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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER Results of the Illinois Primary Election primary held the center Interest for it not only provided lively state battles but also was of considerable moment nationally. Col. Frank Knox, publisher of the Chicago Daily News, and Senator Borah of Idaho, who was born in Illinois, were the contestants for the Republican Presidential preferential vote, and the former came out with 31 delegates against 26 for Borah. The senators friends were elated because, without organization, he carried a large part of the state outside of Chicago. This preferential vote is purely advisory and neither man has a slate of delegates to the national convention. The result makes It certain that Knox will make a respectable showing on the first roll call. It also adds to Borahs prestige and aids him in the coming Ohio primary. Gov. Henry Horner, seeking renomination, was victorious In the bitter fight with the regular Democratic ormaganization and the Kelly-Nas- h chine in Chicago, which had thrown him overboard and supported Bunde-se- n for governor. The Democrats almost unanimously voted for the renomination of Senator James Hamilton Lewis, and the Republicans named Former Senator Otis Glenn to oppose him in November. In Nebraskas primary only Borahs name was printed on the Republih can preferential ballot but almost of the voters wrote in the name of Gov. Alf Landon of Kansas. For the Democratic preference President Roosevelt was unopposed in both Illinois and Nebraska. Our Recreations ILLINOIS 2W& Edward W. Pickard, Water Newspaper Union Italy Is Ruthless and the League Helpless OCCUPATION of Addis Ababa and all of Ethiopia was the price demanded by Italy for an armistice ir East Africa when the council of the of Nations League met again in Geneva. Baron Pompeo Alolsl presented the ultimatum on behalf of Die- tator Mussolini. Wolde j Mariam, representing countered Ethiopia, with a request that the league Invoke all penalties against Italy under article 16 of the covenant, these including military sanctions as well as the economic penalties which the league has been trying tc enforce. The British and French dele gates explained the stand of their respective governments in the embroglio, The league was helpless, and having received the discouraging report ol . the conciliation committee, was compelled to confess It could not find means of attaining peace. France will not consent to the imposition of military sanctions, and Great Britain naturally will not undertake to enforce them by herself. It appeared the poor Ethiopians were to be abandoned to their fate, meaning the extinction of their empire and their exploitation by Italy. The council adopted a resolution regretting its Inability to end the war, reminding league members that they , should continue the sanctions and asking Italy to be generous in bringing the conflict to a close. Anthony Eden In his address to the council warned France that she might expect from Great Britain no further support against aggression by Germany than France had given against Italy. From the north, south and west the Italian armies were advancing on Addis Ababa, and the panic stricken civilian inhabitants of the capital were fleeing from the city. Foreigners sought d shelter In the British The mayor Issued all the legation. arms available and the government called on all able men to make a last stand for liberty, saying it Is better to die than to be enslaved. $ bomb-proofe- Terrible Famine in'Once Fertile China Province DISPATCHES from Chengtu, China, story of the famine and drouth- - in Szechuen province, once one of the most fertile regions In the country. It is said to be the worst famine In the history of China, the deaths numbering many thousands and fully 30,000,000 persons being In distress. Suicides and mercy slayings are everyday Incidents. The peasants are reduced to eating dogs, cats, rats and clay. Officials said the situation primarily wt a result of Communist Incursions during the last two years in which the reds overran and pillaged the land. tary attaches In the Austrian capital were ordered not to occupy the places reserved for them among the reviewing officials. Rumania has Increased its military budget to $38,000,000 and created a special fund of $20,000,000 for the development of aviation. Hungary Is clamoring for revision of the Trianon treaty and recovery of the territory It lost to the little entente. h The birthday of Relchs-fuehre- r Adolf Hitler provided an opportunity for a big display of Germanys military power. forty-sevent- Presidents Secretary and Adviser Taken by Death McHENRY HOWE, secretary LOUISPresident Roosevelt and for many years his close friend and adviser, died in the Naval hospital at Washington after an Illness of more than a year. Mr. Howe was known in the capital as the President maker, for it was largely due to his efforts that Mr. Roosevelt reached the White House. For twenty-fiv- e years, from the day when Mr. Roosevelt and he first met In Albany, he had devoted himself to forwarding his friends political fortunes. Judge Ritter Is Found Guilty by Senate halsted l. ritFederal judgewas found guilty on - Impeachment charges by the senate and removed from office, being the fourth federal jurist to be ousted In this manner. On each of the first six articles of Impeachment a majority of senators voted for his acquittal; but on the seventh article, which was a generalized summary of the charges against him, he was convicted by a vote of 56 to 28. Ah order declaring Ritter should be forever disqualified from holding any office of honor, trust or profit under the United States was defeated, 76 to 0. The senates verdict in the twelfth Impeachment case brought before It as a high court of impeachment since foundation of the American republic amounted to a decision that Judge Ritter had violated the Constitutional requirements of good behavior in office. Editors Condemn Seizure of Private Telegrams the RESOLUTIONS condemning communica- private tions were adopted by the American Society of Newspaper Editors in convention at Washington. We are of the conviction, said the resolution, that if such practice is not checked the threat to liberty of individual action and particularly to the freedom of the press is Immediate and menacing. The society urged Its members to cowith all law enforcement agenRemilitarizes operate Turkey cies by guarding against the premature Dardanelles Zone publication of information harmful to post-wa- r treaty has gone the successful completion of criminal ANOTHER Kemal Ataturk of cabinet decided that the investigations. Dardanelles must be remilitarized, despite ?WA Power Loan Suit Goes the Lusanne pact, and to the Supreme Court Turkish troops were that the Supreme court promptly moved Into ASKINGthe lower court decision in the zone along the the celebrated Buzzard Roost case, the long strait that Duke Power company and the Southern connects the Sea of Public Utilities company carried up to Marmora and the the highest tribunal the question of Aegean sea. It is bewhether the Public Works administralieved Kemal will tion may finance publicly owned and soon rebuild the fortiplants to comoperated hydro-electri- c fications in the zone pete with private enterprise. Unless which the allies failed extraordinary measures are taken to to capture during the speed the case, arguments cannot be heard until the term beginning next The Turkish dictator didnt surprise October. The government has 30 days anyone by his action, for he asked per- in which to reply to the petition for mission of the League of Nations some review. time ago to rearm the Dardanelles. No This case, which deeply concerns the formal reply had been made, but the New Deal program, arose when the British government rather favored giv- PWA allocated $2,852,000 for construcing consent, and the Soviet union tion by Greenwood county, South Caroopenly approves Turkeys move. Italy lina, of the Buzzard Roost plant on the was displeased, and there was consid- Saluda river. erable excitement in the Balkan states, especially Bulgaria which bor- Respighi, Noted Italian ders on European Turkey. The BulIs Dead garians renewed their demand for a Composer, corridor giving them a direct route to respighi, one of the of modern Italian the Aegean sea. Trobably Kemals action will not be composers, died In Rome at the age of heart disease following severely condemned by anyone, for of fifty-si- x most of the European nations are pre- blood poisoning. His passing is cause paring for war with feverish haste. for deep mourning among music lovers Austrias army, small but well equipped, everywhere. Several of his operas were held a spring parade in Vienna, and presented In New York and Chicago, immediately the nations of the little and he was guest conductor of the Philentente displayed their anger at this harmonic Symphony orchestra of New show of military force and their mili- - York in 1932. Ottorino one-sixt- Flood Control Approved by the President HIS press conference President INRoosevelt said government departments are concentrating on flood control problems and that if congress would pass a bill appropriating a billion dollars for that purpose he would sign It, provided the measure put men to work immediately. Mr. Roosevelt said the Passama-quodd- y project in Maine and Florida ship canal were eliminated because of the recent refusal of congress to make appropriations for continuance of the work. He said he did not contemplate doling out relief funds for the projects and that there would be no fund3 for the projects unless congress reversed its refusal. President Lays Cornerstone or a Big Building appropriate ceremony the of the new Interior department building in Washington was laid, the President handling the trowel. The structure, the second largest government office building there, is to be completed in December. It covers acres and will profive and one-havide 700,000 square feet of usable floor space. It will cost $12,000,000, about $5,000,000 less than the capitals largest, the Commerce department building. The trowel used by Mr. Roosevelt was the one employed by George Washington in laying the cornerstone of the Capitol in 1793. WITH lf Draft of New Tax Bill Ready for Consideration T T AVING discarded the Presidents Ll suggestion of temporary processing taxes, Chairman Sam B. Hills house subcommittee completed its draft of the new tax bill. It calls for a new type of corporation levy, ranging from 1 per cent to 29.7 per cent for corporations with net Income up to $10,000, and from 4 to 42 per cent for corporations with net income over $10,000, depending on the amount of earnings that are not distributed. Preferential tax treatment Is given to banks and insurance companies, to n companies, to companies In receivership, and a new system of taxaliens is created. ing your recreations be moderate, seasonable and lawful; the use of recreation is to strengthen your labor and sweeten your rest. But there are some so rigid or so timorous that they avoid all diversions, and dare not indulge lawful delights for fear of offending. These are hard tutors, if not tyrants to themselves; whilst they pretend to a mortified strictness they are injurious to their own liberty and the liberality of their Maker. Steele. LET Spend no more time in stating the qualifications of a man of virtue, but endeavor to get them. ODDS AND ENDS . . . -- These Three" is a picture that you cant afford to mis, . . . Toby Wing is actually going make a picture at last . . . The Trail of the Lonesome Pine is such a sue cess everywhere that all studios are ing in for outdoors pictures . . . Leslie Howards son Ronald has been uorking as an extra in Romeo and Juliet Shirley Temple has learned to ride a bicycle and shes crazy about it . "Little Lord Fauntleroy is a grand pic. turization of the famous, book, although Freddie Bartholomew had his way and does not wear golden curls or a velvet suit Incidentally, his father and mother are still trying to' get part of hi, earnings . . . Paramount will make four pictures in color . . . And Twentieth Century-Fowill film Ramona the same way . . . First thing we know, black and white pictures will be on the shelf with the old silent ones. ,l ... x STAR DUST Dainty Collars and Jabots to Crochet MOVIE AND RADIO BY VIRGINIA VALE Western Newspaper Union. By VIRGINIA VALE who sees in Follow the Fleet or hears her sing on the radio 'with Ozzie Nelsons band EVERYONE ought to meet her as well; shes decidedly worth meeting. To begin with, she is much prettier in real life, than in pictures. And to see her as the demure music teacher who, as Ginger Rogers sister, falls in love with Randolph Scott, gives you no idea whatever of what sort of girl she is. She is magnetic, delightful, charming. And she is one of the few girls who have had a career thrust upon them. She never did want to go on the stage, but she had to earn her living. And when she was very young her mother pointed out to her the fact that its better to train for a profession that pays well than for one that never will bring in much money. Better a dancer at one hundred a week than a stenographer at fifteen, said Mama, or words to that effect So Harriet became a dancer. She appeared at one of Broadways big movie houses, and on the road in musical shows. And she worked so hard that, at nineteen, she had to stop. Pattern 1130 High time to be thinking up fresh accessory notes for spring wardrobe, isnt it? Then what better than these airy, lacy collars and dainty jabot for giving last years frock a lift and changing this years so it wins recognition! Theres an open front collar in a square mesh design, a triangular collar that closes in back, both easy to do in petite boucie. The soft, flattering jabot of mesh with nosegay of Irish roses is made in cotton. Pattern 1136 comes to you with detailed directions for making the collars shown ; an illustration of them and of all the stitches needed; material requirements. Send 15 cents In coins or stamps (coins preferred) to The Sewing Circle, Needlecraft Dept, 82 Eighth Did you hear the recent broadcast Ave, New York, N. Y. of Paul Whitemans birthday celebration? Of course, BOYS! GIRLS! it came at a bad Read the Grape Nuts ad in another In hour column of this paper and learn how the morning, East- to the Dizzy Dean Winners and ern Standard time; winjoin valuable free prizes. Adv. NBC kept its line open after midnight Real Magnetism for It. The Paul Some men are magnetic without Whiteman alumni to gyp others. their, power using staged it and what n a list of people once worked DOCTOR for Paul ! Morton A FAMOUS a young man the CrosDowney, Bing Dr. R. V. late by, Jane Froman, Pierce practiced medicine in Pennsylvania. Ferde Grofe and George Gershwin, His prescriptions met the composers, and Mary Margaret with such great demand McBride, whom you may have heard that he moved to Buon the air as Martha Dean. ffalo, N. Y., and put up form one-thir- ty well-know- in his k And, speaking of Morton Downey, hes sailing in May to keep concert engagements in England and Ireland and how he loves to go to Ireland! e well-kno- Removes Dandruff-Stop- s Imparts Color and to Gray and Faded Beauty 60c and $1 00 tiie RHEwmiajnusiE IHIdDTIEIL - A Distinctive Residence debt-ridde- Big Pay for Lobby Committee Lawyer Is Refused A vote of 153 to 137 the house rejected a resolution to permit Senator Blacks lobby committee to pay $10,000 to special counsel in injunction litigation started by William Randolph Hearst to protect his telegrams from the probers. This action, which followed a bitter debate, doesnt halt the work of the committee, which has its own funds, but it prevents the payment of more than $3,600 a year, in accordance with general law, to Crampton narris of Birmingham, Ala., BY An Abode., .renowned Throughout the West Mrs. J. H. 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