OCR Text |
Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD Prize Cow Given Roosevelt Blessing Pr! Winning WHOS C. Houston Goudiss WHAT TO EAT 4 v: y New Deal political efforts have now reached an ap- parent nationwide SCOpe in the strat-i- n egy for control of Party Row the Democratic party machinery. It is no longer a secret if it ever were concealed that the White House board of strategy is determined to lick Democratic representatives and senators who have failed to respond to New Deal orders. This has happened despite President Roosevelts repeated declarations that he Is keeping hands off of all party primaries. The only exceptions to the above information are in states where incumbent Democrats are so solidly intrenched that there is no chance to defeat them for renomination. The latest of numerous New Deal entries in primary races is in Maryland. David J. Lewis, a representative for many years, who is accounted a full fledged New Dealer in all respects, his entered the race for the senatorial nomination against Sen Millard Tydings, who has been off of the New Deal reservation many times. Mr. Lewis is to be regarded as formidable opposition. He announced his candidacy after a visit to the White House, and Democrats there was none who failed to understand that he had the presidential blessings It had been known since the court reorganisation fight that New Deal leaders were looking for someone to do battle against Senator Tydings. The Lewis candidacy virtually completes the list. There will be no New Deal candidate against Sen. Bennett Clark in Missouri. The reason is that Senator Claik, despite his frequent attacks on the New Deal program, can not be defeated for the Democratic nomination. Much the same is true about Senator Lonergan of Connecticut. The New Deal board of strategy has no love for fre Connecticut senator, but be is rather firmly entrenched in his state. So it seems the way to express the situation is that the New Deal strategists do not hate him quite enough to run a candidate against him. In Colorado, Senator Adams has opposition fiom an avowed New Dealer. Senator Adams has never been quite so outspoken as men like Clark, or Burke of Nebraska, or Wheeler of Montana, but he has been suspected of being none too friendly to the New Deal as a whole. The board of strategy, therefore, is taking no chances. Senator Ad ims opponent is Justice B C Hilliard. A few hundred mrs to the westward, a son of Justice Hilliard is seeking the Democrat, c nomination for the senate in Nevadi He is after the scalp of Sen. Pat McCarran, who has jumped off of the New Deal bandwagon when he disagreed with presidential programs. So it has been decreed that he, too, must go. The Iowa battle is now over. In that fight, Harry Hopkins, professional reliever of destitution, sought to aid representative Wearin relieve Sen. Guy Gillette of the Democratic nomination for the senate The Hopkins outburst, given to newspaper correspondents here before the Iowa primary wnst If I were a voter in Iowa, I would support Otho Wearin agunst Gillette That raised plenty of hot winds In the senate and, since it came on top of the Pennsylvania primaries and on top of Son Jimmy Roosevelts endorsement of Senator Pepl as per in Florida, it gave a to how far the thing was going. It was perhaps the Iowa meddling by Professor Hopkins that caused President Roosevelt to tell a press conference that he was taking no part at all in the state primaries. Prior to that time, however, he had quietly given his blessing to Senator McAdoo, over his several opponents in California; Senator Baikley, over Happy Chandler in Kentucky, and e it is understood he has shown s for Senator Bulkley of Ohio, who is opposed for the Democratic nomination by former Gov. George tip-oi- prif-erenc- White. As is shown by the records, things are not all milk and honey tor the 100 Not All Milk centers who Pr are and Honey set king ruiornina-tioMention was made of Bulkky in Ohio, and B uk-Ic- y in Kentucky. Sen Llmer Thomas of Oklihoma, the great advocate cf cheap money and the man who forced congress to enact legislation allowing for printing of tin re billion dollars in new silver ccrtdl cates, has opposition that promises a bitter fi 'lit to the end. The same is ttue of Senator Thomas of Utih, who is confronted with a c.impugn cf a defensive character. I! must show why he is eo strong for the New Deil to win rcnommation in t at s'ae firm which uKo cones Senateir King, Senator King has lien a violent opponeit of the Ntw n L1 el. Then, there is anoiler 100 per centi r in t! e far We st. Sen James P. Pipe has to fight oil the attack cf Weuth Cl irk for the senatorial nomination. Mr. Claik, now a mem ber of the house of representatives, is said here to be making a battle of it for Senator Pope whose chief claim to fame seems to be that he fathered the agricultural act of 1938 and nobody knows yet how to make the law work. Clarks record is regarded by many of his colleagues in the house as proving him to be a Democrat of the liberal type, for he has supported the President on numerous occasions while voting against White House dictation when he felt that he should do so. The New Dealers have persuaded Governor Johnston of Soutn Carolina to run against Sen. Cotton Ed Smith. At least, it is the assumption that the governor was persuaded to enter the race. H13 announcement came immediately after a visit to the White House. There is a fight on m another southern state also. Sen. Walter F. George has opposition for the Democratic nomination. Lawrence Camp, United States attorney at Atlanta and a Roosevelt appointee, has filed for the nomination against Senator George The understanding in Washington is that the New Dealers settled on Camp when they found that Governor Rivers of Georgia could not enter the fight because he was vulnerable on several points. Senator George, one of the ablest constitutional lawyers in the senate and long highly regarded m that body, apparently has a hard fight because of the likelihood of a divided vote. There are several other candidates in the field and it has been suggested that the vote may be so divided as to bring about defeat of Senator George. Months ago, of course. Sen. Fred Van Nuys was marked for liquidation in Indiana because of his activity against the Presidents court bill. The state machine in Indiana is completely under the domination of former Gov. Paul McNutt, who aspires to the White House, himself, in 1910, and McNutt is sticking with the New Dealers. But to turn to another phase of the interparty fight, the question of use of relief funds in politics has become hotter than a pan of boiling grease. Judge Brady Stewart, manager for Chandler in Kentucky, lately wrote a letter of protest to President Roosevelt, charging among other things that relief was being handed out only to persons "apby the Barkley faction of proved the party. From Pennsylvania there have been many squeals about political use of relief funds by Senator Guffey, and in neither case has there been proof that the charges are not true. Undoubtedly, if the WPA workers are being used politically in some places, they are being used in many places; it is a condition that must be expected if the country is going to turn relief of destitution over to politicians. They will fill their gullet first. if two billion di liars. The nnpi rtant thing to renu uiber is that a great government made sueh a costly expemm nt on its citizens, and failed. For it must be 8aid that the Warren scheme for raising prices has failed. C Western Newspaper Union, S aU1 1 li8 ducted through the co newspaper was a grat A tremendous pes were submitted and? economists on the staff 0f k 'i perimental Kitchen Lak, 4 New York city have ; ) a $ V days testing and .'1 S By LEMUEL F. PARTON every imaginable kind V i report that our and ail that They some very fine cake Czechoslovakia destiny bake is just They regret that it i v an added starter in the ble to acknowledge indcvjj cosmos of A. W. Robertson, jr f but they thank every! chairman of the tries, maker who entered the L West-Has Robertson board of the and have asked us to sa Electric Remedy inghouse each recipe will be & given tb Manufacturing Gloom for careful consideration 1 company. Because of the volume of and assured is the hopeIt always pes submitted, they ful Mr. Robertson who announces his .tile while on will $12,000,000 spend company their tests and to arrive a President Roosevelt got close to nature when he visited the httle mountain community additions and betterments this year, New Deal cow shown in the picture seems un The VV. Va., site of a federal homestead project. WWneM and, from where Mr. Robertson sits, Snn0a the five impressed by tlifl presidential friendliness. thats just a couple of white chips prizes of $10prize, 00 each, and tn ' compared to spendings to come. third prizes of $5.00 each Is the H. G. Wells Robertson Mr. Prize winners be re' Divinity Student of industry. His shape of things in these columns will in the nea to come, which he has been outlin- ture, and as Graduates With announced at the ing for the last year or two, includes ginning of the contest, Bride on His Arm the follow jig specifications: ning recipes, together v th Migratory humans, shifting Four years ago, when he enrolled receiving honorable mention north and south like the birds. the judges wiii be at Columbia Theological seminary, a prired Just whether the children will booklet to be distribute! nai as Rev. Jack Brame McMichael of be born in the North or the 11 s ally. Boligee, Ala., vowed that when he he said, is not quite South, I getl clear to me, but I expect we Thorougmy Tried L"1 will follow the policy of the True friendship is a pa4 ic! birds and have the children in slow growth, and must the North. and withstand the shocis of df Window less houses, pasteurii4 rd versity before it is entitled zed air, and artificial sunlight. One-ma-n appellation. George Wasurgtj sv planes, with folding i "E wings, kept In the hall rack, ir with the umbrellas. Pocket radios for two-wa- y talk with anybody, anywhere. Noiseless cities with doubleBo you feel bo nervous you want to kti deck streets. Are you cross and irritable? Do you i n X those dearest to you? i Flat houses, with a If your nerves are on edee, try tYlT crane which will park the PINKHAMS V LCiETBLE COUPGt A It often helps Mature calm quive mg the auto on the roof. For three generations one womai hsl a farm and village boy at He was another how to go smiling thr ash V E. Pinkhara s Vegetable Con Lydia Panama, New York, chore boy and helps Nature tone up the t. fvv? Jn I in his youth and hence not ing the discomforts from sjstem, rustler the fund ftjr orders women which must endure. school until he through grammar '4 Make a note NOW to get a bott eoff was seventeen. Then he studied law famous Pinkhams Comoound toe 1 if W1 a OUT FAIL from your druggist moretia ' i in a country office, entered pracmillion worm have n written in tetter? Robert Greenlees Pearson is among the upper 10 per cent of the for clients and porting benekt. got tice, corporations i Whv not try LYDIA E PIN graduating class at the University of Kansas this year, but he wont be then began owning and operating VEGETABLE COMPOUND? elected to Fhi Eeta Kappa, honorary fraternity, because he admitted in finished school he would graduate them. a magazine article that he had been a ghost writer for students at with a bride on his arm. A few he was president of At forty-siOld Adage many schools. lie had clients at Northwestern university, Wellesley col- days ago he was married to Miss the Philadelphia company and now A drop of honey catci es 1. lattwo hours lege, the Universities of Wisconsin and Wyoming, He guaranteed his Frances Jackson and heads a $200,000,000 company. He flies than a er he received his diploma. Here he hogshead of yin work a B average or no pay. Pearson is shown talking on the telepays liberal wage bonuses and with is shown to and bride. customer. a piospective sheepskin phone relaurges friendly, tionship between capital and labor. A A WEEK if t I" tasCj h j tawtoS prize-winni- Campus Ghost Writer Exposed re 5 3 HERVOUSfl push-butto- A '"VA: x Sherlock Holmes Son of Business Man Pilot Ends Lon" Voage Creator Weds TT "BLACK year ago that Rob-er- t R. Young, Texan, quite unknown to Wall Street, rode herd on the straying Van Sweringen A. Thornton Baker, Princeton, N. WAS only a LEAD Keeps Dogs Assjs J Evergreens,Shnite per Gallon efS e Young Texan system and Herd on railed it. It was Rail System a11 bewildenngly J., business man who turned skipper is shown after bringing his schooner into New York harbor after a voyage that, lasted 13 months and took him and his crew cor-Rod- ot complicated, Great Little Things Little things are great to but, Goldsmith. men. finally sifted down, it appeared that 0 Mr. Young had picked up a rail empire with an original investment of $225,000. He is a quiet, inconspicuous, unassuming man, and now the feature writers are just getting around to calling him a Titan. He won a KILL ALL FLIESl $3,000,-000,00- The death of an individual whom one does not know, however tant the individual Passing may be, creates of Warren only passing interest Perhaps that Is why so httle attention was paid to the death a few weeks ago, of Dr George F. Warren. Professor Warren was nationally known as a Cornell authority on the economics of agriculture; he was known, too, for his famed experiment in causing hens to lay more eggs by keeping them in electrically lighted hen houses at night But Professor Warren will go down in history for a much more important reason than either of these. It was he who convinced President Roosevelt that prices could be ontrolled by the federal government by means of changing the gold content of the dollar. Our currency structure had remained much the same for 50 years until Professor Warren became an advisor, a consultant, for the New Deal. There had been many attempts, much fanfare, many blowings of trumpets, about tight monor Wall Street control of ey money, or various other Ideas such as the fiee silver of Bryan days and the equally silly scheme of Senator Thomas of Oklahoma, who wanted to print three billion dollars m new paper money to bring the Country out of the depression. The native intelligence and solidarity of the country, however, brought us safoly llu ou ;h these periods until Professor irren came on the scene One need nut review how the Thomas scheme for punting money was forced through congress nor how the Wane n plan for control of puces was propagandized unt.l numbers of the senate and the house, knowing re thing about economic subjects, swallowed the proposal. The gild content of the dul-li- r was loweied the dollar was devalued, and the government kept the piufit, amounting to moie than senes, reports that tpe Contest which he THIS V V v ' Washington. our NEWS rw Rec;Fe! o Be Announced 1 Flawed anvwbere hiiltr attracts and Oiunmecd effect taiiD ennvtmeDt . T mm a t wiiiDotlloriDjurtaayui Lasts all d tiers Haroll to lou be halb Aveb jaw ons ft My, a mo rock-and-so- V- jf Ma J -- A into some of the world's most famed ports. The schooner was built for Baker In Hong Kong and Is made of teakwood throughout. lie was accompanied on the voyage by his sons, Hobart and A. T. Baker III. . f- A, X, Adrian Conan Doyle, second son of the late Sir Arthur Conan creator of Sherlock Holmes, is shown with his bride, the former Doyle, Anna Andersen, only daughter of the late S. Andersen, Copenhagen ship owner. The bride is regarded as one of the loveliest women in Denmark. Exciting Moment in English Motorcycle Race t zA;.-- ' ( .'"Jr ft" ?! 'bvx , . V V-- " - n H 'VAIt Jrr' i sV 1 Ns v .. . j- etult proxy battle for the control of the Chesapeake and Ohio railway. tVithin the last few years, he has infiltrated gently Into high finance, which is just now becoming acutely conscious of his presence. His family was in and around Canadian, Texas, before the battle of the Alamo. They started the First National Bank of Canadian, which is now in the hands of the fourth generation. At Culver Military academy, Robert R. Young was graduated at the head of his class, its youngest grad-CulvIVas uate, and later he attended the UniProphetic versity of Virginia. With the Du Ponts in 1918, he got his preliminary work-ou- t in finance and joined General Motors in 1922. In 1932, he founded his own Wall Street firm, with Frank F. Kolbe, his later associate in the Van Sweringen putsch. Mrs. Young Is the former Anita Tpa Eyck OKeefe, of Williamsburg, Va., sister of Georgia OKeefe, the painter. In 1935, they leased Beech-woothe Astor estate, in Newport. Mr. Young, a Democrat, like his father, paid $15,000 for a consignment of those famous Democratic convention books, which congressmen, badgering him at a senate hearing, insisted wasn't nearly so much of a bargain as the Van Sweringen deal. You are a bigger sucker than I thought you were, said Senator Wheeler. foi Aca ert E f Dont Neglect Them! J designed the k dnr I ' task t Mr marvelous 10b Their free of ai flowing blood stream I act of! The toxic impurities. a itself is constantly must matter the kidneys health " k if blood good the V. hen the kidncvj ,lJ U Nature intended, waste that may cause bodvJtwrw nagpnr suffer One may tress attack persistent headache, r PdrJL getting up under the ey - It Isnt a spill. The sidecar passenger is leaning over to keep the balance of the machine as d.flicutt turn dining the Sydenham t asc race for motorcycles with sidecars at Londons Crystal rllac! fTquent, or burmr; yaw 'tne ey e ?ot u ent L stra n it rig high 'con' and ock an c it is Is av the lequa dvmg c 11a in bi HOTEL BEN thoi LOW We ,m t coui Ol V OGPEV, J Hooma 350 Untlu 4 perxo Family Kooma for 3 0 b and Air Cooled lounge Coffee fchop Cnll Room .. , Rome of . Rot.ry-Kl-'- .n,- tchanxe Optn" an Chamber of Commerce F j , f f l I i or efi feel tired, nenwi Ae e scanty of MW may be further evidence disturbance. bladder and The recognised ts a diuretic medicine to helPlJ g get rid of tse Doan's F'',Thehy,,1DA than forty years endorsed tne c0'in!r,.tnre3 Doans Sold at all g . Dr am Nature er Skating Skating apparently was originated by tlie pumitjve Norsemen, whoso sagas boast of the ability of their fighters to move swiftly over the ice on bone runners attached to the feet with leather thongs Other nations took up the ait, the Swed-- s, Danes. Finns and Dutch all contnb-utmto its early development. In the Th.rd century, the art of ironworking was introduced in and this led eventually to Europe, the development of metal runners and thus to great improvement in skating technique. rat b () Console Mod Nos Features. WhU Service, i A' son , nhi aso s 4 |