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Show - 3 The I inent acted on within ten months Said Senator Vandenberg: "Now it's up to the Administration. I've done all I can do. If they want to do something about child labor, here's their f Time March BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1937 Page One) sorts of things. All about? a was little boy. he since I remarkable it how him telling 1 a man so hated to be so free u Don't you think he's been haven't been where I've nwr on this trip." gcce l of ll.00 sailing for Europe a later, Lady Astor gave her 7rion mi V. S. Labor: "What's going States today is an to the United revolution. Capital is trial and has been organized for in the United States, and now Sor is j1181 starUnS to organize. Of "?L you might as well let it organ-ffi- s it will organize anyway. Under conditions you will always find Le leaders losing their heads and (Continued From WART, the Speed Cop rffTs 70&? JOB HUNT ed JOB - - - The Child Labor WASHINGTON. aendment proposed in 1924 had ieea ratified Dy oniy six. oiai.es prior oi c rmns.ua v. ivouse-rt- lt Then, with the Presi-iff- lt as its big campaign, 22 more states ratified it during the next four ears But with eight ratifications required before it becomes part g the Constitution, the 1924 Child labor Amendment came to a stand-- 0 Lg. Wheel Base FROM $595.00 rozK, sp v Stealing jOchigan's not CI1EV-TEUC- 325.00 SEA BURIAL - - Steam, but Streamlined NEW YORK Unknown to most voyagers, every big ocean liner carries a couple of coffins and ship's doctors are qualified embalmers. While ship captains have the right to order burial of bodies at sea,' such is a horror of this type of burial that the bodies of persons dying aboard ship today are usually embalmed and turned over to authorities at the decendent's home port. Returning to the U. S. on the "lie de France" two years ago, devout Danvers, Mass., school Principal Eliza beth Ann Ahearn died of a stroke while in her bath tub, was not discovered until 14 hours later. Ship's doctors found it inadvisable to embalm the body and the captain called upon Catholic priests aboard to officiate at a sea burial. Subsequently four cousins sued the French Line for $100,000 for their mental anguish resulting from Miss Ahearn's body not having been committed to hallowed ground in a Catholic cemetery, lost last week when Catholic canonical experts testified in a Manhattan Federal Court that necessitous burial In unconsecrated ground is "not disgrace full." NEW HAVEN, Connecticut. "My Sitting in his mother died of cancer and my father cream and yellow has never forgotten it. He has al privately-owne- d Plymouth cab in front of Washing- ways wanted to do something about ton's Dodge Hotel on June 1', Driver it. He has established the fund to Joseph N. Carnaggie spied Mr. and gether with another person, who pre Mrs. Francis J. Smith of Watford, fers to remain anonymous, as his con England, coming down .the steps. tribution to the fight against the dis "How does one go about seeing the ease. The fund is created promarily U. S.?", asked Mr. Smith. Driver to inquire into the causes of cancer Carnaggie said that a good way to rather than into its cure." begin was a tour of Washington for Thus last wek spoke Starling W $5. Childs, Jr. in explanation of his fath During the trip Carnaggie er's $10,000,01)0 donation to Yale Uni g lecture versity for the establishment of interrspersed his with many a remark about the beau- - Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund ties of near-b- y Virginia, easily sold announced by Yale President James on Smiths idea of a $75 trip Rowland Angell at a vast alumni the Sid labor without the farmers alarming io expect their children to do chores through that State. Three weeks later luncheon in New Haven last week. the farm. Advisers of the Childs Fund will be Finally Senator Vanden-ber- g the trio turned up in Manhattan, havlowered the age limit two years ing been to Mt. Vernon, Arlington, Yale's Medicine Dean Stanhope Bayne tomswer the objection of those who Yorktown, Jamestown, Charlottesville Jones, a bacteriologist and Rockefel ained that boys and girls of 16 over the Skyline Drive to Gettysburg, ler Foundation protege; his predevee- W were reallv not children. The Pa., then north through Harrisburg sor as dean, Pathologist Milton Chas Iliiary Committee approved all this to Montreal, Ottawa, then south again Winternitz, who at the American Me i added a fourth change:: a provi-- ; through Lake Placid, Albany, Sara- dical convention announced new disrequiring the States to pass up- - toga Springs, Mirror Lake and West coveries about the hardening of the the new proposal by convention Point. arteries; Rudolph John Anderson, bi jsthin seven years, the same provi-:- :i For their next taxi odyssey the ochenust; Dr. Ross Granville Harwhich got the Repeal amend- - Smiths paid a 25 rate and rison, biologist who began the arti- - 's non-sailer- MILLIONS FOR CANCER WASHINGTON K CIIEV. TRUCK Lg. Wheel Base O TAXI TOUR j 1935 rs 0. a march on the New Deal, Senator Arthur Hendrick Vacdenberg therefore drafted a new tlM labor amendment which the Sen-it- e Judiciary Committee last week only endorsed unanimously but be iered could be speedily ratified. Af-t- a finding out the objections of those to the 1924 proposal, which opposed Ad: "The Congress shall have pow-- s to limit, regulate and prohibit the 18 years of labor of persons under sje," Senator Vandenberg edited the jest to read: "The Congress shall have wer to limit and prohibit the em- jtoyment for hire of persons under years of age." Thus were eliminated the words regulate," which was too elastic and people to fear it might be stretch-s- i to mean anything a future administration might wish, and "labor," iMch the Catholic Church might be stretched in include jurisdiction over yjpils in its parochial schools "Em ;!oyment for hire" was substituted to Jdtlaw most of the worst forms of I IS 'A Z&B&anse - T I !.:;. er,rve ia Museum r.);r ,'ive which pulled the - ied two-ho- ur sight-seein- j cent-a-mi- le '. ' The "iron horsa" got a swanky new harness when the Union Pacific streamlined its steam locomotive No. 2S06 and equipped it s so that it can speed along at 100 throughout with miles or more per hour. This is one of three kinds of streamlined locomotives, one of them a steam turbine electric type, with which the Union Pacific is experimenting. Its brilliant color scheme, with brown and yellow predominant, is similar to that of the Union Pacific's fleet of streamliners. No. 2906 is the product of long experimentation by Union Pacific engineers. ' ficlal cultivation of living tissues, for which the Rockefeller Institute's Al exis Carrel is more famed; Rockef el- Institute's Francis Peyton Rous, whose discovery of a type of cancer (Rous's sarcoma) which can be trans planted from one chicken to another gave students of cancer a powerful new instrument of research. The Childs donation, whose disburse ment these scientists will manage, is precisely the amount which the world's No. 1 cancer authority, Man hattan's Dr. James Ewing, says is necessary to establish an effective cancer study institute. NEW YORK Revealed this week by the Fortune Quarterly Survey are the favorite movie stars of the U. S. Public and the attitude of the public on the double feature, long a thorn in the side of the cinema industry which thinks the public likes it. Men's favorite stars are Clark Ga ble, Shirley Temple, William Powell, Wallace Beery, George Arliss and Myrna Loy, in that order. Women's favorites are Shirley Temple, Robert Taylor, Clark Gable, Norma Shearer, Jeanette MacDonald, Greta Garbo. e On the question pre ferences are divider as follows: Dou ble feature 21.7 per cent; one fea ture and good shorts 63.9 per cent; no preference, or don't go to the movies 14.4 per cent. double-featur- I3 i Fine Magazines THIS NEWSPAPER 0n Year 4 (2) of UCOOKTBt Thest Magazines HOME D HMIOHAt SPORTSMAN ( ONLY Select 2 THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 McC ALL'S MAGAZINE FACT DIGEST D HDNTINQ 2 .V.fT.T. ft FISHINO. '.t . y. SILVER SCREEN OUTDOORS .1 yr. . ... yr. 1 "T. 1 yr. J yr. POPULAR SCIENCE Monthly 6 moi. . Q FACT DIGEST Q - ril Servit Of Ft mt l5!?$O30B COUNTRY ..7! AMERICAN 0r ft yr. HOME FRUIT GROWER 1 1 POULTRY TRIBUNE Any I Three (3) For Only Q BOYS' ft- fr. no LIFE (For All Boy).. NATIONAL SPORTSMAN .... 1 fr CAPPER'S FARMER ....."."." .1 ft Four (4) For Only $2.60 TMAIL H.EMEN:-Encf- NAMnpWPP oed Q POULTRY KEEPER MARKET GROWER'S JRHL. J" BREEDER'S WORLD (PwAryl jrr. YOUR COUPON TODAY - Tt3? !&f? .....r. BOYS' LIFE (For All Boy Rain or Shine SAND, MUD, HILLS witirm. mstNT siiewrioit-tf- sc matcfc 19-yea- r- one night last week as he sketched her's. Later, as she read a detective magazine, she noted a picture of 29- Robert Irwin, former insane year-ol- d asylum inmate, sculptor of sorts, wanted in Manhattan for the horrible Easter Sunday murders of the beau teous artists' model Veronica Gedeon, her mother and a man lodger. "Why that looks like our Bob!" she exclaimed. Two nights later Henrietta sudden- ly asked the bar boy: "Say, Bob, what's your last name?" "Murray," he answered quickly. "Why?" "Oh, nothing. But did you ever of Robert Irwin?" hear "No," he said turning away. By midnight, Pantry Maid Koscian The bar boy ski was all had obviously skipped town, his locker was empty, and in his $1.50 a week hotel police found New York newspapers with stories of the Gedeon murders. Next day Robert Irwin phon ed Hearst's Chicago "Herald & Examiner," offered to surrender for a price, had his terms accepted, and soon slouched into their offices to pour out the story of the Gedeon murders in a signvoluminous, jumbled, ed confession. From late Saturday until Sunday afternoon Hearst writers and cameramen had their prize to themselves, while other papers, writing as Hearst extra after extra hit the stands, howled to Chicago's police. De tectives vainly searched the "Herald & Examiner" office while Irwin, spirited away to the Morrison Hotel, played cards with Hearst men. Finally surrendered to the Cook County Sheriff, Prisoner Irwin was flown to New York City to face the murder charges. sex-load- tir - -- a A You're Ready for Anything with a "Caterpillar" With the sure gripping tracks of a Tractor, "Caterpillar" Track-Typ- e farming Is a vastly more pleasant occupation. There's less delay in plowing, because planting, harvesting of sure traction and there's more time left over In which to enjoy being a fanner. Then, too, "Caterpillar" farmers earn more because of lower operating cost and more timely field work. .... .... ..... .... Why not Investigate "Cater-pillar"- -f arming? Tremonton Tractor & Implement Co. ..f.? yr. 1 HEADQUARTERS IN yr. mo. I t TREMONTON AND VICINITY FOR jnr. yr 6 mo. PARENTS' MAGAZINE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY ..". mo. I ft- SILVER SCREEN .1 MODEL AIRCRAFT BUILDER O AMERICAN COOKERY CAPPER'S FARMER n HUNTING Q O .T ?J?.l mo4 I yr. BREEDER'S WORLD (Ponttrj) . . . . . .".?. FLOWER GROWER COUNTRY Q ' Tt FISHINO n AMERICAN FRUIT GROWER yr. positive guarantee Quiet Running Low Cost Operation on Less Electric Current BALANCE ON EASY TERMS SMALL DOWN PAYMENT VISIT OUR NEW GOOD HOUSEKEEPING STORE TODAY t mm. NATIONAL SPORTSMAN POULTRY TRIBONB HUNTER TRADER TRAPPER Other Magaix. AMERICA'S NO. 1 BUY IN 1937 Im MARKET GROWER 8 JOURNAL.... I Q REFRIGERATORS AND RANGES ftyr- - i yr HOME AMERICAN BOY QDOO WORLD... j- a CLEVELAND, Ohio Buxom, black eyed Henrietta Koscianski, old pantry maid in Cleveland's Startler Hotel, studied the bar boy's face I yr. .IHf. for whkh tencl me Q find $ nd th niagaiines marked with A (X) A If too re interetted m STATE. museum will stsy." I yr. 1 t ETUDE MUSIC MAGAZINE OUTDOORS I yr MAGAZINE HOUSEHOLD . ' THUS (X) Tfr:! McC ALL'S MAGAZINE Q m HUNTING It FISHING .TH PATHFINDER (54 latues) HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE custom? ias apoj of d class- w MARK :t PUBLICATIONS yr JRNL .6 mot. yn. mo. HOO FOR ONLY yr. O EASTER KILLER - - - yr. I yr. MODEL AIRCRAFT BUILDER Year Year 1 OF THESE yr. 6 mo$. ... ".'TT!. HOME, and your choict of any 6 mos. COOKERY AMERICAN I I I I . 6 mo. PARENTS' MAGAZINE 6 mo. FLOWER GROWER AMERICAN BOY . . . ?. .7??!?, . 1 yr HUNTER TRADER TRAPPER 6 mo. KEEPER "ARKBT GROWER'S ::.'. BOYS' LIFE (For All Boya) PATHFINDER (52 Issues) ETUDE MUSIC MAGAZINE .1 yr. D BREEDER'S WORLD (Poultry)2 D BOYS' LIFE (For All Boys) . 6 0 POULTRY ft. yr I yr. TRIBUNE.....?... D CAPPER'S FARMER One (1) of These Magazines .1 D HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE U POULTRY and Favorites YOUR With COUNTRY S yrs. D AMERICAN FRUIT GROWER I r ( WITH Two ) t SU M m nc.v:t HMhvpy 1 Diesel-powere- d DOUBLE FEATURE OFFER .) Japan's first railway, transported by ! v. roller-bearing- O OfftH SU ; ' -- ;s 4 r J CHEVROLET CO. hitch-hikin- the elecuon in 1932. (o USED CAR PURCHASED J933 G.M.C.TBUCK No shrewd buyer passes up our used car bargains theirs. jDiTLN'G T y Coo'-idg- vai becoming .iwyhr Kory y NEW YORK Not since the e era have June graduates found jobs a splentiful as have this year's. Reports Chicago's Graduate Placement Bureau: 92 per cent placed, average monthly salary $115. Yale: 45 ;: per cent placed, salary $120. Princeton, "anyone who wanted to land a job could do so." Harvard, being hired 15 per cent ahead of 1936." Columbia, "1937 will join 1936 and 1930 as peak years." Stanford, 50 per cent increase in placements, salaries $105." U. S. Steel took 594 from 91 colleges, American Telephone & Telegraph 300, General Electric 700, Goodyear Tire Carnaggie's hotel expenses, put up and Firestone 110 each. $1,000 bond to permit the cab to enO ter Canada, followed Carnaggie's suggestion to detour the see the Dibnne OUT OF GAS - - Quintuplets. A week later Carnaggie NEW YORK With the possible ex- put them on the liner "Berengaria" g ception of a honeybees, and Mr. Smith peeled off $625 plus the most exasperating thing in any a bottle of Mischief perfume, which motorist's life is to run out of gas. he manufactures. On the trip the But President Coleman W. Roberts Smiths lost a Voigtlander camera and of the Carolina Motor Club reports to show his thanks, Driver Carnaggie that a .survey of American Automo- bought a new one for $30, mailed it bile Association garages reveals that to England. Then he headed back to about 1,500,00 U. S. motorists ran Washington, where he cashed in once more by charging out or gas on tne road last year or half again as many as in 1935. to take his picture. Said he for nothing: "They had one Says Mr. Roberts: "The surprising thing about this record is that there of the best times an Englishman ever are some 325,000 retail gasoline out- had in America. . . . They're coming lets in the nation, or approximately back in a couple of months with their one for every mile of surfaced high- son and daughter. I'm going to take way in the State systems, and every them to Yellowstone and all out West modern-da- y car is equipped with a on that trip." gauge." J WHO MAKES USED CAE BUYING SAFE GUARANTEED hat-fvn- is By Fronk Chevrolet Co. chance." tfSm or-J- - tAGlS THREE' ft ya SCHGSS ELECTRIC CO. hv TREMONTON, 138 Main Street FOR ANY STORE PHONE 307 Also Stores at Ogden, Brigham City, and Malad yj |