OHN D. ROCKEFELLER, JR, threw a man-sized bomb into the camp of the prohibition forces with his announcement that he had come to the conclusion that the eighteenth amend ment is a fallure and should be repealed. Himself a teetotaler and, with his father, a liberal supporter of the Anti-Saloon league for years, Mr. Rockefeller in a let. ter to Nicholas Mur- ray Butler commend- ed the latter's anti prohibition plank and urged its adoption by both the Republican and Democratic parties in thelr pa- tional conventions. He declared the aims of prohibition had not been achieved and sald that “drinking gen- erally has Increased; that the speak- easy has replaced the and that a vast army of lawbreakers has been recruited and financed on a co lossal scale,” Upon these reasons of “unprecedent. ed crime increase and the open dis regard of the eighteenth amendment which 1 have slowly and reluctantly come to believe,” Mr. Rockefeller based his present stand. He declared that “the benefits of prohibition are more than outweighed by its eviis.” After approving in detail Doctor Butler's proposal for repeal and state control of the liquor traffic, Mr. Rocke feller expressed a hope that the “mil. lions of earnest workers in behalf of the eighteenth amendment” would con- tinue their efforts In support of “prac tical measures for the promotion of genuine temperance.” Of course the wets were jubliant over Mr. Rockefeller's statement, and the drys tried without much success to minimize its effect by contradicting his assertions concerning the success of the prohibition legislation. John D. Rocke- feller, Jr. saloon NCOURAGED by the Rockefeller pronouncement, leaders of six na- tional antiprohibition organizations met In New York and formed a “unit- ed repeal council” with the purpose of placing In both the Republican and Democratic platforms planks calling definitely for the repeal of prohibl tion. Pierre 8S. du Pont was elected chairman of the council, —— MN ANY anxious hours were spent by administration chiefs and James R. Garfleld over the form in which the Republican prohibition plank should be cast, and a conference par- ticipated In by Post master General Wal ter Brown, the Presi. dent's political advis er, and a dozen sena- tors finally approved a resolution which states that, while the P Republican party i stands for enforce A 4 ment of all laws and Lad abhors the saloon, it Senator Borah recognizes the righ of the people to pass upon any por tion of the Constitution and therefore favors the prompt re-submission of the eighteenth amendment to the people of the several states acting through nonpartisan conventions. This naturally did not at all suit the wet Republicans and they prom ised that the Issue would be fought out in the convention. The tentative plank was derided as utterly evasive and deplorably weak. On the senate floor Senator Borah, dry, and Sena- tor Tydings of Maryland, wet Demo- crat, took turns poking fun at the proposed resolution. Borah said it was “the rarest combination of hypoe- risy and insincerity ever heard of,” and Tydings called it "the biggest piece of sham, bunk and camouflage ever seen assembled in 150 words.” NDIANA Republicans In state cone vention went wet despite the agonized pleadings of the prohibition ists. A plank was adopted calling for submission to the people of a repeal proposition on both the national and state dry laws. It was not a strong declaration In favor of such repeal, but It sufficed Raymond Springer was nominated for governor and Sen ator Jim Watson was renominated by acclamation. HEN President Hoover signed the new revenue bill, he said many of the taxes imposed by it were not as he desired, which mildly ex- pressed the opinion of countiess Amer feans concerning that hodgepodge measure. However, bad as it Is in many respects, the act will, under cer. tain conditions and within certain lime ftations, balance the federal budget at the end of the fiscal year 1033, provid. ed congress enacts the necessary econ omy legislation. The senate almost re- jected the conference report on the revenue bill beause the tax on elec tricity was made to fall on the con sumer instead of on the companies, One economy bill cutting the costs of government was possed by the sen. ate after it had been mangled. De signed at first to save $238,000,000, it was amended so the saving will be only £126,000,000. An important change was the substitution of the en- forced furlough plan for federal em- ployees for the 10 per cent pay cuts previously adoptéd, This was reject. ed by the house, PEAKER GARNER'S $2,300,000,000 v7 relief bill was rushed through the house by an almost solid Democratic vote alded by twenty-one Republicans. The rest of the Republican members pald heed to President Hoover's de- nunciation of the measure as a gigan- tic pork barrel and voted In the nega- tive. It is hard to understand how Garner and his associates can justify spending so much time and effort on this measure in the face of thelr ex. pressed conviction that it would never get through the senate or past the presidential veto. The senate, indeed, showed at once that it intended to smother the bill. Leaders of both par ties In the upper house prepared to push through a noncontroversial bill permitting the Reconstruction Finance corporation to lend up to $300,000,000 to states for relief purposes. This was just section of the senate Democratic rellef program, the re mainder, involving a £300.000,000 bond issue for public works and a $1,000. 000.000 expansion of the reconstruc tion unit's capital, being left for later consideration, one RANKLIN ROOSEVELT'S support- ers, having decided to run the Dem ocratic national convention to suit themselves, announced that Jouett Shouse wouldn't do as permanent chair. man, though he had been selected by the Smith-Raskob faction and presumably had been accepted by Roosevelt, They de- clared Instead that they would try to put Senator Thomas J. Walsh of Montana in that position, which he held eight years ago. Mr. Shouse, how. ever, made It known that he and his friends would to the last diteh, so there Is a prospect of a first-day battle in the convention that will pro vide for a test of strength between the Roosevelt and anti-Rooseveil Mr. Shouse sald that Governor toosevelt expressly consented to plan to make } permanent chair man, “Not even Jouett Shouse lake HEUL forces. the remotely wns of condition attached to the governor's assent ; 1 should have been a party to it." said *Any speech 1 may make hefore the conven tion will be my own and will not be censored or inspired by any candidate, The presiding officer of the conven- tion should represent no faction and should decline to assist or obstruct the fortunes of any candidate” ORE seriously affecting Roose M velt's chances was the problem of Mayor Jimmy Walker of New York, put up to him by the Hofstadter in vestigating committee and its counsel, Sam- uel Seabury, the gov. ernor's inveterate foe The report of the committee makes it necessary for the gov. ernor to decide wheth- er or not the mayor shall be removed from office, and it Is be lieved he will take some action a day or so before the Demo cratic convention meets. Presumably, if he ousts the mayor he will rouse the wrath of Tammany Hall—which might cost him the vote of New York in the election but. undoubtedly would add to his strength elsewhere, for Tammany is not admired outside of the metropolis, Governor Roosevelt made a strate gic move when he demanded that Sea- bury quit talking and submit to him the charges and evidence against Walker at once. He let it be known that he would give the mayor unlim- ited opportunity to defend himself and his administration, but sald he would demand that Walker prove himself fit to be mayor of New York. Walker en. gaged Dudley Field Malone as his chief counsel, otherwise not he, og 8. Seabury EN. CHARLES GATES DAWES suddenly and unexpectedly sent to President Hoover his resignation as president of the Reconstruction Fi nance corporation, to take effect June 16. He denled rumors that there had been any friction between him and Eugene Meyer, Jr, chairman of the board of the corporation, and averred he was quitting the post merely be. cause he wished to resume his bank. ing business in Chicago. In his letter to the Pgesident General Dawes sald he felt h¥® could do this now that the budget had been balanced and “the turning point toward eventual ity seems to have been reached.” IGHT thousand of the “bonus marchers” who had gathered in Washington to demand immediate pay- ment of the bonus to veterans held thelr first parade down Pennsylvania avenue to the capitol, and there was not the slightest disorder despite rumors that the communists would stage an outbreak, As a matter of fact, the reds who ried to stir the veterans up to violence were roughly treated by the ex-soldiers, The marchers carried many Ameri can flags and had three bands. Swarms of police were on hand but had little to do. The paraders broke ranks at the Peace monument and returned to the various camps established for them. Every day the number of vet- erans In those camps wns augmented by arrivals from all parts of the country. Senator Lewis of Illinois had a run- in with the bonus seekers and came off with flying colors. They resented his Memorial day reproof to them and threatened to “tell got off,” whereupon the genntor calmly told them to “ and them to the him where he courtly go to hell” walked through chamber, -~ jeva Republicans at t grown weary of Senator Smith D, Brookhart and have put an end, at least for the present, to his political career, In the pri- maries they decisive- ly rejected him, se lecting as his succes gor Henry Field of Shenandoah, a nurs eryman novice in politics owns a radio station, Field had king a vigorous speaking which he Brookhart for neglect. senatorial senate have and a who been ma campaign in attacked Sen. Brookhart especially ing his duties to make chautauqua lectures and for nepotism. He pledged himself not to take any of his family to Washing ton federal pay rolls, Brookhart, a radical hesitated to against Republican measures, refused to comment on his defeat, which was attributed by some observers partly to the fact that many voters hithero Republicans had desert. ed that party and cast their ballots as Democrats The Democratic senatorial was Louls Murphy, who defeated for mer Senator Daniel Steck. In North Carolina the Democrats turned against one of their long-time leaders, Senator Cameron Morrison, for the nomination by Robert R. Reynolds, almost a new. comer in politics, Morrison is bone Reynolds Is and fasten them on the who never has vole who was defeated Neither of them . 80 both the ran- others IN wo ow their support 85 mary. “Alfalfa only a small w¢ West Palm Beach, proh pla feated Ruth Bryar gressional nomination tial . qisircu ition NSIN'S conservativ 3 in convention at pominated a ticket with the of putting a crimp in the regime of the La Follette dynasty. John B. Chapple of Ashland was put up for the United States senate in opposition to Senator Blaine: and former Gov. Walter J. Kohler was nominated for governur to run against Gov. Phil La Follette who seeks to succeed himself, A MUEL INSULL of Chicago, who for many years has been one of the country's leading public utilities mag nates, has finally fallen under finan cial stress and has been forced to re sign as head of his great utilities con- many other corporations with which he has been associated. and it is understood he will reside In England, where he owns a home, Three of the big corporations he built up, it is said, will unite In paying him an annual pension of $18000, HILE has become a “socialistic re republic.” The government of President Montero was overthrown by a military and socialistic junta in a coup d'etat that was almost bloodless, and the leader of the movement, Carlos Da- vila, former ambassa- dor to the United States, was installed as provisional presi dent. Col, Marmaduke Grove was made min: ister of defense and immediately had to Vl get busy suppressing a counter-revolution Carlos Davila in the southern part of the country. It was authoritati ely stated in San. tingo that the establishment of the so. cialist regime created no immediate danger for American Investments in Chile except those tied up in the $375. 000,000 Cosach nitrate combine which, ft was understood, would be nation. alized, President Davila sald one of the main purposes of the government would be to remove the burdens on workers and the unemployed. (©. 1933, Western Newspaper Union.) CHIEFS | SITTING BULL ‘By Editha Probably no Indian is more widely gnown than Sitting Bull, and certain- ly no Indian has had as many conflicting stories told about him. In turn we find him called a hero, a cow. ard, a old scallawag, the finest type of In- dian. The which he given him these na changed v Inter day, wns all of these, One was colorful, The year of his birth in South Da- lived have ues Sitting Bull others, South Dakoth was a wild coun then, inhabited by Sioux, who The the valor of this went young came noted far and near as a warrior tribe, and as on, Sitting Bull he Certainly, coward. wis not that distinguished his youth He buffalo calves age of ten, with counted is first coup. and at fourteen he his father on the warpath and three ¥, scalping Coups are counted in killing an ener to strike ar Considering the 1 warfare, it must be grante was a brave age of Ag he often foro grew Bull was consulte » role of He, ender in foremost in peace: extend to the or Qistirer Ritting peace war, was also but not them, Bittl white men Bull always had a sense Tr DE pleturesa, glaring out from his Indian eyes; It showed most—and always—in His first Important engagement whites was at Fort Buford The next three years found from various tribes flocking Then Indians came seven there upon, or Crows to were frontier posts to Shoshoni to EWOoD battle with, ment In whi Here one ment about Was he a have fled with on that eventfa mighty medicine 3 r his people inclined to the Who ean tell? Gall fought game school which had thick and trained in the of battle? John Grass bravely Many other Indian warriors fought bravely also. Is it believeable that he who had spent the last ten years on the warpath, had fled from this hand ful of white men—especially when he had already predicted the Indian vie tory? int with General Miles hot on heels afterwards, no one can blame him for escaping into Canada. Gen ¢ his The year 1581 saw the return of Sit ting Ball to his own country. He had been promised amnesty, and surren- dered at Fort Buford, where, 15 years before, he had made his first great fight against the whites It Is almost impossible, in describ ing the Sioux leader at this time of his life, to avold using the expres gion, "a caged eagle It so exact iy fits him. His fighting heart was not tamed, even If his power was limited. Was this a martyr who urged his people not to yield to the white men, a prophet who foresaw the fall of his race, or an old scalla. wag with an Insatiable desire to make trouble? The truth, no doubt, lies somewhere In between, There is something a little sad ip Sitting Bull's death, The chief was of more than middle age; his eloquent opposition was his only effective weap on against the whites. Two troops of cavalry with two Hotchkiss guns, and 43 trained Indian police, were sent at night to take him. They woke him where he slept, and told him te go with them, and bitter-heart that he was, he Berated them ax he made his preparations, He was shot as he went out with his captors. Fearful that his followers might effect a rescue, the Indian po liceman at his side killed him, In front of his people who had crowded around to save him. Killed by men of his own race, Sitting Bull died as he had lived, hating and despising the white men and thelr ways to the last, (D 1972, Wertern Newspaper Union.) DVANCE showings of midsummer formal fashions carry the mes sage that designers are In ~ mood 10 create filmy, joyous looking apparel such as suggests going to lovely gar den parties on sunlit afternoons or dancing at the country club. Not as yet have creators of clothes beautiful discovered anything in the way of fabrics which add such en wer festivities as richly colorful print Let daytime prints be as so ber and as monotone and ac trim and neat in design as they wish, but when it comes to prints for nighttime they must be gorgeous, exotic and breathe the air of romance, not only in thelr =aith of color but in the daring of the expressed In mmer. of color and design be said that this nmer evening prints Ew eetest ever into a riot the garden seem f« * holding a reunion as ros to space on diapha Field flowers, y ragged Is such as daisies and bachelor making merry on Y chiffon. Then again fascinating tale of printed design is toid dramatl cally In two colors, such as for (o glance, a startling print which shows a vibrant yellow playing a solo dance all over a very black background their patterning as well—such 1s prevailing sentiment as onland for this matter this su story owers of eC Be many the Sometimes 28 many 8&8 sever or eight colors splash over white or pale grounds ino flowery design. The charm- ing gown to the left In the picture Is fashioned of just such a chiffon of many hues. No less exciting than the chiffon itself is the unique decolet- tage of this ultraemart gown There is nothing quite so new and so ud psual 8s the decollette neckiine which reflects the vogue for scar! effects One of the points to observe In con nection with this new scarf move ment as adopted by this dress is that which Is two the high infront neckline, pow the thing Is accented, the the scarflike drapery drop at the back as shown by th rire Vig Oo 6 to the scarf and slice seem molded into a uniL end forms a srug shoulder strap. wi sther streamer glic ite shoulder, fallin ate grace toward th printed georg model is one © jeall soring lor scheme is also interesting as it features the pattern (©. 1931 Western Newspaper Union) New Coats Have Little Flare; Frocks Tailored he smartest coats this year do not have much flare—they hang fairly straight, but with sufficient swing to be easy and comfortable for walking. Dresses, too, have gone taliored in always called an “afternoon dress” ie almost threatened with extinction. The beauty of a tailored dress Is, that it is at home everywhere. Wool than silk ones, and knit than either. But now we know few distinctions as informal So under a iallored coat may go perfectly appropriately any of the following fabrics in a simple dress; rough silk crepe; canton or flat crepe; tweeds: sheer wools; jersey and all knit fabrics; mesh and crochet. And with a tailored coat you may also wear a sweater and skirt; and be very comfortable as well as very smart. Practical Ensemble Is Latest Spring Favorite Early spring sees the practical en gemble enjoying a real success. Eve ery house is concentrating on wearable ensembles done in woolen, stressing a bright, youthful note, and made with all evidences of careful treatment and workmanship. The woman who spends a great deal of her day out of doors Is particularly addicted to this type of garment as it fits unobtrusively into any scheme and Is most flattering to every type Brown is being much used and in place of the white used so much with color Inst spring. two tones of are being shwwn and very much liked. Foulard Squares Large foulard squares apparently are the favorite cholee of smart young women for scarfs to give the color contrast to sport or spectator cos tumes. JEWELLED CLIPS By CHERIE NICHOLAS Every woman who travels appreci- ates the comfort of a lace evening gown-possibly several of them, for there are so many types of lace in fashion nowadays to vary one's ward robe. The new lustered laces, espe cially those described as angel's skin and the “chalky™ varieties, also the durene laces which are not expensive but are elegant-looking, vie with oth- er fabric In meeting the obstacles of hasty packing and hurried dressing when there is no time or opportunity for pressing on a week-end trip. The design of its durene lace which Is han dled like real irish crochet lace with a touch of Venice Influence. The just.