Show Weather Forecast CTAH — Unsettled Saturday warmer in oath west Local Metal Priced — I nsettiedl showery and Saturday IDAHO ‘5 Lead Zinc Sunday SO® 475c Copper 13650 hilvae Ue V ' YOL 121 NO 18 SALT LAKE CITY SATURDAY MORNING MAY NEW IMPETUS 4 BONDjHSSUE Leaders Urge Salt Lake Citizens to Vote Tuesday Civic Against for Argenta Plan Summed ‘V and TOWNS CRASH Up Interest In next Tuesday's water bond election took new impetus Friday as various organizations spurred their memberships into getting out the vole French aviatrix who day set up a new en- WASHINGTON DAMAGE durance Livestock Crops Suffer Cloudburst Drowns £ Die in Autos Many record for women Leaders of municipal civic commercial’ and industrial activities Jomed in the city-wiappeal to all by soaring qualified voters to go to their polling places on Tuesday and vote for or for against the $3000000 water bonds "Vote your conviction — for or hours against the bonds — but vote!" "TOiis became the watchword as in 46 minterest was stimulated throughout the utes ff city Many organizations started movement to enlist all members as seconds informal committee members to urge everyone to participate in the elec tlon Dam Proposed in Cottonwood Canyon It was pointed out that the issue is of vital importance to Sait Lake City The proposed bond issue pro vide for the building of a dam in Big Cottonwood canyon at the Argenta site and the creation of a res o£ Committee ervoir which will Impound 12000 Decision acre-feof water for consumption in Measure on Merits Balt Lake City Still Pending The city administration which sponsors the project asserts that it is imperative this additional water supWASHINGTON May 2 lip)— By ply be obtained immediately as Balt a tie vote the senate interstate comLake is facing a crisis in Its water situation due to the possibility of a merce committee today ordered redrought which will result in a great ported to the senate the Couzens’ deal of damage resolution curbing railroad consoliAt the same time there are oppobut whether the report will nents of the plan who assert the proj- dations or adverse hinged on ect is not Justified by the facts and be favorable of a the other six committee poll that insufficient preparation has members iJ been made The project has been Couzenk Senator Republican criticised from many angles and if author of the resolution those who take sides either for or Michigan and chairman of the committee said against express their convictions at he would report the resolution to the the polls there will be cast the high- senate on Monday and he predicted est vote of any special bond election the final roll of the committee on it in the history of Balt Lake it is would be “at least a tie—8 to 9" claimed Couzens hoped however for committee approval as he said of the Balt Lake Residents six absentees two were still undeWill Bear the Costs but that both he becided Inasmuch as the bonds are to be lieved tonight favored the resolution water of out of the earnings repaid The resolution would suspend the department upon an increased rate of the interstate commerce for meter consumption nearly every authority commission until March 4 1931 to resident of Salt Lake City will have approve or authorize any consolidato bear directly or indirectly a por- tions or unifications except in contion of the cost with provisions the measure It is for that reason that every formity would lay down citizen should take an interest Chief among these is one declaring Everyone who paid a real or personal the commission should not approve property tax in 1629 is eligible to vote any acquisition of control which exif he is a qualified elector cept for its own authorization would Mayor John F Bowman wound up be in violation of the antitrust laws a speaking campaign Friday night at Couzens said the resolution authorthe Bryant junior high school the ized unification of short lln4 and last official speech he will deliver be- feeder roads with trunk lines "where fore election they would not be in violation of Oscar Van Cott principal of the the antitrust laws" school presided The mayor declared that if the bonds are voted next Tuesday the city will put 600 men to work on the Argenta project in Big Cottonwood canyon early in the summer and will continue the work for three years during all the months when weather conditions permit Mayor Fledges Use MIAMI Fla May 2 OF) —CompletOf Utah Labor ing his round trip inaugurating air "It will take about three years to mail service between the Americas complete the great project" said the Colonel Charles Lindbergh arrived mayor “and I pledge vou now that if here at 503 p m E S T after an the bonds are Authorized by the peoflight today from Puerto ple Utah labor exclusively will be Cabezas Nicaragua He carried 211 of road the used in the construction pounds of airmail bound from Buenos the dam and clearing of the reservoir Aires to points in the United Btates site This provision will be made a on the new seven-da- y schedule of the express service part of every contract between the Colonel Lindbergh wav three mincity and the successful bidders on the utes behind schedule when he landwork” ed at work declared Bowman that Mayor airport here will be done eight months of each Average speed for today's flight which not started Cottonwood at Cabezas at alone in Puerto Big year 555-m E S T was 97 miles an (COntlmird on Fat Ten ) hour Tour ) (Column de CHICAGO May 2 of desolation today marked the paths of tornadoes and storms which cavorted over nine states of the middle west Thursday leaving 23 persons dead and scores more injured and home (J'l-Sc- encs If SENATE GROUP FRENCH GIRL VOTES TIE ON PILOT MAKES NEW RECORD RAIL MERGERS of et LINDY BACK AT MIAMI FINISHES NEW MAIL LOOP 899-ml- Latin-Amerle- DRY LA W FORCES MAKE WAR t K t A ON "JAKE” GINGER LIQUOR Lake (Chicago Tribune-Sal- t Tribone Leased Wire) WASHINGTON May 2—Officials at the federal prohibition bureau said today that the wave of paralysis Jacaused by drinking maica ginger has furnished them with new-anserious problem a Prohibition administrators In all Sections of the country have been mobilized in a campaign to stamp out "Jake" ginger which made its appearance in large quantities for the first time during January and February of this year “We have collected and tested hundreds of samples raptured chiefly in the southern stales ” said Dr W V Linder one of the bureau chemists "There have been several one in Kentucky big round-up- s where Indictmenta Lave been brought in and indictments are pending else where We believe that we are now getting the stuff under control ” The "Jake" is entirely a bootleg product and cannot be handled by legitimate permittees Dr Linder said Its component parts have been found to be ginger made from the strong ginger root together with creosote obtained from tar or wood The creosote according to Dr Linder is similar to phenol and carbolic acid a poisonous substance and it is this which causes paralvvls “So far as we know physicians seem to be stumped on a treatment for the paralysis" Dr Linder continued "Our advice is: Drinkers don’t drink It” The United 8 tales public health service is reported to have not made any official study of the ginger paralysis although the health service coo era tea with the bureau of prohibition when its aid is requested ed re- Immediately after the appropriation requested today by President Hoover is approved 'by congress the wheels will begin to move in another gigantic reclamation task New towns will spring up railway spurs will be built swarms of laborers will wend their way toward the hum of tills new construction Secretary Wilbur said the work would go forward as soon as the required appropriation is approved less 3IIle Lena Bernstein Sets Endurance Mark for Women Aviators LE BOUROrT May 3 (IF) —A French gill flier Mile Lena Bern- hung up a new endurance hours 46 minutes 55 secwomen onds for Bhe beat by almost ten hours the women's endurance record recognized here— that of Mile Maryse Bas-ti- e who flew for 26 hours 46 minutes 30 seconds last July By almost the same margin ahe exceeded the Americah women’s enstein mark today of 35 durance record achieved a year ago by Miss Elinor Smith at Roosevelt field New York a mark of 26 hours 21 minutes 32 seconds Mile Bernstein took off at 7:18 o'clock yesterday morning and landed here at a fraction after 7:04 p m tonight when her fuel had been exhausted It was announced her flight constituted a world record for airplanes of all categories having only one pilot male or female Last July she made a nonstop flight from Marseilles to Sidl Barbani in Egypt The whirring black funnels of the tornadoes dipped to four widely sep arated places — TekamahNeb : West by Wls Norborne Mo and Russell Iowa — and cyclonic winds dealt death elsewhere In the affected trea Projierty damage it was estimated ran into seven figures Tekamah Neb had 4 dead Nor borne Mo 5 Russell Iowa 1 West-b- y Wis 1 Lake City Minn 3 Du2 luth Minn 2 Kickapoo Kan 1 Lawton N D 1 Rocklord 111 Oalesburg 111 1 Chicago 1 and Ant- ioch 111 1 Nine of the dead were women Few Village Left Debris Chokes Streets Livestock was lost crops were damaged and few villages in the area escaped Nebraska Minnesota north east Kansas abd northwest Missouri were hardest hit by the erratic storms but high winds driving rain and ughtnlng distributed destruction a Leo over Iowa Wisconsin Illinois and the Dakotas The Tekamah tornado cut a wide path through the city to kill four and leave the streets choked with debris Darkness followed with the failure of the electric light plant Physicians and rescue workers tolled by candle light and flashlights Jack-so- n and Homer Neb also were struck by the tornado Tlie death at Lawton N D was that of a farmer struck by lightning A cloudburst sending a wall of water down a ravine in which an auto was stalled caused the drowning of two women and a child at Lake City Minn At Duluth an auto carrying two women skidded in the storm and they were drowned A boy ran before the tornado at (Continued on P (Column Four Ten ) Army Pilots Stick With Plane as 6 Mates Jump Two Ilitle to Safely as Giant Bomber Crashes Near Fresno Six Make Parachute Leaps All Escape Without Hurts : FRESNO Calif May 2 (AP)— Six army aviators were forced to make parachute leaps and two others made a forced landing In a Fokker army plane in a vineyard near Oleander eight miles southwest of here late today when one of the propellers broke None of the fliers was ed ln""d ' The plane en route from Marsh field to Mather field was flying at an altitude of 1000 feet when a pro- peller suddenly snapped As the big ship wavered orders were given for the aviators to Jump All six drifted safely to earth while two fliers brought the plane to the ground The plane came down in a vineyard One wing was tom off and a second propeller was shattered Lieut W A Maxwell of Marsh field and Staff Sergeant J H Arthur stayed with the disabled ship and attempted to bring it to a safe landing The fliers who qualified for the “Caterpillar club" by making forced parachute leaps were Sergeant C A Davis and Private John Kozlak of the Eleventh bombardment group: Cord poral W L Green and Privates Roy Stokes and Tony Washle-vic- h of the Ninety-fift- h pursuit group All six are stationed at Rockwell field San Diego With two motors disabled and a crash Imminent one of the men yelled "Jump" and all six leaped In rapid succession floating down safely into vineyards Five of the men went through the side door while Private Lockwood went through the trap door Lockwood skinned his nose Corporal Green strained his neck when his chute snapped open and Sergeant Davis was burned slightly by parachute harness Lock-woo- SCULPTOR DIES BFRIIN May 2 OF)— Professor Feter Bruer 74 eminent sculptor is dead Professor Bruer won the medal in the Paris exposition oi 1900 for a colossal marble group in which the central figures were Adam and Eve Among his other notable works was a bropze statue of Charlemagne BABY FALLS FROM BED STRANGLES TO DEATH AT DECL0 8peHt to The Tribune BURLEY Idaho —John Bernard son of Mr and Jacobs Mrs R H Jacobs of Declo met death from strangulation late Friday afternoon The baby had been put to bed Mrs Jacobs stepped out of the room for about 10 minutes and returned to find the child fallen from the bed with its head caught between the bars at the head of the bed The ehlld waa rushed to a Burley hospital A lungmotor was secured from the fire department but the delay in driving from Declo to Burley a distance of 11 miles was too long to Dr permit revival of the infant a Ben Schultz stated the child at the arrival dead upon hospital Corah Scheduled At IJealers’ Meet STRUCK IN MAN 24 driver on the Bingham highway Attaches at the emergency hospital where Hess was taken feared his neck was broken He was given Lake-Ogde- n emergency treatment and removed to the Salt Lake county general hospital where his condition late Fri- day was reported fair Turner was arrested at his room in the Semloh hotel at fl 45 p m by Patrolman W E Eggleston and lodged in the city Jail on an open charge pending outcome of Hess’ injuries L B Adamson of American Fork and Miss Lois Jordan 659 Fast Broadway who were riding in the bus driven by Turner who was returning more than a score of children from a visit to the Cudahy Packing company plant at North Salt Lake told the police of the accident "The bus was traveling behind Hess’ automobile" said Mr Adamson times our driver “Several sounded his horn as a signal for the automobile to move out of the way The automobile however continued moving forward nearly in the middle of the road “Traveling at a low rat of speed the bus attempted to pass the autoof the cars mobile and fenders touched The man in the automobile shouted a rebuke and Turner stopped his car and went back to the automobile which had stopped Hess got out of his car and they beIn the midst of the gan arguing argument Turner etnick Hess and the latter slumped to the running board of his car "I ran back and Turner asked me to drive Hess who was with his wife to the municipal baths where we telephoned for the police ambul- ance " According to Patrolman Clayton Blank and Detective M D McGtn-nes- s Turner took hts car to the bus He was line garage and departed arrested when he returned to his room FACES SECOND TRIAL BUFFALO N Y Mav 2 OP) —Lila Jtmerson Cayuga Indian woman will go on trial for the speond time on Monday May 5 on a clmrge of murder first degree in connection with the slaying of Mrs Clothilde Marchand March 6 Notice of the second trial was served on her attorneys today by District Attorney Guy B Moore DswmmtniMisiiRjmMMtHmnHHmmitaHiiimflioBMiHi WILL ROGERS SAYS: BEVERLY HILLS Calif Mav 2— The chamber of commerce of the United States now In session In Washington Is running tree to chamber of commerce form They have (he maximum of objection with the minimum of remedies for all our national Ills Of all the things thU country is the greatest is suffering from of organizations to help somebody that overproduction organised don't need the help as bad aa the organization itself It's not taxes that keeps us flat It's dues ' When a failure form something When the judgment day comes half o America will be on their way to tome ronvrntlon and the other half will be signing application blanks Yours WILL charge of the construction expects pieliminary work to begin on the dam power plant and canal under the project within a few weeks after the appropriation is provided Orson P Hess 56 of Farmington was critically injured about LSD Friday afternoon w hen struck bv Tom 8POKANK Wash OF -- Senator Borah will be the principal speaker at the Pacific northwest grain dealers’ convention at Lewiston Idaho June 13 unless senate business detains him in Washington It was announced here Friday by R J Stei ssimmoiiiiiwiwt!timiinmim!tnuit!i!"iiuiHM phens president of he grain men A Action New Step in Fight on Dam Commissioner Elwood Mead of the reclamation bureau who will be In Argument Over Auto MisEnds in Broken ' hap Neck Belief Stage Line during an altei cation er responsibility or an automobile of a mile north cment one-four- th of the municipal baths on the Salt ing for favored the the rate vot- Those against were for a higher Ten-Ye- SERIOUS HURTS Turner LOSE BITTER 2 WASHINGTON Maycall on roll sugar tariff follows: (Those tion SUFFERS ROW BEET STATES SUGAR DUTY Bv CECIL B DICKSON WASHINGTON May 2 (fl)— The initial outlay for construction work on the $165000000 Boulder canyon undertaking on the Colorado river was requested of congress today in a supplemental estimate of $10660-00- 0 submitted by President Hoover In order that work may begin on the project probably in the early fall the house appropriations committee piepared to include'the item in the second deficiency bill to be formulated late this month Secretary Wilbur lias advised President Hoover that he has negotiated contracts for the disposal of power and water which he believes will provide revenue adequate to reimburse the government within 50 years for its investment as required by the act authorizing the construc- (UP) —Eight years will be quired to complete the Boulder dam project according to estimates made in official circles NULL! ON S IN THE VOTE ON ency Bill May 2 In tlie meantime Secretary Wilbur will advertise for bids for tlie construction work In View of the magnitude of the project considerable time probably will be allowed for contractors to study the plans It is expected that it will require eight years to complete construction The action of the president today is another Import ant step in the contest in rongres over Boulder dam Representative Swing Republican California coauthor of Boulder canyon the dam act said he would resist any to the Item from eliminate attempt the deficloncy bill On the - other hand Representative Douglas Democrat Arizona a bitter opponent In the contest said he would do everything he could to strike it from the measure Construction Camp to Go Up on Nevada Hide Douglas said he expected the state of Arizona would institute court proceedings to prevent the construction should the appropriation be approved by congress 8w Ing said however that "only the threat of Arizona stands in the way Swiug-Johns- dick Campbell of Iowa Chi Istgau Clancy Craddock “ Cliristopherson Dalilnger Davenport Doutrich Dowell Elliott Esterly Fenn Fitzgerald Foss Freer Freeman Garber of Oklahoma Gibson Gifford Goodwin Guyer Halsey Hartley Hess Hoch Morton D Hull Hull of Wisconsin Irwin Johnson of Indiana Johnson of South Dakota Kadlng Kendall of Kentucky Ktefner Kinzer Kopp Lambertson Korell LaGuardla Lampert Langley Dice MdCltn-toc- k of Ohio McLeod Maas Martin Mengea Mlchaeison Morgan Nelson of Maine Nelson of Wisconsin Newhall Nolan Palmer Pritchard Peavey Ruth Pratt Selberling Rogers Ramseyer Shaffer of Virginia Short Shott Sparks Speaks Sproul of Kansas Stafford Stobbs Bummers of Washington Swanson Taylor RATEFIGHT Levy Placed on Both Refined and Raw Product Equal PRIOR VOTE FAILS IN FINAL TALLY” Smoot-Hawle- Com Basis of y promise Final -- Settlement J By HARRY of Tennessee Thatcher Thurston Ttnkham Treadway Underhill Watnwrtght Walker Welch White Wlggles-wort- h of California ' BROWN Tribane Correspondent WASHINGTON May 2— When the house of representatives late tills Wolverton of West Virevening on a roil call voted 229 to ginia Total Republicans for— 90 180 to concur in the Smoot amendDEMOCRATS FOR ment to the tariff bill fixing the duty Arnold Abefnethy Allgood Almon Cuban sugar at 2 cents a potindi Auf Dr Heide Ayres Bankhead on con- Box Boy lan It ended the sugar fight for this Bell Black Bland and defmitely fixed the raid Brand of Georgia Briggs Browning greaa Brunner Buchanan Bushy Byras that will go intothe effect when the signs Canfield Camion Carley Cartwright president bill The action of tlie house took (OOntlnuzd on Pam Tw ) the sugar issue out of tlie hands of (Column Two ) the conference committee for the senate and house are now in accord ' on the rate and there Is nothing remaining for the conference committee to consider so far as sugar la concerned Coming at the very dote of & Jong hectic day the sugar f t ht w as doubly disheartening lo Ihe ariay of congressmen front the beet sugar states of the west for on two votes Just preceding tltt fata) roll call the Board of 2 20 had won Oltio Prison Inquiry right for a rateshort-lived At the The victory was Care Finds Latk of closed of to litwr'a debate the hot befor two it had motions: That by Canned Holocaust Chairman Hawley of the ways and means committee that the house COLUMBUS Ohio May 2 P)— eland by lta original sugar schedule one a reduction by but with Negligence was blamed lor the Ohio rate from 2 40 change to 220 and the prefercon320 took penitentiary fire which ential motion made by Representavict Uvea April 21 in a report sub- tive Crisp of Georgia acting DemoT cratic leader that the house "recede mitted today to Governor Myers That is recede from Cooper by his inquiry board while and concur submitted a It own position and concur in Um same time report at the state marshal fire expressed fixed rate Smoot amendment tlie the by by belief the origin of the fire was in- which had been adopted by the senSmbot-Hawl- ey FIRE BLAMED TO NEGLIGENCE ate cendiary Negligence consisted in tlie alleged to of officials designate Standing Vote Defeat failure prison some one to take command of the Early Low Rate Skirmish situation arising from tlie fire inside Under house rules the prison walls the inquiry board's report said Negligence caused the (Continued ort esse Ten ) On? (Column delay in opening ceil doors behind which the doomed convicts were locked while there was also serious delay in sending in the fire alarm HYDE the report said despite the fact the prison had no fire apparatus Oivlng three possible causes for the CHANGE fire as defective wiring inrendlarlsm reand spontaneous combustion the evstrong circumstantial port said POWER COMMISSION idence Indicated tlie fire was started by the temporary w lring in the I and K cell blocks The temporary wiring while danWASHINGTON May 2 7A gerous was found to be in working In the federal powsweeping change order the fire marshal’s report said er commission was recommended to- however Stressing the incendiarism day by Secretary Hyde testifying be- idea the marshal pointed out that fore the house interstate commerce oil and Caroline were available to concommittee in support of President victs within the prison walla The Hoover s plan to set up an indepenmarshal withheld other evidence dent organization which he said was important as to He said he Asserting that the present mem- the cause of the blaze bers of the commission who are the could not make It public until after secretaries of war interior further investigation were unable to give adequate consideration to the problems Smoot Confident of ' of regulating the nation s water power resources Hyde said a commisReport on Veit Bill sion of five with a new personnel should be established for that purWASHINGTON May 2 OF) — pose Chairman Smoot of the senate fiHvde was the only witness before nance committee today expressed the committee at a hearing on the confidence that the house bill to libParker bill to set up a commission eralize veterans’ compensation would of thiqe He suggested that the growbe reported lavorably to the senate ing importance of regulating the na- after substantial amendment tion's power resources in the various The committee chairman said he sections of the country would be favoied "a bill which will not be the more adequately represented with house bill but which will substanlive members A thorough reorgan- tially liberalize veterans' compensization of personnel waa needed he ation" under the existing compenssaid ation act the SECRETARY SEEKS 4 4 4 Douglas Eights Proposal lo levy) Republicans for: Allen Andrew Bacon Blackburn Bachmann Include Item in DeficiBolton Bowman Browne Bur- WORK AT DAM SLATED FOR EIGHT YEARS Missouri City Is Hardest Hit by Twister Dark-Follow- s in Wake ness Fri- Initial $10660000 Fund for Boulder Dam Project HOMELESS A S Bernstein 4 4 LEFT Hoover Asks SCORES Mile Lena 4 4 young Arguments PAOES— FIVE CENTS SUGAR GETS TWO CENTS TARIFF T ornado Leaves 23 Dead in Nine States Wins Laurels as Flier GIVEN WATER MAYOR BOWMAN ENDS CAMPAIGN 34 y 1930 IN vote had to come first on the Crisp motion which may have given the low tariff advocates a slight but only a slight When the speaker subadvantage mitted this question to the house for viva voce vote the Crisp proposal was manifestly snowed under the "noes" made twice as much noise as was the the "ayes" So vote that the speaker had no alternative but to announce that "the noes have It and the motion is rejected" That was music to the ears of the members from the beet sugar states But Represents the Crisp keen In parliamentary procedure knew that noise does not necessarltv reflect sentiment so he demanded a division: that is a rising vote The advocates of the Crisp motion rose and were counted and as (hey sat down the opposition rose and to the galleries it appeared that the "ayes" outnumbered the "noes" by fifty or more but Sjieaker Long-worwho made the official coun announced “aves” 198 noes 204" This defeated the Crisp motion and was a second apparent victory for the members who were making a final stand for a 2 20 tariff rate But again Mr Crisp of Georgia one-sid- th on Pare Two (Column Three ) (Continued ) EXPLORER UNFOLDS PLANS OF UNDERSEA POLAR TRIP WASHINGTON May 2 A" — His plans for a submarine trip through the top of the world to seek the meteorological secrets of the polar sea were unfolded today by Sir Hubert Wilkins famous Arctic explorer to the American Geophysical union Dr H U Sverdrup noted Norwegian oceanographer Joined oilier scientists at the meeting in agreeing that the projected undertaking was feasible leaving Spitzbergen during July 1931 in a specially equipped submarine Sir Hubert plans to go through the north pole to Alaska about 2000 miles awav The trip is expected to last two months Not only will meteorological and magnetic observations be attempted in places where they never have been recorded before Sir Hubert said but efforts will be made to find a permanent base for observations some 700 miles northeast of Point Barrow Use of submarine he explained is the only means for obtaining the information aa attempts by surface vessels nd airplanes have proved fu- tile Both the season and special mechanical features of the submarine combine to make the trip sale he aald During the summer months It waa explained there are numerous patches of open water through which the submarine can come up about every 25 mile for surface observations The vessel however will have battery strength to run 125 miles without replenishing In addition it will carry Sir Hubert pointed out equipment for use in bringing it through the ice should the need aiise 115-fo- What? A Church for Sale! Amu'eiuent hall chapel and let tor Mile Will sell to II e hlglu'M tn!4 r (0 wreeic Take a peek In Tribune Want Ad& Homes lor Sle Column I and see what tin is all aoout Aladdin and His Lamp coulctn t have done this but there t ait e advertiser over in Busmen Oiporuinl-tiho will double Column today your money In 90 days He s akm for iOO0 and will the the la treater a M too Bacon and Fggs will eook like a ‘million on tilts L range and to vmk thu tbO elertnr rificmt mooJ Owner buvf this Want Ad for MM tn for fja’e 33 Column today Want to Swap? "Here’s an ad eraser who sill do paint Inc or pupe rhanemr for furniture or 6e who it la in Warned to Chey Buy Want Ad Column 3 rrb |