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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 6

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The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
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6
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PAGE SIX MIAMI DAILY NEWS. MONDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1933 Daybreak! Empty Success Maxine Elliott was one of the brightest to intervene in Cuba has been of doubtful value, either to Cubt or to the United States. New York Day By Day By O. O. MclNTYRL stars of the American stage.

The theater sat- IKi.v, 'A sBi ML.t a- -r -t. 7 iw jL'. J. 1 i M'. Once on a time the supreme court at Washington had something to say as to the duty of Washington to underwrite a republic in Louisiana or any other state.

The guaranty of a republic, the justices declared, "implies a duty on the part of the states themselves to provide such a government." The people of Louisiana had botes. They used them to invoke the burden of Huey Long. They made the hard bed in which now they lie. In time they will escape, with a saddened experience to make them less gullible when next a plausible Huey Long appears with his gold bricks to sell. Miami Daily News OLDEST PAPER lp MIAMI DAX.

J. MAHOXET, General Manager ROSS A. REEDER. HAL LEYSHON. Vice President Editor Entered at Postottice.

Miami. Gloria a. as Second-Class Matter Published sverv day ia Che Newe Tower, corner Btscayne Blvd. and Sixth St. by the MetrODOlle Publishing Co.

Telephone 8-1101. The Miami Dally N-w la dedicated to the Beet Interests of Miami and Florida. It la honest In He conviction a and is honest witb the nubile, because tt has no entancllna alliances. The Dally News seeks at all times to be accurate In every tiubltahed statement of fact. Readers who discover any Important Inarcuraev of statement will confer a favor hv calling attention of the Editorial Itenartment to the error MONDAY, DECEMBER 11 1933.

MIAMI DAILY. NEWS OFFICES: NEW YORK. 220 E. Fortv-Second Street. CHICAGO-Palmollve Butldlne, WASHINGTON 1213 National Press Building.

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11.50. Air mail subscriptions payable In advance. Subscribers will confer a favor on the Circulation Department br calllne; 3-1101 and making known any complaint of service. named for her in New York still echoes with the triumphs which gave her great fame and fortune. Yet, visiting the United States from Francs for the first time in six years, she declares that she never found pleasure in her professional career.

It was a dreary business which she entered by accident and she "wouldn't live through it again for anything." For her the stage was grind, not glamor. If she could have appeared in a new play every night it might not have been tiresome. Her efforts were too successful, running on interminably. Real happiness, the best of the art of living, she found only in the peace and quiet of retirement. Ambitious young women, hopeful of following in her footsteps, need not to be discouraged, for Maxine Elliott adds, to the contrary, that she "would not have missed the experience." Most of us, whatever the unpleasantries of the past, are inclined, in retrospect, to teel the same way about it.

NEW YORKDec. 11. In the manner of Arnold Bennett's journal: M. and arising late, walked to a Tudor City tea room for breakfast. A chintzy place with a charming conspiracy to please.

On a roundabout way back to our chambers we saw Fay Templeton, quite largish in ripe years, but still extraordinarily beautiful. There was on the Helen Gould avenue corner a kindly professor from whom I articled a course of French lessons years ago, paying full tuition but going only once. I affected absorbed in conversation and tried to analyze the feeling of sneaky guilt. He was not a loser. Nellie Hussey, who was reared in my rondure of Missouri, came in and is off soon for the Orient where she has lived many years, and she told me much of Buddhism and I noticed that she, like all Americans residing in Peking; conversed in modulated tone.

I wondered why. All day troubled by Messmore Kendall's eerie experience with a dog, inherited years ago with a Great Neck, estate. It was a bloodhound, 24 years old, so decrepit it had to be urged to be helped to feet. One stormy November night, it leaped up out of a fireside nap unaided, scratched to get out and was never seen again! DAILY NEWS FORUM Miami Daily News Is a tnenmer Audit Bureau of Circulation. (EDITOR'S NOTE Letters must not exceed 500 words those of shorter length will be given preference.

They must be typewritten or in clear penmanship, using one side of the paper only, and bear, not necessarily for publication, the name and address of the writer.) Calling Floyd Gibbons on the phone about another matter he tcld of the horribly wiggly things he saw magnified millions of times in a drop of vinegar. So graphic I will be a long time tasting vine- Bible Thought for Today I am -weary with my groaning all the night make I my bed to swim; I -water my couch with my teats. Psalms 6:6. gar, a favorite condiment. There came a Driver's Duty A truck came down a Virginia road at a speed of 35 to 60 miles an hour.

A four-year-old child darted across the highway in front of it and was killed. The truck was hogging the middle of the road. If it had been in the proper right-hand lane the accident would not have occurred. The court awarded damages of $10,000 in the case and the supreme court of appeals of Virginia recently upheld judgment. 1 Its decision is of interest to motorists everywhere.

The court declares that the mere sight of children along the road itself constitutes a danger- signal. The driver must anticipate such a childishly thoughtless act as may cost the life of one of them and not himself to avert a possible accident. The court says: The driver is bound to exercise reasonable care, varying in accordance with the circumstances. Knowing from the immature years of children that they do not exercise good judgment and will take little precaution for their safety, the driver of an automobile necessarily must increase his vigilance to prevent injury to them as the necessities of the case require. Schoolboy patrols have greatly increased protection of children on' their way to and from glassrooms.

Yet, in few cities are playground facilities adequate. At play or otherwise, there are times when children suddenly and inevitably cross streets unguarded. The law holds the driver responsible for their safety. The sight of children on a sidewalk should be a "caution slow down" sign no more to be ignored than a traffic cop's upraised hand. note from Charles G.

Norris in Singapore that he is rounding into Paris to holiday with Gilbert White, the painter. Dennis McSweeney was here a moment. Extraordinary how enthusiastic he is after many years about the singer John McCormack. Of course, he is his manager but the fervor is so genuine. I was a press agent, cum grano sails, for several biggety-bugs years ago but such intimacy made my patrons actually grotesque.

In fact, I would soon grow contemptuous. Weather coolish. From coast to coast and A from Canada to the Gulf roars high debate. Money, THE money, money! A nation TIMES ia one again trying to master the abstruse subject of money. The air la thick witfi argument and epithet A Harvard professor shies a verbal brick at the president of the United States.

The president only smiles. Have we remembered that not many centuries ago the professor, anywhere in the world, wij shied a verbal brick at a nation's head would have been pronto without his own head? At 3:35 I shoved from my typing machine for a turn in the park. I generally suspect that women who sit alone in open squares await masculine advances. Quite unfair. In a spur of curiosity I sat on the far tip of a bench occupied by a comely lady who seemed abandoned to reverie.

After a tedium of silence, I observed: "A delightful day!" She was startled, looked about and moved quickly away. I had a surge of horror she might be going for a policeman. I shall address no more strange damsels in public parks. Philadelphia Public Ledger new business and mostly recorded a friendly reception. The bank was In much of the earth today a professor disagrees with his ruler only at great risk to himself.

Suppose Professor Sprague had raised his voice in Italy, Germany, Russia or Japan instead of in the United States? Ask the exiled professors from all those lands. The money question is argued from sea to sea, every man freely expressing his knowledge and his ignorance. There is no one to close his mouth. delighted. An observer comments they should have tried soliciting business in California or Alabama or Ohio.

NEWS BEHIND THE NEWS National emergency council may be used to boss all New Deal branches Tugwell wins as Peek loses Business psychology shows striking improvement Final drive made by stock exchange own plan of control An official Nazi view of U. S. colleges. INSURANCE New Tork gets word that the deposit insurance situation is greatly improved among a number of small banks in the Midwest and South. Farmers who have re A venerable ryot, ridding up twigs along the paths, told me curious thing about When one is mangled under a motor and hurriedly removed, all the squirrels in every far reach of the park go into hiding for days, sometimes a week.

How the tragic new3 spreads is a topic for fascinating reflection. ceived government loans and bonuses that certain Wall Streeters are trying I confidentially to organize a bull mar are using the money to pay their debts and their banks are much better qualified to pass an insurance examination than they were a few weeks There is a lynching in California. The governor of the state, betraying his office, gives the lynchers his blessing. That governor hears from hi3 home folks and from the far folks of other states the horror which his words inspire. Just as freely he hears the commendation of such as can commend that sort of thing.

ket. There is nothing particularly outstanding in the immediate picture. By TAX I MALI. ()N WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.

TRICK This innocent appearing new national emergency council Is not the trivial thing it is supposed to be. No one paid much attention to it because the White House said it would only be an information bureau of no importance. A handout was issued inviting all citizens to send government inquiries to this new No one believes we are going to leap into prosperity. Yet the impression is It looks as if all banks now open will be made eligible for insurance. iu January, with modificAtious vt the system to come before July.

general that nothing can stop gradual Back at my desk, in sudden seizure, I tapped out my column in 28 minutes, but the top of my head feels quirly. As it does when I read too long in bed. At a tea, Lucy Virginia Long Norris and Hattie Belle Johnston fell to discussing the most fittingly named dramatist. A playwright makes his name well sounding. But it's a graceful coup to have one like Sir Arthur Wing Pinero.

progress toward a good spring rise. That is, the money policy uncer tainty, the NRA, hoopla, the agri A CONSERVATIVE'S VIEW To the Editor of the Miami Dally News: It is said that unless the government continues the emergency relief that we will undoubtedly have a revolution. Under the old order of conventional thinking it was never intended that any government should support or give alms to its people either for, emergency or otherwise; the giving of relief or sustenance defeats the scheme of life; man was to earn his keep by some service rendered and if, by some whim of Providence, he was deprived of the fruits of his labor, it was not intended that he be recompensed by the state which taxed the diligent and the thrifty to pay for the prodigal, the profligate or even those who, through no fault of their own, have lost their all. We have strayed so far into radical changes in our thoughts of old practices that we are in a revolution at the present time. Up to now there has been no bloodshed, but if these many revolutionary schemes which are now being promulgated do not materialize successfully we may see uprisings of major magnitude only to revert again to the old order, which history relates always happened after these upheavals.

There are those who hail every new theory or untried experiment that sounds reasonable with unbounded enthusiasm. To illustrate: Could anyone of our former conservative statesmen believe it possible to give agriculturalists money out of the treasury for not planting wheat? Could any one believe that such an absurd or assinine scheme be used when there are hungry people craving for food? I am an old fogy and hate to put my puny thoughts against the great brain trust or great political economists. I only reason from a common-sense basis and I want to say that, according to my reasoning the administration has accomplished splendid achievements when they did good, common-sense deeds, but when they monkey with our currency system and devaluate the only thing that we had, left which was valuable, it again looks to my dumb reasoning power as being a very silly performance. True to American tradition, we never stop with doing things part way. We generally overplay our hands.

Now we are in the throes of the greatest spending orgy, to bring about recovery, that the world has "ever witnessed. All this money must be paid back some day and how we will ever pay the interest, much less the principal, is again a mystery that I cannot fathom. When the government essayed to help rehabilitation no one ever dreamed that our whole economic, fabric was to be overthrown. We knew things were bad, but our conservative element did not think that such extreme measures were necessary. are still in better material circumstances than any other; our streets are lined with millions of automobiles, the Chicago fair drew 22,000,000 people, football and baseball and places of amusement still draw thousands.

The commercial interests believed that if the government would lend a helping hand to get this affair on its feet again, that by turning the crank the engine would start and they would pull the machine out of the mire; but to have a dictatorial executive and to engage to regulate business and do many of these other radical experiments wa3 not contemplated by even those of socialistic tendencies. We have faith in the president and believe he is the Moses born to lead us out of our dilemma, but the danger of dictators is that they get drunk with power and generally lead their people to destruction. I would rather trust the people with all their incongruities than the best potentate that ever lived, and if they make mistakes the people will have only themselves to blame. OBSERVER. Miami, Dec.

5, 1933. cultural prospects, are all being dis council. counted by the best judges. There is a substantial feeling that things are That is the way it will work for gradually getting better and will con tinue to get better regardless of the administration relief and recovery German Refugees Mussolini lodged his political exiles in island prisons. Germans driven from their country by Hitler must shift for themselves.

In the case of a scientist like Einstein or a musician like Bruno Walter a haven is readily found. Other countries are eager to absorb the scholars and artists with contributions for their own culture. Their German property may be confiscated and their works barred, but they are assured of a livelihood almost anywhere else they may choose to go. The problem is not so easily solved for the thousands of exiles who have neither fame nor genius to offer. James G.

Mac-Donald of the United States, commissioned by the League of Nations to work out a solution, tells the governing board which will assist him that there are German exiles thus far. Private agencies have already done notable work in the raising of relief funds and the provision of employment. The first step will be to coordinate their efforts. Then right of entry and passport questions will' be taken up with the various governments. With progress along these lines, it is expected that no less than twice as many more Germans, for whom life in Germany is impossible because of race or of religious or political convictions, will leave their homeland.

Some 25,000 are already in France. Some 6,500 have gone to Palestine, 6,000 to Poland, 5,000 each to Czechoslovakia and Holland, (3,000 to England and 2,500 each to Belgium and Switzerland. The Scandinavian countries have given refuge to 1,500. Scattered hundreds are in Austria, the Saar and Luxembourg. Spain, the United States and a number of other countries have a total of 1,000.

Immigration restriction has been the rule in recent years, and no country adds the present, but skeptics noted that the official executive order issued by the president did not say anything about information. It talked about Alfred E. Smith, a former governor, a former presidential candidate, bestows his choicest objurgation upon the president and his works. Father Coughlin, to a radio audience of millions, hands back to Smith blows no less heavy than the blows Smith bestowed. The country listens, weighs, makes up its mind.

It is one vast debating society. This is freedom of speech, of thought, of press, the process by which a free people makes up the judgments by which in freedom they shape their own destiny. program. all the federal relief and recovery agencies. None of the non-partisans share the published view of Senator Fess that We dined with the Will Hayses and over the coffee Cobbie and Albert! Cam-pioni, a young hotelier of Rome, told the best dialect stories I have heard.

Cob-bie's were in Japanese, Chinese and Portugese cant, his bargaining Chinese wood-chopper being an unbelievable realism. Signor Campioni's contribution was of a French banquet at which a German Englishman, Swede and Frenchman spoke. We left for a play at 9:05. Deep down in it was a provision "we are going to hell." They pay giving the council any authority the little attention to such statements, SUBWAYS Mayor-elect LaGuar-dia will find New York subway finances riding his neck harder than any other problem. Rigid economies in police, fire and health departments might save seven million dollars which would be grass seed as long as the subway deficit drains the budget.

He hasn't a prayer of making both ends meet while the situation persists. The seven-cent fare is the only way out. Assuming the same number of riders, this is estimated to yield $40, 000,000 a year in additional revenue. This relief to the budget would in turn make refinancing of city obligations possible on easier terms, with the prospect of saving another a year in interest charges because of improved credit. That would put Fusion on Easy st.

Watch for action on this line within the first sis months of LaGuardia's administration. The sooner it is done the more chance for hard feelings to evaporate before the 1937 election. ascribing them to political motives. president cares to give it. Therein lies a tale.

Most of the eound Republicans also doubt the wisdom of singing uch a MOTIVE The president is just chant of death. Some are really fear about fed up with all the inside ful that th administration will do something to impede recovery, but they recognize tha better psychology scrapping that has been going on among his New Dealers. There has been a complete lack of harmony between the liberals and conservatives now existing. With all its jangling voices, its air-full of argument and epithet, it is a eight to glory in. The America which, in freedom of mind and tongue, wrestles its way thus to its decisions, is safe.

What equal guarantee of a well-lighted path can there be in the land of blindfolded eyes where a dictator, locking up all minds but his own, decides the course in the NRA, AAA and all the other alphabetical supers. These two SUGAR There is some talk on the inside now about trying to revive the sugar marketing agreement on a price-fixing basis. Nothing definite is being dote. At the entr'acte I spoke to Thomas Meighan, far handsomer than in days of cinema stardom. Also talked to Brock Pemberton who seemed enjoying catching a cold.

Exciting, Rube Goldberg, affecting vague recognition, inquired: "Are you in the same line?" So to a restaurant party and sat with Rosamond Pinchot and Mrs. Grace Harriman there, beautiful in a Merry Widow hat, and across the table eager Bob Davis, just from Russia, with usual trope and metaphor told impressions, all favorable. But I was more intrigued with Grover Whalen's gray checkered shirt nor would he confide whence it came. Jogged home long after midnight with the Henry Sells in a horse-drawn gig. Copyright, 1933.

The terms under discussion include a processing tax of one half cent on each pound of sugar. opposing forces are rarely able to agree and he has spent most of his time lately refereeing bouts between them. His new council will be a super-council over all the other supers any minute he chooses to make it that. He puts his close friend and jtood servant Frank Walker as head of It merely to hold the bag until he is ready to show what is in his sleeve. Unless some plan is adopted by the time congress convenes, a loud wail will be raised by the representatives from sugar producing states.

needlessly now to its unemployment MEXICO Local Latin-American experts rate Puig Casaurane's co-operative gestures at Montevideo as so much polite applesauce. Mexico's ambitions to dominate Central America are moving ahead behind the scenes. For the first time in history Mexican syndicates are offering loans to Guatemala and other countries in exchange for concessions in developing natural resources. Mexican diplomacy aims at peasing Argentina and Brazil. They may not like the Yankee colossus, but Mexican imperial dreams rile them still more because they rate Mexico inferior to themselves.

They may enter strenuous objections if the Mexicans get too overt about it. NOTES Bootleggers here held "going out of business" bargain sales problem. Yet, the 15 nations represented on the league body dealing with the question of German refugees realize the when repeal was announced. Scotch and Cognac were sold by the case at a rate of $2.60 per bottle THIS STATE OP AFFAIRS while legal liquor authorities in nearby Maryland were charging $5 and $6. necessity of intelligent disposition of such an exception.

They could do worse than help promote the peace of the world by opening their doors to the German element so committed to liberty that they are willing to forsake their native soil TROUBLES The president kept the true state of his temper to himself in handling the threatened blowup in the AAA. By beguiling diplomacy, he managed to save the situation from breaking wide open before the public gaze. One fact which never got out was that the No. 2 man, Tugwell, had his hat on ready to go back to Columbia. The wets are grumbling about the strong regulations Mr.

Roosevelt is putting on the liquor traffic. Con gressman O'Connor sarcastically said to achieve it. His pal Jerome Frank was preparing to close" up his desk as chief counsel of Russia's Woman Explorer he preferred the former prohibition to the latter. National City Bank made a strong advertising virtue out of its acceptance of Jesse Jones' preferred stock plan. It ran large ads in Wall Street papers.

Copy the AAA. A berth already had been arranged for him in the solici Louisiana borders on the same gulf as Mexico and Cuba, linked with the Caribbean about which lie Nicaragua, Colombia, Venezuela, and other lands. Mexico had its Diaz. Cuba had its Machado and has now a dictator of another brand. Nicaragua, Venezuela all round the Caribbean the rise and fall of men who, by violence seizing political power, become dictators, large or small.

In Louisiana, on a neighboring gulf of the Caribbean, rises Huey Long. Strong arm at the ballot box, strong arm everywhere, and Long is in the state house, then in the senate, his human rubber stamps in every other post. Louisiana joins present Cuba, past Mexico and all he rest. Burt W. Henry, chairman of the New Orleans honest election league, tells the senate committee which has been investigating the Huey Long dictatorship in Louisiana that the people of Louisiona are afraid to tell what they know.

They are afraid of Huey Long and his army of political retainers. Louisiana looks to Washington, hopes Washington will remove the dictator from Louisiana's back. Washington used to try to help the other Caribbean states escape the dictators on their backs. It narticipated in getting rid of Huerta in Mexico. It had something to do with the flight of Machado.

It tried to keep crder in Nicaragua. Its efforts gave no happy result. They have been abandoned. right, 1033, by Paul Mallon. tor's office of the treasury department under Morgenthau.

That was the line-up until the very day that Mr. Roosevelt summoned the Tugwell-Prank opponent, tleorge Peek, to the White House and de There is a story behind the story of Sarasota's decision to tax the Ringling art exhibit to the breaking point a story of shrewdness masked aa a blunder. The museum and $5,000,000 art collection were included in the assets John Ringling, while ill, signed over to creditors pressing him for interest on a $1,700,000 loan. Taxing a leading Sarasota benefactor and taxing his creditors are entirely different. The county now has a tax bill of it will insist upon before anyone takes away the exhibit.

Next year the county bill will exceed two millions and the city may add approximately $800,000. Uncle Sam has an import duty lien of $3,000,000 that is unsatisfied, so it will cost some one approximately $6,000,000 to get clear title, and Sarasota doesn't believe there are many such customers loose these days. While Admiral Byrd and Lincoln Ellsworth invade the Antarctic, Russia's woman explorer, Nina Riabtzova-Demme, faces another winter in the polar regions at "the top of the world." A graduate of the University of Leningrad, she was 30 years old when, three years ago, she accompanied her husband on an expedition to Franz Josef Land, the only NAZIS The church revolt in Germany hag much graver aspects than appears from news dispatches. With the struggle of the Protestants occupying the front pages, a determined opposition has been quietly organized by the Catholics. The Nazis are trying to stamp it out before it gets too far.

More than 150 priests have been arrested as wcretly as possible during the last wo weeks. Munich eeclesiits have already agreed on a possible temporary substitute for Cardinal von Fanihaber, because his arrest is feared daily. The new membership blank of the German Bar association contains the following pnssagp: "I solemnly affirm that I have read Adolf Hitler's 'My BattlP, and that I am familiar with its contents." SUNLAND SHORTS By OLLX MILLER woman in the party of 11. For this service she was made head of the polar station in Severnaya Zemlya, A socialist is one who is willing to share anything he hasn't got. The stratosphericians say (a) that there is no weather in the stratosphere By JAMES Mt l.LIN NEW YORK, Dec.

11. CONTROL Stock Exchange authorities are making a last-ditch drive to steer forthcoming congressional regulation into their own channel. That's why all the secret conferences with the committee appointed by Secretary Roper. The big hope is to work out a program which congress will accept. The question of pools run by non-members bothers the exchange heads more than anything eke.

Every control measure they have tried in this direction has been so much water over the dam. There is reason to believe that the exchange would not object if congress did find a way of coping with this type of speculative manipulation and would cooperate by voluntarily opening its members" books. A pool to be really successful munt have inside knowledge from the book of the specialist handling the stock. Stricter control over specialists may furnish an answer satisfactory to everyone except the pool participants. and (b) that they make ascensions into the stratosphere in order to study the weather.

We can't understand this, and even if we could, we wouldn't believe it. The creditor is the forgotten man. Some people spend so much time pre cided to put the AAA codes under the. NRA. The cheering from the Tugwell-Frank group has not died down yet.

ROOTS Agriculture Secretary Wallace got all the headlines in the fight. He was an ally and spokesman for the Tugwell-Frank faction but was not involved directly to the extent that they were. The trouble started last summer, Frank was chief counsel for the AAA, but Peek, the director, had nothing to do with him. For a long time they spoke to each other only when required to. On legal questions Peek consulted his friend Fred Lee, not Frank.

Lee was privately employed by Peek. That state of affairs might have gone on indefinitely were it not for the fact that Peek started winning disputed points. He seemed to be putting over his views. The liberals sot the idea that the White House favored him, not them. They threatened to quit and forcea action.

NEWS The OFFICIAL German government newspaper recently published this "American universities are populated by the sons of wealthy farmers who, with a Coir strapped to their hip and a lasso dangling from the shoulder, loaf around the campus while their horses are being fed. After four semesters they buy themselves a doctor's degree for $500 and receive an exquisitely engraved sheepekin diploma." Gadsden county spent $200 trying and re-trying the alleged killer of a pet hound, to say nothing of the expense to the irate citizens who marched on the capitol at Tallahassee more than once to argue about it before the pardon board finally settled the issue the other day. But of course Gadsden county can afford to indulge in a few follies so long as the larger counties collect enough gasoline tax. Dade, Duval and Hillsborough probably paid for the "noun" dawg" case and didn't know it. paring to die that they never have a formerly Nicholas II Land, extending well up into the Arctic, circle off the north Siberian coast.

She is governor of the immense territory, with absolute official power to regulate commerce, trade, immigration and other state affairs. But her ice-locked domain ia inhabited only by her three men assistants, one of whom, her husband, operates the radio. She went there in 1932 with two years' supplies. An icebreaker was to take the party off recently, but failed to get through the floes. The long polar night was begun again and Mme.

Riabtzova-Demme must remain another winter. The ice masses are driving the big game away, but the larder was recently replenished with two polar bears. In spite of hardship and privation, she sticks to her declaration that "there must be no more inaccessible chance to live. A politician asks what nation consti tutes the greatest problem to the United States. The United States.

The Constitution of the United State3 guarantees to every state a republican form of government. Washington might have excuse, undr that act, to lift Huey Long from the back of Louisiana. It has a similar right in Cuba. When Cuba falls into disorder, the United States, under the Piatt amendment, is authorized to intervene. It is expected that, before another year is out, the Piatt amendment will be repealed.

The right of the United States GOOD WILL A large New York bank recently sent men out for personal solicitation of nw accounts through Manhattan and Brooklyn. And just about time we're on the verge of making ends meet, something busts GAS The German Chemical Trust has taken np the wholesale manufacture of Germany's latest poison gas Military Chemical W. The gas was invented by the chemist Wasner and is the deadliest yet. It is produced ia highly concentrated form and effective even if diluted in the ratio of 1 to lOlWlOfMI Cam tral- pffnrtt no r.rn- GOOD RIDDANCE (Chicago Daily News) New York city's principal industries, getting up stock pools and running sweat shops, see no prospect of early recovery. loose in the middle.

Alas! If you keep your chin up, people will say that you're going around with your nose in the air. (The real object wss to find out I whether there was as much hostility jto Wall Street in iu hop town as jwas gen orally reported. The solicitors came back with quite a bit of lands." IMPROVEMENT Business psychology is so much better hereabouts tection. Copyright, MeC'lure Newspaper Syndicate. 0.

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