The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 230, Ed. 2 Tuesday, May 24, 1938 Page: 4 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma News and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE OKLAHOMA NE1SS-
lahoma News News About Incomes ! Mrs Wolter Ferguson !Nice Trick
p1 Vpv tnnticr Tlig ArroRNEys GENERAL of 25
1
PAGE Four
The Oklahoma News
A Scripps-Houard Neuspaper
tj:tog
LTI HILLS “ IF
CHARLES L NICHOLSON 13111rtat Matipt
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'Give Light and the People 147 Find
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TrLEDAY WY :4 113
A New High-or Low
A BOLD AsNouscEmzyr by Se1
Addington that 5OCO of the state's 18 CA
employes are now under rigid orders to
''get cut a: :: r Goverilor Mar-
lads e4otion to the C S Se—or
quit your jobs" gie the pblc an
alarming view of the length some po-
litical bofses are to go to -°'11-
ence electi:ms 1LradtiOngt)n is one cf
Governor Marla:ris chief Leterants tn
the carnoaign Ile sent on to say tnat
any employe caiight shirkog this po-
litical activity or camoalgor g ft oher
candidates wiii be fired promptly and
replaced by other workers
Mr Addington In charge of direct re-
lief declared further that he has to:d
5-01 workers In his 0-n department to
get out and hustle for Governor Mar-
land or get off the payroil He said
other departments under the governor's
control are under the ume orders While
Governor Marland haa said he will make
no personal effort to force state em-
ployes to work for him It is evident
that others are attending to the details
of political coercion in a thorough man-
ner nil policy is Inexcusable It Is not
new but never before has It been so
brazen
To see such a respected official II
Reford Bond corporation commission-
er ordering all gasoline Inspectors to
work for the nomination of Ray Weems
to the commission Ls another shocking
commentary on the new low to which
political morals have sunk We cannot
believe Judge Bond realized the impli-
cations In what he was doing Yet It Is
becoming commonplace for State Auditor
Childers and other officials to threaten
publicly to discharge any employes In
their departments who don't get out and
beat the political bushes for their bosses
Are state jobs the personal property of
these officials? That Is the Inference
The public—taught to believe that pub-
lic office In America is a high resrpon-
sibility and a privilege—will resent the
Insult
Voters also should start calling the
hands of such candidates when they give
lip service to the merit system and then
brazenly use the patronage whip in this
way to build political machines control
elections and perpetuate themselves In
of
Worth A Trial
THE PUBLIC UTILITY Industry has
taken many beatings from the New
Deal—and for its arrogance and Its
abuses has deserved most of them
As one consequence the utilities are
falling into line with Government policy
The big holding companies are at last
registering with the SEC and moving
toward compliance with the law which
requires a breakdown of their topheavy
structures The TVA and cities in its
area are getting along In negotiations
for purchase of private electric distribu-
tion systems That is all to the good
But as another consequence expan-
sion of private power plants has slowed
down almost to a stop
The privately owned utilities say that
last-growing public competition and the
threat of more of it—especially when
financed by gifts and easy loans from
the Federal Government--frightena in-
vestors and prevents the raising of new
capital for private expansions and im-
provements And that can hardly be
denied
So THE PRIVATE COMPANIES make
this proposal: Let the Government stop
making grants and loans for public
power plants to duplicate and compete
with existing private plants Then the
Industrywill raise hundreds of millions
of dollars of new capital from the public
and will undertake a great expansion
program creating new jobs building
new purchasing power and boosting the
country toward recovery
Taking the private companies at their
word the Sedate appropriations com-
mittee has Writen into the big spending-
lendin bill a prohibition against new
grants and loans for competitive public
power projects
The committee's plan needs study
There may be cities which dissatisfied
with present utility service and balked
In good-faith efforts to buy private
plants at a fair price are counting on
Government help to remedy their situa-
tions Provision might be made for such
cases possibly along the lines of the
amendment suggested by Sen Barkley
after talking with President Roosevelt
PROPERLY SAFEGUARDED however
the plan deserves careful consideration
by the Administration and Congress The
Utlilty industry is the largest single field
In which a big private spending program
might be organized quickly A big
quick private spending program is what
the country most needs and a rea5on-
able compromise that would get one
started would be welcome
I
News About Incomes
THg ATTORNEYS GENERAL of 25
states —not including Oklahoma — said
the federal tax collector couldn't do
that But the U S Supreme Court said
he could
Thus was decided—and decided
riglit—another celebrated tax test case
It concerned the salaries rangleg frcrn
S81O3 to SI5000 cf three officials cif tne
New York Port Authcriiy The autholety
was created by New YLIk and elev Jer-
sey to build and cperate tunnels brides
wharves and (err The three offcals
contended the Federal GDver--Pr had
no right to tax their salaries on tne
same basis as it taxes the salaries of
prlvate czens
The 25 attrirneys general got excited
and interveriel against the Gove—eent
becauie they feared ttie Supreme Court
might hand down a decision so sweep-
ing as to open the way for Congress to
:ay income taxes on the salaries of hun-
dreds of thouai& cf other state offi-
cias and ernpcyes—includieg the attor-
ney geeeral That is just what the
Court did
A:though the deci-ilon involved what
lawyers like to call a fine legal point
JJ!Ce Stone speaking ftr the Court
majority used pain langage Ile said
a cltzr:r1 is not excused from his duty
to pay taxes to supy)rt the Government
merely because he is on the payroll of
a lo:ai governmental agency
Cengress is thinking of appointleg a
committee to sdy ways by wnich Con-
gress might end the tax-exemption of
public salaries and stop the issuance of
tax-exempt puulio secures Let the
committee read this decision and It
should be able ty tomorrow to recbm-
mend a "short ad simple statute" sub
as Preldent E'osetelt has atlied And
Congress could pass that statute before
adjournment
But that won't happen Congressmen
Ike to move slowly on a measure whch
will make their own salaries subject to
state income taxes
HOWEVER CONGRESS is getting busy
on a measure designed to help a great
many people whose incomes are far too
small to be subject to any income tax
federal or local
The wage-hour bill Is going through
the House at high speed A different
type of wage-hour bill already has
passed the Senate So the big fight v-ill
be in a conference committee—with the
Senate insisting on a bill that will give
a federal bureau power to fix minimum
wages and maximum hours and to allow
differentials between North and South
and between large cities and small and
with the House holding out for a nation-
wide wage minimum starting at 25
cents an hour and rising hi three years
to 40 cents
We like the House approach to the
problem Grant that living costs are
lower in the South and in small com-
munities and that freight rates dis-
criminate Still there must be a limit
below which wages should not drop if
some semblance of what is called the
American standard of living is to be
maintained
It's up to Congress to find and fix that
limit It may be 25 cents an hour or 30
cents or more or less But workers in
Interstate industries need a definite
wage floor Labor unions can be de-
pended upon to see what proper differ-
entials are established above that min-
imum level
Potential Killers
MEMBERS OF the Ministerial Al-
liance at Duncan are indignant because
of the lenient attitude of Judge Cham
Jones of the Duncan District Court to-
ward drunken drivers They should be
and so should everyone else if Judge
Jones said as reported that You can
see a drunken driver coming a mile
away and get out of his way" for such
an attitude is indefensible
Drunken drivers are highly danger-
ous to themselves and others The law
recognizes the peril Doctors agree that
alcohol lowers driving efficiency In-
toxicants muddle the mind and hamper
co-ordination and vision A Judge who
looks upon drunken drivers with a tol-
erant eye isnt trying to safeguard the
public as he should or punish potential
killers as they deserve
Gore's Third Strike
THOMAS PRYOR GORE concluded hts
announcement of withdrawal from the
Fifth Congressional District race with
the meaningful words "strike three"
In the parlance of the game that made
the might Casey famous he is out
Certainly he is otriof that free-for-all
and many believe out of Oklahoma
politics for good If so he wrote finis
to a colorful career in Oklahoma politics
The blind former senator has known
the ups and downs of politics His stand
against America's entrance into the
World War was a factor in his defeat for
the senatorial nomination by Scott Fer-
ris who won the nomination only to
go down to defeat in the Republican
landslide of 1920 Time heals old wounds
and adjusts the perspective and Mr
Gore won his way to the senate again
His stand against New Deal measures
in 1936 doubtless was a factor in his
second defeat when Josh Lee won easily
and both Governor Marland and Gomer
Smith led Mr Gore in the first primary
Soon after the start of the present
Filth District campaign he withdrew He
would have been known as the anti-
New Deal candidate in that race too
had he stayed hi
The years march on and the read- -
justments grow more difficult with their
passing Whatever you may criticize
about him Thomas Pryor Gore is not
one to compromise There has never
been much doubt about his stand on
important issues whether you agree
with him or not
Show-off children according to an
educator just show up their parcts
Mrs Wolter Ferguson
1 An
— ‘-t! Oklahoma
:
'e
Woman's
I 11- A
I
- Viewpoint
CHART ES 1:NL:11o!-:
SP:rtt CZ
rro
c:r Vis::4 of ridir
a- 7o traivr-fy
In--:eed a: :atl- o tocicrg
rnan e t'f:r atter-
r7crta: t'cre
A g a:---ars are con-
crned long
t-hIP h:-ran tPat ana nct at aj
witr :7 ra7-
Tnat rne 1a5 ehdrrect more
tan fr---:n (-7:me rr-grt very well
Lave cf efft:1i to a study
of our pe:-a: and :r thhod
of creat:n:-C toyi-r-d the bo'inds
of tnat t'ne individual
:fe : ex'-ert-ent may pro-
t! Ha:nann?
rncre deoades
to t'r:-ater r:-:tane dLsease and
1e:r:a? 71 :r-re frs-rn f:ar of can:er are
t'ne fact that lanat
53'e at ct rt:ay be snlffed
:n a ty tne ri:znrcry of a brother
into tne c'nernita: se‘:rets cf
V- e cf gctting r:d of
a--no may end their days in
starrp cit tne
a-te e !Ave f:rst stamped out
tar tne With Erplahos mar has
corcur::et: lato a ants to go va7atio-
irg in bp-iin?
Raymond Clapper
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
AL-niouoli CONSIDERABLE effort has
been made on both sides to bring about some
senibaase ef ceacihation between business and
tae Ad—!easration tae reaalas have been neg
hsible There :a evicience of persistent hos-
naty on bath a:fie-a and tualaessznen seem to
be za"e-ng still front that peculiar political
:meat whch Dana id Riclibesg calls "F-D-RFritia"
Former Gov Landon says that business will
be raaterlahy improved only if t'aeee is an in-
cieaae in Repub inan representation in Con-
gresa "Everything Is going to be bc:d tack" Gov
Landon strs "antil people see how many
Republicans go back this year"
Businessmen are locking hopeful: to Penn-
sylrania where the reactionary organization
controlled by Jcsaph Pew Philadelpaia oil mil-
lionaire hopes tu caeca its candidate for gover-
nor after havina given the progressive Repub-
liCan Gifford Pinchot a rough beating for the
nomination Recapture of the second largest
political unit in the country by the conserva-
tive Republicans would give new hope to angry
bneasmen who believe the only courss is to
smash the New Deal 5traighL out Why Join
'cm if you can :lea 'ern?
Lose In Court Fight
BITFER FEELING among businessmen to-
ward the Roosevelt Administration springs in a
considerable measure from the labor troubles
which they are encountering This feeling is
accentuated now because in a long series of
court tests the National Labor Relations Board
has come through with practically a clean bill
of health from the Supreme Court It has won
victory after victory and all hope of pulling
the teeth of the NLRB by court action has dis-
appeared It is now clear that changes can
be effected only through legislation
Last winter when Robert H Jackson blurted
out the charge that business was staging a sit-
down strike against the Government there was
a general cry of protvs Jackson probably
ruined his case by overstating it
Now this charge has been revived in modified
form by Jamea A Farley Democratic national
chairman He says: "Investment forces banks
and capitalists withheld their funds from com-
merce and Induatry Some cad this because the
courage had been frightened out of them by
their adventures in the big email Others were
content to keep their money piles intact per-
haps because they had a grouch against the
Government and thought that was one way of
combatting policies to which they were hostile"
Farley cites the RFC Which lends money on
such security as is demanded by private financ-
ing companies and individuals Of the RFC
money lent 72 per cent hai-s been paid back
Farley says: That not only suggests that
somebody overlooked a lot of excellent busi-
ness opportunities but that the reluctance or
timidity of private capital is both foollah and
unworthy"
Thus runs the seemingly Irreconcilable con-
fleet Months ago many business men said that
if the undistributed-profits tax were repealed
business would leap forward with sudden con-
fidence It has not been repealed but it was
hitsled down to a bare token That has not
whittled down in the same propoation the fears
or businessmen tuffering from F-D-R-Fritis
John T Flynn
TODAY'S BUSINESS
NEW YORK May 24—No one apparently
noticed that Congress passed a bill creating al—
most as many additional judges as the Presi-
dents famous court proposal would have done
in the courts below the Supreme Court It
was done noiselessly and without any row
When the President made his attempt to
pack the Supreme Court he put it on the ground
that the courts were oter-crowded with work
and that additional judges were needed They
were needed in the Supreme Court and in the
lower courts His plan was to add six judges
to the Supreme Court and an additional judge
to each circuit or district court here the In-
cumbent was over 70 years of age
Nothing so completely exposed the bad Ap-
proach to the subject as that part of the plan
which would have added judges to the lower
courts The fact was that the lower courts as a
rule were up with their work save in certain
districts In these districts they were behind
lint because the judges were over 70 but be-
cause the districts had grown swiftly and the
work had become too much for one man
THE PRESIDENTS plan would have given
no -relief to the districts whisth needed relief
It would instead have added judges to dis-
tricts where there was no crowding It would
have put the additional judges into courts not
on the basis of the need for the added judges
but on the basis of the judges' age
It was of course very properly defeated be-
cause it was the perfect example of the wrong
way to achieve an objective
Having been defeated Congress then went
to work to deal intelligently with the situation
It has Accomplished that task by creating 16
new judges and putting them in the di3tr1cts
where they are needed
There was no fuss about it no feathers fly-
ing and now it has gone through without the
slightest difficulty Perhaps it went too far
and provided too many judges But it illus-
trates how easy it would have been for the
President to accomplish that reform had he
been willing to approach it without mixing it
up with a political motile and a political war
f
1"" itbA
!''r77
ti
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t
:Ss:
HOLD
LETTERS
About Saving
Where It Counts
To the Editor:
'When Roger W Babson ses forth
the facts about high-handed man-
agement cliques of big buisines
time for every little stockhoer to
stop look and listen
Babson ridicules the fallacy that
office holders and government em-
ployes are the main ones who eat
up the public's money Politicians
are small fry ELS compared to big
business Owning but a tiny per-
centage of the stock a clique of
corporation officers get together
and -rontrol affairs
It's high time the small fry stock-
holders got busy and protected their
interests When it comes to sign-
ing their interests away by the
proxy route they're worse than
suckers at a county fair he game'
Yet these same czens are aroused
to high pitch about election of pub
lic officials and attend rallys and
vote regardless of the inconveni-
ence Politicians are petty Name one
public office holder whose salary
and perquLsities equal that of a
third vice-president of any of a
dozen corporations
Of course there is a solution and
a simple one Babson points out
that stockholders should form a pro-
tective union and have representa-
tivcs at every meeting asking pert-
inent questions about the business
Polcs is attempting to save at
the spigot getting interested in
stock interests is saving at the
HERB B SEWEL
Wants to Set
Record Straight
To the Editor:
i Bill Murray is saying In his
speeches that 'Red" Phil:ips was
' Republican county chairman of Ok-
flAcre County 12 years ago The
old pros erb: "A half truth is Nvore
than a whole lie" certain:3P applies
So They Say - -
1 He (President Roosevelt) Is in
favor of free speech fur Lis side of
the fence only
M Landon referrMz to the
Pusident-s re1ua1 t) take artion
aganst Mayor Hague of Jersey
City
Women jurfsts shoud appear
as though they are in court on busi-
ness and not to attend a social
'function 1
—Supreme Court Tutice Abram
Zol'ier of New York tate
r 16 P"pk "riew
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News readers are Invited to
express their views in these
columns religious controver-
sies excluded Make your letter
short so all can have a chance
Letters must be signed Names
will be withheld on request
to old Bin in this 'Red"
was 'county chairman' a:I right at
that time but he was Democratic
county chairman of Okfuskee
County
"Red" Phillips has voted for ev-
ery Democratic candidate for Presi-
dent including Al Smith since the
innnortal Woodrow Wilson and all
of his friends in Okluskee County
know it When he supported Gore
in 1920 he said in all his speeches
he supperted the blind seliator al-
though he c-iffered from him vio-1
Heywood Broun -
FOR THE SAKE of the record I
would like to express my feeling
that both Simon Gerson and Stan-
ley Laaes appeared to advantage
before the MeNaboe committee
' It seems to me that the president
of the borough of Manhattan made
a perfectly proper appointment I
have known Gerson as a reporter
for several years and I share the
- feeling of his other newspaper as-
' sociates who regard him as a
highly competent and useful citi
Zen
I congratulate Mr Isaacs on his
courage But since I think the
whole business has been vastly
overplayed I have no intenton of
writing an entire column on the
sub!eict but prefer instead to deal
with something really important
such as the question of a name for
Mr C V Whitneys colt out of
Top night by Man o War Nat
uray the name of the sire and
dam should be hnked but Joe Wil-
i hams is making it much more (lir-
' lcult by stipulwing that there
oud alo be seine reference to
the Derby since that happens to
be the birthday dat? of the young
: race horse
AS A PROFESSIONAL horse
namer I am not eligible for the
competition I had thought of Sea
Plane since that includes the sug-
gestion both of naval warfare and
altitude but there is no suggestion
of the Derby in that In a fugitne
way I toyed with Reserved Seat
since from such a vantage point Rt
Churchill Downs one might see
plain Tha I tossed aside as un-
worthy of me
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I d:scgree Nkittl V!t you soy but will de-
fend to the deoth r:ght to soy it—Voltaire
'
S-to
he doesn't u'ant anyone
MI
‘--19
AO' et
e
:eWIy in his attitude toward Wilson
Mlirray on the other hand has
voted for Wilson only and for none
of the ()then He was out of the
co '!"try in 1920 1924 and 1928 try-
ing to be a big shot in South Amer-
ica Alti-ough he was here m 1932
we h3rd17 think he voted for
Frank:in D Roosevelt when he said
the things he did about Roosevelt
in the same campaign
The same day that somebody was
quoting Murray's 1932 criticism of
Roosevelt in The Blue Valley Farm-
er we heard the voice of -Red"
Phillips calinz to the multitudes
"I believe that Frankin D Roose-
velt is the best friend thP common
people have had in the White
House in 100 years" What will the
"common people answer?
THE MAN WITH THE HOE
- It Seems To Me
I know one name which does take
in both the Man o' War and Top
Fight train ard a1so drops a
Derby hint trit I m under the impre7z-ion
that another horse is using
It The Lame I have in mind is
Brown Bomber But maybe the
horse is b:v'k or roan
Wri Gerson as a reporter I Ft-'40d the art of naming thor-
al years and I share the ouhbreds at the ke or Herbert
his other newspaper ELS- Bayard Swope who used to be a
who regard him as a newipaper man before he became
tripeterit and useful citi- state racing commsioner I can't
remember the breeding but the
atulate Mr liaacis on his commissioner was very proud when
But since I think the he thought up the name Sidereal
lle for a promising yearling It didn't
d I are ri so
turn out so well because all the
in entire column on the gamblers in the betting ring in-
'Is S has
I bineteennti Notaist o
- Vartab:y referred to e horse as
lleltthpitiigeterr ililealsVt"idmPtoortdaenati th
Side Reel which spoiled every-
he question of a name for thirlg
: Whitney's colt out of And te:rible things happen to
it by Man o War Nat-
horses with French names when
name of the sire and
eager bettors are trying to get
0
: down S2 to show just before the
barrier is 5prung What chance has
nildakbienglinitkemducbhutnjlole N(Ni'llf1--
stipulwing that there a horse called Fils De Liral in a
situation like that?
rehfaeprpenelcles to to
y''() sbLatnliaeat
rthday date or the young
IT HAS BEEN said that good
e
horses have good names but that
is not always true Twenty Grand
PROFESSIONAL horse -
Grey Lag Ga
ant Fox and War
am not eligible for the Admiral all have !- swing to them
on I had thought of Sea
but there was a rfati o War colt
ice that includes the sug-
which won a Kentucky Derby under
oth of naval warfare and
tie not too exciting label of Clyde
but there is no suggestion van Dien
Yrby in that In a fugitive
wed with Reserved Seat Moreover I am a little weary of
uch a vantage point at
ri
finding that all the sons of Gal-
Downs one might see a
Irnt Fox are named by the simple
s
a' I tossed aside as un- Proeem of changing the adjective
me : so that you get Wise Fox or Fight
ing Fox or Crafty Fox and so on
indefinitely That s to- easy
By Clyde Lewis Seabiscuit was not what I would
consider a standout in the matter
— -I of names but he beccmes more
' pleasing to the ear now that the
railb rr
irds have by tacit COnse
07:X '- ' shortened it to the Bi-cuit For tne
--
--- ri' ai:
k 0 i the glamor of the big match re !c:e
- I
'e' 14'414
t b '6' ''17- grows when I hear arguments
which run "Do you think the Ad-
C A e
miral can beat the Bcint?"
I have said that my own arria-
4 68 ' fit tear stand m
ing as a horse naer is
-- i 1 t gone A very promising filly of the
ail I Falaise Stable marks me as a pro-
i' 1
-- fessional She is by Sun Briar out
b of Coinixa I hope I-ve spelled that
- - 0( last name right but at any rate
-
---- -'----e I suggestA Lady Nicotine They tel
- - sc4 -
- e I -0 me she's i n05t trick and I think
'
Z-------01'et I it's a nice name
Test Your Knowledge
i 1 What fort was built on the site
of the city of Chicago?
2 Name the last Democratic
president before Frankin D Roo:e-
velt
3 N'Clat Ls a psychrometer?
4 Name the state flower of
Rhode Island
5 Can water have a temperature
higher than its bong point?
6 With which American League
baseball eb does Ear: Averi:: plav?
7 Who discovered the Nlississippi
River?
8 Name the highest known
4 mountain in the world
9 How many centimeters are in
I meter?
10 Do Ameriran citizens require
paspors to visit Canada?
Anzwera found on classified page'
"-TUESDAY MAY 24 1933
!General Johnson
Diehards
Cause
Radical
Swing
Sooner Poetry
Thoughts
'
r
t
WASHINGTON May 24—The es-
sential d:fcrence between thc old
deal md the first New Deal of
ex:eeclingly simple—the New Mal
proposes the responaibility of Fed-
eral Government to relieve human
suffering in economic fields
o:d deal oppesed it
That opposition was based on
legalistic reaaons It went back to
the idea that this was exclusively a
probem for the states and that
unOcr the constitution the Federal
Govelnment could legislate In eco-
nomic or social fields in only a
very limited area
That was very old doctrine It
had been defended by Democrats
11pub4ears But it is in
the chcard now—forever The peo-
ple have repudiated it hi three
oyerxhelnting elections and—what
is even more decisive—the Suprenie
Court has discarded it The gravest
guee:tien of the moment and for the
'future is 'has the Republican party
diacarded it?" That is far front
certain It is vital becau-e uniffs
'that party not merely recognizes
but also zealously adopts this com-
:p:ete change of Amnican doctrine
this country faces an awful pros
pct
Will Determine Trend
WHY? Decatie resistance to thia
r:Irrige by that party and also by
indutial diehards makes the
an isaue of war be
raeen them and an overwhelming
majority of public opinion That
naturally and unavoidably puts into
the leadership of that majority the
most leftward extremists of the
contrary view It pours into a
comb-tie iss!le the spark
of hatrcd and the oil of prejudice
Cfl 11 only have one renult—more
ovewhelantig extremist vi c t or i es
arguing new "mandates" to go fur-
ther to the left when we are already
so far that anything further wouil
he pretty near all the way
It is now certain that the people
throuedl the Federal GoYernment
are going to have more to sat
about the operation of the great
industrial groups and the economic
forces that so closely affect their
daily living
What does "more to say" mean?
:There is a fateful principle in the
answer to that citietion It can
ine?r one of two thing:4 The first
Is that they are going to reamate
industry to prevent abuses—by law
to what it may or may not do
That they will do this is a certaint:-
l'his much could be done
v-thout deqzoying the political and
rcommic democracy tvh:id-1 we ea:1
the capitalistic system and withi7e:t
'embarking us on an unknown sea
of economi2 and political horrors
Bot more to say" can have a
serond meaning—that Goyornment
wi:1 not merely say what busineFa
may and may not do but what it
'must do That is not regulation
:That is operation with or without
iownrship If governmental oper-
ation is attempted ownership is un-
important Operation is the Fascist
or Communist formula—and the end
of L 01110C racy
Shore In Blame
! PRESS DISPATCHES ere now
frequently asserting what this col-
umn has nid for months—that
s!rategists of the third New Deal
plan to apply to inductry precisely
hat Nfr Wallace is trying to apply
to nerieulture—complete operating
control That would be it—the be-
ginning of the end
There is no malority popular
opinion for any such lunacy but die-
hard Republican and industrial re-
sistance to the milder middle way
alienates the resisters from popular
support and hence from the coun-
cils of Government It thus auto-
itiatrally seats In control the most
radical reckless theoretical and in-
experienced people in public
! If business and political leaders
who sincerely believe that there is
something worth saving in the eco-
nomic and political democracy that
made this country great don't
promptir get hep to the fIcts of
life and bestir themselves to make
real popular opinion effective we
Sr(' going to this extreme nnd they
will be PA much to blame as the
tnot radical red In the third New
Deal
HOPE
Thou art the very heart of thought
The motor of the human Foul
If ye we're naught what could be
wrought?
' And who would c'er teeth his
goal?
In some dark and weary hour
When sorrows deep doth bend tie
lotx
Then thy spark and silent power
Both Itft us up and bid us go
Through day and night thou art
the light
To guide one's weary feet along
Yea clear their sight and lead
thorn right
E'en fill their saddened hearts
with song
Thotkert a golden dream through
The spirit of Pnnnbling thought
A star to gleam through calm and
strife
A part of every battle fought
Through all the ages of the pmst
Hope shed its rays in eery breast
And so 'twill be until at last
Grelt souls will wing their way
to rest
J HARTMAN OSIVIdA
Horn Lake Miss
Nevertheless God that comfort-
eth those that are cast down com-
forted us by the coming of Tithe
—II Cormth!ans 7:6
Of all creek comforts Ood
the leader you are the borrower
not the owner—Ruthertorcl
'
1AY 24 1933
I
hnson
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Hills, Lee. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 230, Ed. 2 Tuesday, May 24, 1938, newspaper, May 24, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014286/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.