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Show UTAH LABOR NEWS. SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH. SEPTEMBER LANDING ON LANDON! Gov. Landon wants academic freedom. So does everybody else That makes it unanimous. It cancels out but it doesnt add up, because Gov. Landon has made the schools of Kansas the goat. When a feller is going to run for president he ought to start about ten years before to get the record straightened out anc cleared up. When theres a bad spot in the tablecloth you put a plate over it, or else jou talk about something else. Landon talks about something else. lie talks about academic freedom for teachers. Nin hundred Kansas teachers are cut of jobs. They have aca demic freedom lots of it . Kansas kids get gypped on the price of their school books. The road to education is made hard for them. The Kansas schools are a hole in the Landon tablecloth so he puts a plate of hash over it and talks about something else, picking cn that nobjciy has any quarrel with. But the ghastly Kansas school situation sticks out like a sore thumb. About ninety per cent of the daily newspapers refuse to side with the people in this campaign. Tts a gicat chunee for the labor and farm papers to perform grand public service. d these new have a lot to do with it. hard-surface- (Continued from page 1) sion. He made an enviable record. He has made a thorough study of roads the states problems. Ho is a When it member of the Committee of Nine. rains, the water runs right off em, This committee is made up of three senators, three representatives, and three members named by Governor Blood. They have delved into the needs of the state. Mr. Child has served as secretary of the committee, which will have a comprehensive report of the needs of the state. It will be the most valuable report ever given on the problems of Utah. It covers taxation, home exemptions, treatment of fuels, The gathering. correspondents natural resources, and many other were so dumbfounded by the naive phases that the legislature must comment on one of our great na tional problems that they couldnt sas. Lotta jobless teachers could use some dimes. speak. As the writers walked away, Landon was an oil man, leaving Average Alf to his dreams, one remarked: Landon was a fox. And thats the man who asBut there's no use completing pires to be President of the United that rhyme, because until John States. Hamilton quits talking nobody can be quite sure which it is thats Mr. Ilearst wrent to Topeka running for President. Maybe it There to have a big look see. isnt Landon at all. Mr. Hearst said in Topeka, Landon plans two more trips to Little Alf, dont I love thee? make speeches. Thats another Alfreds reputation, couple of million votes for Willies circulation Careful calculation A lot of folks take a look to see Fearsome combination, where the Liberty League is going Fool the population. and then they go the other way. Mr. Landon will find that out on a Mr. Hearst went to Italia certain day in November. On the Fascist liner Rex. Mr. Landon said Ill tellya, Platitudinous vacuity isnt Something tells me its a hex. enough to fill the presidency. Every indication And concantination Shows the population, Wiser than tarnation Balks that calculation. Now you take when quick like. I was a boy in Kansas, I used to drive a horse and buggy. The buggy dug ruts in the dirt roads. Those ruts held water. Then, the horses big, plopping hoofs would make indentations in the mud. These hoof-marheld water, too, from it runnin kept off, making floods. A heavy silence fell over the ks Landon, in his last big speech, criticized the indirect taxes, but the only tax he promised to re-pwas the tax on corporation That tax is levied in surpluses. such a way as to bear down on those able to pay. It provides a cushion for small business, taxes Wonder, has anybody yet told fairly the big fellows. Gov. Landon that Hearst now has Now wouldnt it be nice to help two on him? Milwaukee strikes such corporations as U. S. Steel? and Seattle. do. would Landon what Thats Then Steel could have more money G. 0. P. headquarters are reto fight unions. ported in confusion. Probably pracelection. Believe it or rot, this HAP- ticing up for the day after PENED! When the nation was stricken During the eminent Kansans Landon was for a dictator and he recent staged visit to the old home Roosevelt to have all the town in Pennsylvania, when he wanted he needed. Now Landon power pulled all the stale political hokum, criticizes what he then.- - praised. including the kissing of midwives When the devil was sick. . . and babies, there occurred a very Funny fellow, that Landon. Go strange incident. and laugh. ahead The newspaper men assigned to cover Landon are smart boys. Why was it that his schoolSome of them could even tell you the called Landon mates who was vice president under a about there is What fox? Hoover. They were all sitting fox? around listening to the platitudes of Average Alf, who that very day Rockefeller ought to go to Kan- had discovered that America was chock-a-bloc- k Americans. with Somehow, the talk drifted around to Mississippi flood control. Now LEMKE PREFERS the terror of the Father of Waters SCAB WORKERS! on its annual rampage is something that grips millions of our fellow Americans who live along its MILWAUKEE (LSP) The 2,000-miattitude of Father length. Its destructive friendly floods have ruined hundreds of mil- Coughlins Union party and his lions of dollars of fine crops. How candidate for president, William to control this devastating force Lemke, toward organized labor has for generations engaged' the was exemplified again. best engineering brains of the Only the threat of a mass picket country. Progress is slow and line forced the Lemke supporters n musicians to replace the costly. One of the scribes asked Aver- with union musicians to entertain age Alf what he proposed to do the audience at a Lemke rally here. about it, IF elected. And this The change was made at the last believe it or not, was Alfs reply: minute, after several days of neWell, boys, Ive been thinking gotiations in which the Lemke out-- 1 You know, I think fit insisted on scab players. about that. al POLITICAL OUTLOOK le tJJo B&o - THE BIG ALL -- UTAH SHOW 1936. 3 deal with in the near future. Because of the importance of this committees work Mr. Child should be nominated and elected to the senate without any opposition. Mr. Child is serving on the planning board, recovery boartl, art commission, and other important activities of the state. The state senate needs men of Mr. Childs caliber. Nominate him and you will not go wrong. Another worthy aspirant for the senate is Peter S. Marthakis. He is a member of the house of representatives, where he served well. His voting record is beyond reproach. Marthakis is a University of Utah graduate and for the past 18 years has taught mathematics at West high school. His program is adequate old age pensions, general assistance to the underprivileged, encouragement to the establishment and operation of industries to provide employment at good wages and better conditions for labor. During the 21st session of the legislature Marthakis served on many important committees, and his voting record on labor, agriculture, and social welfare bills, is 100 Economic Highlights Happenings That Affect the Dinner Pails, Dividend Checks and Tax Bills of Every Individual. National and International Problems Inseparable from Local Welfare. American industry was created by the American people. In return, industry has created for the American people the highest standard of living in history. So says Factory Management and Maintenance, one of the McGraw-Hi- ll publications, in a brief history of manufacturing industries in the United States. Biggest internal change of the last hundred-od- d years has been Americas transition from a to a primanly-industri- al nation. Between 1820 and 1930, the countrys population Power first multiplied wTas the steam, then electric prime cause of this bloodless revolution. Where the average factory worker had 1.25 horsepower at his command in 1879, he had 4.86 at his beck and call in 1929. In the preceding 1929, the survey says, the machine created over 1,000,000 jobs in 16 industries alone. manufacturing Biggest employer of the manufacturing industries in 1929 was electrical apparatus and supplies, with was 328,700 workers. Runner-u- p motor vehicles with 224,600. Third by a nose was motor vehicle bodies and parts, with 222,700. No other industry even came close to these giants, fourth place being held by (Continued on Page 5) 13-fol- per cent. He is a student and observer of general problems with which we are confronted. He would make an excellent senator. (Continued on Page 6) d. half-centu- ry IBs the Lighter Task A kind old gentleman, seeing a small boy who was carrying a lot of newspapers, said: Dont all those papers make you tired, my boy? Naw, I dont read em, replied the lad. KEEP IN THE (CoTuumty (Comnunmissiouni 4 .. Loyal. Experienced. A Man .. Capable Unselfish Devotion of the Soil J. R. Rawlins, candidate for nomination for the office of County Commissioner, has had an exceptional training along the lines of qualification for this important office. He was bom in Salt Lake County. After completing his education in the common schools and at the Brigham Young University, he followed teaching for a number of years. Later, as president of the Jordan School Board, he carried out an extensive building campaign, which included the Jordan High School. For many years he has been a successful farmer, livestock grower and poultry man at Draper, where he maintains a modem home and farm. , non-unio- II. Nearly every office of public responsibility held by Mr. Rawlins has come to him unsolicited. During the many years when it was hopeless to expect victory at the polls, he continued to serve the Democratic Party with unquestioned loyalty and with no other remuneration than a sense of duty well performed. Among the offices he has held are district chairman for over 30 years, precinct chairman and member of the Salt Lake County Committee. He has acted as delegate to nearly every County and State Convention since the Party was organized in Utah. He is now serving a second term as president of the Sage Brush Democratic Club. Offices of Trust The positions of trust and responsibility to which Mr. Rawlins has been elected or appointed are too numerous even to mention here. It is a high compliment to his capabilities that he was unanimously appointed to finish the un' expired term of Commissioner Edward E. Howe at the time of the latters resignation. It is generally recognized that he has served on the Commission as a 'sound business man and experienced counselor. At the present time, Mr. Rawlins is a member of the Executive Committee of the Utah State Farm Bureau, is president of the Salt Lake-TooeBeet Growers Association, president of the Utah Sugar Beet Growers Association, which has a membership of 8,000. In January, 1936, he was elected and is now servof the National Beet ing as Growers Association, an appointment that is acclaimed as real recognition for Utah. At the time of his appointment to the County Commission, he was also serving as director of the Utah State Poultry Producers Association and as of the State Board of National Recognition His unusual experience and his seasoned judgment in matters of business policy have qualified him to sit in counsel in committees of national importance. Since the election of President Roosevelt, he has been called to Washington on six occasions to confer on matters of legislation vital to agriculture. He has addressed large gatherings of farmers in several western and middle western States. le RECORD-BREAKIN- G Vice-Preside- nt 0cT! EXHIBITS OF THE PRODUCTS OF UTAH FARMS, HOMES AND FACTORIES Hr MAKE YOUR PLANS NOW TO BE THERE Vice-Preside- nt . A Sound Business Man It is apparent from the foregoing brief summary of J. R. Rawlins achievements that his experience has covered the basic and broad fields of human welfare. He has sound business judgment. He is sympathetic and considerate He knows, intimately, the in his dealings. needs of the people he serves and he is in full accord with the aims and policies of the New Deal. Noinndirmfce (Political Adv. by Thomas Williams, 215 Wentworth Ave., S. L. City.) v |