Show TIIE GARLAND TIMES GARLAND UTAH Many Die in Zeppelin Hindenburg Explosion Tfy Sunbonnet Girls to Applique on a Quilt" I r So quaint so colorful — thasa adorable “Sunbonnet" maidens with their bobbing balloons — yem won’t be able to wait to applique them on a quilt The block measures 9 inches Hera’s a opportunity to utillza those gay scraps you’ve been saving Yotg - ‘ w jL'WW" 7 n rV:-'- R1 S??v slM V i : '' 1 & £JA $ 0 v 's&gf KiAriha j " fP?t Av wjA ‘1- i ' This remarkable picture was made just as the giant German dirigible Hindenburg burst into flames N J t nd exploded as it was preparing to land atXakehurst following a flight from Germany r died almost instantly and of the persons aboard were plunged to earth in the ’flaming wreckage 4 rescued many were horribly injured An explosion of a gas cell in the stern was blamed for the disaster Journey’s End for World’s Greatest Airship ?P 'A $ §N fUJWWj ' 'at J rv faAA’: ?' A JL A r Sw“ A Svt f” Jpp L - ? & Wreckage preparing : S of to COMMANDED ” p 4r'f A ' "iv t ’ f was aAI rs9 nt 1 7' - i 4 i K j$ £ the huge dirigible Hindenburg after land Costing the lives of more than S v v 34 - v rafflYiyrriirfiiiwi:iai explosion at Lakehurst N the disaster was one of the the 1 J when worst in the great ship history Escapes Death in Zeppelin Disaster ZEPPELIN 1 l: J The dirigible Hindenburg’s 1937 maiden voyage which ended in flaming disaster when the airship exploded just before landing at Lakehurst N J marked the first time that Capt Max Pruss commanded the sky liner on a flight from GerLast many to the United States year he was a subordinate officer when Capt Ernst A Lehmann and Chief Engineer Rudolph Sauter of the Zeppelin Hindenburg who Dr Hugo Eckener the veteran Zepwas severely injured but escaped death when the giant ship exploded pelin expert handled the ship on as it was about to land at Lakehurst N J recently Flaming to earth schedule her regular passenger was soon a charred mass of wreckage He was schooled in Zeppelin work the Hindenburg for a quarter of a century HEADS U S CHAMBER You Wait Dog’s Tonsils Out While 7 ' - lyS'jy AX-" A: ' A i 1 kL A a-vaa- V ‘ ' A 1 t Preaa Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart Building Washington — Congress lately passed and President Roosevelt just signed rk-- "'o "V v National National I a S V i - George H Davis of Kansas City who was elected president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States at its recent annual meeting in Washington D C He succeeds Harper Sibley Mr Davis is w 4 &'' lvi) a banker a farmer and a merchant has If your dog will not eat as heartily as usually perhaps heDr At its convention the Chamber opDr Harry Gifford Wagner left and shows The above picture posed President Roosevelt’s proposveterinarians as they removed the tonsils of Cleveland al to revamp the Supreme court D Roberts The doctors assert that tonsihtis in dogs is a and called for amendments to the Fritz a Great Dane common ailment in some parts of the country Wagner labor act has has the coal bill It is therefore a law And result of the passage of this legislation you and I and every other person who uses soft coal will be paying higher prices The increase in price that will result however is not the only phase n of the law that seems to be open to criticism There are many who believe that in passing bill the (and it was done under the lash of administration leaders) our government has taken a step which is very close to oven actually a step toward fascism in America It is an action so near to the policies of fascism In Italy that close students of the Mussolini plan say they can hardly any distinction Let us see what the law does It permits all Boft coal producers in the United States to organize as in a monopoly under government control True the government is supposed under the law to fix the price of soft coal but actually the law is going to work out bo that the producers and the mine unions will establish the prices subject to the approval of a government commission It will work out this way because the law has actually legalized the right of the on to the prices producers agree they will charge by virtue of the fact that thos prices are based on the production costs in regional " areas It is provided in the law that the United States shall be divided into 23 regions or sections The United States coal commission is empowered to prescribe the prices both minimum and maximum to which coal from each of these areas or regions may be sold In that manner the law guarantees that the soft coal producers shall gam an acceptable rate on their investments Since labor costs enter directly into production costs —indeed they constitute a major factor— it becomes plain that whatever wages labor demands and obtains influences the level of the production costs and the result is a change in the selling to the price consuming public Thus when John L Lewis president of the United Mine Workers of America and head of the C I O determines that the mine workers are not being paid sufficiently high wages he demands an increase from the mine owners The mine owners or producers now that the law has monopoly passed simply submit the new costs to the coal commission and it has no alternative but to approve an increase In the selling price In conseevery bucketful quence therefore of coal going into your stove and every shovelful that goes into the furnace of a home or the fire box of a factory carries an additional tax that has been legalized by law So we see the bulk of the coal industry pass from the field of free competition into the form of a monopoly under government control If that can be described otherwise than as fascism I am ignorant of what constitutes fascism Wanhlngton D C under open competition to sell at lower prices than many of their There Is another sectcompetitors ion of the mining Industry where production costs are high and In consequence that section of the industry was barely able to scrape out a living return Under the new law the high cost mines will be assured of a reasonable return and that means that the low cost mines will gain exorbitant profit On the face of things it would seem that the low cost mines would be all for this law because of the heavy returns they can make Such however is not the case Thus mine owners pretty generally would prefer taking their chances in open competition because they can make a larger profit through a heavy volume of sales at lower prices than under the new scheme whereby the high cost mines are bound to get a share of the business Proponents of the law contend that there is an obligation to the owners of the high cost mine or to the workers they employ But what I ask is the user of coal going to do about it? What has he to say and how can he say it? Again sponsors of the legislation explain that interests of the consuming public are to be protected through the office of a consumers’ council That is there is a government official who is supposed to look after and protect your rights and mine against excessive It prices I bemay work out satisfactorily lieve however that the odds are heavy against any of us receiving any benefits in this direction able few days after President Rooselaw signed the Attorney General Strike Cummings came forth with a letter of Trusts urging congress to revise and tighten the law He said that monopoly was growing in the United States and that small businesses were being driven to the wall by the Inroads of great masses of capital There is evidence that capital is massing We need not look any further for proof of this than the law itself which permits capital to work together— the only hindrance being that which is subjected somewhat to the influence of n organized labor under the The result is exactly law the same whether the massing of takes place under private capital arrangement or under government supervision such as is legalized in the law This situation impresses me as It seems being a bit incongruous to be a circumstance where the administration is trying to run in two directions at one and the same time It is further exaggerated by the fact that the President lately has spoken with emphasis about the rapid increase in retail prices Yet besides raising wages for labor the only tangible result that I can see Aitf TavotitQ A velt under the law is high- er prices for all of us to pay Surely monopoly has a tendency always to 'increase prices It has been the chief subject of harrangue against monopoly and the Attorney General adverted to this fact in his recent appeal for legislation to prevent monopoly But why is it bad There the question for arranged to whether the law promoted by forcemonopoly privatelyand good for higher prices Senator Guffey of legalized by congress monopoly Question Pennsylvania and to force higher prices? R e p r e sentative Validity Vinson of KenPresident Roosevelt has sent word tucky is constitutional around through all government de- It will be remembered that the partments to the Supreme court once threw out the No Stock effect that no gov- n law It threw original emment worker Cambling out that law because it held that the may engage in original legislation attempted to fix stock market speculation He has hours and wages for workers and told the civil service commission that in accordance with the unani- that “among the matters to be conmous decision of the court when it when passing upon an eminvalidated the NRA was an illegal sidered” ployee’s qualifications for retention act by congress The labor proor advancement the commission visions alone were discussed in the consider whether that emmay litigation at that time But in the ployee has engaged in speculation n law those obcurrent in securities or commodities jectionable factors have been omitblush At this did seem to ted There is no way to discover be a first sound order I have whether the Supreme court will find much discussion of the matter heard howthe monopolistic practice authorized ever that gives rise to other in the current legislation to be imabout it I think there can thoughts hunch a that such proper except the be more reprehensible than declaration of policy by the con- for nothing a public official or employee to gress is not in conflict with the con- use the confidential information stitution directly which he obtains officially as the Some members of the congress basis for stock speculation On the bethe bill opposed other hand is it not questionable cause they believed it to be unconshould whether a government try stitutional There were so few of to tell any of its employees that those however that the house of cannot invest their surplus debated the bill they representatives in securities as a means only a day and a half and the sen- earnings of increasing their income? The ate debated it only a few hours President said that “bona fide inare all right but the vestments” Some sections of the soft coal inwhich for I have not been dustry objected to the bill but they question able to find an answer is “how can were quickly it be determined whether the purto the insigned chase of a few shares of stock is fry Lewie tangible fact that speculation or bona fide investit would become a ment?” law because of the power that John That brings up of necessity the L Lewis wielded over congressional difficulties of enforcement It also The chief reason for leadership to the forefront a real danthe division of sentiment among the brings is not as remote That ger coal producers was that there is a as it seemsdanger I refer to the use of wide range of costs among the pro- power in the hands of the Chief Exducers There are many mines ecutive to take away individual libwhich have low production costs and erty of action consequently they are able or were 6 Western Newspaper Union remains Pattern 5724 can use the same design on scarf and pillows and so complete a bedroom ensemble The patches are simple in form—you’ll find the work goes quickly In pattern 5724 you will find the Block Chart an illustration for cutting sewing and finishing together with yardaga chart diagram of quilt to help arrange the blocks for single and double bed size and a diagram of block which serves as a guide for placing the patches and suggests contrasting fnaterlals To obtain this pattern send IS cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle Household Arts Dept 259 W 14th Street New York N Yf Write plainly your name address and pattern number ecipa Stan MovU Star Springerle till 4 Anna I pound flour Ublespoonfula anUe teed pound powdered sugar level teaspoonfuls baking powder 1 1 3 Beat egg yolks and whites septhen together arately creamy add sugar slowly beating until bubbles appear Sift the baking powder with the flour thoroughly then add the anise seed Add slowly to the above mixture and mix well Let stand for four hours in a cool place Roll out cut into fancy shapes and place on sheets of paper to dry Bake in slow oven until coprrlaht — WNU SrYlc Little Red Schoolhouses There are 138542 little red schoolhouses dotting the nation’s One room affairs countryside they represent 57 per cent of ell American school buildings and for the most part teach good American education with the three R’s as the basis— Literary Digest Why Laxatives Fail In Stubborn Constipation to wait hour It Twtlvi to too long 24 whon relief from dogged bowola and oonotipation It needed or then enor of bacteria accumumout quantities OAS Indigestion and late causing many restless sleepleke nights If you want REAL uUICK RELIEF taka a liquid compound such as Adlerika contains SEVEN cathartic and carmlndtlva Ingrodtenta that act on the stomach and BOTH Most ‘'ovsrnlght'' laxatives bowels contain one Ingredient that acts an the lowtr bowel only Adlerika’s DOUBLE ACTION glvae your system a thorough cleansing bringing out old poisonous waste matter that may hava caused OAS pains our stomach headaches and tlooplsag nights for months OAS at Adlerika relieves stomach once and usually removes bowel eon No gestlon In loss than two houra Thla waiting for overnight results famous treatment nas bssn recommended by many doctors and druggists for SS yeara Taka Adlerika hour before breakfast or ona hour before bedtime and In a short while you will feel marvelously refreshed At all Leading Druggists 19 — 37 WNU— W LAKE’S SALT KEWEST HOSTELRY lobby la delightfully air daring tbs stuuner BwaU&S Sadie for Every Sown 200 Seeese— 200 Our cooled Bddj iTful ME! HOTEL Temple Square Jtofea $10 to $300 The Betel Tesaple Square bl— Mradly a hlsLly will al ways fled It lie phwraT lata nenanlr eaiafortal IkecMiklr aer— able oa mb fere awknlaed vfay I hi bate! toe HIGHLY RECOMMENDED Tan sW alaa appreciate vhys Its a mark of dlatlecflaa to step at two Seasrtifal hostelry BRNEST C ROSS1TER-Mg- r |