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Show UTAH LABOR NEWS. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. SEPTEMBER 18, 1936. Roosevelt Rally and Dance P mSstolingn Landon the Oil Operator At Coconut Grove, Sept. 30 seattlep..i. case And Landon the Candidate I Opening Gun of the Campaign to Reelect President Roosevelt I Jf8AordanchXnF! l! Will Be Fired In Utah When a Grand Rally and Social Laws in Placing Ncwspa'pcr on Unfair List. Gathering Will Take Place at the Coconut Grove, Salt Lake City, Wednesday Night, September 30 The Affair uy a. r. oi u newsservice Is Under Auspices of Labors League of WASHINGTON, Utah Organization Has An Enrollment of More Than V,m Green, president ot the American 15,000 Men and Women. lederation of Labor, made the fol- - WASHINGTON Contrasting constantly that with all the imper- oil Landon the operator and fections of the New Deal, at least Alf Landon the candidate for presi- - it has provided in a definite way dent," Harvey Fremming, president i for the common man as well as the of the International Union of Oil bankers. Every member of our Fieldj Gas Well and 1efinery American society has profited by Workers, in a radio broadcast over President Roosevelts efforts. To a netWork of five stations, attacked deny this statement is only to deal Qovernor Landons record as an oil in the ugly realm of untruths or lowing statement regarding the and as a candidate. tae Seattle news- - 0pCrator The first big guns of the campaign to reelect President investIaVn Landon Benefited xhe broadcast was over a net- Would I shock your sensibilities FrankliaD Roosevelt will be fired Wednesday night. Septem-- 1 sobmission WEVDNew if I told you that among those who dance will be complaints by officers of the print, ?raMd 1 yf enteJtamment Philadelphia! WKQV, materially benefited by and as a WIP, p Utah at Coconut mg trades , organizations against I Pittsburgh and WCFL Chicago! staged by Labor direct result of President RooseI the action of the Seattle central Grove. The strongest force in moulding velts recovery program in the petroleum industry was none other 1 Dr Ld0i,,' legi?la.live r'P(rts'ntalive ?f J O'der of Vdfaf epon the than Governor Alf Landon, the with Rail a " directed the representative fion now obtaWne,- - said Mr. Republican candidate for president LI ?" co,mml'e ments tor the big rally and dance, more than 10,000 of the American Federation of La- of these United States. He joined to attend. He said this will be the first gigantic demonstration 1501, in Seattle, Washington, Row- - Fremming. We ear about boon-doging, the hosts of employers in the oil industry in not only urging gov!hi5.C(ampaign a.nd wilJ gatnand0"Umitmf paort Tht afedriRing ernment regulation control of the October in was made and the ?"d lh? fef5LIJwe.ibr.2e",.d?nn.8 investigation nations Hitlerism and irreplacable natural reh fascism, state. Mr. Loftis said he besubmitted. report source but he journeyed to but oil, after communism, lieves the Roosevelt vote in Utah The report states that the in- - all of these I am for Roosevelt I with the rest of us wording: Washington grotesque arguments will be greater than it was in 1932. Labors I vestigation of Representative Wat- of and we been ave League cannot fail personally presented his case. made, Tickets Moving son showed that the Seattle Cen- - to remember the dark, bleak buttons most natural that he do are union was It days M nf tho nil ppfinorv made and bear the Council acted in accord- - 0f 1930-31-3Labor tral the crude labels because union of which so, ,fer , period during xt ooa the Machinists and Lithographers. anfe which profits accrued to from finaiKe and tlh Prostrate lay lndu8try man of the ticket sales committee, The rally is one affair you can-- 1 of economic tur-n- the governor and his associates, 01i scrap-hea- p reports the demand for the tickets afford to miss. Do not make of Labor when it placed the Seattle moii. was at the lowest possible level, very brisk. lie believes the initial any other appointments for Wed- upon the unfair making his venture in the oil inRejoiced They printing of 10,000 tickets will be nesday night, September 30, so I list. Efforts to conduct a hearing Obviously, economic formulas dustry a liability rather than a exhausted before the date of the that you and members of your I upon the complaint Lied by theljd to be prescribed and President source of substantial income. This grand rally and dance. may attend this event of I American Newspaper Guild and to Roosevelt did just that. Industry , was in 1932 and 1933 in the days family I Mr. Visser reports that a number all events. promote a settlement were made an(j f jnance rejoiced. I know this of Hoover and the chicken in every of organizations have ordered as Enrollment Is Growing by the officers of the Seattle cen- - to true because I was in Wash- - pot period. You will also remem- was formal action bodv d before many as 300 tickets each. One tral the of phrase Secretary Thompson jngton during the resurrection her the Post-In-- 1 I taken order for 1000 tickets was filled Seattle the the White House in at the placing was mating this true reports membership Especially period. this week. Those desiring to place enrollment of the League is grow-- 1 telligencer upon the unfair list. ag applied to the petroleum in- - those bleak days which implied an order for tickets may telephone ing daily. Applications for mem- - The laws of the American Federa- prosperity s being dustry. In 1932 this great industry something about to Mr. Visser, Wasatch 9274-Mr. bership are coming in from all I tion of Labor require that central was the comer. That kind around Crude oil was bringing just sjcj Thompson, Wasatch 2981; Mr. Lof- comers of Utah. Five hundred I bodies take such action and follow jq Cents per barrel at the well, of Republican prosperity meant 10 tis, Wasatch 170; Mr. Scott, Was. membership buttons went to Ogden I such a course before placing any bankruptcy and receiverships were cents a barrel for crude oil price 2809-or Mr. Rhodes, Hyland this w'eek; 500 to Carbon county; firm upon the unfair list. wars in gasoline sales chaos raising their shapeless heads 753G-The price of the tickets 100 to Brigham City; 100 to Tin- A. F. of L. Cannot Interfere workers wages were at the lowest starvation wages long, unreasonhas been set low just enough to tic district; 100 to Grand county, In view of the fact that the heVel. able hours of employment 12 cover the expenses. The tickets and some went to practically every Seattle central body conformed to Came the summer of 1933 and hours a day on Governor Landons sell for 25 cents each. own properties and $50 per month the laws of the American Federa- - the application of the county in the state. I accordin acted and Labor of tion A Real Rally The membership enrollment of New Deals recovery program. the wage paid the workers who conferred the with j ance near on the in be rights Codes real is the The rally will of fair competition were ' produced his wealth through the 20,000 League put I FederaAmerican the it address mark. an the be will There upon by membership I Nationally style. promulgated, and economic recov-excee- production of blacky gold. followed Is Amusing and Labor of tion Men legal and music a women, Rooseveltian, 4,000,000. by prominent ery resulted. The prostrate oil Amenis more the than amusine to It Roose-and 1 and unorganized and entertainment, and the big orderly procedure dustry was again on an earning think in I can Federation of Labor cannot in- of Alf Lan-- ( retrospection, basis. The workers benefited. The dance to the strains of sweet music velt supporters may join. Continued on Page 7) lYank Bonacci of Helper, state j terfere. I have directed Represen- 0ld work week was by union musicians. of the League, says much tative Watson, however, to serve panted by the work week, All those securing dance tickets is manifested for in every possible way m trying to Crude petroleum went from 10 will be entitled to wear the official enthusiasm the cents per barrel to one dollar. The lapel button of the League, repre- Roosevelts reelection in all parts bring about a settlementtheofmanSURE, YOUR between state. of the the with existing dispute industry, workers, land owners, in senting the map of Utah, fact everyone directly or indirect-- , agement of the Seattle CREDIT ISt GOOD I and the members of the y profited and as a result of . gencer O. unions and Is I local Newspaper Guild so that m-- I what? As a result of those funda-backin- g WAVE OF PROTEST mg the C.theI. C.I.O. On Goodrich Silver-tow- n 100 per cent I dustrial peace may be reestablished I mental economic principles being with all the resources at our com- - n the city of Seattle. AT A.F. of L. COUNCIL mand." applied which now are being con- Tires Electro-Pa- k ; rfrmnrd ORDER IS GROWING The resolution, which was adopt- No Return Batteries Blacksmiths ed unanimously, declares that the Can that say truthfully anyne Craft DULUTH, Sailors Union of the Pacific, to-- 1 Motorola Auto they desire a return to the Hoover A?. (Continued from Page 3) 1 work-maritime with tnforeantanlr I ? Pi0ons 35,000 gether days of 1928 to 1933 of course not. Radios Beaumont Typographical Union ers affiliated to the Maritime Fed- oiI workers dont; the business- industries The m workers the the a resolution resenting eration of the Pacific, is on record passed in the oil communities dont, suspension order against the C. I. (or the industrial form of union tvho does? Ill tell you: the Then GOODRICH Kob, O. unions. It instructed its delegate re- who selfish same were group Philadeinhia to the I.T.U. convention to vote tary f Local 23, International l sponsible for the depression are the SILVERTOWN Brotherhood of Blacksmiths, Drop C.I.O. the and aid for PHILADELPHIA. (UNS) -Tfte & STORES ' of President Roosevelt's Philadelphia Central Labor Union Forgers leadership tas of mstartioM Iowa Federation of Labor voted to condemn the action of the written Mierj 2661 Wahington Avenue telIs the dtj (UNS)-Th- e suspension of the yr DES MOINES, la. A. F. of L. executive council in local to Phone 795 C.I.O. unions. steel organizing campaign of suspending the C.I.O. unions. 24-IIo- ur the C. I. O. was endorsed by the Service I Protest Union Joins Iowa State Federation of Labor in Frey's Pittsburgh a resolution which also protests PITTSBURGH. (UNS) Adopt- - j ST LOUIS, Mo. (UNS) A resC.I.O. the of from resolution a suspension against Pittsburgh 0iution protesting against the ing a sad Union No. 7, the ting action of the A. F. of L. unions, describing it as blow to the American labor moveCentral Labor Council utive council in suspending the C. ment. asked the A. F. of L. executive I.O. unions was adopted by the St. The resolution points out that council to defer action against the Louis conference board of the Inunder the A. F. of L. constitution C.I.O. to the next convention. ternational Moulders Union, reprean international unions charter senting 10 locals with 1,700. The can only be revoked by a two-thirYoungstown resolution praised the stand of cona at O. -Tregular YOUNGSTOWN, (UNS) majority President OKeefe against John P. vention of the A. F. of L. by a roll-ca- ll rumbull County Central Labor Frey, also a member of the I. M. vote Union has gone on record to back U., who acted as prosecutor for the We endorse the campaign of or- up the C.I. O. and protest its council against the C.I.O. If from the A. F. of L. ganization of workers now being conducted in the steel industry and Wisconsin Unions Lansing Federation petition all branches of organized SHEBOYGAN, Wis. (UNS) A labor to cooperate to that end in LANSING, Mich. (UNS) The in labor of of conditions Provisional Committee has Labor Federation Wisconsin that order ansing that occupation may be improved, adopted a resolution protesting for the C.I.O. was set up at meetthe Federation declares. suspension of the C. I. O. unions ing of 44 representatives of both and urging the A. F. of L. exec- craft and industrial unions, called Sailors Union ute committee to reconsider its ac- to protest the suspension of the C. tion. I.O. unions. SAN FRANCISCO. (UNS) ifatoww iMftwArt&v.vaMa ijSkHtAWAi&tikfiUjU, The Sailors Union of the Pacific, with 7,000 members, has gone on Yes sir, he drank Beckers Beer in the good old days, and record condemning the executive BEST WISHES TO LABOR its still his preference. It looks good it tastes good it council of the A. F. of U for their in is good I tactics suspendg Non-Partis- an I half-truth- s. uilr 1 gl alsthawe' Non-Partis- an !? ApStfS Post-Intelligenc- price-structu- re 2, ot er 1 orig-Leag- ue often-repeate- I r J; J so-call- ed I ds 84-ho- -- ur sup-presid- 36-ho- Post-Intelli- ent ur -1 hn fgXA 3jZ he split-Typographi- exec-Pittsbur- gh "The ds sus-lensi- Same Good on Old Beckers! i ft labor-splittin- v STERLING TRANSPORTATION CO. Best Wishes to Salt Lake Federated Musicians and Other Organized Labor GLEN BROS. MUSIC CO. Full Line of Musical Instruments 4 So. Main Was. 3353 On draught or in bottles, always say, Daily Service Between Salt Lake City and Beckers. Uintah Basin Points WASATCH 2875 EASTERN UTAH TRANSPORTATION CO. Daily Service Between Price and Uintah Basin Points PHONE PRICE 224 7 BEER MADE BY UNION LABOR |