cation muet bear the nanieand addree of the auhor, pot »usurily for publication, but for ont file. Suh iâterisl uot reach the editor, by Tusday MOOD t. o c inime for ihe crrent isue. TowNSHIP.,RELIEF,. T1he Illinois. Emergency Relief commission is scheduled to die a natural death on JuIy 1, af ter which the administration of relief will'be toss.ed into the laps of township governmental units, to be under the direction of the supervisors. These officiaIs, it was thougbt, would turn:the job over teý the county bureau of, public welfare, as -did the Chicagocity council. However, in a confer- ence held Monday with a joint cominittee of the, Chicago.council and the ceunty board, thesuper- visors, 29 to 2, declarèd that they wanted' to bandie the relief problem themnselves, the two exceptions being Mrs. Gertrude M. Thurston of, New Trier t ownship and -William A., Lally. of River' Forest township. Lack of organization to handie 'the work is the obstacle sighted by the dissenters. More and more the, dangers and expense ýof remote control of relief are being rcgnzdby those honest persons in a position te kneiw wbere- of tbey spealç. More and more it is beinig recog-, nized that the smaller -the unit of geverniment, administering relief the lower the cost, and the, higher the efficiency. And in a township such as New Trier there is net need for a large organiza- tion to. handie the m~atter. 'Ehere would be less waste, if any at ail. Impositions would be reduced te a minimum~, beesuse the condition and habits Of relief clients would be better known and in- vestigations reduced in both time and effort. The sorry mess which has been made of relief by> state. and federal- agencies impels one te believe that the change te townshi p control could flot possibly be anything other than an im- provement. At least it is worth trying.- IT CAN BiE DoNE, With hundreds of thousands of automobiles traweni~un i-,r the trees ndIhiighwa&vs of Chicago and DREDGINO THE HARBOR The present effort to raise funds by subscrip- tien tô dredge Minmette harber and malce it navigable for the current ,sea son wîll receive the support of the. considerable. number of north shore residents. who 'are interesied in boating and,,yachting. One imÉportant purpese of'the plan is- to open Up' the harbor se that the coast guard can use it at al times, and especially iii stermy weather. It does ne good now to comàplain of a' short-- sighted governnient' which,:,with billions to spend, prisits coast guard station te become sand- Iocked in the b arber.- It is no re th an likel y that funds will become available later and that a comprehen'sive'rebuilding of the harbor will take place, but that is months in the future. The practical necessity is- immediate action. WE DID OUR PART Under the titie "Let's Do Our Best,» this paper printed the following editorial in its issue of August 10, 1933: "The ready response to President Roosevelt's recovery program-a response that bas corne from the largest centers and the smaliest, cen-. munitiles alike-indicates an earnest desire-on the partof American business to heip itself out of a sickbed and back to normal health. "Th e blanket code, which han for its object the shortening of working hours and the absorption ef unemployment, was reeeived by ail employers In the New Trier villages last Saturday, and im- niediately steps were taken t,) put Its provisions' into operation. While the code is in sonme par- ticulars obscure in meaning, leaviflg much un- certainty as toexeaut requirenments, It Is gexierally accepted hI a spirit of patriotic loyalty that fore- casts a genuine effort to. adbere to the program. "In these circumstances it may be superfluous te direct attention te the tact that the ineat' ef the proposition Is contained In one object, the putting of more men afld women te work. Uf this be flot achieved, the plan wlll faau. The simple* shortening of heurs te the maximum permitted in a given lndustry will flot gain the desired restiltg. Additlonal help must be recrulted. In essence, the plan provides fer a division of aval!- able woôrk heurs. "This is comparatively easier of acemplishrnent in 'large Industrial plants and mercantile con- cerns than In small establishmients such as cern- ,prise the most of our New Trier concerne. boon to Mr. and M.LVI. ,nm. i . aper. ýaturuay the Keys quadruplets from Texas (every one a peach, too) were in Chicago enroute to Callander, Ontario, to visit the DiÔnne quintuplets and ini- vite 'cm to the Texas Centennial exposition. Get- ting to be very common,.these quads and quintçs. 'Ho1opes for G.O.P. Victoryin.,November ,Rise," read a Monday. headline. It's about time Repub-. licans camne* to the conclusion that they cani elect the next President. Weve known it right along., Ma ny a liberty'ioving heart rect2ived a. savage wrench when the papers of Sunlday were read, for in the, news there were portrayed tWo incidents which cut deep, into the-sen- sibilities of fair-minded foôlks. One pictured Mussolini ý de- claring total Italian:sovereign-. t.y over Ethiopia, proclaiming, Victor Emmanuel to, be, eim- peror over Italy's war-ac- quired territory, and present- ing bis people with a new em- pire "on the seven fateful 1, huIs of Romie." The other J shoWved the erstwhile king of u » conquered. Ethiopia stealing è from bhis hotel roomn in the gray dawn of a day that broughit no surcease of his sorrows, facing a world from whicth ail joy for him hae fiown, kneeling before the HOly' Sepuichcr in jerusalem and praying fcrvently for bis unhappy, enslaved people. crying out against the cruelty of aggression. Might rnay not make right, but it wins warsi However, when both appear before the great judgment Seat, the van- quished xnay become the victor. And now a Democratic Senator, nime Harry F. Byrd, bas discovered, that the big corporations will pay Iess taxes than now, or non'e at ail, if the. admninistration's grab-the-suùrplus tax bill,*goes through..' The New Dealers. are always talking about soaking the rich and passing Iaws that soal< the poor., There is nothinig within 'the range of. hurnati ex-, perience that so deeply stirs the wells of syml- given the police departint te strictly enforce traffic regulations until the nuisance was abated. Many arrests were mrade and convictions secured. Within a f ew days the news spread that it is ne. longer safe for motorists to "cut 'er wide open" on J. Edward JO: winning court securities and ex by a 'federal gr« using the mails1 Mr. Jonues-but, s, New Yorker who fought a ttle against the New Deal's hange commnission, wàs indicted id jury Friday on a charge of defraud. We hold ne brief for looks like a case of retaliatien. Have you noticed that spring (fingers çrossed) ,as corne almost a month earlier tlhan usual? THZ. PHANTOM RÉPoliaR.