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Show CACHE AMERICAN, LOGAN. t'TAH 'H Johnson Averts Textile Strike and Tackles Steel Work ers Threat Steps for Drouth Relief Fletcher Made Republican Chairman. 15 y EDWARD W. PICKARD C br Nawapatf ration ItvniVL JOUVSON, adnilnla lxn miibl t pin of oik rri-ill- t fur Willful teitlle in 1 nic Industry. Immediate (cerll tuii to the workers for iha rollon mill owners, emt.urr a d b y oer prod o c 1 o 0 , would he willing to ahnt down planla for a considerable time. Of course, the New turn I would hair suffered a tilnik ce, to General J oh mo m Inekled the prnhlera ener getic-alland persuaded Thomas McMahon, president of the foiled Textile Workers of Ameriea. and George Sloan, head of the Cotton Textile Inalltule, to areept a com promise, and the rail for the atrlke waa rooked. The rmiiloeera are permuted to Ho ahead with their prod ram of rurtnlllnit production 25 per cent, and the laborer haie the promise of an Nli.V Imesflgatlon Into the matter of higher wages and other points of difference. The union also I assured of Inrreaaed representation on tlie Industrial relations hoard of the cotton teitlle code an thorlty and on the NRA advisory board. The neit front labor trouble, the dispute between the steel masters and tlie Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, promised to lie more difficult for General Johnson to handle, and It seemed that prompt action by President Itoesevelt would be necessary to avert the threalened atrlke. The men demand the right of collective union the through bargaining agent. Michael F. Tlghe, president of the Amalgamated, declared It was up to Mr. Roosevelt to "prompt and unqualified enforcement of the law on this point. Jie said the government had failed the steel workers and "their patience Is exhausted." General Johnson offered a compromise In the form of a speclnl labor relations board for the steel Industry, similar to that which was created for tlie automotive Industry In March. Rut the proposition was rejected by both the steel masters and the spokesmen for the union. According to the American Iron and Steel lustltutc, the strike threats are due to the activities of union leaders who seek government to maneuver themIntervention selves Into positions of power and domination over the steel workers of the nation." In a formal statement, the Institute asserted rela tions of steel companies and a great mass of their emplojees are "peaceful," and that the whole difficulty lies with the Amalgamated association. The closed shop" Is the one point at issue, the statement says, and for the emplojers to accede to such a request would be rack treachery. 1li 1 tbelr f pro-vid- OUSED to action by the drouth, Is the worst the country has ever experienced. President Roosevelt telephoned from Groton, Conn., to the federal relief administration, directing that a special relief work program be put Into operation Immediately In the middle western states. On his return to Washington he called a council of war to expand Ids plans and bear s proposals from government officials. It was stated by Mr. Roosevelt that farmers should be given cash Income from work and also employment on projects so that tneir Immediate distress might be alleviated. Harry L. Hopkins, federal emergency relief administrator, at once allocated $6,500,000 to 13 states so that the work could start The states receiving allotments are: Wisconsin, $2,100,000; Minnesota, $1,000,000; South Dakota, $1,030,-000- ; Idaho, $230,000; Kansas, $200,-00Montana, $350,000; Nebraska, $276,000; N'ew Mexico, $100,000; ; North Dakota, $500,000; Dtah, TO IN which vari-lou- $600,-000- W'yoming, $130,000. Work projects, Mr. Hopkins said, will be put speedily under way to employ the heads of farm families in need. The projects will include the development of additional wa ter supply through digging wells and through Impounding or diverting water from rivers and lakes. Projects employing men and worn en In the canning of meat, fruits and vegetables also will be used to conserve food resources of the area control whhb began with the pacing of the I.ankhcad cotton hill, Ihe house voted, 2il lo 114, for passage of the so railed Kerr tobacco hill vesting the AAA with stnt utory powir to fore compliance with It adjustment program. The measure wus sent to the senate over the protest of Republicans who denounced the plan at Just another step toward regimentation of the farming Indiislry and enslavement of the American farmer." The house also completed legislative action on the reciprocal tut Iff hill and It wa sent to tlie for hi signature. cash Income for (he farnlllr. Road work, a well, will provide romiilerahle emergency em ploymenL A appropriation congressional that may eneed t'amoon.i) was the paramount proposal before the drought conference. Some congress men felt $1, (xi, is h nx) would be The picture presented to the waa one of live stock emm luted fur want of water and food, grassliopis-- r and chinch bugs doing untold damage la (lie wake of llte heat and dr) ness, thousands of airee of planted grain ly Ing ungermlmited or blighted and hundred of farm couimuuUie pray Ing for ruin. Hews Intermountain told for liuay Readers Briefly I.OIsE 1935 (IIOKK IFST ING THE I I(in IOIMIN lllCOlTI! IKEX I I NT Itl I ILF BEGINS is Rolw wa Itj by ID Kill l FALLS, ID Mill! 1 MXSIEIRS KIvLS mil-fUMES- VO Ihe s Iiventioii of Huslnei- the Idaho lit il IVomena Clul-and Iri of the fourteen! It the i1ol!ig aiiiiuul lotivenilon Inn- nsftitly. hue .Slates, these being the of the Natl. Facta ami figure were presented showing officials of the German govnt ernment had money for the of relnlly ltitATFI S if IT mi-ti- 1 exi-ec- Informa- It. Jirisr Starting Place for Stratosphere Flight Him r and the consul general In New T I EMIT P. PI ETCHER of Tenn-aIn )lvan!a tins been handed the York, Ir Otto kiep.both figuring rather difficult job of managing the the testimony. was aald to have Doctor Kh-Republican party, The nallonnl s committee at Its paid ll.tssi to a Now York city pule k. J ' session In Chicago llctly ami W promotion firm Vf r IDA Two tons of SlIuSlIONE. to obtain publicity In this country" elected him i poNon proved lnadisiiate In I to succeed of anti Semitic statements. He waa Ar In Lincoln grashopN-r''. Everett Sanders. aald, also, to have contributed, uncomity, and five more tons have Tills would seem to officially nnd In behalf of a third SJ g lieen received. This nialerlul is be a wise choice, person, $.'ks) in $70 hills for the ;iT A v-. ' otl farmers distrilmud among 7for Mr. Pletcher Is publication of a pro German pamphseveral traels of the Big WinmI S' Doctor Luther was descrtlied an able and ener- let art 5Sc" jL'JvT . . t particularly In the aa Imiker financial and man. notable the spongetic of the North Shohonc trait where f his diplomacy sor of the pamphlet was greatest the hoper ima-io- n and tact and also Under examination, Carl Dltkoy, tills season. for ready wit. In partner of the New York firm of a grasshopior TOOELE, UT.-ISPS he abandoned Carl Ryoir and Associates, aald his cnmimlgn started at Ihaaih by law practice to become one of The- firm has a contract with the GerComity Agent A. O. Klllmrn, five odore Roosevelts Rough Riders, and man tourist Information nfltce, reand one half tons of halt was put after Ihe campaign In Cuba he ceiving $6,000 a month giving adi reek section out along the transferred to the Infantry and vice. counsel, and getting together BOISE, IDA Attorney General served Ihrough Ihe Philippine Inmaterial for travel Information. advised I.ert H. Miller has Ixs-He entered the diplosurrection. About twlie a month, too, he tes that Ihe test suit on the constitumatic service In PNC and after valtitled, a sheet entitled tionality of tlie stale chain store uable service In Cuba, China, Portin , la Economic Bulletin anil Hint tax will not he npH-ahugal and again In China, he was a list of prepared and mailed to protesting compnnits will siv the successively ambassador to Chile, about 3NN) newspaper and some tax. The attorney general estimatMexico, llelgium and Italy. For a few business Institutions." o ed the tax would approximate lime during the Harding adminisRev. Frauds Gross This secluded bowl In the mountains eleven miles from Rapid City, S. D., was the place selected for the One witness. 1933 of for half of nml the all of was tration he undersecretary of Perth Amboy, N, linked Am- start of the stratosphere balloon flight of Captain Stevens and Major Kepner. 1931 for width It Is due. The tax slate, nnd afler his retirement from bassador Luther withJ., was enacted by Ihe 1933 legislature. alleged the embassy In Rome he was chairpropaganda In a letter MOSCOW, IDA. Several hundred man of the federal tariff commisMISS LOS ANGELES which he read to the committee. 4 II (lull ho.vs and gills of Idaho atsion. a retired Catholic Father Gross, tended the 121 h Annual junior short The national committee adopted priest, told how he had published course at ihe University of Idaho a statement of prlnelples for the Justice to pamphlet entitled, this month. pnrty In the fall campaign which Hungary, Germany and Austria. BOISE, IDA. Miles of snow In temperate but tlrui language conLater the committee heard a story fence owned by the state highway demned the doings of the Demoof the nation wide distribution of department will he made available cratic administration, without any Nazi "propaganda" some of It alIn southern Idaho to conduct rabpersonalities, and more specifically Inlo the United bit (Hives, according to Gov. C. set forth what the Republican party legedly brought without customs Inspection. lien llO'S. The first district from thinks should be done to restore States Evidence was presented to show whiih an application for fence came to the nation prosperity. Opening that German consuls had encourwas Dietrich, nnd a large supply with the statement that "Americnn now stored at Shoshone will lie aged organization of Institutions and American civilizaclubs to which the "propaganda" turned over to farmers for use In tion are In greater danger today was sent. drives, the governor slated. Herded than at any time since the foundaInto Inclosures made by the fence, of the State, Representatives tion of the Republic," the statethe rabbits can lie slaughtered with ment plunges Immediately Into dis- Post Office and Labor departments dubs, other snmv fence is stored cussion of the needs for social legis- were Interested listeners to the tesin Iooatello and Idaho Falls nnd timony produced, and there were lation. will he available for use in the camof later hints proceeddeportation There was assurance of liberal against the animals, the govpaigns ings. treatment of these problems In this ernor said, upon application of those paragraph : in charge of tlie proposed drives. Britain formally Our nation Is beset with probthe United States that it BASIN. WIO A hunting accilems of Infinite perplexity the would not pay anything on the war HI, dent took thp life of Lognn-Kileproblems of recovery; of debt Installment due June 13; that near hero. Ihe youth laid his 22 with Its unending tale of It would make no more payments caliber rifle in n hush, nml Inter human suffering ; of agriculture, until the United States consents to pulled the weapon out, with the with Its lost markets and relatively a downward revision of the debt, muzle pointing toward him. The low prices; of forever checking and that any discussion of revision gun was discharged and the bulabuses and excesses that have be- at this time would be useless. All let entered his heart. come all too apparent, and thereaftof which means default The rOCATELLO, I D A. Participation er the problems of a wider spread British note wasplain sent In response In the federal corn hog proof prosperity, of relieving the to a blunt notification from PresiIbis e(ir will net Ilannoik gram hardships of unemployment and dent Roosevelt as to the sums due. county farmers approximately $15, old age, and of avoiding these disIt was evident, from foreign to the county agent. OIK), according tragic depressions. These problems patches, that the other debtor naIDAHO FALLS, IDA. Increased After several years of idleness, the famous steamship Leviathan Is must be approached In a broad, libtions, except Finland, would follow in 4 II club work in the in the Atlantic service. She Is here seen docked interest eral and progressive spirit, unhamMiss Mercedes McNutt was chosen to be put to work again the course adopted by the British. district of the Idaho exteneastern for Boston at the yard overhauling. nuvy ob"Miss Los Angeles" in a contest pered by dead formulas or too sion service is noted in the number with more than 200 California beaustinately clinging to the past." of enrollments this year ns computLOUIS ofBARTIIOU, foreignas the ties, and will be a candidate for the Solution of the problems, how France, appears ed to last year, said G, IV. CleveMiss at state California the title be ever, said the statement, should dominating figure In the negotla-maland, in charge of this woik. in Is Mercedes within the framework of AmeriSeptember. dispel the war fair PAItOWAX, UT. The wool men can Institutions in accordance with clouds hanging eighteen years old and weighs 113 of this district have succeeded in the spirit and principles of the over Europe. The pounds. putting their wool of approximately founders of the Republic." most Important 90 40,000 fleeces on the market, Further on the platform said: NAVYS COMMANDER thing he already cent of which was consigned, per to "We are opposed revolutionary bag accomplished with an advance of from 14 to change without popular mandate is the engineering 16 cents per pound. From 20 to 23 and all change by usurpation, the of an accord becents was paid to the growers who customary weapon by which free and France tween Due to mueh dry sold outright. are governments destroyed. Germany on condiweather and wind, the wool is not We believe that the present tions for the Saar so good as in previous years, and emergency laws vesting dictatorial plebiscite and setcarries more dirt. powers In the President must never ting the date for OGDEN, UT Plans and specifibe permitted to become a permannt that vote on Janucations for the first unit of the part of our governmental system. ary 13, 1933. The Pino View clam project have been that During its sessions the committee agreement gives assurance sent to the Denver U. S. reclamaraised more than enough money to France, under the pretext of pretion office for printing. The first pay all its debts. serving order, will not use force to includes the construction of the baof the Saar the return prevent clam, tunnels and spillways, the means also It that SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR sin to Germany. Ogden city water supply alterations ICKES journeyed to the Germans now have everything nnd a portion of the Eden and to lose and nothing to gain from a Chicago and testified In the disbarHuntsville highways. ment proceedings brought by him putsch in the Saar, so the possibilin near SALT LAKE CITY, UT. Farm the clash future a two O. of W. Chicago lawyers, ity against loans in the western region this Larsen and J. M. Malmin, the lat- is virtually eliminatad. ter once a federal Judge In the VirIn the disarmament conference in year approximated only 50 per cent of the loans made during 1933, Geo. Mr. Ickes asserted the Geneva, M. Barthou has been equally gin Islands. S. Glen, regional manager of the defendants had tried to blackmail forceful though not so peaceful in him In order to obtain for Malmin his doings. He has stood out firmerop production loan section of the farm credit administration, said rethe position of governor of the Vir ly against the German demands for gin Islands and a federal post for arms equality and has greatly ancently. Larsen, He said their conspiracy GENOA, NEV. Eail.v days were gered Sir John Simon, British forwas based on trumped-uin Genoa, historic Moreign secretary. Id connection with charges mon settlement and Nevada's oldest growing out of a Probate court case Counsellor Rosenberg of the Soviet he handled as an attorney. town, recently, when an estimated Admiral Joseph Mason Reeves, embassy In Paris, Barthou has been crowd of 2IXK) gathered to pay tribThe secretary's charges were forming what Is called an eastern for years an outstanding naval airMrs. Anna Roosevelt Dali, daughter of the President and Mrs. Rooselater flatly denied by the defend I.ocarno pact to be signed by Rus- man, has become the commander velt, rode the first prize winner In the road hack class at the Toit Mver ute to the pony express riders with Mrs dedication of a monument. ants. The case was being heard by sia, Rumania, Czechoslovakia, Lithof the American fleet, succeeding horse show. She Is shown on True Love, receiving the prize a. the grievance committee of the Chi uania, Latvia and Esthonia, with Admiral Sellers. Carey Langliome of Upperville, France as Us moral guarantor. cago Bar association. l l.nther, German A -- - , y tAw lW i.' ss hair-ma- Ievi-opme- r.T- n -- M - t', A A- s V tA t v live-Bt- pro-j.v- t, t Tu Ih-e- German-Amerlca- n isS A d $60.-Oo- Leviathan to Go Into Service Again n Great Ar' President Daughter Takes Prize A. . p azaaosa iiu the other day about tnec ting the Sec- retary of Agriculture Wallace, tiiiiii-- IDA I.O, and hlki rs are w.irmd lo I1 on the liK.kout for kImui oak a.nl jmli-othis MiimuiT while In the hill Ivy ' ' adj.os nt to Pis'iitfllo. - iiTm 4 L SAIT LAKE CITY, IT Thru I. I t an program Inaugurated by the 1 Waiver A Rio tJrande D XVesti-rRailroad company M.inh. the tinmls-- of men employ-e- l In the Khops ami the maintenance I 1 fast In a long line off Ambrose lightship, and, 2 President Roosevelt wllh of wav (hpnrtmcnt Part of the American fleet pas-dothe lll.SO level, nnd durSecretary of the Navy Swanson, Josephus Daniel and Admiral Standley on hoard the Indianapolis reviewing lid tlie naval parade. 3 Cavalcade, winner of the American derby at Chicago, with Jockey M. Garner up and ing July will equal or Mra. Sloane, the horses owner. level, ll wax slated recently by II. M Huai, division niierlnlemlent. SALT I AKK (TTY. IT. -- Drouth relief project lu the Wasatch National forest have boon ntarteil. Tho -projis t are In Tihk-Io- , Wasaleh and : Summit counties and lnv Ive Ihe development of eprlngs ami piping J, I water to troughs roiistrn red lor i . X . I . ; T of use of llveMixk. the " r-X 1-- ' . V W the springs will make the entire I .. f rV area of ihe fnreM avnllnMe for r tion In this country, the German epitaph - u Infiu motion IntcrcHiIng waa given (he apei In I nminillh-- e that is Investigating tin American" artivlth-- in th Lulled BEVERLY HILLS. Well all I know la Just what 1 read in the paper, or see high and low. You know I wrote to you In one of my little daily fete-Io- Iri-id- cnt and furnish the agreement which forest ailed the threatened atrlke of time 4kmmh) work era In Ilia cot ion In Scenes and Persons in the Current News forward the program CARR News Review of Current Events the World Over In one of the old MiCalifornia ssions. Well H waa no made op joke. You see he bad been out here on a speaking and inspection tour, and he waa naturally doing a little sight seeing on the aide. Well to the I had been down to funeral of a friend, and a very very dear old friend of Fred Stone, Mr. Lew Hemlock, a retired business man from Chicago, Just about as sweet a character aa you would find, lie was a fine citizen and a big loss to the town. Well one should never pass any of tbeso Missions without stopping and going in. They are among the greut historical spots of our Country. Thia one wus built in 1776. Thuts tho year our lust World Series wa over with England. I dont know much history, but I have looked at many a one of those pictures, labelled Spirit of 1776." It atlra the spirit of )ou. I expect Its a terrible bad painting, and mnby worse music, but Its a heroic looking group. Ono lias his head tied up I remember, one's got a flute, and I believe the little fellow has a drum. It and Washington standing up In that boat crossing (I think It was the Delete are) those two constitute all the art they had In those days. Nothing being painted now will ever live that long. We tore ourselvs loose front England In that year, its a question of who it was a better deal for. There was an awful lot of things before 1776 that we wasent "Blessed' with when we were under England. Just mention any problem thata facing our Country today, and it wasent with us before 1776. Do you realize there was no Senate, and no Congress? Then you talk about freedom. No Inflation, deflation, reforcs-tratlosophistication. Tho only thing like today was we had no money. But we had no debts. Course you had a little Indian trouble, about one tenth as much as you do today with your kidnappers. If any trouble showed up, why you had Paul Revere to saddle old a Ned and come down the valley, and holler, The Slonxes, or Black-feare coming!" And Paul was more sure fire than a telephone. Suppose the fellow that wtnts to warn you that somebody is coming after you hasent got a nickle. Well he cant warn you. But In those days everybody had a horse. They muBt have been great old days at thut. The tax in those days that we fought to do away with, must have amounted to at least five percent of what it is today. They were very religious people that come over here from the old Country. They were very human. They would shoot a couple of Indians on the way to every prayer meeting. But wliats all that got to do with what was happening out here on west side of Uncle Sam? An old Priest had come up Country, Father Junipero Serra, and he built Mis-- s i o n a and schools, and taught the Indians trades, and et into the the churches were run like b i g ranches. They each had thousands of cattle, and horses and sheep. He was an odd old fellow. He could pray without shooting an Indian first. He was a greater humatarian than all the Pilgrims combined, including the 3 million that come on the Mayflower. No such man ever set foot on the Eastern Shore. He civilized with a Bible, and the old Pilgrim boys did it with a blunderbuss. There was never a church in the East built for Indians to worship. So as I accidentally run onto Secretary Wallace in San Juan Capistrano, 65 miles out of Los Angeles, although perhaps like me, not of that faith, he viewed it with great reverence. Each community farmed and raised everything, (and these Missions were not in a great watered country remember) but they did it all, no overproduction, no unno tarnffs, no derconsumption, processing taxes, no birth control with hogs, no plowing under every third row of free holy beans. Thousands lived in each of these valleys, until the Gringos come. They gummed it up proper, so I think Mr Wallace's thoughts must have been on the way these people did the thing that all our civilization seems to say we rant do. Wallace knows there is a way, because he stood on the very ground where it worked. 1934, McN aught Syndicate, Inc, |