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The Ogden Standard-Examiner from Ogden, Utah • Page 1

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Weather UTAH: Fair tonight and Sunday; not nmch change in temperature. IDAHO --Tonight Sunday fair. i Fifty-first Year--No. 261 OGDEN CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 25, 1922. Share Gtood Fortune iip and-paint up tMs in a position to hire two, three more days to help you put yottr home in repair do so.

Pass' prosperity around. LAST. EDITION--4 P. M. UINTAH SEEKS TEACHER'S RELEASE LEWIS TO URGE NONUNION MINERS TO LEADERS HOPE TO STRENGTHEN THEIR LINES Efforts to Be Centered on 200,000 Non-Union Fuel Diggers STRIKE POLICY MADE Seems to Stand in Way of Walkout on April 1 CLEVELAND, Ohio, March in the nation-wide coal strike of union set for April 1, i turned attention today toward win- 200,000 nonunion miners to the walkout, which seemed assured with I united support- of the half 'million I union men.

Calls'for the nonunion to act-'will be issued in several i states probably Monday. The program, of striking In the nonunion fields- was decided on yes- jtarday 'by the general policy com- imittee of the-United" Mine i of also affirmed the iunion's a.suspension of work no'wage contracts being made iivlth- any. soft coal district workers i until agreements had been reached I for the 'central competitive field. (Doubt'that'-the policy could long be I maintained in some unionized i fields. was expressed'by Frank Fari ring'ton, the Illinois leader, who voted.

support-; it, but declared the' I11K- would make a contract with operators' whenever the strike bsfran to cru.nj.ble The -committee' meeting also- was marked by private conference between John Li. Lewis, the miners' presidemvrand Warren Stone, presi- tlsnt of Locomotive Engineers. Mr. Lewis announced that Mr. Stone had "proffered but the miners' chief 'declined to define the nature, of the proposed aid, and Mr.

Stone refused to make any statement. Mr. Lewis said "he had no other conferences planned with the leaders of the three other "big four" rail brotherhoods which have headquarters in this city. Tho-union's move to bring about a strike -of nonunion, miners will center in Pennsylvania, where there are 100,000 union workers. Other nonunion fields that are expected to be invaded included Colorado and Washington.

(NOTE--Utah is a nonunion state in so far as its coal mines a cerned. allusion to Utah is made the'foregoing Associated Press'dl'3- patch. The-coal to be mined by non- strikers-in Utah and Colorado "was expected to help materially in preventing absolute collapse of industry should the prospective coai strike bo prolonged.) COURTING RIGHTS DEPEND ON VOTES LOOKS LIKE SOMETHING IS DOING WOMEN DIE OF EXPOSURE WRECKED BOAT Flying Boat Pilot Tells Rescuers of in Open Sea CLINGS TO WRECKAGE Two Temporarily Crazed Jump Overboard and Fifth Sinks OPERA SINGER GIVEN PRESENT FIREWOOD Salary of 1,500,000 Rubles Buys Only Pound and Half of Bread CHARLOTTE, Iowa, March men, if you wish to continue courting our daughters, you must sup- port'our ticket'in-the coming election" Is the practical political ultimatum issued by a group of women wljo are fostering the mayorallty candidacy of Mrs. James McDermott and the complete ticket of women will, oppose a ticket composed, entirely men here Monday. I DES MOINES, Iowa, March A score of small towns in Iowa women candidates for mayor, a i i several cases entire tickets of women.

Women have raised the issues in "several cities. In New" Market, iho campaign is "Shall we ha.ve poolrooms?" Women at Ames have raised the question of Sunday movies. Cambridge women have an independent party with a man candidate. St. Charles, Sabula and Calcmus a tickets entirely of women, and in I Iowa Adair and -olhor there are women on some tickets.

STRANGE DEEP SEA FISH IS CAPTURED ODESSA, March of. wood, bread and meat or flour are' more welcome to Odessa's grand opera singers, than gold or silver. Among the gilts to the orchestra' conductor of the famous play, here at a recent benefit in honor of his 25 years of service, was 25 pounds of firewood. The singers receive salaries, the best of which. 1,500,000 rubles monthly, will pay for, only a pound and a halX of bread daily.

Many of the best singers have left, but there still are 35 principals, -with" a chorus and ballet. Several performances a week a're given. Many of the seats are free, and a box for six persons costs only the equivalent of 25 cents. Madame Marie de Ribas. coloratura soprano; has contracted tuberculosis, but frequently sings leading Sho ia a granddaughter of the general de Ribas who was delegated by Catherine the Great i 1 7 9 4 to build a.

city here. The voice of M. Kanchan, well known as a. tenor, has recently changed to baritone, due to nervousness growing out of lack of food. Hia is lliO.OOO a day, price of a half pound of bread.

----oo PAINTER DINED BY U. S. AMBASSADOR HONOLULU. T. March fish of a species hitherto unknown to science, caught by a Japanese fisherman.

13 miles off shore at. a depth of 1200 is on exhibition here and is causing great interest- among ichthyologists, ami the general public. The- specimen weighs 150 pourds, is flat and almost circular in shape. Silver predominates in the coloring of its body, M-ith its i'ins and snout -tf scarlet and the 'dorsal a-bout IS long, spotted whito dots. The Is i a grey and black- and the eyV? are round and- about four inches in diameter.

yhe creature, was so strange that it nlaced on exhibition by the fish- who snared it. of people paid 15 cents each to view it. Dr. C. H.

Edmonson, ichthyologist that the specimen was not classified in any. available scientific works. Thu' will be presented to the Bishop Museum here, following its public exhibition. A-' cast will be and colored and-, the fish itself preserved in a g-lass tank. LON-DON, March Harvey, the' -American 'ambassador, and Mrs.

Harvey gavn a th'i embassy Friday to Singer Snr- gent, the. painter, -who is returning to the United Statos. The guests included the Japanese ambassador, the archbishop of Canterbury, the Duke and of marquis and- i of Sligo, the Earl and Countess of 'Sandwich, Lord and Lady Lee' of F.aTehaiYi, the Honorable Lady Herbert and Mr. and Mrs. John St.

Joe ''OO HARDING APPOINTS 7000 POSTMASTERS -March. Harding signed a.pproxim,ately,,7,- 0.00 commissions for postmasters since his it was. made known today. Under present -civil''. seryice rules each postmaster, before appointment must pass -arid of the 7,000: appointed alljpassed with I air averagftst, it "was announced.

Grocer Clerks Launch Fight On Blood Test Pricking Ears to Learn If -Handlers of Food Are Healthy Brings Hot Objections ALLAS, Texas, March 25--Objection of employes of Dallas grocery concerns to blood evidence communicable, required under Jaw passed "by the. last was placed on the grounds of the constitutional right of every man to refuse to testify self, in an injunction suit brought against; the city by W. Longley.here.' The Boston Party and other famous precedents are cited by lawyers for the plaintiffs in an effort to convince the court that 1 the men who handle food' in the city should' not have their ears 'unwillingly pricked by geon in order to examine; -their blood of disease, that might be- communicated tto-ough they handle. The which is being brought tty grocers in order to restrain the from carrying blood was left- in abeyance until next' Friday, when a final the court''having, arranged a gentlemen's agreement 'that during the time no Wood tests will be given. i --00 ---BIRTHDAY LETTERS SENT TO 'PUSSYFOOT' TEXAS ROILS GOOD Federal Officials-Take Hand in State's War on Gangsters DALLAS, Texas.

March county and city" officials today, await-, developments jn the investigation of flogging case's in Dallas, recent-, ly. They were joined in official I terest by department of justice ficials, who are keeping' a cases Cor forwarding to ington. 'MIAMI, March the women passengers of the flying boat Miss Miami, which left here Wednesday island -of'Bernini, and was "forced down in the opt-n sea.by a broken propeller, died of exposure and two other passengers, crazed by -exposure, jumped, overboard into' the sea, according to the' story told by" Robert Moore, pilot of, the craft, members the crew of the steamer William Grton; which rescued him Friday. night, from- wrecked hull of the boat. CLINGS TO WRECK.

The fifth passenger, a man, whose name- as well those Moore could not quietly "into the sea-early Friday haying become exhausted, from 'clinging" to 1 tti'e craft. Passengers aboard the. 'Miss Miami- whe'n. she left here were and' Mrs. sas Dickson of Memphis.

"than picked up by the bound 'steamer' -night' about''50' miles' a about 100 miles-'nbrth of "Moore "was." unable' to; g-iye a coherent account-of what happened, the captain the' William Greeii said in a wireless "to'Jtiariii duping the night, "iarid only which had- boon -obtained was that he had: cllin? to-'the wreck, of the boat more than hours -in-a- heavy" storm 1 BUSHED 0X3 HOSPITAL, The sub-chased 154 arrived in port' sriortly after" 10 today after having transferred the deiii-uus which picked him up. He was rish- e.d to a hospital; According to his-'disconnected story, told during intervals when he was.ra-j tional, two 'women 'died in arms from exhaustion, two of became panic-stricken" finally slipped quietly into the watery grave-Friday morning" 1 as a result of sheer incoherent story of accident as told'to the members.of by the-pilot before he lapsed a semiconscious is to "the effect that" shortly after the Miss'Miami left this port last Wednesday morning, a broken propeller forced her down and she rode the waves '-in "safety; drift- ins OME of. the many features -to be found in -Tomorrow's Ogden Standard-Examiner: FRAXK H. SIMONTS discusses what" the French position really amounts to. HARDEN" COLFAX.

financial writer, presents' figures on what coal strike will cost people. VICE PRESIDENT doesn't think much of his present- job, Edward- Hart, political observer, says in ar.ticla. SPORTS ARTICLES by Billy Evans. Walter Camp and George Chadwick. AXDRE TAR.DTEU.

recognized as most skillful: analyst in France, will give of the political situation- his country as affected by America. MAXIMIIJAX HARDEN, foremost writer on present-day Germany, will give" a character, sketch of Otto Wiedfeldt, the new ambassador from his country to the United States. SIR PHILIP GIBBS. famous English journalist, who is now in the "United. States, will describe, flack: of b- served in'ith'e'-' GEORGE "parliament leader, 'will reviewi the Apolitical situation "a view of 7 George 'is." "steadily.

gaining. LLOYD BYBEE, SHOT BY SCHOOL TEACHER, DIES County Prepares Complaint Charging Voluntary Manslaughter ONE TO TEN YEAES Investigation 1 of All Circumstances Still Being Made By Officials "I'm awfully sorry," was the com- Ynent-made this morning by Marlow J. Christensen, of the school through the barred door I of the county-jail this morning when he was told that Lloyd Bybee, 18 years of age, had died as the result of the shooting Wednesday evening. This morning Christensen was held within the jail proper and was not allowed to occupy the visitors' cell in the outer office. Visitors who called to see him were barred, except his relatives and others who had business 'to transact.

Other than to say that he was sorry ever the death of young Bybee Christensen made-, no. other comment. PETITION-SIGNED, Uintah'-residents Richard Pincock and declared that boys -of vicinity- had harrassed Christensen throughout the that'- he '-became desperate, They he was.frequently made lads atonas even 1 'when "he crossed the road Uintali" resident: said ing petition.had been nearly the entire population of ''Uin- itah asking that Christensen-be'-released-from j'ail and- 'declaring that he. was-driven to'the-shooting. man declared the peopl'e of Uintah would, furnish if necessary.

to obtain the of the prisoner. The'Uin'tah-''resident-said that the petition is Being brought'' to Offden and a request will be made that it'be published. i happened until Thursday, morning, when the. i of the began to leak. Men and women.pas- sensers at the i all became exhausted and one of the women- 0n Thursday jumped if a i 'threats from anonymous sources a warn'ed the district attorney to.

"g'o, easy" in P. Ethcridge, a victim today I guarded by- -plain-'clothes men. Philip Rothbliim, who-was flogged to leave the city under, threat of death return to Dallas by his wife from Louis connection with the trial- of I Patrolman Crawford-, set for next officials said. Crawford is iassau i an( WESTERVILLE, O-, March town folk of "Pussyfoot" Jxihn- son today celebrated the sixtieth, birthday of the. internation-.

ally al-. though Johnson is absent. For several, days. local have 'been writing carefully, worded 'letters of; good wishes and- directing-them to Johnson at -Indianapolis, where "he to. "deliver two addresses Some 'gift' of Wes-' tervllle his room i a Johnson' sail for New Zealand; about-Juhe 20 to tour in that 00; MOZART'S QPEKAV, IN 'FIRST SHOWING March' its on the 'American stage', Fantutte," libretto." da Fpnte, was' isurig ri'isht-by the'' company-.

and they fainted supported by Pilot Moore for seven, a halt hours, when died the arms, pilot ami-ha' gently dropped their bodies into; the had now claimed passengers. This left only ust Suite," vice 'president of. the abie Flour Mills corporation', of 'Kansas City, -took ning the pump In.an; boat' afloat. They'-k'ept until Friday' morning when they so exhausted, they: could, r.o-longer WASHINGTON, March (By the Associated Press:) The four- power -Pacific treaty, to which the senate gave its approval yesterday has still to run. the -gauntlet of another- executive Diplomatic representatives of.

three Bowers in Washington have been-'- keeping their home governments closely advised'' every, cle- the contest over the pact- in. the United" States. Without any formal admission -on the point it. has been: tacitly understood in diplomatic circles here 'that because of the- genuine doubt- existed up to the last as the a treaty, in the some of. these dipjomatic have rather advised government that it might to defer their own action on.

the developments in SAME JW. FIREMEN WEEP AS THEY BATTLE to a Brooklyn engine comr wept today- as they fought small blaze they knew' that -Frederick'-Brandt; one of -the--most popular members of the company was On the blaze.he from the engine, and heavy wheels passed -over Afterward all-eight members of the to. give i their "blood In a transfusion operation, --He sent- his-regards the died. 0(fr, WEATHER WITH LOCAL SNOWS DROPS INTO -and Mooro "over the side of the boat-and fast-, ened a rope around himself tCvS.uppdrt him in case became, unconscious. Standing on his feet vtie waved a white this "up all day 1 After or realizing his money containing, his 1 to 1 "You'are a younger and-maybe' abletb come-through J.can- not hold WASHINGTON-- tlie week begin' and-pla'-: teau Generally jfalr greater part, week: -with biiity- of local' snows to' mi, tHel.we.ek.

JPacific iness, "-raiTic 1 Moore said nine the Miami'after she one. so that, vhe.could^'reaii;, her but they '6eW'ttie-- wrecked said that: on: 'and Friday- he head, none-ron Tl Stewart. erican- was aboard -the the- stric.ken "re.scu'edi' I In y.ou; 1 iriy lAOi 1 CE E.royid-erice" Vl i Three Foreign Powers Have Kept Governments Advised of Situation- British if it follows the ordinary course, can give its assent- to treaty reference to parliament by- a. mer-e' order in privy council. The Japanese is -clothed similar.

'power or. 'the ratification of that country hiay be by, council- of a very llnfiited body of-high'of; action- likely to 'the is doubtful and' yesterday's, fiery 'debate 'in-, that -body 'on -basis mere' 1 reler- the -Washington is oJt here as warranting---tlie closest study o.f' the situation Paris. Tfcikre have been, some suggestions- in- diplomatic circles herej that 'government will entually approval 'to the -'treaties- of Mariow J. principal ofc' the Uintah.school will today be.charB-- 1 cd-with -voluntary, manslaug-hter as the result, of-the 'death'last niieht of Xloyd. i Bybee, 18 years of age, who was shot; Wednesday night by Christensen onj the.

road the-Uintah depot, when; Bybee and other lads are alleged? to-have-surprised. Christensen and ad: vanced toward' him in a threatening; attitude. Ieath caine at 7 o'clock after pneu-: monia from the passing through the lower portion oC the right, lung. The .38 calibre bullet- also tore a large hole In the lad's BOND TO BE NAMED David Wilson' morning-'that, he would file complaint, "charging- Christensen witlu'voluntary manslaughter so that the school principal can -gain his'lib- erty un'der bond. The bond will be set by a district "court judge after the complaint-is Issued.

Voluntary manslaughter carries the punishment of from one to In the-state prison in the event of said that the shooting did'' not fillns: of a murder charge agalnsrt'Chrlstensen for the reason that no could be ahowri on- the part of Christensen in the shooting. Investigation by Mr. Wilson has'also-disclosed that no evidence can be shown that the'killing was but on other, hand. Christensen -attempted to -defend himself. The cpunty, attorney said that the manslaughter charge was all.

'that if further investigation -'disclosed that the crime was preme'diated; he Intimated, that a'- more -serious -complaint may later be lodged. Mr. Wilson said he the -as a would 'nbt. if -serious -attempt's; were to Iplace -reservation's -and-' even ''amend' ments -upon 1 '6 4.n;. adoptiiigj the" lielf is- ref erred 'aitack he-'p J-'-f 1VLT.

rVliaUJJr- JciJ.U. liW i manslaughter, charge 'on the 'Christensen draw a "gun. last Sunday -night Or 7 -yille with'Christensen outside his If later testimony ahowa.that Chrlsten- 'did pull the disperse complaint" may. be filed. DENIES HE BAD GTW Orville Bybee friends.

are naid to that: Christensen did 'flash his tvenlngr" aaj chase reported to-have denied, but-, said of wood his hand. The shbotinsr. was the m'tnatlon existed; in -BChool' for some" time. JJloyd Itrissaid, took. the part peiidedi'him -for alleged prepare 1 his -i; OF on the princl-: about to grun and estop.

is. three story, he told then" shots, ifTontof Orville By? froTM- some brush viinftthe stilly In the county,.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

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