Show of Current Events the World Over News Review Assassination of Senator Long Stirs tlie Nation — Great Britain Ready to Take Sanctions Against Italy — Ickes Versus Hopkins By EDWARD C Wwttm r J yf pi"l s' fore Political leaders of til rart os ex pressed tfcelr deep regret for the as of Senator Lcrg 'nation as Ml'i-SOLI- tacitly coucvd to a p intuo tit of a emmii itee of five natona by tie league of Nations council to hacie the ItaoK'hi-opiaand eiiibrog’lo after protest agreed i that Great Britain anl s b a o I d be Trance itnorg the members of that body The other are Span tter stid IViauL Turkey Senor Salvador de Madariaga of Spa n is the claru an and be and h’s sssiniates at once began tne task them Each assigned country Is represented by Its chief delegate Eden of England Madariaga Iaval of France Rusta Arras of Turkey and Josef Ueck of Poland Soon after the aerah!y of the Sir Samuel league opened lta session Hoare British foreign secretary ei fied the gathering by an outspoken lie dewarning to Paly and Prance clared Great Retain recognized Italy' need for expansion and raw materials hut would not admt these could not Roun llrg the he obtained peioeah’y tribune he raid : "Britain stands for seady collective to all acts of unprovoked resistance egression” He paueV struck the trlbure again and repeated quietly: "Steady collective restine to all acts of unprovoked aggression" Sir Samuel more than Intimated that Britain was Great prepared to take unctions against Its'y In case of aggression provided all the other of the league shared the wd If not then England was prepared t Isolate herself from the continent Ibis seemed to put It c? to Premier Laval of France to choce between the friendship of Britain and that of was trying Italy LaTal meanwhile to persuade Mussolini to accept another plan he had devised and pos'poce-Ms speech to the assembly Representatives of the Netherlands and Sweden were the first to support Iloare's position their announcing countries would fulfill all obligations tncladlrf collective penalties If any became a victim of member le two apsschee ta Romo Worsen W PICKARD Ntwfpiptf States HUEY P LONG United and political dictator of Loula dead isiana the victim of an asAs he passed through sassin’ bullet a corridor of the i state houae In patoo Rouge where the legQ islature was pacing lawa to solidify I rj mre oxer the his control state he was shot once through the body by Pr Carl ) Weiss Jr of Raton Rouge one toe of pohtUal opponents The itelx shot was Irainr to death by the senator' eer present bodyguards The surgeons snd physi ims worked to sate Png hut his onceaslngly waned aid shortly steadily Strength after 4 o'clock Tuesiliv m urnng about thirty hours sfter tie shooting he passed away Long’s body lay In Mlate In he tonda of the Capitol h in the 'bier many thousand ies were The Impressive funeral held on the front terraie 'lit the dead senator was Interred In a iinlen garden of the Capitol grounds Rev Gerthe voting minister ald L K Smith in Stireve-r- t who deserted a rich pati-was the only to follow levrig The only muat the funeral speaker sic was the song "livery Man a King" played In minor key and dirge time band by the Fta'e I’uiver-it- y the uitu who k lied Long Though was known ns one of hi (Htlitical foes na’lon was the real story of the In shrouded lari serre'-trof the late senator t! at Lot g was murdered as declared that a num a result yt a her of his enemies formed a "Jury of death” nnl Cut Poetor We:- - was elect eJ by lot to fire the fatal with the those who are familiar conditions in Lotfstana this story does not sound especially fannstic a “empire” ill lieconve of What ts a question that agitates all tis followers and all the (ovpie of the state It seuned For the present as well likely the members of the Long machine will sink their personal anbitlons ami try to ho'd the erg miration Iftact It wl! be d 'hcu't for them to dec! le on a siov—r to the "KrctSh" as their leader Gov O K Alien Is considered too mild an! peace loving Seymour Weis— ro relative of the as — treasurer of the Lorg organ sasin lza'b-Is the strongest man io the lot but he always has back from Allen a A public position to’d'rg Eier ier speaker of the house may be the can ftrI'y selecte-though Gov James A Noe is to the Lieut nl Uoioa —— — Indication that be would not be diverted from his purpose to conquer Ethiopia Though In one he said "the Italian people want peace provided It la accompanied by Justice" in the otb er he declared "we shall march straight on" The Ethiopian govern ment announced that "telegrams from the northern frontier show that tlie Italians are niak'ng Important troop on movements and the Ethiopian Eritrean frontier Indicat'ng an earl) offensive against Ethiop'a" Accepting tlie advice of bis ‘'brain trust" which Includes Everett A Co! son of the United Sta'es Emperor h s Haile Selns'Ie Instructed repre sentatlves in Geneva to reject ail solutions thus far offered by the powe-- s with for settling the quarrel Italy over These are a tripuru'e mandate Ethiopia as suggested hj France with the league of Nations guaranteeing nnd territorial Ethiopia's Indejw'tidence for an France's projwvsal Integrity Italian protectorate similar to that of the Iiritish in Iraq and an International police force alegar to the one that tccupied the Saar pave works administrator prruc ICKES and Work Progress AdminisHopkins got Into sikh a qunr over the spend ng of the $1 (kCinsi furd " 0 that the President had to cal) them to II vie Park the m with together neutral If third and memlicr of the works trator rel ft relief triumvirate — Frank G Waller the of the na !rector tioiu! eno rgeney cotin cil and administrator of tion" regarded the lecer as Mr s opening of his gn fur re election and detrled It according to their party affiliFrank Knox of the Chicago ations a potential candi late for Dady I’resldentlal nomina the Repuhliian tion eai’ed It "Just another promise" the many campaign and set forth Mr which Roosevelt has promises failed to keep Senator Rink of Ala bama said the statement was "a wonderfully clear explanation of his program Its orginal alms and its exIt should be a call to those ecution In engaged in business to further national progress" Howard had written the President l’o’Jtii iins men had become that many convinced that there could be no real recovery “until the fears of business have been allayed through the granting of a breathing spell to Industry and a rece-- s from further exper mentathe until tion country can recover Its Condition of Tree Shown by Apperance of Leavei ADVENTURERS’ CLUB “ The Open Crate” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter salutations Miss Evelyn for the story Terry greeting and your night of terror Gosh If folks don't stop telling me spooky stories about graveyards I’ll be afraid of even being buried in one Let's tell this one as fast as we can before my hands start shaking "And now Miss Perry where wcie you on tlie night of February Question AND tuns?" “I was In a graveyard" Answer What were you doing In a graveyard at night "A graveyard! Question: was near uiy home and by cutting through It Answer: "Tie graveyard a dance n I had been attending could save a mile on my walk from town to stay so I left the dance town and had grayed later than I had erniis-i"alone and in mv hurry to get borne entered tlie graveyard” "Did you continue through the graveyard'" Question: Answer: "No” Question: “What did you see there that caused you to change your mind?" ” Answer: “I saw a saw a We haven't any proof that Miss Perry I object Walt a minute club Jury and let ghost so let's just review the evidence for the Adventurers' theta Judge Evelyn Entered a Graveyard With Open Mind Perry entered the have here before me shows that Mi The evidence She was thinking of tlie good time she had graveyard Id a carefree maimer 2i Much may be seen of the condt tion of trees by watching them froa drive along your car window a you Rartlett ay E I’orter Felt of the Tree Research laboratories Reddish terminal leaves on many vl and oake tell of abundant rains orous growth the latter reflected 0 Hie rich green of the hillside especially oak th other foliage fine gray spotting and tiny whit or rasts are signs of th eggshells work of the red mlt midsummer ur red spider a rather common pest Rronzed elm leaves on trees growtell of an ing in bushy thickets When trees abundance of lace bugs: are 'distant from shrubs they will not lace because bugs need fleeted a be low growing shrubs to complete their Another species of lace life cycles folihug causes gray spotting on the age of our native sycamore or plane The sycamore lace bug wintrees ters under the hark of the tree When blot hy brown spots are these are the eon on hirTh leaves leaf miter a work of the birth la Insect first Eurojiean this country In li23 and now gendistributed and re pmsible erally over conditions for unsightly foliage much of southern Nexv Knrtarid and the south to adjacent Experts Select QUAKER OATS FOR DIONNE ‘QUINTS’ " reIn a long letter the plied that the legislative program of had reached subhis a and “the breathstantial compVtlorv ing spell of which you speak is here- -r decide !!y so" cen who made of the deaths of war veterans in the Florida hurricane reported they found no evica'it g culpable negligence dence on the part of any persons They were S'atcs Attorney G A Worley of M'ami Williams Aubrey representing Federal Relief A 'ttlnistrator Hopkins and CoL Gtsrge E IJarts of the veterans’ bureau representing President Rooexeit fin llrg as was denounced This “wUitewa-bbv James F Van ZanJL cutnnian Dr in chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars John J Pkiiiman commander of the Miami chapter of the and other repr same erg inizit Ion set ti fives of ve’eran' societ rs Van Zandt's statement ca'iej on President to ignore the official report Rn'seve't and tale action against “oSiela’s guilty of negligence" THREE Red lit railed to the works re- Harry Hopkins lief par ey Included Daniel Hell director of the budget Charles West unof Interior dersecretary Corrington Gll assistant of Hopkins Fred Iron sides of administrative assistant atzd Wa’ktr Horatio Hackett CL pfdicgi of American business and REACTION men to Preaident Roosevelt’s latest public statement that hta substanbasic program has reached tial completion and Industry will hava a breathing spell ran tbe gamut beuntween mild hope and downright Those who permitted belief themselves to be quoted were generally cautious In tbelr expresextremely sions but there was usually a vein of In their remarks Wall skepticism Street brokers were gladdened by a spurt of trading at higher prices but hankers were more than doubtful anl economists Insisted that a balance! buJget which wasn't mentioned In tbe Rrestdent's letter to Roy Howard puba lisher i prime requisite Silas Strawn former president of of the the Chamber of Commerce “Business men I'ulted Slates said: generally will say that the Improvement la some lines of business bas been In s'lte of rather than because of the activities of the administra- s Others Important chief hotmirg In the l’WA Mr Roosevet was detenu red to Lave peace and to’J those resent the prime necessity at tills time Is to make Jobs qiiKkiy aiwavs keeping In uund tlie Idea of turning workers back to private Industry as bus nes warrants Th’s linked ke a victory fur Hopkins who favors quLk Jobs over Ickes champion of permanent public works The President has declared that be hopes persons can be removed from the relief rolls and pat to work by the first of November of Sre'sl LEGAL attack act has on the Guffey soft been opened by 16 coal Cvn(jn:eS o(eratirg in Harlan In Federal court at county Kentucky Ijoulsville Ttey brought suit for la Junction against Its enforcement charg It violate the federal Constilug that tution In these ways It violated the fifth amendment which forti is takirg property without due process of law 2 It violitej the tenth anienlmect which reserves to the stall's or to the the fed jwi pie rights cot or fort! idea the eral government states 3 It sttei ts to delegve legislative ps'wer A The section levvlrg a lfi per cent tax on 'l coal production with a per out re'ui il to priuluc-rto the provilod by the a t Is "an urcors’itutloral attempt on e the art of corgress under the of taxation to purlh those producers of bit: coal who are cow to surrender their constitutional rights" over Congress has no Jurisdiction and no power to legislate upon certain matters covered by the act or the code The cc'tnpanies declared they would refuse to submit to the act and the code it suthoriies Former Federal Judge Charles L Dawson filed the action ss counsel for the plaintiffs Judge Dawson recently left tbe bench to re enter private law practice sfter declarirg unconstitutional the NRA and ether New Deal measures dle TjMlEKSITY of Mlch'gan ts rej for Itg over a g'ft of of Its school en'argenent The rnonby Is d mated by the Horace IL srJ Mary A Rackham fund based on the b't’k of the esta'e oe the late Horace H Kackham Detroi philanthropist One mLHon dollars will be spvent to purchase a square block of land the present campus and for a rew building The reualnder will be en ployed as an endowment The to come will be used to promote research By' the terms of the agreement the school will be known as the Horace H Hackhsm Schvol of Graduate $'iviv StndlesL “The purpose of the gift ts twofold” Pr Mark - Knappi director of the fund said “First to create a me mortal and secondly to p’see the university on a firmer foundation as oie of the greater nnlversities la this country It will provide metna for origna! research funda for which have been lacking” of the Greek nearer and presumably Former King George will be the man to occupy the throne Frern'er Tsa'daris bas put himeif on record and Presias favoring the restoraton dent 7a!ns has Indicated he wll be to resign to make room for a wiiitng king Tsaldar's said In hia statement: “1 attribute the nervou tendon at present exiting In pub’ic ranks anl the army to get eral anxiety concernI ing the question of a constitution consider democrat c royalty a the natural regime for Greece and ask the In the to rote for it Impending people Restoration She Out Jumped Like a Frightened Ghost taJ at the dance and not a thought of the si pernatural passed through roiuit tic n it'd n that tie It leaves out the This s'ite of mini Is lmporant of an aGUe Imagination young lady naa! t have hi en “seeing things” A light snow lay on the The night was a typical February one d see to ffcult made clouds the way ground and dark wirtry She had taken thi M ss Perry was not bothered fcy that short cut through the gravestones many times before and was completely familiar wth it traversed on tis night She Lu according to her own of tie graveyard ar i was approaching tie Luther’ gate when she saw something that cuts'! her to stand transfixed with horror! Bt A wl'te fgc-- Tbe figure AReal Ghost Clanks Real Chains moved slowly toward her along tlie path to the gate! Miss Perry lays was approaching her and at she stared terror stricken unable to scream because of a tremulous lump irt her throat she heard distinctly the slight metallic rustling of chains! M :ss i’trry ws new de herself with horror She saw that she could to the svcier in her path not reach the gu‘e without passLg return the way si e hut come— even if It was a She dec ded therefore t and run so she kept facing Rut ’e was ufra'd to turn suddenly mile farthir the Thrg and slowly away boys and girls of the jrry you'd better take a deep breath At this Yoj may think this is written flippartiy but when you hear what ' happened neat yea’ll understand how terribly serious it really was she tripped and fell right As Miss Perry wa’ked blindly backward Into an open gravel Well cow take another one and make I told you to take a deep breath! is yet to come It a good ore teeause ti e You may even doubt that a yot rg person could go through such an aid keep her rtascu but one did and it’s true All right have you got your breath? Then Miss Perry was rot alone In that CFen As she fell a cold hand closed on her wrist! t the scream the The deal in Zowiei graveyard are still tit hire a couid have seen her they vvuuid luxe been even young lviy !e: out at! R more a maced 1x e that hand and Jutxia'd like a fruitctied ghost Srhe wrvrhed right out of t: e gravel ort ltea the of food world science to guide them the experts ia charge of the precious Quintuplets select Quaker Oats for their cereal even before their first birthday! B Its Vitamin for keeping fit does children such a world of good k IN VITAMIN k la B FOR yy KEEPING FIT lc worth of Quaker Oats hj 3 cakes coimIi of Fresh Yeast 0(0 o Quaker and Don't mokes Mother's Oats ar tha same Maybe a Turnover judge tbo ciaars by those lie gives a man away t!y till ?EwereWENT war on foot and the parade the shout lis) of the sane way" gririled veterars who attended the anof the Grand Army nua! of the llepi Mlc In Grand Rapids: Mich In So these sturdy old men marched (he t'g pifi le m Lite the rest number tg some hVi role In autemublles ere all that remained of the Here hundreds of thousands who answered Use call to the colors In Clril war days save for s few who were kept at home by extreme age and Illness Some of tha states had no representatives In the line but their flags were carried neverFrom other states there were theless but one or two It was a pathetic bat Inspiring processlop watched by thousands whose eyes were dimmed by tear and escorted by Sons of Veterans American legionnaires snd Vejerana of the Spani-- b ar 91 of Slater Iowa Oicy Nelson was elected to Albert F Stacey of Fib ridge N Y In a session of the organization tha Eext pro(Hsed reunion at Gettysburg year with the Confederate veterans was discussed and Commander Stacey made it plain that the affair would not be held under the official auspice of the Grand Army The plan originated In Pennsylvania to EDWARD U DO HE XT one of tba wealthiest s oil of America' died in Los Angeiea at the aga of years after a long niHis oil Interests were mainly ta nes California and Mexico Ia 1K4 and his o!d friend Albert B Fall secretary of the Interior nttfier Ilard-Irwere Involve! In the lnvest!a:1o of tbe government lesin of the ITk UiR nival oil reserve In California to Dobeny for expioitatioo tried od twice Doheny was acquitted oa charges of conspiracy ti defraud tbe goeerrment and of git'nt a brbe of to Fall lat ter however was found guilty of Ing a bribe and went to prison Te tk Unbelievable Story Has Plausible Endng e went at brvik neik t ' the'gue fi ar ii v ar Th“ " d t urt vp— she !’ ' evened cniy a speed a: t a: d m sd !y ut !c o c itto cd and bid her travt ib 'hr vwre G' urd-t e bead Net until tbe next afternoon d d the shaken girl dare tell her And what weird story do you suppose her father dd? Why the unfeeling man just roared xwith laughter! You tee Evelyn Perry's father had heard another story that day which dovetailed perfectly with his daughter's Here they are Now that my heart Is a Dttie quiet I'll tell you the facts in order: First: Tie town drurkaral's white goat ran away after breaking h's chain Hat Evelyn saw ) Ht was this gnat— out a Said drunkard ftble follow irg his goat irto the graveyard fell Second: into an grave and was n-- stfl to cliaib out He was found there the next morning Third: Evelyn fell into tLe same grave aDd aforesaid T D — lke a drown— grabbed her wrist! ing man grasping a straw Weil these are tbe facts in th cast so you see It's ail true after ail know a certain Evelyn doesn't say whether her fcs'r turned white or net but tartly Adventurer wboSvou'J have gone green and stayed right ia that grave! How about you? Srv‘c lir ev Remarkable Swiss Clock an Ancient Attraction The CVkV Tuwer a wrel? known stands s capita! landmark in the la what Is tbe center of the c'ty and dates bn k to tbe Fteen'bv century in the was rarsTuctel The ciockwivk Sixteenth century ad pones a attraction Dr visitors anl Frota eariy raorn!ng until tives alike late at debt whenever the time approaches for the hour to strike groups themselves beVr of people station this ancient tower eagerly ant!c'ps!:rg the moment when the Intricate of the clock is set Into play This tea sterj iece of medieval In the following manner: a troop as the hour strik of little bears goes round la a circle and a cock crows three tlnnes before A a tting and once after the chiming man bolding a staff la one band ted A often hour g’ass in the other counts tht strikes by opening Ms mouth and smiting wth- his s"ek at every stroke of the cio k Ano'her wooden manni-krings two ttie be’ is when the hour is about to strike In the belfry at tbe top of tbe tower are the bells and bes'de them stands a figure of the Manufactured by baking powder Specialists who make nothing but baking powder — under supervision of expert chemists ALWAYS Sam t price today os 45 years ago 25 eaaca Car 2$0 FULL PACK NO SLACK FILLING an So B(war stone isn't Breaking up to be what It's racked of Zahrirgen (the founder of the in armor who announces the hours on the beiia with a hammer duke c’ty) Aarjnoao The delicate weed anenv-ris one of America’s rarest and prettest wiij flowers Tbe quilt block of this name Is one of the oldest krown to quilt historian and one that Ss thoroughly American since it )s only recently that the anemone was cu rivaled in Europe Eariy Virgir’a qu iters seized upon tha flowers ard simplest reprlnce! them most successfully ia their must fatao is quRhs MOSQUITOES FLIES’SPIDERS and OTHER INSECTS att |