The Alamance gleaner VOL. LXI. GRAHAM, N, C., THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 19, 1935. NO. 33. News Review of Current Events the World Over Assassination of Senator Long Stirs the Nation?Great Britain Ready to Take Sanctions Against Italy? Ickes Versus Hopkins. By EDWARD W. PICKARD ? Western Newspaper Union. HUEY P. LONG, United States sen ator and political dictator of Lou isiana, Is dead, the victim of an as sassin's bullet As he passed through i a corridor of the state-bouse In Baton Rouge, where the leg islature was passing more laws to solidify his control over the state, he was shot once through the body by Dr. Carl A. Weiss, Jr., of Baton Rouge, one of the "King fish's" political oppo nents. The assassin Huey P. Long waa imme(]iate]y shot to death by the senator's ever present bodyguards. The surgeons and physicians worked unceasingly to save Long, but his strength steadily waned and shortly after 4 o'clock Tuesday morning, about thirty hours after the shooting, he passed away. Long's body lay in state in the ro tunda of the Capitol building while many thousands passed by the bier. The impressive funeral services were held on the front terrace and the dead senator was interred in a sunken gar den of the Capitol grounds. Rev. Ger ald L. K. Smith, the young minister who deserted a rich parish In Shreve port to follow Long, was the only speaker at the funeral. The only mu sic was the song, "Every Man a King," played in minor key and dirge time by the State University band. Though the man who killed Long was known as one of his political foes, the real story of the assassination was shrouded in uncertainty. Earl Chris tenberry, secretary of the late senator, declared that Long was murdered as a result of a conspiracy; that a num ber of his enemies formed a "Jury of death," and that Doctor Weiss was selected by lot to fire the fatal bullet. To those who are familiar with the conditions in Louisiana this story does not sound especially fantastic. What will become of Long's "empire" is a question that agitates all his fol lowers, and all the people of the state as well. For the present, it seemed likely, the members of the l.ong ma chine will sink their personal ambi tions and try to hold the organization intact It will be difficult for them to decide on a successor to the "Kingtish" as their leader. Gov. O. K. Allen is considered too mild and peace-loving. Seymour Weiss?no relative of the as sassin?treasurer of the Long organ ization, is the strongest man in the lot, but he always has drawn back from holding a public position. Allen A. Ellender, speaker of the house, may by the man finally selected. USSOLINI tacitly consented to I "-a the appointment of a committee of five nations by the League of Na tions council to handle the Italo-EthI opian embrogllo, and after protest agreed that Great Britain and France should be among the members of that body. The other members are Spain, Turkey and Poland. Senor Sa 1 v gd'o r de Madarlaga of Spain Is the chairman, and be and his associates at once began the task assigned them. Each Salvador de country Is represented Madariaga by Its chief delegate, being besides Madariaga, Eden of England, Laval of France, Rustu Arras of Turkey and Josef Beck of Poland. Soon after the assembly of the league opened Its session, Sir. Samuel Hoare, British foreign secretary, elec trified the gathering by an outspoken darning to Italy and France. He de clared Great Britain recognized Italy's need for expansion and raw materials but would not admit these could not be obtained peaceably. Pounding the tribune, he said: "Britain stands for steady collective resistance to all acts of unprovoked t'-^ression." He paused, struck the tribune again, and repeated quietly: "Steady collective resistance to all ?cts of unprovoked aggression." Sir Samuel more than intimated that Breat Britain was prepared to take sanctions against Italy in case of ag session provided ail the other mem bers of the league shared the risk; 0nd if noft then England was prepared t*> isolate herself from the continent. This seemed to put It up to Premier Laval of France, to choose between the friendship of Britain and that of Laval, meanwhile, was trying to persuade Mussolini to accept anoth er plan he had devised and postponed his speech to the assembly. Representatives of the Netherlands and Sweden were the first to support Hoare's position, announcing their countries would fulfill all obligations, including collective penalties, if any member became a victim of aggres sion. In two speeches In Rome Mussolini gave indication that he would not be diverted from his purpose to conquer Ethiopia. Though in one he said "the Italian people want peace provided it is accompanied by justice," in the oth er he declared "we shall march straight on." The Ethiopian govern ment announced that "telegrams from the northern frontier show that the Italians are making important troop movements on the Ethiopian and Eritrean frontier, indicating an early offensive against Ethiopia." Accepting the advice of his "brain trust," which includes Everett A. Col son of the United States, Emperor Haile Selassie instructed his repre sentatives in Geneva to reject all solu tions thus far offered by the powers for settling the quarrel with Italy. PUBLIC WORKS ADMINISTRATOR ICKES and Work Progress Adminis trator Hopkins got into such a quar rel over the spending of the $4,000,000, 000 fund that f the President had to call them to Hyde Park, together with the third and neutral member of the works relief triumvirate? Frank G. Walker, the director of the na tional emergency coun cil and administrator of applications. A yH Others called to the ,, Important works re- y Hopkina lief parley Included Daniel Bell, direc tor of the budget; Charles West, un der-secretory of Interior; Corrington Gill, assistant of Hopkins; Fred Iron sides, administrative assistant of Walker, and Col. Horatio Hackett, chief of housing in the PWA. Mr. Roosevelt was determined to have peace, and told those present that the prime necessity at this time Is to make jobs quickly, always keeping in mind the idea of turning workers back to private industry as business war rants. This looked like a victory for Hopkins, who favors quick Jobs, over Ickes, champion of permanent public works. The President has declared that he hopes 3,500,01)0 persons can be removed from the relief rolls and put to work by the first of November. LEGAL attack on the Guffey soft coal act has been opened by 16 coal companies operating In Harlan county, Kentucky, in Federal court at Louisville. They brought suit for In junction against its enforcement, charg ing that It violates the federal Consti tution in these nays: 1. It violated the flftli amendment, which forbids taking property without due process of law. 2. It violated the tenth amendment, which reserves to the states, or to the people, all rights not granted the fed eral government or forbidden the states. 3. It attempts to delegate legislative power. 4. The section levying a 15 per cent tax on all coal production, with a AO per cent refund to producers submit ting to the code provided by the act, is "an unconstitutional attempt on the part of congress, under the guise of taxation, to punish those producers of bituminous coal who are unwill ing to surrender their constitutional rights.* 5. Congress has no Jurisdiction over and no power to legislate upon certain matters covered by the act or the code. | The companies declared they would refuse to submit to the act and the code It authorizes. f TNIVERSITT of Michigan Is rejoic ^ Ing over a gift of $5,000,000 for enlargement of Its graduate school. The money Is donated by the Horace H. and Mary A. Itackham fund, based on the bulk of the estate of the late Horace H. Itackham, Detroit phi lanthropist. One million dollars will be spent to purchase a square block of land ad Joining the present campus and for a new building. The remainder will be employed as an endowment The in come will be used to promote research. By the terms of the agreement the school will be known as the Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studies. O EACTION of American business and J~ UV financial men to President Roose velt's latest public statement that bis basic program bas reached substan tial completion and Industry will have a breathing spell ran the gamut be tween mild hope and downright un belief. Those who permitted them selves to be quoted were generally extremely cautious In their expres sions, but there was usually a vein of skepticism In their remarks. Wall Street brokers were gladdened by a spurt of trading at higher prices, but J bankers were more than doubtful, and economists insisted that a balanced ] budget, which wasn't mentioned in the I President's letter to Roy Howard, pub- | Usher, was a prime requisite. Silas Strawn, former president of the Chamber of Commerce of the 1 United States, said: "Business men generally will say that the Improve- j ment In some lines of business has 1 been In spite of, rather than because j of, the activities of the admlnistra- ^ tion." . Politicians regarded the letter as Mr. Roosevelt's opening of his cam- , paign for re-election, and praised or decried it according to their party affill- 1 ations. Frank Knox of the Chicago Daily News, a potential candidate for the Republican Presidential nomina tion, called It "Just another promise" and set forth the many campaign 1 promises which Mr. Roosevelt has ?] failed to keep. Senator Black of Ala- j bama said the statement was "a won derfully clear explanation of his pro gram, Its original alms and its ex- ( ecutlon. It should be a call to those J ( engaged In business to co-operate In further national progress." THREE men who made Independ ent Investigation of the deaths of 256 war veterans In the Florida hur- | rieane reported they found no evi dence indicating culpable negligence j on the part of any persons. They were J States Attorney G. A. Worley of Miami, Aubrey Williams, representing Federal | Relief Administrator Hopkins, and Col. ' George E. Ijams of the veterans' bu- J reau, representing President Roosevelt ! This finding was denounced as ] "whitewash" by James E. Van Zandt, j commander In chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars; John J. Skillman, com mander of the Miami chapter of the same organization, and other repre sentatives of veterans' societies. Van I Zandt's statement called on President Roosevelt to ignore the official report and take action against "officials guilty of negligence." n ESTORATIOX of the Greek mon- i 1 arehy Is coming nearer and pre- i sumably Former King George will be I the man to occupy the throne. Premier j ! Tsaldaris has put himself on record ; as favoring the restoration, and Presi dent Zaimis has ?Indicated he will be ! willing to resign to make room for a king. Tsaldaris said In his statement: "I attribute the nervous tension at present existing In public ranks and | the army to general anxiety concern ing the question of a constitution. I consider democratic royalty as the nat- I ural regime for Greece and ask the people to vote for It in the Impending ; plebiscite." ?ITTTE WENT to war on foot, and V V we're Joining the parade the ' same way," declared about 150 of the grizzled veterans who attended the an- ! nual encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic In Grand ifapids, Mich. So these sturdy old men marched In j the big parade while the rest, num bering some 250, rode In automobiles. I Here were all that remained of the hundreds of thousands who answered the call to the colors in Civil war days, [ save for a few who were kept at home 1 by extreme age and Illness. Some of the j states had no representatives In the line, but their flags were carried never theless. From other states there were | but one or two. It was a pathetic but Inspiring procession, watched by thou sands whose eyes were dimmed by tears and escorted by Sons of Veterans. American Legionnaires and Veterans of the Spanish war. Olcy Nelson, 91, of Slater, Iowa, was elected commander-in-chief, to suc ceed Albert E. Stacey of Elbrldge, N. Y. In a session of the organization the ' proposed reunion at Gettysburg next year with the Confederate veterans was discussed, and Commander Stacey made it plain that the affair would not be held under the official auspices of the Grand Army. The plan originated ! In Pennsylvania. pDWARD L. DOHEXT, one of the | wealthiest of America's oil mag I nates, died In Los Angeles at the age J of seventy-nine years, after a long 111 ness. Ills oil Interests were mainly In California and Mexico, in 1924 Do heny and his old friend, Albert B. Fall, secretary of the Interior under Hard ing, were Involved In the Investigation of the government's leasing of the Elk Hills naval oil reserve In California to Doheny for exploitation. Doheny was twice tried and twice acquitted, on chafges of conspiracy to defraud the government and of giving a bribe of $100,000 to Fall. The lat ter, however, was found guilty of tak ing a bribe and went to prison. ?? ??11 West Point Cadets Get Artillery Practice I ylRST classmen of West Point military academy always have a summer tour of duty at Fort Monroe, Virginia, and ? there they learn to operate the big guns that defend the Chesapeake bay region. Some of the boys are here seen ring the 155 mm. guns. I Bedtime Story for Children i By THORNTON W. BURGESS THE MERRY LITTLE BREEZES HELP LIGHTFOOT HOULD you have seen the hunter ^ with the terrible gun and Llght oot the Deer that morning on which he hunting season opened you might lave thought that Llghtfoot was hunt ng the hunter Instead of the hunter luntlng Llghtfoot. You see, Llghtfoot vas behind the hunter so as to keep rack of him. As long as he knew just vhere the hunter was he felt reason ibly safe. The Merry Little Breezes are the >est friends that Llghtfoot has. They llways bring to him all the dlf erent scents they find as they wander :hrough the Green Forest. And Light Foot's delicate nose Is so wonderful that he can take these scents, even though they be very faint, and tell lust who or what has made them. So, though he makes the best possible use t>f his big ears and his beautiful eyes, tie trusts more to his nose to warn him t)f danger. For this reason during the luntlng season when he moves about tie moves In the direction from which the Merry Little Breezes may be blow ing. He knows that they will bring to him warning t>f any danger which may tie In that direction. Now the hunter with the terrible gun who was looking for Llghtfoot knew all this, for he was wise In the ways of Llghtfoot and of the other trees behind which LIghtfoot had been hiding he worked aronnd It slowly and with the greatest care, holding his ter rible gun ready for use Instantly should LIghtfoot leap out. Presently he found Llghtfoot's footprints In the soft ground and studying them he knew that LIghtfoot had known of bis com ing. "It was that confounded Jay," mut tered the hunter. "LIghtfoot heard him and knew what It meabt. I know what he has done. He has circled round so as to get behind me and get my scent It Is a clever trick, i. very clever trick, but two can play at that game. I'll just try that little trick myself." So fhe hunter In his turn made a wide circle back and presently there was none of the dreaded man-smell among the scents which the Merry Lit tle Breezes brought to LightfooL LIght foot had lost track of the hunter. C T. W. Burgeaa.?WNU Service. "It Was That Confounded Jay," Mut tered the Hunter. little people of the Green Forest When he had entered the Green Forest that morning he had first of all made sure of the direction from which the Merry Little Ilreezes were coming. Then he had begun to hunt In that direction, knowing that his scent would be car ried behind him. It Is more than like ly that he would have reached the hiding place of Llghtfoot the Deer be fore the latter would have known that he was in the Green Forest had It not been for Sammy Jay's warning. When he reached the tangle of fallen ^YOU Know? That more than 3,500 tons of hair has been cut from the heads of American women during the bob era, it is esti mated? There are 14,000,000 bobbed heads in the United States and about half this number spend $15,000,000 a year for waves. C McClur* Newnp&per Syndicate. WN'U Servlca. Minute make-ups =By V.V. I If you have a short neck, pay atten tion to the arrangement of hair at the napeline. Make the curls go upward off the neck so that there will be a clear sweep from the base of the neck to the hairline. Hair curled high will give the appearance of a longer neck well poised on the shoulders. Copyright by Public Ledger. Inc. WNU Service. Question box b,EDWYNN, The Perfect Fool Dear Mr. Wynn: I hare lost all my money and am broke. A fortune teller told me that when the soles of my shoes wear out, I will be on my feet again. Do you believe It? Tours truly, CLAIRE YOYANT. Answer: Well, I have to. Dear Mr. Wynn: Can you tell me how It Is that so many men are bald headed? Yours truly, DAN DRUFF. Answer: Men lose half their hair worrying If their sweetheart will mar ry them. After they are married they pull out the other naif worrying how to get a divorce. Dear Mr. Wynn: I sear where they were recently play ing Hamlet In evening clothes. I ain trying to modernize Uncle Tom's Cabin. Can you offer any suggestions? Truly yours, L NOEL OTT. Answer: When the bloodhounds chase Eliza, have her do the Charles ton on each cake of Ice. Dear Mr. Wynn: I owned a horse bat bad no bay for the horse to eat. I met a man who had a load of hay and I traded blm the horse for the hay. Now I have no horse to eat the bay. What van I do? ANN VII.L. Answer: Find the man yon traded with and ask blm If he'd be kind enough to lend you the horse to eat the hay. | Dear Mr. Wynn: - There U a man living next -oor to me who Is very lazy. In fact he lets his wife support him by taking In washing. Shouldn't be be ashamed to let his wife support him In that way? Sincerely. ALEC TRICKIRON. Answer: I wouldn't blame the hus band so much, If I were you. Maybe his wife Is Ignorant and can't earn a living any other way. Q Aaaorlated Newspaper!. WNU Serv ice. rfoiher^CooK Book SECRET OF CUSTARDS /TSTARDS are auch good desserts ^ for children and the aged as well as for those who have weakened diges tion. The secret of a good custard la In the cooking. Meringue of Rica. Put a cup of rice to cook In a pint of boiling water. When the water has evaporated add 9 pint of milk, a tablespoon of butter, the grated rind of a lemon and four well-beaten egg yolks. Butter a pudding dish and pour In the mixture, adding a little salt Beat the whites of the eggs until stiff, add a tablespoon of lemon Juice and half a cup of sugar. Spread over the pudding and bake until brown. Steamed Cup Custard. Beat two eggs lightly until the whites and yolks are well mixed, add three tablespoons of sugar, a bit of salt and a generous grating of nut meg. When the sugar Is well dissolved add a pint of good milk, stir and mix well and pour Into three custard cups If large?four I' smalL Set In a pan of hot water and put on to steam. Do not let the water stand too deep In the pan so thar in boiling It will roll Into the cups. Watch carefully after the boiling begins: test with a ...ean knife thrust down the center of the custard. When the knife comes out clean re move the cups at once from the bor water and chill before serving. For variety In flavor?melt a few table spoons of sugar In a smooth frying pan end pour this caramel Into the bottom of the cups before adding the custard. When cooked they may be turned out and the caramel will form a brown sauce over the custard. C Wfitfrn Newnptper Union. ON LABOR DAY By ANNE CAMPBELL ONE never knows the satisfying taste Of bread until he earns It,.. Better still To plow tbe stubborn earth, to plant the waste And carry the threshed wheat dow* to the mill Bread that one gains by sweat la bettei than The proffered loaf . , . The gift ol luxury Will never sing Into the heart of man As will his triumph over poverty. Once the soiled hands of Labor were not held In high repute, but now our daily prayer Is not for gifts of bread ... Our pleas have welled From weary hearts that have too much to bear. But with new courage for the blttet moll. We pray to earn our bread by hon est toil. Copyright-?WXU Serric*. Chic Tailored Suit V Black velveteen and black and gray striped corduroy are combined effec tively In this tailored suit Tbe double breasted jacket has four patch pockets. Tbe blouse Is Chanel's new matelasse crepe In wblte with elephants oot ' lined In gold lame thread. I PAPA KNCWS-I I f 32 ?5-1 "Pop, what is a gadget?" "Gewgaw." C Bell Syndicate.?WXU Servlca. Uncle Sam's New Printing Office THIS Is the new government printing office In Washington. That Is, tt Is the architect's drawing of the building which Is to be erected to replsce the present out-of-date and rather dilapidated structure The new office will be on H street.