Show TIMES GARLAND THE GARLAND UTAH J'?: - k fa h - Kk ! C-J- r: v&&- - V v 1— British of Michigan hr Arabs on Schneider cup race entry which In test minister to Holland appointed American Jew of Palestine started lltHS lltvitw OF CURRENTEVENTS Graf Zeppelin Lakehurst Trip cf&mze ¥oto izcmvzrxii tzazx orTTsdAsoirur Urtatotooq Ay rUmfrn-so- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON a— i 1IIS year's celebration of Indian American day which Is observed on the fourth Friday In Scptem-- I Under her finds plans si way for honoring a great ntlan famous for his ejlsSSu war ®8ninst the whites but a man of outstanding abilities and one who Judged by any Just standard was a patriot and a hero Metacom his father Massasolt sachem of the Wampanoags culled him but the whites who felt the force of his wrath knew him as King Philip or Philip of Pokanoket They all but his people they hunted exterminated him to earth and killed him and they as to Indignities subictqit Jilr'fcody nus as any Inflated by their And now neurty sa1ike enemies three hundred years later hll memIn a shrine ory Is to be perpetuated to be erected by descendants of some of tbe men who fought his tribesmen A Massachusetts and archeologist historian It F IlaflTenrefTer Jr of Fall River has purchused the historic In Rhode Island known as ML ridge Hope the home of King Philip and there will be built a fireproof memorial for housing Indian relics a veritable shrine of New England Indlun The Mt Hope reservation Is history a tract of more than COO acres and contains many points of historic terest Among them are the spring whers King Philip drank the rocky throne on a hillside where tbe leader held hla councils with his braves and the swamp where he was killed by the men led by Cupt In this reservation Benjamin Church too Is the gTound where 80 bushels of com were raised by the Indian women and given to the starving Pilgrims by Massasolt who lies burled on a hilltop a few miles away Tbe story of King Philip Is the story of the leader of a lost cause a champion of a weaker race whose attempt to stay tha onrush of the conquering whites was foredoomed to failure He was the first great Indian chief to attempt a confederacy of the tribes to resist the whites and he came nearer succeeding in his plan than did Pontiac Tecumseh or any other red leaders who followed la hla has made him footsteps "History Klng Philip to commemorate tbe heroism of his life and death" says one historian "He almost made himself a king by bis marvelous energy and statecraft put forth amAng the New England tribes Had the opposing power been a little weaker he might have founded a temporary on the ashee of the colonies" Notwithstanding "repeated usurpations upon his lands and liberties" Massasolt continued In his role of "Friend of the White Man" to the day of his death In 1662 Near the close of his life he had taken hla two sons Wamsutta and Metacom to Plymouth and requested the governor In token of friea lshlp to give them English names To Wamsutta waa given the name ot Alexander and to Metacom the name of Philip and Massasolt charged both of them to continue hla I I I ve" Real Burning Bush One ot the most remarkable of plants Is flowering now In the rock garden at Kew— the “gaa plant" or “burning bush" called dictamnus When a lighted match is applied to a shoot ef It there comes a brilliant Like a flash of lightscarlet flame ning It travels up the length of the flowering shoot without Injuring It The best time to make the experiment la when the flowers are fading policy of friendliness to the English But Alexander who succeeded Mawa-soas sachem found that difficult for as the number of white settlers Increased their desire for more land Insaw creased and the Wampnnoags tbelr territory passing rapidly Into the hands of (lie whites More llmO that the kindly feelings that had prevailed between the two races began to give way to suspicion and hatred on both sides and to harsh treatment of tbe red men at the hands of the white Alexander’ friendship became noticeably less and he was summoned to Plymouth to answer to charges of plotting against the English Alexander refused to come and he was This Indignity brought by force threw him Into a rnge and he becurae seriously III dying upon Ids return tflp to the Vampanoag lands In Rhode Island ills wife Wetalnee and bis brother Philip both believed that he bad been poisoned by the English and But resolved to avenge his death Philip who succeeded him as sachem clearly understood the power of the to Intend did and make not Ungllsh the mistake of acting too hastily For nine years after his elevation to sachem he devoted his energies to observation and preparation for the Impending si niggle Philip made every effort to accumulate guns and ammunition for hts warriors and even tried to obtain the formula forJeefcinffTmrpawder He succeeded'fn getting' a of fireatfus and mftny of his meftoe-camAll of these expert had not gone unnoticed preparations By- - Uie colonists who were uneasily of disaster cloud aware that a dark was hovering over them Finally In 1671 Philip waa summoned to a council at Taunten to explain the suspiHe ascious acts of bis tribesmen serted that he was preparing for dedefense against the Narragansetts nied any hostile Intent toward the a new treaty and English signed to his He surrender sll guns greed did give up some 70 of the weapons owned by his tribe but Immediately after hie return to Mt Hope continued to go forward with hie preparations for war For the next three years peace prevailed but still the uneasy feeling that they were on the verge of war troubled the colonists By this time Philip’s plans had matured and he had determined upon opening hostilities In the spring of 1676 II become more Independent and bold In his attitude nd when the governor ot Massachusetts summoned him to another council to make s new treaty Philip sent "Your govback this haughty reply: ernor is but a subject of King Charles of England 1 shall not treat with a subject I shall only treat with the ling my brother When he comes 1 am ready" At'about this time too a Rhode Isho was a good friend of land settler the Indian leader tried to dissuade him from war Philip's reply Is hislie said: "The English who toric came first to this country were but a handful of people forlorn poor and distressed My father did all In hla Others came power to serve them The lnflamtnableness of the plant Is due to this that oo Its stalks are minute reddish brown and glands these secrete an etherlc oil The glands develop fully soon after the blossom begins to fade but they shrivel up when the fruit begins to form— London Answers Forty Miles of Water Twaoli There ars sugar plantations on Kamil Oahu and Maul In the Pacific with 40 miles of tunnels and ditches to water and a famous carry Arrives at Their numbers increased Completing My father’s counselor were alarmed They urged Around him to destroy the English before they became strong enough to give taw to W PICKARD By EDWARD the Indiana and take away their counIts arrlvsl at Lakehurst N try My father was also father to tha WITH Graf Zeppelin completed He remained tbelr friend English Its epochal trip around the world In Experience shows that hla counselors the course of which only three stops were right The English disarmed my were made for refueling — at people They tried them by their own Tokyo and I os Angeles laws Rnd assessed damages my people The Zeppelin made a smooth landcould not pay Sometimes the cattle ing at 8 :07 o’clock Thursday morning of the English would come lDto the having circled tbe globe in 21 days cornfields of my people for they did and 7' hours breaking ‘all previous not make fences like tbe English I records It had down approximately must then be seized and couflned till 20000 miles and was in the air about I yold another tract of my country for eleven and days Thus trant after damages and costs While the huge dirigible displayed tract Is gone But a small part of tbe most excellent qualities In the way of domlulon of my ancestors remnlns I safety and cruising ability the speed am determined not to live till I have lion’s the feat the credit of for share no country” must be given to Pr Hugo Eckener Despite Philip’s plans to open the the airship’s Indomitable commander war In the spring of 1670 the conflict and chief pilot Ills passengers and In the summer of crew are glvlng'hlm was precipitated unstinted praise 1675 with the famous attack by the for the skill he showed throughout Indians on the town of Swansea For the trip who the next fourteen months Californian southern the war Every could get there greeted the Zeppelin Of 00 English raged with great fury at Los Angeles towns In the war area S2 were atwhich waa reached tacked and 12 were dLtroyeik For a on Monday! after a flight across the Pacific enlteened only by an electric as Laiugh time It looked Philip's eoon after the de dream of extinction of tHe hafed white storm encountered Invaders of his country wis to be real- - parture frofy Tokyo As It passed down Ized But as the colonists began to the California coast the airship on over Sun Fran circled had reeover from the havoc Vdilch Philip Sunday os Angeles had wrought In tbe early of the cisco The getaway from was not easy and quantities of ballast wur the tide turned In their favor and extra equipment bad to he dumped Some of hie allies were defeated others deserted him and bejan to help to give tt enough lifting power As It of Capt was the dirigible barely avoided ran the English The appointment nlng Into a network of high power Benjamin Church a brtve and skillelectric wires near Mines field ful soldier as comraandt-- ot the colAn Interesting story conies from onists’ forces added to several acts of to the effect that fhe Zeppelin’s Japan re own t qrii cry by his people spelled safe crossing of thl Pacific prevented dqfitn for the Indian lener atonement the "seppnka" or sulcldnl Philip became a O’A’tlve hunted of the five officers and twelve enlisted a wild anifrom place to place' men of the Japanese navy who held mal Ills wife and onl Hon were capblameable the slight for themselves tured and sold as s1av accident that the airship suffered In Indies "My heart break being taken from the hangar at when he henrd of thlaJ airport Such action by the ready to die" Finally h have been In accord to the Iliellsh by the Japanese would was betrayed with their ancient custom and the brother of an Indian wlorn YVT‘" fol owed fclllp had wives of men the slain for proposing to peek peale with the Engtlsfr — Finding hie cam I surrounded the chief attempted th flee '’LlfiVKLAND was "up In the air" along a path guarded by a sotdleriand the ulrplane enjoying the Indian traitor The soldier’s cun VJ all week ceres and exhibitions of flying and missed fire but that of the Indmn filled with two bullets and a doufije the big aircraft exposition Among Mrs Louise the star attractions was of chle charge powder brought the McPhetrldge Thaden of Pittsburgh down Ss ha ran who won lbs women's derby that start that Philip’s conqueror’s proved ped at Sants Monies Fifteen of the they were but little less savage than Nineteen finladybirds who started An Indian executioner he had been ished the race Marvel Crosson was was ordered to cut off his head and killed as related last week and three His head was sent quarter his body forced out by mishaps others were to Plymouth and there exhibited on a O’Donnell of Long Beach “Such was the Gladys gibbet for 20 years Calif woo second place and Amelia fate of Philip" wrote Edward Everett Earbart transatlantic flyer was third "Ho had fought a relentless war but Colonel and his wife who Lindbergh hs fought for his native land for the student flyer were Interested Is now mound that covered the bones of his and Interesting visitors he fought for his squaw and parents The United States will have no reppapoose no— I will not defraud them resentative In the Schneider cup races of the sacred names which our hearts In England for Lieut Alford Williams understand — he fought for his wife the tests of was unable to complete and child" Today a monument stands his plane In time and withdrew Itnty'a at Plymouth erected there during the best racing flyer Captain Motta was In celebration Pilgrim tercentenary killed while testing one of hi planes 1620 which perpetuates the fame of and the British were asked on that Massasolt as the friend of the white account to postpone the races hut reman Soon another memorial Is to fused because the financial sacrifices rise to his son King Philip whose would be too great fame also deserves to be perpetuated even though he was the enemy of the ROM Dan to Rcersheba" and a For King Philip wa a white man F great deal farther In direcfighting man and a patriot and the Palestine and the nelghlxiring tions kindlier Judgment of a later day will were aflame with revolt countries no longer deny him the honor due Jews In a were nmssacrelng Arabs him score of cities towns and villages the native police and military force and Great Britain was aqueduct on Oahu taps four valleys were Impotent marines and and traverses a tunnel 14443 feet rushing warships troops to the Holy Ijtnd to restore more water airplanes long One plantation If possible than the city of San Francisco says peacs which haa been simmer Tbe trouble Nature Magazine Thousands of armonths broke out with clashes tesian welts dot the countryside In tag for Arabs and Jews in Jerusalem 1926 about 776000 tons of sugar worth between at the Wall where Walling especially $65000000 were raised on the 6449 for centuries and square miles that comprise this daub Jews have prsyed which Is the last remaining fragment of land The pine- of Solomon’s temple The rioting apple crop brings a revenue of nearly spread rapidly to the Slaboka rab$34000000 annually binical college and a Jewish school where the Jews killed li at Ilebron California has a lion farm eluded s number of Americana and IS - kP us World iheu to many other places In Pales1 tine Latest reports made Indefinite said the by strict press censorship Arabs of Tnlnsjordinla and Syria were rising in revolt demanding their "complete rights' and the abrogation of European control In those lands Upon Great Britain fell the burden of meetand ahe responded ing the situation swiftly Her troop carrying planes carried hundreds of soldiers from the Palestine ports Inland and her planes went Into operation against the Arabs at Jerusalem add elsewhere At Haifa where Arabs were attack Jewish quarter the British lrig"Thp marines were said to have fired on both Arabs and Jews killing and many of American Jewish organcalled on President Hoover and Secretary Stlmson and asked that they take every necessary step to protect the lives and property of American nationals They were assured of the deep sympathy of both Mr Hoover and Mr Stlmson for the Palestine sufferers and were told that Great Britain was doing everjTIiThg possible to restore tranquil conditions Then they called British ambason Sir Esine Howard sador and were given the same as 8urnnce by him wounding Leaders izations The Hague came to an end with an for the putting Into of the Young plan for German reparations and for getting the allied The troops out of the Rhineland British claims for more German money than the Young commission allotted them are to he satisfied to the extent of about S3 per ceut of the demands the amount being made up by various devices of the other creditor nations The German government Is to pay first $11602000 toward the maintenance of French British and Belgian gari Isons totaling 56000 men now and Mayence the Coblenz holding and adjacent areas The bridgeheads British force on the Rhine numheis This 6230 places a premium on only the Rhine by the allies liberating Christmas as thereafter or whenever donation of $1I6G2 000 ts Germany’s British and the French expended Belgians must pay for their own troop maintenance pro rata "We bought back our Rlilnelard one Gerntun provlncea for $11662000" delegate remarked dryly The Young plan though achedulci to start on September 1 reully be comes effective from November 1 according to (he plans of the delegates of the great powers The beginning of the plan Is truly timed by the eight months given the French to evacuate all Rhine zones — that la from Novetn ler 1929 to June 80 1930 The powers propose holding a resumption of the conference In Switzerland— Montreuz of Lucerne— during the first days of October after the League of Nations assembly ends to wind np the final agreements arrangement uTJL INOOLN the Debater" a bronze statue of heroic size was unveiled at Freeport Bl the scene of the most famous of tbe 1858 Ten debates In August the cerethousand persons attended monies and listened to Senator George W Norris who delivered the chief address The Nebraskan took the opportunity to moke a hot attack on the electric power trust the system of the abuse of elections Presidential power by federal judges and the building of big armlet and navies Daring campaign Senthe 1928 Presidential ator Norris was mentioned as a possible third party candldnte Referring ‘ to the present system of electing Freehlents he charged that election of an Independent candldnte for President ts possible la theory but absolutely Impossible In practice He argued that the electoral college should be abolished united Lawrence d tyson from Tennessee In a sanitarium near Philadelphia had been nnder treatment Tor several weeks lie wg just his first term In the senate Tyson was horn In Greenville S C years ago and was grarin ted from West Point In 1883 While commander of cadets at the Univerhe studied law and Tennessee of sity later practiced In Knoxv tile He serv ed as a colonel of volunteers In tb Spun war and then went Into the Tennessee legislature During tbe World war he distinguished himself dted whers ts I JL a apeed of 850 miles an hour 2 — Gerrlt J Diekema where the attacks 8 — Famous Watllng Wall In Jerusalem attained a brigadier general commanding brigade of Tennessee and Carolina troops attached to the "Old Hickory” which saw service In France division One of the outstanding German figures In the World war Field Marshal Llmon von Sanders passed away In Munich He was the cavalry officer to whom Mohammed Reslild V sultan with of Turkey' by arrangement Kaiser William II Intrusted In 1913 of the Turkish the reorganization army He remained In the Turkish defenses at Gallipoli in 1915 and after the British retirement organized the Turkish fighting forces In Asia Minor and conducted operations In 1918 In howPalestine The Turkish debacle ever nullified his efforts as seemed to be and Russia time last week In their Manchurian quarrel though the prop- agenda agencies of both nations were active The Soviet radio station broadSiberia casting from Khabarovsk kept telling the Chinese that America and France were plotting to set up an to control commission International the Chinese Eastern railway and conwas feeling siderable created In Harbin until (he newspapers there printed a true statement concerning President noover’s efforts a under the Kellogg pact to prevent CHINA war There was another bloody outbreak of the Mongolian Nomads In western Manchuria scores of Chinese being stain and naturally the Chinese authorities blaned the Russians for stigating It Extreme heat of defective shells that destroyed caused an explosion the Chinese govern ment’e largest arsenals in Nanking and the conflagraThe tion spread to other buildings was estimated at damage property $1500000 of the public lands a conference in Salt Lake City and received a message Hoover In which he from President suggested that the surface rights of public lands remnlnlng unappropriated should be transferred to the state Western senators in Washington henrd this proposition with surprise and disfavor looking on it as somewhat of a as the mineral gold brick Inasmuch would rights which the President tain In the hands of the federal govwhich ernment furnish the revenues the public laud states long have wished to get hold ot They contended that the revenues from the surface AS Senrights would be Insignificant ator Borah said those lands are “chiefly desert and mountain territory and could hardly live on a jack rabbit Governors them" have commissars peoples a three shift day and for — Russian week to the Moscow dustry according to tbe plan each According bu worker geta every fifth day free various shifts In the factories will keep producing day and night The factories will only be closed five times a year of the greatest for the observance Besides abolholidays revolutionary ishing Sunday completely and destroying the Influence of the religious sect! on the working class the Isvestla finds the new plan will also assist communism and destroy the old forma of life Even the family will be abolished and will live In socialized the workers of house with perhaps a segregation the sexes SOVIET - law is to be THE prohibition IFforced In New York city the federal authorities must do all the enforcing GroPolice Commissioner according to After a conference ver A Whalen with county prosecutors magistrates and police officers the commissioner Admlnls ootlfied Federal Prohibition trator Campbell of that distrlst that he flatly refused to take the responsibility fof local dry enforcement He to order the police to ' also refused under the proceed against speakeasies 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 your ability to effectively direct the activities of your department for which of a $’6OOO0iK aA large proportion Is alloted the admission prcprlotlon should be primarily to your su)xilor In Washington Instead of ‘pns!nc the buck’ to the state Ijw enforcing officer" 1928 Westers Newapspsr lluieQ S |