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Show TH E WEATHER. Sunday and Monday, centrally fair, net much change in temperature. Cecal Settlement Prtcex. 8ilrr Copper teeth odea) 5e tK .......... ,.iS.0ls - VOL. 107, NO. 50. SALT LAKE CITY, SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 3, 1923. E! Republic to Strike at Its Royalist Foe HOT STATE Snakes Get Loose j Delay Mail Tram r" RCOTT8 BLUFF, Neb., June Snakes hel up the TVnveiSto-Al-Imn- Pleased Britain Shows Desire to Come to Un-i derstanding With. Rus. Otherwise .Peasant Who Has Suffered So Much Would Be Sacrificed. HONORABLE WIGHT THE By DAVID LLOYD GEORGE, O. M , M. P. (Former British Prim Minuter). lNDOX. June 2. I m frankh de-- , lifted that the negotiations between oem-wweeTaord Curaon and the soviet 2.- ot mail train this morning. Ftfl reptile, part of a carnival their menagerie, escaped from bter-fnif cage on the traha between amt Bridgeport. A drawbar was pulled out of place when the excited train crew tried to uncouple the engine, according to rw port here, and rs atra held up the train for nearly half an hour while the carnival attendants worked to recapture the rattlers, bullsnskee and other Aspecies In ther collection. 9 IITI PILOT Chances of Success of New, Premier Hinge on Solution of Problems. TO ENTER CEIL ' Satisfactory Settlement of German Situation Held to Be Most Important. Attorney for J. Homer French Drops Fight for Execution Stay. By FRANK H. 5IM0ND3. 2 The recent WASHINGTONVJupe eircleinci-dent- s turmoil in British-politicto the enforced resignation of Bonar Law. -- because- ofp lit health, has a very olnlou? Interest for Amerto indicate a femnns deicans, who are more and more threatColo. June J. Homer DENVER, sire eft. the part of both parties to esened with precisely the same disinteone of the Delleaders French, of tablish "a more satisfactory under-gration of political parties which hAS dollar to ivers will go ring, overtaken Great Britain and resulted standing between Great Britain and the Colorado state topenitentiary Russia "? morrow to begin serving his sentence in so much chaos 11 The BolshevW episodt I k Aa a consequence of the revolt of v. seven of to from in the ten years revolutionary terFsrs, has been at Hi attorney today with- the Tories against their own rary times a shrieking hUfhtmare whirh has made the world ehdder It did drew French s plea for a stay of exe- leaders, a revolt lue to the fact that render one supreme eerttefeto rfMltaa-tio- n cution pending appeal to the supreme these leaders persisted in following into it terrified democracy'-vbaccourt and announced French would Lloyd George snd thus rin maintainVbe sanity just at a time when his case ing a coalition ministry abhorrent to the not appeal Is vou excitability that followedinstaFrench under Indictment at arwar was bordering on mental Miami, Fla., in connection with- - tha the mass of Tory members there bility. alleged swindling of $120,000 from P. rived last year one of the oddest In our attitude toward the soviet "R. inin British hietorj Nicholson, ile also la under government we must, however, con- dictment In Flrat of ail the Torv party was Cleveland, Ohio, on stantly bear In mind one consideration. of using the mail to defraud, hopelessly divided, and most of the rharfcrs so much not is What matter to us months in the more conspicuous leaders including hrcitcksswrved the Russian government as the peo- federal prison ateighteen Atlanta, Ga., In 191$ the Earl of Balfour, Lord Rlrkenhead ple of Russia, and for the moment the on charge of Impersonating a federal Austen Chamberlain and Sir Robert Bolshevist , administration constitutes officer Authorities 8L Horne, having failed to hold the Tories the only medium for dealing with that Fla. and Jacwsfenviile, Fla., Augustine, also have in line for coalition and Lloyd Georc PYench made mighty nation Aa Jong aa it remains declined to take office under Mr. charges against the only constituted authority m RusFrench, known' to him associate as Bonar Raw and thus retired from, 1 sia, every act of hostility against it tapper Jack," is asid to have promi- party leadership and public office at nent relatives In Cleveland and Bt the name moment, Injures Russia As we discovered In 19f9, you cannot Louis When he was arrested last This retirement inducted more genthe summer he was a member of the fash- erals war government against wage the mass of the than for the time being of a count rv with-o- ut ionable Rummer tourist colony at Estes party were private, heart and soul for Hnar TClokh a Park. devastating Jand iul alienating l more Esrwr or, Xgfftftgr Ltm-yxgctftr -- old lou Rlontrer, the 7 its people. You cannot refuse to tradee alleged George and coalition, and in favor of po-plA. its bunko of the and leader W, band, with it now without deprtvipg it alone But it depmed the of commodities and especially of Duff, Rtongers alleged first lieutenant going some of their moet weli-behto obtain their Conservatives equipment essential to their who will make an attempt captains snd left it not Release frqm jail on bond ponding their experienced It Is the people therefore, but divided, severely handionlp, v Is It whould suffer and 4he people who appeal to the supreme court Moreover if the br! of Hal-fowould ultimately resent that suffering. probable a number of others later will capped. vlftwtd with his charthe affair acnato decide accept their sentences, Governments come and go, but a acteristic philosophical detachment, cording to reports current today. tion goes on forever. same was not true the either of Birin the bunko cases The next chapter Russians Deserve Sympathy. will begin June 11. when Roy Coyne, kenhead or &ir Robert Horne, in a The Russian people deserve espe- arresed in Columbus, Ohio, is sched- word, the schism was accompanied b cially at the hands of all the allied uled to go on tnaL Judge George F all the usual personal bitternesses nations every sympathetic considera- Dunklee. who presided in the bunko Tories Control. esses, today reinstated Philip Van tion we can extend them. Not only Oft the actual political fortunes of (Mae, district attorney, aa prosecutor for the reason that they have to enthe Tones the split had little or no dure the swav of a tyrannical oli- - in the cases. At the election following the Van else, who made the raids that effect imposing its will by ruthless garchy rounded up the band of convicted con- retirement of JJnyd George they Carv iolence, but even more for the rearied the country that is, although sons that led to the establishment of fidence men, was disqualified from them in court on a peti- they fell far short of polling a mathat tyranny. If the fruit is bitter, prosecuting of althe votes, they were rejority we must bear In mind how the tree tion of defendants' counsel, who majority leged that a Van Cise had made the turned to power with came to be planted fn the soil. It arrests he should of nearly ninety In a house of comhistory not be he was so prejudiced may sound like quoting ancient or mons of $00 members result This to act. Two spepermitted nine to revert to the events of eight cial prosecutors were appointed. disposed of the calculation of Liod v ears ago, but no one can understand of coalition and the Tories, George Russia er do justice to its unhappy who had hoped that the Fionar Itw people without recalling the incident group would be compelled to make an that led to the great catastrophe. alliance. Inevitably with Lloyd George, Those who denounce any dealings to dominate the house with the existing order seem to have Tories tho die-har- d victorious The persuaded themselves that prerevolufaction. In British political jargon Russia was governed by" a nr - tionary gentle - and beneficent despotism which conferred the blessings of tolerant- and kindly fatherhood upon a d household In no particular is this a true picture of the former had thug broken with their more conspicuous leaders, aside from Iiw, who was titular leader, surviving as cn h front prewar times; thev had demon- OeDtiowi Fag Kiu well-rule- GiUM regime. The fortress of Pt. Teter and St. Paul was not erected nor its dungeons dug hv the Bolshevists Siberia was not set up as a penal settlement --for political offenders tor the first time In 9 If at all bv the Bolshevists. shout 46 000 political exiles were deof to severities endure the ported Persecution of suspected reb the not was started leaders ligious soviets To them does not belong the of methods of discredit Initiating pogrom ism Rut let us not forget that beyond all these circumstances the revolution was rendered inevitable hv the ineptitude and corruption of the old system and especially bv the terrible suffering and humiliation which that state of things inflicted on Russia in the great war. Hatred Against OW Order. Anone who has rea.8 iprMebfotr Of an Ambassador. by M Paleologue, will find a complete explanation in its pages of the savage hatred with which the Russian revolutionaries viewed all t hone who were associated in anv degree with .the old order He tells the etorv of how a gallant army found iteelf' at the critical hour without ammunition, rifles, transport, and often without food. No braver or more devoted men ever fought Tor their rmmtrv than the" voung peasants who made up the Russian armies With little of 19U. lit! and 191. and often no artillery support they the best without fared faltering equipped heavy artillery in the world. shell fire were mown down bv Tney and machine guns by the million. casualties Their aggregate up to September, 1914, even according to the j essrint generals of th day, ware five minions In realitv they were muchrr Often they went Intoac-ttoheavier with sticks, aa tho Russan war no rifles with which to arm fiad office them Thev picked up a they advanced rifles dropped by fallen comrades There is nothing In war comparably to tha trustful heroism of these poor peasants. We know now whv there were no rifles or shells or wagons. The wholesale corruption of the regime has been exposed to the world bv irrefutable documentary evidence Here are .a few extracts from M, One book, Paleologue s interesting extract from his diarv read Lack of ammunition means that the role of the artillery in battle The Is necessarily Insignificant. whole burden of 4he fighting falls on Lha infant my and. tha results is a - ghaatlv wxpandiittFeOtf hum, DukeA day or atwo ago one of Grand Colonel collaborators Sergiu said to Major Wehrlin. my Were paysecond military attache of our administraing for the crimes tion with the blood of our men. Importance of Bystem. About the"same date, talking shout the deplorable state of thing. GrandDuke Sergius, who was Inspector genera! of srtillerv, said to the French think that this embassador 4When exhibition of Impotence is all our aris- tecr tic system has to show It makes want to be republican Bsnin a1915 grand duke talked like that what must the peasant early foldief have thought by the spring of had been slaughtered as a result of Oeattwwd aa Ho Tvs M (Geiana.Tewr.) Many surprising recoveries of lost . articles have been made through The Tribune Want Ads. Quartet of Krupp Em- ployees Given Prison Sentences and Fines. DUKH5KI DORF, June J. (By the Associated Press ) Four employees of the Krupp works today were sentenced to varying prison terms snd fines of one million marks each upon conviction by & French court martial of making plans of French barracks and reporting the movement of troops beneflV ef .the and ''traitts-fo- csabotage gang headed by Albert Schlagetcr recently executed By the French. Heinrich Kinder, a buyer for Krupp. -- was sentenced to ten years at hard labor; Wilhelm Jenanirae, a designer, waa given five years: Ernest Mar gram, electrician, two years, and Frams W eilandt, laboratory assistant, six months. Baron Krupp von Bohlen and ,hls throe fellow directors, Bruhn, Hart-wi- g nd Oesterlln, whose appeal to the French ' supreme court Is still pending, have been removed from the local jail to the military prison st Zwelbrucken. in the Barre valley. This will interrupt their active supervision of the Krupp plant which has been made possible through the French permitting other Krupp executives to consult with them, Herr LultflWik acting president of the Dtmssetdorf district, was sentenced today by a Belgian court martial at Sterkrade to ten months imprisonment on conviction of the charge of making insulting remark about the Belgians. Herr Luttrbrk has been a thorn in the aide of the occupation authorities, because he has een a prolific writer of letter of protest against the act of French and Belgian officials. The main line railroad used by the FYench for the transportation of coal and coke mu of the occupied Ruhr district was cut early today by the explosion of bomb, Roth tracks were tqyn up for a considerable distance and traffic will be interrupted for some time. A coal train was derailed by the damaged track. Tn two 6tftfr$ack contact "'bomb "were" exploded when struck1 by locomotives, both engines being derailed. Aa in most cans recently the sabotage occurred In wooded districts, the French have ordered that the trees be cut dowm for 24 met ere on each side of the right of wav In all districts where attempts hsve been made to cut the rails. The FYench announce that German civilians must chop down the trees and that the burgomaster of the various towns will be called upon, to supply the woodcutters. -- Suspect Is Held. BFtUXGFiraLtr; Masa, Jan 1 F Garrett White, alias sJohn S. Fremont. wanted "In Ism Angeles on a of larrenv of $36.fi 00, was heifi rhr few a hearing today on a fugitive He has said he would not charge fight extradition. -- 0.) Big Class to Graduate From Naval Academy Md . Juno Z nudsbipmen will r- ceive diploma of graduation from the naval academy at commencement ceremonies to be held on Thureday of next week, although the exact number will not be determined until the ua y department acts upon a report of the academic board which was forTh warded to Washington lodav board met todav and finally passed Infew In MmerU a roll. the upon stances diplomas will be withheld, it I of sre rae midshipstated, Tpes men prevented from taktng the final tewts by reason of sickness or other causes. r fe AJmAPOLJR. Bride of Few Weeks Is Robbed and Deserted ' CHICAGO. June 2. Mrs. Robert E. Barre, 28, of Marietta, Ohio, a bndn of only a few weeks, reported t the police todav that her husband tdok all her jewels lat mrht and left bhr penniless in a fashionable hotel here, MAWETTA, Ohio, June 2- - Rob ert E. Barry, who, with his bride, left Marietta for California on May their immediately following 29, marriage, is wanted bv the police a eharge of having herp a worthless cheek, 'Bam- - came to Marietta from New Tork CTtv, where he met Eranees Louise Gage, daujrh ter of a wealthy resident of W ash inrton eeunty. The marriage lieense records her show that Barrv gave his age as 25. his home as ?Tbw York Ctv and bis oeenpation ms aviator He is a son of Robert E. Barry, br., of New York City. Suppression, of D&udet ..Organization Promised as Result of Chamber Fight t PARIS, June 2,(By the Ann eiated Press.) Reports thst a com has been ret plfte up m PH ore ready ko undertake a campaign similar to that conducted by Mussolini in Italy have gained circulation as of yesterdays debate on French Faseism m the chamber of deputies and the disclosure by got eminent officials of details regarding royalist organizations throughout the CAuptry. Details of tho organization as gathered by the police show that each department in France has its staff of officers who'reeeive ord-- rs fr?m the headquarters in Parts. Each arrondissement in Paris is aim so at a word that Sarly organized of command from, the head of the organization the whole force might te vt in motiou. The importance of the governments disclosure, however, was discounted bv an official of the royal, ist organization, LAction todav. . The has diseovered a mare's goiernmept nest. he said. tOur organization dates twenty years bark, when I, 'Action FrancaTso had its birth Then, as now, we had local France organizations throughout connected wth a central organization. Nothing has been changed surer. Proceedings wiil probably be instituted at once to dissolve L Action Francaise. a government official declared todav. The goiernment's decision is to hae resulted from the of Thumdav night, in which Socialist deputies were set upon bv members of the King's Camelots, a rovalist connected organization with 1,' Action Francaisc. The use bv t nmelots of castor oil and ink in thesp attaela was referred to in the subsequent chamber of.deputies as indicating the outbreak of Fascism in France. Fran-caise- debate By MARK SULLIVAN. 1$33 by New York Tribune Inc IjONTON, June S. Your correspondent the other day for an afternoon and evening aat through a aeesiion of " jhe Irish Dail (pronounced like ah-eeL- '' almost like Dojle) They aeem to have adopted the manner of the English house of commons, meeting At I in the afternoon and sitting often until late in the night Itwaa, I suppose, a charartertatir session. ,Th debates a bill for the censorship of motion picture film, a financial budget bill and one of Mr d Valera's' overtures toward peaee. &Tk members of tbs cabinet aat on the front bench of the government as in practically all European side, legislatures, though not in our American congress. Instinctively one compared them with our own present cabinet at home. Naturally, the comparison waa to the disadvantage of the Free State Among 4,000.000 people there are not to be found a many picked men of big caliber as among 100.000.000. our present Moreover, American cabinet happens to be probably the strongest taking It a a whole slnOe President Havre's. In the '70s The Dail cabinet Is oung I should Imagine the average age is not much (Copyright, fdr-eig- cUi-xe- - fc The-ma- leased Prospects Good for ' OK) 0K) OK) tter . OK) op I too ball Battle Wet-Dr- y H0 OK) Public-Opinio- n OK) 00 Looms Capital Discusses Political Aspect Tribune Salt I .lie Triban. Wire WASHINGTON. Jun 2 Wh.ther th. rebellion agxinet the Vo 1. 1 e. d xet will ere.te z dlzlurbznoe In the Republican party ramainz to ba seen It U not an Iszu e In that party now and Cbfc'.s i Oregon-Washingt- ns tllv lv Democrats would can ticket vote the Republi- Ksch partv would figure that It hed more to gain and he. to lose In thia than the other Aa a result of these eon siderat Ion, re-p- -- It falls out that Politicians are concerned more, r'ght now. with the shaping of the Issues than r.lth Individual candidacies. If th. wets gain control of the Democratic eon. ventlnn they would b In a strong position to Dominate either At Hmlth Hwderwnnd wf Mbs trie ' K the drts should he tn the saddle the advantage nould be with such candidates as William G. McAdoo and Senator Ralston of Indiana. If there were a deadlock there would be a, chance for John W. Davla. of West Virginia, for example In tha meantime the fortune of factions and candidates are likely to he profoundly affected bv condition, produced In New York bv the abro- tha state prohibition engation of actforcement - I.tquor never has bea In scarce tha metropolis and the general expectation is that It will flow pretty freely now, despite Washingtons efforts to enforce the law The dry wilt endeavor to put a new enforcement law through the next legislature. despite the prospect of s veto by Hmlth, and to elect a governor next year who woultj stgn a new bill. 3 tory for the Lawless, Prohibitionists Say.. Rr Jun 3 -Britten, RetHjhlFxn, mi4 today that on the flrt day of th nxt eion of conrrea h would Introduce a bill to KfaH the manufacture and ale of light win and berr, with the reeultin federal taxe applied to a eoidierr benu. lie raid he regarded Governor KmttV couree in aiming the New York enforcement repeal a plndtL Moet of the mrfrtber of the state house refused to comment WASHINGTON. ntttve York Situation .Crimps the Resource of Federal Agencies. CVe,f Trtbonega't take fnhoaj Win. WASHINGTON, June S A dry drive on congress for Increased appropriations to enable the federal gov- Governor Asserted to Have Both Damned and Boosted Himself Public Opinion. Heres Variety of Conclusions as to Results ernment to enforce the Volstead act Is In prospect as a result of the of Governor Smith of New York vesterday In signing the bill repealing tho state prohibition enforcement n law. Federal authorities here fmnkly ad mitted that It would be difficult If not wen nigh Impossible, for the national government, wHh the funds and forces now available, to cope effectively with the situation presented In New York. may become much more serious It several other- states with wet leanings follow Nbw Yorks lend. At the present time congress Is appropriating about 110 000 060 annualenforcement ly for the prohibition unit, headed by Major Bov Haynes 1 h's enables the prohibition unit to employ 2000 agents who are distributed In various parts of the country, according to the degree of act- ress. The appropriation does not In- clude additional funds wnlch eongreea bss found it necessary to allow the department of Justice to handle the thousands of prohibition eases which are swamping the federal courts During the last hearings before the bonze appropriations committee Representative Gall!' an Democrat Massachusetts. a wet member, estimated was that the federal government U nno 00(1 to spending approximately enforce prohibition,- - practlcallv all of It in communities where local sentl ment was admittedly wet. Wets Will Contest. The prospective effort to Increase this appropriation-- will he bitterly contested by the wets Congress has shown an Increasing tendency during the past jtar cr two for tightening the purse strings no prohibition enforcement and the wets are confident thet thev will be able to block any attempt to raise the outlay above the Wet present average annual figure.'Tlnk-harleaders, notably Representative point Republican, Massachusetts, nothout that congress appropriates ing tn enforce the fourteenth and fifteenth emendmente In the southern states and argUr that there Is abundant precedent for holding down If not cutting off entirely the appropriations for enforcing the eighteenth amendment. The wets are not quite so confident, be able tn however, that they a accomplish mpeb In the direction of modification of the Volstead act aa during suggested by Governor Smith the next session. Wile to permit a more liberal alcoholic content than that now, allowed by the Volstead act have already been drafted and will be ready for Introduction both In the house and in the senate when congress reconvenes. There la almost no chance of tha favorable action on the meaeuree, as congress Is now constituted, but thev will be debated considerably with so eye on ceil year's elections. Are Flabbergasted. The signing of the dry rrpesler by Goternor Smith, although not unexpected. appeared to liave rendered It Washington authorities speechless. revealed that they were wholly unpreProhibisltuetlon meet the to pared tion Commissioner Haynes declined to make any statement. E. Yellowly. chief of the prohibition agents will go to New Tork to malc,a survey of the situation and whst is needed, and will lay the facts before Secretary of a. 111 New York Governor Ac-tio- n Considered From Standpoint of Con- flicting Interest. Br ralNW) Berrtpp, -June lOrmlffht WAfeKINGTON, reaction In official and political Wash- ington to Governor Smith a approval qf the bill repeaJini the New York state prohibition enforcement law, may be summed up In the following conclusions: Republican Drawa tighrr the line of demarcation between the Republican and Democratic party and further President Harding's effort to place the o. O. P. definitely on the aide of the MdryM in th public mirnl, with reaultant benefit to the Republicans ami trouble for tho Democrats Democrat Purely a state matter and In no sense should be regarded as committing the party nationally to a 'rivet stand. The party's attitude on the question can be determined solely by the national convention next summer. Leaders divided on tha beneficial or harmful effects of Governor Hmubs action aa it will affect the national situation. An Una loon league Force the fight tn the open for a welcome test of the claims ofTtM wetk that the country has swung over to tho "wet view, and insures law And order aa one of the paramount issues of the 1924 national campaign. ' Association Agaifist Hie TYntlfMtttm AmendmanPMPo4nta the way to tha ultimata modification of the more Volstaad drastic provisions of th act authorities Federal prohibition Adda tremendous handicap to the task of enforcement', but had been anticithe government will do tha pated, and heat It can with limited funds and forces. Question of whether or not agents will be withdrawn from other tatee.end sent to New Tork in large numbers i The federal government policy for dealing with the New York situatioh will be worked out at a aeries of conferences next week, in whkh President Harding, Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, Internal Revenue Commissioner Blair, Prohibition Commissioner Haynes and Attorney General Daugherty' will take part. Pending the convening of congress next December, it waa said, there are two alternative deplete the only force in other sections to strengthen , -- CsattaoH ea Fso - Fear r' tta.)- 1(M Feer gteatiaeed ee (Gelena Tear.) ftp Fifty-on-e Moroi Are MAX1I.&, June S. (By tho Afso eiated Pres.) Fifty thra fanatiral Mero, including Akbara, the have bullet proof prophet-- self-style- d , been killed in a fight with tho constabulary oa .the island of Pala. hear Joio (Suhi). No details of tho uprising have been received. A total of 800 Moroi surrendered to the constabulary after the battle. It is estimated there are SD0 more of the fanatics still at large, three pettv chieftains. The authorities believe the fight has broketrlbe-bnrl- r VILLAGE IS THREATENED. CONCORD. N H. June 1 Aid has to been sent from here Canaan, where ftre Is reported to he sweeping through the vtltage At the Boston A Maine railroad offices here It was said that the Canaan station waa afire and that setensl other bulld- Irgs had been either dee, meed r damag'd. Including the telephone ofWord received from a telephone fice lineman who put tip temporary circuit was to the effect that the buslines section of Canaan bad been virtually destroyed. Martinez Mutt Di. n PHOENIX. Art., Jun court this afternoon cornua writ wreaked tke which aaved Manuel Martin from hawrtnjr May 22 infor th murder of J a bandit raid at Frank Pearson Rohv. Artr in August. l$?l The supreme court tffderrd that Martinet be taken back to the Banta Oru county superior court for reaentenc-tn- . J.w-- Th Art-xo- ha-bo- j SIX. " FALL. HURT , Six Mo. June were injured aevuraJ believed th seriously, when lightning struckbuild-in Pornioe on a downtown busines fats today. The heat v corn ire fell to the street, nulling part of fire eacapa with it, and smashed several automobiles parked la the bu&ines district. CORNICE BTrT-OLTB- I WASHINGTON. June Repeal of the New York state prohibition enforcement was characterised by headquarters of th Association Against th Prohibition Amendment today aa a triumph by the people over the An tisaloon league. "In his statement of reasons which swayed him In signing the repeal act, said W, H. StayUn, head of the association, Governor Smith ha performed patrlotio duty of the highest order, in serving to dear up the confusion and misapprehension regarding the whole situation, which 9aa been so sedulously spread hr the fanatical prohibition and particular the organiratioh Aatiaeloe Jeegua-,H- -' bar rtearty disposed of the persistent efforts of the reformer to place the Velsteed act and the elghteentif amendment In fhe same category. The repeated chargee of the AnUsaloon league, through it general counsel, Wayne B. Wheeler, that repudiation of any mate legislation designed to enforce Voiaieadism constituted nuUlica tlon Is torn to shreds. The whole constitutes distinct triumph for the people and the rule of the majority as opposed to the kmg reign of the AntisaJoon league, whose lease of power m fast funning out. No longer can it dominate tha legislature of the stats or the na- tion The reign of the organised mi over. BorRy per-so- Portals Without Any Chic.,. TtlbeeeS.lt lake Tribes. WUe. Follow-IriMADISON. Win.. June the airnlnc of the Oovtlller blit tho state repealing prohibition enforcement art Jn New York, Assam hlvrran Herman Tucker, Roclalut, of todav Jn tha azsemblv Milwaukee, succeeded In taking the Tucker bill from the table and having It placed on Thursday , calendar. The hill entirely repeals the he verson tow and IS exactly almllar to the WU sinned by Governor Smith Of New York, c Tucker', motion, being not debatable, passed without diMcusaion snd Assemblyman following his auocess announced he Lindahl, buperior, would Introduce a resolution congratulating Governor Rmith on his stand for personal liberty. Assemblyman Tucker pointed out thst the only consistent position for those opposed te prohibition was lo agitata for the repast of the state forcament laws and of the Volstead act. Then, said Tucker, the eighteenth amendment wilt be tn the same class with tho fourteenth and fifteenth amendments, which have never been enforced bv any Republican or Demoeratlo administration. Furthermore,'' Tucker pointed out. "during the war the old parties united In refusing to enforce tho first ten to the constitution, omendments known as the bill of rights. the eld parties must stand on their records of the last aixty years, which is to enforre only such portions of th, oonrtttopHNi as they believe to bo favorable to their interests. A constitutions! amendment Ilk the dry amendment ts not "It has no Tucker declsred effect until enforcing legislation such a. the Voiztesd snd the Kevsrson set are adorned Consequently, atlh the ropes! of the, acts the dry amendment sutomatleath becomes a dead letter, as hays and fifteenth. t Smith Dead, Andsrsow S.yw error 1. Gov TORK. June NEW Pmilh's signature In the repeal of the as fciHcd - hl. .Miffm chances of being nominated for th h a presidency, but hasin strengthened the state. Tf DOlitlcsJ Standing jf Gonze-guent- H. Anderson, stale superinten- A Free Map of the - gro-er- al lf hr n. dloyd four-col- ls -- , er . f -- WETS MAKE MOVE IN BADGER STATE ly dent of the AnUsaloon league of New York, declared todzv. hr said "is "Governor hmlth," Emotion; I No. 37,944. done so far as the presidenc is cona cerned He has not a chmncs In hundred of nomination, nor one In a thousand of election If nominated. SAN QUENTIN, CalTJune J Mrs. But In a rare for governor pr New Oara Phillip, convicted of LIU Inc Cntlwri Nri fwt Mr. Albert Tremaine Meadows with (Mnu Tie..) a hammer near IjO Angeles July 12. 1922, waa incarcerated In San Quentin state prison today after having escaped from the Jx Angeles count JHlto Yeiruclgalpa. Ifontlurts, Panama-Cana- l. Mrs. Phillip, whoerttfej the prison gate without a tear, although know that Do your you the great nervous strain she ment excavated enough material was under, relaxed when she reached to flit a from- - the-- Panama-canthe womans ward. Khe went to bed train of cars circling tha earth Immediately after going through v the one-hatimes? and three formalities of rerulatton Not since the dawn of History has Mrs, Phlbips will b allowed to rM man put his hand to such a mighty for a few dara and prison tasks aa the building of the great be task will thn .assigned her Mr. Phillips entered tha gates of ditch la Panama. Pan Quentin prison at noon and offiHere ts a beautiful souvenir of cially became prisoner No. 37 944. She th'a rlupeodous accomplishment maintained her poise, snd. other than will be apprenaied by every that a passionate farewell hug bestowed American citizen. upon her meter, Mrs. Ftta Ma Jack-soOur Washington Information Buno emotion. she reau will send a blrdseye Mrs. Phillips pas formally turned view irap of tha Panama canal to over to Myron T. Clark captain of the send cents In two who will anyone ruarfla. at the stale penitentiary bv wtampe r mum postaew. Fill tn BiSTAkloX pt ppu $r Ftertrr JSuiffncs sure writ te be the eotrpetr and Angeles county The deputy sherdearly on tha lines. iff and Mrs. Biscaiius brought Mrs. Phillips 'roof than 4fX0 miles from Honduras, where she was caught after her escape from the Los Angeles Frederic 3 Baskin, Director, The Fait Lake Tribune county jail Information Bureau, Mr. Phillips waa taken to the womM ashingtoa, D. G. ens quarters, where BertiUon measurement were made. She shed no I endue, herewith two welt , tears. In stamp, for return postage on free a copy of the Panama Map. JOHN E. RHODE DIE. June S John NEW ORLEANS, of Nam Edgar Rhodes, secret the Foujhgrn Fine association and One of the best known trade execuStreet tives In the country, died in a hostwo a months' Jllnesa City pital after 4 . . Mr Rhode. vears old, and a i of Kent, Ohio, pas a former guts ....... newspaper man and at one time waa publisher of the Tacoma (Wash.) Tribona. , na-tli- tf -- 1 h Slain in Island . Fight Fugitive Murderes Passes of movement, but further constabulary detachments are being sent to the OK) district to gather in all the aV hereats of the Prophet Akbara. 00 OK) with Treaident Harding apparently fpeiif Is TWe THbvn. 2 W azxurcd of renomlnatlon. If the move-SnrS Work BOISE. Iddho. June initiated by Al Btnlth should at Weatherby Bio. sectionaod--foreman ILtbRemas-ua,r.(4i?a . JirpiaiVepa..ptnUbIp.. to,galn wa kitted tello. worker on a signal gang control of the , partv and verety cut about the head when thev. dictate a wet Democratic nomination on a speeder, ran Into th not unltkelv that and platform R'J.f limited at 7 oclock )at RenuWIcan leader would wax restive and gUe grave conzlderatlon to the svening near Baker,toOr. the Baker hos- advisability of heaving an anchor lo Bruce vu taken Senator Johnson- .- who windward. pital. Hla condition Is ngrtou loves to extol the light wine of Califind an . issue besides fornia might Widow Presents Nation which to that of the world court on of the presrenomlnatlon the contest CarnarvoiCs Collection ident. A contest between a bone dir LONDON. June t The Eart of candidate and a Wet Demoprivate mllecttnn of enttooi-tte- s cratic candidate manifestly would bin widow to furnish a ilear-eu- t will be presented by test of national tho nation for the British museum, sentiment on prohibition after a four Mail. ears the veer trial of. the Institution and The newspaper ssnerts that the doubtless would bend If not break pros pee the rifts will Include whatever partv tinea MU Ilona of wet Republicans part of the treasure found in Tutankhwould support tha Democratamen s tomb I allotted to Carnarvon s ic candidate, while millions ot dry estate by the Egyptian authorities. A Nothing by Comparison With Congress of U. S. to Fr Triumph for People, Britten to Propose Wine-Bee- r Measure Wets Declare; Vicat Coming Session Suffers New SETS FOUR FREE pat Clear Test of One Killed and One Hurt When Train Hits Speeder F Situation Found Favor- Funds and Force' Now Insufficient Available able for Ultimate. Sofor Real Enforcement. lution of Problems. Dail ' Personnel J , - IS shore 26 ffThey hare' native abtttty, the capacity to meet and irverom crises, It ha ret to be written wt their countenances There was no on with a sum of experience comparing with that of Hughes, or Mellon, or Hoover, or Weeks. Go iad a moment, too, of comparing this cabinet of a new nation with the leaders who started our own America off after its secession from Great Britain. But one abandoned that comparison instantly, with a little pang of pity for Ireland. Tragedv of one sort or another had deprived the Free State of three of the best of Its pioneers It ts aa if within a year after w wonoor Yndspawdesos George Washington had been mur. derod. Alexander Hamilton bad died of RemainRelease Early and Thomas Jefferson had gone oft on an insurrection. ' BeComparison Favorable. Now ing Captives ' But while the Dail cabinet is much and otherwise not to be comlieved Be Probable. younger pared with ours at home, the membership of the Dal), aa a whole, need not fear comparison with our lower house of congress, or even with our Aso-ciatTlbTS'TSTV, 4 senate. In tho debates there wan huJunv2 (By the n mor, common sense and decidedly Press ) Four more of th more of sign learning than captives held by (hq Suchow In our congress.qlasalc (The Dail includes train bandits on American, two a marked sprinkling of teachers and institutions of British jfi Jects and on Mexican n ftrorfesaors from member of the Dail la in have been released unconditionand manner a counterpart of features ally and arrived toda at the relief the late Champ Clark. There waa 10ft per cent absence of camp at Teaochwpf, according to a anvthing even faintlv of the nature of telegram from there Those released todar were Jerome A. Catiivd a Fg Far Hrnlcv American. Commodore hotel, (OiIbm Tv.) New York employed bv the Ferron-Danicompany at Shanghai- Kdward Four Killed in Crash Wlas and Theodore Sapphier. Jiotlv RrTUh auMect and brokers of febang-ha- i. on Railway Crossing and Manuel A erea, manufacturer of Guadalajara. Mexico. N. Y., Jn BfFFALO, 2.Four The dihpatch from Taaochwang Raid sere for the speedy release persons wort killed and one was prepeeis of the eight other foreigner imprisslifzbtlr hurt today when au Erie oned on Paotsuku mountain tram hit au automobile at tha Fne The international military commisrailroad jvade rrossmff near sion rest hed Tsaochnarig today and The victims are all of the sent an airplane to reconnoiter the family of Joha Smith, engineer at bandits position. The efght fore gnera Mill held at the plant of the Eastern Tanners last reports from the Fhantung hills, Glue compsny. Included four Americans UNDER SERIOUS CHARGES. MAjor Roland R Finger t' S. arrm. ordnance department, tcedfT PYiedrnan, "f 3im 1 of GhUago and Shanghai, John B widely known motion picture diPowell Bhanghai, newspaper man, and rector. and Oaston Gians, motion picIee Solomon of Kan Francisco and ture actor, wereIn arrested today by a roomlnsr home The others were Fred police officers Shanghai broker of Shanghai and a and taken to the city police court to Eha Two brother of the Kdward Ellas who was answer a charge of lagrancy. been released toda and RerlnAJd H Row-la- tt young women, eald to ha of Tientsin both British aubjecti; found In tho same house were also Km ile Gensburger Shanghai broker, taken to court on the same charre was cm Inued until The defendants were reMonday Coi1ad a lift TGlsma Tsar.) Smiths Sanction of Dry Act Repeal Sets Factions by the Ears - E FIVE CENTS PAGES 66 . I or |