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Show sh f 1 v ' iv ' ? t, f. . 9 v f tT'fC; First Class Job Printing At living prices. Let us have your next order for anything you want print Rich- - County News cd. printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. If not please remember our , subscriptioa , w!Il help make this ' paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed news service. . BEACHES EVEBY NOOK AND COBNEB OP BICH COUNTY TWENTY-FIFT- NUMBER 46. RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1922. YEAR. H IIIS EJ i i UTAH NEW BCHEDUlE WENT INNTO EFFECT AT MIDNIGHT ON Became Conspicuous During the War For His Attack Upon Wilson And His Adminis- Hope That Measure Will Be Successful Expressed by President Harding; Congressmen Witness the Signing Daughertys Washington. President Harding on Thursday signed the tariff bill of 1922. The bill was signed shortly after 11 oclock in the presidents office in the presence of Chairman McCumber of the senate finance committee. Chairman Fordney of the house ways and means committee, a number of house members and others. Remarking that the measure had been long in the making, President Harding, after he had affixed his signature with a pen presented to him by Mr. Fordney, who said he intended to keep it as a souvenir, said that if we succeed as I hope we will succeed CONGRESS in making effective the elastic provisions of this bill this will prove the great contribution toward progress in -tariff making in a century. One of those who witnessed the LAW MAKERS TO TAKE U CAMsigning was Harry Parker, negro PAIGNING IN THEIR HOfefE -- I messenger for the house ways and STATES means committee for the past 33 years. Parker was introduced to the president with the remark from Chair- President Harding Will Call Special man Fordney that he had witnessed Session During Month of Novi nb- h the signing of the Dingey, er to Consider Important and Underwood tariff bills. Matters In addition to Senator McCumber and Representative Fordney, those Waslungton. With members of both who witnessed the signing of the bill houses straining impatiently Id get included Representative Hawley, Orefrom away Washington and haek to gon, Tlmherlake, Colorado, Hardley, at home, the political Watson, Pensylv ania, Washington, h second the of session North Young, Dakota, Green, Iowa and Republican members of the ways and Congress drew to a close Friday. means committee. Congressmen are now on their' w ay Treasury officials in discussing the home to inaugurate a hectic gikveeks new act "said-thaIthongirTrirTbhwmpalliier-Te-e1dctRin6nJd$bf;T. ganization of the customs service There were genuine Sighs of relief would be required, the staffs of the Friday on the part of Republican an i customs offices in a number of the Democrats alike, over the closing of larger ports of entry would' have to the tumultuous session which began be expanded to handle the increased on Dec. 5 last. volume of work. The recess, for it will amount to that in which President Harding intends calling an extra session the midHarding Signs Grain Trading Act dle of November, will he the first real Washington. The Capper-Tinchbill providing for regulation of trading rest the Congress has in futures on grain markets was had since President Harding came insigned Thursday by President Hard- to power on March 4, 1921. Within ing. The new act, which becomes ef- a month after his inauguration he calfective November 1, was passed by led a special session. Except for a recess at the close of last NoCongress as a substitute for the reg- ten-daulatory provisions of the futures trad- vember Congress has been steadily in ing act of 1921, which provisions were session ever since. declared inoperative by the supreme Praised by its Republicans as one court. It follows along the same lines of the most constructive Congresses in as the act of 1921, except that it is recent history, and just as much conbased on the power of Congress to demned by the Democrats as a do regulate interstate commerce while nothing Congress, the Sixtj sev enth the statute to w hich the supreme court leaves Washington in a state of nerfound objection was predicated on the vous apprehension over the fate that taxing power of Congress. Grain ex- awaits the entire membership of the changes coming under the new act are house and one tjjird of the senate on those at Chicago, Minneapolis, Duluth, Nov. 7. Kansas City, St. Louis, Toledo, MilThe Republicans are going home to waukee, San Francisco, Los Angeles praise the record of this Congress and and Baltimore. assure their constituents that a great era of prosperity lies just ahead as a Ford Plant Resumes Operation Detroit, Mich. The plants of the result of the' new tariff bill. They will Ford Motor company in the Detroit also stress heav ily the business addistrict, closed last Saturday because ministration inaugurated b, the Reof the coal situation, thereby throwing publican administration. 100,000 Ford workers out of work in The Democrats are going to tell different parts of the oountry, re- their constituents that the new tariff opened Friday morning. Orders for the bill is to raise the cost ot living in here tlie United States some .$100,000,000 reopening were telegraphed Thursday by Edsel B. Ford, president a year and they have organized a flyof the company, who is in Cincinnati. ing squadron of speakers to tear dow n Mr. Ford said cancellation of the inter- the business arguments of the Repubstate commerce commissions service licans. One fact the Demociats will order No. 23 had made it possible stress is that the Republicans closed this 'session of Congress with a defiagain to obtain coal. cit of $650,000,000 staring them in the face reported by Secretarv of the Discard Donkey Emblem Mo The Goddess of Treasury Mellon as one of the chief St Louis, veto. Liberty was adopted unanimously by causes of the bonus features of the ten The Demof outstanding executive committee the the ocratic state committee as the emblem second session of the 67th Congresof the Democratic party in Missouri, sional record: 1. Inauguration of the budget syssucceeding the donkey, which has served the Democratic party as its tem. emblem for many years. Members of 2. Agricultural credits acts, extendthe committee said the change was ing financial relief to farmers. made because the donkey as an 'em3. Ratification of the treaties growblem was neither artistic nor digniout ef the Washington conference. ing fied. Under the decision reached by 4. Renewal of the thiee per cent the committee, the Goddess of Liberty will displace the donkey upon the immigration law. 5. Passage of the Capper-Tinche- r Democratic ballot in the November n election. gambling bill. 6. The tariff act of 1922, imposing the highest protective rate- - since the Fire Arm Production on Decrease bill. The production of Payne-AldricWashington. 7. Rejection of the soldiers' bonus, fire arms at private plants in the United States showed a decrease of more after a veto by President Harding. than 58 per cent in the year 1921 as 8. Legislation aimed at stabilizing compared with 1919, according to a the coal industry. 9. Creation of an American debt report by the census bureau. The total value of the output of the 25 establish- funding commission to collect the ments operating in 1919 was $30,181,-37foreign indebtedness. 10. The seating of Senator Truman against a value of $12,510,302 for the 18 plants operating last year. H. Newberry of Michigan. Chicago. The dastic temporary injunction ordered by Attorney General Barty M. Daugherty against shop crafts strike leaders was put in fpree Monday by Judge James H. Wilker-non- , without any of its effectiveness being modified. Several slight changes in the wording of the order submitted Saturday were made by Judge Wilkerson to clarify its meaning. ' Judge Wilkerson signed the order after Donald R. Richherg, defense said he was unable to suggest any form of order which would be effective to give legal sanction to the exercise ot an authority which we respectfully urge is not within the power of the court. To call this proceeding in its method and result due process of law, to justify the denial of constitutional rights of the defendants by the judicial finding based on affidavits, seems to me to disregard the fundamental principles of our system of laws, as well as to exercise a power specifically denied to the federal courts by an act of Congress passed in order to prevent the very deprivations of liberty and property where it is here accomplished, Richberg said. It appears, he added, that no one is even of the named defendants charged with the commission of any unlawful act and I am unable to ascertain positively from a careful study of the opinion of the court just what unlawful acts are found to have been done by any of the defendants iq furtherance of an unlawful conspiracy. Apparently, however, the court has found that there is proof of an unlawful conspiracy In the large number of unlawful acts shown to have been committed, the most of them by unknown parties and that the defendants are presumed to have knowledge that these things were done. Follow ing th short plea by defenses attorneys that the government petition for an injunction be denied. Judge Wilkenson denied their motion to dismiss, added the phrase with intent to further said conspiracy in sev eral paragraphs and signed the order. Tlie date of hearing for the defendants not heard in this action was set for 10 a. m., October 5. SEPTEMBER tration United Sthtes Sen- ator Thomas E. Watson, of Georgia, died suddenly at his home here TuesDeath was said to be due to an day. acute attack iof asthma, from which Senator Watson had suffered recurrently for some years. Although falling health had Interrupted Senator Watsons attendance at senate sessions frequently in the last several months, he was in his seat Friday when the Senate adjourned and his friends believed that he was then showing improvement. He was stricken suddenly after dinner Monday night and passed away shortly after three oclock in the morning. He was sixty-siyears of age. Members of the senator's family and a number of close friends were at hi3 bedside when tne end came. During the first year and a half of bis term in the senate of which he was elected In 1920, after receiving the nomination over Senator Hoke Smith, and Governor Hugh M. Dorsey, Senator Watson gave no indication of any Impairment iof the vigor and activity which had marked his long career in politics and as a publisher. In his last speech in the senate, delivered only a week ago last Wednesday, the Georgia senator severely criticized the administration for its course in connection with the rail strike situation. His previous attacks on the administration, and most notably his charges of illegal hangings in the American expeditionary forcep, the, subject of exhaustive investigation by a senate committee, had made him a conspicuous figure in the senate body during his brief service there. Bom in Thomson, Ga., in 1856, Senator Watson grew up and practiced luw there for some years before entering state politics. After serving in the Georgia house of representatives and later, in 1888, as Democratic elector at large for the state, he was elected to Congress in 1891, on the Populist ticket After being defeated on that ticket in the next two elections, Senator Watson was nominated as the choice for of the St. Louis Flopulist convention which indorsed W. J. Bryan for president in 1896. Nominated for president by the People's party in 1904, Senator Watson conducted an active campaign to revive the party. Although having served only a short time in the enate, .Senator Watson's oratory anu fiery attacks upon legislation he opposed added to his national prominence gained in his home state. He was an historical expert, hs senate speeches being rich with incidents of history, particularly of French, of which he was a great student. He was a strong advocate of a bonus for former service men and another of his strong policies was advocacy of release of men convicted during the war under the esponage act. x i AGAINST SHOP CRAFTS STRIKE LEADERS IS PUT INTO EFFECT END COMES QUICKLY FOLLOWING ATTACK OF ASTHMA; ATTENDED LIST SESSION Washington. Borah Plans Fight For Seat Washington Senator William E. Borah, of Idaho, is going back home this week to engage in one of the hottest political fights of his ternpes-tuo- s public career. Restoration of the district primary in Idaho on which may hinge his reelection to the senate two years hence in the issue he must tackle in the face of the stif-fekind of opposition from wn-l- n his own party. If he loses the batthird - party tle, the movement may find him willing to assume its leadership in a nation-wid- e campaigu to prevent the direct primary from being stamped out by tho Republican old guard. ' st much-agitate- d Federal Booze Agent ie Arrested San Francisco. Harry W. Meyers, federal prohibition agent, was arrested Monday night by government operatives in connection with an alleged liquor bribery plot involving the passing of $10,000. Two other agents and an alleged also face arrest. It was reported. Air Compression Explodes Five workmen were injured, one perhaps fatally, lives of forty others were imperiled and windows in neighboring skyscrapers were shattered by an explosion of an air compressor in the new Illinois Merchants' Trust Bank building early Chicago. Notes Parts of SIGHS TARIFF BILL S. SENATOR DEAD U. News My From All INJUNCTION 21 Weapon Rail Against Strikers Made Effective By . Judge Wilkerson Defense Appeals Case A r 5JIS , I Payne-Al-dric- fence-mendi- Sixty-sevent- at er Sixty-sevent- h y -- anti-grai- h 0 FI CHANGING ATTITUDE OF PEOPLE ELIMINATES POSSIBILITY OF REVIVAL OF MEASURE Senator Borah of Idaho is Credited With Cryatalizing the Feeling Which Caused the Act to Fall Washington. The comment of the on the veto leaders of the of the bonus bill, says Mark Sullivan, is that the fight has just begun. The soldiers bonus is a settled issue, not only for the present session of congress, but forever. It will never again come so near to winning in any future congress as it did in this. It was passed by the house overthe pres ident's veto. In every future congress the number of senators under the obligation of a promise to vote for it will be smaller than in the present session and the number of senators who will feel free to oppose it will be larger. Furthermore, Hardings veto is based not merejy on the present state of the treasury, but on principle. Every reason that the president gave for his veto will continue to exist and wil even exist in a stronger form during the remainder of his term. So long as Mr. Harding remains in the White House, whether it is for the two and a half years remaining of his first term or for six and a half years if he should have a second term, he can be expected to veto any bonus measure that comes up. For that matter, the measure is not likely to be brought up again in good faith. Only in case there should be a congress politically hostile to the president and with a purpose to embarrass him is the bonus measure likely to be brought up in the future. The reasons that make the measure imposible of success will in time become so apparent that the agitation for the bonus will never again have as large a popular backing as it had on this occasion As a final reason the bonus proposal cannot be successful at any forseeable time in the future, it can be said that however unable the treasury is to stand the strain this year it will be still less able at any time for several years to ' Farmington. An overhead crossing to cost around $11,000 will be installed here. Ogden. Large property owners are said to be objecting to the laying of new sidewalks. The Rev. Sidney Love of will conduct a drive for the Salvation Army in this city, to procure $2,000. Ogden. ex-par- George Carpentier Meets Waterloo Paris. George Carpentier, idol of French fight fans, has at last been toppled from his pedestal, and today a new king reigns in the European heavyweight division. Battling Siki, a Senegalese, hammered the great Georges around the ring in tlie New Buff alow veledrome Sunday night before a howling mob of spectators and sent him down in the sixth round to stay. The bout was to have gone tw enty rounds. Grand Jury is Impanelled Salt Lake. To investigate the alleged simultaneous increase in the price of coal by all local dealers in the Utah product hnd such other matters as may properly come before it, a come. grand jury was impanelled in the The treasury already faces the pro Third district court Monday. Exami blem of a revenue which is $600,000, natoin of the venire by District Atty. 000 short of enough to pay the appro- E. A. Rogers inferred that other matpriation. It may seem sensational to ters which may be called to tlie atsay so, but it is a fact that, even dis- tention of the jury for possible inregarding the bonus, taxes in this vestigation include creamery, lumber country are likely to become higher and cement Interests. before they become lower. Government to Sell Transports The bonus message has a dozen Washington. Five historic vessels angles from which it must excite admiration even on the part of many of the United States transport sen ice, who do not agree with it His giv- the Sherman, Sheridan, Logarf, Buford ing it thetone of an address to ongress and Crook, are to be sold by the was both good politics and government. t For more than a quarsound in principle. It is a fact, as ter of a century these vessels have of the seven seas Harding implies throughout the mes- ploughed the sage, that the bonus proposal arose carrying the fighting men of Uncle not out of any solicitation from the Sam to the far corners' of the earth but rather from the desire from the time of tlie Spanish-Amer-icawar down to the world war. They of members of congress and other politicians to do a thing which would have carried relief to stricken comconsolidate the behind munities, and through them the war them politically. department has maintained military One final point: Whether you like contact with Alaska, Porto Rico, the or do not like tUis final outcome of Philippines, Cuba, Hawaii, Guam and the bonus, give the principal credit the expeditionary forces in China and Europe. for it to Senator William E. Bo'-ah- , of Idaho. It was largely his aggresHerrin Men Out on Bond sive energy that built up a following Morion, 111. Circuit Judge Mortweli in the senate from almost nothing, granted application for the reand it was chiefly the outspoken cour- Monday lease on bond of 36 of the 44 men in age of his speeches and writings that dieted for the murder in connection crystallized enough feeling throughout w ith the Herrin mine killings, but dethe country to bring about the present nied liberty to the remaining eight. result. n Fort Worth, Tex., Wendover For starting fires on tlie Humboldt national forest in Nevada, to frighten away coyotes, Jose Char-rar- i, a sheepherder, was sentenced to pay a fine of $50 and costs amounting to $47.30. Tremonton A herd of pure bred Holsteins from the Potter Lommond view farm at North Ogden, won 10 fiist prizes, four seconds and three thirds at the Southeastern Idaho fair in Blackfoot, Idaho. Logan Sugar beet growers are being advised to water their crop plentifully just now as several weeks of hot dry weathe has dried the ground. It is said that if water is applied there will be a fine yield of beets. Brigham City. Utahs peach crop for 1922 estimated at 1,020,000 bushels as compared with 703,000 last year, according to a report of tlie United tSates bureau of agricultural economics. Provo Provo Rotarians are active camly engaged in a paign, and fifty hoys who have not returned to school this year will be given assistance by the Rotaiy club. back-to-scho- A Christian Endeavor Mt. Pleasant boosteis meeting was held at Manti aroiTse" Interest hi ' tie siate 'con-- " lent ion of Christian Endeavorers tov lie held in ML Ploas.int October 27, 2S and 29. Salt Lake The Weber county tax rate for county purposes is lower this y ar than it has been since 1917, the first year of the world war, it is show tabulations prepared by the state board of equalization for its biennial , report. Salt Lake. Headquarters company from Fort Douglas established a model military camp at the state fair giounds this year. The company w ill move to the fair grounds and will have on exhibition there a considerable portion d of its equipment,- including a howitzer. - one-poun- Suit for $10,000 dam Salt Lake ages was instituted in the United States district court by J. S. Galewick on behalf of Vincent Galewick, a min-or- , against J. J. Galligan, M. I., and Sisters of the Holy Cross hospital as sociation, a corporation organized un der the laws of Indiana It is alleged in the complaint that on June 20, 1921, Vincent Galewick was sent to the hospital by Dr. Galligan for treat- m n for a broken left leg and that while in the hospital lie was subjected to carelessness and negligence, resulting m his permanent deformity. Eureka. A new federal building is to be erected m a short time. Price. A local merchant is planning an entire new business block. , Neplii. Over a mile of new sidewalk will soon be constructed if present plans carry through. William Russell, 63 Springville ears of age, architect and builder and resident ot this city for eighteen years, fell dead at his home after a few minutes illness. Ogden. There are more than 8,000 students in school at present and indications are that this number would be increased in the next few weeks. Salt Lake liquor law against Burt Ben Johnson, guilty to the A fine of $150 fot violations was levied Burnett by City Judge when Burnett pleaded charge. Logan. Ralph Snowball, recently convicted in the city' court of fish ing in restricted waters and fined $200 by Judge Bullen, has filed papers on appeal to the district court. Provo Excellant weather during the past few days and absence ot rain hav e been very beneficial for cutting-corn and filling silos, seeding fall grain, picking and rnarkitinj fruit, and for the development and harvesting of alfalfa seed throughout Utah |