xt7zcr5n9g1t_25 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zcr5n9g1t/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zcr5n9g1t/data/82m1.dao.xml Evans, Herndon J., 1895-1976 3.5 Cubic feet Herndon J. Evans, editor of the Pineville Sun in Bell County, Kentucky, closely followed labor unrest in the Kentucky coalfields, especially in Harlan and Bell Counties, during the early 1930s. The collection contains handbills, leaflets, pamphlets and newspaper clippings collected by Evans primarily from 1931-1933. Also included are handwritten notes, correspondence, and drafts of articles and editorials written by Evans as well as memorabilia such as Communist Party membership books and organizational charts. archival material English University of Kentucky This digital resource may be freely searched and displayed. Permission must be received for subsequent distribution in print or electronically. Physical rights are retained by the owning repository. Copyright is retained in accordance with U. S. copyright laws. For information about permissions to reproduce or publish, contact the Special Collections Research Center. Herndon J. Evans Collection Coal miners--Kentucky Coal mines and mining--Economic conditions. Communism--Kentucky. Editors--Kentucky. Pamphlets. Strikes and lockouts--Coal mining--Kentucky. "In Pineville," Time, February 29, 1932 text "In Pineville," Time, February 29, 1932 2012 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7zcr5n9g1t/data/82m1/82m1_2/82m1_2_14/123733/123733.pdf section false xt7zcr5n9g1t_25 xt7zcr5n9g1t it I A ti I "L I I I N RM ` ;· rx
FIFTEEN CENTS ("§J.i¢.l`f.’?"&.?3“) February 29, 1932` it ¤j{Qfj_f_ _`_
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* Circulation Oflice, 350 Earl 22Nd Street, Chiragd. A (Reg. U. S. Pat. Off.) Editorial and Advertising Ofiices, 135. East 42nd Street, New York.
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lllHl£ LINCOLN 8·—·TWU·\\`lN110\\' Totsx Sunni V
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·· ZOZ{f7'H4?€ZIO77’L$2QOO. ,
THE new Lincol11 V-8 cylinder, in The new V-8 cylinder is an ad- wood and steel, sturdily braced at
the footsteps of the V-12 cylinder, vaneed motor car. lt is youthful, all important points for maximum
brings that beauty and high per- fleet in appearance. The engine de- safety and freedom from noise. L
formance one has come naturally to velops 125 horse-power. A new free- ln every detail of chassis and $1
expect from a Lincoln. Into this wheeling, on all forward speeds, is body, this Lincoln is built to a high
new ear, with 136-inch wheelbase, operated by a lever on the dash. ideal. Backed by the resources of
have gone those structural charac- Gear shifting is made easy and quiet the Ford Motor Company, the new I
teristics that have always been pccu- hy means of a special synchronizing Lincoln 8 cylinder car carries, fur- I
liarly Lineoln—cxpert engineering. unit in the transmission. Helical ther than ever before, the prestige
precision manufacture, careful test- second gears make this speed virtu- of the Lincoln name. The new Liu-
ing of every important operation. ally us Silent as high. Bodies are of coln is priced at Detroit from $2900,
1
T H E N E W L I N C O L N E I G H T J
*
'l`|\11·], l·`cl;mm·y 29, 193; TIME ls pul»1lshe<1 weehly by TIXIIC, Inc.. at 3511 1·la>st 221ul Street. <‘hlca;;o, lll. Entered as second-class Volume Xlx, Xilmligr 9 .
matter Juntlary 21, 1928, at the postolllee at Fllieago, Ill., uurler the act ut March ilrd, 1579. Mibscrljzzlvrz 1
runs: one )'CiLl', iu the U. S. aud possessions, (Tuba, Mexico. South America, 55; Canaria, $$,00; elsewhere, LU.
1
‘ I I
February 29, 1932 T I M E 1
I AN OPPORT I I N ITY T0
Iniily IIOt OIBBIIP ilgilill
for 20 years I
SOME MEN view a business depression with Business today is new and complex. The old
alarm. Others view it as an opportunity. 1·ules no longer work. A whole new set of prob-
A business depression, like any other big lems is presented by production. Foreign mar-
shake-up in human affairs, causes old leaders to kets have become a vital issue. An entirely new
fall and new leaders to take their places. conception of selling is replacing the old hit-
That is what happened in 1907. It happened o1·-missway.Consolidationsandreorganizations
again in 1921. It is happening today. have wiped out old jobs, created new functions.
Profound changes are taking place in busi- In order to progress today, a man must know
ness—this year, this month, now. The man who the new rules. And the man wl1o does know
sees in these changes his opportunity for inde- the new rules will go farther and faster in the
‘ pendence and power is the man who will make next {ive years than the average man goes in
his fortune in the next five years. twenty years.
Send for the Booklet which describes
this Opportunity
I Since 1929 the Alexander Hamilton Institute worth half an hour of your time. It contains
has been laying the foundation of a new kind the condensed results of 20 years’ experience
of Service for the leaders of tomo1·row. The in helping men to fo1·ge ahead financially. Many
‘· ablcst business minds—men of international men have said that in 30 minutes it gave them
reputation-have helped prepare this new Ser- a clearer picture of their business future than
I vice. Here are a few of them:M.H.AYLESWORTH, they ever l1ad before. This booklet costs noth-
President, National Broadcasting Company; ing. Send for it.
I THOMAS J. WATSON, President, International
Business Macl1ines Corporation and President, Te me Mexeeeee Hemueee Ieemem
‘ Merchants’ Association of New York; HUBERT 60s. A-mr rms, New Y0.-k cny.(1¤ cmmnu miami Alexander Humilum Insti-
T. PARSON, President, F. W. Wloolworth m°’ L'd" C`P` R` Building` T°r°m°`)
e Company; coLBY M. cmasrrza, JR., President, ij;je“}°_;Khfeefwiffjfftfeizfild K“°"‘”
General Foods Corporation. I V
l l`¤¤l0..... ........... ........ .......... ................... .... A8€........
I new Service and about the Opportunities Business Address .,...... . ......................... . ................ . ..... .
I of the next five ygayge It is called °°Wl]3t an ............. . ............. . ..............................................
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2 T I M E Etna-tial-y 20, 1932
Q ;-s._s_ __ _
Hawaii’s Symphony that when the lights came on again after
` Sirs; _ Lawyer Taub had been beaten in the dark,
_ diSit¤1·pi:?ctlP;·oth may bel to know that the Pa§a— Herndon Evans, also editor of the weekly "
0 IC (ICI C, "KBS CSS )lll`,L{ZI[0l'y ' " ' ' , gi
a · amd race hatred" (Turn, jhu. 18), Lil Pmevlue Sim and local Red Cross ll°—lll»
symphony orchestra of 62 pieces directed by Wllll{€d_ up to bl00dy`l-flccd Allen Tflllll l
Australian Fritz Hart, F.R.C.M., and with a and said: "Well, Taub, give us a speech ·
D€l'SOlll`l€&.|ilil(l€ [ID of On the Constitution HOVV "__ED "
7 iilipiuos ' '
2 JZIDHIICSC I
WILL B UILD E ffi?i`D{iY1E"` Sl’lY€’ Allm Acqulml *
2 f’ortugue`· Sirs: I
I 1*oym Riztm The killing of Francis Donaldson III by
‘ ;> Italian; Edward Allen was considered newsworthy by :
45 Anglo Saxons TIME. Is not Allen’s acquittal part of the con- `
l. Today [hc mg; COHEN; Of the msg Season “-as temporary scene or is the omission of it in the °
Y A E smoothly rendered. enthusiastically received in l‘l€Il· I5 ISSIIC im OVGFSIQIII?
Honolulu’s big Princess Theatre (capacity R. N. VAN GILDER
_ N 1,5543. [Exien more cosmopollgtan than the DCT- New Haven, Conn.
` SODIIC 0 IIC OFC ICSIFH \\'(lS i. C ll1I\I{€—ll[) of [IIE V
audience. Prices for the concert ranged from _Edl'l'fl_lld Allellv lellll Yolllltl gcllllemllll
EBI`?) $$5%. and every seat was occupied, I‘1Cl€I‘. l llllll
• mg of the programll Nor was this due to the Donaldson had invaded the Allen apart-
A- ll`i§E$iL€“‘€S ii·Q;'i§ZL"'i$tI$iy‘l`$p‘,1Lill$?§Ei“eiiftfbli ‘“"“l= ““°“Sl“g l° l°¤“*» ml lllld l<¤°°l*€°l é
Police for Honolulul young All€¤ down ln ll quarrel growing I
Enclosed please find concert program. out of Donaldson S 1‘€lI1ll0llS with Edward
R A N TED TRENT Allen’s 18-year-old sister Rose. Donaldson
HOIIGIIIIU, Hnwuu _ and Rose Allen had mutually admitted a
Certainly no music on the Honolulu love affair. At the trial young Allen, whose l
symphony’s opening program would in- family is now poor but still influential. i
spire riot. Mendelss0hn’s pleasant, pic- had the legal services of Philadelphia`s
torial Fingallv Cnoeibegan the- concert. crack criminal lawyer, ]0hn R. K. Scott. l
v_ 6* Beethovegi s great Fifth gave it signifi- and onetime State Senator, Fletcher Wil-
J- · Q .. $6, . tance.- o. bur Stites. TIME, aware that few influen-
-_!·‘ · . . ¢*" tial roun killers ar "l d f ' °
_ _,.,,···» Gai. Sr; P¤¤¢v¤II¢ theylare lnacked by'1ilZ‘<‘?=t:n..?Qlt‘i2.$tiZ}“?·l
, _ , ,1 _ · V '- SI Y ,
@7* 6,6* @5 ·_ , , iggest—in-the-world" Long-Bell Lumber
_-Iii ‘ '·"*‘ _;_ . '·"» , - . i. ,... ia _.,.,. —»·-— "· ` "‘ Corp. ·
l ogg,/;_; ” l am enclosing a photograph of "the huge old .
J, _ _ _ house" in Kansas City in which Mr. Long lives. V
Q It Pays to ovcrcoat the old l;>u1ld111g. ;1`his home is unquestionably one of the finest, ·
in every respect, in this part ot the country and
Ig? It means Plsotectioll and Pycseyvatigu, there are very few to equal it anywhere. l
_V " I f 1 1 mention this because your comment on ra huge
»;V *~ _ _ · · , _ cS_ old house conveys rather the wrong nnpression ~
_ V F é Lcttcl lcntals and llugher lc Sa C va u ot a man who is most exacting abociit his home .
' ‘ _ Q, * . . · · life, which is modest but most splendid.| `B
Alld lt 1S cas1ly (10118, lsotli €COI10IH1C8lly Mt. Lung is SI years of age ilmmd of xi .
I . · He is one of the youngest "old men" I have I
U and Pc1‘I1'1al’1Cl1tly Wit}! Stucco that IS ever known, walls perfectly erect, is active, and
f _ he is I think without question recognized as the .
i II‘\8,dC Wltll Medusa Wkterpwvfrd Portlalld keenest mind in a very line organization. Out—
, L _ side of his brilliance of intellect, the most out- ·
‘ ,~ Ce]ngHt$—G1·3y and Whlté. Tl1CS€ , standing characteristic of the man is his immense ‘
l courage and equanimity. Your appellation "Old E'.
t W2zterj7ra0fédCcmc11ts have been Sz¢cces.g'ul l Robct·t" intrigues nit—it would not be mug- ,
, . Y l l ' nized here, least of all by Mr. Long, who doesn`t il
l V 7. . - r h' k he is old and certainlr doesn`t act it. i
ui oca CO1'1t1 actor t ¤¤ . _ _ > _ _ .
for 22 EQQ1-S° • 0 ” Mr. Long has unusual dignity, even with cordial i
i?·’ - .· · “ . ’ * familiarit· to those of all stations with whom
V · €1CO8t1l'1o Y . _ V;.
will glvc you a' Pllcc on Ov " he comes in contact, but nobody tried "()ld
” . . · _ Robert" before. ¤_
your 0L1bu1l(11ug“qtl1PO1tlanJ' Cement On the whole, however, I want to compliment ·
» . . you on the picture you painted of a most unusual *
{ Stl1CCO, but First Send In the coupon man——a man who in former days would have
’ _ built empire. 4
J l`)€lOW for 11'l{0l’II18t1OI1 Of V8ll1€ to yOu. SOPHIAN _‘
Kansas City, Mo.
MEDUSA PORTLAND CEMENT CO- TIME felicitates the youngest "Old
1002 Engineers Building · Cleveland. Ohio l Robert" in history.—En. _
CW . V Xi
’ G
wakrprvrféd PO RT L A N D C E M E N TS The Widow Ch=i·¤*r·"=¤¤
Sirs:
ig Your exceedingly interesting account ('l`l\1l·1, .,
Medusa Portland Cement Cc., 1002 Engineers Bldg., Dept. A, Cleveland, Ohio [ Feb. 15, p. 21) of a recent happening in the
gf,?,g,'°Z;T§t‘:;CEg€?i°0;°12d me without Obligation or cost a copyo your on an it jj *For example, Turn reported the American §§
Vi Farm Bureau Federation’s determination to re-
Name Q V2? sume its tight for the equalization fee ('l`1nu, L;
,1 ..—` i Aug. 24). °
Address V ;Q +The house—a porticoed mansion in the 3
ornate French Renaissance style made popular Q
Ciry $¤¤¤¤ by Chicago·`s Columbian Exposition of rSo5.— V
..; . E n. ,
L
I Febru
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6 T I M E February 29, 1932 g
l
House of Commons, entitled "Old ]oe‘s lloy," g
66 ’ seems to me misleading at one point, although ~
there is no actual misstatement. You speak of ‘
the present Mrs. William I-Iartley Carnegie, as——
"a little old U. S.-born lady," who was the widow .
. » of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain ("Old _loe"), and
, stepmother of Mr. Cl`tIlll1l)Cl'lIlllllS children. The
impression given is, I think, that the former Mrs.
_loseph Chamberlain is greatly the senior of her
distinguished stepsons. Miss Mary Endicott was g
9 23 years of age at the time of her marriage to E
_ 1 ` I Mr. joseph Chamberlain, then a man of 50. and `
M , she is almost exactly the age of her eldest step-
zotr j*,,,;. son, Sir Austen Chamberlain, and she is not
, __ » _-»· >{" "l1ttle," being tall and slender.
‘ = ¢ ‘ * I` _ ELIZABETH Nrcuots Clxsiz
l A "IAIF ` Hartford Conn '
" . I l I ' I I . I .. . .
_ _ · J ;l§ The onetime \\1dow Chamberlain is 67;
- . , . ,__. Stcpson Sir Austen. 68; Stepson Neville.
is ··.: — 1 , 1; ____s.: vv Chancellor of the Exchequer, 62.-Eo.
‘ .t.`’` E · Ei; =‘__% _, -. __;
I2 1 » · I Y. ` A .
1 j, — e e » . , ji Paraehuted beats
ll? ‘ { · r 1 ¥ if Sify
..., . ,2; j A Loiigiatulations on a lmilly, clexei, and ,
, j `*""* ;‘, accurate report "l’arachutes tor I’assengersr"
l . I I/ Ie .3 p. 40, Feb. !§,IlSSllC. , , .
; e ___,, , f ·’ Without detracting in any way from the
' __ .-— —. I l l Q `.‘. .·`i°° . honors or activities of Major Iidward L. Hoff-
._._ ? man, but in fairness to conscientious effort and
_ ,,_,..-/QQ ~ merit where 1t is due, l want to point out that _
,,/" *" ,— ~.,~ · .; __\_ the early development work on the ’chute with
_*_° J _ __ _ , .."’ , which "Les" Irvin made his famous jump at
g ' gw, `**·**#<'“ ~ McCook Field was done by Floyd Smith, mem-
\ ; lil A _‘ .· I *·’ .;j_ I , . l. __»` ber of the "ICarly Birds," pilot in 1912, test pilot
‘ ~-». I`? ‘·’·’ ~ I s; . for Glenn Martin in IQI4, barnstormer, aeronaut-
» I ` [ —;\ `§flyl.` " scientist. He turned his attention to parachutes
..¤- » · . Y. 2.%%- >*"I ‘ .- ·hen the win·· of a plane he was testing for
[ , . ··\ -.. _ , ..,. .—.-· .· /,/r “ . =.. . . . , ·~ ,
·&*e·#-· V I 1 4 —\ , . · Martin broke oll 1,200 lt. 111 the air. Sept. 2N.
t $4: I ~ , ’ - ·’ Ir IQIS, General \\`illiam A. Mitchell cabled from
France to have Floyd Smith put to work on
parachute development .... With Guy Hall.
“ThjS is my ear and, believe me, Ilve I HloytlIS31i:l1b wogted (Ln his tpiiracliute I idea /
_ _ irougt c o er, 1 ovem er, irs crop- es ienig ,
· learned 3 lot al)0I.1t OpCI`alZ1Hg costs. made Dec. 4, 1918 .... Early in 1919 activ- 1
cz I · _ , ities at McCook were taken over by the Air
My first Car I treated llkc 3 baby_I Service Engineering Division and the parachute j
· ‘ ' . - section came under the supervision then of Major
gl eased and polished it iegularly arid b0¤gl1l lll? b€$l H,,ll,,,,m_ Clllel oflicer of the €fllllDlll€|l[ section-
motor oil I could find. Result was that I drove it for Maier 1·10f1mu¤ alrlecl and nluutzed ¤f>il#¢¤~··¤·
. . . tlously for parachute development, contributed ;
I0ll1’ y€a1`S Wlth practically HO I'€pa1I` COSTQ arid Wl1€Il I little gf Scientific value. Smith}s name has been
. · · - lost in aviation consciousness iecause 1e ear y
lul ned It lll’ I got more than the market prlcg sold rights under his patents to inanuiacturelto
, l)€CHllSC It was ill perfect shape, Irving Air Chute Co., the public since assuming
N _ that the parachute was the design mainly ol _
l\/ly l'lCXt thl`€C CaI‘S got careless tI`CatIr1€l'lt. I quit Irvin, the jumper, which was error .... _ .
.... Flo d Smith is still the best parachute brains r
Y
bu Ilull the best 011 and Started usln a low uaht I in this hemis>here irobably in the world; prob-
. _ auy ·nows more Z1 out parac iu e per ormance
D ll it l ’ li) 1 t i
llllll Cost IOC 3 quart less' I really lllollgllt I was Sav and effectiveness than all other parachute men
ing money. But, believe me, l’ve learned my lesson. ¤*>mbl"°d (*:10 °f“·“l*°'Si‘;i"‘lillgglfliilt;2;“l;°:l}{;f’,f I
20, years a eat; pre s ‘ · _ ‘
EHCII of those CEIIS 1`Z-lll al)0l1t a year arid 3. half, then l each individual seat in passenger planes \\'lll‘ he
· - · · - "' . parachute—e·r·1ns at various times -‘
the least per quart but the one that really gives motor 'l·i‘PurrP€W¤#7/'·’""i rw l_ ll
· ‘ ‘ ” r”“"'"“° I I LLOYD S. GrtA11.·m1 ‘
piotection and resists wear. l ,
. . Buffalo, N. Y. '
HYV1S_1O0% Pure Pen“SYlVama_‘$uP€f‘Y€H¤€d i 1
motor oil is rich, pure lubrication. lt protects; it’s é
wearpr00f—that’s why thousands call it The W0rld’.s l I M l.
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Finest Motor Oil. Yet, HyV1S costs