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T The Bismarck Tribune it Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher ‘Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail per year (in Bi Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) .......... 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North # DAKOt® ....sesceeresereveseees BE Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ......-.6..025 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per Member of Audit Bureas of Circulation Member of The Associated Press * The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Descent to Bestiality ‘Two different methods of handling lawlessness were given illustration Sunday and Tuesday in two widely- separated sections of the country. Out in California a mob seized two white men and hanged them. Down in Maryland troops were) called out to speed up the forces of | Justice in hunting down the men who recently lynched a negro. To get the differences between the attitude of Governor Rolph and Gov- ernor Ritchie, it should be remem- bered that Maryland, while not in| the Deep South, still is a southern state. It borders on the territory where a negro is considered little bet- ter than one of the lower animals. Yet powerful forces were set in mo- tion to bring to justice men who molested one of these members of an admittedly lower order. The crime of which he was accused was that of attacking a white woman, one quite as serious in those parts as kidnap- ing and murder. eek Calm consideration by the residents of mid-America may lead to the con- clusion that both executives went to extremes, Governor Rolph’s offense against sound public policy probably is much the greater. Here we have the spec- tacle of a chief executive encourag- ing lawlessness. There is no gentler term for the mob action at San Jose. In his capacity as first citizen of the commonwealth he led the cheer- ing section, so to speak. The question which presents itself in this connection is where would the governor have the spirit of lawless- ness end? A man’s life is presumably his most Precious possession. No matter what crime he has committed, he should not be deprived of it without due pro- cess of law. The lowest and meanest is entitled to @ fair trial by a jury of his peers. Society is entitled to the knowledge that, whatever penalty may be inflicted, it was imposed only after careful consideration. It is en- titled to protection from the excesses of mob action and the long train of unpleasant consequences which it can engender. For one excess frequently begets another. If men are to be deprived of their lives without trial, it is dis- tinetly possible that others may be deprived of their property by the same process. Carrled still further, homes may be violated, wives and daughters outraged, killed or dragged off to slavery. It has happened in a@ thousand cases and the small seeds which $7.20/ oo|tention ‘to the underlying forces, jsame law which reduced the cause ing fury, the obvious descent to! bestiality, which is apparent in the mobsters. Under such circumstances, men of | ordinarily decent instincts lose them) entirely, Fair play and elemental} justice is swept aside. Men prove ;that they can be, after all, nothing) {better than animals whose only resort | lis to the law of the fang and claw. | see | We long have had the law of “Judge, WHEN A FOREIGN Lynch” with us in America and it) | sds He GRE BS siege aa GE We BE MAL ast ee | EIEN practical advice given by the late Dr. George W. Boot in the event the influence of every decent citizen that you know or fear a child has should be aligned with the forces 'swalldwed a coin or other foreign Joined aed ee diets ot tes seeking to abolish it. body. Here it is again: ot veness ‘These forces need not comtine| Have the child eat a good-sized |D™. Boot’s advice as. quoted above I table b- “feel that this singular suggestion of themselves to an effort to prevent] Pow! of mixed vegstables—cab- “lpr. C. Francis Bliven of Worcester such demonstrations as we recently [nth seal te i cased aa th is worthy of broad casting. In my vegetables should not be cooked have had. They might also give at-| soft, and should be swallowed with 4 judgment there is no objection to the wallowing of the threads as the good little if any mastication. Wash || them down with a little water if |@entor directs, What do I mean den- ° First among these, undoubtedly, is| Mecessary. Give no laxative. ba might foe erent vet The the feeling of many citizens that the |onity ‘aciaentaly swallowed °s silver] fered to the physician Dr. Boot or law cannot be depended upon to mete|quarter dollar and the X-rays taken|‘he dentist Dr. Bliven, so I use the out quick and speedy justice. In this|from day to day showed the coin in|™Ore Precise term, that’s all. Any they are correct, for the law too often | the stomach where it tarried till the is made by lawyers for the use of|tenth day. Indeed the surgeons had lawyers and filled with loopholes commenced to close in on Rednced OU! through which the guilty escape. In|humseit to confer with Dr, Boot, Just many cases where people have lost/12 hours after Dr. Boot’s instructions confidence in the law and the courts, /had been carried out the coin passed it is because confidence is not de- (naturally and easily. served. Now in Dr. Boot’s day it would have Y the old With speedy justice and even- en—oh, I don’t know how the ed enforcement of the law assured, they had no bananas then anyway.|operation ... (Mrs, R.) there would be less cause for lynch-|Today it would be quite proper and| Answe: wish your cousin would ings and no lynchings at all. e |“indicated” to add to the bowl of inform me about my method. When ‘chopped vegetables some ripe banana 'I had appendicitis I was glad to un- |—or rather to let the child have the dergo operation immediately. That banana to eat as a dessert and reward is the only reasonably safe treatment after the bowl of vegetabies. {for appendicitis, in my judgment, Better clip the instructions and Time to Trim Up paste in the medicine chest or the; I am 44 years old and have always \scrap book. I shall have no copies |been rather stout, but in the past few {to distribute to the readers who neg-; months I seem to be growing a real ‘lect this. |corporation and I feel like a poison- | An important caution: NEVER per-/ed pup... (R. C. T.) mit the child to receive a physic.| Answer—Time to give the easy Suits of recent months is the half-'Neighborhood Saireygamps are quite|chair a chance to recuperate while million-dollar damage suit filed jlikely to ufge castor oil or other-ca-/you adopt a schedule of exercise. against a New York law firm the thartic or laxative. It is as dangerous|/There is nothing better than daily PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to diseare diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. BODY IS/be necessary to recover the foreign body, otherwise it may easily escape recognition. As some of you old timers well know, my inclination is to pooh-pooh which cause them, i may retort as he sees fit, and I'l {print his retort here if he makes his jidentity known to me. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Is Zat So? «.. My cousin, Mr, of —— advised me to write to you as he was troubled with appendicitis and has for such action would increase the fear of consequences on the part of any who might be tempted to indulge | in it. ‘ The Price of ‘Skill’ One of the most interesting la other day by Conrad H. Mann, for-|ctances as it is in the presence of|few minutes a day practicing the Last mer head of the Eagles’ lodge. acute inflammation in the abdomen. |Brady Symphony will do good. Send Mann was convicted in federal] In most cases buttons, coins, whis-;a@ dime (no stamps) and a stamped court of violating lottery laws, and tles swallowed by infants or ee laeoree eee Moe Aa and mptl; Presi |pass through the alimentary tract;ask for it. ies and gentlemen pean Apelor Hed ae |within 48 hours without causing any/ past 35 who feel themselves slipping, aie | trouble. |going stale, getting prematurely old, has sued served as his counsel during 4 dentist 83 years old who says he | ought to take @ while at the Regen- his trial, and he is asking the dam-/is 60 psysiologically and the young-jeration Regimen. This is another ages as compensation for “humilia-/€st man of his age in his city ot booklet, and irk another dime (coin, tion, shame, an ” | 200,000 population, offers the method no stamps) and s. a. e. through alleged euiivah Riuimingrer oa ee Insulin for Skinny Weights histcase | tents accidentally swallowed sharp Yesterday I was surprised by a hie jobjects such as parts of dentures, jocal doctor that my urine test was This suit raises a neat question: |plates, glass, a tack, etc. He re- negative and that therefore the in- ‘What claim has a client on his law-/@uires such persons to swallow ravel- sulin treatment would not benefit me. jing threads from 112 to 2 inches long, I am 6 feet 3 inches tall and weigh only 140 pounds. . . (O. R. 5.) foe heal his lawyer hasn't lin apple sauce, in sufficient quantity for him? Answer—Obviously the doctor docs not understand the use of insulin for to thoroughly enwrap the article.' Mann feels that proper conduct of Enough of the threads to make a ball the purpose of enabling underweight lindividuals to accumulate needed his case would have ‘won his acquit-|the size of a horse chestnut will suf- tal. Whether he will be able to per-/fice to so enwrap a crown tooth with suade a court that this contentio is | Pivot. The foreign body when pass- | weight and strength. n ied from the intestines will resemble test has nothing whatever to do with correct is another question; mean-/a cocoon more finely wound than it while, the legal profession gets an|could be wound by hand. A sieve will interesting new angle on the old, . problem of a lawyer's relation to his, C 0 NTINUE D client. ( | trom ane: ‘uch suspension might be justified on it. (Copright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) | Would not create a vacancy in office. Is Only One of Three “One may vision instances where jdentist who resents the designation | hand-|timers would have regarded it, but/been cured by your method, without | |to give a physic in such circums-|walking. If you can’t afford that, a/ The unique | county and city officials and any ‘custodian of public moneys’ for cause. determines its action, and under these circumstances it would not be possible for Mr. Wenzel, as a minority of the page. S udge Buttz Says * | the ground ot necessity,” says the de- CHURCHES 10 HAVE Removal Action Is_ | ‘cision, “out the ground pa ap- pear to exist in this case. . Wen- Contrary to Law 271. tut one of three commissioners SPECI Al, SERVICES The majority of the board rules and |It also provides that ‘the governor y iMay in his discretion . . . suspend’ piete investigation of the bureau, nor Two Lutheran, Episcopal and such accised officer from perform- | to hamper the attorney general in = " ance of his duty during the pendency | curing access to such evidence a1 Catholic Programs Are {of the hearing.’ It also provides for (documents in its office as might be Announced ‘appointing someone to fill the office necessary or desirable. Mr. Wenzel {ad interim. If he be such ‘custodian | represents the employers of the state jof public moneys’ he is subject to re- on the bureau. It is apparently im- |moval for cause by the governor and inossible for the ouster proceedings to {may be suspended and another ap- be completed and passed upon by the ‘pointed to perform the duties of his!governdr ‘within the 30-day period; office during the pendency of the the suspension, creating no vacancy, ouster proceedings.” will, if the governor's order may The attorney general argued to the |stand, prevent the employers’ repre- court, the decision says, that a bureau | sentative on the bureau from acting commissioner is a custodian of public and leave them without representa- funds, while Wenzel's counsel argued | tion for more than 30 days against the that moneys coming into the bureau | positive prohibition of the statute. jare not public funds. ‘My conclusion is that the governor, | Quotes Previous Decision ‘i a proceeding to remove, may not Judge Buttz quotes from a decision |suspend that officer during the pen- ities department of the church synod, |°f the supreme court in the case of |cency of such proceeding, and it fol- board, to prevent a full, fair and com- Special Thanksgiving services to be held by the Trinity Lutheran, First Lutheran, St. George's Episcopal and St. Mary's Catholic churches in addi- tion to the Union services sponsored | by seven congregations will mark the! church observance of the national | holiday in Bismarck. | Thanksgiving services at Trinity | Lutheran church will be at 11 o'clock according to Rev. Opie S. Rindahl, pastor. At this time there will be a special offering taken for the char- brought terrifying fruit were hardly ever as vigorous as those which were sown at San Jose and nurtured by the words of Governor Rolph. * * On the other hand, Governor Rev. Adolph Johns, pastor of the (Stearns vs. Olson, state treasurer,|lcws he may not appoint anyone to First Lutheran church, has planned [PRE eala sara anabtnperpee’| ee a service for 8 o'clock Thursday eve- | men's compensation fund is not a part APPEALS TO SUPREME . His sermon theme will be : s B ; of the state fund, and is, in no sense, COURT SEEN PROBABLE ahouy We aie Thanks This Year? ‘public money.” An appeal to the state supreme re voral Solos by ©. N.\" Hence, Judge Buttz says, Wenzel is |court from the decision of Judge C. Nordlund and selections by @ male ‘not the “custodian of public moneys” W. Buttz in the R. E, Wenzel case quartet composed of Edward Nelson, | 2 tion on the certiorari case, it is ex+ pected to get under way, in this case would be taken and placed before the governor, who then would hear final arguments. Should the governor hold against Wenzel and order his removal, the commis- sioner may appeal to the courts. CONFINED Dies in Flames at End of Rope While | Big Crowd Watches — ’ any pretentions of mere dentists a attempt to break in the front |door with a 5-inch pipe as a batter- ing ram, Officers scattered the crowd with door. A chain was attache truck took the door away. driver who failed to close a his vehicle securely was ard interned. The tank action. the mob started in. He held the ers at bay momentarily. They ed past him as tear gas fogged corridor. Police and sheriff's deputies bat itand to hand with the crowd, were pressed back by the heavy odds. Tear gas bombs exploded at intervals. | A few wild shots were fired. State highway patrol headquarters |appealed to northwest Missouri peace officers to “rush all available men to St Joseph.” The mob had won, however, before reinforcements arrived. | The noose was placed on Warner's |neck, gasoline obtained from a near- by filling station was hurled upon his irousers and a torch was applied. La- ter men built a fire beneath the body. The flames burned the rope and the | body fell upon the embers. | Officers said Warner sought to jplead guilty Tuesday to the assault State directors. appointed included: North Dakote, Miss Pearl Salesberry , REV. OPIE RINDARL SPEAKER AT ROTARY Thanksgiving ‘Only National Religious Holiday on Cal- endar’, He Says Myron H. Anderson sang “The Clothes of Heaven” and “With- |charge. Judge J. V. Gaddy, however, | dent, jairected postponement of the case | until Wednesday. | “I don’t want to rush things,” he isaid. Governor Park declined to comment, on the lynching. |Operations Begun at New Prison Industry {| North Dakota’s newest state indus- | try—a plant to manufacture automo- | bile license plates— began operation here Monday. Established at the state peniten- | tinry, the plant turned out 193¢ license tag number one. which is to be re- served for the governor. A repre- |sentative of the John R. Wald com- pany, Huntington, Pa., consulting en- gineers for prison industries, is super- vising the work at the plant for a short period to familiarize workers with its operation. | About 25 convicts will be used to {manufacture the tags. | Manufacture of road signs also is |Planned at the prison plant. Under the law, auto license plates and road signs may be sold at a price! | tration to the motor vehicle registra- tion department, the highway depart- ment and to counties and municipali- ties of the state. Receipts of the in- dustry over and above the expense ot | maintenance must be used under the irection of the board of administra- tion to augment funds of the peni- |sentiary. [Local Woman Named To New Relief Job Pointment; of state directors of wom- en’s work under the federal relief ad- ministration in 23 states and Puerto Rico, Hawali and the Virgin Islands was announced formally We by the relief administration. Mrs. Ellen 8. Woodward, ‘national head of women’s work, said meetings would be held shortly in 23 states to k and Mandan Ro- tary clubs will hold a joint meeting at the Grand Pacific hotel in Bis- marck. Henry: M. Wilson of Minot, ninth district Rotary deputy, is ex- pected to attend. Dr. Constans also of the luncheon organization to at- tend the KFYR Lone Scout band concert Thursday evening at the city auditorium. George Bird, Neil O. Churchill and John Hoffman were announced as members of the club's December pro- gram committee. Guests at the luncheon included Dr. J. D. Carr, superintendent of the state hospital at Jamestown, and James W. Guthrie of k. FINISH TESTIMONY _ INCASE AT BOWMAN’ Evidence Completed in Effort to Oust Three County Commissioners fixed by the state board of adminis- | three Washington, Nov. 20.—(?)—The ap-| three faith and on legal nied any intent to violate the law. The commissioners were sus; | HORIZONTAL | 2 Who is the famous writer in the picture? HUG! RIO Iolo Authoress Answer to Previous Puzzle lO ICIVE INET 10 English coin. 11To unite ina league. NE OME tO! 12 To shed blood. NV] and not subject to removal as such. Ritchie's action is only @ little less|Henry Danrot, H. A. Swenson Sa Interpreting the Workmen's Com- ! difficult to explain. An outrage had|M*. Nordlund. heen committed in a Maryland coun- ty and the county authorities were lax, not to say unwilling, to bring the perpetrators to justice. One can easily understand why that should be 50 when he reads of the sttack on the troops which were sent into the territory. In the face of this situation, Gov- ernor Ritchie chose to use force. In- stead of trying to marshal the forces of public opinion, a necessity if the men are to be convicted, he used drastic and spectacular means. To what avail remains to be seen. * eK Comments on the Rolph action fre many and varied. A surprising- Jy large number of people have ex- Pressed approval of his action. It may be that they feel that the stern A communion service for members| of St. George's Episcopal church will! be celebrated at 9:30 o'clock Thursday morning by Rev. John Richardson, rector. All communicants of the church are requested to be present. The Thanksgiving day Masses at St. Mary's Catholic church will be at 7:30 and 9 o'clock. ‘The Union ‘service which will be held at 10 o'clock at McCabe Meth- odist Episcopal church is sponsored by seven congregations, the First Presbyterian, First Baptist, German Baptist, St. George’s Episcopal, First Evangelical, McCabe Methodist Epis- copal and Salvation Army. An invi- ‘tation is extended to the public. Grain Trade Fights Federal Code Plan Washington, Nov. 29—()—Grain pensation Bureau law, as amended by the legislature in 1931, Judge Buttz says that “my conclusion is that not jonly may any of these commissioners be removed through an action in court as provided generally for officers not {Subject to impeachment, but that they may also be removed by the governor for a cause, subject of court, to a Proper proceedings wherein charges shall be preferred, evidence adduced to support the same, and the accused be given an ample opportunity to ad- duce evidence, defend and be heard.” Holding that the governor may not, |under the Workmen’s Compensation \law, suspend a commissioner and ap- {point another ad interim, the decision | Says in part: Not Acting Under Law “We have seen that in removing a Workmen’s Compensation sioner the governor is not acting un- der the general removal of officer's statute, but under the special provis- jon of section four (A), Workmen’s exchange officials Wednesday placed Compensation laws. Could he act un- “justice” of a mob is the correct upon thé government full responsi-|der the general removal statute, he thing. That they would continue tej bility for the consequences of federal | would by its terms be permitted to! feel that way if they happened to be accused, justly ér unjustly, is hardly assumption of control over commodity | suspend the officer in his discretion markets. jand might appoint another to act Was regarded as likely by counsel for! both sides, but a copy of the judge's decision was awaited before determ- ining the next step. It was indicated that both Wente! | and the governor may appeal from the decision. Judge Buttz’ ruling that Wenzel could not be removed by the governor as a workmen’s compensation bureau commissioner pending outcome of re- moval proceedings was taken as a victory for the ousted commissioner, while the ruling that the governor may remove him for legal cause sus- tains the contentions of the attor- ney general's office. It was indicated the state may ap- Peal from the ruling that Wenzel cannot be suspended by the governor and an ad interim successor appoint- ed, while Wenzel may appeal from the ruling that the governor may re- move for legal cause. In the meantime a hearing before & special commissioner on the charges against Wenzel is set for Tuesday and unless steps are taken MILK OMUSERT 15 Ruler of the 12 Wattle tree. aul HG ITY zodiac. NMEOIA| 13 Yellow bugle Sa from office by Governor William Lan- ger more than a month ago pending outcome of the re! b and successors were named to serve until the case is decided. Debt Token Payment Offered by Slovaks Washington, Nov. 29.—(#)—Czech- slovakia offered the United States $150,000 Wednesday as a token pay- ment on $1,680,812 due December 15. and Veverka, minister Crechoslovakia, made the proposal to acting secretary of state Phillips. Phil- lips reported to have suggested a larger sum and no agreement was reachech Czechoslavakia paid $180,000 last June on & total of $1,500,000 due at that time. Italy has made an offer of $1,000,000 on its December 15 installment of $2,- 133,905. ‘There have also been negotiations between state department officials and representatives of Latvia, Finland and other debtors owing small sums which will fall due in mid-December. U. 8. DOLLAR WEAKENS London, Nov. 20.—(#)—The United} States dollar weakened by 5% cents,’ closing at 5.22% to the British pound in an irregular session of the foreign exchange market Wednesday. ' i SYNOPSIS: After q winter of wolf hunting by airplane én the aub-Arctic, Curt Tennyson returns to Edmonton to fn ing that Curt ‘not “tie anything defore they meet. oe to Mariin’s hotel room, eces is flancéc, Rosalie Marlix, and then noes to breakfast with 4-K. A-K is amazed to find that Curt already knows the history of Igor Karakhan, the international crook toho has evaded the police for 9 Curt looks over Kara- record, and photographs of Chapter Three CURT REFUSES 'URT glanced at the enaps, two of them full-length; and studied one enlarged bust photo. He had seen the Russian personally on half @ dozen occasions, but not close { @nough to observe him very well. He was struck by the intelligence and dynamic power of Karakhan. A | man of forty, tall and commanding, he did not look Russian at all; his handsome manly features had noth: ing of the usual Slavic broadness. His dark eyes, staring straight into Curt’s, were smiling a faint sar donic emile. Except for a lustful ex- {pression about his mouth, he gave no suggestion of the crime trail that he had tracked across two conti- nents, ‘The record contained severat facts z “ei a ‘ ° “Soak up all the soclabilit which Curt had not known at all. Karakhan was a Don Cossack, born of the lowest muzhik parents. Join- ing the army at.an early age, be rose by sheer brilliance and became.a colonel in the Imperial Guard at twenty-five. ‘ As an aide to General Sukhom- plant. f 14 Auriculate. 16 Crescent- shaped. 17 To catch. 18 Shovel. 19 Suffix forming nouns. 20 She is one of today’s finest 39 To pall. 41 Roof with a finial. 43She is a —— woman ——. 21 For example 24 Sawlike organ, citizen. 26 Perished. 47 Wrath, 27 College official. 49 To rub out. 28 Northeast. 51To make a EMBSIEISIE [LIU] q. 25 Portuguese money, 29 To dispute. 30 To enslave. 35 Hawaiian bird 37 Oat grass, 57, 58 What is the 38 Musical name of her best book? VERTICAL 1A silencer, 2 Sea eagle. 3 Inclined. yi 45 Yellowish gray. 46 Fantastic grimace, 48 Pealed, as « bell. 31 Neuter mistake. pronoun. 52. Fortified work. 32 Southeast. 54 Giver. 33 Third note. 55 To drink dog- 34 Negative. fashion. 36 Esch. 56 Center of an frieze. 5 Row. ¢ Grand. Darental. 7 Night. 59 Call for help 8 Slumbers. linov, be had raked in his share of Sukhomlinov’s war graft during those times when the Russian armies were struggling pitifully in the Galician swamps, ‘with Luden- dorft’s gray hosts in front of them and traitors in the high places be- “We got that data from the Soviet G.P.U..” A-K explained. “They want dim as badly as we do. You eee, his game in Vancouver was to pose as an agent of the Soviet foreign trade commission. With his Russian back- Ground and all, he put it over in easy style. He cleaned up a million that we know of, and his han} must have totaled twice that much; some of those frms-von't admit they were defrauded, for fear they’d lose prestige, Last September, on the: sixteenth, or seventeenth, he cashed 38 Footlike part. amphitheater. at sea, 9 Failed in duty.53 Silkworm. to defer it pending further court ac- | padi allied cor ci esi ITT TTT rer ZR ae in and vanished like = puff of smoke.” ce understood that A-K wanted him to run Karakhan down and Probable. Neither is it probeble that any such Persons have ever had opportunity to| change observe @ mob in action or been Present at a lynching. ‘Those who take part in such an affair doubtless get a temporary emo- tional thrill. To lay hand on a rope and help hoist 8 man to his final Judgment, or to aim wild shots at a|?* dangling body must produce a def- inite emotional reaction, But to the man who looks on with- out taking part in such an affair, the spectacle is s grisly one. . ‘The thing which strikes hardest at ministration Tuesday. closed public hearings on the proposed grain ex: code after members of the farmers national grain corporation sought admission to the Chicago grain exchange and leaders of the grain trade had predicted a disastrous market collapse would follow the adoption of rigid control measures Prepared by farm administration ex- rts. Peter B. Carey, head of the Chicago Grain Exchange, forecast dire results in event of the adoption of a govern- ment proposed amendment to require exchanges to grant full privileges, in- farm cooperatives of adequate finan- cial responsibility. s The agricultural adjustment ad- temporarily, in accordance with the express terms of that statute. But the statute under which a commissioner may be removed makes absolutely no Provision for an ad interim appoint- ment, “Generally speaking the governor may not appoint to office, except as statute conferring such power. I know of no such constitutional provis- ion giving the governor power to make appointments in cases of suspension, the constitutional grant authorizing him to make appointments only ‘when authorized by the constitution or a|" oh ct a arrest him. After so brasen a crime, the man’s clean get-away must have dealt & serious blow to the reputa- tion of the Roya! Mounted. And 20 doubt A-K, like all decent-thinking men, considered ‘that Karakhan's reckoning for the long trail of bu- man suffering, death and ruined lives that lay behind him, was due and overdue, © As he looked out into the sua- ‘splashed court, Curt felt a challenge in pitting himaelf against this inter. national criminal who had outgen- eraled the police of half a dozen na- tions; and he was proud that the heads of the Mounted should have turned to him, an outsider now. when all other recourses had failed, Personally he despised. Karakban with tinge of loathing: and in fancy he imagined himself nailing ERE ee Grand Jury Indicts Dr. Alice Wynekoop Chicago, Nov. 20——Dr. aig, Wynekoop said Wednesday in 9 eg, matic interview from her sick te in the county jail that she “con. fessed” shooting her Gaughter-in-Jay Rheta, “because I thought it was th, best thing to do—but that it was The ailing, 62-year-old woman doc. tor gave the interview a few minutes after the grand jury was Teported to have returned a true bill char; her with murder. “I signed the statement in without apork Thought 4 was the right thing ore Dr. W: said. “I intended ty stand by it, and I would have i¢ my ce had not set up a terrible bat. “TE realized that I might reach an. other bar of justice before going the criminal court. - I wanted to tel; the truth.” —$—_—____ GUON CASE DISMISSED Fargo, N. D., Nov. 29.—(P}—Mike Guon of Mandan was freed ona charge of conspiracy to violate the national prohibition law when Judge Andrew Miller dismissed the case in federal court Wednesday for lack of Prosecution, the Cossack and wiping that sar. donic smile off his face, Marlin stirred his coffee musingly. “Curt, I wouldn't be asking this of you if the case was just ordivary, But it’s an international affair, and besides that it goes a lot deeper than merely capturing and punish. ing a criminal. You and I know that when some person makes a fat haul by theft or graft or shady deal, and gets by with it—we know what a pernicious influence it has on the man in the atreet. It breaks down his respect for law.” Curt saw the force of the argu. ment, but it did not move him. Mo- ments ago he had made his decision, He would not tdke the job. He was going back down north. “Til think about it, A-K,” he said evasively, “and—uh, let you know.” A-K shrugged his shoulders, the only show of his bitter disappoint- ment. He knew that Curt was re tasing him, 'N a way he did not blame Curt, Those seven years had been harsh years, a big fraction of a mau's lifetime; and he thoroughly under- stood Curt’s wish to go north again. His year down there had been happy, and he had richly deserved it, Yet, the refusal hurt. Not only be- cause he had been banking heavily ity you can,” said Smash. on Curt to get Karakhan, but be cause it showed him so clearly that Curt had changed @ lot since his Police days. He appeared uncertain of himself, wavering between the careless selfish freedom of his new life and the earnest responsibility of the old. In the last few weeks ho had becn. quietly working to secure Curt ono of the best positions in the province, a work which would give him scope for his abilities, If he was to sce Tennyson established in that pos! tion, it had to be quickly. Unknown to Curt, unknown even ‘to Rosalie, death had marked bim— one year longer, two at the very most, bis physician said. Now Curt was turning bim down, not only on the Karakhan bunt but on this {n- finitely more important thing. He felt very old and defeated. Curt had been just as much 8 s02 to him as Rosalie, of bis own fies and blood, had been a daughter. At 8 familiar voice speaking their names, he and Curt looked around. Smash Desplaines was coming into the breakfast room. He was freshly shaved and his red hair was cropped close; but his muddied flying clothes brought haughty looks of disar- proval from the correctly groomed people there, Waving the waiters breesily aside, be picked up a third chair and started across to join bis partner and Marlin. Re ‘Better not discuss Karakba> fore bim,” Curt said.quietiy. “He's honest as daylight, of course, but he’s got an unguarded tongue. We'll talk this over later, AK.” In their room that evening Smash paused in his whistling. to inquire, “You and Rosalie stepping out to night, Curt?” Cort turned from the north wit: dow, “Yes.” : “That's the time! Better make It high, wide and bandsome, and soak up all the socislibility you can while you're back in civilisation. It's your Yast chance till snow files, you know,” (Copyright, 1988, Wittam B. Mowery) Curt momentous de cision. & ging | |