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Show THE WEATHER. Generally fmf and warm Tuesday;' Wednesday probably unsettled. Local Settlement Prices. ..US-4- 0 Silver ... . Lead 18.00 Copper (cathodes' Ill . 1871 YOU 109, NO. 2 ' Sundry little business affairs may be carried out successfully through. Tha Tribune Want Ads. lk SALT LAKE CITY, TUESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 2, 1924. Davis, at Wheeling, Dawes Plan FormallyDeclared in Full and Effective Operation Stresses Imp or tan c e of World Signing the Dawes Plan Protocol AS ASSEWIBLY'S Co-operati- on Democratic Leader Is Against Wars and! Declares for Equal Opportunity for All. Favors Ratification of Child Labor Amend-men- t and Condemns Abuses. Injunction By SEARS TAYLOR. lalversai . WHEELING, W. V.. Sept. 1 of John W. Davis, standard-beare- r the Democratic party, today broad-oaa new doctrine for American labor in an address here before the Ohio Valley Trades and Labor council. He virtually wrote a new labor plank for the Democratic party and amazed those who thought he would "stick to the platform" on every isService. By ' st sue. ' While the address waa nonpolittcal and Davis announced that he "had not come to plead his own cause or the cause of his party," his audience detected in his remarks seeral veiled thrusts at the Coolldge administration and particularly at former Attorney General Harry M. Daugherty. The principal features of the speech were: vigorous. condemnation of the "abuse" of the writ of Injunction in connection with labor disputes. 1. , An appeal to labor to unite In ending all war and in bringing about world disarmament. 3. A warning to labor to safeguard d its privileges against "the forces of human greed." 4. He flayed child labor and came out strongly in favor of the child labor amendment to the constitution. NEW LABOR CREED.' i. He proposed a national labor creed based on freedom of opportunity, freedom of speech and freedom , of contract. I. He urged collective bargaining on wages and working conditions. arrived- - in Wheeling Mr. Davis and , was shortly before 1 o'clock taken directly to "Wheeling park, four miles from the city, where ha delivered his speech. &.- packed A crowd- of -- 1 the grassy hillsides which surrounded the speakers' stand, and an amplifying device made the speaker's vole audible to even those on the outskirts of the crowd. The nominee will leave Wheeling tonight for Chicago, where he will spend the next four days conferring with his western campaign manager and completing arrangements for his stumping tour of the west. 1. A hard-gaine- ,. - ACT. S Mr. Davis Included In his address remarks about the of adtransportation act and boards justment in general which were not Included in the original manuscript of his speech, He declared that the personnel of boards should' be labor adjustment filled by appointments as controvsr-sle- s than arise rather by the existing system of permanent members. more Is difficult," he said, "Nothing "than for a permanent board to retain the confidence' of employer and Each decision exposes It employee. to the charge of having unduly favored one side or the other, and la subpointed to as a precedent when sequent decisions are to be made. "It is In the light of these principles and of the accumulated experience that we should rewrite thetransvlsioas of the Cummlns-Ksc- h portation act that deal with the settlement of labor disputes." TEXT OF ADDRESS. WHEELING. W. Va., Sept. 1. Those who counsel isolation for America are "blind leaders of the blind." John W. Davis, the Democratic presidential nominee, declared here today address. In a Labor-da-y Sneaking before the Ohio Valley Davis Trades and labor assembly, Mr. called upon the laboring men and women of America, "as those upon whom the burdens of war fall with the most crushing weight, to lead their fellow countrymen on thia great subject, to make sure that America takes her rightful place id the councils of humanity." Adaptation of the political and commercial policies of the nation to the new conditions In the modern world so as to make the country secure by the sgalnst war was declared Democratic nominee to be one of the three great constructive duties before the American people, if labor is to hold the ground that It has gained He enunin centuries of struggle. ciated as the. others the preservation of the equality of opportunity and of . the equality of right. In his treatment of the last two himself declared subjects Mr. Davis as follows: For the strengthening of the public school system, but against the proposed federal department of education as an entry "upon the fatal path of a state monopoly of education." For ratification of the child labor amendment so that "human greed" may not again close the door to education that has been opened. OUTLINES PROGRAM., Against any "trifling with" the nat-urrights of freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of labor, freedom of eonferenee, freedom of the press and freedom In matters of religious belief and practicea-' Against proposals to curb the power of the courts to protect the weak against unwise and unjust laws. For the writing' m plainer terms e axatnst m use or injunc tions In labor disputes, if that be to make the courts stay necessary within the limitation already fixed of act congress. 4 ' byAt the outset of his address Mr. Davis said he would not make a political speech. as Americans on an "We meet American holiday." he said. "We can sfford for the moment to forget political parties and the issues that divide them and speak or things conall true Americans cerning which should agree." Reviewing then briefly the struggles of feees ffal . ir -- Castleinc (Oelsata Pit Iw.J Tw J Davis Promises to IH PRESIDENT 9" Emulate Wilson if 'He's Chosen President Former Swiss Chief Mag istrate Honored by ABOARD THE DAVIS SPECIAL TRAIN EN ROUTE TO CHICAGO, John W. Davis, the DemSept. t ocratic presidential nominee, told a crowd that greeted him at the station at Cambridge. Ohio, tonight that If he were elected president he expected to emulate the record of the Wilson administration. "The Democratic party under Wood row Wilson." Mr. Davis said, "gave this country more beneficial legislation than any other admin-of istration In the same length time. It gave the country an administration that waa free from corruption and scandal. That administration raised American prestige throughout the world to a greater height than ever before, and gave us a place of wonderful Influence and power among the motions." .. League .x'szzf sift; .fy-lPt.t- r ajt Geneva. Fifth Gathering1 Featured by Hy man's Address; Business Taken Up. OENEVA, Sept. the Associated Press.)-J- 3r. Glusepe Motta, fcrmer president of Switierland, was today elected president of the flfti. assembly of the league of 'nations. Dr. Motta. received 41 out of 4T votes mt. He was escorted' to the chair amid tremendous enthusiasm. In accepting the presidency of the arsembly. Dr. Motta declared that, the peace of the world hinged on the acceptance of compulsory l.-- (By FRANKS VERDICT al The arbitration featurea of the Lon don agreement for the inauguration of i the Dawes plan were hailed the r.cw league executive as a goodbyomen Photo shows members of the plenary conference assembled at the foreign off! CP T.ntif?on F.nolnnrt re. for the future. He aaid that the influence of the league of nations had eeatly to sign the protocol of the London reparations conference. The rear row (seated) shows, left to right, operated to strengthen the will for Premier Theunis of Belcuim. Premier Herriot of France. Prime Minister MacDnnalrl nt firmot R.itim He declared that the minds pet.ee. Philip Snowden. British chancellor of the exchequer. The German delegates are seen in the center; back, to of people In countries most opposed to American and Japanese ambassadors to Great Britain. Whatever Back of Theunis are the the league were undergoing a decided right, are shown the Caverly't the Italian delegates. change. This, he explained, was due P. & A. Photo. t the fact that the league .was conDecision, Court Strug-- . stantly augmenting Its Importance as a power for good. like efficiency and speed Business gle May Be Renewed. marked the Inauguration of the work of the assembly. Paul Hymans, Belgium's energetic foreign minister, who its as president opened proceedings I.aki Tribune Wire. Ckir.ro Tribune-Sal- t of the league council, conducted the the CHICAGO, Sept. 1. Whatever affairs like the chairman of the board of directors of some big American decision by Judge Caverly in the crganlsatlon. None the less, he spoke Franks murder case, it means a court long and seriously to convince his battle, large audience that this assembly A death sentence for, Nathan Leocould achieve great things If It would In lasting peace for the pold, Jr., and Richard Loeb means, y PARIS, Bept. the Associated aidorld assuring by finding a solution of "the an appeal. A higher undoubtedly, Press.) The reparation commission grava problem of security as a necescourt may remand It back to the today officially declared the Dawes sary step toward the reduction, of criminal court here for a new trial. The plan became armaments. plan In operation. In this event. Prosecutor Crowe beNEW, HOPEFUL ErU effective at noon. lieves the defense will enter a not Referring to. the London agreement for a reparation settlement with Gerguilty plea, fcaaed on the Insanity deBy KARL H. VON WIEQAND. many, he aaid It ushered In S period fense. Service JUniversal Cable. of quietude and progress on ths rosd This would mean that the entire :T a BERLIN, Sept. 1, Germany made of civilisationeraand had caused' a new long battle of alienists and experts to suoreed the previhopeful her first payment under ths Dawes and wvwiu maw w to this v w . e the ous time of trial, as or if Ice and sufIf matters come iuuui pass, 'u.j plan today by" depositing twenty mil fering. He remarked that countries state hopes to bring out details of lion gold marks In the relchabtnk for which were "not yet members of the the .mysterious crimes known as A, the account of General Reparations league, like the United States, RusB, C and D, which Loeb confessed te sia and Turkey,' had participated in the alienists, but which are held secret HKRREi, 111., Sept. 1. (By the As Agent Toung. work of the technical organisadefense them and the attorneys. sociated Press.) Three of the six Wales Has Plenty of Exby With thaw payment Germany start- tho out that ed on the loag road of paying for ths tions of the league, pointing They were merely alluded to in the men the league's sphere of action was thus shot to death Saturday In a trial. war at ths maximum of her ca citement When He At- tost the and extended betng spirit rapidly The defense) has striven hard to se- clash between Ku KJiix Klan sympa an unnamed but pacity, of solidarity daily gaining strength. cure a life sentence instead of the thisers and mourn inrougn an unnamedstaggering, number opponents were burled be aaid, had of Belmont tends The Datlona, death penalty. The state la fighting league of which bewill reach long years, of all today, while state and county audesperately for the death penalty. yond this generation, under a plan de- (.roused the persistent hostility of the attorneys for the de thorities debated the advisability of . One Events. vised by Americans and administered who "worshiped force and who Racing aa fense said today that In the event wearing a patriotism by Americans. troops brought here to Judge Caverly imposes the death sen- withdrawing The first payment is advanced bv mask 'of hatred and anger and who maintain order. tence they would not ask the goverthe government on the loan, which degrade. the love of country Into in By GRACE ROBINSON. nor for a pardon, but would center While Williamson county remained Tribune-sal- t egotistical and ferocious nationalism Lbk. Tribune Win. their efforts' to have the penalty quiet on the surface, the swearing Clilntn "There are," he continued, "oratorical in America and England this month.''' BELMONT PARK, iL. I.. Sept. 1. 1 sento to life commutation A like amount is to be deposited by phrases, a tendency in certain quar changed out of warrants murder in tence. If the judge sentences them large numbers tycharging each faction and Scorning a bodyguard and refusing the government every ten days until ters to oppose the idea of tne. counto life Imprisonment, the defense at- the arrest of Sheriff George Galllgan to keep out of the crowded sections the proceeds of the loan arrive. J try to the Idea of solidarity, as if torneys say there will be no appeal. on. such a charge brought a new of Belmont Park, the Prince of General Reparations Agent jOwen these were conflicting and (reconcilall Is to use the Yet. They say this to able conceptions. they and the tenseness to the situation. Young is expected here relatives have asked for. take the execution of the Thursday DaWes plan words of M. Barthou of France," he conference' between Adju- Wales today attended the long-he- r a After, In town Is strong- tant General Carlos E. Black, Sheriff alded International race, In hand. which Speculation around His quartermaster. Leon tairf, "the eptrit of Internationalism ly on the side thst Judge Caverly will Galllgan and Deks Duty, state's at- Epinard, .the French champion, Inst Kraier, is already here and has es- can and ought to be -In harmony with sentence. His record torney. General Black announced, tablished give a life temporary at the Idea of country headquarters shows he has never Imposed the death however, that unless there is some to Wise Counselor, a Kentucky horse. the Adlon hotel. HYMANS (APRLAUDED. J sentence where the case was entirely new development he would order the It was a day of sensations. Society Young's first task, K Is expected, the galleries as in hts hands. home tomorrow, as he saw no cast manners to the winds. The most will be to establish control of the M,Applause burst from troops of the In their cells In the county jail te- evidence of lawlessness in the county. diHtinguisbed German finance ministry, check the Hymans flayed the enemies dowsgers In the of progress as ds y Leopold and Loeb were being revenues more opponents milled lnclosure and establish swarmed a and budget for league Fears of possible further trouble to the grump than usual and neither had were increased late todsy when sev- about and dashed from box to box the payment of the money deposited and civilisation. Alluding for the armies of occupation, and to charge that the league waa a supermuch to say. (Leopold is deeply en- eral automobiles drove up to the rear In an effort to see the prince. The prince came to the race against check up on deliveries in kind. grossed In his study of the Polish of the Herrin city hall, where they state, the Belgium minister declared his latest linguistic pas- were loaded with rifles, shotguns and the advice of his entire staff, all his Germany's snxletv now centers In It did not supersede the functions of language, sion, but Loeb was chafing over the ammunition, and were then driven close friends and everyone at Syosset the prospects, for the loan. Finance individual countries, but extended, dethem. delay In starting the customary baseaway. Those about the city building and vicinity who had a chance to Minister Luther todav called in the veloped and encouraged ball game between the fifth-flo"Individual countries." he declsred, He was warned it foreign press correspondents to lay and refused to comment on the maneuver, counsel him. sixth-flocase before would te a holiday crowd; that the Germany's He them. prisoners. except to indicate that It might be a heat Oeathra.4 es P.ge Twe would be intolerable, and that he stated that Germany will be able to move to prepare for any eventuality. tbataau tlx.) The three victims of Saturday s would be in constant danger of bing amake the advance payments only for short time, and is absolutely defight who were burled today were mobbed, 'if not suffocated, by the pendent on the loan to execute the Goldman to Make Dewey Newbolt, an avowed Ku Klux frantically curious thousands. That did not Interest the prince. Dawes program. Klansman, and Chester Reld and Ot"This loan Is ths safest Investment Home in England to Holland, Innocent bystanders, who He was determined to see Epinard were shot during the fight. Tomor- run. He saw Epinard. run Into sec- In the world," he said, "because It has priority on sll reparations payrow the three other victims, two ac- ond place. LONDON. Bept. 1. Emma Goldments and Is backed bv tha whu klansmen and one knowledged PINKERTON 18 ANXIOUS. man will be among the first RusGerman national weath, controlled will be burled. by ' sians admitted to Great Britain unAlan Plnkerton, head of the great aa American." General The conference between detective agency, was in D He said he einefted the loan to der the new treaty regulations for Black and State's Attorney Duty de- Pinkerton of a constant of brainstorm sll boom German Inrtrstrv. which will ths admittance of the nationals veloped Into a heated controversy over afternoon. Itstate up to him to guard then be able again to pay taxes, but both countries Into each other. .The whether troops were longer needed, the person of was number a hss who woman anarchist, to he the heir the th view British expressed that German Black maintaining that the throne, and If he had had to General In London, hss informed guard an cumiteuiioji incne world markets of friends state,- - forces cannot 'be longer held athletic that she will make her home grasshopper his Job would would never regain prewar nmwr. them relatives here on the assumption that somehere until she has have been much easier. tions because f loss of territory, raw with might happen. Veteran Soldier of Civil thing After the second race the prince materials and population. He laid found the right place for her serThe state's attorney in a statement insisted to arrive here She vices. on expects box the the of Mrs. stress,iipon great leaving of "participation new trouble Is Imminent declared that American people. If nbt tha within the next few weeks, probably if the soldiers axe withdrawn and ex August Belmont, where he was a the and Spanish-America- n October. out Into in and American the the guest, during aettu. government, going paddock pressed his belief that General Black to look at Epinard and his opposi- ment.1' Miss Goldman now la In Berlin, is In sympathy with the klan and tion The fn of German mnnev n horses. Clarence MackaV, Pos-tbut haa been asked several times by General Black may belong to It, Succumbs 84. said In off investors German war loans la the authorities to depart. It is not Telograph millionaire, led the way he would not give "dlgnltj-- " to out of the question. Luther said as known whether her band of a few such a statement by denying It. ea Pag Tear 0eatiaBi the Wiping out of the German followers who sre In Berlin will come Nine alleged klanamea arrested here tCeluata five.) is a part of the Dawes plan. to England with her. by sheriffs deputies and HELENA. Mont., Sept. 1. Lieuten- yesterday taken to ns.rri.mirg were released ant General 8. M. B. Young, distin- When they obtained bonds Ten Are Killed When field of officer the guished civil and n Trains Hit Automobiles wsrs and first General Is president of the United States war Radical NEW LONDON, Wis. 8ept. t Six by college. , died at hts home here this persons were killed bera this sfter-noo- n morning after an Illness of several when a southbound Chicago A TOKIO, Sept-- 1. (By the Associatmonths which followed an attack of ed Press.) General Massataro Northwestern passenger train crashed Into the automobile In which they, was attacked today by a sobronchial pneumonia last March. He were riding at a-- grade crossing. was 84 years old. cialist, but escaped "unhurt when the William. Haen, his wife; his son, by tho Cblnro Tribune B If Use' Tribsae WnV Born, at Forest Grove, near Pitts- one pistol bullet fired at him pose they'd hang us?" continued the Raymond, It, and daughter, Ruth, Tnunr' man missed its mark. burg, Pa.. In 140. General 1 years old, snd Mr.' and Mrs. Peter was not 1 who ham The win socialist, KyutAro Wsda, CHICAGO. SeUt, admitted letting two obtained his early education In coun girl, "They Keene. all of Hheybosan, wrere killed. It then was and graduated from Jef- arrested Immediately. try scnoois us, we are too young," say Lu- boj s Bill Lydon, 1, and Tony Vallns, and William Haen. Jr., Is In an Ap- ferson ' college, that he had been a fol- hang the Gaennslen Pa., learned Cannonhurg, apartment. 17 of and years age, who was slain cille Marshall, The two boys are accused of stran- pleton hospital, believed to be fatalshortly before the outbreak of the lower of Sakae Osugt, law folwho confessed ly Injured. have Mrs. Anna Vattna, IS, civil war. He enlisted In the Twelfth during the martial gling Gaennslen while the girls period her cries. Pennsylvania infantry In, J8S1. was lowing the earthquake and fire last their, jshararia the murder, last April, stifled -CHICAGO. Sept. 1. A man, two We're young and pretty? she condischarged the same year, and re- year. General Fukuda, as comman- of Mrs. Bessie Gaennslen. and a child were killed and ceived his first commission as a cap- der of the Tokio district during that tinued, "and..vou never heard of a women other men and a baby were In two as woman or any tain la the Fourth Pennsylvania cav- time, was held responsible for the .. The girls are not worrying much man one beback and forth shunted In . Illinois. Ws should jured, rope theytare . alry. anjebyprobablv the anniversary of "qj iygn the puliee station and the worn WJa Chans' were riding was struck In which m for-hfreen they Is Anna the witn Gen on. a i quarters attempt of hy a westbound eighteen battles, sixteen smaller en- earthquake conspicuous )u. example Chicago, Rock Island quent trips for questioning to the an oversealoua father. He was con- A Pacific gagements and thirteen skirmishes eral Fukuda s ins. railway train. state's attorney's office. her. of bad conduct stantly accusing during the civil war, and was as a colonel, "Why worry?" said Lucille. "Why, over her protests that she was leadbreveted KINOERSLEY CREW RESCUED. I could beat this case myself withas a brigadier general being ing a straight life. for meritorious World Fliers to Leave , he ABOARD B. 8. BOXER , out a lawyer." turned her over to the Eventually service during the campaign termiJuvenile court. KAN Harbor Today sentence the ARCTIC, Bunday. The only girls expect Investigation proved her claim that Aug. SI. nating In the surrender of Robert E. is one punishing them for escaping she was going straight, but ths dam- (Delayed. Bv the Associated Pre., i Lee. He received numerous citations t. crew of the Iady Klndersley, a WASHINGTON. Home The Girls. Ths for , Sept. army from the Oeneva for his strategical handling of cavalry age wss done. Her father then vainair service was Informed today thst Lucille has two '.'breaks" charged ly sought to get her out at the Hands gasoline schooner that the Ice of the in the major engagements. ocean Is carrying away to d fliers against her. while Anna has eaeaped of the court. The arrest and disgrace Aroth-Af er the civil war he sccepted a the American would leave Indian Harbor. Lab- once. "They will know better than had broken down her moral fiber the' north, were today taken aboard eornmtasinn in the regular-armand as a rador, not . noser. Tn waa before tomorrow. to send us back there." said Anna. her spirit and she could not endure the second lieutenant, and until the out. .. Mndersley A dispatch from the cruiser Milpunishment - is a the taunts- i JMghs-or"tSureiXapUal break of .the war. with Spain served and others abandoned., .. reIn Texas ana night, but not good thing." she continued. "I'd like leainua or ner attractiveness. From northwestern Indian waukee filed last SAUC huti that time she began ..I unai.. lite. today sid campaigns.., A a-- brlrtl- - generei he tlvtd,. here.cannot leave Indixn Harthe "planes as far as we are concerned It s the different class, and the murder of Special te Tlx Tribune. bor before September 1. This may Dunk. Csatiaaed ea Ptr TairlMs Mrs, brouaht Gaennslen her inn h NEW TORK, Sept. Martinique. ' (Ceiuaas six.) "Even if ws are guilty, do you sup police court. delay Brasos (a tanker)." Brown. FIGHTPRELUDE .J Judge Sheriff Arrested for Murder as Aftermath of Shootings in Herrin for Warrants Out Situation Others; e n e; Continues Victimrlre Buried. Official Announcement Made by Paris; Germany Begins to Make Her Payments. l.r-(B- Royal Prince Squeezed by pohday Mob Park t- conoxnic Policy Gives Labor Best, Coolidge Says Labor Hasn't Parted With Political Rights, Union Leader Says ' WASHINGTON. 1. Wart at tl al . inter-naldebt Spanish-America- Japanese Attacked Fu-ku- Too Young and Pretty, Say Pair Under Charges of Murder; So They Do Not Fear the Gibbet good-looki- other-stretc- hing is Indian e around-the-worl- . - oab-awing, . e JUlUEB-JLtLJM- -- Enjoys Wage-earn- er Standard of Living Far Above Any Oth er Nation in World. Presi- Sept. dent Coolldge's principal engagement today was with a group of representstlves of organised labor who arranged to cull at the White House to hear a Libr day message from the executive. The delegation Included about 126 men. members of "many branches of organised labor. In InSroducing members of the delegation to ths president George Krietaa. president of the Licensed Tugmen's association," said: "We all carry union cards. Inthese men follow their dustrially, chosen- - leaders. but politically they follow no man and no group of men. As cltlsens they own the e. right to cst their They have never parted with that right, and they never will." Mr. Prietas presented telegrams Jfrom F. M. of the International Brotherhood of Dredge Engineers and C'ranemen, W. N. Doak, vice president and representative of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and John L: Lewis of the rotmnverkers, expresslng-r- e gret at their Inability to be Here today. The telegrams to T. V. O'Connor, chairman of the shipping board and 'honorary president of the International Shoremen's union;own-vot- WHEELER TfllAL No Foreign Brand otV NeedGovernment ed; Restricted Immigration Mandatory. WASHINGTON, JTept. .tt President Coolldge,' addressing a delegation of labor representstlves who called at Jhe White House today, saidjhe gov- -, " continue a poller erhmerifwpttld 'which, he declared; had resulted In "Americas, wage-earne- ter than, at an bet- living rs other time In our history.; "Ifv anything t to be done by ths " government for the people who" toll for the cause of labor, which la the sum of all other causes" the president said. "It will be by continuing ills efforts to provide healthful sur roundings, education, reasonable conditions of employment, fair wages for fair work, stable business prosperity and the encouragement of religious worship." Reciting statistics which, he said, "show that ' the American er enjoys, a buying power enor- mously greater than that of any othf r in the world." Mr. Cool- " ldge declared: , I wage-earn- . HITS OBSTflGLE wage-earne- - AMERICA STAY "We do not need to elgn economic ideas government. We had AMERICAN. Import any for or any foieign better stick t the American brand of government, the American brand of eqnajity and the American brand of wage.. Ami-r-icm naa neuer stay American. "We have outlawed all artificial privilege. We have had our revolution and reforms, f do no: favor a corporation government, a ben government, a farm government or a governnicrt. I am for a common sense government by all the ptople according 10 the Aniencan pollcv and under the American constitution.' Turning to a discussion of hU views on labor, he asserted tl at t.e right of to organise, bargnm ( . wage earners ' anu negotiate through Its own agents had been determined. Referring obviously to the rVJroait he called attention that "we. have been making an interesting: experiment in relation to railroad labor," and expressed .the opinion that "It could, probably1 be modified, through mutual agreement, to tha benefit of all concerned." In private employment, he continued, the right to strike goes along with the right to organise. Likewise, he said, the principle of voluntary arbitration la recognised, "but compulsory arbitration, to my mind, cannot be ireconclled with the right of indlvfdual freedom." Restriction of Immigration and enactment of tariff laws ars necessary to' preserve American standards for the president added, declaring that the present administration had sponsored such legislation. Government economy, he said, also Is necessary, as Is the establishment of peaceful conditions which will permit of protection at,a minimum cost, bat . by an "adequate army and navy." Inatead of permitting the period of deflation which followed the war to be used "to secure a reduction In wages and the dissolution of labor organisations,"- he said, the administration sdopted a policy of "health-fulneto business. Industry and labor." WAGE CHANNELS KEPT OPEN. "The federal reserve system." he related, "has constantly reduced discount rates, business has revived and the millions who were without emplenty of work: ployment have found of wages. It ia at an increasing rata my belief that this policy represents most of the one Important and helpful services eu the part of the United States government, which waa everrs performed for the benefit of the of this nation. When almost everything else went crashingIndown, time a change of front took place to save them from almost certain destruction. "I want to see our Institutions mors Oeatiaoed ea Tags 7mt Bourquin Disqualifies Self; Date of Hearing Is Rendered Uncertain. :a-b- or GREAT FALLS, Mont,. Sept. Trial of Burton K. Wheeler, junior United States senator from Montana, and candidate for vie president on ths Lav Folletts ticket, during the term of federal court,' which opened here became a possibility regarded today, as - remote; whetr Jndgw George t It. Bourquin disqualified himself from presiding in ths case. Judge action plsces Jurisdiction of the Wheeler case with Judge Charles N. Pray, who left Sunday with Mrs. Pray for an - absence from the state of a month or- more. Senator Wheeler was Indicted several months ago on charges of having appeared before a government department as an attorney in matters In which the government also was la terested, after his election to the sen Jurisdiction in ths case was ate. reposed in Judge Pray by Judge Bour tn an amendment to Bourquin's quin original order, in which he disqualified himself. It was at first regarded by court officials that Judge Bours would automatically retirement quin bring about tne. assignment of an outside Judge to try the rase, but between Judge after a conference Bourquin and Prosecutor J. U Slat- terr and J. H. Baldwin, of Wheeler's counsel, It was determined that since 1. lauor-hnar- T Bour-qul- d, wage-earner- s, Oeatumd ea Page Twe (Celasu Three.) - ss ELECTION HANGS or GENERAL YOUNG FIVE CENTS PAGES 18 on iss pit wage-earne- MacDonald Probability Government May De- cide on Appeal to Voters (fMlcwa Use.) 8 ROBERT J. PREW. Universal Service Cable. Varied and Appetizing LONDON, Sept. 1 The British la bor ministry Intends to resign in No Dishes at Meat vember and appeal to tha country In another general election. Little Cost In ths last fortnight this statement Meat Is undeniably one of the most expensive Items in the food has been made confidential!' by .La bill of the ordinary family, and for bor party bosses, but It received conthis reason it is Important that it firmation at the opening of the trade be bought and used to the best posunion congress at Hull today, when sible advantage. A. A. Pureed said: of tasty dishes which "I warn the congress that It is: a The number "good cook can make out of the well within the bounds of political: of meat or cuts cheaper to the possibilities that the opposition endless. Russian treatv msv decide the fate' meat la almost Directions for Intelligent marketor the labor government." ing and recipes for the attractive it is a certainty that the Consepreparation of Inexpensive meat rvatives and Liberals will unite In the dkfhes for every day are given tn house of commons in throning out the Issued by the department treaty, with the Inevitable result of a aof booklet agriculture. election. general free government publia This is Over "00 delegates Tepresentlng cation. Our Washington Informa4.SOO.00 workers attended the conwill secure a copy, for Bureau tion gress, which aroused unusual interest any reader who fills out and mails because it represents the driving fore coupon below, enclosing two the behind the Labor government. The for return postage. "reds were there in strong fore and. Cents In stamps sre All sent direct. rdplles i before the sesiions end Intend to ' Be sure to write your name and attack Premier MacDonald's strongly address clearly on the lines of the moderation. coupon. The .Dawes Dlan will also com In or" Miter nslaurtfs ss a capitalistic' scheme. President Purcell. broadlv Frederic J. Haskiru Director, outlining Labor's policy, said: our task is to capture every leg- - I The Salt Lake Tribune Information Bureauj Islatlve and administrative no.lt Ion. ' We have certainly made mistakes, but Washington. D. C tney are only a part of our apprenI enclose herewith two cents . ticeship." In stamps for return posters on J. Marchbanks. leader of the rait. a free copy of the Meat Booklet. readers, opened the broadside of the reds on the Dswes elan, declaring Name that "It was designed for ths benefit I downfall of the working class move Street . ment; 4n general.. in. miners delegates slso ployment for Ih miners in view of Stats ....... . Csatiati.4 ea Pass Twe I "left-ove- I . tCsluaia Tares. J |