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Show V $ V the weather wedne!'1 Tuesday and probably v fate, somewhat warmar. ' Lecal Eattlamant Prloea. fit' an Domestic, 99foe; foreign. I"h Lead IS! 'a Copper lE (cathodes) jiar.n. ;a i i ter of their own. f a VOL. 107,. NO. 17 SALT LAKE CITY, TUESDAY MORNING,. MAY . Approved Promise to Murderer GEOS -- i court. i Af.rr testifying for the state. Chief Pettit was called to the stand on behalf of the defense. His testimony Indicated an agreement between himself and the county officials whereby Cook was to be bargained with for a confection i Beburgeif entered repeated objections to Pettit s testimony, but the chief was allowed to continue. He has registered indignation throughout tha trial at the attempt of the state tp secure the death penalty. Bight women are on the Jury hearing the case. ' Grand , Jury to ft oir the Question an i j Bodies. Exhuming Resumes Today Large Number of lessee on the Stand. immorality al 'Kins Benja-nell'- a a "House of David" resumed tomorrow morn more than fifty prospective 5 to be heard. Harry Dingema of Detroit. judge of (he slate circuit MIMED -- , t Proposals by Midnight Places Sum at Marks, (By the Associnew reparainspired by Lord Cur-- , BER'lJN', April 30 f ho n ilttmr'k" ' n one-ma- id Attorney Genera) Andrew it y are expected to decide to-- I qioming'whether to order the Of a srare In the House of bury in ground to Inresticate that the occupant had met by violence. - f Irmer sexton eat the cemetery tht the body, whichwhenwas Hated it "was death certificate two years age. ax that ti( a , 98 cards old. wan in reality .about Id. who bore finger prints throat. . j I sexton has told officials and If George Bridgman that the A' rough box containing the body f open at one corner while being red into the grave and that he I the body, whwh a as unclothed I wrapped In pld newspapers. I Dsath Causss Unknown. fete officials todsy checked up the of all the dead of the colony since nell came here in 1904. There are names qn the list, end the itry was directed particularly t to jmatance surrounding the oea ha half dozen people who, the record shows, died of se unknown r. Estes, a physician member ofI cult, signed the death oertlflj umeli teaches his followsrs they I gain Immortality bv following bis tchlng pud can only die if they e faith. Bacnuse of hia peculiar chlnga the members of ths colony use to have anything to do with mnere'Whmar. A Benton Harbor dertaksr who he.fis a contract with s cult, fa railed and take ths body way to be dumped into a lonely grave ithout ceremony. There are no lourners and no religloua rites, al hough in nearly every case the death ertifioates show tha dead left from ne to nine relatives -- behind in the . i okmy. Burial Ground Isolated. The Hoase of David bought an Iso's ted section of A local cemetery and here In recent years Its dead have been burled. Before that a few bodies a ere Interred dn a lonely corner of the eolony'a estate. Attorney General Dougherty and Assistant Attornerv General Homer Quay expect to question several former girl members of thfe cu' thlg week. Th girls claim that Purneu, under the guise of religions rites and ceremonies, had Improper relations with them while they liven in the colon v. Several surprtsa wllnesaes who have not been involved fin previous Investigations or eivls cases, have been loti med. cated, it Is The grand ery Is also expected to heaf some of he former girl members who testified n the civil suit of Mr. HenseL at Grand Rap. and. Mrs. Job ids last mom It was on the strength of their testl ny that federal Judgedeclared In his decil.iv Sater, Sarur Florid- a- Governo- r- Urge Drastic' Action at the Hands of Legislature By Taivert 1 J. TALLAHASSEE. Fla.. 'April Governor Hardee thla afternoon recommended to the senate the dlsOissal from office of County, Judge Willi of Leon county, on chargee of malfeasance .and drunkenness, - growing out of tbe Investigation of tbs death of Martin Taber in a convict oamp. It"wa Jiidge WIHIs who sentenced Tbbert to the camp for ninety days on a charge ef riding a freight train. Tabert was terribly wh'pped in the camp and d'ed two days liter, Sheriff Jones of Leon county, who caused ths arrest of Tabert, waa removed from office by the senate last week on charges the saint' e those filed against Judgre Willis It waa charged that Willis and Jones had conspired to "railroad' men to the prison camp So that a head for Jonea could .collect $20 . UiPTlonvicts. At the same time the legislative committee Tabert' a Investigating death was informed that the United States government Is Investigating ths death of .another convict from lashing. The government probe Is being made in the case of Ned Thompson, a negro, 05 years old, who died In the - Leon county jail shortly after he was returned from a lease convict t damp A federal agent has been investigating the death of Thompson ever since the Tabert case became Public, and United Staten District Attorney Cufeberly may take the ease before the federal grand Jury at Peniaoola : in May. The federal officials say they have evidence to show that the negro died as the result of continued floggings. He had been .working at the oamp the Putnam Lumber company, In of which Tabert died. The state board of medical examiners todav began consideration of Catimi aa Pass Tv ' (Cslsam Toes.) tions program son's speech will be dispatched le the entente, capitals and to Washington Tuesday night. Its final draft will be decided ea tomorrow after Chancellor Cuno and 'Foreign (Minister von RoAenberg have concluded further deliberations whh the reichslag leaden and announced the government's plans to the premiers ef the federated states. . Official quarters continue their re- fusal to make even a cursory revelation aa to the nature of the new proposals, characterising current predictions aa unauthorised and wholly conjectural. Among the reichstag leaders a ho hsve been In constant touch with 'government headquarters during the past week, the opmion is pretalent that the new offer will specify flat fixation of 30, COO. 000,000 god atonight will propose a marks, antiaggreasion pact, to be participated in by all the Rhine (ewers, and provide for the creation of a Franco-Germa- n Industrial entente. Whether Germany Is making the gold marks payment of 30,000.000,000 contingent on tbe successful flotation of a foreign loan cannot he learned tonight, although it was stated that the German Industrial and financial interests had vouchsafed to Chancellor Cuno their support for bis new program. Aa an alternative to its new offer. learned that jhe German government would make the unconditional suggestion that th whole reparations tangle should be submitted to a jury of authorized economic experts, a tha American secretary of state proposed last December. Fledge. Universal Service Cable "BERLIN. April 30. Germany holda out the olive branch to France in th form of mutual peace pact to endure for thro genera lions, lb the new tier, man reparation offer which goes to the allies tomorrow night. This proposition, originally made bv Ihe tzscutlve committee of the united German socialist party to the of the allied socialists in their recent conference in Berlin, has been taken up by th cabinet after much deliberation. It has been written Into the final draft of the new document designed to end th hatred and hostilbetween the two nations. ityThe cabinet this evening finally passed upon the not tothat is to be Ambassador sent to the alliew, and Wiedfeldt at Washington, who will Informally acquaint Secretary Hughes with its contents. of the note have Some translation alreadr been made. It i not believed Minister Finance of Hermes, who that returns tonight from sick leave, and whose approval Is necessary, will Insist upon any vital changes Thirty but billloflix. Is the "present value, With thb. Interest this ran be read to e and thirty-fivmean between forty billion marks. Doubt i expressed, even In German circles, that the offer of th German railway! with their enormous deficits, will be acceptable JS security for International loan, out it Is believed that this offer will open the way for other securities. While there is much skepticism that Premier Poincare will accept the be- as a bests for negotiations, the ea Piet Tw Csstisa (Coinma Feu.) de'e-gat- es Paris Takes - Steps to Counter Move by Turks High Court Favor s Idaho Kefir in Indemnity Case on the Syrian Border. Nelsons Funeral May J Ths Tribune. Be Held' on Friday HNGTON. D. C. April J. denied a as a fpreme court M OeatuAwd ea'pass Three, fCalaaui Oea.) i of-f- er today rertlorari In tbe case of the States Fidelity and Guaranty y vs, Robert S. Blake, thus of the circuit flnsl J .appeals for the Ninth circuit, helling the insurance company to LBjhke. a minor, ITolQ on account death of his father, who was A for that amount. Edmund Lie, the father, was killed In Tinty. Idaho. January 1Z, 1521, If from a window of his room lourth floor. the supreme court did not any formal decision or discuss fits of the esse In any wav, Its I to review the findings of the court In effort deals another nt what are frequently called reservations'' In insurance tbe elder, carried an . which - contained I His This policy does not cover ddrntal bodily Injury caused or mted to (Erectly or indirectly, knese or disease " I record showed Blake was suf-- I from pneumonia, and white deli in the presence of hie doctor, I and wife, suddenly Jumped out M end either fell or jumped .from I inflow, the fall kiHing him. lause of the cleuse quoted the to Ice company sought to avoid pay- I of tbe death benefit, but the II Ktstei district court for Idaho later the circuit court of appeals, heir, named as beneficiary fi la pollcv, and tbe full amount of knee' will have to be paid. ' e e, or-th-e PARIS, April precaution against what la regarded as the threatening gesture of the Turks In opnoentratlhg 29. 00 troops along the northern border of Syria, the French government has decided to reinforce its own military strength In ths mandated territory by two divisions. , Thla will place 49.000, men at tht disposal of General Weygand, who mils late this week for Beirut to take over the duties of, French high commissioner in Syria and commander of the army in the east s The t reinforcement of the It, 000 French troops already in Syria waa decided upon. It in understood, a conference between Premier Poin-at care and General Bpjle, French high commissioner at Constantinople and head of the French delegation at the Lausanne conference. ST. PAUL. Minn , April 30. While were further arrangements being m&de today for tbe funeral of UnitKnute Nelson of Senator States ed Minnesota, speculation continued In a to wbo would be circle political Senator Nelaon died hi successor. suddenly Saturday night on a train near York. Pa. Although it was announced here last night that the funeral would be held Wednesday afternoon at Alexandria. home of Minnesota a "grand old man." it wa Indicated today thar the services might not be held until Friday. mentioned as candiProminently date for the office are Governor Preua, FredW. Putnam, who resigned last week aa state railroad and warehouse commissioner; Frank B Kellogg. former United Btetea senator, Oscar Hailam, justice of the state supreme court, and Lotus D. Coffman. president of the University of Minnesota. The governor has denied that he would seek- the senatorshlp Selection of a, successor to MinneLAUSANNE, fBy April the Associated Pres ) An official pro- sota s junior senator will await the test agaraat Russia's being arbireturn o( Governor J. A. O Preu. who will accompany the body from trarily kept eut of the conference" was eent to the near east peace conChicago. It is not expected, however, ference today by . M. V oroveky, the that anv announcement will be made soviet representative here. He de- for some time. clared such a decision was in direct violation of the terms of the Invita- Three Are Slain During tion sent to Russia by Great Britain, IVanc and Italy preceding the first Race Alabama Lausanne conference on November 14. -- - IQ-- Riot 1922, M. , In hia protest, Vorovsky, says Russia cannot accept th ultimatum tha conference that she must sign the convention fixing the status of the Turkish straits before being admitted to the conference. Tribune-SaRussia must enter th conference bike Tribes CsMs, 1 The in Paris on fult terms of equality, ths soviet IS, May troops he city garrisons are under representative insist. atlon order from midnight to I hi. vhlla the Garde Repub- -' CONSTANTINOPLE, April 30 (Bv aAd the city police force will file Associated Press ) a convention hforced throughout the city on putting Into effect th railway devele opment and mining ooncesslons grantay The bakers struck at g the ed by the -- Turkish government to the police are la ftepubliqu ami the streets Ameeicao syndicate- headed try Rear Admiral folbv M. Cheater, retired, (the (Poor exchange, also the waa today at Angora. signed if. of mm ter of public works The will bo afhie aixnature for the govern- idlrm rf jihnrt yruard throughout the fixed nvent and the military governor Clayton Kennedy for th" though that no trouble Is expected promoting corporation. Commander Arthur T Chester tlry has been ordered to patrol ie trnde Auc Relies, headquar-rhh- e son of Rear Admiral Chester, al eommuniefn and nnarcfi Makes Ready for Iay Day Disturbance is lt mld-Th- gua-din- f of BIRMINGHAM. 30 Ala.. April Three men were killed and two inat this afternoon Helena, Ala., jured when a negro ran amuck and fataliy shot Allen Abernatbv, nephew of Judge P. 8. Abernathy of the Jefferof misdemeanor son county court The dead are- - Allen Abernathv. 22 see. of Orevmont. Birmingham, years Charley Phillips. 22. coal miner, RoeJohn Morgan 'Cain, negro, buck. Al 43. coal miner, Helena, Ala. waa shot about I fo Abernathv o'clock is the afternoon and died just before reaching a hospital in Birmingham General ahnoting and dynamiting started Immediately forlowittg the outbreak which theratened to develop Into a small sized race riot, but reIndicated port at 5 o chick Ton.ght that the situation waa wel! in hand had down. quieted rvhlng BALT LAKEER IN NEW YORK, I gprrlsl l TH H. Manson. Tribes. Ctcate Ttlbae-0al- t Tab Tetbeae Wire., BUZZARDS BAT, Mata. April 39 Th reconciliation between th eccentric Charles Garlaad and h'd wife, which waa effected last Saturday, ter- minated todav, and th Socialistic scion -- of wealth has returned to h.s two young girt companions at North Carver, where the three have occupied i Several hundred exquisitely colored the Garland shack for the past sevweek. tilde gave tbe best possible Idea of eral The Mr. Mary Wren Garland, what (s Irf store for the president If has iettwife, the family manaiok at Bourne, and no one about the place cares to he can arrange to visit Utah fasav where ahe haa gone. mous caption. Neighbors of the couple In Bourne Th coered pictures- - wbr augment- believe thst Garland waa finally called ed bv several reel of moving pictures, .to a showdown by his wife. He was told flrmlx. B is believed which, while nut colored, gave an even he must choose between hia wi.e better Idea of th magnitude of th that and th girls at the farm aback domes Weskrana chasm that abound Uarland chose, and, being whatever on terms "a good sport." Mrs, GarIn Zlonjpark and Bryce canyon, f Mr. Blanchard, who look the pic- land, after seeing that her husband was served a hot breakfast, which ture last season, gave a descriptive his favorite dishes, took the talk m the views were thrown on steering wheel of hef automobile and drove hep husband back to "April the screen. One of the striking features of the exhibition waa the dem- Farm." Mr. Garland, a hen ahe drove her onstration of how the colors change ear up to the little, dilapidated group in Zion and Bryce as ths sun sinks of buildings in the Carver grove, steered through the brush and mud In the west, and throws the brilliantly colored recks Into shadow Th Utah into the front- - yard of th ancient view proved of intense interest to hub A Garland alighted front the oar th president and are said to have exceeded his expectations Senator his young girl companions, barefoot, Smoot dined with- th president and bailee and in light garb, pattered up Mr Harding before the pictures were to greet trim. He gave every evtdeao exhibited, and later added bia expla- of being glad to see them. One of the nations to - those offered by Mr. young women Is Miss Alice Agerton, ' . the other is known at Betting of Blanchard. Senator Smoot is diligently urging Boston." (lie president not to pass up the nres-e- nt but he Garland had little to opportunity of seeing the finest Indicated that he planned to stay at scenery that- the entire west has to the aback with the two girls indefi, offer, nitely. eery-ic- e. - sv, ALLIES' ninety-nine-ye- It'te High Points in Ruling , by U. S. High Court v ' Nature Guarded, but Rumor - J. Blanchard of the reclamation ' ated Presal ASermany's r i 3-M- Have Foretaste of De- Gxrlandt , Reconciliation Short-liveRich Solights to Come if They Visit Canyons on cialist' Goes Bach to t ' f Trip West. Girl in Farm Shack. - j ipecitl t TH Triboo. WASHINGTON, April 30 President and Mrs. Harding and a group of Invited friends, saw Zioa park and Bryce canyon in picture exhibited at th White Houae this evening by C. Allied Powers Will Receive Cuno Government 30,000,000,000 col-b- -- ile d; . SETH, Mich . April ' SO i'o grand Jury Invettisation o( Dry Law in Full Effect Limit, Only Within 'Supreme Court Deciden r fossed. Slayer of Harrison W. Des Mpmes druggist, that Huegl he would eacapp the gallows it ha confessed the, murder, was approved by Judet Bonner and County Attorney Beburger, Ch.st of Detectives Tofe Pettit testified today at tha trial of Cook in district FI VII CENT: 22 Hardings See.:, Marital Ship 4 Utah Films ; Strikes Reef HEW t twaaMM DE8 MOINES', low. April 30 -Hia promise A George con Hook, POSSIBILITY u.PAGES 1, 1923 tinm 1 111 Free State . Leaders , Hold Steps to Prevent ContinU' r ' d That Peace Proffer Was ation of Civil War Not Addressed to Them by Li's' Adviser. Sug--geste- Skeleton of Student Miss-in- s Since 4921 Found in Chicago Breakwater. Final Chapter Written to Story of Youth Who Vanished From Class. Chics ge Tribune halt lake Trlbnn EVANSTON, 111, April So Wire. Student university basing In Northwestern shack to lta annals tonight added he a the skeleton of Leighton Mount, a youth who disappeared In September, 121, 'waa found Imbedded In an old breakwater here. t. Toung Mount, a Northwester vanished from fill rtaxsei Hi th midst of a spirited controversy over Ah evil of hasing fiesrlf two years ago. Fot months It waa pretested that he was voluntarily absenting himself on account of- embarrassment arising over th hasing. Mount a disappearance followed on the heels of a naXing sensation surrounding the Rescue of Arthur P head Persinger. who wua bound, a piling In the lake off downward Calvary bemetery. It gw said at the time that numerous atudenU had been ''hazed and that Persinger wao forgotten in ths confusion of class fighting. . Following the trouble th officials of the university leaned statements bad not protesting thst Persinger been bound and that Mount had not been severely dealt with. But after many months of search bv Mrs. J. L. Mount, mother of the final youth. there came tonight th curtain of the college tragedy. w Discovered by. Lad. ,, . Ralph Ward. 12 year old. waa In th edge of th water al playing th foot of ladle street. Reaching from the old breakwater he retrieved This from the water a queer bone. he took Home and exhibited to his mother. Mr. Ward notified the Police. Chief Leggett and a squad hurried to th lake. Wedged between water-wor- n timbers and stone was a skeleton. There wa little to Identify It at first, but io a (oomnt thar roll into view a silver belt buokl. It bore th letter L M." " L M.V mused one of the policemen. "Whj, thata Leightoa Mount. Mrs. Mount said that there could be no quewtion of th buckle end the hits of cloth having belonged to her son. beNo sooner had the discover come public than In host of rumors filled K van slon, particularly the campus of Northwestern university, whose routine onlv last week was disrupted by the death of Louis auAuber was killed In aa tomobile collision, the rNmax of a basing bettle. He wa burled today. Theory of Police. The skeleton wee found under the broad surface of the breakwater feet from Its end about twenty-fiv- e A small round hole in the flooring of th breakwater arms th only discoverable ingress by which the body of the student could have been pushed into the Water beow. Thug it s walled between pieces of stone. Th police and coroner's theory is that Mount's body must have been thrust Into Its Impromptu grave by person seeking to hide a possible crime or accident; or, If Mount e death, was Suicide he must have lowered himself Into this lake cavern before taking b's own life. It was not considered tenable that he killed himself. investigation of Mount's student associates began shortly after the A identification was accomplished. search was started for J. Hellen Mills and HaaseiL of both Henry whom bid been heard to speak of having seen Mount at about the time of th Neither of disappearance. these students wss found tonight. While some of the police were Insistent that Mount had been aia'n in a student battle, others were of the opinion that be had taken hie own etu-den- y the AssoRYAN.-PEKING, April ton hr forciated Prose. Uk Tribune Cable. DUBLIN, April 30. Diverted by exrepresentaMves to eign diplomatic plosions; Dublin is aWalting the gov, prevetK Impending c!vi .war, which ernmer.u rep'y to Eamonn d Va- many observers belleVe is about to lera a peace proposal. Although the break out between the Fengtltn fae diegovernment hae Issued no statement, tlon, headed by Chang Tso-Uit Is understood that th following is ts lor of Manchuria, and the Chihli ' It gtti'ude; , party, led by Tsao Kun. whs urged Since De, Valera haa not addressed today by B. Lennox Bimpson, adhia overtures to the government, but visor to Prealdent IJ Tuan-HunEmtaeeriaa .from President Li have haa issued them aa a proolamatioa to most, emphatithe cabinet, it does not consider that been assured bynoChang warHke Intentions, he, haa a reply called for, though one may cally and th chief executive, It la reportthis statement of eventual'y be made. The government ed. has repeated war loida to Tsao feeie tha': De Valera's Stipulation that the Manchurian that recommendation Kun, with th hia followers be permitted t sit in Tsao cease hia recent menacing moveihenU. the Dail Eireann without taking aa troop deducMr. Simpson, drawing hi oath le contrary to the treaty, which tion from nightly movements of la the foundation of the present cabinorthward through PeChihli troop th belief express-- d net. Furthermore, the government king. credits that another clash is Imis understood to demand the surrender elsewhere minent between the two powerful of the arms of the peoples represen- forces which last year battled for control of Peking when Chihli won , tatives. , n and Chang, with his defeated Consequently when De Valeras returned to his Manchurian men, after concealing tbelr arms, re- stronghold. Mr. Himnaon recommends that the turn to their omee at noon tomorforeign diplomats to demand pledge row, the government will not cease that China her trade treaty adhere stipulations, which include demilitarimaking arrests and searches.,,. ,, Mukden of the sation railway- In conThe national troops redoubled their formity with the protocol ef tool and vigilance in Dublin today, patrolling consultation of th wishes of th Chilorries halted periodically along the nese people through the president, the aesemlilie. trade gruilds curbs and the soldiers descended and provincial In this and chambers of commerce. searched the crowds for suspect. adviser the way, presidential points De a Valera action was, as out. Actually. Inflube Kean O'Higgins said, "clever. If enced developments might methdiplomatic legitimate by th irregulars return to their homes ods and s the hands president the government can no longer defend In bis, efforts to avert Its policy of holding 12.000 persons (strengthened war. without a trial, aa suspension by civil Meanwhile Tsao Kun's Chihli forces haboas corpus is justifiable only when are n pouring northward along the the etate is threatened. But th rereilwav. while it la said that a lease of the prisoners without first years accumulation of ammunition at negotiating peace would be to provide the Techow arsenal pas been shipped De Valera with a future army. Ih (heir wake life. , The explosion occurring in the last It le predicted that If hostilities three davs are apparently the acta of break out the clash will come along from republican youths who waht a last a line running Rivers Chengtehtu New round before quitting. Persons in about eighty miles northeast of Petouch with the republicans say .that king. to Chlhfeng 100 Threaten poroxlmste.y Big Damage tomorrow marks the end of their ac- miles northeast of Cbsngtehfu and , tivities. depredations will be southeastward along a line from BOSTON April iW Th . to th Gulf of Liaotung Cbengtehfn rivr ni at-- flhanhafkwau on thr Mukden ralu hfv-- ft- tha heavy rains of th last two (Osiiu way. ar on a rampage. Several dam have been swept a ay, bridge damaged and long stretches of railroad track washed out and many highways are under water. Trains have been cancelled bn several division of the Main Central railroad and oa portion of th Boston A Main system Great log drive breaking their booms, have been swept away. Service by way of the Canadian Pacific railway from New England to the maritime province waa rut off by th cancellation of ail traJna on the relversel 8, Trice. By with Bngv-VaacbSantiago was on the section of the mam me. When I saw that allbridge NEW BEDFORD, Mass, April SO th boat - .. Une of tbe Main Central. How John Santiago, quartermaster, were away I signed to him to Jump, Th dam of the Howland Pulp and as the bowling wind and the almost died with his hands to th wheel tryat the outlet of human groaning of th sinking ship Paper company near Ebeemee pond, Brownville, Me , ing to keep the faultily constructed drowned out my shouts. Kaiahdin Iron work dam In and the "I as then the Beacon leaped net the same section have gone out. steam collier Reaconnet headed Into a keeled and as I swam for one Four thousand cords of pulp wood hurricane on Nantucket, was 'told to- of the over, boat I looked back and saw which smashed through a boom in night by the survivors of the disas- Santiago, as though frozen to th Queechee river In Vermont yesterday ter, The Seaconnet. whose plummet-lik- e wheeL He smiled at me. and then the down into (he Connecticut rushed seven to death sinking brought gave a last groan and slid river and early today had reached men of the crew, came to her end be- Seaconnet sea. the Turners Falls, Mass., where cause of the haste with which she under Revere I vessels summoned by the swept away tbe flash boards of they was built, Ahe t) frantic B. O. 8. calls of the Seaconnet dam. The one woman aboard the Sea- reached th scene late Sunday afterTh rity Of Concord. N. H wag cut connet, Mrs. James J. Hudgins, wife noon. only to find bit of floating off from highway communication ex, of the third officer, stood calmly and wreckage. crpf to the westward when th Merri-ma- c with fortitude the wild tossing about river and It trtbutane overin the storm that followed - the Ckteai Trtbaae-get- t flowed the low lyihg roads In all other Labe Tribes Cebte, of For boats. the she hours launching directions. SYDNEY, April 30.rNewe reached sat bravely In the spray of the icy water until rescued. But when she Sydney today from three survivor 8PANISH ELECTION RESULTS. ' the schooner Amy Turner, which stepped ashore she collapsed and had of foundered MADRID. April SO (By th Assonear Guam on March 2i to he taken to a hospital. gale while bound from ciated Pres ) Returns from the gen"The Braconnet went down in less during a heavy Australia to Manila with a cargo of eral elections for congrea. held yessaid Captain coal than half aa hour, The survivor drifted for terday, came jn slowly todav., lf'the wee alDaniel- Will-- The pumps day tn- an open boat, s ut- eight deputies chosen In this city the most useless when the first seam the eracted five, tb others betering greatest Thev privations our heavy cargo of coal fmallv landed on tha east coast of Socialists opened and ing two minister'allstlc' libera s, and sucked i down Mindanao. one business exPhilippine map candidate. The soIslands, "The crew wa 'ordered to the boats, hausted and Thev were cial lat' victory caused much surprise. starving of which there were only three. On food.- - e'oth'ng and shelter and According to th latest returns given to the of these was washed awes by a great were transported to Cebu. ministry of th Interior this afternoon. wav. The other ekirfded down a N. E. Wilson his wife and nineCaptain 10 supporters of th other will government e when the Seasmokestack members bf the crew, mostly Austra s.t in th chamber, while others lhay At lian. are mieein connet listed heavily to starboard. f' The wa addel be of the scrutiny veel THY furnif IT-f- n L7 acpunea m ine ATBlfffltyrTradeKn3 water. waa sold at Melbourne to pay drill. bpenlslt chamber.) - By THOMAS Ckleato Ttlinae-Sal- S0e-4B- " t 1 -- ( g. 1 Au-ber- e. Feng-tienlte- - Kai-ga- England Iter OT Tragedy of the Collier Seaconnet, Lost in New, England Coast Gale, Is Related by Rescued Survivors -- - Iwen-ty-fm- ir- -- guy-wir- V 1 These high point are stressed InUie supreme court rulings tn tea liquor ease 1. Chairman leaker of the shipping board saa it will anable American vessels to compete with the Brltieh. He favors th sale ef liquor, but will keep th ships dry until ordered to lift the lid by th president. 2. It change the status of dry negotiation with foreign countries since, the! rum traffic la now le- galized. 3. it will, tn (he opinion of cus tom officer, greatly increase tha 4number of rum ships. a fight to t It precipitate have the pres'dent declare American-owned ehlpa dry under th same law that the navy Is now . .. dry, , I. Tlry will seek new legislation in the next congress to change tha few and nullify the decision of the supreme court. drawing up Secretary Mellon regulations'to permittoforeignridves-of sels sufficient time get their Hquor store In line with He tbe supreme court decision. said that he would al'ow ihfpa now oa their way to America to clear for the return voyage before max- ing the law operative. I HLL. Author Succumbs to Heart and Respiratory Trouble in Hospital Noted q. CHICAGO! April ' 30. Emerson Hough, author, died in a hospital In Evanston today. Mr. Hough waa 41 years old and wax taken to the hospital late Thursday suffering from an Intestinal obstruction. An operation was performed on Saturday. Heart and respiratory complications caused death. Mr. Hough, who wss a devotee and disciple of outdoor life, had writtea many western stories, his most recent book, "The Covered Wagon, having in mojust recently been reproduced tion pictures In the winter of. 1 fa, donning skils, h trav ed over Yellowstone national park and hi activity after thin trip waa credited with having Inspired th act o( congress protecting buffalo herds. Mr. Hough explored many of the corwildest and moat ners of the country, and during hia earlier yeara gathered much of the material for hia later booka of travel, adventure and romance. Many of his novels were of the historic romance type. Involving the building of the west, with lta pioneer difficulties, geld, land and Indians. Tha author was born In Newton, Iowa, Juna 28. 1337. He was graduated from ths University of Tows tn 1380, Ha la survived by th widow. Among bia mors well known and famous stories were or Kizht." published In 190 and The In 1902. There M reisstppi Bubble, were many others, most of them having to do with th west or th outdoors. among them The Law of the "The Way to the West, Land. "Heart' Desire "The Story of the Outlaw and "Th Young Alaskans tu th Far North." "Flftv-Four-For- ty Foreign Ships Cannct Intoxicants Bring Into U. S. Ports, but Sell Outside of Zons j0 0. IntoxWASHINGTON, April icating liquors, tven under seal, cannot lawfully be brought In Americas or foreign ships within three mile of th shore of th United fit a tea the supreme court held today In a decision which declared, however, three-mil- e limit that outside th American Vessels can legally sell In- toxicants to passengers. Th right of foreign ship t do M had not ' . been questioned, The opinion, rendsred in tan ease brought by foreign and two by American steamship companies, was delivered by Justice Van pevanter. Without expressing his views. Justice Justioa dimeated. McReynoida Suth- erland In a dissenting opinion agreed with tha majority ef th court In reference to American ships, but declared that foreign reams had th right to bring liquors into American ports under restrictions adequately guarding against leakage asbort. The effect of (he decision was to affirm that o( Federal Judge Hand In New York in so far as it sustained th opinion of Attorney Gene rai Daugherty that Inioalcant could not legally ha brought into American It with regard porta, and to revere to tha right ef American vessel to hare liquor aboard high on seas and in foreign port. Power With Congress. Th court today pointed out specifically that congress has tba power, if It awes fit to exarcie It, to forbid all ships flying the American flag to serve Honor and outside the carry three-mil- e limit. This view of th court resulted Is predictions by man dry leader, after ihe gist of th derision had become known, that aa attempt would be mad to obtain legislation' oa this point at the earliest opportunity, Sweeping in lta soope, the decision someleft administration officials what at sea a to how they wouul' a matter of permanent proceed aa g Chairman Igniter of the policy board announced that for the present, at least, the ban on itouor would be kept on nil shipping board vessels. The treasury. It became known. Intends to begin at once to redraft Its prohibition regulation to make them jib with today a declaration. Prohibition Commissioner Haynes, expressing gratifies non at the court a Interpretation of th law. declared it would grrealiv simplify prohibition enforcement within American waters, hia view being that a benefit would be gained mm a ri.- -i t of foreign and American reee' bewith n ing placed on (he same baa limit. tbe three-miTh expected to re me question up for discussion at tomorrow a eeo ret meeting. General Attorney a Daugherty will participate In for th flret Urn In more tha two month and it la likely that he will hava suggestions to make aa te He declined to diecuw the policy. decision todav, but began an exheuc-tiv- e stud v of th various points mads ahso-Ptn- trfi-Infi- at le 1 diwu-sion- by tha court Jurisdiction Complete. In Its disc tia ton of federal jurisdiction over foreign ships in American territorial waters the court declared that Jurisdiction waa eomplet. It wilt be possible, however, should congress decida te waive the enforcement of this Jurisdiction and permit foreign ship to do things Amenrea ships were prohibited from doing. Tha court expressed the opinion that foreign nation could pot force say such cxemptioB. Referring to th department of due-ti- c contention that prohibition covens American ship outside ths water of the United Btates, the court it does not nay o, and whet It does any snow that It Is confined to th physical territory of th Lmt-e- d fltat. In support of their contention th defendants refer to th statement sometimes made that a merchant ship la a part of th territory of the eountry whose flag tha files But th aa haa been apilv observed, la a figure of speech, a metaphor. . . , The jurisdiction which it i Intended to describe arises out of the nationality of the ships s established by her domicile, registry and use of th flag, and partakes of th characteristic of perwonel rather than of territory sovereignly , , It I chiefly applicable to ships on th high aeaa, where there is no terreececre ritory tnsovereign, and a foreign territorial waters It hips ha fittie aumiratlnn he vend ht Is aald-Ihit . -- Former Illinois Lawyer Clubbed to Death; Wife and Son Are Missing. , CaiiiM m Fas nd AURORA. Ill, April S0.-4- 71ty county authorities were eearchmg.la-- J1 night for U,o body of Warvea Lincoln, former attorney and prominent nuraervmnn, who. they believe, waa beaten to death with an Indian club an h lay in hia bed last night, John Uncoin, 20 year old, eon of tha missing man, is under arrest. mlssln 'The elder Lincoln wa when hi brother .went to hi home this morning Hut clothes were piled on a cba.r In his bedroom, the brother told the police, while la a waa near found a large by greenhouse Indian pool of blood, a c'xb and a parity emptied ; whisky The missing man g nightshirt, night cap and a woman s glove were found hundred yards in a rtatern several from the house.-- His desk had bees were strewn and papers open pried about the house and yard and aa far as th cistern. Lincoln a wife, from whom ho was Tha auseparated,- - also la missing, thorities ar searching for her and for her brother, B. L. Shoup, who lived at ths Lincoln home for a time nd with whom Lincoln ia said to have quarreled.-- . Mrs. Lincoln, acwas .last to the police. cording heard from In California, Marie Kim, a neighbor girl, who worked at Lincoln's home at interwife left. Mid th val since hi glove found in the cistern waa - on had In a wobeen a that of pair man a cloak tha! waa tn the Lincoln Th raina home Saturday gloves, coat and a skirt were gone when to arrived. th the police' According soa, hut father s wife an 4. brother-in-la- w had beaten Hi missing man before Mrs. Lincoln left. Lmcoififo mother Uvea in Lexingblood-staine- d -- ton, Neb. J , WEBSTER CHOSEN JUDGE. Repre-entatl- v 30. WASHINGTON April c.f WashJ. Stanley Web-t- er ington wa appointed today by prea- Aa he Upurd . state irfr the eastern d.stnct of judge W Tw Fee (OMawa Take a Look at Your Own Panama Caned R "'cut 'in talf the ' highway of th , whol world It compre Into smaller compass. Thla ia a matter of tremendous advantage to th American nun. meth forturtr, th farmer, rchant, and the man In th street ' it brings Chile and Peru nearer to New York than California. . It brings Anstralm 1300 miles I nearer ta England. The roost authoritative map of the Panama canal was made under the direction of the National Geographic society. It is printed In four oolora on coated paper, and ll fit bt 12 inches in size. Our Washington information bureau will secure a copy for any reader who will fill out th coupon, and inclose two cents in panne for retunp -- postage., Print name and address er be sure to write plainly, , , Frederic J Haskm, Director, The Halt Lake Tribune Information Bureau. I,' Washington, D. 7- - herewith two rent In stamp for return postage on S ffee copyuflh Panama Map I incloe Name Street City asntngton. A ra |