?;v :: '
ies
’
t
'*
1
-
-
*T ’
h
: " ■
m ■
resident H v
ge to Cong
•*c" ’’ - r- ’ -
* • As t -1*. d rer , the President laid
A
nt, bu
.
; i •
^ ■ ■
; Mil t.. t
*: v-. i.r.t.nl oa,:*ht t undertake big
build in/;* * :• ,tct t . vl • J b for men out f work end he asks
for
r *•
;
oy o pr
• :
i r;
r.
f
nuudret. fifty mil1 ion
dollarr f »r the purp ).- e.
"...
r' : .•■nt
: id tx.f t the ^ove:nment wes
fr cin .'•fic.it tr.i: ; • .• f one hundred eighty million dollars;
and he t 1 . Con-*: : . Ur t ririd economy would be needed to prevent
an ’ ncrf ■ • ' t -.x-
-- th* t i , ririd economy in everything except
:
'
■' :
tion,
'
■ ' - ' ■ ' ; ’ ':
. I m su
we are ell gl' to hear that
,
first battle of the season,
In the err te
t) ■
y d th i - • ^
H0C7Z] - :
It didn't amount t ^ much t. . en&t ri^l tkir'r,I;:he; *o.
;enator Kye, head of th- c -vu. It tee that investigates
cr.mrai • n expenditures, thinks tin t former secretary f labor
Dnvi;,
‘ lit Lo.i ■. uch money in getting; himself elected ar senator
from ' t-n;.cyivnni: . He thinks that Mr. Davir shcfiild not be
allcr
hc
to take hii seat in the Senate -- at least, he v/antec
the matter thin shed out - a ■■ tl. ;ou.;'ly,
out tht ;enate to ’>k vote ,s the subject tnd decided
't
henator Davis should e admitted. So Senator Nye was sat
upon. The vote ear SS to 27, -./nich leans the t the former Secretary
>f Labor is non full-fledged senator.
From Wesl inyton let’s fly dov/n to the e -t Indies.
.Mr: . Keith ' .iller
ll
re or tee to be flyinr north late
tod- y on her v. r y up from the ha haffla, There seams to be a
•,P
thrill in,* • t o rj in th ■ return to life of the Australian woroan
flyer* Because, in the eyes of the /orld she actually se-as to
te ratirning fro.i that re.‘•-ion .vhere- no tr veller ev r returns.
She was mirrinp for five dr-ys after havin ' taken ff from Havana
on - flight to : iami. The v.eather war bad and it looked as
th )u -h she war. just another one of the many aviators lost at sea,
ell, according to the United Press, th- trouble was
that her coranas r didn't v/ork rivht. She got off her courre and
had to 1- nd on the little i sir nc of Andros. .She was safe and
sound there, but Andres is one of those Bahama Islands which is
e.lroet as isolated as s ome of the itols of the South leas,
thottsends of mile- from no where. I know just what those islands
are, because I we s down that w y sumraer before last with Count
Lucknrr, the Sea Devil, in his big four-masted schooner, I've
already told you the story of ho Burt Masse, of Chic:go, who
was the host on that vOfege, took ur to Srn Salvador, where
Columbus landed. There we:
just •ne white man on that island
-nd
1 v •1.;
j
r i .just r o;Ut
f
ip. 3j«t-.(d Andros, Anyway,
I-.
t
: . Keith ; Lller s ju; t 1
l
yood
r
-
*
:
ut of the world down there,
until 5 U e • t •. fish in : be? t to . ail her over to K&- sau.
Ke- :r bile, her onoth-..- r ; n
her made new record
f ,r tr nr.-continent- 1 tliyht, 3h e Is bis.: Ruth Kip hoi s , a scoiety
girl. According to the United Pres:, she landed at Burbank,
California, after * record solo ho across th*. continent. The
record she broke, by the way, was e. t-bli her by none other than
this seise l.'n . Keith Tiller, v ho has jut t comeback to the world
fro*:, nowhere*
/ell, all these aviation records ' ncl trick flights are
interesting, but here's- scale thing e lot :;.o re solid in the way of
nutting ■ vl' ti -n n a re- 1 cnmmerciai basis.
11 *that rejected trail.---Atlantic air mail line which
is intended to shoot the me Hr ••cro. s the Atlnmtic in big high-
nov/ered lane; , v.ith the name regularity that the railroads haul
fro -r ils a cross the continent. There is real glamour and
romance in this - and the current Literary Digest contains a
fn -cineting st ry on the erob1em of flying the mails across the
It he;, be n announced thet the Trens-Atlantic service
.'ill be--in vitain e year. The Digest tells hos this is
ros ibis.
Two bi.-? concrnr are coTiblninr to fly the mails between
luro^e and .America; rne British and one American. They are the
Airways of Briteii , and 'he •,an-Am-?r5can Airways of this
co untry.
According to the Literery Digest, the denes wili be
flown by American avie tors from our shores to Bermuda wher.
British rilots -'.ill take the mails for the big jumn to Europe.
-
3
1TasoN
Air- lanes :n.ay be the latest thing but here’s a r-igeon
that 1;eked an airrlane.
At Lon - Isl-nd City, on the out skirt, of New York,
ichoel Cushing wa? kidnun ed ••.nd the kidnapners ha> e clever
soli me of .-'ettinr the money without, any rolice interference.
They informed Cushing's brother to go to a certain alace and he'd
find t o homin>; • ige -n in a eege. •■He was told to tie e five
hundred dollar bill to the lev of each rigeon and then release
the birds. Veil, the lice got into the little game. They
rot hold of the Mgeons and released one of them. The eons
were goinr to follow thr t nigeon end they had an si rt lane to do
It, They turned the "igeon loose says the International News
Service, started after It by eirnlane. Tne Pigeon climbed and
the nlsne followea. The Pigeon herded for home; the ^lane
right after it. Then that ^ifeon got into a flock of other
nigeons and ell that the airnlane could do was turn around
x
and
go home. So the police didn't get the kidnapnere after all.
There Li another stor*' in the day? dir re tehee that may
have a kldnatr inr i nele or r: it may not.
Tn h’ev; York two rather famous small boys are beck home
’• • t:. their "'arents today. And they are two of the most
extraordinary youngsters in the world. Both ere musical nrodigies
and -nf of the-, h* been one of the sensations of the oast year,
he is Hugiero lies', s t-n year old violin nrodigy,
L'uric critic? *o into ecstacy when they tell how marvelously he
' 1: y • * h ■ t. t i'fficult v. rks of the greate: t masters.
Also n big legal bat•le has been going on around this
small boy and his younger brother.
Thai r -rents rut th-m in the c*'re of a lady to develop
their talent, 7 hr t w-’s soite time ego • nd now the a rents want
them beck.
Thor have been a lot of lawyers on the job and plenty
of court • rocet dings. And x the future of the two boys was all
tangled ur.
But the Asr ocl* ted x resr tells us that last night Rugiero
and ytk his brother lc’ t at home; and today they are
2
a running
3ICCI -
2
end shouting and nXaylng with their other brothers and sisters;
bee? u. e the Ricci family i; a big one.
The 1-cy v.ho h- . be- n ti e ir guardian claims they were
kidnamved by their r? rents. The re rents say that the boys
merely ran r- r y from their guardian ' nd cone home.
: * o v. for a c O' ur 1
:
V
f o r t i gri d i
i
••etches.
i.'ie first is a story about some Grerraen ooliticious who
f.rt in 3 huff. They are di snr untied.
he Foreign
^
Committee of the demas Reicixstag,__ .. They -have ju,::t come out with
a dem- nd th- t nernn ny with* r>-vv fro:. the Di sarmement Conference
nt hen-vn. The Reichr.tar Fore’, yn Committee is hot under the collar
because Germany' r la ter t v'ro">oral at the Geneva Disarmament
Conference .vas turned down. That ‘lerta-n rronosel by the way, was
a little bit drastic. They rorosec. that all nations cut their
arra'e dov.n to the size of the German • rn:y. And the German army,
e-» yon-
has been ke^t mi *hty small by the rroviions of the
Tret ty of Versailles.
Just to
make
e rood cry’s work of it, the Reichster
Foreign Com It tee also re com: ended that Germany break trade
relations with Poland, ss a nrotert -gainst the recent Polish
el.cti-ns. The As:ociated ^ress cables that there has teen a
good deal of excitement in Germany about those Polish elections,
/hy are the Germans so interested in Poland? 'Veil, they say
the
T'oler
didn’t rive the Gemen minority in ur-oer Silesia a
fsxi
fa i r fhanop They say the ’ oles used all kinds of tricks and
violence to’keen the Germ-ns -ho live in Poland from electing
their candidates.
JUGO - SI : V '
A dispatch from Home to the Shier, -o Daily Nev/s states
t'v t six I toll an cu: toms police were smbuf hed near the Jugo-Slav
harder, Concealel riflemen opened fire on them end one was
kill-c. The crime wos attributed to the Tuso-Slavs. The
relations hetwe- n Itily and
Ju
so-31
°
via are not • articularly
aood end thi< incident won’t help them.
Nov, let's Jtrnr over to the tattle-front on the Tecific
Coast.
a
SPOI
&
kn
Interni'tione 1 1 ev.-r Service disDatch says- that out
in Calil omla the odds art. shifting on the tir f ootball game,
hotre Dame .vas the frvori e to beat .southern California. But
nov. the big Tr Jan teem i r considered an even bet to beat Bockne’s
fi.•-htinr ' ri L:::en. "lenty of sound football minds are expecting
Notre Dame to oet
a
;ound thrashing.
That may seem a little strange after RockneT s men have
won every rn.me for the vast two seasons and after coining through
in those last tw tourh battles with Northwestern and the Army.
But it * excatly those last two gamer thr.t are causing football
men to switch to Noithern Celifornln, The- ? y that Northwestern
and the Array took a lot ut of Notre Dame, end that the South
Bend warriors had to -lay so hard that they cr-n't wossibly x
be the seme teem now.
Knute Rockne gloomily declares that his team will be
beaten, but he’s said that before.
LTV" TC"-. -Hg:;
''errors you’ve heard they ere holding the big live
; - ck. i h ) ^ert; in Chicago end it’s cuite r. spectacle. In the
ring,
'■'■F
'ni f icent horre and the eristocratic cattle are led
befor*. the judges. One odd thing is the
xrk
names of some of the
bigh nobility of the s.ni .ii.l kingdom. They are nomnous end high
sounding, but some are snasny and ur>-to-date. Five Lindys are
present, m-ybe to sho. that calves and yearlings and steers are
becoming air-minde. . There’s an Amos >• nd Andy end one calf is
realistic.'.1 y named Sirloin. Amon * the cows the United Press
rointr out that there’s only one named after
t
movie actress, and
she 1. Clare Bov.. Technically, however, that -rize bossie is
not listed es a cow. She is a short horned junior calf.
Veil, I’ve a fern of sorts u~
i .
New York stete and I
have several cows, but they haven’t any fancy name? at all.
In
fact, they’re not fancy cows.
e n.hile, in I.'ilwrukee the annuel convention of Wisconsin
Cheese meker? goes into session tomorrow ant. the United ^ress
tells us that those cheese makers are doing things in a big way.
The auditorium where they will meet is decorated with hundreds of
I_T7___TOOK
^T-;j
- 2
■e»
cheeses. There's the big cheese and the little cheese. I don't
icnov.
If there is a weak cheese - re ent but there certainly
are
.•-one
stronr >n
D ' 0£
" * '• v* n - ** • t ^ r -zo T told you aft out r f ic h-ce tching dost
!:Il ‘ “ere 1 ■’ letter frorr. ry Jrne 'erren of V.ev: York City, ’ ho
•r-"e• Ur ' f• h-catching Scotch collie na^ed Rob Hoy. Ee
caused somethin^ of e .yrt• ry,
1::"'. n m Del-- re -fi 1 ong o ere k, fish were constantly
- ''' '■
"‘'L
‘rnd cry >n the trnk, • n;’. nobody knew how they get there.
Th- n, on* dry, Else e r &n ’ r father xx saw Rob Roy dash into the
wptrr, c-tch a firh, errry It up on the benk.
After the t whenever fish were v/antec for dinner, they
sir:.- ly took the collie down t .i the creek. According to I.:iss
.erren. Pot Roy v.os one of the greetest firh-c thing dogs on
record.
A let er har also coie in fro' a boy at ‘‘estport, Conn.
His n•*:ne ir ioger Oakley and he tells about h.s cog, ’..hich x is
named Chief. v/e
l
, there isn’t much remarkable about Chief
• be that’s vihat 1 1 ike aoout hicp. Ro^er cays that h s dog is
just a yellow mutt, but Roger ^refers him to any thoroughbred in
the ■ orld.
I c* n -ym^' *! I?e with
11 v e a v/ e a k n e s s ii y self
for ju t o.-Ti’Tion dos: , it on yr el , ju-t r>lr in mutts,
.’/ell, r, coy calls to mind the subject of whistlinp. -
but her * r r men and ■ fainoui on«. in his xya way - who certainly
won * t be out >.:.i tliny to his doy.
m
HISTLIKG
» i sconrin , t!. or.6 * 3 r country jail and the
*
prisoner
* ■
11
, ■ .; n * v ha^©
1
r uu ic 1 Chrif tipas ,
t ■ c us * Boovt-.r D"'■ c -11 v;i 11 b ■ tht_re, '"ow Bo ;lcer is a olo red
man rnc h- if the .1,1 tlin^ champion of the United States, He
£9
can '.hi tl- het*-r t’.an anyone else says the United Press. He
con h '* 1 ■
onrs ■ nd operatic erles and when he whistles Jazzy
one bl ■ , it ju *. i- ko. everyone start : huffling. However,
Book r 1; not .•-olnu to j-fil for hrrtling. He is accused of the
mere small matter of taking > ©tiling that didn't belong to him.,
and ih jud -e .aid he thought thu boys u- there in the country
jail .v ulc -nJoy e little of Booker's chrmnlon shi^ brand of
whi til no n Christ as. So he gave cooker sixty days, which will
kee^ him in the hoosegow ovey the holidays.
c: o "E
:n -ew Yor> recently t, o In pilch > ctora got
a big
1^-u h -- . o ,
; e:.'
l
co
.•-u
i ■■:nr , they '.veren’t trying to be
funny
.
Ont
v,
n a s ri u: tr* • :ic rlay; the othr.r was in a
rroblem lay, just ar seri ur. But they were laughed at -
because they were so bloomin' Kinglish.
In oth r wordst It i* renort*^ thrt the American audiences
are beginning
to g t • bit Tec ur with English actors whclbring
jus t a Iittle
ra ther to‘ much deoh old riccadil y on
to the
Amer:
r. stcge.
All of thi; Is ci cussed 'n an emusinr article in this
week's Literary Direst.
The Digest say. that the frmous American dramatic critic,
, took some
forcible cigs at wnglish actors, and
he did it in a London oa-er, the London D'ily Express.
Sosie of there English actors srys Nathan rre so terribly
that they say:- Deah
for dear, rnwther fo:
er, h;
for here, end ro -n don't you Kno .
CLO SE - 2
ex ’ tn iccadil'.y lin -o ir sometimes wonderful to
'
*
*
;
:
suthsea, an English seaside
re ort ^nce, rnd A v.-nted to
ro
to the -ost office.
y call a post office, the G. P. 0., which
. t- nc for 7L
r
m rc 1 r t of; Ice.
Anywry, I • rkeu s very swagger-looking Englishmen the
\ y to the
d
t of let .
;!e raised his eyebrows t t my American
accent.
"Gh, df h, he s i.. MYou me; n the 0.^,0. "ell , he rented
seid ’•you go ovah thyah, and then you - thyah, and then you
go thyr h, r nd thon you tr thyah.”
But, you n v r con tell -- th t invcrion of English actors
Lking
,
1
tay come when
YOU or Bill Gmith, Y. run th< rrDCery rtor e In Kokomo will say
”1 aay, old chao, thyahs your tin of tomahtoes. *
If th*t*' ^oinr to he-^en I ruess I might as well get nto
the swing nd see If I can’t cultivate end English accent myself.
In foct, I th'nk I’ll do It right now.--
CLO ' . - -
Oh,
I . y, eh-
1 e , e ’ v had a lot if jolly old
ne c rind it*.:
to t: dale along, ; o cheerio -- in other
v.oro
r-
,