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Show THE LEHI SDN.LE11I.CTAI1 News Review of Current ; Events the World Over Second Revolution" Smashed by Ilitler and Its Lead-ers Lead-ers Put to Death Roosevelt Naiaes Five Boards and Sails Away. By EDWARD W. PICKARD t by Wm tern Newspaper Union. Bb 'Mrti ala Chancellor Hitler FOREWARNED of radical plot F within the National Socialist nartr to brine about a second revo lution In Germany, Chancellor Adolf ! Hitler struck wltb swiftness and rutb-lessness rutb-lessness that complete! com-plete! ; smashed the revolt on the eve of the planned coup d'etat and left the malcontents, chiefly membera of the Storm troopers, dazed and terrified. The chancellor himself exhibited resolution and pergonal per-gonal bravery with which the world had not credited Lira. Flying from Berlin to Munich In the night, Hitler with only two bodyguards went direct to the sum mer home of Cant Ernst Roehm, commander of the brown shirts and long his personal friend. Roehm and certain of bis associates were found In situations that confirmed the often heard stories of their moral oerversion. and as Hitler was certuln also of their complicity In the revolutionary plot, he per sonally arrested Roehm, tore off lils Insignia and offered him a chance to commit suicide. This Roehm refused, so on Hitler's order he was shot to death, as were the others taken with him. Meanwhile. Cen. nermann Wllhelm Goerlng, premier of frussla, directed a se ries of raids throughout the coun try that resulted In the deaths of numerous prominent members of the conspiracy and the arrest of cures. Chief among those shot down was Gen. Kurt von Schleicher, Hit ler's predecessor as chancellor and reputed head of the revolutionary plot His wife stepped In the way of the policemen's bullets and also died. Well known Storm troop leaders In Munich and elsewhere were put to death summarily, and o was Helnrleh Klausener, head of the Catholic Action party. Vice Chancellor Frans von Papen, who had recently attacked the radical radi-cal tendencies of the Nazis, was put under heavy guard and forbidden to leave tils home, and two of bis adjutants killed themselves. Von Tapen offered to resign from the cabinet, but President Von Mn Oenberg, his close friend, refused to accept the resignation, and the cabinet urged him to remain as minister without portfolio to super vise activities in the Saar. Von I'apen, However, will take pro tracted leave of absence. Viktor Lutae was appointed to ueceed Roehm as chief of staff of all the relchs-wehr relchs-wehr units. Including Includ-ing the Storm troops among whom the disaffection bad existed and the regular army, which was declared to be entirely loyal to Hitler. President Von Illndenburg all this time was at hla estate es-tate at Neudeck. v . W SrN Viktor Lutze East Prussia, and there were re ports of his serious Illness, which were flatly denied. Two days after the chancellor's drastic action the aged president telegraphed Hitler and Goerlng bis approval of their course, congratulating them on their victory and thanking them In the name of tho nation. Undoubt edly Hitler's persoual position was strengthened for the time being, and the leftist elements in the Nail party were weakened and divided. Goerlng and Hitler professed pity for the "misled" Storm troopers. but the latter are cow out of thetr uniforms temporarily and may never be as important as they have been in the past They had become omethlng like a pretorlan guard Mat threatened Hitler's supremacy In the various European capitals there were predictions of further outbreaks In Germany and the re turn of the Hohensollerns. inner s -violent ' nietnooa were criticised by Engelbert Dollfusa. Austria's dictator, who said: "Does not the light at last dawn upon us that one cannot make a people nappy with violent methods? Paris Interpreted the affair a victory for conservatives and as opening the possibility for a return of the HohenEollerna. The violence. It was claimed, revealed a break down In the unity of the nitler movement In London the view was taken that Hitler had solidified his post tion. Some papera accused him of employing the methods of gang iters and called the slaying of anorm troop leaders "brutal niur Jers.' TRADE war between Great Prl- J. Uln and Germany was averted fcy the signing of an agreement pro tecting Prltlsh Interests during the fetch's sli anontha foreign oblign tlona moratorium, ordered In effect ef-fect July 1. Under the accord, Germany agrees to pay Toung and Dawea plan obligations when due In October, Oc-tober, November and December, on presentation of coupons on bonds by the Bank f England. For six months, beginning July 1, the German government Is to pro vide sterling funds to the Bank of England for the purchase In full at the nominal value of all conpons on these loans held by British sub jects on June 13, when the mora torium was disclosed. JAPAN'S cabinet resigned as a re- J suit or a financial scandal in volving a vice minister, and the emperor called on Prince Salonjl, last of the elder statesmen, for ad vice in selecting a new premier. The prince recommended Admiral Kelsuke Okada for the place and the emperor made the appointment, which was generally considered very wise. Okada asked Kokl Illrota to remain as foreign minis ter, and the minister of war and navy also were reappointed. The new government Is expected to fol low the general iines of policy laid down by Salto, retiring premier. One of Its chief alms will be to clean tip graft Japanese naval circles are con vinced that Okada la the only man capable of safely piloting the na tion through the naval conference next year. They feel that Salonjl selected Okada because he realized that the conference will be of the utmost Importance to Japan's fu ture. D RESIDENT ROOSEVELT de- parted on his cruise in the Carib bean and Hawaii aboard the Hous ton, accompanied by his two young- r wM'uiy' er ons, Franklin. f f Jr., and John; Ru dolph Forster of the White House secretarial staff; Commander Ross T. Mclntlre, naval physician; Gus Gennerlch, personal bodyguard; Rich ard Jervls, secret service man, and Pharmacist's Mate George Fox. On ac- companylng destroyers are two secret service men and three representatives of three big press associations. Before sailing the President per formed several Important acts Approved the Frazler-Lemke farm mortgage moratorium bill Approved the railroad unemploy ment and pension act Involving ad dltlonal burdens of millions of dol lars on the carriers. Appointed Joseph Kennedy, wealthy New York stock operator, as chair man of the new securities exchange commission for a five-year term. and George C. Matthews, James M Landls, Robert E. Healy and Ferdl nand Pecora as members for terms ranging from four years downward Named Eugene 0. Sykes, Thad II Brown, Paul Walker, Norman Case, Irvlo. Stuart George Henry Payne and Uampson Gary members of the new communications commission for terms ranging from seven years downward. Set op the new national labor re lations boards with Lloyd Garrison. dean of the University of Wiseon sin law school, chairman, and Prof. Henry Alvlp Mills, head of the eco nomics depHrtment of the University of Chicago, and Edward S. Smith of Massachusetts, labor relations spe cialist as the other membera Named Joseph A. Moffett. former vice president of the Standard Oil Company of New Jersey and a member of the planning and co-or dlnatlng committee of the oil con servatlon board, as administrator of the new $1,000,000,000 housing pro gram. Appointed Ave members of a com mission to study federal aviation and air mall affairs and make rec ommendations to the next congress Clark UowelL. Atlantt, Ga., put Usher; Jerome Clarke Uunsaker, New York; Edward P. Warner, Washington, D. C; Franklin K Lane. Jr., California, and Albert J Berres, California. PRIMES MINISTER KAMSAT MAC DONALD of Great Britain, who Is In Scotland on a vacation, mas bitterly assailed In the house of lords by Viscount Snowden, former chancellor of exchequer and once close personal friend of the premier. Snowden denounced Mac- Donald as a traitor to hla colleagues In the Labor party and to the country. "The cabinet found the prime minister such an amenable Instru ment of Tory policy," Snowden declared, de-clared, "that It has come to the conclusion that there are no profes sions which he made, no pledgea which be gave the country which he will not repudiate, no humilia tion to which he will not submit If they only allow him still to be called prime minister. "The Tories have no use for Mac- Donald except for exhibiting him on their platform In chains as the onetime one-time Socialist who has seen the error of his ways and found salva tion in the spiritual home of the Tory party. "He will be used for the same purposes as the reformed drunkard at temperance meetings. CENATOR BORAH of Idaho, tn- dependent Republican, opened his one-man campaign against the mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm- .... I I f ' "'i J Senator Borah J TaN .."""'j J. M. Landls New Deal In a radio address at tacking especially bureaucracy and monopoly. Although his criticism waa directed primarily against what he conceives to be these elements in the New Deal, he summarily Indicted the national leader ship of the Repub lican party on the ground that It "seems wholly unwilling to touch this vital issue" namely, the mo nopolistic trend. The senator said the Roosevelt regime was establishing not Nazism, not Fascism, not Communism, but "simply that meddlesome, Irritating, confusing, undermining, destructive thing called bureaucracy." And bu reaucracy he defined as "that form of government which steals away man's rights in the name of the public interest and taxes him to death In the name of recovery, Bureaucracy, the Idaho senator as serted, "has destroyed every civil ization upon which It has fastened Its lecherous grip." It is the common man who will be the chief victim of our new bureaucratic form of government. the Idahoan asserted. The Influen tlal and powerful have demon Btrated that they "can generally ob tain all the rights and privileges they desire under any form of gov ernment." But the "freedom and political rights" of the toilers are being more and more limited. whether under European dictator ships or the American bureaucracy, National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart i tin DING up Its fiscal year, the V V federal government found that, counting emergency expenses, It had spent abou' $4,000,000,000 more than It had collected. Balancing receipts against ordinary -expenditures, the government figured It was $28,000, 000 "In the black" for the year. President Roosevelt has estimated nearly $5,000,000,000 would be added to the national debt by emergency expenses during the next 12 months. This was predicated on recovery that would make industrial production produc-tion average 93 per cent of the 1923-25 1923-25 level In July, 1035, the President hopes to start the payoff for the recovery program. By that time, he has said. the budget a' otild be balanced. According to the federal reserve board's index, the Industrial production produc-tion figure for the year Just ended was slightly above the 81 per cent average on whlcn the rresldent based his hopes. XIR. ROOSEVELT went ashore for the first time on his cruise at Cape Haitlen, Haiti, where he was met by President Stenlo Vincent Vin-cent and other officials of the Island republic. At the Union club he made an addreRS, partly In French, In which he announced the forthcoming forthcom-ing withdrawal of the marines, ad ing that he hoped they ould be remembered as friends who had tried to help Haiti. Marine detachments detach-ments have been on duty In Haiti, whose population is 90 per cent colored, col-ored, since 1915. THE of HERE was a general scattering MME. MARIE CURIE, co-dlscT-erer with her husband of radi um and rated as ow of the world's greatest women, passed away at Passy In the French Alps at the age of sixty-six years. Her physi cians said that ber Inability to re cover from an attack of pernicious anemia was probably due to the fact that her bone structure was weakened by years of exposure to radium ana X-rays. The Netherlands was thrown Into In-to mourning by the death of Prince Consort Henry. He w married to Queen Wlihelmina In 1001 and the Dutch people had learned to love htm deeply. following the departure of Presl- i dent Roosevelt Secretary Roper went to Alaska and Secretary Mor-genthao Mor-genthao to a Montana ranch. Secretary Sec-retary Dern sailed for the Canal Zone, and Secretary Swanson and Attorney General Cummtngs were down on the lower Potomac on yachts. Secretary Hull took motor rides In the Virginia mountains. Secretary Farley was In New York, and Secretary Wallace went to Chautauqua. Secretaries Ickes and Perkins remained at their Job. General Gen-eral Johnson went to Saratoga Sprlngn for a lest Harry Hopkins sailed for Europe and Trofesaor Tugwell went to the Far West. ATTEMPTS to open the port of San Franclsoo, closed for some time by the dock workers' atr'.ke, resulted la bloody riots la which several men were killed and many Injured. Cat. Frank Mprrimaa called out 2,000 National Guard men to quel the tlolence. Washington. Congress took a for-1 mal adjournment a few weeks ago, but i round in Tax Inquiry roaming about v: . the Capitol and Significant senate houge buildings the other day, that there are no less than eleven of its com mittees continuing In session, and that no less than eleven of them are conducting Investigations. It Is true that only a few members of the committees remain in attendancethe attend-ancethe others are out campaigning campaign-ing for re-election but, even so, It appears there Is going to be an extraordinary ex-traordinary amount of searching after truth, of mudsllnglng, through the heat of the summer and the cool of the autumn. While I am not Infallible in my judgment and conclusions, I must confess that I can see a valid reason rea-son for only one, Just a single one, of these eleven investigations. The ways and means committee of the house has started out to do some surveying of the federal taxation structure, and everywhere I have asked I have found approval of the idea. There can be no doubt of a need for that survey, provided the politicians will accept the results of those who examined the facta, because the American taxation sys tem, both national and state, surely Is of the hlt-or-mlss type. But there Is another significance to the tax inquiry. I reported to you recently that It was going to cost taxpayers a total of almost $1,150,000,000 a year in interest on the public debt of the national gov ernment when that debt reaches the $31,000,000,000 which President Roosevelt has announced it will reach. Since that information was given you, further Inquiries con vlnce me the debt easily may reach $35,000,000,000 by the winter of 1035-38, and the Interest alone will be correspondingly more. This is Just the Interest, mind you, and makes no provision for retirement of any of the debt, which would have to take extra tax dollars. Since the national debt Is so high, and going higher and the house ways and means committee Is making such an Intensive study of the tax system, one can not fail to link the two together. The obvi ous question Is: Is the administration administra-tion becoming concerned over the sources of funds to pay the huge total debt Incurred in spending our way out of he depression? Concurrently with the house com mlttee's study, Secretary Morgen than of the treasury, announced the appointment of another brain-trust group to study tax questions for him. Mr. Morgenthau holds that our tax system Is full of holes, which undoubtedly It Is, and he feels that the general method should be revamped so that the flow of rev enue will not be so dependent upon prosperous economic conditions. To that end, the secretary sent part of the number of professors and tax experts selected by him over to Eng land for a study of British taxation methods. British taxes apparently are much higher than ours, and Mr, Morgenthau Is desirous of finding out how the British government gets away with it Bo, one hears around Washington a great deal of discussion of what the future holds In the way of tax levies upon the rank and file. Mr. Roosevelt said In his latest radio speech to the country, it will be remembered, re-membered, that relief was his first consideration, that vast 6ums had been expended for relief and that further vast sums will be expend ed. All of which leads back to the observation I made above, namely, that one cannot help linking these several studies together with an undercurrent of fear that, perhaps, we are Spending too much money, While discussing the tax Invest! gation, however, it would be unfair to omit reference Double to one feature of Taxation Evil toe house com nilttee Investiga tion that. I am told by real tax au monues, can be of much vnin The house committee was instructed instruct-ed to look Into the double taxation VH tUt besets the country. It la known to everyone, of course, that there ure places and things upon Hu.n me federal government lev ies high taxes and that these taxes on top of smaller, and some- uuies greater, levies by the states Consequently, the committee Inquiry In-quiry may brinsr to lieht how Aft and where, this sort of thing Is hap-' 6. For example of double taxation 10 or three common Illustrations M serve to Indicate how - uH.a obtains. Take the it n gasoline as one. The federal government laid a tax on gasoline - Jeara ago, and that tax although al-though It was small had to be paid by csers of "gas" in addition to the Kate levies which run as high In ome state, a, 7 or S -cents a gallon, making the tax borne by that com mouty asregate as much as 10 or " cents , janon ln m Lie tax on cigarettes Is another ei "Pfc but this commodity was ed erst by the federal goTera URGES CALLING SPADE A SPADE ment and then the states put their levies on. The result Is that In many states the tax on cigarettes amounts to more than the selling price of the package would be if no tax were laid. Twenty-nine states now collect taxes on Incomes of Individuals or corporations, and twenty-six of them collect a tax from both. These taxes, of course, are aside from the high rates Imposed by congress un der federal Income tax laws. These matters naturally consti tute subjects for serious investiga tion. It is the only way by which congress can Inform Itself and determine de-termine a policy. Such, however. unfortunately cannot be said about most of the other investigations that are running through the summer sum-mer and fall Policies of the last several administrations ad-ministrations In Washington have presented many U. S. Greatest puzzling things, Landlord and some of them move one to Inquire In-quire where It all will end. For example, the Farm Credit administrationthe adminis-trationthe FCA of the alphabetical alphabet-ical soup released a statement to the press the other day to the effect ef-fect that the twelve federal land banks now own outright 22,073 farms and almost own thousands of others on which the loans are ln virtual default I think it can be said, therefore, that Uncle Sam has become the greatest landlord ln the world. While the Information is more or less startling that the federal government, through " one of Its multifarious agencies, now owns so much farm land, the fact gives only an inkling of what has happened in others of the various agencies through which it acts. As I 6ald, one can hardly help inquiring where it all will end. I make no attempt to controvert the policy of federal loans on farm lands or homes; I only can pause and wonder what the future holds if the course is continued. The farm loan banks have a total of $82,939,000 tied up- In those farms which they hold. The only way that money can be withdrawn Is by sale of the lands. If they are sold, the chances are new mortgages mort-gages ln varying amounts will have to be placed on them because most buyers are not In a position to pay the whole sum in cash. Some of them again will default and the government agency again will own the land. All of which is by way of saying that the Idealist who walls and gnashes his teeth about the terrible brute who forecloses has not yet solved the problem of saving homes that were bought on a margin of cash that was too narrow, nar-row, or a home that was bought by an Individual who ran Into hard luck. The point of It Is that the federal fed-eral government Is dabbling Into everything. It Is going beyond what government ought to do. When one examines the whole picture respecting government and its scope these Astounding days, It is rather Picture "standing- vr Instance, the Reconstruction Re-construction Finance corporation announced the other day that It was willing to help the Baltimore & Ohio railroad refinance its maturing ma-turing bonds. I do not know what the outcome will be, but It seems to me that refinancing of a railroad by use of government credit Is hardly a function of government The Reconstruction Finance corporation cor-poration Is making loans continually. continual-ly. It has loaned money to, or has bought stock in nearly 4,500 banks. Proponents of this policy contend soundly enough that unless those loans had been made, the banks which obtained them would have gone on the rocks and the depositors depos-itors would have suffered. But I am still wondering If it is the proper prop-er function of government to protect pro-tect private activities to the extent of guaranteeing out of the public funds that I shall get my money back on any old Investment or what not into which I have put It Some way, I am Inclined to feel that gov ernment, as Such, OUght not be dab- ifLORESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for use fa '( 11 a re- iuur Borland fluffy. Critic Sees Opportunity for Debunking Speech. American speech needs debunking, In the opinion of Frank G. Tomp kins, professor of English at the Colleges of the City of Detroit Professor Tompkins deplores "the tendency to use big names for little things as the result of our love of the elegant high-sounding word to express the commonplace, work-a-day fact and our aversion to calling a spaae a spade. Too often, he believes, Americans refuse to recognize cheap and ugly things as cheap and ugly, or even commonplace. Instead, we attempt to fool ourselves and others by dressing them up ln grand names. "Consider the glittering offices we assume In our lodges," Professor Tompkins points out. "Titles like Grand Exalted Potentate of the Honorable and Benevolent Order of So-and-So,' or, 'Her Most Imperial Majesty, the Lady Queen of the Hive.' What delusions of grandeur the resounding titles must bring while one wears the purple velveteen robe and the gold-braided hat that go with them, but once out ln the cold street what a let-down to face the world as plain Maggie Smith or John Brown. "The same love of title shows it self In the colonels and majors who earned their rank without leaving their desks, the professors' of phrenology and astrology, medicine show 'doctors,' barber 'colleges,' and business 'universities. "My neighbor does not take roomers, room-ers, but for years she has had 'paying 'pay-ing guests." They look like roomers, Just the same. Down the street is an 'obesity salon' and farther on a reducing shoppe. Neither one is a salon or a shoppe. "Is It less humiliating to wear 'dentures' than false teeth? Does an 'educator teach better than a teach- Ar a,. with worZfV', v 'iiwl,vfc3 Phot 1 A Eafe ted , kroomZtClefc, 'est pocket. Th. 44 'n o familiar 'aPackofc2rJ, velon . "Krtet(v compact nrvJ5.V. Uttle tankT1 for rolling the filffl lPlng and fT. -t 1 course, iD jlertlf SYNOP ! fii i8 kept b : L? a crank device. aTy1 strument which telk T' "Wired for fcSj Afferent hES summer. The rr Which k.. v.td LelpZlgrT: dgeryofdev possible foriT1 a finished fii 1. ff tank Is r IS I IBM ' hut -,,14. Jm rtss ! ppu ' I dlwr J M Mr. J t.v. .tori child Quick, Safe W, For Eyes IrritatJ By Exposure To Sun, Wind and M MAllDruiStw WrileMQriaeCo.,Dn.W,QaU,, Butterflies and Moths Butterflies and moths employ the short time assigned to them in a variety of ways, writes Prof. J. F. Furbay, Ph, D., in the Missouri Farmer They never have the responsibility re-sponsibility of rearing their families, fam-ilies, as do many other animals. They lay their eggs and this is the end of their duty to their offspring. The only precaution they take is to lay these eggs on the kind of food, or near the kind of food, on which the caterpillars will want to feed when they hatch from the eggs. The rest of their short life Is spent ln quest of sweet foods among the flowers, or in quest of their mates. "Sockleis Jerry" Simpson "Sockless Jerry" was the nickname nick-name for Jeremiah Simpson, representative repre-sentative from Kansas in the Fifty-second, Fifty-second, Fifty-third and Fifty-fifth congresses. Born on Prince Edward Ed-ward island, Canada, March 31, 1842; moved to New York In 1848, served in the Civil war In the Illinois Illi-nois Volunteer Infantry, moved to Barber county, Kansas, ln 1878 ; was a farmer and stock raiser, and died ln Wichita, Kan., In 1005. Allow Coral to Grow The necessity for conservation of natural resources is recognized by the Algerian coral Industry. The Algerian coral reefs are divided Into ten regions, only one of which is dredged each year. This allows each reef a period of ten years between be-tween dredgings in which to recuperate recu-perate through the action of the tiny polyps which are responsible for the growth of the coral structures. Size of Hippopotamus The hippo, as must people know, is a huge aquatic animal. In fact, It Is the bulkiest quadruped there is except the elephant The hippo might even outclass the elephant except ex-cept for the fact that his legs are short The average full-grown hippo hip-po is 12 to 14 feet long; but it Is only 4 feet high being very "squatty He will weigh a ton or two. Peopls of CriuN mixture of Turk, Russia casian, Greek tnd Tartu. 1 latter predominating. Taf sula wag once 1 Tartar ll .1. L . . . I me su 01 wnicn was Baiii. a rambling collection t! j buildings and gardens; then: Genoese forts showing aefc terest in the country; lm still stand; an impressive rek. sones, Is what remain of 1 thriving Greek colony of 2,1 ago. Sevastopol Is the m of entry by land. Its pod bor and gracefully mounting r white-walled, red-roofed v are reminiscent of some M;i nean shore. Ancient acd Modem L The ancient and tot' blend more perfectly In Pr-I ln any other South America I try. Nowhere else is that ( wealth of remains of tint cent Inca and pre-Inca d'fcf and many of them tre -I short distance of Lima 8ws which was the "Qty of fte I 300 years ago, In the days Spanish viceroys, and Is u 'A ing modern city today. Dogs of PreideH Washineton. like other gentlemen of his day. kept -1 hunting, but Jenerso largest kennel for this ut drew Jackson kept bird dop a large nondescript hotnd; i land favored setters, p spaniels; Theodore Roc a number of dogs wecM his children, Including nurds, terriers and n, Enliin Surf In appearance the Em) ling resembles a tames -j It is about the same sizftfc 1 stockier. The plow -J twice a year. a mottled appearance MJ it u darker in color, , spots. Both have plu f f ,vwt Theta!-; vellow in spring bat is black. I l J I ( 1 n. .mil I 8 PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM BDomDandrna-StopsHJr Filling Imparts Color and Baantrto Gray an d Faded Hair fur ami i . w mi ursrgmxm. HTm Chrro. Wtta.. Pi'.chogra.N.T quired to Insure that people will not be foolish or crooked. And there are going to be more loans made. The last congress enacted en-acted a law providing for loans to Industry, the so-called small industries indus-tries loan legislation. It was called. Business leaders and bankers tell me that the government Is going to find Itself owning a lot of business wrecks through those loans. The bankers say that If a business has a chance to survive, which means It can pay expenses, it can get money at ordinary banking houses. If the government is going to make loans only to those unable to get bank loans, the conviction I hear most often expressed Is that the government had better set np another an-other agency from which It can send supervisors or general managers man-agers all over tha country to run the property It eventually will own, C T Western Xawptotr VxAom. 0 eenta fav mail or at draff" rata. Hiscox Chemical Works. Patchoffne, N. Y. WATCH' the Specials OU can depend de-pend on the special sales the merchants of our town announce in the columns of this paper. They mean money saving to our readers. It always pays to patronize the merchants mer-chants who advertise. They are not afraid of their merchandise or their prices SaltLakeCitf fewest Hold I. 'in " I kone rer inch they ! I xn. I likenesses Doctor i tM hp" j li him j,eedr, ' h Slnt,wl EiiktH p:uiW ' 4 (inner, J 0 oi the 3IAPTER gnc one ha Denver re i I Mother , flook, Ja iv-she kn! f, and pu kel frwc f reveal yo iv 1 isn't n ( ,it? Shew Varies 0: I can It I ier-fflj t i-kell turn o Janet I could with sad ape yoa w Go In s. Go c make tuc tre to hi yn, are y t to maki Alton was ,fi Hask problems freighted I tradition ,f jhire 0! nice. - t to kee nlrl's mi saver to.. ii I f'ly; ti :i? I wal TM? 1 3.-. -Jiart yo No." 8e hiiro e along fct her at i J If every are 1 me 1 T y ta of 1 i story.' t: loi 'it her ' s not ire 1 '.df ';'s n, strai t bro ViS y, 'tea, at ra vm a J hotel TEMPLE SQUARE 200 T3t 200 Room PATES FROM W 1 -!f 'itj J- Va n It I.M st;s. Tk I Pit ' t ." ; - v.4, taai wxu-w i |