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Show UINTAII BASIN RECORD Vanquished Poland Still a Factor in European War Bruckarts Washington Digest Closing Session of Congress To Set Stage for 1940 Campaign WHOS sea-wate- THIS WEEK HOTELS By WILLIAM BRUCKART National Press Bldg., Washington, D. ,HO?EL RmNvEIAD.A,"01' C. By LEMUEL F. PARTON WASHINGTON. It is generally possible to forecast in broad outline what will happen in the session of a congress that winds up a second term of an eight-yea- r national NEW administration. That broad outline But contrary to what has been the situation re specting the money bills, there is going to be a determined effort to make them the center of an issue, a political focus. -- Tangled up with the appropriation bills this year will be a delicate question involving the national debt because President Roosevelt is going to put up to congress the question of increasing the present national debt limit from 45 billions to 50 SOME FORECASTS Next session of congress will be longer than politicians would like. Republicans will seek a big do- mestic issue. Roosevelt will ask 50 billion debt limit. Garner will be on watch for New Deal fumbles. Senator Wheeler may join test for delegates. con- billions. And it must not be overlooked that the question of national revenue taxation is bound to fig- ure in this controversy because the national treasury has been in the red more spending than receipts in the seven years of Mr. Roosevelts administration and two years of Mr Hoover's administration. Proposal to Create Second Budget Sure to Draw Fire 3. National defense expansion of the army and the navy obviously wall get attention and here, again, the question of taxation appears. Mr. Roosevelt has suggested to some of the senate and house leaders that there should be a separate listing of these expenditures and a separate tax to pay for them. That is to say, the President is thinking, at least, of creating a second, and distinct, budget covering such outlays of money just as he has resorted, heretofore, to the use of separate budget listings for regular and emergency expenditures. 4. Another controversial proposition will be the President's proposal to extend the life of the reciprocal trade treaty program. If one expects fire from the trick budget plan, there is likely to be found a land, filled with gasses of the latest poison, hand grenades and machine gun strafing, between those who favor and those who oppose extension of the trade treaties. 5. In addition to the trade treaty program and tied to it in a fashion that makes a skein of tangled yarn appear simple of solution, is the widespread demand that congress revise tile general agricultural program. Many farmeis and farm organizations, as well as numerous politicians, are chasing Secretary Wallace and bureau farmers and farmerettes, in full cry. They are demanding changes and Mr. Wallace is resisting. Schism Within Democratic Party Due for Finish Fight Monetary Policy Though Poland is a vanquished nation, it is still a factor in the European war. Two Polish destroyers, the Blyskawica and the Grom, managed to reach British waters after the downfall of Poland and have been active in fighting against Germany. Left: Gunners aboard the Grom are shown loading her 4.7 guns, making her ready for action. Right: A Polish gunner, aboard the Blyskawica, man an gun at anchor in a British naval base. anti-aircra- ft G. long and bitter conflict, more bitterly assailed in the past than perhaps any other man in France, he com' mands respect as he keeps on croak ing, Victory in war is often destroyed by finance, and he is still a powerful guiding force in French monetary policy. He has known glory, riches, jail, exile, calumny, foolish adu- lation, scandal, exultation, bitterness and disillusionment, and with bloodshot eyes and st jaw, hes still on his feet when the gong ends the round. His fortune was sunk in the defense of his wife for killing Gaston Calmette in 1914. He returned from banishment to full vindication in the espionage case against him. to become premier and later finance minister of 0. P. Presidential Hopefuls Meet in Washington out-thru- ... MAY JUMP Senator Burt Wheeler expected to bid for delegates. lieve to be conservative trend in the country as a whole. The best evidence of this is the great strength admittedly shown for the Democratic presidential aspirations of Vice President Jack Garner. France. There will be other candidacies that must be watered and fed with artificial stimulants. Conservative Tinge to Most Republican Aspirants The Republicans have presidential aspirants, also. There are three of them in the senate Taft of Ohio; of Michigan, and Vandenberg Bridges of New Hampshire. Some others may be found in the house of representatives. That is, there are those who are thinking of themselves as dark horses. Except for Vandenberg, there is a distinct conservative tinge to most of the fellows whose hats may be noted in the Republican ring. Hovering over the candidacies in each of the two parties undeniably is the mist of a possible third term decision by President Roosevelt I do not believe Mr. Roosevelt is going to run again, but he has not said so. Politically, of course, he would be foolish to announce it too early for the reason that once he takes himself out of the race, the wild scramble begins and Mr. Roosevelt loses control. The political possibilities of the coming session are many. There is, of course, the evident move on the part of New Dealers, to drag the foreign situation further and further into the limelight. That has the dual effect of enabling appeals to patriotism and of helping voters to forget mistakes and grievances. Iunderstand are thatRepublicanwheel-horse- s to make issues out of purely domestic problems and alleged shortcomings of the New Deal administration. The undercurrent of information seems to Indicate that Mr. Garner will make his campaign on proposals for improvement of conditions at home. moving Wdl Result in Shaping Policies for Campaign v v r news- - ' paper work in Chicago, people In Halsted and West Madison streets v ' Three Republican presidential hopefuls meet in Washington. Left to right: Sen. Arthur Vandenberg of Michigan, District Attorney Thomas Dewey of New York and Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio. Dewey and Taft have already announced their candidacy. seemed to be about as badly off as European war victims of today. I knew Hobart Chatfield Taylor and was Interested in his work with Jane Addams at Hull House, the pioneer social settlement. They were devoted and unselfish, but, when I looked around the Hull House neighborhood several years ago, nothing seemed to have changed much. Mr. Taylors son, Wayne C. Taylor, grew up in this shadow of misery, and now moves into a sort of pantograph enlargement of the same. He is en route to Finland, to study and organize relief there. The social settlement theory, as bravely K-- l expounded and lived by the elder Mr. Taylor and Jane Addams, was that all men are brother?, and, if fortunate citizens will live in neighborly in'.V tercourse with the unfortunate, v w a little leaven will leaven the " whole lump. A J The younger Mr. Taylor catching step with his times, was a realist v I who believed that the way ahead WVWSZV&STZ f ; lay in understanding of basic economic forces and in the application of progressive and enlightened techniques of government. He became special adviser to President Roose's velt on foreign trade; assistant administrator of the AAA; vice president of the Export-Impobank of Washington; assistant secretary of the treasury. He withdrew from the office last February, When Admiral James O. Richarddissenting from what he considered son, inset, becomes commander-inchie- f the treasury departments policy of of the U. S. fleet on January shaping money Huge gains in manufacture of munitions for domestic use is evidenced procedure to foreign in busy munitions plants in the United States. Here a worker in a Dover, 6, succeeding Admiral Claude Bloch, policy. N. J., arsenal rivets the timing head on the end of a 75mm shell, one of retired, Charles P. Like the Hull nouse melio-rists- , the plants most dangerous jobs. Workers are so busy they have little Snyder, top, will become full adIt would seem that the time to worry about the shadow of danger which hangs over the factory miral and commander of the battle economist innovators and reno where death is packed into steel c finders. force. Announcement was made revators have not yet found the cently by Acting Secretary of the golden key. A comparison of Navy Charles Edison. notes by father and 6on as to whats wrong with West Madison street, Europe and points, and what to do about it, would, I am sure, be interesting. 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Vice-Admir- al Crowned Nations Healthiest Sextette Leisure Begins at 40 r ' w s -- nAA TT7f The presidential candidacies w'll make themselves felt likewise in the decisions which will be taken by congress on various of the other questions that I enumerated at the outset of this discussion And V'hen I say presidential candidacies," I speak broadly of all of them, whether the aspirants be in, or out of, congress. It is to be remembered that the current session will result as much In shaping of policies to be fought out in the campaign of 1940 as in determining which of the men shall be stlccled by the respective party conventions. Consider for example, the RooseLastly, there is the politics of velt proposal for Continuation of the the picture This new session will trade treaties. Or, take the quesbo semewhat dilli rent than the ortion of continued heavy spending bedinary run of last" and the debt that is being cause of the schism within the Dem- piled up resulting for future generations to ocratic. or majority, paity. Real pay. on which Mr. Roosevelt lately Dimucrats are determined to get chain nged Senator Taft to show how conn ol of the party back in their the budget can be balaiued In two hands; New Dealers, who have been years Or, examine the geneial agrunning the show with increasing ricultural pioblem. Any one or all to power themselves until lately, are of these may make or break the eff iced with v hat many observers be- forts of those now In the field. VITHEN this writer began $ I It looks like Sen. Burton Wheeler of Montana may jump out one of these days to contest for delegates to the Democratic convention against Mr. Garner. Each man will have his partisans, as will Paul McNutt, former Indiana governor, who holds himself in the spotlight through being social security administrator. But make no mistake about the vice presidents ability to break up New Deal plays, if I may use a football term. He has shaded down his green trousers and yellow shoes and green vest to more somber hues, but his is still the toughest political hide anywhere extant. ft , 11 a V7TTprv'S L'-- - IT WOULD be hard to say whether big, swart, dead-paCol. Fulgen-ci- o n v vV " x s IS i y Batista, Cubas power man, headed in from right or left. Possi- - v JC Political Fora, V f i Of Power Men Hard to Place t V A. " . Svo 4 J L HOTEL BEN LOMOND 1933. V if -- f 6 ses-inn- s YORK. Old Senator Joseph of France, who knows a lot about money and trade, says Germany will be licked by her pov- in natur- Caillaux Still ertyres0urces, Guides French chiefly oiL At will include the annual appropriations for running the government, the promotion of several legisla- tive proposals designed to aid the political party in power when its presidential nominee gets out on the hustings, and much talk by representatives and senators. Congress, and a Washington dateline, make fine springboards, and the politicians who are in make full use of the opportunity. Since the last session of congress in the Roosevelt administration is upon us, it seems that a prediction on several phases is indicated. 1. The coming session is going to be longer than some of the politicians would like. Contrary to the average of such sessions, the national legislators are likely to be here until almost the middle of June. The length of the sitting probably will be determined by the dates of the Democratic and Republican national conventions, and there is every reason to believe these will be later than usual. 2. Appropriation bills will occupy a great deal of the time in the early weeks of the session, as usual. r. NEWS Proposals to Aid Party in Power Sure to Appear; Effort Will Be Slade to Make Money Bills a Political Focus; Trade Treaties Expected to Draw Fire. WNU Service, Ethjl Fluid Plant More than half of the ethyl fljid used in gasoline is provided from a chemical plant at Wilmington, N. C where bromide is extracted from J i V 4 Hcallhicsl Juvenile scvictie In the nation is tills group of club workers who were selected at the national 4 11 club congress contest In Chicago recently. left to right: Richard Crane, 17, Rushcillc, Inch; Warren Calcs, 18, Sam, .tone, W. Va.; Ruth 1 itenreiter, IS, Bel, la.; Joan N. Parks, 13, Liberty, Ind,; Carlisle Klein, 18, Black River 1 a'N, Bis., and Leslie G. Warrant, 1G, Kasota, Minn, Thousands of farm gills and bojs took part In the contest. JhJ; Off to a life of leisure Is Harry, world's oldest horse. At 40 years of age, Harry is being retired to a Dedham, Mass., farm to spend his re- Barbara Alger, maining jears. granddaughter of Harry's owner, gives him a farewell ride. Harry, it may be added, is thoroughly SSa' with all such curent inno vators, and their political orientation is academic. A year ago, themerely news scouts were reporting that Batista was swinging right. The news today is that the Cuban Communist party is backing him for election to the piesidcncy. Also news Is the mere fact that they are having a presidential election in Cuba. Batista r, was r, barber, brakeman, soldier and stenographer, before he seized Cuba with the flight of Presi-deMachado. He is of Cuban, Indian, Chilean origin, with features and big Mongoloid muscles. cane-rustle- ditih-diggc- nt (Consolidated Features WNU Service ) 350 Baths $2 00 to $100 $4 00 Family Rooms for 4 persons Air Cooled Lounge and Lobby Grill Room . Coffee Shop. Tap Room Home of Rotary Ki warns Execittires 350 Rooms Etchnnce Optimum V0 TO Chamber of Commerce and Ad Club Hotel Den Lomond Come as you are T. . Fitzgerald, NU Week No. 3953 Mgr SALT LAKI ' |