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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON. UTAH of Current Review u3 Events the World Over Called by President J Industrial Conference Smoot Predicts Revision of Revenue Case Developments. aw Walker V W. PICKARD By EDWARD TnE nature avoid this publicity and who thought further congressional action was necessary If the transactions were not to be held as confidential by the clerks of the senate and house. culmination of recovery A which I'real-ff- l Au-n- t called to open iIoorer ha3 Washingin -- 0 gust summoned ton. Those kPr2eaconfe.-ene- of are the members Inand the business committees dustrial set up in recently rethe twelve federal and districts, serve FIVE distinguished engineers will pass on all applications for loans for projects as provided for In the relief act carrying a fund of $1,500,000,-OOfor construction work to aid the un At the employed. head of this commit tee of five Is Dr. Charles David Marx, one of the foremost engineers of Califor ula. He is a personal friend of President Hoover, who esteems him highly and lias utmost confidence In Dr. C. D. Marx his ability to handle the big Job put in his hands. Doctor Marx, who was born in Ohio in 1S57, was educated in Cornell university and in Germany. He was United States assistant engineet on Missouri river improvement fifty years ago, and afterward was on the faculties of Cornell. Wisconsin and Stanford universities His home is In Palo Alto. an- the purpose nounced by Mr. Hoover Is to start a "con- campaign centrated whole ecoalong the nomic front. franklin Continuing the Pres Fort con- ident said: "The will deal with specific proj accomplishment: where definite fimslness, agriculture, and employ-rT"be 'attained, and will SJ. mobilization of private and to that jTemmental Instrumentalities co-or- and officials preliminary meeting were. Owen D. P. Dennett, Boston; 11. Houston, New York ; George chairmen Committee who were to hold the Pari Toon' ClevelaB. Williams Philadelphia; L. Richmond, C. Graham, Edwin ndAtlanta ; Sewell L. (leorie Harris, St. Chicago; J. w. Harris. MinneapD. Dayton, Louis; George Kansas City; olis' Joseph F. Porter, R. K. Kingsbury, Frank Kell, Dallas; S. Z, of the strange developments of times is the farmers' strike that was started in Iowa for the purpose of forcing higher prices for farm produce and that spread to some extent In other states of the central west The Iowa farmers undertook to compel all agriculturists of the state to withhold their products from market, and In some regions, notably about Des Moines, picketed the highways and stopped nearly all trucks carrying vegetables and live stock to the city. Deputy sheriffs were Instructed to keep the roads open, but few farmers eared to run the blockade. City milk distributors obtained sufficient supplies by train, but urbanites had tr rely on home gardens for their vegetables. In North Dakota the farmers united to withhold their wheat from market until the price shall reach $1 a bushel, and their leader said this movement had made progress in eleven states. Plans for financing the threshing hills of farmsrs who promised to hold hack their wheat were being worked out ONE Francisco; Secretary of the of AgricultTreasury Mills; Secretary ure Hyde; Secretary of Commerce ; Secretary of Labor Doak ; San Chapin of the fedPomerene, of the Reconstruction chairman corporation ; Paul Bestor, chairman farm loan board ; Franklin Fort, federal home loan board, chairman and James C. Stone, chairman of the Eugene Meyer, governor eral reserve board; Atlee Fl-na- farm board. federal expected to be accomphome loan banking systthe lished by em created by congress, of which Franklin Fort of New Jersey has been In a radio address made chairman. Mr. Fort explained that the home loan banks will have the power to make direct loans on first mortgages up to of the value of the same percentage the property that they may loan to Much Is Institutions. shall all be greatly disappointed," he continued, if the home loan bank system does not put under the real estate and mortgage structure of America the type of underpinning which not only will prevent its collapse In these troubled times, but will form a foundation for the continued expansion and growth of home ownership. The machinery of the new organization, which will be set up as soon as the board decides upon the sites for the establishment of the eight to twelve home loan banks provided by the law, Is designed primarily to advance loans to building and loan associations, savings banks and Insurance companies In the mortgage field. "We OEN'ATOR SMOOT, chairman of the senate finance committee, realizing there are many Inequalities in the new revenue law, expresses the opinion that congress, when It reconvenes, will find necessary a revision of that measure to fit business conditions as they will then exist And he believes the plan of a general manufacturers ssles tax will be revived. Personally" said the Utah senator, I think that the bottom of the business depression has been reached and that conditions are getting better everywhere In the country. The Chamber of Commerce of the nited States has announced forma-fio- n of a special committee on taxa-o- n to examine the manufacturers tax and other possible sources t federal revenue as a means of u ,ng Inequities In the taxation sya- m as 8et hp In the last session of wngress." yiCE PRESIDENT CURTIS was iPraay notlet of his renomina-bthe Republican party at his me y tu in Topeka, Kan., The cere-f0- r LWaf, otab,e for its simplicity, 6 bai 8a be did not wish hi 1 entl8 and nelKll)ors to go to s lor There were no pa... .expenseU tbe Topeka Post band of ths a merlcan Region played and the iamo Post provided a color guard. DotifiM1, DickInson. chairman of the n C0IumlRcc, spoke for about ten WA?S at,d 'Ir- Gurtis then t a(ress of acceptance, an 8t his fe,!ow receivpd high praise from - Republicans, S TRIMBLE, clerk of the that Speaker rcpr(sentatives, decided Earner and Represent- was ma ,nej Were r,Sht and that It t0 Inke pUb' He the dSnsYfV1 fieconstrucJo! fJnanS maJe by the Finance corporation . . In tbls he with Pr.Ji disagreed Hoover, who sought to f Mayor jimmy walker of New put In another strenuous trying to convince Governor Roosevelt that he should not be re- week moved from office. The examination conducted by the governor went Into all facts connected with Walkers relations Sher- with Russell T. who handled wood, the mayor's financial affairs and has long been missing; and with many other made by charges Walker Samuel Seabury. During the questioning there was a lot about an unnamed woman who was unofficially admitted to be Betty Compton, an actress now beliving In England. The evidence fore the legislative committee had shown that this person, whos. name was not then revealed, received a check for $7,500 from a brokerage account of Mayor Walker's and that cash and stocks valued at $75,000 were turned over to her from the various accounts of Sherwood. The mayor In his testimony referred to the unnamed person as having been his personal friend ; he offered to explain his arrangement with her, ns It was expressed on one occasion, but the governor refused to permit an explanation. Throughout the trial Governor Roosevelt has shown a commendable determination to get at the truth and frequently found occasion to squelch Walker's counsel, John J. Curtin. To the layman at a distance it seemed that the efforts of the attorney did nothing to help the mayor's case to put It mildly. IsSupreme Court Justice Staley sued an order eompeling Roosevelt to delay his decision In the case until after a hearing on a writ of Injunction, and there was a good prospect that court proceedings would block removal of the mayor, If that Is decided upon by the governor, until after the Presidential election. Mayor v JEWS of Interest to all the country IN came from Englewood, N. J. There, in the Morrow home, a second son was born to Col and Mrs. Charles A. Lindbergh, and it was announced that mother and child were doing well. event came five months The happy and sixteen days after the kidnaping of the first Lindbergh boy from their home in Hopewell. Colonel Lindbergh InIssued a plea to the press not to bis of home, feeling vade the privacy that the publicity to which the family meashad been subjected was In large ure responsible for the tragic death of their first child. TYUMORS that Theodore Roosevelt, governor general of the Philippines, would be called home to take part Id the Presidential camgalgn on behalf of Mr Hoover were strengthened when It was announced that John H. Holliday of St. Louis, Mo., had been of the Islands appointed by the President. He has been acting as legal adviser to Colonel Roosevelt. The m a'lagers of the Republican campaign felt that a few speeches In the middle and far western states by Governor-General Roosevelt would greatly help the Hoover cause because it had been found that many voters out there were going to cast their ballots for Franklin L. Roosevelt under the Impression that lie is ttie son of former President Roosevelt, to whose memory they are devoted. 0011 the first time in a year and a half President Hoover took a vacation, but It lasted only a few days. He siient the first part of the time on the Commerce department boat Sequoia fishing In the waters of the Chesapeake, and he and hia companions caught a lot of fish and had a good rest Wednesday evening the President landed at Annapolis, whence he motored to the White House and then went on to the Rapldan camp. 7 fields of central and Illinois were greatly disturbed following the acceptance by the union of a compromise $5 a day rate. Many of the miners rebelled mine COAL against this and there were mass meetings and picketing activities that gave the authorities much to do. Joe Colbert, a union official at Orient and one of the protesters, was called from bis house and shot to death. Many of the larger mines reported that they were operating with full forces at the reduced scale. ii politics in New York Is lively, aud the Republicans are preparing to select their candidates at the convention, which meets In September. To oppose United States Senator Robert F. Wagner, Democrat, who seeks It Is likely Charles S. Whitman will be picked by the G. 0. P. He Is a veteran STATE In politics, having been elected governor in 1914 and two years later; but he was defeated In c. GOODYEAR TUDE0 ire YOU DOfor bow to low priced know what you get S. Whitman your money when You get the safety of tough new rubber Goodyear rubber between your car and the road. You get full oversized tires guaranteed for life. You get Goodyear Supertwist cord construction Goodyear quality through and through. E. by Alfred Smith, since when he has not held or sought office. Mayor Rollin B. Marvin of Syracuse Is another possibility for the senatorial nomination. For the Republican nomination for governor the most conspicuous aspirant to date is CoL William J. Donovan of Buffalo, who acquired the nickname Wild Bill In the World war. He commanded the old fighting and won the Congressional inth Medal of Honor, the Distinguished Service modal and other decorations. During the Coolidge regime he was assistant attorney general. Sixty-n- Tl'ilB I la every bow tub dr You get the extra value that Goodyear can put into tires because Goodyear builds more tires than any rubber company in the world. No wonder millions are calling Goodyear Speedway the greatest thrift tire on the market today. Read these prices and ask yourself: Why pay good money for you pay the low prices printed here? 191S it's thrifty to put any tire when second-choic- e costs no more? FIRST-CIIOIC- E oo the Goodyear Program every Wednesday night over N.B.G Red Network, WEAF and Associated Stariooa economy in mind, Italy Is to reorganize her navy and will retire about 130,000 tons of her fighting ships. These will Include two WITn battleships, three heavy cruisers, nine destroyers light cruisers, twenty-fivand a dozen submarines, all reasonably old, but still within the age limit The ships will be stripped of their crews, but not Immediately scrapped. In this condition they will continue to serve as a bartering point when the world disarmament conference resumes Its discussions at Geneva, Switzerland, this fall. e KURT VON SCHLEICHER, of defense In the Von Tapen cabinet, Is moving steadily toward realization of his ambition to master of become GEN. Germany. Reports from Berlin Intimate that out of the political chaos may emerge a new government st r o n g with that as chancellor man and Franz Bracht as premier of the state of Prussia. Von Schleicher Is much more highly regarded than Von Tapen by the Junkers, who have been urging that all pretense of parliamentary government be dropped. Adolph Hitler, leader of the Nazis, In conference with President Von demanded not only the chancellorship but the same power assumed march on by Mussolini after the Rome. This the aged president curtly refused, but be did offer to make Hitler vice chancellor and give his offices. Hitler party other cabinet would not accept the minor post, preas the ferring to remain opposition The National SoNazis. the of propiiet cialists thereupon began an attack on the Von Tapen government, and they now have the assistance of the Cora munists, numbering some 3,500,000. a Tlie latter decided to institute the to force governstrike n-wide unment to take action for relief of SEE YOUR Through Arctic Snow stone The Old Seat of Learning shaft onerection of a In Greenland, Cape York, The university, In the modern as a memorial to Admiral Peary, the sense, dates to the Twelfth and discoverer of 'lie North pole, recalls outThirteenth centuries as an one of Hie greatest chapters in growth of earlier schools In connec- Arctic history. monastion with cathedrals and Although it was not until 1909 teries. This despite the fact that a that he actually reuched the pole, number of European universities lie lind been engaged In Arctic exhave legends carrying their origin for some yenrs previously, ploration considerably farther back as for and his daughter, Mrs. Marie Peary instance Oxford, whose tradition Is Stafford, 1ms the distinction of bethat It was founded by King Alfred ing the only white woman who was about 872. born within the Arctic circle. Oxford dates, however, to early In universithe Twelfth century. The Salmon Killed by an Eel ties of Paris and Bologna, which exmore than an hour a batLasting Influence upon ercised the greatest death between a salmon to the tle the later Institutions, were founded eel was seen In the Spey at an and uni1200. oldest The about Spanish The Aberlour, Scotland, recently. versity is that of Salamanca, dating combatants lashed the water to a The earliest Italian univer-versiteto Itwere foam at times. The eel wrapped besides Bologna, the salmon and attacked around self Padua, 1222; Naples, 1221; Genoa, Its bead. One snap of the salmons 1243, and Perugia, 1270. About ten would have dispatched Its adothers were founded In that country jaws which defied all efforts to versary. was the before 1550, and Uaiy It. Finally the eel bit off dislodge greatest resort of students for the both of tiie salmons Jaws and the those tinips. higher education during salmon sank xhaasted. The University of Prague was esfirst 1.34S the In cotloge ; tablished Limit in Argument at Cambridge n 1257, and Hie U niPoIn Argumentative, Isnt he? Cracow, Phillips of Jagieile, versity Brown Rather! He even answers The University of land, In 1304. wireless announcers. Copenhagen dates to 1179, and of back to the 1582. Edinburgh to Dog fights start because one of the flinches; and man lights somedogs an are eccentricity Pmd manners times start the same way. when a genius has them. University of Oxford The African Gooso Nothing definite Is known of the origin of geese, according to the It le leading writers on poultry. said that they were held sacred In Egypt, 4,000 years ago. They were domesticated ninny centuries before the Chrlstlun era. Italy Is said to be the home of domestic geese. Scientists claim that the graylag" is the ancestor of all domestic geese, nils probably arises from the fact that all of the earlier geese were gray or gray and white. Calamity Speed Fiend Well, Im afraid that train will beat us to the crossing. Passenger Thats not what I am afraid of. It might be a tie. The Right Soap for 9 Baby 8 Tender Skin Cutleara Soap. It ia u anally sufficient to allay minor irritation and la remove redness, roughoesa aud chafing, while, assiated by Cutleurn Ointment, it ia moat valuable ia the treatment of ecsemaa, raahea and other infantile eruptiona. OiotMot IS ud Ms. Proptiamoi Pottm Drf 3 Soap 2 So. W. N. U., Salt Laka City, No. 35-19- 32. Addressed to You Personally any LettersThink addteased this of the advertisementa In paper aa ao many lettera what they are. This newspaper thata be, and, actually, to you, personally which brings you news of events and new of the best merchandise at the faireat prices. is in effect, a mail-bathe You dont throw away letters unread. You dont read three or four letters eatefully and skim through alL Read them carefully. Read them letters in this merchandise the lame the way. Treat newspaper rest. One single item will often repav you for time It has taken to read them alL Thati what theyre intended to employment. g AYALA, who bas become of Paraguay, is as firm as bis predecessor in determination Bonot to yield to the demands of but Chaco, Gran the livia concerning In a public statement he declared that war between the two nations over that which Issue would be an absurdity." EUSEBIO was encouraging 1131 90-fo- 12-1- natio- peace. LOCAL DEALER FOR THESE VALUES! Weum for ttie cause of Uaioo. and paper, ready Many good housekeepers have formed the habit of reading their newspaper with a pencil It to jot down the atticlea they wish to look at when they atart out on theit shopping tour. Try this method. saves time, and saves money, and provides you with the pick of the days merchandise. EVERY ADVERTISEMENT UL HAS A MESSAGE ALL ITS OWN |