OCR Text |
Show EAST SALT LAKE TIMES, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2$. 1923 LIKELY TO xle und alarm the doetors If the re, on for it were not known, and if it were not also known that there weulJ come luter on u cotiditjun t.f ,..,1. all the organs aad the body 14,11:1c. It Is only the truti to say t! at l ptil'llei.iis of all kln..!,( in Wo! ' PISS were Ingress seems disposed to enact this and also to tBY i MTIQNADf CAPITA! . AFTAID 1 tax reduction. ISSUE WITH INKING a!i!ii,:ed Wreck of the Twentieth Century in Which 9 Were Killed West W MELLON B. CLARK By There are evidences intends to try to reduce lat a lion:. Mil to mid yet llfl i' T,, yf course will Increuse tiie I.lil ' la.I'i.r necessary that the must make. HHisury (ici'iirtiucnt lias d Seiivtiiry Mellon virtually bill passes It Hretl tliai It the bonus JlU be i:i. possible to reduce taxation, bo In congress of both parlies take or at least they Mue with Mr. Mellon, with him. They gem to take issue mncar to believe thnt tuxes can be und an additional government incurred at the sume lime, dperiM! be some finesse admittedly It will take to accomplish what the N legislation leaders seem to think can be can determine, and Mr. further apart In their views than are senTlie Democratic leader of the Senator Johnson and Sir. Hitchcock, has ate, Mr. Robinson of Arkansas, or perhaps it might he better to say will In congress that Ids party l'"J ,IUU j' fcvnr sweeping mlndlons In tuxiith.ii. it If reductions will it oppose tat that work appoint- will make Imisoi-llljlderwood e the pnyinents to the the bonus bill has Ota Senator Kiihliinon favors u passed. ton, issue to pay the bonus. The belief Is strong today that the no mailer (onus bill will go through, It shut imiy lnippon to tax reduction. louks iioiv as If the bill will he pus-o- il btfnv any attempt Is made to change in Ilia revenue act so that reductions million cun be effected. It may he that afier the bonus measure Is pur through no utteinpt will he made to Irglslate In hchulf of tax cutting, but the general belief Is now that legls-litluboth for tbe bonus and fur tux nduitiou will be attempted. Cost of Bonus la Uncertain. There is a difference between the estimate made by tliu representatives men und the Treasuof the ry department olllclnls as to the usount the payment of the bonus will the government during the Hrst three years of the luw's life. The men say tliut the bonus require-nent- s ran be met without In any way ilfertlug tux reduction ulong the lines outlined by Secretary Mellon. This Is combated, of course, by the treasury sfficlals and It may be that no one can tell who Is right In the matter until the. thing actually Is tried out. Originally, as already has been an- Lapalgn n dt nounced in Washington publican lenders, In tbe letters, the Resenate at least, sere opposed to any plun for tax refaction legislation, not because they fid not believe that reductions would hulled by the people, hut because f their feeling that If the revenue set once was opened to change there would be no end to the amendments offered and that what they call radlcul-kwould Insist upon having Its way. Now that the country seemlt'gly Is tending bnck of the Mellon proposal for reductions In tnxutlnn, the lenders bare had a change of mind and niuy tree to open everything wide, to trust to leadership skill In directing legislation to prevent rndlcul enactments and k do those things which the secretary bis recommended. Therefore It looks today ns If both the bonus and taxation will he subjects of legislation during foe coming winter. Various Views of Tex Reduction. Possibly never before In the history of economic legislation has there been o wide a difference of opinion as to the form In which amendments to the teveniie law should appear. The contention of one element In that great turtaxes are of no avull because the money of the rich Instantly la put Into securities and that the overtaxing of capital prevents Its Investment In business enterprises which will give work to the worklvss and id to the general prosperity of the Wage and salary earning eople. The contention of the other element k that Health docs not stand its fair burden of taxation nnd thnt it should be forced so to do. The desire of both Nrilcs to the controversy, of course. k to relieve the man of small Income bom excessive luxation. It limy he (but smne kind of a compromise will be clli'citM which inny or tuny nol lfne eventually to Imve merll, lint tertitin It is thnt before this taxation legislation s solved there will be a fong drawn-ou- t debate In which will IlH'ur arguments, sane or fantastic, wording to the vlewiailnt of the pns Pwhig iiieinliers. It Is rarely In Hint one can find I wo men who Hit. same views on Hie general 'I'Jcit of finance. Il Is said today by some inembers f ciiiigri-sthat there will lie no tax oliii-accomplished If the Ik to be contingent upon w lci,. n( f legislation fur the re-"f rx soldier. The liotius Is not an sense a parly measure. Johnson Amazes the G. O. P. Trouble In organising the house of division between i' n, progressive-radica- l and divisions between Iem-o- f the Slime two kinds, Imve bivn able to cover even for a be con-jf's- s i 'iWII rib'isilcr.illti'i Wiisl.ing'oii. licans have from - 1.- being S' ns cra.-l.c- .l :ew of the w reek of t!ie Twentieth Century train on the New were killed and two s. ere Injured. One sect loll of the train h. i..i automobile mill slopped, uiul uiiolher see t Ion j ".fth l:i lJMii.y Two Youthful Champions of Ohio R ADVOCATE OF FAGS ' (1 X . . y - s. fH.'X'V Vh. ' . "" vVj-v', i W-.'v- ' i v-- ; v- -- : I I'- j 2 b i'V ... r g. . fi; . . the Intense Interest tliut Is the Capital In the campaign presidential nominations 1,1 fo n. ;r.hiiulitl . sl llu- - nT l the us , lii I nllii nui.e-l ! is lali-s- t pr...-1-s.l.-s- i ,irv I'.i-nf- . v s f K A t ivj-r- I . . r I. tin-i.-.- is. f of i ru. i :.ii ini-:! lil im. were ill l lie con v.-s- m-- super 'Vf la ,M s r by of the li in. i. The l.rit eohsldi-ral.l- bailie eriliser llooil la huger than either tin West Virginia eluss or tin- Muisn class. Nelson and The new hulili-sbip- . . al-- i will pimslrui-lionnow- nndi-more powerful, he iitu-l- i larger and il I said, than the Mulsu or West Ilod-n.-- of iii'iiiu - l y. r i i li'li-- of Is Uncle Sams Waterways Large liuillde: Meiiomineu haron j will bor, Mich., $Is,ihI; tlreeii Huy harbor, mid during Wls, $17.xi0; bin Hirer, Wls., $157 (In- - year July 1, (XX); Sturgeon Huy nnd l.nku Michigan for the various ship cmml, Wls, $:kS,(XH); Milwuuksn IP2 1. Hcrniiiuii-uihitluiipiii.h-i'- t wets muile by the chief of lisrlmr, $(! U),(XK); ltaclns liurbor, Wls, of the army, under whoso $27,Otk); Keuushu harbor, Wls, $S,000 ; d'.rei-ihn- i this work Is carried on, In SL Joseph harbor, Mich, $M,(XX) ; bis uimuul report siihmllleil to cou-gi.- Sooth Iluvcn huriior, Midi., $78JXX); Saugutuck liniiioraad Kiihiiuazoo rlvur, with the lil'j.T estimates. $i:t,lKM. Appropriations for last year, lueliid-In- g Mich, Ths Mississippi river receives tb annual upproprlatlon, shnro of recommended , amounted to bringing I ho largest for this year, Its total Insince tin- - work betolal iipproprlalb-nof the Mississippi rlvsl work Ifi, nol Including cluding gan In $I.2UI, $1. I, .'.'1(1,500. for Wilson dam (No. 2) nt conuiilssbni, iiggregaling New 4 ork limber and Ihe ilalers Ig Mum-IiShoals, Ala. Us xiiinlly rcipiln- - mors than $J, rm-- r und liarimr work I'or (KHI.Ihtl. for the fiscal year of l'.i'-'--i (lie chief of dill. river dams, lmprovs-im-i- ii can engineer says $ s nml open ehmiiiel work call tot expended. Kxpondlluros for JO.UXI.INNI. June itn, 1P2.I, the year which WINoii ilmii lit Muscle Rlioals Is sb for this work were $ 17. ITS, If. 7 and Ini $7,iNNi,ixm for energeile prose-cl were for the Ion of Ihe work there, nnd for payfl.V'-l.ilbud of which O $;rii.:v.i,1INl ments for hydraulic and electrical maboon allotted. chinery, lock and flood gates and other Recoimiii-ndiitlnnfor the Chb-agumehlnery. Kxpendlturea district are as follows: tiilcago harbor, will average $SIXI,iXk) monthly during river, $15,IXNI; liilu-nu-- t the fiscal year of 1025. It Is estimated $20, INN) ; I'hb-agharbor nnd river, Illinois and will he required to com$1it.(NM.iNN) $121. (XHI; Indiana Harbor, Iml., plete tin? project. $::i ,r0ii ; Michigan il,v harbor, Iml., Philadelphia and the Delaware rlvar river, $17S,.'iKI; Wau require $2,81(5,(HX), and the Inlnnd wa$l!i,0M0; t'lih-agharbor, III., $2l,5iJ. terway, between tlie Delaware river For thu Milwuiikis! district rocoin- - and Chesapeake lore l In- - country's rli ers, wal.-nva- -i aptiro-priulbu- is $7(l.!l-'i7,irils L.hi. hn-ks- . (ilenmi WciliUiin 1 .i x , of pivi-idi-- i l llu- - Miidi-n- t nt of l'emlirnki- - hall, tin- - woun-iTITovhh-iii-c- , It. IM the champion pig llrnwii Unix Delbert Mowery, ugi-- fourteen, of Fayite muniy, signal hit to a gal club member of tlie state of Ohio, having raised a Roland China shoal from OS to prnvldi- - a smokthe asking faniliy 1511 pounds days, nt a feed cost of $.8.27 producing pounds to 217 pounds iu ii well room for Ihe girl ing of live pork at u cost of 5 and reins a pound, with Img averag- ns to to puff grant llii-ing 7 cents u pourd. Mmiclinu I'lelsdi, aged sixteen, of lrehlu county, Is the on Ilia campus. cigarettes oilier und four llvu of thu muile dresses club state, having clothing diamplon garments, und mended 20 gunuents. iissi.i-lalhn- s 1 d I 8-- iwo-tcut- OLD CHURCH CELEBRATES Cavalry Horses in Clever Stunt ut yi-a- r s Crops Good on Reclamation KNATORS un.l representatives who ure preparing to demand that Western settlers puy up tin- - million of dollars they owe t the In the fur tisxisiuiu-of Irrigation projects development ure laying much stock on a report Just Issued by the Impart men t of tlie Interior on crop conditions on tlie project s. This report, which shows that on most projects the crops were good, follows ill part: c lrri-gute- il Yiinm Project, Arixoiia-Callfornl- Colton gins continue busy. Local estimates of tlie yield vary froai lii.otm to I8.k si bales. As it whole, lluunclul .oiulillipiis oil tlie project were very good. nrland Project, California. Cutting of the tifili crop of alfalfa was com-- ! ami some land yielded a light sixth cutting. Oranges were maturing salisfaclnrily. Shipment of almonds totaled about 4 10,(k HI pounds, valued ph-te- ' at s e, lives. fit show for the Army Relief society. View of New Englands Rum Row y . 1 1 , FRANCES SMALLEST FEET jCiO.ihni. tlranil Valley church at This Herman , the Rellevllle. Ill, cliarten-i- l In oldest of Its denomination in the Unitd Third cavalry, of ed State, has Just celebrated Its of Treop picture .bowing memhorses of one One the the charter of In which Jubilee. cuvnlry n Vn.t Jump staging historic Mjer, benestill ber, Conrad Kline, ninety-ontakes a leap over another. This was one of the thrillers provided for the vapod, both flesh und seeds, of any which the of plant eapslrum, riety but gives lis Hie edible fresh pepper, which bears no relation to the true Is. by vpicr plant, t syenite pepper rilling of the board of fond and drug Inspection of HUM, distinguished from red iepHT as being obtained only from small fruited varieties of capsicum. hV IK fellow who said that lie didn't cure who wrote the law .f Ids ciiun-.rif they would let him write it popular sung was away o.T. For sexi-r.i- l inuurbs now tie- American people Imve warble-- l mid shrieked that they Imve no bananas, Iml as a mailer of fact they will have .f 'em about f.ir i this year by tlie litre Santa Cians Imx paid hi- - annual visit mid hiked back to tin- nur:). j '1 Ti.i- cPisiNii of lyric ami - empl.a-ic- d Moti-ti- c by a review bv tin of tbe bail. ma imia-arNutb-mi- l I'ity Imm: of Now York, wliicli -- linn- that we pay oar tropical neighbor- - on tbe shore of the t'u $211,1X10.1 kH l a year for bananas. We have paid tlicm Jliki.ikto.ikki in the last 20 years, nml tlie beginning of empire" t lint are now discernible about that tropic sen lire mostly based on the banana huslne. The hHn:iiu grower gets about half a cent each fur each banana delivered t the slt ria edge. Figure what you - I Prevents Raindrop Beads. Hie glass with a piece of cloth wet with glycerin. The (irst few drops remain lis a tendendrops spreading and showingIncrease In run. hilt ns Ihe dros on glass. cy to I rib-bea- u i Hon to vision. Above me pictured the smallest nnK most perfect feet In all France. Mms. n Park Murtlnie, wife of the financier. Is tin- - possessor of the prlxa foot, which Is hardly six Inches lung and Is comfortably titled with a one and a bait xhoe. well-know- a rum row off Ito not to he minion.- by New Jersey, also has vessel was taken on hoard one of the llquorninnlng limit for tweiviMnile the were wall ing oiili-idVnel-m- coas? This photograph St o M s. Have Bananas Today, Millions of Em T n i Projects Minidoka Project, Idaho. Tlie yield of sugar beets is probably tlie largest ever liurvi-Kieoil the project. II utley Project, Montana. The sugar hect crop was the best Iu the history of the project, many tields yielding 20 tons un urre. N'cwlunds Project, Nevada. About ljkki acre of winter wheat were planted. Harvesting of potatoes waa practically completed and In many ease prevailed at excellent prices. Considerable satisfaction wns expressed. over the returns from tha cantaloupe crop. The yield and quality of the apple crop were exrelleuL Rln (rande Project, New Mexico-TexaCotton gins were being taxed to capacity to take care of the crop and were the centers of nctlvlty of cotton buyers and of salesman fur automobile concerns. Will 1st on Project, North Dakota. Splendid results were obtained from the test plots of sugar beet, the average yield being more tlmn 12 tons an acre, and one plot yielding 1G ton. The sugar content ranged from 14.1 to Project, Colorado. About half tin- - sugar hect crop was harvested with excellent yield. potatoes, alfalfa and sugar beets were 17.2 per cent. the most crops and the seaStrawberry Valley Project, Utah. son was satisfactory fur must farmers. It was estimated that the yield of sugar beets would exceed 100, Out) tons. t'ncolnpaligre Project, Colorado. were excellent for good Storage of a pies wns being contemProsper!. yields of sugiir beet. plated until better prices prevail. We i To prevent raindrops of water from Largs Radio for Shanghai. An American company will staJJ'a'nille nnd Republican. one of the world's largest radio to imwerful enough Shanghai, at ! l,ule bounding In tions iv nington ut this season. It Jumps eiid messages across the Pxdflc will. 4 kosiM op a pace which would pus- - out relaying. l In . iv NiTIIi t''fi, (III Wi-'- a rlie number they come Into contact with each other and coalesce, forming a over smooth, transparent Min of water no ohslruc- Is which surface, entire the t W.Uii; candidates. nccom-Pll-'lunei- V r the iimt was In- .ri. .ill- eem.trv niaile ll Ihe li"e of I' ilioii.il pe.i.-mill ill Ihe iiliei-es- l inii-silc. oiioniy." fi V 11 . nf r .li - in 'C i , vli.-h- Wv' - i wuent t tna ii sin- - is ilie iiisi ef s nili, i,- - 1 i I Ini ;r 1n u'.i.l K . I'or setae j trjii.g to git away Red and Cayenne Pepper. Red pepper Is tlie powdered s i iff an iT:l." Si'i-- cl .il") l.-iilito in Ins wli. i i In C.ipt TIioiiiik .Ion."-I'i.'ii tin ini. "I niin I'.'iiic there . ii lie no in. lie . ni) l It ion III eaiiliil . iniviil i.owi-rs.4 : iim.Mii; liie I V.Jiksi i..ii, s!ie the ;i. .y lvt'IiUMLi-I- over southern tustloual representation In llii-iThere la no pnliticnl bins snggcstcil W ben It is said that the fear now Is In ranks that lies unit ter may once more trouble the party In convention Mr. Ilitclicoelc knows the situation of Uoiiihlii':iulsiii in the South as well a any Hriiili!icun of them all. lie ha had u hand in directing the nomination cumiadgiis of several aspirants for ullice and In every case the southern representation matter 1ms been Involved. President Ctsdldge lias a secretary, u Virginia Republican, who also knows Insouthoru conditions timately. It will interesting to watch the developments which tuny com,; as the result of the appointment of the former iNisttuaster general to direct the Johnson campaign. Mr. Slemp Is on the Job and Mr. Hitchcock Is on tlie Jnli. Coolidgs and ths Primaries. So fur us President Poolldge and the nomination ure concerned, there are many of his friends In Washington who believe tliut the President will not lift a Unger In the way of primary effort to secure tlie nomination. It Is said ly some of his friends that undoubtedly he Intends to go along as he has gone along, working and saying nothing, nnd Is willing to trust to developments to secure for him the endorsement of tlie Republicans when they assemble in nutlonol convention. Till view of the thing seems almost Incredible to some of the old time party leaders. They cannot understand the luck of desire to get Into tlie whirl of tilings, especially when rivul and active candidate! either are In tlie Held or are allowing marked evidences of s desire to enter IL One has to go hack to tlie early months of 1004 to find a parallel case. Theodore Roosevelt then was President uud the Republican convention hud been called to meet In June: Colonel Roosevelt rested on his record to secure him the nomination, although It la n fact that, running true to form, he said a few thing on certain occasions concerning the efforts of other men who thought that tlicy might possibly secure the sanction of the convention nt the Roosevelt expense.' President Coolldge, however. Is not Ills of the Roosevelt temiieranicnL friends say that If he makes ap his mind to stay quiet nothing cun Induce him to break silence. The PemiKTiits are Just ns busy as the Repuhlleniis. The licinocrntic national coiniulltee Is hard at Its work today of combating Republicanism without saying one word In favor of any piirtlvulur Iicmocrutlc candidate for Hie nomination. Rotli the Republican anil Prmueriitli' national commit tea lire compelled to keep hands off i h.i i; : fill t'lMili'iru "Tin iruli.i.i will mini, tin- - U-c- i t roubles ' it. ilfr f nominal Ion lu-e- .i l l d that they JMt N a V'.Wt ls in:m;tcr no uccoiu-oll.lie- b fouAd . MU-i- i il.ut i..c Munnut'iit hh.iiilj own iiui Linra;e the telephone mid telegraph line, of the iimntry. Underwood M:yit Pick Bryan. It may lr thnt soiueth'.ug akin the llllchcock uppolatiuent will irom tl,e ranks pay-wli- 1 11. i .. rvv!n isa it '' , .s 1. Vlraana's coiiiplemelit ,in. men, and l.nm oili.-i'i.iiiimsir ..iiT.es s I.', iiuii I.", e. .i:1. re nn,lit laldiV g ms. J '.I Inch ub- i!o lulies unit S it llii-l-l nuns. She is iVdl feet ut Ilia I ,i'j in. in s feet .ill of oil Inis u iif L'l knots. Her :i holds the ii.iv) cross for ico In a y merll. 'lions ns com-if j. ron i Inly of the North lhikota in. Inn: otli.-i-in Hie Allmiiie dining the war. The West Virginia. Maryland and t'olorad.i ;i re the lurgesl sliis in tha I niii-Sinli-navy, hut they nru not ns tlie so Japanese bsltli w libll ships t!u- - Mill u and Vignto, disnla.-tons, are 7'Sl feet in and Imve a heiim of Oo feet. are. approximately equal 111 draft They 45 mid iirmor mid eiirh has ship gun, but the Japanese broad ineh gun In tlu-imi lm shir Ini'lerles mil have . speed of 29 I In- n,i : .mi sl Battleship Up-to-Da- te 'XMlI.Nii EDWARD li Virginia, paid for your last dozen, and you have tlie cost of distribution. The high coat of trunspurrng, refrigerating, and ripening tbe fruit, added to the upkeep of tlie ni) rind of retailors, adds more to the tiniil cot of the Imnana than la sail, lied oil almost ally imported food; ami yet tlicy are cheap when their fm.il vuiac is compared with other :ipii-4. Twenty years ago the Aiiicrb'ini peowere spending only ? l.tiNi.iioo a year :n ihe tropics for bananas. Since tliut time tlie fivefold increase has been dm- - almost entirely to thu Investment of American capital in ships, railways, plantations, docks, hospital, and all the uppurtenuuevs of a tropl-cindustry empire. The tuun who plants a banana trea In place of a tropic thorn probably does more good for humanity than all the politicians and pundits who ever to steal and modernize tbe performed judgment ef Dran Swift on tha tribe of politician whom ho knew a wslL ple ut |