ma OTH Republicans and Democrats B derived great encouragement from developments of the week, and seemingly with the best reason. The former hailed with glee the warm reception given Pres. ident Hoover in lowa, Before enthusiastic thousands the Chief Executive delivered in Des Moines his first speech In his campaign for re-elec- tion, addressing him- self especlally to the corn and hog ralsers who have been show- ing such decided dis that their shift to the Demo- freely predicted He de program offered by his mean ruin to American agriculture and down one of his that inc the igh protective tariffs the amelioration ation and the marl oq HIArseLs of H. H. Lehman content crats was clared the rival would inid maintenance farm the use own ded on of the foreign for = Sit payments on del af © foreign American farm products. th Mr. Hoover and Mrs npanied him on the trip, Iowa, and ther f ordial encour- Hoover, are of the people the state gave wel Come. used by the reconcilintior etween ra in D. Roosevelt, | i candidate, and Al holding rather aloof in the campaiin. The hatchet was bu New York Democrat ronvention where been 2 state botl ing to were fight- the nomination of for » * 1 Roosevelt bring about Lehman tubborn «¢ governor position of Going to the nomina- grasped the his with a “Hello, governor responded eras of the clicked madly lled approval leaders, Lehn an in wmnd of place Hine His sn with cordialit the cz photo ers wl the vd ye Roosevelt said: *Al this is from And Al replied: t “pr hn Fr hat the heart.” Hall in was nominate of Utica for liet Senator Robert F. accorded a renominati Republi New York conven nated Col. William J. (“Wild vernor: F. Tru can stant sed nant governor, and lie for United States COL retary of fortnight's Manchuria” War Sadao the report of the ve izgion to Nn Jap met to ue of when the cabinet it Other agreed that unworthy of Japan's serious atten tion, and the then this curt announcement: it was cabinet made “The government that the Lytton report does not constitute cause to alter its Manchurian policy.” Various responsible leaders in Ja- pan notice that their country would continue Its domination of Manchukuo, and the world wonders Just what the League of Nations ean and will do about it. The Japanese war office issued a statement declaring that If the league acts in the spirit of the Lytton report, Japan will have no alternative but to withdraw from the league and oppose its action with the firmest determination. France has shown decided sympathy with Japan In the controversy and Great Britain has been rather lukewarm In her friendship for China. The Unit. ed States, though not in the league, is a most important factor in the af. fair, and Japan insists that Secretary of State Stimson has again displayed his animosity toward Japan and is a menace to the good relations between Japan and America. This is because Mr. Stimson in an address before the I'hiladelphia Union League club sald President Hoover had formulated a successful policy of nonrecognition for territorial gains made by force of arms, and added that the “open door” policy was necessary to preserve China's territorial and administrative integrity. The Lyttor report, insisting “less on the responsibility for past actions than on the necessity for finding means to prevent thelr repetition” calls for the establishment of an auton. orous demilitarized Manchuria un has decided Sec'y Stimson gave The detalls be agreed upon Sino-Japanese confer- ence followinz the recommendations of the and with the league council sitting as arbiter. It holds up practieally to ridicule the Mukden (incident of September 18, 1031, over which Japan jumped off to the occupation of Manchuria. It In- timates the whole thing was planned. “But even in Japan” says the re port in a tart passage, “appropriate means must be found for attainment of every end" der Chinese sovereignty, of its status are to at an advisory league V HEN Samuel Insull, former pub- lie utilities magnate, and hls brother Martin Ignored the request of State's Attorney Swanson in Chl- cago that they return from France and Canada, respectively, to assist In the untangling of the affairs of the numerous corporations with which they had been Mr. Swan son promptly them to days indictments larceny by connected, indignant and against the grand fury. Within a that body returned three charging embezzlement, and larceny. for the arrest of the issned and steps to bring about thelr extra were taker hecame presented his cases few Capiases brothers were dition 1 The first Indictmen Insull alone. It el stracted by larceny, ~nd means of embezzl larceny as balles the Middle West ¥ and used tie money personal brokerage ne- from the treasury of Utilities con to protect his counts, . The second Indictment charges Sam uel Insull and Martin Insull Jol with using $68,000 of the funds of the Middle West Utilities company to pro tect brokerage accounts carried In the name of Washington Flexner, dent of the Lincoln Printing company The third ent names the brothers jointly on a charge of ab stracting $104,222 from the treasury of the Mississippl Valley Utilities In vestment company for the same nreal presi indictn pur pose, Samuel Insull in mda both on in Paris and Martin refused to comment the news from Chicago. RESIDENT DE VALERA Irish Free State has brought the dismissal of James McNeill as governor general, and it is reported in Dublin that he will He of the ahout COeS8OT, ge the positie or cutting fe + Sta entirely from the SEY PTO should ge government ternative ng to the Mr. De his way home t Geneva conferred with British eabinet nembers in London and it was agreed that the Anglo-Irish wl + hi hat starte over the James McNeill from economic withholding he Innd annuities due the British gov- ernment, should be settled by dire negotiation. This was a for the Free State, for the British had previously insisted the dispute should be arbitrated by an empire tribunal ct victory REAT BRITAIN took steps to break the disarmament deadlock caused by Germany's withdrawal from the Geneva conference when her de mand for armament equality was re fused. The British ambassador to Ber. lin invited the German government to send representatives to a four-power conference in London to consider the serman demand and to pave the way for Germany's return to the confer ence. The other three powers would be France, Great Britain and Italy, and the United States vould be in. vited to send an observer. The Ger man reply was that it would be use less to hold the meeting unless Ger many were first given certain guar antees ‘hat her demand for eguality would be really fulfilled, Norman Davis, acting chief of the American disarmament delegation, went to London to talk about fleet re. ductions proposed by President Hoo. ver. On the way from Geneva he stopped 'n Paris to sound out the French on the Franco-ltallan obstacle to making the London treaty a five power pact. RAQ was admitted to a seat as a sovereign member of the League of Nations, the first country In the Arabian world to reach that status, and King Felsal Is now an entirely independent monarch, Great Britain resigned her mandate over Iraq and was highly praised for her generos- ity by all speakers In the league as sembly, There was an intimation that France should follow this exam. ple In regard to Syria, but the French at Geneva wer: noncommittal. Iraq was formed after the World war out of the former Turkish provinces of Bagdad, Mosul and Basra. Within its boundaries are vast ofl flelds, and the population is nearly three millions ESTED by thelr lorig summer va. eation, the venerable members of the United States Supreme court re- sumed their labors and one of the first matters to come before them was of great Importance to all states along the Great Lakes, Including New York. Attorney General Gilbert Bettman of Ohlo, acting on behalf of Ohlo, Wis consin, Minnesota and Michigan, pre sented an application for the appolnt- ment of a receiver, commissioner or United States marshal to run the Chi- cago sanitary district and carry out and make effective the decree entered by the court in April, 1830, restrict ing the withdrawal of water Lake Michigan by the drainage canal. The purpose Is to force Chicago to plants and thus reduce the diversion of water. Instead of the eight years the diversion Is 1088 it will present plicants’ cut to 1.500 require 37 years at the the rite of construction, ap- brief declared. celebration In commemoration of signing of a treaty in October, 1867. The pact was between the Unit. ed States and the Kiowa, Cheyenne, Arapaho and tribes, and it led bloody and permitted the unmolested day the Comanche, en con In return the In- reservations their homes to the Pacific coast, ans were allotted they ever since. NjESicos government 4 Catholic nre stholie church each other's thro: havé made In 8 re 1 President Rodriguez Mexico to re closed h's attit lieal™ shoul » he called ATIC alet . RAZ ‘nd oh wa i 4] Si ed for nearly tl a q ont i for nearly thr months ame to a close with the tional sur render of the rebels in the state of Sao Paul rebel go Military pol the ment in Sao Paulo, capital ice replaced Ivor: of the re, and the great coffee port ra Of San The revi was reopened to commerce, lutionary army disbanded and der, Klinger, and cers were held under arrest fit the federal army headquarters at Cruzeiro, ita lea Gen, Bertoldo other off HILE went through another switch in government when Gen. Bartolme Blanche, provisional president, was forced to resign by a revolt agaigh the military regime. He was succeed ed by Judge Abraham Oyanedel who will serve until the election set for October 30. Dr. Harmodio Arias was inaugu- rated as the fifteenth president of the republic of Panama, and pledged him- self to economy and the payment of the nation's foreign financial obliga. tions, ARTIAL failure of the five year pian was admitted by the central committee of the Communist party of Soviet Russia at its annual meeting to formulate policies for the coming year, It decided that quality rather than quantity should be the watchword for 1933, and outlined this procedure: Improvement of the cities’ supplies of food and other commodities: in creases in the production of goods for domestic consumption and elimination of the speculative spirit by the devel opment of a system of controlled prices and the Introduction of labels for man. ufactured goods to improve thelr quality. HERE was more trouble in the IHlinois conl fields and detachments of the Natienal Guard were posted in several towns to curb the actions of the striking miners and their pickets, One of the peculiar developments wag a strike of high school pupils in Kin. enld because the Chicago school board had bought conl from a company oper- ating under the $5 wage scale. In that town it was reported that a pa- trol of the militia was fired on, though no one was wounded, ©. 1932, Western Newspaper Union. On the Funny Side AS NEAR AS POSSIBLE 5¢X, Cuthbert, “1 wasn't deceitful at “But, “Of course not,” replied panion, “What 1 told Stray Stories, HARD TO BELIEVE se — no doubt , that is a sur. I never noticed it og have you bes been think- ut They Are Doing It €re are you going in for Hollywood. he thie the third assistant Experience Speaks won't Mere Bagatelle { A Coming Executive So you want to marry my Have you any business si ir am I'm trying I not to get T= ANEW Ers, STERN, COLD FACT nary.” “Yes. But when you eat toms there is usually something more Color Scheme asked what Kind of would like to have, teplied: “1 think vanilla would look west on my dress. "Detroit News. Calling It Even Mr. Mayem (with his lawyer's bill in hand) -S8ir, this charge is outrageous | His Lawyer (blandly)—But so was the charge against which 1 defended you.-Stray Stories A Bedtime Story Mrs. Kitten—1 heard Jones ‘and his wife fighting last night. Mra. Cat—Is that so? Mrs, Kitten—Yes, they were fighting over the radio, Mra. Cat-—Goodaess! they broadeast next! What won't Not Exactly “Don’t you agree that Time is the greatest healer?” “He may be~but he's certainly no beauty specialist."--Moustique, 4 has rediscovered the or guimpe frock, if prefer to call it. Now JF AsSuloN Jumper 80 put igns in school on the map the realm of room and there ever or CAG for there nore office, could be any style of frock han the one which can and its neck- ments notice unto itself =a sleeves the jump to this influence presses It such as, fo that the sleeves seems to er mt » Al ON 8 gencrous » of er 5 exquisite umbters on the 1Mes GAY COLORS MARK NEW SPORTS SUITS * new mports clothes for fal of and reds and blues won't be crowded off the fashion 3 they are to be Joined by a riotous array of colors The new knitted sports suits, many with long belted coats and ; rn others In styles, wil and gay solid colors. right shades of red and green will prominent on the snorts fashion For instance: Emerald, pea be he dark sports suits will be bright. Feature of Late Hats The new down-infront hats are The hat is set rather high up on the head, but a soft little feather fancy or a soft little bow comes down over “row at one side. They are most becoming, these new ever were Velvet and wool jerseys are used for some of the new little hats that are shown now in Paris They are light and soft and altqgether most charming. And they are made, of course, in all the smart color com. Chiffon Quite Correct for Wear in Evening Quite correct is printed chiffon, even if som¢ women have declared themselves against prints for evening. A pretty evening frock is of black chiffon with a small floral print in green, white and red. Wide shirrings give the waistline a wide belted look and the frock has a tiny vestee of wlencon lace and there are white vel vet flowers just above the waistline Making a sensation these days are gome most original feather boas. With a white chiffon dress one woman wears a boa of white coq feathers, wired to curve up gracefully over the shoulders. SATIN SLEEVES By CHERIE NICHOLAS The frock of rough-surfaced crepe which has satin sleeves Is playing s stellar role ia the new authmn fash fons. Usually the sleeves are very wide at the armhole or they are apt to be leg o mutton style or some styling along generous lines which makes them conspicuous for accord ing to the dictate of style creators, sleeves must be made the center of attraction. The scarf of satin tied in a soft bow at the neck adheres to the new highabout-thethroat silbou- ette, Detachable Furs for Autumn Coats Latest Coats coming out for autumn wear are cut on depression lines, shich really means that it is going to be very fashioiable to have detachable fur trimmings that can be used on various clothes First fall fashions being seen on the rue de i Paix in dicate many separate capelets, draped collars ind scarves and ets to be worn with several frocks .nd coats Straight long coats, tledoon eff °° and buttoned up ones are on ‘he style etd
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers