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Show THE PAYSOX CHRONICLE. PAYSON, UTAH Review of Current "gvents the World Over .. Bill in Face of Veto Threat by the Ref K pinTjiam3 Beer Rider Seems ;85epa??es rans for Campaign. 'Blocked EDWARD W. PICKARD By corporation finance to Inloans make to an,n and iduals Virginia Is to continue in charge of the women's activities. And 1 hope that Robert I.ucas, who has been in charge of the executive work, and Ray Benjamin of California, who has been of material assistance, will continue their services with the committee. There was no such certainty of lo cation In connection with the Demo eratic organization. James A. Farley, New York state cliairmnn and Roosevelt preeonventiou manager, who has been elected chairman of the Democratic national committee, has lndl cated a tendency to favor New York as the center of operations. ciMlIties unable from obtain funds - ALFRED . Republican t 'fri bill 0flfO'iDS Staining provisions - It President HnovPlainly lead would had cated mens-,-, to veto the Chief of these! Z clause empowering , j v reconstruction ,h Cjr. to fcker SMITH settled nil as to his intentions when he issued a statement that he would support t he Democratic candidates, platform and party, lie said he had received many letters urging him to run Independently for President on the Democratic platform but regarded such a course as iut practicable and impossible. ru- hanking had Insisted cocaker Gamer for n i,t tills provision and Mr. SLen equally li slstent on made the asserting It and would pawn broker credit of the nation, fitter controversy between followed two Jereoces at the White louse. attacked Mr G8raef Tiolently house and the of the floor 6mer noruia ' T 'in, SI aj eroo the bill on the speaker. went to the senate of debate shot through peppered with as obsti-fyie- d Speaker Garner demagogic," it and , for Increasing the capitall-- oa 'jjd at-- i and politics power of the borrowing and Finance corporation to $3,760,000,000. 000 000.000 sorarrled In addition $322,000,000 .nstrnction r ced construction to be works public the treasury, by turned over to Finance corpora-jbat $300,000,000 Is set aside i oans. Part Is to be loaned direct-individuals and cities on such ballitjasthey can command. The s to be loaned to states, cities, 517CP.OOO.OOO the n Reconstruction in North Carolina the wets a decided victory In the defeat of Senator Cameron Morrison, corpora-sn- private agencies, and ic CHARLES CTU and Speaker Garner, who hopes to succeed Charley, both expect to do a lot of speaking throughout the West for their respective tickets. In deed, the heavy work of the campaign will fail to them, for President Hoover will make only a few speeches In large cities and Gov. Franklin Roosevelt probably will not often depart from Albany. I Mr. Curtis said In Washington: expect to do a lot of campaigning this fall and would be glad to meet Mr. Mr. Garner Garner on the stump. said little of his plans except that as soon as congress adjourned he would go to his ranch home near Uvalde, Texas, for a rest. Roth these gentlemen are seasoned campaigners, famil iar especially with the West and the South. And both of them like the old style of oratory, with plenty of ges tures and language that appeals to the common people. all the blame sh u Placing lit disagreement it VICIO PRESIDENT t scorcb-Zm- a retorted with K. DOWN sorts of organiza-tbnlld toll bridges, water-s- , tenements and other projects tat Is termed a various veteran leader of the drys, r u n o ff Democratic In the Is primary, to which an elecAmerican 'TO and Bennett flatten, aking to set a Griffin, unm- more than for record new equivalent tion. The senator was swamped, losing by James aviators, artor tan record In Thence they hur-iMoscow, but were miles from Minsk, toward on down reed their time, making at Berlin. at stop 50 d tone was wrecked. 'ENaTOR force BINGHAM'S effort on me not getting well He sought to attach n a vote In the senate filiation of beer was 4 very 100, OoO votes to Robert U. Reynolds. The winner, who campaigned as an advocate of repeal of the Eighteenth amendment, received the largest majority ever given a candidate In that state. Lie Is forty-seveyears old and practices law In Asheville. J. C. B. Ehringhaus of Elizabeth Citv won the nomination for governor. the world, flew from Grace across the Atlantic git around to the bill rider, but the came to the W strongly, and at delayed matters proposition taw bank I ONE a K on the !!t bill itself. This e was amend- precipitating debate that left way a pet bill administration ; ae I the Ial It so Jd same time wets who disliked It Sen- - could for Chance3 :!wSX.tl,e 5 tthoT Bingham vote the Wet iZ 7ZiT?rcess t0 It. f; publicans frce the aruer insisting out for ac f beer y fr 8 that 6 beeD ,ntrndueed. J democrats In that they caileS 'on 10 carry out modif,caitnn clause seemedf be kt Volstead f Cas until af'or a cnce to the protSbtad vote in Nnvpr.,bor. thevPrf I!cans shill DrVntCnd that the f Bny rrata eer to threiitpeople. f,r b rlMtloBnilEIl(S camrm,Sn . Cbicaco LI conducted Wett Sanders of Indiana. r Si M 'Airman of Republican committee. ona! na- - He Chcgo and JLged headquarters ZTj ya hon Hnd added Urn! there wouM considerable activ- - rrse recte(1 i B0 w0lSnSt,,n ftPn Be com- Mil Eal1 if tohIspend cost U the six,h the fa,mer - e, rrr from a'l be he In sovernor "c Ela Yst of West vCharRe of after another the Insurgent of the senate are and the Roosevelt toward turning Democratic ticket. Norris of Nebraska was the first to announce himself and Frazier of North Dakota came next. Both declared they would support the New York governor in his campaign against President Hoover. Then came Hiram Johnson of California with a statement in which he gave high praise to Roosevelts acceptance speech as the most important speech He also lauded the Demof the day. ocratic nominees airplane journey to in Chicago as a commendable change national political custom. declined Although Senator Johnson to say whether he will openly support Governor Roosevelt In the campaign, his statement left little doubt that he to prefers the Democratic nominee President lloover. convention in the Prohibition parBorah ty decided it wanted Senator so and candidate as Its Presidential nonInformed him. His reply was committal as to his acceptance but some advised the party to nominate door open the leave one else and then If for withdrawal of Its candidates croups all dry of an amalgamation conferIs arranged at the coming ence In Washington. Therefore the convention nominated William D. Upshaw, former congressand man from Georgia, for President HI., for Rockford, of Frank S. Regan Vice President. MEETING in the Liberty, Farm BY Progressive and Social and 1st parties, the Monetary league the Farmers union, ttie New Liberty convention held party was formed at a o in Kansas City. Mo. Irank Wei for nominated was San Francisco of President, and Andrew Nordskng both President Vice Los Angeles, for though being named by acclamation, also of Ohio, S. Coxey General" Jacob am oi was offered as a candidate, rman, dm the City, Kansas Bruner of com called a meeting of the national oO. August In Kansas City mittee COMBINING P INQ VILLAGE HAS HAD Italian foreign minister, aud Premier Herrlot of I ranee both gave utterance to declarations that greatly disturbed the conference on reparations and war debts In Lausanne. First Grand! made a demand for complete cancellation of all European post - war financial obligations. Prime Minister J. MucDonald Ramsay of Britain flatly refused Grandl's demand that the slate he wiied clean. Great Britain, he said, cannot cancel debts due to her unless the United States does likewise. Grandi precipitated the discussion by asking Premier MacDonald to agree never to demand renewal of war debt payments by Italy, in line with the policy he had outlined as the ideal of Premier Benito MusGRANDI. ITS DAY OF GLORY Old Tadoussac Now Quiet Summer Resort. The oldest white settlement In America, and once the center of the American fur trade, the quaint little French Canadian village of Tadoussac, on the lower St. Lawrence river, Is today a quiet Canadian summer resort. m The first trading post of the Hudson Bay company, that great company of gentlemen adventurers, was erected on the site where the modern Hotel Tadoussac now stands. In 1(503, Champlain landed at Tadoussac and made his disastrous treaty with the Algonqulns, thus Incurring the enmity of the warlike Iroquois, and In the same year the oldest church In America, the Tadoussac Indian chapel, was erected. On the site of the first church a tiny chapel still stands and the bell, which three centuries ago called the converted Indians to mass, still rings out from the chapel belfry. In 1001, the Iroquois sacked the village, leaving standing only the church, which their superstition prompted them to leave unmolested and for a time Tadoussac was a deserted village. In the meantime, explorers had pressed onward and In the search for new worlds this beauty spot on the lower river was neglected. Great cities sprang up throughout the Dominion and Tadoussac remained a tiny village Important today only for Its historical Interest and Its summer resort fame. Once the Beene of great historical events, peaceful and warlike, Tadoussac today submits each summer to a peaceful Invasion as visitors arrive by steamer and by car to rest and play In this oldest settlement on the continent Womans Chief Charms Not to Be Purchased The mouth Is a photograph of the disposition. Someone has said that we are not responsible for the disposition we are born with, but we ars responsible for the one that we die with. It Is the same with the mouth. The sweetness and klssableness and dearness of a babys mouth are not dependent on the shape or size. Baby's mouth is sweet because his soul Is sweet No brand of lipstick, nor any artist In Its use, can camouflage a sour mouth and make even s casual observer believe It is sweet Then there Is the eye, which the contents of the vanity case cannot change. "The eye Is the window of You can buy something the souL that will lengthen the fringe on the curtains to your you can change the cut of the lambrequins above, but you cant keep people from looking In sometimes, unless you pull the shades down altogether and put yourself in darkness. No vanity case, not even s whole drug store or beauty shop, can make attractive the windows out of which looks a quarrelsome, envious soul Keep sweet within, If you want to get full value from your vanity case. Nellie S. Russell In the Farm Journal. Nestling among the foothills of the Laurentian mountains at the Junction of the St. Lawrence and Suguena rivers, the village Itself Is still living In the past, the natural beauty of Its surroundings and the qunintness of Its people attracting euch summer a large number of holidayers who are seeking to leave behind the rush and bustle of modem life. Woven around Tadoussac Is a long and romantic history. Here Jacques Cartier, the first explorer of New France, landed In the summer of 1535, and there are numerous tales of visits by those fierce sea rovers, the Vikings, at a much earlier date. Tadoussac, with Its natural protected harbor, was long used as a whaling station by the Basques and Bretons, who were the first to form a settleUnbeliever Challenged ment there, and It was In 1590 that Is said that a woman's voice can It the first house In Canada was built be heard by a man In a balloon at Deceive Themselves At the opening of the century, a height of two miles, while he canare who think they Tadoussac became the center of the Slany people not hear a male voice above one mlla. fur trading Industry, which extended hard boiled only have thick skulls. Care to test itF London as far as Labrador and Hudson bay. Exchange. blue-cappe- d solini. MacDonald but replied politely firmly that Great Britain U bound by the Balfour declaration, which sets forth that Britain shall ask from her debtors only as much as she needs to pay her own war debts. While she has to continue payment of her own debts, he said, Britain cannot agree to wiping the International slate clean. Then Premier Ilerrtot came forward with the flat assertion that either the United States must revise the war debt schedules or Germany must continue to pay reparations under the Young plan. At the same time Germany continued to stick tightly to Its contention that It can no longer meet the Young plan payments. Herriots declaration was made at the end of a day of negotiations which led nowhere. It was given to the press in explanation of why France demands a safeguarding clause, protecting its reparation Income in case America remains adamant on the debts, in any agreement s, Tlt-Blt- Governor Sterling Joke the side of protection. In general, Species of Hawks That Gov. Ross Sterling tells this one Are Friends of Fanner say biologists of the United States with a chuckle: harmless of The saying, the only good hawk is a dead hawk," has been proven false by modern biological studies. Some hawks, of course, prey at times on poultry and valuable game birds. Slany, however, live mainly on rodents, Insects, and other destructive forms of wild life. It Is not easy to distinguish between the harmful and harmless species of hawks, that In itself being good reason for erring, If at all, on negotiated. Chancellor Von Papen has proposed that Germany pay about $000,000,000 in a flat sum on condition that the war guilt clause he removed from the treaty of Versailles aud that Germany be permitted equality of armament. It was the Impression In Lausanne that Von TapeD attached to the conditions even more lmpor tance than to fixing the amount Germany might be called on to pay. Her-riohowever, declined to consider them at all. MacDonald, as the week closed, was trying hard to bring accord between France and Germany. Department Agriculture, I had been visiting the Imperial hawks have broad wings and wide, farm, near Houston. They prison harmful and the tails, me with a car and an furnished ones have relatively long tails and efficient driver to return to Houston. rounded wings. Study of the apTf It will not make you too lata, pearance and habits of the hawks In I wish you would drive me on to the farmers enable should section any and sportsmen to tell which are like- Bay, (Sterling's summer home), I said." ly to visit the chicken yard and Certainly, sir." which will confine themselves largely to feeding on Injurious animals, and You will have enough time?" thus be useful Oh, yes, sir, I have seven years." d t, POPE, a New COL. FREDERICK acting alone and In a pri- vate capacity, is trying to bring about formal recognition of the Soviet Russian government by the United States Dispatches from Moscow say he presented to Soviet officials a suggestion that the United States send an unofficial commissioner to Russia as a pre liminary to negotiations for establishment of normal relations. Be gave, It was learned, an account of satisfactory conversations he had held on the subject In certain quarters in Washington Just before he sailed for Russia late last May. Pope Is expected to return to the United States this month, and the prospect was that he would renew his conversations here. Britain and the Irish State are at each others throats over the matter of the defaulted Irish land annuities. On motion of J. II. Thomas, secretary of state for dominions, the house of commons passed a resolution empowering the government to impose a retails tory tariff on Irish imports up to 100 per cent ns a means of collecting the annuities. The special duties net was then put on its way through parliament, though it was opposed by George I.ansbury, Labor leader. President De Valera of the Free State has demanded that the dispute he referred to an International tribunal for arbitration, but the British he hangovernment Insists It must Mr. dled by an empire tribunal. As nev. could Britain Thomas says. Great a er permit foreigners to arbitrate domestic dispute. to The land annuities, amounting $11,000,000 a year, were approximately treaty of set up by the Anglo-Irisreimburse to Intended were pil and mostly British, for land landholders, to tenant purchased for parceling farmers. Great having Which tlra will you buy at the same low price? Why accomplished WITHOUT of importance, the dis- armament conference Jt Geneva pre next autuinm pared to adjourn until issuance of Its final act was to be the Sir John a statement prepared hy laudsecretary, Simon, British foreign Hoover's proposals for ing President hy one third armaments of reduction In and setting forth certain points delegations various the which on them It also were approximately ngreed. would the of plan some phases said by for study time require considerable concerned. the powers Russian Maxim Litvinov, soviet Most of the best things on the market others in public preference by better than two to one? Why do you suppose that more people ride on Goodyear Tires than on any other kind and have for 17 years? These tires must be first-choic- e because theyre better. They must outsell all other tires in the world because they outrun them on the road. On a straight quality basis, then, it certainly looks like common sense to tires. buy first-choic- e the Which brings up question, how about price? naturally cost more than the all THE OR EAT EST NAM second-rater- s. But heres the amazing fact about tires: You can get the safety, the quality, the extra life and trouble-fre- e mileage of the worlds greatest tire at no extra cost. Think that over when someone tries to you into buying an unknown or doubtful bargain. high-pressu- re Ju3t ask him this simple question: Why should I pay good money for second-choic- any E e tire when costs no more? IN RUBBER for-el-- commissar, and Ambassador dissatof Germany expressed declnr isfaction with the procedure, on which find no points Ing they could was agreed. the conference really Union.) (9. 15::. western Newspaper do you suppose that Goodyear Tires lead y TUNE IN on the Goodyear Program every Wednesday niht over N.B.C. Red Network, WEAF and Asociated Station first-choic- e |