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Show THE SALINA SUN, SAUNA, UTAH Gave Away $512 In Tips, COOLIDGE MIGHT LOSE BAY STATE MASSACHUOF REPUBLICANS SETTS' ARE FOR BONUS AND AGAINST WORLD COURT. THESE ARE JOHNSON PLANKS By EDWARD B. CLARK Some of the-- RepubWashington. lican politicians here 8uy thut It is quite eonceivuble that, with the Issues drawn as they are in the Republican primaries, President Coolldge might lose Massachusetts and Senator Johnson might lose California, which are 'lutThowesiates of the presidential candidates named. What Is here written represents the Views of politicians who have spoken freely upon this matter, and It Is given without any bias at all as between President and senator, eucli of whom It Is definitely known now 1ms his nomination ambitions. Tlie conditions In Massachusetts are peculiar unto themselves. The President Is a Massachusetts man with the apparent loyul backing of his state as a favorite son, but the Ray state Republicans are committed almost wholly to two of the Johnson policies which are directly opposed to the Coolldge policies. Your correspondent ban talked to some New England politicians and publicists about the situation In their home state. of The Republicans Massachusetts, and In fact virtually the entire population, Irrespective of party affiliation, are, it Is alleged, heart-whol- e and actually headstrong for the bonus. The entire population and seemingly Is also heart-whol- e headstrong in opposition to the World court proposal and to anything which looks like an attempt to help Europe out of Its troubles. States Vote May Be Personal. Senator Johnson, therefore, will enter the Massachusetts contest for delegates with a platform which, In considerable part, suits most of the people who will go to the primary polls. If he were a son of Massachusetts he seemingly could secure on the busls of two planks In Ids platronn a great vote In the state. As It Is, It Is suld he probably will lose the state because Coolldge Is a favorite son. Massachusetts, therefore, according to the politicians viewpoint Is to vote In a Locul Way not political but personal. pride may displace political preference. Your correspondent asked a Massachusetts editor If the Democrats could carry a single New England state on a League of Nations issue, or on a more or less direct Issue of something looking like American Intervention In European affulrs. lie said In answer that the tusk of counting the Democratic votes cast In such a case would Bet a mark of minimum labor. One great Democratic uewspuper of Massachusetts Is supporting Coolldge for the nomination. Thus does the favorite son Idea dominate the heart of the adversary. One of the greatest Republican newspapers of New England now Is for Coolldge ufter having been a staunch upholder of Hie Johnson policies for months. This newspaper refuses to speuk of the adjusted compensation ns a bonus. It declares that the deserve all that Is asked In the congressional bills for their relief, and thut to deny them their due Is to flaunt the spirit of rlhJt pnd of patriotism, This same paper, a power In ull the New England communities, Is violently opposed to American membership In the World court und to anything else which suggests action beyond the three-mil- e limit or, as It soon will be limit. Yet toprobably, the It Is for the Coolldge supporting day with all the editorial nomination strength which It possesses and does not seem to think that it Is necessary at all to expluln why It is for one man on a platform which It loathes Instead of being for another man on a platform which It loves. Republicans Select Cleveland. The Republican national committee has met and gone Its wny. Representatives of all kinds of Republicanism from all parts of the land were present In Washington while the committee was meeting. Those present had one surprise of size sprung upon them and another of less magnitude. The first surprise and a rather stag geriug one was the direct request made to the committee by persons close to the administration thut Cleveland rather than Chicago should be named as the convention city. The second surprise came In the form of an announcement, the nature of which had been discounted In advance, that President Coolldge was to authorize a campaign In his behalf for the Republican nomination. The national committee, of coarse, cannot as a body actively support the cumpalgn of any candidate for the presidential nomination, but Individually the members can do much for this man or that man, and, moreover, It Is known that If the wish, concealed from the public, of the majority of the committee Is that this man or thut man be given the prize, this man or that man will (Rid help of the sort that counts. Frank II. Illtchcock, Senator Johnsons campaign munager, was here; Gifford Plnchot was here; the LnFol-lett- e agencies were represented; and with them were the soldiers of the Coolldge phalanx. The word Is that those members of the committee who were and still are bitterly opposed to anything looking like a suggestion of 12-ml- membership In the League of Nations are entirely satisfied with the message which Ctolidge delivered to the country through the congress. Coolldge Satisfies Adams. John T. Adams, chairman of the committee, was criticised some months ago rather more than sharply because of supposed activities against the Harding policy of American membership In the World court. Adams has expressed himself us entirely satisfied with wlmt Mr. Coolldge has had to say on all subjects. ot course, it is only nuturul that the chairman of the great Republican campaign body should eudor.e what the titular party leuder has to say, but there are evidences of sincerity in the chairmans words of prulse for the President's pronouncement, and therefore It would seem that Mr. Coolldge cun huve little to fear from antagonism In high party quarters because of his fairly strong endorsement of the plun for World court membership. While, us has been said, the national committee cannot us a body give open support to the ambitious of any one presidential candidate, there Is nothing to prevent Individual members from doing what they choose. So It is thut the way Is perfectly cleur for the activities of Committeeman William AL Butler in Alussachusetts, and of Com mltteemun Churles D. miles in New York, and of other conservutive-minde- d committeemen In other stutes, In behalf of the Coolldge cundidacy. There are some Johnson committeemen and they are as footloose individually us are the Coolidge committeemen to do whut they choose for their favorite. Most of Them Conservatives. Seemingly toduy there Is an luten-tio- n on the part of a good many of the committeemen to get into the fight A majority of the members of the body Is conservutive-minded- . Mr. Coolldge Is conservative-mindeand us thoughts generally run In the same channel the chances are that polltlcul activities will keep them together. All members of the Republican national committee are politicians. They know perfectly well that the party Is to have trouble over taxes and some other things In the preseut congress. They know that something must be done to placate the progressives, but apparently they do not want to do any more for them than Is actually neees-Bur- y to keep them In line. Some of the proposals are such that the purty may almost be willing to dare the progressive wrath ruther than to give them countenance. The chances are, however, thut there will be an attempt to do enough for the Republicans who are on the edge of the reservation rendy to leave It, to keep them within the party with a mind to work for Its success next November. Next Come the Democrats. This city finishes with one politically Interesting thing and Instantly looks forward to the next. The memnational bers of the Republican committee have gathered up their bags, their hopes and their fears and have departed. The members of the Democratic nntlonal committee will be on their wny here Just at the waning of the holiday season, although doubtless hoping that not all the good cheer has left. Some of the Democratic politicians here are disappointed, and say so, because there Is no Jackson duy banquet to be held In this town on the day given over to celebrating Old Hickorys victory at New Orleans Jan. 8. The dinner heretofore has been made the occasion for the appearance at the board of all the party candidates for the presidential nomination. In the past the chief guests have spoken their little pieces and In a way huve announced the platforms upon which they base their claims for preference. Why Is the festivity to be foregone! Probably because in the jiast It has proved a festal scene only for the hearers. The speakers at times have been In a mood which suggested something like stnge fright. It Is said that some prominent ones have told their Democratic brethren that it Is too much to ask of a man six months In ndvunce of the convention to proclaim to the world all the nrtlcles of faith upon which he Is to bnse Ills request for the smiles of his party. Both Sides Assume Cheerfulness. There are a good many members of the Democratic nntlonal committee already In Washington, where the committees headquarters have been established for some years. Cheerfulness Is the order of the Democratic day. No heart Is harder to read than the heart of a politician. So far as the one remembers In Washington heart of no party man ever has been worn upon his sleeve. The Democrats are cheerful over what they declare to be the divisions In the Republican ranks. Taking It the other way, the Republicans seem to be cheerful over the alleged divisions In the Democratic ranks. Both Of are satisfied. sides seemingly course, they are not, but no corkscrew (if one could find such an Implement In these days) could extract from any committeeman of either party admission that all Is not well along the Potomac and along all the other rivers of the country. Democrats here say that the two most patriotic men In the United States are Oscar W. Underwood of Alabama and William Gibbs McAdoo of California, who at this hour are the two most frequently named as likely, one or the other of them, to secure the prize. In Democratic circles, however. It is easy enough to find that there are men lu the followings of both the two gentlemen named who fear much that a third man, today rather In the background, will walk away with the prize. This third man also Is In Washington. Ills name 1b Samuel L. Ralston and he halls from Indians. d News Notes From All Parts of UTAH j j I ! Wants It Back Now He I Atlantic City. A lietlc gathering In a North side saloon, at which $10 bills were used to light cigarettea and $20 tips were given to waiters, was narrated In the court of Magistrate Joseph Paxton, where three young women were arraigned on a charge of robWork will be started In bing Alexander Massey, Jr., of WashNephi, this city within sixty days on fh ington of $512 In the course of the itwimMnMiiuniiMH.i...,Mi.M...,.......T...frf7lm,Ttt)nHt1rrit)(M)Uttt)ttttttr)tMWn miriiiiiiiiniMiiniiiMi Himnimiinnim revel. The three women are Kathbuilding of a pea canning factory. barbecue and erine Repp, Alice Leonard and Mae Sulina, The recent festival, In celebration of the comple-tio- n Cuddy, all of 1826 Atlantic avenue. of the paving and lighting sysMassey said he met Katherine Repp tem of the main business block and at the hotel where he was staying, of paving where she was employed aa a telethe mile and a half strip running through the town constructed phone operator, and they visited some Later the by the federal government, was one of the North side cafes. of the most largely attended and suc- two other women Joined the party. According to the testimony MaFey lightcessful ever staged in Salina. Unusual records for the ed cigarettes for the women with $10 Logan, bills, threw a $100 bill on the floor, and production of butter fat were made and $20 tips. The Holstein gave waiters $5 recently by twro pure-bre- d morning he found his bankroll cows from the herd of the Utah next was missing and he went to police Agricultural college. This informaThe arrest of the tion has been received at the college headquarters. women followed. The police young from the advanced registry office of that $285 was returned to Massey Association of say one the IIolstin-Friesia- n of the women. All three are by America. held In $500 ball. Salt Lake, Capitol building bonds amount of $10."), 000 were purchased Armed to Teeth from the Boy by the state, Wednesday, Taken by Virginia Cops Palmer Bond and Mortgage company at 98.25. The bonds mature in 1934. Washington. Armed like the famed Bill bandits, thlrteen-year-ol- d Salt Lake, Completion within the two-gu- n of Smith Clarendon, Va., was arrested races will be mntches in the accepted sense of the word. They will be open, next week of the new radio station at For Douglas will make this city one by Arlington county police authorities according to present plans, to all horses of Eplnards age. of the most important receiving and while sitting on a roadside calmly albroadcasting stations in the nation munching cakes and drinking milk, a to from been have stolen Park and will lead to eliminations of many leged lane grocery. With the Virginia youth minor relay stations in the west. was a Washington boy, who fled when A truckload of black bass the officers Ogden, appeared. here from Here is a'new portrait of Lieut. spawners were received At the Clarendon jail Deputy Sheriff he state fish and game department KInes Corliss Hooven Grlfiis of Hamilton, O., the pockets of Bills west of the clothes emptied now beginning a term in a German and placed in the pond and found two revolvers, a the mouth of Ogden Jail for attempting to kidnap Grover sanitarium at knife, four penknives and a Game Warden W. hunting Cleveland box of cartridges, all of which are Bergdoll, the American canyon by County II. Anderson. Another load is ex- said to have been taken from a store draft-evadeComplimenting Griffis on his noble effort to take back "a pected. at 3271 M street. Northwest. Smith real traitor to his country," but conof Ogden snld he had obtained the loot from Ogden, The population demning him for wilfully violating the Is 39,303 an increase of 6501; or 20 his Washington companion, whom the German laws. Judge Karzmann of per cent, over the census of 1920, police have not been able to locate. Mossbuch, Baden, sentenced Griffis to which gave Ogden's figure at 32,804. one year and nine months imprisonThese are the facts revealed by a cenGo Signal ment and a fine of 2 gold marks (50 sus survy just prepared for the Og- Rabbit Gets at cents). The Judge did not mince words den Chamber of Commerce. Citys Busiest Corner in denouncing Bergdoll as a traitor. bureau farm Provo, Twenty-tw- o The others involved In the kidColumbus, O. Traffic automobile, incorfiled of articles organizations Euas were street car sentenced and follows: naping pedestrian was gene Victor Neilson, chauffeur, of Chi- poration with the county clerk srecent- stopped for about 30 seconds at Coincorporati'ft'-yr.-perlumbus busiest corner. Broad and cago, three months, which he already ly. All of the has served; Roger Sperber, one year are identical in their wording. High streets, shortly before noon to and six months; and Prince Gagarin, a Iarowan. The town of Parowan is let a wild rabbit do a marathon down Russian, eight months. Four months contemplating n of a public the center of High street. was deducted from each sentence, as The traffic cop on duty, seeing bunbuilding. Plans have been presafety this already has been served, and so pared and work will commence soon. nys speed and realizing that a trafNeilson was ordered freed. Never did a Judge sugar coat a sentence more. He fic jam would result unless he had a Ogden. R. II. Hodge, recently apr clear track, set the block against all explained that Bergdoll was like any other American citizen In Germany and, regardless of his being a traitor, he had the same rights as any other foreigner. pointed superintendent of the state Broad street traffic and himself Therefore the court had no recourse but to find the prisoners guilty of at- Industrial school has assumed his of- stepped aside to let the rabbit pass. tempting to usurp the government power. They knew they were violating the ficial duties sucuceeding Jobvi Mills, who resigned . The only ceremony law, and therefore the court was forced to sentence them. Engineer Runs Burning incident to the change was the turnTrain Into Station ing over of the keys of the institution Conn. With the woodMr. Bridgeport, Mills. by work of the engine cab of a train from Ogden, For use in heavy duty in Springfield for New York In flames. conection with the Utah national Engineer Mooney of Springfield, Mass., and to guard possibly replace the stuck to his throttle and brought the A crowd of 5,000, coming from trucks which have been used to haul train Into the station. The engine was miles around, crowded about the Soo the field artillery, two five ton tracuncoupled and live steam was used Line station In Superior, Wls., in an tors have been shipped from Fort to put out the flames. to see the return of Edward attempt Sill to Salt Ike, and are expected to J. Sallstad (portrait herewith), accomin the near future. The guardsarrive inmiiinimiiniiuuiiHiuiiiimmmiiiiiimiiiiiiwiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiMiHiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiigl sunpanied by Dorothy Anderson, his i men on look a as the equipment shine girl," brought from Napa, Cal., Cranks Auto in Gear; much needed addition to the Utah by Sheriff W. A. Ilagreen. Their curi1 Man Crushed to Death f guard. e osity was natural. Its a regular Md. William C. Baltimore, dime novel story In real life. I Salt Lake, Utah showed a profit1 Kreuzer, son of twenty-nine- , Sallstad Is charged with burning able year In dairying compared to a prominent Syracuse manufac-- I I a cottage at Lakg Nebagamon, Wis., other Western states, according to a turer, and once a candidate for In August, 1920, to create the Impresreport compiled by J. E. Dorman in the lieutenant governorship of sion that he had died, so he could charge of the dairying division of the New York, was fatally Injured elope with Miss Anderson. A sensaUnited States department of agriculhere when he was crushed be- tional trial was held In which his supture. tween his own automobile and posed widow sued eight Insurance comthe tall gate of a delivery wagon American stere. for on Fork, life Thirty;five $80,000 Insurance panies as he attempted to crank the American opticon slides showing policies held by Sallstad, and after machine while In gear. Fork cave and canyon, bones of a human body burned in the Big Cottonwood canyon and other views in the lUHinaumiiimaiaiMmituiiutiiHiimimimnniiiuiuiaHiiiiiiHiaiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHimi cottage were produced, a compromise was effected. It later transpired that Wasatch canyon and forest will be used for educational purposes in the Sallstad exhumed the body of Allen Hides Sorrow to Entertain Crowd. McIhee, a friend, and placed It In of Council Los Angeles, Cal. Informed In a Bluffs, public schools the cottage before firing It. Mrs. Lena Sallstad, believing herself a widow, mar- Iowa. telegram that his mother was dying, , ried Ross Richardson. They are now living apart and Mrs. In a show-hereSalt Lake, Miss Johanna Sprague, Wiillum Burrisa comedian is suing for a divorce from Sallstad. Sfie has two children. continued stuff" to his doing the Salt Lake public Mrs. Augusta Sallstad, Sailstads mother, has forgiven her son and has librarian of a big crowd. After the show please disThe girl library reports that almost 1500 virtually adopted Dorothy Anderson, "because Ed loves her so. the man hurried to his mothers home-ancarded books have been sent by that Is threatened with consumption. found that her condition was im- The girl was privy to all details. The couple wandered across the conti- institution to country readers in Utah, nent by automobile, Sallstad repairing typewriters for a living. He was an Montana, Nevada and Wyoming durThe old volumes are sent ing 1923. Eau Claire manufacturer and was In financial difficulties. to anyone on request. Epinard May Be Better Than Papyrus Griffis Complimented by German Judge -- r. Real Life Has Its Dime Novel Stories old-tim- Sallstad-Richard-so- Volcanologist n Jaggar Goes to Japan Vernal, B. W. Johnson a farmer the High living near Vernal under Line Canal, reports the unusual yield of over $1,000 net return from 24 acres of alfalfa which he alllowed to go to seed nfter getting a first cutting of hay. He was also bothered to some extent with grasshoppers. Dr. Thomas Augustus Jaggar, Jr. (portrait herewith) has been author, ized to go to Japan, In response to the request of the Japanese governthe present ment to Salt Lake, with Dr. Oinorl, During authority on volcanology and seismol- season up to December 1 there were ogy, in an Investigation of earthquake 23,499 nutomobile tourists registered Dr. Jaggar Is the guide, at the Utah State Automobile associconditions. and friend who has ation headquarters. This is an inphilosopher shown to thousands of tourists the crease of nearly 7300 over last year. wonders of Kilaueas terrifying Salt Authority to proceed House of Everlasting Fire In Ha- witli Lake, the construction of a federal rewaii Nntlonal park. Since 1911 he has serve branch bank at Salt Lake, at been in charge of the Hawaiian Voa cost of approximately $250,000 has lcano observatory of the United States been received by R. B. Motherwell weather bureau. This observatory Is of the Salt Lake branch of on the very brink of Kilaueas manager perched reserve system from John federal the enormous crater, In which molten lava lT, Calkins governor of the federal bolls. eternally reserve hank of San the Francisco, Dr. Jaggar was born In PhiladelIn 1871 and was educated in Har- parent bank for the Twelfth district phia vard, Munich and Heidelberg. He Is Salt Lake, Charles S. Burton, vice A. B., A. M., and Ph..D. He was asof the Utah State National president sistant professor of geology at Harand for a half a century a leadbank head of and (1904-12vard. lie was professor of geology ) the ) department of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He was assistant geologist ing figure in the business and financial life of Utah died suddenly from a of the United States Geological survey , As a volcanologist and seismologist he is having conducted blood clot Saturday. volcano expeditions to Martinique (1902), Vesuvius (1906), Aleutian Islands Salt Lake, Custom was observed (1907), Hawaii and Japan (1909), Costa Rica (1910), and Sakurajima, Japan New Year's day at the state capitol he 1920 In visited New In Zealand Interest the the of (1914). when the offices of the Utah national volcano observatory campaign. and Bountiful Dr. Jnggar has been a freqnent contributor to scientific Journals and hi: guard from Salt Lake on Governor called units Mabey and on the Hawaiian volcanoes are Important Of the volreports and bulletins canoes of Hawaii National park Kllaaea has been continuously active for a extended him the compliments of tki century, Mauna Loa erupts every decade, Kaleakala last erupted 200 years ago season. (1904-17- (1S98-1904- ). world-famous- Pan-Pacifi- c Salt Lake City Firms To assure prompt service and nuick return to these adrcrtioementa mention the name of this paper. A BARBER Write IN EIGHT WEEKS Barber Col., MoTet BUSINESS 114 Regent St S. L COLLEGES LDrrUSINEsTOLLEG School of Efficiency. All commercial branches. Catalog free. SO N. Main St.. Salt Lake City. BOOKS AND SHORT STORIES nnnVC DUUlVJ Any book you want by mail, C. O. D Deseret Book Co. 44 Kast So. Temple FURS BOUGHT price for fur Write for price list or hides, afind pelts. house. We esn make ship direct to reliable overcoats or ui) your furs and hides into robes, We pay highest market rime rUIViJ write for our free entiling. Furriers & Tanners Salt Lake City 153 West South Temple SONGS & SHEET MUSIC other fur garments, Hide & Fnr Co., American Crtkirc new and old. All kinds. Sheet music by DUnllO mail. COD. Beesiey Music Co. 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