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Show TIIE PAYSOX CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH ews Review of Current Events the World Over Marchers Ousted by Troops After Fatal Battle With Pomerene and Miller W ashington Police Appointed to R. F. C. Board. By EDWARD W. PICKARD It was believed he would act on the matter quite promptly. Tammany Is rurMSTS and criminals among In 'bonus marchers" accomplished their puon a bloody conflict made It neees-fo- r fhe police that to call on Hoover president In order. restore tr troopsoneto of the veterans, a ,htlng '"oan, was killed and scores of bonus tmenand members of the Involved many has just formally Indorsed the candidacy of Roosevelt fur the Presidency. rging 'T'EXAS seems s offl-ha- governments construction pro-Thursday morning they did those buildings but afterwards al thousands of them attacked con-- i Wllce and the rioting was for hours. The district allied for help and by n of Mr. Hoover 3,000 soldiers Fort Myer, equipped with tear s and gas masks drove the their camps and lmmedi-burne- d the shacks they had oc-The main camp, at Anacostia to t, the Potomac, was the last ized, after all the women and ren had been removed, e bonus array members who had drendy gone home departed for stown, Pa., where they had been d to make their new headquar- F com-one- !ie!j rort dl-,- ?t roo!j vet-fro- the Ml AK IT ODCO ISJ! i ii o.ooej ie a 40U ce of charges that rieconstruction Finance cor-io- n was being run too much for ienefit of the Republican party, President Hoover appointed a Democrat as a member of the board, and he was elected chairman to succeed Eugene Meyer. The new member is Atlee Pomerene. former senator from Ohio and assistant ISir.LY because counsel In prosecuting the Teapot Dome oil cases. In announcing the appointment Mr. Hoover said Mr. Pomerene had had a service as a lawyer, business man member of the senate banking a.itee. r in the week the President comil the board by the appointment urles A. Miller, Republican banker ioa, N. Y., who was to be made i lent of the corporation, Ills corporation's board was thus this way: mocrats Pomerene, Harvey h of Pine Bluff, Ark.; Jesse Jones Houston, Texas, and Wilson irthy of Salt Lake City, Utah, publicans Secretary Mills of the ury, C. A. Miller and Gardner e up In s of Dos Moines, Iowa, presentative Rainey of Illinois, erntic floor leader of the house, red the President, by giving the crats a majority on the board, not dodge the responsibility for lew relief law. Mr. Hoover, he has had his own way about the of relief law we should have. If Us, the responsibility will be his. etoed the Garner relief bill." s first loan to a state approved e board was $3,000,000 to Illinois, y for relief purposes In Chicago, rnor Emmerson had asked for W.OOO as a starter, and probably "HI be loaned to Illinois In the future. i !GE Til the formal approval of both Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. tyelt, one of whom will be the I resident, a war on governmental e has been declared by the Na-Economy league at a meeting tw York. Six of the nation's prominent men were selected to a national advisory council, and r them accepted and promised to In support of the league's h is alined against extrav-rof national, state and 1 pro-hic- e munlci-overnment- 7V5'1 men are Calvin Coolidge, 1 CHhu Root, Newton 7n dolln Pershing and "illlam Sims. t league plans first to attack the of federal funds to war vet-h- o suffered no disability In Investigation conducted by e 8h that this class of receiving nearly half of nPPrprlation of $927,849,000 f ,War' The ,easue asked revise downward the vet- the eitent of over bUt con&ress contented in the lan session wlth , n nvestigating committee. e- - ff ZlT S tvelt hiq'r V1 8nt tH,L7merS,enCy :o'erunr to ren)ove ... office. ' akor KER of New t0 Governor charges of ma,le aeanSt "bo asked the mayor de-- c:trnuTnsmedandfor asserted Pcbtlcal ptl- - Ves to have lined up In the wet column. In the recent Democratic primary the proposal that congress be petitioned to submit repeal or retention of n a t lonal prohibition to the states carried by a vote of 301,393 to 120,383. However, the dry3 asserted that not half the Democrats expressed themselves on the question. In the race for the gubernatorial nomination Mrs. Miriam A. Ferguson, former governor, led the field of seven contestants by a handsome plurality, hut the others polled enough votes to make necessary a run-of- f primary. In this Gov. R. S. Sterling, who was second, will be her rival, and declares lie is confident be will win, as he did two years ago In like circumstances. The Democratic nomination In Texas Is of course equivalent to election. In some of the counties negroes were permitted to vote In the primary for the first time since re construction days. - were Injured. President In a explained by the d the treasury statement, c try-i- 0 several days been for to evacuate get the veterans demolished be to were iugs that s In the controversy, and Tam- only DIRECTORS of the Chicago Board decided to fight the order of the grain futures commission suspending trading In futures on the board for sixty days. The boards attorney was instructed to file a petition In the United States Circuit Court of Appeals and to carry the ap peal to the Supreme court if neces sary. The commissions decision against the board was the penalty the commissioners sought to Impose for the board's refusal to admit the Farmers National Grain corporation to clearing privileges. In the exchange of statements concerning the commissions action the latter body referred to efforts of the boards president to discredit the administration of the law or to satisfy some antagonism has now gone so far as to make unfounded predictions creating business uneasiness. Those charges are utterly false, It said President Peter B. Carey. was necessary for us to act quickly to retain public confidence when the commission Itself Informed the public, through newspapers, that the Board of Trade was suspended for sixty days when the board did not receive Its notification until 10:30 Monday morning. We succeeded In doing this because we refused to be muzzled by the political office holders who have taken action against us. We want the public to know that this situation was not Initiated by the Board of Trade. SHANNONS in Kansas City has been hearing a lot more about the damage done to agriculture by the federal farm board. First the grain men were called In, and they described the colossal and tragic failure" of the experiment In price fixing and the "withering effect" the farm board has had on everything It has touched. The Farmers National Grain corporation came in for some bitter attacks that were supported by figures. Next day there was a long line of witnesses actually engaged In production of farm crops, and they were no less emphatic In their condemnation of the farm board, which, they asserted, the farmers never wanted. They were positive in their declaration that the farming Industry is opposed to continuation of the agriculture marketing act. After another day of farm witnesses, the committee moved to St. Louis for two days, and there heard a lot more testimony to the same effect CONGRESSMAN that the legitimate expenses" of a member of congress eat up his entire salary so that It Is Impracticable for him to lay up anything for his family, John Representative y. Tilson of Connecticut says he will not be a candidate for re-felection In the fall and will resign his seat as soon as It Is convenient He Intends to seek a Job that pays better, hoping that the return for his labors will at least be on the right side of the ledger." Probably he will resume the practice of law, but he says that if the Importance of any future service he might be able to render demands it, no sacrifice would he too great for him to make. Mr. Tilson has been a member of the house for twenty-twyears, and for six years he sered as Republican floor leader. Declaring necessary o ' received the 20.- - ent without comment. Cash Revenue in Woods on Farms GERMANY was fairy quiet during the week, which preceded her Important parliamentary elections, but the dictatorship over Prussia was maintained, Frans with Bracht as minister of the Interior and chief assistant to Chancellor Von Pap-en- , who had been made commissioner of Prussia. The action of Von Hlndenburg had been upheld by the Supreme court at Leipslg. Bracht, who is lord mayor of Essen, was to all Intents and purposes the dictator of the Prussian state. On Tuesday President Von Hlnden-burconsidering that public order and security were no longer endangered, lifted the state of martial law that had been put on Berlin and the province of Brandenburg and that had been In effect for six days. The executive authority thus reverted to the president of police of Berlin and the governor of Brandenburg. Gen. Kurt von Schleicher, minister of war, in a radio campaign speech, served notice on the world that unless Germany is granted equality and released from the limitations of the post-wa- r treaties, she will establish her own security by reorganizing her armed forces. Can Be Made to Yield turns Well Worth While. By B GERMANY that she and chestnut at $32 per thousand. Still more can be saved by having this material cut from the farmer's own woodlot, the difference going Into his pocket for labor In getting the material out. Dead and diseased, decayed and dying trees can be removed and used for fuel, or If sound sawed Into lumber. Open places may be filled In with seedlings of ash, walnut, poplar and other species that can be used on the farm. In this way the woods may be made a place of pride and of value instead of the most neglected part of the farm. The farm woods provide a shelter belt and protect crops and live stock from the wind, produce maple sugar, provide refuge for game and nesting birds which destroy crop Insects, and act as a reserve of cash In time of need. Although this Is a poor year to sell timber, many farmers are turning to the woods in order to obtain funds to pay taxes and the Interest on loans. b CWEMIES of President Machado of Cuba are determined to compass the downfall of his regime and perhaps his death. The severe course of the government does not check them In the least and bombings, shootings and assassinations are of dally occurrence. The Communists, as always, are taking advantage of the situation to stir up all trouble possible, and red mobs banners Inscribed carrying Down with the Government have been having bloody encounters with the Havana police. Among Machados foes are counted many of the younger members of the Island's best families. The other night the police arrested twenty young women, most of them teachers In the Havana normal school, when they visited In a hospital a woman who had been injured by explosion of a bomb she had made. Other arrests Included a normal teacher, two physicians and a customs broker. Soldiers killed three brothers accused of conducting a campaign of Incendiarism on sugar mills In the Matanzas district. those marine tragedies that ONE ofInfrequently shock the world occurred In the Baltic sea off the coast of Holstein. The German naval training ship Niobe was caught In a sudden storm, upset and sank, and sixty-ninofficers and cadets perished. The steamer Theodore .Russ was nearby and her lifeboats picked up thirty-sevemen. The only officers saved were the captain and the first mate. Most of the lost cadets were trapped In a classroom between decks. The Niobe was formerly owned and commanded by Count Felix von Luck-nethe famous sea raider of war times. In Chicago, where he was visiting, the count said : She was a good ship, so strong 1 did not think she could be sunk. e r, of the week AMONG the deaths of Nelson O'Shaugh-nessy- , those a veteran of the United States diplomatic service, In Vienna; Fred Duesenberg of Indianapolis, pioneer automobile manufacturer; Caleb Powers, central figure In a drama of politics and murder thirty years ago In Kentucky; Florenz Ziegfeld, musical comthe glorified edy producer who American girl; Reginald Fessenden, eminent as a radio Inventor; Alberto Santos Dumont of Brazil, one of the earliest and most famous of aviators, and Enrico Malatesta of Italy, for years a leader of anarchists. hun-- dred and anniversary of the first United States postal service established by act of the continental congress July 2G, 1775, Maj. James Doolittle made a most notable airplane flight. In 15 hours and 40 minutes he covered more than 2,000 By miles, passing over 14 states. stage coach and saddle horse the distance would have taken about four years In continental days. Flying with Doolittle was Miss Anne Madison Washington, a direct descendant of General Washingtons brother John. Another passenger was A. F. Maple, representing the Aeronautical Chamber of Commerce of America, under the auspices of which the flight Cultivate, and Destroy Weeds That Hurt Crops The main purpose of corn cultivala to kill weeds, and if it can be done without aerating the soil too much or 'disturbing the roots of the young corn plants, the more successful the crop will be, state Iowa Stats college Investigators, reported by the tion Irairie Farmer. was made. During the day they dropped 30 mall packages of letters, bearing air In their Jourvarious at points stamps, ney of historic interest mellon, amhassa Britain, returned for a short visit at his home, having been to given leave of absence to attend private business. He emphatically de nled the report, printed In London, that he would resign. The amhassa dor refused to discuss international debts or the political campaign, but said of the latter, I will do anything w. I can. 1932 Wauro Nwn)MrCnl Contrary to general belief, they find, cultivation does not keep water In the soiL It does kill weeds that would use moisture, how- ever. The roots of the corn plant are located In the first six or seven Inches of soiL It is In this layer of soil that the most nutrients are found. Sumto an Inch mer rains of moisten only about three Inches of soiL Stirring of this layer aerates and dries out the soil and prevents the roots from securing food and moisture. The theory that water moves upward through the soil capillary system from grent depths beneath the surface has been disproved. Unless there are great amounts of moisture In the soil there Is little or no such action. Weed destruction through shallow cultivation is likely to be the most profitable. one-quart- Protect Farm Machinery With lower prices making It necessary for farmers to economize, they are turning to the care of machinery as one way to reduce expenses. Surveys have shown that housed machinery lasts just about twice as long as that which Is exposed to the weather, says the United States Department of Agriculture. Many farmers unable to put all their implements under cover are taking the next best method of protecting them from rust and other weather damage. This Is by oiling metal parts. Implements such as plows, cultivators, and disks roust have their working surfaces shiny to do good work and greasing them prevents rust Intricate parts of machines, such as the knotter on a binder, may be kept from rusting by spraying or swabbing with oil. Machine oil or used crankcase oil Is good for this. Careful cleaning will help preserve some Implements, even If they are left out In the weather. Grain and dust often collect In corners In drills, grain boxes, and combines. Cleaning these out helps prevent their rotting. fifty-sevent- h Andrew Ohio $25 could one MALES IN FLOCK soft-woo- d to the Franco-Brlt-Isagreement that was formulated at Lausanne, but her acceptance was qualified with a provision that Germany wtF not become Involved In any bloc formed to deal with war debts, limiting her adherence solely to problems affecting the European regime. Italy and Rumania are among the nations that have signed the pact. IN CELEBRATION of the WIERKHUEGEI Foriter. WNU Sorrlco. University. If NO REVENUE FROM Managing the farm woods ao that It can be used as a source for repair materials on the farm and a permanent crop that will produce a direct cash revenue Is sound farm practice. Although most farmers like to work lumwith pine and other ber, It Is possible to save considerable expense by using those species grown In the state. Good pine for construction purposes will cost from $05 to over $100 per thousand, while local green oak nmy be obtained at g, decided O. Slot Re- How He Got Clover phosphate pays better dividends than limestone on Marion Finleys farm In Vermilion county, IlRock linois. Wise Poultryman Will Get Rid of Roosters. The only object of keeping male birds Is to get eggs for batching and that season Is past. The farmer should remember that the rooster Is consuming feed which neutralizes the froflts from a laying hen. A still more Important reason for disposing of the males Is the production of Infertile eggs. We hear a great deal about egg quality. The best way to Improve egg quality Is to produce Infertile eggs. Fertile eggs do not keep well. Five per cent of all eggs marketed are a total loss because of chick development Besides a large proportion of rot Is due directly to chick development being retarded. The object of a hen In producing eggs Is to reproduce herself. If males are present and the egg Is fertilized, the embryo starts to develop within the body of the hen. When a proper temperature Is again maintained this development continues. There will be a slow growth at any temperature above 70 degrees Fahrenheit A temperature of 84 to 90 degrees Fahrenheit for three days will produce as great a development as one day at a temperature of 103. A temperature of 104 to 110 for one day will produce an embryo as far developed as three days at a temperature of 103. Production of Infertile eggs is especially advantageous during the summer. Such eggs do not develop germs, stand shipment well, withstand heat, are easily preserved, slow to decay and cost less. The hen will lay as well or better with no males present In the flock. An Infertile egg can thus be produced and, If unwashed, may keep Indefinitely. A large percentage will dry up before they will rot. Missouri Farmer. two-yea- ttM, Acreage Not Measure of States Population The ranking according to the population of the states Is almost reversed compared to the ranking with regard to area. The states are ranked according to area, as follows: Texas, California, Montana, New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, Wyoming, Oregon, Utah, Minnesota, Idaho, Kansas, South Dakota, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Missouri, Washington, Georgia, Florida, Michigan, Illinois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Arkansas, North Carolina, Alabama, New York, Louisiana, Mississippi, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Tennessee, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, South Maine, West Carolina, Vir- New Vermont, ginia, Maryland, Hampshire, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Connecticut, Rhode Ilelawure, Island and District of Columbia. According to the census population of 1930 they rank us follows: New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Texus, California, Michigan, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Missouri, Indiana, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, KenIowa, Virginia, tucky, Minnesota, Oklahoma, Loulslanu, Mississippi, Kansas, Arkansas, South Carolina, West Virginia, Maryland, Connecticut, Washington, Florldu, Nebraska, Colorado, Oregon, Maine, South Dakota, Rhode Island, North Dakota, Montana, Utah, District of Columbia, New Hampshire, Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico, Vermont, Delaware, Wyoming nnd Nevada. ENJOY in Breeding of Chicks The Massachusetts experiment station has compiled records covering six years work with Rhode Island Reds. Each year, the flock was made up of two hatches, eight weeks apart one In March and one in May. The chicks were out of the same matings, fed and cared for alike as nearly as possible. weeks of age, the avAt twenty-onerage weight of the March pullets was exactly five pounds; the best year, they weighed 5.18 pounds and the poorest year 4.83 pounds. The May pullets averaged 4.27 pounds for the six years, 4.42 pounds being the best and 4.10 pounds the poorest The comparative weights remain about the same throughout life. Wallaces Farmer. A TRIP TO NEWHOUSE M1IS. J. H. WATERS, I'M. W. E. SUTTON. Mrr. e Movable House Best f t 400 Baths 400 Rooms $2.00 to $4.00 C Family Room 4 Times. Broody Birdies Broody birds cause loss of eggs, loss of freshness, breakage of eggs. Take the broody birdie off the nest after dark and snip a celluloid band on the leg. Iut her back on a slat bottomed nest for three days. If she has to be put In a slat nest three times for broodiness, It Is time she was eaten. Fatten her and use the ax. Broodl-nes- s Is an inherited trait, Just as certainly as shank color, plumage color or other distinguishing marks. or T4- Room with C T 5 Person two persons f f enrn - JU Cholc Oul.ld. cn JU Bath THE HOTEL NEWHOUSE SALT The light, movuhle growing shelter Is coming Into more general use by poultrymen everywhere. It Is regarded by those who speak with authority as the greatest Improvement In poultry housing since the Introduction of the house. On a suitable range open-fron- t It provides conditions similar to those that are enjoyed by wild birds easily movable quarters, freedom from mites, amde ventilation, cool roosting quarters, no overheating or sweating, qf germ-ladedusty air. Los Angelet LAKE CITY. UTAH Pt Digging Into tho The annual Smithsonian exploration reports tell of sciences march through Jungles, deserts and mountains in an unceasing quest for more knowledge about human beings, bugs, birds and beasts. Important among the expeditions wa that under Dr. Charles W. Gilmore. In Montana and Wyoming It found 000 specimens of fossil animals. The prizes were the partial skeletons of a rhinoceros like creature and six skulls of ancient crocodiles. fossil-gatherin- Spar the Afflicted The gods spare the afflicted and do not always oppress those who are unfortunate. Ovid. Reduces Flock Costa to One way to reduce flock costs hens and retain them cull the year-ol1 Painting the Brooder two-yea- (gtiCUTfl Pta Uralul Cwp.t HiMw. An advantage not often mentioned, that early hatched chicks have over late ones of the American and English breeds, Is the greater weight This Is no little consideration when the hens are sold after a years lay with a cut of 25 to 40 per cent In price for hens under four and one half pounds. Com Following Sudan ten-yea- r Soap ZSe, Oiotmaat 25 n4 Wt Propnston t Dru A SALT LAKE AND another year, states University of Illinois poultryman. Such hens have gone through their most expensive depreciation. If they are well bred they should make good producers another year, though their egg yield may not be quite as high as pullets. Keeping old hens Increases hazard of disease, and where possible It Is desirable to brood a new lot of chicks and replace the flock with pullets. Contrary to general belief Sudan grass does not reduce the yield of the corn crop which follows any more than some other crops. Tests at Iowa State college over a period show that where corn and Sudan were r rotation, comgrown In a pared with corn and oats and corn r roand soybeans, each In tations under similar conditions, the yields of corn with the Sudan have been fully as good as those with the soybeans or oats. Iralrle Farmer. Culleufa Soap Weight Important Point had the soli In one field tested," said Mr. Finley, and found that It needed one to four tons of lime an acre. I treated It with one ton of rock phosphate an acre and got a dandy stand of mixed clover. Every ton of rock phosphate contains 000 pounds of Ume. The phosphate makes corn mature earlier, gives a better quality, and I believe It pays better to buy the rock phosphate than to spend the same money for lime. Cappers Fanner. I yon with a tkin clear of pimple blackhead) and other annoying ernp tiona, begin today the regular use of assisted by Cutlrura Ointment No other method ia to agreeable, ao often ef fective and to economical Unless the premises where chicks are kept and all appliances used are known to be absolutely free from lice and mites, and It is certain that chicks have never been exposed to them, It Is a wise precaution to paint or spray the brooder with a mixture of four parts crude petroleum and one part keiosene, allowing It to dry thoroughly before using. Puffs of insect powder on the chicks when In the brooder, about once s week, will destroy any lice ' Shes all worn out again the has the lame old Poor girl , headache . . . backache . . . nd blue. She ought to try Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Compound in tablet form. From Now On I hear Pauline is week. next married ting get- Chorus Girl Comedian at last Yes, a speaking part Stray Stories. Think It Over To climb steep hills requires slow pace at first. PARKERS HAIR BALSAM HMr robotm UKidniff Stow imparts Color and VaUfaia Fdd toGrynd Butyur and l Irnijirm. 0 fltvoi enrm SHAMPOO Ideal for Salt Lahe C.ty, o. N V. N. U., Half ue in |