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Show V CACHE AMERICAN NOT IN Tin: nox SCORE: VA1,K football trainer Frank V an 1 die gels a higher salary than ri COUNTY. UTAH CRIES SOUND ONCE MORE thrr l)uiky Pond or Greasy Neale, the head roaches . , . Tennessee's football admirer still are squawking samrUilng awful about the during that Alabama defeat . . , Although be has Utile time for baseball now, Jordan Oliver, the young Htaleu Island giant who play so much tackle for Vlllanova, was bring watched by big league scout while still in high school , , , Ralph Wolfe, Ohio Slate center and captain, played 439 minutes out of possible 44 last year . . . Ohio Stale, by the way, cleaned np a cool 49 Cs on that trip to California even though losing to U. B. C, Although six more eminent football universities were after him and his dad was willing, young John who is most of the Drown team, refused to listen. "1 can solve at Icsst part of your problems. Pop, and my place is here, classmates quote him os having told Coach Tuss McLaughry . . . During the five year Uieir trams have clashed a Lafayette outfit never has lust to one coached by Pop Warner, Ilia pola frlrnda aay Ibe duke of Windsor lo In better standing with ' Britiab bigwigs than the press Indicates. Say be really Is making those trips. Including the ene to the United , Stales, for propaganda purposes. i A Sort of a hands across the sea gesture from a popular guy In case our cousins need help later on, you know . . . Jockey WUIIe Obert, who still Is riding around Rockingham years old and park, Is weighs 10S pounds . . . Retired Jockey Silvio Couerl Is so busy playing golf that he doesn't even visit the tracks nowadays . . . Eastern horsemen are changing their minds about racing at Santa Anita this winter. They put the blame on California's Insistence upon displaying its native son spirit . . . Debaters vs. books propoof the sition nre noting that Jim Butler's Laurel, Maryland, part - mutuel The calamity howlers have predicted many dire reckonings for us ail, but here we are, hale and hearty. course is tor sale while business n deserts (upper right) and our people are Despite predictions, our farm lands have not become continues brisk at bis bookmaking of tbe world has not come as predicted by Winot some famine The end Chinese ss are (lower left). facing Empire City. lbur Glenn Yoliva (upper left) or Robert Reidt (lower right.) Calamity Howlers, Foreseeing Unutterable Doom, Try Today, as in Years Gone By, to Scare the Pants Off Us. 4 T? ' WOLF! lXJAN, CACHE J 1 :) N York foL Srrtc. WNU Tliis Game Called Football Has Many Confusing Angles football: Marquette tied for three eonaecutlve fame from 1W to 1911. la 1912 the Irlah won. 9 to . Year after year Pittsburgh hat one of the nation' tuperior team. But It bat been seventeen year aince the Panther have had an tub defeated team, nineteen year aince they have had an undefeated and un tied team, and twenty-ieveyear inee they have had an undefaated, untied and unscored upon team. So youre a football expert, eh? Then: 1. Name the coach at Iowa called THIS Kama Pan and t2 What I the Como Corner"? What time out la permitted between the Brat and aecond quarter of a game, between the third and fourth quarter, between the aecond and third quarters? 4 What college team Is nicknamed "The Friars"? S Name the "Four norsemeo and what they are doing now. Sure, you knew them all along, but here are the answers, anyhow: 1 Irl Tubb of William Jewell college. 2 The angle formed by the side line and the goal line. 3 One minute between the first and second periods and the third and fourth periods. Fifteen minutes between the halves. Providence college of Providence. R. L 5 Elmer Layden, head coach at Notre Dame: Jim Crowley, head coach at Fordham; Harry Stuhldre-hehead coach at Wisconsin; Don Miller, practicing law. From a Pennsylvania gentleman who to often makes this weekly football piece to easy to write: "Football is some gamel It lasts but three months, yet symbolizes college activity for the whole year. Its just an amateur sport, yet puts hundreds of boys through colleges, supplies employment to thousands and provides a good living for hundreds of coaches. It supports the athletic programs for other games, to yet Is played by but twenty-fiv- e fifty boys per school. It builds stadiums, but pays no cash to the participants (theoretically, at least) teams are "Its g dominated by names. Its the roughest game in America, but girls love it. Its witnessed by millions each week, yet only a few hundred really under stand it. It reaches its apex teams In the picking of when every honest fan knows one team cant honor all the best playr, foreign-soundin- ers. "Football is some game! for con- tradiction." Gloomy Gil Had Ace Record at Navy When Gil Dobie was coaching at Navy, the Middies defeated Ursi-nu- s 12 lo 0, in g jgjg JJex yeaf hey F slapped a 121 to 0 ft score on Colby . . . Columbia twenty - one years without getting a man on the From the S. time Richard Smith was named at fullback in 1903 until Wally Koppisch got the halfback call Gil Dobie in 1924 The ball wasnt equipped with handles forty years ago, either. In 1896 Penns great guard, Willy Woodruff, fumbled five times within Lafayettes line, and Penn lost, 6 to 4. There has been considerable misunderstanding of tbe Graham plan by which the president of the University of North Carolina has been seeking to remove some of the hypocrisy from college sports. Perhaps a letter from n member of the North Carolina faculty best explains the university heads aims: "President Graham is anxions to see to it that scholarships and other help to athletes shall be granted on the same terms as those on which similar favors are granted to other students. Under the Graham plan the student is required to submit a sworn statement of all monies and other help received by him together with tbe names of the donors. I might add in passing that since the application of this plan to our local athletic situation, there has been no great failing off in our athletic - went ... standing." Mytm-coache- KiSvV. .AT forty-seve- 'W t? in ,J a dust-blow- Pro Colfcrs Relax as Pro Football Fans After a strenuous summer of golf. Pros Jimmy Thomson and Horton Smith are seeking relaxation by watch- n football i ' games . . . Ohio State misses Frank Cumiskey, the end now starring for Brooklyn's pro Agamst Dodgers. Michigan, last fall, he made three consecutive tackles to hold the foe on the line. Then, later, caught a forward pass for the first touchdown . . . Peter Bradley, Princeton miler who came so fast last summer, is running cross country to toughen his legs. He believes he can do 4:10 on the boards this winter and that he may get under 4:06 before June . . . His friends are hoping Paul Runyan soon will learn all there is to know and so resume his about rhumba-inproper place as one of the nation's top pro golfers. Credit the good old Dodgers with a big assist in keeping Pie Tray-noPittsburgh managerial job for him. Tbe teams late season spurt earned Pie another chance. Players insist the main reason for the spurt was the spark plug playing of Catcher Ray Berres, who was hauled in from Louisville where Brooklyn had traded him for Gibby Brack . . . Keep an eye on Maxie Farber, the young Ghetto lightweight who has been coming along so nicely . . . Tbe boys claim Jesse James, Hollywood Greek grappler, came near giving Danno O'Malioney the business" the other night . . . Murray Brazen of the Dusek offices is trying to organize a team of wrestlers to play pro football. Joe DiMaggio's Ma has become an ardent baseball fan. Had an interpreter translate the World Series reports into Italian so that she cou4 appreciate them properly . . . Quip by Rogers Hornsby after hearing Michigan State had defeated the Missouri eleven, 2 to 0: "They sure must use the dead ball in that league, too. . . . One of the railroads estimates it lost $25,000 worth of business when the Giants, instead of the Cubs, won the National league pennant . . . Bob Feller confides desire is to catch that his Im sure tired," up on his sleep. the famed youngster tells reporters . . . Best minor league managing job of the year was done by former Dodger Jake Flowers who, in his first try as a pilot, won the Eastern Shore league pennant for Salisbury. Harry Balogb, the fight announcer, started as a jewelry salesman and made bis announcing debut at Grupps gym . . . Frank Doc Bag-lethe famed handler of boxers, is doing nicely after an operation performed on an abscessed left eye Ralph Chong, the boxer, donates part of each purse to Chinese war sufferers . . . Tbe Louis-Far- r movies were a worse flop than the fight. International leaguers doubt that Second Baseman Gordon is ready to replace Tony Lazzeri in the Yankee infield next season. They whisper that the Yankees really are whooping it up for the kid in the hope that they can peddle him to Brooklyn for a fancy price. ! big-tim- e 4 one-yar- g rs y, By WILLIAM C. UTLEY news of catastrophes and wars reflected in the Wi often enough to give the nation the jitters, calamity howlers are emerging from their hiding places like groundhogs from their burrows with a new batch of fearful predictions. 1937 deserts,? Suicidal war, next year was the time for the Last plagues and blights which will surely bring devastation to all farm Judgment, but many years have lands these have always been passed since 1844, and with them, among the favorite topics of the the Milleritcs. skilled and unskilled prophets. ToAnother Doom Proves Dud. day, the bombing raids and the unIn 1925 Robert Reidt of Freeport, huin certainties of a new institution man affairs undeclared war are Long Island, made Page One of most by predicting that the giving an added note of terror to newspapers world would end February 26, 1926. the old familiar war songs. Collision with a comet would demolIt is yet too soon to tell whether ish this planet, he said. Nothing the optimists or the pessimists in more was heard of Mr. Reidt until the war scare controversy are cor- 1932, W'hen he revealed that New rect, but only the booming of can- York City would be destroyed at 11 non and the whine of shells could oclock Sunday night, October 9. The the other calamity-howler- s time came and went. appointed in lec who are raising their voices He was last reported running a teature halls and before microphones. room. The cry of "Doom!" was taken According to some prognosticain the soil of the tors, the fertility up again in 1933 by Arthur B. Ware, United States is being reduced at who tried to prove there is somesuch a rapid rate that the country thing in a name. The Britisher floodwill some day reach the status of ed the world with pamphlets, bookChina, and Instead of $90 worth of lets and announcements that the food being available for every perearth would cease to exist on June son in the country, there will be 12. Two years later Wilbur Glenn only about $15 worth. cult leader of Zion, Illinois, Most widely spread of all the presentook up the torch of prophecy. Mr. calamity-howlinis the omt-day dust Voliva wasnt sure whether the inous prediction that the world would end in 1935 or 1936. bowl" will emerge as an American of the Sahara where only The second group of calamity-howler- s those who try to shake the present population of 127,000,000 could possibly exist. faith of pioneers with the cry: It Few, today, raise the cry that the cant be done!" have pretty genend of the world is coining, as they erally suffered the same disappointment that overtook those who prefrequently used to. The end of the world! That cry dicted the end of the world. Calamity-HowleStill Wail. that once struck terror into the hearts of men, and which is still reEven Columbus, who had to conmembered when bombs and shells tend with his share of scoffers, did go screaming through the air, calls not envision the day when ships to mind the days of with a net tonnage of 130,717,015 Mother Shipton. would cross between the Old World and the New, as they did in 1936. Phoney Prophetess. She not only predicted the end Nor did the Wright brothers foresee of the world, but foresaw the Great the time when glistening liners of Fire of London, the deaths of kings the airlanes would chalk np a record of 439,000,000 passenger miles in and princes, the invention of autoone year, as they are doing now. mobiles and steamships, the AmerThere are still many calamity-howler- s ican Revolution and hundreds of who defy history with preevents. other of dire happenings about to dictions n Ship-toThe only trouble with Mother occur. was that she never existed, for In 1934, Professor Gustave Meyer, her famous prophecy was later said that there would be an epiwrita clever forgery, only proved demic of scarlet fever of terrible ten and supposedly discovered after in the United States the described events had passed proportions to confirm this can Nothing navy. one into history. Nevertheless, for medical records, in found be navy breathless night in 1879, nearly evhowever, and the 103,000 men in the ery church in England was jammed rolls are ample evidence of to the doors with the faithful, who navy another prediction that went wrong. of end the the awaited confidently A modem pioneer in the predicprophet- tion of calamitous world, as the events was R. P. ess had foretold. British economist. noted Hearne, When William Miller shouted for the London pictorial Doom in the autumn of 1843, thou- Writing The Sphere, he said in sands of Americas believers in the magazine. 1920: went the issue of October 10, Second Advent trembled, monthe ten Within power years the while and taking home, prayed opoly of coal will be broken and it last stitches and tucks in the resurrection gowns they were to don will be broken not by political and that night. At 12 oclock they went economic methods but by the arout on the hilltops to await the end rival of a new fuel which will reof the world. They waited until place coal! Long before our coal measures are exhausted, coal minmorning. Then the Rev. Mr. Miller exing as we know it today will have ceased, and the coal strike will beplained that his calculation derived from an assumption that the come as obsolete as coal itself. arouse the Some calamity-howler- s 2.300 Biblical days from the time Ezra went into Jerusalem signified country with forecasts of slow and 2.300 modern years was in error, horrible annihilation. A moderate warning, which was because of the time lost in the change from Julian to GregoriaD taken up and distorted with fearcalendars. He announced that tha some results, was issued by Dr. man-mad- e out-sho- Vo-liv- a, g one-fift- h rs n world-shakin- g Jacob G. Lipman. After exhaustive studies with the aid of a corps of 30 WPA engineers and statisticians. Dr. Lipman submitted a report last June, which said, in part: Warns of Soil Destruction. iinatuimAfH4titu WHOS NEYS THIS WEEK... By Lemuel F. Parton mv?Tm?T?Tmf m ? TEW YORK. Career diplomacy (s closed to women. Brilliant is girls. Just out of college, keep on knocking at the door, but it doesnt open. In tli De- partment of Com- merce, things are different. Trade commissioners or assistant commissioners in seven countries are women. They have been singularly successful, working as Uncle Sams saleswomen, finding out shut people of other nations want, employing tact and discernment In their work, supplying the department with all sorts of keenly observed data about preference, taste and sales possibilities. They are proving themselves excellent trade envoys. The N utioni.l League of Women Voters, publishing its survey of women in public office. notes es- pecially tiie success of Miss A. Viola Smith at Shanghai and Miss Elizabeth Humes at Rome. Miss Smith has been with the De-- l partment of Commerce in China since 1920. A native of Los Angeles. she was graduated in law at George Washington university. She was at Peiping two years before being transferred to Shanghai. She has been president of the American Women's Club of Shangof the Internahai, tional Committee of Womens organizations. and has been active in many fields of social and civic life in China. Miss Humes, assistant trade comin in Rome 1925, missioner and commissioner thereafter, showed typical resourcefulness in inducing Italian women to wear backless bathing suits. This, with a successful cosmetics campaign, opened new avenues for American trade in Italy. She travels a great deal around Italy and keeps the department minutely informed on trade conditions and opportunities. She was reared in Louisiana and educated in Italy and Switzerland. In the war, she was with the Red Cross and later was attached to the American embassy in Rome. Miss Gudrun Carlson has made a similar success at Oslo, Norway. Other nations in which America is represented by women in trade posts are Brazil, Guatemala, Chile and Venezuela. All reports are that chic, intelligent women are highly esteemed in foreign capitals and it would appear that more good jobs for bright girls are coming along in the Department of Commerce, as clerks or commercial attaches, if not as commissioners. We have about 200 years to go unless we start seriously conserving our soil and renewing it where it has been destroyed or impoverished. The six most vital elements of the soil, essential for our food supply, are nitrogen, phosphorus, potash, calcium, magnesium and sulphur. Nearly all of them are being used up at the rate of many million tons a year. Granted that the American farmer has dissipated his resources, that is not to say that behind the scenes science is not perpetually on guard to offset mankinds carelessness. On the debit side, floods and drouths have magnified the devastation, but means of restoring the soil are being THE Buddhists have it, The constantly developed and improved. turn of the wheel is the whole Dr. P. D. Peterson, agricultural so of the Timothy expert for the Freeport Sulphur Trebitschlaw,LincolnIgnatius has six wheels deis of who one those company, etched on his bald bunks the terror of the dying soil. skull hoi with History, if nothing else, should and be irons, teach that dire predictions of soil comes Chao Rung, exhaustion are risky, he says, bea Buddhist monk. cause the same acres have been In Manchukuo, he opines that farmed and refarmed for centuries Japan will bring about more peacein Europe and are still producing ful conditions on earth than the abundant crops. Christians have done. He declares that American acres An internationalist, he was chased should be more productive rather and caught by a Brooklyn policescienout than less, pointing that man, landed in an English jail, baltific prescriptions in the form of circulated during the war, pretendanced fertilizers and chemical coming to be a German spy, helped pounds which enrich the soil are in the Kapp putsch in Germany, pracbeing added to the century-olwas chased out- - and went to the tice of crop rotation. Sulphur, like Orient. He was born in Hungary and potash, and reared in the slums of London. nitrogen, phosphorus is required by all growing plants He became a Presbyterian missionand animals, Dr. Peterson explains; ary, then a vicar in the Anglican soils deficient in sulphur will not church, and, in 1910, a member of support normal plant growth, but parliament. such deficiencies are being met by When the Brooklyn police nailed adding sulphur to the soil, either him, it was supposed to be a alone or in fertilizer mixtures. spy case, but it was later disclosed Fungicides and insecticides, to that England wanted him for forgwhich sulphur is also important, are ery. That was in 1915. Thereconquering other menaces agamst after he staged himself in a great which older generations were pow- deal of European spy melodrama, erless, and have completely altered all of it supposedly imaginary. the situation, he says. Out of prison, he was engaged in Still other modern wolf criers arms traffic in Germany and built point out that in 1936 nearly 100,000,-00- 0 an impressive estate in Ceylon. bushels of wheat were burned Then he became a Buddhist abbot, away as great, stifling clouds arose in coarse robe and sandals, from the Dust Bowl. time, the forty or Farmers of the great wheat belt, FOR the first societies seem to be peace to to refused have yield however, themselves heard at Washmaking most panic, and they are giving the One hears talk of their poseffective answer yet devised to the ington. sible influence in calamity-howlers- , by taking the changes, enforcesteps necessary to overcome the difment or negation ficulties in their path. They are of the neutrality deand such simple logical using law. fenses as picket windbreaks and Mrs. Estelle Stemberger, execuranks of trees. They are plowing tive of World furrows at right angles to the pre- is a secretary brown-haire- Peaceways, grandof so the that winds, sweep vailing mother who has swiftly risen to the storms will be broken up. leadership in the peace army durIncidents such as these may coming the last few years. bine to prove that calamity-howler- s She sharply challenges the Presdo have a value in dramatizing the ident's stand. In his Chicago menaces which threaten mankind. speech, says her organization, whole countries are mentally While the President points the Amerithrown off balance by their can people down the road that led enough heat is generated to to the World war. Her gospel is weld together the constructive ele- simply that war is horrible and ments in the community. This was we've got to keep out of it. seen in large-scalenterprises for She was Estelle Miller, reared in reclaiming the soil, and may be Cincinnati, an alumna of the Uniloud howl becomes repeated if the versity of Cincinnati. Much of her enough, so that new measures for l.fe has been given to ph.lanthrupy healing other ills will be forth- and civic enterprise. Console tod Nov s Features, coming. d blue-eye- d fulmi-nation- s, e Western Newspaper Union. SEEN and HEARD V aroundthe 2t U Servn e. NATIONAL CAPITAL Field By CarterCORRESPONDENT FAMOUS WASHINGTON Washington. Public utility executives would do well to consider what has happened, is happening, and probably will happen to th San Francisco bay ferries. It might induce them to exercise little foresight Instead of waiting for hindsight to prove they are right assuming that they are. Because the trouble about watting for that demonstration still assuming they are right is that they will be in the position of the motorist who Insisted on exercising his right under traffic regulations: He was right, dead right, as he drove along. But hc'a just as dead as It he'd been wrong." Out In San Francisco the ferries, naturally, suffered a huge loss of business when the new bridges were opened up. To recoup some, they obtained permission to reduce their rates. So they made the rate for a car 30 cents instead of 50 cents, and the round trip 50 cents. Whereas the bridges charge 50 cents toll each way, except for a slight reduction for commuters. As a result, the ferries are doing a land office business hauling automobiles, and the bridge revenues are not what they should be. So the six counties that guarantee the bridge, which means that they have to make up any deficit in paying operating charges and interest on the bonds, are alarmed. They are appealing to the state railroad commission to reopen the case. What they want, of course, is to force the ferries to charge just as much as the bridges. Boiled down, if they get what they want the ferries might as well go out of business. one-wa- y Just Imagine Now lets go back a few years in other words, use hindsight and Let's supimagine a situation. pose that when the bridge was first proposed the ferry owners had reduced rates sharply, instead of first waiting in the vain hope that the bridges would never be built, and then seen the Inevitable happen. Obviously, a ferry cannot compete with a bridge, once a bridge is built. If the bridge management is permitted, it can make any rates it pleases, drive the ferries out of business, and then raise its rates again. It costs the bridge management virtually nothing, save a little wear and tear on the paving, for traffic to pass over it. The main cost is interest on the investment, and that goes on, whether there is any traffic or not. The case is strikingly similar to a government hydroelectric project. The project may be uneconomic, but once the dam is built and tne power plant installed the current must be produced. The mere fact that it loses money, that it costs the taxpayers money, is beside the point. It is, not to make a pun, water over the dam. So the competing privately owned utilities lose money, the taxpayers lose money, and nobody gains, not even the consumer, because the utilities could, had they used foresight instead of hindsight, have supplied the consumer at just as low rates. As abundantly demonstrated by the San Francisco ferries. If those ferries had reduced rates back before the bridges were authorized, it would have been necessary, in all computations as to whether of construction such bridges was economically sound, to figure tolls on the basis of ferry rates. This sort of figuring was done, but it was done on the basis of a ferry charge, hence a toll on the bridge. On that basis calculations were made showing that the bridges would pay. Had those calculations been made on a round straight toll, trip, which the ferries are now charging, the bridges might never have been built. tion castigating something which had already been changed as of the pleading of its own presl-den- t, William Green? Why not Juat d.jcuss any objection which still remains The answer la simple. Those for that resolution. In that curious form, were seeking to build up public opinion against the wages and hours biiL almost regardless of details. So they hit it hardest on what they considered its more vulnerable points, despite the fact that those points had been eliminated in the last session. re-su- it Wanted No Change There is the possibility, of course, that there was a slightly different purpose that the desire was really to prevent the bills being changed again into something resembling its original and. to union labor, objectionable form. As a matter of fact, the bitterest opponents of the bill, the folks who so effectually sidetracked it last session. holding it in the house rules committee after every one had assumed it wou'd pass, are hoping to change the bill substantially. And some of the changes that these potent gentlemen want to make would again add some of the features that William Green managed to get stricken out. As a matter of fact, the opposition of little southern sawmills and other small plants did not really reach the burning point last session until after Green's federation influence had accomplished these changes. The effect of the Green changes was to restrict the jurisdiction of the board, or whatever the governing body that enforces the wage and hour regulation may be called, to compelling the maximum and the minimum. They would leave all disputes involving conditions better for labor than these particular limitations to be settled by collective bargaining. Boost Income Tax Income taxes on $5,000 to $1,000 stipends will be sharply boosted by congress in revising the tax law to get the additional money the Treasury needs, unless there should be some totally unexpected upset. Levies on corporation net incomes will also be boosted. Corporations are now paying 15 per cent of their net incomes to the federal government, in addition to the undistributed earnings tax which, of cojrse. they do not pay if they distribute all their earnings to stockholders. There will be a strong effort to lower exemptions and hike levies on incomes below $5,000, both of which are advocated, and have been for several years, by Senator Robert M. La Follette of Wisconsin. There is a possibility of boosting the tax on incomes below $5,000, but the chance of reducing the present exemptions is practically niL As a matter of fact, this is one of the few points on which La Follette and the New Deal differ. La Follette wants those with the smaller incomes to pay taxes for two reasons. He wants them to know about taxes, and he knows that to get as much money as he thinks the federal government should have it is necessary to go lower. It just so happens that no one has ever contradicted the statement made by Alfred M. Landon during the last campaign, that if the government took every dollar of every income in the country from $5,000 upwards it would pay only a fraction of what the government is now spending. Very few people in the country believe this. It sounds too fantastic. But it happens to be true and La Follette, though never quoting it, knows it and acts on it. Not on Program Taxes were not included in the announced program for congress. But since the announcement of the proNo Hope of Speed gram the budget figures have been out It has developed that worked control and wages and hours Crop will regulation to enact the deficit for this fiscal year legislation, which congress was called In extra be much larger than was anticipatsession, do not promise very rapid ed. It is now certain that the debt action. Very little doubt exists that of the government, on which interest must be paid, will be increased this both will be enacted, but every indication is also that congress will fiscal year by at least $750,000,000. make haste slowly, and in rather This is much smaller than has been the case in the last five years, but exaggerated fashion. The one contingency that might there is no assurance at the moresult in beating the wages and ment that this is the final figure. The only sure thing is that it will hours bill is that the American Federation of Labor and the Committee not be less than that On top of this the Treasury knows for Industrial Organization should both decide openly to knife it. Some now that a heavy shrinking of revthink that the A. F. of L. could do it enue will be revealed in the income all alone, but no one here in touch tax returns of March 15, next, both with the situation doubts that both corporation earnings will be smaller, it is forecast, than for 1936, due could do it not so much to diminished business, Nor does any one doubt that they would kill it if they dared! Neither for this is comparatively slight as costs wage boosts, of the organizations likes it even a to increased higher commodity costs, etc. And little bit. That resolution adopted is net earnings on which corporaby the A. F. of L. bristles with op- ittion income taxes are computed. position to the original pian, and Individual incomes from diviwhile it was disavowed by leaders dends, as compared with the rein the discussion that the same obturns of last March, will be way jections lay against the present down in conseTuence. But on top of foim, the opposition is there. will be down this individual incomes Why else, it might be asked, would because there will be nothing like an organization as politically minded as tbe A. F. of L. devote suff- the profits resulting from security sales. icient time to put through a resolu IVNU Servica. (h. Hell S.ndicate. |