OCR Text |
Show CACI1B AMERICAN. I.OflAN. UTAIf News Review of Current Events the World Over disarmament conference, bureau resumed work Thursday In Geneva, does not wind np In utter failure, much of the credit will go to Nornmn Itavla, representative of the United States. He haa been exceed Campaign Closed in Lively Fashion Recovery in Industry Seems at Hand Plan for Disposal of Farm Surplus. By EDWARD W. PICKARD tjn of the United State. X1 Jf , 1 of whom the believe expert nearly would 40.ooti.ooo go to the poll. The elector seemed loth to yield to excitement but ere dogged and I determined, and Herbert prutuihly had umrie up their minds long before aa to how they would mat their ballots. The results of the election will be known to most of the readers of this column before It reaches them, so prediction are not In order. President Hoover final effort In bis csmpalgn carried him to Spring Held. Ill; Si. l.ouls. Mu; tinry, Ind.. and then np to St. Pnul, Mina On the mate he muds many platform speeches, bnt his mnln addresses were In the cities named. The tour constituted his last attempt to capture the till electoral vote of till cols, Indiana, Missouri, Iowa. Minnesota and Wisconsin; and hla ar gumenti were also directed to the agricultural vole of Ohio, Nehraa ka, Kansas, Michigan and the Dakotas. Before leaving Washington for the Middle West the President bad spoken vigorously In New Tork city, Philadelphia, and other points In the East, and had made an especial appeal by radio to the voter of t'allfornla. Ills home state. Governor Roosevelt main speech of the week was delivered In Boston. A driving rainstorm and hla desire to get bnck quickly to Albany led him to disnp- .. Hoover point Inwaiting Hartford, s Bridgeport, and other cities of the yew England area. The final days of the campaign were pent by the Dem- ocratic candidate close to home, but he did not cease to talk to the electo- rate. Since hla Franklin D. Roosevelt nomination he had visited 37 states, the only ones omitted being seven In the solid Democratic South and Nevada, North Dakota, South Dakota and Minnesota. his 300 associates SPEAKING to York citizens com mittee of the emergency unemployment relief committee, Myron C. Taylor, chairman of the Onlted States Steel corporation, declared that the general Industrial situation was more promising thnn It had been for two years. lie said It was quite evident that recovery from the low point of Inst summer has appeared" and that this recovery Is definite and progressive. His brie' address was made at the committee's first meeting preparatory to the launching of the $13 000.000 drive for funds from the public for unemployment relief. Encouraging, too, was the news from Jefferson City, Mo., that the citizens relief and unemployment committee of St. Louis told Governor Caulfield that mild weather and an upturn In Industry made it unnecessary to use any of the $209, 000 apportioned to St. Louis by the Finance corpora Reconstruction tion for relief In September. El C. Steger, a director of the committee, said unexpected Increases In orders, particularly tn the garment and shoe industries and in railroad shops, with much highway work in made available relief progress, funds adequate. at a time when corn and wheat were selling on the mar-- t st the lowest prices on record. re was staged In Kendall GST coun-Illinol- a demonstration of a m that might wipe out In two irs the entire surplus of farm vducts, according to the county m bureau and J. J. Groetken of rora. It simply Is the mixing of from corn iyl alcohol distilled other products with gasoline for tor fuel, the proportion of 10 per cent Besides us-ualco-bein- g the grain surplus. It was nted out, the move would aid terially In conserving the natural plies of petroleum In the United tes, now being consumed at a e that is reducing the national ply at an alarming pace. he demonstration tended to bear research reports which have n compiled from several Euro-ountries and by the Ameri government on the value of yl alcohol as a motor fuel. 'wo and one-hagallons of al ol are obtained from a bushel lf of corn, two am Ingly gal- lon from a bukhel of wheat, while barley, potatoes, beets, cantnlUM-s- , and other surplus product proAt preeent the duce high yields. ua of such alcohol, even when ren dered poisonous and soluble In gasoline, la restricted by the prohllil tlon laws a well a by the complications of state and fish mi gas taxes. Manufacture of the fui I could be done In rural rommuultlc wl'b simple distilling plants, as It Is done In Germany, the sponsors of the test declared. By adding one gallon of It at 33 to 30 rents for each nine gallons of gasoline, corn would be worth 40 to DO cents a bushel and other crops In proportion. i ?, coutrne CHARGES that private flood buy . . h 110 I ' i F M w y I, - j 'i Vt - v J t i IDA It MALAD, much Idaho gialn on the farms fur big if i all M -- 7 x o v i ir . f jt v 'r.. d BEVERLY HILLS Well boy it wont be long now. Thli la the lat week of Democracvt Campaign. It the boy bavent 2 c o r r a I d tb now, DM1U CROC PS OKGWIZE , f W CCIl NTY US in:i:E 1M IKMRV - luiff 1-- oepb I They Are Just Opening the Bathing Season retried Is that . wa-ct- it I UR ten ri.u cent ., In Euro- federal control projects along the lower Mississippi river were mlslreallng negro labor era, mentioned In '3 this column some F" ' weeks ago, led Pres ident Hoover to np point a committee of three negroes and one white man to make Immediate Inquiry Into the alt The men nation. named were Dr Robert IL Motnn, president of Tuste gee Institute; Judge Jnmes A. Cold of Washington, D. C and Eugene Knlekle Jones, exocu tlve secretary of the Urban Longue of New York, representing the negro ductlon. race, and Lieut. Col. U. S. Grant, the United States JAPAN has Its hands full with representing and the Chinese lr army. A White riouse announcement of regulars that are operating there In the appointment said the Chief Ex an effort to overthrow the puppet erutlve Imd asked this committee state. The situation In the north to make a thorough and Impartial ern half of Mnnchtikuo was report to be especially dangerous the Inquiry as promptly as possible" and ed Japanese hold on the Important report the results of the Investlga city of Tsitslhnr being Imperiled tlon to him Immediately. Two bloody battles were fought about one hundred tulles north or LONG and efficient service for the that point and though the Jnpanese was recog department claimed victory In both, they lost a nlzcd and rewnrdeil when the Presl dent selected L. Lamont Bolin of good ninny men. and were troubled Manehukitan Waverty, Pa., to be ambassador to hy the discovery that Polnnd. He succeeds John N. Will!-o- f troops were revolting and Joining Toledo, who resigned not long the Chinese. This revolt, the Jup was spreading. ago to resume his business duties. anese admitted, In addition to the thiust from Mr. Belln la a veteran In the United States diplomatic corps, having the north, the Japanese control was threatened from the northwest by served In the embassies at Peiping wen and his Chinese Istanbul, Paris and London, and as Gen. Su Ilng chief of the State department dl Irregulars, who for some weeks have occupied the city of Manchuh vision of protocols and Interna He resigned the lat on the Siberian frontier. tlnnal treaties. ter post In March, 1931. HAVING made only one campaignIn oyer the radio. A NNOCNCFMENT was made In 1 New York of the engagement which he made but one promise, to Arturo of Miss Elisabeth Reeve Morrow, respect the constitution, was daughter of Mrs. Dwight W. Morrow Alessandri and sister In law of Col. Charles A elected president of Chile. Formerly a Lindbergh, to Atihrey Neil Morgan radical, he had son of Mr. and Mrs. John L. Mor toward the shifted The gan of Brynderwen, Wales. date for the wedding has not been right and was sup set Miss Morrow and Mr. Morgan ported by the mod met while her father, the late Sen erate elements. He a large ator Dwight W. Morrow, was attend obtained over Col. Ing the London naval conference In plurality Mtirmadtike Grove, 1930. She and her mother had acradical candidate, companied Senator Morrow to Lon don. Since that time Miss Morrow and three others. has visited in England, having Alessandrls victory was a very happv passed three months In the summer one for the veteran politician of 1931 in Europe. whose six year election In 1920 short hy a revolt and dictator OTRICT censorship keeps from the nev world most of the news con ship in 1924 and who lost the In 1931 to Juan election general Boeerning the warfare between livia and Paraguay over the Gran Esteban Mnntero. Colonel Grove told his admirer Chaco, but It is we Intend to continue tin that known that the activities, not only li revolutionary continues fighting in other Latin Anierlcnt hut Chill, with Increased fury. countries. We have sworn to uniti The minister of war our efforts for the formation of u at La Paz has anLatin American Federation of So nounced that Gen cialist Republics." Hans Kundt, Ger Martinez. Mera, Liberal, was elect exman military ed president of Ecuador; and Ti pert who organized bttrclo Carl ns Andlno was success Boand fui In the Honduras elections. livias modern army, to has consented Bra lead SEVENTY EIGHT prominent that army t into exile were against the Para'intion in thi for pi guayans. The latter Sao Paulo revolt that was sup commandto have competent appear months o ers, also, and have shown no signs pressed only after three of yielding to their opponents The strenuous effort bv the government Included In the list were generals Argentine war ministry at Buenos political leaders and editors, most Aires slated that many deserter of whom probably will never he from the Bolivian forces operating permitted to return. The nten were in the Gran Chaco were entering loaded on a vessel at Rio and taken Argentine territory. to another port for transfer to a steamship on whleh they left for GENERAL election day in Cuba Euriqte. most of them for Portti by many Instant es gal. The deportation was carried of violence, the worst of which wa avoid the explosion of a powerful d.vna out so the government might and and trials, Investigations long mite bomb in a theater tn Santa Clara. Five of the 600 persons in also to weaken the opposition par In the campaign preceding the the building were killed and many ty election next Mtv. assembly said the crime Investigators Injured. was committed by Conservative In rEATH claimed two especially retaliation for what they claim'd well known Americans. They were government controlled elecwere Horace Kent Tenney, Chicago tions. attorney who was prominent tn his President Machados Liberal pam profession, and Harold MaiGrath. were returned over candidates whose novels and short sories had whelming victories In the voting, in pleased millions of re.tdcS t non which two e n n tn rtj 7? representa G. 1981. Western Newipar MI DIINLS 50.000 TREE ? w Told for Busy (traders $711,633.11 i f r.. u -- Brtefl , $ lisws Intermountain pean capitals, try Ing to reconcile the l . . $ ' views and demnods of the various pow era. Especially wn f he Interested In the new Frenrb plan t , Norman Davia laid before the ho rean, which calls . . conan of the f for army adoption f. .. ' i , 3r v script system and the writing of new security treaties. In a conHerrho with Premier versation and Minister of Mar Paul Boncour. I Mr. Davia said the United Slates aa tinatde to commit ItHclf lo the use of force In defense of the Kel the fall houaecieanlng In the house office building In Washington preparatory to the session of war, though logg pact outlawing Ill, largest of the five locks In Illinois waterway project complete,! loU. at congress. It accepted the Idea of rorisullntion whhb will be open to navigation next spring river Mississippi and the Great the Uke. connecHng In case of violation of the pace of Nation to succeed Sir Eric Drummond, resigned, the of League named secretary general M. err ot told Air. Davis that Avenol of France, 4 hla pniMsal for the substitution of professional armies with short term conscript forces did not apply to the United Mates and was confined to cotitinenial Europe, excluding even England. It was believed In Berlin that this proMisal might Induce Ger many tn resume participation In the disarmament conference provided the other power agree that nil reached shall apply agreements equally to all the signatories, in eluding Germany. On Hip natal side the French are again talking n limit a Medner ranean lux nr no of France. Grea Britain nnd Italy as a prelude to a with Italy, naval understanding which would complete the London' treaty and possibly lend to further American. British and Jupauese re 1 1 - - Scenes and Persons in the Current News THE IFwho Presidential and fnrloua were the FAST of Hi candidates am their grtlT supporters during the closing week of lb campaign, ami every known argument to waa brought bear on the 47.000,-OOqualified voter live, and officials of most Cuban It was etl ell lea were chosen. in led that SO per cent of the eligible volert did out vote, either through lui k of Interest or because they heeded the plea of the oppos! tlon to ho)cntt the election. J'T'T held 1 T price. I.EII I, UT A 3 year old chlM act fir to a barn here mulling In (he lot-- of the building. BEAVFR, tT. From one of the local rbeiklng atlon m irly 17i)0 d,Hr hunters enti red the nearby national forest this see-o- ritovo, I for the rn mark tv are ontl.dr way to f 11 the Hunk sgivng ovens. Returns to the grower ant tint vet known. Mnt of the birds will go on consignment Federal r- ports Indicate a ten cent Incraise In the numlxr of bins av.ilnVe, as compared wlh I t ycir, and reports to tho state board of neicul-ttirb ad to the b. Hi f Hut the Increase will lx? at least that large. PRICE. UT A nnd rn county Infirmary to accommodate more than 30 persons was for Carbon county with the closing of a deal whenhy the prrp rty en whl-the Infhnnry Is now located will be traded for a 209 acre site west of the Cailx-Country club. ea- rkey -t tr e d SALT LAKE (TTY, 1 T Organization of an a so, i. Hi n of state dairy groups on a cooperative basis Is announced bv the (its olive s strut try of the I tail Snte Earn) bureau. The intion will be a slate wide one an the several cub groups will cnnp'-vtoher in the devriopi.iuit operating of the dairy business in their respective lotaiitits. BALT LAKE CITT. IT-T- .ai payments In Ottoler amouided to with f301e $J9S056 3S, comnan 13S 93 in October of 1931. -- no 1 i 1 1 OGDEN, UT. A rat poisoning drive has conducted here at a part of the unemployment campaign. .TURRAT, UT 250 men will b rut to work when the local smelter reopens In the near future. lv-e-n lT. 30 men have work on the roads MILFORD, put to near here. ben LEWISTON, IDA. W. IT. Lane, 77, drowned In the Clearwater river while attempt. rg to from an to shore. lie clung to a wire attached to a stomp on the Blind but lost his hold when the cold water numbed his hards. POCATErLO, IDA. R. F. Moore was ki led Instantly when thrown from a truck whkh he was driving and attempted to turn a sharp curve near MoCammon. BOISE, IDA. The first National bank of Idaho has opened its doors nlong with Its string of banks In southern Idaho and eastern Oregon. This makns available to depositors ten million dollars in deposits tied up for two months since the closing of the banks. SALT LAKE CITY, UT ExpendA itures of state road funds for October totaled S714 C33 11. This total I- 3 d ..I Is one ot the largest expended during any month for road work la the history of the state. Because of reed for make-worand unemployment relief, an unusually large volume of roadwork Is being carried to completion before cold weather sets In and makes It Impracticable to carry It on. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. An effort will be made at an early session of congress to obtain an appropriation of $1,300,000 to settle Inthe claim of the Uintah-Ouradians against the government, it Is Walter Johnson, former manager of the Washington baseball team, announced by the assistant commiswas cast In a new role when he was made director general of the Armi- sioner of Indian affairs. The money stice day Jubilee of the Veterans of Foreign Wars In Washington. He Is is due the Indians for lands taken seen above with some of the beautiful girls who took part In "Armen-tiere- s from the reservation and placed in the national forest. on Armistice Night Idaho Is one of MOSCOW, IDA the eight states In the Union which Is classified as a modified, accred-levited tuberculosis arpa. There are of one per cent less than W.W of the cattle In this state infected. ijm fte Idaho cattle are free from tick fevV er and practically free from anK thrax and hemmoragie septlcema. N 5 The largest loses to dairymen result from Bangs abortion and garget. LOGAN, UT About 50,000 fortree seedlings will be available 1 est for distribution to Utah farmers for planting next spring from the forestry department nursery at the Utah State Agricultural college. These small trees are of 13 va4 rieties which have proven adaphd These girls of the Dare club are ushering In the bathing season at Inglewood, Calif, by walking the tight balloons. rope with the aid of gas-fille- d STRONG PURDUE MAN New Kind of Job for Walter Johnson L;k,V, .v -- k One of the reasons for Purdue uni- versity's successes In football this year Is Bill Fehrlng, who plays at tackle, and plays mighty well WrxL y RESTORER OF YOUTH er Lightning Destroys Big Oil Tanks WMd Ul trained well figur ones that tb tbat ar out yet ar out t b s n. they juat aa oney. boya Tb tbat bavent decided by now waiting tor best offer. y From now on ' till Tuesday la You dont where dough counts. win tbeso lat decider by arguments. You got to lay It on tb line for them. They have all perfrom on side alhaps ready and are laying for the other if i 'Jarlha y I " colh-cte- one. I think tho people as a rule hav patient all this Summer and Fall. They have heard the ben m'-h- ty country saved In every possible There baa been form and d'alect. men talking over thu Radio that their own families cou'dent under-s'anTammany Hall leader o spoke before the microphone wlth-it Interpreters, which should never have beo- - allowed. Poor old Tammany, s her figure grow less, her d alect becomes more pronounced. Fba has never been able to make a dent national! Well I guess af'er all It been what they call a cleat campa gn. A clean campaign Is one where each side cleans the other of every possible vestige of respcctlhailty. Mr. Hoover rare'y If ever mentioned hia opponent. He has kinder worked on the "Totally Ignored system. That Is. "I si.pptse I have an opponent. but aa far as I am conRoosecerned he does not exist. velt lock the other ta'li. He knew be had an opponent and he wanted people to know who the opponent was even It he did know some of them bad forgotten. fought very They personal'y clean tin all but the clinches). Then of course it was each man protect yourself. Mr. Hoover early in the Campa'gn when he first went out to Iowa to speak, asked "For some degree of sportsmanship to be It seems they bad been sayused ing that he had had no car for the suffering that had gone on during the last three years. Well that was pretty bam propaganda and be bad a right to speak out In church to stop it. but it L too bad tbat politics cant be conducted on a little higher plane. They Just wont pay even one atom of cred't tn the d. They are just horse thieves and that3 all there is to 1L Well they are, but arent we all? Now this naturally brings me back to my Platform." Every party and everybody must have some platform formed even if Its in their minds. Mine Is that a President should hold office six years, with no Stop this thing of a President having to lower bis dignity and go trooping around asking for votes to keep him there another term. He has to do it. naturally, but a six year term with no will be the remedy. Six year gives him time to do something. It takes him four yean to find out who is his friends In the Senate and House. There is a lot of Senators la there for six years Well, where do they get that way? Look at the saving of all the monev, all the time, all the uncertainty of another election. It lessens It one third. Then pay the man when he goes out one half of his salary for life. The Country should keep an ex President from bankruptcy if It can keep a railroad or a bedly managed bant. Course the Cabinet wouldent have much to do on their last summer In office like they do now, but they could hang around their offices and kill time. I am anxious to see how the state elections come out. My good friend Dave Ingalls in Ohio, as fine a young man as entered Politics got a one-ha- lf 9 A - VX W Dr. Helan Jaworskl of Paris, who has conducted a series of successful rejuvenation operations by transfusing the blood of young men Into the veins of aged patients without resorting to surgery. He will visit this country at the Invitation of leading scientists. Found by Accident The greatest Mayan city of 1,500 years ago was discovered by native chicle hunters In Mexican Jungles. a. 4 & .4 yi- - e I, v- I At lift V . ' v. -- 1 V r Davi- son in New York is another fin young man. Course Lieut. Governc Is kinder like a co pilot. After hit and the pilot he has to jump ar pull their chutea there ls'not muc he can do. But It may lead him t a better landing gome day CHEYENNE, WXO. A Wj An we will know aits more In entry, Miss Domino S.iivv.-week from now than we do nov c1 senior arq ion There is going to be a terrible Ic XVII, was Judged Hereford cow among 300 ent1- - t rt of people fooled. 1 have always sai the Ak Sar Ben stock s o v, at voting is a funny thing, a fello Omaha. will lie about it as easy as a go -i OGDEN, UT A report fro- ti ' score. Every cand date in the rac S' rr on all sides have had enough pron offices of the Amalgamate e Ises to elect etn company here is that approx unanimously, bi you wait till the votes are counte ly 1,250 000 pounds of cone-and let them tell you how mar i phosphate was ned tl is v liars there are of legal age. beet grswers under comrri f 3 1932t Syndumf. I He. company In Utah, Idaho n on-ln- g f not be ashamed. Trubee During a storm that struck the Oklahoma City oil field four huge tanks were set ablaze by lightning and the fire was spread by a gale. Property loss mounted Into the thousands of dollars. tana. ' 1 |