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ATTORNEY GENERAL RECOMMENDS QUICK ACTION ON DRY LAW Says Present State of Public Mind Will Make Officers’ Task Difficult REFUSES TO COMMIT SELF Disrespect of Law Caused By Laxity in Enforcement, Mitchell Declares Washington, Dec. 7.— (4) — Citing that one of the principal arguments “against prohibition has been that it! has created disrespect for the law,” Attorney General Mitchell Wednesday recommended in his annual report to President Hoover that if any changes are to be made in the dry laws they be made “as quickly as possible.” The statement was the first of its kind by the justice department head since the prohibition bureau was tak- en from the treasury and transferred to the justice department two years ago. There was no indication in the rec- ommendation of the attorney gener- al’s personal attitude »oward proposed changes in dry laws, as each part of it hinged on the word “if.” Would Avoid ‘Scuttling’ ‘He said: “If any changes are to be made in our national system of prohibition two things are obvious: First, the changes, if any, should be made as quickly as possible; and, second, changes should be made through amendment of sub- stantive law and not by leaving laws on the statute books and scuttling them by refusal to appropriate money for their enforcement. “It is evident that the present state of the public mind will make the task of the officers of the law doubly diffi- cult, and increase breakdown and dis- respect for the law unless changes which are to be made are made speed- ily. Furthermore, one of the principal arguments against our prohibition system has been that it has created disrepect of the law, and nothing can ‘be imagined which would tend more to create that disrespect than to have criminal statutes in force but to relax the effort to enforce them.” Must Improve Locally “The crime problem in this country 4s not to be solved,” he said, “by en- larging the scope of federal activity, but by improvement in local machin- ery of justice, supported or demanded by public opinion.” He also mentioned that sometimes one to three years were required to dispose finally of criminal cases after @ verdict of guilty because of the ma- chinery of appeals to higher courts. He called the situation “a grave re- proach to our system of administra- tion of criminal justice.” ‘The attorney general reported 222,.. ‘738 cases were begun in federal dis- trict courts in the fiscal year 1932 compared with 198,404 in 1931. Sim- ilarly, cases terminated for the two years were 216,087 and 201,408, respec- tively, because of the rapid increase of the department's activities. Mitchell urged that “no legislation imposing additional burdens” be vot- ‘by congress without consideration ' drawing of juries by the different municipal bodies, not only in Bur- leigh county but elsewhere in the tate. “In many instances and in every small precinct the law is violated. We all know it. It is a matter which some time must be taken up and remedied,” he said. “It often happens that the same men are called for jury service twice a year. and re-picked, year after year. At the same time there live in these same districts citizens who lived there year after year and still have never been called for jury service.” Those matters, however, could not be reached by the challenge made, he jasserted, but promised to take the matter up with his colieague, Judge Fred Jansonius, Bismarck, in an ef- !fort to see what could be done about |it. He said the court was “anxious to reach as high a standard as possible in selecting persons for jury duty”| but that the motion would be over- ruled. It should be understood, he told the jurors in the courtroom, that the mo- tion constituted no challenge to any member of the jury panel nor reflect- ed upon their integrity but was di- rected at the conditions under which the names were selected. Previously the fact that there are several Johnsons in Grass Lake town- ship with similar names had raised | another jury question. One of the names drawn from the} jury box that of J. F. Johnson but it appeared there was no such indi- vidual. Both John Taylor Johnson and Fred J. Johnson responded to the call and each said he had been re- ceiving mail under the initials given in the call. The tangle will be dis- posed of later, the judge announced. ; One explanation of the preponder- | ance of rural names in the jury list, | as offered recently by a court attache, was the fact that the county commis- sioners, who serve as a jury board, usually like to have each township represented in the jury list and that the city has never received its fair proportion of the names, although the law asserts that representation shall be on a pro rata basis “as nearly as/| may be.” The situation apparently reached its peak with the announcement of the present jury panel, however, and the drawing further emphasized the situ- ation. Of the 35 names taken from the box, seven were of persons who give their postoffice addresses as Wing and five get their mail from Arena. A number get their mail from Bismarck but only two are residents of the city proper. CONTINUE from page one Hoover’s Cleaver Cuts Deeply Into | Proposed Budget} xolls. This would be done by limiting all benefits, except to ex-soldiers with Claims based on active service at over 65, to persons with a net nicome, if single, of less than $1,500 and if mar- ried, of less than $3,500. Wholesale re-examination of those now on the rolls would be followed by removal at the end of six months or 90 days, de- Pending on category, of all not quali- fying under the new terms. Many specific forms of benefit would be reduced, including compen- sation to veterans receiving hospital- ization, and stringent administrative | regulation would limit further addi-} tions to the rolls. 1 To cover his proposals for new tax and economy legislation the president in his message departed from custom, gave a list of appropriations as rec- ommended in the budget itself, and flanked it with his own further re- | ed of the department's financial situa- tion. ce from page one- | Panel Drawn for | Present Term Has Only 2 City Names ing after the two excuses, only two were from the city of Bismarck and the other 31 were from the rural dis- | tricts of the county, Fisher said under | examination. | O'Hare asked the court to take no- tice of the fact that the 1930 census credits Burleigh county with 19,769 of whom 11,090 or approxi- mately 60 per cent, live in the city of Bismarck. Yet Bismarck supplied on-/| ly two of the 33 jurors ready to serve. This and the lack of names in the jury box, as well as the lack of names from Bismarck, was the basis of the challenge. Hanley Supports Motion J. M. Hanley, representing the plaintiff, asserted that the motion was directed at a situation in which all members of the bar and all citizens are interested; that “all any of us want are fair jurors” and that the legislature has provided a method of getting disinterested citizens on jur- tes. NTINUEJ) Failure to fill the jury box to the required number of 200 names, he said, constituted a violation at least of the spirit of the law covering the selection of juries and it seemed to tiff, he said, he felt that the matter should be corrected. The court, he said, undoubtedly was interested in ing the sanctity of the jury ‘and that the plaintiff not to object to the motion with the defendant in aE dg fhe g duced figures. Without his veterans and pay cut savings estimated reduc- tions in expenditures totaled $397,- | 553,000. With these included, $581,- 923,000 was trimmed below the actual appropriations for the current fiscal year. Food Exempt From Tax The new tax proposed by the presi- dent— essentially the same manufac- turers’ sales tax advocated in congress last year but extended to include everything except food at a flat 2% rate—was estimated to yield $355,000.- | 000. Continuance of the one cent tax on gasoline—which unless re-enacted would end next June—was estimated to produce $137,000,000. The total of | $492,000.000 would cover the estimated deficit for the year. | The government pay cut proposed! would affect all income above the first $1,000 of annual wage or salary, saving an estimated $55,000,000. It would be imposed in addition to the present 30-day payless furlough which constitutes an 8 1/3 per cent salary reduction. The pay cut recommendation was accompanied by a draft of legislation to put it into effect. This provided that all goverinment-owned corpora- tions impose similar cuts on their em- ployes. Except for @ few miscellaneous projects. no provision was included for additional projects in the govern- president said the $100,000,000 author- ized under the emergency relief act of the last congress had taken care of all additional public construction now needed. Defense Budget Reduced The budget provided $586,477.00 for national defense, as compared with $632,466,000 last ybar. It carried $39,- 388,129 for rivers and harbors wors, a reduction Of $20,161,871; and $40,000,- 000 for the federal aid highway sys- tem. Hoover said no more than this should be allotted to highway aid un- til the is in vetter condition. The president said appropriations for public works in his budget were leas than those for the present year: “Speaking generally of public works, this program is well in advance. of the country’s immediate need by virtue of the vast appropriations made for this purpose as a means of increasing employment. The authorization of large programs of self-liquidating ‘works to be firianced by the recon- struction finance corporation pro- vides aid to employment upon an ven larger scale, without burden up- ‘on the taxpayer.” The same men are picked! ment’s huge building program. The | $27 LOOT BELIEVED SMALL Chicégo, Dec. 7.—(7)—Postal au- Hel aeeee a g Bas Tuesday. fay not rae $500,000 2 value most m apparently were non-negotiable. Many helpful opportunities may be obtained reading i | ” (CANDIDATES SPENT | $10,000 IN EFFORTS -_TOWININELECTION Byrne Receives Reports From Congressional and State Office-Seekers | P. W. LANIER SPENT MOST; to District) Three Aspirants Bench Report That They Expended Nothing ] Candidates for state and congres-{ sional offices personally spent more} than $10,000 to further their candi-| dacies in the fall campaign, accord- ing to reports filed with the secre-| tary of state. Democratic candidates reported a total expenditure of $4,236.24 for] printing, livery, and advertising. Contributions to the Nonpartisan League campaign fund took consider-( able of the $2,533.31 the Republican candidates reported they spent for| election purposes. Candidates for} district judge spent $3,508.24. Six Communist candidates report-j| ed they expended a total of $62.15.! The Communistic expenses ranged | from a report of “no” expenditure | by K. P. Loesch of Montpelier to aj report by Andrew Omholt of Minot; that he spent $25.65. | The most spent by any single can-| didate was that of P. W. Lanier of Jamestown, Democratic candidate for U, S. senator, who reported expendi-| tures of $1,800. Lanier, who visited} some 70-odd cities and villages by} airplane during the campaign, re-| Ported that it cost him $500 for the airplane and pilot, and an additional $500 for miscellaneous items, includ- ing board for pilot and himself and) repairs, during the tour. In addi- tion he spent money for advertising| matter, automobile trips, and gaso- line. Nye Spent $575 Lanier’s Republican opponent, Sen- ator G. P. Nye, reported his expenses as being $575, of which $350 was con- tributed to the campaign fund. A $250 contribution to the cam- paign fund was listed as a part of the| $458 which Governor-Elect William Langer reported he spent to further his election in the fall campaign. while $48 went for advertising. His Democratic opponent, H. C. Deroy of Grafton, reported $64.89 in ex- penses. spent are: Democrats, R. B. Murphy,/ $720, and W. D. Lynch, $828.75; Re-/| publicans, J. H. Sinclair, $450;- Wil-| liam Lemke, $188.50. Running for secretary of state, Robert Byrne, Republican, spent $55. while the Democrat, S. F. Casey, spent $75. R. A. Johnson spent $170 in his campaign for election as lieu-| tenant governor and Ole H. Olson,) Republican, expended $21.66. Other candidates’ expenses were: Railroad commission—Ben C. Lar-! kin, Repfblican, $175.50; A. L. Chap- man, Democrat, $36.60. H tate auditor—Berta E. Baker, Re-j publican, $57.50; Grace Hoopes, De-! mocrat, $7. Commissioner of insurance—S. A. Olsness, Republican, $50; Perry R. Benner, Democrat, $350. Attorney General—A. J. Gronna,| Republican, $228. State treasurer—Alfred §S. Dale,| Republican, $202.15; William Schantz Democrat, $84. Commissioner of agriculture and} labor—John Husby, Republican, $72; John Magill, Democrat, $100. Judge Candidates Report | Of 22 candidates for district judge-| ships, three judges, R. G. McFar-| land of Jamestown, Morton L. Mc-| Bride of Dickinson, and F. M. Jack- son of Hettinger, reported they spent | no money. The other candidates and amounts each reported they spent: M. J. Englert, Valley City, $67.80. Daniel B. Holt, Fargo, $368.65. iH P. G. Swenson, Grand Forks, $241.25. T. H. Thoresen, $210.95. C. W. Buttz, Devils Lake, $154.70. G. Grimson, Rugby, $47.70. William J. Kneeshaw, Pembina, $45.50. O. S. Gunderson, Christine, $34.77. William H. Hutchinson, La Moure, $35.25. George $442.56. | Fred Jansonius, Bismarck, $19.50. | F. B. Lambert, Minot, $132.44. i H. E. Johnson, Minot, $339.89. John C. Lowe, Minot, $597.53. George H. Moellring, Williston,! 0. Grand Forks, M. McKenna, H. L. Berry, Mandan, $85.50. Frank T. Lembke, Hettinger, $84.50. Thomas H. Pugh, Dickinson, $88.50. Ten of 29 candidates for the state| house of representatives who filed reports said they spent no money in the campaign. Three of five can- didates for state senator said they spent no money to further their cause, The other two reporting spent $10. Sioux City, Ta., clear... Spokane, Wash., clear.. 10 Swift Current, S., clear - The Pas, Man., clear. Republican and Democratic con-|} Winnemucca, N., peldy gressional candidates and amount/ Winnipeg, Man., clear: Co Secretary Points ing. Napoleon, | £00. RST SE eT Weather Report | \ Pipe ola FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: and Thursday; somewhat tonight. For North Da- Generally fair and continued cold tonight and except colder kota: Thursday, south-central por- tion tonight. For South Da- kota: Generally a Thursday; west portion tonight. For Montana: Generally fair to- night and Thursday; continued cold. GENERAL CONDITIONS The high pressure area, with its accompanying cold weather, extends to the western Rocxy Mountain slope. Sub-zero temperatures occurred in Minnesota, the Dakotas, Montana and in the western Canadian Provinces and drops of 20 to 40 degrees occurred in the Mississippi Valley and south- ern Plains States. Light scattered precipitation occurred in all sections, but with heavy precipitation in the lower Great Lakes region. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.58. Reduced to sea level, 30.53. For Minnesota: Generally fair to- night and Thursday; continued cold. “NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 | BISMARCK, clear . Devils Lake, clear .. Fargo-Moorhead, pcid Williston, clear. Grand Forks, clear » Minot, clear’. Jamestown, cle: Amarillo, Tex., cldy. .... 2: Boise, Idaho, snowing. Calgary, Alta., clear Chicago, Ill, snowing Denver, Colo.. clear... Des Moines, Ia., clear.. Dodge City, Kans., clear Edmonton, Alta., clear Havre, Mont., snowing Helena, Mont., snowing -12 Huron, S. D. Kamloops, Kansas Cit Lander, Wyo. Medicine Hat, A., clear -16 Miles City, Mont., cle No. Platte, Nev., snowing 10 Oklahoma Cit Pierre, S. D., cldy 4 Prince Albert, Qu’Appelle, Sask’, clear -22 Rapid City, S. D., snow’g 4 Roseburg, Ore., cldy St. Louis, Mo., cldy St. Paul, Minn., Salt Lake City, U., clear 24 S. S. Marie, } Travel cost Langer $160, he reported, Bneridan wy snowing. , clear’ -24 « 32 woe 28 clear... -4 , snowing 18 clear... 28 . snowing -2 0 16 28 S88PseessaResesesseseeeseReess NTINUED) from page one Out Excise Taxes | Are Insufficient all finished manufactures, excepting jonly food and moderate priced cloth-| still remember the mince-meat epl-| $22,000; Pine Ridge $43,000; Rosebud | $28,000; Canton asylum $48,000. Later other exemptions were added furs, Income Estimate High The secretary said while it had been estimated last May the income of the government for the 1933 fiscal year would amount to $3,098,000,000, revis- ed estimates indicated they would to- tal $2,624,000,000. He said customs du- ties now were estimated at $290,000,- 000, a drop of $60,000,000 from the May estimate; income taxes at $860,000,000, @ drop of $176,000,000; brewer’s wort at $10,000,000, a drop of $72,000,000; bank checks at $45,000,000, a drop of $33,000,000; and admissions at $21,- 000,000, a decrease of $23,000,000. Government receipts were estimated for the 1934 fiscal year from all sources at $2,949,162,713 and expendi- tures at $3,790,425,200. For the present fiscal year he estimated receipts from all sources would amount to $2,624,- 256,693 and expenditures to $4,268,888,- “However difficult and painful it may be,” Mills told congress, “govern- ment expenditures must be drastical- ly cut when, owing to extraordinary circumstances, the government finds that within a comparative short per- | iod its revenues have been cut in half with little prospect of substantial im- provement in the near future. “It is not only unwise but impossi- ble to bridge the gap in the budget entirely by increased taxation. There is no other course for the government to follow but the one to which indi- viduals and business enterprises are driven under similar circumstances, that is, to endeavor to live within its income.” Striking Clerks at Butte Back at Work Butte, Mont., Dec. 7.—()—Busi- ness returned to normal here Wed- nesday after an eight-day mercan- tile moratorium participated in by most of the larger stores because of disagreement with the clerks’ union over terms of a new working agree- ment. All clerks who failed to show up for work Nov. 28 returned to their posts Wednesday while officials of the union and of the employers’ as- sociation entered into negotiations in an effort to harmonize their differ- ences. It was not believed the task could be accomplished in less than two or three days. Matters at issue included wages for! men employed. The number of holi- days to be allowed on pay, whether clerks may be engaged for half-day periods, and whether Saturdays shall be half holidays during the summer months. + ——~% | Today in Congress —_—_____—___+ SENATE : Wednesday Receives _ president's message. Democratic leaders meet draft legislative program. budget to HOUSE Wednesday Receives president's budget. message. Ways and means committee opens hearings on beer legisla- tion. INSULAR HOUSE DISAGREES Manila, over an appropriation to increase the pay of representatives, the insular house was unable to meet Wednesday ‘as scheduled in a special session of the legislature called by Governor General Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. BOOK BRINGS $4,400 New York, Dec. 7.—(?}—An, excep- The Armour Creameries in Bismarck are now taking in Turkeys for the Christmas Holidays. Come in. \ ) Ua {tional first edition of Dickens’ “Pick- wick Papers” brought $4,400 ‘at auc- | tion. Gabhiel Wells paid that sum Tuesday night for the work in its original wrappers. It was published-in London in 1836-37. ° Gener- ally fair tonight colder fair tonight and colder capital--Anna to the Misses . |mavy, ; Sode. Dec. 7.—(#)—Disagreeing The Story of the Next White House Family The Rising Roosevelts (Copyright—NEA Service, Inc.) Just ordinary, active and imag- inative children were the younger Roosevelts during their years in Washington. Amusing anecdotes, hitherto unpublished, are told about them in THE RISING ROOSEVELTS, a series of 12 ar- ticles prepared for The Tribune by NEA Service. The third ar- ticle follows. —— BY PAUL HARRISON Except for the frequent dinners given by the Franklin Roosevelts in their Washington home, and an un- (derstanding that their father was a |from the Mississippi Valley westward | very busy man and not be worried with childish troubles, the tenor of life ran fairly quietly through the World War days. The youngsters had a succession of governesses—“who, I am sure,” said | Anna, “believed that we were the worst kids on the surface of this shin- ing earth.” There was a legend round the Roosevelt nursery to the ffect that whenever Anna, Jimmy or | Elliott could think of no fresh mis- chief to do, one of them would pro- ceed to catch the measles or the mumps. They went to private schools in the East- , and James and Elliott to St. . There they apparently con- ducted themselves with angelic pro- priety, and won more distinction with their knowledge of French (taught from babyhood by their governess) than with their position as the chil jdren of a government executive. A! ter all, their father was only a $5000- a-year assistant secretary of the 'y, and it was not until post-war days that there was a general realiza- tion of the extent of the responsibili- ties he had assumed. But there was one time, at least, when they were literally thrown into the limelight. That was the evening when a slinking radical, carrying one or more powerful bombs, stumbled as he crossed the yard between the houses of Attorney General Palmer and the Roosevelts. There was a tre- mendous explosion, a crash of glass from scores of windows up and down the street, fire, apparatus and ambu- lances clanging, policemen shouting. ee * NO CASUALTIES! Both Roosevelt parents were out of the house at the time, but they rushed in a few minutes later, gasping with fear as they realized that the skylights and windows of the big leeping room had been wrecked by the blast. But the first thing that met their eyes was a widely grinning Jimmy. No one had been hurt, for none of the children was sleeping in| the glass-inclosed room. Jimmy, however, had followed the sound of unearthly, muffled wailings | to the lower regions of the house, and had come upon the spectre of the negro cook, sitting in bed with a sheet over her head, rocking and pray- ing to the uttermost heavens. There was a guard stationed at the Washington home after that, but it was not his business to forestall minor explosions within the effervescent household. e* * BIG AND LITTLE ‘HATES’ | A number of people, for instance, This is Anna speaking: | “I know that we must have com-/| It wasn't fair, either, because most of “And sometimes, usually for no rea- “Well, this time we had a very big hate against the butler and the sec- of a big formal dinner that mother and father were giviig. Our inspira- tion came when we found the butlers. and second man’s shoes all newly pol- ished and sitting side-by-side in a rear hall. And then we re! 4 the huge jar of mincemeat that Cook always made up to last throughout the winter. “We smuggled it out and filled those shoes with mince-meat. It was quite moist and sticky, and I remem- ber how satisfactorily it squished as we stuffed it into the toes. But we were so pleased with ourselves that we made far too much noise getting away, and were discovered. And the last thing I care to remember about that incident is being chased around and around the kitchen table by Cook, who had a broom in her hand.” ee * BATTER UP! ‘When the Roosevelts moved into the R street house, the back yard was called “the garden.” Ivy luxuriated ing vines trailed over latticework. Flower beds were here and there, with grass plots between—a good place to Play, not quite large enough for the rollicking Roosevelts. and trampled the flowers a lot. “Jim and Sis and I used to baseball there. poor baseball player either. I'm sure that between the lot of us we brol at least a dozen windows in a apartment house that backed on edge of our property. We paid paid for those windows. It seemed though our allowances always suffering deductions for one kind or another. z “But now that I mber uch I wonder much damage we really did, Sis wasn’t such & up the shade, and began to devour the woodwork, In the midst of the confusion, Jimmy and Elliott, nearest the flames, remained strangely quiet. “I guess the house will burn up,” opined James, “We gotta go up and rescue Anna!” “But she’s got the measles and shouldn’t be handled,” pointed ‘out Elliott. “But maybe if we get us a sheet, and fix it kinda like a stretcher it would be all right. Anyway the old house is sure going to burn down, ree Just then a couple of well-aimed buckets of water doused both the fire and the would-be heroes, WOULD CUT INDIAN EXPENDITURES BY MILLION THIS YEAR Bismarck School Would Get | $40,200, Slightly Less Than i That Last Year Washington, Dec. 7.—(#)—Indian education and health programs were allotted $12,724,935 of the $225,033,519 asked for the Indian bureau in budget estimates sent Wednesday to congress. Education estimates aggregated $9,- 422,035, as compared with $10,396,500 appropriated for the current fiscal year, while the health fund aggregat- ed $3,302,900 against $3,584,800. The bureau's total budget was cut ap- proximately $5,000,000 from the $30,- 021,141 appropriated for this year. The: two largest items in the edu- cation fund were $3,590,800 for the general reservation school system and $3,758,005 for boarding schools. The education fund provided for the following: Lease, purchase, repair and im- Provement of buildings, $475,600, in- cluding heating plant, Pine Ridge, South Dakota, $38,000; Turtle Moun- tain, North Dakota, water supply $17,- Allotments for boarding schools, for maintenance, etc., each slightly re- duced from current appropriations, in- clude: Pipestone, Minn., $128,680; Bismarck, $40,200; Wahpeton, N. D., $116,000; Flandreau, S. D., $187,450; Pierre, 8. D., $121,920; Rapid City, 8. D., $99,470, Tomah, Wis., $114,220, The health conservation program} called for $2,996,200 for supplies ad- ministering, maintaining, repairing and improving hospitals in the Unit- jed States as compared with $3,213,000 appropriated. The hospital total included: oe Pipestone hospital $22,- Montana, hospitals: Blackfeet $25,- | 000; Fort Peck, $22,000; Crow Agency $24,000; Fort Belknap $30,000; Tongue River $30,000. North Dakota, hospitals: Mountain $35,000; Fort Berthold $18,- (000; Fort Totten $23,000; Rock $25,000. South Dakota, hospitals‘ Crow Creek Wisconsin: Hayward hospital $30,- in an effort to win congressional ap-| pletely be-deviled our colored servants. | 000; and Tomah hospital $27,000. proval. 1 Mills did not name the new taxes|them really adored us and let us take | seek $25,000 for clinical surveys of In- he would like to see repealed but said | advantage of them. ‘the taxes on brewer's wort, on bank Ichecks and recreation admissions had|son at all, we'd swear a ‘hate’ on |produced much less than expected.| somebody ad make him the object of ‘The internal revenue bureau report he| our attentions until the ‘big hate’ or transmitted to congress said it had! the ‘little hate’—according to our fan- been difficult to administer the new | cies—was satisfied. taxes on checks, electrical energy, gas- oline, lubricating oils, jewelry, toilet articles, sporting goods, soft}ond man. And it was on the evening drinks and brewer's wort. The health program estimates also dian disease conditions and $281,600 for medical relief among natives of Alaska. Recommend Slash in Reclamation Funds ~ Washington, Dec. 7.—(?)—Funds of the reclamation bureau were cut ap- proximately in half in the budget estimates sent Wednesday to congress. The estimates sought $13,051,000 for the bureau next fiscal year against appropriations of $25,464,500 for the current year. Of the $13,051,000, the Boulder Canyon project is allotted $10,000,000 for continuing construction. ‘The $3,051,000 balance is for bureau administration, maintenance of exist- ing projects and continuing construc- tion of projects now under way. The bureau recommended that un- expended balances of previous appro- priations continue available for fol- Washington; Salt in, Utah; Palo Verde Valley, Califor- nia, flood protection, and for its econ- on the side of the house, and flower- | est; to, maintenance of and operating isting irrigation and drainage systems on the reservations as compared with $1,010,824 appropriated for the 1933 fiscal year. The total ited Proportionate reductions in funds al- jotted the projects for this year. Mills Tells How U.S. Rubber Stamps _ We Make Them Commercial Service, Inc. upstairs, the gas flame from a plate heater caught a window. curtain, licked o\ Produced ninety-seven per cent income tax had sharply ‘The class is that with $10,000 or above. In 1928 there were 15,780 taxpayers who had incomes of $100,000 or more, while in 1930 there were 6,152 and in 1931 this had dropped to 3,142. The secretary said the net income of persons reporting $5,000 or more had dropped to $6,489,000,000 in 1931. The beverage grenadine is made of the | from the pomegranate. The juice is « diminished. | boiled with sugar to produce the red- incomes of | colored liquid. —_—_———————ssss DRESSLER POLLY MORAN ProspeRITY, For twelve months, for seven days each week, your gift of a year’s subscription to The Bismarck Tribune acts as a constant reminder of your thoughtfulness, your friend- ship, and your good taste. AND NOW READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY. and note the money you can save on the following magazine club offers CLUB NO. S-102 Pathfinder (Wkly), 26 issues Household Magazine, 1 Yr. Gentlewoman Magazine, 1 Yr. American Poultry Jrnl., 1 Yr. Successful Farming, 1 Yr. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, 1 Year Value $6.75. You Save $1.40 ALL SIX CLUB NO. S-104 Pathfinder (Wkly), 26 issues Woman’s World, 1 Yr. Good Stories, 1 Yr. American Poultry IJrnl., 1 Yr. Illustrated Mechanics, 1 Yr. The Farm Journal, 1 Yr. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, 1 Year Value $7.50. 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