Show s WEATHER 1 A THOUGHT UTAH — Gener- ally fair tonight and T u e s d a y somewhat warmer tonight north- Be not rlgliteows Ecvl west portlom IDAHO — Unsettled wanner tonight south 7:16 overmuch-- — : The ultimate notion of right la that which tenda to ihe universal good — Franch Hutcheion Cloudy nnd Cooler Fifty-nint- h Year—No LAST EDITION OGDEN CITY UTAH MONDAY EVENING SEPTEMBER 10 1928 54 BUSINESS ME SKY DERBY FLIERS COAST-TO-COAS- T LOS ANGELES SEEK TO OUST WATCHES SKY vvv RACKET REIGN Ay Frank Francis i FROM CHICAGO - i iv Many visitors have' remarked that Ogderi is beautiful in late summer flowers Nearly everyi home haa den and News and Views regrets that all of the beauty spots can not be given individual attention is column ita gar- m-th- At the rate Ogden is going for- -- vv ward in flower culture this city will gain national recognition for its li'loiyal wealth within a few years Funds Subscribed To Pay Expense of Grand Jury Probe MANY INDICTMENTS Troubles Follow Because Officers Refuse To vvv w "vv ViVvvMV: v' y a FOR WINGS OF 79 DERBY RACERS S3 ' v'"' VT ( It -- Children aiding in beautifying find themselves in the positiorrof an artis painting a Their picture develops picture of spirthey catch the meaning itual things with a soul appeal ' Grown-up- s community is uplifted by indulging in the love of the beautiful as disclosed in beds bursting In bloom September 18 is the date of the dedication of Grand Canyon lodge and the Kaibab' trail jn the Grand Canyon park A Carl Gray and party of the Union Pacific will arrive in Ogden on Wednesday afternoon on their way to the dedication They are to be accompanied from Ogden and Salt Lake by a number of prominent Utahns and at Cedar City will be joined by 100 or more business men from southern The printed invitations are illuminated with scenes from the wonderland of southern Utah and no doubt will be retained by those receiving' them as unique souve nirs With modern transportation which includes Pullmans to Cedar City and bus lines to the Grand Canyon of the Colorado the round days with trip will be made in five ample time devoted to sight-seein- g But 40 years ago A L Brewer and companions of Ogden were three months making the journey by team Much of all that country south of Fredonia and Pipe Springs was uninhabited and without much more than trails Today the outside world is making a pilgrimage to that land ofcolor gorge and vast desert stretch' es It must have been a lonely region when those who were pioneering first settled at Pipe Springs and built a fort to protect themselves against the Indians who as desert nomads resented the coming of the white man to take possession of their water holes Today the Indians are on a reservation to the north of Pipe Springs and a number are employed on road work at the Grand Canyon As one they swing the pick they give the impression that they are too fat for such extreme exertion and ytheir white neighbors declare they are strangers to work except when dire necessity forces them to labor Born to a wild life they dislike the exactions of civilization and Would be the savages they once were if they could escape the restraints imposed upon them by a modern world which has encroached on their hunting grounds We all inherit a bit of that to be carefree Today as our boys started to school after the vacation period there was evidence that in their blood stream is the urge to be One of the first great lesions of life is to learn to submit gracefully to the tasks imposed by a society in which everyone must do his part for the advancement of the whole Neither white boy nor Indian e Jakes kindly to work It is a Which must be acquired and once accepted is indispensable to happiness Have you an established reconciliation with work? If not you are having a distressing experience vir-jtu- New York gangsters have un- dertaken to fight back the Chicago racketeers who have invaded their territory of spoils That is the word conveyed in a message from the east -- "Gangster" and 'racketeer" had no place in our vocabulary of a few years ago Now they are In daily usel Thirty years ago William T Stead as an English visitor found Chicago With a tongue of its own It was unlike any place in England or elsewhere i It was pulsating with energy had a certain impatience indulged in political fights in which aldermen defied judges judges defied the legislature and legislators hi turn challenged the sovcniors Crowe-Thomps- SAX Sept JO— arrived at Itockwell field at 8:35 a m todny In his Cessna monoplane from Yuma Magpie Project Situation To Be Studied By Commissioner Dr Elwood Mead United States commissioner of reclamation will make a survey of the Magpie dam situation Tuesday afternoon when in company with A P Bigelow and Mayor Frank Francis he and his party will make the trip to South Fork ahd along the mountains from the mouth of Ogden canyon to North Ogden Dr Mead who arrived In Salt Lake this morning will drive to Ogden from Salt Lake Tuesday morning arriving here at 9 o'clock Mayor Francis and Mr Bigelow will join the party here and they will continue to Cache valley where they will meet with William B Ballard a member of the Utah state water storage commission and inspect the Wellsvllle project Following lunch they will return to Ogden where they will inspect the proposed Magpie dam site and hear the proposition as outlined by Mr Bigelow He was the first of the York Los Angeh s air racers to arrive at their western goal LOS ANGELES Sept 10— (AP) Angeles' skies were cleared of all airplanes this morning while interest in the national air races here centered on the arrival' of the first group of planes in the transcontinental derbies which started from New York last week The first line of transcontinnetal race worn planes twenty-on- e of the class A division tuned their motors at Yuma Ariz for the final leg of the contest — a two-ho- p flight to Los Angeles and the end of the transcontinnetal racing rainbow where awaits honor and gold for the winner OTHER GROUPS RACE Meanwhile two more racing groups lined up at Oklahoma City in the class B and class C divisions to take to the roaring pathway of the skies that ends at the national air meet here At the head of the class A fliers and favored to 'win the $5000 major jurize of this division was the Cessna "A" plane of Earl Rowland Wichita Kan Dropping down on the field after the day's three-sto- p flight from El Paso Texas Rowland finished the lap in almost a dead heat with the speedy Waco of Tex Rankin of Portland Ore AI-- : though he was ten seconds behind In unofficial Rankin Rowland compilations of elapsed time had an advantage of 51 minutes over his nearest rival Robert Dake of The leader's elapsed Pittsburg time was approximately 24 hours 14 minutes and after him in order came Dake W H Emery Jr of Bradford Pa Theodore W Kenyon of Boston and Rankin HOP OVER MOUNTAINS Today's flight was a mountain country hop to San Diego Calif and then a final dash of slightly more than a hundred miles to the finish line on the grandstand bordered field here where the national air meet and exposition is under way In addition to the winner's $5000 prize money the race Includes $2500 for second place and other Twenty-on- e awards down to $300 of the 37 planes which left New York last week in the 16 hops from coast to "coast remained in the A division when it reached Yuma INTO WYOMING OMAHA Neb Sept 10— (AP) — Drury of London Ont and Kennedy White Hamilton Ont only fliers In the international air derby from Windsor Ont to Los Angeles to reach Omaha yesterday within the7 time limit took off shoTtly after a m today for Rock Springs Wyo the second night control station A stop Will be made at Cheyenne WEATHER IS POOR OKLAHOMA CITY Okla Sept 10 — (AP) — R W Cantwell of Duncan Okla led the class C racers of the New York to Los Angeles air derby out of Oklahoma City on the hop to Fort Worth He took off from the Oklahoma City municipal airport at 7:44 a m in his Lockheed-Veg- o monoplane Like the class B fliers those In class C were delayed here this morning more than two hours due to bad weather conditions New --L- Ten of the aviators who flew from Long Island in the away York-to-LNew Angeles air races are pictured here The ten photos provide a most interesting study In the center in aviation faces is a view of competing planes up y on Kooseveit field for the in the Class A event Reading from left to right in each case the fliers are: Top C W Holman H y C Grevenberg "Red" Jackson Putnam middle M H "Moon" Mullins Earl Rowland M B Allen bottom Charles W Meyers Mrs Theodore Kenyon James S Charles Earl Rowland took an early lead among: the class A racers Pretty Mrs KenyOn accompanied her husband a Boston entrant os r 1 vx Le-ro- "Red'Jackson of St ' ' t vV"'lfl6 ' -- did Louis 1 some sensational night flying between Kansas City and St Louis the Republican National conirg vention transporting convention pictures for The 11 1 ft ' TEN ARE DEAD i ANDflVEHUPiT Opponents Of Prohibition n And League Several Accidents Take Place In Nation On Outline Gampaign Plans Sunday BY AIRPLANES Anti-Saloo- (11 j- The Associated lress) Ten men were killed and five others seriously injured in aviation accidents in widely scattered sections' of the United States Sunday None of the accidents was in cony air nection with the racfes n jw in progress but a navy flier was seriously injured when his plane c rashed during a race at Los - ' cross-countr- Association Against Eight een th Amendment to Center Efforts On Electing Wet Congress and Will Question All Candidates Leaguers On Record For Hoover and Curtis! and All Drys R egardless of Their Religion Their Leader Asserts Angeles WASHINGTON Sept 10— (AP)— An outline of the major that are to be thrown into balance on Two students at Otterbein Ind high school were killed when the both sides of the prohibition! issue during the campaign of plane in which they were passen- 1928 has been givtn to The Associated Press by ranking of gers crashed attempting to make n a landing at the air field there ficials of the league and the Association Against The two boys Dorwin Leighty 18 the Prohibition Amendment d and Robert Burns 15 died of frac-turne- skulls shortly after the Donald Burgett- of Chalcrash mers Ind the pilot was seriously Injured WINGS BUCKLE Harold Tennant of Sioux Falls n S D and Frank Kuehn of S D were killed when the wings of their plane buckled as they were completing a test flight at Sioux Falls They were en route from Sioux City la to the state fair at Huron S D Lieutenant Joseph C Soper 25 was of Self ridge field Michigan killed vihen his plane failed to come out of a dive and plunged into Lake Erie during an aerial exhibition held in connection with the national rifles matches at Camp Perry Ohio Charles Gilhausen 35 formerly of Essen ' Germany was killed at Des Moines when the plane he was testing crashed to the ground STRAP BREAKS Jack McElveen 23 of Atlanta Ga fell to his death at Florence S C when a strap oh his parachute broke as he dived from a plane 2 000 feet in the air Alden Baker pilot and Henry Krause mechanic were killed and Riley Sheldon passenger injured when their plane crashed 2000 feet at Los" Angeles L AY Drugger pilot died of burns and injuries received when the plane owned and built by Carl W Cates crashed and burst into flames at a Kansas City air field Gates and R B Suor a passenger were both critically injured Lieutenant G II Hasselman attached to the airplane carrier U was seriously inS S Langley Los when his at Angeles jured plane crashed as he was rounding a pylon during a national air meet races if Gar-retso- The local committee formed to investigate the possibilities of erecting the dam and the amount of water that will be subscribed has issued a questionnaire to the water companies that will be affected by the dam and will have the Information furnished by their answers tabulated and in a presentable form Mr Bigelow said Dr Mead will be accompanied on the trip by Governor George H De rn W It Wallace chairman of the 'Utah state water storage commission C 11 Detder water ex- CONGRESSMAN HOPS pert for the bureau of ' reclamaLAKE FROM tion E C Larson government engineer in charge in Utah J 11 A1- -' SALT LAKE Sept 10— (AP)— exander government attorney and Congressman W Franl James of George M Bacon state engineer by two ?Iichigan accompanied army officers hopped otf from the 2000000 JEWS ARE airport here this mornin in a army transport DYING OF HUNGER plane for Fokker San Francisco The congressman chairman of LONDON Sept 9— (AP)— The the house military affairs comannual conference of the federa- mittee is making a tour of the nation of Jewish relief organizations tion' army He is accomhere today heard a report in which panied by posts V Thomas Major soviet authorities stated that Hammond and Lieutenant II A Jews are dying of hunger Dinger Sergeant Frank Ritter is in Che Ukraine piloting their plane SALT -- tri-motor- ed WIRES TAPPED TO GRAM JUP Figures In Chicago! Probe Learn of Charges Uttered CHICAGO 10— (AJ?) — Sept Walls of tljie grand jury room were tapped by wires which carried the secret deliberations to the ears of interested parties It was charged today by Frank J Loesch directing (he grand jury into election violence and crookedness Through the electrical- device Loesch said persons who were indicted or Who feared indictment were able to get a report on what took place iamong the jurors and to lay their defense accordingly in advance More than a hundred Indictments ranging from murder to fraud have been returned since the special grand Jury investigation started three months ago - n Speaking for the league Dr Ernest H Cherrington its director of education said the league was supporting Herbert Hoover and dry candidates genthe country over regarderally less of party or religious affiliation He pronounced absolutely fajse any statement that the organization had raised the religious issue WETS TO CON FX: U Henry H Curran president of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment declared that a decision whether to put the association actively into the presidential campaign Is awaiting a meeting of the executive committee to be held late this month but that a widespread effort "would be made to secure the election of members of senate and house who oppose prohibition "Repeal of the eighteenth amendment" was said by him to be the ultimate goal of these efforts were Both of the statements made in response to requests for information as to just what the two organizations would attempt during 192S TOLICT OF DRYS "In the present political cam- (Continued on Page Twor Anti-Saloo- Many Can See Fairies Sir Arthur Declares — — fairies LONDOSV Sept 10 (AP) A snumber of people fan seeincredulbecause of the foolish ashamed to say ity with which their observations would be greeted" Sir Arthur Conan Doyle novelist believes Addressing the congress of the International Spiritualists association he asseited also that' fairies can be photographed and displayed a photograph purporting! to show a fairy presenting a flower to: a little girl He also! showed pictures of wood elves dancing and bathing in a woodlaiild pool and a girl playing with a gnome whd danced in rhythm atl her handclappingi Sir Arthur further recounted that he had been in a spiritualist' contact with the novelist Joseph Conrad "He asked me to do something for him" he said "It seemed as if his spirit was and e wanted to link up with the world once more" Sir Arthur also claimed to' have received a long message from Earl Ilaif three days after the field marshal's death and said: "I asked his relatives whom the message concerned whether they would like to see the message but they did not reply Earl Haig wasj a spiritualist "and I cannot help- feeling very much for him In thel circumstances" un-eas- j- La Sept 10 — (AP)— Six convicts arc is believed to have been shot fatally and eight persons are injured as the result of an attempt by thirteen prisoners to shoot their way out of the Louisiana state penitentiary last night jjj ij Headed by Cleveland Owen New Orleans desperado the convicts overpowered two "guards broke into the ammunition room where they obtained guns and then raced for a launch in the near Mississippi river while they kept up a running gunfire with prison authorities j Two prisoners and a trusty weie os der-byis- ts get-awa- - HERE TUESDAY -- Ariz Anti-Saloo- DOCTOR MEAD DIEGO (Al) — Earl Rowland Wicltita Kan on on t Canadian Aviators Enter Contest Heading For BATON ROUGE another Rock Springs - the home by planting and cultivating a bed of roses build a little bit of themselves into the structure and feel the ties which bind ' 1 By JAMES P KIRBY CHICAGO Sept 10— What is to end the- rackeChicago doing What can add more to the charm teers' reign of terror and their of home than the rich coloring of domination of business? legitimate flowers on a background of shrub10 which April day' Primary bery and a carpet Of green! marked the downfall of the political machine also seems to mark the limit Of endurance of the exasperated citizenry of Chicago at these conditions This election demonstrated conclusively what had been generally accepted as fact but which heretofore lacked specific illustration namely: the alliance between politics and crime in Chicago with the resultant immunity from apprehension and prosecution of notorious gangsters Just before the election the homes of U S Senator Charles Deneen leading the fight against the machine and of Judge John A Swanson Democratic candidate for state's attorney were bombed as were those of several other lesser political Then followed the killfigures of Joe ing Esposito and a" Deneen On election day there follower were kidnapings ballot box stealings and numerous other vote frauds CITIZENS TAKE HAND Suddenly public opinion was electrified with the announcement that a group representing the Chicago Bar association the Chicago Crime commission " and Association of Commerce and other civic organizations had petitioned Judge William V Brothers of the criminal court for the appointment of a special grand jury to investigate the primary day occurrences and racke' teering in general AtThe petition was granted torney General Oscar Carlstrom at Springfield "appointed special assistant attorneys general — all men of known integrity — to handle- the investigation ' Frank JT Loesch corporation lawyer counsel for the Pennsylvania railroad and numerous other corporations and more important president of the Chicago Crime commission was named to head the Although 76 years investigation old th6 vigor of Loesch's interest and energy is the equal of that of a man of 50 As his first assistant and the man actually handling the detail of the special grand jury investigation is David D Stansbury former U S district attorney at Chicago He is a younger man but the victor of many court battles on both sides of the trial table FAMILIAR WITH RACKET Stansbury It is pointed out in Chicago knows what its all about (Continued on Pasre Two) : Class A Fliers Leave Shooting Their Way Out of Louisiana Prison Thirteen Yuma For Final Daeh to Launch in River But Searchlights Pick Many Goal Out in Dark and Guards Bring Them Down Four Guards and Three Prisoners Wounded Captain Los- KECK NECK BASH ing One Eye '4 Make Arrests Crowe-Thomps- ' I 4 A Half D ©Z©R Slain As G ©evicts i ry To aRe Escape if 180-mi- le '' AINE VOTERS GO TO POLLS PARTIES WATCH Majority Given Republican Candidates Considered Barometer 10— PORTLAND Me Sept political (AP)— Maine barometer of the union holds its state election today with both the Democrats and Republicans confident that the barometric readings 24 hours hence will mean "fair and warmer" for their respective par ties in the coming national election This northeastern political garden has sprouted what some hav! regarded as a forecast of the national election every presidential year and the national organization of both parties have been busy cuU the past during ''-"tivating the crops w" so-call- ed few weeks""' - '"V'"' Maine takes pride in the slogan "As Maine goes so goes the nation" and the Republicans were out to prove that the political crystal foretold a sweeping Hoover victory while the Democrats hoped it would augur equally weU for Governor Smith FIGURES RECALLED In 1920 the Republicans elected a governor by a majority of 65000 and llarding received a majority of 65000 over Cox in the national election Their fondest hope was to exceed that figure today The heaviest artillery of the G O P came here with that end in view Senator Charles Curtis Republican nominee for vice president and Senator James E Watson of Indiana have both been here booming Republican stock William Tudor Gardiner Is the Republican standard bearer for the Hethas been a popgovernorship ular sta-- t figure ffor years and waged his campaign on the record of both state and national adminis- trations YOUXG OPPONENT J A insurance agent Edward C Moran Jr is Gardiner's He led the successful opponent fight to send a lie has delegation to Houston nade the state water power ques tion his issue In the senatorial race Herbert E Holmes is opposing the of Senator Frederick Hale Republican" who wants to go to Washington for the third time Holmes has campaigned Almost alone going about the state with a phonograph fto attract crowds and then preaching "Al" Smith Smith-instruct- ed on CROOKS KEEP j cross-countr- ar 21-ye- j Kin-che- een-ten- ' ce ' ? '? 4 SEN CURTIS FINDS WOMEN pTERESTED Sept 10 — (AP) Greater interest Ily women In politics was d eciaredC in evidence by Senator Curtis the Republican vice presidential ftominee upon his return hero todatf from a " tour in New England ' speaking "I was particularly impressedEy the attendance and the attentiorhof the womeij at my meetings' the senator said in a statement "The national campaign this year aeems to have aroused the interest of all members of the home" WASHINGTON j : POLICE ON RUN GANGS KILL TWO RITES FOR THIRD Robberies And CHICAGO 10— (AP) — Sept Two more men are dead of gang killed before the convicts reached the boat and three others lost theitQ lives before the craft could be gotten out of range of! the bullets Another is believed tcj have been killed but he possibly may have escaped Four guardaHand j three prisoners were wounded and two or three' convicts escaped Two others surrendered when firing began Warden Amacker who was here when he received tt report of the break rushed! to the scene and today was directing an intensive search for the missing prisoners They are believed to have deserted the launch as soon as possible and ' y struck out ' Owen serving a 14 to sentence fori shooting a New Orleans policeman with intent to kill ' is credited by prison officials with A few engineering the affair months agb ht arid several others escaped and fatter they Were captured he declared he never would be taken aliV again His statement was fulfilled foi' he was one Of the slain Three of the others killed Were serving life sentences and two a few years for robbery All Werk white z One of th dead is J 8 Broon a trusty who lost his life aiding guards in thir attempt to prevent the escapci Jle was serving a life sentence: ffrf jmufder ' n The other fwere:- - Arthur life sentenca for statutory offense Starjlei Procter life crime: not learned S J Beck robberyi and Jack ' Martin' ' " i ''! robbery SMUGGLKD IlETOLVKR Walking up jtoi two guards Owti suddenly Whipped out a revolver which had! been smuggled to him-an d the other j cbiivicts then 6tr--- ' powered 'tije guards Working swiftly the men ran to the ammunition house obtained revolvers andj cartridges and raced to the river about 2100 yards away Meanwhile an alarm had been sounded and the prison searchlight picked upj the fleeing prisoners Guns blazed find three of the conf victs fell Guards started In pursuit ex changing bullets with the prisoners Captain JOhnl Singleton was shot in the head aiidj tody and Captain C C lllgtenpojlliam lost an eye' and was wounded in the body Two other guards and three of the prisoners were slightly wounded A few convicts survived the heavy gunfire arid reached the river where they wounded Archie Walter operator of a launch and commandeered the craft Three more were killed! however before the boat reached a safe distance 1 from the jjuniFirei ' Tbefts Result In Repeated Station Calls bullets la Chicago and elaborate plans were being made for the SALT LAKE Sept 10 —A wave funeral of a third of lawlessness struck the city beJoe Ferraro who was shot down tween 9 and 11 o'clock Sunday in the crowded-Madisostreet dur- night as the climax to one of the ing the peak of Friday afternoon quietest days of the ycr in Salt traffic by the same "mob" whose Lake crime annals bullets slew Tony Lombardo died Detectives under Lieutenant D yesterday of his wounds Lorn II Clayton were called out repeatbardo's death had been instantan- edly to investigate house robberies eous a shot drilling through the and holdups members of the mohead Ferraro a bodyguard of torcycle squad searched the city Lombardo's was wounded in the for three stolen automobiles reportback Paralysis set in causing his ed missing within a period of ten death minutes from the heart of the Almost at the same time that city and police were kept busy inFerraro died police came upon the vestigating suspicious prowlers rebody of Cobb Eskelson 35 who ported to headquarters by frighthad been shot as he walked along ened men and women Larrabee street near the north side In the home robberies the loot Sicilian colony comprised a valuable wrist watch end lesser Jewelry BASEBALL n POLA NEGRI IS OUT OF DANGER GIRLS RETURNED PARIS Sept 10 — (AP)— Pola Polish motion picture actress who was thrown from her horse ia considered to be out of immediate danger unless complications develop She will not be disfigured and will bear no scar from the accident said Prince M'Divani her husband He added her left arm and right knee were painfully bruised when she was thrown from Uolse de her mount in the Boulogne on Friday when a motorcyclist with cutout wide open came dangerously close to the horce Ncisrri AFTER LONG HIKE EXETER N II Sept 10— (AP) — Two 3'outhful girl students from the Northficld seminary of East Northfitld Mass who police of three states had sought since they disappeared last Wednesday were on their wav back to the institution today after a motorcycle policeman had terminated their hike near here They told officers at the local police station that the walk was a "dare" undertaken in the hope of reaching Lebanon Me where Miss Shaplcigh'a father was staying 119-mi- AMERICAN 1 Louis Cleveland Batterie St R II E itl 11 1 Ion Shautje x 13 "1 3 Ilieholder and Man-afi- ct Myatt NATIONAL-First game:! ' " ah'ir" jfft l" n 11 6 11 E V 2 11 13 Philadelphia Doak McWeeney Sweetland McGraw and jLerain Batterlels: Koupal and Detberry Second game J mi R II E Brooklyn 'S i Batteries: Clark and Ring Mill er an dl Davis 1 1 T First 0 8 Gooch " gapme li li7 4 New York Boston 1 Batteries Fitrsimrnbns and gan R Smith and Taylor Second game: le New 'York Boston t 7 13 2 i J'' to 0 1 7 Ho- - R II E 11 16 I 0 3 1 Batteries: Genewich and Ilogan Edwards O'F'arrell ' De?aney Clarkson pbksa'and Spohrer ' c ' I I I ' it " - |