WHO'S By LEMUEL F. PARTON EDITOR'S NOTE—When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of the news analyst, and not necessarily of the newspaper. Religion IEW YORK.—Is the “czar” on i his way out? Before and since the elevation of Judge Landis and Will Hays we have hired benevolent autocrats, in times of stress and confusion, but now the New Impartial Ump Pushing ‘Czar’ : ? Into Discard: York city hotel industry hires, instead, an “impar- tial chairman,” with labor concur- ring, as he will represent both em- ployers and labor. Is this a prece- dent, or is the title just a euphe- mism for ‘‘czar’'? Granite-faced, tight-lipped Ed- ward P. Mulrooney gets the umpir- ing job, at $25,000 a year. He also is now entitled to his $6,000 yearly pension, as a former police commis- sioner, withheld while he held pub- lic office. In 1933, he became chair- man of the state alcoholic beverage control board, and later state com- missioner of correction, from which office he will resign to accept the hotel post. He started pounding a beat in West street forty-eight years ago, when Theodore Roosevelt was police commissioner. He first hit the headlines by rescu- ing women and children in a small boat when the Slocum burned. As a “waterfront flat- foot,” he was known as a ““cop’s cop,” always having his mind on his work. He became in 1930. He police commissioner gave his men orders to shoot to kill, and set shotgun squads patrollin the city, He roughed up the racketeers a lot. and, when he was switched to the Albany liquor control job in 1933, the word was out that certain anti- social, anti-cop elements had desired the transfer and helped bring it about. At 68, his reddish hair is turn- ing brindle. His ferrety eyes reveal a penetrating alertness of mind. He looks a great deal like General Pershing. It would seem unlikely that anybody in the hotel business here will be giving the umpire any back- talk, = NEWS reports from Havana are i that, when Colonel Fulgencio Batista, Cuba's strong man, visited Mexico, he was regarded by some of his conserva- tive supporters as having gone over to the Cuban Business Frowns on Left Turn of Batista | ‘wrong side of the tracks.” There was particular displeasure over his fraternizing with President Cardenas of Mexico, | and business representation at his welcome-home ceremonies was con- spicuously lacking. He told the crowd of cheering workers that “if capital does not wish to respect the desires and rights of the people, the resulting confusion will work against its own aspirations.” This is one of several recent signs that the one-time cane- rustler, barber, buck private and stenographer who now runs Cuba is veering left, after a wide swing to the right, Soon after his seizure of power, with the downfall of Machado in August, 1933, he reassured the “law and order” elements, and left-wingers have been pasting him as the “Hitler of Cuba.” He made peace with foreign and native industrialists, and, from all accounts, they are jolted con. siderably by his getting clubby with Cardenas, the ‘Expropria- tor.”” He is circulating much more than he used to, and there is talk that he aspires to be the “Napoleon of the Caribbean.” His hole-card is the army, which | he commands efficiently as chief | os man, 37 years old, he says little and keeps a sharp, soldiers. A. W Ite a bullet in his shoulder and one heel shot away, Dr. Oswaldo Aranha, foreign minister of Brazil, is an effective emissary Aranha Thinks It Time to Stow 4 h . white ope of Shooting Irons. our State de- partment, as he visits this country. He was the leader of five reveolu- tions in eight years, including the one which established Dr. Getulio Vargas, the present president of Brazil. His present mission is mainly financial. It is possible that a central bank of Brazil will grow out of it, with the United States supplying $50,000,000 capital. He is 43 years old, the son of a wealthy hidalgo in Rio Grande do Sul. His life activities have been the army, law and poli- tics. When President Vargas set up his one-man state last year, Doctor Aranha’s co-oper- ation was taken in this country as reassurance against Euro- western hemi- sphere, and the an fascism in that country, re @ Consolidated News Features. WNU Service, ' European notable many a squabble, two most were (1) war settlement attempt Benedict XV and (2) consummation POPE PIUS XII Despite Count Ciano and Germany. most difficult job was negotiating a treaty with Protestant Russia 1029, a feat that won him the red cap of cardinal when Pietro yarri retired in 1929 When Pope Pius XI died last Feb- ruary 9, Secretary of State Pacelli ediately became camerle m chief of the Roman Cs: h until the college of cardinals 1 name a successor. Interna- tionally better known than any other potential candidate, Cardinal Pacel- li's name was immed about as the most li This, despite his c¢ ¢ to lead the contemplative life of monk, despite rumors that his se- lection would be none too welcome by totalitarian Germany and Italy. in Gas- go, lic If Cardinal Pacelli had never ad- ritted anti-dictator sentiments, Italian Foreign Minister Count Ci- no time pointing out that a Pacelli appointment would be unwelcome in Rome, In Germany another newspaper, Das Schwarze Korps, chimed in. At the Vatican, German Ambassador Carl-Ludwig Diego von Bergen told the college that his tion was tion of a new world,” and that “‘the papacy without doubt has an essen- role.” na- 1 in dedi these events, Cardinal Pacelli's ele. vation to the papacy might be in direct retaliation against two gov- ernments which saw fit to interfere with church affairs. A further pos- sibility is that the Rome-Berlin axis erred diplomatically to such an ex- enced statesman who could deal with Herr Hitler and Signor Musso- lini, Europe Britain's chief reason for backing down at Munich was unprepared- ness, Subsequent appeasements have grown noticeably smaller as rearmament was sped. Prime Minister Chamberiain gave nary an inch at Rome. In Febru- ary he openly announced plans to aid France in war and to win the new Spain away from Fascist domi- nation. Shortly after General Fran co's government was recognized the army, navy and air ministers than $5,000,000,000) will be spent. How army, navy and air expenses FORECAST BY THE U. S. TREASURY — March income tax collections of $425,000,000, considerably less than the $723,000,000 collected during the same period of 1938. BY VIENNA AUTHORITIES Release of former Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, held in cus- tody by Nazis since March 11, 1938. BY ROME SOURCES—A meet- ing between Reichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler and Premier Mussolini. BY NO. 2 NAZI HERMANN GOERING-An increase in Ger- man population from 80,000,000 to 100,000,000. BY MANHATTAN POLITI- CIANS—Continued leadership in Tammany by James J. Hines, even though sent to prison for conviction in rackets conspiracy case, budgets, compared 1939-40 805,665,000 768,333,405 1,103,133,500 1938-39 $ 532,500,000 618,535,000 671,015,000 $2.677,131,905 $1,822.950,000 | { | { | | than $2,900,000,000, or more than the government will spend for all other purposes combined. Specifically: Army. Standing at 563,700 (a new peace-time high), various army units will be boosted by about 185.- 700 during the coming fiscal year. Increases are planned both at home Navy. Fearing German U-boats, and Hong Kong ports will be se- Canada may purchase a naval flotilla leader to head its fleet of six destroyers. Six new motor torpedo boats are being shipped to Hong Kong. Planned construction: 20 fast escort vessels, two battle- ships, one aircraft carrier, four Aviation. Personnel will rise from to 118,000, four times the 3y March 31, a total of 1,750 first-line planes will be ready, with production paced at 500 a month against an estimated y. Within a year the air ministry expects 2,840 first-line Civilian. Fifty million civilian gas masks, 1,400,000 *‘toy"” gas helmets for babies and 1,300,000 masks for children are on the list. Some 27,000,000 sandbags are on hand, with 200,000,000 ordered. electrical equipment is planned and “‘erisis’’ organization is being com- pleted. » * * Der Tag, whose fear is responsi- ble for this preparation, meanwhile remains at flirting d nce. Points of potential trouble between France and Italy over Mediterranean mands have gre Italy has repatriated her natior in France, ousted French per men, Polish away from France One ne established at from Nice. Mean- in clear focus 131% won reportedly 150 miles in 1928. Everyone that of knows, velt's too, dream an $80,000.000.000 income may mean even if it does come true, since increased governmental costs up the profits, How much relief costs have gained. how in reports of security board. (See graphs). But far more DIVIDENDS, INTEREST 14.4% weit N\| 65.5% 20% COMPENSATION TO EMPLOYEES 1929 INCOME: $78,574,000,000 DIVIDENDS, INTEREST 62.1% COMPENSATION TO EMPLOYEES 1938 INCOME: $64,184,000,000 Relief cost 58 per cent, or $3,724, 000,000, not incl administrative costs, Since than 1929's, tually larger faconie seas {aller percentage for relief is ac than shown in “pie.” national income came not from pri- vate initiative but from government aid. For example, even the $3,724.- 000,000 total relief expense was in. cluded, as was $57,000,000 spent for war veteran payments, Emergency subsistence payments to farmers are also counted in. Darkening the picture still more are estimates that total relief costs would have mounted to $4,468.800,000 instead of only $3,724,000,000 had federal, state and local administra. tive costs been included. Moreover, since 1038's national © was more than $14,000,000,000 under 1920's, the growth of relief cost over this period was bigger than shown, WOMEN In the News . . . RUSSIA'S NADEJDA KON- STANTINOVA KRUPSKAYA, widow of Nikolai Lenin, , early revolutionist leader and educa- tional leader, died on her seven- tieth birthday at Moscow, JAPAN'S EMPRESS NAGAKO gave birth to her seventh child, a girl, five days before her thirty- sixth birthday. AMERICA’S MRS, FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution, reportedly because that organization refused Wash- ington’s Constitution hall as a site for recital by Marian Anderson, Negro contralto. 7 ENGLAND'S DUCHESS OF WINDSOR, AMERICA'S MRS. CHARLES A. LINDBERGH, dis- covered to be neighbors in an exclusive Parisian section just off the Bois de Boulogne. the Labor For two years labor's ill-starred dove of peace has sought a resting place, hovering over the battle- ground of John Lewis’ Congress for Industrial Organization and William Green's American Federation of La- bor. This month, for three reasons, the dove hovers nearer earth. But there is still no indication that peace will come via mutual consent: a more likely solution is victory for the A. F. of L., thanks to growing anti-C. 1. O. sentiment welling up since Homer Martin split the United Automobile Workers during Janu- ary. The three indications of a showdown: Supreme Court. The much cussed national labor relations board, al- legedly pro-C. 1. O., was rebuffed in three Supreme court decisions which effectively banned the down strike. Specifically, the it. ih major dec ns ruled (1) that | cago’'s Fansteel Metallurgical | poration could not be compelled to DANIEL TOBIN The peacemaker eschewed peace. rehire participants in the notorious 1937 sitdown, and (2) that NLRB has misruled in charging a Cleveland firm with unfair labor practices for | dealing with one set organized | workers after failing to reach an agreement with another set. Since C. I. O.'s most successful weapon has been discredited, C. 1. O. itself is thereby discredited. But John Lewis’ organization has al- ready attained a big measure of success, so this effect is unimpor- tant. Greater by far is the blow to NLRB's prestige, to be reflected in congress during the next few weeks. Wagner Act. C. I. O. has stood pat against amending the labor act, and well it might, since most NLRB decisions have been favorable. Chief sentiment for change has come from A. F. of L., which lost prestige by NLRB decisions, and employers, who claim the act dis- criminates against them. Adding its voice is the public, which appar- ently dislikes the idea of giving NLRB jurisdiction which tradition- ally has belonged to the courts. Re- vision of the Wagner act is the No. 1 certainty of this year's congress, probably stripping NLRB of its power and establishing another tribunal more to the liking of con- servative elements. How C. 1. O. would suffer, how A. F. of L. would gain by this move, is strikingly ob- vious, Peace Talks. Encouraged by court rulings and public sentiment, A. F. of L. could afford to accept Presi- dent Roosevelt's current labor peace bid, with reservations. Hope of the administration is that labor's two factions will settle their dis- pute in conference, precluding a fiery congressional debate over Wagner act changes. But Mr. Roosevelt had not counted on such independence as that of William Green and Daniel Tobin, A. F, of L. stalwarts. Appointed a delegate to the peace talks, Mr. Tobin refused to attend on the excuse that he had too much work. A more logical reason is that Mr. Tobin, famed as a peacemaker, failed to see a chance for harmony. It was re- called that at last autumn’'s Hous- of gued for arbitration “provided the points do not involve fundamental laws of the organizations.” The same feeling of futility probably led Mr. Green to demand that senate labor committee hearings on the Wagner act be continued, not post- poned until after the conference. Recognizing a good chance for - ADVENTUROUS AMERICANS By Elmo Scott Watson The Redoubtable Mme. La Compt THE year 1734 a daughter was born to the La Flammes, a French family living at St. Joseph While she was still a little girl, her parents moved to Mackinac and there she grew up and married her first husband, Pilette de Sainte Ange. In 1765 Sainte Ange took his wife to the site of the future city of Chi- cago where they lived several years. After a time she became fa- muilar with the language of the Pottawatomies and tribes, studying their character and acquir- ing a great hem. When Sainte Ange died. his widow moved to the French vill » of Ca- hokia on the Mississippi. She soon married again, this a Ca- nadian named La C it ring the the Cahol ers, whom George Roger to the American cause, were in constant danger of attack by the Indian allies of the British, as we the American settlers in the days of the Territory of Ill for other influence over ievolution, won won Many times Mme. La Compt was awakened in the dead of night by Indian friends who urged her to seek safety in St. Louis. But, in- stead of fleeing, Mme. La Com variably hostiles their staye rith them for days More than fearful villagers of Ca and ready for an strange procession the wo their before she succeeded. once the ds—a band « war-paint away and humbly ders given th woman marching ah Ads 19% After rearing chi o owed ried, named Brady. She Ver him for years died in Ca- hokia in 1843 at the age of 109 years. > » * A Monument to Failure | ONG'S PEAK, the highest in Col- orado, is not only a memorial to its first American discoverer, Maj. Stephen H. Long, of the En- gineers Corps of the United States 7, but it is also a monument to a great failure. n 1819 the United States govern- ment was preparing to send a great army into the Upper Missouri coun- try to establish a military to protect and extend the fur trade. The expedition was also expected to add to knowledge of the West and Major Long was di- rected to take with him a group of scientists for this purpose. With a small and inadequately supplied force, he crossed the plains to the base of the Rockies and spent some time exploring that region. When he returned he made a re- port that was destined to become famous for its inaccuracies. “In re- gard to this extensive section of he country,” he wrote, “we do not hesitate in giving our opinion that it is almost wholly unfit for cultiva- tion, and of course uninhabitable by a people depending upon agriculture for their subsistence.” More than any other man, per- haps, he was responsible ‘or fixing upon the maps of the United States Again time 8gain this Tom to an ug ami si anc arm; post retarded development of that coun- try for nearly half a century. * . * Sharpshooter and Spy J IRGINIA MOON of Memphis, Tenn., was 18 years old and go- ing to school in Ohio when the Civil war broke out. She immediately lines to Tennessee and was refused. raised on the school grounds, she The results were immediate and most favorable—she was expelled from school and sent home to Mem- phis, which was just exactly what she wanted. She was not only a good marks- woman--she was pretty and self- confident. Her beauty and other charms enabled her to become en- gaged to 16 young Confederate army recruits, all at the same time. This wasn't very honest, she admitted years later, but it made the young soldiers feel good and didn't make her feel bad. As the war went on, Gen. Sterling Price appointed her special agent and she carried dispatches and other information back and forth from Union to Confederate territory. Several times she was arrested by Northern soldiers, being acquitted on one occasion but found guilty and served short sentences on others. She was the only Confederate woman spy whose unusual career did not end with the war or with spying. At the age of 75 she be- came a movie actress in H : She appeared with Pola Negri and Mary Miles Minter and other prom- inent stars before her death in Greenwich Village at the age of 81. © Western Newspaper Union. HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONS Oil in Time, If your home is equipped with casement windows, oil the hi This will prevent their rusting * ~ w Nges occasion: ly. soaked Juicy Lemons.—Lemons 1 will 10 minutes in warm water yield more juice than ” ’ lemons - * * Keep Down Dust.—If the carpe SWeeper must be empties d empty 1t paper to pre tering. White Linens.—Linen: become yellow w ugly tin which a been dissolved 2. ¥ Owost is raw from cold, crush and dissolve 3 Bayer Tablets in if glans of water . . . gurgle, 1. To ease pain and discomfort and re- duce fever take 2 Bayer Tablets — drink s glass of water, Use Genuine BAYER Aspirin— the Moment Your Cold Starts The simple way pictured above oiten brings amazingly fast relief from discomfort and sore throat accompanying colds. Try it. Then — see pour doctor. He probably will tell you to con- tinue with Bayer Aspirin because it acts so fast to relieve discomforts of a cold. And to reduce fever. This simple way, backed by scientific authority, has largely sup- planted the use of strong medicines In easing cold symptoms. Perhaps the easiest, most effective way yet discovered. But make sure you get genuine BAYER Aspina. 5%on 127A 2 FULL DOZEN 25¢ = Dangerous Play Men are apt to play with thei healths and their lives i with their clothes.—Temple. UESTION Do Luden’'s do more than relieve? RISWER Yes, their added alka- line factor helps build up your alkaline reserve. LUDEN’S 5° MENTHOL COUGH DROPS More Opportunities A wise man will make more opportunities than he finds.—Lord Beaconsfield. maxi )0 : this FEE Here is ng R Conditions Due to Siuggish Bowels Formidable Foe Formidable is that enemy that lies hid in a man's own breast — Pubilius Syrus.