OCR Text |
Show THE WEATHER. Partly cloudy and eorttewtiat" unsettled" Thursday and Friday. -- '..".;".'r;v......i,... m a. ta i4c .M M II 14 ii vflV 1 ,w mi I 11- kXXJ am v I i i 'VM --' ti is - f. I 151 i. mi oF u quick action is neeessaixr it may be Lad through The Tribune Want' Columns,;, ' . , h . The March WASHINGTON, contempt case of Harry F. Sinclair, who refused to answer questions of the senate oil committee, will be. presented to the District of Columbia grand Jury tomorrow, under plans announced today by District Attorney Peyton Gordon. Atlee Pomerene and Owen J. oil Roberts, special government counsel, will be asked toy Mr, In the to case, Gordon, participate end to thla end he will ask the department of Justice today to designate them as special assistants. . By rushing ths presentation of his case, Mr, Gorgon hopes to get action before the present grand Jury expires next Monday. i tWBM Finai Stagv of Hayes Mundelein Elevation Will Take Place Today. , Chase Resignation Is : Accepted by Mellon;. Walsh Scores Goolidge PPIIIILL .ujtdi4itli-Jignit- y i March Is. By the Associated Presa) Cardinals Mundelein and Bayaa today, advanced another Up toward the final state of their t elevation as members of the council of the Roman Catholic church. The occasion was lata this afternoon, when Pope Plus. In all the solemnity of the ritual. draped around their shoulders the rich violet silken cape called moss.uaa and placed on their heads the scarlet silk ' Theheadpieces known as biretia. deeply impreaalve ceremony took place in the famous oonsistoiial hall of the Vatican, where scarcely three days ago the two American prelates were nominated as cardinals lU a secret consistory. There was only a stiuUl gathering; to witneas the' investiture. They were specially Invited guests, mostly Americana. The final ceremonies In the elevation of the American churchmen to the purple will take place tomorrow morning In the right transept of the basilica, of Saint Peter's, where they will receive at the hands of the pontiff the red hats symbolic of their new rank. This public consistory, filled with pomp and pageantry, will -be attended by several thousand - ' Americana. POPE EULOGIZES AMERICA. The principal feature of thla afternoon's ceremony was the delivery by e I'ope l'iua of a eulogy of America, In which he declared that America's "mttraelo of charity saved millions fromV starvation,' just as the entry of thk United the Htates into the world war decided fate of Europe and the world. " The pontiff's address was delivered throne. as he sat on his scarlet-drape- d It was made In a conversational, tone. though musically modulated, MunThe pontiff spoke after Cardinal delein, aa senior archbishop, had delivered an' address on behalf of himself and Cardinal Hayes. The cardinal declared that, although he and Cardinal Hayes were filled with a sense of unworthineas at their elevation, they were consoled by ths fact that "In our humble persons you wished te give unmistakable proof of your fatherly consideration and benevolence, not only to the faithful of our prosperous dloceees, but to all the Catholics In the United States, who In their faith and devotion to the and their loyalchlr of Saint Peter ty to the person of the holy father count this as their greatest glory." A BRILLIANT ASSEMBLY. Shortly before 6 o'clock, forty minutes before Pope Plus was to appear, ih. wmiMm htiui assembling In the eonslstorlal hall, which had been filled with backless benches In order to accommodate the greatest number, of The men we're ejersons possible. and dressed In full evening clotheswearIn black. women gowns and the ing black veils The members of the clergy wore gowns colored according ROME, big-hea- tenty-fie-mlnut- Twain. re rive.) Honduran Leader Dies of Wound in Battle PTini Tn inn i n i inn U UUU U IU1 With Cabinet, After Adverse Vote, but Is Asked to Retain Post. Resigns, March 24 (By the Associated Press.) Premier Raymond Polncare, with his entire cabinet resigned from office today, and when he announced his resignation he declared .that his decision was lina But' tonight there is every reason to believe that he will acquiesce tomorrow in President Millerand's request that he resume office at the head of the ministry. M. Poinoare's acceptance in principle of the president's earnest plea that he continue to direct French political affairs virtually . ends the ministerial crisis, which broke over a comparatively seM. Pomcare's offirene situation. cial acceptance of President MUY lerand's request is regarded aa a foregone conclusion. The advice emphatically tendered to President MUlerand by- Both MM. Doumergue and Peret, presidents of the senate and the chamber, respectively, that M. Polncare was indispensable as premier in the continuance of the work undertaken In the past two years, and the conviction of M. MUlerand himself that the "surdid not prise" vote in the chamber reflect lack of confidence tn the premier personally, caused the president to dispense with the usual xmsulta-tlona In such cases with other prominent statesmen, and he sent for M. Polncare Immediately and asked him to carry on. The defeat of the government In the chamber was on a question of minor himself was importance. The premier not present. The vote against the government was 271 to S64, many of the votes being cssl by proxy. In the conference President MUlerand had with MM. Doumergue en J Peret all agreed that public opinion, as overwhelmingly ' expressed by a of the press, made It great malorlty for any other leader to impossible assume power at this stage. The conference between the president and the premier was touching. to have M. MUlerand is reported as he greeted M. Polncare effusively that it earnestly Impressed upon him was a public duty and a matter of he continue his "magpatriotism that to Its conclusion for. nificent work France." M. Polncare returned to the mints-tr- y There Genof foreign affairs. eral de Oastelnau, Deputies Isaac and Chasrelgne-Goyorepresenting anil entente delegated by the republican M. group of 1J0 deputies, reiterated the that premier Millerand's request the 'Yemaln as a patrlotlo duty In lobface of Germany." The chamber bies were in a high state of excitealment until late in the evening, though the afternoon session lasted The majority of only a few minutes. the deputies sppeared stunned at the of the government. overthrow The opinion advanced In parliamentary circles Is that Mr. Polncare will 0 tinned ea face Twe PARIS, . - n. BAN SALVADOR, March 2. Dr. of TeZunlga Huete, chief defender wounds gucigalpa,' died yesterdayoffrom revolutionattack in received'" the ists against the city, according to advices received from the Honduran Mnltml American marines hare established a neutral sons around uie Americanand have postlegation and consulate ed machine guna. The marines also ser- an ambulance have established (Celnata Fear.) vice and are earing for the wounded. In San Salvador Honduran residents maof American the landing legard violation rines In their country as of International law and an attack Honduras. of ott the sovereignty March It. A WASHINGTON, revolutionary lead-er- a group of the rival have combined to of Honduras reestablish ordar In that country by agreeing on a proclamation making president. Pausta Davila provisional Dr. Devil la. arrived two weeks ago from Washington and, although it was reported he was en route to Honduras to become provisional president at theof the revolutionists; he pro' request fessed to know nothing about It. Ed Lockhart, Oklahoma Dr. Davtla at one time was Honduran minister to the United States minister as foreign .and was serving Bank Robber, Killed in when Lopes Guiterres was elected had him thrown president. Guiterres Into prison, where he remained a year, Sheriff. Gun Fight and upon his release he came to this ""According to 'information here, Dr. Devil will serve as provisional presTULSA. Oklal. March 41 EM Lock-har- t, ident until another election can be called and chief executive b named last of trio of notorious Okla; by the people. homa outlaws, was killed today near Sperry, Okla., as he attempted to flee Bishop Manning Penalizes from a farmhouse where he had been Offending Gotham Parish trapped by a posse, v Lockhart went like his pals, Henry NEW TORK. March J.. Bishop Starr and Al Spencer "with his boots Protestant the of Episcopal ' Manningof New Tork defying the law. today Informed on" and diocese" He was shot cy Mont Urady. a the Rev. Dr. William Gorman fiuthrm. the Oklahoma! speciTrrrcr-froj- ii rector of St. " nenltentiarv. who. after he was dis would remain "withthat his churchvisitation and was being outlaw the armed by or mlnlstraout Episcopal used as a shield against the bullets tlon" for Its rector's refusal to discon- of the posse, of other members tinue eurythmio dancing in connection .. wheeled, and, selling his own gun, with services at the church. On two occasions last December and which Lockhart had placed in his once without removing Manning pocket, fired from again on March 14. Bishop the bandit's, clothof the ritualthe weapon expressed his disapproval Dr. Guthrie insisted istic dances. they ing. "You have killed me," Lockhart said, were not banned by church law. The Sauces were presented in the church and then collapsed. The bandit, who had been sought last Sunday. tail The action of. Bishop Manning since October T, when he broke the at brought to a climax the controversy at Jay, Okla.,a was located Sherheaded for by posse months farmhouse existed and by has has attracted wide attention. iff Bob San ford of Tulsa county. ApwrnvjU of Dr. Guthrie's programs . Lockhart's life of crime- was had been riven by some other clergyleged to have begun with the attempt men of the Episcopal church, and to rob the Harrison bank that cost of nany of them were present at the Starr his life. He Inwas accuse Oklahoma and lance ritual given last Sunday night many bank robberies and served a few months Arkansas, sentence in OklaSHOT "BY BANDIT. of a twenty-yea- r PEORIA, Ills., March .26. Mark homa for the robbery of a bank at , Pouitln. ts'ewraph operator at the Gore. lie died as tie nopeo without ever Rock Island railroad depot at killed a man in a robbery. twenty mile from here, was having While In the army he was attached rhiit "by a bandit who attempted to-to to division and served the Thirty-sixt- h rrti the station at 10:W o'clock In overseas. six major encagemenl euli to .sherthe a to night, according . i emerging unscratched. iff s office. OUTLAW DIES Willi BOOTS With :; Chllll-roth- e. ON PAGES FIVE CENTS 18 SOWS; Roxie Stinson Mentions $33,000,000 Stpck Deal InvolvingFiveUnknowns PRIMARY FIGHT White House Should Secretary Mellon Divorcee Again Star Al Jennings Says Will One Relate He Declared Ineligible Have Taken SumWitness in Probe of Whale of a Story to Hold Office Belated South Dakota ReRepublican Leaders Ex mary Action, MonDaugherty's Conduct March WASHINGTON. March 2AA1 WASHINGTON, turns Turn Tide in Fai Jennings pect to Report Both that Secretary Mellon from charge here arrived today tana Senator Says. ofis occupying of His Department. office. Illegally berause Long Beach, Cel., end had a his Interest In various financial ference with Benjator Walsh, the the Measures vor of , Shortly. I Pontiff Eulogizes America in Cloaking Princes of .'4 " Sinclair's Case to Be Presented Today to District Jurors GET BED HftTS When .. iU. SALT LAKE CITY. THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 27; 1924. LS TO (Coliuaa 4 A - VOL. 108, NO. 165. Oeeatlaaed ea I M ..fll.U Copper (cathodes) l V rss ' 4.33,1 settlement Slhft .i. LM1 ni i i Elements Lining Up for Expected Brisk Contest on Floor of Chamber. WASHINGTON, March 2. Prediction that the revenue and soldier bonus blUs would be reported to the senate by the finance committee within two weeks and that action on the measures would "be speedily forthcoming was made today by Republican lead- With the floor fight approaching. Democrats worked over the income' schedule they will offer as a substitute for the Mellon rates, leaders Indicating some modifications would be made In the Garner scheme supported by house Democrats, Some Intimated the maximum surtax rate of 44 per cent In the Garner .plan would be cut to 40 per cent with a general revision of the brackets to which the various rates would apply. x The immediate attention of the committee was centered again today on ths variance in estimates aa to the cost of the house soldier bonus bill The American Legion presented an es timate of 13.300,000.000 In . comparison. . . .i i Dr. .i. tn w ,in. ..,om,,vwitMW ma jvaeyii1. siui!ei.ie McCoy, treasury actuary, and the esof timate 12,119.000,00 made by the house on the basis of a report of the veterans'bureau actuary, H. P. Brown. The 'committee has called unon army and navy officials to present data on the exact number of veterans entitled to the bonus or paid Insurance policies and on the average length of service of veterans, on which; ths actuaries disagree. POINT OF DIFFERENCE. The Other main point of difference between the actuaries whether the government will have to account for Interest on the funds which it must use to pay foe the policies will be worked out by the committee, which then will decide for Itself, Chairman Smoot said, what the estimated cast of the bonus will be. The committee resumed work today on the revenue measure, clearing up some oi ins remaining aammiatrauve provisions after which the enlv other sections of the bill, the miscellaneous tax schedules, will be taken uo. The question whether the bonus bill will be put ahead of the tax measure, as favored by some Republican, members, will be decided upon completion of ' the hearings. Leaders of both parties have been quietly sounding out their forces on the income tax rates Issue. Republicans intimate that they have some Democratic votes for the Mellon rates, while Democrats are counting on the support of several of the Republican insurgents. FAVOR PRESENT RATES. Senator la Follette. Wisconsin. leader ef this faction, has not announced his plan, but Senators Nor-ri- s of Nebraska and Brookhart of Iowa, of the group, have declared openly for retention of the present surtax rates with a maximum of 64 per cent; a greater reduction in the normal rates than provided for in the Mellon plan and for "liberal ' exemp tion. The Mellon scheme provides for no change in the exemptions allowed in the present law. Both senators also have declared for reenactment of the excess profits tax. This Is practically the plan advanced by the Republican insurgent group in the house. "If the senate insurgents should swing to the Democrats, the outcome would hinge on the number of Democrats who would support ths Mellon rates. Democratic leaders are drawing their substitute rate schedule with view to harmonizing the various elements. DEMOCRATIC PLANS. . , Bonis Democrats also are consider ing a modified form of the excess pro file tax in the shape of a graduated scale of rates for corporation taxee in place of the flat 12 per cent tax In the present law. Senator Jones of New Mexico, a Democratic member of the finance committee, has been working out such a tax. but lead ers generally have frowned upon such a scheme. Senator Jones is considering either a graduated tax on earnings of cor porations baseu on ofinveatea capital,or with a normal tax ( per cent, a normal tax on tne total income or. with a grad taxpayers corporation uated tax on undistributed corporation Inoomes. Chairman Smoot said today the night sessions of the committee would be resumes, later tnis week. e up-lif- r v-- : ; WASHINGTON, March M. The resignation of Clarence C. Oiaae aa collector of customs at El Paso Was accepted by the treasury late today, ; effective immediately. Senator, Walsh ef Montana, the oil committee prosecutor, told the senate, today that he could not understand why President Coolldge had not "ignomlniously dismissed1' Clarence C. Chase, of Albert B. FalL as customs collector at, El Paio. It was a matter of great surprise, the Montana senator said, that Mr. Coolldge had not acted promptly after Price McKinney of Cleveland testified before the oil committee a week ago. told the committee that McKinney Chase, whose Impeachment was proposed In a senate resolution adoptsd yes'.erday, had been sent to induce him to say that he had loaned to Fall. "The president' must havs been apprised of the fact," Senator Walsh said, "because the unofficial observer, Mr. Rush Holland, was there and he has been preaent before the committee at the direction of the president." MELLON IS ADVISED. The senator said he had informed Secretary Mellon that there was no reason why Impeachment proceedings should stand in the way of acceptance of Chase's resignation, submitted immediately after he had appeared before the oil committee Monday and refused to testify. secretary Mellon had written him, Mr. Walsh said, asking whether In view of the aenate's action yesterday acceptance of the resignation would Ths treasury emberrasB congress. secretary added that but for the senate action the resignation would have been accepted "aa a matter of course." Appended to Secretary Mellon's letter waa Chase's letter of resignation. In It Fall's said that his refusal to testify probably "will provide unfriendly criticism, and this criticism may react upon your department." The letter added: "I have not committed any crime, nor has any crime been charged against me." w 24--Th. concerns, wss revived In the senate today by Senator McKellar, Democrat, Tennessee. Referring to the treasurer's recent statement discussing his incorioratlons In terest certain granted tax refunds. Senator McKellar directed attention to section 243 of the revised statutes, which prohibits the secretary of the treasury from engaging in trade and commerce while In office. Mr. MeBon not only Is Ineligible, he continued, . but la "liable? to a ' heavy penalty." "Perhaps Secretary Mellon did of this law Just ss Secdid not know that retary Hughes It was ' illegal to view prize right films," hs continued. "But If that was so It is no longer an excuse." not-kno- Landslide in Italy MELLON INUiLICHT Tax Records of Concerns in Which He It Inter ested Figure in Probe.. March 2.-WASHINGTON, records of the "Mellon companies" were brought today to the committee room of the special senate committee Investigating the Internal revenue bureau, but the committee did not reach them during the session. Its time was occupied with Charles T. Brown, ons of ths group of appraisal engineers dismissed from the bureau last Jear. Brown recounted the circumstances of his dismissal, making charges of his former Incompetency against later also separated from the SECRETARY IS COURTEOUS, f chiefs, bureau. He declared specifically, howSenator Walsh said he acknowl- ever, he had no knowledge of any edged the "extreme courtesy" of graft or corruption within the bureau. Mellon In communicating with At the conclusion of the session, him on the subject, and had replied Brown said he would present the case that, acceptance of Chase's resigna- -. ef "another MeHon company" on which tion could have no effect on the pro- he had worked. lie sinned Allen p. Davis A Co., Pittsburg steel concern, dot! impeachment proceedings. The committee prosecutor then but bureau officials said this was not launched Into a review of the $100,00 a Mellon company. loan testimony ss It affected Chase. It developed that Brown's InformaSecretary Mellon was InterFirst he took up a mysterious tion that tn this company came from the ested memorandum, unsigned and undated. which was found In the committee' engineer who assisted him on tax apHe sam ne couia praisals. The case involved a reducAles in January. tion of the tentative estimates made "only surmise It was what Mr. Chase was would have told us when he came be- by Brown and on which taxation The reduction was made, determined. committee." fore the in a the Brown declared, by "clique" set forth at The memorandumoffice of the reviewing engineer of the Ionian the circumstances under which "unit in bureau. the Fall obtained a loan to enlarge ranchj Pressed by senator V ataon. Kepiib- properties, and recited tnat cnase was llcan, Indiana, to say whether hs had details of all ths of that with familiar of any Influence on the part knowledge transaction. of Secretary Mellon or anyone else to EVIDENCE. CIRCUMSTANTIAL a liberal construction In about bring case, he said he had not. The Telegrams sent to the oil committee the Mellon books, which a letcompany's In November and December regarding from Secretary Mellon to the comChatie's possible ' appearance before ter would be made said, mittee veeterday the committee, together with ;the available, of a large number memorandum and other docurnenta. of massiveconalsted which were not volumes Senator Walsh said, "afforded such examined today, nor were the namea evicomprehensive circumstantial tax whose records of the companies dence" of an intent to mislead the contained put" Into the committee committee that he "was amased the they was minutestitthat indicated 'not summarily removed committee tomorrow would take up the president hadoffice." an . Chut from11th of examination of these cases, In which "On the March, two weeks previous witnesses have made general ago yeeterosy," Senator Walsh ex- allegations that the taxpayers were claimed, "this whole affair became dealt with liberally by the bureau. public property. The president of the United 8tates knew all about. It, if his official observer sitting in the Japanese Vessel Sinks; committee every dsy has discharged 23 of Crew Missing any duties or is serving any purpose whatever. someLONDON, March IS.- - A message to "I would like to know from Lloyd's from the North Foreland wireone why It was the president imthe resig- less station, reports that the Japanese mediately did not demand sank after collidnation of Mr. Chase or why. not even steamship Tokufuku ing wltn the German steamship Heinr ssklng for his resignation, the execuin a dense fog near diil was Dungeneas, tive had not notified him that he last night, and that twenty-thre- e of Ignomlniously removed from the pubare crew her missing. lic service? I sm utterly unable to fifteen men of Understand the attitude of the White theTh HelndaL-too-crew, off said the message, House concerning this Investigation." and Japanese arrived at Dover today with her DEFERS ACTION. bows damaged. The missing men ars believed to The house Judiciary committee failed to take action today on the bare been asleep at the time of the senate resolution which proposes Im- collision, and to have- gone down with the ship. C. Chase, peachment of Clarence Th Japanese vessel was bound from of Albert B. Fall, as customs Bremen for Japan. collector at El Paso, Texas. not did The Judiciary committee register lists the Tokufuku take up the resolution tods v.. Chslr- - asJJoyd's a steel vessel of 5S5U gross tonnage. was last reported te have' arrived She CsntUxae ss Page Twe at Rotterdam on March I. Ms Ma.) Tx ... Bee-reta- ry - w -I- nosed into the lead over President Coolldge as additional returns cams in tonight tromoTuesday's Republican presidential primary in tioulh Dakota. During the day the president held a narrow marsln. but tonlvht th CaUrornlaji gradually wore down the v.....Ug going into me Buvanuige, lead when lll of the state's Uii precincts had reported. Johnson's margin in those precincts, to .unofficial figures, was according a --scant 126 votes, and in the next two precincts reported he added six more to his maiorltv. the vi vtvin Cuplldge S4,4& and Johnson titilll. , runiniR INCREASES. Johnson's majority was further' Increased in the next fifty precincts to report, his lead growing to 496 when returns from ISKu precincts gave him S&.tl to 36,422 polled by the president. Kural returns from ths central part of the state, coupled with earlier complete reports from some of the Johnson strongholds in the northeastern section, brought the senator to ths front. Watching the trend of the returns tonight, Johnson state headquarters added a few more thousand majority to the prediction of victory for the Califomlan, doclaring he would win by a 12.0U0 to 16,000 majority. . STICK TO. CLAIMS. 7 ur counties had reported complete unofficial returns on the Republican presidential contest when Johnson moved ahead of Coolldge. Only meager returns were available from several counties, but In counties with reports deemed representative JohiiswU had a lead tn thirty-fou- r and Fifteen of Coolldge In twenty-six- . the Johnson counties bad reported complete returns. When 1I preclnfts had reported on the Republican senatorial contest. Ceatiss4 ea Vase Swe am.) House Committee Votes ChUd Labor Proposal By tJslteraal Berries. . The March house judiciary committee in reporting the proposed child laibor amendment to ths constitution, today requested the rules committee to grant a special rule giving the amendment an early place on .the calendar. The vote In the committee was 14 to (, with Chairman Ueorgs B. Graham, Republican of Pennsylvania, heading the opposition. The other five opponentsyvere understood to be Democrats. Opponents of the measure explained that their attitude was based- solely on constitutional grounda state's rlgtit and that they were in no senae opposed to the regulation of child labor. The amendment' Is scheduled to pome up In the house the latter part of next week or the week following. A definite determination to give it a place on the calendar already had been reached by the Republican steering committee, and Chairman Bnell of the rules committee stated there was no doubt that the committee wbuld grant a special rule. The? plan Is to call up the amendment after the Immigration bill Is disposed of. , The present effort - to reach - the child problem through a constitutional amendment, resulted from' the action of the 'United States supreme court In twice holding federal child labor statutes to, be unconstitutional. WASHINGTON. , More Skulls Uncovered by Coast Excavators , ROME, March 24. Fifty persons have been killed in a landslide In the miles seaport of Amalfl, twenty-thre- e southeast of Naples, according to a dispatch from Amalfl to the Giornale d'ltalla. i.v.l hntef rtappncjnlTW Tiht vento. In the old Capuchin monaatery which is visited by alLlourtsis, is threatened with collapse. The landslides undermined the famous hostelry of the monks, causing the terrace, view of the coast for miles, to cave In. The building: is greatly endangered, with the possibility of collapse at any moment. The cmel villages siieciea are where, most of the casualties occurred, MullM, Furore, Praiaoo and Atrarn, The catastrophe was caused by resent storms, which swept the bay of Salerno, undermining the shore and uprooting the foundations of the houses buildine; on the sides of the vex-tic- MU.-- . ' ; OO 040 040 00 ;' 00 Roxie Stinson Supplies Fresh Thrills By Universal aerfiee. WASHINGTON, March 26. Developments todT in th Daugherty . s'il loaso iuvestiifationf by senate committees were: defied the Brookhart committee ir Attorney refusal toy turn bverTerortr-04n-apieiwith agentson border. . Chairman Breokhart analleged gun running on the Mexican resolution in seek will senate the to ascer- by. nounced the committee tain from President Coolhige what authority Daugherty hadtor, his , refusal. t 2. Miss'Boxie Stinson testified that Jess Smith told hcra group of five persons in Waahinirton made a clean profit of 33,000,000 on stockShe declined 4o- give the names of those in the jfroun, by JDaugherty, s but imtimatwi she may do so in her ' eounsel tomorrow. 3. District Attorney Gordon, charged by the senate with proceeding against Harry Sinclair for contempt of the oil investigating combe laid before the grand jury tomorrow mittee, announced the rase will morning. Special Counsel Roberts and Pomerene will assist in preparation of the ease. train banditarrived from Los Angeles, . Al Jennings, onf erred' with Senator Walsh preparatory to. taking the witness stand,,! tomorrow . to. tell what he knows about the use of ,money by the oil the last Kepnbi.cgn national convention, inaerestt v ' 5. Nomination of Samuel Knight by President Coolldge to "Oil company booking toward proceedings gainst the Standard revocation of leasee in section 18 was rejected by the public Jands committee on the ground that he wss formerly eounsel for a banking bouse in which the Rockefellers, are, interested. , w General-Daughert- at il " n '."-."- one-tim- e MAYOR TO LOSE JOB. RAHWAY, N. J., March 2. James will Furber, Rahway's Socialist mayor, reltnquiKh office Januarv 1 next, as the result of today's special election, in which the voters decided. 2922 to HI. to abolish the commission form of government In favor of the coun-cllmsji- lc system. Mayor Furber was the main Issue In the campaign. His administration baa bees undsr fire. it eon-du- Al- Con- tinues Her Amazing Story of Intrigue. it f By PHILIP KINSLEY. CMeate Trlbase-aa- lt Lake Tribes. Wire, i WASHINGTON. March 2$. Miss Roxie Stinson lifted the curtain a few Inches today upon a new scene in he great political scandal show, "the so. oret of Jess Smith," and gave th sensation-surfeite- d Capital a peep Into a 133,006,000 oil stock deal,. In which, she had been told five men of national prominence made fortunes In the fall - SIIEBW Indiana Governor Defending Self Against Embezzlement Charges. of 1912. - : It was lust a sun vi.. Stinson, offering only a woman's rea son Because heelted strangely in, giving the names of the five men aa whispered to her In the little flat in Washington Courthouse, Ohio, on one of his frequent visit noma, March 2. Joseph The four Senators of the Daugherty INDIANAPOLIS, B. Kexllng, Republican national comInvestigating committee, thrown Into a momentary by mitteeman from Indiana, testifying to. the , Hiin.ii.. day In the trial of Governor MoCray l'"r ramies, taking this matter un- on charges of embezzlement of state action tomorrow ""'"""umi, lor ..,.,.,. considered funds, told of a conference of Repub- that the committee win . --i. probable, t.v .. lican leaders last July, at which he namea The attorney general today held two asserted James P. Goodrich, fcrmec conferences with President governor of Indiana, accused the e- protracted and strong Coolldge rumors are. endaat of "violating every law on the abroaH . . .1 . Tu-- , ij retirement statute bdoks." Mr. Keallng was the Is Imminent. At u,the White House It first witness called by the state. The TL" t,at1 tb Mr-- Daugherty sought ...... jury waa completed at the morning Neither the interview nrMn this morning. session. Mr. Keallng testified the conference, ney general would comment. REPORTED AS SORE. was attended by Senator James K. MlBS Rflnar,na aM Watson. Clyde WaJ, Republican state ,l!U. chairman: Kwlng Emlson, manager of. on ths M3,0o0,000 story was that the the Coolldge campaign In Indiana; in Sinclair on storks and that the men Involved were me a Goodrich, McCray and himself. ' During the conference Goodrich said who had entertained Bmlth and to the governor, according to Keallng: attorney general at dinner and the at "Mr. Governor, I don't think you their homes and he not let them in, appreciate the seriousness of your sit- on ths deal. Smith and Daugherty uation. Tou have violated every law were represented as being "sore" over on the statute books." this, as they had been losing lots of '.'Do you refer to the fair board Miviicy m me block markst. to McCray asked, money?" according .mis. eunson naa prererred, she the witness. anger "Yss, among other things," Goodrich she Biurj had been It one or iwo otner tningssaving replied, the witless said. to con- , ''I had a right to borrow (hat money, fnlltuiJ. .I.- -..n . j 11, een- in.r and, besides, It's been paid back." the etor George Chamberlain when they governor returned, Keallng said. go after her on. Clarence W. Nichols, In his opening on statement for ths prosecution, said the there, pruuuaes w. : aaaae in fur fly state expects to prove the governor . ha waa ImA InfA tt, received sums of money from tlx. ever, by being questioned aa to where board of agriculture for deposit with an me mat ne was the Discount & Xieposlt bsnk of Kent-lan- constantly sendingmoney spending in but that It had been credited to fhe stock market andher, In his expensive account the governor's personal erf Bvlrg in style Washington. She James W. Noel, pnrsenal counsel for said thst when Smith first went to the governor, contended that the v on ne to discuss his used turningi facts- the state , Intended to prove aeaiawith but later.lt ireeiy her, characterwere not baaed In 'aw, and became a "delicate subject" between ised the Indictments against McCray thorn. . ss "much ado about nothing." NOT IN THE DEAL. ... . "T AM tut .W him " -- w he had profited by one deal He said. iivv men in a lew asys msae 133,00a, 000. I asked him if he and were in and he said 'No,' thatHarry was what thef were sore about, as they . were frlenda" "Was Ned McLean oner" asked ,.,.,, , i.n.i.i 1, win, piuhi nim teeth and smacks his Hps whenever he gets the name of McLean In evl- ; dence. h--. T am not sure. --. "What was ths ehiraMer- t ' deal?" "It waa a Sinclair oil deal In th Detectives Balk Plot to fallIt ofIs recalled that- Sinclair stocks Will iHi 111 in mwa, n anjiuvKccau .. w V U ' . n . ' of new Rob Pennsylvania Pas- organisation companies to tak over the lands, and the sum of had been fixed as the total vaiue or tne increase m rHndair senger Near Pittsburg. stocks during the time she referred to. A8HUR3T PRESSES QUESTION. -- I. t3Aetsan. 4 ahof.. ri.w.M.at PITTSBURG, Pa, March 2 J. A plot did not let th but later subject drop, to bold up a Pennsylvania passenger l..M.4 b. Ka. A 1171 Ul SIIVU ls W (SV IV VTfTT train at the Beck's Run bridge Bear on In th committee room expected to ee nmrum or in piiiars lopvxe Homestead, a suburb,' today was domeiaof the c&pttol fall In. thwarted by city and county detecwouia sne mention n&meer tives. Edward 1. Brophy, superintena, wsa VI isnv ,v uvbwuev wm her emlltntr responee. dent of the Pittsburg police, and five like ene tew momeniB ex wu later j. city detectives were injured, three OoettDUwd Twe erioualyJKheil they used their auto C.ma Tip.) mobile, to stop a macnine occupied by one of the bandits. A representative of the American Railway, Express uncovered the plot and asked for police protection this morning. He said he had been In formed that the express ear safe Con taining 1400,000 would be thrown from the train at Beck's Run bridge, where If you ar. going to put a new the bandits would pick it up In automobiles. sleeping porch oa your house, or Twenty, detectives boarded lay a new walk, this is the time the train when it left here. Others of year to do it. went to Beck s Run by automobile. You may have In mind putting observed a Superintendent Brophy near.-thup a new ' fence, or new clothe bridge. big machine parkedwaa in the backyard. . poets about detective' stopped The All of these things-ana hundred When the 400 yards in front of it. "be done economically more can the without went trsln stopping by with concrete, In a minimum of driver of theother machine started at time and without the necessity of to Oairton. high speed on the road calling In help from the outside. car the next station. With the With simple Instructions you can In lead. the containing the officers mix the concrete in roper proporwaved to the Superintendent Brophy the necessary forms, tions, driver behind to stop. The signal and setbuild the mixture. was disregarded so ' the superinteninstructions The you need are dent ordered that his machine be contained In revised edition of rne otner. parked across tne roao. which is ofbooklet, machlnecrsshed'lnto-it- r Injuring, the fered free to any of our readers. drew a pistol, officers. The suspect fill out a obtain To copy, and maH but before he could user It one of thethe coupon, below, enclosing two disarmed and handon to cents Injured detectives In psy stamps postage ' " ;. cuffed him. It. Be sure that your name and on are address written the clearly Wadsworth Resolution ' lines of the coupon, near-pan- ia -f -- ,!.... Vi -- , Meanwhile the Coolldge state leaders held to their original statement that returns complied by them "Indicated a Coolldge majority of MOO to 4000." Twenty-fl- v of the state's sixty-fo- tueiaats ternately as She Chi-ou- rav s i' SIOUX FALLS, 8. D, March 21 Senator Hiram Johnson of California Weeps and Smiles millio- n-dollar ,w 8I0UX FALLS, S. D., March 27. Duplications ef twe preolnct reports disclosed In recapitulation early today cut Ssnater Hiram Johnson's lead tor Republican presidential prefer-nee down to 35 votes. Rsvlssd returns frem 1J63 pr olncts Out of 1828 ln the state Sve Senator Johnson J5,4Mj Presldsnt Coolldge, 35,423. i ANGELES. Cel., March High Spots in the Scandal Probes LUclentlsts Additional human bones sunnosed bv to be tens of thousands of 00 - , tlOO,-IK- ' committee prosecutor, lie promlaed "a whale of a story" when he takes the stand tomorrow, but would not discuss a statement recently attributed him to the effect that there was a "oil dear at the convention In cutinectlon with the nomination of the late president Harding. oil Coolidge Majority Steadily Whittled Down as Rural Votes Come In. . Fifty Are Killed in con- California Mart. years om were uncovered near here today b excavators on the Cunajo ranch. Laboring in a quagmire under g steady ratn, the scientists brought to lightIn what they regard as , support new evidence of their growing belief that they have uncovered the fossils of "a race of thinking men antedating the semlapes of prehistoric India." Work will be continued tomorrow. Dr. Robert Thomas H1IL former assistant paleontologist at the jnd for years engaged In geological gecraphlar of th southwestern explorations states and Mexico, visited the fossil a to make close examinapit today tion of the strata beneath which the rancho Cunajo remains were found., He declared there wae every reason to believe that ttie akeletorw had not since the Pleistocene been disturbed period-o- r ice age. ended some l.l.OOO or 20,000 years ssro and added that ' "If It can be flnallr and definitely shown that these remains date It will be the first from the k-specific eeolosrlcal evidence ever that men existed on this Continent in that long past era." . , POSTPONEMENT DENIED. KANSAS CITY. March W. Judge In Pollock federal court here John C. "it trxiay denied a petition ofiPrltlsh Investors In the Kansas City, Mexico ft Orient railroad aklnsr a postpone-meof three mmfh in sal" "f the rnad. scheduled at Wichita,. Kaa., to. morrow. int a. nt - : """ll' d, - - , .... TRlii , THWARTED la." 1 L 11 A 1 SV SJ V to' ro Now Is the Time to Build. ; e ar - -- ' Be Recommitted Will '' .ii in WASHINGTON. frch H. After several- - days' debate, the senate today to the Judiciary commitrecommitted . tee the Wadsworth resolution propose Ing a new method of ratifying amendments. The resolution provided for- action by the voters of a state upon the ratification "of rejection of an Its legislature. amendment-bThe motion to recommit, offered by VirSenator Swsnson, Demorrat, ginia,' was carried. 41 to S3. constl-tut'on- suppls-ment- SALT LAKER IN NEW YORK. NKW YORK, March W. lit Thompson. al al Frederic J. Haskln. Director, The Salt Lake Tribune .Information Bureau, , Washington, D. C. I enclose herewith two cents in stamp for return rteee on a free copv of THE CONCRETE . BOOK-LET- . Name Street Clly State, faiqiyw. .n - |