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Show V You cant sell it' if people' dont know it is for sale. A SerJ it yczr: gtt tks yon wi3 little For Sale ad in this paper will tell them all about It A few cents will sell it VOLUME XLIIL TURKS LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, HiSTI UTililtlUIEKUiSMLSH OFiSIHUSEnS BAITING Bridegrobm, Murderer of Serenader 0 DUQUOIN, 111.. Oct. 8 Lloyd Stanton- young bridebroom of Murphysboro, leaves this week And Clash May Occur for the Chester penitnetiary to his term of one year to At Any Time The begin life for the killing of Ellery Gray Kemalists Persist In 16 years of age, on the of Their Provoking Tac- - Stanton's wedding a few night months tics-rBrit- ish Blow. Up ago. Gray, with others,1 com; Some posed a charivari party. .Ston-to- n Bridges became incensed at the af(By Associated Press) fair and fired- killing Gray - - in- CM Of Rev. Hall And Mrs. Mills lie Mistook Them For His. Sweetheart And Her, Companion And Shot Them To Death (By Associated Press) A British destroyer anchored Sun- MRS. PHILLIPS day cn the Black sea coast and and the Commander went ashore DENIES HER GUILT and met a Nationalist officer with-dnaand requested him to his forces. The Turkish officer (By Associated Press) LOS ANGELES, Oct.d). Mrs replied he had orders to remain And the British Commander de- Clara Phillips, awaiting trial cn Oct 23 for the murder of Mrs. clared he also would re chain. Alberta Tremaine Meadows, a 20 year cld widow who was beatSECRETARY FAIL en to death with a. hammer, has made to newspaper men the first ON A .VACATION tpointbiairk xfeniaPexcepl 'whbfi she pleaded in court that she was not guilty of the crime. I never (By Associated Press) struck the blow which killed AlWASHINGTON, Oct 9. Se- berta Meadows, Mrs. Phillips tocretary Fall left Washington is quoted! as saying neither did at home his Three to visit day I strike the first blow, it was Rivers. at that point she checked herself Later he will make a tour of and refused to finish the stateInspection of Interior Depart- ment. ment activities and of the public - . lands of the West. He expects to be gone several weeksYoung Venetian Girl w o ; - CHICAGO, Oct. 9. Mr. afternoon. The public is invited to attend this meeting and a special invitation is extended to the business men to be present and hear Mr. Howard, who is a national character. . Mr. Howard is one of the leading farmers of the state of Iowa. He is not only a farmer but a leader in manj activities. Mr. Howard made an address at Salt Lake City last week and created hnepmpresst m. He is a very forceful and1 impressive talker and leaves an impression where-everiappears. . SUPREMECOURT (By Associated Press) Locates Hidden Springs IN JAPAN (By Associated Press) ROME, Oct., 9. Augusta Del Pio Luogo, a beautiful girl of des- Venice, is looking forward to a (By Associated Press) TOKIO, Oct- 9. Fire has troyed the chemical laboratory of the Imperial University With all instruments and books. The loss is estimated ait two million yen: The mills and warehouses of a milling company near Tokio also were burned. The estimated mildamage is three and a. half lion yenv - - GREATFURSALE ATSU0U1S (By Associated Press) ST. LOU 16, Oct. 9 Furs with mil(an estimated value of three o lion dollars were put on the auction block by the Fouke Fur Com .here top&ny and a subsidiary seventeen include The pelts day. thousand Alaskan seal skins which utc to be sold tor the ernment The buyers Particularof the ly from, the Eastern partof pelts country report scarcity this year which they say will make the market steady and strong- - Score of Persons Hurt In Roller Coaster Crash LOS ANGELES. Calif., Oct. 8. A score of persons were ina jured, several seriously, when two-c- ar roller coaster on the Lin- coln park scenic .railway here to-jumped the track in a tunnel night. The passengers, including three women and several sailors of the Pacific fleet, were hurled against the tunnels wooden sides. Fortunately the Irain was on the home stretch and its acspeed Was not great when the cident took place. 111 ' y. -- - , (By Associated Prees) WASHINGTON, Oct. A 9. rehearing of the Corortado coal case was denied by the Supreme court today. . railroad. (By Associated Press)' WASHINGTON, Oct, nations corn crop has been ' decreased by twenty one millions six hundred thousand bushels during September, presumably dut to drought, according to the department of Agriculture forecast of production based on the condition at the end of the month. . j The spring wheat crop is estimated by the department' at two hundred and sixty mtilioft, 9The -- DENIES REHEARINGS 4 Plants Grow And Seed Without Daylight six-da- y BIG FIRES OCCUR i , The Coronado coal company asked to have reviewed that part of the decision which held that the United Mine Workers union and certain individuals had not been guilty of restraint . of . trade., The Supreme court today deof the engine and carried for nied the rehearing in the case more than a quarter of a mile. brought by the United States 4 and in which it directed the Southern Pacific company to divorce itself of ownership and Mining Congress Will control of the Central Pacific CLEVELAND, O., Oct., 9. The American Mining Congress, session which , opens a here today in its quarter centennial convention, will consider not only labor matters but technique of operation, angles of finance and the question of governmental supervision and taxation as they effect the coal industry and production of metals. Three thousand delegates are expected to attend the congress. The congress, one of the most influential of American trade associations, was founded in Colorado twenty-fiv- e years ago. For ten years it embraced mainly the metal mine operators of the west, but with the opening of headquarters in Washington 10 years ago it took in the coal in David I. Walsh, of Massachusetts VjJ will be the. Speaker iaf a Big Democratic .rally and meeting to be held tomorrow evening at the High School. The meeting wiir commence at 8:15 oclock as Senator .Walah. will arrive only shortly, before that' hour having to tome from . Mohtanla, where he is speaking tonight. Senator Walsh is a great statesman nd a big man in the United States Senate. He comes from T gidaUstaTe and he cornes' to u rgfethe voters of 'Utab to returif United States Senator William H. King to that body because Senator King is badly needed by the. progressive forces of the coun-tr-- ie Har- Convene In Cleveland Its Decision As To. Priority In Water Ap-- . Hurts proprfatiDns . By, , TJNITED ' . James R. Howard, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, will talk at the Utah Agricultural college chapel Tues riet Margot of Chicago and six of her seven small children were killed almost instantly today at Wheeler, Ind., five miles from Valparaiso, when a Pennsylvania flier plowed into their stalled machine, while the father, a son and a friend tried frantically to push'the cal from the path of the train. .The-carjwijta seven passengers was picked up on the pilot Supreme Court United States . r s, ! President of Americah Brilliant Orator and Statesmah of Massachusetts Farm Bureau FederaComes to Address Cache County Voters. On n i i tion To Address Business Men, Farmers and Public.At Agricultural SPATES .senator College a I' MINNEAPOLIS, MINN-- ' Oct. Plants will flourish without daylight. Although ancient agricultural people worshipped the sun as the all powerful source of life for the grains they raised, Dr. R,B. Harvey of the University of Minnesota has discovered that when artificial illumination is made to entirely supplant the sunlight wheat, oats, barley, rye, 9. three hundred And fourteen thousand bushels , which, compared with j the ..forecasts a month ago, ,ot , two , .hundred and seventy, seven million bush-el- s. Senator Walsh is one of the most wonderful speakers I have ever heard said Mrs. Weston Vernon of this city today after hearing Senator Walsh at Salt Lake City Saturday night He is a wonderful speaker, a very plain man who lowers l.imsclf to the level of every one of his lint eners. He has fought for the com mon pebple on the floor of the United States Senate and he 'is still fighting for them. Logan and Cache county people should feel highly honored to have such a big national figure as Senator 'Walsh here to address them, Mrs. Vernon continued. Senator Walsh was cheered by thousands of people who heard him talk at the Salt Lake Tbea. tre at Salt Lake Saturday night He made a wonderful Impression at that time and immediately efforts were made to get him to Lo gan for a meeting here this week Tuesday night was selected as that is the only taime the senator wijl be able to be here., h Senator Walsh is touring the country t his own expense jn the interest of the Democratic party. He urges the election to the senate of progressive and faerless men such as Senator King of Utah who has made a splendid record in the six years he has served there. , Colorado f j ,1 r (By Associated Press) , .WASHINGTON, Oct. 9. The Supreme court today denied the applicatiorroC the State ,"of Colo- -' radcr and other&ior a rehearing of the original case brought py the State of Wyoming involving a division of the waters of the Laramie river and in which the court fixed the rule that priority of appropriation is the con- -, trolling factor the right to the use of water streams taken from inter-stat- e but ordered certain minor . changes in the decree, ' 4 Press)' 7 DENVER, Oct. 9 The ' al by the United States Supreme court of Colorados appeal for a rehearing in the Laramie river case will result in a final lose to northern Colorado of approximately thirty thousand acre feet of water claimed by the state from the Laramie river for the future development of thousands of acres of land lying principally in Weld county, according to a state-- 1 ment made today by Victor Keyes, attorney general of (By Associated de-ni- 1 Colorado. ' - STILL PARLEYING ; JT ; By Associated Press) MUDANIA Oct , 9 Allied The department ' forecast of Generals here for attendance up the corn crop is two billion on the armistice , conference eight hundred and fifty three million three hundred and ninespent this morning in conference with the Greek delegation. The ty nine thousand bushels in conference with Ismet - Pasha, comparison with a total of two Arrangements for Senator Turkish Nationalist representabillion eight hundred seventy million bushels forecast at tne Walshs meeting tomorrow night tive is to be resumed at 3 oclock are being made by the county this afternoon. Delegates met , end of August. --4 committee officers together with informally last night postponing . Mrs. Vernon, who is national the final decision until this afterCuban Fencers Training committeewoman from Utah. A noon. . great c rowrd of people are expectto hear him. The general pubFor 1923 Tournament ed lic, regardless of political affilia Simrivcrs of tions, is invited to j attend the , meeting. HAVANA, Cuba, Oct. 9," Chicago Fire Honored their elated victory by Highly last May over picked swordsmen CHICAGO, Oct., 9, Thirteen from the New York Athletie club of the fifteen surviving firemen Cuban fencers have begun trainwho fought the great Chicago ing and are arranging elimina187 attended a dinner fire of tion bouts to pick a teairi for the in their honor today by given international tournament to ,be Retired Firemen associathe held in Havana next February. tion v Pio Alonso, one of Cuba most ' fifty-firwas Yesterdv the Associated , Press) By noted masters at arms, is in KANSAS CITY, Oct, 9 Cat- anniversary of the day when charge of the preliminary work. -tle 34,G00r Market Mrs. 0 Learys famous row Reports from the United States beef receipts to 15 cents kicked over, the lantern that steers steady says that the Amateur Fencing Most started the fire that, practically $10.75. rtop lower; early League, of America, which has ' to consumed a city , $5. cows, $3.75 the Cuban accepted, challenge to 11 ,000. MarHogs receipts engage in Februrary tournament ket 5 to 15 cents higher; top Flier Captures has discovered that interest in bulk of sales $8.90. to Navy fencing in the United States in $9.65; $9.60. increasing and that new fencing - Sheep receipts 10,000. MarCurtis Trophy Race masters have been imported ket lambs cents 25 to steady from Europe to develop latent Colorados $13.75. higher. Prime ' American talent, DETROIT, Mich., Oct.. ' 9. ; Lieuteant The Cuban team that met the A. W. Gordon, U S N, New Yorkers last spring while Former Boston Boxer won the Curtis, marine flying composed of experts, was not rep trophy race here yesterday with resentalive of the republic, for Anxious to Meet an average speed for the eight A Meyers twenty-mule lack of time prevented the holdlaps of 112.65 miles ing of adequate elimination an hour. Eight planes-piloteby,, bouts. Under present conditions POCATELLO, Oct., ,Joe T, aviators of the uavj and marine elimination bouts will be held Adams, formerly of Boston, who corps started, every Saturday, winners' names hag been boxing in the northLieutenant H. AElibtt. navy, will be posted, and they will be west for the past year without won second plate, and lieutenforced to accept challenges from a defeat, is anxious to meet ant L. II: Sanderson of the maother winners. The members of,Spug Myers of Pocatello. Adam8 rine corps won the pnze tor the 1922 team will have the right states he will make any weight best average speed in the air: compete with the final winner Myers asks. Adams has defeat: & The race was not so much a of the elimination contests for ed. Muff Bronson, Roy Conley . speed event as a contest demandthe honor of representing Cuba Eddie Huse, George Kelley, al ing good piloting. One of the in 1923. Bill Renko, Georgie 'difficult manuevering feats Biddle, ' Sailor Macobee, Milijauired was that the end vpf Harry Kerns and oth- the fifth, sixth and seventh laps WHEAT AND CORN Johnson, era. In a recent fight with Pete leach pilot should Bring his tpa-- ! Bross Adams was outweighed chsine down to the water aid (By Associated Press) by twenty pounds but managed taxi over a 1,200 foql stretch' Manager before taking a hairfifi turn CHICAGO, Oct. 9Decem-be- r to cecure a' draw wheat $1.074,. Stonecipher of the ' Pocatello again taking the air. Com sixty twy and club will try to arrange a date Gordon; winner. of the t for the two g boys .who was one, J Great, Jill'S w T - - - -- ATTJUDAIIIA period of profitable and pleas-an- e employment. Italy is particularly interested just now in two things, the location of petroleum, for all the world wants oil, and the finding of water, for lettuce, potatoes, buckwheat, the drought of the past two sum clovers, radishes, peas, beans, mere is said to bo but the beginflax, and a number of common ning of a- long dry spell. To weeds will grow, ripen, and proAugusta Del Pio Luogo is ascribduce good quality seeds which ed the ability to locate the dewill germinate. posits, within the earth, of both A speeding up in the growth oil and water, and her successes " of the grain is a consequence of have been so remarkable that dustry, this method. Spring wheats! her services are being sought by Herbert Hoover, secretary of were made to produce ripe seed is the honorary chair in abcut companies interested in oil pro commerce, ninety days of continman this ,of year's convention. uous lighting and at this rate, it duction and irrigation. W. J. Loring of San Francisco is Augusta first noticed her abilis believed- it will now be possiof the congress. president ity when a child. When walking ble to grow three generations in the country she would notice from a cross within one year little shocks passing from her Plant breeders and agronomists feet to her head, causing her will find this method cf practidistinct pain. In 1909 she me cal use- Dr. Harvev believes. a famous water diviner, Chiabre The eneigy used bv the ordinra, and found that his divining ary greenhouse in Minnesota in rod acted as well for her as it the winter time is sufficient to did for him. A year later she produce all the light and heat went to Argentine and, making necesrary for such exoeriments, use of her powers, indicated a it is stated. Nearly all the enernumber of places where water gy of the light finally becomes would be found, sometimes at a heat and thus is made to serve depth of 600 feet. In each case experiments Dr ' Harveys water was found, but in pome were performed in three unheatinstances it turned out to be ed basement rooms and illuminsalt. ation for the experiments was Back in Italy after the war obtained from tungsten filament of Augusta, In the presence two engineers, has located not nitrogen filled lamps whichawere hours day. burned twenty-fou- r only water, but petroleum and was found, to of set lamps One no She of pyrites.. deposits last l.ng enough to produce an longer uses thediving rod, but clop of the cereals. chronometer. ordinary is said thus a It Government experts found equipped she can tell with re- American waters will give rise that artificial ago several year to no international i at complications markable'accuracy the depth be used as a illumination might which the water will be discover- according to the view expressed for daysubstitute time Dart Office ofBritish the Foreign ed, and whether it is scanty cr by shown that now is ' , this winter, it but the race execr t,r? ficials today. They say thegov- light, abundant. e be bloomed j iott. electric no may and cabbage, the lights is variety the 4 attitude that piloted kifaw enynents an the plane, powetTd with ployed to entirely take, the place Many locomotive engineers re' matter Is one m which 'period of illumination to produce .transatlantic service has crossed power, Lawrei.cN as. unlucky to enter thei United States has a light to f sunlight gard I oxsept tested, All the blooming. action ed rrKtor, . on sees plants it take any fit ,the ocean ,550 tie. cab w ith tW left foot first. ' V.i . cx - i . , , , $V. f i - mbw E CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct- 9. stantly. Stanton was found guil- NEW BRUNSWIG, Oct. 9. Clifford Hayes, 19 years eld an Turkish National troops yester- ty of manslaughter. RahmerAyhd Reeder-William of Gorham, day resumed their advance in Edward 6'DaFdaheIIesareaTin' thedir Wheeler Mrs. Hall and Eleanor he testified had not read a newsection of Chanalv the British in ten years and knew no- Mills a choir singer, was arrestpaper ed today and formally charged stronghold according to a Mud-ani- thing of the case. w ith first degree murder for the dispatch to local newspapslayings. According to Raymond ers. It was reported that Turkish GERMANMARK Schneider, who the prosecutors irregulars had appeared yestersay, signed a statement accusing day a short distance from Beik-othe crime, the double STILL TUMBLING Hays ofwas a suburb, of Constantinople the result of mistak slaying en identity, Schneidef said he eight miles above the American had gone cut with Hayes on the naval anchorage. The British are NE (By Associated Pjss) W YORK,,Ooct. 9 Ger- night of the killing trailing a entrenched ground Beikbs. The man marks sold here swompamed tt Turkish irregulars and a small less than four cents ataritay- for mer the couple be- Seeing girl. hundred, .band of guerillas and bandits the he said Hayes on neath the record: The tree, price which frequently form the adquotation ranged from opened fire. , vance guard of the Turkish army opening three and three quarters to four have appeared in small villages cents. The price was East of Constantinople. The Bri- twenty threeprewar and three tenths Seven Killed When Flier final made tish yesterday prepar of a cent each ations for the defense by blowHits Stalled Automobile ing up bridges at cross roads A - c: 16 - If . t nuu: MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1922. Goes to prison . tdi This prrcr about EilzL!j tkm is tetter tkiu it . c Z- -l st , r one-eigh- th. hard-hittin- the-cab- , . . em-th- seemsto-require-any-particu- laV - n -- re-Bro- |