The alamange gleaner VOL. LIX. GRAHAM, N, C., THURSDAY NOVEMBER 9, 1933. NO. 40. News Review of Current Events the World Over Roosevelt Directs Buying of Gold in World Markets to Boost Commodity Prices?Administrator Hopkins on Winter Relief Needs. By EDWARD W. PICKARD BUYING of newly mined American gold at prices above prevailing fig ures did not prove so efficacious In boosting commodity prices as the ad ministration had I hoped, bo President Roosevelt called Into conference his finan cial advisers and It was decided to buy I gold In the world mar | kets. Prof. George F. | Warren of Cornell and Prof. James Harvey i Rogers of Yale, who I had devised the dollar ? dniMmnlntlAn n o 1 I o v ucpicuakiuu i> u u v. j Prof. George F. which Is being tried, Warren were among the con ferees, naturally, and the partial fail ure of the plan was put up to them. They then told the President that it would be necessary to force down the value of the dollar in the foreign ex changes as well as at home, and that if that were done the scheme was sure to work. The purchase of gold abroad is un dertaken by the Reconstruction Finance corporation, as is that in America, by direction of Mr. Roose relt. It is preliminary to revaluation of the dollar and establishment of the President's plan for a managed cur rency. Chairman Jesse Jones of the R. F. C. said the Federal Reserve bank of New l'ork had been authorized to dispose of R. F. C. notes and take foreign gold in payment. The bank also has made overtures to the Bank of Eng land and the Bank of France for the purchase of pounds and francs respec tively in exchange for gold. The co operation of the French and British banks would tend to support an ear lier White House statement that inter pretations of this government's foreign gold purchases as the beginning of an international depreciation race, "a currency war," were erroneous. In Washington it is the opinion of many observers that conservatism In finance Is being gradually abandoned and that the dollar will ultimately be forced down to a 50-cent value. Bro kers in Wall Street were frankly con fused and avoided any extensive mar ket operations. Meeting with President Roosevelt and the professional authors of the gold plan were Acting Secretary of the Treasury Dean Acheson, Gov. Eu gene Black" of the federal reserve board, George L. Harrison, governor, and J. E. Crane and Fred I. Kent of the Federal Reserve bank of New York; Henry Morgenthau, Jr., gover nor of the farm credit administration; Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the Re construction Finance corporation; and Henry Bruere, the President's financial co-ojdlnator. At least some of these gentlemen have formerly opposed any program that smacks of inflation; but the Pres ident evidently felt the Warren-Rogers plan was an experiment that deserved a trial. HARRY L. HOPKINS, federal re lief administrator, went to Kan sas City, met with relief delegations of Missouri, Iowa, MO*=as, Nebraska, p ail an Arkansas and Okla I homa, and told them ! that the need for re ' lief was going to be I greater than ever and ! that each state and lo cal government must do its part fully. "We are going to start the winter with a million more families on the relief rolls than there were a year ago at this time," ne sain, and he added emphatically, "the n?edy idle are going to be taken care of this winter." Mr. Hopkins estimated about 3,250, 000 families were on relief rolls at the present time. During the five months the federal emergency relief adminis tration has been in operation $21G,000, 000 has been allotted by the federal government to care for the needy, he said. *lle noted that when new Jobs open up most of th*- ire filled at first by "self-sustalnir !)? who have never been on reli . .oils." 'The idle relief bill of the nation, which is about one billion dollars a year, must be paid," he said. "This means that the need for private con tributions Is greater." FOLLOWING a conference in Des " Moines, Governors Herring of Iowa, Olson of Minnesota, Langer of North Dakota and Schmedeman of Wisconsin went to Washington to lay before President Roosevelt the plans approved by the conference for boost ing prices of farm products. Immedi ate steps held necessary to securing benefits to farmers before the 1933 crops leave their hands include cur rency inflation, pegging the prices of basic farm crops, the adoption of a code for agriculture under the NRA, and improvement of the federal farm refinancing machinery, especially in the Omaha land bank district. The program has been Indorsed by Gov ernors Horner of Illinois, Bryan of Nebraska, McNutt of Indiana and Berry of South Dakota. The proposed code for agriculture would authorize the creation of a board of farmers which would have functions similar to those of trade as sociations in existing industrial codes. The board, in conjunction with fed eral authorities, would determine the cost of production of principal crops, determine what is a fair margin of profit for farmers, and set minimum prices for domestic consumption. Though President Mllo Reno of the National Farmers' Holiday association declared the farm strike off pending developments in Washington, the strike was kept up, especially in Min nesota and Wisconsin. LATE developments concerning the recovery program include these events: Counsel for an employees' brother hood obtained a temporary injunction restraining the New York Edison com pany from violating the NRA and the re-employment agreement. President Roosevelt settled two dis putes with the steel industry. He ob tained a "substantial agreement" be tween the United Mine Workers and the captive mines of Pennsylvania op erated by the steel companies, forcing the latter to accept the checkoff sys tem. He ended the differences between Transportation Co-ordinator J. B. East man and the steel companies over the price of rails to be bought by the rail ways with money loaned by the gov ernment, by setting a price halfway between that asked by the companies and that demanded by Eastman. The Ford dealer whose bid was re jected by the government because Ford had not signed the NRA sued to prevent the award of the contract to the next lowest bidder. More than 300 charges that the Ford Motor company is violating the NRA automobile code provisions were dis missed as "not legitimate" by the De troit compliance board. SECRETARY OF STATE nULL and his aides have made everything ready for the conversations with Maxim Litvinov of Russia concerning establishment of re lations with the Sov- | iet republic, and the | foreign affairs com- I missar is speeding to I Washington. It is fi taken for granted | that when recogni- 1 tion of Kussia is com- J pieted the Moscow I government will ap- I point as Its first I nrnhnoeer1nP tf? AmPF UUJuaoouuvt .v ica M. Sokolnikov, M- Sokolnikov now vice commissar of foreign affairs. He was formerly ambassador to London and was Russia's delegate to The Hague, ne Is descended from a fam ily that was prominent in the days of the c|ars. Vaiery Meshlauk, It is expected, will be chairman of the Russian trade dele gation to the United States. He is acting chairman of the state planning board and has often visited this coun try in behalf of Russian governmental purchases. GERARD SWOPE, president of the General Electric company, ex-in dustrial and labor adviser to the re covery administration, outlined a plan for the gradual conversion of the NRA Into a great private organization with governing powers over all Industry. Administrator Hugh S. Johnson and Henry I. Harriman, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, Indorse the plan, the former asserting such a scheme would make It possible to avoid cycles of depression, and the latter warning that the NRA would be a failure If It were allowed to become "Just a government bureaucracy." Briefly, the plan outlined Is to en trust to a national council the code supervision authority now In govern ment hands. Government officials would be members of the council, and It would work In close collaboration with government departments, main taining extensive research and statis tical staffs. The council might be created by an enlargement of the United States Chambers of Commerce with labor representation. It was suggested. SAMUEL INSULL, fugitive former public utilities magnate, and the Greek people were equally jubilant when the Greek court of appeals again refused to extradite Insull to the United States and ordered his release from custody. The judges held the In dictment against Insull did not furnish sufficient basts for his extradition. What the American government will, do next, if anything, was In doubt. There Is no appeal from the decision, but Washington might denounce the extradition treaty. The Greeks hope that Insull will remain in that coun try and establish big Industries; it Is rumored that he will ask naturaliza tion and change his name to Insull opoulos. ON DECEMBER 15 France will owe the United States another Install ment on the war debt, amounting to $22,200,928. But we won't get It, or any part of It. The new French gov ernment headed by Albert Sarraut in tends to default as did that of Dala dier on June 15. It was said semi officially In Paris that the government would abstain from raising the ques tion In parliament. THE senate banking subcommittee and its counsel, Ferdinand Pecora, kept up their hammering at Albert H. Wiggin, former head of the Chase Na tlonal bank of >ew York, and the compli cated transactions car ried on by him and his companies. It was brought out that the Oh a s e bank made huge loans to Wig gin's personal com panies for trading In the bank's stock and for the creation by Wicirin of enmnanies i Albert H. " ?"~ "" "?' Wiaoin Canada to escape income taxes. Sher mar, one of the Wiggln companies, be gan selling the Chase bank stock short in 1929, a month before the great mar ket crash, and big profits were made. "What prompted you to sell the bank stock?" asked Pecora. "I don't know," replied Wiggln. "I j must have had some trend of thought at that time. I thought all bank stocks were too high and that Chase was in line with the other stocks." "If you thought Chase bank stock was too high, why did you permit the Chase Securities corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary, the Metpotan corporation, to go into these various pools to stabilize the market?" asked Pecora. After considerable discussion with counsel Wiggin replied that the pool bought and sold stock and that "the net result was the sale of stock, just the same as I did." ACCORDING to Secretary of Agri culture Wallace, the country's wheat farmers have signed up about 80 per cent of the average seeded acre age In the farm adjustment adminls- | tration's crop reduction campaign. Mr. ? Wallace estimates that cash benefits to farmers for agreements to restrict plantings next year 15 per cent will exceed $102,000,000, of which they will receive slightly more than two-thirds this fall. Checks already are being sent out, the first going to some farm ers in West Virginia. Applications have been signed cov ering 570,203 farms on which wheat is grown and representing 51,925,612 acres. A reduction of 15 per cent on this area for the crop to be harvested next year will reduce plantings about 7,780,000 acres. MODERN Turkey, the republic. Is just ten years old, and its birth^ day was fittingly celebrated at Anka ra, the capital. The state as it now orlofa fa lnrfplv thf? work of Mustapha Kemal, the president, and It was with justi fiable pride that he recounted Its growth f and achievements be fore 100.000 of his fel low citizens at the race course, ne said: I "Our greatest accom plishment Is the Turk ish republic which President tj,e heroism and high Kemil culture of the Turk ish people created, thanks to the na tion's will and valorous army, but our task Is unfinished. What we hare done Is Insufficient. "We will raise our fatherland to the ranks of the most prosperous and most civilized nations of the world with the speed of this age in which we live. We shall succeed because the Turkish people Is lofty, Industrious, and intelligent, and is led by the torch of positive science and by the love of fine arts." Turkey today, added the president. Is dedicated to peace and Is satisfied with her present physical boundaries, but be declared that, as the cradle of aDCleDt civilization, she Is determined to spread her cultural boundaries far into Europe. 0. IMS. WnUra Ncviptpe Uata* I -A Hitch-Hikers Invade Air Fields Hllctl-HIKEKS are beginning to "thumb" rides trow airplane pilots now. Here's Dale Myers, Tucson (Ariz.) pilot, being "promoted" for a ride by two girls, Wilbur Spencer and Bonnie Berrlns. who said they were hurrying from Los Angeles to El Paso, Texas, where Miss Spencer's sister lay ILL BEDTIME STORY FOR CHILDREN By THORNTON W. BURGESS JERRY MUSKRAT WAKES UP JUST IN TIME NEVER Id all bis Ufe had Jer Muskrat been quite so flattered as he was by the artmi ratio- of Reddy Fox for his skill as a builder of houses. Listening to the praise which fairly dripped from Reddy's smooth tongue, Jerry actually forgot who was talking. At least, he forgot that "V dy always had been an ~nem.v. tt was hard to believe that such a handsome fellow and such a pleasant spoken fel low could possibly mean any barm. And he seemed so much In earnest wher he said that If only Jerry would oome with him and show him how to build a house he wruld be the happi est Fox In the world that Jerry had It on the tip of his tongue to say that he would do that very thing and be glad to. Jerry actually had paddled In to the bank and was beginning to climb out as Reddy said this. And then, as so often happens with a tongue that Is too smooth, Reddy's tongue tripped him up. If only be hadn't said that Jerry conld make him the happiest Fox In the world! That word Fox waked Jerry np Just In time. He J wasn't really asleep, you know, but he was so flattered and so Interested In what Reddy bad said that be had quite forgotten who was talking. But at that word Fox he suddenly realized what he was about to do. In Just one wee little minute more he would have been right out on the bank within easy Jumping distance of Red dy. Hastily he pushed himself out from the bank and swam far enough out In the Smiling Pool to feel abso lutely safe. Then he looked up at Reddy to see If the latter had noticed the haste with which he had left the bank instead of climbing out on It. He thought there was Just a trace of disappointment In Reddy's eyes, but It passed so quickly he couldn't be sure. Apparently Reddy could think of nothing but a new house like Jerry's, only on land and big enough for him. He went right on talking Just as If he hadn't noticed Jerry's action at all. "If you only could show me how. I be lleve I could build a house. Anyway. i wuuiu ue wiuiug 10 iry auu iu wur& hard," said he with his eyes half closed, as if trying to picture to him self what such a bouse would look like. "I certainly would be the envy of everybody on the Green Meadows and In the Green Forest. I believe such a house would tickle Mrs. Reddy almost to death. I must bring her over here to see your house." m Once more Jerry was growing so In terested In the Idea of that house that without really knowing It he was pad dling toward the bank. Then as his feet touched bottom he remembered and made a half circle to deeper wa ter and there floated lazily. 'Til be , glad to have you bring Mrs. Reddy to see my house," said he. "I am afraid It isn't possible for me to show you how to build, but as I told you before I will be glad to tell you how.H Reddy Jumped lightly to his feet ??That will be fine." ne replied. "I have an engagement now. but If you have time to spare tomorrow night 1 will come over at about this time and we'll talk the Idea over. I certainly would like a house like that." He glanced longingly towards Jerry's new house out In the Smiling Pool, then, wishing Jerry good-night trotted away. ?. 1933. by T. W. Burgess.?WNl' Berries. I PAPA KNCWS-I "Pop, what la a ehamplon7" "Might b? a prize fighter or a priza Pekingeaa." e 1M1, Bell eradicate.?WTTO 8crrlc* I GraphicGolf I TOMMY \ ACNOOftS 1 ??O^CLU0 'I WTTM I M6AVLY A Wt-GUTSO l\ HtiP$ M PtAvta ^ 0Aa Ka$HY. n HEAVY HEADED IRONS TOMMY ARMOUR S rifle Iron shots have Ions been the admiration of all golfers, duffer and star alike. Al though Armour realizes the futility of an average player hitting a long, straight Iron that will compare favor ably with those of the powerful wrist ed pros, he does think that the high handicap player can help himself con siderably by proper selection of Iron clubs. The limber shafted, light beaded Irons In his estimation are not the best suited ones for the game. SOFTER JUGHTS By DOUGLAS MALLOCH THESE cooler nights And kinder days, These softer lights And autumn haze. Are like the years Of later life. After the teal's And Joy and strife. Less red the flow'rs. Less green the grass, But quiet hours In peace we pass. Though gone the May, The summer spent. We are less gay But more content In spring we fear The thought of fall. But autumn here. Mind not at all; For living writes No fairer page Than softer lights And quiet age. C. 1!1S. Douglu llalloch.?WHO Sarrlce. Most of the better players hare clubs with rather heavy heads which at least give the suggestion that there Is something strong and solid In their hands. He advises such heads for the average player, coupled with a slight flexibility In the shaft whlicfr should Increase proportionately for the longer Irons. With such clubs there is a tendency to hit the ball more easily, which in itself is conducive of better form than a vicious swing with s slightly weighted head. There is also a shock to the latter which soon tires the wrists and hands. ?. 1933. Bell Syndicate?WXl' Service rioiiggsiBooh DESSERTS AND OTHER DISHES ? THERE Is nothing easier to prepare than Junkets and gelatin dessert. They are most wholesome and espe cially good for the young and aged. Cherry Sponge. Dissolve one package of cherry Savored gelatin In a pint of boiling water. Add 12 finely cut marshmal lowg. Dip the shears Into water when cutting them and they will not stick. Stir well, add a pinch of salt, six drops of almond extract, and chill. When slightly thickened beat with a rotary egg beater until like whipped cream. Turn Into Individual molds and chllL Serve with cream. Flaked Ambrosia. Dissolve one package of raspberry gelatin In a pint of boiling water, add a pinch of salt, two tablespoonfuls of lemon Juice, one tablespoonful of orange juice and chill until firm. Beat with a rotary egg beater until well flaked, fold In two cupfuls of whipped cream and serve In sherbet glasses. Garnish with a green cherry. Prune Jam. Soak two cupfuls of prunes over night In One and one-half pints of wa ter. Cook for ten minutes In the wa ter In which they have been soaked, drain nnd cut Into small pieces. Slice one lemon and two oranges. Including the peeling, very thin nnd cook In the prune Juice until tender. Add the prune pulp, one cupful of sugar and one-half teaspoon of salt. CVok until thick, stirring constantly. Sea! In Jars. Dried apricots are equally good for Jam prepared In the same manner, c. 1933. Western Newspaper Union. EONECi IT S M. SWELL ) GO*-D ) BriCKJL^ [ iBoOCrr^ What has the government slone to protect the Indians? Put them In reservoirs. BONERS are actual humorous tid-bits found in examination pa pers, essays, etc., by teachers. A balanced sentence is one fiavlng an equal number of words on each side of the middle word. ? ? ? One of the qualifications for the President of the United States is that he must be at least thirty-five years of age because before that time he would be too busy thinking of getting married to be of any use to his coun try. ? ? ? The stomach Is the size of a hen's egg and holds two quarts. It con tains the liver, pancreas, Intestines, and other organs. ? ? ? Cod liver oil prevents babies from getting crickets. ? ? ? Grace Abounding was one of the mistresses of Charles the Second. ? ? ? Heresy Is where one person hears something and It Is passed around the country that way. C. 1>I1 Bell syndicate.?S.ST Sere'.re. Afternoon Outfit This burgundy velvet afternoon dress is trimmed with silver fox. A silver fox muff and a short red velvet coat to match go to complete the outfit. Harvest Thanksgiving Day in Germany SCt.NL at Buckeherg, Germany, during He Harvest Thanksgiving da; cere monies showing some of the peasant women In their picturesque costumes taking part In the festivities which were held tbroughont the relch.