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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 10
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Press and Sun-Bulletin from Binghamton, New York • 10

Location:
Binghamton, New York
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Page:
10
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TIIK BIXGIIAMTOX TRESS, WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 27, WlO. 10 Nine Are Killed as Warehouse contributions of Roosevelt and the New Deal. He discusses foreign policy, the monopoly cooperative and decentrallst movements. Here Is a brilliant statement of the liberal position in the face of increasing political and euonomlo difficulties. Chaplin Wants Hitler to See THE STORY OF DEMOCRACY By Hendrik Willem von Loon Illustrated by the author Books on Today's News Falls on Them Old Spanish Gold Mine of Great Wealth Found Monorchia! System Grows From Union of Power, Money Dictator Film Reported Trying to Get World Premiere in Berlin For background on ihg cu Binohomton Public tAbrary tupacttt reading the following: Homeless Victims in California Include Two Women of operations and their complete lack of scruples) forged ahead and gradually destroyed all competition.

Having started their careers as members of the feudal system and therefore being rich In land but poor In cash, the monarch! were obliged to go to the middle class for that direct financial support without which they couM never hope to overcome Iho' opposition of their former fellow-feudalists. These ambitious founders of a monarchlal form of government were completely successful. A FTER the end of the 16th century, the map of Europe was no longer a crazy-quilt of thrce-by-four little duchies, counties, baronetcies and independent cities and villages (even the sovereign village existed In those happy days). It began to show those big blue and yellow and green patches which represented the kingdoms of such famous families an the Bourbons, the Tudors, the Hapsburga and a dozen other familiar names, As so often happens when mutually hostile Interests art forced to make common cause for some common purpose, the moment the victory had been gained, the partners fell out among themselves. Their majesties were liable to forget to whom they owed their success and those who had contributed to this success were apt to remind them of their services at very Inappropriate moments.

There followed a period of disastrous conflicts between these former allies. These quarrels were bound to manifest themselves with the greatest sharpness In those countries where the middle classes had accumulated more abundant riches than elsewhere. Sanltt Rosa, March 27 (Pr ITollrwoorf. Mnrch 87 UfH Charlie Chaplin wji reported today to he Keeking a world premiere In Berlin for hta forthcoming movie travesty on dictators and before a one-man audience consisting of Adolf Hitler. Lyons, Kuscne Stalin: Oar of All the Kusdas.

The author refers to Stalin as "the most powerful man In the world today" and describes him as a "terrible triumph- of mediocrity." This modern "csar," although known to almost no one, has become a threatening force which may have to be reckoned with in every corner of the world. Mr. Lyons brings the book up-to-date with a discussion ot Stalin's ambitions In the Baltic. The bodies of nine homeless persons, two of them women, were placed In a morgue today after being recovered from beneath a warehouse that collapsed and dropped 150 tons of stored prunes on them. Forty rescue workers, directed by Vndershcrlft Ted Lewis, tolled all last night under the glare of Mr.

Chaplin, who now in Riving the picture its finishing touches, maintained his customary but his friend Insisted he was serious in his international Phoenix, March 27 (INS) An abandoned Spanish gold mine of "unbelievable wealth" has been located in the Superstition mountains east of Phoenix, it was announced today by a mining engineer and a writer-adventurer. The discovery, said Walter I'p. son, mining engineer, and Barry Storm, writer, was made by three prospectors in the virinity of the legendary "Lost Dutchman" mine, said to hold untold wealth and sought after for nearly 60 years by hundreds of prospectors. Now! Milk of Magnesia That Effervesces That's what the world has been awaiting for a long time, and now the makers of the famous Listenne Antiseptic have achieved It in a sensational new product -called Milk-O-Mag. Milk-O-Mag is a tablet, and not only a tablet but one that effervesces when water is added.

Vou get a lively, sparkling, effervescent drink that's mighty agreeable to take, without that pronounced flat after-taste. And plenty economical, too. No spill, no waste. If you use magnesia to combat excess stomach acidity, and as a mild laxative, here's a new, pleasant way of taking it-a way you'll like. Milk-O-Mag comes in two economical and 60e.

Get a package from your druggist tonight and see what an improvement Millc-O-Mag la. Advertisement. HAVE already told you of the rebellion in the Low Countries, when in the year 1581 the merchants, bavins? dulv abiurerl i I string-pulling to tl I I Cv 11 err Hitler 1 the first look at their lawful master, the king of Spain, established an independent republic- of their own. The) next outbreak occurred In England In 1842 and again in 1680. jierr ismcr, niK-nor Mussolini, Hcrr Goering and A few political dynasties forged ahead and gradually destroyed They led to a tremendous Increase In the governing power of those who derived their Income, not from tho land but' from commercial transactions.

It was from our point of view, a decided sten all competition. Chapter Twenty-One flood lights, hunting more bodies. The victims, eight of whom were Indians of the Tome tribe, crawled under the warehouse yesterday to get out of a pelting rain. They were crushed to death when the storm and the weight of the sacked prunes caused the old building to slip from Its stilt-like supports. The flattened forms, lying in a circle were found under the floor.

"It was a terrible thing to look at," Undershcriff Lewis said. Three Indians who live nearby identified eight victims, including the two women, as members of their tribe. They were occasional workers in the fields and orchards here. The other victim was a white man about 35 with the initials H. tattooed on his arm.

Coroner Fred Young said an Inquest would be held April 4, and that a mass burial probably would be given the Indian victims by tribesmen. Eastman, Max Stalin's Russia and the Crisis In Socialism. As a friend of many of the "Old Bolsheviks" who disappeared In Moscow's sinister purges, the author has made a study ot socialist theory and has been active in the labor and radical movement. He has used a wealth of new material in this book to reveal the inner workings ot the Stalin regime, which he is convince surpasses "even the brutality of the Czarist regime." Chamberlain, John The American Stakes, John Chamberlain' views of the political economy of the United States is realistic. He maintains that the much maligned pressure groups are the watchdogs of democracy.

He analyzes the practical opportunities liberalism has before it. He examines the Democratic party and the IIIIAT liad been begun by the feudal system was continued and brought to perfection by a rapidly increasing number of monarchies. Law and order (and therefore security) was Herr Goebbels cmari.l Chaplin in Hollywood's never-never land. "And if Hitler has a sense of humor as big as the head of a pin," Jack Oakle said, "he'll take one look at the picture and wonder what all the shooting's about. If he gets Charlie's point, he'll call his war off and retire to his mountain top, giggling to himself." Mr.

Oakie plays straight man Mussolini to Mr. Chaplin's comic Hitler. The rotund Billy Gilbert is Herr Goering, with a new uniform for every scene, while the villain in the piece is Henry Daniels, who, as Herr Goebbels, once more reestablished all over Europe. forwards. Let us stress this point: In neither country had the introduction of a more elaborate system of parliamentary government anything to do with our modern Ideal of Democracy.

Those whom, a few centuries later, Alexander Hamilton was to describe as "the rich and wellborn," remained In complete control of the situation. There was only one element In the nation they distrusted more profoundly and hated more cordially than either the nobility or the monarchy and that element was known as "the common people." NEXT: From unexpected places come the new ideas that begin to shape Man's destiny. (Coptrioht 1940 for Thsi Bxkqhamtom Press Br NEA SrRVics. Inc.) It meant a tremendous increase in the wealth and prestige of that new class of citizens which had gradually Interposed Itself between the lordly gentry who ruled the land and the peasants and serfs who worked It, As all history shows us, no class of society will ever wilfuliy commit suicide for the sake of another. spends his time whispering sinister The aristocracy (which is merely another name for "old End of Trial Removes Skeleton From Courtroom TABLE PADS strongly opposed, therefore, the ambitions of those merchants who secrets in Herr Hitlers ear.

"We've all got trick names," Mr. Oakie said. "Charlie originally planned to call me 'Benzlno Gaso- to them represented the obnoxious Idea of "new money." Pa. Bars 'Dope Addicts' but decided maybe that to have a mania for crashing; head-on luckily at low speed." "She somehow escaped apparent Injury herself," Mr. Hamilton added, "but left her victims on as Drivers After Crashes ITnrrlsbtirg, March 27 (JP UNDER those circumstances the men of the counting-house eagerly looked for some one who would protect them against the menace that came to them from the castle of the feudal sounded a little too much like 'Benito So now.

I'm known as 'Bcnzino "I promised to keep quiet about the plot," he said, "but, I can say that Hitler and Mussolini literally the highways while she sped oft Into the nlRht. She finally confessed causing at least four acci A story of a woman who apparently got a thrill out of repeatedly driving automobiles Into head- chieftain. In order to do this they needed soldiers and political henchmen on collisions while under the in dents." The were no fatalities, wrote the story for Chaplin as At last there was a class of citizens who were possessed of ready fluence of narcotics was disclosed Asbestos Phone or Write. Representative they went along. Now after play Stockton, March 27 UP) The skeleton of John Mazcnauer was removed today from the courtroom wall where It hung during the murder trial of his friend, Dominlck Sutter, 28.

Sutter was convicted yesterday of killing Mr. Mazenauer for his car and his money. Judge M. G. Woodward, who heard the case without a Jury, said he would spare the young dairyman the lethal chamber when he passes sentence Monday because of the "faint possibility" of truth in Sutter's story that he thought he was shooting a burglar.

The sentence will be life imprisonment, Judge Woodward said. cinhanV N. i cash. A tacit alliance was formed between the rising young capital POTATO TRAIX POPILAR Ing In the picture, every morning I pick up the paper and read about conferences between the two dic today with announcement that she and 211 other alleged "dope addicts" have been barred from Salt Iike City, Itah (U.PJ An can ion Measurements. istic forces, struggling for greater Influence upon the government, and the equally young and new monarchies, desperately trying to Phone Right Awaf estimated total of 60,000 persons Pennsylvania's highways.

Her escapades were brought to In six western states left their tators in Europe and I laugh my head off. They're doing just exactly what Charlie and I did in front of the cameras. the attention of the state depart destroy the feudal aqulrarchy which still stood between these new fangled majesties and their final grab for the supreme power. American Tabid Pad Co. No Charge for This Service.

DIAL 2-2584 ment of revenue. Secretary Wil farms to visit a special Union Pacific railroad train bearing an exhibit of Idaho potatoes, diseases "What we all hone Is that the liam -J. Hamilton, said, by 82 MART STREET, BINGHAMTON During the 15th and 16th centuries a few political dynasties (closely resembling our own big commercial dynasties In their mode residents ot a central-state county of potatoes and cures for the dis eases. wno reported that she seemed whole world will laugh at the headlines from Berlin and Rome, after the picture is released. We even hope that Hitler and Mus solini themselves will laugh." Three Regional Auditions widloliplhi' TIP Ml for Orchestra Aspirants Walton, Mnrch 27 In addition Foirmeir Wcalwes ieh to the final audition In New York May 23 for places on the All American Youth orchestra, three rcRional auditions have been scheduled for this state, Lockhart KuMtell, Delaware Sullivan NYA supervisor in Walton said today According to information re 4 sBg-jjMisBg lit, mm tfsi 'fiajfflasjSWSf ceived from Karl JX state NYA administrator, the regional hearings were scheduled due to the number of state youths who qualified in district auditions for the final.

Facing this added competition Is Isabella Maynard of Fish's Eddy, violinist, the only girl among seven persons selected from 30 competitors in tho district audition in Ithaca. Total of 108 passed district tests and the personnel of the orchestra, to tour Central and South America this summer under the direction of Leopold Stokowski. will comprise only 109 persons from the entire country. No dates have been set for the regional hearings, but they have been planned for Rochester. Buffalo and Albany.

Mr. Uusseil said that Miss Maynard would compete in the Albany tc-t. WARDS OFFER BIG 1940 DELUXE FEATURED 6.4 CU FT. REFRIGERATOR AT LOWEST PRICE IN TffllM 1 WdU JAu caliollm null km, mi NEW fIJATED I sin effect I 11 mCHMEKT hade nx I f9 ANTIQUED I lr SB 'I I i mu ft 11 rrrrm Cancer Control Lecture to Be Given in Andes OUR HISTORY! Walton, March 27 Dr. trfiuis Kress, of the Division of Cancer Control in New York Srite Department of Health, In Albany, will be the guest speaker Monday night at 7:30 o'clock In the Andes Central school, It was announced today.

Dr. Kress, chairman of the New York state committee ot the American Society for the Control of Cancer, appointed In 1935, will give a lecture Illustrated with slides In the meeting sponsored by the American Legion post and auxiliary of Andes. Phillips Undiscouraged by Rebuffs in Dam Fight Vinlta, March 27 (PI 25c DOWN 25c WEEKLY 0 I I I .1 COLOR TRIM I Sp Hetty Governor Leon C. rhillips. rebuffed again in his "state's rights war" with the Federal gov-ernment over the $20,000,000 Grand river dam, asserted today "I'm not discouraged or afraid of any off-the-record remarks in court." The red-haired chief executive obviously was piqued by sharp criticism from the bench of his use of the' National Guard In an effort to halt closing the dam until WPA paid the slate damages for roads and bridges to be Inundated.

6.95 ill III! te 1 1 UNION CENTER iSy, -Villi WITH I fHlV A beautiful lamp you'll be proud to have in your living room and one that you'll enjoy, for it gives every degree of light you need. The nite light in the base is useful as well as decorative. I Also on Sale at Our I k4t1fTlTl5' I EXD1COTT STOItK, 52 Washington Aie. Lli.fiillMlll, Also on Sale at Our EXD1COTT STOItK, 52 Washington Ave. TTnion Center, March 27 Mr.

and Mrs. Clyde Smith entertained at a family dinner- party recently in honor of their guests, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh D. Sherman and son, Hugh, of Baltimore, Md.

Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Kred Tiutler, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ives and daughters, Nancy and Sylvia, all of Binghamton.

Mr. and Mrs. Victor K. Jenks and Mr. and Mrs.

Arthur Updike and sons, Robert and Roger, all of Ithaca, were guests Easter day of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Saddlemire. Mr, and Mrs. Joseph Andrus of South Plymouth, were recent guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Louis Ketchum. Roy Parr of Vestal was a dinner guest of Harry Davis and family. Saturday. Mrs.

Burton Nelson is ill at her home here. Miss Norma Ketchum was a recent guest of Mrs. Molly Cummings in C'tty. Mm. Soars of West Endi-cott, was weekend guest of Mr.

i T' TELEPHONE 2-7261 BINGHAMTON, N. Y. 60 HAWLEY STREET 73 COURT STREET OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS HOT pmoj vffiXT ADS TR HTW, IT WILL PAY YOU TO INVESTIGATE A A' I.

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