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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER WART, the Speed Cop The MARCH OF TIME t. two-fiste- bald-heade- d, after acting as sparring "Terrible Terry" McGov-erfor partner "Herald" n, McGrady's as a labor leader and organizer have brought his great prestige, little cash, and he felt that he owed it to his family to do better than the $9,000 to Madam he gets as second-strin- g Perkin's fiddle. Last spring he was reported to have declined a $50,000-a-yejob with Distilled Spirits Institute partly because he felt his job would not let him leave, partly he felt Secretary Perkins might be going to resign. At RCA, where he is expected to start sometime after Labor Day, Ed McGrady will receive from $15,000 to $20,000 for smoothing over labor dif ficulties developing in RCA's three fields of radio: communications, manufacture and broadcasting. Best guess why Ed McGrady did not abruptly quit last week was that he wanted to let the President start the difficult job of picking his successor, a man who, among other things, must be, as McGrady was, acceptable to and trusted by C. I. O.'s John Lewis and A. F. L.'s William 40-yea- rs ar se Green j j . eOVA5WUt Domes, ammunition in the boat and the suspicious police lushed the re- tvWvX fugees off to jail, suspecting them of being a revolutionary expedition to Cuba. This week Cuban authori ties released them, arranged for their return to Great Inagua, where Gov-- j ernment officials arriving from Nas-- I sau, 400 miles to the north, verified stories of the riot, reported that the natives had settled back "to their ac-- I GUTS - - NEW YORK After a fight in which he had failed 15-rou- to knock 's Welshman Tommy Farr at Yankee Stadium last week, Joe Louis retained his world heavy weight crown on points, admitted over the radio that he had been hurt twice. Said Tommy Farr: "I've got plenty of guts that's old Tommy Farr, you know. I'm a Welshman." down Man-liattan- O REBELLION MAYARI, CubaStartled fisher looked up from their work on tie beach near Mayan last week to five Americans, mne British West Indian Negroes tumble out of a grounded, rudderless motor launch whose makeshift sail was made of dirty shirts and trousers. Wolfing food and water, the first they had seen in four blistering days; the survivors gasped out a story of rebellion on Great Inagua, southern most of the Bahama, 50 miles from Cuba. Fortnight ago, ran the mumbled story of one Negro (Dr. Dudley Fields representative of the Governor-Generin Inagua), he sent out an order for arrest of a native accused of molesting a young boy in Matthew Town, largest island village. Armed natives, blaming Josiah Erickson of Swamp-scot- t, of Inagua's Mass., $500,000 salt factory, for the order, stormed the Erickson store, killed one employe, then roamed the island in search of other "Yankees." While en raged natives fired the radio station, store, Commissioner's residence, salt and warehouse, Erickson, building four other Americans, Physician-Cor- n missioner Fields and eight Negroes grabbed rifles, teargas guns, cartridges, shot their way clear to the launch Said Dr. Fields: "We hoped to find a vessel at sea which would take us to Nassau. How ever, after cruising several hours we ran out of fuel, and our motor broke down. We drifted four days at sea without food or water." Suddenly down to the waters' edge came Cuban rural policemen, hastily summoned by the fishermen. One look the small arsenal of rifles, gas men WCJtfSr)r m i i JUST OQDtN- - WHATS That) ((WHAT STREET ADDRESS oiD VOU SAV s look EVOY&ODV-Uft- BLOKES-COOBS- --o- super-service- E Lf. Wheel Butf ?J rr d G.M.C.TEUC5 $595.00 15 j j , 1933 O DEBT COLLECTION - - CLARKSDALE, Miss. A colored sharecropper named James Wiggins and his commonlaw wife, Ethel Davis, owed $175 to their white boss. Joseph Shelley Decker, who was afraid they might decamp without paying. What this situation led to last week was described by Clarksdale's Sheriff H. H. Dogan, summoned to the Decker farm by Sharecropper Wiggins. Said Sheriff Dogan: "I went to the Decker place and in a sharecropper cabin I found the woman chained to a bed with a trace chain locked around her neck. She had been there several days. She had been fed well and other than being chained apparently had not been harmed. I ordered the woman unchained and took her and Wiggins off '.-VI- 200-ac- Olds-mobil- queer-lorokin- g, k- b. 1 FAMILY - - act-tiviti- es U. S. A. C. LeRoy Bunnell, Clyde Morris, and Coach Lyle Tripp, new teachers, were introduced, and spoke briefly of their hopes and expectations. "Melvin Manning football captain, Naoma Gaddie, Agenda president, and Stanley Johnson, editor of the Searchlight, gape brief speaches. The appearance of the school paper on the first day of school won much favorable comment for the editor and staff. CLUB NEWS 4-- H & Kitchen Queens Cooking The club of Tremontn, entertained their mothers at a delightful breakfast and party on Thursday evening, September 2nd at the home of their leader, Mrs. Mildred Harris. A demonstration on muffin making was presented by Phyllis Cook and Beverly Manning. Following the demonstration, the girls) served their mothers a candlelight breakfast, planned and prepared by oothem. After the breakfast, games In class elections held last Wednes were enjoyed by all. High score was by Mrs. A. L. Cook. day at the high school, Homer Shurtz won The honored guests included: Mrs. was voted senior class president, with A. L. Cook, Mrs. Edgar Winchester, Fanny Hall as vice president and Lu- Mrs. Dan Briggs, Mrs. Oscar Strand, cille Lish as secretary. Fred Allen is junior president, Tho-l- a Mrs. Lee Potter, Mrs. James Manning, Jensen vice president, and Vere and Mrs. James Ransom. Yvonne Briggs Reporter. Johnson, secretary. Anare officers Jack Sophomore derson, president, Shirley Watland, SHOP THRU THE LEADER ADS 4-- H -- -- - ' OAKLAND, Calif. Cleone Goad, 13 married Leonard Newlun,, 30. Miss Goad's mother's husband is a brother of Mr. Newlun. Consequently Cleone is her mother's sister-in-laand her is her brother-in-lastep-fath- clean-u- p court. A boy and a girl are on hall duty every hour, patroling the building in an effort to prevent petty thievery. The officers are leading a clean-u- p campaign, and plan ,to establish a court for severe offenders. of Summer vacations ended for 723 students last Monday, when high school opened with a variety of apparent the first day. Harold Capener, Velda Gibbs, and Melva Davis, student body officers, conducted an assembly, featuring a farewell speech by Coach Joe Whitesides, leaving the school for a position at the 12,-00- et super-gadg- vice president, and Billie Lower, see s. one-stor- wf-p- 325.00 are directed by Frank J. Dwyer, who retary. Vera Oyler was elected freshie presfor more than twenty years has contacted Oldsmobile customers who go ident, and the other officers are Helen to Lansing for their new cars. Dwyer Winzeler, vice president, and Carma is well known to thousands of Olds- Gibbs, secretary. oo mobile owners and dealers throughout The Bruins and Agenda boys aiuf the country. He is especially familiar to many Oldsmobile "repeat" owners girls clubs at the high school, began who, year after year, have come to the school year's work with two outhim to get their latest model Oldsmo-bile- standing features, planned by the officers in two meetings held before school started. Melvin Manning, Fred Allen and? Stanley Johnson, Bruins leaders, and Naoma Gaddie, Geraldine Walker and Bear River Beth Manning, officers of the Agenda, HIGH LIGHTS have begun a hall patrol and a form A new Customer Driveaway Building, constructed to serve the people who place their orders with local dealers and go to the plant at Lansing to drive home their new cars, recently was opened as the latest step in huge modernization program. This new addition to the Oldsmobile y building 85 feet plant is a by 250 feet of brick and steel construction, the same design and construction as employed in the several other new units added to the Oldsmobile plant during the past few years. It provides the Lansing factory with modern driveaway facilities unsurpassed in the industry. It is situated on one of the street comers of the plant where the new reception room is easily accessible to the public. Its construction was necessitated by the big increase in recent years of the number of persons who preferred to take delivery of their new cars at the factory. At present, retail driveaways from the Oldsmobile plant number from 25 to 70 per day. A total of between 0 and 14,000 cars annually are delivered in this manner and it is expected that this figure will be greatly enlarged in the future due to the better facilities now offered. The new building, in addition to providing an attractive reception room for customers, also has a storage capacity for 80 cars and the Oldsmobile driveaway clearing office. half-a-doz- O i The customer driveaway operations Driveaway Facilities Added to Olds Plant re IMMORTAL INVENTOR WEST ORANGE, N. J. Eleven years ago the general manager of Thomas A. Edison, Inc.'s storage battery factory, George E. Stringfellow, yelled into the inventor's less deaf ear: "Mr. Eddison, would you be willing to continue as consultant for the battery company after you passed to the Great Beyond? Said Edison: "You are crazy." Shouted Stringfellow: "It might work. . . in your mind there is information that no one else has. Will you let the staff give you written questions about the battery every Saturday afternoon before you go home, You could bring the answers in writing Monday morning." Edison did this for two years. Stringfellow kept the notememoranda in a black loose-lea- f book. Recently Edison batterymen were troubled. The iron used in the Edison battery comes from Sweden because Swedish iron is unusually free from impurities, but traces of nickel were found in a $40,000 shipment of Swed- - CHEV. TRUCK Lg. Wheel Base No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains ish iron which recently reachAri the West Oranere Dlant. There wan no pure iron available. Dared they take me cnance mat this impure iron would cause defective batteries? A council of war was held, and the minutes of the meetine. as renorted tn the press by the publicity-wis- e firm, read: Mr. Stringfellow: "How would you like Thomas A Edison to make the decision?" Out of a safe came the sacrosanct loose-lea- f relic. Mr. String- xeiiow iuppea through the fingermarked pages, read an the farm." Pending arraignment on a charge question: "If there is any nickel in of peonage, Farmer Decker was last iron, does it adversely affect the life week released on a $1,500 bond. In of the cell?" a Clarksdale jail stayed SharecropThe immortal Edison's answer: "No pers Davis and Wiggins voluntarily harm." as material witnesses. O FATAL MAGIC - - SUICIDE DISEASE HOLLYWOOD On the 20th Pen. BOSTON Studying the problem of Fox lot in Hollywood last tury suicide has been the chosen work of men were grouped in and ambitious young Harvard psychiatdouble-decrist Dr. Merrill Moore. Last week Dr. around a tne in fa held air, piauorm Moore reached, among other things, together the conclusion fiat suicide is "an im- by piano wires. The whole thtnp' was portant disease." Other conclusions, hung by cables from enormous pul not all new to psychiatrists but en- leys on tne stage ceiling. The lower deck, with SDriners and Dada like a lightening to laymen: (1) "Suicide's huge mattress, was covered with a can incidence be materially decreased. . ." (2) It "is the ultimate expres- carpet. In fact, this 1,500-lwas a "magic carpet," which sion of a yc.sonality disorder that has Eddie Cantor has been using for three progress .i..ough known stag:3 of e weeks in his latest picture. Balancing yloal compli- ana neurosk, c'i... with rigging tne contraption for the cations a3 hysteria." (3) ride were a crew of property to medical ' treat-'me- day's It "is "Uiespo-.oiv- e men. Two were on the upper deck, ini.i to addition which, being one on tne lower. Winch Operator effective, comes too late." (4) "This Philo Goodfriend started his electric disorder can be precipated and agraised the magic car-- ! winch, slowly faand gravated by physical strain into the air Ptt! one of the sup-pet tigue, psychologic disturbance and porting cables snapped. Before even, conflict, and social and environmena warning shout could be raised the difficulties. tal had bumped down 20 Considered as a disease, suicide heavytoplatform the ground, fatally crushing cannot be cured, but it can be pre- feet vented. Some of Dr. Moore's recom- Winch Operator Goodfriend, hurting Propertyman Harry Harsha so badly mended preventives: he died in a hospital a few hours later. in(1) Reading "psychologically spirational articles" in newspapers such a3 Beatrice Fairfax's "Advice to the Lovelorn, fills "a need which we as physicians in public institutions are slow to recognize, namely, the desire of anxious persons to come in contact with the thoughts of others on daily problems." (2) Conversing for an hour with a friend, physician or priest a simple, commonplace preventive. (3) Eating a good meal, best preventive of all, because "very few persons attempt .suicide on a full stomach." How the prospective suicide is to go about getting a good meal, Psychiatrist Moore does not report. warn i cm viamh er This Merchandise Goes On Sale Saturday - 9 a. m. w li Out Goes Our Entire Stock of Silk, Broadcloth, Percale Flannel and Other Remnants Reduced to Vz Price XmwWj 1937 Step Into Tluxe New Fall Tunnel 1- -4 J II Plan Your FALL If MfJI Very Smart 1 X DRESSES OH V They'll you look and feel very well dressed! Shir-rings, corseted waist- lines and other new details that put them Way ahead! fcaa Pair V 1 -- 3 4 OSFORBS A -- '' BU i7,B;;ii BA ' ,,., Thoy Look More Ex pensive I LUXURIOUS Far Trimmed Vfcv Hi X j Hie shoes you 11 wear for dresthe sy occasions as well as on street. Rack suede vtth attractive stikAdng and perforntkms. Covered Continental heels., mmvmmmr Fall FmkUmt garssaa I I Straps .98 We tt-- 1 make 12-4- 1. 5i US J 1935 BUYING SAFE customed routine." al er THH WHO MAKES USED CAK (?iycu . eov srs going thev swell again JciC r J96VW THEIR CARm YO'VN,loI(TH,5 n ftrapVEfWTTViH0ARE.y nt O ARE -- v (Continued From Page One) YVhen Ed McGrady's career as an d Washington labor efficient, lobbyist caused him to be boomed for labor Secretary in noo, rrcuuuui Roosevelt appointed instead his wife's good friend, Frances Perkins. When postmaster General Farley recommended Ed McGrady as an assistant secretary, Madam Perkins decided she jid not want him, but changed her mind after he, as an NRAdministra-tor- , had settled the 1933 coal strike. Thereafter, when he not only did all the Department's important field work but also got credit for being its ablest member, it was no more than natural if Madam Perkins was nettled when labor leaders who had known Ed McGrady for years turned to him instead of her. At least once she drew herself up in dignity and said, "Now, now Mr. Mcuraay, i m the Secretary of Labor." honest Ed McBut Grady has more concerns than Madam Perkins. One of them is cash. Starting as a union pressman on the Boston By Fronk Chevrolet Co. -- tiSSSrllSSfS-0- ? N J.fttil $.HP) THAT COUPLE AT us Vacar uki THIS ic 7 Era. u. a. pat. off. Prepared by the Editors of TIME The Weekly Newsmaiazine 9. 19S7 M.wd fta7fT?tnootil - I m Ml f, itemed in P?3 a M , raode iBdT?manner vamF- - A COATS U! Il(B-s- o Dcaurifal rich lax . Women's BRAEMORE 32 PAIR RAYON PANTIES Cleaning Tissues Women's and Children's Small, Medium and Large 500 to Box SHOES 2 pr. 25c 19c box 50c pr. trimmings of tsswer dyed coney, wytom, CMncse goatstndvcfi dyeddogl Lowdysoft Cbaxn and habrj-tbsg-fl- es Fbterfng ncctfiucs, trSKHt-- d Tremonton, Utah j |