SC Relief for Aliens. ANTA MONICA, CALIF.—-If J an American were depend- ent on public charity in any continental country, he'd be out of luck and out of that country, too, as quickly as they could him out. If, in addition, he openly attacked the government of that country, he'd still be out of luck because he'd be in jail. Hundreds of thou- sands of aliens are on relief here. Many of them slipped across the borders through leaks in our immigration laws— and brought their folks with them, al- so to be cared for at the taxpayers’ expense, Some are avowed enemies of our form government. : Steps to oust such parasites are balked on the ground that to do so would work hardships on their fam- ilies. You could say the same thing for bedbugs. We're starting to register these non-residents. But it's to be a "‘vol- untary’’ registration, not compul- sory. Any person in the audience, besides Madame Perkins, who be- lieves the undesirables will come a-running to list themselves, and risk deportation thereby, kindly raise the right hand. % » * Champion Crooks. Irvin S. Cobb of a world’s champion of thing and then another. Surely that would seem to be ca- ditional claims to recognition. and penitentiaries, which in would seem to constitute an inter- national record, and said that i forty-three of these cases he had been paroled. tences. al government that, owing to the cruel refusal of Uncle Sam to go wholesale basis, none of them, how- ever ambitious, equal this splendid showing. nificent tribute to the lock on it. * * * Nazi Influence. "VE been talking with a friend just back from Germany. In old days, a superior line of liverwurst. I won- der whether I'd like it so well now. Because this fellow says every Nazi salute and say, ‘Heil, Hitler!” If a citizen wants his eggs fried, he says first to the wuiter, ‘Heil, Hitler!” If he wants em turned over, he says it twice—once for each egg. There's a swastilea flag flying over practically every house. Absence of a swastika flag signifies that the in the hoosegow for failing to fly same. somewhat, but, I think, not much, because while talking we came a delicatessen store window and involuntarily he said, ‘Heil, der!” * \ * Nominating Barkley, (CANVASSES show Senate Leader ’ Alben Barkley gaining as a pos- sible Democratic nominee in 1040. It's high time we had somebody from Paducah for President. For e@ hundred and fifty-odd years this republic has fooled along without one of our local boys sitting up there in the White House, writing messages to congress condemning the use of sugar in cornbread and proclaiming that, if any traitor dares to pull down fried catfish, shoot him on the spot. With Alben on the job, we'll not only have homegrown statesmanship in job lots, but silver-throated ora- tory, which, by comparison, would make Patrick Henry seem like a tongue-tied man suffering from chapped lips. For Al can talk an hour and never use the same word twice or the letter *‘r”’ once. Nominate Barkley and that night there won't be a dry throat in Mec. Cracken county. Elect Barkley and—well, I always did think I'd make a middling fair Secretary of the Interior; certainly nobody could botch up the Indian bureau worse than it is. IRVIN 8. COBB. © WNU Bervice, Landon Calls on G.O.P. LF M. LANDON came to the 17,000,000 Americans who voted for him in the last election, and es- pecially to the Re- publican party as a whole. He said he had called this ‘‘ra- dio meeting'’ to sug- gest ways and means by “we, the party,” can be of outstanding to the country. The Kansan lar President AlfM.Landon Jared Presider i | | | | i follow the Constitution, and now was demanding increased power. “What he really needs is less pow- er,” Mr. Landon asserted, “a posi- tion that will force him to take the advice and counsel of other men of both parties—men whose hearts also are in the right place, but men who have had more experience and who know more about the practical application of government than he does.” It is up to the Republicans, he said, to curb Mr. Roosevelt in his demands. He also discussed the war talk prevalent after the Presi- dent's Chicago speech and said: “We are faced with a situation where he may make a mistake that would indeed be tragic, that might lead to war. Close observers have increasing doubt if he thought his recent declaration through to logical conclusion.” In conclusion Mr. Landon said: “We have had a New Deal. Now new yardstick-—a yardstick to meas- ure the ability and the accomplish- ments, as well as the good inten- tions, of public officials. “It is time to put a solid founda- tion of workable legislation under the air castles which the President “It is time to realize that we must apply the resources of the mind if we are to make the wishes of the heart come true.” an Farmers Warned on Loans J,PWARD A. O'NEAL, president of the American Farm Bureau federation, headed a group of farm leaders who called on the Presi. on corh to improve prices. It was understood Roosevelt warned that crop at this time. However, Secretary of Agriculture Wallace subsequently told a press conference a government loan on this year’s large corn crop “should be exceedingly desirable.” He de- clined to say what loan rate he fa- vored, but conceded that a corn loan of about 46 cents a bushel would be comparable to the government's 0 cents a pound loan on this year's cotton crop. oe Credit System Praised RESID ROOSEVELT, speak- ing at the opening of the new Federal Reserve building in Wash- ington, gave full praise to the fed- eral reserve system as a most im- portant part of the government's plans for economic stability and se- curity. He said disastrous depres- sions and booms could be avoided only by the development of the credit and monetary machinery of the nation. That machinery, he continued, “must be steadily perfected and co- ordinated with all other instruments of government to promote the most productive utilization of our human and material resources. Only in that way can we hope to achieve and maintain an enduring prosper- JAY LANE TELRGRA i iekard ity, free from the disastrous ex- tremes of booms and depressions. Only in that way can our economic system and our democratic institu. tions endure.” Mr. Roosevelt avoided mention of the jittery condition of the stock markets, but before delivering his address he had seen Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau and Among the many notable persons ministration. The veteran senator was loudly cheered. pani Roper Has a Program [) ANIEL C. ROPER, secretary of | commerce, also made a speech in Washington, under the auspices of the Rotary club. His subject was the economic relationships of the isphere, and he proposed this four-point pro- gram which he believed would bene- fit the entire world: 1. United action throughout the Americas for the publication of ver- ified facts about every country, stressing constructive events and objectives rather than prejudice, crimes, and disrupting events. 2. The introduction into the edu- cational system of every country study of other languages so that each country would be better pre- pared in attitude and knowledge to help develop its own country. “This means,”’ he said, “that no country 3. Encourage tourist travel among all the Americas by truthful adver. tising and better travel facilities. 4. Broader studies by the coun- tries in the western hemisphere of each other's economic and social needs in the light of the individual country. LS. New Budget Figures P RESIDENT ROOSEVELT found his estimate of $418,000,000 as the probable deficit for 1038 fiscal year was much too low. So he gave out new budget figures putting the prob- able deficit at nearly 700 millions. And it admittedly will be much greater unless the executive and congress achieve very considerable mies. an Felix Warburg Dies ELIX M. WARBURG of New York, one of the country's fore- most financiers and philanthropists, died at his home at the age of sixty- seven. He was senior partner of Kuhn, Loeb & Co., international bankers. Between 1920 and 1930 he gave at least ten million dollars to various philanthropies, and for years he was active in the efforts to aid the Jews in Palestine and those driven from Germany by the Nazis. La Airliner Wrecked: 19 Dead SMASHING against Hayden peak, in the Uinta mountains of Utah, a big transcontinental airliner of the United Air Lines was totally wrecked and its passengers and crew, numbering 19 persons, were killed. The debris was sighted by scout planes some 10,000 feet up the mountainside, but efforts of rescue parties to reach the scene were hampered by heavy 3 snow. Bela Kun Seizad A CCORDING to an official com- munist publication in Moscow, Bela Kun, Hungarian who has stirred up lots of trouble in the past, has been arrested by the Rus- sians and charged with * ” activities, which usually means the death penalty. Kun was dictator of Hungary during the short-lived com- munist republic after the conclusion of the World war. HALL, PA. REAT BRITAIN, France and It- aly--with Germany on the side- agreement for the removal of volun- teers from Spain, but Generalissimo Franco wasn't waiting. His forces in northwest Spain pushed forward to surround Gijon, last important loyalist seaport in that area, and in- surgent warships blocked escape by way of the sea. the defending loyalist troops real- ized their predicament and surren- dered the city unconditionally. The place was crowded with 130,000 half- starved refugees. The loyalists still were in possession of some strategic points in that sector. Occupation by the Italians and the coasts of Spain was reported in Paris newspapers. had occupied the Columbretes is- iterranean coast and had established a submarine base there. Normally the islands are occupied only by members of a lighthouse crew. Germans were alleged to have oc- cupied Alboran island, 50 miles off the south Mediterranean coast and to and from Gibraltar. The Ger- mans were said to have established a submarine base on the island, wn Wen Davis Sent to Brussels NJ ORMAN H. DAVIS is on his way of the American delegation to a con- fererice of the signatories of the nine - power treaty which, the optimists hope, will put an end fo the warfare be- tween Japan and China. More realis- tic observers of the course of events have no such expec- tation, for the pact has no ‘‘teeth” and the conferees can do little except talk Associated with Mr. Davis, the ad- roving ambassador, Stanley K. Hornbeck and Norman H. Davis the press officer and is secretary of the ert T. Pell is C. E. Bohlen delegation. Before sailing for Europe the dele- gates received instructions from resident Roosevelt and Secretary but these were not The invitation to the conference was issued by the Belgian govern- ment “at the request of the British government and with the approval of the government of the United States.” China and Japan are both signatories to the treaty. The for- mer accepled the invitation to the Brussels meeting, but it was be- lieved Japan would not be repre- sented there. Tokyo has maintained the policy that the Sino-Japanese troubles must be settied without the intervention of other nations. ww Wes Russians in West China OKYO newspapers stated that 13 Soviet Russian planes, co-oper- ating with Soviet land forces, had bombed Kashgar, Yarkand, Karg- halik, Khotan, Gumer, and other cities of Sinkiang, province of China, against Mohammedans. in a battle The troops of the cities. ws Won Mine Disaster JAL gas exploded in the Mulga Birmingham, and the lives of 33 miners were snuffed out. trance. The blast was the first chant iron in Birmingham. How- ever, 56 men had been killed Mulga in former years. ne "Lindy" Still American UMORS that Col. five year renewal of his commission in the United States army air corps. Army officers expressed the belief privately he would not have re- newed his air corps tie if he in- tended changing his allegiance. The airman has retained his military status since his graduation in 1025 fiom the air corps flying school at Kelly field, Texas. —s Palestine Terrorism BRITISH military authorities took stern measures to suppress the violence in Palestine, but appar- ently without success. The Arabs continued their attacks on the Jew- ish people and buildings and in Jerusalem began using bombs, Gen. A. P. Wavell, commander of the 10,000 British troops in Pales- tine, ordered the homes of Arab terrorists burned, following the de- struction of Kalandia airport, near Lydda, with an estimated loss of $50,000. Sixty persons were arrested for breaking the twenty-four hour cur- few which amounts to virtual mar. tial law. It this sort of thing Great Britain is ety to estine a crown mandate. A Trio of Triumphs ; { HE way to day-in, day-out chic | for the woman who sews is | shown in today's attractive new three-way plan. It goes deeper | than the surface, you see, in the | presentation of a new slip. | Ah, and it gives great thought to sleek note in the two wing-side models Spicy New Model. shipshape as a ne fashion and, in its As arisian role, as important—that's tle number at the left to give one at's handy 1 ried ove naers does wr and doing feeling t} have aro Pe ’ 2 ind the house in ti ng Make this frock in g I cotton: shanti { crash yt | A Congenial Slip. th a well-groc rface | That's | and one | by re piece Sew-Your-Own abides Yin see Two T™ A art + » HEIOUSIY i0CAaY 8 five ver- Sion is as easy to put together as it is con ngenial to your comfort and | Make two | while you're about it: with | ain top for everyday, the other one bit of frou-frou for dress- Deft Design. The “girl in the little green hat wears a dress with many tucks in this her latest picture. It is the dress for you, Milady, to star in at familiar Fall festivities. Deftly but definitely it gives you em- dhasis where you want it: soft pedals worry-areas. Wool is smart material and it fits this frock's personality to a T. Let's sew and be seen places this Fall. Okay? The Patterns, Pattern 1389 is designed for sizes 36 52. Size 38 requires 4% yards of 35-inch material, or " fo Pattern 1088 is designed in sizes | 34 to 46. Size 36 requires 3% yards | of 38-inch material, plus 1 yard of | ribbon for shoulder straps, and 1% | yards of edging for finishing upper | edge. | Pattern 1302 is designed for sizes 14 to 20 (32 to 42 bust). Size | 16 requires 2% yards of 54-inch | fabric. Send your order to The Sewing | Simple Way to Avoid Dust When | Shaking Grates and Taking Ashes From Pit "T HERE is an easy way to keep dust from sifting through the cracks of the ashpit door when shaking furnace grates. Quite a few readers have asked me how it can be done, and I'm sure many more of you will be interested. Here's how: Have a spray made of small pipe, connected with the cold wa- ter system installed in the ashpit of the furnace. Only a short length of pipe will be needed. In it have small holes drilled and cap the free end. Just before shaking the grates, turn on the spray. It will throw a fine mist over the whole ashpit, wetting down the ashes as they drop through the grate openings and settling the dust immediately. 7 WW. York, 15 cents Circle Pattern Forty-third New N. Y. Price of patterns, {in coins yar Dept. 24 street }) BCH. New Pattern Book. for the Barbara Pattern attractive, ing clothes, Bar- lanned, easy-to- HEADACHE REMEDY STARTS WORKING IN SECONDS cents sel anc Wir ter » yourself from the All people who suffer occasionally from headaches ought to know this way to quick relief. At the first sign of such paim, take two Bayer Aspirin tablets with a hall glass of water. Some- times if the pain is unusually severe, one more tablet is neces. sary later, according to directions. If headaches keep coming back we advise you to see your own physician. He will look for the cause in order to correct it. Of Greater Value Good instruction is better than riches.—William Penn. for WOMEN only CARDYI is a special medicine for the relief of some of the suffering which results from a woman's weak- ened condition. It has been found to make mopthly periods less dis agreeable, and, when its use has bees kept up awhile, has helped many poorly nourished women to get more strength giving it a fair trial Of course, if not benefited, consult a physician. oe eh
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers