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I 1 SATURDAY, JANUARY 10, 1926 ' MW (Ufaftgtt tUtliWCh ' OGDE1S. UTAH - I Try Chiropractic First Do not wait 'till ycu have tried every, tiling else before you try CHIRO PRACTIC. TRY CHIROPRACTIC FIRS i, snd it will hot be necessary to i try cny cthor methed. The Chircprac tor relieves the nerve pressure "by ad justing the scgamcnts of the spine Free' nerve supply means health. In a few moments, I can explain the' principles of this new health ccicnce i and how it will help you snd y-urs. ! Take the- elevator to third floor in j the Lewis Building. Ask for Dr. Mc. j j Cunc, the Chiropractor. j CHIROPRACTIC IG RIGHT. j ROSS H. McCUME, 1 CHIROPRACTOR . T-hrcc-Year Graduate Gst the Idea i i All Else Follows. 1 I LlS SMS MB I MIT GET E SHE Coffroth Goes to Tijuana To Look Over Site For Huge Stadium SAN DIEGO, Cal , Jan. 10. If Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier are matched to box for the heavyweight championship of the world it will be with the understanding that the win ner take 75 per cent of the purse, ac cording to Jack Kenrns, Dempsey's manager, who was here today for a conference with James W. Coffroth, whose bid of $400,000 for the bout to H. be held at Tijuana, Lower California, Hj has been declared acceptable by Hi Kearns. Reiterating his former statement that he would prefer that Dempsey fight in America and in a bout pro-, moted by Coffroth,- the manager of j Dempsey said: ' "The Coffroth bid of $400,000 is ac- ceptable to us and we seo no reason 1 j why the fight could not be held at! Tijuana. It is true that Cochrane, the j English promoter, has Carpentier sign- j efl lor a fight with Dempsey and that this agreement is effective until early in February, why, naturally, wc must' wait until the agreement expires if Carpentier Is to appear in a bou pro-j moted In this country by Coffroth." I Coffroth 'Capable. As regards the other bids, two of! which aro higher than Coffroth made.! j Kearns declared that the question of a few thousand dollars would not de ter him from accepting the Coffroth "I want to make It plain that I con-' sider Coffroth the most capable pro moter for the fight," said Kearns. "If the fight is held we will Insist that the; purse be split 75 and 25" per cent. We 'lon't want to go abroad and fight, but, if we must we will insist on a guar- Coffroth said he was hourly await ing a cable from Charles Harvey, his, foreign representative, on the qucs ! lion of direct word from Carpentier. j Kearns and Cofrroth will go to Ti-I Juana tomorrow, and view the site for the proposed arena. Kearns plans to return to Los Angeles tomorrow night. Agreement Conditional. :JAR1S, Jan. 10. M. Descamps, man ager of Georges Carpentier, when shown a dispatch from Chicago quot lng C. B. Cochrane, he English pro raoter, as saying that Cochrane held the signature of Descamps to a con tract for a fight between Jack Denip s,oy and Carpentier in London, and would sue for damages should Des camps fall to carry out the contract. H I0(h Wlieo ttOTTS8 your mouth tastes like a11 tne mean VicRfucgfgBi things you ever did mixed together, then , . you need Beecham's Tills. Your mouth Is a good indication of the condition of stomach and bowels. I BEECHAM'S 10c., 25c. PILLS "Ursc.t Sal f Aar MbiBcIbo a tie World to Street ... FRENCH LEAI BIG LESSOi FROM MS Value of Outdoor Athletics is Proven by Doughboy's at Football, Baseball, Etc. PARIS, Jan. 9. One of the biggest lessons learned by France from the American "doughboy," according to Gaston Vidal, president of the I nioiv of Sporting Federations, who was re cently elected to the French Chamber of Deputies, la the value of outdoor athletics. He predicts Franco will have at least 1,000 open-air athletic stadi urns in various cities and towns within' the next five years. "It was due to football, baseball and similar sports," he said, "that the 1 United States was able to raise, equip! and train an army of 2,500,000 men in! a few months. Athletics is the best sort of military preparation". M. Vidal told a rcprescntath c of The I i Associated Press that one of the first i i bills he will attempt to have passed' I by the chamber will be to make the J appropriation of 10,000,000 francs given this year for athletics an annual affair. He said that ho also would interpellate j the government on tho manner in - --O00.000 francs or 1919 were expended. ... the coming Olympic Games,, tho new member of parliament said that Franco would send 200 train-' ed athletes to Antwerp, as well as two complete soccer and" rugby foot-, ball teams, water-polo teams and I tennis. If tho funds allotted by the govern ment arc insufficient, Mr. Vidal said that he, together with Mr. Ramleil, and Mr. Pate, legislative colleagues' who are also much interested In ath letics, will raise a public subscription!, which will be called "The French Olympic Million" in order to finance the French atletes. declared that tho agreement was a conditional one. Descamps asserted that the agree ment was signed immediately after the roccnt Carpentier-Beckott fight in Loudon, i and that it was conditional on Cochrane's obtaining Dempsey's signaturo to a similar contract before , Jonuary 15. In the event of the fail-' ure of Cochrane to obtain Dempsey's! j signature, M. Descamps added, the) ! agreement automatically expires on : ! that date. ( EL PASO, Texas. Jan. 9. Jack I Dempsey, world's champion heavy-j weight boxer, was charged with having "apparently skulked in hiding from tho i draft boards" during the late war, and Geoiges Carpentier, his French rival 1 for championship honors, was made a I life honorary member of the post, at a i meeting of the El Paso post of tho Am erican Legion held here tonight. The local post also appropriated $25 to be wagered on Carpentier in his coming! fight with Dempsey. ' oo .YELLOWSTONE LEAGUE : ! HOLDS FIRST MEETS! j Representatives From 6 Towns i Discuss 1920 Season at' Idaho Falls REXBURG. Idaho. Jan. 10. The! i first meeting of the Yellowstone Base- ball league was held at Idaho Falls ' Representatives from each of the six towns in the circuit were present to I discuss the 1920 season, and were en ithusiasticv over the coming year's prospects. i Tho towns now represented in the 1 j league are Rexburg, St. Anthony, Ida-1 I ho Falls. Sugar City, Ashton and1 Driggs. Blackfoot and Pocatello made application to enter. These teams, however, were not accepted at the. meeting on account, of the long dis-( jtance and expense attached to travel- ing. , Twenty games will be played the. coming season, beginning May 12, and ' Wednesday afternoon will be declared ' a half holiday during the baseball sea-1 son. ' A split season will be played, the' i winners of the first half season plav- I ing the winners of the second half. 'These winning teams will not be al lowed to exchange players, as last! (year, but this will be allowed by the' next teams on tho list according tot percentage. Each team will be allowed four pro fessional players, the remainder to be "amateurs," in order to make more! evenly matched teams. t Rexburg won the baseball pennant last year, supporting one of the best teams in Idaho, and is again in the running for tho pennant. oo ! Seals Purchase Good ! PitcSier and Catcher SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 9. Charles Graham, manager of the San Francisco team of the Pacific Coast league, an nounced today the purchase of Catcher I Sam Agnew and Pitcher Jordan from . the Washington Americans. The lat-, ter played with the Buffalo Intel-national club last year. oo ierrman s Successor Will Be Selected CHICAGO, Jan. 10. Selection of a chairman of the National Baseball commission to succeed August Herr mann, who tendered his resignation probably would be made at tho Joint session of the two major leagues to be held bore February 11, John A. Hoyd lor, prcsiaont of tho National league, announced, The committees of the two major leagues appointod a year ago to select a man for the commission chairman-i ship are expected to nreEent their WAR ON DIVORCE L&W j t5i:; ''&.-! i.-ii ft5$!j R 3lSft?llES?Lw3 I lvVViNw v A !ftTjSM5JpSWi I LONDON Making infidelity tho solo ground for divorce in England is being fought by tho Divorce Law Reform Union, secro- I ary of which is Mrs. M. L. Seton-Tiedemnn (upper right). She cites tho enne of Lady Lawson (left), who cannot be divorced because I infidelity cannot be proven. Adrian H. Hassard-Short, (lower ! r:ght), secretary of the "Poor Persons' Division" of tho divorce I court, seeks to raako divorce proceedings choaper to afford-uso I of these courts by tho poor. recommendation at the point session, he said. "Tho man chosen to head the com . mission should be powerful, fearless and independent enough to reach out after any player, club owner or offi cial in baseball who either by action, association or speech brings tho game (under suspicion or disrepute," Mr. Heydlcr said. nn Pacific Coast League to Play at Stockton STOCKTON. Calif., Jan. 10. The di rectors of tho Pacific Coast baseball league have sanctioned the playing of Sunday morning games in Stockton, staled Charles Moreing, Sacramento magnate, in a telephone message to the Record. Stockton will bo given fourteen Sunday morning games now designated in the schedule to be play ed in Sacramento. The first Stockto game will be between Seattle and Sac ramento, April 11. Charles and Louis Moreing, in charge of the Sacramento club, declare tho Coast league has given its permis sion provided a guarantee is given that thero will be no financial loss. Tho Stockton fans have assured the forc ings of their support, 750 season tick ets having already been purchased. oo COUGHED DAY AND NIGHT. John Vognue, Elberton, Ga., writes: "Last fall, when my neighbors were down with influenza, I took a severe cold and before I was aware of my con dition I was down sick in bed. I coughed night and day and my throat 1 was raw and sore. I got a bottle of Fol-1 ey's Honey and Tar Compound and I took eight small doses In two hours. ' My condition began to improve and in , a few days I was as well as ever. In ! my opinion Foley's is the best cough medicine made." A. R. Mclntyre Drug Co. Adveritsement. uu J. J. Brummitt, 2417 Hud son avenue, , pays highest prices for Liberty bonds. 00 Funeral Service Held ! For Irs. M. L Paynej i Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Payne, a rela tive of Abraham Lincoln, was burled In tho Mountain JVIew cemetery yes- j terday, folIowing"services at the Kir- j kendall chapel.' Rev. John Edward Car ver conducted the services. Mrs. Payne was SG years old. She was born in Louisville, Ky., in 1833, the daughter of William Hall, an un cle of the martyred president. Many friends and relatives of the de- J ceased attended tho services. oo INVESTIGATION BEGUN. NEW YORK, Jan. 9 The house committee in expenditures in tho war department today began an investiga tion here into $84,000,000 for two ni trate plants at Mussel Shoals, Ala. Members of the committee taking part in the Inquiry were Representatives Graham of Illinois and Jcfferis of Ne braska, Republican, and Garrett of Tennessee. Colonel Jay Hoffor, former chief of the gun division of the army and now retired, was the first witness. WATCH THE BIG 4 Stomach-Kidney s-Heart-Liver Keep the vital organs healthy by regularly taking the world's stand" nrd remedy for kidney, liver, bladder and uric acid troubles GOL0 MEDAL : '251!' ' Th National Remedy of Holland for 1 centoriea and endorsed by Quoon WUbel- I mlna. At all druggists, thrco sizes. Look for tho noma Gold Mdo! on crcry box ' 1 " ad accrpt no ImiUtloc ' STRONG APPEAL FDR POOUK OF MMESj Concentration of Sea Forces' for Service of League By Britain and U. S. , LONDON. Jan. 10. A strong appeal ! In favor of pooling tho British and United States navies and concentrat ing them for tho service of tho league of nations as an instrument for banish ing war from the seas will be made in the weekly article of Alfred G. Gardin er in the Dally News. Mr. Gardiner declares that If through machinations In Paris,, the league of j nations is lost, nothing can prevent tho United Slates from becoming the greatest naval power in the world, and that this situation would produce a feeling of anxiety in England which could easily dovelop into suspicion and perhaps antagonism. There is only ono way to prevent this menace, ac cording to Mr. Gardiner. "That is," he asserts, "to say now, while tho sky is clear, while we still are masters of our fate, that there 'shall never be naval competition be tween the two countries. Nothing is easier than to make such a decision now. It may be difficult to mako it a year hence and too late to make it five years hence." Mr. Gardiner argues that henceforth tho United States either -will Invest ; the Monroe doctrine with tho sanction ' of her own seavpower or a new instru ment of seapower must be forged. He . contends that tho initiative for the pooling of the navies should como from England, because the British sea pow er is actual while that of the United States is potential. oo NOTICE The annual meeting of the Little vauey ivnnmg uo. win ne neiu at my office, county court house, Ogdcn, Utah, Monday, Jan. 12th, at 8 p. m. for the election of officers and such other business as may come before said meeting. W. II. TAYLOR, Pres. 2071 oo ;0HTH PEBBLTY FOB HIS HIED Evidence of Witnesses Review ed and Only Three Definitely Call Him Insane LOS ANGELES, Jan- 10.Harry New, on trial here charged with the murder of his fiancee, Freda Lesser, was described as "a cold-blooded mur derer," and tho death penalty demand ed for him by Asa Keyes, deputy dis trict attorney, In an argument before the jury which is trying New. i Keyes reviewed the evidence of wit-' nesses for both sides, paying especial attention to depositions of defense witnesses irom inaianapons and Okla homa City, Okla. He said that out of tho hundreds of persons who had known Now, the defense had been able to produce depositions from only three persons who expressed a definite opin ion Now was insane. Referring to the claim of tho de fense that New ac,ted like an insane man in driving from Topango canyon, a few miles from here, where the death of Miss Lesser occurred, to cen tral police station here with her body in an automobile and surrendering as her slayer when ho might have denied responsibility for her death, Keves said New's act was that of a man of common sense. "If New had burled the body or thrown it into tho brush," he demand ed, "wouldn't search have been made? Wouldn't tho authorities have demand ed an accounting from Harry Now- as the man with whom Miss Lesser was last seen alive?" Tho prosecutor accused Now of hav-1 ing betrayed MJss Lesser and then, luoting a prosecution, witness, charged j SUNDAY 5, 7, 9 P. M. PRICES 3c a 10c i : In her Latest and Greatest Picture from He r Own Studios I j g 9 rSf Jig g 99 ! 'q a picture I WK PLEASE THE g 1 Jk I "You dare to pull my hair," cries Mary Pickford, as the little mountain girl just i j starting to school. And Mary shows the boys she 'can fight with her fists for her I y rights. It is the inimitable Mary, with her laughs and frowns and intrepid daring, in , ;: : j the story of the feudist fights of the old Kentucky mountaineers. jl ;', !THE POPULAR SCREEN STAR IN A NEW 'CHARACTERIZATON ! f l: ). Also, Joe Martin, the Monkey Comedian in "A Jungle Gentleman." Orpheum j I I . Concert Orchestra with a popular musical entertainment. P M il Hil 1 1 lift I I s;AH-yraWJV)WV iM . JM ' IMih n t iiHriiii.M ift..ii;r?rc-irj.;iftji nn j-is tho girl with "running around with other men." Adjournment was taken to Monday because of tho illness of a member of tho jury. II. 5. CAPITALISTS' Enormous Sums Spent With out Any Expectation of Re turn or Profit NEW YORK, Jan. 10. A story or how American capitalists spent vast sums without expectation of return or profit to aid the government in its ef forts to supply explosives for the war was told to members of the house com mittee on expenditures in the war de partment. Incidentally, it developed that the same men had put at the serv ice of their country valuable secrets ! learned from the Germans for the ex-1 tractiou of nitrogen from the air. The committee met to open an Investiga tion Into the expenditure of $84,000,000 for the two nitrate plants at Muscle Shoals, Alabama Frank S. Washburn, president of the American Cyanamid company, which built ono of tho plants at Musclo Shoals, informed the committee that the company had made no profit, on over 5S9.000.000 worth of war work It had done for the governments The plant cost tho government $62,000,000 and had produced 1,500 tons of ammon ium nitrate when the armistice was signed and then ceased operating. "It was inconceivable to me," said Mr. Washburn, "that during the war some men of affairs should be enabled by the government to make large prof its and others should give their serv ices for one dollar a year or risk their lives at the front. The American Cy anamid company did not want any profit out of its war work. As a mat tor of fact, it had none. Government j Tonight' 9 to 12 I ;J$k LILLIAN THATCHES j f ft (sJ ORCHESTRA f g ! Os if 'Couple, 85c; Extra Lao, 40c M J Qy (War tax included) 1 . r Tell Your Friends You'll Be There J ' Prof. Woodward's private dancing lessons every I It. ;- Wednesday and Saturday, 2 to 8 p. m. l-j officials insisted that we be paid n fee of $1,500,000. When wo receive this fee we must pay eighty-five per cent of it in taxation. It has not been feas ible for the .government to repav us our entire expenditure. We contribut ed without expense tho services of a staff of experts to the government. V, o had to reimburse families of men injured in the work, "There has been a general belief that the American Cyanamid companv made a largo profit; so I tell tho facts. The plant was an extraordinary ac complishment with astounding charac teristics In relation to constructive work as the destructioa in France was astounding, compared with other war destructions." nn MEXICAN REBELS DEFEATED MEXICO CITY, Jan. 10 Rebels who attempted to ambush General Candidlo Aguilar, governor of the state of Vera lf ' Cruz, while the latter was traveling to Ki. .- -the earthquake zone in that state do- - . ft ' ing relief work, have been decisively T.. defeated, according to a war teoart ''if: ment statement. " V oo J OTTAWA PARLIAMENT CALLED jfi hTl)rTJiin- 10 Parliament has H WA been officially called for Thursdav, M Feb. 25 The address in replv to the M speech from the throne, lb Is expected, &A will be moved by Hugh Cronyn, M. P., k for London Ontario, and seconded bv W Alcxanuer McGregor, member from g UP THBnSHIPr,f0rSet "D0N'T GIVB ' if ..Jr11?11, eJ,cn Euro"e can't forget t watchful waiting." , jf ''a cmalaj; qfry ' j ! New Satin and Straw Hats f Small hats of satin and straw, brifrhtlv- and rln-mt-i"! w,i. i -, . it. of hues, o, clever 'IMi ag . SMART HA TS of SA TIN in IRREGULAR SHA M '" Jaunty turbans with veils attached especially adapted for stvoM wt? K .We invite your inspection of the Early Sprinr Models t - LAST & THOMAS " " J' i MILLINERY DEPARTMENT ft I" - 4 Si - . P