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Show THE BULLETIN, BINGHAM :" Hews Review of Current Events DR. MORGAN SUES TVA Seelcs Reinstatement as Its Chairman and Back Salary L . . Proposed New Deal Party Purge Hits Some Snags i .,,.. V sr T? Here is the new Peace Memorial In the Gettysburg National Military park which was dedicated by President Roosevelt during the celebration of the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg, In which veterans of the Northern and Southern armies participated. On the top of the sbart burns "The Flame of Eternal Peace." SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK t Western Newspaper Union. Wants to Regain Post DR. .ARTHUR E. MORGAN has a court fight to regain the chairmanship of the Tennessee Valley authority from which he was could not be renominated. The senator was planning to run as an independent After hearing from McNutt, the governor invited the senator to present his candidacy to the state convention, and Van Nuys accepted in the interests of party harmony. Corcoran's purge appears to have bogged down elsewhere, too. Sena-tor George of Georgia and Senator E. D. Smith of South Carolina seem likely to win renomination. In New York city Tammany decided to sup-port Congressman John J. O'Con-nor, who led the fight against the re-organization bill, and several other New York members of the lower house whom Corcoran had listed for defeat. A. E. Morgan ousted by President Roosevelt for what the latter termed "contumacy." In chancery court at Knoxville, Tenn., he filed a mandamus suit asking that he be recognized as a member and chair-man of the board of directors of the au-thority. In the bill, which Insists on Reorganization TN HIS last press conference be- - fore starting on his transconti-nental and Pacific ocean trip. Pres-ident Roosevelt revealed that he was still determined to have con-gress pass a reorganization bill. Seemingly not at all discouraged by the defeat of the measure in the last congress, he said he was confident the next session would realize that the country wants such a law and would enact it. The con-gressmen who voted to recommit the measure favored at least 90 per cent of the bill, he said, and opposed only 10 per cent of it. Trial Fare Raise O EVERSING a previous ruling. the interstate commerce com-mission in a e decision au-thorized eastern railroads to in-crease basic passenger coach fares from 2 to 2V4 cents a mile for a trial period of 18 months. Commis-sioner Claude R. Porter cast the only dissenting vote. Railroads esti-mate that the increase will mean $40,000,000 in added revenue a year. Action was taken on an appeal by the carriers for reconsideration of the commission's initial decision on March 6, when their original plea was turned down on a six to five vote. In seeking a review, the roads contended the commission had entered too greatly into the field of management. This view was concurred in by several of the commissioners, who dissented from the original majority opinion. Want to Quit Austria Arthur Rosenberg, repre-senting the Federation of Au-strian Exiles, told a conference of 32 nations at Evian - les - Bains named the TVA and Directors H. A. Morgan and David E. Lilienthal as defendants, the former chairman asked for payment of back salary since his dismissal. He also asked for a declaratory judgment voiding the President's removal order and forcing the other two directors to recognize him as their chairman. Doctor Morgan never has recog-nized the President's right to re-move him. After starting the court action, he said he would carry his fight for reinstatement to the Su-preme court if necessary. The justice department in Wash-ington withheld comment on the suit, but it was a foregone conclu-sion that the government would con-test it. Before the President re-moved Doctor Morgan he asked the justice department whether this was within his power. Robert H. Jack-son, now solicitor general, but then acting attorney general, advised "there would appear to be no ques-tion that the power of removal is in fact vested in the President." Tells Cities to Hurry OlTIES of the nation were urg?d by Secretary Ickes to make haste to submit projects for PWA approval and thus play "a dominat-ing part in bringing about recov-ery." At the same time he asked busi-ness to with the govern-ment in the $1,600,000,000 building program, and warned contractors and private industry not to pay "graft" to corrupt officials in an at-tempt to curry political favors in the form of benefits from PWA con-struction. "The success of this recovery pro-gram will depend upon the speed with which our municipalities move," he said. "They will have to produce faster than before. They will have to draw their plans more rapidly, make decisions more quick-ly and file their applications with alacrity. "Involved are jobs for workmen, the creation of new business for industrial and commercial con-cerns, the expansion of factory pay-rolls, the rejuvenation of transpor-tation systems, the spread of pur-chasing power, the expansion of credit, the stimulation of our securi-ties and our banks." M. 'Purge' Is Hard Hit 'T'WO long distance messages A came from Manila, from Paul V. McNutt, governor general of the Philippines and reputed boss of the t ranee, that four and a half million Austrians will flee Nazi rule in their country if a new homeland can be found for them and they are allowed to take a substantial part of their proper-ty with them. The conference, officially the Intergovern-mental Committee Myron Taylor on Political Refugees, was instigat-- . by President Roosevelt. The American delegation was headed by Myron C. Taylor, former head of the United States Steel cor-poration, and he took the lead in the preliminaries for settling the problem of German Jews and other refugees from the Reich. The Americans made it plain however, that the United States' attitude was one of helpfulness rath- er than direction. Officials said were they trying to help shape 1 ft. 'A Democrats of Indi-ana. Thereupon the New Dealers of the Hoosier state decid-ed they could not win in November unless they renomi-- n a t e d Frederick Van Nuys for the senate. That gentle-- a n had been marked for elimi-nation by Tommy Corcoran and his fellow managers of Senator Van Nuys plans, but "we do not intend to be the final judges of whatever may be done "' Mr. Taylor was unanimously elect- ed president of the conference. The Zionist Organization of Arrer ica closed its forty-firs- t in Detroit convention with an attack on whati it termed Nazi violence and brutal ity toward Jews in Austria and Ger many. Dr. Solomon Goldman ef Chicago was elected president the proposed "purge" of those who had opposed any major New Deal policies and Governor Townsend bod publicly announced Van Nuys WHA T TO EAT and WHY (2. --fouAton (foudlll Recount! The Miracle oi Milk Noted Food Authority Explains Why It Is the Cheapest and Most Nearly Perfect Food By C. HOUSTON GOUDISS 8 East 39th Street. New Vork City. OF ALL the foods known and used by man, milk is It is a miracle of perfection a veritable elixir of life. Milk has powers possessed by no other food. It builds sturdy bodies for infants; strong bones and sound teeth for growing children; helps to maintain vitality in adults; and to delay the onset of old age. It contains a greater assort-ment of nutritive materials than any other single food. It is the foundation of every balanced diet. Considering the services it performs for mankind from in-fancy to old age it is the cheap-est food tve have. Milk is so many-side- d that I al-ways think of it as the Benjamin $ Send for This Free Chart Showing which Food are ACID ALKALINE One of the principles in plan-ning balanced diet is to in-clude at least enough alkaline, or g foods, to bal-ance the g foods. To help yon distinguish the foods that belong in each group, C Houston Goudiss offers to send a free chart list-ing the principal acid-as- h and alkaline-as- h foods. Address C Houston Goudiss, 6 East 39th Street, New York. City. LillB JIM Franklin of foods. It is a vast treas-ure chest of nutri-ents the most complex product of nature's chemistry. It contains nearly every chemical el-ement of the body itself, in propor-tions adapted for quick and easy as-similation. Milk fulfills six essential requirements of a per-fect diet. First; It supplies carbohydrate and fat for heat and energy. Second: It furnishes protein that is suitable for building new tissues and repairing the millions of cells that are worn out daily. Third: It yields minerals which build bones and teeth and regulate the subtle internal processes of the body. Fourth: It contains every known vitamin in some degree and is abundantly supplied with the vita-mins that are necessary to growth, to the smooth running of the body machine, and to the pre-vention of many types of infec-tion. Fifth: It contains water, to act a3 a solvent, a carrier and regu-lator. Sixth: It is easily digestible. This brief summary helps to ex-plain the unique place of milk in nutrition. Think of it! In one food, we find protein of the high-est type; carbohydrate and fat; all the vitamins; every one of the minerals demanded by the human body; water; and an easy digesti-bility that readily changes these ingredients into vigorous life. -- - The Biggest Food Bargain We occasionally hear the charge that milk is too high in price that it is a luxury to afford enough of this master food to supply a quart daily for every child at least a pint for each adult. That is ridic-ulous! The cost of milk is much cheaper than the cost of illness. And milk is not a luxury, but an indispensable necessity. I contend that no homemaker can afford not to buy milk in ade-quate amounts that if she desires health, efficiency and longevity for her family, she must provide a sufficient amount of milk be-fore she purchases any other food. -- - A Food for Children and Adults Humankind needs milk as the flowers in the garden and the grains in the field need the bless-ing of rain. Deprived of milk, children de-velop a multitude of ills. They become thin and weak; their re-sistance is low; they fall easy vic-tims to the germs of disease; there is small hope of their reach-ing normal manhood and woman-hood. Nor is milk only a food for chil-dren. It is likewise essential for adults who desire to live longer, happier, and healthier lives to fortify their bodies against the as-saults of disease to retain or re-gain mental and bodily vigor. It is indeed a Fountain of Youth! -- - Milk lor Pep and Power A quart of milk daily supplies from two-third- s to three-fourth- s of the total calories required by a year-ol- d child. For a five-ye- ar old, it provides about half the day's fuel requirements, and fof a ten-ye- old, one-thir- Even a moderately active man could ol tain one-four- th of his energy re quirements from a quart of thi precious fluid. It is also interest-ing to note that five-eight- cup of milk is equivalent in energy value to one and one-thir- d eggs, or two and one-fourt- h ounces of lean beef. A quart of milk yields more than an ounce of pure protein of the highest quality. Moreover, nu-trition authorities hold that under normal conditions, it is the most completely digested and absorbed of all food proteins. --M- ilk for Minerals As a source of calcium, milk is indispensable. Without milk, it is practically impossible for the body to obtain enough of this cap-tain of the minerals for normal skeletal development. It has been estimated that when the calcium requirement is met through the use of milk, the need for phosphorus will also be ade-quately provided. Though milk is not as good a source of iron as of calcium and phosphorus, the iron is present and in ,a form that can be easily utilized by the body. --M- ilk for Vitamins Milk is so rich in vitamins A and G, that the addition of a quart of milk daily to a good mixed diet practically guarantees against a deficiency of either of these pre-cious substances which promote growth, help build resistance to disease, prolong the prime of life, and help to ward off old age. It also furnishes a considerable amount of vitamin B, which pro-motes appetite, aids digestion and helps to prevent a nervous dis-order. Milk contains a relatively small amount of vitamin D, but this can be remedied in both bottled and evaporated milk by irradiation, or the addition of a vitamin D con-centrate. It is less dependable as a source of vitamin C than any other vitamin, as the amount it naturally contains varies with the diet of the cow and is reduced by pasteurization or evaporation. This deficiency is easily made good, however, by adding to the diet fresh fruits and fruit juices and raw leafy vegetables. , A In Praise oi Milk Producers As milk is man's finest food, the men who are occupied with its production are engaged in the world's most important pursuit, They labor to provide the nation with a pure, safe, clean supply of the food that makes life worth-while for children and helps to prolong life for adults. Let no one say that milk is ex-pensive. Rather let every home-mak- er come to realize that this magnificent food would be CHEAP AT ANY PRICE! C WNU --C. Houston Coudiaa-18- 38 IS Combine Crc and Cross' It Pattern flit, A quick "beauty trea; your hnens-t- his east, border and simple motif! Pattern 6106 c transfer pattern of tt by 11 inches, two mot; inches; and two motifs inches; chart and dirt crochet; color schema tions of stitches; lo obtain this patter cents in stamps or p preferred) to The Sew. Household Arts Dep. Fourteenth St., New Yc Please write your : dress and pattern nuiri. i I HOME COM! . f j S'SSE ft 1 uoi g .". s"iif i, ; The BELVEDE! APARTMENT HI 2 So. Stits St.. lilt Id I Tel. Wai. 170 Ciki.u NERVOIjf Do you feel so nervouijM'rf Are you crosj and irriuWfc' t' those dearit to you? J h: If your nervee an on Pf i you need a good fentrilijs T Lydia E. Pinkham'i Vbis Jp s mai en penalty for urn ij Forover60yearioneww V other how to x"milint'i' I Pinkham'aCompound.ltK!' up more physical resBUW0 calm quivering nerves mi lJ jjl from annoying symptom Jj company female function!! T Why not give it a eana' f wOver one million wo reporting wonderful beaetnf J Compound. n - t It, ""LALLFi t 3 n flowing bWffitt'J The blood When the f f ; wat that JW,,,! tress. On pr r persistent head 1 f ntl it is.WSfej than for lal endonwd jw DO YOU KNOW HOW TO Balance Your Diet? gr This Free Chart Makes It Simple as A-B- -C Helps to Safeguard Health Planning a balanced diet will cease to be a puzzle if you send for the Homemaker's Chart for Check-ing Nutritional Balance, offered, free, by C. Houston Goudiss. It lists the foods and the standard amounts that should be included in the daily diet, and includes skeleton menus for breakfast, dinner and lunch or supper, to guide you in selecting the proper foods in each classification. 9 A palcsrj is ulficitnt to irmf yom this vtltuik std to fpx menu plmt-m-m 1. Just ask for tbt Nutrition Chart. Address C. Houston Goudiss, t East 39tb Street, Hew York City. S. ADVENRERS' CLUB HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES J YOURSELF1 W OF PEOPLE ME "Man Who Didn't Reply" By FLOYD GIBBONS j Famous Headline Hunter HELLO EVERYBODY: know, boys and girls, there are times when tt. sight harder to just remain still and do nothmg thaTit would be to climb the Alps. Everybody knows that from boredom. But here s one feeling. Usually it comes case where it didn't. the story of Albert Jones of Chicago, that I'm telling you today. And a! remained still as death for 10 terrible minutes, not out of bore-dom, but in the most exciting circumstances anyone could Imagine. During that time, Al's brother spoke to him-tw- ice. And Al cVdn't answer. He didn't dare to speak. One word would have cost him his life. Death was so close that he hardly even dared to breathe. of 1919. when Al was living In All that happened in the summer southern Texas. His brother lived with h.m and the pair of them had a house near the town of Sinton. The house was built on post that ros e A lot of houses are built up about two and a half feet from the ground. where people don t need that way down there in the warm country, cellars to keep their furnaces in. Looking for Snakes Under the House. I'll bet that nowadays Al lives in houses with foundations that go right down to the ground. And I'll further bet that he never tries crawling under a house of any sort again. "This story," he says, "may be a thriller for the people who just read about It. But it was a nightmare for me." The trouble started one summer day just as Al and his brother were getting ready to go to town. Al heard an unusual noise under the floor and he didn't like the way it sounded. He thought It might be a snake and he told his brother he was going to crawl under the house and take a look. He went outside and peered between the posts that held the house up. He didn't see anything under there, but. Just to make sure, he began to crawl under the floor on his hands and knees. He moved forward slowly and carefully, scrutinizing every inch of the way. Doggoned well he knew that it wouldn't do to be careless at a time like that If there was a snake under there and if it turned out, as was An enormous rattler raised his head. ' extremely likely, to be one of those Texas rattlers he wanted to give it as wide a berth as possible. Al looked around a long time. There wasn't a snake anywhere in sight. He had just about decided he was mistaken was just about to give up the search and crawl back, when his brother, inside the house, dropped a pan on the floor right above him. And then suddenly Al'i whole body stiffened. There Was a Huge Rattler. Dead ahead of him, scarcely two feet from Al's face, an enormous rattler raised his head out of a depression in the ground where he had been lying hidden from view. "I was paralyzed with fear," he says. "I knew that the slightest movement on my part would be fatal, for a snake as big as that one could strike like lightning over that scant two feet of distance, while I was stooped over in such an awkward position that I could scarcely move at all. "Although it was a hot day, cold sweat began to cover my face. Every minute seemed to be an hour. I was hoping against hope that my brother would come out to investigate, and see my danger. Finally I did hear him start out of the door and my heart leaped. I didn't stop to think that even if he did come out he couldn't see the snake from where he d be standing." Al's brother came out and stopped by the side of the house. of hc'S" n Ut f there'" Said' "thre isn'1 8 Snake Within 3 mile One Word Might Mean Death. E?k' ?6 Wrd out ' him and 0134 ske would bS O, Jea'hV" " SPkCn hiS a"SWer WOuld Prbab "And there I was," Al says, "afraid to breathe. After what to traw bet!1"0 "" S'Wly Uncoilcd "nd my hands and knees." undeArr,Sfurk,CheP mVing 33 that r "thered along a.aiATdidn'Ware'0: T,8 there' And S frotvTa ST 'fror your life, don't Then hQ Al heard him dah aTros," th. n ? """""" t0Ward the house' the crashrf a shot 8 minute he was ba- - Al and like a leaf. crawled out frw" under the house, shaking measured t had Cnis,"d and was quite dead, the two : tr-:- Ai- - ;and 4 A n.cnt alm..st certain death." unprotected surface would have that's why I'm betting that M crawls under C'Wnuht.-WN- U Service no more houses The Electric Ec I A yard-lon- electric h j, 500 volts, which passes dor electric organs at sp & 700 meters a second or n of about 1,800 miles ante ' Hk Landinf Cf : Between Las Vegas.' 4at the Grand canyon, t I" field that is so high actually to go to land. Generous iby Clear, cold sprjf U from the trunk ranch neVGrassj Name Meanings Is your ,iame amon the folIow. bi 'Vlr:' 18 a Gman name a M.ldred is a Teuton mur.e meaning mild threatener M:ifs is a Latin M:nnie is ?Ztni meanmg remembrance. Irene J German name meaning peace V rael is a Hebrew God nghteth. James'! me meaning a supplanter. Asia Crab Travels Appearance of the mitten crab near Chelsea. England, has aroused fears that the Thames is in danger - a Far East invasion. Experts are wondering if it is the first of an army which appeared on the coasts of Europe 20 years ago. The mit- - Us presence in European waters i unwelcome because the tunnels it makes undermine river banks. |