OCR Text |
Show ~------~--------------~r---~------ ~ ~~ THE JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE, UTAH . ~IRPlANE fAlLS THE _DICAN L[GION FORM!." ---~-- ! ~~RE~A~LR~E~E~N~ DL_I_E1'1_ents_inth_eLi_,eso.:__{Lit_tleM_en_10 BLOCKADERS ARE \VON HINDENBUR) iF;;~ I PASSENGERS KILLED IN CRASH NEAR SALT LAKE CITY BOOZE RUNNERS ARE MEETING PEACE REIGNS '" BERLIN AS WITH STIFF OPPOSITION IN TRYING TO LAND LIQUOR NEW PRESIDENT TAKES OFFICE; THRONGS CHEER Part of Rum Row Fleet Has Left Seeking New Fields to Land ConUnited States Soil • traband on Say Officials lnaugurat on Is 9arried Out According to Schedule: "Deuchland Uber Allies'' Is Heard From Those Present 1 CC..py for Tblo Department Supplied b)' tbo American Lec1on Newe tlervlce.) CONNER WILL HELP PLAN PARIS MEET Bl"njamln H. Conner, Machine is Total Wreck; Heavy West Wind Is Probable Cause of Machine Going Into Dizzy Tailspin commander Ot the deJHlrtment Of }'ranee or the Salt Lake City.-Arlen Claron XelAmerican Legion, delh·ered to the na•on, 30 years of age, former Rupertional convention of the Legion at St. Paul, last September, an official Invita- lntendent of the western division of , tion to the Legion to h6ld a national the air mail service and a world war , ronventlon in Paris. At that time It aviator, and two passengers, Grant . was suggested that the convention for Christensen. 15, 122 North \Vest Tem- 1 1928 be held "In Paree," ln c·elebratlon pie Street and Russell De Loge 15, ;.>r the tenth anni\·ersary of the armis128 North V\'est Temple StrePt, were tice. Plans are now being ('ons!rlered for kllled, May lOth. shortly after 1 holding the 1927 convE.>ntion In the gay o'clock when the Unger Aircraft rorncity, which 1t is the amhltlon of every pany plane, piloted by Nelson, crash· '·eteran to see onee more. :-Jatlonal ed near the \Voodward aviation fi£>ltl. Commander Jau1PS A. Drain has ap. The standard J-1 plane, in which the 1I pointed a committee, h!'aded by Past boys were <~an-led without charge br Department Commander John J. \VIcker, of Ylrglnia, to investigate nnd Nelson took off in the face or a stronF: work out plnns for the migration of west wind. A quarter of a mile from this great body o! American veterans the Ungar hangar the plane ~<ideto the scene of thelr battles. sl!pped went into a tailSJ)in, and 1 SALT LAKE MAY BECOME OWNER NT ' • 1 OF SALTAIR AS PRESE Upon :Mr. Conner and hi~ associates erashecl nose downward from an altl· FROM CHURCH OFFICIALS Jn the depactment or France will fall tude of liiO feet to a flaminl': ;lestruca great deal of responsibility, tr the national convention, whkh has the tlon just Fonth of the Saltil ir spted· final power to make a decision, votes way. · L d Gift Would Include Rarlway ea 1ng to go to Paris. The plane burst into flames and the to Amusement Pavilion; City Mr. Conner, a Kentuckian by birth, unconsriou~'< P 11 ot an d 11oy passen"ers Plans to Rebuild For Large Is a Ia wyer by profession. Born at 'l If' I I Sum Says Mayor Connersvlllf", Ky., on ~on~mber 28, were so badly burnec t 1at H ent 1cation of the charred bodies wut1 cliff!cult. The position of Nelson's body showed that he had made a heroic Salt Lake Cit ·.-What is left of effort to right the plane. Salta!r lleach since th€ recent fire, Efforts were male by Kenneth R. and the electrified railroad operat· Unger, \Yilliam F. Ericksen. William ing between Salt La k e C1ty an d th e ~·raxfJ'eld and H. G. Darke, air mail resort aiAo th11 branch running t o " mechanics, and Carl Helberg to res- Garfield were offered as a present to the people of Salt Lake City by Prescue Nelson and the two boys. lcl~nt Heber J. Grant 0 , the 1\Iormon ~ ~ Nelson was first taken from the churcb. The offer was made to Mayor blazing ruins and the bodies of the c. Clarence l\'eslen and by him pretwo boys were recovered just b e f ore sented to a special meeting of the the auxiliary gas tank exploded with c-ity commission. Following this meeta force that sent a blast of fla mea lng, whil"h was executive. It was an- York.-Yanqnisherl in this portion of the Atlantic se:1board by the rlry navy's blockade, Rum Row i!:l breaking up. Some liquor erafts re· main off Kew York hopin~ for fog to aid them. 'Thick mist came Sunday for the first time since the block· ade started last week. Read Admiral Billard, commandant of the eoast guard. has Aaid in \Vash\ ington 'that he will he Hatisfied if ap!Predable diHintegration of Rum Row begins within u month, hut HO!tle of the sehooners and l;teamcrH _that .have fornwd part of the fl~et sellmg ilquor between Cape Ann, Mas,:., and Cape May, N. J., for four years. huve al· ( ready vanished. l<~ither they have gone to theit· home ports on foreign !Rhores or are seeking other mart;< along the eoast. 1 Captain W. V. 1~ . .Tacoh,s. divisionJ a! <·ommand~r of the coast guard he~e re<·eh·ed a radio message from h1s . blockaders that some of the wLlnsky ahips wm·e headiug out 10 sea. ate.lhere were reports that. some of the rum selling craft had headed in shore in the hope that eu,;tomers could elude the coast guard's pickets in the fog and do bnsinrsH During a • ift in the fog el~:ht rum eraft. were noted lazi!~· riding the roller~ o ff ::;andy Hoole SAlTAlA RESORT PROPOSES BAN ,I ON P~ISON GAs IS OffERED GITY I - .r" l Ohio Representative Would Prohibit U _G . Tl of War· se o1 ases 1n me , Many Nat 1· ons are Represented at Gathering Geneva.-Condernnation of the use of poison gas and prohibition of Its exportation for war purposes is proposed In a new article of the draft convention offered by Representative Theodore E. Burton of Ohio, heading the American delegation of the inter- \Vlth the blockader:; having on duty thirty-eight craft. It was bP.Iieved ~mugglers would have ~reat difficn 1ty in getting ashore e~en in the mist. national conference for the control of traffic in arms. Mr. Burton said he expressed the Instancing the efficiency of the desire Of the America n government b hat sonle such provision blockade is a story told y a seamant and People t d "'h r~guding poison gas be adopted. He of the vv en • d b ryt navy. t 1 1 t a coas rum said the subject had been brought guar oa cu n c ose o a from thirty to forty feet. The rc>~cu- nounced by· the mayor that the gift to the attention of President Coolidge steamer there carne a hail by rnega· 1 r t'l would undoubtedly be accepted by b ers endangered their 11 ves n u 1 and that the President would approve phone from the ridge: Salt Lake City. 00 but heroic efrorts to extricate the a prohibition or th~ exportation of "We need water. How about 1 "I hope that within two or three nofson bodies from the gasoline ignited In· gas for war purposes. cases of whisky for 100 cases o f days," sairl the Mayor, "we will not "' ferno. He recalled that nine of the pow· water?" only notify President Grant of the Nelson and the two passen!(ers b ers that signed the \Vashington treaty The patrol boat ignored the hail acceptance of his offer but wil1 e died from burns, but all three were able to expreRs the appreciation of lgreed to try to Induce other powers and veered of!. .. unconscious after the plane struck the city commission and the people to agree to measuJ·es for~idding the the ground. Examination by Dr. o t 8 a It L a k e f or th e magammou · s use of asphyxiating gases m warfate, Ex-Governor Faces Jury . John J. Galligan attending surgeon ~ift.. " but he adm1tte~ y1at there are ob'Topeka, Kan.-Tlle trial of Jona· at the emergency hospital showed Th t 1 th t t .;tacles to proh1b1tmg the export of than M Davis former governor of e ma:vor sta ec a aecep ance h · ·· that the slmlls or both boyR v. ere · ,,f Salt air ~nd the railroad would cost sue gases. r~ansas. on dwrges of conspiring fractured and that Ke!Hon suffered the city nothing but reallY 111 eant the The article proposed by Mr. Bur- while in office with his bank com· a concussion of the brain and possi· giving ·to the cit~ of a half-million dol- to1~ declares that the. us.e in war of misRioner, Carl J. Peterson, to obtain ble internal injuries. Death is believ- lar proposition that can be made a pmsonous gases and hquHis_ has _b~en a hrihe in ,,xchange for a pardon has ed to have come quickly to the boys. ''evenue producer, as i.he resort, he justly condemned . b_Y_ pubilc opm10n 1 hegan before .r· 1dge James A. McXelson died in about twenty minutes . id . •• . and that the prohibition of such use Clure In the district court. The for-a ma<1e .., , 5 ,000. 1as·t ). ea1.. · t· without regaining consciousness. . · i );Ius been incorporate<1 m trea tes mer governor \\ent on triltl alone. PetThe standard J-1 plane, made by 'The ~ity, It "'.as expla~erl h! the which have been signed by a majority erson named jointly with Davis on the Standard Aircraft corporation and m'\yor, m acecptmg the gtft. :" 111 as- of the civilized powers. the warrant. is to be tried later. wme the bonds now outstandmg for equipped with a K-6 Curtiss motor the electrification of the railroad Oil· "The high contra<:ting parties there· 1 I>aviR faces two criminal :o;uits. In the hr.d not been in the air more than orating tO fore agree absolutely to prohibit the ease going to trial he and Peterson the beach, these bon<lH, five hours, Mr. Unger, owner of thP amountlng to export from their territory of any are alleged to have attempted lo oh$267,000 nnd being ser· plane said. Mr. Nelson was not em- 'a! bonds, running swch astJhyxiating poisonous or. other tain a hribe in exl'hange for a pardon until 1941. The ployed by the Unger Aircraft com· church now holds a mortgage given gases and all analogous liquids in- for \'1-'alt er Grundy, Hutt•hinson hank· pany. He was an experience::l aviator by the (\IIlUsernent company, which tended or designed for use in connec· cr, who is serving n sent pnce in the and on Saturdav ' had taken a flight l)ae been operating the reRort, but the tlon with the operations of war," the state pen1tentian.· for emhezzlement. in the plane with Mr. Unger. 'l)ayor announced that the tllortgage article says. 1 In the other RUit the ex-governor'::; son The two boys had long wanted to would be cancelled by the holders. Mr. Burton also submitted an alter- Russell G. navh. is named jointly take an airplane ride and had walked '''ThPre are no legal, financial or native text, as follows: with his fathP.r on charges of ob· to the aviation field. After waiting athE'r ohatacles in the way of accept· "To the end of lessening the hor- taining $1250 in exehange for a pararound for a half an hour the two 'tnce of the offer by Salt Lake City," ors of war and ameliorating the suf-1 don for J<'red \\'. Polland. convicted youngsters, who had been berrleuded ~air! the mayor. rerings of humanity Incident thereto, I La Cygne banker. A. L. Oswald, by Mr. Nelson In the past. readily ac· The mayor stated that If the city the high contracting parties agree to, young Hutchinson lawyer, who apcepted the kindly offer of Claron to took the prope:rty It would be with control the traffic In poisonous gases 1 pealed to .Jonath: n M. Davis while take a ride. 'he Idea of rebuilding the superstru<'· by prohibiting the exportation of all I the latter was govt•rnoi' to parclon A quarter of a mile had been cov- ture which was destroyed by the re- asphyxiating, toxic or deleterious I Grundy, Is the ~tate's Rtar witness ered when a strong gust of wind cent fire. He estimated that a mod- )gases and all analogous liquids. rna- I · ''l!l!.\ thirty-four ~ubpoenaed. caught the plane, turning to the ern structure>, one that would be 8 terials and devices manufactured an<\ soutl!.~reat. A side-slip followed. The credit to the city and the !\tate, could intended for use in warfare, under Fr.male Army Is Suggested plane went Into a tailspin, revolved be built tor about $250.000. adequate penalties applicable In all 1 Paris, l<~rance.-Diseussion !'ranee's but once and crashed nose downward As to the financing or this building places where such high contracting ~s of population through the infor 150 feet. the mayor said it might be done in parties exercise jurisdiction or concrease of deaths over births the Po"everal ways, either by a bond is~ue trol." tit .Tournul in au editorial ~lii<IC.t>RtE'" ;·oted by the people 01' by leasing the Darrow's Aid Sought By Shepherd that eYentu.,Jiy t lle government will Explosion Kills Three property to nn amusement company, Chlcago.-Clarence Durrow, who , be forc<>d to 111ake 1\'irlR do militar~· Pueblo, Colo.-Three men were klll· senit-e potentiHl ~.olrlierA to defenrt has helped 103 persons charged with which would advance the money to murder to dodge the gallows, has rebuild thP superstructure. He also ed and another Injured when 3500 the countrv in case of ill\·asion. Combeen employed to assist William D. 3uggested that money might be raised pounds of dynamite exploded In the 1 menting o~ the article the Intransig· yards, of the Colorad~. Fuel an~l Iron 1 P.ant points out the great advanta~e Shepherd emerge unscathed In his by public subscription. The mayor announced that the company. She~ts '\napped around I of this, remarking that girls play trial on the charge of slaying his mil· <·hur(·h w~s ma<le an offer of .~, 5 000 the cha~Ted bod1es of th~ men caught football, hocky, l'e cross-country nmionaire orphan ward, William Nelson " "' ' McClintock, with typhoid ~erms. In for the properly b1!t that President fire While they were bemg takE'n to ners. drive automohlle,; and eonjul('al the Shepherd case, Mr. Darrow will Grant decided to reject this offer and the count)· morgue and partially burn· dame;~ use the revolver as effil'ient i'l' not appear as chief counsel, but will . make a presc>nt of the resort to the ed the hearse they were being car· as men. "Soldiers' knapsacks ,are no ried in. act as a witness for Shepherd and people or Salt Lake City. heavier to C"arry than a marlret ba'l· will lend his advice to Stewart and l'et," :;ay>< the arti<"ie. "Men are br· Utah Coal Land Lease is Awarded Dempsey Lands in Europe O'Brien, regular counsel for the Shep<"Omilll\ rarer in Frane•! and we mnst \\'ashlngton.-A preference right to herds. ~out~a.m~ton, Eng.-Jack De~np j organize battalions of amazonH. The I a coal lease on 200 acres of public se~, "01 ld s heavyweight champwn, influence of women in the barra<·ks ·and in Summit eounty. Utah, was 01ccornpanied by his bride and hie during militury training would be Vandals Blow Dam Headgate awarded Moses Paggi by the interior friend Jimmy Russey have arrlve.l }Je!pful. They "ouid put flowers in Ogden.-'Tbe headgate or the clam department. The terms of the lease here from New York. He said he did I the window Rills, drive out bedhugs at the mouth of Ogden canyon was provide for an initial Investment of not know how long he would stay I and cockroaches and keep the quarblown out by yandals It waR reported $4000 on the property during the first on this side of the water or what he tt>rs clean. Military serYice for both here. The action caused the level of three years and a minimum produc· was going to do, exactly, "except sexes is the sole remedy against dethe water in the reservoir to drop to 1 tion of 3000 tons a year, beginning loaf around." Dempsey Is dlscllnE>d to trout and bass that were recently with the fourth year. A royalty of 8 take very SE.>riously several proposi· population. A woman nrquitting her maternal duties becomes a reserYist stocked hehlnd the dam by the state , cents a ton must be paid the govern· tlons for fights which have been after having two children and an auxfish and game commission. ment. handed him. iliary after her third infant." l I I Benjamin H. Conner. 1878, he has practiced his profe~slon f(,r 22 yeurs or more in hhl native •tate, ,n Xew York and ih Paris. lie has h•' vice pn•sldent or the merican rlJ.tml•"~ of commerce in h(JilO!iH ry secretury of the 1m•ru '"' l\'uvy Jpague in France, member of the board of trustees of the American hospltnl ancl vice president of the A~kc~<·iation of Internatlt•nal Jurists in Paris. ~1r. Conner is a member of many professional hodleR, induding the Americun Bar association, the American Society of International Lnw and the American Economic asHwlatlon. He Is a writer on legnl amd economic subjects. EntPI'ing the service as a cnptain of Infantry at Pnrls on August 14, 1917, llr. Conner t;:erved on the starr of the l<'irst division and the Second army <'orpli'. He was Ia ter counter-Pspionage officer In the First army ot the A. E. F. until the armistice. From December, 1918, to March, 1919, he was chief of the !!'gal department In the bureau of war damages at the peace conferf"llce. He was promoted to major on February 22, 1919, and was discharged at St. Algnan on :March 13 following. Privilege and Duty to Be Member ol Legion C'ongreesman Hamllton Fish, Jr., ot New York, In a recent statement comroenting on memberohlp In the .Amerleen Legion, suld: "Every ntE>ran of the World war ehould belong to the American LPglon. It Is a badge of honor and a privilege limited to those who served in the armed forces of the United Stntes during the war and received an honQrahle discharge. The Legion should <'OII.nt Its memhE.>rship by millions, not by hundred~ of thousandR. It is not finly the privilege. hut the duty ot eyery qunllfied ,·PtPran to apply for membership and the flame applies to those women eligible to rnembc>rshlp In the auxiliary. There are tens of thousands of young mc>n who are not qualified who woultl give their eye teeth to belong fo the American Legion. 11 All-American" Post at White Eagle, Okla. An "All-Arnerlc'an·• po~t of the American Legion in thP strictest 8ense of that term Is located at White Eagle, Okla. All the memher>~ of But'l'ulo post of the Legion there ure full·hlooded American Indluns. Each memher of the )lOst owns an allotment of lund from the govl"rnment anrl !til l'I"Side on the resernttlon near While EaJ::Ie. 'The Rulfult) Braves. ouly n•epntly organized, ure making plan>< for a memhPr~hfp drive through whkh they ~XJ;+>et to s[l!n up all f'llglhlp memhNa of thC>ir trihe In the Yldnity ot White .Eu~;le I as I I Many Admit Guilt in Bomb Plot Vienna .. -Dispatche;; from Sofia RllY l.hat all the princip11ls chaq~ed with ;esponsihility for the recent homhlng :lf the S,·eti Kral cathedral in whit•h L60 persons were killed have )lleaded guilty with the exception of one derendant named Koeff. I Annual Defence Day Planned Washlngton.-General staff plans for making Defense day a regular anannal event to be held each year coIncident with Armistice day exercises Kovemher ll, have been completed an<! a walt only \\'hite House approval to be put Into motion. The project Is exp(jcted to be presented to tho president soon for final action, with urgent reeommendatlons of the reserve officers' association that 1t be approved. 1 Oil Promotion Plot is Bared Seaplane to Try For Record Los Angeles.-Alleged mail frauds Philadelphia.-The seaplane PN-9, '1 which postal authoritieR claim will which last week shattered th11 total approximately $20,000,000 were world's record for nonstop !light by 1investigated here by a federal grand remaining in the air twenty·eight · TllC pro b e 1_nvo · 1,·es operatwns · Jury. hours and t hi rty·s i x m 1nutes, wi 1I atof the Tnvader 011 corporation and tempt next week to better other recits subsidiaries of Muskogee Okla.,, ords. The plane will go after the and the Owensmouth Oil eorporatlon records for speed and carrying capaof 1-'orth \\'orth, Texas. Three tons j city, Tw<'nty of these records are of evidence, Including books and rec- Mid to be held by rtalinn fllers, but ord11 of the oil companies were Lieutenants C. H. Schlldaue1·, and J. brought here to be scanned by the ln·]R. Kyle, the PN·9's pilots, are conflve!tlg~tors. dent their craft can surpass them. i Cooper Wins Auto Race and $10,000 Charlotte Speedway. N. C.-~faintaining his lead over the last fifty miles by steady consistent driving, l%rl Cooper won the 250-mile Memorial day race, winning the first prize of $10,000. Harry Hartz wa>~ second and Tommy 1\Illton, winner of last year's race, who led the field for the !lrst 200 miles, came In tbircl. Coop· er's official time was 2 hours 2 min· ates and 55 seconds, an averabe of &early 125 miles an hour. Salt Lake City.-Preparatio or lhe annual convention of the Utah rlldsion of the International A socia-, rion of Identification, which is. to b 1~lJ at the 1\'ewhouse hotel June ~ rtud 10, are now under way nd an Ia borate program is being planned A numlie1· of committee!> have been appointed liy Chief of Police :Joseph E. Burbidge tu make the necessary .1rrangements. H<>llin.- 1-'iehl Marshal von Hindenburg was inaugurated pre~>ident or Salt Lake City.--Mr!:!- :\om Olson Germany May 12th. .Jf Neola, Duchesne county, was foun•l Ex<·r•pt for a hrief ~hout or pro- guilty of having used the mails t:.. t(~t from the communi~ts. the inaug·lefraud in the United States district urution was carriP<l out aec·onllng to court. The 17-year-old girl wall ac schetlnle, the field murr.hal being cused on fou:- ,..ounts of send ing fie· sworn into office by Reichst.ag Pres- tldous cheeks to mail order hous • ident Paul Loebe hefore a crowded In payment for clothing. house>. Logan -Pistol practice hns beoo The oath taken by the president • begun by the members of F battery was as follows: (•f the Natiomri Guard, acco rding to "f HWPar to de,·otP all my energies 1 (~Uptain Fred 'Thomas, who ts super· to tho welfare of the c;erman people, to inc-re;lse their nrospurity. to pro· vising the Instruction of the> men. The practice will prepare tl1e men for simteet them from injury ao preserve Ilar work this summer at Camp thl• constitutiqn an<l laws of the C"Oill· Is, where the local battery will spend monwealth, to r•erform m~· duties two weeks cr·nscientiou;;ly and to deal justly with all." Ogden.-Another $25,000 h been To this he added the religir ns at-\ received from the federal govern ment firmation ":;o help me (;()(1." there- roing to the construction of federal nt, the hy setting a new prceedc nt for Ger- ,dcl highways in Utah in pay t}iggest part, of moneys alr ady exman Jlresidents . The president-eleet ldt the chan- pPncled under state direct!oD.> Some cellor's palace. where ho had Hpent $i595 of the amount is 1 placmg the night at about 11:45 a 111. for the funds expendpd on the Ash Creek reichstag IH1ilding where the inaug- bridge, $6650 on the project et W<'en ,\nclerson's ranch and 'Toe uerville , ural ceremony was held. His route Ia:. through the \V ilhelm- $520!! on the road betweer t ra>-<He and Unter-den·Linclcu. br way Junction and Big \Yash In Snn of the central arch of the Drunden- :ounty; $2989 on the Chicke hurg gate. \,·hieh was formerly re· project and $2552 on the u toff. served for the empero1· anct through whil'h also President !%en's funeral Salt Lake proces!;ion passed to the short street two passengers met eonnecting with the reich'Stag liuild· near the Saltair speedway when in g. airplane in which they were The street was recently name<l went into a tailspin and Frl"iderich Ebertstrassee in honor of ~he ground. Mr. Nelson the late pr·esident and the govern. iy superintentlettt .fllo"'ftra.... ,•·eslt•rn ment announcements of the official mall division. program for the first time designated Ogden.-Data it as such. ous canal and Irrigation At the door of the reichstag building, ''on Hindenburg was greeted by In Weber, Davis, Summit and the vice presidents and the adminis- counties, particularly tration d!J·pctor, who conducted him financial standing is now to the waiting Herr Loeb. The mar- thered for submission to the ble steps leading to the chamher were States reclamation service in tion with the Echo canyon da dPeorat~·cl with deep hlue hydrangeas, rirst unit of the Salt Lake Basi the new president's favorite flower. ject. with laurel trees on either side. Al noon von Hindenhurg. accompanSpanish Fork.-John E. ied hy LoP.be, entered the chamber, partment commander of the which was hare of decorntions ex- can Legion, has been <"e]lt around the presidt'nt·~ table. Go\'ernor George H. Dern to Behind the president'H chair hung a an assi~tant to Adjutant G huge ta pe,strr bearing the , German G. Williams in distributing eoat of arms which was (;H<'a':<Pd in tured German war trophit o; laurel wref,ths interwon n with the out the state of l'tah Ea< h repuhlkan <·ulors of hlucK red and the union has been aR~ignecl gold. to of the captured war The presldt•nt's tahlP at which Von proportion to t.h<> num!Jer of Hin1len hurg stood whil r: heing sworn furnished into offi<·<>. wa:; eovered "ith a large Provo. The seventh republican flag and waH flanked on 1 1·ention o .he Utah State either side by hydrangpas. aRsoria[ ion will be held In June 5 and 6. Jo~eph T. Veteran Diplomat Dead a meeting or the county orga t Lynclhnr~t. England. Sir· Stephen was named chairman of the Lec<"h, "ho for thirty-two yt>urs was a memhe1· or the B1·itish d i)llomatic ing s<>nite, \\Us found dE>ad in bed ut his the vh;iting bankerR. home here. Sir Stephen Leel'i1 was t·er will call a meeting born in HG4, educated at Eton and mittees to work out the d Mngdalena f'O!lege, 0:-..forcl ancl enter· once. ed tlw Rritish diplomatic servil-e as Salt Lake City.--An attaehe in USR, sel'\'ing ~uc<•essfully at Rerlin, Rrn~:wh:. Con~tuntiuuple. more than twP.lve million LihHon, Rome. C"openhagPll, Chril'· the valuation of property tiauia, Peking and In Central mer· is shown hy tho figures just ka. He retired from the ~<en·ice in by tho state board or equal! ''alues being on public uti! la.:!O. mining companies, the fig lng a grand total or $219,4 Reticent On Criticism compared with $207,463,456 Chica:;o. • \'i<:e Presi<lent Charles Salt Lake C'ity.-The G. Da" ~s was Hhown a copy of r£· ston of the Utah mark!l attributed to Senator \\'llliam the veteran's bureau H. King, democrat, Utah. eriticiRing the Dawes proposal to revise the senate rules to prevent one or more sen- "ard lng to a report utors from hlocking the majority. The regional manager. Yice pre:;ident, however, refn>:!ed to al office waR the ern n's bureaus to I'OmllleH t. and reestablished to comply rro1·isions of the world war American Autos Flood England act. pas:;ed by congress and London.-Anwri<:an made automo· eel hy the Jlresident June 7, biles are being Hhipp,..d to Great Rritourpose of thiR dPcenti·allzat ian at the rate of a tbonsand a dar •o eliminate as much delay as a result of ('haneellur Chur~hill's hle in the handling of claims threat to make the McKenna duties. •ler all pos~ihle Hen-ice to a whi<-h plaeed a tax of :J5 ner c·ent on at c,r near his home. foreign carH 01· parts, retroat:th·e ~ew PRESIDENT W 1LL GIVE APPROV· AL TO u. s. DELEGATES AT GENEVA MEET ~![~fi~ J Alvin Gash, 16, of this klllt"c! when he climbed a :;ion tower in the foothills Og•l•n and came in contact 1 '':ire earrylng 44,000. YOitR. 1 fl om the to\\ <'r and Ill fallln flnotlwr wire. His dothing rlames whpn police offieers him. Salt Lake City.-P. A. Europe Frowns On Hindenburg Salt Loke was r('e!ectcd Paris.-The FrP,nch, British, Italian and Bel~ian governments have clecided to omit the usual formal congrat- organization in the fPc• ulationK to a newly elected d1ief of llo also was named d · · 11 . s t at< m t 11e case o~~ FlP c Marsha 1 national convention of von Hindenburg, Germany's presi- at Detroit, l\fich., n<>xt rlent-elect in view of the fad that his I Salt Lake City name Is sUn on the list of those Rqnare mile of territory Is charged with war crimes. The four decl to Salt Lake City as a DOWers it is stated will simply tor- nctlon uy ~he city commiss ward a brief acknowledgement when clding to exteml the city notif_iPcl of his assumption of tht ~alt Lake City ln the lll'esldenr·)'. aectlon. I |