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Show f First Cbss Job Priatinf At living price Let us hove your next order foe anything you want print' cd. Rich County News printing is synonymous with art and efficiency. Are Toe a Subscriber? If not please remember your subscription will help make this paper strong a thing necessary for an unsurpassed news serrice. BEACHES EVERY NOOK AND COBNER OF RICH COUNTY TWENTY-SIXT- YEAR H RANDOLPH, RICH COUNTY, UTAH, SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1923 Strong Arm of NUMBER 37 iaaaaaaaaJ Law News Notes ! UTAH I From All Parts of T I COMMISSION AT MANILA ALSO DEMAND ABSOLUTE INDE. DEPENDENCE OF ISLES Lay Will Visit Washington and Matter Before President Harding Upon Hia Return Manilla Immediate recall of Governor General Leonard Wood was demanded in a resolution unanimously adopted at a joint meeting of both houses of the legislature here Monday night The resolution was addressed to President Harding. Manila. The Philippine comniis--sioin session here Tuesday, adopted resolutions demanding the removal of Governor General Leonard Wood. The independence commission also adopted a resolution demanding the absolute Independence of the Philippines. . The commission Is controlled by Manuel Quezon, Filipino leader, who recently led the cabinet in their resignation as a protest against what Quezon charged was the disregard of cabinet members prerogatives by Governor Woodv Manila, P. I. The split between Governor General Leonard Wood and Manuel Quezon, which resulted In the resignation of all leading officials of the Philippine government, has developed Into a local political partisan embroglio, with the Democrata party supporting Governor Wood and the Collectivista party opposing him, according to political leaders here. The Democrata leaders adopted resolutions opposing the joining of the parliamentary mission, which is to leave for Washington, D. C. within the next two weeks to lay the facts of the Filplnot controversy Instead the fore 7. favored a 'plan regularly elected rest Vttrbythe dent 'Commissioners would be pj 'full power to lay the facts Detore President Harding. Governor Montinola of Iloilo, in a statement here places the entire responsibility ,of the political crisis on Quezon and ' Manuel Roxas, speaker of the house of representatives. He cites instances where, he asserts, these men encroached on the prerogatives of the governor general. Governor Wood stated that no offer of cabinet positions had been made to members of the Democrata party and, so far, no Collectivista members have been willing to accept such positions. In the meantime, he said, the undersecretaries are carrying forward the business of the Philippine government. n, k -- Decisions Deferred Decisions of tke Washington. mixed claims commission in the Xusitania and other damage claims of Americans against Germany are to go over until next fall. The German Tepresentatives of the commission, "Dr. Wilhelm Kiesselbach and Count von Lewinski, left here Monday and will sail from New York for Germany Thursday. They will not return nn-t- il October. Robert W. Bonynge, the American agent, and several counsellors of his staff, also will sail for Germany next month to investigate claims and secure evidence for presentation later to the commission. Claim Ruhe Debates Cause Silence London. The secrecy agreed upon "by the British and French govern- ments concerning the reparations documents forwarded to the. allies is being closely maintained, and it is expected that another ten days will elapse before any reply Is received from the French government, owing to delay In the meeting of Poincare and Premier Theunis to consult over the British draft note to Germany. fi Man r, & y ? , ' ,fi o r , H.' Ottawa. Mousseau, ..mju.v-drug clerk, recently fell heiress to a share In a $1,500,000 estate left by Tier aunt, but she remained loyal to Eudorde Gubord with whom site has She mixed soft drinks for years. married him. , r, ' Guards Battle Insane Mob ''Chester, 111. One inmate of the 5 hospital for the criminal was slain by' guards when inmates battered their way through the bars' of' the institution The .:, ana, made a break for freedom. y i'Trery was effected after tlie in. tes had stabbed two guards. Four vtf - Jhe inmates were recaptured, twenty six being alt large. '"Illinois thir-H.to- ne k -- H PETITION ALLEGES DISOLUTION DECREE OF 1918 FAILED TO DISSOLVE TRUST New SAN BERNARDINO SUFFERS MUCH DAMAGE; SHOCKS FELT IN MANY PLACES Action Avers Monopoly Has Not Raised Prices to Farmers But Has Ended Los Ogden Argument over the payment of a taxi fare cost R. B. Dyke-man- ,, 80 years of age, a $50 fine when he was brought into the city court. Angeles, San Diego, Riverside And Long Beach Feel Trem-blorMany Walls Are Cracked Logan. While driving cows to pasture Royal Fisher of Clarkston, turned a corner a little too quiAcly and his leg, caught between the horse and the post, was broken. San Bernardino, Cal. Thousands of Bingham Ground is being broken dollars worth of damage was done for the erection of a clubhouse by the here at 11:28 oclock Sunday night Utah Copper company on the site when tlie severest earthquake In the of the old Shawmut mill. history of the city was recorded. The Mt. Pleasant. Deputy Game WarHall of Records, a 'building in the den P. A. Poulson has received a courthouse group, was badly damof twenty-fiv- e Chinese shipment aged, tons of rock being tom loose pheasants to be in the fields placed from the walls. here under the protection of the The .felling debris crashed through local game club. the roof of a rooming house adjoinMoab. Ranger Marion Hunt has a ing, critically injuring George R. Fisher, 56, who was sleeping at the force of men at work on the south time. Other roomers were thrown division of the LaSal national forest This work will into a panic and rushed into the constructing trails. be completed by faH. street iartly clothed. Plate glass windows in virtually Xogan Cache county has one of every business establishment were the most bounteous crops of small shattered. Walls of numerous build- fruits in Its history. Strawberries, ings and sidewalks were cracked. raspberries, currants and gooseberTelephone communications were cut ries are abundant. off, adding to the pandemonium. Logan. The 2 year old son of Street lights were out and a number Green narrowly escaped death George of wire went down. when he was rescued from an open made of Canvass the city is being cesspool Into which he had fallen. by police and deputy sheriffs in the Mt. Pleasant Under the auspices belief that a number of older buildings may have fallen in or partly of the Relief societies of North collapsed. Chimneys on residences Sanpete stake a health clinic will be conducted from July 18 to Setpem-be- r throughout the city tumbled over. 1 for the children of Due to the lack of telephone comage. munications only meager reports have been received from outlying disRichmond For each dollar spent tricts. The shocks were felt In for feed the members of the .RichHighland, Rialto, Colton, Patton and mond Lewiston jjow ji'jsting associa-- , Pass.1 It tion received' areturn of $3.22 .as far north as on Is not known what damage has been their cows during the month of June. done in the smaller towns. Layton Layton iScout Troop No. 1 Santa Fe railroad officials are mak- has organized a scout brass band. Oning a check of the system from Thirty-fiv- e scouts have signed up for tario to Cajon in the belief that a membership. colnumber of their towers may have Bountiful John H. Miller had lapsed. Forest rangers in his cabins to right shoulder fractured and the done Pass reported damage Officers have left shoulder and his spine injured as on the mountainside. fall while been rushed to the Southern Cali- a result of a twenty-fofornia state hospital at Patton, where picking cherries. there are several hundred insane inOgden. Herman Guy, 16, of Boise, The Patton hospital Is an Idajjo, was rescued in an unconscious mates. old structure and fears were felt condition from the Weber river by I, here that It may have been damaged Stanford of Wilson lane. ,, , ' if ' severely. Weber county property Ogden. this year is given at $58,361,204 as Training Camp is Disbanded compared with $57,126,645 last year, Salt Lake. The reserve officers according to County Clerk and Auditraining camp at Fort Douglas was tor 1. A. Van Dyke. officially closed Sunday after two Tremonton Damage to the extent The ofweeks of strenuous work. of $500 was caused to the cafe owned course a hard were ficers put through by James Cauley by a fire from a of Instruction in weather unusually defective flue. The roof of the caffe hot for Salt Lake and under condi- was destroyed. The tions not altogether satisfactory. and South Fork Ogden. Ogden regular army officers were limited by army regulations in equipment and canyons may be closed to temporary the number of men with which to campers because of the unsanitary work out problems of warfare and by conditions left by many, according to Yet before an announcement Issued by the state a shortage of funds. health board here. leaving the camp the reserve officers a unanimous by Provo. Lee Owens, is In the conn, resolutions, adopted vote, declaring that the camp had ty Jail to answer to a charge of havbeen of great benefit to them and that ing stolen an automobile belonging to they return to their homes better N. A. Booke of this city. physically and mentally, and better Ogden Mrs. John Childs of Clinprepared to serve their country as ton is suffering from Injuries and offireserve The patriotic citizens. bruises as the result of an automobile cers also expressed a keen desire to accident on the railroad bridge near summer next camp attend a similar, Death Curve. ofother and said they would urge Bingham. Engine No. 72 of the ficers of the 104th divisional area to Utah Copper company jumped the do the same. track while on a bridge between Bingham and Copperfield, taking a Meet Test Russia Fails to plunge of about sixteen feet to the the of Recognition Washington. ground below. Russian Soviet government by the Ogden. Prisoners in the city jail United States can not come while Its leaders continue to evince a spirit will be put to work crushing rock and repairing roads, according to the of destruction at home and aboard. recommendation of Police Chief CurSecrea to declaration by according L. Allison, which was made to tary Hughes, made public Sunday. tis In an exchange of correspondence the city commissioners. with Samuel Gompers, president of Logan. County Agricultural Inthe American Federation of Labor, spector H. P. Mathews distributed Mr. Hughes renewed n statement of five tons of poison grasshopper bait in principles which he said was guiding the Amalga district. Acoording to the American government policies twith inspector, the drive against the hopregard to Russia, while Mr. Gompers pers has been successful. made direct reference to the recent Coalville. Peter Cano, was senpublic demands from senators and tenced to die before a firing squad at others who have visited Russia for the Btate prison In Salt Lake for the recognition. murder of June St. Clair of Park s; n St. Paul, Minn. The United States government, through Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty, Tuesday filed a petition in federal district t court here seeking division of the International Harvester company into three separate corporations. The government alleges that the dissolution decree entered against the company in 1918 did not store competition in the farm implement industry; that the company still is a monopoly and that the number of competitive concerns Is shrinking steadily. The dissoluton petition was preON TEXAS TOWN sented by a special representative of the attorney generals office in Washington which will handle the case for the government. TEXAS TOWN AWAITS INVASION MEXICAN OUTLAW MEETS DEATH Federal court is in session here BY FORCES SAID TO NUMAT HANDS OF TRUSTED now and the petition was locked up BER 20,000 f' . EMPLOYEE in a safe until the return of Federal - Judge J. F. McGee' and United District Attorney Lafayette French Jr. Transients to Be Arrested; Alleged Death Occurs Almost Immediately; from Duluth. '111 Feeling Against Insurgent Mistreatment of Organizer The filing of the petition brought la" Cause; To Be Probed By Slayer Killed a about a speedy reply from Alexander Few Minutes Later ", Grand Jury Legge of Chicago, president of the company. Mr. Legges statement contended that the company was acGeneral Chihuahua City, Mex. Port Arthur, Tex. Imminent In. quitted of wrongful acts and unfair Francisco (Pancho) Villa, commander flux of I. W. W. crusaders, estimated competition In 1918. to total more than 20,000 Thursday of jebel armies in northern Mexico for 'vteq. years, was shot and killed Trio Acquitted of Jury Fixing found this city of 22,000 outwardly Friday morning at 8:30 oclock at his 111. J A ' to the Waukegan, sequel unconcerned. ranch at Canutillo, Durango, by big trial and acquittal of Fred Lundin In - Announcement Trillo, his secretary. Miguel John Shuskie, by Chicago last week was enacted Wedbattle' which4 followed Trillo tfiatt eetSatifhd'sSi'i''lW';York, inEdward nesday the; fioquittkl was killed by men loyal to their slain the has from all pilgrimage begun Courtney, Edward Kaufman and John B. Fields, charged with fixing the over the country, by foot, freight chieftain. More than a hundred casualties jury that freed Governor Len Small train and by sea, in protection of the have occurred in the sanguinary fighton conspiracy charges last year, acrights of three members said to have which followed the shooting of cording to attorneys for the three been spirited away from here and ing Villa by Trillo. men. Indicted in April, Fields, who The latter is said to have become was a member of the jury which ac- severely beaten by unknown parties Thursday found local au- incensed at the former bandit leader quitted the governor in June, 1922, recently, was charged with having accepted thorities volunteering little Informa- and to have fired at him suddenly. tion as to plans for a reception. John The bullets took fatal effect and Villa $350 for his influence "as juror and Kaufman and Courtney were namer Aaron, secretary of the marine trans- died almost immediately. Trio was fired upon by other men as conspirators who attempted to port workers branch, San Francisco, Influence the verdict by unlawful corroborated reports of the pilgrim- near the scene of the shooting and was killed a few minutes later. menas. William Riley, Antioch sa- age. loon keeper, also Indicted, was promWhat was plainly outspoken was Men who had rallied behind Trillo ised Immunity to turn states evidence that arrests will be made of all per- then engaged the loyal Villa troops and testify against the three during sons without visible means of sup- and a general battle occurred withthe trial. The indictment against port. In the event of their convic-tio- in the ranch. Villa had about 800 him will be dismissed, states atas vagrants, it is declared possi- men on the ranch and all were trainble that they will be. assigned to ed in the handling of firearms, having torney's said following the verdict. camwork on road and bridge building followed the chieftain in his the governObregon paigns against Bill Pases Water Wyoming gangs throughout the .county. ment just prior to his surrender and The Wyoming Cheyenne, Wyo. Alleged mistreatment of John Hol- signing of the armistice with Obrein special house of representatives land, LW.W. organizer, which was the gon. session Tuesday passed a bill probeginning of the agitation among the The movement headed by Trillo Is viding for Wyoming representation on marine transport workers branch of said to have been the culmination of a water pact commission similar to will not be taken up ill feeling against Villa on the ranch the Colorado river pact, which com- the organization, until 6, when the due to delay In paying the men and officially August mission shall consist of all states inreconvenes. Holland was the failure of crops because of lack of terested In the waters flowing through grand jury , It Is expected that .the arrested late in June and detained on rain. Wyoming. Villa several times declared that In senate will pass the bill and that the the ground that he was a member of the Industrial Workers of the World. the event of a rebellion he would put special session will then adjourn. His attorney sued out a writ of It down with an Iron hand and in such habeas corpus in the district court at a manner that It would not be repeatSydney Strike Situation Tense and Judge E. A. McDowell ed. Beaumont N. S. The tension In the Sydney, There are immense stores of steel and coal strike area was in- released him, with the declaration and arms at the ranch, where creased Monday when the authori- that membership In that organization ties revealed that a rail had been is not a crime under the Texas Villa lived the life of a feudal baron. He maintained an isolated position, removed on the Sydney and , Louis-bur- g statutes. having his own artillery and avary railway shortly before the passcompanies, and always showing an age of an express and that a boy Skywriter Killed In Crash had been arrested while jamming a Sacramento. Jack B. Gregory, 26, aggressive disposition to hold on to switch with a piece of iron at a spot of Charlotte, N. C., one of the avia- his property acquired when the pace nearby. The tampering was discov- tors who has been writing In the pact was signed. ered In time to prevent an accident. sky at Los Angeles and San FranChihuahua military officials said were not positive cisco recently, was killed late Thurs- Friday that they Fire Sweeps Amusement Resort day near Lake Tahoe when his plane, whether federal forces will be sent to Cincinnati, O. Chester Park, Cin- In which he was traveling) from the scene immediately or not, due to cinnatis largest summer resort was Reno, Nev., to San Francisco, fell, the fact that General Eugenio Marpartly destroyed ty fire, which early according to word brought here Fri- tinez, personal friend of Villa, is said Thursday swept the northeast side of day by Harry Turner, a fellow avia- to be en route to Canutillo to quell the uprising. It was due to the efthe park and attacked the east side tor. forts of General Martinez that a setof the shops of the Cincinnati Car was reached with Villa when tlement Fails the Total park. company, adjoining Army Flier Again chieftain laid down his arms. Rock Springs, Wyo. Battling un- the rebel damage was estimated at $275,000. event In the troops are needed, they flinchingly to the end in his second Commander of Famous Maine Dies race against time to span the Ameri- will be sent Immediately, however, It New York Admiral Charles Dwight can continent between dawn and dusk, was stated. Sigsbee, who commanded the battle- Lieutenant Russell L. Mapghan, army Dock Strike Ended ship Maine, being transferred to the aviator, Thursday had lost again beThe striking dock obwas blown of Liverpool. insurmountable St. Paul after the Maine fore the odds up in Havana harbor. For extraor- stacles which brought him down with workers here returned to work Thursdinary heroism displayed three num- a leaking oil cooler at Rock Springs, day afternoon. The men at Birkenhead are still out but are expected to bers in rank. He was retired Jan- Wyo. No delay Is considered return. forty-eig16, after 1907, uary years In the service. likely on the sailing of wasp Causes Death Victoria, B. C. A sting of a wasp liners. To Probe Insane Wards in the throat of R. S. Vickers, a Many Injured In Mine New York. Following disclosures carpenter, of Saanich, near here, Fourteen persons here Thursday of the brutal treat-m- caused his death Tuesday. The ftasp Clinton, Ind. of patients in the Brooklyn hos- flew into a glass as Vickers was were Injured, some of ther probably pital for the insane, a movement has about to drink lemonade and went fatally, when a mine cage upon which been set on foot looking to local and down his throat with the draught. they were being lowered Into the state Inquiries Into all such Institu- The sting caused the throat to swell shaft of the Vermillion mine, fell to the bottom, a distance of 125 feet. and strangled Vickers. tions throughout the country. or mu-nitio- ht trans-Atlant- et ic pre-scho- ol .tbe-'-Cajo- n- Ca-jo- ot Utah Scientist Dies Salt Lake City. Dr. Orson Howard, 69 years old, former member of the University of Utah faculty, well known Utah educator and scientist and the first graduate from Iowa college died Friday. He was a native of Salt Lake. He had been ill City. Logan. Maxine, 6 years of age, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Watson, was severely scalded from her waist down when she attempted to remove a pan of boiling water from a stove. Logan. .The assessed valuation of for several years following a physical Cache county for 1923 shows a debreakdown while engaged as dean of crease of $89,851 under that of 1922, the school of arts and sciences at the according to recapitulation figures. University of Utah. |