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Show ' ameitmaeieiMaitmaa WIATHIR. Otnerally flr Thursday and Friday) J not much in SilverA Mi change temperature. Lecal settlement Price. . ,7 f0. j topper i "o 7 14.481. llftllllUll Hi 9 As though a giant's knife had cut through a huge loaf of bread. Where 12,000,000,000 gallons of water pushed aside a mighty dam 185 feet high in San Francisquito canyon. (Photo by P.'tfc A.) TARIFF POST: M- r---..- ir.ir rT."wim r Tm 'i "V- i - Ml nr r .... r - ' '''a''"',,v''"f I ' ... 'pi.' 7 a Characterized Lob- byist; Utahn Rapped - '' i'J:i." - ;i:-xrm- ,. a- -a TV , I- -. ri ,, x ? Declares Commission a . - ' . , - -- - , y - t a,rh. - - If .. v.. - f :Vy?v . - Ij " ',;'.-,- j V . -.- :".:' . 11 ' Congress ' . '-.' ,! . H , s , "T j - J ' ' ' ' . , .... Boy Proselyter s BUULUt Wish Fulfilled FA I lllBaiW i : : - 1 ' twenty-da- y Ma-so- n, W " ' : LI ror"'Fails to Subdue Spirits. . : i -- Los Angeles Will Shoulder ' th By GEORGE 3"ha , In Mexicot Taken - - i MEXICO CITY, March 14 AP The newspaper, El Universal Graflco, persons have says that fifty-seve- n been arretted in Tepatitlan, Jalisco, sccused of supporting what th authorities call the "Catholic Revolution" In that state. The prisoners temporarily In tha penitentiary! at Guadalajara. are-hel- . and 'silt, f 10 important bridges destroyed.' and State county highways washed out at numerous joints. Telegraph and telephone- - lines disrupted over en area connecting half a dozen town and a -dozen smaller communities. , 1500 persons virtually' homeless and. many of these, temporarily at least. destitute. Livestock killed and drowned, un- ' estlmated total. The .aggregate property loss cannot be determined at present. Officials declared today that it would require weeks to fix the figure, which might be found anywhere between $7,060,000 . , and t30.OW.000. Hundreds f Searehera '" Plod for Bodies. Across the great carpet of mud and silt, IMd by the. flood "T hen SS.000 acre-feof water burst through dam 'yesterday, there were plodding late1 today hundreds of of- - .... ' " Mayor Walker Welcomes 480 Hungarian Delegates to distributing handbiDa under the none of hundreds of lice, llaj-D- r Walker; la wekomlag tha del ration of 4S0. aaid: "The mayor of the city of New Fork, bom of an immigrant father, born a Innate enasurutional love for wiih Closes School, SS. In the Mhrety and freedom,-feelof the diatinsuiahed visitors .14 chamber of the city hall In which who hate come to the city today Af.RFRT LEA. Mlna..' Jlir-hnoIa In Ihta clir of Kossuth was welcomed In Public f4P). enmething In common, and that someaoo population were orWed cl'ed 1 There was no disturbance at loday a thing la the great love that you have 707 w hen for liberty and freedom." ceremonlea, aach as the conflict pupiia today enrollroent are suffering the dlentloB tended last evening bethe Baron Perenyl for the tween police and demonatratora fron ififliienaa. d'legatee, anfl another apeaker waa to Admiral Nicboiaa Horthy, the mayor of Budapest, who prrtenied Vhlle nay caaea are charscter-ta- d a "severe" tr.ere a bronae statue of a historical sots iect hr phvuh-tanof Htinaary. has keen no faulity. Iha oppoaiUoa today confined Itaelf to the New York; mayor. 'XZZ'ZZ ljl s Can-dida- te for Reelection. LOS ANGELES, March San Francisquito 14. Toll of NEW YORK, March (Universal). darn dead "I hav It on undisputed authority the; evening that President Coolldge is to be a 14 mounted, today until' at check-uth tally stood 302 dead and 200 to 300 still missing. Indications are that the number off dead may 400. exceed The property loe may approach 320.000.000., Some of the bodies Probably will not be found for weeks. victims localities where the soft deposit was are believed, to be burledMany under thirty many feet deep and difficult for the feet of rock and silt at certain places. machines to negotiate, pack horses and Others undoubtedly were washed Into mules were used to carry out the rethe Pacific ocean at Oxhard, when covered bodies. 50,000.000 tona of released water boiled The scarred sides of San Francisinto tha sea before daybreak yesterquito canyon converged On a huge day. block of forbidding .granite. 'The search for the bodies The central section--!that was left thousands in the devastated engrossed area beof the demolished dnm while- along tween Newhall and Oxnard all day. the canyon bed stretched a darrow The search for a scapegoat engrossed plain of silt deposit, split by a trickle others. The city of Los Angeles, of water, the remains of the flood. through Its mayor, Georg E. Cryer, Scattered throughout this i waste, confeed responsibility for the disaswhat ' was left of sides, floors and ter. j roofs of homes and tangled masses of Mayor Cryer, after a visit to the trees from wrecked orchards protruded scene of the disaster said: ,"Loa Ang- her and there. In the lee of many elea cannot restore the lives lost, but of these were found bodies of men, damages should be paid. This disaswomen and clillren who bad lived on ter was Incidental to tha the destroyed farms, and had worked of th city of Los Antfeles operations in providin the demolished power line cumps. ing a water supply. We of Los Angeles must face the responsibility. I Furious Torrent Leaves do not know how the money can be Down Canyon, i raised, but the legal technicalities, and Below the canyon' and along the the law that muxt be Invoked to do course of the Santa Clara, river, down this, shall be Invoked." The city of Los Angeles was bitterly which the flood had poured, the pasassailed by C. C. Tfeague, president sage of the torrent 'was marked by of the Santa Clara; River, Valley ProIts scar on towns, hamlets and single tectors Ditrict, who represented homes en rout. of the ruined area three years Santa Paula. Fillmore and Plru suf- ago, when they went Into court and fered the most severely. Th total erection of to Son number of houses damaged In Santa tried to prevent Francisquito dam. Paula alone was estimated at 200. Is to of "The Los .city Rehabilitation movements started blame. Tb dam wasAngeles without today at a number of centers. The permission of th state built of division largest of hee developed at Santa water right and It was not Paula, where It was decided that the It to teat that withstand the first step of importance must he'th waa subjected to. Loe Angeles should for the determining of responsibility Mr. aaid Teasne. pay,"; disaster. , C. C. Teague. president of Oie Southern California Fruit Growers Tree Crowing Bill chairman of the meeting, and Dr. W, W. Mett. former state senaby H oute tor, declared they voiced the of the aurvlving residents of March 14 fAP the Santa Clara Valley when they ThWASHINGTON. bill t authorise $j.i.noo placed responsibility on the shoulders for Garber In the growing work experimental of Los Aareles City, which built th trees in the southern great plain dam for its water eyatero over the of was passed today by th nous area proteats of valley inhabitants. ( and sent to th senate. Tb section in which the experimen Question f Reburldlnf ,' tal work would he unlrrtanen InOam Vet UneWdetf. cludes southern Colorado, Kansas, Ok Whether the dam will be rebuilt. lahoma and Tessa Angt-leoffiHsls of the water and power bureau dWIlned to state. They PIONEER SHERIFF OIES. b reached ne decision WELLINGTON. Kai. March 14 until after th pesdinr official inhowannouiK-edid vestigation, Thar fAP). Joseph M. Taralla, 7. former ever, speaking through R. L, Devalle, mayor of Wellington, early deputy United etatea marshal, and pio(Castles aa f.f TVraa ) neer (.Celoeaa Oae.) sheriff, died to4a' p, . . ! - - tun citl-se- candidate for reelection." That statement was made today by W. C. Burbank of the brokerage firm Clark, Child & Co. All effort to get any comment1 on this statement from the Whit Hous at Washington proved fruitless. However, Burbank added: "News dispatches from Washing-io- n may deny it at first on account if those concerned being' unprepared mob. the announcement. but I am confident that it will be confirmed. It's all around Wall street." Pasted ' c nafd . dr ' MM TAKES PROBERS WEST of Airship Received. Vague New Comet of Plane' Pawing, but Disaster Is Feared; PHILADELPHIA, March 14 (AP). As midnight passed without defl." nlte word from Captain Hinchllff and. Honorable Elsl Mackay, bUf was expressed at th Philadelphia airport, th goal of th British filer, that th or a.tplan reported heard Nw England cltle and later at Atlantia City, N. J., was not th Endeavour. Th report from Atlantio City gave th tim a plan wag behaved to hav been heard In that vicinity aa U:lt P. m. By alrplan from there to Philadelphia Is about fifty mile aa4. th plan, If It waa Hinohllff' machine, should hav reached her be', for, midnight. NEW TORK, March 14 (AP).- -, Every possible preparation was mad at Mltchel field. Long Inland, tonight, for th arrival of th transatlantic monoplane. Endeavour, but army aria, Hon official acknowledged they had little hop that th plan would ar. . rive. Teap6t Dome Committee Th landing light were ordered kept burnlnr all night and eoldleri Hopes to Uncover Some wr assigned to remainfifty under arm to polic th airport In th event that" Tangles in Chicago. Captain Walter Hinchllff and his " WASHINGTON, March 14 Unlver- - After a somewhat fruitless session today, th senate Teapot Dome oil scandal Investigators wer speeding westward tonight for Chicago, where hearings will get under Way tomorrow tn search of further startling ' sal). companion, generally believed to the Hon. Elsie Mackay, should arrive. Th Endeavour took off In England for an attempt to fly th perilous, western air Ian to America at 1: 49 eastern standard time yesterday morn ing. Enough, gasoline wa carried to keep the plan In th air, tinder normal conditions, only until T o'clock night. The Endeavour' cruising speed was 10$ miles an hour and it was expected to about dawn broke out from three other angles. thl reach Newfoundland hut after Us takeoff not Senator Caraway, iDemocrat, Arkan on morning, deflnlt report wa heard of it sas, on the floor of the senate de nounced Hays, saying he waa .''trying progreas. to help find a market tor a tniei." No Atlantic Liner Kepreeentative Oldfleld. chairman of Baw Anythlna-o- f Ship, the congressional I wnocratic camNo liner saw anything of It. and paign committee, tfcsufld a public deIn watchers mand that tlfe Republican national Newfoundland scanned commute return The Sinclair bonds. the skies all day In vain. Before th Endeavour set out other Chairman Butley of that committee held a conference With President Cool western planes had attempted th ldge on the subject and said that he passage, but none had aver succeeded, is seriously considering taking the ac- and five persons, on a woman, had, tion suggested is this direction if, at paid for their daring with their lives; Th expedition wa the conclusion tf the investigation, sponsored by Miss Mackay and was shrouded in th conditions warrant it. Inn A total of foity-owitnesses. greatest secrecy. Associates of Hinch-liff- a cluding some of the nation' most explained that this wa necesprominent flnagciers and Republicans, sary because Miss Mackay, herself will be questioaed at the Chicago fed- an experienced aviator, feared that if eral building Is an effort to determine her father learned of her plan to the Identity of others who might have the ocean, he would not permit it. acted as "dammy" contributors in As th hours passed in which reautilising Harry v. Sinclair's 20,000 sonable hop could (till survive, vagu advance to the G. O. P. in 1920. report began drifting In from New; A double note of mystery waa foundland of a plana heard at night. thrown Into th proceedings today But these reports came from pan mystery which the subcommittee of so widely separated and at times so N to Bratton Senators and hope conflicting that littl -credence was clear up daring their session in the placed in them. The one hope felt for the filer toWindy cltyt The first was the Identity of the was that had landed either two mysterious witnesses who have night (Caatinaed they aa Page Twa.) been subpoenaed to appear In ChiColama Tarae.) cago. Tha names of made public. The other two will not be revealed until the bearings start tomorrow, Nye aaid. Their testimony, if the leads furnished to the committee prove of value, may enable the prober to locate thp now missing fourth hare of of the Continental Trading 1750,000 SEATTLE, March 14 (AP). Mr. compagy's n.Otsn.OOO "slush fund." The Bertha K. Landes, first woman may. It been has testified, or of a bonds, already city In th Unitwere divided Into four packages at the ed States,metropolitan wa overwhelmingly beaten office of the New York agency of th for reelection by Frank Edwards,Domlalon Bank of Canada. dark horse, whose campaign ammuniSinclair, James E. O'Neil and Harry tion included tha shot "th mayM. Bl tckmer. all oil millionaires, have oralty could be satisfactorily filled been Identified as recipient of three only man." a by shares. Who received th fourth is won hi decislv victory th Mystery the committee Is seeking In Edwards the face of a campaign in which, to solve. Mrs. the newspaper supported tr Landes and urged the women Inan conducted aid. He to her rally tensive campaign, but refused tt meet the woman mayor on th sam ' platform. .''Xou know it' 'useless to argu with a woman." he explained, when to debate campaign Issue with MEXICO CITY. March 14 (AP). her. , The t'nited States embassy has th Mexican foreign office to Investigate a report that an AmeriMotor--Spee- ds can mining man, Louis. Rhoads, office chief of the "Plomoxinc" sine mines near Hlguero tn the state of Jalisco, has been arrested by th federal military authorities in that state on suspicion of assisting insurgents. STE. MARIE, Mich., Mrrh Rhoads' wife has telegraphed th 1 SAULT (AP). A snow motor loaded with embassy that group of bandits came approximately on thousand pound to the mine and forced Rhoads to give of hunprovisions for snowbound and mile them money, which caused the fedresident of Detour, sixty to think gry eral military authorities 2 0'clo.k; at her of left here, south n that h had made voluntarily a fi- ihi. Mtuirtln v.rim nancial contribution to bandits or to speed of fifteen mile an hour. It In now anne the against Insurgents waa nopea tn maonine. mmw eo-i-n. , ... K a won il r..rh tli Isolated government. upper peninsula village tonight. While the commute wa in session, reverberations of 'he oil scandal tf Seattle's Woman Mayor Defeated - tht Mexico Queried Into Cat; Plunges Concerning Arrest Creek; Five Drown ALLENTOWN, Pa.. March 14 (API Five persons "were drowned in thnle feet of water when ah automobile in a dense fog plunged over a culvelrt bridge Into Coplay creek at Wist Hokendaunua early today. The victims wer pinned in the wreckage I under the Water, The dead are Mr. and Mrs. Fr:lnk i of S, and daughter, Olga. Meyer. y Kjtgle Point; Mike Oolle. ST. of and Mrs. 'Frank Eckert, 32J of J West Coplay. ' Mr. Erkert. th irtrlver of the car, I was the only on to escape. , Provision to Rescue ... Fall Charge d With Sham In Leasing Indian Mines e, erritl-tmen- ta Latin-America- n Endeavour Long Overdue and No Reports thlrty-nlrre-we- re SHAFFER." ; . asked for postponement. It was at Johnson's request' It, undoubt; edly was flue to friction In the enrnp of the California advocates pf Boulder Dam, some of whom do am hesitate to say that Johnson is tactically unover sea-tor- s wise In riding rough-sho- d who have bona fide amendments ea Pate Tw.) " (Coatlnoad , , (Cotamft Taur.)' i G New Yorker Says Presi dent Will Be Costs, Report i . rnt f t SANTA PAULA, CaL, .March. 14 (AP). San Francisquito and the, Santa, Clara ..valley "were struggling nobly toHARRY canyon J. BROWN, By . Staff Correspondent.' , night to pull- - themselres out of the mire of aeath and destrucWASHINGTON, D.'C, "March 14. tion poured over them by the breaking of th? St. Francis For soma unexplained reason the sen- dam " ; . . v yesterday. ate irrigation committee did not meet The toll Id life and property. etl- this morning to finish work on the mated from official figures and the fleers and, rolunteef searchers for Boulder Dam bill, a had been planned of victims. surveys of careful obseyert, stood as bodies 4 In their wake came steam shovels esterday, provided Senator Pirtmarr follows: . . . i , to- aid in the hunt, while in several ' ' was able to attend. The Nevada sens. 284 lives lost. , one-thir- d Twe1.) Five.) . I. B1Imh sW I Makes Bad Impression 7o,n Ttt . ! : ir a - iCohrmn ' Msrrn 14 (AP extension has Been F. Sinclair. Henry granted Harry William J. Burn and his son, W. Sherman Burns, to file a bill of appeal NEW TORK. March 14 (AP). The eirrptiona a a heal a for their In fro-the official their recent conviction delegation of the Hungarian Jury tampering riM. Tha time would hare expired Friday. government, here for tha dedication tomorrow on .Rirerside driv of a statua to Louis Kossuth, .Hiutgtrrlan Epidemic of Influenza WASHINGTON, A ' ea (Ooatlsaed - Brave Meii; Noble Momeh: BROKER STARTS TO xm QQlii S t r ike 0 u t of Disaster 0 Primary Plan Catholic Aids Sinclair, Others Appeal Extended , llUUf ' a priselecting city officials without by voters of Spomary was retained election. This was kane In yesterday's shown by complete returns from all but one precinct today. A majority of Ml against a proposed amendment to the city charter to provide for only first choice rotes for city commissioners wss p"llwl. t4. i Johnson Blamed for De Courage Marks Struggle .Against Results of California Dam Break' and Flood; Horlay; St. Francis Disaster .rXdidrdS SPOKANE, Wash., March 14 (AP). The preferential election system for r"? ; ALBUQUERQUE, for tor was on hand and available,' but Bt." Francis dam demolished. iPt Viinprnl arraneements Wonrv Harrison Jones. 114 years old, I word was sent around by the chair. Los Angeles municipal power house - mlin tnat the a of arrival the daughawaited was until off today meeting below dam demolished. ThuMd 8enator . 5.00 r boraes destroyed or , greatly H Calif. The aged ponement was the idea of the chair damaged. at his home here. - of ; citrus 20 lineal-milesorchard to came Mr. Jones Albuquerque man; others Indicate that Johnson land buried under many feet of mud years ago from srout twenty-fiv- e Spokane Rejects Becomes Natural Convention, In consequence of all this, congress became, for an hour and a half, a kind of Informal national convention, pass ing Judgment on the merits of Hoov er for th Republican presidential nomination. - Th 'event '. had been arranged several days in advance on th rather exultant .Initiative of th opponents of Hoover, especially thou whose opposition to him purports to represent the' farmers.. The occasion wag surrounded by an atmosphere somewhat In the nature of an invitation to Come and see Hoover sliiugh- tered. Th friends 'of Hoover had ar ranged for a formal reply In his behalf. Because of this elaborate preparation and of the discussion of the event In advance, there was a full aUendaur of lh lower hotine, together ' with many senators. "The apeeeh against Hooyer - ws t 1 of New Mexico. March 14 1I7ASHINGTON, (AP). An implied thret gainst th safety Of "any North Amrtco official resident in NlcanguaJi territory," unless American maimmerine ax- - withdrawn diately from that country ts contained in a message gent to tha senate by Augustlno Sandino, tha Nlcaragnan leader. The message, along with s letter from Sandino to Bear Admiral Sellers, commandant of tha special service squadron in that territory, proposed supervision of the Nlcaragnan lections by representatives Instead of by American marines was made public here today. a, -- (Coatiaaed Ptf Tares.) (CalumaTour.) born. Nashville, Tenn., where he was "Daddy" Jones, as he was affectioncitAlbuquerque ately called by many izens, had never been seriously 111 until a short time before his death. He was the oldest resident of the state rrr jh s-i- -' i' ' N. M., March 14 condl-tlon- " H-"-.;- . Death Lays Claim To Man Aged 114 From Sandino By MARK SULLIVAN. 14. One March WASHINGTON, reason for the importance Washington attached to th formally arranged debate about Hoover between . two Ohio congressmen Tuesday afternoon lies In th fact that th Republican ' . South Dakota. The youth was Rolf LIum. who con ducted services at me nermosa church where the presi dent atteuded during his summer In the Black Hills, and his wish hsd been to some time see "the inside of the White House." T.lnm rams to Washington as a member of the debating team of Carleton college In Minnesota and met the president when the team was presented at the White House this Mr. Coolldge invited ulm morning. tn IlinrhMin. Lium accented, and thus was his wish granted. by, I Costigan charged Mr. Coolldge with a refusal to act on decisive evidence that certain tariff rates should be lowered. The president's course, ha said, had "helped to wjeck the commis sion's usefulness." March 14 (AP). WASHINGTON, The boy who preached the gospel to President Coolldge last summer found fulfillment today of a wish ne cner-Ishe- d for weeks In a cattle" tow:i in Death Threat Ohio presidential nomination I being determined by member of congress to an extent that haa not been th case at any other time xoept in th aarly part of our history. There Is nothing statutory about this. It is a result of conditions that hav merely hapNone of the candidates has pened. a nation-wl- d in th organisation sens that nearly all candidates hav bad in previous campaigns. While two of them, Lnwden' and Willis, have managers, they are not managers in the pretentious sense of former years. Furthermore, th primaries are not functioning In a, de cisive sens in any except a very few of th states. Under these th campaign is being largely determined by local leaders: and as respect national politics, the Important local leader Is the congresi.msn A very iarg number of the delegates to the conventions of both partita will be selected largely by the congressmen In their several districts. cented. Haa Been Reckless. Terming the three commissioners "the Marvin group," Costigan asserted that they had worked steadily for important rehigher rates and against ductions, "reckless on occasions In their treatment of facts and law." Costlgan's charges were contained In a letter addressed to Senator Robinson of Arkansas, the Democratic floor leader, chairman of the senate tocomInmittee appointed two years ago vestigate the tariff commission. that the Mr. Costlgan declared "manipulation of the commission since 11)22 is but part of the total picture of present-da- y Washington." con. talned "In an era which history may yet summarise as the age of Daugh erty. Fall and Sinclair." Chairman Marvin he described as a "i!r)exe and fanatical nrotectlonlst known In Washington as a tariff lobbyist for New England protected ' interests." Utah Man Comes in t For Strong Reproff. "No exposures, however discredit' Ins-of bias.. oartlsanshlB and the dis "trust of his associates, have sufficed to break this New England slate," the letter added, asserting that "It Is well known In Washington that President Sent Missive to' a sharp and sudden climax today with the resignation of Commissioner Edward F. Costlgan, last of tha orig inal Wilson appointees. ' tn a letter filled with frank person alltles, Costlgan simultaneously - assailed President Cohlidg and Commla- sloners Marvin, Lowell and Broasard. At the White House It was announced that tha resignation had been ac- - ! Word Implies Burton Read by Acquits the Candidate of Prejudice Charge. . . fit FIVE CENTS FAVORS by President Helped .Wreck Usefulness. ' f-- . PAGES HOOVER Man Urged Aspirant for Jardine's , Ppst. March 14 (AD. WASHINGTON, .Tha controversy that for mora than two yean has aurrounded tha "activi ties of tha tariff commission moved , 28 .. - ? I , Charges Course Taken i. MJIIiMIMHMaa Fear for Safety Of British Fliers SHOWS FARMER Grips Watchers Note - most needed in every line of endeavor. 2 s BRAND LETTER The film strips on either side show some of the destruction in the wake of the flood. .(Films by courtesy of Paramount ncwsrccl.) Many bodies were recovered from the tossing, raging waters. Head of Commission - : sure indication of what's SALT LAKE CITY, THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH 15, 1928. First and Exclusive Photos of St. Francis Dam Horror The Want Ads are a ! ffibtptl VOL. 116, NO. 153. QUITS miiHuwi lima urjred by Harry F. Sinclair, oil matr-nat- e, had determined to award th B. leaeea to the lead for com rveti live bidding-- company without In"While Fall wan cussfnc; mad at dwlnration of AUirt crUx3r of interim FaiT, thii competitive bidding for Quapfe dian mininf tease In Oklahoma, ver characterised by C. B. Amen, Attorney for lh Indian), In district ber , sham. Uxlty, aa Th Indian to cancel tiie jea which vera made to the Lend cflmpawr to 1S2, whniKiII waa a member of th rrdent'B rJinet. They allege lhait the leanel were not made by rrtmpeMMre bldf m, thxt Itvy ere trreeiitr and rit in with imiiao treatWft with Uj ' government. rn After th cOTTipanvf tkad Ofn- hcmen4 ciit Y,t f nk Hu1h1 opemna; I iMu-he- teHiimflfir. iaeneiit, At tn h arixl that Fail, Washington, prendinit to want btrtdinr." A me aid. "h had a letter from fcinrlstty with a telearm which Sinrliiir forwarded from Jo W, Ferry, Kanwa City hart iter, vonipetlt.v bdi:nr bid. Line on the put of 'ome,iiiva Fall waa a aharn and a pre t pup and a paper arbem to awrtrd the leaa r !e J1t.-hto the Iead commT. Fall already Lad mad vp hU minij to that. 'Secretary Fail mad a preteniMf of f':huMnn for Otrrt htd-- i to l received at t nhinJoo," the attorney adrtel. ''Fail but ttrn days' bk. cmn-petlt- iv td prote-ntin- tic c .on th ipml tm b4. ranks as IDAHO state in the' Union in. the production of tim- ber products, growing from 763,-50- 8 board feet in 1914 to 1,019,100 in the ten year period f o o w i n jr -- 1 1 1911. . |