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} atti elir! a 4 — 1 Ome ! Pd PAGE TWO CHINESE DENIED STAY, MUST DIE BY LETHAL GAS Partner in Tong War Crime Wins Clemency Of Pardon Board. CARSON CITY, Nev., Jan. 26.— Francisco Chinese ted of murder, must die alone lethal gas chamber here Feb ary 8. he state pardon board today un animously yoted against commuting Jon's sentence to die in the gas chamber to a term of life imprison- ment and by a vote of 4 to 1 com iuted the sentence of death against Hughie Sing, Jon's mate in the slay- ing. to life imprisonment. The action tn regard to Sing was taken because of the extreme youth of the Chinese and because of cer- tainty on the part of the board that Jon fired the shot that killed Tom Quong during the course of Gee Jon, S m tong war flare at Mina, Nev. The sentencing of the two Chinese to die in a sealed cell into which hydro cyanic ced from s under p irred the country. A score of petitions have been in reulation here and in many other s and hundreds of people by & them have protested against new method of carrying out a e of capital punishment. | General Yhi, of the Chinese at San Francisco, joined his protest with many others on behalf of the Chinese government. y Consul Yhi took the position that he d other Chinese had no assur- consula Edward W. before a senate foreground) of Philadelphia, who offered $100,000 committee to testify as to the amount of money he is He refused to give the committee the information {t -w anted, Seated left to right; Senators Shipstead of Missouri and Caraway of Arkansas. SOUTHERN FLORIDA LIVING MONUMENT TO THE BENEFITS OF PUBLICITY TAXES NOT CONSIDERED Assessments Voted For Entertainment of Visitors, ‘ Regularly at Miami Who Pay Dividend Returns By ROBERT T. SMALL. (Copyright, 1924, The Casper Tribune.) MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 26.—Southern Florida, with its network of amaz- Ing cities and home communities. living monument to the efficacy of publicity. The great go of boosting” is common to nearly every Amefican municipality. Even austere and domineering New York recently has fallen for’ the custom, and resorted to real old down home Miin street methods to win the Democratic national convention. Florida much before the middle of and along tor ‘d the end ruary they begin” winging thelr way north again, generall; easy stages. Florida wants the “strangers” to come, in December and remain until April at least. An insight into the way a growing city and winter resort carries on its publicity may be had from a report made by the Miam! Chamber ‘of Commerce today. The budget for expending the city publicity tax fund includes an item of $35,000 for spending for @ pract in ig was Minnesota; Green of Vermont; Moses New the Maybe This. Pistol Bout. ‘Was ‘Framed’ MONTEVIDIO, Uruguay, Jan. 26—No one was injured when Dr. Balthazar Brum, former —presi- dent of Uruguay, and Minister of War Rivera engaged in a pistol duel here. The bullets went wide. Attacks in Dr. Brum’s new Paper against the war minister's Ppropora! for compulsory military service resulted in “satisfaction” being sought by Rivera. (United Press~Staff Correspondent! LONDON, Jan. 26.—At the end.of the first week of labor government |. In Great Britain tonight, friends of the MacDonald cabinet pointed the course of the stock market Tuesday—the day the.Baldwin cab- inet stepped out—as the best wer to panic mongers. + The general tone of the market has been steady, it was pointed out, been reflected eign problems, tion of Russia. Mac Donald has evidenced no dis- position for hasty or unconsidered action on the Russian question. He will not recommend recognition, his GREAT BRITAIN BY LLOYD ALLEN The public has shown. its confi- dence in the labor ministry by an increasing tendency to tn’ reputable ‘enterprises, The spirit of confidence also has by chairmen of the big banks in their addresses at an- nual meetings. Financial circles are -particularly well impressed with Prime Minister MacDonald's business like methods as revealed in connection with for- especially recogni- LABOR RULE IN "m ‘going. to school | stood to have the sanction of Rev. school of life. I.want to] West's clerical superiors in, Califor- _Tatural, to inisters| churchman friend of fhe “West he said.| family phrased it. vest in all’ and -hypocritical. with more deference than I wished, but {t was the outsiders who were the chief mischief makers. “I would often travel incognito— motives—but escape the artificiality and the constraint that immediately surrounded me when people covered that I was the wife of a TITLE OF “MINISTER'S WIFE’ PALLS ON WOMAN WHO OUITS __HUSBAND.OF SIXTEEN YEARS The proposed divorce is under- nia, but church dignitaries are re- luctant to discuss the case. No breath of scandal is attached to the separation two weeks ago. speak-| B is generally agreed that the dtter 16 years| two. have “done left her husband, | thelr marital craft from the rocks. Baptist church ncisco, and has come to| man, engrossed in religious work ‘heir best” to save “It {s the problem of an older and concentrated on his clerical discussed frankly this morn-| ambitions, married to a younger ing at her apartment the forces.that| womam who yearns for gayety and led up to her determination to sever] the privilege of indulging her de- “My pomition a: wife’ became unbearable, “People seemed to freeze up at my —————>—_——_ approach—fearing to be pvatural— t fearing’ to ‘say the things and do ‘things that they say and do in the Presence of other people. It all breathed of hypocrisy to me because I want to live near the heart of life, -f-want- to know people and to be treated as_myself, not with the false deference that is accorded to the “ministers wife.’ “It was from those ‘outside the church that it was the worst,” she said'when the reporter inquired into the falseness she had spoken of. “True Christians are not narrow They treated me sire to follow a musical career,” a TRIBUTE TODAY TO DEAD CHIEF Traffic to Stop Five Minutes Throughout Nation, Report. Y, JANUARY 27, 1924 HIRAN'S THR AGAINST 6. 0. MACHINE. {0 To Bear Coolidge ST. PAUL, Minn., Jan.°26.—sen,, tor-Hiram Johnson's: tirade a;:\,. “machine. politics” in Minnesoig was lost in the shuffle. Everything went for President Calvin Coolidge in the Repubign, state central committee meeting + * Frantic efforts of friends of tis California senator to gain at leas the advantage of a postponement o the state convention failed. Senator Johnson's telegram arrived too late, Charles R. Adams, chairman of the Republican state central com. mittee did not recefve it until atier the meeting had adjourned. He «) advised Johnson in a telegram to. night. The answer also stated that the state legislature in Minnesot, has not provided for @ direct pri. mary, Johnson forces tried to change the proposed state convention date from March 8 to April four. © It lost a tle vote, 16 to 16. Thé report of a sub-committee was then adopted fixing the stat convention for March 8. (United Press Staff Correspondent) MOSCOW, Jan, 26.—Tomorrow at four o'clock in the afternoon, traffic and industry throughout all Russia will stop for five minutes as the Pryor’s band to play twice daily In the public park. The sum of $30,000 is set aside for advertising in news- papers and magazines, In_ addition to the $100,000 pro- vided from taxes, the chamber of ance that white men also would be| In all the wailing and gnashing executed in the future by such | of teeth which has been going up means. He objected to such an | the country over on the subject of “experiment” being performed on | taxation, not a murmur has been two of his countrymen. heard from the property holders of In the courts the Nevada law, re-| Miami, who in addition to all their cently passed, which called for the | other federal, state and county Jethal gas execution, has been held | assessments, pay annually a city constitutional. The United States | publicity tax. This year the pub- supreme court recently sustained | licity tax will yield ‘more than all lower courts. $100,000 and every cent of it will The pardon board at its meeting | be spent in advertising Miami and today took into consideration all |ontertaining the visitors to this moves that have been- made in be- | jocality. haif of the two Chinese, took its Other Florida communities are vote and announced that its action | following the example of Miami in is final. many of her publicity methods and Jon can’ now be saved from the | they, too, may soon impose a pul Jethal chamber only by action of | licity tax on the residents. It is “Governor Scrugham, The state] felt here now that Miami is suffl- executive has shown no disposition | ciently well known to attract tour: to interfere in the matter so far. | ists and winter homeseekers, so an Gas for the execution has been | effort is to he made to prolong the purchased in Los Angeles, Calif.,| “season,” The most fashionable and now is enroute here by truck, | folk, it seems, think it would be express companies having refused | ubsplutely “dowdy” to come to to 5 body of Nikolai Lenine is lowered i friends evy, until he believes the} Mrs, Wost exonerates her hus- @ituation is ready, band from any blame in the events pecctahr acs 5 EE SES {that led up to her“separation. She M L SI 1 has returned here to her apartment |!Pto its grave in the Red square commerce is spending $45,000. this. where she says she will take up her | ° Moscow. ° | Action Nearer; winter on entertainment of visitors, P. A. Thompson who was releas- study of music once more, From the _ Powerful government ‘But I want to do more than that Natghnpnd tation here u message will I want to get some kind of work | Pe, fashe F that will Da a ey contact with real “Lenine is dead, but hi work an outdoor sports bureau, pageants, |ed by United States Commissioner air meets, flower shows, etc. M. P. Wheeler yesterday afternoon, Countless millions of dollars are | having, been charged by der being paid into Florida every year | warggnt with violation of the lqui by northern and western visitors, | laws, is being hela by the sheriff's and by northern and western capi-| department for the arrival of offi. talists, The latter money is being |ciala from Johnson county. It is spent in industry, in property de- | said that Thompson is wanted there velopment and in more advertising. lon a grand larceny charge. Rich Heiress Ignored By — Family and Friends When telephone broadcasting stations will catch and send to all parts of the country the strains of the funeral sidered that the church had been ‘ keeping up-with the changes in WASHINGTON, Jan. 26,—(United | 0clety toward modernism, Press.)\—Definite action on the Factory whistles and sirens throughout the land will set up an incessant wafl for 3 minutes, while wherever detachments of the red tonight, as the house military atf- fairs committee extended to Henry Ford an invitation to appear in per- pera oy a represen: : sere ne army are stationed, guns will boom ns iscuss some phases a . West formerly pastor] ® salute for five minutes, : ev was eo The committee expects to hear |°f the First Baptist church of Ta- Ford or or Busnday. A day oF fo of ether | ears ago. goine to san Francine LD UNIORS PAY hearings will follow, giving repre- al prominence by HEAVY FINES It has done re. sentatives of the Union Carbide | Preaching tho funeral service of the company .or. the .southern power.|Jate Warren G, Harding at, San companies that “have submitted | Francisco. theirs, an opportunity to say final (he chamber in which Jon will ‘ tion headquarters for Willlam Gibbs human’ beings. lives forever. hi . McAdoo have been opened in New ~ Ford to Talk| she wan txvea wnotner ane con.|, Th sinsio ne. ‘Then wireless York City in the Vanderbilt hot, , y it was announced tonight, 1 supervision of Judge Davi “Absolutely,” she replied .|™march and of the Internationale, | £enera Ses TRUDE TR RCUIREE ahi Basten Lis: othe omen = ay earn played by army bands at the grave. | Rockwell of Cleveland, Ohio. continued in New York by Day Hunter Miller, in charge of tho Mc Adoo interests in New York state. Headquarters For McAdoo in Gotham Opened NEW YORK, Jan. 26,—Conven. Headquarters will be under the The McAdoo headquarters will The office manager at the conven. tion headquarters will be Mrs. Al. berta Hill Smith of New Yor! EASY 10 DARK face alone the great adventure,phe dirst condemned man to die by such Mystery Men In Anderson Case Sought » NEW YORK, Jan. 26.—A merry yhunt for four men of mystery—the man who gave and the man who got the $25,000 involved in the state's effort to convict William H. Anderson, anti-saloon league head. of third degree forgery, was on to. night. «, With the Anderson case due to go to the jury Monday, Assistant Dis trict Attorney Ferdinand Pecora is anxious to make the acquaintance | of at least ong of the. mysterious | figures described by the state su- \Perintendent. under cross-examina- tion. But all the Mr. Jofm T. Kings in Baltimore say they didn't give An- cerson $25.000 early in 1914, as An- derson insists ‘some one /of that name did. And aa for Mr. Henry Mann, who took $25,000 and made much publicity of the sort that showed what alcohol does to the human somach, and Mr. Green and Mr. Johnson who helped him—they have passed with the days when the "nti-saloon league wa#’a thing apatt #nd its agents not so popular as in this better and more righteous age. feaia es ale ats Senator Norris Is Candidate For Re-election Jan. 26.—Senator Norris tonight an- nounced for re-elec- Mon and forwarded the necessary Papers to the secretary of state at Lincol While Norgis’ announcement was “4 Surprise to Washington in view of his frequentiy expressed desire to retire, it has been known for some: time that strong pressure has come from his state to get him in the Face. “In .makipg his announcement, Norris said he did not intend to take @n active part in the primary com- paign. ———__~. — -~ Under high temperature and at a high tension wool can, it is said be stccessfully mercerized. The yarn is immersed for about five minutes in bi-sulphide of soda at a high temperature. Shrinking is pre vented by a mechanical apparatus that holds the yarn at high ten Sjon. The tension is then relaxed, and yarn, is boiled in a weak acid solution ats ENS Don't forget to get your order {n to the Tribnne for several copies of the big Annual Industral edition so that you can send them back home to your friends thereby advertising the state. Telephone 15 and 1¢. WORLD JUSTICE: GOURT OKEHED BY OHIO. BAR Newton D. Baker Leads Fight for Hughes Plan Approval. COLUMBUS, ...Ohio, Jan. . 26.— After a lively debate, Newton D. Baker, former secretary of war, to- day succeeded {a driving through a resolution whick put the Ohio Bar association's convention here on record ag favoring the Unite States supporting the permanent court of international justice in ac- cordance with recommendations of Secretary of State Hughes. Opposition to. Baker's resolution was led by Judge Frank W. Geiger of Springfield, who delivered a spirited address replying to the world court spech of Manley Hud- son, professor of international law at Harvard university. When the proposal came ‘to a vote it ried overwhejmingly. There was a sprinkling of negative yotes however, and several delegates de- clined'to go on record. MOUNT EVEREST CLIMB WILL BE TRIED AGAIN THIS YEAR BY FRANK GETTY (United Press Staff Correspondent) NEW YORK, Jan. 26—A rather tired looking Jittle American girl, with a brave smile fixed on lips that were blue with cold, stood at the rail of B. deck as the liner Veen- dam sailed today and watched the familjar skyline of New ork slip ping away Into the haze, She is Millicent Rogers, hetress to forty millions, who married Count Salm Von Hoogstracten, gas Aus- tralian adventurer, and she was sailing with ‘her husband for Hol- land and eventually Austria, the count’s native “land. There were no friends to bid her “bon voyage'’—-she whe was ever the most popular among the young- er set of New York society. Her parents, apparently still es- tranged by her sudden marriage to the gallant nobleman, did not come to the dock. We One man, a stranger Dr. Boomula, friend of the count’s, was with them. A short time before the boat was due to sail, Millicent sat in a chair in the lobby of the Ritz where she and her husband had been living in the apartment formerly occupled by the. bride's _ parents. Her eyes were c'osed and the corner of her pretty mouth drooped a bit. Salm bustled about, towering to his six feet four above the heads of other guests thronging the lobby. The count’s noble manner was a bit frayed by irritation, The bell- hops at tho Ritz insist the count’s tips are scarcely commensurate with his nobility. But then, you see, Millicent of the forty millions LONDON, Eng., Jan, 26—(United Press}—-A further attempt will be made in 1924, under direction of the Royal Geographical Society, to scale M The expedition will ling in March with the hope and expectation of excelling the record of 1922, when the party reached a point within 2,000 feet of the summit. In regard to the Mt. Everest ex- pedition, the Earl of Ronalkishay, president df the Royal society, said in an interview: “The exploring party is expected to be ready to leave Darjeeling, on the flank of the Himalayas, by the end of next March. The chances that this year’s expedition will be successful in reaching the summit are very fair,” he added. “At any rate, we are hope: and the party has profited by the experiences of. the ditions “The route taken will be almost the same as last y Pe A great deal’ depends on how long the weather holds. ‘It has been” questioned whether oxygen need be taken this time. The matter has not definitely been settlec, but we have learned that nights can be passed without oxy- gen at a height of 25,000 feet. ‘There have been a good many changes in tho personnel of the jeneral C, G. Bruce will re- main in charge of the expedition, but Colonel Strutt will no longer be the second in.¢ommand. The numbers will probably be about the same as last year." The first expedition left Dar- jeeling about the middle of May, 1921, under the command of Col- onel Howard-Bury, and was really a reconnoitering party for the sec- ond expedition which went out in the following year. Bad weather defeated the 1922 expedition, after the party had broken the world's record of 24,- 583 feet, established by the Duke of Abruzzi, Mallory Somervell, and Major Norton reached a height of 26,985 feet, and Finch and Cap- tain Bruce climbed to 27,200 feet, with the help of oxygen. This was less than’ 2,000 feet below the sum- mit, wh'ch {fs given as 29,000 feet. Genera! Bruce has stated that perhaps the greatest lesson of the 1922 expedition {s that cimbers can carry on eyen at great heights without oxygen, Ay She Sails on Honeymoon i night in a cell. ‘words in behalf of their proposals. After that the committee, Chair- “jman Kahn said tonight; he expects had no dot whateyer, for ‘Rogers set his face agati t match, * | house. The sad, tired Mttle girl, who forced a smilo when asked aboat to lose, little time in coming to a, ‘eonclusion on its report to the! The McKensie bill embody-' her trip said, “Oh, gee, what can|mittee’s discussion in I say? I don't know why we are | session. going or when we're coming back,” “Oh damn it,” the high pitched voice of the bridegroom preparing for the honeymoon, broke in, “do I have to do everything for my- self?” . The bell-hop had disappeared, 60 the count had to go upstairs after a forgotten steamer rug. The count and countess are to.| || be re-married at the former's home in Regina Auntria. , KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan. 26. — Charles Bain, a barber, was shot and killed by policemen here short- Ocean voyages. were no novelty] ly after midnight when the officers to him, who was the darling of fair| mistook him for bandit they wer. ladies in many European cities, a| pursuing. Bain was returning from movie star of parts, a tango dancer| work an‘i’was about to enter his without a peer. “Have Colonel_and Mrs, walked slowly to the revolving door,’ followed by Salm. : The Irish taxi starter held open a door and tipped his hat with ‘a happy grin. Millicent flashed him a grateful little smile and got in unassisted and the party drove to the ship. ‘One quick glance about the dock had convinced the bride that none of her friends or relatives had come to see her off. tiny one on B deck, filled with ‘Then she sought her stateroom, a trunks, 3 No friends to ease the pang of farewell; no flowers even. But Millicent was happy. i O, yes, very, very happy, for| wasn't she sailing on her honey-| moon? and there was! just a sug- gestion.ot break in her foice as she. repeated her assertion, “But I seem to have lost all my friends,” she said. A sad, tired little American girl, sailing for Austria with none to bid her farewell. And then the count came and closed the door in the reporter's face. ——EE ACTORS AND THE LAW VIENNA, Jan, 26—{United Press) —The law was no respecter of per- sons, but it was of art, in the case of Eugene Kloepfer, popular Aus- trian actor, who was taken to the'|~ theater by the police and told to go through with his program. Kloepfer was just boarding; an ex- press train to Italy, where his préw ence was demanded for a moving picture film, when an Austrian gen- darme led him to police hearquir- ters. The actor has neglected to cancel his contract with the Less: ing theater here. _At the hour ap- proaching his scheduled appear ance, the actor Was given his vio- lin and conducted to the theater by two gendarmes, He played his role home when he was suot down. He died in Hie wife's arms. ‘Suicide Rests Head on Stick Of Dynamite GRANTS PASS, Oregon, Jan. 26.—George Kenyon, invalid, com- mitted suicide today by ‘Ifghting a fuse and resting his head on a ick of dynamite until it went off, 4 Expenditure But Not Expense Advertising done right and under rightly adjusted conditions becomes an investment because it more than carries its own weight. Advertising reduces prices with- out reducing profits. - Advertising’s great mission to business is keeping capital moy- ing in a hurry. Annual profit is per sale profit multiplied by the number of times you do it each year. Customers thoroughly pgsted in advance by reading the store news have programmed their buying so that the salesman spends his time selling. Selling thus facijitated reduces selling costs and therefore selling prices. Leading merchants depend on the advertising columns of The Tribune to have the customer ready to buy on entering the store. SHOP IN THE TRIBUNE BEFORE SHOPPING IN THE SHOPS. —— Production of 5,947,900 tons of coal in one week recently is believ- and afterwards was again taken in| ed to be the high record for any charge and forced to spend the | week in the history of the mines of Great Britain, MINISTER TO ASK DIVORCE. OAKLAND, Cal., Jan. 26,—Rev. James 5. West, Baptist clergyman of San. Francisco, recovering at the home of friends here from a nervous.| ordinary bootleggers such as breakdown caused by the departure of his wife for Seattle, will file suit for divorce in the near future, he ‘said tonight. West will allege desertion and. expects no trouble-in obtaining Seattle, according to authoritative report, that she too would file suit, if she could discover any grounds for asking the divorce. Rev. West, who recently figured in a stirring clerical probe of “pet, ting parties” in San Francisco, has announced his intention of making the best of the situation, and throw. ing himself all the more vigorously into his clerical duties as soon as SELF DEFENSE IS CLAIMED BY _ SLAYER OF ACTRESS’ FATHER . CHICAGO, Jan. 26.—Declaring he Henry Harris, Mildred = Harris, with his fist and not a weapon as had been charged, and that his motive was self defense, John Vernoskey, a taxicab driver, was being held on an open charge at detective headquarters here to- mpvie AT HARVARD CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Jan. 26— Classed as “nothihg but common w Mquor squad brings in every day" Fred 8. Harrington and Roland T. Kinney, juniors at Harvard univer- sity, the former said to be the son of a wealthy Utah manufacturer, Were denied the mercy of the, court here today by Judge Arthur P. Stone when brought before him on charges of violating the liquor laws. Harrington was fined $100 = for Keeping and exposing Nquor and Kinney was ordered to pay $50 for unlawfully selling liqtor, Counsel for the young men, both of whom are students at the Har- vard law school, asked that their plea of nol contendre be accepted and urged the court to be lenient ®s their arrest might result in ex- Pulsion from college. Harris died at a hospital early to- day from a fractured skull sus- tained in an altercation with the chauffeur following a collision of their automobiles Friday night, Police alleged. Vernoskey said Harris struck him first and that he retaliated. On the first blow Harris fell, striking his head on the pavement, the chautf- feur said. 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