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Show PAG2 TUPJ3 BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER, THURSDAY, JUNE 30, 1933 The MARCH OF TIME prepared by the Editors of TIME The were put under a Civil Air Authority composed of five members and an Administrator. The was tol3 to report whether Authority or not (and how) the Government should help create a national system of airports. New Judges. During its first session, the 75th Congress killed Franklin Roosevelt's plan to enlarge the Supreme Court; but in its third session, it did create the 20 new minor Federal judgeships he had requested. Housing. Congress extended in time and broadened in scope Federal mortgage insurance; upped USHA's loan funds to $800,000,000. RFC. Congress reimbursed RFC for moneys advanced for Relief and empowered it to make loans to businesses and municipalities to aid Recovery. Merchant Marine. Congress extended the Maritime Commission's power to fix rates, and to insure ship mortgages up to $200,000,000. It created a Maritime Labor Board with medi ation powers. .c,rjtir.ued From Page One) SUccesser to the Shenandoah, ir'! -"d Macon, ell of which came i 1925, 1933, 1935 re- 1116 'tJm-yHouse said . ., L-- fe flt "N" - voted $500,000 to start work week got it through in the Bill. gl Deficiency fIood Control." Just when TV A was xjitted that power production !rr cent of its reason for building t4ral dams, the Administration last leek brought up its flood control bill senate with a provision the Government to take title all lands involved in any and p any reservoirs or other aii darns, rj control projects paid for entirely JjTe u. S. (retroactive to 1928). howled jjjta' rights champions SeniDemocratic Utah's Cried tadly will break "This the back or King: the entire private utility industry!" filibuster threatened, but failed, and bill for flood control j $375,000,000 passed with this provision. Jefferson Memorial. Hanging fire for over a year has been a plan to uemorialize Thomas Jefferson by Washington's Tidal Basin. ie late architect John Russell Pope abmitted a design which the Fine yts Commission had not approved. $nator Glass blasted the way for a appropriation to start build- n the Pope design whether the likes it or not. Xaval Officers. To staff the expand jgNavy, Congress authorized a increase of 1,043 'officers by J12, at a payroll increase of $3,000,-3- o WORK UNDONE ng SOO.OOO Com-sissio- per-gtm- el 0. .Natural iere was ;p that Gas. Congress decided a public interest affected transmission and sale gas, so declared such gas to the Federal Power interstate i natural Com-sssio- n. abject In a section of the 1938 Reve-l- e amendments to the banknm- law and a measure framed by viator Francis T. Maloney, Congress Act. .y j itably extended give utility pjsecial WASHINGTON In an election year, no Congress continues bucking a President who wants to spend big money. In May, when Senator Claude Pepper of Florida was renominated on a straight ticket, Congress hastily set about giving Franklin Roosevelt what he wanted. Result was that the session closed with an unusually brief score of work undone. Its chief ommissions: Railroads. Because Labor insisted that the railroad industry give up its remand for a 15 per cent wage cut if a bill for railroad relief was allowed to pass Congress, the session closed without anything being done for the railroads. Result: Unless the Interstate Commerce Commission closes its eyes to the facts, and certifies to d the RFC that the roads can repay loans made to them, it is likely that within a few months most U. S. railroads will be bankrupt. Reorganization. Alert representatives sensed that the President's plan for reorganizing the executive branch of the Government was one of his few unpopular proposals, shelved it, went home without attempting to do anything about it. Regional Planning. The creation of seven "little TVA's" throughout the land is the dream of Senator Norris of Nebraska, who sired big TV A. The President put this program on his Must list for the special session last fall, let it be forgotten when the ruckus within TVA broke out. Last bill on the subject submitted was "National Planning Act of 1938," which proposed to curb floods, improve navigation, conserve water, soil forests, etc., did not mention Power. hard-presse- : SEC. Weekly Keusmasaztna the powers of SEC: holding companies tax treatment on gain or j sses resulting from property transfers ordered by SEC; to issue advis- 7 reports on bankruptcies under limed Section 77B (where the failure less than $3,000,000, the court may fM SEC for a report; where more j:an $3,000,000 it must ask) ; to regu-pt- e security sales, j Wheat Acreage. Next year's wheat peage was to have been limited by d pir to 45,000,000 acres. Congress that figure to 55,000,000 despite as year's bumper crop prospects Jem 80,000,000 acres. I Civil Air Authority. All civil aero- wiucs, including airmail services, -; er up--:- : Fronk Chevrolet Co. FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT'S SHEET . - NEW YORK Franklin D. Roosevelt, conducted b Fortune Magazine. Using the same scientific sampling of the electorate' it was able to predict the hy results of the 1933 election with an error cf less than 1 per cent, Fortune piepaied a balance sheet of Franklm Roosevelt's popularity. Its prime facts Popular are: Franklin Roosevelt's personality, liked by S0.3 per cent (a majority in every section of the U. S.. of every class and occupation), disliked by 11.7 per cent; his reaima-men- t policy liked by 63.G per cent, disliked by 13.2 per cent; F. D. R. as President, approved of "in general" by 54.8 per cent, disapproved cf by 33.9 per cent; his international policy, liked by 50 fer cent, disliked by 15 per cent; his legislation, liked by 48.8 per cent, disliked by 21. 8 per cent: his economic objectives, like by 48.1 per cent, disliked by 29.1 per cent; his attitude toward unions, liked by 38.3 per cent, disliked by 30.4 per cent; his attitude toward business, liked by 37.3 per cent, disliked by 34 per cent, his attitude toward TVA, liked by 26.8 per cent, disliked by 23.9 per cents. Unpopular are: His methods, dis liked by 40 per cent, liked by 35.5 per cent; his reorganization bill disliked by 38.3 per cent liked by 22.3 per cent; his advisers and associates, disliked by 32.3 per cent, liked by 28.3 per cent. i ir s ip m m kj m Revealed this week are the full results of an extraordi- -' nary survey on the popularity of wagcs-&-hou- 1 BAL-AX-C 5 l i r r rs o SPLES SEIZED . - NEW YORK Guenther Gustave Rumrich, an American Army deserter of Austrian parentage, was arrested in February in a clumsy at tempt to steal passport blanks, promptly implicated several in attempts to steal Army aircraft designs and military secrets and U. S. Attorney Lamar Hardy went spy hunting forthwith, and by last week they were able to hand a Federal Grand Jury a large chart showing the operations cf the spy ring. Five days later, the Grand Jury returned indictments in the most serious charges of espionage ever made by the U. S. against a friendly power. Said Attorney Hardy: "The direct Gering heads of this ring reside in Govmany and are connected with the ernment of that county. (They) paid these agents in the U. S., all of whom were of German extraction, various sums of money for furnishing information concerning our national defense. . ." Of 18 alleged spies named in the in dictments, 14 are believed to have left the U. S. Two are minor officials of the German War Ministry. In captivi ty awaiting trial are only four: Otto Herman Voss, onetime employee m the experimental section of Seversky Air craft Corp. at Farmingdale, U I. charged with shipping information on U. S. Army planes to Germany; Guenther Rumrich; a U. S. private named Erich Glaser; redheaded Johanna Hofman, a hairdresser on the German liner Europa and messenger of the ring, charged with transmitting to their employers the secret code used by Army planes in communicating with their stations. Unlike Germany, the U.- S. does not punish espionage by death in peacetime. 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