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Show T1IE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, bin aftf'p them up to the real to WaUng ton The polio declared the story provide a time discrepant y, ice the alesretl asto have taken sault wsis at about t o'clock, while the lil waftpiac said not to have left the home of a relative here unti at ahonii 10 3d clock deard Utah Men Give Arguments for Separate C. P. Road CONFESSES AIDING FEARFUL CRIME Secret Service Operatives Capture Ringleaders of a ; Counterfeiting Group. t ' (Oentlmnd frn Par, On,.) than $450,000. They previously had recovered In Los An stoles and San Frannotea cisco, English equivalent 'to almost the same amount. The money found In New York included 8W d notes and 36 one hundred-poun- d nutes. Ulavadonovlc was declared hy the aeoret service to have earned 1100 counterfeit notes when he was arrested recently in Los Angeles where, officials here understood, he was connected with a hank-Thenotes also were of fifty and d onWnUndred-poundenominations, Mr. Moran said, and it was believed that the operations had been confined to . the production of that - kind of currenev-Officials here- understood that secret wrvtce agents of the west roast had the presses, tools and some of the pairer used by the counterfeiters In Los Angeles. SAN FRANCISCO. Cal., Dec. t. Ivan Clavadonovlc, who wdis arrested here. on a charge of passing $6000 worth of alleged counterfeit Bank of England notes, confessed, according to federal secret service agents, to an alleged conspiracy to obtain exchange of more than 3350,000 for the alleged counterfeit notes. John Popovich was arrested In New Torw today in same case. third man. Oscar Simon, Is also under airest. BUtxsk "Ange'es, from Which City Popoy ich fled to New York. fifty-poun- se cap-tur- f V Va SHOOTS' MAN, THEN SURRENDERS , SELF Deo. is-- gai-w- Service. PORTLAND. Ore., Dec. 2. M'S. Mabel .Nichols,' 23, gave herself up to Bheriff late this afternoon, worn and Roberta dash from Sumtired after a flftv-mll- e mit atave station, In 'Klamath county, saying that at 11 o'clock this morning ahe shot and killed Robert Greer, a man about 45, with whom she had been living. ., "We had been moonshtning and he threatened to bring me to Bend and take she Is said to m into a life of shame, 1 grabbed have told Sheriff Roberts. big pistol and shot, just once. I tan. 1 I'm sure he is dead didn't go back, but I jumped into his automobile and drove . full ispeed to town." The stage station Is at a lonely, point. No one lived in the Immediate vicinity except the man and woman, who went there six weeks ago from Ellcnsburg, home. Wash , Greer has a married daughter, Mrs. R. E. Smith, who resides in Ellcnsburg. Mrs. Nichols has a daughter and & sister living in faeattle, she said. thelr-form- On Trail of Slayer. HACKENSACK. N. 3., Dec. 2. The authorin' are on the trail of the murderer Hervish of VaJltngton, N J., whose mutilated body was found yesterIn field a there. Prosecutor Hart deday clared today in denying reports that a formal arrest had been mads, He as Id that the foreman of the mil! m which the murdered girl had been employed was . , questioned. The Police also Investigated the .tale of aged couple who said they saw two men beat, a young woman on a lonely rood mo r Caristadt Thanksgiving night . The couple said they saw the men best and knock down a girl, who arose and rn av served as lookout because of his friendship for Becker. . Norkins statement, authorities said, explained that on April 7 Becker drove the car into the welding yard, where he pretended the machine stopped because of engine trouble. Beeker got out and then called to hts wife to alight and look at the motor. It was while lookifig tihder the hood, the authorities say, that Mrs. 'Becker was struck with a lead pipe. Then she was dragged thirty feet by the collar and thrown Into the nit, it is charged. While Norkin watched for intruders, Becker, it is alleged, filled In the pit. shoveling quick lime, earth and slabs of rock over the. body. Then, standing on the ground, the two men are said to have shaken hands anil pledged themselves to everlasting secrecy. . Arrange for Days Trial. 2. para-lelle- Guaranteed Fur Goats Including Our Entire Unrivaled Stock at j n Discount 3 Debts an Obstacle. Jointly Operated. -An- ANNUAL CHRISTMAS SALE. L DURANGO. Colo., Deo. Judge W. N. Searcy of the- distort court of La Plata announced called in he had county today Judge J. C. Wiley of Del Norte. Colo , to preside at the trial of Rod S Day, editor and manager of the Durango Democrat. charged with killing WiUiam L. Wood, city editor of the Durango Herald, on the main street hfre April !4 lat. The trial is scheduled to begin next Monday. Judge Searcy announced he was withdrawing from the case for reasons which he considered sufficient to summon another trial judge. Because of the piomlnence o t the principals, officias expected it would take History Is; Related. several daja to get a Jury. Day, who Is "Let us touch upon the historical. The 47 years old, is a son of the late David first transcontinental railroad was comT. Day, pioneer. pleted In 1S69. The driving of the golden spike occurred at Promontory Point, Given Prison Terms; of Ogden. At the very UP PER SANDUSKY, O., Dec. 2 drew fifty miles ofwest the Central Pacific and inception Greer and Edward Gibbs, Carey. Union In conwaa there Pacific rivalry Ohio, policemen, who were indicted by struction. as both were land grant and the Wvandotte county grand jurv for Jn and. bo thetr aided bond companiesr shooting Edward Reissiitg, a University two eagerness to gain an advantage the disof. Michigan student and assaulting othother each for a er Michigan students while returning roads overlapped 106 miles west of Ogden, the of tance from the, Ohio football d the line having been game, October 2d, today pleaded . guiltv gradingto ofthat extent. The Central Paand each was sentenced to from one to y was organized-bthe cific 'Big company twenty years 4n the Ohio state peniten Four, who were men comparatively poor tlary. The penitentiary sentence was for an undertaking so gigantic. At the suspended, however, on condition that the Central Pacific had neither again assume to act as an of- avery beginning political atmosphere and lobbyists were ficer. to promote its Interests, and The two oiffieers will have to spend engaged of persuasion remained a thirtV days in the county jail, however, this science of the resourceful men part of the life on the assault charge. who dominate l the affairs of the Southmen were ambitious There Pacific. ern Charges Dismissed. had vtstons. DENVER, Dec. 2. District Judge C. J. and they Sloriey todav dismissed charges of operat- Turn to South. ing a confidence gam against Ixm Blon-ge- r, K. C. Williams and A. W, Duff, filed "When thev found at Ogden a barrier last August, following their arrest In the to an expatvs'on eastward, they turned breaking up of an alleged $1 000.000 bunco southward and then eastward, and in act they turned from their first ring. Counsel for the plaintiffs announced an agreement had been reached out of that love, the Central Pacific, and finally cencourt. tered their efforts In the Southern Fa- -- Deposit Xmas. ftt On j Pacific Ogden has large Southern shops where more than Hnn men today find emp.ovment. It ts the division headquarters of the Southern Pacific. There are large yards joinllv operated by the Southern Pacific and Union Pacific railroads, and a union deiot. In the whops work is performed for the Union Pacific as well as the Southern Pacific. When the subject of segregation and of grouping of the Central Pacific came before us, and the time arrived for a decision, there was some hesitancy because of the big local interests, involving our tndustrlai life, held bv the Southern Pacific and the Union Pacific. The determining factor was the. discrimination practiced by the Southern Pacific and the effect of that discrimination- on the welfare of thn -region. We have no criticism to make qf Southern Pacific management as affect'ng the financial intera whole, ests of the Southern pacific or of the operating ability of the men at the head of that great system: they the most caprank, in our opinion, with able railroad officials of the United States and are masterful in their calling, but tliev are required to play a double role in which there Is divided allegiance, and thev cannot serve the Central Pacific to highest purpose and Paat the same time yield to Southern devocific, to which they owe supreme reabove tion, a company stewardship proach. tnter-mounta'- A Will Reserve Any Fur Till , i to-th- UlSeTOirCasH Between eifle ft s a way rmt to th vrt and 1S54 thev made ot the Central Pacific main line a bridge- - a much Jectet brjdsfd and tnev built eisew Jjweh A though the Ctn;ri Partie roeivd a reh patrinionv, including Ent grants of very mStf action of land for tentvj of way, aide of ths r miles on a mile in bonuftt and as htaii as ati the nd of 194 tha Central Vacifie aa in decay and had creeping paralysis, and Has otherwise incapacitated. And.' all the time, tha promoters were proa- ' paring as they moved south and Hard. Cnliforma panera quit jreneralv' charged the four with snie Bing he sub stance out of CVntrpl Vac'fie in order to realise their dream of the Sunset route, am of the opinion that they did and What was the reason much of the! upbuild ng of Call font ht waa at the expense of every interest tied to the Central Pacific, Including that of Ogdon? 2. , Be Universal trwi Short line as feeders to the transcontinental lines. considerable a With its YORK, "Notwithstanding signed Statement from Reuben Norkin that he growth, Ogien tn itsf Infancy and is a to acted as a lookout while Atwaham Becker city that has yet arrive Granted all knocked hu wife unconscious and then that is Ogden's by right in, a' railroad way. to the Pacific buried her when she was still alive in a this city, at the pit in his automobile park in the Bronx, coast, should have toil UOO or ir.oie popuauthorities were confident tonight that lation, and this bring1 me to tile point they had correctly reconstructed everts of Southern pacific control of the Central Pacific and th discriminations which leading up to the murder of Jennie Beckhave attended that control over a long er on April 7 last. to the Becker is under indictment for the poriod. greatly tnjuty and retardathe entire The authorities indicated that tion of iot only Ogden but slaying. country discriminations there might be at least one more indict- Intermom.tain ment asked next week in connection with which have been ref.-- red to by the supreme court of the United States as a the ease. and a restraint upon the freedom Albert Cohn, assistant district attor- - i menace commerce which congress intended to of on from scene ney, the where returning the body was found, said tonight "Nor- recognize and protect, and which the pubkin looks like a principal in this case lic is entitled to have protected This goes to the point of morals and the ofto me " neither be condoned nor Norkin's confession,, according to the fending should tolerated, whether a few or many be inpolice, stated that he accompanied Becker when the latter drove with his wife volved. in a taxicab parking kt, and then Yards NEW li DECEMBER 3, 1922. "It has jh.pn pleaded that the Central Pacific, stamlng alone, would he a weak line. Whatever elements of weakness are present are the sin of omission and commission of the Southern Pacific dating hack forty year. The Central Pacific was drained, hut the debts were left as an obstacle to rehabilitation, and eventually those obligations must be met by the cities and towns, and tha people Theregenerally, served hv that road fore, we have a prior right and a moral right akin to that of an Inherent right, "When Hacriman took over the Souther Pacific In 1901 he found a wrecked Central Pacific, ' IK rebuilt. Improved, revived the road, hut he, too, faced the the truffle. His problem of dividing work and genlivs for constructive his ability to finance somewhat for the restrains he placed upon trade. Then came the supreme court carrying the order divorcing Union Pacific from Southern Pacific. It was a step forward in law and order, which exacts fair treatment and protects the weaker forces of soe'aty tn the enjoyment of their rights. Then arrange-eft la were made to sell the Central Ahe Union Die If and al the details had been worked out when the California railioad intercommission pleaded an objection. The supreme court had indicated that the nion Pacific would not have set up a monopoly In ac qulrtng the Central Pacific. Ogden was disappointed over this turn of affairs, havrisr hoped that a wrong wouUrsln a measure he corrected once the Central Pacific was Released from the strangle-holof the Southern Pa- . -- .AND MORE 'Choose from the largest coUwtion of up-- t d a models in Salt Lake City. Each coat embodies highest class workmanship and peltry, AU elepantly silk lined. Prices in this sale place furs for Christmas within reach of the modest purse. o-- Reserve .Any Selection Until Christmas A Deposit Will Choose Ear ly Fur Coat Are Always in Highest Favor for Gift-givin- g. m to We Stand Behind Every Fur Coat Sold 1 With the Boston long-endur- .Se Guarantee of d cific. TI0N Improvements Held Up. "In the past eight years the Southern Pacific has made no improvements on the Central Pacific in our territory. There ha been no building of feeders; no enlarging of fac. lilies; and We trace this standing still to the faet that the Southern Pacific prefers to uphold In the direction of its long haul. It has a compelling motive and selfish interests dictate that It continue to throw the weight of Its resources in tha. direction of the 100 per cent Sunset route. This must have a serious influence on the future of Ogden and all tributary territory. "Ogden Is an resembling point of freight oHglnat ng in much of the a With country. rlosely connected transcontinental route this ehort-hawould be stimulated. "Ogden not only wants the Central Pacific so controlled or grouped ss not to be fettered, but urges that the ll Pacific he so unhampered as to-- . be allowed aggressively to fight for business over the central transcontinental route, to eollcit and . invite traffic through the Ogden gateway-- Ogden, like an individual worth while, asks for no favoritism, seeks no doles and courts no condescension, but labors for a far field in which to grow and expand by virtue of all the blessings conferred hv nature We object to the Central Pacific being closed In any degree to the free and normal flow of competition in Interstate traffic. n ul Cen-trn- j Water ftoute Factor. "If water competition Is entering more largely into the field of railroad traffic, we call attention to the neces'ty of building up the indusft-ieof these In. terior place far enough removed from the coast as not to Ite readily accessible to ocean transportation. Unlesa due consideration he given to this phase of the problem of ocean competition, rates on transcontinental lines eventua'lv may have to be increased. The traffic from rail to ships should displaced be made hp by stimulating the growth of Industrial suoh as Ogden, and the way to best promote Ogden's Interests - arid those of Ihe state of Utah and the ire mountain domain. Is to strengthen that great artery of trad created under the Pacific acts and conceived as a continuous, connected snd unified railroad, , "It has been suggested that this advancement of the Imermountaln country might be brotigjvt about by the Central a stub line, and the making Union Pacific another stub line competing at n to direct th; flow of traffic east or west by the breaking down of the rate structure through dvxtructbe competition if we could be assured of the breaking down of rates and eould he further assured the breakdown would ne potmj-nen- t. we might he tempted to pursue " , this will o' s Choose elections Wisely s i r a j that they may have lasting value and be daily enjoyed. Quality furniture . ancUAecora-tiy- e nowe pieces may'" bought at' very ntoderate prices. They reflect sound judgment and good, taste Fn selection. They -- will brighten any room in the home, - t ' Mahogany or Walnut Tea Carts, with drop leaves, $27 An excellent Tea. Cart, with- out drop finish leaves, ...... r mahogany .$13.95 cen-ter- a. e- Os-de- -- he-wisp, Destruction Not Encouraged. A t understand the purposes of the interstate commerce commission, destructive competition Is not Rimed at and fS not encouraged. It Is an axiom In economics that a laborer cannot continuously receive a wage he does not earn, for, in the last analysis, that. brunts ruin to cm. and ployer employee, This, stated conversely and applied to this question, means a railioad cannot go on giving aervic without just compensation; and so the intei state rommerce commission, in its wisdom, determines rates on a basis of equity and stands guardian of our rights, leaving competition of service and actommodation to the railroads to be administered within the bounds of Justice as defined bv the supreme couit of the United States. "A to segregation, we feel that many of the Interlocking and entwining 'problems were created In anticipation of this day of judgment. Originally they may havhvheen set up to ward off the liquidation government debt Howev.r, in the Idle sixties a similar difficult confronted dive people . of the I nlted State. hearmg'bAy specie payments Those opposed erilar'ged'wi the difficulties and minimized the possibilities, until a dis tingulshed statesman cleared the atmosphere by declaring that the way to resume Kperie payments wds tp resume. We are told that It is only a ptqp from the sutdlnee to the ridiculous Wexqften find It Is only a step from the seerrnihelv impossible to the posslhle, when thereqkx the right approat h and understanding coupled with the will to do. or-dh- e Fernery, as pic. $25.65. tured Other Ferneries in Mahogany : . . .$19.35 finish 1j Un-o- er I of-th- e r We in Utah are somewhat amused to flnd propaganda favorable to the Southern Pacific in New Mexico and Ar'x na and that which is distributed in t. tah, so contradictory. We quite agree with the statements made in New ani Arizona, that the unmerging of the Central Pacif.e and Southern Pacific would ieesen the tonnage over the Sunset route. ' Professor Ripley expresses my thought more clearlv than- I am capable of doing w hen Another advantage of Central Pacific unmerger concerns provision for the future of a Central Pacific railroad developed folly up to the physical stand-arri- s of the Union Pa ific and the Chicago & Northwestern, to constitute a prim transront mental route It is not heart of the Un.ted States. alone that through train srhedulea by one company could be made, or that through rates and hiding could t.e established, hot also that amide investment should be g and ell of the marie In insmmwnlalittes necessary to a tther first-clae line. While the Central naturally iswillsq profitable to Its pres, la allow never ed to cut owner, it ESTABLISEEDiBSr i double-trsekin- ss Pi-rifl- SPECIAL NOTICE. the convenient, sizable Compare lumps of Knight F.gg Coal with any fuel value on the market, ; Knight Egg Coal gives you: a lump eoal value at a nut coal price. Bave smashing of lumps and save money by insisting on Tour dealer's delivering Knight Egg Coal. (Adv.) opinion of those with talked, the witness replied: I am Impressed with the fact that the older cIrss of business men, thb men who have been in bustnes in Utah the longest and who have been mainly at the head of th enterprises of "Utah, are mainly in line with th uprme coutt decision. However, among some of th younger element that ts growing up thcid la a diversity of opinion. Those who hsve been In favor of th Southern Pacific retaining control of the Central pacific have been the younger, newer business men rather than the men who hive lived In Utah a longer time and dene part ofe Its development Utah Resources Detailed. Mr. Rif hmond then discussed In some detail the natural resource of Utah. dd ing: It hna become more and more abso- lutely necessary ax our development has gone forward that w e should seek a closer and more pprfert market for our products than we have had In the past, and that market is naturally on the I'a- ewatuwed oa Pet levesteaa. ran The Eye Is Like a Camera It is common knowledge that if s camera is 'out of focus u blurred e picture results. thing, happens when the evoball is too long or too short it cuunqt focus correctly. The-satu- o ...... ..... " e. Unmerger Effect Discussed. Mahogany 'GOOD FURNITURE lapse Into down right neglect. But there the pres'dent of the chamber under auts a real distinction between passive thorization of th boatd of governors maintenance, even at a high standard, The committee consisted of practically and a positive program of upbuilding and the entire hoard of governora. with probdev elopment. ably ten or eleven additional names to The ftnd.ng "We feel our position la not one of make up the twenty-fivpublic clamor or public sentiment based of this committee never ha been Of on false promisee, but is founded on Just Commerce to the Chamber back extending over a period of as a body, and to properly represent grievance more than a quarter of a century. We the Chamber of Commerce and Commerfurther feel that, though certain Califor- cial club qf Balt Lake City this findnia Interests may he temporarily incon ing should have been reported back to venienced by an Independent Central Fa - the enure body and at ted upon there vote or by maea cifjC or a Central Pacific unified with the by either referendum Pacific, the disturbance would meeting. That was not done." wCl what with but slight when compared, have sufferjed and within a few, months- Procedure Questioned. to he followed by an undisnp. And is that g requirement of the bystimulus to industry wher-evprecedent!! the Union Pacific and the Southern law of the Chamber of Commerce? pacific might meet in the field of public "That l my understanding. seriice. . "Then do we understand that that resolution adopted by the Chamber of Richmond on Stand. Commerce of Balt Lake City represents Mr. P.lchmond, after stating hs busithe opinion of the committee of ness connections, said he is a member merely twenty-fit- s and the board of governors? of the Balt Lake Chamber of Commerce, would be my deduction. "That of hoard was a member governors "Have you studied the question now for six years, and president four cotisec-u- t before th commission ? ve term. "Yes, somewhat.' action with the taken "Have "Are you familiar you formed an opinion as to by the Chamber of Commerce of Salt the matter? Lake City in Ihe matter now hef0ne the "It la tnv opinion that the mandate Mr. asked Hollingsworth. of the Commission? supreme court should be carried I j am," replied the witness. the Central Pacific should out, that Waa the resolut on adopted by the and, chamber referred to the membersh'p as be divorced from the Kouthern Pacific," Th witness was asked If he had diswho's he rep led. 'No. cussed this mot with members of the was tt Ba't whit loike Chamber of Commecc and way adopts 'in The committee that acted tjon tide other dubs and organizations. He stated matter was a committee appointed hv he had done so informally. Asked for Nature tries to overcome the imperfection by muscular effort, which always overtaxes the nervous system and undermines general health. GUmc, correctly fitted, remove the STBA1N by correcting the aud health improve simultaoeouxty. .S3.75 All Glasses Reduced Reading Glasses Distance Glasses Double Vision Glasses Spherical lenses, gold filled and case included. Toric Bifocals e Torie Bifocals . ' Choice of gold filled, shell or Dames. t Deep-Curv- One-Piec- e 3.75 $4.75 CONSULTATION IS FREE AT EITHER STORE frames - $(K75 -- $12.50 rimless ' Schubach Optical Co. 276 Main St. 105 Main St. 2$tores 'itrTTTT |