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Show THE SAUNA SUN, SALINA, UTAII 'THUS is the busy season of the year 1 for aviators, and some of. their ac- News Review of Current Events the World Over ' ; Employers Rush to Support of Presidents Industrial Recovery Program Grain Exchanges Called to Time by Administrator Peek. ' . . " . By EDWARD W. PICKARD to radio appeal for adherence to the blanket Industrial code was Immediate and flatteringly favorable. Telegrams and letters by the thousands have been received at the White House and Gen. Hugh RESPONSE by employers Joh so ns n office pledging eager r a 1 o n , promising prompt action or asking for further Information. Though there may be many .dissidents, carpers and selfish holdouts, it is apparent that the people are determined to give the N. I. R. A. program a fair trial. Industrial leaders In general are willing to shorten work hours and Increase wages. There Is, however, one section of the Jobs agreement that arouses considerable distrust. This . In effect provides that signers of the blanket code automatically bind themselves to the union labor provisions of the- recovery act. Open- shop employers naturally do not like this. The President Id his radio address declared that prompt action .by emby workers ployers and would spell success for the recovery plan, while failure would mean another desperate winter. Signing of the universal . agreement, he said, will start the wheels turning now, and not six months from now," and . he added that to awnlt formation and approval of specific codes for separate industries would not Jbe fast '' ' . .enough. We are not going through another winter like the last, he said, as a grim determination set Into his voice, and he declared that if employers will act together now we can put people . . hack to work." . "Unless there Is united action," the President said, "a few selfish men In' each competitive group will pay starvation wages and insist on long hours of work, which forces honorable men to follow suit or close up of acshop. We have seen' tion of that kind in the continuing descent into the economic hell of the past four years." While pleading for vol.untnry action and promising the creation of rolls of honor of signers to be posted In their home towns, Mr7 Roosevelt warned his hearers that the law gives him power to deal with those- - who try "to thwart this great common purpose by seeking selfish advantage." co-op- 1 . the-resu- working-as General 'joiinson, as he did when he administered the World war draft uct, was pleased with the general approval of the uniform code designed to establish a week and a .$14 minimum wage for labor and a week and $15 minimum- - wage for- the white collar" worker. As in the draft case, he said, numerous questions come up in trying to apply a general rule to Industry. We'll find undoubtedly that weve made mistakes," he said. And whenever we find we've made a mistake we'll come out and say so and correct it. We attempted to strike as near a. median as we could without upsetting too many applecarts. Rut we will . d.eal very promptly with specific cases of hardship." .A very Important question, covering a large class of workers, was raised as to whether existing contracts are affected by the uniform code. Johnson said they were not Contracts cannot be broken. Over the radio General Johnson told .the country that no power can stop the recovery program and that five million workers would be before September 4 Labor day. 40-ho- - regional advisors to the public administration have been appointed by the President to serve as direct representatives of the administration and obtain from state boards lists of projects for consideration. These men, their headquarters and the states In each region are: Region 1 Ralph L. Cooper of Belfast, Maine; Boston, Maine, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut. Region 2 Edward J. Flynn of New York city; New York state. Region 3 Daniel J. Tobin of Indianapolis; Chicago, Illinois. Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. Region 4 Frank Murphy of Wheaton, Minn.; Omaha, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa and Wyoming. Region 5 Dana Marshall of Portland, Ore.; Portland, Montana, Idaho, Washington and Oregon. Region 6 Justus S. Warden of San Francisco; San Francisco, California, Nevada, Utah and Arizona. Region 7 Clifford Jones of Spur, Texas; Fort Worth, Texas, Louisiana, TEN and New Mexico. Region 8 Vincent M. Miles of Fort Smith, Ark.; Kansas City, Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Arkansas. Region 9 Monroe Johnson of Marlon, S. C. ; Atlanta, Mississippi, Ala bama, Georgia, 'South Carolina and Florida. Region 10 George L. Ratcliff e, Baltimore.; Richmond, Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware,' Virginia and North Carolina. Intermountain News (ahe Perahera In . Briefly told 'for Busy Readers WILL NOT REBUILD WILL. JOIN THE NWY . W ATER SUPPLY W ANES KICK OF IIOKSE IS FATAL EXPLAIN ACREAGE PLAN C.- C. work BOISE, 1I)A.-T- C. is., proving sufficiently popular so that .' & large majority ' ojf the boys are ' anxious to enroll for another six months. Recent questionnaires sent to members the various Idaho camps elicited that TO per cent de- -' after several days" sire to enroll again without quad-- of festivity In New York, left for their . .ficatioh; 24 per cent, are .willing! to enroll again'- if they can have the ' homeland, going by way of New Bruns-- , wick and '. Newfoundland.. As they Christmas holidays at home,' and.-thor soared away over' Jamaica bay the remainder are. commander sent to President Roose- velt apd Mayor Keliy of Chicago. radio SALT .LAKE CITY, UT. Forty, messages of gratitude for their receptwo young men tion. in the United States and at the enlisted in Salt region will-bWorld's fair. . Lake as apprentice seamen in .the One of the armys big twin motor. United States navy on August 18, ac- - ' ' d bombers, carrying Lieut. Carl A. to an announcement made six other men, lost a wing In ' cording .at the local recruiting office.' midair .at Oceanside,- Calif., and fel OGDEN, UT. Lee In ruins. The seven men, unablq to.. Lemon, ' this died In 9; from hospital injuries get free to use their parachutes, were ' ' .' .received' when' kicked- by a. horsekilled.-- ' ' at- his home in Corrinne. senator-'H.fror, rebuild-MUEY LONG, the klngfish of OGDEN,'' . the Ogden" Louisiana, has .been mnch ing powder magazines vexed of iate concerning patronage, hrsenai which were destroyed .by and flood control matters, feeling that A storm twe years ago. were damp-- " he was being Ignored by the adminlss ened by a telegram from Senator tration. The other day hq went to" William . II. . King' ' to the Ogden In the White House Chamber of Commerce, saying that. ' blustering mood, declaring he was going to have his 'Highly Adorned" Indian Royal Elephant. reports that part of a $(1,900,000 fed: rights. He had not been recognized in eral building-funwould be used for ' ; Prepared by. National .Geographic Society, companions come' into view- - Then th two appointments recently in Louis'!--anWashington', D. C. WNU Service .this purpose-arunfounded. .. first of the frantic dancers weaves io fes-That of controller of customs , ' ; and" out; Oeylon, is. donning . with rhythmic step, to the-PROVOp UTh The' federal wheat was given to a follower of Senator for Perahera its pro KANDY,' of drums and dash of the brazen ' acreage reduction plan. "will. hie qx- -' Harrison of Mississippi, and an 'avowed which have been, he.ld beat ' and disblanks application-'plained cymbals.enemy of. the Long- organization ; Paul annually lri the. city for-ces ait.of' ah tributed to Utah '. It fanners requires cojmty B. I.Iabans- was selected to direct the turies.'. hour for the richly caparisonpd ele- -. ' ' affairs of the Home Loan bank' there . a series of meetings scheduled dur, -' PeraThere is a tradition that the ing. August, according to .County glittering groups of dangWell, Huey was affably received by hera processions, have been held an- ers and ' chiefs In gorgeous dignified Agent Lyman II. Rich. . President Roosevelt and Postmaster when Buddhas nually aince the time In of a reviewing ; to front Tobes pass AGeneral Farley, ap'd what the' Chief PROVO, .UT. fetrpet carnival Tooth- was brought 'to Ceylon, hidden stand. dance feature the evening pro- - ' ' within th.e Coils of- the hair of. a Kailn-g- o . Executive and' the astute politician . ' Scenes of Wild Exciterpent. told the rampaging 'gentleman from gram o.f the second day 'of the Utah' princess, some eight' hundred yea-rthe. procession, State Firemen's association oonven-- ' ' after the. death, of., tfie Hindu sage,, the South must have been plenty. .The. .Every now and-the' .music be: such the At times, tlon iield here;' August. 16,-1B. Klngfish emerged from the conference stops. C. and 18.' 43' about Drummers a silent and seemingly squelched man. IIYRUM-- , Despite the later wtanderirigs and at comes faster and faster. men the air and times violent- - history of. the Tooth'. .beating .'madly, leap. Into' as, the' local' committee here In a . frenzy,- Of- excitement. InWave on pirouetsome .to been weeks thbref off the carried Goa, 'was it to list the Tor the FOR' Trum'peters bjow shrilly, addirtg to the rumors tn Washington' dian mainland, in 15(50 by the Portu.past four years. . din. Tirelessly whirl the that. Secretary pf the Treasury Woodin' guese, who maintain that the present AV'YQ. Due. to. .' ex- MOR.AN, would soon refdgn. These' were ' conthe sa- - dancers, .stamping 'their feet, waving relic IS only a reproduction hot weather and very little' ' . their.arms; advancing an'd retiring, as tradicted' by officials connected with' ' prod festiyar has changed but little-Inuse of water from tire Jackson ra'iu, ,. they spin to . the everiquickening. cenwere the heard but thq administration,barbaric, splendor through dam reservoir has' been increased to even ' in the . East, . ' rhythm. again when it was learned that ; turies. . does. one see such utter motional- - aban- -' .approximately, three times that of '. sore 'throat from- - which-MrToday the Perahera also commemto the 'accompaniment .of ,such ' last time. this .don' The jit . . .ye'ar daily Woodin 'had been suffering had orates the birth .'of .the god Vishnu, ' . use of about 11,000 nere-fee- t . has .' .who' first saw light on the day of the clamor. not bleared p'p' and had developed inThe"' and-.in lowered the ceremony' the reservoir six participants to "quinsy. . lip has been on vaca.new.' moon. in. Esal'a : ' one-hafeet from Its .maximum ca- Another version of 'the origin of the- cover many miles In their gyrations .tipit and the President, ioltl him .by . course of the is which Perahera, four feet lower ' .than iteity, telephone to take a good rest and reprocessions concerns the activities of during the ' ' and at the end are to a stath of com- -. last year.' he had rega.ined his turn w hi-a certain King Gajaisa.hu, who .Is cred' ' . ' ited with having liberated 12,000 of plete exhaustion. . There are.no' worn--. ; SALT LAKE' CITY, UT. Ilun- .strength. ' ' . ' If Mr. . .. should is Wo.odin his 'own people from foreign rule- In en dancers. dreds of .Corporations will be barred ; step out; it - Feast believed lifs portfolio- will be given to from carrying .on business unless'., .India; th(n returned with- them to his fpr Artists Eye. 0 addition Frank- C. Walker, treasurer own- domaiti,' bringihg-if . the To convey '.some conception of.lhe they immediately comply to the law. Democratic national committee, who captives and a number of' sacred .brtliiarrt colors of this kalei.doscope- - of This announcement was '.made by not long ago was made executive secobjects .of .which, his. kingdom had swaying elephants and wild . danceFS Secretary of State M. II. Welling been despoiled 300' years "previously. 'artist requires' the- - services of retary of .the new super-cabineafter the list 'of delinquent porpov: .took Mr. Walker has long been the devoted-frienThe celebration .jf this victorythan a writer. A particularly had '.been compiled showing' . ations of Mr.' Roosevelt and could have the form of a great parade,' which has large and specially, bedecked elephantj a total of 1,142 either had not paid had about ary job he wished," but herewith gold ahd silver howdah, pot dis- -, been observed, .annually up to 'the extheir tax or'filed a claim-for. . . tofore he has preferred to remain In " titnq. daining the use of science in its dec- -' present 'emplion ' Teft has a bright electric eye In' the background. of ' Fervor..orations, . . Days MT. TLEASANT. . UT. A eon-- . take the. writer of. his forehead! Another The nightly place processions strnefion program entailjng tla? ex'over a 'period of ten days, beginnifig In' cloth .of royal blue,-- , heavily emMISSOURIANS who are ardent ad; penditure of approximately $70,000. broidered with silver, carries' on hlai President have givwith the first evening' of. the' waxing en him a handsome chestnqt saddle ' will lie Undertaken by Mt. Pleasant, a 'spe- ' back a kings ramsom In jewelry; moon in Esala..' Each' one if the necessary funds can be ' cial was a: time when the king of horse, born and bred tn Audrain coun. There religious significance, but for the borrowed from .the public .w.orks tbok part In the annual takes, the ty, arid now named New Deal. The first Kandy public general ' fund.. . Surrounded' by his. chiefs tn animal was' presented to Mr.'.Roose-Vel- t no. active, part. .From fhe sixth ' ' . Is-SALT LAKE CITY, UT Farm Tiy Senator Clark and Represe.nt-' easy to ' on, everybody Ip town particiresplendent eostnmesr-- tt or bureau officials fropr all .parts of a his to atives Cochran, Lozier and Cahnori, if even progress through' excited Imagine carry lamponly pates, . the west are planning to attend throngs of' loyal subjects. Toddy the acting for the donors; urge the dancers to further effort. the .regional farm 'bureau confer The wihl and eerie effect depends . king Is gone, but'the chiefs remain ti ' cnee in Salt Lake August 9, 10 and. '"YNE of tire old friends of Secretary .largely upon- the .glowing 'torches and carry on fhe tradition. Perhaps some a hrillifint maori-,silvery-light-oof State Hull has be.en given the qf the chiefs would gladly' discontinue 11, The- agricultural adjusthient-act' the day Perahera' (Only one the practice of appearing In the pro-- , farm credit legislation and agreeable post of minister to Finland, cessions, but-- ' the simple countryman lie Is Edward Albright of Gallatin, other phases of the national situa-- . procession takes . place- In' daylight In. all the glory '. garish ,' expects to see Tenn., editor and publisher of the " tion will lie discussed. All Utah hours). the . sunshine gives-Sumner County News and a former touch to the glistening costumes. Per-- .' of. jewels and cloth of- gold.- He makes' county and 'local farm bureau of- the actors themselves feel the the journey to Kandy tally- once, a . haps ficials will meet writh. directors of president of the National Editorial as- on that day wants to see year,-and .. soctotion. spotlights and footlights which the state farm bureau. in SaR Lake ' ' so the an eastern of theas. his father saw' them.stafte parades pvehing on August 8. ' ' son ' ' of ROOSEVELT, the provides. amply Night '.Ceremony Is.Wqird-tpLLIOTT BOISE, IDA. Oiling-- the s But' it is at night that the PenUiera President, did marry Ruth Tooth." Buddhas' highway will he among of Fort Worth, Texas, In BurIn a (pool, dark room, upon- a table takes on all .the glamour and weird the first jobs to be let bytiieidC' and Is the golden, bellthe couple sped ness of oriental pageantry.lington. Iowa; solid of - ' ' . Silver, partment of public. works under the-down to the Lone Star state by autowith studded A With shrine, a fall, jewels. beautiful, clear night, shaped emergency highway program. ' ' mobile. Thence they went to Los Protected from' all eyes except the moon and myriads of stars, overhead, BUHL, IDA. Farmers of southsons of kings, and other high personmrikes a perfect, setting .for the flowwestern Idaho have been' warned ages to jvhem occasionally it Is un-- . ing stream of lights and gyrating hti- - . by the assistant entomologist with oil a geddlfrtus-lea- f man beings. Smoking censers swing ITLEItS secret German police veiled, the Tooth-restthe university extension, division' at' mount. A wall of glass reaching from hand to .hand land braziers, In staged the biggest raid ever see" to be on guard against-thMoscow, In that country; Everywhere except from the (tailing, to the floor shields which glow husks of burning coconuts; In "Bavaria the baggage of all travelpotato beetle which first apare. hetd aloft by hundreds of. torch-beare- rs the sacred felic and many 'other jewpcared in Idaho in 1930 and some1- - . els and treasures.' Over .the shrine ers was opened and searched for subto augment the .street lamps times does considerable damage to versive literature. All automobiles stands & glittering silver- - peacofck, In casting-fairylike spell dver the the crop during the hot weather. were stopped, and traffic was tied up from whose tail hangs the scintillatscintillating costume? and shining-browIn the cities. Arrests were numerous, SALT LAKE CITY, UT, Apbodies of the thousands of" ing emerald of Kandy, known .the but those persons who were found Inworld over for it? size .and luster. ' enthusiastic marchers. . . proximately 40 per cent of the clip nocent were given passes to proceed Back! Back, everybody! A clear-roaThe coconut husks burn 'with a of wool of the 1933 season has been ' and released.. for Ills Highness the Temple ful yellow-re- d delivered into the hands of. the light and .emit .acrid Another of the Nazi chancellors fumes', too pungent for occidental ' Elephant and for the troupe's of' whirlmanufacturers, and .the entire drastic measures is a new law for the ing' dancers yet to come! '' tastes, but- - they', have'- Illuminated. is voicing confidence in a . The who In Perahera 'parades for centuries and sterilization of the unfit, designed to Hark return to prosperous price levels, earlier days cleared the street with still .serve that 'purpose well. .It la purify the German race. It is to be J. A. Hooper, secretary of he Utah an incongruous sight, amid such pomp their snapping thongs, herald the apapplied to persons afflicted with heredre-, State Woolgrowers association and circumstance, "to observe quantiproach. itary diseases, hereditary deficiencies announced. ; cently ' one catches' the spirit of Insuch as idiocy, insanity, epilepsy, SL of coconut husks being rushed ties Every OGDEN, UT. Two hundred riieh . fectious excitement that Vitus dance, blindness, deafness, or In modern jinrikishas to keep prevails along were recruited here and rushed to . when the crowd takes up the shoutand serious bodily deformi--ties- . the braziers cohsTantly supplied with ' to "Which' creek Carey fight" irTtrp . . ing, which- - swells to a roar as - the fuel.broke out in the Idaho national Perahera at last eomes Into view. " . .Ceremony. " forest. Wonderful Spectacle. At the end of the procession come worked up SPAIN was thoroughly Nearer and .nearer draw the . the water-carrier- s discovery of a great civilian PAROAVAN,' UT. Parowan city bearing palanquins plot to overthrow the existing governThey stop, but the halt Is of sacred water taken the year before officials are planning to ask for a from the Mahaweli Ganga, one of Ceyment, the conspirers Including various short and on they come again. loan of approximately $45,000 under So tense Is the excitement when the lons largest rivers, which flows groups from Oarlists to Communists. the national industrial act for the head of the column draws near, you The civilian uprising was to have been through Kandy. This ceremony of the making of improvements on the water-cuttinalmost forget to snap your cameras. followed by a military dictatorship, when temple priesta municipal water and 'lighting sys- a before lies ThouM'hat to slash the the surface With their swords you ' ' ' sight according police, though the terns. .... sands upon thousands of brightly clad and attendants scoop up the water In latter were slow In arresting any army t BUHL, IDA. The' annual officers. Hundreds of civilians were Ceylonese from all over the Island, Ingolden pitchers. Is the closing event has started in the farming of the Perahera. terspersed with many foreign visitors Jailed, and seized documents Indicate area around Twin Falls, Filer, armed with all kinds of cameras, that attempts on the lives of members Behind the palanquins press masses Bnhl, Castleford, Ilagornmn, Goodof the republican government, bombstraining and leaning iirward to see of humanity, which stretch as far aa the procession. the eye can see, completely filling the ing and Wendell, with threshing ings of ministries, sabotage of commuThe staccato beat of many drums outfits tinder way. All barley is nication lines and general strikes were streets. Orderly, patient and cheerreaches the ears and the gorgeous on the program. ful Is this vast multitude, as It beripe and wheat has ripened fast. . , 1933, Western Newspaper Union . . holds the final temple elephant and his two flanking - . , Italian-squadron- ' - who of "the. stat-estheir annual conference in California, received from President Roosevelt an Invitation to assemble In Washington next winter In the hope It will mark further solid accomplishments by all of us In the direction of national recovery.. Progress is being made, the Chief Executive said, In his- message to the gov; ernors, In adjusting the balance .be; tween mutual state and federal undertakings to determine the Joint re-- ' of many . great tasks. BponsibilitiesThere are, he added, many problems that extend beyond the power of sin- gle Btates where federal ; . required. ,' GOVERNORS are .notable. complishments Wiley Post ' of Oklahoma, who once flew around the world with Gatty, successfully made' the circuit alone, establishing a new time record of 7 days, 18 hours. 49 minutes. He Is the first to make' the Solo round trip and the first. ' . to fly around the globe twice. The Mollisons of England, Captain Charles and his "Wife, Amy Johnson, flew acro'ss the North Atlantic from Wales. They were ' headed for New York, but weariness an'd the exhaustion of their "fuel supply forced them down at Stra.t ford. Conn. They landed in the dark In a marsh and were slightly Injured, and their .plane was wrecked-.'.-Gen- , Italo Balboand his men of the . inter-mountai- n of-th- Mur-rayan- . - - AVa-yne. - - - - . C'OLLOWING the sudden collapse of grain prices on the Chicago, board of trade and all other grain exchanges, the men directing those concerns were sharply called to time by George N. Peek, farm adjustment administrator. They took UT.-rJIop- es -- a. e '. . . three-quarter- - temporary action to halt the demoralizing declines due mainly to the operations of Edward A. Crawford, a plunger and then hastened to Washington to confer with Mr. Peek. That told them flat--lthat the government ftoyld take drastic action if th.e exchanges did not move at once .to "put their house lri order. . I do not entertain the view that the present grain trade lias any .divine rigiit to handle the farmer.s products, Mr. Peck asserted. We are not going to superimpose something on the grain trades until after they have had an opportunity to work out their- - problem themselves. If tills is not done promptly, how ever, I will make no promises.; . An attempt will be made to. meet that sltua tlon. Abuses exist in the grain trade's. The trades, acting as the marketing medium of the farmers, should correct these abuses. If they do not succeed, then the government will act." The grain men then offered; these four sweeping reforms in trading prac' - - e ' - s - n ' . UT.-Tliree y were-named - - - wheat-average- s g .... , (july-Augusf- - ). lf - - - . - - . 12;-00- - . . . t. . ; ' '. . tices; Esthlishnicht: of daily price pha-nts,'th- - fluctu- ation limits of '5 cents wheat, rye and barley; 4 cents on earn; and 3 cents on oats. Restriction of the futures holdings'" of any one trader to a maximum volume, probably .between two and live, million bushels, to he determined Inter. Permanent elimination of trading Id. indemnities. Uniform and perhaps higher margin requirements for all exchanges, the minimum requirements to be. deter' mined later. o-- - - for-193- - - h.-i-s 'five-day- - eve-flin- g . - - PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT and his advisers were not in the least discomposed by the slump In (trices on the stock exchanges that, was simultaneous with the crash in grain prices. . Inweldeed, they comed it because It was the puncturing of what they considered an unwholesome and r unwarranted boom, and the administration gave no sign of intending to protect prices of securities as it did those of grain, uowever, Senator Steiwer of Oregon, Republican member of the senate banking committee, believes there may be legislation next- - session of congress to minimize the possibilities of such abnormal shrinkage" of prices as occurred. He offers three propositions for consideration by business leaders and econ omists before their submission to'con-gress- . They are: Preparation of a simplified form of corporate returns to he used by all corporations reporting to the Treasury so that the reader could tell approximately the liquidating value of all classes of securities In any corporation at the time the return was made. "An adequate curb on short selling. A prohibition of directors of any corporation increasing, decreasing or suspending the payment of dividends without first securing from the stockholders a y prior authorization." at-th- e OF STATE HULL the leaders of the world economic conference In London that a time should be set for determining whether or when the parley should reassemble; but before adjournment was taken the plenary session set up a permanent committee of twelve designed to keep life in the conference during the indeterminate recess. James M. Cox, head of the monetary section, is the American member of this committee. SECRETARY . , - , f for'-upo- - h'iS-lor- - - . - . . . Eagle--Meridi- Goo-gin- - - - . , U s . e . a - 1 whip-cracker- . - . Water-Gutting- ' 1 grain-harves- - rit-uat-- |