Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 29, Number 203, Decatur, Adams County, 27 August 1931 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
UNIFORM MOTOR LAWS SOUGHT Washington, Aug. 27.—(U.R) — A campaign for full reciprocity among | all states in the matter of automo ! bile licenses has been begun by I the American Motorists' Associa-j tion. The preliminary survey shows.! according to a recent statement, i that only 16 states now grant full j reciprocity, while 23 states have ; reciprocal agreements in regard to i licensing of automobiles. "Despite the fact that there has. been a uniformity of opinion in I state legislatures and state 1
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way motor vehicle commissions.’ says .1. H. Weeks, president of the ! Motorists’ Association, "there are still 26 states which have not adopted full reciprocal licenses." In the general summary made by !the association it was found that Mississippi and Texas permit for- . eign motorists only 25 days of opl eration, while two more states, ; Georgia and Tennessee, give the ! visiting driver 30 days without the j necessity of securing a new license. ' Arkansas, Indiana, Nebraska and I Oklahoma have 6(1 day limitations I and there are 13 states which set i a 90 day limit on car owners from : other states. In addition to these I Arizona has a four months law and | six months is allowed in Illinois. I lowa, New Mexico and Virginia. I The remaining states and the I District of Columbia all havd reciprocal agreements. RADIO STATION BATTLES CZARS Jeannette, Pa., Aug. 27. —(U.R) — Outcome of the government’s attempt to halt broadcasting at radio station WGM. Jeannette, is awaited with interest in the radio world -for a number of similar cases are I reported as pending. The Federal Radio Commission. U. S. radio czars, seek to stop broadcasting on the ground that WGM (broadcasts beyond the state boundaries and that a Federal license (therefore is required. Lee Elton Spencer, owner and ! operator, who twice has been ari rested and who declares he will l carry his case to the supreme court if necessary, maintains the station cannot be heard outside of Pennsylvania. Spencer is going ahead with plans for erection of a larger and , better equipped broadcasting sta- ! tion on Gobbler’s Knob, despite the i fact he may be tried at the next | term of Federal court. "The law reads that any station I which broadcasts outside the bounIdaries of the state requires a Fedleral license,” Spencer said. “I have | conducted tests which showed ■WGM’s waves were confined to i Pennsylvania. "Recently 1 was charged with opI erating without a license because lit was claimed WGM was heard in (othe r states. I will fight that I charge to the end. if it takes me I to the supreme court.”
YEAR ROUND SESSION URGED • I FOR LEAGUE More Business Makes ( Such a Move Necessary Experts Declare — — / Geneva. — (VP) — The present ■ session of the League’s Hague I Court of International Justice demonstrates the necessity of the I i court remaining in permanent ses- > sion, according to League circles. As a matter of fact, revised stati utes for the court, which have been adopted by the League assembly, I already provide for the court remaining in permanent-session. but I to date the new statutes have not been ratified by a sufficient number of states to render them effective. I In Hie meantime, the steadily in- , creasing number of cases that is I carried before the court, makes it ’I necessary for the latter to convoke ' I special sessions when an urgent de- ’: cision is necessary. Twenty second Session 1 The present extra session of the court which was convened especially for the granting of an advisory opinion on the G|rmanAu~ ian customs union makes the 22ml ses ' I sion which the court has held in ' ■ the ten years of its existence. Besides the hearing on the Ger-man-Austrian customs union, the 1 i court has four other cases on its 'docket which necessitate opinions. ' ; or decisions, as quickly as is pos- i 1 | sible. As a consequence, it is expect--1 ed that an all summer session of 'I the tribunal will be necessary. The four other cases to be heard I i this summer include: . First: The dispute ibetwi-en > ( France and Switzerland relative to i t i the establishment of free customs zones around Geneva us piovided by | L the Versailles treaty. -i Second: The dispute between - Denmark and Norway relative to - , the possession of certain parts of 1J Eastern Greenland. Railway Traffic Third: An advisory opinion, as - reqested by the League council re- ■ lative to railway traffic between 1 Lithuania and Poland. t Fourth: An advisory opinion, also 3 j requested by the League council, relative to the statement of Polish I
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1931.
Coach Craft Winners ' K- . '' :e -u V-Thb’*- a ? ¥ ’ * SY ‘ Aft-* Sir 'W a /JEra I'utir s< holarship winners in nation-wide Fisher Hi <iy Craftsmen Guild coach-building contest, at din-1 ni r :n their honor at Detroit. Left to right: Howard Jennings. 19, ol Denver; Albert Fischer. 19, of Waukegan. 111., winners: Arthur Brisbane, famous newspaper editorial writer, extending felicitations; W. A. Fisher, president Fisher Body Corporation, who announced the victors, and Raymond S. Doerr. 16, of Battle Creek, Mich., and Donald C. Burnham, 16, of West Lafayette, hid., winners. The youths receive fourvear university courses as prizes.
nationals and other persons of Polish oiigin or language in the DantzL territory. All four of the questions in which advisory opinions are asked by the League, must be heard and decided before the next session of the League council on September 3, in order that that body may base their final action on them. Leaguers declare that the only i solution for the constantly increas-
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- ing number of cases that are being - carrted to the Hague court lies in the bringing into force of the new 1 requhemenis for permanent ses- > sion, I o —— Friday Sets New Record Klamath Falls, Ore. — (U.R) —Friday, a Holstein cow owned by C. W. Lewis, has set a new state rec- • ord for butterfat production. She ■ produced 123.9 pounds of butterfat
from 2.152 pounds'of milk in one month. o Corn Husks Forecast Cold Zanesville, O— (U.R) -A cold winter is approaching, sages of this section predict. Heavy husks on growing corn are indicative of a severe winter, they say. Get the Habit—Trade at Heme.
SOCIAL EXPERT PREDICTS LONG BREAD LINES St. Louis Community Fund Director I’orecasts Hard Winter St. Louis —(UP)— Bread lines) next winter in many of the larger American cities will be the longest in the history of the nation, Robert W. Kelso, director of the St. Louis ' Communty Fund, and a recognized authority on social welfare believes. Social relief agencies will be call-, ed upon to provide four or five times as much relief as ever before ’ he predicted. "We have a tough i winter ahead of us,” he said. ’’Families that have been wreck i ed by lack of work during the de- ! pression will be on the hands of the social agencies,” he continued. “Thousands of families that have stood the strain during the last winter and have dragged through tire summer on their own, will find next winter too rough. “Undoubtedly many of the needy will not be taken care of and there lies the gravest danger in this hardest winter in history. “The first symptom of this trouble will be riots. When these troubles start the whole gang of uk will yell ‘Communism,” And we’ll be right about it, insofar as we define Communism to mean discontent with the existing order of
things. ”A deep thinly of F ■ emor Montagu of England. sai,> . drastic measures ;ll , ~k , the civilized workl will ',//’■ he eivili-ed worl(| Wlll , )( within a year.” HI ! German-American S College OrgaJ i Mess-en, Germany, -ipp. | American C01t,...,, Sl , V eichon (Seven t.asi, lH „ which is to advan. • understandin;', will with courses in grammar psychology, socn.l ... . "W ' ""-y ~f art - '' a l>wl - , . W graphic geometry. ail .( peds, all conforming to ~,/B i standard. Courses ar, /■ Tile instruction will bp J ( lish for the first fem m,, Ilt i, s ?■ it is estimated th. ml,. nts wj| ,W able to proceed in ■,/ J I ulty wil leonsist ~i <;.. ri „ aw , ~.M , for the one American ami on, J I lish professor. Monica president of the college. I students win | lvp in M ’ Siebeneichen Cast . as ,n,., h |,J . President van Milt it z’> i llmi i v T| B j . will be given an oppmtunitv fo r ß | cial contact wit!; oth.-r Genn M B ; milies. ■ ’( The Rev. Moncrieff lt ril ,. p J lain of the American ( luireh ofß ’ i John, Dresden, is on. ~f th<. n J ! trustees. I s, —— o I State Paid $1,189,733.24 | f Salem. Ore—(U.R) Oregon wgl 1 men and dependents received fl t-1 189,733.24 from tlt e woruJ i-1 compensation fund for the refl f fiscal year. a
