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Show BANKING SYSTEM OUTWORN By W. CHARLES COLLINS. Nw York Bank Lawyar. E OF this generation have inherited an antiquated and outworn system of banking. Our attempt in this modern age of mass production to give a banking service to business and the public through more than 25,000 separate and independent corporations, most of which are 6mall and weak and situated in the rural communities, is as much of an anachronism as would be the attempt to restore the horse and buggy to the arterial highways of the United States. In the old days when local communities were isolated the business of every small town was autonomous and the local bank could diversifj ita business. The bank was integrally associated with local enterprises It represented a cross section of the business of the community. Now , British Schneider cup race entry which In tests attained a speed of ,T () miles an hour. 2 Gerrit J. Dlekemo of Michigan, appointed American minister to Holland. .1 Famous Walling Wall In Jerusalem where the attacks by Arabs on Jews of Palestine styrted. 1 NtWS HLVILW OF CURRENT EVENTS Graf Zeppelin Arrives at Lakehurst, Completing i Trip Around World. W. PICKARD Its arrival at Lakehurst, N. the Graf Zeppelin completed Its epochal trip around the world, In the course of which only three stops were made for refueling at Fried rtchshafen, Tokyo and Los Angels. The Zeppelin made a smooth landing at 8:07 oclock Thursday morning, having circled the globe In 21 days By EDWARD WITH and 7 hours, breaking all previous records. It had flown approximately 20,000 miles and wag In the air about f eleven and days. While the huge dirigible displayed most excellent qualities In the way of safety, speed and cruising ability, the lions share of the credit for the feat must he given to Pr. Hugo Kckener, the airship's Indomitable commander and chief pilot. His passengers and crew are giving him unstinted praise for the skill he showed throughout the trip. Every southern Culifornian who could get there greeted the Zeppelin at I .os Angeles, which was reached on Monday after a flight across the Pacific enlivened only by an electrb storm encountered soon after the de parture from Tokyo. As It passed down the California const the alt ship on Sunday had circled over San Fran cisco. The getaway from I os Angeles was not easy and quantities of ballast and extra equipment had to he dumped to give It enough lifting power. As It was, the dirigible barely avoided run nlng Into a network of high power electric wires near Mines field. An Interesting story comes from Japan to the efTect that the Zeppelin's safe crossing of the Pacific prevented the seppuka" or suicidal atonement of the five officers and twelve enlisted men of the Japnnese navy who held themselves blameuhle for the slight accident that the airship suffered in being taken from the hangar at airport Such action by the Japanese would have been In accord with their ancient custom, and the wives of the men might have followed them In death. one-hal- globe-entirelln- g a CLEVELAND was "up in the air" till week, enjoying the alrpluue cares and exhibitions of flying and the big aircraft exposition. Among the star attractions was Mrs. Louise McPhetridge Tlmden of Pittsburgh, who won the womens derby that start ed at Santa Monica. Fifteen of the nineteen ladybirds who started finished the race. Marvel Crosson was killed, as reluted last week, and three others were forced out by mishaps. Gladys O'Donnell of Long Beach. Calif, won second place and Amelia Earhart, transatlantic flyer, was third. Colonel Lindbergh and his wife, who is now a student flyer, were Interested and Interesting visitors. The United States will have no representative In the Schneider cup races In England, for Lieut. Alford Williams was nnable to complete the tests of his plane In time and withdrew. Itulys best racing flyer, Captain Mnttn. was killed while testing one of his planes, and the British were asked on that account to postpone the races, but refused because the ftnuneiul sacrifices would be too great PROM Dan to Reersheba, and a deal further In ull direc- tions, Palestine and the neighboring countries were aflame with revolt. Arabs were massacreing Jews In a score of cities, towns and villages, the native police and military forces were Impotent, and Greut Britain was rushing warships, troops, marines and airplanes to the Holy Land to restore peace If possible. The trouble, which has been simmer lng for months, broke out with clashes between Arabs and Jews In Jerusalem, especially at the Wailing Wall where Jews have prayed for centuries, and which is the Inst remaining fragment of Solomons temple. The rioting spread rapidly, to the Slnboka rabbinical college and a Jewish school at Hebron, where the Jews killed In eluded a cumber of Americans, and hen to immv oilier places In lilies tine. Latest repoits, made Indefinite by strict press censorship, said the A rubs of Transjordinla and Syria were rising In revolt, demanding their complete rights" and the abrogation of European control In those lands. Upon Great Btituin fell the burden of meet lng the situation, and she responded swiftly. Her troop carrying planes ear rled hundreds of soldiers front the Palestine ports Inland, and her bomb lng planes vent Into operation against the Arabs at Jerusalem and elsewhere. At Haifa, where Arabs were attuik-Inthe Jewish quarter, the British murines were said to have fired on both Arabs and Jews, killing and wounding many. Leaders of American Jewish organl r.atbms called on President Hoover and Secretary Stlmson and asked that they take every necessury step to protect the lives and property of American nationals. They were assured of the deep sympathy of both Mr. Hoover and Mr. Stimson for the Palestine sufferers and were told that Great Britain was doing everything possible to restore tranquil conditions Then they called on Sir Esine Howard, British ambus sador, and were given the same as siirnnce by him of wrangling at The came to an end will) an arrangement for the putting into op oration of the Young plan for German reparations and for getting the allien troops out of the Rhineland. Tin British claims for mote German money than the Young commission allotted them are to he satisfied to the extent of. about So per cent of the demantis the amount being made up by various devices of the other creditor nations The German government is to pay first $1 I.UUJ.tHHi toward the nminie nance of French. British and Belgian garrisons totaling 5(5, (KK men now holding the Coblenz and Mnyenee WEEKS bridgeheads and adjaeeut areas. The British force on the Rhine numbers only 0,250. This places a premium on the allies liberating the Ithlue by Christmas, as thereafter, or vvheuever Germany's donation of $1 1,002, (MX) is expended, the French, British anu Belgians must pay for their own troop maintenance pro rata. We bought back our Rhineland provinces for $11.(5(52,000, one German delegate remarked dryly. The Young plan, though scheduled to start on September 1, really be comes effective from November 1, according to the plans of the delegates of the great powers. The beginning ot the plun Is truly timed by the eight months given the French to evacuate ull Rhine zones that is, from Novetn her 1. 102!). to June 30. 10,50. The powers propose holding a re sumption of the conference In Switzerland Montreux of Lucerne during the first days of October after the League of Nations assembly ends, to wind up the final agreements. a bronze size, was un- Debater, J1NC0LN oftheheroic veiled at Freeport, III., the scene of the most famous of the Llncoln-DottTen las debates In August, 1858. thousand persons attended the ceremonies and listened to Senator George W. Norris, who delivered the chief address. The Nebraskan took the opportunity to nuke a hot attack on the electric power trust, the system of Presidential elections, the abuse of power by federal Judges and the build lng of Mg armies and navies. During the 1523 Presidential campaign. Senator Norris vvas mentioned as a possible third party candidate. Referring to the present system of electing Pres Idents, he charged that election of an Independent candidate for President Is possible In theory hut absolutely Impossible In practice. He argued that the electoral college should be abolished. g d. tyson, united from Tennessee, died In a sanitarium near Philadelphia where te had been under treatment for several weeks. He was Just com pletlng his first term In the senate. Tyson was born In Greenville, S. C sixty-seveyears ago and was gradti ated from West Point in 18S3. While commander of cadets at the University of Tennessee he studied law Hnd later practiced In Knoxville. He served as a colonel of volunteers In the Spun war and then went Into the Tennessee legislature. During the World war he distinguished himself Lawrence n branch banking which will give us strong toward a system of banks with branches wherever banking services are needed. This would give the most complete diversification, making a bank failure as nearly impossible as human ingenuity can devise. In my opin ion, a system of branch banking such as exists in every other advanced country of the world is the only form adapted to modern conditions, the only form which will give to the public the safety and the service to which it is entitled. world-wid- as a hrigiidit r general commanding a brigade of Tennessee and Carolina troops attached to the Old Hickory" division, a hlch saw service In France. One of the outstanding German figures In the World war. Field Marshal Union von Sanders, passed away In Munich. He was the eavulry officer to whom Molmmnud Reshld V, sultan of Turkey, . by arrungemeut with Kaiser William II, intrusted In 10115 the reorganization of the Turkish army. He remained in the Turkish de fons"8 at Gallipoli In 1015 and after the British retirement organized the Turkish fighting forces In Asin Minor and conducted operations In 1018 In Palestine. The Turkish debacle, how ever, nullified his efforts. and Russia seemed to be time last week In their Manchurian quarrel, though the propaganda agencies of both nations were act he. The Soviet radio station broad casting from Klinharovak, Siberia, kept telling the Chinese that America and France were plotting to set up an to control International commission the Chinese Eastern railway, and considerable feeling was created In llarbln until the newspapers there printed a true statement concerning (resident Hoover's efforts under the Kellogg pud to prevent a Sino Russian war. There was another bloody outbreak of the Mongolian Nomads in western Manchuria, scores of Chinese being slain, and naturally the Chinese authorities Maned the Russians for Instigating it. Extreme heat of defective shells caused an explosion that destroyed the Chinese government's largest arsenals In Nanking and the conflagration spread to other buildings. The property damage was estimated at $1,500,000. of the public lands a conference in Salt Lake City and received a message from President Hoover In which he suggested that the surface rights of remaining unappropriated public lands should be transferred to the states. Western senators In Washington heard this proposition with surprise and dls favor, looking on It as somewhat of a gold brlek, Inasmuch as the mineral rights which the President would retain In the hands of the federal government furnish the revenues which the public bind states long have wished to gel hold of. They contended that the revenues from the surface rights would he Insignificant. As Senator Borah said, those lands are chiefly desert and mountain territory and a Juck rabbit could hardly live od them. commissars have SOVIET peoples a three shift day and for Russian Inweek seven-dadustry. according to the Moscow According to the plan each worker gets every fifth day free, bu. various shifts In the factories will keep producing day and night The factories will only be closed five times a yeur for the observance of the greatest revolutionary holidays. Besides abolishing Sunday completely and destroying the Influence of the religious sects on the working class, the Isvestla finds the new plan will also assist communism and destroy the old forms of life. Even the family will he abolished and the workers will live In socialized houses with perhaps a segregation of the sexes. to be enthe federal authorities must do all the enforcing, according to Police Commissioner Grover A. Whalen. After a conference with county prosecutors, magistrates and police officers, the commissioner notified Federal Prohibition Administrator Campbell of that distrist that he flatly refused to tnke the responsibility for local dry enforcement He also refused to order the police to proceed against siteakeasles under the state nuisance law. if you are unwilling to discharge your sworn obligations to the federal Mr. Whalen said, or government wish to make a confession of yottr Inability to effectively direct the activities of your department, for which a large proportion of a $.,(5,00UKk is alloted, the admission should he primarily to your superiors In Washington tnstead of passing the buck' to the state law enforcing olllcer THE IFforced prohibition law Is In New York city, - 1129 Western Newspaper Union ) mmmm e Law must never be merely a business; the primary thing is justice be an artist. lie must have a knowledge of science and of social behavior. Tradition through generations has raised him in the profession to an artist. We may as well realize that whatever may be our theoretical notions as to the common origin of law, citizens and officials alike carefully discriminate between law and law. In a democracy the best test of law is public accord. When that is lacking the law becomes a hollow phrase, devoid of the living spirit. No amount of mechanical tinkering can make it a living thing. The repeal of such a law merely prevents its already lifeless form from cluttering our statute books. As to President Hoovers crime commission, if it starts out in a spirit of adventure, discovers its own facts and draws its own inferences it will be a success. But if it accepts the views of the President in his address on law observance it will from the beginning be tied to an unrealistic view of the law which may well spell the wreck of the whole The lawyer today must CHINA Governors however, isolation has been wiped out by the automobile, telephone and radio. The local utility enterprises and other concerns have become absorbed by larger companies backed by great aggregations of capital, and their banking business goes to the large city bank. I am confident that congress will in the near future amend the banking laws to prevent the repetition of the nearly 6,000 bank failurel we have witnessed during the past eight years, I believe we are headed j adventure. DEMOCRACY FACING CRISIS By REV. CLYDE H LININGER. Indianapolis (Methodist). Loss of our idealistic tendencies is one of the weaknesses of our government. America is the largest, country ever to try the denioi ratio form of government, but we have lost some of our idealism. We dont find the high ideals that formerly characterized American life. One of the dangers we are facing is that of allowing minorifies to rule our civic righteousness. Our forefathers fought that wemight have a free country, and yet a large number of us pass up the right our forefathers fought for the right to rule ourselves and thus we lesve the minority in power. People seem to place the burden on the minorities nnd thus fail to assume the responsibility of shouldering their part of the load. Too believe men should out of people good many keep politics, when, in fact, good men should get into politics. Americans need courage, faith and leadership and the idealism to stand back of the leaders that are put into office. Democracy lies with the individual and the character of the citizens. NEED FOR BROTHERHOOD SPIRIT By DR JULIUS ATWOOD. Former Episcopal Bishop of Arizona. Right and wrong are undeniable facts of the universe. Although regarding prohibition and total abstinence, we must surethat drunkenness is wrong, and the laws of the nation must ly recognize be obeyed. It is harder to live for ones country than to die for it With the strong appeal these days for money and power, it is still harder. The integrity of our nation is at Stake when money and power are used dishonestly by our public officials. There cannot be a national faith without trust, a national fame without truthfulness and a national responsibility without justice. You and I are not only responsible for our own selves but for the welfare of all. What shall it profit a nation, as much as man, to gain the whole world and lose its own soul. The spirit of brotherhood, sympathy and service are needed in this new age to guide us, for men cannot worship Christ and the devil at the same time. The spirit of nira who firt gave us an expression of a true democracy will in turn give us perfect liberty as a nation. we may differ ORGANIZED LABORS POSITION B WILLIAM GREEN, President A. F ot L, Organized labor is as beneficial to great corporations as it is to the workers. We live in an age of organization. Individual effort alone can count for little these dais. Massed production is the watchword of our times. It is the duty of workers to organize so they can collectively protect their just interests. And in this way the important employers of labor also benefit. Organized units are more efficient and work mors intelligently. The American Federation of Labor is built upon constructive linej. We are unlike those who come preaching dangerous doctrines of revolution. We believe in this country and in its laws and customs and it is eu purpose to uphold those laws and customs. : News Notes : t Its a Privilege to Live In UTAH : Utahs lamb crop HEBER CITY in 1929 Is estimated at 1,458,000 head. In spite of the unfavorable winter and spring. In 1928 the crop amounted to 1.732.000 head and in 1927 1,405,000. HEBER CITY Last years production of apples in Utah amounted tt 850.000 bushels, with a valuation of Salt Lake valley Is th $704,000. heaviest producer. Horse races, BRIGHAM CITY and steers, mules broncs, bucking roping, clowns, and musical entertainers will round out a program each afternoon of the Peach day celebration here September 13 and 14, according to an announcement of the executive committee following a meeting at the chamber of commerce. More than 71,000 chicks PROVD have been sold by the Utah Poultry Producers association In the Provo district alone during the past season, according to Manager John T. Harden cf the local plant. In the entire district of the local plant, comprising the territory from Vineyard to Payson, more than 215,000 chicks have been sold. OGDEN Farm crops and livestock . Jf the southern part of the state are excellent condition, J. Cecil Alter, chief of the local weather bureau, reported recently after an extended trip The recent rains to that section. greatly benefited the fall and winter ranges and the indications are that there will be plenty of feed, he said. During his trip Mr. Alter visited seventeen weather bureau stations. RICHFIELD A banner year for sugar beet growers seems certain in this section, according to S. R. Boswell, county agricultural agent. The long spells of cloudy weather, with frequent showers, has been ideal for the growth of beets. The hay crops have been above normal and the grain has matured with less loss than was expected as a result of the heavy storm that occurred July 27. CEDAR CITY The total number of visitors into southern Utah parks up 3 to August 21, was 2S.076 against during the corresponding period of last year, E. T. Scoyen, superintendent of Zion park and Bryce canHe is attending yon, said recently. the governors conference. Approximately ten superintendents of national parks will visit here en route to or from Yellowstone park to attend a superintendents conference in the park Feiitember 18 to 24. ROOSEVELT Plans are well under way for holding in Roosevelt tins fall the first dairy show ever held in the Uintah basin, according to Walter E. Atwood, chairman of the agricultural and livestock committee of tlie Roosevelt Commercial club. Mr. Atwood says that owners of dairy cattle in all parts of the basin are taking a keen interest in the show and that he is now assured that more than 100 head of the finest dairy cows in the basin will be exhibited. AMERICAN FORK The second carload of mill concentrates from the mill of the Pacific Gold Mining and Milling company in American Fork canyon left here last week for the smelter. Reports from the propertv are that grade of ore that was milled in the drift is still heading into the same last car of 55 tons, about $60 y to the ton. An streak of high grade ore continues in the face of the drift and the workings give promise of a high grade bunch, which may open up in the next few days. SALT LAKE Crops in Utah have suffered less from the dry weather than in some of the other mountain states, and the indicated yield of sugar beets is greater than in 1928, according to the Standard Statistics company of New York. General condi- tions in this group of states are more satisfactory than last year, the com-pan-y reports. Records of the company show that Salt Lake transacted the largest volume of business, measured by debits against Individual checking accounts, reported for any July in the last 11 years, VERNAL Since the Inception late last spring of the drive on mountain lions in the Diamond mountain region., northeast of Vernal, five of the killers have been slain. As the lion Infested territory extends into Colorado, as well as the big game and fishing region, efforts are being made by the sportsmen of Uintah county to secure the cooperation of the Colorado state fish and game department to have the state line posted. In past years the fact that hunters, trappers and fishermen of the two states at times found that they had unknowingly operated beyond the borders of their own state has led to some unpleasantness. In In 24,-63- h VERNAL The first two days of the roundup of wild and abandoned horses on the east end of Diamond mountain has netted 120 head, among them a few stunted wild horses not much larger than a sheep. The initial catch Is corralled near the old Slaugh ranch on the slope of the mountain, and it is planned to drive these animals and additional catches into Ashley valley by the end of the month so that branded horses may be redeemed and the unbranded stuff sold to the highest bidders. The drive is being conducted under the supervision of Ernest Eaton Of Vernal. |