Base Map © American Map Co natorial election; Politics Like all natural phenomena and many not so natural, U. S. political fortunes run in cycles of liberalism and conservatism. Thus every lengthy Republican administration has been succeeded by a shorter Democratic one, attesting to the American people's inherent conserv- atism. Since the Republican party reached its latest low ebb under Candidate Alfred Landon in 1936, none but the most optimistic expect- ed anything but a minor gain so early as 1938. But it has proved otherwise, thanks to (1) a growing belief that the Roosevelt administra- tion's expensive recovery efforts have been unsuccessful, and (2) a fear that New Deal policies were en- couraging the growth of radicalism. Moreover, it has been apparent that the public must eventually pro- test against the political corruption which unavoidably gathers around so large a financial project as WPA. Though the Roosevelt administration may be blameless in this respect, such political machines as that of Pennsylvania's Gov. George H. Earle have unsavory reputations. Another consideration, one that re- ceived less attention than eventually proved justified, was dissatisfaction among America's numerically im- portant farmers. Since the agricul- tural vote can control congress, it looked bad for the administration when this year’s highly touted farm program failed. Despite Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace's sincere efforts, islation has left producers in north- ern states without permanent relief. Almost without exception the No- vember general election has there- fore made the U. S. return to its most normal political alignment in 15 years. (See Map). Always Dem- ocratic, the ‘‘solid South’ has clung tenaciously to tradition. But this tradition does not mean the South will line up 100 per cent behind President Roosevelt, for South Car- olina, Georgia and Maryland elect- with the New Deal. southern senators and congressmen, not up for re-election this year, are also unsympathetic. Though in many cases the Repub- lican trend is not so great as the above map might indicate, practi- cally all northern states have shown a surge back to conservatism. This was especially marked in Minnesota and Wisconsin, where Farmer-Labor and Progressive partisans ousted after long incumbencies. cratic Gov. Frank Murphy largely because he sympathized with the radically tinged Committee for In- dustrial Organization. In all north- western states the swing to Repub- licanismm was due partly to agricul- tural dissatisfaction. New England's industrial population rebelled against allegedly oppressive taxa- tion and the C. I. O., while this ter- ritory’'s traditional conservatism also played an important role. Sub- stantially the same explanation can be made for votes in Ohio and Pennsylvania. The only important New Deal gains have come in California, where a rock-ribbed Republican governor was ousted; in North Da- kota, whose notoriously unsettled political situation has freakishly placed a Democrat in the governor's chair, and in Maryland. But such a resume does not tell the entire story, for even those states which remained Democratic have shown an amazingly strong Re- publican upsurge. New York's Gov. Herbert H. Lehman won by only 70,000 votes over his Republican op- ponent, youthful Thomas E. Dewey, whereas two years ago Mr. Leh- man had a 500,000 margin. Illinois, which remains predominantly New Deal, increased its Republican house representation and returned a much larger conservative vote than in 1936. Having gained at least 8 senators, 75 house members and 11 governors, the Republican party once more has a vocal minority in congress. More- over its 1940 presidential hopes are better, despite the defeat in New York of Tom Dewey, once consid- ered a likely candidate. If the 1938 dential possibilities, they are Ohio's Republican Sen. Robert Taft and Business Government prosecution of com- binations in alleged trade was known as ‘‘trust-busting’ in the days of President Benjamin Harrison. In 1890 the Sherman anti- trust law began hacking at financial octopi in what was shown to be a legitimate campaign to keep Ameri- can industry from killing itself by mushroomed growth. Modern trust-busting is an out- growth of the New Deal. Its in- tended victim is not the monopo- listic trust of bygone days, but usu- ally a group of powerful corpora- tions which dominate an industry. But though the 1938 model trust (17 victories, 12 cases still pending, out of 42 filed since March 4, 1933) he might also be charged with mak- ing political capital of his job. Thus it has been hinted that So- licitor General Robert H. Jackson, once an assistant attorney general, joined the anti-trust crusade last year largely in the hope of winning rial nomination. If politics was the inspiration for some anti-trust suits, these same suits have now become such hot potatoes that a vanished justice department’s dropping them. One possible example may be the trust case against the Aluminum Company of America. To date this year-old investiga- tion has failed to uncover much ex- cept a re-hash of testimony and evi- | dence from the 1935 federal trade commission's probe, and a private litigation of a decade ago from which the company emerged with a Champ Clark. What the Republican upsurge will do for the U. S. remains conjectural, but post-election stock market activ- ity has been encouraging. To aid industry, the American Federation of Labor is already banking on G. O. P. congressional aid in amend- ing the Wagner labor relations act. The outstanding fact is that 1938's Republican party has emerged a liberal entity, former ultra-conservatism, Foreign | international importance is some- times hard to believe, since state visitors make a studied effort to avoid shop talk with their hosts. But diplomatic Great Britain refuses to minimize the significance of King George's visit to the U. S. next summer, and every sign indicates the English reasoning is correct. Coupled with the U. S. visit iz an invitation for French President Al- ham palace next spring, thereby re- turning the honor accorded by Today’ 8 anti-trust division of the justice department has 90 lawyers compared with 15 in 1933, handling THURMAN New technique: ARNOLD Price policing. summer. While all this sounds like France and England are desperate- cle of democratic solidarity, offset- ting the trumpeting of Premier Be- nito Mussolini and Chancellor Adolf Hitler. Though King George's visit will not result in a U. S.-British pact, it will certainly tighten the bonds between England and Amer- ica. This means that next spring and summer Italy and Germany will go into eclipse, while world democra- cy stages its show. There is every KING GEORGE VI How important is his visit? reason to believe the Fascist-Nazi nations appreciate this and realize they must gain their concessions from France and Britain within the next six months. That is why Hit- ler is pressing his demands for a return of British-mandated colonies, and why Mussolini is urging inter- nationalization of the Suez canal. People The death of Turkey's dictator, President Kemal Ataturk, removes the most colorful totalitarianist of our era. A man whose passion was violation of every accepted rule of human behavior, he customarily stayed up all night, ate every food that disagreed with him, had an amazingly large capacity for raki liquor and champagne, was Tur- key’s champion cigarette smoker and drank gallons of coffee every day. He detested exercise. More benevolent and less anxious for self- aggrandizement than most dicta- tors, Mustapha Kemal established a model nation out of the post-war debris of Turkey. At his death, the nation he founded looks in bewil- derment for a successor, while Eu- rope fears southeastern-bound Adolf Hitler may seize the opportunity to establish his economic strength in the Dardanelles. connected with 31 other major acts of congress, Trust-busting boss is vestigating the price policies of in- Arnold: “We are being forced to take control of in- flexible price structures and coer- cions in restraint of trade today just as in 1933 we were forced to take control of the financing and market- Much interest now centers in the justice department's newly inaugu- rated suit against Delaware's Co- lumbia Gas & Electric corporation for allegedly ‘‘conspiring to monopo- lize'"” the natural gas industry of Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia and Michigan. But in accordance with his probe of price policies, Thur- man Arnold is probably more inter- ested in oil. Since crude oil prices recently plummeted in the wake of alleged over-production by refiner. ies, both the President and Mr. Ar- nold favor a program for state con- trol over oil production and refin- ing. Harking back to the trust-busting days when Standard Oil's case first made the U. S. monopoly-conscious. the new probe will examine every phase of the oil industry from pro duction to marketing. Though oil men will welcome an intelligent gov ernment program to stabilize crude oil prices, observers fail to see great consistency between this program to raise prices, and other monopoly quizzes which prosecute men for Religion After 31 months of strife, four months of which cost 1,317 lives and left 1,150 wounded, Palestine’s “holy war’ is still not ended. The British-mandated territory has been Arabic for centuries but was set aside as a homeland for Jews fol lowing the World war, only to arouse Moslem fears that Hebrews would soon dominate the land. Using ter. rorism as their weapon, Arabs have attempted to force an immediate settlement on slow-moving Great Britain, but London has just an. nounced its refusal to make an im- mediate decision. Great Britain proposes to call a conference of Jew- ish and Arab leaders whose com: promise agreement would wash Great Britain's hands of all respon sibility for the Holy Land. This would be fine except that Arabs re fuse to arbitrate in this fashion, which leaves Palestine’s problem still a hopeless muddle. Miscellany An Evanston, Ill., woman has been granted a patent for a pair of pockets to be hung over her cocker spaniel's head, carrying his ears for him, ® In 12 months just past, the Meth odist Episcopal church of America increased its membership by 181. 297, approximately 1 per cent. WASHINGTON.—I believe it can is not their fault en- story escapes them even headlines on the front page. Nor It seems to be true, never- ality that we call ‘“‘the public’ has considered fully the significance of Existence of this condition, how- | is warrant for an attempt at | the railroad industry. | added to it the suggesticn also that | too, in connection with the | try. Indeed, prospective develop- There were, of course, the many dangers of a financial character | with which the railroads were be- | set. There followed the attempt of | railroad management to reduce ex- | penses by a program cutting wages | of the workers by 15 per cent, and | there came almost immediately | thereafter the dread specter of a strike threat by the million or more rail workers who are highly union- ized. After that, in the sequence of | events was President Roosevelt's utilization of the law providing for | fact finding commission for the first | time. It is necessary only as a further | review to recall that the fact find- ing commission heard days of testi- mony and reported to the President | that a wage cut was unjustified. | But the commission made no con- | structive suggestions. As a matter | of fact, it added nothing to the total | of human knowledge, but it got a | lot of publicity for its findings. Legislation to Relieve Railroads Up to Congress The problem was, thereupon, left | in Mr. Roosevelt's lap. He called in the representatives of the rail managements and the leaders of the The rail executives were cut, if there were any way going bankrupt—more than half of the mileage being already in the hands of receivers. reiterated they did not want to strike get on their feet, jobs. J. J. Pelley, the rail lines, asked then what the government could or would do, and So there we are today. be no strike. There will There will be consid- And it will be sup- ported by Mr. Roosevelt's adminis- But I am wondering whether the country as a whole is fully aware of is behind the troubles that awakened the country as a tion in which the railroads find derlying conditions that we are go- ing to find a solution. None can deny that we need rail transportation; none can deny that they either must operate without losses or else they are going to be left in the lap of the government, and what a terri- ble mess that would be, for govern- ment seldom runs anything without making a mess of it. The rail prob- lem, its relation to other forms of transportation, the public interest, national policy, all must be threshed It can not be longer avoided without increasing the dan- gers of genuine national suffering. Public Has Tremendous Responsibility to Bear When consideration of the various phases of the condition gets under way, if it is done thoroughly, con- gress must give attention to a re- vision of some of its long-established policies. They are basic. When I am talking about the plight of the railroads, I am, at the same time, condemning to the very core some of the high-handed brigandage, thiev- ery, corruption, that went on among so-called captains of industry a few generations ago. That stealing, that corruption (in which politics figured amazingly) put the railroads in dis- ed interstate commerce commission saw to that job. Yet, the stigma and lack of public good will remains to curse the carriers that operate over steel rails. So, there is first the need for a ments now display. The public must sibility to bear in connection with this phase. Next, the really important phases, question of continued subsidy, both direct and indirect, given by the government to compe- like the bus and the truck and the automotive industry generally. and private automobiles by the mil- lions stands as a monument, a marker, showing where that subsidy | was distributed. The thousands of miles of hard roads, all-year roads, who can the greatest steps for progress? Monster of Competition Cuts Railroad Earnings Of course, road construction was necessary. It was vital. The na- tional policy for good highways can only be praised. Yet, their very existence is one of the reasons why the railroads’ income has fallen off, We see, therefore, a great monster from taxpayers’ pockets. The rail- ily taxed of any industry, of competition. There was the creation of the in- terstate commerce commission some years ago as a unit of govern- ment for supervision of the rail lines. It was, and is still, needed. But its existence, too, has held down rail earnings. This has resulted from the control of rates. No rail- road is permitted to charge more than a rate approved by the I. C. C. While the competitors were creep- ing forward, under governmental blessing, the I. C. C. was saying to “You fellows obey our orders, or else. Subsidies out of taxpayers’ pockets petitor, also. I refer to inland wa- terways and to coastwise shipping. value that hardly can be measured. It is as much a part of our national the attendant motor transport. as a competitor of the railroads, be- cause of a paternal government that Steps Into the Picture Lately, air transportation has such efficient air service, nor as safe air service, as is to be found in the United States. express; passengers are of the type, general- ly speaking, willing and able to pay government subsidy in ways. The air mail doesn't begin to pay its way; the government makes up the difference by con- tracts that call for stated pay- ments. And consider the scores of great air fields throughout the coun- try! The bulk of them are built at public expense. True, the air lines pay for the privileges of the field, but does anyone think that the air lines could afford to spend $40,000,- 000 to build such a field as that which serves metropolitan New York? federal government grant. build a proper airport. how the government has of an expensive character forced upon the carriers, requirements for terminals of luxury-type construc- tion and so on. I believe it unneces- sary to recount them. Those that have been enumerated serve to show where the trouble is. It does not show the answer, but I believe it points the way to an answer. The answer, as I have mentioned above, certainly can not be found, however, unless there is genuine study of an unselfish sort undertaken by con- © Western Newspaper Union, ’/ Pattern 1203, A doll's wardrobe for a regula- tion 14 and 18 inch doll is easily made when the little dress is just two identical pieces , . . coat and tam mainly in stockinette stitch. Pat. making coat, tam and dress shown; illustrations of them and of all stitches used; material re- quirements, Send 15 cents in coins for this pattern to The Sewing Circle, Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Ave- nue, New York, N. Y WHOEVER TAKES ASPIRIN SHOULD STUDY THESE PICTURES Drop a Boyer Tablet In water—it starts to dis- integrate in 2 seconds whence is ready to “go to work” rapidly This “Quick Dissolving” Property is Why BAYER Aspirin Acts Se Fast to “Take Hold” of Muscular Aches and Pains If you suffer with headaches or the pains of rheumatism or neuritis, keep the above picture about gen- uine Bayer Aspirin in your mind. 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