OCR Text |
Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER WART, the Speed Cop OF TIME The MARCH i IpYhOw'S VDU Bta. n. pit nrr. of TIME The Weekly Newsmagazine Editors the by Prepared (Continued From Page One) the final break with a. F of YVilliam Green, the historic events of the labor year revolved largelyof about C. I. the powerful, leonineof figure the rvs boss. The rise industhe storming of the automobile of U. capitulation try the peacefulthe disastrous strike c c;t?i Corp., C. I. O. to 'little Steel" were strictly affairs. "Out of the agony and travail of economic America," John L. Lewis To declared, "the C. I. O. was born. millions of Americans, exploited without stint by corporate industry and undersocially debased beyond the its fortunate, of coming the standing was as welcome as the dawn to the watcher. . . It is now and henceforth a definite instrumentality destined greatly to influence the lives of our people and the internal course of the Republic." Of Ohio's Governor Davey, whose militiamen broke the steel strike in that State, Labor Lion Lewis roared: "The steel puppet, Davey, is still Governor of Ohio, but not for long, I No tin hat think, not for long4 or of vigilantes goosestepping brigade mob of blackguarding scoundrels will and corporation-pai- d prevent the onward march of Labor." Of Capitalism, John L. Lewis declared: "Unionized, as opposed to Communism, presupposes the relationship of employment; it is based upon the wage system and it recognizes fully and unreservedly the institution of private property and the right to investment profits. . . The organized workers of America. . . will prove the finest bulwark against intrusion of alien doctrines of government. . . Of Franklin Roosevelt, whom he did not mention by name, but whose famed quotation "A plague on both your houses" could not be mistaken, John L. Lewis declared: "Labor next year cannot avoid the necessity of a political assay of the work and deeds cf friends and its political its beneficiaries. '. . It ill behooves one who has supped at Labor's table and who has been sheltered in Labor's house to curse with equal fervor and fine impartiality both Labor and its adversaries when they become locked in deadly embrace. . ." sit-dow- n, ni-h- t ... bible-babbli- whooshing overboard went seven depth charges. By the time sister ship Hasty" reached the "Havock" the sea was irriuescent v.ith oil The mystery sub had apparently been sunk. Then two days later the British tanker "Woodruff" was sunk k by two torpedoes fired at range from a submarine whose identification had been crudely painted out. Backed to the hilt by France, two long and secret meetings were held in Downing Street, and soon came the announcement that a meeting of twelve nations would be called to discuss piracy in the Mediterranean and action to be undertaken to suppress it. Meantime, a special meeting of the Cabinet was called to meet the crisis, while still more British warships steamed to the Mediterranean to protect British shipping. Since Francisco Franco contiols only two Spanish submarines, and since Germany is at present anxious to keep in Britian's graces, almost every observer agreed last week that the pirate submarines must be Italian. Careful not to mention Italy and piracy in one breath was Great Britian, busily trying to wheedle Italian cooperation for her parley at little Nyon in Switzerland. But Russia, fighting mad at the loss of her ships during the summer, suddenly upset the applecart, bluntly sent a note to Rome, accusing Italy outright of the torpedoing of the Soviet freighters "Timiriazev" and "Blagoev" during the past week, and demanding cash reparations. Just as bluntly did Italy deny the torpedoing, refuse payment, intimate that she would sit at no conference table with Russia. point-blan- v'IM tC A FOOL. pvTHATS WISE TO (i EVECV THING A.U. wVfI iffKf A ( IAf010" BEEN a bank) COME ON - c U. S. armed HONG KONG TYPHOON - - - HONG KONG, China Magnificent, landlocked Hong Kong Harbor, 7th busiest in the world and always alive with yachts, junks, ferries, sampans, was freighters, liners and men-of-wa- r, the hallway? TO KNOW VOU CAM EVERVBOOv) JAVf MOBl kAONlV CHEVROLET CO. ) f G.M.C.TBUCK $595.00 There than VOu'Ll EVttl MAKE OOfcww' 5425.001935 I 5S BglKiSSS:, i 4 $ iU u&i&i IfJ CM ART $325.00 before he can turn all of his attention to that effort he must finish super vising the production of the CCCs SSS supply. This is costing the Gov ernment 5 cents an injection. Civilians may be able to buy it for $1 a dose. But to them none is yet for sale. Ma, ' BI iiJliiiifRfr h II OTLIGH'i Studebaker plane mammoth, homecoming for salesmen, deal-er- a, u'stributors, in Sept. . . . 8,000 are expected in South Bend during the two weeks of festivi-T ties . . . The pedestrian is the in safety statistics he keeps getting knocked ae flat an ! . . . of Pedestrians amount to 85 the fatalities in Philadelphia for first half of 1937 . . . Watch your step on the street, and the step-pewhen you drive . . . Demand is so greet for the successful Fram Oil Cleaner that the company is starting construction of Think of 55 a new factory feet when you're going 50 and want to stop . . . that's the distance you'll go while the impulse to stop travels from your brain to your foot, and before you even touch the pedal . . . Magnetic road sweeper operated by North Dakota has already collected 36,000 lbs. of old hub caps, nails, and other metal items . . . Lead foot and aluminum headed drivers look out! . . . The American e finally passes from the automotive picture . . . a name once synonymous with luxury is now history , . . others are Delmonicos, Vanity Fair Magazine, the Leviathan . . . But yoti can't regret the good old days when you think that the four gasoline buggies which existed in 1898 have now become 27,000,000 . . . and 40,000,000 people enjoy a driving comfort and ease today; never before possible, YOUNGSTERS CHICAGO Because Chicago's Board of Education miraculously discovered in its kitty an extra $900,000 wherewith to pay its often unpaid teachers an extra week, Chicago's public schools were due to open a week ahead of time. Then, five days before the scheduled opening, Board President James B. McCahey, announc ed that they would remain "indefinitely closed" because of a threatened infantile paralysis epidemic. President McCahejrs order brought much pleasure to the city's 619,000 hale pupils; but to the Carpenter Elementary School on Chicago's West Side it brought destruction. Picking up whatever impliments they could lay their hands on, a band of marauders broke into the school and proceeded to thwack, whack, hack their way through each and everone of its dozen classrooms. They battered black boards into slate piles and desks into kindling, doused gobs of ink on walls, disembowled a piano, scuttled kitchen equipment, tore up writing paper, tore down wall clocks, scattered movable and immovable objects on the floor until thousands of dollars of damage had been done. What typewriters they forgot to destroy they took with them and sold them for 50 cents each. Next night they came back. This time they were greeted by a policeman who was surprised to discover the pillage and wreckage had been done by six barefooted, dirty-face- d moppets, twins Chester and Leo Froe-lica ventilating fan. Bundled off to ther 9; John Rudecki, 9, and his brother Walter; Walter Mir- station house, they were lined up. brother anda and his photographed, bound over to their John Rudecki, the only one who parents pending a hearing this weelu. tried to escape, was extricated with The raiders explained they did not. difficulty from between the blades of like their principal. es ... Rolls-Royc- a. a.rn 'v t l.Etai " Suturiluy Hrrmnif I 'ml. "Here's what happened curing Eoy's Week when I took th President's place! t last week more than usually jampack-e- d ' with shipping taking refuge from Shanghai's war 1,000 miles to the north. Suddenly in from the China Sea blasted the worst typhoon in ten years. So furious was the wind that observatory instruments, capable of registering up to 125 m. p. h., broke down. At least 18 ocean liners were ripped from their storm moorings and slammed ashore. The "On Lee," a 1,026-to- n costal vessel, was smashed against the British "Suffolk," bounced g ball into the back like a British destroyer "Duchess," rammed wharf, piled ashore at the through awater-fronstreet. Included t foot of a among the at least 20 ships sunk was Britian's "Hunan," with 1,200 Shanghai Chinese refugees aboard. Hundreds of fishing vessels and small Chinese houseboats splintered against the sea wall and rocky coast as scream ing coolies catapulted into the seething water, many to be drowned, few d to be saved b' a life line of police and customs officeis. Hong Kong's business section became a sordid shambles. Motor car parts flew like pebbles, steel lamp posts were bent almost at right anflood of stinking gles. A waist-hig- h water and mud seeped through the waterfront streets. Though the typhoon was spent after six hours, behind was left a trail of fires and cholera. At week's end, British officials still trying to assess casualties and damages despondently gave out that at least 600 lives had been lost, that the typhoon had cost about 1,000,000 Hong Kong dollars ($300,000). ping-pon- rope-tethere- O PNEUMONIA PREVENTIVE WASHINGTON Everyone of the 300,000 Civilian Consei-vatioenrollees who is willing Corps next month get a hypodermic injection in his arm. In consequence it is hoped that no more than 300 of them will develop pneumonia this winter, that only 10 of them will die from this disease which regularly kills 100,000 people in the U. S. every year. But CCC men who refuse the injections may not be so lucky, for according to averages pneumonia will fell two out of every thousand of them, and one out of eleven who takes sick may expect to die,. and chemists oi Bacteriologists Washington's Army Medical School last week busily prepared this new preventive. f To avoid adulteration they worked in glass cages, sieruizea eacn mum ing by live steam and ventilated all day by sterile conditioned air. Before the men entered the cages, which con tained no germs except those in test tubes, flasks and demijohns, they changed every stitch of clothing. With those precautions the bacteriologists cultered germs, treated them with chemicals, eventually produced substance a witish-tasugar-lik- e called SSS ("Soluble Specific Substance"). Dissolved in salt watei and injected under the skin, it stimulates which the blood to develop will kill specific germs. There are 32 different types of pneumonia. SSS is effective only against Types I and II, which cause half of the cases of pneumonia in this country. The inventor of Soluble Specific Substance, Dr. Lloyd Derr Felton, who had ex perimented at Harvard and now at John Hopkins, hopes to develop similar sugary substances to be used against other pneumonia types. But will h, Nor-ber- t. BRAND STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY jm n, anti-bodi- es This whiskey is 2 years old. Stored mm) 1 2 in temperature controlled ware- houses. PINT No. 64 QUART No. 63 lifffllEIIEll f a m a than when it sold for $185 m mack eyes from unseen doors when there's a bulb in the light socket Yet today this Maytag, the finest ever built, h light bulbs placed AFEW where they belong pre household Tent tragemany dies Do you have a reserve supply on hand? If not buy a reserve carton of assorted sues. For example, $1.10 buys you a naif doxen bulbs, l vuw tw i. ata oi uieo sums. 25, 40. 60, J3. 100, 150. Or for $1.00 you get two 40's, two 60's, an4 two 100s. Other assortments t equally, low yours for only . V-- -f Pi, KCNTUCKY STKAIGHT BOURBON WHISKCY A 90 PROOF Whiskey. PINT QUART Ne.Cl No. GO t - V prices. LIGHT IS CHEAPER THAN EVERI j- - Bcnt reduction in domestic lighting rat.g. togthr with Extra Electricity at Hall-Prieyou mora lighting lot your monsy than svsr before. s. See Yaur Mazda Lamp Dealer or Ulah Power & Light o. good to be trve, a brand new but 1934 Maytag, of borefyhoH the end old price. Whet a buy what a comfort to have a Maytag in your home for years to come. You can still get easy terms. Act now, before prices go up. Call or phone. It sounds too (T IS TRUE SEE IT AT THE COUNTY FAIR Golden Wedding BOURBON BLENDED STRAIGHT WHISKIES 90 PROOF PINT QUART Ne.282 No. 263 SCHOSiS ELECTRIC CO. TBEMONTO.V, UTAH - MRS. J. A. PACK, Mgr. - CIIEV. TRUCK Lg. Wheel Base No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains - Sir.o-Japanco- Le;. Wheel Baetf tVW HtAft Of IcinTAJNLVl THEN VOU OUGHT lt I 13S3 - UNSIGNED REPLY BUFFALO. New York Addressing the 36th encampment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars assembled in Buffalo ictsc week, Major Geneial Smedley Butler, U. S. M. C, retired, uprose ainiu cheeis and whistles to from the president read a congrat- ..a;.: ; the Veterans on their anti-wr- v 'Jx. cv.:ii:: f :. :.;ndatory ratr!:ty i: the curient V0 WHO MAKES USED CAB BUYING SAFE tfCMVl: O IS THIS in 7J WISE er ..a. ....J tic withdrawal of forces from foreign soil: O "Other countries must make their damned war without our help." When SUBMERGED PIRATES - - he finished the General looked up, LONDON In recent months at said "It ain't signed. Wouldn't it be least 25 British ships have been at- fine if we did get such a letter from tacked in the Mediterranean, French the President?" O merchantment have been fired on, numerous Russian ships sunk. Last straw for the British Lion's back was added last week when past the destroyer "Havock," on Mediterranean patrol off Alicante, darted the long white wake of a submarine torpeda. Out crackled a message for help and J BIN A"aiuk ffl I PAGE THRJEflf By Fronk Chevrolet Co. TlvmJMltec? AINT WOU WISE AffOQO - 16, 1937 Entire contents Copr. 1937, Schcaley Distributors, Inc., NY'Ci |