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Show PUBLIC OPINION In Cottons for Sunny Afternoon PATTERN News Review of Current TIIE Speaker Raineys Death Starts Race for Ilis Position Prominent Men Organize Liberty ILeague to Combat Radicalism. W. PICKARD By EDWARD Weatarn e br Newspaper Union. conHENRY T. RAINEY, veteran gressman from Illinois and speaker of the house, died unexpectedly In a St Louis hospital where he was believed to be recovering from an attack of bronchial pnenmonl The Immediate cause of hi death was anMr. gina pectoris Italney, who was within a day of being seventy-four The secret of the charm of till frock la In ita jrouthfulneaa and appealing demurenes making It becoming to every type of figure. And beat of all. It la almple aa can be to make, for the bodice and pulfed aleevea are cut in one, and the walst-lln- e la anugly fitted by pointed BeaThe flattering collar la lovely ming. faahloned of aelf or contrasting color. Make Jt with the help of the new Sew Chart it tella and lllua-tratevery detail In cutting, sewing and finishing. Iattern 0843 may be ordered only In sixes 12. 14,' 10, IS. 20, 00. .12, 04, 30, 38 and 40. Size 1C requires 3 fabric. yards Send FIFTEEN CKXT8 In cnlna or atanipa (coins preferred) for this pattern. lie sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, the STYLE NUMREIt and SIZE. Send your order to Sewing Circle Iattern Department, 232 West Eighteenth street, New York. Mr. Rainey was burled In his home town, Carrollton, after services which were attended by President Roosevelt and mnny other notable person denth will SPEAKER RAINEY'S spirited contest among a number of men who are ambitious to succeed him. First In the line of succession, so to spenk, la Representative Joseph W. P.yrns of Tennessee. who has been serving ns majority floor leader and who la head of the Democratic national congressional committee. President Roosevelt Is going to tnke no part In the race, but the more liberal of the THERE She was determined to be married, and he was equally determined to remain single. It's no good, my dear," he ahl. I'm roo hard lip. Why. I couldn't even keep a mouse." "Of course you could." wns her re1 love the lit! le ply. things." New Quito a Difference Mother (lecturing Hilly nfter the company hml gone) Don't you know the difference between suflicient" and enough"? Sure, mol her, answered the hoy. Suflicient' Is when a fellow's mother thinks It's time for Mm to stop eating dessert. Enough Is when he thinks it Is." Hi Honey The traveling salesman railed the head waitress over and complained: "Where's my honey?" The head waitress replied, with great dignity: "She got so fresh we had to let her go." 1 'at blinder Magazine. Too Silly for Words Are you askin' fer alimony, Mrs. Waggs?" Alimony. Mrs. Tnggs? If he nmld pay alimony, would 1 he askin' fer a divorce?" old, waa district 3!)-lnc-li NO DIFFICULTY years first elected to congress In 1002, and he served continuously with the exception of one term, being defeated In the Harding landslide of 1020. lie waa elected to the speakership when John Nance Garner became Vice President His control over the house during the sessions of last year and this year, while the Presidents program was being put through, was gentle hut so firm that the legislators were kept well In line. Mr. Rainey devoted much of his service in Washington to efforts to Improve the condition of the farmers, for he held that farm prosperity was essential In any program for national well being. He also waa a student of tariff and fiscal subjects. As a Democrat he waa alwaya a regular." Ha waa the author of the tariff commission law and of morh other Important legislation. Mrs. Rainey acted as her hu band's secretary for years and Is so well acquainted with congressional work that the Democrats may select her as the candidate to complete hla term as representative from the Twentieth Illinois I Dealeri are known to favor Sam Well Informed obRayburn of Texn servers believe liyrns will be elected speaker and Rayburn floor leader. Other aspirants for the sppakerslilp are John E. Rankin of Mississippi, who has announced hs candidacy; William R. Hankhead of Alabama, and John J. O'Connor of New York. Mr. Hyrns has been a member of the house continuously since his election to the Sixty-firs- t Ilis work congres as floor leader, In conjunction with Ralney'a rule aa speaker, waa not especially pleasing to the New Dealers for some months during the last session, but before adjournment most of the misunderstandings were cleared In any case, the administration up- seldom Interferes In the selection of the leaders of congres not wishing to Incur the pnmity of powerful niem-- ! bers of the party. from his swift trip to funeral of Mr. Italney, the President went directly back to Washington Instead of going to hla Hyde Park home. Tills change In plan was due. it was said, to the development of a hitter dispute between Gen. Hugh S. Johnson on one side and Donald Kichlicrg. Mr. Roosevelt's chief Industrial adviser, and Secretary of Labor Perkins on the other, over the new structure to he given the XKA. The issue. It was disclosed, is whether there shall he a hoard of control In authoritative management of the XRA or a Imnrd which shall be more advisory In power, lenvlng the real control still In the hands of the administrator and hla deputle It was expected Mr. Roosevelt would tnke command of the situation and determine definitely wlint shall be done with the recovery administration. Returning ORGANIZED labor scored a victory Administrator Johnson when the national labor relations bonrd ordered John Donovan, former president of the KRA union dismissed by Johnson for Inefllrlen-cy,- " reinstated to his position with the labor advisory bonrd. The agencies which are administering the law should In their own dealings uphold Its purpose" the board said In Its decision, giving a veiled reproof to Johnson for whnt tt Implied was a violation of section 7a of the NR. Wlth rather bad grace the XKA accepted the rebuke and permitted Donovan to return to his Job. Johnson himself had nothing to any about It, but Dr. Gustav Peck, Donovan's Imstatement mediate superior, issued In which he sniffed at the board's de waa ended when the men and their employers accepted a agreement, and martial law la the city waa discontinued, business thereafter speeding back to normal condition The peace plan, devised by federal representative provided that all employees on strike bo returned to their jobs without discrimination and on basis of seniority. It Included an agreement to hold an election within ten days In each of tha 1GG firm involved to determine whether their employees want tha drivers' nnlon or other representatives to act for them In collective bargaining, and a pledge of the 106 firms to pay for at least one year not leu than SO cents an hour to drivers and 40 cents to helper platform men and Inside worker com-prom- ts Events the World Over M4 strike of truck drivers la cision and warned Donovan that he would bnve to toe the mark." Soon after this the NRA announced that It does not regard Itself as obliged to withdraw the Rlue Eagle In casea where the national labor relations board has found companies guilty of violation of section 7A of the national Industrial recovery act and of subsequent failure to obey the Instruct tlons of the board. The labor board has recommended withdrawal of the Blue Eagle to the NRA compliance board In all cases where companies have disobeyed Its Instructions to reinstate discharged The decision by the NRA employee will remove teeth from decisions by the board, alnce It may now hear case make decision and find that no penalties are Inflicted for disobeying Ita order f'OTTOX garment code amendments reducing the working hours and giving workers a wage Increase have been signed by the President The amendment which affect plants In 42 state are of Importance. Sidney Hillman, labor advisory board member and Amalgamated Clothing union head, termed aignlng of the order "the moat move NRA has yet made to increase employment" It waa hoped that this g g order would avert the threatened strike of the garment worker - prominent Democrat two almost equally prominent and one leading Industrialist, all of them of conservative tendencle have united to organize the American Liberty league dedicated to a war on radicalism In the United The five founders of the leugue are: Alfred E. Smith, Demo-cratl- e TWO 8tate Presidential In 1928; candidate John W. Davis Democratic Presidential In 1924 ; candidate Nathan L. Miller, Republican of NCw York; James W. Wadsworth, Republican congressman from New York, former senator and Presidential possibility for 1930; Irenee Du Pont manufacturer, who supported Smith In 1928 and Roosevelt In 1032. They believe the league membership will grow Into the millions and that it will become an Important element in the national life. For president of the organization the founders selected Jouett Sliouse. former chairman of the Democratic national committee and president of the Association Against the Prohibition Amendment until repeal waa accomplished. In a statement Mr. Shnuse set forth the purposes of the league as follows: It Is a nonpartisan organization, formed, as stated in its charter, to defend and uphold the Constitution of the United States and to gather and disseminate Information that (1) will teach the necessity of respect for the rights of persons and property as fundamental to every successful form of government, and (2) will teach the duty of government to encourage and protect Individual and group Initiative and enterprise, to foster the right to work, earn, save, and acquire property, and to preserve the ownership and lawful use of property when acquired. To Interviewers Mr. Shouse declared the league was not but it seemed clear that It will be opposed to most of the major purposes of the New Deni and the radical professors of the brain trust. He said he had visited the President and Informed him fully of the purposes of the league, but he would not tell wliat Mr. Roosevelt's reaction had been. TX THE nature of a reply to the for- niatlon of the American Liberty longue wua a speech delivered in Washington by Secretary of Commerce Daniel C. Roiier. lie denied that the profit motive In American life haa been or Is to be abolished" by the New Deal, asserting that It seeks only to abolish certain profit abuse such aa profits on watered stocks and salaries. Private enterprise. said Mr. Roper, la getting back upon Ita own feet, and more and more la exerting Ita Initiative and la able to relieve the federal government of responslhllltie which under normal conditions belong to buslncs Pardon my relating again that the Roosevelt administration la squarely It believes In behind this prlnclpl Just profits for management and capital and an equitable return to labor for Its rightful rewards In the economic processe No thinking business man desires to have the obi order restored. He docs desire and Is entitled to have the new order characterized by a better control against economic cntaelysina and by the freedom to exercise his initiative In planning for the future of hla business In the light of an equitable profit system." Howe About: Sally Sez Conversation On Quitting Work The Country A BaH SyadleMa-WN- U Barrie By ED HOWE HAVE met tome opposition In my contention that a man may learn much from conversation going on around him; that ha may thus acquire education as unconsciously as he eata his meal attends to hla work, or otherwise meets lifes Incident I have known a telegraph operator to alt Idly for hours In a room full of clattering Instrument and suddenly grasp a key when hla call came out yiLLIAM GREEN, president of of the confusion. So a man constantly the American Federation of La bor, saya he hopes the general strike In the babble of conversation may pay of textile industry workers will be little attention to It until something of averted; but ha an- Interest attracts him ; a bit of wisdom, nounces at the tame new or a jest he has not heard. Oscar Wilde left In books as great time that the federaMaaatarkw It tat Um du ( tion Indorses the a number of bright sayings as any u'l Um It's what he Hut strike and will co- Englishman. All of them were sug- Sms far hla ftUaw am. operate fully with the gested- from mingling with men, first PATBONIZC H01U KDURBY oincere and members used In conversation, and the best of WWVWVWWW1 of tha United Textile them later transferred to print Men Workers organization. acquire education laboriously from books they are compelled to study ad He appointed federation committee! to as- a duty, but easily out In the world, sist tha textile work-er- a where everyone has a little, and la and announced busy distributing It Treesore Chests Not Disturbed that he would draft In Lake Esan, in the Caucasus, trained organizers and strike specialBecause a man loses his Job," I chests of treasure, thrown into tha ists from other unions to assist the read somewhere, it does not follow lake years ago to save them from textile union. he should quit work." still lie there. I know a man invading armies, dont know how That la good sens George A. Sloan, president of the But natives the Cotton Textile Institute and chairman who lost his job as a maker of radio to salvage them, and foreigners of the cotton textile code authority, part This morning I bought vege- arent allowed to try. uld the threatened strike la not justi- table of him ; he continued work on fied by the facts established by Imsome land a neighbor let him us and Special Ter The Meath Of Sept. he haa not suffered the humiliation of partial government economist $1S Ins CiayMi Sk Hutto hut? dm Challenging tha wage Increase de- calling on the Salvation army, the Red Taa caa saw lore a piafralaa that wiH Maka or mand of the United Textile Workers Cros the county commissioner jaa Mqnfal far tha Ml af jaar Sara. ITS nlr far tha of America, Mr. Sloan declared that congres rMplft caaraa af Si Manffca. as a result of three basic wage proI have another neighbor who lost Pkaaa ar writ far aar catalaeaa. visions In the code the hourly wages hla job In a machine shop. He did not ITU litl semi If Kill? CM. THE 111 a Mata It, faH Laka Cttr paid In March, 1934, show an Increase quit work, either; he la now operating In case I am of 7 per cent aa compared with March, a laundry In hla horn able to change shirts this week, I 1933, when there was no cod Premises of a Legation All of this haa meant a substantial shall certainly arrange with this man The premises of a legation are Increase In manufacturing cost" Mr. to wash my old one. regarded aa a part of the soil of Some of my other neighbors are get the country whose flag it flies and Sloan said, and the research and planning division of the NRA found, after ting $15 a month from the county, and cannot be entered by an American a comprehensive Investigation last regularly their name appear In tha official without tha permission of the legation. June, that under existing conditions paper under the heading of Disthere la no factual or statistical basis bursements to tha County Poor." I for any general Increase In cotton tex- shall make a hard struggle to keep tile code wage my name out of the list I know most Mr. Sloan estimated the present of the people read It, and make ugly THIS WEEKS PRIZE STORY number of workers at work In some comment 14X10 mills In the cotton industry at 4GO.OOO. TranHns tea IlMnil aiiks each pear If the people are starving, what Is I aU manta la Hah Pradacta azeal to be done about It, since nature has IallSat tka rat. par tin ar. (u. Una no more to give? I once lived on a ail Mat, aaa alaas tka klckwar MARIO nERXAXDEZ witkaat I LIEUT.-COwait as af a plot to overthrow the farm, and while I am able to recall tnakla. Tka hack kas aaa aaslaaa pradacta aukn I alwaya had ta atap and aajar a saai anaL Ba aut government of President Mendleta of some discomfort and bad ap with Intanaaataim Pradacta Cuba and establish a military dictator- enough to eat Frequently, we used hefan yaa taka par trip. ship, but the authorities got wind of parched rye for coffee, and sorghum LA VOB TYLO Epkrmln, UUk. It and frustrated the conspiracy, In molasses for sweetening. The other on found I molasses the sorghum which a considerable part of the army day table, bought from an was Involved. CoL Fulgenclo Batlst Fall Term Begins head of the army, said that Major farmer, and thought It still very good. Ws grated com meal for bread, and Benitez and some soldiers were sent Out of Town Students to arrest Hernandez and that eight always down In the feed lot were pigs Earn Living Expenses. men of the detachment were killed. coming on to supply meat when the Hernandez tried to (hoot Benitez but smoke house began to show signs of was himself shot In the head and neck. emptiness. We had cattle for plowing, The official report said Ilernandes waa and to supply milk. Chickens almost being rushed toward Havana In an took care of themselves about the automobile and that the car upset, the place, and supplied eggs In addition to prisoner being killed, though the oth- a surplus of old roosters which, when boiled long enough, made fairly good ers In the car were uninjured. blackber-ri- e MaJ. Angel Echevarria, commandant eating. We had wild plum and preserved them for winter of Fourth Infantry at Camp Columbl There waa plenty of fuel In tha and Capt. Augustin Erlce, chief of the us woo'd and one man In the neighborsignal corps, conspirators with Herwere captured later and a hood tanned beef hide from which nando In almost every summary court martial sentenced them another made shoe house there was a loom, for the manuto death. Four thousand troops In Plnar del facture of a cloth called linsey wool-seand this supplied clothing. under Rio are confined to barrack was a poor start, but we were It a ENROLL NOW and thorough reorganization arrest, of the entire high command of tha never hungry or naked while waiting Write gar Catmlajwa Cuban army Is In full awing. About for times to get better. And times Henager Business College 200 civilians have also been arrested never did get much better; indeed, I as parties to the conspiracy, charged think they are harder now than I ever 41 Eat Irafn?, Ut Ub Cr. Itafe with carrying message to military knew them to be on Big Creek. town people should The plotter Many Streams Polluted remember there Is a place where they stream pollution, for Inland Soviet citizens art can at least always get enough to eat, which there is no federal regulaEIGIITY-EIGHmove out Into the country. Pretty nnder arrest In Manchukuo, and tory agency is regarded aa the much all the land will soon be owned greatest menace to commercial charged with plotting against Mantax the sale government through fishing in the United States. chukuo and Japan and sabotaging by and almost anyone free to file on It. Japanese military train The Russian 400 government, through Acting Consul In one of the periods of depression General Itayvld at Harbin, has presented to the foreign office of Man- In Rome, Sllerlus called the poor tochukuo a demand for an explanation gether. In your meeting" he said, you make very severe charges against of the arrests and Insists on prompt measures for the release of the those who are feeding you. It Is not Service Stations in Utah and Idaho usual to criticize the poor, but many prisoner The arrests were made without of you have very bad habit and are First President in Auto document accompanied by searches not doing your part. In an emergency President McKinley was the first of the apartments and offices of Soviet all should help. Some of the rioting Chief Executive of the United you have Indulged In has only resulted States to ride in an automobile. In employees of the Chinese Eastern railway which have not been explained," In destroying such food supplies as November, 1899, the President had we hav I give you frank notice this a ride in a steam carriage owned Rayvld said. The Japanese allege thnt some of will not be submitted to again. If any by F. O. Stanley, inventor of the Locomobile. the prisoners confessed to an attack of you have not heard of It, I announce I am head of the army, and on the Japanese military Intelligence office at Sulfenho (Pogranlrbnaya), to will not Join you In unnecessary deS'FOBESLDArEStopips sending Manchurian and Corean com- struction. munists Into the territory, to wreckForma a Canoeing On a certain day In history the Rusing trains carrying Japanese troop There are two forma of canoeand munitions toward the frontier, sians were fighting against Frederick ing: Paddling and sailing. Tha and to creating general disturbances the Great The next day the Russian armies were ordered by their chief Big greater number of devotees belong along the eastern lln to the for this is Probably before long will come the Man to fight for Frederick. . . . the truepaddlingof dan, wherecanoeing, type As a I have often rebelled subject news that the Japanese have seized as the calls other for skill, sailing the Chinese Eastern railway, and that against the orders given me by rulrr and sailing seems to belong to the order In bPlleving they war frequently between big may very well result sport that is called yachting. things done for petty reason Japan and Russl a a Telling the Truth A vote of about 10 to 1 the peothe truth is seeing beyond Telling BY of It Is probably best that parents and the Germany decided that Chanple that take the eye and things do children not tell or boldly print cellor Adolf Hitlers action In assum-In- g have tha price. the powers of president was all what they really think of each other. . . . A reasonable amount of reright The result of the pleblsdte far AA Pr week will ka paU was: "Ye" S8AG2.709; No," 4,294,-G5- straint Is best In everything; within artirla " "Wfcr aa Its bounds has ihanM aa hypocrisy 872,21X1. good points ya HiaUar Invalid," Though the Interaaatala nude Grcda" A certain mean foreigner, long since ia abava. Saad par itary la proa ar yes" votes were several million less arm la lalaraManlain 1radarla than In the November plebiscite on dead, lias been written about for year P. Bax ISU ash Laka Clip. If and pronounced a 'nystery, , . . the withdrawal from the League of Nayam Mary appeara ' More no man Is a IMl Hitmysfoolishness; tnlaMn sntlafled are and Nazli yaa tion the acira chark for ler appears to he safely fixed as the tery. I know myself, and necessarily And whether I look at country's ruler for the reat of Ills life. know other Wok Ka. Sill W.N.U. S.ilt Laka Clip (hors or at myself, my knowledge la Ills power, as chancellor-leader- , hnmcs ui& of dictator. other that than any grentcr I tini. rate" ui Sept. 4 y, T At Utah Oil Refining 4; u)jiUU a $3.00 |