By EDWARD W. PICKARD ONGRESSMAN SAM B. HILL of Washington and his subcommittee of the house ways and means coms mittee took up the heavy task of de- termining how the new revenue of $l. 137,000,000 called for by President Roose- velt should be raised. Treasury officials rec- ommended that an av- erage tax of 33% per cent should be levied on undivided corpor- ation profits and a tax of 90 per cent on J all refunded or un- Rep. S. B. pald AAA processing Hil taxes. In this the fiscal experts followed the suggestions of Mr, Roosevelt, They told the sub- committee that the proposed corpor- ation surplus tax would yield the gov- ernment $620,000,000 annually. The President has estimated that this amount will be needed to finance the new farm program and the soldier bonus, The so-called “windfall” tax on processors who successfully challenged the AAA In the courts, it was be lieved, would yield another $200,000, 000. This will be used to reimburse the treasury for losses suffered as a result of the Supreme court's invalida- tion of AAA. There remains an ad- ditional $£317,000,000 which it is pro- posed to raise through excise taxes on a wide range of farm processors. Chalrman Hill said the experts and the members of the subcommittee were agreed that the tax on undivided sur- plus should not appl banks and life Insurance compar - There was wide divergence of opin- lon concerning this tax ers In congress. Senator James Ham. ilton Lewis of Illinois for . ¥ o nel among lead- Democrat, ditional An unnecessary a¢ business, and indicated he would sup- port, instead, a plan to tax the in. from federal securities now ex- xderal Se Borah, Republican, come empt. said that | plan of taxing undistributed earnings, while Senator Hastings of Delaware, also Republican, denounced it as “con- fiscatory.” King Utah, Democrat, and Representative Knutson of Minneso by the progr cutting down of federal expenditures, and in Mr. Borah concurred. Speaker Joseph W. Eyrns and Major- ity Leader W, B. seo diffic los the proposed measure. One thing that boosted the chances of the President's tax report from Roper that corporation income in Senator of this # to no in the way Secretary of 1985 Senator Black of of the lobby committ right vate gation Silas learned subpoena chalrman to seize and ex heir pri 1 i and his the courts, attorney telegrams, thus Chicago the committee his telegrams was and he ob. such action, this injunction permanent, The wholesale examination of tele grams was attacked by Representative by Senator Black. “It strikes Wadsworth “that we have reached a strange stage in the development of democracy when private correspondence can be seized without court procedure or search war- rant.” Black said: “Repeatedly it has been me,” to influence legislation behind the scenes, through subterranean channels, to prevent us from getting evidence.” OVERNOR LANDON'S boom for the Republican Presidential nomi. nation is progressing in a way that must be pleasing to his supporters Kansas Republicans in a state conven tion pledged him the state's 18 dele gates to the Cleveland convention, de slaring him to be “the best-fitted can didate.” That Kansas should support its governor is natural and expected, but he also is garnering a good many delegates elsewhere, and Indorsement in some states where the delegates are aninstructed, Sentiment favorable to Landon ap- peared In New Jersey, and Hervey 8. Moore of Trenton, a Republican leader, was contemplating starting an active sampaign for him In that state, OF THE third anniversary of his inauguration President Roosevelt pushed an electric key In the White House which set in motion machinery that closed the sluice gates of the Norris dam in the Tennessee Valley project. This signalized the completion of that part of the vast work on the Clinch river, “I hope as many people as can will go to see the Norris dam in eastern Tennessee,” the President sald In a for- mal statement. “It exemplifies great en- gineering skill, high construction efli- ciency, and, above all, it Is the key to the carefully worked out control of a great river and its water spread over parts of seven states, “The Norris dam is a practical sym- bol of better life and greater oppor. tunity for millions of citizens of our country, The nation has come to real- ize that national resources must not be wasted and the Norris dam is evi. dence that our program for conserva- tion of these resources is going for- ward.” SENATOR BORAH and Senator Van Nuys of Indiana, the latter 8 Dem- ocrat, introduced a bill directed against certain practices of the chain stores. The measure would make it unlawful for any person engaged in commerce to grant any discount, rebate, allow- ance or advertising service charge to a purchaser over that available to the purchasers’ competitors. It also would prohibit sales “at prices lower than those exacted by sald person elsewhere in the United States for the purpose of destroying competition or eliminat- ing a competitor.” Co-operative assoclations would be exempted from provisions of the meas- ure, Violators would be subject to a $5,000 fine and a one-year jall sen- tence. The so-called Robinson-Patman antl. monopoly hill, aimed at chain stores, will be passed by the senate before very long, according to a prom- ise made by Senator Robinson to a mass meeting of 1.500 independent mer- chants who went to Washington to lob by for the measure. This bill legislates against special rebates, tising and brokerage giving sales advantage to chain stores, also prices, adver. allowances fees HROUGH teen its committee of thir League of Nations Benito Mussolini and Em- peror Halle Selassie to consent mediate negotiations for an end to hos tilities and a definite re-establishment of Italo-Ethiopian peace. Though consideration of the proposal by his cabinet council was deinyed a few days, Mussolini, to advices from Rome, wns disposed to ae quiesce provided ter. ritory in Ethiopia al- ready occupied by Italy is considered hers and left out of the negotiations. Halle Selassie accepted the proposal reservation. In recent days the ap pealed to fins. Tr LO in routed in big battles and have lost many thousands of men, and the Italians have penetrated far toward interior of the country; and in the South the invaders were prepar- ing for a rapid advance. Back of the league's appeal standing threat extension of include an embargo on This suddenly brought about a was of league. Dr. Giuseppe Motta, Swiss foreign minister, gave a warning that if the oil embargo was applied his feel It necessary to leave the league In order to preserve its neutrality if the consequent threat. ened war in Europe resulted, that if Italy quit league and hosilities ensued, Switzer land, through her membership in the league, would appear in Italian eyes a8 a party to a hostile coalition, and would be subject to Invasion, by Italy on one side and perhaps by Germany on the other, out RITAIN'S government evidently be. lieves another war Is coming, and intends to be well prepared. It made public a gigantic program for Increases in the army, navy and alr forces and for swift mobilization of man power and industry, No official cost estimate was given out but authorities sald the total over a three-year period would be not less than one and a half billion dollars. The program Includes these features: Army~Four new battalions of In fantry are planned. All units are to be modernized, mechanized, and re equipped. Especial attention will be pald coastal and anti-aircraft defenses, Navy-—-Two new battleships next year and an Increase In crulser strength from 50 to 70, with five new ones to be lald down this year. Naval personnel also will be increased by 6.000, a new aircraft carrier will be constructed, and the alr arm of the navy will be strengthened. Alr Force—About 250 new war planes will be added to the home defense squadrons, bringing the total to 1,750. Twelve new alr squadrons for imperial defense——that Is, alr forces avallable for transfer to danger areas—will he added, and more pilots will be recruited, Following this announcement the an. nual naval estimates were submitted to parliament. TLey call for $340,650, 000, an Increase of $40,400,000 over the previous year, amazing revolt and attempted coup d' etat of a thousand soldiers led by a group of young “fascist” officers who thought the Okada government was hampering the military progresg cf the nation. So far as can be judged at this distance, the net results of the upris- ing were: Admiral Viscount Makoto Watanabe, chief of military education, were assassinated by the rebels, miler Okada escaped death, his brother. in-law being mistaken for him and slain, mitted suicide. The immediate concern of Emperor Hirohito and his advisers was the selec. tion of a man for premier who could form a new government that would satisfy the various parties, First Prince the house of peers, was asked to un- dertake this task, but he declined on the ground of poor health. Then the cholee of the emperor fell upon Koki Hirota, a moderate who is well known in both the United States and Russia. Hirota at once began picking out his ministers, saying: “My cabinet will be composed of young, able statesmen.” Hirota's selection was taken to mean that the emperor has determined to proceed with the modernization of the country, and to exercise his power to rule Instead of permitting himself to be the exalted agent of military overlords, Al. GEN, WEIGEL, N WILLIAM L retired, one of the army's most reliable commanders, died In the army hospital on Governors Island at the age seventy-two. He served 44 years, through Indian campaigns, in the Spanish-American war and in the Philippines, and went to France in the World war as a captain, He was rapidly promoted through grades, to brigadier general on August 15, 1017, and to major general August 8B, 1018, when he was given command of Eighty-eighth division, a8 new unit which he trained Previously he had Fifty-sixth brigade, Twenty-eighth division, a Pennsylvania Chautean-Thierry, of on the al army OOK Overseas. gd the outfit, at NORE than 150.000 workers In 11. i 000 buildings in New York city were called out on strike by James J. Bambrick, president of the Bullding Service Employees’ International union, and the sky-scrapers from the Battery to Washington Heights were badly crippled. Elevator men stopped thelr cars, furnace men banked thelr fires and scrubwomen threw down thelr mops, and all marched out of the buildings and formed picket lines There was some scattered fighting be tween the pickets and men hastily hired to take their places, Since the strike affected not only office bulldings but innumerable apart. telephone connections, and cases sick persons were marooned without food supplies. This lead Mayor La Guardia to call the city health officials Into conference, and to declare a civic emergency and order Health Commissioner Rice to see that fires were stoked and that trips neces- sary to health of the tenants and care of the sick were made in all residence buildings of more than six floors, in many MMEDIATELY after President Roosevelt signed the new soil con scervation-farm relief act passed to take the place of the invalidated AAA, Ad- , h ministrator Chester C. Daris began planning ways to spend the £500,000,000 author. ized. Under his orders more than five thou sand employees of the AAA who had been waiting since January 6 for something to do . got busy placing the fF. | new program into ef: Sint fect, C. C. Davis ye goal of the new law, Mr. Roosevelt said in announcing his signature, is parity, not of farm prices, but of farm income, He sald the New Deal has “not abandoned and will not abandon” the principle of equality for agriculture, Davis planned, as the first move, a series of four conferences with agril- cultural leaders in Memphis, Chicago, New York and Salt Lake City to for- mulate plans to take 30,000,000 acres out of commercial production this year and place them in legumes and other soll conserving crops, The new law provides benefit pay- ments to farmers who co-operate In federal suggestions for conservation of soil fertility in 1036 and 1037, It pro- vides, also, for federal subsidies to states setting up permanent state pro- grams in 1038 and thereafter. Pom amin ns st) EMEMBER the Alamo,” the bat. over the state as its centennial cele. bration opened at the village of Wash. laration of independence from Mexico was signed. The old “charter of em pire” was taken there from its place HALL, PA. oT oa vv ee - ve CPE 70 + Fe oP = oe Es ame] Ii om Prepared by the National Geog Washington, DD, C--WNI ICARAGUA has some 5BOOOO Boclety, service an area of square miles, about equal to that of New York state, and a pepulation of approximately 650,000, close to that of the city of Buffalo, It is the largest of the Central American republics; many consider it the most beagtiful, Much of the Interior 18 mountainous: the coasts are generally flat. Atlantie, Most of its people live in the cities In the western part of the public, for the rainfall here Is erate as compared with that eastern coast: the climate, re- mod- of fertile, agua, Masaya and Granada are located near the west coast and along line of railroad, exten port of Corinto, on the Pac nda, the main port or $ the one from earthq: among very fertile } are the center Indian to the an portance wgrowing district on the Sierras, located between the lakes and the Pacific. Granada owes her early growth to the that she was the chief port for the trade between America and Spain, by way of Lake Nicaragua and the San Juan river. Her leading citizens are not only landed proprie- tors, but merchants who sell goods in person over the counters of thelr stores, Matagaipa, the largest town off the raliroad, Is the center an im- portant coffee-growing district. Be. cause of Its altitude, It has a more agreeable climate than the cities lo- cated in the plains: but the absence of a railroad, or even a good highway connection with the outside world, has thwarted its growth, East and West Are Divided, Eastern and western Nicaragua are divided by mountains and jungle cov- ered country, which have effectively prevented intercommunication except to & very minor degree. The physical separation has operated to prevent close political union and a common na. tonal outlook: to hamper trade and commerce; and to obstruct a desirable interchange of people and ideas, In addition, the lack of a practicable route to Its east coast has forced vir tually all of Nicaragua's foreign com. merce to seek a longer and more roundabout route via the west coast and the Panama canal. For these rea- sons it has been the desire of the government of Nicaragua for many years to open a means of eommunica- tion between the west and east, either by the caunsalization of the San Juan river or by the construction of a high- way or a railroad. A highway has been under construction from Mana. gua through Tipitapa to Rama, on the Bluefields river, where boat connec tions can be made with Bluefields, the largest port town on the Caribbean, The population of the country is overwhelmingly of mixed Spanish ani Indian blood, with Spanish the uni versal language, although one finds In Granada and the other large towns many families of pure Spanish blood, Perhaps 10 per cent of the population is pure Indian, found mostly in the area around Masaya and Matagalpa and in the thinly settled cattle-ralsing sections of the province of Chontales, east of Lake Nicaragua. Still farther to the east, along the rivers that drain Into the Caribbean north of Greytown, the Sumo Indians fact Central of and timid race and have resisted all Spanish influence, The Mosquito Coast. Part of Nicaragua's Carribean coast has the world’s worst real estate title “The Mosquito Coast.” It gets its name not from the prevalence of mos quitoes, but from the Misskito Indians, Here there Is decided evidence of negro of a siave ship that was wrecked on the coast years ago. These blacks, or nixed Indians and blacks, called “Sambos” or “Zambos,” were aug. mented by escaped slaves from the plantations that sparsely dotted the const In later years, and by renegade slaves from Jamaica and other islands of the West Indies, The Mosquito coast was also a was visited by many trading ships seeking turtle shells. As a result, the blood of the inhabitants became badly mixed, and characteristics of many races can be detected in the present. day population, San Juan del Norte (Greytown), at the mouth of the San Juan river, has an English-speaking negro Long the had population, an excellent community, but drifting sands have closed the en- ago port occasional schooner calls In the boom days, Mari- anal company undertook the ction of a canal, Greytown had when the fons of being a metropolis: ary community now it of rusted + shacks, a popula- tit it } the government offic yu 8 friends, gus } large part of family, usual car-owner always has his fam iy his the Cars Nearly All American. Practically all ears are of American make, and it is a trib to thelr stor diness that they can stand the usage to which they are subjected. New cars are frequently equipped with extra spring leaves, as spare parts are hard to get, and for service on Nicaraguan roads springs have to be strong. The cars on the roads are few and far between, but they add the touch which shows that you are traveling in a civilized country. The creaky ox- cart is the usual means of locomotion. Small but sturdy animals, with yokes or pulling bars lashed just behind the horns, draw these carts creaking and groaning over the tralls, but they get through mud that will stop a strong pony. It is not necessary to ask for road directions; there is never more than one road or trall in the direction you want to go. A question as to distance is futile, for no peon has any concep tion of time or distance. A league may actually be any length from one to six miles. The usual answer to the ques tion, “How far 18 it to any place? is “No hay mas,” the Nicaraguan equiv- alent of the answer, “Not fur,” which one so frequently gets from the small darky on our southern roads, Coffee ls the Main Crop, The prosperity of the country de pends upon the coffee crop and its price. Crops have been good in recent years, but the price has been very low, For its future Nicaragua looks to the building of the canal linking the Pa. cific and the Caribbean. A prosperous Nicaragua will no doubt mean a quiet Nicaragua, for prosperity will mean roads, railroads, and other public im. provements, A hungry man in Nicara- gua is a prospective recruit for one of the bandit gangs. DBanditry probably will cease when any man seeking work can get it and when every man can boast of the few dollars rattling around in his pocket, Gold In small quantities has been produced In Nicaragua for hundreds of years, The richest mines are in the province of Chontales. This area Is also bandit-infested, and the mines are 3 i ' i ~ WISH TO BE HEARD Were we as eloquent as angels, we should please some more by lis. tening than by talking —Colton. Whether the Remedy You are taking for Headaches, Neuralgia or Rheumatism Pains is SAFE is Your Doctor. Ask Him Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family's Well-Being to Unknown Preparations EFORE you take any prepara- tion you don’t know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains of rheumatism, neuritis or neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it — in comparison with Genuine Bayer Aspirin. We say this because, before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin, most so-called “pain” remedies were ad- vised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery of Bayer Aspirin largely changed medical Practice. Countless thousands of peop who have taken Bayer Aspirin vy in and out without ill effect, proved that the medical findin about its safety were correct. Remember this: Genuine Aspinn is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relie of headaches and sll common « » . and safe for the average per to take regularly. You can get real Baye any drug store — asking for it by the name “aspirin alone, but always saving BAYER ASPIRIN wh “a You buy. Bayer Aspirin [I= Cleanse Internally and feel the difference) Why let constipation hold you back? Feel your best, lock your best ~ cleanse internally the eanry teacup way. CAR- FIELD TEA is not a mir acle worker, but a week of this “internal besuty ish you. Begin tonight. (At your drug store) GARFIELD TEA Far From 'Em he more “madding crowd” is, the more people detest it Stil Coughing? you have tried for your cough, cold or bronchial rt Shaest there other remedies have failed, don't be your druggist is authorized to guarantee ulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv) Lespedern’s- Korean, Kobe, Services (Peren. nial} broadoast any type soil Northern Virginia Grown. 8, H. Robertson. Semp- son's Whar!, Va. BACKACHES Need Warmth Miserable backaches or muscle pains esused by rheumatism, neuritis, arthritis. weintion lumbago and strain all respond instantly to Alleoek's Porous Plaster, The glow of warmth makes you feel good right away. Treats sche or pain where it is. Insist on Alloock™s . . . lasts long, comesoff easily, Get relief, ormoney *Aieock Guiaing, 3. HERE'S RELIEF Sore, Irritated Skin Wherever it is—however broken the esinol | Ee ———————— WNU-—4 11-38 Watch Your development of the properties on a large scale, Hoever connected at one time with Its management. Here only the richest strikes are now worked, the ore being brought to the mill by pack mule. The Javall mine at Santo Domingo Is worked on a larger scale and at con siderable profit to its owners, Putting a canal across Nicaragua is a matter of utilizing some geographic features and overcoming others. Of outstanding importance physically are the country’s mountaips and its two great feesh-water lakes in Its central basin, “the Great Lakes of Central