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luNDAY MORNING, JULY 2, 1922 THE UGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER etWO MEN SEEK FARMERS' VOTE MPormer Virginia Governor Trying to Replace Senator jX Swans on -en r e ,f BY ROBERT GLVsS ipecial He-patch to riio Stitudard Examiner. flip. Copyright. 1 922, by The Standard Examiner.) 1 LYNCHBURG, Va., July 1 The arm bloc in the United States senate. tfe list strengthened bv the result of tho Ji i lepublkan primary in Xorth Eakoto, .' rill receive further encouragement if '4 ormer Governor Westmoreland Davie 5i4, ucceeds in hi-- ambition to replace ( J JJaud A. Swanson, senior United Itates Senator from Virginia, r' Mr. Davis Is contesting for the Dcm- I tsratlc nominution, which Is equivalent I p election, in the primary o '.August . Hi Is tin. onli opponent of Senator I wanson, who has held his seat since PI he succeeded the late Major John W. L Danie l In 1910. In 1911 Senator Swan- Eon won tho Democratic nomination fiver the then Representative Carter IMSlass. now lus colleague in the sen- , -I URGES FINANCIAL RELIEF E Mr. Davis is making an appeal to the sSarmer? of Virginia for their support, IsjKiavinc hei-n known when he ran for jovenw' r- ago as "a friend ' bf the f.'inmr" and belng,af filiated for jEeveial vr.ii -.- with the Farmers' Co Kperative Educational association. He gEwns a farm In Fauquier count). In 'Pfannoun. h!-. .mdldacy, Mr. Davis Beclared that "land Is still the funda- "4 mental sour f wealth the founda- fkKion of the nation' prosperity," and In MlllSW . r to a 1 1 n 1 i . .1 -alii he would af qHttllatc wii.ii ih- so-called farm bloc In .She senate on agricultural questions If lectei He announced also In favor Bf extending the time of farm and UlJ cattlo paper and dcclar.-d that the ln UM dnstr.a! .I.-,. re.-.-;..., h. ..ugh which tho MEountry has been passing was Large Vnr due to the llmit I pun h ising power the farmer who ihould huv. Same opportunities for securing credit' have other groups of endeavor." avrs placing a represi ntatlve of the iLBBTareners upon the federal reserve UK board. POINTS TO His RECORD But the hop.1 of the Virginia f-trni-jjl er do.- noi h in,; upon the election of W&lr. Davis, It appears, for Senator I 6war.son s friends claim that he also Is the 'farmers' friend " The senator Hies not a"w affllation with the ' irm '.J blOC. but .!... s hold tha! to he-' helper V the larruer.s .u the senate on more Hhan one occasion, lie points to his work for f. d.-rai appropriations for roads, his work in behalf of parcel m post, his vote for the fedejal arm loan yiact, for tho Kcr.y.m-K'-ndrick bill to regulate the pa. k. rs and his speech ffor th" bill providing for co-operative jjBjnarkcting for farmers. IB A feature of the campaign which supporters of both nun are taking (M note is the large n-g;vtration in the Jcltle3 of women Payment of capl- tation taxes six months prior to the lection, is a prerequisite to voting In rlrglnla and in the cities of the state Shale and femal taxpayers nr.' approM Hpately equulh divided. In Richmond. pLynchburc and . . -- ii other cities wo- men who haw paid their taxes Jn time u ftp register and vote In the November ' electlons, and threfore in the prlrn- any, outnum'cr the men. STUMPS FOR HUSBAND. L. As a consequence factions of the iparty are appealing to the women, and Hthe unusual sight, for Virginia, of wo jmen around h adquartera in large Bumbers le beheld. Another unusual feature of the campaign Is a wife ttC Bj ftlvely canvassing for husband. Mrs. i iWes'.morela n.l bnvi--, making the j rounds building up an organization of pvomen for her husband . In her trav I lels, she i- accompanied by women Itteaders, who were so effective in their efforts to oh ct E. Lee Trancle govern- 1 When the former governor first an Inouncr .1 his candidacy. .! was not tal: -Bl very seriously by the politicians of the state but as the day of election approaches thev confess that a warm battle v. 1,1 be foughi before the result ascertained II AT DRAWS ATTENTION mt LONDON, Juh 1. ( By the Assocl Kted Press) Ladv Astor has a new That for parliament, a black strow with tita smart jrn of the brim. Accord ing to accounts car. -fully kept by loby g08slpers. this in only tho third the first woman commoner has had since jBfeking hi-r seat. It i j THINK TWICE BEFORE YOU JOIN AFRICAN GOLD RUSH j. . o- , Map of African "El Domdo" and Sketch of Pro-ieotors wltl their portUTS By EDWARD M. THIi KIIV (WTio, ns Oorrcapoiulpnt fr ?.T Ser vice with the smitiiMiiiian 'African Expedition,' i9ia-ioi:o, Travcleil in the Belgian Conyo,) NEW YORK Will there be a great gold rush to the Belgian Congo on '49? The secret has leaked out that nine man, members of a syndicate organiz ed in the suburb of Katonah, N. V., are on the way to Congo to find a nugget-paved stream Julius J Dolgos claims to have discovered while serv ing in the colonial campaign against th.- Gorman general. on L'-t'ow 'or beck in 1917. Capitalists are said to be behind the expi dltlon, guided by Dolgos, and led by Edward P Barrett, lawyer and town supervisor of Bedford, N V Eighty thousand people rushed to California, following the original dis covery by John Marshall of small bits oi koiu in a miu race near Loioma pre iocs handful How many will go to the Congo ?j Dolgos' accidental find a handful of nuggets picked out of a spring brought him 51 GOO. after he reached civilization, according to reports. Travelers in the Congo knew the dif-1 ficultles of mineral prospecting there-,' These are tropical fever, wilderness travel, and laws restricting mining and prospecting. Scarcely any white man in tho Con-j go escapes fever; many succumb to its most dread form. blackwater,' Quinine is takrm daily with a liberal dose of whisky! as a preventive. 1 MEN AND AfFSK AT WASHINGTON By R. T. S. 4 (Copyright, 1922 by The Standard Examiner) 1 WASHINGTON. July 1. The defeat of Senator McCnm'oor in th-: Norih Dakota primaries brings about the un- usual situation of both authors of a' new tariff bill retiring from public life within a few monthes after their Joint work shall have been written fi nally upon tho statute books. There has been no parallel to this state of affairs in recent years. Uncle Joe Fordney of Michigan had announced that he would retire from congress prior to the McCumber collapse in North Dakota. Uncle Joe, long famed as high priest of protection, attained his life's am bition when he wrote the new tariff bill as it passed the house, and he! hn u-nlchcH vtlfh inrcnulncF, u.,ikfn. l tion the many higher duties being amended Into the bill in the senate Uncle Joe thought he was doing fairly well in "raising the rates." but tho consecutive and. deliberative senate is showing the- Impetuous house some thing new in the uplift of tariff sched- " I II SSSSBBBBSSBSSSBSBB i The j Meadow Lark HF I i Any fabric that can be washed with soap and mirmmny Bafely and thoroughly washed by the MEADOW LARK The Banttary, smooth wood cylinder quickly and thoroughly clnnses. by gently forcing the hot soapy water through and through every part of tho fabric. Tho MEADOW LARK la ao safe, so convenient, so easy to oper ate that any body can quickly do an entire washing almost with out effort. Have it demonstrated In your home. ogden electric supply co. 2430 Washington Avenue Phone 2 I Gold has been discovered in several parts of the Congo, notably, in the wildest part In the northeast. Also diamonds, tin, copper Some of the; richest copper mines In the world are located in the southern tip. FOl'ND WHILE LOCT Dolgos says he found tho nuggets' When he got lost from a cavalry col umn that later took part in the cap- ture of Tabora. German East Africa, (now Tanganyika Territory This in-: dlcates the find may have been some-1 w here between Albertvllle, on Lake I Tanganyika, and Stanleyville. Only short stretches of railroad ex-1 1st In the Congo. The easiest ap proach would be by steamer to Dar- es-Sala&m on the east coast, by rail-) road to Kabalo which takes a fullj bertvllle, thenco by a 100-mllc rail-i road to Kabalo which tokes a full day' and thence up tho Congo riv er i Another route would be from Cape Town by railroad to Buna ma and thence 400 miles by river an uncom fortable seven day trip to Kabalo. To reach the district from Boma, by way of the Congo river, would take, five weeks The upper east and northwest part; of the Congo, probable location of ihe supposed El Dorado is closo to the tse-tse fly country. The tse-tse fly is the greatest deal.i earner in tho Afrl- an tropics. Belgian-British companies operating the copper mines and other mineral workings possess iron clad concession--, making the prospectors' p;uh difficult V ules Having attached his name to1 a tariff bill, Uncle Joe is ready to lay down the uneasy robes of congression al office and give the younger fel lows a chance. Mr. McCumber also attained a Ufel ambition when he became head of1 the powerful finance committee, fol ' viug th. death of Senator Penrose 1 and although hU tenure of office has been all loo brief from his point of1 view, nevertheless he. like Uncle Jo ' has atviched his name for all time to a tariff bill, and although he passes involuntarily from political viow hisi handiwork on the tariff will be a'sub- Joel oi political and economic discus-' sion for years to come. larirf lulls are notoriously unkind to parties If not always to authors, Mr McKlnley rose from the author ship of a tariff bill to the presidency. Representative Serono Payne and Sen ator Aldrlch, co-authors of the famous bill of 1909, remained In congrc-s un til their deaths, but a great many of their colleagues went out as a result lof the bill Senator Underwood, au- Jthor of the first Democratic tariff since the days of Cleveland, still re mains an honored member of the up- per branch of congress. .Never before ha.s there been such a speedy exit of -arlTf makers as in the case of Messrs. Fordney and McCum ber. And never before- has so much t:m heen, consumed on a tariff meas- I ure There do lu those who are will ing to predict that the authors of the bill may be. out of congres before It is actually translated into law. But they appear to be entirely too pessimistic- The optimistic think it will bo all over In thre-i or four months. There was more than one surprise tor Washington in that North Dako ta vote, one of the biggest was the discovery of Orsby Mcllarg 4n the race. He wasn't very much In th. race, it is true. As a matter of fact, his namo was carried in the flrat few bulletins giving the result of tho tally? Qrmsby was stationary at about 431 votes when his name was dropped un ceremoniously from the press reports It may prove, however, that he polled sufficient votes to make the defeat of Senator McCumber certain, and that it seems, was his object Ormsby la very well known here In Washington. In truth he is very well known almost anywhere in the United States A rather striking figure, tall slonder. white-haired, big. horn-rlm-Bied or rubber tired spectacles, and a carriul dresser, he ha.s attracted at tention on Fifth avenue, on Pennsyl tention on Fifth avenue. Pennsylvania avenue, Boulevard Michigan, on Mar ket street, San Francisco, and on the beach at Waikikl. To tho casual ob server there is f,u(ie u striking resem blance between Orrnsby and Colonel George Harvey. This twain are alike in other respects, too. In politics they are a pair of stormy petrels. They love a political tempest better than life itself. MeHarg was assistant to the attor ney genral under President Roose velt's administration, and when Mr. Taft took office, he appointed Ormsby as assistant secretary of commerce, and labor, the two departments now separate, being then combined. Mc Harg did not remain long under Mr. Taft. Ho was a restless, ono might almost say a resistless progressive and he left the public 111V to go to New York to practice law. The Republican convention of 19K1 found him fighting tooth and nail fo Colonel Roosevelt for the nomination. He pitted hlin Sell aRalnst Frank Hitchcock In the contested southern delegate cases at ihut time aud tho ateain roller Q&t' Porch Furniture I SBBBBBsl Prices Reduced I fiHl The persons receiving discounts on the June Brides' I III I Sale are as follows: H Jjjj G- A- Croft, 260 Thirty-second St. Mr. Hanna, Apartment 32, La Franz I X-JF yHflU ! 1 John Firth, Rear 367 Twenty-seventh W. S. Hoggan, 2710 Monroe Ave. jH ? - - " TBIIIi St' Mrs' A' Iverson Henefer, Utah H (fjj'lJXi'J ' -". llapg Brown Brokerage, 327 Eccles Bldg. Joseph Toombs, Willard, Utah H : -UTIHB Thomas W- Jensen, 514 Twenty- Lawrence Hansen, 3467 Adams Ave. X' iJSilllUSSH seventh St. M. A. Repass, 625 Washington Ave. H V jvj : R- L' Wilbur, 1036 Tventy-third St. Kenneth Drake, Sunset, Utah Man TWenty"fUrth St J L WUson Jr- 648 Thirteenth St. H H All these summer necessities can be mm I seen on floors now and all are to be gj I "Honeymoon 3 Room Is the I CUage" -SIDRE I!,BIIII City I inL-' ag Hp : tened him Into a fare you well. Eight years of Democracy found Ormsby somewhat quiescent politically, but 1 during that time he drifted back to North. Dakota which he hud known In his youth and now he Is flgtlng in the turbulent political waters of that rad ical state. It's hard. In other words, to keep a squirrel on the ground. Speaking of congress, attempts are being made to stir up a new crusade against those coneri-ssnii .1 and sen ators who put relatives on the govern-j rnent payrolls as secretaries, clerks,; charwomen, etc. They ar- belng charged with nepotism and various other sorts of high crimes and misde meanors. It may he perfectly true that some congressmen put on the payrolls rel-, atives and others who do little or no, work for their semi-monthly payj checks. But on the other hand, there1 are a lot of hard working congress-' no-n and hard working members of th Ir families who could not live on a congressman'! pay without this addi tional financial lu-ip. Washington knows the dilemma of I the congressman To the earnest man, congress Is no longer a sinecure The sessions once short and snappy, aro: nowadays interminable. The- time! .'ins not so far away when Champ: Clark's prediction of a continuous con gress may bo an actuality. It was not so difficult in previous years fu- a congressman to maintain hi house ii homo and an apartment In Washing ton for t h- few mi 'lit Iks u . :,, ! , . ion. But now It Is necessary for the mem ber to rent a house or apartment In tho capital by the year In other words, on $7,600 a year, the married men are expected to keep up two es tablishments virtually all the year! round. With the bachelors, the prob lem It not so difficult. They are mostly at home wherever thev hang their hats. All of which shows that tho bachelors have something else in their favor In their political fights With tho married cult. Mrs. Peter Qleson, Democratic nom inee for the senate' In Minnesota, has !- tatcj op, nl thai to- will hrlng M r Oleson to Washington as her secre tarj if she is elected. She says It that be nepotism, her opponents can make the most of it, oo NEGROES CONVICTED II OF ASSAULT MOBBED JESDP, Ga., July 1. James Har vey and Joe Jordan, negroes, convict-' ed of criminal assault unci granted a respite by Governor Hardwlck, were taken from a deputy sheriff ne&i Danesbrldge, G.r, anil lynched early today, a telephone message to Sheriff Rogers here said. Tho negroes were being removed from Wayne county to Savannah tor safe keeping. J K. t. re, 'i- puty in i harge of the prison- a ers. reported tho lynching. SOLUTION KEEPS MICE AT DISTANCE SYDNEY. N. R. W .Tuy 1 Hope that one of the Australian farmer's greatest problems protecting wheat against the attacks of mice Is near solution has risen from successful tests conducted by a Sydney doctor of a protective preparation ho had evolved. miffM The value of the discovery may be gauged from the fact that the records of the wheat board show losses of 500,000 pounds In New South Wales alone directly attributed to the rav ages of mice. The final test was cpnducied by the inventor, Dr. Henry Dot troll, in the presence of representatives of the wheat board, primary producers and the press- Mice were scaled in an Iron tank with lare supplies of bread j :ind wheat, which were enclosed in i sacks and cardboard boxes which hadj fxsen sprayed with the solution Invent led by the doctor, some as long ago as 15 months. When the seal of the tank was broken after two days it j was found that the mice had made no attempts to eat either the wheat or the bn ad no trace of teeth or claws being found on the hoxes or bags. All of the mice were dead, apparently pre ferring to starve rather than approach the solution. uu TENANT FARMERS OF JAPAN REVOLT OSAKA. Japan, July 1. As In most countries with a large tenant farmer population. Japan Is faced with a ' land problem. In recent months, In several parts of the country, but es peclally In Osaka and Yyushu pre fectures tho tenants have been re turning the land to the owners be cause of the latter's refusal to grant them a larger percentage of the I crops, the farms in-inu worked on the share system. These tenants claim thai under the present system, with' 'H,""V'T.i ' ..,! imipi SBBSJJ long hours and arduous work, tho I learnings of a family averages $11 MEp ' monthly. br'' The land owners on the other hand Hp j c;,lm that besides raising much of their own food on the land the ten ants have the income from by-pro- ducts which Increases, their earning- H considerably but against this tlo- I farmers offset the Increased cost of H fertilizers, large quantities of which MRpi' have to be used all over Japan, and IHKV' irrigation. Ht. Some of the owners are propositi-; I to farm their own land and are mak- ing trials with tractors for plough- Hh& Ing, but the tenants assort that the H labor for sowing or planting which i H case of rice must be done by hand ML' will not be forthcoming. According Be'," to the latest statistics, the number I of the tenant-farmers in this countrv JH Is 5. 4$2. 000. Their tenant-land Is 3 105,00" oho (one cho being about IHfpf 25 acres) in area and the crops ar- about 60.8 IS, 000 koku (one koku pi iRjfcJ ing about four bushels) H Napoleon opened the finest rod H system in tho world. S jBr-N ' Ogden's Le&ding Dentists Hg Bgjl );,,. making artificial teeth in HpjppH 'IBP''' It is necessary that the dentist de- jj isflsM i p2 vote the time necessary to restore the , J bbbbbu? t V natural expression and the pleasing BPir I 1 sbbH 'tf&SBfr' arrangement of the teeth. jMH j IsHLsr TjV BHfssssk ou nro awaro f v:ist lmpor- MwBkTW' j sbbbeIm! v . 1 tance to the patient that the expres- UaK&i "p H I 'SssassM V , :,' sion ot the mouth be restored with ar Hr-' fljk " "9 I Hsf tificlal teeth and plates, which will , . j fl i wiiJIriig appear like natural healthy teeth. yBR0kii -f Our plr.to eases are skillfully made .jft-BHMV LbbHh A to In.- faction The best SBL K H JLl u.yj,,.vy of teeth, gold and tooth products are Bflst -9-'Bi6mr j IHHj v. ufJL. used, which places our name In good ; ' '2jL H fffyK repute; also strength which you roc : ftjjk IHj P -'''''"''''iSii'-'Hiw Plates, crown or brldgework of gold 5?isb bbbbbbbm Vj.Jpm "i ic.ain, li!lin;:, painless Hlr 'issssnf S p' - nThi I real H aH Kiyo excellent results the quality B J- and the moderate price of our dentis- pisssbbbb! Dr. A. J. Foutz, D. D. S. try give it a wide range of satisfied Qr. E. R. Foutz, D. D. 8. psisbbbbI A Dad tooth uncared for con patients. Our practice Is limited to high S tantly gets worco. All work guaranteed. grade dentistry only. bbbbbH New Mettled Dentists 2-5G5 AND 2-!69 WASHINGTON AVENUE P.ilrjfsss Extroctlon of Teeth PHONE 766-W I'M i : ' j