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Show U J I i r lanfriiiiiiTr i, i TIIK PAYsOV riiUOMC n n Mils ki 1 1 hm ru jm nn M ,111 It MmiCIMi: f r rittns I I U h t fit n s V) lMg i Sue U i y nt Forty rnillu n pi pie constitute roughly one fourth the population Of 20 000 physicians surveyed, 17,000 i or on i fourth the physieians in territories canvassed) reported free medieal sirvice to 2 611 471 persons each year, plus 909,713 hours of fiee hospital service each year If all physicians furnish free service on this basis, A M A figured that of the 43 000 000 tin. Julv argument over cconotrv revisit A versus c.uly ad jouinment 3 hough the sen ite junked Trisi di nt II nisi v e It s Florida ship i m il ts turn fill spt mimg sprte give 1 io id house igo to c ui $771 420 000 n i mss the rec il this yi i r, ccugriss arnuiid to ri n e thi is m scurrying nnn mhi v ulMi g ag m st but possibly the Presufi nl s udinomshmi i t th it (1) tutal ri Minus must nit be de cri tsid and (2) Imv mcume levies sh ill not be buusti d All i adv ciri u latmg are pi ins to tip mw t ix soul ces f ir $J 160 000 000 by looking to liquor and tobacio, pi rsnn il income, coriioration income and inaii-u- f it tuiers salts taxes, t mil's, and taxis on state employ ics and mi nu sihiduled June whin Bi it un s No utizi ns v is it the N'o 1 U S citizens ( lam cm hit'll 1 What happened to Loyalist Spains huge gold reserve is a perplexing mvstiiy especially to money hungry Gin frnniisco Franco, who needs it rebuild h s war torn nation Part i f Spam's gold rests in U S banks anotlur and larger part m flame Rumor has it that still more w is shipped seeretlv to Mi eo to si i pm t feeing I ov al sts Sivti il months ag i I ranee and Bi it un h pi d to w o Du t P r co ni iv fr m tie H n e Bui n axis w th nconstuut n loins whih nei ther P il v r r Gomim c ml i fur n sh Hi ji 1 'g ilu iIo Frt m h hi Ip sin - Fi uno j. mod the A s a' tni i e t nfi i i! n il b e I er. Vi n ri i i Mv m P u s w m P ml the adii p ilieies eTi 1 it il to w irk ii j 1 I i vein thri its and re ness, thi reby nnk nistiatnns q ending e in putting idle i q ' I do not Ik S ud he g mg a stunulant and tun neutralizing it. only meanii g that be used to end ng should t lagg ng purehas ng power Crux of Mr Youngs argnmnt against the undistributed prod's Icy v is that most industries must expand with earnings retained for that pur pose, an experience cf both General s boo-- (ranhtrr s sauce llutti n il hats Sui it potato puds f rozi n i hi esc anil i ri ss salad Maple und almond ue cnam ( niji e Me in while-- the idv if Butish Amb issa fi r Sir R n ild I n 1. ly f 3u0 mvititims fir the garden putv her himb mil will give fur the visiting sovereigns leaving 13 000 other would be gues's sulk mg out m the cold 1 W: Rebuff Thus far self righteous Japan has mot little resistance from western democracies in such bold land steals as Hainan island and Canton. In early May, Tokyo informed British and American ambassadors that she wanted greater voice m rule of Shanghai's vital international settlement. A few days later she landed marines in the international settlement (Kulangsu) of Amoy after a naval commander Japanese charged his life had been endangered in a street brawl. If Britain thought of following precedent and bowing to Jap demands, the U S also followed precedent by setting Japan back on its heels Within 24 hours American, British and French marines were pulled ashore at Amoy, a gentle hint which Japans bluejackets accepted by bouncing back to their Ziiml V tti in r n V mist in f i JM . t i' it f i ill t - i' 1m i M i h Imi d bv sw vs to n w u il be m i Ifi ri m kn u n ' m ' ' g nh in ut th f the m e ov e r Fr i lirwt Urn a m S Du iief r i ' h i in ut i Fi inc t pi e i e h 1 i fi i ,n n e, hi ie 1' ink. s h n ifii g w ert moot i ' net nis mu r d Iri ou ird It il i t i r w o ts no tr u k w ith Fnruo spin m loss a pun Hint t i 'r il tv igi nu nt is ivtru'u! i i w 1 1 rc'ui I i '"le aboi t d h . Get Ii emu r hi.vevir il Ft me s c ire idler s atvt ule ih!v angiy o i r i i I) d Ih'ii Fltub m sh o ifi) held m bar ks i u i illv v a the i' i r -e di iw i g Basqiu s w h o it (f funds br us a dv them fi ' n bp up. Franco gla v boi row from priv itc ba- u I s He nug t tv in ti V ti esc bat kors ii 1 1 retiming t dN hi ir p S i i s g line THIS WEEK raC. No. By LEMUEL F. PARTON Mi nrri Eyes Reflect Poetry : Mind on Rubber and Tin N TH York An ideal cotton 1 uen topp Tmll be "re-Hi- s J'tndship fleeted the soul st-cla- s- young 8 Wefttm t 1527 tadored sknt is row sash idt, YORK eye piay womans shut An ecstatic young woman, reporting on Dr. Herbert Feis of the state dedream-li- t partment, averred that his NEW Jropo 1747 prcc Juiis snug, wide MLees h high at the neck, skirt in the swirlmj houette. Intlud shorts, with a fitted, slimly. A perfect sports and sutn-- ' Make it of id!tco cale, and tnm ttw.til ELMO bound 4 He Shelley. may look that way, but the chances are that he is thinking of rubber and tin. John Masefield had some such thoughts in mind when he wrote This poet, however, "Cargoes scans only trade balances, and his dreams are precise and statistical Dr Feis is economic adviser to the state department, and it was he who schened the barter deal by which we would acquire needed rubber and tin and get rid of the necklace of millstones hung around Uncle Sam's neck in the form of that government owned surplus of bales of cotton The news from London is that the barter deal is under way, Trime Minister Chamberlain having informed parliament that negotiations have been opened. Wheat also will be included in the bargaining, as England needs both wheat and cotton as much as we need rubber and tin. Here may be a working commodity axis, whiih Machiavelli so vehemently declared was always more important in the long run than any political axis. And, incidentally. Dr. Feis has read Machiavelli. He is a hold over from the Hoover regime, appointed to his present post by Secretary Stimson, who was impressed with the insight and in formation in Dr. Feis book, Eu He has rope the Worlds Banker. been used by the department ir clarifying confusion and in boiling down vague policies to definite pro cedure. Dr. Feis is a New Yorker with a Harvard Fh. D. He was professor of economics at the University of Kansas and the University of Cincinnati and director of research for the council of foreign relations. Like many men given to meditation, he smokes a pipe, blows rings and comes out of the haze with an idea or hunch as sharply defined as if it had been cut by a lapidary. DHILOSOPHERS getting on in life are apt to think m as contrasted with our workaday Tai time, both of which are currently explained by Hopes to Bring E. Mllne HumanVar tables the distin Sulshed Brit Into Uniformity ish mathematician. like is stretchable, unlike the swingtime or springtime of youth all of which was expounded in different terms by the aging Montaigne and in this time zone there may be written off, or at least discounted, much imminent disaster; and somehow in this temporal kings-irresistible bodies may meet immovable masses without any bystanders getting hurt I have known wise old gentlemen who carried their in one pocket and their m the other. Such is the 80 year-ol(in Tau time) Lucius N. Littauer, whose $3,000 000 Littauer center is dedicat ed at Harvard. His foundation was established to "bring about a bettor understanding among mankind It was Mr. Littauer who, as a congressman from New York, sponsored and established the United States bureau of standards. It worked out nicely. I niformity in machine appliances and spare parts was easily attained. Moving from machines into social adaptations and adjustments, Mr. Littauer found human variables could not as yet be calculated like metal variables. Hence his new bureau of human standards at Harvard. Like the late Chauncey M Depew, he has been honored by a statue ui his own town, during his lifetime. Tne town is Gloversville, N. Y.i w lure, after his graduation from Hirvard, he picked up his fathers Kfive manufacturing business His liter years have been absorbed in his manifold philanthropies, to which he has given many mdhons of dollars Thinking in Mr. Milne's h ng stretch of time, he is calmly assured that, in due time, all will be well with the world, but that "we n ust oppose absolutism in any guoo fri m any source. His father, a native of Breslau, (.crrnanv, passed on to him hi ritage of Carl Sihurz liber-aliswhiih perhaps could be fittingly measured against Fritz Kuhn's importation. Just in pissing, he played on Harvards first football team and rowed on Its first irew back hi his e days. 8 tea-tim- x The blouse is cut on waist lines, v, ith a pla P'5 co el, side fullness, round little frills giv e it afe-touch. For thj Signer en, gingham, dotted su rema Pel-mer- T f The Patter is designed656 15, 17 and 19 fbentb No. 1747 11, 13, quires 4' yards of ji fiashe rial for the ensemble, ftnunei 35-- ric-ra- invo edition If c. No. 1527 is designed 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42 f quires 5 yards of 2V4 yards of pleating 0 J rUH c Spring and Summer Send cents 15 for of tpi Bell Spring and Suiri g atte Book, which is now re fed adn yourself attractive, pr g fear becoming clothes, s' ft dri signs from the Barbariw r planned, gmy.1 Send your order to 7 tforc' Circle Pattern Dept ftfarers Montgomery A e , San f Calif. Patterns 15 certs pH1 each. easy-tomak- e 1 Mon f r Parental Co-- pert T Should Rear Fruit oericar Wilt Yn.s 1)()R (lUIW lli unsiirrid Japan in hind own w irsh p s At the s in e in 1 uv ' C S At il'ass ul 'r J C Gt e w t u sst. i his gov 1 nn v u w s on Sh i gli u Ihc gnenment of the C x nt out cons' i ni d t e mini i s in the Sn mh u an so f ir from in in d t e a thi re is t ' d'v Im disi uss n fin si eg i w ai d an u s. t fi nu i . i f the i on pi i iti - e ist t nl s ti- S is that l ate . th it f r n i Iv m Tau-tim- (Consolld-ite- Features ntsin. A maded tion of the pupils in he toed b the school nurse, wrote JUeton after school-teache- r, ing note to the tain little boy: M parents i Your boy Charles of astigmatism. investigate and Willi take s't. S ide Th re Chilli rect it? be The next morning a laboriously written r the boys father, which she follows : I dont exactly f what Charlie has done,1 walloped him tonight wallop him tomorrow. to help. Ciatkn an e d 1 1 i NEWS Tau-tim- Inn 1 I n 0 1 fn to bus s latum T rom T ranee I", m remove tomatoi Peas sj i nd g t ilk ti is In en forg tie n un dt r Tissue of a 9 10 elei turns NVt g i n Nothing If ttis is a neutral zing f ut ir, Cfi m al fi fi i trie Chairman l)w en D 3 nr g discusst d a greater neutt ihz i r hi fin e Servitor O Mahoney s com-nitt- n ill uif'i hi ml simp tlrmled fih I nf fluundt r Mushroom ami u me sum e ( Hum it capon ii Mi un i: HOI .Suii $ on 00() k'i) si mis bushils ir 8 s t Governniiit l Is 47 000 000 0 Ike Pri sidi nt and Mrs II When White H Use simple- - f lod k i per Mrs Hi urn tta Ni sbitt tr ms-lite- d into fingh h several minus sirved Hi it mis King Get rge and ibi th dm mg list y i ir s Queen I Pans v isit she disc dm ri d thi v too Iked simple food Announced in Wushingti n was the tvpnal Amt - appropri i 'ons fill lax revision apparentlv t.is a grei n light from the Wh'o 11 me tint tst Jump try s ,n ti His argument i i c ( i Menu 1 ix 1 t yi ni During the World war anxious Great Britain enlisted Aiab aid with a hasty, tllieisonid promise of independence in Palestine Britain also enlisted Jewish funds bv promising to make Palestine a homi ind f ir Jews Twenty ye irs afti r Versailles tlie bloody "holv year" which has kept British troops busy in Palestine shows no sign of abating I ast winter an ArabJiwish confirmee in London filled because deleg ites refused to sit at the same table Confronted with more pressing crises in Fuiope. Britain finally die id ed to dictate a settlement Released in London yyas a white paper decision providing gradual relaxation of British overlordship between now and 1944, during which 75 000 more Jews would be allowed to enter Palestine Then, yvith population standing at 40 pir cent Jewish and 60 per cent Arab, Britain would try to get delegates together M. A.g DR. SI.EYSTfiR to frame a constitution for the new Is it all uorth uhile? independent state. more basic side. Nationally known Observers thought Britain's haste as a brain authority, President Sley- to reach a settlement had precipister pointed out that 10,000,000 of the tated chaos Since 20 years expenation's 130.000,000 people bear in rience have demonstrated that Jews their bodies seeds which may re- and Arabs will not live under the sult occasmnally in a feeble minded same flag, it was quite obvious child Holding that mental troubles Fi ime Minister Nev die Chamberlain are the "greatest unsolved medical might have made more permanent problem," he gloomily commented peace by following the original of independent Jewish and that medicine's strides in prolonging life have cost "far more th m the Arab states separated by a British goods are worth" if such protection neutral stnp from sickness brings unwillingness 'o battle against economic troubles SPUN: t ' u ifi r Settlement? and it d ii ' g 9i4-00- KCi:S: Most U S business men have an opinion on why the nation is glutted with idle capital Their explanatToo much federal spending ionand excessive business taxes new enterprise Bv coincidence, Sen Jostph C O Mahoney's temper iry national economics com mittee beg m investigating this prob lem just after the senate passed its huge fin m bid inciting a new rs 1 in CONGHKSS: Taxes me f 'man ' s as first pi iced at 7H9O0 0O0, Mr ill ice ri ide it 704 000 000 Imp id i'i ne of 01.1 9u0 000 bushels, Mr thi ri f ire gut a July 1 tofiil if 000 well und' r the maud itury requota figure lo furthi r placate fit Ihuus farrmrs during t fiction m pi mt yi ar he di i idt d to fit tti 62 Out) 000 ucri s m xt ye ir 7 000 000 un t mure th in m 1939 The 974 000 000 b ishel mt mite f r people its survey are getting free sirvice On a nation wide ba sis, multiplied by four, this would mean U S physicians are already taking care of the 40 000 000 nitily iitims Uncle Sam would help Possible, though unsubst eiti iti d, fi ri i m r AM A fa 11a c ii s U ms may include those to solvi nt patients guilty of the good old American custom of not laying doctor bills, (2) not asking free sirvices trior would they ask help tindi r a U S program) are thousands of low medicines forgotten men, salaried white collar workers who can neither get relief nor pay doctor and hospital bills Socialized medicine is one side of the problem, but A M A s President elect Dr Rock Sleyster of Wauwatosa. Wis , thought he know a i ( t v 1 10,000 000 f b amihile the ll mdsors make the most of an uncomfortable situation. s i ! ti d dr v w t ' r g w ( M bi p t i r I irj if t rict i' ire lb n y A t e fv r i e il eh u g s i e J i1 M il ri P i r' i ' ' s i r I O' m il Julv 1 c r r v m r I - re v is I i uoo 000 b i hi Is Mr V. i i t e S i g di I I i d it to 270 000 000 V hi at . as fir ' ici d it 200 00 0 000 ill.it e m ide it 1'0-00- 0 bishils, Mr T tal curri it i ir s enp 000 opposed intend sun J t! i tin g it t vc Mir 000 0U0 i r i'i i) ci in I . g t p m n Ur , I V b r r ic r i St son ihatnm is stririu-usltiy the American M (in a assi euit mi which surveyed (al physu unis nf 747 c unties in i7 statis to di junve the gnvern-m- i Mar dr hive 10,000,000? ir t' f ( For C)iton )jw WHOS X" ars a..n, on June 3, I 'I I . a Ling nuirneil a , ornnmner at Monts, t runre. N till exiled from Ins nutue I njund, appanntlx , ri signal to a life oj inronse-iuiniell indsor tluLe of the I, i,s iimtentedly in trance tilth ins Arneriian horn uife, the forirn r Mrs. II idhs II arfiild im psnn. 'some day he hopes to ntiirn to I ngland uith the i to i, L f r . MU d A g the H igm r bill r v tie l n Is the ( i rn the 40 inni'ii'-t 0 000 U S are wih ut If mu die il c ne issi d the r t is ri non I n ale ft d ral subiidu s f r i ire nf the indigent sick, ainu in rig In $100 000 000 the first Charming pr v-- 7 ii o yi in tin m ( olurnns, thi When opinions aro express (F III roll's NOT I arc liiose of the news analvst anti not nttssaril of tins n vspaper t k .si d b Wo'crnNtwai i r L t n n eis s: 2ii(lAniiiversarv Group Hits Claim That 10,000.000 Require Care: Call Health Program Nmllr IJ. S. Medical Ii PVSQN Windsor? Mark I'll U I K. W NU Service I Hero I Conditions tew YOUIlt LOST Amazlnfl Duo to SlugJJJ II yon HO WTOWSSP tSJA i tritium invmoratliw rick headaches, bilious Kil spew with consttiJation. associated Without RiskSJ;:, if not delighted return refund the purchase price TKit'i fair. Get NR Tablets today ALWAYS CARRY, pnjMsiliiS, Salt Lakes NEWEST! con Hotel TEMPLE SQ'-V- a It iSSfiSgftf R,I$I5(IP( d'' a mark of at this beautiful gyERNEST C. KOSSlTi |