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Show SM1TTTFTELD. UTAH TTIE SMITH FIT IT) SF.NTINF.U of the bead of the rebel" committee bn Industrial organization taut Is seeking to gain control of the American Federation of Labor, Invited President William Green of the feileratlon to resign and accept chairmanship of the committee. In a letter to Lewis, Green declared that he never had associated himself with any minority seeking to split the A. F. of I., ami nercr would do so. lie mildly rebuked the insurgents by saying that he himself "In a spirit of good sportsmanship took It on the chin" whenever he had found hlinself outvoted In the A. F. of L. convention. LEWIS, president JOHN J. Mine Workers and News Review of Current Events the World Over President's Defense of AAA and Canadian Treaty Italy Offered Peace Plan at Ethiopias Expense Naval Conference Seems Hopeless. By EDWARD 9 Wotei W. Sew:lr t'atoa. lreldent Roosevelt was In seeking to Justify the entire New Ileal farm program, lie the American Karni Bureau federation In f he International Amphitheater at the stock yards and was heard and ally applauded hy some 25.000 farmer and a ninny others as could get Into the theater and adjoining wings supplied with loinl aMukera. The farm program, the President said, aimed to stop the rule of loolh and claw that threw funner Into er turned them Into serfs." As he asevidence that It Is serted that farm Inemno "has Increased aaarly $3.000, noo.rtsi in the past two aad a half yearn.'' Necessarily Ur. Itoosevelt defended the new Canadian trade treaty because tidy two days before that pact had been bitterly at tucked by hla late trade adviser, George N. Peek. "Just aa I am confident, said the President, that the great maaaes of so I am slty people are suaa that the great majority of Ameri-oa- a farmers will bo fair In their judgment of the new treaty. the calamity howlera should happen to be right, you have every assurance that Canada and the United States will join In correcting Inequalities, but I do not believe for a single ament that the calamity bowlers are Chl-cag- o Imnk-ruptc- POLITICIANS, especially Republicans were greatly Interested In a meeting In Washington between former Vice President Charles Curtis and Senator Roruh, and Its possible Implications. Curtis Insisted to the press that he Is still advocating the nomination of Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas for the Presidency, but the Idaho senator la himself a leading possibility for that honor. Curtis had recently had a cenferenee with Landon In Topeka, but he said there was no connection between that and hla call on Borah. President said ef the The nomination: "I have no second choice, but a lot depends on what happens at the convention. I have the highest regard for the senator. Im for Landon, who la well equipped to run, after giving as an economic administration la Kansas something we need here la Washington more now than ever before: Purls conference and the meeting of the League of Nations committee of five to all concessions comparable to Ita dignity, to avoid Itallun aggression, but that aggression has been committed. We cannot submit to force which we never provoked, became that would be rewarding violence." Since Mussolini showed a disposition to consider the proposals, the oil embargo waa postponed to permit negotiations. if he rejects the plan the embargo would go Into effect later and supposedly the war In Africa would continue at least until the rainy season next spring. y right. "We export more agricultural prod-act- s to Canada than we have Imported frem her. "We ahall continue to do ao, for the very Simple reason that the United States, with Ita larger area of agricultural land. Its more varied climate and lla vastly greater population, produces far more ef most agricultural products. Including nnlmul products, vegetables aad fruit, than does Canada. "In the case of the few reduction that have been made, quota limitations are set on the amount that may be brought In at the lower rales. " la fals. analysis of the Canadian agreement. Peck showed that 4 pel eat of the 'tariff concessions whirl i ho New Dealers granted to Cannd: ivore oa agricultural and forestry prod 'jets, lie also showed that the article on which the New Dealers granted tar iff reductions amounted to 308 million dollars In 1020, whereas Canada In hud granted concessions on articles valued at only 245 million dollars. After completing his speech and eating luncheon with a lot ot local nuia-blethe President went to South Bend, lnd, where be received ao honorary degree from Notre Dame university and delivered "another address. officials state will ask the new congress for a ! 100.000.000 appropriation as the Initial fund to launch the federal social security program going Into effect January 1. The fund Is to be distributed among the (tales for the needy old aged In the form of pensions, for maternity and child welfare, and to aid the blind. State commissioners And public welfare directors were summoned to Washington by the social security board to discuss formulation of regulations and procedure. "Ethiopia agreed at the time of the If PROBABLY with Slight hope of anything worth while, representatives of the United States, Great Britain, France and Japan met In London and opened the International naval conference. Italy aleo waa represented, but only aa an observer and lletener. Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin welcomed the delegates In a smooth address asking the chief sea powers to lessen some of their demands to "avert the calamity of unrestricted naval eometltlon. Norman H. Davis offered President Roosevelt's suggestion of 20 per cent reduction In existing naval treaty tonnage, or, fulling that, a continuance of present fleet limitations. Then arose Admiral Osural Nagano, chief of the Japanese delegation, and told the conference that Japan de-mnnded parity with Great Britain and i he United States Instead of the exlst-nratio and requested a "Jusi and fair agreement on disarmament After several day of discussion, and debate, the Japanese demand for parity was flatly rejected by the delegates of the four other nations. The pessimistic feeling that prevailed waa attributed to the Japanese demand for parity, the rivalry la the between France and Mediterranean Italy, the war In Ethiopia an ! Its sanctions developments and recent occurrences In north China. Any one of which might wreck the conference. resigned aa of Cuba becaura of a fierce quarrel In the government ever procedure for the election of a conMendleta had stitutional president held the office for two years. Secretary of State Barnet took over tho office and reappointed all members of the cabinet, aad preparations far the election went ahead. CARLOS MENDIETA -rioting la Cairo, ef. control British reeled against vj Egypt, attacks oa English Midlers and smashing or street cars and shop windows, forced Premier Nesalra Pasha and hla cabinet to decide to resign. The rioters demanded the restoration of the constitution of 1923 and the ministers pleaded with Sir Miles Lampoon, British high commissioner. to give Ills consent He was obdurate In his refusal until King .Fuad. Neralm Pasha an- nounced that he would quit but yielded then to avoid disorders similar to those of 1919. Therefore, with the consent of Great Britain, King Fuad signed a royal decree restoring constitutional government and the cabinet members withdrew their resignations. The constitution thus restored provides for a senate and chamlier of deputies and takes control of Egypts Internal affairs out of British hands. It United States and Great Brit completely does not, however, affect Britain! conTHE la the conference at Washingtrol of Egyptian foreign affairs, nor the ton, agreed upon a plan that Is British military protectorate. to result lu regular air mall and passenger transportation across the Atlantic by the summer of 1937. Ne- NORTH CHINA autonomists, by the Japanese armies, gotiations were under way for the northern route by way of Canada. New- evidently are too murh for the Nanfoundland. and Irish Free State to king government, ef which Chlang k has now become the premier. The England, and the southern route from Iurto Rico and American porta to provinces of Hnpel and Chahar. with a England. population of 3U.UU0.000 or more, have The northers route Is more practicabeen granted virtual Mlf-rul- e under ble thnn the southern route because of political coundL The central governthe shorter distance, but Is less prac- ment made only three stipulations ticable In winter because flights would that Nanking would continue to control be undertukeu under less favorable the new stated foreign affairs, financonditions. cial, military and Judiciary matters; Under the agreement experimental that all appointments would be made flights will begin next summer. When by Nanking, and that there would be regular service Is Inaugurated, accord- no actual Independence for the area. No marhlnery waa provided to preing to the agreement, four round trips will be made each week. vent the new council from doing exact ly as it pleased under JapaneM protection and guidance. TOUX II. IIOEITEL, congressman from California, and hla sob, Charles, were found guilty by a Jury convicted of Bruno hauptmann, In the District of Columbia end murdering the LindSupreme court of conspiring to sell an appointbergh baby, lust almost hla Inst chance ment to West I'olnt for $1,000, They or escaping the electric chair when were released on ball pending motion the Supreme court refused to review for a new trial. Iloopim! was deeded Ida case. The decision was made to congress la the Roosevelt Inndxllde through the single word Denled. or 1932 from the Seventeenth CaliforHauptmann's atton.eys had annia district, and was In 1924. nounced previously that. In the event r He Is years old; his son Is a review was refused, they would eeek twenty-one- . a new trial if new evidence could be found and would appea. for a commuGORGE I. RERRY, Industrial co-'tation of the death sentence to life ordlnalor, found great difficulty in mustering his proposed Industrial roun dl, la which many great Industrial who buy potatoes In groups had refused to participate. The CONSUMERS establishments are Initial session of hla conference broke nut liable to a fine as high ae $1.nou In disorder amid shouts of llar" ir the spuds are grown and marketed up and threatened list lights. Further doIn vlulntlnn of the potato control act. ings were postponed fora week or more Only the first purchaser of unstamped end most of the delegates went hnuie. IHiiutoes Is liable. This to the ruling declaring they wanted nothing to do of the AAA, and the act may bo with a permanent council which might amended later te Include this prelend ts further government Interfervision. ence with private business. The lulmr The bureau of Internal revenue reguunions stood hy Berry, hoping his lations require that the producer ran-ce- l pn xram would aid Ihelr plans for a the stomps, after they are attached, week and government licensing of by writing In, Ink nr Imlollble pencil or industry. by stamping his Initials and tha data: CONTINUOUS ! g . re-tar- American Farm Bureau BEFORE the closed Its convention In It adopted a resolution en- Chk-ago- ADMINISTRATION already declared by the League of Nations to be a vlclim Jf Italian rapacity, would be still further victimized with the consent of the two great powers that dominate the leugi.e. Presumably, If Emperor llaile Selassie refuses the terms and decides to continue his light for the territorial Inviolability guaranteed by the league covenant, ha will be abandoned to his fate: Dispatches from Dessye, Ethiopia, said the emperor rejected the Frnnco-Britls- h plan, asserting: The Ethiopian government cites Its previous declarations, notably that of October 8, to show that Ethiopia never wished and does not wish war. But tolny we are bound to defend our soil, which Italy has violated. the United State Supreme WHILE waa hearing oral argument la tha Ilooaae Hill caac hi which the Dastltutlonallty of I lie whole Agricultural Adjustment act waa attacked and de- fended, PICKARD , dorsing reciprocal trude treaties. To avoid dissension, the resolution did not mention specifically the receut trails agreement between Canada and the United States, which lowered the duty on many farm products coming In over Kal-slic- the northern border. Another of the 17 resolutions adopted at the meeting concerned "federal Sscal policies. Indicating their uneasiness over the mounting federal deficit, the farmers recommended that the fiscal policies of the government be modified, and that "Its revenues shall be Increased, and that Its expenditures shall be decreased, to the end that within the next few years a balance shall be attained. The federation aim approved a resolution pledging Itself to defend the Agricultural Adjustment administration set The meeting offered no aerl ous criticism of tin act, but asked that Its administration be simplified. . The delegates, representing a paid up membership of HtNl.UOO rurmera In 87 slates, Ed want A. O'Neal ef Abilmma ae president of the federation for a term of two years. Uluirle E. (leant was vice president and all 15 members of the board of directors were reappointed. ITALY Is being punished for starting against Ethiopia, aad will be well paid for stopping It. That In a nutshell Is the status at this riling. Great Britain and France reached an agreement as to the offer to be made to Mussolini before the Imposition of an ell embargo, set for December 12. This plan for peace, drawn up by British Foreign Secretary Sir Samuel Hears end 1remlei Laval, was based oo the proposal that Italy should retain part of the territory already con quered In Ethiopia, chiefly In Including Tigre province. Adowa hut not .he sacred city of Ak sum, and that the Itallaa Somaliland border should be rectified. la return. Ethiopia would be given a seaport, either In Eritrea or la British oi French territory. Thus poor Kthlnp;.- J fifty-fou- O north-wester- - ! J BRISBANE THIS WEEK Alas, One Rich Man Only! Gasoline Is King All the Ships She Wants Senator Borah's View Only one solitary American dtlxen had a net Income above $.".000,000 last year, and they were dollars. The man did ant realize It, perhaps, but he will realize It later 59-ce- u Inflation, which Is now a fact beto comes known alL Who the last, remote, lonesome, unfriendly, Is not be told. The law forbids Income publishing may ... ., her citizen, yon Soctaty, Prepared by Natluiml Uaoaraphte U D. C. WN Sarvlcu Waahlnglun, Arthur Brisbaac YORK conjures up a tax names; but the government tells of a great metropolis, a you there Is one and only one. state where the forgreat That last rose of depression's sum- ested Adirondack rise above vast llad-kiimer must look around him, agricultural lands, where the mourning over bis old companions, river flows placidly from the withered and strewn. north woods to the sea, and where the Niagara river spills a portion What la important today may be of Its water and lurea hundred of nothing tomorrow; what was nuthlug thousands of tourists annually. yesterday may become all Important But few laymen are aware of the now. Once man was helpless without state's economic and industrial feahis hone, camel, ox, yak. ass. mule, tures. reindeer, dog sled or tame elephant of all the life InNearly Now, In civilization, they mean little, surance. In force In America, both while Lloyd George tells you, "Oil la and Industrial, la held In the decisive factor In the Abyutnlan ordinary New York. Approximately half the campaign." Of all the great powers nation's Inqiorts, measured alike by whose attitude Is being canvassed, that and value, enter the Unitof King Gasoline la most Important tonnage ed States through the custom Without olL Mussolini cannot win hla house at the mouth of the Hudson, rt war; with oil, victory Is certain. and more than half of our total thut clears through tonnage Japan at the naval conference will of til the net consider nothing less than a battle port. retail sales In the United States fleet as big as any the United States were made in New York In s recent ratio. may build ; no year $7,000,000,000 out of $49,000,No Americaq should object to that 000,00a If Japan can afford It It Is not the The Empire state's role In the size of the fleet that counts: Unfor- manufacturing realm to a particutunate Spanish, grandees In charge of larly Interesting one. There are the great Armada could testify to that some 10 industries In which Its after .they met Elizabeths small fleet products constitute more than one-haand big sea captains. of the total output of the entire country and about thirty othAlso, there Is the fact that If real ers In which Its share of the nawar started, above the clouds and tion's production to more tbun a under water, every fighting nation third. would hide Its battleship targets out With the gradual growth of manof airplane sight In Mfe harbors; ufacturing west of the Alleghenies, many battleships or few would make there lias long been a falling off In no difference: New York state's relative standing In many industries; but as there Senator Borah tells over the micro- has been a recession of rank In the phone what the country needs: making of these wares, there has Support of the Constitution; a fight been s corresponding expansion In This against those who would undermine It the fabrication of clothing. The destruction of monopoly without expansion has been so notable that necessarily enacting new legislation. It has more than made up for all An end to crop restriction. the losses In other fields anil enSenator Borah says restriction hns ables New York still to stand out always failed In depression ever since ns the leading Industrial state of the days of Roman emperors. the Union, with aliout of all the natiou'a manufactured Mr. Lamont du Pont receives the wares to Its credit. chemical and metallurgical engineerLeads All In Clothing. ing award for the grentest chemlrnl are only seven states In the There e large-scalof the tiie achievement year Union whose total output of manuproduction of synthetic rubber If war and blockade came, this coun- factures of every kind suriwsse In the Empire'! try would be at the mercy of foreign clothing aloneseven statea are Masera for Its rubber supply, an absolute state. These New Jersey, Pennsylsachusetts, modern and civilization of necessity vania, Ohio, Michigan, Illinois and war. ' California. In 1929 New York made clothing The scientific news, gruesome but Important tells yon thst the eyes of at factory prices was valued at apIt Inthe dead can supply transparent tis- proximately rJ.700.UU0.U0a s of the nation's useful In curing cluded sue from the corm-blindness In the living. Tissue from production of women's apparel and of the country's dead eyes has been successfully trans- nearly one-hamen. for to clothes to and there living eyes, planted The Dutch practically began hope of thus curing certain types of Ihelr colony on the strength of the blindness: fur trade, and the latest census Englnnd bos always acted like one shows that New York to still active walking on eggs In dealing with Ja In marketing furs, accounting for pan. but she does My that Japan's $228,000,000 worth of manufactured proposed seizure of Chinese territory fur goods out of a total of for the whole United 8tatea. "harms the prestige of Japan and ham Practically all of the industrlea per the development of friendly future relations between Japan and her In which New York holds this sort of leadership are of the lighter friends." kind. The scepter for the heavier Walter CL Tengle. head of Standnrd Industries baa largely passed Into the hands of other communities. Oil ef New Jersey, did not make deal to supply Mussolini with all hla Specialization In Industry applies oil for thirty years, casually arranging to communities aa well as to wares. to finance the Italian oil market up to Rome cnlto Itself the copper city, of the Mr. Teagle says so, and and makes about $200,000.0001 It to so. Rut when the wise John D nation's output of copperware. to In the manRockefeller once said, "I want to are my managers, their desks cleared and ufacture of gloves, and turns out their feet on the desks, studying how more of them than any other comto make money for Standard Oil, he munity In the country. Rochester hntF' men like Walter Teagle In mind. to the optical and photographic-equipmecnpltal of the nntlon, In Georgetown, Rrltlsh Guiana, producing more than a third of the kindly clergyman sprinkled a tiny negro optical goods of the United 8tutes baby Just born, naming him "Room and moet of Its photographic velt Selassie Caleb." The hoys parents, Sometimes those who are not descendants of slaves, any the name wns chosen to honor "the greatest man New Yorker have been inclined to in the world, ('resident Roosevelt.1 complain that the Empire alate The little hnhy mny wonder Inter seem to get more than lla fair s why his dragged In IlHlle share of benefits, particularly more Selassie, In whose empire slavery still than lu aliare of the country's income. Esiieclally ere they Inclined exists as a major Industry. to think this true of the metropolis An ofllrlal representative of Russia Itself. t When thus they complain, perMid to this writer not long since: "W. have nothing to fear from Japan. They haps It to because they lose sight of walled three yenre too long." While tha other aide or the ledger the Japan was waiting. Russln established measure of how much New York great snlunnrine and sir base at produces for the country. . Vladivostok, within short striking disPays Huge Sume In Taxea. tance of everything Japanese. If you were told Hint every great Since then Japan nntl Russln have This remintry Irrigation project of every slate In got nliuig peacefully. the West, from Yuina and Yakima mny suddenly wake np to find prnb lems more lniMirtnnt thnn sny theory to 8hoshone, has been built from on how to make everybody happy on funds supplied to the federal government by the stale of New York short notice. and to nuilnlnined by funda from C Xlns Walnm Syndicate, Inc. NEW anil-eye- d, ii one-fift- h ex-jio- One-sevent-h ir a three-fourth- ir re told Likewise, If yon every dollar of all tlc fedtqjl lias JJVi'fei money the governim-unstintedly In helping all tlie su !" 11 to develop their highway ryt.: comes from New Ym yog JJJJ a be amazed. But wait! As tin- sliowt captain of radio fume eid "Thnt to only the beginning, : when Uncle Sam sat down to re. up what the state of New Yort to help him pay for tlu runnii-htgovernment In 1922, he &. end that she supplied him with come taxes and Interns! nr. receipts reaching the grind of $744,000, iXkl. He next foari: If New York had paid r tun a per capita basis, her excise would hare a When hr for only $209,000,000. dueled thin amount from the r 000.000 actually paid in, he b that New York lind givn $475100.000 more than would! been required under a per n quota. That $475,000,000 certainly prvl a godsend to Uncle Sam In mwl his prnhlea financing the ojieratlniis of u j creaslngly exacting household found that with It he could pay each and every one of the Mj Ing Items In his budget : every lar voted to every state for tel aid, whether to roads, Nad Guard, forest protection, or eg tural. experimentation; the el expenses of the legislative bn of the government, Library of Congress; the entire of the Judicial branch, 1urlmlin: federal courts and prisons; the of the Independent nlliri-- md reaus, from the Smithsonian tutlon and the National niiuecr the Interstate commerce, the eral trade,- and the civil te commissions; the cost of tie' partuient of the Interior, tor general land office, the of reclamation, the geological vey, the bureau of Indian the office of education, etc; whole outlay for the Dopartme Labor; the cost of the Depart of Justice; and the exjiendi! required in the scientific Ixr of the. Department of Come from the bureau of atnndank T the coast and geodetic "umy EA J the bureau of fisheries, the office, and bureau of mines In other words, all that t Sam gives the statea In federal as well aa all that he speak maintain two of the three lira of the government and three pnrtmenta of the third branch.; all that he spends for sclentlk search In a fourth department! the maintenance of the Indepcr offices, can be met out of York's added quota of tnxatlml o In-- shared-nationa- one-tent- h Glov-eravil- le aup-plic- a. pm-ent- l g : I 1 - inrlt-th- ' Abounds In Dairy Farms $277,-000,0- WNU Service. rff melan- choly The traveler roundahout the of New York readily discovers.' much of the attractiveness d rural scene to due to the mark careful tillage upon the face d fertile acres. With a population that b parts urban and one purl if there to a vast demand for New York city Itself must 11 out 300 miles for Its supply- farms therefore abound every" And they call not only for P lands, but also for cnrnlteMH rca general crops, with the In mould of color, alike tbejt son valley, the St. Lawrence and the Mohawk country. In 1929 the state produced 000 gallons of milk, enough a vat ten feet deep and ( 1 one-hal- f wide, extending ft' southern end of Miinh:itte E rla eastern end of The vineyards, the orchar mall fruits, and the truch P that flourish on the si"! vlron the Inland lukes. bees' warming waters of I he short the frosts of the " and bold back those of the U of as much to the beauty aa they add to the proswrilJ region. The vineyards -tauqua country and around toe are ieclnlly noted. The Empire stale I Its Inland waterways. Thrnw a wh"1 J'J1. runal system alhle In send nhlia of length from and 300-foChamplain. Into take city hy way of Buffalo or to Watklua and Ilhaos by Boned and Cayuga hike lj" J"? 1" |