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BRISBANE
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THIS WEEK
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More Years, More Cares
Monkeys and Yellow Fever
, The King Sees Poverty
Ancient Koran Found
The French have a saying, referring
to a man's age, "One year more, one
care more”—Un an
de plus, un soin tie
plus. (J
European nations
might take for their
motto, “One treaty
more, one more dan
ger of war."
Italy, Austria,
Hungary have a
three-power treaty
under which Italy
guarantees Aus
trian Independence,
against any attempt
by Germany to ab
sorb Austria, for
Arthur Brl.b.M | nstan(<(1 There Is
possible cause for war If any cause
were Jacking.
Sao Paulo, Brazil, worries about re
ports brought by health oflicers from
the forests of the upper Sorocabana
area. In that region, where mosqui
toes are thick, explorers frequently
Saw “monkeys with high fevers” drop
out of trees and die, dozens of them,
victims of yellow fever.
Fortunately for Brazil cities, the
Jungle mosquito that bites monkeys and
gives them yellow fever keeps away
from cities. The fight against disease-
bearing mosquitoes and rats would
keep men busy, if they were not busy
already killing each other In war.
News Review of Current
Events the World Over
Half Million Farmers May Get Double Federal Benefits—
New Processing Taxes Abandoned—-Clements
Quits as Townsend Plan Secretary.
By EDWARD W. PICKaI?D
© Western Newspaper Union.
R. G. Tuflwell
Edward VIII, now king of England,
visited the magnificently luxurious
ocean steamer Queen Mary In Glasgow,
then went from house to house, knock
ing on doors, visiting some of the worst
slum dwellings in all his kingdom.
Later, talking to Lord Melchett. the
king put the problem of England, this
country and the whole world in these
few words:
"How do you reconcile a world that
has produced this mighty ship with
the slums we have Just visited?”
A marvelously illustrated ancient
manuscript of the Koran, found In a
nhop of an antiquity dealer of Cairo,
Kgypt, was bought for fifty pounds.
Heaven knows how many thousands of
pounds It Is actually worth.
The Koran Is said to have been writ
ten by a highly educated Jew. who
suggested Ideas to Mohammed, the lat
ter being unable to write.
It Is possible, however, that angels,
cupposed to have revealed divine truth
tw Mohammed, also taught him to
write.
Good news for tree growers, fruit
trees or others. You may get rid of
Insect pests by hammering the trunks
of trees with a riveting machine, such
as Is used In driving rivets In city
skyscrapers.
A California Inventor patented the
process. This writer proposeg„ to try
It In a New Jersey orchard at the
earliest possible moment. The iivet-
Ing is said to loosen Insect pests, after
which It is easy to wash them off
with a strong spray of water, no chem
icals needed. To save the tree from
Injury, It Is probably desirable to put
several thicknesses of old automobile
tires or tubes between the hark and
the riveting machine.
There is plenty of money In this
country, billions of it. Jes>»e Jones will
toll you. but It is not circulating, ns
anhealthy for money In a country as
for blood in your wins.
You know the strange, perhaps true,
story of a man who unwittingly passed
u counterfeit $ii> bill. It went through
the hands of ten individuals, paid
foi $100 worth of goods, and came buck
tv» the man who originally-passed It.
He Identified and destroyed it.
One hundred dollars’ worth of debts
R EXFORD O. TUGWELL, head of
the rural resettlement administra
tion, announced that a special commit
tee Is considering a plan unde* which
more than half a mil
lion growers of farm
products would receive
double benefits from
the federal govern
ment. It provides that
the rural families now
getting loans from
Tugwefl'S' administra
tion to put them on
their feet and keep
them off the relief
rolls may also receive
full subsidy payments
In connection with the soil conserva
tion program now being put Into op
eration. There are now 450,000 recip
ients of the Tugwell- loans and the
number Is expected to increase to 525,-
000 by July 1.
The soil conservation subsidies are
to he paid to farmers who transfer
land from commercial crop production
to soil conserving growths, or who re
sort to other “economic” farm prac
tices. Officials said that the rehabilita
tion clients already are under obliga
tion to treat their soil wisely. Before
a family can obtain a rehabilitation
loan It must agree to fol^nv a farm
management plan drafted by the gov
ernment.
This plan stipulates that the borrow
er must conserve his land’s fertility
and grow food and feed crops for home
consumption. It also Includes a finan
cial liiidget.
O NE of the major features of the
new tax program suggested by
President Roosevelt Is omitted from
the measure prepared by a house sub
committee and on which open hearings
were begun by the ways and means
committee. For political reasons If
was decided that the plan for new
processing taxes on farm and compet
ing products should be abandoned. Mr.
Roosevelt’s suggestion for a ‘‘windfall”
tax to recapture part of the refunded
or unpaid AAA processing levies was
accepted by the subcommittee.
A third suggestion of the President,
for graduated taxes on the portions of
Incomes which corporations do not dis
tribute In dividends to stockholders,
was changed to provide levies on total
Income of corporations varied accord
ing to percentages of profit^ put Into
reserves.
The subcommittee agreed that the
corporation tax rates s'/uild be so
drafted as to permit corporations, par
ticularly small ones, to build up re
serves for lean years without being
compelled to pay comparatively high
tuxes for the privilege of doing so.
The subcommittee figured on col
lecting some $25,000,000 from taxes on
dividends going to foreigners who own
stock in Anurican corporations and
$82,000,000 from temporary continua
tion of the capital stock and excess
profits taxes.
IUST ns Chairman C. Jasper Bell
and his house committee were about
to open their inquiry into the finances
of the Townsend old age pension plan
organization, Robert E.
Clements, co-founder,
secretary and director
of the movement, re
signed. He was sum
moned to be the first
witness before the
committee but said his
resignation was not
i motivated by this, hut
was solely due to his
opposition to political
fees, etc. The Borah-Nuys bill ; would
prohibit such allowances only when
they were refused to purchasers of
goods of "like grade, quality, and
quantity."
O NE of the big fights within the
American Federation of Labor
has been settled peacefully. It was
for control of the building trades de
partment. In the past, building proj
ects have been held up by strikes
growing out of arguments over which
of two unions should do a certain
piece of work. The peace pact pro
vides for appointment of an impartial
referee to settle such arguments.
The pact also called for J. W. Wil
liams of the carpenters to head the
reorganization department, with M. J.
McDonough of the plasterers as sec
retary-treasurer. Each has bqen the
leader of one of the warring factions
and each has styled himself as the
lawful department president.
DENITO MUSSOLINI evidently ex-
pects another European war, and
In preparation for it he announced
several drastic measures on the seven
teenth anniversary of
the founding of the
Fascist party. He
abolished the, chamber
of deputies, substitut
ing for it a council of
guilds;, and be also
eliminated the coun
try’s large industries,
leaving the medium
and small private In
dustries in existence.
This latter move, he
told the council of the
22 guilds of the cor
porative state, was to Increase the na
tion’s economic self-sufficiency. "When
and how war will come, one does not
know,” he said, "but the wheel of fate
turns fast."
Mussolini asserted the large Indus
tries, particularly those working for
the defense of the nation, would be
formed into organizations called “key
industries." These, be said, "will be
run directly or Indirectly by the gov
ernment Some will have mixed or
ganization.”
Benito
Mussolini
K OKI HIROTA, the new liberal
premier of Japan, declared in an
Interview: "While i am premier there
will be,00 war"; anckcontlnued: "We
Intend - to cultivate our traditional
friendship with Great Britain, the
United States, Russia, and other pow
ers, thus fulfilling our great mission of
stabilizing east Asia.”
On the same day that Hlrota made
this pronouncement the soviet Russian
government ordered its ambassador to
Japan to lodge a strong protest fol
lowing a new border engagement which
Soviet advices said resulted from a
Japanese attack on a Red frontier
post. Fighting lasted for hours, en
tailing loss of life on both sides, said
the reports.
C'EDERAL reserve board has pre-
" scribed a 55 per cent minimum mar
gin for purchases of stocks, the ruling
becoming effective April 1 for stocks
bought through brokers and -May I for
those bought through banks.
The margin regulations were made
to^apply only to listed securities on
registered stock exchanges, thus hav
ing no effect upon the large over-the-
counter market
The maximum loan value applying
to registered stocks has been fixed
at 45 per cent of current market value.
W ITH only one change, the house
passed the senate bill to continue
the Electric Home and Farm authority
as a federal agency until February 1,
1937, or any earlier date decreed by
the President. The authority was cre
ated to help finance sales of electrical
appliances.
FT ENRY BOYLE SOMERVILLE.
1 aged and retired vice admiral of
the British navy, was murdered by
gunmen at his residence at Castle-
townsend, County Cork, Irish Free
State. Thrown through the door of the
house was a card bearing these words;
“This British agent sent 52 Irish
boys Into the British army In the last
few months. He will send no more."
The admiral had received previous
threats because of his recruiting activ
ities.
! STAR i
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* jMovfe • Radio *
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★★★By VIRGINIA VALE★★★
DUST
jMovfe • Radio
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IJAVING sent Joachim von Ribben-
*â–  trop back to London with a modi
fied rejection of the four power plans
for peace in western Europe, Hitler
was preparing his counter proposals
which British Foreign Minister Eden
bad requested. Meanwhile the relchs-
fuehrer continued his campaign tour,
delivering rousing speeches In defense
of his policies. Speaking In Ludwig-
shafen, in the heart of the remili
tarized Rhineland, he said: “Those
who want us to grovel On our knees
before agreeing to talk with us forget
we are not a tribe of savages, but a
European nation looking back on thou
sands of years of culture.
"1 stretch out my hand to France.
We want peace for common sense rea
sons. Germany needs no more fame
on the battlefield, but is now getting
ready to seek laurels In the Olympic
peace competition of nations. Men who
relish the indecent thought of victor
and vanquished are not statesmen.
They must be silent when peace talks
start."
Most of the continental statesmen
who gathered in London to consider
the Rhineland affair went home, some
of them In very bad humor over the
Indecisive proceedings. The French,
disinclined to consider any further pro
posals from Hitler, were urging that the
French. British and Belgian general
staffs cet U aether on plans in accord
ance with the Locarno treaty.
INTREPID citizens of scores of cities
* and towns in the eastern and New
England states which were devastated
by the unprecedented floods were dig
ging out their homes and places of
business from the mud and debris as
the turbulent waters of many rivers
subsided. Reconstruction and refitting
btgnu everywhere immediately, and
this, as well as the relief of the suffer
ing thousands, was aided by funds to
taling more than $43,000,000 allocated
by President Roosevelt before bereft
Washington for Florida.
Rough estimates were that the total
dead In 13 states were 169; the home
less were 221,500, and the total prop
erty damage, $271,500,000. The last
figure probably would be tripled if one
took Into account the losses from In
terruption to industry and trade and
the stoppage of the wages of labor.
Cities along the lower Ohio were
threatened as the flood waters raced
down to the Mississippi and tbj Gulf
of Mexico, but they had had plenty
of warning and were in a measure pre
pared.
I SABELLA GREENWAY, the capable
lady who has represented Arizona
In congne.s s!ace October, 1933, has
announced In Tucson that she will re
tire from public life
at the conclusion of
her present term. She
was first elected for
the remainder of the
term of Lewis Doug
las. who resigned to
- become director of the
budget, and was re
elected in 1934.
Mrs. Greenway owns
and operates several
ranches in Arizona
Mrs. Greenway and New MexIco and
â–  hotel In Tucson, and is also Inter
ested In some mining companies. Un
doubtedly she could go back to con
gress without opposition, but she says
she wants fl* devote more time to her
private activities.
children helpless living creatures, eas
IIv hurt—live ehii Ls. er newly hatched 1
ducklings
The helpless creatures are roughly
treated, mutilated, fortunate if they
happen to be promptly killed, by chil
dren that know no better.
Doctor Townsend promises Ml «
month to everybody past sixty. That
would cost twenty four thousand mil
lion dollars a year. Congressmen
know it can't he done, tint do not dare
say so individually.
Townsend clubs have organized mil
lions of votes. The a month
promise made that easy. Congress
men do not want those votes cast
against them as individuals. ,
V'Oiild follow the secretary's example.
Clements appeared before tin* com- i
mittee with a great mass of records.'
ready to ‘’account for every penny '
collected." Before testifying he said: !
‘ I have nothing to hide. I’m anxious |
to appear. 1 have been responsible [
for financing the Townsend plan. 1 ;
have collected around SSotl.tHNi and the ;
organY/aton has spent about $750.lHKt. |
There is still $100,000 on liand.’’
The hard working. Intelligent Swigs
nation is said to he disturbed by the
prospect of another war as by none
other.
Every Swiss under fifty Is armed,
trained and ready. Even in the big
war nobody tried to Invade Switzer
land—too much hard climbing, and
the conqueror would not know how to
run the hotels, even if he acquired
(hem.
■ ■ k.—
The Immediate business of (Ids coun
try Is to find some way of controlling
flood wafers—probably not impossible.
, © King Feature* Synrtlcjta. Inc.
VVNU Serelo*.
O EVERAL witnesses who appeared
^ before a senate subcommittee de
dared that the Robinson Patman anti
chain store bill, which has administra
tion hacking, would promote rather
than curb monopolies, increase the
c<*t and lower the standard of living,
and decrease employment in whole in
dustries.
The hearing was on the Borah-Van
Nuys bill, a modification of the Robin
Bon-I’atmao measure, hut the witnesses
particularly attacked the latter, which
already has been repiJMed favorably.
The house Judiciary committee report
ed the L’tterback MU, still another
mollification of the Koliinson-Patman
tpeasiire, and a bitter fight over the
proposed legislation is expected.
The Kolunsoii I'atinan bill would pro
hibit manufacturers from making price
discriminations in favor of large quan
tity purchasers, through advertising al-
.owances service charges, brokerage
I N CONNECTION with the signing of
the new naval treaty by the United
States. Great Britain and France, it
was disclosed in London that the two
tirst named powers have reattirmed the
50-50 ratio for their fleets and again
promised not to compete against each
other in naval building. The new
three power pact limits the size of
battleships to 35,000 tons, retains 10.-
(MMi tons as the maximum for cruisers
and provides no cruisers of that size
shall lie built for six years.
in the expiring Washington treaty
there was an article regarding forti
fication of naval bases. ,, This is not
renewed in the new pact, and Japan
requested information as to the future
intentions of the powers. Conse
quently the United States, Great
Britain and Japan were carrying on
diplomatic conversations <>n that topic*.
The new treaty gives the signatories
certMn liberty of action In the event
of unforeseen naval activity by powers
not signatory to the treaty. So far as
Anierica is concerned, this “escape
clause" is taken to apply mainly fo
Japan. 1 '
F OURTEEN persons perished In
Mexico's worst aviation disaster.
A big tnmolored plane carrying ten
Eunqiean tourists and four company
employees crashed on the ridge be
tween the volcanoes I'oiMicatapeti and
Ixtaccihuatl and there were no sur
vivors to explain why It fell. Among
the tourists were 1‘rince Adolf of
Schaumburg Llppe and bis wife, Prin
cess Kllsbeth.
S TILL refusing to appropriate $12,
UtKi.tRK) for the Florida ship canal,
the senate passed the army bill carry
ing approximately $611,000,000. More
than half the sum goes for the military
activities of the War department.
There will he no reduction in the
number of UCC camps during most of
the coming fiscal year, and the en-
rollees will be kept up to about the
350,000 mark. This was the decision
of President Roosevelt after a threat
ened revolt of Democratic represents
lives induced him to change bis mind
in the matter.’ * .
Senator Black, chairman of the sen
ate lobbying committee, has added the
Wichita Beacon to the papers whose
telegrams he has seized or attempted
to seize.
S ENATOR.. YYJLLIASr E. BORAH Is
campaigning earnestly for the Re
publican Presidential nomination, and
has Just received-a big boost for bis
pause in the announcement that Dr.
Francis E. Townsend, founder of the
Md age i>eusion plan that bears bis
name, will give the Idahoan all his
support. Repudiating President Roose
velt and changing hip registration at
Long Beach. Calif., from Democratic
to Republican, Townsend said Borah
was the only Republican candidate
who “even approached” the standard
of the Townsendites, although the sen
ator lias refused to indorae the Town
send (tension plan as it stands.
Hitherto (tie Townsend organization
had favored circulation of third party
lietltions Id every state to enlist mil
lions of people as a demonstration of
str^gth. So the doctor’s announce
meet la a reversal of polty.
W HEN Mae West’s effects
were moved off the Para
mount lot, a fashionable gallery of
Hollywood celebrities watched
the strong men carry her furniture
out to a red moving van. The list
of onlookers included Carole
Lombard, Bing Crosby, VV. CX Fields,
Jack Oakie and Herbert Marshall. Mae.
who voluntarily relin
quished her contract,
was not there. She will
begin a new picture for
Columbia which is
headed by Emanuel
Cohen, who was her
boss at Paramount
when she made her
first film hit. She Is to
receive $300,000 for
tills picture. Mae was
represented at the*
moving party by Jim
Timony, her manager,
who checked over the list of furnish
ings from her dressing room which
were moved to the new studio. These
included a piano, a desk, a divan, a
chair and an oil painting of Mae.
—*k—
A special automobile that will speed
more than three miles a minute is being
built for M-G-M for use in its new pic
ture "Speed.” it is expected that it
will be sent out on the road for pub
licity purposes when the picture is fin
ished. The producers promise that it
will hot be driven at anywhere near
its maximum speed.
r* t
Grace Moore has never sung the aria
“Woman Is Fickle" in Rigoletto, fot
that Is the tenor's job. but it might be
a theme song for her off-again, on
again act with the movies. After an
nbuncing that she was through, she
says she has changed her mind and if
going to make some more pictures at
Columtiia. She has made one important
reservation, though. J8o' more scenes
-where site is singing while milking a
cow. ,
Richard Arlen is on ids way to Eng
land where he will make a picture for
Gaumont-British. Accompanying Dick
are Joby and little Rickey. When hlf
English hitch is over. Dick will rettirr
to Hollywood to go to work for Twen
entieth Century-Fox. with whom he re
cently signed a contract to make threv
pictures.
Anita Louise, whose blond beauty hai
captured many hearts, will be cast foi
the feminine lead in Warner Brothers
new picture, “The Charge of the LigM
Brigade." This, it is said, is the biggesi
film opportdnity Anita has yet beer
given. Errol Flynn, who swept to star
dom in “Captain Blood," will play oppo
site her.
—*—
Hurd luck has dogged the footsteps
of many a movie star of yesteryear
but it has nipped rather constantly at
the heels of Alice Lake. She is now
the ward of the Film Welfare leagus
in St. Vincent's hospital. Fifteen years
ago she was in the big money and had
an Immense following. Recently w her
brought into court and lief plight re
vealed, she said she could not even get
work as op extra. She still gets fan
letters, however.
The success which lias followed
David O. Selznick's ventures in revlv
ing classics of litera
ture lias won him a
well deserved acclaim.
“Little Lord Fauntle-
roy.” in which young
Freddie Bartholomew,
the English star, is
featured, lias attracted
about as much atten
tion as "David Copper
field.” which endeared
Selzniek to the Dick
ens fans of America
and abroad. Faithful
adherence to the story
itself in the talkie ver
sion was* responsible for much of its
effectiveness.
Lucien Littlefield, co-author of the
screen version of "Early to Bed," has
joined the cast which already includes
Charles Ruggles and Mary Boland. The
picture, originally called: “Where. Am
I?” is a farce detailing the life and
love of a clerk in a glass-eye factory.
Rugflles plays the role of the clerk
who Is engaged to Mary Boland. The
picture develops a kick when the down
trodden Ruggles goes berserk, quits his
job and successfully establishes a rival
glass eye company.
ODDS AMD E\DS . . . Katherine Hep
burn has so many pets her home resem
bles a menagerie, uhat with cocker span
iels. canaries, a monkey, a Siamese cat and
a poodle . . . Robert Montgomery's face is
adorned with a mustache for the first time
in a new picture . . . Doug Fuirkanks, Jr.,
has sailed for Europe . . . Carole Lom
bard was ill recently with a throat ailment
that affected her voice . . . Al Jolson, Jr.,
recently celebrated*’ his first birthday;
&ere was a party, a cuke, one candle and
all the other trimmings . . . It is reported
that Gary Cooper and wife will return
from Bermuda a week earlier than they
expected . . . They are still looking for
i successor In the beloved Marie Dressier
. . . "Captain Blood" recently had its
opening in Belfast, Ireland, with Errol
Flynn's father and mother in the audience
© We*t«rq Newspaper Union
Phy Just ai Important to
Well-Balanced Life as Work
A vacation helps to balance our
powers, to give us41 more symmetri
cal development. It keeps us from
becoming one-sided. It Improves our
Judgment.
People who alternate work with
play, who frequently get close to Na
ture, preserve the sweetness of life;
are sounder, saner; have more com
mon-sense than those who never
drop tljeir work.
Man’s Friends Glad He Told
Them About Black-Draught
Writing from Texarkana, Texas,
Mr. W.T. Bentley, of that city, says:
“I have been using Black-Draught
for fully forty years. I weuW have
a bad taste in my mouth and head
ache. I knew I needed a laxative —
•omething to cleanse the system. I would
hunt up the Black-Draught and take a dose.
I would be relieved in a few' hours. In
DIack-Draught I have found a simple rem-
e d y — one that does not have any after
effects. I do not know of anything better
to take for a dull, tired, listless feeling. I
have recommended Black-Draught to many
friends and neighbors. I know they have
been glad that I did, for they have said »o.”
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health.
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Read what Mr. T.
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’HATURE’I IEIT ASSISTANT*
Watch Your
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WOUR kidneys are constantly filter-
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their work—do not act as nature in
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poison the system when retained.
Then you may suffer nagging back
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Don’t delay? Use Doan'i Pilla.
Doan's are especially for poorly func
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Doans Pills
WN’U—7
15-36
BEFORE BABY COMES
Freddie
Bartholomew
Elimination of Body Waste
Is Doubly Important
In the crucial months before baby arrives
it is vitally important that the body be rid
of waste matter. Your intestines must func-
iion—regularly,completely without griping.
Why Physicians Recommend
Milnesia Wafers
These mint-flavored, candy-like wafers are
pure milk of magnesia in solid form —
much pleasanter to take than liquid. Each
wafer is approximately equal to a full adult
dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Uhewed
thoroughly, then swallowed, they correct
acidity in the mouth and throughout the
digestive system, and insure regular, com
plete elimination without pain or effort.’
Milnesia Wafers come in bottles of 20 and
48, at 35c and 60c respectively, and in
convenient tins for your handbag contain
ing 12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximately
one adult dose of milk of magnesia. An
good drug stores sell and recommend them.
Start using thosa dalictous, affaettva
antl-aeld, gently laxative wafers tffday
Professional samples sent free to registered
physicians or dentists if request is made
on professional letterhead. SsUct Products,
Inc., 4402 23rd St., Long Island City, N. V.
35c & 60c
bottles
20c tins
Thm Original AINfe a# i