The Alamance Gleaner Vol. LXIII GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1937 No. 17 News Review of Current Events the World Over President Still Insists on Supreme Court Bill, Which Raymond Moley Scores ? Disturbing Developments in the Field of Organized Labor. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ? Western Newspaper Union. VALIDATION of the social secu rity act by the Supreme court was most pleasing to President Roosevelt, but he did not agree with Raymond Moley the general opinion that this Would put a stop to his pro gram for enlarge ment of the highest tribunal. He more than intimated in a press conference that the fight for his court bill would be fought to a finish and that he was not sat isfied with the ap parently slender "liberal" majority in the court, since a number of im portant administration policies are still to be passed upon by the Su preme court. He cited four issues raised by the new wages and hours bill, namely, child labor, minimum wages, maximum hours, and the question whether goods produced un der unfair practices can be regulat ed by the government. He also men tioned TVA, the problems of flood control on the Ohio watershed, the right of municipalities to borrow federal funds to construct electric light plants, and whether the gov ernment can condemn property for a housing program. One of those who believe the President's court plan is doomed to defeat is Raymond Moley, for mer head of the "brain trust." Ad dressing the Illinois Bankers' con vention in Chicago, Dr. Moley scathingly attacked the scheme. "The President," he said, "has spoken of the dangers of a govern ment of men. Well, there is some thing worse than a government of men; it is a government by a man. "Most law and all constitutional government down the ages are real ly halters and check-reins upon this unlovely tendency in rulers to lose their heads in the intoxication of power. . . . "There are incidental factors that have contributed to the defeat of the President's proposal to violate in this way the spirit of the constitu tion. The change in the philosophy dominating the majority opinion of the court has helped. The scatter ing of the attorney general's insin cere, insubstantial statistics by the chief justice is another. The retire ment of Justice Van Devanter has helped, too. "But behind all this has been a slow and powerful surge of public opinion. The people prefer the stability of constitutional institutions as against the unpredictable will of leaders, even very popular leaders." /"CONTINUING its vigorous cam ^ paign to organize the steel in dustry, the C. I. O. called out on strike the employees of the inde pendent companies that refused to sign contracts for collective bar gaining. These companies were In land Steel, Republic Steel and Youngstown Sheet and Tube. More than 20 plants employing 'about 85, 000 men were involved. Philip Mur ray, chairman of the organizing committee, said it was the purpose of the committee to conduct the strike peacefully. In the Chicago district police arrested a number of men for violating the rule agayut mass picketing and for other of fense. Employees of the Sharon Steel corporation followed the example of those of the Jones & Laughlin con cern and voted in favor of the S. W. O. C. by a large majority, so the C I. O. gets contracts from those companies. Operations in the huge Pittsburgh plant of the H. J. Heinz company were interrupted by a strike of the Canning and Pickle Workers' union. The strikers demanded a 10 per cent wage increase and recognition of the union, an A. F. of L. affiliate, as sole bargaining agency. PORD employees at the Rouge plant, Detroit, took matters into their own hands and severely pum meled a number of U. A. W. A. men who undertook to distribute at the pl?nt Bates handbills designed to offset the "Fordisms" card that had been given Henry's workers. Among the union men beaten up were Wal ter Reuther, R. T. Frankensteen, J- J. Kennedy and Robert Canter, ffankensteen telegraphed John Bro Pny, director of the Committee for Industrial Organization, at Washing ton, asking: "Will the C. L O. co-operate in simultaneous nationwide demonstra tion before Ford salesrooms to pro test brutality at Ford's today and establish the right to organize?" At the same time a strike of C. I. O. men closed the Ford assembly plant at Richmond, Calif., forcing 1,800 workers into idleness. The lo cal union head there predicted strikes might spread rapidly from that beginning, possibly to all the Ford plants. FINAL passage of the (1,900,000, 000 work relief bill by the house was delayed by rebellion against the practice of "writing blank checks" which give the President and Harry Hopkins power to spend relief funds as they deem fit. The opponents of this policy found in the revolt a chance to obtain a lot of "pork" by the earmarking of more than half a billion from the total appropriation for projects that would get votes. HEADS of unions affiliated with the A. F. of L., meeting in Cincinnati with President William Green and the executive council. William Green went ahead with the plans to combat Lewis and the C. I. O. One of their first steps, it was indi cated, is to be an invasion ot Lewis' own union, the Unit ed Mine Workers of America, through the granting of a charter to its rival, the Progressive Miners' union in Il linois. Drives are expected in tne antnracite Belds of Pennsylvania and the soft coal fields of Virginia, where there is consid erable opposition to Lewis. The United Garment Workers al so declared war on the Amalgamat ed Clothing Workers whose chief is Sidney Hillman, first lieutenant of Lewis in the C. I. O. In the Cincinnati conference John P. Frey, veteran president of the federation's metal trades depart ment, accused the C. I. O. and the communist party of "sleeping in the same bed and under the same tent." PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT in a ' special message asked congress to enact a new law for the benefit of workers in interstate industries, reg ulating the hours ol work, the wages and the employment of children. Immedi ately after it was read. Chairman Hu go L. Black of the senate labor com mittee and Chair man William R. Connery of the house labor commit tee introduced iden tical bills designed Senator Black to carry out the proposals of the President. The measure had been agreed upon in conferences at the White House and was promptly re ferred to committees with prospect of quick action. It had been ap proved by John L. Lewis, head of the C. I. O., but since laws setting minimum wages for men have al ways been opposed by leaders of the American Federation of Labor, it was considered probable that orga nization would not like the bin The twin bills originally had pro posed a forty hour maximum week and a 40 cents an hour minimum wage. But, at the last moment, these limits were eliminated and Spaces in the "measures left blank for congress to fill. CTANLEY BALDWIN, prime min ^ ister of Great Britain, enter tained the king and queen at dinner and then retired from his high of fice. He is succeeded as head of the government by Neville Chamberlain, who has been chancellor of the ex chequer, and a few other changes in the cabinet were made. If another war comes, the British empire will not be caught unpre pared. The imperial conference in London turned its attention to this matter and a special committee was formed to organize all the empire's resources for an instant shift to war footing if that becomes necessary. A subcommittee s'.udied the prob lem of American competition with British shipping in the Pacific. Brit ish ship owners charge that the Americans are driving them out of business there because thl latter are heavily subsidized. CAN FRANCISCO put on a wonder J fully brilliant festival to cele brate the opening of the Golden Gate bridge, the fulfillment of the city's dream of half a century. The battle fleet of the United States navy was there, and so were representa tives of the states, of numerous cities and of many foreign nations. Automobile cavalcades from Ore gon, Utah, Wyoming, Mexico and Canada, as well as from parts of California, Joined in the great pa rade, with bands, floats and flesta units. John Thomas, noted baritone, and a cast of 3,000 presented a pageant depicting the history of California and the West, and a week long program of sports events was begun. The Golden Gate bridge is a single deck suspension bridge, the longest single clear span in the world. It is 6,450 feet in length from end to end, and 4,200 feet center to center of piers. It crosses over San Francisco bay at a height of 250 feet and con nects San Francisco by highway di rectly with the redwood empire of Northern California. TP HE social security act, which President Roosevelt considers the soul of the New Deal, is consti tutional, in the opinion of a major Justice Cardozo ity of the Supreme court. The unem ployment insurance provisions of the law were upheld by five of the justices, Van Devanter, Butler, McReynolds and Sutherland dissent ing. The old age pension provisions were declared .con stitutional by all "the justices except Suth erland and Van De vanter. Justice Cardozo wrote the two ma jority opinions, and, as It chanced, delivered them on his sixty-seventh birthday. Administration leaders declared they completely justified the President's broad interpretation of the general welfare clause of the Constitution and his policy of ex tending federal power, and it would seem that this is true. In another 5 to 4 decision the court upheld the Alabama state un employment insurance act, declar ing the relief of unemployment a valid state function. Yet another opinion was handed down by five of the justices, up holding Wisconsin's law prohibiting injunctions against peaceful picket ing in labor disputes. I N ORDER to determine the per * formance of co-operating farm ers in the soil conservation pro gram, the Agricultural Adjustment administration has employed thir teen aviation firms to make aerial maps of 377 agricultural counties in 22 states, the cost to be $753,909. From a study of the photographs agricultural experts will be able to tell how much of his acreage each farmer retired from production and put into soil-building legumes. Their reports will be the final test of claims for farm subsidies under the new AAA. Department of Agricul ture officials estimate there may be from 200,000 to 300,000 overpay ments to farmers. ??? AM very tired," said John D. 1 Rockefeller, Sr., to his secre tary as he sat in the garden of his Florida winter home at Ormond ueacn. i n e n ne went to bed, soon fell into a coma, and a few hours later passed away, peace fully and painlessly. His wish to live to be one hundred years old was not fulfilled, but he would have been ninety-eight on July 8 next. Thus died the man who, starting with a John D. Rocke feller, Sr. H-Sw a week Job, fought his way to the very top of the financial world, created the vast Standard Oil trust and built up one of the biggest pri vate fortunes ever recurtled. Disturbed by ill health, John D. retired from active business in 1B11. Some time before that he had switched from accumulating wealth to giving it away. The giving- was done systematically, and represent atives of the family interests esti mate that his own benefactions be tween the years 1889 and 1934, both inclusive, totaled $830,853,832. Mr. Rockefeller's body was taken from Ormond Beach to his estate at Pocantico Hills, Tarrytown, N. Y., and there the funeral rites were conducted by Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick of New York city. Next day the oil king was laid to rest in Lake View cemetery, Cleveland, be side his wife who died 22 years ago. Only two of Mr. Rockefeller's chil dren survive him. They are John D. Rockefeller, Jr., head of the busi ness since the father retired, and Alta, wife of E. Parmalee Prent.ce There are eight grandsons and ti . ? granddaughters. Virginia Steeplechase Jockey Comes to Grief During the running of the Virginia national steeplechase at Warrenton, Va., Jockey Nichols was thrown by Kentucky Ginger. The camera caught Nichols just as he hit the turf, his riderless horse scampering away without him. The jockey, though badly shaken, was able to walk back to the stewards' stand. ) Zy Thornton WBiirgess PETER FORGETS ABOUT THE STRANGE TRACKS Kick your heels and jump and dance I Hop and skip and gayly prance I Sister South Wind's come to stay. And Mistress Spring la on the way I F VERYBODY said that Peter Rabbit and Jumper the Hare had gone crazy. Of course, it wasn't true. They weren't really crazy, even if they did act 'so. People al ways say that Jumper the Hare is mad at this time of the year, but it isn't so unless trying to show how happy and full of joy you feel is madness. That was the trouble with Jumper and Peter this time. They They Hopped and Skipped and Jumped and Did All Sorts of Fool ish Things. were so full of joy that they just had to do something, and because they couldn't sing and shout ? for you know they have no voices for sing ing and shouting ? they just had to do something to show how glad and happy they were, and so, in the moonlight, when they thought no one saw them, they hopped and skipped and jumped and danced, and did all sorts of foolish things. But other people did see them. Jimmy Skunk saw them affll said, "How silly I" Bobby Coon, poking his head out of his hollow tree to see if the last bit of snow had dio Very Summery Bright field flowers are primly arranged around the dull blue vel vet crown of this attractive Breton sailor. The brim is of natural col ored straw braid. Matching velvet streamers tie over the back of the hair. appeared, yawned sleepily and said, "How foolish!" But Peter and Jumper didn't know this, and they wouldn't have cared much anyway. They didn't have room for anything but the joy that filled their hearts, and that joy was because they knew that Mis tress Spring was on the way, and she always brings the glad time, the happy time, the merry time, when the very air is full of joy and love, and it is, oh, so good to be alive I They knew that she was on the way because Sister South Wind had ar rived and told them so, for Sister South Wind had come to prepare the way for her, to melt the snow and ice, and to whisper to all the trees which had slept the long winter through that it was time to wake. So they forgot everything else in the joy of this good news. Peter forgot all his trouble because his friends and neighbors wouldn't believe the story he had told them of the strange great tracks he had found deep in the Green Forest. In fact, he forgot all about those tracks him self. There was too much else to think about. The Green Forest and the Green Meadows, and the Laugh ing Brook and the Smiling Pool would soon be waking up, and Peter just had to be on hand to greet each of the sleepers, who had spent the long, hard, cold winter warmly tucked in bed, and knowing nothing about Jack Frost, or rough Brother North Wind, or how hard it had been sometimes to get something to eat. So Peter hopped and skipped and danced in the moonlight with Jump er the Hare, and was happy. "No more days of hunting and hunting to find something to eat!" he cried. as he foolishly tried to jump over his own shadow. "No more racing around to keep from freezing to death.'" And then, just because he didn't have to, Peter raced faster and harder than ever. You know, it is a lot easier to do things when you don't have to. It is fun then. "Just the same," added Peter, "I wouldn't sleep all winter the way Johnny Chuck does, and Grandfath er Frog and Striped Chipmunk and a lot of others for anything. Think of all they miss! It's worth it even if we do have hard times once in a while. And it's going to be such fun to see all the sleepers wake up! Yes, sir, I'm glad I don't sleep through the winter, but I'm gladder still that Mistress Spring is on the way. "Hipplty-hopplty. ikipplty-skopiiltj. I couldn't keep still If I would! SJdpplty-skoppity. hippity-hoppity. rm glad there's no reason I should.** ? T. W. Burgess WNU Service. i ,oeuae_n "A diet is something for only those to worry about," says aoMlo q ailing Elisabeth, "who have mon ey to boy more food than is good for them." C Bell Syndicate. ? WHO Strrk*. First Aid Roger B. Whitaai to the Ailing House ODD JOBS ON FURNITURE TP HE usual varnish finish of a ta ble top turns white under a hot dish when alcohol or other liquids are spilled on it. These white marks are damage to the varnish. If the varnish is damaged through the wood, the only remedy is to scrape it out and to refinish. But more 'usually a white mark is only on the surface. The treatment for taking ii out. depends, same-what uvthe.kiod, of varnish used in the finish; but one or another of the following will probably succeed ? a little of a liq uid being applied lightly with a cloth: turpentine; linseed oil; spirits ai camphor. Another method u> to rub lightly with finely powdered pumicestone and any light oil. ap plied with the finger-tip. Cigar ash can be used in place of the pumice stone. A dent in wood is actually the crushing of the wood fibers. To take out a dent, cover with several sheets of blotting paper wet with water, and press with a fairly hot iron; the steam will swell the fibers and bring them back to their original posi tions. A nick or a break caused by the chipping oft or gouging out of some of the wood can be filled with shellac in stick form, which can be had in all of the various wood col ors and shades. Stick shellac looks like sealing wax. To apply it, a 1 screwdriver blade is heated hot enough to melt off some of the shel lac, which is then pressed into the break in the wood. When it has hardened, it can be cut off and made level with a razor blade or by rubbing with fine sandpaper. Loose chair rungs can be made tight through the use of thin and small slips of steel made for the purpose, and usually to be had at a hardware store. The loose end of the rung is pulled out, a slip of steel of the right size is placed against it, and the two are forced back tato?the Bole. ~Havtag (the teeth, the slip binds the rung tightly into place. When a chair has loosened all over, due to exposure to dry air, it is best to take it completely apart and to put it together again with plenty of glue. The parts should then be tightly bound with heavy cord until the glue is thoroughly dry. Squeaks in a wood bedstead are due to the loosening of the glued joints. To cure the squeaks, the joints should be taken apart and re glued. A split in a table top, also caused by drying out, can be brought to gether by exposure to damp air; sometimes by laying damp cloths on both sides of the split. When a split has closed, small pieces of flat metal, to be had at a hardware store, should be screwed on the un der side, to prevent the split from reopening. THE GREAT PHILOSOPHERS By DOUGLAS MALLOCH THE great philosophers may think They stand on rostrums, write with ink, And lead mankind with theories ? And yet I greatly doubt i f these Are great philosophers at all. They are too great, they are too tall A truth to fashion or to find Simple enough to serve mankind. The sphere they live in is as far From where we live as star from star. They move in orbits, often we In circles they can never see. They understand the human race. But not the people of a place. They never hear, so far apart. The beating of a single heart. The great philosophers indeed Are not the ones who write and read But rather those who think and pray, Man near, and God not tar away. They stand beside the bier of grief. Have less of learning, more belief. And do not "think" a thing is so ? Know what they live, live what they know. TBI LANGUAGE . OF YOUH HDTD A By LtictcUr K . Doris e PttMic L ?4??r. Ik \4 OST of us have "the blues" at times. But the normal mind soon clears them away. This is not true, however, of some unfortu nates, who seem always and quite unaccountably depressed. In a world that is filled with so much about which to be cheerful and hap py, these mournful souls see only that which should not be. Destiny, for some imfathnmahle reason, seems to have singled them out for unhappiness, brooding and gloom which they hardly deserve. And destiny has marked them with the finger of Saturn now to be de scribed. Ike Melancholy Finger of Satan. Fortunately you will not coma upon many second fingers d this type. But when you do, yoa will recognize its peculiarities at a glance. The outstanding character istic is the twisted and distorted appearance of the finger from root to nail tip. This and excessive length and leanness, which add em phasis to the large and knotty i knuckles. The first joint usually inclines sharply toward the forefinger, the second joint just as sharply away from it, while the nail tip turns I again toward the forefinger. The 1 nail is long, narrow, often con vexed and deeply ridged and rather deep ly set. Individuals with this unusual type of second finger are rarely under stood, even by those with whom they are most closely associated. They crave sympathy, which they deserve but which is too often with held. If encouraged, the real abili ties so often lying latent within them may be loosed in surprising j accomplishments despite the handi cap which destiny has imposed. HfUjO- T!UfN6AST. JOfFPf, CAeam.tfBWN v,ano McAllister , ?\ VtLL. LIT M? b | "M* *5 f SSAHMVOOHeN^ <