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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON, UTAH si lh?:A. X. Vk." ? rv ? - - v"f'? Honor Comes Too Late to Interest Inventor Clean Kidneys A If there ventor it genius of Delaware By Drinking Lots of Water Tk Salt to Flush Kidney or If Bladder Bother Back Hurts Eating too much rich food may produce kidney trouble In some form, authority, because says a the acids created excite the kidneys. Then they become overworked, get sluggish, clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particularly backache and misery In the kidney region, rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid liver, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary Irritation. The moment your back hurts or kidneys arent acting right, or If bladder bothers you, begin drinking lots of good water and also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. This famous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with litlila, and has been used for years to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity; also to neutralize the acids In the system so that they no longer Irritate, thus often relieving bladder disorders. Jad Salts cannot injure anyone; makes a delightful effervescent llthla-watdrink which millions of men and women take now and then to help j keep the kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus often avoiding serious kidney disorders. well-know- n President Hoover receiving members of General Federation of Womens Clubs gathered In Washington for their annual convention. 2 Automobiles buried In snow In Kansas City during fierce blizzard that swept ever the Middle West 3 Entrance to St James palace, Loudon, scene of the naval limitation conference. 1 NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS forcement legislation died three years ago. automatically this hullabaloo coincided with tenth anniversary of the advent of national prohibition, and at the same time the league annual conopened Its twenty-fourtvention in Detroit. The leaders of the organization announced plans for raising a "war chest of $50,000,000 for use during the uext ten years and said they were determined to rout utterly the organized forces that seek repeal or modification of the Eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act. General Superintendent F. Scott McBride In his address assuming a rather remarkable knowledge of the Creator's Ideas, declared The league was born of God. It has been led by Him and will fight on while He leads." Dr. A. ,J. Barton, chairman of the executive committee, said: "The league Is the most hated and feared organization in America. The wets are more and more amazed at the strength of our organization. In a pitying and patronizing way they announce that we are dead or at least moribund. The wish Is father to the thought; they know that we are very much alive. ALL Anti-Saloo- n Center of Stage in Capital Held by Prohibition Enforcement. By EDWARD W. PICKARD was a;:Hin the dom- PROHIBITION inaut topic In Washington, displacing the tariff and the naval conference in London. Somewhat hurried by political pressure, the Wickershnm crime commission made a preliminary report and in submitting it to congress lresidont Hoover made recommendations for legislation designed to facilitate enforcement of the dry laws. Then the fireworks started. The commission's report was thus neatly summarized by the Boston Herald : In effect Chairman Wlckersliam and his associates say: 'Whether the Eighteenth amendment and the Volstead act are wise legislation or not, we do not chouse to say. The law Is here. Conditions in the courts and elsewhere are such that enforcement under Ideal conditions has not been responsible. Set up some new machinery for enforcement, try It a while and ultimately we may have something to say on prohibition as prohibition. We defer judgment meanwhile. " The four major recommendations made by the commission were: Unification of enforcement under the Department of Justice. Machinery for speeding up prohibition cases in the federal court Codification of ail statutes relating to prohibition. Amendment of Volstead act to facilitate prosecution of padlock injunctions. Here Is what President Hoover asked of congress: Reorganization of the federal court structure so as to give relief from congestion. Consolidation of the various agencies engaged In prevention of smuggling of liquor, narcotics, other merchandise and aliens over our frontiers. Provision of adequate prisons and reorganization of parole and other practices. Specific legislation for the District of Columbia. Legislation to give United States court commissioners enlarged powers in minor criminal cases. Transfer of prohibition machinery from Treasury department to the Department of Justice. TI1E house these recommendaINtions were referred to the several committees especially concerned, and there was an apparent disposition to measures push the administration through in quick time; hut it was thought they would encounter much opposition in the senate. The constitutional lawyers in both houses were prepared to fight especially the commission's plan to permit United States commissioners to handle petty prohibition eases on the ground that It deprived citizens of their constitutional right of trial by jury. Mr. Wickersliarn explained that tills was misapprehension, the plan merely t be defendant a speedy trial with the right to appeal to another ourt In which he would be tried by a Jury. The wets in the house organized for the coming battles by electing J. Chatles Linthicum of Maryland leader of the bloc. I'reviously Representative James .U. Beck of Pennsylvania had declined the post, explaining that while he opposed the prohibition law, he believed it to be the manifest duty of the administration to enforce it. Representative La Guardia of New York made a surprise attack on the drys when he raised a point of order on the prohibition provisions of the pending Treasury department appropriation bill and offered a resolution to declare the Eighteenth amendment inoperative. La Guardia set fortli the proposition that only ten of the state legislatures ratified the Eighteenth amendment within seven years, as reThe quired by its third section. others, he said, ratified merely the Joint resolution, which later became the constitutional article. Hence, he argued, the amendment and its en Anti-Saloo- n rAN THURSDAY the senate, by a of ten votes, rejected the proposal of ttie Republican regulars for un increase in the sugar tariff. The amendment of Senator Harrison of Mississippi forcing the retention in the tariff bill of the existing rate of 1.76 cents a pounds on Cuban sugar, was adopted, S to 38. The finance committee had proposed a rate of 2.20 cents on Cuban sugar and the bill passed by the house put the rate at 2.40 cents. The Western Independent Republicans, who combined with the Democrats to knock out of the Republican bill ail rate Increases except those on agricultural products, spilt on the sugar duty. Senators Borah of Idaho and Norris of Nebraska, leaders of his bloc, were among those voting against an Increased rate. green of Michigan, Governor recommendation of Arthur D. Wood, commissioner of pardons and paroles, has commuted the sentences of the five 'victims of the states former life for a pint" law, reducing their terms from life Impris- to 15 years. Id cononment to formity to the amended statute. The sixth sentenced under the former law committed suicide in his cell. Oscar G. Olander, Michigans commissioner of public safety, announced that the state police would be provided with fast automobiles equipped with machine guns and tear bombs to stop rum running between Detroit and Chicago. The officers will wear bullet proof vests. In Providence, R. l a special grand jury called to consider evidence Id the slaying ef three men aboard the rum runner Black Duck by coast guardsmen reported to the Superior court that, after thorough investigation, It had found no indictment. SECRETARY OF STATE STIMRON of the American delegates to tlie naval limitation conference landed at Ilymouth Friday morning and were speedily carried up to London. There Mr. Stimson spent several hours In conference with lrime Minister MacDonald, and on the two following days lie talked confidentially and at length with Premier Tardieu of France and Dino Grandi. Italian foreign minister. Presumably these conversations did much to clenr the way to a tentative agreement in the conference, which was to open Tuesday. To the advance guard of the newspaper correspondents from all over the world Mr. MacDonald said Great Britain would propose the abolition of battleships and submarines, not with any great hope of obtaining total abolition. but In the strong hope of securing a drastic reduction in these forms of armament and their possible extinction after a term of years. lie favors reduction by categories rather than global tonnage, but France and probably Italy are committed to the latter plan and it Is believed the Un'ted States is ready to accept it. The French and Italian dehgations were reported still far apart on the question of naval parity. However, fair minded observers in London were convinced that all five of the delegations were sincere in their desire to obtain results of real International value and that while each of them would Insist on adequate national defense, all were against the principle of armed supremacy. Therefore there la reason for optimism. 1" KLEGATES of the allies and of Germany in the conference at The Hague finally reached an agreement on the several questions of sanctions and formulated two declarations on the subject to be part of the Young plan protocol, the way to the signing of which was thus cleared. Germany agreed that in case she wilfully defaulted any of the Young plan provisions any creditor nation might appeal to the court of International justice and If that court gave an affirmative decision, the creditor power or powers should resume "full liberty of action. That, of course, means the possibility of armed Intervention or occupation, and both the Germans and the British hesitated to sign It, but this was necessary to prevent utter failure of the conference. Paul Moldenhauer, German minister of finance, had already promised that the Iteichsbank would participate Id the financing of the world hank for reparations, though Hjalmar Schaoht, president of the Reichsbank, had fought stubbornly against this. Agreement was reached on the date of German payments, the fifteenth of the month, as demanded ; on the moratorium question, with the provision that at the end of any period of suspended payments the amount postponed becomes payable Immediately, and a special advisory committee is to determine whether Germany's economic life Is endangered when moratorium Is asked. chairman of investigating committee, reported to the senate denouncing tariff lobbyists, especially those of the sugar interests, as a set of grafters fattening upon the donations of credulous business men, who might as well give their money to a palm reader or a crystal gazer." He estimated that the sugar lobbyists, both high and low tariff, had raised more than $400,000 in their campaign to Influence congressmen. The report said the com mittee had found no Impropriety nor anything open to censure or criticism on the part of the President. SENATOR much of the river valleys flood conditions were Increasing until they threatened to be the worst in years. Vast areas of farm land were inundated and many towns were isolated. Southern Indiana especially suffered, and extremely cold weather added to the distress, there arid elsewhere. The severest storms of the winter swept over the North Central states, and the heavy snowfalls extended even to Portland. Ore., and southern California. Still worse in destruction of life and property were the great gales that prevailed in England and northern Europe. About fifty persons were killed and many injured, the majority of deaths being due to the foundering of vessels. CLARK returned to GROVER a six weeks inspection trip in the Wei river district on behalf of the China International Famine Relief and reported that of persons are dying thousands daily from famine and exposure. He declared two millions are doomed to die within a few months and that there was no hope of saving them because of transportation difficulties and fear of bandits. Mrs. Green had announced cheerfully that she was having a table of bridge the next evening w hile Mr. G. went to a business dinner. Her husband looked at her with the cold eye of an unbiased critic. Do you mean to tell me you have the nerve to Invite people here to play bridge? Why, you cant play." But, Fred dear. I can, Mrs. G. Mrs. Thomas gave replied proudly, me a lesson yesterday." What Mr. Green had to say about a bridge player was sufficient. It accounted for Mrs. Greens telephone call to her brother next day. Oh, Bob, she walled. Youve got to help me out Just bring any oue you please and pretend to drop In unexpectedly tonight. Anything to break up the bridge game." one-lesso- n Insuring Peace You say youre a lover of peace and then you go and throw a brick rJrt.B?am Instead of dangerous heart depressants take e&fe, mild, purely vegetable KATUBKS REMEDY end get rid of the bowel poisons that cause the trouble Nothing like Nl for biliousness, sick headache and constipation Acts pleasantly. Never gripes Philadelphia, who plied the river In a steamboat of bis own design and construction 22 years before the Fulton effort on the Hudson. Fitch spent years In working out Mild, safe, purely vegetable his idea and did it with a considerAt druggist only 25c. Make live tart tonic FEEL LIES A MILLION, TAKE able degree of success, but he was a very humble member of society, given to minor spells of so that he was never taken seriously by anyone and no hand was raised to help him. On the contrary he met DR. CLAIRE M. GOULEY with opposition und misfortune. One SpeciuKxlng to treatment of diaeaaee hy blow after another fell upon his shouleievtnvmiinielifl vibration. Outline and Infra Kedray. ders and finally he gave up and made Examination by blood teat and south, where he lived a while laboratory findiuge. Free eouuliatioa and then died and was buried there. Hour 9j00 to S KM) 607 Scott Uldg. Phone Warn. 6072 The story of his setback Is a long one. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH reThe only recognition that he ever ceived Is about to he bestowed upon him In the shape of a celebration by The Koler Barber College. Inc. his descendants which will he held at BARBKK8IN DRM.AN1) Hern While f on team. an early date, but it Is a little too late State ZJoenaed College. you for any 8ute Examination Prepares to be of any Interest to old Jim Fitch. U a bLGLMT ST., 8ALT LA CITY . UTAH Washington Star. leeUriciLy-liatiier- wnn-dere- PARKERS HAIR BALSAM Lucile is the Baao Happiest Girl mothers So many nowadays talk about giving their children fruit juices, as If this were a new discovery. As a matter of fact, for over fifty years, mothers have been accomplishing results far surpassing anything yon can secure from home prepared fruit Juices, by using pure, wholesome Call fornla Fig Syrup, which Is prepared under the most exacting laboratory supervision from ripe California Figs richest of all fruits In laxative and nourishing properties. Its marvelous to see how bilious, weak, feverish, sallow, constipated, children respond to its gentle Influence; how their breath clears op, color flames In their cheeks, and they become sturdy, playful, en ergetic again. A Western mother, Mrs. H. J. Stoll, Valley P. O., Nebraska, says: My little daughter, Roma Lucile, was constipated from I became worried about babyhood. her and decided to give her some California Fig Syrup. It stopped her constipation quick; and the way It improved her color and made her pick n she up made me realize how had been. She Is so sturdy and well now, and always in such good humor that neighbors say shes the happiest girl In the West" Like all good things, California Fig Syrup is Imitated, but you can always get the genuine by looking for the name California on the carton. under-nourishe- d run-dow- Dandruff 'etopalialrPailftBi Reatorea Color and to Beauty Gray and Faded Hdi 40c. and $100 at DnirrisU. 99 f?fyT PYiem. WQa PatrfeogTifl.R Y ml for FLORESTON SHAMPOO-W- eal connection with Parkert Hair Balsam. Hakes to hair aoft and fluffy. (0 cents by mail or at drae-lat- a. illucox Chemical Works, Falcbogoe, N. I, PISOS gives quick, effective rclie Pleasant, sooth' Excellent for ing and healing. children contains no WWW (IIIN.U opiates. Successfully used for 6S years. and 60c sires. 35c Another Universal Language The latest effort at a universal lan- guage Is Ianoptlc English" which has been devised by a group of scholars and scientists of Cambridge, Mass, English is the basis and It consists of only about 500 words and the whole language Is ex-- ,, haustlvely explained In a very small book of two or three pages. The claim Is made that It Is so simple a person of any nationality could leara It In a few months at the most and persons who are quick at such things could master the new language In a few weeks. d English Established Church The prlucipul revenue of the Church of England Is obtained through Its large estntes and endowments and from tithes. Collections are taken up In the Church of England as elsewhere. Hi Kind Not a Beat Seller He Is the most undiplomatic boob She When does a book become a I ever met. classic? after I throwed it." He When people who haven't read Yes, heB the kind of a nut who will start bragging about what a wonTrouble doesn't Improve the charac- It begin to say they have. derful place Florida is the minute be ter of a silly man as It does that of lands In California. The safe blower Is never safe. a wise one. at Casey. Yes, sir A an 'e were peaceful, too NEW THIS AGE OF LUBRICATION BEGINS WITH NEW MOTOR OIL CHARACTERISTIC! Penetrative Lubricity CONOCO Alone Has this New Characteristic Since the discovery of the wheel, lubrication his been necessity snd a problem. The first rude barrows which men built, needed lubrication, and one of the brighter tribesmen began rubbing the axles of his primitive cart with raw animal meat. With Watt's invention of the steam engine in friction resulted. Then it 1763, was that animal and vegetable oil lubricants became definitely unsatisfactory. Their tendency (o leave corrosive deposits ruled them out. metal-on-nict- upon them, Wells and Southcombe, two British scientists began a study of the problem which occupied 16 years. The result of their efforts a propwas the isolation of die Germ Essence erty that provides increased oiliness when introduced into mineral oils. These processes were patented and Continental acquired them exclusively for North America. Thus Continental brings you the first and only fundamentally belter oil of the century t Germ Process and Penetrative Lubricity Mineral Oils Are Discovered Aftor ttie drilling of the first oil well in 1859, mineral oils became commercially successful. Because petroleum was plentiful and was freer y from gumming and corroding tendencies, it supplanted animal and vegetable oils. But since 1901 there have been practically no changes nf fundamental importance in refining motor oils. Now since 19C1, think of the changes that have been made in motors! Probably the make of cor you drive today was not even manufactured in 1901. Certainly its needs for oils are jar more exacting! Foreseeing that ordinary mineral oils would eventually fail to meet the increasing strains put The Germ Process adds one startling char, actcristio to Conoco Germ - Processed Motor Oils. It enables them to penetrate metal surfaces! This means that an enduring oil film actually penetrates all working parts and clings under all conditions. In starting when 40 to 60 of motor wear occurs in speeding when any failure of the film is fatal to motor life, remember diis the permanence of tin's film precludes any possibility of metal abrasion. Hie germ essence naturally adds greater oiliness and we call that lubricity. So we have Penetrative Lubricity as the outstanding characteristic of this new oil. When will you begin using Conoco Motor Oil? THE OF rap-idl- The Development of Germ Process FOUR AGES .... -- Germ-Process- LUBRICATION PIUS XI Issued an encyclical criticizing methods and declaring the right of ttie church and family to take precedence over the state in education of children. The state, he said, should have charge of military education for the common good, hut should avoid an excess of physical and military instruction. Though especially a part of the pope's controversy with Mussolini, the encyclical was translated Into several languages ami sent to ttie church The Italian throughout the world. press accorded It the severe criticism of complete silence, which brought forth an angry rebuke In the Vatican official organ, Osservatore Romano, (, Mrs. Greens Pathetic S. O. S. Over Telephone CARAWAY, THROUGHOUT POPE er wus ever an unfortunate Inwus old Jim Fitch, the 1930, Western Newspaper Into, Means Slipperiness, smoothness, freedom from friction: also the property that diminishra friction, as the lubricity of oil, coupled with the unique ability to penetrate metal surfaces. j |