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Show News Review of Current Events the World Over President Hoover Speaks to Farmers Roosevelt and Smith Bury the Hatchet Instill Brothers , - Indicted Japan Ignores Lytton Report. Bv EDWARD BOTH nepubllcans and Democrat Demo-crat derived great encouragement encourage-ment from developments of the week, and seemingly with the best of reason. The for mer hailed with glee the warm reception re-ception given PresI- dnnt I T a n m A W In fJvTI Iowa. Before en thusiastic thou-sands thou-sands the Chief Executive Ex-ecutive delivered In Dps Moines his first speech In his campaign cam-paign for re-elec 1 1 o n, addressing A 4 Trj , H. H. Lehman himself especially to the corn and hog raisers who have been showing such decided discontent that their shift to the Democrats was freely predicted. pre-dicted. He declared the program offered by his rival would mean ruin to American agriculture and laid down one of his own that Included the maintenance of high protective tariffs on farm products, the amelioration amel-ioration of the farm mortgage situation sit-uation and the use of annual payments pay-ments on foreign debt to advance foreign markets for American farm products. Both Mr. Doover and Mrs. Hoover who accompanied him on the trip, are natives of Iowa, and the people of the state gave them a cordial wel-' wel-' come. The President was no encouraged encour-aged that on the way back to Washington Wash-ington be made back platform speeches In ten towns In -Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Democracy's glee was caused by the reconciliation between Franklin D. Roosevelt, Its Presidential candidate, candi-date, and Al Smith, who had been holding rather aloof In the campaign. cam-paign. The hatchet was burled In the New York state Democratic convention where both Roosevelt ana smith were ngnnng to bring about the nomination of Herbert H: Lehman for governor against the stubborn opposition of Tammany Hall leaders.; Going to the platform to place Lehman In nomination. Smith grasped the hand ot his old frlend-wltb a smiling "Hello, Frank," and the governor responded with cordiality as the cameras of the' press photographers -clicked madly and the crowd yelled , approval. Roosevelt said: "Al, this Is from the heart" And At replied: "Frank, that goes with me, too." - Tammany Hall was utterly defeated de-feated and Lehman was nominated, with W. M. Bray of Utlca for lieutenant lieu-tenant governor. Senator Robert F, Wagner was accorded a renom Inatlon. The Republican New York convention con-vention nominated CoL William J. ("Wild Bill") Donovan for governor : F. Trubee Davison, assistant secretary secre-tary of war, for lieutenant governor and George Z, Medalle for United States senator. At the notification notifica-tion ceremonies Colonel Donovan declared himself In favor of repeat fhe Eighteenth amendment - "iVl ' diary of a rort- ' night's Journey through Manchuria" Man-churia" was the way Minister of War Sadao Arakl chnracterlied the . report of the Lyt . ton commission to the League of Na Hons when the Japanese Jap-anese cabinet met to consider It Other ministers agreed that It was on worthy of Japan' serious attention and the cabinet then made this cnrt announcement: j--.ii The government 8ecy Stlmson has decided that the Lytton report does not constitute consti-tute cause to alter Its Manchurian policy." Various responsible leaders In Japan 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 oflTce Issued a statement declaring declar-ing that If the league acts In the spirit of the Lytton report. Japan will have no alternative but to withdraw from the league and op pose Its action with the fir mesa de-' de-' termination. France hnsjhowa decided de-cided sympathy with Japan In the eB rattier iuKewrai in fie friendship friend-ship for China. The Cnlted States, .Y. . . . k. . I . , ' I . ' Important factor In the affair, and - Japan Insists that Secretary-of State Stlmson has again displayed his anlmosltytoward JanjinntMs a menace to the good relations be twecn Japan and America. This U Because Mr. Stlmson In an ad before the Phlio.elpriia Union League clan, said President Hoover has formnlated a successful policy of non recognition, -for territorial gains made by force of arms, and ad d that the "open door4 policy waa necessary to (wmtj China's W. PICKARD territorial and administrative Integrity. Integ-rity. The Lytton report. Insisting "less on the responsibility for past actions ac-tions than on the necessity of finding find-ing means to prevent their repetition," repeti-tion," calls for the establishment of an autonomous demilitarized Manchuria Man-churia under Chinese sovereignty. The details of Its status are to be agreed upon at an advisory Slno-Japanese Slno-Japanese conference following the recommendations of the league and with the league council sitting as arbiter. It holds up practically to ridicule the Mukden Incident of September 18, 1931 over which Japan Jumped off to the occupation of Manchuria. If Intimates that the whole thing was planned. "But even In Japan," says the report re-port In a tart passage, "appropriate means must be found for attainment of every end." WHEN Samuel Insull, former public utilities magnate, and his brother Martin Ignored the request re-quest of State's Attorney Swanson In Chicago that they return from France and Canada, respectively, to assist In the untangling of the affairs af-fairs of the numerous corporations with which they had been connected, connect-ed, Mr. Swanson became Indignant and promptly presented his cases against them to the grand Jury. Within a few days that body returned re-turned three Indictments charging embezzlement, larceny by bailee and larceny. Capiases for the arrest of the brothers were Issued and steps to bring about their extradition were taken. The first Indictment named Martin Mar-tin Insull aone. It charges that he abstracted by means of embezzlement, embezzle-ment, larceny and larceny as bailee $377,720 from the treasury of the Middle. West -Utilllieacompany and used thevmoney to protect his personal per-sonal brokerage account. The second Indictment charges Samuel Insull and Martin Insull Jointly with using $06,000 ot the funds of the Middle West Utilities company to protect brokerage accounts ac-counts carried In the name of Washington Wash-ington Flexner, president of the Lincoln Lin-coln Printing company. The third indictment names the brothers Jointly on a charge of abstracting ab-stracting $104,222 from the treasury of the Mississippi Valley Utilities Investment In-vestment company for the same purpose. pur-pose. Samuel Insull In Paris and Martin In Canada both refused to comment on the news from Chicago. PRESIDENT DB VAI.ERA of the Irish Free State has brought about the dismissal of James McNeill Mc-Neill as governor general, and It Is reported In Dublin that he will not nominate a success or, either taking the ' position him self or cutting the Free State entlrelj away from the Brit -lsh commonwealth When he declden" that McNeill should go the British gov ernment had no SI ternatlve to aceed ti " L JamesMcNeill Injr to the demand. Mr. De Vetera or his way home from Geneva conferred with British cabinet members In London and It was agreed that the Anglo Irish economic war, that started wrer the withholding of the land annuities due to the British government should be settled by direct negotiations. nego-tiations. This was a victory for the Free State, for the British had previously pre-viously Insisted the dispute should be arbitrated by an empire tribunal. IRAQ was admitted to a seat as a sovereign member of the League of Nations, the first country In the Arabian. world to reach that status, and King Felsat Is now an entirely Independent monarch. Great Britain resigned her mandate over Iraq and was highly praised for her generos Ity by ail speakers In the league as senihly. There was an 'ntimation that France should follow this example ex-ample In regard to Syria, but the French at Geneva were noncommittal noncommit-tal Iraq was formed after the World war out of the former Turk lsh provinces of Bagdad. Mosul and Basra. Within Its boundaries are vast oil fields, and population j nearly three millions. T II EAT. BRITAIN took steps to break the disarmament deadlock dead-lock caused by Germany's with dra wnl from the Geneva conference when her demand for.' armament equality was refused. The British ambassador to Berlin Invited the German government to- send representatives repre-sentatives to a four-power confer ence In London to consider the Ger an demand and to pave the way for Germany's return to the conference. confer-ence. The other three powers would be Franc Orvst vrritnln and Italy. Ik 1 and the United gtates would be In vited to send an observer. The German reply was that It would be: useless to bold the meeting unless, Germany were first given certain guarantees that her demand fori equality would be really fulfilled. Norman Davis, acting chief of the American disarmament delegation, went to London to talk about fleet reduction proposed by President Hoover. On the way from Geneva he stopped in Paris to sound out the French on the Franco-Italian obstacle ob-stacle to making the London treaty a five-power pact RESTED by their long summer vacation, the venerable members mem-bers of the United States Supreme court resumed their labors and one ef the, first matters to come before them was of great Importance to all states along the Great Lakes, Including In-cluding New York. Attorney General Gen-eral Gilbert Bettman of Ohio, acting act-ing on behalf of Ohio, Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan. Dresented an application for the appointment of a receiver,, commissioner cr United States marshal to run the Chicago sanitary district and carry out and make effective the decree entered by the court In April, 1930, restricting the withdrawal Of water from Lake Michigan by the drain-; to the president of the eleventh dis-age dis-age canal. The purpose I to force trlct of the agricultural credit cor- Chlcago to hasten the building of sewage disposal plants and thus reduce re-duce the diversion of water. MEnlu eovernment and the funda to'stateg for cooperative dis-Catholic dis-Catholic church are again at ..... . . ,. each other's throats. In a recent encyclical en-cyclical Pope Plus discussed what he called "the new and legal persecution" persecu-tion" of the church and Catholics In Mexico and announced an-nounced a policy of "formal co-opera- tlon" without re- a day.Jt Is reported. The applica-nounclng applica-nounclng principles tlon for $93,000 for Escalante's first or withdrawing past , water system and applications for denunciations. Pres-., $54,000 for Improvements in the Ident Abelardo L. ' Panguitch system have been re-Rodrlguez re-Rodrlguez coun- celved. Sandy has applied for - the tered with a dec- sum of $14,000 for water purposes. 1afation that all the Cities are being notified -regarding Catholic churches requirements of the It.' F. C. and as President Rodriguez In Mexico would be closed to religious re-ligious use If the Cathollcchurch's attitude, "as shown in the encyclical" encycli-cal" should continue. This attitude he called insolent and defiant. Archbishop Leopoldo Ruiz y Flores, papal legate to Mexico, took part In the controversy, and tneneck made of all deer killed, ae-chamber ae-chamber of deputies unanimously ; cording to the forest supervisor, voted to ask President Rodriguez to wbQ- distributed the announcement deport him. The president Immediately Immedi-ately complied and the legate was put aboard a plane and shipped to San Antonio, Texas. " NE of the heroes of the British conquest of the Sudan, Gen. Sir Rudolph Slatln Pasha, died In VI enna at the age of seventy-five. Born In Austria, he enlisted for service with the British army In the Sudan when he was twenty-one years old. Ilndor (lan "PHInooo' Clnrtlnn ha i led the British In their bloody 'war ! thetc of Ogden, for reconstruc-wlrh reconstruc-wlrh th. Mnhrti Ar.hirhwt.in t. I tton ot lts water SUPP,T main line In was Sir Rudolph's prowess Iri heating heat-ing back the dervish tribesmen In 2T battles which won him the title of "'The Hammer of the Arabs." In 18S5 he was taken prisoner by the Arabs and was held a slave for twelve years. After his escape he served under Lord Kitchener. pOWN In Medicine Lodge, Kan-S Kan-S sas, there was an Interesting three-day celebration in commemoration commemo-ration of the signing of a treaty InJIctober. 1S67. The pact was be tween the United States and the Kiowa. Comanche. Cheyenne. Arnp shoe and Apache tribes, and it end ! ed bloody warfare and permitted the unmolested construction of rail j roads and wagon roads to the I'a j cine const In return the Indians were allotted reservations on which they have made their homes ever j since. j ' " 1 B RAZIL'S-. civil war, which had lasted for nearly three months, came to a close with the nncondi- J tional surrender of the rebels in the state of Sao Paulo. Military police j government In replaced the rebel J " ' -!Je ","t-- "nd the great -coffee port of Santos was reopened to commerce. The revolutionary revolu-tionary army dlshanded and its lender. Gen. Bertoldo Kllnger, and other officers were held under ar rest at the federal army headquar' ters at Cruzeiro. ""MULE went through another switch In government when Gen. Bartolme Blanche, provisir.11.il president, was forced to resign by a revolt against the military regime. He-was succeeded by Judse Abraham Oyanedel who will serve until the election set for Octolier SO. Dr. flarmodio Arias was inausu- ....... ii ir-viuu presuirnt ol the republic of Panama, and pledged -himself to economy and the payment of the nation's foreign5 financial oh HeaflonsV' lW-r- '-"' :'v- ' nrilERE was more Illinois coal Ids and desnrh-: metits of the Natinar Guard t.rc rMted n seven,! towns to curb th, ntliin nt f K 1.1 their pirKefi inp of rhe pw 110m tinman - 1. ... chool nnoiU l T. " , "'f ' " . " ' """-p iTiirago school-board h.id ho,,-),- , - coal from a companr nfwrriTir .,. . .. ' - Trr""'g nn mHtti, nrJ Z ..... ' ''' rn';1 wonnded, i PLEASANT PROVE REVIEW. Intermoiintain News -Briefly Told for Busy Readers CITIES PLAN WOKK. LIST DEER HUNTERS. LOWER RATES ASKED. CREWS BATTLE BEETLE. 20 MILLION FOR KEIJEI. OGDEN", CT. Three crews, comprising com-prising 100 men, are working on the Wasatch national forest, in a campaign cam-paign against the mountain pine beetle. SALT LAKE CITY. UT.-Tax payments for September showed a gain over remittances of the eorre- j sending month a year ago WEISEH. IDA. Forest fires in the Pacific Northwest have caused a two million dollar loss in the past few weeks. IDAHO FALLS, IDA-Reo Ed gar Elliott, 10, niea nere-oi coi j cusslon of the brain, suffered when he was thrown from a horse he was .riding. SALT LAKE CIT1, Li. lwenty million dollars will be available for j agricultural relief in Utah, Nevada, -Arizona and California,, acfordjng poratlon. BOISE, IDA. It is reported by the United States forest service de- norfmonf that l'ntmpnts of federal planting stock to farmers, under the Clarke-McNary act, amount to $71 868 for the fiscal year 1933. SALT LAKE CITY, UT -Applications for Reconstruction Finance corporation funds for municipal water supply systems are being prepared pre-pared at the rate of three or four soon as the proper filings have been secured will he in line for the final decision on their applications. RICHFIELD, UT. Deer Tiunt-ers Tiunt-ers on the Beaver district of the Fish lake national forest will be registered as In the past, and a close In form letters to hunters... The letter let-ter may be obtained by hunters at the registration points, lists' 12 pre cautions Including instructions for the hunter regarding the registration, registra-tion, wearing of the metal identification identifi-cation tags, checking of dead does and fawns, and the filling out of the state license tag. OGDEN, UT. The Reconstruction Reconstruc-tion Finance corporation has voted I its willingness to advance $045,620 Ogden canyon and other improvements improve-ments to the city water system. The corporation, however, makes the loan conditional on the obtaining from the supreme court of Utah of a declaratory Judgment upholding the right of the city to issue bonds on the work and to pledge the revenues rev-enues from the water system for the payment of the bonds. BOISE, IDA. Idaho state reservoirs reser-voirs that ended the Irrigation season sea-son last year entirely dry, this year had carry-overs of storage water. Little Camas reservoir, irrigating land near Mountain Home, has been dry at the end of most seasons for several years but this year ended the regular season with'7.000 acre feet In storagevThe Carey reservoir also had a carry over although in recent years It has usually ended with nothing. The American Falls reservoir, dry last year, ended the season with S7S.2RO nore foot in ctn. age and no more storage water is beimr released although th nnt,,r. al flow Is continuing through the head gates. SALT LAKE CITY, UT.-The Te!P" pany. lists completion of a half million dollar project to supply additional toll circuits between be-tween Salt Lake City, and Denver, as a part of a seven million dollar constructionjrogranit OGDEN, UT. 70 men were returned re-turned to work by the Southern Tacific railroad, recently, to handle an increase of traffic. The new jobs comprised positions for 30 trainmen, 23 enjrinemen,. 5 .operators, 1-dispatcher, 5 clerks and several shop men. HEAVER,' UT. The .ThanVsgiv-' Ins: end Christmas shinment'a f turkeys from Beaver county thts year will surpass that of last year. T'ast ytar'8 hiPmpnt was n,ore than 3 00,1 tlirds tnd 11 ls PWted 'this 5,('ar's shipments will reach 5,000 whirls. - . SALT LAKE-CITY, UT.-riea of,' rth producers of potatos and on. ; "PP0"5' Unit! -fttnta Ion, for . t ... ! f to J", i an.rtliese commodities will again be for- uiiar waruci to, railroad executives, as a I vv,3i uiarheis On Tk. recenteeting held at 1 me capitol building. The fact that it.i, , v.r at - ' --' niseis uav Bioraw mnirt- i,r t , capao ltv for onlT 10 ner mnt nt ly for only 10 per cent of the esti- ting as a reason why Utah 1." from surrounding states. " ' ".r uunprusnea of jwt Scenes and ' I $ '14 J t V J l?'l t 1 1 'riiiiiin.iiMr- A JhrnMnttrntfetiummtm I 1M i 1 1 im mi , f 1 Mrs. Herbert Hoover receiving her disabled veterans' forget-me-not from Joseph As;.-both As;.-both legs In battle In France, 2-The ferry terminal at San Juan, Porto Rico, after It hiD, the hnv bv the recent hurricane. 3 ToDy Lazzarl, second baseman of the New York y.i,j a home run In the final game of the series la which the Yanks defeated the Cubs for the world Cincinnati's lm I ' 1-jP-----.V'V--------- j,.,...,..,...7jSSU..;..- i UuZTtm--mpmmitm vZj" JStJarBJ mwwwwma ..;&Mwfe!gg;.:- A view, from the -front, of Cincinnati's new $45,000,000 union railroad station which to fat pletion. The depot is said to have the river floods by an enormous fill. ILLINI QUARTERBACK Jack Beoyon of the University of Illinois football squad Is one of the most promising quarterbacks In the Duncn and has the qualifications of a real field general. APPOINTED TO SENATE Walter Walker. Grand Junction oto.) newspaper pisblfsher a hd're-tiring hd're-tiring chairman of th n J' ! ' - 4 rV" 1 fA if ' 'vA ! - . sS I:'.'. K7 state ceVral committee. X, rom Colorado to fill tho te"n of the late Charts rrt.JL. -f,- P'Dtmefiriras made by Gov Uam a Adams. . , "u .""in uiao. No Rept.1 of Gr.TitatioB - Scientists state that it 1. 1 - Me to go beyond the earth's grar- .k "fnuniai Pd- the eanh. hnt so far as knew, ceases to act" Persons in the Currently New Union Rail Terminal largest half-dome in the world. The building 1 guarded 8 America's New Golf Queen f - - ft . , ' W M Miss Virginia Van Wle of Chicago shown with ft which she won by her sensational victory over Gle champion, in the final match of the women's nauoi the Salem Country club. When Japan -Reco tS1 1 . t it ..-.. t ..:f--'.';-.rf;- k . . ,-1 i. f- - Signlm: of the treatr at Government "ou between represenUtlves of Japan and 01 , te7 state. Gen. Nobuyoshl Unto left). mia'Mfl ft ' signs for his country, which thereby 'ndiiit while Cheng Hsiae Hsla (right), premier uu 1 gnized I " s a I JLfSt- new state. |