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Show T UTAH STATESMAN Smith's Record. Shouts Out Loud tor Public RELATIONSHIP OF STATES AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENT PROBLEM FOR Development of Country Hu Added Complice' tioni to Ruling of it. Hu Many Things to Consider in Matter of Duty to Self and Nation. .Utah C1TIZSNERY In California Promise of World Business Discussed; Ways Of Saving Suggested. Foreign trad in over-growi- CHEYENNE, Wyo Democratic voluma la now essential to tho largleaders in Wyoming wers slated er aconomlo welfare of tho United with th victory of Al Smith In CalTha amount ifornia yesterday and were point- wasted each year Inofthresources United ing to the prominent part In ths States is appalling. New York governors campaign in all tha history of tho world taken by Mrs. Nellie Taylo Iloae, thara has been no parallel of comof Wyoming. and Industrial Governor Kosa delivered address- mercial, financial potentiality on tho grand scale, es in Los Angeles, Ban Diego and such aa the new world now preelsewhere In California and Is con- sents. ceded to have been an Important Latin America is ready fur defactor In aiding th Smith land velopment. The United Statu Is elide. to foster that In It also ass pointed out. Mr. able so largo a way as todevelopment break all preRoss a year ago took tho Initiative vious even th marvelous among westerners and threw her record records, mad by tha United Mates upport to Smith et a time when po- ilself during ths put 10U years, litical wlaeacrea were predicting th dry west would Join the south waiter ut'h cryptic sentences did to detVat tho New York candldata. ner & Parker, economist of FanBeane, New York and New Mrs. Roaa has spoken In Washingout the commercial ton. D- - C., and in tha states of Ok- Orleans, ofpoint destiny American people in lahoma. Tennessee, Kentucky an address tha that opened th Latin South Carolina, North Carolina, American sexaion of the National Georgia and Texas for Governor Foreign Trade Convention si HousSmith, pounding upon the gospel of ton. His was Th Trade religious tolerance. She also has Promise ofsubject New the World. taken Issue with those who contend Enough for World. that prohibition Is an Issue. also In Democrats Latin .America pout-aseCheyenno natural wealth In mine, forest and point with prld to tho leadership of a number of Wyoming men In field on a scslo not comprehensible the western states movement for to many people, he .aid- The Smith. Fred W. Johnson of Rock region Is capable of supplying maSprings Is chairman of the organ- terials to feed, cloths and condition isation. It beesnio known today practically all the world. that ohortly after tha 1121 elecIta gates are wide open. It tion Johnson eonferrred with welcome ambitious people from Joseph C. O'Mahoney. Cheyenne, 11 the world. It has work and laid plana for tho organisation occupation for all who coma. and of a western states movement for "In th process of development Smith, which later became a real- It will need th factory products of ity when Smith advocates met In other lands. It will need money by Utah. the billions, engineers, physicians, Thera Is a movement on foot, al mechanical And all thou Democrats , to get Wyoming that Latin America will need,things the now movement behind a United States can supply. strongly growing In tho atata, to push Gov But ths people of the United ernor Ross for vice president. This Slates must plan well If they would movement got a big driving force, avoid the economic difficulties that Dem- now yesterday In tha Sweetwater confront of their Euromany ocratic county convention at Rock pean trade rivals. were (Continued on Pace Four) Other student of the doctrine declare that the federal aid highway system, whereby the federal government matches dollar for dollur with state and county money for road building purposes and then takes complete charge of the spending or the money la In direct vlo- -' latlona of the rights of state. Students who decry this plan have no compunction about seeing money go to their stale for the development of rivers and harbors. Some claim even that the public domain In the western states shoula be the properly of the states where In located and should be turned over to the states unreservedly. Oth er who are normally states rights persons are quite content to take their chances with the federal government rather than to let the local and state political, machines gel their hands on the lands. The rehabilitation of the world arwar veterans, the fifty-fift- y rangement which provides educa tlonal measures for women about to become mothers, have all come s' under the gun as being enough atransely rights, yet virtually all who are benefltting by this work are states' rights people but are willing to set aside their doctrine In the particular case. Dry Mates' Claim. People In dry states who saw neighliquor filtering in from the to the boring wet state appealed federal government to dry up the entire country. They felt that their sacred right to be dry If they cnose, was being violated by the sister commonwealth who was enjoying her sacred right to be wet If she chose. Thus came about two phases of states rights and each appeared correct according to the viewpoint.to California asserted its right when resolution A nation without natural " Springs urging from run Its own affairs ram h delegates adopted at home la at a disadvann It when work for to PS3 Sweetwater county years ago abroad. A nation burdened which prevented Asiatic from In- Instruction at the stats convention tagedebt and high taxes Is handiby land owners. for Governor Roes for vice presi- capped In every field. A people sisted upon Its states rlhl dent unable to look beyond ths near stales that great advocate of Bryan, horlson. Incapable of practicing tha CANADA COQUETS rights. William Jennings art of thrift and economy, negliNEWFOUNDLAND attempted to get California to WITH of nearliy opportunities, can gent withdraw from Its position. few a senate capUallsa hardly states Dominion rights I, larger opportuIn th Ths theory of of course, as old as 1 the Cnnt days ago a resolution wee carried nities elsewhere." parWaste In U. 8. Enormous. to th effect that In Its opiniona tutlon Itself. In fact the first conunder the federal should consider In Her Mr. Parker pointed to a ty alignment or Canada for taw outstanding stitution were those In favorwno friendly spirit any proposals Durexamples of ecothose and loose construction nomic waste m tho United States union with Newfoundland.' The oonWructlon. waa that strict It favored flood waters of tn Mississippi urged ing tho debate advocates of the former theory be- If tha negotiations failed, an ef- which should bo Impounded for lieved that the federal government fort should b mads to purchase beneficial purposes; tha cubic mils had all the powers not specifically that section of Labrador which was of silt that annually passes down denied It; the strlot constructionswarded to Newfoundland tha Mississippi river, tho hundreds ists declared that the federal gov- recently th British Privy Council The of ships that were built during the ernment wan limited to those pow- by Labrador littoral which was won war and row are rotting berauis er described In the Constitution Quebec by tha colony Is oomo no plan was mods to us them after from In and that all other powers lay 120.000 square mile In extent and the war. states. the hands of the Muarl Shoals, h Includes enormous wealth In th pointed out, Doubt. In Washington natural resources The was built os a wartime power projThat Osorg Washington hlmselt shape of for ect because no and Labrador, peacetime purchasing plan wee In some doubt on tho Question proposal Newfoundland to waa mods It has Join Idle for 10 la noted In hla farewell address always supposing aurh year to listen to any be In the willing opinion If. wherein he eeye: Food thrown Into American was seemingly of the people, the distribution of proposition, activities garbage cans would feed a million. constitutional powers bo In any strengthened by reportedcitlxena Tha moot accessible 10 of ha said. on tha part of certain let It bo Mftwi particular wrong per cent of ths nation's coal la minth Constitu- the United States. by tho way In which and the remaining 40 per cent Tho present Is by no means tha ed. Inst tion designates. But let there be to human use. no change by usurpation, for thin, first tlm that Canada has mads "Because of our great wealth ws It has approaches Newfoundland, to although lu aomo Instances do not protest effectively against been an Instrument of good la tn known os the "senior colony, public and prlvata negligence and ordinary weapon by which tho free Several unsuccessful efforts have wait. Our wise course would ho government la destroyed.. been made to induce her to confed- not only to stop tha great leaks but Whsther or not Georgs h; erate with the Dominion. Only to turn our Chief called attention to tho betterington would hav once, In 1(14. did tho colony make of th economic environment Justice John Marshall's actions any advances, but this was dus to ment which w draw our substance during th two score yeare that finandsl embarrassment, the con- from In that way safeguard our high eminent Jurist wee the guiding dition being that th Dominion and lew Interpreter should Newfoundland's earning power and at ths same light of America' certain assume It Is that Is not known but matter of some time lower basic costs.' a national debt, hand wise and School Aid Asked. under th strong 111.000.000 which today would be of Marshall tha federal government considered Mr. Parker spoka of how foreign a mere bagatelle. This would which powers developed to do and th ne- countries train their young men to have foored the original strict con- Canada refused foster foreign trade by having fall through. structionists had they lasted long gotiationsNewfoundland Is a richer them live abroad and learn tha on. Today enough to learn what was going the habita and speech of foreign namiles set up prise with its 120,000 square It wni Marshall whoeourt was New- tions. He urged a training school lands. desirable It of to pa of th supreme right this for American youth. foundland's own act which origin- like upon the constitutionality ofIn tho He pleaded for the United States no ally kept her outside confederation, laws of th country, although to help Its southern neighbors, saythe for she took part in tha conferences place does th Constitution give State leading up to that memorable ing: supremo eourt of tho United It follows then that th mor setevent. Moreover, many In New- assistance this power. With th matter we give to othor countled and accepted by all. even to foundland still declare that th ad- tries tn opening up of markets tho present day. Marshall waa abt vantages of giving up its present for their the own surplus products, the dominto further th power of the fed. position ss a ''ttcr the markets abroad will b eral government to a great extent. ion. with th right to settle Its own for our own products Dartmouth College Case. and so forth for th purpose tariff Expanding tho need for a worldwhere Ono of the first ocacslons a of status provths of assuming wide outlook or complex for Amertho theory of stales right first ince of Canada, are debatable- h cited how th United showed Itself wai In the famous discussion In the icans. of th In spite States had become tho banker of wherein j senate. however, Dartmouth college no approach at the how our mills are cat0 Canada pableworld, !h JTt-Lrrl- d wtutThs Unit- - hav " A4 of producing an enormous matter a nlor hy th(l cololiy. A, - surplus over domestic consump2 f thl j! of fart, th Premier or Newtound- tion. and ths vital need for world th that publicly utd m'rbeti. colege By ovT- ln pomIMIIty of the "Our present ststu Is new to riii In thin port iMfln the Marshall Dominion th v n t rf ii colony entering he said. definitely cara Jturtira Many of ua federation new our must In the oners of education begin tho P ststesji founded. little the kindergarten Nevertheless. of world affnlra Of course ths early example h whole ques-tIs that the and learn even ths simplest of fortha doetrln of states rights were of 'doubt withheld its effect, eign relations. variety with th - tlon, ths discussed when Carob South will act of tally nullification Flood Control Harked. Una being an outstanding example. Newfoundland parliament meets In rinsing, he pointed out "some President Jackson soon put the Monitor. of the things every true patriot In South Carolina people straight on the Lnlted States can full proHarry Sinclair la acquitted, but priety advorate for th with that matter, although ofh thehimself good of th prop- th Chanute Tribune feel that his was a strong advocate were: They er balance between state and nahappiness will be a lot nearer com- country. Control of Interstate flood draintion. Other aonthern state an- plete If h I subscribing to no clip- age through the use for all benenounced the doctrine more or less ping services. T. C. Star. ficial purpose In place of wasta In until after the Civil wtr but ae on destructive floods of the water writer put It. th theory of state without first getting Utah's per- sources of th United States. right didn't weigh heavy upon mission? Early completion of an Is Utah rilht In raying that th their conscience when th fugitive highway from the Unitslave law, which wa clearly a lim- United tastes has no right to build itation of the right of th north- th Boulder canyon dam because ed Rtetes through Mexico, Central It endangers the future of Utah's and South America. ers state, took effect. rt Prompt development of Utah's Problems. development by usurping Its transportation in Latin Amer- Utah is vitally Interested In the states right doctrine at th presArehose Uahns right who claim Jfa .andJb ent time In th following wy: that the public lands and public State. The I nlled States can wall Fhnuld th federal government fureat belong tn the states where- afford to auhaldlsa such steamship have the right to regulato the hunt- in they lie and that the govern- lines, he said. Air mall service between the ing of gam and th catching of ment should turn such lands over trade centers of Latin America, befish within the limit of th state? to ths states? tween thus trad- - renters and th Ua Its Ha Utah surrendered any of Is Utah losing any of by permitting th govern- sacred rights tiy accepting aid In United States and mall service bement to build road for Interstate tha matter of vocational education tween tha United States and Euand In furthering maternity and In- rope. travel? There never haa been In th I Utah correct In It stand that tent hygiene? It owns the bed of certain river Just how Utah best develop hletnrv of th world." ho concluded, of so tavorahl an opportunity for nd therefore should he tlr reci- to fit In with the sisterhood pient of any revenue which thee state he a part of the government reciprocal trade relations as now river bed may tom tlm bring of Washington, and still retain It exists he tween Latin America and th United States and we can well forth? autnmnny as a sovereign stats? I Utah right In Kg stand that In ths next Issue of th Utah affned the cost In money and time to develop these rela-tloths United States has no right to Statesman the be Iseueg will ft build .. . data upe Utah SfOiwA oord fully dtoeusac. anti-state- Kher -- I' raly ?hVtetraVh ' Former State Senator, Jossp h Che. Secretary of Th Westers on, with headquarters at Ogden, srnor Smith Should bo Nominated allowing reasons: man and his accomplishments, both I vs n full answer to tho question, to holder, from assembly-ma- n state his life Is in th union, gesl ho oyos of hla political opponent. personally or officially, Ills achievements as govsrno r rood Ilka chapters from some taw of these: a land of arc Utopia. Hsr perfect Reduced 117 state agencies to If major departments; reduced the state Income tax Si par cent a nd th direct tax on real property 21 per cent; established tha abort b allot; established th axacutiv budget; secured passage or bond I ssues, Ilf JIUO.OOO tar atata parka liu.UMl.OOO for new construction fo r wards of atata; 4i, 000,000 for bonus to state's World War veta; a Ignsd tha largest educational approprlation In tha history of tho si sis; Increased appropriations for education from 111.114,171 to 112, 211,121; brought about an Increase of 22,OUO,OOV In teachers' asla ties ; vetoed laws passed by th legisla-an- d of political opinion that would turs controlling freedom or speech hav tattared th educational ays tern; called tho legislature in rial session to ratify th woman au amendment: consistently ad-l- x vocated minimum waga board to f a living wags far women and minora la Industry; abolished child labor; oatabllahed a mothers enabling them to ing week; established state aid for discrimination against woman In keep tkelr children at homo; remov civil service; appointed woman to b Igh atata offices; sponsored stive marketing law and appropria or over $20,000,000 for th eradication of tubercular cattla; a p pointed parsons to office for abll-- t took ity and fltnasa, and ahawod grea ability in hla selections; th highway department out of pol Itlcs; advocated accounting for contributions and election diturea before campaign expen Thera aro many other officio I acta to his credit. Let every cltl sen study Governor Smiths nchlev manta, and I have no fear of tha States assoeiatl Utah, In an Interview on Why Gov nd Elected President" gnv th f "Governor Smith' record os a aa n legislator and as a governor,' g After twcnty-ftv- a years as nn offic four term as a governor o t th big spotlcs and blameless, even In t Not once haa scandal touched him EXPECTED TO ENTER RACES AT SPORTSMENS flra-catl- nr port-to-po- self-respe- ct 'd aa work-widow- ed outcome." Democrats Score in Selecting Keynoter nr cared for all tha peopla will be cared for: although ila sincerity In America, but bowing to the will of making the assumption ean w the majority, as he had to do, n questioned. Therq can be no q'ten-tlohowvver, that first and Inst aided in drawing tha federal conand it Is for ths powerful stitution. and In establishing the few. always The people of America, however, first administration. Always, however. he labored against democracy can bs won to a party which thinks to tho extent of hla abilities. Al- of th peopla first, which proceeds ways h favored those devices on ths theory that tha people ora which kept control ss far away abl to control their own affair from tha peopla os possthls, und and ought to control them; a party and always ha favored those measure! which thinks of principle which would establish favored aaa rights and equal treatment of 11 aa In th foundation class tha nation. of good governsuperior Tha Republican party dares sot ment, rather than aa something dwell axtanalvtly on these nets of which probably may be had If tha Hamllton'n of course. For public big Industries of tho country can consumption It praachcc lh Jef- be kept prosperous. It Is this Issue which Bowers fersonian doctrlna of th right and the ability of th people to rule. makes plain, the old Issue of HamOn n I premia of Jeffersonian ilton versus Jefferson. Jefferson democracy It builds a government- won that old contest: the Demoal structure of Hamiltonian pluto- cratic party can win thla present day contest if It will devot itself, cracy. Hamilton Nad no other Ides ss It should do. to battling for a than that tha country should bo government truly of, by and for ruled by favored few. Tha Re- the people. If Claude Bower can summon publican party today has no other idea. It Invites always tha atten- the Democratic party to hla own tion and tha public to th needs Ideals, then Indeed will It forget and ths wants of the great In- its factional quarrsla In a battle for dustries. tho powerful economic the fundamental American Ideals of group. It assume that If these democracy. t Continued From Page One) n. t Art Collection Ogden Arsenal Given Jolt Of Judge Garys on th part of Effort Congress to get the United State to store some of Its supplies at th newly made Ogden arsenal have met with Brings Large Sura Tha highest total rebuffs, Washington patches say. vr brought by th auction of an art collection In this country waa established by ths sals of tho late Judge ElbertH. Oary'a work of art. at the ga!leries of th American Art asso- dis- AtltTMWfl ri(yviipp FMlgerea At Senate Probe ciation. Th grand total tar th four sessions was $2,207,702, or approxiCandidate Hoover showed fire mately $10,002 above the previous record total of $$,107,100 brought several times during ths question' In nat committee con-t- h b)r th by tha Charles T. Yerkea sola In! hla campaign. Ha refused , earning same galleries In 1010. lv th nam of th senator which bidding Spectacular ho1 discussed hie W eat marked tho painting auction on I Yampan. an? caP Friday night, continued through tho concluding' session yesterday J iormatlon Utai? afternoon, making tha total for ths Th session $014,100. bidding 8MITH ASSURED reached a climax In the auction MORE SUPPORT of th small bust hy Jean Antoine Th Dolores Star has always Houdon of hla daughter, Sabine, which brought been a Democratic newspaper aoA its editor haa always voted ant $241,000. The second highest price of tha supported th Democratic ticket, and regard lea of who the Demoafternoon was $100,000, paid by for a royal Ispahan palace crat nominate at the Houston concarpet of th alxteenth century. vention. that candidate will receive It excited keen bidding by virtu the support of this paper and the of th fineness of It workmanship, vote of Ita editor. Itli becoming mote apparent ev-It preservation, and unusual six Governor Alfred E. 20 "feet T Inches by 11 feet 10 .dayof that Now York will bo the mlth Inches. The rose pompadour field and If he to he Is enriched with an allover design I Df,7,ocra1t of row of peony, lotus and leaf "11 "cflv th unreserved support f this j paper from the start of the palmette Governor Alvan T. Fuller of "!,n,a Vh I, Massachusetts, who was an unsue-- , i rli A It!? l0pctu"- ats eou,d ba no fln'r repudiation of for a Sirarhln tnUmtiM ani m n, --v hvmuiHrf 21 1 IT Inch feet feet carpet. by I Inches. Another Polonaise rug of about 1000, feet I Inches by I feet S Inches, from th Charles T. Yerkes collection, went to Parish-Watso- n TOLERANCE. Co. for $0,100. Another Polonaise rug, 2 feet Recently firs destroyed the CathT 1 Indite by 4 feet Inches, olic church In a small California went for $1,000 to KouchakJI, who town- - Immediately th local Adalso paid $2,100 for another Po- ventist and Presbyterian churches lonaise rug I feet 4 Inches hy 4 offered their building to th Cathfeet 0 inches. Two Brussels tapes- olic for th celebration of mass. try panels of tha sixteenth century On offer was accepted, and th and Catholic services 0, Protestant went to L Bloomlngdala for In 'f!"a, Spring Season Winding Up as Summer Season Begins; Athletes Busy. Utah Is entering upon a coupl of lurid weeks or sport os the spring competitions ar Just winding up their programs and th summer sport ar Just getting under way. Tha fifth annual sportsmen's outing at Geneva, Utah laka; May 20 and 27; th tat high school track and field meet at th Uniof Utah versity stadium May 12; tha out college track and field meet at Provo May 12 &nd th Olympic tryouts for tha Intsrmoun-tai- n country on Juna I make tha chief morsels on tha bill. up Listed among tha sporta which ara Just getting a start to tha Utah Idaho Icagua of professional baseball, which will open ita season May 1$ with Salt Lake getting its first homo gams on May 22. Th high schools of tHo county ar on tha last part of their baseball season, soccer to dus to wind up shortly and tha Junior high schools ar getting ready for their annual track and f.eld meet. Coif courses have been open for some time and tha tournament season to at hand with all four clubs reporting crowded courses. Amateur baseball has been under nay In Salt Lake for two week and has cither Just started or is about to start In tha various leagues of the state Copper. Eastern Utah, Valley league, Davis county lengu and others. Not to say anything about the Helling season wh ch to Juit around tho corner and which will be upon tha anglers of tha atata befora they are well twin of the fact. Wrestling and boxing art still going ahead at full speed with tha promoter not yet announcing, when If ever, ha will apply tha brakes. a CONTRIBUTIONS. Editor Utah Statesman: Here are two letters which wero published In The Deseret News April 20 and April 22. I believe they should be reproduced In the Statesman" for rrsson of the prominence of The News, Ur Merrill and Mr. Smith. You will notira that Utah passed the prohibition law before national prohibition earns Into effect, believing, with Mr. Smith, that prohibition eras a states Issue- - is it notstraxge? Editor Deseret News: Is It not strange? We read In tha press again and again that ths Democrats of Utah are favorable to a certain presidential candidate who to favorable to ths repeal of tha Eighteenth amendment. And thla notwithstanding the fact that the Democratic party In Utah stood for statewide proh'jbltioi) In 1210, 1012, 1014. and 1010, carrying tho stale In 1110 on prohibition as the paramount Issue. True to Its pledge the party in 1017 enacted a statewide bone-d- r law. prohibition Further, a Utah legislature subsequently unanimously (If I remember rightly), ratified the proposed Eighteenth amendment to tha U. 8. Constitution. After all of this, can It be that tho Democratic party In Utah will stand for a presidential candidate who would nullify tha stand It took on prohibition? Well, some of ua who voices were raised In behalf of party success In 12, '14 and Ik will certainly use our Influence to defeat any candidate for preol? dent who would favor tha repeal of the Eighteenth amendment Some of us think In terms of principle and men; politicians think in terms of offlca and power. Some of ua hold honor and law enforcement far more dearly than wa da party name. Yours very truly, JOS. F. MERRILL, Salt Laka City, April 10, 1122. IT IS NOT STRANGE. Editor Deseret News: Th article "I It Not Strang? by Mr. Joseph F. Merrill In your issue of April 20th, mlsrepreaenta-liInference, the Democrat of Utah and th leading candidate of th national Democratic party for president of tha United States. Governor Alfred Smith of New York. As a matter of faet the groat majority of Utah DemocrWa stand with you, friend Merrill, for personal, state and national prohibition, and Gov. Smith, If elected, will stand by Utah and every other state In maintaining our rights as states upon thto subject and for all other state rights, so many of which are now usurped by tha federal government Personally. Gov. Smith believes and practices prohibition. In this matter he. Ilka tha majority of Utah's people, lives above this law. wars conducted simultaneously It to admitted that he. like many of tha building separata parts othera, opposed the 12th AmenexThera ha bean several other dment solely upon the ground that toier-an- c It waa a matter for each state to amples lately of friendliness, between rep- regulate. However, a thto amendand resentatives of different religious ment 1 new an Integral part of Jews, Protestants aa-- tho constitution, th president and groups. Catholics have appeared on the every other officer elected or aprams platforms, uniting their ef- pointed thereunder must wer to forts In som fine civic enterprise. uphold and support th same, hence in It Is In no sen a political Issue In dedicating a new temple, now. community betterment work. What proof hav you. Mr. MerThto does not mean that there Is no more religious bigotry or Intol- rill. that Gov. Smith, If elected, would mean that erance. nullify th aland Utah took It doe and favor tha rethinking people with a truo human- on prohibition itarian outlook, find that they hove peal of7 tha Eighteenth Amendmany Ideals and alms In common ment If Gov, Smith la nominated by a nd aro big enough to work togethconer for their achievement, regardlew 1 majority at the Houston people of religions or set. Montrose vention and elected by the of the United States, which at Tress. present, appears very probable, then w can b assured that all tha A SETBACK. laws will be more strictly enforced Our major editorial tenet, that than they ar and hav been for day by day tha world la becoming year and an economical and hona batter and better placa In which est government reestablished. His to live, received a heavy jolt this long and excellent record as govmorning when we read that Ger- ernor of th great state of Nd'.v many exported $0,201,400 harmon- York gives ua thto aaaurancicas In 1027, as compared with only Keapari fully, I. & T1IORE8EN. 40,741,000 In 102$. Arkansas city 14. 1$$!. April Travslsr, "" H.ril fl,-00- largest slngls purchaser at th auction was Sir Joseph Duveen. who paid total of 1702.200. Hto purchases at yesterdays session Iona amounted to On Friday evening h set a new American auction record for a picture by paying $100,000 for GainsborTh Harvest Waggon. ough' Th $221-100- . friend Ed Drach sends a lot of good argument In th Interest of Senator for president. Ed and I need to flddl for danca from night until morning almost forty year ago, havt agreed on all political mattar practically (Inca then, and It's really too bad wa can't ba standing old by eacn on th subject of tha Democratic presidential nomine. Jim Reed U one of the country's most abl and fearless statesmen and haa dona splendid eervlee for als partly Rut In th opinion of Th Emplr there to Just one Democrat who stand a chance of elect Inn to th presithto dency of tho United State year, and that man to Governor Al Smith of Now Tork Say, Ed, lot's compromise by making Jim Reed Hontuy of gutfteaCralg Empire, My old Rd .j y - J 1 JT I Started Survey -- ape-ffra- SPEEDBOATS TWENTY-FIV- E nt Wyoming Men Happy Over Vote MAY 4, 1928. To Investigate Laws Successes Chief Justice Taft, Vic President Dawes, Speaker Longworth, th ma- jority and minority leaden of tho United States aenata and house and several leading Judges and men interested in political affairs a well aa men connected with law administration ar organising a great national movement for Insuring better Justice. A federation will be formed May 24 at Washington. The organisation's plana aro briefly aa follow Make a survey of ths exliglng, proved successes of administering tho law and tha apeclllc methods, practices and principles by which they are secured. Consolidate and compile these practices and principles into reports and brief, practical manuals and texta. I'ut these reports, manuals and texta into tho handa of every active official and agency of Justice country, without charge to In-t- him. America Is talking much about the failures of Justice, but saying a, Httls and doing little about It th leaders of th movement any. These succcese arc relatively little known. They are scattered all over the country. In sums places, civil suits are being disposed of quickly, cheaply and with pvace Criminals between tho litigants. are being successfully caught and and convicted by some police states attorneys. Some prison keepers are reforming them instead of making them worse criminals-Somcourts and Judges are making good boys out of bad boys. Some private organisations are preventing much crime and Injustice. can not be adeThese success quately used today becauat they ar not adequately known. They hav never been gathered together or compiled. A fundamental condition at the bottom of all tha troubles of Justice today to that the defects of the law ara not of tha law Itself, Our hut of Its administration. courts and officials do exceedingIn knowing the law. but ly well relatively poorly In administering It. And Justice to ths law admin- istered. Justice la different from "law." Justice Is defined, "rendering to to 'Law every man hto due. what to hto due. "Justice" la giving It to him. Low" Is primarily a science-kno- wing Justice" Is something. primarily an art doing something. There are no Institutions where officials ara adequately taught, or can learn, the definite practices and methods of administering the law that bring success. Thera an schools for doctors and plumber, preachers and latrberg. but machinists and manicurists, none for judges. Thera ara no books that contain these beet methods and pi act Ices OUTING Uuh, Salt Lain County Craft Vie for Honors; Other Titles at Stake. Twenty five boats an sxpsetad to bo In competition at Utah Lake at ths fifth annual sportmsn'a outing which will bo held at Genova, May 22 and S7. Thor or ten boat already from Malt Lak county and flv more ar ntrd Utah county that it will hav at least a reports dossn boats and b there may ready ss high aa twenty crafts entered from Utah county. There will bo six races. Th program will bs drawn up at a meeting of boatmen in l'rovo Friday night. J, h rt1 archery championship settled at th Tho Ut dub of Salt Laka outing. City haa ta-- a defy to all archer In th tat end this has bean accepted by th other thra clubq Ogden, Pay-eo- n and Grantavlllo. Thera will b numerous Independent qrchers there also. Tn state horseshoe tltl to always settled at this outing. It la expected that about fifty of tha beet ring toasera in tha ataa will vie for honors In that department. trspshooters will also decide Individual and team titles, braid this there will be the usual fee-th- a outing halt casting, athletic events including running Jumping, wrestling boxing and field work, not to say a lot or spontaneous horseplay which la not on the program proper. This outing I. staged hy the Suit Lake County Ftoh and Game Protective association and Is open lu members of any fish and game association in tha state. Membership cards In any association will give the holder free admittance. G. O. P. Candidates Under Same Roof KANSAS CITY Four candidates for the Republican nomination for will have headquarters under the rams roof during the national convention here in June. Secretary Hoover. Benator Curtin. Senator Watson and former Governor Lowden hav reserved headquarters rooms at tha Hotel Baltimore. Smith Leading In Alabama IV alter Moore, Smith und cundldute fur nntlonal supporter commil-teemn- n from Alabama, haa assumed the lend over hi opponent Watt Brown. Mayor Will em A Gunther of Montgomery, a Smith man han displaced an man aa delegate at large. anti-Smi- th 1920, A WARNING. The Republican presidential nomination m liiu was equivalent lu election. Ihe reaction to the Villsuii regime was slurp, 'im. fact of wur ulune in 1212 preveultu ths return to power of the nominal majority puny. Consequently, interest In tile i.epu oilcan convention in IV2u was marked. Genera, of Justice. Wood aes the outstanding candibeat date. highly capable The knowledge of these und easily th methods and practices has never populnr chulce. Lowden had yet been gathered together or com- strength on hto record as war govplied. so that It could le printed. ernor of Illinois. Hiram Johnson Low schools and colleges can not waa mak.ng serlou- - old fur the adequately teach good law admin- nomination. Down In Ohio Ilarry Daugherty istration, because they do not know It was playing tha gains, carefully, also to Officers of Justice, all leg- ekllliully and with such confidence Islators. state and federal governor that he boasted publicly that the and national executive! concerned -j Republican nomination would not In Judlrtal administration, all lawgo to any of th prominent leader yer. all social and welfars organ- contesting for It; rather, he said, tha nom ne sou Id b chosen In a isation. and the press. Each department of th survey smoke-fille- d hotel room at two III be under the supervision of a o'clock In the morning. The counspecial board of th most eminent try laughed, but Daugherty knew Wood was blocked; officials, with the best active di- hto politic Lowden was stopped; tha convenrector possible to be secured. The whole work of the federation tion was thrown Into a deadlock; win be not to dictate or to give and during the night the politicians unasked advlc but tn have con- met at the Dlsckstone and Daughstructive facta, available, without erty put over his man. The nomination of Hard'ng was expense to those who cere to avail not merely a party matter, it was themselvra of tha Information. a national concern, for Harding, from the day of his nomination, was destined to b tha next president. The country, operating on a party system, cannot take Its parties too lightly; cannot leave their control In the hands of a of politicians. interview with llttl group PARIS. An What was done at Chicago In George Clemenceau In the current 1120 clearly constitutes tha plan e. Issue of the weekly periodical the Insiders hop to work at quotes th former premier as that Kansas City next June. Secretary raring; easily Is th popular chnlc We will never pay that debt (to Hoover for the Republican nomination. th United States) because It Is Lowden is making a sectional reRut the "Th Tiger, raid he had written showing.and fuse even to consider thee debt on th second letter a question other prominent possibilities. They which h wa ready to aend, hut ara concentrating on favorite sons that friends persuaded him the everywhere, not that any of these time was not propitious and h have even ths slightest chance for would wait nomination, but to gain control of "When 1 wrote ths first letter a formidable block of delegate he continued. "I feared that It These will be used first to elimwould make friends over there an- inate th outstanding candidates gry, but not at all- - They under- for the nomination, then, when th stood and continued their friend- polltlotona hav agreed on a ship. choice nf their own. to put acres "If only the French government thto dark horse In th convention. were like them. 11 only It underof 120 With the experience stood thnt we will never pay thla fresh In mind, th rank and file Rut far nf Republicans must view thto sitdebt because w cannotfrom It. uation with considerable apprehenen r twenty-fousion Th partv needs th strong"Why. had I first hours later with the letter, est leader available; a manipulatFremiere Poincare would have ed convention will very I'kelv mean signed (the debt agreement), and defeat. Colorado Springs Gaiette. now what ar they trying to do abolish the Dawes plan. It to A new airplane I equipped with Idiotic- - But what do you export a card table, probably to a ecu atom when the government to filled with passengers lo tha grand atom. men without courage. Springfield (Ohio) Dally New Clemenceau Says France Cant Pay Can-didl- . b-- We trust there will not ba any Not even tha rheumatism can grand Jury Investigation Into th keep a man from patting himself trout baskets nf some of our meek on ths back. Harrisburg Telehut resourceful citlxena. Hartford graph. wramav Dally Time. When a golfing liar and a fishSecretary Ditvl, thinks there ing liar meet fee to far It la must h at least t.oon.psa men In generally a tie. Detroit Fra America today who nre out of a Press. tn It worse, murh make job Bd, surh a condition la probably satisthat Rprlng frocks remind u factory to vast number of them we'll soon hav to wt th fly. Columbia Mtosourlao. Charlotte (N. C.) Nsws, |