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Show Thursday, August 27, 1931 Unemployment Blatned to Metal Imports by Gov. Hunt THE MIDVALE JOURNAL of Rexburg, Idaho, are visiting at the nounce the birth of a son Monday at home of Mrs. Rang Carlson of East the Cottonwood home. ' ' Midvale. They were called here on M account of the death of their niece rs. John I. Wiberg entertained at Iitle Lucile Oakeson. • her home Thursday in honor of her husband's birthday anniversary. ReMr. and Mrs. Joseph Wilson an- freshments were served to Mr. and nounce the birth of a boy, born Fri- Mrs. Lester Pugsley and children of day, August 21. Salt Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Anna Wiberg Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Sharp and of Wanship, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wiberg children were Sunday guests of Mr. and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Morand Mrs. Kenneth Morris of Salt gan and children, and Mr. and Mrs. Lake. Reuben Wiberg and children. Mrs. Charles Thornton and children Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Goff anwere Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and nounce the birth of a son at the CotMrs. Allen Bateman of Murray. tonwood home. Mrs. Goff was forMr. and Mrs. Orson Jensen and Mr. merly Miss Ella Morgan. a~~ Mrs. Hans J_ensen and family Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Page en1 VlSlted Sunday w1th Mr. and Mrs. tertained the following out-of town Jacob Jensen of Salt Lake. guests at her home Saturday: Mr. and Miss Vaur Sharp is spending a few Mrs. Robert S. Sleater, Mr. ar;td Mrs. weeks in Ogden. Jay Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B . Mr. and Mrs. John Peterson and Mr. Sleater, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Carr, and Mrs. James Brady joined mem- Mr. and Mrs. William Bess, Mr. and ?ers of the Good Ti~e club and en- Mrs. Harold Sleater, Mr. and Mrs. JOyed Saturday evenmg at the grove William McKague, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bringhurst of Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Houser, and Bennion ward. Mr. and Mrs. Lonzo Olson of Salt Miss Betty Rutherford of Los An- Lake it being their wedding annivergeles, Calif., is a guest at the Knowles sary. ' home. Miss Willa Dansie had as her guest Mr. and Mrs. Jack Larson and fam- during the week Miss Fern Wood of ily enjoyed an outing at Lagoon, West Jordan. Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Maynard had ~r. and Mrs. Thomas Allsop and as their guests during the week-end, ch1ldren, Glen and Lavon, of East . Parris W. Stewart of Detroit Mich. Midvale, and Mrs. Emma Nicol of I and Mr. Stewart and daught~rs Or~ Union left Tuesday morning for a trip lean and Margaret, of Los V~gas, to Portland, Oregon. Nevada. Mrs. J. N. Rock of Salt Lake visitMisses Pearl and Ruby Stone ened Monday at the hor;ne of Mrs. D. W. tertained at a slumber party Thursday McDonald of East M1dvale. in honor of Misl.l Jennie May, Miss Henry Cole and ~on, John, returned Mary McMullin, Miss Glendon NielTuesday from a tnp to Moab. sen and Miss Vilda Green. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Powell and Mr. and Mrs. Morris Butterfield litt~e son, ~ack, left Thursday for were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. the1r home m Bluff, Utah. They have Henry Nielsen of Murray and Mr. and spent the past two weeks at the home Mrs. Ben Maxfield of Farmington, home of Mrs. Powell's parents, Mr. during the week. and Mrs. Jack Larson. Mr. and Mrs. William Nelson and M~ss Norene Walker entertained at Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Newman and a m1scellaneous shower Tuesday eve- daughter Lois spent the week at Fish ning at her home, honoring Mrs. Lake. Burgan. Games were played and reMiss Ruth Howard returned home freshments were served to fifteen from Los Angeles, Calif., Monday. guests. Mrs. Burgon was formerly She was accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Miss Alberta Manka of East Midvale. Wallace Howard. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Hatch and chi!Miss Pearl Stone chaperoned her dren returnPd Monday from Malad, Beehive class up Butterfield canyon, Idaho, wher~ they spent the week-end where they spent Tuesday and Wedwith re~ativcs. nesday. Relatives of Mrs. Leon Malstrom Mr. and Mrs. Eldred Hamilton engathe_red at h~r home vV.-~nesday an~ tertained at a chicken dinner Sunday surpnsed hi!.- on _he~ btnhday anru- in honor of Mrs. Florence Page and versary. Tho;;e enJoytng the day were family. Covers were laid for twelve Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Norris and guests. son K., of South Jordan; Mrs. Oscar Mr. and Mrs. James Steadman, Mr. Beeney and ~on and Mrs .. Henry Gos- and Mrs. Meredith Page and children, man and children of M1dvale; Mrs. and ' Mr. and Mrs. Leo Bills and Mr. Nellie Jensen of Salt L<Jke, Mrs. Leon - and Mrs. Jay Steadman of Draper &rd Sharp and childre: of East ~lid- formed a party at Saratoga and envale; Mrs. I. A. Norr1~, Mrs. Verda joyed picnic luncheon and bathing. Cook and daughter, Arline, Mrs. V ~ r& Mrs. Hans B. Jensen entertained at Smith and children, and Mr. and Mrs dinner Monday in honor of Mr. and Melvin Nor_ris. Mrs. Farrel Lloyd, Miss Zelma ButterMaster R1chard Bateman of Murray field Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Peterson is visiting this week with his grand- Miss' Phyllis Butterfield and Mis~ parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Green- Nona Jensen. wood. Miss lola Maynard, Miss Geneal ~r. and Mrs. Leonard Sharp and Jeffs, and Miss Ora Aylett spent last children were guests Sunday of Mr. week at Vivian Park. and Mrs. Kenneth Norris of South Mrs. Curtis Jackson of Salt Lake Jordan. spent the week as guest of her parMr. and Mrs. T. F. Greenwood, Mr. ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ezra L. Bills. and Ml<lil:. Clyde Soffe, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Giles and Alfred Robbins and Mrs. Annie Green- daughters Leda and Phyllis of Los wood of East Midvale attended the Angeles, ~ere guests of Mr .~nd Mrs. funeral se~vices of Mrs. Emalit;e Fred May, Thursday. Bartlett which y.r~re held Thursday m Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Huggins had as the J?seph Wilham Taylor funeral their guests during- the week, Mr. and home m Sal.t Lake. Mrs. Bartlett was "\Irs. Sanders of Phoenix, Ariz., Mrs. th_e mother of W. R. Ashment of East C. E. Draper and Misses Emily and Midvale. • 'is Draper, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde RusMrs. I. A. Norris and Mrs. Vera sell, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Goff, and S~ith of Sandy were dinner guests Mrs. George Buckway of Salt Lake. Fnday of Mrs. Geneva Sharp. Mr. and Mrs. Zach Butterfield and Miss Beatrice Simpers was a guest Mr. and Mrs. z. T. Butterfield and at a bridge luncheon Tuesday at the children returned home from Yellowhome of Mi~s Allene Johnson of Salt stone park, Monday. They were enLake, honormg Mrs. Bob Howard, for- tertained at the home of Mr and Mrs merly Miss Dirella Reed, also of Salt George Webster at Blackfoo.t, and Mr: Lake. • and Mrs. William Palmer of Egin, and Alberta M. Burgon, Norene Walker, Bishop and Mrs. Junis Wardle of Fern Story, Merle. Swenson and Stella Hemin, Idaho . L':lnd of East M1dvale at!ended . a Miss Ila Johnson spent last week at miscellaneous shower honormg M1ss Herriman as the guest of Mr. and Fern Bosh at the home of the latter Mrs. M. R. Huggins. in Midvale, Friday evening. Miss Mrs. Fred May was a guest at a Norene Wa!ker and Alberta M. Bur- party at Highland park, Wednesday, gon were ~ostesses. . given in honor of Mary Oswald. Mrs. Da1sy S"':enson entertamed Mrs. J. E. Huggins returned home members of the B1rthday club at her Tuesday after spending three days in home Fr~day afternoon and evening. Salt Lake as the guest of Mrs. C. E . Progress1ve games were played and Draper. refreshments were served to Mrs. Ann Dalton, Mrs. Irene Jensen, Mrs. Zelia Denney, Mrs. Betty Webster, Mrs. Begin School With a Pennanent Allsop, Mrs. Edna Nelson of Sandy, Wave-So Charming and Mrs. Mary Jacobson and Mrs. Verla Convenient Glover of East Midvale, Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Bosh, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Canning, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Algers of Midvale, and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Story Including two finger waves of East Midvale. George W. P. Hunt, governor of ::a and the slavery of the Congo. Arizona, has issued the following What is true of the American copstatement on Unemployment in the per producing industry is also true in United States, ap.d apropos of the great part of other of our industries. Governors' Conference on Unemploy- On all sides we are menaced by the ment, called by Governor Murray of products of cheap foreign labor. YesOklahoma, which convened at Mem- terday it was agricultural products phis, Tenn., August 24. from Russia, wheat, wood, butter, Unemployment 1s one of America's and what-not, Venezuelan oil and so major problems. If it is not the na- ·on. Today it's copper from Africa tion's greatest problem, it soon will be South America, Mexico and elsewhere: if nothing is done about our indus- Tomorrow some other of our industries. Protection of American indus- tries will be attacked. How can our tries against destructive foreign employment conditions be stabilized in competition is the remedy for our un- the least with such turmoil? Plants employment Ills. being closed down here, there and In the Rocky mountain states metal everywhere, armies of workers demining must be protected, and the prived of their means of subsistence most important of these is the mining wandering about the country seeking of copper. Production of copper, one othe~ _work for ":'hich they are poorly of the great industries conceived by quah~1ed by the1r past efforts and our hardy pioneer forefathers and expenences. built up by American courage, thrift Then again we fear about the and !ntell~gence, is now falling before 1 ?hanges being wrought in the Amerthe mvaswn of copper from foreign l1can home. How can there be the delands and peoples ignorant of the velopment of any home, in the true ideals and aspirations of the United sense. of the word, with our people States. roammg about the land seeking their Large and important communities bread and butter. I think it's bread of Montana, Utah, Mexico, Nevada they are seeking, I believe most of Arizona and other western states: them have given up hope for butter. their welfare institutions, industries One of the gravest mistakes of the and commercial enterprises, repre- present day is the notion that it is senting millions of dollars of invest- the pl"ime duty of the United States ments of the people, are being Wiped to adjust its economic condition to the out by the closing of copper mines. advantage of foreign countries; reAnd these mines are being closed by model ourselves, our homes and our the dumping of cheap foreign copper 1 work for the benefit of the world. into this country. Why not have other nations do some 1 Copper production in Africa is on adjusting! There is much more reason the up-grade while the American cop- in that. The United States has beper miner is forced to be idle. Mills, I come a highly successful nation. This smelte~s, refineries and other plants ¥ov~rm;nent, our industries and our of the mdustry are fast being erected mstltutwns have become the envy of on foreign soil, and soon the fires the world. Why should we tear them under our furnaces will be quenched apart for a. doubtful, hypothetical for the last time. world-wide benefit? It is quite unCopper is but a single illustration. certain that the condition of a single The production of oil, asbestos and African would be bettered were we to manganese are a few other minerals 1 sacrifice ourselves and our country in suffering from foreign influence. The such a manner. Certainly our ambifarm~~ feels the pressure of Soviet t~ons.. our enthusiasm and our effi-Russla s wheat dumping. Hides from c1enc1es would greatly suffer. As a Australia and the Argentine worry conseCJ.uence, there would be more our cattlemen. Canned meats from Amencans unemployed, more disNew Zealand and South America tressed and more starving. Wherein harass the packer. And so it is with would the world be benefited? other industries. There is no doubt Yet this is the extreme to which· that most of our economic ills have some would have us approach. There their origins in other lands. is the other extreme of placing an I use copper production as an illus- embargo on all foreign products and t~ation because that industry is of have nothing to do with any foreign f1rst importance in Arizona. Other peoples. The sensible procedure is a commodities and other states may be middle path. The levying of duties on cited with equal effectiveness. Con- all imports that threaten to undersid~r Utah with its metal mining, mine our industr_le.s and institutions agnculture and other industries. would be a suff1c1ent practical proForty-seven per cent of the people of tection. Such duties should be suffitha~ state _depend on metal mining for cient to equalize the difference betheir livehhood. The metals include tween the costs of production of a principally copper and silver. Every- foreign product and the dome·stic proone knows the hard road silver mining duct and, of course, the differences in is traveling. In 1929, Utah produced transportation charges to our mar159,000 tons of copper. In 1930, the kets. Th~s would give American workProduction was depressed to 89,000 ers a fa1r chance to compete against tons, a 45 per cent drop. In Montana the quality of foreign products withthe dr?P was from 148,000 to 99,100 out. the necessity of their sacrificing tons; m Nevada, from 70,000 to 42,- the1r standards of living and their em600; in New Mexico, from 48,000 to ployment. 33,900 tons; and so on. It is easy to . Our industries must be protected gauge what happened to employment rrom destructive foreign competition among copper miners when these if we are to stabilize the American drops happened. home and American employment. But what happens to the farmer when the copper mines, mills and smelters curtail production. Maricopa county in Arizona, an agricultural region and containing the city of Phoenix, is an illustration. Here'f Mr. and Mrs. T. F. Greenwood what the board of supervisors of that motored to Provo, Thuf'sday and county writes: "The reduced employment in the .risited with Mr. and Mrs. Clifton mining districts has resulted in largr fhayne. numbers coming here, thereby adding . Mr. and Mrs: Lavar Heugly and to the already great excess in labor .1ttle sons of East Millcreek viisted supply and has added materially to Nednesday evening with Mr. and the number of indigents soliciting ai<' l!rs. Harold Bishop. from the county. Since Maricop!o' Mrs. Dora Johnson and little daughcounty is the largest distributor of .er of Murray were dinner guests supplies to the mining districts, their fhursday o~ Mrs. Clarence Sharp. Mrs. Anme Greenwood ei.tertained reduced employment and lower income have been heavily felt by all Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bishop. classes of business in the county." Mrs. Donna Johnson and little What is true of Arizona is most probably true of Utah. The states Jaughter of Murray were dinner are about the same size, similar ter- p1ests Thursday of Mrs. Clarence rain, almost identical industries in .Sharp. kind and amount, and nearly the same Mrs. Annie Greenwood entertained population. And what is true of Ari- Wednesday, honoring her sister Mrs. zona and Utah copper mining is prob- Lottie Walker of Blackfoot, idaho ably true for copper mining in other .vho is here visiting relatives and states. These other states include friends. Dinner was served covers California, Idaho, Michigan, Montana, being laid for Lhe honor gu'e3t, and Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania. Mrs. Easter Young, Mrs. Kate Sharp, Tennessee, Utah, Washington and the Mrs. Alice Rock of East Midvale Mrs. Bessie Forbush and Mrs. Polly Territory of Alaska among others. It is surprising what a large area Proctor of Union. Thursday evening Mrs. Lottie of the United States copper mining directly affects but it is much morE Walker was entertained at the home Including two finger waves surprising to investigate and find out Jf Mrs. Easter Young on Social avethe extensiveness, the variety and the 1Ue. Those enjoying the evening were Mrs. Thomas P. Page was enterramifications of vocations which it M:rs. Walker, Mrs. Annie Greenwood tained at her home Tuesday, it being MARCELLING, 50c sustains. It stimulates occupation .Yir. and Mrs. George T. Sharp, Mr: her birthday anniversary. Luncheon for railroad men, lumbermen me- :md Mrs. Charles Young and Mr. and FINGER WAVING, 50c was served to Mrs. Hattie Freeman. chanics, powder makers, fa.'rmers _\frs. Apollas Lambson. Mrs. M. Hand of Sandy, Mrs. Bessi~ Mr. and Mrs. Meredith Page, Mrs. livestock-growers, the engineering profession, clerks and scores of other :<'orbush of Union, Mrs. Cornelia Clay- Gwynne Page, Mrs. John I. Wiberg, callings in addition to the miner and :on of Blanding, Mrs. Sarah Bennett Mrs. Z. T. Butterfield, Mr. and Mrs, 31 Lincoln, One Block East of the mine laborer. Copper mining is a and Mrs. M. J. Thornton of East Mid- Robert S. Sleater of Salt Lake, Mrs. Midvale School most important industry, affording ·vale enjoyed Thursday afternoon at Hans Nielsen of South Jordan, and HAZEL RICHARDSON, Operator George Whetman of Draper. livelihoods for hundreds of thousands the home of Mrs. Lester Forbush on Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Ezra L. Bills had as Phone Mid. 216-W of American men and women. As one State street. their guests Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Harold Bishop visited Friday of the outstanding efficacious remeCurtis Jackson of Salt Lake, Mr. and dies for unemployment our copper with Mrs. Del Rogers of Murray. Mrs. Eli Webster and son, Dick, of mines should be kept busy. William Bennett of Bingham and West Jordan; and Mrs. Elton Bills Not only is it essential that these Mrs. Sarah Bennett of East Midvale and children, Mr. Alta and Thomas, of hund!eds of thousands of our people were guests Sunday evening of Mrs. Herriman; Miss Arlene Gaysford and Lock, Gun and Novelty Repairing. be giVen work but is no more than Nellie Clays of Salt Lake. · ' Miss Alice Roberts of Lehi, and Floyd Mrs. Annie Greenwood had as her right than the American copper marAll kinds of repairing, Keys and Butterfield and Hilton Bills. ket, the largest and most attractive Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sharpening. Clair Platt of Kanarra spent last in the world, developed in this country Jensen and children of Union, Mr. and week as guest at the home of Zach 58 No. 1\-Iain St. 1.\fidvale, Utah by our people, the greatest users of Mrs. T. F. Greenwood of East Midj copper products in the world, should vale, Mr. and Mrs. Elias Parry of Butterfield. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Page anbe supplied with copper from Amer- Ogden and Mr. and Mrs. Orson ican mines worked by Americans and Thompson of Salt Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Clark and not by Africans, South American~ and o~her foreigners merely for the en- children of Clarkston, Utah, and Mr. rlchmen of a handful of financiers and Mrs. Ben Sainsbury and children who see nothing in the manipulation of our industries except the almighty dollar, even though it means the destruction of the means of livelihood of hundreds of thousands of Ameri• cans, the weakening of our local and The grime and dirt, the wear and tear of a severe winter has national economic and social strucleft its imprints on that car of yours. That's ;why you should ture, and our dependence on the bigbring your car to us, let us give it the "once over" and we'll heartedness of other nations to furbe perfectly frank with you in advising what repairs may be nish us with an essential metal in the event of war. necessary. I am stating it mildly when I say OUR ESTIMATES WILL PLEASE YOU! that the crying need of the United States today is more attention to our industries and more careful scrutiny of the pseudo economic arguments of our financiers whose eyes are on the American dollar and whose hearts palpitate for the serf system of Soviet Jtussia, the peonage of South Amer- I I I EAST MIDVALE "FIDDLERS' GREEN" Of all the yarns about the sea, it has remained for Albert Richard Wetjen of Portland, Oregon, to collect the lot and weave them into an unusual story of · adventures in a strange world, in a book called "Fiddlers' Green." The title, in sea lore, means sailors' heaven. Heaven for sailors had to be a ship so large as to be immune to wind and tide, bearing on board everything a sailorman could wish for taverns and girls and music; good food, warm bunks, and old shipmates who had gone before. In contrast with the savage inhuamnity of the old sailing days, the men who follow the sea seem to remember only the good things about the watery world which they were so near. The more cruel the experiences, the greater the glamour that attached to the tales that drifted down through the centuries. "Fiddlers' Green" is a narrative of gripping interest to young and old. The very smell and mystery of the sea seems to be caught in its pages. In reading it, one becomes really acquainted for the first time with Davy Jones and his brother Casey, Lief the Lucky, Ulysses, Columubs, Drake, Hudson, the Old Man of the Sea and Mother Carey. Cool skinned maidens with sea weed in their hair become living characters. The Man Who Flogged the Dolphin and who was "leadin' 'arpooner fer L'ap'n Jonah," invented a pump to milk a herd of fine fat whales which he caught, fenced in a little bay and trained to come to shore when he called them. He figured he could get n.bout a ton and a half of butter and cheesP form each whale each day not to mention milk, but, as he ~aid, "When I got aroun' to givin' the firs' milkin', I discovered I'd got me a •erd of bulls." The world marveled at the exploits of Baron Munchausen but his adventures seem to be equaled in "Fiddlers' Green." I Try Our 1 COLD LUNCHEON 35c f I Dinners, Lunches Short Orders Are served in a manner you will appreciate and enjoy. U.S. CAFE Samas & Thomas, Props. r--------~-----------------J Wednesday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday, August 26, 27, 28, 29 Metro-C..>ldwyn·Maver's :Miracle Ptoducdon The great book that fired the imagination of millions has now been brought to thrilling life! The stirring adventure, the jungle perils, the heart-touching romance -all are here to be seen, heard, and never forgotten! ·Prices 15c and 35c. No Tickets . \ ' , '"'•' ~, .. ,·,,,. .. '•'•' . ~ . ~.. 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