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|^d 0 National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart Washington.—Some twenty-five or thirty newspaper correspondents privileged t h e other day to witness the start of a new stage were "He Ain't Coin to Fool Wid Em » » In the national drive for economic re it Is unfortunate there were covery. only those few persona able to witness that which I am convinced Is going down in history as an event worthy of recollection. It Is unfortunate thaï hie to see the more persons were una spectacle of Gen, Hugh S. Johnson, the recovery administrator. In that moment of determination, his eyes glaring, his Jaws set. It was decisive. The incident to which 1 refer was when General Johnson, at one of his regular conferences with newspaper correspondents, announced that the time was near, if, indeed. It had not already arrived "when somebody Is going to take one of those blue eagles off the çjodow house" because that business house failed to live up to its pledges In the code. "And," General Johnson added with all of the grim determination of the army officer that he was, happens, It Is going to be an economic death sentence. That outfit will be nearly through." He leveled a finger at the corre spondents that, under the atmosphere created by his earlier remarks, seemed for all the world to me like It might go off. There was no braggadocio. It was a positive declaration, this asser tion that some of those who promised to do their part would try to cheat. And thé added-remapfe that such « business house was economically sen tenced to death when their pet blue eagle Insignia was taken down was as sternly said as though It had been an actual sentence of death from the lips of a Jurist I repeat, it was im pressive I do not know bow effective this threat will be. No one does, because It never has been done in peace time In this country. But make no mistake about It: the individual who attempts to balk General Johnson is going to have both hands full. To employ a favorite exp r ession of a colored boy whom I know ; "He ain't goln' to fool wid 'em." of some business "when that ♦ « ♦ General Johnson's remarks on that occasion Illustrate better than ether words available to me the develop ments thus far in the great campaign to lift this country out of the economic depression. Heretofore, amPlt still con tinues, the effort was to get businesses into line, Into agreement to stand unit ed and work for the common good. Those agreements among the Individ ual businesses were, and are, agree ments with and promises to the Preal dent of the United States that each will make the necessary sacrifices, the required concessions, that a given re sult may be attained. Everyone hopes for better times. That Is the end sought, and the sighing of codes, In cluding the promises of Individuals who buy things to deal only where the blue eagle is displayed, was Just the preliminary work. Now, however, the national recovery administration has reached the point where the enterprise must either suc ceed or fail. There are to he no more soft words. The decisive moment has come. Geaeral Johnson's determina tion that "he ain't goin' to fool wid 'em," has placed the entire power of a sovereign nation behind that which has been done. This blue eagle insignia Is a power ful weapon. It may later fall Into dis repute, but. however that may be, the dis play of that poster now is having an enormous effect. For Instance, Gen eral Johnson's attention was called to the status of public utilities operating wholly within a state, a unit unto It self and not subject to the jurisdiction of the federal government. He re plied that Hie blue eagle knows state lines. "This blue eagle doesn't know any thing about Interstate or Intrastate commerce,'' he said, "If the recovery act falls to reach such corporations, the blue eagle will reach them." And so the stage Is set for the drive to encourage people to buy now and to buy only from those displaying the blue e agle. Let us look Into this program. The call to buy now represents a move to get people to let loose of money they have been holding back on account of uncertainty (if they have had such money) and thus to provide the dis tribution agencies such as retail stores ■with business and, of course, profit. If the retailer sells, he must buy from his source, which Is the wholesaler or the Jobber, and when they have dis posed of their stock they must seek replacements from the manufacturer. He, In turn. If he Is going to remain . In business, must manufacture replace ments, and thus the cycle has been set In motion. Rut there Is more to It than Just the proposition of moving goods along from producer to consumer, time that the consumer sets the cycle In motion by making n purchase, he adds theoretically at least to the proh ability of more Jobs for workers. He also adds to the possibility of a profit Powerful Weapon no Each for all of those handling the com modity. • There has not been a time In recent stocks of manufactured years that goods In warehouses of the country were as low as they are now. It is a condition known as hand-to-mouth One result of that condition buying. is that when a retailer, for example. sells a couple more suits of clothes or shoes or dresses, he Is out of those Unless he goes back wholesaler Immediately and sizes or styles, to the buys replacements, he cannot make further sales of those particular things. So it Is with the wholesaler, and the manufacturer has no great If he refills stocks piled up either, empty shelves, he has to put people to work to do It. When he hires work ers, the money they are paid Immedi ately Is spent because tens of tftou sands of them have been out of jobs and with no money to spend even for barest necessities. General Johnson's purpose, there fore, is twofold. He Is driving hard to get people to buy now If they have money with which to do It that the cycle of business may be set In motion full swing again and thus. If success ful, the plan will provide jobs for workers, profit for the dealers and manufacturers and markets for the producers of the raw materials. In pleading for consumers to buy only from establishments where the blue eagle of N, It. A la displayed, Gen eral Johnson seeks to cement the united effort for recovery and at the same time repay those who bave made the concessions necessary for such a move ment by turning the business to them. * • • With the destruction of cotton crop surplus under way In every cotton growing state, the Wheat Acreage agricultural ad Program Justment adminis tration has con centrated its attention on getting the wheat acreage program started, which, indeed. It has been In more than a pre liminary way. Previously, I reported that Secretary Wallace figured a wheat crop of not more than 400,000,000 bush els next year was all that would he necessary. Accordingly, withdrawing of thousands of acres from planting will he necessary."' Now, the adjustment administration has sent out orders to farm extension agents -wherever counties have them and has appointed temporary workers where no county agents exist, and these people are laying the ground work for wheat farmers to sign con tracts with their government. The contracts will provide f%r withholding of acreage and the farmers will be paid for giving up that acreage through the funds obtained by the processing tax on wheat as It Is milled into flour. Something like 1,100 agents, either permanent county agents or temporary appointees by the Department of Ag riculture. are at work in twenty-three states. They are taking tin* Initiative lu organizing the farmers, explaining to them what the purposes of the acre age reduction program are and how they will be compensated by joining in the plan. * ♦ • Chester C. Davis, director of the, wheat production division In the agri culture adjustment administration, en tertains ' no doubt at all about the ul timate success of the program. Nor does Dr, M. L. Wilson, of the same group, who has been in close touch with actual wheat farmers. They are agreed that It will go over Just as rap idly as the farmers can have the thing explained to them. In the meantime, however, the mill ers of wheat are suffering, and the De partment of Agriculture Is playing tag with the grain exchanges and boards of trade. The millers obviously are kicking about the burdensome process ing tax which they say Is difficult to pass on to the consumers fully. The boards of trade and the Department of Agriculture are snarling and biting at each other over a different matter, but settlement of their differences will affect the results of the acreage re duction campaign. So the whole thing constitutes one picture. The grain exchanges have been criti cized without end by Secretary Wal lace and the others In positions of re sponsibility on the farm problem. Secretary Wallace has told the grain dealers they have to come under a code, like other businesses, and they have submitted a code for his consid eration which he does not like at all The secretary wants to keep the "little fellows" opt of the grain speculation He feels they have no business there and that their marginal trading has been the cause of some of the violent llnctuntlons In prices because they can not always put up more money If the price falls out from under them. The code submitted by the exchanges leaves more power In the hands of the exchange governing boards than Mr Wallace wants to leave there, and falls also to reduce the speculative factors the secretary thinks necessary. So the situation Is tense. It Is proper to say, I believe, that restric tions already, thrown around grain trading have virtually abolished con tract markets. Cl. l93S,'W«tern Newspeper Union. Success Is Assured Camping Out in Railway Coaches in England ajpa a gw" 1 1 BS 1 ' iiiiÉi mgf.. - * - & m ja v|. . . - , , ■ f&m S! t|;| ÉS I ÜX: I NGL1SH railway companies this summer have fitted out coaches as camping outfits and find they are pop ular and easily rented. Each coach accommodates six persons and bas two bedrooms, living room and kitchen with all utensils. The coach may be booked at a certain station and con veyed to the camping site at moderate cost. E MM tIÄ ■ I I . v m. c HILDREN'S STORY —By. THORNTON W. BURGESS JERRY FOLLOWS HIS OLD PLAN P ETER RABBIT artd Booty the Owl were not the only/ones Interested U the building of Jerlry Muskrat's new house. Oh, my, no. | Every one around the Smiling Pool wW Intereste was very much the safne-aa-R'' be If a new house were being built near where you live You know how Interested In that house every single neighbor would be. Just so at the Smiling Pool there was a great deal of Interest In what Jerry was doing. Grandfather Frog was Interested. Billy Mink and Little Joe Otter were Interested. Redwing the Blackbird was Interested. Spotty It would ?//// ft m » 1 ,ul Ml * ' ïnH® _5 2 \ iß i / ; t Vi Spotty the Turtle Wat Interested. the Turtle was Interested, You see It gave them something to think about and talk about and criticize. So they spent a great deal of time watching Jerry work, and giving him advice which he didn't ask for and didn't heed. "Chng-a-rum 1" exclaimed Grandfa ther Frog abruptly from the big green lllypad on which he was sitting. "Chug-a-rum ! 1 suppose, Jerry Musk rat, you will build a finer house than yop had before." "I hope It will be a little better," re plied Jerry modestly. "I ought to he able to build It a little better after what I learned In building the first one. Anyway It will be safer, because It will not be In danger of being swept away If there should be a fiood next spring. I will make It a little larger than the old one and the foundations will be broader." *T suppose that means that you will have more rooms In it," said Grand father Frog, rolling his big goggly eyes so as to stare at Jerry, "More room but not more rooms,' replied Jerry. "I shall follow the same plan as the old one was built on." "Huh!" exclaimed Grandfather Frog "Huh! I should think that while you are about It you would try to Improve on that old plan and have something really new. I would if I were foolish enough to waste a lot of good time In B > 7v> & "Those of us that always envied the Ilfs of a king," «ays pounding Priscilla, "realize now that It is easier for a »five to keep his job." ©. 1933. Dell Syndicat«. — JTNU Bm-tIc«. hard work building a house. I'm thankful I don't have need of a house, but If I did and had to build a new one I certainly would try to make 11 enough different from the old one to know that I really had a new one, What'a your Idea In making It Just like the old one?" "As I've already told you, It won't be Just like ihe old one; It will be big ger and better," replied Jerry with .-Considerable dignity. "It will simply be on the same plan as the old one be cause that plan Just exactly suits me, Just as It suited my father and my grandfather and great-grandfather and my—" "Hold on!" exclaimed Grandfather Frog hastily. "You don't need to go back In your family history to the days when the world was young; 1 know all about It. Some people are set In their ways. They certainly are set Ip their ways. Because yom grand fafhcr-a-thousand-tlmes-removed did a certain thing In a certain way Is no reason that you should do that same thing in exactly that same way.** "Ho!" cried Jerry Muskrat "Ho! That Is queer talk from you. Grand father Frog I That certainly I» queer talk from you, who are living today Just as your grandfathers way hack in the beginning Of things lived. 1 hope I have sense enough to know that when I have a thing which exactly suits me It would be worse than fool ish to try to change It Here comes Redtai) the Hawk!" "Chug-a-mm !" exclaimed Grandfa ther Frog and dived headlong Into the Smiling Pool. Jerry grinned and then quietly sank from sight himself. ©. 1933. by T. W, Buntes«— WNU Service. Graphic Golf] TOrtES VAPlEff UOPT OP Club poo. \ CWlP \SMcns m 08 TVTZÀ MORE distance, more PITCH AND ROLL 1THIN a short distance of the pin and where the hole lies well back from the edge of the green, Bob by Jones generally pitches short, a! lowing the ball to roll the rest of the The ball Is pitched sufficiently, W way. however, to allow It to land on The putting green Itself. No chance Is tak in an Irregularity of the ground spoiling the shot ; which might occur If the ball came down on the fairway For this reason Jones Increases en first the loft of his club In ratio to the hall's di stance from the green. Near LShle Iron can the putting surfin be used, the ball pitched'to' the edge and plenty of roll added. Further back a more lofted club is required to send the ball In an arc that will be sure to reach the vicinity of the green and stop near the cup. Thus the mashte, mashle niblick and niblick can be used at time for this play. The shot 1» generally straightforward without a sign of backapln. ©. 1933, Bell Syndlwt«,—WNU Servie«. SANDWICHES - 1 TASTY HIS la the season tor the sandwich. The following will be helpful In preparing your lunch baskets or sand wlches for the porch or garden par ties; T Emergency Sandwich. Put six sweet pickles through the food chopper, also five hard-cooked eggs. Cream two tablespoonfuls of pea nut butter with one of prepared mus tard and add the pickle and eggs with salt and pepper to taste. Add a dash of vinegar to thin the mixture and a Frock of Satin i m * i Y LI Li i. ' Ü One oi the most attractive ol the season's fashion offerings is this new draped satin frock and turban. The frock makes nice use of faggoting to accent Its lines. bit of paprika for added seasoning. Spread on whole wheat or rye bread. Sardine Sandwich. Take one cupful of minced sardines, one-half cupful of S tuffed olives chopped, one teaspoonful of scraped onion, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, one tablespoonful of lemon Juice and three tablespoonfuls of cream. Mix and spread on buttered brown bread. Lobster and Celery Sandwich. Mince fine the meat of a fresh boiled lobster. Moisten with heavy mayon naise, add a dash of cayenne and two teaspoonfuls of minced wnlte celery leaves. Spread on rounds of bread and decorate with a stuffed olive. These are served open, or they may be covered with another slice of bread and use the stuffed olives minced. Pineapple and Tuna,Fish Sandwich. Take one can of tuna, drain and flake, add salt and pepper and two Cablespoonfuls of chopped pickle, add french dressing to soften and then add three-fourths of a cupful of drained crushed pineapple. Spread on but tered bread. Salmon with lemon Juice mixed to a paste and spread on bread, and flaked salmon with a good boiled salad dressing spread on buttered rye bread make most satisfying sandwiches, by WpFtern Newspaper Union. Increases Speed of Motorboats 1 ! rp-Äf.-- - ^ rM ... : » mm >■ .>■ s È w ■ ' - ,; v y i -O as , x : I i •t ; , • pu? il V> ÉL-fc-ris • v. m 8 ■ • < f , i ^ J K. uSKAU L. 1TETJENS, Westinghouse research engineer, has made public an Invention of his which, he claims, will double the speed of small motor boats. It consists of thin steel vanes which are set beneath the boat and on the motor. When the boat reaches Its maximum speed these vanes raise It entirely nut of the water. D 1 SHALL CHOOSE MY COMPANY By DOUQLA8 MALLOCH T HE pa«t 1» both oor friend and foe. And we shall say If more or lésa It shall be so. Forgetfulness la not our friend If we forego The memory of things that bless, Nor memory If we shall know But recollections that distress. The wise will treat them as they do The ones they meet upon the way : The faithful few Of yesterday Shall be their comrades all life through. Forgotten strangers those who say The thing unkind, or prove untrue. Nor on our burdens burdens lay. Yes, I shall say to memory, If It shall bless the way I wend, "Abide with me Until the end, For such shall my companions be, My Journey share, my steps attend, For I shall choose my company. Forget the foe, recall the friend." ©, Itll, OoUKlaa Malloch.—WND Servie«. « KONERS rrr MS, \ £ ♦ l Julius Caesar was murdered by the Ides of March. As he was dying he looked up and said, "You two brutes!" BONERS are actual humoroua tid-bita found in examination pa pers, essays, etc., by teachers. The king of England has little po litical power. In fact, he Is Just the blockhead of the government * • Centipedes are Insects that are found by the hundreds while milli pedes are found by the millions. Oceanlca is that continent which contains no land. • • Caveat Emptor, Caviar for the emperor^ t • • The digestive Juices are the bile and the sarcastic Juice. * * • The three principal religions ot China are Buddhism, Brahmanism and Idle worship. • • • The name of America Is anonymous with Liberty. ©, 1933. Bell Syndicate.-—WNU Servie». IV KTJTciT" COUNTRV people or Ot -0 TIMES t. New York Gty, now the second largest city in the world had a population in tha year 1623 of thirty families of Dutch Colonist* from Holland- It was then a small trading-post called New Amsterdam, so named after the principal city of Holland. ©. by McClure Newspaper Syndicat«. WNU Servie«