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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • Page 2

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER THURSDAY EVEINIIVG, MARCH 23, 1922. OF IRNTAH SCHOOL SERIOUSLY WOUNDS YOUTH, 18 Quarrel Said to Have Resulted From Teacher's Efforts to Maintain Discipline Leads to Serious Consequences ISSUES TON Continued from Face One) Lloyd remark that he would not cause any trouble about it until school let out in June. Mr. Bybee said: "Last week Orville was expelled from school for not having hie lessons, but I upheld him for the reason that he was ordered to stay in after school hours, when he had work to do about the farm. He told me he had asked the teacher if he could not get his lessons in school hours so he could get home, but the teacher refused and told him to stay late.

"The trouble with Lloyd and Chris-, tensen last night came as a -surprise I had bought a new pair of USE GUNS Intermittent Firing Heard Along Ulster Border; Constables Shot GIRLS BECOME BUNCO ARTISTS Society of gKifters" Is Newest' Scheme. in Feminine Circles' BELFAST, March 23. Reports that snipers on the. southern side of the Ulster border were using light machine guns against opposing: parties reached Belfast today. All day Wednesday the snipers.

shoes and Lloyd had agreed to go to the store to purchase'some waterproofing for thorn. The first I knew about the trouble was when they told me Lloyd had shot." Lloyd-was conscious this morning in his bed at the hospital, but was in extreme pain. Narcotics were administered and he laterr slept. Dr, Durake declared he. had about an even chance of recovery.and much depended upon the extent of the infectitfn that is expected to set in as a result of the punctured liver and lung.

The lad is in good physicial condition and this will aid greatly in his chances of recovery, the physician said. KNOCKED HIM DOAVX Christensen said toctay at the county ja.il that Orville Bybee and several other lads called him from his house Sunday night and that Orville Bybee hit him on the jaw and knocked him down. The father of Orville Byboe said this morning that Orville was passing along the road near th'o Christensen house Sunday night and with other boys was making some noise and laughing and yelling. Christensen, he said, came from the house and approached them, when Orville Bybee knocked him down. Christensen then pulled a gun and ordered the boys to leave, according to the father.

Christensen is 30 years of age and has a. and an infant child living at Uintah 1 He was born in Levan. Utah, but was raised in Ogden and married Effie Kent of this city. He has taught school at Plain City, Moab and several Utah towns. Christensen is a former service man and was overseas for IS months during the war.

Following a report to the county school authorities on. Monday to the effect that a. gang of boys led by Orville tBybee had surtrounded 'the home of Principal Christenssn Sunday night and after inviting him out of his house had set upon him and knocked him down, Superintendent Fowler -complained to the- juvenile court authorities and it was understood that the father. William Bybee and the boy Orville, were to be summoned to appear in the juvenile court yesterday. ORVILLE XOT THERE When the case was called yesterday Juvenile Judge L.

J. Holther discovered that through an oversight by Juvenile Officer A. B. Malan he had hot summoned Orville to appear. The however, was on hand and said that.

It had not been his understanding that the boy was to appear. 'Through Superintendent B. A. Fow- heavyjie'r, the county schools issued the following statement with regard to the Uintah "The shooting at Uintah is a deplorable thing: indeed. We regret very much that This state of affairs has developed.

"We have known, for some time that active "with' their rifles, firing inter-' mittently until a late hour in- the sector" between Aughnacloy and. Caledon. In Belfast two special" constables were shot mortally at rioon on -May stre'et. According to Fermanagh all road traffic on the Free State side in that vicinity has been suspended. seeking to sell cattle and horses, are being forced to offer them below- pre-war pric.es.

CONTRARY 'TO ORDERS March 23. (By 'the Associated Press.) If the Irish Republican army; convention is held Sunday, as announced Wednesday, it. will be "contrary to the. of general headquarters' staff," Richard Mulcahy, minister of defense', in th'e DzUl "TEW YORK, Society of Shifters," a. mysterious, band, whose charter 'is said' to.

have originated in -some cratty flapper mind, was denounced Wednesday by Miss Gertrude president of the Vacation "the most unmoral organization" she ever-heard of. Miss, said the "shifters" first came to, her notice disciplinarv troubles have caused som'-j Eireann cabinet, declared Wednesday unrest. These troubles were not con- mght He said nothing, however, in- sidered unusually serious and only dicating intention of trying to what frequently happen when largo school boys offer resistance at times to prevent the'meeting whicli.was recently forbidden by Arthur presi- i i i i i A i.i.it.*.i.i 4 school There'is an. i of the.Dail Eireann. settled case before Juvenile court here locally, do with an alleged Iretfusal ofl isome students at Uintah to obey the teacher's rule, involving a striking of -the teacher by one of the pupils in a' gang fight, it has come to this sad is a great surprise to the school people in Weber county.

We sincerely trust i that the young man who is injured! may recover speedily. (Signed) B. A. FOWLER." 1921, and that he Iliad completed only the sixth grade in school. The records show that Orville By-! bee was born May IS, 1907 and.

that the boy is still in school. -op- Four Power Treaty, Says Speaker, Means Safety to California SAN FRANCI-SCO. March peace is no longer menaced by Japanese militarism but by the United States senate, Chester Rowell. member of the California State railroad commission, declared in an address here, at a mass meeting called to'. i urge ratification of the four-power treaty.

WASHINGTON. March condition of winter wheat and other i fall-sown grains generally continued "And the only reason the menice is not immediately s-srious is' that Japanese statesmen are intelligent to that, infamous innu- improve during the week ending with' the contempt It deserves," day, the bureau says, today in he "It'is not Japanese yellow its weekly crop review. The excep- Journals but ostensibly responsible tions noted by the.bureau in its re- UnitedStates ors.who charge he with trickinf ports are that it continued too dry in with a few localities in the southwest and sleet and glaze storms did some damage in the western lake region. Wheat showed some Improvement Jin Ohio, the review says, and conditions are reported satisfactory in Missouri and Kansas, where' the effect of recent rains as yet has not become evident. Both wheat and made good progress in Oklahoma and show some improvement in Texas, although green After consulting with Juvenile Judge bugs are reported-'in many localities in the former state.

Rains during the week, however, the review continues, served to set back farm work and seeding of oats was retarded in the central states because of wet' soil. Planting of' sugar beets has been nearly completed in California and the early seeded ones are up and looking well. -oo- SWITZER NAMED HEW DRY CHIEF the advice of Juvenile Judge Holther, called on -County Attorney David J. Wilson for the purpose of having a complaint issued against Orville Bybee charging him with battery. County Attorney Wilson, said this morning that he had not -as yet issued the cpmplalnt against the Bybee boy because of the fact that Superintendent Fowler was to investigate the matter further relative to rumors he had heard about some of the boys saying that if they could not whip the principal with their, hands' they could with a gun and also relative to rumors that the principal had procured a revolver to protect himself against the uttack of a gang.

Pending the outcome of the injuries of Lloyd Bybee County Attorney Wilson said that no complaint would be issued as yet against Principal Christensen. WHAT RECORDS SHOW The juvenile court records show that Lloyd Bybee. 15 of with a number of other boys appeared in the juvenile court August 23, 1919 on a complaint filed by X. H. Anderson, 16, 1919.

charging him with trespassing and that the complaint was dismissed on the grounds of insufficient evidence. The county school records show that Lloyd Bybee was born Dec. 14, 1903, that he was not in school during the school term of 1920-21 and that he was IS years of age on November 14, "water body the world. England. 1 declared- there never would be war on the Pacific if the powers bordering-the-ocean could be gathered into one room and talk over the matter.

This treaty, he said, guarantees such a conference and nothing more. "Of these treaties, only one is menaced, that is the four-power treaty, the key to all the others. That is also the treaty which most nearly touches California. It safeguards the. security of our coasts and Oi our commerce.

It at tlii unrest which was troubling the peace' cf the Pacific. Primarily it is our 1 It Is to be voted on in the senate Friday. On that vote, California's voice in Washington is. now 3ivJJed. We are met to say that California's voice at home Is united." BANDITS LOOT SHOP IN CROWDED SECTION WASHINGTON.

March of division chiefs and designation of headquarters of new general prohibition enforcement territories announced today by Commissioner Haynes included: -Wyoming, Utah and Colorado--Theodore Switzer. Seattle, for Washington, Oregon, Idaho and Montana--F. A. Hazeltine. Los Angeles, for California and W.

W. Anderson. are 68 cities In the United States with a population of more tban 100,000. CINCINNATI. Ohio, Within full view, of March of passersby and with a policeman- directing traffic not a hundred feet away, three bandits today held up the Liberal loan office in the heart of the city and escaped with diamonds and jewelry estimated by Sam Sabin, owner of the pawn shop, at $100,000.

-DIAMONDS SEIZED BY U. S. OFFICERS NEW YORK, March whose wholesale value was estimated between $85,000 and $110,000, were seized today by customs officials. Francisco Chamine, 40, a rubber dealer of Para, Branil, alleged to have 11- Sunorior 400 miles Ion- and er of Para BraKil alleged to have 11- superior, miles ion 0 ana imported the gems, was ar- 180 miles wide, is the largest fresh re ted wnUe trying to dispose of them in a jewelry sho'p. "is is a poor way to get It I A LITTLE wisdom in the daytime is a better assurance of rest than any amount of anxious wishing when are a-jangle at night.

What you do at noon often has more influence on sleep than what you and hope for, at midnight. Coffee's drug element, caffeine, whips up the nerves, its use is continued there's usually a penalty which no amount of mental effort can avoid. The part of wisdom, as so many thousands have found, is to turn away from nerve- stimulation and adopt rich, delicious Postum as the mealtime drink. Postum delights the taste, but brings no dis- turbance to nerves or digestion. Even the little children can share in the enjoyment of Postum at any meal.

It's better to anticipate warnings than to be driven by them. It's better to encourage and preserve sound nerves and complete health than to listen to the clock ticks at night and say, "I wish!" You can get Postum wherever good food or drink is sold and served. An order today may be the beginning) for you, of the great satisfaction and comfort" which so many others have found in Postum. Your grocer has both forma: Instant Postum (in.tins) instantly In cup by the addition of boiling water. Postnia Cereal (in packages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drink while the meal is being prepared) made by boiling for 20 minutes.

a Reason" Made by Poatum Cereal Battle Creek, Mich. when'scores of members the Vacation association, employed in stores and' bjg business establishments were unable to pay' the small weekly which the association col- 'lects and puts away for them as a vacation nest-egg. SWEAJRS SEOBECY. Reluctantly, some, of the girls explained 'that, the tho "shifters," the newest flapper a -has- spread frora--the high schools and colleges to business girls whose -vacations come from A member of this strange, female bunco body, Miss' Robinson-Smith learned, first approaches a girl- friend and arouses her curiosity regarding the The victim'soon' signifies a desire to 3oin. "Put up yojir right hand--and swear you will never tell the-secret," says the initiator, and the candidate complies.

Then she -is asked for an inl- "tiation fee--anything from a quarter to a dollar. "Now," says the initiator, "you are of the 'shifters' and all'you have to do is to-make a present o'f a' pair of silk -stockings, then go out five of your friends." "Tha.t is'apparently air there is to Mrs. Robinson-Smith. "But it's abominable. The girls seem to be afraid of the stigma of not 'being so they let themselves be made shifters." The.

Vacation, association voted unanimously, to put the and forever-'out of business. --oo '-Gorgeous Sunsets May Adorn Gowns of Advanced Ones NEW YORK, sunsets, landscapes, or portraits of fortunate young may soon adorn the g-owns of New York's advanced dressers if-they take up, the latest art painting--samples of which-have been placed on exhibition in a New York art gallery for the first time. Ethel "Wallace, originator of textile painting, today said velvets and silks took her dye paints Just too beautifully for words, and she had interested chemist's who are working to produce dyes suitable for painting on other -fruits of the loom. The painting is done by painting the not-to-bc-dyed part of the fabric with molten wax and then immersing the fabric in the dye. Garments, however, are not the only textile products Miss Wallace hopes to beautify by her art.

The textile paintings, she says, can be used with good effect for screens, hangings and wall panels. -oo-- Does Crime Pay? DANVILLE, 111., March Gillenwater, carnival proprietor, -was fined $4000 and sentenced to the Leavenworth penitentiary for 20 years by District Judge English for violating the White slave He was charged with having taken Lilliani Merle, and Marie Thomason, young sisters, from their home in Pawhuska, and Gladys Pipkin, of Springfield, from Kentucky into Illinois, for immoral purposes. All of the girls testified against him, two of them alleging he was the father of children born to them. M'ADOO TO PRACTICE LAW IN CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES, March for the admission of William G. McAdoo, former secretary of the treasury, to the California bar has been filed' in the second district court 'of appeals here by Isidore Los Angeles attorney and California member of the Democratic national Hearing on th-j application was set for next Monday.

oo CALIFORNIA 'U' OBSERVES BIRTHDAY BERKELEY, March 23. -Fifty-four years ago today the Uni- of California was 'started with one small class. Today the university, said, to be the largest in the world, is celebrating its. I birthday. From a dozen students composing institution's first'class, it has grown to an establishment with an attendance in all its branches of 43,000.

SUITOR KILLS GIRL AND TAKES OWN LIFE FAMILY cn 9 Socks Children's Hose Black, brown, navy and gray. Black or brown; all sizes Sc Pair Sc Pair Limit 5 pairs to each customer. Limit 5 pairs to each customer. Black or white; ail sizes Limit 5 pairs to each customer. OGDEN-UTAH Avenue Washingt SALT LAKE CITY MAY PAY REWARD SALT March city commlsioners are anxious to find a way in which to pay the-reward 'of $500 offered for the apprehension of murders of Charles A.

Faus, Herman H. Green, commissioner of public, affairs and finances, said last night. "The impression seems to have gone out to the general public that the city commissioners have taken a stand against Mayor Keslen in his offer of a 5500 reward in the Faus murder case. and that they have' failed to back the mayor in his offer of this reward," "declared. "Nothing could be further from the facts i Levi L.

Peterson, through his attorney, asking that the reward offered by the city be paid to' him, and, as is usual in such; cases, the matter.was referred to the! city attorney's for an opinion, "The opinion, of -the city attorney was that this claim should not be allowed. The vote on the motion to deny was unanimous. "This action in no way. bars the I from the matter of' payment of the reward up at a future time." REFUSES TO THROW OUT M'MILLAN CASE SALT LAKE, March was made by the state supreme court yesterday to grant a release from trial on the charge of misappropriating of public funds to Hugh A. McMillan, who is sued for such action on habeas corpus proceedings.

In doing so, the supreme court holds that a deputy county officer charged with receipt and transfer of public funds has much -the same responsibility as hfs principal, and is equally amenable under the Utah law. Gives Assurance PATTERSON, N. March Angered, it ie said, because Miss Elsie i a fellow employe, resented his 'attentions, Aiphonse. Beyer, shipping clerk in Mapel Silk Mills. Wednesday lured the young-woman to a-drying room, shot and mortally wounded her, then fired a bullet his head.

Botlj died in a hospital, without regaining consciousness. NONE IDLE THERE, AUSTRALIAN 1. LONDON, March man is unemployed in- -Victoria, and no man need be poor there, de-i dared John McWhac, the new.agent general for Victoria, who: has arrived here'to start an emigration campaign. He that. Victoria is opening up its irrigable land and has about OOO.dOO acres of- crown lands suitable for growing.

In IS months or h'e announced, the government will be ready with a big scJieme to provide for many men on one of the- largest electrical undertakings in world. A deposit "brown coal is being developed pounds are being on plan to electric power for the whole oo- When a product has been the leader for more than 25 years you don't have to guess about its merit--you know that its economy, service and dependability have been proved. Castle Gate and Clear Creek coals have proved their worth in more than 25 years as Utah's leading fuels. When you buy Castle Gate or Clear Creek you buy absolute fuel satisfaction, for they are free burning, clean and economical, with a very small percentage of ash. Natives of British-East Africa, use jam jars and curtain for personal adornment ASK Miners and Shippers of Castle Gate and Clear Creek Coals.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

Pages Available:
572,154
Years Available:
1920-1977