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Show UINTAH BASIN RECORD Eternal Light Peace Memorial for Gettysburg WHOS juMurnimrfltii J . 1 NEWS 4thTsL THIS When In HOTEL Land,Me, 'tEo GOI.DE.N- milt 6 WEEK Washington. It is curious how 'trade winds blow in politics. We, here in Washing- Phenomenon ton, have just wit- - nessed what can well be called a phenomenon. It grows out of the primaries in two widely separated states, Florida and Pennsylvania. The fact that it was a Democratic primary in each instance, however, makes possible this analysis and discussion of details. Taking up the primaries in their order, there was the primary in .Florida where Sen. Claude Pepper, 100 per cent New Dealer, indorser e pensions, and (of Townsend himself indorsed by James Roose-jvel- t, son and secretary of the President, licked the pants oft of his challengers. He polled more votes 'than Rep. J. Mark Wilcox and Gov. Dave Sholtz combined. It was, without doubt, a New Deal victory for which the President can claim justifiable credit. The second primary was that in Pennsylvania where there were (three candidates for the United States senatorial nomination among the Democrats and three for the (Democratic gubernatorial nomination. There were two candidates for ,the Republican nomination for each of these offices, as well, but that fact will be treated later. Few party primaries in modem times developed the bitterness that 'flamed in the Democratic test in Pennsylvania. It was the first time that organized labor, as such, had come out into the open with avowed 'candidates and it was the first time 'Democratic National Chairman Far- ley has taken a hand in attempting to tell the voters of a state what to da In addition, there was a state party committee which insisted .upon selecting a slate of candidates in regulation boss fashion. So there .were all of the elements of a rough fight, and it happened according to in Politics old-ag- for-,m- er forecast Mr. Farley made an eleventh-hou- r public appeal to the Democrats of Pennsylvania "for harmony. He 'asked them to nominate Governor Earle for the United States senate. Governor Earle was the choice of Mr. the state committee faction. Farley also asked that the Pennsylvanians nominate Lieut Gov. Thomas Kennedy, secretary-treasure- r of the United Mine Workers, for the governorship. Mr. Kennedy was thrown overboard by the state committee but he had the open indorsement of John L. Lewis, head of the C. I. O. labor union. He also had the backing of Sen. Joseph Guffey, who has constantly served as President Roosevelts voice in the United States senate. The Farley thus cast out recommendation Charles Alvin Jones of Pittsburgh, state committee selection for the governorship, and it threw Mayor S. Davis Wilson of Philadelphia into the discard as far as the Democratic senatorial nomination was concerned. Mayor Wilson was a Lewis-C- . I. O. Guffey candidate. The Farley announcement, made on the day before the primary, built up resentment even from the men he indorsed. Governor Earle barked loud and long; so did Lieutenant Governor Kennedy. Mr. Earle won. Mr. Kennedy lost. Mr. Jones won, and shouted about it. Mayor Wilson lost and bellowed about the interference. And after the smoke cleared away, Mr. Farley said promptly, in effect, "Lets all get together and elect our Democratic candidates. -- ' John D. M. Hamilton, Republican national chairman, wrote a stato ment while the sun was coming Biting Words UP on the day fol- the primary. He bounced biting words right off of Mr. Farleys head. In substance, he said the Pennsylvania primary showed: 1. The voters of any state resent interference from the national headquarters as regards their party nominees. 2. The voters of Pennsylvania showed they will have nothing to do with John L. Lewis, despite the fact that probably that state is the most tightly organized for the C. I. O. of any state in the country. 3. The Democrats of Pennsylvania are tiring of the "crack-po- t brains of the Roosevelt administration. Mr. Hamilton, further, called attention to the fact that two present Democratic members of the house of representatives were defeated for renomination. Representative Stack, an admirer of Father Coughlin, radical radio priest, and Representative Crosby, author of Townsend plan bills in the house, were supplanted. The Republican chairman sought to connect their defeat with a trend away from radicalism which he says is inherent in the New Deal, because Mr. Slack sometimes went beyond New Deal ground. Now, as to the Republican battle: James J. Davis, present senator, uas renominated over G. Mason Ovvlett, backed by the Republican slate committee, and Judge Arthur II. James was nominated for the governorship over former Gov. Gif lowing ford Pinchot, who, like Mr. Kennedy, was approved by John L. Lewis and his C. I. 0. as acceptable. So again, the voters took things into their own hands and their state com, mittee selections were taken on 4 4 where the voters liked the man. to to back the premise But, get upon which I started, it has been I a, ..31 most interesting to note the veering f ' 4 i of the political winds. Shortly after the Florida primary, there was a hurrying for cover by dozens of Democrats in the house of representatives. They thought they saw in those results a swing again to the New Deal, a restoration of the w 111 Presidents popularity. New Deal Architects rendering of the Eternal Light Peace memorial eathat 0 -- eveutv-fifth anniversary of the as Roosevelt did around President 3, Washington on spokesmen by Sunday, July burg battlefield, of the four-yeveterans not let any grass grow under their famous Civil war battle. A joint reunion of the Blue and the Gray surviving . bat of the feet They used the Florida results struggle will be held for the first time in history in commemoration to advantage. In good political fashion, they whispered and hinted and GOLD STAR MOTHER sometimes said out loud that the boys who went against the New Deal would get their spanking. And to their credit it must be said they did a good job. For example, I am convinced the vicious wages and hours bill that was locked so securely in a house committee would never have been brought out except for the reaction from the Florida primary. Seldom, if ever, has there been so much haste in signing a petition for report of a bill as was observed in Vw-- M the case of that legislation. Generally speaking, I believe it is a fact that New Deal backbones were stiffened all along the line by Senator Pepper's renomination which assures election in Florida. in th mercml YORK. r atBu and Husband James in acnews cordance with her husbands deci- sion, she presented only seven American women at court is one of her rare appearances in the headlines. 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 lens 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 ar Kennedys Presented at Court training, she taught her father Sweet Adeline. He was John F. (Honey Fitz) Fitzgerald, and in his campaigns he sang his way to memorable political fame riding like a surfboard the long, lingering "swipes of the song the taught him by his daughter flower of his heart Joseph P. Kennedy, her childhood years old playmate, was twenty-fiv- e when they were Fortune and married in 1914. borrowed $2,- Family Greu) He 000 for a down Up Together payment on a $8(. 500 house. Their fortunes grew as their family, with Mr. Kennedy president of a bank, in a year or two after their marriage. Portof Wells Duncan Mrs. Bess Mrs. Kennedy once told a Boston land, Ore., who was elected national drygoods clerk that she bought 200 Gold Star Mothers of the president suits and dresses a year. It takes at their national convention in Phila heap of shopping to make a home, adelphia. She succeeds Mrs. Hor- like the Kennedys, and she became The of LonBlake B. ace Philadelphia. Mrs. Joseph P. Kennedy, wife of the American ambassador to known among her friends as a paradon, with two of their daughters whom she presented with five other war mothers hit isms as they gon of household efficiency comin aliens resolution that a first the at to the king and queen at Buckingham palace debutantes urged to the one in Solomons offcourt of the season recently. Left to right, Miss Kathleen Kennedy, swearing allegiance to a foreign parable to such skills and hand apostrophe countrys dictatorship be deported. Rosemary Kennedy and Mrs. Kennedy. virtues. Now she Is mistress of the castle which was once J. STILL BELTS EM Pierpont Morgans home; also of a beautiful mansion in Bronx-vill- e, N. T., a huge summer estate 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 1 and takes size 14 Has Diamond in dresses. Vion-- a fVjS V net makes her Potentate and Might Envy 8envied by sheis other ; women for her magnificent jewels notable among them being a ruby i and diamond bracelet which, it is , I r'46'" said, is matched only by the one the Aga Khan gave his princess. But she never lets the children 1 ) run to nnseemly display, hoickA ing them to restraint in regime and dre,ss. Even without ail these adventitious fixings, say her friends, she would be an admirable ambassadors wife, with her own quite adequate equipment of tact, charm and intelligence. Gene Tunney, who retired undefeated as worlds heavyweight VAN and boy, this journeyman champion, drives one from the has helped process a lot of eighth tee during a golf tournament explorers and adventurers copy at Pinehurst, N. C., recently sponthrough the news mill. If it was sored by Attorney General Homer it had only slick and S. Cummings. The will to win that Papa Dionne and his quints doesnt rate with City Manager Randall synthetic excitement, like Ersatz carried Gene to the top of the heavy- M. Dorton of Long Beach, Calif., and his large family of Safety Sallys. weight heap is apparent in the de- Sponsored by one of the citys service clubs. Safety Sallys have been pastry, and if it wasnt it was usutermined expression on golfer placed at all school crossings and have done their ally dull. Happily in contrast are duly so well that not the Genes face as he watches the flight one single accident to school children has been reported in doubtlessly authentic and perfive nearly of the ball. sonally written yarns of W. H. months, leader of the British Mount Everest expedition, now getting under way. These stories from the Tibetan base camp have a professional ease and fluency, along ''440? a irvWr- -r Yarns From with a ring of in- . . Mt. Everest tegrity ' which iT-- ' & 1 1 : . 8ves assurance ' True Ring N' s U1M.U that Mr. Tilman is wr really writing them. There is no ' u . v i ' 1 v ? . J $ j ghost on the Job here. Mr. Tilman is thirty-nin- e MM m years old, a i 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. ' ft i.j. ? - M )Nkj v This is his fifth 1 i. , E expedition to the J Himalayas. The entrants in this 7 f '"WA ' high hurdle event are not youngM , f fi " " hwwrs a sters. N. E. Odell is forty-seve4 f F. S. Smythre is thirty-seveand t the others are all over ft c thirty. Consolidated News Feature. R., , ' MV WNU ' Came then the Pennsylvania primary, a vote that was preceded by charges of graft. Maybe, bribery, bossism. etc., and to Far- Maybe ley harmony attempt in the day before the polls were taken. And came then a sudden revival of the fight that anti-NeDeal Democrats were making prior to Floridas vote. Maybe the Florida vote did not involve clear-cu- t New Deal issues; maybe it was Peppers machine, maybe It was this and maybe it was that anyway, their thoughts were running: Maybe Pennsylvania is a better barometer. And each one is analyzing that vote in an effort to apply the result to his own district Whatever their conclusions are, there is one thing definitely established. Organized labor's most ambitious political effort flopped. It was washed out of the road. The Pennsylvania rout of organized labor of the John Lewis brand is made the more significant because of the link with the White House disclosed through Mr. Farleys indorsement of Mr. Kennedy. It may be, of course, that President Roosevelt did keep hands off, but it is quite another matter to convince the average person that the White House was not involved. For one thing, the Pennsylvania results seem to show that the John Lewis claims of political strength can be discarded as so much hooey. Another thing to remember about the Democratic primary results in Pennsylvania projects itself into the future to 1910, to be exact. The victory by Mr. Jones in the fight for the gubernatorial nomination destroys the control of Pennsylvania Democrats so long exercised by Senator Guffey. He cannot be called the boss again under any stretch of the imagination. And when it is time for election of a successor to Mr. Guffey, the best political judgment available predicts Mr. Guffeys disappearance as an entrant. As to the 1940 projection, attention ought to be directed to the fact that probably Mr. Jones, and not Mr. Guffey, will determine what Democratic presidential aspirant shall have the great block of 72 votes in the national convention. This seems certain whether Mr. Jones wins or loses the race for governor. He is established as head of the party. All of the Indications now perceptible promise an alignment of the Jones faction, now controlling, with the more conservative group nationally, including Sen. Pat Harrison, Vice President Garner and men of that type. So, it is seen that the Pennsylvania primary can, and Is almost certain to, have an important reaction on national Democratic strategy. w In addition to these circumstances, there is talk going around now that the anti- Talk About New Deal faction Kentucky ln Kentucky is determined to do business. In that state, of course, Senator Barkley, the Roosevelt majority leader in the senate whose selection to the job was made in the famous Dear Alben letter, has a tremendous bulge. Cold analysis of the situation does not afford much comfort for the forces of A. B. Happy Chandler, who seeks the Barkley scap. The point is, however, that anti New Dealers among the Democrats think the Pennsylvania situation may possibly be reproduced in Kentucky. Neubpupur Union. Reduce Accidents Safety Sallys n Qrf o s w n s. r m 6 mibjectu, Bun,- -, 3 month. bookkeeping ghorthand, ,tc H5.1' It. time work for room and'C Can Mi SAI-LAKE Atlas Bldg., BrsiNFSgrS.? By effY mite hi smithsoman Sib88 CLL8f Sewer Pipe Flu i,nil PTAH FIRE ClIy nifie testii 1,J-- t iaica NoU A, "Kg P. O. ' it ro?Ulf JiiiLy Jdep of FINISHImb PHOTO 25c SkKVICE. " 15 jt CLAY PRODUtr am-Mr- ri hJ,J'wt at hJ0 Special to teachers Mrs. Joseph P. has been an effective social and political ally of both her father, former mayor of Boston, and s. her husband, Kennedy bassador to the of St. Aids Father Court NEW -h Dnp heart of 2nd R0. St 36 E By LEMUEL F. PARTON T r v. Rslrt J, r!T K,K1I! FEMALE jeasu si of the Bl ,;es HELP ssary. i'S'? CHPARMCOSMLTrirI .Write 169 East Bdv.. Salt 1,1,. the e shop c ces POULTRY jstanci SILVER-LACE- WYANDOTLEsT. Vn -- Nuvi, snoot! INSTRUCTION lb Cive aye and Ine.. Dept. WN, DRAW. 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IDAHO SCHOOL SUPPLY GREAT ICE CREAM a FREEZERS geabli elast FOUNTAINS ICE CREAM CT 1ER FREEZERS and Ice Cream caws Bar Fixtures, Stools, Carbonatore S Tables Also reconditioned equipmen- tSODA 55 Post Office Place REDUCE :anect lecura i Manufadirt Salt Lnlw CO. SENSIBLY nfm Caa nesto .eric, Fi HARLEY tai Write for Motorcvcles OF HOPPFR. Bdr.tJtt 140 E. sing ir Jmal FURNITURE dm New 9 x 12 carpet rug $'4.95: Lied coal ranpe $J5 00: Used mohair Inn I1 piano Used uoright 19 : 50 aet $ Bargain Basement--W ester; Frnioe I stae South 115 i: m it MOTORCYCLES Used ec this REDUCE SENSIBLY I Chart and Write Dr. Wendt, t'on free. South Dakota HOUSE daw came - - - lamp: :sof evt y galt a smj PHOTOS app, to in a New Sensational, 8 glossy prmte & 2 professional enlargements ?ct print 3c ea Star Film Companv. nals, d S' he G a. . China at Height T.mot of P China reached the power under Kublai Thirteenth century. time h height Khan ed $730 rysot -- Deafness tole Overcome great Jctior THE GENUINE Para' ithc AC0USTICAN s t 4r' tv . " 'Mr . . c s keen-face- wel 'nited jrjsstAT InshM active Amo Acouslicon the an lame a Til-ma- n, r sh e With ghost-writte- Soviets Armed Might Parades in Moscow b, tion, II. to rottii F"n'il;,!iw d scratches on, Light remedied hy rubbing ox!, with boiled linseed mixed vinegar white and proportions. For th cK use a paste made of m coloring mixed with with the wood in quesi use burnt umber ana for mahogany, Yenetwn and walnut, burnt umber, tRi brown. hard-muscle- d , Aztecs Knew Biack Aztec Indians of Vi iduff; o wh poisonous black used an oil extracted medicines ? -- P f SCOy'((j Captain Cook, Hawaiian Hands, wa -tives on his second 1779. n te J M' J t Service. Rats Drink Ink at Night Rats have been drinking black ink at night in the Swellendam, South Africa, city hall. Possibly they were blondes vho wish to become brunettes, is one suggestion. P. Reyns, the municipal foreman, says he fre- ? 1' t it ' 1 , i l 11 "L iiiiinm t. 4k' F Red square in Moscow was fiMcd with tanks in an improssNe demonstration of the 3 during the rcirnt celebration of the inUruational pioiet.uian holiday jn Moscow S. S. K. P"Cr f the quently has found his ink well, which he kepi in a Iock-- d room empty. Before leaving the office one afternoon ho poured the ml; inti a Saucer. Next morning u wa en.pty. How Tenguins Keep stnn Emperor penguins Anta long the during between the J the ;i t ; egg it warm, the par1 task between them. How to 'lin.--r- it'; or tluee tablespoon .loh, d, v Clean I urnl th. To clean furniture v,n"h badly soiled. water to whith bus urpentino. ( oi undi foui f f , tsih d j . or t : re k' ley 'JCeri: ! age |