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Show Damaged Page s ' r-- J SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYBUM. UTAH News Notes s Its a Privilege to Live In tr xv JLp- i&k -- t' 0 UTAH SALT LAKE Shipments of cabbage from Utah this year already have exceeded those for 1928 by 30 carloads, and an additional 25 car- A ' - ; - - ' I f' expected, will be shipped end of the season. CITY Sheep entering Colorado for the winter range are looking finer than ever before, according to Harden Ben-niostate commissioner of agriculture, who returned from an inspection of eastern Utah. LYMAN Miss Eunice Poison of Mountain View has been awarded third place in the Wyoming state championship food3 contest. Miss Poison is the first Uinta county club worker to win state recognition for the excellence of her loads, it is before the HEBER Utah from : a S:SP llllllJteE 1 f '&& ' mirifiiffniinennnnnr rmnmmnwinnnniu j'uiiumnniorKCTiornfirinriirrrni liiifiiiiiiiiiiwfiriiiiiniiifiiifi ifi i nr r m i no nnnr mfr urnni' r fi n nr rri Nelson T. Johnson, assistant secretary of state In charge of Far Eastern affairs, who was appointed minister to succeed John Van A. MacMurray. 2 Walter F. Frederick of Chevy Chase, Md., with his model for the clipper ship, George Washington Memorial building to be erected In the National Capital. 3 Benjamin F. Packard, that was sold at auction In New York as an Item In the art collection of Max Williams the largest antique ever so sold. 1 NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENTEVENTS Hoover's Prosperity Program Goes Well China Asks Russia Be Checked. By EDWARD W. PICKARD D USINESS as usual and then some. This appears to be assured by the responses made to President Hoovers call and by the programs disclosed In the series of conferences held in Washington at his summons. The last of these conferences with different groups was that with the representatives of public utilities on Wedne. roads radiating from Ogden, Henry marched past the tomb of the Unknown Soldier In honor of the Tiger. last week also claimed Emory Warren, United States senator from Wyoming, who had the distinction of serving longer In the senate than any other man. He was a member of that body for thirty-seve- n consecutive years. A state funeral for Mr. Warren was held in the senate chamber, with President Hoover and his cabinet. Chief Justice Taft and his associates of the Supreme court, members of the senate and house and the entire diplomatic corps in attendance. The body was then taken to Cheyenne. Senator Warrens death removes one of the last three survivors of the Civil war who held high office In Washington. Warren served in the Union vces with Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes of the Supreme court. Representative Charles M. Stedman of North Carolina served the Confederacy. Another well known American who passed away was Raymond Hitchcock, actor and musical comedy star, who died suddenly in Los Angeles from a heart attack. He bad been in poor health since .last May. Lieut George T. Cuddihy, one of the best pilots In the navy, was Instantly killed when an airplane which he was testing at Washington crashed. Cuddihy, who was thirty-thre- e years old, graduated from the Naval academy In 1917, served in the World war and later entered the aviation branvft1 Fie distinguished himself In the Schneider cup and other races, and in 1927 flew over the Andes. DEATH sent over be the Jappurported anese program for the London naval conference, and it contained the demand for a ratio in cruiser strength and other auxiliary ships, as well as a reduction in the size of capIt seemed certain the ital ships. United States would oppose, the Increase of Japans ratio in cruisers, but later dispatches from Japan said its delegates had received private instructions to accept considerable less than 70 per cent of the British and American auxiliary navies. France and Italy were still trying in vain to reach a preliminary agreement on policy in the conference. The principle obstacle Is that the Italians insist on complete parity with France in all categories of warships. The French oppose this on the ground that Italy has only Mediterranean . interests, while France also requires sea power In the Atlantic and in the English channeL The French also oppose giving Italy parity because of Frances widely distributed colonial empire, whereas Italys possessions are chiefly Tripoli and the area facing the Red sea. TOKYO correspondents to 10-19- hi1 Diiniuiiij other public improvements. Pennsylvania headed the list of states making that definite pledges, announcing $155,000,000 would be available in 1930 for roads and public buildings and that it would be distributed throughout the state with a view to taking up any employment slack that occurs. Leaders of fhrm organizations met with the President Monday, Secretary of Agriculture Hyde and Chairman Legge of the farm bo&rd being present Mr. Hyde announced that they were in hearty accord with the Hoover program and promised to aid It in every possible way, and he added: The general opinion expressed was that confidence has been gaining In agriculture and that the morale of agriculture is now better than It has been for years past Except In short crop areas there has been genuine Improvement in agriculture and an Increased Income, and therefore an Increased buying power this year. RAILROAD executives having extensive plans for expansion and improvement; leading industrialists having promised there shall be no reduction In wages, and heads of organized labor having pledged their word that there shall be no demands for Increases In pay next year; and numerous associations of manufacturers and merchandisers reporting good conditions in their fields, It would seem that the prospects for continued prosperity are Indeed bright. The nation is determined to show that the speculation crash ha3 not done vital damage. Edward N. Hurley, one of Chicagos level headed business men and a former president of the Illinois Manufacturers association, put the matter so well that he is worth x quoting. There is nothing wrong with American business and the outlook for 1930 Is most encouraging, Mr. Hurley We have everything today declare (J. that w- - had on September 1 in the way of brains, wealth and earned Income. Nothing Is gone except some delusions as to the umount of profits which American Industries might earn in years to come. stock The deflation of values from about $90,000,000,000 on September 1 to some. $71,000,000,000 now does not represent the disappearance of one ounce of material wealth. Ultimately this loss represents a positive gain, because it will Insure more and cheaper capital and the industries will be relieved of the pressure to earn extravagant profits which Tom ranking were equally specific and urgent It was said In Washington that there was no indication that the State department would take any Immediate action in response to the call from Manchuria. And the officials there were rather at a loss to know what could be done about it, since the Kellogg pact contains no sanctions and depends wholly on public opinion for its effectiveness. Within the last two weeks the Soviet invaders have made decided advances in both eastern and western Manchuria. Hailar was captured, as were Muling and other important points, and it looked as if the Russians were getting ready to close in on Chinese Harbin from both sides. troops everywhere were reported to be retreating almost without offering resistance, and thousands of them were made prisoners and disarmed. Those still in the field were described as lacking sufficient food, ammunition and winter clothing. Japan was excited by the push Into Manchuria, for she has many nationals resident there. . The Japanese ambassador to Moscow, Tokichl Ton-aktold the Soviet government that Japan demanded that full protection be given its citizens in Manchuria, and Russia promised to exercise every care. The military group Is very strong In Japan and there Is some reason to believe it has been preparing to have the country eventually enter the conflict on the side of China. a, more of the great figures of World war perhaps the greatest passed with the death of Georges Clemenceau, who, as premier, guided the destinies of France during the most critical years of the mighty conflict and by his tremendous courage and ability kept his countrymen nerved to their task until victory was achieved. The old giant he had year died in passed his eighty-eight- h Paris of uremia after many hours of suffering, and the next day the Father of Victories," as France called him when he was its idol, was laid to rest in a little village of the Vendee with only a dozen to witness the interment. . In accordance with his injunctions there was no state funeral, nor were there any religious rites, for Clemenceau was an avowed atheist Premier Tardieu, however, ordered all flags at half staff and the firing of a salute of 101 guns such as was fired on November 11, 1918, In honor of the armistice. And the Sunday fallowing the funeral the World war veterans ONE of the trust agreement for THE text Bank of International Settlements has been made public by a Paris The principal procorrespondent. visions relative to the Issuance and marketing of bonds are contained In article 12, which provides that the international bank, as trustee, will be guided in matters relative to mobilization of annuities by the provisions of the (Young) plan which govern mobilization. The bank also wifi inform the creditor governments when it seems practically possible to proceed with the Issuance of bonds. CREATION of five new cardinals at the Vatican, bringing the membership of the sacred college to 62, of whom 33 are The new list included the Most Rev. Joseph MacRory, archbishop of Armagh; Msgr. Cerejeira, r patriarch of Lisbon; Archbishop of Paris, Archbishop Lavitrano of Palermo and Archbishop Minoretti of Genoa. s. Ver-die- P. SUMMERALL, chief of his annual report recoin-- 1 mends the enactment of a selective service law to operate In war time as the one method of procuring new units for the far from complete Infantry division of the army. In other respects the report reflects a generally satisfactory condition throughout the army, says the decentralization system Is justified, and that Increased ration allowances have greatly improved the morale of the troops. GEN. ), C. 1030, In Western Newspaper We all catch colds and they can make ns miserable-bu- t yours neednt last long if you will do this: Take two or three tablets of Bayer Aspirin just as soon as possible after a cold starts. Stay in the house if you can keep warm. Repeat with another tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin every three or four hours, if those symptoms of cold persist. Take a good laxative when you retire, and keep bowels open. If throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in a quarter-glassf- ul of water and gargle. This soothes inflammation and reduces infection. There is nothing like Bayer Aspirin for a cold, or sore throat. And it relieves aches and pains almost instantly. The genuine tablets, marked Bayer, ' are absolutely harmless to the heart. work. OGDEN Approximately a halfmillion dollars will be spent in 1930 by the Utah road commission on to China is exercised by a speculative securities market." As a culmination of the Presidents conferences, some two hundred of the countrys leading business men were invited by the Chamber of Commerce of the United States to gather in Washington on December 5. It was announced - that Mr. Hoover would open this conference, the result of which was expected to be the formation of a business council for continuing study of business conditions and the of activities. A summary of business conditions, published by the federal reserve board, reveals a higher industrial activity during the month of October last than in the same period of 1923, although there was a decline In both industrial production and factory employment compared wi IFade0 CCdDILIID n, ::y Union.) - H. Blood, state road commission, told the Exchange club recently.' Mr. Blood said the estimated cost of road building in Utah for 1930 was more than $3,000,000. DUCHESNE turkeys, 100,000 Approxi m HBAWIE weight of 816,988 pounds and making thirty-seve- n carloads, were shipped out of Utah in the Thanksgiving turkey pool, an increase of 300 per cent over 1928, Albertus Willardson, assistant general man- , Aspirin is tle trade marie of Bayer Manufacture - PRICE Bids will be received Gardening Pays Mrs. Neyber Did you have any success with your garden this year? Any morning before the rush traffic Mrs. Nexdore Yes, I got two new has begun you may see the homeless a hat and a pair of shoes, out dresses, ones who sleep on the London embankof Tom for. letting him play golf ment walking slowly along, peering of working it The Pathfinder. over the parapet at the steps and landings. They are looking for ducks His Stunt eggs. ever take any Does your I was walking past the air force hard exercise? husband Well, last week be war memorial (writes a correspondwas out seven nights running. ent) when I saw two ducks perched on one of the steps just above mark. Between them lay. a Bruises beautiful new-lai- d egg. I climbed over the low railing and Try Hanfords retrieved the egg. As I was clambering back a seedy looking embankment Myrrh babltue accosted me. Youve pinched All dealen are authorized to refund jour montr r, not suited. he complained. lor tho lint bottle it my breakfast, guv-noI gave him the egg, and he explained that he had found a half dozen eggs on the same steps during a fortnight. New York World. Taka NATURE'S REMEDY Ml tonight. Youll be fit j Pulpit Jokes and fine by morning- -1 The late Dr. John Roach Straton, tongue clear, headaahegone, Jr unbending at Greenwood lake, told a back, bowels acting appetite P reporter a number of pulpit jokes. pleasantly, bilious attack forgotten. Then there was a very nervous than Better For constipation, too. preacher, Doctor Stratton said, who any mere laxative. At druggists only 25c. Make the test touigit gave out as his text one Sabbath, FEEL LIKE A MILLION. TAKE Heaviness may endure for a joy, but night cometh in the morning. Another preacher had to preach before a convention of medicos. He was a joker, that man, and no mistake. His text was, A certain woman had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was nothing better, but rub in Rack as rather grew worse. of IN NOSTRILS- -.. A terrible Scotch preacher JTiAK- - OSSs d request Descriptive folder on $1.25 All Druggists. at a notorious misers funeral. Inc. LEONARD, A. O. This isnt a joke, though. The Scotch70 Fifth Av- e- New York City man took for the text of his funeral sermon, And the beggar died. high-wate- LOGAN Plans are being developed for the registration of stu- dents at the Utah State Agricultural college for the winter quarter on December 14, according to W. H. Bell, registrar. The fall quarter' will close December 13, according to the schedule bulletin, making a quarter of exactly 12 weeks. All students, both those now in attend- ance and the new students entering at that time, will register on Saturday, and regular classwork foj the winter quarter will begin on Monday morning, December 16. . r Cuts, Burns, Balsam of ILIOUSl . ears-INSE- offl-ate- - Played in Luck Clarence Appleby of Kenedy, Texas, boarded a bus for Victoria. On arriving there she found that her diamond necklace was missing. Three days later she returned to Kenedy and began searching around the bus station In Front street There near the curb was the necklace intact, save for two stones loosened from their mountings, but lying nearby. The valuable ornament had lain on a busy thoroughfare for three days undiscovered. Mrs. Kissing Is dangerous; sometimes a wedding. TivlUCIU OmAUs H lsvm O to womanhood, when a womana when gives birth to her first child, e woman reaches middla times Lydia E. Pinkhams to reVegetable Compound helps store normal health and vigor. 1 B the result is , Renovates and Shapes W 'h'lIv.Tfrcei New. Fast seller. Everyone 2oc fr Big money dally. Send AVE., CHICAt. 1289 ,0 CLTBOURNE California Orange Blossom reranu lte of Hollywood Stars. IutrKU,nfjing Xmas Gift. DuI'it;gnfed'Td iieorrf;' Calif paign regular 34 size ! Perfumer, Box S06, Beverly . IP YOU ABE INTERESTEDor some of the best summerwrit partin'.VESTMENT pasture land In Colorado lars. THE HOME LOAN COLO. CO., GRAND JUNCTION. i Alfalfa, hardiest ('n Write for description and sPecall3, Darrow Brothers Seed Co., Cossack un- $16,000. approximately Approximately 51,151 pounds of structural steel will be used In building the while 133 cubic of concrete will be required in the abutments, which will extend several feet be-1- 0 w the river bed. of Monoace ticatides ter of Salieyliradd Homeless Men Glad to Find Stray Ducks Eggs of Mapleton- - til December 4 for the construction of an bridge over the Price river at Castlegate. According to present plans, the structure will be one of the biggest and strongest in this section of this state, costing IIB. ASipnmn ate ly reaching a net ager, Utah Poultry Producers Cooperative association announced. SALT LAKE The state department of agriculture collected fees totaling $40,922.01 from June 1, 1928, to September 30, 1929, It is shown in the audit of the department collections made by Glen James, special auditor, received Wednesday by State Auditor Ivor Ajax. Records of the state department are in excellent condition. RICHFIELD Potato growers of Sevier county are taking steps to place their industry on a business basis, and already, with the cooperation of a Salt Lake commission house, plans are under way to provide a storage cellar, 120x40 feet, convenient to railroad trackage in Richfield. Communities to the south also are interested. PLEASANT GROVE The board of directors of the American Fork Canyon Water comuany met at the weir at the mouth of American Fork canyon recently and accepted the contract vork of A. K. Thornton company. A new radial gate has been installed for flushing the weir. The present spillway has been widened and a new flume built across the weir to convey the Pleasant Grove water to the canal below the weir. OGDEN. Following an annual custom that has meant much to poor children of the city. Firemen have announced that the men in their department are eager to repair and remodel all damaged toys that may be sent to them that they may be distributed at Christmas time. In this connection, the chief urges that all persons having such toys and desiring to make some needy little one happy send them in at once. The Wright SPANISH FORK planing mill at Springville has cut a quantity of red cedar in Tie Fork near Soldier Summit for use in making chests and other articles of furniture This is largely an experiment but may be developed on a larger scale, as the native cedar has a beautiful color when polished. The timber is dried for a year before using and has already attracted attention of one of the lar-ger concerns. With the ship- SPRINGVILLE ment of 3500 dressed turkeys by V. C. Mendenhall and 2500 by B. M. Mendenhall, these two men for the second time are reported as the heaviest producers of turkeys in this community. Both men shipped to a California market. Others who ranked close with these producers this year are E. T. Thorne, Joseph Carnesecca and C. O. Law 4 Off-- ' Mothers .Watch Childrens colds COMMON bead colds often "settle and chest where they may become dangerous. Dont take a chance at the first sniffle rub on Childrens Musterole once every hour for five hours. Childrens Musterole is just good old Musterole, you have known so long, in milder form. Working like the trained masseur, this famous blend of oil of mustard, camphor, menthol and other ingredients brings relief naturajly. It penetrates and stimulates blood circulation, helps to draw out infection and pain. Keep full strength Musterole on hand, for adults and the milder Childrens Musterole for little tots. All druggists. CHILDRENS prices idaM. Absorbins will reduce inflamed, Bwoflen joints, sprainA bruises, soft bunches. Quiciy , heals boils, poll evil, quitter, f fistula and infectedsores. WiULJ Sf no t blister or remove hair. can work horse while using. $2.50at druggists, or postpaid. Send for book S free. From onr files: Fistula rev buret. Never Baw anything to treatment so quickly. WJ be without Abaorbine. All Winter Marvelous Climate TourW Good re Views. The uonderfu I desert Write Cree A cha,Jt K TTDaloi win know W. N. U, Salt Lake City. N- - |