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%%p^ r ORT COVINGTON SUN VOL. LI. FT. COVINGTON, N. Y.. THURSDAY, JUNE 6. 1935. NO. 7. News Review of Current Events the World Over Supreme Court Kills NRA and Farm Mortgage Mora- torium Act—New Dealers^ Congress and Business Uncertain About Future Action. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Chief Justice Hughes *~pHREE unanimous decisions of the ; -•• Supreme Court of the United States ' shook the New Deal to its very foun- ' dations. In the first and most im- portant, read by Chief Justice Hughes, the heart was cut out of the NRA, for the court ruled that the entire code structure of the act was invalid, the code making provi- sions being an uncon- stitutional delegation by congress of its au- thority to legislate to persons not connected with the government's legislative functions. By the ruling the exercise -of con- gressional powers over commerce was definitely restricted to interstate com- merce, or to such activities as have a provable direct connection with inter- state commerce. The court held that no economic emergency could justify the breaking down of the limitations upon federal authority as prescribed by the Constitution or of those powers reserved to the state through the fail- ure of the Constitution to place them elsewhere. Next in importance was the declsioo read by Justice Brandeis, holding un- constitutional the Frazier-Lemke farm mortgage moratorium act. This law provided for a five year moratorium in the case of collapse of efforts to scale down a farmer's debts to a figure that would enable him to pay off his mort- gage. The court held that under the Fifth amendment to the Constitution private property could not be taken without just compensation. There has been no previous instance, the court said, where a mortgage was forced to relinquish property to a mortgagor free of lien unless the debt was paid in full. In the third decision President .Roosevelt's dismissal of the late Wil- liam E. Humphrey from the federal trade commission was held illegal be- cause the President did not remove Mr. Humphrey for the statutory grounds of inefficiency, neglect of -duty or malfeasance in office, but, as the President stated, because their minds did not meet upon the policies or administration of the commission. The court held that trade commission- ers' terms are fixed by law. T HERE was consternation and con- fusion among the administration forces in Washington, and no one could •say immediately just how much the New Deal had been damaged or what •could be done to repair the damage to its structure. Donald Richberg, chair- man of the national Industrial recov- ery board, after a White House con- ference, issued a statement saying that •''all methods of compulsory enforce- ment of the codes will be immediately •suspended. The question of the constitutionality •of the Wagner labor disputes bill, passed by the senate, was raised by the NRA decision. The opinion was widely expressed that collective bar- gaining now cannot be enforced in any business enterprise by federal statute, In the senate demands were voiced to recommit to the committee on agri- culture the amendments strengthening the AAA. Senator W. E. Borah said that the NRA decision clearly raises the question of the Yalidity of much .AAA procedure. B USINESS was as confused as con- gress and the administration after the killing of NRA. Heads of many large employing corporations intimat- ed they would not make wage reduc- tions or lengthen the work hours jusf (because the way was open for such ac- tion, but always there was the qual ifying statement, \It depends on whai •our competitors do.\ The big concerns would prefer to maintain the cod< ihours and wages, but the smaller met*, •chants and manufacturers, who were hardest hit by the code requirements, might depart from them enough to de- moralize prices. Among the dozens of national trade associations whose officers urged mem- ibers to maintain wages and otherwise to continue the status quo are those of the automobile manufacturers, auto- mobile dealers, chemical industry, re- tail dry goods dealers, cotton manufac- turers, cement makers, oil industry, \wholesale grocers, and grocery chain «tore distributors. Harper Sibley, recently elected presl •dent of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, called upon Amerl can industry and business men to pre- serve for the present wages and work hours established under the NRA. Instead of cutting wages Standan Oil company of New Jersey and th< Tide Witter Oil company announced ai increase of f> per cent In salaries am •wages, effective June 1. The United Textile Workers, 350.00C in number, threaten to strike if an; mills cut wages. And there Is also i chance that 450,000 bituminous coa miners will go on strike because there is no wage agreement with the oper- utors and a scale conference collapsed. The liquor business was throw! wide open without any federal regula- h T tio p xcept that exerted by the Treas- nioi try department In the collection of axes. Officials of the federal alcohol ontrol administration said that the Supreme court's NRA ruling took vay from the FACA every Iota of •ntrol it had over the distilling busi aess. A CTING with surprising suddenness, the senate passed the Copeland 'ugwell food, drug and cosmetic bill, which had been modified to meet the 'bjections of Senators Clark, Bailey nd Vandenberg. Dr. Copeiand said he lelieved it would get through the house i-ithout difficulty. President Roosevelt 'avors the measure. The bill greatly increases the scope ! the 1906 food and drug act, in the lefinitions of adulterated or misbrand ?d articles, and provides penalties of a •ear in jail or a $1,000 fine for viola- ;ions. It was designed originally to permit he secretary of agriculture to order wholesale seizures, which would per- ait the destruction of a business, if ie deemed the articles in questi dulterated. As amended, however, inly a single article may be seized sending a court hearing. Exceptions may be made if there is \imminent langer\ to public health. Originally, ajso, the bill provided se- •ere penalties for publishers and radio iroadcasting companies, as well as ad 'ertisers, for violations of regulations :o be laid down by the r>\i>artment of Agriculture. This was ch.mged so that no publisher, radio broa [casting com pany, advertising agenc\\. or other me- dium for the dissemination of adver- ising may be deemed to have violated :he \false advertising' 1 provisions un- less they refuse to furnish the name and address of the advertiser. F RANK C. WALKER'S present job as head of the division of allot- ments and information in connection with the work-relief program is not so important as had been expected, and proba- bly by the end of the year or earlier he will be able to delegate his duties to others. Then, according to current rumors, he will enter the President's cabinet as postmaster general, !o succeed Jim Farley Mr. Farley has defi- nitely decided to re- tire from the cabinet —voluntarily. It Is said —so that he can devote all his time and energy to directing the campaign of Mr. Roosevelt for renoniinntion and re-election. He expects to remain not only as chairman of the national Dem- ocratic committee but also as chair man of the New York state committee. In order that he may have an Income he plans to make a business connec- tion with an important organization. There has been a lot of talk about Mr. Farley's alleged ambition to be gov- ernor of New York. Melvin C. Eaton, Republican state chairman, dares him to run for that position. LjAWAn was treated to a magnifl- ^ •* cent display of American naval power in the Pacific that continued through two days. First the forty planes that had taken part in the mid- Pacific maneuvers returned and the entire armada of 225 planes participat- ed in an aerial review. Then the ^ sels of the fleet returned and moved to Pearl Harbor, the great naval base, which they all entered In a crucial test of the harbor's capacity as an an- chorage. The navy's largest subma- rines were with the battleships and cruisers, and there were 700 marines on the target ship Utah. Navy Memorial day in Japan, the thirtieth anniversary of Admiral Togo's destruction of the Russian fleet, brought forth a pamphlet from the navy's propaganda bureau which made significant allusions to the United States. It said: \Then Russia was the rival and the danger. Today that is changed. We j have had to face in another direction. We are confronting another great sea power which is increasing its navy with Japan as the target. \We need a navy sufficient to pro- tect our sea routes to the continent of Asia and to face the menace in the direction of the great ocean. That is why Japan demands parity with the greatest navies. If Japan's just and reasonable demands are rejected by the powers, causing failure of the ef- forts to reach a new naval agreement and leading to a naval construction race, the responsibility will not be ours. In such ouse the only thing for Japan to do Is to resort to resolute measures for self-protection^' T HOUGH the League of Nations council ended its session in Geneva with the hope that it had arranged matters so that war between Italy and Ethiopia would be averted, the prospects for such a settlement are ngt bright Under pressure from Great Britain and France, \BRISBANE THIS WEEK , \See America First\ Now More Than Just a Slogan T\T TELL, \ \ I Smiths W their i O NLY nir West w ne states of the Central ill send delegates to the \Grass Roots\ convention of the Re- publican party which opens June 10 In Springfield, 111., but the meeting will never- theless be rather na- tional In scope, for it will be attended by unofficial delegates from other states and by national leaders of the party. It was be- lieved that Harrison E. Spangler, national committeeman from Iowa, would be mad© temporary chairman A. M. Hyde and as such would deliver the key- note address. Others on the tenta- tive program for speeches are Arthur M. Hyde, former governor of Missouri and secretary of agriculture in the Hoover cabinet, and Edward Hayes of Decatuc, 111., former national com- mander of the American Legion. The keynote address, according to reports, will take Inventory of Ameri- can affairs under the Roosevelt New Deal and indicate the trend of the party In opposition. Mr. Hyde is to talk on the Great Emancipator at the Lincoln tomb in Oak Ridge cemetery, and Hayes is expected to deal with the theories of the Republican parts on constitutional government. A DOLF HITLER has proposed thai Germany, Great Britain, France, Italy and Belgium enter into a mul tllateral western European pact against aerial aggression. It follows the lines of the proposed Anglo-French air pact and would do for the nations named what the Locarno pact does with the land forces for France, Ger- many and Belgium. K ELLY PETILLO of California won the 500-mile auto race at the IndinnaiKJllB Speedway, setting a nei record with an average speed of 10S.24 miles an^hour. Clay Weatherly of Cincinnati y>st control of his car and was killed. By WILLIAM C. UTLEY well, well. So the :hs are going to spend vacation in Europe this summer! Well! Be right in the swing of things, won't they! As a matter of fact, the Smiths won't For these last two or three years the swing of things has been definitely away from setting Europe MussoHniToWntedTo ': »*,* f° al _ f ° r _ J a f_ at ^ ? a _ v _! L ._ S _ te . a ™; I recognize the league's | jurisdiction over the \ quarrel and agreed to =* arbitration. But imme- \ diately thereafter II Duce told the cham- ber of deputies in Rome he would not allow Germany to make of Ethiopia ship lines and travel bureaus report a steady decline in tourist bookings for the last few summers. There are several reasons for this.. One of them is that the average pock- I etbook is decidedly slimmer than it | was a few years back. The others : don't count—except for one. That is ; the fact that Americans are beginning, 'a pistol perennially pointed at us in \ it seems, to discover that the good old .'ase of trouble in Europe\ and assert- • U. S. A. has appeal, scenery and trav- ed he was ready to take the supreme el interest in an abundance that the responsibility to sustain by every ; vacationer can find in no other land means Italy's position in east Africa, j on earth. He alluded bitterly to Britain and ! There was a popular song a few France, and indicated that he believed hat Ethiopia was perfecting Its army with the help of European powers nimical to Italv. Following this address, Mussolini ordered the mobilization of thousands years back that got the idea over as well as anything could: \You'll find your castles in Spain through your window pane, back in your own back yard . . .\ That's almost literally true. Just .f officers and technical experts of the j ^^ n ^ t ^ t \ vo ~ u a 7 e siting there class of 1912, , {jreamjng aDO ut far-off Spain, famed ; for Its sunny skies, brilliant after- S AN DIEGO'S beautiful world's fair, | noons, gay, starlit evenings and white the California Pacific exposition, ' was thrown open to the public practi- cally completed. Thousands of visi- tors moved along the ancient El Cam- j agine. Like a metropolis of Old Spain ino Real to Balboa park on the open- j itself Is the southern California city ng day and viewed with delight the i where millions will probably visit on their vacations this summer. It is San Diego, home of America's 1035 position. Here, on the bay discovered President Roosevelt addressed the by Cabrillo in 1542 is a setting that towers glistening under merry red roofs. It's not so far off as you might im- g handsome buildings and interesting exhibits. The climax of the opening ceremonies came in the evening when throng hy radio from his study in the White House. today resembles the explorer's native , land; here are the azure skies, the I white buildings and the red roofs. It J APAN, ready to take control over | is Spain of the renaissance, yet the more Chinese territory, delivered | travel comforts are those of modern to the government at Nanking an ul- ! United States. g timatum charging that Dictator Chiang Y Hh Much of southern California is like Kai-shek, as well as Gen. Yu Hsueh- i this. The bountiful country, spotted chung, chairman of Hopei province ' profusely with orange groves and and commander of Chinese troops In i sloping vineyards, guarded by snow- north China, were directly responsible ! capped mountain peaks, is sprinkled for a long list of alleged infractions with old Spanish missions, lovely In >f the Tangku truce signed May 31, architecture and rich in tradition, 1933, marking the conclusion of the Sino-Japanese hostilities over Man- churia. Dispatches from Tokyo said Japa- nese officials admitted plans had been often built 300 years or more ago. The climate concedes nothing to the Mediterranean summer. Yet eleven days or more of two-weeks' vacation may be spent In this happy land, no made to Include Peiping and Tientsin | matter where you live in America, within the demilitarized zone, which at present lies north of the two cities. Threats were made to bomb and oc- cupy both those cities. desperately to -are the P Offers Many Attractions, California, like any other vacation I spot of the United States, offers the i visitor attractions that are distinctly | American, In addition to the glamour of European atmosphere. •franc and prevent inflation, Pre- f,\ u lu '\' v ' —•\*•- ^ mier Flandin of France staked every- \ Ther / i s Hollywood with its endless thing on a demand that he be given \° nder f o f the m ° st ^mating Of all dictatorial financial powers until the ; l ?*\ 8t J Ie * and the ever-present poe- end of the vear, and lost The cham- i 8lblht * that *°» ma * run lnt o Clark ber of deputies voted against him, 353 I «f le ° r o Joa u Crawford face to face, to 202, after a dramatic debate, and I J here »» ^ F ™ n t cl8c ? Wlt h it S W f * Flandin and his cabinet Immediately i famed t Golde n Gate = j here are nation ; resigned. M. Fernand Boulsson, who ! a l *>f ks ^\-passe d in beauty and was committed to the support of the ! grandeur the world over, and count- ,, a __ ^ Y^ m o n oro l les s P^nts of interest interspersed. franc, was called on to form a new government. Visiting California, you may pass through other glories of the West—Ari zona, Colorado, New Mexico. Where D R. ALAN ROY DAFOE, Judge J. i a Spa , n wll , vo u nm| ., ,, ;linte d A. Valin and Minister of Welfare i DesPr t a Garden or tl»- <;,.,N a Y David Croll of Ontario, guardians un- , der the king of the DIonne quintuplets, i put on a party for those famous babies ' were on their first birthday, and there was | tne E ng u S h co a great crowd of visitors in the little | i n man * y parts town of Callender. But Mr. and Mrs. Or let's say it was Kuu'lnud yoi thinking about. The charm o ntryside you will tin* of the New Englan< states. On a Vermont hillside Dionne, resentful because the infants j may stop fo r lunch or fo r a da v have been removed from their charge ; tw0 o f rest and recreation in a qualm and home to a special hospital across ! oM English lnn . I n Boston, Maine, the street, refused to attend the fes- ; New Hampshire and Connecticut you tlvltles. The five little girls, who are ; mlKh t wel l ltua g ln e you were on the in good health and growing rapidly, t Brltlsh Isles . Tlier e is a section of were displayed briefly and were per- j tne Malne nU! s wnicn lm s bee n cane d raltted to crow or cry into the radio j the Sc otland of America; It is sal' microphone, : t 0 resemWe tne home o f t , l e kii { an . | the bagpipe more than any other phic C ARLOS MENDIBTA, president of j on earth. Leaving New England, you Cuba, has announced that he will may return home through the Irish not be a candidate next winter to sue- hills in southern Michigan, whoso ceed himself. Therefore the race is slopes and lakes are ivininisoont •*' expected to narrow down to Miguel the \ould sod.\ Mariano Gomez, twice mayor of lla You'll find (Jormauy tn sovora vnna, and Mario G. Menoenl. former places on the United States map. Takt' president of the Island ropuMlc & moonlight trip down the Hudson river some evening. All you need I; :he deck orchestra playing \Zwei Hertzen im Drei Vertel Tacht\ and it will be as easy as apple strudel to image you are floating down the Rhine, especially as you pass the \castles\ 3f the United States military academy at West Point. If you're looking less \or romance and more for recupera- :ion, such as you might find in the >aths at Baden-Baden, why there are Hot Springs in. Arkansas, French Lick Indiana, Waukesha in Wisconsin and numerous other spas that rank with Europe's finest; you can find the romance there, too, if you want it. Or perhaps it's the weather you're worrying about. Sweltering in a tuffy office or shop, or toiling in the ieids with the torrid summer sun beating down, more than often gives nspiration to fanciful revels in fields )f snow, skiing down a mountain side or watching your breath dart forth in iittle puffs of steam as you sigh re- lief in getting away from the heat of July and August. Where? At St. Moritz, famed cooling-off place of the Swiss Alps? Forget the Alps. Forget about the Swiss Alps. The Pacific Northwest is calling 3 Rainier and Glacier National parks, Mount Baker and other snow-capped peaks beckon with promise of cool, clear weather and scenery not even surpassed In the Alps, Paradise val- ley in Rainier National park is one of the world's greatest winter sport cen- ters, and the real winter season lasts well through June. Even after that you will find plenty of snow in the icinity, for the giant glacier areas haven't yet wilted under the summer un. Don't worry about missing the sights of the Riviera. When you see them you will be likely to deprecate them anyway, for it is almost bound to strike you that you've got something like this back home, only better. That's one objection Europeans gener- ally find to American visitors. They just can't help bragging about some- thing bigger and better back home. What the average European doesn't realize is that it's the truth. Summer along Lake Michigan brings the vacationer the climate of the Riviera, (Have you ever stopped to realize that Lake Michigan is just as far south as Riviera?) The long stretches of white beach, wide ex- panses of blue sky and water, tree- crowned bluffs along the shore line have a charm and beauty that is en- enjoyed by hordes year after year. Swimming, fishing, summer sports and opportunity for relaxation are ever- present; so are the amusement gaieties of the resort world, such as dancing and cabaret entertainment. Educational and historical relics, monuments and atmosphere are pai of the magnet that used to draw American tourists to Europe. It i; true that Europe's attractions are dis- tinctly Its own In this respect. By the same token It is also true that Amer- ica has tradition and historical educa tion possibilities that are certainly in dividual. The American tourist ha; too often overlooked the lore of old- time battlefields and spots consecrat- ed by the blood of his ancestors righ here at home. Historical Trips. The South is replete with such at- tractions qf a more serious nature. S< is New England and so are many part: of the Middle West. There are many tour arrangements that plan complete historical trips for the vacationer, sandwiching In enough sport and en- tertainment to afford hiai suttieienf divertissement from his everyday la- bors and keep him from going stale. Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia, Vir giuia, Mississippi and other southen states have preserved many of the most historic buildings and battlefield: of the Civil war. Xo American's edu cation is complete if he has soaunyd the countryside from the crest of Lookout mountain, spent few moments in reverie at the sites of the IviitUos or Chattanooga, Chicka- mnuga and the Shenandonh. AiuUvw Jackson's home, the scene of Sher- man's march to the sea and the sitos of sopie of the great Confederate vic- tories should not be overlooked. Goodby, NRA Wall Street's Dormo 1 Good Wages, Short ] Lottery Swindles The Supreme court uflj I clares NRA unconstitutic High lodges, whose decision no- body ca n veto, short of a constitu- tional amendment, say congress must do its work and cannot abdicate in favor of the Chief Executive. The most impor- tant decision in many years, this probably makes further argument about extension of NRA unnecessary. You can't extend , . i that whlcfh is dead. American busi- iortherners will be interested in tte [ ness tfft'feiay now resume business ight of cotton growing and fascinat- j id by the charm of southern hospital- :y, just as southerners are interested :n the vast wheat fields, the great in- yustries and the summer recreational ossibilities of the North. No trip through the South should 'verlook the most beautiful capital f the kindly light of profes- il>tpers. Atlfee's puzzlett Dormouse, at the Ma*d^Hj*tter's tea party, could not un- his watch, that would not although the Dormouse did ey«r>t*ing. He dipped the watch in ity in the world. Washington, D. C, | bis.teai put butter in the works. \It if it is not that already, is certainly j was the 4 best butter,\ he said, \but lestined to become that. It is con- ! nothing-.seems to please it.\ :idered the most Important capital in The stoc k e5enanK e i s something like :he world, and it is surely the busiest tha t watch—nothing seems to please it, t the present time. It offers interest- ; either, ng side trips to the home of George Washington, that of Thomas Jeffer- son and others who were the founda- ion rocks of our nation. For the seeker after the night life of 'aris and Vienna, America has two ities whose bright white lights are 'amed to the ends of the earth for the At first, stock broker gentlemen, whose \Kaaba stone\ Is the stock tick- er, began a weird dance of joy when they heard that NRA was dead, and pushed up stock prices. Then, suddenly, as the day wore on, y , one broker asked another, and every bk kd gfty ana _en t «,ey represent. | ^ '££ Z T 'JKT'iS? The cabaret and show worlds of New ; s York and Chicago can give you every- :hing that a European metropolis can. Besides, to occupy your time when the sun is still in the sky you will find matchless beaches, race tracks, major league baseball parks, endless boule- r ard drives and, especially in Chicago, j And then they put the prices down. It is announced, but not by Mr. Green, head of the American Federation of Labor, that a great strike will be called in protest against the Supreme court's NRA decision. Mr. Green is too wise to permit, if he can prevent \t, a strike park^areas that^are the envy °f£ll ot&- j agains'Tthe \unTted\state L s l \'snpreme court _ He ma ^ shoui^ an( j probably will, take a wiser course and work, cities. Broadway and Michigan j avenue are more than a match for j Montmartre and the Rue de Paris. j as organized labor has worked success- These things that we have been talk- j f Ully fo r generations, to improve work- ng about are for the larger part vaea- i £ ng conditions tion attractions in America that are j gome on i comparable with those in Europe. But ; hmrs ^ othe r COD(lition s , B ve< ; the United States has more and more | i n fte o W are more £ -. which Europe can never pretend. ; increase d pay ba , ed 0Q poiItica l - fiat Most important of these are the na- | it i s necessary for some one to pro- tional parks, which were host to near- j vide as well as for some one to take i t ly 4,000,000 persons last year and will \ probably be visited by an even greater j Peddlers of tickets in the Havana number during the tourist season of lottery send out \come-on\ letters, try- 1935. ing to sell tickets to foolish Americans. America has its own \Mediterranean\ On one such letter this is printed: coast, you know. The palms and ; \Arthur Brisbane says large sums of beaches along the Gulf of Mexico are money ... are won by Americans visited by throngs in the summer as | buying foreign tickets.\ visited by thg | well as in the winter. Florida's climate ! and vacation attractions might be com- pared to those of southern Italy. New ; Old F What Arthur Brisbane has said, and now repeats, is that through foreign lottery schemes Americans are swin- Orleans is a piece of Old France, even i dle d*ourof large sums\\ He\ who\in- to the dress and habits of many of its | vest s i n a Mtery throws away hi g people. : money, adding foolishness to incapa- Great Scenic Parks. , city. The Havana lottery is as much Outstanding of all these national ; of a trap for fools as any other lot- parks is the Grand canyon of the Col- ! tery. orado river. There is nothing like it ! _nywhere else on this earth, at least j Postmaster Farley's plan to hasten This fearful panorama of nature at air mails allows a crowd of 10,000 to its wildest, most awesome and at the ; see a whirling autogiro drop dowu on same time most beautiful is a sight to remember for the rest of your life. Some of the other national parks have sights to see that are nearly as j the roof and deliver mail, another au- togiro coming to get mail bags and car- ry them away. Mr. Farley's plan is to have the au- grand, but in a different way. There togiro fly between outlying flying fields, is Sequoia, in California, with the old- where high-power, fast planes land, est living things in the world, the and carry mail bags to the roofs of giant trees, whole forests of them, cit y P° s t offices, saving time lost ID which tower above as high as the sky- slo w street travel. V-*. „*«»,-.. — ^ ne Dranc n o f the Standard Oil con> parks'\and B one oVTbV'most popular* j P an J» K tte , r Ne ^ J ^ reey b I anc |!'^ an I scrapers of our metropolises. Yel- lowstone is the oldest of our national with its Old Faithful Geyser and its Mr - Teagle, notifies 6.000 of with its Old Faithful Geyser and its i other natural wonders. The Yosemite I a bonos o f 5 P e r cen t added t o their j P aV envelopes to meet the highe cost osemite I aterfall in the j P a - V envelopes to meet the higher cost with the greatest world draws its share of the summer thousands. w _ t h ^ gigQ p f gmob e flame> cratef Other national parks, some of which _ nothing t 0 indicat e an exrinc t TOl . may be included in your summer tour, cano _ a uew and liv e vo!can o sad . are Lafayette, in Maine; Glacier, in denl y be£rin s eruption in an out-of-the- Montana; Rocky mountain, in Colo- wav place i n Iceland. A great hole rado; Rainier, in Washington; Crater , appears in the earth, flames and red- lake, in Oregon; Lassen volcano, in ho t ]av a rise> No overflowing of General Grant, in the California; General Grant, in glorious Sierra Nevada range of Call- : y? hat WO uld Datives fornia; Mesa Verde, in Colorado; Platt ^ad and Hot Springs, in Arkansas; Sully's hill, in North Dakota, and Wind Cave, in South Dakota. Our national parks contain good ho- tels, where tine meals are served and where prices are adjustable to almost, Postmaster General Farlev thinks of any pocketbook. They get us out of printing o n aI 1 postage st a ^ gur . doors in summer, when we need a re-; mm Corda % which mMng .. Lift up youp hearts.\ He neighboring farms as yet. have thought this happened in earlier days, when everybody believed that hell, the devil and all his wickedness were just beneath our feet and heaven just- ove r our heads? lief from the year's work, and let us follow their delightful trails through gigantic laboratories of nature. They give us a true picture of what our fore- bears had to conquer when they first explored this land and built upon It the nation which we like to think is a good deal better in which to live than any other on earth. sees a great summer ahead, \a summer of content.\ , \Car loadings.\ says the postmaster , general \are up,\ incomes re^xirted by our taxpayers \are up,'' '\more people ! are buying automobiles than before,\ For some, the hig news is that Little, the San Francisco golfer, has defeated There Is little that the European va- Doctor Tweddell t m Britis h chal . cation can offer us that we cannot , duplicate here in our own country. v And the difference in expense, it is For othw ' ^ « m P'^™t **** * needless to say, is tremendous. Rail- the ^» in ? *f SuO^'Jjjjesc by Japanese troops- The 300 killed are said to especially the western railroads, as well as other travel medin, have pre- pared tour programs this year which most of us can afford, and have re- duced regular rates for the summer months. It's easier than ever this year to \see America first.\ © Western Newspaper Union, p have been professions! bamiit?. The Silling of 300 armed Chinese bandits cost the -4ives of only sis Japanese, which 5011 mis like efficiency. e. Km* Features Svn-Ucate. Inc.