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Show jU'Mi, XSgJiAWMSJTV toli. wV.KV?-"- l iWS 0 w THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON, UTAH News Review of Current Events the World Over President Hoover Speaks to Farmers Roosevelt and Smith Bury the Hatchet IiimiII Druthers Indicted Japan Ignores Alton Report. II y EDWAHD W. (ier Chinese seven Ignty. 'J lie details of Us status ate to tie agreed upon at an advisory slno Japanese confer erne followin' tin' rernmniend, items of Ihe league ami with the league coiim ,1 s.rnng as ai inter It holds up practically to ridicule The Mukden ineident of September IS, over width Japan Jumped off to the occupation of Manchuria, It In dilutes the whole thing was planned Rut even in Japan," says ihe re port In a tart pas, age, appropriate means must he found for attainment of every end" mu! Dihiioi r.ils encimrageuicnt great from developments of the week, mid Beeinlrigiy with t ho heat of reason. The former hailed BOTH Republicans with glee the reception given warm Iros-iden-t Hoover in lnwa Before etd hiiM.iMio thousands the Chief Executive delivered Des Moines his in liis first speech campaign for re election, addressing especially to (lie corn and ho" raisers who have been .show lli! such decided dis in him-sel- content Mint their tduft to the f Samuel lie ut Martin Ignored the request of States Attorney Swanson in (in eago Hint they return from France and Canada, respectively, to assist In the untangling of the affairs of the numerous corporations with which they had been connected Mr. Swan son became Indignant and promptly presented ills cases against thorn to the gram Jury, Within a few days that tiody returned tiiree Indictments Memo American farm products. Both Mr. Hoover and Mrs. Hoover, who accompanied him on the trip, are natives of lowu, and the pimple of the state gave them a cordial welcome. The President was so encouraged that on the wuy back to Washhe made hack ington platform speeches in ten towns in Indiana. Ohio and Pennsylvania. Democracys glee w as caused by Hie reconciliation between Franklin I). Roosevelt, Its Presidential candidate, and A1 Smith, who had been holding rather aloof in Ihe campaign The hatchet was burled in the New York state Democratic convention where both Roosevelt and Smith were lighting to bring about the nomination of Herbert 11. Lehman for governor against the stubborn opposition of Tammany Hull lenders, doing to the platform to place Lehman in nomination, Smith grasped the hand of Ids old friend with a smiling Hello, Frank," and the governor responded with cordiality ns the cameras of the press photogrnphers clicked madly and the ciowd yelled approval. Roosevelt said: "A I, this Is from the heart. And A1 replied: Frank, that goes with me, too. Tammany Hull wus utterly defeated and Lehman was nominated, with W. M. Rray of Ftica for lieutenant Senator Robert F. Wag governor. ner wus nceorded a renmninalion. The Republican New York convention noininnted Col. William J. ("Wild Hill") Ihinovan for governor; F. Tru bee Davison, assistant secretary of war, for lieutenant governor, and George Z. Medalie for United States senator. At the notification cereDonovan declared monies Colonel himself In favor of repeal of the Eighteenth amendment. iisiili. former pnie brother cruts was freely predicted dared the program offered He de by Ins rival would mean ruin to American agriculture and laid down one of til own that Inducted the maintenance of high protective turllTs on farm products, the amelioration of the farm mortgage slioation uud the use of annual payments on the foreign debt to advance foreign markets for PICKARD charging embezzlement, larceny by bailee and larceny. Capiases for the arrest of the hrottiers were Issued and steps to bring about their extra dltion were taken. The first indictment names Martin Instill alone. It charges that he nb stracted by means of embezzlement, larceny, larceny as bailee $277,720 from the treasury of the Middle West Utilities company and used t ,e money to protect tils personal brokerage accounts. The second indictment charges Samuel Instill and Martin 'risull Jointly with using $00,000 of the funds of the Middle West Utilities company to pro tort brokerage accounts carried in the name of Washington Flexner. prosl dent of tiie Lincoln Printing company The third Indictment names the brothers Jointly on a charge of abfrom the treasury stracting of the Mississippi Vn'loy Utilities In vestment company for the s.me pur $10-122- pose. Samuel Instill In Paris and M n t in Canada both refused to comment on the news from Chicago. In DRESIDENT DE VALERA of the Irish Free State has brought about the dismissal of James AlcNeil! as governor general, and it is reported In Dublin that he will not nominate a sue cessor, either taking Hie position himself or rutting tiie Fr ' State entirely away from the British common-veallJ When hi deMcNeill hould go thi British government had no rided that ilternntive to acred mg to the demand Mr. De Valera on ids way home from conferred with British cabinet members in London and it was agreed economic war, that the Angto-lristhat started over the withholding of the land annuities due tiie British government. should be settled by direct negotiation. This was a victory for Hie Free State, for the British had previously Insisted the dispute should be arbitrated by an empire tribunal Geneva f KRKLY a diary of a fortnights journey through Manchuria" was the way Minister of War Sadao Arnkt characterized the report of the I.ytton commission to the League of Na tions when the Jap anese cabinet met to consider it Other ministers agreed that It was unworthy of Japans serious ntten tion, and the cabinet then made this curt announcement : The government has decided that the report does Secy Stimson Lytton not constitute cause to alter its Manchurian policy. Various responsible leaders In Ja pan gave notice that their country would continue its domination of Manchukuo. and the world wonders Just what the league of Nations can and will do about It. The Japanese war otllce Issued a statement declaring that If the league acts In the spirit of the Lytton report. Japan will have no alternative hut to withdraw from the league and oppose Its action with the firmest determination. France has shown decided sympathy with Japan In the controversy and Great Britain has been rather lukewarm In her friendship for China. The United States, though not In tiie league. Is a most Important factor in the affair, and Japan Insists that Secretary of State Stimson has again displayed his animosity toward Japan and Is a menace to the good relations between Japan and America. This is because Mr. Stimson In an address Define the Philadelphia Union League club said President Hoover had formulated a successful policy of nonrecognition for territorial gains made by force of arms, and added that the open door pnliey was neecssary to preserve Chinas territorial and idministrative Integrity. Tiie Lyttor report, insisting less on the responsibility for past actions than on tiie necessity for finding means to prevent their repetition. rails for the establishment of an autonManchuria on omous demilitarized li GREA'l the disarmament deadlock caused by Germanys withdrawal from tiie Geneva conference when her de nuind for armament equality was re fused. The British ambassador to Ber n invited Hie German government to send repi esentatives to a ionr power conference in London to consider the German demand and to pave Hie way for Germanys return to the confer enee. Tiie other three powers would be France, Great Britain and Italy and tiie United States vould he in vited to send an observer. The Ger man reply was that It wood be use less to hold the meeting unless Ger many were first given certain guar antees hat her demand for enalitv would be really fulfilled. Norman Davis, acting chief of the American disarmament delegation, went to London to talk ihoui fleet reductions proposed by President lino-ver- . On Hie way from Geneva he stopped 'n Paris to sound i the French on the Franco Italian obstacle to making the London treaty a five power pact 11 i was admitted to a seat as a sovereign member of the League of Nations, the first coiintr" in the Arabian world to reach that status, and King Feisal is now ,m entirely independent monarch Great Britain resigned her mandate over Iraq nnd was highly prulseo tor lior generosity by nil speakers n the league ns seinld.v. there was an intimation that France should follow thi exam pie In regard to Svria, hut the rench nf Geneva wer noncommittal Iraq wns formed after the Worn war out of the former Turk sh provinces of Bagdad. Mosul and ILsra irDin Its boundaries are vast oil fields and the population Is nearly three millions. I RAQ I by their long summer RESTED the venerable members f - Briefly French Morocco News Intermountain of the United States Supreme court resumed their labors and one of the hrst matters to come before them was of great importance to all stutes along the Great Cakes, Including New York. Attorney Heneial Gilbert Rettmun of Ohio, acting on behalf of Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan, presented an application for the appointment of a receiver, commissioner or United Slates marshal to run the Chicago sanitary district and carry out and make effective the decree entered by the court In April, 10,20. restricting the w hei i aw al of water from Lake Michigan by the drainage canal J lie pui pose is to force Chicago to hasten the building of sewage disposal plants ami thus reduce the diversion of water. Instead of Ihe eight years allowed for building Hie works before Ihe diversion is cut to 1,500 feet ill 1028 it will require 27 years at the present rate ot construction, the apdeclared. plicants hnc-- Told for Busy Readers CITIES n.AV WORK. LIST DEER HI NTEItS. LOW ETC K TES ASKEI). CREWS BUTTLE BEETLE. 20 MILLION FOR RELIEF. OGDEN, FT. Three crews, comprising IOO men, are walking on the Wisiteh national forest, in a camHie mountain pine paign ag.iiist beetle. SALT LAKE (TTY, FT. Tax p.mmnts for September snowed a gam over remittances of the corresponding month a year ago. WElMTt, IDA Forest fires in the Pacific Northwest have caused a two million dollar loss in the pat few weeks. IDAHO FALLS. IDA- .- Iteo Edgar Elliott, 10, ditd here of of tiie brain, suffered when he was thrown from a horse he was riding. S ALT LAKE PITY, FT - Twenty million dollars will la available for oon-(iisi- Down in Medicine I.odge, Kansas, was an interesting three-dacel'bration In commemoration of the signing of a treaty in October, isti7. 'I he pact was between the United State's and the Kiowa, Comanche, and Apache Cheyenne. Arapahoe tribe's, and It eniled bloody warfare and permitted the unmolested of railroads and wagon roads to tiie Pacific coast, in return the Indians were allotted reservations on tiie'li they have made their homes ever since. y agricultural relief in Flab, Nevada, Ari'ona arid California, according to tiie president of Hi eleventh district of tin agrh ultntal credit corporation. BOISE, IDA. It i reported by the I nifed States forest service department, that allotments of federal funds to states for cooperative distribution and growing of finest planting stock to farmers, under the Clarke MeXarv act, amount to $71,-00- 8 for tiie fiscal year 1 fiB.'J. SALT LAKE CITY, FT Appli- v government and the MEXICOS church are again at eaedi others throats. In a recent encyclical Pope Pius discussc'd what he called the new and legal persecution" of the church and Catholics In Mexico and announced a policy of formal without renouncing or withprinciples drawing past denunciations. President Abelardo L. Rodriguez countered with a declaration that all the Catholic churches In Mexico would be closed to religious use If tiie Catholic church's attitude, "as shown in the encyclical" should continue. Tills attitude he called insolent and defiant. Archbishop Leopoldo Ituiz y Flores, papal legate to Mexico, took part in the controversy and the chamber of deputies unanimously voted to ask President Rodriguez to deport him. The president Immediately complied and tiie legate was put aboard a plane and shipped to San Antonio, Texas. cations for Reconstruction Finance corporation funds for municipal water supply systems are being prepared at the rate of three or four a day, it Is reported. The application for $93 000 for Escalantes first water system and applications for for Improvements $31,000 in tiie Panguiteh system have been received. Sandy has applied for the sum of $11,000 for water purposes. Cities are being notified regarding requirements of flic IL F. C. nnd as soon as tiie proper filings have been Scured will lie in line for tiie final decision on their applications. UT. limitRICHFIELD, ers on the Reaver district of the Fish lake national forest will be registered as in the past, and a close chock made of all deer killed, according to the forest siijiorvisor, who distributed the announcement in form h tters to hunters The letter may he obtained by hunters at the registration points, Ik's 12 precautions including instructions for flip hunter regarding the tion, wearing of tiie metal identification tags, ehe 'king of dead does anil fawns, and tlm filling out of the state license tag. OGDEN, UT. Th' Rei onstrne-tio- n Finance corporation has voted Its willingness to advance $015,020 to the city of Ogden, for recons) ruction of its water supply main line in Ogden canyon nnd other improvements to the city water system. The corporation, however, makes the loan conditional on the obtaining from the supreu e court of Utah rf a declaratory judgment upholding the right of the city to issue bonds on tiie work and to pledge the revenues from the water syctem for the paymmt of the bonds. BOISE, IDA. Idaho state reservoirs that ended the irrigation season last year entir'y dry, this year hail carry-over- s of so-e water. Little Camas r rvnir1 irrigating land near Mountain Hi me. h; s been dry at the end of mo-- t seasons for several yeats hut tics year ended the regular season with 7 ooo ni re feet in storage. The Carey re ".voir also had a carry ewer nlMm;i',h in recent years it has mimllv Hided with nothing. Hit American ITUs reservoir, dry last year, endiT Hie D-- er E of the heroes of the British nnquest of the Sudan, Gen. Sir Rudolph Slatin Pasha, died in Vienna al Hie age of seventy-live- . Born in Austria, he enlisted for service with the British army in the Sudan when he was twenty-onyears old. Under Gen. Chinese Gordon, he led the British in their bloody war with the Mahdi, Arab ctiieftain. It was Sir Rudolphs prowess in beating back the dervish tribesmen in 27 battles which won him tiie title of The Hammer of In 1SS5 he was taken the Arabs. prisoner by the Arabs and was held a e slave for twelve years. After his escape he served under Lord Kitchener. ORAZILS civil war, which had lnst-efor nearly three months came to a close with tiie unconditional surrender of Hie rebels in tiie state of Sao Paulo Military police replaced the rebel government In Sao Paulo, capital of Hie state, and tiie great coffee port of Santos was reopened to commerce. The revolutionary army disbanded and its leader, Gen. Bortoldo Klinger, and other officers were held under arrest at the federal army headquarters at Cruzeiro d OI1I1.E went through another switch in government when Gen. Bartoime Blanche, provisional president, was forced to resign by a revolt against tiie military regime. He was succeed ed by Judge Abraham Oyanodol who will serve until the election set for October 20 Dr. Harinodio Arias was lnaugti rated ns tiie fifteenth president of the republic of Panama, nnd pledged himself to economy nnd the payment of the nation's foreign financial obliga- season will) 271, 2s0 acre feet in storage nnd no more s.vage wqt r is rob si,i n'H op-Hie m t oral flow is iiintinuiig thiou-'the h head gates. SALT LAKE CITY. UT. The Mountain Stales TDcphnne r.i.d Telegraph company, lists uiripU'ion of a half mTlion dollar roj h t to supply ndiiliomT toil inn "its Salt Lake City and Dinvir, ns a part of a seen ni'.'liin dollar construction program. tions. PARTIAL failure of tiie five year admitted by tiie central committee of the Communist party of Soviet Russia at its annual meeting to formulate policies for tiie coming year it decided that quality rather than quantity should he tiie watchword for 1022, and outlined tills procedure: Improvement of tiie cities supplies of food and other commodities; In creases In the production of goods for domestic consumption nnd elimination of the speculative spirit hv the developinent of a system of controlled prices nnd tiie introduction of labels for man ufactured goods to Improve their quality. OGDEN, UT. 70 min wore to work by tie 'hn'birn Iacifie railroad, ro en'iy, to bundle an increase of ie. The m vv jobs comprised positfi ns for 20 tiaiunion, 1 dis25 enginem n. 3 operator'. patcher, 3 eerks nnd e'ir,il simp men. UT. The T1 an, .givBEAVER. ing nnd ChrMuns h(p,,t tits if j turkeys from Biaver year will s rnas tha' Las year' ship u ait vv 2 000 birds and it is year's shipments will birds. was more trouble in tin coal fields and det.n bun t.'of the National Guard were poMtd in several towns to curb the ni Hons of Hie striking miners and their pL kcis One of the peculiar developmetrs wn n strike of high school pupils in kn cnid because the Ctiicago school lour had bought coal from a cotupnv (,p, r In Le atmg under the SI wage that town il was reported lh ,t a n S fii ed on U.oi.1 Hoi of the 'iiitiH'1 iio oik was wounded vv Jt I sag vv r 1 a .N , u - a ,j, i i ie , n of i l .t yeir. n ore Hi in p.i t d this r ai .Umo U IT - IT a of Utah prodm its of po.ttii. ; ; onions for n iiihn ion in fvi.nt rat. s ' to eastern mil ini-pin k on t tin 'n coimno.'i'ies to lailro.i result of will 1 i a. d m bn ex m w a melting lu M m n rut thee ip. to bn'hliu Tliof.itth.it Utah gr. we i have slor, go ia for only 10 j er nut of the d crop this y a r vv is m-- d at the meeting as a reason vvfiv Utah territory might he distinguished from surround g .o a (ui-mate- ( ; h Dryland N Street Singer ttional Gfotrraphic Society, Service. 1. t'.-- Morocco is becoming oil conscious. Preliminary borings near tiie town of Mekinex have shown sucli promise that modern machinery which will drill to great depths has been ordered. French .Morocco, though streaked with the rugged heights of both the mounHigh Atlas and the tains, and dotted with vast dry plains and deserts which give a large part of its area a forbidding aspect, has several large cities of great commercial and political Importance in northern Anti-Atla- s Africa. Casablanca and Rabat are tiie lead- ing coast towns and handle a large part of tiie colonys sea trade. Casablanca was founded by tiie Portuguese about a decade before Columbus discovered America, but the newcomers held it only a short time until tiie natives routed them and sot up a Moslem stronghold. Casablanca was occupied by the French in 1207 and began improvements that have made it the show city of Morocco. From a city with a population equal to that of Elgin, 111, Casablanca lias grown by leaps and hounds until it now lias nearly as ninny inhabitants as Kansas City, Mo. The pedestrian could easily imagine himself in a European city were it not for tiie Africans of midnight black, chocolate brown and tan complexions fine half the inhabitants arc Moslems; slightly more ttian a Herd are Trench, Spanish and Italian, and other Europeans, and tin rest are .Tews. Tiie price of a room in one of Casablanca's lintels not onlv affords European comforts hut also the equivalent of a ringside circus seat An automobile rolls by with a prosperous French business man or a fez bode ked Turkish merchant: wealthy sheiks stroll along in their flowing white garments and tightly wound tertians, holding others hands; dignified French officers in medal tiedecked uniforms are ousted from tiie pat It s of little with barefoot grain laden donkeys Moors atride, and now and then, plnddMig along in awkward fashion, three or four moth eaten, cud chewing pass by, often followed closely by a small future ship of tiie desert." Thieklv sprinkled among this seething mas of humanity of various t breeds and blends, are Hie noisy street hawkers, darting here and there with their home-mad- e rugs, sweetmeats, hammered hrnssvvnre, and whatnots." Bad Harbor Was Made Safe. Why France poured a fortune into Casablanca was a mystery to Europe. It had one of the worst natural harbors on Hie coast. Tiie low, rocky shore lay open to the strong west winds nnd the lashing waves of the Atlantic. No river runs through tiie lity to Hie ocean. But the appropriation was partly used for the construction of breakwaters and harbor ini provements that have been dominant factors in the citys development to tiie second largest city in the protectorate. Ocean going vessels that anchored perilously off the coast can enter Casablanca's port today, Casablanca also has electric lights and power and modern water works. Railroads now connect the city with Morocco, (Marrakesh) the capital of the proteciorate and North African points Daily air service is maintained between Casablanca and Toulouse, r, nice, and planes fly, every two weeks 'o (Iran. Rabat was built almost MK) years ago by the labor of 40(HH Ghrishan 1, -iio city is located on tiie not o!i rit coast adjacent to the o!d my of s;ie, a former lair of e r- iii-l- i ever-presen- . cm. SALT LAKE THERE ciumy this A vv in . iv are two p- -i ent day I! thus. Id mil Lai at mu the native town l iu li IL hat is like a bit of trails t has wide streets I'.an'.T airojie, an sm ,rt hub villas ,u,. thus,, of tie iiivieri In its streets are women 'I In I I I w It L g Bari,, in (lotiles, ini!Ui's i in in s.ii h suits and smartly uni-fr ii ed I reach ofiiers. There are tea hums and electric lights and mo-r mi's Every tJ'Rig is modern and itl.i'.tui and ever n.ono Europeans i.v e it in n its borders. o L vv in Morocco. Native Rabat ts another hutiat houses line tiie narrow From tiie mosque tower the street, calls the faithful to pr ffiuezzn haned Arabs of tiie Iteni Hassan Berbers from tiie hills and tube file through tiie bazaars. Heavilt veiled women travel silently throw lie crooked streets. The plaintive, barbaric wailing, which the Moroccaa call music, may be heard at all tiaej during the day. Groups of the sick and tiie deformed, clad in dirty sh, rags, sit in the streets of the inzaar begging aims from the passers-by- , Native Rabat Is Picturesque. Tiie souks or bazaars of Rabat ate as famous as their wares, red and yellow leather hoots, pottery, and the rugs which tiie Uuliati women weare in their homes and color with vegetable dyes. These rugs, when new, are a little too brilliant for Westers taste but they fade into a pale, blending of colors with wear, There is slight demand for chairs or knives and forks in the souU, Chairs are used only by the Christian tourists who visit the city and knives and forks are not necessary to eat couscous, the staple viand of the Moroccan meal. Coupons is made with flour and meat and vegetables, nnd taMes not unlike the American dish of dumplings conked with meat. It is served In a big pot and everyone sticks in his hand and brings forth ins portion in three To use four fingers' or two fingers is extremely had manners. Moroccan etiquette demands three. Because of its mild climate, Rabat is a favorite residence of the present Sultan of .Morocco, Sidi Mohammed, who has other palaces in Pez, Mekmei and Marrakesh. Marrakesh and Fez are the outstanding Inland Cities. Marrakesh n one of the buiest marts in French Morocco. An almost constant stream of came! and donkey caravans passes trailers through the citv gales where local meet each other and alo the wool and leather merchants, tanners, silk weavers, armorers and idanufafr Hirers of agricultural implements. In the Marrakesh Bazaars. Tiie bazaars in the narrow, dusty streets of the city are thronged from dawn to diik. In one street deeply sunburned Berber men in flowing, heads vv bite robes and turban-wounbicker others while in stand groups with sullen, bewliKkered shopkeepers meover ihe price of inexpensive Moveiled S'leni. heavily rchandise. and slem women peer into yarn and green shops where red, yellow, di'P bine strands form colorful from Fierce looking tribesmen with Atlas mountains near-bbeds airon) their arms 81 protruding hv J1 hypnotized t e,r and dyers plying spinners bWk in congested stalls. Frightened bartbiwk slave men. stooped under the ing loads, slink before heturlmned maWJ of their glances cum Robust slave girls, with cau jars balanced on their hips, come and go without Jos caste. pedestrians of high hnIemf' with women, , Berber m kets accost dusty camel re?l from tiie outlying desert of n peoples Around Hie corner h races watch metal copper, silver half-nake- ppear PJ receptacles of shelves where of tinilied Afri. labor glisten in the can sunlight. The thronged streets !il eler to believe tbit have emptied their well as IP L ' oiipant, as one me. H,h, ,he bazaars a. their '' put, lie 'Vr.' other gri up a h..u chew emits him g and story h ho , l "f fiie per ' l,s nl ilUllik 'tnl,fiff M.IO foremme o i"1'1 ti use a rooL'i r,h t. v:-r,;tongve. wh.i. a a p,it m'9r' ,iot v l From tla ro if of G1 "'i ing hord. I'.u-- t secs a gri" p of on " "ilh (raT. ' human iy, j'"1 awkward hang lh"V mouth sur-in- ) sqii'tre. , . ' u.oke fr"'!) f (( h A ,.f ea'C w straw |