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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE. PAYSON. UTAH jTews Review of Current Events the World Over Moves to Take the Profit Out of War president Roosevelt Wallace for Continued Federal Control of Agriculture. W. PICKARD By EDWARD by Western Newspaper Union. amendments to the AAA on the ground that they really did not enlarge his powers but merely sought to remove uncertainties In the law and to specify more clearly the secretary's powers to enforce these marketing agreements against the recalcitrant few." The Tugwell amendment to the food and drug act Is defended by Wallace on the ground that it would remove from the government the formidable obligation of proving that claims made In the labeling of patent medicines are both false and fraudulent" and provide more drastic penalties, Including Jail terms for violations. the senate committee P. Nye of still was Investigating Dakota orth makers and their profits munition and methods, President Roosevelt named WHILE Senator Gerald an-oth- committee 'te"'-- "' V ' I A charged with the duty of preparing legislation that would authorize the Chief Executive, in Ume of war, to assume absolute power over Industrial Proflts Prlce and CONSTITUTIONAL guarantees were suspended by the Cuban government In the provinces of Havana, Santa Clara arid Camaguey In order to cope with threatened uprisings. Authorities are thus enabled to search homes without warrants; hold prisoners without bringing charges against them and Inspect personal malL Is the only remaining province where citizens are assured constitutional rights, since the guaranties were suspended in Pinar del Rio and Orlente provinces some time ago. The secretary of state In Havana announced that squatters" on some thousands of acres of land In Orlente province, where a miniature Communist state has been set up, will be evicted. Ma-tanz- policy was clearly set forth to the press by Prince Radzlwlll, chairman of the foreign relations committee of the Polish parliament, the statement being meant primarily for the French. The prince said the Franco-Polisalliance was still the basis of bis countrys foreign policy, but Frances lack of consideration for Poland's Independence and the attitude of French capitalists who regard Poland as a fit object of exploitation have developed serious differences. Radzlwlll said Poland wishes to avoid becoming Involved In Danublan and Balkan problems and at the same times wishes to be consulted on problems directly affecting It, 6uch as the proposed eastern Locarno security pact and questions concerning Its relations with Russia, Germany, and the Baltic states. Poland Is not the "yes man" of France, and it cannot permit action to be taken in northeastern Europe without being consulted, Radziwill continued. pOLANDS foreign h wages and over the op-- 1 eratlons of all indus- Bernard M. TM IN. I have more than enough trjeg Bernard M. Bar-Baruch A votes to uch. New York finan win," said RepresentaIndusttive Joseph W. Byrns of Tennessee; ce,. who was head of the war ries board, was made chairman of this and this ended the contest for the S. Johnson, speakership of the next house, for a committee, and Gen. Hugh count of noses proved Mr. Byrns was former head of the NRA, was selected Others on right The President remained neutral, is Mr. Iiaruchs assistant. tie committee are Secretaries Hull and one after another the state delega(state), Morgenthau (treasury), Dern tions fell into line for the Tennesseaa UnderThere remained the race for the floor (war), and Swanson (navy) ; actiTugwell, of leadership which was sought by a Agriculture secretary number of men, Including John W. Mcng for Secretary Wallace; Assistant Secretary of Labor McGrady, acting Cormack of Massachusetts, John E. Rankin of Mississippi, James M. Mead for Secretary Perkins; Assistant Secretary of the Navy Henry Latrobe and John J. OConnor of New York, Eastman ; William W. Arnold and Adolph J. Sab-at- h HENRY FORD believes, as do many Roosevelt ; Rail that recovery can be of Illinois. MacArthur, chief of Gen. Douglas about Adviser by reviving Industry Trade and brought Foreign itaiT; INVITED by the League of Nations and creating employment, and he 1 George N. Peek. acting on his belief. council to name the commander of The President told newspaper men The motor magnate conference the International force to preserve orgathered at his press announces that he will that the time has come to take the der In the Saar before and during the He declared that plebiscite of January 13, the British spend an additional profit out of war. for further $8,000,000 to J. not only the war profits of corporatthe government gave Maj. post expansion and Imions would be under Inspection but E. S. Brind, a soldier of considerable provement of his comthe wages of Individuals as welL He experience in and since the World thousand-acrthe between panys out war. The British contingent will comthe disparity pointed plant at River Rouge, loldiers pay of $1 a day and that of prise 1,500 men. The Italians will numnear Dearborn, Mich. ber 1,300, the Swedes 250, and the the munitions worker at $10 a day, and This Is In addition to declared this unequal mobilization, as Dutch 250, bringing the total to 3,300. the recent letting of he called it, had led to the veterans The governing body of the Saar Is contracts for nearly demands for a soldiers and sailors authorized to exempt the Internafor two $12,000,000 bonus. tional force," as It Is called, from all steel mills and power units for the Legislation will be asked of the new responsibility for any acts accomplant, so the company will spend a total Mr. plished In the performance of Its miscongress meeting In January, of about $20,000,000 within a period of reRoosevelt said. He added that he sion and confer on itself, In case of ten months for the development of the garded the subject as one of the most need, power of requisition, accommodaRiver Rouge plant Important of any to be laid before tion, maintenance, and transport of The new units now under construcsaid force." congress. and the cost of each are the steel tion move his that Insisted The President finishing plant $3,100.000 ; the hot steel et this time was not prompted by any a few days It seemed that FOR threat of war. The war horizon, he was determined to provoke strip mill, $0,111,923; the stripper dd, is cloudless. Neither should the another European war as an aftermath building, for handling Ingots, $230,000; new steam and electrical units for the oposal be considered one for war of the assassination of King Alexander. power house $4,599,888; new blast furadded. Bogoljub Yeftitch, Jueparedness, the President I naces and foundry equipment $2,120,-40, mInisof his others and forel'n Senator Nye Sslav and additional equipment of many ter, appeared before fearing this move might pre-rn- t made necesthe League of Nations kinds, costing $3,144,250, the appropriation of funds for the to from the shift by sary council in Geneva and intinuance of their Investigation, daily production. ere rather caustic In their comments denounced the governEvidently Mr. Ford has no fear for ment of Hungary as action. It was l the Presidents the future economic stability of the Dinted out that the entire field of responsible for the country. was the President Marseilles murder, suggested by overed by the war policies commis-ion- , and his government appointed under congressional pressed him to obtain UNION labor, like President Is heartily In favor of legisconcrete action in reuthority three years ago. This lation made recommendations, but unemployment into establishing the complaint gard surance, but It proposes, through PresAt the same time Juongress took no action. ident Green of the A. F. of L., that In order that he may aid In goslavia was deportexpected War department legls-atlo- ing thousands of Hungarians from the insurance be financed wholly by a General MacArthur Is retained within Its borders. Hungary, denying 5 per cent tax on pay rolls. Opposing a chief of staff indefinitely, by direc-lo- n any responsibility for the killing of any direct levy on the workers, Mr. Green says they would pay most of the of the President This does not Alexander, protested bitterly against nean that he will serve another four-fea- r the deportations, and was supported cost any way. Employers add their 85 terra. by Italy In Its position. France stood cost to prices and employees buy If he cent of all argued. goods, did Czechoof hack per Jugoslavia, as workers shared the direct cost of Inwas thrown Into slovakia and Rumania. Michigan ALL Yeftitch told leaders of the major surance, he adds, they would be payby one of the worst disasters that ever occurred in that European powers he preferred to withing twice. state. The Hotel Kerns In Lansing, Representative Connery of Massadraw the matter from the hands of the house labor crowded with legislators gathered for league and deal directly with Hungary chusetts, chairman of the In favor sentiment that 1 special session of the assembly, was committee, says mere a than rather accept "platonic as a measure week of the destroyed by an early morning fire, condemnation of terrorism. nd probably as many as forty persOur moderation has mistakenly means of reducing unemployment Is ons were killed by the flames or by been conceived to be weakness, he Increasing. This also is warmly urged by union labor, but the administration leaping to the street or Into the Grand asserted. river on the bank of which the hotel The situation was genuinely threat- seems to think the time for It has not stood. The exact number of victims ening and the representatives of the yet come. Bay never be known, for the register great powers began tj get busy. Pierre as burned. At least six members of Laval, French foreign minister, told cummings general tte legislature lost their lives. Baron Aloisl of Italy about the Serb (.rime conference threat, and a spokesman for the little In Washington with some five hundred DALANCED abundance" Is the entente admitted that the Belgrade delegates, and President Roosevelt and keynote sounded In the program government might be forced by public Henry L. Stimson made speeches at the offered by Secretary of Agriculture opinion to act unless the councils ac- opening session. Criminologists, Judges, Wallace in his annual report. Contion was satisfactory. and sociologists joined the govvinced Then Laval proposed to the league a lawyers that agriculture should be ernment officials in devising a program brought under permanent federal con-hoplan involving an Invitation to Hungary to make the nation more he will ask congress for drastic to conduct a careful Inquiry Into the 11. J. Anslinger, chief of the narcotic new legislation. This will include broad murder of Alexander and to punish bureau, discussed the recent raids In Offlendmcnts to the AAA, great extensanyone found guilty of connection with many large cities In which his agents ion of the grain futures act and pas-o- f the crime. This scheme was presented seized hundreds of dope peddlers, adthe Tugwell food and drugs to Hungary and the little entente by dicts and their equipment, and said the bill While he insists on continuance CapL Anthony Eden, British lord privy raids showed the need of more drastic of crop control, Mr. Wallace advises seal, and was accepted by them, to the laws against the dope evil The matxgalnst falling Into the great relief of the statesmen. pit of scare-fiof ter shady lawyers was taken np Meantime the tenseness of the situeconomics; nevertheless, he C. Goldman of New York and Mayer the working of the AAA reductation was lessened by the sudden cesthat private counsel In crimsuggested ion schemes to date. sation of deportations of Hungarians and a system abolished be inal cases He secs the end of our period of from Jugoslavia, which action, it was of state defense lawyers be established. emergency adjustments, of drastic resaid was due to the Intercession of othofficials urged that their poaction in farm er powers, chiefly Great Britain and Treasury Into output coming bootlegging against authority lice flew." France. The Serb government probab- should be broadened. These and many Hereafter, the task may adjustment of production to a ly realized that its cause at Geneva other topics were thoroughly discussed. flsing demand, he says. To this end, as would be prejudiced by the continuasafeguard against the effects of crop tion of the expulsions. siiure in the badiy beaten by Paraguay, future, the secretary BOLIVIA, her acceptance of the his proposal for an ever December 15, war debt WHEN Nations of plan for ending the it came around, League day. Larger reserves against and, although at the in Chaco; was found that Finland was again the war j0p failure would be maintained, was Issued for an order time same to he believes, should remain In the with enough decency only nation all the counIe of mobilization amount due, a general cl,nfrol of the farmers, through pay. It deposited the man power, It was beavailable or:);;e and ReYork , Federal New trys government loan arrange-fnts$228,538, in the c npled with nn obligation to serve hank. All the other debtor na- lieved the long struggle was near its a jelpate in continued crop adjust tions repeated their defaults, and Great ending. en.s. By The league plan prsvides ror an armcoordinating storage with Britain rejected a suggestion for anothwhile a neutral International world istice that on the ground ai,;iUs,Ill(nts, farmers would have er conference out details of a setof means to control live conditions had not altered since last commission works a of grievances. Paraguay has Production cycles, It is held. June and negotiations tow would be tlement e acted finally on the leagues offer. not pi.fr(tary ,Pfencs ij,e proposed useless and unwise. e 7 com-lttee- 0, 24-ho- in-ui- com-fissio- han-llln- g 30-ho- Attorney i, 18-ho- ur BRISBANE on Womans Part Both Partners in Marriage Must Avoid Injuring Self Esteem, No, No Cash Money Won Their Reward To Discourage Murder No Surprise Possible According to solemn agreement, between gallant allies, which the British cal themselves and us, the United States should receive from Great Britain the sum of $300,000,000. Another considerable sum on account of war debts of honor is due from France. Will these amounts be paid to maintain, spotless, the honor of nations that borrowed In their troubles? They will not be paid. Nothing will be paid. Three hundred and sixty millions of dollars are more important than "spotless honor." made To the announcement that she would pay nothing Great Britain frankly adds that It would be useless, and therefore unwise," even to attempt nego- tiations. Little Finland, on the contrary, announces her intention to pay the Installment Napoleon called England a nation of shopkeepers, which annoyed the English and was Inaccurate. Shopkeepers make it a habit to pay their debts In order to keep their credit Two life convicts have earned freedom by submitting to medical experiment with tuberculosis vaccine, or The preventive with "preventive. which the doctors have experimented on Carl Erlcson and Mike Schmidt for months past Is not a tuberculosis cure. It prevents those Inoculated from contracting tuberculosis, as ordinary vaccination prevents contracting smallpox. Doctors of the National Jewish hospital, who have worked on the new serum for 15 years past warned the convicts that they would risk their lives In the experiment, now proved successful. Both braved death In hope of possible recovery of liberty as the reward. They have won the reward. at- tempts are made to discourage murder. President Roosevelt takes the lead here, summoning all forces of the country state, national and local to fight private crime, banditry, traffic In narcotics, lynchings, kidnaping, plain ordinary murder. Private crime worries us here. Doctor Dafoe Is in New York, first visit, and surprised reporters note that he shows no amazement when gazing streets. on skyscrapers and canyon-likThe reporters need not have been Doctor Dafoe is the man surprised. who Introduced the five Dionne quintuplets to the world, and kept them alive, breaking all records, after they got here. When you have ushered five little girls Into the world, one after the other, you can no longer be surprised by a mere skyscraper. e Never crush the pride of your marriage partuerl" That heads the latest list of "commandments" for being happy though married, is the opinion of a distinguished woman writer. The author Is a Judge in Atlanta who Is reputed to adjust about two thousand cases a year that come Into court seeking Pot holders are necessary In the divorce. kitchen, and Ita Just as easy to maka The next two of the command- an attractive pot holder as a plain ments" apply jointly to husband and one. They are Interesting and easy wife: to make, In spare time, and soma "Be willing to compromise on little ahould always be worked up ready things." to take as a gift when a trifle la "Cultivate Interests In common wanted in a hurry and you know It and work together toward some def- will be appreciated. inite goal" Package No. 8 la composed tf The following three apply only to three pieces. Two pot hosiers an4 husbands : one container. When made up, tba "Tell your wife the truth about holder Is visible through door, aa shown above. The holders are placed your financial situation." "Pay her compliment now and In pocket through top opening. Tba then." material la stamped and stenciled In Make a definite move toward de- colors, ready to be made np, and tba veloping and maintaining real com- lines may be outlined If desired. Directions are also given bow to put panionship. And the seventh and last, for wo- It together. men only: Send 15c If you want the set Address Home Graft Oon Dept, A "Remember, always, that at heart Nineteenth and St, Louis Ave St. your husband Is still a little boy. Excellent commandments" all, Louis, Mo, Enclose a stamped addressed enwhich, If It Is possible always to follow them, will certainly Insure a velope when writing for any lnfor measure of success and happiness In (nation. g marriage. But when the Judge really shows genius la In repeating at the end of his list, hie first commandment, Never crush GUft) the pride of your marriage partner "The one sure thing you can do to kill a woman's love Is to injure her When pride, the Judge explains. to a cup of flour you do that you often destroy the for most recipes. woman. Women will forgive a great deal ao long as you do not wound their pride." True, Judge, very true, about the unforgivable sin in marriage being wounding pride. Only why specify women's pride? Surely the Judge must know that the surest way for a woman to make a man hate her bitterly Is to put In shadow for a moment the sanctum sanctorum where is his pride? Doesnt he know that f all the faults a woman can have, of all the ways In which she can offend In marriage, all are forgivable Same except the slightest pricking of his self esteem. 44 I was amazed recently to bear eaneea 2S0 talk of Infidelity on the part of a man whose worst enemy would Mannfaetnradfcjr Baking Powder Specialists whs make never have connected him with that oathlng bat Baking Powder. offense. Of course he particular was not Inclined that way," a fraternity brother explained. "I am enre he cared nothing about the other woman; It was Just his way of getting back at Ills wifes air of suCRISMON & NICHOLS periority. A man who Is not given the proper respect In his own borne ASSAYERS AND CHEMISTS Oftlcs and Laboratory ft. Waat Will do anything." Tempi 8L, ftait Hake City, Utah. P. X Box 1791. Mailing envelope aad prkea Who said women's pride?" furnished on request. A-- rule-makin- Davis, colored, sixty-fiv- e years old, very eloquent preacher, who operates a garage between Sundays, says he Is the New York representative of Senator Huey ling's Idea and already has 10,000 members willing to help share the wealth In Harlem. Hes only waiting word from Senator Long to start in earnest "Me and the senator will take this town like an epidemic, says he. Epidemic Is what the French would call Le mot juste (Just the right A. GE- leveliteas Q, Bell Syndicate. -- WNU tonic Salt Lake Citys eRcwest Hotel A Few Drops Every Night and Morning Will Promote a Clean, Healthy Condition! art HOTEL TEMPLE SQUARE At All Drug Stores Writ Mur ioCo..Dt.W,Cbeo,forFr Book 200 Tile Baths 200 Room To quickly allay skin i irritations or hurts Radio connection in svery room. RATES FROM 1.50 depend on soothing Jiul .ppotil. Morwum TabtrmmcU ERNEST C. ROSSITER, Mgr. Fifty men were arrested at a cock Six hundred fight near Los watched the fighting. Two fighting Ang-le- s. roosters were named Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich, singularly Inappropriate names, If you know anything about fighting roosters. The extraordinary thing is that adult Malays, Americans, not should actually enjoy watching roosters driving steel needles Into each others brains. semi-savag- e de-loa- level-beade- d Dr. Leo Wolman, Intelligent, with Nicholas Kelly man, young and Richard L. Byrd, is in Detroit to see that employees In the automobile Industry have a chance, without fear of Intimidation, to elect their own representatives to bargain with employers. If this means that the automobile industry through the power of the United States government Is to be put in charge of organized labor lenders, the experiment will be interesting. An Inquiring alderman in New York men working discovers that ninety-one "relief work" eliminating mosfive quitoes were supervised by ninety bosses. On account of cold weather mosquito exterminators the ninety-on- e bosses were were laid off, but ninety-fivexterminators. imaginary kept bossing Ino. . Kins WNU Serrlc. on e D- BAKING POWDER price today as years ago tar IS share-the-wealt- h word). GD 1 Doctor Rosenhach, book specialist, thinks New York city needs a building devoted exclusively to the works of Shakespeare. It is a shame, says he, that scholars have to go 3,000 miles to see a quarto of Hamlet." Fortunately, they can get a better Ilamiet than that "quarto In any good book store for one dollar. To do justice to Shakespeare, you enmight have one building devoted about Ilamiet, written to books tirely who never lived. Rev. Joseph POT HOLDER SET IN THREE PIECES Br GRANDMOTHER CLARK THIS WEEK On both sides of the Atlantic Pride Not Alone TIIK newhhljse HOTEL. A Distinctive Residence An Abode. ..renowned Throughout the West Mrs. J. H. Waters, President Salt Lakes Most Hospitable HOTEL Invites You RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4 00 DOUBLE $2.50 to $4.50 400 Rooms 400 Baths TIIE Hotel Ncwliouse W. E. SUTTON, General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST A.'iinl. Cen. Manager |