Show w i N 'I THE GARLAND J Uist'SOOGnqressmen TIMES GARLAND UTAH 1 ! f t ' 1 — Colonel Lindbergh and his bride the former Anne Morrow N leaving the Morrow mansion at Englewood 2— Students of the professional schools of Mexico City in riotous demonJ Immediately after their marriage 3— Roger Q Wlllluraa and Lewis A Yancey at Old Orchard Maine Beach stration against new regulations ready for their projected flight to Route I l NEWS REVIEW OF ClRENraENTS Th "Congressional Burying Ground Washington who wrote the Ban By ELMO SCOTT WATSON ncr hoping that she might he related 600 OST: Congressmen! Such la the wording of to or know something about two oth er Keyes who were Maryland repreheadline or a They found her which hv ap- sentatives In"butcongress might learned that she knew eventually peared In the newspupers nothing about either of the two men throughout the country Then there Is the cuse of a dlstin thereby providing John Ilnnson gulshed Marylander newspaper parugraphers with ample material for who was president of the Continental jj In and who Is often congress one of their referred to as “the first President of jests at the expense of ths United Stutes" since he served our representatives In the as President under the Articles of national legislature A- Confederation The directory says lthough snch a statement has nothing to do with the 610 men and women that Ilanson Is burled at Oxon HU) in Prince Georges county Maryland who are now In session at Washingbut Mr Wold admits that this may be ton It Is true nevertheless Ask Ansince Hanson’s grave only tradition son Wold has never been found Maryland hisAnson Wold Is the man who has torians have tried to solve the mysseen his work just "Biographgreat without success and a Boy Scout tery ical Directory of the American Con- organization has dedicated Itself to gress— Sir go to presa make a search and help locate the Wold who v as brought to Washing ton from Minnesota 20 years ago by grave Not only has the progress on the Senator Knute Nelson was for many been hampered directory by the abyears a clerk In the census bureau Four years ago the congressional Joint sence of reliable Information but by Information which turned receiving committee on printing headed by Seout to he misinformation Frequently nator Moses of New Hampshire authorised the publication of a new con- this was supplied to them by relatives or descendants who and Mr Wold gressional directory had no mors authentic data than that was assecretary of the committee offered which by family tradition signed to the task For the Inst four Is unreliable Curiously notoriously years he and bis assistant F L'Frid some relatives or descendants enough ley have been at work on the gigantic to refused Information at supply any task of compiling the biographies of 0000 men and women who have served all declaring that the congressional relative or ancestor had dishonored In the two houses of our national legislative body Now their work Is the family name One such case concerned s representative who had withdone and within a few weeks libraries drawn from congress when his state the country will receive throughout the Union at the opening copies of the work which libraries say seceded from war Is one of the most used volumes In of the Civil Other difficulties are explained In their collections But despite the fact that Mr Wold the foreword to the biography by Mr Wold Prior to 1809 apparently no and Mr Fridley have sent out someffort was made to publish a direcething like 35000 letters communicated with persons In nearly every part tory of congress Tlte earliest khown of the world nnd tolled unceasingly directory Is entitled ‘Tlaces of Abode to make the directory complete In ev- of the Members of Both Houses of First Session of the ElevCongress ery detail there are In it 500 biographical "blanks’ that they stilt are try- enth Congress" This was a pamphlet by IL C ing to III The roster of those a ho of 15 pages published In 1809 served In congress of course Is comand contains the Welghtman plete But the "blanks’ have to do names and locations of boarding with birthdays burial places profes- houses arranged alphabetically which are followed by names of senators and sions and politics Take for Instance the case of Wirepresentatives residing therein lliam Wilson He Is listed In the d“Directories added concontaining Information irectory thus (and his Is the shortest gressional compiled and under contract biography In the book) “Wilson WII printed by private 11am a representative from Pennsyfirms" the foreword continues “aplvania was elected to the- - Fcmcteenth from time to time Though peared and Fifteenth congresses (March 4 still printed by contract the congres 1815— March 3 1819)“ Or this one alonal directory for the first session “Woodruff Thomas MH a representThirtieth of the congress Issued In ative from New York elected as a 1848 by J & G S Gideon assumed Democrat to the an official sir by bearing the congress (March 4 1845— March 3 1847) en- words ’Compiled and published for the gaged In the furniture business In use of Congress by the Postmaster of New York city where he died about the House of RepresentaUves' Sim 3854 or 1855" Here are some other liar Information was carried on titles unsolved mysteries: Alexander Wiup to and Including the first session lson was s representative from Vi- of the congress rginia In the Ninth and Tenth con“At the beginning of the second sesgresses but neither the date of his sion of the congress a birth or the date of his death Is Joint resolution approved February 14 known For that matter It Is not even 1805 was unanimously adopted proknown where he lived In Virginia the for and publividing compilation Asarlah Boody a representative from cation of the first congressional New York died as recently as 1883 rectory under the supervision of the and yet bis bnrlal place la unknown on public printing Joint committee Alfred Moore Gatlin of North CaroHie committee held numerous seslina served in the Eighteenth co- sions obtained and examined like pubThen he moved to Florida ngress Ikatlong Issued Jnforelgn— countries which was then a wilderness and no further trace of hltn has ever been y f ' 4 ' I I f : ! h brief address to tbe commission the President said: -h IS ray hope that the coihndsslon nrr tenet crniirratton of fact and cause following them with constructive courageous conclusions which will bring public understanding nnd cmntnitnd public support of tt solutions The ’general public approval of the necessity for the creation of this commission and the extraordinary unlversullty of approval of Its memevidences bership are iu themselves of the responsibility that lies upon concern you and of the great public In your tusk nnd of the hopes that you may succeed T do pray for the success of your endeavors for by such success you will have performed one of the greatest services to our generation” lic works and chiefly held by Americans If he loses In the Island courts a ' found As an Illustration of the difficulties which the two congressional biographers have experienced take this case: for two years they searched for s granddaughter of Francis Scott Key f Save Freight Costs A of the Anstrallan representative Industry bas been making a tour dairy of the a orldialhlnlereatafifihe Anstrallan business men He Is now In this country moving through tbe West and on bis way to Canada While In England he took the opportunity to confer with English business men about tbe feasibility of shipping butter to that conntry minus Its water content This plan if adopted will C In the comthe Fortieth congress piler's note It Is culled a ‘proof ed Itlon’ and has approximately 235 biographies of senators representatives and territorial delegates “It Is referred to as being Incom plete and In 1808 vvns replaced by second edition which contained a few more sketches The directory for the third session printed In 1SC9 contains 280 biographies approximately “The work of preparing and publishing a biographical directory to "Include all the preceding congresses was first undertaken by Churles Ban man tn 1859 It bears the Imposing title of the United States Con “Directory gross ” There have been at least six editions which were Insubsequent tended to give and authentic biographical data Since Mr last volume however the succeeding compilers appear to have done little more than to add such Information as could be obtained from the directories published congressional It during each session of congress seems that no effort to correct revise or perfect the work of former comever pilers was attempted and thus original errors were perpetuated" Filling Ip some of the “blanks" In the new directory would have been If all easy though for the compilers of the dead congressman hnd been burled In the congressional cemetery established for that purpose In the That cemearly days of the Republic etery Is one of the most Interesting and historical spots tn the city of In 1S07 Christ Washington today first Episcopal church In Washington this burying ground and established a few years later It was chosen as a place of burtal for senators and who died while In office offSince that time 109 government icials have been burled there and monuments have been erected over a hundred of those graves 'In addition 85 have been placed tn honor cenotaphs of members of congress who have been burled In other cemeteries Up to 1835 practically every member of congress who died In office was burled there Means of transportation were so limited that few families were able to convey the bodies of their dead from the capital But as transportation facilities grew better censed this practice finally By an act of May 23 1870 congress abolished the custom of erecting cenotaphs and that thereafter monuments provided should be authorized only when the deceased was actually congressman burled In the cemetery The first congressman to be buried was Ezra Darby of New Jersey who died January 28 1808 George Clinton Vice President of the United States was first burled there and years elapsed before his body was taken to his old home In New York But other notables still sleep there One of them Is Tobins Lear the faithful private secretory to George Washington Near by are tbe graves of Bush the noted Choctaw chief Scarlet Crow another fumoua Indian warrior Wllllnm Wirt an attorney general of the United States and Abel I Upshur a former secretary of stale and secretary of the navy One monu ment has a particular romantic Interest Boiualhltsh)e by slde tn a single grave rest the bodies of Cnpt Beverly Kennon and Abel Parker Upshur victims of an explosion of a gun aboard the American frigate "Princeton" In 1S44 Both were natives of Virginia and the two men formed a friendship In early youth that lasted until the grave mean that the Australians will save more than $1000090 In freight costs Die price of the butduring s year ter could be lowered and the market be Increased With the water extract cdAbe butlerwould be even less apt to acquire bacteria of a harmful nature be said Australia ships 40000 tons of butter to England and consumes 80000 tons herself Butter manufacturing Is one of the large industries of the country Thera la no day without sorrow Standard Tima The United States Naval obsem tory bas three standard clocks rnn nlng In constant temperature vaults’ wound and sealed to keep electrically the constant Meridian circle observations of selected star are taken regularly on clear nights and from these observations the er ror of standard clocks are deter mined The observatory sends out time signals Correct time Is given over radio networks as a sdvertlw Ing derice House Passes Tariff Bill Boosting tlie Duties on Nearly AH Articles n By EDWARD W PICKARD duties on muny ugrlcul IMPORT are and Industrial products raised to new high levels by the Hawley tariff bill which was passed by the The final house of representatives Twelve Repubvote was 2CI to 147 but licans voted against the measure Democrats on the other hand twenty OOL CHARLES mostly from the Southern states votJ In and Miss Anne Morrow were mared for IL The dozen Republicans A II Andresen were: ried Monday afternoon at the Morrow opposition N estate Just outside of Englewood Frank Clague G G Victor Chrlstgau J and the cohorts of 'reporters and Goodwin and C G- Set rig (Minn) news photographers who have dogged Merlin null (Wis) E II Campbell (S D) (Iowa) C A Chrlstopherson every move of the young couple knew W P Lambert-soT J Halsey (Mo) nothing ubout It until the affair was all over nnd the bride and groom had (Kan) F H La Guardla N Y) and James M Beck (Fa) Much ns sped away In an automobile from central agrithe people of the United States are The Republicans cultural states voted sgnlnst the bill In LIndy and his doings a Interested boost to failure of because ran all across the conchiefly gleeful chuckle duties on dairy and other farm prodtinent when It was learned that he ucts high enough and because of the hail put one over on the press and camera men The wedding ceremony Imposition of duties on building maThe Increased duty on sugar was of the simplest with no bridesterials maid was the chief reason for the adverse or best man and only La Guardla vote Of Representative members of the families present The All of the more Important cbnnges nuptial service was conducted by Rev made In the turiff by the mensure are Ir William Adams Brown of Union upwrard except that the rates on chilTheological seminary a close friend So too Is of Ambassador Morrow dren's books are reduced At Its contbe rate on carillons if any clusion Colonel nnd Mrs Lindbergh The bill ends the terms of mementered a waiting automobile clevertariff bers of the present bipartisan ly evaded pursuing reporters who commission and provides for the apthought they were Just going for a of seven new members on ride and disappeared pointment entirely from nonpartisan basis with salaries of the ken of the public The flexible tariff syriera Is $12000 retained bat with a change In formula TVTME ROSIKA SCnWIMMER’S of costs for the ascertainment long fight for naturalization In to The senate finance committee the United Stales came to an end whose bands the Hawley bill Is now when the Supreme court affirmed the will take several months committed the Chicago Federal Disdecision to rewrite the measure after which trict courtof that the famous Hungarian It will be debated by the senators radical and pacifist Is unfit for AmerDuring that period it Is hoped conican citizenship The majority of the gress can take a recess and escape high tribunal In an opinion read by some of the hot weather Justice Butler reversed the Circuit Court of Appeals and found with the decisive Vote of 57 to 2fl the Chicago IMstrlct court that HIE BYsenate passed the combined Schwlmmer’a admitted lack of bill that was so nationalistic sense and boasted “unobnoxious to the dry of tbe South make her pacifism” compromising liable to be Incapable of that attachIts main features have been told bement for and devotion to the princifore in these columns Passage of the measure by the bouse was considered that Is reples of our Constitution s certainty quired of aliens seeking naturalization” Justices Holmes Braudels and Sanford dissented HOOVER’S first PRESIDENT address delivered at was an National cemetery Arlington A NOTIIIIR decision by the Supreme earnest plea to all the nations of the court uphold the Presidential world to join In the peace movement "pocket vetoes” which nave been used the effective Kellogg pact by making all Presidents to kill legby nearly He urged that they all reduce their islation they deemed undesirable The and navy building naval armaments opinion Interpreted for the first time programs to the limit required by the that section of the Constitution which needs of national defense The mainprovides that bills not signed by the tenance of permanent peace the PresiPresident within (on days or returned would be the highest dent declared without his signature before congress the honor that could be accorded It adjourns shall not become law memory of those who had died In came as a blow to those advocates of war government ownership nnd operation who Insisted that the Muscle Shoals WILLEBRANDT resolution "pocket vetoed” by PresiMRS MABEL as assistant attorney gendent Coolldge at the end of the first eral In charge of dry law prosecutions session of the last congress became and the President luw without his signature accepted the resignation In a letter expressing deep reSenator Norris at once Introduced another resolution Identical with the gret at her leaving the government service and appredrUlon of one killed and It was reported favor8he Is to become she has done ably by the committee on agriculture counsel for the Ariutlon but the Nobrnaknn hnd little hope that Washington the senate could act on It before the corporation WRIebrandt that Mrs summer recess Reports hnd planned to leave the government been current since It became known la a great over that President Hoover had no Inten- THERE affairs In the Philiption of placing her In charge of all pines Insular Auditor Ben F Wright enforcement when the prohibition dry refused to Issue certificate releasing bureau Is transferred from the Treasr the fund for a wharf of ury department to the Department scheme at tbe city of development Justice It was stated In Washington Ololo asserting the contract was that Mr Hoover would not select Mrs valid lie was sentenced to prison successor until about WHIebrandt’s for this refusal but hns been set free the time she retires which will be by a bnhea' corpus writ granted by Jane 15 Court Justice Street and Supreme thus the case will come before the full court in July Americans In the Isspecial law PRESIDENT HOOVER'S commission lands say Mr Wright sought to proheld Its (last meetings and began the work of tect American funds and faced the to get to readiness for for protecting tbe treasorganisation penitentiary Its gigantic task which It Is believed ury which tn turn represents millions la bonds Issued by tbe bureau of pub In will keep It busy for two years he contemplates curry lnfc the case to “ths — Supreme— cOTrrTrthe'Utrtted ' States Opposed to Mr Wright are Manuel Quezon and his followers who are striving for complete autonomy PEACE at least to a degree has to Elizabethton Tenn for In tlie textile striking workers mills voted to accept the terms of th and apply for reinstateemployers ment In their old Jobs The settlement was largely due to tbe efforts of Miss Anna Welnstock who was sent to the scene by the federal Department of Labor She obtained from the rayon mills an offer that was much more conciliatory than any preThe companies agreed viously made not to discriminate against any former employee because of his or her affiliation with the union provided the employee’s activities were legitimate and were not carried on at the plants The management agrees to meet a committee of employees for the purpose of adjusting any grievance the ' 'HERE was great excitement among the universities of the Middle West when the faculty committee of the Western Conference usually known as the Big Ten expelled the University of Iowa from the conference effective January 1 1930 Put in a few words the reason for this drastic action was that Iowa bnd been administering athletic funds for the support of Individual athletes The Iowa authorities from President Jessup down professed to be exceedingly surprised by the expulsion and the student body In Iowa City was tremendously worked There were ominous threats that up the action would result in the breaking up of the Western Conference because other Institutions also were vulnerable It seems not unlikely that the date of actual expulsion was sot so far ahead In order that the trouble might be adjusted meanwhile and Iowa permitted to retain her membership and there are predictions that this Is what will happen The championship track and field meet of the Big Ten was held at Northwestern Just before Iowa was expelled and was won by the University of Illinois Two new world records were set Tolan young colored sprinter of the University of Michigan ran 100 yards In 10 seconds and of Ohio State Itockaway university the 220 yards low hurdles negotiated In 22 seconds T AY KEECH won the 600 mile auto-Imobile race In Indianapolis his average speed being 05585 miles an hour Louie Meyer was second Billy Spence was killed when his car was overturned Out of starters thirteen finished the dividing prize money of $100000 TAMES KELLY and R L Robbins flying a plane over Texas shattered all records for sustained flight remaining np for 172 hours and 31 minutes They came down then only because their propeller blades bad been crucked by hall IV G Lieut Tomlinson of the navy won the Curtiss seaplane tropbv making a new speed record of 175 miles an hour J Fort Worth nEPARATIONS experts reached an almost tn complete agreement Paris anu If the German reservations can be adjusted the great problem will goon be solved As tbe plan stands will Dnymlolnl-of-- a Germany bout — eight and a half billion dollars over a period of years the figure being annuity approximately $4S7POOOOO tinder this Payments Young plan are to begin on September 1 The matter of early evacuation of the Rhineland being purely political was not considered by the experts Dr Gustav Stresemnnn German minister announced he would be In Paris Monday when It was hoped the Relgtuns and Germans would reach a settlement of certain disputes that hampered full agreement & 7 A MANTLE An efforts to regain the throue of Afghanistan and has passed through India on his way to Italy where he vU reside The former king does not believe Pacha Sakao who seized the throne' will be able to retain It very long his possible successor being Gen Nadir Khan ' |