{ title: 'Lackawanna herald. (Lackawanna, N.Y.) 193?-19??, December 14, 1933, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-12-14/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-12-14/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-12-14/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071107/1933-12-14/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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$i‘Z3,‘-i\‘:':'~ 5 Qty V. ‘ ‘M1 41,-‘. If ;T__: 5;i.v '!'L,,_w DEAIFE came _'Ii1dd'enly ‘to Alena‘-.: “def Legge, gm-es,ide‘nt_ of the Inter-1 -national Hurvesfef gompany and one= ot ‘«the ‘country's’ ‘leading ‘industrialists; In his s’u‘b‘iu-ba._n home‘ néar ‘Ghlcagog He was almost a‘!'x-ty-eight years of ‘age, and apparently zlmd been an goodl‘ -henltli. = News Review of Events World ‘Over -PRO}_l|BlTl0N' ERA‘ %coMEs TO AN END slit CECIL ~H“uRs‘I\ .Stefqn;s9n (Tell: (if Conditions ‘in Arctic Vtlhjalmur ;Stet;mssou is a; gxfeat Arctic. ‘explorer, rbut an exceedingly modést one. He al_ways.= disclaim; hem: I ‘hem or ‘ha ‘undergone rai1y'é\xtxaoI'jd!n‘ar»y -hatdshfps, in ..the A.\.~i:t;<j:‘ ’reg_,loi1,3.. ».8BS’~8 the Scleh vA ! Repeal ‘Is IPrqclaimed' and Liquor ‘Frlom._— National Prohibition Passes Out and Foreign. Liquor C;oines In——.Johnson Put in Control of Codesé Will Budget Director Douglas Resign? Mr. Legge was the - .chnlrm:_m of: the federal turn‘: board. under Pres’!-‘ dent Hoover, ggvlng up ‘his 5100.000‘ post with the Harvester company in; the summer -at 1929 to accept the $12.-I 000-‘u-‘year government posltlon. For 20 months he apvotea1ximse1:.co mm relief experiments, mtandlng his ground ; In the (ice 0.! wldespread crltlclsm.‘ Then he resigned‘ ind returned to his ‘ former plmc_e._ ‘- By the gm of 8400.000 some time; ‘prior ‘to his death and of $500;000 in- hls wlll, Mr. Legge brought to ‘com-‘ pletlon months of work to perfect ai phllanthroplc organlzatlon -to ‘be known j on the Ffarmhonudhtlon, it was made , known by Frank 0. Lowden. lormer governor of nlinoxs, and chairman of the foundation; } Wasiiington prohibition era -in the United States history is cloned. It ‘had =exist_éd' 101- tom-‘teen ‘yea.I-8.; iive monthsand days and itsiendj ‘came when a convention :0! Utah -deie- gates made their commonwealth the‘ -thirty-sixth -in the Union to ratify the’, Twenty- amendment. ‘ This amendment. submitted to the? states Iiast February 20* by the last “lame duck” congress in ‘the =nntion'sj »histoi\y! was rati in the near-record ‘time or nine months and «sixteen days. Lowering of bars to importation off liquor was completed when the tem-‘ pomry ‘import committee -assigned quotnsund issued permits to importing \ It was’ estimated the initial quotas aggregated ‘between 4.000,000' and ’5;000;000 gallons of hard liquors and wines. , Mr. ‘Stetunsson ‘is ‘definitely oi,‘ the opinion that with :1):-ope1‘~pi-ecnutioni and pi-epai-iitions life in -the Arctic may \he reizftively pleasant. and. '-ting within the Arctic circle perfectly pouible. _ At a lecture which ‘the v‘expi_qrejr de- iiv'er_ed_ lbefore the, American society 'or,Mecha‘n_icai Engineers, 1_\ir.‘Stet- ‘nnsson toolgpnins to explode certain -erroneous ideas which ‘have appar- ently ‘been ‘handed down to us from the ancient Greeks.- The notion is prevalent that for at least. half the _year the Arctic regions are in «lurks ness. As}: matter or fact, for two- -thirds of theryezlr the ‘sun -never sets at the, North pole, and it is on1‘y-dur'- ing one-third. or the year that »there is night. What is more, ‘snow and ice are such perfect reflectors of light. that -there is never. at the North'pqlo, the ‘absolute darkness which may ‘prevail at the ‘equator. Another-.populnr Taliacy is that the maximum ‘of’ extreme cold is taunt! at the North pole; the maximum de- gree ot-cold has actually been found and recorded in the province of Yn- kutsk in Siberia (1,100 miles from the North pole), where a tempera- ture of 93- degrees below zero, Fah- renheit. has been found. By EDWARD PEKARD NATIONAL prohibition went into ‘ the discard -on December 5. State- eonyentlons» in Pennsylvania. Ohio and Utah rati the repeal,amendment on that day. making the necessary thirty- six, and immediately on being notitled by telegraph, President Roosevelt: and Acting Secretary '0! State William Phillips is- sued proclamations that the Eighteenth amendment west at no longer a part not the Constitution. In twen- ‘~’°'°Ph‘H' ty-four ot the forty- °h°“°\\\' eight states the manu- facture and ‘sale of liquor now is or soon will be legal. '1‘he state laws un- der which it can be sold vary from those providing \wide open\ saloons in Nevada to a strict system of -dis- pensing hard liquor in Montana only‘ through state-owned stores, one in every ‘county. Most widely enacted‘ of the laws is one providing for serving or ‘hard liquor only with «meals. Governmental agencies in Washing- ton were swamped with preparatory measures to deal with the importation oi.’ foreign liquors, many huge cargoes of which were waiting for entry; and with the federal restrictions neces- sary to protect the states that remain dry. Joseph H. Choate, Jr.. of New York, son of the famous lawyer and statesman, had been appointed direc- tor of the federal alcohol control ad- ministration. and he arrived, In the capital. to take ~hp his duties. ‘Mr. Chonte halted the issuance of import permits until a few -hours before re- peal became an accomplished tactrand in the meantime omclalschecked the standing of importers and worked out quotas for\ foreign coun- tries. -:. - - cents a bushel for each bushel the farmer agrees to withhold from pro- duction In 1934. The payment will be based ‘on the. average yleld of the contracted acreage ‘during the LDTQVIOUS period. One-half the payment wlll» be made to the farmer as soon- aa his contract has ‘been approved. the other halt when he has ful the terms -of the agreement. In return for the farmers‘ agree- ment to curtail hog‘ production the government will pay $5 ahead on 75 per ‘cent ‘or the‘ average number \of hogs marketed’ or to be marketed: from litters rarrowed by the producers’ sows la the last two years. In developing his project, whose funds and activities will be devoted to the Improvement or “the social, cul- tural nnd economic conditions of rural ii1'e.\vMr. Lowden disclosed. Mr. Legge enlisted as trustees a group of twenty rlndustriniists. educators, capitalists and farm lender-g from all parts of the country. The end of ‘the nation’«s_ experiment \ wtlh prohibition was ot ,pro- claimed -by Actlng Secretary of. State Phllllps after ‘Utah became the thlrty- sixth state to mtifsf the Twenty~ repeal amendment. _ 5 Sir Gecll ‘Hur§t of Great Brltnlu is the newly leleetedwpresldentrot the Per- manent Count‘ for International Justice at The -Hague. Holland. He will hold the olllce for two years. Pnnsmnmr Roosnvnur returned from his two. weeks in Warm Springs and plunged at once into the work or solving the various problems confronting his administra- tion. Most immediate of these was the re of government obliga- tions amounting to about $727,000,000 maturing the middle of the month. This /matter was easily ‘and speedily settled when an entire block of $950,- 000,000 of treasury certi was sold in one day. El‘-he fact that it was heavily -oversubscribed was considered in administration circles to be a marked victory tor the New Deal eco- nomics. There was‘ no cessation ot the con- troversy over the Ilresidentis monetary policy and thearguments on both sides grew more bitter. though Mr. Roose- velt himselt maintained silence. Finan- cial interests have, been considerably annoyed by the fact that the severe -federal securities ‘act has checked the movement ‘or capital into legitimate channels. and they were cheered up by Senator ii‘-letcher's statement that Pres- ident Itoose,v_elt wants the act amended to correct this fault without dimlnish~ ing’ the ‘protection of the investing pub« lic. Mr. ii‘letche‘r. who is chairman of the senate banking committee. said _Roosevelt's attitude had been brought to him_by Acting Secretary 'M'or-genthau of the treasury. In this 'eonnectio‘n he said‘ the President had ‘nit asked the banking committee to -recommend legislation to curtail the Itqclpaxchange operations. ‘ ' -.—-—‘ . \ H5OW long Budget ’Di‘i'ecto“r Lewis Douglas will continue to- hold his job is a question that interests observers in Washington. He has worried over the ex- pansion ot emergeh~ cy obligations of the government and has warned‘ against any further increase, but almost certainly his warning will not he heeciegi when congress meets. Anrhour Inter President Roosevelt issued a iproelzlmntiona announcing the passing of Constitutional pi'ohibition' and ‘calling upon all citizens to confine purchases of alcoholic beverages to duly licensed dealers. ll plea that was. in effect, an appeal to eiiminnte the bootiegger from the nation. !i‘he Pres- ident also nppenled to states not to permit return of tho old-fashioinetl sa- loon. He said in conclusion»: WITH considerable ceremony and military display the seventh ‘Pan- Amerinnn conference was opened in Montevideo. Uruguay, to continue probably three weeks. Its deliberations are managed by Enrique E. Buero us secretary- generuL He is one of! Uruguay’; most prom- inent young diplomat: and was summoned from his ‘post as min- ister to Germany to this duty in the con- ference. PLEA OF -GUILTY BY HACK»E\l'T’.S K‘IDNAPER Jones to Help State Agaimt 'l'\‘vo Other ‘Men. “The policy of the government will he to see to ‘it that the social -and po- litical evils that have existed in the pre-prohibition era shall not he re- vived nor permitted again to exist. We must remove forever from our midst the menace -of the bootiegger and such others as would pro at the expense of good government. law and order. “I trust in the good sense ot the American people that they will not bring upon themselves the curse ot -excessive use of intoxicating liquors. to the detriment of health, morals and social integrity. “The objective we see); through.._s national policy is theieducation ht ev- ery citizen towards a- greater temper- ance throughout the nation.\ Strlctest supervision of the ‘liquor rectifying industry, which will ‘produce most of the country's post-repeal whip ky by blending aged iiqnouind alcohol, was urged as hearing opened an the rectifying code. This Avns one of the last liquor codes to be eonside1'ed‘b,v o who virtually completed -‘plans for regulation of liquor for the interim until congress adopts permanent legls lotion. Local Woman Earns . . . $26.Q0»in one week ‘wgmoinuin null town ' ' ,; Il’0—h.Il‘l'Im_g upuohquru ‘ ‘\ '-lntocuhincomeatavory 7‘. xb Iatiajfnetory-nto‘ of puy V through ‘thouew adver- tininguoj ulling plan of : Lord .All\el;Il)¢.,l!lbIl'I =2: o1tho1upu\’u!.onub«u- typrentn ! woman nvqrggen 89.00 Ir weak. rvos,-king only u few hour: ouh day- nnolliorin Michigan won‘-kod dvuy dngnncf iiuqo 826 ixrona vyegk; nthul ear'n;88 820 ugly wick. Any yvomxh neadi this an ob nhl]: ]lIl’ ulgpply writing to- I.0RD‘I\ESLlu. Ann” pouoord will ,' write your use pkmulu. Chicago.-—Ju1ius Augustus Jones of ‘St. Charles pleaded guilty before Judge Thomas J. Lynch in ‘the Cvlminnl count on charges of twice kidnaplng James Hnckett. Blue wand gambler. .!or to- rn! rgmsom of $26,500. Jones persisted lu thetplczaln the face of a court warn- ing that the death penalty might be Im- pos ~(]. for the -crime. .£_ £_ gum, _In hie speech ‘in- augurating the new sionn ~President Gabriel Terra of Uruguay demanded the “scaling ‘down in all American countries of customs tariffs which President Rodseveit just- .iy termed unsound. fatal and direct originators 02 world economic disas- ter.\ He referred to Mr. Roosevelt's indictment of the -Hawiey-Smoot turiit measure and retaliatory acts “to which other nations were forced.\ Evidence will be heard and Jones will be qeutenced on Jnnudxjy 15. The plea 0; guilty was eutei-gd utter As- -sistant State’: Attorney Mai Gaghlnn had revéaled that Jones will testify for the state against two co.-dei'end- puts. ,Gu1e_ Swoiiey M Peoria and Ernnk B.;S0uder of Benton. ‘Concerning the war in the Gran‘ Chaco ‘between Bolivia gnd Paraguay. he said. “The noble’ American juridi- cal tradition cannot remain buried in the swamps of the Chnco.” Swoliey and Souder were granted a severnnce__on motion_of Defense Attor- ney Jnnies M. Burke. and their trial was set for January 8.“'1‘he trial’ was nontlnued until the iirst of the year in order that a jury might not the locked up over the holiday season. Swolley. Sander, and Jones. with three other men who have not been apprehended. are renatevl to have col- lected a total’ or $00,000 through a dozen kidnaplngs ‘in -the last three years. Jack Kiut§!8.. Edward La Rue. and Edward Wagner are other mem- bers at the gang sought by the -police. Jones and Souder are alleged to have been members of the gang that seized Hacitett on May 1, 1031. and obtained $75,000 for his release. These two and Swolley are said to have aided in the second kidnnping of the gambler on May 27, 1038. Hackett won his release on this occasion by paying $1,500 and promising farther payment of $10,000, which was never made. It was understood that between four and five million gallons ‘oi’. foreign spirits and‘ wines would be gllowed entry during December and Jannury, and tlmt. it the demand were greater‘ than the supply, the quantity might; be increased in order to discourage- bootlegging. The government sought to prevent a of foreign liquor from awnmping the American market to the detriment of domestic produc- ers. . Wife wi” 30°\ = -HER :3 noun were loathed. \ N She haninnea that M cola’-‘-mtful unim. uuéa‘ am—XTu. m net system ol hqwgl-clog“: wanton uuuuen uwinn her vxuugr. III MI (NIIIt0'O,‘8!! \ an 9 ate. Illv vexeublc Ianuve-war edthc omntiu. ‘n1 ndgor conltiplthmlbilhmntu. hudé lnghed you tees, A! III dnahqk 25 cents. \TUMS\ Postponed trom 1932 because of the depres_sIou,xa ,gutherl’ng In whlch all 21 nations of‘ the westefu ‘hemisphere were participating found uppermost In the. minds otpdelegnteg a mutual search for co-operafh-e methods to im- prove the economic status of their countries. Secrettu-y’ of State; Hull heads the delegation from United States. and nine other foreign ministers are par- ticipating In the conference. Attorney General Cummings Issued an order changing the Depnrtment of Juatlco’_s ‘pmhlhltlnn unit to the nlc0~ hollc beverage unit. This unit wil) take over activities of the prohibition bureau of the division of Investigation. Codes for the distiller: and import- ers already were In eirect, and those for the ‘lrewers, the rectiilers and bienders and the wine growers were being completed. When congress meets in January one of tho matters to .be taken up will be legislation to in- crease the taxes on liquor and -for permanent control of the traillc. To draw up such legislation the house ways and means committee and the senate committee were called to meet in_:oint sessions beginning December 11. FOREIGN COMMISSAR MAXIM LITVINOV of Russia, on his way home from his triumphant visit in Washington, stopped over in Rome for a conference with Premier Mussolini. and the correspondents said this re suited in an agreement for soviet- Fnsclst collnboratlon to better the alt- uatlon in Europe. The well informed thought Mussolini had obtained the support of Russia in his effort; to solve the disarmament problem and that he and Litvinov were in accord in the matter of having Russia and the United States asked to join in the four-power pact. Before Litvinov left Rome he was given a brilliant han- quet by the Duce. which waarattended by numerous dignitaries. Alexander Laue Dies ‘Suddenly at His Home Beware the Cough or Cold that Hang: On Peaairtent eongfha and colds lead to aeriouatrouhle. on can atog them now \vithCreomulaion,an emulai ed creoaoto that in pleaaant to take. Creomubion in I new medical diecovery with two-fold ae- tiou; it aoothea and rheala the inflamed membranes and inhibit: germgrowth. Of all known drugs, creosote in recog- niaed by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agenciotfor per- Iiatcnt cough: ‘and cohia and other form! of throat troublea,Creomulaion contains, in addition to creoaote, other healing ele- ment: which aoothe and heal the infected memhranea and :12 the irritation and in» \\ ,. asreopote the atomach, ia absorbed into t a blood, and attach the out of the trouble. Ch1cngo.—-Mexnnder Legge, sixty- seven. II farm [my who became presi- dent of the International Harvester company. died ‘suddenly at his subur- ban home in Hlnsdnle. Mr. Douglas thinks that the entire bud‘ Lindbergh: Fly From ‘ Africa fo Natal, Brazil SECRETARY of Agriculture Wallace and Director George Peek of the agricultural adjustment administra- tion. disagreeing rndicnily concerning nuthority and meth- ods. laid their dispute before President Roosevelt, with the re- sult that the powers of the -AAA were sharply curtailed, part of its code work being transferred to the Nib tlonni Recovery ml- ministrntion. Stephen T. Early. one of the get, including both \“\‘ °°“9'\ general and emergen- cy funds. may be brought into bul- unce toward the end of the fiscal year 1935 if no further emergency funds are authorized _ufter the 53.300.- 000.000 public works fund and the less than a billion left In the RFC- fund are used up. He thinks these funds should be sufllclent for emer- gency purposes‘, Mr. Legge. who took pride in know- ing many dirt farmers personally. ro- signed his $i00.000-n-year position with the harvester company to nccept a $12,000 job as first chairman of the federai farm board at the ‘request of President Hoover in 1929. For twenty months he labored to build up n farm- er-controiled co-operative ‘marketing ‘system and after getting the organi- zation into operation resigned in 1931 in resufné his post nu president of tho grout harvester organization. ( In war time Mr. Legge was vict- chairman of the war industries honrd. inking chame of industrial mobiliza- tion. and became manager of the al- iiéi] purcinisinxz _commission. Nntnl, Brnzll.-—Col. Charles A. Lind- bergh and his wife. the former Anne Morrow. nlighted on the harbor here after flying from Bnthnrst, Gamma. Atrlcn, 1.875 miles away, In 16 hours 10 minutes. It was the longest over- water night of their nerlnl survey tour, which began at New York last July 9 and has tnken them to (green- lnnd. Iceland, and many countries ln Europe; and to Afrlca. The whole population of Natal. its stores and otllcea closed for the ileum of welcome, my street: decorated, packed the waterfront. WITH his experience as :1 delexnte to the disarmament conference nt Geneva clenrly In mind. Secretary of the Navy Swanson «In his annual report urges that -the United States nlmmlon Others in the administration, in- cluding the President. have dllferent ideas. Secretary of the Interior Ickes expects to ask for nn increase of ns much as $l,'700.000.000 in the public works fund. The RFC probably will mint $1,'000.000.000 or more. The new civil works administration will run out cf money in the middle of the winter and the President already has expressed the hope that additional funds will be forthcoming from con- gress. Its nllotments have come thus fur from both the public works funds and the relief fund of the RFC. Ctoomulaipn inguruntaed utiufnctory In the treatment ofponiuent coughs and colds, bronchiil ullnm, lirbnchitin, and in excellent for building up the syatcm me: cold: or Your own. dnlsigigt, in authorigqd yo refund you: many on the am! if your co\:5h or cold in not‘ to liovedvby Creom sion. (udv.) leadership In the dis P r e s ldenfe secreta- ¢,°,.g,.-puk rles. Issued this state- armament movement Supiéme Court Orders ceed nsl soon as pos \by exmnpie\ and pm Wilkins Expedition Extradition of Factor “Following 1 conference with Secre- tary Wallace. George Peck. and ‘Gen- eral Johnson. the President authorized the statement that. for the purpose of co-ordination. all codes under the NRA. including those under negotia- tions by the AAA, will be turned‘ over to the administrator of the NRA.\ Mr. [leek was especially annoyed by press conference statements by Secre- tary Wallace, which were interpreted among oillcials as supporting Prof. Rex Tngwell, assistant secretary of agri- culture, and the liberal ‘group allied with him. Chief of tlmse liberal asso- ciates or Tngweil are Jerome Frank, counsel for AAA, nnd Frederick Howe, consumers counsel for AAA. alble to build its navy Head; for Antarctic Washington. —— The United States Supreme court approved the extra- dition of John (Jake the Barber) Fac- tor from Chicago to Great Britain to ‘stand trial there for participation in u stock -swlndiiug ucimme, the proceeds at which have been cutimuted as high an eight million dollars. up to full treaty strength. He ranys our Dunedin. New Zeulnnd.-—’l‘i1o expedi- tlon of Sir i-luhert Wilkins, Lincoln. Ellsworth and Hernt Bniahen set sail for the Antarctic. Their destina- tion is tin» bay of ivimlos. Ahngmi tho \V,vutt Enrp was Butch- t!n's monoplane. enmpletely overlmliletl during the siny here, in which he was con of mnk'ln;: a successful ex- ploring flight over the Weddell sen. concdsslons in-the‘ past have been “dnn;:'erou RELIEVE ECZEMA extravagance“ and that peace is jéopm- dlzed by our wenk~ s'°\\”’ ened condition ‘'be- s'”‘\'°\ Don‘! ou uoodleuly. Stop also itching and illdlico healing--begin R my to me 9811101 PRESIDENT‘ I_ioosevg_2lt, nddresslng ' the Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America, took occasion to condemn yeverely «nil those who con- done lynchlngs, and his‘ remarks we're Interpreted especluhy as a sharp re- buke for Governor Ilolph of Onlffornln who approved the actions of the mob that hanged two kidnap:-rs and mur- derers at San Jose. The ‘court's decision Is the climax to’ a legal battle of many moatha. The specific charge against Factor In that he received :E45S.500 from the Broad Street Press of London, knowing‘ the money to have been fraudulently ob talneda ‘cause balanced armaments fortify di- piomacy.\ The report showed Japan will have its full treaty strength of 183 vessels with a ‘total tonnage of 775.370 when the treaty expires December 31. 1930, whereas the United States will have only 118 under-age vessels with a to- tal tonnage of 088.520. Under the treaty. the report said, the United States conid construct ‘ninety-six more ships with 157,280 tons displacement. The British empire, according to the secretary, will have 161 vessels with 9i)i).398 tons displacement at the same vdnte,pe1jmi'tting it to ‘build sixty- tour ships with a displacement oi‘. 197.- 607 tons. p _ *“ R In \M EIJTH PUWDEE Q rouunsmvuvvium Girl Who Trapped Kelly; Sues for $15,000 Reward \This new generation\ said Mr. ‘Roosevelt, “is not content with menth- ‘lngs ngninst that vile form of collec- tive murder—~lynch inw—which -‘has broken out in our midst anew. We ‘know that it is ‘murder ‘and u delib- eruto nnd de ‘disobedience at the commandment, ‘thou shall; not _*kill.' We do not excuse those in high places or in low who condone lynch ii1w.\ Wallace. in his press conference, questioned -the eifectiveness of the marketing agreements and codes in the ag relief program. He sug- gested the major necessity in farm ire- liet was strict restriction of ‘crop pro- duction; Peek has throughout ‘empha- sized marketing agreements rather than crop control _ methods. Tugxveii and other iibernis have taken the op- posite -position. stressing crop contra) as more important. Qkinhonm ‘City. ‘Okla.--Suit to col- uect for thirteen-yen!‘-old -Geraldine Arnold ‘the $15,000 reward ot‘lered_,' in connection with the Churieg ‘F. Urschei lcldnnping, by ~0ki:L‘homn City residents for‘ the capture or ‘George (Machine Gun) Kelly and his wife, Kathryn. was’ med here. Charles ‘F. Coicord. who hendea the .co‘mmitteo otrering ‘the reward, was nnmed defendant. Mark Twain Medal In Given to Mr. ‘Roosevelt Washington. — Pnesldent Roosevelt was presented with the Mark ’.1‘\_vnln medal of the International Mark \1‘waln society, nnd toid the donor that his campaign) slognn, \The New Deal,\ came from Twn|n's book. “A Connecti- cut Yankee at King Art1mr'n Court.\ -.,s«.‘ ‘PARK:-:1:-s v ‘-— ,‘.‘ HAIR BALSANI, ‘; \\\i.'.’.'”“\¢~f.':‘:.\.‘.'.:1i' \ I 3...” G: H’ dodllnk '\ M Mn 9 WHEN Col. Charles A. Lindbergh ’starts out to do something, in -the way or nvihtion, he does it compe- -tently. skilfully and neat-ly. Accom- panied and ably assisted by Mrs. Lind- bergh, he piloted his big monoplnne across the southern Atlantic ‘from Buthnrst, Gambia, Africa, to Natal, Brazil,‘ ‘making the 1,875 miles in 101 hours -and 10 minutes and ‘landing smoothly in the Natal harbor, where the entire population of the city was gathered to welcome then'i.'_'1‘hrough the long flight Mrs. ‘Lindbergh at the wireless‘ instrument’ kept in constant communication with Rio de. Jsneiro. Japan was ‘highly displeased ‘by ‘See- retary Swanson's.upproval or the prep- ent treaty ‘ratios for uavles. The spokesman for the naval o in 'J.'okl‘o declared that Japan is thoroughly dis- satis wlth her present allotments‘ under -the 5-5-3 ratio and is determined to demand ‘an upward revision ‘ot Ja- pan's quota when the naval power: reconvene to consider‘ extension .0: the Washlngton and London treaties; , only a few days before -the‘ Jnpanen cabinet had {approved -«the =’nafvy'§- re» plenlshment D‘!-'0xI'am calling for about $245,000,000 tor the next three yearn. , ,, - ._. JON SHAW.-.» -ldgqlb 1or‘.n_I9 In W I u . 0'. \ $?”'¢§\{'n‘5'§1”e'r'§\E?:'£.‘:'n\n»l;'!£f?“\§‘3\h°M gum. Human-neuwoou. rmuonu. :53. Burgh} Slay: -G ‘Pliyar '1‘ori’)ntn.—-élohnny Com). Unlverslty of Toronto‘ football player. dled In a hospital from bullet wounds x'ecel.vml when he grappled with 11 burglar out- side Ills father's home.- The thlei’ es- cnped. Wnshlngton.»~P1'es_ldent Ilosevelt, fe- sponding to u plea by Pres_ldent Stenlo Vlncént of’ I-Inttl, hns replied that un- escapnble treaty .oM1gnUons prevent immediate wit-hdrmvnl of -the Ameri- cnn ndmlnlsh-utlon from Ilnitl, unless u refunding urrungemen can be’ evolved satisfactory to the hold- ers of $12,600,000 Human bonds‘. Can’! Leno Hum’ Yo! LATEST ot_the farm relief ‘experi- - ments, :1 $350,000,000 campaign to control the production of corn and hogs by paying iedeml hoimtlcs to the producers, was launched by Secretary Wallace. The money will be raised by processing taxes which the consumer will pay andwill go ‘to former: who sign agreement: to reduce their average of coin and production of hog; in 1934. Bene payments on coin, under the program, wlll be .1: the rate of 30 Free 'MaréhnndiIo Barred New You-‘k.——'1‘he New York retml code nuthor_lt.y‘ ‘announced that the princtme of uttering free merchandise wit‘ the purchase of another nttticle as a means of inducing sales is‘ out- lawed ‘under the code. , -Cold Wnvq‘ Sivoepn ‘Europa Pi\rLs.~—‘Severn‘l deathtv were report-' ed In Ic‘-I-ance-.ns‘a cold wave-‘swept all Europe. 0. ms. -Vlontfrn Nonpapir Unln} WNU—-U AH-V3,-I541\! s')!'1F£‘ VNNVMVXLW‘ ‘ta, 3.. , Mg: ‘.35 ‘\535 H‘ , \ - ’I.''.‘. ~I»\\3\'5'«'-I ' \ \ ‘V. “;:-H‘75~:%2\..5y;‘.*'t’3 , . f‘..§,Z ‘J'l‘,!}\- ' 'v\.«al;“’Véé _ ‘A’;-3 551\ W.\ ~5'f,“_' '[' 1v'}.‘;;‘' 9?; f '3'}; W\ ml, .; fl ,, :‘3‘..T'n.‘ -\1 1?’.-.~\.'