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Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 14

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Tucson, Arizona
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14
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tucson, Arizona; Sunday morning, july is, 33 ITTE ARIZONA DAILY STAR PACE FOURTEEN Kentucky People End Their Shivering Spells In Old Tucson 48-40-25 AND 10 YEARS AGO Established 1877 PUBLISHED EVERT MORNING IN THE TEAR BT THE STATE CONSOLIDATED PUBLISHING COMPANY W. R. MATHEWS and CLARE R. ELLIN WOOD Answers to Questions By FREDERIC J. HASKIN Thousands of government experts are working constantly for the benefit of all citizens of the United State.

They will work directly for you If you will use our Washington bureau. This newspaper em. ploys Mr. Haskin to act aa an agent for its readers. He will take your matter to the proper authority.

State your Inquiry briefly, write clearly, and enclose three-cent stamp for a personal letter in reply. Do not use postcards. Address The Arizona Dally Star Information- Bureau; Frederic J. Haskin, Director; Washington, D. C.

mp I Entered as second class matter, September 28. 1926, at the post office, Tucson, Arizona, under the Act of March 3rd. 1879. MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS George O. Hand (1830-1887) pioneer Ariiona soldier, butcher, saloon keeper, politician and In his last years, janitor at th Pima count.v courthouse, wrote in his dia.y 48 years ago.

(Reprinted by the courtesy of Ariiona Pioneers' Historical society) Thursday, July 16, 1885: Fine morning. Drake and Sampson are some better. Subscription Rats, $9.00 a Yssr, Deliversd Anywhere CHARTER MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS. The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use of the publication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also to the local news published therein. All rights of republication of special dispatches also reserved.

Q. Who Is the newest attache of the British embassy? I. B. P. A.

It is His Grace the Earl of Chichester, one of the youngest diplomats in the corps. His name is John Buxton Pelham. He was born in 1912, and succeeded in 1926. The earldom was created In 1801, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY 16, 1933 The Administration's Program Court opened and took a recess. Dad Overton has gone to California.

11 A. M. court opened in case of S. F. Bd of Trade vs Kaufman continued all day.

4 P. M. fine shower. Lasted until nearly dark. Quite windy with thunder and lightning.

Was obliged to sleep in the house. Paul left on the East bound train. Q. What disposal did President Theodora Roose-velt make of the Nobel peace prize which was swarded him? W. R.

A. The prize amounted to $40,000, and he used part of the amount in endowing the Foundation for the Promotion of Industrial Peace. Residents of Pineville, couldn't get rid ef the idea that a big boulder parched on a mountain above their town threatened impending doom. So they chained the rock to the mountain. Q.

What kind of a drink was ens called sack? D. K. A. It was a popular drink In the times of Shakes, peare, and he made it the favorite beverage of Fal-staff. It is believed to have been a light-colored dry Spanish wine.

PINEVILLE, Ky. Folks in the little town of Pineville long have feared that a huge boulder, balanced precariously bn a mountainside 2,200 feet above them, would come crashing down in their midst. heavy cables across an abyss and connected with three-foot bolts sunk in the hanging rocks. The boulder, located on Cumber-land State park property, is viewed by hundreds of tourists passing through the southeastern Kentucky mountains on the Dixie highway. So they got busy and chained the rock to the mountain.

A chain 137 feet long and weighing a ton and a half was cut in two sections. Four mules were used to drag each section to the top of the mountain. There the chain was stretched by rORTY YEARS AGO It may Interest Star readers to know that there Is now a first class trail to Mt. Lemmon via Sablno canyon, bringing Tucson within 25 miles of the finest mountain climate In the world. Jack Robinson, better known as "Long Jack," and Jim West-fall are the pathfinders and have constructed an excellent trail over what was formerly considered an almost Inaccessible country.

It Is not an easy (horseback) ride to the top of Mt. Lemmon, almost 8000 feet above Tucson. Beginning tomorrow the tiours of railroad work will be shortened In the shops here.the time being from 7 to 1 and from 1 to 4 o'clock from that date. Q. When were Indian head pennies made? B.

C. A. They were first coined in the year 1859. The deslgnwas changed a little In 1860, and a slightly thinner coin was made in 1864. The Indian, head one-cent piece was made from 1859 to 1909 inclusive.

Ocean Airline Planned For 1934 by Germans Q. What fate befell the clergyman who read the Scriptures at the funeral service of John Brown? -B. S. A. The Rev.

Joshula Young was, for his act, deprived of his church at Burlington, Vermont. The time has come when there needs to be some plain thinking and frank talking done about the recovery program of the administration in Washington. It is a matter that transcends partisan politics. It is a matter where the welfare of the nation and its people alone should be considered. At the present time the general recovery which is taking place in business screens serious and fundamental defects in President Roosevelt's program.

Because business shows rapid recovery, and because this recovery lias taken place since March 4, there has been a general willingness to accept the President's program without question, and a general belief created that it Is responsible. It is this belief that needs to be challenged. In the first place conditions in the United States hit bottom on March 4. The prompt and decisive measures the President took immediately on assuming office met the banking crisis in a highly satisfactory manner. Because the measures he took at that time were fundamentally sound, the banking crisis was surmounted.

But March 4 marked the end of the long period of declining prices, and the breaking of the vicious downward cycle. Recovery which had already begun abroad soon was making itself felt within the limits of the United States. Had the President done nothing more than what he did to meet the banking crisis, a general revival of business would be taking place. The legislative program that followed had little or nothing to do with the generation of recovery. Yet this same legislative program easily may retard recovery, and if carried out do irreparable harm.

The grave defects in the President's program are that it is fundamentally unsound, a mass of contradictions, and composed of a number of legislative nostrums, such as monetary management, industrial control, farm relief and price fixing, which although they may generate a great wave of temporary speculation, will in the end if continued, end in disaster. Furthermore on such fundamental matters as the tariff, the war debts and the budget, the administration has so far dodged responsibility. On the one hand the administration asks the farmers of the middlewest and Q. How long ago did Dorothy Arnold disappear? J. R.

A. She left her home in New York City on December 12, 1910, and disappeared completely. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. Charles F.

Pogue of 735 North Stone avenue announce the wedding of their nelce, Mrs. Eva Stakebake Seayrs, to Benjamin Franklin Daniels, the United States marshal. The Thursday evening smoker at the Elk's building Is exclusively for Klks, and Ollie Parker Is expected to tell what he knows about second experience, within a few years, as a delegate to a national convention of Elks, as well as a booster for Los Angeles. Rev. W.

W. Breckenridge, D. S. Cochran and their wives have been enjoying the grandeur of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado since their arrival at the elegant Santa Fe hotel on the brink of the canyon. Dr.

Breckenridge and Mr. Cochran left here last month by 'the wagon route, the ladies going by the all-rail route at a later date. Q. Who was the commander of the boat which sank the Lusitania? C. D.

A. The Lusitania was sunk by the submarine U-20, commanded by Walther Schwieger. Q. Does poison ivy belong to the ivy family? C.C. A.

The poison ivy, like several other plants with similar names, Is not an ivy, but is merely called by that name because of its resemblance to the real ivy. Poison ivy belongs to the same family and genus as the sumacs and is totally different plant from the English ivy. 4 SevtA. '-'yTj ''NATAL Ocean, 4.w'. VTo RIQ 0E JANEIRO Q.

What does Kokomo mean? G. M. A. Kokomo means young grandmother. A Miami village, thus named after a chief, stood on the site of the present Kokomo, Indiana.

TEN YEARS AGO Construction work on a branch of the Market Inn, to be located at 848 North Fourth avenue, will start this week, according to O. K. Bush, manager of the grocery company. The recent ballot taken by the Tucson Open Shop association to determine whether Tucsonans desire to continue the open shop policy in Tucson showed 169 votes favorable to Its continuation and but one vote opposed. Mr.

and Mrs. Grant O. Tevis were the hosts on Friday evening at a charming party given in their home, 943 East Ninth street, honoring their two cousins from Dallas, Texas. They are Miss Anna Dee Wilson and Miss Emma Dee Wilson. BY PAUL SANDERS RIO DE JANEIRO Experiments with the steamship Westpha-ien as a mid-ocean base for trans-Atlantic airmail service have been a complete success, and the first trans-ocean line will get under way in 1934.

says Capt. Fritz Hammer. Captain Hammer, former pilot of the giant flying boat Do-X and director of the Syndicato Condor, Brazilian representative of the German Lufthansa company which will operate the ocean line, piloted the first flying boat catapulted from mid-ocean in a test run to Brazil. The Westphalen, now on the way home to Bremen, Germany, for minor changes, will return to mid-ocean in September or October for finar experiments. The ship already has received and catapulted planes from Africa and Brazil and vice versa, besides taking part in numerous offshore landings and catapulting tests.

Only One Accident In all these experiments, extending over many months, only one accident occurred Captain Hammer, experimenting with the landing machinery aboard ship, cut off part of a finger. "The ocean air line, alternating with the Graf Zeppelin, will at the start give 4-day service from Berlin to r.io." said Captain Hammer. "Later, as night flying Is instituted along the African coast, and faster flying boats are placed in service, the time will be reduced and is expected to get down to 60 hours before many years." The trans -ocean part of the line will require from 12 to 14 hours, depending on flying conditions. Planes from Bathurst will reach the Westphalen, in mid-ocean, in six or seven hours, the trans-ocean tests demonstrated. Reaching the Westphalen, the flying boats will be taken aboard by an ingenious drag sail and crane.

A second plane will be catapulted for Brazil while the recent arrival from Africa is being overhauled. Landing Device Important The landing device, key to success of the experiments, worked without a hitch in the four ocean flights made as experiments. This device consists of a canvas, 52 by 26 feet, reinforced by wooden Q. Whst is the difference between miracle plays and mystery plays as dramatic types? D. M.

A. Halleck, in his English Literature, says that "A miracle play is the dramatic representation of the life of a saint and of the miracles connected with him. A mystery play deals with Gospel events which are concerned with any phase of the life of Christ, or with any Biblical event that remotely foreshadows Christ or indicates the necessity of a Redeemer." Stamp News Q. How many Confederate veterans are still living? E. A.

R. A. It is estimated that there are about 15,000. The liner Westphalen, shown here, is to be used as the mid-ocean bate for a trans-Atlantic flying service announced to start next year. Planes will alight on the water, taxi up a drag sail and be drawn on board the ship.

The map shows the projected route. Q. How are Pullman cars procured by the different railroads? D. J. B.

A. The Pullman Car company rents or leases its cars to individual railroads by an agreement or contract with that particular railroad. weighing nine tons loaded, in the ocean experiments. The planes are equipped with radio direction find ers, and in experiments hit the tar get despite Dor visibility. Was Weather Bureau Q.

How far from Monticello is Ash Lawn? T. A. Ash Lawn, home of James Monroe, five miles out of Charlottesville, Virginia, is about two milei beyond Monticello, home of Thomas Jefferson. The Westphalen is reported to have the most elaborate weather strips, and with long slats underneath to assure stability. Upon receiving a plane, the Westphalen heads into the wind, letting out the canvas drag sail behind.

The flying boats, alighting on open sea, time their descent to hit the top of a wave close to the canvas. Runs Up Sail The flying boat proceeds to the sail, which drags partially under water. Then the Westphalen speeds up, the canvas pulls up more, the plane taxis partially up the canvas and a crane pulls the plane aboard. The Westphalen was reached without difficulty by the planes, bureau a-sea, picking up weather reports from Europe, Africa, South and North America, thus enabling Q. What is the medical term for a person who habitually tells useless lies? L.

P. A. He is a pathological liar and suffers from what is known as mythomania. complete weather maps for the At lantic to be drawn. The Lufthansa line will run from Berlin by way of Stuttgart, Cadiz, the Canary Islands, Bathurst, the Westphalen and Natal.

Q. When were alarm clocks first used? E. M. A. It is not definitely known when the first alarm clock was made.

Alarm attachments are as old at the mechanical clock itself. They were probably adopted for use of the priesthood. According to one authority, the invention is attributed to the Monk Gerbert, as early as 936. Links Church To Government By E. G.

GAY As promised last week we now have more information on the miniature sheets of 25 of the Century of Progress stamps. Besides printing these sheets In the 3c value, the lc value will also be printed so that for a dollar bill one may be able to purchase a sheet of each value. But they will be issued imperforate and ungummed and will be good for regular postal use. At present the lc will bear plate -numbers 21143 and the 3c number 21144. Whether more numbers for these sheets will be used or not remains to be seen.

The P. O. department will not prepare or mail covers for collectors, but these sheets may be purchased from the Philatelic agency at Washington, D. on and after August 28, 1933, until sold out. On this date they will also be sold at the Century of Progress branch post office, Chicago.

August 25th will be first day of sale and issue at the headquarters of the American Philatelic agency, Medina club, Chicago, where there will be established a temporary branch post office. These sheets will be printed on the flat plate press at the exhibition, with margins all around in which will be printed, "Under authority of James A. Farley, postmaster general" at the top; "Century of Progress, August, 1933, in compliment to the American Philatelic society" at the right; "Chicago, 111., plate No. "'at the bottom; and "Printed at the bureau of engraving and printing" at the left. The reason these will not be perforated Is because being printed on the flat plate press they would take a different perforation than tHe larger sheets now being printed on the rotary presses, and hence a.

different variety would result, and rather than go to the added expense of preparing a special perforating machine for the purpose, it was decided not to perforate at all. The W. S. C. states that there were 232,251 first day covers mailed from Chicago of the Century of Progress stamps, both values, on May 25th.

There was a total of 2,425,900 3c stamps and 1,586,409 lc stamps sold on that first day. Wrhen the Georgia Bicentennial commission notified the P. O. department that they were running low on ttielr supplies of the recent James Oglethorpe 3c commemorative stamps, the department Immediately complied and printed another 15,000,000 stamps, making the total to date of this Issue The nearest tills approaches another commemorative issue is the Von Steuben 2c of 1930 when the final total reached 66,487,100. The Harding memorial 2c black of 1923 beats them all so far with a total of 560,207,385 stamps Issued.

Q. How long has the word, reforestation, been used ss it is today? C. F. R. A.

It came Into active use for replanting with trees in about 1880. That this religion is the Science of Jesus' teachings has been proved n.any times by the works which its students have done and are doing through the spiritual understanding Q. When is Frontier Day held In Cheyenne? J. T. W.

A. The Cheyenne chamber of commerce says that the Frontier Day celebration is held annually the last full week in July. of God's law. He who practices Christian Science, in ways small or great, is we'll prepared to take his place as a servant of mankind (The Christian Science Monitor) Today men of all nations are evidencing deep interest in the affairs of their respective governments. This progressive attitude has undoubtedly resulted from the ceaseless, though not always recognized, influence of the wonderful Christian teaching that in the sight of God all men are equal.

This does not mean that every person as a citizen can have assigned to him a spe-citl public duty. However, to everyone comes the privilege, as well as the duty, of being a supporter of right government, and this is indeed a high office. To each citizen, come opportunities to support a righteous government through in Speaking of "a knowledge of the Science of being," Mrs. Eddy says in "Science and Health with Key to Q. Is there a women's sir reserve? M.

L. J. A. The Betsy Ross corps is composed of women pilots who are in training to relieve men fliers for combat duty in the event of national emergency. Mrs.

Opal Logan Kunz of New York, is the organizer and national commander of the corps. ft" vy. mvu Willi a deiinite cash reward as an incentive. With the other hand it advances money for the creation of new irrigation districts to add to the agricultural surplus it is trying to eliminate. It shrinks from imposing new and necessary taxes, yet levies through the processing tax on wheat and cotton a sales tax which will be paid by everyone, including the forgotten man, who buys a loaf of bread or a piece of clothing.

On the one hand it imposes ruthless economies on the administrative functions of the government, and with the other hand creates a vast new bureaucracy. It presumes to balance the national budget through the dubious subterfuge of creating an extraordinary budget in which it can conveniently dump enough of the extraordinary expenditures to reduce the regular budget to the totals of current revenue. It promises economy, yet it proposes to indulge in the greatest peace time spending spree the nation has ever known. If prosperity can be created through government spending; if prosperity can be created by destroying wealth deliberately, America is going to have prosperity. How strange it seems, that such a magic formula will work now, whereas in the past it has always led to disaster The monetary program with its apparently aimless drifting Is another feature fraught with danger.

The deliberate and unnecessary debasement of the dollar is nothing short of plain fraud, a violation of the campaign, pledge of the Democratic party, and a direct repudiation -of the President's own word. Debasement of coinage is an old, old, trick practiced by kings and tyrants of ages ago for the purpose of paving for the'ir wars and squanderings. None will suffer more from this than the salaried and laboring classes. Developments of the next few months will show that. No doubt the President has adopted his monetary program as the result of strong on the part of certain theorists who believe that a price level can be regulated by monetary management, and by certain other classes of industrialists and special privilege seekers who will reap a great financial reward for themselves.

In fact, the underlying defect in the entire program of the President, and in spite of all precautions, is that it uses the powers of the government to create unearned wealth for certain special classes at the expense of the people as a whole, including the forgotten man. It takes only a review of the past two months of speculative activity fo'realize who is making the unearned profits. The inevitable result of this will be that the rich will become richer, and the poor will become poorer. The disbanding of the London conference is another illustration of this incessant conflict of contradictory purposes Before the conference met the President publicly stated that it 'Must not fail," and in emphatic terms declared, "If any strong nation refuses to join with sincerity in these concerted efforts for political and economic peace, progress can be obstructad and ultimately blocked. In such event the civilized world, seeking both forms of peace, will know where the responsibility for failure lies.

I urge that no nation assume such a responsibility, and that all the nations translate the professed policies into act.on In addition the President declared that currencies must be stabilized and tariffs reduced. Yet when the tet came, it was the President who broke up the conference by his refusal to cons.der stabilization, and without stabilization it is useless to talk of tariff reductions. The President said that stabilization could not be' considered now, because budgets of certain countries, like France were out of balance, and that in such circumstances, stabilization could not be permanent. Perhaps the President meant the government of the United States with its mounting deficit A continual. on of this steadily growing deficit, despite skillful bookkeeping, and the use of two budgets, undoubtedly makes stabilization of the dollar impossible.

Despite all of the horror which has been expressed about foreign loans, the administration has blithely started making foreign loar is or i.tsown Account. The loans of $50,000,000 to China, and $4,000,000 to Soviet Russia are small, but they may grow into totals involving billions. Like all foreign loans, these advances will have to be repaid in goods or services, or else default is inevitable. The outstanding feature of this entire economic program is that it cannot cure the evils which beset the nation, while the uncertainty that will surely develop as prosperity fails to ffu to formula, may easilv prove embarrass-mz before the next Presidential election. Those who will par-Ki thls.orK' of fecial privilege, and who get a share of he 5SJnCarVOvSWaS'-n wonderfu1.

by that time retout of wonder what lle to get out of it. The curb on the flow and exchange of goods and the Scriptures" (p. 128), "It raises the thinker into his native air of insight and perspicacity." Surely, one so equipped can furnish strong support to the right activities of mate triumph of Truth, even when evil seems threatening. To charity, evil is only a deceiving false sense which may be progressively replaced with the true sense of being as spiritual, hen charity governs thought, the citizen may look critically upon his government in a helpful way. He may turn the searchlight of critical inspection on the nation's functionings, and by keeping aglow In his own thought the light of wisdom, fairness, patience, and love he will be able to see not only the errors to be eradi? cated, but the good already accomplished.

Many doors to service are opened by the qualities expressed in the word "citizenship." Citizenship, as a way of living, has to do with such opportunities as come to the thinker In the usual walks of life, in the home, the school, or the shop. Citizenship means bringing to bear upon these activities the influence of a high idealism. It means practicing Jesus' Golden Rule, "All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them." For the student of Christian Science to be a good citizen hie must practice the truth discovered and founded by Mary Baker Eddy. civic government. The doorway to Q.

What fighter got the largest amount of money for a single priiefight? W. P. A. Gene Tunney holds the record of earnings in a single prizefight. He received $990,445.54 for his ten-round battle with Jack Dempsey in Chicago, 1927.

the highest service is opened through the power for good in true prayer. Prayer founds thought on the divinely substantial Rock, Christ, the true idea of God, the strong foundation for the super structure of harmonious living. True prayer avails, and the Christian FOREIGN NEW ISSUES Germany adds another Hindenbtirg medallion type stamp with an 80 pf deep blue border and gray-black portrait. Peru adds to the present series a 50c green with the Simon Bolivar monument at Lima, ns on the others. Portugal adds a 30c slate and a 95c carmine to the current Lusiadus type issue.

Barbs Thermometer tests in the capitol at Washington showed the house chamber was two degrees warmer than that of the senate, which seems to indicate that the house has the most hot air although we had always believed the honors were about even. In view of the brand of weather we've been having here, it's hard to understand why Jimmy Mattern, that globe-girdling aviator, was in such a hurry to get back from Siberia. Butter and egg futures make new high price marks on Chicago mercantile exchange. Everything's all right; soon, we'll have the Big Butter and Egg Man back with us. telligent thinking.

Through the cul: tlvatlon and exercise of such qualities of thought as are implied by the words understanding, charity, citizenship, and prayer, the individual can prepare himself to be a useful citizen in his community. Christian Science enables one to regard these subjects In their true light. As men begin to grasp the truth concerning God's government, and to prove their understanding by bettering individual thinking, they find themselves willing and ready to accept the responsibilities of useful citizenship. Many opportunities are thus made available by spiritual understanding. This understanding includes intelligent comprehension, enlightenment, alertness.

One who through Christian Science seeks to understand his government, its purposes, methods, and aims, has an Intelligent standard whereby to measure its acts. He is not misled by false propaganda or by personal influence. He casts his ballot on the side of integrity, sound sense, and progress. In this way he rises above the limitations of a merely material sense of government and begins to demonstrate the truth concerning real government; for he has learned the, spiritual nature of man as an intelligent son of an all-wise God, the perfect Mind. Charity, too.

is an open door to opportunities for serving. It may be described as a true sense of love. Charity is the attitude which re WHAT DO YOU KNOW ABOUT NORT AMERICA? How does Mexico City rank among the largest North American cities? How does Mount Whitney rank among the largest mountains? What country has the largest wheat crop? Where is the Lincoln sea? Mosquito gulf? Melville sound? Where does Havana, Cuba, lie in relation to New York City? The NEW MAP OF NORTH AMERICA offers an-swers to these and innumerable other questions concerning the great territory of North America. The fact of the map, in full colors, gives North America in its entirety, Greenland and Alaska, Canada and the United States, Mexico and Central America, and the West Indies. The reverse side of the map is replete with valuable information and statistics of a commercial and geographic nature populations, rivers and mountains, imports and exports, money values and agricultural products.

This valuable map, 21x28 Inches in is yours for a mere cost and postage charge of ten cents. Use this coupon. THE ARIZONA DAILY STAR INFORMATION BUREAU, Frederic J. Haskin, director, Washington, D. C.

I enclose herewith TEN CENTS in coin (care- fuly wrapped) for a copy of the new MAP OF NORTH AMERICA. Name 4- Street cltV State Scientist learns to pray availingly not alone for the good of himself, but for the whole world. In Christian Science, prayer is fervent, reverent, aspiration; it is spiritual vision. Prayer is that mental attitude which rests on the conviction that God, Love, is the only cause and creator, and that every real effect is Godlike. Prayer breaks the mesmerism of befogging material sense, and through the mists it reveals God's man, governed by God.

Through prayer consciousness is filled with the holy facts of being; greed is replaced with unselfish love, hatred with brotherhood, lust with peace, and ignorance with wisdom. "Are we benefited by praying?" asks Mrs. Eddy on page 2 of Science and Health; and her Immediate answer is, "Yes, the desire which goes forth hungering after righteousness Is blessed of our Father, and it does not return unto us void." As men "universally learn so to pray, the mental atmosphere o' the whole world will be suffused with loving-kindness, and all can then echo the angelic rejoicing, recorded by the Revelator, "The kingdoms of this world are become the kingdoms of our Lord, and of his Christ: and he shall reign tot ever and ever." New York professor says the boy in the poem "who stood on the burning deck whence all but he had flad" was a moron, not a hero. The heroes were all the school kids who had to learn the poem by heart. the flight of capital this artificial policy imposes, will leave a permanent problem of and sharpen the distinction between classes.

No groups will suffer more than the salaried and wage earning classes. The rich will become richer, and the poor will become poorer. Space does not permit a more extended discussion today. But openly and mllitantly we want to go on record as strenuously opposing this ruinous program It cannot bring prosperity. If continued easily it may prevent recovery which has begun from reaching its normal growth.

It does not eradicate or cure the evils which brought about the calamity of 1929 In fact it enthrones, stronger than before, greed and spectal privilege. The responsibllitv will be the President's, unlefs he makes a profound and radical change in the direction hcls going. Congressman punched1 in the eye a neighbor whose radio annoyed him. Now all we need is a supreme court decision that such an actioji Is entirely constitutional. No, Doris, a sweatshop isn't a Turkish bath.

France sends a new governor to Its penal colony at Devil's Island with orders to reform it. Only giving the devil his due. joices in the certainty of the ulti.

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