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

Location:
Ogden, Utah
Issue Date:
Page:
1
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VTAlr -ally tonight anil a cooler in north portion tonight. IDAHO--Fair tonight and Sunday; i colder tonight. AMNUA-L STOCK SHOW, AGBEN more vites all its friends to attend the 'annual Ogden Live Stock sHow to be held in Ogden early in January. Fifty-fourth Year--No. 132 OGDEN CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 22, 1924.

LAST EDITION--4 P.M. FRANCIS Stretches of road in southern California are through sand dunes and tho engineers in- building the highways have had a more difficult problem than is encountered In road building in Utah. The sandhills in Imperial valley extend northward from the Mexican border 60 miles and they must be crossed to provide an outlet over the southern route to the east. TOT IXPRESS Where they are crossed by the highway the dunes are miles wide. In 1916 a plank road, built cf pine lumber, was constructed, but the planks arm rotting and now the, state of California is planning on; redwood timbers.

The planks, CxS' inches, are 10 i to 18 feet and they are laid- 4 inches- apart, bolted and the! open places are filled in with sand, The present road Is 8 feet made of solid planks, belted and! spiked by stringers. There are no I openings between the planks and I tho timbers are weakened by dry rot. Road building: Is a real problem in some parts of the country. An Ogdenlte, -who has traveled in foreign countries, calls attention to the fact-that In Mexico two ot the slayers of Mrsj Evans, a British subject, have been sentenced to bo bhot. In his travelers abioad.

the Ojf- den man says that foreigners might spit upon him In contempt, but an Englishman -would bo respected because Great Britain never 'allows a perpetrated against one of its subjects a. distant-land' to go unpunished, -and The natives recognize, this' unrelentiiig vigil 'of- the 'Brit-' ish government. It Is. or no respect for an in foreign countries prior to the war. Since then a decided improvement has occurred and the rights of Americans are being more regarded.

It would be'tvell for the American government to follow the British example of making the flat? respected wherever it flies. Auto drivers are requesting that the stretch-of road approaching the Klverdalo viaduct on the west side be Improved to the extent of removing of the corrugations. ASHINGTON, Xov. morning passersby at tho senate office building today saw a you. is woman hurtling through, a window and plunge 15 feet to the stone- pavement belo.v.

Slic suffered a compound fracture of the leg- and was taken to a hospital where she refused to give her unmc. Those who witnessed the plunge said a man's fnuc appeared at'the window and ttmt tho young woman, when picked up, exclalnied: "Oh, why did he moke me Police, are holding for investigation a man said to have been employed in Use offices pf a senator. R. WAY TO" NEW. Woman Dead Before Body Got In Furnace, Efe Says TESTS HER VBLOODj Lungs Show Indications of Strangulation Or Suffocation ill AT CEIIUES HERE $400,000 Passenger Station Formally Opened to Replace Famous Landmark Ruined by Fire in 1923; Site' Originally Given to Two Lines By- Brigham 'AGDEN'S new Union: costing" $400,000, and i- -known as the "gem of the was formally thrown open for.

public use, this' morning after a program jof dedication attended by hundreds of Utahns, promi- Combined Hotel and Bank nent railroad officials, and representatives of chambers Building Proposed (of commerce of the state. The, program 'began at By Eccles i o'clock in the new depot and was- -held under the uspices of the Ogden chamber of commerce, with- COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. preliminary report of an analytical chemist, setting forth' that Addie Sheatsley, .50, whose practically cremated body was found in furnace of the Christ 'Lu-' theran church parsonage, in Bexley, Mondy, by her husband, the Rev: C. Sheatsley, was dead when the fire chamber, toda'y caused Prosecutor John R. King, to' push- forward with Absence -of-any-trace -of earbon- monoxid'e poisoning in blood taken -from the lungs of the victim, Chemist C.

said in his' findings to Prosecutor King, resulted in his conclusion that she Th Is picture shows part-of the-new Union station in Ogden, which was formally opened today -with a program in representatives of "both the the Union Pacific and Southern Pacific A A A M. Nye, president, presiding. i Speakers-' voiced-'- that I Ogden, in- the will pro(Many Show in. keeping confi- I 'j. I deuce i the the; tO ACCept- Jflan -I erection of- the beautiful station- A fViTrlinprl by the Pacific, -and the- AS UUtimea southern Pacific a citizens who Attended -'-the dedication exorcists agreed An Cor Og-! tKat -new station is oiie of the de( 1 UDlty hot I wa finest in the western country and- mitted -t5.

the subscribers. the. un hotel last' night at a mass.) onst i. uc tioTv Impressed in In tli fiTn Trie .1 mi c- meeting in the Bertha-a ar.d the majority of th-ern fv Instead of proposed; wno VAEi hotel at. northeast corner--of, 'of'-tourists-i sh WHO ma-king '-apparent that Tw ntyfourta-, trect i A Calcmatipns and tetter, vsxn ciuiring additional- south, -ad' TMT had ceased to breathe before ner MEW YORK, Nov.

body entered the chamber. and-'-'east. "Urider the ne.w. -plan, --It it will i-ijso 1 only about 'Ohio, Funeral' -services Monday here at M. B.

for Mrs. Floretice after- church Kling Harding, who died at the home of Dr. Carl-W. Sawyer, son of the late Dr. C.

E. President Harding's person.il sician, will be simple. This was announced today by George. B. Christian, former to Mr.

Harding jnd a at the bottom of and is destined to remain He explained that IraQ sMe j.i 'i. i'- j- TT 1 breathed her lungs would have fnere until next springj at least, -according to. rrankhn wife'Aritiioriy e) absorbed by the blood. Mr. heyward Dravton Others, is -backing a quest said both Jungs revealed congestion, indicating Intense i.

either to.recover strangulation of. suffocation. of a section of the stomach and a. bit of the I esophagus for poison resulted In 'a he 1 A bottle of 1 poison, authorities say, J.lll£ it The road has been, lett in 3 oi the aaj ft i I I. A T-f a rough until the entire surface is to be "paved, but, in the meantime, heavy travel is calling for temporary repairs.

is in charge of the fur.eral 'arrangements. Tentative funeral" clans, Sir. Christian said, include'singing of "The End of a Perfec: Day" is missing from the Sheatsley home. Prosecutor King'today had not revealed what his next 'step might be. 'He returned from Canton I from the wreck.

operations "have, been held up 'by bad weather and we shall -probably hav.a to abandon the enterprise until, next spring," Mr. Mai today. The quest-f or Merlda's treasure-was-begun October. 1, WASHINGTON', N.ov. Long-worth.

ctill already as. the: IS Still utah a o''participate. by, worth of cornraon The plan was presented i tail by Marriner. S. a member', of.

the executive- the hotel movement.after, -it tiad been indorsed by the hotel TRANSFER As the matter now of the subscribeia have signed, slips permits the 'trustees to use th'eir money for 'of-. 1 the combined bank and composed' o'f J3d Peterson Greenwell. the' dechcation'" exercises Upset In New Haven Second period--Harvard 6, -At Syracuse--Second period--- -Interest in. the celebration. 3ir.

before Introducing the speakers, of -Its new structure, plainly rhows that Ogden industrial -center of the- intermp.uiiia'a west. This ho. is 'not New'Haven, Nov. was leading to 0, at the end of first quarter' annual ciasslc 'Jierc, therebV- lapaettiny the. is being played before a huge Rain, has soaJied the trawlers Foam 1 and (ing 1 on'' the and! "TJtdlf ha- Spray; -with the best-divers arid sal-Jtional bank site "after, ac- vage equipment a out quisition of additional last night where they Ohio, Rcpuhli-can house leader, 1 of Mji-s.

Perhaps the oldest records in Columbus, Ohio, Jlepublic.ini.he said, do not believe she corn- court house are contained In i which, while Jir Har- rnitted suicide. book devoted to the probate jdiniv was a The Sheatsley, informed at Pai-ls, Ohio, -of the clxcmist's find- up to Prose- I am glad of any information that may be found. I cannot say anything for it and I cannot say against it. Further tharf this, I-regard what York- harbor 'for I propertv. the site of -the Mr.

Eccles, in presenting the fairs of Weber Utah Tor-1 often at the Whije House on spe- from 1S51 to The a i The Mrs. j'Harding's favorite and ahvays'was came 'oiit today In favor of 1 --J some -east -of Cape. Charles! new: proposal 1 explainer the tllG COnSlaCratiOll I 1 I T-i 1 ftf' 1 i l-i ritory, book is-part of the records 0 trusted to the care of County Clerk requested by her when any musl- Van. Dyke. cal appeaved the executive mansion.

THat the probate court had great! The Rev. Dr. Jesse Swank, pastor i i .1, i I.AI tL3, j. powers In those.days is disclosed Epworth M. chinch, of i a been said to me as this paragraph: "John Thompson, having ji-lrs.

liarding- had been a riu-mber- 'since girlhood, will deliver a short mailo sermon. Tho Rev. request of the probate court a i pastor of Trinity Baptist Jasper Shipley, a minor, 14 years church, or which Mr. H-ivoting was of aso. be appi-entlcec.

to him, tho a member, will road the scrip. boy consenting, it is ordered: turos. The entombmer.Xso.-v'.ce' at by these presents bound unto John Thompson until said. Jasper Shipley shall be 21 year's of age. to rp-p A 1 TTTJ serve as required in a reasonable! AJtCAJUJli UJP ings, "said: "It-Is cutor King to act.

In charge Or. "Said John Thompson shall in Consideration of auch service clothe said Jasper Shipley in a respectable manner, and give one and a half years of schooling, and at the expiration of his time, a horse, sad- i a bridle worth $75." gAYS BRADSTEESTS -v, YORK Xov In those a horse, saddle and bridle meant today. A young equipped could travel over the seeking work on the farms and he might get employment as a cowboy This was (Continued on Two) LITTLE JOE given a fillip to retail distribution in the" northern half of the country which fortified the feel- tion and accept it as such." BE3JIEVJ3S IT SUICIDE On Wednesday, The minister told the prosecutor that he had come to the conclusion his. committed 1 suicide. During his, exkmination Tuesday, pressed the conviction 1 'that his wifo had been murdered.

The Rev. Sheatsley and his children, -spend the week-end at Paris with his mother, whore funeral services for Mrs. Pheatsley were held Thursday afternoon. Dr. H.

Brundage of Coluin- bus today will begin pathological examination, vital' organs, t'urne'd -'oiier to him yesterday by Long, which, it was Intimated, may be productive of additional information having Holiday trade buying is mentioned as larger also. Southern trade has not gained in propor- recently noted. re tt bearing on- the A hasty by Dr. Brundage has so far borne out -his findings, Mr. tlon.

this being variously attri- CHEMIST CL4JGVIS ACCURACY lower a expected am absolutely positive that prices for cotton. Holding of the: i was no of carbon- crop for better prices and monoxide in' the -blood'," 'Long warm -weather in central gulf and st ated "'I obtained three ounces southwestern areas. Reports from it a submitted it to five jobbers and wholesalers are rathei- different--tests. In- all o'f -them- more cneefyl. especially wa shown to be positively northwest and in the northern I normal strlcting corislcferatiori heretofore giVen the' i'nsurgfent.

Republican sin the house. WASHINGTOX. Howard M. Gore of We'st ginia was rotary of agriculture Uie late Henry C. Wallace; Mir.

Gore, who has been acting secretary since of Mi-. Wallate. can serve until next March 4, when becomes governor of his home'? state. CAIRO, Egypt, --A British note handed to Zagloui Pasha, the premier, today, demanded "proper apoloCT" in connec- i. --tion wflli the killijpg General Sii-.

Lcc slrdar. and of pounds. MEX. PRESIDENT TO RETUBN TO FARM Va. October It' 1 was an'-'-j proposal bu'ildin'g A A --i alone' for the a i a a TM TM 1 A of the its'geiievouv.

The rale team, first to set the but more especially" for tlie confi- Plaudits-of the somewhat, dence and. Interest -indicated in early- crowd, broke up the ci.y -by the railroad' MAYOR S.PEAKS. Mayor P. kirkenda.ll- formal-, ly accepted the in behalf ppiritih.qr out; its arrfjltecural, beauty of; a unique style 1 is to attract attention the tourists en. ter it.

"Tourists now 1 a i a beejilhotel ing. to.remember. Ogden alone for bank building now stands. beautiful also for been abandoned." 'To continue with ijts railroad, lie said. "We co'mplirnerit thosfi.who'-have given 'something- different In' and' for the -people 'saying we.

are absolutely satisfied. It is expected and "we gather' "express deep sodden' ground- to get beuer at--: the'conditions. The- located In 200 of water "and a -former 1 vell, navy diver-- had -identified the wreck' as that of -the PEAKS HI- ACKERS. -Mallory admitted, tlwt the wreck liad -been "but declined to exact position be- ca-use' of the fear, of hi-jackers. An Iron sweep a mile ilong dra'gged along' floor of the sea.

'by the to in the location of the hull 1 The 1 Jierida, a Ward, liner, was sunk May 1.011, when, ramjned on afogfry. night. "by the -Ainerican mail steamer. She was bound New -York roin 'jyas carrying large. 'shipiifent of gold, silver, lead 'and copper- said to valued- at from.

lib four million dollrs. OTHER other attempts have been Sinaloa, Nov. the expiration his presidential' term, will enter the garbanzp home town, according to the president's friends. becomjs a commission the, ha'ndling of the garbanzo. one of 2 0 0 191(5, expedition supposedly Percy Rockefeller, and.

Stillinajj, failed because the be'-located and the divers were unable to descend another ditipn 'backe'd -by Converse eat an'd Gotham, failed beqause of inadequate, equipment- AUTOIST'SENT'TO JAIL FOR YEAR ST. JOHN, Nov. CUTE THINGS -APE WHAT THE BABY DOES ONLY WHEN DAD AND NIOTHE ARE ARDUND of states. Reports from'! have preserved these sam- ha the results of these- ttsts and I am willing to sub- mil them to any'chemist to tHe- world. curate." -wholesalers and leading'industries are of a faster pace in 'many lines--tho best reported i since last in fact--although in very few' cases equal to a year ago.

This week, as last, the best reports'- come from the iron and-steel as regards output, 'buying- aW fl 1 and the estlles, silks winter i ci and spring, seeming to lead in the latter line. "Weekly bank slearlngs, 59,909,264,000.. I know they are ac- QN THIS the important-food crops' of Leonard Reid, son of, the late Sir imami ci na ef fl Itiiiic'toad the gives up the reins of 'government. land ai ro aa; as by- December 1,. is expected: to reach a in the sup'rem'e-.

court 'here Navajoa about December 1'5 to actively engage'ia dustry. The. president, "terested. in 'the opment of his. nativejsection', wets born.

miles from Navajoa 1 and is hims'elf farmer -on modern farming methods op the resources 1 nation. this plan, lie said, 'It would be for the trustees to' raise' $126,000 more, which, now Furthermore', it. was set- forth -that the. hopes that a hotel 'operating- company could" be secured to contract for operating the ity hotel on a 7 per Cfnt basis: had failed So- the: trustees, he asserted, were compelled turn to some other proposal. MUST FpRAVARD.

am Atr. "that If Ogden the future; -we hope for that jt: must "have a Jarge, fire-proof, tnbdern we ail shall the. laughing -stock '-of the west. -only -identifi-. cation- with the movement is to P.

a director of the" 'chamber' of 'an ihipressive address -in 'which out; the wtp.id stride's city, has- made ah. industrial jwaj- vsin'ce the -'building- of the station in He "Thirty-five years ago the 'built, on "sltb. 7 'the first XJnlon passenger: station, at- that indicated their, in -railroad' world-." in (Jniy July 1 fv" AM ntf fl ward 'the live 'for- wa. wint to "It; is now found to be- impossible "to -with the, -original --plans for, 'the hotel building on'' the old- Kirst i-Jfatiouai bank for' reason that only approximately $300, OOU. of Btock' has.

Thferer-; fore we are short, 'Assuming we could obtain of which is. -we then have; sufficient with -which to' carry the tMs 18.89'.' "Whether 1 they' had--: 0 awaiting or not at' any. rSTte one July 31, the of coiiimerce'had been one in and' Its' M-. wai'. the- prineipal, speak- "The "proposal ex--- tremeljt nlrAS rl PPonrpfV 'The Have Friday of rin i-ho 1 ftTlT 7-') ing veterans overturrie'd-in pf occur-; pants.

The "'victims''included, leers and i two of- i Reid was y-sentenced to jiionths' imprisonment. "o'o-: Con. -12'! STORMS PREDICTED FOR COMING- WEEK WASHINGTON. Nov. outlook -for the week be- Northern- Rocky Rali.i or snows ginning Monday: Mountain region: about i of week and.

again toward end. Temperatures near. normal, first half 'and iitiid'cr" latter halt REGINA, little town of Battleford, MOTORISTS OE residents arc threatened with TT possible levy of 75 per cent or I total assessments- to satisfy 'town I has', "appealed the katchew'an''gdvernmerit to I'roro'-'financial -warning 1 guard against- "fly by bondholders, of which approxi- TM mately has be.en.i-se'cured. community by. the SLAIN- FOR i ITTEMPTING- -building of you know bank 1 is.

monle's' 'in ln which Vqui i creditors -and th with 'of 640 'the total 'aasessmeiit 1 tlon. 12 0 0 Blue; favorite to. win, apparently-'decided-it riiust ad-; just itself to.conditions that might; upset all pre-jjame calculations. The coming field slowly'instead of with v.he! traditional snap and 'dash. "was busy: tossing and.

run-; ning with' ball. AH. pre-game calculations toda'y were; considered upset "by downpour. YAX.E KICKS OFF. Yale won'the toss kicked 1.

rail the' ball 'back ya.rf.fi and Harvard the line up to 'Yale's line. 4-yard sniasTi. Tale. Harvard promptly -turne'd" punt with a'. 60-yard 'Gehrke.

to 35-Tard line, -r another exchange of Jkiiller. of Ha.rvard: fumbled an3 Dfck.Xuman recovered, the.ball IJa.rvard's line. Two -smashes srave Vale 10 yards. TWO FIBI.D GOAJCS. "'In several who" was be a earned on Tale's 16' 1 goal "for' Har--.

-followedr -goal G-ehrke aflierithe Crimisbn'qffeftse had 1 "Ogdea --had of about as ji. heretofore '-Had 'contained one street car'rf- of T-hey --ran" from -V street side.walks,,;- except, board some-, 3 of ront mire 1 mer '-dayi io ot -miles of -our toriesr i'abput Ojiden. w.as.. at Bale's 10-yard "line. Another ifleld goal the Crimr son -came: after the kickoff, making theT score Harvard 6, Yale first gSal a place kick from the line Stafford Holdingr- Ytxle kicked and-G'ehrke ran ball-back' 20Vyarda to the 23- ryacd jine.

1 p.unt-by G.ehrke-.wenf- nearlyrTO' '-yards 'and dreed. to punt from behind' its own goal- line. Stafford fair catcH and plar.c?ment' klcl; forward with EFFORT 'eiict-'ol tiie- first', period. Aftir-' i for, jah. the-iliickpff' 25 second Yale got -ball Harvard's.

34" punt by Gehrke. made 'a'; of hojv i '-gain, Scott.K-whose.^iipme, wauy'-a; snbstltute--fpj; Jack" "-'-riext'-'- j'c'ar -to 'accept.

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About The Ogden Standard-Examiner Archive

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