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Show LEHI FREE PRESS. LEH L UT A f? Submarine Tuna Booklets in Loose ""Leaf Ring Bindert ' WHO'S I Launched Refuses to Register NATIONAL AFFAIRS NEWS . THIS tions of homemakers in America, since John Alden and Priscilla setup housekeeping in Plymouth col ony. irus time my treasure warn the pair of ancient fiat irons yoa see here in use as book ends for my work-roolibrary of loose lee financing not lines Senator Hatch had in mind . . . Regular Republican leaders fear amateurs u ill hurt WUlUie. F. PARTON Bv LEMUEL WNU Servict.l . . (BeU Syndicate f t eV YORK. One of the greatest philippics of William Pitt was his fair.ous denunciation of that foul j i democracy," which had come into the Merwin K. Hart English in Attacks guage "from -- Ian-Joi- ns f" 'Democracy only associations were This deand madness. 11 comnoted has recently partment parable attacks on this subversive word from similarly respectable and authoritative sources. The latest is the address by Merwin K. Hart, at the Union League club in which Mr. Hart "suspected" that the word was eased into the country, subversively, in by the Communist Internationale him its homicide 1935. This thesis, which may develop into something of an American "kulturkampf," is based on the contention that the founding fathers set up not a democracy, but a republic, and that the word, "democracy," is inseparable from Dubious Marxist associations. Mr. Hart also insists that the Marxists have kidnaped the word "liberal," which was right until it got into bad all CARTER FIELD along WEEK ,Cor.solJdJtel Feature On Reviewed by i p. Cam paign W ord, i r?. By RUTH WYETH SPEARS yHENEVER I make a trip t New England I like to brine back something to remind me thm there have been about 15 genera company. Mr. Hart is president of the New York State Economic council. He has been for many years a vigorous g assailant of radicaliand sm in any form. He shells the hard-hittin- "subversionists" from his estate on Pippin hill near Utica. His targets have been labor unions, child labor legislation, social insurance, socialized medicine, compulsory health insurance and extravagant expenditures for public education. Graduated from Harvard in 1904, Mr. Hart has made his business career in insurance, law and manufacturing. He was gassed in the war, is a licensed aviator and a patron of aviation. He urges national discipline. In his Union League address he warned us that we are becoming too soft to stand up against the "tougher products that result from a fascist education." sfi:m of money. For example the regular Republicans in any given state will go to a man who has always given liberally, ) tvery campaign, for " I I If, , years. They will find ..... 1 that he has been approached by a solici-tofor the Willkie V :lubs, or by some one connected with a Business Men's Tl.e S6.000.000 V. S. S. submarine Tuna, being launched at the The Rev. Allen Lambert, 34, who, Willkie league, or a Mare Island navy yard, at Vallejo, Calif. The Tuna, authorized in 1934, disapproving of conscription, told new club of orWillkie was begun in July, 1939, under an appropriation voted that year. It will his any congregation at Sinking Valley, Democrats, be commissioned early next year. The christening was performed by Sen. Hatch that he would refuse to register one of the dozens of Pa., names taken the wife of Rear Admiral Wilhelni Lee Friedell. by for the draft. these various organizations. He will tell them, regretfully, that he has U. S. already given all that he thinks he 4U. S. Can should. So the regular Republican cupboard is bare as far as his contribution is concerned. All this has been magnified by the Hatch act. Lots of folks began to figure out ways to "get around it." CHISELERS COLLECT FUNDS In some instances, it seems, with no interest whatever in the Willkie campaign save as a means oi making a bit of money, set up organizations which collected money and paid themselves fat salaries out of the treasuries of these newborn units. Can you imagine how that would hit the regular Republican cam"y'' paign fund? All this comes, too, in a campaign where for the first time in history the regular state organizations are being required to finance a lot of normal campaign items themselves, or go without. 3.' i ::,fl XA.. r link. Latin Generals Inspect Defenses Lick Japan' chis-ele- p $ STATE ALLOTMENTS This soundphoto shows (left to right) Gen. Calixto Carias of Honduras, Gen. Luis Castaneda of Columbia, and Gen. Felipe Rivera of Bolivia machine guns on a "flying fortress" of the examining one of the U. S. army at Langley Field, Va. The generals are making a tour of United States defenses. A V" v well-know- n n ,'r. Hull and Trujillo Sign Treaty n are failing. ft 0 -- C. B. Burmwood, pilot to Gen. Chsays the U. S. can iang Kai-shelick Japan in 90 days. Burmwood will return to China after visiting his mother in Chicago. Typical Conscriplee MB rule over the finances of the Dominican I'nited States' a signed by Secretary of State Cordell Hull bv ended treaty was fnTfien Rafael L. Trujillo, political chief of the West Indian state. former ambassador to Germany, The treaty, negotiated by Hugh Wilson, relations. is expected to improve 35-ye- Latin-America- n HIT For exampie, because of the Hatch act limitation on national committee spending, it has been necessary to wield the axe on allotments to the states of all sorts of things, from literature to buttons. In the "good old days" these were furnished liberally by the national committee. But the Hatch act prevents all that. So the present far from businesslike system is followed. The Democrats are finding the same difficulty, but to a lesser degree, since they have an army of people in most communities to whom the job of keeping their party in power is their bread and butter. But even the Democrats are apparently working through various other For inthan regular committees. stance, literature is flooded out with a post office box number given as the return, and no other indication as to the source. It's a far cry from what Sen. Carl A. Hatch intended! G. O. P. HAS TROUBLE LOOSE LEAF BINDER y3 BOOKLETS WITH TABS ATTACHED that I have been wanting to picture to you my method of fastening booklets in ring binders. I use inch wide gummed tape. Pieces long are folded in half. The fold end is stuck together and punched. These tabs are placed on the rings of the binder and booklet stuck between the We are inveterate open ends. booklet collectors on all sort of Frequently we cover, subjects. binders with fabrics or interesting, papers so they look attractive on the shelves in any room. ed me -- rood luggestlon for NOTE: Her la keeping the lerlet of tewing booklet which Mrs. Spear hat prepared for our booklet avalW reader. Ther ar five new on 1 published every abl and contain dlrecUoa other month. No. for SO different bomemaklng Idea, liv useful holiday new fall curtains; eluding gifts, and description of the other book let In the series. When you write for, your copy of Book B be sure to enclose1 10c te cover cost and mailing. Send order to: MRS. RUTH WYETH SPEARS Drawer 10 New York Bedford BlUs Enclose 10 cent tor Book t. Name .' Address DON'T BE BOSSED BY YOUR LAXATIVE -- RELIEVE CONSTIPATION THIS MODERN WAY When you feel gajsy, headachy, logy bowels, do as millions due to cloRged-uat bedtime. Next do take morning thorough, comfortable relief, helping you start the day full of your normal energy and pep, feeling like doesn't disturb million! your night's rest or interfere with work the t, next day. Try the chewing gum laxative, yourself. It tastes good, It'a handy and economical ... a family supply p Feen-A-Mi- Feen-A-Mi- nt Feen-A-Min- FEENMHTToi What Time Brings Time is the nurse and breeder of all good. Shakespeare. ADVISES YOUNG GIRLS ENTERING WOMANHOOD Thousands of young girls entering worn-aabo-od have fouad a "real friend" la Whether it has anything to do with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comthe voting on election day or not, pound to help them g "smiling thru' restless, moody, nervous spalls, and there is terriffic organization trouble relieve cramps, headache, backache and in the Wendell Willkie camp. Part embarrassing fainting spells due to female functional irregularities. Famous for over of it is due to the Hatch act. Part 60 years. WORTH TBYLNGt of it is due to the intensive drive to organize the Democrats who happen to be for Willkie, and to do it independently of the regular ReHeaven ne'er helps the men who publican organizations in the various states. And part of it is due will not act. Sophocles. to the fact that what might be termed the regular Republican lead ers are not having much luck in getting their advice taken with respect to how the campaign should OURa IT - T-- my a I I I be run, and, even more important, Applicator as to what should be done and said JUST A Willkie himself. Mr. by DASH IN FEATHERS It may be that all the mad scramPrivate Roy Bruch of "Company bling, the furious energy, the inexG", New York, takes the role of a pert but enthusiastic work on the typical conscriptee. Pack includes part of amateurs, will actually re- WNU W 4140 messkit, helmet, gas mask, first aid, sult in more votes for Willkie than raincoat, bayonet and shovel. would have been the case if the Compressed Fury Beware the fury of a patienl campaign had been run in an orthodox manner. The regular politicians man. Dryden. do not think so. The amateurs do. AMATEUR MAY SURPRISE rtocularitr Todav's There are certain spots in the of Voan't Ptlli. after many years of worldcountry where most political reportwide use, surely must ers think the amateurs may surbe accepted as evidence I of use. success. their satisfactory prise everybody by And favorable public For example, in communities, paropinion supports that of the able physicians ticularly in the big cities, where the who test the value of regular Republican organizations Doan's under exacting are actually more adjuncts of the laboratory conditions. These physicians, too, approve every word Democratic machines than they are of advertising you read, the objective of which is only to recommend I'oan's Pills a real fighting opposition to the maas a good diuretic treatment for disorder chines. of the kidney function and for relief ot the pain and worry it causes. The amateurs are not worried If more people were aware of how thr inabout the party at all. They are Itidneys must constantly rrmove wa.ti terested in a particular candidate that cannot stay in the blood williout in jury to health, there would be better un or a particular issue. In this camderstanding of why the whole body paign most of the amateurs on kidneys lair, and diuretic medication would be more often employed. Willkie's side are interested only in Ilurning, scanty or too frequent urina tion sometimes warn of disturbed kidney electing Willkie President. Most of function. You may suffer nagging back them would not give a whoop about ache, persistent headache, attacks of the Republican nominee for vice vetting up nichts, swelling, pum ness unilrr the eyes fed weak, nervous, L. if it all McNary, president, Charles out. played were possible to discriminate. Not Use Dean's Pills. It is better to rely on a medicine that has won world wide acor are that they , against McNary, rin claim than on something leas favorably against the Republican nominees for known. Ask your neiehbcrl Vice President Garner takes the senator, governor or county commisgavel from Sen. Key Pittman, as sioners where they are working. he resumed his duties as presiding They simply do not care. They are officer in the senate, after a out to elect Willkie and nothing else absence. bothers them. , GO MUCH FASTHOI Resumes Duties suffer-whe- i RenKc rs ' '' p swim-rotfigl- hole . CIR ERIC COATES was the first British composer to treat modern syncopation seriously, and write compositions in the quickened beat. bricks bir Coates of Many were thrown Quickened Beat in his direc- tion bv his Gets Last Toot classical confreres, but now he gets the last word or the last toot. They gear their whirling war machines to his "hot licks" tempo, broadcast to the forges and workbenches. It is speed-umusic and workers and machines catch the pace. A favorite piece is his recent "Calling All Workers" in which he says he sought to capture the spirit of the "wonderful British people in their war effort." It is a tribute to the surprising adaptability of the British ; at a time when their traditional work-bewas supposed to be like "Auld Lang something Syne." Significantly, war and rumors of war stir lively musio and frantic dancing, as attested by the historic dance of the Carmagnole which has been the forerunner of European wars and revolutions, the jazz outbreak before our entry into the World war, and the present swing craze. At any rate, Sir Eric is in tune with the times and by all accounts Old England inventor of Springfield, Mass., is shown at is( too, as her war production J Robert Fish, hits a machine-guwith hotel drawings of his "Diatonic torpedo." The sketches his New York tempo to the to the bottom and stands beat of a swing baton. show that when used as a mine the torpedo sinks currents. Friendly vessels may pass upon at an depending angle, r'c was a romanticist and upright, field safely by using a secret timber. classicist, which makes his change over the mine w Pace all the more interesting. For many years, he was the principal viola in the Queen's Hall orchestra. He gradually eminence by his numerousgained orchestral works and songs and became a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in 1C22. One of his songs "IPitch My Lonely Caravan at Wight" a mood ironically at variance with London's night-tim- e musings just now. He is the son of a back country surgeon. His avocation is which passion photography ne indulges even when the bombs 1905 Joseph A. Rosen arrived at Michigan State agricultural college from Russia with fifty cents and a few grains of The fifty cents blossomed into rye. the education of Dr. Rosen and the handful of rye spread over 1,500,000 acres in Canada and the United States, the highest yielding in the world known rye s 'Rosen Today Dr. Rosen, as head ofrye." the European Refugee colony in the Dominican Republic, y "ports things are going in this new home base for e victims of aggression abroad. Servic.) WASHINGTON The real clash between the regular Republican organizations in so many states and the various independent groups is due not so much to authority in the direction of the campaign, though that is a sore point, as to the raising Inventor and His 'Diatonic Torpedo' best-know- WNU m binders. Setting them up remind three-mont- h |