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Show UTAH THE SM1THF1ELD SENTINEL. SMITH FIELD. News Review of Current Events the World Over Chancellor kcrt has long schusch- - beeu at outs with the vice chancellor. Prince Ernst von Starhemlierg, and now ho baa got rid of that active young man and la practically the tide dictator of the cuunrry. This was arcompllehcl by the resignation of the cabinet and with Its recount ruction liiiniedluti-lVon Ktnrliemherg left out. Scbu:h-nlgIs not only chancellor but. also minister of defense and foreign minis- BOYSt GIRLS! The Gopher State! Head the Grape Nuts l rnlnmn of thle paper ai-- i ha??w5 Join the Dizzy Dean WlniJSS via valuable free prizes- .a-- jr Violence Fails Violence may constrain j .;ie ut sliull and form of tliin.x win the acquiescent-- of Borah Loses Ohio Primary House Defeats Inflation Bill Tu "wells Report on Ilis Resettlement Administration. By EDWARD Witcin ft In tlm Ohio Presidential preference primary, but llie Republicans of Ihnt slate turned blm down derisively In favor of tlielr faaiux-etu- A. vorite eon, Taft, Ron of the late President Tuft. Of the llolM-r- t 62 delegates to tin Cleveland ronvontlon, llorah raptured only five, the other, In- 1 eluding tbo delegate M at large, Mur Taft men. Tbe winning del- - rW egatlon will le virtu-allbe- - Senator Borah nnpledRed, canae It will vote for Tart only on the 'drat ballot Mr. Iloruli did not take tills defeat calmly. He gave out n statement In WuHldnRton arritslng the orgiinlxatlnn lemli'ra of tbe vote of colored citizens against him by promlaliiR the pnsKiige leglalatlun of federal which be ban opposed as imoonstltu-tlonn- l. Tlio Idulio aenator added: The Republican tairly will go Into the campaign laying great sires upon Constitutional Integrity ami the preservation of stale rights. The men who nre In control of the party, and who will likely lie In control of the convention, will write Its platform and name lls candidate, have y already demonstrated that' they care nothing nbout Constitutional Integrity or the preservation of state rights, that their talk on tills subject Is hypocritical and Intellectually dishonest. Ohio Democrats (lulled about 500,000 votes In the primary, nearly 100,000 more than the Republicans, and they expressed tlielr preference for Mr. Roosevelt over CoL llenry Brecken-rldg- e to the tune of 10 to 1. They also renominated Gov. Martin L. Pavey, who will be opposed by John W. Pricker, Republican, In November. West Virginia also held primaries and there Borah and Roosevelt won easily over nominal opposition. Tbe state's Republican delegation, however, will go to the convention nnlnstrncted. It la Interesting to note that one of Ohios delegates at Cleveland will be Alice Roosevelt Longworth, daughter of T. R." and a spectator at many prevloui conventions. ARB not going to have any Inflation, at least besession of congress. The Frazier-Lemk- e farm mortgage refinancing bill, dragged out of committee by a petition signed by 218 house members, and then hotly debnted for a day, was defeated by the decisive vote of 235 to 142. The bill called for the printing of three billion dollars for Its financing. The petition signers included 150 Democrats, and before the vote every one of them was told by Pat Bolnnd of Pennsylvania, the party whip, that WE fore next the President didn't want the measure passed at this time and that If the member voted for the bill It would be Just too bnd for hi in. Besides this potent argument the Democratic lenders Induced President William Green of to the American federation of Intervene and he called together the federation's executive council and had It write a letter saying It was opposed to the hill because of the Inflation feature. Tills was read to the house by Speaker Byrns and undoubtedly affected tlie vote, though some members resented being told what to do by Mr. Green. There was relief In the White House when It was announced the President would not have to veto such a measure In au election year. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT was abandoned for the present the Florida ship canal and tidal power projects Passamaqiioddy for which the house refused to appropriate further funds. But Senator Robinson of Arkansas was called to the White Mouse for a conference and returned to the house to Introduce a resolution authorizing tbe President to appoint engineering hoards of review for the two schemes. The boards would present their findings by June 29, and. If favorable, the President would have authorization to set nslde SIO.ikMl.tXX) for the canal and JR.OtKl.tXX) for Pussatnatiuod dy out of available relief nuncy. Newton d. baker and Stiirhoiiilierg hud antagonized by insUtlng oil keeping up his own private army, the Helinwehr. and also by his friendliness toward Mussolini and his general Fascist sympathies. Von PICKARD ivnn for live power companies that are trying to block the government's municipal power program, met with defeat In the Dlsrrlct of Columbia Supreme court when they sought to subpoena correspondence between President Roosevelt and Secretary Ickes. Jerome Frank, a New lcal attorney, stnted that the President had directed that bis privilege" of Immunity be asserted in the case, and Chief Justice Wheat refused to Issue the subpoena. counsel, tesil-moni- ul THE bouse concurs In senate acIFtion, the title of Harold 1.. Ickes will be chntiged from secretary of the inA terior to secretary of conservation. bill making the cliai g- - was passed by the senate at the Instance of Senator of llliiinl. Two years ago. when Mr. was at the height of his power, lie wanted the title altered to secretary of conservation and works" and hoped that many of the agencies of the Department of Agriculture would lie transferred to Ills department. Rut Secretary Wallace objected strenuously, and lately so much has been taken out of Mr. Ickes hands that Senator rut Ills hill to the one paragraph, milking the rliange of title and leaving off "and works." e PROGRESS HARRY HOPKINS an order to state WPA directors Instructing them not to employ armed guards, not to spy on workers and not to blacklist workers who organize. The order wus Issued following s conference with Victor F. ltldder. New York city WPA administrator, who employed a detachment of guards to protect Ills ofllce agulnst demonstrations which Mr. Illdder asserts were stirred up by Communists. WORKS antl-WP- OPPOSITION the applause of para-dii..- . kill those who dispute its ratii,,,.,? But It cannot muke truth lx,, rvT hood, or falsehood Into truth. ter. Neiriiair Vnun. BORAH blinked SENATOR WILLIAM i on W. In the senate finance to the corporate profits was advanced premiership to the presidency of Spain by almost unanlmoua vote of the 874 electors gathered In the at palace Crystal Madrid. He aucceed Nlceto Alcala Zamora waa removed who from office on a charge of malfeasance after the Leftist victory In tbe recent elections. Azana, fifty-si- x year old, Is a lawyer, ora tor and playwright and Is regarded as thr most astute politician la Spain. To the notification committee be said: Spain may rest assured that I will be loyal to tbe principles of democracy and that tbe welfare of tbe nation will be my constant concern. MANUEL HINDENBCRG, the Immense and freight, made the flight from to Lakehurst, N. J, In 61 hours and 57 minutes and was welcomed by thousands of Americans, Including R. Walton Moore of the State department who brought the greetings and congratulations of President Roosevelt Three days later the airship started back to her new base at Frankfurt The dirigible was In the cummand of Cnpt. Ernst Lehmann, bnt he recclred far less attention here than did Dr. Hugo Eckener, the veteran skipper of Zeppelins. Eckener, In bad with the Nazis at home, was permitted to be He aboard the ship ae an "adviser. and Captain Lehmann went to Washington together, while tbe ship was being groomed for tbe return flight, to call on President Roosevelt and other officials and return tbelr greetings, On the return flight the Hlndenbnrg traveled swiftly, reaching Frankfurt-on-Mul- n 48 hours and 18 minutes after the departure from Lakehurst The Hindenburg Is to make ten commercial tripe this sum107 persons, mall Fried-rlchahaf- trana-Atlant- $08,-347,0- $173,-001.8- anr-geo- n - and marine s ALWAYS CROSS PRAISES CHANGE AZANA tax In the administration's $803,000,000 revenue bill was so strong that both Democrats and Republicans sought for soma compromise. Treasury officials were heard In favor of the measure as passed by the house; but former treasury offlcluls and various business and Industrial leaders speaking In opposition were seemingly more persuasive. Senator Tom Connally of Texas put forward s plan be thought all might agree upon. It would retain tbs 15 per cent corporation Income tax and repeal only the capital stock and excess profits taxes. Instead of repealing all corporation taxes as proposed In tbe house bllL In addition It would superimpose graduated tax' on undistributed earnings, exempting tbe first 20 per cent on the amount retained. The bouse bill reaches a maximum of 42M per cent of the total Income if none is distributed. mer. Senator Byrd of Virginia, another of the Democrats opposed to the house bill, showed. In a letter to Secretary PARK TRAMMELL, veteran United aenator from Florida and a Morgenthau, that 11 of tbs largest staunch of all New Deal would In supporter the pay country corporations measures, died In Washington of (a no taxes under the Roosevelt bill, cerebral hemorrhage which followed an attack of Influenza. Though III, ho to senate a RESPONDING Tu swell made a re- tried to remain on tbe senate floor port on the activities of the resettle- king enough to vote for proposal to ment administration of which he Is the Include $12,000,UU0 In the War departhead. He showed that ment appropriation bill for continuation of the Florida ship cansL This emIt has 152904 ployees on the admin' effort probably cost him his life. Istratlon pay roll and has been allotted SOME two thousand delegates were when the annual conven$275.r4n.944 to spend. Of this amount, the tion of the American Red Cross was report stated, opened In Chicago by Admiral Cary T. hns been spent Grayson, the national chairman. Speakand a total of ers at early sessions Included Mayor Ed Kelly, and Ralph Christian. schoolobligated, leaving $102,458,112 uninboy of Birmingham. Ala., representing the Junior Red Cross. Mrs. Elizabeth cumbered. R. & Tuflwsll .p tQ Aprl, 15i ac. H. Vaughan, a nurse of SL Louis, was cording to the report, the resettlement awarded the Florence Nightingale medadministration bad taken options on al for her long record of nursing serv0,G70,0(X) acres of land, of which opice. tions on 8,469,000 acres, costing Dr. Thomas Parran, Jr., the new ha.1 become legal commitments. general of the United States public health service, waa present and As of May 1, the report said, 59.521 liersnns, including 32)81 on the CCC made a speech, and talks were delivered by Robert E- Bundy, director of pay roll, were employed In connection nntlonnl disaster relief, and others who with the land acquisition program. directed activities In tbo flood and The report stnted that s recent sur the purchase of storm areas. vey indicated Unit approximately 24.000,000 acres of land would be needed to block In and round ICKES supporters SECRETARY defeated by tbe Harry out" the existing projects and to establish a minimum number of new ilupklne forces In the bouse fight as to whether the Public Works administraprojects. tion should share In the handling of Of 33 subsistence homestead projects. const ruetlon has been completed next year's relier funds But It waa on IS. Is In progress on 11 and final understood the feud would be revived (ilnns hare been drafted for 4. The re- in the senate under the leadership port lists four suburban housing proj- of Senator llayden of Arizona, Demoects, financed from a $31,000,000 alltv crat and a member of the appropriaration for this purpose. They are In tion committee The house majority voted according Berwyn, Mil.. Bound Brook, N. J to the wisnea of the administration on and Cincinnati. On rural rehabilitation, the report the roller hill, which Is a $2,304,229,712 $1,423,000,000 to iieasiire says the KA has eared for ntote than finance the Works Pragresq adminisMXMXXI families. For Its rehabilitation 1. advances in individual "clients." the tration after July In addition to the relief appropriaadministration will expend $UX!.090.(XX) tion, the bill carrlea S45S.63t.SG0 for through June 30. social security program. $39,900,000 There were more than 7I.IXXI work the Tennessee Valley Authority, ers employed on projects financed by for the for continuing the communithe organization during April, the re- cations commission's telephone port slates, ndding that the peak Is ex- and various new and deficiency iiInquiry, mounts pected to be readied during the sum lor other agencies. 100.000 with workers. liter Tbe must Important amendment permitted to be added to the bill by the League of Nations i be bouse leaders was one submitted BECAUSE would not Immediately rec- uy Representative William P. Connery ognize Italy's annexation of Ethiopia providing that the prevailing wage In and the creation of the new Unman em- communities be paid to WPA workers. Ickes signified bis acceptance of depire, Frontier Mussolini recalled his representative from Geneva, and before feat in the battle for funds by orderlung Italy may quit the league entirely. ing an Immediate cut of 25 per cent At present It Is merely not particila IW A personnel In Washington anil pating" In Its activities. The council throughout the country. This affects had adopted a new resolution virtually 2.000 persona condemning again Italys aggression In East Africa and then adjourned nntl! PASHA, MLSTAI'llA NAI1AS June 13. Wafd or Nationalist Previously Baron Ponipel Alolsl, ebiet party la Egypt, baa become premier of the Italian delegation, had walked and formed a new government In out of a session of tbe council because which he bolds also tbo post of minWolde Mariam. Ethiopian reprcivuia-llve- , ister of the Interior. Wssyf Gliall was permitted to take a seat and Pasha Is his foreign mlutater and Gen. AU Fahmy Pasha la minister of war present a pica from Emperor Halle i r;, ! g Frazier-Lemk- e A Minnesota Idea of Pu nirnl i t!i NiOIoiihI I). C.-- MINNESOTA Society. Service. Is unique among In Its drainage sends waters to three widely separated seas: through the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico, through the Red river and Its tributaries to Hudson bay; and through and the St. Lawrence the Great to the Atlantic. And no other state has as many takes within Its borders. There are more than 10,000 of them. The map of the state reveals that Minnesota Is rut Into two vast triangles by a diagonal line running from the northeast corner (where the Red river flows out northward) down to the southeast corner (where the Mississippi flows out southward). Imagine the upiier triangle painted green, and the lower one painted yellow, and presto! you have the state roughly divided into Its natural forest and prairie parts. The green triangle, before the lumbermen came, was In general a huge pine forest, and begins to be so again. The yellow triangle, before the funner came, was a grassland "like the billows of a great sea, majestic and limitless"; now It is fields, with windbreaks of planted trees to shelter the red barns and white farmhouses. The diagonal line that divides theso triangles has Its significance, too. It marks the chief trade route through the state and also a wandering barrier of deciduous woods, now carved up to make way for farms and cities, s which everywhere separates the from the prairies. Broader toward the South where It attache to the deciduous woods of Wisconsin, It dwindles to s thin scattering of stunted trees toward the north the final outpost of the hardwood forest of eastern America. As the endi of thla diagonal mark the low exits of the state's two rivers, the outer corners of the two triangles mark the states highest ground. At the onter corner of the yellow triangle the plateau known as Cotean des Prairies Just crosses, dividing the Missouri from the Mississippi basins with Its Immense gradual swell. In the outer corner of the green triangle, the Arrowhead Country" above Lake Superior, are the Rawteeth mountains and the MIsqiiah hills, rocky, choked In forest pine-land- prin-clp- Climate la "Continental. The climate of this pair of triangles Is a grief to those who resent surprises. It is continental In the most emphatic sense. Temperatures range in a mild year through 120 degrees; in a year with a real wallop to It, as high as IG5. In consequence, the of outdoor habits must maintain a wardrobe that Includes everything from the shortest of swimming shorts to the longest of long woolens; Lnke Superior, It Is true, tends to temper the winds or the region around It. bnt not to the shorn lunih; no, no. Thanks to the proximity of that deep reservoir of pure Icewuter, a grouchy visitor hns been heard to roinplaln that the coldest winter he ever spent was one summer In Duluth ! Nor are the Messing of ample rain fall to. be taken for grunted. Of late years the yellow triangle, commonly loss rainy and much less snwy than the green, hns Involuntarily tried the experiment of getting along with next to no moisture at nil. In fact. Minnesota hns wenther to please all tastes, In strong doses which, as a rule, stimu late rather than kill. The Nineteenth contiirj marked an n:i-tl- Immense change In Minnesota. The white man arrived In numbers to himself In a country where It was easier lo make a living than In the one he had come from. This wus not a very noble puroso In one way. and it led to many Injustice to the exist ing inhabitant, both men and animals. Yet the annals of the pioneer In vaslon reveal, too, n deep longing In those people for the good life, for the , were certainly ready to undergo discomfort that were sordid nnd hanl ships that were killing In their hig ho(e for the future in a new land. There was nmeli to be done. Tor the white man always Insist on altering nature to suit hi own view. Rut ergy wn the characteristic of the age. With Title, nx. nnd plow, nnd later with money, miracles were wrought. Its Animal Population. For one thing, the status of the no tlve animal was drastically change... In the yellow triangle, nmrrehmsly for wheat, the buffalo, nnteloiie. anil coyote were agricultural Impossibilities. The first two were exterminated ; the remnants of the coyote trilw retreated to the green triangle, aliered their habits to suit a woods environ ment, and became "brush wolves. Tho deer, whose natural home w the diagonal woods barrier, also treated Into the green triangle. Tile lumberjack, by hewing down tlie greater part of the pine there, did the deer a favor, for the birch and aspen that Ter-til- e a Bridge Approach. It made a home to their fact, in It they thrive and supplanted liking; In multiply. Though one would not slight the luscious meadows, vast potato fields, and other agrlcluture of the green triangle, It has In general been rebellion In the fanners hands and so remains essentially a forest and game refuge to this day. True, the trapper and sportsman have drastically diminished the numbers of Its natural citizens, such as tlie tlinlmr wolf, otter, fisher, and lynx. But the beaver still builds Ills dams there; the black bear may be spied, fishing with his paws when the fish run In the streams; the porcupine In large numbers yet gnaws the Jack pine bark, and travels a path which, winding through llie snowy groves, looks as neat nnd regular as If some one Imd railed a heavy truck tire there. And the snowshoe rabbit, whose favorite dipt Is the pine seedlings sot out by government foresters, travels the winter drifts on his padded legs. The American elk, or wapiti. Is extinct In Minnesota. The caribou Is almost so; a herd Is sometimes seen In the remote fastnesses of the great swamp of Iteltrauil county, north of Red take. But the moose, In the Arrowhead country, survives In fair numbers. Canoe travelers often see tbe noble monster at lunch in some lake, his body submerged for protection against the files; his Ups cnrllng around the water Illy shoots that mnke a dainty salad for this giant among American mammals. But he Is wisely s shy snlmnL Lots of Good Fishing. Fish and fowl likewise have had to adjust themselves to their new neigh-borthe white man, , A game-fisparadise has a way of retreating when the sportsman finds It. Thus th" greedy now must go to the border takes to catch boatload of pike In an afternoon. But thla doea not mean that there la not famous fishh ing elsewhere. The mtukellunge of such takes as Mantrap, or tbe fighting bass of White Earth, and the many other fish of a thousand waters; mnke tnll fish stories annually, which, In spite of the low repute of fish stories, nre essentially true. Certainly they reflect justly the fun thut ancient sport provides. And the Minnesota citizen almost anywhere may go out after supper and hook n black bass or a mess of crapplcs, or. In not more than a day's drive, reach lakes In whose depth the noble lake trout can be caught on lines of spun Monel wire. Of the original game-birInhabitants of the state only the grouse can now he called abundant, nnd Its abundance wanes and waxes In cycles. This ruffed grouse Is the characteristic bird of the green triangle. Tame, richly speckled nnd raffed. It provides a voice for the wilderness In the accelerating thud of Its wings dramming on some hollow log. a mysterious music that the forest muffles as If to hold secret. Thanks to drainage and the advance of the farmer, the wild ducks breeding grounds In nre largely lost to It; tbe black Vs of Its spring flight go for the most part beyond the border Into Canada. Nor has the prairie cldeken been clever In adapting Itself to life onvery the amall-mout- NEW BEAUTY THRILLS HUS3AKD Bands at her dear ern new vitality. Slie ie eonnfce. paUua brent ehqnehiM. WtatadilferenceaS!. fcoaHonof naUiml laxatives make. Lramfe a bid. Note how naturally they rk.aV22 Her husband yqa feeling lOOfr better, mineral derivative. 25c, aKdnggWs, mm Wisdom Sets la When the thrills ceasu to lien philosophy begins. thrill, To instantly relieve pain, stop nag. gins shoe pressure and quickly, safely loosen and remove com or use New Do uxe Dr. callouses Thexe soothing, Scholls Zino-pad-s. heeling, cmhkmnc pedi prevent core toe andblietcre. Klein color; waterproof At nil dru, shoe end deportment etaree. tiZSclioltsi FEMININE WEAKNESS C. Xieuky of 1M Garfield St., Phoenix. Aria, laid: "Dr. Pierre's Favorite Piescriplten has been the bisseat help (or eay wile. She wee run- down durbis the chanie of Ufa period and her appetite wee poor. I knew of Dr. Pierce'a Rtmcdht beemee my people hid brays had peat faith in them, and a few bottla of Iks Piaerlpdon' man hid wy wife tins man and enjoying load health." Ce la your neighborhood druid today. a FIRST AID in. for Relieving Common Skin Ailment Injuries h Resmol MYquFsdgSi suffer burning, scanty at rjOtooyou frequent urination; backaaie, 200-fn- headache, dizziness, loss of energy, leg pains, swellings and puffincts under the eyes? Arc you tired, nerv-ofeel all unstrung and dont Know what is wrong? ui d mils excess waste to stay In the blood, and to poison and upset the whole system. Use Doans Pills. Doans are for fit Kidneys only. They arc recommended the world over. You can get the j Doan1 at any i nine, time-test- store. Min-neso- farm and as a target. But the Introduction of a partly parasitic bird, the pheasant, which docs not scruple to help Itself to the farmer's corn to pay for Having os his autumn target, has praved a huge sucres. That fantastically colorad bird, looking fitter to stand among the exotic Mussmii point, ed on sonic Chinese screen than anion- the prairie sunflower, nevertheless has made Itself completely at home In the rlng-ncckc- d yellow triangle, it voice him become that area's voice, the harsh donlile cry like the chixhing of two sabres." Another hinl. too tough nnd clever often to lie shot, gives n voice to Min- ,he looni whn!,e in Lilli holy cry on some black take shaggy with overhanging pines, when the moon set and the winds are down speak In the accents or truly grri lKM'try. The man who has heard t never forget that wilderness music to Ids dying day. A for small hinl., M th woodsman t friend, the chickadee, or wine-rehat winter visitor whinner-In- s It clear song, the pine grashrak Train the North, or the horned Inrk hat brings the earliest music of spring o frozen tebrunry ficlds-t- hey are ton numerous even to be mentioned ,ch d Self-Mad- e taw is caused ly sa Morning sickness" cid condition. To avoid it, acid must be oSset by alkalis such as magnesia. Why Physicians Recommend Milnesia Wafers Three candy-lik- e wafers are pore milk of magti U in solid form the most pleasant way to taka it. Earn wafer ix approximately equal to a full adult dose of liquid milt of magnesia. Chewed thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct acidity in the mouth end throughout the digestive system and insure quick, complete elimination of the waste matters that eauie gu, headaches, blotted feelings sod doxen other discomforts. Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and 48, at 35e and 60c respectively, and in convenient tine for your handbag containing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is spproxiinatrly one adult dose of milk of magnesia. AU good drug stores sell and recommend them. Start nsing these delicious, effective eatLacid, gently laxative wafers today or dentists if request is mads on professional letter head, bled PredscHi Y. 02 Bird Long Islood City, N. physicians lc-44- UP'UOICTTTlUe. 35c ft 60c bottle 20c tins Men No ninn la wholly Helf nia.le. he mnJ Need to Suffer MorningSickness No Wht. fhlevp.i (here have taenmnny who huve helped hlui iu the The Original milk at M acaeste Water |