The Alamance Gleaner o - . Jj Vol LXVI ? * \ GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1940 , No. 3 .i i '" .? ? ... - ? ... . . WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBlNE British-Soviet Tension Grows In Wake of Nazi-Red Treaty; British Expedite Aid to Finns (EDITOR'S NOTE?When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) i-' Released by Western Newssaoer Union ?_ ? EUROPE: Showdown Ahead Almost six months to the day after Germany and Russia shocked the world with their non-aggression pact, Berlin paused to hail a new I phase of Nazi-Communist relations. Ratified with ceremony was a new and glistening trade treaty, which was but one part of a complex but vividly clear picture of what is hap pening in Europe today. Inevitably, it is believed in most chancellories, a wedding of Russia and Germany, of Communism and Naziism, will stack these military juggernauts against the rest of Europe. Among the signs: Marxism. Writing in Der Angriff, Nazi Party Chieftain Dr. Robert Ley showed how leftism has grown in Germany by using the Marxian HITLER'S DR. LET "Workers of the world, unite!" Communist cry: "Workers of the world, unite! . . . This war is a war of the mastery of money against labor . . . Therefore the working men and women must draw togeth er . . Allies in Finland. France and Britain were actively protecting against Scandinavia's reluctance tq let allied volunteers pass through Sweden and Norway ep route to the Finnish frontier, indicating a stiffen ing attitude toward- Russian aggres sion. Even more pointed, was ppr ? liament's decree permitting men over 27 to enter the Finnish cam paign. Near East. Arrival of 100,000 Brit ish coloniaLtroops in the Near East coincided with an alarming growth of war talk. The Balkans, led by Turkey, were, forming a strong mutual-defence' frontier against Nazi-Russian penetration. Russian frontiers of Turkey, Iran, Afghanis tan and India were strengthened, either for defense against the Reds or for a lightning allied stroke against Russian oil wells. The Wars In the West. Quiet, as usual, but continued sea warfare. In the North. Finnish troops re ? treated on the Karelian isthmus, but Russia's gains were terribly costly. In mid-Finland, unreported for sev eral weeks, a United Press corre spondent found the Reds have suf fered 50,000 casualties in the Pit kaeranta sector alone. CONGRESS: Six Weeks Gone Either the President thought he had congress well in hand, or else he decided it was hopelessly rebel lious. At any rate he left secretly on a 10-day fishing trip in Caribbean waters, his movements shrouded be hind an army of secret service men. His last acts were to (1) okay the $252,000,000 emergency defense bill NAMES in the news . . . JOHN D. M. HAMILTON, G. O. P. national chairman, called his com mittee to order in Washington to name a place and date for the 1940 convention. HERBERT HOOVER JR. helped discover a new method of detecting oil' by analyzing surface earth. Meanwhile, HERBERT HOOVER SR. forecast that European war de mands will soon eat up surplus U. S. foodstuffs. GEORGE KIOSSEIVANOFF, Bul garian premier, resigned because one of his cabinet members favored closer relations with Soviet Russia. and (J) veto a bill to raise mail carriers' salaries. Congress meanwhile began its sixth week with members of the American Youth Congress hissing from the house gallery at every thing in sight. Still unsolved were such major problems as economy, foreign relations and the reciprocal trade act,- indicating another long session. But plenty of legislation was in the mill: > Neutrality. Passed by the senate 49 to 27 was a bill to boost the Export-Import bank's working cap ital by $100,000;000, paving the way for non-military loans to Finland and China. Interest on foreign pol icy thus shifted to the house, where the G. O. P. expected to fight against loans to belligerents. Meanwhile the senate foreign relations committee kept postponing action on the pro posed embargo against Japan. Con gress watched with interest while Secretary of State Cordell Hull laid at Britain's door the responsibility for a German threat to torpedo U. S. ships in the war zone. Reason: Britain has detained U. S. vessels and taken them to contraband ports in the war zone. Defense. Less than 24 hours after it had okayed a $966,772,878 navy supply bill (cut $111,700,000 under budget estimates), the house naval committee repented and approved a $685,000,000 fleet expansion program. The latter bill would only authorize new construction; actual funds must come from separate legislation. Pri marily concerned about the big sup ply "bill, the house expected to re store part of the cut. Agriculture. The house agriculture committee okayed a $350,000,000 bill to expand scope of the farm ten ancy act, insuring mortgages of ten ants who want to buy their own farms Labor. Chairman J. Warren Mad den of NLRB told the house labor board committee that Reconstruc tion Finance corporation has agreed to withhold loans from firms found by NLRB to be violators of the Wag ner act. This created a rumpus. WHITE HOUSE: *Missy in Trouble 6