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Show CACHE AMERICAN. LOGAN. UTAH News Review of Current Events tlie World Over United States Warns Japan It Is Violating the Treaty President Prods Congres Nine-Pow- er ci on Relief Measures. rAN liii been formally notified (list In (tin opinion of the Anier-leagovernment ilia I violating th. Sin power treaty hr tier actloni In T b Mum hurls. lulled States doe. not recognlza a. legal Japun'a occupation of tha country. Cltliia and Ja- dally Included n art pan both pnaej tha bill already by the house to Increase the capitalization of tha federal land hank system by a sum between $luo.0"O,J) and fl25.0u0.0u0j the bill to create a federally reconstrucfinanced irsai.Ouu.UaJ tion finance corporation"; the bill to create a home loan discount sj.tem capitalized by the govern-ilit at a minimum of the 000; and a bill to rediscount provisions of the federal reserve sjsU-m- . The I'resld nl also urged a pin 0 to release the assets of closid hanks, a revision of the transportation act with a view to strengthening the value of railroad bonds, and a revision of the hanking luwa, the belter to protect de(osltora. Renata and bouse leuders of both parties promised to aid the I'resl dents proHmnla. The senute start ed relief affairs In II own way by passing Cupers resolution authorizing the distribution to the needy of 40,UJO,OUO bushels of sta blllzatlon wheat held by the farm bourd, through the administration of (he American Red Cross and oilier The farm bourd Is organizations. to lie credited with (lie market price of wheat at the time of the transaction. chairman of John Itarton the Red Cross, said that that organization would gladly undertake the distribution, and lati-- r before the house committee on agriculture he not only spoke In fuvor of this bill, but encouruged the Introduction of a hill to treat farm hoard cot ion In the same fashion, so that cotton goods may he donated to those lacking clothing. Sir. Inyne was explicit on one point, lie wanted the exuct dalle of the Red Cross as distributing agent definitely set out in the hill. Out of tils experience, he snld, the Ited Cross would he criticized In whatever It did and he wished no loopholes left In the bill. warned that Washington will not recognize any n g entered Into by tlieiii which the oen door or the Kellogg pact 8ae y SUmtort lrpnty The. stateiuenta were forwarded In Identical note, to Tokjo and of State Nanking by Fem-lnrFilmson. who Immediately thereafter called In the diplomatic of the aignalnrlea to tbo nlnepower pact and told them what he had done. It was expected that Great Britain and some of the would follow the other power Mr. Stlmaon American example. declined to any w hat could or would bo done If Japan persists In violations of the treaty. The pact call, for no oilier action than full and frnnk communication tho contracting powera concerned In case of an emergency. The Kellogg treaty calls for no military or diplomatic steps. The Japanese forces In Muncliurla moved on southward from and occupied Shnnhnlkwan, the gateway to China, slluated Where the Great Wall renehea the coast Their garrison In Tientsin was heat lly Increased and a grand held there. review" Enrller In the week the Washington administration was aroused by an attack made on American Consul Culver R. Chamberlain by Japanese soldiers In Mukden. Formal protest brought an apology from the Japanese ambassador In Washington hut Mr. Stlmson let Wllllnm Jennings Rrynn him know that the Incident would COULD returned to earth nnd been Dot be considered closed nntll the present at the senate chamber the offenders had been adequately pun- other day he would have been Imished. For this affair, as for alt its gratified, mensely actions In Manchuria, the Japanese for the old 10 to government sought to put forward 1" Issue which nearIn excuses and explanations ly carried him Into most cases appear to be ready made the White House to fit the circumstances. years ago was reOn Friday a bomb was hurled In vived by Senator Tokyo by a young Corean In nn Rurton K. Wheeler. Illroh-Itto assassinate Emperor Democrat It exploded near the carrlnge from Montana Inpreceding that occupied by the troduced a hill proruler, and no one was Injured. viding for the free coinage of silver In the French on the basis of 10 GREAT disturbance was caused by ounces to 1 of gold, the dentb of Andre Maglnot, min- which was exactly what Mr. Rryan ister of war, and It appeared cer- sought so long to bring nbout. tain there would be changes In the This legislation would do more cabinet Some observers expected that all suggestions heretofore comBriand would be forced out and bined towards reviving, encouragthat Tardiea would succeed him ns ing, vitalizing and resuscitating foreign minister. Maglnot was re- business in this country and sponsible for the governments throughout the world, Wheeler Strong military attitude and orig- said. inated the plan for a great chain Contentment, happiness nnd luof fortresses along the eastern crative occupation would be substiborder. tuted for discontentment, despair, with their Inevitable resultant trageHoover dies to follow." WITH toPresident congress for speedy and Donpartisan action on the relief BORAH sometimes measures he has recommended, the SENATOR utterly the wrath of Democrats began to his colleagues, and he did this when push forward the he Introduced three bills designed first of their party to effect economies In government bills of major ImThe first of these expenditures. portance. This Is a measures would reduce the salaries tariff bill not deof the federal farm board members signed to alter exIt from $12,000 to $0,000 a year. isting rates but to would further place a $15,000 maxdeprive the Chief imum on any annual Bnlary conExecutive of his nected with the board, a provision control over the aimed at the counsel who now reflexible provisions ceives $20,000. of the present act. The second bill strikes at the It also calls on the dearly beloved twenty cent mileage President to summon an International conference prerogative of congressional and certain other governmental officers. for the reduction of tariff rates. The third bill cuts the salary of This measure, which was Introduced by Representative James W. the Vice President from $15,000 a Collier of Mississippi, Democratic year to $10,000; and does the same chairman of the house ways and thing for the members of the Presimeans committee, had the approval dents cabinet It also reduces the of the congressional Democratic $10,000 per annum paid to senators joint policy committee. It would and representatives to $8,000. It was stated at the White House take away the power now enjoyed beby the President to accept or re- that President Hoover did not ject, as he alone sees fit, the recom- lieve this federal salary cut movemendations made by the tariff ment would come close to passage In congress and that If It were seCommission, under the flexible act riously considered he would oppose of the It would give congress the final It His opinion Is that It would right to determine whether or not result In loss of efficiency and the commissions findings justify a morale and also that It would set a bnd example for the country. All Change in rates. Supported by all the Democrats tbrongh the depression period the and probably some of the Independ- President has urged business and ent Republicans, this bill. It was industry not to reduce wages exadmitted, had a good chance to get cept as a last resort through both houses but not with EMOCRATS and wets both a sufficient margin to pass It over over the result of the the Presidential veto that might be election In New Hampshire to fill expected. the vacancy caused by the death Fletcher Hale, HOOVERS plea for quick of Representative on relief bills was dry Republican. In a normally Remade In a special message. The publican district William N. Rogmeasure for which he spoke espe- - ers, former congressman, who Is a ree-nie- tlo-lute- s nine-powe- r Chin-cho- s ef-fo- That Smoot-Hawle- y r MR. nJvltln In r :-- $,CUA 4 ! rr-v-? V t, j t rG li Bnngi Almost Instant RtUef llio intuJeiabl pfciM of rltro or ocb or oeunua or lumhog o tua4 dua l forfH rinvo you nrily tho mrv?loua heat Natur put uto red It it lhi penetrating heat peiprra. lhat relieve 11 pain M It aoothre and fei down tinder tlie akin, teeming to clear op inflammatioa instantly. U tlu genuine red pepper heal lhat i gow contained ia on ointment called Aowfea pepper Rub Arrau rub it in you can feel fetid com. There nothing better fo brekmg up odanger out cheat cold either. All druggitf rll ft a Ptppmr Pub la Convenient put. UVq Japan: Well sll I know I read In th paper, what Jut I Prowl. I think snd whst I Ih last time I wrote you s long letter w wer In the mlJJIe of PseIfIe the . OSAKA. til J le V Ovean. You know I an th Champion of th World getting and I sf -- e know 1 that kIt U Just 1 If you nerve. R . ewill Juat keep op . there and battle with It. sod keep going why you r O. K. But I am kinder yellow ! snjliow, and when 1 feel s Iltt.e squIrmUh why I etart hitting for i the Hay. and when one I get down In the old Lank why I am s dead I og from the n on, no muster If r week or a month. are out for So knowing Hi! lu advance I a jail ct for shout eleven da fun It pays to shop and smueement right In Ih old hunk with one of thee little tin B.iekct fastened onto th j Bread 'tide of 1L Everybody said. Ah keep going, eat 11 the time. Drink! Floyd Gibbons of course la a good STOP YOUR COLD Sailor, for he has done nothing but sail somewhere all his life. He was IN 6 HOUS WITH is kidding me and telling me to come on and eat s lot, and have another little glass of beer. Well Its s beautiful trip from Vancouver over to Victoria, thata the Capitol of British Columbia. So Drives if away In 12 hours. I dldent have much excuse to keel Relieves over going through all those beautiHeadache Neurelgia Peini ful wooded Islands and stralla. We got over there Jut shout dark, and there was s lot of folks come down to the Boat The American Conul there wanted to take me Modere Appreciates ashore and show me the Town. Listen to that mor- Oh. Bertie! Course It was dark, but we drove by all the big Government buildings velmis Jazz!" and we got a mighty good Idea of thats classieul music Why, the City. There la beautiful homes tliej're phi) ing." Well, It sounds good enough to there and gardens and grounds. Its about the most British City of any he Jazz." Stray Stories. In Canada, there Is an awful lot of Britishers there. I mean the real ones that come direct from Eng' land, and are not Canadians, but British. There seems to be s kind i of a pack of em out there. Well then we pulled out and bit Dont Neglect Kidney and the real Ocean, and course I went Bladder Irregularities to bed. But even in the morning bothered with bladder irIf I surprised myself by getting up Typical street scene In Chinchow, the Important city In southwestern Manchuria, which the Japanese regularities, getting up at night to and down and going breakfast, and nagging backache, heed troops occupied after the Chinese force had been withdrawn hack of the Great Wall. then stuck It out till Lunch, and promptly these symptoms. then dinner, and mind you all this They may warn ol some distime I was packing In the Fodder. TYPICAL SHOW GIRL ordered kidney or bladder conThey had awful good eats on the dition. For 50 years grateful users have relied upon Doans boat and I just went the limit, and Pills Praised the country over. then about the middle of Mister Sold by all druggists Balboa's Ocean we hit a Typhoon, and thats when the Llfebont v ashed away and like to got some more. Then by that time I was flgure-Inthat I was a real Sailor. This thing of a Typhoon, crossed with a A DIURETIC FOR Monsoon, and sired by a Hurricane THEKIDNFtS , lasted with all that was following It, about two days In all. But whnt I started to tell you was one time, away out In New Zealand, thats It Works right near Australia, I was workVisitor (at farm) There doesnt ing with a Circus. Well I left It seem to be any work to do, yet I see to come to America, or rather the you have a sign, Farm Help Wanted. United States, for we are not ALL Farmer Oh, thats better than a of America. Well I was supposed to keep the tramps away. dog to make a one night trip by a small boat from down the coast where Keeping Moving left the show, after being It for First Watchmaker How is busl- over six months, and finally made ness? enough to get home on. (But not Second Watchmaker-makin- -- Oh, Im still first class). a go of It. Well the train I was on pulled up beside the Boat, and I knowing that I was going to be sick, rushed aboard well into your chest away, and I says RUB Musterole to myself I will throat almost instantly you feel easier. Repeat the Musterole-ru- b get in the bunk once an hour for five hours and maby that what a glorious relief! will help me cold feme-diThose good from being too oil of mustard, menthol, camphor sick. Well Its are mixed with other valuable ingredidocthe paint, and ents in Musterole to mate it what because counter-irritaof that 8 m e tors call t gets action and is not just a salve. varnish that If kd I'j - tU "xV'Vi l ' RHEUMATISM mum ' tilled K'atce btt0 tHfii vA ec!ally of Hamilton I l.h. Jr, con. -' j from N w 1ork, and th recent tragedy In Easton, I'a, when mall clerk were killed by a bomb mailed to an Italian, together with t b discovery of bomb, in tli mult In other localities gave him a new opiKirtunlty. He In" i- troduced In t b a i 4 bouse a resolution confor calling Hamilton Flih, gresslooul Inquiry if. j Into (lie arllvllle K ' ' A I of Fascist and anti Fascist In tide bomb country. The "dlatadh-ahe auld, had been charged to hotli these factions of our Rue Ian resident and he urged the Investigation for the puriaise of putting an end to all atnh artlvItV. wliUli lend to create ulword with a friendly tuition nnd have caused enmities, riot and murders among 2 Con- 1 Wro kage left by tornado that swept through southeast Mississippi, killing five person. our own people." .vie! from the Iurchnmn prison farm worUig to prevent the breaking of the Tallahatchie river levee near rnl Lieutenant Von Bhmiborg, who will represent 3 and Nadolny and G.-J. RASKOIt, chairman ol Glendora, Ml.- -. JOHN IvirnKTutiC national Com- Germany at the disarmament conference lu Geneva. mittee, fearing a split between the wet and dry wings of the party, backed down a hit from Ills dripHe made pubping wet attitude. lic a Idler he sent to members of Hie national committee recommending the adoption of a home rule plank by the coming national convention. He advocates the submission of an amendment to the Eighteenth amendment which would give control of the liquor traffic to each r- Individual stale. si Mr. Itaskoh also asked that the lr2' tx w result of III questionnaire to con3 ? 5 tributor. to the last natloi al cam; paign he referred to the convenv5, tion. More limn 3,000 replies to Ct the questionnaires were received and of these 03 per cent favored the resubnilNslon of the Eighteenth amendment to the people. Seventy-nin- e per cent were for outright repeat of prohibition. ll ADVISES HEAT OF RED PEPPERS FOR wai. Ih n lly EDWARD W. riCKARD J Scenes and Persons in the Current News wet Democrat, was victorious over former Gov. John Rartiett by about ft.tHju voles Rogers chief la.ua in th campaign was unemployment and Industrial depression. Th liemoomt In tha house now number 220, while the Itepuhllenn 14 and th Farmer Lahorlte bar one. ' !5jii3Vl i At PENNEYS Street in Chinchow, City Taken by Japanese 1 v is in oilier lenders of the Indian Nationalists are under arrest nnd troops nre on their way from England to reinforce those In India ; but It Is evident the British government Is going to have a terribly hard time suppressing the revolt of the natives. Viceroy Lord Wllllngdon put Into effect vurlons emergency decrees, outlawCongress party, ing the forbidding contributions to Its funds and prohibiting demonstrations and peaceful picketing. From his cell Gandhi Issued an appeal to the Christians of India to support the independence movement, to adopt the spinning wheel and home-spugarments nnd to renounce drink. Native women were lending most of the demonstrations, while the men carried on the fight against payment of taxes and manufactured Illicit salt. The boycott of British goods of all kinds spread rapidly. Gandhi told Ids followers that the boycott is the weapon thnt will bring England to her knees." Mahatma ganpiii ninny a G. DAWES, Great Britain, on comfrom London the other occasion to deny forcrumor the ibly that he was a possible candidate for the Republican nomination for President, a sort of last hope of those who do not favor the renomination of Mr. Hoover, General Dawes said he was in Washington solely for the purpose of consulting with the President course to be followed by the American delegation to the coming disarmament conference, of which delegation he Is to be the head. After General Dawes and the had other American delegates breakfast with President Hoover It was announced at the White House that the United States does not Intend to play a leading role at the conference. Having cut the American military establishment to the bom In the name of economy, no further cuts along this line should be expected, this administration spokesman said. It was also pointed out that as the United States now ranked fifteenth among the nations in military power, there was little likelihood that this conn-trwould be asked to make any real cuts. CHARLES - y EM w, mi. Newspaper VatchYour Kidneys Stone on Tomb of Unknown Soldier Doan's ills COLDS right es 1 1 does Miss Dorothy Adams, of Great Bend, Kan., has been selected as the Typical Show Girl, winning the honor over 100 other entries. Miss Adams is nineteen, and has dark hair and blue eyes. Carcaeeonne Ton may have never been to Carcassonne in France, and like the old man In Nadauds famous song, you may lament, I never shall see Carcassonne, but you have heard of It and read of It, the famous walled city which still stands as It did In the Middle ages, with Its double line of fortifications and 50 towers. The citadel dates back to the Fifth century when It was occupied by the Visigoths, while its cathedral of St. Nazaire Is of the Eighth century. Tlie city Is so old that Julius Caesar saw it 2,000 years ago. only Chicago but mankind much the poorer for the death of Julius Rosenwald, philanthropist and capitalist, who passed away after two years of Illness. He had made great sums of money In merchandising aDd devoted most of his fortune to benefactions deWUdom signed to encourage thrift and to He gains wisdom In a happy way eradicate racial and religious preju- who gains It by another's experidice. ence. flatus. Western , Union.) NOT A- - st V m illt--u -' ' I If I ' s " i tkw j 5 Postmaster William Mooney of Washington selling the first block of new George Washington Bicentennial postage stamps to Senator Simeon! D. Fess of Ohio, chairman of the Republican national committee, and Representative Sol Bloom of New York, chairman of the bicentennial commission. The stamps are In great demand wherever they are on sale. Odd Human Habitations There are more than 100,000 persons living today In subterranean dwellings In North Africa. True Hero Among the heroes may be classed the man who when "paying the piper, can-smil- It Well nt I It penetrates and stimulates blood circulation and helps to draw out infecgot a whiff of It tion and pain. Used by millions for JO and going down, years. Recommended by many doctors I crawled right and nurses. All druggists. Into my bunk, (which was In To Mothers Musterole is also among a lot of other mens bunks). made in milder form for babtes Now I was under the Impression and small children. Ask for Children's Musterole. that the Boat was going to pull right out. But this old sniff of paint had got me, and sure enough I started In being sick. I had the old Lunch Basket tied right on to the edge of the bed. (They have lovely little Cuspldora of a thing for Birds like me). Well I sure was going strong. I thought well Matter of Business I havent got long to be sick, for They say Dave married Gladys for we will be in there before long, noney. Yes, to get back what hed and finally some fellow come In and ,,riven her! asked another fellow, Whats tho matter with this Boat, alnt It ever Sober second thoughts usually going to pull out? Here I was the next day. practically dying and the boat tied to the dock, we hadent moved a peg. But the old Imagination had done some working along with the AT GOOD PRICES Old Stomacher, and here I was 500 horses and mules every Monday dying and still tied to the dock. after January 1st, any kind, any age. So when I crossed the Pacific this Writs or win for information time with no casualties, why I sure COLORADO HORSE A MULE CO. did think I was a Sailor. I was for Stock Yards Donvor, Colo. shipping on as a regular. 1 952, W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. McNaugki Syndicate, Inc, WE CAN SELL |