OCR Text |
Show THE PAYSOX CHRONICLE. PAYSON. UTAH Pr Old H ,! modern In HPP d.itea back h the port l C. and ranked 5r, Venice In Medlter- Middle agev. during the ? aj; 'H.j 0f When a Vice President Die- s- mfK Uth.rnOiiH. off. bead bitten 7, KrV-- : for Mother ,d ihers to 'Jv found It there wult- - 'e U ajc family let her - t? r- - t ; Vw S ;; Uoo-icvc- lt t-- - esr?O - S- i ' vlk-tia- 'I i t " loud the hey off 5 Governor I.inun of .Maine is un ami Preswilting to slime ident may drop the Pite-power inaquoddy pioject. 11i.it would be a national misfortune. Wlille spending bullous so freely, It would seem worth while to spend thirty a.x little million to harness tin gigantic tide power in the l'.ay of Puiidy. of that projeet Development would supply the whole state of Maine with power and Industrial prospeilty and pay for ltMdf. To allow the vast jHiwer of one of the highest tides on earth to continue going to waste would lie a foolish as it would be to cense us lng the power of Niagara. km;W" Idea of Urn- - ' Ji M , .1 u Richard i.i That Something lu a I was Janitor col-- Home of Henrq Wilson, the "Cobbler Vice M. Johnson d Presidentin Natick, MnsS. e. Cncle Elum. "1 learned ain't la de books; among not hollerln ndealsdoru of huo v." erythin, you L t U(fe to ocfQ ;i for cts. even In. xthday. Yu, louvenit w to do our people A share of it lifetm ftua 7 Jess bd(101, CiNGFrrt, MOW eqooJi CfiKEJ :2H t$ f Iretht la'k tfViu (mi com PORT iii MotWiCi trweaaaj LIQUID MEKTHOLATUM HEW Wyi you tried the Hm ovcrspccainm I for head cold? ointment like MenlKolatum brini soothing comfort U toiao tok Burning, sore.cracked t In caves Verde (oon.relieved.and healing a: liihsafe.soolhing- jdea - lesino Complete Pleasant Quick, LIMINATION si's one way for frank. There's only be imbed; to nd itself oi the waste mat a that cause acidity, gas, headaches, feelings and a sated dozen other dis-lEsi-ta your intestines must function. To naie them move quickly, pleas I. completely, without griping, mauds of physicians recommend Liesia Wafers. (Dentists recommend Lies wafers as an efficient remedy mouth acidity). mint flavored pure milk of These is STOVE C candy-lik- wafers e magnesia. Each wafer approximately equal to a full adult mm liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed wmghly in accordance with the direc-ouo- a the bottle or Un, then swallowed, t uect acidity, bad breath, flatu-1- 1 at their source and at the same enable 0 quick, complete, pleas-- N elimination klnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 wafers, at 35c and 60c j respec ?7'J? Convenient tins containing ch wder is : iJ approximately oi of magnesia. All ,dhug 'ores carry them. Start using deuoous, effective wafers T Jfd9 today, samples sent free to or dentists if reguest taiis on professional letter head. LhPcR?UCTS ,ncrporated bong laland City, N. Y. ir ofesaonal she icarti aiiwr-tts (Natartr JQRKCB& ip from bo Tba rs. 3 the Fr, Cataloff. "rth Swattl, Wuh. REWEST Loh.bf I HOSTELRY delightfully air months nrlng the summer h!h Rn' ,,en' 8athg it indk liter AS.4 rep- r HOTEL emple 2 ,KE- J cnS Square SI. 50 tonn nd JwtUiJ v T,urth, '1" Can h''" irl A BlGHl V - WATSON. I.TIIOUtlll November 2.'), lsv". proli tu die ably has little average American, in le.ility it was an important date in our liKtoiv. on that day just So years ago 1 lion, is Andrews I lendi icks, vlie the United States, died at Ins home in Indianapolis, Ind. Now, of course, It has become a standard Joke that the vice pn-- d dent, so far as his authority and powers aie concerned, Is a most unolheial in onr important national government. Hendricks was probably an abler man than the majority of ids predecessors had been, jet ttie same obscurity, which had engulfed tfie others when they were elected, had been his lot when lie went to Washington as vice president with drover Cleveland. He had been In public life for 40 years, beginning with bis election to the Indiana legislature In 1S4,'. In ISoO and again two years later lie was elected to congress. Itefeated for the governorship of Indiana In lMM), he was elected to the United States senate In ISO; and served there until ISOO. In the Itemocrntie convention of ISOS he ran second to General Hancock in the balloting for President, but both lost out to Iloiatio Sej mour. Again a candidate for governor of Indiana In the same jear, Hendricks was defeated, hut In 1S72 he staged a comeback and was elected. In the 1S70 Democratic convention he was again a strong contender for the residency, but when Samuel .1. Tilden was nominated instead, Hendricks received 720 out of ttie 70S votes cast for vice president. The Democrats were defeated that year, but eight years later they won and Hendricks became vice president. He died eight months after Inauguration, hut his death while occupying that oilice was not unique, for four previous vice presidents had died before finishing out their terms. Why, then, was his passing a significant event? The answer to that question Ups in the result of his death and an event which followed soon afterwards. The Constitution of the United States provides that in case of the removal of the President from office or of his death, resignation or inability to discharge the powers and duties of the said ofliee, the same shall devolve on t he vice president; and the congress mav, by law, provide for the case of removal, death, rcsLna tion or Inability both of the President and vice president, declaring what officer sluill then net as President, and such officer shall act accord ingly until the disability be removed or a Pres! dent shall he elected." Up to the time of Hen drlcks death, however, the congress had not seen fit to pass a law providing for the case of removal, death, resignation or Inability both of the President and vice president and this despite the fact that four vice presidents had al ready died while in olhee and one hud resigned If at any of these times when the oilice of vice president was vacant, the President then in the White House Imd died, resigned or been unable to discharge the duties or powers of his office the nation would have been without a Chief Executive. Of course, the congress could have passed a law providing for his successor pro vided it was in session. Put what If it had adSince the President alone has tiie journed? power on extraordinary occasions to convene both houses or either house," who could have called the congress together to choose the new high-rankin- YEAS ?r -- By ELMO SCOTT UvA'fiV v rY- - dorses earnestly Mussolini's .JrM. ".a i iTt tr ME.NDE PPrrciat why . J? at it,,, EKE,T hotr ! 1?: ,,st'ncton lo stop ulhestelr, O SS ITER. Mar. Chief Executive? con Although the need for providing for such for nearly 7oyeais, been had apparent tlngencies nothing was done about it until Vice President Hendricks died in lWv Then the congress acted reto avert the potential dangers which might vice and President the both sult from the loss of it passed a president. On January If, In succession Presidential a for law providing nder serve. I not could ease the vice president Its terms the secretary of state would become to President. In case he. too, would be unable of serve, the next In line would he the secretary score the treasury and so on down the cabinet genera postmaster tary of war, attorney general, of the Inti r or, secretary of the navy, secretary of commt rcc secretary secretary of agriculture, and secretary of labor. amend Under the provisions of the Twentiethk amend ment to the Constitution (the lame dm further still , IT.:!), ment, adopted February Presidential sucees safeguards In the matter of the land. In cn-- c of law to the added were slon within the tune die should the Presidentelect the vice of his election and his Inauguration, President. become would t president-elecoilice vv hlch Considering the importance of the to fill called upon be may the vice president that l.is our government of Is a curious anomaly and that so lithe so regarded Is lightly position with care Is usually taken in filling that positionof the the days early an outstanding man. In men receiving the honrepublic, when the two un vn e est electoral vote were chosen Prescient room for little was president, respectively, there of the nn n w i complaint about the caliber was taken a a served as vice president. It ",l" ' matter of course that the vice I'f'1'1ef I.xe u en wl the U President new become the ted alio his filled had live under whom he served President time in the White House. Thus Vice Wah- George President John Adams succeeded ld, Inva- Italian soldiers In Ethiopia, mil. h surprised, can buy as many fiesli eggs ns they want at r.dictih.usly John C. Calhoun low pri. cs. S9 iam land with men chosen more for political expediAn even stronger ency than for ability. of that custom was shown in the nevt campaign when William Henry llnrilson, the Whig candidate, defeated nn Puren, the DemoHarrison's running mate crat, for re election. was John Tyler, who was not even a Whig but a liglnia Democrat. Just a month after Harrison's Inauguration, Old Tippecanoe died and John Tyler became the first vice president to win the Presidency through (lie death of Ills predecessor. Tim Constitution hail left undctei mined the question whether a vice president, upon the death of the President, should become President In fact or should merely discharge the duties of the office until the congress should decide what to do next. y- R- Kmq iligton and Vice President Thomas Jefferson succeeded President John Adams. Put tiie break from this tradition came when Aaron Purr was vice president under Jefferson. Purr served one term, t hen became Involved in the scheme which led to his tiial tor treason and, as a result, George Hinton was chosen vice president wiien Jeffeisnn was elected for Ids second torn). Again precedent was ignored, for Instead of Ulmton succeeding Jefferson as picsldent, that honor went to Jefferson's seeietary of state, James Madison. Clinton, however, was reelect ed vice ptesident but died in 1h12 after seiving During tiie last only tli roe years of his term. year of Madisons first term as President the United states had no vice president. When Madison was reelected, Ulbridge Gerry He also died In ofiice became vice president. after serving only a little over a year and tiie United States was again without a vice prcsJ dent this time for nearly three years. So James Madison was tiie only president In our history (luring whose administrations two vice presidents died In oilice. The next vice president was Daniel D. Tomp kins who served both terms under Monroe, but w lien Monroe retired, Tompkins did not become ids heir to tiie high office. Again It went to a secretary of Mate, John (Jiilncy Adams Adams vice president was John C. Calhoun of South ruroluiu, w ho was again chosen for tiie olloe when Andrew Juikson became Chief Executive. Thus tiie Hotith Carolinian load the honor of ocof oppocupying that oilice under two Presidents site political faith. Put Calhoun did not serve out his term under Jackson. He quarreled with Old Hickory' and in 1N!2 the vice presidency was again vacant, this time because of a resignation, the first and of a only one thus far In our history. Instead death. When Jackson was reelcctcil President, Martin Van I.iiren, his former secretary of state, became viie president, and after Jackson retired from the White House Van Puren succeeded hm had been Up to this time the vice presidency Put In filled with tnen of unquestioned ability. stand the of sudden a lowering was 'Id there IS, Iticli-arard for vice president, says a historian. M. Johnson, who was chosen by the Demo ter crats to run with an Puren, lived in a was not state, Kentucky, where Van Iuren a second late strong. Otherwise he was merely fame was to claim poiitnian whoe principal Te that lie had killed the great Indian chief. In lsl.l of Thames tiie Pattle the during ciimseh, was a spuriIt helped elect him, even though it of ous claim. More authentic Is his dMimtmn ever een lias who vice prescient ttie only i.eing elected by the United States senate. The Twelfth amendment to the Coristlvlon must receive a maprovides that a candidate number of electoral votis to whole tiie of jority If no eandida'e re tie chosen vbe prescient. must then oelves such a majority, the senate candid .te choose a vice .resident from the two of votes number the received largest who have votes were cast n the election of KM electoral as follows: for the candidates for vice president 77, Granger. Francis 117; M. Johnson. Kuhard 23. The b.'al John Tyler, 47, and William Smith, aid number of votes cast for Granger, Tyler as number same Johnviis, the smith was 147, of the whole and no candidate had a majority the election Therefore cast. votes of number chose Johnson. which fell to the senate, of the rus Ills election marked the beginning ofi.ee In the second highest tom of hUing the Pur half a century after Its adoption no one knew the answer to that question nor apparently even thought much nbout It When Tyler became President, he settled the question to Ids own satisfaction, at least by acting on the assumption that he was President In fact. Since no one challenged Ids right to do so. he established Ihe precedent, followed ever since, that the vice president who succeeds to the highest oilice through the death of his predecessor shall serve cut tiie remainder of the term for which that predecessor was elected. Moreover, during Tylers administration ttie country was without a vice president for the longest peilod In Its history three years and 11 months. In ISoO, when President Zachary Taylor died after having been In office only a little more than a year, Vice President Millard PUlmore followed the precedent established by Tyler und served ns President for the next three years. Again there was a vacancy In the office of vice president during tin greater part of an administration. There was another vacancy during the next administration, that of Franklin A. Pierce, for six weeks after William It. King became vice president he was dead. Incidentally, King was the only vice president who ever took the oath of oilice outside the United States. Before Ills Inauguration hi health began to fall and lie went to Cuba to recuperate. When It became apparent that he would he unable to attend the inauguration ceremonies In Washington, the congress on March 2, K'i, passed an art authorizing William E. Shaikev, United States consul at Havana, to administer the oath of office on the fourth day of March next or some sol. sequent date. King was accordingly sworn In bv Sharkey cm March 4 and he died on the following April IS shortly after his return to his home In Alabama. In 1 SOT, for the third time In hlsloiy, the vice president hecame the occupant of the White House through the death of a President, when the assassination of Lincoln elevated Andrew Johnson, the Tennessee cohlder, to that position Seven years later unother rohl.ler hecame vl.p president, lie was Henry Wilson, a native of New Hampshire, who was born Jeremiah Ji eos Colba.lli, hut had his name changed by Ihe legislature when he came of age. Wilson was the Republican candidate for vice president when Grant was reelected President In 1S7T. He died In K7.T before completing his term. The nevt vice .resident who died In oilice was Garret A. Hobart, elected with William McKinley In KP7. llohart d.ed In Kit) and another two years saw the death of McKinley with the result that another vice president entered the White House Ills name was Theodore Roosevelt. In 1!H2 James Schoolcraft Khernnn was vbc president under William Howard Tatt. Sl.eimin was also a candidate for re election but on tol.er .TO he dad. thus creating the only Instance In the history of the lulled Slates In whl.h u candidate for either of the two offices nt the head of the nation il thket hid died on tl.e eve of election. Shermans death raised the question of whether any atten.pt should tie made to till the vacancy. Naming a new candidate would have been tlte ordinary procedure, hut because of the nearness of the election it was not to do so In this case. The Ropiihlhan nali.ii...! committee l.dd a lia.imm Ililb's meeting In New York city and announced that Shermans death would not Invalidate the ballots beiaose voting legally, was for electors In cm It slate ami not d.rectly Tor tl.e com President and vice pres, dent. mil tee selected Nicholas Mmav PaiMer, ptosl dent of Columbia niilwrs'j, to Ml Shorn, in ? is Mile mm.- then dace on the ballot Pan (h . I loi, an empty gesture, f..r the . lieudcd by W oodio.v W P n so t t he co'in'iy. irwrwaaVfwy e - I ic.i.-iati- i Weitem Newipepec Uni.n. . Tunnel and Interior trim. Here the Tha Young Potiura i SS. BuilJ . pest sets to woik eating Its way through the wood, weakening the timber until It Is a dangerous and uninhabitable building beyond sion of Ethiopia, . raising the val la i it army which. In Intrepid ob.s (Pence to the eomnmml of their fatherland at the .rice of t lit' r blood, (lien the doors of Ethiopia to the (nth. die faith nod the civ lU.iition of Point'. to Associated Also, nccoidll.g Press, ttie eaidmal pialsed Fas. Ism ns promising the national iiioralily wished by the Catholic chinch. f VORIH Hours ('.rating A iamaer.cse. Termite I.. The termite enters a building from nests In the ground and builds tunnels extending up to sills, Jolstg, In Mdan, Cardinal Schuster, cel mas for those that died In the Fascist match on Pome, 111 cek. Work Pr.iin? Hard of hard prunes the Sins f ! Vebesaa praWn hard work t to Induce birles aft) in an eiToit Victoria Falls in Africn The Victoria falls In southern Rhodesia on the Z.ambesl river are a ntlle wide and from 250 to nearly 350 feet high. The river forces Itself through a l'Kt foot outlet Inlo a yiiwnlng gorge that winds away for 40 miles. The railroad bridge crosses the gorge nearly 400 feel above the water level. Government Railroads? Personal Succe fUna THIS WEEK Hay of Fundy Power Religion Aids Mussolini ('.heap Eggs for Soldiers A'Art. 'W ' BRISBANE fsyi m a 'V fryy tr- - ' m Fir it American Architect Charles Bulflneh (17031844) la often referred to as the first American architect While his works fall Into the general category of early American architecture, they bear a distinctive stamp of hla own. Their elegance, rejmse and refinement of detail rank them among the best products of the nation's early years. Ethiopians will not eat eggs their religion fmldds them to devour that which might have life til the future," hut they are willing to sell the eggs to the Italian und let them Imperil their Im mortal tends by dev mu lng future life" If they choose. Ethiopian tribesmen have no scruples about tailing the chicken, once It i hatched, which show that religions scruple take Interesting forms. W'lmt about ttie future life" that the hen might have produced? At birth, the young 'possums are naked and flesh colored and very tiny. There may he ns many as J4 of them, hut (s.mehow or other, only half that many survive. Li Po, Poet, Drowned IJ Po, the great Eighth century (Tilnc.se poet, wus drowned when he fell from a boat while trying to kiss the moon's reflection In the water. Waihington Women IJva Longer to statistics, women In Washington, I). (., outlive the local male popolallon by three years and twenty three days. According Tapioca Made From Roota Tapioca Is prepared from cassava starch, the product of the huge tuof the cassava or berous rooi manioc plant. s Firat and Foremoat 11 Wlint Is the quality im.-- t character? Keif reaped? missing labor unions plan a lobby, to promote government purchase and operation of railroads. Owners of some railroads would gladly share the expense of that lobby If they could sell their Railway Washing!..!! railroads at a fair price. Running a railroad In competition with automobiles, motor busses and trucks Is like running a legitimate hotel In competlllon with night clubs and other former speakeasies. Russia Is a successful spy hunter, having conv Icti'd on the average one every elx hours, according Collier's " In Russia, you are convicted of spying, no second conviction Is ever ni'cisssary or possible. These 0,(KS) spies, to earn their money, must keep International suspicion alive, and that helps to keep war alive. to If, Eejol.lng In the fad that the years of the Fasc ist regime have not passed In vain, and the world of plutocratic and conservative egotisms Is obliged to take note of this. Mussolini denounce league of Nations sanctions aimed at him as a proM.storn8 crime destined to Incn'iise disorder and distress In every country." Now Science Explains Why So Many People Past 40 Ferl Tlmt Theyre Slipping LoingThcirGriponThing9 13 Air Elm asks air ".Shall we serve cock travelers: tails to passengers? The answer should le einphntlcHl-l"no." First, the nverage cocktail Is unfit for anv stomach, except perhaps that of a carrion eating hyena; second. It lias 1.1011 proved more than once that alcohol and filing do not mix well. The iTesIdent Inspected "fc.r'lfb cations" of the panama canal, returning from the pacific to the Atlantic. Unfortunately there are no fortifications on tiie Panama cannl. The cnnal depends on Its loc ks and they, open to attack from the air. could easily he destroyed. No engineer will deny that. The way to have a fortified" canal Is to build one at sea level. In theae spending dais that might Ire done now, through Nicaragua. Unde Sam would have something to show for his money more substantial than groups of weary gentlemen raking loaves There Is encounigenii nt In ttie fact that regular Jobs, not the klud, are artificial made Increas.ng. Three hundred and fifty thousund men were hired In See temlier, and payrolls for September are J12,x0,0iK) a week nboie r Warner Brothers suet evsful pro ductlon of A Midsummer Nights Dream," under the direction of Max Reinhardt, proves courage and sound business Judgment. The picture Is a financial ns well ss an artistic success, greater by far than any recent Shakespearean stage production with living acting. Many people round 40 think theyre growing old. 'i hey feel tired a lot . . . weak. Have headaches, dizziness, stomach upsets. Well, scientists say the cause of all this, in a great many cases, is simply an and condition of the stomach. Nothing more. AH you have to do is to neutralize the excess stomach acidity. When you have one of these arid stomach upscs, take Phillips Milk of Magnesia after meals and before going to bed. 1 bats all! 1 ry this. Soon youll feel like another person! Take either the familiar liquid PHILLIPS' or the convenient newr Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tablets. V TAD1.ET FORM 1 Phillips Milk of Magnesia Tab-lbtc now on ink at ail drug stores evtYywhere. Lath Uny tab-l- et is the equivalent of a ten'.poonfui of (yen-Lin- e Phillips Milk of CSSV AISO Phillips5 A!ilic cj tlatjncHct. Be Sure They Properly Cleanse the Blood Icidneys are eomlantly matter fiom the blood xtream. But kidneys sometimes lag in their work do not act as nature intended fail to remove impurities that YOUR pooon the system when retained. back- Then you may suffer nagging ache, dizziness, scanty or too liequent urination, getting up at night, pufhncss under the eyes; feel nervous, miserable all upset. Don't delay? Use Doans Pills. Doan's are especially for pooily functioning kidneys. They are recommended by grateful users the country over. Get them from any druggist. Kins FttSlursfl Syna.cata, lus, W Nl' Ksivks w |