AMUEL INSULL, once the grand old man of public utilities, has been brought home to be tried for his alleged sins after his long period of refuge in forelgn lands. His “prison ship,” the Exllona, ar rived off Fort Han- cock, N. J., and Insull was taken off at open sea by the United States coast guard cutter Hudson, which landed him quickly. After an automobile ride to Princeton Junction, he was put aboard a train and transported swiftly to Chicago. Hig son, Samuel Insull, Jr., had been per- mitted to join him on the Exilona and accompanied him on the trip west, Landing on American soil, Insull appeared to recover his old time con- fidence. To reportershesaid: “lamin America to make the most Important ight of my life. I am fighting not only for freedom but for complete vindication. I have erred, but my greatest error was in underestimating the effects of the financial panic on American securities, and particularly on the companies 1 was trying to build “lI worked with all my energy to save those companies. [ made takes—but they were honest mistakes. They were errors in judgment, but not dishonest manipulations, “Arbitrarily, I had been instructed to resign as head of these companies which I had built and which 1 had tried to protect. “lI was told that 1 was no longer needed. Tired from fruitless struggles to save the Investments of thousands of men and women, dis. couraged in my attempts to save the investments of my friends and ciates as well as everything 1 had, I got out. “No charges Samuel Insull mis. the ARRO- were brought against me until I had been away for three months, My return at that time would have further licated the prob- lems of the reorganization of the com- panies, “The whole com story has not yet been told. You only know the charges of the prosecution. Not one word has been uttered in even feeble defense of me, And it must be obvious that there also is my side of the story. “Whe It is told In court, my judg. ment may be discredited, but certainly my honesty will be vindicated.” USSIA has been angered by a rul- ing of Attorney General Cum- mings and there is danger that all the plans for re-establishing trade with that country will go awry. Mr. Cum- mings was called on to determine what nations would be barred by the Johnson act from marketing their se- curities in this country or In any way receiving financial assistance. This he did by announcing the six foreign nations that are not In default to the United States government on thelr obligations, These are Finland, Great Britain, Czechoslovakia, Italy, Latvia and Lithuania. Finland has met in full all Installments on its war debt. The others have made token payments on recent installments, Immediately after the attorney gen. eral's ruling was made public it was authoritatively stated in Washington that President Roosevelt had decided to accept no more token payments: therefore England and the others that have made such payments will fall in- to the default class on June 15, when the next payments are due, Even Fin. land may now default, If the nations proffer token payments they may be accepted by the treasury as “on ae count,” but the nations will still be held in default and thus will be shut out under the new Johnson act from obtaining any government loans In the United States, The President will Inform congress, it is reported, that he desires no legis. lation at this time with respect to the debt question. Soviet Russia fell In the default class because it ignored obligations of the preceding czarist and Kerensky governments, 0. Sie directly at the American Telephone and Telegraph com. pany and the Western Union company, both of which are sald to have defled him, Recovery Administrator Johnson made public a drastic code for the wire communications Industry pre pared by his own staff, Imposition ot a code is regarded to all intents the same as writing law for the industry affected, equal in scope to the author. fzation for licensing industry, Noth. ing like It has been resorted to here tofore. In the telegraph case, with all but one minority group flatly opposed to any code, the NRA Is proposing to change long-standing conditions and alter the internal economy of the ine dustry, on the ground that existing conditions burden commerce and re duce employment. A date for hearings wre set, after which the President was to be asked to take action, The code, If adopted, would deprive extensive Interests of financial ad vantages amounting to many millions of dollars, the NRA authorities claring these are not fairly held. Among the things it would abolish are: Exclusive rights of the Western Union Telegraph company to some- thing like $25,000,000 worth of busi- ness annually; use by many corpora. tions of private wire circuits leased at figures alleged to be out of line with regular charges for the same yolume of business, and free use of these cir- cuits by clients of the lessees to the tune of millions of dollars worth of words each year, n——— de. RASTIC reorganization of the NRA to give the federal govern. ment a permanent balance of power between large and small industries was recommended in the majority re- port by the Darrow board, which Pres. ident Roosevelt decided not to make public in its original form but referred to three government agencies for pre- liminary digesting. On the theory that the NRA has shown business incapable of self-regu- lation, the 5-to-1 majority report pro- poses to scrap all the au- thorities In favor of an entirely new set-up in which the federal govern- ment, big business and have equal voting repre Sous to both the White House silver bloc in congress is likely coop worked out, 3 Senator Porah, present code sort of a compromise wants outrig metal, thought the plan would not retary of ury Morgenthau ane eight sliver held pr Sec. Serve, the Secretary Morgenthau Senator Utah said he hoped for a bill would nationalize siive provide for the Llishme per cent silver reserve ‘oF 1 Probably the measure will be tory as to poli leaving to the discretion o ident the policies, estal les and permi means of carrying out the 0 AVOID impending defeat by the Tam the President withdrew from its consideration the names of two men he had appointed to office, One was Willard L. Thorp who had been made head of the Commerce de- partment's bureau of foreign and do- mestic commerce. The senate’s objec tion to Mr. , who has been serv- ing as head of the commerce pending action on his nomination, based on the fact tl regis. tered as a Republican in a M: 1gsachy- setts primary. The other withdrawal was of Rene A. Viosca as United States attorney for the Eastern district of Louisiana, He was opposed by Senator Huey P. Long. Thorp bureau was at he on NDREW W. MELLON, the ven erable and wealthy ex-secretary of the treasury and former ambassa- dor to England, came out on top in his latest contest with the Department of Jus tice, The government had accused him of evading his income taxes and sought his indictment by a fed eral grand jury in Pittsburgh. However, the grand Jury re fused to return a true bill, declaring the Shutges were without A. W. Mellon The foreman of the jury was Wil liam Beeson, a bank clerk. Among others on the jury were five laborers, two farmers, two engineers, two mee chanics, two clerks, one plumber, one carpenter, a lumber dealer, and a writer, Mr. Mellon sald: “1 am of course gratified that I have been exonerated by a jury of my fellow citizens. The fact that the grand jury reached a sound conclusion, notwithstanding the unusual methods pursued In my case, is proof of the good sense and fairness of the American people,” The finding of the jury probably ended finally the affair, Mr. Cammings saying the government would not chal. lenge the decision. It may also put end to the not Infrequent attacks on Mr. Mellon In congress, RESIDENT ROOSEVELT is again a grandfather, for down in Port Worth, Texas, a daughter has been born to Mr, and Mrs, Elliott Roosevelt, The baby, who weighed six pounds six ounces, has been named Ruth Chandler Roosevelt, AR mall flying by the army has come to an end, and the routes are being taken over by commercial aviation as fast as the short term contracts are let, OW the League of Nations pro poses to ald China was told In a long report, made public by the Nan- king government, covering the ar. rangement made by Dr. Ludwig Rajch- man, representative in China of the league. This plan, it is supposed, led to Japan's recent statement of a policy demanding that other nations keep their hands off China. The document was politically fnocuous, being chiefly the recommendations of technical ad- visers for projects designed to attract foreign capital to China and date it as an independent nation, list of advisers did not include Japanese, The chief Interest in from the standpoint of States, concerned the to cotton, consoll- The any the report, the United section devoted It shows that China must purchase about £060,000,000 worth of raw cotton annually, most of which comes from the United States, The report also proposes an exten- sive road bullding program which Is likely to improve the market for Amer- lean cars as well as gasoline, A Chinese national military and communications commission has just left Shanghai for the United States by way of Europe. Its twenty-two mem- bers are instructed to learn how China can acquire a modern war machine and methods of communication that are up to western standards, REPORTS from Calro, Egypt, somewhat hazily about 18 going on in the where Ibn Saud, king of i Arabia, making war on the ancient kingdom of Yemen, determined to Sonquer it. Already the 3 which is rowertv) and equipped with all mod. told flerce fighting that wi Ara- bilan peninsula was ern tured port wi From ame reat terests, USBANDS and wives who want be divorced—and lots of them do ~MAay DOW in conjunction with a pleasant ¥ Cuba, which is bidding for the lean divorce President Men dieta si at shortens the time required to get mutual consent di- vorces from three It also provi appearances before vals of make three appearances Four new causes 15 recognized as grou They are bigamy, o use of any drug, and di acter, accor ish business decree th gned a d years to six months, des that, in stead of three the court at inter the parties may 30 days apart. are added to the nds for divorce, or immorality, sparity of char. six months, the verge of a big trade war, The British have threatened to take strong action to protect their textile export interests against Increasing Japanese competition, although the British gov. ernment officially declares it will do everything to maintain amicable rela. tions with Japan, The official position in Tokyo Is that Japan can take care of herself, and there was every indica. ish nitimatum that it must modify its trade program and tactics, ish already have begun quotas on Japanese goods, but trade ly since Japan's imports from British Isles in 1033 totaled 83,000,000 yen or almost as much as was export- ed there, BO.000,000 yen, able to make reprisals, Trade with the British is considered far more Important and the Japanese are confident the domin- fons will not follow the mother coun- try's lend-—especially Australia, which sold to Japan in 1033 four times its purchases, and Canada, which sold seven times as much as it bought, A SCORDING to the unanimous re. port of a house committee of in. vestigation, Maj). Gen. Benjamin D. Foulols, chief of the army air corps, acted “in clear violation of existing law” in the proposed purchase of alr planes costing $7,500,000, Coupled with the criticism of Foulols was a commendation of Harry IL Woodring, assistant secretary of war The report stated that late in 1033 the Public Works administration set aside $7,500,000 for the purchase of army airplanes, It asserted that Foulols had decided to buy the planes, without competition, from the North rap corporation, the Boeing Alrplane company and the Glenn L. Martin company. On Woodring's insistence, the pian for direct purchases was dropped and specifications drawn on which competitive bids were asked, © by Western Newspaper Union Washington.—The Republicans are glving some indications that they in- tend to fight for elec. Queer Quirk tionof theirpartisans in Politics In the next congress on the ground that the emergency is over and that Presl- dent Roosevelt and his administration are continuing on a spending spree Just to afford deserving Democrats with pie from the government counter, The tipoff as to the direction from which the attack will come arose the other day without attracting a great deal of attention, It came from Rep resentative Snell of New York, the Re publican leader in the house, who op- posed one of the newer brain-trust creations because he declared, un- equivocally, “the emergency is over.” After Mr. Snell had made the state. ment, I inquired of a number of per- sons, astute in politics, what they thought of this anomaly. Here is a leader of the opposition party declar- ing that the emergency is over, and if that condition exists, the leader of the inference at least, has admitted that credit for the job must Roosevelt administration, admit the correctness of the without admitting at the that there should be an end to the erge i. hat the Roosevelt ad It seems to me, one time countless em cy agencies t therefore, that we are witnessing that where rule. Sue side other occurred In things are the amounts to this: ever politics wtly, it each is Cont ing that the hould be sald, much under the bridge be wmnted in Novem. changes will the votes are o« ber: Indeed, come be paigns In many fore the the various st hite heat, course tle now indicated is tered, re t the ngressional can #1 > § ates get stirred unless the » to thelr mass “we have not wp the AAA thers? And, at hinders Democrats licked the de pression and they must now put an end to thelr orgy of spending and run- ning up bills which the taxpayers must meet”? have Neither side, of course, will those words, But, if the goes ahead as it has started, have to be the substance of their tale to the voters, Therewillhave to be some careful, as well as very before the very quick, campaign's end that this may turn out to be a most campaign because of the is now presented by Mr #1 aration, conf anomaly that Snell's decla using . - * considerable disen ax to how far reaching the effect may be if the Re Just publicans stress, Speculation with sufficient vigor, the contention that the Democrats are trying to hold on to the extra jobs and that they are continuing to spend taxpayers’ money for repayment of political debts. There is always something sinister about that kind of thing. Whether the charge is right or wrong, many voters get suspicious when campaigners per. ‘here is asion eral treasury. They always think of it in terms of theft of money from the local bank or stores and not in the terms of political maneuvering, al ference. It always has happened that the spots where the funds will do the most good, politically, and when either side kicks about that, it seems to me it Is exactly like one mule calling an- 1 won't even suggest that 1 ean guess what the ultimate effect of these strange arguments Is going to be, Anyone who tries to predict the result at this time is just being silly. The best Judgment I ean get is that the re. sults in the various congressional dis tricts are going to vary. The differ ence likely will be dependent entire ly upon how many mistakes—plain bonehead statements—the various can didates make in their attempts to fol low arguments and analyses laid down for them by the national political com. mittees. My belief is that there will be plenty of them and there ought to be, therefore, a considerable amount of surprise when the votes are counted, It is quite apparent to the Demo. cratic leaders, and they say so, that a number of house seats, now held by Democrats, will be turned over to the Republicans next fall. There are seats occupled by Democrats who have no reason on earth to be In the house except by virtue of the tremendous landslide that placed Mr, Roosevelt in the White House, Districts normally Democratic are more than ing to continue to elect but the “political accidents” that elect- ed many others of the vast majority in the house are going to send many home because they from over- whelmingly Republican communities, The Republican leaders are asserting they will pick up eighty or ninety seats from the Democrats next No- vember. There can be no doubt that they will gain some, but eighty or ninety is a high figure in anybody's language. likely go- Democrats, come CE It seems to me Mark Wilcox of that Representative Florida won a os , rather gignal honor First Termer in his first term as Wins Honor fa member of the house of representa- tives by obtaining passage of the leg. islation that has come to be known us the municipal bankruptey bill. It something like twenty years “freshman” member of the representatives has sponsored a plece of leg national scope that wis ag law. Plenty of new members have introduced bills, nationwide In thelr effect, but as my research has disc been successful In the years, Mr, Wilcox won m house Mrs, inughter of the Bryan, for the in his has gince - house of islation of passed and become as far loged, none embers defeating district where the amount to an elec- fon. So he was given a baptism of fire reached the house it- self, Vhether It prestige won be fore he ever Democratic the ing wom fact rems r reasons, orced through t may pe ion a federal court for the ri arrange its debt on a8 new basis but the court must he three-fourths in of holders of the bond agree to the terms of a If they do agree, then the igsue a decree that will compel maining bondholders to accep ghown that at least num! is are compromise, the ree t the set. tiement. What happens, taxing district will be the defanited bonds with 1 of course, is that the to replace a fresh series, ly at a lower interest rate. The taxing district gets out of the predie ament of what amounts to bankruptcy, and the bondholders get new securities which are marketable and have some. thing like their face value beca Interest will be paid. This privilege is extended for only two years, but it is the general understanding that the communities concerned will be able to accomplish settlements with their creditors much seoner than that, and it Is obviously hoped also that im proved financial conditions through out the nation will make the job of rearranging the debts easier than it wis a few years ago. The bill did not get through con gress without a fight. It had plenty of opposition from members who con. tended it was a step toward repudia. tion of debts, a thing always to be ab. horred. There was argument also that by granting permission for the muniel- palities and taxing districts to force such compromise as will result, the congress was making such securities lesa attractive to Investors, * *» » able probatl use the One of the obvious results of having the spotlight turned onto an individual . . or a fact or an is Kidding sue is plenty of com the NRA ment. People talk about it. Sometimes, however, the talk develops jibes and Jests and ofttimes they'are not pleas ant for the ardent advocztes of a proposition to swallow. For Instance, until recently discussion of NRA had been confined to serious argument, very often of a heated character Lately, however, jokes and puns about NRA have been emerging with greater frequency and there are now a con siderable number of them. The lat est, and one of the best that I have heard, runs as follows: N. R. A. me down to sleep, I pray Thee, Lord, my codes to keep; If I should bust before I wake, A. F. of 1. my plant will take, I heard already that the American Federation of Labor considers the ref. erence to it in the doggerel to be close ly akin to unfair practice, or what. ever it is organized labor says about those who are not its supporters, Gen. eral Johnson's reactions are not yet a matter of record, although I know he has seen the thing. © by Wenters Newspaper Unton. Historic Metiories of Little Iron Wolverine The BAYH: At Erle, Penn., new ribs are fitted to a bit of the origina) the National Geographic Magazine being keel of Perry's vice flag but also interestin sel Niagara, whip, g i8 the little ves. now Mis ery bay near the Perry monument, The Wolverine was the fron. hulled ship on the Great kes, It was forged In Pi tisbur; ported In pleces ness to Erle, to sink She Wolverine, anchored through Seoffers until all the gone hon Le self du Flyi de throne d King land, and helped fou she that an | Quick, Safe Relief For Eyes Irritated By Exposure To Sun, Wind and Dust At All Drug Stores Write Murine Co., Dpt. W, Chicngo, for Pree Book OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION IDGE LENMAN - = Kan, LOST 57 POUNDS OF FAT DIDN'T CUT DOWN ON FOOD Humboldt, —— FERRY’S ian: | ween SEEDS 5c in fresh-dated at your local store LET HIM BE FREE FROM WORMS Whenever you decide to free your child from Worms or Tapeworm, get the medicine that will drive them out with one single dose. Dr. Peary's DEAD SHOT Vermituge. fa bottle at & or Wright's’ ® rin Co, 100 Gold St, NX. Oity. =eeeCUT ME OUT-=====1 and mall we, with Ide cols oretampe and Pe hn nddress to MDA a wil i fring ua Ah ge rons sample of as Face er and Lomtobe, the mares long all-purpose uty cream. Also details how to make 10 $10.00 a week extra In your spare tims, a Ivy POISONING Soothe burning itching torment quickly and help nature clear Resinol Robust { Hea Ith depends (88 Teds proper [eR sRs assimilation. Keep the digestive pro sses active with Weights 3 HE