The Bowie Booster (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1936 Page: 2 of 8
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'mn&ur
\BRISBANE\
THIS WEEK
By Edward-W.Piqkard
W«rem Newspaper l/nion
Two New Deal lipseta
25,000 %it toll Progs
In School.Until 22.'
Rourtil Trips to Europe,,
lilt; news from the Supremo Court
Guffey Coal Act Is
Declared Invalid
glX members of the Supreme court
of the United States ruled that the
Guffey net to control the bituminous
cent Industry Is Invalid, and another
of the New Deal ex-
periments (toes Into
the discard. , TtylS Is
(he act which I’resi-
dent Roosevelt urged
I
I'.-
Sen. Guffey
i coitgress to pass not-
; "withstanding ' doubts
of Its constitutionality,
"however reasonahle."
Five- Justices—■Ko+Il-
erlamt, «a Hotter, Van
Devon lea, MoReyriblds,
and Roberts — joined
In the majority opin-
ion yvhleli Invalidat'd the whole act.
Justices Curdozo, Bfitndeis, and Stone
joined 111 a dissenting opinion In which
they upheld the act. Chief Justice''
Hughes held in a separate opinion that
the net was conslitiiflortaU..with re-
spect to the maflci'tlng. provisions hut
unconstitutional wltli respect to the
labor regain I Unis.
The court In the majority opinion
held that there is no authority To the
Constitution for the control of the coal
Industry attempted,In the Guffey act.
The act was nut valid either under
the commerce clause or the welfare
clause.Power was unlawfully delegated
to set up a coal code similar to ,lho
Codes of the Invalidated Nit A and the
rcgdlallons establishing working hours
of miners were a violation-liftin'' fifth
amendment prohibiting the taking of
property without due process of taw.
Mining, the court declared, Is a local
Industry, the state jurisdiction whereof
Olft federal government has no iiiill,,,r.
lty fiTinvade. ",
Cf>tigress provided iluit If one part
of the act wore held uncbiisUInlimnel
other parts should not. he nlVected. tint
the majority declthed to accept that
■ arrangement, riilingjluit the price fix-
ing provisions were Inextricably Inter,
. woven with the labor regulation's.’
Senator Guffey, author of lfie act,-
declined to comment on the opJljiou,
hut It was said he was preparing a
suhstlfdte measure.
Jotvn T.t-WIS/ preshl-.it of tlie Unit-
ed Mine Workers, said that "It (s a
sad commentary hpon our form of
■ government when-every,decision of the
Supreme court seems designed to fat-
ten capital and'starve und destroy
labor.”
ably will be pK-mler-of France soon,
but. there was no Indication tlpit either
one wiih plahnlng to ntnke a payment..
Ilium tolil the American club in Paris
lib hoped the war debt "mteuhderstund-
Ing" might lie cleared tip, lint lie was
Jest trying to-be piensimt tii the people
of bo!h America and Fruricp without
spending liny moupy.
Of course the debtor nations would
like to Inive the Issue cleared up^Jfir
subject lie the restrictions of- the John-
son ai t which makes It unlawful for
nn.v person In the United.SliTles to pur-
. chase ".r sell the .honds,..secnrlticK or
oilier i ill 11 gr:i linns of any foreign gov-
ernment ur:io..iaaJ;e any hums In stir'll
a government while Hint government
Is In default lu.payuienl o.f Its obligu-
tlotis to the i’lilted. States;
* 'T
Prcsjffent of Bolivia Is
Compelled to Resign
JOSE LUIS TEJADA SOItyJ.
•I. forced to'resign the itresfifimc;
Hollvlu by n Jun-tn of ai uiy-ojtieers und
SoCliilists who staged u bloodless coup
d’etat In l.a Puz. Pol. .Gernflbi Itysi-h,
acting chief of the general army staff,
leader of the coup,/will tie at the head
the United States and the UnTlFIT J+'m.,nch Trill Ic PlU't
State Court of Ap- '
peals for the Dis-
trict of Columbia.
Two "far-reaching
( experiments” off
the "Roosevelt New
Deal are declared
unconstitutional
‘•The Supreme
court la a sweep-
ing decision killed
the Guffey coal
Common People
for Roosevelt
New League Form sd-
to Further F.
Social Program;
i
w
fiy. EARL GODWIN
ASIIINGTON; — There. - Is a
newly organized outfit with a
good name. . . "The Good
Neighbor League’’ . . , heail-
an efstvVhjle Republican, Dr.
act; the District of
fc'olmiWii Court of
Appeals held,, the
Itesettlement Ad-
Ttithlstt’iviloti 'Hitler
L’rufasiio'- ’Tugwidl
violates the fundamental law of the
land." . * ’
A rlliiir lli'lNliuni*
The decisions, set forth that “these
major experiments In socialization in-
volve iirrtirwfri]' delegation of powers
vested la cbhgreks arid violation by the
federal government of the right's of the
states,” tin- Washington dispatch avers.
The ■ resettlement decision affected
only tlint- part of the relief activities
Under Professor Tugvvell-'s administra-
tion, leaving undecided the remainder
of the $d,sou,000,0011 voted to ttie 1‘resl-
»f the government until Cut. David i <k'nt last year.
T- I ’ AT../.I. ..P «i.n
I ori», liemof tlw*4\vnr with rurjigun.v,
Much of the resettlement tiioney-.has
returns' froiii tlie Chaeo, when Toro will. *>een sl>ent lin,i "lui'h more allocated,'
be Histalled as. president.
Til!.’ IinmT-rH.'rte ntijeelln- uf Lilt- new*
adininkstration. was complete -settle-
ment of a general strike whie|i the offi-
cersasserted was imperiling the ootitv-
try’s- economic 'stability. The‘labor
federation iialekly suspended the strike-
movement, expressing- sulidafl’ty with
the army'Socialist colli).
cancellation of whleli will rinse prob-
lems. ..
A t Angels . .Camp,: ,Calif.,. 2.1,000. per-
sons watched the annual Calaveras
county frog-jumping contest and saw-
■‘‘Can’t Take It” cover a distance of 12
feet, .’! Indies in three hops. Another
frog, raised on the ranch.of tlie late
ed by
Stanley High, a "rather famed pub-
licist who believes that Roosevelt's
ptd-ioy of loosening the tig-lit social;
Mructnre is the only iking that--wl.lt
save this country from a collapse, in
tlils-'leftgue, which, lias a met offiijyien
TANGLE PREDICTED
Administration leadership managed
to choke hack the demand for a Imv-
lnterest means of paying olT. farm
mortgages, -When tlie house voted dpvvri.
the Frazicr-Lcnikc fal-m yiiortgui.-e "bill.
Hut while ccmerTviitTsm'WotiVi momen-
tary .victory; I look for the \d>o(I,- to
sla>t a tremendous tangle UiYoniiiig
events . S—1 particularly In pMitlrs.
Wouldn't surprise me In .the least if
it Is the tiu^-il-olT for a grand assault
by Father Coughlin and other radicals
who have*a trememtous'Tollowing fob
their’theory that tlie way to salvation
Is .through a currency so ’completely
diluted that it will wash the banks and
bankers all away.. .
'The proposal 'that tire federal govern-
ment should pay off farm mortgages
with three billions of new money, and
then reimburse ftseif by very small
annual payments from farmers at a
ra+e—of ntmitf ru per ,-V-iir'
’’IMPROVED'
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY 8
Dchool Lesson
•By REV. P. B. l-'ITZWATER. IX D..
ik-niTii’f uf faculty, MoodyJBlble
In si lime of Chicago. ’
©Western Newspaper Union
Lesson £or May 31
the last supper
Italy Releases-Alleged
Leader in King's Killing
^lt. ANTON" PAVELIC, alleged lend.-
Will Rogers; was second, with .12^feet
' Tugwell’s Housing Hit
hw Court Decision
' |' 11R resettlement administration
■1 headed try Rexford Guy Tugwell
’ was declared hy tlie District of Co-
lumbla court of apiienls to lie ‘'clear-
ly' unconstitutional delegation of pow-
er," In a case Involving a model com-
munity "project th Somerset county.
New Jersey.
Going beyond .he Issue before them,
the justices of the' Appeals court
called the entire -relief, .appropriation^,
bet of llktfl Intivquestlon. The act’ vi ns
Invalid unr1 hence It A was Invalid, ac
cording to the court. Legully, however,
none of the rest of the net will be
affeeted by the decision because the
other multitudinous activities'-of-the
New Deal under the apufoprlntlon
were not before ’the court.
Solicitor Gen. Stanley Iteed s.aUl kft
, ajjpeal would be taken to the ^supreme
jtuurt at once. .
er of Uslnslil, the Uroatiati ter-
rorist orgaidzationvaud ireeusi’d as one
of I lie "nmsjer ml mis’’ill I heassussinulion
of King Alexander of
,,l agoslavla In Mar-
seilles,' has been, set
free by the Italian
• authorities,' - Released
with hint was Ids lieu-
tenant, Kugene Kvater-
nlk. The two were,ar-
rested at Turin In Oc-
tober, iiki-i, soon attor
IhO-WUrder of Alexan-
der, but the French au-
thorities Who were
working' on the ease
were never’ permit-
ted to question, them and an itaHnff
tribunal refused the request iff tlie
French government for "their extradk
tlon to Frunee for trial. ________
I 2 inches.
• Twenty-five tlioirsand huma’n beings
watelied some frogs hiij); not half ns
; many - would have .‘gathered ,to ...liear
i Kinstein lecture on relathity. "
It is sui^esTi'd that, every American
he cmnpelled to go to -school until
twenty-two years,'of age to cut diH^n-
the competition for jobs.
might be siinplei- to keep every-
Dr. Pavelic
body in {school until sixty and then
give Cveryliody a pension of $200 a
month. What could he simpler than
that?’ , .....
. The average spnslble American starts
making .a living long before he is twen-
ty-two and would do well to continue
on that basis.
L. ' ' . - • “
General Is the New '
Premier of Poland
.jpoi.AND feels that another 'Faro-
Uncle $am Stands by
"Nln.e Power Pact
XTF,\VS that Japan was greatly on
larging her force In North Ctpim
led tlie State department "ttvWiisliiiig-
fon to announce that-Mho-position of
the United ’States Is the-same fiT’tlint
outlined last December by secretaio.
pean war Is more- than likely to
-break out soon, •mil she .intends to lie
ready to tali^pRTt In tYf? Vonllii;t. A
new government has been Installed with
.Ucrr.v VpJi<*inn.. ^lawdJeiSkMkotyskj «s
pre mier, and." minister o-f the Interior.
Tlie general took file, oath ofjitlice wear.--,
lug Ids uniform, wiileli was taken ns
symbolic o' the government’s program.
Poland will lie adequately arntext. * Op-
position leaders are warned that they
will lie 'prbseVuted. as they wereTy
Pilamlalil after M’lO.
Sir Ihihert. WilkTiis, who hjis flown
In the Arctic, Antarctic and other queer
regions by plane,-crossed the, Atlantic
by dirigible recently, , .
" Says sir Hubert: ■ ,
“From nlmost anywhere In the
United States, a business man could'
spend Wednesday and Thursday going
about- bis business, catch tjie dirigible
by airplane Thursday midnight,, spend
two business, days In Europe and be at
Ids desk flic - early -part of the next
week." tAi -, ,
"I'rof.'-'IlkyWOfftl Mole.v says It'-wtrs-
•eaSier for Mussolini to conquer "muddy
thinking” In the League .of Nations
than It will be To "“prevail over the
mud of Ethiopia in months, to 'come."
New York police arrested a mUWle-
_Rnle complex, there a:e,-thouJmful
people active in clmrolr v. ork, .labor br-
goni/.aUoiv work, relief work, editorial
work; ete:- -They arW-hot- politichrns by
ady means, but they will undoubtedly
turn out to have a vyist political inllu-
■enee by $trdssing the tyct that Jtoose-
vell’s policies pre strongly endorsed by
the great mass' of Jifiirl imitate folks far
down In the social scale.
You’ll find In tile Good Neighbor
-league such men as CM, ratrlck II. Cal-
lahan, the Louisville industrialist who
long ago began sharing the wealth of
Ids business with his workers. You'll
find Fannie llurst tlie iiiithor, A. I’.
Gionini, financier and chairman of
the liank -of;America ; 'Clifford tyregory,
f/ijllor of the I'niirio Farmer; Dr.
James William Crabtree, Avho tibads a
world-wide educational association—
I wish/ -there were room to list
JtT5 IFiMefs of lids iTifpimring of
people of indepehTTehf thdi'igiit and lib-
ertrl -TCtldencles who know that ubless
someone interprets events and politic^
the reactionaries will ;:o completely
nils-'statc the (aso as to fool millions
of. people. The-'loiiguo , represents a
definite movement/to tioln Roosevelt do
what'he wants to do iitidqri l.lie promise
"Io' make America a fmttertyVliice in
which.to live.” . .
It is a skip at the Du Fonts and
tlu'ir Liberty I.Cjigue, e.mi will give
tlult, munitions gyniipT a ioh to think
nhoiff. ’ It comes along-about the same'
time that a young follow .with a lot of
vision named Paid" Dost forms a. na-
tion-wide "‘rirgii'nizidion .headed -fip as-
Uio Rooge.volt First Voto'rSL*ah Outfit
designed to reach young rieri and women
who vote for the first-time next fall.
■It is not a Democratic outfit-—just an
outfit l*i honor of the fact tlint Roose-
velt has touched the hearts and minds
of young people who have heard a lot'
of, promises but have seen no perform-
ance except from F. D. It. Especially
■ interested, are thhse Roosevelt First
Voters In the policy of providing oppor-
tunities for young men and young
women.
Then conies Labor’s Non-Partisan
league, which in my opinion is the rrtbst
striking thing that lias occurred in
polities recently.- This is an organiza-
tion of labor union leaders and their
followers to re-elect Roosevelt, whom
they describe ns the one man to carry
on their fight for ’tf'fair wage at fair
working conditions. j-Tlie , labor inhn
in this league issue statements dig-lur-
ing themselves violently tin apposition
to the Llber.ty; Teague aipj the Nntlohnl
AsS<tfJp.Ufi»T-Pf Manufacturers and nil
so-called southern "grass roots” orgnni-
znttons opposed to , Roosevelt. ., Th'e.v'
' knovyn .that, . these southern p.ursts of
antl'-Rooseveitism are fTnanced here In
Washlngtbfl by the Liberty lea
some .close affiliation.
Heading Labor's.Nurulla!
a year Is
attractive enough to any -fanner with
a mortgage; ami had enough’support
lo get 1-l'J votes in tlie house an the
face of- .strong administration opposi-
tion. •
Hut the method is looked on hy so
nmny leaders as dangerously ,inllatioii-
ary-tlmt for nil intents und purposes
it'is too radical n, mea.-illfe'-'to get to
the statute'liooks until.there is a much-'
more radical foiLowjng iu both lumses
■of Ciingress. The strongest attack-on
tlie measure came from organized la-
bor, which feels the financing of the
shortage payments h.v throe billions of
new money (to be either borrowed or
printed), would dilute currency to a
state where prices would sky-rocket
and wages remain - static.- - Thai idea
killed the bilL-rUind that alone.. Scores
of men who are sympathetic \tyth tlie
farm problem voted against'tlie Frn-
zler-I.enike measure, on the ground
that this dlHited money, jypii 1 il lie ruin-
ous .to everybody—explaining,that the
farm-mortgage problem and other
rurnj economic tangles , would lie
LESSON TEXT—-Luke S2r7-23. _
' GOLDEN TEXT—'rills do in remem-
brance of me.—I,atke 22:19. . /
PRIMARY TOPIC—Tit* Supper Jx;sus
Gave His Friends. 1
JUNIOR TOPIC—The I.ord s Supper.'
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR
TOPIC—What ttfe Lord's Supper M-eans
YOUNG PEOPLE AND A.PPT.T
TOPIC_What the Lord's Supper Meant
to JeSus.'
The last meal that Jesus ate with,
tils disciples was the Passover,JJie me-
morial 'of the' nations! (ieliverance
which pointed to the supreme deliver-
ance to be .effected by Cliri'st on the
"cross' of Calvary." l« ctmireKturr wttti
this Passover, tlie feast oF the new
rnvemmt was InstitutefV This feast
nisi) has a doulde import. It 4ooks
"backward to tlie 'great deliverance
wrought through Christ's atoning death,
anil forward to the even greater de-
liverance whlfh lie shall accomplish
at ills second coming (1 Cor. 11:2(5).
I. The Last Passover (vv. 7-18).
1. The Passover prepared (vv. 7-12).
a. As the time had arrived for the
killing of tlie Passover, Jesus directed
Peter and John to make ready for it
(v. 8).
b. The disciples inquired (v. 0) where -
they should prepare the Passover.
Doubtless, they were eager to he of
service lo I heir .Masler and Lord.__________
c. Jesus gave strange directions (vv,
10-12), that they should go Into the
city, where they
would find .it man
straightened by a price, reform and 1 hearing a pitcher*of water. Tlie cus-
better business, rather than hy green-
back money.
lfut^agrarian move’lnonts in the past
htive never died out as the result! of a
first dpj'eat. I-look for this Frazier;'
tom wgs for women to carry the water.
This unusual occurrence woiilil make U
yie easier fop them to recognize tlie
man of whom they would ask, "Where
is the guest ctyjnilier where I shall eat
I,oniice movement trC*iweep.tlie Middle ' the Passover wiYtV'frfy"d>seipJ.es?”
!'Vcst arid Northwest. Father Cough- | d. The disciples gave^unquestioning
lin and his Union for Social "Justice..! -ot/odioiice ■ (.v. 12), not permitting the
will become more Important than ever,
from the Stundpolnt of the inakeoip
of .the next congress. Scores of. good
fellows .were put the spot byv the
vote- frt ’thc house; aiuf many members
vviy have to fight-for nieir lives on ac-
count of their position in tlyii vote. T
also look for a s-trohg oji/rnTta'-proinlsaK
A COMING LEADER
Representative L.einke of North Da-
kota is a coining radical, lender, lie
unusual instructions to raise the ques-
tion of sanity or reasonableness. Jesus,
because lie was omniscient, 1'new’ just
how the mutter would turn otit, and the
disciples found It even so.
2. The Passover eaten (vv. 1U18).
• a. -The, historic group aromaf that
table (v. 14j" was composed of Jesus,
a'nd the Twelve, the apostli's-
■ b. iTesos’ jvords to tlie .disciples, (vv.
75-18). • TT. ’ • *TL
(1) “1 have desired to oat fills Kjf®-
/15).
/ '1 .
was the,onl}^ Republican -to get a hill ■ over with you before I suffer” (v/15).
of any consequence through congress | ue deshed to show them the meaning
ho first hulf of thic nilmrnlctr'itinn • 1 u.„ _____ ....•____ ,..i,i..l, 1,«v nvno
rty leagiie or out
Y'-1"*
IrtlsnVi tengne ' Inst
aged woman begglng'near a church’and’
"a,-filin' murm'-V'-Tv "' sir..- ivAvv. „Y,oPa 1 is Ala.l- George I'(. Berry,-a- printing
illlll aillrmliig its support of ttie 'nine
power inlet that guarantees china's tdr-
rltorlnl Intqgrlty. At that time Mr. Hull
said tills country has a, binding fnitli
in tlie’ fiihdaiiiental prlt^'lph’s of , lis
traditional, policy. This government
adheres to "'the provisions of the
treaties to which It Is a party and
continues to bespeak respect by all nil-1
tli/hs for the provisions of treaties sol
eirinly entered Into for the purpose of
, faoilRajjjrig and regulating,- to reelp
rocnl nml coninion nil vantage, ‘
Ah the State department it was said
that the realllrniiitlon of support of the
nine power [inot does not mean' that
the administration will nlwindon its pol-
icy of ileollfdhg to take tin- initiative
in any nttempT to Curb iliiwin I'.nr
latlons of tlie pact. This was at.-
tempted by Henry L. Stlmson, secre-
tary of state in the Hoover adminis-
tration, with" tlie gain of nothing hut
Japanese 111 will.-
Jiipnul'se military sti'cngtli In North'
China-south.,-of tlie Great Wall Is now
sntd to he fully 15,000 men. There are
about so.ooo more In Munelmkuo and
still others in .inner Mongolia.
Borhli Is Loser irv the
Ohio Primaries
OKNATOR \V-ILT.IAM RORAH hanked J ' Tills should not' discourage
heavily on smaess in the. Ohio cllfll'ltv.’ Not evorv hid wonmn
Presidenli-ikt^ preference primary, hut
tlie Republicans of Unit state turned
him down decisively
In favor of their,"fa-
vorite son.” Itolowt A’
T-,l't ,iiti nf It;,. .Inti-
"acting stmgel.V.;' She wiife .men’s
shoes, live dresses, fii-io over the other,
and carried bantc hooks showing de-
posits of $25,000,
This stioiild not discourage wise
.charity.’ Not every bid woman, lrqg-
ging, has four extra dresses and $25,-
ltut It might well disco’ll rage
thoughtless, liitliscrhntnqfe giving,
vvhicli encourages professional beggary
and causes young beggars to gl'Uilililtri
War Debts Will Be
Defaulted Again
XTEITHER Great Britain nnr Franco
-xx has any Intention of paying the
.Installments on the Amerlciin war
djht duSlJiUIC Jo- Ami almost certain-
ly all the other debtor nations except
.Linhind will, follow the-example of ,the';
two big ones and again default. Brit-
ish Foreign Minister Eden talked about
the (debts with Leon, Blum, who prob ,
Frewiiten-t Taft. Hf the
5‘i .-delegates to till*
CtfR elaitil cun vent ion,
Hoiali cnpliircd only
live, the olfkers, In-
cluding fhe ddegafes
. at large, hd/ig Tuft
incn. The winning deb
(■gallon will he vir-
tually uaplodgoil, be- Senator Botah
cause It will vole for Tal’t only on the
first luillot. Mr, Borah did Hot take
tliis detent calmly, lie gave out a state-
ment In Washington accusing the Re-,
publican organization lenders of nui-
Idpiilallng (he votes, of cotdred citizens
aguinst liini hy promising the passage
of federal 'anti-lynching . legTslntiun -
wtilvh lie has opposed ns uncoiiktitil- ;
I tlonal. -•■* , ’.
Ohio' DeniocnUs polled ahojit 500,00(1
votes i,u the priipnr.v, nearly 100,000
nidre than the Republicans, and they
expressed their prefereifcc for Mr.
Roosevelt over Col. , Henry' Breckcn-
rldge to the time of U! to l. They also
renominated Gov. -Martin I„ Dnvey,
who will lie-opposed hy .lolin.W. Brlck-
cr, RepuhllCnii; in Nuvtuuher,
About twenty of'Pennsylvunfn’s dele-
gation to tlie 11am,hllcnn convention
tv ere pledged to support the popular
choice of. tlie state, which turned out
to be- Mr. Borah, no 'other name being
officially entered at the. April 28 pri-
mary, The delegutiod. which Is uriln-
structed, has now voted that those
■ .embers must keep their pledge pn ttje
(list baljot or until it becomes man I- '
fiBtlylmiKiBBlhle for their choice to
win. This notion was taken on motion
of former Senator David A. Reed.
Following an old Roman cusjqm,
Mussolini Is inking a of the
Fllfiopians ihut rcinaln. The total
number is tietwei'p six nml fourteen
miHions,- Exact t-ig|ire$ are‘wa'iited.
The ahlc-hnilied wjll-iie put to work,
pjovvs,. spades and sljpvoks supplied h.v
Mussolini, with Italians' telling -The
FtlitinfilllflS) vvlieVe. ank whitT ”ttf—tlij».
That need -not, hoi-rify, ifc-, for ills what
we have hceiwloing ill this country for
n long time. It will tie \>ettcr (or tlie
Ethiopians thagJ&UItng aiikl selling each
other Into slavery., --' \
■ -_u- A - ■ :
Ainui'leaiis* ask three ipicstlons:
“Wliat ts the" news'; Who won the
game? Have yoit heard the story
about —1", For that rea'soiV IhoTsuc'
ccssfiil newspaper pays attention' Ju-sl
in tlie news', told accurately and vivid
ly; then it concentrates on sport, then
on humor. Such dry tilings as'opin
ions, editorials, hook’s, In the rguj,. Fic-
tion ought to he number four, but good
fiction is scarce and the other kind not
worth printing,' -
-e
Anti-religious hatred persists in
Spain. While Pope I’hiS in Romo wee
press unJon man; Juliti Levvts, United
Mlije. Workers’ chief- (and I ttiliik file
mpst- (hiring union lender in America)
anil Sidney Hillman, Garment ^Workers'
head. . . They- have a well-knit
army of tens of thousands all ready to
go. . They have. 4,000 experi'ehced 'filtit-
form men and women speakers and
campaigners and organizers.
SUGAR COAT G. O. P. .MEET
•addressing representatives of Catholic,
newspapers, deploring Communism and
die Hltlep attitude toward the Catholic
church and the Catholic press, a Span-
Isli mob iti Viticheift wis Bkitnlhg two
I'athpllc churches, beunttful monuments-
of early-days. Former tnditTcrence to
religion has turned tQ actual hatred Iq
many countries; and In those that ri'ere
most deeply religious. •
e-KIpf Ftmures S/nStcat*. la*.
- WNU Servlc*. -
national convention at Cleveland' so
that It will have an lip-to date stream-
liried, s’liow, vvindo.vv appearance, are
being made by one of these Now York
super-pHhllclty men named Bruce Ba-r-
toh, whom the Alf Lumion element. In
the party’brings In to give life t.o tlie
unutterably (Will.'Campaign ris run by
Ohalritmn Fletcher of the G. O, P lieird-
qunrters here. The- fact that Barton
has been recruited ’to publicize -Alf
Lnndnn is '.Interesting 'in the light of
the fact 111; i L lie is the author of a hook
entitled "The Man -Xifhody Knows.”
However, iinyddrig, tlmt .anybody can
do , to luimnniza a political conven-
tion, now Jhat so many attend thorn via
the radio, is eonnnendable. Tlie Demo-
cratic chieftains have, been leading the'
way in publicity, atf'.-antr printed, for,
several ^years'. Now that tlie Repub-
lican's have decided to make imp'rove-
ments, the general public-can sit hack
"and have a swell time in a few days,
now, listening jto the Impassioned ora-
tors spell binding.
Otic interesting feature Barton is
"said to be,, planning 1$ gbod music,
planned to appeal to racial and Sec-
tfonal!groups. -Barton thinks tlmt If
Ids pipe organ nt Clfvehtml plays "Old
Kentucky - Home""that will carry the
Blue Grass state fiir Bandon or who-
ever G. O. P, picks. 1 trust they will
not mike 'the mistake that tlie At
Smith boys made when the Georgia
delegation nearly mobbed, the band for
playing."MarehUig 3’hroitsh Georgia" ;,.
that tifhe being the greatest Insult that
can be offered a Georgia Democrat,
as It Ip an echo^of tlip tlhlon army's
In the first half of this administration
that was the • Frazier-Lcmke morato-
rium bilj wliich granted time to farm-
ers Who had coriie up to the- limit on
mortgage payments. The 'Supreme
court held the bill unconstitutional. ’ ’
Lcmke Is-dlsted as a Republican, but
he ts not. Actually he is a Non-
partisan'Leaguer and when the league
captured and ate up the Republican
party In North Dakota he became thy
party’s state chairman. But no Re-
publican would elajm him as a brbttWrT
been use l.einke has stood for some/ of
the most, radical steps. As attorney
general of tits, state he drafted'laws
Which have been called revolutionary.
They include state hunks, state'Insur-
ance.'for, farmers against hall, state-
qwned flour mills, and other far reach;
frig changes. -.- .............
This radical farm leh'der Is not with-
out educational background, ire stad-
ia-two of the most-conservative
Institutions on- earth •/ one was Yale
University, and tlie otlier was George- ;
town 1 university*here in tlie national
capital. / I look to see flits gentleman 1
attempt soiue'great things for himself i
anil liis radical following- before tlie
next -fidministratlon is through. '
of the passion through which lie was
to go. Ije also' crjiveil thejr human
sympathy* as he passed through this
terrible orifeal.
(2) “I will not any more eat thereof
until-it be fulfilled in the kingdom of
God” (v. 1G). His death wris the anti;
typical fulfillment ,of the Passover
meal. He declared that this would be
the last, tRoe that they could share to-
gether this sacred ordinance before the
completion of his mediatorial work.
(2) *7’ake tills cup and' divide It
_mong,ourseKes” (vv. 17, 18). By the
tgken of. the .cup trie disciples were
partaking ritC the shed blood. This cup.
should be distinguished from the’ Cup
of the feast of the new covenant.
Ik The Feast of the New Covenant
(vv. 10, 20).
This feast -took place at the close off
the pascal supper.
1. The bread a syfnbo] of Christ's
body (v. 1!)).. As bread nourishes and
strengthens, onr bodies? so Christ is
food to our spiritual nature. Unless
the Jbqdy receives nourishment,_Jt de-
eays. Unless our souls feed upon
Christ, we shall perish. Christ's giving
the physical bread to his 'disciples sig-
nified the giving of himself to them.
2. The cop a symbol of Christ's blood
(v. 20) He sfljik "This cup is the new
testament-in rriy blood whleli was shed
•4......r1
TRADE PACT WITH FRANCE
JVe have been engaged in-* ten-year
triiilo war with France; ndw it's all. „. ,, , .
, . , ■ , , , for-you, indicating that each one innst
over. A new trade agreement has been ' ,, -"V, - , .
: I Iu npppnr tho nmnomnnt »
.......imm *.....h «!<
111. The Treachery of Judas (vv.
France while they Ih turn have a , bet-
ter market for their-goods (partteu-
Jarly vvineki'anil perfumes).. Our to-
bacco raisers ..see a great opportunity
to do, a lot rfiore btlsTness .with the
21-22).
L- The time bf-*lts manifestation (v.
21), It was wiiile they were eating tlie
last Passover, ttiat Jesus made an-
LO uiJ u»L niun? iMi.-MiiThsa ,»mi nitt •■■■ %■ «•
Frenii), and all told every one should i Wounc-sH.imU hf the betrayal.' Perhaps
be gratilredf " • : was In this manner offering
*' ‘ Judas an opportunity at this last mo-
K-,
There is no • sharp exciteniont about
a new trade agreement, hut world-wide
peneefui results are hornet th flow be-
cause tlie new-stjie treaties are n part
of tlie new era wherein the. seeds of
War are being eliminated, hy a neigli-
borly.,policy. Of- cimrse, Jhe.fe will he
criticism directed at certain items. Tt
will lie charged, IIS In tlie ease of. tlie
Canadian trade treaty, that "foreigJT-•
ers are allowed to rush'.in and steal
our markets; hut all told tlie French
and Canadian' treaties together are be-
ing praised hy some of;.the harshest op-
ponents of the Rqpseyelt administra-
tion At last we are getting to the
..point vyhere we?can tear down our
fences and do business with our world-
neighbors oil' the same human, com-
nrion sense basis as we do In our own
i. tpwn.
It has been proven that past wars
have sprung from the selfish, national-
istic tendencies off nations to build
high tariff barriers and bottle them-
selves up In a ferment of selfishness.
The new "policy Is like going down
town a’nd mingling with ybur fellows
and learning that a llttW give-anil take
in trading Is the way to ^jpake -friends
—and nt the sa'iiie. time So more busi-
ness, - You lose a little ojl one item hut
you make up on another. Best of all,
both sides remain friends.
© Weitern N*w*pap«r Union.
I
■V
t;:
ment to repent.
2 - 'rhpk.betraynl was by the deter-
ralnnte counsel of God (v. 22, cf. Acts
2:22). Nirttrlrig takes place by chance.
Evert the sinful acts of vyicked men
come'within tlie permissive providertce
of God. This.does nht, however, lessen
ffee guilt of sinners, for Jesus.said,
"Woe-iintox/Uie man hy wliom he -is
betrayed,’,’ - '
3. Tlie sorrowful, question (v. 22).
Tlmt.the disciples were not suspicions
of one another is evident from tlie per-
sonal natijre 'of tlie question they'
asked. "Lord, Is It I?" (Matt. -20:22).' '
Well may each bcifeverjask if he is in
any way betraying his Savior and
I.Ord. *
-wi-
True Happiness
Genuine happiness is the deli’crite
perfume of a holy life. The sanctified
soul exhales happiness as tho flowers
emit sweet odors. Heaven is a tropical
garden of conscious spirits and Its at- ’
mospliere Is laden with hnppipess us
the normal product of their purity.—.
D., C. KnowJes. fJf
- 'if- -
iL-
' ■ A Purpose in JLifa
Hhve a tiurpose In life, and* having ■
It, throw Inljo your work such strength
of m.Ind and muscle as God Bag given '
you,/'’ . ^ •
■M'VJ
. - ..
; -
• 1
■- ;-f-
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Murphy, Robert. The Bowie Booster (Bowie, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 12, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 28, 1936, newspaper, May 28, 1936; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth641935/m1/2/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bowie Public Library.