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3 C z Cola's C 'Zi. A THIS WEEK "My Empire" Wanta Peaee "ME, Too," Say Selassie Popgun for Uncle Saia -$900,000,000 More England' ' lord. Ugh chancellor, Tlscount Hallsham, read the king's speech, written by the -king cabinet. Th king's reference to atepa "urgent ly ; necessary, to safeguard' my empire", are rec ommended to this government We haven't any "empire" exact ly, bat we nave a republic worth defending. Some of our loose bU' lion . might be Artha Briabaaa that direction. ' well p e n t In Ignoring some Italian friction, the king went on to say, "My rela tion with foreign power continue menuiy.- - Mentioning the Italian misunder standing, he said: "My government will continue to exert their Influ ence In favor of peace.' If It does. . peace will come. ; .;,."';"'. v Halle Selassie, emperor of Ethi opia, sensibly asked the Patriarch Johannes, supreme authority of the - Ethiopian Coptic church, to ar range peace, if he can, with Musso lini, and Abuna Cyril, high bishop of hi church, 1 asked by Selassie to do his best. And now come from Universal Service the important authoritative report that "... Halle Selassie has agreed to give part of his territory in return for peace. Washington says this country plans a series of . Pacific ocean "Glbraltars," armed with 16-Inch guns with a fighting range of 25 to 30 miles. Quite amusing, con sidering that the original Gibraltar ha become a useless rock, thank to airplanes and' submarines. In vading airplanes might not' be kind enough to come within; 25 or 30 miles of these interesting fixed Glbraltars. What this country needs for coast protection Is airplanes, for fighting, and dirigibles for observation," lo cated close enough : together and high enough up In the air to make them really useful In the next war. Uncle Sam borrow $900,000,000 more; bringing the national debt above $30,500,000,000, but $40,000,- 00,000 below the amount that cer tain "great bankers" told President Boosevelt this country could easily carry. Congressman Hamilton Fish Jr. wants President Roosevelt to tell who the great bankers were, but It Is understood that they talked In confidence. - Prince Suml of Japan, brother of the Mikado, fourth son of the late Emperor Yoshlhlto, takes the title "Prince Mlkasa," meaning, literally, "Prince of the Three Umbrellas." The name "Three Umbrellas" la taken from a Japanese mountain and is also the much revered name of the flagship on which Admiral Togo fought the battle of the Japan sea. - "Three Umbrellas" seems appro priate one for Japan, one for China, one for the Philippines; all Japanese, The village of Verde Cocha, near Guayaquil, in Ecuador, exists no longer. A landslide- wiped oat everything, Instantly killing fifty In habitants. A slice of green moun tainside, two mile wide, came roar ing down, and there was no trace of the village, and no man lived to tell about it. '"-'.f ',. But other -men will rebuild Verde Cocha, for men are a persistent as ants, that rebuild their village when the gardener's hose sweeps tliptn JlWfiv -.(' - , r Senator Borah of Idaho and Con gressman Hamilton Fish,. Jr., of New York, bad a long talk, and re- porters "guess' 'that Senator Borah and Mr. Fish have agreed to run side by side. Senator Borah for President, Mr. Fish for Vice Pres ident. It is not safe to "guess" about Senator Borah, but It would be wise for the Republicans to de cide soon. . When experimenting starts. It - keep going. Hitler," manufacturing - - cannon, know tbey will need "fod der," and Insist on more babies. A German farmer gets a divorce- be cause hi wife wants no children, .. "It I the duty of German wives' to perpetuate the German blood," vr the court says. i v .Mlsa Edna Maria Granltsas, twen i ty-two-year-old member of a Mass-1 a chosetts .school committee, says : teachers talk .too' much, do not, let ' the children talk enough. She says children should - be encouraged to express themselves.. The Massachu setts lady 'goes far when she say ;"If a child want to yell out. In class, let the child yell until he decide not to yell." Discipline la also a part of education. -: - C Kins PcMtirM 8ynHMt IM, ' V.NU Srvl. . ....... . . Walter Russell, well known sculptor of New York, pictured with a model, of the center portion of his Mark Twaln-memorlal which Is to be erected lnvHannIbal, Mo the boyhood home of the creator of "Tom Sawyer" and "Hack Finn." The actual memorial Itself will be 60 feet long and will contain 28 figures, all Trapping Salmon to Strip Tem . ,: t"rf- !,-.-----.--- ..: .'. "' S! - aiillili-- - - Jiil- .'23. - ' W : "- : :-.'-'.v:v!KvW':':S:::fc - ;T- j -- 1 ' F "-, Member of the fish and game around a large number of salmon that come up to the pool to spawn. ..The salmon are dipped out of the seine and strlDDed of their anawn which la hatched In the hatchery ' la this manner over 88 ner cent of tlW em are batched, whereas, if the salmon would .be hatched.. ' Represents America at World Labor Conference W. I' Hutcheson . was appointed by President William Green of the American Federation- of Labor as that organization's delegate to the ''ST- forthcoming. International labor con ference In CbllL The selection was aid to be "shocking" to the secre tary of labor. : Hutcheson opposed bi New Deal : 1 Safe Because Deer on a United States government preserve, near plcturcsqae Lake Montana. , - J more than life size. ' - ,, ; department at work In the salmon hatchery at Raymond, Me' putting a seine were allowed to spawn in their natural way only 2 per cent of the egg -Kxti'S-: .- ; ' vK'K-;':"- i Belle Alliance Farm Is a Monument :vX-;-:si-j::?:::::A::X;::o: .'"St U 'aa ': The farm of the Belle Alliance on the battlefield Of Waterloo, which war Napoleon's headquarters 'during the haftle, ha, been preserved, as a "monument bistorique" by the Belgian government. ;' This Is a view of the'. farm building. a tbey. are ijWvV'rv-NS. Uncle Sam Protects JTEem - fcr Yc Ta t ke part In the American eel- i jiH of the centenary of the birth of Andrew Carnegie, Hugh Grant, olriclal piper at SUIbo castle L Scotch home of the Carnegie fam ily, came over-and showed u. how the pipe should be played. With him la Roswell Miller, Carnegie's of Their Spawn -'vrf'.V-..-."'"'V;'. flu.; McDonald, Glacier N National park.' . . OGt3 ' . i w '"'' i " " " - - '1 e ' : ' - :v yK Li famous wa$"":;tc;i cc '.Washington. Repres entatlve James P.; Buchanan, chairman of the house appropriations commit tee, Is' far from the rebel, bedevil ing President Roosevelt, , that ' he has -been made to appear In the re cent dispatches from Warm Springs and Washington. ': 1 Actually he 1 a member of the team, and at the moment Is doing yeoman service for. the "Quarter back,", as Mr. Roosevelt sometimes likes to style himself.?; His present play of forcing the President' hand on economy and budget balancing; his hopes that the President will eventually be In agreement with him, despite hi own admission that he" Buchanan Is a ?Janaflo" od budget, balancing, 'la all part of a very shrewdly calculated drama, not entirely unconnected 'with the election campaign, next year. - For- Roosevelt himself . 1 thor oughly convinced not only of the necessity for, making a very strong play toward economy In his budget message , next month, and of paint ing a picture Indicating that .the budget will be balanced 10 due. time, but also of the necessity of some extraordinary, method of making the country believe he means It ' He has been told very frankly that the .very ; Interest : he; most wants to placate-i-to win over . to the 'convjctlon that, from an , eco nomic and fiscal, standpoint, .be is perfectly safe distrust his words. He ha been told that it will take a great deal of sklir to convince them he really intend to' do what he may promise in that budget mes sage. - - j Hard-boiled cynics are very , dial cult to convince by mere words, es pecially When some of those cynic believe firmly that the speaker of the words ha fooled them before. So the problem was to stage a little drama1 In advance '.of the bu Jget message, ' which ' would lead up to It, and pave the way for its being believed, , . ,.-. Would' Cut Budget Deficit ' It - wasn't Just a trial . balloon which the. Texas congressman sent up when be talked .about catting the-budget deficit down to half a billion dollar for the year begin ning July lj next, , and to scratch for the following year after which expenditure were to be kept with in Income. " 'N' 1 , 1 1' The Idea Is to have the country read the President budget prom ises nextmonth with the knowledge that the head of the house appro priations committee- wants to : go even further toward budget balanc ing than the President himself t v If the New Dealer had figured for a month they, could nor. have devlsed'a more convincing plan for persuading the country not Just of the President' Intentions, bit? that they would be carried oqfc ri i-'yv! : For Mr. Buchanan Is far from 'be ing just a congressman, v He is chairman, of the one 'committee tfa the house that handle all appro-, prlatlonsv Subcommittees Appoint: ed by him and working Under him scrutinize , the . proposed expendi tures for every, governmental de partment and agency. House mem bers as a whole .'are very prone to follow; the receinmendatpns of the bouse .-, appropriations- committee. For one thing, it provides them a very simple and effective alibi for their votes.- It save lots of em barrassing explanations to , critical constituents, " mMs- ' Moreover, business I perfectly aware that at the other end of, the Capitol, the appropriations commit-' tee is presided over by Carter Glass of Virginia, who was so worried about national credit, and the .ad ministration's . spending policie that he. wanted to cut the famous four-bllllon-dollar bill last year' to two billion dollars.: Senators do not pay 41s much attention' te commit tee recommendations as do house members, but Mr. Glass and Mr. Buchanan will both be on the con ference committee 1 that - will Iron out differences' between the - two 4om.'V''0''-'hV' Lewi V. Green v v That John U Lewis, president of the United Mine Worker of Amer ica, has all the cards In the Inter onion labor battle, a far es Issue art concerned, most labor leaders here privately . agree, ; and would win the fight promptly If his name were William Green. , v , Or to put It more sacclnctly. If he ; had Green' , personality, -. and Green's backgrqund, and Green's friendships. Wv- i - The American Federation of ta bor; Is marching toward vertical, or Industry unions, and away from the old form of craft unions.- "But the oligarchy of (be 'federation leans' heavily , toward Green, their presi dent. 'Not only do the majority of the leaders distrust Lewis; but they Include many who actively dislike him. v',':;'; 4! V .PI, Lewis, many of them say private ly, has been a successful fighter for the United Mine Workers. lie has been aggressive, battling every mo ment. But he never knew when to lay his lighting ninnriers nsldti. As a f- -lit, In cp"' ---'! of - leaders he has t to r over his colleagues JuKt as t;. . . U they Were ' nothlpg but canHaltsts, and with all the contempt In his expt-es- slon, both facial and by words, as . . . . . u mey were trying to starve ins,'-" followers Into submission, Entirely aside from all this' per sonal feeling, many of them point out that battling .for the Mine Workers, successful as it haa been so far as winning each battle that came up was concerned, has proved rather disastrous tot - the workers In the Jong run.';'',;;' :V;''tj "f:U Lewi had been head, for; In stance of the automobile workers, and they had followed him with the same percentage of loyally that, the coal miners have demonstrated, the story' would be very different' v - For In the case of the automo bile industry, ,1c ba been, expand lng year by -yeart . Every season lit needed more workers than the sea-1 sible to get rid of, once you're ! rta'Aefoftil'.Virot. onqr 'waa' tta' df.wkh them. And as for wlu t mana for its product growing, but there , was ho other Industry com- petlng with It taking,' away; lu: market, . , Success m Backfire ;; .-:,-'' f. Ini .the v coal , Industry,: however, there has been active competition from oil, Doth for. ships and for fac- hhiot, ini cycu ir uuuicn. j. uiuv has been, the rapid development "of gas and electrical competition. For example; -the electrification .'f the Pennsylvania railroad from New York to Washington.-And there has been -a very heavy slump- In Inter national trade, which : accentuated the -slumping enrve of railroad -coal consumption, also: shipping,' espe cially the big trunk ones leading to ports, So that In boosting the price of coal by Increasing wages, Lewis' success has,, had a decided 'backfire. This; Is not the sort of 'point that usually gives labor .leaders much pause.'; But they cite It as showing thai Lewis lack Judgment - ' . Hbwever, several very .large em- ployergj who- have- been i-operatlng. virtually .open shops for some time, have told labor leaders privately they do not object to! letting their present company unions forced by NRA-H-intd ..vertical' or -'industry onions. ' What -they are 'i worried about J- having to deal with twen ty to thirty different craft unions. which frequently,' tbey - have obi served In other, concerns, get ' into quarrel among' themselves and pro duce strikes whh:h are not to be blamed, even by the workers, on their employer; j : vgfj-' : iThey'Vant tp1 be able to ettle all their labor troubles with one set" of officials with- one ' unions And they- have1 served notice that they will fight to the death against the organization of .their worker into the nresent craft nnton. -' Farley Shocks Them $ 'if the; brain trust wmg'ef the ad ministration, aa . distinguished from the practical polltJcar, wing, : wa shocked beyond words Cat the' re mark of Postmaster Jim Farley at Denver before the .Colorado Demo cratic lentral committee, y,; " Mr. Farley ' words, ., which , so aroused the brain truster -who have been- made sick .at heart again and again . at having their legislative Idea; "mangled" pn I Capitol Hill, were: "The second error 1 , that ' the delegation in the national legisla ture are expected to be mere rub ber stamps to carry out the will of the President.'' On the contrary, let me assure -yon that the member of independent habit and. Judgment Is the one most appreciated ' by the administration. It la the President's function to recommend legislation. To advise congress what be deems requisite for the welfare of the na tion.; Those who .have faith in his Judgmept go along with htm, tot there Is neither pressure brought on the congressmen f to follow.: the rPresldent' lead,' nor hostility or. reprisal for thoso who differ with him. It is rare that any, important measure "v gee'- -through ; ".without amendment- 8e - much for- that j", , The exclamation point at the con clusion of this paragraph appear. In tho official text, and moat people' at Washington, of whatever polit ical persuasion,; and in whatever of fice, agree that the punctuation te correct ' k - r t T Turning; on the Heat, ,,' ' '- Now If ever In . the. history of Presidential; deaUng with Capitol Bill more heat was turned on by the White House to win, Senators away from the Glass-Adam side of ; cms controversy, ana get; them W vote for the nearly five billions which the administration wanted, old-timers around,: Washington do not remember' it And remember that Mr. "Adam. -JUst praised by Farley, was one of the ringleader of the move to cut the appropria tion in half! ;.:':!,5,;;f-".r . ' But that was then; while now. Is something else again. Farley Is not worried about legislation next p'- ilon. ' He Is worried' about the e :-tlon. 1' t is his Job. .. . : . . - , ; c",v '-it-T-WNv s-rvies, . , lems ; t ;:.vi.;:j to l!e r . ' hit r;H-a r luiiv.a nn m! trnf!!c laws of 43 or h i r (. c 1 1 tO B" y v 1 . ;o 1., i a l (inwu tl.i"- . pear (.. I. to i. ) i and r i the I- t where i to be si'M: lng nit. bor of f u v o h y m n. A s taxPS, t!i j'i Jrvln 6. Cuio cockKnuit ' 'easy to nick ud and n . t average clUzen thinks of the 1 l lators who gaily hang these tw burdens on us so that, pol tnay have more of somebody c money to spend well, you cut, print thatl i, ' , .;;,$ - ' tltar of fit LlUratl l't o OCTAL note : . Went ;t0 pi Among tQose present, the i ric' Marches, the Bud Lelglitou Johnnie Robinsons, Gloria Swa Hugh : Welpole. "Herbert ' Maira Constance Collier, Frank Lloyd, be an .evening devoted to ntelU tual dlscnsslon of literature, dram,:, the- .higher art..1' 1 . Y " . i - Sq all night we played a fixl; u game called "Who Am ir When the game, was-called on account of sunrise; Iwas "It" I still am. In other' words, while! I have' roinrh Ideas, what I may be you oiiKht t see some bf; the letters I get it remains a deep mystery as to who -I am, if, at all. , ,' -' rd1 rather somebody eke gave these big buffet suppers. Being host, you can't go home when . you're bored, and, besides, along towai-J the end of .the second week after the shindig you. do get ao tu 1 of aaplcj Jelly for breakfast ' i An LTatnn Ceniui : HAV5 yon .' ever read the -nov . "Anthony Adverse," i r cv held the: book, onr your lap u i your knees - went , to sleep 1 ; - Some quit and .went back to busi ness after the fifth month. Oilier? gave np everything else for tlie year and fought the good fight right through W the end. After that, they were ready to -tackle ' aomethlng- llghf and chaffy, such as the last Ix volume of the encyclopedia. .Anyhow, If yop were not Included among those. who bought.thls work' or bdrrowed It and tha woulJ put -s yon In the minority, for It has sola close to million copies the above should give you 4 rough; Idea, bo that yon may share with me In this tribute ,to an .authentic - genius. ; I've Just met him.; He's the dl-, jrectorvWho ha the Job of: putting- "Anthony Adverse" into eight reel of moving picture film. Alongside . of him,. I contend, the fellow who engraved, the Lord's Prayer on. thj head of a' pin was Just a piker.- . y:'' ';B;; y; p .-1- I DON'T know when I've been so1 stirred up Just panting like r lizard on a hot ' rock. - Every da seems like, I read that a Jurrof e pert has solemnly selected the ten best-groomed men. (Only horses had grooms when daddy was a boy). Or ? the ten best-dressed womem Or the ten hottest hostesses, or the ,ten - most ideally married couples : Holly wood entries barred for gouging In the ' clinches; ?!;;vv .-' :: ' i: Now I hear they're picking the ten most prominent debutantes that ' our leading movie idol is Hkely to be shuck up on by, 1. can hardly wait .When the really vital coni- peHtion are losed, would; It 1 - asking, too toucH of the Judge; t name,' say, the ten human boin t who contributed most to the worlu betterment ttil past yeart Or ho v about a better committee in e . i town-to choose the tenworthk case for .Christmas "relief t f-;v;',v -. WITH , 'Ethiopia ' convulsed I f . vHuywlth Brazil hiving I, -Hal spasms?, and Chinj crumb i udder armed pressure from w. and without; that-faint -squea! sound coming out of Geneva, S erland, would ,seem to. betoken -tinned plaintive protests on the i t of the only grea.t world moven wnicn quit functioning, before ever began. ' is, Mr.. Intarloautor. wliv la tin- I8ue of Nations i:k the elevntop smaii European or tel? Well," Brother J3oec$, I r can'tJmagine why the Lee"' Nations should resemble an e In a European hoti-i.- gnppo: tell ua -;'.; H Because, before 1 y've It finished, the pr. ..,r ! framed cards rwidy to 1 i on every floor b " : i elevator is out i ' t) North t -
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 12, 1935, edition 1
6
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