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Show 4 PAGE TWO News Review of Current Events the World Over 1 mm ' Davis Warns Japan Against Scrapping Naval Treaty Peaceful Agreement for Saar Plebiscite-;- , Moley and Richberg to Industrialists. By EDWARD W. PICKARD UaJoa. bl a DAVIS, ana-pldo- ' a ats-on- government of Jugoslavia THE 0 decided to expel all the Hungarians now living In that country. The process will be grad27.-00- ual but relentless. Already more than 2,000 have been deported and more are being sent away daily. Hungary railed the action of Jugoslavia to the attention of the League of Nations, solution of the Saar problem seemed assured when the council of the League of Nations unanimously and gladly adopted the retnrt of the Saar committee embodying the Franco-Germaagreement for payment for the mines In case the region votes to return to the relch. Leading up to this settlement were two announcements of utmost importance. First, Foreign Mlnlsier Pierre of France promised that French troops would make no attempt to enter the Saar territory before or during the vote on ary IS. "1 desire to announce." aald he, that France will not participate In any International force which It may he found necessary to send Into the Saar. We cannot participate In such a force because Germany cannot participate" .Then CapL Anthony Eden, British lord privy seal, told the council that Great Britain' would contribute troops to the proposed International force, provided Chancellor Hitler Germany were willing that such an army should he sent Into the ter rltory. When Rertln waa Informed of thla foreign office spokesman announced that nitlers government would raise no objections to the plan. PEACEFUL n j r I who during tha ; war waa Lloyd George! chief liaison officer with the presa of the world, la dead in London. Ha rained fame and greet wealth as a newspaper publisher. As a reward for hla war work Riddell wsa made a peer In 1918. Hla voice over National Topics Interpreted tbe telephone carried the flrat new hy William aU I to. England of the signing ef the BEVERLY HILLS.-W- ell In tha Versailles treaty. For aome time know U Just what little I read after the war be continued to be a papers. These poor Colleges are hav-lu- g Washington. Administration to a time. You friend and confidant ( of Lloyd in congres. are prepared Later there were political know we got to Georgs. pose any addition to the UX burden look at thla Coldifferences, hat while tha eloae liaiFight never men "Racket" son ceased the two axes 0f the country lege ctlon Riddell t h e s e Added I ceased to be friends from an-- 1 leaves no heir and the title exsession. Although the young folks nel( Co pires with him. gle at that. wh!te House has made no public Lord nmDEii All thla waa In effect a victory for the policies of CoL Godfrey CL Knox, the league commissi oner of the Saar, for ha haa long advocated J j nt - Rich-berg- g d tute for our present system." Moley expressed much optimism regarding business. He told the Industrialist In effect, that they need have no fear of any radical change In the present economic and soda! order, that Industry was needed to stimulate trade, bring about reoov ery, and that In the last analysis It would he the business men who would distribute the wealth of the nation. Mr. Richberg admitted the NRA had not achieved all Its alms In Its effort to bring about Industrial but Insisted that Its fundamental principles must be pre served In permanent legislation for codes of fair eoniMtltlon. He warned the manufacturers that the permanent law must be written In with labor and consumers, ss well as private business and government, so that there shonld he neither work-cosumer regimentation by business nor business regimentation by gov eminent. He hinted that If employers con sented to legal restriction In return for Increased power under the codes organized labor would be called upon to do likewise In submitting to legislative control Organized labor was soundly berated hy C. "L. Bardo, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. He said in contribution to national recovery had been the most widespread Inauguration of strikes, coercion. Intimidation, and violence that the United States has ever seen, as evidenced by strikes In Minneapolis. Cleveland, textile Industries. and the general strike at San Francisco." Bardo pledged the united opposition of the National Association of Manufacturers to the efforts of the American Federation of labor to oh tain throngh congress legislation Imposing a StVhonr week on Indaatry. or any other effort to "fix a rigid and arbitrary work week for all Industry." Industrys platform for recovery, which was proposed at a meeting of the national Industrial council urging return to the gold standard, a balanced budget, and other orthodox economic measure' was submitted by , W. B. Bell, president of tbe American Cyanamld company, and was discussed at dosed session n " KIROV, one of the most members of the Itns polliicul bu rcan, was assassinated In and ss he was a close assn elate of Stalin his death was the occasion of public mourning. Thf gov- Nlco and that he "was sent by the lleff enemies of the But working class. Ssrgal Kirov It apivenrs there Is something more to the eveni than s mere murder A dispatch from War saw said ten Red army officers hnd been executed ss the result of s plot lo assassinate all Soviet leaders at the same time The Moscow government denied this story, but at the sntne time It was putting under arrest scores ot White Guard, enemies of the Soviet regime, accusing them of terroris tic action." They were tried hy a military collegium of the Supreme court and sixty six of them, Includ Ing one woman, were found guilty and Immediately executed. The names of thm executed suf-fhle- u were officially announeed. Among them apparently were none of the lenders who had flgirred prominent ly with the White nnules during the civil warfare following the Rol shevlst revolution. Nor were there any names of men who have had '''! door everybody to see If tbe key ',r' . ,n ,'i,,Ui'-lnt':lan(la! com! ern, fn. 1 ZtP pit malna,J of the association, rep resenting 19 states, met ,u Chicago and perfected plans for a soil erosion and flood control program, to cost 900.(100.11(10, which the association will recommend to the federal government with a request for a atirvey to determine Its practicability. The plan, which waa devel- oped by A. B. Hunt of Uhlengo. In- volvea the construction ofrannl and dam. over an area extend.ng from northern North Dakota through Texas to control Aond water originating on the eastern slope of the Rocky mountain , , . Yjj&f the gov- will fit. You. boiler at him. Dont K1 gave " go there, that Not So Bad "fViS ,,;,ni,,n ,1 are not not It," and he h o ll e r a back, Financially In such hnd shape now." Ills state. Well you dont ,0 "" know where It lI,rxlmnte nd what Is, and ao I am the administration calls ordinary going to try em expenditures. all." expenditures for an of the So Ita not a bright future that we ,Sn regular -n- ment establishment p"t ask them to enter Into. They feel f U"d lD that they are the ones to right It recovery operation, UPh We feel that we are the ones that ag th national prominence subsequently In Russia. The executions were carried out while Kirovs body was being ere mated. He was given's state funer al and his sshes were placed In the Communists Valhalla beside the wall of the Kremlin where rest the remains of Inln. John Reed and ether tnlltary and civil heroes of the Red revolution. - MEMBERS Im-u- bs ernment announced that the assassin was e djs Just lan Communist party e gov-loo- o ISTSSTT ill will And IL Ita Just a difference of opin.ou, iU not a different, of nature. They ar absolutely the same as w, are. IU viewpoint, human na- ture dont enter Into It. Its outlook Its viewpoint W look at it from the old daya. they look at It from the J ' , W cant help buVfook bacY they cant help but look forward w, ar. both atand.ng on th, ground, and their feet la there aa 'corporation ' these j ' rectlon ' S fun,,s "SSSe.W. ; - - F,m,n' wd hy alphabetic.! the sale of hoXT" C"me from 11 U lM,r- rowed nmnev and mu be paid hack Mr ,'!metirn !' assun,Pd t,lps bec;mSldi e.T.?.r.nerPSRnry to He w sm.? H' 'h h"vIn)! the or exll, ,aS SSTnSaTEr4 ! ' a,ln,llllstr- There win L, t- U,C - consideration mad necessary by aUt-te- s. expiration of certain-prese- nt The emergency brought tha necessity for enactment of Tarlooa nuisance and excise taxes uch aa the tax on check! and gasoline and numerous other These must be continued. They have been producing something Uko four hundred and twenty million dollars annually, good Mxd chunk of revenue In anybody! language. It la planned, therefore, to renew these. There may be eoroe revision and aome change In the bases, but the principle! Involved In those lee lea seem certain to be continued. of theae statutes Is not expected to have a material effect on business because business has become adjurted to them. I am Informed by business experts that undoubtedly business would move forward more rapidly If these taxes could be eliminated. - 't Pntplp, Ui V tot money ; toi 1 11 licit tlik lUg to. stan Eenyoa Nlchol lop, too. That Uttle fndg shop along fln clnnatl uprooted Its a which It did, ay tbe Marlon GlUetpit at t Yvonnt Brin temp, Ct derbilt. Jr. cUppiug fe ot hla parents ave special maid wha Elizabeth Ardens top,? Netherland bar h tig, trance on toe even Walter Chrysler, Jit dressier flrat nlghual who try to walk UtesJ What a k ahJ President Roosevelt and bis emergency administrators believe they have bit upon a Money for new and prodne-the Needy tlve plan to give out to those who need It. They are about to embark opon a program of enloans by couraging personal loan hanks to Individual men and women and to guarantee repayment of a portion of each loan made. It Is viewed as exceedingly Interesting that a national government or any other governmental agency for that matter, shonld embark on such a policy, because there are those who hold It to be a dangerous precedent 1 have done considerable research work regarding tola proposal and 1 have failed to And In the records any such move In the history of Important nations of the world. It Is therefore, undoubtedly one of the most highly full-bac- would hav mad fJ came of toe lady whoa Control Weekly to One word description Bavo skittery. Whotj Lady Mountbatte & ta rana white carnation, i daily gesture for ay digntfled dining place? ' try Room at th Pad i Camera! NooMvtBl, win or lose means loti eerimental steps yet taken In this of recovery plan Announcement of the scheme was mndp by Janies A. Moffet, federal who deadministrator, housing scribed It as marking a new era In American business." It Is true that there are certain types of banking Institutions that have made or character loan where no collateral security was offered hy the borrower and where only the good name and the record of the Individual warranted extension of this credit. Mr. Moffet said that this character loan Idea would prove to be the very foundation" of the home modernization program which he Is administering. He described the action ns one predicated upon the governments absolute confidence that the average American will keep his promise to repay what he borrow "Nor Is that position as much of a Jump In the dark as It at first may seem." said Mr. Moffet. Aa usual Uncle Sam knows what he Is doing. Before offering to Insure these onns. he consulted the countrys records oa Installment buying.-He also asked what hnd been the experience of the few hanks who np to Inst spring had made character nns. From the hanks and from commercial organizations selling on the InstnRrnent plan, he learned that the average American Is honest, and that the loss from character loans was just a little more than three-fourth- s of 1 per cent." maelstrom Indl-vMun- d Maud Hart Lntkt and her newspaper, went out to their oil let sota recently to eotkt novel Feeling eertibg their state had the sum 1 they gave that ta their i lo, a hamlet near Flint It and tbe citizen heldi1 honor their celebrity. Floyd Gibbon, after ot top speed gtddyip him Americas tute staggered in to hit moaned: Im aQ end: beaded for th pirep--j could stand this pace without a terrible illieof took a sheaf of Z nji! count, tested hit haa 1 what not And there vu J minor aliment Bo Gm into the sunshine, m', chest and smiled the v tory. Central Part e swung into brisk X passed under heel A hours he exulted ud r. returned to hi hotel, n hoe called the doctor went to bed for to blistered feet Jr" issue gress. of con- The for- eign relations early January and. according to present Indications, the administration can easily muster enough votea to adopt that resolution. for Arnprican affiliation .court Is stronger now than LT, " h,Hn bpforp Of of power. O by merchaat - Z ws "rM MnniKH, Catos, t Itfns C En Already tbe middla aged Clah.fi has t lady greater creased throughout the world ,n 1 wou,d I87 hud ear-- I Her because of the revival of dla- whethpr th United !? - t.ites should enter the League of wl,l b recalled that Pnf " Ilson, Proposal to Join the Y f Nat,on ITT Precipitated one 81 J),tter controveralea In which '.h" haa ever been pn 11 the niL and ubaeqnently rejected little more has been I11"111 thl faU nd rly there Is what !Y'er; be movement determined th U,,Ued Zn league and aome of tbe .1 laments o, American adherence . A y Observers here take the that American adherence position to the wor d court would have far Srf : his-Th- r'1 'v,rM politlcal sltna-n- , princes in her the breakdown of the naval experiment o I limitations treaties and fro the jumping among nations to split up to housekeeping In o groups for arrangement of a b.ilnncf blgbustneos. ten-rteno- i Zim was Jsdpt former in the IFa sd J a yearning yap lor a Hortens McQuarris D was presented with to by department store a Christmas gifl Is being watched World Court v V1--' toonlst committee of the senate, which must pass on such treaties, has an agreement to send the resolution of I nlted States adherence to the world court to the senate In It Is now believed that the world court Issue will be settled deflnltely paHy ,n the Dext - H. T. Webster pegs version of bis "thrill l( In lifetime" cartoon bs drove to Honshesi. visit bis boyhood god L drooled over every to artist drew. Zim, vto Zimmerman, has Hid beads 50 year la tf" ba draw a weekly Wj 1 Elmira paper to k8P and spends leisure Mb ing. While proslto bouse, Webster stM thrill On the waH illustrated letter I to, tha master limner wbesj H eras from borne town, Tommylnvt !h U HEW YORK...,, strolling: if jw : Bmckart theaa - SERGEI .VQQl BY understand-raiswa folk pronouncement. It Is the In the senate leaders up on what the thjt unwas, until a few nd the bonM who have taken ln- ago. generations roca poaltlon against a tax onr hind 1935 were reflecting the and wa aay. View they had obtained from Presl-Whadenj RooaeTelt in addition to their ion that this Is a bad young coming owi toot They dident do Ilka that when t)me increase the levies which ln-- I was young." But all a young man jirijuaig and business Interests k or woman has got to do today is to pay for fhe upkeep of the over tbe mesa that us old tlm-- 1 ernraent. era hav made of everything, and If pllrjn(f the current weeks there w aro fair with the young Up- bag (jioped some indication. If, starts" there la no reaaon why they tndeevl. It la not an assurance, that should look on u with any great j thpra wIR he curtailment of federal "Huxxaa." The Present Generation exp,ndltnres. Just how this Is going la tha one that Gummed" up the t0 accomplished Is not yet clear start high the when can be stated on highest auao young It hut cards, tangle-ment- , a call what wt tailing off on thority that a curtailment of the why Its Just because they can outgo from the treasury Is expected ea what a mess we have made of t0 accomplished. In making that statement, I think i ought to add that things. In our days the young folks that the curtailment Is contemplated with wer fortunate enough to go to Col- - respect to emergency agencies and Include any of the var ous leg bad no reason, (so 1 Imagine, d' new proposals from segments or for 1 never went anywhere but Oxhouse or senate memberships Inford under the auspices ot my good volving additional heavy outlays. As friend Arthur Brisbane), but oa I an example of this type of expendisay tha College folks of a by gone ture I refer to the proposal for Imgeneration dldent have this national mediate payment of the soldiers havoc to look at like the young ones bonus. That there Is a strong denowadays do. They looked forward mand for this action there can he to graduation with a great expect-- ! no doubt. Yet on the other hand there Is bitter opposltloh both In ancy, With a great Expectancy say that sounds pretty good, that old congress and among administration Oxford Is cropping out leaders to the program that would Well they looked forward wlih, (I entail payment of something like will repeat that because I think it two billion dollars to the former solgood) a great expectancy, they felt diers, sailors and marines of World that they would Btcp out Into the war days. The Question of taa..on always world, and that there was a definite notch awaiting them. It meant some- Is of an explosive character. Hence, thing to be a college graduate. There the urge on the pnrt of some of the was Jobs, there was positions, and new dealers for an Increase In taxall things being equal, you wera ation so that emergency spending given a little edge. That old Lambi might he made to appear more In Hide you brought home impressed line with government Income has not only Father and Mother, but It precipitated an Issue very quickly. knocked the town haywire, and that The proposition had hardly begun was what might be called the Gold- to gain momentum when Senator en Period of the young college Itohlnson of Arkansas, the Demograduate. He could come home and cratic floor leader of the senate, and take a bow. and If he really wanted Senator Rarrlson of Mississippi, It he could take a Job, so he had no chairman of the senate committee particular reason to look oa life on finance, both were called to with any great differenee than his Warm Springs. Ga , for a conference elders. Of couri-- he knew that he with Mr. Roosevelt. It was said at knew more than they did, but that that conference that taxation was goes nl.vx ! with a eoP-r- nt the onlv thing discussed but, nevertheless, both leaders caine away tws degree, but lit llu.-dlate elders bad kept things going frolic the temporary White Meuse on a fairly even keel. They dldent with the announcement tint there know that "Mass Production was would he no tax boost In the llillo simply an Invention on which Amer- session of congress ica had no patent, that In time it Simultaneously Represent a 1 v e would defeat its own purpose. But Bill Democrat, of Washington, the young dldent know It, and chairman of a subcommittee of the neither did the older. So you might house ways and means committee, say the collegiate stepped out Into made known his opposition to a tax a world that was roiv from every boost. Mr. Illils romftiittoe has de voted Its attention to a survey of angle. tax rates and revenue Then came the dawn requirements The whole world was suddcnlj reached the conclusion that pd slapped In the face with a wet towel, to Increase the levies now would he and told to Wake up, you are sleep, to retard recovery as a result of adlug on your back, and you are snor- ditional Imposts on business. The ing with such satisfaction that you Washington representative feels have annoyed the Gods." And sinre that the present tax structure will then the world has Just been rolling function properly and provide and tumbling. They cant get back revenue Just as soon as there a rot urn of to a natural Bleep, and they dont something approach knovv what to do. Some trying to ,ne nonn;l commercial activity, lie read, some are counting sheep, and ,hlnks there might be some simpll-mos- t of em are walking the floer. "f the laws applying to the And that the generation that the 'ari"!,s forms of federal taxation, hm hp ""diler them new college graduate must step out adequate as in. No Job awaits him, no bows revenue pro, lu, era f Hn hpn ,,,,-rawait him. He looks out over the D a normal volume of business. wreck of which he had no In this connection It seems making, advisand says. "So this Is the old folks able to recall that Secretary way. Yeah?" So he starts looking of the sent a for the keyhole In the dark. too. and freshman team of Treasury hrnln trusters to with his young enthusiasm be England last summer to the thinks he can And It before you can Rrltish tax svstem. While gtmiv comthis (Forgetting that you have a little mittees find ngs and recommend.-!advantage over him by knowing 'l,n, to the secretary have not Iwn where It used to be). His youth wll nil,le public. Insiders tel me tint make him take the results of that Investigation a chance quicker 'ery little to the sum total of knowledge cou.ernln than we will. He starts fumbling v problem, old western and northern CENTRAL, of Honduras wera dethe creation of an International po- vastated by x series of earthquake shocks continuing through two days lice force for the territory. Tha extent of the disaster Is unaald known at this writing .or all comWarsaw from DISPATCHES were amased and munication system were crippled, but It waa reported that at least alarmed by the Franco-Germa- n agreement because they feared the three towns of considerable size, .Uahanas and Santa Rita, understanding between those two Oopaa, nations would be extended to In- were nearly destroyed. Most of the clude Great Britain and Italy. Tha Inhabitants escaped with their Uvea mountains foreign office hinted that In that and wera roaming the caaa Poland's relations with Russia without shelter or food. An entire mountain. Cermaznl near Paralao, might be made closer. Poland resents being left out In the cold, for crumbled and dlaappeared without she la determined to bo recognized any volcanic eruption. as one of the great powers, and to MCSTAPHA play her part In the stabilization PRESIDENT has become the of peace In Europe. idol of all the women of hla nation. R008KVELT rt for, after giving them such social PRESIDENT Warm Springs to bis rights as emancipation from tha reconditioned executive offices In harem, he haa given them political Washington with the greater part rights. At hla mstance the national of hla winter program completed. assembly unanimously decided that It will be presented to congress In any Turkish woman more than thirhis annual messuge on January 8. ty years old Is eligible to election The major Items have to do with to the chamber of deputies, and that women over twenty-twyears expanslou of the public works ad- all ministration to provide work re of age can vote In the national women lief, revision of the NUA and the elections. Thousands of their gratideepest telegraphed AAA, extension of power developments, social security Insurance tude" to Kenial and low cost housing, and the paring down of the budget. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELTS conhaving statements were cluded Its hearing on national deINTERESTING American Congress fense began drafting ita report, and of Industry In New York by two It waa authoritatively unlit In Wash of the President's closest advisers. Ington that. It congress approves of government Raymond Moley, Its recoiiinipnibitlons. airships will surely be operating In and Donald Dedirector of the a new transoceanic service. and worked were tails out, national emergency Professor ll seemed likely the commission council Moley declared would adopt the IIi.inhumi plan there la no work- approved h) Ewing Y Mitchell, as able substitute for alstant secretary ot commerce, and he national advisory committee the present capital That pun calls Istlc economic sys- for aeronnulirs tem. Basically, he for two huge Zeppelin type airships said, the New Deal and one smaller metal clad craft waa an effort to along with necessary modern land save capitalism and. Ing equipment also will ask The commission the by spreading In Its congress report to February en to of under range II opportunity able the average limn to regain a create a permanent federal agency measure of control over the con- with suervtsory control over all This would com ditions under which he lived. It civil aviation seemed to me In 1033, ss It seems to prise live to seven meudiers and me now, that this effort to save take over present Commerce de capitalism whs eminently wise and part men t aviation activities. By no stretch of the Imagination could the vote of November. 1932. have been Interpreted as a mandate for the abandonment of the capitalistic system. Finally, even had there been such a mandate, there was ahd Is no workuhle substi- Pi ... - Ird Wmi American and our chief representative to the naval Umltation convanaUona that have bees . going on la London, haa given Rain warning to Japan that If that nation lnalsta on crapping the Washington naval treaty, oocurity will n be endangered, created and the world forced Into a coetij naval conatrncUon race. Mr. Davla waa ad- dreading the American Correa pendente aaeociatlon In London, but hla worda were meant for all the world to bear, and as hia (eecb waa tha flrat coniprehenalva atatement ef the American poaltlon since the opening of the conversations. It waa regarded aa of the greatest Impor tance. lie atao announced, for the flrat time, that 1 resident Roosevelt a substantial haa proposed reduction In naval armaments." Ur. Davis snld that since no agreement for armament reduction haa been reached, the United States advocates the continuance of the Washington and London treaties with their asaurunce of "equality of aecurlty." Asserting that the Washington pact put an end to a ruinous naval rare and established a sound hauls for peace in the Pacific and the Tar East," he continued; "Only hy maintenance of the aya-teof equality of security, with proportionate reductions downward ef naval strength If (toaalhle, can there he maintained the auhatantial foundation for security and peace which hHs thus been laid "Abandonment now of the principles involved would leud to conditions of Insecurity, of International suspicion, and of costly competition, with do real advantage to any nation." Unotltclally, It Is said that when Jaan gives formal notice that she Is denouncing the Washington treaty, prulmbly on December 'JO, the United Stales will Iniiuedlaioly withdraw from the discussions In London. Otliclala In Washington consider that to continue the conversations would be tantamount to acqulscence to Japans demand for modification of the ratios on which the treaty la bused. No more than uny other nation floes the United States wish to see the revival of the race In naval construction. but the government will not tolerate the decline of our navy to a subordinate place. Recent utterances of cabinet members and Of congressmen who especially have to do with naval affairs make thla plain. la hla annual report to the President. Secretary of the Navy Swan-aoaaya that although the United States may reduce Its naval strength Xroportbnntely with other powers. It la Imiieratlve that a navy to none be maintained. He warns Iso of the dangerous shortage of personnel In the navy, sa.vlng that "ahlps are valueless unless manned by adequate crewa of trained and experienced officers and men." NORMAN Pridar.Ce UTAH MAGNA TIMES' MAGNA. Sd-- M ss'.es-Althoug-h be the Grand toicbess Marie to run ho announced m clasa but not high turn, whose busba few to make 1 th depression, In dress and speech Installed 1 These nlpPT WJ nos , gera and bins ban" ot back yonder bred in th dreaming out th dust at crossing. F cattle gnard In of hot ,te smell i -- in zinged through. Aj J v, be, tar J,.!.. e W4. I l" tw |