RANCE seemingly narrowly es caped a civil war. Following two days of bloody rioting in Paris and other cities, Premier Daladier and his 2 , cabinet capitulated and the reins of gov- ernment were put In the hands of Gaston Doumergue, the sev- enty-one-year-old for mer President who was In retirement on his country estate. His reappearance on the political stage was in response to the pleadings of President Lebrun and many oth- er patriots who were convinced that he alone could restore the country to quiet. It was condi- tioned on pledges that both chambers of parliament would support him un. reservedly and that the president would give him an executive order dis- solving the parliament and calling new elections, to be used if he considered It necessary. So the “iron man” of France, as he has been dubbed, re turned to Paris with plans for a small cabinet made up of former premiers and party leaders and with power to make himself the virtual dictator of the country. War veterans, Monarchists, Commu. nists and other elements joined in the violent demonstrations that forced out the Daladier regime. All joined in op- position to the government, though no one of the groups was in accord with any others in The mobs were furious and fought desper- ately with the and the troops that Daladier had brougl nto the capital. The mainly In the Place de la and the region about the Palals Bourbon where the chamber of sits, were raked by machine fire, sabered by clubbed and shot by the Infantry and police. But they returned to the fray time after time and would until Daladier resigned. The number of dead was i ted at fifty, and more than a thousand persons were wounded. After the battles were over the boulevards In the center of Paris presented a of desolation and destruction unequaled there since days of the commune in 1871 Natlonalist elements resented espe cially the removal by Daladler of Jean Chiappe as prefect of police, feeling that he was being made a scapegoat in the Bayonne bond scandal. The Communists and Soclalists accused Chiappe of he rioting, but the “right” elements sald the “leftists” were determined to get the Corslean out of the way because they knew he would block the proletarian coup d'etat they were planning. The Royalists were in the mix-up hopeful, as always, that they might be able to restore the monarchy and put on the throne the duc de Guise, head of the Bourbon house of Orleans, who lives In exile in Brussels, Naturally the pretender Gaston Doumergue other respects. police ght | rioters, operating Concorde deputies gun mounted troops and not cease the struggle scene as deploring the bloodshed. EVALUATION of the dollar, and the purchaseof goldat $35 = fine ounce caused a turmoil in the world's money markets and an immediate result was a great flow of gold bul lion from Europe to the United States, The pound sterling and the france made gains, but not enough to suit Presi- dent Roosevelt his monetary ers. Later both the pound and franc de clined again, and the Prof confusion was made . greater. The French were alarmed by the drain on their gold and expressed Intense resentment against the American policy, charging that the administration was making de- liberate efforts to embarrass France. For the time being the administra- tion was prevented from driving the dollar down to its projected parity points In foreign exchanges by the ris Ing tide of American dollars flowing back to this country. But most of its financial experts were confident that the 00.06 cents value would be made to prevall after a reasonable time to allow for the shakedown. As for the $35 an ounce for gold, It is the opinion of Prof. George F. War- ren, chief deviser of the experiment that is under way, that the figure must be raised If prices of commodi- ties are to be put up materially, Frank E. Gannett, the Rochester newspaper publisher, after a visit to the White House and talking with both the President and Professor Warren, sald in his Rochester Times-Union that he had been convinced by those conver sations “that we shall continue to raise the price of gold” and that the $35 figure probably would succeed only in preventing prices from slip- ping. By the President's devaluation stroke a treasury deficit of $5.900,000,000 was transformed overnight into a surplus of §078,710,087, Warren T WAS authoritatively stated In Washington that the President be lleves that excessive Interest rates on all classes of debts should be reduced as an Important step toward reduction of the debt structure. His viewpoint applies to foreign debts owed to Unit- ed States citizens, to private debts and to those of industry. He was sald to be of the opinion that reduction of in- terest would make payment more probe able, and that fixed charges also could be cut down, Bills before the senate, which have house approval already, would enable corporations and municipalities or oth- er political subdivisions of states to scale down the principal and Interest of thelr debts through an agreement with the majority of thelr creditors. Legislation Is already In effect which enables the individual to rearrange his debt and Interest rates through a pact with the majority of those he owes and to give similar help to raliroads. There have been complaints that these laws have not been particularly effec- tive and that they need strengthening. The President, in letting it be known that he thought the debtor was paying too much on obligations contracted in better times, did not say what he be- lieved was a fair rate nor did he speci fy particular charges that he regarded as too high, NIRA and the steel Industry came into sharp conflict, and the NRA to a certain extent backed down. Ex. ecutives of all the leading steel com- panies met and con see mone sidered the claim of the national labor board to authority by the Presi dent to conduct elee- tions for given employee when num- representatives a “substantial™ ber request that ae- To this the steel men took excep 1d hey statement tion, issued a saying the istry intends “to resist all attacks” upon company unlons and that it holds tion. Gen, Johnson that the present plan of employee rep- resentation with the NRA. ‘he statement. how ever, declared the steel industry “is co-operating whole heartedly with the President in his ef. forts for national recovery and sub- scribes fully to the principle of collee- complies tive bargaining as provided in section | 7 (a) of the national recovery act.” | The NRA had given out a press | statement implying that all company unions are dominated by employers. This drew sharp criticism, and the statement was retracted. Administra. tor Johnson and NRA Counsel Done ald Richberg upheld the right of the lator board as stated above They as serted, however, that the executive or der which sald that representatives elected by a majority of workers “have been thereby designated to represent all the employees,” does not abridge the rights of labor minorities to con duct negotiations with employers, AMUEL INSULL., who was due to be ousted from Greece on Febru ary 1, was permitted to remain for a time because of il] health. but the gov- ernment at Athens then Informed him unofficially that he must leave before February 13. two physicians having reported he was able to travel with. out danger to his life. The fugitive Im- mediately began packing up, but at this writing It was not known where he would go In his effort to avold ex- tradition. WENTY-TWO days after he was kidnaped, Edward OG. Bremer, banker of St. Paul, Minn., was set free in Rochester, Minn., and made his way y home, nervous and with wounds on his head inflicted when he was “snatched.” but otherwise an- harmed. His father, Adolf Bremer, wealthy brewer, had pald the £200,000 demanded by the kidnapers, In £10 and $5 bills, through an intermediary, Dur ing his captivity Bre- E. G. Bremer =. was kept In a dark room and under constant guard. State and federal law enforcement agencies were conducting an Intensive hunt for the abductors of Bremer, who probably numbered ten or more, It was believed the victim was held in either Sioux City or Kansas City. Verne Sankey, notorious kidnaper who was captured recently in Chicago and taken to Sloux Falls, 8 D, for safe keeping until his trial In a fed- eral court, committed sulcide In his cell by hanging, using a loop made of neckties. He had admitted the ab- duction of Charles Boettcher of Den. ver and Haskell Bohn of St. Poul, SESIDENT ROOSEVELT ealled congressional leaders into confer. ence and with them formulated bills designed to bring the stock markets . of the country under federal control. The measures were then Introduced In both house and senate, They den! with short selling, marginal trading, kpecinlists, pool operations and man fpuiation. * ACKED by the President, a federal grand Jury Investigation was go- Ing on in Washington that promised to uncover a $10,000,000 scandal in the War department. Two lawyers promi nently connected In the past with the American Leglon were sald to be in- volved. It was nsserted that automo- bile manufacturers had been asked for a fee of $50,000 In return for War department contracts for trucks run- ing into millions. The house naval committee made an Inquiry into airplane and engine con- tracts that, It was predicted, would lead to changes in the Navy depart- ment's system of audits. ————— ILLIAM P. M'CRACKEN, who was assistant secretary of com- merce for aeronautics in the Hoover administration, and three alr line offi- clals got into a fam with the senate com- mittee that is invest}. gating alr mall con tracts. All four of them were cited to ap- pear before the senate to show cause why they should not be punished for contempt, McCracken practices law In Washington, The others are L. H. Brittin, vice president of Northwest Alr. ways: Harris M. Hanshue, president of Western Alr Express, and Gilbert Glvvin, Hanshue's secretary, Me. Cracken has been under technical ar. rest but this was vacated, Chairman Black's report to the gen ate showed that Brittin admitted that he had removed from McCracken's of- fice and destroyed subpoenaed corre- spondence; and also that Givvin, on order from Hanshue, had removed con. fidential papers since recovered by the commitlee, Senator Black also told the senate that testimony before the committee showed post office contracts had been awarded “collusively and fraudulent Iy" and that former Postmaster Gene eral Brown and McCracken partici. pated in a “secret meeting” held In a room adjacent to Brown's Post Office department which the coun try was divided into certain all routes and contracts were distributed among “particular” operating com Ww. P. McCracken office at panies, N A unanimous opinion the Supreme United States held accused of violating prohibition laws and whose cases had not been finally ad- judieated by December 5 last, when the E amendment was re. pealed should be set free. The opinion held that repeal canceled the power of prosecution, According to the Department of Jus. tice, were 0.578 prohibition cases, with about 13,000 defendants, pending In federal courts. y passed the bill Introduced by Sen ator Hiram Johnson of California which is designed to prevent the float. ing In America of pri- vate loans to coun tries now defauiting on past debts. Before passing it, the sena- tors amended the measure so that it urt of the all persons the late national ghteenth there senate JITH little debate the President's new scheme to grant to foreign nations loans with which to buy American goods, A proviso was written in declaring that joans to foreign defauiters could still made by government owned corpora- tions, As it now stands, however, the bill puts In the hands of the administra- tion its most powerful weapon for forcing payment of defaulted war debts, No defaulting nation may float any private loan In this country, and any American aiding In the illegal flotation of a private loan to a de faniter would be liable to five years in jail and 210000 in fines According to Chalrman Jesse Jones of the RFC, the President's plan ealls for the creation of a trading bank which will partially underwrite ex- Sen, Hiram Johnson ers of American goods The bank would be entirely owned by the govern. ment, so the arrangement would act. ually be a partial government guar antee of payment to the American producer, The bank would be a di vision of the RFC. NLY one representative voted “no” when the house of repre- sentatives passed on the bill to ap propriate $050,000,000 for continuation of CWA and direct relief activities, George B, Terrill of Texas, Democrat, The money is to be used by the fed- idle for another year and for continu- ing the Civil Works administration un- til the early part of May. About 500 millions is to be used for the former purpose, it was sald, and about 450 for the CWA, GDEN L. MILLS, who, whether or not you like him, Is one of the most forceful leaders of the Repub lean party, has often been spokon of as a possible or even probable candi date for the GG. O. P. Presidential nom: ination in 1080. But the New Yorker has now removed himself from that entegory., While In California to see Herbert Hoover and others, Mr, Mills told the press “1 most certainly have no intention of becoming a eand date, Nor will 1 mix In local or factional polision™ © hy Western Newspaper Union od ATI, TE JIL Washington.—Among the character Istics of the New Deal which Presi dent Roosevelt is Dream giving us is =a Becomes Reality eer admixture of planning for the long-range developments along with quick action for, as well as un- der the gulse of, emergency problems, None can say that he has failed to be quick on the trigger when it came to taking some kind of action when emer- gencles had to be solved, whether one agrees with them or not, but coupled with this haste he has been moving in the direction of long-range planning with a celerity that is, to say the least, unusual in government. Some months ago, I wrote of the possibilities of the transfer of human beings, like so many cattle or chat- tels, Into new spheres of activity, into & new locale, into places where some of them have a chance for an even break in the battle for subsistence. At that time, I believed the idea, ad- vanced to me by some of the Presi dent's advisers, was largely a dream But It has gone past that stage and is about to become a realty. ’ Harry Hopkins, who started out to be administrator of the government's Job of extending relief to the destitute and who since has become one of the President's right-hand men, 1s now se riously planning a rehabilitation move. ment of the very kind that, as [ sald, wis only a six months ago. Hundreds of thousands of nilles are Involved. Their future is dream individual or the whim, whichever you choose ers of It is experin ental. a those who are worl claim It With but the plan be car Hopi can sucecssfil Mr ECCT of the fourors Ezekiel, also of and also one ale K. Parrot of the Ir of the Civil and terior d irtment, Works weir pla will another mu id Jaeoh Baker TT be th mii. Summarized the program contem. thon and indus sical transfer of upon thousands of men areas or from farming commu areas where the people living Instead of being they now on roles of charitable or govern This trans. planting seems to have two purposes: First, It will provide those people who are moved with tter living econdl as relieve the crowded cond “We have large numbers of families ging that It seems entirely improb commodated In Industry, or particu. “They been Hopkins, industries that have ters to some extent, In copper areas and In farming country that is no long “As to submarginal lands, in con government cannot go in and simply lands and have those families move on and go places. They So that pation. This plan gets into the gov. We are going to try, therefore, to take steps in the Interest of those needy people Involved and in the Interests of a national economy at the same time™ . "0 Thus the picture 1s unfolded of a ultimate, means the Remake herding of the popn- Iation into the vari Social Map ous sections of the country or cities as the planners in Washington deem wise. It is a pro gram that is designed to remake the social map of the nation. Those who sponsor It go Into ecstacy In discuss. ing the beauties of the dream and the ideals which are sought to obtain. They depict for the transferred popu. lace one permanent Joy of living, or as nearly such as may be expected on earth, and In listening to their expo sition of the plans, one will feel the sincerity of their beliefs without half trying. They believe It is as near utopian In its possibilitios as a gov. ernment may prodoce for ita people, “But what will those people do when they have heen taken somewhere? Mr Hopkins was asked. “They may do two or three things” he replied promptly. “They may work part of the time In national forests, for example. Large numbers of men are required for rehabilitation and re planning of our national forests, The Clvillan Conservation corps eannot be gin to get all of the work done “I think it is time for the govern ment to explore this situation and make plans aside from just giving re Hef. If the government is going to spend such large sums of money, a substantial portion of it should be #pent In constructive enterprises ilke this” And with a fund of $£25.000000 to start, we launch on another plan for changing our national life. Mr. Hop- kins described the £25.000,000 as “Just a starter,” and explained that many more millions ean and will be used if the ideas prove practicable. He thinks they will, » - ® ut among those hardened eritics that watch Washington day after day and who do not have Fear It’s Too to shape thelr ideas idealistic along political lines, among those who try to be unblased, there is a hope that the scheme can be earried and a fear that it is too idealistic for use among people with the traditions of those of the United States. In oth- er words, it Is a guess whether the plan will be practicable. One hardened observer took me se- verely to task for even assuming that it was possible to the plan without wasting many times as much money as it could be any you care to set I called attention that there were undoubtedly out execute worth by guage up. some families that would welcome an opportunity to get on a plece of farm land, made available to them by the government, for which they could pay as they were able. 1 thought they would learn a new Joy In life itself and be me Independent, rightthinking cit! families is right” “Bat for those ‘some’ nake use of the change. he 11 drift back twenty times to thelr g at the first og » » t has been unusually in ting to ch the reverberations rege. here to the speech mad Kan, by Ogden LL. Mills of the treasury under Pres * recently Topeka, Becretlary ident Hoover. Strange and paradoxi- cal as It may seem, the Mi of fire ils speech into some Democrats in the administration in support of the Roosevelt New Deal and put fire Into others to cause them eriticize It. Ogden MUR has been derided and ridiculed as few men have suffered in political life. He was born an aris tocrat and the politicians opposed to iim have made use of that, But Og- den Mlils is a fighter, and his Topeka speech showed that he had lost none of his fortitude It will be remembered that Mr. Mills charged Mr. Roosevelt with “an un- constitutional effort” to grasp power over the country and the President of destroying the rights and liberties of the people under the Con- stitution. I have seen much less se rious charges huried at a President to be followed by a young riot by his supporters. There have been some attacks on Mr, Millis thus far, but ob- servers here thought they did not car ry the old-time ring of a real battle. Of course, It Is known generally that a goodly number of the President's own io asocused his plans but they have been afrald to bark too loudly because of the elee tions next autumn. Those Individuals lately have been a little more brave and, when I was around the senate end house of representatives the other day, 1 heard more mutterings than usual » - * 1 asked some of the avid Roosevelt supporters what it meant. Their an- swers identical: “They are not real Democrats.” But | asked several Getting Timorous as “not real Democrats™ what the sig nificance was of the changed tude. Their answers were down one groove: “We are just getting afraid of the way this man Roosevelt is lead: ing us” i i i cepted here as being the opening gun Democratic party. That being tration of strength In opposition to the Roosevelt policies, or many of them. Is it not possible, then, Mr. Mills may have started the actual! formation of a new Republican party? As Mr. Mills set his Ideas, It Is made to appear that he and those who follow him will foster the philosophy of wide-open competition among all, with as little government domination as is possible; that it will be thelr contention that bureaucratic control shall be avoided In every direction and that the powers of the Chief Execu tive of the nation shall he limited to those properly delegated by the Con stitution to him, © hy Western Newspaper Unlen, TIME FOR STUDY, SAYS EDUCATOR ——— The proverb that “one hour's sleep before midnight is worth two houry’ afterward,” usually is ridiculed by physicians, Most of them maintain that while eight hours’ sleep is necessary at some time during the twenty-four, it makes little difference when it Is ob- tained. A recent German investigation tends, however, to cast doubt on this medical opinion and to confirm the ancient proverb, says Dr. BE FE. Free, In his Week's {New York): “Dr. Theodor Stockmann, prinei- al of a school In Duisburg, noticed that one of his pupils was falling be. hind in school work, and w Ing more and more lazy an “Inquiring into this yo sleep habits, Doctor found that he was studying night and sleeping late in the Ing. Change of this habl the pupil slept before midn woke very early in the study caused ren ent In school work an Doctor Stockman: game idea on seventeer averaging about ninet All turned out to be and to do better scl they habit hours’ sleep be up at { morning to do th “Two pupils whe the day also found ter health and more their studies when immediately { their school work bets and dawn, His suggest, Doctor to the that less the be © ugh, ¥ provi Apple Holds Lead in the Kingdom of Belence ark three af TEiy aiter » yey Ger ded all ‘+ CER Pies » A q dollars worth 1 Doctors have always recognized the value of the laxative whose dose can be measured, and whose action can be thus regulated to suit individual need. The public, too, is fast returning to the use of liquid laxatives. People have learned that a properly pre- pared liquid laxative brings a perfect movement without any discomfort at the time, or after. The dose of a liquid laxative can be varied to suit the needs of the individual. The action can thus be regulated. It forms no habit; you need not take a “double dose” a dav or two later. Nor will a mild liquid laxative irritate the kidneys, The wrong cathartic may often do more harm A good. n Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a Preucziption, and is perfectly safe ts laxative action is based on senns ~a natural laxative. The bowels will not become Sependont on this form of help. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is at all druggists. Member N. R. A. | WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY | ITCHING Wherever it occurs and whatever the cause, relieve it at once with Resinol |.