Show GARLAND UTAH THE GARLAND TIMES MAROONED IR SAVED RAPIDS AFTER 17 HOURS Bonner —r WtSmW TO DOGS KINDNESS Mi k M:eet w'h California 1— Mm Herbert Hoover receiving honorary degree at Whittier college ty aa ttjriluru 2 — United StateH nnvy sallora !n first ulrnre training “adutked youth tlomui at Mllledgevllle Gu typlcul of the btute of thereglun ufter the dlMibtrou ruins und ui NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVEHTS Smith in Acceptance Speech Is Outspoken for Change in Prohibition Laws By EDWARD W PICKARD the courage of hta Gov A1 Smith In hi epeeclt of acceptance frankly Ueclured his opposition to the Eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act a they hoW ex 1st This was the dominant note of hi address which was delivered in the assembly chumber at Albuny because of a persistent ruin that preNecesvented the outdoor exercises declured Bmlth like Hoover sarily tluit If elected he would liomwtly and He laws vigorously enforce the dry his belief that the saalso repented loon would not and ahould not return Hut the vital part of this section of the speech “was a demand for the mod amendof the Klghtconth lllcatlon ment to permit the sale of alcoholic If apby state agencies bevernges and proved by popular referendum of the Volstead act to for own to its determine allow each state the standard of alcoholic content that pronot to exceed minimum vided Klghteenth by the amended amendment Severely scoring the evil which he said had resulted conditions from the present dry laws and the failure to enforce them the candidate "I raise what I profoundly declared believe to he a great niornl Issue of our navolving the righteousness of tional conduct and the protection our children's morals" the farm relief problem Concerning Smith went little further than the Houston platform on which he stands lie promleed to take up the ninjter after election acting on linnimediately He pledged of experts the advice of honestv himself to the restoration Jn govern meat And Jo jcleiit ll!ctnrliT making nod declared against "sudden or drastic" chunges In the economic system which might upset business fie followed the platTn other matter form quite closely Unbiased and nonpartisan opinion Is thut Smith in his address showed he Is making his chief play for the Eastern states that he believes the South will he solid for him and that his hopes of winning states lu the Ills Middle West re not excessive program Is clear enough prohibition and Is workable and probably satisfies all the wets except those who still hislst amendment the Eighteenth No one should be utterly wiped out supposes It will please the wet DemoHut It Is likely crats of the South their attitude ts fairly expressed by the Arkansas Curette of Little ltock which says "The Gazette Is for the present dry It laws fully and strictly enforced cannot shift ground an Inch tovvurd with Governor Smith compromise - Nevertheless this newspaper ran and to support Governor will continue The changes Smith for President Governor Smith deems necessary and would he defeated In expedient by dry legislative votes" WITH GOVEItNOn SMITH took time last reply to the attack on bis record in the New York legislature made by William Allen White -- whlch l already had the Republican The publicity chief governor justified his votes on liquor snd social vice matters by explaining and though White' the clArumstances made answer from Parja g rally' admit ted Tils t Sin It hTiuifuiuch the better of the argumesft ltws HERBERT HOOVER in his progress to Washington at Wet Branch Iowa the stojqied town of h!s birth where he was accorded a fine reception by the villager and took occasion to elaborate He made ble views on farm relief one concrete proposal — that" of an adequate finleriil revolving fond to b placed at the disposal of the form mid Intelligently mod In financing whatever measure of crop control ts found necessary to prices He also said that if elected he would Lon deg to be among tsk for a farm solution the counselors - He ad n final blow to the Inn w ith lie words "It equalization Is not Intomhd to ji'it the government of ag Into the control of the lai ubshhze prices of no’’ to rlculture nml pay the Ios'o-farm piodects thereon either from the federal or hj a tax or fee cm the farmer " After a confel rite? With farm loud ers in Cedar Rupills Hoover went ou to the national cupltul COOLIDGE numed ns PRESIDENT of commerce to succceetl friend William if Hoover and F Whiting of llolyoke Muss sworn In the new cab net member Immediately ut Superior WIs lu Mr Mr Whiting w ho L’mdidgo’g presence head of Is sixty four years of uge lie has the Whiling l’uper company never before held public iillice hut has and bceu keenly Interested In politic as a delegate to the Republican national Conventions of 1920 1924 and IP11N Ilia selection was surprise In it 1ml been exwhere Washington Julius Mein or pected that either both high In the deWalter F Ilrovvn would get the appointment partment Ir lAItD BYRD’S COMMANDER ItK'l the most elaborate of Its klmi ever organized Is on Its way toward the South pole of New folk Milled SatThe bnik t urday fioin New York carrying planes to the hopping off and equipment place uhd ulso 31 of the 7d men force compose the expeditionary mnnder Hyid and tlie red of the will (ad In September ou the whaler mid the t'lulsea Lnrst-taking mine planes uud eiu!pinciit oik under the The City of New Frederick C command of Cupt a cousin of the lute Herman author' of sen stories und Melville of “Moby Iiek” the great creator white whale lie bus btvn going to sea since he was tlilrP-iyears of He Is now The forty four ago Mills and bark Is equipped both will np Its sails auxiliary engine but to conserve the whenever possible fuel supply HASSELL- and who started to fly from Roekford to Stockholm with stops In mill Iceland Greenland Ontario reached their flrt Mopping place all right but on their fcoumd hop they When hope for their disappeared safety was fading amateur radio operators In Chicago received messages from them saying they had been forced to land on a small Muml off the New fnundluml coast” that they were safe lutt their food supply was getting low BERT GOERKL the famous winner the Ikdo ruce from Sia Fran cisco to Honolulu last year estub Acllslied a nevq record last week companied by Harry Tucker he nnde a non stop flight ai ro a the cunt incut from Iaia Angeles to New- Yiuk In IS The distance hours and fiS minutes was 2710 miles and the average speed of their Lockheed Vega plane was u little over 112 miles uu hour ART running liquor across BUSINESS river from Canada went to pot lust week when a couit In Ottawa ordired the stocks of the seized within 20 days Foi tv exporters liquor dealers most of them in Windsor were reported to be hastily clearfrom ing their storks for Vancouver which point they may If lucky livable to got them Into the Initod Stalr— The Wii)dorfU!i and In lotndt and nearby dispersed the price vf liquor ruse rnp place Idly The Detroit river trade was estimated by Ontario authorities to have amount) d to a m!IlUn Dollars a moirh 'efforts nicgu amt Toronto Interests to merge all breweries In western Canada under one bolding with company have been completed the merging Of nil breweries In SasThe K'Chenie katchewan outlined to organize breweries In Manitoba and Albertn Saskatchewan Rrltish Coltinba and then to vonvolldate the Inlo one huge holding organizations company Coupled with the brewery Hungers' are plana for a g'guntlc export business of VJ INT persons wore killed and damage amounting to hundred of thousands of dodurs was caused bv terrific windstorm Hint swept through parts cf Mlifuesota and low a Many buildings were wrecked Tile mu crops stiffen d seriously sustained the town of Aim in Minn worst of the Mow la northern Iowa hall followed the wind and destroyed the corn crop In a large district aremnlntv A modi— a Ing aid to loiioo Inhabitants of Haiti who uere made homeless by the recent tropical dorm The crops especially coffee were badly "damaged and the people In the stricken area were without food and medleul supplies until the arrival of the United State uvul tug Woochitoi k down and Nancy hurried running mot of the way- and then turned down antii her and run all of five most more blocks to reach their cousins' home had 1ut They heiiid Siometl lug and they wimteil to Y 'arrive before "if was too late Nick went half way down the hull he humped when straight into link r ing up from liar stairs the He was holding in his arms the little fox terrier Marl n n h a d week before with tier has a new trouble but It likely to arouse great Western Manterest at Uds distance rbttriu baa been Invaded by a large force of Mongolian cavalry thut Is led according to report by Russian were defeated In The Manchurians two bloody battles and sections of the Japan was railway were destroyed worried by the prospect of the weakening of her influence lu Manchuria CHINA of the signing of the treaty mace the animosity of Italy has aroused again by holding extensive attack and defense maneuvers In the department of Haute Suvole near the Italian border Many of the crack French regiments were engaged in the practice and artillery anil atl the elements in country in a mountainous warfare were used Italy gave It reorganized test In maneuvers nrniy a successful along the River I’o Rem use of the extensive ' fur 1i!t visits In I'uris arid of State Kellogg his plan to stop In Iondim after the Hiiti war pact Is signed THE rv ONKellogg VENT ELFUTIIFRIOS PREMIER won au extraordinary elecIn the Greik parliamentary The Vcnlrellst party secured tions The Royalist 224 seats out of 270 Kafandurlsts the elected 20 ' members four nrul the Fungalists only two Venlzelos now bus a free hand to put In operation Ids program which cludes financial reform and better lations with Yugoslavia I yAI DFMARAS premier of Iltho-refused to neghaving (inu In Geneva his country’s dispute wlih Poland the government at Wat saw has yielded und agreed to the for a confer Lithuanian suggestion cnee nt Koenigsberg before the Geneva meeting lit order to bring to an end the unofficial state of war between the The Polish note was two countries notably friendly V otiate spectacular fig ONE of InAmerica’s politics diplomacy and with the death journalism disappears of (1 George II Harvey at bis summer home In New Hampshire he was the first inally a Republican Wilson for the to boom Woodrow hut Inter they beciime Presidency! to say the ieust and enemies pulilii-nIn 1H20 Harvey had a good deal to do of Harding by wlih the nomination Ills rewnrd was the the Republicans to the court of St ambassadorship J n tiles Ihtrlng most of his life he was actively connected with new or magazines nnd for 'a time he was president and manng'ng director of Harper A lire Another notable wbo ill last week was Mscoent Haldane of (Torn who a secretary of state for war created Great Prltulu's territorial army nnd thus cWrihuted largely to the success :le tillle lu the World war Hg was driven from by popular out he reiterated his love for cry beinie-'German cholxrhlp though there was no question of bis loynlty THE? Interstate Commerce IE' approves the consolidation of the Grent Northern and the NorthRttelfte ern there railways likely to be a new railroad grouping whUh would bring Into those lines the Southern ‘Pacific and the This predation Rurllngtnn system followed the announcement of hn portunt changes In the personnel of some of the companies Hale Holden Is to he president of the Hurlirgton chairman of the board of the Southern PacIfiCt of which Pnul Shoup will be made and other chances were In prospect The new grouping With Its rate agreements with Eastern lines would offer service spuunlr the continent by three routes just bong’ liiojiev dog was still only a tiny puppy little soft white puppy with a iiio bioun ii r ami one Mack one and — khtek- - spot (HI Ills Soft b i O' 'I ll!H h iih you didn't do It cried N ii It's no affair of yours" did you?" answered Lu k look absurd with their Fox tei tails Tong And everybody said it would be all right In a week" The poor little fox terrier was shivHis eyes looked so ering with pain id his little body hurt- him so — at of Ids little body there was the Tsui Ii a icnihle pnlri lie horns are soft the man said it didn't hurt And that he’d look so foolisli wnh a tall” Marian said ’What did you cure what people ‘'You are horsaid?'- s" reamed Nick rid nnd cruel “Thai little puppy never did anyone any hrm nnd he was at your tneriy "You wouldnt want to have a foot rut off and not he able to do anything nhout It ‘And for the sake of n little stvle lit that tiny loving (log go you'd u f thri ugh a pain and misery For shame - by can’t pro decide pie they be so cruel they’ll change the fash p o n nnd for mx ter M riors to keep tin ir won't a n d that tails?" N'a tu And M it r e d e r J a cl an did n d feel lug dhe week he tie next week not so mm h I’ut "they always fill ashamed of themselves nnd so griileful to the little dug for w tn t (riling them And always nfter that when they saw Ids little short tail wagging they thought that they would have loved him Just ns imieli with a longer toil There was really no reason In rite It was world for smli w liked to have a style hurt an who tould do nothing about It Fawn Tlo for Petf pot piobleiii ims been solwd fm staff the cl ildii-- of the govern at Ilium! (’ nyun Nauonal pitk De tiled the u 'Miliary cts and dogs the thiimgli the pa: k regulations fawns have hcen given them froni the deer herd in lie ixaihah National forDogs und eats est mu Ii id llie pitk are fotbnldm lu the paik partly because they iie pieditory uimmils and likely to kill or ut least annoy the 'Hie MiUsie native wild population tutod fawns woe provided by uriaugo cunt between the I ntid Stales national park service und the I lined Suites’ forest strvice und were iriins-pMil lu the south ted Loin tlie not One of the by truik und one died not long after Its urtivel but the survivut park headquarters ing eight are thriving und have he (oiu very laiie A Game for Rainy Dayt 'A Japanese lull rave is u line game mid Jcrii to play on ruiny htr Kuna — of it Irma '(Tf'5"s Ref 3 This the July Issue of Ghlld Life to them: “T he fans uie used to fan u three-tu h square of lhsue paper towards the goals Rime two laH'kn on the floor about a toot apart ai73 Tall" loir the goal 'Hun nmtk the pieces of tls sue paper on the starting line When word ts given each one tries to fan tl his paper through tire goal first" Postponed Ablution didn't wash Junior you face this morning Little Roy— No Expel C Efficiency heaid you say we were goMother-ing to have grapefruit for breakfast your Peak o‘ the Program lien yetag man you shout hit that boy when hFsdwn" ‘Gn an’ What d’yer think I CcXvil fer?" Privilege to Lioe in Utah i of A at it it lid after loved they their little puppy and be was suffer badly for — AH m DUCHESNE— A cjuarter of dollars worth of honey cam out the Uintah basin during 1927 SALT LAKE— The total valuation of all Utah crops in 1927 at prices paid to growers has been estimated The conservatively at $39000000 estimated total of acres planted to all crops was 1120000 the night searchlights All through PLEASANT GROyE— More than hHd played on the solitary prisoner 5000 barrels of Utah strawberries were on a roi k slab 2 bv 3 feet “cold packed” in 1927 and distributed perched h foot anda half above waJuitiirg throughout the country for ue in soda ters In which no man could survive fountains and by candy manufacturers The crop last year totaled 2541000 About midnight the navy men pul out In m strong bout to one of three quarts'" Valued St $305000 shore v TREMONTON— The bulk of the Island! between the Maryland wheat grown in this section has ueen Island to this and Lugenhecl's 'rock which they harvested there having been shipped they made fast a rope in the first month since paid out until they 'reached the second from this point the first car was loaded July 11 101 island They repeated the process cars f"From Garland during the same til they reached the till id 133 cars was there shipped period Then they fastened ropes to two of each car averaging about 1200 bushels their number who picked their way The Garland shipments represent tha among the roiks to lugenbeel's side crops from Portage Fall In Water Help EUREKA— Tintic mines shipped a A total of 149 carloads as compared with water drop overnight 115 carloads for the week preceding In aided theta reaching weak who fell and exhausted Into The Tintic Standard shipped 42 carrock loads North Lily 24 American Smeltthe slippery their arms from for 17 ing & Refining dump ore 15 Empire where he had eat cramped Mines 10 Colohours 4 2 Dragon Struggling against the current but rado 9 Mammoth Mountain View 2 nnd Gold Chain 1 aided by the ropes they carried units: Chief ConIsland and the Chief Consolidated to the neares solidated 7 carloads of ore and 5 of dump ore Eureka Lily 10 Plutus C SALT LAKE— A total of 8180 apres of land in Utah and Idaho will be open for settlement soon according to word received by the Associated Pres from Washington D C The land is scattered throughout Custer and Blaine counties in Idaho and in Utah county-iUtah Veterans of the World xvar to file will have the first opportunity The land in Utah will be on the land opened August 31 while the tracts in Idaho can be filed on beginning September 14 HEBER — Vocational agriculture students of the Wasatch county high school at Ilober will be represented the national ram sale in Salt Iiake with two pens of registered Hampshire rams including some twenty head of lamls and fifteen yearlings have set for themselves a The bqx-minimum standard of 13Q pounds for lambs and 200 pounds for the yearFrcn a caality standpoint lings will he the best shipment yet made from'the s'udtnts of the school to the na' ioral sa'e MT PLEASANT— Mt Pleasant city will soon he protected front the menacing floods of past years as a floo I control project is under wav two miles cv-of the ci'y A F Reynold of Hours Sat Cramped for Seventeen Mt Idea' ant rho is tn charge of the construction work has 20 men an! reversed ittvy boat The rescuers th'-The excavation for on the Job teams to Island from to Island their process is now cobble spillway the tin shore com pic tel v rea'y f r Ajie mao'ry was recovRy this timi Iugenboel once Thwork xv! !ch vvl't bent to smile and ask ered sutheleatly s north wine r th“ ii " hen do we cut ?” and th wing will be bath and J Eugi iibit-Angel 19 (’ayset rescues noli'd for heroic water — MYTON The road that is b Mg out hoot the rapids in a canoe to th'ou’h the Flea ant Valley on twp ' JuLihe ii s IrT cTTA T!Tb e' r ohi pi e tc d in a coupT” women one of whom had drovvneil of days so V1 E Broome overseer of roiks been sighted wiflged among The purpe of construct io reports Both Cling to Rock is to put it in shve for this activity fl9 had own canoe iiipsied Their of fitpp'ies mater al and the Each man that of die two women test well for o to machinery for R W be started immedVely ugtd to reach a ns k and ding to It t from loshlnn was 2Kl (e a represen‘ative cf the Utah Southern Angel’s mid even more hnzaiihus Oil company is superintendent of the laigenhecl’s H was resitted by a spedal fire work in this part of Utah recenFy with a workmen began making excavations in department squad equipped which nut ie its way by rope gun preparation for the setting up of ths o and ilc rick rooka sueceslve fastening RICHFIELD— The Sevier County finally took libit off In hreeche s that extensive Fair assor'ation was brul ed while Angel training is going on at the fair grounds every day ntnong owners of hauled to safety the horses About ten head of The bodies of both women were re race horses are already on the ground covered il'W listieiun from southern Utah reckone It Is believed the struggle to save among They also the body the fastest in the state Hie two men had dislodged that had been held by rocks In the have booked e!x head from Utah counnext week piomlsing the to arrive ty rapids most in'eresting racing program to bn held here in years The dairy exhibit js also more nrorristng that Ha Thrilling before owing to the fact that a numAtop Locomotive ber of animals from important herd J— While lw broken I'laliiHcld in Wisconsin and the northwest have been entered driving rods were tearing up A Ohio a tl reman at a Uiiltimoie VERNAL — Prospects for the 1923 eliinlied to the top of the alfalfa seed croP in Utah are 47 per liHomotive cent of normal compared with 60 per engine and released the exhaust valves To prevent an explosion in ease the cent a year ago Frank Andrews agcareening locomotive left the rails ricultural statistician for the United The westbound express was traveling States department of agriculture more then 40 mile an hour when the Increases or deWednesday roils creases from this estimate may result snapped near the Flainfield staarrival of ki ling frosts Mr tion pending Mark S Goodright Andrews reported applied Engineer Early frosts will bring production lower than estimated the air brakes but they did not funis lion be mrtd Inter A huahlna thing and hi ghcn result if Frosts are late the report fiotn the engine strut k the upright of a shelter and caused said Lack of sufficient moisture h? caused the crop to lower from lest It to collapse Edgar Smith of Rlahe year’s harvest and reportof stripping field who was sitting In the shelter tee- - beef! made Mr:- Whi Andrews stated climbed to the top of the locomotive and clung there antld clouds of steam MYTON— The Upalco Flour Mill in while he emptied the boiler through which is operated Myton by C P llulf tulle from where the valx Watterson has opened for the fall and P the rods broke the thiln stopped first learned wits then that passengers winter and recently began receiving what had happened new wheat About 490 bushels were in one day some of which wrs rf a superior quality we:ghing ”s’xy-foSmall Baby’i Cries Mr pounds to the bushel for thiYseaT esthna'e3 the Frighten Away Burgmu r son in the vieihiiy- of Myton at 20 000 F A Fal Longview bushels which is a marked increase eoncr's ! lathy act'd ns night watch In’au-doxer that of previous years tmin when a burglar entered the Fal m he erp'cts tp purchase'csnsidconer home during the right "lle from other porun of cried frantically nw ikening buhy the basin The nutthcr s reams fi ig’d enid ho tty the Intruder Sixteen men from the Washington— United Rtuies uavy ynrd rescued Herbert Eugenbeel years old at dawn recently from a tiny rock amid (swirling Rotomac river rapids near here where he had been marooned for 17 hours’ j - It ’ Mart Spendt Long Night in Perilout Position in the Potomac River Hilary Graham) inrrit News Notes got In’t " Un rae Fireman Ride t evr J |