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Show UTAH LABOR NEWS. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. SEPTEMBER 9. 1938 rage 7 VOTE AT THE PE3IK3AC30ES TUESDAY SEE 'THAT VOHJC3 FC3IEN0S VOTE BE A GOOD CITIZEN V LABOR ON ITS HOME EDUCATION FORWARD MARCH (Continued from Page 5) familiar with the details of the contract, he said that anything which would bring peace to Harlan was to be commended. At the same time the President took occasion to praise the work of the National Labor Relations Board. .Both the Board and the Harlan contract have been criticized by President William Green of the A. F. L. MURRAY AND IIILLMAN TO URGE C.I.O. PEACE PLAN ON AUTO BOARD Family- - Froebel. (Issued by the National Kinder garten Association, 8 West 40th Street, New York City.) LONELY By Laura Gray Mrs. Ellwell was sipping Young tea with her. friend, Mrs. Brown, on the Browns wide, cool veranda, and enjoying a quiet chat. Ive been so worried over Mary lately, confided the pretty young mother, a note of distress in her voice. She just wont eat. The doctor says theres nothing the matter with her. The baby books all advise us to let the child get really hungry. I have tried to do that, but when meal after meal is scarcely touched How old is Mary? asked Mrs. Brown, sitting back in her comfort able wicker chair. Two and a half. Mary has her meals on the porch at her own little table. Her daddy and I eat later in the dining room. Even the little she does eat she doesnt seem to enjoy. Mealtime is no joy for either of us. She is growing thin. Im distracted. Did you ever have that trouble with any of your four? Im trying to remember. Its ten years since my first was an only child. I certainly havent that problem today. Lets peep in at the children now. Mrs. Brown set down her cup and arose. Both women tiptoed to the curtained glass doors leading into the WASHINGTON (UNS) Chair, man John L. Lewis of the Committee for Industrial Organization has asked Philip Murray and Sidney Hillman to attend a meeting of the interna tional executive board of the United Automobile Workers Detroit. The meeting will act upon the proposal of the CIO for settling the controversy which has divided the organization. I cannot too strongly stress the necessity of the United Automobile Workers cooperating with the CIO for the abatement of the present controversy in your union, Chairman Lewis wired President Homer Martin. Since the CIO proposal was made resolutions have poured in to CIO headquarters from locals in all parts of the country wholeheartedly approving the peace proposal and pledging their co- Workers, President Paul W. Fuloperation to end. the controversy ler submitted his resignation Aualong the lines suggested by the gust 31 to a special meeting of CIO. the unions international executive board. HARMONY RESTORED IN Announcing Fullers action in FLAT GLASS UNION, SO Chairman John L. Washington, PAUL FULLER RESIGNS Lewis of the Committee for In dustrial Organization declared that COLUMBUS (UNS) Having The Federation of Flat Glass successfully completed the task Workers is to be congratulated on of restoring harmony and unity to having set its house in order with the Federation of Flat Glass the assistance of the CIO. Not only has complete harmony and unity been restored within the T Federation of Flat Glass Workers, but remarkable progress has been made by the union in effecting Elva A. Wilkinson 100 organization in the flat glass industry and winning what is in Weber County effect a national agreement maintaining and improving the workers Recorder conditions. The CIO is proud to have parOne Good Term Deserves ' ticipated in these constructive Another achievements, and Mr. Fuller is to Vote the Democratic Ticket be congratulated on the excellent he has rendered in his term service Primary Election, Sept. 13 of office. Vice-Chairm- , The Childs First School is the an RE-ELEC- (Paid Political Adv.) PRINCIPLES ARE PRINCIPAL Best Wishes to Labor When William died suddenly the neighbors were shocked, and a kindly woman proceeded to comfort Williams wife by describing his Re-Ele- ct dining room. There sat Mary a the table with the four. Sucn i happy, Jolly lot of youngsters! The two and a half year old was prattling and joining in with the rest, Why, Mary has drunk up al her milk is asking for more! gasped Mrs. Ellwell. Shes never done that before! There, shes taken the last piece of bread and but ter and is eating it as if she were starved! Im ashamed of her man ners! Ha, ha, laugher Mrs. Brown Dont worry. Nancy is quietly. Certainly bringing more bread. Mary seems quite happy over her meal now. For a while the mothers watche the children eating the plainest o food with relish and enjoyment. I wonder if Mary is lonely a ; home, mused the young mother when they hal gone back to the porch. Perhaps she is, remarked Mrs Brown. I suppose wee ones like company at mealtime as much as grown people do. Now I come to think of it, Marys mother went on, I simply cant endure to eat alone, and wil wait hours for Fred to come home to dinner. He scolds me for it. After this Im going to have Mary at the table with us. Her father is always wanting to see more of her. They get on splendidly, too. When I cant do that Ill try to have meals with her myself. And often I'll invite other little ones in. I never thought of loneliness as being a case of indifference toward a meal, but perhaps it is, nodded the older mother, thoughtfully. ! Experience has taught me that those children who pass through the kindergarten before entering the grades are very much better fitted to do their work, have a socialized training which is invalua ble to them, and stand high among their classes in the later grades. Wallace E. Mason, President, The Normal School, Keene, New Hampshire. If the children of your commu nity have no kindergarten provided for them in the public school, write to the National Kindergarten Association, 8 West Fortieth St., New York, for advice and free lit erature. RADIO Boake Carter Boake Carter, the Russian-bor- n Englishman, had to leave the air again because his latest sponsor, General Foods, found his reactionary mouthings a liability rather than an asset, just as Philco Radio did last year. Boake (Croak) Carter was constantly aiming his spleen at President Roosevelt and the New Deal program. The public readily protest uncalled for attacks over the radio, even though the program is in disguise of news commentating. George McCall, Hollywood character, ran spang into & hornets Brown E. some weeks ago when he renest George marked that movie stars had no right to hold political opinions. Im. County he didnt Every Saturday night mediately Melvyn Douglas, Gloria come home and place his pay enAssessor Miriam Hopkins, Paul velope in front of me as regular as Muni, Irving Pichel and several Democratic Ticket clockwork? Not a nighty did he other luminaries demanded and we were married. received the right to answer Mcthe time all miss Thanks for Your Support Of course, the envelope was al- Call on the air. What affects the ways empty, but look at the princi- other 130,000,000 people in this (Paid Political Adv.) ple of the thing! country also affects us, the stars maintained. We are citizens just like the rest of them and we want, above all else, the right to use our NOMINATE AND ELECT Democracy as other citizens do. The end product is likely to be good points. He was such a man of principle, said the neighbor. And am I not the one to know it? said the bereaved woman. Weber Stuart, CHARLES G. COWLEY Democratic Candidate for " Weber County Honest, Experienced, Efficient (Paid Political Adv.) Democratic Candidate for Re-Electi- on of STATE SENATOR weber county ranking Oldest ranking member in that body seeking Chairman immember on committee on HEALTH and LABOR. portant Judiciary Committee for past 6 years. Member of Appropriations and Claims, Banking and Commerce and Revenue and Taxation Committees. (Paid Political Adv.) By M. I. T. MAN MADE OF TOUGH STUFF el trouble, as the sparks fly upward. On the front page of the Picton, Second, mankind as a whole and Ontario Times of recent issue ap man as an individual must be made of pretty tough stuff to be able to peared the following: stand the bumps and twists of life re is a Rust responsible for duced wheat crop in Manitoba. and survive. We probably ought to be thankGrasshoppers eat too much wheat in Saskatchewan. Hail ruins crops ful that we are made of as tough elsewhere. Tomato worms threaten stuff as we are and for the fact to seriously reduce the tomato crop that in most cases the more we in Ontario. Some growers wondex tussle, the tougher we get. if they will be able to pay taxes, others are afraid theyll have to AN AMERICAN SOLDIER keep the young people home from THROUGH AND THROUGH exactly $445,127, the F. C. C. reported. Of course a station could be built for $94,837, but that could be tuned in at great distances only by the very best of receiving sets. Regional transmitters cost from $19,466 to $260,468, according to wattage, while even a local station using but fifty watts of power runs around $19,629. Under the circumstances it looks as if at present our only choice is to bring pressure to bear upon existing stations to force them to keep their programs unbiased and honest. Dog-Da- y Notes This seems to be the goofy season for radio. Let a few examples suffice. Just when Donald Peterson, was producer of the Junior ready to admit that the series was too lurid for children and should be abandoned along came Garnet Garrison, radio director at Wayne University in Detroit, to remark that the classics are full of gruesome highlights and he didnt see why children should be prevented from enjoying them. WDAS, Philadelpha, has ruled Flat Foot Floogie off the air because one of its biggest patrons, the Foot He<h Institute, claimed the song praises just what it has been preaching against flat feet. Another sponsor, who advertises a swimming pool, suggested that the station avoid giving bad weather forecasts for weekends. The vast potentialities of radio at last are being made use of by a mattress company in San Francisco. It is presenting a show intended to put listeners to sleep. Swing music was called a degenerated form of jazz and its devotees the unfortunate victims of economic instability by Donald the of Dancing Grant, president Teachers Business Association at its recent New York convention. The present furore over swing is sign of our uncertain times, Our Grant told the delegates. young people, disturbed by uncertainties of their economic situation and wondering whether they will e on W.P.A. or in a C.C.C. camp tomorrow, have found in swing neurotic and erotic expressions of physical activity. Listeners (if any) to a transcribed speech of Alf Landon broadcast over KNX in Hollywood apdurparently failed to notice that fifteen-minut- e the course of the ing address the record got stuck on three separate occasions. The endless repetition of phrases derogatory to the Administration seemed exactly in keeping with the rest of the text.. five-kilow- att clear-chann- el One hundred and two years ago Saturday (Sept. 10) a man-chil- d was bom in Augusta, Georgia. They named him Joe Wheeler. In these days of wars and rumors of wars it is interesting to note that here was an American warrior who didnt get his fill of fighting in one war but also won honors in another. A southerner, trained at West Point, in charge of dragoons at Carlisle, Pa., until 1861 when he joined up with the Confederate army. Alabama soon made him a colonel, he saw fighting in several battles in Kentucky and Tennessee and was made brigadier general (Continued on page 8) G-M- T. Leland Shreeve Democratic Candidate for STATE SENATOR Weber County I Stand for the Principles of Good Government and Elimination of Waste and Duplication in Government Operations. Primary Election, Sept. 13 (Paid Political Adv.) Arias G. Belnap Democratic Candidate for Weber County Treasurer One Who Has Served Well. His Record Justifies Your Support. Primary Election, Sept. 13 (Paid Political Adv.) A LEE CLAUSSE Democratic Candidate for SHERIFF OF WEBER COUNTY Bom and Reared in Weber County. Has Had 8 Years Experience as a Deputy Sheriff. Cautious, Honest and Efficient Primary Election, Sept. 13 (Paid Political Adv.) Vote at September 13th Primary for y Re-Electi- LAWRENCE A. MALAN Candidate for County Clerk and Auditor Democratic Ticket With additional experience received during my present term of office as County Clerk and Auditor, and with the installation of new accounting method, I feel better equipped to serve the public. Your support assures you efficient, friendly, honest service. . County Attorney IRA A. HUGGINS to the Office another batch of those quiz' broadcasts which even now litter the networks on Tuesday nights and which devote themselves to the dissemination of great hunks of absolutely useless information. Liberals Out of Luck Various liberal organizations in this country that have been toying with the idea of building or buying a radio station which would be able to fight wholeheartedly for the constitutional rights of the American people were set back on their heels last month, when the Federal Communications Commission issued an estimate on the costs of various kinds of broadcasting equipment. staThe price of a clear-channtion that is, one capable of being picked up without interference anyis where in the United States flews and Comment college. One farmer paid killers 5c per dozen but soon had to quit before the war cost more than th crop was worth. Engine failure caused two fishermen to drift on the vasty deep for eight hours. All of which reminds us of two things. First, man is born to (Paid Political Adv.) A y JOHN W. ARRINGTON DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE FOR Weber County Commissioner ar term With Malice Toward None, Justice and Equality for All. Always on the Job. A Business Administration Seeking the Lowering of Taxes. PRIMARY ELECTION, SEPTEMBER 13 (Paid Political Adv.) y |