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Show ' V 0 THI WEATHER. Fair liluraijt and probably Suaday; warmer wait portion Saturday. Lacal Settlement Frtcaa. Silver 7S The occasional emergency only emphasizes the continuous value of Tribune Want Ads. , I wad Cop par ...... lilt ,,..(11174 Icalhod.t) VOL. 110, NO. 67. SALT LAKE CITY, SATURDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 20, 1924. Naval Appropriation Bill Bank Robbers Set Fire to Entire Town; Carry 2 Safes Away FORT WORTH. T.ii, Dec. 19 Bank robbers set firs to the Passes House; New Measure Introduced Would Ex- The house passed the naval appropriation President TooUdge appointed an oil oonrervation board. Relations with Japan were discussed again In the house. The senate voted to appropriate $10o. AQ to fight the poultry disease A full force against the rum fleet by next July was promised bv Rea Admiral BUlard of the coast guard. A house corrmlttee upheld the la r'ght i a. of t Representative Guard New York, Republican, to retain his seat A vote on the Muscle Shoe.lt bill waa deferred in the senate until after Christmas President Palmer completed his testimony before the house shipping board investigating commit- More Than One Hundred Milion Representative Brit ten Urges Nkvy' Equal to Any; Four Cruisers Suggested. A lc Toincl-den- t WASHINGTON. with the paasag by the house late today of the naval aupply bill, carrying nearly $30,00.00 for aetivl-tte- c 19 United States Amity With Held Great Britain as Major Consideration. KINOS INQUIRY SHELVED. On the senate aide of the capltoi the naval committee shelved the resolution of Senator King. Democrat Utah, proposing a eearrhlng inquiry Into the status of the ngiy, but agreed to seek from the navy department data which will show whether the United States Is keeping up its end of the aims conference ratio In addition to the reference made to It In the Britten bfil, the question of gun slevation also was brought again Into prominence today by the announcement at the White House that a note setting forth1 the views of before the stale Great Rritaip department. Hitherto the officials had not revealed that the British representations cm the subject went beyond mere Informal suggestions and Inquiries. Neither the White House nor the state department would elaborate on today's announcement or indicate what might be the next step in the diplomatic angle of the controversy Commenting on his bill and its purposes. Mr. Britten said it was introduced "In accordance with a statement made by the secretary of the navy to tbs committee on appropriations of the house Indicating that additional ships and authorisations were necessary to time our navy up to the ratio promulgated by the Washington conference." "Unless another conference is called for the limitation of all naval craft " continued Mr Britten, "it will le nec- - vu 0oatUod (Oeiai fill One.) Three Mrs. Gould Refutes Illegitimacy Charge 19 Dec Mrs YORK. NEW Guinevere .Sinclair Gould, wldo wot the late George J. Gould, appeared today at the referees hearing in the Gould accounting suit to defend her three, children against the charge, made yeeterdar, that her husband was not their father The question of the legitimacy of the three children, who were born before Mrs Goulds marriage to Gould, was first fought into the accounting suit yesterday when J. Ar-3. thur Love, counsel for George Gould, Jr., denied that the late Georgs Gould was their father. Mr. Gould in his will acknowledged the children a. boy and two girls as his own and left them part of his estals. Mrs Gould said today that two of her children George and Guinevere were born In a hospital In New York City tn April, 191$, and June, 1916, respectively. The third. Jane, was bqgn at Lakehurst, N. J.. in April, 192$ she said "Was Georgs Gould their father?" he was asked. "Yea" answered Mrs. Gould. She said shs married Mr Gould in May, 1921, a ysar after the death of his 4 first wife. Bootlegger Pays $ 1000 to Prison Relief Fund X d- Tokio Denies Japanese Declined U. S. Offer bill. guna Testimony Parents Were of Unsound Mind Forerunner of Insanity Plea. Th LG8 ANOEI.ES, Cl . I'M 1 alleged unsound minds" of a mother and father yearly half a century ago cams down through the years to the aid of a son, Norman Selby, also known as Kid McToy. charged with Th murder of Mrs W. Mors, In court hers late Theresa today. The final bits of circumstantial evidence to reach the court records before the defense closed its cane were in the form of depositions from aged lesidents of Milroy and Central, Ind . accused the boyhood homes of man and the residences of the Selby family. The deposition of Lee Hume. Mii-roInd , declared tbs mother and father, Mary E and Frank Selby,dur-to have been of "unsound mind" ing the years he knew them. A similar document from Wilbur Brown, also of Milrov, said the mother and father "were at times mentally deficient " A deposition of Dr. Max A Bauer, physician EjJJthe Central. Ind , hossaid that the pital for the Insanfe, mother had been In that institution from March 2. 189. until June 15. the same year, xufferlng from and tendencies, hallucination " Other depositions were of like contents. Generally accepted as paving the way for a temporary Insanity plea on Monday, when arguments begin, the defense in Introducing the depositions said It sought to show "the probable mental condition" of McCoy at the time of the alleged crime. TOKIO, Dec. 19 (By the Associated Press XThe foreign office tonirht issued a communique denying the of newspaper versions correctness printed widely this morning f Premier Takiakira Katos speth of last a political dinner. itghtt Premier Kato had been quoted as that the Uw8 government had taring btlmated that It might send the American nary to Yokohama after he spring maneouvert .pear Hawaii ut that the Japanese government bad declined the offer with thanks. Tonights communique said in part f the premiers 'The report ipeech) Is the product of some grave niaunderatandlng, for this gotern-fien- t could In nowise decline a that never was made" v- - r prp-oc- - Mr Coolidge haa been influenced in reaching these decisions partly by his fear of a revival of dangerous competitive navy building, partly by his passion for economy, and partly by his feeling that the developing of military aircraft may, within a very few vears, revolutionise navy construe-tlo9 CLOSELY ALLtEd. These considerations are subordinate, however, to the fundamental consideration of the new relationship between Britain and Amerh'm, which has existed since the Washington arms conference, when the alliance between England and Japan was terminated Tna ending tf that alliance, tha way for a close coopera--tlo- n paving Af America and Albion in world affairs. Is coming to be regarded as ona of the greatest achievements of Antevioa diplomacy and g turning point in history The British and American governments met in that conference and proceeded to act on tha assumption that there never will be another war between the two peoples For that rea-o- i. Mid the British plenipotentiaries, England waa willing to limit itself to a navy no greater than the American Then, on the eve of the termination of the alliance, the British plenipotentiaries made the flrvt suggestion of Inform! or tacit tha United States They alliance with at America would ba ex- suggested-thAnglo-Japanes- e Ceatinsed an Pigs Tw (Oaltuas fear. mii TO al BE EXECUTED Dec. 19 President WASHINGTON, Pnolidge today sent this message to Mrs Julius Kahn "Your husband s death has caused mourning wherever his splendid services to hts country were known. It was his fortune to possess the talents and the opportunity to do an Incomparable work In connection with our countrys participation in the world war His high place among the I public men of his time Is assured send you the deep sympathy and condolence of Mrs Coolidge and myself in your great sorrow A resolution of regret adopted today by the house military committee. of which Mr Kahn was chairman, declared he bad been foremost fostering his countrys welfare, and that "In his death the country has lost a true. Just and wise man. one possessing the loftiest patriotism and devotion to bis conception of the right " The senrfte adopted a resolution expressing its profound regret for the death of Representative Kah i, and, on motion of BenatbryJohnson, Republican. California, as a further mark of respect, adjourned until noon toIn One Killed, One Dying, Following Gun Battle man I. drid and another I expected to wounds a In received from die ptatol duel at Hynea, near here, Uat night which atarted when two civilian and two.Ixi Angeles deputy sheriff., separately engaged In a burglar -hunt, met and mistook each other fo- th object of their search. Raymond Oappi, formerly of Yakima, Wash , died at the hospital her late today, and hia companion, a. F Hamer, a atora owner a( Hynes, la said to be dvlng. One of th deputy ahertrfa, C. W. EUlaon. era .lightly wound. 4, while th other escaped unhurt. Cal M Dae, 13 On Former i Prison Warden Indicted for Bribery - ATLANTA. ! Dec. IS federal A rand Jury today returned an ENGLISH HOUSE ADJOURNS. agaTn.t A R. Sarfln. fur. ler ward-- n of the' federal penHen, LONDON, Dee. JS The hou.e o In h wit .rv, charging acceptance of brtbe. accordance it pro aimmoni. e made lond In the sum of (Voh thh gram, began K holiday rece h Hr appearance the first - Monday afternoon, adjourning until Februsrj . .0 January. , 3Hh. -- x and Vote - Dishonest Measure. Bill as Gompers Head of Federation; Vice President Resigns. NEW f5rn American TORE. Dc William cf ' th jibor by th l lri4 prlent Federation rtf I executive council here today James B Noonan, president of the International Brotherhood of Klectrl-cWorkers, was named eighth vice president to fill the vacancy on the council caused bv Green s promotion I pon Green s election James Duncan, the first vice president, at once resigned A close associate of the late Samuel Gompers for fortv years, Duncan told his colleagues he felt entitled to the office htmse.f because of seniority and long service His resignation will not he acted upon untH the executive committee meets again at Miami, Fla , about February 3 I uncan. former head of the granite cutters, gavs his decision is "irrevocable " MINK OFFICIAL. secretary-treasurGreen, who has been of the United Mine Workers of America since 1912 and votes in Coshocton, Ohio, was nominated by Thomas A Rickert of the garment workers and seconded by Matthew "oil of the photoengravers. Both Woil and Rickert had abandoned tentative candidacies of their own and retired In favor of Green In ths actual voting Green was opposed b) no other candidate Both Green and Noonan take up their new duties at ones. Green withdraws from the mine workers organisation and John I lewli, the miners president, is expected to appoint his successor after a meeting of the executive hoard in Indianapolis In January. Mr IjwIs said ths alectlon or Green - wa "the ehoic f wisdom because the miners' secretary-treasur"Is the one outstanding figure who can take upon htmself the mantle al w WASHINGTON An ediDec 19 torial attacking Senator Underwood. Democrat. Alabama, and hia Muscle Shoals leasing MU, published in the Hearat morning newspaper on 13, waa neither fair nor honest," M) s a report oT an investigating committee adopted unanimously today by ths senats "No evidence was submitted " the report aya, "nor was it claimed thkt any evidence existed that in anv way reflected upon the Integrity or honor or character of Senator Underwood The personal vindication of Senator Underwood wss full and complete, and it waa repeatedly denied that In the editorial there was any intent to make any personal reflection upon Senator Underwood WASHINGTON. Dec 19. The senate mads such progress today on tha Underwood Muscle Shoals bill that a final vote appeared likely soon after the Christmas reeas A number of amendments which hitherto proved troublesome were disposed of and. although there was no announced agreement on a time for a final roll ths day a devel opments appeared to be accepted by both aides promising an early settlement of the issue AMENOMENT PASSED. After two da of debate, the senate accepted. t to 29, the amendment hy henator Walsh. Democrat, for government Montana, providing regulation of power distributed interstate This Walsh amendment served to put the senate on recotui as being govopposed to state regulation of ernment corporation As drawn, the bill provided for state regulation of power produced at Muscle Bhoals by either a leases or government Senaeor Underwood made no serioua objections to the amendment, but considered It unnecessary. A number of other amendments were Accepted by the Alabama senaGeattaaed ea Page Three tor end adopted without a record vote tOeisma Twe.) These would require the distribution ail power not needed for the manuHollywood Chiropractor 6tfacture of fertilizer, provide that a iekse of the property cannot be transIs Held on $10,000 Bail ferred without approval of tha president. and that farmers be given prefI'S ANGELES. ! 19 BaJijamln erence In the sale of fertiliser; auA (.Titchlow. Hollywood chiropractor, thorise leasing of the property, either who attempted to force Mayor George separately or as a whole, and stipuK to pav him $600 at the point late that ths lessee shall set maids an nf a pistol Tuesday evening was aradequate reserve fund' to over deand guarantee tbs governraigned In Justice court' here late to- preciation with day. charged attempted robbery, ment against loss TRUST CHARGED. attempted extortiona and assault with felonv Hia bail intent to commit At the opening of the session Senwas fixed at $10 000 and hia prelimi- ator Norris. Republican, Nebraska, for set next nary hearing Tuesday. again charged that the General was the head of the company New 75-m"water power trust" of America He Army Gun to declared the company owned the AlaPower company and other light Displace Stokes Mortar bama and power companies scattered over the United States bv stock ownership 19 Dec. WASHINGTON. Army directorates ' Ordnance experts have developed a sndHe Interlocking would like to know, ha added, new mortar for use with In- bow many of these directors ' had nests fantry against machine-gucontributed to the campaign just The weapon will displace the Stoke " ended mortar used in the world war It Rising to the defense of the Norris throws a twelve-poun- d projectile, with a range of from $00 to 1900 government operation bill. Senator and is light enough to be hanCsatiaaMI ea Page Tw yard, dled hy one mule or four men. (Claaia Tbrae.) er er trer -- Electric., (By HANQVBR, Germany. Dec tha Associated Press ) Frits Haar-minthe "wholesale murderer," whose trial for tha slaying of twenty-si- x persons haa stirred all Germany, wss sentenced to death today Tha extreme penalty was also ordered In the case of bis accomplice, liana Grans. Haarmsnn waa found guiltv of muryoung men, the dering twenty-fou- r crimes extending oer a period of six years His codefendant waa condemned for Inciting to murdar in one vase Frits Haarmann a Hanover butcher, waa shown at his trial to ba s criminal degenersta who Trd men and boys to hi lodgings and there killed them by tearing their throats with his teeth and sucking their lrftod The crimes wet committed tn Kls room in tha top story of a decrepit tenement house facing the River Letne, and the bodies were disposed of by throwing them Into the stream. Many hen the human bones were found bad of the river waa dragged after his arrest early last summer MORBID The Best Features Authoritative Comment FEDERAL TAXES DECLtNINO RAPIDLY A THREATENED COMMUNIST UPRISING writes from Paris thst the is all atremble at the rumor of a Communist uprising originallycity set for December And revTardieu TESTIMONY. tha trial, Thetestimony at horror which aroused Intense throughout Germany, waa revolting much of It to the extent that witnesses were heard hehind closed doors Among tha allegations was that tha murderer as a butcher had offered his customers human flesh for consumption. Haarmsnn confessed to slaving fifteen youths between the ages of 15 and 22, but declared ha could not remember the names f hia victim The crimes were spread over a .period of seven years. VI go to the decapitating block Joyfully and happily," Haarmatutd-clare- d to the court. Then hq pleded "Dont send me to the Insane asylum 1 would rather not Uve," .Grape attorney,' reviewing the Malory of the case, resented the charge that such an affair waa possible onlv in Germany, as claimed by some of tbs newspapers "A long chain of cases tattfs from Gtiles de Rits via Landru. ieb and Leopold to Maarmann." he declared n The attorrtey pleaded that was the "master mind" in the am of murder that Grans was series M.t jh? tol who dj tint I now th CatiBtrf e fir Thw eve. , LANDIS SUPREME. Chadwick con George tribute a timelv article on the big time baseball squabble. Landis is still baseball 's big snan, he says, but Connsker Is the American league's new boss. WILL ROGERS Why send photographs byv radio! asba ths eowbor comedian. It's bad enough to mail. CANADIAN RAILROADS Professor of Cunningham Harvard, m an extremely valuable article, discusses govrailernment operation of roads in Canada. THE SUNNY SIDE OF LIFE. Ths Sunday Tribune will bring the Gumps and Walt and your door. W. E. Hill scores a th a page of crossword puz-tl- e sketches from life; Ring Lardner gives tome gennine Christmas tips, while the , Christmas ghost tells Stephen Leacock that the pinch of unemplovment A ruining him." George Ade relates How the Cruel Mr. Crabb Completely Crabbed His the fable of And there are many others. Christmas. Skee-xir't- Haar-man- . Order Your Sunday Tribun CALL WASATCH 1 1' An oil fu-t- ANNOUNCES ACTION. Ths president announced ths crea- tion of the new board In letters addressed to the secretaries of war, in which commerce, navy. Interior ' he bjG d "It is evident that ths present methods of capturing our oil deposits ta wasteful to an alarming degree, In that It becomes Impossible to conserve In the ground under our present leasing jind rejalty practices, if a neighboring owner desires to gain possession of hia deposits "Developing aircrafts Indicate thst our nations) defense must be supplemented, If not dominated, by aviation It Is ven probable that the supremacy may be determined by the possession of avaliaBIs petroleum and its products "I am advised that our current oil by drilling supply is kept up onlv many thousands of new wells each year, and that th failure to bring In period producing wells for a would slow down the wheels of industry and bring about serioua Industrial depression oil two-ye- AVOID SHORTAGE. "Ths problem of a shortage in fuel jand lubricating oil, not to mention gasoline, must ba avoided, or our man ufacturing productivity will bs curtailed to an extent not easily calcu- lated. Wf ars wot Joday, boirsver, facing an undersupply of oil. Ths production of our $00,000 wells is tn ices of our immediate requirements. That overcheapproduction in itself encourages ness. whhh, in turn, leads to wastes fulness and disregard of essentlaJ Oil, of which our resources value ars limited, la largely taking the place of coal, the supply of which seems to be unlimited, but coal cannot take ths place of oil in most of its higher usee, on land or sea. or in the air " Broken' All corded in Country; Over State as MerReaches cury Declines; ConMontana Low Mark, 44 Below tinued Cold Forecast Sub Zero Tempera- Only Prompt Action ture and Terrific Safeguards City WaBlizzards Damage ter . Supply, Which Rail and Wire Lines. Was Threa t e n e d. Wlr Trthim Sslt lak Trthvo 19 -- Xld winter, afCHICAGO d ter a few skirmishes at various pcints, today swept down upon tha entire country in fore and tonight is consolidating hta position at svery point of Invasion. Th high points of th attack all along th front tnay h summed up briefly. Eleven deaths, four of which werg In Chicago, due to falls on icy pavement a Two persona were frozen to CbUf Ic death In western states. Texas swept by fierce blizzard, with aero temperature approaching th point. Fort Worth snowbound and other cities badly crippled. Entire northwest In grip of bitterly cold weather Montana repefrta the extreme, with 44 degreee below Zero. Minnesota reports a maximum of $3 below zero; North Dakota, 2$ below; Wisconsin, 32 below, and other states near these marks. In sU of them the temperature will drop several degrees lower by morning WIRE TROUBLE OCCURS. Heavy damage to telegraph and telephone wires In all directions because of sleet, which has destroyed miles of wire. Oklahoma and Missouri points are tsotated because of In many cities ths broken wires. aleet storms hav seriously Unpaired the ftre alarm systems In Chicago and other cities snow, sleet and rain, freezing to wires, have put electrle lighting circuits out of commission, leaving many districts in darkness. All roads operating under th third rail electrical system are working under heavy handicaps snd some of them have abandoned trains altogether-tk third rail prevents the shoe from touching th This rail and no power Is available. Is particularly true of the elevated road. Bteam railways report a number of trains running behind schedules, due chiefly to orders to sU engineers to use extreme caution and watchful-nee- s for broken rails and damaged Burburban traffic In all bridges cities badly slowed down. H'T RADIO UTILIZED. Salt lAk. In sent tern pern tur last tight at I oclock at tha koma et J. deCcll Altar, weatherman, waa gree colder thtn at tha aama hou Thursday. Th metaorologist pradlct-e- d this morning would be at least a cold, and poaaibly much ooldar, than yestarday, whan the official thermometer on top of th Boston building loharad to I degrees below saro. Th prediction for eastern Utah la no mention ta mad of ooldar, wbll change In temperature for tha city on tha weather card. Tha highest temperature yestarday waa 11 1 degrees between IX and t oclock noon. This mercury leral waa an almost exact duplicate of tha day previous. Mr Altar (aid that tha "high" which la aorompanlad by tha oold wav may hut sa.aral days, but th temperature should not remain a oold aa It haa bean. Ha waa Inclined to some "reeplte In tha air toTh Bero line had extended night. into th southwest yesterday, with the unusual temperature of I degree below saro at Oklahoma City. "High' ar Inclined to Unger longer than Iowa and tMe may mean Balt Lake will be relatively oold for perhaps ten days Th poopl of this elty. Mr. Alter said, hare a good philosophy on tho weather generally. H estimated rd were glad that tha thermometer two-thi- did not go below I degree yesterday and felt some pride la the city' sheltered position. Th other third, ha taid, ware perhaps disappointed that they could not say how cold It waa, railing off soma figure below sere at least In Its taans Tender, Wyo, reported It rcldeat temperature on record Jeaterday at 40 degree below aero. Most temperatures on tha weather map showed alight upward tendency yesterday. Chari at tt ja, Eorabcr of Itah rpoi-- d 'll degrees below saro at th Institution, while B. C. Rudbury in th south western part of th city reported 1 degree oelow. Mich temperatures aa tbead were reported by th Utah Power Ught company for it plants, all la Idaho- Oneida,, it below; Rods Point, 31 below, and Or are, 34 below aero. Extreme cold weather prevailed over the western part of th country yesterday, with some relief In Montana, Oregon and Washington.- - Yellowstone park registered II degrees below lira AIRPLANE ON TIM. Air mall pilots mad their flight aa usual and on scheduled time In each direction. They made no report whatever concerning th bitterness of tha weather, although heaters hav not been Installed yet In a number of the planes "From lop to 409 calls were received at th offtr of th superintendent of waterworks from residence which had frosen pipes or meter. Th department recommend wrapping heavy paper around exposed pipes. A trolley wire an the Ninth East rar line snapped last evening and traffic for approximately thirty minutes Th Denver 6 Rio Grand Western railroad reported some delay on account of ths cold, th Oregon Short Lin waa running from on to two hours late, according to report; th Orem lines were aa scheduled, and th Bamberger Electric was likewise on Urn. BOY EARS FROZEN. Dewey Ogtoka, f years of age, waa taken to th county hospital for treatment when his ears became froien on th way to th Lincoln school yesterday afternoon, I - Radio scores additional triumphs as and telephone services telegraph break down important commercial messages snd general news distribution tranefeVred to radio, thus opencommunication with Isolated ing towns All take beats seek the nearest shelter and will remain In port until the weather clears and lanes are broken. Heavy Ice covers Lake Michigan ae far as the eye can see. Cities In which heavy passenger buses operate find they are the most reliable method of transportation. Transcontinental railway report trains one to two dsvs late, afMortimer Swore to Get some ter bucking through 2t00 miles of blizzards Thousands of 'deer hnd other aniVeteran Bureau Chief, mals north of the Grand Canvon In Arizona reported perishing, with sevinches of sleet covering every eral According to Testimony form of vegetation, l.lveetock everywhere suffering from cold and hunger. Weather forecasters say no relief Is In sight in the Immediate future. CHICAGO, Dec. 19 (By the AssoIn the northw'est. hzzardv been ciated Pres. ) Testimony tliat Elias raging for the last five days have and temH- Mortimer appeared before the senperatures are rapidly lowering tois expected to ate veterans' bureau committee and night The ascold wave far south a central there loid hia story of fraud, waste, penetrate Fearteea pestUwed ea graft and corruption in the further(Oelassa Three.) j to enance of his determination WATER SUPPLY compass the destruction of Charles H. Follette Followers Forbes, former director of ths bureau, IS THREATENED was given by defense witnesses toAre Shojrn of Patronage In court. federal aa Fait tak facad a water short day low tmpratura TV n a rau)t of th W A Mr I NO TON'. Iwr 19 Th Forbes and J Thompson, It waa learned yestarday, and In the house, made pin delegation on for are trial wealthy contractor, up of ten Republicans and one 80 a supply of watar waa mad poaalbi conspiracy to defraud the government cialist all of whom enlisted under the by th prompt action of th watr T.a Worker were Follette banner during the cam department official through hospital contracts of Dr George B Tultidge of Philadel- palgn has about given up hope from a 0atin4 fit any patronaga crumbs UMraa Tw phia, father of Mrs Mortimer testi- cleaning W bite House fied Mortimer asserted the night be- th Thev became convinced that they fore he took the stand lu the senate were "out in the cold when investigation that he would go to thev definitely learned todav that President his soul to Washington and swear hrfd foolfdtf nominated Martin F All True Sportsmen hell to get Forbes " to be Walter at West postmaster This and other testimony relative recObserve the Game Law Waller pend appointment to conversations with kjortimer bear-Ib- f ommended bv Senator tjfnrootw4 upon the veteTSKs bureau was lawa are paaed and enGam of Walter's nomination sending corroborated by Mrs Tuliidge who to The the senate came on the heels f forced for U feneral food of all followed her husband to the stand. ia Their only porpo the appointment by the president of hunter. MAKES AVOWAL. to prevent tha extinction of Fame. a block of other postmasters recomTh good a port man no longer "I n goiig to get Forbes, if I can t mended by Fenator I .enroot break lawa He has even the rePrior to the nomination of Presiget him one wav, Vil get hint ansult of gam protection H knows other." Dr. Tuliidge said he heard dent Gno!Iyte last June some patronLam-pewas the lawbreaker is spoiling his that assert. age given Representative his the eletkn Fine however, own port, also the other fellow's, In response to a question m to whv failed a has to even land Th Unuert he was so bitter toward Forbes, Washington bureau of this Senator la Follette and paper Is prepared to send out Mortimer said according to Tulildges winner In his the house follower most of Because he could have copies of "Game Laws for tho Seatestimony. son $ made me a rich man bv giving me have been without patronage for sevears 5 This booklet gives tho legal procontracts, but he would not eral hospital " In visions It every state covering It do cenaa, season, possession, sale and "Did Mortimer mv tn your pres- French Government Will of If make Cathence that mi did not export gime. If you own a gun you need a erine (Mn Mortimer Hne up with Not Prosecute Ibanez ,Copy of th new game lawa. Tney him against Forbes be would drag are free, fiend for yours today. her dow n to the mire? asked James 19 Th Fr.w & for- - I Enclose two cents ia stamps tor PARIS, course) for Forbes. 8. T return postage. oixn offlr offtctallv dnld today riv "Tee." the father replied The earn question tn sHxhtlv dif- tnt.ntton to Attempt tH procuilonRtco Iban.z, th Spunferent words wss answered w the af- of Frederic J. Hank In. Director, l.h author. Th rport that tt would firmative by Mrs. Tuliidge Th Salt Lake Tribune urh th Initial prnarcutlon brcaos of i Moftttaer bad testified for govInformation Bureau, ernment that his enmity toward th puMIratlon of hi pamphlet aaain.t was la Alfonso of th latters hav- Kin Washington, D. C. Pari, printed Forbes grew out Mrs Mortimer ue won him from .paper yr.teniay. ing I enclose herewith two cents Defense testimony refuting 'Morttn stamp for return poetag on imers story that he paid Frbe $5000 Unmasked Bandit Robs a free copy of th Gam Laws in caslr in th Drake hotel in ChiBooklet. cago on Jun 2$ 192? was unchanged Vancouver Bank by the today by the Nam we aeoaseao. a. prosecution attorneys. VANCYICVER. B C., Dc 19 A Miss Edna Bree. rorbe' stenog. Street , , ., robber entered unmarked the Bank during his Chicago rapher at the hotel here today and visit mt June 19. 20 and 21, testified of Nora Sent! branch City slip of paper to the teller. yesterday Forbes wss nor In th room readn at the time Mortimer, testified he Slat so. I'Oho " The teller "Hand me handed out llhoo tn currrp y with Cwbtwf sa Page Tw mao fled. the which (0issks Tv. ed La , The only wy to reduce tain ii to reduce expenditure ni reduce' debt. The current expenditure of the government have been and are being reduced rapidly. That i contributing it 'hare to the reduction of taxes. Thi i the cheering eign that Mark Sullivan observe in the national capital. llis article in tomorrow ' Tribune merits study. and now postponed to Christmas WHY D&E8d? A French newspaper asked the question, Wny Do Wo men Dress t William Bird says, and now all France is trying to answer. EETIRINO CELEB BJTIEfS David . Warfield, C'yril Maude and Leo Ditriehstein may be about to retire from the stage, Jane Compton asserts, but Daniel Frohman doesnt believe it. AMERICAN TALLS Tribune will Tomorrow's contain tha second of a senes of article on tbs ,tre Amenean rnendous yTalis .. i project. IW CENTS E Records Re- Fe All tli a News 17 WASHINGTON," conservation board, tomiting of ths secretaries of xar, navv, interior snd commerce, wa created tyda) bv President Coolidge Tbs board ill study the government's responsibilities in oil conservation, and sill seek the full operation of ths oil Industry to that end Th commission appointed bv Mr. last Marih to atudv the Coolldg supply of fuel oil for the nav, wilt work In cooperation with the new board Deaths - THE SUNDAY TRIBUNE 19 at1 Once. o Wl-co- fne -- rt 1934-2- r.f Kasby-Rmlt- 4 . vi-'.rt-e at prn1d 590. V- - y Conservation Expected Petroleum Output Highly Soon ; Senator Norris the to Important Charges Power Trust. Nation, President Says. on n Death Sentence Imposed on German Murderer Coolidge Sends Sympathy and His Accomplice. to Widow of Julius' Kahn DOWNEY, Muscle Shoals Editorial Is Coolidge Organizea CabOfficials Declared to Be Unas a inet fair SEARS day In a tacit alliance, partkotlarly In tha region of the Pacific ocean This is tha consideration which furnishes tha ker to tha policy of th Coolidge administration In regard to the development and maintenance of th American navv In relation to the navies of ttreat Britain and Japan Many persons have been pusxled by the president opposition In building cruisers and other auxiliary warcraft up to a parity with Great Britain and a strength'- nearly double that of Japan, puxxled likewise by hta refusal to sanction the elevation of guna on our battleships so as to produce a range equal to that of the British A me. 1 New WASHINGTON, York draft for $1000 received by the Relief from man a Prisoners society who described himself as a "bootrefused by legger by profession " was donor morrow he society today. The would-b- e wrote: "I mav need your aftstance some am going to pay in time and vattce " Thirteen Succeed HENNING k ChbWfo TrtNift Kelt Dlbna W rv Dso is - Nft only WASHINGTON. will th 1'nltrd Rtatet and Great Brit aln never again ba drawn into war against earh other, but th two great English-speakinth rt hat popi and moat powsrful ration In tha world, stand ahou'dsr to ahmildsr toBy ARTHUR The treasure end postoffice hill. $743. 180, $22, v reported earning to the nous President Coolldge asked congress for $275,000 for survey work on the Great Lakes-8- t. Lawreme waterway project. Action on the King resolution for a navy investigation waa postponed Indefinitely by the senate naval committee The senate condemned the editorial of the Hearst, newspapers attacking Senator Underwood tn connection with his Muscle Shoals "sul-cld- ecu h and Air Craft Development Are Also Governing Influences. ing, from $21,000,000 to $33,000,000 Mr. Britten s bill was automatical- ly referred to the naval committee, and he said hearings ahh'h would be held on the proposal would serve the purpose of drawing frbm navy department officials the Information eg to the exact condition of the America! navy he haa been seeking to bring out through a congressional investigation. pounds BE PROTECTED 0 Economy tee already authorised. Representative Britten of Illinois, ranking Republican on the house naval committee, introduced a measure to appropriate $101,400,000 for new naval construction. His measure would authorise the building o four ecout cruisers, costing $11,100,000 each, and one floating drydock to cost $7,600,000; the elevation of the turret guns of thirteen battleships at an aggregate cost of $.600,000. and would Increase the limit of coet of the two airplane carriers, Islington and Saratoga, now build- 4 RflTUy The Day in Washington pend SUPPORTED IK of alley view eeny today after wrecking a atats and national bank and carrying away two safes The banka were the First National and the Guaranty, and the business section was wiped out bv the fire Np accurate estimate of rhetr lose waa obtained, but the fire daqiage waa estimated at S100 00 Tbs safes weighed 40i0 PAGES-j-FIY- Zero Weather Hojds Utah With Icy Hand; Nation Swept by Cold OIL SUPPLY TO town Expansion Proposed 20 -- or V n ... ,... |