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Show , Ilome-hiaker- earnest who are really s happiness-hunter- WEATHER are s coming. ouite generally. to be intelligent readers of Journal want ads. UTAH: temperature.' VOLUME L. LOGAN, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH, TUESDAY, JULY. 5, 1927. ACCIDENTS AIIIO PRESIDENTIAL ANNIVERSARIES NUMBER 159. SING PRISONERS LEVELED GUNS WHILE Said to Be Die to Mixing Booze and Gasoline Two Victims in Hospital as Result of oh South Collision Main Street. Firecrackers Among Orientals in Los Angeles Brings Out Arrest of Two Dealers Thirty Police Participate. of LOS ANGELES, July 5 (A3) A clash of police ideas of Fouith of July, safety and Oriental conception of a celebration caused a small riot in Los Angeles Chinatown in which a policeman and ' fireman- were handled somewhat roughly before being rescused by the riot squad. , Efforts of tlie officer and the firemen to enforce a city ordinance against the sale of firecrackers moused the ire' of Some of the Chinatown residents and when the riot squad of. 30- policemen arrived, both men had their backs to a brick wall of an alley and were fighting off a mob of a hundred or more Chinese. i CcUvm of all Two Chinese, Bill Hong, 30, anniversaryCoohilge, of greatest and Poy Wong, 22, said to have independence pay - teen leaders of A Vwmoht Ennlifl rtp'V) v , of tlie tinted States, has a birthday tlie presidents nations people patriotic.( - Bignific anee to his u as the farm "where the" thirtieth neai Plymouth place the- attackers, born 4,, 1872, and took the oath as thief executive were arrested on charges of in 1923.' was An ungi ailed village school, typical of the period and locality, illegal sale of firecrackers.1 The furnihhed his earjy si booling in his His first intimation of fiis serious interest in history came policemen, James P. Fogarty year at Ainherst Cocllege, when he won a medal for an essay on and o the fireman. If. RNHoag, senior the causes of the Revolutionary war. After, graduation, "lie entered the received treatment at the re- legal profession and He was a political career at Northampton, .Slass and afterward governor of Massachusetts ceiving x Hospital for minor ml.vor then state senator lie aftentien the Boston - ou-Jul- step-preside- nt J of the country when He attracted the stopped guardsmen, With law and order police strike by tallpuc out the state for a slogan he won a 'second term., Silent Cal, he became when he tffok over .the presidential duties after the death of President Hording.- - Coolidge economy was another phrase cairied over into the present term of office to whiiH he was elected In 1924. Jbruises. Fourth Death Tolls Reported ' CHICAGO, ' July S(P)The sharp decline from old time Independence day death tolls, was shown .agaip this year whqn EARLY fatalities reported directly from Tire works, guns and similar objects used to celebrate the day hovered around the dozen mark. CHECK UP OF RAILROAD WRECK More than 700 persons, were injured however, including 214 r , in hospitals in New York, 100 'in of several .dead and 5. N. Y., NYACK, Reports (P) July Washington, 228 at St. Louis, 35 in Chicago, 15 in Milwaukee, 75 injured in a railroad wreck on the west shore line atJones available ambuthree in Westfield, Mass., and Point brought calls this afternoon for every from 25 to 30 at a celebration in lance from Nyack, Newburgh and Sufforn; N. Y. The report was that a New York, Oiitario and Western railforest thes preserve near road passenger train, with about eight cars, moving at' full Chicago. Strict laws- governing the use of fireworks undoubted- speed southward, had crashed into a "freight train at Jones Point, south of. Bear Mountain. ly helped to hold down the Scenes of great confusion prevented art early checkup of the toll. In Malwaukee a drive against violators of city ordin- dead and injured. ances had counted 1200 arrests over the week end. INVESTIGATE MODE DETAILS t cas-alti- es Among those killed by fire- (Contiuned. on Page Three) , DANIELS VIEWS OF WILSON Governor Refuses Stephenson Freedom INDIANAPOLIS, July 5 (A3) Governor Ed Jackson today approved the recommendation, of the board of prison trustees in denying the requests of tD. C. Stephenson, life prisoner at Michigan City for a 90 day parol. ' . May 16 re. quested that he be, given his freedom temporarily so that he' might take personal charge , of to the Tndiaha his appeal court from the original supreme conviction. He was sentenced in November 1923 to life imprisonment for the murder of Miss Madge Oberholtzer, an Indianapolis' girl The prison trustees, sitting as a parole board, denied, the peStephenson on tition last Friday. Idaho Cherries Bring Good Price EMMETT, Idaho; July 5. from (fp) Idaho Bing cherries 75 cents sold for Emmett valley a pound on the New York martoday ket, producers announced sale of the of notification upon 1100 crates of cherries, repr- AND CABOT LODGE 5 ATHENS, Ga., July If Woodrow Wilson and Henry Cabot Lodge had pictured the other as he 'appeared Lodge would.be a hiephistopheles (A3) and SEE tOTSsSp-hu-? Se addi said . the Southern Institute of Po tics today. ' Speaking at the University of, Georgia on the scholar in politics Woodrow Wilson and Heny Cabit Lodge, Mr. Daniels asserted that bitterness between the two men was more than a historic estrangement. It was an international tragedy, he declared. I call it an international tragedy because if there had been the same oneness of purpose between Lodge and Wilson in 19J8-1- 9 as in their earlier aspirations and at the' time of the Panama tolls fight the United States todaj might be the head of the league of nations and the last peace of the world issued. The two men were fellows in the belief that, the United States should be strong upon the sea and both believed in espeesenting a pool gathered, hotel devotion to treaty obligations, Wrk New the for cially to Mr. Daniel said, but in every growers trade. Net earnings as far were $3.60 per 15 pound crate other position were or 24 cents a pound. .The hand apart as thep oles ' as they were leaders of opposition press carload of special to rushed was' cherries t parties picked New York on passenger train. Senator Lodge in his book ' time to furnish New workers drew a caricature of a self cen 'with the seasons first tcotteeta . cherry delicacy. e' DISCUSSING WAGE Navy of Any Other Nation. GENEVA, July 5 (A5) 1 he American delegation submitted new total tonnage figures for cruisers at today's secret session cl the tripartite naval conference. Although official confirmation is lacking it is under-toothat the United States in a spirit of compromise and iiva genuine attempt to meet Great Biitairs experessed needs in an incruisers, has sugge-tecrease in the maximum tonnage for Great Britain and the United States so that the new total would be in the neighborhood of 400.000 tons.1 This is 100,000 tons more than was indicated in the orig-- . inal American maximum proposal, and roughly come-pondto the existing strength of tfie ) British cruiser fleet. s , plehipot-eniaries-t- o. 4 ; I lie also picked up a. flask that had contained liquor, that had teeh thrown from the ' Collins car. L. S. Nuhn of Hyrum. had - 3 DROl'JR bSHINING, N. Y., July 5. Held in their prison yard by the leveled guns of guards, 1200 convicts at Sing Sing prison were forced to stand helplessly by while three youths in a canoe drowned in the swirling waters of the Hudson a few feet away. Many convicts clamored for permission to go. to the rescue, the'guards, who feared the Senator Hale Declares but men might take advantage of United States Navy the opportunity to escape, Will Never Submit to threatened to shoot the first who tried to scale the Be Subordinated By man fence. The experts adjourned alhospital. Mr- - Egbert, hearing most immediately to hermit the the crash, ran down the street British and Japanese and identified the Collins car study the hevyipro- as' the one that struck Mr. Williams. be dispensed: (A3) , PREVENTS - There may have been several minor automobile accidents on the Fourth, but only one, serious one has teen reported, and that occurred on South Main street last evening as a result, it is claimed, of mixing liquor and gasoline. It is stated that two men; Lv II. Collins of Logan, and William Rice - of Providence, with Collins at the wheel, driving at a furious pace and while under the influence of intoxicants, struck a pedestrian, Mr, Williams, formerly of Hyrum but now of Ogden, as he was crossing the street, at second South and Main, hurling him about twenty feet according to S. R. Egbert, who witnessed the acci- dent. Then according to the same authority, instead of stopping as required by law Collins gag an(j g0jng at an even faster rate a block south, struck a fine new Viele sedan driven by Frank Durfey of Beaver Dam, with such force that both cars were badly wfeek ed. In this collision Rice, who was riding with Collins, 'was receiving severely injured, severe scalp wounds and bruises, and a four year old son of Mr. Durfey received a number of bruises. Both were taken to a IEQAL1U HELD BY GUARDS WITH AT BAY Sale Fair tonight and little change' in Wednesday; Ptga Three) (ConUuaed on - Flax Wilt Fungus Evolves to Match Tricks of Breeders The youths were not identified and today a search was under way to recover their bodies. The convicts were having their early morning exercise yesterday when the accident occurred. - A 12 foot iron bar fence separates the prison yard from the river and through this the men peered at the drowning struggles of the boys. Warden Lewis E. Lawes defended the action of the guards. He pointed out that only a few weeks ago a prisoner pleaded for a chance to rescue another convict who supposedly had fallen into the water. When the "drowning man was pulled out he was found supported by two inner tire tubes, Warden Lawes declared, and it later developed the two men were brothers. The warden nevertheless expressed regret tiat he had not teen present when the youths were struggling for life as he would have had the- authority to allow a "volunteer convict to attempt a rescue. t were Many, of the convicts incensed over the action of the guards and revited ttem after, the drownings. Some of them refused to eat their ctiicken dinner, one of the three special meals of the year at the prison. Several guards vainly sought a boat or a rope, but there was no boat at the wharf and when a rope finally was obta.ucd it - ( Distinguished Flyer Already Has Most of Awards Accorded to Other Aviators Plans Not Yet Sent to Washington on Homcoming WASHINGTON, July 2 (A3) , The wholesale awarding 'of medals which marked the re turn of Lindbergh, probably will be dispensed with on the ' of ' Commander homecoming Byrd because he already has most (f the important aeronautical research and geographical honors. v Secretary Wilbur will recommend tlie distinguished fly- -, ing cross for the commander, this being one of the awards he was to, receive for' flying across the north pole. At that time the cross had not teen authorized by congress. Byrd now holds the con- -, gressional medal of honor, the Hubbard medal given through the national geographic society for exploration, and many other medals and citations. k , So far there has teen no concerted movement here to stage for the erewt of the Amer- - . ica any such demonstration as that given for Lindbergh, - ugh the Byrd reception here is expected to be an enthusiastic one, especially in i z naval circles. u Naval officials are awaitin'! with great Interest the report of )iis flight which' Byrd has ' promised to prepare for them. officers expect to Aviation gain much information from this report which will be of value in naval aeronautics. Byrds plans for returning home have not yet been j comto Washington ofmunicated When the question of ficials. a possible trip back on a warship was discussed last week naval officials said it was too early to go into the question Of an official reception here. . 4 meantime picked up the first victim, Mr, Williams, and conST. PAUL, July .5 SS-'- Has veyed him to another hospital, where he was found to have sus- the parasite fungus that causes tained fractures of both legs. the destructive wilt disease of flax been evolving under our was too lace. (Con tiuned on Page Three) very noses, to meet the handicap imposed by the breeding of Small Boys Rescue CITIZENS resistant strains of its host Parachute Jumper Invite Men to Club plant? Or have the special Suitor Days Only fungus strains been in existence TACOMA, Wash., July 5. out to sorted be al only lalong, F rescued Four small (A3) OF HEAUNG USED and detected now that the new .Stub Campbell, boys Chicago July 5 (av--a daredevil per club to which men will flax varieties have teen BY;;';' former and country parachute jumper, be admitted - as guests only halted. These are the J s from a watery death here IN LOS ANGELES CANAL confronting plant Par' tenlay when they picked him twice a month has teen given to ology experts at the University ou Commencement bay, in- women employes erf the InterLOS ANGELES, July 5 farm here. to which he had descended in a national Harvester company by Alexander Legge, president. a Miles Down From about 19Qo until investigation to determine Thirty-On- e parachute jump in the dark, threatened wilt It is a memorial to Katherine flax ago, af-. years whether proper care has teen Stream From Where rescue,as effected late wife of the execu- to wipe out flax growing- in ter three Legee, had Swept given . Mrs. Clara Drummond, live. Was First many regions of the United the bay forspeedboats Automobile more than an hour h f ninetv F A specious clubhouse in modTheip resistant" flax for him. After being revived Located in New York States. came wide ern into use, varieties Englishstyle and 53 acres said he had become Canal After Accident and production increased again, Campbell of afrolling, partly wooded land in the parachute to entangled considerable constitute the Last profit had yvith and project. Member-- . the ter water, Friday. striking city health officer northwestern farmers. Bat the about given up hope because it ship is open only to feminine Dr, Parrish announced his inBOISE, July 5 (A3) -- The body disturbing fact has developed preVented him from swimming. workers of the harvester com- tention of opening the inquiry of E. H. Little, Boise, trucking that resistant flax varieties Campbell is over 60 years old. pany. Its facilities include teninto the treatment being given contractor, w'hose car- - crashed have in some regions shown nis courts, an outdoor . swimMrs. Drummond in a private into the New York canal the themselves more or less susming pool and a .large ballLeatherwood On room. hospital because numerous com- night of June 27, was discov- ceptible to the disease, and Way to Orient Men are admitted to the plaints had been lodged at the ered this morning by Oren .Hat- thoitgh part of this could be health department office. club only on suitor days. field, ditch rider, five miles blamed on- the weather and The city health officers said southwest of Kuna in the Mora other outside factors, not alj of MANILA, July 5(P)-Sev- en T it was because of the number canal. Searchers are continuing the trouble could be traced to members of the United States Love Affair Ends house of representatives arrived of hero plaints that the- - investi- to drag the canals of the Boise these causes. in Two Deaths gation is to be made. Most of project for the body ofjMrs. Tests rece ntl y m a d e JyW- C. here today aboard the army brief for a Thomas the- - complaints, it Was said, Little, drowned with' her h us- - Brbadfoot of the" Minnesota ex- transport were made upon assertion that band, and the body ofi Vella periment station show that the stop here on their way to China VALLEJO, Cal, July 3(A) Dr. W. J. Peacock was at- Kent, 18, Boise, who was flax wilt fungus species is di- and' Japan. Jealousy wras blamed today for tempting to bring Mrs, Drum- - drowned yesterday when a car vided up into at least ninei The party included Ilepie- - a love tragedy here which cost Kansas ; the lives of Mrs. Vina Smith 29, in which she was an occupant separate strains, or soc ailed sentatites Strong of ,Lehlbach (Contiuued on Page Thtee) of and John Bingham, a sailor atTennessee; e Byrns were forms. into the from a ditch plunged physiologic They of New Jersey; Drain of .Florida tached to the Mare Island navy New the canal. determined York relative by Balloons Making of Utah; Simmons yard, and may cause the death Littles body was recovered amount of injury they caused Leatherwood of of Edward Bentel, a rigger who and- Arnold of Nebraska in Air Record Stay 31 miles down the canal system on four varieties of flax, col' Illinoisv' was the third member , of , the Lit- lected from Minnesota, North ' DETROIT, July 5.(A) The from the point where the ' triangle. Iiome-Boise Mountain car and tle left the Saskatchewan Dakota, Mrs. Smith was shot to death Goodyear IV, 'one of the five It may be that highway, the body hav Manitoba. balloons which took off from and Bentel was possibly fatally the Ford airport here late yest- - ng traveled 18 miles down the further examination of other1 wounded by Bingham who killed 13 will miles New York and canal flax varieties disclose still, erday in the annual Detroit; down himstlf attacking the the Mora canal. other physiologic forms of the, OGDEN, July 5. (Ah After a other twoafter News trophy race .landed shortin Mrs. Smiths apartf Mrs. Little disap- parasite. , Mr. and . ly afternoon today near Stouts-villdrenching shower in the after- - ment last night. . of Tliis to June contlie woid 27, peared discovery Ohio, according very night noon Ogtlens Fourth of July The police declared Bingham m received here. The flight dis- leaving a two year old child in; s iderabljr-eopheates the prob- - temperature rapidly declined, bad become enrayed tance was approximately 183 the care of Mrs. Littles sister. lem of developing flax, varieties until a low point of 39 degrees apparently because Bentel had taken Mrs. miles. Walter that will completely defy the, wan reached in the night. TH Snlith for an automobile ride the pilot. Jw hen a watermaster discovered disease, and may .require the! was the coolest since June 1. and had awaited with a gus Other competitors were still the Little car Submerged in the: breeding 6? Special strains Lthfeir return .rfo the Highest yesterday nsi st in the air, late reports indicated - . New York cam!, ' nAtmation in each remon, (A3)-A- I n yes-no- w - pj. 7 - - - -- - . . e, - I |