Buying of newly mined American gold at prices above prevailing fig- ures did not prove so efficacious In boosting commodity prices as the ad- 3 : ministration had hoped, so President Roosevelt called Into conference his finan- cial advisers and 1t was decided to buy gold In the world mar- kets. Prof. George FP. Warren of Cornell and Prof. James Harvey Rogers of Yale, who had devised the dollar depreciation polley which Is being tried, were among the con- ferees, naturally, and the partial fail- ure of the plan was put up to them. They then told the President that fit would be necessary to force down the value of the dollar in the foreign ex- changes as well as at home, and that if that were done the scheme was sure to work. The purchase of gold abroad is un- dertaken by the Reconstruction Finance corporation, as is that in America, by direction of Mr. Roose velt. It is preliminary to revaluation of the dollar and establishment of the President's plan for a managed cur- rency. Chairman Jesse Jones of the R. F.C. said the Federal Reserve bank of New York had been authorized to dispose of R. F. C. notes and take foreign gold In payment. The bank also has made overtures to the Bank of Eng- land and the Bank of France for the purchase of pounds and francs respec tively in exchange for gold. The co- operation of the French and British banks would tend to support an ear lier White House statement that inter. pretations of this government's foreign gold purchases as the beginning of an international depreciation race, “a currency war," were erroneous, In Washington it is the opinion of many observers that conservatism in finance is being gradually abandoned and that the dollar will ultimately be forced down to a 50-cent value. Bro kers in Wall Street were frankly con- fused and avoided any extensive mar- ket operations. Meeting with President Roosevelt and the professional authors of the gold plan were Acting Secretary of the Treasury Dean Acheson, Gov. Eu- gene Black of the federal reserve board, George IL. Harrison, governor, and J. E, Crane and Fred I. Kent of the Federal Reserve bank of New York; Henry Morgenthau, Jr. gover nor of the farm credit administration; Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the Re- construction Finance corporation: and Henry Bruere, the President's financial co-ordinator, At least some of these gentlemen have formerly opposed any program that smacks of inflation: but the Pres- ident evidently felt the Warren-Rogers plan was an experiment that deserved a trial Prof.George F. Warren ARRY L. HOPKINS, federal re lief administrator, went to Kan- sas City, met with relief delegations of Missouri, Towa, Kansas, Nebraska, x wen Arkansas and Okla- f homa, and told them that the need for re lief was going to be greater than ever and that each state and lo- cal government must do its part fully, “We are going to start the winter with a million more families on the relief rolls than there were a year ago at this time” he said, emphatically, “the Hopkins present time. During the five months the federal emergency rellef adminis tration has been in operation $216,000, 000 has been allotted by the federal government to care for the needy, he said, He noted that when new jobs open up most of them are filled at first by “self-sustaining idle who have never been on relief rolls.” “The idle rellef bINl of the nation, which Is about one billion dollars a year, must be paid,” he sald. “This means that the need for private con. tributions is greater.” Explaining that the federal emer- gency relief administration is caring for 15,000,000 persons by two meth. ods, direct relief and “work relief,” Mr. Hopkins expressed a preference for the latter. JoL1ovinG a conference In Des Moines, Governors Herring of Towa, Olson of Minnesota, Langer of North Dakota and Schmedeman of Wisconsin went to Washington to lay before President Roosevelt the plans approved by the conference for hoost- ing prices of farm products. Immedi. ate steps held necessary to securing benefits to farmers before the 10233 crops leave their hands Include cur rency Inflation, pegging the prices of basie farm crops, the adoption of a code for agriculture under the NRA, and Improvement of the federal farm refinancing machinery, especially In the Omaha land bank district. The program has been indorsed by Gov- ernors Horner of Illinois, Bryan of Nebraska, McNutt of Indiana and Berry of South Dakota. The proposed code for agriculture would authorize the creation of a board of farmers which would have functions similar to those of trade as- soclations In existing Industrial codes The board, in conjunction with fed. eral authorities, would determine the cost of production of principal crops, determine what is a fair margin of profit for farmers, and set minimum prices for domestic consumption. Though President Milo Reno of the National Farmers' Holiday association declared the farm strike off pending developments In Washington, the strike was kept up, especially in Min. nesota and Wisconsin, j AzE developments concerning the recovery program include these events: Counsel for an employees’ brother. hood obtained a temporary injunction restraining the New York Edison com- pany from violating the NRA and the re-employment agreement, President Roosevelt settled two dis putes with the steel Industry. He ob. tained a “substantial agreement” be tween the United Mine Workers and the captive mines of Pennsylvania op- erated by the steel companies, forcing the latter to accept the checkoff sys tem. He ended the differences between Transportation Co-ordinator J. B. East man and the steel companies over the price of rails to be bought by the rail ways with money loaned by the gov- and that demanded by Eastman. The Ford dealer whose bld was re- by the government because Ford had not signed the NRA sued to prevent the award of the contract to the next lowest bidder, More than 300 charges that the Ford Motor company is violating the NRA automobile code provisions were dis missed as “not legitimate” by the De troit compliance board. ECRETARY OF STATE HULL and his aides have made everything ready for the conversations with Maxim Litvinov of Russia concerning establishment of re : lations with the Sov- fet republic, and the foreign affairs com missar is speeding to Washington, It Is taken for granted that when recogni tion of Russia is com- pleted the Moscow government will ap- point as its first : ambassador to Amer Eo fea M. Sokolnikoy, M- Sokoinikov now vice commissar of foreign affairs. He was formerly ambassador to London and was Russia's delegate to The Hague. He Is descended from a fam. ily that was prominent in the days of the czars. Valery Meshlauk, It is expected, will be chairman of the Russian trade dele. gation to the United States. He is board and has often visited this ecoun- try in behalf of Russian governmental purchases, ERARD SWOPE, president of the General Electrie company, ex-in. dustrial and labor adviser to the re- covery administraticn, outlined a plan for the gradual conversion of the NRA into a great private organization with governing powers over all industry. Administrator Hugh 8. Johnson and Henry I. Harriman, president of the United States Chamber of Commerce, indorse the plan, the former asserting such a scheme would make it possible to avold cycles of depression, and the latter warning that the NRA would he a failure If it were allowed to become “just a government bureaucracy.” Briefly, the plan outlined is to en. trust to a national council the ende supervision authority now In govern. ment hands. Government officials would be members of the council, and it would work in close collaboration with government departments, main. taining extensive research and statis tical staffs, The council might be created by an enlargement of the United States Chambers of Commerce with labor representation, it was suggested, SAMUEL INSULL, fugitive former public wtilities magnate, and the Greek people were equally Jubilant when the Greek court of appeals again refused to extradite Insull to the United States and ordered his release from custody. The judges held the in- dictment against Insull did not furnish sufficient basis for his extradition. What the American government will do next, If anything, was in doubt, A N DECEMBER 15 France will owe the United States another install ment on the war debt, amounting to $22,200,928. But we won't get it, or any part of it. The new French gov- ernment headed by Albert Sarraut in- tends to default as did that of Dala- dier on June 15. It was sald semi officially in Paris that the government would abstain from raising the ques- tion In parliament, and this policy, rather than his health, would be re- sponsible for the absence of former Premier Herriot because his partiel- pation would be certain to revive the debt question, HE senate banking subcommittee and its counsel, Ferdinand Pecora, kept up thelr hammering at Albert H. Wiggin, former head of the Chase Na tional bank of New York, and the compli cated transactions car ried on by him and his companies. It was brought out that the Chase bank made huge loans to Wig- ¢ zin's personal com panies for trading in the bank's stock and for the creation by Wiggin of companies in Canada to escape income taxes. Sher mar, one of the Wigzin companies, be gan selling the Chase bank stock short in 1929, a month before the great mar ket crash, and big profits were made, “What prompted you to sell the bank Stock? asked Pecora. “1 don’t know" replied Wiggin, “1 must have had some trend of thought at that time, I thought all bank stocks were too high and that Chase was in line with the other stocks" “If you thought Chase bank stock was too high, why did you permit the Chase Securities corporation and its wholly owned subsidiary, the Metpotap corporation, to go Into these various pools to stabilize the market? asked Pecora. After considerable discussion with counsel Wiggin replied that the pool bought and sold stock and that “the net resnit the same N BS. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT + Is taking an exceedingly active part in the winter's campaign for the relief human wants, being chair In the course of her dutres she spent two strenuous days in Chicago attending a conference of community welfare workers of the nation called by Gen eral Chairman Newton DD. Baker. Representatives of 34 national wel fare and health agencies and dele gates from cities preparing to cam. paign for community chests were present. “Coming in a crisis year,” Mr. Baker said, “these community campaigns for welfare work represent a challenge to Albert H. Wiggin as 1 did” of | = Washington.—President Roosevelt's bold move in ordering the Reconstrue- tion Finance corpor- What Gold ation to purchase : newly mined gold, Buying Means with a view to fore- ing higher commodity prices, has led to more discussion and, I may add, con- fusion, than anything he has done since the banking holiday of last March. He described the action as a move toward development of a “man- aged currency” for the new deal. His action was as swift as it was unex- pected, The fact that his announcement cre- ated so much confusion and resulted in so much discussion is attributable largely, I belleve, to the lack of knowl. edge generally among people concern- ing the part gold plays in the coun- try's economic structure. In the ab- sence of that understanding, the nat- ural question was: what's it all about? And to show how the program suc- ceeded In stirring things up, I need add only that the discussion continues and the confusion remains, Mr. Roosevelt sought, by having a federal agency buy the new gold at prices above that which gold is val ued at in world markets, to make the dollar less valuable as it Is measured in world trade. It was a move, there fore, supplemental to his action of last March when he placed an embargo on export of gold. That action resulted in more dollars being required to buy an ounce of gold than when gold could be bought and sold freely. In other ed States even when it was issued against gold, Thus, as a correlative fact, more dol- cotton or a wagonload of corn or wheat or a hog or share of stock in a corporation than had been required before the embargo on export was Inid. When the federal government, for the Reconstruction Finance corpor- ation Is an agency of the government, began to buy the newly mined gold at prices higher than If the gold were being bought for minting Into money, the dollars became cheaper again. The President hoped for an increase in prices of farm commodities and all other things entering into trade cor- responding with the reduction of value ‘Over the top’ must be the cry this year.” A CCORDING to Becretary of Agri culture Wallace, the wheat farmers have signed up about SO per cent of the average seeded acre age in the farm adjustment adminis Wallace estimates that trade. (After all ix sald and done, world trade governs the valoe of com- modities because only in world trade does the age-old law of supply and de. mand operate unhampered,) For ex the federal statute providing The this fall ers in West Virginia, grown and representing 51.925.012 acres, A reduction of 15 per cent on this area for the crop to be harvested next year will reduce plantings about T980,000 acres. ODERN Turkey, the republic, is M It was Mr. Roose. and the theory of the economists who believe in the Roose- velit program, that prices would ad- vance so that commodities would be worth roughly one-third more after the purchase of the new gold than they were worth In February before gold was withdrawn from circulation. To nearer to each other: the price at which the Initial purchases of new gold were made should have increased the price of commodities by a percent. age as large as was the difference be- tween the price paid by the govern exists is largely the work of Mustapha Kemal, the president, and it was with just) flable pride that he recounted its growth and achievements be. fore 100,000 of his fel low citizens at the race course. He said: “Our greatest accom- plishment is the Turk. on ish republic whieh President 4. heroism and high Kemal culture of the Turk. ish people created, thanks to the na- tion's will and valorous army, but our task is unfinished. What we have done is Insufficient, “We will raise our fatherland to the most civilized nations of the world with the speed of this age in which we live, We shall succeed because the of positive science and by the love of fine arts.” Turkey today, added the president, is dedicated to peace and Is satisfied with her present physical boundaries, but he daclared that, as the cradle of ancient civilization, she Is determined to spread her cultural boundaries far into Europe, HAT many Britons are dissatisfied with thelr country's present Inter. national attitude was manifested at two great mass meetings In London in which demands were made that the get ont of entanglements that might Involve her In another Eu. ropean war. At one meeting a resolu. tion was adopted calling on the gov. ernment to declare “Great Britain's forces are no longer at the dis- | of the league council to be used a declared aggressor nation, | @ 1913, Western Newspaper Union. sold in the world market, - » ® Whether the thing Is capable of working that way remains unanswered as far as I am able Calllt an to see. Indeed. the Experiment ©onviction held by ne most monetary ex- ington is that the program cannot be regarded In any other light than as an experiment. It must be considered an experiment for the reason it never of a test are not available But Mr. Roosevelt believed that the argument advanced by some of his “brain trust” advisers was worth an experiment. I am told on what I con- sider to be good authority that prac tical monetary men in the administra. tion had no part in formulating the program. The theorists developed the scheme and the President accepted it. *. * 9 Use of the experiment had to be adopted before any further moves could be made toward a “managed currency” 1s that the value of the cur- rency shall be made to fluctuate, thus maintaining a stable price for a bushel of wheat or a bale of cotton or prod. ucts made from them. In other words, the theorists argue that the value of the dollar ean be controlled to such an extent that the prices of all com- modities, whatever they are, will range within a very narrow limitation from year to year, : i : 3 g : : : £9F 5% als i is iH it §2X Hn go up and that would result in a dol opment of the Human Factors present program Involved just how they will overcome certain human factors in the situation For Instance, the value of the dollar may be fixed so it will buy one bushel of wheat, but other wheat countries in the world may have a tremendous crop. They will have much more than they can use and, naturally, the pro- ducers will want to seil badly, so bad- ly, in fact, that they will take 25 cents a bushel for the wheat. Will Ameri- cans deliberately pay $1 when they can get wheat for 25 cents, or will there be a tariff wall built so high that no wheat can enter this country at ail? And If there is isa: tariff wall, how will foreigners buy our goods, some of which they obviously are going to want? The circumstance is that un- less they can sell something here, they will run out of money eventually and cannot pny for purchases in America. That situation will run through our ness, duction and if can be stabilized and if employment ington, however, that the gold chase plan constitutes the first In a general inflation of the currency. On the face of things, It would seem that infiation is certain. On the other hand, Mr. Roosevelt Is regarded by many men who know him snd have known him through wants and will have They are saying that individual who sound money. fiation because he has seen what in- flation did to Germany and what it has done to every other country attempt- ing it. Sooner or later, thelr currency became worth only the value of the paper as script or waste, or souvenirs * - » There seems to be no doubt that fox farming is an important industry, It has at last been ree- Help for ognized as such by Fox Farmers the farm credit ad- ministration. The fox farmers, it seems, have suffered like others during the depression and have to have help. They are going to get it, too, from the farm credit ad. ministration. Here is the announce ment, officially made by the Depart- ment of Agriculture: “Considering silver fox raising a business that calls for long experience and special equipment, the farm credit administration has informed the De to make loans on silver foxes as pri- mary security, but it will make such loans only to those have specialized In fox farming have proper equipment and have shown ex- feeding of the animals, cation, It Is added, will be considered ing or other business operations, silver security, within reasonahila limits” In other words, the farm credit ad- fox Is Just as good as a horse, or a make loans on that basis. After talk. better security than some other farm who ean afford such luxuries still have money, and they are zbout the only ones in the country still having it. L I - The truth of the old adage that “pol. itics makes strange bedfellows” never has been better demonstrated than un- der the present administration, There is considerable comment on these con. ditions among Washington observers, and Republicans are overflowing with mirth about the actions taken. “We Republicans have been enjoying this one phase of the administration's recovery efforts,” said one Republican leader. “Just think of it! Here is a political party that throughout its his. tory has argued for low tariffs and has criticized those of us who have Insist ed there must be protection for home industry. That same party, having full responsibility for the government, now is turning to high tariffs in a num- ber of cases and has even gone to the extreme of laying an embargo on com. petitive goods from abrusd. Shade of Boles Penrose, (the late Senator Pen. rose of Pennsylvania) the thing is laughable,” And the Republican leader's asser- tion about use of the tariff by the Roosevelt administration was true, More than that, It is apssarent that there will be additional use made of high rates that can be invoked under ' si s———— toe ROADSIDE MARKETING By T. J. Delohery CLEAR CIDER MORE PROFITABLE A PROFIT of at least $10 could be added to the Income from the 100 gallons of apple cider which is Juice was clarified. The truth of this statement 1s borne out in the experience of farmers who have been using the homemade filter. ing device recently developed in Mich- igan, The filterer, costing little more than $1 to make, has revolutionized clear and clarified Juice has been of- fered the publie, College experts and fruit growers feel that, with clear apple julce possi. ble for every farmer to make, and the consumer responding as they have when it has been placed on sale at roadside markets, retall stores and restaurants, there is an opportunity for greatly Increasing the consump~ tion of this pure fruit beverage While clear cider is not a new drink from a commercial standpoint, farm production has been lin the larger orchards because cost of machinery, The device for producing quality apple cider gives the farmer, who can con- tact the public or retail] chance to turn low grade fruit & nice profit, Experiments with consumer demand homemad outlets, a Ty # BLO wise unmarketable or saleable fo p r YS FuTERED CI0ER A Cider Filterer. more than 10 to 15 cents a bushel. grossed 90 cents to $1.50 a bushel 8 cider, basing the yield on 23% gallons to the bushel of apples cost of producing the on, everythin considered, Clear cider is easy to make. Apples are in the usual manner and the with a called pectinol. It is an enzyme which breaks down the collodial matter or pulp. The mixture is allowed to re main overnight, the exact time depend. ing upon ripeness of the apples and the amount of pec tinol used. The process can be speed ed up or retarded, as desired Shortly before the cider is placed in the supply tank, a flitering agent called hyflo is added. It is an sorbing agent like Spanish clay and other such materials, which catches the sediment and permits the clear Juice to flow, The filtering device consists of a five feet of garden hose a pressed juice treated chemical the temperature, ab- The hyflo settles in the muslin tube and the juice from the barrel or supply tank, hoisted five flows through it. The tube, by the way, is rested In a wood. en trough somewhat similar to that ‘he accompanying sketch shows or tank, unless it is bought new, should not cost much more than The device and parts should be thorough- Iy cleaned after use. Farmers who have been making and selling clear cider report an unusual demand, some marketing 100 gallons a day at 50 to 75 cents a gallon, with ordinary cider, on adjoining farms and slow sale even at 25 cents a gallon. Where both clear and ordinary cider have been offered, consumers have expressed an exclusive desire for the clear juice, even though it costs more, Something new In farm products, processing clea: cider has an adver tising advantage, Consumers are anxious to see how it Is made and progressive producers have been mak- ing it a practice to do the job In public and on certain days which are announced before hand, to which the public are invited, Farmers who have no direct selling opportunities have found city retail ers willing to handie and display clear cider where they will not bother with the ordinary fruit julce. And where clear cider has been placed In restau. rants to get public reaction, sales not only have been larger but the price higher. In one restaurant, diners mis. took It for tea because of its clear ness, In addition to clarifying apple of der, the new homemade device can be ©. 1922, Western Newspaper Union, Peas From Tut's Tomb Grow