Show This Week by ARTHUR BRISBANB Drink Credit Gold Garbage Made Useful Happiness Does Exist Get Yourself an Enemy Credit ar to and tbe value of money ap-be matters of public confl-ace except when a nation goes t r ly crazy or becomer financially as Germany did and Issues Tty of billions of worthless CiMieands P per News Review of Current Events the World Over Controversy With Secretary Wallace Forces Peek Into a New Job — Education Begun In CCC Camps— Sumner Welles Comes Home Frpm Cuba By EDWARD Cold experts who “know all about ri mey" said President Roosevelt's fln--i ndal policy was ruining United States edit Then Uncle Sam said "I should to' borrow about a billion dollars :d the people promptly offered him tl ree billions at low interest rates Fact outweighs theory FORCE PEEK'S controversy with Secretary of and his assistant iTofessor Tugwell Roosevelt was put up to President and he speedily found the way to settle It Mr Peek was persuad ed to resign as agrl taxes and admlnlstrntor Dew much position more to his liking was He devised for him was called a special assistant to the President and named to hend s temporary coin mlttee that will recfor coommend permanent machinery of government efforts to ordination expand foreign trade The committee also will Include the members of the two departmental adcommittees the visory board on reciprocal treaties terdepartmental trade policy commit tees and such other Individuals as Peek may select In a formal statement the White House said : “The report of the com mlttee and final action Is expected within two weeks” It continued: ‘‘Ocorga Feek agricultural administrator adjustment the organization having completed Is designated to AAA of the period head this committee as a special assistant to the President on American trade policy" The new organization “to correlate the Internal adjustment of production with such effective foreign purchasing power as muy be developed by reciprocal tariffs barter and other will be ternational arrangements" headed by Mr Peek when It Is completed The administration expects to bring most fa about modification of some vored nation treaties so as to make possible special treatment of liquor ports from countries agreeing to take more of this country’s surplus farm This Is not regarded as a products great difficulty to Mr Peek aa It Is a favorite theme with him that trade amounts to “swapping my for your marbles" to him whether Trade on a domestic or International bnsls Is just what the word signifies and he says that In Its transaction “we sometimes have to sleep with people we don’t like and sometimes with those we like” He Is quoted as remarking to an able of the prospective liquor deals Sure we’ll take their liquor If we can pay them with butter and pork and other stuff" Mr Peek has long felt that agriculture has been neglected In Its possibilities for export contending that too much emphasis has during the last 15 years on the exportation of Industrial products on alcoholic Considering d' lnks It would be worth while to rex' w opinions expressed by Thomas J fferson who knew the people of the Crlled States and wrote their Declar He recom-- r f" t on of Independence nded an English brewer to the Leg-- I tore of Virginia urging that he be v treated because good beer would lie imported his t irquer drunkenness o a ltght wines from France and ur d lowest taxation on possible ’i Is wines “no nation saying dt'nken where wine Is cheap and no e sober where the dearness of wine comas ardent the substitutes spirits mon beverage" London In the old days when distilled spirits were new and high alcoholic taxes not Invented you read over gin shops such signs as “Here you get drunk for a penny" Officials Interested in efficient hon- est management of cities might learn of something to their advantage by with William Sydow communlcatfpg of public service In the city of Miami Unlike some “highly civilised" Northern cities that dump sew age and garbage Into the ocean that their citizens may bathe in It Miami has long got rid of garbage by burning At first burning cost money for fuel and labor Then Mr Sydow who Is a competent engineer and a man attached to the burning gar of bage steam boilers for production power MiaWith the steam thus supplied mi pumps Its water supply saves the cost of power for that purpose saves also all that it formerly cost to burn the garbage True there Is “nothing In It” for but there Is something In It politicians for taxpayers and they may be inter- director ested There Is happiness earth praise Heaven somewhere on II E Dugan writes from Glendale California: “I have Just returned from a trip through the Mother Lode mining of California and gold sections of Nevada and Arlxona And does It look like 'old times’ In these places? I’ll say ao The large properties are dally adding miners and many have given each miner a Christmas bonus In ad vance and extra dividends to stockholders The hills rivers old workings are crowded with ‘young America’ all hoping to get rich Many are Not a speck of making good wages In tho depression many mining towns" Colonel Shutta of Miami editor and newspaper owner making a speech on success said this worth remembering: “One very Important of Ingredient success la a good persistent tireless enemy" “One enemy is worth twenty friends In promoting success An enemy to 9 ambitious man Is like the rhlnoceft' bird to the rhinoceros When the enethe rhinoceros bird tells my comes about it When a successful man la making mistakes the enemy Immedand warns the iately calls attention man “Friends praise you pointing out good things that you do You know all about that Your enemies attack you Get for yourpoint out your mistake self a enemy cultivate him as an enemy and when you achieve success thank him" Vienna reports from Grax Austria one of the greatest landslides In his tory An entire mountainside covering Sine square miles is sliding toward the village of Wtenen and authorities believe the village la doomed That la- far from us but It may Interest our descendants millions of years hence ' cultural adjustment CHESTER DAVIS who was slated to succeed Mr Peek as administraof the AAA has been in charge of crop control section Though long a close friend of Mr p he sided with Peek Wallace Secretary Secreand Assistant tary Tugwell In the he However dispute Mr defended Peek assertions that the latter’s presence In the adminihad delnyed & stration of the prosecution crop control program lie pointed to the control plans for wheat cotton hogs tobacco and other commodities placed In operation and said: "The record of the past alx months would have been Impossible without of Mr the continued Peek It Is absolutely untrue that he obstructed progress" With Mr reek moved to a new officials associated with him post were considering plans for extensive revision of the methods of handling In the AAA agreements marketing It has been virtually decided to scrap the two main divisions crop control and processing and marketing tor the against ) leaders from u In Chicago for the annual convention of the American Farm Bureau federation and gave full end their support approval to the farm relief policies of the President A Edward O’Neal president of the federation called the federal farm adjustment act the “Magna Charts of agriculture" saying that “at last have tbe machinery and the power In time within the few hundred milto obtain a fair ahare of the consumlion years that men still have to go on er’s dollar" For forty years be said this earth their planet may become farmer has been getting less and the round and smooth absolutely If that less of this dollar but by use of the ' happened the oceans would cover the earth miles deep everywhere and full powers of the agricultural adhe declared men could take their choice of living justment administration afloat eating sea food or digging can this trend can be turned the other way From Mr Roosevelt came a letter ala big enough to bold (he oceans and full of which was read to the optimism lakes The President who Is a delegates Some scientists believe that the Inmember of the New York state farm habitants of Mars a planet bureau for the expressed older appreciation than the earth have years federation’s and the outlined support already done that They think they eee first effects of federal money “getting Martian canals as straight lines in the Hnto the hands of people who need It" telescope yet he cautioned fanners and others ' (9IU tv Cn Fhhim SrtAoi hi) to “guard agnlnst letting a rise in farm slides and mountain tops down the slipping effect of frost and erosion helping the work A million streams wasa soil into the ocean gradually filling those depths Volcanic and land upheaveruptions als do little to counteract this eternal “leveling power" Mountain are constantly crumbling’ Agricultural PICKARD W Income tempt ui to forget the realities of supply and demand" OST of his duties having been transferred to Acting Secretary of State Morgentbau Thomas Uewes resigned his position aa assistant secretary and followed Dean Acheeon and Professor Sprague out of the administration All three of those men had been selected by Secretary Woodin who Is never expected to resume his duties and Mr Hewes la a dose ally of Attorney General Cummings II was understood In Washington executive that Walter J Cummings treasury assistant would retire very soon to become head of the Continental Illinois bank and Trust company of Chicago the board Mr Weir aald: any arrange"We must consider and th ments with you terminated In accordance election will proceed with the rulea adopted by the employees’ organization" Informed later that Chairman Wagthe board "would ner had announced enforce Its agreement to eupervlse the election at the Welrton and W Va and Steubenville Ohio Weir reiterated “my letter plants stands" A honored by hundreds CHEEKED and Cubans ' but snubbed the Grau government by Sumner Welles departed from Havana and by plane to Miami on his way to Washington where he resumes his former post as head of the Latin American affairs bureau In the Department of State Jefferson Caffery who succeeds him In Havana will be for the present the personal representative of President Roosevelt rather Jefferson Caffery ambassador Whether he will be able to do more than Mr Welles In the way of restoring peace and prosperity In Cuba la a question Col Carlos Mendleta leading oppositionist said that the strife with no end In sight Is keeping the Island sunk In economic bankruptcy and threatened by strikes He said the nation resents control by a government backed by army 'dictatorship and the of 11 student directorate composed Communistic youths with decidedly leanings Augusto Saladrlgas a director of the ABC opposition declared that 05 per cent of the natives are opposed to President Grau’s revolutionary socialistic regime Saladrlgaa expressed the opinion that the only solution Is either a native revolution or United A States Intervention revolution seems Impossible as long as the array remains loyal to Grau but failure to meet a pny day might prove the start of a revolt At the conference In Montevideo Angel Giraudy Cuban minister of labor attacked the Cuban polFailure to icy of the United States recognize the Grau regime he asserted was actually Intervention since It was a upholding minority group ngalnst the wishes of the people and revolution propagating than Robert feciiner director of emergency conservation work announced that a great program for education of the 300000 men in the civilian conservation corps had been approved by the President and was being put Into effect Immediately advisers to the number of are being placed in the forest work camps and an Individual program of Instruction for each camp Is To a considerable being developed extent the advisers are drawn from lists of unemployed teachers that have been submitted to Dr George F Zook federal commissioner of education by state directors of education “It Is the hope of the President" Mr Feehner said “that the educational program hy emphasizing forestry agriculture and like subjects will assist the men In readjusting themselves to a new mode of living— to country life Instead of city life — and to assist them In Improving themselves educationally and vocationally “A great number of the young men In these camps arrived at working age at a time when there were no Jobs Many of them had meager educational advantages We propose to give these men a chance at an education and to furnish them vocational guidance which will aid them to earn a living" The opportunity for education will be offered to all members of the corps but participation in tbe courses of Instruction will not be mandatory The available working hours on forestry projects — 40 hours per week will not be disturbed The plan la to ntlllze hours other than normal working periods and periods of Inclement weather for purposes of Instruction cannot wither James A Reed for so many years enlivened sessions of the senate with his The Missouri dynamic personality statesman who la seventy-twyears old assembled 20 guests for a game dinner In Kangaa City and surprised them by marrying there and then Mr Nell Q Donnelly wealthy garment manufacturer who has long hern hit political supporter- and friend Two years ago Mrs Donnelly was kidnaped and held for ransom and Mr Reed helped to run down the kidnapers and prosecute them Later Mrs Donnelly her husband divorced Mr Reed’s Brat wife died In October 1031 AGE the happy man who WEIR of Pittsburgh of the Welrton Steel company has defied the federal labor board and flatly refused to abide by to guide an the rules It announced election of employee’ representative In a letter for collective bargaining to Senator R D Wagner chairman of ERNEST T C BULLITT WILLIAM Russia waa received In Moscow In a tnanner entirely unpreef cedented since the establishment the Soviet regime on arOther envoy rival at the capital have been accorded little or no attention until they have precredensented their but Mr Bullitt tials was greeted with exenthusiatraordinary sm by officials and When populuce alike crossed he the Rusat sian frontier he was car stalled In a sumptuous private and In provided by the government On his to Moscow this he traveled station he arrival at Alexandrovsky was met by cheering crowds and was A formally presented to Alexander who Is coming to WashTroyanovsky and to ington as Russian ambassador Alexis Neuman vice director of the Soviet press department He was Installed In the National hotel which thus became a temporary and atop the buildAmerican embassy was Banner ing the raised flying thus for the first time In Soviet Russia Mr Bullitt himself and his daughter occupy an elaborate apartment which last summer was tenanted by Col end Mrs Charles A Lindbergh The suite recently was refurnished with valuable furniture and priceless antique jects of art MOW a wife may testify In a behalf of her husband In cases for the old this has been relegal rule forbidding versed by the Supreme Court of the United States The case which came on appeal from the United State Circuit Court of Appeals was that of the United States versus John S Funk of N C Rockingham court in criminal rOWN In Montevideo the conference was talking about ways of ending the Chaco war withbetween Bolivia and Paraguay Meanwhile out getting anywhere the forces of those countries were exceedingly busy In the jungle with the result that the Paraguayans captured more than 13000 Bolivian troops with most of their officers In one engagement more than 000 Bolivians were to the official ankilled according nouncement There was great rejoicwhere the Paraguaying In Asuncion decorated ans marched through streets and corresponding despair In La Paz the Bolivian capital A few days later the Paraguayans captured Fort Saavedra the most portant Bolivian stronghold In thi Chaco and it was generally believed that these victories meant the final defeat of Bolivia In the war HAS FOUND JOY IN LIFE’S WORK w BEVERLY Is HILLS— Well all I kn0 and Just what I read In the papers see messing around old what I You know Loa Angeles la geta ting to be quite center In that ev- comee erybody here or hy here coming or And somewhere you see quite a lot of folks that dldent out come used to here Lots of times I see em at our I where studio work They all try to see the studios but dont let this put wasent me any Ideas Into your head It It was that got em Into the studios friend or pull I guess some particular In they had with some one prominent the company Anyhow quite a few are out there at various times and have actors say lunch as we have (as the that work around at all the different studios) We do have a great restaurant Well for lunch I the guests drop In the-mean many of em I mean many one had never met till the party a day other day Mr McCormick that owns and runs the great Chicago Tribune He Is an awful nice fellcw and of course awful well Informed He said I got him In trouble one time for quoting him In my little dally “Blab” when he was talking about war In Europe "That when war was started women would help start It as usual” Well he hopped him says they Now I dont want to do anything to down condemnation “She" more bring on him but out here a couple of months when California put on their ago lynching women were the rooting section and the original encouragement of the thing come from tbe “She” sex So I guess Mr McCormick was about right at that Many a man has gota licking because his wife has said “Go on get him ’ohn you aint a going to let him say that are you!” She will not only egg the thing on but by golly she will go In and Join Women are not the weak frail little flowers that they are advertised They love to say that women dont want war and that they have to bear the brunt of It which of course they really do but If you ever noticed all their speeches and denunciations of war Is after Its over they never do It In the making of one And thats a fine spirit more power to em They got more nerve than men They enter a thing with more spirit and enthusiasm You let a woman get and do up at a recruiting meeting nounce the whole thing and defy the Niv(r Ounce of Prevention Unless much time and effort to the children who have not been Infected W’ith tuberculosis they ""will afford a constant stream irrigatTo the field of tuberculosis ing tuberculosis control blight It Is tbe ounce of prevention that protects the child Dr J A Myers suggests Id llygela Magazine as a solution to an Important part of of this the tuberculosis problem country Head w ill lay you a bet boy s to Join up and that tbe first fifty hands that tore her asunder would belong to the fair sex No sir the whole thing about the women Is they Just love to be COILD§ mis- understood They always want you to about the wrong Impression whats in their minds and not the right one There hat never been anything invented yet Including war that a man woman would enter Into t'at too But here is the thing you must never let em know but what you think they are Just doing everything In their power to prevent war when as a matter of fact six or eight women could prevent any war The wives of the Prime Ministers Diplomats and Presidents would only have to say “If you allow war to come t this country I wm leave you so help me But history records no record of one having been left for that reason though left for everything else But when he comes home some day and says “Honey I guess you saw the extras on had to declare war" She the street says ‘‘I know It darling and we will lick the very pants off that other old mean Nation” And when the rectult-lnhave It be PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT let the Interdepartmental committee on communications headed by Secretary of Commerce Roper had completed Its study of the matter and laid Its report before him This will be report submitted to congress and may result In legislation for rigid government regulation of telegraph telephone starts she will make the first and radio companies and she will work her head off of speech the reorganization from then to the finish at anything no communlea-ttie wloe then tft A matter how tiring or dangerous o n e Industry and when Its over the will say “We womsome huge mergers en mrfst prevent war” But thats the The committee favors a trend toward and the should be thats way we way It monopoly subjected to strict federal want It supervision Outright government In letters or Now any any argument ownership Is an alternative The consensus of studies within and regard to thenegatlve In this debate without the government has been that please send to Mr McCorrr’ck owner and proprietor of are unsatisfactory present conditions the Chicago Trlb both from the standpoint of national defense and regulation of such ma- une He has plenty an tters as rates and that present restric- of secretaries tions give foreign governments an un- swer nc mall Even If Us good letter due advantage over th American dont answer It I sho dont And to get into CPANISH anarchist etarted a bloody want with revolt against the republic In the any argument for women northeastern part of the country and any like to argue they It soon epread to Madrid and further south There were sanguinary con- Just likr theyytlke between the rebels and th to go tOWar So flict leavexne out and troop end police and bombings In th McCortfilck again Auother were frequent capital and elsewhere Score" were "killed in ‘fl?htTnt °°d hlding woud do hm 5°°d' He and hundred of agitator were placed deserves It for saying women help atari saying women Thats slander After several days of wars under arrest Ineffectual effort to overcome th help to start em Boy women start em civil guards the anarchist resorted without any help Remember the ad Tribune Building’’ Chicago send to their strongest weapon and propostage If you wish an answer No claimed a revolutionary given to anonyThe order was Issued through serious consideration strike mous Yours W11L letters of Labor the National Confederation P S am certainly glad I had nothwhich la controlled by the syndicalists For four days the fighting contining to do with this argument and am out of It Good luck Mr McCormick ued and then the government announced that both the revolt and th Im UrAmfkt Symdumts t) general strike had failed ft till VTsstsrs Dalse twt from his cheap flat for of rent a young invenstood guard over his tools for 3fl hours without food or sleep N0t until a neighbor gave safe storage to his preelcus Implements would he give thought to shelter or nourishment "They are my Jewels" he said “1 cannot work without them” That man may he homeless he may be hungry bqt) he is not one of children On the contrary hp Is one of fortune’s favored So are any other men and women who know that their tools are their For they have within themJewels selves the seeds of that usually exotic plant happiness A questionnaire distributed to people who havtf’ tried most of (he alto the source of leged approaches happiness would doubtless reveal the conclusion that about the most rella- In love of one’s for It lies ble hope work Yet how many people know real love of their work? How many are fortunate enough to have work that they do because they want to and not because they have to? How many are led in their youth— which is the Important time— to choose or find work that will he their Interest How many Instead of their job? workers regard their tools ns “my lewels” rather than ns their signs of slavery? Your work may be of tbe kind that to visible sucis quickly amenable cess It may he rich In financial reThen it may or may not bring ward you more or less content and happiOn the other hand you may ness have chosen a medium of expression that is slow to show results that Is meager In worldly return You may without reward know only labor may experience poverty ridicule And yet you may be among fortune’s fa Yon vored the elite of the earth may know real content ami happl ness That Is If you are a man or woman who can sny from your heart about your tools or the medium of your labors "They are mv jewels” C 1931 Bril Syndicate — WM’ Service Evicted tor Put Mrntholatum In the nostril to relieve congestion and clear the breolking passage ENTHOGATJJM If Ton Hay BANG! OR WORK IIORSKH OLTS brok nr unhruks M L Ift3 (nr wlowrlt FKkU IHANULkU Chariton Iowa After Five Years’ Suffering and Embarrassment Cuticura Healed “Eczema spread all over my ears and finally Into my hair It was In dry gcales that would reappear as fast armoveand my hair fell out My ears were very red and I lost much I sleep from constant irritation could hardly keep from scratching “After five years of suffering an embarrassment I read about and set Soap and Ointment for a free sample After a few aj plications I began to feel grentl relieved so 1 bought more andafler using three cakes of Soapfind two boxes of Ointment Lextfas healed’ (Signed) Mrs Berttfa II Whitaker Rt 1 NevadaIowa Feb 10 1933 Ointment 25c and 5Qo Soap 25c Talnn 25c Proprietors: Potter Jrhg 4 Chemical Oorp Malden alasg— Adv Even Cosmetic can’t do this! loafter !F?FF SAMPLE WMtritlu VIS CO BrwUya bn (Mb ' Hoar cmsnwsnd powOstsajii Tb huU oomplxlon blemiaho on of don’t Flmh lh RuuOpntion can To sod rtC bowala with thst oltD vouroelf of th vast od rasolt tn blotchy nior pora of thlf amplod completion will “InloraalbMCitytmstisaiie’ IS rlBtonlrht(Pt SAonldhyoo mw dene (t st wk pa m tan mn GARHIFEDIT lV 51—: |