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Show HIE PAYSON CIIKOMCI.E. PAVSON. TTAH News Review of Current Events the World Over BRISBANE THIS WEEK II t il' to Christianity Hiller's Great Power for His Podlion-IromineSpeaker Raineys Death Starts Rare .Men Organize Likert) League to Combat Radieali'in. i Uuby Daite Easily Said I inirteen-loiim- l nt V. PICKARD By EDWARD Ci bv Western Nr I' n per veteran eon from Illinois ami speaker of the house, d'ed unexpectedly hi a Ft. Louis hospital where he was believed to he recover Ing from an a: lari; of i.eumot..a. hronel.lal T! e ,.U.01 ate ,p. e of his d ath was anMr. pectoris. gina Kulnev vv ho was In a day of being HENRY T. RAINEY, not regard ttseif as strike of truck drivers In Min-men i.e.ipohs was ended when the and their employers accepted a xe agreement, and martial law in the city was discontinued, business there, aUer speeding back to normal cui litmus. 'I he peace plan, devised hy eih ral representatives, provided that all employees on strike he returned to their J'.bs without discrimination and of seniority. It Included an on ha.-.- s me to hold an election within nt re, rig in- ten d '.vs in each of the 100 firms einvo.ved tii deterimne whether their ,;,,vc, x want the drivers' union or' otl.'T leprexen'atives to act for them in c.'.eri.ve bargaining, and a pledge of n e I'M firms to pay for at least oi.e vmir not Urns than 50 cents an h, r 'to drivers and b cents to help 'atforiii men and Inside workers ei- com-iro:- lTil.I.IA.M GREEN, president ot t;.e A meric m Federation of La ' - i, e ( my act and of vv , vim: s o.d, was tiaidti may develop and spread ani"r, Oerti'.iiis as It has (lane In Spidn, Mexico a ml elsewhere. holds In Ids name all the reised hy the kai.-er- , the lenhstag, the vaiiuiix separate kingdoms anil governments that timke up the German empire Herr Hitler Alai, quite imporlaat, has the power to declare war nnd to II iler .uwirx now ntiee e rtia e pence, It might he easier to declare war than to make peace In these times. He Is eommander of the army, navy ami air force, which Imlimites rapid prepress for n gentleman who was not a citizen of the derm,an nation four years ago. dlovier, of Moorofield, W. Yn., weighs 120 pounds, her husband weighs l.'kri pounds. Not that his weight makes any difference. Their lit He hoy, named, as you will guess, Franklin Heluno Glovler, just arrived, Franklin fourteen pounds. weighs Delano Glovler will not attract as much attention us do the five Dionne quintuplets. Ilut the mother Is proud of the fnct that her Franklin Delano weighs at birth one pound and a half more than all live of the quintuplets. Franklin Delano Glovlers father says, I can't account for It." No accounting Is necessary. Every baby, big nr little, Is a marvel, and weight at birth makes little difference. One sickly little baby called Voltaire started a work that overthrew a long line of fat French kings. Mrs. Ted The big steel companies talk of abandoning the NBA code altogether, fearing the consequences of putting their Industry absolutely In the control of organized labor. More easily said than done," they will be told. An old horse mired In a swamp might talk about "abandoning the leeches that cling to him, but the leeches would cling. American industry must go all the way through the process of being managed by those that never successfully managed anything else before. Maybe the experiment will lead to the millennium, maybe not. All must hope and cooperate, even the mired horse. his memoirs, says was borrowing American dollars so Industriously, the United States, shocked by the cost of war, was suspicious as the allies He does not add, asked for credit. as he might, that Americans would have been wise to refuse the credit, since all of our gallant allies have turned out to be gallant welchers. Lloyd George, In that while England presents to your attention an Interesting robbery In the borough of Brooklyn. A gang of highway men surroumh'd an armored car, with machine gnns carefully planted in a peddlers cart and In parked cars, held up the armed guards, stole $427 JUKI. New York The robbers escaped In three automobiles, the armored truck pursuing, one machine gun that the robbers had overlooked spitting futile bullets. That appears to he the record for robbery In the public streets. The eleven bandits will regret to hear that. In addition to overlooking one machine gun, they overlooked $29,. M) In cash. d A big diamond Is coming to the United States, fourth largest In the world, called the Jonker gem. The pebble was found in South Africa hy a farmer, and sold to the diamond corporation for $215.0X). The corporation refused $500,XX) for the stone, now coming here to be cut to host advantage. Ladies will wear diamonds ns big ns pigeons' eggs but hardly as big as a turkey's egg. spicuous. That would he con- Hoboken, N. J., Is shocked. One tentleman, who liked the looks of gentlemans wife, bought the Mfe for $700, to be paid In Install- nents, like an automobile, with her onmntlc consent, the last Installment mid recently. That makes all that are absolutely veil behaved shudder, although many nilllons of human beings on earth nev-- r get a wife except hy purchase. Oth-- r millions may sell a wife If they boose, and no evil is thought of 1L t Is thinking that makes it so. an-ith- Klr.f Kotitun WNTJ Syndicate, Inc, Scrvloe. first elected to on gross in Ring, and he served continuouslyof with the cm i ptlon one term, being defeated In the Harding landslide of 1020. He was elected to the speakership when John Nat.ce II, s Garner became Vice president control over the hoi.se during the sex slons of last year and this .war while the President's program wax he t,g ti in put thloiipli. was gentle blit so that the Ifgslaturs were Kept will In line. Mr. Rainey devoted much of his service In Washington to e orts to Improve the condition of the farmers, for lie held that faim prosper, tv was essential In any program for national well being. He also was a studei t of tariff and fiscal subjects. As a DemoHe crat he was always a "regu'nr. was the author of the tariff commission law nnd of much other Important legislation. Mrs. Rainey acted ns her husband's secretary for years arid Is so well acquainted with congressional work that the Democrats may select her as the candidate to complete Ids term ns representative from the Twentieth Illinois district. Mr. Rainey was buried In his home town, Carrollton, after services which were attended by President Roosevelt and many other nahle persons. death will SPEAKER RAINEY'S spirited context among a number of men who are ambitious to ueceed him. First In the line of succession, so to speak, is Representative Joseph W. P.yrns of Tennessee, who has been serving as majority floor lender and who is head of the Democratic national eon-s gresslonal committee. President Roosevelt is going to take no part I J In the race, hut the more liberal of the New Dealers are known to favor Sam Ray burn of Texas. Well Informed observers believe Iyrns will he elected speaker nnd Kay burn floor leader. Other aspirants for the speakership are John E. Rankin of Mississippi, who has announced his candidacy; William B. Rankhend of Alabama, and John J. O'Connor of New York. Mr. Byrns has been a member of the house continuously since his election to the Sixty-firs- t congress. His work as floor leader. In conjunction with Rainey's rule as speaker, was not especially pleasing to the New Dealers for some months during the last session, but before adjournment most of the misunderstandings were cleared up. In any case, the administration seldom Interferes In the selection of the leaders of congress, not wishing to Irwur the enmity of powerful members of the party. from his swift trip to of Mr. Rainey, the President went directly hack to Washington Instead of going to his Hyde Park home. This change In plan was due, It was said, to the development of a bitter dispute between Gen. Hugh S. Johnson on one side and Donald Richherg. Mr. Roosevelt's chief industrial adviser, and Secretary of Labor Perkins on the other, over the new stricture to he given the NRA. The Issue, It was disclosed. Is whether there shall be a board of control In authoritative management of the NRA or a hoard which shall be more advisory hi power, leaving the real control still In the hands of the administrator nnd his deputies. It was expected Mr. Roosevelt would take command of the situation and determine definitely what shall he done with the recovery administration. Returning funeral ORGANIZED labor scored a victory Administrator Johnson when the national labor relations board ordered John Donovan, former president of the NRA union dismissed by Johnson for "Inefficiency, reinstated to his position with the labor advisory board. The agencies which are administering the lnw should In their own dealings uphold Its purposes," the board said In Its decision, giving a veiled reproof to Johnson for what It Implied was a violation of section 7a of the NRA. With rather had grace the NRA accepted the rebuke and permitted Donovan to return to his Job. Johnson himself had nothing to say about It, but Dr. Gustav Peck, Donovan's Immediate superior. Issued a statement In which he sniffed at the board's de-- goneial str.k kors will he averted; hut tie an noimees at the same time that the federu tion Indorses the str.ke and will Co operate fully with the olheers and member? of the United Textile orkers organization He appointed fedora tion committees to as sist the textile workers and announced that lie would draft id org iniers and sli.ke special-froother unions to assist the e hi ;n'S s;ix hoard lias rccou ended wpl.diavval of the Rice II. gie to the NRA compliance hoard In all cases where companies have disobeyed its d.scharged liixtruetjon.s to reiii.-ta-e employees. The decision by the NRA will remove teeth from decisions hy the hourd, since It m iy how hear caxex, mai.e decisions, and find that to penalties are Indicted for d.sohey-ii.its orders. '1 io labor PorioN garment code amendments the working hours and g.ving others a wage increase have The been signed hy the Pr amendments, which affect plants in 42 states, ae of far reaching importance. Hillman. labor advisory Sidney hoard member and Amalgamated Clothing union head, termed signing of the order "the most move NRA has yet nude to Increase It was hoped that this einploynn'iit. order would avert Hip threatened strike of the garment workers. red leu g vv prominent Democrats, two Re almost equally prominent, and one leading industriali-t- , all of them of conservative tendencies, have united to organize the AraertcaD Liberty league dedicated to a war on radicalism In the United States. The five founders of the league are; Alfred E. Smith, Demo crntlc Presidential in candidate 192S; , re-- . John W. Davis Demazk erratic Presidential in candidate 1924; Nathan L. Miller, Republican James W. Wadsworth, Rcpubliouu congressman from New Y'ork, former senator and Presidential possibility for 192(i; Irenee Du Pont, manufacturer, who supported Smith In 192S and Roosevelt In 1922. They he liove the league membership will grow Into the millions and that It will become an Important element in the national life. For president of the organization the founders selected Jouett Shouse, former chairman of the Democratic national committee and president of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment until repeal was accomplished. In a statement Mr. Shouse set forth the purposes of the league as follows: "It Is a nonpartisan organization, formed, as stated In its charter, to defend and uphold the Constitution of the United States and to gather and disseminate Information that (1) will teach the necessity of respect for the rights of persons and property as fundamental to every successful form of government, and (2) will teach the duty of government to encourage and protect individual and group Initiative nnd enterprise, to foster the right to work, earn, save, and acquire property, and to preserve the ownership nnd lawful use of property when acquired. To interviewers Mr. Shouse declared hut the league was not It seemed clear that it will be opposed to most of the major purposes of the New Deal and the radical professors of the brain trust, lie said he had visited t he President and Informed him fully of the purposes of the league, hut he would not tell what Mr. Roosevelts reaction had been. TWO nature of a reply to the for- mation of the American Liberty league was a speech delivered In Washington hy Secretary of Commerce Daniel G. Roper. He denied that the "protit motive In American life has been or is to be abolished" by the New Deal, asserting that it setks only to abolish certain profit abuses." sindi as profits on watered stocks and disproportionate salaries. Private enterprise, said Mr. Roper, is getting hack upon Its own foot, and more and more Is exerting Its initiative and Is able to relieve Urn federal government of responsibilities, which under normal conditions !..! ngj to business. "Pardon uiy repeating again that the Roosevelt administration is squarely behind this principle. It believes In Just profits for management and capital and an equitable return to labor for Its rightful rewards In the economic processes. "No thinking business man desires to have the old order restored, lie does desire and Is entitled to have the new order characterized by a better control against economic cataclysms and by tbe freedom to exercise his initiative In planning for the future of his business In the light of an equitable profit system. TN THE Indi.-'r- y t'a Wo! ' Hell Syndicate WNU Service. By ED HOWE HAVE met some opposition In I my contention that a man may learn much from conversation going on around him ; that he may thus acquire education as unconsciously as he eats his meals, attends to his work, or otlicrwi.se meets lifes Incidents. I have known a telegraph operator to sit Idly for hours in a roam full of dal toring instruments, and suddenly gniM) a key when his call cuine out of the confusion. So a man constantly in the bubble of conversation may pay little attention to It until something of attracts him; a hit of wisdom, news, or a Jest he lias not heard. Wilde left in books as great a number of bright sayings us any Englishman. All of them were suggested from mingling with men, first used In conversation, nnd the best of them later transferred to print. Men acquire education laboriously from hooks they are compelled to study aS a duty, hut easily out In the world, where ever one has a little, and is bu.-distributing it T t "Because a man loses liis Job, read somewhere, "it does not follow lie should quit work. That Is good sense. I know a man wtio lost his job as a maker of radio parts. This morning I bought vegetables of him; he continued work on some land a neighbor let him use, and he has not suffered the humiliation of calling on ttie Salvation army, the Red Cross, the county commissioners, or congress. I have another neighbor who lost his job in a machine shop, lie did not quit work, either; he is now operating a laundry in his home. In case I am able to change shirts this week, I shall certainly arrange with this man to wash my old one. Some of my other neighbors are getting $15 a month from the county, and regularly their names appear in the papers, under the heading of "Disbursements to the County Poor." I shall make a hard struggle to keep my name out of the list. I know most of the people read It, and make ugly comments. To Preserve Poi;,h s and other aBr' beaut, Ini ()!lv "boa a.1 kept This is tlx Mihruit t0 oxer, if l!l"r'"igliv cl(, lb. lira--- lnK Lra-- U , 'arni-h--- A. s 400,090. MARIO HERNANDEZ organized a plot to overthrow the government of President Mendieta of Cuba and establish a military dictatorship, but the authorities got wind of It and frustrated the conspiracy, in, which a considerable part of the army was Involved. Col. Fulgencio Batista, head of the army, said that Major Benitez and some soldiers were sent to arrect Hernandez and that eight men of the detachment were killed. Hernandez tried to shoot Benitez but was himself shot in the head and neck. The official report said Hernando was being rushed toward Havana in an automobile and that the car upset, the prisoner being killed, though the others in the car were uninjured. Maj. Angel Echevarria, commandant of Fourth infantry at Camp Columbia, and ('apt. Augustin Erice, chief of the signal corps, conspirators with Hernandez. were captured laier and a summary court martin! sentenced them to deatti. Four thousand troops in Iinar del Rio are confined to barracks, under arrest, and a thorough reorganization of the entire high command of the Cuban army is in full swing. About 2(X) civilians have also been arrested as parties to the conspiracy, charged with carrying messages to military plotters. IEUT.-CO- Lv - soviet ciczons are Eighty-eighunder arrest in Manehukuo, charged with plotting against and Japan and sabotaging Japanese military trains, The Russian government, through Acting Consul General Rayvid at Harbin, has pre sented to ttie foreign otlire of a demand for an explanation and insixZs on prompt of the nrre.-t-s measures for tbe release of t lie prisoners. "The arrests were made without documents, accompanied by searches of the apartments and offices of Soviet employees of the Chinese Eastern railway which have not been explained,'1 Rayvid said. The Japanese allege that some of the prisoners confessed to an attack on the Japanese military intelligence office at Suifenho (I'ogranichnaya), to sending Manchurian and Corean communists into the territory, to wrecking trains carrying Japanese troops and munitions toward the frontier, and to creating general disturbances along the eastern line. Probably before long will come the news that the Japanese have seized the Chinese Eastern railway, and that may very well result In war between Japan and Russia. t Man-chuku- Man-chuku- u,(t ,.i ... i I ns nitclx. PILGRIMAGES cn-- P'di.-- u Itil, to famous shrines of If the people are starving, what is to be done about it, since nature has no more to give? I once lived on a farm, and while I am able to recall I had some discomforts, always enough to eat. Frequently, we used parched rye for coffee, and sorghum molasses for sweetening. The other day I found sorghum molasses on the table, bought from an farmer, and thought it still very good. We grated corn meal for bread, and always down in the feed lot were pigs coming on to supply meat when the smoke house began to show signs of emptiness. We had cattle for plowing, and to supply milk. Chickens .almost took care of themselves about the place, and supplied eggs in addition to a surplus of old roosters which, when boiled long enough, made fairly good eating. We had wild plums, blackberries, and preserved them for winter use. There was plenty of fuel in tbe woods, and one man in the neighborhood tanned beef hides, from which another made shoes. In almost every house there was a loom, for the manufacture of a cloth called liney wool-sey- , and this supplied clothing. It was a poor start, but we were never hungry or naked while waiting for turn's to get better. And times never did get much better; indeed, I think they are harder uow than I ever knew them to be on Big Creek. The town people should remember there is a place where they can at least always get enough to eat, and move out into the country. Iretty much all the land will soon be owned by the government through tax sales, and almost anyone free to file on It. In In one of the periods of depression Rome, Filerius called the poor to- gether. "In your meetings, he said, "you make very severe charges against those who are feeding you. It is not usual to criticize the poor, but many of you have very bad habits, nd are not doing your part. In an emergency all should help. Some of the rioting you have Indulged In has only resulted In destroying such food supplies as we have. I give you frank notice this will not be submitted to again. If any of you have not heard of It, I announce I am head of the army, and yvill not Join you in unnecessary destruction." disc, vote of about 10 to 1 the peoBY de of Germany decided that Chan- history the Ru sians were fighting against Frederick the Great. The next day the Russian armies were ordered by their chief Big . . . Man to fight for Frederick. As a subject I have often rebelled against the orders given me by rulers, believing they frequently order biff things done for petty reasons. On a certain day f cry Utr OLD QUEBEC i a i ! j , li",! Beaupre, i. '7Y - ed Jat'ques v- - TZ2 twenty-on- no, tli ,,t Quebec on the St, I(awren. Devot-oat this shrine Ism confined to feast days and 'n celebrations, Imxmer. Large hers of visitors kneel here daily, Looo.ixx) pilgrims annually Ring the shrine. According to tradition, St. Aar. dates from 1054, when the church was established hy Brei sailors in thankfulness for their t cue from a storm on the St Lt rence. Discarded crutches, canes t braces are piled here hy the piizri: who are said to have experiea miraculous cures. Sharing the interest of pilgri are Quebec's other noted shrir St. Joseph's Oratory in Montn wide h lias heroine famous within last four decades through the wo: of Brother Andre, and the Natio Shrine of the Blessed Virgin at f near Trois Rlviet Historical students ns well as religious visit the ancient sandai of Tres Fainte Rosaire at Cap-dMadeleine. Built in 1714, it Is one Quebec's most cherished antiquit! re'i-o- an Exploratory Surgeon Did you operate? Also Surgeon Yes, for append! citis. what And Surgeon was wrorf with him? S3 mL KEEP COOL SAVE TIME SAVE WORK SAVE MONEY with the Iron rJ orktmi Coleman THIS A tnVe you more time and $1(XC0 washing machine! H' better norm strength . . . help you do less cost. easier and quicker at Instant LlglitluSU . .no ... no double strobes. D'JL garments with (ewer smooth base slides reduced Economical, too . . anywhere. See you V2d an hour to operate. dealer. ware or housefurmshm dealer doesn't handle. with matches or torch evenly-heate- d ca5''r.1;(, Salt Lake Citys Hotel potest hotel TEMPLE In It Is probably best that parents and children do not boldly tell or print what they really think of each other. A reasonable . . . amount of re straint Is best In everything; within bounds hypocrisy has Its good points A certain mean foreigner, long since dead, has been written about for year, nnd pronounced a mystery. . . . More foolishness; no man is a mys l cry. I knew myself, and necessarily know others. And whether I look at ethers or at myself, my knowledge shames roa Jf thiMrytn,o.dn square 200 Rooms 200Ta.Bh u eveff'00' Radio connection rates from - cellor Adolf Hitler's action In assom ing the powers of president was all right. The result of the plebiscite was: "Yes." 28.202,709; "No, 4,294,-054- ; Invalid, 872,290. Though the yes" votes were several million less than In the November plebiscite on the withdrawal from the League of Nations. the Nazis are satisfied nnd Hitler appears to he safely fixed rs ths country's ruler for the rest of his life. Ills power, as chancellor leader, la greater than that of any other dictator. Ca... rixer. - A r M, 1 Sioan, president of the ami chairman ,e cotton textile code authority, the threatened strike is not Juxti-hthe facts established hy ini economists. government imlai Ch.ii eiiging tin wage increase demand of the United Textile Workers of America, Mr. Sioan declared that "as a result of three basic wage in the code the hourly wages mid in March, 1921, show an Increase of 7 per cent as compared with March, 1922, when there was no code. All of this has meant a substantial increase in manufacturing costs, Mr. Sloan said, and the research and plan- ning division of the NRA found, after a comprehensive Investigation last June, that under existing conditions there is no Tactual or statistical basis for any general increase in cotton tex tile code wage rates. Mr. Sioan estimated the present number of workers at work in some 1,290 mills In the cotton Industry at T , u-c- ar Textile n Conversation On Quitting Work The Country Inti-res- 'e union. ego Howe About: Smooth Soap WNU-V- Y 8 s" - |