OCR Text |
Show THE WEATHER mi nil m mm . Utah Fair nd continued warm day! Tutaday probably unttld pooler. Mon- Senator Gooding Of Gem State Dies Idaho's Junior Solon Daughter. Idaho, Juno U (AP). Senator Frank R. Gooding:, Idaho's Junior senator and on of th atato'a leading political figures, died at hi daughter's horn her at 1:2$ p. m. ' today. Senator Gooding waa known to have been In poor health (or aome time, and recently underwent an operation in the Mayo hospital at Rochester. Career One of Moat pramatie In Nation. Hia death brought to a close on of the moat dramatic career In Idaho history. Bora In England In 1S59, he came to America, with hla parent when he was t years old and won bis way to an honored position In the United States senate. Hla name waa best known in connection with rut hills, one of which, bearing; his name, haa been acclaimed a one of the most aggressive bills in the history of railroading. Cam Into Prominence A Governor in Hectic Day. Senator Gooding first came into of Idaho firomlnence as governor day surrounding th trial of the late "Big Bill" Haywood, charged with the murder of Governor . Frank Steunenberg in th early years I 6f the century. His unflinching demands that and hia alleged accomplices be daily brought to trial, despite almost threats against his life, won him a firm place In the esteem of the people of the atate. Following two terma as governor, Mr. Gooding returned to direction of his sheep business, but In 1918 returned once more to political activity as candidate for the senate. Defeated One by Nugent, But Later Swept Stat. He waa defeated by John F. Nugent, but as candidate In 1920 was swept 'n, office with th Harding GOODINO, State Builder Senator Frank R. prominent in Idaho political and business life for many years, passes away. Cbtcaxe Tribune Tress Service. I y;;::.:: Sik Living Survivors, Sixteen Silent Men, Is liiiiii EXXNGTON, Ky, June 24. under Beale, Clydo death sentence in Wyoming county, West Virginia, across Tug river from here, carries the keys to the Jail of the county, where he is a prisoner in name only, It became' known her today. He is the most trusted prisoner in the state and has never made any more toward escape. He is charged with the murder, about two years ago, of Mrs. Kissle Perdue, whose ' body was found in the Tug river. Beale denies any guilt. Th West Virginia supreme court upheld his death sentence. New developments in the case led to execution being '" deferred. DED His Ship Is Crippled. styjS'f'' :.:;; :fc Of His Jail Relief Pilot Joins Long List of Victims When Tragic Score of Italia. ROME, Jun 24 (AP). General I'm- berto Noblle, cast away since May 25 when th dirigible Italia wa wrecked on th Arctlo Ice, ha been reacued. Mil y - m No Cold the Convention Baths in City. vJi ' J J ' JL ' ! ' ,"' V !' to Warble in Texas. T Enormous By Chamber Majority Fixes Coin at 3.93c U. S. Money. June U (AP). Th Frnch national legislature today enacted Premier Polncare's plan for stabilising th franc. The opposition In both th chamber of deputies and in th sen ate wa practically nil. Th senate voted tonight, 251 to t, in favor of th measure. Earlier' rh chamber of deputies had passed th bill. 450 to IX. Therefore, when the tnonev ax- change open tomorrow, the franc wilt have a legal value of 1.91 cents in American money. Th stabilisation Is on the basla of 65 milligrams of fine to th franc. gold, More than 100 membera of th chamber abstained from voting, but an analysis of the ballot ahowed that these were individual abstentions only. .None of the principal groups, not even the Socialists, went on record aa opposing the measure In principle. The day'a debate brought out a deal of party politics, th radical and Social--1groups aiming especially toward proving that Polncare's scheme waa a logical outcome of their own policies which had been adoptrd by the union government. so far aa party lines were con cerned, however, th band wagon waa crowded tonight. The stabilisation bills were at once sent to the senate. Th finance committee of that body already had adopted them In principle, considering their general aspect while the debate waa going on in the chamber of deputlea. There was, therefore, no doubt but that the bill will be law PARIS, S nine-tent- st Mrs. Coolidge, Now Recovered, Attends Church BRULE, Wis., Jun 24 (Universal). Favored by aunny sklea and pleasant weather the first time in ten days President and Mrs. Coolidge motored over from cedar Island lodge to Bruio looey ana attended services at th little whitewashed Congregational church. It wa Mrs. Coolidge' first appearand at church. She seemed to be Illness completely removed from theana an time looked serious, that for a hundred-odcrowded d people gave the most a church th gracious into greeting. Governor Theodor Christlanson of Minnesota and Mrs. Irvin Lenroot, wife of th former Wisconsin senator, the congregation. Fol vm amonc lowing services they chatted briefly Mrs. coolidge.: Mr. and wirh John Tsylor, the blind lay preacher was from Duluth, again in th pulpit. John for Taking th tenth chapter of on "Th Good a text, he sermon hi with Shepherd." filling naive nominee mat amacaea strongly of nutrlrht evangelism. ald, "the "I tell you folk a," h devil Is on on side and Jesus Is on the other and they're both fighting for us all of the time. by Monday morning. In th The only Chang orialnal drafta mad in th chamber waa the adoption of an amendment providing lor th coinage of sliver silver pieces In place of the coin provided for in the original text. J ne Dili aa it reached tne senate authorises "colnaae of gold plecea and 10 and ailver pieces. While anyone ran theoretically change the worn little paper note for nrtgnt new gold mnd silver coin tomorrow, it will be many months before th man in th street finds himself receiving and dealing; out hard money. It will take time to mint th coin and France will take no chance o fa run on the Bank of Franc until recently restored confidence become a habit. There will be bar of gold at th hank for big transactions, but the peasants of France are famed for their "woolen ock" storage of coins i ' and they will not b trusted with a BURIED. CHANO TSO-LIto salt away ao much of the chance SHANGHAI. China, Jun 14 (AP). yellow metal that their country'a of Peking, credit Chans will be endangered. They will was burled today at Mukden, where be given ailver colna gradually and he died from wound received when there will be enough of these to rehis train waa bombed following th place the small bank Dote completely nationalists' capture or reKing. by the end of IP?. v well-root- Tao-Ll- . 1 Movie Queens Are Clouding Platform i , special t The Tribune. V Texas, Jun 84. followiiuj tTM enti bit caused mora talk at th convention than Keynoter Fes forgetting hla ipeecn: First, Mary Flckford Dicainf th government for tore thousand buck. Mary if not only ear sweetheart, bnt ear best bargain banter. Then Mm Mnrray, with no preliminary advane notic, baa month old, baby sixteen which was thought an of feat evn in th Then Tom Heflin'a noTiea, platform collapse. That wag th first platform crash of the political season. Two other wia follow in erder. IIOUSTON, Th 4 1 f I Totrrm, WILL. T. 8. Hooiton is ai cool and sober aa Beverly Hills. By HARRY J. m Staff Correspondent. two-third- f V.' Utah Delegates Right Up Front BANNER At Convention w Patrols Unable To Find Schooner Reported Struck "do" I r OF DEMOCRATS (AP). Intent upon making harmony the keynote of their 1922 convention. Democratic leader were moving today to hav all controversial question affecting th party platform disposed of kn the resolution committee, thu avoiding any fight on th floor. Whether this program could be carried out appeared to depend largely upon Texas' fighting governor, Dan Moody, who came to Houston today from the atate rapltol and conferred with some of th dry leaders rerarding th prohibition plank. He declined to make any statement, but ald he expected to hav something to say tomorrow. There ar several school of thought ,1 r Imom the deleastea aa tn th ar seeking an plank. The ultra-dry- a outright endorsement of the eighteenth Kinntumvni ana ui voisieaa acl, wun a declaration against any repeal or mooincaiion.' ine less "radical" would he satisfied with a plank similar to that adopted by the Republicans at Kansas City, in which the eighteenth amendment w. u . n - n. . ..1.11. other hold that th 1924 declaration w enforcement would be tor Liquor Plank Problem Of Platform Maker. The problem facing the platform maker, whp will go to work after th opening session of the convention Tuesday. Is to frame a plank which will satisfy these elements within th party. Aside from prohibition the other big controversial question la that of farm relief. There Is a diversity of opinion on that subject with most leader opposed to an endorsement of any particular plan, inch aa the equalizabill. tion fee of the McNary-Hauge- n They favor a general declaration recof the th agricultural ognising plight industry and pledging- - the party through congress to take the necessary atep to correct the situation. Former Senator Hitchcork of Nebraska, who haa the endorsement f n hia state for the presidential ea race Tw. NEW YORK, Jun (AP). Coast guard patrol, boat searched the ea off Bamegat light on th New Jersey coast in vain today for the schooner which the "Lake Ellithorna" f the Newtex line, outbound from Botaon for Galveston, reported ramming early this morning. Coast guard headquarters her received the "Ike Elllthorpe'e" wireless messes that aha bad rammed an unidentified schooner and Immediately broadcast It to all patrol boat a At 1:10 o'clock they received a message from th "Tk Elllthorpe" 0lVMJ. reading: "Am proceeding after finding no trace of schooner." While It waa fee red that .the Belgrade Funerals Pass schooner and It crew were lost. It waa pointed out by marine experts Without Police Activities that the freighter might have rammed a piece of wreckage In the fog and PKLGRADE. Jugoslavia, June 14 darkness and might have mistaken It (AI i. r.xceptlonal measure police fot a schooner. d for th preservation of order In of ceased Th funeral today. HEAVY RAINS IN TEXAS. Faul Radltch and Dr. Basarltchek, the PARIS, Texas, June 24 (AP). peasant party deputlea who were shot Northeast Texaa waa recovering from down In parliament here, passed withone of the heaviest rslne In recent out disorders. There was no recur- years today. The precipitation here I renc of rioting today and th situa 0 tion I regarded a again normal yesterday gsuged 7 1 inches. oat-sid- e. Quibbling. Six Lose Lives In Automobile At U.P. Crossing nqmina-(Omtu- Za-tre- California Seeks Plank Favoring Boulder Project Hear Radio Tell About Big Meeting THROUGH arrangements with KSL and associates, The Tribune trill present to people of the lntermoontaln region the most complete radio service ever attempted, when the Democratic national convention opens at Kansas HOUSTON, June 24 (AP). An ety tempt to xet a plank In the Democratic platform declaring in favor" of the Boulder canyon aam project win be Initiated tomorrow by supporters of the proposal who have arrived in the city. It la exDected that whoever is e lected to represent California on the convention's resolutions committee will sponsor the actual presentation of the drart of which al plank, a tentative readv haa been made. The prospective mov sf th Boulder dam proponents unaouoteaiy win meet and with opposition from Arizona Utah representatives, Inasmuch as of the congressional delegamembers tion from the two atate hav fought n bill paaaage of the in both the house and the senate. i The City on Tuesday. plete service of the National Broadcast company at Houston has been obtained and will be broadcast over KSIt and will be given to listeners In front of The Tribune by The Tribune's public address system. Graham". McNamee, greatest of radio announcers, who served at the Kansas City convention, will again be at tha microphone. An electrical setup in the convention hall will allow th broadcasting of all speeches and announcements, as well as the music, cheering and other thrilling features of the convention. The radio service will be on from the fall of the gareL Listeners-In will hear the gavel, the invocsAiqn, the keynote e Vppoln tment of speech, committees, ths committees' 'report, th discussions, the tabulation of votes, the nomination and the cheering, it will all be brought direct from the convention hall So com- dearly end-e- d faithfully Bwlng-Johnso- Mexican Nonstop Fliers Forced to Land at Tarapico TAMPICO, Jun t4 (AP) Josqnln Pacheco and Krtts Bieler, Mexican fhers, who t.iok off from Windsor, p Ontario. Saturday morning on a flight to Mexico City, landed here at H.&O this morning, owing to a lack of fuel. They plan to refuel and continue their tngnt to Mexico City as soon as poselbl. The filers said they encountered bad weather all the way acrosa the United States, which prevented them from making the apeed they had cal culated. They were considerably overdue when they landed and for a time telephones In newspaper offices and telegraph offices were boay answering many anxtnua mnulrera. eion-sto- Mother of Legion Woman Killi Self re- produced that listeners can feel the very spirit of the convention proceedings. Ton are invited to tone in on KSL or to come to The Tribune and hear the evnu as they happen. MART8VILI.K. Kan.. Jun UP). Th body of Mra. Anna E. Hadorn, mother of Mlaa Emma Hadorn, In- dianapolls, national secretary of the American .Legion auxiliary, was found hanring in a shed at her borne, five miles eat of here, today, Mra. Hadorn, who had been In 111 health, had threatened to commit 24 M. i j I . d BROWN, HEED. WAVES , Group By JAMES L. WIIJLIAMS, Press Staff Writer. fJOUSTON, Texas, June 24 (AP). The Smith tide rolled tranquilly onward tonight in this Democratic convention city as the 1100 delegates gathered to nominate a candidate for presi" dent. There was no argument over; the claims of the New York etiter the balloting Thursday or' governor's friends that withes clear of week this majority of the convention Friday A minority group, however, still refused to concede votes. s vote, and Smith's nomination, whic would require a labored to stem the flow to ward him long enough to push another candidate to the fore. Singing, Good Time All Along, but Too Warm HOUSTON, Texaa, June 24. Whew I Some warm reception handed out by Houston to the train-wear- y But th five other member ' of hla delegatee from Utah, Idaho and , other northgroup itlli are marooned, according to rewere aa rolled west states that brief official report Jnto th they Democratic convention city at I ceived by radio today. o'clock this afternoon. In fact. So Unheard of, also, remain the seven far as warmth of greeting la conmember of hi party carried away whole tat of Texas ha th cerned, with the bag of th Italia, th three done itself proud thi livelong day from Dallas to th scene of Impending who started to walk to land on May It seems there strife and JoHiflcation. 20 and th six would-b- e rescuers in times when even the AI Smith of are which carried th French seaplan of Utah, confident that enthusiast Roald Amundsen on a! rescue expeditheir choice' will be the choice of the tion. turn their talk to v th convention, Swedish aviators won the credit for weather. The special, In charge of K. I j. making the first actual rescue. On district Wilkinson, passenger of their plane, equipped with runagent of the Missouri. Kansas & Texlanding near ner, made aon bold as, at Salt Lake City, made good on an Ice floe. It took Noblle'a camp the promise to break speed records off with th wounded leader, but between Ogden and Houston. It crashed when the pilot tried several clipped off a full ten hours from the Associated Staff Press Writer. hours later to repeat hi teat. regular running time, a fact of which HOUSTON, Texas, Jun 84 (AP). the passengers were not unaware, ftescu plan Crashes Th prohibition Issue was picked up even If the going waa a bit rough In Sacking Second Passenger. but every convenience of consequence, today by Senator James A. Keed De oouia wnicn Apparently, therefor, the number proviaea of marooned men remains th same Missouri in hi dogged drive for the under nunianiy climatic 'conditions Democratic presidential nomination as today fell short of bringingprevailing aa before the heroic effort. oersonal The general waa carried by the reswaved th banner of "Impartial en- comfort to th travelers. cue plan to an Island in Hlnlopen he even How could Al Smith enthus strait, the body of water which sep J forcement" Atto the dry forces lining iasts be comfortable when the merSmith. arates West Spitsbergen from North, up against tn car the thermometer cury paaaed st ana. There he was transferred Th Mlssourian placed his original the 95 mark and halted only because to another Swedish machine, a Ma-plawas that the Ufp of the tubet Someamendment to the eighteenth objection and transported to Virgo hay. body found a thermometer at the Thl harbor, sixty miles north of "on the same ground as did President station at Smlthfield, the last stop th regular baa of the rescue opera- Wilson, vis., that It waa an Invasion before Houston: it registered 104. tions at Kings bay, was? the base se- of the police power of the states," The entry of the delegation from lected by tbs Swede for their effort. but he announced today that "th Utah, Idaho, Wyoming, Nevada and A message to the Cltta dl Milano, will stand until neighboringstates Into Houston waa amendment eighteenth Noblle'a ship, brought her post-has- te and unless the moral forces of the not at all according to plana It had from Kings bay 'and the rescued man nation become convinced that there is been intended to pause at th station wa restored to the car of hi counsome better way to deal with the nd regal the natives and the re trymen. ception committee with a collection liquor problem." of song composed en route, but It Information on Neblle's Insists Upon Enforcement was too hot, spirits were too low, Condition I Lacking. Of Eighteenth Amendment. the native of th cool citlea of th Th identity of th Swedish pilot ahd th statutes mountain statea were not equal to constitution "Th concerned in the rescue la uncertain. must stand and be obeyed unless they th task when they reached sea level. So, too, is the reason for taking Nobfe he declared, "or re- (Ceatinaad ea 'age Three.) oft th ice first.. It I known that ar changed," In the manner and form 4ald (Oolama 'Tin.) he wa injured when the Italia Sealed by the conatitutlon. There crashed, but it wa understood Xbat-- J should be no evasions. There should n waa recovering from hla hurt. be no attempts to accomplish their However, he asked advice a few daya destruction by Indirection. ago by radio on bow to treat his leg, on with his promts to fight Going and axoaur may have brought some "to th end of th road," th silver-haire- d form of illness to him. campaigner opened fire with Another member of Noblle' group, the busy during prohibition Issue Natale Cecclonl, chief technician of Sabbath anti-Smi- th the hut-ditc- h the Italia, suffered a broken leg In factions. forArrival of Governor today the wreck. The other at Noblle'a of Texaa brought about a new camp are Lieutenant Alfredo Vlglieri Moody of conferences among the southof the Italian navy; Riuseppe Blogi, series TOPEKA, Kan.. June 24 (AP). Six erners and there were and the radio operator; Fillppo Troiano, enpersons were killed, five oflhsm Intonight that a cohesive stantly, predictions and Professor F. Behounek, a anti-Smiwhen the automobile In which gineer, th Czecho-Slovakiorganization would be set they were rtdlha was etruck by Union 'meteorologist. Then there la the Swedish pilot of the plane. up within a few hours. train No. 137, about Pacific passenger T four mllea west of Topeka this mornteed' Attitude Qrssped died before she The victim sixth ing. Avidly by Antl. Smiths. could be taken to a hospital. Th Reed pronouncement, which hsd The dead, all of Topeka: wa been heralded since yesterday, W. D. Frye. seised upon eagerly and, tn some InMra. W. D. Frye. anti-Smi- th stances, enthusiaatlcally, by the Otto Dunlop, 22, eon of Mrs. Frye by group who still were working a former marriage. on th quiet. It waa regarded In some Mrs. Gertrude Harritt. quartera aa "the first pier in the Mrs. W. A. Thornburg. bridge between th dry south and th Thelma Louise B radii haw. 4, grand- Reed forces." of Mra Tbornburg. daughter The Reed statement, which came The car was demolished ana tn after a aerie of conference between wreckage and bod lea atrewn all along senator and representatives of the track for a distance of 100 feet. th any groups, also set forth his views Tha party was returning to Topeka afon the platform and took a alap at ter attending an Odd Fellows' meeting that "horde of grafter, bribemongers at Manhattan. By JAMES L. WEST. , The crossing Is an unobstructed one. (Oeatieeed ea Page Tw.) (Associated Pres Staff Writer.) (Celaau Six.) Jun 24 HOUSTON, Without "istrVtion. (Oeatiaoed ea Fir Twe.) (Celum a Tear) W. H. Stayton, who opposes Moody's dry stand at convention. Eighteenth Amendment Mtoumis man CENTS 18 PAGES-FI- VE Refuses to Admit Smith's Nomination and Opponents Show No Sign of Surrender. Minority Plans Fight Insists on Enforcement Hay-Wo- Although a native of England, Frank "tvnlcat westerner." His progress a a westerner may be Bald to have started when h becam homesteader in Idaho, engaged. In th cattle business and interested himself in politic and th affair of the state. Eventually he ranked, as on of the largest atock raisers in th State, waa lected governor for two term and then Ualted State senator. Care From England. At S Yar f Ag. Senator Gooding wa I year old when hi parents brought him from England, where he waa born October It, 1859. Th family aettled in Michigan and the future aenator received his education In the public schools of Paw Paw. After nine year th family moved to California, and when i Telephone Wasatch 590 Delegates Find There Are : DRY ua R. Gooding often was described aa a I p.'j i mw Foes Concede New York INTO HOUSTON Governor Enters Contest With Majority of Votes HQTAND WEARY " "v. i mm Local Settlement Prices- - uih rawi liirVva i si i em UTAHNS ROLE Doomed Man v Carries Keys I ICE-STRAN- Gooding, Had Been in HI Health for Some Time; Recent Surgical Patient. aVi SALT LAKE CITV, MONDAY MORNING, JUNE 23, 1928. Wasatch C90 Tflephona at Home i iitoaxi'v.i ist ti and VOL. 117, NO. 72. Succumbs of His Yir Brm West and South to Hold 'Baldhead Row' Seats, Plan Shows. - V STAYTON SEEKS IT PLATFORM Will Urge Democratic Plank Abolishing 18th Amendment at Houston By WALTER CHAMBLIN. . (Associated Press Staff Writer.) HOUSTON, Texas, Jun 24 (AP). Two camps, on wet and th other dry, mustered their 'forces today for th fight each will make to have their g on prohibition view accepted by th Democratic party Whether the battle will turn Into a niajor engagement that must be settled ultimately on the convention floor or a skirmish that will be decided in th resolution committee, remained problematical. In both groups, however, there were some who expressed belief that the spirit of party harmony aa gaining an upper hand and from several quarter there were prediction that th prohibition Isaue would b smoothed out behind th closed doors of th committee. Leader on both sides put in a busy day conferring with their respective lieutenants, with Governor Dan Moody of Teas th center around which th bone-dr- y force collected, and William H. Stayton, chairman of the board of th Association Against the Prohibition Amendment, taking the leadership wets. among the widely-differin- Stayton Will Seek Amendment Repeal. Moody arrived In th city early In the day, but declined to make any statement He announced, however, that he probably would have somehis thing to say tomorrow. Whether prospective announcement willor come at a In the form of a statement breakfaat to b given In the morning by the dry forces, at which he I scheduled to speak, was not disclosed. Stayton, upon his arrlvsl here, announced that he would seek incorporation in the party platform of a plank (Ceetlnesd ea Pag (Ceiama . Sevea.) lane.) HOUSTON, Jun 14 (AP). Delegation from two western and two outhrn states will occupy "baldhead row" during th sessions of th Dem- ocrats convention. The final seating arrangement show North Carolina and Tennessee occupying th oholc front chair of th two center sections, with th for mer to th left of th platform, facing th sceaker. and Tennessee to th on th left wing, and right Utah, Nebraska on the rlrht. will take up sixteen seat each In th front rank of th flanking section. Immediately behind the tar heel delegation In the left center section will be Alabama' famou ."twenty- hh.hi, hi lour, wntie w mwirchair hav been of Tennessee, thirty set aside for th Kentucky group. The California delegation will be within good hearing distance, right behind Alabama, and will be followed In the order named by Louisiana, VirNew Hampshire, ginia, Minnesota, New Mexico, Iowa, Georgia and Mia-sou- In th right center section, behind Kentucky, two row of flften seat each wtll be taken by emissaries from Mississippi. Behind them. South Dakota, North Dakota- - and Oregon will split up two more rows, with th rest of this section being occupied In th order named by Montana, New York. Porto Rico, Sooth Carolina, Maryland and Texas. Arisona's twelve delegates, each with half a vote, will sit Immediately behind Utah In th left section, with these states following: Arkansas, Connecticut, Illinois. Vermont. Florida, Ohio, Maine, Colorado, Massachusetts, Hawaii, Virgin Georgia, Michigan, Island, Alaska, Canal Zona and s. In th far right contingent Kansas will be among th front rankers behind Nebraska, followed by Delaware, New Jersey, Indiana, West Virginia, Wlaconsln, Waahlngton. Pennsylvania, Wyoming, Nevada, Rhode Island, District of Columbia, Idaho and Okla- homa. An aisle running the width of th hall will aeparate the delegatee from the alternates. Missouri has ninety-thre- e seats, only one behind the biggest chair monopoliser. New York. Pursuers and Pursued In Mexico Still on Ran 14 MEXICO CITY. Jun (AP). Federal troop today continued their hunt for the bandits who kidnaped W. M. Mitchell and John F. Hooper, American mining men, yeaterday, but no word came from either the pursuers or the pursued. The American consulate at Guadalajara told the embassy here that they had received be-no tidings of the two men, who are ing held for $1500 ransom. The Mexican government offices had no reports togiv out. Write Your Own Views Of The Tribune's News, Daily Special Services on It publlo faithfully To serv attribute of a newspaper I that it must educate a well a Inform.. Th Insatiable thirst of th public .Jf or more and mora knowledge hesJJnide thl service of a newspaper one of If most important. anxious to Th Tribune, alway give it readers what they want and th best available, preaenta daily aa one of Its very many featurea the articles of Frederio J. Haskin, together "Questions with the supplementary snd Answers" and Th Tribune Washington bureau eervlce. The Hasklna feature la Just one of the very many regular feature which Th Tribune offer its resder. in ad dition to Ita primary ervk- - of fur nishing th news of th day. There r so many features. In fact, that The Tribune wsnta to know Just srhat Ita readers think about them, what they read and what they ' don't read, and, in fact. Just what they think of The Tribune. Summer Vaeatlen Trip Will Be Splendid Result. To that end. The .Tribune la offer-I- n its reader four vacation trips either to Yellowstone Ntlonal park or to Zlon National park for the tw best letters ea the subject, "What I Think of The Tribune." fo the writer of the two best letters will go two trip each with Pullman and train fare paid from Salt Lake City to point of entry and return aa well aa a rear- Liar trip through the park with an 5 paid, Including transportaThus ' th lodging and meala. expense tion, winning letter writer can have a vacation trip and Invite a companion along and Th Tribune will foot all th bill. Contest Now tijfen, Se Oet IM If Early. Th contesti'J'how ooen. Her I the wsy to iWm It: Accompanying this article la a questtonnslrs listing most of Th Tribune's regular features. Scan that list, decide which of the featurea ar the greatest asaet or The Tribune columns and than fill out the questionnaire. Then consider the news columns of Th Trib une, see what you like and don't like about the cable news, the telegraph news, tne meal new and th state new of I tah, Idaho and Wvomlnr. Then consider the general oollcr of me Tnoun in presentation of news. v nen have you considered them well, sit down snd writ 40 words, no more, on "What I Think of Th Trib une. In considering the various features, consider their worth and appeal. Mr. Haskin. for Instance, dally writes an tnformatlv article on subjects of general Interest. Through the aid of a corps of research worker he I able to present authoritative articles on everything from memorial bulldlnes to strawberry planting. Hla articles are plainly written, easy to read and so Interestingly composed that they ar of wide Interest to sverybody, (Oeatlaeea freaa Ts (Celoma ,r Tar.) Tight.) . With the convention Just, thirty-si- x hours away th Smith manager went about quietly and without ostentation among the arriving delegate - On every hand they exhibited extreme confidence that their man, upon whom political fortune has smiled consistently, would be accepted aa th leader of hi party on a very early ballot There waa no sign of a surrender, however, in the ranks of those who elected to carry on th fight againtt Smith. Among the minority candidates themselves. Reed of Missouri, George of Georgia, Hull of Tennessee and Hitchcock of Kebraaka war In. the thick of It But It wa noticeable everywhere that whatever bitterness might be fermenting in Democratic rank still wa carefully kept under control. Th Smith people, mustering th greater convention strength, were doing little boasting. They seemed to be well satisfied with th situation aa they found It In Houston and - expressed that aatisfactlon to Inquirers, but that wa about sill they had to say. Some workers fo. the minority claimed to have assurances that they could hold a sufficient number of supporters to veto the Smith nomination of by registering more than th convention vote against htm. Other In th camp were not so sure. The Smith manager, recalling almost unbroken precedent, asserted th convention would never turn down a candidate who registered a majority and that many of the op- poaltioa votes would he In their man's column after th favorite aon bad had their fling. ' Ne Repetition ef Madison Square Fiasco. There were indications that an ef fort would be made to prevent platform disagreements revolving around farm relief from prohibitionon and, floor of the conventhe breaking tion and bringing discord such aa that wnica marked the gathering in New York four years (go, Speculation wss concerned chiefly with what 'kind of an enforcement plank Smith' supporter would want him to stand on, ahould he win the nomination. To those who merely wished the convention to place the party on record aa favoring enforcement or all laws, there appeared to be no difficult task- ahead. But there seemed to be quite f ormldabl element insistent on matching the acUon of th Republi cans In Kansas City last week inspecifically naming the Eighteenth amendment aa one which ahould be. made effective. Whether these divergent views could be harmonised In committee remained to be determined. Likewise, in the case of farm re- lief, delegate were arriving tonight with demand that th party go fur- one-thi- rd anti-Smit- h ' -- sa Pase Sevea.) (Celesta (OeatiBasd Explosion Injures Sailors on Board Docked Tanker BEAUMONT. June it (API Els-h- t Italian sailor were in a hospital her thl afternoon, two possibly fatally Injured, as a result of an xnioelon early this morning oa board th Ital ian tanker. Capena. aa ah lay at the, Magnolia Petroleum company docka. The moat seriously injured wa Vincent D. Albla, ship' cook, who wa Handing watch at th time of th H and another of the explosion. ae flora ar In a critical condition. The other six In the hospital ar expected to recover. Sixteen men were brought to th hospital In ambulances and eight of them were later released. Th fume collecting from gaaoiin loaded in two hatches became ignited Iwhil th crew wa sieep in it quar- - f fTer that forward. The wind carried crew' quar i sheet of flame into th ter and sixteen of th men wer burned before they awakened. Thete wer IS men in th crew. Several ran t, to the deck and threw themselves into i th water, swimming asrrnr safely. Pe-Quick action by the Magnolia appsr-atu- s troleum company from blase th reaching prevented th main body of th gasoline on believed th vessel board, and It can call within three or four days. 1 Amelia Earhart Shows Europe She's Real Flier (AP). DeterLONDON, June 24 mined to show Europe that she can Dllot a Diane, despite the fact that control of she did not hand! th , th Friendship on in iraneauamio flight. Amelia Earhart todayflewstole. a and field to Croyden away moth plane for more man a nuuiir. the t Mis Earhart said sh enjoyed It n return to th ir and ah onproved th spot. buying the moth plan It will h crated end ent to th United Bute for private flyiag. . WITH a field produc-- : tion not equaled by any other northern state, Utah now stands first in the produc tion of alfalfa seed: ; |