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Show 3age four SOUTH CACHE COURIER Courier HYRUM LOCALS HENRICHSEN & McDOWELL Puhlibllf IB Published at Hyrum, Utah Weekly Establish 1910 MEMBER UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION HAT1PNAL f 2.t)0. Legal paper entered at the in Hyrum, Utah as Second Class matter under the Act of March 3, 1879. post-offi- gilbert Editor and ce v. McDowell Mrs Elton Olsen . Linda. Hy-rum- ETHEL JONES Wellsville News Editor Telephone 142R2 Bow-thor- MRS. OWEN BURRELL Paradise News Editor . Roles on YOURS INSTALLED NOW CACHE VALLEY ELECTRIC CO. PHONE 53 LOGAN, UTAH Mrs. Elton Olsen entertained at a delightful party at her home on Saturday evening complimenting her husband who was observing his birthday. Card games and other entertainment were enjoyed and a de licious luncheon was served to Mr. and Mrs. Dell Jensen of Shelley, Mr. and Mrs. August J Clawson, Mr and Mrs Hilary Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon E. Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Baxter and Mr and After a pleasant two week visit John Langston have left for their home in Malone, Fla. Mr. Langston will attend the University of Florida. She is the former Lois Unsworth of Hyrum. CURES BY MUSCLE POWER . . . Mrs. Estrid Dane has won fame throughout England for her cures of baby deformities. She does it by a series of exercises in which the babys own muscle pull is tbe Infantile paralysis is factor. among her cures which include most children ailments. Mr. and Mrs. Their Great COAL HEAT pe in-la- Surpassing All AUTOMATIC Mr. and Mrs. Dell Jensen and three daughters of Shelley, Idaho spent Thanksgiving at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon E. Olsen of Hyrum. Mrs. Ralph Petersen and her three month old daughter are visiting indefinitely with her Mr. and Mrs. W. A Petersen. Her husband, Dr Ralph Petersen is serving in the medical corps of the army in Japan.. Starts Sunday . . Hyrum entertained at a delicious Turkey dinner at their home on Thanksgiving. The guest list included Eugene and Eugene, Jr. LiljenquisL-Sr- . of Blackfoot, Idaho, Reed of Salt". Lake City, Mrs. Ralph Petersen of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. W. A Petersen and son Bruce Mr and Mrs. Russell Petersen and Mrs. Emma Liljenquist and Afton Petersen. NORMA BAXTER Hyrum News Editor w' Mr. and Mrs. Grover Christensen and son, Mr and Mrs Elwood NIel sen and Mrs. Connie Nielsen and daughter Hy-ru- Mr. and Mrs. Lee Petersen of Business Manager and Hyrum Third ward Primary their monthly meeting at home of Mrs. Grant S. Nielsen !!' Miss Marilyn and Kathleen All- family. Monday night. Hostesses for en of Hyrum attended the footparty: were Mrs Grant Niels.! Mr. and Mrs. Duane Wright and and Mrs. Fon Brown. ball game on Thanksgiving at Salt Lake and were guests of their two children of Salt Lake spent sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Eliason Noel Cook. The Cooks returned and Mrs. Ernest Larsen of and two sons, Robert and jav to Hyrum with the girs and spent Mrs. Wright is" the former spent the week end Salt Lake iq their end parweek Effie Larsen of Hyrum. the visiting City where they visited with their ents, Mr. and Mrs W. A. Allen. daughter Mardell who is employ The officers and teachers of the ed there. Mrs Connie Nielsen of Hyrum entertained at her home on Thanksgiving with a delicious Turkey dinner. Covers were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Don Fullmer and two children of Logan, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Ferguson and three children of Salt Lake City, THRIFTY-CLEA- N Mr N. W. Bullock of Providence, raelsen in charge. The lesson was presented by LeRoy Jorgensen. These meetings yHlibe held on The Progressive Homemakers were entertained at the home of the third Monday of each month. Bishop and Mrs. Wendell Alien Mr. and Mrs. E. J Wilson of on Monday night. Miss Lois Smith of the extension Service gave an Hyrum entertained on Thanksgiving day with a delicious turkey excellent talk on Good dinner. Covers were marked for Mr. and Mrs. K. C Hendersen and Assistant County Agent and three sons, Mr and Mrs Dee WilMrs. Reuben Hansen 'and their son, Mrs Jesse T. Wilson, Mr and Mrs Derwood Olsen, all of Logan, daughter Carol were Thanksgivand Mr. and Mrs. Wilson and son ing dinner guests at the home of Leonard. their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Swenson of Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs John A Eliason of Hyrum on included Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. David O Nielsen, Thanksgiving Thomas Eliason and Mrs. Bishop and Mrs. Levi Andersen, and Mr. and Mrs. Ross family Eliason Mr. and Mrs Paul Nielsen and fam nad family. ily and Miss Emma Nielsen of Hyrum enjoyed a turkey dinner Mr. Julius Sorenson, one of on Thanksgiving day at the home oldest residents was happy of Mr andMrs. Floyd Bradford to members of his family have of Franklin, Idaho. enjoy Thanksgiving with him. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Mortensen The Teenage Fireside group of of Tremonton, Mr. the Hyrum First ward met at and family and Marion Mrs. Chugg and famthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Rulon of Providence, Mr. and Mrs. ily on with Wright Sunday night Welch and family of ParaGrant Wright as the host for the Harry dise and Elias Sorensen of ' Hyparty. rum were present. . National Advertising Representatives, Newspaper Advertising SerSt., vice, 188 West Randolph Chicago, 111. One year, Subscription price: DECEMBER '6. lo46 -- , Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dipoma and two sons and Mr, and Mrs Weston Allred and family of Ogden spent Sunday as guests of their parents Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Allred. We have always felt Moderated by FRED , G. CLARK Does the Wagner Act Infringe the Employers' Freedom of Speech? Raonl Desvemine Known Attorney, Former, Nationally ' President of Crucible Steel . Company of America -- WANT ADS FOR SALE GOOD Charter Oak enamel heating stove. Used very little. C. C. 26x Petersen, Hyrum. RENT MISCELLANEOUS Everton Logai. tta-ki- ng & 10 MISCELLANEOUS Used automobiles. Highest Cash Prices. Also several good used cars for sale. Wendell Jensen Conoco Station. WANTED ployers representative, yet employers consistently thrust themselves into elections of union representatives and enjoy complete immunity under the Wagner Act. The only situation in which an employers speech may be made the subject of a Labor Board Cease and Desist Order is where that speech carries threats of discharge, intimidation, reprisal or f warnings of economic, loss if the employees do not follow the employers preferences. The Wagner Act respects employers freedom of speech, otherwise, it would be held uncon- -' stitutional. In short, the current com-- I plaints about alleged infringement of free speech in the Wagner Act are a pretext used by an anti-labgroup of employers to further the drive to the Act in other respects. j amend ' MOW AVAILABLE Allied Offset Wheel Type Disc Harrow. or MR. DESVERNINE CHALLENGES: Mr. Pressmans allegation that any-loseeking to correct abuses, be- -' cause of partisan N.L.R.B. decisions. Us "anti-labo- r, blurs the issue. As with all laws, whether it be the Wag-!nAct or not, the danger lies, as 1 have already .shown, in the interpretation of the law and its application. Under the New Deal the law has jbeen interpreted and applied mostly in labors favor. Thousands of businessmen know this. The electorate knows this. Labor knows this. I dont think that the American Civil Liberties Union has been tarred with the "anti-labbrush, but they have vigorously and courageously fought N.L.R.B. decisions on the grounds that they infringed freedom of speech, MR. PRESSMAN REPLIES: If the j IWagner Act has been misinterpreted so as to deny employers free speech, as Mr. Desvemine contends, why is it that N.LJt.B. decisions are rarely upset by the courts and that the Board has the best court record of any federal agency? Free speech does not .entitle you to cry fire! in a crowded theatre or to destroy the freedom of others. My opponent would like to leave the employer free not merely to argue against unions, a right which he now has, but to destroy unions, a right which Is inconsistent with the er Frazer Universal Front End j Loader FOR ALL TYPES OF TRACTORS Rototiller or (POWER TILLER OF A HUNDRED USES) EMPIRE MOTORS DEALERS IN FRAZER 'FARM EQUIPMENT Tel. 1771 68 W. Center, Logan - public Interest in free lenneth Lindquist Mortuary ' U. MR. PRESSMAN OPENS: The Labor Board has held in., numerous cases, even where the employer launched an aggressive campaign to indues employees not to exercise that their right to the employer is free under the Wagner Act to discuss trade union matters with his employees and advance arguments to them against unions. Today it would be difficult to find an disemployer who does not freely cuss issues of trade unionism with his employees. Most employers use free speech for more aggressive ends unions, than this; openly their objectives, program, finances, leaders, etc.; electioneering in Labor Board elections even though the selection of the employees bargaining representative is primarily the employees business. No employee would interfere in the selection of an em- service. ! i - FLOOR SANDERS, Sons, 25 W. 1 No. utmost in value and in complete and flawless As debated by The officers and teachers of the Hyrum Third ward Sunday School held their monthly meeting at the chapel with Supt. John A. Is- - FOR service should he well within the means of the bereaved family. Here regardless of how little or how much is spent all receive the Chairman American Economic Foundation Lee Pressman General Counsel, Congress of Industrial Organizations that the cost of a funeral ciMR. DESVERNINE OPENS: iThrough misinterpretation, and the employers freedom of speech has been infringed during the past several years under N.L.R.B. decisions. In the matter of Clark Brothers, Inc., vs. the United Automobile, Aircraft and Agricultural Workers of America, CIO, the N.L.R.B. majority found against the employer in that, on company time, during working hours, officers of the company compelled their employees to listen to speeches urging them to resist CIO attempts at union organization and engaged in surveillance Cache ' Countys - Pioneer Mortuary ESTABLISHED : 1880 LOGAN, UTAH PHONE 19 Good ; Now,.-- and. for the of its employees activities . . . by means of superior economic power. In dissent, Gerald D. Reilly stated, The policy grounds upon which the majority opinion is rested seemed equally unpersuasive. I refer to the premise that since the respondent has superior economic power, the fact that it paid the workers for the time they be appraised as interferlistened ence. . . . Granted, this company, like most industrial concerns, has greater economic power than its own em- ... ployees, such an analogy, when re- ferring to an election contest undertaken by one of the powerful CIO This Board unions, is fallacious. oI knows . . . the vast amount money spent in organizing campaigr j it is doubtful if any concerns, other than the largest corporate en- terprises, can match the financial re- sources . . . available to national industrial unions, like the petitioner in such contests. Should the union, then, when it has superior eco- -' ... ' be silenced? These nomic power, are the kinds of decisions that have throttled the American employer. CHALLENGES: MR. PRESSMAN Mr. Desvemine quite obviously is not interested in protecting the employers right of free speech since that right is protected both by the Constitution and the Wagier Act1 His quarrel is with the right of to organize free from em- -' ployer interference, surveillance and discrimination. Mr. Desvernines argument essentially is that labor unions are today as economically powerful as employers, and that emto ployers should, therefore, be free erigage in unrestrained union bust. an argument which Is uning sound in its factual premise and which reintroduces into labor relations the law of the jungle and the mockery of liberty offered by the infamous liberty league. MR. DESVERNINE REPLIES: Sticking to the issue and without resort to unwarranted allegations of union busting and jungle law misapplication and misinterpretation of the law is the core of evil. The U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals, St. Louis, recently reversed another arbitrary N.L.R.B. decision after the . had found Montgomery NX.R.B. Ward & Company guilty of anti-labtactics in that an official of the com- -. union pany had made answer to CIO charges that the company was fas- -i The Court found the company had the right to defend its integrity before Its employees. The point Is too many N.L.R.B. decisions have far too often infringed the right of employers to talk back in' defense of unwarranted charges. es .. Moulded PmaoIh, gentle bur firm support for bones ond musces. POLL-PAR- R growing kitfU loom me on no pinching or cromping to distort young feet. The finest in materials, construction and comfort.. '.plus these special features makes your choice of Poll-Parr- Archmakers so for important your child. ot Stitodf Qemi mc&o for fongfosring wear, sup por ond protection. or . d. 31 North Main Logan |