SEEN HEARD around the National Capital Sins By CARTER FIELD as Washington.-—~With nature moving in to help extinguish the cotton surplus, as she had already on hogs, cattle and to a lesser extent wheat, probabili- ties for trouble in the future for cot- ton growers in this country are not di- minished, but Increased. The point Is that the dust storms in the big cotton producing areas of Texas and Oklahoma—more than half of the cotton raised in the United States Is grown west of the Mississippl despite the prevailing opinion to the contrary—have already boosted the price of cotton. Pressure on AAA Is expected to continue loans at around 12 cents, despite the desire to drop them gradually. All of which means that the price of cotton will be main- tained at this high level next year, So far, so good, but unfortunately it is Impossible for the United States to keep such a situation secret. If this country could only do what Russia did a few years back with wheat, it could imake a killing on cotton—perhaps— mext year, The Russians, it may be recalled, clr- culated stories that thelr wheat crop had failed, back in the days of Secre- tary of Agriculture Hyde and the farm board. wheat, and the Russians began selling. Hyde thought they were selling short, and actually denounced them In public speeches for such a nefarious practice. Jut the Russians delivered the wheat. Whereupon the price the tussians having been the only wheat farmers to get a real product, and the money for that com- ing out of the United States treasury. 3ut the whole world knows crops In the United States. Down in Brazil they know about the dust storms that are wrecking crop pects west of the Mississippl, know about the agitation the 12-cent loans collapsed, cotton tificially maintained 12-cent price next year. And they know that In } cents a pound! Big Brazilian Crop cotton next square yard possible. This “possible” amount is far from trivial. Tremen- dous overnight expansion is impossible, acreage season by every of course, but Brazil's agricultural ex- perts figure that only the 6 ton—always with cents, tivation. So that the real problem is labor. But there is labor for much more expansion. So It can safely be assumed that will be a big increase In the next Brazilian crop. enoug} inh there Over in England the cotton spinning people know about these dust storms and about the prospect of the United States maintaining the 12-cent price. Some of their big mills have made the change In their looms so as to spin the Jrazillan cotton. More of them are now expected to do so. They will nat- urally figure they can buy Brazilian cotton cheaper than United States cot- ton. Over In the Japanese puppet state there are now 30,000,000 acres In cot. ton. Very small so far as world fig ures go, but there also the facts about the situation In the United States are known, and may be expected to have results. Similarly in Egypt and India. All of which point unerringly to the probability that throughout the world there will be a mad rush to take ad- vantage of the situation. ises eventually to leave the United ing millions of bales of cotton for which It paid 12 cents a pound, when the world market will be around 7 or probability. But this is snly part of the trouble. Johnson and Johnson have already an- nounced their plans for setting up cot. ton mills in Brazil, the idea being not away from the processing tax. Prod. ucts of this mill would be used in place of goods formerly exported from the American mills of this big firm, Army Is Stirred Army and navy officers are terribly concerned over the bill Just passed by the house, and soon to be considered In the senate, for taking the profit out of war. They assure everyone who will listen to them, In private, that it will also take national defense out of war, which might be very serious Indeed to the nation In the event of a conflict. The pacifists hail the bill as: “A bill to keep the United States out of war by providing In advance that there will be (1) profits for none, and (2) confiscatory taxes for all, so that it will be to every American's interest to keep the United States at peace.” Army and navy experts say that It should be called: + “A bill 3) to transfer the war mu- nitions industry now in the United States, and which might be started here, to foreign soll, (2) to provide for murderous delay In preparation in case a war Is forced on this country, (3) to conscript soldiers and employers but not workmen, and (4) to repeal the oldest law of military strategy: that the best offense Is a vigorous offen. sive” Goaded by a $2,000,000 bonus to ~Bugene G. Grace, by screams of the cifists, by complaints of soldier bonus bhyists that “these boys fought and ked their lives while profiteers were making millions,” the house voted down every qualifying swendment, passed the bill, and privately hopes the | senate will write some sense Into it Tax on Profits More serious, from a preparedness standpoint, is the tax provision on prof. its, Half of all profits up to 6 per cent and then 100 per cent is the house provision. Suppose, say army and navy officers, the du Ponts had been faced with such a situation at the entry of | the United States into the Wdrld war. Would they have dared expand their plants? Suppose, instead of a prelimi nary period of nearly three years dur. | ing which the allies were buying all the munitions they could get, and which naturally caused tremendous ex: pansion of the du Pont, Bethlehem and other munition plants, the United States had been involved from the first, with such restrictions on earnings as are now proposed, The point made by the army and navy men is primarily that no manfac turer would dare expand his plant to take care of a war need. He would not be able to make enough to scrap the plant after the war, and he would have to take his chances with govern- ment auditors on depreciation charges, Altogether he would be much safer it his plant were located on foreign soll, where it would be welcomed as an ele. ment of military strength. So that the natural development would be for foreign countries to bene fit—even In time of peace—by the train- ing of thelr workmen in the making of munitions, and in time of war by the possibility of big profits, which these foreign governments could tax to their heart's content and still leave some thing for the manufacturers, Nearly everyone agrees that the pro- law would be repealed as the first act of congress after the next dec Critics are not much What really wor posed worried about that. moving abroad wholesale to escape such conditions, not only depriving the United States of this element of strength, but actually providing it for potential en emies. The enterprise bill would have no chance of 3 ly to vote for such a measure than to vote against it, and then try to explain Groups lob. bying for are militant. And, almost to the last man and wom- an, they would remember at the polls! See Long Session Congress is not going to ba rushed to It will be with us Almost surely un- September, the measure an early adjournment. 3 » vet, til August. Probably until Possibly longer than that, il the flat pre- “must™ This is true despite leaders that the dictions by be rushed spre «131 : Te items will through else will be abandoned. Many But they of the erything things may be “abandoned.” will not be abandoned time element, because They will be abandoned, if at all, because actually they are not wanted examination the leftovers at of adjournment will reveal the truth of this statement. Utility heads got all pepped up a few ago at this list “must” It did not include the pub ility holding company bill. Now, all the statements, the proba- bility of the moment is that a holding company bill affecting the utilities will Careful of the time days of Measures, lic © despite be passed. It will not be passed in the form desired by President Roosevelt. It will be much more moderate. It will actually be what some of the utility chiefs favored as much as ten years Ago, But its omission from the “must” list given out by house leaders Is very amusing. It was a bit of Intra-party strategy. The house leaders In partic. ular are getting very tired of the Pres- ident’s treating them the way he goes. Hence their public statement of a “pro- gram” which would be put through and then followed by speedy adjournment. The legislative veterans were laughing In their sleeves at the time, but their statements made good newspaper copy. What they want Is for the President to take them more into his confidence, and stop treating the house of representa tives like a stepchild, Soldier Bonus Naturally, the soldier bonus was not on the “must” list. The President does not want that. Bot If anyone thinks that it 1s not going to take a lot of the senate’s time, he just does not know very much about the senate, Especial- ly, as the best predictions now are that the bonus legislation, after passing both houses, and being vetoed, will be passed over the veto by the house and then fall of passage in the senate, This unofficial program calls for two | separate considerations of the measure | by the senate! That Is not all. Very few administra. | tion leaders are optimistic enough to be- lieve this congress will adjourn without | giving the soldiers something. Which means that time must Intervene—after a sufficient demonstration of strength to frighten the White House, and after a sufficient demonstration of weakness | to frighten the American Leglon—for | a compromise to be worked out. i The President has let it be known to | a few friends on Capitol Hill that he | is willing to go to a compromise of about $1,200,000,000. The bonus lead. ers know that, and will move heaven | and earth to obtain It If they find that | they are going to lose out on the main | fight. i Incidentally, there is nothing on the | “must” program about the AAA amend. | ments, nor about the growing move | ment to rescind the cotton processing | tax. Nor the corn and hog processing tax. Flat prediction Is hereby made that there will be a lot of oratory in the senate on both before the final | gavel taps, | Couyright-WNU Servis | i i { { “IN DIJON-" & By JACK DE WITT ©. MoClure Newspaper Syndicate WNU Bervice. IKE DELANEY of the plain clothes detail flicked at his immaculate civilian sult with a whisk brush. “Golng out deep tonight, Mike?” the question was tossed at him in friendly carelessness by Lieutenant Reese, “Takin' Ann to dinner,” replied the plain clothes man, “and no gags from you.” Lieutenant Reese looked up from the fiimsles, reports and “Wanted” circu lars he had been perusing, and his ‘arge face beamed. “Ann's a swell kid, and no foolin', But—ever been In Dijon, Mike?” “Dijon?” queried the plain clothes officer. His lean, clean-shaven face came alive with a happy memory. “You mean“ Dijon In France? Sure, I was there. Right after the war, Why? “Ever meet the Bluebeard of Dijon? asked the lieutenant, without humor. Mike Delaney eyed the officer sus plciously, “What you getting at? he wanted to know befare committing himself, “Just this” the lieutenant thrust a paper towards him. “First pickup or der we ewer got from a foreign country. And them frogs go for rewards, too, See the Agure? Fifteen hundred Amer fean dollars reward for the Bluebeard of Divyn” Mike Delaney read hurriedly. “Phey seem to think this mug's In this town,” he sald to the lieutenant. Seah,” agreed the desk officer with out enthusiasm, “but they ying to trall him for five years chance pickin’ him now. women, didn’t he? I didn't read it care- Mul.” have Wanted for Murder. Nicholas six women Mesurance for last victim. The trall of where it was lost five years ago. circular, available by the subject of this photograph of Lamaire is spent the greater part of his the restagrant business @ Inches tall, Weight Dark Pair and eyes. His has wdoubtedly changed considerably but be may be readily {dentified by a triangular scar, result of a wound, two Inches below the p his right shoulder blade, 160 pounds appearance knife oint He may be and he may be the proprietor of a res taurant of the better type” Delaney paused in his reading. Heutenant observed: “How after these years? he works in restaurants. " when he reached the sidewalk. denly he laughed aloud, It was 7:30 when Mike Delaney pre sented his broad shoulders in the door way of a neat suburban cottage. Ann Morgan met him at the door, “Late, Mr. Delaney, Fifteen minutes late. Give an account.” Mike Delaney said nothing. He nsn- ally went tongue-tied for the first few minutes in Ann Morgan's company any- way. When bis little coupe was nos ing through downtown traffic again, and when Ann had eunddied comfort. ably close to him, he sald half mus ingly: “If we had fifteen hundred dollars we could get that bungalow in the Sunset addition and make a good, big down payment to the real estate peo- ple" “Mike Delaney,” the girl interrupted him, “quit worrying about that bun- galow.” The subject ended there. Ann was dreaming her dreams; Mike was dreaming his. Both dreams were very similar when he piloted her through the garishly lighted doorway of a downtown restaurant Gilded letters on the restaurant window announced that the place specialized In French cooking. When the walter brought soup and turned with a dexterous flip of his nap- kin to leave the booth, a sharp ejacu- lation from Mjke Delaney brought him Mike Delaney was holding by the tall—suspended above his plate—the “I'll show it to every customer in the “M’'seur, Mseur—" stammered the control his quivering vocal chords he “Please—please,” he begged, “1 will Please. Fifteen Eventually Mike Delaney allowed himself to be placated by none other than the proprietor. As they walked toward another res taurant, Ann sald: “But you shouldn't taken his money, Mike. You “Teach him a lesson,” her compan. fon assured her. “Forty dollars is a lot of money to a mug {ike that. IH let him suffer until tomorrow then take it back.” ’ In the next restaurant Mike Delaney again chose a booth. The walter went through the preliminaries with expert uess and dispatch. After the soup was brought, he, too, whirled in sudden alarm, hearsed a little act. Spms of ranging from ten olarcy inal forty, went Into Mike Delaney's pocket and the curtain fell on the serio- comedy with Ann and her escort on the sidewalk seeking another eating house, It was as they were approaching the sixth restaurant that Ann Morgan turned an amazed and hurt expression upon Mike Delaney, “If that's your way to get that fif- teen hundred dollars you say we need, I can assure you, Mr. Delaney, we no longer need It.” She stepped Into a taxicab parked at the curb and was gone, Saddened, alone, Mike Delaney en- tered still another restaurant. The act proceeded. The head waiter came and went. And then there was a hitch in the play. An Irate, pig- eyed gentleman came crowding to the booth, “Ah,” sald this one, “the old mouse trick.” He filled the booth with his bulk. Mike Delaney rose and seemed to be estimating his chance for a fast getaway, jut the proprietor had another idea. “Call the police, Oscar,” he sald over his shoulder to the hovering, alarmed walter, “And you, wise guy, sit down,” He pushed Mike Delaney back into his seat, “It's the old, what yon call, shake down trick,” resumed the cafe propri- etor viclously, "and you go to jail for it" A uniformed policeman was elbow- ing his way through a knot of curious restaurant patrons the “What's wrong? the asked, and then he saw Mike Delaney, The wondering traveled to the now almost near booth, officer policeman's from Delaney's face purple one of the cafe owner, gaze “You've seen that trick before,” De laney was saying and with a menace In his volee that the cafe man did not miss, in Dijon. A gang of carefree American soldiers slowly “You've seen it used to pull it there to get a little cash.” At the word fat man suddenly glinted “It's a lle. Dijon—1 what it means Arrest that ficer—arr—" but trailed It was his turn now for an avenve Dijon the eyes of the not know man, of- off. to look furtively of escape. do his voice *. « « and hurry off his shirt” In- structed Mike Delaney, at police headquarters a few n ip want (o see that sear before 1 go take Ann to dinner, return collected—and do some heavy the gone gdonug . of 70 Passed by Many ionary conclusions about why did a be expected still longer in the future are new #8 of death in Great Brits wople live longer than they eneration ago may 0 lve suggested by stndie in by three mathematicians, Col. A. G. McKendrick, Dr, W. OO. Kermack and Dr. P. LI. McKh f Edinburgh, BAYS the Providence Jo One conclusion is that rate statistics lay, all the chief lives is what kind fc- quired during the first 10 to 15 years of life. Another Is living to be ninety or one hundred promises not to be improbable instead of the tradi- tional limit of three score and ten, Sanitation and medical science have greatly decreased deaths among chil dren and young people, so that the percentage of middle-aged people has been increasing. There has been no direct evidence, however, that the old people are living any longer or that the maximum span of human life ia lengthening. Many experts have suspected, in- deed, that this life span might de- crease, as one result of keeping alive many children who are naturally weak and cannot be expected to live long AByWay. The new Scottish investigation Is the first evidence that this pessimis- tie conclusion may be wrong. British children born In each decade since 1845 are found to live a little longer than children born in the previous decade. an indivi of constitution is that cept the year of birth, which implies that what happens to children ‘under fifteen seems to be the chief factor in living long or dying early. Extensions of the same computations to future decades imply that substantially in. creased percentages of the people now ninety. Derby Races Epsom, Surrey, England, in which none but three-year-olds race for a gener. ous purse. The most important race at any track Is sometimes called the Derby but the Kentucky and other specified American races are patterned after that of England. British pro- nunciation—Dar-by-is derived from the old spelling of Lord Derby's verri- tory, Deorabl, Of late there has been a tendency in America to adopt the English pronunciation, Sables’ Luxury Life Sables, destined to provide fur conts, lead a fe of luxury at the nursery established in the forest at Barguszin, eastern Siberia. Here is thelr menu: Breakfast (7 a. m.) : biscuits, oatmeal, or rice with milk; luncheon (1 p. m.): minced meat with vegetables and cedar nuts, Once a month the sables are weighed. Those which are not up to the mark receive extra food--eggs and cream, Fi gure on No one who hag not been in one of the dust storms which have swept the western plains for more than a year can appreciate their devasta- tion and the. apprehensions of the people in the region extending from the Gulf of Mexico to the Great Slave lake. Science knows full well the po- tentialities of this terrible phenome. non, It has innumerable records of other soll transformations brought about by the wind. Much of the rich er soll over vast areas in the United States was carried there by dust storms, in Missourl a year ago revealed the characteristics of soll in the Da kotas, All solls are easily identified by their mineral content, The Da kotas had been exposed to drouth for a number of years. The soll was deprived of Its protective Thus, when the wind blew, was carried away to be in other states, To most of us who moisture Is sufficient needs, it is difficult to the storms hav al winter, been sufficient to keep the dust down vegetation the deposited for realize dust been even In mountainous states like Col Heavy r Mississip orado, lower shortage of 1 on in the pl or Saskatchey to rise and thing, tl worse Neediess to say, the d non has greatl uation In the fects ments and responsible Hard for Japanese to of ‘ job the Japanes his own Ia » seven hours a week 1 ciass, seven b total of fourteer years, At t! has mastered only Chinese 1deograph or pix different meanings). read a But he baffled by a magazine or book. less written In the most colloquial speech, Even university students have a very uncertain knowledge of the lit erary language. It Is supposed to be used In the composition of letters, ar ticles, books. A young friend of mine in Tokio Imperial university, principal Institution of learning in Japan, confesses that his uncle rare Iy hears from him-—because any let ter to him must be written in the old literary form, and Its composition is & long and fatiguing task, Even the greatest scholars eannot write without a good dictionary at hand. Educated men find it easier to read Japanse classics In an Eng lish translation than in the original.— Willard Prince, In Asia Magazine, ¢ end of that time he 3.000 of the having five He newspaper, un- Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the orig: inal little liver pills put up 60 years . regulate Bivar and bowels~Ady. ali “What's Your Hurry?” *Darling, answer me, I am on the rack.” “So Is your hat,” came a deep volce from the hall. Whereupon the young man took the hint, his head-plece and his departure, to a minimum, If It persists this Year, there will be no reserves of corn left, From surplus induced by excess production in our own and other countries, we are In danger of passing to scarcity due to drouth and dust, Records of drouth are readily traced In the rings of trees. There are records of other drouths in the plains as bad as or worse than the present drouth, This i8 not, how- ever, an assurance to science that We may now be witnessing the be. ginnings of one of those deserts in which nature delights, It was when the Southwest became a desert that the Indians moved Into Mexico, Life follows the molsture-bearing alr cure rents, When region south of region they passed from the the Mediterranean to of the Mediter- The Asi accustomed to following the mois. the north followed them. atics have long up and been Science would not eare to assert They may ¢ consequences of just an. other drouth, Or they may be the ing of end for all that sgion where buffalo grazed, Rei knows has happened, What Is to happen is on the knees of St. Louls Post-Dispatch, be tbh the 5 gods, ann let-down feeling for me” “1 reasoned that my red blood corpuscle strength was low and I simply took a course of $.5.8. 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