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Show THE ~IIDV ALE JOURNA L Thursday, August 28,1930 AN INCREAS E- OFto I MILLION IN CASH HEADACHE? New Bingham High LICENSE FOR FOOD MEN FUR FARMER TO EXHIBIT !-Miss Edith Edna r:en of Pittsburgh being crowned Queen Oceana XXII to reign over the baby parade and carnival at Wildwood, N. J. Z-Some of the forty Acadians from Louisiana who were received by President Hoover on their way to Nova Scotia to celebrate the anniversary of the deportation of their forbears 175 years ago. 8-Richard Bedford Bennett, Conservative leader, who has become premier of Canada. N,EWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS American Bar As:;ociation Upholds R1!ferendum olhe 18th Amendment . By EDWARD W. PICKARD • laws and their en· P ROHIBITION forcement were to the fore at the opening session of the fifty-third annual meeting of the American Bar association in Chicago. George W. Wickersham, chaii:man of the President's enforcement commission, was the chief speaker of the day, and naturally he spoke mainly on that topic; but what he said would give small consolation to the dripping wets of the country. "Good citizenship," said Mr. Wickersham, "must acquiesce in the law as it is, for the time being. A society which has adopted the in \'entions a11d applied scie11ce of the last quarter of a century and has taken into its midst millions of aliens from every country in the world, must resort to legi!;lation in order to regulate its life, preserve order, and, so far as possible, suppress acts and habits injurious to it~ welfare. "That the individual and minority groups must" accept and abide by the restraints so imposed is obvious. Otherwise !awful government breaks down and we have anarchy. The remedy of those who object is to appeal to tile same authority as that which enacts, for rescission or modification. There can be no indiviclual right to ele<:t what Ia ws one will or will not obey." The commi:;;sion, said its chairman, had opposed the Jones law and the Dyer act, believing "that a speedy prosecution of mino1· offenses and tl;le imposition of penalties having some relation to the character of the offense would be more likely to induce respect for law than the creation of penaltie~ so disproportioned to the gravity of the offense as to induce resentment In reasonable minds." exciting than any speeches M ORE was the battle over an actempt by some of the members of the association to halt the referendum vote on the Eighteenth amendment. Secretary W. P. t.'iacCracken, Jr., reported that the executive commlttee had rejecteu a petition to recall the postcards sent out for this vote. Judge James F. Ailshie of Idaho offered a resolution that the submitting of the question was not in accord with the objects and purpose of the association and contrary to its constitution and bylaws, after the committee's report ha<l been accepted. President Henry U. Sims sustained a point of order that the right of the executive committee to take such action was specifically granted in the constitution and ruled that the action of the committee could not be recalled by the delegates. An appeal from this decision was voted down by a majority uf about fifty to one. The convention also upheld the executive committee In rejecting the report of the American citizenship com· mittee which contained a bitter attack of the federal farm board, declaring its appointment was the first step toward state socialism and that this effort to aid the farmers was foredoomed to failure. The section on criminal law and criminology also refused to adopt a report on "lawless enforcement of law" and ordered the 'committee to continue work for another year. In his opening address President Sims asserted that constitutional liherty in this country Is in no danger whatever, "and that the visions of social strife supposefl to be lmpendin~:" are but plantasmagoria of morbid brains." The sessions of the asRoclatlon · were attended IJy a numher of distinguished lawyers and jurists from foreign countries. rmd many American notables were among the 2,000 delegates. G B~EROUS rr1ins fell over much of the corn and wheat belts, but they were too late to save the crops fiom at least partial ruin, and the plans of the government and the states for relief of the farmers in the drought. areas were not halted. President Hoover appointed a federal relief committee, headed by Secretary of Agriculture Hyde and including Chairmen Alexander Legge of the federal farm board; Paul Bestor, chair· man of the federal farm loan board ; Roy Young, chairman' of the federal reserve board: John Barton Payne, chairman of the Amerlcari Red Cross; Under-secretary of the Treasury Ogden Mills; Henry M. Robinson, president of the First National bank of Los Angeles, and R. 8.. Aishton of Evanston, JIL, president of the American Rail way association. Governors of the various states reported to Vlashington that they were moving rapidly in 'the creation of their organizations. persons aboard the British steamer Tahiti from death in the mlddli! of the Pacific ocean. The vessel's port propeller 'shaft carried away, tearing a hole In tlle ship and permitting water to flood the engine room and two holds. She was kept afloat for a time by the use o1 emergency pumps and wireless appeals for aJd brought the Matson liner Ventura and the steamer Penybryn to the rescue. All aboard the Tahiti were transferred to the Ventura !n safety, despite heavy seas. About half were disembarked at Pago· pago, American Samoa, and the rest were taken to San Francisco. Many other vessels on the Pacific answered the radio SOS but their help was not needed. The Tahiti went to the bottom soon after the passengers and crew leit her. action of the federal comN'ITED Spanish War Veterans held FIRST mittee was to lay plans for fimtnU their thirty-second annual enclal relief with the federal intermedi· ate credit bank system as the principal unit. 'l'he plans called, first, for the creation of state and local credit corporations by bankers and business men through which farmers may obtain seed and feed loans. The corporations will sign the notes over to the credit banks, which will advance the capital obtained from the flotation of debentm·es on the investment market. Secretary Hyde estimated roughly that a maximum of $20,000,000 will be required of the credit ban'l\s, whatever more is needed coming from p•·ivate sources. 1\Ir. Hyde announced that the Department of Agriculture will make a \·aita!Jle for seed loans aptH'oximatel;v $800.000 remaining f1·om a $6,000,000 appropriation prodded by congress. The use of this money, however, is limited to specified areas and will be distributE-d largely in Indiana, Ohio, Yi1·ginia, l\Iissonri and r.1ontan;t. John Barton Payne, chairman of the American Red Cross. said that his organization l1as $5.000,000 a\·ailable for emergency work . and does not contemplate an appeal to the public, at least until the fund is exhausted. In order to furnish employment for farmers without liYelillood as a result of the drought. the Department of Agriculture has made Immediately ·available to the states $121,857,000 in federal aid road funds which ordinm·ily would not have been apportioned until January L This action was taken at the urgent request of President HoO\·er. The federal farm board announced the exten~ion of $5,000,000 credit to the Inter-Mountain Live Stock Growers' ass;ociation, which will facilitate the shipping of live stock to pastures. In aviation centered in I NTEREST !=hicago, where the nat1onal air races opened and toward which men and women contestants in the air derbies were racing from various parts of the country. Nearly every prominent American aviator was there, and so were some of th-e best flyers of Europe. A varied program of speed contests, stunt flying, and other exhibitions was offered the immense throng of spectators that flocked to Chic!lgo from 'all parts of the Union. Before the races hegan, the first national air confere11ce was held for three days on the downtow11 campus of Northwestern university, with ty"le nation's chief authorities on aeronautics in attendance. The conference recommended the adoption by the states of federal laws regulating airports, airplanes and air transportation, in order to secure uniformity. The states also were urgen to authorh:e municipalities to purchase, maintain and police airports. The conference recommended the establishment of a comprehensive system of national ai1·ways. giving equal consideration to all sections without regard to population density. hut giving greatest con«hleration where topo~raphicnl conditions are unfa\v!'Bble to flying. L E J A C K S 0 N and F-.rest D AO'Drine, St. Louis encluro..!lce flyers, didn't stay In the air for a thousand hours, as they threatened, but descended when they had established the new mark _of 647 hom·s 28 minutes and 30 seconds. 'l'heir motor dPYeloped trouhle, forcing them to alight work by officers anu G ALLANT crew and quick response to radio calls by other ,·essels saved the 317 campmc:ut in Philadelphia and had a fine time fighting over again the battles in Cuba. The feature of the affair was the parv.de on "preparedness day." Edward S. Matthias, former judge of the Ohio Supreme court, was elected national commander, and New Orleans was awarded next year's encampment. P RESIDENT HOOVER has decidea to go to Boston on October 6 to deliYer an address before the American Legion. He will then tai'e a special tmin for the South and speak again next day at the celebration of the one hundred and fiftieth annive1·· sary of the Battle of· Kings Mountain. Though his vacation plans are still unsettleu, it may be that he will take a trip in October either to Mexico or on the Caribbean. Among the tasks now on his hands a1·e the selection of the the members of the ta1·iiT commission and the completion of the 1932 budget. 1 AN LEAR BLACK, wealthy pubV lisher of the Baltimore Sun and Evening Sun, was drowned at sea in the night, haYing evidently fallen from his yacht Sabato when it was steaming outside the outer New York harbor on the way to his summer home on the Chesapeake. When it was disCOYered he was missing from tl1e boat, the alarm was sent out and for tW•l days vessels and airplanes and the navy dirigible Los Angeles searched for him, but in vain. Mr. Black, who was fifty-five year!l old, was an enthusiastic aviator, and in 1927 began a se1·ies of flights that took him around the world, all over Europe, to the Dutch East Indies and to South America. Other notables taken by death were Thomas B. Slick of Oklahoma Cit~·. known as the richest Independent oil operator in the world; and Louis Bourgeois of Chicago, noted architect and sculptor. press dispatches reported CHINESE the slaughter of 4,000 Communists by provincial troops In western Kiangsi province and the capture of 2,000 rifles. The Communists, however, gained possession of Wusueh in Hupeh province, an important Y~ngtze river port 25 miles above Kiukiang. The terrified Inhabitants of the town abandoned their property and fled. GERMANY asks the League of I FNations next month for revision of the Versailles treaty in regard to Ger· many's frontier, France will put up a strenuous opposition. Herr Treviranus, German minister for the occupied regions, recently macle this demand In a speech, and soon thereafter the German ambassador to Paris hustled back to Berlin to warn his gover'lment that the Streseruann pol ir>y at conciliation was being jeopardized. It is reported that the French foreign office bluntly told the German envoy that France cloes not regard as acceptable proposals for revision of the Polish corridor. At the same time France is urging Poland to abandon her bellige1·ent attitude and to drop the tal'iffs in force along the borders of the corridor. preventing fi"ee pussage between Prussia and the rest of Germany. , The name of Frnnk E. Kellogg, former seC'retaJ'Y of statC', was presented to the League of l"ations by the Americ.:an grou,p as candidate for justice of the World rourt. ((c), 1930, Western Nswspaper VnloD.) OLD AGE AID PREDICTED THE THRIFTY SUN FLOOD CONTROL PLANNED "Do you have bad storms, or do you think you ha,·e bad storms on your Earth r• the Sun asked Harry abruptly. Harry had had the rare good luck ot going to visit the Sun. "\Ve have a good many," he answered. "Why?" "You should see the storms I have here. None ot your storms could pos· slbly compare with mlne. ~'he gases are so very hot and they get so ter'rlbly excited they just boil." It relieved Harry to feel that the Sun wasn't perfect and that he hadn't always a nice sunny disposition but could boil with excitement. ''My surface," continued the Sun, "is no smoother than yours." Harry still had the feeling, at times, ot being the entire Earth from the way In which these cre~tures talked to him. "Flames come out from me in all directions. Why, one of my storms could burn up your whole Earth into a tiny, tiny cinder." "That wouldn't be nice, to say the least." "Oh, I won't let that happen. Dear me, how your Earth people Uke to study me too. TbeJ' have a grand in- Rprlngvllle-A pest of grasshoppers is attacking crops. Scipio-The plan of marketing of cattle cooperati>ely is being pushed. Moab-A fair for 11rand county Is planned for early Octolltl. :llapleton-'l'he completio ... of a new "ater Fy»tem is celebrated. Bin~:"ham Canyon-\Vork h to begin at once on a new $303,000 high school. Heber City-The IiYe Gtock show i~ >ery "'"'n n trended with many interesting exhibits displayed. Baski11- Work of oil surfacing the road to Fimery i~ proceding rapidlS. Rpl·ingville·-Ope rntion of the new industrial >tlrohol plant has begun. Pa~·soD-- About 3 thousand pet·sons attended the Kolob stake outing here. Ro~·-'~'wo mountain liollf were seen nea 1' Jw;·. Lflytoll-A car load of gr.,.;n torna toes has been shipped. Ogtlt'll·-A one hundrel. <housanu dollar sheep house is dedicrced at the stockyards. ToOf'le-H. Young, 93, is ••till able to do a da~·s work at hay pitching and in this way celebrated his 93rd birthday. Spanish Forl;-Tbe 1931 lJtah State Firemen's association convention will be held h(•re. Price-Construct ion of 11 new beet dump for Carbon and Emery counties will begin about September 1st. Hyrum-The Jiye stock growers of Cache county will arran~e marketing uni: . Brigham (;ity-The "Peach Day" carnival will be held September 12 and 13. Millions of people have learned to depend on Bayer Aspirin to relieve a sudden headache. They know it eases the pain so quickly. And that it is so harmless. Genuine Bayer Aspirin never harms the heart. Look for the Bayer • Cross stamped on every tablet. 1 BAY ER ASP IRIN ..- -. • .. ' ,~... '• r ·' :(? r,r -:',(',';> ~;·, l. ~· • ; .. . . ' "; ~ ~· I >- • ~ ~ ' ' Wonderful and wre. Make your skin beautifnJ. at.o eares eesema. Prlce $1.26. Fnekle Ointment removeta freeklu. Uoed over '0 yoors. $1.26 and 66e. At All Deale.ra.. Beauty booklet •.nt #roe. Write DR. C. H. BERRY CO. 2930 Michl.rr:an Ave. • • Chlc:•go Costly Judge Vr.lentlne stated his opinIon that n vast majority of minor offenses against the law were occasioned by people "trying to keep up a front." "Too many young chaps," he declared, "'just try to be happy-golucky fellows and merely turn out to be unhappy-go-brok es." "' ' :'11iclYalc- Reports indicate early construction. of a large Fecleml building at Salt Lake. ""tnte Capitol-The total assets of 25 lmilcling loan companies of the state are repnrte1l at $55,242,822. This is an increase of neraly ten million dollars in the 1m~t eigllten mouths. Ft. Dougfns-Lieut. T. Oyama, professor of miiitary training at the .Tapan~?se military college of infantry at Thibia, Japan, vi~ited this tort. Ogden-Local horse fanciers will entel horses at the horse show at Blackfoot, Idaho. on September 30-0ctober 1st. Ogden-1'his will city will make a loan of $Hi0,000 to replenish the special improYement fund and the general fund. :Salt Lake--High officials of Eagles Fraterna 1 Order pt·edict federal aiel in supplying old age pen~ions in nn lnten·iew in this city. Kay~ville-A plan to be sponsored b:r bu~ine's J'l"OUllS of OgLlen. ~alt Lake ancl intermedin te 110intR, \Yill ad vocate a Reeond lliglnway hetwc0n Ogden antl Salt LakP. ProYo-)1 rs. E. Heed. l'tah county nurse, re! urncd from the International llygienic exhibition ancl health conference at Dresden, Germany, where she reprcl"ented t:ta'h public · health "My Rays Warm Up the Air." Makeslife Sweeter strument now called the spectroscope which scatters my blinding glare so they can find . out a lot about me and they have something called the photosphere, too, which has shown them Too much to eat-too rich a diet that I haven't a s;olid body. I knew -or too much smoking, Lots of It all along but they seemed glad to things cause sour stomach, but one find It out." thing can correct it quickly. PhilHarry seemed to feel drowsy again, Ups Milk of Magnesia will alkalinize and the Sun, noticing this. spoke In the acid. Take a spoonful of this a louder voice. "You get a scattering pleasant preparation, and the sysof the colors I send because of your tem is soon sweetened. atmosphere-it scatters them. OtherPhillips Is always ready to relieve wise you'd probably get some whiter distress from o1·er-eating; to check and bluer lights from me. 'l'he white all acidity; or neutralize nicotine. lig-ht you get from me is made up of Remember this for your own comrays of two or three colors 'vhich to· fort; for the sake of those around gether gh·e the feeling of white. And you. Endorsed by physicians, but of course you get some of my golden they always say Phillips. Don't light. too. But your atmosphe1·e has a buy something else and expect tbl) happ~· wny of eli vi ding up lif!ht waYes. same results! "Dear me, dear me. I have all sorts or things that you haYe,'' t!Ie Sun boasted. "Oxygen, zinc, carbon, iron, nicl,el and others." nur~er:. Harry was amused. He had exProYo-All produce clea.lers in the state handling fmits and vegetables pected to hear of other things with in carload lots or their equi;-alent will which he might be more familiar. "I'm not only a worker," the S\in be required to take out licenses and went on, "but I keep others working bond':', accordin):!; to Harden Benuion, too. That's quite an art you knowStop Order comnnsswner of ll):!;rieulture. 1'he anto !!'et oth-ers to work as well." "Sir, may I inspect your gallery of nual license fee, untler the Jaw, is $25. "I never h!ld It," Harry said, ''and art treasures?" nn<l the amount of the bond $2500. Pve .often wished I had." "Yes, but if I've been stung I don't The license run;< the calendar year. "I have it," the Sun smiled. "I care to hear about it." Logan-I>lans for the seventh Vtah make the wind blow, for example." intermountain egg-laying contest con"You do?" Harry was amazed. "I Truth is mighty-and it may ha'l"e ducted by the state agricultural expernever knew how the wind hlew or why prevailed before the gas meter was iment station, to begin about Novemlt blew or where it came from In the invented. ber are under way. The contest extends oYer a period of 51 weeks, and great first place." "I'll tell yon then. Oh, this is funinterest has been urom,ed by prospects to tell all this-to give a piece of of hreaking past rf><>or!ls of e.f!:f!: prod ncne~·s a person hasn't heard before." tion. The Sun changed his position slight· Pleasant Grove--An in<.:rea~e in profIy and Harry stretched out his legs. it per cow above feed cost of $1.51 is He wasn't feeling sleepy now. shown by cows of members of the Ut"I make rivers go and I make the ah County Dairy Herd Improvement sea have waves," the Sun went on. association for the month of .Tuly ov~·Honestly? You're not bragging?" er .Tune. "Honestly. When ~'OU think your Cedar Oily-Provision is made in windmills are being helpful I am really the Iron county school calendar for attenrling to them too. 1930-1931 for school to stnrt one week ''When my rays warm up the air, earlier than previously and also that the Christmas vacation will be only the warm air rises. Then, as It rises, one week instead of two. This will in- other and cooler air comes In to take crease the school year to eight and one Its place and then you have wind-nil half months instead of l'ight months, due to me." "That Is news kl me," Harry said. Schools are to open on September the "'I make the plants and trees and 8th. flowers grow, too. Farmington-Pla ns are being made "Yes, I know that." to control future floods and landslides "Maybe you don't know \Vhat rm in Davis county which will include the elevation of the Ogden-Salt Lake high ~olng to tell sou now-but maybe you f'Just a few words of praise of way in North Centenille aml the con- do. I don't mind so long as I have your medicine. Nothing gave given yon one piece of news about struction of a half-mile concrete water how the wind is started. me relief and health as Lydia way and bridge by the state and fed"Anyway I'll tPII you this as well. E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comeral governments. When you hum wood yon think you're Coalville-Const ruction forces of the pound did. I am a practical long lines division of the Bell Tele- having a fine fire, and you are, and nurse and was so rundown you have to make steam to drive an phone system lla ve startecl building the that I was unable to work. I engine. transcontinental telephone line from used to suffer agonies at times "Reds of coal came from ferns and Salt Luke to Denver. About fifty men and would have to lie down the trees grown by my warmth centuries are at n-ork on tile job with headquartbiggest part of the day. After agn--so when you travel on a train ers here. two bottles of Vegetable Com· remember It Is driven by power that pound Logan-Fur bearing animals will I felt better. Now I have came from the stored-up strength of constitute one of the most important used ten bottles and. feel fine. I the Sun years ago. exhibits at the annual Cnche county recommend it to many of my "It was thrifty of the Sun, wasn't fair on September 1() and 18th. lt?" patients. "-Mrs. Florence John· State Capitol-Total resoul"C8S of 8-! "Yes. I'd say that was pretty thrifty son, R. R. #3, Chetopa, Kansas. Utah bankH are $133,798,499.85. In adof you," Harry agreed. dition to the state banks there are 1~ national hanks with re:;ource>: of $(}9No Cheer 842.0lJO.· Old Lady-WhJ' don't you try to Salt r.ake City-rtah i~ one of the rheer you little brother up? four states in the uuion wherein there Small Boy-Dl<1ja ever try to cheer ha 'e been no bank failures in the last r,.r•.vbody up who'd just eaten five two ~·ears. In this periil<l bank remmanas, a hot-dog and six ice cream s;>urce~ haYe in(·reased in t.l.te l:lcate con 1 ~s? W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No 35--1930. .oenrly eight milliou dollars. • I PHil liPS Milk- of Magnesia I -,. • . |