OCR Text |
Show f THE BULLETIN. BINGHAM, UTAH Xacs Iteview of Current Even is WAGE BILL IS PASSED Southern Democrats Lose Hot Fight in the House . . Secretary Ickes Is Married in Dublin Must Re-Hi- re Sit Strikers National Labor Relation! THE ordered the Kuehne Manu-facturing company, Flora, IlL, to re-instate with back pay 164 American Federation cf Labor n strik-ers. It was the NLRB'i third major n decision, but the first In-volving an A. F. of L. union. The labor board refused to an-swer 74 questions put to It by the Ford Motor company In United States circuit court at Covington. Ky. The board particularly resented being asked whether Thomas Cor-coran, Benjamin V. Cohen, John U Lewis or Homer Martin were con-- &2&vE&t. U ' fiill suited In arriving at an order charg-ing the Ford company with violat-ing the Wagner labor act Too Late for Wheat Quotas WALLACE said that SECRETARY crop control law it is too late to Invoke marketing quotas on this year's indicated bumper wheat crop. He explained that the law authorized quotas this year only in the event congress ap-propriated funds by May 15 for "parity payments" provided in the new legislation. Martin Loses in Oregon CHARLES H. MARTIN of GOV. the veteran soldier who has been fighting against the C. I. O. and other radicals, was beaten for renomlnation in the Dem-ocratic primary by Henry Hess who had the backing of labor unions and of Secretary of the Interior Ickes. Charles A. Sprague was nominated for governor by the Republicans and they believe they have a good chance to win In the fall elections, for the Democrats, there as in Penn-sylvania, were badly split. War Narrowly Averted GERMAN and Czech troops by were massed on the frontier between the two coun-tries. President Benes of Czechoslo- - I Here is an armored car detachment of Csechoslovakia's te army which was sent to the frontier to meet the threats of aggression by Fuehrer Hitler's troops that were massed on their side of the border. IV. PuJoaxd r SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK t) .Western News paper Union. House Passes Wage-Hou- r Bill REPRESENTATIVE MARY bill finally got through the house by a vote of 314 to 97, despite fierce opposition of nation's leading statesmen, liberal In his viewpoint and in his attitude toward legislation in the interests of labor and the common people." Harry Hopkins, WPA administra-tor, found occasion to say a good word in favor of Rep. Otha Wearin of Iowa, who is seeking to take the Democratic senatorial nomination away from Senator Gillette. For this Hopkins was denounced by senators who were demanding that the relief appropriations be ear-marked so they cannot be used for political purposes. Ickes Weds in Dublin HAROLD L. ICKES, secretary of and PWA adminis-trator, put one over on all but his closest friends. He sailed secretly ' ' '' J " : ' the southern Demo-crats. It was sent on to the senate, which has passed a widely differing measure and where opposi-tion blocs were re-ported forming to carry on a filibuster. The Southerners fought for differen-tials favoring their industries, and were aided bv a few Re- - vakia and his cabi-- ! net decided to call ' 70,000 reserves to the colors. Poland assembled armed forces close to the Slovakia border. Hungary was re-ported to be taking "certain military measures." France was ready to defend her ally, Czechoslo-vakia, against Nazi a eeression. and Rep. Norton President Benes from New York to Ireland and In Dub-lin was quietly mar-ried to Miss Jane Dahlman of Milwau-kee, twenty five years old and a clerk in his depart-ment. Mr. Ickes, who is sixty four years old, lest his first wife nearly three years ago in Harold Ickes an automobile acci-- publicans who called the bill a "vote catcher" that would "throw millions out of work." The measure establishes rigid wage-hou- r standards for certain classes of workers in all industries operating in interstate commerce, regardless of prevailing sectional scales. It fixes an initial wage of 25 cents an hour which steps up to 40 cents an hour in three years, and a week graduating to 40 in two years. A coalition of farm state repre-sentatives and the southern Demo-crats put over a drastic amendment offered by Mrs. Norton exempting thousands of employees engaged in the processing of agricultural com-modities from the provisions of the measure. Other amendments exempt retail establishments in intrastate com-merce; the entire fishing industry; and employees of rural weekly and semi-weekl- y newspapers with less than 3,000 circulation. The shipment in commerce of goods produced with the aid of child labor is prohibited, but child actors are exempt from this provision. When the fight ended, Mrs. Nor-ton, chairman of the labor commit-tee, was cheered and hugged by the victorious administration Demo-crats. Morgan Charges Deceit F)R. ARTHUR E. MORGAN, oust-- - ed chief of TVA, was the first witness heard by the congressional committee inquiring into the affairs of the authority. In straightforward fashion he told his side of the story, charging his fellow directors with dishonest management. He ex-plained he did not mean David and Harcourt Morgan took bribes or stole money, but that they deceived the President, congress, and the public; that they covered up important facts tending to throw doubt on the advisability of the gov- -' ernments huge social experiment; reported a false electric power yard-stick, and were subservient to politi-cal and other special interests. He accused Lilienthal flatly of de-ceit in leading trie public to be-lieve that the financial accounts of the communities buying power from the TVA include all the costs of the service they render to the public. Dr. Morgan discussed in great de-tail the celebrated "Berry marble case," involving Sen. George L. Ber-ry, Tennessee Democrat Boss Hines Arrested there was assurance that Great Britain and Russia would come to the aid of France if she were at-tacked without provocation. No wonder the governments of Europe were desperately worried by such a critical condition. Hitler must have realized that the time was not ripe for aggressive ac-tion against the Czechs, for German authorities in Berlin solemnly as-sured Dr. Vojtech Mastny, Czech minister to Berlin, and the Czech military attache that Germany planned no military expedition against Czechoslovakia. This eased the situation somewhat, but the British cabinet continued to urge Benes and his government to make all possible concessions to Hitler concerning the demands of the Su-deten German minority. It was be-lieved the Fuehrer would ultimate-ly get about everything he wants from the Czechs without a fight. Dr, Milan Hodza, premier of Czechoslovakia, and Konrad Hen-lei-leader of the Sudeten German party, were brought together In peace talks in Prague. Henlein was reported to have said he didn't be-lieve much progress In that line could be made until the government had recalled the reservists who had been mobilized. The Czechs informed the French and British governments they are willing to become a central Euro-pean Switzerland in which all races of the polyglot republic will have equal rights. However, they insist on further guarantees against Ger-man aggression to compensate for weakening their defense. In Paris it was reported that the French government asked that the United States associate itself with France and Britain in their efforts to keep Hitler from attacking Czech-oslovakia, and that Washington's reply, through Ambassador Bullitt, was a refusal to mix in the row. This was denied by Mr. Bullitt. Italy Warns France ITALY intimated it would keep out of the Nazi-Czec- h quarrel, but Mussolini broke off the friendship talks with France and warned that continued French acquiescence in the shipment of arms to govern-ment Spain would not be tolerated dent in the Southwest. The new Mrs. Ickes, red haired and pretty, is a niece of John Cuda-h- y, American minister to Ireland, and sister of Mrs. Wilmarth Ickes of Winnetka, 111., widow of Mr. Ickes' step-so- Minister Cudahy did not attend the wedding, but was represented by S. J. Shattuck, an attache of the legation. The couple left Dublin by automobile for a brief honeymoon trip. Mr. Ickes cabled friends in Washington that he would return there in a week and would be at home on his estate near Olney, Md. Plane Crash Kills Ten '"PEN persons died when a twin-motor-plane of the United Air Lines, bound from New York for Chicago, crashed and burned south of Cleveland, Ohio. The victims in-cluded seven passengers, two pilots and the stewardess. Officials of the air line said their Information indicated the pilot was forced to make a landing because of engine trouble and that the ship did not catch fire until it struck. Japan Demands Apology "MOW it is the turn of Japan to demand an apology from Great Britain. The Tokyo govern-ment felt it was gravely insulted by a statement, attributed to R. A. But-ler, parliamentary of the British for-eign office, that Japanese marines had shot many Chinese war prison-ers and civilians when they cap-tured the port of Amoy. Tokyo de-manded that the British government "peedily give satisfaction" for this sli r on Japan's honor. Ihe Japanese announced in Shang-hai that they had at last gained complete control of the 800-mil- e Tientsin-Puko- railway, and expect-ed to resume operations linking Pei-pin- g and Shanghai early in July. V,.' The Duce declared that unless France ceases aiding transmission of Soviet and Czech arms to Barce-lona, Italy and Germany may be forced to increase their assistance to the insurgents. This naturally would endanger the new Anglo-Italia- n agreement. Predestination Is Out QENERAL assembly of the Pres- - byterian church in the United States, in session at Meriden, Miss voted 151 to 130 to omit from the confession of faith these two impor-tan- t sections: "By the decree of God. for the manifestation of his glory, some Men and angels are predestined unto everlasting life and others fore-ordained to everlasting death. "And their number is so certain and definite that it cannot be either increased or diminished." TAMES J. HINES, most powerful leader of Tammany Hall and chief dispenser of federal patronage in New York, was arrested on charges arising from the policy game racket in that city. He surrendered in the office of District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey, hard hitting young prose-cutor of Manhattan's multitudinous rackets, and was released in bonds of $20,000. Lewis Backs Barkley JOHN L. LEWIS, C. I. O. chieftain, has asked labor to support Sen. Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky in the primaries August 6. In his ca-pacity as chairman of Labor's Non-partisan league, Lewis said of Bark-ley: "He is recognized as one of the Two Taxation Decisions IN TWO decisions the United States Supreme court fur-ther narrowed the field of recipro-cal intergovernmental tax immuni-ty. The rulings continued the trend in the direction of President Roose-velt's theory that the federal and state governments can tax the sala-ries of each other's employees and the income of each other's securi-ties without a constitutional amend-ment. In a decision delivered by Justice Stone, the court upheld levying of federal income taxes on employees of the Port of New York authority. In a decision delivered by Justice Roberts, the court upheld federal admission taxes on tickets to foot-ball games conducted by the uni-versity system of Georgia. WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK. Mrs. Joseph P. has been an effective social and political ally of both her father, former mayor of Boston, and her husband, am-Mr- s. Kennedy bassador to the Aids Father Court of St. and Husband James- - u news that, In ac-cordance with her husband's deci-sion, she presented only seven American women at court is one of her rare appearances in the head-lines. The 11 engaging Kennedys have been viewed more or less en bloc in the news and Mrs. Kennedy has never been in a very sharp Jens focus. She was one of the prettiest of Boston debutantes, 30 years ago, a rollicking girl with black hair and eyes of Irish blue. Back home from her convent training, she taught her father "Sweet Adeline." He was John F. (Honey Fitz) Fitz-gerald, and in his campaigns he sang his way to memorable political fame riding like a surfboard the long, lingering "swipes" of the song taught him by his daughter "the flower of his heart." Joseph P. Kennedy, her childhood playmate, was twenty-fiv- e years old when they were Fortune and married in 1914. Family Grew He borrowed $2,-U- p Together payment on a 500 house. Their fortunes grew as their family, with Mr. Kennedy president of a bank, in a year or two after their marriage. Mrs. Kennedy once told a Boston drygoods clerk that she bought 200 suits and dresses a year. It takes a heap of shopping to make a home, like the Kennedys', and she became known among her friends as a para-gon of household efficiency com-parable to the one in Solomon's off-hand apostrophe to such skills and virtues. Now she is mistress of the "castle" which was once J. Fierpont Morgan's home; also of a beautiful mansion in Bronx-vill- e, N. Y., a huge summer es-tate at Hyannisport, Cape Cod, and a villa at Palm Beach, built by one of the Wanamakers. She is slender and girlish, comely and vivacious, weighs 115 pounds and takes size 14 Has Diamond in dresses. Vion-- a Potentate net makes her 6 and she is Might Envy envied by other women for her magnificent jewels-not- able among them being a ruby and diamond bracelet which, it is said. Is matched only by the one the Aga Khan gave his princess. But she never lets the children run to unseemly display, hold-ing them to restraint in regime and dre,ss. Even without all these adventitious fixings, say her friends, she would be an ad-mirable ambassador's wife, with her own quite adequate equip-ment of tact, charm and intelli-gence. JVfAN and boy, this journeyman has helped process a lot of explorers' and adventurers' copy through the news mill. If It was ghost-writte- it had only slick and synthetic excitement, like Ersatz pastry, and if it wasn't it was usu-ally dull. Happily in contrast are the doubtlessly authentic and per-sonally written yarns of W. H. Til-ma-leader of the British Mount Everest expedition, now getting un-der way. These stories from the Tibetan base camp have a professional ease larnstrom and fluency, along with a ring of t. Everest tegrity which Ring True gives assurance that Mr. Tilman is really writing them. There is no ghost on the job here. Mr. Tilman is thirty-nin- e years old, a keen-face- hard-muscle- d Britisher of medium stature, who has been exploring ever since he left college. He has climbed mountains in the Alps and in Africa, including Mounts Kenya, Kilimanjaro and Ruvenzori. This is his fifth expedition to the Himalayas. The entrants in this high hurdle event are not young- sters. N. E. Odell is forty-seve- F. S. Smythre is thirty-seve- n and the others are all over thirty. Consolidated New Features. WNU Service. 2IB HOTEL GOLDEN -- fe In the hJ"VlM E. 2nd s. a, t TEACHERsgS Special to leichMTsiii ereu Mbjwi,, 3 bookluepmg, .hirth.d fcl time work for room ' .,u- - C. CLAY PRODUCT 1TAH n.?ii atjSjg PHOTO FINISHIN FEMALE HELP Opening foTT.J. .fiT" CHARM COHMETlfgi? Writ 169 Et ndr.. R.uT I0ULTRY Everywhere. Stock Ewlo"; 20. C. (.. Loeher. V. j INSTRUCTION YOU LIKE TODRAi PAINT - Writ, for T.IV nr.. Dept. WN, MinnH ALCOHOL mm Jure accomplished without dm ' r Narcotics under suoervisio, ,! ' eian if oesireil lntrBMiiti ')4't Ka.t fith South FOUNTAIN PENjn All Makes Tenn and Penr', j cliBtiRid All Tarts H.U, siv 3 scHooiT , Barberinir faucht in ihorl Da, ' "nod pay and steady work. Bi siitand Knrull Now. i ttiOLKK'S HAItRKRCOUPCtc ! BUILDING MATE; j INTERSTATE BRI Building and Fire Brick - f I Hollow Building Tile - 1 Pipe Drriin Tiie - Roof - SIHO 8. Ilth E,. SALT IA( OFFICE EQUIPME NS AND USED desk! tit typewriters, adding mch'i,!,.'. 8, l.. desk ex.. ana 8. gin. ATHLETIC GOC ;keat western Amir llniforma. Bats, l.lovet, Biti vollyballs, Athletic shoei, ftt IDAHO SCHOOL 8t'PPLT f ICE CREAM FREEi SODA FOUNTAINS ICE CE! TEB FREEZERS and lee Cm Bar Fixtures, Stools, Carbon Tables Alno reeonditloned (mil CO. aii 5S Poat Office Plaee Si REDUCE SENSIil REDUCE SENSIBLY I Chart if tion free. Write Dr. Wij South Dnkota. I motorcycle! j HARLEY PA RTS-A- ct eiMrid-- Uied Mntorcveles Wrltt l HOUSE OF HOPPER, IrtHc FURNITURE New x 12 carpet rax f 14.9S: s coal ranue $35.00 : Used note: aet 139.60: Used own Bargain Basement Wenm 135 South State ' PHOTOS, New Sensational, 8 glosT priati fli A 2 professional enlarirerMna China at Height off , China reached the he power under Kublai L Thirteenth century. ft - i --Deafness Oven I Wilh THE GENUINE ACOUSTICAL j It Fre Horn Demonitnti" , for fre heariM re Acousticon In? h 268 So. State St..-- -' 1 f bi Versatile Umps XXT'HEN It comes to belnj "ersa-- tile, the umpiring staff of the National leagne can hold Its own with anybody. Its members have been distinguished for a long time for their prominence in other fields of activity as well as baseball. Take Bill Stewart, for instance. For years Bill was the ace referee in the National Hockey league dur-ing the winter. Then he became manager of the Chicago Blackhawks a year ago and really began to make the headlines In earnest. He reaped more fame than an umpire ever dreamed of, when the Hawks swept through all their opposition to win the world's championship In the hockey league's Stanley cup play-offs a while back. Then there's Ernie Qulgley, so pervlsor of umpires for the Na-tional league. For 25 years be has been one of the most noted of-ficials in intercollegiate football and basketball. He was chairman of the committee to select Uncle Sam's representative basketball team In thu 1936 Olympic games in Berlin. Sneaking of Sports Sclimcling vs. Louis Bout Is Sports Riddle By GEORGE A. BARCLAY WHEN Joe Louis and Max climb into the New York ring to fight it out for the heavyweight championship on June 22, you can be sure of one thing. The fight experts won't be out on a limb as they were two years ago when these battlers first met. In 1936 the prognosticators were unani-mous in picking Louis. Columns were written about his superiority over the stolid Scbmeling. Betting odds made Max a long shot. It was simply a matter of how few rounds it would take for the lethal Louis to do his stuff. But you remember what hap-pened. It was a pugilistic Cinderella story. The underdog emerged as the And don't forget Charlie Moran. Charlie won fame as a football coach. He coached the team from Center college, in Kentucky when the Praying Colonels were famous from coast to coast, beating a great Harvard team and earning for Coach Moran the title of football's miracle man. . iiiisAii, x i Kid Golfers A "KID" golf team is represent-in- g Uncle Sam in the Walker cup events In Britain this month. The eight lads on the team cap-tained by the g veteran Francis Ouimet, average less than 25 years of age. Oldest member of the squad is Johnny Goodman of Omaha, a dod-dering campaigner of twenty-eigh- t, who is national amateur champion and former national open crown-holde- r. Youngest is Fred Ilass, Jr., of New Orleans, national collegiate title holder. In between come Ray Billows, Foughkeepsle, N. Y., runner-n- p to Goodman last year; Charley Yates of Atlanta; Johnny Fischer, Cincinnati; Chuck Kocsls, Detroit; Marvin Ward, Olympla, Wash.; and Reynolds Smith, Dallas, Texas. Two alternates, Tommy Tal-ler and Don Moe, figured they would be just wasting their time under any MAX SCHMELINQ lion.'The crafty Schmeling got Lou-is oil balance at the start, clubbed him repeatedly with his right, over-awed and out-foxe- d him and wound up by knocking him out. Louis Explodes Louis looked bad. A seven-da- y wonder had exploded. Some who had been loudest in their paeans now solemnly Insisted that Joe was all washed up. But be went on to lick a couple of set-up-s, recovered his form and equilibrium and really showed championship caliber when he knocked out Jim Braddock a year ago and won the heavyweight crown. . , . So today there is an air of cau-tion about predictions. It is an open and shut question. You can get "yes and no" answers, but few are willing to go unequivocally on rec-ord. Everybody is agreed that Louis is fistically more grown up than when he met Schmeling two years ago. Everybody is likewise agreed that Schmeling is physically a good deal older than he was. At his time of life athletically a year or two makes a tremendous amount of difference in the performance of his legs, his wind, his timing. He has looked good in his recent fights, but it is a question whether he is now hitting as hard as he did when they met before. But there are some imponderables involved and they can determine the outcome as well as anything else. Has Louis recovered psychological-ly from the beating Schmeling gave him? Will he be as confident against the German as he was against Jim Braddock? Schmeling is probably as smart a fighter as Gene Tunney was. He studies his opponents and depends on what he learns about them to crush them. He made several trans-Atlantl- c trips in order to get first-hand evidence about Louis' strength and weakness before their last fight. Both Louis and Schmeling have demonstrated that they can be r.u.l.i ii .aim "nmmiiiifi niiririHTf'ylfl"-'"- t8 ; 1 JOHNNY GOODMAN circumstances, so they did not ac-company the team abroad. Francis Ouimet is an oldster of forty-fiv- e years and has been a member of every Walker cup team lince the competition began in 1922. He has been captain of the last three teams. Here and There HAL TROSKY'S robust batting average is attributed to orders from the new manager of the Indians, O&car Vitt, to forget that short right fio'd fence in League park and try for singles and doubles . . . uoston has not de-feated Carl Hubbell since 1935 . . . Carl, however, pitched only one game against the Bees in 1936 . . . Texas Christian football players gained weight In spring practice but lost an average of two pounds each during examination week. There may be nothing to it, but Managers Burleigh Grimes of the Dodgers and Gabby Street of the Browns Insist on wearing unijtorms No. 13 . . Boston baseball writers have presented Duffy Lewis, the old outfield star and now traveling secretary with the Bees, a wardrobe trunk . Roland Logan, Univer-sity of Pittsburgh trainer, was Glenn Cunningham's first coach and Jim Potts, assistant coach of the Pan-thers, started the peerless miler in his first race when Glenn was thirteen years old . . . Max Baer never has been beaten in a return bout. Six man football is the coming sport for smaller high schools, Iowa high school superintendents and coaches agreed at the first annual six man clinic held at Iowa State college recently. Though only 19 Iowa high schools played six man football last fall sev-eral of its sponsors attending the clinic predicted that this number would be greatly augmented when the 1938 season rolls around. Sev-eral coaches from larger Iowa high schools also attended the clinic. Western Newspaper Union. JOE LOUIS knocked out It is a case of superior ringcraft, coolness and experience against youth and great natural abil-ity. Gameness may be the deter-mining factor. But whoever wins, some interest-ing possibilities will be opened up in the way of future opponents. Three fighters stand out: Max Baer, who his reputation as a big-tim- e fighter by the way he polished off Tommy Farr; Tony Ga-lent- o, the human punching bag; and Gunnar Barlund, the Swede. How to Patch Furnila J-- j Llg-h-t scratches on '; be remedied by rubM-wi- th boiled linseed o and white vinegar i proportions. For dee ,11 use a paste made oft . .j mixed with coloring with the wood in quest ;. D, umber an use burnt for mahogany, VenetJ m; walnut, burnt brown. f Aztecs Knew Blacl J J Aztec Indians K black 1 poisonous used an oil extracted medicines. ;ek Captain Cook, d' Ith Hawaiian islands, w est tives on his second 3et 1779. ?' How Penguins KP Emperor penp during: the long Af.Mt, the cgg between V g it warm, the pa" task between then Rats Drink Ink at Night Rats have been drinking black ink at night in the Swellondam, South Africa, city hall. Possibly they were blondes who wish to become bru-nettes, is one suggestion. P. Heyns, the municipal foreman, says he fre-quently has found his ink well, which he kept in a locked room, empty. Before leaving the office one afternoon he poured the ink into a saucer. Next morning it was empty. How to To clean furnitu';.. -- badly soiled ( water to which n t ktfl torpen'une. The" fej j I i 3 |