Show Year— No Fifty-nint- h OGDEN CITY pTAHj WEDNESDAY EVENING NOVEMBER 21 1928 126 4k Frank Francis WIMWWWWUWMIMiulllHlwri Influenza In its sweep through the country is in a comparatively mild form and "alarming therefore is not With any form of cold or flu there is danger of the lunga becoming involved and so the doctors send the afflicted to bed and keep them there until they are well along toward full recovery i' Some day flu will be controlled as has typhoid diphtheria small- - cjiun level nim uiucr uia- caiies which have claimed their jiniiiviia vi victims The ' iwhole country must bo gambling on the New York stock On Tuesday 6811000 exchange shares changed hands which is the record Business of that institution Order from every city In the United States ' poured into Wall street in such great volume that the brokerage houses were swainped and the ticker service was at one time nearly two hours behind in reporting the transactions It is the most astounding exhi the bition of frenzied finance country has ever witnessed - : j Slaght declares thajt after a month's regular feeding on corn meal and water sonwi oysters which he packed in j seaweed would Jump over on their backs and open their mouthsjlike hungry birds when meal tmc came Jarring of the? basement stair door he says caused the oysters to open their Jaws and become attentive i t- - Slash t admits his training process had one handicap— the oysters lived only five or six weeks HOOVER STOPS rr resiaeni-c-iec-r TM 1 Iff nopes rr1 Hook Giant Swprdfish i trie country an alarming condition resembling a panic If it were in the old days the wise ones would be looking for a collapse but under the federal reserve bank system a serious financial disaster is not to be expected The reclamation commission has been urged to recommend appropriations large enough to assure the beginning of work on the Magpie ana JLcer Ureek projects That would be a moat pleasing solution ol eur reclamation prob lems - Thought also must be given to the units which- have been pro- posed fori Cache valley i j t If all three reservoirs were to started' there would be rejoicing v- -' Friends of Loring Nichols gave him a warm reception on Tuesday evening when hundreds of them gathered jto hear him and hia or - 1 chestra Leaving Ogden less than eight years ago as a boy of 15 he has returned with the distinction of being tne nignest paid cornet player in the world He is recognized as the king of jazz and because of his outstanding ability as a musician has been called on tjo make-- tour of Europe I — CAUSES RUMPUS - plainly labored under high nervous tension lesterday the rame story snt was reiatea bv vvaipttp Bowen 14 eldest of three daugh- iers or tne dead woman and by Es- ATTACK WITH CLCR The narrative told of the attacit alleged to have been made with a ciuo by Tharp and hia sons To ward 14 and Leo 12 upon a group oi scnool children including the Bowen and Rose girls and of how Tharp returning in a truck to his own home after the attack on the children had been stopped by Mrs Bowen in front of her residence Then Tham left his truck and lie- can shootlna: Without warni wuness reiatea iirst at Bowen and then at his wife who fell dead with tnree bullets lit her body Defense counsel developed in that Tharp had been stopped in front of the Bowen residence by a group of seven per sons — uowen and his wife their daughter and three younger children of the Harry Rose family Mrs Bowen the v witness - said stepped through the gate to the ectge or tne road as Tharp came on in his truck: raislnar her hand she called "You stop Jfo othe'r persons were in the road Bowen t stifled He said JTharp- - uttred no 'word but Immediately began from befiring as he came around 1 hind his truck STORY OF QUARREIj Relations between' the ' Tham Bowen and Rose families were amicable Mrs Harry Rose testified until about a year aeo when Mrs Rose shot Tharp's dog after it Killed her chickens Sh Rtfl a few weeks later Tharp with his automobile struck and killed a calf she was leading across the road Mrs Bowen and her daughter Waletta were witnesses asralmrt Tharp in trial of a suit for dam ages ior killing the cair Tharp was required to pay $120 damages The fatal shootintr of Mrs Tiowen took place within a' month after ' ward on cross-examinati- I i a lie says 'he gained his determina- College Also Excited Over TO SPEED TICKER Allegeed Bible Burning BY DROPPING SALES tion to succeed by hard knocks Charges j Much of his talent in what musicians call "hot stuff" was inBIRMINGHAM Ala Nov 21— spired by hearing the negro orchesu VV V HIC tras land bands on the Mississippi largest vvjvvi schools of iho Baptist : river south was in an unroaritodav as a by the For six jmohths he played in an special committee'appoiited reviewed charges orchestra on a boat operating be- board of trustees preferred by 21 students of irri- tween Memphis and New Orleans proper conduct on the (ampus the charges was iin alle Among The young cornetist that a member ofj thefaculg with his His tri- gation has asserted that ''ifS all' Bibles umph was complete when his for- ty in me worm were piled up and mer associates overwhelmed him burned the world wouldbe better with attention off within 100' vfiars" fThn John C Religious fervor at times oper- plainants alleged thatbr failed to president had ates in a strange way Recently Dawson seven families have left their homes give a sympathetic7 heajring when other c£mplalnt3 vero in Eugene! Ore and are now on this and to him their way to Mount Ararat where made other cKarces beinz Drobed they expect to witness the second areThree that students during a recent coming of the Messiah etageil a mock fraternity ruh on the cam Is compulsorywedding to An ark appear and enter- pus which was witnessed by a ing it thei faithful are to e car- mixed group of students: that ried to heaven gambling and drinkinal had oc- A traveling preacher persuaded curreiyon the campus aiid that frain the Oregon people to give up their ternities had permitted jdanclng their houses contrary to" school homes and make the pilgrimage regulations The complaining students testi- Before the Civil war a revival ied before the committee after be York state and many people gavtM ing assured of immunity their property to friends in anti pation of the near approach ofthe — was-delighte- M JL d home-comin- - i" I II I day of accounting iteiisousi nauucinauons arc a form of nefvous upset groyning out of mental strain produced by an extreme anp emotionalappeal The American people must talk or suffer a severe repression They havie more telephonic than the people of all other nations com'-municati- on j There arej in ore telephones in one of the skyscrapers in New York than in all of Greece New York City has five million telephone calls on an average business day j Thirty thousand telephone operators at "central" and at private switchboards are required to make the connections What would happen to the people of this country if they suddenly were to be cut off from telephone serviced MARKET BREAKS q In a w VT —— J effort tb keep pace with the "Hoover market" New Y'ork stock exchange bo- lnning tomorrow will drop from the ticker all) sales volume except at the opening This action was decided upon when 'yesterday's tape at the c1om of the market was two hours and 44 minutes behind By carrying only the prices on sales it is be lieved the ticker can be speeded upsfrom 25 to 60 per cent Total sales of individual stocks will be given to press associations and newspapers two or three times Total sales daily yesterday reached 6811900 shares in con trast to the previous high of 714000 made last Friday record-breakin- g tlye i NEW YORK Nov 21— (AP) — Wide open breaks in simeof the high priced stocks brought the "bull" movement on the! New York stock exchange to a dramatic halt lust before the close of today's mar ket' With the ticker mors than an hour late Radio broke from an early high of $379 to $34: and Montgomery Ward from $41 S to -- world's altitude record todav lost when his oxygen in haler failed at 30000 feet and fell nearly five miles before regaining his senses Regaining consciousness approx imately 4000 feet above the ground e righted his plane and landed " ' safoly r had been in the air LeMoigne ones hour and ten minutes when his oxygen failed conscioilsnefis GETS MEjNINGITIS FROM HER PATIENTS iovis oui SHKUWOOD N Y — Afti: He Says Pity Will Be Needed If Agricultural lief Fails i : lt't m FOR EXCHANGE SEAT ' ' i Nov NEW YORK Nov 21 — fA- MAIJ — MSs Emily llowhand For the first time in the hlstorv f tor of who is 1 0 If years old the New York stock There would be an oppressive si- hJivesletters exchange a that vomrn doj not begin membership sold for more than a lence in many a home where regu- io uve till a second half: million dollars j She tays Today's larly the gossip of the day keeps compulsory education should be ob orousnt 5525000 an Increaseseat of the line engaged for many minutes ligatory after that age ouvuu over me last sale j £1 — doc- Pi ' j j Re- - Over Streets All Night KILLER IS DESCRIBED 200 American I Men i rI ' ' i I I A i rumps tce Decree Asked f lteno' a tall gray haired f"farm- - gripped by the dread inspired today er" turned! "business man' from by its "hatchet man" Pes MoJnes head of a Farmers' ine new slayer who like "the Mutual Insurance company! and sniper appears to pick his victims power in the livestock industries of at random has slain three beaten umcagos and Bt Paul was the prin a fourth so severely he will not cipal exponent of satisfaction in a live and seriously injured a fifth group apparently composed of men All the attacks have taken place none too happy with their lot "Ihe farmer needs a Ilot of Nov 21 — (AP)— things" Heno declared"? "He CIIICACO folks needs higher prices for his crops would say that 'and hisi livestock he needs better a ace In a trumping partner's educational facilities for his chil bridge same is justification Cvcn dren and he needs more of the for manslaughter The supecomfortu that his city neighbors rior court is now asked to detake as al matter of course termine If it is cause for di"But for all that he is not going MS vorce hungry-J-h$'- s right at the source Mrsj Virginia Chapman Schmidt! who at 19 secretly of supply'! ' was tmarried to the son of a THJiY WON'T STARVE: Reno was in the midst of a group wealthy Chicago architect lias filed the suit declaring that of his fellow delegates when Ihe told simply because she laid down a The United Press of his disbelief trump on hpr husband partner's in even? the remote chancei of the farmer starving All of thenr adace he beat her mitted readily enough the farmers access t food but they were quick to qualify his statement "l'ood isn't all not by a long OF shot" said C C Talbott veritable giant ofj a man who runs a 1000-acrwheat farm at Jamestown S TO BE D and finds time besides to head the North Dakota Farmers'! union "We are not goinjr to starve but the way we are going we ire not BY DELL going to jnlss It far Talbott! emphasized the nfced for the farmer to solve hia owi problems anil o do hia own marketing Edward Bok Gives Singing and financing through associations without the aid of Chimes Adopted t government agencies Countr1 "We don't want paternalism" he We think we are i smart said MOUNTAIN LAKK Nov enough to do our own thinking and Fla 21 — A1)-- A carillon — medieval — well— rthat is what we are trying Europe's warning: of flood and war to do — m sound a note of peace on "Our greatest problem is that of ? when the dream of getting the farmers to thinking Bok becomes reality and and acting together" his memorial singing tower HKKS AND FIDDLI5 of bells goes on ihe air for the first time "True('1 interrupted T J ILamn- Anton! ISrees aged white haired internationally drom known earilloner will broadcast from Lqngmont Colo who has resymphony from 61 bells tired to devote himself to the keepwhich the: Philadelphia philan- ing of his bees and the playing of thropist placed in a 205 foot marble his fiddle "But tell me jtist extower as'a memorial to his parents actly hoHvi you intend to gft the and the i American neonle whence farmersito think and act together? came opportunity of wealth and I've been ja farmer for 52 years and fame for the donor of the famous we never ihave agreed on anything ' : : I peace prizei yet" exactTalbott thaf that explained Kadio engineers believed todav was the trouble and the treason that they had surmounted the ly oi the farmers' for greatest obstacle in broadcasting a unionorganization ' I cannon symphony have They H d Mills bright-eyeJ wiry found" a microphone that is not exof Ifirmers' the president Georgia pected to pick up the terrific din t so characteristic of efforts to put (Continued on Page Tvo) carillon chimes on the air when the transmitter is placed close to the source of the music Although official dedication of the memorial will not take place un til feDruary ai Brees who is earilloner at Wercersburg Pa acadI tJ emy plans dally symphonies through December January and ' 1 February and after dedication until April 8 0 ' Each year he expects? to return between December and Roy Pjalmer of Worland May for a series of symphonies on Perishes In Cold As the bells whichy were brought to i I the United States at great cost and He Rests I 1 trouble CHEYENNE Wyo Nov 21— (AP) — Wyoming's week-enrtorm MISSIONARY WRITER which wjas especially severe! in an along the continental I divide CALLED BY DEATH area " where more than 50 motorists j M were marooned claimed one !if CHICAGQ Nov 21— (AP)—For The fricteen body of Itoy Palmer years Miss Eufcrilla Clark av 21 of Worland was found bv a 30 letters each day to ione- - searching party about three-quarteeraged ly missionaries in far off lands of a1 smile from his hunting spending her time as invalid in ' this camp According to members of method of spreading cheer She the searching party who followed died yesterday at the age of 81 his trailin the snow Palmer apUntil paralyzed 13 years aero Miss parently lad become exhausted in Clark was lassociaterl with th his search for his camn and had Methodist Deaconess home frozen to) death while resting I s -- PEACE NOTE e SOUNDED TOWER ! Pe-cemb- Kd-ward- er "V ex-farm- j er the-initia- l i HUNTER FROZEN WYOMING j d- i - : Disaster Hits Banclit iWlio Forgets Pistol '111 " ' fHICACO Nov 21 — (AP) — The decadent &ge of banditry seems to have set in jj tiiere was First the bandit who got peeved at his victim threw away his gun and started a fight Then there was the bandit who stuttered taking so long to give the command to 'era up" that police were on the scene before the victim could respond Again jus last week there was the holdup man who picked a deaf ' ! i -- Z "Time When Tillers of Soil Are Suffering Most rs VILLA COUBLAY France Nov 21 —(UP) — The French pilot Le Moigne attempting to break the CillCAGO Nov 21 — i API — A young woman physician stricken with sninkl mpnlncitiH innlrnrtrt hos- from patients in the county am yjimi was mneu near cieain touay Doctors said that Ytr Hlfn Catherine iHayden might possibly recover Serum injections have been-maj ?400 at thi hns tt hot hrain Radio came back toj $352 but as well as th the spina) column Curtlss Aero and WstlnKhouse Hayden ' 26 years old has Ir several Klectrk showed losses of $6 pach won porfessional honors General Motors $3 an4 Tackard during heij short practice American Can and NewjYork CenS4 tral about each Totil rales ex- $525000 NEW PRICE ceeded 6000000 shares! l-- Groiip Is Imposed Upon and Looted Usually at " FALLS FIVE MILES AND LANDS SAFELY t IN WALL STREET CITY UNCAUGIIT Too Fast And - j kj gentleman as his victim and had to shout so loud to make his demands known that police came running ( And today there was Daniel Falco the holdup man who forgot Jiis pistol Falco walked up to Milton Fields al Madison and Curtis streets and said f'Hands up" As he jspoke he reached to hi3 hip podiet: for his gun It w&s ' i i not there j In a quandarj he began to search hislbther pockets llii vie- tim observed the actions with growing interest t ' "You tjave no gun?" he inquired v f "No" said Falco "It's gone" ali i Field3 wanted to know He began burying his UaTa1 1 fists inFaco's face Lieutenant Sullivan was Uhuttinff the cell 'door jpolice behind I alico a few minutes later Falco i was mystified "It certainly beats all' he said "where I put that gun" I 'I - !!- j ' 1 1 thla stl since eariy Sunday morning Omaha's "sniper" whose silencer-equirifle! slew two and wcundedVone before he was captur ed a few years ago kept the city m a state of uneasiness during the days he remained at large That same sense of terror prevailed to day intensified because of the brutalities of the crimes and the regularity of the hatchet man's deadly visitations Mrs Harold Stribling the only victim of the madman's handax who was not killed or critically wounded had provided police with a description of the man they hold responsible for all five attacks "He is of dark complexion about 21 years old five feet seven inches tail and weighs about 140 pounds" she said "He was well dressed His trousers were neatly pressed and he wore a belted overcoat a dark gray cap and a bow pped DEPRESSIONS Is Arrested WICHITA Kan IS OUTLINED TO GOVERNORS Xot 21— Charged with reckless driving of a horse Frank Bier 42 was in jail here today pondering the possible ' wages of speed Police said Bier was thrown from his wagon in a wild ride over the streets of Wichita last ni&ht After the alleged reckless driver was bounced from his sent to the pavement the horse galloped toward a motor car driven by l)r B F Bixby In the crash that followed Dr Bixby Mrs E- - W Montgomery of Wichita and her infant daughter were Injured Bier also was charged with being Intoxicated 5 j' MOCK WEDDING SLAYER ROAMS Legion By FREDERICK C OAXJIMAN Volunteer! To Hunt j United Press Staff Correspondent For Murderer" Colo Nov 21 — (UP) — Fanners may! need !relief DENVER twin FALLS Idaho Nov 2 they get it or not they won't go hungry as OMAHA Neb Nov 21 — (AP) — KAP) — Charles 33 Bowen broke as remain farmers it was indicated at the National — Not since the rifle of Frank Carthey down and wept openly on the wit- long ness stand in district court hete Farmers ' Union convention here today! n 7 ter "the sniper" was a death today as he told of the slaying of "And Milo said Reno weapon that sent fear racing down that" Farof the Iowi president his wife by Ward Otis Tharp on a Union mers' city's spine has Omaha been to be "is something grateful for anyway' irjai ior rirst degree rnurdef ther Rose 12 neighbor and chum o oi me iioweni girl thoughts to his favorite sport The Maryland was halted between Cape ban Lucas and Cape jCorrientes well off the Mexican coafet for deep sea fishing The president-elec- t had in mind the cent experience off bureau of fisheries men in these Waters who hooked a gigantic marliii or sword-fis- h "playing' it for fourteen hours before landinar it r Mr Hoover did not hfpe to snag a fish of such proportions as he does not want to interrupt the southward voyage more Ithan a few Throft nf tVla TW f via n A'n hour small boats were ordered out for the excursion oh© contain- fishing nr t rr ana nis inenas a ju uf xTwoYvr second carrying the newsnaner mpn and a third laden with cameramen who unlimbered their machines for the first time on the voyage The Maryland wilT proceed south-war- d again tonight making the first stop of the goodwill tour at On Amapala Honduras Su'ndav that same day the Hoover party will go to la union Salvador for an afternoon reception leaving Sunday night for Corlnto Nicaragua where a third stop will be made a can at runta Arenas Monday Costa Rica Tuesday will complete the present tour or central LAmerlca OMAHA WHILE SMOOT MAKES SUGAR APPEAL TO PRESIDENT I U S Producers Ask For Limitation of Product From Philippines WASHINGTON Nov — United States sugar ' 21— (UP) producers cannot realize a profit ion their product because of competition from duty free Philippine sugar' Senator Iteed- Smoot of Utah told - President Coolidge today Smoot urged a provision in the regular tariff bill or in another measure to rpstrict Philippine importations to from 300000 tonsjto &00000 EDITION WAY: TO STOP Drives Steed His Eighty Police In Pairs Drive Retiring of Dairyman QUARREL DESCRIBED Accused Shot Worn aji Without Warning Wit nesses Charge i Off Mexido What Ihe end will be it Is impos sible to forecast U S S MARYLAND IpN ROUTE TO AMAPALA Nov 2L — (AP) — There are elements of danger in Herbert Hoover today Iturned his A sudden reaction could bring to Charles E Bowen On Stand In Twin Falls Trial i GOES FISHING GRIPS 'L M! Jii! President of Farmers' Union Declares: St I 1 of this city Tharp snoc jvirs uowen to death last Sep tember 24 Bowen third witness to tell the tragic story that is becoming familiar ttO the courtroom fltlrlienp MARYLAND AMD TERROR One Delegate Avers So Stt)re Others Not —— — a dairyman l a prolonged boom WASHDEREQ ' ' f HOW HIS WIFE ed fleas have rivals — the train-en- ! oysters of Prof W 15 A Slaght head of the psychology department of Cornell college here TELLS AS HE VERNON Iowa Nor (AP) — Th0 educat- MOUNT mers Womt Starve HUSBAND SOBS Oysters Learn To Leap A rid Open Mouths t ! '! Construction Reserve of ahreeiBillion Dollars Ad vocated iBy Brewster HOOVER'S £jWN PLAN Executives I' Told Method To Be Invoked In Policv I oH New Chiftf NEW !RIEAN& Nov- 2lJ— (AP) — Governlpr Ialph O Brewster of Majlne actlnte uDon the quest of Herbert Hoover outlined today before tie comference of governors a plan for the creation of a nation-wid- e construction reserve of $300000Q000 to pe released in times of ©i'erifroduction and unemI ployment! Governor Brewster recommended that publjp authorities store up u reserve Of fbonstruction projects equal to two gears' normal expenditure on improvements and release this reserve at times of unemployment Such a fund he said Ivould be joneji of th best forms f insurance 'iagfinst national panics AT HOOVERS RKQUIiST j "These iielvs of the way In vhich-th- ej sttes anjd otheri public authorities mliy cooperate with the federal gelnment in controlling in some mlaifure construction work for the tbmjinon gioOd" said the governor fate presented to conference? of governors at the thj request of Herbert Hdpver as an' authorized Position of apportion of his program "tvr' stabilizing th torosnfrit-- nf f Tie rTwi j t "In rffti4Ung the presentation of this project to thb conference of governors: Mr Hoover mrKsftri the importarfce of establishing co federal state operation Dctween and municipal governments in accordance vih the proposals outlined at the jime of the unemployment confjbrjnce in 1922' "With "ah expenditure of seven bllicinlIjannual upoij construction 14 i a position td stabilise America prosperity flola most remarkable e v i tons annually Smoot said three-fourth- s of the sugar produced in the islands was backed by foreign capital and suggested there was no reason to grant it tariff Immunities! not! accorded foreign capital from other countries tie"' "If the Filipinos don't want this Harold Stribling who was beat k'nd of restriction I will be willing en by the hatchet man early yes to let them have their independterday morning lies dying at a ence" Smoot said hospital with foua distinct skull tent" ihe Ridded 'Public authorfractures Hospital physicians said ity spendsfnisore than a billion and his death was a matter of hours a half With this vie are here KILLED : von noun Mrs pleads Strfbllng was awakened early yesterday to e a man stand ing beside the bed The lights were oji and her husband's head was bleeding The slayer hit-hiagain and then struck at her She moved and received a glancing blow Then she pleaded with the man for an hour begging him to Jeave and offered him anything if he would He consented but ordered her to leave with him The Strib-llrg- 's baby sleeping in a crib nearby was not harmed Mrs Stribling Walked with the abductor three miles before he said she could go He walked in one direction and she in another until she met a patrolman She told her story and she and her husband were taken to a hospital where she underwent an operation last night which probably will save the sight of her eye which was in- jured by the hatchet's blow : s BOYS prl-mari- - IN EVANSTON the great commercial:: interests of the country Shave the most vital stake This "may apply not only to Sled Traveling At High construction dui it in© renewal and extension of capjltai facilities of Speed Crashes Into It is the considered every sort recommendation of the one who Motor Car has received the overwhelming mandate of the American people to EVANSTON Nov 2l'- Wyo: — (Speclal) Two boys were fatally Injured Tuesday eve- the next tor years that a conrfeslrye my prudehtly: be ning In a coasting accident on Elev- struction accumulated! in tirtie of plenty enth street They are: the dean year that is to Victor Osborn son of Mrs Beu-la- h against ' I 1 come" Osborn and Walter Crompton DldMT SPLKS Jr son of Mr and Mrs Walter NEW ORIGANS Nov (LfP) Crompton all ot this city Governor Creprge H Dern of Utah The youths were coming driwn conference! oC Eleventh street on their sled when speaking beorQ thej said governors bifildlng of with1 tday they collided with great force n a motor car driven by George Rob- Boulder dam would menace walipr supplies of such inson Evanston Robinson saw the states as Utth Colorado Wyoming theboysis coming down the Mil and New Mexico giving the bulkj of which very steep and covered with ice He pulled over to the the river's flow to the Calif ornia right as far as he could but the — LjL youths one lying on top of the other pn the sled prashed head-o- n BABY bkcAPITATED osborn was thrown over the machine He sustained a fractured AND IiEFT IN GULCH skull and lived two hours Young Crompton was crashed beneath the Texa Novi 21— HOUSTpIf machine and suffered a broken (AP) — The aismemhered body of a neck He died Jn about 30 minutes girl who had After an inquiry by! officers been shot nd bab stabbed to death Robinson was held blameless was found ia a lone outskirts of Ithe city today Police Immediately! began an extensive search fox the slayer : - 21-- " — j thejlr-rlgatlo- PURCHASED This attack followed the killing o! Mrs "Waldo Resso and 'her sister Creta Brown early Monday morning In their home and the slaying of Joseph Blackman: 75 a drayman early Sunday Eighty policemen in pairs armed with shotguns drove over OmaA half a hundred ha last night men volunteered last night to as sist in the hunt for thei slayer t Two dozen shotguns have been for the purchased police depart ment Commissioner Dunn said and 50 cots and mattresses were pro ! vided to give officers and detec tives a chance to rest A score of deputy sheriffs slept in the court house last night to be ready for an emergency A squad of 200 American Legion men narcotic agents federal and 21 — (AP)— CHICAGO Nov prohibition agents have volunteered their services Rewards of $1000 Railroad managers and commithave been offered for the slayer's tees of the Brotherhood of Railroad arrest or information leading to his Trainmen and Order of Railroad Conductors were in Joint confercapture ence here today discussing the rePresident Coolldge port made-to- DAWES TO RETURN by the emergency fact finding comwhich investigated the TO BANKING JOB mission wage and labor dispute between the railroads and their employes Nov CHICAGO 21— (AP)—- - The union representatives held Vice President Charles G Dawes meetings Monday but ' has announced that he will return A F Whitney president of the jo the banking business after Sen- traipmen would not comment on ator Curtis steps into office March what if any action was taken 4 Lnless a settlement is reached "I have never made an announce a strike is In prospect the union ment that gave me greater pleas-life- " men having voted almost unani the vice president said at a mously for a walkout unless their banquet of employes of the Central demands are met Trust company last night Mr Dawes' position as chairman NEW TAX FOR DOGS LONDON of the board of directors of the Nov 21— (AP) — Central Trust company has been Americans will have trouble'if they vacant since he resigned to become bring their dogs on tours to Eng Vice president in J924 Previously land next summer After January 1 no he was president of the bank dog or cat will be permitted to land without special detention Inspection and license' SHOTGUN'S ly concfTPed''Priv'atei ljueinessi'iwill soon follow such practical demonstration as the govb jpment may make since i SILENCE MARKS WAGE CONFAB and-Tuesda- y -- AIRMAN DROWNS CARRYING PICTURES TOKYO Nov 21— fUP— The Japanese pilot Masac Iwata was drowned today when an airplane was he flying for Nimpo Demp© fell into the sea Iwata was carrying the pictures the arrival of the Emperor Hiro-hit- o and his party at the Ise Shrines to Koyoto for the &f j A second plane carrying similar pictures fofr the newspaper was missing and it was feared it hal crashe din the mountains The emperor and empress were tr Kvotn expected to rpturn Thursday after the com Dletlon of the Ise ceremonies Found A Chance to recover your lost f article If you phone 252 immediately Put this paper: on the job to find your valuables Certainly with Its 12000 circulation a night it will be the best way to reach the person who has found what you have lost !' - I nlne-month-- ld The discovery was made by BiII Evans who was exe:rcisinghis pet dog in a lonely sectlbn of Houston The body! had befen decapitated and the arms and Jegs had: been severed from the torso Justice pf Lhe Peaje Campbell R Overstreeteallcd to hold the charajpterized the crime as the most fiendish he ever had inh is years of official service as!croner j Five stab founds were found in the torso an several! birdshot were taken from he body leading officers to advance th£ - theory the baby had t'ej-- shot and stabbed tp death-anddismembered 1 Uthen — y nORSKlII ELPS invalid 1 In-riu- eet ed : MONTCLAIR N jj Nov 21— (AP) — For health and longevity ride a horset E Onar Carrington at 50 seemed to be ai incurable invalid "lies was advised to take to the ODen lie boucht n rnnrh nrl spent every possible moment for years in tji saddle He has just died at 9Z 8 |