OCR Text |
Show THE TIMES - NEWS. NEPIII, UTAH PACE TWO News Review of Current Events the World Over TAPA.J la moving swiftly to ol tain the control over north China which evidently Is her main objective at present New demand were presented to the Chinese government at Nanking, and when some of these were declared unacceptable the Japanese troops and otllclals moving Into 1'elptng and Tientsin and all the area between the Great Wall and tht Yellow river The Chinese officials, being helpless, moved out and the branches of the Kuomlntarig or People's The central party were cloned. council In Nanking, though accepting some of the Japanese demands, could see nothing but trouble ahead and Instructed Gen. Ho the war minister, to prepare for eventualities. ls-ga- n NRA Despite Long's Extraordinary Filibuster Grass Roots Meet Offers a Creed for the Republicans. Senate Extends Skeletonized W. PICK ARD By EDWARD C Wcst.rv Nawspapsr Unloa. vise like grip of vast bureaucratic form of government which is de- the SENATOR IICEY LONO, made a tremendous efTort to keep the senate from adopting the resolution extending the skeletonised stroying Individual Initiative and regimenting the American people." Nit A until next mm ' A JTC .1 ? yfi. M THOUSANDS of Republicans from April, but failed. Advocating an amendment offered by Sen- - tor Gore, which would ha?e required senate confirmation offl- V1 of all executiveMAPI .1-- 1. 00 than year thus disrupting me natronaee machine. Senator Long IIuey started on a filibuster. For nearly 16 hours, with occasional help from Senators Bchall and McCarren, be kept the tipper house In session, pouring forth a contlnuoua stream of discourse that ranged from the necessity of preserving the Constitution down to recipes for fried oysters He attacked the and President and the administration generally, called the NRA "the national racketeers association," told stories about his uncle, read from the Bible and Victor Hugo, stalked about the chamber waving his arms and croaking as his voice weakened, nd now and then took a bite of cheeRe and a sup of cold coffee. All In all, IIuey put on a show that kept not only the senators but a big crowd of visitors up all night lie was contlnunlly heckled by his angry fellow solons but always bad a smashing retort At last the senate broke down the filibuster, rejected the Gore amendment and passed the extension resolution by a vote of 41 to 13. One change, to tighten up the antitrust laws, suggested by Borah, was made, so the resolution was sent back to the bouse for concurrence. In Its final form It continues the recovery administration without codes but with authority for voluntary agreements among business men dealing only with collective bargaining, minimum wages, maximum hours, abolition of child labor and prohibition of trade practices outlawed by statute. The house had previously adopted the resolution by a vote of 201 to 121, only a few Democrats standing with the Republicans against It X'wk' 1 spending the PLANS for work-relie- f fund are coming to the fore rapidly and numerMitchell ously. Representative (Dem., Tenn.) has Introduced a bill requiring the President to use to help the durable goods industries. By its terms factories supplying machinery and materials would be reimbursed for losses directly attributable to hiring new men. Mr. Mitchell thinks his plan would aid in the production of worth of durable goods needed by private Industry. The War department filed a request for $17,071,388 to finance the construction of 36 army bases In Alabama, Arizona, Arkansas. California and Kansas. The Labor department asked for $400,000 for research designed to aid the United States employment service In selecting and placing workers on relief Jobs and In private Industry. The department said it would use this money to carry on studies in Cbicago, Baltimore, Newark and 11 other cities not yet selected. $475,000,000 TAXES go totaling out of existence before July 31 If not extended, so a resolution continuing them two years was being hurried through the house in accord with the wish of the President Among them are tie postage and the federal gasoline charge. A second resolution was being prepared to plug loopholes in existing tax laws and to adjust present rates found to be unconscionable or unproductive. American Federation of more than tny other group except the old brain trust bemoans the death of NRA, and its attorneys re busy drafting a bill designed to take Its place In a measure. This measure proposes to put nnder federal license all concerns engaged In Interstate commerce or handling goods destined for such commerce. Those companies would be exempted from the operations of the antitrust laws but would be required to agree to hours of labor and working conditions determined by a federal commission. TI1E SENATOR WILLIAM E. BORAII be a receptive candi- date for the Presidential nomination next year, .but anyhow his friends In Idaho bave grabbed his bat and (brown It Into the ring. They are organizing "Borah - for - President" dubs all over the state. Ralph Erashears of Boise, one of the lead-ersays Mr. Borah Is the man to "emancipate our people from the a, the Middle West gathered In Springfield, 111., for the "grass roots" conference and. In the shadow of the tomb of Abraham Lincoln, who saved the Union, solemnto ly determined save the "indestructible states" from what they consider assault on 'heir constitutional ao L, J J Bryce Canyon National Parle between Paraguay In the Gran Cba-co- , which has been going on for three years, came to an end after representatives of the two nations signed an armistice agreement to Buenos Aires. The truce was the result of conferences between representatives of Paraguay, Bolivia and six neutral nations the United States, Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Chile and Uruguay. An attempt will now be made to settle the disputes by direct negotiations. If these fall the World court ut The nague will be called on to render Judgment The war In the Jungle has cost about 100,000 lives. rights. The gather- Ing was considered o important mm it Frank O. attracted political Lowdsn observers from all It Is THE Britishhas government over the country. Most of the deleIn prinaccepted gates were young men eager for the ciple the German demand for rebattle, but wltb them were many storation of the German navy up w hite haired leaders of former frays to 35 per cent of the British whose enthusiasm and patriotism strength. This Is exceedingly Irribave survived the years. to France, and Premier LaAfter a pilgrimage to the New tating Is likely to send a note to all val Salem Sta'e park where the scenes to the Washington signatories of Lincoln's youth have been recontreaty protesting against the restructed, the delegates assembled In vision of the multilateral treaties the fair grounds Coliseum and were welcomed by George W. Bunn of by bilateral agreements, and a new naval conference, inSpringfield, general chairman of the local committee. Harrison E. Span-gle- r cluding Germany this time, to revise the Washington and London of Cedar Rapids, Iowa, was Installed as temporary chairman and ratios all around. made a speech In which President Roosevelt was pilloried for all manOEINSDORF, a German town 52 ner of political and governmental miles Bout h west of Berlin, was sins, from killing six million pigs virtually destroyed by the blowing and breaking campaign pledges to up of a great munitions plant and violating the Constitution and atthe ensuing fires. Because of rigid tempting to set up a dictatorship. censorship it was Impossible to Mr. Spangier then introduced the learn the number of casualties. orator of the day, Frank O. Lowden, Nazi officials admitted there were former governor of Illinois and for- 52 dead, 79 Injured seriously and mer aspirant for the Republican 300 slightly hurt Presidential nomination. Mr. Lowden, breaking a political BRITAIN'S attitude silence of seven years, vigorously GREAT the crisis in east Africa Roosevelt's has denounced President enraged all of Fascist Italy and proposal to change the Constitution the attacks on England In the Italto fit the New Deal and argued at ian press became so bitter that Muslength for maintenance of the bill of solini had to order that they be rights unimpaired. toned down a little, though It was denied In Rome that the British had by made IN TnE "platform" adoptedthese any diplomatic protest II the grass roots conference Duce, however, continues his outadvowere policies governmental spoken denunciation of the British cated : In a speech at Cagliarl, course. 1. The Immediate adoption of a the of Sardinia, he defied capital policy of economy and thrift In govbis European critics who linve reernment wltb due allowance for quested him to deal less harshly essential relief expenditures as op- with the Ethiopians, and attacked posed to the present spending polthe British without going to the icy of waste and extravagance. trouble of hiding his words behind 2. The prompt attainment of a diplomatic formulas. balanced budget, not by the mis."We will Imitate to the letter leading method of double bookkeep- those who taitaht us this lesson," he ing, but by the honest method of sh uted, referring to British colonizbringing the expenses of the gov- ing methods which bis press has ernment within the limits of its been "exposing." "They have demonIncome. strated that when they were creat3. A sound currency based on ing an empire and defending It they gold and definitely stabilized by never took Into consideration world congress so that individual enter- opinion. "We have got old, and we have prise may have confidence In the future value of the dollar, In terms got new accounts to settle with of which every man's plans for his Ethiopia, and we will settle them. present or future must necessarily We will pay no attention to what We Is said In foreign countries. be made, 4. The Immediate withdrawal of exclusively are the Judpes of our government from competition with own Interests and the guarantors of our future." private industry. 8. The maintenance of the vitalActually, Mussolini's plana for ity and free growth of American war with Ethiopia are not very popIndustry through the preservation ular In Italy, but British Interferof the competitive system protected ence Is Increasing h'.s support daily. against monopoly by the vigorous The reconstructed British cabinet Is enforcement of anti-trulaws, so much worried over the situation that small businesses may be pre- and believes the war cannot now be served and the door of equal oppor- stopped. tunity kept open to all. 6. The rigid enforcement of all swarmed with laws, civil and criminal, to prevent WASHINGTON week, and they or unfair and punish dishonest enjoyed themselves In their charpractices In business, Industry, and acteristic ways. Leonnrd P. Steuart finance. of that city was advanced auto7. National recognition of the matically to the position of Imperial Is needs of agriculture. Agriculture potentate, and A. G. Arvold of Fara fundamental Industry of the go, N. D., was given the coveted United States. outer guard office, first step toward 8. Work for the workers. With the ttp. The conclave of 1030 will men out of work, as now, the capibe held In Seattle, opening July 14. tal structure of the nation Is not only being Impaired but underMAX BAER lost the of the mined. championship 9. The breaking down of arbitrary world, being defeated by .Tames J. restrictions that throttle world com- Braddock at Long Island City In a merce, such as quotas and exchange battle. There were no restrictions. knockdowns and neither man was 10. Continued protection to farm badly punished, but the referee and and home ownership, and continued Judges nnanimously decided that In wltb state provision. Braddock was the winner on points. and local governments, for those Baer's chances were Injured by a enthat are In need until private number of unintentional fouls. terprise absorbs the present army of the unemployed. of the kidnapers of young Senator Robinson, majority lead- TWO Weyerhaeuser of Taco-m- a er of the senate, speaking before Harmon M. Waley and bis the Arkansas Pharmaceutical asso- wife Margaret were arrested In ciation, said of this: Salt Lake City, where the woman "The only constructive suggestion was passing $20 bills that were made In addition to those which are part of the ransom money. A third embraced In the Roosevelt admin- member of the gang, William istration policies Is the often rean was being huntpeated demand for the balancing of ed In the vicinity of Butte. Mont, the budget The budget eamiot be in which he was forced to abandon balanced unless the a stolen automobile that contained Immediately various forms of relief now being $15,000 if the sum paid for release carried on be abandoned. This can- of the boy. Waley and bis wife, not be done Just now without dan- heavily Ironed, were subjected to a ger to millions of our people who grueling examination by governhave yet been doable to obtain ment agents and confessed their part In the crime. prj-posin- g 'J J q up-pl- LSZJ of health giving Postum free to ujone who write for It Adv. Work Both Way. Forgetfulnesa is a plague, tlmea a blessing. 5 --. . r papers, or what I kinder eve drop around ana near. A We are back at tWrthe Studio working oa the picture after being away on location up around Sacramento, Cat. We bad a lot ot fun on steamboats up there. We had two or three rented and lived right on the boats. Had a big teamboat race. Irvln Cobb was the captain bf one and me of the other. Cobb really knew something about a boat, but I am not part of a boat man, either ocean or river, although I would take the river first I am the champion sea sick guy of this or any range. I am getting a little better though than I used to In my early days of ocean traveling. Its all nerve you know and I am as yellow as a small pox flag. I give up and off to the hay I go. But to get back to rivers, this Sacramento River that we were working on Is a pretty big river. Well nothing like the Mississippi (but what Is?) or even the Ohio. In fact Irvln aald its about half the size of the Tennessee. I dont know nothing but the Verdigris, (that last four letters gris. Is prounced gree) Verdlgree. Its a pretty big river. It has to be to furnish Claremore with its water supply and have any left over. I was born right on her, about a quarter of a mile away. She is steep banks, and muddy and boggy, and you cant cross it only at fords. This Sacramento and another river that run Into it right where we was working, the American River, that was the river where they first found the gold in Cal. And say, the gold thing is around up there now, and all over California. There has been a pretty big strike up here in the desert at Mohave. The high price ot gold Is what has caused em to get out and dig again. Its a railroad division point. I like to go to those little mining towns. One time out here in the old silent day pictures, it was in 1919, we made about three pictures up at a place near Mohave, Calledarndsburg. It has a big old mine, and Irene Rich was with us. She was Just a breaking in as a leading lady. She is a big radio star now. Modern audiences think that old folks are Just to be the fathers and mothers of the young ones. And too In one of these same pictures was Margaret Livingston, who Is now Paul Whiteman's wife. She is the one that made him quit eating so much. The way she did it she would let him order whatever he wanted and then she had a string tied to it and she would pull it away from him, and he got thin grabbing at It I was one time to rescue her out ot the water. Well we had to go another two hundred miles to find a stream. You know this water thing out here aint' Just water, it3 gold. Well I was supposed to swim in on a horse and rescue her, and as I dragged her ashore pull her up on my horse and run to the doctors with her. Well say you get on dry land and try to stay up on your horse and pull a fair size old gal up on there with you, when she Is supposed to be plum dead, and then wet to bopt! Say, she had to reduse before I could get her up there. There is nothing heavier than a person that is wet even a little person. You dip one of Singers Midgets In the water and let him soak awhile, and I bet you Dempsey wouldent lift him up in front of him. We had lots of fun in those days in the old silent pictures. They was-eso careful and tegious with everything. I love Westerns. They wont let me make one. They say they can only get Just so much money with it, as tney have a kind of set price for Westerns, but I would like to get to make a good one. (Now dont start sending me any, you cant hint anything in j Bryce 1115 Canyon la on of a ocriM of articla to appear In thb newspaper, Bait Iaka Advertising Club, aaaoeialed civic cluba IKinaored by th oi aontharn and centra! Utah, and ehambera of commerce: part of m ao that local people will program to point oat Utah'a resource "Know Utah Better". Thia By MARION C. NELSON all the awesome sights on the face of the earth, there Is none more breath-takinnone that more completely overwhelms an observer, than Bryce Canyon. This scenic wonder is approximately twenty-fivmiles from Panguitch and is reached over splendid highways. It has been said that if a view of this great amphitheatre does not create a feeling akin to reverence, nothing ever will. While Bryce Canyon Is not as extensive, it la like Cedar Breaks, intensified. Crowded into 35,240 acres, 8,000 feet elevation at the rim, Bryce Canyon presents such a spectacle that in recognition of its unusual scenic value it was made a National Monument in 1923 and changed to a National Park in 1928. From Cedar Breaks to Bryce Canyon one passes through seventy miles of most interesting and varied scenery as though to prepare the visitor for the climax at the rim of Bryce. Crossing the broad summit of the Markagunt Plateau the highway traverses fine coniferous forests that frequently open into charming "parks", and passes great areas covered with lava from Hancock Peak and the adjacent extinct volcanoes. Navajo Lake, a beautiful mountain tarn encircled by pines, and a noted fishing water. Is about eight miles beyond Midway. Soon pretty Duck Creek, rising in full power from a fine spring and filled with trout parallels the highway for several miles, then disappears under the volcanic rock. At the crossing of Strawberry Gulch a little used trail extends southward to Strawberry Point, a famous observation point on the Pink Cliffs. The mala highway Is alternately surfaced with white, pink, and red rock, a painted road in a land ol color. The road enters Red Canyon which Is so like Bryce, on a smaller scale, that you may be excused for thinking you liave already arrived. A few miles more of travel through a pine dotted valley, walled with red rock, and you come to Bryce Canyon National Park. At first you may be disappointed I Here is Bryce Lodge, but there seems to be nothing to Indicate the existence of a canyon. Have patience, for you notice a footpath leading directly away from the lodge. A short walk and there bursts upon you one of the most brilliant sights ever beheld by man! The thing about Bryce Canyon that will fascinate you, that will keep you entranced for hours on end, is the weird sculpture of the rock formations that rise in countless numbers from the canyon depths, and the brilliant colors with which they are tinted. As you stand for the first time on the rim of this fairyland of reality, looking downward, your first thought is that some giant hand scooped out a bowl in this Utah plateau, and then studded it with these strange beautifully-colorefigures that rise from the canyon floor. They scarcely seem real. Perhaps the Indians who once roamed through this country described it as well as it can be done. Their name for Bryce was Oil g e d But though these figures rise erect from the canyon floor, like men, they resemble almost anything under the sun that your Imagination can conceive. Here in one place is a whole city of spires, their bases tinted with a deep rose, their tips glittering in brilliant frost-whitSingle forms are everywhere. Here is a statue of Queen Victoria; there another of the Pope the resemblances so amazing that you can hardly believe your eyes. A few of the established names in Bryce may give you an idea of the variety of the forms: the Organ, the Sculptor's Studio, the Queen's Castle, Tower Bridge, Moon Temple, Bluebeard's Castle. But the changing colors of Bryce are almost more amazing than Its figures. Lighted by the morning sun, the canyon looks like a bowl of glowing embers, decorated with lace and filigree work. It is no wonder that the Indians referred to Bryce as the "canyon of fire". At midday the canyon has lost its sparkle and seems to sleep in the sunlight. At sunset the colors are brought out in soft hues, and by moonlight, the deep shadows set off the brilliant white spires, making them almost seem to glow with a white light No visit to Bryce is complete until you have seen it from the trails that wind through the depths of the canyon. Like the Grand Canyon of the Colorado, the view from the rim serves only to stimulate the imagination, and a descent to the canyon floor is the only means by which a traveler may fully appreciate the versatility of nature's art displayed there. Here too, as at Grand Canyon, no observer can look at the great amphitheatre spread out below him, sigh, and say to himself "well, now I've seen Bryce Canyon", for the moving sun constantly sets a new stage with new scenery so different that you may spend days at the canyon always being surprised with new quirks of color and form. Intermountain News Briefly told for Busy Readers TO KILL B0V1XE ILL FLAN GREAT FIESTA FARM PRICES LOWER ENJOY 16000 MILE TRIP ENROLLMENT OF 600,000 IDAHO FALLS, IDA. Tulley, Bonneville county C agent R. re- ports that a carload of dairy cattle which reacted to tests made for Bang's disease will be shipped out to slaughter houses for killing. At a special SALMON, IDA. meeting, the Salmon school board approved the building of a gymnasium. Plans will be submitted for government approval with an application for P W A funds. The balance of the building cost will be raised by a bond issue. POCATELLO, IDA. Enrollment to increase the C C C numbers to 600,000 has begun according to advices from local agencies. An IIOLLISTER, IDA. run of Irrigation water has slarted from Salmon reservoir, which has the greatest storage supply since before the drouth period several years ago. Directors of the Salmon River Canal company said the current storage approximates 43,000 acre feet against 11,780 acre feet a year ago. BLACK FOOT, IDA Dr. V. C. White has announced a horse show ns one of the major attractions for the Blackfoot Trade day celebration, to be held June 20. ine- - r Organ st Ma-ba- Head uie oner made by the Postum Company In another part of thia pa. a ruu week a y per. 'iney win Well all I BKVERLY HILLS know is Just what I read In the Great In Ml n 20, 1935 Week' Supply of PotumFre IRQ)(GIEIR .. Ylng-chln- WARFARE A Ths Thursday. June EEXBL'RG, IDA. The 1935 en campment of the department of Idaho, Veterans of Foreign Wars, t( be held at Rexburg July 2, 3 and 4, In connection with the annua) whoopee celebration, promises tc be the most outstanding event evei to be held in the Upper Snake River valley. BOISE, IDA. Prices received by Idaho farmers for their agricultural commodities averaged lowei than a month ago for 10 of the 34 Items for which monthly farm prices are estimated, Richard C. Ross, agricultural statistician for Idaho, wrote In a mldmouth price release. REXBURG, IDA. The peace of fleers of Madison county have decided to enforce strictly the absolutely no favoritism plan in prosecution of offenses committed nnder the state liquor store act The sheriff's force, the Rexburg city police and the Sugar City officers and all other officers of the county will cooperate In keeping Madison county in line with the laws of the state. SALT LAKE CITT, UT. Twelvf motorcycle riders, hardened by miles of travel since April 8 and cheerfully facing the prospect of some 6,000 more before returning home, arrived In Salt Lake for the west coast. MONTPELIEU, IDA. The new ly constructed hlghwny through Montpeller canyon makes anothei link In the scenic canyon route from Salt Lake City via Logan canyon, beautiful Bear Lake valley and Montpeller canyon to Afton, Wyo., and thence to Yellowstone park. 10.-00- croc cart NEUTRALIZE Mouth Acids by chewing one or more Milnesia Wafers Yon can obtain a full size 20c package of Milnesia Wafers containing twelve full adult doses by furnishing as wiih the name of your local druggist if be does not happen to carry Milnesia Wafers in stock, by enclosing 10c in coin or postage stamps. Address SELECT PRODUCTS, INC. 4402 23rd St, Lob Ulan Clty.N.V. ..... . My Stmt a Strttt AJdrta.. . ......................... Tom My & Sift . si.................... .................. .... Druuat'i Nam Slrtti Adtirta Town & Start. pnOTO FIMSniNO Highest Quality. Lowest prices. I ir I rolls developed snd printed Hun Jitme, Cal. Mailed -- mmo day. Far I'hot-os- (futicura ComfortsTRefreshes - i Fore, medicated and mildly anti septic, it cools and soothes the skin, protecting against chafing and irritation. It absorbs perspiration and imparts a delicate fragrance. Ideal for every member of the family. Be Sure Tfiey Properly , Cleanse the Blood are constantly YOUR kidneys matter from the blood stream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work do not act as nature intendedfail to remove impurities that poison the system when retained. Then you may suffer nagging backache, dizziness, scanty or too frequent urination, getting up at night, swollen limbs; feel nervous, miserable" all upset . Don't delayl Use Doan's Pills. Doan's are especially for poorly functioning kidneys. They are recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist nt this business without som dozens of em, taking you up on it) Fox picks my stories. not me. They notify me the night before we start what Its to be, if they know by then themselvs. Pretty near everything In pictures nowadays Is made inside a stage. Street scenes, churches, homes and all are put up Inside a big stage. Then they can light It as they want to. We got a whole big steamboat built inside on a stage, water around the edges and all, but we miss a lot by not going on all those old location trips. Course this one to Stockton and Sacramento on this picture was great and unusual too. The people are awful fine to yon. mighty friendly and nice, but the whole thing must look awful nutty to em, for there Is no sense to it. It 3rives you pretty near cuckoo Just to try to watch em make erp. O 19SS, McNfAt Synduau. Int. FCZEMA ITCHItIG Oiiitsfw evlU?. Iki irrifr.4 torment and promote healing of Irritated skin uilrh - Resinol SALT LAKE'S HEWEST HOSTELRY Our lobby la delightfully air cooled daring the summer months 9 Radio for Every Room 200 Rooms 200 Baths ji aaSSrOTlUihrTT.I t 'SIA sz H ! S itf .l .I t HOTEL Temple Square . , Rates $1.50 to $3.0Q Tha Bntnl Tompla Srtiara haa highly drairnhlfi, frirn.lly atmosphere. You will always lin.liilmmv. and nlata, supremely aomfortahle.therethoroughly aareeahle.'oii can fore understand why thia hotel lea inCIILY RECOMMENDED You can also apnreelata why t It' a mark of distinction fa top this beautiful hottelrr ERNEST C ROSS1TER, Mgr. |