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THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER. SUNDAY, JUNE 6, 1920. 9 j H 1 aiii'it'!(niigiBitiiiii.iwiiitiwwwiwwwwwiwwwiiwimwiiwwt'( It's a Most Beautiful Picture and I Constitutes One of the Season's Best 1 W 0r' ant Ca CS "Ut ames " A fHRIBH A tremendus success. Starring the famous dramatic &d 'VST iTjjKjMiliSIIM actress, Alice Lake, in a big- human drama of thrills and eart throbs. Replete with delicious humor and tender & IHBi ou mut not a t0 see remarkable picture. Also a 3 U -f I! BB very funny girl comedy. No raise in prices. - I pSSlI Now Playing Until Thursday p AL?rE1sHVE acr 3 Largest and Most Comfortable Chairs S WORKS TWO WAYS. ; jTV Captain Johnathan Joiiej and Col. ! C. A. Black, right of way agent tor', the Union Pacltic road, were in Raw lins during the exirly part of this week, j While, there they met Frank Hai:seli, newly appointed w;irdcn of the- state j)enltentiary at Rawlins. ! ' Congratulations, were in order, and i as the Colonel and the Captain finlsn- I . od "milting" their mutual acqualn-, lance of Warden Hadsell rushed wild-; 1 ly up, with right hand extended J 1 'Permit me to tell you how glad I J nm to hear of your appointment. Ij have always thought that you ought: to bo there." ! Hadsell is pondering yet. his friends , say, over whether ho was compii-( j mcntcd or insulted j j YO,HO YOU 41) OWNERS YO.IIO.' Three reputable foresters wlio rc- ccntly returned from a field trip, ;e t late a singular experience, according ' ' to James E. Scoit. , national forest in- .spector. of the local forest headquar tur.s who vouches for the story: I 1 It seems that while travelling over excessively rough rondo, the dram plug of the crank case was knocked oil'.' a and all ihe oil was lost from the on- ITKitii. Launched Boom of Pennsyl vania Executive in Formal Statement WASHINGTON. June 5. Senator Knox of Pennsylvania, who was ro ll cently indorsed by his colleague, ,: Senator Penrose, tor the Republican presidential nomination, came out to- night (for Governor Sproul. " Senator Knox also formally an- nounced that he would not attend the c Republican national convention, to t) which he had been chosen as a dele- X gate at largo from Pennsylvania, be- i cause of "private business." His j proxy, he said, would be held by 3,t - Judge A. R. Rcod. of Pittsburg, e Dark Horce Boom a CHICAGO. June 5. W. W. Alter- bury, vice president of Uie Pennsyl- vanla railroad, and one of iPennsyl- ,J vania's delegates at large, in a for- : mal statement tonight declared the V Pennsylvania delegation would be J "for Gov. Sproul firet, last and all the time." This coupled with the statement by Senator Knox that he ij regretted he could not be at the con- l vention to have the pleaure of casl- ' ing a vote for the Pennsylvania gov S ernor, was taken by the politicial J sharps as having the makings of a Sproul dark horse- boom. The following statement was is-1 sued by the Pennsylvania senator: HlHl' " am sorry that private business j compels me to stay away from the Chicago convention, especially as I .. H -would like to cast my vote for Gov- , H einor Sproul. My proxy, however, Jh will bo in good hands Judge A. R. iH Reed of Pittsburg, whoso views on lM the subject are the same as mine. JjH "Governor Sprout's republicanism and experience admirably fit him for BH: the highest office in the country. H' There can be no question as to his Ib ., lit ginc. The party stopped at the hut of a Mexican farmer In the vicinity of the accident. In vain hopes of secur-1 ing some lubricating oil. I The Mexican had oil. in fact he :iai a considerable quantity of oil, that ho had rendered from tho fat of two wild: cats, which he had trapped during the winter. : The forest officials purchased the; lubricant, glad of the chanco to eocape' the dire consequences which their lack of oil in a nearly desert country, I promised to bring upon them. Wild cat oil was poured into thoj motor and tho engine was started. Noi sooner has this occurred, when tho mo-' tor purred with a strange resonant: note, recalling plaintiff walls, heard! at nifeM. j It was with difficulty tliat the car'; could be restrained and the foresters' wore experiencing difficulty In keep- ing the car in the road. i All control of the vehicle was lost when a jack rabbit crossed the path' of the car. With a loud "Mce-aow." the car leaped from the well worn rutri and started across country In pursuit' of the long ear. ! When the Jack rabbit had been over taken a sheepherders dog appeared CRAWLED 3 MILES THROUGH SEWER; CAPTURED AGAIN i BOSTON, June 5. Edwurd 13. Kinne, who figured in a sensn tlonal escape from the Leaven I worth federal penitentiary in ' April, 1919, wns captured here lo- day. Tho fugitive, who wore an army uniform, admitted his iden tity. Kinne was serving a ten year sentence for larceny when, j with two other prisoners, he j crawled three miles to freedom i through a sewer leading from tho i prison to the Missouri rher. nn - ONE KILLED AD . i MANY INJURED IN ! D.&R.G. WRECK i DL'RANGO. Colo.. June o One person was killed, twenty injured of whom some may die, when Denver & Rio Grande passenger train No. 116 was wrecked today at Toltcc. A parlor car rolled one hundred and fifty feet down tho mountain side, The dead man Is Albert Schultes of Durango. nn . ! GUARDIAN OF KINGS DIES. LONDON. M. Paoli. the general secrotary of French Prefecture of Police, who has just died of sleeping sickness, was known the world over as "the guardian of kings." Ho was attached to all royal visitors to France as guide and protector and held 45 decorations anu gifts from royal per sonages. oo NOTICE Th Leo Company has purchased the grocery store of Kim Lee Yong at 2462 Lincoln avenue. Partioa hav ing accountn against this store will please present them at 12 o'clock n,oon, June IB, for settlement, LEO COMPANY. Advertisement. 2264 on the scene and the travellers 1 3wear treed the car in a nearby pin ! on. The travellers, it Is stated, are en thusiastic over the pro.spccU! of uti lizing wild cat oil a3 a means of rojuve nating old and broken down Fords. SA.YINGS OF FAMOUS MEN. Jass O'Connor: "Gimme a Match." OLD HIGH COST AGAIN She "How much the brown hose?" He "Four fifty," She "Kinda High." -Me ""You're Pretty Tall." f j A group of kids were hanging: nrouiul ICddlc Brooks' airplane .yesterday iifternoon us the aviator landed a Tier a flight. The nie eliuiilcian climbed up to the ns lank :ui(l began unscrewing the tank top. A ru.sh of an came Horn (he tanii :us the top came off, anu run I n loud hissing- noise. "Wni'.s I hat noise, lnIstel,?" uskvd a frcaklcd faced lad, elail in ocraIls. "Thai's air." the mechanician answered. "That's 'ere Will?" wiid the kill. LEAGUE'S FIRST . TE5TJSC0MING i Persia and Bolsheviki to Fur-: nish Tough Nut to Be 1 'Cracked LONDON. June 5. The first real test of the league of nations as a practical working body will be made when the council meets in London on June 11 to deal with the case of Persia versus the Bolsheviki. The greatest I Importance is attached to this case by the supporters of the league, partly because the case has unusual compli cations. One of these is that a section- of the British press holds that the recent British-Persian agreement i amounts to a Britin'a protectorate, and 't Persia thus has a right to look to I Great Britain to defend her from at Mack. i Another is that the Bolshevik may reject any commuuicatlons from the league. j Otherwise the issue is perfectly i a straightforward one. The league could not refuse to take- it up if it wished. Prince Firouz Khan, tho' Persian foreign minister, mado a for mal appeal to the league. Invoking article 21. ! If the Bolshevik leaders decline to have dealings on the subject the po-1 sltion of the league of nations as the protector of small nations will be placed on trial. i nn i JOLD 'JTM 12 AOTOIiS GOT ONLY $35 A WEEK (Uy International News Service.) LONDON, Miss Kate Terry, sister of Ellen Terry, and the first of the famous theatrical family to appear on the stage, makes much of a compari son between salaries paid to "stars" in her early days and the present fig ure. "I appeared in Manchester about fifty years ago. In my company were Charles Wyndham and Nellie Farren. They certainly did not receive more than 535 per week each, and I remem ber the famous comediene Mrs. Kecley telling mo that at the height of her caroer she never got more than $S0 a 1 week. PROFITEERS IN PAPER SOUGHT Hold Scarcity of Newsprint Due Only to Artificial Obstruction i i WASHINGTON. June 5. Holding that scarcity of newsprint paper which has handicapped American newspapers to be "move the result of artificial ob structlons than of natural laws," tho senate committee which investigated the paper situation today recommend ed that the department of Justice In stitute proceedings under the Sher man and Clayton acts against print pa per manufacturers. - Manufacturers were charged by the committee with "unjust, illegal and discriminatory" practices. Present prices for news print paper were held by the committee to be "excessive and unwarranted." Other recommendations mado by the committee include: Establishment of a federal newsprint board to "supervise the manufacture and distribution of print paper" should government efforts to maintain a rea sonable price fail. Amendment of the Lever food con trol act to penalize profiteering in newsprint paper. I Imposition of an excise tax of 10 j cents on Sunday newspapers weigli I ing more than 1.28 pounds a copy, so jas to limit such editions to SO pagos until an adequate paper supply can b.? secured. j Appropriation of $100,000 for the 1 purpose of experimenting with substi tutes for wood pulp. Establishment of a rate of 1 cent a I pound on sheet print paper to any par: of the country when sent by parcel j post without increasing the present ; limit of 70 pounds provided under the postal regulations. The committee also recommended that consideration be given by the gov ernment to the establishment of n newsprint paper mill to supply the government's peeds with any surplus paper to be sold to small consumers. WOOD INDICTED AS : PROFITEER wood V I NEW YORK Is this man respon . slble for he high price of the sun i you are wearing? William M. Wood 1 Is president of the American Woolen ' Co. A grand jury here has Indicted j him on a charge of profiteering. i oo ! CENSUS FIGURES i i WASHINGTON. Juno 6. Now York boroughs: Manhattan. 2.284, 103; decrease 4 7,130, or 2 per cent. Bronx, 732. 01C; increase 301, 03U or 09. 8 per cent. Brooklyn. 2.022.2C2; increase 3S7, : 91 1, or 23.7 per cent. Ttlchmond 115,959; increase 29,990, or 34.9 per cent. Queens 4CG.811; Increase 182,770, or 6-1.3 per cent. Total. 5.821.151. Boston, 747,923; increase 77.3SS, or i 11.5 per cent. Now Britain. Conn., 59,316; increase 15,4 00, or sr. per cent. Port Anfci js. Wash.. 5,351; in crease 3,065, or 134.1 per cent. Miami, Okla., C.S02; increase 3.S95, or 134 per cent. Newport News, Va., 35,596; increase 15,391, or 76.2 per cent. Manchester, Conn., IS, 370; Increase 4,729, or 3-1.7 per cent. I oo I'BRFUMF. MAKERS STRIKE. (By International News Service.) CANNES One thousand women and girls employed in tho famous scent factories of Brasso have struck at tho moment when distillation of ror.c petals nnd orange blossoms was about to begin. It may mean higher prices for perfumes. GOLDEN POPPIES i TRASNJHRIVESI Hiram Johnson Greets 150', Boosters Bringing Car of i i California Flowers I I I CHICAGO. June 5. The Golden Popples special, wih its carload of' California's favorite flower on ice.' rolled in from the west tonight, brlng- lng 150 Hiram Johnson boosters from I the Pacific coast. i Senator Johnson greeted the Ca.ll- fornlans at tho close of the parade I through the loop district and assured j them of his confidence in victory in I the convention next week. "It's Just the same old ' fight you 'have known . year of tor year In Cali fornia." said Senator- Johnson. "There is all the power, all the Influence and 'all tho wealth on the other slrii' hut! I just ns we have always had in Cali fornia so we have here, the peoplo on our side. We are going to demon strate It next wcok. "You have shown the entire country that there Is an empire in the west ijubt as there is an empire in tlir east 'and that a man can c'oinu from the west and aspire to' tho highest office !in tho land just well as can an easterner. "Wo are golns" to make tho country .understand lhat the Republican party 'stands', as in Califo'nia, not. for a class (but for all the people." j Praising Chlcagoans for the wel 'como given him on his arrival Thurs I clay, the senator said: I "I want you to know that no clll' could have received us with more hospitality than ' his great city. It was like coming home. This is great big hearted city that undrslands what good government means to humanity." OO HARVEST ARMY TO GI-7T RECORD WAGE THIS YEAR I (By International News Service.) I KANSAS CITY, Mo. The 1920 har jvest field laborer will not' only be the i highest paid but also the boat fed.; : housed and "mothered" in 'history. 1 Civic and church organizations ' throughout Oklahoma, Kansas. Mis souri and Nebraska are planning to be i "fathers and mothers" to the soldiers of the harvest army. Kansas wheat growers have set the pace in fixing a minimum wage scale. The lowest figure to be paid will be (seventy cents an hour. It la expect ed that a similar scale will be adopt ed in the three other states. I-arge I tents will be erected, where enter tainment will be provided, stationery supplied and buttons sewn on by tho j "mothers." TO PLANT 1,500,000 ACRES I OF WHEAT IN COLORADO, DENVER Despite high cost of farm , labor and rumblings that dlssatisfac- j Hon among farmers might result, in 1 1 curtailment of farm products. Colorado I farmers this year will plant approxi-! malely 1.500.000 acres of wheal, an in-' (Crease of nearly 50.000 over last year's acreage, according to estimates re-j ceived at'the state capitol here from various counties throughout Colorado. : It is estimated that 975.000 acres of corn will be planted In tho state. (against 956,371 acres last year, and 2S5.000 acres of grain sorghums, com pared with 255,605 acres in 1919. i Reports indicate a considerable In-, crease' In sugar beet acreage for tho. i coming year. oo 93 PAYS HIS FIRST VISIT TO BARBER SHOP GROVE CITY, Pa. Employes of a j barber shop here were receutly giveu I a surprise when an old man, with hair hanging over his shoulders and a long beard, came In and, asked that he bis allowed to watch the barbers at work. "It is my first visit to a barber shop In my 93 years of life," he said. He had Just moved Into town, he added, and his curiosity about barbers got the better of him. I When asked what he expected to 'find, the nonogenarlan said he "always ! thought a barber was covered with i hair as an emblem of his trade." i SAYS MOUNTAIN J,ION STEAK IS FINEST IN THE WORIjD (By International News Service.) DENVER A healthy wallop at the I high cost of food will be delivered, and the meat supply In the Rocky moun i Lain region materially increased, if Dr. Walter H. Bailey's recent announce ment Is heeded. Following a state-wide campaign to annihilate the predatory mountain lion that has been so destructive to domestic animals during the past win ter, comes the epicurean advice of tho physician that the flesh of the moun I lain lion makes the "finest eating in the world." Mountain lion steak, Dr. Bailey declares, Is a feast fit for a king and he also recommends musk rat and bobcat meat as highly pala table and nutritious. oo- - ! PET DONKEY KILLS VICAR'S WIFE LONDON Mrs. Mabel Gaster, wife of the vicar of St. Paul's, Greenwich, has been killed by her pet donkey. She was stopping In the country with her children and was feeding the ani mal when It kicked her down, bit her and trampled on her. nn $12,500 RING, LEFT IN HOTEIj WASH ROOM. LOST (By International News Service.) KANSAS CITY. Mo. It cost Mrs, C. E. Spraguo, of Emporia, Kan., a diamond ring valued at $2,500 to wash her hands In tho rest room of the Hotel Meuhlbach here recently. A few minutes lator Mrs. Spraguo missed tho ring. She returned to the. rest room, but the "sparkler" had disappeared. Bfl 'Bill' Russell ; I A Guaranteed 100 Perl H - Cent Production 8 H i 0m " Also I I WSSmiC : PATHE NEWS g H !Ogden TheatreX I Positively the Best Ventilated Theater in Og- I den Cum "Up An' Cool Off. Sunday School Outing to Be MeM June 18 I The annual t)i-stake Sunday school outing of the Ogdeh, North Weber and Weber stakes will be held at La-: coon on June IS. according to u.n-1 Inouncement made by the superlntcn l dents of tho three stakes. Several i thousand children and their ' parents arc expected to participate ih the i ovent. I The following committees' have been appointed: Transportation R. 11. I Hodge. Joseph R. Jeppson, B. II. God dard: advertising W. J. Rackham, Jny G. Stone. Angus Berlin; program F. A. Behling. Albert Powell. George A. Holt. Alfred Stratford. C U. John ison. Molba Bramwell. Alia Cooley, '.lohn J. Davis. Mabel Chuss. Iva . Steers. David B. Fowler. ' no DADDY OF WEST i POINT GRADUATES WASHINGTON Brig. Gen. Horatio Gates Gibson is the oldest living grad uate of West Point. He Is 93 and still spry a veteran o the Mexican and Civil wars. ' : oo ' " "V RIA'ER D A L E AV A R I) Elder George Shorten of the Weber stake high council will be tho speaker at tho Rlverdale "ward this evening. Tho service will be held uudor tho aus pices of . the wtrrd Mutuuls and all young pe'oplo arc Invited to be pres ent. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH John Edward Carvor, pastorf Chil dren's Day services Sunday morning nt 11 o'clock. The entire hour will be given to the departments of the Infant, primary, Intermediate and senior di visions of tho school who will present fHB - W TOOTS AND CASPER Casper Couldn't See the Poor Doc Suffer. By J. E. Murphy 4 T-TrJ) f I'LL CflLL. A II fcfR-TlS V1 TH,NK I KNOM ( SYWTeEL) f MV BUWMlfV 11 7SfT?CY 1 1LEMfVh DOWN tXX I H ! V PonI J DOCTOR I OOCTO ) UHrYTS WRONG- V DOC' 7 RH5UMfYn5N I? J JJTS A ( nTriB' YTr(Y 'N BED- O i program of real merit. Ecniitir si-rvicc will be the father and son ami 1 scout and family service for two jH l troops- of Boy Scouts. Troop Xo. 3 and ! Roosevelt troop No. ft. The evening 'hour will be In 'charge of the mem- IH j hers of these troops who with their H I families will be in atlcndance. H . 00. H UP THE CORNERS. 1 (In American Motorist.) I Some reckless Joy riders go plub to H j hell, to others hell comes. H , A bluejacket in the British navy I is not permitted to cultivate a mus1 j lache. If he attempts it he is fined I a month's pay. H 9o I For Subscription and Advertising Department, Call Phone No. 56. RANDOM I " REFERENCES SjxH'Ial. Geraniums and lilies half price.' Dumke I'loral, 370 'Jlth St. Bullillng Honies The Utah Power c Light company Is erecting three new cottages, at the junction of Twelfth street and Canyon Road for use of operators at the Pioneer power plant. Tomatoes, cabbage, asters and oth er plants fine stock at Weber Floral Co., 740 28th St. Marine Sergeant Sergeant Lynn Mcibos, former marine corps recruit ing sergeant in this city, arrived in Ogden this morning after having made a flying trip to Rock Springs, TVyo. Ho said that he had completed ar rangements for a visit of "The Roving Marines" to that place. Tho marines will go through Ogden June 2 6. en route to Logan, where they will spend two days. I Winter's resort 'is open. Groceries 1 can be purchased on grounds. Two Couples to Wed Marriage II censes were issued yesterday morning in the county clerk's office to Clyde A. Chilton and Miss Gertrude F. Tur- nor. both of Ogden, and Vito Ferro and Jeanette Di Sanza, also of this 11 Phone 502 for messenger. Greek Arrested Andy Mlentasea, 22 ! years old. a Greek clerk, was arrested f at 2:40 o'clock this afternoon upon or dor of Dr. H. W. Nelson, city physl cian. Micntascs is being held at the city Jail under quarantine, it is stated. Ogden Typewriter House ror type writers and repairs, ?.V22 Hudson Ave. Phono 236. Fb-st Congregntloual Services at the First Congregational churcli this morning nnd evening will be conduct ed by the minister, tho Rev. Godfrey Matthews, who has returned to the ; city after a two-weeks' vacation. Prompt service, cleaning, pressing. Phone 513. 150D The Tripp Studio. 132 Bl'nford Ave. Paint contractoi-s. Painters and the public, got in touch with the Crater tH Products Co.. 1701 Washington Ae., tH for paints and wall tints. Something fH new and fully guaranteed. j'l Money to loan, Kelly & Herrlck. f:H PERNELL FOOT SPECIALIST i Phone 260 .Over Western Union, Stevens BIdg ill - FOR SALE 1 I OAKLAND SIX TOUR- I . ING CAR 2456 Madison Ave, j 'I 1 hi