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Show THE LEW SUN. LEIII. UTAH One of Society's Most Exclusive Clubs 1 .. m!'.,.,;,-tijA ( jirrent Events the World Over France and Italy Reach Agreement as to Their.Naval Strength Seventy-First Congress .... . Conies to an End. By EDWARD V. PICKARD ta-Vtr..x Air view of the Bath and TeDnis club at Pal in I'-cacli, FJa., which Is oue of the most fashionable and exc'luaive dubs lo the country. Scenes and Persons in the Current News b ''f- 4 i t ft L yr-y v. jwimm-ii ii lir hmmbm Ma, 1 II. M. S. Nelson of the British fleet, world's lurgost battleship, gqueeislng through the Pedro Miguel locks of the Pannnin canal with only a few laches to spure. 2 W. J. IJulow, the new senator from South Dakotu, wearing his "ten gallon" hat. 3 World war veterans crowding the room of the veterans' bureau 'n New York to obtain loans on their bonus certificates, this scene being repeated In many other cities. Germans to Honor, the War Horse ! if I ; '7" q.nwum j-ffly- t It A model of the new monument which is to be erected In Derlln to the "War Horse." The sponsor of the monument is Field Marshal Von Mackensen, who led cavalry troops early tn the war. It Is the work of the well-known German sculptor, Professor Llmhurg. Rainier Park Hcbos Get a Handout 1 '4 ' i!4. WINS BY TWO VOTES i - i $ - i VV -A;.- ! A- Pehr Evlnd Svinhufvud, former premier of Finland, who was elected elect-ed president of the republic by the slim margin of two votes in the electoral college. YALE IN WORKOUT ... '- I I- t Two begging bears reaching for thetr breakfast at Paradise lodze. Ktinler NaUonai park. . Jl . H J , s . - A I I i ' f James Gamble Rogers. Jr., captain cap-tain of the Yale varsity crew, as he started his first workout of the season on the Quinnlplac river st New Haven. Havaa Body's Blood A normal liuumo bdy -untaIns frx.tn one to one and a fourth or one and a hair gallons of dUh.4 - a gu weighs aluiut eight ptionds. Tile total WoikI volume in a normnl person per-son Is about one-nrentletb of the bdy weight, the quantity varying with the size and physical condition condi-tion of the Individual. r-V- j r $ A. Henderson DIPLOMATS and financiers, finan-ciers, working steadily, have brought about au accord between France and Italy on the question of relative naval strength, and the probable result will be that the three-power three-power London naval nav-al treaty will become be-come a five-power pact. Thus the French and Italians will give up the Idea of starting a building program pro-gram that would compel Great Britain to Increase her naval forces under the "escalator" clause of the treaty, and the United States and Japan would be relieved of the fear that their relative strength would not be maintained without a lively resumption of building. Arthur Henderson. British foreign for-eign secretary, was most actfve in the final stages of the negotiations between France and Italy, making trips to Rome and Paris, and is given credit for excellent work. But It Is admitted that the groundwork ground-work for the agreement was laid by Hugh S. Olbson, American ambassador am-bassador to Belgium, who for several sev-eral months had been laboring to bring the dispute to an end. Acting Act-ing . under personal orders from President Hoover, he held a series of private talks with Mussolini. Tardleu, Brland and others, and transmitted their various proposals to Rome and Paris and finally to the British. The financial end of the accord consists in a long term loan to Italy, to be made by French and American bankers, which will really real-ly be a war debt moratorium in disguise.5 The Fascist government, will receive perhaps three and a half billion dollars, which sum. it Is said, will "save Italy from bankruptcy bank-ruptcy and put the country on its feet" Specifically, the loan will be used to retire and convert Internal In-ternal debt obligations, $1,820,000,- 000 of which fell due on October 1 last. Mussolini's previous efforts to obtain long term loans from American and French bankers had failed because, largely, of the naval nav-al dispute with France. While the terms of the Franco-Italian Franco-Italian agreement were temporarily withheld from the public, it was learned in Purls that it provides that French naval superiority over Italy he reduced from 240.000 tons to 190,000 tons, most of the reduction reduc-tion coming from projected submarines subma-rines and super-submarines. It was agreed that the battleship tonnage allotted at the Washington naval conference would not be used for ships of more than 25.000 tons. France obtained the right to build three 23.,'iOO-ton vessels of the super-cruiser type. In return for superiority In global or total tonnage, it Is believed be-lieved that France gives Italy a slight superiority In light cruisers and torpedo destroyers, but retains supremacy In submarines. It was understood that Italy demanded the sacrifice of super-submarines in the French program and that France made the concession because be-cause its coastal submarines are sufficient for Its present needs. France and Italy, It Is understood, agreed on parity In 10,000-ton cruisers. John W. Davis f EGAL proceed-lngs proceed-lngs are under way in Washington Washing-ton in the contest between President Hoover and the seriate over the right of Chairman George Otis Smith of the power commission com-mission to bold oflice. and the senate sen-ate Is represented by John W. Davis, who was Pemo-era Pemo-era tic candidate for the Presidency in 1924. He was selected for the job by a subcommittee subcom-mittee of the judiciary committee composed of Senators Norris. Walsh and Steimer. The proceedings proceed-ings are expected to add another chapter to the history of constitutional constitu-tional clashes between the executive execu-tive and legislative branches of the government. Selection of Mr." Davis as counsel coun-sel for the 6enate assures a spectacular spec-tacular court test, with the former Presidential candidate on one side and possiblly Attorney Genernl Mitchell on the other. The final decision probably will be rendered by the Supreme court. WITI' a filibuster In the senate and rather uproarious gaiety In the house, the seventy -first congress con-gress came to an end at noon.' March 4. During Its life it carried out fairly well President Hoover's program of legislation, despite frequent fre-quent acrimonious clashes with the Chief Executive since last December. Decem-ber. It Is unnecessary to recount these disputes, for every one Is familiar fa-miliar with them. In only two major affairs the nomination of Judge Parker to the Supreme court and the recent veterans bonus loan act was the President" defeated. The Important Items of legislaV tion during the third session Included In-cluded these: Routine annual appropriation ooooooT rryIn nior tha, S5-250'- ..etriiMtnn nroeram, up public work, including rivers and harbors, highway construction and other federal Improvements. Relief for drought-stricken areas, including $20,000,000 for food loans, provided in measures embodyhnga $05,000,000 loan fund; $2,000,000 for rural sanitation activities; and $3,500,000 of unexpended balances in funds for relief of flood-stricken states. Program of federal public building build-ing censtruction increased by $100,-000.000. $100,-000.000. ' " Series of unemployment reiier measures enacted, contemplating federal unemployment census, long-term long-term planning of public construction construc-tion to meet emergencies and federal fed-eral cooperation In unemployment agency activities. ' : Additional soldier hospitalization facilities afforded , In $20,000,000 program, i . - Naval modernization bill, authorizing author-izing $30,000,000 to remodel battleships battle-ships Louisiana, Idaho and New Mexico, to meet standards prescribed pre-scribed by : the 1022 Washington arms conference. " v The seventy-first congress earned the one distinction of being the heaviest spending of all peace-time congresses. ' In all, it appropriated approximately $10,000,000,000 for government uses. - IN ITS closing days the congress enacted the Muscle Shoals legislation legis-lation which would put the government govern-ment Into the power business, but President Hoover vetoed the measure, meas-ure, sending in a long and well-argued well-argued message. The senate sustained sus-tained the veto, the vote being 49 to 34, and the bill was dead. Mr. Hoover had predicted he would be accused of favoring the power trust, and members of congress did nccuse him of this, and the incident inci-dent it was said, made it certain that the power controversy would be one of the major issues of the next Presidential campaign. Mr. Hoover also failed to sign the Wagner bill for federal co-operation with the states in establishing establish-ing a national system of employment employ-ment exchange. It was understood he would "pocket veto" this measure, meas-ure, which would bring the number of his votes to fifteen. i taw ff ; H. H. Curran IF 100 are to take the word of Henry H. Curran, Cur-ran, president of the Association Against Prohibition, Prohibi-tion, a majority of the people of the United States are now ready and willing to vote for the repeal of the Eighteenth amendment amend-ment In his annual an-nual report to the directors and 3G0,-000 3G0,-000 members of the association, Mr. Curran declared that the dry cause had not advanced an Inch during 1930, while the wet movement move-ment had registered important gains. He asserted that the November No-vember election doubled the wet representation in the house and raised the senate wet group from 15 two years ago, to 22 at present. He said the house now has a wet vote of 100. compared with 76 in 1928. SECRETARY of Agriculture Hyde denies that he is to blame for delay In distributing the $20,-000,000 $20,-000,000 drought relief fund. In a letter replying to a resolution Introduced In-troduced by Senator Caraway asking ask-ing why Mr. Hyde had not begun the distribution, the secretary asid: "I have the honor to inform the senate that because of the extend ed debate upon the appropriation of S20.0O0.0OO contained in the Interior In-terior department bilUand because of the uncertainty as to the provisions pro-visions of the act. It was not possible pos-sible to work out the administration administra-tion and accounting problems entailed en-tailed until the act was finally passed and its provisions definitely known." He explained the machinery which the department had set np In order to distribute loans through intermediate credit organizations and directly to the farmer., "There exists now no reason why application for loans may not now be received and payment made shortly thereafter," he concluded. f AJ. Ralph Rorce of the army air corps is being congratulated congratulat-ed on the announcement announce-ment that lie has ""u anurufu me Mackay trophy for V.m This is In - recognition of the s "Arctic patrol" ; which he led through severe winter weather I m eltriaSe Major Royce field, Michigan, to . Spokane. Wash., and return. In January. p.CO. It was a severe test of the skill and stamina of the pilots and the stability of the planes and was successfully carried car-ried through. The trophy, width Is competed for annually hy United States nrmv officers under War department rules, was first presented IS years go to the Aero Club of America by aarence U. Mackay. The Na- tt.nnt lernnnnffcnl flSSOCiatlon. ,w.iier tn the Aero Club of Amt'rlca, Is present custodian of the "trophy for the War department. LOW bid for the general contract con-tract on the Hoover dam and power plant in Boulder canyon was submitted la Denver by a com-bination com-bination of western construction firms-the Six Compnles, Inc., of San Francisco, and the government engineers recommended that this bid of $48,800905.50 be accepted by Secretary of the Interior Wilbur. Wil-bur. Work on the project, the biggest big-gest engineering Job ever under-taken under-taken In this country, probably will be started before the end of March. Government officials, although asserting as-serting work should lie hastened so unemployment conditions in the Southwest would be relieved, warned workers against a general migration to the Nevada-Arizona line dam site as there were 10,000 laborers on hand at Las Vegas, Nev. Estimates for construction forces ranged from 2,000 to 2.500 men at work at one time when the program gets into full stride. M AL S. DADGHERTY, brother of former United States Attorney At-torney General Harry M. Daugher-ty, Daugher-ty, was convicted In Washington Courthouse, Ohio, of defrauding the defunct Ohio State bank while he was its president. The Jury found the eixty-elght-year-old financier guilty on all five counts in the indictment. in-dictment. . Each count carries a maximum penalty of thirty years' imprisonment and a fine of $10,000. Sentence has not yet been Imposed. Mai Daugherty became a figure prominent In newspaper headlines during the Investigation conducted by a special senatorial committee investigating Harry Daugherty's conduct of the Department of Justice. t i o NEof the most Gen. Jadwin g 1 n e e r s of the American arm y, and Indeed of the nation, passed on when Lieut. ? Gen. Edgar Jadwin. retired re-tired chief of the nrmy engineering corps and chairman chair-man of the inter-ocean inter-ocean canal commission, com-mission, died at Gorgas hospital In - Panama City. While in Ancon preparing to go to Nicaragua to survey the possibilities possibil-ities of a Nicaraguan canal, he was stricken with apoplexy, and a cerebral cere-bral hemorrhage ended his life. General Jadwin, who was born In Honesdale, - Pa., in 18G5, was graduated from West Point In 1800 and had a brilliant career In the engineering corps for nearly forty years, retiring in 1929. He served In the Spanish-American war and the World war, but was best known for his pence-time pence-time work In the United States and la the Canal Zone. The Jadwin Jad-win plan of flood control formulated formulat-ed after the disastrous Mississippi valley floods of 1927 was the army officer's most Important work. The plan called for expenditure of $325,000,000 and was opposed In congress, but finally passed with administration support VICEROY LORD IRWIN and Mobatma Gandhi, both making concessions, reached an ngreement for peace in India, and the civil disobedience movement that had lasted for a year came to an end. The Nationalists looked on the pact as a triumph for the doctrine of non-violence. The British government, govern-ment, though it yields considerable, probably gets none the worst of the bargain. By the terms of the agreement, It Is understood, the Nationalists Na-tionalists abandon their resistance movement and will work for qualified quali-fied dominion status in the second round table conference. In return, their Imprisoned members will be released and most of the confiscated confiscat-ed property will be returned; they are permitted to conduct boycotts that do no aim specifically at British Brit-ish goods, and the poor natives along the coast are given the right to make their own salt. The most Important gain for the British was the point in which the Nationalists agreed to confine themselves at the next round table conference to the specified scope of constitutional questions elucidated eluci-dated by the first round table meeting meet-ing in London. This commits Gandhi to the principle of a federation fed-eration of Indian responsibility, hut with British safeguards covering finance, defense, foreign affairs, the position of minorities and the discharge dis-charge of India's national debts. III Xiki JIENC 'by Flo: I- Sort. E" SON 44tb St (at 1 'you do 1' ir011' s 1 Proper- I a il,el I married fs an en Your iai,U.I 1- . beut by th. 'ttJ Indortry. Keep ttZJ th beneBU of , prw These BrandsS mailt n nn noaA... " vgciVB JOmJ 3UT1 Inlsh whi Itste matt ? mint WOl Csljll- Best NRvrl i MOTOR 01 Flows Freely in Colril ' OSTLER'S i? ?PUD BAR Mtt.I tiim.l ASK i FOR SPUD BAR MILK BUCSs) Thi. Week's PrlfcJ dmp i look: Make nnttbE mountain made product kt!, i let n. rapport our , Hiy Instead of buying tnm Eumy turen. and mult thi. i- 1 rearion the first to tmerp fej jicxa depression inn An ma MRS. SARAH MAB1A tICffl W .! This coopoa iB FREE GARDEN a aaj uwn, nm HI ! PORTER VALTGS SALT LAKE art, TOt Year v"" Address. PERFECT EAR! MADE ON. Y V SALT LAKE STAMP CO. Bmachray i SALT LAKS CITY, ITMH.USJL ASK FOB BEET SUt THE ONLY HOME SUGi! 1 PIPE AND FITTER INe :lt la ijeofSal Mi-lsh wfort Jity.Ga ik and i I Room ? 12 TP.E.S New and Reclaim Write ns for Frao SALT LAKE PIPE C 475 West (th So. Send this add and set 1 CLAUDE NEON i , Electrical Products Cww 7.946 So. Mm ormnqR THE ONLY HOME OWNE j, Tone la en MORNING MILKPT m i A croceb POH HESsSSS. OENATOU ARTHUR CAPPER'S J committee on food prices reported re-ported that it found "an alarming tendency toward the monopolistic control" of the rood of the nation by a small group of powerful corporations cor-porations and combinations.' the tendency being especially strong In the case of bread and milk. A careful scrutiny by the federal trade commission and the Department Depart-ment of Justice was recommended. PHAIRMAN RASKOR. told the Democratic national committee at its meeting in Washington all about the wet policy which he thought the party should adopt, but said he would not ask action on his suggested platform until the next meeting. Dry members from the Soiith vigorously opposed Ras-kob's Ras-kob's views or any consideration of them by the committee. It was decided de-cided that a SlO.omi.oOO campaign fund should be missed. Fne For i Sperry Drifted K Flour At ro em;: APEX HA!R Ask Yonr Drnecist For AN INTERMOTJNTAEtf Are yon eoinj to &M HAY DERRICK We ean 1 Write for CirW Buflders Steel 475 West 6th So. Salt :Ss tAT'S 1'iae 3 itch Bind Sea tl liotli fal r 'awaki l-o, dep( t 1 TP WO new rovemmpntii trtthtn week for Peru! First a navy group forced Sanchez llprro to re-; sign and named Hilef Justice Ricardo" Elias provisional president. presi-dent. Then along came a hunch of officers an and out went Ellas and his friends. The nefli- army Junta was header, by Col. Oustave Jimenez. (A- 13L Weetera Newapaper Cnlo. S5.oo sr-JyJ yea afaenU mm Inter-oo"1 J Similar to aooTe. Set j hteramntaisi FroKt I Bex 154$. Salt Lake CHT. j apiKars la thj eehtsw r win reeeire AJal WANTED t Nanwe ef krt t mm Cards fat Wl v" 0i yriater. Plane tor 1" "T Send tn jn er raUV sake m eeffiae: eas w tnablea. aartakes and ST mmmiliil easten . ,m w. v. v-r. o. Bo t"5- i I i |