Show rt ft ( THEGUNNISON VALLEY NEWS GUNNISON UTAH Gunnison Valley News Published Every Thursday at Gumdson p Entered at the postoffice at Gunnison as under the Act of Congress of March — I Member — ah State Tress Association t National matter Advertising 1879 Ons Subscription Year Six Months Editoriul Association Payable Kates Given on SWORD OF DAMOCLES Utah second-clas- s 3 THE1' In Kates: - - $200 - $100 Hit The Nail On The Head! Advance Application You have a stake in the prosperity of Gunnison and so have we The vnlu business properties ever of homes thing tangible depends upon our ui remaining a good place in which live and do business w t W CHERRY Editor and Publisher H riri mui PHONE 20 kists skkk WITH IABOK MIOWIMINN showdown tween ngimiltuie ni'il oiganied ril labor is foiesha (lowed in an investigation undertaken in behalf of fnimcis by American Aga ulturist oldest of farm papeis pub- li lnd at Ithaca New Yolk In the opening aitirle of a sci i' s wntten by Kidicit Kastman son of ilit'o Kd announced in the cm lent issue the paper states that tin1 uncovers these investigation points: Fai niers says the article are sym-- ! pathetic with people who wink for a living but they are ‘‘unitedly angiv ’to which Communists I the extent taking orders from Moscow have en- themselves in the very labm urions which would like in turn to in entrench themselves agriculture Faimers object too to the nu thuds laiior unions employed by sinking since they Hie so similar to tactics that Keds advocate Threats violence heatings intimidation and boycotts are not the American way" A spite this the government has sup lalioi polled and eiicom aged tins monopily so much so that it is m tile saddle of powci t"da hough only HOHI 0(1(1 v o k e s the nntioml total of r i (MM) ate under dnert of the labw monopoly stJI the monopolists speid n the 'Voice of Labor’ Since th government accepts the wind of th' s hi will as of all wink professionals rs behold they have neateil a mom jopidy ns dnily to national wilfarc as "one of the largest unriguJated btisi n"iH's m h’ cnun'’” and savs tin' ll wks onl’ "K“"‘‘t tl'" "'!fm aim’rs )Ut “a great deal mine to h‘ disadvantage of the laboring man” nfler practices which have been lowed to grow up unchecked by govMr Kastman the f‘rm’nt' says strikes not when he has an wok('r h"n‘sl Krievunoe hut when the mnIn If he lefuses 0P(dy lads him to may he fund dropped from the union and so lost' his job or in exticim cases he may even suffer pciMinal of nt injuiy" wiivrs MY Many incidents are cited of lawless NAME?" organized methods and violent strikes d h tvd a g a inv ng r frul hive by "the “1 Was born in New York Flats- In labor monopolists" in their attempts a great mansion nevei knew what to "enter and cnntml all businesses wmk was or is and nefthet ifid my connected with processing and (Its-- j flthei Howevt-know about in ti ibuting farm piuducts work or business than you y()UI Statistics and nuthont’es aie c t d As a boy had two oi mote muses to show that agiicultuie cannot stand and a governess to answer and increased costs which labor union isfy my eveiy whim the Ihning organizers seek to put upon fat mors last war when most men my age for my count' y of a took up arms Bankruptcy or the acceptance economy says Mr Hast- - thiough pull I iccoivrd a cushie job pi man must result fiom nn extension of as assistant secretin y of the navy the unionizing diive inti iu al sec- (that an older and mine expel lenecd He adds: "Farmers know that man could have filled better) tions a economy is one of the practiced law in Wall Street des of a National Socialist fending “bucket shops” joined Nazi or Facist stito They know that 'list two business ventures both of a suffocating would be them proving 100 per cent losses bureaucracy needed to keep it going investors long before the collapse of 1929 “It was once thought that the solved four vents as govtoo were trusts powerful ewn ernor of a great state and w lock'd to t "y to cuih their abuses but oui ds finances have served eight years as presipeople in their rnth did cuih them The r buses of the labor t'u t must dent of the gieatest nation in the likewise be curbed before the western woild urn! now have it in the worst mess in its history light of libei ty is snuffed out” While my wife sons nnd daughter ‘There exists today in the Coiled States a colossal labor rnonopc lv an through the prestige of my office have each made foi tunes now want oligarchy of professional labor unionists whose every action is bent toward to continue myself and family in rein themselves office foiever maintaining power What’s my nnme? — A A J gardless of the effects of their action Not hII on workers or the nation One editor suggests tbit if F but a too laige number of labor lead loses in November lie will still be ei up among this group M ‘This continues nmnopoly" piosident until January and may call Wc l'astman "has been cioated hv un off Thanksgiving Hlt'gothei American no th is of violence (can think of a better New Heal cam How thients Inllot-lxthat about cion threat than stuffing and sign includes among its number cilminTs this: “A vote against Koosevelt is a I)e- - vote against ncki’teors and Communists Christmas" t' t' cc I Tra&aMEmttuJ fo PUS TMt INDUSTRIAL APvANCtS MONtV X) NJV xarmir 4 Also PR a row W n ccvse y4t s Tut wo rut TiUftpl AMfKK WAdt WffK WHHf weetASfo ha vf HAXffOW 300 HO TVAtTQ o IMMF9 kOUKS WAQtS oyt nn rDmiieirmioM'wfitmMiMf'tnrcRisiNi PIUso OWRtSVVl t th iuivymocvot ORlim N P0I PRl'MS lUTOf WAOCAiMS tmrNDlM6 OF THE TftMT ft OAAH CWH p v - o ' w rm ri't vn UV Uf FuANITURI - tkic PCX or otceseo seen ay NFtHiyiO A tractor 3f yfAR ago WILL cah mow mom LAT£X TUf or RuHivrs MADE BS(S ytAR TAX But roa Th( TEtu (Nmtay touAitfp yeMSf'Af ro V2 fOO ! Trade In Gunnison Gunnison Valley Bank GKN TKKSHING AT 80 the force of real logic In one of his last addresses to the senate in the Senator of this year early days Borah offered an analysis of legislation to conscript industry that has developed even more pertinence today than when it was first spoken are themselves Borah’s remarks the most powerful kind of an editorial to confound those who would give government complete control over alt We of production the processes think you’ll agree when you’ve read his words: “If we can do what irf provided In this bill because of an emergency then we 'could' also provide' In case of an emergency for the suspenWe could sion of the Bill of Rights prohibit free speech free press an? the right of trial by jury “Mr president democracy is having a pretty tough fight with arbitrary power and with arbitrary govSuch legislation as ernments and the seizure of now proposed every opportunity to discredit demand democratic processes ocracy hastening at all times to advertise the efficiency and the necessity of arbitrary powers are telling most igainst democratic principles and The glory democratic processes of the Bill of Rights is that it Is a restraint upon government as well as upon individuals” Thus the eloquent "final words” of a great legislator serve to remind us that political assumption of powei does not stop halfway —and that the next step after the drafting of property is the drafting of free thought and everything else that democracy values most highly! General John J Pershing one of the world’s greatest living soldiers and one of the few surviving officers who exercised high command during the fust World War was 80 years of ge on September 13 neid ntally it may be' mentioned that Pershing was born on the 13th and his 80th Finlay In birthday also fell on a Friday his ease the jinx date does not appeal to have been unlucky although his life has been maiked by one great His wife and thiee youpg tragedy daughters weie burned to death at the Pcsidio of San Francisco in 1915 one s n suiviving A native of Missouii General Pershing was graduated fiom West Point in 1880 and was engaged in the cam- paign against the Apache Indians the! He served in the Sioux same year war of the 90’s and in the Santiago He so distincampaign of 1898 guished himself in a succesful campaign in the Philippines that he was promoted from captain directly to In 191ff brigadier general in 1900 he compianded an expedition sent into Mexico in pursuit of the noted bandit Pancho Villa I’pon our entry into the World War he was placed in command of the m Amciican Force Expeditionary Fiance nnd for his distinguished services was made general of the armies of the United States a rank created especially for him by congress in 1919 He was retired from active rervice in 1924 The nation extends congratulations to its first soldier on his 80th birthday and wish for him many more JOBLESS SEEK TO ORGANIZE yeais m which to enjoy his honors PROTECTED BY PRESIDENT Gunnison Utah Member Federal Deposit Insurance Coloration Member Federal' Reserve System project workers and other privileged" The conference considered ed “under-- j prob- affecting unemployed and WPA employes and sought a program Chairman guarantee their security David Ldsser recently broke with Alliance charging it wa controlled by communists The alliance previously represented the vaf1 lous unemployed groups President Roosevelt offered to look lems t' over any program auhmitti 'V the conference and stated it is imputait to the nation that the viewpoint of the vast block of unemployed Ik adequately presented FIRE THEFT and All Classes of Insurance Written ’ IRA OVERFEL1 Gunnison Valley Bank ' HE KK KEI) TIIE OUTCOME The late Senator Borah of Idaho was a truly gieat American — sometimes wrong which is the common lot f mankind but able to comment upon significant facts with intelligence and In a letter to the American Security Conference meeting in Chicago the middle of August President Franklin D IJooseVelt promised his protection to an organization of unHe and WPA workers’ employed suggested a 100 per cent American movement confined to the unerrtplfly- - Utah Mines Dependent oil Outside Mart for Revenue OTE POOCETBOOK of KNOIVJLEBGE m Do your part by encouraging horn-- 1 those men and women enterprise who pay our taxes support our churches and maintain our charities You boost your home town every dn when you It out The Inexorable laws of supply nnd demand affect all Industries ThHr effect upon metal prices Is extremely important In Utah where mining is the most important Industry Mines are dependent entirely upon an outside market for their products They produce the metals here ship them east for sale and the money IsVbrought back to he used in local "trade and Industrial channels and to consume product grow n w Ithln the stale It Is Interesting to note how metal prices are established In the newspapers and other journals we see mentioned various quotations for the price of copper: The Price the Cathode Price the Connecticut Valley Price and the Price for Export Copper The medium for the quotation of these prices accepted officially In the trade Is the K k M J Metal and Mineral Markets ehlch Is the weekInformation Issued by ly market the publishers of the Engineering and Mining Journal In New York All settlements In this country for the purchase and sale of copper In ores and concentratea are baaed upm the figure published by this Journal This Journal has the confidence of both the buyers and sellers of copper and obtains from buyers and sellers practically 100 percent Information on aalea of refined copper made In the United States On the bails of these sals It determines the price of copper that was sold on each date The E & M J Metal and Mineral Markets uses for purposes of their baste quotations tbs pries cf Elec trolytic Copper fob refinery auch copper being In the ordinary forma of wire bar and Ingot bar Quoting from the Journal Itself “The figure are net prices at refineries at th Atlantic Seaboard ” These refineries are principally located In New Jersey and Maryland This electrolytic price Is used as a basis of settlement between the mines and the smelters In many cases Trior to having been melted Into wire bar and Ingot bar the copper as It cornea from the electrolytic celt Is known s Cathode Copper 8 of which Is usually sold at t cent per pound less than the copper called electrolytic copper as described above Sometimes this la the quotation used In the purchase and sale of copper ores and con centrates The seat of the brass Industry In the United States is historically in the Connecticut Valley In New It costs $4 50 a ton to England r transport a ton of electrolytic from the eastern refineries to Connecticut Vsllev points on the average nr 225 rents per pound Thla transportation charge Is added to the quotation for electrolytic copper at the refinery and the resulting figure becomes the Corv nsctlcut Valley price for electro-lyticopper The Connecticut Valley price Is that which Is used customarily In Union wag agreements and is a fixed and definite quotation as estsbllshed by the E M J Metal and Mineral Markets by merely addlrfg to th quotation for electrolytic copper at th refinery 225 cents rtr pound at explained above HIS MASTER’S VOICE? WVV W' ne Talburt in th WathingtonDailu |