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About The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1936)
i «i n i \i r* il It O \ I (' 1< K Il K B O S S E ' 1 M * • 11 * 1 M _______ - FRIDAY, M g -» Review of tlie History*Making Events of the Woij By EDWARD W. PICKARD © W estern N ew spaper Union. ents taken there. The rebels also reported a victory near Zaragoza after a bloody battle General Franco met General Mola amt "President” Virgilio Cabanellas at the northern rebel headquarters In Burgos and p'aiUied for further ad vances of their louthem and north ern columns on Madrid. These »ill be supplemented by 4.000 Moors and foreign legion veterans march ing eastward from Badajoz. greatest “surplus population ” He urges a migration of 12.200 fami lies from Texas and 7,360 from North Dakota. Heavy removals al- sc are suggested for South Dakota. Nebraska. Kansas. Oklahoma, Wy oming. and Colorado. AAA M.,y Ablndon Of Gram Crops 1 ( y ? ‘,ALS * «• tpr y ,u,,n;™« ■dmuuiiSi h i !.’"*' w,,hS S its b" “ y of ,|r«»tlc«Uy r«W mov*nic altogether the ¡ ? »trictions on corn andw-, ond largest in history, and seedings as large for the 1937 crop would produce fully enough wheat for to RESIDENT ROOSEVELT was at tal domestic utilization even if his best as a radio orator when yields should turn out to be one- he addressed the summer camp at fourth below average.” Borah and Robinson Are year No decision wu Chautauqua. N. Y., on foreign rela farmer. w,U h* eca*M R enom inated for Senate tions. He expressed '“pWO veterans of the senate. Wll- any changes ire ordered , his deep concern Father Coughlin’s Group 1 liam E. Borah of Idaho, Republi however, definitely about tendencies in Indorses Lemke can, and Joseph T. Robinson of wheat ... reage will be OLLOWING the recommendation other parts of the Secretary of Agriculture Arkansas. Democrat and majority United States Will Not world and spoke bit of Father Charles E. Coughlin, leader, won Uioer fights for re- passing through Chics*« terly about the vio the National Union for Social Jus Interfere in Spain lation of both the tice, in convention in Cleveland, in EFFORTS of European nations. nomination without much difficulty. back frorn lows, mg * letter and the spirit dorsed the candidacy of Represent Ea notably France, to persuade the Borah defeated Byron Defenbach. government-cue trolled cm of i n t e r national atives Lemke and O'Brien, heads United States to Join in a neutrality who was backed by the Townsend- once would prevent wild agreements “with of the Union party ticket But, also pact concerning the civil war In Ites. His Democratic opponent at tuations m farm product, fig the polls in November wiU be Gov. he ».i d. has not pnge? out regard to the on the advice of the priest the Spain are not likely yond Ha- embryo .up, but C. Ben Ross. simple principles of Lemke platform was not indorsed to succeed. Howev honor.” In the Presidential contest the ly would entail slora* g The 25,000 members of the N. U. : er it is the intention President “Our c l o s e s t S. J. present enthusiastically and of our government American Federation of Labor, as government granaries L kj Roosevelt neighbors are good unanimously elected Father Cough not to interfere in l an organization, will maintain its cr. dejending on the per neighbors,” the President said. “If lin president of the organization. the situation in any * traditional non-partisan policy, ac- ! his normal crop be wal_ there are remoter nations that ws'h Lemke and O’Brien both appeared way whatsoever. In cording to the firm declaration of sure, w .uld make his “sgp us not good but ill, they know that before the convention, delivered structions to this ef President William Green. The fed payments in the form of br* we are strong; they know that we speeches and were given a rousing fect were sent to eration. said he. Is not In the Non- be stored in a common pod Tlie plan, preventing /y can and will defend ourself and de reception. Partisan Labor league, which Is all American repre and fat years,” would leads fend our neighborhood.” The final episode of the meeting sentatives in Spain backing President Roosevelt “We lire market prices becauMl Mr. Roosevelt said he had seen of the Coughlinites was sensational. by William Phillips, will not formally indorse any candi war on land and sea. The militant priest was delivering acting secretary of date this fall." Mr. Green contin assure a continual sirpa “I have seen blood running from a dramatic address before a vast state. While assert- Phillip« ued. “Our non-partisan committee ply of whatever commodaj the wounded,” he said. “I have throng in the Cleveland municipal ing that the American neutrality ; will merely prepare parallel reports be Insured. Gradually, ht seen men coughing out their gassed stadium when suddenly he faltered, law prohibiting assistance to war- I on the labor records of the two might be worked out to at lungs. I have seen the dead in the begged pardon and announced ring nations does not apply to the chief candidates and of the plat major farm product. mud. I have seen cities destroyed. weakly that he could not finish be Spanish civil war. Mr. Phillips said forms. We will send out all data I have seen 200 limping, exhausted cause of illness. He was half car that the United States intended to ( to our membership. They will have C iv il W a r Breaks Out men come out of line—the surviv ried to a car that hurried him to conform with its “well established to make up their own minds.” ors of a regiment of 1,000 who went his hotel. There it was said his policy of noninterference with In- > Among Townsendites forward forty-eight hours before. I indisposition, due to the heat and temal affairs in other countries, ei ebellion among um have seen children starving. I have overwork, was not serious, and next ther in time of peace or civil No New Taxes Promise s. smolder. {rmi for Coming Year seen the agonies of mothers and day he returned to Detroit t h e i r ( . eland c»mm) strife.” ALLOWING a conference of broken out into civil war. Or. wives. I hate war!” Most of the nations Invited to President Roosevelt Chairman cis Townsend has just Germans felt that Mr. Roosevelt’s participate in the non-intervention Harrison of the senate finance com ousted from the org speech was aimed at them and re Commodity Exchange Act agreement were willing, but Ger mittee. Chairman Doughton of the of the eleven directors, sented his criticism. A Mexico City Attacked in Court newspaper saw in it evidence that N EQUITY suit attacking the many temporarily blocked the plan house ways and means committee the reason is that they in the Monroe doctrine was to be re constitutionality of the com by announcing that its answer | and Secretary of the Treasury Mor- Ing President Roosevelt ltd vived. The press of Buenos Aires modity exchange act. chiefly on the would be delayed until Madrid gave grnlhau, the administration's fiscal to Townsend's effort to warmly applauded the address, one ground that it seeks to regulate in a satisfactory reply to German pro program for the coming year was followers to the support of Journal saying: trastate rather than interstate com tests regarding the execution of four thus outlined: Tlie three men thrown out “Without the intention of making merce in violation to the Constitu German nationals in Barcelona. 1. Assurance that no request will Clinton Wunder, • former a parallel between discourses re tion, was filed in the federal dis France set August 17 as the dead be made to the next congress for preacher, now living in So* line for completion of the agree the levying of additional taxes of in John B Ki. fer, Chicago cently heard from Rome or from trict court in Chicago. Berlin and which proclaimed vio The suit was instituted by Wil ment, and it was expected that, if crease of present tax rates. rector, and MaJ- William lence and expansion as the two liam S. Moore, a member of the general neutrality failed, the 2. Launching of an Immediate New York, eiitem regmd sole aims of the modern states, we Chicago Mercantile Exchange, and French government would lend aid study by treasury and congressional ; recommend reading this dignified names the exchange, its board of to the Leftist government at tax consultants of present revenue tOr. I„ Ne « V rk city Watfj and sincere Roosevelt speech, en directors, and the following as de Madrid. laws as a basis for recommenda out n written statement nobled by the spontaneity of hu fendants: Henry A. Wallace, secre American Ambassador Bowers tions to the next congress for elimi “I am fired.” It read. man content and with which Roose tary of agriculture; Leslie A. Fitz, abandoned his “floating embassy” nation of Inequitable taxes, espe I objected to Dr. T(h velt raised his figure above the supervisor of the commodity ex aboard the coast guard cutter cially those unfair “to consumers or Gerald Smith doing the v«T stature of all dictators.” change administration in Chicago; Cayuga and went ashore at St. Jean to trade." they new accuse me ot wj de Luz, France, by advice of the Daniel C. Roper, secretary of com 3. Treasury assurance that "with sold the Townsend orpt, merce; Homer S. Cummings, Unit Department of State in Washington. continued recovery” the revenue Wheat Supply Adequate, ed States attorney general; Michael According to the Army and Navy yield is approaching the point where down the river to Coug)*| Says Federal Report L. Igoe, United States district attor Journal, Mr. Bowers had tried to it will cover government costs and Lemke. HERE is enough wheat in the ney of the northern Illinois district, assume the role of commander of “Townsend has con,‘1**, United States for the usual do and Ernest J. Kruetgen, Chicago the American fleet In Spanish wa provide a surplus for reduction of jected to the fact that the public debt mestic requirements of the season postmaster. have insisted he give the ters, and when the officers politely of his movement to the 15- of 1936-37, according to the mid In his petition Mr. Moore asked told him they took orders only from summer report of the bureau of ag that the commodity exchange act the Navy and Treasury depart- j Reds Waging W ar to Win clubs who pay his Mi - ricultural economics, but the supply be declared unconstitutional, void, ments or the President, he protest- j America, Says Hobson public as a jury decide tw} of red spring wheat and durum is and unenforceable. ion of this man Townsend w- DMIRAL RICHMOND P. HOB ed hotly to Washington, with the short and consequently importation takes his third walk »* SON, now head of the Public result recorded above. Meanwhile of those varieties will be continued. Welfare association of New York, away from Kiefer and the embassy in Madrid has been The amount, however, will not be San Sebastian Shelled, in charge of Eric C. Wendelin. told the National Conference of only two leaders large, Secretary Wallace stated. Hostages Are Slain the young third secretary, who has Clergymen and Laymen at Ashe him In walking out on “It is probable the spring wheat ISPATCHES from the French handled its affairs skilfully and has ville that Comintern, the interna mittee and therefore **« mills in the 1936-’37 season will use border said Spanish rebel war most of the Americans tional Communist propaganda agen congress and now *n a larger percentage of hard red ships finally had begun the long evacuated cy. is waging “scientific warfare” indictment and impns from the city. winter and Pacific northwest wheat threatened bombardment of San to gain control of the United States. than last year,” said the report. “A Sebastian and Irun. He said the board of strategy of larger than usual quantity of soft and that the loyal Migration From Drouth his association, after exhaustive C o m m ercial Failure« red winter wheat is also likely to ists were carrying studies, has collected evidence that Few est Since 1920 States Is Urged be used in bread flour. As a re out the threatened r \ R C. W. THORNTHWAITE, for- a competent Communist general C M G U R E S complied w sult, imports of milling wheat may execution of the mer climatologist of the Uni stalT has been at work and has suc * .........« " ¿ ¡ ¡ 2 > be less than in 1935.” 1,900 Fascist hos versity of Oklahoma, has made a ceeded to the extent of casting cline in commercial« ^ Wheat prices in the United States tages they were study of the drouth area of the widespread doubt on the Constitu lowest figures since ■ may be expected to average about holding there. The Great Plains, and his interesting tion and bringing discredit on the Unuation of as high relative to world price lev battleship España shown for the first i « * , conclusions are published by the Supreme court. els as during the 1935-’36 season, fired a lot of heavy On the basis of a ^ i John A. Lyon, New York attor University of Pennsylvania. Brief when the price of No. 2 hard winter shells toward Fort ney and a leading Methodist lay the agency *mce |t ~ ly, Thornthwaite recommends that at Kansas City was 15 cents over Guadalupe but for a man, supported Admiral Hobson by July insolvencies ^ ^ 59,000 migrate from the farms of Liverpool, the bureau said. During time at least was citing the success of pacifism nual rate of 33 the damaged region. He contends Virgilio the last three years short crops to apparently not try that wind erosion has damaged 65 throughout Methodist youth organi firms in hissincss. H ^ l gether with other influences result ing to hit t h a t Cabanellas 44.« in June ami ^ ^ ed in wheat prices in the United stronghold because many of their per cent of the plains region, ex zations. In January. J*»’ * ferf, tending from the Canadian border States being maintained unusually sympathizers were held prisoners heading for the into the Texas panhandle. A long Railroads Seek Increase high relative to the world market in the fort. The Guadalupe garri range government program for the was above l'°- ,, r((j 0 in Freight Rates price. son was hesitant in returning the July failure* numt “Farm prices probably have been fire for fear that shells would fall return of millions of acres of wheat EADING officials of Class I rail t 20 cents to 30 cents higher than on French territory. Already the land to its native sod, he says, roads, meeting in Washington, ure exceeded on f<>r the n ^ « might have been expected with French government was angered might be the only means of check voted to petition ihe interstate com twice spite the growth °'n^ . „ more nearly normal yields in the by the dropping of bombs on French ing the devastating dust storms. merce commission for an advance Observing that long dry spells United States,” the report contin border towns, though it was disput in freight rates to replace the tem business in the • Jinj j* . ued. “A return of average or great ed whether they came from loyalist have been frequ-nt in the history porary surcharges which expire at pared with «M ^ of the plains, Thornthwaite predicts er than average yields in the United or rebel planes. the end of this year, and to meet that “the present drouth might be the rising expenses of the roads. States would result in an export sur The Fascists captured the impor prolonged for 20 or more years.” plus and prices would adjust to tant town of Badajoz, near the Por The petition also will ask the The weather expert estimates commission to give the railroads ward an export basis. tuguese border, at the point of the that a minimum of 12,610 families relief on the long and short haul “The acreage seeded for the 1936 bayonet, and were reported to have crop, 74,000,000 acres, was the sec- executed 1,500 government adher should move out of Montana, the clauses in the various commodity state in which he reports the classifications. President D inounces W ar in Chautauqua Speech P F R F A T A D L