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Show 1 THE LEIH SUN, LEIH. UTAH News Review of Current Events the World Over William Green Says Labor Must Force 30-Hour Week; Gen. Johnson and Business Leaders Discuss Future of the NRA. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ma0j; AJORITT and minority reports Howe About: Silerius Third Wife William A. Wirt's "red plot" stories were made to the house, and they were Just what had been expected. The majority of the committee held that Wlrfa charges were untrue and Mindiru Your Business that his companions at the famous '"lu"5 " . dinner party did not make the state- American wasic ft Bell SyndlcM WNU Bervic 4 " William Green "VJOTICE Is served on the nation J-N that the 30-hour work week will he forced on Industry, by organized organ-ized labor by the use of widespread strikes. If necessary. neces-sary. This Is the dictum of William Green, president of the American Federation Fed-eration of Labor, and It causes con-sternntlon con-sternntlon In the administration as well as grave alarm In the country gen erally. Green. In his May day address to workers, says the New Deal has failed to remedy the unemployment situation, since there are still more than ten millions without lobs. The 30-hour week, he says. Is the only remedy avail able since If all Industries not yet under codes are brought under them, the resulting reemployment will not give work to these millions, Just before Green lHSiied this statement, President Itoosevelt had apparently declined to support the Connery bill legislating a SO-hour week for all InduKtry; and General Johnson has recently abandoned as not feasible the plan for forcing 10 per cent reduction In working hours. T) KPRESENTATIVE BERTRAND 1 SNELL of New York, minority leader In the house, says the period of emergency Is over, so he and the rest of the Republican leaders feel free now to demand that the emerg ency laws and bureaus be dispensed with. An amazing phase of the con. troversy over the New Deal thus comes to light. The opponents of the administration virtually concede that President Roosevelt and his ad visors have won their fight against the depression and declare that nor mal conditions have been restored or are at hand. But the President and the other New Dealers deny that the battle Is over and assert that their recovery measures must be continued In force. At the same time they Insist that they are not seeking to change the American sys tem to state socialism, collectivism, communism, fascism, and that what they are accomplishing Is "evolu tlon, not revolution." Thus a most peculiar situation In politics Is created, and the man In the street Is waiting Interestedly to see how It will be handled In the coming campaign. T EADERS of business from all - parts of the country gathered In Washington for the annual meet Ing of the United States Chamber of Commerce, and vmm naturally the topic for discussion was the NRA, concerning concern-ing which varying views were offered. President Henry I. ltarriman declared that Industry Is f, " vj. - it v me rrcsuient s sug- i , , -i, si gestion of perma- Pv V' i "t Gen. Johnson eral commission and a cessation of federal subsidies for Inland waterways. Another $2,000,000,000 for public works In order to help the laggard heavy Industries. Relaxation of the present rigid security act and a softening of the pending stock exchange bill. Approval by congress of the Pres ident's tariff bargaining plans as a means to reviving foreign trade. Abandonment by the administra tion of Its demand that industry cut Its working hours 10 per cent and raise Its pay rolls 10 per cent Control of bituminous coal pro duction by a system of quotas and penalty taxes on overproduction. JUST a few hours before General Johnson had snoken In hlch praise of the bituminous coal set tlement, Federal District Judge Charles I. Dawson In Louisville held unconstitutional the code arranged for that Industry, as applied to local business, and granted a temporary Injunction restraining the government govern-ment from forcing the code upon unwilling operators In western Ken tutky. The operators, who claim to have $50,000,000 Invested In the mines, chiefly In Hopkins, Muhlenberg, Union and Webster counties, protested pro-tested rigorously when the code recently re-cently was formulated providing for $4.00 a day for seven hours work. Prior to that the scale was $4 for eight hours work. Most of their mines were shut down more than a month ago. ments he had attributed to them. Representatives McGugln and Lehl-bach, Lehl-bach, the Republican minority mem bers of the committee, character- I Ized the Investigation as a "repudiation "repudi-ation of all precedents" and Indica tive of Intentions to "suppress all Information" which might directly Involve .the brain trust. THE senate by acclamation accepted ac-cepted the conference report on the 1034 revenue measure, which provides for an increase In taxes of $417,000,000. The Couzens amend ment for a 10 per cent Increase In Income tax. which the house re jected, was cut out. I THEN the administration's bill for reduction of cotton produc tion was under consideration its op ponents argued In vain that It would work grievous injustice to thousands of tenant farmers and "croppers" In the South. Secretary of Agriculture Agricul-ture Wallace now finds this prediction predic-tion was well founded, his Informa tion coming from Dr. Calvin B. Hooker of Duke university whom he requested to make an Investigation. Investiga-tion. Mr. Wallace now plans the establishment of a compliance board to Inquire Into complaints of ten ants. At the same time the enforcement enforce-ment of cotton reduction contracts will be tightened to prevent farm owners from ousting tenant farmers and farm workers because of the re duced amount of production. SPEA Ger i 1 s 1 5 i mir- " ' 1 Mrs. Hammond V nent NRA If modi- fkatlons and re strictions are placed on the broad authority granted Mr. Itoosevelt during the emergency last year. On the other hand, Silas It Strawn, former head of the cham ber, attacked what he termed the abandonment of a schema of government gov-ernment which has made "us hnp-rler hnp-rler and more prosperous than any other nation. He called for a three-way action by Mr. Roosevelt: Balancing of all governmental Budgets, a definite announcement that there will be no more requests jot emergency legislation and "no wore tinkering with the dollar," and revision of the securities act and proposed stock-exchange legislation. At a dinner Gen. Uugh S. Johnson John-son was the chief guest and after his address be submitted to an In quisition on the present and prospective pros-pective policies of the MIA. Asked directly. If the principles embodied In the recovery act were to be permanent, per-manent, he replied ; "If there has been any good demonstrated dem-onstrated by the recovery act. It will live and It ought to live: If there has been any bad It will die and It ought to die." Admitting that there has been a lapse In public Interest and enthusiasm, enthus-iasm, the general said a new campaign cam-paign to make the nation Blue Eagle conscious was being mapped. Ee also admitted that the controversy controv-ersy between labor and Industry Is becoming more acute. He expressed the opinion that the Ideal relation ship between labor and management manage-ment had been worked out In the bituminous coal Industry. Generally, the member of the chamber of commerce agreed that the first year tinder the NRA had brought economic Improvement. Some of their suggestions for speed ing the recovery program were: Co-ordination of all land, water. sad air transportation under a fed X7HEN the senate committee on v V Drivlleeea and elections ooened the hearings on the demands that Senators Iluey P. Long and his po litical follower, John H. Overton of Louisiana be deprived de-prived of their seats, the political groups that have been seeking espe cially to oust the "kingflsh" remained In the background and left 1t to the women of Louisiana Loui-siana to take the lead in the fight These women are headed by Mrs. Hilda Phelps Ham mond, who has been Indefatigable In the compaign against Long and his crew. The women were represented as counsel by Gen. Samuel T. Ansel!, wartime acting Judge advocate gen eral, who has pending against Long a suit for libel. Ills opening state ment dispelled the Idea that Long's opponents would be satisfied to let Overton remain In the senate if the "kingflsh" were thrown out "We expect to prove," said Gen eral Arisel!, "the charge that there was fraud In the 1932 Louisiana primaries sutllclent to vitiate the election of Senator Overton; that Senator Overton was an active perpetrator of that fraud; that senators uverton ana Long were designers and Instigators of that fraud." lAKINO to about two million ;rmans at the Teniplehof air port outside of Berlin, Chancellor Hitler deflnntly denied Germany's war guilt and declared the relch has been a victim of the war. He warned the world again that Ger many no longer was willing to ac cept discrimination against her by the former allied powers, and de clared that day of "spineless sub mission" was at an end. (i FARAD" for more than a year, the Austrian parliament came to life long enough to approve, by a vote of 74 to 2, the new Consti tution and a mnss of laws decreed by Chancellor Dollfuss since March 8, 1933. The new Constitution abol ishes parliaments and also does away with trial by Jury. JUST before midnight of May 8, fipnrcn V hoenn th twpntr.flfth year of bis reign as king of Great Britain, Ireland and the British do minions beyond the sea and emper or of India. By his own choice the anniversary was not observed by especial ceremonies, but prepara tions are already under way for a celebration of his silver Jubilee In 1935 that will rival that of Queen Victoria's golden Jubilee In 1S87. In his 24 years on the throne George has earned the high esteem of the the world and has proved himself a real leader and, In the minds of the British, all that a king should be. He Is democratic, human and pro gressive and a genuine sportsman. but upholds with dignity the tradi tions of the court By ED HOWE SO FAR as my reading goes no one has ever more candidly, intelligently intelligent-ly or fairly discussed the relations of married couDles than snerius, wuo lived near the time of the most famous outrace on women recorded In history : that suffered by Sabine women wno were carried off by invading soldiers. Some authorities claim Silerius him self was a general In the conquering army concerned, and that a screaming Sabine woman was delivered at his tent as his part of the loot As near as can be learned rrom me vague history of that time this worn- . . . 1 iU A an. so violently courieu, uecunm me third wife of Silerius; and although carried from her own country to a strange one by a conqueror, with no other preliminary than being suddenly seized by rough Invaders, she was so capable In looking after her own Interests In-terests that her abductor later married her; Indeed, she became prominent and respected In the Inhospitable cltj In which her husband lived. In his memoirs Silerius gives the Im pression that his third wife pleased him more than any of the others, to two of whom he was married witn elaborate ceremonies, and after very sentimental courtship. In writing of his experiences with women, Silerius tells In a rather amusing way of the gentle and cunning arts his third wife exercised In bending him to her will, and I get the Impression that she loved him more sincerely than any of the wives he acquired In a more conventional conven-tional way. What part of your attention do you give to your own business? Say you are merchant lawyer, doctor, mechan ic, farmer. What per cent of your enthusiasm en-thusiasm goes to your business, and what per cent to politics, vacations, clubs, automobiling, radio, moving pic tures, welfare work, social affairs? Many a good business has been wrecked by Its head man neglecting It for other things. It Is charged that one of the most notable of American commercial enterprises Is on the rocks becaurjo Its head, In receipt of an enor mous salary, neglected It for outside activities. The same principle applies ap-plies to those occupying fifteen, twenty or forty-dollar-a-week Jobs. Very few Americans mind their own business. Farmers May Now Get After Weeds Land Removed From Corn and Wheat Provides Good Opportunity. By Bruc Thornton. Awoclat BotanUrt, Colorado Acrlcultural Coll-WNU Coll-WNU Borvlc. An exceptional opportunity for farmers to control harmful weeds Is offered In the removal of large acreages of land from wheat and corn under the government's plan of controlled production. Such weeds are field bindweed or wild morning glory, white weed or perennial peppergrass, poverty weeds, Canada thistle and Russian knapweed may be controlled or eradicated by cultivating often enough to prevent any green growth appearing above the surface of the ground. Clean cultivation Is' the cheapest method of eradication available at present This usually requires culUvat-Ing culUvat-Ing once a week for two consecutive consecu-tive years, although cultivations may be less frequent as the plants are weakened. One year of clean cultivation has produced desired results re-sults under some conditions, weakening weak-ening weeds so that a heavy sowing of alfalfa has smothered them out completely. However, there Is always al-ways a chance that some plants will survive under this method. These weed pests defy ordinary control methods because of the huge amount of food jnaterlal held In reserve re-serve In their extensive, creeping root systems. Usual cultural practices, prac-tices, where care is not taken to keep green growth from appearing, often increases rather than decreases de-creases the growth aud spread of the weeds. Clean cultivation has been hindered hin-dered in the past by the hesitancy to take land out of production, although al-though crops produced In weedy areas usually are of poor quality and low yield. Now that farmers are being paid rentals by the government gov-ernment to keep land out of corn and wheat, or the production of any crop competing with any basic commodity, com-modity, an unusual opportunity presents pre-sents Itself for eradicating injurious in-jurious weeds by clean cultivation. Weed eradication will Increase the value of the land and remove a source of possible further damage. 4 KMWll WILLIAM II. WOODIN. who v was President Roosevelt's Brst secretary of the treasury, has passed away, succumbing to the throat affection that forced his resignation from the cabinet last December. In his death the coun- try loses a business man of the highest type and a gentleman who had the respect and affection of all who knew him. He became president presi-dent of the American Car and Foundry company In 1910, and also was president of the American Lo comotive company. His Interests were varied, for he was musician, composer, art lover and student of government as well as leader In Industry. In-dustry. He was long a personal friend of Mr. Roosevelt and, though a Republican, was one of the first selections for the President's cabinet cab-inet and worked hard so long as bis nealtn permitted. FXACTLT 3d years from the day - Admiral Dewey destroyed the Spanish Beet In Manila bay, the leg islature of the Philippines accepted the new offer of the United States for the Independence of the Islands as embodied In the Tydlngs-McDufile act Uuder the terms of the measure, the Filipinos will obtain complete Independence In VH During the Intervening years a commonwealth government to be set op probably next year, will govern the Islands. mta acceptance or the act the Filipinos ceased to be nationals of the United States and became sub ject to the rigid Immigration laws vniy ou may enter this country yearly. The status of an estimated 00.000 Filipinos In the United States as well as the International status of the entire Island population dur Ing the transition period remains In doubt due to the wording of the measure. A TTORNET GENERAL CUM MINGS feels that the forces of the Department of Justice are In adequate to cope with the gangsters, and will ask congress for about $2,- 000,000 In excess of the $28,700,773 authorized the department for the fiscal year 1933. Next year's appro priation Is the lowest granted the Justice department since the war. With the additional money the at torney general contemplates pur chasing for the division's agents a fleet of h!ghiowered automobiles, a few armored cars and ample guns and ammunition. Likewise the force of Investigators will be added to, and there Is a possibility that the division's 24 field oftlces will be increased. FEDERAL agents believe they have uncovered a great ring of crooks for the handling of money derived from kldnaplngs, bank rob beries and swindles. They already have arrested a number of men and are hurrying hur-rying to get others before they are put out of the way by members of the gang, as has been done before. The ring. It is said, has been operating tn Chicago, New York, St Louis, Kansas City snd other cities. One of the first men taken Into custody was John J. Mc laughlin, formerly a state legisla tor and a political boss tn Chicago, suspected of being a leader In the disposal of the "hot money. The specific charge against him Is conspiracy con-spiracy In the kidnaping or Edward r.remer, St Paul banker, for whose release a ransom of $200,000 waa paid. The federal agents were diligently dili-gently searching for William Elmer Mead, a notorious crook, who Is thought to have directed the kidnapers. kid-napers. McLaughlin confessed that he had handled some of the Brener ransom money, and his son was arrested ar-rested with part of It In bis pocket t) fcf Wwmm Knpapr fTaUm. A doctor connected with the govern ment says that 71 per cent of the hos pital cases now being cared for by the government were not cases that In any way could be traced to the great war; that the Veterans' Disability act was the greatest steal ever put over on the American people. Here Is another startling Illustra tion of the waste and dishonesty In American public affairs; In this case, In relieving twenty-nine men honestly entitled to relief, the politicians, re lieved seventy-one not entitled to It The figures hold In everything else In American public affairs. I have no doubt that for every twenty-nine dollars dol-lars the government necessarily spends In its operation seventy-one dollars are wantonly and villainously wasted. The only way for the government to properly balance the budget Is to cut off 71 per cent of taxes already levied, and wasted. -instead of odrtl hit npw burdens. f ; I do not know Just when, but some of these days I Intend to confess 1 am as tired of my writing as others are, and no longer hold on to the coat tails of the drunken world In attempts to better It. And In my final notice I think I shall pay the people who have dismissed me a good many compliments. Millions Mil-lions of them are admirable. My final message to them will be; Kn tho - f lew good thinrfl vnn hstva anenm. John J. McLaughlin ..a pitshed, and try to accomplish a few more. All the comforts we nave came as a result of men sno- ceeding n doing a little better." When I know what women expect of men. I am willing to grant It. Just how much attention from men do women decides Is proper? 1 have been In doubt at times. . . . There Is In my town a woman who Is very strict; she promptly resents the slightest familiarity fa-miliarity from men. and frequently talks Indignantly . of their boldness. One day i learned, from the private talk of the women, that s friend of mine had squeezed her band, and that she was rery mad about It Later, when I was In her company, the name of the bold wretch came up, and I felt that eU ... i . uiu TiKorousij denounce him. She didn't know I had heard of me atrroat offered her. but I was certain cer-tain she would express a very unfavorable unfa-vorable opinion, knowing she was ten . And this was what she kJ. lie is the most entertaining nian I ever met In my life." I have ions wondered that tho trine called Communism has persisted through so many centuries, althom-h jvery reasonably Intelligent man acknowledge ac-knowledge u is foolish and Impractical Imprac-tical I think the explanation is we are all natural Communists. Children Impose on parents, and everybody else until broken of It Some children tra-' P"se on parents until fourteen, eight w or twenty-one-twMhree-four years 1; some continue to believe tn rwnnmnina long after they have ;"m" '? nf thp!' "d trouble with 0"'.re. Quail, Farmers' Friend, Must Have Food Supply Among the chtef causes for lack of quail and upland birds on farms may be scarcity of necessary food and cover. Failure to supply substitute sub-stitute "patches" when natural feeding ground has been destroyed and neglect to preserve the natural cover for the bob-white's habitat are among the chief causes of gradual grad-ual reduction, says the Missouri Farmer. Many measures may be taken on the average farm to Increase In-crease or Improve the food for quail and help bring about an Increase In-crease In their numbers. Seed can be broadcast in early spring around gulleys and washes, on roadsides, around the borders of fields and like situations, Cain, hemp, lespedeza, clover and many species of small wild beans and cowpeas provide excellent sus tenance for quail Once started lespedeza les-pedeza volunteers year after year, unless killed out by burning the land over after the seed germinates In the spring. When harvesting grain a few rows on the outside near cover may be advantageously left for the birds. Quail at times do much work on the farm by destroying de-stroying serious Insect pests and are considered one of the farmer's best allies and deserve the serious consideration on any man's farm. Beet Sugar Industry More than 31,000 farmers in Michigan, Mich-igan, Ohio, Indiana and Wisconsin, produced $23,300,000 worth of sugar, dried beet pulp and molasses the past year. In the four states there are 23 beet sugar factories, which, It Is estimated, will produce 872,-654,000 872,-654,000 pounds of refined sugar, pulp and molasses. Under the participating partici-pating contracts, in effect with most of these factories, the farmers get half of the net cash return from the sale of these products. Indiana Farmer's Guide, Along the Furrows Pruning before growth starts is best for trees and shrubs. Consumers in this country ate more than 15,000,000,000 pounds of meat In 1933. Sugar beet shipments from Utah in 1933 were 10 per cent higher than those of 1932. Number of farms supplied with hlgh line electric service In Ohio rose from 1(5,000 In 1923 to 4S.000 In OTiU... J . . avails uesiroyea in 1933, a to- 1.3,114 common barborr 573 properties la 2d Pk tip tal of ousnes on counties. In recent years, over 90 per cent of tt- United States flax crop has been produced In North Dakota. Minnesota, South Dakota and Montana, Mon-tana, the states ranking B Dro. auction tn the order named. Wffi RGIEIRi BEVERLY HILLS. Well all I know is Just what I read In the papers, or what I overhear when folks finally get me stopped talking talk-ing for a minute. Had some fun out here at old Uno E Dos Mortgages Mort-gages Rancho (first and second sec-ond mortgage Ranch) a couple of Sundays ago. O. O. Mclntire and Irvin Cobb, and Will Hayes, Bill Hayes wife, and Odd's wife and Irvln's daughter, (and a bright one too) and this elderly aunt of Odd's I was telling you about last week and Mrs. Billie Burke Zelgfeld. Well. to kinder make O. O. and Irvin feel like Paducah, Kentucky, sah( and Galopolls, Ohio, we hitched up a team of big grey mules to a three-seated hack, I took the ribbons, rib-bons, and Cobb said, "There Is where you should have been all these years telling those Jokes to a span of grey mules." Well never mind what the Chamber Cham-ber of Commerce says, this is at heart a dry mountainous country. I have some dirt roads around our patch, but they are so imbedded up against the mountains side that I really have yet to see anybody derive de-rive any great enjoyment out of driving around em. Take those four Hunter boys that broke the endurance endur-ance record in planes. I took them around there in a Ford, and if they had had parachutes they would have "Balled Out" on the second turn, We drove up on a kind of a high lookout. Its our local Pikes Peak, Must be at least 400 feet above sea level. (But I have never known the Pacific to be level, never when I was on it.) I pointed out Catalina Island, or where I had seen it the day when there was no fog. I pointed distant screen. stars homes out I Just had heard they lived within a mile of where I pointed, but there was no place for anyone to argue with a driver. Then I turned my mules down hill and toward the barn. Like a real old stage coach driver I reached for my side brake. I throwed her on, but she had jarred loose and she dident connect with the wheel. She had been an awful nice hack In "Atmosphere" tied out in a Western street in a movie scene, but she was a litle rusty on moun tain work, Well when the brakes dident work she commenced going up on these old mules heels, those single-trees commenced popping em on the hina legs, and they commenced to hit quite a nice gentle loap. Cobb is in the very rear seat and cant do the coaching that I figured be would be able to aid me with. He is leaning in toward the mountain side at an angle that must a been about horizontal. hori-zontal. Mclntire aint on this ezcur- j sion, or he would a busted a spat but his wife Is, and this 82 year-young year-young aunt is sitting up with old Casey Jones Rogers, and having the time of her life. A mighty narrow road, a real drop down side into a deep canyon, down hill, mules pick ing up momentum here and there. Sounds kinder komical now, but not so hot at the time. I got an awful good boy with me. Buddy Sterling, and I kinder suspicioned when we started out that we might need a pick-up man, so he was along on a good horse. Will H. Hayes was along and also an outrider, but Bill could only shout encouragement In a case like that. He could have cut anything any-thing he wanted too out of the scene if it had been in a movie, but authority there had to be muscular. Buddy passed us like a streak and picked pick-ed em up. Had to reach over one's neck and bull dog the second one too. We got stopped and lost three customers, Mrs. Rogers, wife of the driver of course, Mrs. Zelg- j feld, who had never seen anything that wild in the Follies, and Mr. Cobb. Said he dident mind staying ! In, but he dident like to see the ladies walk down the hill alone as no telling what leading man might attack em. We hobbled one hind wheel to the body and went on down in enjoyment The old Aunt Mrs. ' Hayes, and Mcfntire and Mrs. Rrodv. , Irv's daughter. I had another, (about j a ten acre patch) that I wanted to show em, but I couldent seem to get anybody interested. Well it was a flop. I dident have time to point out a thing. I eouldent ' gi.e em a plot of ground and throwed i the mules. Still the thing wasent as bad as It could have been. I got some horses that if those old single trees started to hit em on the shins. I believe we would have iad some real fun. I got the brake Ized now, and am looking for new nickers. 0 tm. McVfli Sydiaf, Im. ill Intft uici mountain h LVALUES bis-SCHOOL bis-SCHOOL pWBB SOUTH SPOTTED FEVfbL SALT LAKE CITT r, tal of $iasaio.44 J; ni 18 the 40 JE if uian recent h. . "lirJ ment of t.nl,i! i " 4 to$2,0S2,s.V).ftSia'f- SALT LAKE cm l? for an expedite nnezplured region,.' J; were annoei t Cal recently by 2 Hall, d,i,f ot the B ' education, national pI' SALT LAKE CITY, rr chiefly to the fart ttaul : eeeds of wines asses J shows an Increase of , Jl 003 over that for vxK, valuation of all property i assessed lv hD . atn H,i. :imn ...... BIIOWJ aal1 apnroximntoii tis TiW,UUV nr.. '"-"ui-iii ua wnica tai levied in 1933. 3 1 " Project, an ImproTK ter system and a 275.0ttu.iu servoir, gained headwuT .w village board accepted the bM J United States government tn; .uue ?.;j,uuu in Donas. POCATELLO, IDA.-P bonded indebtedness was ti- in. uie ena oi trie quarter renrnary l, l'JZi, a detrtss FORT BRIDGER. WTO large sign, giving the historjtf lamous rrontier outpost, hu erected here by the WvomiM department of commerce and k: try. GUXMSOX, tT.-Pest! tn tacking crops with great rtv in this district. GoTernmeat is expected in the struggle It i growing crops. BOISE, IDA.-Author!tyU Ing 200,000 acres of north L burned over land to red top fl and blue grass as a flood to; measure pending reforestafe the area has been received h H. Godfrey of the relief admit: tion. POCATELLO, IDA. - Char; Impersonations of the men played a great part is tie drama of old Fort Hall, and development of Idaho and then- west, will be a feature of the If Hall Centennial celebratios August 5, 6, 7, and 8. Ia two parades to be held on the Dm third days of the celebration be about 20 different charar whose attire will be correct Is tail to those men who blazed trail for the west After the ade the characters will gatte the University of Idaho state the afternoon and will be t for prizes. t nr. 4 v TT The eoldea u versary of the dedication ot flu gan L. I). S. temple, the seeoai the present temples of that ' to be erected, will be marHk May 13th to 28th, With a PF Thousands of members of the ?: from this and gurtoundins -are expected to be present i rangements are being made to-000 to-000 persons to atterd of temple ceremonies that fi-held fi-held during the celebration. Tinw. tit Fanners who" their corn and whfat aewn roor- under the agricultural iv ment act will be In u strategic position for their rj campaign asauisi. , . mi nmro fime and h y farm" thing" 1 Set E dub irtrfnt ' UpenB ; the pr ids of orroondi ii admi notcarr: ..Jen th j has serelt is if befo :01 the i belie Mr. Ko h stable, eoretia UThei bated I public Lot pu plan, th fejence. kd the Jsh co anally, tt oece b of bi to th eipectex iiibtless l-enativi cal cou N to t! to St tioss er er i; be to theorie red bad saibitiot f of pn that ft 'ar, aw ilM this wished jr susm toe s oh att .onstrai 4 golti the i d agai St oni ?r no 7 b : iiis th I that i e good: -!,anc I? cong 4 to fsNS. it CO i ( I do so I wise, will have more torv to cover, Intense f-st! iury i" ,.v.. .,..1.4 ,"i i against insect Birable according to T. & tural DepartmentjdaJ ! New Grafli now Medium rt, 0i (0- - f i ti.' r- BOISE, IDA.-- " of spotted fever tb" reported to tal statistic p' JH ix victims Aflss Washington. Ore organisation of fl,4 SI. iS en 1 'Mb des' f a ktie ri :te t.ch i r 'si, i I i ' 'h ture depcrinx - r i |