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Show THE PAYSON rmmNTCLE. PAYSOX. UTAH News Review of Current Events the World Over Intermountain News Briefly Told for Buy Reader RELIEF CASH ARRIVES MEN ARK KMMXIIKI) TTY4 OK PRUNES Wisconsin Republicans Deal Blow to the La Follette -Regime Farmers Strike Takes iSew Turn SKK LARGE TURKEY ( KOI $200,000 i'KOGRVM BEGUN SALT LA K K CITY, T T.-- Cerrnanv Out of Disarmament Parley. Rult Lake County's first $70,000 Finame corporation cash for direct relief baa been received by the comity treasurer. was for $50, KK). BOISE, IDA. Increased work on highways, large farm employment and teller Industries gave work to Many thousands of men In Idaho during Si pteruhi r. A million dollars Worth of highway work was started during (he Month. GRACE, IDA, The local Phenix-Kra- ft Cheese company plant, one of 17 oiMTatcd In Idaho, has a present daily output of 1700 pounds of cheese. BF1IL, IDA.- - The annual prune crop harvest Is In progress near here. Approximately 45 tons will he harvesttsl from the 120 acres In this district. The licking crews range up to 00 or more. TOOELE, FT. The Tooele county tax levy of the schools, county and state, will show a reduction of five mills over last year, while Tooele City will be 1.1 mills lower. SALT LAKE CITY, I T. Transactions of the state road commission Involving expenditures of $200-00In employment relief work to be started Immediately have been accomplished at recent meetings. LOGAN, IT. The city board of education at a pkcUiI meeting decided to pay the city school teachers on the first of each calendar month Instead of the first of each school month. Enrollment Is larger In the city schools than lust year. TWIN FALLS, IDA.-T- he sugar beet crop In t!s county district Is maturing rapidly with prospect of making one of the heav0 Twin-Jerom- e iest yields ever obtained In this section. 75 men are now employed In the factory wllh about 25 other In the office nnd on related work. IT. Consolidation of PROVO, the Hank of American Fork and the Ieoplcs Slate Hank of American Fork, after the latter Institution Is reopened Is one of the conditions contained In the resolution of the Reconstruction Finance corporation authorizing a loan of $53,000 to ahl the reoiHUiittg plnn. FT. Chairman of the OGDEN, First ward employment committee reports there is more work available In the ward than there are men to handle It. The committee has lieen directing several agricultural projects during the summer and these are now ready for hnr-- j vest. Workers are being paid in produce. IlOCK SPRINGS, WYO. Deals sale of 100,000 Involving the spring feeder grade lamb at 4 25 cents a pound were closed recently. The animals are for October delivery, with 15,000 to be shipped October 15 to central Nebraska, while 83,000 will be fed at Fort Collins and other northern Colorado feed grounds. BEAVER, IT. Most of the excavation work of the huge storage potato cellar at Milford has been accomplished and a well hns lieen drilled and the wall work liegun. Seven carloads of lumber consisting of 135,0(10 foot, ota carload of cement and ninny hundred tons of traw are being delivered at the pit to le used In construct ion. SALT LAKE CITY, IT. Members of the Northwestern Turkey association will hold Growers their annual fall meeting In Salt Lake City. The growers organisation consists of 12.000 memtiers and represents one of the largest turkey pools In the west. Directors and delegates from Utah, Id a ins Montana, Washington, Oregon, Wyoming, Nevada and Colorado will lie present. Plans will be made for the fall marketing of turkeys and Information will lie given as to the size and condition of the crop this year. BINGHAM. UT. llonsehold furnishings for 49 of the 05 families mnde homeless by the recent Highland Boy fire were shipped from Balt Lake to Bingham. The supplies had been purchased In Salt Lake under the direction of the County Commission with the cooperation of the Highland Boy fire refugees committee. SALT LAKE CITY. FT. The state Is making every effort to see that apples which have been sprayed with lend arsenate are properly washed nnd cleaned of spray residue before they are shipped la interstate commerce. KANOSII. IT. A new highway front Kanosh to Balters canyon is under construction, which will cut out all turns including two sharp tnrns In the town ef K.unv-h- . The work Is being done mostly by Millard county men and toams. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ONE of the most hotly contested primaries that Wisconsin ever has the conservative ItcpuhUrnns had, dealt the La Follette dynasty a severe blow. Philip Ui Fol lette. brother of the senator, was a candi date for renondnntlon a governor, hut was soundly beaten by J. Holder, Walter former governor, whom La Follette defeated two years ago. Many of the counties Philip earned then turned him down this time, arid he ran tie hind In both agrlrul tural and Industrial sections of the state. Emphasizing their change of heart, the Republican electors also voted for the retirement of Fnited States Senator John J. Blaine, one of the staunchest of the progressives In the upper house. He was beaten by John B. Chappie, a young editor of Ashland who made a tierce campaign Incomplete returns Indicated the en tire conservative state ticket had been carried to victory by Kohler and IN Chappie. a K otiler, wealthy manufacturer a hose home and large factories are In a village that bears his name, never held public oflice until he was Ills supvlected governor In 102S porters tills year were known as hatchet men for their slogan was "Cut Costs With Kohler. arid the high cost of state government and high taxes were the Issues emphasized. Kohler culled for a $16,000,000 reduction In taxes, and set forth ns h!s loctrine that factories mean Jobs, and that to build up private incomes by keeping the taxing system from chas Ing Industries out of the state Is more fundamental than to Increase income .axes. These arguments proved especially effective with the factory voters Milwaukee county, Racine and other Industrial regions. This was the first time that a La Follette had been voted down s'oee 1S92, when the late Senator Robert M. La Follette was boater In a congressional race. An Intel estlng feature of this years was the campaign presence of Rurton K Wheeler, Democrat! Mon from senator tana, who made speeches trying to persuade the Democrats of Wisconsin to go Into the Republican primary and vote for Blaine and La Follette. The state Democratic lenders hotly resented Wheelers nnd evidently It had little If any In rc-tlo- n effect. Kohler's majority was In the neighborhood of 1O0.0O0. Chappie had a smaller majority about 20,000 for the vote for Blaine was heavy In the industrial centers. The Democrats at this writing appear to haw nominated Mayor A. G. Schmedeinan of Madison for governor over Leo P. Fox and William R. Rubin. For senator F. Ryan Duffy of Fond du Lac was unopposed. Republican national Sanders announced chair- - that President Hoover's first campaign speech would be mnde In Des Moines. Rnva, on October 4. He will make no Addresses on the Journey from Wash Ington and back. In the heart of the Agricultural region, whore the farmers have been on strike ngalnst low prices, Mr. Hoover Intends to expatiate on his program for relief of the farm er In reply to the recent address by It's rival. Frankl'n D. Roosevelt. The ipecch In Des Moines will be broad rust over at nationwide radio hookup farmers of the THOSE entered on a new Middle West phase of heir "holiday" strike which promises to be more effective than the movement that aimed to keep all farm produce from the cities and was marred ty frequent violent deeds. The plan now evolved by their lenders contem plates the withholding from market of All grain and other non perishable products, hut the farmers are forbid Jon to picket the hlghwnys or block them In any way. Nearly two mil (Ion farmers were asked to Join In this uonselling movement. Agriculturists In Minnesota. North Dnkota. Oklahoma. Nebraska Hnd Iowa, the "strike'' leaders said, had then assurnnees they would pnrtici pate. They added that farmers In Ohio. Wisconsin. South Dakota, Kanins and Illinois had "shown interest" In the movement. QEVERAL Important meetings were held in Washington during the week, among them being those of the National Municipal lougue and the national conference on government Addressing the former. Silas H. straw n. former chairman of the United Oates Chamber of Commerce, declared kit laves must bo reduced because pc ration has reached the end of Its financial rope. In the sixteen years from 1913 to 1929. he said, tne cost of all government Increased by 400 per cent, while at the same time the national Income had Increased by only In 1930, he said. In 118 per cent. come taxes amounted to $2,111,000,000 In 1931 they dropped to $1,800,000,000 and in 1932 they hit a new low of $1 0.77, 0 o.fK'O. Commenting on the "soak the rich" uoted in congress at the last session Mr. Straw n declared It hopelessly fallacious and that there are few rich left to "souk" and because those who still retain a part of their fortunes will Inve-.- t In tax exempt securities thereby defeating the very purpose of tax legislation aimed at the wealthy class To the conference on government Gordon 1. Hostetler, director of the Chicago Employers association, said that the racket, originally thought of as a temporary form of graft or extortion, has grown through alliances of business groups, union heads, politicians, and criminals until It annually costs the nation an incalculable sum. In Chicago alone, said .Mr. Hostetter, racketeering costs more than $145,000.-OU- ) a year. Add to this the amount siient by the city to deal with racketeering. he said, and the total cost of Chicagos rackets equals the annual cost of the municipal government. policy 17 HEN the disarmament confer- Its sittings In Geneva the Germans were not In offi xv enee resumed cial attendance because their demand for equality of armament had been rejected by France. But they found they were facing also the united opposition of Great Britain and the United States, If not other of the great powers. The British foreign office memorandum said the German demand was at least untimely, since "attention and energy should tie directed to economic rehabilitation of the world, and that anyhow Germany was not entitled to abrogate the art of the treaty of Versailles that .i.its tier armament even If the other should fall to disarm or reduce their armaments. Tits view of the question apparently was pleasing to the United States government, and Ambassador Walter E. Edge and Senator David A. Reed of Iennsylvania. at a luncheon given by M. Herriot In Baris, told the premier that was the view of the American people. Their government, they said, stands for progressive disarmament and the sanctity of treaties. M. Herriot laid before the foreign affairs commission of the chamber of deputies a full statement of his policy In this matter and defended it earnestly. He gave the commission certain details which had come Into his possession regarding the alleged illicit manufacture of arms In Germany. The German press Insisted that their government must not weaken, asserting that Great Britain hnd deceived Germany and that the British note treated Germany In Intolerable fashion. Some papers declared Germany must withdraw from the League of Nations. after gandiit. a of fruit and milk, began his protest fast, which he said he would keep up until he died of Mahatma TALES OF THE CHIEFS RED CLOUD hostilimaking offers to cease but apparnegotiations, ties pend.ug can trust the ently neither feels It other to act In good faith. Meanwhile their border the fighting between forces, especially at Fort Boqueron, was continued, the Paraguayans claiming the udvaiitage. unless the British government altered the terms of Its settlement of the communal election The mahat problem. urn was still In Yer avda Jail at 1oona The government said he was free to leave the prison, but he re fused to go out of unless he were forcibly removed. starvation JAMES J. DAVIS of viiiim lv ania went on trial in New York on t'vo federal Indictments charging conspiracy, the prosecution alleging he was responsible for two lotteries totaling $3,000,000 conducted by the Loyal of Moose, of , Order senator Is the which ; QENATOR O I ? j Ti,e director general. It was charged that Davis personally prof- ited from these lotteries. which were ostenfor charitable sibly Assistant purposes. Fnited States Attortold ney Treadwell the Jury that checks totaling $1(2,-31from the proceeds of the drives went to pay off a note which was Mr. Davis personal obligation, to his personal checking account, to a corporation controlled by him, and to an account from which he drew the profits of the organization department of the 0 Moose. In 1931 the lottery was more discreetly handled, Mr. Treadwell continued, and the drawing took place on finances. 1IKEE California citizens have undertaken to block the loan of by the Reconstruction Finance corporation for the construction of an aqueduct from Boulder Dam to Los The loan has been authoriAngeles. zed by the corporation, but the suit filed In the District of Columbia Supreme court seeks to enjoin It, attacking the legality of the decision by which the corporation proposes to purchase two $20,000,000 lots of the worth of water district bonds. The corporation also heard opposition to the Los Angeles application for a loan of $32,000.(XX) for the construction of a power line from Boulder Dam to the coast, and to the proposed loan of ?10,0OG.(K)0 for a bridge across Chesapeake bay on the ground that this would mean the use of federal funds to finance a project to compete with going privately owned ferry lines. $220,-000.00- 0 lost one of its most the death In le A none, l'm ilnrin, q 0B'T Xiard It Mho r; h, Tut ,rtfl5h thought, upon And Lev, Thj Ntighbor A. Thj PATRONIZE HOME of Dr. Frank Billings of Chicago at the age of seventy-eigh- t years. His name Is linked with the history of medicine in this country and he had headed killed. Red Cloud had won I There was nothing to do but come to terms, which the powerful chief named: the limits of the Sioux country must be defined; the posts must he abandoned, and the road also; the garrisons must be withdrawn. Red Cloud declined even to appear until the soldiers had gone, when he signed the treaty November G, 1808. This game of red against whhe had taken more than two years to nearly every prominent organization of his profession. He was responsible for the founding of numerous hospital clinics and research institutes nnd trained many great doctors, and himself was rated as one of the best diagnosticians and physicians in the world pla.v. Speaker John N. Garner, DemocratOnce committed to peace. Red Cloud ic candidate for the Vice Presidency, lived np to his promises. He was still was called to tiis home in Detroit, Texnot in favor of civilization, but his as, by the illness of his aged mother, resistance to It was not backed by and a few days later she passed away. force. On account of his Mrs. Garner was eighty-onyears old it was thought by many and was born and spent her entire life prejudices, that he secretly favored the uprising in northeastern Texas. of 1876, but It is certain that he did not aid the hostile Sioux, for Red E ERA I. thousand feeble old men, Cloud was a man of his word, and remnants of the Grand Army of had sworn friendship to the whites. the Republic, gathered for their sixty-sixt- A 'so, in a later outbreak, his neutral annual encampment in Spring-field- , attitude brought hint in danger from 111., the city In which the organhis own race, who resented his loywas horn. They had their ization to the United States. But a man usual busines-- sessions; but much of alty who had counted SO coups In the prime their time was spent In visiting the of his life, did not fear threats. tomb of Lincoln, their adored war comlie was an old man now, aud his and other mander, places connected eyesight was failing. He knew that with the life of the martyred Presithe venomous outbreaks of the Sioux dent, and in attending services In the were hut prolonging trouble, and that old prison (amp Butler, now a nationthe sooner they submitted to their al ceineterv. fate, the better. This, too, was the counsel of the other old men to the Min-- rs of America,' warriors, but the pugnacious young PROGRESSIVE that Is tight-- fighters held out ns long as they could. ing the wage settlement in Illinois efCol. Charles V. Taylor tells the fected with the old union, was not story of Red Clouds visit to him at having much success In keeping the this time. The old chief still had powworkers from returning to the pits, er over his people, and he kept them In Taylorville the Insurgents were from Joining In the fight, while he did blamed for two bombings, one of which all he could to terminate It. One partly wrecked a newspaper plant, cold, wet night, he eluded his tribesTwo companies of state troops were men and came to Colonel Taylor's sent there aud restored order. In camp. Here he discussed the situasome places the mine operators did tion and told his belief that a surrenyield to the demands of the new union der was Imminent. This proved to be for pay higher than the adopted scale. true, and the hostile Sioux gave up and came to the agency shortly after-wari- '. "M11CAGO is jubilant, for the Cubs The tnan who had outwitted are now the champion team of the General Carringtons troops more than National league. 'Hie opening of the 20 jears previously, knew that the outworld's series with the New York come of this war would be different. who won the American Yankees, lie died December lrt. 1909. at the league pennant, was set for Septemage of eighty seven. Mooney declares ber 28 In New York; the games In that he was "probably the most famous and powerful chief in the history Chicago will begin the following of the tribe." C 1931 Wiiurs Newspaper Unlea. ( 1932, W&stern Newpapw Union.) well-know- e gJ'j. I.NDpg Old New York Landmark The Crystal palace in Net V, city was located in Bryant which occup.es a tract o fr J to six acres m the west half tract extending from Fort'eh streets on d Forty-secon- nue. It was opened in Sixth, 1853 destroyed by fire in 1S58. , In Trade UTAH WOOtEK Kills for blankets Your d the steamship Priscilla, outside the twelve mile limit, after which all records were thrown overboard. Counsel for the defense contended all the transactions were Innocent. government witnesses InEarly cluded various officials of the Moose called to prove the domination of Davis In the order and the claim that he was cognizant of everything that was done In connection with ltf AMERICA (A coup Is a deed of Eighty coups atbravery in battle, and often was tended by great risk.) It certainly was no onimort Indian warrior who counted so This was a many. self made man, and me who made a good job of it. He rose to hieftalnship through Ids ability as a statesman; he led his people in battle because of his generalship. The scarlet blankets of his warriors covered the hillsides like a cloud and from this fact he gained the name we know him by Red Cloud. Such a man could not be lightly brushed aside when he had business on foot, as the white men discovered. Buffalo range was growing scarce, aud the Oglalas had but one really good hunting ground remaining. Through this territory it was proposed to build a railroad from Ft. Laramie, Wyo., to the gold lands in Montana, by way of Bovviler river. Red Cloud opposed this railroad. Travel through the buffalo range would destroy Its value and work hardship on the tribe. The Oglala agreed with their chief, and he made ready to act. As the first move, the government sent out a small detachment of troops to start construction work. The Oglala, strengthened by some Cheyenne warriors, stopped then, and kept them under surveillance so that they could not continue. After several weeks, Inhowever, the young, to their capharm dians threatened tives, and Red Cloud let them proceed. This was move number two. The governments turn was taken by commissioners, who came to the Oglala with requests that they allow the road to be built. Red Cloud would not attend the council, but forbade his people to negotiate. It was necessary for the government to make a stronger move. Another council was called. Red Cloud was there, this time, and spoke against endangering the hunting grounds. While he was speaking, however, a large number of troops came up, saying that they had been ordered to open the way to Montana. At this, the Oglala chief withdrew his people from the council, defiant. It looked as if the soldiers had won the game. Work v.as started and forts were built. 1rotests from the Indians fell on deaf ears. It was Red Cloud's time to move if he could and he decided to try an effective one. Two thousand warriors surrounded the force at Fort Kearny. They constantly harassed the besieged men, who did not even dare to go out for meat, though game was plentiful and near. A load of hay for the horses in the fort must lie taken from the prairie under escort. No wagon could hiss over the read, and work was completely stopped. Two severe bnttles took place, also, in one of which an entire detachment of SI men was I been Recim-Btructi- IDA. Another hi? GOODING, turkey crop la coming on. Gooding Wendell section, particularly, Las flocks ranging up to li.'idO birds. LOGAN, TT. Kieht thousand letter containing 19,12 tax noticed on property In Cache county have been Mailed. The smallest notice going out was for 11 cents and the largest are IUST as Bolivia and Paraguay Gran Chaco, the over squabbling are on the so Colombia and Bern of the over possession war of verge and Leticia of the Amazon river port ceded by some surrounding territory The Bo1922. in to lera Colombia to acrefused has gota government for settleproposal Peruvian a cept the peoment of the controversy, and ore seemingly nations tmth of ple rulslng big eager for war and are armaments. funds for the purchase of Both Bolivia and Paraguay have J Salt Lake City, I'ui f g.. Eeltt V. WSend Wool Speak for Yourself! Doctor says juries dont any more than a rabbit what ists a se talking about. And ably if the bare facts were rev the alienists arent exactly it on themselves. Colo (Ohio) State Journal. THIS WEEKS PRIZE I oed To ta ko for mies tnd get liuno my STORI toilet of need Tt'e money didnt mailer much And neither did the speed. In fact I never I slepred to think Of quality and coht, most sirrp4y bought arythinj My money to exhaust. But noJT the times are d ffernt We should giAe thanks for that For now were being taught te b The power bemath the hat. We find that Intermountain Goods Can amply nut b beat A'-'money talks When bnyinf thee Jost try them! Theyre a treat! MRS. LOUGEN'E ANDERSEN, Wilder, Salt La1 e IM City. Utah Eites of Water Snakes Snakes do bren.he under "Feti and the biological survey says that it is possible for a swimming seal to strike a swimming nrn. It h said that the cottonmouth enaia strikes in the water. There an striki species of sea snakes that only xvhen in the water. ASK APEE AN FOR YOUR DRUCC1ST INTERMOUNTAIN PKODtCT Sailors Holiday The nautical phrase, The aSunday means thursday. fternoon of this day is devoted the making and mending of cwW and is practically a holit-ajthe ships company can occtp; themselves as they plca-- rope-y- i h s friends So many and well wishers called at the jail that the aged lender was made 111 from excitement, Hnd thereafter visitors were excluded for the present. He received hundreds of telegrams nnd letters begging him not to under take the death fast To correspondents the mahatma said he counted tls life as of no consequence, adding: "Like the prophet of Islam nnd like Jesus. I, on a humbler scale, have tin dertuheo a tussle for justice, as my fast continues my human cry will rise to the heavens of God Almighty. My fast is not for sympathy. After the first few days the desire for food will vanish nnd 1 shall begin to brood. All my Interest will be with drawu from externals, and shall be cotne one with the cause. "Be assured, however, that I shall make a superhuman effort to retain my grip on life. I am anxious as anybody to continue to live. There Is nothing like water for prolonging life nnd 1 shall partake of it whenever I require It, and hope to carry on until the Hindu conscience awakens." 1 "GRAINS OF G3LE CEKE.lL THE M HOLE WHEAT Better" Taste Makes Cream Western Kzds For Western Ask Yccr Grocer Cubas Huge Theatre of Built in 1837 at a cost thea.re 000, the National is reported to be the thirv ho in the world, with it shoe tiers of boxes die above the other around t p. 1 Sat-urda- , gasolene Packed With Pw In a Nutshell eosinoi Courage is the virtues; $5.00 t.ou Id Goods" the seif-conte- - r- t - TT'C'1 V pr' f roor .tor in , ' t lermoun'atn Pioj.d't-.A Ho, 15(3. SGt ln Cj') 0(J tors ppwill re- - I' ,t. |