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Show THE lHIDV ALE JOURNAL Thursday, August 7, 1930 UTAH BRIEFS Ft. Douglas-223 students attend· ed the military tr11ining camp. Logan-An 11ir drcus will be held here on Labor Day: ~lurray-Labor Day 1\'ill be celebrated with &. "Ilome Coming" e\·ent. Alpine-Hoad from \'ivlan Park to Brigham Young Unulversity summer <·amp will be graded and graveled. Price-A hus line fron• Pdce to Salt Lake City i'l helug planuetl. IIeiper-'l'he rate tax le,-y in Helper has tJeen n·llnC('rl. Provo-The dly has purchased land for site of reservoir in Hock canyon. LPhi-"Beet St:gar" Day will be eel· ebra H·d hPn'. Nephi-Large egg grading plant Is bein~ planned. Panguitdr--The resort on Panguitch Jakf! is to he rebuilt. It was a famous summer r·Psort years ago. :uanti-Date, for the Sanpete county fair ha \"C rn•en definitely set for Sept. 10,11,1 2, at ::\lauti. :\Ioab-Bids on approximately $270-, 00() worth of t·oad work in Grand and . 1-Statue of George Wa~hlngton being r~placed In Un ton square. New York. after remodeling of the park. 2San Jaun countil's will be opened by Scene in Santa Monica, Calif., during the PlOnE>er Day pa rude thnt was part of the celebration of the Centenary of the slate highway commission soon. the Covered Wagon. 3-New United States submal'ine V-5, declan~d to be the safest fi"'hting craft afloat being "'iven Midvale-For the purpose of linkIts preliminary test oft' Provincetown, .Mass, " • " ing up the Oltl ~Iormon Trail with the Ore;;on trail. ,V. H. Jackson, 88· was divided Into 50 wards, each ad· neithl!r of them had a majority. State year-old Yeteran artist and photoministered by n Communist leader with Senator Love, who led the su<'cessful graphl'r and head of the research dea group or riflemen. All power wal:l bolt In Texas from AI Smith In 1023,, par·tment of the Oregon Truil :\lemurcentered In a supreme Soviet commit· was among those badly beaten. Unit- ial a:-:sodntion has ~rrived in Utah. tee. Gangs of C<:>mmuulsts. headed by ed States Senator Morris Sheppard Logaii-l!'ive hundred and se,·eutysquads of Red troops, surrounded was renominated. two ehilclren of Cacl•e county were buildings marked off hy the supreme '.L"here will have to be a run-off elec- examinPc.l in the pre-sehool clinics concommand for depredntiop. • tion In Oklahoma also. The leaders ducted in the various towns of the Orators .procloimed the Communist in the f'emocratic race for governor county. Dirigible R-100 Makes Safe Bxuminatious were only purpose "to distribute the surplus were "Alfalfa Bill'' l\Iurray and Frank made of children attending school for Flight From Britain to wealth," and selected followE-rs enButtram; nnd for United States sen- the fir~t time. tered the buildings and transported ator, Thomas P. Gore, the blind forIiriee-Col'ller store of the new FedMontreal, Canada. fur·nlture anti valuables to the street, mer senator, and Charles J. Wright& eral building is laid. where they were auctioned off. man. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Nl'phi-'fhe seventh annual Jaub 'l'he pr·oceeds were pocketed. after County Fair wlU be held September ltEAT BRITA I. ''S big dirigihlP, which the coolies and town riffraff 18, 19, and 20. and plans are now undthe R.IOo, macre a successful and WTTR virtually no opposition the er way for bigger and better exhib· uneventful cr·oss!ng of the Atlantic were invited to enter and complete London naval treaty was passed its of the looting. After this the places were the county's product"'· <•cean, tal,jng oft' from Cardington, by both houses or the British parlin· burned and the crowd moved on to Mt. Pleasant-Tax rate levy is to 'Yules, and r·eaching Montreal about ment and then was made eiTectf\·e so be redueed in this citv. the next building scheduled for de7G hours later. There, at St. Hubert far as Great Britain is concerned bv struction. J<'armington-Fe~er;l ex1 trts are :airport, she was tied up to the moorreceiving the formal approval of Kin~ making a survey of lllore than 200 foreigners, 20 of the cloud bur,;t ing mast that had been built for the George under quaint procec.lure insti- region. them Americans, were at the summer purpose, and her passengers landed, tuted during the reign of Henrv VIII resort at Kuling, near Kiukiang, and Ogden-Curum and camas roots, well pleased with the trip. Senator Hiram Johnson or Califor- used by pioneer:; and Indians as food were considered to be In grave danUntil the airship reached the vicinnia, leader of the opposition to the in times of famine, may be developed ger. On Wednesday the American gun· Ity of ::-rewfoundland she maintained a treaty In the United States, declared as domestic plants, accordiuc; to Elias boat Palos, which was approaching £peed of between 50 and 70 knots, but that the alacrity with which parlin· Yanousky, head of the division of Changsha, was fired upon by Comthe ever-present fogs then for<"ed a ment ratified the pact was proof that chemistry and munists and ftve of her crew wound· soils of tile Unitec.I :Slowing down until she got well Into the British were only too eager to States department of agriculture. He ed. The Palos return!!d the fire usinu , the Gulf of St. Lawrence, having seal a bargain perpetuating their con· is seeking 300 pounds of camas roots machine guns and three-Inch rifles at passed over the Belle Isle straits. trot or the seas. close range, and finally dispersed the and 300 pounds of carum roots. Rang'Vhfle passing over Quehec the airship Heds. The Palos had previously ers of the 'l'arghee national forest sustained some damage to the fabric helped evacuate foreigners from Idaho, are collecting specimens at the ~ LINE with the Hoover program 4:0verlng one of the fins. and the moChangsha and was returning to surhelping busln~s. representatives present time for tlle research work. tors were shut off until repairs had \·ey the ruins of the city. Two AmerTremonton-A W. C. T. U. Instiof the various branches of the buildbeen made. This delayed the arrival Ican missionaries, Rev. William Lingle tute was held in this city. ing industry and allied agencies or :at Montreal somewhat and prevented of Salisbury, N. C., and Hev. Allen Manti-"J,amb Week" is to be held finance met in Chicago and created a the tieing up of the ship to the moorCameron of Lawrence, Augu ·t 23 Kan., to August remained 30. permanent national conference on ing mast until early Friday morning. In Changsha because they had con· l\Iidvale-The Utah Wool Marketcontructlon. Julius H. Barnes, chair~hroughout the voyage radio commuscientious objections against accepting ing association is said to ha\'e secur·eu man of the national building survey nication was kept up with bases In protection from gunboats. 11 million pounds of wool for this conference last fall, presided and was England and Canada and with ocean year's market. made head of a committee to complete liners. The northerly route was takState Capitol-Contracts to pur:-IDER the l[;'u[(]ance of Prohibition arrangements for the organization of en, following the great circle by way chase lands from the state, on which Director Amos W. W. Woodcock, the conference. A slatement Issued <>f north Ireland to a point south of payments ar·e due .Tanuary 1, of each dry enforcement Is to be carried out said: Cape Fnrewell, Greenland, then to year, have l>een ordered forfeited l>y in a manner that will not be so likely Belle hle and along the St. Lawrence "The meeting was held for the purthe state land board if not paid beto arouse the rage of the citizenry. river to Montreal. pose of reviewing the principal inter· fore August 1. This is a. yearly prac· :'.Ir. Woodcock p1·oposes to have the Squadron Leader R. S. Booth was group problems of the construction tice of the state land office in order tn command, with four officers and a dry law agents trained "to net always industry and to determine the prac· elvlllnn crew of 39 men. Among the as gentlemen" and to resort to the tlcablflty of developing a continuing to have payments due the state school use of firearms only In self-defense. few passengers were Lieut. Com. organization to assist In the solution funds and other beneficiaries of the lane! grants completed. Charles Dennlstoun Hurney, managing He called the administrators and speof such problems. Tooele-Three train loads of coal cial agents all In to Washington and director of the firm that built the R"Aspects of realty finance, Includleft Utah recently in one day. laid before them a statement or his 100; Lleu.t. Com. R. St. John Prentice ing problems of legislation, appraisals American ~'ork-Annual tour of policies which was said to have been of the British aircraft carrier Courof property, methods of home financUtah county sugar beet fields is helcl. approved by President Hoover and ageous, and Maj. G. H. Scott, famous ing and credit practices were dls· Provo--A tug of war between the Attorney General Mitchell. Schools British airship commander. cussed. Possible mean of securing farmers of Utah county and the emwill be set up to teach the agents greater stabilization of the construcployees of the steel plant will be an "to use their brains rather than their tion industry, a number of aspects of A~ADA'S parliamentary • elections exciting feature of the Utah county brawn In discharging their duties," to were watched with great interest taxation and practical methods of Infair to be held at Provo, September train them In methods of gathering because the results are likely to be imtroducing economies in the building 25, 2G and 27. evidence, In knowledge of the law and portant to the United States as well and financing of residences ROd in}lidvale-:Materlal benefit to Utah In habits of discipline." as to the Dominion. The Liberal govcome properties, were considered." and Idaho agricultural interests will Five major. points were emphasized ernment, headed by Mackenzie Kin~. result from the freight reduction on in the Woodcock statement aside from was declsfvel:v defeated by the Con PRESIDENT HOOVER has created grain and grain products recently orthe proposal to maintain high perservatives, and Richard B. Bennett, a commission to study he quesdered by the interstate commerce Conser,·ative chief, will be the new sonal standards for agents. These tion of unemployment commission. stntis lcs and were: (1) Establishment of a system premier. 1\Ir. King himself was rehas invited labor, business and ecoMw·ray-Jack Hardy, serving an of daily reports to Wa~hington by ~lected to parliament, but many memnomic groups to select its members. indeterminate term in the state deputy administrators; (!:!) seientifie bers of his cabinet lof't out. these inE:thelber·t Stewart, commissim er of prison for robbery of the :Murray <'lndlng Finance ~linlster Charles A. research into such problems as drunklabor statistics of the Departm nt of Slate Bank was shot and piOGhahly enne~s statistics, alcoholism deaU1s, Dunning, who drew up the budget lnLabor; William llf. Steuart, (Jir ctor fatally wounded as he made a break c:ren'<ing tariffs against the United n nd hop and co1·n sug-ar production : Of the bureau of census for the De- for liberty from the prison. efforts to obtain more state aid ~tates and lowering them to Great partment of Commerce, and a repreLogan-In some parts of Utah cerlkitaln, which constituted the main in dry law· enforcement; (4) efforts tain sentative crops ha\·e failed to grow as they of the Departmeri't of Agrito ;:ecure more uniform sentences for Issue of the campaign. should. culture There are tomato fields that will be ex officio members. violators; and (3) concentration upon A quick call to a se><sion of the Carn announcine the appointment of are not more than half crop. Other the commeJ·cial liquor traffic rather nadian parliament is considered one this commi!'<sion the President <lefend· crops are short and are not making than upon "pitiful, picayunish, non· c:ertain result of the political upset. ed his practice of naming such inves- progress. The suggestion is made to commercial cases." Canada's extension of tariff prefertigating bodies, and ad <led: "As we plant corn. Even though the corn Supervisors of industrial alcohol ~nces to Great Uritnin, without exactneed the best brains of the country to may not mature and ripen it will permits also met In Washingto" and, Ing tariff preferences ln return, can be with their chief, .James assist In govemment and In the co- make good feed and its shade will :'.1. Doran, cont>xpected to he withdrawn or modified sidered how they might best comhlne ordination of public efforts I shall ap· help the retarded crops to mature. a!! the result of the election. The their efforts with those of the proProvo--:.\Iembers of the Provo city point others." electors turned It down in defeating hibition enfl)rcement unit. school board voted to eliminate the the governnwnt candidates. Canada, swimming classes from high school President HooYer's law enforceJllent RUSSIAN goods will not he kept out athletic acti\·i.ties the coming year tn other words, will mn ke its trade commission will issue a second formal of this country merely because and the Pt·oyo high school swimming treaties with the \'I'Orld, irrespective report of its work this fall. Arrangethey come from a Soviet state. This pool will remain closed ()f empire ties and sentiment. dul'in"'0 the ments for formulation of the docu• in a sentence was the stand taken by en-smng The St. Lawren<•e seaway plan is ment will be completed at a meeting winter. President Hoover, and consequently once more thrown In the realm of po- here early in October. Gunnison-:.\Iore than fifteen thousAssistant Secretary of the Treasury nnc.l fingerling~, comprising rainbow litical controYersy and uncertainty, Leaders of nearly all the dry organLowman had to reconsider his de· and brook trout have been received Higher tariff's against the United izations In the country Issued a signed clsion denying the entry of two ship- and planted in the streams nearby. States, In the absence of a Canadian- declaration of policy which was looked toads of Russian wood pulp at New American trade agreement, are to be upon by many as a recognition of the Em·eka-Dry farm crops in the York impor·ted by the Amtorg Trading Tintic valley ai·e reported gooc.l. expected under a Bennett premiership. growing antagonism to prohibition encorporation. Any action barring • Payson-"Onion Day" will be celeforcement ns it has been carried on in Soviet goods the President held must brated here on August 28, ~ an 30. TARTLIXG news came from China_ the past. In it the:v repudiate all enbe based solely on the. law applicable A large Communist army took pos- forcement policies that do not regard Price-The tax: levy of Carbon session of Changsha, capital of Hunan and safeguard every personal right to all nations and designed to exclude county is increased for this year over convict made goods and prevent "<lump- 1929. province, the government troops re- guaranteed by the C<>nstitutlon. and tiring without making any defense, pledge themselYes to a campaign of Ing" practices on the part of countries South Cottonwooli-Eight troops or and the clty of hale a million inhab- educntion. '!'he declaration states It competing in American trade. Boy Scouts enjoyed an outing in the itants, a commercial, political and edu- is the paramount purpose of the Granddaddy lake region. JF THE Wafdists or nationalists of cational metropolis, was looted nod Eighteenth amendment to destrov :.\It. Pleasant-H. Lund sustained a Egypt succeed in their campaign partly destroyed by tJ;e RE>ds. Ten traffic In intoxicating beverages, and serious injuJ·y when kicked in the face against King Fund. Abbas Illlmi, former ~overnment buildings were burned, as that the enemies of prohibition try to by a. horse, breaking no artery. khedive who was deposec.I br th!' Ur·itwere numerous foreign properties and make this appear as otrensive sump:O.Iu,e:na-An educational dr·ive on ifih, may be re~torec.I to the throne. the Japanese consulate, aurt the offices tuary legblation. nuto <lrivlng was held in .Salt Lake The British gove1·nment is said to be of the Standard and TeJ.:!IS Oil comCounly. dispose!! to accept this re:;ult, though panies were robbed. Weal thy resiUT of the welter of Democratic Provo-4th annual 4-II club outing both Italy and France have declared dents who were unable to escape were aspirants for the gubernatorial their opposition. The "'afclists assert for l'tah county was held in Provo tortured to death. 'Ihe Hl'd invaders IJOmiuatlon in Texu~ .... lu" FPrgnsou, tlw t sn long as l~uatl is on the throne canyon. proclnimed 1\ Soviet republic. former governor, and Ross S. Sterling, Ogden-A reduction in a . rssed valthere will !Je no pe:!l'e in E,;~·pt and no The burning and looting, says a diswealthy Holt ton publisher, emerged nation of sheep in Weber county has tlossibllily c,r settling di::;putcs with patch from Shanghai, was carried on in the !~ad, an1 the victor will be de&~E'en DJade. Great Britain. 1D a •ystematlc mancer. The city termined in a run-orr vrimary, ~;!nee w N.EWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS . G . I • U C , en S Q I l Flit is sold only in this yellow can with the black. band. · No More bed-bugsl Kill them off quick! ...._...._ lCQ The \Vorl<l's tr·:\_\e~ ;g'est Selling Insect~\ Progress in Forestry Making Rapid Strides Change for Better "I've changed my mind." "\Vell, does it work any better?"- A quaner of u century has lll'ought lln extraordinary change in the forestry-polieies of the go,·emment, marking notable pro~ress in <"on-.;er\"atlon, says World's \Vorl(, ln tnor,, when the forest serviee was created, there were GO reserves, with an area of iiO,OOO,OOO n<"res. The at·ea today Is tGO,ooo.ooo acres, embraced In 1:::-,0 national forests. The physic·al development of the forests has progressed continuously in the last ~;-, yea1·s. In 1110~> there were no tire towers or lookout stations; today sat are maintalnefl. As many as 1.1S<l puhlic cam(' g-rounds haYe hePn illllll"nved cluring the period. ~ince l!l07 the mileage of national forest roads has heE>n extmded from ::130 to 16.730. Forest tmils have increasecl' from 1\,GH tc 47 ,17.-, miles. ~I ifeage of telephone lines huilt for fire protection ant) administration 1mrposes has increased from 5:1!1 to 3:'i,!l26. fl.eceipts of the forest reserves in lDO:> amounted to .,8fl,600. all for timber sold. necelpts last year totaled $G.~!l!l.S02 Of this amount more than $4,000,000 came fmm the sale nf timber, cut under forest ser·vice supervision on a sustained or continuous "crop" basis. New Berry Resists Drought Fruit growers are interestt>d in a wild variety of black raspberry which was found in the Oregon woods. It thrived cim·ing a not, dry season when domestic kinds lnnguishe<l, did not die down in winter and even produced berries in the late fall. • It Is beJie,·e<I the specimen is a hybrid of tile blacl( raspl.Jeny with some species of blackberry. Its lea ,·es and growing habits are much the same u..; those or the latter. I'Jxperts are examining the fruit to determine If it is suited to commer<"iat shipping and canning.-Popular liechanics :.\lagazine. 0 1930 Stanco Inao 'I'it-llit~. Restless CHILDREN will fret, often for no CHILDREN apparent reason. But there's a!· j Working Over Old Dumps A Utah eopper company is producIng about 100,000 pounds of copper daily from the huge dumps of tailings that have risen in the course of years. The dumps are estimnted to contain at lenst 1,000,000,000 tons of waste and oxidized ore. End of the Debate Nervous l'ype of Woman-If I don't get a new dress I'll scream. Her Inscrutable 1\Ian-You know you can't holier as loud as the land· lord, dear. lnduatry'a Parentage Genius Is the father of a henvenlv lin~but the mortal mother, that i~ lntlustry.-'l'heodore Parker. ways Castorial Harmless as the recipe on the wrapper; mild and bland as it tastes. But Its gentle action soothes a youngster more surely than a more powerful medicine. That's the beauty of this special children's remedy! It may be given the tiniest infant-as often as there is need. In cases of colic, diarrhea or similar disturbance, it is invaluable. A CtJated tongue calls for just a few drops to ward off constipation; so does any suggestion of had breath. Whenever children don't eat well, don't rest well, or have any little upset-this . pure vegetable pre para· tion is usually all that's needed. Polytechnic College of Engineering 13th aad Madiaoa Sts., Oaklaad, Califoraia The Great Engineering School of the West &t4bliih<tl in 189f-<>.n l>oo,ooo Pl4nl. CNruml to grdot t/q.r«~ in 19U All non-essential aubjects omitted. Intensive-practical-thorough courses In Electrical, 11lechan.lcal, Civil, 111in.inll". Architectural & Structural En· Kineerlnl!". New courses In Aeronnutlcal and Airplane EnKtne<'rinc. SpeciRI courses In Airplane llleC'hnniC's, Ante Mecl•anlcs. Jllachlne Shop, Electrlo Shop, I~rnitlon. Bntteey, de. Cemplete EleC'trlcal Hydraulic, Ste&Dl and Testlnc Laboratories. S..W. ~bout two ~·" limt Students assisted In financing their courses. Write for free catalog. W. E. GIBSON W. J. WOOD President Registrar Trade Your Big Car on The New ~odel Ford..::.: y • M~BRIDE~s 24 W. 5th South Salt Lake City • · Utah All the nelv model Cars and Trucks on display Use..,; Cutieura A household preparation for over half a century. • :;: '¥ Thho seh whdohknow theCse~ret of skin ea1t an eauty use uticura 5 oap and Ointment regularly to keep the skin and scalp in good condition. They also find Cuticura Talcum ideal for every member of the family. Soap 2Se. Ointment 25o. and SOe. Talctt111 25c. Proprieton: Poner Chemical Corporation, Malden, MaA. D~ a |