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Show wsTf A WEEK Iff CONDENSED FOl ORD OF THE IMPORTANT VENTS TOLD IN BRIEFEST MANNER POSSIBLE. enlng That Are Making History information Gathered from All Quarters of the Globe and Given In a Few Llnea. INTERMOUNTAIN. ;5. Cnples, assistant superintend-the superintend-the reduction department of the Falls, Montana, smeller of the tula Copper Mining company has mined to succeed J. O. Elton as ;iit general superintendent of the is was announced last week. Mr. ; has been associated with the ay since 1010, beginning in the : department at Anaconda. r Waddops, living near Moore, accidentally shot Himself fatal-10 fatal-10 out hunting in the hills above He slipped and fell, his rifle Iged and trie ball entered right shoulder and passed the chest. The deceased s of age and leaves a wife :hlld. .rid ogg laying record was it the western Washington station at Puyallup, Wash, rluy, when a single comb n hen owned by J. W. Mer-ittle Mer-ittle laid her three hundred in th egg williin a year, te best liens m the nation :ontest and seven of them the 300-egg mark. oni the country called at msiness houses of Payette, ther clay and asked to use e, the proprietor kindly di-i di-i the desk phone which was i small shelf just under a pener. She cranked the icked up the phone and got tanked the storekeeper and declaring the service In ; much better than the ru- Cinney, 8'J years old, last :he famous Steptoe expedl-ngainst expedl-ngainst the Indians, died 5 at Walla Walla, Wash., Mr. Kinney, a native of Ire-to Ire-to this secticm with the early BO'a. Th property Is home for more than half 'as purchased from a gold for a rifle. It is 120 foot n the heart of the business he city. DOMESTIC, ons vines don't always itermelon vines, revenue covered at Laurel. Del., raided the Wheatley t might have heen mounds urued out to be demijohns destroyed the yards of the Lumber company in St. , a subrub of Minneapolis, day, caused a loss esti-'5,000. esti-'5,000. Half a million feet ilonglng to the company 720 tons of coal and four oyed. Illness of Rear Admiral W. S. Sims, who has suffered for several days with a slight cold and a touch of indigestion, indiges-tion, deve-loped Monday into pleurisy, at his home at Newport. Commander Norman T. McLean, his attending physb-ion. said Admiral Sims' condition condi-tion was not serious, but that he probably pro-bably would have to remain in bed for at least two weeks. r- w 9 The Norwegian steamer Snar a freighter, was placed in quarantine with her crew in Boston Monday because be-cause of the removal at Norfolk of her commander, suffering from a disease reported to have been diagnosed diagnos-ed as typhus. Captain Olsen had been taken 111 after the vessell left Guantanamo and Santiago two weeks ago. The Illinois Fede-ration of Labor recently re-cently adopted a resolution calling on the United States to recognize the soviet republican government at Russia. Rus-sia. The resolution waj adopted only aft-rt- heated debate and amendments striking out commendation of the soviet rule had been accepted. Mines at Thubber, Tex., of the Texas and Pacific Coal comjiany, closed since last spring, when miners refused to accept a reduction in wages, will be opened Monday on the open shop basis according to announcement by E. C. Brltto, general manager. I WASHINGTON. Issuance of permits to brewrs for the manufacture of medicinal beer under un-der the now treasury regulations win proceed with promptness and dispatch internal Revenue Commissioner Blab? said. ' The supreme court refused to review the conviction under Minnesota laws ofi A. C. Townley president of the Na. tional Nonpartisan league, and Joseph. Gilbert, manager of its organization department. Five alleged members of the In. dusti-ial AYorkers of the World con-vncted con-vncted in the federal court, in Kansas of conspiracy to violate the espionage, act, must serve the sentence imposed upon them the supreme court refus'ng to review their cases. Use of Camp Grant at Rockford, 111., as a penal Institution for minor offend' ers convicted under federal laws lam been recommended by the department, of justice it was said by Sealor Me-Cormlck Me-Cormlck of Illinois. The recommendation recommenda-tion now Is before Director Forbes on the veterans' bureau. President Harding was understood to have expressed opposition Monday during a conference with Chairman Porter of the bou-e foreign affairs committee to passage of and resolution re-solution providing for immediate withdrawal with-drawal of American troops from the-Rhine. the-Rhine. Senator Norris Republican Nebraska who collapsed in the senate last summer sum-mer while discussing agricultural credit legislation returned last week much hupr-ved In health. The senatoi who is chairman of the senate agriculture agri-culture committee, has been recuperat. ing lu the Wisconsin woods. The administration bill for funding $500,000,000 of railroad drfbts was reported re-ported favorably by the senate Inter-slat Inter-slat commerce committee with amendments amend-ments by Senator Cummins, Republican Republi-can of Iowa, chairman, broadening the financing operations. The war department announcesd recently re-cently that 1000 scats, about one-fifth one-fifth of the totnl seating capacity of the Memorial nmpht-theatre at Arllng. ton, Armistlc day, had been reserved for Gold 'Sar Mothers or other nearest near-est relatives of men who died In the world war. Not more than two seats will be given any applicant. Appllca Hons shout'' be addressed to the adjutant ad-jutant general, Washington D C. President Harding wll' march In tha funeral procession of America's uni known soldier to be burled at Arllng ton cemetery November 11. The president presi-dent will march directly behind the caisson, followed by Yleo President Presi-dent Collldge, Chief Justice Taft and the associate judges of the supreme court the members of the cabinet and senators and representatives marching eight abreast. FOREIGN." President Almeida speaking from the palace at Ilsbon to a great throng which had congregated to urge him not to resign, declared he would retain his post. lie exhorted everybody to stand by him and aid in upholding Portugal. Relief measures for the victims of, the flood Friday night at Britannia Keach, where thirty-six lives were lost; and scores made homeless, were started start-ed at Vancouver, B. C, by the service finance committee, which voted $0000 subject to the city council's approval. A bald eagle, wilh a w.'ng spread of seven feet, recently attempted to carry away a si j ear-old girl named flibbs from th veranda of her home at Vancouver, B. C. Struggle! o tha child an I her mother prevented tha bird from getting away and It was finally beaten to death by Matthew. Semple. The girl suffered flilii wounds. L. P. Craig and Francis Patenude, miners who were imprisoned by a cavein at the Brittanin mine, Brlt-tanla Brlt-tanla beach, B. C.. last Thursday, have not yet t een rescued although emergency emerg-ency gangs have been working desperately des-perately for four days to rescue them, according to word reaching Vancouver. Vancou-ver. The men are In a shaft C00 feet below the surface arid are btuev- " ed to be still alive. The new cabinet at Lisbon, Portugal, Portu-gal, constituted on a nonpartisan basis, has onnulled the legislative elections of July 10, and r U Judicial acts of the present parliament. The president of the republic signed a decree Wednesday Wednes-day night appointing the new ministers. minis-ters. The foreign, interior, war and marine ministers have already assumed assum-ed their portfolios. . |