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Show :.e? THE WEATHER. -hewer Sunday; Monday"' probably fair; llttta Cheng In temperature. A I Local Settlement Fete. Sitter, domestic, 9 He; foreign. gifo IT I I Ivad . .112.375 Copper (cathodes) The Tribune's Vant are the busiest anl most efficient rental in Salt Lake. . ccl-um- w, VOL. 107, NO. 29. SALT LAKE CITY, SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 13,1923. Russian Reply Proposes Conference With Britain to Settle Controversies Tone Syndicate Dickering for Angora Concession swer Pure Blooded Felines SEGliET PLACE f J - f-- r Fourteen Men, Two Wo-meStill in Hands, of Outlaw Gan; in .China. Chicago n. t Pacific , Tribune-Sa- lt una Cable. LAUSANNE, Lake , Trib- An ex- 22 May clusive concession for tho export of Angora cats was proponed to the Turkish government today through Is met Pasha - by a Swts syndicate. The syndicate figures it .can buy one million Angora ents Annually at Mas than tt erne h and sell them la America. England rd eiaewber for at least $52 ach. Ths syndicate wishes to know the Turkish government would demand for an exclusive concession and alee wdiether it Would conflict with tha Chester concession on account of the complete exploitation right twenty kilometers oa each side of the i Cheater lines. fit Is true there are more cats in Angora than there are stones on tha street. --ad- Sukria. Bex,- a leading Turk. "The same is true throughout Anatolia. It is prob- port one million cats annually, but we fear ths prices of cats will rise tremendously in Tur'ity and the huge stgiply of cats will break the market prices in America and elsewhere. However, the street cats in Anatolia are 'he pure blood Angora cels." pure-blood- i X i yRansom - Payment - Seems Easier Alternative in Securing Then Release. kn , what-term- PEKING, May 1!. (By th AgenFTeoe.) In tha Shan tu as hill back of Llncbeng are, - according to . tha Jataat nyoiiahle .information. fourteen men and taro women foreigners together with an unknown number of Chinese, who have been held al- most a weekly Chlnaae bandits who raided the Shanghai-Peltin- g express ' early last Sunday morning and kidnaped the passer gerr. Here Id Peking g federal government. admittedly almost powerless In the face of - wholesale , brigandage throughout the provinces, baa been striving for a week to moot tha d- -. mandt of tha diplomatic representative of "the powers for the release of their nationals, hut' so far without ref sult, Tonight at 12 o'clock the ultimatum .of the diplomat to tho Peking government expired and tho bandits still are holding many of their captives. Each day from now on until they are freed, Peking, with Its empty treasury, faces an "Increasing indemnity and added penalties for It a failure to protect tho lives, safety and property of foreigners, i i ts ted , ac. One Mad Killed, On man died in the bandit raid oil the night eapress at Suchow. He was Joseph R&thman, a British subject of . manlan parentage, and a reckoning still la to come on that score. Upwards of thirty other foreigners were dragged from their berths nd marched off into the hills In the thht nlghtclotbing la whim they lay when the express struck the right of way that had been tom up by the marau, ders. Two ot these are American army Roland officers. Majors Pinger and ttobert Allen, of Manila; ether Americans are J. B. Powell, publisher of .Shanghalt I,on Friedman and Lee Coiomon', tuisirilHSamen Of Bhanghsf. And Washington has declared that for their lives and safety the Chinese government muet answer. Chevalier Mu sen, an Italian, of Shanghai, I stOl another held In the bandits' Infr tq the hills, and Italy hat satisfaction to demand from Peking. Frenchman Captive. At least on Frenchman, Emil Censburgern a captive, and Trance has msde representations to tbs central administration. Manuel Versa and his wife, Mexicans also are among those who am awaiting their release from the stronghold back of Lincheng. At different times during the past week a number of the prisoners have escaped or have been released. Three Included M'sa Lucy Aldrich, sister-in-lacf John D. Rockefeller, Jr., who, after s heartbreaking Journey Into the mountains, was turned loose by her captors end loft to make her way back again as best Hie could. Now she is in the Peking hospital, together with her traveling companion. Miss and her maid. Miss Srhon-berboth of whom also wore kid- ' w s - ed Conradi an of- - . She Says, Had Undying Hatred Russian' Bolshevik!. Sy RAYMOND FENDRICK. lake Trlbe Ceble. ZURICH. . May 12. The beautiful young Russian wife ef Captain ."Alexandre Conradi bag been weeping constantly' since a fatal telegram , last that her Thursday night announced husband bad killed M. Vonowaky. "My husband had an undving hatred ef bolsheviks," said the wife through an interpreter, as she, Aspeaks only mllilonatr Russian. "Hi father, pastry man and confectioner, was tor-In tured t death by the bolpnevika November, 1211. Hie unde and two cousins were shot by the bolsheviks st the same time. His aunt was killed In a bathtub with an axe by a bolshevik 'raiding party. "He nd two cousins, Hving At (Mur, Bwttserland. are the only survivor of s large family. All their property, the result of a lifetimo of hard work, has been confiscated." line Conradi is 22, handsome, of a lively dispoettioa. She is from an Intellectual Russian family, all ef whom were murdered by the boishe- Ckieege Trlb.ee. S It - Vika- .- - "We celebrated the birthday of one ef his friends in this apartment At Wedneeday night," ah continued.arose 10 o'clock my husband suddenly and said he had a little business trip Cstiwl ea Ptge KMwwa Six.) fw g, naped. Two hoys, Roland Plngsr, Jr , and a tl .4 m gear - (Oetaam FREE STATERS hp Oee.) Johnson Ends Trip of Inspection Through Ruhr Chinee Tribvee-S.l- t PARIS, May Lake Trlbsas Cable. 1!. Senator Hiram Johnson has just returned from n tour of the Ruhr incognita "My trip was most Interesting and Its experiences most Instructive," said Mr. Johnson. "I uniformly have observed s 'policy events and conditions. Therefore I will not express my opinions of this journey or conclusions of my supernal observations. I think such a tour I made, however brief, should be taken bv ail Interested In the present conditions. Columns of newspaper descriptions cannot picture the situation adequately or as vividly as one In the briefest Visit can see them." Upon his return to America next month 'I understand the senator will express his views of the French oc i iipatlon and indicate his reaction to the conditions in tbe Ruhr as he found i them. Property Damage , but No , Life Loss in Storm OMAHA. Neb.. Mar 1! Several buildings in Grand Island, Neb., were damaged, but there was no loss of liie, ' - as a result ef a severs windstorm that swept from Ravenna to Columbus yea terday. Near Ravenna one farmhouse and a number of other farm buildings ware wrecked, A woman living near Cairo and her daughter were slightly hurt by hailstones, reported In some cases so hats been as large as walnuts, but reports circulated last night that several persons wsrs killed there were declared to be without foundation by the Cairo telephone operator this morning. The local weather bureau reported low temperatures and rains today throughout tho state, with the lowest temperature at. Ilartington, with 22 for prediction degrees, although warmer weather was made for torpor row. - . Three Are Injured in' Blaze in Fort Worth - t Deliver OBrien Will - and Other Deportee Demanded . ain. by-Brit- DUBLIN. May 12. (By the Associated Press.) Ksvln OHIggtna, Irish FTee State secretary of home Affair, stated to the press today .that hr would deliver to the British Art O'Brien and All ether persons deported from England to Ireland when they were demanded. The secretary said be considered the agreement under which the prisoners ware obtained from England Included compliance with successful habeas corpus motion. A writ of habeas corpus was recently obtained la England for OBrien. This decision is at variance with Mr. O Higgins's speeches In ths dail at ths time of the deportations, but tha situation now is so much easier, it Is declared, that renewed hostile efforts by the irregulars lq England nr not feared. v When Ur. O'Blggins was asked today as to the poasibl fate of thw deportees if they were delivered to tb English home secretary, he replied that that was entirely tho responsibility of the latter official. The home secretary oould not bold them in England without trial, but Mr. O'Higgins could not aay whether they would 'be tried. It is beHeved her that the house ef lords will confirm the court of appeals decision granting O'Brien a writ of habeas corpus and that O'Brien will be sent back to London next week. The debates In tbe Dali Eireonn on Eamonn de Valera's peace proposals have not modified the Irregulars attitude thus far, and apparently the truce continues on one side while the government- - searches and patrols go on as before. In Dublin soldier Armed with rifle re posted in extended formation ion sorutlmaing pedestrian And holding us ad suspeet who are searched for arm. Throughout the province similar activities are programing, and in some cases have fees rewarded by discoveries of dumped munition. Apparently President Cor grave declaration that the got eminent will not relax the activity of a single soldier is being literally -FORT WORTH, Texas. Mar 11 Fire ai4 Police Commissioner John Aidsrman and two firemen wr in-whea-Jlaur4Mock mp4 out a In the husinm district, the o were occ tiwhich buildtnc sin The tons ed be the tiabert garare. to 9200.000 estimated at The northwest residential section of the city for a time was threat ened because of the strong wind. The ftre started, oa the second floor of - ' fulfilled. the garage. -J entire Bolshevists Insist on Own Rights MOSCOW. May 12. (By the Associated Press.) The Russian reply to (he British ultimatum was banded to the .British .representative - her tnte this afternoon and will be sent to tonight, Its general tonb wss reflected by Foreign ( Mlnleer n in his speech before the soviet this afternoon. In which he declared that Russia would propose to England that a conference be held In an effort to avoid a break. The official organ Pravda says; "Tha government of Lord Curxo found It appropriate to send to a p letariaa slate an ultimatum threat lng to break off relations. bpr Vend Pitetn Tai uiUn sea. At the same time agents of the entente Imperial istic killed the soviet envoy in Lausanne, M. Vorovsky. .Simultaneously, agitation la going on in Poland, and an English war mission Is busy in Rumania. In tbe .light of these facta the English ultimatum ceuid not be considered otherwise than a n shameful attack. The British lion can roar as much as be likes, but our workers and will not crawl Into his jaws,"peasantsIt Is understood that the Russian note in reply to the British ultimatum decla-e- s that most of the charges regarding Russian propaganda in the east are based on information furnished by false reports. As to ths Lausanne tragedy, the expressed belief of the entire Moscow press today says that Vorovsky was killed at tha direction of agents of the "Imperialistic entente" because of his efforts to assist Turkey at the conference. , British Hot Protested. MOSCOW, May 12 (By tbe Associated Frees All Moscow's faotories and government institutions were closed this morning to permit the employees to take part in a great demonstration against the British note. Surging crowds early began to fill the streets of the city. The Intent of the demonst rants seemed to be peaceful, but it appeared, evident they meant to mkka tbe demonstration an impressive one. Deputy Foreign Minister declaration to the Moscow Canetskya council of trades unions that, although Russia is willing to confer with Great Britain ever the difference between, tbe two countries, she "cannot accept such an ultimatum" as was sat forth by Lord Curcon is taken hern as an Indication of the trend of official opinion toward the British note. Ganetaky told the council that the soviet government desired ji break with Britain. "We say to England. he asserted, "let us talk the matter over. But do not dictate." Ganetaky's statement that fRussi Is against those who want to enslave her" found a reflection In the resolution passed by the council announcing that Russia was ready. If necessary, to respond with armed force to those who try to infringe upon her indepen Tchlt-cberi- Mos-oo- -- dence. Hunfl ln Effigy. lone automobile carrying an effigy of Lord Curson on a gallows, penetrated the line of the marching thousands. Troops Stood directly in front of the door of the British mission, and st lunch hour tho mission, thus strongly protected, wss ths quietest place in Moscow. Special atate police and cavalry troops, smartly mounted, drew a cordon around the mission, and the demonstrators remained their distance. The marchers numbered no fewer ' certainly than (0,000 One IS JCHITCHERIN n, F ' u. of Soviet Anto Ultimatum PLAIN-SPOKE- N Tchit-cheri- ea (Oeiama ' 3. Present Status of Repa Some One Givering Up, of That Made rations, the League and State's Attorney; Says Outlined. in Note of Warning. by. Teutons in 1919. Supercourt Latest Tender but One-Thir- d and Approval of Internation- Students in Quizzed r al Tribunal, Modified Effort to Solve Lake Belgium Strengthened; Somewhat,' Is Predicted Peace Offensive Failure Tragedy My teyy; Position of France c . 1Y SyFRANK H7.SIMOND. 1. Tha Trlbaae. WASHINGTON, May 12. The Simplest- poeelbt wtatemeptof the meaa-ln-g Special f MARK' SULUVAhU- CHICAGO, May 12. (Br the Assoj 1922. by N, T. Tribune, ciated Press ) Investigation "of th Jnc.) supposed ' death of Leighton Mount, , WASHINGTON.,. May, ltnrBefor freshman student" at' Northwestern of the latest German proposal for beginning a period In which Ameri- university, who disappeared after th ca's problem ls Europe wlll be treat-t- d from (he point of view of being Is disclosed br the comparison of the farmer students U may hunt for forty-opresent offer with what was demand- en the ground her In Europe, who left th unlrerslty within four be to clear the of Illuminating ground ed by the allies under the treaty month after Mount disappeared. Versailles and what was offered, by by outlining these problem!; as they Three of th foifty-on- e and a memnow view of from' the ef In stand, polnf the Germans themselves In Pari ber of the present sophomore dans .. under7 America. dis1219, when the treaty was The principal European problems ef were brought to tha slate's attorney's cussion. As t the former, the al-of flew for questioning, and subpoena demanded of Germany in' the the American government are at this server dispatched to hunt th other. more moment each resolved Into 1M2 three, London ultimatum of With the grand jury In recess ungold marks. The Germans at' or less distinct from ths other. Up til Monday, tha chief development tothe year they were Paris offered to pay 100.000,000.000 to the beginning of looked oa one. But with the day wan a statement by State' Atgold narks and they now offer 20,' French upon and of the Invasion Ruhr, that Crowe that so moons "cov000,000,000, the associated matter of German torney ering up," and that th ' Inquiry I If you estimate at 10,000.000,00 reparations became a separate prob- far over from lem. By the dtssoctatlon of this prob. gold marks what Germany has already lem the There were ho signs of fractures on matter of the league of naskeleton, physiatana said, and a paid, and this la A high figure, then tion became a separate one. A little tha u bet once at first believed to White the present German offer represents, later, with Hardings proposal that have been lime used In destroying tbe America world the ahould court, join to with payments to date, an offer out to be adlpocero, a flesh turned there arose a third question which, natural settle for. 4 per cent of what of decomposition. T9 wantto Democrats tie product many although fixed tha age of th skeleproposed to pny at the It up to the league of nations, will physician time of the Paris conference end undoubtedly work out In the final evo- ton at around II years. Mount waa ef lution a a third and distinct issue. over IE something less than 20 per cent r . T beery Exptbded. Consider first, for convenience, and what the allien fixed as the amount Belief that Axel Loangquist wealthy Germany was liable to pay, under also because the processes of its solumore the are tion of tbe terms Immediate, presence Evanston treaty. the whose daughter Tou can put the thin even more of the French In the Ruhr and the eloped aomlumberman, months ago with Fred if you say that what associated problem of German repa- Brott. nephew of Waiter concretely,now Dill Saott, to pay to all ration. propone Germany of Northwestern university, of the alllea amount to approximateIn this field we may start with an president some shed on the events might light ly what France alone must spend to axiom. That axiom la that the fixing with Mount s death was restore the actual property destruc- of the amount ef the German repara- connected shattered was when he questoday tion Incident to German Invasion. tions as a definite sum Instead of tioned by assistants from, tha stale s This sum, too, is something like (he Indeterminate sum which the attorney's offioe. of what the European Paric peace conference left 4t must Mr. Lonngquist, who brought his nations must pay tha United States be the first step toward economic bock from Detroit and Tow on account of what they borrowed stability In the world. Until the daughter to annul her marriage, was suing war en the from ua to mrry against amount . Germany must pay la deterto have said That if he told Germane. Tt Is,' roughly rpeaklng. mined, and Until Germane accepts the ropwted he knew it would rock Evanston." as Britain alone obligation to pay It, there will conhalf again a much Is .not just what I said. "That I obligated to pay us under the terms tinue to be n fluid factor fluctuating ot the reeent debt adjuetment. the cor- Lonngquist (old tho Wat. a attorney, at precisely the point where Take the case of France again: nerstone of the worlds eoonomte fu- "What I did aay was that if I told I knew H "would reek the France will have to spend around ture should be. From this point of what thrones ef the kings of Evanston.' I Is 20,000,900 0u gold view the Important thing About which aoean the Root' and ethovav" 1e- lees the also nf the sum marks, to' restore her devastated What do you mens by thaf T he area, and the will have to pay up- than that the sum ehould be fixed at waa or aaked. wards of 2i, 000.000,090 gold mark, tom Tb vice o the Ver to the United States sallies figure, 22,000.009.000. In this respect was that . "I mean liquor parlies, joy rides and treaty wardeooUetta Mr- - Lonngquist snd Great Britain on Account of It left the amount fndstarmlnate, parties, , time borrowing. A against this tov replied. ' tugoaetlsn Rejected. ' tal outlay actual and prospective ef .te Daughter Testify. . ' Up to about the first ef last D Sl3.M0.90o.000, she would receive as Mr. Lonngquist premised to (end his her share of the present German pro- eemher it was considered that repa- daughter to the state attorney's posal 21,900,000,000 In round number. rations was a problem not only of office Monday to teH shout a telephone She wou'd then still have to bear a Franc and Germany, but of the whole due- - to debt world; and that tha United States had . 200.000,000 burden of Pm Saveeiem, end devastations resulting from tbe concern In It such as rav the Ameri(0tw am.) can government the right to proas for German attack. ' solution. During Decomber our govDarltory P rapes!. mad a suggestion that the Another Wall Street In other words, if the German pro- ernment turn should be determined bv a com Bomb Suspect Taken posal were to be accepted 40.eo0.002 mission of business men and bankers French men would, have to shoulder Germany, the allies, and a burden of nearly 210,009 090.900 (ten representing Plates. United If the NEW YORK, May 12. Th desired, Wall billion dollars), while 20,000.900 Ger- also. Thia suggestion was reje-te- d by the street bomb explosion was recalled mane would get off for less then French. Thereafter, the French gov- again tonight when police arrested billion Of (ntne dollar). ernment took a atep which carried Noah Lerner, 22, an electrician, on a course. It Is patent at once why this whole matter Into n new phase. charge of homicide In connection with France, must In the nature of thing With the Invasion of the Ruhr. Amerdecline to accept auch a derisory pro- ica withdrew Its troops from the the disaster which killed more than persons on September 12, 1919. poet 1. If France did accent tt, she Rhine and otherwise made it clear thirty Lerner Is charged with having hired would he burdened with debt, doomed that In the new reto bankruptcy and in this situation lations of Franc phase which the then th wagon that carried th explosives spd Germany to Wall street, the police announced. would face a Germany freed from any assumed tha American policy would The Information brought his similar burden. on of "hands off." The arrest wss said to that a be steady have been The German accompany their of German reparations, the to the district attorney by Mr. givea and with conditions almost a Impoe matter French occupation of th Ruhr and Mrs. Thomas Doyle of Baton Rouge, tbe terms on whlrh that occupation la. They returned recently from a Osstissad ea Pig Tweaty-eae- . shall cease are now wholly a question Kusbas colony In Russia, where, they (Teuitk Psri.) between Germsnv. en the one band, charged, they found conditions enand. on th other hand. France, wit tirely different from what hod been Near East Delegates Belgium acting as a kind of small represented to them by it Nw York The solution of this situa- agents. Several officers of the Kusbrother. Are Crowing Restive tion must arise out ot direct n Mo- bas were Indicted on tha strength of lls t Ion ft between France and Germany, their aocusation. 12. (By LAUSANNE, the It Is ai If Francs had won th war ' Lamer wes a resident of the K us boa May Associated Press ) The allies spent without the assistance nf th allies, In Russia, to which tho Doyles an active day trying to Inject motive and was now occupying German terri- colony end their two children were sent from power Into the near east conference. tory for th purpose of exacting rep- New York, it waa mid, and they were They frankly told Ismet Pasha, head arations. reported to bay told ths district atGermans Mutt Act Alone. of the Turkish delegation, that the torney that he boasted openly of his conference cannot drag on forever and with a part In tho Wall street tragedy. Germany must deal dtre-tl- y asked him to make practical auggea-tlon- s successful antagonist. Th German Authorities had been looking for for settlement of tha main 1b- - government realises this. Ia course of Lerner since the Doyle ret limed German peon' will realise from tho Kusbas colony and told time th sues. It was almost s mailed ultimatum, It. As soon si the permeq govern- their story immediately upon their for the allies, worried by the bellig- ment feel (hst th German people arrival. After a long search Lerner erent attitude of the Greeks, fear that have become sufficiently reoonelled to was located In Benaonhurst, a well o section of Brooklyn. Greek withdrawal from the conference th sltnntion, th German government will take steps that will lead to ultimight, set the near east aflame. mate solution. Informal suegeetlons looking to some kind ot mild inter, Girl Receives Diploma ventlon. of a sort not displeasing to Dies either of th contestants, may com from Great Britain. But the position Of th American government BERKEU5Y. Cal.. May 12. Miss per. of keeping hands off. Wilma Ruth Rayburn, member of (HO OfO tain toIs beno one 040 J'ke'lhood of'our govern- the graduating class at tha University Thar ment ever taking nor affirmative of California, was presented wtth her th degree last night in the university In steps looking to Intevventlon or to 'unsolution of this prob'em until, and firmary. and died22 a half Hour lator. so to asked both do the Miss Reybura, less. Is by it years old. a daugh 040" 040 ter of the Rev. Clinton H. Revburn of parties In th Issue. Not onlyibt this our of Ban the obviously Francisco, collapsed (hi week present position equally obvious during the final examinations and w government It is now the-pen of our removed to the Infirmary. During her that this position government Is Indorsed by the public Illness she expressed the fear that she do now not We would of the country. not receive her degree next opinion have that clamor for our government Wednesday. thing that both sides support. Demo- to "do something" about reparations crats feel that, the president's court which wss a continuing feature of'our Are-Take- n proposal doe not go fas, enough, and public life until the day France an- Eleven Bodies many Republicans feel that It goea too tered th Ruhr. In short, this ssoeet rom Flaming Oil Well is now deft tar; but, generally, everybody ia in fa- of our foreign relations vor of international cooperation and nitely delimited ' Only time can bring Texas.'- - May 12. GerCORSICANA. International arbitration. Even some the answer. For the moment, of the most uncompromising Irrecon- man reparations and the French oc- Three bodies were removed from doe oti well cilable will eonced that international cupation of tb Ruhr have oessed.out to tbe burning Hughes-McKi- e the group of our Immediate prob- near her today, malting the total cooperation for the ae. dement of dis- of lem cf foreign relations. It may be bud tea recovered eleven. Workmen putes and the determ.nation of differthat th time will wore nsbeotos auMa to approach th ences between nations by a tribunal assumed confidently come when both th parties to this blase. Efforts to Identify th bodies are desirable." will th United States recovered today will be mad ask from controversy When that times comes watches and metal th men carried. to help. Lake Tribes Wire. Ckle( Tribute-Sal- t It will have were to flood America wilt be th Plane vicinity of WASHINGTON, May 12 Senator done nothing to Injur Its standing th well with water tonight.- - Effort th or King, Democrat, Uxah, said with th the blase governments today peoples to probably will that he would leave for a visit to of either contestant, Th Integrity of be extinguish Until the fir I made (omorrow. soviet Russia In July for the purpose Its disinterestedness will be w will be Impoesibe to know out It of observing conditions In that coun- olet and It will be In a position t whether other bodies wiU be found. Senwill He bv be try. accompanied ator Ladd, Republican, North Da- help. , League Discussed. Close Train kota. The soviet government Invited Next, tha league of nations; At to Troop Senator I add to viiK Russia and to this, and eat be there Is nothin From Disaster Call anv him he with whom other bring more than the present one nothing,of tbe eear cored to invite. Mr. King w American government. of those asked by Senator .Ladd, but policy be been stated In Abe moat specific - EB3IO.V May 12 (Bv th Aeeoriat-- d U in deciding to make the tnp he dePress. ) A French troop train with The by President Harding clined the offer of the soviet gov- way. oa board waa United States does not propose t n brigade of artiMervshort ernment to pav his expenses and will enter ot dimmer fifty yard stopped of now the nations league by pav his own wav. near Osterfeld. where a big aid door, the beck door, or th today Rhine-HerSenator King has been on of the th aero tbe ateei brtdx so door. The senate has most outsooken critics of the soviet cellar the executive he so declared, canal and the supports on both side regime. He said todav that he was dared, by a heavy charge of people have so declared. Nothing were blownas up siad to have an opportunity to get the tne train waa approech- dynamite d Information of the situa- could be more decnivelv stamped The expkwion was apparently tion in Russia under the Communist neise Jtng. toe quicklv and tb CwtfaMMt m Tn , rule. the engineer. iwiM TiniI . n, fqi.) fwr OAO (HO 1 11 reon-ratio- -- ; Half Hour Later 1 Both Major Parties in Favor, He Says 040 (HO (HO 00 West More Interested in Business Ckksge THbuse-Sel- t Lake Tribes 'May 13. Wire. Senator WASHINGTON, William H. King, Democrat, Utah, who 1ms just returned from the west, said tonight that he had found little Interest there in the president's wprtd oourt proposal. According to Senator King. Indifference to court issue in (he intermountaln country Is, due to the fact that the people of that section are too much engrossed In the problems of I heir own material affairs, "In Utah. Wyoming, Montana. Idaho, Colorado and in some of tbe adjacent states, said Senator King, "the people have been suffering for a long time from Industrial and agricultural depression. Mines have been hard hit and the low price of wool was severely felt by wool growers. The slump In these two Important industries of the Intermountaln country brought a period of hard times from which that section Is only now recovering. The bottom has been reached however, end there is now n rise which Shos s evidence of prosperity. But the people hare been through such a depressing 'business period that they have not been concerned In such a question sa the wwld court. "As a matter of fact, the world court proposal cannot become a political Issue. Both major parties r for it. Tou can t make an issue out ot some . the-wor- ld -- t WASHINGTON. May union newspapers and It Trad periodk! publication are to a considerable degree subject to "propaganda that 1 hostile to the trades union movement fra radical and Oom- munlst organisations within tb ascountry, sod sometimes from emsociation representing tb viewpoint, according to ployer' made report today t the American Federation of Labor executive council by President 8a mu 4 Compare An Investigation, Mr. Gomper Id, showed that "for the most ha rejected part the labor pro but that some of tlm radios! matter was being ueed because the source and object of It waa la a considerable degree concealed. As k mpl of radical organ!-tkn- J tha report aaid, the "Young Worker' league, the "International Pres Correspondence" and the '."Trades Union Educational league are all organ! ttons which fall to dine lose their full purpoaee. --Th opinion was pressed that all three of them would receive rauitier attention" as labor editor came to understand th objective of their backers. Bail Set at $25, COO Each by Judge Noel S. Pratt;" Prisoners Released on Bond axt F rdr. Has -- d. first-han- hit l Marrlner A. and John Browning In FJ6.009 bond werq yesterday each to answer to tbe district court on ehnrge tf murder In the second degree, the crime tielng the' killing of Benjamin F. Ballsntyn st 975 East First South Street April- - 9- few momenta after ths Within ruling by City Jndgo Noel 8. Prett. before lwbom, a committing magistrate, evidence ha been submitted during th Past week, th required surety was furnished and tb men released. They spent lost night nt their horn In Ogden. It sas tho first time ther bod returned there since th slaying. Judge Pratt ruled. In brief, th state had not submitted sufficient evidence to Justify Us cmnptamt that th shooting of BaHentyne constituted murder in the first degreo, and that th defense tied not produced enough testimony from which n decision of Justifiable homicide could be adduced. The magistrate Ukewi found nothing in the transcript of the hearing which pointed to either voluntary or Involuntary manslaughter or excusable homicide. 1 t John Browning, K woe stated, and abetted Ad arri tiers net in firing the pistoi frdm Which the death wound came, to tho extent of being held equally liable. , Thus the charge of murder In th second degree was the only remaining offense under which they oould be held. tat Counsel Diaap printed. That tbe opinion of th judge came as a disappointment to counsel fm the state and was received wnh approbation by counsel for the defense wan evident In their conduct. The court has mule its ruling and derided th cos as for oa it Is concerned. I have 4 nothing move to ey at this tiro, wes th onlv comment of Oranty Attorney Arthur K. id nothing Morwton. The defenee It was mentioned In yesteroav mornings Tribune, however, teat the state might not be hound bv tne rulthe committing nJ! mrsie; ing of that --49 might take O to peer before tmaiur mojri orate w t another Mtnpsnnt of murder In t a first degree and ask eca n that to defendant be bound over. May Raise Legal Problem. and others Interested In Attorney the on last nignt pointed to the last three word at this time of Attornev More tons statement an indie ton that this point ir eht be Under consideration by th state counsel, k was added that the In order to avert such a move, might be forced to prey for a writ of prohibition before th supreme court re reining th second meci-Irafrom hearing tbe case, line." it la admitted, would ml aa interesting legal problem. That the state, however, need not re st to this procedure, bnt might providing th statute covering the ca be Interpreted In favor of Such a move appear directly before ihei district court wKh an Information charging murder in the first decree, despite th ruling of Judge Vreftt, wes indicated by tbeoe me authorities. Ther quoted th wording nf section 3779 of th st utea of the at ef Utah, covering the filing of. to information. This statute reads-May File Original Charge. When a defendant has been examined and committed aa provided In this code, It shall be th duty of tb district attornev. within thirty dsv thereafter, to file in ths distri- -t court of th county In which th c'frnte in triable an information cnarxirg the defendant with tb offense bv hi.-be Is held to answer for inv o cor offer diarlosed bv th whether It be the offense charaed in th complaint on which the examination was held or noth If (he d mi net attornev fails to flie the Information Wttm-n- i4 time specified he sha.I be deemed guilty of contempt, snd mav be prosecuted for neglect of duly, as in other eases." The word in parentheses (or any her ipffenss dlerioeed bv tb tti-monjwhether tt be the offenro charged In the complaint on which held or non th examination id by authorities to be pe- - hd - -- tbt Battle for Mayor Finds All the Parties Confident Eve of Eight-side- d -- to-d- flfr Alleged Slayers of Ben Are i F. , Ballantyne Bound Over to District Court for Trial. Propaganda Is Scored by Campers Anti-Unio-n 1 three-quarte- rs FIVE CENTS Brownings Are Released Under Bonds to Answer to Second Degree Murder 132,909,-000.0- King Finds Little Concern in Court (HO III DM of-f- er MOSCOW. Mav 12. (By the Associated Press.) M. Tchltcherin, the soviet foreign minister, dressed In the uniform of a member of the Red army and wearing a red decoration, was the chief speaker at a great meeting held in a theater here todav. Ths theater was crowded to the door, while in the streets thousands who had taken part In a great demonstration listened to speakers from motor trucks and balconies, all of whom made reference to what they termed the war threat against Russia In the British note, in the assassination of Vorovsky at Lausanne and in other recent - national developments. n Referring to Vorovsky, M. said: "This Is a symptom of the general The direct re- European situation. Cmtlsesd sin 63 PAGES ns Colo., May 12 One of DENVER, th bitterest political campaign to-in Denver in y ra practically ended night with dec I ration of confidence from adherent ef eight candidate for mayor In th municipal election next Tuesday. Voters will elect a mayor and ntna councilman tinder Denver's n government charter, . -nonparti Dewsy-CBailey, Wti be served os a candidate mayor for six y re, United State Senator for redaction. Lawrence C. Phipps has Indorsed Bailey's candidacy. Opponents of th mayor have made th trial and conviction of member of th "Million dollar bunko ring" a campaign Issue, because th alleged confidence men operated hero during Bailey's administration. A. Carlson, former goverGeorg nor of Colorado; Benjamin F. Staple-toformer postmaster of Denver; Frank Newton Briggs, n banker; kidney Eastwood, Henry V. J oh neon, Theodore H. Proska and Frank R. are Rice opposing Bailey. ' Philip Va wholed th Cls. diatrlct attorney, campaign that rounded up th eon-- ,. ted confidence men, has delivered in favor of th election many speech of Carlaon. William E. Sweet, governor of Colorado, ha intervened In the contest by Indorsing Stapleton. Under tha preferential, system of rendtdat voting. If none of th votes, ceive n majority of votes are totaled the second-choiballots. and added to th If there are still no majority for the ballots "choices" candidate, the other are added to tb first and second-choivotes, and th candidates having th largest number of the com"other and second bined first, declared elected. choice" ballot 1 ed -- n. first-choi- flrst-cho- tc ce 1 e-- et-- de-fe- n, te h Supposed to Be Those of Colonel Marshall and Lieutenant Webber f, SAN DIEGO, Cat, May 12. Two, bodies, supposed to be those of Colonel Francis Marshall, former cavalry offiaviator. Thq dippred while flying from Ban Diego to ward Tucson; Aria , December I of last y r, were found today in the Cuyamaea mountain of this county. A soon as the report reached thia city, Major Henry Arnold, command, lng Rocxwell field, from which Webber took h'.s last flight, having Colonel Marshall as a passenger, organised a party to visit th scene and trv to identify the bodies and the machine. In whose wreckage the bodies Is y. He expressed little doubt that the bodies war those- of Colonel Marshall and Lieutenant Webber. Th machine In which the two dead aviators were found had been burned. Nothing waa left but the skeletons of the two men. cer, and Lieutenant Charles Webber, ru (Osettseed m Fate 2 .seats (Ceiuwa lit ) I It Is Not Too Lats to Get a Free Garden Book - " DENVER. Colo., Mav 12 Colonel Francis C. Marshall, attached to th staff of the chief of cavalry at WashLieutenant Charles I ington. and Webber of the air service, left Fan Diego at 9;U o'clock Thursday, December 7. for a flight to Fort near Tucson, Aria. Two day after the departure from Fan Diego five airplanes f th Twe'fth obeervstlon squadron located El started at Fort Bliss, Paso, Texas, an intensive search for the missing airmen. These planes were In charge of Major L. G. Heffemsn. Tbe planes carried emergency rations and- - water containers, so attached that they could be dropped at an; point on the desert if the lost officers Were sighted and a was impossible. landing For many weeks after (he dl ppear-snc- e of th army officers seenh for them waa continued, not alone by atr- but by search afoot a well, p'an There were frequent reports that Indians had seen a wrecked airpan In western Arlxona. but subsequent ef- - ' fort to locale the mi ing craft were not ucceftful. It was announced recently ra Washington that th government had abandoned search lot tiie missing men. Hua-chne- a. i If yon bavsnot olreadv secured on of the free garden books issued by th Department of Agriculture, our Information Buroa u in Washington w.U secure a copv for you Th best way to get good results Is to be sure that your garden is watch it planted right, and then as It comes along. Bv constantly boon-lconsulting this authoritative you will be sure to gam a effort, return for your larger - It will not onlv be a to retie fresh things fur your own table, bet it will prove a la substantial ring of expen feeding th fsmuy. send and taro th coupon l cent In stamp for return postage et r't Frederic J. Heskin. Director, The Sait Lake Tribune Information Bureau, Washington. D. C. 1 enclose herewith two sent In stamp for return purtnxe on a free copy of t jUj-ruc- Booed. Name Street City State |