OCR Text |
Show THE LEW SUN. LEHI. UTAH Out Onln SuUcun News Review of Current Events the World Over WHKN the MtA n reorganizea and put under control of a BRISBANE THIS WEEK commission a change that la goon dueGen. Hugh S. Johnson mny still be In the picture, despite the belief that he would retire completely. com-pletely. He told something of the plan for the sliaketi), am) at the same time said : "If, the President r ni t- "Qoll" Now Tlpal to the Banks wnnU me t0 B,ay' 1 m,Kht 8erve as Eugene Black to bell new ueai 10 me uanKs chairmfln of tne board( provided President Warns Against Food Profiteering- Cotton Textile Strike Voted. By EDWARD W. PICKARD br Wtafn Nwpr Union. mm Eugene R. Black EUGENE It. BLACK hai resigned as governor of the federal reserve re-serve board, and President Roose-telt Roose-telt baa given him a new position j -m I..- contact o ttlcer be-y be-y tween the banks t 4 and the govern- t l ment This means h. J that Mr. r.lack Is K -ySZ Vr expected to "sell" t t 1 the New Deal to ' 1 tttA financial lltutl. tutlons. which In the past have been among the severest sever-est crltlcls of many features of the President! program pro-gram for recovery. lie returns to his former position of governor of the Atlanta Federal Iteserve bank which he left in May, 1933, to assume the direction of the whole reserve system. Mr. Black himself said his new assignment Is "to muster the strength of our financial Institutions Institu-tions behind recovery In America." Some observers In Washington thought the move Indicated that the administration was going to make another attempt to thaw out the vast sums In commercial credits cred-its that are lying Idle to the banks. "Yon can do much good, Presl-dent Presl-dent Roosevelt wrote Black In accepting ac-cepting his resignation, "by presenting pre-senting the recovery program to the ouutry's reserve banks, commercial commer-cial banks and other financial Institutions, Insti-tutions, by acquainting them with the successive steps taken by the administration which have resulted In the present prosperous condition of these Institutions and which make possible their co-operation with the administration In Its program pro-gram of complete business rehabilitation. rehab-ilitation. "I am pleased to think that your position as governor of the Federal Reserve bank at Atlanta will give you opportunity to undertake this work and that that bank, together with the federal reserve board, will co-operate with you In Its performance. Among those mentioned as likely gestlon telegrams were sent to re lief directors and workers every where telling them to keep out of partisan politics and to resign If they wish to run for office. One of the plans that Is being worked out by Mr. Williams Is the mobilization of 40.000 unemployed school teachers next winter In a campaign against Illiteracy and to fit the workless for Jobs when pros perity returns. The program Includes In-cludes vocational training, vocation al rehabilitation, general adult edu cation and nursery schools. f TNLESS President Roosevelt can v prevent It. about half a million workers In the cotton textile Indus try will be on Btrlke on. or about September 1, because they are utterly ut-terly dlBsatlfled with their Nil A code. The convention of the United Textile Workers of America In New York voted mandatory Instructions to the union's executive council to call this general strike, and If It goes Into effect It may later spread lo other branches of the Industry, Involving an additional 250,000. Leaders In the strike movement are Norman Thomas, former So cialist candidate for President, and the younger element In the onion. The specific aim will be to obtain a reope'nlng of the textile code and Us revision along llnea demanded by the union. Demands will be made for the 30-hour week with 40- hour pay, elimination of the stretch out system with corresponding readjustment re-adjustment of machine loads, and a universal system of collective bargaining bar-gaining on the basis of free choice of representatives by the workers. Support of the strike by the American Federation of Labor was promised by George Goode, who appeared before the convention as a representative of President Wil liam Green of the A. F. of L. Goode expressed the hope, however, that timely Intervention by President Roosevelt may avert the strike arid give the workers the relief they are demanding. it did not take all of my time." Johnson said be expected the whole reorganization of the NUA to be completed within the next CO or 00 days. The first step, he said, will be the formal submission of plans to the President Congress will be asked next winter to enact the revised NUA setup as a permanent perma-nent government control over Industry, In-dustry, Johnson disclosed. It will be the New Deal for business which President Roosevelt will try to fix on the country for all time. This "permanent" N It A, as sketched by Johnson, would consist of a general gen-eral governing board, a single ad ministrative officer to carry out ttn board's dictates, and a long string of government representa tives sitting on code authorities as umpires In disputes between employers em-ployers and workers and between Industry and the public. Broadly speaking, the NRA might retreat and allow business greater freedom. . J I - x--' ' -1 . I V - - r t ' I -,r' Uw ? ' - ' it i , sv . r 1 ..Ifi Sultan of Sulu Is a Modern Ruler. ABOUT COO grizzled members of the Grand Army of the Republic Repub-lic were able to attend the sixty-eighth sixty-eighth encampment at Rochester, N. If., and many of them even Insisted In-sisted In marching In the parade, scorning the automobiles that carried car-ried their feebler brothers. Commander-in-Chief Russell C. Martin presided over the sessions and the chief speaker was Secretary . of War Dern. Mr. Dern told the veterans vet-erans that the world was seething with unrest and that weak nations might become Involved In chaos and war. America, h asserted, Is In the grip of another kind of war-one war-one against economic adversity intensified in-tensified by the terrific drouth but he expressed confidence "American character, American grit" will win uuu ue aaaeu: We will surmount the obstacles ahead of us. And because of this period of trial, ours will be a stronger nation, more ready to meet the other crises which lie In the future.' fu-ture.' We must be strong." SENATOR UUEY LONOI was marching ranidlv toward vic tory over his arch foe, Mayor T. Semmes Walmsley of New Orleans, and there didn't seem to be anything any-thing the latter could do to stop the Klngtish. The state legislature, Bafely In the control of Long and Ainuns im se m.uuuru iiamy rjRIMARY elections In several h,9 VenchmVn Governor Alien ; to succeed Black as governor of the I B,fltP. hrnnn-hf thnnr inoatin nenenman, oovernor Allen, was federal reserve board was Marrlner . ,br2,!" ?ut '"if"? i"8 Pl'' through a series of 8. Eccles, Utah banker, who Is now a special assistant to Secretory of the Treasury Morgenthau. He Is close to Rexford Guy TugwelL PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT, It turns out, la not at all dismayed by the catastrophic drouth that has afflicted a large part of the conn- try, to the White House corre spondents he Indicated his belief that the drouth waa In a way a blessing, In that It was wiping out farm surpluses two years sooner than could have been done by the Wallace crop reduction plan. He expressed the belief that there will be plenty of food for all, and made It clear that the admlnlstrat iOO would not stand for any profiteer ing In food prices or grain specula tion to the detriment of the farmer and the public. "Chlselers," It waa promised, will be promptly and severely punished. The federal grain futures admin istration directed by J. M. MehL It was revealed, Is watching grain f I . . results. In Nebraska, Representa tive E. R. Burke of Omaha, advo- ; cate of the New Peal, won the Dem ocratic nomination for senator, defeat ing Gov. Charles W. Bryan by an aston ishing plurality of more than 00,000. The Republicans nominated Robert G. Simmons. It was predicted by friends of Senator Norrls, radical Re publican, that the progressive Re publicans would support Burke, for Simmons, a member of con gress, had been attacking the NUA and the AAA. Ohlonns are given their choice between two veteran politicians In the race for the senate. A. V. Dona hey, three times governor of the state, was made the nominee of the Democrats, running far ahead of Gov. George White and Charles O. West. The last named was the trading closely. The first evidence I choice of the national admlnistra- E. R. Burks measures designed to put every par ish and city In Louisiana in the grip of those two gentlemen before the state primary on September 11. The legislators also passed a bill for an Investigation- Into the affairs of New Orleans, patterned after the famous Seabury Inquiry In New York. ADMINISTRATOR JAMES A. MOFFETT has Inaugurate the housing administration's billion-dollar billion-dollar home repair program, the first loan being made by a Washington Wash-ington bank to Miss Alma McGrum, a home owner. In the presence of many bankers and government offi cials. Mr. Moffett said credit faoil- Itles were available In cities and towns with populations aggregat ing 30.nS0.50S. of manipulation will bring punitive action. The consumers council of the AAA under Dr. Frederic O. Howe, Is charting food prices. House wives will be warned of any Increase In-crease out of line with market sup plies. Secretary Wallace has admitted that there will necessarily be In creases In food prices, and figures released by his department show they are already beginning to go higher. A gradual Increase until next summer Is expected. tlon, but he made a poor showing. Senator Simeon D. Fess, one of the most vociferous opponents of the Roosevelt programs, easily won re- nomlnatlon by the Republicans. For governor the Democrats nominated Martin I Pavey, the "tree doctor," and the Republicans put up Clar ence J. Brown, Gov. J. M. Futrell of Arkansas was renominated, as were all but two of the state's congressmen who sought re-election. Democrats of Idaho are so well satisfied with Gov. Ben C Ross, former cowboy. that they renominated him for a Prepared by National Georrph1e Society, - Wahlnton. D. C WNU Service. THE sultan of Sulu, the only oriental potentate ruling under un-der the protection of the United Unit-ed States, has recently been bereft of all political power, although he still exercises religious authority over his Moro subjects In a little group of Islands which are part of the Philippines. The new governor of the Philippines, Frank Murphy, decided not to appoint the sultan to the Philippine senate. Although the sultan seldom took his seat, the honor had been accorded him since the time of Gov. Gen. Dwlght F. Davis. "In real life the sultan of Sulu is not the amusing semi-savage that George Ade put into comic opera three decades ago, but a decidedly modern ruler of the Sulu archipelago, archipel-ago, which forms a series of oceanic stepping stones from the Philippine group to British North Borneo," writes George M. Hanson, former United States consul at Sandakan, British North Borneo. "Although he partly acknowledged acknowl-edged the temporal sovereignty of the United States In 1899, and completely com-pletely so In 1915, he retains some of the glamor ascribed to him by the dramatist and remains locally a potentate to the native Sulus, or Moros. "Purely religious, his title connotes con-notes nothing more than leadership in the Mohammedan church within the limits of his sultanate. The sultan of Brunei, British Borneo, the recognized 'royal highness' In the greater part of the territory, Is Inclined In-clined to regard him as a poor re lation who pays tribute to Brunei; but nevertheless he Is a full-fledged sultan and has authority of a sort over 300 small Islands and that part of British North Borneo with ad ministrative headquarters at Sanda- kan. "In Borneo, or elsewhere, the British are good colonizers. They believe It Is wiser to placate the Stilus on the Borneo side of the Sulu sultanate than to run risk of trouble; consequently they still pay tribute to the sultan and accord him military honors on his visits to Sandakan. Many Wives But No Children. "The sultan prides himself on being be-ing an American, though his domestic domes-tic arrangements have hardly been of a kind sanctioned In the United States. Under the Koran he may have four wives at one time; and, since he has power to dismiss a wife or divorce her by waving his royal hand, the limitation of number num-ber has not been Irksome. It is said that In his day he espoused many wives.. He has no children, however, how-ever, and the Rajamuda, or heir apparent ap-parent (muda Is a Malay word meaning "unripe"), Is his younger brother. Although the 1915 treaty recognized htm as the spiritual head of the Suln Mohammedans, Its terms were such as will eventually cause polygamy to be abandoned. "Matrimony Is somewhat casual among the Sulus, and It Is not unusual un-usual for girls of thirteen, twelve. or even eleven to be claimed as brides. When I was United States consul at Sandakan. I had an amus- tr i v . . nniNCE RUDIGER VON STAR ' "lltr'eBce w"un ,mpre8SM I HEMBERQ of Austria, who has! Tl the Peculiarity of native WITH the sanction of the American Amer-ican Federation of Labor a strike was called in the plants of the Aluminum Company of America, Amer-ica, which Is controlled by Andrew W. Mellon, former secretary of the treasury, and his family. Six of the plants, at New Kensington, Ar nold and Logans Ferry, Pa.; Al coa, Tenn.; Enst St. Louis, 111., and Massena, N. n were closed, and those at Fait field. Conn., and Baden, N. C were about to shut down. The company normally em ploys about 15.000 persons. Propos als offered by the workers" representatives repre-sentatives late In July were flatly rejected by the company. Jusi ?een In Italy consulting with X I rilll-E Harry Hopkins, federal I thlrd term- Tn Republican nom- I Premier Mussolini, says the Aus W relief administrator. Is vara- ,ne ther Fran" t- Stephan. tlontne In Europe, his dace la taken l-oktng over these primary re- by Aubrey Williams, his assistant ,uus ,na considering the prospects Mr. Williams has OY" country. Democratic 1 been In conference le in Washington predicted their t 3 7 Aubrey Williams with the President, laying out the plans for drouth relief and the conserva tion or rood sup plies. Among the first things the relief re-lief administration i j will do U to buy ) 1 Op hay and fruit 1 party would gain six 'senate seats. Republican campaign managers said the U. O. P. will hold its own. As for the house, the Democrats admit they will lose at least twenty five seats, and their opponents claim the Republican gain will be between be-tween fifty and seventy-five seats. O ELATION S between Russia and IN jar k t r I a n rovernmpnt expects a new Nazi outbreak In that country within the next few months. He says he has Information In-formation that a f rutsch Is being pre- 4 71 E W4 A Prince Von Starhtmberg pan have been further strained might go to waste, by the arrest of 17 Soviet subjects. Hay on public! oft'clals and employees of the lands also will be cut and baled. I Chinese Eastern railway, by Man- The complete program was being I cnukuo authorities. They are ae-formulated ae-formulated by Mr. Williams and I enseal of plotting against Manchu- Secretary Wallace, It was expect-1 no and Japan and of being In col cd this would Include expenditure I luslon with bandits In recent at- of STO.OOO.OOO left In the special tacks on the railway. The Russian I putsch Is Imminent. Uruuui i?..rv.Hauvii nuu uioinuir I fk t.-. n, , iiaiuin vauuT uf- 1 etnnirmyrn aarris last t,n t!on of food and clothing to the I maocwa me release of the prison- I overwhelming majority ef the am. reedy by th aurplus relief corpora-1 era. Is Moscow the arresta gave I trian people are In favor or the tlon. Aid for live stock la to be I rise to rumors that Japan was pre- I Hapshnrg restoration, that the Tat. provided. I rnng to declare military law and - . a . . . Mr. Roosevelt Is determined that I w tne railway, the sale of the relief administration shall be I which has long ben a subject of keit clear of pontics. At hli fug-1 fruitless negotiation. marriage customs. "Shortly before the sultan's visit to Borneo that year, a German land holder whom the British had ordered out of the country for the duration of the World war requested me to tase charge of his rubber planta tion near Sandakan. I agreed, since It was then my duty to take over representation of German Interests. ' I t . .v-- . . pared and that he : J s" ",ere on eaen P oaT nJ ! i struct tn (vaa. i cneck the accounts, but I declined f A See, .mi n I 1 . , . . . --- nmniuj iimcim cuuiroi or Ine Plantation. Thus I became for short time master of the Malay laborers, pending appointment of rermanent sunerlntendent "Upon my arrival on the first pay nay, the accountant, a Slngalese ircrn tieyion, brought to my atten "on a plea from Alus. the house coy, who needed an advance of f 10, four, argued that Canapa was long past eleven and ready to marry.' I announced kindly but firmly that no girl under twelve could be married mar-ried without my special consent "The mother asked If the wedding wed-ding could take place when the girl was twelve. Not wishing to seem over-harsh, I assented. I even offered of-fered to take a photograph of the supplicants and to give them a print as balm for their disappointment disappoint-ment They eagerly posed for the picture and went away seemingly well pleased. "On my next visit to the plantation, planta-tion, 1' Bent' for Canapa and her mother and gave them a print of the photograph I bad taken of them two weeks earlier." They seemed very happy, and the mother asked again If Canapa could be married when she was twelve. Again I said yes, and told her to go ahead and prepare for the wedding. Alus also asked the same question, and I repeated re-peated my assurance to him. Canapa would be twelve at the full moon, which would occur, so he had learned from the accountant, on Sunday of the next week. " Entertaining the Sultan. "A week after this episode the sultan arrived and received official entertainment at Government house. 1 could not let the British outdo me in showing him the courtesy due his position and Influence, and accordingly accord-ingly I Invited him and his party to the consulate to tea. The guests Included the sultana, the rajamuda, the sultan's minister, and several datus, or chiefs. "I offered them cigarettes and handed the sultan a package labeled la-beled 'Egyptian Cigarettes, Turkish Tobacco." He examined the package pack-age critically, and when he saw the hieroglyphics he was delighted. Egyptian cigarettes, he said, were made by the 'followers of the Faith ful and not by Christian Infidels.' 1 did not disturb his sublime faith, though I could have told him that these cigarettes were machine made in North Carolina, from tobacco grown In Asia Minor. And So They Were Married. 'While I was entertaining the sul tan at the consulate, It occurred to me that It would be a fine thing to have him perform the wedding ceremony. cere-mony. This would be an unexpected unexpect-ed honor to Alus and Canapa and no doubt would prove highly grati fying to all concerned. The more I thought of the Idea the better I liked it I would have the young couple come back with me to Sanda kan on Saturday, and Invite the sul tan to another tea, where he could smoke his fill of Turkish cigarettes made by the 'Faithful' in North Car ollna. The wedding of Alus the Bajao and the twelve-year-old Malav beauty, Canapa, would follow. The incident was all but closed. "When 1 went to the plantation the following Saturday, the full moon that regulated Malav birth- days for the month had waned perceptibly. per-ceptibly. The accountant met me as usual but no smiling Alus stood in tne doorway to greet me. "'Where Is Alus? I asked. "'He Is here no more. He and Canapa live In the little housA ha. hind the rubber factory with Surin-lm, Surin-lm, the kaboon (gardener), and they went to Sandakan today in the hone seiug to see tne sultan.' "'Living with Canapa?' I mut tered. 'What do you meanr "They were married at the full moon, a week ago, as the tuan had said, and he Is at this house no more. " 'Married a week ago? Who mar-ried mar-ried them? "'Why you, Tuan; you married Ilcrr GocLbela Brags One American at Rest Mother Was "Mean" Another Hapsburg In Berlin, Herr Goebbels, minister minis-ter ot propaganda, praising Hitler, says, "There will be no kaiser or king." He might have added that none Is needed, since In nitler Germany Ger-many has a kaiser, king and dictator, dicta-tor, "three-In-one." Herr Goebbels boasts: "Hitler does not start the day asking 'What do leading bankers bank-ers sayT Rather, bankers begin the day asking 'What does Hitler Bay?" Germany has no monopoly of that condition. Herr Goebbels will be Burprlsed to hear how many bankers bank-ers and other gentlemen In this country, who once thought they had money, begin the day asking, "What does Roosevelt say?" One American at least Is out of his troubles forever. Mr. Medlock, forty-eight years old, rentB cotton land In Greenville county, South Carolina, and thought he knew how much cotton he ought to plant to pay rent for his farm. After he had finished planting, government Inspectors measured his cotton fields and orderea him to plow under three acres, ne had gone beyond his allowance, Medlock Med-lock complained to his family for two or three days, then went behind be-hind the barn ' and shot himself through the heart, deciding that he, instead of the excess cotton, should be "plowed under." talk of the German ! government He also ' doubts the reports ! of the dissolution j of the Austrian 1 Nad Legion In Germany, and be- lleves the relch Is still finane. the Nazis In Austria, The prince's statements state-ments are borne out by the fact that Austria has sent a note to Great Britain. Franre ami jft. i s'DSaPre currency, for weddln ex- asking permission to enlarge Its fBse!L AIo prospective bride, the army because It fears another Nazi i intermeiIary explained, was Cana- "abater or samat the chief lpper. Canapa Was Too Youna " "fanapa was rather a lltti nri "d, it seemed to me, when her Iran Is for It and that Italy and T I,re!,ented hpr tot Inspec-England Inspec-England are neutral; bnt tht . n"lch to J0'50 to be think- Franc and the little entente wott! a , matrinw,oy. I decided a little oppo It ":,3-T W0'd do no harm. Although mot!,-, herself 01y twenty- "I married theml What are you driving atr SSI W" 016 fuU moon. Tuan, and unarm . , . r , iWelve Arj(j M they were married, as the tuan had u J J Sleep lD the huse of is not the tuan pleased? "Then the whole thin dawned. The accountant was right, l!" ' ?! Jst Plans for ..-."6 UUUSe ooy and his childish child-ish fianr -t . . u --"'""s oi royai pomp andclrcumstance had comf ! "I had married them, however unintentionally, but none-theSt certainly. Fcanse of rtence with native customs b fa its of the heart. I had spoken h,fn Usually. ifftuS had signified his mnun .... . Axed the time. That waa en"" Little Nora Ruth NIciforas may with confidence recite the prayer: "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those that trespass against ts." Because she had been disobedient, dis-obedient, her mother, as shown In court, hetfJ the six-year-old child's fingers over a gas flame, "burning them severely." The child's mother, sentenced to 35 days In Jail, was freed when the little girl told the Judge: "I love my mommy. I was a bad, bad girl and picked things up after she told me not to. She never was mean to me before. It Is to be hoped that the mother will never be "mean" to her again. Prince Von Starhemberg, In a private conference, saw Dictator Mussolini, and gossips suggest that Mussolini will encourage Austria to restore a Hapsburg, the young Otto, to Austria's throne. Otto, young heir of the Haps-burgs, Haps-burgs, Is extremely good looking, would deeply Interest any movie director. But, why people as Intelligent as the Austrlans should think of taking tak-ing on another Hapsburg after what the last Hapsburg did to them Is hard to understand. There Is little enough left of Austria Aus-tria now. Do the Austrlans want Italy or Germany to take that little, lit-tle, or divide It between them? Never adopt a plan unless you know all about it. William Bryant, in the Louisiana penitentiary, read about Dilllnger's "escaping from prison with the aid of a toy pistol, made of wood, terrorizing ter-rorizing guards by the dozen, taking tak-ing away their weapons." A newspaper clipping about that pistol waa found on Bryant's body after he had been shot dead, trying the same "wooden pistol" method. It is a pleasure to hear from the United States Chamber of Commerce Com-merce that there are "only" seven millions out of work in this country, Mr. Green, union labor head, says ten millions, but the chamber says that Is "exaggeration." On the other hand, statistics show that one family In every ten In New York city Is "getting home relief," which Is our substitute expression for the dole. In New York 671,800 persons are on the dole, 7,939 more than the previous highest record. That does not Indicate diminished unemployment Government says It will "bar profiteering" on food, following the drouth. Many administrations have said that, many times, but there Is no "bar." Where there Is a scarcity there will be profiteering, and there is a carcity. Secretary Wfallace says It will Increase In-crease the cost of living 6 to 7 per cent next winter. Sikorsky, who made the biggest passenger plane now flying successfully, success-fully, the S-42 Brazilian clipper, predicts "50-ton aircraft," three times as big as S-42. The 50-ton, heavier-than-alr ship will come, pass and seem like a toy compared with real airships of the future. Columbus, In his tiny caravel, might have predicted a sailing sail-ing ship 100 feet long. He could not have dreamed of a ship 1,000 feet long, driven by steam. The San Francisco Chamber of Commerce reasonably objects to re i moval of the government's gold from California to Colorado, with ""earthquake hazard" offered at an eXCUSe. rnlifnmta wnnrlor If th ( " ( government's real reason was fear of attack from across the PaclSc, j why It does not say so. """'js iii my life. streets Mm. BEVERLY ur,:. I paPer- Dialer; ! B7. r, 'M "" I! wtt k ta l!!t ate( , '"1 ft; 8 0(i tsiaih wny I xKc.A.r streets . " w ; ment. Km " K Published. Weil iVtt-l Eoing around braaX , !; renting hta on tfe race, the feet on h!! l!t,: I used to say whv general strike h, . J country, one halt wouli other half. u Well then along tomt up in San ftancto. grabbed the quickest p!SM . I went. Got In there at ii" thing wag as quiet, no running, do taxicabs, uj had to drive ua In from ti... Just a few restaurant! waJ to be exact Thia wM tkJ the first day of the general ine strikers allowed them !t As you went to enter there was a guard or two t lo Bee you owententer.ii'. knew you, or if you had registered there and had i&irauon cara Irora theclert hotel. Well then I went overtop eral Johnson. Found a bell & yes, all the hotel help hi in the hotel, as they were it: i.u ouine iu. taies were ciosl they served you meali h rooms. Well this bellboy v: livering General Johnsons that he had pressed, to l p them, and delivered em to t person. If it hadent been tea General wouldent hare ia breeches. He was just golns. out that morning to break it He was to go to the TJalver- Northern Cal at Berkley, t branch of the University s which is at Los Angeles. B to be given the By FetaFj , Phy Sigma Gama, or some a those Geek elks club tic was to get a key. Well its funny bat lit 4 aspect of the strike child it was made general, and 1 to interfere with your bosaiss: can be In favor of someth.af. lots of good folks were) mi they saw the trucks that wi ing, moving with a sigaoiE Ing it was by permission oftk committee, well all that ri. the wrong way. They got toft-; "Here look what this n;t too, to have somebody tell what you can do." Well tie erican spirit bobbed up, really was the beginning of & of the general strike. 1 have read that one te'f-win. te'f-win. It just Is not in the cart, of time individual stnla' they are just, and conducted along fair lines have won their case, and they should, for manufacturers man-ufacturers have associations fori their mutual betterment bankers have associations as-sociations to see how they can help each other onf fin d there is Francisco, and its J . . ..... j,o thaPeoP tIr town, uui ., ph ere runnitf L the r tiv ID i and has I Das P'ace irchaser c LaiDdfi ttroU. W twrito w tl arts I rf the at' Lory M"r fin ntln faerefor Ltceresui 1 one lDteI L on the Ljjanyb Icj.nas pi jwause of I it and sec Lay edde fesof comn is lnftatii leas bet" feeter, t I gbout wt It till I of addltio jrtfponse I .;iiired an ibis fa many P: Jainistrati fsh heart I aationalis Ironists : tlahoma iJojaltl I the in extend free prii fcst opinio -lt am iitboritie! that the la and Itrous. T ,ttes,th of silV' 6 certifies les of th jo doubt fct rets it It Is ' teo,to ,and eat fbereca .id in bis 1 would si isd curr ,ny obs than th( f ill find f hl ina I Jy th( ! ien al rL K and that It wasent real ri.:.nie benefit of the st- why the toKtll t Mr creen u " . ryeu j. ( But whatlwant i that the people f?Jvi earth, as peaceful , t Ingas you figM would have eonj- f menL There U toU ; r , Country. butyoafifJ at the amount ot" rjn-J real showdown com will do more to t" f than any strorj j that they -uu- So the mlnat. JheriBl some other nnion P do. 'meblyBmBci. what about San rn , with money kWjJJB -see theyharea fooa thelr w.iness. ' f again- If C 13 - i Price 4 , I promi; linectl; Jn- His edom c;rm 1 i priw 5 s only hold t i-rla Ii ffm wh 4 the do! sligh ir this red j Mo be lire hi men of !! the i the that atio! slfrei f thi t'noll Ion! ?artii ob yhi i.iiatj to t! mix I' d ho t Jtt k to I 5 a ti iaa Se ' m 4ti r H 9 It ftt V I King F-lnr Srodlaate, IMl |