Show WEATHER A THOUGHT JHrcA UTAH— Fair Sun- Q — i day and Monday little change in temperature ID AIIO — Fair The bows of the mighty men are broken and they that etumbled ara girded - with strength— I Samuel day temperature somewhat above normal policy to rule overturneth ISundaynd Dixiy-iour- 2:4 Mon- Strength R 7 IN EFFORT TO — -- GET TRACE OF and VIEWS JUNE! ROBLES By FRANK FEANCIS named Professor George D Clyde state the for conservator as water Utah after a visit to this part ofof$1000 -loss a probable estimates drouth the 000 in Weber county by To prevent that los' is a task calling r the best eiiorts oi evcijr -- ' one 1 FINANCIAL AIO Bars Russia TO Attorney General Homer S Cummings who ruled Saturday that soviet Russia is in default on its debts and thus act from receiving financial aid in the United States JOHNSON BILL READY MILLIONS BORROWED WESTERNERS CHEERED Kidnapers However Offer No Suggestion About Girl s Recovery Certain Other Nations In cluding England Are Declared O K Single Clue RANSOM jS vf i "i ': 4 s " - - j i i suo-stant- ial I j cending Auguste Piccard who was to enter: the stratosphere first the is possible! that voyages in it says the upper air mayibe made by using light for energy ji Prof BOXlWElfflN TMIJE VICTIM La Mar Jenjsen Brigham Dead After hall hrom Automobile Le Mar Jensei cnffoToH fatnil 36 of Brigham In1iir1? Saturday That seems fantastic but the pro- night when he fell from the baggage fessor claims it isjwithin the range compartment of a coupe on Marwyn drive and riactufed nis skuu of possibility died a short timp later in the Dee all for to witnout regaming con speak hospital Japan attempts' resents sciousness its paAsia Asia and all Jensen with Mark Burrows of j? ternalism Huntsville was riding in the bagThe Chinese are! filled! with wrath gage compartment of a small coupe and L W Johnover Japan's arrogance and the peo- His hat blew off: son 349 Parrv stteet driver of the are They of India protesting ple io not want to be part of a Jap car stopped whilie Jensen retrieved it When Johnson started the car anese political hegemony again Jensen wis thrown to the navement on his bead They fear the aggressions of the front sat with Johnson In for more than any exploitajapanthreatened were Mark Burrows and Miss Mrs or Americans by tion Burrows b?th of Huntsville Ina Europeans : while Mark Burrows of Huntsville more evident every day was riding in th6 bagage compartIt becomes with Jensens that Japan has resolved on assert- ment is the Ion of Mrs James Jensen ing a control over all Asia to the Jensenli or Brizham City exclusion of the white race Sergeant W Kl Milligan who in accident booked vestigated The pottery workers in Ogden Johnson on the a technical charge for 40 to a are have who now number j said that circumHe investigation downtown exhibit of their work stances indicated the accident was 0 unavoidable --44 They have fourid- excellent clays in Ogden and on an island in the Great Salt lake i and-aroun- d They also have! J built a kiln and hope to turn outjlia superior product as they gain experience They are encouraged to aim high as there is no place in the United States where- pottery making has reached its highest stage of devel- hj opment - " It would be a real achievement to have Ogden known for the su-- J Why perio: quality of its pottery not? j Early Mormns Quake Is Felt In Ogden Several personsi from widely scattered sections 4f Weber county called the Standard-Examinearly this morning and reported they experienced a sharpy earthquake shock o'clock this at about i morning Reports came from Riverdale and from practically ill sections of Ogden city : er one-twel- ve -- — HOTTEST DAY LAKE SALT CITY May 5—(AP) 'of ambitious the Let us get back —A storm threatened this city early workers in clay Ij today but the 4louds cleared before noon and a temperature of 85 Ed7in Markham has written a —the hottest Of the year — sent poem of protest against - the Nazi pedestrians scurrying to the shade ' ersecution of the Jews The weather bureau saw no immediate eti Two) Fast prospects for wet weather (Ccniist:? j j - I today confident of legislation at this session to increase the use of silver money but without a definite vv 1 ! la HOUSE PASSES TEN BILLS TO COMBAT CRIME Reward Act Set Up Fund for Payments to Patman WASHINGTON May 5— (AP)— bills including one Ten anti-crito permit the federal government to Dut a stiff nrice on the heads oi criminals branded as national public enemies were whipped through the house today and speeded on their way to the statute books The name of John Dilhnger middle western desperado rang time through the legislative chamber and again during debate on the measures which are parts of Attorney General Cummings' program for investing law authon ties with greater power jo deal with kidnapers gangsters and their ilk me " 12-po- int DEATH PENALTY In marked contrast with the pro tracted consideration and long de lays that preceded : enactment of what became known as the Lind ANTHONY W IVINS - SALT LAKE CITY May 5— (AP)— The Utah State Agricultural college will confer an honorary degree of LLD on A W Ivins a member of the first presidency of Saints church at the school's commencement exercises June 2 and 3 it was an nounced here today C G Adney of Corinne vice chairman of the USAC board of trustees in making the announcement said the degree will be conferred on Mr Ivins "because of outstanding service to the public generally and to the college and agriculture specifically" Mr Ivins has been chairman of the college's board of trustees since 1918 the Latter-da- y ' - Liquor Board Called To Assemble May 21 BOISE May 5— (AP)— A call for lem advisory commission to be held in Boise May 21 was issued here today ni a statement by William S Cady of Pocatello chairman The seven members of the com of mission including representatives both dry and wet groups as-- well ps business and professional classes will continue in session "as many days during the week as business war rant" Chairman Cady's statement said The first day will be devoted to reports of the committee members each of whom has made a special study of one particular question a meeting of the Idaho liquor proo - President Motionless At William H Woodin Rites - (D-M- o) Back in the capital this afternoon they predicted that a bill would be enacted setting as an objective the backine of 30 per cent of the na tion's money ty silver They understood the chief execu tive and his financial assistants to a were devoting the week-en- d a with silver of the question study view to working out an agreement Honorary Degree Recog- - next week HE STUDIES BILLS nizes Able Services to After dropping the conferees at Public continued Baltimore the bergh kidnaping law the willing house in only a few moments gave its "ok" to an amendatory bill al ready passed by the senate which would authorize the death penalty for kidnapers who take their victims across state lines The Patman reward bill which would authorize an appropriation of $25000 to be used for rewards for the capture v of designated public enemies "dead or alive ' and as much more for rewards for information leading to arrest and conviction of criminals stipulates the attorney general must determine whether a Sorrow on Bowed a Look person has previously been convicted of a felony before he may be designated a public enemy and subject of Gazzes the reward RESTRICTION URGED Wljich Covers Representative Cochran sought to remove the1 limitation but of the MEW YORK May 5 — (AP)— President Roosevelt sat al Chairman Summers "meeting judiciary committee contended that IN most motionless today in the "in view of the fact that this is an Finns" of the Presbyterians at Fifth' avenue and Fifty-fift- h authorization for the attorney genwas read for his old friend and eral to pick a man who hasn't been street as the funeral service ' tried and offer a reward for shoot- adviser William H Woodin the his in some hands down restriction ought president did not With his clasped lap ing him to be made" lift his eyes once from tne long DianKet oi yeuow jonquus Cochran insisted many rof- the which shrouded the coffin of his former secretary of the worst criminals sought had escaped --— treasury previous convictions but Sumners I He sat with his shoulders bowed m m mmm m m and other committee members sided a look of deep sorrow upon his face with the chairan's position that "I service the throughout is think there such a thing as stayre was s creed After the apostle ing on our feet" Lord's the in cited he joined —44 prayer Mrs: Roosevelt put her hand on Conceals his sleeve as the Rev Dr Robert pastor of 'the Movements of Goal ' Operators and Their W Anthony acting church began the closing lines: Employes Agree on COLON' C Z May 5— (UP) — "The Lord lift up His counten State Scale Wartime secrecy concealed the ance upon you and give you peace movements of the United States ' SALT LAKE CITY May 5— (AP) both now and forever more" fleet as Admiral David P Sellers of labor and mine The president stood as Dr An commander-in-chi- ef ordered his —Representatives r an agreement thony said "amen" and with Mrs reached operators fighting force of 112 ships to sail here coal miners in Roosevelt his secretaries and sides whereby today from Colon today for battle maneuhours a day a delegation of cabinet officers seven iwork will Utah vers in the Caribbean sea week Garner- - Speaker Vice President a five and days Admiral Sellers forbade any news Coal the of Otto Herres president Rainey and other high officials he dispatches from the warship radios who an- moved into the vestry room there association nine-day during the period set for Operators Mrs Woodin and her fam war games in tropical waters off nounced the agreement said the to await ' by adopted and wage pact fly working the Atlantic seaboard last NovemAt Mrs Woodin's request the His order was part of a secrecy miners and operators 31 to March extended be would ber followed the service a plan complicating search problem 1935 subject to modifications to There were Presbyterian t ritual of divided forces the Blue and the 35 hour a week provision prayers the recitation of psalms meet the fleets Gray during the maneuvers The new agreement is in nne witn readings from the books of John the national miners' wage code un- Romans First Corinthians and The basic wage of $544 for Seen If Toe out- from Peter derground workers and $443 forsame There was no singing but before side laborers will remain the the arrival and after the departure Nails but the hourly rate was increased of the president the organist Harry due to the shortening of working Gilbert played Mr Woodin's favorDALLAS May 5 — (AP) — Danger hours "Now the Day Is Over' its hymns— lurks in lacquered toe nails Dr Lee "Lead Kindly Light" "Oh Love Austin warned today before the That WiU Not Let Me Go" A3IERICANS ARRESTED Southern association of chiropodists At Mrs Woodin's request he did HAVANA May 5— (UP)— An Am- not "The grooves alongside the nails play any cf the former secre news-reel are literally inhabited by millions of erican press correspondent a own music cameraman and two photog- tary's bacteria which are sealed in with the The only eulogy was a sentence pretty colored lacquer causing seri- raphers one an American were ar- added the when by Dr Anthony to a prayer ous infections" Dr Austin said rested by police today "We thank Thee for his loyalty "If milady must show her nails photographers attempted to take tinted through her pictures of the statue of Jose Marti and devotion to this nation and delicately must be exercised to famous Cuban revolutionary patriot praise Thee for his faith courage care sandals clean the nail grooves with anti- the eyes of which had been band- and tireless sacrificial service to his country in an hour of great need septics before applying the enamel" aged by students of Steadily at Blanket of Casket With Shoulders His Face He Jonquils 70 ' Lithuania the five nations that have made token payments on their war debts were not in default The opinion which was given at the request of Secretary Hull cited numerous precedents in internation- al law but Cummings explained he was largely: guided in his interpreta tion of thel Johnson act by author ized views of the intent of congress and by President Roosevelt's state ments concerning war debts The attorney general called attention' specifically to President Roosevelt's statement of November 7 1933 when in accepting a token payment from Great Britain he said: "I shall not regard the British government in default" Cummings gave no opinion con cerning Greece whose debt payments have been postponed in ac cordance with terms of the funding agreement or Rumania with whom discussions are still under way concerning a payment due January 2 In his opinion the attorney gener al made no mention of other debtor nations 'btit they— with the exception of Flhlan'd which has met in full all payments due— were by in ference considered in default - Soviet Russia was held to be in default by the attorney general be cause it has failed to recognize ob ligations Incurred by the preceding Czarist and Kerensky governments in Russia Under the Czars bonds totalling $86000000 were sold in this country and the Kerensky re gime during its short life in 1917 borrowed $187000000 from the unit ed States treasury Negotiations are now in progress in Moscow for a debt funding agreement covering those debts as well as claims of American citizens for property alleged to have been confiscated by the Soviets through the nationalization of property de cree ' (D-Te- x) old-fashion- ed president to New York with copies of the pending silver bills in his hands for study He sent Eugene Black governor of the federal reserve board back to Washington to try to work out something Though nothing will be settled definitely before another conference Monday the silver leaders were unanimously of the opinion that an agreement was in sight One of hem said the chief executive's atti-ud- e was "as different as black and white" from his reception of previ ous suggestions for silver legisla tion HOPES DEFINITE While the legislators refused to discuss the details of the conference they returned to Washington with definite hope for legislation along these lines: ' A statutory declaration looking to ward the creation of a 30 to 70 ratio with gold in money backing - Nationalization of -- silver through the condemnation of existing stocks in this country except that needed for industrial uses at the market price but not to exceed 50 cents an ounce A permissive silver purchase pro gram through which the president could gradually increase the treasury's stock of monetary silver toward 0 the objective without skyrocketing the price Possible approval of the Dies plan for a bonus price on silver received in exchange for American goods but with the understanding it would be permissive in nature STUD OF PROCEDURE To substantiate their belief that an agreement was in sight the silver leaders said much of the hour conference was devoted to the ques tion of parliamentary procedure They said the president's Interest In this phase of the question lndi cated he was accepting the Idea there would be legislation It was generally believed that in case of an agreement the silver legislation would be put through as a separate bill instead of as a rider to the Glass loan bill as has been pro posed Senators attending the conference were King Thomas (D Pittman Okla) Adams Smith (D-SShipstead n) Dill and Wheeler Representative wnite a member of the house coinage com mittee attended as a spokesman for the house ' - -- 30-7- (D-Uta- h) (D-Col- (D-Ne- v) a iu innsDAYS 17-min- ute WORM Secrecy Fleet 126-year-- old old-fashio- ft Danger Are Lacquered rff - MANY STEPS TO BE TAKEN Weeks Must Elapse Before Waterworks Project Can Be Started Although city officials feel great- encouraged over prospects of ap plying up to $750000 to Ogden's waterworks system through a public works loan and grant little hope is held that work can start even under the most favorable conditions before August 1 The loan and grant has been ap proved In Washington subject to a avorable supreme court decision and egal procedure which line up about as follows: 1 The city must retain nationally recognized bond counsel to pass upon the legality of the revenue bonds 2 City Engineer Claude L Coray must prepare his final estimates and shape them up 3 He must be approved by the state engineer as competent to make the estimates under PWA rules 4 His estimates must be approved by the city commission 5 An ordinance voting the bonds and calling for the Improvements must be drafted and adopted by the city commission 6 A friendly suit Wsting the le gality of the Granger act under which the city would be permitted to exceed its present legal debt limit with more revenue bonds must be filed In the meantime advertise ment of the proposed bond ordinance may be continuing for 21 days 7 The supreme court must decide the case It is doubtful if such a decision could be obtained even if things went smoothly before June y - -- ? 30 8 The bond counsel must check each step in the entire proceedings and approve each one and finally the whole Then if the favorable court de cision is obtained and the bonds have been voted legally they must be printed apd sent to Washington before the money from the Joan and grant can be obtained f4 SERVICE STAR ENOS SESSION Mrs R S Collett of Salt Lake City Is New President C) (FL-Mln- (D-Was- (D-Mo- h) nt) (D-idan- o) Four Dead One Safe As Boat Falls Apart ERE LDAN1S MADE o) - in ah Expenditure of Less Than $30000 Will Yield Water Supply From Wells Conserve Stream Flow and Decrease Seepage Report Says that the major portion of Weber county's CONFIDENCE Ratio Creation of present investment in orchards and vine be Is can In With Gold protected and fruit matured at a reasonable yards was cost expressed Saturday by the chamber of commerco Prospect central committee on drouth and water resource survey in i WASHINGTON May 5— (AP)— its report to A Z Richards supervising engineer for the Senate silver bloc leaders left a train state ' at Salt Lake J conference with President Roosevelt 30-to-- WASHINGTON May 5— (AP)— Attorney General Cummings decid ed today Russia was In default on obligations to the United States and was not entitled to receive financial aid from citizens of this country Hus ruling which was made with a view to determining what countries! would be barred by the Johnson act from marketing their securities in this country or in any other way j receiving financial as sistance said that Great Britain Latvia and Italy Czecho-Slovak- X j climb to the height of 15 would consume considerable time but the greater speed when once the stratosphere was reached would make up for lost time in as- SILVEJWICTIOM Old Debts ' ficial opinion in Tucson was divided Money advanced "for that pur- as to whether Jupe was sturanve pose if it did not draw interest Tin moo Irnnwn lolsrt that hp had could be accepted without a feeling abandoned his "lone hand" role in of tremendous burden to be met attempting to make contact with the : abductors DENIES CONTACT On June 2 the first wool auction 1 oiae fn heldand to be are wpst the Referring to various rumors the of a million pounds is ft grandfather emphatically denied a expected contact had been jeffected that any wool will be offered-- ! assurance of June being still alive had been received! or that any ranthe at held The sales will be paid in the Ogden Union som had been random Coliseum note delivered The $15000 stockyards to Fernando Robl- two hours after was snatched from a Tucson This new method of handling June April 25 remained the only western wools should take on great- street abductors the grandword from er Importance everjf year for this father said'theaddiiig: is the center of the wool industry "We're willing td pay the ransom" To the contact land ransom rumSelling wool by auction it is- said ors flying about ps the city figuris the plan most commonly used kept its hejid turned away in in Australia the largest sheep pro- atively order that the family might deal ducing country in the world directly with the jabductors the old cattleman said "None of these reThe auction is being conducted ports is true" by Merrion and Wilkins who have Among the rumors was one widely an excellent reputation and in the circulated to thej effect that outeight years of their:! operations have side interference! had prevented returned il00000000 In cash for Fernando Robles from making a contact last night yMmbs handled on consignment SEARCH IN MEXICO " to "For a time" the elder Robles Ogden by this move promiseswool become recognized as the great continued "I thought June had market of the west been sDirited away into the wilds of Sonora Mexico I made a trip to kind of help that Enterprises far below the bolder but like our build a community m a most nther efforts it Was futile i: way "She may be in California Again would not oe surprised n sne were I a Kiirvv Li beine made to de In Tucson But ffrankly we do not termine the feasibility of sending Irnrvw & mammoth balloon into tne sxxai "If we could only make a contact elevation this from and begin negotiations I ara confiesphere dent June would 4oon be home with The balloon is expected to reach a height bf lSmllcs or more The old ranchfej said he would leave to his son fhe further efforts some time at that tnward rontactinci the abductors by is It predicted in the future "long! journeys will be following instructions in the orig made by! sending an airship into inal note which it is unaerstooa the stratosphere from where it nrriprpd the fathet to drive along an will be able to travel at 500 miles oiitlvins hishwavl iach night with the ransom money until a sign from If'' an hour" the kidnapers was received In the stratosphere there are no storms or fogs - I Change Noted Since Last Conference On Metal Rehabilitation j DThe- WARM TOWARD Attorney General Decides Soviets in JJefault on would k " Grandfather Admits " Case Stands' Without One " j RUSSIA IS ittee Ways To Matare Crops In Web FINDS PRESIDENT IS GROUP State College Votes Honors ToA WIvins BARRED UNDER is barred under the Johnson be a calamity if the TUCSON Ariz May 5— (AP) — A but matured be not fint ripriaratiori that attempts to lo crops could the prospects are that sufficient cate little June' Robles or make con develunderground water will be of that tact with her kidnapers "have not a disaster unearthed a 'single clue" was made oped to prevent : here kind today by Berhabe Robles aged girl grandfather of thje abducted more aDoui as not know do any "We should prove If the drouth hp added "than we destructive as forecast Utah would this kidnaping" Ferando (father af ternoorf did the millions for be justified in asking the shocking revealed of June) the from of dollars of assistance news" back &o be paid federal government ThA renutedly Wealthy old cattle In a more prosperous period man made his statement while of It LAST EDITION SUNDAY MORNING MAY 6 1934 UTAH OGDEN CITY PAGES " KIN BAFFLED —T wanting Judgment and itself— Horace THIRTY-FOU- ieat- -' m i SALT LAKE CITY May 5— (AP) R S Collett of Salt Lake — Mrs City was elected president of the Utah department Service Star Le gion at the closing meeting of the organization's annual convention ' here today The installation of officers was directed by Mrs J G Falck of Ogden national president of the Serv ice Star Legion elected include: Other officers MOUNDS VI LLE W Va May 5— Mrs Laura Morgan Nephi first (AP)— Four persons drowned and vice Mrs Henry Painter another swam to safety today after Nephipresident vice president Mrs second a skiff in which they were cross G R Goodman Salt Lake re ing the Ohio river fell Apart and sank Two of the victims Mrs Mildred Weekly 23 and Mrs Ethel Pearl 21 were- - sisters Mrs Weekly's hus band Emery 27 a coal miner and Charles Haddock 36 friend of the family also lost their lives Ken neth Burley 16 brother of the two! women swam ashore All lived at McKeefrey W Va —-- y report in substantiation' of Gover nor Blood's request for federal May 5- -- (UP) — General Homer S CumAttorney mings today answered Andrew Mel- Ion's attack on the government's in come tax suit against him with a blunt statement that the' former treasury secretary could expect no special privilege "He must reconcile himself to be ing treated like anyone else in a ' f- similar situation said Cummings MARRIAGE LICENSE "Mr Mellon Is not as much 'in the WALLA WALLA Wash May 5— dark' as he would have the public (AP) — William H Abeendroth believe "He knows perfectly well the secretary to Governor Ross of Idaho and Veda Kir km an of Boise ob upon which the treasury depart tained a marriage license here and ment made the additional assess were married by Justice of the ments and why the department of Peace C M Wilbur today justice has taken action" - drouth relief aid conservation and ol Development four natural flow sources in the North Ogden area the committee ' believes would increase the present flow available by three second feet at a cost of but $3956 the committee feels "We feel confident that this is the most efficient way of increasing this water supply first becau:e shallow wells are' out of the ques tion (in this locality) and depth wells would be problematical and their cost would be excessive unless a definite knowledge of underground water were available r IN NORTH OGDEN Referring to - the North Ogden territory where orchards and vine yards are paramount the report says: "In this section we will deal with four rather important natural sources of water upon which de pends a considerable area of Wefcer county's most valuable orchards and vineyards These systems and crecKs if depleted will lay to waste a tre mendous productive and highly cultivated area in this county This - served by four particular area streams all supplied by important spring water" The streams ana the proposed developments are:i Alder creek located immediately under Ben Lomond and now supplying approximately one second foot of water The committee feels development tilr drainage mostly costing $351 would Increase the deliverable flow to two second feet Rice Creek located near the foot of Ben Lomond in one large spring Present flow 114 second feet at the source but only 887 second feet available for duty on lands Thi loss In some 2000 feet is 235 sec ond feet or 2219 per cent Recommended that the spring be piped from the source to the first user underground at an estimated cost of $1170 North Ogden canyon where series of springs produce smau amounts of water Into an open ditch which is so poreus that' th water from the upper springs van (Continued on Pare Two) i- World News At A Glance me WASHINGTON - - (By The Associated Press) Domestic: LOUISVILLE— Fifty thousand se City Cavalcade win 60th Kentucky cording secretary Mrs C F Longs- - derby ton Salt Lake City historian Mrs Fred Edson Ogden state organizer WASHINGTON— Silver bloc leadMrs Gertrude Foote Nephi treas- ers confident of new monetary urer and Mrs T H' Collins Provo move after talking with president Mrs Andrew Johansen Mt Pleas ant and Mrs Lila Richardson of NEW YORK— President and Mr Nephi district organizers Roosevelt attend funeral cf WilGirls of the Ogden Junior chapter liam H Woodin presented a ritual at Memorial house convenin Memory park where the WASHINGTON — House pass?i tion was beld and later assisted in anti-cribills strengthening fedthe remembrance program eral power in fight on gangsters Sentence Imposed On Singing Bandit Mellon Told to Look For No Privilege SALT LAKE CITY May 5 — Dick Boatman 26 "singing bandit' Saturday was sentenced to a term of one to five years in the state prison after he pleaded builty in Judge Herbert M Schiller's district court to a charge of assault with a deadly weapon Boatman is alleged to have kid naped Erwin Stewart 28 of Provo April 9 at Helper and forced Mr Stewart to drive to Bait lAke 'The picture In Webei county says the report "indicates clearly to our committee that there Js suf ficient underground water availabla at comparatively shallow depths to supply sufficient coverage for the major portion of our county "We feel and recommend that these surface wells now available should be put to use immediately and additional wells built to supply water as the demand increases and the natural flow decreases" The estimated cos of utilizing available water without loss and drilling wells is listed at $21556 A suggested augmenting of the Og den city well flow for farm land use would cost an additional $4000 and rental of pumps and motors another $2500 This - brings tha grand total cost to $23056 WEEK OF ACTIVITY It took the group Just one week to make its survey of Weber county and report its findings to the' state to be incorporated in a compositf ' NEW YORK— Samuel Insull Jr disclaims planning any move to de lay father's being taken to Chicago CHICAGO— Acquittal for 17 de fehdants ends case trial racke four-mon- th Jeaderf WASHINGTON— Senate bill stock exchange push passage believed assured Foreign: - iONDON —Wheat conference xzzj ask U S to cut export quota U rescue international pact confident cJJ amicable American relations pr pares for trade war with Britain LONDON — Foreign office seel "shortage of cash" barrins new Eu ropean arms race TOKYO — Japan - |