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Show DamagetT Page, Is SOUTH CACHE COURIER, HYRUM, UTAH TELEGRAPHIC TALES FOR BUSY READERS A RESUME DOINGS IN OF THE N WEEKS THI8 AND OTHER COUNTRIES Important Events of the Last Seven Daya Reported by Wire and Pro. pared for the Benefit of tha Buay Reader WESTERN The estate of Congressman Julius Kahn, who died in San Francisco last December 18, was bequeather to his widow, Mrs. Florece P. Kahn under the terms of the will filed for probate here. The will, which was drawn at Washington, D. C., January 17, 1912, named Mrs. Kahn as executrix and expressed confidence she would properly care for their two eons. The value of the estate was not disclosed. Kid McCoy, convicted of manslaughter in Los Angeles, last week. with the death last August of Mrs. Theresa W. Mors, was sentenced to from one to ten years in San Quentin prison. Superior Judge Charles S. Crain, before passing entence, denied the defense motion for a new trial, which contained charges of fifteen counts of error during the trial. The most prominent of the charges was directed at the compromise verdict of man- A resolution proposing enfry o:1 this, nation into the world court was introduced by Senator Wills, Republican, Ohio. It carries a provision embodying the recommendation of President Coolidge that the United States not be bound by any advisory opinions of the court. Records of American fliers indicate that the United States air service is technically and in personal equa to any in the world, Dwight W. Davis, assistant secretary of war, testified to before the house aircraft committee. Americas weakness, he said is due to lack of material ant the smaller number of fliers. Lieutenants Wade and Harding, two oJ! the world fliers, were called to testify. A budget amounting to approximately $18,000,000 will be recommended to the triennial convention of the Protestant Episcopal church at New Orleans this summer according to program plans presented by Lewis B. Franklin, vice president and treasurer of the national church council. The budget, Mr. Franklin stated, has been adopted by the national bishop and council. If carired out, it will involve increased expenditures oJ: nearly $6,000,000 over the present triennial. rv liNewsNoteo its. will rurnm,,.,j send you F5R From All Parts of TDltn and bottle of LIQUID VKNEKR. Wondtife your daily duatins. Cleana,duats and poli,S with oneeweep of your dust cloth. Renew,?' anos.furnlture.woodwork.automobile. everything look Ilka new. Makes dustini pleasure. UTAH Logan. AS SURCOMES RESIGNATION PRISE TO WASHINGTON; NO - WARNING GIVEN A mountain lion and sev T AAm yon recently by a party of Logan men who spent the day at the camp of S. E. Needham. It has been several years since a mountain lion has been killed in the canyon and they are rarely seen. Coalville. Jame3 Cosant, 39, mar ried, wife an son in Italy, who was employed in the Grass Creek mine at Coalville, met instant death when a fall of rock crushed out his life. According to the report made to the bureau of minee department of the state industrial commission, the accident was due entirely to himself having gone into an abandoned place in the mine to take out a prop when the roof fell upon him. Washington. Charles E. Hughes will retire from the cabinet on March 4, and Frank B. Kellogg, now ambassador to London will succeed him as secretary of state. Mr. Hughes has placed his resignation in the hands of President Coolidge with a reaffirmation of loyalty to his chief, but with an insistent request that after nearly twenty years of public service, he be permitted to return to private life. The president, accepting the decision, expressed regret, warmly praised the retiring secretarys record of accomplishment since he took charge of the countrys foreign affairs four years ago, and bespoke for him' a well merited repose, after the cares of public responsibility Ambassador Kellogg, already familiar with many of the outstanding problems of foreign policy through his service at a succession of European conferences, probably will come to Washington soon to serve for a few weeks in the state department before he takes his new post in March. His successor at London has not been selected. Announcement of the impending change was made at the White House and was heard with surprise by most of official Washington. Mr. Hughes had indicated that he desired some time in the future to leave public office and recoup his private fortunes by resuming the practice of law, but some of those nearest him in official life believed he would remain for at least another year at the head of the state department. The suddenness of the announcement accentuated the rumors of a break with the White House which follow all resignations from the cabinet, but hone of these reporto to carry the color of outhen-ticitThere have been many evidences that the president and his secietary of state hot only were in agreement on all major questions of foreign policy, but that Mr. Hughes was consulted by his chief as well on many questions of domestic policy. A few hours before the correspondence was given out Secretary Hughes left Washington for Atlanta, to attend a meeting of the executive committee of the American Bar Association of which he is president.- Neither his office nor the White House would add anything to the published letters beyond the announcement of Mr. Kelloggs selection as tha new secretary of state. Salt Lake City. Eugene Giles, president of the National Copper bank, was elected president of the Salt Lake Clearing House as- Bernard Grant of Chicago has been given another lease of life. Grant was under sentence to hang January 16th. Governor Len Small granted a w, ht ed y. ar two-thir- Sum-merla- - nd ' ce flag-drape- VEREEI tllPUl - vice sociation at the annual meeting in Walker Brothers bank. O. W. Adams, Utah State National bank, was elected president and E. A. James was reelected secretary, treasurer and reprieve to April 17. The case of manager of the association. Grant came to notice when Nathan Ogden. The First Utah Savings Leopald and Richard Loeb, slayers of a little boy, escaped with life sen- bank has filed a final account and tences. Grant killed a policeman in report as received of the Montello a holdup. A monster petition was Salt company in the "Second district sent the governor asking his life be court. Judgri George S. Barker set slaughter. spared and pointing out that while January 19 as the time for hearing The Western Pacific Railroad comLeopold and Loeb, rich youths, es- on the report and petition for approvpany has effected a new wage agree- caped the gallows, Grant, a poor boy al and partial allowance of compenment with its firemen, engineers and was being sent to his doom without sation fees. hostlers, it was announced at San a legal chance. Salt Lake City. Reginald String-felloFrancisco by E. W. Mason, vice Purchase of 1000 steel coal cars 19, University of Utah freshpresident and general manager. The all steel passenger man, died from meningitis which is men were granted a conference re- and thirty-eigcently to settle wage differences. Un- cars has been announced by Presi- declared by his physicians to have der the agreement, the firement and dent L. W. Baldwin of the Missouri been directly due to duckings in cold engineers in passenger service will Pacific Railroad company. This large water by sophomore students. get an increase of 24 cents a day order is in addition to that announOgden. Mike Barclay of Black-foo- t, and in freight service of 36 cents a ced last month which included fifty Idaho, for the third conseculocomotives 3000 and freight day. The hostlers will be given 32 heavy tive won the grand championyear, and this cars, the purchase brings cents a day increase. Several huntotal expended for new equipment by ship for a carload of fat sheep when dred men are affected. the Missouri Pacific in the last thirty he defeated the load which won the Dictating from a sick room in the days to approximately $12,000,000. grand championship at the Pacific Red Cross Hospital at Salida, Colo., International show at Portland. BarThe house public lands committee where he has been confined since clays load were Hampshire range New Years day, Thomas J. Tynan, expects to report next week and Iambs. , . warden of the Colorado penitentiary bring to early consideration in the ThJfee new officials took Ogden. issued, a statement in refutation of house an administration bill which the for office of in Weber govprovides development county January 5th. charges lodged against him by Gov- ernment owned potash lands in ac- They were: Samuel C. Powell, Repubernor Sweet. cordance with the general provisions lican, county attorney; John A. HenSuit brought against the ' govern- of the coal, oil and gas leasing law, dricks, Democrat, city judge of Ogment by the Los Angeles & Salt Lake save that the royalty i3 to be fixed den, and Amasa M. Hammon, Demorailroad to render void a valuation at 2 per cent. term county crat, of Roy, of $45,000,000 placed upon the railcommissioner. roads property has opened in federal President Coolidges veto of the Salt Lake City. John Walker, state court at Los Angeles with Judge postal pay bill has been sustained by senate. vote 55 to The the was treasurer receiver $95,669.85 in feder29, Erskine M. Ross, United States maal funds fo ruse on highways of Utah. court or appeals, and Federal Judge or one less than the Paul McCormick and Benjamin F. jority necessary to pass the measure The money will be expended on roads over executive approval.. With the in Grand, Piute, Tooele, Iron, SanBledsoe sitting en banc. veto sustained, salary increases now pete, Uintah and Salt Lake Counties. The body of George Turner, who are upon the enactment of Summit county remitted to the treasfor two years had boasted of his title the dependent administration measure urer $75,000 in state and state school pending King of Bootleggers in Santa Bar- to advance pay and rates simultanetaxes. bara county, was found shot through ously. senators predict that Many the heart in a field borering the this measure will fail of and Ogden! The Ogden Trades passage at coast highway a mile south of babor assembly indorsed the efforts this session. of an antiprohibition society of Utah grim evidence, sheriff and FOREIGN in working to obtain a repeal or modpolice say, that a rival successfully disputed his reign. The reorganized argicultural com- ification of the prohibition law. A ; mission after its first meeting in resolution was introduced by a comgeneral Mexico City has announced that it mittee from various locals and adoptLeo Koretz, promoter of the Bay-an- o wil continue the land diivsion policy, ed. s oil bubble, who fleeced scores beSalt Lake City. A test case on of friends and relatives out of mil- making careful study, however, estates among the whether the lions of dollars, died at Stateville, fore dividing large secretary of the interior and giving facilities to peasants, las the right to grant oil and gas III., in the state penitentiary. The land owners for voluntary division prospecting permits on executive orpromoter, who for years conducted of their estates, if done within the der on Indian reservations will be his phantom financial ventures so provisions of the law. leard in Salt Lake in the United quietly and effectively that trusting relatives and friends begged him to What is believed to be an import- States district court in the near futake their money, declared when he ant development in the war on opium ture, with Judge Tillman D. Johnson went to prison a few weeks ago that came in a formal notification by the on the bench. he did not expect to come out alive. British government to the league of Salt Lake City. Practically the Government operation of Muscle nations that the Marquis of Salis- same number of men will attend the Shoales was disapproved by the sen- bury had been appointed chief citizens military training camp at Fort Douglas in 1925 as attended ate, 48 to 37, but the whole ques- British representative to the internation of the final disposition of the tional opium conference, now in re- it in 1924, despite the proposed decentralization of C. M. T. camps, Colgreat power and nitrate plant was cess. left in the air. General Guillaumat, who took over onel Thomas M. Anderson chief of staff of the 104th division of the UniChicagos enonomic loss in 1924 command of the Ruhr and Rhineland ted States army, has announced. The from smoke, aside from injury to forces from General Degoutte at May-enstudents for the. 1924 of allotment some time his official and made health resultant deaths, was ago, Fort at Douglas was 915, while placed at $42,500,000 in a report of entry at Dusseldorf, Germany, in the camp allottment for 1925 for the 104th the the smoke abatement commission. On presence of French troops presented Of this number ap1100. is division Genthe basis of that estimate the re- arms and crowds of Germans. receive training will 900 port said, the citys laundry bill per eral Guillaumat later held a reception proximately 120 at Fort Russell, Fort at Douglas, capita was $3.25 larger than that of for his officers and will inspect the Wyo., and 80 at Fort Wright, Wash., the ten leading cities of the country Ruhr. Colonel Anderson said. New York. except Commander Richard R. Mann, U. S. Mutual. Jas. Whittaker, 19 year Legislation reducing the time limit N., superintendent of the Asiatic na- of age, nephew of Mr. and Mrs for World war veterans to apply for val communication service, who died Kimball of 267 Eighth avenue, Prank their bonus from January 1, 1928, to in Manila, P. I., was buried at sea was instantly "killed when Salt Lake, January 1, 1926, has been recom- with military honors. After a re- he accidentally came in contact with d mended to congress by Major Gen- quiem mass was said over his a high tension line of the Mutual San in the C. Robert Ignacio Coal casket eral Davis, adjutant gencompanys plant, where he was eral of the army. Davis submitted church, a destroyer carried the Mr. Whittaker was at employed. his proposal at the suggestion of the mourners to a point off Corregidor work about the establishment, when house appropriations committee, island,, at the entrance to Manila ris hand in some manner touched the which believes that the work of ad- bay, where the body was lowered Intv ligh tension wire. He was electroministering the bonus can be speeded the sea in accordance with the com- cuted instantly. manders wish. up if the time limit is shortened. Hardwmra,farBl tera.drog, paint, froearyand fanaral atom. LIQUID After Twenty Years in Public Service Once Candidate for President to Step Down to Private Life x Sold by Justice Hall Is Wrecked San Francisco. The main entrance of the Hall of justice here was wrecked by a bomb, which exploded as a number of police officials were walking through the corridor. No one was injured, although the force of the explosion scattered pieces of iron, wood and other missiles around the corridor. Several persons had walked past the place where the bomb was placed, about twenty-fiv- e feet from the door of the police chief, Daniel J. OBriens office. The force of the blast tore a hole through police headquarters, demolished a telephone booth, shattered all glass in the corridor and wrecked a steam radiator. German Farmers to Colonize Here New York. Plans for colonizing German farmers in Arkansas and Southern California were announced here by Walter Shade, for many years immigration agent for the Louisville his return & Nashville railway, on from GerCleveland liner aboard the over will We fifty fambring many. ilies in April and fifty more during the latter part of 1925, he said. The first group will settle upon farms near Texarkana, Ark., paying for the land as they develop it. Only selected farmers will be brought over. LIGHT saves tune by tha TESTS conducted College of Agr- iculture show that it takes less time to stable and feed the cows when good lighting replaces lanterns. one-thi- rd ' Scientific analysis proves Carbide-gas lighting to be the nearest to daylight of all artificial illuminants. Not only does it save time in the barn it saves oculists bills in the home, and saves the farm wife hours of drudgery by supplying facilities for Union Carbide-ga- s cooking and ironing. Write to the nearest branch for full information on the J. B. Colt system and the very Carbide-ga- s favorable terms of sale. ; J. B. COLT COMPANY f Oldest and largest manufacturer of Carbide lighting and cooking plant in ttw world ! ( address nearest branch) New York, N.Y jo E. 4zd &. Rochester, N.Y, . . . jl Exchange St. Block . Menadnock root Chicago, III. Kansas City, Mo. . 716 N. Y. Life Bldg. . 6th & Market Su. I bnN. Chattanooga, San Francisco, Cal. . 8ch & Braonan Su, SOAKS RIGHT If and LlfilBERS U? STIFF JOINTS Stiff, swollen, Inflamed, rheum at.s lints should be treated with a ren! ly made for just that purpose at1' tat purpose only. Remember the name of this disco'" and it will take oil y is Joint-Eas- e le agony, reduce the swelling an mber up any troubled joint after ord,' have miserably failed iry cure-all- s 1st rub it on 60c a tube at an uggist ask for Joint-EasAlways remember, when Joint-Ea- s its In joint agony gets out quick. e. Retain the Charm 01 Girlhood A Gear Sweet Shin Cuticura Win Help You impurities are pumped bp the heart into the face. That i t causes that grainy appearance; muddiness, sallowness, pimples! kheads, acne, red spots, and that, LOOD impossibly something which no fac cream, massage, or face powder can cover up of f , The beautify I foundation for ski simply is notj can givf treatment face no and e, red-- , j you. But increase your ruby the and quickly of purity begins to glow m tr. ve ks, the complexion becomes I Tryb.s-i-ys ; like and immaculate S. vill do it every time. you nee the a beautiful complexion. Be5. g S. S. S. at once, and give yott what you have been working , , . , Warren to Succeed Stone Washington. Charles Beecher Warren of Michigan, former ambassador to Japan and Mexico, and chairman of the resolutions committee at the 1924 Republican convention, was named by President Coolidge to be attorney general to succeed Harlan Fiske Stone, recently nominated to the supreme court. , lls for years. S. S. S. Is sold at all good doll tore in tun aizea. The larger ia more economical. S SWorIdsB-s- ! l |