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Show INLAND NORTHWEST Four of the twelve I. W. W. members mem-bers released by Sheriff Filer of Idaho county, Idaho, have been rearrested. At a meeting held at Mina. Nevada, the Mineral county post of the American Ameri-can Legion was organized with a charter char-ter list of fifteen members. Special licenses have been lov!ed against vaudeville ihows. public dances and soft drink parlors by the city council at Livingston, Mont. According to word received al the L. D. S. church offices at Salt Lake, but few missioruirie.- will now be allowed al-lowed to go to Switzerland. A scoutmasters' training class has been planned to meet at the Boise, Idaho, council headquarters. Boy Scouts of America, once a week. All but a very few of the great herd of elk in the national park have now-left now-left the reserve, according to Howard H. Hays, manager of the Yellowstone Park Camping company. Appeals for federal government aid for 10,000 wild elk in the Jackson Hole country of Wyoming have been sent to Washington by L. F. Kneipp, district dis-trict forester, stationed at Ogden, Utah. Billings is to be the main distributing distribut-ing center for the products of the Big Horn Glass company, which is completing com-pleting erection of a $150,000 factory at Lovell, Wyo., planning to start operations oper-ations February 1. Labor troubles during 1919 in Utah cost the industries directly affected and the employees on strike a total of more than $900,000, according to information furnished by the industrial indus-trial commission of Utah. Jack Murphy was killed in n mine at Park City, Utah. Murphy was engaged en-gaged In turning ore down a chute on the 1200-foot level, and is presumed to have been caught by the moving mass nnd crushed to death. Residents of Sheridan county, Montana, Mon-tana, have filed with the secretary of state a petition for initiation of a new workmen's compensation law, which is said to be drafted along lines similar to the compensation law in North Dakota. Da-kota. The state of Utah dttr.ng the fiscal year ended November 30 last, received a total of $11,845,979.38, and disbursed In warrants a total of $12,000,397.00. The state ended the year with a balance bal-ance of cash on hand or in the bank of $1,497,130.80. Clark Ringling, who owns a horse ranch in Pleasant valley, has just sold at Winnemucca, New, the last consignment of 900 horse pelts. He shot that many of his wild horses on the range for their hides, which lie sold for an average price of $4 each. More than 75 trials of I. W. W. members mem-bers are impending in Idaho as a result re-sult of some 300 seizures and 100 arrests ar-rests made during the November raids. Nearly every north Idaho county coun-ty has some alleged radicals in its jails, one county having 34 men imprisoned im-prisoned at its county seat. Dr. E. A. Bryan, commissioner of education for Idaho, Mrs. Josephine Corliss Preston, president of the National Na-tional Education association, and Dr. A. E. Winship of Boston, editor of the school journal of that city, will be among the speakers at the Utah Education Edu-cation convention to be held in Salt Lake, beginning December 22. Christian Wansgaard of Huntsville, Utah, is dead from blood poisoning. About two weeks ago Mr. Wansgaard suffered a blood blister on bis right thumb when he caught the thumb between be-tween the hanies and collar while harnessing a horse. He opened the blister and later blood poisoning developed. de-veloped. The industrial commission of Utah, has issued a warning to all employers of labor who come within the state workman's compensation law that after af-ter the first of the year failure to comply with the terms of the act will result in action by the commission compelling the employer to discontinue discon-tinue operations. In announcing a sentence of ninety days in the county jail upon Cornelius J. Dean, charged with making insulting insult-ing remarks. to women upon the street, Judge D. R. Roberts of the city court at Ogden, Utah, said that all cases brought to his attention of the passing of insulting remarks to women would receive the limit in a jail sentence. Governor Davis, of Idaho, complying comply-ing with instructions given him at the Salt Lake sessions of the new Western States Reclamation association, has named January 14 as the date upon which representatives of the 17 slates leagued in the association will launch upon the United States congress their campaign for $250,000,000 for the reclamation rec-lamation service. Idaho's attitude toward the extensive exten-sive airplane forest patrol program mapped out by forest service, forest protective associations and air service serv-ice experts will be determined at a conference between I. IT. Nash, slate land commissioner, and W. D. Hiiniis-ton Hiiniis-ton of the North Idaho Protective association, as-sociation, both members of the northwestern north-western committee backing the scheme. Below zero wealher and a la.-k ,,( feed, due lo the protruded drought last summer, have caused i lie death, by freezing and starvation, of thousands thou-sands of h uses and cattle. M-c.e-d'n-; to ranchmen in Ihe vicinity r.f Havre, Mont. Misjudgmont of the speed.,,- passenger pas-senger trains by occupants of niii-cuo-biles is the principal conlribu' ing cause of crossing uocideiiis. accord :ig to .1. ( I 'lark, head of ihe safely department de-partment of the Oregon Shoti Line and ihe Los Angeles & Sail Lake railroads. |