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Show - DARE-T- i - -- ' J feature lias proved a sensation among Salt Lake women readers and they find it only in The News hb mrRsnriTOsr1 NORTHERN UTAH Generally fair Tuesday nidu and Wednesday; not narii efiangn In temperature. IDAHO Fair Tuesday night and Wednesday; frosty Tuesday mm night- - PRICE FIVE l M.ll 8ALT LATTE CITY CENTS Roof of Boston Bldg. Kiosk. II II Maximum Monday Minimum Monday ..II it 40 Minimum Tuesday ..41 am., Tuesday M4l,,n.41 a.m , Tuesday ....4?.. ...44 Noon Tuesday II IVfrIDE Page UTAH , TUESDAY lARCII 22 SEVENTY SEVENTH YEAR 1927 (Ml ll Breaks Off Treaty With Mexico to Hold Whip Hand In Oil Troubles. By David Lawrence. Mar. WASHINGTON J (CPA ) Abrogation of the one ear agree, ment between the United States and Mexico with. respect to smug commercial gling means a new adtreaty eventually ehkh will just the pending dispute on the. Confiscation of oil lands. Inasmuch aa the Mexican failed to gle satisfactory U. S. Sugar Producers Ask Fair Tariff as Protection peaches to wait 510 SIltDDITS "ft RUSHS;"?1 Era PBiOte Husband on Of By Car as He Goes IH tq Killing ''Couple Repudiate that aseurntu.es .American property rights would be policy it hid outlined for itself some time ago namely, to obtain the necessary freedom of action to lift the on embargo arms on the bjt- the 10 UWREWCti which vention tua just expired had not been formally abrogated It would have bean continued indefinitely, and thirty days notice would have been Now to end the convention. the American government, can in a few hours. lift the embargo tn to fact without further notice f lm an act la feared bv because administration Calks eleare there already revolutionary ments wanting te get back .nla control and it arms and amrauni-- 1 vo A. can bo purchased, in the linked States the Callea adminiatrati m , may ba overthrown. A This has been known- to the ; ICalles group for some time, but it 4traa not thought the United States m as serious about using the threat about lifting the embargo on arms as a lever to force recognition of the vested rights of American The announcement clears tho atmosphere to the extent cf showfas ing that President Coolidge tired after ten years of conversa- tion and means to Insist on preventing confiscation of American properties. or recognlta and t moral support of tha Callea regime t will In effect be withdrawn. Tha way for Mexico is to agree to negotiate a pew commercial treaty I which will 'dispose of all pending matters. Inasmuch aa a treaty can the t fuperseda the Constitution In United States, according to constitutional experts, so In Mexican U a treaty with the United Situs American citizen, guaranteeing against the retroactive feature bf the constitution would be legally effective iu Mexican courts. The United Btates has no commercial treaty with Mexico since in 1982. An attempt was nade 1917 by the Wilson administration and again in 19:3 by Secretary ' Hughes to get a commercial treatv which would recognize American rights, but each effort failed T tea American government sought o treaty because of the fact that adranee from the Carranza ministration were not respected by the Obregon or Callea adminlstra- lions. A treaty. If duly ratified by no . the Mexican congress would nation made with the Mexican t which would be binding tor all time in international law. The department of state wants a new commercial treaty and la de- j lermlned that nothing else will be satisfactory. Both the treasury de-la partment, which la Interested preventing liquor smuggling on tha border, and the labor department, i which wants to keep aliens from J coming across tho border Illegally. have opposed th i abrogation of the the 1 smuggling convention but both have been assured that ulti-- i thera is more at stake in ' mately south of the Rio Grande securing In fact, in the entire western hemisphere. the rights of Amertesn citizens than in the Illegal entry ef a few aliens or a few shipments ef liquor. The commercial treaty which is about to be proposed will sorer all phases of smuggling and property rights and win be in the nature of a reciprocity agreement sg 1 whereby the United States do for the Mexicans what It stks Mexico to do for Americana Copyright. 1927.9 . citi-sen- s. - 1 1 Third Battle to Bring Defendants West Opens Government Trials in Salt Lake Start April 11. T. March 22 (INS) For the third time within two years, Syracuse la to be the scene of a hearing In the now famous "million dollar alcohol ring" in which the government is seeking lo remove to Utah certain Syracuse men to face Indictments on charges of violating the Volstead act The coming bearing will be that of Louis Wallace, who. after being discharged at the second hearing by United States Commissioner W. W. Raaey. was re arrested and went before Judge Cooper at Schenectady two months ago and gava $9,090 bail to guarantee hla appearance whenever desired. Wants Them hi West. , U. 8 There were five defendants In the original action, Harry and Norman Pe&riman. Louis Steinberg, Abe Wallies and Louis Walla oe. They were charged with being the Syracuse "end" of an alcohol ring shipping beverage to Salt Laka City. They were Indicted there and the government sought to taka them west to face trial. The ca-- e was heard before the late U. 8. Commissioner Harvey Henderson. Witnesses were brought trom Utah at great expense. But Henderson died before he rendered bis decision Counsel for the defendants argued his death necessitated a rehearing and a new hearing was held before U. S. Commissioner Rasev. The latter discharged all the men but Louis Stsinberg, but the government immediately had Wallace Federal authorities at Salt Lake City notified Assistant U. S District Attorney J. J. Crowley today that 'the trials there would start April 11 and asked that Wallace's hearing be held before that data in order that he might be taken there In case the decision favors the government. Crowley, therefore. Tuesday, asked Federal Judge Cooper to set a date for the hearSTRACUSE. N. -- ing. Utah Witnessra Needed. It will be held at tha forthcoming term of federal court in Syracuse probably before Judge Harlan B. Howe, unless Judge Cooper electa to hear it himself before that date. Tne same witnesses will have to be brought here from Utah tor the third time lo give tha same testimony they have given at all the other hearings. U. S. TO WITHDRAW tn Wales Is Again PACT WITH MEXICO Dumped Off Horse HOLDEN BY. Northamptonsh-r- . The England. March 2!. (AP)' Prince of Wales was thrown from the first at jump Me horse today ateepie-hisin tha army but escaped injury. point-to-poi- aunt het e. BAH Escaping Separation Still Leave Her With Right to Half Million. Poverty Weston 175 Soph Attack Freth Witnesses to Be Taken Execution for Women It American, British, Jap Edward Payson Death Near men in Secret Meet; Lies Forces Rushed to ProFrom State to N. Y. to Aired Again; Chicago Hurled Down Youth In tect Settlement as War Hospital. NoAsk Death. Testify Against Stair; Three Clubbed. Wages on All Sides. torious Wallace Group. Mexico. Sdfch E ession of Plot pro- tected, the American government went ahead with the To Give Thanks for WASHINGTON. March 22 that the (AP) An Intimation United States had baen unsuccess- ful in efforts to negotiate a comwas mercial treaty with Mexico contained today in a atat department announcement that the smuggling convention between the two nations would bo terminated on March 2S. Tha department, in whoso hands has rested tha long standing and delicate situation involving American property rights In Mexico, issued a formal statement explaining $hat notice of termination of tho treaty had been served on the Mexican government last night by the American embassy at Mexico City. The smuggling convention has a direct bearing on the American embargo on arms shipments into Under the convention, Mexico. even If the embargo were lifted, the United States would bo re. quired te notify Mexico of - ImpendUnited ing shipments from tharms or any other comI vs seen bard times, but my S'ates of trom Importantion t a sight more people die modities proscribed e iiarvi W deatn. tion under Mexican Jaw. Ul ihaa -- xtw NEW YORK, March 21 (AP) Mrs. Ruth Snyder and Henry Judd Gray, who signed confessions that they had murdered Mrs. Snyder' art editor husband, Albert Snyder, bt a love and inaurpnoe plot, pleaded not guilty In Jamaica magistrate's court today and were held without hall for the grand jury. They repudiated their confessions. SecNative Shanghai tions in Flames as Defense Crumbles ;Strikers Greet Invading Army. by Reginald BT MARGARET CAMERON. Correspondent of The Deseret Few.) NEW YORK, March 22. (CPA) Should women ba electrocuted? That question, long agitated in New Tcrk state, has been given new point with tha development of the Albert 8nyder murder case, in which the art editor of tha magazine Motorboating, was slain In a "love plot between his pretty, frlvoloue wife. Ruth, and her confeesed paramour, Henry Judd Gray. Not since March, lftl when f Ruth Snyder was a little girl three baa a woman paid the extrema penalty for murder in New York State. During that 2S year interval there have been some sensational murders involving women j rticlpants, but the gallantry of Jun men eared thera in every case from the electric chair. 8tate Senator Love only a few months ago, urged In a speech that women, ahould be given equal responsibility for murder. Will the Snyder case prove the turning point? District Attorney Newcomb of Queens county, who has the wrung from both Mrs Snyder and Gray, characterizes the carefully laid plot against Albert Snyder's inoffensive llte as one of the most coldblooded in the annals of crime. He is prepared to pres hia demand for the death penalty to the limit For all the apparent cold of the Snyder murder, and the apparent perfect case against Mrs Snyder and Gray, the woman defendant will present two strong appeals to the emotions of sentimental jurors particularly if they are male jurors. First, zhe Is the mother of a sweet little nine year old girl. And despite the Lady McBeth hardness evidenced in the plot, her neighbors say she has always been a good mother to little Lorraine Shall Lorraine be made an orphan? Second. Mra Ruth Snyder, for all her hardness, la a moat attractive woman, tall blonde and appealing. She was young and loved husband was middle gay life. Her aged and ' loved to alt around the house What will the jurors think Consolidated 1927, (Copyright Press Association. (Special blood-edne- ss SYRACUSE, N. Y. March 22. (AP) Chief of Police Cadin announced this afternoon that he had ordered two Syracuse men detained and that possibly a third Iran would be held here in connection with the murder of Albert Snyder. The men held are: Haddon Gray insurance agent with whom Henry Judd Gray lunched on Saturday noen and spent Sunday evening. sdji.eter. Harry Platz, an inaurapee tv out-aid- Firemen Turn Heavy on Mob, Quell Battle; Annapolis Mayor Hit With Brick; 9 Seized Stream Vm-cen- (Spec's! Cable to The Deeeret News and Chicago Daily News ) SHANGHAI. March 22 (CPA) Eleven British troopers were killed or wounded when Shantung (northern Chinese) soldiers retreated down the settlement road e the north settlement boundary at 9 o'clock this evening. Cantonese lined the roofs of the buildings firing on the retreating northerners who were advancing toward tha settlement. The British troops yert forced to retreat rather then become Involved tn the Chinese civil war. Foreign volunteers and British, Spanish and Italian reinforcements rushed up to prevent the battle from breaking into the settlement. The action may force tha British defense forces to assume the offensive The entire neighborhood la under fire- Addlt onai Amercan and British sailors were landed this morning when the situation took a'more serious turn owing to complete control of the Chinese area adjacent to the settlement being seized hy civilian mobs which graspad civil and offices. Bullets Menace Life. Stray bullets, machine guns and rifle fire continue to menace foreigners and Ch.nese within the foreign settlement.. Some bullets have hit pedestrians in tile central! bnsl-ns- s district. Periodically b'g shells wbtza over the citys tallest buildings One landed In the Whangpoo river Just off the band within yards of the Hawkins, the Br tlsli flagship. The Cantonese f.rst divison of the Prat army, 3000 strong, followed the railroad into Shanghai south station, offering no resistance when refused entrance into the settlement Indiana Senate Reject extension roads by British outpo-t- s Impeachment Demurrer Fires raxed huge areas in the Chapel district (native city of Shanghai) continuing from yesterINDIANAPOLIS. Ind , March 22 day and lighting up the quay (INS)) By a vote ot 4$ to 1 the throughout the night. No attempt Indiana senate today overruled the demurrer ot Circuit Judge Clarence U. Dearth of Muncie to hla Im(Continued on Page Six) peachment trial on charges of suppression of qbe press and of illegal U. S. Sailor Is Killed end proceeded jury appointments heenng. When Cable Gives Way with the Impeachment, afterward Judge Immediately Dearth came before the senate and entered a plea of not guilty. 22 WASHINGTON, March Claude LeCureux a sailor (IX8 MURDERER HANGS SELF. attached to the V. S. 8 Seattle now in Cuban waters was killed In DANVILLE 111 . March 22. an accident while hoisting a small (AP) Nate Harris a negro, senboat aboard, tha navy department tenced to be executed April 22 fer declared today. a double murder, hanged himself A cable broke and LeCurej? In the jail this morning. was crushed against the side cf the He tore county a atrip from hia blanket 8eattle. and used It as a noose. Ogden Invites Pres ident for Summer. AN APOLIS. Md , March (INb) Eight ringleaders of the class riot between Johns Hopkins Inirersitjr students here last night were find S2S.S0 each today. The magistrate said he wished the law permitted him tn impose a heavier fine. He declared he would not send them to jail "for K would rata yoar careers." 2 . HERMITAGE AS CANYON - HOME Fme Scenery, Cool Breezes Await Him husband be tent to tha gallows. Only one in tbs last quarter of a century has a women been senOGDEN, March 22 (Special) tenced to doath InChleago and In President Coolidge is invited to obMrs. esse Sabello Nlttl that spend hia summer vacation at the tained u new trial and was aesuit-tc- Hotel Hermitage in Ogden can) on. At a weekly meeting of the Ogden Chamber of Commerce held Monday afternoon, the direct ore auth-- ' Influenza Break Out orized Preat. James H. Devine lo On U.S. Army Transport extend the invitation to Preeldent Coolidge to rest in Ogden's beautiful and famous gorge. SAN FRANCISCO, March 22. President Devine sent tha offi(AP) The United States army cial Invitation to President Cooltransport Chateau Thierry. TOO idge Tuesday and in the event the miles from San Francisco, her des- preeldent accepts, the Ogden tination, raced toward win arrange with Man. port at maximum speed today while ships ager W. W. Wilson of tha Hermitto atdoctors fought stave off an age to rent the hotel. tack of influents whl-- h no far has The Hermitage .la seven miles seised $1 of tha 100 or mors per- east of the mouth of Ogden cansons aboard. yon and Is situated at one of tl.e Four havo died aboard ship moat beautiful locations In the cansince tho transport left New York yon. - Conlldre tor bar Pacific coast' destination would find aa .ideal sum mar re d. Hem-Preside- nt The prospect of some day inheriting $500,000 from the estate of Edward W. Browning today deterred "Peaches Heensn Browning from heeding the suggestion of supreme Justice A. H F. 8eeger that she seek annulment of jer marriage. "Peaches' belfries that she would rather await action b the laws of nature and become a widow than seek action by the laws of ra and become a grass widow. At least, these were the sentiments expressed by her counsel Henry Epstein. "Under the laws of New York Epstein said. "Mra. Browning has certain doaer rights amounting to neaiiv $ 00.000 in case of the Mr. browning and under dath the cji 'instance I believe that she tan tarcely heed the advice of Justice beeger and seek annul n rt of he- - marriage Epstein said a move by Browning to eeek annulment of the would "give us a chance to substantiate our charges probably before a different Judge, F.pstein said. ff Low; Family Called From Out of Town grip, was reported to be "very low' todav. The children of Mr. Smoot who ara out of tha city have been summoned. DENIES INSTRUCTIONS. WASHINGTON. March 2L had (AP) Flat denial that he ever been Instructed bv the atat to the work for desigdepartment nation of Adolfo Dlax as president of Nicaragua, was made here todav hy Lawrence Denn'a. formerly Jkmerleaa charge 9a Managua. - .. Prosperity Follows WILLIE WILLIS Insurance By ROBERT QUILLEN BY TJf K. HUTCHINSON BUILDING FEDERAL March 22 (IN8) Th, million-dol'a- r libel suit of Aaron wheat king, must Saptro. b bolstered with amendments or libel hi of charges against many Henry ford will be thrown out of court. Federal Judge 8. Raymond ruled today. The Saptro declaration of libel, filed against the auto king, is into sufficient support all tha charges, the court held at the trial here in federal court. The effect ef the ruling will be to force Saptro to present additional declaration, of how he was libelled or the court will dismiss manv of th el 41 libels charged The decision was rendered after a blghlytechnital argument. The Sap'ro forces scored a aeries of technical advantages a little later when the court admitted to evidence addit.ona! paragraphs from articles published in the Dearborn Independent, allegedly Hanley of defamatory character. objected to the introduction of on the ground each paragraph they were not contained tn the The original Sapiro declaration. court overruled the objection The alleged falsity of Henry Ford's attacks upon Sapiro was sdm'tted on one occasion by Fred L. Black, business manager of the Learborn Independent It llliam H Gallagher. Sapiros attorney, charged this afterncon Gallagher declared Black had "admitted In a conversation with Walter Peteet. a farm leader, that The falsehoods were published statement was a shock to the Ford defense Dont wait another day I AA sug-gee- ta f expires soon (r Better leer IUew It A Send $1.00 at once Check or Money Order Mail or Brins to Deseret News Wasatch 550 Salt Lake City, Utah. m Teacher sot mad about mouse, aA it as just a dead ore mo an Pus used to play catcb till at roc" v I v1 i W ' for Farmers Factories. Deseret News - n. Spread of Industry Over Country Sponsored a Your John Hopkins Untveraity wound up hero early today after police turned streamed water on the milling mob One student eenously Injured, four others known to ha'e receded or a medical treatment hospital score nursing swollen heads, blac eyes, sprains and bruises- nine In jail, and a national guard arm. ory badly battered. Is the Officially tabulated result. Bernard Brack, of Baltimore suffered a possibly fractured skull from a blow from a policeman a night atick la In Danger. hosAt Annapolis emergency pital he remained unconscious for teterai hours after the battle had waned, and physicians feared that if complications arose his injury m ght prove fatal John Grayson Turnbull of Town-soMd., and Gladstone Beaden-koof Baltimore also went to the hospital with heads battered was Turnbull by police billies. released at his own request, bat in him took on the police custody hospital steps. Erwin K. Gordon of Baltimore (suffered head and neck Injuries when he wae flung from the top of a flight of stairs, and Baldwin Street Baltimore, broke his arm tn a leap from an armory window The Johns Hopkins freshmen, 211 strong, their destination presumably secret, left Baltim- - yesterday evening- Hardly had they seated themselves around ir dinner tables in the Annapolis national guard armory when 175 sophomores descended on the building with a whoop that rattled the windows of the eaecutUe mansion and gave pause to the Maryland general assembly In the state houe a few hundred feet away. Fifty of the attackers reached the Interior in the rush, taking window panes The and door panels with them dining hall reeled under a barrage of crockery and table ware. Fire Over Mob. The Annapolis police force numbering four men. stormed the gathered sophomores in the street and emptied their pistols over the heads of the rioters. Mayor Alan Bowie Howard, who had been Injured in the knee hy a flying paving brick, called out The aopho-morthe fire department were drowned out bv eight high pressure streams of water. The battle attracted 1 000 persona to the center of the city, an held up traffic through the town The nine arrested students were to be arraigned today. Stephen H. Love Report a Convention In Chicago Cloe; Suggest Higher Joll. March 22. (AP) CHICAGO, Urging extension of the beet augar Industry tn the United States, and "fair" tariff protection, the United State Beet Sugar association ended it conference here today. President Steven H. Love of Salt Lake City, and Secretary Harry Austin of aahington, D. C.. mad public a resolution the conference had approved. It was as follows: "The United States Beet Sugar association, assembled in its annual meeting, invites the attention of the people of the United States to the fact that no duty on augar baa ever been approved which wae not necessary-- . to put th Amencsff f9TmerfmHrtabiing an American home, under American standards of living and wages, on an even competitive basis with the Cuban farmer, growing sugar under tropical condition, and under much loner standards of living ,aqd wages. Point, Oat Costs We call especial attention to the fact that tbe difference between the purely agricultural costs of growing a pound ot sugar in the beet in the United 8tatea and the similar cost in growing a pound of augar in tbe cane, in Cuba, more than justifies the present tariff on sugar, and. Indeed pointedly that the American farmer i entitled to a higher degree of protection in order to afford him a reasonable profit on hia crop. For this anq other reasons, w earnestly urge the friend of American agriculture, who believes that the American farmer Is entitled to fair protection on hia agricultural product, to join with our association In protesting against any change In the present tariff on sugar, unless that change be m the direction of a substantial increase. "Our association further call the attention of the public to the fact that the domestic beet sugar industry is the only American agricultural industry of great importance. which guarantees to th farmer, under a partnership contract, a definite cash pries for hia crop and which gives him in addition a liberal participation in tha net proceeds from ths sale of the sugar produced from the beeie grown by him. so that It must bo on sugar apparent tbat tbe tar-fla directly reflected in the pries the which American farmer reel eve, for hi beeta, and that such tariff I, maintained for his protection. Report Prosperity. "No better illustration of th value of the beet sugar Industry to th American farmer need bo cited than tbat, during the present agricultural depression th farmer in territory wherabeet sugar factories are operating are enjoying a greater degree of prosperity than those residing in other agricultural section, of the United States, and this fact la now so well recognized that agricultural expens studving farm conditions are recommending tho extension 'of the beet sugar industry to various other section of ths country." AXNAPOLIS. March 22 fAP) A riot of (00 underclassmen of treat where he could rest and enjoy scenery unsurpassed in any other state in tha west. With this action on the part of 22. WASHINGTON March the Chamber of commerce, pgden (INS) Mra Alpha E Smoot, wife people are anxiously awaiting the of Senator Reed Smoot (R) of reply of President Coolidge Utah, who has been suffering from BOISE. Idaho. March 22 (AP) President Coolidge, invited to the Pacific northwest this summer has summer "R hite offers of three House locations in Idaho, it was learned today. The first, offered bv Coeur d' Alene and Spokane chambers o Hon suck's Hill commerce is lodge, at Hayden lake. In Kootenai la a Tha second county. private lodge on Petit lake In tha heart the Sawtooth mountains or Stanley basin country, while the third la In In tha upper southeastern Idaho react rt of the Soak river; (INS mar-riat- ea Death Penalty Ashed OFFERS For Chicago Mother CHICAGO. March 22. (AP) The state will ask that Mrs. Bertha Heilman, mother of aix children, on trial hero for the murder of bey sheetland. YORK. Mai eh 22 (AP) Struck donn by an automobile to while on his way to church render thankegiung in prayer for trom hewn the direst rescued having poverty by admirers who remem be red his fame as a cross continent walker, Edward ray son Westoft, IS in the year old pedestrian Jay shadow of death today in St hospital. At one time the name of Ed ward Pason Weston was on every tongue and he was cheered as a hero in ever city through which he passed on his long hikes But ege at length sapped hie strength and though he had known glory hls.espjotts had neer brought hire any considerable revenue. Found Poor Sick. With age and poverty came ill ness and recently the old man was found sick and destitute in a barren tenment substotlng only on the charity of friends who could ill afford to share with him. New Aa he had once been a York police reporter the New York Press club formed a com mKtew to raise a fund and the was immediate and response large. After numerous contribution, Anne Nichols, playwright and producer, a week ago Saturday set aside $10,000, the interest to go to the aged walker as long as he lived. . Yesterday Weston, almost entirely recovered from his illness and with thanksgiving in his heart set out from his Greenwich Village home to attend church serAs he plodded across the vices. street at Seventh avenue and IDh street, his Jagging seps pitiful! contrasting with the long firm stride of his days of glory, he failed to see an automobile bearhim ing down upon Iaks in Hospital There was a shout of warning from others who saw the danger too late to avert it. a crash, and a crumpled gray haired figure lay sprawled upon the pavement Weston was earned into 8L Vincent's hospital close by and it was found that he had suffered head injuries which- - it was feared were critical for a man of his sge and infirmity Iue, .NEW TOBK. March 22 "r |