» OUND money advocates were rather dismayed though perhaps not sur prised by the sudden shift of treasury officials that has taken place in Wash- osnasisees ington, Secretary Woodin, still suffer- ing from the throat affection that has troubled him all year, sought to resign, but President Roosevelt Instead gave him an indefinite leave of absence. Dean Ache- son then, at the Pres. ident's request, re signed as undersecre- tary of the treasury and Henry Morgen- thau, Jr. was appointed to succeed him, thus becoming actual head of the department during Mr. Woodin's ab- sence. The Inference drawn, and It is Inescapuble, is that now the treasury will be dominated by inflationary pol cies designed to ralse prices for the benefit of the farmer, Mr. Morgenthau, long a close friend and adviser of Mr. Roosevelt, is one of the Cornell university group that In- cludes Prof, George F. Warren, co- author of the gold buying plan So far as known Mr. Morgenthan has never advocated currency infla- tion via the printing press. As gov. ernor of the farm credit administra- tion he has been more conservative than many farm leaders wonld have liked him to be, His main concern, however, Is for agriculture and his as sociations are with men who have de veloped radical and Inflationary ideas for meeting present conditions. The new undersecretary is a farmer and a farm publisher. He owns a large fruit and dairy farm in Dutchess county, New York, where he special izes In raising pure bred Holstein cut- tle and Red Mackintosh apples. He became Interested in agriculture as a boy when he spent considerable time on ranches in the West. On gradua- tion from high school, he attended the agricultural college of Cornell univer- sity, to equip himself for scientific farming. During the World war he served as a lleutenant, junior grade, in the navy. His father was chalrman of the finance committee of the Demo- cratic national committee during Wil son's first term and held numerous dip- lomatie posts, Including ambassador to Turkey. Mr, Acheson's retirement, according to observers In the National Capital, is likely to be followed before long by the resignations of others not In ac cord with the gold purchase scheme, these Including Prof. O. M. W. Sprague, financial adviser of the treasury; Di rector of the Budget Lewis Douglas and Gov. Eugene Black of the federal reserve board. Mr. Woodin announced that he would go to Arizona In search of re newed health and that he would ae cept no salary from the government during his leave of absence, The be lief 1s general that he never will re- turn to his post, Henry Mor. genthau, Jr. OVERNORS, mayors and relief ad- ministrators In large numbers gathered in Washington to pledge as- sistance In the government's drive to put 4000000 persons back to work within 8 month, and President Roose velt told them that relief of the needy must not be made a political football Bald he: “Your national government Is not trying to gain advantage one way or the other out of the needs for human relief. We expect the same spirit on the part of every governor of the 48 states, and we expect the same spirit on the part of the mayors and relief administrators, “We would like to have a rule that everyone associated with rellef work never ask whether a person needing assistance be Democrats, Republicans, Socialists or anything else” Mr. Roosevelt described his gigantic employment venture, which will be engineered by Harry L. Hopkins, relief administrator, as a “partnership be tween the United States, the states and local governments In which ail are expected to do thelr share” “The effort we now are engaged in" he sald, “is to put 4,000,000 people on the job so that we can honestly say this winter is not going to be lke last winter or the winter before. At least half of the 4.000000 are now on what we call a dole. When people are on a dole something happens to them mentally, The sooner we ean take them off the dole the better off we will be.” Expenditure of $400,000,000 for the work projects on which the 4,000,000 will be engaged, the President sald, would not add to the financial burden of the country. “We are going to take thls money out of the public works fund, but It means putting the money to good use,” Mr. Roosevelt explained, DETERMINED to give the mone tary plan of Professors Warren and Rogers a full chance to work out, the President, It was stated anthost. tatively, will not change his policy at present. If It falls, he stands ready * to turn to devaluation of the dollar and return to the gold standard. In its first three weeks the program of buying gold at premium prices at home and abroad ralsed the price of gold considerably, and the sponsors of the plan assert it also has been re sponsible for the rise of 4.1 per cent in commodity prices. The “committee for the nation” whose ideas are largely embodied in the present monetary program, now has a rival organization, known as the “committee on monetary policy.” It was formed by 26 business and Indus- trial leaders of Chicago who Indorse the stand recently taken by a group of mid-western university professors against tinkering with the monetary unit. The new committee thus sets forth {ts policy: “1. Recovery can be achieved only through an Increased volume of busi ness, which Increases wages and the whole national income, “2. The fundamental condition for an Increased volume of business Is confidence In the dollar and In the na- tional credit, and a reasonable ex- pectation of profit for Individual enter. prise, In Industry, in trade, and In ag- riculture, “3. Confidence In the dollar and In the national credit demands that cur- rency experimentation be abandoned, and that depreciation of the curreucy be stopped before it gets out of hand. “4. A higher price level is desirable only If accompanled by increased in- come—for farmers, wage earners and business men, big and little—and this cannot be achieved by manipulation of our currency. “8. Further depreciation of the dol lar by government action is the road to printing press money, which means the further disorganization of agricul. ture and Industrial production, and the ultimate impoverishment of the na- tlon—of its wage earners, its farmers and of every Individual citizen, debtor and creditor alike, “6. An announced determination to return to a fixed gold standard, giving effect to current needs and experience, Is Indispensable to elimination of un- certainty and to the restoration of confidence in the dollar.” \ ITH the earnest, not to say '¥ eager, assistance of William Bul litt, special assistant secretary of state for Russian affairs, the conver sations leading up to recognition of the So- viet government pro- ceeded in . Washing ton. But because the matter was so com plicated, and because President Roosevelt insisted on discussing with M. Litvinov the issues previously cov a Si ered In the State de partment by Under W. C. Bullitt oo retary William Phil lips, the negotiations went into anoth- er week. The expectation was that they would be concluded before the President left Washington for his Thanksgiving holiday In Georgia, but Mr. Bullitt said that while this was possible, the business might take long- er. It appeared Mr. Roosevelt was not satisfied to let the matter of eco- nomic relations and the question of the Russian debt to Americans go over until after formal recognition, Senator H. D. Hatfleld of West Vir. ginia, one of the few Republican seh- ators who has been bold enough to at- tack the NRA, also has come out strongly against the recognition of Soviet Russia, but rather ridiculously he bases his objection mainly on the ground that the Russian Communists are atheists, Further on in his argument the sen. ator becomes more rational, saying: “Is our trade with Russia to be financed by the American government? If so, what are they golng to pay us with? Are they to pay us In goods? Then, that means displacement of so many Americans from present and future jobs. Are they to pay us with money obtained from exports to other nations? If so, then they displace by so much our exports that formerly went Into these markets.” PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT left the Chpital for his Thanksgiving holiday at Warm Springs, Ga., and Ambassa. dor Sumner Welles came up from Ha- vana to tell him personally about de President Grau's supporters are bit terly opposed to Mr. Welles, and Sen. ator Willlam H, King of Utah has asked the State department to with. draw him from his post, It seems cer tain that the ambassador will remain there indefinitely, JEP WARD N. HURLEY, an eminent manufacturer and financier of Chi- eago who was chairman of the United States shipping board during the war, died suddenly of leukemia compli cated by pneumonia, : demands of Chancellor Hitler for support of his foreign policies. Nearly forty-three andone-half million persons, or 96 per cent of the electorate, went to the polls, and of this vast number only a few more than two million voted “no” to the question submitted to the plebiscite: “Do you approve the policy of your gevernment and are you ready to ree. ognize It as an expression of your own view and your own will and solemnly pledge yourself to it?” The voters elected 661 members of the new reichstag, and all of them had been picked by Hitler, But this was not remarkable, since no name not so selécted was permitted on the ballots, worked hard to get out every vote, and their success was extraordinary. EPRESENTATIVE DICKSTEIN of New York and his house commit. tee on Immigration and naturalization arrived in Washington and began thelr Investigation of alleged Nazi activities In the United States, ERMAKY having taken (itself out of the disarmament confer ence, Italy now announces it will par ticipate as. an observer merely, and the Hungary effectives committee says it will maintain a like attitude. More- thing approved by the great powers since July 15, when Germany accepted the original MacDonald plans as a London and Paris agreements and the plan which Sir John Simon offered the day Germany left the League of Nations, Observers In Geneva were forced to the conclusion that the dis- armament conference in form was doomed to fallure, NTERESTING, whether true or not, was a copyright story in the New York Dally News to the effect that Al Smith's visit with President Roose velt at the White House concerned these shifts and signed to overcome the advantage gained by the fusionists In the New York election: 1. Resignation of Willlam H. Wood. in as secretary of the treasury and the appointment of John J. Raskob as his successor, a Resignation of Jesse Isidor Straus as United States ambassador States Senator Royal 8 Copeland as his successor, 8. Appointment by Governor Leh man of Al Smith as senator to take Copeland's place, 4. Designation of Postmaster Gen eral James A. Farley as the next Democratic candidate for governor of New York. REAT BRITAIN is alarmed by the naval bullding programs of the United States and Japan, and the gov- ernment announced in the house of commons that It Intends to bulld larger warships within the limits of the naval treaty of 1030, (GUoRGE W. NORRIS, the veteran to stand for lots of abuse in the past because of his determined advocacy of policies that didn't suit others, but of late he is coming into his own. On the cam. pus of the University of Illinois at Urbana the other day he re- ceived from the hands of Governor Horner the was given the medal because of his contributions “In human welfare In half a century.” State Representative David Shana- han read the citation, as on all pre vious oceasions, and addresses In were made by United States Sena- tors James Hamilton Lewis and W. H. Dieterich. Previous reciplents of the Cardinal Newman medal have been: Francis Illinois; Patrick Henry Callahan, Louisville, Ky., and Frank B, Kellogs, St. Paul, former secretary of state, (ONIROLLER GENERAL JOHN R. and Independent officials of the gov ernment, got into the headlines twice within a few days. First he put an end to the NRA boycott against Henry Ford by informing the secretaries of agriculture and commerce that bids on equipment by Ford dealers must be received. This decision was held to be broad enough to forestall further at. tempts to keep government business away from dissenters to the NRA, so long as the latter comply with the terms of the codes. The controller general pointed out that nothing In the national industrial recovery act, and nothing In the code for the auto mobile manufacturing companies, re- quires that units of the Industry must sign anything. A day or two later Mr. McCarl ruled that William E. Humphrey, deposed federal trade commissioner, no longer is entitled to the salary of that office missioner. Salary In the amount $04.44 covering the period October am National Topics Inter Washington. —With the farm strik- ers still threatening mischief and with some labor agi- tators continuing to make disturbing mo- tions, officials of the government, wherever they can con- | tact people, are counseling patience more than they ever have since the gloom of the depression settled over us. It is undoubtedly true that the great bulk of the American people want to see a proper and final solu- tion accomplished for the economic troubles In which the nation, and the world, too, finds itself. But it does no good to hide one's head as an os trich does and insist that there are no conflicting Interests that are danger. ous, They exist, and they are virile and they may eause serious trouble, {| Hence, the government policy of ask- | Ing those who want to help to be pa- | tient. As nearly as I have been able to | arrive at the base of the present erop i of conflicting Interests, 1 belleve much | of the current trouble results from a lack of understanding of the basic problems. It seems to be undeniably | true, also, that there are certain indi. viduals or groups of individuals who do not want to understand the situa. tion. They want to use the bad con ditions to further selfish ends of their | own and they are of the type who will | deliberately and carefully plan to mis- lead whosoever they can enlist as fol lowers, Unfortunately, my research i discloses that there are many follow. | Ing such leadership who are doing so | blindly. There seems to be searcely a single | official of the government but who holds | the view that such leadership will ac i complish anything but self-destruction of a majority of the followers of those ure-all doctrines. That sort of thing never has accomplished anything in all istory, and there seems to be no ground for believing there will be any other result this time, Unfortunately as it may be, In our | rush to get back to what we call pros | perity, some groups have Jealous of other groups and Interests This jealousy has been translated in | to action In numerous Instances. 1 do not say that Jealousy Is the cause of all of the troubles, but Inbred sel: fishness of one kind or another to | gether with personal motives of an ul | terior character can surely be sald to be the general foundation for all of them, Jut the natural question is: why should the situation be one permitting existence of such diffieuities as the farm strike and labor troubles? The | answer seems to me to lle In a law { with which none of us had anything to { do, namely, the age-old law of supply and demand. Just as none of us had anything to do with framing that law, none of us is going to be able to amend it or change It. Farm strikes, labor strikes, capital shirking, hoarding of money, none of these things can ac complish the purpose. Indeed, the only way that we can get back to something like normal conditions is by | pulling together, That is why the government Is urging everyone to be patient within reason. . * 0 I am indebted to Secretary Wallace, of the Department of Agriculture, for an expression that |» Mast Pull seems to fit the pic ture better than any Together I have heard. He de | scribed the condition as one requiring a two-horse team to pull as forward. By that phrase, he meant that pro- ducer and laborer must pull together. | If one of them balks or is unhitched, | the load simply stops. That is all there is to It. Let us analyze the necessity for pulling together which the government so strongly urges upon us, If all of | the cobwebs are swept off of the ple | ture, It seems to me to be fairly clear, and surely there is no point In becom | Ing more confused as to what the need is or what may be done about It or | why things move slowly, After some research into the fleld of figures, I cannot escape the con- clusion that there Is an absolute and positive relationship existing between the money pald to labor and the money received by the farmers. There ls, therefore, a necessity for the farmer and laboring man keeping in step, If one gets a step ahead, the team Is not pulling and conditions grow worse. It really does not matter whether it is the labor-horse or the farmer-horse that moves too fast; the result all through the history of modern econom- fes has been precisely the same, and, thus, too much selfishness on either side causes trouble The government has collected stat. istics that provide a most Interesting proof of the statement I made above that there must be absolute work. For example, those figures show that gross income of agriculture and pay rolls of factories have been Urge Patience become Ld] / TEE re SA [IT =D] each was between nine and ten billions in 1030, There was a further decline in each In 1081 and the totals were about seven billions. Last year, as nearly as accurate records can be ob- tained, gross farm income was about five billions and labor's wage through factory pay rolls was just about the same, From these statistics, compiled year after year, the government has devel oped what the statisticians call an in- dex. It Is a yardstick, a basis, for measurement, From this index | learn that gross farm income is just about half what can properly be called nor- mal (an Index figure of 100), while la- bor Is receiving a total only about 58 per cent of that normal amount, * ® ® jut to get back to those conflicting interests. Everybody who makes any thing or grows any- Recovery a thing, in short, every Slow Process producer, wants to gei as high a price as he can for anything he sells. It hands and sell thelr services, who sell want as high a price as they low a price as they can force, wage Is not high enough and that its too high. this, Farmers get wrought up at demanding so much. urged. In the first instance, not be made an accomplished fact over. night. It Is a slow process, and it seems slower than It is to take such a long time for benefits to reach the man in the street after conditions and among the so-called key industries. But It is to be remem- bered that when the depression took hold, there was a shrinkage In Income of those who had put their monéy into great had Invested them in stocks and bonds or tangible property quite a while before the shock was felt by the man in the street . "0 the factories or Washington observers are expecting ginia a mite of a man, but that apply to his mental eapacity. moreover, a greatly concerned pleces of legislation. does not He Is, about will see the tozzled red head from Vir ginia very much in evidence on the senate floor, . . . Sometime In the foture when the next generation has grown to matur- ity, the users of CCC Doing lumber, and that Is about all of us, will Useful Work look about them and observe fine growing timber awaiting the ax of the woodsman., The picture before them will be the matured re sult of a program about which Presi- dent Franklin D. Roosevelt dreamed before he was elevated to the highest office in the land. Whether one agrees with the expenditure of public funds in this manner or not, none can say that his reforestation program will not pro- duce lumber for the future, and none can say that It will not be sadly need- ed by the time the saplings now belng planted have developed to the point where they are ready for use Mr. Roosevelt started out In execu tion of his reforestation program as a means of alleviating onemployment. He proposed that congress create the civilian conservation corps so that up- wards of three hundred thousand un- employed men might be given work that was of a character of which they would not be ashamed. He believed the money paid te them would reduce suffering among their families and, if not among their families, would take that number of men off of relief rolls or lift them from the almshouses, And such it has proved to be to the extent of some two hundred thousand families and about one hundred thou- sand Individual men, They are working; they are clothed well and they are fed well Their morale is high, according to all per sons who have visited the conserva- tion camps. The men feel that they are not a burden on society, for the work they are doing Is useful. Conse quently, it is the view of those with whom I have discussed the corps that these men feel life to be worthwhile, 1 was reminded of the scope of the conservation program, the tree plant- ing plan, the other day when one of LAND SET ASIDE FOR SOLE USE OF FEMALE NIMRODS Connecticut is trying out a new experiment In feminism by setting aside 300 acres in the Farmington valley for women who wish ‘o hunt game, Last year a woman game warden was appointed and a trout stream was reserved for women anglers. Now they are encouraged to try their hand at such game as Connecticut yields—rabbits, quail, and perhaps a groundhog now and then. Deer may not be killed In Connecticut, and bears seem to have disappeared, although they are to be found In Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. One peculiarity of the Connecticut plan is that women are permitted to shoot throughout the 55,000 acres of publie shooting grounds, while men are excluded from the feminine pre- serve. Is this the beginning of a new deal, to culminate in the elim- ination of man and the development of female Nimrods holding a monop oly of hunting In the Nutmeg state? The authorities say uo: they merely suggest that women are backward hunters, and that the special pre- serve will encourage them to become good shots, The warden, Miss Edith Stoeher, will be on hand to furnish clay pigeons to amateur gunners, and they will be Instructed in the game laws, “so that they will know which kinds of game protected, and do not blaze’ away wildly at any- thing that comes within range.” Naturally, preserve set aside irresistibly tempting to male hunters, but for the danger of being mis cen for wild game, If they they will keep out of this preserve until the women learn how to handle firearms and to withhold t t see thelr t in the hi is notoriously =a Washington Post. 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