OLLOWING the lead of Speaker Nicholas Longworth, nearly all the Repub. liecan members of the house of representa- tives deserted the ad ministration and voted with the Dem- ocrats for the passage of the bill increasing maximum loans on bonus certificates held by World war veter- ans from 22% per cent to 30 per cent of their face value. The repudiation of the strongly held views of President Hoover. and Sec- retary of the Treasury Mellon was decisive, the vote being 363 to 39. The opposition votes were all cast by Re- publicans. Longworth's activity in be half of the measure was exerted In bringing about an agreement in the rays and means committee. As soon as the bill was handed up to the senate its proponents in that body took steps to hold up nearly all other legislation in order to get It through before Friday night. They were determined that it should not he killed by a pocket veto, which would be possible if speedy action were not obtained. Smoot, Reed and other ad- ministration senators sought delay in the hope of finding a compromise that , Would make the measure acceptable to the President, but in vain. The bill was passed by the senate by a vote of 72 to 12, all the nays be ing Republicans, Administration houses admitted that hope that a veto by President could be sustained. Secretary Mel- lon's arguments against the bill and the figures he gave as to its cost to the government were vigorously dis- puted by many representatives and senators. In the last year Andy has lost much of his prestige as a financial prophet, The house followed up its passage of the bonus loan bill by passing with- out roll calls a bill authorizing the expenditure of $12,500,000 for con- struction of veterans’ hospitals and a bill authorizing the expenditure of $2,860,000 for additional facilities at national soldiers’ homes. The hospi- tal bill Is designed to furnish about 8.300 additional beds. The house veterans’ committee re ported favorably a bill for pensions for widows and children of deceased World war veterans. The bill is esti- mated to cost $15,000,000 the first year and $131,000,000 over a period of five years. The administration has sought to prevent action on this legis- lation at the present session. Speaker Longworth both there was no leaders in the NACTMENT by congress of the In- terior department appropriation bill carrying the $20,000,000 drought relief loan and its official approval by the President removed most of the danger of a special session, despite the controversy over the veterans’ bonus lean. The passage of the com promise relief measure was scored as a victory for Mr. Hoover and bis pol- Icy of epposition to any federa} ap- propriatiom that could be interpreted 8s a dole. In the senate the vote on the bill was €7 to 15; and In the house a formal vote was not even taken on the conference report. S ENATE and house conferees agreed on a compromise resolution which provides for government production, transmission and sale of power at the Muscle Shoals plant, as in the original Norris resolution. That measure is changed only in the part concerning the nitrate plant By the com- promise resolution the President is given one year to amegotiate a lense of the nitrate plant to a private cor poration, failing whieh the government is to begin operation of the plant, Unless President Hoover abandons his former stand he will veto the bill. Soon after March 4 next, Alexander Legge, chairman of the federal farm board, will retire from that body and hand over his multitudi- nous troubles to an- other. It Is believed in Washington that his successor will be James C. Stone, now vice chairman of the board and formerly an assistant secretary of commerce. Mr. Stone represents espe- cially the tobacco interests. Mr. Legge will resume the presidency of the In- ternational Harvester company. When he resigned that office In July, 1029, to head the farm board at the urgent re quest of President Hoover, he sald he could not absent himself from the company for more than one year. However, the exigencies of the farm hoard work Lave prevented his leav- ing it before this. At least three other members of the board may drop out before lung, It is understood. They are: C, C. Teague, fruit and vegetables representative, Samuel R. McKelvie, whent member, James C, Stone and William F, member, Almost from the day Mr. Legge took up his duties as chairman of the farm board, he has been the center of at- tack from’ political and grain trading quarters, While he met these on- slaughts with a vigorous defense of the board, it Is conceded that his de cision to relinquish his dutles with the government was influenced by the violent controversy his policies aroused, For almost a year Mr. Legge's serv- lee has been directed toward stabil izing the wheat market. Opposition arose In Washington and In parts of the graln belt the purchasing by the government of millions of bushels of surplus wheat to steady the market and maintain prices, Schilling, the dairy to OSTMASTER General Walter irown was the center of a series of some what acrimonious dis- cussions during the week. In the first place, he called alr mail operators into conference and told them they would have to Increase service and readjudt rates to meet a deficit esti mated at £150.000.000 for the next fiscal year. He sald sched. ules were not being met, connections at junction points not being completed and average speed not kept up to standard. As for rates, the operators were warned that unless they revised them, congress would do it. In his speech to the operators, Brown warned they could not look for support from military branches of the government since these “were not at all enthusiastic about any part civil aeronautics might play In any pre paredness program,” but spoke of such aid “with some contempt.” This brought from Rear Admiral Moffett, chief of the navy bureau of aeronautics, the statement that he was sure no one In naval aviation ever had spoken with contempt about civil or commercial pilots and alrmen or what they have accomplished, “We have the highest respect for them.” he added, “and believe that they would be of tremendous value to the country In time of war.” About the same time some senators learned that Mr. Brown and the in terstate commerce commission were contemplating making Increases In the parcel post rates. Declaring this would cost the American people $£7.000.000, Senator McKellar of Tennessée of- fered a resolution asking Mr. Brown not to make the changes until they «have been approved by congress. Me- Kellar and Senator Norris of Nebraska contended the ralse would be In the Interest of the express companies which they sald would get much of the business now handled by the par- cel post, McKellar added the In. creases would be a heavy burden on the farmers. The resolution was adopted. Postmaster Gen. Brown RESIDENT HOOVER put his sig- nature to the bill providing for a 44-hour week for postal employees, which becomes effective July 1 and will affect 150,000 letter carriers, of- fice clerks and railway service men. The President then announced that he would ask congress to authorize the appointment of a special commis. sion to Investigate ways and means of placing the Post Office department on something like a paying basis. In dis closing his intention Yo take steps to cut down the annual postal losses the President pointed out that the Post Office department faces an estimated deficit of $100,000,000 for the next fiscal year, ENATORS, mostly Democratic, gave considerable of their time for several days to debating the wet and dry question. Mil- lard Tydings of Mary- land, wet, obtained the adoption of a res olution calling on the Wickersham commis- sion to forward to the senate the testl- mony om which the commission based Its recent report on prohibition. Tydings and some of the dry senators from the South engaged in acrimonious dis cussion in the course of which Mor rison of North Carolina sald some most uncomplimentary things about Chairman Rascob of the Democratic national committee. Next day Senator Wagner of New York delivered a prepared speech call. Ing on the Democratic party to lead the way to prohibition reform and attacking the President for “throw- ing away” the opportunity offered by the Wickersham report “to lead a grateful people out of the morass of criminality, corruption and hyprocrisy In which we bave been bogged for eleven years.” The method of bringing about Im: Senator Tydings proved conditions which the commis. sion did not discuss was, he sald, that of state option ander federal control, He offered a plan under such a meth. od. He would have repeal, but with a Joint agreement between federal and state governments, as part of the state's repealing action, to gunrantee state control without the saloon, FE, THELBERT STEWART, commis. sioner of labor statistics, pre sented to the senate committee on food costs & mass of government sta- tistics showing a wide discrepancy be tween the prices pald by consumers for milk and dalry products and the prices received by farmers. He sald the figures showed a very apparent failure of retali prices’ to follow the decline of wholesale prices in milk. The average price of milk In 51 cities Is 13.8 cents a quart, Stewart sald, and the farmer is recelving an aver nge of a little less than 45 cents, lepresentatives of the dalry indus. try testified the consumer was receiv. ing the full benefit of reductions in the wholesale prices of thelr products, But Chairmun Capper showed that one of the companies had averaged profits of about 20 per cent on its stock dur ing the last five ye.rs, which, he said, is about ten times the profit the farm ers In Kansas get, price OUR days of politieal jockeying In Spain ended with the formation of a new monarchist cabinet headed by Admiral Juan Bautista Aznar For the time being both revolution and the renewal of a military dictatorship were avoided, though the fundamental are not and Alvarez, leaders of the opposition had failed to form Ring Alfonso could cabinet Is right monarchists tives, liberals and ents represented. It is consent parilament which reforms In the constitution, the powers of the throne unimpaired, Aznar Is the oldest ranking officer In the Spanish pavy and has not been a partisan In politics, V ARIOUS problems of naval warfare especially that of the relative of the heavily armored hat. tieship and the air plane, may be solved In the greal war game of the navy which be gan at the siart of the week in Panama waters, The forces were divided Into the fleet and the “Black” fleet. The former, under command of Vice Ad miral Arthur L. Willard, fiying bis flag on the Arkansas, was entrusted with the defense of the Panama canal and of a hypothetical Nicaragua canal. It is the Atlantic or scouting fleet nnd was reinforced by the alreraft car riers Saratoga and Lexington and the dirigible Los Angeles: by planes from the naval air station nt Coco Solo and by a big fleet of “V4” submarines The attacking or “Black” fleet was not nearly so strong In planes but more powerful in other respects. It was commanded by Admiral Frank H Schofleld. The *“Dlacks™ had about eighty planes, forty from the aircraft carrier Langley and the rest from battleships and a division of new 10. 000-ton “treaty™ cruisers, tried out for the first time In war operations with the fleet. This division. composed of the Northampton, the Salt Lake City and the Pensacola, was assigned to Admiral Schofield’s command for the war problem, though ordinarily it operates in the Atlantic. The umpire ship was the Texas, flagship of Admiral Jehu V. Chase, commander In chief of the United States fleet and general director of the war game. issues settled. Guerra both that new governments The extreme CONBerva- accept up of with the Catalan made independ. Aznar will of certain believed Admiral to a special will session the make leaving value Vice Admiral A. L. Willard rt "” Hue N THE Sunday before the be ginning of Lent the government of Soviet Russia declared war against religious influence In the schools, en. listing all Soviet children In the eam. paign. The commissariat of educa. tion In a manifesto said: “We cannpt allow the morality of our children to be degraded by re ligion. The churches recently had the audacity to creep into our schools In one school tiny crosses were dis tributed among pupils” The commissariat voted frrds for an issue of circulars calling upon school teachers to intensify their antl religious instruction, and it appealed to the movie trust to produce special anti-Christian filme for juvenile con sumption. HILE the alleged inlquities of postal leases are still under In. vestigation, the house gave Its ap proval to a program for wider federal ownership of ppstal facilities which has the backing of the administration. The bill passed authorizes the ex. penditure of $45,000,000 for the re moval of postal activities from leased quarters into government-owned sub. stations and garages. It received g unanimous vote, EATHS of the week Included those of Louis Mann, veteran comedian; Gov. Frank C. Emerson of Wyoming; W. R. Merriam, former gov. ernor of Minnesota, and Louls Wol heim, movie and stage actor. Ma). Gen. Clarence R. Edwards, commander of New England troops In the World war, who died In Boston, was buried In Arlington National cemetery, (@ 1931, Western Newspaper Union.) Beekeeping Best as One-Man Task Average Keeper Will Make Most Profit With 400 Cglonies, (Prepared by the United Ststes Department of Agriculture i=—WNU Bervice, The average beekeeper will make the most profit if he limits his busi ness to 400 colonies, the number he can care for single-handed, the Unit- ed States Department of Agriculture says. He may be a first-rate bee han- dler, but the temperament of a good beeman generally Is not the tempera ment for managing employees effi clently. What One Man Can Do. One man can do practically all of the work required for 850 or 400 col onles, even during rush seasons, the department learned by studying for three years the records of beekeepers in widely separated regions of the country. With an aplary of this size, however, he will need some additional means of Income, Beekeeping is at its best, as & supplement to farming. man In New York state, who farms 100 acres and cares for 70 colonies of bees léarned from experience that a 70-colony aplary is equivalent to about 40 acres of land in both income and labor. One beekeeper, spends little time in his aplary and is an inefficient employer of labor, had a labor cost of more than $6 per colony. He 063 cents a colony one year, and $1.75 the next year. But not all beemen are po One 1.800) generally, One who lost a colony Ir MADAZErs, who owns reported a yield of about 250 pounds of extract ed honey from and a to tal income of 823.387 in 1028, or a net of £11.78 each hour he worked with the He hires labor and knows how to use jt. Other beemen have reported returns of $2.40 to 85.50 an hour for their time In the aplary. good colonies each colony income for bees, Studied. has studied bee in Colorado, Wyo Practices epartment ractices . Idaho, Montana, lows, New vignn and Minnesota, he next few years the depart- Ohlo complete its nation-wide dvi beekeeping on the ying in the Dakota plaine, In in Plowing for Crops yi ne or Associate r of Boils, State Agricuitoral Ceo The largest item of expense in pro- ducing cereal and annual forage crops is tillage. The most tillage tions are plowing and cultivating. Reduction in depth or frequency of plowing, or number of cultivations necessary for economic mate rinlly reduces the cost of raising the crop. Plowing deeper cereals or crops—is never warranted, Timeliness plowing is important factor In July-plowed ground bushels the acre more tember-plowed ground. Nitrogen conservation is the thing for which the farmer plows, not mols ture conservation, The dust mulch Is no longer consid- ered a useful practice, Caltivation sufficient to keep down weeds is all that is ne wssary-—addi- tional plowing Is wasted. Efficient tools, especially power equipment, is of utmost value in till age In the light of discoveries as to the value of timeliness in plowing. SEWELL, Kansas lege.) important opera yields, inches for root than six row crops—excepting the tillage eight Sep “early wheat produced than to Soy Bean Hay Equal in Feed Value to Alfalfa At the Indiana station soy bean hay proved to be about 8 per cent infe- rior to alfalfa. At the South Dakota station results from a similar test in- dicated soy bean hay to be 8 per cent better than alfalfa for dairy cows, At the West Virginia station soy bean hay proved to be slightly superior to alfalfa for milk production, and at the Tennessee station it was quile a bit superior. At the Wisconsin sta- tion, In one case, milk production was slightly larger when alfalfa was fad as compared with soy bean hay, The weights of the cows were also slightly better maintained on the former than on the latter. In another test at the game station the two hays were prac tically equal in feeding value, but more of the soy bean hay was wasted by the cows than of the alfalfa. Thus we see that on the whole soy bean hay, when well cured and cut at the right time, is practically equal In feeding value to good alfalfa. Intensive Campaign to Control Oriental Moth Growers In the section in which the orienta] fruit moth is already present fare preparing to wage an Intensive campaign to control this pest during the coming season, As ‘the opening gun In battle the growers will give their orchards a deep thorough cultivation. This kills those that pass the winter in the soll. This is quite a per cent of the total number that live over. The other methods of control which are suggested by those who have worked on this insect will be used lat. or in the season. It will be a hard battle but unless the grower wins, this year's crop In these sections seriously tufected will be worth almost nothing. "e ’ Loss of Potatoes Careful Regulation of Tem- perature Is Important. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture. )~-WNU Bervice, Wastes and losses of potatoes in storage can be prevented in great part if growers and dealers adopt the stor. age methods which the United States Department of Agriculture recom mends. These Include careful regula- tion of the temperature of the storage room, controlled ventilation, and ex- clusion of light, Dr. William Stuart, potato specialist of the Wureau of plant industry, has just revised Farmers’ Julletin B47-F to Include Information developed since the bulletin was first issued In 1017. The all-year demand has always necessitated storage of considerable of the crop, many and dealers have that considerable waste in storage was Inevitable. Sclentifie in- vestigation has demonstrated that much of the loss Is preventable, Stor- age under favorable conditions offers several advantages; it assures a more uniform market supply, preserves table quality, and protects the vitality of seed, Doctor Stuart emphasizes the value of temperature to suit the storage stages of the potato. “If he says, se somewhat Immature, temperature of first ten days rel tissues will brief for potatoes quantities and believed ErOowers changing the newly harvested potatoes” Hy the are sub to about 60 d of rees for the the st (¢ period in a sy hut y, the injured heal over." After the of storage at OO iid quickly period degrees temperature shot be reduced about 40 d two or three d then held at about 38 deg B4T-F, rage Houses” talls r srature reg- ulation, light ex , and other fac- Storage and Sto gives de- desir potato stor tors gives practical su sstions for con- struction of storage houses, obtained free by applying to the office of information, ment of D. C. Early Plowing Favored for Best Soy Bean Crop AS a general rule, the ground should be plowed for soy beans, results of tests by the Ohio agricul silat tural farm experimen of “There are a rule,” tins issued by the ex- periment 8 “as the soil is naturs loose and when a good seed bed can be prepared by disking.” Experiments at Wooster have yield- 10.58 bushels of to the acre on disked corn land, while plowed corn stubble land yi 15.79 bushels of grain and 2,002 pounds of straw, Early plowing is the better practice, since it gives time for the seed bed to settle and oppor tunity to kill one crop of weeds be. fore the soy beans are planted. Late plowing in a dry season may leave the soll so loose and dry that germination will be poor and the early growth of Many growers soy beans be- not plant corn is in the Crops ment the few Bays State } exceptions one of the when ed pounds of straw stubble ided the soy beans stunted. prepare the seed bed for fore that for corn, but the soy beans until the ground. do Check Machinery Before Opening of Season’s Work With the severe conditions under which chains operate on most farm machinery they should be carefully checked before the opening of a new season's work. Proper alignment of sprockets should always be main- tained In order to prevent side-pull causing excessive wear on the sides of sprocket teeth, Worn sprockets should be replaced when new chains are placed on drivers to prevent a difference in pitch giving improper chain action and causing excessive strains on chains, Proper adjustment and oiling are also essential. Too much tension places unnecessary loads on the bear ings and chain. Rusty chains should be cleaned with kerosene or light oil When running they should be bri cated occasionally with a good grade of oll stedrefefefefuledededudefodedeirdedaieieleebdodebd Agricultural Hints Fe lmbdeiedededelededeeedeiede idee Kale can be picked in the garden all winter. You might try a few plants another year. *. 9 » Forest trees have just as many In- sect and fungus enemies as orchard trees and field plants. Le - Red raspberries are the hardlest of the brambles, blackberries being most susceptible to adverse climate, . » » Look over thh garden tools and give them a coating of ofl so they won't be dull and rusty when you want them. . 8s » To get better pollination in a single variety pear orchard, top-work some trees to Bose, Kieffer, Anjou, or Clapp Favoi ite. " . ® » In planning next year's work, try a system which will include several of the crops most profitable In the region over a period of years SICKENS—GET RID OF ITI Bour stomach, Indigestion, gas, nse ually mean excess acid, The stome ach nerves have been over-stimulate ed. Food sours in the Cogrect excess i i The best form of alkall is Phill Milk of Magnesia, It works instantly, Your OUEDess stomach, acid wit The stomach becomes sweot, heartburn, he, bi or Indigestion hag van Phillips’ Milk of Mam pleasant way-—the eflicient relieve the effects Ph Hips’ Milk of Magnes; standard with years, 20c¢ and H0¢ be gists, gas, he of ovoer.a been over 5D at drug- doctors for tities Now the Fox Rustler The cattle rustier m but another form Ve loped i Idatio fox grow by thieves pens nad steal Bands largest ver worth £2 of do theft foxes and JEM ng injur ARANTEED, Boschee’s Syrup His Task At all druggists Marine Marvel ng enough body. He Is a ger ure Is kine | WE ARE OPEN TO MEN © HEN Washington's Dodge Hotel (for- merly the Grace Dodge) opened ten years ago men were not accepted. So many women liked the hotel and wanted to bring their husbands, brothers, fathers, uncles and sons that six years ago the doors were thrown open to both men and women. Since then thousands of men have stayed here, including several sena- tors, some bankers, and a few Governors. The Dodge is popular with both men and wom- en because of its non- tipping policy, its cheery, comfortable guest rooms, its spacious lobbies, its garden setting and its convenient location near the Capitol, the Library of Congress, and the Senate Office Building. Accommodations for 400. Room and bath from $3 Write for Complimentary Booklet “A Week in Washington™ THE DODGE HOTEL North Capitol &E Sts, NW. Washington, D. C