The Alamance gleaner VoL LXV . GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1939 -?Weekly News Analysis Nazi, Argentine Trade Plans Threaten American Program By Joseph W. La Bine? EDITOR'S NOTE?When opinions art expressed la ttmaa oohtmm. tbej at? tboaa at tba news analyst. and mat necessarily Trade Today's high pressure internation al salesmanship runs counter to tile reciprocal trade program of U. S. Secretary of Statf Cordell Hull. De voted to the cause of low tariffs and "most-favored-nation" pacts. Secretary Hull's idealistic and hon est efforts fnuat compete .With such devices as the German barter plan and a series of mi^ti-csplored trade ideas which emerge a'rtrfually from congress' halls. This month Mr. Hull saw his beloved program threatened on several fronts: Argentine. Of all South American governments, that at Buenos Aires is least friendly with the U. S. At Lima's Pan-American conference Argentina spoiled- President "Roose velt's. "continental solidarity" dec laration by. charging that the dis graceful poticy of "dollar imperial ism" was still rampant, wt Be real roots of this dislike are com monplace things like hOof-and mouth disease, drouth and depres sion. An Agreement was reached in 1935 providing for U. S. import of cattle from Argentine sections not infect ed with hoof-and-mouth disease. But congress failed to ratify it. In 1937 drouth and temporary JJ. S. prosperity forced heavy imports from Argentina. This business dropped With a thud in 1938's re cession, far faster than Argentina ARMOUR'S PRESIDENT CABELL Urn didn't want Ctma hmrmontctx. curtailed her imports from the U. S. Result has been a trade imbal ance and subsequent strengthen ing of Argentine exchange control against the U. S., encouraged by Germany's increasing willingness to swap machinery for Argentine food stuffs. This sentiment reached a climax with Argentina's declara tion that Imports from the U. S. must be reduced to the level of 193S-36. Faced with a 40 per cent slash in exports. Secretary Bull may be forced to dangle juicy trade plums before Argentina's eyes, se riously endangering the rest of his reciprocal program. Germany. Barter trade like Nazi Germany's is allowed in the U. S. provided it does not interfere with the "moat-favored-nation" plan. But artificial currency devices like Ger man payment for D. S. goods with "trade marks" (good only for pur chase of Nazi goods) are taboo. Mi^-Febftary found U. S. lard prices low and likely to drop still more when the ?priilg hog run starts. Meanwhile Germany hun gered for fats. Putting two and two together, German trade experts be gan contacting midwest packers to swap lard for machinery. Thought the Reich apparently pro gressed oil. two deals, most packers turned their, backs, uninterested. Recalled sfas the experience of one firm which 'arranged a ewap deal with Germany etiual years ago, only to find itself btndencd .with sev eral thousand Nazi hSrmdnicas. Typical was the comment of R. H. Cabell, presMenL of Aamoar and Company, wtvdttadaNdthS bid tft simply stating that "the big peak ing houses ape net interested in ban tering, but itt. the sale of products at market rates.** Next day pack ers were pleased to adtt that lard futures weiV selling up, tftlt Mr. Hull could not fail to not* that the Nazi program has made progress. Agriculture. Crux ef the "cedt of production" farm bill now bnim congress is- that domestically earn sumed products shall have a -*d aiasa-at'-siax would bring. Whatever the bill's merits, Mr. Hull presumably re gards it as an artificial trade bar rier in the field at agricultural trade, which would be reflected in other branches of commerce. If "cost-of-producth?" fails, the state department must still hurdle a sec ond new farm measure which would extend governmental loans on three major crops (cotton, wheat, corn) equivalent to three-fohfihs the "parity price"?an amount higher than the current market price. Farmers would then be expected to turn their crops over to the gov ernment for the loan price. Do mestically consumed products would sell at'not less than the loan price. With surpluses the U. S. would attempt to recapture its lost foreign markets. ? Significance. Though world eco nomic satisfaetfch rhkst be - a pre lude to permanent world peace (an important principle in the Hull pro gram), each nation seeks to further its own admittedly selfish interest with self-preservation as a justifica tion. Still to come is the showdown in which nations will decide whether world problems will be settled via economic treaties, at the expense of selfish aims, or via force, at an other kind of expense. Defense -hast- Decembai President Ttuuue velt's arms expansion program had more foes than friends in the still to-convene seventy-sixth congress. Two months later it had more friends, thanks to clever White House publicity maneuvers and a lot of saber-rattling in Europe. The house passed 367 to IS an adminis tration bill to spend $376,000,000 ex tra on defense the next two years. (Same day. Great Britain voted about $1,000,000,000 more for arms.) Chief features are boosting the army's aviation force to 5,300 first line planes and making the Pan ama canal impregnable. Certain of passage was the Vinson naval ex pansion bill to spend $68,000,000 an naval air and submarine bases. But there was little unity in this new strength. CloSely allied to re armament is the problem of U. S. military alliances with other de mocracies, since the threat that in spired American rearmament is the same threat that makes France and Britain jittery. After a California air crash revealed U. S. manufac turers were selling military planes to France, after President Roose velt denied telling a senate nHlitary affairs committee that U. S. "fron tiers are in France," the White House-congress foreign policy de bate came out in full bloom. Ques tions: (1) Shall the U. S. keep its foreign policy secret? (2) Is Pres ident Roosevelt risking involvement in war through secret international deals? After a week's debate there pre sumably were no longer any secrets about either the French deal or the administration's foreign policy. Ac SENATOR JOHNSON He ntmnud WUtt Horn? r?tntmeM. tual cause of the rumpus was ap parently removed, but not congres sional resentment Thundered California's Sen. Hi ram Johnson: "No epithets applied to senators or newspapers will re lieve the situation pf its secrecy . . There is: resentment among the administration that anybody should- sole the facts. But if there comes a war it wifl not be idaght by the PreSidant alone ..." Facts themselves are startling. Faced with D. S. 'military orders under the new defense bill; plane manufacturers already have their ing Wtth t25.000.0n0 in 183fl. plane ???,3k5S France and Britain have ordered 1,300 ships. Europe In modem Europe no month to complete without its crisis. Janu ary's crisis was Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's visit to Rome. February's was the fall of Barcelona and its decisive implica tions. In March the crisis will again center on Spain if three signs mean anything: (1) Germany and Italy have helped Spain's Insurgents win their battle thus far, France and Eng land siding with Loyalists because they were anti-Fascist. Today, with Loyalists on the run, Britain has granted de facto recognition to Gen. Francisco Franco's Insur gents, encouraging France to fall in line. Obviously a policy of ex pediency, the Anglo-French overture to accompanied by financial offers to help rebuild Spain. In wooing Franco, Paris and London will posi tively arouse the Rome-Berlin axis to new wrath. (2) Combined British home fleets will maneuver around Gibraltar in March, just as Germany completes its most thorough mobilization since last autumn's much-feared troop concentration. Meanwhile Italy to GEN. JOSE MIAJA Bii SOOflOO againsi 1 ftOOftOO. doubling its garrison in Libya (ad joining France's African Tunisia) as an admitted step in retaliation against reputedly increased Tuni sian garrisons. (2) Closer conformation of Anglo French policy is seen in London's declaration to help Paris in event of war, also in Britain's de facto recognition of Insurgent Spain while awaiting official French action. Such parallel policies, coupled with the bold British decision to spend 91,000,000,000 more on armament, illustrate how Europe's two de mocracies are drawing closer togeth er and preparing to meet the next totalitarian demands. Probably these demands will be Italian terri torial claims against France, com ing immediately after the Spanish war. Meanwhile that war has gone merrily on its way as Gen. Jose Miaja finds himself practically the boss of Loyalist Spain's civil and military branches. With an esti mated 900,000 unenthusiastic sol diers under his command. General Miaja recently heard that his friend General Franco was about to charge against Valencia and Ma drid with 1,000,000 men. Labor In Washington John L. Lewis could peek at the calendar for March realizing it probably held the fate of his Congress for Industrial Organization. At the core of trou ble is United Automobile Workers j of America, torn during January when President Homer Martin simultaneously resigned and was booted from C. I. O.'s executive ! board. Reason: U. A. W. under- j lings thought Mr. Martin was con niving for personal control of Ford Motor company's heretofore inde pendent labor vote, while Mr. Mar tin thought C. I. O. was turning communistic. Now split in two factions, U. A. W. opens a pro Martin convention in Detroit during early March, and an anti-Martin parley in Cleveland March 2ft First victory was scored by the Martin faction when property of U. A. W.'s Plymouth local (Detroit) was pulled from court custody and returned to Martin cohorts. "fo rumors that he might lead U. A. W. into alliance with William Green's American Federation of Lab sr. Mr. Martin answered with an' emphatic negative. Daily win ning public support from such Lew is liehchmcn, as Sidney Hillman and Philip Murray, Mr. Martin stands a good chance of emerging not only Mr undttpMBd head at V. A. W;. but as leader in a C. L O. conservative movement. People LdMbscow, Secretary Earl Braw der of the American Communist Cefek'a Col. Fulgencio 1Batista ?d Mexico's President^ LamroCar Brackarf t Washington Digest Age-Old Fight Between President And Senate in Vicious Revival Current Squabble, Involving Senators Glass and Byrd, Invited by President Himself; Mr. Roosevelt's Attempt To Discipline Senate Serious Political Mistake. By WILLIAM BRUCKART WNC Service, National Press Bid*., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. ? Through nearly all of our nation's history, there has been a continuing controversy concerning the respective rights and prerogatives of the President of the United States and the senate. It has alternately smouldered and burst into flame. It has been char acterized by vicious outbursts from one side or the other at various times and it has made or destroyed the political fortunes of a great many men. Washington has been regaled with a fresh revival of the controversy in the last several weeks. The funda mental differences are the same as they always have been. There are, however, new names and new faces and obviously the political fortunes of individuals who have entered upon the public stage in recent years arc bound up in the boiling kettle. Like the earlier embitterments over these rights, this one will prove nothing in the way of a tangible solution. The current fight must be said to have been invited by President Roosevelt. Perhaps, his course of action was urged by some of the "inner circle," which so often has wrongly advised him lately, men who do not know politics and who ignore political history?but the fact remains that the President carried the fight to the senate, and there are more than a few observers who expect that he will come off a bad loser. Mr. Roosevelt, as I have reported in these columns earlier, was insist ing upon his own selection for po litical appointments where the sena tors from a particular state were not receiving his smiles. The pro cedure was not pleasant but there was no sensational outcry from the senators concerned until the nomi nation of Judge Floyd Roberts, to a United States district judgeship, was sent to the senate. Mr. Roberts was picked without consultation? even over others recommended? with Senators Glass and Byrd of Virginia. It proved to be the signal for a riot. Advisers neck one a not With Senatorial Courtesy Alter the manner of senate pro cedure. Senators Glass and Byrd rose in their places in the senate and pronounced Judge Roberts "personally offensive" to them. That was enough. The senate, as it has done so many times before, promptly rejected the Roberts nom ination by the terrific jolt of 73 to 9. It was such a slap that eren the Virginia senators were surprised at its overwhelming character. It surely made the fact abundantly clear that Mr. Roosevelt could not get away with his theory namely, that a President can pick nominees without "the advice and consent of the senate" as the Constitution spec ifies. But it did not have that effect. And here was where the President made a great political mistake. He sought to discipline the senate by publication of a letter to Judge Rob erts in explanation of the senate's action. He scored Senator Glass and he tarred Senator Byrd. They were almost guilty of conduct unbecoming gentlemen. It was rumored that the strategy of the "inner circle" was to have Mr. Roosevelt smear the two sena tors and thus create a serious defec tion in their own political machines in their native Virginia?which any one acquainted with Virginia poli tics will tell you is much easier said than done. But the President and his un trained political advisers reckoned not with senatorial courtesy. Now, senatorial courtesy is an intangible thing. No one ever has been able to define or describe it. One simply has to say that it exists and let time prove the statement. The proof al ways can be found, and the action of the senate on the Roberts nomi nation, and since, certainly seems to demonstrate that the senators will fight for their rights, or what they believe to be their rights, on a col lective basis. Each sticks by the others; none knows when he may need the same kind of help. Smm(? /? Thoroughly Embittered at Roeeevelt Thus, after several weeks of this bade and forth because Senators Glass and Byrd did not fail ;i to tell the country whet they thought of Mr. Rooseveit'e action?we find the senate thoroughly embittered at Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Roosevelt saying,- repeatedly, that the senate is trying te usurp the powers of the Chief Executive. As I said, that fundamental difference has existed since the formation of ouf govern ment. It is going to continue to ex ist because of the form of our gov ernment, its system of checks and balances, and K will exist as long as our system of political parties ob tains. Coldly and without bias, it must be said that each side to the battle predicates its conclusions and con ception of its rights upon a thirst for more power. Mr. Roosevelt, as President, conceives that he should be boss; the senators, as representa tives of sovereign states, conceive that they are the elected represent atives and they are not going to have- a single lraHvlflual," evin though it be the President of the United States, dehorn them of the strength that an election by popular vote gives them. Moreover, the President must do political knitting. He must keep the weave as free of knots as is possi ble. In the case of the present in cumbent, it is quite apparent that he desires to be complete boss of his political structure. He had a taste ?indeed, a full meal?of.it for Bve years tphen a subservient congress vastly earned the sobriquet of rub ber stamps. I imagine that he liked it; anyone would, if that person is really human. Old luit Democrat* Sock To Regain Party Control Nor are the senators, not Just Glass and Byrd alone, but all of them, blameless, if one desires to turn purist. The senators have their political machines. They seek al ways to keep those machines well oiled, smooth running. Upon the functioning of the machines depends whether the senators can be re elected time after time; upon that machine depends the retention or the loss of the power which every politician loves. I imagine they can not be blamed for that, any more than the President can be blamed for wanting to keep his hand on the throttle, niat is politics. Selection of the men to judicial Jobs, or to any other political post in the nature of a plum, is vital to maintenance of machines. Politic cians continue as leaders only so' long as they can dominate the scene and get for their followers the things their followers want But in the current battle there is somewhat deeper disagreement be tween the senate and the President It is too well known to warrant more than mere reference here that old line Democrats are determined to regain control of the Democratic party label. They have had more than enough unpractical direction from the regiment of college pro fessors, crack-pots and long haired dreamers without political training. Many of them will tell you unhesi tatingly that continuation of Demo cratic party control in the hands of such men will be destruction of the party and its conversion into a ve hicle guided by socialists, commu nists and a complete rainbow of colors. Naturally, they want to ad here to Democratic doctrines and Democratic principles. And that is the line of cleavage. The result? I doubt that Mr. Roosevelt can win over the senate. Wanta J ad go, Who Witt Be Friendly to New Deal The other phase of the difference* is less clear. I can report it only as the belief of quite a few sena tors. Some of them believe it, defi nitely. I give it here simply as ? subject for thought. By insisting upon his own choice of nominees for judgeships in the federal courts, Mr. Roosevelt is at tempting to place men in the ju diciary who will be friendly to all i of the New Deal laws, or so some members of the senate and the house firmly believe. That is to say, the belief is held that Mr. Roosevelt is seeking to do by use of the ap pointive power that which the con gress refused him the power to do i when it killed off his scheme to pack the Supreme court. Speakin/j of Sports Varied Sports , Show Planned j For Exposition By ROBERT McSHANE ! IN THE distant future, when the [ 1 curtain rings down on San Fran- ( Cisco's Golden Gate exposition, Cal- , ifornia will have staged a sports ( program huge enough to exhaust the high powered adjectives of even the most fluent publicist of the Gold en state. The western World's fair sports show will be nothing short of colossal. Modest natives admit that as ex position ever thought sports so im portant, and none ever lavished one-third as much money and ef fort on an athletic program. "But this is California, where sport is more important than any where else in the world," shyly ad mits Major Art McChrystal, direc tor of the program. "We won't have any world champion prize fights, and no All-Star baseball game as will the New York fair, but 90 per cent of our events will be in the exposition grounds, not off over town somewhere." The so-called minor sports will be staged in a swift sneeession of events, and will include everything from yacht racing to the National Open championship for horseshoe pitchers. And perhaps fair diree- i tors are smart in opt running a championship priso-Aght ? Unless contenders show remarkable im provement the horseshoe pitchers would easily provide more excite ment Indoor polo will be housed in a coliseum seating 9,000 people around a ring 230 feet long and 100 feet wide. In this coliseum, too, will be seen box lacrosse, the ama teur rage of Canada. The N. C. A- A. basketball cham pionship for west of the Mississippi river will be held in the coliseum, as will an indoor track champion ship. The International champions hip six-day bicycle races will he held March U to U, the National indoor championship in fencing will he beid in tarn, the National singles and doubles in handball May 1H9. the lawn bowling championship September I9-1S and the volley ball championship May 1S-M. There are other championships to be determined, but they are too numerous to mention. The good major has gone to the trouble of in venting new sports so that additional championships can be awarded. Darned unselfish, these Californians. Dodger rurchase A NNEXATION of three Yankee ** chain baseball players by the Dodgers was announced recently by Larry McPhail, general manager of the Brooklyn club, who stated that Pitchers Kemp Wicker and Jack La Rocca and Catcher Chria Hartje cost them the tidy little turn of 180,000? with no discount Wicker, M years aid, la the only member ef the re cently pnrehased trie whe possesses a Mf learne record. He was with the Yankees for a white In ltd, winning seven and losing three fames. The lint year be wan seven sad test tore far the Newark Bean, member el the Yankee striae- Darin* the past pear he was with Kansas City, another Yankee anit, finishing with nine victories and an equal anas bcr of dcfttU. Hartje and La Rocca also are Kansas City grads. A lame arm hampered La Rocca last season, getting him off to a late start His final record was six wins and five defeats. Hartje batted .289 for the Blues. A rumor that Branch Rickey, general manager of the St Louis Cardinals, would sever his present connections and hook up with Mc Phail in the purchase of the Brook lyn club was effectively spiked when Rickey termed the rumor "wild talk with no element of truth." Larry McPhall Sport Shorts Shortstop Hurray Franklin bat ted .439 in the Mountain State i league. North Carolina, to win the Louisville Slugger trophy . . . Hunt ing licenses numbering 8,860,010 and costing $11,348,006 were issued in the United States and Canada dur ing 1931 . . . The Green Bay Pack ers will play a team of southern college all-stars next tall if the pro circuit approves . . . Paul Wearly of Muncie, Ind., set a world's rec ord for Class A outboard motor boats of 44.117 miles per hour at Lakeland, Fla. . Promoter King When C. C. (Cash and Carry) ? * * Pyls, most spectacular pro moter of the final years of epos la* golden decade, died at his Los An geles home recently, he left h-hertt age of fantastic ventures telly as exciting as the wildest dime noveL Pyle's fertile ta>a?testiaa led Mai ? te see the possibilities if cashing la on Harold (Bed) Grange's gridiron I ability. He first achieved uSnk wide attention when he toah the '? asrs career in professional footbafi. During the winter of IDS, with Grange as the teain attract ryie and the Chica go Bears launched a highly successful tour. Grange gal loped up and down football fields in an parts of the coun try. When they re-, turned to Chicago in February, 1938, Pyle and Grange had harvested more than $100,000. His most unusual promotion was the famous "Banian Derby or 1838, in which atmostr, j 100 runners, yOung and old, started' jj out on a transcontinental run from r, Los Angeles to JJew York, with Pyle riding comfortably alongside. -- ' This first darby. Wis* as a 9M> attraction, with a W.M parse la Ill tethc winner, led to anmeroos law salts, which reputedly east Pyle IM.OW. However, friends of Pyla maintain that of all his schemes, the Bunion Derby was eloeeel to lis heart, that he thoroughly eajsyed the antics st his runners. A second race was held in 1919, and the der bies universally were nWi Che strangest events la sperts history. Pyle was also the first to s^e the possibilities in professional tennis On October 9, 1928, be presented the late Suzanne Lengien, Mary K. Browne, Vincent Richards and other stars in Madison Square garden an his initial effort in this field of ac tivity. The gate receipts were an nounced as $40,000. "He was the greatest promater a* aD time," Grange said at the man who started him en hie prMmdmsl career. "Ike greatest paemstee hot not the greatest business mam He had mare ideas than any man I ever knew." Grange estimated that during the three years?M28-'28-'27?he was managed by Pyle, the two attracted i 81,000,000 at the gate, half of which went to them. They split the profits, which would place Grange's earn ings under Pyle at $250,000. In 1928 Grange and Pyle formed the American Professional Football league. It was formed after the National league had refused to grant the pair permission to spon sor another dub in New York. It was a failure, however, as the league never really gut todetway. Both men lost considerable money on the venture. Pyle, with the addition at a little business sense, would hard easily been the equal at Tex Richard as a promoter. He was, however, the most colorful individual in an are of unusual men. If anything appealed to his sense at humor he was sfflhng to take a chance. ' They Do Come Back DON'T take too aeriotato the old saw that "champions never come back." Away from the turf for three years. Jockey Don Meade is now being sought by owners of the most pretentious racing stables in Amer ica. He is the lad who mads the most sensational comeback to turf history at Hialeah Park, Miami f Banned by the Florida State Eas ing commission to wagering on the ooee he rode. Meade was thought to be through. Meet horsemen felt that the S-yea*-bia jock ey would never get into the limelight again. ~*| ^Now Meade has bwfr wa^hfawTS la the SIMM* added Bute Aaifa Handicap, which win be raa off ?a J the Ceast March 4, the oae flhah'i aa the WMeaer race at HhQeeh. ' the yoong rider has laiajBT 0i? that he waa^gotag to rifcl>jg> | George Odea, trainer. Meade has been a ceoiMat^H ner?race after race. Trainer Odom haa a borne la a | Hialeah race, Don pilots it If nofSS then Don may ride any maa'riggj horse. That*a why there ia a fight, among; horsemen to get ewLienij>ii?n11 OaSea. Dm