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Show Sundry little business affairs may be carried out 'success full v 'Ufr oulTTha rribune-- lt Lake Tribune Leased Wire. ' NEW YORK, Aug. 20. Solomon Rettlg applied to the supreme court in Brooklyn yesterday for an Irtjuno-- . from tion to restFsln his wife. spending any of the 850,000 she has on deposit in various savings banks hi her Own name, supporting his with affidavits denying his wifes assertion that he was lazy He is the father of twelve children and submitted an affidavit ty one of hia daughters, who declared that he was slave." He also had affidavits front forty-fiv- e neighbors to prove his Industrious hahlls. . "I distinctly remember giving my wife the first 8150 to start a bank acsaid Rettig n tola papers. count, "She now has more than 850.000 In hanks, from Investments of my earnings, and considerable real estate, all In her own name. She refuses to let Tribune-Sa- Chicago Nix' f PERPLEXITY r ism P Remedy inal Conversations Will Take Place Wednesday or Thursday, Is Admitted Proposed. me hair-bread- th It Is a very poor chance If it Is limited to the statesmen. It Is & slightly better chance, but not much, If peoples have any say In the matter of their own destiny and doom. Vanderlip said the other day that history Is made by people, not by peoples. That was In reference to a conversation about to begin between Uoyd George and Poincare with the Belgian. Italian and Japanese ministers taking sides with one another. Duel Is Fought. It Is to me an appalling fate that a life, hundreds of millions common folk, should be at the mercy of two obstinate and not unaupremely wise politicians like Lloyd George and Poincare, for that Is what It amounted to. The Downing street conference which has just taken place, with the most terming results, was really an Intellectual duel between those ready politicians, with a numbet1 of financial experts In attendance to provide the chiefs vjltlx ammunition for argument. ' Even If they were two of the noblest, largest hearted men in the world. It would be an overpowering responsibility greater than any two men should bear for their argument was to decide future civilization In Europe, hold the balance between future peace and future war, condemn or reprieve 80,000,000 people in Germany, hundreds of millions of people dependent for their health on Germany, to economic life or economic death. Upon the good temper or bad temper of those two.. men, , upon thalt wisdom or lack of wisdom, depended actually the value of the wages that will be received this win ter by the miners of Westphalia, by the seamstresses of Berlin, the typists in German offices, to say nothing of the chances of employment for workless men In London. ballon's very v ,1 . Situation Tense. If Poincare had won the argument by some weakness in IJoyd George and his were extracted against Gerpenalties many, I am convinced that International trade would have collapsed, and both Prance and Germany would have plunged down, slopes of ruin,, It may happen yet. If Lloyd George had lost his temper and broken with Poincare and France beyond any kind of compromise, then again there would be no hope In Europe for reconstruction, but a new grouping of nations In deadly rivalry, repudiating debts of honor and pledges of peace. I can hardly convey to my readers across the Atlantic the strained emotion with which great numbers of British people awaited the news which reported the uncertain progress of that converse tlon between the premiers of France and One Evening It wasreported England, that IJoyd George agreed to the Tour main proposals of Poincare, inflicting new and severe penalties against Germany lch would put a stranglehold upon her mport and export trade, her mines and iha-atee- p. forests. Gloomy View Exjyesscd. There wasn't a business man 1 met who did not draw In his breath and say, "Well, thats an end to Germany, an end to Europe"; for though English business men have no cause for tenderness toward he Germans and believe they should pay ar more than they have dona to repair the damage they did, It Is now beyond argument to this class of men in England such, measures as those proposed by that Poincare would not cnly fall to produce German wealth, but would render it Impossible for Germany to pay any debts or buy any goods which we wish to sell. While Uoyd George and Poincare talked, the German sigxagged and Jumped In a way, and fallowing a falsa report that an agreement had been made there was a steep rush downward. Now, as I have said, conversation he' tween those two men would have been fruitful in Its responsibility ,even If wisest men on earth, but they were the it is clear to many of us now that they started the talk by stupendous blunders on both sides. OK Lloyd George's was the blunder of the Balfour note, which bids fair to be one of the moat fatal documents in history. On the other side was the blunder of the French plan to make Germany pay, which is so childish In arithmetic that U was turned down majority by experts as by a hopelessly unworkable. of Poincares None proposals would result In German gold reaching French pockets, hut would create stagnation in German Industry and wipe It out as a symbol of exchange. Lloyd George, of course, still leas Balfour, was not personally responsible tor the Balfour note. It wae Issued by the cabinet as a warning to France that Great Britain was not prepared to make further financial sacrifices, enormously greater than the FVench will admit, by striking out the 584,000,000 for which France is debt of responsible to England, because England has a debt of 900,000,000 to the United States. The object of It primarily w to bring France sharply face to face with he realities of her position. That Is to was necessary. In the opinion of to convince British government, that England would not stand for the tUaruptkm of Germany, or for French armies, aerial fleets and financial liabilities consequent ent her European fever-strick- four-to-o- I Ceathuied ea Pre Tw iCvlnaia Fvur.) DOT FIB BIGOT TO FflSTEXPRESS OF Engineer and Fireman of Adjustment Impossible if Relative Standing of Men Michigan Central Train Killed at Their Posts. Ignored, It - Is Argued. Evidence of Tampering by Industrys Wreckers Discovered; OfPrompt ficials Rewards. Offer Tribune-Sa- hus-an- have a cent." Only Slight Chance of Retention of Seniority, by Men Who Remained at Escape From Financial Work One of Agreements Disaster, Sir Philip' Says. By SIR PHILIP GIBBS. Special Cable to Salt Lake Tribune. IXJNDON. Aug. 20. The condition of Europe Is getting steadily worse. What will be the end I, for one, do not care to prophesy, except to say that I see only a chance of escape from financial disaster and social upheaval over the entire continent. That chance, hanging from such a slender thread, depends on the conversion of the "European statesmen by the people at the eleventh hour to a new gospel of Idealism and heroic renunciation of lt Lake Tribune Leased Wire NEW YORK, Aug. JO. Traveling as Viscountess Berengere P. de a young woman of rare Bellleref, beauty and evident culture was yesby a board of special terday excluded tuqutry on Ellis Island. Complications admissions about of out her 'arising her domestic relations were said to be real the grounds for denying the "viscountess the right to enter the United States, although the record shoffs the usual technical score "llke. to become a public charge." The tnman'i story hefors the board d was thift'whe Is now suing her for adlvorce; that the divorce will be granted by the French courts In October, end that she and William Grant of Ardmore, Pa., will probably, he married at soon as the French courts free her from her present husband. Grant appeared before the hoard and stated that he had come to elaim the vlecountcss as his wife. He Is said to he a the was excluded, When she vlscountese appealed to the higher In authorities Washington, Chicago 1 y "the-famil- Renunciation of Selfishness and New Gospel of Ideal Viscountess Refused Landing Permit in U. 5. Man Would Keep Wife From Spending Cash E : U PAGES FIVE CENTS SALT LAKE CITY, MONDAY MORNING, AUGUST 21, 1922. VOL. 105, KO. 129. ants. W Demand crack-golfe- May to Executives Salt Lake Merchant Dies Instantly When Struck by Bolt at Club. Country Two Companions Have Narrow Escape; Dead Man r. Well Settle Long Rail Strike. Known in Clubs. Clarence A, Cohn, 40 years of are, son CHICAGO, Aug. 20 (By the Associated By WILLIAM L. BLISS. By Universal Service. f of the late Alexander Cohn and vie were An fireman t and Rerxlr. As By nlrenal 20. a result Press.) WASHINGTON, Aug. engineer president of the I- - and A. Cohn Comof conferences here today between railkilled and two express messengers InNEW YORK, Aug. 20 While both the pany, Inc., was instantly killed on ths 39 on No. the shop craft unions and the railway execuroad union heads, the end of the nationjured when express train Ninth East golf links of the Salt Lake New tives of the country are trying to settle from wide shopmens strike IS forecast before Michigan Central railroad, Country club at 4.34 o'clock yesterday the end of the present week. York to Chicago by way of Detroit, was the rail strike without reference to the afternoon when he was struck by a bolt Declares wrecked near Gaby, Ind , at 2 10 o'clock question of "seniority" the bugaboo of B. M. Jewell, head of the striking of lightning. His companions, William New from returned this shopmen, both sides there can be no adjustment today morning. II. Gibson of the Columbia Trust comUnwas conferwhere at he dead. The York, without restoring to the men the same present pany and Alfred E. Perkins, manager of ences with railway executives, where Edward Coy, engineer, Kalamazoo, relative standing Iti the sho) s that they S. Gives Assur the Colonial Steel company, new proposals for settlement of the and Russell Convicted Mich. had before the walkout. strike were made. Upon reaching WashParsons, 663 Downihgton avenue, a caddy,, Frank Lubbs, fireman, Niles, Mich. ington, Mr. Jewell conferred with WilThere can be no compromise on thts miraculously escaped a similar fate., liam M. Johnston, president of the maThe Injured: No matter on what basis It may point and were all three stunned by the conchinists union, who remained In WashY. N. C. H. of be announced following the meeting Stockwell, Niagara Falls, 20 ington during the course of the recent WASHINGTON. Aug. Secretary Remain Are. cussion of the boR. A. B. Heath, Buffalo, X. Y. the railway executives In this city next negotiations in New York. The bolt struck Mr. Cohn In the d, Hughes, in a letter made public tonight The wrecking of the express train reWednesday, that an understanding has tearing a large hole and partly se4eiin by the Republican national committoe, Way Made Clearer. men are going reached and that the the left ear. Although both Mr. Gibson the conviction, after a review sulted from the deliberate removal of been back to their seniority lights art Following todaya conference between expresses CLEVELAND, Ohio, Au( 20. (By ths and Mr. Perkins were only a short riis- -' spikes from one of the going to work, be reetored or the strike will Associated lance from the victim when he was the union leaders, a way to settlement of the Newberry case, "that Senator twenty-sexePress.) There Is no danger of struck, of the strike Is opened. It was admitted. Newberry was wrongly and most unJUBt-l- y rails, Michigan Central railroad officials continue. neither .of them saw the bolt the four" railroad him. The actual settlement will be affected committee "big hit Two weeks the transportation ago was A 81400 reward policy announced tonight. convicted. of of The men were playing near tha at meetings to be called in New York the craft the divisions three three Into brotherhoods drawn a sympashopt being The secretary, writing to the Rev. Hugh offered fur the arrest of those responel-blon Wednesday or Thursday of this week, unions held a meeting In Chicago and de- thetic strike. even second when a downpour of rain! though hegotlntlons to overtookgreen at which the entire body of railway B. McCaulley of Paterson, N. J., in recided on the basis on which thv would them,- - In a search for shelter, end the strike of the shop crafts fall. to men to ran a large tree, but at executives will meet with officials of the sponse to an beneath work. return their they permit They as to the "facts Train Inquiry standard railway union organizations. Going Tast. suggestion of Mr. Perkins, that they accepted the oi lglnal peace proposal made This was the declaration made by the find a more At these meetings the tentative settle- In the Newberry crsc. gives In detail the them President by Harding, spot, they ran u protected granting The wreck took place about a mile east their Warren S. Stone, president of the Broth- an old ment proposals drawn up last week will findings of the courts, especially the subridge near the third green built unimpaired seniority rights. This be formally voted upon and accepted. preme court, which set aside the con- of Gary at 2 10 a. m., While the train, committee Is composed of ninety general erhood of Locomotive Engineers, and D. across a gully close to where they had. The terms of settle- viction of Mr. Newberry, and then con- which carried no passengers, was travel- - chairmen, representing all of the railroad B. Robertson, president of the BrotherIt Is understood. been playing. J ment were not made public today, but cludes: sys ems In the United States. hood of Locomotive Firemen and Engine-me- n to are understood to constitute such im "Despite the long period of preparation, lng at a speed estimated at more than Clubhouse. Reach an hour. In an effort to make Seniority F OIP ITI Ost on their return to their homes here Try Investigation, the careful choos- fifty miles portant concessions by both sides that the rigid The men remained beneath the bridges Wh.n lh. h..v. .nrln. tin In. I tlni. they require only the formality of adop- ing of their ground, the late today from New York and Wash- until the water bepin pouring In ons The executive .committee of the shop trial, the attempt In every possible way struck the rail from which the spikes had tion. for have ten them and they became saturated. One where, they no to days, the ington, crafts on has to go beyond the authority Retention of seniority rights by the besmirch, and the zeal, ability and been removed, it ploughed along report- attempted to mediate the shopmen's con- of them eaggested that they endeavor ties for some distance and then turned terms which ths policy committee loyal shopmen who remained at work is even bitterness of his pursuers, their ento troversies. reach a ed the clubhouse. Accordingly they be acceptable. If compromise understood to have been agreed to by deavor to establish a violation of law on completely over. The two englnemen waewould to be considered. It would be necNeither would comment on the progress started to run. Mr. Gibson leading and the union heads. ,, the part of Senator Newberry completely were dead when removed from the wreck"1 can't make any Mr. Cohn being between the other twtr essary for Bert M. Jewell, president of of the negotiations. This was the point upon which the failed, and accordingly Senator Newberry age the progress of the nego- and followed In turn by Parsons and twk The cause of the wreck remained a the shop craft unions, to call a meeting comment on executives were most Insistent. A prac- stood as a senator duly elected by the Mr. Blone said, "Too much other caddies. They were running aleng tical agreement has been reached on the people of the state of Michigan and enmystery for some hours because of the of the policy committee to pass on the tiations," been said already." single fl e when the bolt struck Mr. Cohn, question, with the undemanding that titled to hie seat In the senate of the confusion at the scene and because of question.he has not done so makes It clear has"We are acting as mediators, and me- The force was so terrific that both Mr. That the men who will return to work shall United States. the fact that the rails and ties had been Gibson and Mr. Perkins were stunned 14 thetr which diators usefulness the by the prejudice only like matchtossed proposition only and those about who remained on rank Just below (that ploughed up executives will have to consider talking," Mr Robertson said. "I would and one of tho three caddies was knocked wood for hundreds of feet the job during the strike. Eight cars railway Misconception Noted. dow n. i i be un to asked not of the the settlement rather strike with say anything Mr. Hughes expresses the belief that loaded with merchandise followed the en to work with seniority ttl the conferences are over. I cannot Upon recovering from the shock, Mr.' Some Must Yield. glue Into the ditch, the others remaining men returning there seems to be a general misconcepstood prior to July I, when make an predictions now." Perkins and Mr. Gibson saw Mr. Cohn's track. rights as they Strikebreakers temporarily engaged ae tion of the nature of the Ittlg&tkm and onAntheInvestigation AskedJwhat position the brotherhoods prostrate form on the links. They lah-t- o strike was called, by Martin Quinn, spe- - theI10 shopmen by the roads will be forced in Its results, and Senator Newberry has clal agent are Mr. In the if unions to will his side,- - hut said that he was de1,the ha fall, w.lllng negotiations while of revealed permit the that many Instances to yield their places to suffered In consequence of a most serious the roadbed had road, will be In the same as nearly as they could ascertain, when, been ground Into an un- railroads to announce that a settlement Slone said they the old employees who will return to Injustice. Is were In to reached him. Neither of the two, has been reached before. The which strike they mass from the spot where equitable position they The conviction of Senator Newberry," recognizable work. It Is understood. men knew how long they had remained train had left the rails, enough re- both sides, and even to make It appear will elmply go on. The agreement thus outlined. It la be- he continue was obtained under a the In some thetr never railroad been executives gained has stunned condition, but both beThere any sympathetic mained at the place where the engine that the lieved, will be particularly satisfactory statute held by the majority of the sulieve that it was not more than two Of Ite course to fur- valuable concessions and that they are strike nor any considered," he continued to the shoperafts union heads, since It preme court tp be invalid, rested upon had been thrown from mute evidence of the work of train going to keep the promisee originally "There are safety laws to take care of three minutes. constitutes an Independent settlement of a ground which did not involve any find- nish Mr. Perk, ns was the first to recover made that the Joval employees would the defective equipment, which would enEverything ahead of the gap, hold the question of seniority. Union leaders ing by the Jury of moral turpitude, and wreckers had seniority rights above the strikers danger the lives of brotherhood members, from the shock and went to the been destroyed. however, were fearful that If the seniority ques- waa effected only by a most serious misAs a matter of fact, according to one of snd It will only be necessary to enforce for help. There were approxition went to the railroad labor board, construction of the statute which exposed the union officials, mosL of the men who those laws. mately forty persons In the clubhouse, an unfavorable decision would be ren-- i him to conviction regardless of any moral Inquiry Begins. stood high on the seniority of not did strike them women, many , dered, alnce the board already has ru lp(J offeuze upon, fits the wreck came from Itsta before the strike-w- as ns matter called.- - In , Hjsl reports of Foote Summoning Dr. Alexander R. Irvine, that strikers automatically forfeit their high minded he parLfuid of Detroit, who many Instances the men who headed the hate been in his Conductor who was at the rlubhouse at the time, might Harry conduct In the campaign. seniority rights. walked a jnlle down the track to teleMr, Perkins, with a number of others, lists did not strike at all. They The conferences held hers today probThe secretary, who. as counsel for Mr. phone for doctors and rescue parties. E. seniority went In an automobile to the scene of relused to obey the strike order because his associates, participated E Evans, coroner of Lake county, and they feared to lose their seniority snd ably will be the last between uhton heads Nawberry the tragedy. The accident occurred abmft In before the general assembly New m arguments In the case before the su584 yards from ths clubhouse and the officials immediately began an pension rights, which they had earned York this week to reach a final agree- preme court, further declares in his letter railway cause the the of of wreck j through Investigation many years of continued physician reached Mr. Cohn five or six ment with the executives. that It should he borne in mind that to the Gary police, some of minutes after he had been struck. ment. Dr, Senator Newoerrys conviction in the the trainmen were quoted as saying that pioj Irvine snd Dr. J. J. Galtigan, who was waa lower not on court based with been had trouble also any charge the Coes experienced called, said death was Instantaneous, of fraud or corruption or of the use of engine since Us departure from Detroit. The bolt paseed entirely through the These men. of course, will retain their money for any illegal purpose or of any House body, leaving by wav of the loft hrnd act Involving moral turpitude. rights After a frank discussion Dr. Gelligan said. NILES, Mich , Aug. 24 Edward Coy. seniority The lightning bore of the whole matter in the conference and who Frank fireman, Lubbs, such forte engineer, .that the victim's shoes were WASHINGTON, "Aug. 20. The house Misconstruction Charged. between the union officiate of the five were killed In the wreck of the Ntfw A burn marking the course of the split. will get the tariff bill back from the brotherhoods, acting as boll was left on the body. The city express train near Gary Sunday transportation Mr. Hughes then explains that the senate tomorrow Jnst a year and a month mediators for the shop crafts, and the morning, both lived in Niles. . based Newterry-w- a gf after It .first .anted. UPonit Republican to 6(i was who for an autopsy. Coy, nearly years oil, "had leaders plan to send It to conference un- solely on the charge that there had been been on the Chicago run for fifteen years, week, It became apparent that the sen! Earlier In the day Mr. Cohn, with hi der a special rule with Representatives an eypendtture In his campaign and elec- and had, waa only a bad dream orlty nightmare the an been of Michislater. Stella, had been playing golf on employee tion more of 83750, the fixed than limit D. G. R. & could IgFordney of Michigan, Green of Iowa and all be settled best and after by thirty-eigfor the links at Nibley park. At about 3 years. by the statute of the state of Michigan, gan Central and amd Longworth of Ohio, Republicans, There was a private underLubba was- - married last April His noring It. however, oclock Mr, Cohn, with Mr. Gibson and that the federal corrupt practices act bride Gamer of Texas and Collier of Mississipthat men who did not standing, here Mr. 1erklns, had gone to the Country visit to left Lubbs' recently made for unlawful a to as tha probable house candidate spend Near it Denver. hold pi, Democrats, over would strike rights seniority In Iowa. club. They had played around the course in excess of the limit fixed by state law. parents managers.- men who walked out only when such the of A railroad officials once and and were on the second trip when friends party 8enator Newberry could not have been of The conference committee will begin who dead scene the the visited men, the tragedy occurred. These three men Mr. bJreJfly,i,v.i even this week the task of composing the 2004 convicted, Hughes adds, upon of the and plan, Publicity wreck, report that seventeen spikes together on the Country club odd difference between the senate and this charge without what I always re- were removed ra"wy executives are again DENVER, CoLo., Aug. 20. The police played from the ties. course frequently. fI5f the house. The question of American garded, and so stated in my argument to was to A riot rushed .J.l!'6 stolen from A Denver ths the street squad crowbar, Gary an as the supreme court, valuation, which the house approved as extraordinary i It hen the railway executives decided to Rio Grande Western railroad whose tracks parallel the Michl- the basis of assessing ad valorem duties, misapplication of the statute upon which car line, shops in Perkins Tells of Death. ?,0rneeF, n rePr8entatlves, of Burnham, a suburb, late gan Central tracks at the point where the charge was based. may be referred to the house for a spewas a I distance Just little where "Although tonight, cial vote, Representative Discussing the decision of the supreme the wreck occurred, was found near the j ths labor policy the railroads of i dozen or more explosions were heard. behind Mr. Cohn. I did not see It strike, Fordney havat length, Mr. Hughes points out tracks. Mr. Perkins said. "I was wet and cold was no question hut1 ing announced that he would hold out court there the country, men Railroad here said a deal to of great his correspondent that the majority for this plan In conference and let the had conceded seniority rlgh's First reports from the ecene were that and was running with my head down that they trouble has been at In of held experienced the court Gary federal that the house settle the Issue. opinion I was thrown Otherwise Chairman T two railroad guards had been shot and when the bolt struck. the men statute was unconstitutional and. there- recent weeks, ties having been piled on to De Witt Cuvier of the executives asso- wounded. violently to the ground and I do not fore, the conviction should be set aside, the tracks on a number of occasions. was before I recovmeetIt not called would have know how ciation the long An unidentified man was shot snd be- ered. When I finally looked and that the other four Justices, while Young up 1 saw ing for next Wednesday. OLD FEUD ENDS. not concurring on the question of constilieved to have been severely wounded In Mr. Cohn lying on the ground. made When the peace original proposal tn tutionality, Joined reversing" the judgUKIAH, Cal., Aug 24 Isaac Crespln by President Harding was considered by was I to the When first thrown e ground counter with railroad guards. It was ment of conviction, "because the statute and John Haynes, aged ranchers In a re- the executives' committee, It was turned ag I thought that I had been struck hy said later. Ukt Tribunt UiHi Wirt. had been seriously mlsoonatrued by, the mote section of Mendocino county and down Chicago Tribune-Sal- t was same o sure of The I the bolt directly. committee this. forthw.th. More than a dozen shots were exenemies In a feud of vears, shot It out BOSTON, Aug. 24 Six months In fact, that I really for a mofnent ago trial court. Centtuaed ea Page Two rifles yesterday. Both with Winslow W. Cole, scion of a prominent changed, but when the 'police riot squad thought was surprised I was dead. I reached the scene the man had dis- when I found that 1 was still (Columa One.) are deal. Boston family, who disappeared last week breathing appeared. because, his love for a Tltian-halre- d show Holy able to move. The unidentified man approached the and was to take his to me to be a rather singular girl seems "It spumed, threatened life If Miss Maude Lydlate, dancer In shops and when called upon by S. G. c!ncidence-th- at Mr. Cohn was struck 0 "Love and Kisses, Garrison, a guard," to halt, opened fire on violently, while neither Mr. Gibson nor now playing at a FORT PAYNE, Ala., Aug. 24. James local theater, cast him aside for somehim, the guard said. Four shots missed myself was materially affected by the and the man fled. Garrison returned the blow. The only explanation that I can one else, It was learned today. Not even Wylie Reece, a holy roller" and farmer, residing on Sand mountain, near Chefire. A moment later Connelly Cole, an- give for this la the fact that Mr. Cohn his best friends know his whereabouts. "I pray to God ha haa not killed him- vies, was bitten by d large rattlesnake other guard, shot at a fleeing man five was a very tall man. approximately six from which he died afternoon, times. The latter screamed and fell, but feet, snd self, said Miss Lydlate tonight. But Friday when the flash came R struck in within minutes agony, thirty great I dont think Winnie is as foolish as all staggered to hia feet and disappeared. No doubt if the most prominent object. to reports received here. that. I think he realized how atupid according Mr. Cohn had been o-ter b wouM not said that Reece was at the home 20. Four have received the full effect of the blow.w SAN Aug. BERNARDINO, wai hia aulclde threat and that he hat of Ita isneighbor to forty hours toward the latter part of that when the snake By JOHN GOLDSTROM. men, employees in the local. Santa Fe simply disappeared and will stay under was discovered end "We were running for shelter and the test. the neighbor prepared to cover until this has blown over. shops, were attacked and beaten on one At the end of the shoot ths reptile, but before the act was Universal Service. the period of of main streets Coprinnud SB Ptfs Twe the the 20. Successful city tonight WASHINGTON, Aug. entire motor was torn down and examexecuted the "holy roller asked to captCsImna Three.) men said to be strikers. Two ined for wear In the running parts and by three ture the rattler and was bitten, after testing of an airship engine over a of were None fired. shots the attacked the which hs threw the snake upon the condition of the general as water fuel, as forty and Ignition systems. All long men wae badly Injured and no one was period running ground and remarked to his neighbor were friends to look after his children, as he hours at a time was announced today by found In good condition. Itparts was then hit by the bullets. and the test made the naval bureau of aeronautics. It Is reassembled Chics ga Tribune-Sal-t Lsks Tribuns Leased Wire, felt that his time pad come. N. C.. Aug. 20. While Off cers reported that It SALISBURY. the most remarkable performance of an could haveafterward OYSTER BAY, N. Y., Aug. 24. Four on for another 244 hours eight companies of national guardsmen gone overshadowIn near here today were held readiness recorded; motor hydroplanes and forty other craft of va- Mexican aircraft yet The rated horsepower of the ZR-- 1 Is rious types returned tonight from a vain for Instant duty, reports from Spencer ing that of the engines In the British to be 1840. When cruising at a twelve-incy ae&rch for the body of Donald M. h water main altitude the eng nee are required to stated that a dirigible which, crossed the Atlantic. Phipps, 23, graduate of Yale and aon of shops of the Southern develop an average of 260 brake horse- leading Into thewas A. J. Phipps, millionaire lumber mer- By Universal Service. blown It was built for the fleet airship ZR-up shortly power each snd turn u.pto.. a speed of Railway there chant of Florence Park, near here. construction at the Lake 1400 revolutions a minute. The motor after midnight and that this was folMEXICO CITY, Aug. 20. General Juan now under few a bv hours lowed later test Young Phlppa was swept by a high Ubrea was executed has exceeded promiscuous Stop ft minute ant think about requirements. yesterday at the Hurst, N, J.. naval air station. It was "With tne throttle widethese wave frdm the bow of a speed motor open a, horsepower shooting and the burning of several box agriculture colony of Atolonlle, built by the Packard company of Detroit of this fact: boat Into Long Island sound late yester- military the 370 was recorded: the average was cars in yards. state of Puebla, after a trial A contingent of tgenty-flv- e new emYou can ftsk our Washington Inday an 1 drowned. He was on a boat upon charges of rebellion. summary on apectficatlons furnished by the naval 256 at an averags spsed of 1412 ravolu-tlon- s driven by his friend, William Lyons, of a minutes. ployees, however, arrived to work lh Ubrea with General Silvanta Dias Fiof aeronautics. formation Bureau any question of East Hampton. The victims mother Is gueroa and some soldiers, '.all members bureau tha shops shortly afterward without The specifications were prepared with Twelve Motors Carried. and et the answej, )iy perhis death. molestation. ; by Jact. disprostrated of the First army reserve, were a view to securing two main features in covered -- conspiring against the governsonal letter. the airship power plant dependability The fuel economy record established ment at the colony. and endurance and economy of fuel. In the test is represented Three . the It is a great 'eJucational idea inFigueroa and seven m.en were killed by Every expectation Is reported to have of gasoline consumed per bybrake amount horseinto the lives of the most the regulars Friday In sn engagement been troduced fulfilled. power per hour. This was May which followed the discovery of the ploL Officials of the bureau say ths new recorded as 438 pounds expenditure over the entire people in the werid intelligent contest period. The new ship will carry motor, superior to the Liberty, and f .ColtLr Aug 24. Three perBy Universal Service. DENVER, readers. American newspaper Its will some ef characteristics, twelve motors, six for active taining sons were-- struck by lightning and renWASHINGTON. Aug. 20 Represents Kldn establish the lowest figure for fuel con- others as spares. is a part of that best purj'Oe It dered unconscious when eleca severe tivea of the Standard Oil company In and ever attained alrehlp operaCave sumption in trical storm vtrited Denver early tonight. of a newspaper service. the Sinclair Interests will be the next tion. This means assurance of a maxiWEST PALM BEACH, FIs.. Aug.' 20. Mrs. Walter Wright and Harry Hqjio-waWitnesses to be oalled by thd senate comradius. mum There is ao charge except two , cruising 2206 The giant seaplane Sampalo Correia, Tremont place, were stunned Mo, Aug. 20. The mittee which Is holding hearings on the SPRINGFIELD, Lieutenant Walter Hinton commanding eents in stamps for return postage. when a bolt shattered a tree In a yard Kuklux Klan hae purchased a large tract Test Successful. gasoline s tuatlon. next door, both being a short distance flying from New York to Brasil, encounSenator McNary of Oregon, acting of land Including the big (Percy's cave i Get the halatmf asking .was removed to a near here. It was announced tonight by As s'rshtps of ths tyjfe now being built tered heavy squalls on her trio- down away. Mrs. Wright chairman of tha Investigation commits Tie S the JYederic J. of from In coast Haskin, to Director, be the Charleston, C., remain air ef hospital. local the mrmhebra required today tee, Jn the absence of Senator 1st organisation. might la anchored In Lake Worth, Mrs. I. Wagner, 84, wae seated on her haa not determined the date when Officials said that tha cave would he for weeks at a tlms, low fuel comumpv and- tonight Salt Lake Tribune Information BuBeach. In off Palm fece in the when The the of further front porch test lightning struck hearings will be' resumed. The fluctuat- - used for hlaneermTrnU- - The purchase tlon Is a requisite. forty-fiv- e reau, Washington, D. C. waa divided Into two periods of J00 and threatening weather Lieutenant Hinton,.yard. She waa unconscious price of gasoline since the hearings ferO'' I - - - -- -- ilng has added i Interest to tha Quesfive Is a. point of Interest to 200 hours. In Initial runs from eight to said ha decided to spend the flight In minutes, AH will recover, In the opinion af of them. this attended who runs continuous harbor. , with In the Ozark ten hours physicians thirty elght-seetion, BILL CLEARANCE Secretary Hughes Michigan Senator justly, Wrongly W. Stone ance Brotherhoods Will Where They . n e. ut , I - club-hou- Tariff Bill to Back After Year York-Chlca- Police Called . Quell Dij-turban- ce at ht W. Yards I ' f" S, ,r.n Man Disappears After Girl Spurns Him Roller Is Fatally Bitten by Rattle Snake ' Remarkable Performance of Aircraft Motor Recorded iri Trial Flights of Machine Said to Excel in Every Detail 100-ho- Airmen Search for Man Drowned Off Oyster Bay 804-ho- Did You Ever 200-ho- Rebel Executed for Inciting Revolution all-da- 6400-fo- Write a Letter to Frederic J. Haskin? ot 1, . - Hearings on Gasoline Develop Added Interest Lightning Hits but All - to Hold. Meetings Big Pereas , Recover -- he 1 y, que'-tm-- Fel-lett- e, - 304-ho- -- rt ' - -- li I |