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Show t THE WEATHER. Unsettled Friday, probably showers, warmarj Saturday, unsettled. Local Settlement Prices. Biltrar Lead .... ,...97 Coper (cathodes) 12 2' 9U.43 4 Tribune Want Ada afford an effective and inexpensive means of meeting many emergencies. VOL. 109, NO. 46, SALT LAKE, CITY, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 30, 1924. Mellon, Lodge and Others Accused in Means Lurid Story Heart Beats Are Radioed ; Doctor Gives Treatment By t'nlveraal Service Cable Dis- patch. HUGHES SILENT - T Communication Received but From .Nippon, Not Handed Secretary, State Department to Give Consideration to Diplomatic Representation. a formal Washington, May communication from the Japanese government protesting against the exclusion section of the new immigration law, reached the Japaneaa embassy hen today for transmission to Secretary Hughes. Decoding occu- ed etribassy officials throughout the day. and the document had not been presented at the stats department nor had any appointment been made with the secretary tor Ambassador Hanlhara when tfie department closed for the day to reopen Saturday. At the embassy no Information aa to the nature of the protest waa forthcoming State department offiThe cials also maintatnsd silence. question of making public ths protest will be considered by Secretary Hughes and Ambassador Hanlhara after tbs Utter formally places the note before the American government. The only Information thus far available as to the form and substance of the Japanese communication is that carried In press ' dispatches, which have reported that the Toklo government regards the exclusion provision as discriminatory and In violation of n commercial treaty. There Is little dodbt that administration officials will tabs the position that the exclusion legislation In no way violates treaty obligations, wtlh Japan, either specific or general In character. They also are firm in their Insistence that Immigration policies fall entirely within uomestlc jurisdiction. Whatever statement the Japanese to goverfiment finds U necessary cy imake, however, will be n In the Washington government complete spirit of friendliness and Coolidge with a desire of President. and his advisers to make It clear to the peoide of Japan that neither the Washington government nor the the American people cherish any but Jamost friendly sentiments towards Mfl, LONDON. . May Wireless played a new pan today when It waa pressed into eervlre to broad, eaat heart bra La from Cardiff to Bournemouth , for a phvaic.an'a A cltixen of Bournediagnosis. mouth who waa In Cardiff on bualneaa, had a heart eeiaure and Immediately lot hia own doctor, who la a radio enthusiast, on the The doctor arranged to phone. have the actual heart bexta broad caat from Cardiff during Intervale of a morning program. The microphone wea held over the region of the heart Instead of a atethoacope and the Bournemouth phyaidan waa able to hear the beats perfectly. He telephoned treatment a few minutes later. -- V-- i IS a THKENTO TUSK armer-Lab- Party Lead or era Reaenf Stand As- sumed by, Wisconsin. ST. PAUL,. Minn, May 29. Mem-br- a of tjie stats committed of the Farmer-isubo- r federation will meet here Sunday to determine whetblr there should be any change in the plans for bolding the national Farmer convention here ' June 17. Call for a meeting of the twenty-tw- o members of this state committee was Issued today by Wllltom Mahoney of SL Paul, probable temporary chaD man of the proposed convection, as a result of the statement attacking the convention by Senator La Ful-lett- Charges that Senator La Follettes statement yesterday was the result are of 'unfair and unjust counsel made In a statement issued today by the national committee on arrangements tfor the proposed national convention. Senator La Follette letter, the statement declares, subordinates ths tremendous Issue of rescuing the government from plutocratic) control, and the necessity for all honest, progressive voters uniting la this crista The convention is not a lai Fol n movement. . . lotu, or a It cannot be diverted or destroyed Senator by anything la Follette may do or say. The need for It continues to exist and there is no alternative but for It to proceed "For ths same reason that Senator La iFollett feels that the time ha a g come for all people to join fn a common eause ttr brte ths shackles imposed on the people by Autocracy, it is reasonable to give communists credit for he as much honesty and sAnoerity as Senator La Follette claims foranhim opself by giving the oommunists with portunity to unite their Inforces first the the other progressives grest national battle for freedom. . one-ma- Papal Bull Proclaims . J925 to Be Holy Year Owtlaid (Cwsa Ptf rear Tv.) By th Associated pres) Pope Plus today iimued a bull proclaiming 1926 a bnlv vaar. day On the opening of Aacenaion Mon-aignto today the pontiff consigned the Joseph Wtlpert, denn bull emapoetolio prothonot ariee, the bodying the papal pronouncement. The ceremony took place in the throne room where hia hollnaaa a as surrounded by the prelate of the apostolic chamber, the vice chamber-lai-of auditor general and regent ROMJ, May 29. A tudents Have Close Call in Frat Blaze ' BOlLDER. Oolo . May 19 Ollle Mathers, Hatfield Rherman, Eddie Chilson, ell of Pueblo, end I.wrenre of Boston, students at ths Huniey Vnlversitv of Colorado, were trapped on a third floor Bleeping porch early today when fire damaged the Alpha house, here to Tau Omega, fraternity the extent of 1 10,000. The-- men a sheet ladder of bv making bed Clothing and sliding three floors n safety, Seventeen other students floor escaped peeping on the third , down stairways. Arthur Blystad and Two firemen while Injured T.ynn Burdick were fighting the leflamea. believed to- - have been The fire caused by a short circuit In the elec trio wiring of the house, caused by dampness. De Valera Scores Point in Battle for Funds NEW YORK, May 29 Supreme Court Justice McCook today decided that Eamonnwered Valera and Stephen entitled to a reasonM. 0Mara able part of ths $2,900,000 of Irish republican funds now on deposit here , for use in pfosecutlng their defense of the suit brought by the Irish iree stats to obtain ths money. Plan to Press Filipino Freedom Resolution final under way .to put a Filipino Independence measure through congress at this tension. The senate 'territories committee next Monday will take up the bill introduced by Renator Johnson, Republican, California, which 1a similar t one pending in the house. WASHINGTON. effort to May 59 A A".- -- Ai Whatever Its Fate, Convicted of Murder of Young Matron on Sta ten Island Road. - NEW YORK, May 29. Harry L. Hoffman, charged with slaying Mrs. Maud A. Bauer en a lonely Staten Island road, waa found guilty today of murder In the second degree. County Judge Riernan Imposed Ben-.enxt twenty yeaia to life irnnrto-mmeIn Slpg Bing. Hoffman, a motion picture operator, is married and the father of two children. On March 2 the body of pretty Mrs. Maud Bauer, young mother m two daughters, waa found by the side of a Staten Island road She had bern shot, beaten and strangled and there waa evidence that she had successfully fought off an assault. Hoffman maintained his Innocence and a fellow motion picture operator. Hocey Barker, tqld the police Hoffman had been with hint In the projection room of a theater at the time Mrs. Bauer was murdered; but the Hoffman police had learned that three days after the murder had sent to his brother a gun of the caliber of the automatic pistol with which Mrs. Bauer had been shot. They also found a bullet, hole In the upholstery n( his motor car. a coupe Identical to that described by those who had seen the mysterious motorist Parker Inter repudiated the alibi he had ottered tor Hoffman. Hoffman, on hie way to a prison van after sentence had been imposed, passed within a few feet of District Whisky Permits, Campaign Debts, Mexican Revolt and Oil Deals All in Day. gress Is Expected to Adjourn on June 7. r WASHINGTON. May 19 - Republi- can ieadern in the house decided today to make no determined tffort to put through a substitute for the farm relief bill in the event the measure to defeated. At a meeting of the Republican steering committee It was generally agreed that the vote on the bill, nhl.li will be taken again tomorrow by the house, would be close, severai expressing the opinion it would be rejected unless several features, regarded uy opponents as objectionable, were ti eliminated. Those who attended the conferenu. Unstinted tribute to the Confederate dead was paid last Sundav by Calvin Coolidget the first New EnnaMemorial day services at the expreseed confidence that congress glander to become president since the Civil war. Speaking at the Confederate tional eemeterv at Arlington, Va., be paid respect to their seal and belief in the cause in which they fought would adjourn on June 7. regaruicas President Coolidge, of the fate of the McNary-ilauseand the way in which, since then, the southern states had become knit with tho north. the Barkley bill to abolish tht aa shown in the photo, then laid a wreath of flowers on the monument. Captain Fred Beall, confederate raiirottd labor board or any other veteran, and master of ceremonies, is seen standing behind President Coohdge. Station still pending lhe comm.nes wiffeh unofficial!) loturois tbe .eauuM-uvprogram of thea house objecteu to tne pin ot aapport-erof ths baralsy tneasui u uriig it up uatMT a spsciai rule. Fiedktton werermade that tU author. Representative Barkley. Demount. Kentucky, ouht concede next Monda, waeu consideration of ths bid will again be in final order, that it is futile tu sut vote and be willing to put hta measure aside, with a view to obtaining action in the Lfeot mber sea ion. 'YA8H1NGTON. n AT. - Aa HOPE R&dio to Broadcast Me- Retired Episcopal Bishop Brown Ex- pected to Take Stand in His Own Defense. ftf. E. Church j j Divorce Law Is Unaltered - CDBVELAND, O., May I9.The heresy trial of Bishop William Montgomery- Brown before the bishop's court of the Protestant Bp scops. church moved with, swiftness today. ' in the events of the day. the aged bishop lost his eighth and last at' tempt to hate the hearing halted on technicalities. The final attempt was made by Joeeph W. Shafts, the ops attorney. With this out of the way, the prosecution opened its case In less than an hour the entire case of the prosecution against the author of "Communism and Christian i.c:i had been Chanes L. Dibble, by presented ' church advocate. But one witness was called by Dibble Bishop Joseph Francis of Indianapolis, who Joined with lilsbon Arthur C. A. Hall of Vermont asd Bishop William L. Gravatt of West Virginia In signing the formal presentment charging Bishop Brown with departure from sxisting doctrines of the Episcopal church. I al TESTIMONY. Bishop' Francis testified that until ten years ago Bisnop Brown had been an actlva bishop of the Episcopal church in charge of. the diocese pf Arkansas, borne time ago Bishop Francis said he recclted from Bishop Brown a copy of his book, "Communism and Chrlstiamsm," together with n letter of explanation calling attention to particular parts of the writing. On motion of the church advocate, the court admitted as evidencs all from the book that were quotations cited in the formal presentment, as well as the cover page, announcements, the preface and p.ctures These were requested as evidence. Dibble said, to show Intent of Bishop Brown in his writing. Bishop Brown to expected to take the stand aa one of the principal Witnesses In defense of his writings and his religious views. It has also been Indicated that Colonel Emery Scott West su'd Theodore Bchroeder. his adviser, will be called to testify In his behalf wests Contention. Colonel West, authority on atheism, will attempt to testify that Christianchild of paganism. He holds ity is the savvirgin-bor- n tnere were f'fty-ai- x o iors before Christ, of whom twenty-twand thirty-fou- r were crucified reiwirted resurrected from the dead. a famous psychologist, Schrneder, will testify. It to said, on the scientific psychological basis which, he believes, make one man an Episco-a palian, another a Jew and the third Buddhist. Persons close to defense attorney Brown Will say witnesses for Bishop not be on the stand more than thirty mlnuten. Thia does not mean, however, that the trial will soon be over. Arguments are expected to last for several days. Dibble summed up the program of the prosecution ns follows: "We propose to show that Fiahop Brown has denied that God to an objective realdenies that God, ity, that he notofonly all things, but that to tbs creator he has anv influence. "We propose to show that be deFach and shouted. Attrney of our Lord Jesus "Now you and "yew lying witnesses nies the godhead can divide your reward. 1 am inno- Christ and hto present exists nc and cent and you ktiow It." glow. "Wa propose to show that this deLater Hoffman collapsed in his cell fendant has said that if Jesus lived and wept. at alt he has noof Influenceis on our lives which contrary to DOlbV REACHES PEKING, at present, all ths doctrines of this church." PEKING, May 19. (By the Associated Press.) Captain Genres BegeWOMAN GETS BIG DAMAGES. tter d'Oisy reached here late today, a tong distance stage of Mrs. compl-rimoorhead! Minn.: May of Caldwell Ms flight from Paris to Toklo. The Gertrude Livingston, dashing French airman left Shanghai Mont., wss awarded 4.14 199 damages suit against the Northern Pathis morning and arrived at the capital after making a brief atop at Tsinanfu cific railway for the death of Her husD Caldwell, In a sealed disDon In The total band. the aftenujon early tance is mors than tit miles. Jury verdict openety today. ' ng hr k morial Day Service at Cemetery. Arlington JnRfc'v.4 If X -- Proposal for a . Drastic Change Is Defeated hy Close Vote in Gen- -' eral Conference. SPRINGFIELD, Masa . May 9. A for t'.3ratl' change In the divorce law of the Methodist Episcopal church was defeated by ten votes at the closing session of the general conference. The vote was 100 for adoption and 310 against. The present law forbtfto minister to marry a divorced person when the husband or wife Is living unless tha1 person be the Innocent party in a divorce for adultery The change would have legalized al marriages except for adultery. The proposed change also forbade ministers to marry any persons known to be physically, mentally or morally unfit "The present law cannot be enforced," the Rev U. Bromley Oxnam f Los Angeles declared, "and thousands of persons divorced for reasons other than adultery now are In ing In adultery and are subject to , trial A woman who secures a divorce from a brutal husband and wants new home for her children must be lefused God's blessing. We ought to causes of dlvorte Inget at stead of waning until the home to wreck ml If we have a bad law we ought to repeal It." "If you adopt the report youll wipe out the law on divorce upon which we have been acting for many years." Dr David U Downey of New York warned the delegates. "An attempt to being made to meet the conditions In certain parts of the country to which manv people go to get divorce Do not take this backward and reactionary step. The Rev Wallace II. Finch of ; Conn asserted "nas- CMtiaosd Pi Tvs -- c , Tvs,) sta-tia- n -- A r MILLION TO RESTORE WARS h HARM TO FRENCH TREASURES King of Rumania Has Close Call From Death (By th Associated Pres.) John D. Rockefeller, comat the disposal of a mittee to reeonttniot the roof of the fiheimi cathedral, destroyed bY and and reatore world the'fountai'n in the beautify the Germane yitt, and garden, at Versailles and Fontainebleau. Translated into franc the donation amount to 18,500,000. which is in ceeptble contrast to the two or three million franc, which ir all that the French budget permit to V Appropriated for the 'work. The committee is composed of J. J. Jusseraud, French ambassador to the United States, Gabriel Hanotaux, former French foreign minformer general secretary of the french forister; Maurice Paleologue, H. Harje ami Welle. Ro.worth. eign office; Colonel H. Mr. Rockefeller i moved to make thi. gift because, a he ay in a letter to Premier Poincare dated May 3, among the treasures of which France i custodian are some which belong to the patrimony of all nations, for their influence ia a source of inspiration of universal PARIS, May 29. Jr., ha. placed art. ' 11,000,00(1 no-tic- Franco-Amerira- n LONTON, i i Kln Ferdi- .rp.d yterdr rorre-nonde- nt ar-an- al ' In his letter, Mr. Rockefeller remarked that he had been shocked to see the ravages of time on these treasures, ths upkeep of which was impossible1 on account of the war. Warmly thanking the donor of the munificent gift, il. Po.ncars said he waa deeply touched by the generous thought, which, added tho premier, is witness of your unswerving friendship for Prance sad your admiration for her srehi ecturat glories, which belong, as you to ueil say, to the artiatic patrimony of the whole worldT May nand of Rumania Is r.porird by th Burharrat cnm.pondrnt nf th Daily Rxprass to hav narrowlv death durln th proloneetT .ri.s nf In th rontra) ammunition xptroion w.t of th Rumand.lKtt, two mil ian capital, Th kin, the says, that approached no near thwaa nblte.d to General Madarco dra him away and a shell fell and her' he had exploded on the spot been standing The correepondent soy tt to several workmen were killed. Vice Consul Kerr Is Under Serious Charge . ) ' French Ambassador to London at Outbreak of War Dies in Paris. . WILL BE cross-examito Oppor- unities Meant well be given Mr. Daughertys attorneys Saturday, and h wlB then raturn to New Yolk to stand trial in federal court on Indictments charging him with taking money from bootieg-gaand rationed agginaV blm, ha declared. as a result of his wu.k. l'nierturbed and occaslonalR oratorical. the witness pieoed out his story between questions of Senator M heeler, tint committee Jeas Smith, for whom he prosecutor. had been (unet tuning as a sort of confidential eg-In Auguxt, 1922, described fur him, h related, a covert enmity between the department of Justice and the treasure tinder Mr Mellon. "Tbey," said Means, referring o braith nun his friends, "wanted to have prohibition enforcement transferred from the treasury to ths department of e in order to lonuol the whisky situation.'' , Means testified that, well supplied with the cash, he set up the "Women Clean Government league" and put M. L. Hc.xite, a fortrrr deportment of Juellee Investigator, and his asxlrt-en- t, in charge with Instruct inns to get W contact with Secretary Melon. The purpose, he Indicated, wws to lake up prohibition conditions and ahow "the treasury Incompetent to handle tha whisky situation.' DrAL TO RAY DEBT. Jess Smith had supplied him. he continued, with docun enfs purporting to shew that Mr, Mellon had into an arrangement with Re entered Sheldon and k red W Lphom, treasurer of the Renational committee, publican by whl. h Sheldon wn to tie furnitoted permits for withdrawing whisky from distilleries and warehouses. Sheldon was to si'll these, he added, and turn over the 116 or CIO revived per at bootiegsrlng market prices to "pay tho debt ef the Republican national committee " Seerelarr Mellon told Sealfe some-thito make hit otory seem Means seld, add.ng that Senatorlikely. Bur-suNew Mexico, we Republican. Interested, but the latter denied the charge. Working around the general In New York and other subject piarro. M.- aits said he also found that Senator Lxnje, Republican, M&ssaohuseUa. had assisted Craven Brothers, a New York firm, t obtain a permit to ex-- b rl liquor from the United Btadea d. He however, that Senator rs the Asso elated Press ) Pierre Paul Cambon, former French ambassador to Lon don, died at his home hers last night. . .PAJUA, May ( JBy Pierre Paul eminent Cambon, French statesman and diplomat, won international fame in the early dags of the present century for his efforts in behalf ofThe h agreement of April 8, 1994. when the powerful and entente cordials wa born. Paul Cambon was on of three brothers, ait of whom were conspicuous in French diplomatic affahs at the same time. Jules Cambon, later the best known of the three, was ftmbaasador to Washington, Paul was accredited to London, and the third brother was in a similar poM at Constantinople. M Paul Cambon was burn January 0. 1943. He was caked to the Parisian bar some twenty years later, and ten years oi aum.n.atratAe aiur woifc In vanons government a waa tisnsfetred to the o service and appointed mma-t- r uienipotentiaiy at 1'ums. In H44 he became krench ambassador to utter went to iiatirld, and two - in )ears toe same capacity, kousiaiiUiiupLin he pre;nied his iredentmls as amoasimdor to the Court of kk. James. iie waa st.il in --London when, six years later, the rrlatlons between England and France had reached a i tit. cal a u ge over the Fsshoda incident In King Edward VII, working carefully and secretly, had launched his program to readjuitt Europes equilibrium. and to brio Knslanck France nt Anglo-Frenc- Jne-tl-- -- iepart-ment- uipio-nati- CeeUcwd (C Hargt-cour- ROCKEFELLER, JUNIOR, GIVES n ant!-Jewi- sh FOR EARLY VOTE. WASHINGTON, My 29. Ths American people isnsrsUy will permitted pmojTOW toe the first time in history to Join in the nstmwsr hfv mortal dey exercise St Arlington. - The Arlington ceremonies, at which President Coolidge will speak, will be broadcast by three of the moat pow erful radio stations of tht east W EAF of New York, WJAR of Proridenoe, R. L, and WCAP of Washington. It la expected that be tween three and four Million people wilt be able to hear the exercises which are to be held In the memorial amphitheater and are to begin at 1 o'clock, eastern standard time. President Coolidge has davoTed considerable time to the address he wll make tomorrow and It fce expected to be one of the moat Important be hao made In several weeks. All government departments closed tonight not to open until taturdLv moining and the senate adjourneu until batuiday. The bouse wnl tomorrow, working on main In farm expert in kusNay-naugeLiberal Votes Again Save curpuraLon btiL SERVICES IN FRANCE. MacDonald Government Ms mortal day in PARIS, May France wm be aj'giy a ctmuren ROBERT J. FREW. t By Service da. Thu r reach people generally wth Cable participate in tne ce.eraoinet at ah I'mvereal a vote of 4.he mx btg cemeteiies LONDON, May 29. B whiui in American solders are buried, b.n 300 to E2, Premier MarDona d s lacrlftls bor the survived government aeieaL4jiis truiu the achooa Will haw br vught on its policies toward the tae tuofct cony.cuous part in the o house of in the unemployed problem pi ogre in. Ono thousand little ones, grouped commons ton'ght. to profailure The labor ministry's mer.can Fratern t) by the Franco-the slle association, will strew flowers eno vide practical schemes the graves at the viatlofi of unemployment wss debated flags on place gureena cemetery, waere General fur many hours and the government Gouraud will be the en.f speaser, was only saved hy the support of the and a chorus of ffrl students from Liberal, led by former Premier H. H the Lniversity of k aria will sing a Asnulih During the day. the Libmemorial song composed for the oc- erals met and decided to give tabor casion. longer time to advance schemes toa t, give work to Britain s million and School children from Boni, Lecateiet and i$L Quentin, in quarter who ar out of employment. the fckmime war acme, where the Americans fought hard vatttes in 19U, will deposit wreaths on every sol- Nine Deaths Reported dier's grave in the B my cemetery in Oklahoma Storm and pin an American flag to every A feature of tha celebration o oss. C1TT. May OKLAHOMA a of school be dedication Nine will there house built through summer Options by known deaths, more than a score Inon fell who of the the and property damage estimated boys parent jured At Ttaucourt. at 9100,0(10 was the toll paid by three bsttbfield. communities hi eastern Oklahoma Ceettaoed ea Pf Tevx that were swept by a tornado late toeisaa Tve.J yesterday. Wetumka. an oil town of 2509 Inhabitant, ivaid the greatest tod, seven persona losing their lives there At when thirty houses were rased Warner, a small farming center near two persons were killed Okmulgee, and m3t of the towns busnens section was destroyed. Checotr.h, in county, suffered considerable damage from wind and rainfall. eee-m- nl i Those in charge of ths MoNary Haugeh measure hope to prea it lo a nuu vote by Katuiday night. While leaders have agreed not Republican to work in concert to smooiA out the situation, individual members of the house. It waa said, will be given ample opportunity to offer amendments or substitutes. Informal conferences were he4d during the day by various members ot the houfce and senate farm bloc in an efiort to feach an agreement as to a program, hut atoarantly no action waa determined, upon, other than to await the reauit'of the house voie Inumber of those who have been leading tho fight In the house for the MoA hill declared there were enough votes In sight to assure its passage. Among them was Hummers, RepubJksn. who declared In a statement that, while larking in strength, the bill Is guining support s members come to know It better J' CLOSE VOTE EXPECTED. rAe resUxe." ft id Mr. Rummers, that the fight will be a closo one, bul there is ever) indication of support for favorable action if the friends of the proposed legisia-- , ti.a stand steadfast. be Fertiliser would produced at Muscle Shoals either by the government or a private concern under an amendment to the Norris bill approved today by the senate agriculture com It Is also understood that mltteft. trut another amendment provide power could either be prodnrod b Cestiad a Par Three (Calsma Pwr.) Two nr n Prosecution Rests Its Case Against Prelate Accused of Heresies May 29 ot the rer.ate Daucharty lnetl-catlo- n today eerved to let Gaoton B. Means, detective and Its most noted tmurmant, complete his all urine story of adventure and Intrirue In Inveatt-tatlat the behead of the late Fraai-d-Hardlnc, be claims prohibition enforcement and Secretary Mellons connection therewith. ' With scarcely a mention of hto early accounts of money 'carried" for Jess Smith, th desd companion of the former attorney general. Means asserted that th funds of the Republlosn nation! commiltre were to have been benefited by whisky permits sales, and In (he course cf hid testimony drew ia the r.ame of Senator Lodge. Touching lightly on Mexican revolutionary affair and other topics. Meant asserted that he had Inveatl-ante- d Henry Ford by direction of Jeon tomlth, to get the motive for hto sant and to learn hto feeling toward th almlrletrat.on, and Gray 8ilvr, Washington agent of. the American Ihrm Bureau federation. But. ke tIKed tgiiefly .at . Secretary Mellon with reference to liquor quea-ttoi- s, and the latter Issued a statement late In the day declaring Mean ." testimony "too absurd to deserve $ FRANCIS Is . Con- McNary-Hauge- .WILL WORK FOR LA FOLLETTE. THE PRESIDENT. TOAST NEW May 29. The comTOKIO. May IS. The depressing mittee cf YORK, has decided to enactment send its forty-tigatmosphere induced byof the to the Cleveland delegates exclusion leg- convention of the conference In the United States for islation applying to Japanese hung political action on July 4, and the first Impor- bring about of Senator nomination heavily tonight over the tant gathering of Americana and Robert M. Ia FotteUe of Wisconsin for Immigration bill the presidency on a third party ticket Japanese since thefarewell dinner of It nas withdrawn from the SL Paul was signed the because of the society to reitr June 17 convention the American-Japa- n senator's attack on that meeting yestng American Ambassador Gyrus terday H. Tfere a Coattnecd of the J. A. Hopkins, chairman (Catama 8mi) and also a committee of forty-eigh- t, the chancery. Monsignor WUpert then descended to the portico of 8t. Peters chu.ch, a her he read the bull In the presence of the public, the chapter of the church and the master of ceremonies, aftrward giving it to Monsignor Louts master of ceremonies, a ho Inter read the bull in the churches of St. Paul. Santa Maria Maggiore and SL John Lateran. l Probers Senatorial Hear Charges of Misdoings Involving High Official Circles Paul Cambon. But Proponents Hopeful Get Will Measure Through Lower House. r-- U FOLLETTE FIVE CENTS PAGES 18 ue ng ss Page Twt Twe.) . m sss-rte- Oestissed sn (CMawa Te Twe Tkne) The Constitution' Is the Bible of the Government It is tbs foundation of th rights and liberties of every American young and kd, rich and poor. In it we find an absolute guaranty of Son of Chicago Millionaire Is Quizzed in Franks Boy Tragedy. protection for life, liberty and property righto. The average eltlsen haa no knowledge of the relation of the Constitution to his life and that of hia children. He does not fully appreciate the absolute security he enjoys the benefits and privileges that are hto This knowledge can be Obtained only .through a study of this inspiring American document. The Whahtngtoa bureau of (hia paper has for free distribution a booklet containing the Ionetitu-tio- s. Rend for your copy today. Read It yourself and teach It to your children, Encloro two cents In stamp for return postage. . Nathan Leoson of a millionaire box manufreturer, waa taken Into custody for questioning early this morning after records of an optical comiany revealed that spectacles found near th. body of H year-old Rot ert Tranks, kidnapers victim, had been sold to him. a Leopold, Young college student sail that h bad visited the spot were the where found possiglasses as aa many bly fifty times with classes In ornithology. Mayt they are. but I don t think no." h replied when asked if he owned the spectacles. according to an announcement by Robert E. Crowe, states attor- CHICAGO, pold, Jr., May 29 ' ney. Mr. I said Leopold admitted Crow he had been to the spot where the, WASHINGTON, May ?. Devld C Franks boys body vu found a week, Kerr, Pnited States vice consul at three or four days before thej Vancouver, wss arrested hre todfav ago At his home only the esse on a charge of having accepted bribes murder. to influence his decisions on question (or the glssses wss found. .Young CmtiauW ss Fags Tear relating to the passage ot silent across the Canadian border. (C.ams tws.y Frederic J. Hoskln, Director, The' Balt Lake Tribune Information Bureau,) Washington, D. C. I enclose herewith two cents In stamps for return postage on a free copy of the ConatituUoa Booklet Name Street City State . rjghrnrBVrirorrTOdVrinrirkrBtrTrwTrhrtovi, |