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Show SANITARIUM RESULT OF MAN'S BIG IDEA Perry Is Tennis Champ for Third Time Gaylord, 'Mich. Honor Dead at Vimy Spanixh War Pitiless I'ti.sHia Aids Loyalists Hitler Watches Spain Ridge, is impor- - tant to all our friends north of the boundary in Canada. It will interest, also, all Americans that "K'i 1 wcro se"1 abroad a in that famous fight, with which Arthur HrlKl,,,.,,. we h;uJ nothing to do except lose our men and our money. American soldiers, who liked the Canadian and Australian troops better than any others they met, according to statements made by many, testify to the courage with which the colonial Englishmen fought at Vimy Ridge and 'i Statistics of the war show that, on the side of the allies, the percentage of death was higher among the Canadians than among any other troops involved, excepting the French themselves, who fought at their own frontiers to defend their own homes. Sixty thousand Canadians lie buried, each one an "unknown soldier," around that great monument. The king of England, after a long and really admirable speech of appreciation, lowered the flags that hid the monument which, as he said, will forever honor the courage of the Canadians that fought and that lie dead and buried. The war that killed so many millions, blowing them to pieces, leaving them to die shattered and agonizing on the battlefield; suffocating, making them insane with the poison gas just coming into fashion, seemed between 1914 and 1918 as horrible as any war could be. But the civil war, the worst, most savage, pitiless and ferocious of all wars, now going on in Spain, makes the big war comparatively mild. ' Lord Rothermere's London Daily Mail eclipses in the horror of one published statement all stories of horror in the war and goes beyond anything that could possibly be believed. When the French newspaper, the Friend of the People, described fighters for Madrid's radical government digging up and throwing from their graves the bodies of Catholic nuns, that horror seems beyond belief. Hut Lord Rothermere's newspaper prints the statement that other nuns ALIVE were seized three of them their clothing saturated with gasoline, and burned to death. The Daily Mail also quotes the statement that in the city of Barcelona, when the radical forces had conquered the rebellious insurgent inhabitants, "any Catholic priest in the city was butchered without Russia is, according to reliable reports, in constant communication with the Madrid governmen: by ra- Fred Ming, onetime sheriff of Cheboygan county and a state representative, became a man with an "idea" when tuberculosis claimed the lives of his three brothers while they were still :" Tf U w- France, thanUs to the existing alliance with Russia resented by many of the Frenchmen, who ask. "Is Stalin the real ruler of France?" is under pressure from Russia to help the Madrid government against the insurgents. If Spain should become really under the guidance of Russia, the Spanish peninsula would be practically a branch and a dependency of Soviet Russia at the southwest corner of Europe. Russia, wiiose planes have been taking information on manufacturing poison gas and building factories to the nations that are friendly to her in central Europe, might build up a chain of Communist states too powerful even for the dictator governments of Italy and Germany, and the remaining "democratic" government of Great Britain. It is not a happy tune for Europeans, or for any interested in Europe's future peace and welfare. Hitl?r is reported on the point of siding with the Spanish insurgents against the radical Madrid regime, because of savage attacks made on JJa7.i officers in Spain. It is reported that a woman in charge of the Hitler office was threatened with death if she would not reveal the whereabouts of her principal; dragged into the streets, her dress was soaked with gasoline. An interruption prevented applying the match. v ni" r WNUiir sj mlicaia iu0 Serviv... 'i V & a I M V'J-UA-. r 1 t , ' ' 4 their twenties. sanaMing wanted a tuberculosis torium for the upper tier counties of Michigan's lower peninsula. So he became a state representative, and then speaker of the house at Lansing. He advocated a bill for taxation of malt, the revenue to be used for a tuberculosis hospital for the 37 northern counties. The bill was passed by the state Bruck-er- , legislature, but Gov. Wilbur an ardent dry who knew malt was used to make beer, vetoed the San Sebastian Feeling Effect of War in Spain Seaside Resort Has Some Undesired Publicity. Castles in Spain Washington. cannot resist air raids, it seems, even in the enchanted atmosphere of a fashionable summer resort. In San Sebastian, the serenity of swimming and siestas has been disturbed by sharp battle and capture by belligerent rebels. "Spain's most fashionable summer resort, San Sebastian, has provided some excitement not advertised in hotel publicity a share in the country's revolt," says the National Geographic society. "Vacationists had almost forgotten the city's importance as capital of the o ancient Basque Province of and summer headquarters of most of the diplomatic corps. d Gui-puzc- A Europeanized "A graceful scallop stant cooling breezes of Biscay, regattas, Newport of beach, con- from the Bay yacht racing, GOV. LANDON'S AID ,t ' i populous with Basque nursemaids and their small charges. A row of pretentious hotels and restaurants faces the promenade, where languid vacationists sip thick chocolate and munch crisp sugary rolls. Balustrades, building facades, even lamp posts are voluptuously plump and florid. "The main park is extravagantly gay with formal flower beds, palm trees, and rich green shrubbery. Basques have bestowed upon it the name of Alderdi-Eder- , the 'beautiful place.' The city is studded with elaborate statues a tall column topped by Victory in her chariot, a huge animated group in marble commemorating Zubieta, defender of the city during the 1813 siege by the English dislodging Napoleon, a statue of Maria Cris-tinqueen who promoted the resort's popularity by bringing her infant son, later Alfonso XIII. visitor "Another distinguished was the French novelist Victor Hugo, whose house is marked by a plaque. "A distinctive atmosphere surIn this vives in the old town. Basque fishing settlement, at the foot of Mt. Urgull, dark nets dry along the wharves and laundry hangs from windows of the narhouses. row, five and Nearby the ancient church of Santa Maria wears a white-saileship above its doorway to show kinship with its parishioners who must go down to the sea in ships. "A bridge across the Urumea river leads to the newer eastern suburb where various industries have developed. A steady income flows into San Sebastian from such products as flour, preserves, soap, candles, glass, and paper, in addition to its staple commodity an almost ideal summer climate." ' d d - ' 0 n AT Lola Williams, for 14 years the secretary to former Vice Presia dent Charles Curtis, is now in as a new member of Gov. Al fred M Landon'j secretariat She is a native of Kansas and is considered one of the most capable of America's politically experienced To-pek- secretaries. tennis tournaments, horse racing, bull fights, roulette, and formerly royal patronage made San Sebastian the Newport of Spain. Wealthy Spaniards from other sections, diplomats, and foreigners, however few in the city's 60.000 people, have given San Sebastian a European veneer over its native aspect "In the midst of the summer frivolities of Spain's fashionable world, local Basques impassively continue their fishing, speaking their strange language unintelligible even to many Spanish visitors. Their name for their city is Iruchulo. "The city stands near the eastern end of Spain's northern coast, 10 miles from the French border where the numerous visitors change trains on the overnight trip from 68 Years a Pilot; Quits Post at 80 Gallipolis, Ohio. Beginning as a "cub" pilot at the age of twelve years, Capt. George Hamilton, eighty, has just "gone to the bank," which is river parlance for retirement, after 68 years as an Ohio river pilot. Captain Hamilton is the dean of Pittsburgh and Cincinnati steamboat pilots, and most of his years of service were with the White Collar line, operating sidewheel passenger steamers that were the last word in splendor of equipment. I 1, NAZI hail-damag- ed f I . ' '.'vi -- ft t f; set up. GOODING, IDA. Featuring a three-da- y rodeo as a part of their attractions, members of the Gooding county fair board have mailed J out premium lists for the annual county-wid- e exhibit scheduled September 3, 4 and 5. BURLEY, IDA. Idaho Beet Growers' association have protested to President Roosevelt and ;to Secretary of Agriculture Hen- ry A. Wallace against "premature announcement of increases in off- -j shore sugar quotas." reports K. C. Hamburg more than Barlow, vice president of the as- -, ,4 PfM d moss-colore- d 4 oS VOU. lOO. i Don't be t n mwiin mi .VteasfoonfuJw ' v FAAILKOFMAGNEk NONETASrty DOLLARS & HEALTH The successful person is ( son. Don't let yoursdf be U?J by sick headaches, a sluggish stomach nerves and otho k signs of over-acidit- y. HEARTBURN? Its surprising sociation. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. During the month of July, automobile accidents in Utah resulted in the deaths of 26 persons. This is seven more than were recorded during the same period of last year, and three more than during July, 1934. It equals the previous high record of November, 1934, Twins Are 100 to 1 Shot, iwhen 26 persons were killed. So far, the record of fatalities for of the vear According to New Survey the seven months New York. The chances of a ending July 31, a total of 97, is eight more than the total occurrprospective mother in New York ing of during the same surprising her husband by present- last year, and nine moreperiod than for ing him with twins is 1 to 100, says the same period of 1934. the New York health department. Aware of the growing interest in the question of multiple births brought about through the publicity attending the Dionne quintuplets, the Kaspar quadruplets and the four Baylor university the health department made a survey of all births within the city during the period, 1922 to 1935. Based on these figures, it is said, one out of every 100 women about to have a baby can expect to have twins. And one out of every 20,000 can expect to have triplets! SALT LAKE CITY. UT.-W- TWIN FALLS, 1DA.- -A two-ye- warning. Your stomach it Vegetable Growers, Inc.. announced receipt, of word from the Missouri Pacific lines to the effect the rate which places onions on the same basis as potatoes over midwestorn and southwestern lines will be effective by Sontrrn-be- r 1. These new rates open' markets for Idaho onions in O'jlrh':-rn- a, Kansas, Texas and Nebraska and points that cannot avrl themselves oft full car lots, but will, at Ihe potato rat", tako'mi-r-ecars of potatoes and onions. SALT LAKH C v r Prompt action is to "be taken by ...v t v m--i riujj.rt'ss A'Jnimi tration to smn out a center of Canadian thistle infestation in T.ast Canyon, Wrber County. Thirty men are to be sent to this area wnh chemical spray to conduct an intensive and destructive vvanare against the weed. "There is enough Canadian thistle in this region," said George L. Mate supervisor of theilobson, VP weed control project, at. the Capitol to destroy s of the best farming land in Weber DaneVr"rWn cm,n,ics within I on jp3 TAKE in MILNESIAS i ti. f original nun a is in wafer form, neutralizes itomadd Each wafer equals 4 teaspoonMiei; -- i munesia, inc of magnesia. Thin, tasty. 20c, 35c & crunchy, tskH 60c at drag d 35c&69 C"l"lilif'llMii!f boffkt Original Milk ot Tfc Majwj sssmssBomt. NEWEST H0J1 LAKE'S SALT t fnr Inhh in deliehtlttllT cooled daring the summer Bi ' Radio for Every Room wm Roomnzvu ZOO .It ..WJK4"X' i i 7 X.. JB ! ar struggle for more favorable Idaho onion rates ended when the local office ofrecently Idaho Christen Thee McDoucar overcatsj't ith a PWA allotment already approved and an assurance that Salt Lake County would be able to finance its share of the building, architects and draftsmen have begun drawing plans for the addition to the Nurses Homo at the Salt Lake County Hospital. co-ed- Lin smoking, excessive drinking allk. heartburn. When it comes, Its fA Arrested in a year ago on a charge of possessing anti-Nadocuments, Lawrence Simpson, seaman on the U. S. S. Manhattan, has been placed on trial by a secret Nazi court. The charge, however, has been changed to that of "illegal export of how many burn. Hurried eating, ;i: HOTEL Squat $1.50 to 23 Temple Rates HotM Trmpl" Th hiblr de.iral.lr, will !" 'rl'?d!T,,I1 fL", .Vie ,.l.rre.You for. 0 UDdxntand why ,b", J!T HIGHLY RF.COMMt."' can l.o pprecith' mark of distinction mtthit boautitul hostel Yon d T semi-circul- half-moo- OGDEN, UT. A reciuest of tha Weber River Water Users' association for an extension of 20 years in the repayment period fnr construction of the Echo res- ervoir likely will be answered next month when John C. Page, acting United States reclamation commissioner, will visit Utah on an inspection tour of reclamation projects. The association owes $3,000,000 for the reservoir. If the extension is granted, the repayment will be made over a period instead of a inperiod. The reservoir was put to operation in 1030. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Ten thousand traffic violation arrests have been made by the local police during 1S36. CEDAR CITY, UT. Iron coun-- i ty schools will orjen September 14, 193G, and be closed May 29, 1037, giving a full nine months term it is reported. BLANDING. UT. Poison bait to slay rodent pests will be plant ed m this district. F r e e HURRICANE, UT. peaches and grapes were a feacelebration held ture of a two-da- y here a few days ago. ' Idaho liouor BOISE, IDA. sales in July totaled $269,212, of which $182,835 was sold in state stores and $86,377 in dispensaries. Last year July sales totaled $208,-48- 2. POCATELLO, IDA. Under di- rection of Mrs. Catherine K. Athey, executive secretary of the a Antituberculosis association, health seminar will be conducted at the University of Idaho, south ern branch, Setpember 3, 4 and 5, for health workers from seven northwestern states. Delegates will study coordination of activities and health methods. CODY, WYO. Two baby antelope, whose future home is the Berlin, Germany, zoo traveled east by plane to board the Zeppelin Hindenburg for the trip across the Atlantic. BOISE, IDA. Idaho apple and prune producers have received assurance from F. Lee Johnson, state commissioner of agriculture, that a shipping grade which will allow them to ship their fruit to market will be Paris. "Here the Pyrenees meet the sea. and both unite to create unique qualifications for a summer resort. The Bay of Biscay rolls into San Sebastian's har, bor in a of the same regular curve repeated in Bethe beach's yellow crescent. cause its shape resembles the scallop shell's, the harbor is called La Concha 'the shell). "At the opposite ends of its mile diameter rise rocky headlands which have offered for centuries protection against naval assaults. The western bluf! supports a new lighthouse beside the abandoned one, now an observation tower. On the eastern mountain stands a substantial Spanish castle, less associated with dreams than with nightmares of siege. Tunnels of Shade "A wide promenade along the with parasols bench, polka-dotteand bright bathing suits, is shaded tamarisk trees. by Their feathery foliage meets overhead, forming a tunnel of shade ?1 - a, k M 20-ye- ar He Ming was not downcast. moved through the cloakrooms. "I don't care," he told his fellow legislators, "where that hospital is built. Put it in Cheboygan county or anywhere else, just so it's convenient." When they hesitated, he said' "Tuberculosis is killing 150 to 200 persons a year because we lack hospital facilities." The bill was passed over the governor's veto. During the inter1933, $250,000 since years vening was set aside in malt tax moneys. The federal government supplied an additional $204,000, and the ground was broken here recently. Several state notables, including Gov. Frank D. Fitzgerald, Paul A. Martin, of the sanatorium building commission, and doctors, were present. They all spaded a shovel of earth. Then Ming, now an old man, lumbered through the crowd. HELD BY of EnglanM day. He learned America as a young?, Sitting still and& 1 Don't make a The good Lord se But you must di7V Cut this verse up where you'll see it iA the Poet Laureate- - H - 40-ye- ar bill. England. Baron Gottfried von Cram ot Germany (left) congratulates Fred Perry of England, who defeated him in straight sets to win the men's singles at Wimbledon for the third successive year. The German, however, injured a thigh muscle in the first set, and was unable to play his best Wimbledon, dio. Newspapers in England, and the more conservative newspapers in France, declare that Russia, in addition to advising Madrid concerning the immediate civil war and helping the Spanish government by the purchase of Spanish bonds, is also sending by radio detailed information as to the organization in Spain of a "Soviet government" similar to that existing in Russia. R broad-shouldere- in Laureate, POISON BAIT OUT BELAY ASK ANTELOPES BY PLANE ACCIDENTS INCREASE TEN THOUSAND CAUGHT and Ruddy-face- These four by Mr. John -- Briefly told tor Busy Headers Wins Mis Fight After Becoming Representative. THIS WEEK The dedication of the magnificent war monument, designed by a Canadian artist, re unveiled cently ""4 bv the king of hy England in mem-ory of the Cana- dian soldiers that fell at Vimy Intermountain News blue-green- t WNU W IN UTAH AND two-ihird- Tit iamTO' l? J .v w a the i 'I'.'VI .... years." SALT T poop e visited Yellowstone na- t0 URUSt 15,h;ln came in?rk,UP park during all of last .year, it is received by W. D. of the Utah To Up this year, 22,fifi2 I;,,,,"! kZTTs llrk L Aion. PrC rcisl"od in the compared with 2,R'5 Miss Caroline McDougal Neilson, of Springfield, Mass., shown about during all of 1935. to smash a bottle across the bows of the U. S. S. McDougal, 1, SALT LAKE theUperfo5rrn-tin- -. destroyer, launched in a shipyards at Camden, N. J. Miss Neilson is a of the late Rear Admiral David Stockton McDou-- al C1V1C opera ' after whom the vessel Is named. presented in this city . 850-to- KT". : irs TtrM L0MCNI iifiTrT l5 of Ogden's Finest . . One S.IM 350 Ro""- -:" .n innn Delightful Rooms whi Kccm C4 t. - 1XJ Air k' and u--jw Spacious Courteous Service ConEvery Comfort and Loonyt? THE HOTEL BEN L0M -- OGDEN, UTAH COME AS CHAUNCEY . YOUV W. WEST, O1"1, |