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Show THE .JORDAN JOURNAL, MIDVALE. UTAH HAUGEN FARM HAllWAY lABOR BILl NOW lAW BILL SURVIVES WATSON-PARKER MEASURE FIX lNG WAGES UNDER DISPUTE IN OPERATION FEE CLAUSES OF EQUALIZATION STANDS FIRE, AS DO ALL. CONTROVERTED PHRASES Old Board Dissolved and Set of Medl ators Will Be Named By President; Coolidge Signs The Bill Kansan Charges Farm Organizations Conduct Lobby; Cummins Talks; Fee To Be Authorized lmmed· lately .......................... Baree's. Here l.•as something too 'tlll to kl!l, and with an angry squeak the ermine w&s gone. Napanao'l'l wings relaxed, nnd the throb \\ <'nt out of her body. She was dead. Baree hung on It's a Privilege to Lir!e in until '•e "as sure. Then he began his 1 feast : Wuh murtler in his heart, Sekoosew ! hovPr.:d near. whisking ltere and there hut nev{!r comin~ nPnrcr than half 11 MCADOO AND SMITH SUPPORT· Ogden.-The eighth annual Utah Dedozen feet from llaree. His e)·es were 1 ERS ENDORSE PLAN AND IN· partment convention of the American redder tbnn ever. Now and then he CLUDE UNIT VOTE Legion will be held August 23, 24, and emittNI n sharp little Sf]nenk of rage. ~e,'et· hnd he been so an~ry in all his 25, it was announced Monday by De· life! To have a fat p.1rtrrdge stolen • partment Commander Arthur Woolley. from him like this wn~ an imposi- Former Rivals Still Leading Charaa- The convention will be held in Cedar tion lw had never ~nff( red lwfore. He ters In Party; Situat1on May Be 1 City. ·wantPtl to dart in and fasten !tis te!'th 1 Heber City.-Twenty·five hundred Changed; Two-Third Rule ln Barce's jugular. But he was too 1 head of dairy cattle have been tested • Begun In Iowa good a general to mn ke the nttempt, • for tuberculosis in Wasatch county too good n l\'npoll'on to jump deliber· during the past two weeks. Of this ately to his Waterloo. An owl he Washington, D. C.-The present number fifty-three head were found \\OU!d have fought. He mi;:-ht even have r:ivt>n hnttl\' to his big brother growing movement within the Demo- to be afflicted with the disease. -nnd his de.trlliPst pnpmy-the minli:. cratic party to get rid of its two-third Salt Lake Clty.-An article detailing: anywhere betwePn his four legs. and But in B:u·ee he re\'ngnized the wolf· rule began in Iowa with a resolution the Victory highway motor caravan, his little sharp•pointe<l head with its b('ady red eyes could slip easily breed, and he \f'llf!'d his l'lpite at n passed unanimously by the local Dem· "hich will travel from San Francisco distauce. .\ftl'l" a time hi>: good sense I ocratic state central committee. There· to Salt Lake June 9 to June 12, a fea· throu:rh a hole an mch In diameter. t·eturned, anti he went off on another 1/ after Democratic. national committee· ture of the May 12 Issue of San Fran" For several centuries Sekoosew had lmnt. men and committeewomen of Iowa . . D t" m c1sco Busmess, house organ of thehelped to make history. It was heI:aree ate a third of the partridge,', sent a letter dto the "ttemocra lC cfoall. l San Francisco chamber of commerce. when his pelt was \\ orth a hunr]l·ed nntl the rpmaining two thirds he 1 mitteemen an comnu eewomen o dollars In ldng's gold-that lured the caeh<>d yery cnJ•efnll~· at tile foot of 1 other states, which described the rule 1\'!yton.-According to reports given first shipload of gentlemen adventur· the hig spruce. Tlwn he hurrletl down as "a blot on the Democratic escut- out in Myton, the rights of way for ers oYer the ~en, with Prince Hupcrt to the ct"ef'l> for n flr!nk. 'l'he wodd cheon," and solicited the judgment of I the Myton-Roosevelt unit of the fed· at their hend; lt wns lltt1e S e1wosew looked very cltffer~nt to him now. the others about abrogating it. The I era! aid road have been obtained. It who was responsible for the forming After nil, one's capacity for hnppl- Cirst reply came from New York, in is expected that those who have the of the great Hudson's Ray company ness dep<'ntls larg<>iy on how d~piy which Norman Mack of Buffalo and matter in charge will advertise for'" ·, one has ~uffpred. One·~ hartl lnc·k and 1 an d tl1e <]"1scovery of ltu if a c o nt"nent : Miss Elizabeth Marbury of New York bids within two weeks. It is reported for nlmost three CE'nturies he had mi~fortune fnm the mPasnring-stirk : endorsed the Iowa denunciation of the that construction work will begin by foug-ht hi'l fight for existence with the for fntnrl' :::ooll .ucl: and fortum·. So two-thirds rule, and added, possibly July 1. trapper. And now, though he wns no it was w.t h Haree. Fort~·-ei:::ht hours Salt Lake City.-Roacls through longer \\Orth his weight in yellow gold. ago a full stomach wonld not haYe with Slgniii~anco, that the unit rule Ca zb on F merv 1 Grand 1 San Juan Du-~ he was the cle,·erest, the fiercest. and mnfle him a tenth pn,·t ns happy ns he should go w1th it. :1" ' S'nce to1c Iowa commJ'tteeman w h 0 I1 chesne and Uintall counties are in the most merciless of nil the creatures wa;; now. Tht>n Iris :::r('ntt':;t lon~ing that mnde up hls world. was for hi~ mothrr. Since tl·en a f'till Initiated the movemeht was a McAd ~o good con dit ion g enerally, according t~ As Baree lay un(Jer the tree, Sekoo- greater ye:trning hnd come into Ills partisan ancl the New York co ml~lt· Ira R. Br owning, chief engine of the. sew was cret>pin:::!: on ilis pr<>y. His life-for food. Tn fl wny lt wa:;; for· teeman who a<zsented wa s a Smlth state road commission, who, with E. 1 tnnate for him thnt he ha cl almo»t di Prt n"mager, it Is app.uent that the grow· c. Knowlton, assistant chief engineer game was a b"1g f a t spruce-11en s t ant· ing under a thlci,E't of hlnck currant of exi1au•tion ntH] ~tnn·ation, for his in~ suppo~t ~he proposa_l has no ,re· ! m charge of maintenanc!l. returned bushes. lie was lil'e a shadow-a expPrience had helpe11 to mnke a m·m lnt10n to mrhv1dual f_avon_tes or ~,m· , r ecently from a road inspection tour gray dot here, n tlnsil there, now hid· of him-or a wolf de g . .ln~<t n~ you are d.dates for the presidential nomma· • of close to 1300 miles throu~h th& den behind a stick no larger thnn a of n mind to put it. Ile \Yonl!l mi~s tion. . . counties named. They were "accomman's wrist, appearing for a moment, his mother for n long tim<'. nut he It was supposed that oppositiOn pan ied by Reuben Simpson of Price~ the next instant gone as quickls as if woulcl neYer mi~~ her ng:tin as he 1t.1d would come from the south, but a engineer of roa d district No. 4, in he hnd not existed. Thus he np- ml•~cd Iter yesterday, and the day s0uthern paper, the Chatt:-nooga News "1\hich the countle~ visited lie. preached from fifty reet to within before. '~hich is edit n l by a McAdoo partisan, J three feet of the spruce-hen. That Myton.- S. T. 'l'aylor of Salt Lal1e· For nno:her ch,y and night BHree r~ George F. 1\Iilton. expresses the hope was his favorite striking di~tance. mained in the vicinity of his rache. "!hat this effort to rid the Democra t· C1ty, manager of the Taylor ditch . Unerringly he launched himself at the 'Vhen the lao.t bone "as pkked, he lc party of its olrl man of the s ea will which suppliEll! water for the south drowsy partridge's throat, nne! his move(J on. He now entet ell a conn· succeed." This paper includes both the I Myton bench, expects to have water needle·like teeth sank through feathers try whf>re suhsi!'<t('nee w:1s no longer two-thirds rule and the unit rule in on the bench by the first of next Into flesh. a perilous problem for him. It wa!'< a its condemnation. The two-thirds rulo 1 week. Sckoosew was prepared for what lynx conntry, and whf>re thf're are Is merely one which says that a Demo· Myton.-According to reports given happened then. It always hnppened lynx, there nrc also n gr('at mnny rnb· 1 cratic candirlate tor the presidential ln by those who are in a position too when he attacked Nnpanao, the woof!· bifq. When the rabbits thin out, the nomlnntio~ must get two-thirds ?f ~he 1 know, the season this year is at Iea31t partridge. Her wings were powerful, lynx £>migrate to bPttPr hunting delegates mstead of a mere maJonty, two weeks ahead of former yenrs . and her first Instinct when he struck grounds. As the sno" <::hoe rnhbit as is the cnse in the Republican par· , Some of the ranchers are beginning to hreNls an the summer tht·ou~h. Baree ty. The unit rule is one which en· irrigate. So far the outlook is most found himself in a land of plenty. It abies or requires the delegates from promismg in this part of the Uintah was not difficult for him to catch and a given state to vote £olidly as deter· basin. The orchards came through th& k!ll the young rahbil "· For a week mined by a majority of the delegates winter in good condition, and the proshe prosperPtl and grew bi~ger and from the state. If the unit rule were pects are splendid for a good crop.stronger each day. But nil the time, abolished, each delegate would vote 1 . stirred bv that seeking. Wanderlust • .1· "d Salt Lake C1ty.-Requests that the. 11 y. T o a b o11 s h tlw un1"t ru le 1nu!Vl ua . . Rp!rit-stlll hoping to fln(t the old . because sev matter of d evelo pmg the Na\"aJo Ink& Invo1ves some comp 1ex It J ·J . . . . home and his mother-he tt·m·('led into · s wlllch as a reservotr for 1rngahon purposes. I s t a t es h ave pn·n1,ar Y law era b k · 1 the north and en~t. gave the unit rule the status not mere· e ta en up wtta the Utah Water StorAnd this "as straight Into thP trap· ly of a party regulation, but of a for- age commzss:on wa~ made of George ping country of l'iPrrot, thP hnlfhreed. mal statute. In this sen~:>e the ques- 11 Bacon, state engmee_r, by a cl~legaPierro(, untl\ two years ago, had . C'1ty arg1cultural mtert 10ll w h ., th er th e d e 1ega t e.8 f ron1 a twn of Cedar . . bPiil•\ etl him sell · o be one of the most , t " t nit · d" . ests, whtle he was m the southern 1 11 or m lVll1· fortunate men h\ thP big wil rlerness. s . n e s 1n vo e as a u. uals embarrasses the Republican par· part of the state early this week. Mr. Thnt was hefor._ La !\fort Rouge-the Bacon announced upon his retum. Tied Death-<'! n~. He wa~ haiC ty as well as the Democrats For ex· Brigham City.-Prospects for a French an(l hf t.~<l marrl!'cl a Cree ample, in 1920, Hiram Johnson carried chi('f"s 'dnu~-:hter and ln their log t·ahin the primaries in Oregon. Thereafter, ' heavy crop off ruit in Brigham City on the Gray Lo<m they had lh eel f<'r however, ~ne Oregon delegate, Me· this year are very favorable. Ther& mnnv vcars in g1·rnt prosperity nn1l Camant, d1d not vote for Johnson. will be a full crop of Windsor cherhappin~"" Pit•rrot wns proud or 1 Largely because of this, Johnson, ries, according to leading fruit growthree thin)."s In thl;; "lltl world of his: , Within the past few months, has suc· ers, but the early vanetier;, such as he waq imJJH'USt>IY proutl of \\'~ ola. his ' cess fully resisted the appointment by the Lambert, Orb, Napoleon and nwg roynl·hlnod!'<l wife; hP wns prourl of President Coolidge of McCamant as a ' will be lighter, the buds having been his daughter: nnd he was pro\HI of federal judge. slightly nipped by the frosts. hi" r<'pntatJOn us n huntet·. ~ntil thP Salt Lake City.-The acreage of l{(•d DPnth <"ame, life was f]mte com· ' EDWARDS CALLS DRY ORDER ' commercial onions in Utah for 1926 is plete fo;- him. Tt IYas then-two ~ear~ . . . ' estimated at 750 acres in the sprmga~o that the smnllpox killed his Enrollment of State and C1ty Offrc1alr . f t . t F "d b . . oman orcas given ou r1 ay y pr'nccss wife. He ~till liYed In the as L1quor Agents Assailed , Frank Andrews. state agricultural little cnllin on thp Gr:n· Loon. hut he J was a different Pierrot. The heart Washington, D. C.-Denouncing as t statistician. Tl~is ia 250 acres m exSekoosew Was Creeping on His Prey. wns sick In him. It woulLl havf' thl•,J. a "menace" President Coolidge's exe· 1 cess of the rensed total of 500 acres IHI!l it not liePn for ~PJ1<'P~e. his d:m:::!;h· cutlve order authorizing enrollment of for the cro harvested last fall and was always that of flight. She rose t('r IIis wife had named hPr :'\e- state and city officials as prohibition approximately 250 acres less than the straight up now with a great thuncler pee~e. whil'h menn~ thP Will!'""· agents, Senator Edwards, Democrat, forecasts of Salt Lake seed dealers of wings. Sl'lwosew hung tight, his .'\eppe,;e hat! ,;!TO\\ n llll like the ''ill ow, New Jersey, announced that he wili who were basing _their est1mates on teeth burled dee[} m ht>r thnl.lt, awl ~<if•ndel" :Hr n rN'tl. wilh nil hPr mo'h· j call up in the senate this week his the . volume cf omon seed taken by his tiny, sharp el.tws clln~mg to her "r's "1ltl henut.l'. nn.1 w1th n littiP or resolution deman1ling an investio;ation • ~av1s county farmers, the leadmg on1 like hands. Tlu ough the a iJ· he the rrenl'h thrown ln. SIJP wn~ <lx- 1 of prohibition enforcement "in all its 1on producers ot the state. whizzed \\ith lll'r, hiting deeper ancl tPPn. with l'l"Pat. ().Irk. WOIHl!'J'ful P~ Ps. ; phases." In view ot the president's Salt Lake City.-Utah woolgrowers deeper, until a hundred ;~i.tnls from and hnir !'ll beautiful that an nc:et.t 1 order and "the fact that early and fa· are now shipping their wool east where that teniiJie !leat!Hhm;:: had from Montreal paR"inl' thnt wnv h·ut vorable action will be dGmantled bv : tluough the recently orgamzcd Utah fnsten!'!l to lll'r thro.Jt, :\'apanao on('P tr:(••l to louv it Tt fell In two administration leaders on th" Goff bill \Vool Marketm~ associatwn, 1t is ancrashetl nr;am to P.lrth. shi~ing ilmitl" rnC'h n~ hi::!: aq a t;u~n·~ 1 (the administrntion measure to tight 1 uounc<!d by J. 6 A. Hooper, secretary. Where Hhe fell was not ten feel wnst, aln1o~t to her knPf!'< ·.:->on, en enforcement). Senator Edwards \ A number of growers who have not from Bt<ree. For a few moniPHts he ~l'~'~·u,'' I''Nrot hntl ~:• ltl, a colt! 711ttPr said he suspected that "something Is been d1sposed to accept the price oflooked at the stru!.!glin~ 111ass of fe.llh· 111 m lu~ eyf>" as hP '"n"· "hat wa~ m ~ 'rotten In Demn:~.rl:' and that some- I fered in Utah have shipped their wool ers ln a !laze, not quite eomlll"elwndm!; AgPnl'>; f:we. "Tt ~~ nnt for hartlw.' ' th;·1g warrant's a C'C111Il!e te and thor 1 through the association which has also jth.ut at la:st r.on!l was aln1ost. \\ ithtn 11 ough lnvestigr:ttion." Two clays nftPJ" l~.trp,e lull! enter•: financed the enterprise. ius reach. :\up.mao 11 .ls d.\ mg, lint l ·u t 1 1 1· 1 hJR IJ"appinc: grountl. PJPrJ·ot e:une ll1 The senator !1 ' f.<::-ihn:J the executive , , . 8 1e stt s r,u;{g et c oHvn "! >c ~ wllir from the fot"l'Sts wlth n trnnhled lo•JII .1 d th .,., 'f "fl t , Washington. \\ htle the school land 11 1 her win:.;s k1ree ro~p st,'a I lnly, and o1c er an e vo. ,.•. as agran I b"ll . h 11 1 t· • l t" f t't . ht ,. 1 IS P ( liP PPn<1mg negot a lOllS. after a lllnml•nt in wl11l'11 l1e gathered in his f:r(·P. vw a tons o our cons 1 n tl ona I ng s. 1 b t ~ d tl t .· . 1 • . pu t m . to e ween con gre •. s an 1e m 61101 c eall his reJit:uning slr~ngth, ht> uwtll' , nn d d ecI are d tl1a t 1·r et'tl1nr IS '\ · "A · . t I partment, a fl ee d of protests ag;amst 11 1 t t·ush for 111•r. 11 ~~ I f'Ptll s.1nk ulto hN opera wn menca WI . Je me nmor· passage o f tl1e S And now he is in the trapping. . , mno tt or tl10 J ones 1 ~I"Pt~st-antl, ~ot unu_l tiH'n ~till_ he ~ee phosecl 1hto a slave marl. et of one hun· b'll . . . t th d t grounds of Pier1·ot and the lovely . . . 1 1s commg Ill o e epar m('ni 1 !:'el,om;pw. 1 he ernune L1tl r.l!Sl'tl Ius rlrcrl m11l•on souls completely subJect· . . 11 f .1 "tt Nepeese. How wrll he fare? . head from the !l<•:nh ;.:tip at thP Jllll't· e d to th e t vranny o f an o d 10ns an d rrmc1pa y rom ot perm1 ees. an · · h 1 opera tors, and prospectors and mmers. • ridg~·s throat, and his ;;amge little red h a t e f u1 I aw '" 111c 1as a 1retu1Y 1lQ.pe· . . . , . t d of ' Particularly l')es glan'tl for a single m~tanl into I 11 tTo n~o: cn;>;TINL"En 1 1essI v d 1srup e our age-o.1 sc 11er1e 1 d ..,. d those operatmg m 'Utah . 1 I a'v en f orcemen t , a~H I IS . b ree d - 1 an •' eva a. genera l ..,._.,,~".--~, . . --.. t•-•tt.-.-· .... -., .. _ .. ,..,-- . . ,_._ .. .,,._ .. ,...,_ .. ,,._ .. ,.,._-o!_,._~,,.~,.,.~-<!.'~~....!., .. --..:!,. . ~ ...... .-.;...--. ..::~••""'~•• -... •• ·-·-~"'..:.:.· ~-..~··----:" -::::.• · ::-:" • -·"-'" _, , __ ing a national of hypocrites and both Eurel\a-Mines of the Tintic disactive and potential criminals. , trict shipped 167 carload!'< of ore dur· "In an attempted justification of the ! mg the l'.eek that just endPd. Followpresident's prohibition orJ(!r," ho FUHI, l ing ai•? tht: mmP:- :md their sh; ·mcnts "General Lincoln C. Andrews. czar of I (in ca~·ba l lots): Tmtic Standard, Ur. l<~dward S. Morse of Salem, who !\ow 11 e "' e accu~tollJtd 1!1 tlrluk or ,pent 43 years so1·t!ng over the shell iht><t" "''"'~ ahee:;toJ ~of oUI ~ as rather 1 the Volsteadism, 1s repm ted to have 55; Chief Con!lo!idateCI', 32; American liPaps that a1·e found along the New ull!lbcrlnJ!uatlng h1 tl!eir dtet, lul\lng publicly stated that it ls too late to Smelting and Refining (dump ore). ?6: F.nglund shore, found th!'m tOIHJlO~o>u 1w fll t'jtH1ke5 •I: JII&><t lJeast, b!J d. fhdl, initiate an outcry about states· rights; llmgham 1\Ilnes, 19; Mu.mmoth, 14; that the ei~hteenth :1mendment killed , Plutus, 10; Iron Kmg, 8; Colorado. :; largely of oy:sters und clams Ru1 1uullu><l. "' lu~'""' 't'et tiJ.,se PUtlr he I that ancient and honorable slogan. Yan!r,e. 1. when he went to gtu·ope to t"IHJRnlt n!~hlt>d ue:illllt~ llud lived for 2:0•. 000 I with Profe:;tl\lt Steen,;trup, the D:m!~h ) !!<II s "Ill• dams :sened up tu thew . N .1 . Yen~al The Cedarvww Irrlv,at!on n tl e 11ell a:s 11 rr ee lur ell at every West Pointers Wrii ot Fr.l Vacanc1es expert on European shell heaps, he " ' I <"ompanv, composed of ranchf'rs of the was amaz-ed to lo?tll n that uo <·lam utide, 'aud tlrey \V( uldu't touch 'em. Washington.-Uncle Sam nerds 150 nort hca~tern section of Duchesn~ ,. ~hells were round among the os:;~ters, young men to step right Into the L'ni· · county is building a large dam acros:. ;;nys Edwin E. Slosson, director or Signs ol Progress ted States army as second lieu ton· an arroyo on the John Stan- fir t toselenee :service, writing In Colller·~ Time flies, anC1 barbers are chlro- ants, the war department announced cated ten miles north of Ced u·vl<:>w. !<1agazlne. tonsors, undertak.>rs are morticians, Sunday. That a number of vacancie~ When completed this dam will im· Although elllmM ubounded in the wiremen are electrologists and trusts j will exist even after this year's gradu· pound in a reservoir storage watH Baltl~. the prehistoric people neYer ate are mergers.-Detrolt News. 1 ating class of West Point enters the 1 .. ufflclent. to Irrigate !lOO~ acre~. or them. It was the same In England ; tbe clam hud never been eaten, even service, it was stated. Nation-wide ex· I good agncultural land, pa, t of \\lllch ln unclent times. Cowardice aska Is it safe? Ex- aminations will be held next month has been under cultivation for YPD.rl'!. \Ve learned the epicurean delights of the clam from pediency asks, Is It pCJlitlc? Vanlt7 and soldiers of the regular army, re- 1 Owlng to the lack of mOJsturA howthe Nortb American lndlatns. to whom asks, Is It popular? nut conscience serves, national guard and certain eYer, the crops raised dirt not ylel;\ ask11, Is ll right ?-Punshon n are Indebted for tobacca civilians, will be ellrtble to $ake them. i 0 ld harvests. 1 i TWO THIRD RULE OF KAZAN I News Notes f. EFFORT·TO DROP I Utah i .......................... by JAMES OLIVEr! CUR.WOOD~ Washington.- The Watson·Parker Washington.-House consideration blll for settlement of railway labm of the Haugen farm relief bill for disputes was signed Friday by Pres! amendment neared completion with WNU Service dent Coolidge, who said In a state- the most controverted sections ap- 1 ment that although he would have pre- proved, including the provision fo~ an I !erred "a more definite declaration for equalization fee on the sales of '\lasic NEPANAO the possible protection of the public," crops. Synopsls.-Part wolf, pat t dog he believed there was involved an is· Without a record vote, the house re-when two months old B<~.ree aue of "first public importance," thai jected a motion by Representative , : has h!a first meeting with an of encouraging an Industry to adjust Newton, Republlcau, Minnesota, to en ern y, Papayuch•sew (young ' lk h 1 h · 1 th I., owl). Fighting hard, the antagI tl b d re a ons etween employer an em· str e out t e c ause aut onz ng e , onists are suddenly plunged Into ployee without the Intervention of the equalization fee to raise funds for I a swollen creek. Badly buffeted, government. stabilizing prices !luring seasonil of and halt drowned. Baree is finally flung on the bank, but the With presidential approYal of the surp1us. water has dE'stroyed his sense of act, the railroad labor board, In exist· It agreed, however, to an amend· direction and he Is lost. lonely ence for six years, was abolished and ment by Representative Jones, Demo· I and hungry. For many days h!s life Is one of !ear and d•stress a new system provided for by the es· crat, Texas, to require the propose d 1 He meets various creatures of tabllshment of conference groups and federal farm board to advertise for 1 the wlld and goes through a adjustment boards within tho Indus· forty days ita intention to levy the 1 thunderstorm. He Is learning try and the creation of a board of med· fee, which could not be assessed it ]. I more and more. lation, whose five members are to be a majority of the farm organizations ' appointed by the president. opposed it. The fee would be author· Chapter 11-Continued If the board by conciliation falls ized immediately on wheat, corn, ca t · I 1 d b d ft t -4to effect a settlement of a dispute, l t e, hogs an utter, an a er wo provision Is made for arbitration, or, years could be placed on cotton. It was qnlt_e fortunate ~r llaree . t t 01 Durin~ debate Representative Tin· that this !n~tmct did not ;;O to the 1 f th t t as a as s ep, or eb appom men "' . tl b ". · ,., • 1! h id t I cher Republican Kanl>as author of 1~ Hm It m 1e c,mnm., an d mn 1,e •m an emergency board Y t e pres en ' ' . , '. ' . . J untlerstand that his own hrPNl-the to Investigate and report on tho fact!! the Tmc.1er credit b1ll, pendmg With d f . . the Haugen and the Curtis-As well 1 ~ olt-was most feare o a11 t 1te cr<"n· Involved for the mformatwn of thr r j tures claw hoof and win" of the public. The members of the media· commodity mar:~e~ing proposa!s ~uri- forests. Otherwi~~. ILke the ~~null hoy tlon board are expected to be named : ed charges of viciOus ~ob~ymg at 1 who thinks he can swim before he has In time for the senate to confirm them del_e~ates of far~ orga~lzatwns s~~- j mastered a strol,e, he might some•t the present session. POl tmg the Hau.,en bill He S~lcl i where hav'e jumped In beyond his The new adjustment plan, which I members of cong:·ess ,;vere b.~mg Q.?.ptll and llnd his head chewecl of!'. was described by the president as pro- bom?,arded" b_y tele.,r~ms1 ordered by Very much alert, w"th the hair Tiding for "self-government within the the lobby m Waslung.on. ltnr.ding 'tlP nlung hls spine, and n Industry" In labor matters, had been The Kansas member added that the little growl In his throat, nm·ce urged by a majority of the members recent amendments to the bill agreed smelled of the big footprints made by of the Association of Railway Execu· to by Chairman Haugen of the agricul· the bear nnd the moose. It wns the tives and by the twenty standard rail· ture committee had been drawn up at 1benr scPnt thnt made him growl. He way labor unions, including the four ' a m~eti~g to which he (Tincher) was followed the tPacks to the edge of the brotherhoods, while opposition was ex· not mvlted, although Frank W. M_ur· creek. After that he resumed his wan· pressed by a minority group of rail- PhY and George N. Peek, representmg derlng, nnd also his hunt for food. roads In the association, by the Amer· farm organizations In the corn billt, 1 For two hours he did not fintl a lean Farm Bureau federation and oth· weer present crayfish. Then he cnme out of the "It is strange," asserted Mr. Tin· green tlmher Into the edge of a er groups. cher, who is a member of the agriculburr.ed-over country. Here eYerything Hailed by the railroads and unions ture committee, "that this action was was hlnclc. The stumps of the tre~s favoring It as a treaty of peace, it was not taken by the committee, but In· stood up like huge chnrred can~s. It criticised by opponents as not suffi. stead by lobbyists." was n comparatively fresh "bum" of clently protecting the public interest. Representative McLaughlin, Repub· I last autumn, and the ash was still soft The president referred to this point In lican, Nebraska, defended Murphy, as under Baree's fpet. Straight through his statement. well as Chester H. Gray of the Amerl· this black region ran the creek, nnd can Farm Bureau federation, from Mr. over It hung a blue sky ln which the Blow.Almed At Land Surveys Tincher's charges of unfair lobbying. l sun was shining. It was quite lnvit· Washlngton.-Representatlve Cram· lng to Baree. The fox, the wolf, the ton of Michigan is anxious that con· moose, and the caribou would have ARMS PARLEY ALTERS PLANS gress pass a bill before adjournment turned bnck from the edge of this repealing the status under which Commission Directed By Viscount ! dead countr~·. In another year It v. oulcl states may advance money to pay the be good hunting-ground, but now it Cecil Meets Attitude of U. S. cost of public land surveys. This step j was lifeless. E\"Pn the owls would If taken, might materially slow down ' have found nothing to eat out tller·e. su"eys In Utah and possibly In other Geneva.-The preparatory commis· It was the blue sky and tht> ~nn and states where the government has been sion on disarmament at a private ses- 1 the softness of the earth undPr his particularly backward In surveying its sion took steps to prevent the confer- i feet that lured llaree. It was pleasant own lands. Mr. Cramton has written ence trollt becoming a purely league , to travel In after his painful experiences In the forest. &e continued to a letter to the publlc lands committee, of nations affairs. follow t11e stream, though there was of which he Is not a member, urging With a view to meeting the Amerl· I now little possibility of • his finding committee to repeal the survey can attitude toward the conference, 1 anything to ent. The water had he· bill. Unless this law is repealed, It Viscount Cecil, the :British delegate i come sluggish and dark; the chnnnel fa feared he may delay appropriations moved that two subcommittees of the ; wa!'l choked with charred debris thnt for public land surveys next session. commission be appointed, to which bad fallen hltO It when the forest had Representative Colton of Utah, w~en all states are entitled to name repre· 1 burned, and Its shores were soft and Interrogated, said he was not going l'!Cntatives. One of these committees ' muddy. After a time, when Baree to support legislation repealing the will handle military, naval anfl air stopped and looked about him, he eu"ey law. Utah, he said, had ad· problems, and the other will handle 1 could no longer see the green timber l-anced $100,000 to the federal govern· the general economic problem. 1 he had .left. He wns alone in that ment to pay the cost or surveying pub· The original plan of the league ; desolate wilderness of charred treelie lands within Its borders because council was to turn over detailed dis· , corpses. It was as still as death, too. the eovernment Itself wa 'I RO slow get- armament studies to league bodies, to : Not the chirp of n bird broke the sitine around to It, and $90,000 of thet which nonleague countries, such as lence. In the ~oft ash he could not aJQount has been refunded to the the United States, would be entitled to , hear the full of his own feet. But he and the remaining $10,000 soon send representatives. j was not frlghten!'d. There was the w1ll be paid. l"lut unless some auch The United States, however, inform- · assurance of safety here. means as this Is open, and the state ed the league that, when It accepted If he could only find somethin.L( to can loan Its funds to expediatH sur- the Invitation to the conference, it did eat! That was the mastt'r thou.L(ht veys, Mr. Colton fears It will be many not accept any plan which virtaully that possessed Baree. Instmct harl years before su"eys of government would take matters out of the hands not yet lmpres~ed upon him that this lallds ~n Utah are completed. of the preparatory commission. which he saw nil about him was starTuesday's action is felt to empha· vation. He went on, seeking hopefully Vlewa Differ At Rail Rate Hearing slze the soverign character of the for food. But nt lnst. as the hours Washington.- Sharply conflicting commission, and when the commission ' passed, hope began to die out of him. views of the railroad situation in the Is "!lOt In session its problems will be I The sun sanlt westward Ttw ><k~· west and northwest were presented in the hands of Its own subcommittee grew less hlue; n low wind hegan to to the Interstate commerce commie· and not In the handsrof t h e 1eagt<e ride o>er the top~, of th1e stuhs, :rnd I now and thrn onP of them fell with :t •ton in oral argument over the pro- borlies. ' to Increase freight rates by 6 Senor Coriann of Spain has been ap· startling erasl1. I Baree ('OUI(] gn no farther. An hour cent. As against arguments by , pointed chairman of the military sub· before du~i> he lay down in the opPn, :;,eou:ns~el for the carriers and by a rep- 1 committee and Se:1or llue.-o of Uru- weal• nncl starv!'d. The sun disapof security holders ot the I guay has been appointed chairman , pea red bPhind the forest. The moon urging that the commls of the general economic sub commit· rolled up from the rn~t. The Rio· g:llt· .efon come to the rellet ot the roads, tee. tered with stars-and all through the state authorities, through night HarPe Iny ns if dead. When John E. Benton, general solicitor of New Air Mail Route To Open morning rame, he dragged hlm<:eif to the National Association ot Railroad the stream for u drink. With his lnst and Utilities Commissions, describing Washington.-Airmail servi!.'e on strength he went on. It was the wolf . ' ditl n . · hl m-compeIIi ng I"lUll to s t rug-· carriers con o s as prosperous. the Cheyenne-Denver-Co I ora d o S prmgs urgmg ......" ... Burlington, atter paying an 81 Pueblo contract rout will lJe put !n ~le to the lnst for his life. The dog -cent dividend in 1921, Increasing operation was announced. The ser· In him wnnt('d to lie down and llie. ~pita! stock 64 per cent, stUI vice will be pp~rated by the Colorado But the wolf-spnrk In him burned · •·•-a 10 per cent upon the Increased Airways companY., Inc., ot Denver. stronger. Tn the end it won. Half a ; .• jf,...,lr and received 3.4 per cent. The This route make con:\ection with mile farther on he came again to the Santa Fe has Increased Its dividends the transcontinental alrmaH ships at green timher. to 7 per cent and earns 15 per cent. Cheyenne, giving Pueblo and .9ther In the forests us well as In the gr!'at Since 1920 It has Increased Its sur- Colorado points practically 24-hour cities fate plays its chan~lng nnd plus $100,000,000. service to and from New York City. I whimsical hnnd. lf Baree had flragged himself Into <he timber half an hour Public Buildings Bill Agreed Upon · linter he would have died. He was Early Spraying Harmful To Bees too far gone now to hunt for crayfish Washlngton.-Sprays used In arch· Washington.- Congress completefl or kill the weakest bird. Rut be cnme about blossom time to kill harm-~lts approval of the $165,000,00 pub- Jnst as Sekoosew, the ermme-the Insects, government experts have lie buildings bill under which new fe1l· roost bloodthirsty little pi rate of all rm:lD(l, are fatal to many of the busy , era! buildings are to be erected In the oorild-was making a klll. The agriculture department ree- many cities. The conference r'.?port, Ttlat was fully a hundred yard~ already approved by the senate. was from where Baree lay stretched out spraying after most of the accepted by the house and the bill was under a spruce, almost ready to give have fallen. Such a course sent along to President Coolidge, who up the ghost. Sekoosew was a mighty 2ust as eftectlve against the harm- generally Is expected to sign tt. Ex- bunter of hla kind. His body was Insects, It ezplalns, wltftout risk cept for certain. buildings In the capt- ; about seven Inches long, with a tiny the bees, which by carrying pollen tal, the btn does not specify In what black-tipped tall appended to It, and one blosaom. to another, are a cltlea the n.ew 1tructures are to be be weighed perhapa ftve ounces. A aid to the orchardist. erected. "-117'1 ftngerl could bave enclrded hlm 1-===============iJt !I I 1 1 1 I 1 !I I I ! I I i will ! I 1 I I ' 1 1 p o: ! I I ! I L I _ ___ , ___ _ _----- Early Peoples Passed Up Delicious Clams I I I I !· ... • |