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Show 1 J. Thartda?: ana aai colder outh portiun; Friday lair. IDAHO Fab Thursday and Friday; aome- irnai coiotr TBoraaajr, UTAH Unaettle VOL. 120, NO. 23. SALT LAKE CITY, THURSDAY MOKNItfG, NOVEMBER 7, 1929, SIX PERISH Ad ministration Group LAWYERS GET Pirates MN H PLANE rj . j and Western Republicans of Senate Win First Fight. Democrats German Prince and tired British Naval Offi Re- - I jl Route, Forced to Turn f' ,.j Back, Hits Tree, Burns. V c, , i:j j" gl' It I iy i GODSTONE, England, Nor. 6 (UP). Six persons were killed today and two. including a Oerman prince and a retired British naval trfficer, were injured when the Luftshansa passenger plane- crashed against a tree to a log near here and caught fire. , The dead: O. Milne, director of George Hen- -, derson company, Calcutta Jute mer-- ': D-9- 03 9L i&i - V Senator Pat Harrison, ivjo would "put sugar on free list " according to testimony. By D. HAEOLD OLIVER, WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 (rV-I- h the first dispute over a major Industrial tariff, the administration" group in the senate bowed today to an 6irwhelmmg majority of .Deih crats and western Republicans who succeeded by 48 to 30 in reeuclng the duty on pig iron from 11.12 2 to 13 cents a ion. xne iinance committee Republicans had proposed an Increase to $1.50. rate wai sponsored by The nt Senator Bark ley. of Kentucky, Dem ocratic member of the tariff framing finance committee. This was the same duty carried in existing law until it was raised by presidential proclamation to $1.12 2, which rate the house left untouched. How Senate Lined Up On rig Iron Tariff.. Nineteen Republicans. Including many regulars and a Republican member of the committee Sackett of Kentucky Joined 29 Democrats In support of the lower duty. Four Democrats Broussard and Ransdell of Louisiana. Heflin of Alabama and Kendrick of Wyoming combined with 26 Republicans against thede- j crease. The roil call ionows: Democrats for the Berkley amend- ' ki - U - chants; unmarried. H. 8. Oasper, prominent employee of the London office of the same firm: married. D. L. Jones, connected with a Lon- don scaffolding firm. Chief Pilot Bodchinke. Mechanic Ullrich. Wireless Operator Niklas. J I J ' ' The injured: Eugene Ytm- echaiimberf. Llppe. 30, distantly related to the former kaiser's wife, and serving as ment: on the plane. on Friday. (j Jl f h . v. .. y es)) , , H . - J i 5 ' V JL - Lieut. Commander B. C. Glen-Kiston, retired naval officer, sports-!- " man and racing car driver. . . Englishwoman Saves Life of German Prince. The plane left Croydon airdrome near London at 9:54 a. m. on its lar trip to Berlin when poor visibility caused it to turn back. The pilot lost nis cearings over a tnicxiy woooea hill near Marden Park, the highest point in this vicinity, and the plane crashed into a tree and took fire. The crash could be heard for a mile. A young Englishwoman, Mrs. H.R. Meredith, was in the nursery of her home when she heard the splintering of the plane. With the gar-- I dener and a friend she drove her own car as close to the scene of the wreck as possible, climbed the hill and found the prince tying near the still v burning plane. v JktrsTMereditn pulled the prince out of danger, loaded nim into her car and drove him to the nursing borne of Dr. D. L. Grieg in Gods tone. The clothing had been burned from his arms and legs and he was severe- ly cut from kicking his way out of the wreckage. He had bums on his face and he was nearly unconscious,-bu- t he managed to mutter "I opened the window and crawled out" and give the telephone numbers of some friends. Dr. Grieg pronounced his condition as still grave late today. Mrs. Meredith declined to comment on her part in the affair except to say: "I am glad X saved his life." Retired Naval Of fleer Leads Charmed Life. Lieut Commander the other man saved, had borne a charmed life. After serving in the British submarine service, he and an: I Glen-Kldsto- n, other sportsman friend purchased the plane from which the Belgian fi-- -. nancler, Alfred Lowe rate In, fell to his death In the English channel a year ago. They hired a pilot and went for a big game hunt in Kenya colony, Africa. The plane crashed at Nairobi and escaped Glen-Kldst- Y si.- - on injury. He was not at the scene of the crash when Mrs. Meredith arrived there. He had managed to extricate himself and go to a nearby garage, from which he telephoned Croydon airdrome. His wife sent an automobile after him, which took him to London, and, despite severe cuts and some bums, he chartered an air taxi and went up on a flight "Just to keep my nerve up." He explained his escape as follows: "As we approached the hill I realised the machine was going to crash into the trees. Instinctively I put my hands up to shield my head, and succeeded in crawling out of the window while the rest of the plane was bursting into flames all around me. I rolled over on the grass and ferns, putting out the fire smoulder- -' lng in my clothes, then called to the others, but received no answer. I could do nothing. There was no help available and so I went down hill and ... telephoned." Fred Russell, a carpenter who while the crash heard having tea 4n his kitchen, ran to the scene after the prince had been taken away. He said the plant was a tangled mass of wreckage burning furiously. Four bodies lay nearby, burned beyond recognition. te I - t j 7 I Marshal Kills v Man Who Failed To Pay Poll Tax . Ashley, d- Wed-newi- ay WILSON. Kan.. Nov. 8 (fl). Ar-- I rested for failure to pay hb poll t Ray Miller. 38. was snot and killed by City Marshal Oscar Low here yesterday after a struggle in the Jail yard. The marshal, with his prisoner, was said to have reached the Jail yard when Miller picked up a brick and struck the officer. In the struggle which followed Miller was said to have attempted to seize Low's gua The weapon was discharged and Low was shot in the leg. Five bullets tered Miller's body. ' Miller died en rouT 16 EUswortBr where he was taken because no physician is located here. Low was taken to an Ellsworth hospital An inquest is being held today at . rnsm . Black, 3 . ) J Total ,s -- 1 Grand total Republicans amendment: 48. against the Barkley - lars and.,tQ.makeme.addit,jpnsjto il ine advisory commiuee, now ever, retains what the commission considers the fundamentals and as- sentials of the commission's plan. Work Done by Suggestion Of Commission. QUIZ UNEARTHS TARIFF PLANS Senate Continues Probe of Lobbyists' Sugar Activities. Preparation of the proposed amendments .first by the legislative committee was deemed as an assist ance to the revision commission, and, in addition, a short cut to the prea entation of the committee's advice. It was at the considered suggestion of the 'commission that the work is being done in this way, though the common method of collaboration has been. for the initiative to come from the commission and for the commit' tee to give its advice on what was presented to it. The subcommittee was asked by the committee to prepare a draft of amendments needed to put into effect the plan as It leaves the committee's hands; and to call In, to advise the subcommittee, such official advisers and other legal authorities as it should find or desire. The subcom mittee Wednesday issued invitations to six lawyers to collaborate with it at the meeting Friday afternoon at tne capitoL roese are judge 0. R. Thurman, member of the tax revision commission; Judge George p. Parker. attorney general of Utah; Hamilton Gardner, of Salt Lake, president of the state senate; David L. 6tine of ogden, speaker 01 the house; O. A Marr and w. w. Ray of salt Lake. Couzens. Dale, Deneen, Edge. Fees, WASHINGTON. NOV. Campaign plans of the Southern (Oeotlnn4 an ran Thm.) tColumn 0o) Tariff association to obtain a high sugar duty in the pending bill were uncovered today by the senate lobby - TWO-GU- N committee. WOMAN QueeUontog J;.A. Arnold, vice president and general manager of the association, for the Southern SNATCHES, GEMS, fourth day,Tariff the committee produced a letter from Arnold to J. C. Barry of La Fayette, La., which said the SHOOTS Republican narty probably had to follow President Hoover's wishes re garding the sugar duty. "My thought is that the president Male is the tarsiet." the letter added. Subcommittee Will Make Pretty Bandit and Arnold explained that what he had Final Changes. in mind was to develop sentiment in Companion Escape in Following the session of Friday af favor of the high sugar duty and Automobile the subcommittee will make that the word "target" was ill ad- - ternoon, whatever final changes in the lan-guage of the proposed amendment I never saw- a president who-waBUFFALO. N. It., Nov. (UP). it. may deem advisable. In the light bandits are toting not amenable- to public sentiment," of The bobbed-ha- ir the comments made at the ses he said. twin sixes now. sion. Each of the lawyers has been An attractive young woman, carry Democratic Chiefs Head Invited either to present his com ing a revolver in each hand, walked D-ments in writing or to be present at into a pawnshop here today, accom Sugar ty Opposition. subcommittee session. Senator Harrison. Democrat, Mis theThe panied by a male companion, will then be pre final snatched a tray of diamonds out of sissippi,, and Senator Simmons, of sented to thedraft tax commit a display window, turned loose her North Carolina, ranking Democrat tee of eleven,legislative possibly early next were char on finance committee, the both she the had until guns emptied (Continued on Pate Two.) of them, then escaped in an auto acterized in, the letter as the leading tOolumn Out.) opponents of a high sugar duty mobile. schedule a "Mention of sugar The bandits had obtained "the gems and were Just backing peacably from drives Senator Harrison Insane," the the store when Herman Chelffipz, letter said. "He would put you on owner of an adjoining store, opened the free list." fire on them. The girl whirled and Another reference to Senator Har started firing promiscuously. Her rison was contained in a letter from shots shattered half a dosen windows Arnold to E. A. Burguleres, New Or- along the street. During the firing (Continued on Para Thraa.) Flva.K the girl and her companion Jumped automobile drove into the KANSAS CITY. Mo.. Nov. 6 (UP). and away. Elizabeth Hurtt, 17, whose injuries in a trainc accident nad necessitated Boy Dies, One Dying From amputation of a leg, was taken In an ambulance today to the funeral of Drinking Poison Liquor her father and mother, killed by a driver after visiting ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio, Nov. 6 their daughter In a hospital. VP). One boy was dead, another reMeanwmie, ponce nere organusd ported dying and two others were ill a state-wid- e search the driver A re Nov. m. WASHINGTON. today from drinking poison liquor of the car, which swept a lapse In the physical condition of Al- safety cone and crushed to through last night near their homes in death Mr. bert B, Fall, sentenced last week to and Mrs. county, officials said. Harry V. Hurtt while they Mike Stribak, 15, was found dead serve a year in jail and nay a fine waited for a street car In front of on a hillside, while Harry Angus, his of f 100.000 for accepting a bribe the hospital. Elizabeth had been friend, was found in a serious condi- from Edward L. Doheny, may pre- knocked down by a trolley car. tion near by. Joseph Brlee and Cos-c- o vent his departure tonight for his newspapers naa started a lund ior Chelsea were able to go to their home in El Paso, Texas. the Injured girl and her smaller Fall was confuted to bed toaay sister homes, where they were treated by campaign under the care of a nurse. Mem- which in connection with anumbers . of physicians. brought increasing Sheriff Ford Moore was holdlhg bers of the family said that, while court violators traffic .into police as was not condition inhis regarded James Molton. 50, negro, pending than $3000 had been subscaibed had w:akened noticeably More vestigation of the death. The sheriff serious, hesentence for the girl, who bore up bravely was his since pronounced owned Molton the claimed liquor today when, afflicted for life herself, last Friday. which-wa- s poisoned. she viewed her parents for the lsst time from a stretcher. - BLINDLY t s - tt ' CHILD SUFFERS BROKEN IN FALL FROM . President FlsniQaiet Thanksfiving Observance. The clans of President Hoover himself for Thanksgiving day are quite simple. He will worship in one While Hanging From "Feet at School." Special to Th Tribune. PRICE. Fay Ellison. 11. died at the Price city hospital about 3:10 p. m. Wednesday as a result or laying from a swinging apparatus at the playgrounds at the Harding school a nail nour earner. , According to Dr. Charles Ruggert, who attended her, the girl died of a broken neck. A Proclamation. irom me rings ray was swinging At this season of the year, when her lees, her head hanging down the harvest has been gathered in, the by toward the ground, when she sudden thoughts of our forefathers turned ly supped and reii. Leroy oison, cus toward Ood with thanksgiving for todian of the school, imthe blessings of plenty and provision mediately rushedHarding to her aid and car- against the needs of winter. They riA Vim 4ntj itm nHri4nl'a tff came by custom to look to thy chief Hr. Rugger! had her removed to the magistrate to set apart a day of hospital, and she died Immediately and prayer praise, whereon their alter being taken there. thanks as a united people might be Deceased was born October 13, given witn one voice in unison, ood 1018, and was In the fifth grade at has greatly blessed us as a nation m the time of her death. Her father the year now drawing to a close. The is dead, and she had been making earth nas yielded an abundant har- her home with her mother and stepvest In most parti of our country. father, Mr. and MrsvJ. W. Adams. (QaaUntMd on Mr. Adams Is head of the meat de Thru.) (Coluaw Four.) i partment at the Price Skaggs Safe way store. ''"; B. W. McCallister, principal of the . Harding school, announced that the form of play which caused the little girl's death was not being practiced with the knowledge of the school heads, and that henceforth all recreation carrying a risk would be prohibited. The body is at the i. E. Flynn funeral parlors at Price. FuSEATTLE. Wash., Nov. 6 Uft. neral announcement will be made bank later. Floyd Sprague, teller, was said today by police to have confessed his part in willingly handing more than 46000 of the funds of the Marine State bank here to Joe Miller. 26. in a faked holdup 1 111 months ago: Police said Sprague admitted getting only $300 as his share, and quoted him as saying that "af WASHINGTON, D. C.'. Nov." . ter" it was all arranged I wished I Senator King is still confined to bis hadn't gone in for it, but couldn't apartment, and still receiving nj back out then." callers or telephone calls. It was Miller, confessed robber of 11 gaso- stated at the apartment today that line stations and grocery stores, said the senator is not "so well as yesthat Charles Slavson, 33. Sprague's terday," but no details were obtainroommate, made all arrangements able. For the present, at least, it for the "holdup" and received part was said the senator will not be of the loot Previously the robbery taken to Johns Hopkins hospital In had been thought a "one-mafor treatment. Senator Job. Baltimore Police said Sprague admitted every King's Illness is described as being unalso told. Slawson, similar to stomach affections he has thing Miller der arrest, had admitted nothing. had occasionally In recent years. of Fall Relapse May Prevent Trip to Texas fr Stew-artsvl- ile Mich, ree .'.).' REDS OBSERVE SOVIET BIRTH Army Receives iThirty War Tanks as Part of Anniversary Fete. MOSCOW, Nov. $ (ff). Thirty war Soviet factories from tanks, built-imoney raised by a fund known as "our answer to Chamberlain," the e British secretary, were pre sented to the Red: amytodayas part of we tweutn anniversary .ceremonies of the 1917 revolution. The tanks bear individual names, such as Railway Worker, Printer, Miner, Textile worker, Sailor and Soldier, . They are of various sixes and are said to combine the best principles of European and American v " tanks. In preparation for tomorrow's mars: tne iounaa ceremonies, wnicn tlon 13 years ago of the Soviet re Lenheaded Moscow, Lenin, by glme ingrad and other large cities out today in great splashes of red and muea of revolutionary pia cards. Overnight there sprang up every' where speakers' platforms, allegori cal floats and huge decorative ex titbits to remind Russia's 148,000,000 citizens of the twelfth year of the Communist regime. While Moscow's famous Red Square was being rapidly transformed into a huge amphitheater oi red ior tomorrow's huge military and civilian parade. Valdlmlr HUch Lenin, the Father of Bolshevism, rested in eter nal sleep in a small- - room in the Kremlin, from which be will be soon one-tim- : - bla-son- ed , transferred to his new granite mau soleum. the Quaker meeting houses and then have a quiet family, dinner at i . the White House. The text of the president's proc lamation follows: By the President of the united States of America. . Nose Protruding From River Gives Away Bootlegger Virginia Phenomenal Win Is Seen as - Signifi- . cant .Victory for Party. Chairman Shonse Says. ' WASHINGTON, Nov. (IF), Democrats were Jubilant today over a series of widespread victories in state and municipal elections. ' L ' While they pointed, la their enthusiasm, even to minor successes as Indicating a ' general DemocrsUo trend, their most significant victory ; was, election of regular Democrat, John O. Pollard, as governor of Vb ginia by a large majority over the, h, Republican candidate. Dr. William Moeely Brown. Party leaders pointed to this victory as bearing out their predictions ' that President Hoover's successful Invasion of the "solid south" last year was but temporary. The Virginia election was -e flrrt test in any of the five southern states carried by Mr. Hoover. . . Virginia Vktory Setback-- Fee Bishop Cannon. Because of the signal victory there, by a majority far beyond predictions of seasoned political observers. Democratic leaders expressed belief it would have a psychological effect. The victory, was a setback for ; Bishop James Cannon, Jr., of Richmond, Democrat, prominent dry and leader In the Hoover southern campaign, who left before the election and now Is In South America. Democratic leaders rewded return of Democratic majorities in the Kentucky legislature as their most significant after the Virginia sue- - i cess, which Jouett Shouse, chair- - ' main of the Democratic national committee's executive committee, pointed out "Insures Democratic eon trot of the redistribution of the con- ' gressional, districts which Is com- of the . pelled by reapportionment new census, as well as the redlstric- t- ; of state the for lng legislative of. ftees." l Kentoeky Barometer 8tate , . Sbense Bays. Shouse explained that President Hoover's landslide in Kentucky last year "had filled the Republican with the hope of making Kentucky anti-Smit- , , permanei-tl- y Republican.1" "For years," he said, "It has been s barometer state, whose shifts from one political party to the other have been a fairly reliable Index of the national trend." Kentucky he Republicans, said. hide-and-se- ek m ready informed they were federal agents. Then be invited them ashore. The raiders discovered a km still, arrested three men and looked around for Jones. He had vanished. The lnvsstlgators Jumped into boats and rowed about, flashing lights over the water. A beam of light flashed on a nose protruding from the water. - Beneath it was Jones, lying in th- shallow water, weighed down by his heavy clothes and apparently glad to be dragged from his icy biding place to a warm jail SOO-g- fr Stimson Doubts U. S. Will Alter Senator King Still at Home Russian Attitude The Virginia fight was likewise on national issues," Shouse said. "The frank purpose waa to retain Virginia in the Hoover column and a Democratic governor was elected in the face of the coalition of Repub- licana and Hoovercrats by a major any ity greater than that by which his-wus election in Virginia's won, presidential, sens- E' The latest and most successful of these experiments was conducted yesterday when an army transport plane was flown from Wright field to Detroit, carrying five passengers and with no pilot in the cockpit. In the 8 perry plane at the time was Elmer of the Sperry Oyioswpe- - ompagyt who conducted the test; Major A. H. Ollkeson of the army equipment r. branch. Lieutenants Alberg and Samuel Mills and Major J. D Reardon. Other successful Hegen-berge- t flights with the gyroscope directing the plane's course have been conducted between New York and Bedford, Mass., Wright field and New and New York. 1 new model The gyroscope, two of which are used in the pilotless plane, weighs fifty pounds and occuple a space of but 14x14x10 inches beneath the pilot's seat. Its operation actuates the three major controls of an airplane, namely, the rudder, for direction, the elevator for- upward and downward movement and the aileron for maintaining lateral balances. The power required is provided by an externally driven mounted wind-drivgenerator. en p planes' on ; level course and to hold it to a given course the ship control compass need only be shifted accordingly when sudden winds steer it from its scheduled course. rDesigned-te-kee- NOOALES, Artx, Nov. S WV-T- he state's star witness. H. E. Dearman, admitted today at the trial of Dr. L. B. Prultt for the murder of H. H. Johnston of Tooele, Utah, that he had told "falsehoods" to R. N. Beaton, a farmer, concerning his knowledge of the slaying, because he believed Keaton "was a stool pigeon." . Keaton had testified that Dearman told him he was too far from the construction tent in which Johnston, a road contractor, was fatally shot August 29, to hear any of the alleged conversation between the contractor and Prultt. rancher of Tabac, Aria. The state contends the two men argued over a water bill. Another witness, Allan Isaaks of Sahaurtta, testified he had found the gun with which Johnston is believed to have been killed. It contained one exploded shell. ' Dearman had testified he saw Dr. Prultt leave the tent and place the gun In his pocket. as or state." Shouse refrained from mention of Alfred E. Bmlth. whom Cannon des ignated as the real Issue In the dec. tion. Both Virginia senators pointed to the reeular Democratic victory as In dicating return of southern states to the Democratic fold. Senator Carter Glass, who fought Cannon bitterly, predicted his own reelection next year. ' Indicates Entire Sosth WB Retmra to Democrsis. V tn : - - 4 DEBT $4,973,000!, - BOISE. Idaho KV-O-n January 1 the state's bonded debt will be cut below $3,000,000 for the first time in many years, Byron Defenback, state treasurer, announced Wednesday. On that date 1203.000 of the state's out standing bonds will be taken up, re ducing the figure to 473,000. with a saving to toe tsato of about pen withheld criticism of the govern- resulting $10,000 yearly in interest ment. , s interest on bonds at state The MOSCOW. Nov. (UP), No sur- present runs to about $250,000, Defprise was expressed here today over enback pointed out, while other debts pile this total to Britain's action in voting to resume rest-bearing diplomatic relations with Russia. The about $1000 a day. obThe interest on the bonds at pres move was deemed inevitable by ent ranges from 4 to 6.5 per cent, servers here. Valerten Dovgalevsky, soviet am- with an average of 47 per cent. ... . LONDON, Not 6 (UP)r-Prem- ier J. Ramsay MacDonald has decided to appoint Sir Robert Hodgson as ambassador to Russia, it was reliably re ported today. Sir Robert has been minister to Albania since 1928. but before that he had training in the British consular service which would stand him in bassador to France, who negotiated good stead in renewing trade rela- with Foreign Secretary Arthur Hentions with Russia, broken off in May, derson for restoration of . Anglo-Russi- to Vladivostok from 1907 to 1911. consul from 1911 to 1919, British agent in Russia from 1931 to 1934 and charge d'affaires at Moscow from 1924 to 1937. It was believed ambassadors might be exchanged between the two countries by the end of this week. ' He was vice-cons- ul Comment in today's press regarding the house of commons' vote to resume relations with the soviet was varied, but the majority of newspa- - ' . $- 1927. -- i ecWASHINGTON. Nov. This election indicates that the retary Stimson said today he did not entire aouth will return to the Demo believe the decision of the house of commons favorable to resumption of cratic party by large majorities, esrelations with Russia would nave any ; Tw.t (Oaotlnut i an (Column Two.) effect on the nonrecognltion policy of the United States. The secretary added sucn decisions abroad had not had any effect on IDAHO CUTS , American policy in the past. inter' Officials here generally preted the commons decision as an DOWN TO internal political question in En gland. WJ.-S- n" CHICAGO. Nor. 6 0P1 Coroner Herman N. Bundesen of Cook county today recommended that his own office be abolished. The coroner's office to unneces sary and could be sacrifice 1 in the interest of efficiency in the community," he told a Joint meeting of the American Association of Railway 8urgeons and the Surgical association of the Chicago h Northwestern railroad. "The office is hopelessly anti quated and has outlived its useful- nes." be said. . "The reason is ob vious most cases ultimately go to the state's attorney, anyway." Dr. Bundesen gained fame as cor oner of Cook county by assembling outstanding Juries of , business men and experts to Investigate various violent deaths, the investigations often leading to concrete suggestions for the prevention of accidents and crime. : ... Chicago Coroner r MacDonald Names Hodgson as Plane Pilotless Steers Witness Testifies Gyroscope Suggests Office Ambassador to Soviet Republic Be Sacrificed On Straight Course to Detroit In Utahn's Murder DAYTON, Ohio, Nov. of the gyroscope for use in keeping airplanes on their true courses without directional guidance has progressed to such a point that planes have been operated for long distances without the guiding hand of a pilot at the stick, Wright field army engineers announced here to- - ' Even Minor Successes Show General National Trend, sought to gain control of the legts. ture "in order to Gerrymander the Fred state PEORIA. HL, Nor. Jones played with electionIn ofsuch way as totoInsure the Republicans congress,'' prohibition agents last night and lost and hammered at this point "alby a nose. rider with congressthat the ways The game started when the raiders. In the guise of duck hunters, poked men must be returned who would the prow of their boat into Seven support the Hoover administration." Mile island down river irom reona. Claims Virginia Fight ea Jones took them for hijackers and National Isswa, to defend the isle when was Clerk Confesses Parents of Girl His Part in Fake Maimed by Auto $6000 Holdup Wild Car Kills WV-Th- . ur " 1? S! children, the 'oldest a girl of 4, were burned to death te Jay in the fire which destroyed the farm -tonne' of RankEday warnere' while both Eddy and his wife were away. 28 . 2fl. -- NEW YORK, Nov. 6 W). A sweeping decline in prices, which ran from $5 to nearly $30 a share in most ot tho Naders, and niucE more uTH few specialties, took place In the absession of the breviated three-hoNew York stock exchange today. Final quotations showed little recov ery from the day s low levels, with the tape nearly an hour late at the close. A sprinkling of issues broke through the low levels established In the drastio reaction last Tuesday. and much of the ground recovered In the cJosingaessions of last Week was lost. The stock exchange ticker did not print the final quotations until 3:45 p. m., or 1 hour and 45 minutes after the market closed. Holdings ef Veteran Banker Shrink ttZ.000,000. The First National bank stock dropped $1000 a share In the market being quoted $5000 bid and $6006 offered. Oeorge F. Baker, veteran chairman of the board,, is reported to hold 33,000 American people to gather in their shares of Ihu IssueTao that tlie day( decline In the market values of his places of worship on that day and holdings alone amounts to $23,000, render thanks for the' blessings be 000. stowed upon them during the past Other leading New York bank stocks drooped $10 to $130 a share. year. Trust dropped $130, Corn The proclamation said the har Guaranty Exchange sua. Equitable Trust sua, vests have b&n abundant, the fruits National City $90, New York Trust of Industry have been "of unexam- - and Central Hanover $45 each, Chase Sled quantity and value," and both (OoaUntKd on Past ThnO and capital have enjoyed "an (Column Tbrt. exceptional prosperity." At home and abroad, the president said, assurances of peace have been strengthened and enlarged and he pointed out that enlightenment "has grown apace in new revelations of NECK scientific truth and in diffusion of knowledge." The proclamation was the first of BARS its kind issued ny Mr. Hoover. It has been customary for many years for the president to set aside a thanksgiving day and to recount his conception of the blessings that have Price Girl Loses Hold come to uu American people. GIVE THANKS Blease, Republicans for: Blaine, Borah, Brookhart, Capper, Cutting, Frailer. Howell. Johnson, LaFollette. McNary, Norbeck, Nor-ri- s. Nve. Pine. Sackett. SchaU. Stel- wer, Thomas of Idaho and water man. Total 19. THOMPSONVHJLE, Nov. UPON U. S. TO Bratton, Brock, Caraway, Connally, Copeland, Fletcher, George. Harris, Harrison. Hawes, Hayden. McKellar, Overman. Sheroard. Simmons. Ste phens. Smith, Bteck, Tnomas 01 Oklahoma. Tram me 11. Tydings, Wag ner, Walsh of Montana. Walsh of Massachusetts and Wheeler. . HOOVER CALLS - Berkley, Leaders Drop $5 to $30$ Closing Values Show Little Recovery Proposed amendments to article 13 could be called. of the constltatlon of Utah, which has to do with taxation, had by evenuigSeen coucTSedtasuch language that the legislators at work on them deemed them ready to be submitted to a group of lawyers In terested in such matters. According ly, the subcommittee having the task of preparing the wording of the proposed amendments, will meet in the board room at the state capltol Fn day afternoon, to hear such com ments as the legal advisers they have invited care to make. The subcommittee of five is a part 01 the legislative tax advisory com mittee of 11 members, which was ap Presidential Proclamation pointed to give sucn counsel to the Sets Aside November tax revision commission as should be deemed proper. The tax committee foir Worship. was asked by the commission to prepare a draft of constitutional amend ments which would be needed to put WASHINOTON. Nov 6 Winto effect the proposed tax plan sub Tbanksgivlng will be observed Thurs mltted to it by the commission. The advice of the advisory committee was day, November 38, In conformity with to amend that plan in some partlcu the traditional proclamation issued T Three Infants Burn to Death; Parents Away 7 daughters near the northern end of Luzon island. Eighty pirates, in 14 vintas. or small boats commonly used in the Philippine : island . waters, attacked the n sailing ship Purisiria Conclp-cloand then raided the village of Tlngloy. They fled before United States destroyers Discuss Advisers Proposed Amendments co-pu-ot V MANILA. P. T Nor. 9 (UP). A group of Mora pirates today looted a ship, plundered a village and overcame men seeking to protect wives and Legal cer Escape From Wreck. ftff Ship, on Regular Berlin ' ' SUGAR DUTY FREE , Democratic Leaders AGAIN BUFFER Rejoice Over State And City Triumphs HEAVY SHOCK STOCK PRICES Loot Ship, Plunder Island Town Loses Battle Against ALTERATIONS CRASH Pig Iron Duty Slash TO TAX LAWS LONDON FIVE CENTS .24 PAGES an friendship, was among those mentioned today for the ambassadorLondon. in ship GETS 8PEEDT TRIAL.1 8AN JUAN, Porto Rico CP). A Porto Rican record for speedy Justice was , made at Clmacao yesterday, where lino RodrJgues killed. Juan Durgado with a knife, was arrested, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 30 years' imprisonment all In the same day. inte- UAY production Utah last year reached 500,000 tons and brought $17380,000 on the markets. 11 in - , |