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Show TIIK PAGE TWO TIMES-NEW- AnWYITIEtE This Week by ARTHUR BRISBANE India Visits London Advertising Rules Captain Hawks You Shall Not Sell brrrj'S;, lift . .rtf" 2 aUA; 1 "V '.f : ' i ir T""i r 4 r ,r l ! .1. !. Li1"- 1 If; - U ' - - 111 I London at a round table conference Brltlna with the powers of tn Empire. India demanded "dominion status." the same right of self government as is possessed by Canada. Australia and other partners In the British Empire. The two British speeches, cms from the throne and on by Ramsay MacDonald, presiding at tse round table, carefully avoided mention of dominion status. Mir-.- , it r V-J rlil -f"- A i annual Grange at Its sixty-fourtconvention In Rochester, N. Y. To this end six suggestions were put forward by National Muster Louis J. Tuber, these being: 1. Stabilization of values. 2. A higher price level for farm commodities. 3. More Justly distributed system of taxation. 4. Extension of the federal farm loan system. 5. Readjustment of tlie nation's freight rate structure. 6. Restriction of immigration and conservation of natural resources. Criticizing the speculation in grain on the Chicago Board 'of Trade, Mr. Taber said: "As long as this present system remains with its violent price manipulations it Is obvious that there' must be a method of protection by hedging for the safeguarding of the buyer nnd processor, but when hedging and short selling take the form of speculation and gambling in the necessities of life, the public is injured. "Unfortunately for the American farmer, our present marketing structure operates with no concern as to the price he receives. It Is a sad commentary on our present boasted wheat marketing program, that during the recent period of agriculture's greatest depression, and the grain grower's consequent distress, the Chicago Hoard of Trade erected a $12,000,(HH) building, while the producer suffers near annihilation." h NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS United States Contends at Geneva for Real Reduction of Armaments. W. PICKARD IKECT and genuine reduction of land and sea armament was proposed by the United States in the sessions of the preparatory disarmament commission In Geneva, the spokesman for this country being Ambassador Hugh Gibson, lie was replying to I,ord Hohert Cecil's speech advocating limitation through budgetary curtailment, and said the United States could not accept this plan for two reasons : First, because It is Inoperative and cannot efficiently and accurately restrict the maintenance of war material ; Second, because the congress at Washington probably would refuse to ratify any such agreement, which, he said. Infringes on Its rights to make appropriations for national defense. The British want the budgetary system applied to land forces but not to navies, and they are supported by France, the little entente and some other nations. The American demand Is backed up by Germany, Japan, Itussin. Scandinavia, Holland and Canada. Maxim Litvinov, Moscow's representative, insisted that a direct system of limitation of arms alone will give results. He went further ami insisted en a dual method of limitation with the publication of complete tahles of war materiaJ, and a graduated decrease in military budgetary expenditures. N. Sato of Japan declared that the direct method of limiting fighting forces was too difficult im-to apply and was impossible to pose on all nations. He said : "I think that Japan's view is that we should be content to limit soldiers and not attempt to limit material "by any method." Rene Massigli of France complained that Mr. Gibson was too severe against the budgetary system, but admitted that some countries' military budgets do not reveal the exact amounts spent He also voiced apprehension over subsidized arsenals. The French delegation then proposed that a committee of experts be named to examine both systems and report to the governments to give them time to make up their minds before the disarmament conference is held. T By EDWARD PRESIDENT HOOVER in an address urged his listeners to work continuously for peace with the same zeal with which America's war dead waged war, but lie said the time has not yet come when the United States can rest Its defense solely upon the Kellogg pact and other peace machinery, and he also made In-it clear that the United States tends to keep free of political pacts that would bind it to the use of force to maintain peace. "The purpose of our government," the President said In addressing an audience of 3,000 delegates attending the Good Will congress of the World Alliance for Friendship Through the Churches, with others to "is to use our friendly ofliees and, short of any implication of the use of force, to use every friendly effort and all good wiU to maintain the peace of the world." General Pershing, Secretary of State Stimson and Secretary of War nurley all made Armistice day talks in Washington, and all of them pleaded for adequate prefor national defense. ' paredness Secretary "n'urley said that in event of anwuier war "each farm and factory, each mill and mine, will be required to perform its duty to the country in supiort of the soldier who faces the enemy at the front Never again shall one citizen be required to give his life In defense of his country while another is permitted to make unusual profit at his country's expense." American agriculture can helped to establish itself on a Ann economic basis was the main topic before the National HOW SEVEN national leaders of the party ITered Hoover President In nonand his administration partisan efforts to stabilize business, promote business and otherwise improve the national welfare through legislation ; and they gave assurance that the Democrats, victorious In the recent election, would not attempt for the present to change the tariff act passed last June. On behalf of the administration and the Republicans in congress, Senator James E. Watson of Indiana, niiijority leader in the senate, accepted and welcomed the aid offered by the Democrats, saying the country Is faced with a situation where the only patriotic action. solution lies in It was learned at the White House that President Hoover will present to congress in December a large unemployment program which will include authorizations for new building projects that may He already exceed $100,000,000. had announced the administration would ask an emergency appropriation, which may reach to finance an expansion of the government's public works construction program for the relief of unemployment. Removal of time limitations on projects now authorized will be asked, as will new legislation to remove limitations on certain Industries that are handicapped in their desires to expand construction efforts. That promise of made by the seven Democratic leaders was not well taken by Senator Carter Glass of Virginia, himself one of the most prominent Democrats, in so fur as it affected the tariff. He asserted that "no group of Democrats, however distinguished or discerning, should feel obliged to pledge their party associates in congress not severely to disturb the most infamous tariff act ever enacted by a legislative body, lest the doing of this might upset the acquisitive activities of those who are thus licensed to prey upon the American consumers." with $100,-000,00- 0. within the INDIA'S future status empire is to be worked out, if possible, at the long await- ed "round table conference" which King George opened in London. himself started the proceedings a with speech expressing his earnest desire that the problem be settled in the best interests of all his d subjects, and Prime Minister was then made chairman. Seated around a great oval table were eighty-si- x persons including the princes of India, representatives of nil classes nnd communities of British Indians and the kingdom of Great Britain, and among them were two women delegates, the Begum Shah Nawaz and Mrs. But there was no representative of the powerful Nationalist Congress party which is headed by Mahatma Gandhi, for it bad The boycotted the conference. many millions of Nationalists demand complete Independence for India, while the other Indians, present at the round table, nil in Mac-Donal- "So do tftJEETir r si iy lfYry.-1i'- want is performance, and so far as we're concerned there's only one choice. We want the Golden Voice of the provements plus If your friends like well you WET rWhen Rest Is Broken i ills 30. e y T Iut4t We're going to put our money where our faith is, and that means one of the new Atwater Kents. When we go into town tomorrow, we're going to stop at a dealer's and order an Atwater Kent. We know what we want and we're going to get it NOW. Variety of other beautiful models for or battery operation. t r The new 1931 Atwater Kent with the Golden Voice is built for either or battery operation. That' i another reason why rural families all over the United Sutes prefer the new Atwater Kent KENT MFG. COMPANY ATWATER A KCHT, PHIJIDEKT AtWATE 4764 WUlAHICKOIf AVX., PHILADELPHIA, Man's One Never-Endin- PA. War g on His Insect Enemies war that never ceases is that waged by insects upon man. Every year insects cost the human race millions upon millions of dollars by their destruction of growing crops and stored harvests. And they kill or malm thousands of human beings by spreading disease. Science is constantly engaged In investigating new means of keeping Insect foes at bay, and wonderful work has been done. The stamping out of malaria in large areas once almost uninhabitable, and the checking of the spread of sleeping sickness are examples of what has been accomplished. Sow conies news of a discovery which may open up entirely new lines of attack on Insect pests. For a long time pnst a young Australian scientist. Dr. F. G. Holdaway, has been endeavoring to find a way of dealing with the flour beetle, which does an enormous amount of damage. He has found that the proportion of grubs that turn into males and females can be controlled by regulating their food ; starve a hundred grubs for one day and the majority will develop into male beetles. Now, the female beetle mny lay thousands of eggs. If, therefore, he has found a means of decreasing the number of females, the beetle pest may be kept down. Similar prinmay be found ciples of applicable to other Insect enemies of man. The New Exclusive Quick-Visio- n Dial Easy to read as a clock. Greatest aid to fast, easy tuning in all the history of radio. Salt Lake City Directory Cullen Hotel J. R. Traag, Maaafer Meet Your Old Friends Cullen at the Cafe and Cafeteria IS W. taA So. St. Salt Lake City, Utah. 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Theater an cars and she is try- Office those Infant-sizChurch Purniture.Edlaon-DIcMimeograph, and Supplies.Full Line of Stationery, Wraping to get thin enough to ride in it etc. Oldent and ping School Paper, Largest Cincinnati Enquirer. Supply and Equipment House in the West. SCHOOL M'FPLY CO. 165 So. Stute Street - Salt Lake City. " e k VTAH-IDAH- I v p&iii ill ' J , -- , .1 HOTEL 7 - sr Newhouse SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH One of Salt Lake City's finest hotels, where guests find every comfort with a warm hospi- i Wntero Newioaocr Union.) Lowboy come in. first's H E AD THROB? MODEL 70 radio one we g really can show with pride when friends x 1930. I'M r m good-lookin- up-to-d- enough, they will serve you. You don't have to "use" them. Republicans are do must A advertisement good that Senator Simeon D. It If do them all. and five things Fess of Ohio resign as chairman of the Republican national fails in one it fails In all. It must committee because he said that the make people see, read It, underparty must remain dry or face a stand it. believe It, want it. split and be defeated in 1032. The senator declares that this was Captain Hawks continues to merely his personal opinion, and flyers thnt while he will continue to do make other distinguished all he can to combat efforts by the look like "has beens." He flew from wets to weaken prohibition, lie may Havana to New York in 8 hours 44 be ready to support any recomminutes, averaging 190 miles an mendations made by the Wicker-shnhour, doing 600 miles at 210 milea commission that would tend an hour, not using top speed at any to make prohibition more enforce- time. able. He more than Intimates he will not give up the chairmanship, Hawks came bringing letters from but there are those who believe he will S(?nn be forced out nnd that RldSrdo R. Lancls, brilliant editor Robert H. Lucas will succeed him of the Havana El Mundo and wearand conduct the next Presidential ing a rubber life preserver Jacket Deal Promptly With Kidney Irregularities. campaign. given to him by our ambassador. Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, pres- Harry F. Guggenheim. It's a jacket Are y ou miserable wi th bladident of Columbia university, says that der irritations, getting up at over water should that If the Republican party's plat- wear,every flyer and constant backache? night on inflated the way easily reform in 1032 does not call for don't take chances! Help Then or otherwise. down, by parachute peal of the Eighteenth amendment your kidneys at the first sign of "there will come In the following disorder. Use Doan's Pills. SucNovember the biggest political The government has said that cessful for more than 50 years. In smash-u- p that has taken place California may grape Endorsed by hundreds of thou. growers now American the history of any sands of grateful users. Get legally sell the Juice of grapes, living." Doan's today. Sold by dealers or otherwise, proconcentrated As a matter of fact, the leaders vided It sell alcohol before everywhere. El they of both parties are greatly concerned over the problem of adjust- develops. The grape growers are not held ing their platform on the liquor isStruts. sue so as to retain their respec- responsible for the laws of nature, which seem to have no sympathy tive strengths. The Wickersham commission, with prohibition and '.urn innocent trying to get together on a report grape juice into- wine, as the water PfW?EJ7C enforce- was turned at the marriage feast concerning prohibition FOR ment, continued its hearings and of old. MONEYS THE deliberations until Thursday and then adjourned until November 24. Eut, what suits the national govAmong the witnesses it heard were ernment, according to news from W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. Dr. William C Woodward of Chicago, legislative counsel for the California and Chicago, does not American Medical association, nnd suit the distinguished gangsters Cheese It! Dr. William H. Mayer of Pitts- that enjoy a monopoly of bootleg Blake What is the principal aniburgh, Pa. Both doctors were un- whisky and beer selling in Chicago. mal of Wales? derstood to have told the commisexManufacturers of grape-juicDrake The rarebit, I suppose. sion that they felt the present dry pected to sell great in quantities law provisions are obnoxious to Chicago, the buyers to wait for natheir profession generally and a to take her course and change burdensome Interference with the ture the juice Into wine. practice of reputable physicians. But that cut down the demand tor "needled" beer and "bathtub" II. BLISS, who whisky and gin. California's manuGEN. TASKER chief of staff of the facturers of grape juice are told. United States army during the In plain simple English by the World war, American representative on the supreme war council head gangsters: "If you try to sell any of that and one of the American peace commissioners in 1918, died in Wal- stuff in Chicago, somebody is going ter Reed hospital, Washington, at to be killed." the age of seventy-siyears. He was buried in Arlington with full A gentleman Is here from China military honors. to borrow from Thomas Coleman du Pont, for- government one the United States thousand million mer senator from Delaware, finan- ounces of silver, worth about cier and for years head of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., passed China uses silver as money, and away at his home In Wilmington, Del. Other notables who died in- would be much obliged if Uncle cluded Dr. Julia Holmes Smith of oam wouia lend a billion ounces. Chicago, pioneer suffragist and The woman who knows, would philanthropist ; John Lee Mahin, Fortunately we are not in as soon start out without her noted advertising man ; Sidney M. when anybody could shovel days, M. and F. purse ! She always carries Bayer Colgate, soap magnate, Huhbell of Des Moines, reputed out American billions to foreignAspirin. ers. Congress must pass on the to be Iowa's wealthiest citizen. When your head fairly throbs proposed Chinese loan, and will from the stores and crowds, : ask probably in rnpid reach for that little box. Take THREE landslides "Do you want the money to feed caused by heavy rains. two or three tablets, a swallow buried part of Fourvieres, a dense- your starving tens of millions, ot 10 give your 600,000 sollders theii of water, and resume your of industrial suburb ly populated shopping in comfort. Relief Lyon, France. Scores wer buried back pay and keep up the fightis immediate. alive and it was thought the death ing?" list might run as high as 100. MemMost people use these wonbers of rescue parties that began Los Angeles reports a plot to derful tablets for something! work nfter the first landslide were kidnap Harry Chandler, publisher But do you know how many, among the victims of the later ones. of The Los Angeles Times, the many ways they can spare you kidnapers to hold him for ransom. needless suffering? From the of Several men have been arrested. PREMIER wasYuko Hamaguchi discomfort and danger of a The would-b- e mortally wounded made a kidnapers In a Tokyo railway station by a foolish mistake In the selection of neglected cold. From serious young member of a reactionary pa- a victim. Such a kidnaping would triotic society. He was shot in the mean a abdomen. The premier, knovn as criminalspermanent hunt for the by newspapermen that the "Lion of Japan." was considered a financial genius and was understand their business and would mean ultimate detection. popular. - Screen-Grid.fro- the manufacturer with longest Screen-Gri- d experience. We want a new Atwater Kent good, clear, consistent reception, without a lot of noise. We want power enough to bring in distant stations. We want a dial we can read easily from any position, without straining our eyes that new Atwater Kent Quick-Visio- n Dial. We want the new Atwater Kent Tone Control, so that we can bring out the low notes or the high notes as we please. We want a radio that's always ready to go when we come to the end of a day's work. We want the kind of dependability that Atwater Kent is famous for. We want a radio from the maker who insists that farm people shall have just as good performance as city people. ' We want an radio, im- with all the newest worth-whil- e Kai-she- (Cel. l '- ... and it's going to he an Atwater Kent. What we nt $350,-000,00- 0. - r J- pire" But he said nothing definite. knows Everybody in England tor India is out of the question, with 60.000.000 ready to dominate sist on full dominion status ns a Hindus. But no one dares minimum. This the present British tell the truth to India, or discourgovernment Is pledged to grant, age, the national feeling which is and the task of the conference Is a people's only salvation. to work out the multitudinous details. The business world. Including all CHANG, the young publishers, will appreciate PresiMARSHAL of Manchuria who dent Hoover's sound advice to adby his intervention ended the civil vertisers. war In China, went to Nanking last Those with long experience in week to confer with President advertising know that its evils coron a program of rect themselves. Chiang Advertising not The finance prob- founded on truth and value, will reconstruction. lem presents the greatest difficulty, not last. A good name, with adverfor the Nanking government hopes as with women, is the most tisers facManchurian to persuade the of all assets. valuable and customs the tion to surrender The General Motors factory and salt gabelle revenues which Marshal Chang is cornering. Chang machinery are worth probably two also is asking Nanking for $5,000,-00- 0 hundred million dollars. The name monthly for the upkeep of of General Motors product is worth Manchurian troops within the great more than two thousand million wall. dollars. I I want " The King said: "It gives me much pleasure to welcome the governors of my em- Iteproductlon of the famous Fort Dearborn which is being constructed as a feature of Chicago's Cen-- , tury of I'roKresa exposition in 1033. 2 President Ilcover being enrolled ns a 1930 member of the American Ued Cross by Judge John Rarton I'ayne, president of the organization. 3 G. A. 11. memorial statue of Abraham Lincoln, the work of Alonzo V. Iwls, that was dedicated on Armistice day In Spokane, Wash. 1 I. iMLDII with the GOLDEN VOICE I know what Representatives of the 300.000.000 that live in India, met recently in f i Thursday, November 20, 1930 NEPIII. UTAH iiatB consequences of a sore throat.. From those pains peculiar to women. From th misery of neuralgia and neuritis. Every drugstore has genuine Bayer Aspirin. The box says Bayer, and every tablet bears the Bayer cross. Tablets thus marked do not depress the heart. BAYE RhdASPI Rl N tality. Garage in connection. Cafe and cafeteria. 400 Rooms. Each with Bath $2.00 to 11.00. J. H. RAYBURN, Managtr Sunshine'' All Winter Long Dstarl Resort At the Foremoit of the Wst marvelous climate worm sunny days clear starlit nights dry invigorotina olr 'Splendid roads gorgeous mountain scenes finest hotels the ideal winter horns. Writ Ores A Chmtfty PALM SPUING? California |