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Show The question is How CAN you drink beer that comes from CAN?" My Best Wishes 1936 That The. for Provo and Year Utah County Labor will be a Prosperous and Happy One. TTo Qireetiimgs IPirovo and UtisiEm (DoTuurnity ILalboir READ THE ADS ON THIS PAGE PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT OPENS 1936 DEMOCRATIC CAMPAIGN D. D. Boyer OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN Out of Town Patients Given Prompt and Courteous Service 346 No. Univ. Ave. Phone 287 PROVO, UTAH FRIEND OF LABOR or special classes endowed great advantages of social or with ing eco- nomic power. He, like Jefferson, faced with the grave difficulty of disseminating facts to the electorate as a whole, was compelled to combat epithets, generalities, misrepresentation and the suppression of facts by the process of asking his supporters, and indeed all citizens, to constitute themselves into informal committees for the purpose of obtaining the facts and of spread- - STOP AT Russ Trailer Inc. OOTEL ROBERTS Right on the Job to Serve Organized Labor Provo, Utah All Makes Repaired Makes All Bought and Sold p Service Complete Part, Accessories, Tires, etc. One-Sto- Friend of Labor AUTO LOANS Best Wishes to Labor in 1936 BUTLERS 150 North University Ave. Phone 366 PROVO, UTAH Womens and Childrens Ready-to-We- ar well-bein- Infants Wear VITALITY SHOES Our Best Wishes For Prosperity to Provo and Utah County Labor Art Embroidery Yarn Craft 28 West Center Phone 316 Provo, Utah Friends of Labor BUY YOUR 1936 HUDSON or TERRAPLANE FROM SCHOFIELD AUTO CO. Storage Phone 14 UTAH PROVO, Wishing a Prosperous Year For Labor of Provo and Utah County MUTUAL COAL & LUMBER CO. PHONE 357 Best Quality Union Mined Complete Line Coal Building Materials 5th So., 2nd W. Provo, Utah 'Friends of Labor BEST WISHES TO PROVO AND UTAH COUNTY LABOR DRUG CO. HEDQUIST Two Stores in Provo , No. 110 No. West Center 2104 Phone 22 West Center Phone 8 Best Wishes to Labor CRANE MATERNITY HOSPITAL MRS. ELIZ A. CRANK Matron Registered Nurses in Attendance Day and Night Patients of All Registered Physicians Accepted Phone 1156 382 So. University Ave. PROVO, UTAH D. BE A HAPPY AND PROSPEROUS YEAR FOR ALL Sheriff E. G. Dumell And Force of Utah County Our Sincere Best Wishes to Utah Labor Claudin Funeral Homes Private and Emergency Ambulance PROVO 74 PHONE SPANISH FORK SPRINGVILLE 142 Appreciative Letters UTAH Congratulations and Best Wishes to Labor 8 - congress last Friday evening I received many appreciative letters and telegrams from all over the country and I think it will interest you to know that within a few hours I received more of these than at any time since the critical days of the spring of 1933. I have carefully read those letters and telegrams and found two facts which are worthy of repeating to you tonight. The first is that a very large number were sent to me by families who evidently heard my message while grouped together in the My wife and I family home. want .you to know how much we or the Jones appreciate etc. family, gathered tonight with our friends, sends you this message of In other words, as confidence. more greatly and perhaps evenoccasion other on than any greatly government. Grateful For Support I am naturally grateful for this support and for the understanding on their part that the government of the United States seeks to give them a square deal and a better deal seeks to protect them and to save them from being plowed un der by the small minority of business men and financiers, against whom I shall continue to wage war. We can be thankful that people in all walks of life realize more and more that the government is a living force in their lives. They understand that the value of their government depends on the inter est which they display in it am the knowledge they have of its PAYSON 72 II R I V E R S The Union Mens Outfitters Store S M A THE II. G. BLUMENTIIAL CO. Sheet Metal Worka All Facilities For Plumbing & Heating Filling Any Order 474 West Center Phone 109 Provo, Utah Our Best Wishes to Provo and Utah County Labor MADSEN CLEANING CO. Specialists in CLEANING AND DYEING OF FINE WEIRING APPAREL Phone 475 119 North University Ave. Wishing a Successful Year Ahead For Provo and Utah County tabor P. L. LARSEN PLUMBING Plumbing 343 West . Repairing . Warm Air Furnaces Friends of tabor Phone 574 PROVO, UTAH Heating Center Utah Timber & Coal Co. BUILDING MATERIALS Phone 232 Union Mined I know you will be surprisec by lack of comment on my part tonight on the decision by the supreme court two days ago. I cannot render, offhand, judgment without studying, with the utmost care, two of the most momentous opinions ever rendered in a case before the supreme court of the United States. The ultimate results of the language of these (Continued on page 4) 164 W. 5th No. Friends cf Labor THE PROVO BOOK BINDERY Leather Loose Leaf Devices Complete Bookbinding Service Gold Stamping Ledgers Bindings Paper Ruling Tic Most Modern Equipped Library Bindery in Utah Phone 740 PROVO, UTAH East 5th North 58 CARBON LABOR WESTERN DISTRIBUTORS, INC LEADER VISITOR BEVERAGES board Frank Bonacci, Utah member of the United Mine Workers of America, spent several days in Salt Lake City last week. He came in from Carbon county with George Lambert, district vice president, who was en route to his home at Rock Springs. Mr. Bonacci informed the Utah Labor News that coal mines at Carbon county are operating at a good speed. Most of the members of the union are working. Mr. Lambert delivered a rousing address to the monthly meeting of the U. M. W. of A. delegates held in Price. He urged the mem-er- s to stand together and lauded President Roosevelt for the cooperation he has given to the coal miners and other working people in efforts to improve conditions. Other speakers at this meeting were Robert H. Smith of Salt Lake City Mailers union No. 21, who urged the support of the union la-and union-mad- e products. Don lacking of Spring Canyon, Car-io- n county chairman of the Ute.h state direct primary league, made a short talk concerning the purposes of the organization. President P. M. Peterson of the State 'ederation explained the coalition voters. Other of nonpartisan guests at the meeting were Tom Gilligan of Salt Lake Bartenders' union, and George W. Smith of the Salt Lake Culinary Alliance No. ' ' 815. Mr. Bonacci said that the union coal miners in Carbon county are ; oining cooperating organizations :o make the Presidents birthday ball a success. el Prosperity to Labor PROVO HIDE & FUR CO. Buyers of Hides, Pelts, Furs, Wool and Junk Sam Perlmann, Manager Friend of Labor Used Auto Parts for All Makes of Cars 148 West 6th South Phone 367 Provo, Utah FISIIEWS BEER G. W. McLennan, Manager A Friend of Labor PHONE 536 48 Best Wishes to Labor B. D. Palfreyman General Contractor 167 Phone 1096 East 2nd North PROVO, UTAH Best Wishes to Provo and Utah County Labor For Ladies Ready-to-Wea- Commissioner and Shoes r LEWIS LADIES STORE 68 WEST CENTER ' PROVO, UTAH Founded by an Empire-Builde- r for the Builders of New Empires Brigham Young University offers practical training in five colleges: Arts and Sciences, Applied Science, Commerce, Education, and Fine Arts. The 33 departments give 1500 courses. Important Dates: January 27-3- 1 March 23 Spring Quarter Begins June 15 Summer Quarter Begins For Information, Address TIIE PRESIDENT BRIGILVM YOUNG UNIVERSIT Provo, Utah Mark Anderson, Mayor John P. McGuire , PROVO, UTAH North 3rd West Leadership Week Mayor and Gty Commissioners Commissioner 1936 tains it. (City o IProvo Walter P. Whitehead, PROVO, t UTAH Friend of Labor SUCCESS TO LABOR IN policies. A government can be no better than the public opinion that sus- EXTEND THEIR BEST WISHES FOR A HAPPY, PROSPEROUS AND COOPERATIVE YEAR FOR LABOR Here Friendship Dwells and Proves Itself FRIENDS OF LABOR screen of charges and countercharges of a national campaign, constitute yourself a committee of one. To do this you need no parchment certificate, to do this you need no title. To do this you need only your own conviction, your own intelligence and your own belief in the highest dutv of the American citizen. To act as such a committee of one you will need only your own an appointment appointment, which carries with it some effort, some obligation on your part to carry out the task you have assigned to yourself. You will have to run down statements made to you by others which you may be lieve to be false. You will need to analyze the motives of those who make assertions to you, to make an inventory in your own community, in order that you may After my annaul message to the Friend of Labor PROVO, recommendation that each anc every one of you who are inter ested in obtaining the facts anc in spreading those facts abroad, each and every one of you inter ested in getting at. the truth that lies somewhere behind the smoke recheck for yourself and thereby be in a position to answer those who have been misled or those who would mislead. I. G. A. STORE 80 WEST CENTER ry. Whatever may be the platform, whoever may be the nominee of the Democratic party and I am told that a convention is to be held to decide these momentous questions the basic issue will be the retention of popular govern ment an issue fraught once more with the difficult problem of dis seminating facts and yet more facts, in the face of an opposi tion bent on hiding and distorting facts. Get the Facts That is why organization, not party organization alone im portant as that is but an organ zation among all those, regardless of party, who believe in retaining progress and ideals, is so essen tial. That is why, in addition to organization, I make this specific check and Q. JHTeirariod A Union Market MAY 1936 red-blood- ed n, RUSS TRAIIER,' President Service Sales 50 E. 1st North them abroad fellow wokrers. I am aware that some wisecracking columnist will probably say that good old Jackson no doubt realized that every American citizen considered himself a committee of one Jackson anyway. Nevertheless, got his ideas and his ideals across, not through any luxurious propaganda, but because the man on the street and the man on the farm believed in his ideas, his ideals and his honesty, went out and dug up the facts and spread them abroad throughout the land. National Election History repeats I am becoming dimly conscious of the fact that this year we are to have a national election. Sometimes at the close of a day I say to myself that the last national election must have been held a dozen years ago so much water has run under the bridge, so many great events in our history have occurred since then. And yet 34 months, less than three years, have gone by since March, 1933. History repeats In these crowded months, as in the days of Jack-sotwo great achievements stand forth the rebirth of the interest and understanding of a great citizenry in the problems of the nation and an established government which by positive action has proved its devotion to the recovg of that citizenery and since I have been In the White House, I have the definite feeling1 that what I have said about the great problems that face us as a nation received a responsive, an appreciative and an understanding answer in the homes of America. This means a lot to me. The other interesting fact about these letters and telegrams is the very great number of them that come from business men, store keepers, bankers and manufacturers. The gist of their messages to me is that they appreciate and are grateful for my statement that it is but a minority in business and finance that would gang up against the peoples liberties. I reiterate that assertion tonight. By far the greater part of the business men, industrialists and other employers of the nation seek no special advantage; they seek only an equal opportunity to share in the benefits and obligations of Scholarship - Spirituality - Character |