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Show THE WEATHFR Tribune Wants- - wield an influence in business, professional and domestic life. 3 Mc'uu' Saturday fair; possibly showers north por.i tlon; cootor Mit portion Friday, Local Settlement Price. fcii Sllooi' Domestic, Lead Copper (cathodes) 8S; 4 8c 8904 foreign - - 1S 1J - g SALT LAKE CITY, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 27,1920. VOL. 101, NO. 135. 2:. V H QF t .'. G. .in. 22 PAGES FIVE CENTS iim. 0. CHARGES P. SLUSH FUND ; Declares Is BetQg Made to Purchase , Election ofjDpposingtT0 Nation-witfe:End- rt "T-tl--' t - - t Quotes From RepcSli- mLSOXirgnu er ijricultnri- whoea death can Treasurers Bulle- tie Alustrr occurred in Iowa. s, f-r; in. Support of HU 3 : tin for Secretary Recent Accusations. En- Vi r - Jr. Democratic Nominee i Vice President Rouses thusiasm at Tabernacle. 4 Advocates League of Nations and Urges Support of Cox and Progress. V. Franklin Roosevelt, Dgroocra tic nomine for vie president, roused a capacity audience at the tabernacle mass meeting last night to a high pitch of enthusiasm through hjs presentation of the campaign issues, laying his strongest emphasis upon the necessity for the league of nations and the ratification of-tpeace treaty carrying thp covenant His declaration that It la the duty of America to fulfill the obligation She had undertaken before the world was greeted with prolonged cheprs and loud applause and his characterisation of President WDson as being as much a sacrifice of the war as the boys who were torpodoed or who died in the trenches brought the crowd to its feet with a thunderous approval that lasted for several minutes. More than 1000 persons were In waiting at the tabernacle when the doors were opened at 7 o'clock and the throng poured in rapidly until, at a few minutes after save for the 3 oclock, the auditorium, choir seats, was filled. For ten minutes before (ho meeting was called to order -ProfeseoT ). J. RcCldlts rendered "VlwtRm on the organ, flaying patriotic he 1 '. popular, airg ?$$ plaudcd. L ' v, ,, . ; '.$WJcrLtfc State Chairman H, I Jful- Colonel C. A. Boyd of iii(tr introdiur as chairman of the meeting. Declaring that he appeared as a ringmaster to see that the circus went on properly, he announced a violin number by Professor Willard Welbe, who, with the or- gan accompaniment, gave two selections in splendid form, receiving loud applause. Ohio Judge Speaks. Chairman Boyd Introduced Justice Rob- ert Marx of the superior court of Ohio as a man who comes from the state which would send us the next president Justice Marx, in of the United States. the chairbeginning his remarks, declared came from "who said man should have that would that part of the state of Ohio he being a send us the next president, resident of Mr. Cox e city. The Justice the eulogised Franklin D. Roosevelt as had roan under whose direction the navy 2000 more to 200 than from ships grown at the cIobs of the war, with a force of bluejackets that had expanded from to 600,000; who had taken so vital an Interest In the welfare of the boys In the service that ha had accompanied boats ot convoy and stood shoulder to water. shoulder with them across the It was. however, of the work of Governor Cox in Ohio, as ona of the biggest progress, factors in the story of human that he wanted to speak, he said, with som detail. He referred to his long and intimate acquaintance with the governor, telling how ho rose from a newsboy and of a printer's devil to be the publisher a paper which had aucceeedd because it ever adhered to the policy qf giving all the news of both sides of a question. h, OS,-0- - Battles fur. People.- - . "It1 was 'the Progressive -sent Mr. .3 - Republican Cox, a Demoote of Ohio that said the speaker, and crat, to congress.''there die same reactionwhen he found today, ary eiemont that Is opposing himand the found It In Hanna and Foraker is as old Harding guard, others of the don had he "Because of the work that in congress, Mr. Cox was elected gover- (Oontioned on Pag 17, Column 4.1 Game Law Booklet Free to All Huntsmen and whnt be mar kill without coming into conflict with the gams warden. The government, through the bio-- ! logical survey, keeps .track of the laws in all the states and combines them in one booklet that will tell man. anywhere, everything he tny needs to know on this subject. Get the booklet', FREE, from our Washington information bureau. Write plainly.) (Use the coupon. if 1 1 A 3 at ture, 26,-c- frequ- best-know- 00 . slso-tora- ts, 0; 0; 0; 0; 0; $80,-00- Home Communist Destroy Huge Munitions Plant -- $40,-00- 0; ,1 ! Frederic J, Haskin,. Director, The Salt Lake Tribune ! Information Bureau, ' I Washington, D. C. I inclose herewith two cents In tnmpe for return postage on a copy of the booklet on game laws, , ' Street r City aeksesseeeea e a e e e ' e $ e e gssfts i , j Ntnit v ' 28. Without WASHINGTON, Aug. NOMINEES: pomp or ceremony, Secretary Colby toIVL Btor" ' VJ hmoet day signed the proclamation declaring the , Charles R. Mabey to all inwoman suffrage amendment Justice Supreme Court .... E. prtek j. (Ten-yea- r tents and purposes a part of tha constituterm.)- tion of the United States. H. R. Crockett I.,...., r Harvey H- - CtuW The secretarys signature was affixed at hla horn at 8 a. j to Superintendent' Pub'lta inmA&lo' m. a few hours after he had received from Governor Roberta of Temtessee the PrsMdenttat eiectaro-'wsAn'wSu! certificate that final favorable action on' Sk SrTY Hewenf'tarrett. tha amendment had been taken by the legislature of tbat stats. The quiet manCh1e R. Mabey of Bountiful was ner hi which Mr. Colby acted was a disyesterday chosen as th standard-bearappointment to some suffrage workers, of th Republican party In Utah on the who had hoped to make a osromony of bis fifth ballot of on of th stormiest conact, but they contented themaelve with test for ths gubernatorial nomination their oVtt Jubilation ceremonies, including ever seen in a party convention. The in united masa a meeting tonight. They wlng to Mabey, start 4 on tb third done can be now statements that nothing ; ballot, waa more pronounced on tha to prevent the women from voting in Former service man who was yesterday named ae the Republican candidate for fourth, when th Utah oounty delegation November. came on Mr. two nomination the the fifth ballot, aftar governor. Mabeya turned hi way, and became an h leaders in the first two ballots had been practically eliminated. ' The sea! of tho United States has on th fifth' ballot, when hia been duly affixed to tho certificate, and nomination became assured early in the tha auffrsg amendment is now ths nine, .jvoting; . teenth amendment to the constitution, . United State Senator Reed Smoot whs Secretary Colby announced pomlnstag h qcJamttoq in gneesid him. mu M leader of tb etato't ftopabUctai iCdehivctO avoid rifw tbusUglMi anS to an their national ticket after ooneld 4 prgvsnF-- erouslnf feeling . among sufFirst , Second Third Fourth Fifth grablt demonstration. be should relwhom to as workers p frage Ballot Ballot Ballot Ballot Ballot Entering the convention Vnder ths tenent. prompted the quiet setting. Mr. sion of uncertainty which marked the pro. 388 65 . 233 175 J10K Colby explained also that his only pur- Mabey . convention campaigns of th candidates simple duty. pose was to pursue 51 Vi 55 154 163 221 tor governor, ths delegates gav their Badger 152 , 166 131 53 closest attention to the selection of th 158 Wattis Receives Document. tickets head. When th first ballot for 191 . 51 Mr. Colby waa aerakened at t.45 a. m. Odell 194H governor disclosed that Georg T. Odell 40 59 37 by a stats department employee, who Peterson of Balt Lake and W. XL Wattis of Ognotified him that the Tennessee certifica- Cannon 14 1 8 don were running a nook and nock race , tion had arrived. , The secretary then 10 4 with neither showing sufficient strength called F. K. Neilsen, department solicitor, Clegg to assure nomination,- - th doubtful dele-- t to examine the Tennessee papers also Williams 11 . instructing the solicitor to bring the proc- 8 Morris . . gated began to look for a dark hors. 8 12 8 lamation to tho secretary's home at Mabsy began th rac with but oclock. 9 flv votes, running third tb Odell sixty While It wae my thought the eecre-tar- y Thornley with: 3 to undue avoid . 188 snd Wattis with 152. explained later, , Bydalch eagerness In signing the proclamation, I 1 found no reason to conspicuously loiter. Livingston Justice Frick Renominated. 77 I had an aversion to sign in the wee small Biter It took th delegates until wail past hours of the night, and 8 a. m. I thought the was the earliest hour I would begin tho supped hour to decide upon Mr, y function. a their candidate tor governor and When he reached the department, the M wasn t Until after th recess that they secretary found several members of the got into the nominations for th other National Womans party, headed by its offices. J, K. Frick of Salt Lake was secretary, Alioe Paul, awaiting to witness named aa a candidate to succeed hlmentf the signing. Their disappointment wss as Justlc of th supremo court by not concealed when It was learned that considerable margin over hi he had acted, and the secretarys later nearest competitor. James E. Cherry of Mt Invitation that they hear a statement was Pleasant, while T. D. Lewi of Salt LakeMrs. Carrie Chapman Catt. declined. waa a peep third in th running. president ot tha National American WomFrick got 888 vote. Mr. Cherry an Suffrage association, aqd some other 188)4, and Mr. Lewi 2IV4. suffrage workers, however, accepted the The nominations for secretary of state invitation. evoked considerable oratory on th for scattering- - th members of Will Call Convention. Numbers Reserves th ticket in advantageous localities to ; r After the visit of her delegation to tho th stats and brought out candidates stats department. Miss Paul left her from Carbon, Juab and Cache counties, Offen- Will with Hyrum E. Crockett Call for New York to call a meeting of the of Cache as committee of the National executive th winner over Carl Marcuses of Price, Womans psrtv fig a dado for a party and H. McKnight of Juab aa th . Policies. thirdJoseph sive convention of future work. Other leaders Lemberg. man. Th vote stood: Crockett. of the woman's party, Including Mrs. 811)6, Mareusen, 255, and McKnight, 14, Abby Scott Baker, the partys political It was evident that trading was proI V ! t 1 chairman, discussed with Solicitor Genceeding among the larger delegations, eral Frierson and other officials any possiPresent-day MARION. 28. Ohio; Aug. this being especially noticeable In th FARIS, Aug. 28c (By ths ble legal steps the antisuffraglsta might elated Press.) Tha Russian soviet,' opinions of European statesmen on ths Weber and Utah groups. Th loaders oi take. They later said they believed that th various counties were in constant part this nation should take in th peace conference "ail reasonable fear of attack had been government ,1s prepared t withdraw on the floor and th vote from settlement were laid before Senator Har- some of the counties dissipated by Mr. Colby's action. clause In the soviet peace terms the was delayed from Mra Catt, who Is president of the Nato tim time in for tits , consideration by the formation ding Poland today ths shapts dickering. t concerning tional American Woman's Suffrage assoof an armed militia sf 200,000 work- - . ing tb details of a Republican peace ! ciation, called at the White House lata in Wins Over Guff Smith. 1 the dair and presented to President Wil1 u . . Ingmen In Poland,' says a ' Moscow son a (ook entitled, a Tribute to Wood-roFollowing th nomination of Mr. Crock -Tbs report waa brought to ths nominee tt, Eiffel tower towireless up by picked Harvey Cluff ot Provo and H. A. Wilson, containing testimonials from by Byron T. Herrick, former ambassador Smith of Salt Lake were put forward as i day. suffrage leaders and associations Iq every to France, who has Just returned from the only two candidates for attorney genstate. The preface oontainnd an apprej Mr. Cluff winning with 818)6 votes ciation of ths president's effort to bring a series of conferences with ths publte eral, WASHINGTON, Aug. 26. Poland to 271 for Mr. Smith. Tb result in about suffrage, which. It was said, had men of communito American Mr. the has various nations. European replied continued since 1816. The celebration tothis contest was in doubt until th vot Herrick said tho western European statesof Weber county, which threw fifty-o- n cation suggesting that her armies. In night at a downtown theater eras given of votes to the Utah qounty under the auspices of the National League its fifty-tw- o counter-stromen now Bol. were th their against hoping for a return of the leader. of Women Voters. Mra Catt told of the Republican party to power, end would shevikl, not go beyond th E. H. Madsen of Salt Lake. William D. welcome th peace settlement proposed Button of Park City and William U. boundaries ef th country. (Continued on page 8, Column 4.) Barton of Ephraim, entered th contest-to-r Official described It at being not by Senator Harding. state treasurer which proved a Th former ambassador also Intimated disappointing. for th Summit county man. that th world court plan now being for- walkaway In nominating th winner, Mr. Button, A. W. Jensen pointed to th long recmulated by Ellhu Root and th repreoen-tatlvLONDON, Aug. 26. Polish treop Republican victories in Summit of European nations. Would bar ord of and yesterday, after hard fighting, capthe absence of men from that oounty tured th fortress of Ostroienka, large place In th partys program, ' of th past. county on th state tickets mile southwest of Lemsa, twenty-tw- o Tb league of nations Issue' also wag Mr. Button worn with 811 vote t all 14' Barton. for and Madsen 17)5 discussed by tb candidal and forced a passage of tha Narw wltb former forMark of Salt Lake county was Senator George Sutherland of Utah, dis- nominatedTuttla river, th Central New Warsaw' cor. for state auditor by acclaI It was accorded a considerable He inmation. of tinguished lawyer and close student respondent today says officially ovation when hi name waa mentioned. stated In th Polish capital. ternational affair. D. H. Christensen, former city super28. The NINO, N. Y., Aug. intendent of schools In Salt take, nomiWARSAW, ..Aug. , $5. (JBy . ihq Asso- Plans to Elaborate.', watsrmslen obtainable on nated Dr, Georg Thomas of the Uni- To both bis callers Senator Harding is varsity of Utah as superintendent of pubths local market will fsaturs ths last ciated press.) Russian soviet reserve understood ' to hnv outlined th speech lic Instruction, and Nephi L. Morris dinner of Frank Kelly, negro murderer, on are reported being brought, up th be Is the name of Francis W, Kirkham to mak her Saturday detailing hla planed who Is cendemned to die tonight In the before th convention. Dr. Thomas woa souther front in greet number.; Accord- foreign policy snd hla pro- easily, wltb 45 vote to his opponent electric ehalp at lng ting. tlll hope, 00 elaborating ing te'dnformatlon in the hands of th posal for s new association of nation to . ful of s reprieve, Kelly ordered, W adJ Polish General Haller, reserves soma dis- preserve world concord. reset French fried pchloken, dition, Thomas. Lake Salt Supports tance behind ths Bolshevist north front That th nation must not bold aloof but otato, coffee, blecult and milk, must "play It proper part tn tha world Thomas Secured strong support Dr. 7 ere also up brought being Kelly was convicted of staying Cath. was emphasised by the nomine from the Balt taka delegation and took The (military authorities expressed the affaire, Hr a short talk to a group of Marlon the entire delegations from Utah, Wecf srlns Dunn, b house maid, In Brooklyn crushed him declared In belief school (today that, teachers. lie and Cache among th iargar counties. although county last Christmas. According t th aupeace Warren L, Wattle of Osden, brother the north, thq, Bolshevist plan to renow self es anxious as anyone to s thorities of Springfield, Me., he Is th preserved, but he added that the republic of th defeated candidate for governor their offensive, with Lemberg as th ob- could same ngr known a Bua Cain, accomplish Its real mission In tha was placed .bvfor th convention a $ world only If U remained unfettered. He presidential ejector by James Clowe of jective. a who escaped from Jail there fourteen General Heller said there were Indi- also promised to use hla Inf1u.no for Utah oounty. Wasley K. King, direou-- r years ags, while s mob waa seeking school standards and for better of th Republican clubs in th stata w that armies of Russian working- higher cations him for ths murder sf Thomas Roprk, pay for teachers. warmly received when he nominated 7 were Mr. men at various Herrick I I related in detail to th esa- - Geors T. Judd of Bait Lake being grouped points , a civil war veteran, X oa 14 Column 1) X3, (ConUnosd (Continued oiPag I. Column ) (Continued so Fnfs .!.' er ht 8100,-00- ; " Tama Jim Wilson, mer Secretary of $100,-00- ' Delegates to State Conven- f tion Renominate Senator Smoot , by Acclamation. yrtry iUWr $100,-00- V'. T7LQJrf6 From subsequent issues of the .official bulletin Governor Cox quoted many reports from Republican workers throughout ths oountry, reporting going over the top and qxceas of the alleged quotes. , t. Atinoupcement fif BMitaw qubtas, '5tvLr.SB.uw, MIL-- wag. made by Harpy M. Blair, assistant to Treasurer Upham. A meeting was held in Chicago, Governor Cox said, at which Will H. Hays, chairman of the Republi-i-a- n national committee, spoke his blessings. The governor charged that typewritten cities quotas sheets bearing the fifty-on- e were "distributed to those assembled," snd he produced one of the alleged quota lists, but did not state how or where it was acquired. The quota plan, he said, Forwaa carried out like that of the Liberty loan campaigns. That the reputed attempt to raise Agriculcities in twenty-seve- n from fifty-onstates is fair of the forty-eigevidence that the total national fund will His Home. Dies . be much larger wae declared by Governor Cox, who said big business men were prominent among the Republican ways and means committee snd that the raisr CEDAR RAPIDS, Joa, Aug. ing of funds was on a business salesJames (Tama Jtm) Wilson, secretary manship basis. f agriculture in the cabinet of PresiMust Not Disturb. dents McKinley, Roosevelt and Taft, died stateGovernor Cox also quoted from at hia home in Iowa, today at the ments in the Republican "bulletin that ags of 86. Mr. Traer, Wilson had been ill for state and county organisations were not several, months and his condition took a to be disturbed er retarded In their sudden turn for the worse late last week. " He had periods of unconsciousness Calling attenUon to Chairman Hays ently-during the past few days. was being During hts twelve, statement that $8,006,904 yeers of service in raised. Governor Cox said that todays the department of agriculture Mr. Wilson papers carried a statement from Treas- became one of the n agriculurer Upham that the Republican total tural authorltiea in the United Statea. He would be abont 7.500,p00. frequent contributor to farm JourFrom the evidence which we shall wars ' nals and newspapera. I think added, submit, Governor Cox Mr. Wilson celebrated his eighty-sixt- h in you will agree that we are justified birthday last Monday. two. Mr. figure by Uphams multiplying Governor Cox, standing staunchly by Mr. Wllaqu was eu Iowa farmer. Born his charges that an attempt to purchase IS, 1826, he was ths ton ot a the presidency wee being made, declared August who left Ayrshire, Scotland, Scotchman, that the senatorial oligarchy and their In 1852 to settle back of with his family in ths to the are days friends harking Statea Near the present town of Mark Hanna, stating that in ths 1880 United Iowa the Traer, family founded the new campaign which Sir?- Hanna managed noma, and In that neighborhood the eon, i was spent.said Governor James; 'began farming on his own account it was this foul thingRoosevelt which' Theodore brought early as 1861, and at the earns time Cox. to an end when he reformed the Republi- began hi political career with election to the Iowa state legislature. In 1872 he can party. When he wae doing It Warren G. Harding branded him as an Aaron was sent to congress and served. In all, three terms. He was regent of the Iowa ; Burr. State university, from 1870 to 1874, and for six years prior to becoming secretary Attempt on Electorate. of agriculture he wae director of the 1 charge again an assault on ths state experiment station and professor of said Governor Cox. at ths Iowa State college. His It cant be hidden; the hosts are mar- agrloulturs of science to application pracshalled; the money ammunition Is pre- tice brought him to suchagricultural national promipared, but it will not succeed. The net nence that President McKinley made him is spread in sight of tho quarry. What secretary of agriculture, March 4, 1887. is the gams except ts becloud the public As an octogenarian Mr. Wilson was still namind on the subject of the league of erect and vigorous, a man six feet tions issue and world peaceT all bone and muscle. In Iowa his tall, old The typewritten Hst of cities' quotas friends and associate knew him affecas presented by Governor Cox follows; Presbi-teriaTama n tionately Jim." Of the Official quotss New York City, $2,000,-00faith he was. as a boy, made faChicago, 1760,000; Philadelphia, miliar with ths old metrical version of Detroit. $450.0007 Pittsburg, $400,000; the Psalms, from which he frequently Cleveland, $400,000; Boston, $800,000; Cin- quoted In a quaint way with remarkable cinnati, 8280.000; St. Douls, $260,000; Buf- effect. No formalities ever hedged about $160,000; him tha plainest fanner who falo, $260,000; San Francisco, hie Los Angeles, $160,000; Indianapolis, $116,. office In Washington received visited the same 000; Toledo, $100,000; Columbus, rasp of the hand and courteous attenSeattle! $100,000; Minneapolis, tion that was given to leaders in official St. Paul, 8100,000; Providence, 0; Newark, $100,000; Youngstown, Akron. 880.000: Oakland. $78,000; : Dayton, 840.000; Baltis more, 850,000; - New Orlians, 850.000; Rochester. 850 600; Kansas City, $60,000; Denver, $30.000; New Haven, $60,000; V Omaha. $0.000; Scranton. $50,000; SpoLONDON. Aug. T7. Munitions and kane, $50,000; Syracuse, $50,000; Bridgevalued at 82,000,000, port, Conn.. 850.000; Washington, 850.000; which recently were connearly the Louievllle. 850 000; Des Moines, $60,000; entente commission in tha ft rated byWorks Pintsche $50,400; on ths Bpres river, were Schnectndy, $50,006: Portland. destroyed last Birmingham. $60,000; Canton, Ohio, evening by the (000 employees of the Mae , 825,000; Lynn, Plant, Worcester. whom are of many Communists, Masa, 116.000; Albany, N. Y 824,000; At. eayn n Berlin dispatch to the London lanta. $26,000; Memphis, $25,000; Dulnth, Times. 5 , j $28 000; Jersey City, $26 000; Lowell, Masa, Tho Relchswehr was summoned out, $25,004. Tout, $8,145,000. but proved powerless to act. r The government is sending representatives to the I scene. Secrecy Urged. On ths question of keeping secret, all CONTEST BEGIN OVER ESTATE. local eubscrlpttona Governor Cox quoted FORT WORTH, Texas. Aug. 28. A from the official bulletin of August 18, as contest over the appointment of an adfollow; The hames of amounts subscribed by ministrator for ths estate of Omer Locklocal donor should not be mad publlo lear, aviator, who wee killed In airplane accident at Los Anselee several weeks locally. I hereby glva t wide and nonexclusive ago, began today when his parents filed but a petition In probate court protesting publicity, Governor Cox continued; why waa the publication to be only the against the appointment of Locklear organ of the secret society? Why were widow as temporary administratrix. They claimed that a I.oe Angeles bank had n named administrator. '(Continued on Fags 4, Column X.) , $500,-00- The open season for shooting Is approaching, and every man who would fare forth with a pin on hit shoulder should know when, whert V; & ' f ........ - Quotes From Bulletin. i - of pointed; Plan Big Jubilee. $25,-00- O e. ! Swing to Standartf Bearer Start Third Ballot, With Avalanche on Fifth No Ceremony, Whereat Women Leaders Are Disap- ' Governor Coxs data consisted almost entirely of matter taken from the official bulletin of Fred W. Upham of Chicago, treasurer of the Republican national committee,' but his chief exhibit was a typewritten list purporting to show Republican campaign quotas imposed on fifty-on- e principal cities In twenty-seve- n states and aggregating 18,146,000. Names of local subscribers, Governor Cox said, were ordered kept secret. These quotas, given as $2,094,000 for New York City, $750,000 for Chicago, $500,000 for Philadelphia and ranging down to for smaller cities like Albany, N. Y and Atlanta, Ga., were said by Governor Cox to have been announced about the. middle of July. That Senator Harding, hie Republican opponent, was acquainted wltb the details of the quota plan and that It was approved by Will H. Hays, chairman of the Republics national committee, was charged by the Democratic candidate. Re-ceipl- - ? lamation, Following Ratification News PITTSBURG, Aug. 24. Information to support his charges that a Republican campaign fund exceeding 115,000,000 was being raised in a conspiracy to buy the was presented by Governor presidency Cox of Ohio, Democratic presidential candidate, in addressing a public meeting ' tonight U ' Colby Issues Proc- hi- v ii h - - . - , t . u . avs-tanc- -- VOTEFORGQYERNOU - . I' .. 2oa m , . , fe i- Mar-be- T I Herrick in Large Being Hurried for Against t r and Sutherland on Nominee; Amplify Foreign 1 At. ' I W w k ethno-grabb- le Watermelon Last ea Table Dainty for Condemned Man - 081 fi i ,.t.( , Ts h t CCa ! |