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Show - ? - SOUTH CACHE COURIER HYRUM, UTAH With one man dead beneath a racing automobile and another in custody following a siiecfacular holdup of the Jackson street postoffice at Dallas, Texas, in which two postal clerks were shot and a federal reserve bank shipment stolen, additional arrests are expected. Six men participated in the robbery. Adeline Fisher is dead as a result of injuries received when a bellclapper fell upon her as the bell was ringing for recess at the school she attended at Weston, Neb. The farmers of America stand ready to give enough corn to appease the hunger all over the world, if the people of cities and towns will transport it to the mouths of the starving, President J. R. Howard of the American Farm Bureau federation declared at Chicago. WASHINGTON. The president and even senators and representatives might have to take to the streets to enjoy a cigar, cigarette or a pipe as an aid to statesmanlike reflections, if a bill offered by Senator Smoot becomes a law. It forbids smoking in government departments or any independent establishment of the government as a fire protection measure. Death penalty for persons convicted of committing crimes by the use of weapons was proposed Saturday by Representative Summers of Texas, as a means of checking crime. He said such action was necessary to make human life more secure. Nearly 40 per cent of the discharged disabled veterans of the world war are suffering from some form of mental derangement, according to estimates made on the basis of public health service reports by Assistant Secretary of the Treasury LaPorte. Over the protest of the majority of its military affairs committee, the senate on January 14 passed the resolution directing the secretary of war to cease army recruiting until the size of the regular army is cut down to 150,000 men. Mrs'. Clara Sears Taylor, member of the Washington rent commission through appointment by President Wilson, has suggested that congress levy a tax on bachelors. FOREIGN. What the police allege to be another big Sinn Fein plot to destroy property in London was uncovered in court at London, when Patrick Kenney, an Irishman, was charged with participating in an attemp- t- to murder two policemen and trying to ignite barrels of oil on the premises of the Vacuum Oil company, where 60,000 barrels, containing 2,500,000 gallons of oil, are stored. There are' 115,000 tubercular children in Vienna, acording to a statistical study of the child health situation there, made by the American Red Cross. Of this number, it was said that 16,000 were in urgent need of surgical treatment. President Obregon contemplates an immediate reorganization of his cabinet which will affect at least seven portfolio, it is said by newspapers at Mexico City. Newspapers declare the changes are merely a readjustment such as was predicted when the personnel of the cabinet was first announced. Japan has agreed to au indemnity as a result of the killing of Lieutenant Warren S. Langdon of the U. S. S. Albany In Vladivostok by a Japanese sentry, it is understood at Manila. The matter is before the foreign office at Tokio. The Philippine senate has passed a bill providing for flotation of ten million dollars of bonds' in the United States. Funds thus raised will be spent in construction of irrigation systems and other permanent public works. Severe fighting between Bedouins and Druses in Syria is reported in a Cairo dispatch to the Central News. The Druses are said to have lost 1301) killed, but it is asserted that fhe remnants of their forces are preparing for a The Greeks have made another importance advance in their offensive against the Turkish nationalists on the Brussa front in Asia Minor, according to the Greek legation at LonEight-year-ol- d The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed o INTERMOUNTAIN. J. F. Kramer, wlo pleaded guilty at Spokane to a cliarge of manslaughter in connection with the death of Charles Soper, whom he ran over with his automobile, was sentenced to thirty days imprisonment and fined $250. Kramer admitted he had taken a few drinks before the accident. The Portland post of the American legion is asking the Oregon legislature to allow Oregon men the of for of serveach month $25 option ice in the world war, or $3000 farni or home loan. No trace of the mail steamer Joseph Pulitzer, missing in Alaska waters since December 18, lias been found after a weeks search by the coast guard cutter Snohomish, according to advices received at Seattle. The war department has no idea whatever of abandoning Fort Douglas, Utah, as an active military post, but, on the contrary, proposes whenever the detail of troops along the Mexican border is reduced, to increase its garrison to full regimental size, it is announced. One child was burned to death and another suffocated when fire destroyed the home of Arthur Burgener in Empire canyon at Park City, Utah. Four bandits fought a pistol duel with policemen at Seattle, resulting in the fatal wounding of Patrolman V. L. Stevens. They were captured. Two of the bandits were wounded. A beautiful young woman who man, rushes up to an unsuspecting throws her arms about his neck, kisses him vigorously and then picks the pockets of the surprised but happy victim, is the latest mode of robbery to be reported in Denver. ' DOMESTIC. Sadie Harrington of Danville, Ills., broke her fast Saturday, after abstaint days. ing from food for Mrs. Harrington was fasting, to force her husband to join the Church of God. Ernie Harrington, thejiusband, has steadfastly refused 'to join the church. Two of four bandits who attempted to hold up the East Side bank in an outlying district of Kansas City were wounded by a shot and seriously motorcycle patrolman who waited in the bank. Police had received a tip that a robbery was planned. His body hacked nearly to pieces, John Dagg, 60, wealthy cattleman, was found in the ruins of a room at his home near Alvin, Texas. The room had been set fire to cover the crime. William G. McAdoo, Jr., has been elected vice president of the Marion County State bank at Florence, Kan., and will be actively connected with the banking house. At the same time he will attend to some oil interests he has in this field. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Danmiann and the latters father, all residing near Grand Island, Neb., were killed when the automobile in which they were riding was struck by a Union Pacific motor train. Mrs. Louis Green, 38, and her three boys, aged 1, 3 and 6, were burned to house death, when their little was destroyed by fire on the outskirts of Chadron, Ohio. After several practice shots at the family cat, Irving Morton of Muskegon, Mich., forced his wife to become his target and spent thirty minutes in firing twelve shots into her body, according to the police. Then he turned the rifle on himself and fired once, dying instantly. Mrs. Morton may recover. Blindness caused by wood alcohol 0 was the ground for a verdict of damages returned In circuit court at Chicago in favor of Sam Greenberg. The award, which was said to be the first of its kind in Chicago courts, was against the saloon partnership of Cohen & Aitken. Four sacks of registered mail, one reported to have contained $80,000 for use in making up payrolls at Franklin county coal mines, were stolen at Mt. Vernon, 111. Forty miners were rescued from (he fume filled shaft No. 8 mine of the Old Ben Coal corporation near West Franklin, 111. Ten were seriously injured and taken to hospitals. The Rev. Edgar Page Stites, author of Beulah Land and other hymns, was buried at Cape May, N. J., MonHe was 84 years old and In day. was a Delaware river pilot. life early From 1870 to 1890 he was a Methodls' i missionary In Dakota. forty-eigh- two-roo- m $30,-00- aTrxr t o i 300-poun- d counter-offensiv- - e. don. The authorities in Egypt are said to have discovered another conspiracy similar to that of the Avengers sosociety, ciety, ,tn alleged uncovered last fall, says an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Cairo. The Russian soviet government has . decreed a warning to all strikers that unless they return to work immediately they will be imprisoned for terms of from one to five years and that their families will be deprived of food cards. The wearing of monocles by officials or members of the security police at Berlin is forbidden In an order issued recently, on the ground that It is an "affection and a reminder of the days. anti-Britis- h mon-frcbl- al ABLE TO I Ill HOUSE FOREIGN AFFAIRS DO HER WORK COM-MITTE- E HAS PLAN TO INSURE PEACE. PERMANENT After Long Suffering Mrs. Siefert Was Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable DELEGATES AT NATIONAL DISCUSS PLANS FOR YEARS WORK. . Compound Would Authorize President to Invite Will Endeavor to Secure the Protection of a Tariff and Will Investigate All Nations to Send Delegates MarMeasures of to Conference to Consider and Manufacturing. keting Ways and Means. Washington. Steps looking toward disarmament were taken on January 15 by the house foreign affairs committee, which reported a resolution authorizing President Wilson to invite all nations to send delegates to an international conference to consider ways and means. Although all members of the committee voted for the proposal, Democrats objected to its adoption now, on the ground that it might embarrass the president. They contended it was a question which should be considered by President-elec- t Harding. Chairman Porter, an advocate of the movement. Insisted, however, that it was the desire to have the resolution ready for Mr. Harding if Mr. Wilson did not act on it. Representative Brooks (Rep.) of Illinois, author of the resolution, announced that efforts would be made to expedite its consideration by the house. There was no Indication of any movement to get together with the senate, which has pending a resolution by Senator Borah (Rep.) of Idaho, providing for armament reduction by the United States, Great Britain and Japan, and a resolution by Senator Walsh (Dem.) of Montana, authorizing the president to appoint a member of the disarmament commission of the league of nations. BANK ROBBERS FRUSTRATED. Police Tipped Off and Lay Trap for Bandits. Kansas City. Two of four bandits who attempted to hold up the East Side bank in an outlying district here Saturday were shot and seriously wounded by a motorcycle patrolman who waited in the bank. Police had received a tip that robbery was planned. Only one of the bandits was captured. One wounded robber dragged himself to a waiting motorcar outside and drove off. The other bandits also escaped. Mrs. Cora Wilson emerged from a store as theh policeman fired at the fleeing robber, and was wounded in the leg. Brands Organization as Socialistic. Lincoln, Neb. Governor McKelvie, in counseling no violent opposition" to the activities of the Nonpartisan league at Nelson, Neb., has branded the organization as socialistic and a? serls that the best thing law abiding citizens can do Is to let its members work quickly, for the faster they work the sooner the people will be rid of them. Vienna Children Sorely Afflicted. Washington. There are 115,000 tubercular children In Vienna, according to a statistical study of the child health situation there, made by the American Red Cross. Of this number, It was said that 16,000 were In urgent need of surgical treatment. Of 54,000 children examined, said a Red Cross announcement, only one in twelve was In normal health. Salt Lake City. At the opening session of the annual convention of the National Woolgrowers association, ou January 17, it was made clear that the woolgrowers will push their efforts to secure the protection of a tariff; they will investigate closely and adopt measures of marketing; they will avail themselves of the benefits to be derived from the licensed and bonded warehousing act, and they will wear clothes made from pure virgin wool grown in the United States. President Frank J. Hagenbarth of the association sounded the keynote of the convention as one of business, one in which the sheepmen are to confer on their urgent economic problems and to take measures to deal with them. Upward of 500 sheepmen, and some women, too, came from all the western states and many eastern points to attend the convention. And they brought with them, if not their fighting clothes, at least a fighting frame of mind; for there was no denying the feeling present among those about the convention hall that they are going to get out and take most active measures for the preservation and betterment of their industry. The report of the success which has attended the efforts of Montana growers to find a market for their product, through the manufacture of their virgin wool into cloth for clothing, into blankets and other commercial products, was welcomed with a roar of approval. President Hagenbarth was greeted with prolonged applause when he characterized this work of the Montana men as paving the way to what perhaps may lead to the greatest wool mill in the country, and serving at least notice to the middleman that the producers are awake to their methods. Governor Charles R. Mabey welcomed the sheepmen on behalf of the state and was introduced by President e Hagenbarth as a sheepherder who knows the problems of the industry. Governor Mabey expressed his sympathy with the difficulties the woolmen have encountered in recent months and pledged himself and the state to their support. L suffered with PottsviUe, Pa. female trouble for four or five years and -- was very irregular. I was not fit to do my work at times and took medicine from a doctor and got no benefit. I saw Lydia E. Pink-ha- Vegetable tised in the newspapers and took it and got all right. I CONGRESS SETS ARMY LIMIT. Senate Adopts Original Resolution, Providing for 175,000 Men. Washington. Congress voted on January 17 to limit the regular army to 175,000 enlisted men. The senate, 41 to 33, set aside Its decision of last week to reduce the army to 150,000 and then .without a record vote adopted the original joint resolution of Senator New, Republican, Indiana, directing the secretary of war to stop recruiting until the army is cut to 175,000. The house ten minutes later adopted, 285 to ,4, a joint resolution sponsored by Chairman Kahn of its military affairs committee, also directing the secretary of war to cease enlistments until there are not more than 175,000 enlisted men. Invites Wilson to Speak. EXPECT AN EXTRA SESSION. Washington. John Temple Graves, resident commissioner of the Lincoln President-elect Practically Decided on memorial commission, called Saturday Special Session of Congress at the White House. to ask that PresiHardWashington. President-elec- t dent Wilson deliver an address at the has decided to a call ing practically dedication of the memorial in May. The program is understood to provide special session of the new congress for the presentation of the memorial on April 4, members of the house ways nd means committee were informed by Former President Taft and its reMonday by Chairman Fordney, who ception by Senator Harding. has just returned from a conference with Mr. Harding at Marion. Death Sentence for Stealing Food. Mr. Fordney discussed with the Warsaw. Edward Peters, 39 years president-elec- t taxation and general a in clerk Warsaw the old, postoffice, was sentenced to death recently after tariff questions which will be among the more important subjects to come having been convicted of stealing a before the special session of congress. from mail package of food sent by America. He was tried under a law Crime of Crazed Man. making it a capital offense to steal S. C. Crazed by brooding Florence, from the government. over his financial difficulties and family troifbles, in which an estate Woman Fined for False Oath. worth $75,000 was at stake, J. S. in Portland. For perjuring herself shot his mother, his sister and the an effort to defraud the government out of an eastern Oregon homestead, latters two adopted children, then endMrs. Zella Becker of Huntington was ed his own life. fined $1000. Says Fordney Bill Is Dead. Washington. Senator Harrison of Pays $200 for Souvenir Curls. Chicago. It cost Stanley Wasno, 12 Mississippi, who Is leading the fight years old, adventurer, $200 for the against the Fordney emergency tariff souvenir curls he clipped from the bill, has voiced his convictions that head of two little girls In a theatre, the bill will not become a law and will not even he allowed to gome to a vote. the Judge assessing a $200 fine. Big-ha- . m twenty gained pounds or more and am now able to do my work. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to my friends and you may use these facts as a Mrs. Sallie Siefert, testimonial 813 W. Fourth Street, Pottsville, Pa. The everyday life of many housewives is a continual struggle with weakness and pain. There is nothing more wearing than the ceaseless round of household duties and they become doubly hard when some female trouble makes every bone and muscle ache, and nerves all on edge. If you are one of these women do not suffer for four or five years as Mrs. Siefert did, but profit by her experience and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound. Vaseline Reg S.Pat Off U Carbolated An antiseptic dressiiforcutsi sores, etc. A necessity where there are children. . one-tim- adver- Compound AOID SUBSTITUTES CHESESBOcen mfg. co. Mew York State Street (CONSOMOttTtO) j Bad Stomach Sends Her to Bed for 10 Months Eatonio Gets Her Up Over a year ago, says Mrs. Dora 10 Williams, I took to bed and for months did not think I would live. Eatonic helped me so much I am now it up and able Jo, work. I recommend trouble. stomach for highly Eatonic helps people to get well by taking up and carrying out the excess acidity and gases that put the stomach out of order. If you have Indigestion, sourness, heartburn, belching, food repeating, or other stomach distress, take an Eatonic after each meal. Big box costs only a trifle with your druggists guarantee. . Acute Suffering. I wish youd ask somebody else to collect this bill from Mr. Wadleigh," said the new collector. ( "Whats the matter? Ive had some experience in calling Wadleigh for another firm. He pays, but his groans are so heart rending Im unfit for work the rest of the day. Birmingham on Mr. Age-Heral- Feel AU Worn Out? Has a cold, grip, or other infectious disease sapped your strength? Do you suffer backache, lack ambition, feel dull and depressed? Look to your kidneys. Physicians agree that kidney trouble often results from infectious disease. Too often the kidneys are negleeted because the sufferer doesnt realize they have broken down under the strain of poisons from filtering disease-createthe blood. If your back is bad, your all kidneys act irregularly, and you feel run down, use Doans Kidney have helped thousands. A.SK d your neighborl A Utah Case Jonah Mathias retired farmer, S. Second St., Brigham, Utah, says: I suffered from severe attacks of Somebackache. times it was hard for. me to get up from a chair or from a stooped position. My kidneys caused me more or less trouble, too. I used Doans Kid- ney Pills and in a few days the left and my kidneys became mal. Ga Dous at Any StoN. 60e a Bos 9 i bac-ach- DOAN S X!Li FOSTER. MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. e nor- I |