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Show i' ,-1 U 1 i '4 t . if 1 1 Intermountain Hews Briefly Told by Buy Readers BOUNTY ON HOPPERS WORK FOR JOBLESS LEASE MINING PROPERTY RECORD WOOL SHIPMENT OOOKN, UT. Tlie Utah-Idaho Millers' and Oraln Dealer' asaocla tion decided to cooperate with th Ogden Oraln exchange In an af fort to obtain emergency frelgb' rate for western wheat SALT LAKE CITY. UT.-Col lections by the stamp tax depart meat of the office of toe Btati treasurer, In June totaled $24,120.11 which la a record It la believed bj those In chart of the department BR10HAM CITT, UT.-Dedlca tory services In connection with th completion of the flrat unit of thi government project at Bear Itlrei bay have been set for Scptembet 20th. GRACE, IDA. Leas precipitation tlon waa recorded here during June than In any similar period In ten years, according to the monthly report re-port of the weather department. POCATBLLO. IDA. The Eastern East-ern Idaho Wool Marketing association associa-tion announces that It has shipped 4,800,000 pounds of wool, with the expectation that the last has been forwarded for this season. The figure fig-ure compares wlh 4,170,000 pounds last year. ST. ANTHONY, IDA. Arrangements Arrange-ments are being pushed for the rap-Id rap-Id purchase of the right of way for the new Yellowstone highway from the north end of Bridge street pare-nient pare-nient to Cheater. EPHBAIM, TJT. A light crop and short run la the prospect for the local plant of the Rocky Moun tata Packing corporation. MANTI, TJT. At a special meeting meet-ing of the Sanpete county commission commis-sion It was decided to pay a bounty oo graaahoppers for the year 1931 of 1 cent a pound. PBOVQ. UT. More than 400 pounds of poisoned oats bait was used in a recent squirrel extermination extermina-tion campaign at Elberta. MOAB, UT. A dally passenger and freight bus has begun operation between Moah and Salt Lake under a franchise recently granted by the public utilities commission. An order has been placed for four new buses for the line. LOGAN, UT. Logan-Cache air tfort committee met with the Logan rlt eommlaalonera and asked their aid In conditioning the ground at the airport The commissioners promised co-operation. WELLSVILLE, UT.-A committee commit-tee from the Cache county Farm Bureau met with the wholesale distributors of gasoline to find why Cache county should be pacing 21 1-8 cents a gallon, while other parts of the state are paying only 18 1-1 cents. POCATELLO, IDA. Many job less Bannock county residents will be employed on 43 J mllea of road work between Lara Hot Spring and the Bear lake county line. OGDEN, UT. Ogden City may adopt a policy of not supplying water outside its limits and that force annexation, Commissioner Fred K. WUUams, who was actln mayor, informed residents of Buret Creek, during a discussion of th water situation with resident C the precinct AriON, WYO. Fire of an un determined origin destroyed ap proximately $5,000 worth of ma Mitnery stored in the Consolidated Wagon and Machine companyY warehouse. LOQAN. UTjr-IiOgan ., resident! once &ia tasted cool, clear, sprlw. water 'eitei'rwtf Mstl&i ihoriihiA chlorinated canal water. TONOPAH, NET. A syndlcat. of Loa Angeles men hare lease the Julian property at Leadflelr and are already started on an to tensive campaign of prospecting starting at grassroots and ignortn' the long tunnels driven by the Ju' Isn management. BOISE, IDA. Watermaster o the Boise river reports the wate situation getting very serious. Th mountains sre almost exhausted o their ground moisture and snow li the hlghlanda Is nearly gone. Bole river flow is lower this year tha' for 85 years. DILLION. MONT. At price ranging from 15 to IS cents pound, half a million pounds of tr wool clip In Beaverhead county wr sold recently to representatives r eastern firms. It was the blgge1 single day of wool buying In D' Ion county's history. ELY, NEV. Bankers of eastei Nevada are devising means of tl lug harassed stockmen through tl coming winter, or, at least, wl nuke a strenuous effort to do so MOSCOW, IDA. Ore which hr been long sought In the deep, lo tunnel of the American Erplon tlon company property, In tb Pierce City gold district In cetitrr Idaho, has been struck. The si perintendent of the operations r-ports r-ports that the rein was found 0' feet In the tunnel. BRIGIIAM CITY, UT. Daw ous curves and steep grades In Bo Elder canyon between Mantua an Wlllomere will be eliminated I condemnation suits filed ere mi ressfuL News Review Events the World Over France, Alone in Blocking Hoover Moratorium Plan, Is Warned by President Feat of Globe-Circling Flyers. By EDWARD W. PICKARD rAI after day Secretary Mel Ion and Ambassador Ambassa-dor Edge negotiated negotiat-ed with French officials offi-cials in Paris In the effort to reconcile recon-cile the moratorium moratori-um plans of President Presi-dent Hoover and Premier Laval, and In Washington the President and Acting Act-ing Secretary of State Castle were almost constantly Premier Laval at the American end of the transatlantic trans-atlantic telephone line, coaching them and learning what progress tbey were making. At this writing writ-ing the progress, If any, is small. Premier Laval, wno was continually contin-ually receiving the advice and assistance as-sistance of Finance Minister nan-din nan-din and others, stood firmly on the position he bad assumed, and the senate, by a vote of 197 to 6, backed him up, virtually giving him a free band so long as he did not recede This huge vote did not Indicate that the senate bad confidence con-fidence In Laval, however. He was attacked fiercely and jeered, but the senators had to express their approval of the refusal to give In to President Qoover. Mr. Hoover then came to bat with memorandum sent to Ambassador Edge for communication to the French government This was In effect an ultimatum to France that unleaa she accepted the Hoover plan she was likely to be left out In the cold. The warning was conveyed con-veyed that If the President's project proj-ect failed. Germany certainly would apply for a moratorium on reparations repara-tions aa provided by the Young plan, and this. Mr. Hoover toured, would cost France $100,000,000 more than would the Hoover moratorium. mora-torium. .. Behind the .polltt phrases la the memorandum seemed to lie the intimation that If France rejected re-jected the Hoover plan, the administration admin-istration would establish a moratorium mora-torium on war debt payments and leave France out MEANW H I L E Premier Mussolini Mus-solini put over .what. u considered consid-ered by some a "fast one." Hla government a n-. nounced, that the Hoover proposal, which had been accepted ac-cepted unconditionally, uncondition-ally, was In operation, opera-tion, so far as Italy was concerned, on July L Italy's debtor debt-or nations, Ger M. Flandln many, Austria, Hungary and Bul garia, were notified that she was not collecting auma due from them on that date; and her creditors, England and the United States, were told she was putting aside the sums she owes them, pending final decision. The State department In Washington Wash-ington aald the Hoover plan had been accepted by Belgium and Poland, Po-land, both allies of France and by Rumania, an& in part by Greece and Jugo-Slavla. So France waa standing alone In opposition. It was believed in Paris that Premier Laval, after closing down parliament, parlia-ment, would call a conference of alt nations signatory to the Young plan to obtain from thera a release from the guarantee clause requiring requir-ing her. In case of a moratorium, to place In the bank for International Interna-tional settlements the sura of approximately ap-proximately 1120.000.000 to be applied ap-plied In part to Increasing payment pay-ment t be" received by other cred- 1 Itors djjjjj the, .period f spen-, BiVUi WILEY POST and narold Catty. Cat-ty. American aviators, set their monoplane, the Winnie Mae, down at Roosevelt field. New York, Wednesday evening. They had ac-compllshed ac-compllshed the remarkable fent of flying around the glohe, approximately approxi-mately 15,m mllea. In 8 days 1.1 hours and 5H4 minutes, a new mark for other flyers to shoot at. They set out to break the record ef 22 days made by the dirigible Graf Zeppelin, and they smashed It to bits. Great skill In piloting snd navigating. unconquernble courage and nerve and a plane that functioned perfectly all contributed to the Bucceas of this epochal flight. The route followed by the flyers took them from New York to Harbor Har-bor Grace. N. F. ; thence sticce slvely to Chester, England; Berlin. Ber-lin. Moscow, Novnalbersk, Irkutsk. Rtagovyeshchensk, Khabarovsk, Solomon Sol-omon and then Fairbanks, Alaska; Edmonton. Canada ; Cleveland. Ohio, and back to New York. They met with no serious accident but at times flew through high winds and rainstorms. New York city on Thuraday gave the aviators the usual showy and noisy welcome. with parade speeches and reception by Mayor Jlmmle Walker. But they were too tired to mind thla much. President Hoover Invited them to luncheon at the White House, and they received the congratulflllona of eminent per sons all over the world. It Is estimated esti-mated that Post and Gatty will realise about $50,00 each from their wonderful flight and they certainly earned It. WHAT wns the President's na tlonal commission on law enforcement en-forcement and observance, better known as the Wlekershani commission, commis-sion, went out of existence with the i of Current - close of June, and Is now just elev en men ana women, un xoesaay the fine furniture and equipment were moved out of its offices ; after midnight the unexpended remainder remain-der of Its $500000 appropriation reverted re-verted tn the roverament: and Chairman Wlckersbam by that time was the only member ten in me National Capital. RHnklera for OTHrtneu aald the commission will not actually cease to exist until a nnai nistory oi us activities and expenditures la writ ten ana is accepted oy rresiaeni Hnnver In order to attain thla end a temporary commission headquarters head-quarters has been established near tha Whit House eoulnned to ac commodate only the chairman and small staff. There the nrteentn report will be written. Hera la the commission's rec ord: Ten reports have been deliv ered to the government printer or deposited at the White House; four others, one of them the still-controverted study of prohibition, have been made public. Since midwinter the commission has completed reports upon the deportation de-portation of aliens, "lawlessness In law enforcement" crime among the foreign born, juvenile delinquency, the work of the police, prisons, probation pro-bation and parole, the costs and causes of crime and a "progress report' re-port' upon the work of the courts, to be carried on by private agencies. agen-cies. PRESIDE N T Hoover's request to the federal farm board for a definite statement of lta policy brought a response from the board, through Chairman Jamea C Stone, In which Its . 1 policy as an-. nounced on March 23 Is virtually re stated. Pleas from i. C. 8tono the Middle West and Southwest that the board commit Itself to keep lta Immense wheat holdings off the market either for a stated period or under a fixed price level, are rejected. re-jected. One Important concession is made. The board agrees to limit sales of Its wheat to 6,000,000 bush-eta bush-eta a month, thla limit to run on iMimnlariva ha nil the unused nor- tlons of the quota to be good for succeeding months. But It excepted ex-cepted from this limitation Important Impor-tant contracts with foreign purchasers pur-chasers now under consideration. To the problem of the wheat surplus sur-plus there Is only one answer, and that la acreage reduction, the board declares. Hope was seen for sn Improved export market In smaller productions In other countries snd in the prospect lor oetter worm conditions "that will be created by the President's debt plan." SENATOR Reed Smoot of Utah, chairman of the senate finance committee, has been In conference with the treasury suthorlties tn Washington ; and be now says that under the provisions provi-sions of the Haw-ley Haw-ley - Smoot tariff law with relation to the products of 8nstor Smoot convict forced or Indentured labor, the Treasury department de-partment will adopt, s policy of excluding ex-cluding a large share of the prod nets of Russia. I ply to products of tfie soil, 'says Mr. Smoot, It will apply to Soviet products which are manufactured, mined or produced by menus of forced labor of any kind, and which are competitive with products here. He mentions lumber nnl pulp wood especially aa products which will be shut out tpoR the first time since the ' World war the federal government govern-ment began Its fiscal year on July 1 with an unbalanced budget. The deficit Is almost JKKW.IXIO.OOO. Handicapped by reduced revenues, reve-nues, the Treasury found Itself con fronted with rising expenditures, due to the government's efforts to help the furmer, the unemployed and the droupht sufferers. About the only favorable factor In the financial situation was h cash bal ance of over 400,(KX),(KIO with which the treasury entered the new year. This will be used to meet current expenses during the first qunrter Instead of being ap plied to the deficit. CENOR DON SALVADOR IE Madarloga, the new ambassador from Spain, presented his credeti tlals to President Hoover with due ceremony, and the customary polite phrases were exchawted. Then the two distinguished men enjoyed an Informal chat, as both of them used to be mining engineers. Scnor de Madarlaga Is 'a noted writer nml In the past has criticised severely some of the policies of the United States In Latin-American affairs. fANY of America's most end 1 nent surgeons gathered In S;in Francisco for the annual conven tlon of their association. AmmiK the speakers were: Dr. Alexander Primrose, Toronto, president; Ir. Lincoln Davis, Boston; Ir. Kucii.- 47 AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN r aaBaa""" . . . I .'11,... .iJt.u'ift- V ,'JtJAf,rf tt'Ai tfc ".A. swiwV . - .jT""ajaja- . 1 I : - gvfl t-i r Tnrk : Dr.' Dallas B. Phemlster. Chicago; Dr. Daniel F. Philadelphia, and Dr. William . Mayo of Rochester, Minn. Exchange of ideas anal explanation explana-tion of research work on cancer, plastic nurgery, skin traftlnf and other phases of the profession fea-tuned fea-tuned the convention topics. SPAIN Is to continue to be a republic, re-public, and Alfonso will remain an ex-klng according to the result of the nations! elections. Alajan-dro Alajan-dro Lerroui, old time Republican leader nd at present foreign minister, min-ister, la the man of the boor and It la accepted that he will be the first premier under the new natl-tutlon natl-tutlon that U to he adopted by the national nsHemhly that convenea on July 14 The Socialists and so-called so-called radicals will control this assembly, as-sembly, which In fact will be rather rath-er moderate In policies, The communist com-munist are powerless. Catalonia still Insists on being a separste state In a Spanish federation, federa-tion, bnt Senor Lerronx predicts that the Catalan movement will soon collapse. RAY LYMAN Wilbur, secre- tary of the interior, interi-or, before he became be-came president of l.eland Stanford university In 101?, had attained considerable con-siderable fame aa a physician and Burgeon, and he demonstrated the other day that be has not lost his surgical skill While escorting r V 4 h 7 J' Secy Wilbur Secretary and Mrs. Wilbur through Mesa Verde NatlonaL.psrk V. M. Oelerchman. president of a south-westers south-westers Colorado transportation concern, fell suddenly 111 and was taken to the park hospital. There Doctor Wilbur diagnosed his ailment ail-ment na acute appendicitis and decided de-cided an Immediate operation was necessary. So he gathered up the tools and. with the assistance of Dr. B E. Johnson of Cortes, he performed per-formed the operation which almost certainly saved Delerchman's life. Next day the patient's condition was so good that Secretary Wilbur resumed his trip of Inspection of the park. MARRIAGE of divorced persons In Episcopal churches with use of the Book of Common Prayer Is favored In a revised proposal pro-posal by a commission of the general gen-eral convention of the church. Last April the commission offered a plan to authorize Episcopal clergymen to remarry divorced persons. per-sons. That plan barred the use of church and the regular prayer book. The revised proposal would give clergymen the right to officiate. offici-ate. A minority report auggests marriage by a clergyman at his discretion If there already has been a civil ararrlage. Under the majority plan, one year mast elapse after divorce before be-fore permission to remarry may be filed. An ecclesiastical court, appointed ap-pointed by the bishop of the diocese, dio-cese, must then pass on the fitness of the persons to be married. The report will be submitted to the general convention of the church in Denver next September. IN A few daya Secretary of War Patrick J. Hurley will be on his way to our farthest possession, the Philippines, for an Inspection tour or the Islands. This Is because their administration falls under the jurisdiction of the War department. depart-ment. While the official War department announcement ascribed the reason for the secretary's trip to a desire "to acquaint himself more intimately intimate-ly with the details of Philippine prohlems," It was understood that Mr Hurley would study personally sentiment there for Independence In preparation for a movement In the next session of congress to free the Islanda. SEN nil ENATOB, SI nieon D. Fess ef Ohio, Who la a leaHrtg-."iBmbe-of ine senate comnTir-tee comnTir-tee on interstate cotnnierce. predicts Unit railroad and transportation leg islation of a com- I prehenslve charae- I .,t ter will be consld- y ' ered during the liaaissM next session of coiiltcss. He has Senator Fass studied these questions ques-tions closely for years, and prob-fi prob-fi li v kDOws what be Is talking nl. ui. In his opinion, consolidation consolida-tion legislation will again be taken tak-en up. and laws for the regulation of tlie motor bus and the motor truck will be proposed. Mr. Fesa foresees much difficulty In getting legislation enacted to meet the various transportation problems. This difficulty Is much enlinnced. as he vlewa It. by the competition between the railroads and other forms of transportation, on the one " hand, he feels the country cannot get along without the rnllronds. but on the other, he i convinced the public will not s:int in any undue restriction of other forms of transportation. The Ohio senator Is an advocnte of legislation to liberalize existing lin nith reference to railroad con-"olidiilona. con-"olidiilona. Fie sponsored. In the 'ft congress, the Fess Parker bill tn provide. In effect, for voluntary cntuhinatlona. It Is Interesting to hear, from Sei.Mtor Fees himself, that he proh-ibU proh-ibU will remain chairman of the l!ciiiMlean national committee for iini. trier year, despite frequent rn-I'. rn-I'. rs thnt he would retire or he d sd.n-ed. He failed on President H""cr the other day snd after-" after-" .ml nuld: "It appears now that I ' in serve nntll convention time 1 ' oar." However, be Insisted 1 t :id col rthciiRed the nmtter h the President. I'll Wnurn Nipimjw I'nlM ) -.attVaail n WORLD WAR YARNS by Lkut Frank tHagan Over tht Top With a RMinf Crop In tn office In the War department depart-ment bulldlnf In Washington there's a new occupant of the chair reserved for the chief of atalf of the United State army, the secretary of war, the highest ranking officer In that branch of the service. Official Washington . kV tints? el him aa Mat Gen. DoUglal MacArthur, but he la known la high army drclea as -Doug." There are thousands oi ex-members of the Rainbow division who wouldn't think of calling, blm "Doug," who will tell yon that he waa "one swell guy." nd that doesn't only mean that he was one of the best-dressed oflleera and one of the moat dashing figures In the A. E. F. MacArthur waent a "sword-waver," but once he did go over the top, dressed In the height of army faahlon, swinging his riding rid-ing crop against his polished leather leath-er puttee and walking nonchalantly nonchalant-ly Into the face of enemy fire, aeemlngly confident of the fact that be bore a charmed life. But the new chief of ataff wasn't always the Immaculately dressed officer. And thereby bangs the tale of bow the commander of one American division waa "arrested" by soldiers of another division. During the famous "race to Sedan." Se-dan." which kicked op such a fuss between the French snd the Americana, Amer-icana, when troops of the First division di-vision and the Forty second (the Rainbow) became mingled In some places. patrol of the First arrested arrest-ed an American officer because his cap, with the stiffening removed, made him "look like a Boche." And It took wnslderable argument to convince them that be wasn't Heinle but Brig. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, commander of the Forty-second division! Quick -Service" Irvln Cobb tells the story of the colored American soldier whose regiment took over an active tec-tor tec-tor on the Western front after this man bad seen fit to fortify himself with the contents of t couple of bottles of stout wine. It happened that enemy shelling had ceased momentarily mo-mentarily at the time the dusky soldiers made their relief. 8o the fellow who had Imbibed crawled apon a parapet and delivered aa oration. "They sends me over . thousands andHBtiUjon mllea of ocean and they hikes me over all uv France," he declaimed. "They saddles me with guns an' packs and brings me up here, all the way on foot, and tht Bosh dont make a sound. "What's de matter over therer shaking a fist toward the hostile tinea, "1 dares you all to come over tn' take me on. 1 dares you." Just then a aalvo of high explosive explo-sive shells rocked the American trenches, hurling the dusky and defiant de-fiant soldier to the ground and burying him under the resultant accumulation of dehrla. Weak, chastened and entirely sobered, the oegro dug himself out and looked wildly around at his prostrate companions. com-panions. "All I can say Is," be concluded bis oration, "they suttlnly gives you service on this front I" The Fall of the K. P. Sergt Roy Gibson. Eleventh United States Infantry, waa a passenger pas-senger aboard the Leviathan, once the Vaterland, when the huge transport waa tugged out of Hobo-ken. Hobo-ken. March 3. lRig. So were tome 10.000 other troopers. The process of herding soldiers here, there and everywhere about the eight decks In use during those heroic days continued on the Leviathan. Levi-athan. And about mid-voyage such treatment began to part nrpon Set- U getut 6arou Afw MIL an olr soldier, and s non-com of excellent ranking. Little wonder that a scowl became habitual with the sergeant. A part of the program he found particularly Irksome was the process proc-ess of lining up. miles long, twice dally for chow served In the once-ornate once-ornate dining room. Hours of edging edg-ing along through one deck after another ended In the scant reward of an Indifferent meal, served by recruit soldiers. One day Sergeant Glhson completed com-pleted the long hike In front of s fresh young k. p. The lad dumped a generous helping of soupy slum Into the non-com's mess kit, then from on high dropped an apple Into the mesa. The slum flew across (llbson's blouse and, for the first time during the voyage the old soldier sol-dier smiled. Tarefiilly placing his food on a nearby table. Sergeant Olhson measured meas-ured bis man and then delivered a haymaker to the culm He recaptured recap-tured his food and walked away, still smiling, while other soldiers' revived snd dusted off the fallen k. p. The Gibson smile, incidentally, incidental-ly, lasted ss long as the voyage. (A WMin NwiaDn Union.) Si guars ef Armistice The signers of th armistice hlch ended the World war were Marshal Foch end Vice Adinlrnl R K. Wemyss n the Allied side and Mathlas Krzherger. Gen. H K A. von Wlnierfeld. Count Alfred von Obendorff and Naval Captain von Salow for the Germans. Others mentioned a having been preneflt include the Krenoh general Mailme Weygaml and Von llelldnrf, German Ger-man courier and Interpreter Cootamplaout Tra Untrue to salt" la C)i trnni. tlon of a Persian phraae mennlng I dialoyul or imjjniteful JV'J "'-C. i- X."-' .' ' '. ; . Si :, 5 . nil K i1 An aviator b one man who is "up u tin t' b a man who think he can run an indostry t support Intermountain Industries appreciate a? patronage. 111:. , These Brands Are Intermountain Made And Deserve Yoi Aak Taar Paalar iw IntertMaattia Made Brooms T MasM "SBver CrcTfl-Piiccga-Eisi Elf f Reaharpened Saw Ton eta fool tome of tht people til of tilt time, and til of the people peo-ple some of tht time, bat tht rest of tht time they will make fools of themselves. BLUB SEAL CLEANSER Wiaiarfal tattwr Pmitill Ctaanatr ana Water Softeaar SOLI DUTUBUTOaa ASK TOUt DKALKB History "Stria gin" UsT We cling- to the notion that Nero's greatest achievement waa that of fiddlinf before tht fiddle was toTtBttd-Puloth . Btmrid, Red pa for Happiness One of the secrets of snocasa in marriage it knowinr when to keep your month shut Woman's Home Companion. "GRAINS OF GOLD" THB WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL "Makes Creak Tattt Better" Western Uarfi For testers Trade Aak Taar Ornar Military Reaerratkm Tht Canal tone, a United States military re serration, hat aa area of 653 tqutrt miles, including land and water. FIT-WILL AJtnriCUJL LIMB CO. Braaat Artuldal Liato TraaM Cratcbai AN Sapportt Bxtaoaioa Bhoi Bteatte BeaMry IUbUabW la Bait Lake la IMS Ph. Was. OM tjatkf atttoa Oaaiaaal 1U W. Tab Sa. i aak) Lata CU Dt THOMAS ELECTKIC CO. PCMPm M0T0I8 WATKB WHKBXt tOUCHT aOUDt-JtKrAIBKD Ml-t WIST IS SOUTH ALT LAKI CITT. UTAH ' "Rilnsof Hercuianenna; ouncef during the eruption ox Vesuvius in 79 A. D., were discovered in 17ir when tht ruler of Naples began be-gan digging a water reservoir at the aite of the old city. Utah High School of Beauty-Culture TWH rW. CKrt BU. gak Laka Cltr. U t If 7M an Plaaalac Parkas Baata Tatar, lavtatifata Oar Plaa WrHa far Catala a Lift Lift is tht sum of our attainment, attain-ment, our experiences, our character. charac-ter. Chapin. Spend Your Vacation at IDEAL BEACH-BEAR LAKE Boating- Bathin-Dancing-Tenaij Good Cabins and Meals Reasonable Prices J. W. NieL, Garden City, Utah WANTED! Naatas af ImU M U ChrM-aa ChrM-aa Carta to I 111 ikraash r kwal rlatar. riaai far III I avfat araa aaw. tmt la raar aaa far artalli a-Utft 10 bub rm atUias aaiv aiiaaat Ik fvaatM. aUctaaai aat alar rae fca apianatlat aaatara factartaa. WriU W. N. U. P. O. Bm IHI. BaN Laa CKr "Double Cross in g" Doctor Viietelly says that a New York boss in tht early '80a testified testi-fied before an investigating committee com-mittee that when a constituent tsked t favor he made t record of the name and fact and If he intended in-tended to grant the petition he marked a cross after the name. Sometimes he would change his mind, in which case he added a second cross. In his testimony he would say: "I crossed Smith; I double-croRsed Jones." Possibly this Is the origin of the expression expres-sion "double-cross" as used today. THIS WEHlfc If you're naiwU. And yeurtwat?s inea bay anrMty MaDufactarei atk. On "InierBMutia.i i on caa alwtyi e? They are ricksha From berJaaiBflit rruit, grata, tai tr Are raised kv mt Then sspatrt ymi And they will adit mrs.wm.c: Anrk FOREST DALE PC N Bqaal farCrla (Ult Ufa Olf4. "IsmIc The Mariguufi of plant which pn and is prepared 1 the United States, smoked. It bote ing. Its mannfjctut porta tion li fUk able by law. ., A APEXt ft an wmMoaru: One Petit' Good tut nicety; lttnaUKs tie things. PIPE AND I Hwtal SALT LAB mwtMk j 8,d4 tMa W a Early Car Congrest awitlt to PhiladelplihDP' and stayed ttjjf was first wWW reconvened hi 0 ' ' T,AS0L' Packed To some right to td Wayne Newij CLAUDEX Ei tcTWCM. Pg Thy yste5Jt' today iitayW, Is a Secret $5.00 $ 50-wora v&i above. ,ain .Wrf1" Boi 15 BV your ttory r the pro Of com Diet Pfw f non-smoke., t marred n.- |