Show V THE OGDEN STAN leases - MONDAY EVENING JULY 26 1937 DARD-EXAMINE-U £ t muiet PUBLISHING COMPANY L G LAS MANN EDITOR AND GENERAL MANAGER Frank Franda Associate Editor W L N Cox AnocUta General Manager A AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER Published Every Evening and Sunday Morning Without a Muzzle or a duo Entered at the poatolfloe at Ogden Utah aa aecond claaa matter according to Act d Congress March 3 1879 Membera of The Associated Press United Press NEA Service and A B O The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the use lot not republics Won ot all news dispatches credited to It ornews otherwise credited in this paper and also the local SUBSCRIPTION PRICES Carrier 73o a month By Mall— Must Be Paid in Advance—6So a' Month $700 a year In Utah Idaho Nevada and Wyoming — All Other Statea 0 a Month By - 1 SIDE GLANCES Bu-t-says Boake Garter By George Clerk J LIFE INSPIRING F D R Was Pleased The Based NLRB Earle—The Tub-Thump- clntyre er — IToamseeamusedJohn L that NEW YORK July 26—Diary: Up and reading some rare comment in a letter from the novelist Rachel Field about dogs So out and near the Waldorf at ten a m a fellow in evening dress stepped from a taxi and began reciting a la Eddie Guest: "It takes a heap of heaping to make a heap of heap!” Then across town to see" Brock Pemberton’s new head of hair grown - with herbs which every body is talking about But I long ago lost interest in thickening my locks And so asaunter coming upon Ed Wynn and his blonde bride both beaming and to sit awhile with H T Webster Dined with my wife among the most crowd In town at “No 21” And the- waving and gesturing across the room vastly amusing Then to the Madison avenue news reel and annoyed passers by all the way home talking like Donald Duck Lewis’ historic home In Alexan- dria Va is being painted by A F of L painters I amseeamused — To how pleased is Mr Roosevelt over the choice of Senator Alben Barkley for the post of majority leader in the senate by a margin of one vote when Mr Roosevelt himself began a battle against one-vo- te margins on February 5 when he dumped his court-packin- g bill on congress $1-0- PHONE 4511 FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS CURBING THE WHITE HOUSE rNE of the good effects to flow from the defeat of the supreme court measure is the driving home to the small coterie of men who are close e president that ' they cannot put over “must legislation in an arbitrary way Hereafter when the White House has a piece of radical legislation to propose the party leaders first will be consulted Had that procedure been followed on the supreme court bill the measure might never have emerged One of the most capable of commentators on Washington affairs makes this observation : Congress “Something has happened from the orders knows that it can disregard White House if it makes up its mind that President Roosevelt is mistaken about a major project or proposal President Roosevelt knows this too and knows that congress knows it The net result of it all is g likely to' be considerably less To borrow a phrase used not so long ago by a certain European dictator the “era of surprises” is probably over It seems unthinkable that Mr Roosevelt will ever spring a detailed legislative recommenda-- r tion on his congressional lieutenants in the manner in which the court reform bill was If congress hereafter thrown at them stands in a little less awe of the White House and if the White House hereafter exhibits a little more respect for congress the general method and character of futo-th- whip-crackin- r ture new deal legislation will be TENSION ON THE AMUR rapid subsidence of tension over military incidents on the rE Soviet-Manchukuo-an border after withdrawal of Soviet troops from disputed territory on July 4 affords clear indication of the distaste for foreign adventure felt at the moment by political leaders in both Japan and the U S Sr R At the same time the intensity of the brief crisis and the complete lack of agreement on measures for a comprehensive frontier settlement constitute evidence that the Amur river will be a focal point for international conflict in the future According to Japanese reports the dispute regarding sovereignty over the small sandy islands of Senufa and Bolshoi 62 miles southeast of Blagovestchensk was precipitated when they were occupied by Soviet troops on June 19 Soviet dispatches ascribed the friction to seizure of the islands by Japanese forces on June 20 Moscow bases its claim to the territory on a map attached to a treaty signed with China in 1860 while Tokyo maintains that the boundary follows the middle of the main channel north of the islands and points out that n since the waterways Manchukuo 1934 of has mainagreement tained beacons on both Sennufa and Bolshoi Russian-Manchukuoa- After long discussions between Maxim Lit vinov Soviet commissar of foreign affairs and Mamoru Shigemitsu Japanese ambassador at Moscow the U S S R apparently agreed to withdraw its forces The situation again became acute howt ever when on June 29 or 30— the reports vary—Soviet gunboats were apparently sunk in an artillery duel with Japanese forces in the river channel south of the islands in dispute Military positions in the neighborhood were reinforced and both sides adopted a belligerent attitude A new national defense loan of $800000000 was announced at Moscow In Hsinking Man chukuo reported the completion of two more strategic railways faciliating the transport of troops to the frontier while the Japanese government invoked its mutual assistance pact with Manchukuo binding Tokyo to aid in the defense of Manchukuoan terri- tory CONVICTION OF I wonder — How it is that the national labor relations board has the effrontery to “tell off" the Oregon state conciliation board and accuse it of "flagrant bias” when the NLRB itself operates under one of the most lopsided biased partial laws ever passed by the congress of the United States self-consci- ous yoo-hooi- ng I am amused — At Pennsylvania's Governor George H Earle who first takes great pains to call in the newspaper men and announce that he is fed up at hearing rumors he will be a candidate for president in 1940 and announces that he has no such idea in mind and then takes further pains on every opportunity to get front page publicity and so make sure his name is kept before the electorate His denunciation of Governor Lehman’s letter to Senator Wagner on the court isfor Earle so transparsue is political ent that even a kindergarten child could see through tub-thumpi- ’ For the unrazored New York accent commend us to Lionel Stander and Edward Brophy of the movies These boys can be depended upon to say "We sawr everything” and to order “ersters” on the half shell ‘Tm heah thoiteen yeahs” Is the way they’d explain & term of employment How they preserve this accent in its pristine Impurity after years in Hollywood borders the miraculous ng it I don’t like — The inferential insolence of the national labor relations board in its action with a Detroit newspaper after William J Cameron of the Ford company had made a speech denouncing the NLRB’s bias and ir responsibility before the National Editorial associa- ‘Oh don’t pay any attention to Bill friends and 1 He doesn’t like my don’t like his” tion When the Detroit papers were out on the streets with the account of the Cameron talk the little tin gods of the NLRB sitting in Detroit at one of their traveling hearings coolly subpenaed Reporter Smith of the Detroit News to get him to testify that his account of the Cameron was correct Now not for one minute do I claim that newspaper men are angels that they are 100 per cent accurate and that they are perfect models of decorum But I think I am safe in claiming that 98 per cent of the fellows in the business take a great pride in being as accurate as they know how And any story of the Cameron type would first be covered by one of the ace men on the staff and before being run in the paper would be checked and rechecked because of the controversial dynamite contained in it But it is thoroughly disgusting for the national labor board to first thrust its nose into something that does not even come under its jurisdiction and second to infer that the reporter must be basically considered untruthful and inaccurate until he proves under the lash of subpena and oath that he is truthful Mr Roosevelt may not like some of the things that many newspaper men report others say about the new deal But he does not call up Attorney General Cummings and say: “Subpena that reporter and make him testify under oath that what he reported was accurate and truthful” Yet this is exactly what the NLRB did in Detroit that it can only be described as an action which is autocratic high handed and would seem to indicate that power enjoyed by the board has swelled the heads of its members If this sort of thing keeps up soon an ordinary citizen won’t be able to eat his breakfast in peace for fear some alphabetical board will subpena him for something The administration has complained bitterly about the invisible government set up over the nation by the supreme court It seems that most of the governing done today in America is by these boards the legitimacy of 50 per cen of which is thoroughly in doubt Boards to do this and boards do summon that boards to declare this and boards to rule on the other —the whole country’s filled with them to the point where it now borders on a mania If we are going to have so many boards of this type with almost unlimited powers then the person nel of these boards becomes a most critical problem Up to date the NLRB has entered 90 per cent of its hearings with the preconceived and fixed notion that the people complained about to the board are guilty Tliis is one of the most subtle dangers to America today If we are not to have men operating these hoards who are impartial men of caution restraint breadth of mind and intelligence then we shall find ourselves in no time in an era of dictatorship by boards The NLRB has no right to pass on the rights and privileges of any special class as it fondly seems to think it has the license to do now Copyright Public Ledger quasi-judici- al A FREIGHTER CRUISE THE REAL THING NOW (Larry Nixon in Cosmopolitan Magazine) At one time only friends of the owners were permitted to travel oji freighters but now virtually every cargo carrier is prepared to take care of a few passengers and most of them have deck plans and regular price lists You may think of freighters as jdingy dirty and ancient but nowadays cargo moves in fast clean vessels that go everywhere A study of the fares will show freighter journeying to be as cheap as it is varied Two dollars a day takes you from New York to the Pacific coast and return Three dollars or less pays your daily cost on a tour of the orient For $4 you get your cabin and meals for a- tour of the world You can go Almost anywhere in a freighter for $5 a day But the people you meet!” the uninitiated will exclaim when you start talking about vagabond - voy-agi- ng - Yet that you’ll discover is one of the nicest things about freighter travel Freighters by their very limitations serve to protect the carefree adventurer from most of the pests of ocean travel There’s rarely a doctor aboard so invalids infants and the talkative aged stay at home The absence of a practicing M D shouldn’t worry normal folks though The" captain has his medicine chest he and the mate are both surgeons of a sort and the wireless is "always available for emergency advice People who travel on freighters are those who have leisure Tramp tripping is not for the office worker with the last two weeks in August to spend resting up You’ll find writers artists and college professors You may not meet Noel' Coward who wrote “Design for Living” aboard a cargo boat but other famous authors are returning to their favorites for a second or third or tenth cruise Claudette Colbert and other motion picture stars claim their best vacations have been aboard west coast freighters Meanwhile negotiations proceeded in Moscow where Litvinov proposed restora- mination by the proposed border commistion of Hie status quo ante by mutual with- sion' drawal of ‘troops and gunboats to be folDespite the relatively amicable Outcome of lowed by negotiations fori redemarcation of this incident it would be surprising if borthe fron tier This plan was accepted by the der" disputes' of similar scope did not occur Japanese after a meeting of important cab- in the future Hotheaded nationalists in the inet officials on July 2 The Soviet forces Japanese Kwantung army and the Soviet were ordered to evacuate the islands on the Far Eastern forces will be tempted by the relations following day and both sides agreed to strained status of leave the matter: of sovereignty for deter- to provoke disorders along the Amur -- Soviet-Japane- se S U Supreme Tribunal By RODNEY DUTCHER (Standard - Examiner Washington Correspondent) WASHINGTON July 26 — The vaunted dignity of high courts doesn’t prevent them from taking an occasional sly kick at the judicial pants of other high courts Here’s one planted squarely on the derriere of the U S supreme court itself by the Sixth circuit court of appeals in a recent obscure labor case v The “kick” in the decision couched in the kind of “whereas and aforementioned” language so hard for you and me to understand follows But first keep in mind that the Carter Coal case has been for years the key one by which the supreme court asserted that such businesses as coal mining were local and hence could not be regulated by congress under the interstate commerce clause of the constitution The Fruehauf Trailer case one of those vindicating the Wagner act only recently takes a directly opposite view Caught between the traditional Carter decision and the new Fruehauf decision the lower court rather sourly stressed that it must follow “the latest decisions” of the supreme court and put Its decision thus: “LATEST DECISIONS” “Per curiam: This court thought that Carter vs Carter Coal Co and the authorities there relied on required a holding in Freuhauf Trailer company vs National Labor Relations board that the trailer company in its relation to its employes there involved was not subject to regulation by congress under the commerce clause of the constitution' of the United States The supreme court on review of the decision held that it was There is no substantial difference between the status of that company and its employes to commerce and that of the appellee here James Vernon company and its employes “We again follow the latest decisions of the supreme court and hold that the decree herein should be vacated the motion for injunction denied and the bill dismissed It is so ordered” A distinguished lawyer advises your correspondent that this means simply: “Lower courts are now forced to explain the inconsistencies of their decisions on the ground that they are following the inconsistencies of the supreme court” THEY-- WANT PROOF The blast from House Judiciary Chairman Hatton Sumners fegainst senthe court planwa a one-da- y sation but Sumner’s position had been known to insiders for months Almost immediately after the court bill was introduced Sumners asked a friend for the name of a big shot- New York ' lawyer who could marshal’ all possible arguments on the measure "You mean arguments for and against?” the friend asked “Against” snapped Sumners Lately Sumners has been giving the impression that he could obtain the resignation of Justice Sutherland if the administration would accept a compromise otherwise amounting to defeat Administration lieutenants have been demanding proof that he could deliver the goods SAME AS NEW JUSTICES One way of saying it is that if Sutherland were to follow Justice Van Devanter by resigning the president would have the equivalent of four new justices Van Devanter’s resignation decreased the conservative majority from six to five Appointment of a liberal to succeed him would mean a court of five conservatives and four liberal assuming the would Roosevelt that probability a liberal appoint j would 4S itherlind’s resignation reduce the conservative strength to a presumably minority of four as compared with a probable liberal majority of five A conservative justice’s resig nation is expected' to mean both one less conservative and one more liberal One and one makes two and two and two make four HOW IT HAPPENED Senator Burt Wheeler bitter court plan foe spent an’ hour fend - - a half with Roosevelt recently and later flatly denied Senator Min ton’s charges that he had let parts of the conversation leak out Also out of the visit of the “four freshman” i senators who went to suggest a j rbcommittment of the bill came a distorted story to the effect that Roosevelt had said he was philosophically resigned to letting the senate do whatever it wanted about the court plan Solution of both mysteries may be found right here: 1 — No one knew that Senator Homer Bone of Washington friend of Wheeler andj supporter of Roosevelt who arranged the interview sat in on the conference at which Wheeler delivered ImBone later passioned speeches whispered a bit ' 2 — Senator Guy Gillette of Iowa one of the “four freshmen” made a report to Burke of Nebraska Then Burke passed the word around which was later denied (Copyright 1937 NEA Service Inc) ’ so-call- “Mrs Joseph Harris a pioneer from Piedmont was the leader in the silk industry of the early days in Ogden the leader of the group' of women who maintained the silk rooms in the Brown residence” said John Edward Carver Sunday in First Presbyterian church “She was instrumental in the tesUng of cotton in Ogden and the block on which this church stands was the scene of the trial fields “The Gardner brothers came from Canada in 1847 and brought their iron parts for saw and grist mills' with them They first at tempted to establish a mill near the Hot Springs in Salt Lake City but the stream flow was not sufficient as the summer advanced and the stake called men to help in the turning of the wheels Then the mills were moved to Mill creek STRENGTH AND JOY “This is Illustrative of the man ner in which any pioneer age draws talent from fields afar That is one of the elements that make for strength1 and joy in a pioneer age Peoples are recast in new environ ment and with new associates New ideas are absorbed and old failures forgotten' The result is a new people This is seen in the settlers along the Atlantic Many of them were bitter enemies unti ( a ed slave became a master AGE GLORIFIED “Each country and age has been glorified by sturdy pioneers Each church has been strengthened by a few worthies' who have been pioneer leaders In thought and action When the courage and faith and conviction that is essential in the pioneer is lacking the stagma and maisma of leth-erg- y stultifies progress The Bible is a book of pioneers Abraham Moses Joshua Daniel Jesus and Paul are but the chief examples If you have no conviction or belief you will pioneer and suffer for you are only a drifter willing to let the evils of today remain rather than chance personal loss If you have no- - conviction you will endure hardship for you do not count for very much either to yourself or the age” 3 44 Musicians of the Moscow Conservatory in Moscow Russia have started for the Chukotsk Peninsula to make a concert tour of the polar stations and settlements of that part of the Arctic v The scurviest trick ever played was perpetrated at a university dub A member decided to give up cigarets and bored everybody with his struggles and consequent lack of sleep Finally the sixth night he fell asleep and while he slept his pals sneaked into his room puffed it full of smoke and left a pile of cigaret ends on his night table ash tray Then they awakened him by phone When he saw the evidence smelt the smoke etc he decided he had gone out of his head and began smoking again And is puffing away great guns on an Circuit Appeal Court Aims Sly Kick at Posterior of the Strength and Joy Brought Out By Pioneer n ' Age Aims most they came to America 'Here of the old prejudices were for- of a gotten and the viril qualities Each new people commenced new pioneer" age thus develops and abilities types convictions character “The period of persecution of the early Christians brought together grades many races standards andwere the of people Many of them lower strata but the pioneering infused a personality that In three centuries conquered Rome The same was true of the migration of the Hebrews from Egypt New duties and responsibilities forged a new people The 4-- 4 Malad W W Thomas Great Northern hotel correspondent ex-smo- 3 Idea of tough assignment for a Trying to amuse two such precocious visitors as Freddie Bartholomew and Bobbie Breen grown-u- p: 3 Now and then a radio orchestra goes to town with a Gay 90 medley taking us back to the Dewey days out of whanging the “Just Break the News to Mother” go-golli- es and such They are sure fire Sometimes I think song makers as excellent as they are could indulge a sabbatical year and the world would still have an over supply of welcome tunes Well anyway all but Jerome Kern and Dick Rogers New York orchestra leaders sighting favorites entering public dining rooms often glorify their presence by suddenly switching to tunes with which the visitors have been identified on the stage In etc vaudeville Blanche Ring touches off “Rings On My FinEthel Merman “I Got gers” Rhythm” Eddie Leonard “Roly Poly Eyes” James Barton “Anna Bell Lee” A1 Jolson "April Showers” and of course A1 Smith is hailed with “Sidewalks of New York” Malad Popular Friends of Ernest Hemingway say his experiences in the thick of slaughter in Spain beclouded him with a melancholia he has been unable to shake He has known wars first hand but never dreamed they could be so horrible Hemingway’s reaction is not unusual MALAD July 26 — Mrs Dora Nearly all the correspondents have Morgan of Salt Lake City was in been shocked Malad Sunday visiting with relatives prior to her departure for Bagatelles: J P Morgan likes Santa Barbara Calif where her grape fruit twice a day The Mr and daughter and drinks a quart of orange Mrs Joe Aigne are now located juice daily to ward off rheumatism Mrs Morgan is the sister of D M Fulton Oursler does not visit Thomas and is well known here the editorial rooms of the magaShe will leave Salt Lake City zine he edits He edits by teletype where ghehas resided for the past Mrs Paul Whiteman never 20 years next Saturday misses one of Paul’s concerts or Earl H Thomas and Ralph broadcasts Daniel left Malad Sunday for a short Visit in Salt Lake City Vignette: I ran into one of those UTAHN ON VISIT demonstrations the other afternoon Billy McClurg son of Mr W A in Union Square and stood on side of Farmington Utah lines watching until after dark McClurg spent a few days visiting rela- They sang “Wages up hours down tives -and friends in Malad this make New York Union Town” wcdc-Mussolini and Hitler caught Hail Bennie Williams left Malad for Columbia from the marchers So Old Men in Kimonas Ogden Sunday spending the past did the Nine few days visiting his mother Mrs A drunk - weaving on the outer Carrie Adams edge suddenly shouted: “Why don’t Dale Hardman of Salt Lake visit- somebody cheer for America you ed in Malad with his parents over bums you!” i (Copyright 1937 McNaught Syndi-- I the week-en- d cate Inc) Mr and Mrs Henry W Thomas attendBlair and sons Earl and ed the races and rodeo at Logan on ed a new record in the local post-offiwhich is a good indication of July 24th Griff L Jenkins has gone to an increase in business conditions Long Beach Calif where he will in general The (receipts for the join his wife and son Griff Jr previous year were $893076 A new who are vacationing there record was also set for the first SELLS BEAUTY SHOP half year ending June 30 1937 with Mrs Thelma Stuart has sold her receipts showing $405326 compard interest and fixtures of the ed to $399094 for the correspond Bar Beauty shop to Miss Margaret for last year nett and Boyd Tovey Miss Bar- Ing period nett assumed management of the shop this week-MrHOW: LONG CAN A Reed Probstand sons are visiting at the home of her parents Mr and Mrs' Thomas W THREE QUARTER WIFE Richards while Frobst is acting as chaplain in the C M T C at HOLD HER HUSBAND? Fort Douglas Utah was store visit Malad The 'liquor ed by the state chairman of the have to work at marriage liquor commission M B Ye aman YOUmake a success of it Men this Meek and secretary Frank ’ ' ’ may be selfish unsympathetic week but that’s the way they’re made Kenneth Morgan son of Mrs you might as well realize it 'When your back aches and your William Morgan who is employed nerves scream don’t take it out In Montpelier Idaho arrived in on your husband He can’t possibly few a for Malad Saturday night know how you feeL days visit jror three generations one woman With Visitors 3 Over Holidays I son-in-la- w ex-Kais- Golden Gate bridge San Pnmdsce i er OlGHT NOW San Francisco b die most exciting place on die coast The magnificent new bridge across the Golden Gate—the longest and £— fingte span in the world — is now open And there’s the Bay Bridge largest in the world great San Fnmcisco-Oaklan- d So when yon go to Los Angeles go oa Southern Pacific and see Saa rail round trip fare is only $1 more tins way Francisco The fine no more on a three months ticket oa a 21-d- ay Between San Francisco and Los Angeles yon am tick oat brilliant new streamlined Daylight the most beautiful train in America Speed utiles along tbe very edge of the Pacific Ocean for more than a hundred t AIJSISEiSS r I via San Fec HOUIID TUI? ce ’ ? Co-E- s Pullmans (berth This fare Is good in cool clean Francisco or one San via to Los Angeles and back both ways round 21 trip with days (3750 way via Las Vegas Return limit on the fares are good Daylight between three months limit) These each seat way if yon ride charge San Francisco and Los Angeles ($150 car chair for seats) All seats on in tbe parlor car no extra charge advance reserved in be tbe Daylight must ' extra) ONE WAY FARE $12 TO SAN FRANCISCO coaches and chair cars in $1560 one way $2808 roundtrip in tourist sleeping cars (plus $350 for a lower berth from Ogden to San tourist roomy AIR-CONDITION- ED AIR-CONDITION- 3 ED Francisco) $14 TO SAH FRA2CISC3 en the Streamliner City of San Fronds chair cars Five ONE WAY FARE in de luxe RESERVATIONS ADVANCE from month Ogden departures a REQUIRED Southern Pacific's Overland Limited 'Advance Overland limited and Pacific limited are the FASTEST DAILY TRAINS TO SAN FRANCISCO FASTEST TRAINS i V 4 told another how to go “smilPinlc-tuuing through" with Lydia E Vegetable Compound It helps Nature tone up the system tnif lanwning the discomforts from n's Postal-Receipt- s Increase Noted — Malad’s MALAD July show a good Inpostal receipts crease over a year ago according to Postmaster H W Thomas A total of $965162 for the fiscal year ending June 30 1937 establish- 26 which the functional disorders women must endure in the three ordeals of life: 1 Turning from girlhood to womanhood 23 PreApparing for motherhood ' proaching “middle age” wife Don’t be a'three-quarttake LYDIA’ E PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND and Go “Smiling Through” Csofilhem IPacnfin® 3 1 For information reservations on the Daylight etc call G IL Holt (Phone 195) or T Com (Phone 2500) Union Station' at er ij i 4 —ffr t |