By EDWARD W. PICKARD OUR thousand farmers, gathered from all parts of the country, in- vaded Washington and told President Roosevelt and Secretary Wallace that they were enthusias- tic believers in the ef. ficiency of the AAA program and support ers of the amendments which the administra- tion asks congress to make in the tural adjustment Mr. Roosevelt dressed, from south portico of the White House, what he called a “surprise party,” and prefaced his remarks with the statement that “a great many of the high and mighty” have been de liberately trying to mislead many peo ple by “lying about the kind of a farm program under which this nation is operating.” He went on to deny em- phatically that the government “wastefully destroyed food In form.” Next day many of the visiting farm- ers were in the senate gallery heard Senator Daniel 0. agricul net. ad the Sen. Hastings any of critics The dent for characterizing AAA program as liars, said: President urged his audience to free to criticize,’ He Invites criticism and then shows that he ‘can’t take it.' We who have criticized the ete, and what ‘chiselers,’ ‘liars,’ Just ‘whiners,’ we are understands tors,’ now body called every- from a man who holds the high “But I want to say that if greatest of months ever developed the within the last six in any country.” Senator Hastings then resolution calling upon the of agriculture to submit all corre- spondence between the department and the visiting farmers, together with any instructions sent out to county agents with a view of producing the “spon. taneous” visitation. Mr, Hastings also demanded to know how the delegates were selected and what financial as sistance “directly or Indirectly” was extended to them by the agricultural officials. Over in the house Representative Fish of New York started a lively de bate on the same tople, and he was even more outspoken than Mr. Hast. ings, saying: “Confused and confounded by the marked swing away from the unsound and Soclalistic New Deal policies, the President lost his head--and that is the mildest term that can be applied —when he called his critics liars.” There were plenty of defenders of the President and Secretary Wallace in both chambers. crop Y ADOPTING the resolution of Senator Bennett C, Clark of Mis NRA life only untill April 1, 1926, and considerably curtailed its powers. The ex- pressed wishes of the President and NRA Chairman Donald Richberg for a two year extension with enlarged powers were ignored. The changes called for In the Clark resolution provide for prohibiting Inclusion of business firms en. gaged wholly in Intra state commerce under NRA codes or regulations; banning price fixing ex- cept In mineral resource Industries, and directing the President to revise all codes within thirty days to con- form to the provisions of the resoly- tion. Majority leaders In the house were prepared to fight for the two year extension, but admitted the Clark resolution was likely to prevail there also. In'that case, in the opinion of many observers, the NRA will be practically dead. While the senate was debating the matter, Mr. Richberg told a mass meeting of NRA workers that the Clark ressiution was “complete folly.” This aroused the Missourian to wrath. He called it “the most brazen exhibi- tion of Impudence on the part of a bureaucratic official which has fallen under my observation during my life. time,” and next day, In a set speech, he told his fellow senators at length Just what he thought of Mr. Richberg and “his ambition to be a Mussolini In the United States.” An organization called the Industry and business committee for NRA ex tension was called into action, as were the farmers for AAA, and Its head, Ward Cheney, silk manufac. turer, announced that a meeting of dele. gations of Industries would be held in Washington May 22, Senator Clark § ERATOR HUEY LONG'S resolution for an investigation of Postmaster General Farley was rejected by a vote of 62 to 20, the “Kingfish” belng the only Democrat recorded In favor of it The senate then passed the Norris amendments to the Tennessee Valley Authority act, Increasing the TVA's its electric power activities from court interference, Next on the senate program was the Wagner labor relations board bill which its author declared was “respon sive to the ominous industrial distur bances of last summer when blood ran freely in the streets and martial law was in the offing.” After several amendments limit the power the designed to measure tion of Labor had been rejected, the blll was shoved through by a vote of G3 to 12, administra divisions wns estab URAL elecirification tion, one of the new the works relief program, lished by President hoosevelt in an executive order, and Morris LL. Cooke, a Philadelphia engineer, was appointed to its chief, £75.000 for expenses, and tions are to be later for individual projects The executive order described the duties M. L. Cooke and functions of new unit as “to initiate, formulate, administer and supervise a program of approved projects with respect to the generation, transmission and tribution of electrical energy in rural areas.” The order permits th acquire by or by the of eminent domain any real property or any Interest therein improve, develop, grant, sell, was allotted alloca administrator to pow er purchase erty. of Illinols was appointed district attorney for ( and immediately confirmed by the sen. ate—and thus Senator James Hamil ton Lewis scored one on Secretary of the Interior Ickes, who had hoped for the naming of a man of his own choos ing so as to strengthen his position in Chicago politics, Mr, Igoe temporarily lost his standing In the Democratic party when he sought the [llinols gubernatorial nomination which wen? to Judge Horder; but through the good offices of Senator Lewis he was re stored and was elected congressman. at-large last fall 1 States hiecago n Y A vote of about 2 to 1 the stri ing workers In the Toledo Chev. rolet plant decided to accept a come promise offer that had been fixed up by federal labor committeemen, A. F. of L. leaders, company officials and federal mediators. It was expected that this would result in the return to work of 35,000 men In Toledo and oth er motor car manufacturing centers The strike In Toledo was engineered by the local union and really was not in accord with A. F. of L. plans. ENNIS CHAVEZ, who contended that he really defeated Bronson M. Cutting in the electior of a United States senator from New Mexico last year, now has Mr Cutting’s seat in the senate, Following the senator's death in an airplane crash, Mr. Chaver was appointed by Gov. Clyde Tingley to fill the vacancy. He will bold office until the next general elec tion in November, 1938, when a succes sor will be elected, and it is likely Mr. Chavez will again be chosen, The new senator, whe is the head of the Democratic party In New Mex- ico, was born In that state 47 years ago. While serving ds a senate clerk be attended Georgetown university lav school and after returning to Al buquerque to practice law he was elected to the state legislature, [n 1930 he was elected New Mexico's one rep resentative in the national house and was re-elecird in 1932. He resigned In 1934 to oppose Cutting In the sena- torial rasp and was defeated by about 1,000 voles. a Dennis Chavez pages LAVAL, French foreign minister, held important conversa. thong in Moscow with Dictator Stalin and other high Soviet officials, and the resulz, according to a joint commu. sigue, Is that France and Russia will unite In an effort to bring Germany and Poland into a general pact of non: aggression to insure peace In eastern Europe. Both governments will open diplomatic negotiations to this end. The communique declared that nel ther country will allow its “means of national defense to weaken In the slightest degree,” although preserva. tion of the peace Is a primary duty of both countries, VERYONE who knew anything about the matter knew long ago at the “Protocols of the Elders of Zion" were a fraud, and now a Swiss court has declared them “false and obvious plagiarism” and fined two Swiss Nazis for circulating them. The court sald it was definitely established that the protocols were copled or pla- glarized from Maurice Joly's “Dialogues in Hell,” which appeared in 1864 and was a vile attack on the despotism of Napoleon IIL. The object of the suit, brought by Jewish leaders in Switzer. land, was to vindleate world Jewry by proving the falsity of the protocols which professional anti-Semites every- where had been using to excite hostil- ity against Jews, ADMIRAL RICHARD EVE- BYRD and members of his Polar expedition came sailing last on thelr ship Bear of Oakland and were glv- en the warmest kind of a welcome In Wash. ington by President Ronsevelt, Secretary of the Navy Swanson, other officials and a host of thelr relations and personal friends The admiral and Mrs, Byrd spent a night in the White House. Then he was joined by his mother, Ars. Elea- iyrd, and his four chil EAR LYN South Admiral Byrd nor Bolling Winchester, Va. The pert, supply ship of the expedition, de- parted from the Washington navy yard the admiral planning to Admiral Byrd has plenty of work in the Antarctic, a book to be written uncertain, JC THIOPIA'S government renewed its ~“ demand that arbitrators be named to settle the disputes between that country and Italy, as provided in a troops are sent to the Ethiopian bor. mo bilize his warriors Foreign residents of they were ignorant by Ethiopia, been no troops Addis Ababa of any war and that or muni travel. This contradicted a story In great quantities of munitions had been shipped into Ethiopia and were being troops, near the borders of Italian Somaliland and Eritrea, Premier Mussolini, in a speech in the Italian senate, warned all other na. tions not to interfere in the Italo-Ethi opian quarrel, dfclaring that no nation but Italy “can be the judge In this most delicate matter.” He denled that Great Britain and France had taken diplomatic steps to avert the threat. ened conflict and sald those nations need not fear that Italy would be weak: ened In Europe by the sending of thou sands of troops to” Africa. “We shall maintain under arms for all the time necessary.” he declared, “the three classes 1911, 1913 and 1614, Moreover, another class, that of 1912, is in reserve and ready.” of the Pacific, but was relaxed for the announcement of two unfortunate occurrences. While de stroyers were leading inrger vessels through an “enemy™ network of submarines the Lea smashed Into the Sicard, tearing a big hole in her side. Rich ard Chadwick, second class gunner's mate on the Sicard, was fi kifled and three other Commander men were slightly in E. W. Tod. Jured, official records stated. Lieut. Mathias B. Wyatt of Ban Diego, a graduate of the naval acad- emy, was piloting one of eighteen fighting planes which took off from the aircraft carrier Saratoga 200 miles east of Honolulu to ward ff an attack of “enemy” submarine. His plane was caught in the slipstream from another and fell into water three miles deep. No trace of him or his ship was found. In connection with the maneuvers the greatest Interest was in the mass flight of forty-three planes from the Pearl Harbor naval base westward, presumably to Midway islands. They were under the command of Comman- der BE. W, Tod, U. 8 N., and for the time being all that the public was per. mitted to know was that they reached thelr secret destination safely and were “executing thelr missions” enough (IOMELICATIONS in the already pre. carious Europeun situation were expected to result from the death of Marshal Josef Plisidek! the virtual a great shock to the Poles for the seri. ous nature of his affliction had been concealed from the publie, The government announced It would continue to function as though Plisud ski were alive, The authority of the dictator, It sald, has passed to his life long friends, President Ignace Mos cickl, Premier Slawek, Foreign Minis ter Beck and Gen. Edward Ryds Smighly, | SEEN«HEARD around the National Capital SSS By CARTER FIELD SSS Washington.~—~Now {t can be told— who started the depression and why! It was Australia, many months be- fore our stock market crash, and the why Is that a change In fashions played hob with Australia’s exports of wool, for the simple reason that wom- en stopped wearing so many woollen garments and men began wearing lighter clothes, Whereupon, nearly every one In Australia being “poor,” and the ance of trade against Australia reach clamped on drastic restrictions agalnst fmports, tomobiles and trucks, especially leveled against au- | sible for a rallroad to figure whether it makes the profit on any particular shipment. It knows where it stands, within reason, on Its entire business. But it is very difficult to break the thing down the way mathematiclans would like. For it is not a question of subtracting the cost of an item from the selling price, deducting handling charges, and figuring the profit, as it would be In a retail store, How it Works In fact, railroading is almost at the other extreme from a retail store when it comes to figuring what should be charged the customers. To consider a specific case of how this long and short haul thing works, take the three Pittsburgh, Youngstown and The saltimore and Ohlo consider it business to Chicago. good then Australia had been the gingle purchaser of automobiles and trucks, knocked the first card of a distressingly pile, and each successive falling knocked over the next one, over trains Pass though Its to Pittsburgh Youngstown, Youngstown, Chicago If by this lower rate to Pittsburgh a large number of cars loaded with intended to convince anyone that Aus tralia really started the or that the present impasse on world trade not resulted if there had been no highly illuminating telescople view of fhe world situation reduced to an easily understandable formula, would have moment in view of the hubbub up over the of Roosevelt that foreign trade is a thing of the past, to which Senator A. H Vandenberg paid in the senate, It Is also and Poland just having ports of American chinery and one-fourth of alleged statement $0 much appropriate with Italy restricted im. automobiles, ma. other products to 1634 figures, Look at the Record Without attempting tralia the Ae $id x» Jet's look many the * to pls Aus- dock, there The big made of Ace in prisoner's nt the record commonweaith “do under™ advance here, these restricti the beginning ression The date f this begin: £ In £ AS 8 resu But when American 3 lanche sta opped busing sjcks the ava ried, though no one for the time that pebble rolling For the dry- ing facturing, with its cutting down of buying from plants, tire factories, battery makers, upholstery der way by July, before What eration is that important sons, some Europe and from other parts of the world, includ. ing Australia. have been In our midst for the last few days and have been trying figure how to end the present International trade stalemate. Nearly every one agrees that If WHE nore up of motor mam weavers, otc, was well un. 1420 market dive this up for consid the stock brings all in several fron arom very per sOIne to out For haul a train train of BO Even the fuel cost of the trip is not raised any- thing like proportionately by the ad Whereas, the labor cost amount it costs very little more to of 80 cars. Or to haul a advanced worth considering. But gance of an not take cognl- It says that the And has been holding that this law does this factor. the must be compensatory. the 1. C. C there must he a profit, which rate, rail can be demonstrated, at the low rdle which the been able to take, as the Intermediate towns send rs of comm Especially Is raise « delegations and to some. from thelr char Oe, down on 1 ir into the Ag Yo the case ¢ bear congressmen picture and do igstown probably would ergot BEL But there | trong disposition on to do ion allroads, comp part of the administrat something cated by the fact tl to figure ou at desire it is very diffi cult to da. It is and nakes bus regulations probable. New Trade Treaties Trade Netherland Ar Yoo ke a tT Peek report 5 » fly I President pa detnil respect to treat Rwy it der naics | of the Hull policy. his general appr Whereas, when asked for comment men a few days before for Presi the Peek report—in their hands release laster-—wa inted, the i led it off, saving that not even author could ich for 3 the all the figures American match Interests have been terribly treaty. this Swedish chief concerned over Again Japan, the tar. True, It sion that Japanese matches, like Jap- tht are as good as those made this country, but cut for goods, many a time, as every merchant knows figures, is the general impres- bulbs, not in trouble better ward push, started the downward drive, the world eould werk out the present dol drums. But how to get started? Nat. trally the visitors with one accord say that the United States Is the na- tion to start it. The British say that we should reduce our tariff on tex. tiles, wheneupon they wonld buy more of our cotton, ete. That gets a loud laugh, though with no mirth, In New England, not to mention North Caro lina. But it illustrates the difficulty of applying a self starter! Old Problem Up Again The old long and short haul rall road rate controversy is due for an- other airing. This tim. the subject will be brought up In an effort to help the struggling railroads. Chalrman Rayburn, of the house interstate and foreign commerce committee, proposes to try to remove one of the restric. tions In the present law which has irked the railroads considerably. Th's is the provision that if a through rate Is made, which happens to be less than the rate for part of the same distance, the cheaper through rate must be compensatory, Or In short that the railroad must make a profit at the lower rate, At first blush It would seem that the railroads would have no objection to such a provision. But they have plenty, Their chief objection is that the Interstate Commerce commission, | worrying about this Injunction, has | been very slow about approving any | cheap through rates. It was sald, time and again, to some railroad seeking to put one in, that obviously there could be no profit in such a rate, so there | was no use considering It, Whereas, the railroad company In. | volved might be perfectly sure that there would be more dollars In its treasury at the end of any given peri. od If It were allowed to make that rate, whether It could prove that the particular rate would yield a profit on the particular shipments made under it or not. The poirt is that it Is next to impos of Now Japan would like nothing bet. ter than for the United States and for the reciprocal trade treaty, to agree to re duce the American doty on matches “most favored nation” matches at once get just as much benefit as Swedish matches, America is the promised land of match manufacturers all over the world. It Is virtually the only country where matches are not either a gov. ernment monopoly or taxed out of all reason. It is often said that matches are free In America. Due to the ad vertising possibilities of the packages, this has almost been true, though ail the indications are that this era may be drawing to a close, beginning with a small federal tax on matches in the last revenue bill, Match Market Limited 80 rich in revenue is the match In most foreign countries that there is a tax on lighters. In fact it is sometimes sald that the only public lighter in all France is the one in the lobby of the chamber of deputies! Obviously the match market of the world Is very sharply limited by these arette market Is restricted by gov- ernments anxious for a big revenue. Experts say that American cigarette in the world out of business If arti ficial barriers were removed. But also that the Swedes and the Japs, the first good as American matches) and the second on price, would capture the match market If artifielal barriers were eliminated, Sweden Is hanging up a bit of tempt. Ing balt to American negotiators, how. ever, She promises that she will re. doce duties and restrictions, which would result in the Swedes consuming vastly larger quantities of American fruit and ether farm products, Now the agricultural vote that would be in. terested In this new market is very large. Whereas the vote interested In match production Is rather small All of which Indicates that the conces. sions Sweden wants will be made, Copyright- WNU Service, Dental Hygien? 8B The Road to Health By DR. R. ALLEN GRIFFITH HOLLYWOOD'S TEETH HE first essential to success in the films is a get Crooked, protruding, irregular teeth may be assets to a few low but to the 27,000 “straight” players of perfect of teeth, comedians the silver screen such a set of teeth would loom to a professional the enunciation recent by the Electric improved as 32 distinct obstacles Career. Since advent of means everything, months, experiments Westinghouse companies microphone have brought the subjec to the crophones not only rec center of the stage } ord every little fault, lisp, slur or hesitation magnify them, perfect teeth, but they one can have perfect and no enunciation without Because perfect teeth have now be- come an economic necessity to the the largest producing film companies, unit in completion a af prominent The Hollywood has ushed to complete dental position on organization reports now obligatory for undergo a rigid der treatment before range ficiency of either car experts ture “overhead” per hour, it was che permanent nish staff of dentists them with all over the express THOSE VITAMINES WE HEAR 1 lot these ’ the vitamines A, B, They are advertised nd in our periodicals tell us that the day is coming when a ors ia inn 3 containing the days, about D and G. the radio Our scientists over perfectly balanced diet, proper vitamines In the proper amounts will conquer all disease. Beginning with the pregnant mother, a balanced diet will produce a perfect child. This child, properly fed these same vitamipes, will have per fect teeth that will never decay or de- velop prorrhea, and the child will never contract any disease. This is a much to be desired condition and might be practical provided this in- dividual could always be kept happy and free from care. : The constitution of these United States guarantees the pursuit of hap- piness to every Individual, but how many of us ever attain it constantly and permanently? That grief, worry, fear, excitement and overwork have a profound effect upon the human mind and body, there can be no doubt. These disturbances are superficial and, therefore, plainly noticeable. Other organs hidden deeply in the body are also Included in the complex of emotional agitation. Conditions fa- vorable to digestion are wholly aboi- ished when unpleasant feelings, such ps worry and anxiety are allowed to prevail. As these conditions affect the salivary and gastric secretions they are of vital concern in the study of tooth decay. Sometimes people who have been free from decayed teeth for a long on later, suddenly present badly decayed under a summer's sun. In these cases we Invariably find that they are pass- ing through a period of overwork, deep anxiety or added responsibility. Find. ings have been similar in cases of pupils in high schools and colleges as well as their teachers, In the case of young children in the same family, or In institutions where the same diet is fed to all, some chil dren will have decayed teeth and others none. Almost Invariably it will be found that the child with decayed teeth is one that is easily disturbed and the child with perfect teeth has a happy. go-ducky disposition. We must, therefore, conclude that oappiness and freedom from worry and responsibility must accompany our bal. anced diet if we are to receive its full benefit. However, this Is no argu ment against our ideal vitamine diet © Western Newspaper Union