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Pampa Daily News from Pampa, Texas • Page 4

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Pampa Daily Newsi
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Pampa, Texas
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4
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PA66 4- -THE PAMPA NEWS- --TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1939 THE PAMPA NEWS PflblftfceA eWnine, Saturday, Sunday mornlnar by Punpa Kews, 82fc West Foster Avenue. PampB, Teiai. Phdfte departments. OP TttB ASSOCIATED PRKSS (Full Leased wire). 1 ASaoeiatetl Prt-so is exclusively entitled to the use for pnb- IIAkion trf all neiw dlspnlclien credited to it or otherwise creel- MS to thH paper and also the regulnr news published herein.

Erfettd matter March 15, 1fl27, at the nnat- Pampa, Texan, under the net of Mnroh 8, National AdvertiainK Representatives: Tesns Daily Press League, New Ybrk, St. Louis, Kanitns City, Lot San Francisco h'rid Chicane SUBSCRIPTION UATES BY CARRIF.R In Tampa, 2Uc per week, per month. Paid In advance, $2.50 per three $5.00 per months, PH year. BY MAIL, pnynhle in advance. In Crny nnd ndJolhTr.s counties, also Hnnsford, Oahiltrw, and counties, per yenr.

Outside nhove nnmcd counties, $9.00 per rear. Price per Binsle copy 5 cents. No mall orderi accepted In localities served by carrier delivery. An Independent Democratic newspaper, publlshinu the news fnfrly and impartially nt nil timr-i nnd supporting in Its editorial cbluhins tho principles which it belieVra to be riebt nnd tipikttfnR those which it believes to be wroncr, regardless of party politics. FREE DIVISION OF LABOR Under a democratic form of government, there is only one cause of unemployment and depressions.

This one cause is interference with the free nnd natural division of labor. Without tho division of labor, man would be reduced to barbarism, to an extreme individualist. He would be thc same as most animals. Ants divide labor, but most animals do not. To the degree that men divide labor, do we have civilization and a higher and higher standard of living.

If each man attempted lo produce everything that ho needed himself, he could produce only the smallest fraction of what lie is able to have by specializing and producing in quantities and exchanging with others who have specialized. For this reason, any belief or law that interferes with the free and natural division of labor should be eliminated. There are four very primary beliefs, or laws, that have greatly interfered with the free and natural division ot labor: 1. The whole purpose of collective bargaining, as operated, is to interfere with the free and natural division of jobs. It is a combination of workmen to prevent other workmen from having equal rights to do work and be rewarded for same.

Probably the belief in collective bargaining has done as much, or more, than any other belief, to bring about the depression and keep us from returning to prosperity. Usually, under depressions, collective bargaining is greatly reduced. Under thc present depression, it has been encouraged and stimulated by law by the New Deal so that a return to the free and natural division of labor is almost impossible. Until we eliminate this belief, there can bo no high standard of living. 2.

The belief that taxes should be paid arbitrarily, or on ability to pay basis, is another interference with the free and natural division of labor. Hook, chairman of the National Association of i as done much to retard men from being ven- With 40 percent increase in Army and Navy personnel voted by Congress, your Red Cross will be called upon for greater service in the year to come. Last year, Red Cross assistance was given in more than 250.000 instances for members of the armed forces and for of past wars. Answer the Roll of your chapter before Nov. 30.

Sharing The Comforts Of Life FOLLOW-UP ON fHE THANKSGIVING PROCLAMATION By R. C. Holies Profits Vs. Liberties When war begins, private rights can be taken away overnight. But they are never restored as quickly when the emergency ends.

Democracy remains in a convalescent state long after a peace is signed and troops are sent back to their civilian duties. This invasion of private rights is one of the principal reasons business men in the United States today are, unalterably opposed to entrance of the United States into another general war. according to Charles tytanufacturers. Most business men went through the last war. They remember government control of railroads and all the rest of the accompanying industrial regimentation.

They don't want any part of that again. the profits that might conceivably come from war trade are not alluring enough to business men today. The price they must pay is far too high. And when business will turn away from profits, the reasons must be pretty potent. The Nation's Press JOHN I.RWI8 IN THE ELECTION (Chicago Tribune) Once upon a was 16 years delegates to a convention of the United Workers' union tried to assert their independence of John Lewis.

Mr. Lewis, that great believer in democracy, called upon his henchmen to seize the rebels, take them out into a courtyard, and beat them up. As in other mailers in his union Mr. Lewis' will prevailed. Strongarm methods have kept Lewis in office.

Aside from the use of the ballot, unions ordinarily exercise a restraining influence over their central organization by the control of the purse. The members can decline to pay dues. Lewis has closed that loophole, too. He has agreements with the miner owners by which the owner deducts the dues from each man's pay before paying off. One additional feature makes the arrangement unbeatable so far as Lewis is concerned.

In other organizations special assessments upon the union membership can be voted only by a national convention, often by a referendum vote of the members. Rut in the miners' union the executive board, a group hand-picked by Lewis, can order a special assessment. Thus Lewis, who has the organization to perpetuate him in office, merely decides when he wants some money and how much, and then tells the operators to hold it out of Ihe miners 1 pay. When he was frustrated several years ago in efforts to get elected as the head of all American labor Lewis decided to have his own central labor body and created 1he C. I.

O. Money was needed for the purpose, and so he ordered the mine owners to take 'i million dollars of Hie miners' pay, to be used not in organizing the miners' unions but in effectuating the C. I. O. When he decided it would take a half million dollars to reeled Mr.

Roosevelt, Lewis ordered the mine owners to lake the required amount out of the miners' pay envelopes and remit to him. With this money taken from the workers in one of our most depressed industries Mr. Lewis paid for a large part of Mr. Roosevelt's campaign expenditures in 193(1. Last week it pleased Mr.

Lewis to have some more money to be spent for election purposes in 1940 or in any other way which might suit his fancy. And so he ordered Ihe soft coal mining companies to take a dollar out of eacli miner's pay envelope in December and a dollar more in January, He also ordered the hard coal mill" operators to make simihi" deductions, bul in ary and February. Thus Mr. Lewis will have this fund Mr. Lewis may be able to deter- min the nomination of a presidential candidate ttiresome and establishing new industries.

3. The banking system that permitted the banks to synthetically expand credit has done much to interfere with the natural division of labor. 4. Largo and expensive governments employing hundreds of thousands of people who do not produce what they consume, is another important factor in interfering with the free and natural division of labor and the return to prosperity. The sooner people learn that we must return to free enterprise, and send men to Congress who will insist on laws being passed to encourage the free and natural division of labor, thn sooner we will return to prosperity.

TC we do not do this, eventually we will establish a dictator who will take the 1 place of free enterprise and tell each man where he has to work and what he has to work for. There are only two ways of having full employment. One is by a dictator that coerces people and Ihe other by free enterprise that permits each man to sell his services to the world's highest bidder. TOWNSEND REASONING REDUCED TO 'A SIMPLE EXAMPLE If the Townsoncl reasoning is right, that consuming wealth benefits the producer and the worker, then if an aged father and mother come to live with a married son or daughter and docs not even wash the dishes or make their beds, or do a single bit of work, then the married son and will be better off than if they helped do chores and what they were able to do. Tf the theory is right on a big scale, it is right on a small scale.

The only difference is it is harder to see when it becomes big. Behind The News Of The Day WASHINGTON, Nov. latest effort to solve the farm problem finds the administration circling back to the famous processing tax idea, which was embodied in the original Agricultural Adjustment Act, and which went out the window when the Supreme Court killed that act in 193G. Tlie court killed the rir.st AAA, not because it objected to the processing tax, but because it felt that the tax was being used for an unlawful the regulation of crop production. The plan which Secretary Henry Wallace is now formulating would not restrict production; it would, however, get the government out from under an annual expense of around a quarter of a billion dollars, and would provide a method of financing parity payments to growers of wheat, rice and cotton.

CONGRESS HOLDS I'liKSK STRINGS Parity payments now come directly out of the federal treasury. The Agriculture Department, for instance, may decide that the cotton grower needs a payment of two cents a pound on his production order to bring the net price he gets up to "parity." But Congress can always throw a last-minute wrench into the proceedings by refusing to appropriate the i money for those payments. It almost did so last win- ter; and the item of which finally I went into the agricultural appropriation bill for that purpose was largely responsible for shooting that bill up above the budget estimates. i Under the scheme now taking shape, the grower afflSS Tex's Topics Around Hollywood By PAUL HARBISON NBA Service Staff Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 21.

All over the lot: Sensation of the week was Joan Bennett, of the cool and languorous Bennetts, lending a chorus in a rhumba. Swivel hips, bumps and every- Chihuahua pooch, which looked surprised. Miss Bennett is a Mexican dancer in a night, club owned by George Raft. So for this role, of course, she's still wearing the black wig and still looking like Hedy Lamarr. Only you'd belter not mention it.

Three years ago she and Raft and Lloyd Nolan were the principals in a picture called "She Couldn't Take It." at Columbia. Now they're doing a similar flicker for Walter Wanger, except that it's called "House Across the Bay." Haft will surprise the customers by going completely soft in a couple of love scenes with Miss Bennett. Nolau plays the rat attorney, as usual, and Walter Pidgeon gets ihe gal after Raft expiates his sins by being shot by prison guards while swimming back to Alcatraz, from which he had escaped. Filming is finished on "The Cat and the Canary." but Hollywood is hearing off-stage laughs. When somebody asked Bob Hope about the vulture that worked in the picture, Hope said, "Oh, that was the canary's agent." The comedian's favorite scene in the flicker is one where the cat looks into the camera and hisses, "It's time the audience got hissed for a change!" "The black cat has been in so many pictures that he's said.

"He in front of People You Know By Archer Fullingim TliD write-up that appeared in this column about W. C. (Lefty Pendleton the other day was a pain in the neck to his pretty, lively, energetic sister, Tommie Jo who protested, "pe-ple will think that I don't do a thing, and that I'm lazy, and I want to you that I do as much work as that W. C. Pendleton any day in the week And that's true, too, and Lefty himself says that Tommy Jo who is 14 years old, and a Junior high student, does all kinds of work arcttnd ihe.

house, including of the cooking and cleaning. Tommie Jo is fond of sports, particularly softball, and yesterday at noon sh? was knocking flies and grounders to a dozen boys. Besides that she can really sing, and her girl friends she is about the jolllest girl in school, and even to this eld grouch, she is like a shot in the now Tommie Jo, have I mad? amends? The Family Doctor Dr. Morris Fishbein By Tex DeWeese KEEPERS OP the municipal zoo at waterworks park are unhappy rcnuse small boys tense the ani- nnls and in some instances have caused deaths of zco inmates. They appeal to juvenile Pampa not throw stones nor poke sticks the cnges.

Park Supervisor John Andrews hopes lo build lie 7.00 much larger if only he.can KCt the coopcmtirn of the public 11 taking proper care of it. There will be a new bundle of joy in the zoo's monkey family before Ions. The pair of monkeys there was obtained through a Iradc for an American eafvle. A guinea pig is a new inhabitant of the squirrel cage, awl if you look closely you will also soe a tiny fioltl inoiise scur- i-yiiiK about in the squirrel linven. THURSDAY WILL Be Thanks- living Day No.

1. To all those who have decided to observe this one, we hope they have a very enjoyable Turkey Day. Folks, who arc planning to celebrate Thanksgiving Day No. 2 can wait until next Week for 'their well wishes. hristmas will be as usual this year on Dec- 25 and it falls on a Monday.

Incidentally there are only 28 more shopping days until Christmas. Tho Chrysler strike is making itself felt in Pampa and the entire nation. The automobile industry is fast becoming a. question mark because of the labor difficulties. And if the CIO is permitted to continue its slowdown tacties you'll no doubt pay more for your next car, Aleck Sakcwltz, the artist who joined the staff of The News this week, has never seen but one big football game in his life, but he keeps apace with their records and can pick the winners like nobody's business- Tho French are being urged to continue smoking as a "partriotic duty." Exhale in the direction of Berlin, please.

The price of men's shirts is going up. Gentlemen will be less inclined to lose them on Rated after heart disease among the chief causes of in the United States are influenza anc pncummia. They are grouped together because they frequently strike at the same time, or because one often follows the other. In 1937, influenza and pneumonia accounted for 148,014 deaths, or 10.02 per csnt of all deaths in this country. They caused 12.6 per cent of all deaths among persons between the ages of 5 and 19 and were third amcng the causes of death in this age group.

Nevertheless, except for the great epidemic in 1918, the number of deaths from influenza nnd pneumonia hns been gradually declining. Now ther? is reason to believe that with 'the discovery of anti-pneumonia serums and sulfapyridine as effective agents, the rates will fall still lower. Influenza alone is seldom fatal. In tact, for a while, all deaths from both diseases were chalked up to pneiinr.nia. Then enmc the epidemic stock market- Gold hns 1918, and we special natur? of by one of the major parlies.

This is powe. no man should have. A corporation may not such a contribution. No individual has evei been willing to contribute such an amount of hi- 1 own moans. Congress; should amend the corrupt practices act prohibiting use of money to subsidize any political parly to the extent that Lewis sub- wo 1 molle llsl tnc sidized the Democrats in It should bo possible to get congress to take the necessary action early in the coruini: session, because it is the right thing lo do.

Also in his present mood Lewis is as likely to offer his money to the opposition party as to the New Dealers whom he largely financed in 1036. same thc PRIVATE POLITICAL I ILES HOLD MA.V. SEt'UETS (Jucksoii (Miss.) riiirioii-LeilgiT) i'ow Americans could survive tin 1 seerels of their private files politically. Take namci money wouldn't come from the treasury. What, he would get, originally, would be a certificate, entitling him to collect his parity payment.

TWO METHODS OF FIXING PAYMENT This, in turn, could be figured in one of two ways; il could be a payment on his entire production, up to a maximum set by his farm's average yield over a period of years, or it could be an equivalent payment at a higher rate per pound based on that I i percentage of his production which the Agriculture camera-wise," Hope wouldn't let me cross him." Deaf Mute Lets His Face Talk Joe Herman! is one movie veteran who wasn't at all affected by the change from silents to talkies. During 17 years of acting he never has said a word on the set. Joe's a deaf mute. But no charitable motive prompts casting directors to hire He gives full value for his pay checks, for he has no rival in registering distate or disgust. In "Little Old New York" there's a scene in which Richard Greene hands Herman! a sour apple.

Then comes the wry-face act. According to thc rules, an actor who doesn't speak is an extra. But Joe is a bit player and draws $25 checks. He qualifies by making a slight sound, a sort of grunt. Usually the grunt is cut out of the sound track, but Joe doesn't feel slighted.

He's better paid than thousands of players who could talk but aren't allowed to. Unending yarns are told about the hard lot of property men, but Eddie Jones has found his toughest job in "The Grapes of Wrath." He has had to collect a fleet of disreputable cars and trucks and through weeks of production maintain them in exactly the same asthmatic and shaky condition. They must always run, but they must never run well. The vintage vehicle, half touring cur. half truck, driven by the Joads plavcd Jones false the other It's held together by halr- iind chewing gum.

Henry Yesteryear In The News TEN YEAKS AGO TODAY Pampa was to be host, to tlio annual meeting of the Highway No. 41 association. Senator C. C. Small was lo be a speaker.

the temperature around 30 The person who is sick should not degrees and a light snow falling use the same towels, napkins, drink- steadily, Pampa and the North learned of thc influenza under some circumstances. In that epidemic, mnny patients died of pneumonia, but the chief cause of death was influenza which induced pneumonia. Since scientists are convinced we are likely to have further epidemics 01 influenza from time to time, we should give some attention to methods prevailing such conditions- In the first place, remember llie.se discuses are of the infectious type. On: of the first prevcntative measures is to stay away from persons who are victims of these discuses. Remember, too, that the germs are spread by coughing or sneezing.

been discovered in Georgia- All that glitter are no 1 peaches. A proposal to let pedestrians control traffic lights by means of button is under consideration in New York. Looks like a long- awaited opportunity for strollers with vengeance in their hearts. A bcc sling- won S8000 for a man in a court suit. On a proportional basis, a (log bite should be a gold mine.

For the second time recently, the eastern part of the United States has experienced an earthquake. It looks as if thc Japs are sending over their revenge for Ambassador Grew's utterances. A woman was sentenced to thirty days in Cedar City, before 'ihe new women's jail quarters were completed. She said she would consent to wait lor a rrservation. The man who put the Duke and Duchess of Windsor on a diet of spinach and garlic juice is'said to be engaged to Greta Garbo.

It's all risht if Gorbo-wants to look forward to that kind of life- Cranium Crackers Plains were experiencing another touch of winter. FIVE YEARS AGO TODAY Contract fcr construction of a beautiful new club house at the Pampa Country club was awarded to W. A. Mullinnx at a meeting of the club. Receipts In the annual roll call of ihe Red Cross passed the $500 mark, although of workers had not reported to headquarters.

A BID FORASMILE 1'i'OSidi-nt. when Theodore kindly assumed Department deemed needed for Ihe tlomi-stic market. Fonda stood on a rear fender as tho job of choosing the country'!) chief executive for it. The art- digging data out of tho Tall family convspondi'nec. It has been recently rttl that Henry Taft in lS9y him the presidency of I he Vale cor- jwration at SIO.OOO a year.

Alter waiting a week Taft turned it down lor two (1) hi? was not qualified; i'J? his religious vieu cli'l not lit the institution. "I do not believe iu tin- ul lie wrote. Aguinit the peril of that sentence becoming public the valorous Theodore Koo.seveli, who could be timid in politics, bad lie known of this lei tor's existence, would have- seleeted another And in the camj ait" had pious Bryan got. his hands on that epistle, how he would n.ive blasted lho bulky form of his opponent with it. In cither case, it.

would figure out to a total suffi- he roped a mattress on top of the load of bed springs, furniture, chickens, children and clothes. With the camera rolling old and FKOOK. I'UCASK "I tell you 1 won' have thi. room 1 protested old the whc was her. "I'm not going to nay nv good money for rlesc folding bed.

If vou think just ln'caii'e I'm from the in, lady got in." cut in wearily. isn't vrr room. This is the elevatoi Santa Fe Your jaws electricity wlK-n ing and eating utensils that are used by the rest of the family. Certainly they should refrain from klss- ing or fondling childrm. We do not have any established form of vaccination or inoculation against influenza and pneumonia.

Prevention, therefore, means that we must keep cur bodies in the physical conditiai so they can resist these diseases by the development of Mie kind ot natural resistance the body has again.st all sorts of physical disturbances. Neglect of mild influenza or of a mild cold leads lo pneumonia. The first thing to do when you are sick i.s to got into bed and call a doctor. Jap Envoy Denies Americans in China Being Persecuted WASHINGTON, Nov. 21 Kensuke Horinouchi.

the Japanese ambassador, asserted today that Americans were being given consideration by Japanese militaiy authorities in China. Horinouchi talked with reporters after Stunnor Welles, acting secretary cf state, had made public reports that the Japanese had been FORGOTTEN MEN? People aren't likely to forget a president of the United Stales for many years after he has retired from office, but cabinet officers frequently drop into obscurity when they surrender their portfolios. Each of the following, men were United States cabinet officers within the last 15 years. Simply fill in blanks: 1. Curtis Wilbur was secretary of under Coolidge, from 1924 to '1929.

2. Prank 13. Kellogg was secretary of under Coolidge between 1925 and 1920. 3. Ogden Mills served in 1932 and 1933 under Hoover as secretary of with tho transportation dent lo boost his receipts for his crop to parity.

And the money with which he could turn his certificate into cash would come from the processor who bought the cotton. In Mib.siance. the processor would pay a tax of so servalion program, which runs to half a billion dol- nnich per pound on cotton bought for his mill; he i lavs this year, and presumably with its surplus coin- would not pay his tax into the treasury, but would modifies program, which is standing it close to hundle it cither through a or through the banks. but the parity program would be WOULO LEAVE U. S.

IN CLEAR you cut. Approximately of I ol American goods into the British a volt i.s generated at each chew, ami pvench concessions at Tientsin, i China. Fonda speaking lines. The ambassador said as a fender broke clean Fonda,) rule Americans are granted prefer- sprawling, said some things thaijential treatment, you could find in the book but not; Horiiicuchi said he had not been in the script. So did Director John advised that the Japanese had in- Fovd, whose star might have been icrlavd with the movement of injured.

Jones didn't try to say! to the concessions, anything. He had fixed that fender And since this particular processing tax would not The result would be that the transaction would not act as a brake on production, but would be designed show up on the treasury books at all. The Depart-j simply to raise the grower's price, the department figment of Agriculture would cury on with its soil con- I urcs it would get by the Supreme Court, so it would rattle just right, but! Rice is grown more widely and he hadn't known that anybody used more extensively than any was going to stand on it. lolhrr foodstuff. The department figures that this tax would not mean much of a ri.se in price for the consumer in the case of wheat and cotton.

Processing co.sts, say the department experts, are the big item in cotton goods and flour. They arc doubtful, however, that the stunt could be applied to livestock; there, they say, a processing tax could and would be passed directly on the con- M. Jardine was secretary under Coolidge from 1925 4. W. of to 1929.

5. Ray Lvman Wilbur held the post of secretary of under Hoover from 15)29 to 1933. (Answers on Classified page) So They Say I would advise you never to forget that in countries at war there is an understandable inclination always to have the darkest expectations about the intentions of the opposing powers. DIRK JAN DE GEER. of Belgium.

Never allow yourself lo become a "case" if you can help it; and never froth at the mouth about things. FROST, American poet. In defending free enterprise, they (business men) are defending democracy, because without free enterprise democracy cannot exist. M. GIRDLEU, chairman, Republic Steer Corporation.

Now i.s the time to listen to the rule of reason by all sides. The prosperity of labor and of industry as a whole depends on industrial peace. SENATOR WILLIAM GIBBS McADOO of California. Pettengill EIGHT VKAItS Democratic Congressman From INDIANA The Honor of tho Nation In the discussion of the neutrality bill there has been a remarkable degree of tolerance. Millions have participated in this debate, and so far without the report of a single bloody nose.

All this is something of a rebuke to "tired liberals" as well us tireless radicals. Our free institutions have shown an unexpected vitality. One point, however, appears lo have been little touched upon. It is the honor of (he nation and the American people. In this particular, the argument has run nn ignoble course.

As the debate has proceeded it has become crystal clear that proponents of repeal really wanted to help England and France. And that, in turn, is predicated upon the belief that their victory would protect tho United States. Senator Austin of Vermont, Senator Burke of Nebraska, Miss Dorothy Thompson and others hnve made this as plain as Mussolini's lower jaw. It has been argued that if Hitler wins, we are next; thai the British fleet must lie kept afloat in British hands; that our "first. lino of defense" is on the Rhine.

or in France or somewhere "over there." Now this is an arguable thesis which does not discredit the intelligence or patriotism of those who hold it. I personally think it. is not our war. Nevertheless, men are not morons who hold that England and France, in fighting their battle are also fighting our own. This premise is that Germany is our foe, as well as theirs.

But from this premise what is the conclusion? It is that we should lift tho embargo, sell bombing planes, poison gas, and every instrument of cleat's by which the enemies of England and France (our enemies) may he put. to death and charge our brave allies a profit for fighting for us! I submit that this is a craven excuse upon which to predicate the action of a great nation. We were called Shylocks once without cause or excuse. That was after we had sent more men to France than did England, and after we had paid for that sacrifice with our own money and our own men. But if we are called Shylocks now we shall deserve It! We are going to charge soldiers a profit for the guns with which to protect us! We are to "play safe." We are going to hide behind the skirts of French and English mothers as they send their sons up against the Seigfried for us.

We are going to get all their C. O. And when our allies have paid us all their gold, and their situation is then more desperate than now, we are going to rub our unctuous hands and say to them, "no goods. We sell only for cash. We fight only for cash.

We fight only for part in money, in ships and in men. Such is "more than words and less than war." To me it is wholly ignoble and rotten. If this is our war, even a fourth or a tenth part of it, we should pay for our profits." Or will wo? But if it is our I believe it is not then we can with honor either lift the embargo or retain it. But the thesis that, -t is our war puts us in the position of hiring Hessians to fight our battle, or as in the Civil War, paying someone to take our place in the draft not hiring or paying them to fifiht, but charging them a profit to fight! Such a spirit did not decorate the while snows of Valley Forge with the red badge of courage. To their eternal credit Senators who opposed lifting the embargo such as Borah and Clark of Missouri said that if this were our war Ihey would vote to declare America's participation in it with all that implies.

But no Senator who voted lo lift the embargo, had the nerve to say this. They pretend to believe that England and France are fighting our war only so long as their gold holds None of them dared to argue from premise to if this is our war, in whole or in part, we should give them the guns at least. For that would be to admit that they are prepared, if necessary, to later repeal the provision for cash only, as they now repeal the embargo, and then still later repeal the embargo on ships and men. In snort, that if guns for cash are not enough, then guns for credit; and then men and guns! We shall see whether any good will come to us, or to the world, from this Hessian philosophy. SAMUEL B.

PETTENGILt. Copyright, 1939, America's Future Inc. Hitler caused the war, but the allies caused Hitler. PAGE, author. Officials claim the Scminole common-consolidated district is the largest common school iu Texas.

It comprises 802 sections, or 513,280 acres, oil pools, the Wasson, Kirk and Semiuolc, and employs seven buses to transport pupils from homes to school. Forgets To Duck And Goes To Hospital NEW YORK, Nov. 21 An ex- pugili.st accused teing- gunman for a $500,000 jewel robbery ring- is in a hospital today because after diving through three closed windows and breaking a door off its hinges trying to police he forgot to duck when Detective Thomas Tunney, brother of the former world's heavyweight boxing champion, UIKW a left hook, The suspect, booked as Herman Horowitz, 34, on parcle front Sing Sing, was held on a robbery charge..

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About Pampa Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
191,180
Years Available:
1930-1977