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About The Bonneville Dam chronicle. (Bonneville, Or.) 1934-1939 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1936)
TW O |i \ M I ' l l lt d M ( I » — J ■ ............... 1 " Nou N,: U m ,'H'.,; J M’ " Review of the History■ Making Invents of the W By EDWARD W. I captured three other town* in that 1 region, and came within seventeen ! miles of Madrid. PICKARD (¡3 Western N’e* »¡uper Union. rights and vital interests must be respected.’’ Mollison Sets a Record He saw the League of Nations ' T ' H IRTY-SEVEN thousand tnari in Atlantic Flight “ shipwrecked by Wilson ideology.” time workers cn the Pacific ''.M T . JAMKS A MOLLISON. which he asserted was the phil coast went on strike, and im FngUsh aviator, established a osophy inspiring “ the illusion of dis mediately the trouble spread to the new speed record f r trans atlantic armament.” Gulf a n d Atlantic (lights when he landed at Croydon “ The league must reform or per coasts. In the west • near i.< nd o. IS lb urx and ish.” So fur as Italy is concerned about 150 vessels / 17 minutes after he had left Harbor “ the league may perish," he as were tied up in ports ' § Grace. Newfoundland, i.i hn Am er serted. and others heading f ican Bcllnnca monoplane I> >rolhy. In London it was said that rec The previous fastest west to «-a»t that w a y faced ognition of Italy’s sovereignty over crossing was made in 19.12 by Am e walkouts by t h e i r Kthiopia could come only through lia Karhart in 14 hours. 5« minutes crews on arrival. In * ■ League of Nations procedure so fur New York members from llarb r Grace to l.ond xtderry, as Kngland is concerned. Foreign of the International office comment was that no matter Ireland. S e a m e n's union what might be the portent of Mus- j voted a “ sit down” solini's speech, Britain w >uld not Nazi Four Year Program strike in defiance of Mayor Ko.ssi change her Mediterranean policy. their national offi Launched by Gocring cers, and maritime workers in p Houston and Port Arthur. Texas, v I quit their jobs and picketed Toronto’s “ Baby Derby” of air and now the director of the the waterfront. Federal officials Ends in a Muddle to Nazi four-year economic sch r HEN Charles Vance Millar were trying hard to settle the dis make the rcich in- died ten years ago leaving a putes between the unions and ship dependent of th e ping companies, chief of which re- will in which JoOO.OOO was bequeathed rest of the world in late to control of the hiring halls, j to the Toronto woman who gave r a w in u c r u l i . wage increases and shorter hours. birth to the greatest number of l a u n c h e d his Assistant Secretary of Labor E. F. children in the ensuing decade, it program at a great McGrady was in San Francisco and was considered a sardonic j"ke. The Nazi rally in Berlin. intimated the government might in “ baby derby” is over, and it still “ We shall hack fin is a joke, or at least a sac. muddle. tervene. ger after finger of? Six women are tied for the prize, “ When any group, whether bank the foreign h a n d ers, employers or labor, take action each claiming nine registered ba c l u t c h i n g at endangering the welfare of the na bies. and eight others have filed Germany's throat tion they are assuming a position claims with the executors of the within the next four that the government must challenge will. years." he declared. < i n . Goer lug Two relatives of Millar announced to protect the state and the people,” Outlining hiS plans. Goering said they would contest the will; and no German had starved, nor would McGrady said. “ The free flow of water-borne for the Ontario government was ready starve. The high seas fishing fleet eign and interstate commerce has to intervene with legislation that will be increased, he asserted, so become paralyzed. This will involve w o u l d keep the lawyers, w h o the |<copic can eat fish whei meat directly or indirectly the lives of the planned legal actions in behalf of is not available. Whale fishing will various claimants, from getting be developed for the margar.ne it citizens of the whole nation.” can produce, he promised. San Francisco had the added dis most of the money. tress of a strike of 1,000 warehouse Goering urged all Germans to fol men who demanded higher wages, Hoare Warns Russia Not low the example of Reichsfuchrer and Mayor Angelo Rossi was mus Adolf Hitler who, he said, eat* nei to Meddle in England tering his forces to meet both this ther [ . e of commons repre- i V1 " * meat nor butter The audience trouble and the maritime strike. He X 1 A*, . a m , * • « . 1 *1 I I, m k ___ . .1 . ■ »»i expected violent warfare along the Goering told them he I had I I st 22 ment declared that nonintervention waterfront and said he would take pounds by eating less butter. the necessary steps to protect pub in Spain must be preserved to pre Germany would prefer the old sys lic interests. The police set up head vent chacw in Eu tem of international exchange of rope; r.nd then Sir quarters in the Ferry building and wares, but this now is impossible in strung their own telephone wires to Samuel Hoare, first a mad world, so Gi m any will build lord of the admir- 1 every pier. her factories, pr due«- h r own syn alty, uttered a stern It was reported in San Francisco thetic rubber and h< r own sub warning to soviet that coast shipowners were consider Russia not to inter- stitutes for cot n and other m a ing a plan to ask the United States terials for which .!• no . must spend fere with ailairs in navy to put “ safety crews” aboard millions of dolla. ■ y< .r y, the gen England. western merchant ships left un eral declared. “ It is almost al manned. ways disastrous to Admiral Harry G. Hamlet, as a interfere in the af Lorado Taft, Noted member of the federal maritime fairs of other coun Sculptor, Dies Sir Samuel commission, opened a fact-finding tries,” Sir Samuel I ORADO TA f r el 4 ■ gi Hoare hearing in San Francisco, summon declared, addressing l j , r recoi ing the shipowners to present their a west-end meeting, “ I commend most American tcjlpt« r <.f this pe case first. The seven striking unions that observation to agents of the riod, died at the ag;- of seventy-six- and their allies were to be heard Comintern. They will find that the after an illness of eigl t days. He later. The maritime commission had more they interfere in th* domestic ; knew his demise was impending and previously ordered peremptorily affairs of this country, the worse it worked hard almost to the last m that the strike be delayed until it will react against their activities.' the endeavor to complete several could hold t h e hearing, but the Sir Samuel added: “ On no ac commissions. Mr. Taft was a grad unions declined to submit to this count must we interfere in business uate of the Univer ity of Illinois and dictation. which does not concern us. It is studied in the Ecolc des Beaux Arts necessary to say that—and say it in Paris. He did many important most clearly—in view of the very pieces of sculpture and also was Mussolini Says Italy’s curious vacillating attitude adopted continually active in enlarging pub Policy Is Armed Peace by the Labor party toward the civil lic knowledge and appreciation of **/r'\U R policy it one o f peace with war in Spain.” art. everybody. But it will be The admiralty first lord referred an armed peace.” Such was the flat statement of Prem ier Mussolini to the complete "volte face” of the Japan Emperor Revh ws of Italy in a speech Labor party fn resolutely support His Large Fleet at Milan which was ing the government’ s policy of | V OT to be outdone in martial carried by r a d i o “ hands off Spain” at the party con- | ,:' :,urcs by o th | ,r nations, t h r o u g h o u t the gress recently and then shifting to \ world. It was ad demands that the government per- Jaf)an dotted out her entire navy rcVK‘ w by Kmperor Hirohito. dressed to all na mit British sale of arms to Spain It Was the groat« t V .i «-t o v e r tions, but especially brought together in Asiatic waters, to Great Britain, comprising 108 warships aggregat Madrid Is Bombed by whose superiority in ing nearly 700,000 tons and manned the Mediterranean II Insurgent Planes by 40.000 men. Large numbers «if Duce b o l d l y D EPEATEL) raids by rebel b .mb- aircraft also took part in the evolu llenged. id - ap tion in Osaka bay. pealed to thu British , ri^ an9 its suburbs and scores of Prem ier to c o m e to some | Persons, mainly women and chil- Mussolini w i t h Aren, were killed. There was fierce Roosevelt Names Ei^ht agreement Rome as to Italy’s rights and in and desperate fighting northeast of for Peace Conference terests in this area, warning that the capital and the government t ] ECRETARY Of STATE HULL failure to do so might mean war. ferees were driven back toward the 1 z r and seven other Americans were “ If the Mediterranean is for others « I » . T I , «S to », lines were | a high road,” said Mussolini, “ for us Italians it is life. We have said Ä Ä s" " " » «S and the * i “ ..“ ” " " ' ■ a thousand times and I repeat we government commanders were pre forthcoming inter-American confer do not intend to menace this road, paring for a "sweeping new offen ence in Buenos Aires for the main- we do not intend to interrupt it. sive.” The Fascists took Brunete tenance of peace. The conference ii But we say, on the other hand, our alter a bloody fight, having already to open on December 1, and the American delegation i* on its way Shipping Is Crippled b y Maritime Strike C U w ❖ now to the Argentine capital Mr Hull'» colleague* arc: Sumner Welle*, assistant seerr (ary of atalc In charge of Latin American a ffair»; Alexander W Weddell, ambassador to Argentina. Adolf A Merle Jr., chamberlain of New York city; Alexander F Whit ney, president of the Hrothcrh'MMi . f Railroad Trainmen; Charles G h en wick, pi ofessur of f Mil It tc a I silence, llryn Mawr college; Michael I' Doyle. I'liiladelph :a lawyer, and Mrs. Elsie F. Musser, Salt Lake city, member of the Utah state senate. f A:r;!*UoftZj . " ‘tuestion ft* ‘ • > m uJJ" • 4*tcn^ I J 1 ; -I r ■ » >• t •• Cent.ua Bureau Gur-.s Is 12H.429.000 Population S A M s n e p h e w s no t J now number 12fl.429.0o0, according to the estimate of Direc tor William L Austin of the bureau of census. The new figure, s i of Jufy 1, represented an increase of 908.000. or 0 71 per cent, since July I, 1935. It was based on the num ber of births and deaths during the year ending June 30, 1 Jdfi, and the excess of immigration over em igra tion. Mirths exceeded deaths by 899 95fl ! and the n«-t imm grat. >n w 8.044. according to the data taken by Aus tin Tlie population figure on the h i• is of the 1930 census was 1 2'.' 77 > 04fi. and the biggest annual increase since then was 1.022.000, for (hr year ending July 1. 1931. The bureau of agrlrultural eco nomics also has been doing some population « '.¡mating It says the back to the farm movement of the depression years has halted and tiiat the farm p -pula,ion remained practically stationary during 1935. being 31.809.0U! at the end of that year. Tins figure, the bureau s.iys, was only slightly greater than in 1920 and “ somewhat less” than m 1910. ■* ' --n to mt Vvzii hr;: ti 3 -e' d-.hip l i J t'L K I f N nieces T * ! Vj f g iv in g « * m q y I <■■■'■ :t!y 'a t ù.ffr V7^1|J •J >d I ird n i T in I J s 1‘ " vsit y qi » ir. ! ■ ■ • i ir.ee Urij.-.'Di for Nine Months ! r _* „-«I 2 ber by mors fimi * log to a report re lè. i«.rd by Secretary N i: ; the p r e v i o u s three [ • t tbs •T 'id . f.i\ ra b > baUr.ct France W ill Builil Up It» Air Strength • J *.r ,i rle dur.nf U* I l nine rr.onlhi of BED to quick action by thp S PUR new accord between Germany the year arr.ounUnj .1' 7% i " ... , t t with i hw and Italy, Leon Ilium's popular front cabinet approved a large in crease in France's m ilitary a i r mg period of 1935 force, already reputed to be one of r minimized field the most powerful In the w-rld. To Hi : . tiiat heavy modernize and build up the aerial squadrons the government will j . r.{ « - I (fiend $230.000.000 at once. It was . ,r Pressed for farver • reported, too, that the cabinet de cided to ask parliament to vote ex ! ' “i l l traordinary funds for the fortifica tion of the northern frontier because , • jj,-r governments in and Uu* was the»« of Mclgiurn's reversion to a policy of private business. On I of armed neutrality. trade agreements he Veteran Ship Captain Dies in England -A, ii l.ke to end th» 1 1 v -r hie trade balar.ee. he «aid. ‘ but weare i ^ \ J A N Y Am erican travelers Join j,,.r. .1 of study ana n » * the English in mourning the ' i, world trade." death of Sir Edgar Britten, com j In fact. Roper found mander of the great liner Queen Mary and commodore of the Curiard 1 White Star lines. He was stricken 1 with paralysis In Southampton and J died within a few hours. Sir Edgar was sixty-two years old and first * went to sea as u lad of eighteen jltcd from the dm m in sailing ships, lb- was knighted by . jp ,.r, ratiK-r th an King George V in 1934. Iif ,.x miHio" P'f J ] Mrs. “ W a lly” Simpson Is Granted Divorce I > R * minutes in the court of a sizes at Ipswich, England, sufficed to give marital N >b!e Bay Trto j j j j g B c c n A M ^ H freedom to Mr "W a lly” Simpson. Justice Sir Anthony Hawke heard neatly arranged evidence of the infidelity o f Ernest Simpson, who was not represented, and gruffly gave a decree nisi to the attractive American woman who h a s been and is the close friend of King E d .Mr», ttlmpson ward V III. For six months she will be on probation, technically chaperoned at all times, and if her behavior satisfies the k m g'i pioctor she will be unquali* J I I the t h i r L . g| I ,..(■■ 1 I J I 7 ' laure!" The Roman cf0#j. J I f ' T H 'f J