1
IN REVIEW vy 1 \ bu &Um/uL 10. Picka/tar © Western Newspaper Union. Deadlock Continues in General Motors Strike p OV. FRANK MURPHY of Mich- igan abandoned, at least for the present, his efforts to end the deadlock between the General Mo- tors corporation and the striking mem- bers of the United j Automobile Work- ers, but James F. *JBI Dewey, conciliator for the Department of Labor, remained in Detroit, still hope- {wLTßmH ful of bringing about lyK a peace conference. . William S. Knudsen, o executive vice presi- William S. dent of General Mo- Knudsen tors, thus stated the corporation’s position: "General Motors corporation rep- resentatives immediately upon evacuation of its plants by employ- ees engaged in sit down strikes will meet with representatives of the union, but to accept the union’s conditions would have placed Gen- eral Motors in the position of con- doning their illegal actions. We can- not condone illegal occupation of our plants.” The union conditions, as set forth by President Homer Martin, were: “We are willing to agree to with- drawal if negotiations are opened immediately with an agreement that all plants rempin closed, without movement of equipment or resump- tion of activities until a national set- tlement is effected, and with a fur- ther agreement that all activities such as circulation of petitions, or- ganizing of vigilante activities, threatening or coercing of employ- ees, be immediately stopped.” About a thousand men, engaged in the sit down strikes, were thus holding up negotiations for settle- ment of the controversy which al- ready had thrown out of work near- ly 100,000 employees of the corpora- tion. General Motors officials received telegrams from a number of Ameri- can Federation of Labor units urg- ing no recognition of the United Au- tomobile Workers as sole bargain- ing agency for the motor car fac- tory workers. They were assured the corporation would not back down on this point. Making the situation more diffi- cult, the strikers in Flint engaged in a wild, riotous battle with the guards and city police that lasted for hours and resulted in the injury of dozens of men. The local offi- cers restrained themselves admir- ably though armed with machine guns, and the state police were hur- ried to the scene to aid them. Gov- ernor Murphy and other state offi- cials also went to Flint. Kidnaped Boy Found Slain Near Everett, Wash. 'T'EN-year-old Charles Mattson, -*■ kidnaped from his home in Ta- coma, Wash., Dec. 17 and held for ransom, was found beaten to death in snow covered woods near Ev- erett. The body was nude and cru- elly battered. State and city police and department of justice agents, who had been held back to give the lad’s father a chance to pay the ransom and save his son, immedi- ately began an intensive manhunt, but their clews were few and poor. France Ready to Occupy Spanish Morocco E' RANCE, according to reliable re- " ports, is all set to occupy Span- ish Morocco, and expects the full co-operation of Great Britain. The French had sent to General Franco, head of the Spanish Fascists, one protest IfJ |§f|| ||llH against the alleged ' jMwf admission to Moroc- t SR* co of German g|> J . troops, and then sent another before taking drastic ac- tion. If they do raHjjjjM move, it will be nominaUy in behalf of the sultan of Mo- rocco and because of violation of the Franco-Spanish treaty of 1912. France has 100,000 men in her Mo- roccan army and could easily and speedily occupy most of the Spanish zone, which the Fascists control. Support by the British presumably would come from the British fleet in the Strait of Gibraltar and possi- by from troops to replace French forces taken from the German bor- der. Franco sent a conciliatory reply to Paris. At a reception to diplomats Chan- cellor Hitler talked with the French ambassador to Berlin and assured him that Germany had no intention of attempting to seize Spanish Mo- rocco. / Berlin has indignantly denied the presence of German troops in Span- ish Morocco, asserting they are min- ing men and properly are armed for self protection. High Commissioner Beigbeder of Spanish Morocco also avers there are no foreign troops in his territory. To a correspond- ent he said: "You can declare no soldier, German, Italian, or even Japanese—for they will soon invent news of Japanese landing has crossed our frontiers.” At Gibraltar there was a report that 3,000 Japanese volunteers were expected to land at Cadiz and Jerez de la Frontera to join Franco’s troops in a final assault on Madrid. Tokio said the story was fantastic. Great Britain, angered by the air bombing of her embassy in Madrid, filed protest. Some of her most powerful warships were added to the fleet at Gibraltar. The British government forbade citizens to en- list in Spain, and continued its ef- forts to persuade other nations to stop the sending of volunteers to that country. France agreed to intro- duce legislation to that effect, but Germany and Italy were still cling- ing to their conditions and allegedly continuing to give aid to the Franco forces. Supreme Court Rebuked by the President THINLY veiled but unmistakable was President Roosevelt’s re- buke to the Supreme court in his annual message on the state of the Union. Standing tri- lopsidedly Demo- Bfi- house in joint ses- sion, the chief exec- L jty continue the task of succeed. "In that task the President legislative branch Roosevelt of our government will, I am confi- dent, continue to meet the demands of democracy whether they relate to the curbing of abuses, the extension of help to those who need help, or the better balancing of our inter- dependent economies. “So, too, the executive branch of the government must move forward in this task and, at the same time, provide better management for ad- ministrative action of all kinds. "The judicial branch also is asked by the people to do its part in mak- ing democracy successful. We do not ask the courts to call non-ex- istent powers into being, but we have a right to expect that con- ceded powers or those legitimately implied shall be made effective in- struments for the common good. "The process of our democracy must not be imperiled by the denial of essential powers of free govern- ment.” Sketching the program for his sec- ond term, the President said legis- lation he desired at this time in- cluded extension of the RFC, of his power to devalue the dollar and of other New Deal authorizations about to expire, deficiency appropria- tions, and extension of the neutrality law to apply to the Spanish civil war. Conceding that NRA had "tried to do too much,” he contin- ued: "The statute of NRA has been outlawed. The problems have not. They are still with us.” Congress Receives Budget Message of President CTATING that he expects to bal- ance the national budget and be- gin reducing the national debt in 1939, President Roosevelt submit- ted to congress a budget for the 1938 fiscal year. This, he said, balanced conditionally except for statutory debt retirement—meaning that if his conditions are met the gross def- icit for the fiscal year beginning July 1 would not be more than $401,515,000, compared with $2,652,- 652,774 in the current fiscal year and $4,763,841,642 in the 1936 fiscal year, which ended last June 30. But the President warned the na- tion that conditional budget balance in the next fiscal year and complete balance in the following year de- pended on industry’s co-operation in hiring more persons from relief rolls. All estimates were dependent upon continued economic improve- ment. The President estimated that fed- eral revenue in the next fiscal year will increase by $1,475,466,378 be- cause of better business and higher taxes. He did not propose new taxes but opposed the reduction of any taxes now in effect. The message allotted 451 millions to a general public works program, excluding the Florida ship canal and the Passamaquoddy tide har- nessing project; 482 millions for ag- ricultural relief and soil conserva- tion; 835 millions for social secur- ity, and 316 millions for recovery and relief. The message revealed that Mr. Roosevelt planned to curtail relief expenditures sharply from the 1936- 37 levels. But he found available funds insufficient for the rest of the current fiscal year and asked congress to appropriate $790,000,000 immediately, of which $650,000,000 is to be expended for recovery and relief between February 1 and June 30 when the 1937 fiscal year ends. Frank Is Ousted From University of Wisconsin P LENN FRANK, president of the University of Wisconsin, was removed from office by the board of regents of that great institution, by a vote of 8 to 7, on charges that his administration has not been capable and that he has been ex- travagant in personal expenditures for which the state paid. Allegedly, Dr. Frank was ousted because Gov. Philip La Follete demanded it. As one regent said: "He has not been very Progressive.” Accused of play- ing politics in this affair, the La Follete group replied that there is no politics in their attitude in the sense of political party affiliations or convictions, but that they have been extremely patient with Dr. Frank over a period of years, and that he has shown himself incom- petent in many ways. Neutrality Resolution Applied to Spain’s War 'T'HE senate and house met the day before the President ad- dressed them and organized, with Mr. Garner of course as president of the former, and ■HpgSBMH Speaker Bankhead K” % again ruling over Wi , the lower chamber. The one matter of | interest in this pro- jAMrJEpH ceeding was the se- ’■ lection of Sam Ray- BL, < burn of Texas as majority leader of Connor of New York in the caucus, hav- ing the potent back- y ing of Vice President Garner and presumably of Mr. Roosevelt. Of the total of 16 new senators only two were absent, Clyde L. Herring of lowa and William H. Smathers of New Jersey, both Democrats. Two new Republican senators were sworn in, H. Styles Bridges of New Hampshire and Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts. Immediately after the President’s address had been delivered on Wed- nesday, both house and senate hur- ried with the neutrality resolution applying specifically to the civil war in Spain. The senate adopted it quickly by unanimous vote, but there were parliamentary delays in the house, and meanwhile the freighter Mar Cantabrico managed to get away from New York with Robert Cuse’s cargo of airplanes Maritime Commission to Dispose of Ships A NNOUNCEMENT is made by the United States Maritime commission that it will dispose of four shipping lines by June 29 next. They now operate 36 vessels in di- rect competition with private Amer- ican shipping. The lines and the routes they serve are: Cosmopolitan Shipping Company, Inc., operating the Amer- ican France line serving French ports; the Southgate-Nelsin Corpo- ration operating the American Hampton Roads—Yankee and Ori- ole lines serving Germany and the United Kingdom; the Roosevelt Steamship Company, Inc., operat- ing the American pioneer line serv- ing Australia, India and the far east, and C. H. Sprague & Son, Inc., operating the American Republics line serving the east coast of South America. Landon to Build Country Home Near Topeka ALF M. LANDON retired from public office, turning over the governorship of Kansas to Walter A. Huxman, a Democrat. He let it be known that he had purchased two suburban tracts totaling 160 acres west of Topeka and will build there a house of colonial type where he and Mrs. Landon and their chil- dren will reside. Until the place is completed they will make their home with Mrs. Landon’s mother, Mrs. S. E. Cobb, in Topeka. Program for Recovery of Brookings Institute IN ONE of its periodic analyses of * the economic situation the Brook- ings institute, non-partisan research foundation, summarizes proposals for "a consistent program of fur- ther recovery,” the seven points of which are, briefly: Re-establishment of a balanced federal budget. Continuance of the present policy of maintaining a fixed price of . gold and the establishment through in- ternational co-operation of a system of stable foreign exchange. Extension of the reciprocal trade agreements "as the most practical means of reducing artificial barriers to commerce and reopening the channels of international trade.” Preservation of the "generally favorable ratio of prices and wage rates.” Maintenance of prevailing hours of labor “as the only means of meeting the production require- ments involved in restoring dur- ing the next few years the stand- ards of living of the laboring’ masses and promoting the economic ad- vancement of the nation as a whole.” Elimination of private and public industrial practices “which tend to restrict output* or to prevent the in- crease of productive efficiency.” "Shifting of the emphasis in agri- cultural policy from restricted out- put and rising prices to the abun- dant furnishings of the supplies of raw materials and foodstuffs re- quired by gradually expanding mar- kets.” c*mi ij.LoU "Jhmhd about International Fourflushing. SANTA MONICA, CALIF.— When the German troops marched into the Rhineland, France was going to fight about it, but didn’t. When the Italians moved against Ethiopia, Britain was going to in- voke force, but When Russia poked I her snoot into the l| ( Wm Spanish mess, there W' Opß was going to be armed action by oth- pP ’MINI er powers, but ■- w m When Japan began B - litfajfj to nibble again at ML jjefilMar China, there was go- Wjd ing to be interven- tion but all that hap- Irvin S. Cobb ened was that the League of Nations chirped despair- ingly and then put its head back under its wing. Somehow, I’m thinking of the two fellows who started fighting and, when bystanders rushed in to sep- arate them, the one who was get- ting the worst of it yelled: “Five or six of you hang on to that big brute. Anybody can hold me!” Curing Temperament. A JUDGE back east rules that this so-called artistic temper- ament is not sufficient excuse for a so-called genius to beat up his bride. I tried the stuff once—just once—- but the presiding judge in my case was a lady. For years I’d been trudging as steadily as a milkman’s horse, whereas being a practitioner of a creative profession, I said to myself I really ought to stage some temperament just to make the fam- ily appreciate me. So I rehearsed my act and went downstairs one morning and put it on. So my wife looked at me across the breakfast table, and said: “I know what the trouble with you is. You’re bilious. You’ll take some calomel.” Well, what are you going to do when a beautifully staged emotion- al outburst is diagnosed, not as the promptings of a tortured soul, but as liver complaint? You guessed it. I took the calo- mel, and, I pledge you my word, haven’t had an attack since. The Law’s Delays. ONCE a Massachusetts Supreme court reversed a felony convic- tion because the prosecution, in filing the record, stated that the crime was committed “on the fifteenth day of June, 1855” but failed to state whether the year was 1855 A. D. And ever since then on quibbles almost equally foolish—such as a misplaced comma or an upside down period—other high courts have been defeating the ends of justice and setting at naught the de- cisions of honest juries. Science has gone ahead, medicine has taken enormous steps forward, but law still rides in a stage coach and hunts with a flintlock musket. Has it ever occurred to anyone that one reason for the law’s delays is a lack of the thing called common sense? Dinosaur Footprints. BACK in 1858, a college professor discovered on a sandstone ledge in Massachusetts a whole batch of imbedded tracks of the dinosaur—- familiarly known to geologists as dinah, just as among its scientific friends the great winged lizard is frequently referred to as big liz. At the time, the discovery created no excitement —merely a slight shock of surprise to the old families upon learning there was something historic in Massachusetts antedat- ing the Mayflower. For the natur- alists figured those tracks had been left more than 150,000,000 years ago. And they were suffered to remain nearly eighty years more. But here recently it develops that parties unknown have been chisel- ing Dinah’s footprints out and toting them off. This would seem to in- dicate either that America is get- ting dinosaur-conscious or that dino- saurleggers are operating, or both. So if a slinky gentleman should come to the side door, offering a prime specimen for the parlor whatnot, don’t trade with him, read- er-call the police. Next time he may come back with a dornick off of Plymouth Rock or the corner- stone of Harvard college- or the name plate from Cotton Mather’s coffin. IRVIN S. COBB © —WNU Service. Meaning of "H. M. S.” on Ship "H. M. S.” preceding the name of a vessel stands for His (or Her) Majesty’s ship. The letters are used in connection only with vessels in the British service. Popularly “H. M. S.” is supposed to be the abbre- viation of His Majesty’s steamer, but the letters were used in the names of British ships long before the commercial development of the steamboat. "H. M. S.” is also the abbreviation of His Majesty’s Serv- ice. MIDLAND JOURNAL, RISING SUN, MD, HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS N Items of Interest to the Housewife A simple way to freshen white washing silk which has become yellow through constant washing is to add milk to the rinsing water and allow it to soak for a few minutes before squeezing out. * * After putting water and soap in- to washing machine let it run for a minute or two to dissolve soap before putting in clothes, if you wish the best results. * Chilled, diced oranges mixed with pineapple and sprinkled with coconut make a delicious dessert. Never put soda and water into an enameled saucepan that has been burned. Although it will re- move the burned particles of food it will make the pan more likely to burn again the next time it is used. Use salt instead of soda. Fill the pan with cold water, leave until the next day and then slow* ly bring to a boil. * Chairs and sofas upholstered in leather will last and retain their appearance much longer if you apply regularly a mixture of one part vinegar and two parts boiled linseed oil, well shaken together. It not only cleans the leather, but softens it and at the same time prevents its cracking. Apply little on a soft rag and polish with a silk duster or piece of chamois. Calotabs Help Nature To Throw Off a Cold Millions have found in Calotabs a most valuable aid in the treatment of colds. They take one or two tab- lets the fifst night and repeat the third or fourth night if needed. How do Calotabs help Nature throw off a cold? First, Calotabs are one of the most thorough and dependable of all intestinal elimi- nants, thus cleansing the intestinal tract of the germ-laden mucus and toxines. Second, Calotabs are diu- retic to the kidneys, promoting the elimination of cold poisons from the blood. Thus Calotabs serve the double purpose of a purgative and diuretic, both of which are needed in the treatment of colds. Calotabs are quite economical; only twenty-five cents for the fam- ily package, ten cents for the trial package. (Adv.) Considering Our Duty That which is called considering what is our duty in a particular case is very often nothing but en- deavoring to explain it away.— Bishop Joseph Butler. Diversity of Interests No one who is deeply interested in a large variety of subjects can remain unhappy. The real pessi- mist is the person who has lost interest.—W. Lyon Phelps. Sore Throat Pains DUE TO COLDS Eased Instantly lllif \ le Cruih and tlr 3 Boyar Aspirin ptHI MsJf (ot>ltn In yi glass of water. 2. GARGLE thoroughly - throw (jfllL lP your hood way back, allowing a HK fi ; little to trickle down your throat. v - 3e Rep*°t gargle and do not rinse mouth, allow gargle to remain on membranes of the throat for pr^ Just Gargle This Way with Bayer Aspirin Here is the most approve it. And you will say f amaz ng way to ease it is marvelous. the pains of rawness Get the real BAYER ASPI- of sore throat result- RIN at your druggist’s by ask- ing from a cold we ing for it by its full name know you have ever tried. not by the name “aspirin" Crush and dissolve three alone, genuine BAYER ASPIRIN m* tablets in one-third glass of I "I"pop a dozen water. Then gargle with this mixture twice, holding your 2 FULL DOZEN FOR 25* head well back. Virtually lea tablet This medicinal gargle will act almost like a local anes- thetic on the sore, irritated / membrane of your throat. Pain eases almost instantly; rawness ///} Countless thousands now use / this way to ease sore throat. / Your doctor, we are sure, will A JMEFICULT DECISIONS By GLUYAS WILUAMS IT A &• jf- WONPERIN6, when your father,who has WARNED VOO WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF HE EVER CATCHES M3U COASTIN6 ON BREAKNECK HILL, UNEXPECTEDLY APPEARS AT THE CORNER, WHETHER TO UPSET IN A SNOW BANK OR WHETHER YOU CAN 60 BY HIM FAST EKOUSH SO HE WONT RECO6NIZE YOU 6untA aKwn>

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IN REVIEW vy 1\ bu &Um/uL 10.Picka/tar

© Western Newspaper Union.

Deadlock Continues inGeneral Motors Strikep OV. FRANK MURPHY of Mich-

igan abandoned, at least forthe present, his efforts to end thedeadlock between the General Mo-

tors corporation andthe striking mem-bers of the United

j Automobile Work-ers, but James F.

*JBI Dewey, conciliatorfor the Departmentof Labor, remainedin Detroit, still hope-

{wLTßmH ful of bringing aboutlyK a peace conference.. William S. Knudsen,

o executive vice presi-William S. dent of General Mo-Knudsen tors, thus stated the

corporation’s position:"General Motors corporation rep-

resentatives immediately uponevacuation of its plants by employ-ees engaged in sit down strikes willmeet with representatives of theunion, but to accept the union’sconditions would have placed Gen-eral Motors in the position of con-doning their illegal actions. We can-not condone illegal occupation ofour plants.”

The union conditions, as set forthby President Homer Martin, were:

“We are willing to agree to with-drawal if negotiations are openedimmediately with an agreement thatall plants rempin closed, withoutmovement of equipment or resump-tion of activities until a national set-tlement is effected, and with a fur-ther agreement that all activitiessuch as circulation of petitions, or-ganizing of vigilante activities,threatening or coercing of employ-ees, be immediately stopped.”

About a thousand men, engagedin the sit down strikes, were thusholding up negotiations for settle-ment of the controversy which al-ready had thrown out of work near-ly 100,000 employees of the corpora-tion.

General Motors officials receivedtelegrams from a number of Ameri-can Federation of Labor units urg-ing no recognition of the United Au-tomobile Workers as sole bargain-ing agency for the motor car fac-tory workers. They were assuredthe corporation would not backdown on this point.

Making the situation more diffi-cult, the strikers in Flint engaged ina wild, riotous battle with theguards and city police that lastedfor hours and resulted in the injuryof dozens of men. The local offi-cers restrained themselves admir-ably though armed with machineguns, and the state police were hur-ried to the scene to aid them. Gov-ernor Murphy and other state offi-cials also went to Flint.

Kidnaped Boy Found SlainNear Everett, Wash.'T'EN-year-old Charles Mattson,

-*■ kidnaped from his home in Ta-coma, Wash., Dec. 17 and held forransom, was found beaten to deathin snow covered woods near Ev-erett. The body was nude and cru-elly battered. State and city policeand department of justice agents,who had been held back to give thelad’s father a chance to pay theransom and save his son, immedi-ately began an intensive manhunt,but their clews were few and poor.

France Ready to OccupySpanish MoroccoE' RANCE, according to reliable re-"

ports, is all set to occupy Span-ish Morocco, and expects the fullco-operation of Great Britain. TheFrench had sent toGeneral Franco,head of the SpanishFascists, one protest IfJ |§f||||llHagainst the alleged ' jMwfadmission to Moroc- t SR*co of German g|> J .troops, and thensent another beforetaking drastic ac-tion. If they do raHjjjjMmove, it will benominaUy in behalfof the sultan of Mo-rocco and because of violation of theFranco-Spanish treaty of 1912.France has 100,000 men in her Mo-roccan army and could easily andspeedily occupy most of the Spanishzone, which the Fascists control.Support by the British presumablywould come from the British fleetin the Strait of Gibraltar and possi-by from troops to replace Frenchforces taken from the German bor-der.

Franco sent a conciliatory replyto Paris.

At a reception to diplomats Chan-cellor Hitler talked with the Frenchambassador to Berlin and assuredhim that Germany had no intentionof attempting to seize Spanish Mo-rocco. /

Berlin has indignantly denied thepresence of German troops in Span-ish Morocco, asserting they are min-ing men and properly are armed forself protection. High CommissionerBeigbeder of Spanish Morocco alsoavers there are no foreign troopsin his territory. To a correspond-

ent he said: "You can declare nosoldier, German, Italian, or evenJapanese—for they will soon inventnews of Japanese landing hascrossed our frontiers.”

At Gibraltar there was a reportthat 3,000 Japanese volunteers wereexpected to land at Cadiz and Jerezde la Frontera to join Franco’stroops in a final assault on Madrid.Tokio said the story was fantastic.

Great Britain, angered by the airbombing of her embassy in Madrid,filed protest. Some of her mostpowerful warships were added tothe fleet at Gibraltar. The Britishgovernment forbade citizens to en-list in Spain, and continued its ef-forts to persuade other nations tostop the sending of volunteers to thatcountry. France agreed to intro-duce legislation to that effect, butGermany and Italy were still cling-ing to their conditions and allegedlycontinuing to give aid to the Francoforces.

Supreme Court Rebukedby the President

THINLY veiled but unmistakablewas President Roosevelt’s re-

buke to the Supreme court in hisannual message on the state of theUnion. Standing tri-

lopsidedly Demo- Bfi-

house in joint ses-sion, the chief exec- L jty

continue the task of

succeed."In that task the President

legislative branch Rooseveltof our government will, I am confi-dent, continue to meet the demandsof democracy whether they relate tothe curbing of abuses, the extensionof help to those who need help, orthe better balancing of our inter-dependent economies.

“So, too, the executive branch ofthe government must move forwardin this task and, at the same time,provide better management for ad-ministrative action of all kinds.

"The judicial branch also is askedby the people to do its part in mak-ing democracy successful. We donot ask the courts to call non-ex-istent powers into being, but wehave a right to expect that con-ceded powers or those legitimatelyimplied shall be made effective in-struments for the common good.

"The process of our democracymust not be imperiled by the denialof essential powers of free govern-ment.”

Sketching the program for his sec-ond term, the President said legis-lation he desired at this time in-cluded extension of the RFC, of hispower to devalue the dollar and ofother New Deal authorizations aboutto expire, deficiency appropria-tions, and extension of the neutralitylaw to apply to the Spanish civilwar. Conceding that NRA had"tried to do too much,” he contin-ued: "The statute of NRA has beenoutlawed. The problems have not.They are still with us.”

Congress Receives BudgetMessage of PresidentCTATING that he expects to bal-

ance the national budget and be-gin reducing the national debt in1939, President Roosevelt submit-ted to congress a budget for the 1938fiscal year. This, he said, balancedconditionally except for statutorydebt retirement—meaning that ifhis conditions are met the gross def-icit for the fiscal year beginningJuly 1 would not be more than$401,515,000, compared with $2,652,-652,774 in the current fiscal yearand $4,763,841,642 in the 1936 fiscalyear, which ended last June 30.

But the President warned the na-tion that conditional budget balancein the next fiscal year and completebalance in the following year de-pended on industry’s co-operation inhiring more persons from reliefrolls. All estimates were dependentupon continued economic improve-ment.

The President estimated that fed-eral revenue in the next fiscal yearwill increase by $1,475,466,378 be-cause of better business and highertaxes. He did not propose new taxesbut opposed the reduction of anytaxes now in effect.

The message allotted 451 millionsto a general public works program,excluding the Florida ship canaland the Passamaquoddy tide har-nessing project; 482 millions for ag-ricultural relief and soil conserva-tion; 835 millions for social secur-ity, and 316 millions for recoveryand relief.

The message revealed that Mr.Roosevelt planned to curtail reliefexpenditures sharply from the 1936-37 levels. But he found availablefunds insufficient for the rest ofthe current fiscal year and askedcongress to appropriate $790,000,000immediately, of which $650,000,000is to be expended for recovery andrelief between February 1 and June30 when the 1937 fiscal year ends.

Frank Is Ousted FromUniversity of WisconsinP LENN FRANK, president of the

University of Wisconsin, wasremoved from office by the boardof regents of that great institution,by a vote of 8 to 7, on charges thathis administration has not beencapable and that he has been ex-travagant in personal expendituresfor which the state paid. Allegedly,Dr. Frank was ousted because Gov.Philip La Follete demanded it. Asone regent said: "He has not beenvery Progressive.” Accused of play-ing politics in this affair, the LaFollete group replied that there isno politics in their attitude in thesense of political party affiliationsor convictions, but that they havebeen extremely patient with Dr.Frank over a period of years, andthat he has shown himself incom-petent in many ways.

Neutrality ResolutionApplied to Spain’s War'T'HE senate and house met the

day before the President ad-dressed them and organized, withMr. Garner of course as presidentof the former, and ■HpgSBMHSpeaker Bankhead K” %again ruling over Wi ,the lower chamber.The one matter of |interest in this pro- jAMrJEpHceeding was the se- ’■lection of Sam Ray- BL, <

burn of Texas asmajority leader of

Connor of New Yorkin the caucus, hav- „

.

ing the potent back- ying of Vice President Garner andpresumably of Mr. Roosevelt. Ofthe total of 16 new senators onlytwo were absent, Clyde L. Herringof lowa and William H. Smathersof New Jersey, both Democrats.Two new Republican senators weresworn in, H. Styles Bridges of NewHampshire and Henry Cabot Lodgeof Massachusetts.

Immediately after the President’saddress had been delivered on Wed-nesday, both house and senate hur-ried with the neutrality resolutionapplying specifically to the civil warin Spain. The senate adopted itquickly by unanimous vote, butthere were parliamentary delays inthe house, and meanwhile thefreighter Mar Cantabrico managedto get away from New York withRobert Cuse’s cargo of airplanes

Maritime Commission toDispose of ShipsA NNOUNCEMENT is made by

the United States Maritimecommission that it will dispose offour shipping lines by June 29 next.They now operate 36 vessels in di-rect competition with private Amer-ican shipping.

The lines and the routes theyserve are: Cosmopolitan ShippingCompany, Inc., operating the Amer-ican France line serving Frenchports; the Southgate-Nelsin Corpo-ration operating the AmericanHampton Roads—Yankee and Ori-ole lines serving Germany and theUnited Kingdom; the RooseveltSteamship Company, Inc., operat-ing the American pioneer line serv-ing Australia, India and the fareast, and C. H. Sprague & Son, Inc.,operating the American Republicsline serving the east coast of SouthAmerica.

Landon to Build CountryHome Near TopekaALF M. LANDON retired from

public office, turning over thegovernorship of Kansas to WalterA. Huxman, a Democrat. He letit be known that he had purchasedtwo suburban tracts totaling 160acres west of Topeka and will buildthere a house of colonial type wherehe and Mrs. Landon and their chil-dren will reside. Until the placeis completed they will make theirhome with Mrs. Landon’s mother,Mrs. S. E. Cobb, in Topeka.

Program for Recoveryof Brookings InstituteIN ONE of its periodic analyses of* the economic situation the Brook-ings institute, non-partisan researchfoundation, summarizes proposalsfor "a consistent program of fur-ther recovery,” the seven points ofwhich are, briefly:

Re-establishment of a balancedfederal budget.

Continuance of the present policyof maintaining a fixed price of . goldand the establishment through in-ternational co-operation of a systemof stable foreign exchange.

Extension of the reciprocal tradeagreements "as the most practicalmeans of reducing artificial barriersto commerce and reopening thechannels of international trade.”

Preservation of the "generallyfavorable ratio of prices and wagerates.”

Maintenance of prevailing hoursof labor “as the only means ofmeeting the production require-ments involved in restoring dur-ing the next few years the stand-ards of living of the laboring’ massesand promoting the economic ad-vancement of the nation as awhole.”

Elimination of private and publicindustrial practices “which tend torestrict output* or to prevent the in-crease of productive efficiency.”

"Shifting of the emphasis in agri-cultural policy from restricted out-put and rising prices to the abun-dant furnishings of the supplies ofraw materials and foodstuffs re-quired by gradually expanding mar-kets.”

c*miij.LoU

"Jhmhd aboutInternational Fourflushing.

SANTA MONICA, CALIF.—When the German troops

marched into the Rhineland,France was going to fight aboutit, but didn’t.

When the Italians moved againstEthiopia, Britain was going to in-voke force, but

WhenRussia poked Iher snoot into the l|

(Wm

Spanish mess, there W' Opßwas going to bearmed action by oth- pP ’MINIer powers, but ■- w m

When Japan began B - litfajfjto nibble again at ML jjefilMarChina, there was go- Wjding to be interven-tion but all that hap- Irvin S. Cobbened was that theLeague of Nations chirped despair-ingly and then put its head backunder its wing.

Somehow, I’m thinking of the twofellows who started fighting and,when bystanders rushed in to sep-arate them, the one who was get-ting the worst of it yelled:

“Five or six of you hang on tothat big brute. Anybody can holdme!”

• • •

Curing Temperament.A JUDGE back east rules that

this so-called artistic temper-ament is not sufficient excuse fora so-called genius to beat up hisbride.

I tried the stuff once—just once—-but the presiding judge in my casewas a lady. For years I’d beentrudging as steadily as a milkman’shorse, whereas being a practitionerof a creative profession, I said tomyself I really ought to stage sometemperament just to make the fam-ily appreciate me. So I rehearsedmy act and went downstairs onemorning and put it on. So my wifelooked at me across the breakfasttable, and said: “I know what thetrouble with you is. You’re bilious.You’ll take some calomel.”

Well, what are you going to dowhen a beautifully staged emotion-al outburst is diagnosed, not as thepromptings of a tortured soul, butas liver complaint?

You guessed it. I took the calo-mel, and, I pledge you my word,haven’t had an attack since.

• • •

The Law’s Delays.

ONCE a Massachusetts Supremecourt reversed a felony convic-

tion because the prosecution, in filingthe record, stated that the crime wascommitted “on the fifteenth day ofJune, 1855” but failed to statewhether the year was 1855 A. D.

And ever since then on quibblesalmost equally foolish—such as amisplaced comma or an upsidedown period—other high courtshave been defeating the ends ofjustice and setting at naught the de-cisions of honest juries.

Science has gone ahead, medicinehas taken enormous steps forward,but law still rides in a stage coachand hunts with a flintlock musket.Has it ever occurred to anyone thatone reason for the law’s delays isa lack of the thing called commonsense?

• • •

Dinosaur Footprints.

BACK in 1858, a college professordiscovered on a sandstone ledge

in Massachusetts a whole batch ofimbedded tracks of the dinosaur—-familiarly known to geologists asdinah, just as among its scientificfriends the great winged lizard isfrequently referred to as big liz.

At the time, the discovery createdno excitement—merely a slightshock of surprise to the old familiesupon learning there was somethinghistoric in Massachusetts antedat-ing the Mayflower. For the natur-alists figured those tracks had beenleft more than 150,000,000 years ago.And they were suffered to remainnearly eighty years more.

But here recently it develops thatparties unknown have been chisel-ing Dinah’s footprints out and totingthem off. This would seem to in-dicate either that America is get-ting dinosaur-conscious or that dino-saurleggers are operating, or both.

So if a slinky gentleman shouldcome to the side door, offering aprime specimen for the parlorwhatnot, don’t trade with him, read-er-call the police. Next time hemay come back with a dornick offof Plymouth Rock or the corner-stone of Harvard college- or thename plate from Cotton Mather’scoffin.

IRVIN S. COBB©—WNU Service.

Meaning of "H. M. S.” on Ship"H. M. S.” preceding the name of

a vessel stands for His (or Her)Majesty’s ship. The letters are usedin connection only with vessels inthe British service. Popularly “H.M. S.” is supposed to be the abbre-viation of His Majesty’s steamer,but the letters were used in thenames of British ships long beforethe commercial development of thesteamboat. "H. M. S.” is also theabbreviation of His Majesty’s Serv-ice.

MIDLAND JOURNAL, RISING SUN, MD,

HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONSN Items of Interest to the Housewife

A simple way to freshen whitewashing silk which has becomeyellow through constant washingis to add milk to the rinsing waterand allow it to soak for a fewminutes before squeezing out.

• * *

After putting water and soap in-to washing machine let it run fora minute or two to dissolve soapbefore putting in clothes, if youwish the best results.

* • •

Chilled, diced oranges mixedwith pineapple and sprinkled withcoconut make a delicious dessert.

• • •

Never put soda and water intoan enameled saucepan that hasbeen burned. Although it will re-

move the burned particles of foodit will make the pan more likelyto burn again the next time it isused. Use salt instead of soda.Fill the pan with cold water, leaveuntil the next day and then slow*ly bring to a boil.

• • *

Chairs and sofas upholstered inleather will last and retain theirappearance much longer if youapply regularly a mixture of onepart vinegar and two parts boiledlinseed oil, well shaken together.It not only cleans the leather, butsoftens it and at the same timeprevents its cracking. Apply •

little on a soft rag and polishwith a silk duster or piece ofchamois.

Calotabs Help NatureTo Throw Off a Cold

Millions have found in Calotabs amost valuable aid in the treatmentof colds. They take one or two tab-lets the fifst night and repeat thethird or fourth night if needed.

How do Calotabs help Naturethrow off a cold? First, Calotabsare one of the most thorough anddependable of all intestinal elimi-nants, thus cleansing the intestinaltract of the germ-laden mucus and

toxines. Second, Calotabs are diu-retic to the kidneys, promoting theelimination of cold poisons fromthe blood. Thus Calotabs servethe double purpose of a purgativeand diuretic, both of which areneeded in the treatment of colds.

Calotabs are quite economical;only twenty-five cents for the fam-ily package, ten cents for thetrialpackage. (Adv.)

Considering Our DutyThat which is called considering

what is our duty in a particularcase is very often nothing but en-deavoring to explain it away.—Bishop Joseph Butler.

Diversity of InterestsNo one who is deeply interested

in a large variety of subjects canremain unhappy. The real pessi-mist is the person who has lostinterest.—W. Lyon Phelps.

Sore Throat PainsDUE TO COLDS

Eased Instantlylllif \ le Cruih and tlr 3 Boyar AspirinptHI MsJf (ot>ltn In yi glass of water.

2. GARGLE thoroughly - throw (jfllL lPyour hood way back, allowing a HK fi ; ,

little to trickle down your throat. v

- 3e Rep*°t gargle and do not rinsemouth, allow gargle to remain onmembranes of the throat for pr^

Just Gargle This Waywith Bayer Aspirin

Here is the most approve it. And you will sayf amaz‘ng way to ease it is marvelous.

the pains of rawness Get the real BAYER ASPI-of sore throat result- RIN at your druggist’s by ask-ing from a cold we ing for it by its full name

know you have ever tried. not by the name “aspirin"Crush and dissolve three alone,

genuine BAYER ASPIRIN m*tablets in one-third glass of I "I"pop a dozenwater. Then gargle with thismixture twice, holding your 2 FULL DOZEN FOR 25*head well back. Virtually lea tabletThis medicinal gargle willact almost like a local anes-thetic on the sore, irritated /membrane of your throat. Paineases almost instantly; rawness ///}

Countless thousands now use /this way to ease sore throat. /Your doctor, we are sure, will A

JMEFICULT DECISIONS By GLUYAS WILUAMS

IT A

&• jf-

WONPERIN6, when your father,who hasWARNED VOO WHAT WILL HAPPEN IF HE EVER CATCHES

M3U COASTIN6 ON BREAKNECK HILL, UNEXPECTEDLYAPPEARS AT THE CORNER, WHETHER TO UPSET

IN A SNOW BANK OR WHETHER YOUCAN 60 BY HIM FAST EKOUSH SO HE

WONT RECO6NIZE YOU6untAaKwn>