OCR Text |
Show . THC Tuesday WIATHtH Wtnwdiy Local Settlement PrUaa. It 10, IJ flltver I rad C('Hr :j kKvVsK ,,..l.ti5 (cwiuodroe VOL. 101, NO. One way to gr.in l to Lkirr is Tribune things through Want Ads. JT fair. SALT LAKE CUT, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 4, lfrjo. 120. 22 PAGES FIVE CENTS UTAH. G. 0. P. BA TTLECR Y; E. WARSHIPS GO TO MEXICAN WA TERS NATI mo ns TIIEI 1 1,1111110 J. LARKIN, noted JAMES who tus been sentenced to lon jriaon tana t bard labor. UIZJOIHS 0, TOLL ''ENEMIES OF Two Women Going to Convention j DELEGATES t Urge gad one of the tlternktee to the Republican national elected yeetfjday at Price. Top. (left. to right),.. Mra. Jeanette A Hyde, delegate at large, and Mr. Lily 0. Wolstenholme, alternate. Center (left). Senator Reed Smoot; (right), J. U. Eldredge, Jr., and below, J. C. Lynch, delegate at large. . OfMOIEIIOTE 1IHEE Relation With Carranza Government j Escobar I Won Over to the Rebel Cause. Oklahoma Village Virtually Wiped Out by Big Tornado . Which Sweep Over Country. Returns at Early Hour Give Him Substantial Majority Over Senator Hiram , Johnson. Welfare of Nation D dared Paramount Opening Speeches Before Price Convention. Are U. S. Destroyer Ordered to Vera Cruz Whole Familie Are Crushed to . Death in Ruin; Hasty Relief Is Organized by Citizen. Californians Managers Wilson Administration Is Assailed; Ratification of Pact With Reservations Advocated. Sever - and kee ' Tampico; Reported Yan- Slain. MUSKOGEE, 'Okie., May 3, Tli dqath tolls from tho tornado at Ttgfri, Cherokee county, reached That EL FASO, Taxaa, May h bad Joined tba revrolution to avert tho possibility of bloodshed, wee the aubttance of an addreea made by General Escobar before a civilian audience at Theater X In Juaret tonight. It was announced that General Urbalejo trd his, troops at Caaaa Grande had joined the revolution. , i fifty one tonight, according to a telephone message from Locust Grove. Seven person are unaccounted for, with about . 100 Injured. A special train bearing the injured in on the way to Muskogee. t " fly Universal ferv l.c. has V.L I A 80, Texas. May 2. Juancaiatulated. The Mexican town Just across the border from Et Baso was In Years. ot a fhe hands of the rebels tonight, comfcfiot was fired when (he military mander renounced Carranxa. Tli maniNEW lORIC, May 1. Extraordinary festo waa Issued at 2 o'clock and was ac- precautions were' taken when today claimed bv th ringing of church bells Janies J. Larkin. Irish agitator, convicted of was leaf week Juarex All criminal anarchy, waa and the blare of bands. sentenced lo five to ten years tn stale itliib'jftmg. with hard labor. ' ' Clem rat Joseph O. Escobar. Cartanxa prison Fifteen detocLiyo commanded by Sr- bomb fdbfrek. gtant Janus J. Gelgan of fhS of the Jua. tommander-ln-chlc- f god several deputies headed by was won o, er to the rebel cause' after squad. hlierlff H. David the Knott, gunrded members of his staff and prominent ci- courtroom, which was filled with Larkin the sympathisers. taka step, vilian bad urged him to woman was rebuked by the and tine lie had stood out during the night w lifer, she roes and attempted to court joufg the Mexearly tdday against renouncing Lai km's tike hand as be wipe led away. was presentican government. Today he Called to the bar, the woman esld: ed with an agreement for the transfer revolution-nistrose "I Wniply thinking I would be of tho military forces to the to show respect In that man1 It was slimed bv his regimentalto and permitted ner for the man for whom perhaps I si He consented imop commanders. have more respect than any other. I fix his signature. would be allowed to rise as thought to surrendered supporters on does I for The rity whs the judge of the court.' of Oeneral Obregon. Obregon la a women shook hands with Ear-ki- n Several is for president of Mexico and and of foircer Assembly-ma- n the mother The Carranxa. by President now Ultlow, when serving sentence for revolution had its 4 urrsnsa attempted to acml troops into criminal anarchy, embraced him. the state of Honors to oppose Obregon a candidacy there. Kojicra revolted. s. . can-dicta- te Populace Rejoices. 1,1 tl' was The United States government J0"'1 an merely an onlooker. be--Itn was established In Obregon Junta had K1 Paso ten days ago and that negotiations were being carried on with the Carranxa garrison across the riter. No arreats were made, however. Oeneral EsTt waa reported tonight stating cobar would Issue a proclamationCarranaa. against Juarc had revolted recogmean Juarex not did It but that i nized Oeneral Obregon. were troops Two trains of revolutionary from Chireported approaching Juareg expecthuahua City tonight. It was not would attempt to regain ed Carranxa In He has troops Jnare Immediately. but they are the Casas Grandee district, In be to said and mostly taquE Indians, a rebellions mood. maThe fall of Juarex to Obregon has or the terially weakened the toresistance the general reCcrranza government volt which i sweeping the country. Business Is Resumed. Half an hour after the revolutionist were In control of Juares business waa The only indication of a resumed. The t hangs was the general nocelebration. here. surprise Call of the city caused since last week. Jt had been expected revoAmerican interests here regard thetoward friendlv more as forces lutionary waa Carranxa. the United State thanmen. who intendKtfty Chicago business on a commercial Mexico invade ed to rule-iowere In Juarex when the change It wae in government wag announced not expected they would cont mie Into with Mexico, although communication atat Chihuahlua City, capital city of the of Chihuahua, will be resumed. All communication with the capital waa cut off last week when the revolutionists gained control of wires and railroads at Chihuahua City. Oeneral ignaclo Enriques, commander of the rural governor wlll be selected ac-as of Chihuahua, ptovlslonal cording to reimrts tonight. General V. Elias Calles ts mobillxing in Sonora, with which he (nK) troops will march through pulpits pass in the Sierra Mudres into Chihuahua. heAfter wlU Junes with hi column .thence coining to9outh to Chihuahua City, proceed will march io Torreon and from there City. This was announced fn Mexico M. fcllaa, Arturo by late tonight here brother of General Calles. n, (J. S. DESTROYERS ARE ORDERED TO MEXICAN PORTS 1. More . bodies have been recovered by rescue worker from Muskogee, and Locust Grove. More are to be iu the wreckage. Only three buildings remained standing after the storm tad passed, Forty-tnre- e Tab-lequ- ed - Wrote. tanilllce uyr cmtbeditghdeatb heu lively home were torif to pieces by the force of tli gale. Nine member of the Levena family, were killed; seven of the Littlefield family, eight persor.e by the name of Prank and five members of the Wilkerson family are numbered among the dead. Forty-twcofftne are being sent to the scene of the storm from Tahlequah. This la many as could be found in the city. Temporary hospitals have been organised amid the wreckage and scores of severely Injured are being given first aid. Those who can stand the trip to Tahlequah are being taken ther, where they will be placed In hospitals. V. o- n - WILL ATTEMPT TO HIGH PRICES GRUNAU READY TO MAKE CONCESSIONS CHICAGO, May 3 Nine thousand railway switchmen who walked out In sympathy with the strike called her April by the Chicago Yardmen's association aie willing to return to work If tualr seniority r,ghts are restored. John Grunau, president of the C. Y. A., declared in fed- eral court this morning. Grunau and forty-o- n other officers of the C. Y. A. and the United association were arraigned onEnglnrren' charges of conspiracy to violate th Lever act and at Urunau's request tl.e cases were continued until May 1. defendants in Twenty of the forty-tw- o the conspiracy case have quit the railroads and taken other work. X Pressed Into Service. Doctors, nurses and tssieUjitg impressed Into aervL have worked unceasingly since early this morning earing for th injured. A number of the wounded are en route to Tahlequah. Due to the rough country and poor roads It will likely bo late this evening before they can be placed In th hospital there. One of the freaks of the storm was that a small frame ahack, uninhabited, was left standing in the heart of the town, while brick building housing many eggs persons around It were raxed. Th school house, a concrete building, was crushed. Clothing was found plastered on trees several miles from the storm's path by rescuers th's morning. The storm covered an area three miles long and one mil wide, apparently dropping in time to hit the It.village and rising soon after leaving REFUSES TO REOPEN Country Is Deluged. Members of the rescue parties who STEEL TRUST CASE turned her tonight with the Injured told re- bed S-- May OTTAWA, May 3 While the Canadian j The little village of Peggs is In 'the patriotic fund is being used to assist foothill on the northern border of CherAmerican veterans In Canada. 'lt ie like east of pu'ling teeth" to get aid from the Ameri- okee county, about sixty can Red Cross for former Canadian sol- Tulaa. The place ie off the railroad. diers residing In the Lulled States, C. Tahlequah, fifteen miles south, la the II. Homier, executive secretary of the efet railroad station, Vancouver branch of the Canadian pa- trlotlc fund, testified today before the' Those familiar with the roads in the on pensions. parliamentary committee vicinity eay it ia practically Impossible He said that particularly In Seattle, to reach Peggs by motor car. soldiers or their families who The Tulsa Tribune started a newspaper needed aid In establishing themselves were being told bv the American Red man by airplane to the stricken district Cross to get out and earn their own livelithis morning. hood. John Littlefield, hie wife and six of Many men discharged from service In British Columbia, he said, wete Ameritheir seven children were among those can, enlisted in California for the trans- killed in the storm, a report to Tahleport or engineering service. quah said. Th only physician In the town. Dr. W. R. Hill, also wax killed. Tahlequah doctors were the .first to reach the scene. Six physicians left there SMASH Irqmediately after the storm was s'ghted last night. Later they sent calls for 3 One Mnv YORK. NEW of New more assistance and at ( o'clock this Yorks larg-- st department store Inserted morning one hundred automobiles with advertisements In todays newspapers an- men and women relief workers w ere on nouncing that it would attempt "to break their way to the Injured. the backbone of high prices" by offering had a population The stricken village its stock valued at y2o.O00.0fi4 at a reduc- Of about 250. -tion of 20 'per cent. The only goods exa When the rescuer rived in cluded will be about 50,000 worth of they found only a heap of twisted, Peggs under merchandise purchased regudebris. A heavy rain and hail price which cannot "be honorably i accompanied th storm and when the lation. changed. workers collecting the bodies from The only motive hi making this general the rulnebegan eo plastered with many were reductlor! said the advertisement, ia a tl e mud that tliev- - had to be washed "conscientious sense of duty made neces. 0ff before thev could be identified, sary by the reports of government in- -j The dead were collected In shelters vestigators tiat prices are still on tne ;tft by the. tangled walls and roofs, j upward trerd, The supreme W AAHTVGTVfN, May court today refused to grant th government request for a rehearing of the antitrust sut against the United States American de- -t bieel corporation. W tsllINOTON. hlav 3 to Vera Gru The government's molten for a rehearordered been have lovers thete. ing was principally on th contenand Tampico to protect Americans Ision In the steel on ted the at tion tlil the couii's tierirted The uavv dnartment with that on of the nate department, where it cues on Jlarxhte cmf th Order US, dissolution ,g of the warehlps April na.. explainedn Sod) teat the. In and certain of Its rail romper, thoee Reading xard imteraiu koiiUI subemlanes. Both qgj'ses were and ou decidua l a 4 to ( decision. AWeuumiea on fage . CoRunn i le Okie., than fifty persons are known to have been killed and approximately 100 were Injured In a cyclone that virtually wiped out Pegga, a small village In the northwest corner of Cherokee county, about 9 . oclock last night. WITNESS TAKES RAP AT U. S.vRED CROSS Off the Railroad. r. trturo Ellas, regarded as chief revolutionists, e of the Honor negotiated the transfer of Juarex today. When the news came that the garrison had been won. the populace Joined In t celebration that continued throughout the repre-nenta- MUSKOGEE, James J. Larkin Must Serve Term of Five to Ten ! , encountered In locating difficulties and Identifying the bodies. A deluge of rain accompanied the torsade and t ie first relief party found the vl!.age a tangled mas of wrei kage. with pooie of water standing everywhere and mud a oaton deep. In some cases sec era bod'ee were found among the ruins of one building, indicating whole Tam. lies had been wiped out. The hodlee were covered with mud. They were removed anj piled In nook and cor- 2, Cotmoa 8.) (Conttnued on of Fill gv t . Abandon Plan for Recount m New Jersey; Indiana Vote Today. BALTIMORE, MJ., May 3. Com and returns from Baltimore, plete from the practically complete' return counties of the state. In today's presidential preference primaries, gave General Leonard Wood IS, 904 votes to 90S9 for Senator Hiram W. Johnson, a majority of 7141 for the former. General Wood, carried Baltimore by 25C7. He also carried twnty-c- n out cf twenty-thre- e counties and will have 1M ouf of 139 votes In the Republican state convention, which will elect sixteen national delegates. The vote was on of the lightest ever cast at a primary in Maryland. The following incumbent congressmen were renominated: Democrats Carville D. Benton, Second district; Char's P. Ooady, Third district; J. Charles Lltuhlcum, Fourth district. n publics william X. Andrews First d' strict; district, Kydney IL Mud'J-Vt- h rederi Jk 'N. -- Fibiman.' u. utemof;-- " 10 XI. Trlbtui, BRICK, May I With a battle-cr- y cf "natkmal.xm," a demand for the aUok-tlu- n of the peace treaty with th . reeeryat'one. Republicans front ail of th state met here today for thep.i of delegates to the national at Chiv'd go. Tb delegates a ill go' to th convention unlnetructed any presidential caadidate. The platform adopted endorsed th stand of Republican senators on t'e peace treaty, scores tb national Den ,. administration for It Mexican for alleged encouragement of setis and pledges the Republicans to wo: k for the deportation ef radicals, the settlement of the disputes between labor a: il Industry on the basis of an honest dy t wag for an honest day's work fur tie one and assurance of dependable .r-- '. and freedom Of InterruHion f 4 tfker. The platform . or trod fv.,..a.t.uv t r k tlJ, h an old to service men.. Sinna.1 Loe cn-vend- or U-- r pel-ky- ia; v 4 By Universal BervUa. Returns frpm BALTIMORE, May todays presidential preference primary hi Maryland indicate4 that General Leonard Wood has carried the state by a rood majority over Senator Hiram W, Johnson of California, his only competitor. Com-- , plete qnofflclal returns put Wood's plural-It- y at 744. Wood got his heaviest vote In this dty and In eastern Maryland. Johnson won In western Maryland and In th fpwna of Cumberland, Hagerstown and other rural sections Johnson's managers counted on winning Baltimore to offset the big Wood vote which was looked for from Annapolis and other points on the eastern shore. The big vote given for Wood tn Baltimore, howrover, vvhlch was Indicated by early returns In tills city, destroyed the hope of Johnson's supporters that he would carry th state. Wood appears to have won not oWy the presidential preference vote, but has (Continued on Ttg 18, Column 1.) Bride Arrives (o Find Death Preceded Her Democrats Assailed. The Democrats are aesaUed In the report for "the waste of public funda." Demand is made In (he reeolu-t.on for a revision of school and tax iawa In the state to permit of adequato salaries for teachers. The convention elected as Mo- gates from the state at large United states denator Reed r'moot by acclamation. Jeqanette A. Hyde of Salt Lake and J. L. Eldredge, Jr of Ogden on the t: I balot, and J. t Lynch of Balt Iaike a. lourth delegate after an hour of and ngle dispute. oiiowmg the election of the delegate, rule were snsiwjode'l and Mr, t r Mtclst.ruioimo cf halt Lake ay ef lryn couni y, T. H. Burton tf IXephl and P. C. fleorup of Sailiui v, ' e.ected alternate from In slat at larg-b- y acclamation. The dug battle was tveen J. C. Lsacli and A. J. Lee for t e fourth delegate. The meeting was at 7 oco a 'ter a telegram had oecn received from Senator fcrnoot congratulating the co ventloii on toe woik dune. fl-- , , -- Charged by Federal Grand Jury of Violating Ship Districts Eject. Delegatee from the K rst d'etrlct met immediately oorgresso. after f J state convention adjourned. Air. VVfn called the session to order and i ij troduced Alva D. McGuire of who ie chairman of the of that district. , yt . j publican committee J. Lowe was then elected chairman ard Mr, McGuire secretary of the meeting On the first ballot L. K. Anderson t f Banpetq.and Clarence P. Cardon of Logan w ore elected delegates. Vole tha were cast for alternate and Mra. Alice Uolllna of. Weber county and Jame Knudson of Boxelder county were elect ed on' the first ballot Delegates from th Second emigre-?- . a. . at district met in the high school building. E. O, Lratherwood was made chapman and Lawrence Klllson secretary. Harold P. Fabian of Halt Lake and a , E. Loose of Provo were elected on t' first ballot. The alternate selected were Judge F. V. Loofbourow and J. Pari, r White of flalt Lake. , s At the afternoon session of the si' convention reports of tho commute, a were made and adopted. Registry Act. An indictment NEW YORK, May chargring Charles W. Morse with violating the shipping beard act, which prohibits sale of American registered vessels to foreigners, was returned by th federal grand Jury today. With Morse were indicted Captain W. S, Mitchell, the United States Steamship company and the J. G. MeColloch com(Chicago Tribune Special Bervice.) pany. Judge A. X. Hand issued bench 3. There arrived May CHICAGO, wai rants upon request of Assistant Feda sonny Italy today District Attorney Jerome Simmons, eral young bride, whose fine eyes were who has been tonducting an investigalasting four months. bright with hope. She waa coming tion Tne indu tments t barge that In August, to meet Antonio Mirandi, her hus1917, the steamnlilp John J. McCulloch was sold for t S'O.unO to the government band, who waa a citizen of the great of Tunis, a Freni h protectorate, United States and who had enlisted Mr. Morse entered a idea of not guilty fc. u. Gibboney. At and fought as an American in through hisof rltornev. The heai mg. Mr. Gibboney the close France. Also he was a prosperous in Issued a statement whu h he said It was merchant in a modest sort of way. true that toin a 1917, negotiations for salecon-of French company were tne ship He was a member ef the American ducted, but that completion of the transaction was conditioned on the approval of Legkm, a voter, respected by all the United Butes authorities. who knew him, "When a question waa made about it," ' Bo she who had been Raffaoia he said, the sole niattir was submitted to the United States board and Fadula hack in Tuscany, came with Ij was espectady examinedshipping by the Honorable Balnbridge I'olbv. then a member of the her head high to meet her husband. board. Everv detail w a considered and She found him in a black casket at the suggestion of the shipping board waso abandoned " in a darkened 'room he had died theMr.transactionwaa held In 15.440 ball Morse three day ago and the parish priest furnished by a surely company. Captain whose home ia In London, was had forbidden that she be notified Mitchell, held In 5uw ball. of his death. She must not know until she is here, he said, and aha must have a last look at the body before It ia buried. The couple married four years age and Antonio came to tho land of to build a home. Then opportunity came the war, and "Tony, his spirit fired by true Americanism, wag eager to enlist. His comrades say he waa a splendid soldier. His neighbors say be was an upright citizen. When he returned be plunged Into hie work, night and day.. and tent for bis bride. Then pneumonia seized him. v SERIOUS CLASH IS REPORTED IN SPAIN BARCELONA. Mar 3 The via!, of Manual Joffre her developed today into a great Catalonist political demonstration whim led to serious incident. This was a collision between the regional authorities and the Cataionlst miuvi.'i;al guard. Two guards were wounded. The 'trouble arose when a poem bv feapola, th deed Cat Ion poet, was being read at the floral festivities In honor of Joffre. The people were shouting Death to end "Long live the Catalonians! Spn!" were when th civil guards called to clear the hell In attempting to do so they encountered th guardians of the building and Catalonist ho municipal guards, fichu but ner oeromc. Mareluil Joffr, ftcon)pdDic1 by Joffro. mantan had Lit ftieoo iu a automooUe lor Gtroim, ift 4 r 4 jt .ssoeje r a, e. a. iqwWSWi sew ae ' Reports Read. Charles M. Morris reported for the eo v mlttee on credentials fwispite tome a m debate, It was adopted as read, ai -- Important Radical Witness Commits Suicide in New York Building. ' t.; lows- "Your committee on credentials to, ? .cave to reourl as follow. j. lrstTmtt aJ counties arc dale re ' 4 t convention, seated at thl except xountie of Dnkge.u, entitled to cue v t Kano, entitled to four vote-- T Rich, eetltid lo four votes, and Piute, cu'ltlcJ to t i i , v vbt. e. NEW TORK, Jlay 3. Toi.y Taxlo. 3J years old. detained by the department of justice as an Important witness against a number of radicals involved in the bomb outrages last June, committed suicide early, today by hurling himself from a w Indow on the fourteenth floor of a Psrlc Row office Iniliding, where the department headquarters are located. Chief William J. Mvnn of the department said today that Taxlo was one of several anarchists who were arrested In connection with th bomb explosion of June 2, last, and had been deta.ned at headquarters as s government witness for six weeks Th June bomb attacks Included the homes of Judges Charles C. Nott of general sessions court in New York and Attorney General Palmer at Washington. The explosions resuited iu the death of two persons. Taxtu a suicide revealed for the f ret time that siiv Important arrests ever bad Seen made In connection with the cose Chief Flynn sate that the man's real name was Andrae Baieedo. He ad n tied, according to Chief Flvm. 2, Column (Continued en Pg i) "Second That the delesra'es and a ternate whose l.em, s hate oeen certified by the county organisations of the respective coumie be considered declared to be the dulv elected and qq fled delegates from th said leaped, e counties Third That each county snail the right to vote the full number of v.. apportioned to such county by the committee in Its official call; pro.1.x io. , tui however, that where any delegate . represen! ed, either In person or bypr--nm e t, whola the County delegatvon either in person or by proxy, bv mai. c. : votes shall determine bow tne a'' . vote or votes ehaU be'eset and alien a cordlngly vote the same. c,' -- s. -- Proxies Allowed. "Fourth That proxies s.ivil be .?.' sosen.w of any de esste or nate. provided the holder of the p o, . in th - a legal resident of the county from e was e.Kt-- d the abeent de.egst Where an alternate I preset t fro l gl -t he or dlsirlpre'iutt r'g.,t to vote o prefereme and an abste t by I ruxv riven f. a.'iv uoi crecin t or u e ell , n ,i i . r -a Jjdge F. C. Loc'w roe air (Continued on Fij 3, Colusa f I -- . , 1 , a e |