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Show T r n THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH Encouragement and Truth Two Great Needs in I of Children Training By MISS AGNES TILSON, i4 Detroit School Teacher. and response to a method of self expression, in ENCOURAGING start, are the two most important factors relationship. Nothing is more disastrous to the development of the child mind than parental indifference to Ids efforts, no matter whether it is only a house erected with bloilis. his work is appreciated, he feels ambitious to go on. It eventually leads to the child solving his own problems. Each child has the right to expect four tilings from adults whether they he parents, teachers, nurses or friends. They are security, truth, and response to his efforts. A child the opportunity of needs to feel security with adults and he needs truth at all times. Ilfj must have tlie truth in order to he adjusted socially and tlie right kin between parents and child comes from giving them tlie of truth always. It is often difficult hut it can he done, and there is never a come-bacIt is tiie best way to teach a child to respect its parents If 1 k. word. 1 Scene in Houston, Tcmi", win re v.i-2 It tmsav iters of tla I.iiITmIo havnu damage was done iy llood 3 Expi can cruiser Moui tte in which Colonel MacDonald, I.nliorite, v.lio hemme inline mtnisli r of Great Li.tain. and Mrs Llndliert.li spent their honey moon. v and rear id dug tie bureaus charg'd with ei fon eiuei.t of the dry iavv-- , In coo, fiat. on v ,th Ids spe i,d (oiaads h '!i on l.nv eufori eluent. At tin same time the Ticasury department lho opening of a new drive in stop liquor smuggling In the Detroit i.ii a. Progress of the Farm Relief Measure MacDoneld Now British Prime Minister. VJ aN By EDWARD W. PICKARD OW Known ns the agricultural marketing net, the farm relief hill ennie out of conference lust week and was then accepted by both the house and Semite. It was scheduled to he in the hands of resident Hoover for signature about June 12. From the MU ns muddled the export debenture plan was omitted, all the eonferei.s except Senators Norris of Nebraska and Smith of South Carolina voting for this course. On other features the measure represents a compromise be tween the senate and house Mils, the essential points of the la'ler being retained. Provision is made for u farm board composed of the secretary of the treasury and eight members appointed by the President nt sal tries of S12,(mi. The President will the chairman of this hoard. Commodity advis ory Cornells are to tie set up to advise the board on methods of dialing with crop surpluses. stnMii.ntlon corporaCommodity tions, all the stock of which Is owned lives, urc nulhoried to buy by store, anil market surplus commodities. The stabilization corporations will be able to obtain loans from a revolving fund at the disposal of the farm hoard. Only such part of this fund us congress appropriates .111 he Immediately available. The hour! may make loans for the bundling of crop surpluses and also for the pure base of warehouses and other physical market facilities anil may make advances to for various purposes, including loans for Insurance against price decline. The hoard may tlx the terms of the loans, the Interest rate being limited to an amount approximating the rate on outstanding government securities. President Hoover let it he Known that the iiduiinistratloi would ask congress to appropriate, before recessing, us much as $l00,m)0, otto from the half billion fund authorized, with n view to hurliig It available for handling the wheat surplus. Department of agriculture experts said this immediate appropriation should he SJOO.iKMt,. POO, for they believed more than half that sum would be needed for wheat alone, the price of which has fallen very low. This does not mean neces-Bu- i ily that the entire amount will he loaned to the wheat stabilization cor poratlon to he set up by cooperatives with the approval of the farm hoard Home of the supporters of thb Hoover farm relief program believe that if n ftahlllzi timi corpora ion buys as much as 25,000,000 or f.d.onoooo bushels of wheat It will have a tremendous effect on the market, provided it Is known that the corporation can borrow un limited additional funds from the farm bourd. ) OENATOK SMOOT, clmlrnmn of the senate thiunee committee, announced the niake-uof the four groups of subcommittees which will consider various schedules of the taritf bill. They are to hold hearings simultaneously. beginning June 13. The free list and administrative provisions will be handled by the full committee. Tarls industrial newspapers urge the French parliament to llml some means of erecting retaliatory taritf harriers inagainst United States prodmts deed, throughout most of Europe there Is deep resentment tig dust the proposed American tariff measure. The presidents of the European clm'iihers of commerce In a report stated that the policy of the United States s in if one considers its comprehensible Jin uncial requirements," for this country is not only Europe's creditor hut iilso is the holder of the greater part of the w 01 Id's gold; and If Amoraun polls arc closed to European merohan disc Jim debtor countries are cut off from the'r only means of raising money to settle their debts. p DENT HOOVER In a message gross asked that the senate and house appoint a stlect committee to study tie matter of concentrating PRES' PVS'SVHn of the census and reap nt Mil was accoaipiished I" in the house, hat only alnr the lenders had freed the measure from negro disfranchisement and alien exclusion nrmndnients that threatened to tiring about Its defeat. The final vote was 272 to 105. ERMAN reparations ure now up to the governments of the allied nations and Hermanv, for the conitnis sloii of experts has concluded Its great task with the adoption of the Voting plan, the main features of which were g:vin In these columns a week ago Seventeen weeks of nerve wracking discussion Hois came to an cud, and while It could not lo said every one was satisihd, all ut least were re hev ed. Will, are you glad it Is over?" sonic one ashed Dr. lljalinar Sihacht, I hi chief Hern an delegate. "Who would ho ghid over the pros poet of paying $ 1S7,!mi0,0ik) in the next thirty seven years and then not he through?" lie snapped hack. The Ia Igiari ri presentatives nt a 'sJ creditors meeting In Faris announced that t lu v would accept the Herman offer for settlement of the Delgian claims for compensation of the l.e'gian worthless Herman marks unloaded in Delgium dming the war. This settlement Is to he negotiated directly between Hertnany and Belgium and inu-- t he completed before the Young plan goes Into effect next September 1. In Iterlln It Is thought that a political conference will la called in July to sanction the report of the experts and to take up the question of evacuation of the Rhineland. Freshlent Hoover and Secretary of State Stlmson cahed their congrntula tlons to Messrs. Young, .Morgan, Ier-hln- s and I.amont, the Americans on the experts commission who really brought ubout the settlement. mao donald, chief of parly, is now prime minister of Croat Britain and his cabinet has been sworn In. Stanley Dahl win handed in his resignation Tuesday and the king immediately summoned MacDonald to form a new government. lie submitted the names of the pilneipal members of Ids cabinet and they were approved by Ms majesty, who sat up in bed nnd chatted and joked with the new prime minister for a hour, for they are very Ramsay good fi lends. It was reported In London that Lloyd Heorge was willing to give the I.ahorites the support of his Liberal following on condition that an electoral reform Mil ho Introduced mid no real- contentious leglslat'on, such as nationalization schemes, vvldespicad he proposed. The question of the mining industry may present difficulties In which the I.ahorites nnd the I.lh prals cannot agree. The biggest mat ter on which they hip agreed is un The schemes of etnploytm nt relief. both porties Include large appropria tlons for building of new houses, slum i learn nee, drainage of land and reclamation, construction of new roads electrification and reorganization of the railways, and afforestation on a wide scale, lu fortign affairs the Liberals an I.ahorites are In complete accord. ly 1 months In Jail are not for the punishment of Harry F. Sinclair, the oil magnate. The Supreme Court of the United Stales last week unanimously upheld tlie dci islon of the District of Columbia Supreme court which sentenced Sinclair to serve six months in jail for hiring detectives to shadow the jury in tin first Fall Sinclair criminal conspiracy trial almost two years ago. Henry Mason Day, vice president of the Sinclair Exploration company and Sinclair's peisonal representative In the shadowing of the jury, must serve a Jail sentence of four months. William J. Darns, head of the directive agency which supplied the detectives, was sentenced to serve 15 days at the same time Sinclair nnd Day were sentenced by Justice Frederick I.. Sid dous. The Supreme court reversed the Ilurns sentence, but permitted a THREE Q fine of 1,000. Impo-e- d on his son. W. Sherman Lures, seer, t ry of the do Kitlve ugei.iy, to stand. CIIAIH ES H. DA AES. our new to the Court of St. James, sailed fur England after a laid celitereiK e with Dissident Hoover and Secre'iiry Slliuon, On June 2li Hineial Dawes Is to icceive the tie gree of doctor of civil law from Ox ford university. News Notes doesn't mean tli.it lie Giving a child the right to should intrude at any time, hut lie should he heard and he should have the opportunity to have his curiosity satisfied. Barents need to lie their children, too, if they are to have a clo-- e relationship in later years. It is often a battle of wits in rearing children and parents m v. should fdil to he firm, hut cent le. There should he some definite ngiee incut between the parents regarding disiijdine and it should he carried out. At all times children should he respected and their personalities should be respected. Too often things are done to children which nc one would think of doing to adults, and it often makes a deeper impression on tlie child than it would on tlie adult. Respect jour children, treat them as they have the right to expect nnd there will he very few child problems. pal-wi- th Its a Privilege ! J to Live In UTAH : SPRINGVILLE Nearly 8000 trout have been planted in Hobble creek during this week, through the effort of the Fish and Game association of Springville, according to Henry Weight, president. A meeting of the association will be held soon in in public library. ot PROVO Under the direction Grover Clyde and II. V. Swenson, district inspectors, weed campaigns ure being carried on at Mapleton, Springville and American Fork. Calcium chhiiate is the new weed spray being u.siil in tiie county this season for the killing of obnoxious weeds. GUNNISON fallowing a trip to the Mt. Halily ranger station, Ranger Ld. P. Cox reports that snow is about 6 ini lies lighter than last year at the baine time. Un ms trip the ranger discovcitd that changing of creek beil-- . during tlie spring would necessitate considerable bridge and road work m the bcition. UTAH Although Utah lost 325 cattle permittees on national forests during 1528, a gain of 130 sheep peimit-tee- s was recorded, E. C. Shepard, supervisor, Wasatch National forest, announced recently. The loss in cate grazing permits represented 8 percent of tlie 152S total, while the sheep grazing gain was 6 per cent. LOGAN Rules for the teams entering tlie dairy products judging contests at the farmers encampment, July are issued by Professor George Caine, dairy specialist at the Utah State Agricultural college. Contesting teams will judge the quality and market grade of butter, cheese, milk and vanilla ice cream. d DRAPER Fried chicken and eggs were served to more than 1000 visitors who attended the fifth annual poultry day at Draper recentautomobiles ly. A caravan of fifty-fivturned the town and visited model poultry farms in the section. Among the farms inspected were those of J. It. A!Un. J. E. Mickelsen, Elman MiikcNm and Avar Cosgrove. VERNAL The rock slide just south of Iia.xi rs pass on the Umtah railroad, the narrow gauge line that connects Mack, Colo., with Watson, Utah, is proving to be more serious than was at fast believed. The slide occurred about a week ago, but rock and dirt continued to move down the mountain side until half a mile ot track 1ms been swept away or covered wiih debris. PLEASANT GROVE Monday mornings frost, ah hough bad, was not as had as first reported, those engaged in tlie wholesaling of produce say. The damage was done to tlie tomato crop, as many of the freshly planted plants were frozen. However, the canning companies are making every effort to replace all frozen plants. Early vegetables, currants and some strawberries were fiozen. RICHFIELD Supervisor C. A. Mattson and J. P. Martin of Ogden, road engineer of the forest service, have just completed an inspection of the roads of Fish lake national forest. They reported most of the roads to be in good shape. Construction of the Salma Fish lake road was started recently. Mr. Martin will return to Ogden soon and his report will recommend necessary Improvements. PROVO Work .n the paving of three-tenthof a mile of state and county road from the north city limits to Eleventh North street? was begun recently. The county and state will pay the costs jointly. The contract let to Christensen, Jacob and Gardner of Salt Lake, who are just finishing another contract in the city. ith the completion of this road there will be two paved roads leading into .b-1- MRS. IINDLERHII COLONEL AND foi ml, not by j were hut by a steamer cat tain who discovered the monoyniooners aboard I. indys express cruiser Mouetfe when he bellied moor the craft at a pier at lilock Island. The Mouette was purchased by the eolonei just before his wedding, and he nnd his bride hoarded it at a lonely spot on the Long Island shore. Tuesday the little craft put to sea again, apparently headed for the Maine coast, and again I.lndy dodged the press and camera men by going uround Cape Cod Instead of through the canal. Newspaper re ports said a piece of canvas was draped over the stern of the Mouette, hiding Its name, and coast guards In Iio.stun declared the colonel for this reason was incurring the danger of being tired on by their patrol boats. Stupendous Increase in National Wealth Con- stitutes Peril to State By CHARLES E. HOUSE, Washington Banker. hard-boile- Americans are living in the golden age of finance. Oar enmmou-wealtnnd dominating influence of tlie present time may tend to weaken the sturdy citizenship of our forefathers and become a peril to the state. Our plain living in Colonial days is rapidly being superseded Our background was adver-itv- ; our futurt by waste and extravagance. is prosperity. Let us never, then fore, overlook our priceless heritage which has been handed down to us through the great sacrilhe? of tho-- t h who preceded U. We are now emhaiked upon a mvv period of over-ea- s expansion which, we believe, will he for the funlier development of our foreign trade and a better understanding with our neighbors. I11 our rapidly expanding trade relations, may our mcrihant mu rine hack from foreign shores not only the gold of Opliir, hut YTIILE the Shriners were gutlierbring lug I11 Los Angeles for their anthose more important things in life, namely, good will, a good name and nua! meeting and joy test, t lie Supreme a reputation of fair dealing with our neighbors hejotiJ the Atlantic and court in Washington handed down an Pacific. 0 lulon Halt gives the negro organization known as the Ancient Egyptian Today, our great financial system rests upon a solid rock of gold Arabic Older of Nobles of the Mystic Federal Reserve system, which was enacted into law in 1D13, gradu The Shrine the rigid to continue the use o of its name and Insignia. White 'ally brought together gold reserves in our country in such vast amounts shriners in Texas had objected to the that we have been able to more thoroughly stabilize the gold reserve activities of the negro organization been than eould done have under our old system. possibly nnd to Its insignia. They won In the This of Ynn lower courts. Justice Devanter foreign stabilizing gold can also be found in the leading In delivering the opinion, to which no banking institutions of the world. We have no other bads to dissent was announced, said the white our great system of credits than the gold plan, which is now universal'v shriners by their failure to object used. By reason of this enormous gold basis, our gre.it industrial and within a reasonable time laid lost their right to act. financial corporations have shown enormous growth. PORTERS and nuuds in tin employ company have won their three years struggle for higher i pay, having been given a wage ease of $5 a month and various Improvements In winking conditions. Tlie agreement was roa lied In a con ference between offnials of the com puny and 21 elected representatives of tlie 12, (XX) porters and maids. The in-c- brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters was Ignored by tlie lompany. I.ig building operations in Chicegi were held up for several days by a strike of the bridge and structural iron workers. In which tlie arcliitec turn! Iron workers Joined. Tlie formei demanded a wage scale of $13 a day an increase of $t. This was soon agreed to by the Steel Erectors assn elation, but tlie Iron league held out longer. of Italians who livee of Mt. Vesuvius vverr driven from their homes when that volcano Indulged in another big erup tlon and poured rivers of lava down its sides Tlie property damage was Immense but Hie loss of life was kept to a minimum by tlie precautionary Tourist steps of tlie authorities. were prohibited from approaching the danger zone. Thousands tiie Vatican and tlie last week ex changed ratifications of tlie Luteran pact, tlie relations between Pius XI and Premier Mussolini ure not cordial. The dtiee addressed tlie parliament recently on tlie treaty, and the pope, In a letter to Cardinal Husparrl, eharactenz.es tlie dictators specifies as "heretical, modernistic, ponderously erudite hut full of errors and inTin letter indicates that exact." there may lie a long period of disputes over details and expresses tlie church's resentment of the fact that tlie states Mils giving effect to the Luteran treaty are not conceived in tlie same spirit ns that pact. TilOUnil hrandon judaii has re as ambassador to Culm ; and Dr. Hubert Work lias resigned ns chairman of the Republican na tiomil committee. There were rumors that Work thought he had been ig nored by tlie Hoover administration but the correspondence between him nnd tlie President contained no hint of this. Nolle Entry of Churches Into the Field of Practical Politics Unfortunate By DR. CALEB R. STETSON, New York (Episcopal). Church and state should be absolutely independent of each othei There seem to be indications, however, that ohim lies and combination' of churches have become active of late years in bringing pressure tr bear upon our legislative bodies to enact legislature of various kinds. The motive behind such action is a good motive. It is the dedre to re form society, and to bring about hotter social conditions more spcodilv than these objects could he accomplished by the slow and tedious process of teaching and training the individual. In my opinion, this entering of the churches into the field of prac tical politics is unfortunate and it will in time react unfavorably to the churches of all denominations. Let the church as a church keep out of politics. The place of the clergy is not in the lobbies of congress, nor i it their business to stir up party strife or to further party interests. We believe in a free church in a free state, not in a state coerced and governed by the church. We, as a church, have a right to express our mind about policies and customs, virtues as well a vices. It is quite another matter foi the church or for its representatives to attempt to dictate tlie course mv ernments should pursue or to compel tlie passage of laws by poiitie.il pressure. Alarming Indications That the Home Is Losing Its Hold on Youth By WILLIAM J. ELLIS, New Jersey State Official. vauii seventeen tears oh! showed that as the adolescent grows oldet hi fondness for home life decreases. These children were why they liked or disliked their homes as a pla.e to spend then leisure time. It was found that TO per cent of the eleven-- j ear-ol- d girls preferred their homes nnd that GO per cent of the hojs of the same nsre expressed similar opinions. From eleven to seventeen years of age, however, the percentage decreased 5 per cent for each year of those who ii th. priuried homes as a place in whieh to spend leisure time The survey showed that it was not outside interests wliiih p ii.urdv drew Hie youth away from the homo, nor vv.is the rea-o- n laid to smh superficial causes ns the type of home or furni-hinghut rested ilmo-- t entirely upon the predominating spirit of the home. Children inclined to stay nv.ay from home a much as V pos-i- ! inclined to criticize their parents f.r the latter' lack of interest in the home. ' 11 tiiH U s, n!-- ,, e s s Trovo. COALVILLE The summit county commissioners at their June meeting recently voted to appropriate $500 to be matched by a similar amount by the state for eradication of noxious weeds. From the report submttod by County Agent David Sharp, Jr., 'from forty to sixty acres in the county are Invested wiih Nieeds and an attempt will be made to wipe them all out. It is anticipated that next years budget will provide for the continuation of this work. VERNAL More than 223,000 pounds of I intah county farm bureau wool Etoied at a warehouse here Is being moved bv trucks to Craig, Colo., for shipment to the main line sf the I). & R. G. W. over the Moffat railway. Trucks are operating day nnd night, as the highway to Craig is m good coniTTiion at rresont. This wool sold contract to be delivered on the c; of the mam lin at a specified rioil. Five trucks are engaged transporting tiie wool to Crag, distance of 135 miles from Vernal. UTAH The genual condition reeds icpcrted goo in the L letui of tlie stale road commission leas d meetly. Mountain pasu s mummy ii s, d are Lognn-Gjidu- i C. tlah |