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Show i THE WHTHf s , Monday and Tuesday fairs Idahe, Cloudy and cooler. Leeal Settlement Prices. Silver . . St S..I Lead is.JS Copper . Zlno VOL. 116, NO. SALT LAKE CITY, MONDAY MORNING,, OCTOBER 10.- - a i.i t- - 1UED i SHOT IN HEAD CALL IN Operation Proves Fatal to Frank Judson West j cott at Rochester, Minn. . Secretary Tribune V ! , r V Brother-in-la. .4'- - Oct 2J (AP). Po-lic- e theories that poisoning may hav caused a audden Illness which last In Crane Gilbert, who flightharesulted was a film actor, being rushed aid LOS ANGELES, to the receiving hospital, were upset today when an anaiysia of tha content! of his stomach showed neither poison nor ground glaaa. The actor had told hospital attendants he believed there had been poison or ground glasa in candy which- had been left on his door step. The police also were told that threatening letters had been sent to the actor. Samples of the candy also were ordered an. i alysed. MUST NEW FILE SUIT. i LOS ANGELES, Oct 23 (AP). Mrs. Josephine Bushman will be forced to file a new complaint against her former husband, Francis X. Bushman, tha film atar. If aha desires to continue her attempt to collect S2.i98, which he declare la due her In alimony, Tha necessity for a new action was known today when It was die made i a decision sustaining the closed 'f'" actor's that demurrer to the complaint had been filed in tha superior court. Mrs. Bushman had charged In her suit that she wss granted a decree of divorce In Baltimore and awarded 140.000 aa alimony and 4noo a year for the support of her children. She charged that f ' little of this money bad been paid. . Claims ""afternoon when his parachute failed to open after he had leaped from the plana at an altitude, of about 2600 feet Davis, who waa about 21 yeara old, was a son of W. C. Davis, publisher of the Arriba, Colo., Record. Young Davis, a passenger In the plana, essayed the parachute leap in a contest with a man In another plan to sea who could make tha quickest - landing. - Federal Forces Seek Rebel Chief ' 7, f . VERA CRUZ, Oct. 23 (AP). The forces of General Aguirre. federal commander, are scouring tha Teflon around the Orisaba volcano, where General G"mel. the rebel chlet. Is supposed to be. Several federal rolumns are advancing in various directions and a meeting between tha opposing ores la expected soon. "I i and Navigator ' u J. WESTCOTT E i through tha medium of picketing, striking coal miners, led by members of the Industrial Worker! of the World, pledged themselves to start an intensive picketing campaign at a meeting In the Southern field today. Having told Oovernor William H. Adams that no troops or financial help were necessary to cop with tha sit uation, Huerfano county commissioner were scheduled to meet with Sher iff Harry Capps Monday morning to map out a campaign for enforcing the law. The commissioners were expect ed to give the sheriff ten more depu ties, bringing the number of his help ers to thirteen. . While the miners In a mass meet ing at Ludlow, twenty-seve- milea n south of here, were giving unreserved support to the picketing move, miners In the northern tleld deemed to go en masse to the Fremont county mines to enlist the sympathies of th work ers there. As yet, Fremont county has been unaffected by the walkout SOLICIT HELP. At a mass meeting at Lafayette to than 300 by nor day, attended strikers and their wives, some thirty naspeakers. Including A. 8.I. Embree, W. W.. and tional organizer for the K. Clemens, chairman of the strike committee there, urged th formation of a caravan of miners to proceed tc the Fremont county, which is about 100 milea from Lafayette ana nortn The meeting voted of Walsenhurg. unanimously to stay out on strike un- a til the mine operators negotiated new wage scale. The Ludlow ineetfng was attended by between 800 and W0 miners, their wives and children, and was held In tha shadow of th Ludlow monument, erected to commemorate a battle beand striking tween state troopers miners In I'M, during towrauo a fCttlmrm Lindbergh Ends Tour of Country at Gotham Field Spirit of St Louis Com Jourpletes 22,350-Mii- e ney; Hero to Rest Alnef ll ) Wife of Pilot on Road to Recovery tra NEW TORK. Oct. 23 (AP) Clar. ene Chamberlln, AtlanUa filer, exhibited his first "fool proof plan toit day at Teterboro, N. J. He brought200 down almost vertically to within feet of th ground, floating It on an even keel like a parachute. He i trying to make a plan that will b saf to fly by enlarging th for anyon control eurfaces and causing the plan even at atalllng to be romroliabl peed. Th plan can be brought down with a forward motion of only fifteen milea an hour and today ha stopped Beventy-flvefe- HUNDRED VISIT BIER. CARUNGKOR. Irish Fre Stat, Oct. reds IJ today vlalted tha late Patrick Cardinal O' Donne!! a summer residence here, srher the dead prelat la laid out In full vestments In tha bedroom where he died. All th of the Irish helrarchy now member In Home hav wired a Joint me'save of sympathy and regret dwelling on Cardinal O Donnell a great services. (AP).-Hund- s- point Th coastguard lookout, a few yard from th radio station, wa th first to sight th returning plane,. in which wer Mrs. France Grayson, Pilot WUmer Stulti and Navigator Brie WAR- Blaze Stubbornly TillEEK Resists Firemen - VETERA Heaviest Loser Major General Dickman, Question of Permitting Carpenter Paper. Company When Stock in Warehouse Goes' Up in Government to .Enter Commander of Third Smoke and Store Is DamageoV Old Testimony Raised. American Army," Dies. . is - U . t after t, o'clock EIRE of mysterious origin, starting shortly warehouse at the rear Oct 2J (A P). T;he ; WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON. Sunday evening in an old two-stor- y 143-4- 5 General Joseph. Theodora Dick-ma- criminal conspiracy trial of Albert B. of the Carpenter Paper South State .street, eompanj', organiser and commander of Fall and Harry F. Sinclair wul enter the and structure damaged the badly completely destroyed th third American army In the world upon Its second week tomorrow, with loss of a three front total adjacent buildings, causing war, died at his residence her early Juitlc glddona determining whether ; today at the age of 70 years from a the government Is to be permitted to ; present to the Jury testimony which sudden attack of heart trouble. First alarm of the spectacular blaze was received at 7 :23 the defendants gav before th senate Famous also as a cavalryman, Gen- oil four years sgo, committee when passers-b- y noticed smoke pouring from the first nearly o'clotk, eral Dickman had spent practically an Justtr Hoehllng, who presided at and second-stor- y windows of the paper company's building, oh trial last year, perof bis service in that branch sine the Doheny's statement about his State street. Within half an hour, every available piece of fire bis, graduation from Wast olnt In mitted "loan" of 1100,000 to go Into the rec1881. . in the city, mannrd by the full force of firemen, was ord. But that was a volunteer stateapparatus Leading tha Third division of the ment by th California oil operator, on the scene. Police reserves also were rushed to the spot to th evidence th government regular army overseas In March. 1911. whereas control the General Dickman participated In vir- now seeks to Introduce waa offered preat crowd which quickly gathered. Sinclair and Fall had been Intually every major campaign of th after S Heaviest losses wer suffered by th American troops, rising rapidly In vited to Washington by the senatecompany, an Initial check pape.' rank and" finally receiving commnnd committee and placed under oath. fashowed, although the Mountain State Should Justice Biddons decide In of the third American army, which South company, , Implement vor of the government, special oil he led Into Germany. Stats atreet, and Sam Peterson and counsel then will put before the Jury d He returned bearing the 147 South State atreet Bona company, service medal of the t'nlted Sinclair' statement to th committee reoorted losses to both hulidlne and that he visited Ijall at hla Three of (Treat States and the decoration. stock of their respective establishRivers. N. M., ranch during th Chrlst-ma- a Britain, France. Italy and ments. 1921 to discus the He then commanded the Eirhth crpa holldaya of VALUED AT S225.000. area with headquarters at Fort Sam eae of Trapot Dome. Martin W. LitA. P. Spltlio, treasurer and general Houston, Texas, until his retirement tleton, of counsel for the oil operator, iCmtlaeed g Ttm Twelve.) a( Twthr.) (Ceatiasea manager of the paper company, esti tCehuaa Tw-- ) (Ctlxan Thr.) mated stocK vaiuea at izzs.ihw was Destroyed or so badly damaged by amok and water ats to be a completer los. TOsking possrbIelectreutTuhr CapHa said there was about I12S.00. intain John Rafferty of fir station I surance covering .th stodc, howver. saved Fireman Francla L. Buhlcr of The building on South Stat street from headquarter company burning occupied by th company la of while brick construction, and. to death when fir destroyed th Carnot connected with 'the warehouse, th penter Paper company building at III flames wept th rear and center porSouth Stat street Sunday evening. tions of th structure, damaging roof Buhler, while chopping; a pathway and floors to the - extent of perhaps for a bos to be brought Jnto the cen- ,50.080. It was learned early Monday mornter of the building, fell headlong Into1 ing from Mr. Spltko that a smaller a mass of burning rubbbh and came warehouse, also- back of the Carpenter from destruction. was saved Into contact with an exposed live wire. compnnv,filled , It wss with valuable paper stock, Ha wa rendered unconscious by the Mr. Spltko said. Seven-State- s ComBoth warehouses snd the" newer electricity and would hav burned to death but for the heroic action of Cap- building are owned by th Oeorg A. Lowe estate of Ogden.- according to tain Rafferty, who rushed to his as- Mr. Spitko. who said their valu was sistance.' Dashing tha charged wire at least S75.009. He said It waa probable that insurance partly covered th from the prostrate body of th fallen By OLIVES J. GRIMES. fireman, the captain carried him to a atructures. Firemen, working under direction of of safety. First aid treatment First Assistant Chief William Hmooek California statement closed with a discussion of section point was applied and Buhler was revived. and Battalion Chief Andrew Eikrem, 5 of the" proposal 0f the upper states governors. Section a desperate, successful fiirht to made Excused from further duties by bis confine th blase to the warehouse and 5 read as follows: to Buhler refused leave the superiors, the rear of the paper company's buildr "Section I. Arizona and California seen of th fire, but grabbed a fire-a- x ing. Connected with th warehous to buildof . lower division states should have the each may divert and us and dashed back Into the flaming tha east waa a lanre He accomplished hia first ing, uixd s a garase by several of th unappropriated waters of the main u of all of the waters of the Colo- building. saved. river below Lee ferry, aubject purpose by clearing a way into the the companies, and this wa Colorado river flowing below Le ferry, rado Roofs of the Implement company buildn to the terms of th Colorado river center of th fire that enabled of on north to street, State futur directly to get a hose through. ing equitable apportionsubject Compact. s ' bVetlon I further provide that the a the Carpenter structure, as well as the Lieutcnsnt Hsrland Theobald, ment between the said states after to . th structure o divided ahail be member of No 4 bos company, was Peterson directly the year lit.1, and on the specific use of th wafer damagd by th condition that the use of said waters 'subject to future equitable appor treated at the emergency hospital for south, wer partially statea after Injuries received when tie stepped on flames, although firemen prevented th between the state of the lower baam tlonment between the sa'd a Is start at either from Thla not biane satisfac a the gaining year shall be without prejudice to the Hants rusty nail while fighting the fire. Two employees of the Mountain of these three-stor- y building. between the states of the lower basin tory. It will also be even more diffith divide State company, who went to the third further apportionment of water aa cult to ascertain and STOCK DESTROYED. such water a may floor of their building to Investigate provided by tha Colorado river com- equitable bua inofactual tJOO Mr. Spltko said that about nee thaa 4t in damag when the bias wa at Its net then pact' of his stock, stored on the secnow. Mem, th California suggesTo this California replied; height, became lost and wer almost worth of floor the ond building, Implement is that any water not actually put overcome by smoke. The men, who was "Regarding section I. relating til tion ruined by th smoke. W. F. Robus for ssrlcullural or refused to give their names, finally to benefti-ta- l unapportloned waters,' if the term domesr local manager of th implement erta, i 1, to October to who Kikrtm. Chief Join purcose waters prior meati managed 'unapportinned water' Is an Ogden emu-enbject to aaa at the front windowa of the company, ofwhich not otherwlne apportioned by the pro- 1S0J. shall thereafter Inh hla concern's stock, stored either state, third fioor. A ladder waa set up from said compart, aifh term appropriation and use California posed three-stat- e of th floor on third th building, main- the street below by firemen, and the la satisfactory. Jf It mean unapporpursuant to its laws. two employee reached safety by detloned by th Colorado river compact, Fm Twe.) (Cestsa ea Ptee Tear.) (Osartlaafd iColsma . (Cl ma On.) not satisfactory, a th then it scending th ladder. 0a) Oct. 23 (AP.-Ma- jor n, approxi-matclyj:J25,0O- ' : - MITCHEL FIELD, N. T.. Oct 23 Charie Ar Lindbergh (AP swung down out of th air today, tour of th completing a 21,350-mcountry" In hla Spirit of St Louis, Just on minut ahead of hi sched- ule time. II greeted question as to hla future plans with a smile and a shake of th head. "I .haven't any," be aaid, and hla expreaaiun ..Indicated hla pleasur .at one more being a free agent with no fixed echedul driving him on daily. "Wher can we ae you tomorrow?" a reporter asked him. ANGELES. Oct 21 (AP). "Why, I don't believ that's going Mrs. Martin Jensen; wife of the pilot be replied. "1 feel who placed second In th Dol air to b I necessary," hav won th right to drop that race to Honolulu, waa resting easy out of th th public view for a while." at hospital tonight following ,,. 2000 ADMIRERS. n( an overdose of a Sleeping Her physicians A lowering sky failed to keep away yesterday. potion ner sid they expeciea a crowd of about 2K)0 admirers win . covery. wished to view Lindbergh's arrival. ; Long before Mrs. Jensen, wnen qunura 1 p. m.. th hour set for ice at me receiving mvpiv.. his appearance from Philadelphia, th field wss rimmed with spectators. for ing potion after falling to sleep "I never felt better In my life." he several nights, after hearing of th said, when there was a lull. "Bandeath of Hawaiian irienua m quet food didn't aeem to do m any . . plan crash. harm. Th flight was In no way exTwslw-(Ctlia! (OItti Tlir.) it in vi; w TO PICKET PLftn hausting; bard work for a few times, but never exhausting. "Th Bplrit of St Louts Is In fin shape; It give more revolutloas per minut than when It was new. liut this looks like a good time to do it. so I'm going to hav It completely overhauled. That's never been done sine It wss built you know, and It's been almost 1 jo hours In th air. No, It lan't deatlned for a museum yet; eventually, but not now." "What ar you going to do next?" a half dozen reoorter asked. "1 hav no plans," he said. "I'm going to rest a few days and then mak a abort visit to Michigan, flying, but not In th Spirit After that. I frankly don't know, but 6t. Louis I will be my present headquartere. am going to confer with Harry GugDaniel Guggenheim, president of the genheim Fund for the Promotion of Aeronautics, which sponsored my tour, and a report will b mad on At 1:51 ther waa th shsrp roar of an airplane motor running at a high apeed, and from over a hangar ot St. louls. Aa roof shot the the crowd cheered and Jostled lor the plane rrowed over tha field, hanked, sideslipped and wheeled Pe Twtlw.) (Cntlsae n, (Colaiaa lane.) W OLD ORCHARD. In the room with the woman at th time of th ahooting, according to his own statement to th police, was her brother-in-laEarl J. Loftis, 2J, clerk at th Federal hotel apartments, 140 East South Temple. Ha told the committed nolle that his sister-in-lasuicide by shooting herself while he was in ,th room. Hjs explanation to detectives, however, did not satisfy them, and they ar holding him in Jail for questioning by Chief of Detectives Riley M. ueckstead Monday. MAN'S HANDS STAINED. According to attache of th hotel, they were not aware of th Ittragedy when until Loftis told them about he waa accosted In th lobby by Alfred suspiMills, night engineer, who cions war aroused by Loftis' actions and a quantity of blood on the man's hands. Loftis. Mills said, came down lobby, tpe stairs leading Into th walked Into a washroom on (he main floor and washed th stains from hi hands, combed his hair ''and started he toward the street door - when grabbed him. "Whafa th matter?'' Mills is reported to hav aakd. giueo nrsir up ly s!ter-in-iah sell Loftla replied. ." In room the manager Mill notified Whereupon and a bellboy, who wnt trp to th room. They bad difficulty in opening a Mrs. room, th door of th Loftis' body lay almost against It on the floor Insld th room. . ; When police arrived they aid they found Mrs. Loftis lying face downward on the Iloor, witn ner Knees oeni u under her. Th pistol with which th shooting had been don was lying near th center of her lap, but neither ol her hands, according to police, was automatic near It It was a and but on bullet bad been fired from Twe.) . (Ctatlrnd a Pit Teur. gh Th ' amphibian plan," Th Dawa, thla which hopped off from her morning at 1:11 for ... Europe, wai forced to return by heavy fog tered off Nova Scotia and wa reported In sight of Cap Elisabeth, fourteen mile from her, at 1:54 p. m. Th report of th sighting cam from th naval eompaa itatlon at Two Lights. Cap Elizabeth, which less than an hour befor had ncelvel a mcssar from th plan aaylng that It wa returning because of th dens fog encountered. This message wa th flrat indication received her of a return. FIRST TO IHT.' Sine th measag had not stated th position of th plan. It had been assumed that she was turning back at that time, which waa after mor than nine hoars flying from the tart-In- morning. FRANK Golds-borou- Disappointed. - 13 I Suspicion; It Is Suicide. v,V. With a bullet wound In her. right temple, an attractive woman about 30 year of ag, who registered at the Ken yon hotel eight day ago a Mrs. T. R. Loftis, of Dillon, Mont, waa found dead In her room early Monday Parachute Fails and Flier Dies Flier Exhibits KANSAS CITY. Mo.. Oct IAP). Kenneth Davis, a student flier al "Foolproof" Plane Richards field here, waa killed this 4 Mrs. Grayson, Pilot Stultr Arouses w Employees' Map Campaign Fight Issua; Labors Seek Aid. Poison Analysis Upsets Theory Miles. 500 Traveling 'V Huerfano County Officers a Pag' Vise.) (Centlntwi (Oelnma Fmir.) From... . . 1:10 a. m. The body will arrive hera Wednesday afternoon, and funeral aervlcea will be held Thursday at the Cathedral of the Madeleine. Details of the services will to be announced later. ANSWERS CALL OF WEST. The life ot Prank Judson Weatcott Is the story of a young man, eastern born and bred, heeding tha call of the came to Utah from growing went. He 18X5 when less than New York state in Oct. II WALSEXBURCS. Colo., 30 years of age, settling first In -- Park ' (AP). Apparently determined to atop City. It was there, at the opening of all mining activities in Colorado the new century, that be became as- v.i BUCK One Engine Stops and Plane Returns After Dillon, Dies of Builet Wound. er sociated In a business way with tha late United States Senator Thomas Kearns, who waa then developing hla valuable mining properties. This close sssociatlon lasted up to th death of Senator Kearns In 191. , Mr. Weatcott .waa born October 12, WSS, In Russell, N. T., the eon of Oris and Catherine McGruer Weatcott. Ha apent hla boyhood on his father's farm and attended college In the town of Oouverneur. At tha aga of 25 ha left the farm and went to work In. the atora of hla uncle, Duncan McGruer. in N. T. After a few yeara there ha decided to venture forth into th west, from Whence stories were coming of vast mining enterprises. STOPS AT LEADVILLE. Tie stopped for a while In Leadvllle, Colo., then pushed on to Park City, where ha arrived in tha fall of 185. His first thought waa to get Into the mines, and, while purchasing soma mining clnthea, made the acquaintance of John Rogers, who conducted a general merchandising atore. Rogers M TflEDIII EDUCED Mrs. T. R. Loftis, Regis-- . , lishing Company, Off i rial Silver King Mines. 4 - J .... ... Xj tered Pub- Frank J. Weatcott, secretary of Tha Tribune Publishing company secre of tha Silver King Coalition Mine company and on of tha bast known figure In Utah and Nevada mining circle, died, Sunday morning at Rochester, Minn,, where he underwent an operation at the Mayo clinic Hla ton, Warren "K. Weatcott of th advertising deportment of The Tribune, wai with him when ha died. Mr. 'Westcott, accompanied by hla on, went to Rochester September I. It waa believed that he waa recovering from hla ordeal and that he .would leave for homo within the next few day. Saturday night, however, Mra Weatcott received a telesram from her had son, saying that Mr. Weatcott suffered a relapse and waa In a critical condition. Sunday morning word waa received that he had passed away at MOTOR FAILS IN HOTEL ROOM EAST J ! Photograph showing smoke and ftames pouring from the windows of the Carpenter Paper street store was gute&mpany plant, .during ltheJbig blaze Sunday night, when the , State ted and surrounding luMings threatened "with dcstruetiorirCroWds stood for hours on the street while firemen fought the stubborn blaze. -- , ANSWERS DEATH Y $35 .I i iiiiroui- - Illness Fatal CITIZEN (li 4 - be. FIVE CENTS 18 PAGES 124, 1927. TO P 1 If the thing is to had in the intermountain country, a Tribune "Want Ad will get it. . Fire Captain Braves Death for Comrade dlsttt)-ruiKhe- P,e!g-u'm- 1S&-3- 9 . , Calif or nia's Exception two-sto- to Unapportiohed Waters Considered Warranted - Attempt at Distinction Between Conditions Under and 'Tristate pacts Held Not Clear. THE - one-sto- one-ha- lf fellow-fireme- -- rrt 1 Uoldsborough. All who had seen the plan off this morning wr so confident a nonstop flight to Europe had been begun that all had left the beach. Igor Sikorsky, builder of the plane, and T. Harold motor expert, bad Wright Kincaid, New- York. f left for aad Mrs. Only Mr. Ooldaborough evethey awaited th New York. ' Captain ning train forwhose hangar bad been Harry Jones, nlared at the disposal of th party, to New York with the mov tin ing plctnr film of Athe takeoff and large Sunday had not returned. on hand, crowd of sightseer wa . however. Th Dawn alighted on th deserted beach from which ah took off this) morning. TELLS TORY. tol Navigator Brlc Goldsborough which a vivid story of th experience most a after back drov th ship auspicious beginning of an anticipated flight to Copenhagen. W had mad better than ninety an hour." he aaid, "from tb mile nr. to a point oft takeoff at 1:11 about 10:30 a. m. SudCap 8bl-a- t we do not know cause denly; for a aa yet. on motor went bad and w a as Tw.) (Ceatlaaea wick,- - wher (Ceiwns T1. Ruth Elder Longs to Fly Once More Madeira. Oct IS AP). The steamship, Lima, withandRuth Iter Elder, th American .aviatrix, aboard, Haldaman, copilot, Oeorg fliera arrived her this morning. The will proceed on th Lima to Lisbon. and Th Lima docked at T a. m.hour Mia Elder disembarked thre In w good ah Althouah later. .k. 14 mhm waa tired of being below and longs to fly again. -Helra Journalist wno mauAsore and th trip In small boat to wr returned to Funchal on th Lima, to unsuccessful In getting Miss Llder serosa fliaht talk of her Interrupted offered her even Atlantic. They th aboard the boat champagne luncheon of her flight but sh refused to talk men an Interor grant th newapaper view. When the Lima aocaea ul - .,vwn r" tcan consul ... F.lder Into erai i u y t " Hr.- Mm refused. an Interview, which h flatlyarriv to al Is expected Th Lima Lisbon Tuesday. FTJNCHAEL, -. f i FOREST anroads important part of the highways of this state, leading through some of the most beautiful mountain scenery. Up to June . 30, had 1926, there been expended $2,205,655 of forest funds and $683,637 of state funds road ment. or local in forest improve- - |