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Show 4 Lacy Cartwheels SEfcN Make This Cloth Theres magic in this two colored crocheted square when its joined into a cloth or spread, it looks like two medallions I Begin right away on the first 8 inch square. Its "repeats" will follow in quick succession for it is sim- - senators. Only in this way, the southern senators told the President could the legislation bs saved. They predicted that otherwise this MO, which means so much to the progressives and if so integral a part of the administration program, would be sidetracked again as it was last session. Not in the same manner, necessarily, but perhaps by some other device. This proposal was made to the President after the blast of William Green, ' president of the American Federation of Labor, against the pending bill. This attack by Green wee regarded ae devastating for several reasons. One is that the A. F. of L. has a great many friends on Capitol Hill, not only senators and representatives who believe in the old organization as against the C. L O. on principle or economic theory, but personal friends of long standing with A F. of L. leaders. More Important is the difficulty of meeting Greens objections. Elimination of any type of governmental board to supervise enforcement of the law would teem simple. It would seem as though the law could be enacted just as any. other federal statute, leaving prosecution for violations upon the federal govcin-ment- e Washington. A real battle between President Roosevelt and the New Dealers, mi the one hand, and the conservative Democrats plus the regular Republicans, on the other, seems certain despite the flood of exaggerated reports about the President's conceding the error of his ways and turning kindly toward business. He hasn't changed any, His talks with Wendell L. Willkie, president of the Commonwealth and Southern Power company, and with Floyd L. Carlisle, chairman of the Niagara and Hudson Power com pany, details of which are now known, prove this, giving quite a diflegal department local fedferent picture from that obtained eral district attorneys, etc. merely from the news that he had called them in, and from their wn There's a Problem statements just after their White That would be simple were It nol House visits. for the differential question. It is 1570 Pattern Actually the President conceded nest to impossible to get any law On the contrary he gained passed fixing minimum wages and pie to do in economical string and nothing. work. a great deal for the New Deal ob- maximum hours without providing makes delightful pick-u- p You may use the same color jectives. From Willkie he obtained some arrangement whereby, the concessions as to the g South will continue to have the pres..throughout, if . you prefer. Pat- base which are going to. cause the ent differentia, under which it may tern 1570 contains chart and' dK rections for making the square; utilities a great deal of trouble. continue to pay slightly lesk' Wages More important, its publicity effect and work its labor slightly longer material requirements; illustra- is to put Roosevelt in the right and hours than the competing industries tions of the square and of all the utilities in the wrong as to the in the North and West. I But how to fix such an arrangesquare; color suggestions. From Carlisle he obtained a ment without a board, which would Send IScents in stamps or coins promise-ag-ain accompanied by a have discretionary authority. Is a (coins preferred) for this pattern j M to spend a great problem. to The Sewing Circle, Needlecraft deal ofpubUcity-money. Which reinforced Complicating the situation is the Dept., 82 Eighth Ave., New York. Roosevelt's contention that the utili- remainder of program. AlPlease write your name, ad- ties have been holding back their ready the senatethe has shown what it dress and pattern number plainly- - spending, and thus helping Impor- can do in the way of tantly to bring about the present re- Discussion of the bill cession, in order to have an effect on dragged on and on until the farm to force MU was reported. Every one knows legislation specifically, Rising Tide A new magazine has made its modification of the holding company that the report on the farm bill death sentence. would not have been made yet by appearance on the newsstands of Roosevelt met every point made the senate the country. It is pictorial in charagricultural committee either executive with an argu- were it not for pressure on Chairman acter under the name of the Ris by ment or silence. He disputed E. D. Smith to rush this measure ing Tide," originally issued in Eng- and denied or out so ae to head off the i every contention. bill Otherwise, Senator Smith On taxation the President is still was informed, he would be blamed der nine different languages. The and tooth nail to restrict for not doing his part in battling fighting magazine is reported to be a non- modification exclusively to the small the bill. profit publication carrying no adEven the house comBut whether any time was really vertising but such matter that is of corporations. mittee (ways and means) has gone saved interest to the people of the world further by this pressure on the senate than the President wanted who are seeking answers to their committee is something agricultural own problems. It is said that these further than he had the Treasury of- else again. As Senator Smith said, ficials urge. under the pressure, he would bring problems are covered without rethe biU out if it were a blank piece Sets Battle Stage gard to race, class or creed. of paper, and leave the working deIn the cenate, of course, there Is tails to the floor of the senate. even more sentiment to modify taxes with an eye tingle to improvMeans a Struggle ing business encouraging investThe administration will be forced ment and hence employment Sena- to fight with all Its strength to pretors, and many house members, are serve as much as possible of the not concerned whether such modifisocial and economic reform objeccation happens to play bob with tives of the New Deal, while the ofplanned economy, war against bigHow would you like to lose 15 ness, or any of the other New Deal fensive, caring nothing about the New Deal ideals or Brain Trust pounds of fat in a month and at the same time increase your energy and objectives. theories, wiU be considering only This temper on the part of the how to ease the strain on business improve your health? How would you like to lose your White House and congress sets the to produce prosperity double chin and your too prominent stage for a battle which has been sufficiently and employment and at the same time make hips skin so clean and clear that it your will becoming more certain since the Roosevelt and his senate and early arrivals of congressmen for house leaders wiU face a new probcompel admiration? How would you like to get your the extra session. But every passFor five years the White weight down to normal and at the ing day has actually drawn the line lem. same time develop that urge for acHouse has fought an MIcnsive war, of conflict more eherply. tivity that makes work a pleasure its high tide and its first One piece of this White House reaching and also gain in ambition and keenserious reverse on the Supreme ness of mind? has been correct The court Get on the scales today and ace how propaganda enlargement bill. Now, howmuch you weigh then jret a bottle of President is concerned about the reKruxchen Salta which wiu last you far 4 cession. But he believes it due to ever, with the business recession, weeks and costa but a trifle. Take f plus the demonstration In the court fy teaapoonftil every your the attitude of the economic royalbattle that the President could be diet set a little regular ran tic exercise ists. and whan you have An tha contents the fact that the politiof this first bottla wall There are three chief reasons for beaten, plus Wow you will know cians on Capitol Hill are now confat and you'll eien know the recession, in the mind of the vinced that the folks out in the counthat istiljj of Kruse hen have prcaant- - President They are: l you with glorious health. ae they may be for the 1. Too high prices, containing too try, strong But be aure for your health's sake that you sk for and get Kruachen Salts. Get large profits, in many commodi- President, are not excited by specifthem at any dnintoro tat tha world and ic votes against his recommendaU the results one bottle brines do not ties, with steel No. 1 on the list and is different. Detertion, the you do not joyfully satisfy you concrete a close second. Lower mined topicture aid business, congress is prices, the President believes, would on the end the President's have made greater sale, hence forces offensive, driven to a new type are more employment in the industries of strategy a type which the mentioned (and other similar ofof the relations of Presidents fenders) and in the industries that with congress shows is frequently from them. buy unsuccessful. 2. Hold-of- f in expansion and reDont Neglect Them ! Unexpected fireworks may enlive placement by the utilities, amountNaUre Mined the kidneys to do the situation as the President tries to ing, him figures according given Tktir taaklTto karpt to gsMsys Mood stream has of an neam by S-- E- - C., to billion dollars a to change the battleground. A masaf rate-makin- . . time-wastin- g. EJEnS - anti-lynchi- Safe Pleasant Way To Lose Fat one-hal- morning-Hmodi- ht SerrtinelsJBB hie-tor- y RfJHealtP waata that may rauaa body-wi- dim siskm. swtlljng. gjta vmtM iron out paffinem all manly ar burning naaaagm SJtridtfexrre. f aakorSlSif jloyrere jfreta WNU-- W 50-- 87 The railroads in 1827 to 1830 Installed more than twelve times as many locomotive! each year, nearly Railroads the complexities five times as many freight care, laid Face Crisis of modern civilize: nearly three times as many tons of tion and modern raila and laid nearly twice as many business. Many times have we erase ties as they averaged in the heard how closely agriculture is re- depression years from 1831 to 1838. lated to other industry; how general "Capital expenditures for 1829 and commerce and Industry is interwov1930 averaged $863,164,000 a year. en with every phase of our life. During the depression years from There can be no doubt of thii condi- 1831 to 1936, the average of capital tion. No proof is required. Nor is it expenditure! was only $206,813,000. necessary to argue that when one Similarly, the trend at railway lection or segment of business is on (of things they must use purchase its sickbed, there ii a resulting bad in operation) of fuel, material and reaction upon every other phase ol commerce and industry lo a greater supplies declined sharply during the depression years and never ha reor less extent. turned to anything like normal. Wilh these fundamentals in mind in 1929 and 1830 Railway ft becomes obvious that probably amounted purchase! to SI. 184.017.000 in each of the most important development it the two years. In the five years a national character in the last few from 1931 to 1935. the average per weeks is the appeal of the country's year was shout $556,000,000. In 1936. railroads for the right to increase the expenditure! in this direction then ratea by 15 per cent. The de- were up to $603,421,000. (Figures LIKE to give yourself tails of their condition, as presented (or 1937 are but there for the New Year, incomplete in hearings before the interstate ha been another decline because of Milady? Then spruce show cominerre commission, they curtailment of buying.)" with the are confronted with a crisis. Since neceseary Dr. Parmelee turned to the ques easy way to chic. Here, for they are uii'deMffie rlgtd supervision ,of the federal government, the fed- tion of railroad receipliroif their instance- are three swell wing models that will make you eral government is the doctor in services. He told the commission the case. They will live or die by that the depression years had left modem as tomorrow and put you the command of the interstate com- the railroads without any reserves. in the running for the title, "best For seven years, he eaid, the rail- dressed woman. Right now it's merce commission. roads have been barely getting by, parties you're thinking of, so pick The case they have presented and pointed out that at no time be- a pair of eligiblea from this trio. shows, for example, that they have tween 103f and 1937 had Will Ton Dance? they earned had to cut thousands upon thousands more than 2.57 The New Year's Party will be per cent on their of workers off of the payroll; that investment as it U appraised by the festive and so will you in the they have been unable to buy more commission. In three of those sev- model at the left in black moire. than one third of the customary en years, the records show, the Thia is a very young frock and annual purchases from other busirailroads receipts did not amount to not a little flattering to the debunesses, and that more than one aa much as their fixed chargee, a tante figure. It has a skirt that's fourth of all the railroad mileage in term which includes interest on built for dancing, and the oh, so the nation is now being operated ai their sleifiler waist is no drawback. debts, taxes and bankrupt property that Is, the amounts for paying off partsrequired of their Theres always a "morning aftin is the hands of court debts. In other words, all property and thats when you'll be er," they receivers. earned in those year was just glad to have A spic and classic So, adverting to the observations' enough to pay the people who work frock like the one above, center. of the first paragraph of thia die for them and buy the necessary fuel It is suitable to take back to mission: a gigantic industry can not and school to rouse the roommate's operating supplies. run at a loss without resulting in a envy and, pleasantly enough, it's bad heart or partial paralysis in so easy to cut and stitch, a freshThe argument to the commission other industry. Higher rates are is predicated, therefore, upon rising man can't go wrong. Make one always opposed for the very human costs, genera ex- - version in flat crepe and a carbon . reason that none of us enjoys taking in sheer wool it is superb Rising penses, and the copy any more money out of our pocket both ways. dozen or so rail Costs than we must. Many lines of busiAh, My Friends. way presidents ness oppose rate iji cresses on the How about a of lame railroads because the fear that it who testified before the commission tressed the fact that these expenses and velvet for that rousing family will reduce their volume of sales. But it occurs to mb that in consid- are out of control by the railroad reunion over the holidays? The eration of a questioA of freight ratea authorities. Dr. Parmelee figured model above, right, is two pieces, and charges which the railroads that these higher costs of fuel, sup- but it'a one with chic and figure You'll have your auntmake, we ought to think of their sit- plies, wages and taxes had bid a flattery. uation as we do cf other lines of burden on the railroad that is ies making ohs and aha and the business. Our retail grocer is not greater this year by $664,789,000 bright young cousins calling you it was in 1933. The companies the duchess! What's more going to sell at a Joss; the druggist than hope to get 9567,287,000 of this sum you'll look the part. can not subsist from the 15 per cenf increase in Pattern 1330 is designed for profit however sm freight rates, and the railroads of sizes 12 to 20 (30 to 40 is the farmer goii bust). Size the East are asking that passenger 14 produce unless he requires 4 yards of be fares Increased 2 from cents to material plus 6 yards of gros-grai- n return from his work. The only difference between these and the rail- 21k cents a mile, which they think ribbon to trim as pictured. will bring in an additional $47,500,-00roads is that the. railroads can not Pattern 1397 is designed for From this it is teen that the sizes 12 to 20 raise their rates unless the inter (30 to 40 bust). Size state commerce t ommission, a gov- carriers still will fall ihort of the full amount needed, but their arernment agency; says they can do gument, as I understand it, proso. Further, there is a tendency on ceeds on the theory that they ihould not seek more of an increase than the part of a goodly number of persona throughout the land to question i sufficient to keep them from gothe accuracy of statements made by ing broke. If the new depression buiinen. No doubt you have heard, conditions subside, there will be a ! next year. aa I have, the remark that larger volume of "you That will enable freight them to make a can't tell whether busiprofit. That is, a greater volume of ness is bad off or not. Big corporation! can cover up and make black business with the new rates will look like white." Indeed, while I provide a profit unless there are was listening to one of the L C. C. new government taxes and other hearings in this ease, a man In a burdens laid upon them. In thii neighboring seat made something of connection, I looked up the effect the eame observation is I have of the social security and carriers quoted. My answer to him was in taxing act Commission records substance that none of the railroad show the rail lines are paying $111,. officials would dare lie to the com- 000,000 in taxes annually under Waihington. Much baa been written and much more has been said concerning 14 requires material. Pattern 1398 is designed kl sizes 32 to 44. Size 34 requinj 17k yards of material k the blouse; 17k yards of 5(L I material for the skirt. Send your order to The Sere I Circle Pattern Dept., 149 Kn Montgomery Ave., San Francos! Calif. Patterns 15 cents (in oaf 39-in- ch each. HOTEL BEN LOMOND' two-piec- 39-in- ch Crj OGDEN, UTAH SSI Komu III Bilks s:.M far i rmmnt Fiailr . bn tiki ILM ial Uttr Sine . Ti fan I Air C00M Lanco Crill Kmmm .. CoSm Hmm af Bot Kirkmi Choakcraf Klwmolo. Exwolhw k : HOTEL fir IEN LOMOND the a h e it c :bine blent ll'e on Wly ai Cowo as rw ait T. E. Fitegcnlifol CHBG get ca (the ca I he ..before you bay pny doct ol k bowels g unkn ' I Itaedyl k iSkii of kiaotioeal I one-eixt- h NEWEST HOSTELRY Onr lobby is deUghif.Uy air cssitd during the Moths Kmdlm Hr 00 Beams-2- suuer Cvnry Bomb 00 Baths I j Temple Square MnOLSOfollOO Ibid htehly ftTfco Temple Square timLZ danhte, Will always find ll Immaa- gjwm.Y face rnxlmtaad why thia hatal tei niGlILY RECOMMENDED Tow aaa aba appraaiata why ,e t eta at tMs haaalifaf hsstatey ERNEST C ROSSITFR. Mar. Western How Victoria Succeeded to the British Throne Queen Victoria, christened Alexandrine Victoria, the only child of Edward, duke of Kent, fourth son of King George 111, and of Princess Victoria Maria Louisa of reigned from 1837 to 1901. She succeeded William IV, her paternal uncle. In 1817 Princess Charlotte, tha daughter of the prince regent died, and her death removed the only legitimate heir to the throne. Three of her brothers then married, the dukes of Clarence, Kent and Cambridge. The two children of tha duke of Clarence died In Infancy; the duke of Cambridge had a son, but since the duka of Kent was older than tha duke of Cambridge, at hla death his Victoria daughter became heir to the throne. At St James' palace on February 10, 1840, Queen Victoria married her cousin, Princa Albert of the second ion of tha duka. then-reigni- Memorial to Lumbermen in Huron National Forest A memorial to Michigan's lumbermen is located in the Huron National forest on the high bank of the Au Sable river, overlooking Five Channels dam, 15 miles northwest of East Tawas. It la composed ol three bronze figures, each nine feci tall, resting on a n granite ban. Ona b tha timber cruiser, on back and compass in hand, pack running a lection line; another is the woods 20-to- Nowopar cui oral ENf Union. cial L?CT AiUten inscription: "Erected to perpetual! the memory of the pioneer lumbermen ol Mirliigun, through whose la. bora was made possibla tha of the prairie atates." remaining sides ar in. scribed with the names of 81 Mich-iga- n Ant Wire men linked wilh lumbering. in tablets OBlhi, with a Pavy. The figures art composite of aeveral hundred picture! loaned Rrt aide j ran Wain, man carrying an as and tha third b tha river manuw and Nei? York. Pn latlkr ?ou . I Sridiu. r8 J HOTEL cranl Optimn CwnrautiiM ind- LAKE'S I I 0. these two levies alone, a burden the mission. even if they were so inclined, because the commission has companies did not have two or three years ago. access to every item of expense So it is evident that the rail lines and income, even all actions of the are b a bad fix. They are conmanagement, of the carriers. fronted on the one hand with mount-inIt might be eaaed in thii concosta of operation and on the ter he nection realizes political strategist, that official of for the lait three years. Incithe inter year other by declining receipts from the difficulties of a keenly defensive state commerce commission under the dentally Willkie put this figure somewhat lower in hie talk with battle. So he may be depended up- stand there is to be e request by the smaller volume of businese. At earn? time, it seems to me the the President, and wae argued into on to inject new proposals, make the interstate truck operators for an silence because be wanted to keep new appeals to the country over increase in rates if and when the country hat more than a paasing interest in their plight Thi is go the President in a good humor. the head of an obviously recalci- rail lines are allowed higher rates. because during the last two trant In The he congress. short trucks are represented as siowi for This utility thing the President remonths, may example, close to 60.000 be expected to make every effort lo ly starving to death but gards as even more damnable than resume they can't" employees have been laid off-- railroad out the offensive, and attempt and won't boost rates until their of steel and concrete prices. The lost work, in the rail industry alone are due, he thinks, to greed, mh to whip congress back into competitors, the railroads, charge With the decline of purchasing of more for Uicir services. and unenlightened. But the utility supplies by the rail lines, other inis just a conspiracy to Chief Problem dustry has suffered, has bid oil stymie Roosevelt on his objectives. 1 believe there is no better way to men. But the President'! chief problem S. Failure of railroads to make set forth the plight of the is that he is facing railroads, Looking at the thing another way. necessary improvements. This is so many fronts. He isopposition on Presented to one might call attention to federal fighting his the only one of the three which the commission, Plight farm control battle now. The wage approprbtlons for relief the President regards as having no of Carriers than to include been in excess of threewhich have and hours battle has taken on a billions a ulterior motive. He would like to more nere some ex serious tinge in the lsst few year during the last several years. ot the statement made offi help the railroads, but does not weeks, cerpts The figures given above show especially since William that know how. Nor, apparently, does in the case by Dr. J. H. tha railway purchasca-j- ust Green denounced the national la- dally Par one melee. one else. He is director of the bu- ustry-have any bor relation! board, and after a fallen ol? more than reau of One grain of salt must oe Inject500 million!, or about of southern senators warned tion of economics ot the Associaed into all thia discussion. The Pres- group of American Railroads him that the bill would be sideand, as the relief appropriations. If the ident just may decide the battle is knows the details. tracked unless he consented such, to again aid all unemployed "Today," Dr. Parmelee said, "the are unnecessary. He may decide that to reviving all the 900 odd NRA only six times aa large as the codes carriers are there is too much risk involved, and forces and reducing are a substitute. drop in railway expenditures, it is that it would be better to bend be--I curtailing their Then will come the tax bill, on ment, materials purchases of equipeasy to see what an influence is fore the storm to avoid conse-- : and supplies. They wielded and why I have which ths President and congress are forced to do taken the quences. because of the position that it are absolutely at loggerheads, and financial conditionthis is necessary to conin which find they Would Revive N. R. A. sider the seem destined to stay there. Ths themselves. This petition from the retrenchment has standpointrailways' of tha country aa A proposal to revive all the 800 difficulty of a compromise lies in serious economic effect on emodd NRA codes as a substitute the fact that the fundamentals of ployment, on the manufacturer! ot whole. We. as citizens, have a bur-de-n to carry whether It is for the wages and hours regu-- I the two positions clash. One aims railway euppliea and their employdona through the railways or through latlon bill now pending before con- purely at business recovery. The ees end on all business activity some other avenue. None of gress has been made to President other aims purely at social and eco- Such a policy with its unwholesome those rail wnvbowm 10 Roosevelt by a group of southern nomic reform through the tax route economic consequences only partial- without a Boll Syndicate, WNU Service. ,ob ly offsets the rising lideafcosts hold-bac- PilU. They 1have had mora of publle .pprevilTI country avar. L ' 8oM at all druf BtoroCb Niftiness for New Year tfCrSE) American Bar-Rei-n forced TIRE iremPMmutaSteS w Itelml " Tiro antes end m onannwi fcnsrer. Iiwiit namnilM ante iVwiuiuur, tesoalMWilm urenr at ' CHAIjgl Un1 I Kj |