Show GUNNISON JTIIE GUNNISON VALLEY NEWS UTAH f News Heview of Current Events the World Over i Democrats Renominate President Roosevelt— Drought ! Again Causes Crop Destruction — International I Conference Considers "Mediterranean Problems W PICKARD By EDWARD C Wertrn Nawapaper Union FRANKLIN D renominated by the Democratic convention In Philadelphia In a of great popular aclemonstratlon claim The convention unanimously adopted a strong New Deal platform and' voted 'the abolition of the historic two thirds rule The sessions marked with extreme enthusiasm Party harmony and a deterto stand mination mllitantly on the administration's record In the past three jears ’and present a united front In the coming campaign characterized the convention rule The abolition of the for the nomination of candidates was "one of the significant achievements This rule which had been In use for more than 100 years was superseded by the adoption of the tules committee’s !report recommending thut at future conventions only a bare tnajoiity be Required for nomination While some southern and the eastern and western they were States opposed abrogation to It lj the committee’s ’’reconciled Recommendation that changes be made In the apportionment of delegates The platform pledged continuance of benefit payments to oil conservation farmers a sound currency a balanced amendconstitutional a and budget the to achieve ment If necessary It party’s broad social program of the the accomplishments praised New Deal lo a preamble declaring that It planned to continue them lu the Interest of the nation The platform’s keynote was that the Roosevelt administration has put and will keep the 'nation “on the road the recovery and PRESIDENT u ( 1 0 1 ier ped on ou rt ieU :ids Lack ng-- d death rf Bernhard V von Boe secretary of state for foreign affair In the Hitler cabinet removed one of the moat skilled of Kurone'a who was Von Buelow diplomat an expert on the League Nations and gave his country valuable counsel when Germany began to consider rejoining the league lie waa noted as a studious and hard working official with a vast amount of detailed Information always readily available A "blueblood” of the German the diplomat was a nephew of the late I’rlnce Bernhard von Bhelow Imperial chancellor lie was one of the ffrat of the German nobles to associate himself with the republican regime after the collapse of the empire In 1918 Although different la background from Hitler he nevertheless enjoyed the chancellor's confidence In Russia Maxim Gorky early foe of the czars who became a hero of the Soviet regime and Its outstanding writer died ef Influenza 4 the age of Although not a member of the Communist party Gorky had a preeminent position In Soviet life and was a former member of the central executive committee Moscow honored him with a public funeval and Interment In the Kremlin In a niche facing Lenin's tomb TUB the seflous effects of lack of rain Figures on June rainfall for 1936 aDd 1934 compiled by Nat C Murray crop authority of Chicago showed that Ohio had 39 per cent of normal this year and 90 per cent In 1934 Minnesota 46 per cent In 1930 and 92 per cent In 1934 Missouri 26 per cent In 1930 and 152 per lh 1934 and 'Kansas 37 per' cent In 1930 and 65 per cent In 1934 Added to the seriousness of the drouth situation was a plague of grasshoppers that swept over eastern Nebraska threatening to destroy hundreds of square miles of crpps The swarin was reported to he 100 miles In spots the Insects were said to long he so numerous that they hid the sun ns they passed over valuable farm lands mt In Montreuux Swltz-aInternational confersought settlement of military and naval problems In the Mediterranean The conference had been called by the powers ns a result of Tin key’s request to fortify the Dardanelles which were demilitarized under t lie treaty of 1923 The possible threat of Russia’s grow lng naval strength caused an alignment of the ltrltlsli and Japanese Japan announced it was willing to accept any limitation on Japanese war ships authorized to enter the Black providing similar restrictions were placed on Russian warships leaving It Russia demanded free westward passage of warships and submarines out of the Black sea through the Dardanelles adding she was unable to see why other powers not bordering on this body of water desired unlimited passage to It Because of her mutual assistance pnet' with the Soviet France was expected to side with Russia Mrirnvo ence I" £ Indtctr In Washington 1 relief program for the drouth stricken northwest states msi mapped "out by Relief Admlnls-- I Irator Harry L Hopklna Work relief jirojoctf designed to gUt work it ODCO ( tw " "ir1" IMMU ml crop land have been laid waste for the Seventh coniecutlve year were planned In the Middle West the fact that June of 1930 has been cooler than the Mme month two years ago baa offset ( I I further tied up bjr whose number approximately Io thi 1JXW L'1 J - ' Seventy fourth congress ad after a session lasting fi'e and a half months during which It ap proprlatod nearly $10 060 000 000 and wns faced by some unexpected legls latlve complications In the closing hours the emergency tax hill which is expected to produce $800000 0(H) !n revenue was passed Supreme court Invalidation of (he AAA and Guffey coal hills and the passage of the cash soldiers’ bonus over the President's veto upset the budget plans and made such a hill necessary Although It was passed by the house the amended Guffey coni hill designed to jemove the objections of the Su pfcme court failed of passage In the senate Similarly the Wagner slum housing bill which had passed the senate failed In the house Larger than normal appropriations were activities for governmental passed The bonus farm payments relief and the greatest national defense program In pence time history helped swell the total Funds for continuing the present relief program were voted the public works revolving fund waa amended to permit more heavy construction projects But congress failed to approve the Florida ship canal and tide dam Invalidation of the AAA brought a revised and expanded toll conservation and domestic allotment act the rural electrification administration and electric farm and home authority were both placed on a permanent basis the Commodity Credit corporation was expanded two flood control received attention Labor passed bill dealing through the with working conditions on govqrn-meA compromise ’jilp contracts subsidy bill was rushed through In Nhe closing honrs Financial legislation expansion of the jurisdiction ef SEC Important among business was the Patman bill amending the Clayton antitrust act regarding price discrimination A number of Jmportant bills failed of enactment Among these were the Pettinglll long and short hauls bill stockyard regulation farm mortgage bill and bills on the week extension of the railroad r tenure profits alien deportation enlargement of the federal trade commission's power and reasury agency service’ E itrlkers cached tailors “'S'lbTuiX cTiiut rlkrr - 7nl? "L mnndrsCKmy the walkout week bedshceti 00 H ( i t THE 10 emj For Busy Women fa EPRESENTATIVB WILLIAM prosperity" LEMKB of North Dakota anRegarding the Constitution the platnounced that be would run for tha form declared that while the RepubPresidency as candidate of a new polican platform proposes to meet nalitical group known tional problems by action of the sep aa tha Union party ’rate states the Democratic party recE Father Charles maxiognizes that minimum Wages Coughlin Detroit child labor monopolistic mum hours priest Is the leading dust business practices and 'unfair sponsor of Lemke's Otorms drouth and floods could not be Thomas candidacy It stated handled by states of Charles O’Brien efbe will be the Boston i “If these problems cannot with-'Icanfectively solved by legislation shall aeek we the Constitution didate on the ticket it amendment! as will such clarifying waa announced assume to the legislatures of the sevMr Lemke made eral states and to the congress of the platpublic a lUnlted States each within Its proper form embodying demands for rethose to’ enact Jurisdiction the power financing of farm mortgages old age Jaws which the state and federal legsecurity a living wage for all worktheir within respective ers limitation on individual Incomes islature spheres shall find necessary in the establishment of a central bank adequately to regulate commerce the Issuance by congress of all curprotect public health and safety and rency and Us regulation of the value Thus of all the money safeguard economic security we propose to maintain the letter and Plans were made for the new party to hold a national convention some spirit of the Constitution" In addition to soil conservation and time during August in Cleveland the farm plank benefit Mr Lemke said the Union party has payments pledged the Democrats to financing the support of farm onions labor the and tenants in buying National Union for Social Justice esands ’favored commodity loans on tablished by Father Coughlin the farm surpluses and retirement of ten Townsend old age pension movement million acres of submarginal land and "all other liberals who have been from production and rural rehablllta- - driven from the old parties" Mr Lemke was co author with Senthe “good pelghbor” ator Lynn J Frazier of North Dakota Itlon the foreign relations plank of a 13000000000 farm mortgage rereaffirmed the party’s neutrality profinancing bill defeated in the house of gram pledged to keep the nation out representatives It reasof foreign entanglements w CUTTEN Who achieved serted the reciprocal tariff policy but demanded "adequate" wealth as a grain protection to ARTHUR farmers and manufacturers against trader died of a heart attack In his He waa unfair foreign competition home In Chicago I Denouncing monopolies and conceyears old Mr Individualism ntration of economic power the platof An exponent form declared that the administration Cutten went his way alone In the grain would "vigorously and fearlessly en- market playing his "hunches” against force the criminal and civil provisions the field In 1924 he made a profit laws" of the existing estimated at between gl500000 and Other 'planks pledged: Expansion go 000 000 In a corner on the corn mar-o-f the aoclal security program con- jje repeated his success with a tlnuance of rural electrification pro- - COUp n the wheat market the of the rights of labor to bar- - I jng year I with a group of associates he gain collectively extension of federal Just treatment of tered the stock market In 1928 and projects ’war veterans and their dependents I during the boom months made millions extension of the merit system through j 0j dollars freedom of j Most of his life Mr Cutten was a classified civil serylce fpeegh press radio religion and as- “long" trader who bought for the rise of aembly public works jj the market but following the crash projection "bear" or projects to aid unemployment oppo-jg Mld to have become a hort seller Ills operations as a hear yltlon to Communism and "the menace Trade of brough of concealed Fascism in the Chicago Board his suspension by the grain futures but he two for years frilB specter of drouth stalked In administration of this ruling In the f the Northwest Damage to crops won a reversal court States Supreme United nn farms In South Wyoming and Montana caused sad Industrial difficulties great concern and recalled the dlsaa STRIKES to b trass France alrous drouth condition of two years solution was though their ultimate eo In forecast area Railroads serving the drouth I omed by hiTprench chamber agreed to place emergency freight rates eminent toward thjMF Jnto effect on live stock shipments to I hther grazing areas Wheat and corn of commerce a Mgur re-- j chambers of 00 Wop have suffered sever damage Cool Slnrtwaislcr 0 lh ship were affeited by The aallors demanded a vacations with pay and lhelr Every wardrobe demands at U 1st one frock alwava on call ready tor instant duty Here Is such a frock— a most attractive nml serviceable one — a new and fluttering version of the ever popular shirtwaist type with a clever matched collar short and iliuple set In sleeves two or four ' pockets as you wish and a plain aklrt with two kick pleats In the front and a center seam ending In another kick pleat at the back Barbara Bell Pattern No 1901 B la available In sizes 14 16 18 20 40 and 42 Corresponding bust measurements 82 84 36 38 40 and 42 Blze 16 (84) requires 4 yards of 39 Send 15 cents In cola Inch material for the pattern Send your order to The Sewing Circle Pattern Dept 149 New Montgomery Ave Ban Francisco Calif C Bell 8jrn6let— WNU Barrie Sod Eprinc tench on when you Some experiences ing— except to groan of them noth- think Learning Daily Each succeeding dny Is the scholat went before It — Pub- of that which lius Byrus stars in a pine WILL YOU OQOP UP TO THE WAQOCN’S OFFICE ? HE'S STARTING FOR TOWN AND WANTS YOU TO RIDE BACK WITH HIM VOU’BC SURE HE DOESN'T WANT TO LOCK ME UP FOR SOME or THE DECISIONS MAOC UMPIRING THIS CAMEt the lend of Orest FOLLOWING States formally re- voked all sanctions Imposed against Italy during the recent conflict A proclama-oa by President Roosevelt declared all communicaprevious tions dealing with the sale of munitions of war loans and travel by Americans on Italian ships was revoked Although tho sanctions were against both Italy sod Ethiopia In practical application they were used against only not Italy since the United States did supply the African nation with any war materials and the empire of Halle Selassie had no ships of its own Tbo French cabinet agreed to abide of Naby any action which the League tions may take In cancelling sanction against Italy The Britlah government’s decision to abandon sanctions was defended In an address by Prime Minister Baldwin at the only alternative which would prevent a sulddal war plunging western civilization Into "barbarous anarchy" Baldwin asserted: Wo think It Is right to drop sanctions because they art useless and Ineffective There 1s only one way to alter tb course of events as they have tfiua far taken place That Is by going to war I do not know a single nation In Europe that la prepared for that I would not cast thy vote for that Course A BATTLE to recover all the proe-teasing taxes paid to the government under the Invalidated AAA was tndejtaken by tb "big four" of tbo packing Industry— Swift and Company Armonr and Company Wilson and Company and tb pndaby Tacking company Having woa back 115000000 wbea ths AAA was declared unconstitutional Inby tb Supreme court the packing dustry has decided to attempt to recover from the government mor than $200000000 paid before Injunction! gainst the tax were granted and subsequent payments impounded you’ll NECO MORE ENERGY ANO YOU I TEU help ME WITH MY ' pitching! 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