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Show Friday, Jar. other provisions of tho treaty, to aid in huilJlng np tha French nitrate Industry to a point where U News Review of Current Events the World Ovei Senate Ratifies the Hoover War Debt Moratorium oman Made Member of Arms Parley Delegation. ' ' 3 After Warm ' i Debate--- W By EDWARD W. PICKARD -- I iy ,K, rki Ar-nald- Toting in could be taken out and sunk in the SIXTY-NINocean, I should welcome It" affirmative, some with tba senate ratified tha Hoorer moratorium on lntergovern- - PRESIDENT HOOVER announced Dawes Charles mental debts after as aereral days of ambassador to Great Britain, would dubbing to CINVENIENTLT Chinese In beetle debate. brad the American delegation Twelve members, the world conference on disarma- Uancboria who oppose them, the equally divided be- ment In Geneva. Ho then named Japanese are merrily proceeding tween tba two par- as s member of tho delegation Dr. with their war. Close censorship ties, were . record- Mary Emma Woolley, president of ed In opposition. Uount Holyoke coilegs the first of leaves tbs outside world In soma Tba Republicans, her sexfirst-cla-to be given such a position She has doubt ss to what all listed as Insur- by s power. Is being dona, hut gents, were Fra- been an active worker for Internaenough leaks out iler, Johnson, Nor-bec- tional peace and an advocate of to make It certain Norris, Nye navy reduction. Senator Claude A. and Scbali, Tba Swenson of Virginia, Democrat end that Gen. Shlgeru Democrats who member of the senate foreign af-al- Honjo, Japanese commander. Is carvoted no were Bulow, Caraway, fairs and naval committees McKellar and ready had been named as a dele-gat- s Dill. Connaliy, rying on k, or- - B dl tej let Ex- - ' Thomas In view of the pledges President In xarp ion admittedly hopeless, but Senator Johnson of California and several others Insisted, nevertheless, on voicing st length their objections to the resolution. Johnson in. par- ticular was bitter la bis denunciation of Ur. Hoover's course in this matter, criticising him for not giving due notice that the moratorium as originally proposed bad to be altered to suit Franca. Ha repeatedly charged that tha President abandoned the former and had agreed to tba linking of war debts and reparations. McKellar of Tennessee, Oort of Oklahoma, and one or two others were scarcely less outspoken that Johnson In their opposition. The senate rejected half a dozen amendments and adopted the resolution as it came from the house which had passed 'It by a vote of 317 to 100 after adding an amend- ncy ; large-scal- e The President and Ur. Stimson Hoover bad received In advance, will direct the course of the Amertba fight against ratification was ican delegation from Washington. ! a ;'6$- - vei ment which puts congress on V- - 4a art ?. rT 9W rec- 31- - md BP- - if I f I tin ,Hng sent be-- F.n. u, , argue 18. of difficulty In exchange tor debt remittances the government of angary declared a moratorium for one year on foreign debts, Tba "non-exper- ts Phil-ippine- tbat public and decree stipulated private debts for which sufficient foreign currency Is not available most ba paid In pengoes to , tha and Hungarian National bank ' which via bold tha money as trustee for ho creditors. Tha pen go is the Hungarian monetary unit-- i In order that trade and commerce may not bait,' tba National bank will put at tba disposal of Hungarian citizens each sums as are needed to carry on and also will cover service on the credit-freezin-g - ; agreement. so-call- congress was debating WHILEmoratorium, rthe senate part of the $133,000 finance committee, continued its In- received by tbs bishquiry Into the sale of foreign secur-Ue-a op , end' his, antl-SIn this conn-tr1 1 h Democratic Several ,, emicommutes found Us " nent bankers weis way jnto. his per- - Btehol Cnnon heard, the most Insonal accounts. - ,V teresting in some Bishop Cannon, It was found, had ways being Otto H. personally handled tbs greater share of tha money. He bandied it, Kahn, head of so Investigators discovered, through Kuhn,. Loeb ft Co. Few hosrsMr.Kahn no 'less than ten bank accounts, held forth, explainfrom and to which funds ware transferred In a maze of transactions. ing the intricacies of International fiAR told, tbs committee learned, nance and descrlb-h- g $18,300 In political contributions th was transferred to the bishops privividly : rials In world eco- - Otto H. Kahn vate accounts and remained there lomlca. until tong after the election. Although Mr. Kahn made dear hat ho was opposed to either rISPATCHES from Paris stated or permanent redaction of that. France was on tha point (ho war debts owed the United of signing two Important, trade ('tales, be declared that the emer-- ! treaties. On Is with Germany and ency required temporary adjust- provides that that country shall (apments to lighten the burden of ply Francs with all tha nitrates shs fierman reparations and European needs tor tha next nine months The ar debts Neither Justice nor other Is with Russia and In it could lead to Insistence st France pledges berself never to Join ila moment on demands for pay-ien- any movement to boycott any class to the full letter of agree- of Russian goods or refuss to sup ments effected In the past, Mr. ply tbs Soviets with any materials ahn said. they may need. In an outline of his own attitude Frances stock of nitratesT (a esi vigorous terms Hr. Kahn, said, sential for the manufacture of war f It were possible to find a way monitions, is said to be dangerously y which an these reparations and depleted, and it Is held as curious ar drbts which bang around the that Germany should undertake to cf 'oZ the world like s millstone. supply tbs deficiency and, through y. v ' can-citati- ts 4 -- troops from Japan arrived In Tho mission will go armed with Tientsin, being quartered there to secret instructions and will keep In prevent the Chinese pouring. Into close touch with the State departthat city if Chlnchow fails Into . - ' ment. , Tbs American Japanese hands. legation In China warned Americonsideration of cans residing along tbs Peiping-MukdeDURINGHoovers proposed railroad to evacuate to reconstruction finance cor- Tientsin. force of General Honjo sent poration by the senate banking and subcom-mltt600 Infantry and railroad guards currency Daniel northward from Mukden. These the troops were Instructed to Mize the Baltimore ft Ohio towns of Kangplng, Changtn and railroad, praised the Faknmen with the object of sweepinclusion of the rail- ing ont 7,000 Chinese troops who roads in the cate- are said to be menacing Japanese gory of Institutions lines of communications on both to' be sided, ss tbs South Manchuria railway and necessary at this tha line running ' northwest from "critical time," Ssuplngkal through Chenchlatun Banker witnesses and Taonan. Faknmen was taken heard did not op- on Tuesday. pose this Inclusion. Ur. Willard told Internal affairs, the committee that the railroads CHINESE In a terrible moss and the country was without govthroughout the country bad In maturities falling ernment Every minister and vice due within the next' three years minister resigned, and tbs nation and.no money to pay. them.- -. His was without an official to voice a own - railroad, he admitted, mast protest against tba Japanese aggresmeet $8,000,000 worth of maturities sion. The entire government quit In May; $33,000,000 more in August. despite an appeal frwm'Geix Chen "It would bo a satisfaction to me," Mlng-sbacting head of the ex ecu said Ur. Willard, "and I think it tive council, to stay on the Job. would bo In the public Interest, If, when these securities mature next V7OLLOWING the example of r.Great Britain, Australia has oustsummer, we could borrow at a reasonable rate of Interest from the ed Us Labor government and Prims And. of - course, it Minister James Scnllin and bis cabgovernment. would be te our Interest to pay inet have been replaced by Joseph back ss quickly as possible. It A. Lyons ss premier and a coalition would be s good deal for the gov- government made op of members ol ernment with a profit, and the haz- the United Australia and the Counard would be well nigh negligible. . try parties. Lyons bad been treasThe alternative, he pointed out, urer In Scull Ins cabinet but bad would be for the railroads 'to bor- broken with his Labor colleagues. row from., other,,poures . sod at In the ; dominion parliament the stress prices." , coalition has now 62 seats ont of Senator Couzens of Michigan 76; the Laborites bare 13, the Exbroke in at one point with the as- treme Laborltes have 9, and Indesertion that it was folly for e board pendents, 2. In railroad affairs" of to pass Judgment on loans to rail- WHETHER or not Dwight F. roads: and praised tbs success of return to the tbs transportation act of 1920 with as governor general was Its revolving fond of $300,000,000 not decided during the week. Mr. administered by railroad experts." Davis arrived In He intimated that be will seek to Washington revive s part of that set of 1920, had a long conference with the PresSENATOR GERALD NYE of North ident. bnt did not on behalf of bis commit- hand in bis resigtee on campaign expenditures re- nation as bad been because ported to the senate that Bishop expected James Cannon, Mrs. Davis is p lihad violated the able to live in a corrupt practices tropical climate. act In bis handling Coming from the of campaign funds White House, be In 1928, , The comsaid to correspondmittee also declared ents: that a considerable "There Is nothing I can say t eJ BECAUSE con- siderable body of es ad recommended. About the time the President was tgnlne the moratorium resolution rord Fame from Basel that the roung plan advisory committee had cported that Germany will be cable to resume payment of the conditional reparations when the moratorium terminates next July, and hat "adjustment of all reparations and war debts to tha troubled situation of the world" would be essential. The next reparations on January opera- tions Another n ord as not committing Itself to any policy of cancellation or revision of war debts. Both bouse and senate, having settled the moratorium matter, adjourned until January 4. Senator kofiitr tnade a futile effort to have be data for reconvening changed 9 January 28, aa the President .ha ismi - $300,-000,0- Amer-polic- y 3 about the future except that the Information I have received about Mrs. Davis sines my arrival in the United States Is not encouraging. I will go td St. Louis fog Christmas and,later, to Paris. You understand I am on leave st the request of the secretary of war to familiarize myself with the sentiment In the United States on the Philippine question. T OSS of patronage is not the only trouble Representative Louis McFadden of Pennsylvania faces as a result of his fierce attack on President Hoover. He may even loee bis seat in the house st -the next election. Mrs. Cornelia Bryce Plnchot, wife of the governor of ' Pennsylvania, has announced that she will (contest the Republican nomination in the Fifteenth district with McFadden, and tbs latter will not receive the support of the Re publican state organization, wbetb ef or not it ie given to Mrs. Pin chot' Back In 1928 the lady and McFadden' contested the nomination. McFadden waa notified by the Pool Office department that he ha been cut off from ail patronage hie - district. Postmaster Genera) Brown wrote him stating that speech against the President convinced him that his advice concerning appointments would not helpful to the department. 16 S( Westers Newepspee Csloe) body waa lying on the floor beside the car. The doors of the garage were cloaed and tha motor was atili tanning. t T Ti - :v4 .. hi j. l. Hodg twin falls, ida. was found ss ok -- v CLOSED GARAGE RILLS. KEROSENE FATALITY. STATE LOSES ON LOAN. BOTH FEET LOST. SHEEI MEN TO MEET. death of his beloved brother director of the newspaper Popolo dlUlla and able assistant of tbs dues In tbs Fascist regime. He died suddenly In Milan after an attack of angina pectoris . a I Briefly Told for Busy Readers ea, Twin Falla farmer, MUSSOLINI of garage, the victim of PREMIER a severs loss in Italy tbs dead in his carbon monoxide poisoning. His senators E Where the Republican Convention Will Be Held l:,t:Fc:,;:.t::n I!:w$ will be Independent of the Germans, In the pact with Russia both nations tgres to commit no act of aggression against each other and not to take recourse to war; and if a third country commits an act of aggression against one signatory, the other signatory promises to observe neutrality and give no help to tho aggressor nation. 1 ,t i 4 1 4V- - I vi : r 'I BURLEY, IDA. Only $2700 was ever paid on endowment fund loans ? In Casals county amounting t $54JSC5, according to s surrey of farm loan foreclosures In this - . V county prepared by the bureau of N public accounts. : v- ELY, NET, --Both feet of Bett ranee Jaurenguenberg, Basque cheep j-r-n .. -- i man from Eureka county, were amHls feet local a at hospital. putated were frozen early In December. An interior view of the Chicago stadium, the great building In which tha BALT LAKH CITY, UT The Republican national convention - , state association of county clerks, of 1932 will be held la June. treasurers assessors, auditors and mm will bold its annual convention in Salt Lake February 6, Paul V. Mohr, county clerk of Cache county, and president of the association bat announced. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. The executive secretary, of the Utah Tuberculosis association reports tbat $6233 has been collected by the association from Its annual Christmas seal sale. She reports that the col lection of $11,000 necessary for the associations program la Utah next j--- n A: A: 'y '3z -- A.';, 'v a - , ma Scenes and Persons in the Current News year appears certain. CENTERFIELD, UR1This city will he drawing Interest on $15,060 of Its own bonds for tho present Several years ago the town bonded Itself to construct a waterworks system , Five years ago It took up $7000 of tha Issue and now have paid off $3,000 In bonds which still have tive years to run. MOSCOW, IDA Thirteen men are doing research work In the University of Idaho school of forestry this term. Some of the projects are being worked ont In cooperation with tho U. 8. forestry department Soma of the more Important projects art tho better utilization of wood, window sash preservation by use of chemicals, a study of match stock materials, and a study of the para sites which attack tbs white pine blister rust BURLEY, IDA. The Smith-Hughe-s students In the high school are preparing many outdoor activities for the winter. The boys will hold s rabbit poisoning drive In January In the vicinity of the farms south of Barley that border on the open domain where Jackrabblts are becoming nuisances. The poison for the campaign wiU be supplied by the county commissioners and the county agents office. SALT LAKH CITY, UT. The story of Americas prehistoric population Is foIdTn a film directed by A. C. Cooley, in charge of the local office of the United 8tates Indian service. The tint section of the film has been completed. A piece of year1' old; used th Be burial rites, forms one of the interesting exhibits. - Pottery and stone Implements also are described and exhibited. Heart disease conBOISE, IDA tinues as the greatest single causa of death in Idaho. During November, various forms of heart disease caused 69 of tho 344 deaths The death total includes 228 males and 118 females. Epidemic and Infections disea ces resulted In 38 fatalities, IS being attributed to tuberculosis. General diseases reused 38 deaths, 23 resulted from cancer. Nervous disorders were fatal In 37 cases, cerebral hemorrhage leading this classification with 27. - SALT LAKE CITY. UT. Securities commissioners of 11 western states will assemble in Salt Lake In a group meeting early In April It la announced by 8. P. Stewart, director of the Utah securities commission. Tho group Is one' of three Into which the national association of securities commissi oners la divided, and the sessions st Salt Lake are expected to bring up for discussion problems dealing with western types of securities, Jhclud lng those concerning mining of precious and semiprecious metals, and IT drilling. SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Water ttaere of the 11 western states will konvene here February 8 to 10, to disease drainage, taxation, leglsla tion and other problems of common Japanese troops near Hslnmla, Manchuria, fighting Chinese bandits In weather 20 degrees below free- -' Robert E. Olds former undersecretary of states named American member of the permanent court of arbitration at The Hague. 8 Parabolic reflector microphone which may he used to broadcast the proceedings of the United States senate 1 lng. 2 CHINAS NEW PRESIDENT .1 i I ( 1 r ? ; V UT.-In- a f . f-- ,a Lin Sen, veteran member of the Kuomlntang, who was mads president of the Nanking government following the resignation of Cblang Kai-she- k. FIANCEE OF WRESTLER This orrery, or astronomical dock, unique In the fact that It not only shows the relation of the planets to each other and tbelr movements around the sun, but also shows them In their relation to the whole solar system, was placed In the Franklin institute in Philadelphia, at a meeting of the Rlttenhouse Astronomical society. The orrery, made by Michael Sendtner, of Munich, is an exact duplicate of one he made for the famous Deutsches museum In Germany 15 yean ago. Sealing Illinois Com for Loans If- - V ! ' " mstre f the state penitentiary are now utilizing their idle time In study and class work and listening to tortures by prominent scholars. The Prison school," established under the supervision of the University of Utah extension division has an enrollment of 149 of a population of 321 and Is still growing,. 8 ALT LAKE CITY, UT. Those who are sightless may enjoy reading notable works that bars been printed In Brains and are on tile at the Salt Lake public library it U announced by the librarian. The books, totaling 610, are available for blind residents In all parts of the state. Besides 45 residents of the city who nse them there are several who receive the hooka by mail In other Utah dtles. PROTO, UT. A new and larger post office building is being planned for this city. 'A 3 Interest SALT LAKE CITY, Philadelphia Has a Unique Orrery '.if? ' f1 t, f . WARN1?,?,,- - It- m - ' . .mi b , -- . J - - 'X V t X r 0 1 Alice Dlllaracos, Grecian beauty who won the title of "Miss Europe In 1930, is reported to he engaged to wed Jim London, the Greek wrestler, who is familiar to Americans who go to see the grapplera. She sailed recently for Athens after visit In New York. . Hlia mrint- State agent sealing golden ears of corn to a crib as security for the loan of $200,000 to farmers of the Illinois corn belt. The new state warehouse loanlng act "permits 'the farmera to obtaln SO cents per loan is repaid. bushel, the grain to remain sealed in the crib until the Projection Dogfish Eggs Helium is made from natural gas . The Wise Man The egg of the dogfish are deposon a commercial scale by liquefacwise A Judge remarked that antion methods similar to those em- husband never forgets bis wifes ited in tough pouches which are means of email weeds to chored by which in ployed obtaining oxygen from the birthday. He merely forget ' tendrils. one It Is. atmosphere. |