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Show TT7 T h r a - j. . i HslCzVvM ' ah:' -- trrr -- r''p"1 r.!j jAuu I- - hu: tcridfcf ' A'0---- : - n f v , i , i - 'i' - f $ . , ti Are Too a ScbscriW? 1 'ii vi if t i 4 i ;v: i - '? n.r YEAR H RANDOLPH, RICIT COUNTY, TJELLOII ' senrice. IdOEJfER OP RICH COUNTY REACHES EVEBt BOOS. TT7ENTT-SIXT- If not please remember will your subscription help make this paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed news 1 yvs y U- - - . V SATURDAY, - - MAf 19, 1923 NUMBER 27 PATH III TEXEAS - e Conscience to be Physician's Guide in Ordering Liquor for Patients, v - Cabinet Member Saya; Will Appeal to 8upreme Court Al-li- es' Berlin. The allied replies to the May 2 have en-gendered In official and relchetag circles a belief that the only path now ' iopen to Germany may well be the dispatch of, a brief formal note to the creditor powers suggesting that the reich unreservedly consents to permit a commission of International economists to determine her obligations . Such a solution of the diplomatic deadlock, it is argued, would afford the entente statesmen an opportunity to Indicate their approval of or opposition to .& plan aiming at an ultimate settlement of the reparations based on 'economic principles and on Germanys capacity to pay. Germany as well as the entente, should be rep- -' resented on such a commission. It is said. Although this suggestion was incorporated in the retchs recent offer It " was buried in the body of the note. Those government officials have informally discussed the ex. change of notes see no possibility that a new German offer 'could be made "which would not likewise be rejected on the ground of Its flexibility. Talk of a government crisis la dismissed as inviting a needless complication of an already gravely aggravated internal aad foreign .situation. There seems to be tio relchetag group which would willingly - asiume the ' legacy Chancellor Cuno would leave all behind. ''TFe"URd gocHistoj-ov , .. y Otep Would Definitely Determine View on Straight Economic r Question, Berlin Thinks; Reich Offer Buried reparations offer of f : r j''--- 1 . . j, - V :Mmvne Washington, Disagreement over prohibition, enforcement which the supreme court and congress will be called upon to settle has occurred between Secretary of the Treasury Mellon and Prohibition Commissioner Haynes. Mellon and regards as illogical improper the provision of law limiting amount of liquor doctors may prescribe for their patients. He believes congress either did not Intend arbitrarily to put a drastic limitation on (fbetora or that if it had that intention, it was wrong, Haynes replies to such arguments that it is the law, and has to be Enforced no matter whether it is Illogical or not.- The disagreement has been brought , to light by the action of Judge Knox In New York Wednesday In granting an injuhetion to prevent ' prohibition authorities Interfering with a doctor n the prescribing of liquor. - The decisions, by taking off the limit entirely from doctors, left them free In Mellons opinion, to prescribe all the liquor they think necessary, as often as they think necessary. Haynes takes an entirely opposite view. He warned doctors Thursday that no one but the individual doctor in New York, who sued, wa freed by the Knox injunction from the laws limitations. At once a race began between Haynes ' and Mellon to distinct and clashing views? , Haynes and his lggH staff .will 'tvthelr car-ry'a- a Cnh'. Start court and ask for appealer tte speedy desupreme cision of the point, which may prove vital to successful prohibition enforcement Fire and Flood Damage Town Hot Springs, Ark. Hot Springs Tuesday was endeavoring to extricate lltself from debrla and ruin left by flood, fire and wind which - Monday night wrecked the business district of the city with damage to property which is expected to run Into the millions. Several persons are reported to have been killed. It Is not expected however, that the death list will exThe ceed three of four persona 'Marquette hotel Is a pile of charred bricks and stones representing a loss In excess of $250,000. The only build-in- e left In the Marquette block is the The city Is Citizens National bank without street car, electric or gas service. All utility plans. Including the telezraph office were flooded and put out of commission. Pirate Band Ransacks Ship European , passengers were among those terrorized and robbed when the Chinese steamer Tals-hu- n was seized near Swatow Saturday by pirates who, disguished as passengers, overpowered the crew, sailed the ship for nearly twenty-fou- r hours, at night without lights, and finally left her Sunday at the mouth of a small creek, transferring to a junk loot valued at $60,000. The Tals-huwhich was bound from Hongkong for Shanghai, returned to Hongkong Sunday afternoon. The chief officer, wounded In the forearm by a pirate, was taken to a hospital. Most of the passengers had lost all their money and personal effects. The vessels's cargo, a valuable one, was hot disturbed. Two Surrender for Camp Whippings Tallahassee, Fla. Walter Higginbotham and William Fisher Tuesday surrendered to a United States deputy marshal, who held federal warrants them charging conspiracy in connection with the alleged whipping of a nesrro at the Putnam LumbeT companys camp at Clara, Fla. They were released on bail of $2,000 each jrii'intham was whipping boss of tbe Prtnam company and Fisher Is now superintendent of the company The negro, it Is charged, died as a re suit of bis treatment at the camp. Shop Strikers End Walkout Denver, Colo. Striking shopmen of the Denver & Rio Grande Western railroad voted Thursday 849 to 379, to end their strike on terms suggested by Russell Felemlng, attorney general of Colorado, and John F. Tobin of Montrose, state senator, - acting as mediators. General Fleming announced Friday he was notifying Joseph E. Young, receiver of the railroad, of the decision of the men, who agree to return to work under conditions outlined by the mediators. These include restoration of pension nnd pass privi. leges. According to General Fleming, the strikers agreed to return to work as their services are needed by the railroad. The present status of employes now at work for the road will not be disturbed, he declared. French Sel-- e German Factory Terin. The Frenrh have occupied the Paden aniline and soda works a according to a mes received here Tuesday. The em royes have not attempted to enter the wori-- s which are shut down, with an entire French regiment quartered fSo-- e. The street railways at Lud have ceased operation ns the result of French occupaton of the depot. T rd'ri'-shfife- sae Radicals Jaded at Chhuahua Chihuahua City. Mexico. Five ai le-e- d laor nritators were put ir prison hero Saturday after a distur Americans and brnce involving r Mexicans at a sacred Indian Tnfprmation was sent to the police that Americans were laughing at the dances. Police found two American-from quietly watching the festivities an automobile and refused to arrest them. A speaker criticised tjje police nnd Americans. Police atempt-e- d to arrest the speaker and other leaders, but this was not accomplished until a body of males arrived to reinforce the police. da-w- ! Hongkong. n, New Yorker Buys Chicago. As a Frank J. Godsol of dent of the Goldwyn From All Part s of UTAH f TWO HUNDRED PERSONS PORTED INJURED IN TORNADO I RE- - Eight Bodies Recovered and Casualties Reported at Every Farm And Ranch for Many , 1 Milea OPINION MAY HOLD PATRIOT! " ASSOCIATIONS RESPOtiSISLt -- FOR ASSASSINATION NOTE AGAINST OF WARNING RECEIVED WITH ROARS OF APPLAUSE A' , f Conradl Asserts He Murdered Of Soviet Group to Aveng Atrocities of Bolshoi, ,'v Vlk AH. - C f. . j Red Foreign Terror C ' V- Ministers Remarks Forecast of Russia'a Reply to Ultimatum; , Want Pce i - i - Vr border ovsky, head of ' th Russian- sovlv delegation to the Neap East 'Confer Lausanne.-vf- oe f moseow.-'- but we Colorado, Tex. The sanitarium here Is filled with victims of the tornado which swept a strip of territory a mile wide and fifteen miles long near here early Monday. The number of dead, It is feared, will total 50 when bodies at various wrecked homes have been recovered. Twelve bodies are in Colorado already. About 200 persons were hurt, and property and crop damage will total millions of dollars, according to observers. Many of the dead and injured are children. The eyclone was accompanied by a severe hall storm and heavy rain and mud In the devastated area makes relief work difficult. .The country over which the storm passed is one of the best farming sections in this community, Persons doing relief work report dead and injured being found at almost every scattered farm and ranch dwelling for miles southeast. Doctors and nurses from a dozen nearby towns have been appealed to and are searching In the devastated area, covering many sections of grazing plain, for the dead and Injured. ' Only slight damage was done .'to ' the town of Colorado itself. want.peace, , prepared to meet the enemy, This was the Challenge flung at Mother of Unknown Hero' Honored ence, .by Maurice. Alexander Eonrad Grfeat Britain by George Tchitcherin, Washington. The mother of the a Swiss who once sdrved'in the Riik minister of foreign. Affairs in a fiery unknown soldier was honored at Mothers day exercises in Arlington sian army, has stirred Switzerland es speech in the- - AlOscow opera house aftempOh. national, cemetery Sunday . attended has no single event since the assas- - Saturday , . . by representatives of the American legion and other' patriotic organiza- WE . Lehi. Sugar production in Utah facteries in 1922 was 110,000 tons, ac. cording to statistics made public by the bureau of agricultural economics. Beaver. Fire destroyed the brooder and 300 little chicks of Albert A. Morris. Mr. Morris, president of the BeavCr Poultry association, had Just the baby chicks from California. Parowan. A Benson of this city had a narrow escape from death when the car he was driving was demolished by a skid into a canal near Spanish Fork.' Mr. Benson was badly bruised about the knees. of , son Logan. The Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Elwood of Trenton was drowned while playing near a vat used by bis father to. cool milk cans. MantL Matthew Baer, prominent business man of Tremonton, was Instantly killed In an automobile accident one mile north of Mantl. Magna. W. T. Harwood. 35, an electrician of Garfield, was ran down by an automobile and later removed to the St Marks hospital in Salt Lake. The driver of the car Is unknown. Salt Lake City. President and Mrs. Harding will be Utahs guests for two days during their Western trip this summer. This assurance was given Senator Smoot just prior to his departure from the national capital for . this city. , j N. T. Chief Assistant Fire Ogden. Moore of the central station was painfully injured when he was ' thrown from tthe step of a fire- track. ' Park City. A party of twenty-thre- e stndents from the school of mines of the University of Minnesota arrived in Balt Lake for the purpose of vlsit-in- g 'Utah jniues. They will visit 'I ft ft 1) , ?1 - -- sUhiUod. especially In view of the allies re- jectlon of a reparations offer which :ln no small extent was Inspired and .supported by this group. ment-honors r Newo Notes; 1 1 SECRETARY AND HAYNES DISAGREE IN ATTITUDE TOWARD PRESCRIPTION DECISION .. . SPLITS LEADERS ARE NOW CONVINCED THIS IS THE ONLY PATH , THAT IS OPEN v . , sTs K . i - Chicago Theatre pesonnl venture, New York, presiPictures corpora- tion, has purchased the Roosevelt theatre here for $1,800,000 from the Aecher Roosevelt Theatre company. Balaban & Katz, motion picture theatre operators, no,w have the building under lease at a reported sum of $260,000 annually, In addition to shar. ing equally the profits with the lessor. The Goldwyn Pictures corporation owns 50 per cent of the stock In the Ascher Brothers theatres, but Mr. Godsol's purchase Was a personal In- vestment police in Hotej Cecil after he had killed Vorosky and wounded two attaches of the Russian delegation, continues to maintain that he acted alone in an effort to avenge his father and uncle for the mistreatment they received at the hands of the" bolshevik during the red terror. The genetir Impression in Near East conference circles is that the excitement caused by Thursday evenings events will not directly affect the outcome of the negotiations. Yor. ovskihwas not regarded as an official Russian delegate. Switzerland keenly feels the. position in which Conrads act places her, and fears that world opinion may hold local patriotic associations materially responsible, inasmuch as the Swiss Faclst organization recently ordered Vorosky to leave the country or take the consequences. The Immediate implication in the latter alternative, spokesmen of the Fascist! assert, meant nothing more serious than that Vorosky would be doused with castor oil and run out of the country as a penalty for his attacks on the- - Swiss government for its refusal to grant a visa to a soviet courier to Lausanne. Jails Editors forjContempt Birmingham, Ala. Three members of the Birmingham Post editorial staff who went to Jail rather than apoloof gize for publication of matters legal record in a recent news story, were released at 3:30 Thursday after The men, adjuged guilty of noon. contempt 6t court by Circuit Judge R. P. Heflin and sentenced to twenty-fou- r hours confinement, are E. T. Leech, editor; Jack Bethea, managing editor, and Lewey Robinson, reporter. Citations for contempt were issued by Judge Heflin following the publication of a news story in which it was stated that a murder trial defendant was under indictment on two other counts. The court Insisted this was prejudicial to the rights of the defendant and constituted contempt. The defendants, In their formal answer contended they had a right to publish legitimate news. Bandit Killed In Gun Battle One bandit was shot and killed and two escaped when a squad of police officers engaged In a pitched revolver battle with the bandit trio In the heart of Chicago Heights business district early Tuesday morning. Chicago. Will Ask Charges ef Manslaughter Snowstorm Hits Wyomlng-Colorad- o Indictments charging Chicago. Denver. Snow was falling Tuesday manslaughter against the Northwest- in Wyoming and in eastern Colorado, ern university students, who figured in the automobile crash In which Louis Aubere, 17, was killed during a class rush, the night of April 27, according to reports received by the weather bureau. The mercury stood at 31 degrees above zero In Denver at 11 a. m. Tuesday. manding satisfaction within ten days for "alleged encroachments on Brit-IS- h rights, with a threat of sever, once of relations.. Russia will not take a single step Insolent decalred Imperialism, Tchitcherin amid a roar of applause. ' A break, in relations may mean war, he said, and If it comes we are prepared to meet the eneipy . The foreign minister, attired in a uniform of an infantry officer in the red army, threw down the gauntlet to British power, asserting that the broad banners of soviet Russia would never be dipped to Imperialism. - ante collision Painters and Paperhangers to Strike 0 New York. A general strike of 10,-00- onion painters effective Monday, May 21, was authorized by the Brotherhood of Painters, Decorators and Paper Hangers of America, district council of New York, after a strike vote had been cast by the members. The union demands, it was said, include a five-da- y week, restoration of collective bargaining and a wage .In crease from $9 to $10 a day. London-Pari- s Plane Crash Fatal Conty, France. Six persons. InSuspect Taken In Bomb Outrage a Mr. Schwab, New York New York. The Wall street bomb cluding business man, were killed when a explosion was recalled again Satur. passenger airplane operating on the day when police arrested Noah Paris-Londroute, was wrecked earLeraer, 23, an electrician, on a ly Monday afternoon at the village of charge of homicide in connection Monsures, five miles from here, and with the disaster which killed more between Amiens and Beauthan thirty persons on September midway vais. The machine caught fire while 16, 1919. Lerner is charged with traveling at its usual height on its having hired the wagon that carried daily trip, and then either fell, or the the explosives to Wall street, the pilot tried to make a hurried ladling. The Information police announced. The plane was wrecked by the fall that brought his arrest was said to and explosion. have been given to the district attorney by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Famoue Clipper is Burned La. They Doyle of Baton Rouge, Wash. The . famous old Seattle, returned recently from a Kuzbas Glory of the Seas, said ship clipper colony in Russia, .where they charged to be the fastest vessel of her type in entirely the world, was burned on the beach they had found conditions different from what had been reprehere Sunday, efforts to have her sented to them by its New York preserved as a historic relic having agents. Severaly officers of the failed. The Glory was built in East on the strength Kuzbas were indicted Boston in 1869 by Donald McKay, of their accusations. famous builder of fine ships. She made the voyage from Havre, France, Army Fliers Bodies Found around the horn to San Francisco in San Diego, Cal. Two bodies, supninety days, a record said never to posed to he those of Colonel Francis have been surpassed by a vessel of staff of chief of cavalry of the army, her . typ?. Charles Webber, and Lieutenant aviator, who disappeared while flySun Soldiers Push Forword ing from San Diego toward Tucson, Canton. Fighting between Sun Ariz., December 7 of last year, were Yat-Seconstitutionalist army and found Saturday, in the Cuyamaca forces still is in progress mountains of this county. As soon Kwangsi East river and has spread the along as the report reached this city. Mato the borders of the British terriRockjor Henry Arnold, commanding of Kwangtung Hongkong. well field, from which Webber took tory of the constitutionalist army troops y his last flight, having Colenel have partly captured Shiuhing, north to visit the secne and try to of Canton, and are deputing poses-sioIdentify the bodies and the machine, of the remainder of the city in whose wreckage the bodies lay. the with Kwangsi army. He expressed little doubt that the bodies were those of Colonel MarSearch For Misstag Officer shall and Lieutenant Webber. A squad of police led Cleveland. Harding Congratulates Scout Leaders by Chief Graul started digging for the New .York. James E. West, chief body of Patrolman Dennis Griffin in executive of the Boy Scouts of a dump on a river bed In the southAmerica Saturday made public a eastern section of the city late SatGriffin who was letter from President Harding con- urday afternoon. L. Whitfield, after gratulating the organization on hav- kidnaped by John aring reached the six hundred thousand Whitfield had been placed under on of a rest con. charge morning and Friday urging membership mark 0 stealing an automobile, has not been tlnuatlon of the campaign for new members, more than 70,000 seen since he entered an automobile to drive with the prisoner to a poHcb of whom already have been station. Mar-part- n 100,-00- ' I E. T. McCarthy,' one ot the- - drlvers, was arrested on a charge of reckless driving. Ogden Fifty thousand dollars are asked as damages for the death of Louise Orem, alleged to have been killed while In the employ of the D. & R. G. W. Ry. In a suit filed In the district court. Salt Lake City. One hundred and seven tobacco dealers of Utah have qualified nnder the new cigaret licensing law and are permitted to sell cigarettes over the counter without thereby placing themselves in a class with the bootlegger. Moab. A survey of the work being done on the road to the San Juan county oil field, for which the legislature appropriated $15,000, by H. S. Barnes, county commissioner of San Juan county, shows that the Cow canyon road has been completed. Murray. A Lions club was organized last week at Murray. It is comcharter memposed of twenty-fiv- e bers. Farmington. Sheriff George Mann departed for Los Angeles to get Edward Donaldson, who is wanted on a The alleged grand larceny charge. crime was committed In Clinton last October. Price. Joseph A. Young, pioneer stockgrower and farmer of Mountain Home, Duchesne county, died near the old well an route to Price from My-to- n. Helper. Gus Adams, 38 years of age, a machine man, was crushed to death by a falling roof In the Mutual Coal company mine In Spring canyon Carbon county. Provo Robert Curtis was awarded the Mr. and Mrs. W. Lester Mangum scholarship consisting of a four-yea- r course to the Brigham Young university. Mr. Curtis was chosen from ten students of the Provo high school who rank highest in their studies and possess leadership ability. Ogden. Inheritance tax on $110,. 010 62 ot the estate pf the late HeDei Scowcroft will be paid according to the report of the appraisers. Kichmond. Balck and White" day the annual exhibition of Holstein cattle, held in Richmond, scored a greater success than any show of ths kind ever given In this section ot the is li state. Professor C. I ML Pleasant Johns, principal of Wasatch academy, announced that a new boys dormitory, to be known as the Sage Memorial wl be built this summer on the Wasatch block, the gift to the school ef the Woman! Board of Home Mis, slons. :Vd ! |