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News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Plan to Rehabilitate Industry •r Under Government Control; 9
President Asks Congress to Pass Railway Co-ordinator
Measure: Fanners Vote National Strike.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
Af'P. asti-t^st laws, that have
beet held resjK-asible tor o-acv
of industry's woes in recent times,
would be relaxed and ruinous compe-
‘ v
|p~ |fa.' M
Ifet i k'fr '
S«r. Wagner
of New York. Some members of the
so-called ‘•brain trust” also had a part
in its formulation.
The bill provides for full govern¬
ment control of industries through a
federal board that would closely re¬
semble the war industries board of
191S. As somnssrized by one Wash¬
ington correspondent, it proposes to
set aside the anti-trust laws, the fed¬
eral trade commission act. and the
Clayton act; empowers the national
board to designate any industry as
one affected with a public interest;
permits price fixing directly and wage
regulation Indirectly under govern¬
ment supervision, and provides for the
seif-organization of industry through
trade associations.
The major features of this bill have
been approved by the National Asso¬
ciation of Manufacturers and by pres¬
ident H. L Harriman and other offi¬
cers of the Chamber of Commerce of
the United States. It was said that if
Mr. Roosevelt liked ft, the measure
might be offered to congress as a sub¬
stitute for Secretary of Labor Perkins'
bill establishing the 30-hour week and
bureaucratic control over production
and wage scales of industry. Or it
might be combined with the Perkins
bill, wbich was meeting with sueh de¬
cided opposition in the house of rep¬
resentatives that the administration
leaders seemed ready to abandon hope
of its passage during this session.
This industry bill sets up a board
consisting of seven members headed
by the secretaries of commerce and
labor. The others are to be spokes¬
men for commerce, finance, labor, ag¬
riculture, and the public.
The plan sanctions the formation of
industrial and trade associations which
shaii work with the national board to
correlate production with demand,
establish prices of commodities at
fair levels, and stabilize markets.
I W KHfLE the National Recovery act
was still under consideration in
the White House, the President in a
brief message to congress asked imme¬
diate passage of a bill which he hopes
will rescue the railroads from their
desperate situation. It provides for a
federal dictatorship under a ‘‘eo-ordi
nator of transportation” whose func¬
tion it would be to eliminate duplica¬
tion of services and wasteful methods
of operation and to bring about finan¬
cial reorganizations. This authority
is asked for one year, though provision
is made for extension of the period
by the President.
The President aiso recommended
placing railway holding companies un¬
der the jurisdiction of the interstate
commerce commission, repeal of the
recapture clause of the transportation
act whereby half of excess earnings
go to the government, liberalizing the
basis of rate making and modifying
valuation requirements. During the
period of emergency control the rail¬
roads would be immune from prosecu¬
tion for violation of the anti trust
laws.
Plans were laid to hurry the meas¬
ure through congress, and there
seemed to be little opposition among
either Republicans or Democrats.
i'l yt P,. ROOSEVELT, addressing the
Chamber of Commerce of the
United States at its annual dinner,
sought to dissipate the fears of busi¬
ness men that he was trying to bring
stout a bureaucratic control of indus¬
try, intimating that this would not
come about if industry granted three
requests which he set forth. These
were that wages should go no lower
and should rise just as fast as indus¬
try improves; that business should
help the government to end cut-throat
competition and unfair practices, and
that leaders should work for national
recovery, not for the selfish gain of a
single industry or trade.
fpHGUGH the" house accepted the
A inflation rider to the farm biii, it
did not agree to the senate's amend¬
ment authorizing the secretary of ag¬
riculture to set arbitrary prices for
basic agricultural commodities and
penalize sales below such prices, and
final enactment of the measure was
thus delayed. This difference of opin¬
ion also ied the fanners' convention
in Des Moines to order a farm holiday
beginning May 13. the producers being
instructed to keep their products off
the market during the period of the
strike in order to starve tbe nation
into complying with their demands.
Eggs, vegetables and milk are inciud-
tition and reckless
price siasbic? e!;c
lasted under the pr>
Tislons of a tew bill
that was laid before
President Roosevelt
for his approval This
measure, entitled the
“National Recovery
Act," was drawn up
b 7 * committee of
-
congressional and in¬
dustrial leaders head¬
ed by Senator Wagner
ed with the other farm products.
This action was taken by some 1.500
delegates from twenty-one states. Ob¬
servers said they represented only
about 1 per cent of the farmer strength
in their respective states ami predicted
the strike would be Ineffective.
The convention adopted resolutions
of sympathy with the farmers of two
counties la Iowa which are under mar¬
tial law because of the disgraceful
mobbing of Judge C C. Bradley at
Le Mara. Many of The mob leaders
were under arrest and the state troops
were used to gather evidence, although
the cases were to be tried in civil
court.
\ ITHILE continuing his economic
' ’ conversations with representa¬
tives of other nations, the President
found time to consider the selection
of American delegates
to the world confer¬
ence that opens June
12 in London. He con¬
sulted with Assistant
.Secretary of State
Raymond Moiey, who
win be one of the del¬
egates, and also was
visited by Henry hlor
gentbau, Sr., former
ambassador to Tur¬
key, and James M.
Cox of Ohio, Demo¬
cratic Presidential
candidate in 1920. Both those gentle¬
men. it was understood, were to go to
London; and Mr. Morgenthau also
was chosen to represent the United
States at the international wheat con¬
ference in Geneva.
To the organization committee for
the London conference Norman H.
Davis, special American envoy, pro¬
posed that the nations should enter
into an agreement for a world-wide
tariff truce pending the outcome of
the parity, putting this on the agenda
was ieft up to Prime Minuter Mac¬
Donald, who returned home to con¬
front a difficult situation. While he was
talking international trade agreements
with Mr. Roosevelt, the British board
of trade under President Waiter
Runciman was promoting biiateral
trade understandings with many gov¬
ernments.
\yf Ft ROOSEVELT had a round of
conversations with Latin-Ameri
can diplomats, starting with Thomas
Le Breton of Argentina who was ac¬
companied to the White House by Am¬
bassador EsplL Doctor Le Breton
and his corps of experts also met
with Secretary of Agriculture Wal¬
lace and other government officials to
discuss monetary and trade problems
and especially methods of controlling
world surpluses of wheat
Guido Jung. Italy's finance minister,
arrived in Washington and at once be¬
gan talks with President Roosevelt
and his advisers concerning the pure¬
ly economic and monetary phases of
the current question*’;: and Augugto
Rosso, Italian ambassador, handled
for his government the discussion of
disarmament and political matters.
X j OVING along somewhat similar
•A 1 lines to those of the Roosevelt
administration. Chancellor Adolf Hit¬
ler was going a swifter pace than
Adolf Hitler
and tow n to seize the union premises
and the labor banks. All the impor¬
tant union leaders were put under ar¬
rest.
"This clears the path for the new
National Socialist state in which labor
will form a pari of society, divided
and grouped according to professions.”
said Dr. Robert Ley, Nazi president
of the states' council, who directed
the raids. "Guilds like those of the
Middle ages will be formed.”
Hitler's next move, with oniy a day's
interval, was to assume control of the
Central Association of German Banks
and Banking Industry, reorganize the
board of directors, appoint a Nazi
liaison official and take steps for a
general reduction in interest rates.
There was no let up in the Nazi
campaign against the Jews. Bernhard
Rust, the Prussian minister of educa¬
tion, dismissed twenty-one professors
from Berlin university and nine from
Cologne university. Among them were
some of the foremost scholars and
scientists of the country.
F JNCLE SAM is now authorized to
^ go into the power business, for
the senate by a vote of 63 to 20 passed
the Norris bill for the development
and operation of the Muscle Shoals
project. The house had passed an al¬
most Identical measure so there was
little adjusting to be done before the
bill was sent to tbe President for sig¬
nature.
»
Henry Mor
genthau, Sr.
of his feliow dicta
tors ever held. Imme
diately after a May
day announcement
that he would draft
the youth of Germany
into a labor army, re
gardless of wealth
and position, he pro¬
ceeded to destroy the
free trade unions of
the nation. The Nazi
storm troops were
sent into every
COURIER
* PRESIDENT iected Sara G. ROOSEVELT Bratton of New has Mex¬ so
ico fee a federal judgeship in the
Teeth Circuit Court of Appeals, which
embraces New Mexico. Colorado, Okla¬
homa. Kansas. Wyoming and Utah.
Bratton accepted but will not resign
from tbe senate until the special ses¬
sion ends.
W. A. Julian of Ohio has accepted
tbe post of treasurer of the Ceiled
Slates, and Dean G. Acbeson of Con¬
necticut is to toe undersecretary of tbe
treasury.
/■"V PEN1XG date for Chicago's Oo
L' tury of Progress exposition was
advanced to May 27 to accommodate
President Roosevelt, who promised to
be on hand to take principal part in
the ceremonies. On the same day he
will officiate at the formal opening of
tbe Great-Lakes-to-the-Gulf waterway,
the ceremony to be held at the mouth
of the Chicago river.
Qi ^ auese GREAT quarrel import is in the the news Sino-Jap- that
Soviet Russ: a has resumed full diplo¬
matic relations with the Chinese Na¬
tionalist government. Dimitri Bogc
asoloff. the new ambassador from Mos¬
cow, presented Ms credentials at Nan¬
king. Immediately Use Chinese press
began a vigorous campaign looking to¬
ward an alliance with the Soviet gov¬
ernment similar to the one that fol¬
lowed tbe war with Japan in 1895,
when China virtually ceded Liaotung
peninsula, part of Manchuria, to Rcs
sia in return for assistance against
Japan.
Tbe Chines':- cow suggest that China
grant the Soviets Important trade
privileges to provide an outlet for
Soviet goods in China and at the same
time exclude Japanese products. In
exchange it is hoped that Russia
would actively help China in connec¬
tion with the Manchukuo conflict.
K ERMA NY has proposed to the dis
vJ armament conference in Geneva,
through her representative, Count Ru¬
dolf Nadolny, that the arms plan
offered by the British
be altered to provide
a maximum caliber of
195 millimeters for
mobile guns and to
entirely abolish tanks.
Nadolny contended
that if these proposals
were rejected. Ger¬
many should be al¬
lowed to have all land,
naval and air arma¬
ments that other na
tions deemed neces¬
sary for their adequate defense.
"The German government has suffi¬
ciently proved its good will." he said.
"We have accepted in principle the
period of transition for the practical
realization of full equality rights for
Germany. This proves there is abso¬
lutely no foundation for the opinion
that Germany wishes to avail herself
of disarmament to proceed with her
own re-armament at the highest pos¬
sible level The contrary is the case.”
Count Nadolny won a victory when
tbe committee on armies voted not to
include in the armed strength of Ger¬
many the 80,000 Nazi storm troops.
The decision was reached by a vote
of 7 to 6.
T T OARDERS of gold in large num
Ua hers have defied the treasury, re¬
fused to turn in thc-ir stores of the yel¬
low metal in exchange for other cur¬
rency. and challenged the authority of
the government to coerce them or to
punish them for their stand. Among
those who are holding large supplies
of gold in safety deposit boxes are
many foreigners, both resident and
nonresident. All requests for licenses
to export this gold are refused by the
treasury, unless it is earmarked for
foreign governments, central banks or
the Bank of Internationa) Settlements.
In addition to the foreign gold own¬
ers there are many domestic holders
j of gold with large amounts in safety
: deposit vaults. Some are known to
j j the treasury and were said to have
several million dollars in gold coin.
j j According to the information, they de¬
clined to surrender the gold on the ad¬
1 vice of attorneys, who plannS to test
the law in the courts.
Indications pointed to a test ease
within a short time. The Department
of Justice probably will arrange to ex¬
pedite the case so that a prompt de¬
cision may be obtained from the Su¬
preme court.
A XE more head of a Latin-Ameri
V-' can government has falien at the
hand of an assassin. Luis M. SaDcho
Cerro, President of Peru, was shot to
death by Abeiardo de Mendoza, a mem¬
ber of the Aprista, opposition party,
just after reviewing 20,000 conscripts
in training for the war with Colombia.
Mendoza was slain by the Presidential
guards. The Peruvian congress named
Gen. Oscar Benevides as temporary
president.
A SSEMIXG the correctness of mea
A ger dispatches from Cuba, a real
rebellion against the Machado regime
hag broken out with tbe landing of
two expeditions near the eastern end
of the island. The government claimed
to be having an easy time suppressing
the outbreak, but the fighting contin¬
ued. Pome of Machado's opponents
more than intimated that the revolt
was a “set up” engineered by the
President himself.
T U "SITED States District Judge
George A. Carpenter of Chicago
sent to the President his resignation,
effective June 30, saying that be “feeis
the ravages of time” and at bis age,
which is sixty-six, is disinclined to
carry out the daily routine of judicial
work. Judge Carpenter- has been on
the district bench for 23 years.
6, SSJJ, Wrettre Newspaper Cntoa
Count Nado!Ry ,
GEORGIA
NEWS
Happenings Over
the State
David Morris Porter. Jr- Augusts,
has been given the graduate school
awajd of the Bulkier fellowship in
history at Yale University.
Congressman Castellow in letter re¬
ceived recently in FitxgeraJd asserts
that W. A. Adams has been reappoint¬
ed postmaster at Fitzgerald.
Forty-six young Lowndes county
men have been selected from among
more than 60© applicants as recruits
for the civilian conservation corps.
Richard W. Smith, of the state de¬
partment erf forestry and geology, is
making a surrey of Henry county to
locate deposits of mica, feldspar and
primary kaolin.
Monitrie merchants observe that
advances in the price of cotton, hogs
and corn have made this "a chang¬
ed world.” Moultrie is the site of a
large packing house.
The income of the general treas¬
ury o! the state for the first four
months of this year was S1.6S9.311.39
less than the income during the first
four months of 1S32.
Reports from newspaper corre¬
spondents a!! over the state show that
business is -picking up.” Prices are
advancing, factories are turning over
wheels and farmers are getting ready
fer better prices.
The Georgia public service commis¬
sion has ender advisement a request
made by the Savannah traffic bureau
for reduction of express charges on
shucked oyster to the level of those
for other seafoods.
E. Walter Tripp, candidate for in¬
ternal revenue collector for the north¬
ern district of Georgia, is receiving a
hearty support by the laboring people
throughout the district. His many
friends feel assured that he will be
the chosen one for this position.
Exports of merchandise from Geor¬
gia in 1S32 were valued at *23,403,595
compared with *31,233,564 in 1S31. ac¬
cording to information made public
recently by the statistical division of
the commerce department.
A cabbage with twin heads, the total
weighing eight pounds, was grown on
the cabbage patch of E. A. Moreland,
near Thomasviile. The same step
supports both heads, which are per¬
fectly formed and a fine variety.
One of tbe large granite quarries
in Hancock county, abort three miles
out of Sparta, on the Duggan prop¬
erty, has been leased by ths Chupp
Granite company, and much building
stone wiil be cut and shipped out of
tbr* county.
'the Christian Index, Dr. O. P. Gil
bert, editor, in its current issue, car
ries the program of th^ centennial
celebration of the Mercer University,
Macon. The celebration will take
place at Penfield, just out of Greens
boro, the original site of the univer
sity.
Publication of a new weekly news
paper, the Metier News, wiil be launch
ed in Metier in the near future. H. R.
Yandie is the editor and proprietor.
He and his wife have been connected
with newspapers in Athens and in
Lyons. Mrs. Yandie is now postmaster
of Metier.
1 Reduction in railroad passenger
fares between all points in Georgia
to 2 cents a mile for one-way tickets
and to pne-and-one-half cents a mile
for ronnd-trip tickets has been order
ed by the public service commission,
James A. Perry, the commission chair¬
man, has announced.
The demand for lumber has been
picking up within the past few weeks,
wholesale dealers have announced at
Moultrie. Orders are being received
from many cities. For the first time
in a number of months one big whole
saler at Moultrie declared that he
made some profit in April.
A distinct upturn in economic con¬
ditions as they affect the farmer and
business generally is reported by Com¬
missioner of Agriculture G. C. Adams.
Speaking at the annual agriculture
day celebration sponsored by the Can¬
ton Chamber of Commerce, he pre
dieted a gradual return to better con
dittoes for the rural population, es
peciaiiy in the South.
New hands are tending lighthouse
on Tybee Island, for Captain Wil
liam Lindquist has retired after 36
years devoted to keeping ships off the
rocks and sand bars of the Atlantic
coast. The captain figures a third of
a century given to seafaring entities a
man to the calm of a landlubber’s life,
*o he and his wife have settled down
in a cozy little home in Savannah,
which he bought with his savings.
A Georgia carrier pigeon released
in Akron, Ohio, when the United States
airship Macon was christened March
11, died on its flight home to Macon.
The bird was beaten down at EHgo,
Pa. H. C. Ozbum who sent two pig¬
eons—Miss Macon and Miss Georgia—
to the christening of the dirigible Ma¬
con, has received word from Mrs. Gid
eon M. Henry, of Sligo, Pa., that on*
of the birds was found April 24, starv¬
ing and dying in her barn. Its leg
band was removed and its message
was saved. The bird died a few min*
utes later.
TORNADOES FATAL
TO 58 IN SOUTH
Terrific Wind* Also Sweep
Through Illinois.
Shrevep-wt. La.—Tornadoes which
swept through Louisiana. Arkansas
and Missouri almost destroyed oDe
town and took a total of lives which
mounted to SR as reports from isolat¬
ed communities were received.
The town of Minders, in northwest¬
ern Louisian*, bore the brant of tbe
storm. Deaths in Minde® and tbe im¬
! mediate vicinity placed at 40.
were
hut it was feared search of wreckage
would yield more bodies.
The storm which wrecked Minden
appeared first near Magnolia. Ark-,
jus: north of the Louisiana line. It
did miner damage in Magnolia and
swept through Calhoun, a few miles
to the sooth. Then it tore into Louisi¬
ana and through Minden, wiping out
an extensive residence section and
damaging business buildings. Arcadia.
gome twenty males east, next reported
the tornado.
A tornado aiso struck a small re¬
gion along the northern Arkansas
Msssonri border, wrecking 14 homes
between West Plains. Mo„ and Salem,
Ark.
More than 1.000 persons were re¬
ported injured in the tornadoes, many
critically. Damage to crops and
farms was heavy. Most of the vic¬
tims were negroes.
Complete breakdown of communi¬
cations made relief work difficult in
the hard-hit Minden area.
Chicago.—Terrific winds of tornado
force, accompanied by lightning and
a deluge of rain and hail, swept over
parts of Chicago and the western sub
urbs. causing one death, the serious
Injury of four persons and damage
estimated at many thousands of dol
lars.
Tornadoes in central EHnois claimed
the lives of at least three additional
victims. In Fulton county two were
killed and at least fifty Injured.
Property damage in the county was
estimated at more than $290,000.
Pulitzer Awards to
Journalists Announced
New York.—Edgar Ansel Mowrer,
correspondent of the Chicago Daily
News in Berlin, has beeD awarded the
Pulitzer prize for the best foreign
correspondence during 1932. it was
announced by the trustees of Colum¬
bia university.
Mr. Mowrer was singled out for the
most distinguished award in journal¬
ism for his daily dispatches describ¬
ing and interpreting the turbulent po¬
litical upheaval in Germany which ied
to tbe rise to power of Adolf Hitler
and his National Socialist party.
Other journalism prizes announced
j by the Pulitzer committee of awards
i are as follows:
i For the most disinterested and meri¬
torious public service rendered by an
j American newspaper during the year,
j a goid medai costing $500 awarded
1 to tbe New York World-Telegram.
j For the best editorial article written
j during the year, a prize of $500 was
j awarded to the Kansas City Star for
j its series of editorials on national and
international subjects. For the best
; reporter's work during the year, $1,000
j was awarded to Francis A. Jamieson,
staff correspondent of the Associated
Press at Trenton, N. J„ for his cov¬
• of the kidnaping the
erage of Lind¬
bergh baby.
H. M. Talburt of tbe Washington
Daily News won the prize for the
best cartoon of tbe year.
. Clawed by Polar Bear
as He Seeks Death
j Milwaukee, Wis.—William Ecb
hardt, nineteen, was severely clawed
by a polar bear at the Washington
park zoo here when he leaped into
a bear den in what was described
by authorities as a suicide attempt.
The zoo attendants rescued Eck
hardt, one turning a water hose on
j the polar bear and a wolf, which oe
copies the same den. while his com¬
panion lowered a ladder upon which
the youth climbed to safety.
Eckhardt was taken to a hos¬
pital and held for observation. Rela
tives said Eckhardt became discour¬
aged looking for a job.
Stork Visits Burning
i Hospital; 226 Saved
i
’ Sayre, Pa.—Birth, death and fear
mingled in a flaming drama when fire
ravaged the Robert Packer hospital.
j A baby was born in the hospital
: at the height of the terror. Infant
: and mother were rescued unhurt An
i old man, suffering from a broken
; arm. was carried from the burning
] building oniy to die of shock.
Two hundred and twenty-four oth¬
er patients were rushed out on cots
or carried <|pwn ladders. Of these,
27 were infants, many of them less
than twenty-four hours oid.
j Casper, Mayor Arrested Wyo. on Federal Dry Charge officers
j —
served warrants on two-score Casper
residents, including Mayor E. W. Row¬
ell Police Chief Quealy and Sheriff
G, O. Housle, on charges of conspir¬
acy to violate the prohibition law.
Pitched Ball Fatal to Youth
Collinsville, Okla.—Henry C. Car¬
ter, seventeen-year-old high school
student, died In a Tulsa hospital of
a skull fracture received when he
was hit by a pitched ball in a sand
lot baseball game.
HARBINGER OF SPRING
The spring peeper, of small body
but great voice, Is the smallest mem¬
ber of the tree frog family and tbe
one b&trachlan I tint tells us when
spring is here. Its voice then re¬
sounds from the damp meadows,
marshes and ditches. The sja-ing
peeper averages about one inch in
length and is the first of the sing¬
ing frogs to be heard in spring.
SPEED!
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tablet stamped Bayer dissolves and
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Stick to genuine Bayer Aspirin.
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Rashes, eczemas and most
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I Unsubstantial
Philosophy is a good thing to sell,
but not much to live by.
!
:
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XJE was an easy victim to colds— and they
of hung on 90 long—until she suggested the use
NR tablets. He seldom catches colds now.
*> hen he does they are quickly broken up. This
safe, dependable, all-vegetable corrective —
Nature's Remedy—strengthens and regulate*
bowel action as no other laxative can—carries
away tible poisonous wastes which make you suscejv
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tion,
Comedy of Error*?
“Experience” is largely a lot of
mistakes.
A FAMOUS MAN
/'’VVER sixty years
vz ago Dr. Pierce,
whose picture ap¬
pears here, placed in
all the drug stores
of this country his
Favorite Prescrip¬
tion for women suf¬
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sickness, headaches, cramps, backaches, monthly
flashes. Women hot
of ail ages testify to
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contains no alcohol.
n Dr. r*°' fn * “Hlul mKire, V. RlM M
Pierce 1 . Clint. I. BoB.ti, N.