3 ickard Nominee Draws Rebuke V ITH his customary exercise of the dramatic, President Roose- velt nominated Senator Hugo L. Black (Dem., Ala.) to fill the vacan- . 2s cy on the Supreme court bench caused by the retirement of Justice Willis Van- Devanter. Senator Black had not even been mentioned for consideration previ- ously, and the ap- pointment was a complete surprise to his colleagues. For 20 years it has een a custom, when a senator is appointed tc high office, for his nomination to be com- sidered in open executive session. But when Senator Ashurst (Dem., Ariz.) proposed this in Senator Black's nomination, objections came forth immediately from Sen- ator Burke (Dem., Neb.) and Sena- tor Johnson (Rep., Calif.). They asked that the nomination be re- ferred to the senate judiciary com- mittee for ‘“‘careful consideration.” This was viewed in the light of a distinct rebuke for the nominee. Senator Black has been a militant leader in the fight for the Presi- dent's wages and hours legislation. As a justice he would have the op- portunity to pass upon measures regulating public utility holding companies, authorizing federal loans and grants for publicly-owned power plants, and fixing prices in the soft-coal industry. He was, as the chairman of the Black commit- tee to investigate lobbying, the cen- ter of a storm of public opinion during the early months of 19386. Black practiced law in Birming- ham after being graduated from the University of Alabama in 1906. At fifty-one, he is one of the younger members of the senate, =. Shells Pepper Great Wall A LTHOUGH war was till with- out benefit of official declara- tion, the army of the Chinese cen- tral government clashed with the Japanese invaders for the first time. The Eighty-ninth division, from the provinces of Suiyuan and Shansi be- gan the attack at the Nankow pass of the Great Wall, 30 miles north- west of Peiping, the Japanese said. Through this pass the Japanese have been able to move reinforce- ments from Manchukuo, its protec- torate, and the Chinese wanted to gain control of it. They wiped out a whole battalion of Japanese sol- diers in the opening battle. The Japanese opened up immedi- ately afterward with heavy artillery fire which the Chinese failed to re- turn. Indeed the latter were silently retreating into positions they thought more secure. As shells fell in the city of Nankow, fires were seen to arise from heavily populat- ed areas. The Chinese, however, were said to be well equipped with trench mortars with which to de- fend the pass once they considered their position satisfactory. Japanese warned that all of their forces in North China, some 40,000 fighting men, would be loosed upon the Chinsée if they made any at- tempt to return to the old capital in Peiping, now held by the invaders. a South Demands Crop Loans ONGRESS regarded adjourn- ment as possibly farther off than ever as the wage-hour bill got all tangled up with surplus agricul- tural control and cotton loans in what looked like a hopeless mess. With the Department of Agricul ture estimating a 15,500,000-bale cot- ton crop, about 3,000,000 bales more than can be consumed, Southern representatives and senators were demanding surplus crop loans. The Commodity Credit corporation has authority to make such loans. In a press conference, President Roosevelt indicated that he had no intention of permitting a 10-cent cot- ton loan until congress passed the agricultural control program and ever-normal granary bill which Sec- retary of Agriculture Wallace says is necessary before the new session in January. Trouble is the house Senator Black b committee doesn't know how to write such a bill and make it stick, in view of the Supreme court's deci- sion on the AAA. Now the Southern bloc has made it clear that it will not push through the President's much-desired wages and hours bill, as dictated by Wil- liam Green, president of the Ameri- can Federation of Labor, unless southern farmers get their cotton loans. Furthermore, the Southern- ers under the capitol dome are now asking for loans as high as 15 cents a pound, and in some cases even 18 cents. The South is not any too well in accord with maximum hours and minimum wages anyway. The result of the whole affair is a complete stalemate. Somebody will have to give in; somebody prob- ably will, and there will be old- fashioned ‘‘hoss - trading’ on a wholesale scale. For congress wants to adjourn before the snow flies. Southerners in the senate were the South has been successful blocking since the Civil war. ready passed by the house, might be defeated by filibuster Bilbo of Mississippi threatened to believed that the Southern members would consent to its passage to put President Roosevelt ‘‘on the spot.” They explained that if he did not sign it he would lose the negro vote so essential to the third term that is being whispered about, and that if he did sign it the Democratic South would drop him like a hot potato. se fe Senate O.K.'s Court Reform LL that was left of the admin- istration’'s sweeping court re- form proposals passed the senate in an hour without a record vote. This was the procedural reform bill for the lower federal courts. It was in the nature of a substitute for the Sumners bill in the house of repre- sentatives, and went back to the house for what was expected to be a peaceable conference. The bill, as summarized by Sen. Warren R. Austin (Rep., Vt.), who wrote most of it, included: Provision making it the duty of the District court, in any constitu- tional suit between private citizens, to notify the Department of Justice that upon a showing by the attorney general that the United States had a probable interest the government would be made a party to the suit. Permission for the senior circuit judge to reassign district judges within that circuit for the purpose of clearing congested dockets. (If necessary, a judge may be trans- ferred from one circuit to another.) Permission for direct appeal to the Supreme court, if 30-day notice is given, from any decision of a District court against the constitu- tionality of an act. Requirement that all suits for in- junction against the operation of federal statutes to be heard by a three-judge court, including at least one circuit court of appeals judge. _ Shanghai Smells Smoke JAPANESE officer and a sea- man tried to enter the Shang- hai airport, now under Chinese mili- tary control, in a high speed auto- mobile. Chinese guards, after try- ing to halt them, shot and killed them. The Japanese claimed the road on which the men were travel- ing was part of the international set- tlement, and threatened the sever- est reprisals unless the Chinese made satisfactory explanation. The incident bid fair to touch off a terrible conflict on the scene of the war of 1932. When Japanese warships threatened the Shanghai wharves, Chinese national troops be- gan pouring into the city from ev- ery direction. Simultaneously came reports that two boatloads of Nip- ponese soldiers were headed to aug- ment the garrison in Shanghai, and that the sudden ingress of Chinese troops had virtually blocked off the entire city, isolating thousands of foreigners from the outside world. Cutting Madrid from Sea LOWLY but determinedly Gen. Francisco Franco's rebels are pressing their campaign to cut Madrid off from Valencia and the sea. Latest advances of well-mo- bilized and mechanized troops, fol- lowing up co-ordinated attacks, brought the insurgents near to the capture of Salvacanete, which is only 30 miles from Cuenca. Cuenca is the provincial capital, and from it emanate most of the roads upon which the loyalist government is depending to keep open the traffic between the two cities. Reports revealed that the rebels were also opening a new drive on Santander, last government strong- hold on the northern coast, and had already made important advances. The drive followed an attack made upon them by Asturian miners fight- ing under the loyalist colors. The miners acted quickly in a surprise move, advancing far enough to throw hand grenades into the insur- gent trenches. Then the rebels opened up with machine gun fire . Ask Me Another and half the attacking band was killed, Franco's officers claimed. well as General Franco insisted was indicated when he was forced inte | the paradoxical act of shelling one of his own cities, Segovia. This | was done, it was reported, to quell a rebellion among the insurgent forces. It was also said that the insurrection had been spreading among several provinces. Meanwhile, other nations were on | the point of being involved again. There was a riot among rebel troops | at Toledo, and Italian soldiers were alleged to have aided in quelling the uprising. Four merchant ships British, one Italian, one French and one Greek—were at- tacked in the Mediterranean by three “mystery” planes. Great Brit- ain blamed the rebels and demand- ed an answer to its protest, Italy blamed the red loyalists, The loy- alists blamed the rebels, the rebels blamed the loyalists, there were lots of talk and back talk, and nobody got anywhere. — Peiping Gets "Protection" ‘“" LTHOUGH Nanking is pre- paring to wage a destructive war, do not be afraid. “The Japanese army will protect you." Leaflets ing these words flut- tered from the skies to come to rest in the hands of resi- dents of the ancient Chinese capital, Peiping. As the air- planes which spread the news hummed overhead, a brigade of 3,000 Japanese soldiers, in com- Kang Teh mand of Maj. Gen. Torashimo Kawabe marched through the city, taking possession of it in the name of Tokyo. What would be the result of the new Japanese domination apparent. ly begun by Maj. Gen. Kawabe was a matter for speculation. Chinese residents, long since convinced that the inevitable would happen, took it calmly enough. Some of them voiced their belief that the former boy emperor of China, Tsuan Tung (Henry Pu-Yi), since 1934 Emperor Kang Teh of Manchukuo, would re- | turn to his throne in Peiping. He would then rule over North China as well as Manchukuo, as a puppet for whom Japan would pull the strings. ne New York's Share Cut SENATOR ROBERT F. WAG- . NER'S (Dem., N. Y.) $726,000,- | 000 housing bill was passed by the senate, 64 to 18, but the senator | scarcely recognized it when his fel- | lows were done with it. Senator Wagner and other admin- istration leaders struggled frantical- | ly to defeat an amendment by Har- | ry F. Byrd (Dem., Va.) limiting the cost of housing projects to $1,000 a room or $4,000 a family unit. Result | of the struggle: The upper house, | which originally passed the amend- | ment 40 to 39, defeated a motion to | reconsider by 44 to 39. i The bill originally called for ex- | penditures up to $1,500 a room or | $7,000 a family unit. Opponents | conceded that the Byrd amendment | would prohibit the building of the type of houses Senator Wagner had in mind in New York City. —_— Purge Toll to Date: 320 EVENTY-TWO Russians in East Siberia were lined up and shot by the government, bringing the to- tal number of eastern executions in Russia's purge of ““Trotzkyists” to 320. The 72, described as right- ist terrorists, were charged with operating along the Siberian rail road for the Japanese secret serv ice. It was alleged the accused had wrecked a train, killing 14 persons and injuring 40. Arrests of officials in charge of various branches of the Soviet econ- omy who had failed to make their production quotas continued. won Memorial for Will Rogers THE memory of Will Rogers, America's lately beloved gum- chewing philosopher, will be en- shrined in fitting manner near his Claremore, Okla., home after the President signs a bill which has now been passed by both houses of con- gress. It appropriates $500,000 for a memorial to Will; the state of Ok- lahoma also will be required to fur- —One Emperor nish $500,000. A Quiz With Answers Offering Information on Various Subjects 1. What countries have dictators at present? 2, Is there any guide to the length of sentences when one is preparing a lecture? 3. How is GPU (Russia's secret police) pronounced? 4. By what title was Commodore Perry known to the Japanese? 5. How fast do bullets travel? Answers 1. The principal dictatorships are Russia, Austria, Italy, Ger- many, Turkey, Hungary, Bul- garia, Albania and Mexico. 2. There is the generalization that sentences should not be long. Twenty-four words is a safe maxi- mum. 3. GPU is pronounced Gay'pay- ooh—but only by foreigners. Rus- sians do not mention the name, sometimes referring to them as the “three-letter men.” 4. For diplomatic purposes Perry created for himself the title of “Lord of the Forbidden Inte- rior,” but, of course, he did not actually hold such a title. 5. Military rifles drive their bul- lets at speeds of from 2,000 to 3,000 feet per second. The Ger- lich bullet, one of th espeediest, is capable of traveling almost a mile a second. “Favorite Recipe of the Week— Refrigerator Ice Cream 12 package (scant 5 cup) ice cream powder (vanilla, strawberry, lemon, maple, or *chocolate flavor) 2 tablespoonfuls sugar* 1 cup milk 1 cup cream, whipped Combine ice cream powder and sugar. Add milk very gradually, stirring until dissolved. Fold in whipped cream. Turn into freez- ng tray of automatic refrigerator, setting control for lowest freezing temperature. Stir when frozen %- inch thick on sides and twice more a' 20-minute intervals. Freezing time: about 3 hours. 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