The Haileyburian (1912-1957), 11 Mar 1937, p. 6

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Page 6 : * hOB rau igl pH Ye Bb) UaRaGagN THURSDAY, MARCH. 11th, 1937 . a i z J fs ae é + oteee 4 5 @. er ote e . © Es © : Late ews fFictures an artoons "2 | o°o \ {9° 3 e --_ 5g Serre cece ce teres eee eee ee NIAGARA FALLS LOOKS LIKE ROCK CANDY MOUNTAIN THESE QUINTUPLETS WERE BORN ON AN ARIZONA FARM i + 4 yt - i Five little kid " '8 oe : : Callander, Ontario, hasn't a thing on Tucson, Arizona, since the arrival of quintuplets at the : : i = : Atkins goat dairy Here is the first picture of the five kids, all dressed up in baby bonnets for ae BP OS Ses ' 3 ae photo. Only two kids are born at a time, usually, and records show few instances of quin- View of ice-choked basin | Bek 3 uplets. TT ei fis x \ a This striking view of Niagara Falls shows the basin of the mighty cataract so jammed with ice SHOWDOWN ON UNION ISSUE NEAR IN STEEL INDUSTRY that it resembles a mountain of rock candy. Ice barriers so dammed up the American Falls that E only a slight flow of water came through. FAMOUS LINER BECOMES TRAINING SHIP ets. essay 2 The famous liner, "Majestic" which for years was the pride of the Atlantic shipping lanes, will hereafter be known as H.M.S. Caledonia, and will be used as a training ship. She is shown above at the quayside at Southampton, while her palatial dining rooms, etc., are turned into gymnasiums, class-rooms and sleeping quarters for the 1,500 boys undergoing training for the Royal Navy and 500 artificer apprentices. When she was the largest vessel in the mercantile marine she completed over 200 round trip crossings of the Atlantic. -- | Industry employs 550,000 men PAINTING THE FLEET Roe Sweeping wage increases for steel workers were announced by major units of the industry al) most simultaneously with the meeting of Benjamin Fairless, president of Carnegie-Illinois Stee* i Corporation, and Philip Murray, representing the John L. Lewis Committee for Industrial Or- ganization. Their conference, held in Pittsburgh, came as a surprise to the steel industry and was taken as virtual recognition of the G.I.O. hy the United States Steel Corporation's chief 5; : operating subsidiary, employing 120,000 men. In addition to wage increases granted, many of the steel companies established a 40-hour week. It is expected that C.1.0., now claiming 150,000 members in the steel industry, will hold a convention in April and demand a gene of the steel heads. sb ral conference AMERICAN LABOR FIFTY YEARS BEHIND BRITAIN? ORGANIZATION-OF-LABOR UNION +a Ik 4 é FANCIFUL FABLES i530 King Features Syndicate, Inc. Great Britain restrves a a 6s, AR, KAAA a 2 4, Se he. Se. RR. A KR Ke reePRPe Pr & 2'E ARARARAAS f KKKKKRKAAAK GREAT BRITAIN A KIRA RRR Each.symbol-represents- 1100,.000-leborecs he 2 iS : According to prominent officials in the Unions in the United ; ; States, the workers of America are fifty years behind their The sailors with the British Home Fleet at Algiers know that ' English cousins in the matter of organization of labor. | This Hare, 4 Spring is here, because they have started to spring-celan. This _ very excellent chart prepared by the Literary Digest shows AY DAY = Ue ED picture, very much suggestive of flies around a jam pot, shows that in Great Britain one out of two workers, gainfully em- ISIS, HAVING DU Eb UP some of the boys on H.M.S. Rodney giving the ship a new * ployed, is'a member of a trade union; while in the United (7H *HROBHIReS oF HE Ko i ae x Nail States only one out of ten) workers is organized. laifx " / coat of paint. : TO (NSPRCT Lr

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