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Show THE PAYSON CHRONICLE, PAYSON. UTAH I UTU1L11- - RIP j : , i 1 Mr and Mr' Chorgi Stal i Bishop Leland Elmer of Pan-gutc- h was here Monday with his had for ther dinner guests Saturi emng a numlxi of Mi parents, Mr. and Mrs Lee Elinei, day Slahi h's tou'ins who have bun it being his mother's bnthday lsiting h( re Mi. and Mis Jo m Sarrin of Benson, Arizona, have Mrs T. H Wilson of Anna be la le n visiting in Payson for the visited with members of the Wil- hiM turn smel8')3 Their sist i son family in Payson last week Mis Amanda Mulloiy and She also attended the Blai k Haw k Maiy Louise Woodiuff at of Dextei, Missoni i, male thro encampment Spnngvillo last v 1st here in 1901 Mi , Eliza la tn Clough, another cousin, was also a guest at the Stuheli home. i WW : i - ? it vi Dr Asa L Cuitis left Bunda, by plane f oi Di rivet, Coloiadn, to attend a committee meeting of the Westein States Medical Association He is chairman from Utah and the weie meeting to plan nest yeai's convention He plan-r- e S S. BREAKS F. S. LUNDELL 7 he only candidate outside of Provo on the Democratic Ticket. l 5: . . t 200-mct- 5 i k Has had past experience for which there is no substitute. X? Is honest, RELIABLE and FAIR in all his deliberations. With SINCERE desire to serve the PEOPLE OP a UTAH COUNTY. He thanks the people of this section for their support in the Primary Election. (Paid Political Advertisement) Your Candidate dtti'u QUEEN OF INDIAN TRIBES Miss America of the Indian Nations, Princess Dorothy Lee Rain- water, selected in a recent competition at Atlantic City, Princess Rainwater has traded her tribal costuniery for American sports Attire. . . . Wm. A. DAWSON Vole for one who understands and appreciates your problems. - ; some - ai ,ht the uture v Goss sail1 ijI v .a posed to i. U the uirr pluses. One c uintry sugge1 corpora mi which wn ,i b farm p. ducts funneled into world trade. Another proposed a woi'dwide extension service to educate farmers In wii.it to grow. Even pi tor to the conferee loss said, the British Farmers ion sent out a tentative constltul for a proposed world federate i of farm organizations which would have had an elaborate staff and permanent world headquarters. Money Is Pledged. "The four U. S. farm groui s felt this was too ambitious," he said. They thought a couple of years of consideration might be wise before we launched a definite program. As a result, a compromise was reached. The representatives to the conference pledged $40, OCX) to set up a temporary council which will function during the coming year under a constitution worked out at the meeting. Next year a permanent council may be set up. Its objectives would be: To promote the farmers welfare all over the world. To exchange agricultural Information and ideas throughout the world. To encourage efficient farming methods. To advise and confer with International food organizations such as the United Nations food and agriculture organization so they hsvs the viewpoint of the fanner in whatever plans they make. Vole for one who knows that fhe country can- prosper unless Ihe Farmer, ihe Businessman, and ihe Employee all prosnot y world to ban! way were four surpluses whli tlon to uncD 200-yar- X 4 . Joe Verdeur, Philadelphia Turners club, who broke two worlds records at A AU meet held at Batnbrldge, Md. lie eclipsed the d and the marks, following navy discharge. An active farmer and one who KNOWS the problems of the farmer. 1 f WORLD RECORD A Veteran interested in the welfare of veterans. ?' - National Grange Master Albert Goss said the meeting convinced him that the world's Independent farm groups "can and will work together to prevent economic conflicts between farmers of various nations. Goss represented the grange at the London meeting. Complete Agreement. "There was complete agreement among the nations attending the conference, he said, "that some I to stabil organization was ize farm prices Oj international basis. "The surplus nations c the world pari re agreed that agriculture wuu i"ad the :"zx Mis. Garth Belliston it the home of Mis. aunts, Mr. and Mrs. until the opening of Bel-i- jigair, where Mr. coach. unWASHINGTON. Almost In the crush of other events, the farmers of the world have taken a long step forward in setting up their own machinery to settle international farm problems and prevent future depressions, says the United Press. The four major American farm organizations, along with similar groups from 12 other countries, recently met in London to lay the groundwork for the first world organization of independent farm the International Council groups of Agricultural Producers. noticed :.i I 1 To Settle Difficulties Arising on Farms. d to flv irom Denver to New r oi k C'it on business and planted to be away foi one Wei k ifWi ,Liv i International Organization i, FOR STATE SENATOR ole for Bigger and Better Harvest World Action , grand-d.mghte- Womb inv Wilson had af- pci tv last Saturday .son who Jimmy, ,n bn her Fifteen of four ye. us old lends v eio piescnt. M s Farmers Plan , 946 KSfS V i 4$ 'JW iV.,' , . f .? w' ... TrXMf j per. n Vole for one friendly to the general welfare of all. . . Hus is tin- ret mil of the BIGGEM AND lilsl IN lI.K- Nut onlv will America farmers rmitrihuUon to "saving the jitaie. he well fed Du t vast amounts of grain and produvt will he available for shipmi lit aluoad to aid the starving in main lands. . Flies Jet Plane at 504 Miles an Hour Take It Off, They Said, He Did and Did LOS ANGEI ! S A Lockheed tinve'ed from San Francisco to Los Angeles in 42 minutes 33 seconds, setting an officially timed spetd mark which approximated 504 pules an hour. The pilot was Army Lt Claude L. Wolford, 39 who learned to fly DANVII l.n, ILL A Della L police m Ten pairs removed of trouseis and overalls 10 coats and jackets, 10 shuts, four caps, vests, puttees, neckties, and muf tiers, a whisk btoom, four pennies, five combs, and a Chinese Police said the man newspaper. told them it might turn chilly ' old itinennt. dining a vestigatiun in 1923. FOR STATE SENA1 (Paid Political Advertisement) This is George Sylvester Raikes Who failed to have us fix his brakes , Fire Destroys Canvas Of Custers Last Stand ST. LOUIS. The original painting of "Custer Lat Stand" waa destroyed by a flra at the Fort Bliss Officers club at El Paso, Texas. Reproductions of the painting have adorned bara throughout the world through distribution by the Anheusar-Buic- h Brewing company. An official of the brewery estimated more than 150,000 copies of the painting have been distributed. Accepted accounts are that Adoll Phu Busch Sr., grandfather of the firms present head, paid a St. Louis saloonkeeper $30,000 for the picture and presented it to the seventh nv-airthe regiment of General Cus-tand his men who died In the 1878 massacre. 'Taint Funny, McGee Not when its your acci- y, rr Republican Candidate Second Congressional District BUI Dawson Is Qualified... o o o o o o o r" Vofe Republican County Chairman L.D.S. Bushop (8 years) Kiwanis Club President Jap Admits Theft of Javas State Treasure (2 terms) Mayor of Layton (2 terms) H practiced law in Salt Lake and Davis Counties since 1926 ly face a double charge-ille- gal pos- session of property and responsibility for war crimes. Nomura ha been held In a prisoner of war camp. Polands Population f Primary AUGUST 20 Nominate WARSAW. Poland now has a population of 23,622,334. Lodz is the biggest city, with 496,000 inhabitants. Warsaw has 476,000, Cracow 300.000 Wm. A. DAWSON for CONGRESS (Paid political adv. by Frank H. Halien, Sait IiVe City) 8lv you You temper and saV accident. Drive . make a comple assembly checkup and Poznan aS!' 268,000 Out of the 210.000 412.000 total lai.'Ts total population, 16. people are peasant and 7- live in town and cities A of 5,012,000 now inhabit Pd PPVV Wpstprn tprritnH Big Little Things Burned-ou- t headlight bulbs, faulty door latches, broken windshield wipers are small, repair jobs that, if neglected, can cause accidents. Bring your car in for checkup of these "little things. Genuine Ford parts and accessories are yours at moderate cost. low-co- It's a Good Idea Our factory-traine- d st I me- chanics know your Ford car best . . . have special Ford equipment use d methods and Genuine Ford parts' Lets check over your car to it safer to drive and keepkeep its resale vaiue up. Bring your Ford back home today. ... I i factory-approve- Now Tops 23 Million Mark Run-of- I rCv - BATAVIA, JAVA. Col. Akira Nomura, chief of the Japanese plan-nln- g board in Java, confessed atealing part of the 30 million dollar Java state treasure, told authorities that "in the but of the Japanese surrender I forgot where I hid It." E Brunsweld van Hulten, Dutch prosecutor, said Nomura would con-fusi- State Senator (5 sessions) County Attorney (3 terms) N dent. So brake checkups and brake jobs are getting top priority in our shop. That's one way we are cooperating in the countrywide campaign to make our streets and highways safer. Come in today. Let us check YOUR brakes. You get prompf Service n in GOSHEN, UTAH m sidy Priced from W 0 piu SOI R. M. CLOUlJ r, |