By EDWARD W. PICKARD LANS for spending the $4,880,000, 000 work relief fund are being made rapidly, parts of the general scheme belng revealed to the public almost every day. The Presl- dent will be the final arbiter but practically all the federal agen- cles will participate and three new ones have been announced by Mr. Roosevelt, These will handle rural re- habilitation, rural elec- trification and grade crossing elimination. Standing at the Frank Walker President's right hand i8 Frank CC. Walker, former treas- urer of the Democratic party. He has replaced Donald Richberg as chairman of the National Emergency council and is the head of a new division In that body known as the division of applica- tion and information. Under his direc. tion all proposals will be sorted out and data them from various gov- ernment units will be co-ordinated. Then they will be handed on, with Mr. Walker's recommendations, to a new works allotment board which is headed by Secretary Harold Ickes These two additions to the alphabet groups in Washington are known as DAI and WAB, In a press conference the President named these eight types of work which will be undertaken, with the amount of money to be spent on each: 1. Highways, roads, streets, grade crossing elimination, and express high- ways, $S00,000,000, 2. Rural rehabilitation, rellef in stricken agricultural areas, water con- servation, water diversion, Irrigation, reclamation, rural Industrial communi. ties, and subsistence homesteads, $500, 000,000. 3. Rural electrification, $100,000,000. 4. Housing, low cost housing in rural and urban areas, reconditioning, and remodeling, $450,000,000, b. Assistance for educational, pro fessional, and clerical persons and other “white collar” unemployed, $300, 000,000, 6. Citizen Conservation corps, £600. 000,000, 7. Sanitation, soll erosion, stream pollution, reforestation, flood control, rivers and harbors, $350.000.000, on counties, states, and other political ubdivisions for pubHe works, $000, 000,000, The rural rehabilitation work be directed by Rexford G. Tugwell, der-secretary of and will not be responsi Wallace but will carry out flies from shifting stranded Indust workers to new, planned rural communities and bulld- ing cities outside of large urban cen ters to relieve slum congestion. will un- agric ire, he to free hand to 8 for moving fam have a ands, be spent the President ward for the CCC and that Works Administrator Harold L. Ickes had applications tot ling more $1.000,000,000, In conclusion, the Chief Executive sald that there was a tendency to make loans instead of grants wherever at low interest rates. Appointment of Mi. Walker Mr. Richberg free, ns the President 8aid, to devote his t me to the NRA during the period of pending legisla. tion In congress and litigation in the Supreme court. RGANIZED labor opened its at tempt to obtain tecognition in the automobile Industry with a workers in the Tole .o plant Chevrolet Motor con pang tory was closed don though only a part of (he force joined in the strike. Unicon placed about it, but city police and of that there was no dis rder, President Sloan of General Motors corporation Issued tl 5 statement In New York. “The vital questi n ‘tnvolved Is whether General Motc s corporation is willing to sign an greement for a closed shop recognizin the local union as the exclusive repr sentative of all the employees of th: Toledo plant. This General Motors + il] not do.” The union, In a le gthy statement, sald its committee “.as done every- thing In its power t meet with the management and to se ure an amicable and falr adjustment if the matter of Wages, hours and u ion recognition and varlous other grl vances, “The management r fused to sign a contract of any kind a flatly refused every section of the p oposed contract with the exception of tv o minor points.” The company offere| to make wage | readjustments and give a 5 per cent general wage Increase. show no dis crimination against talon men, and agreed to respect sen ority rights as provided by the automchile labor board, Secretary Perkins « t Thomas J. Williams, Labor depa tment econcilia- or, to Toledo to see what might be President Greer of the A. F. of sald there was gr.ve danger that the Toledo strike might other antomotive plants, Leo O. Wollman, chairman of the National Automobile Labor board, re- ported that that body had completed a canvass of 163,150 workers In Amer. ican automobile plants and found that 68.6 per cent of them showed no affiliation with any labor organization. The various employees’ associations grouped together ranked second with 21,774 members, equal to 138.8 per cent of the total. The American Federation of Labor was third with 14,007, or 86 per cent, while the Associated Automo- blle Workers of Amerlca were fourth with 6,083, or 8.7 per cent. The re- mainder of the vote was split between the Mechanics Educational soclety and ten other unions. V FITHOUT benefit of gag rule but with perfect party discipline, the administration's was jammed through social security bill the house sub- stantially as President toogevelt wants it The final vote was 872 to 83. It may be some weeks before It Is passed by the senate, for the senate finance committee, to which it was refezred, 1s busy Just now with NRA extension and veter. ans’ bonus payment. Leading features of the measure as passed by the house are: irants to states for old age assist. ance (pensions) on a 50-50 basis, but for no Individual will the federal gov- ernment’s share exceed £15 per month. Compulsory old age benefits for per- sons over sixty-five on basis of salary spread to Speaker Byrns and upward to 8 per cent in amounts. This will mean a total pay roll tax of 6 per cent by 1940, Unemployment insurance. Tax on employer of 1 per cent on pay rolls in 19368, 2 per cent for 1037, and 8 per cent thereafter. Social security board as new burean of government In the executive branch with three members appointed by the President, Federal grants to states for mater. nal and child health service, an appro- priation of £3 800.000, Federal grants to states for public service, an appropriation of Speaker Byrns and other majority by the Immense cause, as they asserted, It was put House. Mr. Bsrus said: “We EN. W. W, ATTERBURY, veteran official of the Pennsyivania rail eight months before that would bave been nec essary under its regu- lation , because of ill health. The directors unanimously elected Martin W, Clement to succeed him. The new president of the great system was born 058 years ago in Sunbury, Pa. and entered the service of the road In 1901 a« a rodman, His promoiion was steady became the vice M. W. Clement president, Genéral Atterbury had this to say became vice “Since he president, with me In conducting the company's other railroads and with the govern. ment, “The remarkable results achieved by the company last ‘ear, one of the most difficult periods the railroad has ever experienced, wer largely due te Clement's leadership. His manifest capabilities have comtwended him not only to his associate d rectors and off) cers, but also to the executives of other railroads with wom he has been working In recent years in the interest of the rallroad Industry as a whole “Moreover, he enjoy« the confidence, respect and co-operatl «nu of the entire Pennsylvania rallroad organization” — ORE than three t! susand persons lost thelr lives in a series of ea-thquake shocks that occurred in the most thickly populated section of For. mosa, the island off th: Chinese coast which Japan acquired in 1505. It was the worst disaster of the kind In the Orient since the 1. .kyo-Yokohama quake of 1023. The nu nber of injured was estimated at fully 12.000, and a quarter of a million were rendered homeless. Property dan ge was placed at $28,000,000. Half » dozen sizable towns and many villezes were com- pletely destroyed, and tres and heavy rain added to the dang rs and distress of the afflicted people. priest” of Detroit, staged the first state meeting of his National Union for Social Justice in Olympla stadium in enthusiastic supporters crowded ple. sading cleric were Senators Thomas of Oklahoma and Gerald P. Nye of North Dakota, and Represents atives William Connery of Massachu- setts, Martin KE Sweeney of Ohlo, Thomas O'Malley of Wisconsin and William Lemke of North Dakota. The priest put forward the National union as a definite political weapon almed at the money power and at standpat partylsm, Father Coughlin has been endorsed by the bishop of Detroit, Rt. Rev, Michael Gallegher, “1 pronounce Father Coughlin sound in doctrine, able in its application and interpretation,” the bishop sald. “Free ly 1 give him my imprimatur on his written word and freely I give my ap- proval on the spoken word, May both be circulated without objection through- out the land, Under my jurisdiction he preaches the. just codes of the old law anc its commandments. Until a lawful superior rules otherwise, I stand steadfastly behind this priest, Father Coughlin, encouraging him to do the will of God as he sees it and 1 see It.” OVERNOR G gla, Democratic Roosevelt TALMADGE the most vociferous denouncers of President and the New Deal, has a strong supporter in Tom Linder, the Georgia commissioner of agriculture. In the department's official farm bul. letin, that gentleman sent to the farm- ers of the state a message that “we still have the right to secede” from the Union, The statement was carried In a foot- note to a long article written by Lin- der In which he drew a comparison be tween the Democratic administration in Washington and the Russian gov- ernment. The secession reference was In the nature of resentment against a recent ruling by the United States Supreme court reversing Alabama courts in the Scottsboro case on the ground colored citizens were excluded from juries. ENATOR HUEY LONG delivered his much advertised attack on the President and the administration be fore a crowd that jammed the senate chamber. He was lim . ited to 40 minutes, but in that time he used a lot of language. Aft er describing Ickes, Farley, Wallace and General Johnson in terms not very funny, the “Kingfish” assailed Mr. Roosevelt as per sonally responsible for what he called a plan to force the state of Louisiana to yield to corruption and debauchery. He threat. ened a tax in his realm if there were further federal encroach ments in the matter of controlling the expenditure of federal loans for state projects Huey charged the administra. tion was solely with con trolling the expenditures in Loulsiana in such manner as to insure winning the election Io 1008, “They could go down there and spend the whole five billion and they could not win that election,” he sald Senator Long now indieates that he has no desire to head a third party next year uniess that should be necessary to bring about the defeat of President Roosevelt. He says he would gladly Join with the Republicans If they would nominate Senator Borah, of Geor- one of Senator Long rebellion that concerned NDER a new law the German Nazis are suppressing the entire church press of the country, Catholic and Prot. estant, and also all Jewish organs, either religious or racial. The edict, signed by Max Amann, president of the reich press chamber and manager of the Nazi party's publishing organiza. tion, is designed to monopolize the reich’s publications for Nazi ideas and make them legally subject to Naz! dies tatorship., The law provides that “church or pers intended for groups of subserib- are forbidden.” The Nazi party and its organizations are not subject to the new law. ver Jubilee, such as was planned by the cabinet committee, and now he and Prime Minister MacDonald have ordered that the affair shall be very “quiet.” His majesty was not consulted at first, and when he heard there were strong protests from the northern shires es pecially against such a wasteful expendi King George 0 of money In hard times, he was exceedingly irate and wanted to call off the whole affair, This could not be done, but the cele bration will be nothing like what the cabinet committee had intended, The king has forbidden garter king at arms, the duke of Norfolk, and oth er high officers of state of the cere monial department to have anything to do with the jubliee. He has refused to have the peers of thy realm In thele robes for the presentation of addresses from the houses of parliament. He has refused to robe himself for the oe casion. i | { i ! i ER AR SETA MILE A MINUTE CROCHET COLLAR By CRANDMOTHER CLARK H AW AIIANS TURN distinct Roelos. of difference in i terests and background, TO PRESERVATION | ‘This finds its most practical ex. OF RACIAL GROUP pression In separate civie elubs and chambers of commerce. It 18 ae centuated by the cultural clubs drawn along racial lines nt the unl versity and by the growing em- phasis upon the study of racial heritage In the schools. — Elizabeth Green, In Asia Magazine, So Not that the Hawalian race is dy- Ing out—far from it—though it 1s certainly spreading out, by Inter- mixture. But it Is at the same time experiencing today a fresh ground Ing In its own subsoil through an Increased “inmarrying”—that is, the tendency of part-Hawallans to marry back Into the Hawallan group rather than to continue outward toward a further dilution of blood, The Hawallan people are a vigor ous and prolific people, and their women are Instinctive and devoted mothers, The race 18 experiencing now a period of recrudescence in numbers as well as in racial self consclousness, VALI, 77, YOU NEED HERE IT 15... LANTERN Coleman Lanterns "turn night into day! Give plenty PRICED AS LOW AS of light for every outdoor Sob st night in every king 5-95 COMPLETE of weather, Up w 30 candlepower brillianos, Pyrex glass globe makes it wind proof, rain. roof and insect-proof. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers