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> " X Th* gamwll People^entlnel, BAnuggll a C„ February 22,1934 X Review of Current Events the World Over Bloody Riots in Paris Drive Out Daladier, and Doumergue Becomes Premier—Austrian Government and Socialists at War. y EDWARD W. PICKARD r Oast on Doumergue ' 7'■ C'RANCE seemingly narrowly «•- ” caped a civil war. Following two daya of bloody rioting in Paris and other cities, Premier Daladier and his cabinet capitulated and the reins of gov ernment were put In the hands of Gaston Doumergue, the sev enty-one-year-old for mer President who was in retirement on his country estate. His reappearance on the political stage was in response to the - ' pleadings of President Lebrun and many oth er patriots who were convinced that he alone could restore the country , to quiet. It was condi tioned on pledges that both chambers of parliament would support him un reservedly and that the president would give him an executive ojjder dis solving the parliament and calling new elections, to be used If he considered It necessary. So the “Iron man" of France, as he has been dubbed, re turned to Paris with plans for a small cabinet made up of former, premiers and party leaders and with power to make himself the virtual dictator of the country. r War veterans, Monarchists, Commu nists and other elements Joined In the violent demonstrations that forced jwit. the Daladier regime. All joined in op position to the government, though-no -•one of the gnmps was hr accord wtth- any others In other respects. The mobs were furious and fought desper- ately with the police and the .troops that Daladier bad brought -Into the capital. The rioters, ojeratlng mainly 7h the Place de la Concorde and the region about the Palais Bourbon where the chamber of deputies sits, were raked by HflAchiDCL gun fire, sphered by mounted troops and clubbed and shot by the Idfestry and police. But they returned to the fray time after time and would uot cease the struggle until Daladier resigned. The number of dead was estimated at fifty, and more than a thousand persons were wounded. After the battles were over the boulevards In the center of Paris presented a scene of desolation and destruction unequaled there since days of the commune In 1871. Organized labor of France, to show Its disapproval of what U considered the Fascist methods of the new gov ernment. staged a one-day strike that Involved one million workers. Virtual ly every Industry was shut down and communication with the outside world was Interrupted. Thirty-five thousand unable to prevent riots and the looting of shops by the Communists. Through out the nation the armed forces were held ready to suppress disorders. Maj. Emil Fey 5* 1 *'' i ■ D OWNRIGHT warfare between So cialists of Austria and tire gov ernment broke out following the proc lamationof i general atrike ant) a conflict between So cialists and the po lice In Linz, capital of Upper Austria. In the melee the police, re inforced by troops, used machine guns and their opponents hurled hand-grenades, with the result fhat scores of persons were killed. Martial law was declared In Linz and Vienna and civil ians caught with weapons were or dered shot at once. Later the troops at Linz opened fire with artillery on Socialists barricaded on the banks of the Danube. First to respond to the strike call In Vienna were the municipal gas plant workers; electric plant employ ees fallowed, snd the street car serv ice was paralyzed. Chancellor Doll- fuss and his cabinet were attending a special service In St. Stephen's cathe dral commemorating the anniversary of the coronation of Pope Pius XI, and in the midst of the ceremony the lights went out. The government Issued orders for all troops in the Vienna district to stand ready for Immediate action. Fascist helmwehr (home guards) troops, equipped with machine guns, moved out of Vienna toward the thickly pop ulated factory districts. Meanwhile, emergency works organ izations, trained to man the electric and other public service plants, were called out for duty. . „ The cabinet went into permanent session and decreed the dissolution of the Socialist party. This was the sig nal for attack on the Socialists by the Fascist helmwehr led by Prince von Starhemberg. *nd for desperate resist ance by the Socialist Schutzbund. which was well armed.!’* Barricades and barbed wire entanglements were placed in the streets and the govern ment troops went Into action, with bloody results. The.row with the Socialists came to s head when Maj. Emil Fey, vies chan cellor and directog of public security, deprived Karl Seits, Socialist burgo master of Vienna, of all his police pow ers. These powers were assumed Im mediately by Eugene Seydal, chief of police, who Is directly responsible to Major Fey.’ v They Include public or der, police a press clubs and societies, the regula tion of foreigners and expulsions, transportation, theaters, and public amusements. _ The situation In Austria was fraught with International peril. For the time being the German Nazis were awaiting results, but it was admitted that If the Dollfuss government could not sup press the revolt Italy and Hungary would have an excuse to Intervene; then Germany and the nations of the little entente might be drawn into the affair. T WENTY-TWO days after he was kidnaped, Edward G. Bremer, banker of St. Paul, Minn., was set free in Rochester, Minn., and made his way home, nervohs and with wounds on his head inflicted when he was ••snatched,” but otherwise un harmed, His father, Adolf Bremer, wealthy brewer, hud ‘paid the $200,000 demanded by the kidnapers, in $10 and $5 bllls,_ through an Intermediary. Dur ing his captivity Bre- dark room and under constant guard State and federal law enforcement agencies were conducting an Intensive hunt for the abductors of Bremer, who probably mnntrered terr w "more.-" It was believed the victim was held In either Sioux City or Kansas City. G OVERNORS of all the states have received from the admlntitratloh a draft of s model state recovery law which would make all national codes of fair competition automatically ef fective within the statea. It Would re mora the threatening possibility of, a constitutional barrier to the enforce ment of those codes among concerns that do not deal In Interstate com merce.. . The model law would authorize the state governor to consent to the utili zation of state and local officers by the President of the United States **ln effectuating the policies of the nation al Industrial recovery act" A viola-' lion of a code would be made a misde meanor in the state with a penalty of for each offense and for each day the violation continues. WTiere a license under the NRA is re quired. a person doing business with out one would be liable to ^ fine of $000 or six months’ Imprisonment or both for each day. of the violation.' These state penalities are copied after those in the national Industrial recov ery act 1 6 maid National Topics Interpreted , - ^ by William Bruckart Washington.—Among the character Istlcs of the New Deal which Presl- pitESIDENT ROOSEVELT having decided that the civilian conserva tion corps shall be. maintained at full strength until March 31, 1935, orders to this effect have been sent to the commanding generals of all army areas. There will be two enrollment periods of six months each, the total [ ©f ibem number of men to be 300,000. Addi tional local experienced men will be enlisted in some, of the states, In the eighth and ninth corps areas in the ex treme West. P ENALTIES under the NRA petro leum code cannot be applied against oil companies that have not signed the code or that are engaged only In Intra state commerce, according to an opin ion rendered by Federal Judge Ran dolph Bryant at Sherman, Texas. It was announced In Washington that *.-<3. Bremer m er was kept ifi a the government would appeal the caso.- Hun( j redg of thousands of Individual to the United States Supreme court. DltESIDENT ROOSEVELT called * congressional leaders Into confer- ^ence amL-with them-formnlated hills designed “to bring the stock markets of the country under federal control. Verne Sankpy, notorious kidnaper * 'flSfre measures were then introduced who was captured recently in Chicago ,n house and,senate. 1 hey deal i Itrxfnrd Tlucwcll assistant secre- with short selling, marginal trading, . and taken to Sioux Falls, S. D., for : safe keeping until his trial In a fed eral court, committed suicide In his cell by hanging, using a Ibop made L specialists^ pool operations and man ipulation. of neckties. He had ftdwrttted- the* ab- j PAOKfU^;.fay„iIifc„iU:fialfl£Ok. ^ rXmt duction of Charles Boettcher of Den- 13 Sfhnd jur, tnvestlButlon was to- 1 ICTarfnnHBr rmnw ver and Haskell Bohn of St'PnnL \ ■ lag on in VVashington that promised to uncover a $10,000^000 scandal In the dent Roosevelt Is Dream giving us is a Becomes Reality queer admlxtare of planning for the long-range developments along with quick action for, as well as un; der the guise of, emergency problems. None con say that be has tailed to be quick op the trigger when it came t<L taking some tlnd of action when emer gencies hmi to be solved, whethec one agrees *An them or not, but coupled with this haste be has been moving in the direction of long-ran^e planning with s celerity that la/ to say the least, unusual In government. Some months ago/1 wrote of the possibilities of the transfer of human beings, like so many cattle or chat tels, into new spheres of activity, into a new locale; into places where some a chance for an even break In the battle for subsistence. At that time, I believed the Idea, ad vanced to me by some of the Presl- d^t’s advisers, was largely a dream. But It has gone past that stage and Is about to become a reality. Harry Hopkins, who started out to be administrator of the government’s Job of extending relief to the destitute and who since has become one of the President’s right-hand men. Is now se riously planniifg a rehabilitation move ment of the very kind that* as I said, was only a dream six months ago. families are Involved. Their future Is all .bound up in the scientific planning or the wh’im, whichever you- choose to call it; of those social engineers of tlTb "N^WTrein. TrTs'experTmentaTT ad mittedly, but those who are working out the plan claim It can be carried Out successfully. With Mr. Hopkins -tary of-agriculture and one of the pro- fessors of the New Deal; Mordecai Ezekiel, also of the Department of H. Wlrth, of the Interior deonvriwnr; THE ground that fraud and col- War department. Two lawyers promi- lusion had been uncovered, Post- . nently connected In the past with the master General Farley canceled tips! American Legion were said to be in- contracts of all air lines carrying the yolved. .. It was asserted llmt ntitouio- United States air mall, and the Pres- Ml® _z- , -«<; / Ident directed the army air service to f° r a fee of $50,000 In return fot/War carry the air malls until further no- department contracts for trqckS/Tun- tlce. Despite the warm protests of nlng lnto mllliyns. heads of the air line companies and of Colonel Lindbergh against this sura- VASSILY BLUEOHER, com- mary action, it appeared likely the mander of the Soviet army In the transfer of the service to the army ^ ar Ka^t, went to Mokcbw to attend would be made perumnent. alf-unlon Communist party con* The country, was divided Into three an d he told that gathering that Japan Is preparing to make war nn Russia, offering "proof" of that state- be administration. Their plans will completed within another month. Summarized the program contetn- was asserted mat autrnno- plates the physical transfer of tlmu- manufacturers had been asked sands upon thousands of men and their families from cities and indus trial areas or from farming commu nities where the land has been worked to death, to areas where the people areas, eastern, central and western, for this service. Operations In the eastern area will be carried on from The general, however, asserted troops on duty In Paris but were the Newark (N. J.) airport under Maj. j that the Soviet state was ready fof B. O. Jones of Dangley Field, Va. Lieut. Col/H. C. 'HIckam of/ Fort Crockett, Galveston, Texas, will be in charge of operations In the central area, with headquarters in Chicago. Lieut. Col. H. H. Arnold Will command the western area. The change was or dered in effect on February 19. Air mail letters will move more slowly and will be flown to fewer places in the first weeks that the army tries to fill the shoes of a highly developed private Industry, post office officials ad mitted. Service will be curtailed and less speedv while army bombers lum ber over the routes previously skimmed by fast private mall planes. Major transcontinental routes will the coming conflict “The Red army,’ said he. “is generally strengthened. We have encircled our frontiers by Iron and concrete. They will be sufficiently strong to break any imperialist head that comes against them." In support of his-charge-that Japan is making an armed base of Manchu- kuo, General Bteucher made these statements:- — That Japan has sponsored construc tion of about 620 miles of^rallroads In north Manchukuo In the last two years, 65 per cent of which he regards as economically unnecessary. That about 1,367 miles of highways have been opened In the same region; and, , That 50 aviation bases have been be flown at once by the army, Harlee concentrated north of Mukden. Branch second assistant postmaster ne 8a id Japan has 130,000 troops general In charge of air mall, said. an( j 500 a irplanes In Manchuria, in ad- Secondary lines will be disregarded ditio n to “110,000 to 115,000 soldiers for the time being, Mr. Branch s^ld, 0 f the Manchukuo artny and 12,000 but gradually they will be picked up white guards, - capable of bearing again as organization of (he army/ post office service Is perfected. Even tually, Mr. Branch Indicated, the Post Office department looks forward to the arms. n EPRESENTATIVES of business ^ groups In Washington said they full re-establlshment of air mall serv- W ere fairly well satisfied with the new Ices as they now exist under private companies. M EANWHILE the senate commit tee investigating air mall con tracts was playing a most undignified game of tag with William P. MacCrack- en, whose arrest on contempt charges had been ordered. MacCracken re mained In hiding nntll the senate war not In session, and then emerged and sought to persuade Sergeant-at-Arms Jurney to arrest him so that he might make use of a writ of habeas corpus he already had obtained, and thus get the matter at once into the civil courts. But Jurney hid himself, locked up the warrant and refused to act until Mac Cracken could be hronght immediate ly before the senate. Next Justice O’Donaghue of the Die- tton of the privilege. trlct Snpreme court, who had granted the writ of habeas corpus, fined Mtc- Cracken $100 for contempt in assert ing that he was held In bodily restraint by Jurney, and the writ was Invali dated. Thereupon Jurney arrested MacCracken on the senate warrant revenue bill which was brought before the house, though there were some ob jectionable provisions . which they hoped might be removed by the senate finance committee later. The bill now represents a compromise between the recommendations of the Hill subcom mittee and the suggestions of the Treasury department The chief -phanges are those with respect to de preciation, consolidated returns and corporate reorganizations. The bill does not reduce depreciation allow ances as did the subcommittee recom mendations. Nor does it abolish con- Washington deem wise. It is a pro- have a chance to produce their own living instead of being, as they now are, on roles of charitable or govern ment relief organizations. This trans planting seems to have two purposes: First, it will provide those people who are moved with better living condi tions and a fresh start and. second. It win “ relieve ttre rrowdpd~ mnd and the demand for Jobs In the places from which they are moved. “We have large numbers of-families whose economic future Is so discour aging that It seems entirely Improb able that they will ever again be ac commodated In Industry, or partlcn- larty tn the Industry where they once nan jm)#. Rain mt. riopKins. tnpy are In Industries that have been worked ont. such as In the steel cen ters to some extent. In copper-areas and In farming country that Is no long er productive and where no one can make a living bnt of It. “As to submarginal lands, in con tradistinction to timber land, we find families living on such lands and the government cannot go In and simply purchase the lands and have those families move on and go places. They must have some place to go. So that the plan is not only for those In cen ters where Industry cannot help them but for those on suhmarglnal land who are In the Same kind of economic stag nation. This plan gets Into the gov ernment’s long-range program and into some of the first steps that are neces sary to work out that program. We are gotrig to try, therefore, to take those first steps In the Interest of those needy people Involved and In the interests of a national eepnomy at the pa me time.” -— 1 4 4 • • Thus the picture Is unfolded of a general program that, carried to the ' ultimate, means the Remake herding of the popn- c •*.» latlon Into the vari Social Map oug gectlong of thg country or cities as the planners In solldated returns for affiliated corpor ntions. While It imposes an extra tax on corporation earnings when consoli dated returns are filed, this Is not so objectionable as the entire ellmina-- CXIRTY felons in the Washington 1 state penitentiary at Walla Walla armed themselves with knives, "shears and hammers and made a desperate empt to break out of the prison. At i^e main gate the guards opened fire with machine funs and rifles, and a company of state militia rushed to the scene. When the battle was over It was fbund one turnkey snd seven convicts had been killed and four guards and ^irevfelons Injured. While the upper surtax brackets have been scaled Up somewhat they <io not Increase greatly the tax apply ing to a person who has an earned income credit. The tax burden is in creased somewhat on a person with out earned income, but with corpora tion dividends and government bonds not subject to normal takes Which are reached by commencing. , surtaxes above a single 4 per cent normal tax instead of above normal rates aggre gating 8 per cent The movement for a general sales tax Is not expected to get far. Thera is much less sentiment for It than la 1932. This Is chiefly because Presi dent Roosevelt Is supposed to ba against It • by WmUmi Newapapar UniMk grain that Is designed to remake the social map of the-uatlon. Those who sponsor It go Into ecstasy In discuss ing th4 beauties of the dream and the Ideals, which are sought to .obtain. They depfet for the transferred popu lace one permanent Joy of living, or as nearly, such as may be expected on earth, knd In listening to their expo sition of the plans, one will feel the sincerity of their beliefs without half trying. They believe it Is as near ntoplan in its possibilities as a gov ernment may produce for Its people. “Rut what will those people do when they have been taken somewhere r Mr Hopkins was asked. “They may do two or three things,’ 1 he replied promptly. “They may work part of the time In national forests, for example. T>arge numbers of men are required for rehabilitation and re planning of onr national forests. The Civilian Conservation corps cannot be gin to get all of the work done 1 think It Is time for the govern- ment to explore this situation and make plans aside from Just giving re lief. If the government Is going to Spend such large sums of money, a substantial portion of It Should be spent in constructive enterprises like thic with a fund of $25,000,000 to rt, we launch on another plan for changing our national' life.. Mr. Hop kins described the $25,000,000 as “just a starter,’' and explained that many more millions can and will be used if the Ideas prove.practicable. He thinks ! they will. ^ -■ A - 1 But among those hardened critics that watch Washington day after day and who do not have Fear It’s Too to shape their ideas Idealistic a,onK P 0,,tical ,,nes * among those who try to be unbiased, there is a hope that the SCheroe ean be carried out and a fear that It is too itrehlistic for use among people with the traditions of those of the United States. In oth er words, it is a guess whether the plan, will be practicable. One hardened observer took me se verely to task for even assuming that it was possible to execute the pla-n without wasting many times as much money as it could be worth by any guage you care to set up. I called* attention that there were undoubtedly some families that would welcome an opportunity to get on a piece of farm ' land, made available to them by the government, for whleh they could pay as they were able, t thought they would learn a new Joy in life Itself and be- come^TmlepehdenC figMTfiTfrKTng 'CTtt^ zens. ■“ ‘Some families’ is fight.” ha- sneered at me. “But for those ‘some* thaf will make use of the change, thorp will he twenty times as many Either Pint in Portraying Beauty artistry of a French patww who concealed her scantineat of hair with aome ribbon waa mt odd Inspiration that caused Harriwm Fisher to draw the first of his Ion* aeries of magazine covers idealizing the beauty of young feminine Ameri ca. He was known as the “father of a thousand pretty girls;” .but he nev er married. , Reared in Brooklyn, schooled « the Mark Hopkins institute lit Sa» Francisco, widely traveled In Eng land and on" the continent, Fisher knew the girl of the New York draw leg room and of the western plain*. He was born during the Garfield- Arthur period; be saw the fashion able world in coaches behind teams and in the side saddle; on bicycle*, and in linen dusters, goggled and (lowing motor veils and then in lim ousines.’ He felt the wild pulsatlo* of the Spanish war, and lived through the World war well into ah ercittn* period of readjustment. He knew Victorian England, and the England of Edv/ard and George. Fisher portrayed rather than inter preted: Thousands of drawings and illustrations that flowed from tha point of his pen have been, for a* interesting generation, far closer to the American home than the famed treasures hanging in museum* abroad.—Cleveland IMain Dealer. '.Your local dealer- carries Ferry’s Pure Bred Vegetable Seeds. Now only 5 cents a package. Adv. Precious Volume A cook book contains the en». ’balmed records of endless delighL •t To keep clean and health, Pleree’e Pleuwmt ” rT liver, bowels and nd healthy take Da, Pellets. They regulat* stomach.—Adv. Naturally Many a man has something worth being conceited about—and he Is. If Past 45 and “Lew” and Upset that will drift back to fte«ir old ways of living at the first opportunity.” Look for Add Stomach nrrh'T^wirfiim^iWWefestlnrto watHi flu* reverberations and reac tions Tier*' to (lie speech made recently T y*?” 1 * 1 ." In TomcU.i. Kan., by Ogden L. Mills, secretary of the treasury under Pres ident llndyer. TUrange and paradoxl- cnl :i4 It uroy ?ccfn. the MtltsTpeeclr T HERfAUrtHE^reWS: | Nervousness Frequent Hendaches Feeling of W l Indigestion Sleeplessness : Loss of Appetite Mouth ACIdlty ) Nausea Sour Stomadk Auto-Intoxication « ~ -H A1 put an unexpected amount of fire Into some Democrats In the administration in support of the Roosevelt New Deal and put fire into others to cause them to criticize It. ~ ^ Ogden Mills-has been derided and ridiculed as few men have suffered In political life. He was born an aris tocrat and the politicians opposed to him have made use of that. Rut Og den Mills is a fighter, and his Topeka speech showed that he had lost none of his fbrtitude. It will be remembered that Mr. Mills charged Mr. Roosevelt with “an un constitutional effort” tq grasp [rawer over the country and accused the President of destroying the rights and liberties of the people under the Con stitution, I have seen much less se rious charges hurled at a President to be followed by a young riot by his Thera have been supporters. There have been some attacks on Mr. Mills thus far, but ob servers here thought they did not car ry the old-time ring of a real battle. Of course. It Is known generally that a goodly number of the President’s own party have been douhtfuT of some of his plans but they have been afraid to bark too loudly because of the elec tions next autumn. Those individuals lately have been a little more brave and. when I was around the senate ahd hoiiqe of representatives the other day, I m*ard more mutter!ngs than usual. of the avid Roosevelt it meant. Their an swers were almost Identical: “’Bbey are not real Democrats.” But I WHAT TO DO FOR IT 1 TAKE—2 teaspoonful* of Phillips' Milk of Mag nesia in a glass of water every morning when you get up. Tate another teaspoonful 30 minutes after.eating. And another before you go to bed. OH—Take the new Phillips' Milkof Magnesia Tablets — one tablet for each teaspoonful as di rected above. If you have Acid Stomach, don’t worry about-H-. -FoBow- the- simple ~ directions given above. This small dosage of Pnillips’ Milk of Magner.ia acts at once to neutralize the acida that cause headache, stomach pains and other distress. Try it. 1 fou’tt feel like a new person. But—be careful you get REAL milk of magnesia when you buy— genuine PHILLIPS’ Milk of Mag nesia. See that the name “PHIL- LIPS' *’ is on the label. I asked supporters wht —f. -, • Getting Timorous —\i « of those who had been thus catalogued as “not real Democrats^ what the sig nificance was of the changed atti tude. Their answers were down one asked several ' groove: “We are just getting afraid of the way this man Roosevelt is lead ing us.’’ While the Mills speech has beep ac cepted here as being the opening gun In the Republican campaign for next fall, it probably will have a broader effect than that according to the sug gestions 1 have heard most frequently. Even the chief Democratic leaders un der the New Deal admit that Presi dent Roosevelt has been busy for a year In development of * Roosevelt party, as distinguished from a purely Democratic party. That being the fact, then, I am told that Mr. Mills has Issued a rallying cry for concen tration of strength In opposition to the Roosevelt policies, or many of them. Is It not possible, then, Mr/Mills may hava started the actual formation of a new Republican party? As Mr. Mills set his Ideas, It Is mad* to appear that he and those who follow him will foster th4. philosophy of wide-open competition among kli with, as little government domination as 1* possible; that It will be thtfi contention that bureaucratic ccutrol shall be avoided In every direction and that the powers of the Chief Execu- tlve of the nation shall ba limited t$ those properly delegated by the Coa stltution to him. • by WsaUrn Nswspaptt Unlo*. K ALSO IN TABUT FORM Each tiny tablet is the equivalent of a teaspoonful of Genuine Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. MEMBER N.R.A. / , PLillips’ Aiilk of jMagnesi* Sounds Like It “She treats her husband like * mandolin.” . “What 4o you mean?” “She is always picking on hlm."r— Brooklyn Eagle. Smooth Off Ugly Freckles, Blackheads Nature’s Way Here is an inexpensive, quicker ' way to skin beauty—a way that has been tested and trusted by women for over A generation. 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