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Show ' THE WEATHER, Y Silver cad fair, Lfcal Settlement Price. .... 4Uc . VOL. 107 ELLIS 914.75 SALT LAKE 71. NO; Postwar Depressions End Seems Discernible, D II E Harding Tells Kansans TO Lack of Team Work Re-- . sponsible for Miman-agemen-t, Probe Reveals Being Deported; Threatens Commons Britons Step. Retaliatory hictgo Tribune Malt Like Tribune Wire. V 2r With the flaying Ellis Is ctnd and threatening retaliation if ihi mrric&n government does not i hanire Us methods of detaining trown subjects there, actual deportations of Britotis shut out by the Immigrant auota law have begun. Mv the firm time in the hiatorv of the two nations, subjects of the king of Eng.and were barred from,enter-'n- ? the I nited States merely on the ore thif a certain specified nurtiber been admitted nt them had already within a year, and not upon a basis of e eet.on Six Bnton were taken ifm Kills inland and plated upon ship. which will sail for England. rl hU of them were women, m-- 4 ud ng Mie Ma.de Dlemonfe. Miss Dorothy okes, Mrs M E louson and two children, all of whom had come here to join relatives and dwell ermanently e ludfd Tnere are fifty -- een Kriton'. still left on the inland, fifteen iI whom arc stowaways. The latter would be deported regardless of the quota law, but the remaining fortv-vi- o were excluded by boards of specs! inquiry simply because the Brit-i'- h quota of 77 Outi per year under the Dillingham act has been completely All excluded aliens have the tilled right of appeal to the almost auto- ratic discretionary powers of the secretary of labor, and these Britons ae made thir appeals and are anxiouslv waiting for the final ruling uom ashmgton ISLAND CONDITIONS. Concerning the matter of whether thi Brtturh house of the. inticlism commons finds justification in present conditions on Ellis Island, a special investigation resulted in these rev fU lions First. There Is a woefully small force of Inspectors now active n the wotK of passing upon the fitness of the jPsflOuiUCJkUens, and this in largely responsible for undue crowding of thf detention quarters. Second. That the morale of the force is at so low an ebb that team-vn-'- c ORK, June Hrtush houc of common M:V n with the retiring commissioner. Rolcrt VI Tod and with the appeal board In Washington which finally review all casts on appeal, is rendered impossible Third. That U is true, and admitted bv Commissioner Tod himseK, thaf British women have been, and slit! are, lodged in a large room where I 0 or 240 women and children from the congested and unsanitary cities of southern Europe also are lodged on equal terms. They all sleep on bed. with onlv a blanket to soften the metal mattress m d FAR FROM 8ANITARY. Fourth That conditions in these 4mwded rooms are far from sanitary', despite all efforts at sanitation and that many aliens have freen stricken Owttawd m Face (Column Tour ) I -- Noted French Aviator Killed in Plane Fall MERACYWRT. Framer June 23. Bv the Associated Press.) The noied Wench aviator. Jean Casale. aas killed and his mechanic. Boulet, d injured when thoir plane suddenly over the village of Hoi de Ville near here this afternoon They were returning from Rerrk. where they took a party of passengers this morning, t a hen the accident occurred. 1 Jean Canale distinguished himself in the French aviation service during the war bringing down seven enemy After the war he plane, ifi combat turned his attention to altitude ftvln and experiments with motmieas airplanes or gliders, and it was only a month ago that he created a new altitude record for plane carrying a weight of 1000 kilogram (JIM pourde), by reaching a height of 100 meters, or approximately 1H.200 feet. He twice set world records for airplanes carrying no specific load, ascending to 1,000 feet in March, 111, and later to 31, US feet ' b - . CITY, WALES MOST THIRTY, Universal Service Cable LONDON, Juen 2.1. The Prince of his twenty-nint- h Wales celebrated hirtlday and was deluged by presents from all over the emand me Many congratulations came to pire the prince from the United States. President Meets Sweetheart of His Boyhood Days HUTCHINSON, Kan., June 23 (By the Associated Press'. ) Forty-fiv- e years ago Warren O. Hardin, then a boy of 12, had a love affair with a small irl. Certainly, Warren would marry. Mattie, the school companions of rack said. Today, tha same Warren Harding, now president of' the United met and recognised the States, same girl in Hutchinson. She had more than a hundred motored miles across Kansas to see him. The president told of the boyhood romance in his address before 7044 persons assembled to hear his of discussion the agriculiiiraj problems of the countrysJfetAjLhe state fairgrounds. He - described her as "My first boyhood sweetheart: married, "heppy. a' and doin her part in the (itlsenship of this reat community." Members of the president's party said later that the president did rot know Mattie by her . married He only remembered her name as "Mattie Meil," of Caledonia, he had not seen for whom Ohio, forty-fiv- e years. jrrand-moth- er President at Hutchinson Takes Optimistic View of Future for Great Basic Industry President Cause Engineer's Chest to Greatly Expand Kas.. June 23 HUTCHINSON, When the president, oh his way here, was informed that it fepectai. Tram was "nearly two of" three miles from Newton, the chief executive recalled a vmtt to that town when be was giving Chautauqua lectures. He greeted members of the trstn crew and had quite a long taik with 8. H Yokum, the engineer. As a boy one of my ambitions was to be a railroad engineer," the Some of president? told Yokum. that old ambition still remains, and I would like to go up and ride with you in the cab, but for the sake of safety first, I guess they wouldn't let the president do It. It must be a pleasant feeling to sit in the cab with a hand on the throttle and with a consciousness of controlled power You know Yokum. when you are up there in the engine with your hand on the lever, you really have more power within your control than I do as president of the United States Yokum a chest expanded several Inches. Tte fall text at the fwedwt'a will he fand elawhare ia this issee. Kan.; June 23. (By HUTCHINSON, the Associated Prose.) President Har- ding brought to the agricultural middle west today a message of optimism, with a prediction that tbe worst of the postwar depression has passed and that gradual improvement could be reasonably expected. In an address devoted to discussion of the agricultural situation, the chief executive reviewed the measures taken by the government to alf the farmers placing at the forefront the farm credit legislation enacted by the last congress. This legislation, wnen carried out, he declared, will be capable of furnishing the American farmsrs, for the first time in the history ?f agriculture in any country, adequate investment and working, capital on terms as favorable as those accorded to commerce and industry Furthermore, he said, it will tend to restore fair prices-- for farm products and aid the farmer in lifting debts incurred the period of depression during I confess a frank pride in the government s pert in bettering a situation against which you justly complained and whkh ail the people of the nation deplored, the president told his audience in this agricultural state. The cooperation of all the goern-mentc,tbe agencies, and with them leadthe fine forces of of cooperation Comptroller ership whichof the Authority farm national great have developed, made it General Challenged by organisations possible to secure a measure of helpful results in thih department of our endeavors which has been especially Federal Commission 'gratifying It has found Moreover, prompt reflection in the improed status of every agricultural concern. fre have been officially informed that 23 WASHINGTON. The owing to improved conditio nk the farm June. Compproducts of the country m 1922 were sweeping authonty asserted by worth $2 000,000 900 more than thev troller General McCarl over disburs-menby the federal gove nmnt was were in 1921 Clearly, we are through the worst of the depression and can emattain challenged today when the expect graduai improveployees eompensation commission de- reasonably ment. of cided. with the apparent backln INDUSTRY'S BALANCE RESTORED Presldeht Hardin, to order resumption of s certain class of pavments The balance' within the industry, which the comptroller general had re- as between livestock and grain profused to aiiow. duction, has been restored. While the war lasted there was no possibility of Attorney General Daugherty recently upheld the validity qf the payoverproduction of such staples as ments, but Mr. McCarl has indicated, wheat And cotton, for example, and audoes he not the when peace suddenly burst upon the that recognize world the farmer had plans for a long thority of ehher the Justice' deportment or thd White House to overrule future which he could nor readjust No human wisdom could poshim. The comptroller generals office controls actual payment of the claims sibly have foretold the course that involved, and apparently It Is the in- would be taken by supply and demand, tention to continue to refuse to' ap- and it 4s as futile as it is obvious to wisdom would hate prove the payment vouohqrji ip, spite us now to sav thata lees of the position taken by the president. dictatW ht least precipitate polIn the wartime restricicy outcome will removing be of What the that and guidance in dealing with situation, no one in official circles tions some aspects of production and discared to predict, but it was suggesttribution. ed that it m'ght result in a showdown When the present administration on the authority of the comptroller . responsibility, agriculture catpe who has recently general, successfully was in Into lowest ebb of depression the held up the orders of several cabinet The Immediate need was for measures officers. to meet an emergency There was far urgent call to kefT open, and. somarour as Continues foreign possible, enlarge kets, and this was accomplished bv Its Toll of Victims a prompt policy of placing her weary credits at the disposal of hose en CHICAGO. June 23 One dealh.nthe gaged in finningbvforeign markets for our foodstiiffs, recalling the war twcnty-acon- d of the week due to finance corporation from its state of the extreme heat, and twelve prostrait a credit animation, suspended tion were reported up to noon to- of 41.900.009 00 in go givmg ernment funda day. At that hour the therroomdter and recommissioning it to afford reregistered 34. Professor Henrj J. lief to the American farmer The wisCox. .forecaster .of the Joral weather dom of this! action was demonstrated bureau, said there was no possibility by results. of rain. LOANS TO FARM INTERESTS. In point of duration this spelt is Almost unprecedented. said Professor Four hundred million dollars have loaned bv this institution, Cox bean sucin the is sixth Today day of it to the farming and live cession that the mercury has gone to 30 degrees or above stork interests At the name time the emergency tariff measure wa passed FRESFORT. III., June 23. Perry B. by which to secure the farmers home Ftaver, 55 vice president of the State market against the flood of competing Hank of Winslow, It , died here today, Articles from distant corners of the overcome by the hct. At Chadwick, earth The new tariff schedules saved III., D. D Cummings, hotel proprietor, for the American farmer a vitally im portant and gravely menaced home dropped dead market. The resumption of the war finance 23 MILWAUKEE. operations, backed by the reTwo Win, June deaths occurred today, due to the heat. sources of the onlv government on was able to summon such that earth Thermometer hovered a registration American farmer credit, eqabled-Tbaround 90 to compete for sales abroad enumerated other The president measures taken by the government to Bulgaria Is Ready to aid the farmer, including the reestabObserve lishment on an active basis of the Treaty federal farm loan board, reduction of POFf June 23 ( Bv (he Assoc- freight rates on farm products and to facilitate cooperative iated Press. legislation Minister KaliofT Foreign has arm a nme to the Lausanne peace marketing of farm products; to pregambling In agricultural oonferwice ratling attention to Bul- vent harmful to regulate and control the garia a declared readiness to observe futures, industry to remove restricparking the treaty of MeutUy and demanding tions upon the operation of the joint fulfillment of tha article promising took land banka to authorise forBulgaria an outlet to the Argmn. The of Irrigation districts whereby note point out that the grant of such mation water-usin- g are brought settlers the an outlet through foreign territory to conduct will be an illusory execution of the together In associations the federal with governtheir relations The Bulgarian delegate at article. on payto extend time and the ment, Iauaann. has been Instructed to take ments due from irrigation fanners to a firm stand on the issue. the government. premier Mussolini of Italy has sent FARMER RECEIVES HIS DUE. Foreign Minister Kailoff a telegram Tf the recital of this long list of expressing satisfaction with the paIn the farmers' bemceompiiatanents cific declaration of the new government and the hope that the economic half shall have ceemed to suggest that been devoting Itself has Washington life of Bulgaria may be rapidly rewith a special and perhaps a partial stored. to the agricultural interests, assiduity Mr. Harding asserted. "I shall reply Police Suppress Paris that the farmer has received nothirig than was coming to him; nothAnti-Fascisti Move more ing more than he needed; nothing more than waa good for him. and nothing that was ao good for all of our naPARIS, June 23. (By the Asso- tional Interests, bound up as they are ciated IVess.) Several thousand in mutuality of deCommunists and workers gathered in and interdependence. I tell 1' pendence de the Place Opera tonight for an ybu I am proud to be able that frankly announced demonstration against Fascism and the royalists, but the to come to you today and tellin you of has been done, because doing heavy forces of police and mounted what it we have served not only the farmer, republican guards sent to the scene, but everybody else in this land. together with the great number of But that la not all. I have respectators, made the program im- served until the last what we mar well of fulfillment.. possible - A few groups started singing the appraise the crowning achievement of ""international." at which the police the entire list. 1 refer to the code agricultural credit legislation known charged end the crowd fled, the de-- of on st rants and spectators alike sprint-in- g as the agricultural credit act of 1923, berame law m the closing days which from the bliiecoata.. The only person Injured Was a man among the of the last congress. It has not been perfect machinery for spectators wearing on him breast the possible yet tothis act, but I do not administering, insignia of the Legion of Honor. hesitate do express confidence that of agricultural this scheme Suffers'-Broken taken In connection with thecredits, other Belgian I have described, furnishes Wrist Bone enactments the basis for the most enlightened, modern, sound and efficient scheme of BRUSSELS. June 33. (Bv the agricultural finance that has been set Aaeociated Press. ) Kin Albert suf- up in any country, and will enable the distant future to free fered a broken bone In his wrist to- farmer in no obstacles which have himself from day when he fell with hfs horse while made it difficult heretofore to con- galloping around the Chateau de The animal wu thrown Laequen. 0Um4 aa fw when his loot caught In a hole. the ts Heat Teuton Mark Is Steadied by Ebert Order F ReGerman Jpurrency sponds to New Rule of Exchange Promulgated by Government. Editorial Comment CausIndefinitely of Amount Jun. 23 CBy the tic in Reference to Holds World Rack and BRAUN, Press ) An o crier from President Ebert dealing wth transactions American Procedure. jmylgated today, .Ilnjtut tn Vanquithed. BESET three-fnurt- e Peace . m King vu P, Uncle Sam Smashes Seals Aboard Liners, Seizes Liquor Cache Drastic Step Follows Balked in Effort Hectic Day Among to Replevin Bees Federal and Port At- -' VC4I KHGAN, III. June Ieputy fehertff Walt a' Stark and taches in New York. a squad of special policemen start-- , Deputy Sheriff Is Z3 Asso-eiat- ed Country Declared Better Able to Pay Now Than at Time of Armistice. BY (Copyright, MARK SULLIVAN. 1923, by N T Tnhjune, Inc ) June 23 In this unhappy European situation one of the many obstacles In the path of clear thinking and helpfulness is the fact that whenever you criticise anything the French government dn. vou seem, by implication, to be expressing sympathy for Germany This confusion of thought was tht we made in cauae of the about-fac- e America over the French invasion of the Ruhr lTp until the time France actually entered the Ruhr our American public opinion deplored it and tn- misted that Mr Harding and Mr. to prevent tt, Hughe j da something as soon as France had acbut Just tually taken the step the Germans began to wail to heaven. Thereupon in America turned public opinion We declined to shed anv around tears oer Germany s woes We remembered what Germany done in France and in Belgium, th' , Rememdeportations, the executions. Now let bering all that, we saidher own meof Germany take a dose dicine.' We continued to know tkat was most unwhat France was doing fortunate from the point of view of world that wanted to get back jo peace and stability, but, however much right we had and Britain had, and the whole world of Innocent had. for deploring the French action, we knew that Germany, in view of her own record, was not in And so an postion to complain American public opinion which disapproved the French action refused, nevertheless, to let that disapprobation be turned into sympathy for Germany. PARIS. herf both sides Wrong. In this Ruhr situation both parties are in the wrong What the Freftch govamment is doing Is unwise. Every government except the French one Our government at thinks R unwise home thinks so. (The day the French entered the Ruhr we withdrew, our troops to )et France know hat we thought of it ) Britain deplores It. Italy deplores It. Even tbe Helgiepa government, which Is nomipartner of the French govnally ernment in the enterprise, thinks it unwise (The Belgian government is under duress to the French ) Many of the best people In France heartily their government's disapprove of .etion But It doesnt follow that jnu need, sympathise with Germany With the (Otebsued m Page Seveateae (Part Peer.) to-Tak- e 4 62 PAGES FIVE CENTS SUNDAY MORNING, JUNE 24, ,1923. ISLAND'S TROUBLES 1 1 ,,97.25 Copper (cathodoai i Tribune .Want Ads act quickly and cost but a trifle compared with the service rendered. cxeapf fia, 'bly anowara northwest portion, Sunday and Monday, Big Shipment of Silver Made From the Yukon ANCHORAGE, Alaska June 23. At Nensna, 215 miles north of hers at the donhmction of the Alaska railroad and the Tanana river are seventeen carloads of silver ore. valued at the first shipment of what Is expected to prove a voluminous movement of the produce of Yukon Territory by a new route to the outaide 1280.-00- 0. world The ore was brought by steamers from the Mayo di?trict. far up the Stewart river in Y'ukon Territory, down to the Yukon, down that river through Dawson to Tanana and from there up the Tanana river to Nenana. At Nenana the ore will be loaded on railroad cars and shipped to Anchorage for transfer to ocean steamers Through passenger traffic on the Alaska railroad, suspended June 99 because of washouts, has been renamed brooming effective immediately. The regulations provide , that in exchange for the reichsmark or securities payable in the reichsmark and charges can only be met In sUl h foreign currencies as are officially quoted' In Berlin, and not the day's official price. On days when the currency tn question is not quoted officially, no transactions may be concluded in it except in transactions with the rtfehs-banIt provides that business done in contravention of these regulations shall be null and void The mark showed Improvement of more than 14.900 points on the dollar tn the Berl n exchange market today as a result of the governmental decree and the hesitation with which the dealers are awaiting further early steps whlh the government is reported to have under consideration. The ofFckal dollar rate for tbe da)- was announced this afternoon as from 121,190 to 121 804 marks, as compared with yesterday's 135,060 to 136.340. NEW YORK, June 23. Mark In the local market toriav upon news from Berlin that the German government had ruled that orders in foreign monej s In Germany should be bandied at the bourses official rate of exchange and tutting off operations of outside speculators Tbe mark, which sold last Monday h OoatlsMd en Ooluma Six. Four ) Influential Some by Lon d o n Newspaper. Tnbune-Sa.i- l Cable. IWDON June Lake Tnbuna Ixnrin The 23 Jnrthis (HO OK) i'nited States today smashed the American watergt To us British shipping MORAL ISSUE. II hakpt . at Anglo-Americ- Anglo-Americ- how-evs- i. pvw-cia- I j 1 OK) Half-Sist- (Bjr HUTCHINSON, Kao. Jun Preaa. ) PreakJent the Aaaoeiated 100-re Warren O. Hardier went into a lienana wheat Held near here today, drove a binder, ahoefced up anxne o t tbe herreated grain In both the Kansaa and Ohio way and obtained information aa to th probd lem at the wheat farmer of the middle went. , The chief executive demonstrated that he bad not forgotten his farm-bo- y days tn Ohio, and aa he climbed down Jrom the tractor which drew binder Governor Jonathan the M. Davis of Kansas exclaimed "You are some farmer, Mr. Preai-denand several of the farm hands called out, "You are all right. Chief!'' The visit to th wheat field, located about five mile, out in the country, was (he feature of the earlier part of the vfatt of the president and Mrs. Harding to Hutchinson. Prior to the the premdent trip Into the tocountry s gathering of echool poke briefly children In the City park, and late in tbe day went to the state fair ground! to deliver the third prepared address of his western trip. WALK 4NTQ FIELD. Arriving at the wheat field on what la known in this part 'of Kansas aa the Chester O'Neil farm, the president and Mrs. Harding left the motor car and walked to the gate into the field. A number of persons had gath-ere- d and the president and Mrs. Harding shook hands wl(h several. harvest hands, children and others. "Warren, have your picture taken Mra. Har said little with tha baby," 13. first-han- ten-fo- : tr -- r - er By nightfall there bed been removed from the Baltic all Jlquid supplies which Dr. E. K. Sprague, chief of thd United States public health sen Ice, of considered in excess of medicinal needs, and it was announced that sur, plus wet goods would b taken from the Berengaria Monday morning. Th liquor seised was trucked to government warehouses. Captain of both vessels entered formal protests at th 22. Miss Ully June breaking of 'their governments aegis, of A de la. rile De- but put no obstacles in tbe ,pgth of Priet I Court in Former Witness in Montreal MOiNTREAU, Delorme, half-rtet- er lorme, former Catholic priest of murderlns bis half-broth- set-use- d b Farm Bloc British The baby was a chubby, d little girl, a year or more of aga "Now. don't be afraid to hold it." laughingly remarked Mrs. Harding ae the camera clicked at the president, with the tittle girl in his arms and several other youngsters at hi feet. One youngster with a navy cap caught th chief executive's aye, and as the boy removed hie cap th president noticed a bruise on the boys forehead. In reply to how he had hurt himself, the youngster said: "I got off my tricycle the wrong way and tried to kiss th pavement." Th premdent spied another little felloyr in bUi. denim .with a heavy watch chain displayed prominently from his overalls pocket. "What time l it, eon? queried the chief executive. The urchin pulled out the long chain -andI replied: aint got no watch on. ding. bhie-eye- . "shocks some wheat. Airman Burns to Death in Fall d (By the R L Foote, piBristol Locifer monoplane, loting fell and was burned to death near Chertney, Surrev, today, while on the last lap of che handicap ruce for the G roe venor challenge cup of club. Aero Roval the The race was open to British pilots driving machines of less than 10 horsepower. The winner was Flight lieutenant W. H. London, piloting a Sopwith Lerhone TiONDON, June 33. Ptmw-- ) Major Asso-date- 400-mt- Former Justice Clarke Is Attacked by Dog YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio. June 23. A report received at police headquarters today that John H. Clarke, former justice of the supreme court of the United Btates, had been badly bitten by a mad dog, caused a flurry of excitement until it was learned that a stray dog for which Mr. Clarke was caring had attacked him, tearing his clothing but not breaking the skin. It is believed th dog was affected by the Heat, bat was mrt mad. Police killed the animal. V After the handshaking and taik with the children which went on while the president was waiting for the binder to drive up. the party walked into th wheat field. President Harding and Governor Davis put up a shock of wheat, but, not pleased with their work, shocked another, 'Now let me show you th Ohio said the president, and, after way. City" Manager to stepping a few paces, he gathered sp several bundle and shocked them to Take Post on Coast th approval of Governor Davis and Senator Capper. E. June Charles NORFOLK, "Do I get in on the farm bloc now?" Asbburne, city manager of Norfolk laughingly remarked the president to and to hold man first tbe that posiSenator Capper, head of tbe senate States, resigned tofarm bloc, aa h brushed some of the tion tno the United accept the city managership of day s Th--Pace Tv, Stockton, Cal., at a salary of (20,044 . year. First ) I 7 a. acting: slow in confiscating officials. Raoul, student, testi- SLOW an Ottowa university that fied today concerning events transpired in her home January I, was 1921, the day on which Raoul shot to death on the outskirts of the cil). The defendant, who has been fccrib-bllvoluminous notes since th trial started, today had a supply of fresh n IN Uncle Sam was delivering his punch. Twice he raised his fist against those who had defied his prohibition laws and twice he lowered lu while his executives held psrley. Conflicting orderg rained on the waterfront before the saixure made, and, in the meanwhile, the French liner Baris steamed Into the harbor with a maritime cellar 'Veit stocked ' for the homeward voyage. Indication, were that even more trouble would accumulate next week, when more liner will arrive carrying liquor atruss limit. the three-mil- e Customs officials and prohibition enforcement agents massed this morning on the pier occupied by th White' Star liner Baltic, which yesterday unexpectedly slipped into port ahead of th Cu harder Berengaria, heralded aa the first liner to test the treasury de- notebooks Miss Delorme testified that the former rlertc did not leave the house p. ni. and J a. tn. on between the nieht of the murder and that Raoul had left at ?5 4 p m. Breaking down frequently, the irl was tested aa to her ability to tell time by watch or clock. Three time she failed to read the time correctly by a watch, hut answered correctly partments ruling. Tbs announced purwhen shown a clock. Miss Delorme s testimony arms of- pose of the American official was to down on th two vessels and swoop In th former iNe'i fered support of alibi, which was that he had not left promptly confiscate their stocks. DAY' TH the house at all on the night of the EVENTS, I murder. This ta what happened The exact hour of Raoul's murder Bander First Deputy has not been established. His fam- inarched aboard theSurveyor Baltic shortly afily last heard from him when he tele- ter 9 20 a. m. ; tbe British seals ware th afternoon of Jan- smashed; Captain John Roberta Prophoned late tn bullet-ridden body was tested, and Federal prohibition Direcuary 4 His not found until the next morning. tor Canfield began taking an inventory of the wet fmods. . Second Proceedings were, suddenly halted by a telephone coil from tbe ' customs house, while Washington wondered. leter Collector of th Port KFATTLE. Wash.. June 23. A con. explained that this haltKiting wu called versaMon overheard by the Rev. Dr eeaause Dr. 11 K. Stirague, chief of Mark A. Matthews, pastor of the First th United States public health serissued permits for Presbyterian church of Seattle, caused vice. had not the arrevt last night of A. M. Hailey, medicinal liquoryetsupplies. Meanwhile, formerly a deputy sheriff, on a charge Mr. Kiting conferred at the customs of murdering J. S. Smith May 13 house with treasury department offilA B Boos witR whom Smith cials, end Surveyor of the Port Whit-li- e hoarded on Mercer Island, In Lake dashed aboard the White Star liner Washington here, has been' in Jail Majestic, which sailed at noon with since Smith was ehot and choked to Secretary of the Treasury Mellon, for an unexplained parley with hi chief. CesUBssd on Fax Four WORK IS HALTED. (Column &von.) this pfternoon federal J. Early on th agents who spent the day work of Baltics pier resumed their seising her liquor. t. This work was halted by a telephone call from Dr, Sprague after A- - CHANCE TALK CAUSES ARREST CaOrnt Farrar Qualifies for Place . voyage. (Mb vs Nit tm.) Twe Bryan's Granddaughter . Weds in New Jersey - Georgfia Court to Consider Petition in Atlanta June 29; .Simmon' View. actor-husban- OK) Brit- ish governments seals placed on the liquor stocks which the steamships Baltic and. Berengaria brought into thi port yesterday to test the treasury department a ruling that no ocean liner may cross America's three-mil- e line with bar supplies for the east-bou- Runs Machine and Shocks the Grain OK) NBW YORK, June-23- . (By the Associated Press i After two daya reflection and two false starts, th pa i our very existence. the Daily Mail, sajs W tihout it we cannot hope to pay the enortnou amount we borrowed from the I mted Htates during the uar. nor ran permit it to be arbiattacked or harased trarily ' If it were believed that our ship were being so attacked, retaliatory legislation against United State ehipe and goods would be certain and inevitable We have alw&v deprecated reprisals, but if Interference with our shipping penrists there may be no other hotce where our existence and our solvency are at stake. Put Forth by Commanders, but Formal Protest Made of Action. morning ar9 a unit in deprecating and miauling the situation which, ha arisen as a result of the treasury department's decision to teixe liquor stored under British custom pea)! aboard British hhips in Harding Does His Bit in Wheat Field (HO No Obstacles Are is By JOHN STEELE. Ohicaxu NO OF yard John SchloH. owner of tne beei, nonchalantly went to Justice liar ev Uolson to obtain the replevin writ "You're stung for th coats, said the justice. Hch loss was willing to pay. as he had which his wanted hoes, neighbor s yard swarmed JbIo-LMis So the wnt was issued. Jsohman onlv smiled, and the law officers only started aftrr the boos, whFh at last accounts, still remained in the Lehman yard. lint at Retaliation Made It cannot be alleged that there is any moral principle behind the United Staley government. There can be no solution of thi question by any agreement concluded between the two. governments a a result of which our rights in international law as t atands today are infringed We stand on the broad grounds of this principle Mirror The Daily ridrrulee the pussyfoot fan'e. saying A sene of humor tbt dry-hi- p drama from becoming an interIt is still 'a national complication. Anglo-America- n joke which becomes more ludicrous Arbitra- aa the pirs foots over there get more excited about the beer and wine that contaminate the atmosphere o4 tion Pact Convention I may New York even if they are kept under aeal within three miles off the Signed Wachington. coast. Tt seem incredible that tbe Influ ence of a fanatical clique should have brought a great country to this nonsensical interpretation of freodom of WASHINGTON, Jum 23.- -A convenIt is not too far to say the eeas. tion extending for five years the that the whole world is laughing at arbitration treaty of America politely, of course, and low. 1908 was ABSENCE OF RANCOR. signed here today bv SecreWithout the rancor which might be tary Hughes and Sir Auckland Geddcs, expected, the Dally Exprewa regrets the British ambassador the passive entrance of the government The original treaty, signed by FSibu Root aA secretary of mate and into the queeitnrv a an attitude more enhance Jamee Bryce as British ambassador, likely to damage than which ail wane provided forprucUcaHy unqualified ar- men value friendship, the as hope of modgreat of ail bitration issues between the ern civilisation. The shipping compaUnited State and Great Britain. nies are not brewkiag the American,e developing in the senate, are simply testing its resulted in a severe limitation of lay. they Jit tent ion. the scope of the instrument, which, in a moment has dreamed o for one the form It finally became effective, of dictating to America whether her that difficulties o a legal citizens provided shall drinq or shall net drink nature or relating to the Interpretation of treaties not possible to settle On the other hand, the refusal to alinto American ports by diplomacy shall be referred to the low liner to bring is only strict seal liquor that tribunal prov fded they do net affect under outside the three-mil- e the vital interests or the indepen- to be rousumed to dican essence limit in attempt dence of the two contracting states and do not concern the interests of tate to other countries. to the of the seriousness The danger third parties three-mi- le It is regarded as possible that IM prestige of the whkh much of Great limit, upon convention, reeiewed tolav for the Britain's means of livelihood depends, third time, may become of impor- U spoken of by the Daily Chronicle. tance ifi the event that the matter RAISES BIG QUESTION. of ships liquor Khali develop into serious Issue between -, the two ooun It is quite conceivable that the acevehow deSo tries. the state far, tion of the British eteamship linex in partment ha taken the rositlon that testing the right of tne United States the ship liquor question is purely a to t confiscate liquor may raie the domestic one. which could not be taken whole question of international law to The Hague without the consent of as it affects the limits of territorial this government. When the agreement wa signed toCeattased mi Pace Fear (CMioas Ftvs y day, notes were exchanged providing that in case the senate gives its assent to President Harding1 proposal Wins for participation bv tbe United States Geraldine in the permanent court of international From Divorce Tellegen justice, the two government will order the making of an agreement for NEW YORK. June 23 GeraJdmc the submtfuMon to that court of disdivorce putes of the nature described in the Farrar baa won her suitit forwas antreatv. against nounced tonight by Samuel Untermyer. A referee's counsel for Misr Farrar. report reeonwnefi&tng a decree was filed today, he ahi Action by Uiss Fferrar wu begun two yearn ago, and 4n her complaint d with OK) OK) OK) she charged her It wis Infidelity with three women. reported that Referee Harrison s report held the opera star had sustained The ber allegations on two counts. courts OK) OK) OK) recently ruled out chargee that Miss Stella Larrlmore and Tellegen had been Intimate. HE! ed out today to replevin a swarm of hoes from Mlwt laura Uebrosn's ATLANTA, Oa., June 23 Hearing of the petition for a receiver for the Kuklux Klan, filed by Devid M. CAPE MAY, N. J.. Jun 2A W ! Ruth Owen, granddaught-- r of WilWilliam liam Jennings Bryan and Painter Meeker, eon of Mr. and Mre. Richard C. Meeker of Baltimore end Miami, were monied here today. Th ceremony was performed at the Meeker summer home by the Rev. Paul Fturtevant Howe of tbe Episcopal Church of the Advent. Th oouple left for an automobile trip, will sail tor Europe July 3 Mr. Bryan was among the relatives preecnt. He arrived her Just !hy the ceremony and lert thi ternoon. af- before- of Philadelphia and others a weeks ago, today was act for June 29 hy Judge Humphries In Pulton few superior court. The suit against William J. Simmons, emperor of the klan. to enjoin him from further organisation of the Knights of Kameiia, filed yesterday by the Kuklux klan, goes over for a week or two. Th proceedings instituted bv H. W Evans in Pulton county superior court to enjoin ma from establishing the Knights Kameiia." Simmons said, "is only another attempt on his part to Intercept mo tn carrying out my original purpose and plan of perfecting an organisation of native white American citizens of tha Protestant faith. This attempt wi.l be as futile to arrest the development of that order as were his violent and vehement attempts to arrest the Kameiia, the woman's order which I founded some . ' months ago. "This re training order obtained by will W. Evans temporarily prevent (l the coming together of 15.000 kJans-me- n on Saturday night aa has been arranged, and those inworthy klansmen th higher ormight be Instructed der of klankraft. The restraining orwill not affect the der, however, sealous seth Hie. or abate the ardent enthusiasm of the representative men to Atlanta hnd were who came knighted and fhence dispatched TO their respective realms to carry the emancipation to the proclamation ofwere klansmen who being coerced and the exercise of unwaroppressed by ranted and tyrannical power for the time being wielded by incompetent and Irresponsible men." Emperor Simmons stated that next week he would go to Texas for several meetings. - , , Say It With Flowers But let them be from your own garden. A garden of hardy annuals gives n satisfaction and real, dahlias, scarlet Marigolds, joy sage, amnios, poppiee can you Imagine anything prettier? Make your own little piece of outdoors radiant with a garden of annuals. This bureau has a booklet that will tell you how. It ia called "Growing Annual Flowering plants," and is offered for free distribution hy the United States department of agriculture. Our Washington information bureau will secure a copy foi' any reader who fills out and malls the two cents In coupon, encioemg stamp for return poeiafs, deep-dow- Frederic J. Haskln. Director, The Salt Lake Tribune Information Bureau, . Washington, D. C, I enclose herewith two cents tn stamps tor return postage on a free oopy of "Growing Annual Flowering Plants. Name Street CRr State 4 fi |