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Show UTAH LABOR NEWS. SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH SEPTEMBER 30, 1938 Page 4 DEMOCRATS POLL A HEAVY VOTE PRIMARIES IN RUN-OF- F (Continued from Fage 1) District 13 Mrs. Albert Jensen, She has served two incumbent. terms in the house of representatives and has a 100 per cent record for labor and progressive measures. District 14 George W. Reid, an operator of a retail gas station. He is a liberal and a friend of labor. District 15 William Ingleby, inHas a splendid record for labor and other progressive measures. District 16 Thomas M. Rees, a truck farmer. He is a liberal and a friend of the aged. County Nominees For two-yecounty commissioner Roscoe Boden. For county recorder Mrs. Cornelia S. Lund. For county surveyor George M. Haley, incumbent. For constables, Salt Lake City G. R. Kelly and Benjamin S. R. Harrison. For constable, Sixth precinct Reuben II. Forbush. For justice of peace, Third precinct Arthur B. Bringhurst. cumbent. ar join the parade of victory states such as Ohio and California where League forces are dominant. Laof bors League these and other states are greatly heartened by the marked gains shown in this years primaries and are going to move steadily forward until labor in every state is organized for maximum effectiveness on the political front. UTAHS NEW DEAL CONGRESSMEN Non-Partis- n ate nomination in the Juan senatorial district. Emery-Grand-Sa- LABORITE WINS LEGISLATURE POST IN JUAB COUNTY MASSACHUSETTS LEAGUE ENDORSED CURLEY Victor G. Pett, incumbent, won the Democratic nomination for state representative from Juab county by a majority of 382. Pett had the endorsement of Labors League. He resides at Eureka and is a member of Tin-ti- c District Miners Union No. 151. successful Democratic Other candidates for state representatives nominated in the run-oprimaries throughout the state are: Davis county Harry L. Strong, Sanpete county ,H. Christensen. Utah county T. Earl Foote, disNon-Partis- Former Governor BOSTON M. James Curley, who was nomi- nated by a large majority as the standard bearer in Democratic Massachusetts in recent primaries, was endorsed during the primary campaign by Labors League of this state. The four candidates for the nomination appeared in person and stated their views to the League at a special session attended by 320 delegates representing 51 unions. Announcing choice of Curley, Frank Manning, executive director, said no other candidate in the field could approach former Governor Curleys record on progressive and Mr. Curleys labor legislation. would he statement that support the New Deal was also a factor, Manning explained. enCongressional candidates also were dorsed by the League nominated in the Democratic an Non-Partis- ff trict 2; Glen E. Davis, district Weber county 5. Macfar-- 1 II. A. an . lane, district 2. HEAVY DEMOCRATIC VOTE CAST IN CARBON COUNTY an RUN-OF- F . priSurprisingly heavy run-omary vote was cast by Democrats in Carbon county. More than 4500 Democrats voted, while the Repub-- 1 LABOR ENDORSED contest attracted less lican run-oSENATE CANDIDATES than 300 followers of the G. O. P. WIN IN UTAH COUNTY elephant. The successful Carbon county Arthur 0. Ellett of Spanish nominees are: Democratic State and Fork, Representative Four-yeD. A. commissioner Francis S. Lundell of Benjamin, are the Democratic nominees for Tidwell. Two-yecommissioner state senators from Utah county. Both were endorsed by Labors Peterson, incumbent. County clerk B. II. Young, inLeague. Ed Johnston, Mt. Pleasant mer- cumbent. County treasurer A: N. Smith. chant, received the Democratic in state senator nomination for County sheriff C. A. Knobbs. County attorney Ed Sheya. Sanpete county. senatorial In the Beaver-Millar- d County assessor Chas. Semken. In the Republican run-o- ff for district, Margaret Cates Rohn is the Democratic nominee. county commissioner John W. Byron A. Howard, Emery county Holden defeated John H. Redd by Democratic chairman, won the sen- - a vote of in July." Labors Non- William S. Knudsen, president of General Motors, said auto inPartisan League dustry is certain to find auto sales LEAGUE up from 25 to 33 3 per cent over 1937 by the end of the coming WINS SENSATIONAL The fact that one is active or year.' VICTORIES Steel production for next week busy does not necessarily mean more estimated at 44 per cent La that one is either restless or superof The sensational victory ficial. Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt. Cal than double three months pre bors of League south in and marked viously. gains ifomia, Electric power production in U. era states where independent lib S. for week ended September eral voters rolled up new high to totaled 2,148,954,000 kilowat hours, tals at the polls, spurred the largest output thus far in 1938. job of educat Leagues long-tim- e Rise accelerated, says one of ing and organizing pro-labvot the Journal of Commerce headlines, ers. by U. S. spending. Progress of the League everyIt is true that relief workers where cannot be measured by the averaged only $54 per month but same yardstick as in such states thats not dead money. Its spent as Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, promptly and stimulates business California, Montana, Oregon anc all along the line. elsewhere where liberal forces have been forming for many years. The President declined to partici- THE CANDIDATE Even in those regions where pol POLITICAL OUTLOOK pate in other northern and western taxes, county unit systems of senatorial contests. the votes, and other re loves the he Who counting workingsays (Continued from Page 1) In the south he opposed George on the ballot, operate to strictions man? vention officers. in Georgia, Smith in South CaroThe candidate. keep democracy from being fully Arrangements committee mem- lina, and Tydings in Maryland, and And the League . drive has he time him works effective, every bers in Ogden are: S. T. Epper-se- n, lost all three. Finally he fought been can? making gains as demonstratchairman; Frank M. Brown- OConnor and won. 1938 primary results. For ed the The candidate. by But that doesnt tell the entire Who is it ing, Ed Vended, Mrs. Ira Huggins, you with a smile. a reactionary like Senator Cotton and Mrs. C. C. Johnson. story. It should be noted that no And treats greets the finest style, Ed Smith of South Carolina, to in you Democrat who has openly an- Whose virtues be even seriously challenged marks charm you for SENATOR BONES nounced his opposition to New a distinct forward movement of ? awhile WONDERFUL SHOWING Deal principles has been nominatliberal forces there. The candidate. ed. Even in Maryland, Tydings Marylands pro - labor voters The newspapers and press serv- was constantly proclaiming that rolled thousands of votes to Who the up stops grasp you by (A Total of 124 Issues) ices of the G. 0. P. ilk did not fea- the President should not attack him state came ? the and hand throughout ture primary election returns from because he had gone along about N within a few thousand of unseat The candidate. the state of Washington. 99 per cent of the time. Who is so hard to understand ? ing Senator Millard E. Tydings in One Year Each: Why? the most sizzling campaign the The candidate. Because it would have been SAFE FOR Who hands the bunc out good state has ever seen. Vast sums glad tidings to New Deal Demo- DEMOCRACY of corporation money were pourec and strong, McCalls Magazine crats. Who would never commit a wrong into Maryland on behalf of TyFrom the state of Washington One of the shrewdest political According to his little song? dings, yet he was barely able to comes the report that Senator observers in California Pictorial Review . hold his earlier strongholds with writes: The candidate. Homer T. Bone, a great New DealThe political situation looks to of the mastate support powerful er, in the recent primaries polled me like a sure victory for the Dem Who calls you honest sons of chine. Womans World about 30,000 more votes than all ocrats in November. In The results in South Carolina toil? framing the other senatorial candidates on the state and Maryland clearly showed that The candidate. Downey, candiboth the Democratic and Republi- date for platform,and Good Stories candiit is but a question of time when Who Senator, has Olsen, a as smooth tongue can tickets. date for governor, put the soft hose and other southern states will oil? He defeated his Democratic oppedal on the The candidate. pension The Country Home 4 a two and and to 1, ponent got plan and played up their devotion I Who makes those promises to you deny those economic rights withhalf times as many votes as his to the New Deal. About what he intends to do out which civil rights themselves Republican rival, Ewing D. Colvin. Both men are undoubtedly sin-- 1 And when elected The Farm Journal ? skidoo are a hollow mockery. says cere in the latter declaration, and, I The candidate. SABATH TO HEAD so far as I can see, the big majorTHOMAS H. WEST. SPREAD OF FEDERAL FUNDS And Your Favorite HOUSE RULES COMMITTEE ity of California voters are still G. O. P. ORGAN ADMITS FAIR, to the President. BEWARE OF With John OConnor out of the loyal UTAH LABOR NEWS THOSE WHO For four years spokesmen and House the chairmanship of the YELL RED columnists for the Republican orRules Committee passes to Con SQUAWKS DROWNED OUT BY NEWS OF and Liberty League aid ganization A. Sabath of J. Chicago. gressman All Seven Publications Ohio Red hunt- societies have claimed that the He is the father" of the House, BUSINESS RETURN ers who yell Communist at Roosevelt administration was having served longer than any othValue $4.75 its issue of September 8 the I one trying to improve the living spending most dollars where most er member, and is a thorough-goin- g New York of mass standards of Journal the Am Commerce the votes were needed. This thesis was of de Progressive with a splendid laplored Federal expenditures for erican people, were lashed by expanded lavishly through several bor record. For Only My notion of the Rules Commit- work relief, the implication being Secretary of the Interior Harold pages of Life magazine in preparathat should in a relief delivered be here. to tion Ickes, returned speech the for 1938 the is and is that it tee, says Sabath, campaign The drawing of this odorous millions of copies were creature and not the master of the the states, as under President sent out as - with Hooverville colored herring across the trail is en- source material to propagandists House, and that it should use its Hoover couraged by those who, having for hate Roosevelt clubs and to power to facilitate the passage of nies. In the same issue themselves as parasites Republican county and precinct fastened the of Journal block to progressive legislation, not of Commerce also in the Wall upon our social and economic sys- workers. it. t Street Journal appeared such items tem, have grown obese from the Monthly and annual reports of as: special privileges upon which they Federal emergency agencies refutFACTS ABOUT Retail sales of metropolitan de- have been permitted to gorge ed the assertions but THE PURGE they were partment stores have shown a themselves, he said. disregarded by metropolitan newsTo the red hunter every man papers, as has also been an article Foes of the Administration con- sharp increase during the week, who would bring about in a recent issue of The Annalist. woman or well ahead a of tinue to circulate misleading sto- running year ago. in our economic sys- This article, by Theo. R. Goldsmith, demand in for improvements ries concerning the alleged presiExpansion heavy so tem dde to no longer be of the Goldsmith Washington ServFederal that goods dential purge. (machinery) They claim, for said that 60 per cent of the citizens ice and H. R. Baukhage, WashSend your order to the has won outlays. instance, that F. D. As a result of recent spurt in of America are living at or below ington newspaper man long known only one out of ten contests. Of course, the fact is that on his contracts awarded, volume of high- the margin of a decent existence as commentator on western tour the President openly way construction under way in re- is a Red or a Communist who is N. B. C.s Farm and Home Hour, indorsed Barkley of Kentucky and mainder of 1938 reflect sizeable dangerous to the welfare of Am- presents two yard-sticby which erica. Federal expenditures may be meashad a word to say for Bulkley of increase over 1937 level. The fact is that the man who ured. One is the formula of the Bank deposits as of September Ohio, Thomas of Oklahoma, Cara28 Fourth East St.9 . most is to StatisStandard 30, of McAdoo according dangerous to our institu- Hayden-Cartwrigof and Federal Road Arkansas, way California. With the exception of tics Co., will probably be close to tions is the man who would deprive Act of 1916, the other the unemrecord high. any citizen of those civil rights ployment census figures of 1937. McAdoo, all were elected, and Salt Lake City which are guaranteed to him by of iron in DownAn accompanying table in the pig Daily production conqueror, Sheridan ey, is a 100 per cent New Dealer. August was 23 per cent higher than the Constitution or who would (Continued on page 5) ff ff 1-- NON-PARTISA- N ar an -- ar Non-Partis- Non-Partis- an f86-to-10- or 6. Publications $30-a-we- PUT-IN-BA- Y, d non-partis- an ks - Mc-Ado- os ht Utah Labor Hews |