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BOS a en et aed 00 en SA se - 4. 8B6Ro sce, 09 OR EEE ee ntd m rt SS does 7oPamemanwwOyvoZRERERE ANNU UUKOW 2 — ASKS COOPERATION Congress Will Hit Bootleggers and | Rich Tax Dodgers FOR PROTECTION OF © EMPLOYES OF CWA Campaign of Public Aid in Pro- Changes in Taxation Set-Up gram !s Launched by Will Be Worked Out in Roy G. Arntson Next Session SPECIAL TAXES ELIMINATED Pian Special Attack on Million- aires Dodging Income Tax Payments BY RODNEY DUTCHER at this session. hopes to raise through beer and et will be balanced 934-35, according * Ss unanimous ss revealed rails or oth ty devices. the to! hanging embankme: tax Ss than $25.000. to climbing. to form © Weather Report FORECAST Kk and vicinity: ay: y temperature. For pias Da- that x now 10- str; SHOR gag, Straigh rising tem- perature For South Da- iS Unsettled, ional snoW Th and €8St cor rature. For Montana: oe tonigh an lay, snow SNOW FLURRIES xest p io Warmer tonight and east portion Fri- own. There's a vac' ing here innesota: Increasing cloudi- ness, occasional snow Friday and in gin to Ss! ng vestigations are pr cept in extreme sot GENERAL CONDITIONS An_ extensive n pressure area, her, is cen- ¢ outcome doubtful. i | agreements with other countries. In t case, Scotch and Irish whiskies ht be admitted for as low as $2 a gailon, with wines as low as 60 cents, instead of the present rate of Liquor is something else again. It now is entrusted to the Federal Alcohol Control Administra- under Joseph H. Choate, Jr.,/ ch supervises codes covering dis-; importing, rectifying. whole- and beer. control Administration leaders in Congress, apparentiy reflecting the White House view, prefer to wait and see how FACA control works out. All kinds of control measures will be ad- vanced, meanwhile, however, includ- g some previding for no control nd federal protection for dry Some Taxes May Go in the session some control ely to be introduced with istration baczing. It might as Assistant Secretary of e Rexford Tugweil urged, a federal corporation to buy the out- of distilleries and sell it to the lesale and retail agencies. Roosevelt is believed to be inter- ested in the idea. Besides the taxes automatically d by repeal, several nuisance a year may be repealed be- cause they are expensive’ to collect and bring little return. Such taxes include those on bank checks, candy and chewing gum, soft drinks, radios, refrigerators, matches and firearms and sheils. Loopholes to Be Closed Acting Secretary of the Treasury au has stressed the texation ity to pay” in pre- Congress discussions and the issue will be fought out on the floors of both houses. A proposed single normal income tax rate instead of the present two classes of rates would be accompanied y higher surtaxes to offset resultant decreased revenues. xres to reduce tax avoidance i vision of capital gains and es provisions and of the partner- provisions, both of which helped an and his partners to escape come taxes, as well as compulsory t returns by husband and wife. ‘e more there will be @ move- nt for a sales tax, but it isn’t like- ywhere. A showdown is certain on taxation of tax-exempt securities, with the Sengtor Idaho is one of those who have come to believe Congress should impose such tax and then let the courts de- cide whether it is constitutional. Senator Augustine Lonergan, one of roponents of the plan. esti- mates the tax would raise from $140,- 000.000 to $150,000,000 a year. Tax-exempts include federal. state, securities. The chief to taxing them are questionable constitutionality of issue involved in “break-/ FARN LEADER SEES. | BIG ADVANCEMENT DURING YEAR 1998 Organizations Working Togeth-| er Now in Common Cause, | Declares O'Neal (Editors Note: The year 1933 being as momentous as it was, what did it mean for agriculture? The Associated Press herewith presents the answer as viewed with an article written for it by one of the most widely known farm figures.) BY EDWARD A. O’NEAL President American Farm Bareau Federation | Washington, Dec. 28—(—Unity of | action among farm organizations has; been demonstrated in the past year) as being possible. Farm organiza-} tons ordinarily have worked congen- ially together but in the last 12: months they have worked in a par-/ ticularly close formation i beginning of a new era in re-/ gard to control of surpluses. although! several years prior to 1933,; got into full action during that year. | I refer to the control of surpluses’ by limiting production rather than trying to control them after they are produced. Then years ago we did not need to Umit production because then we had world markets. Nineteen hundred and thirty-three brought us face to face with the fact that our world markets for farm products had largely vanished and that farmers. if prop- warded should control their mn. Se oars aod ry come SCHOMUISES Find World War Was Far taltweia that st eratietied our Te | Bigger Than All Others on Record eral policy of taxation based ability to pay, despite the fact that the federal government in its efforts te relieve unemployment needed vast sums. The income method of taxation has | been continued through this trouble-_ some period instead of resorting to other forms of taxes which are based mostly on necessity to consume. In my opinion, along with the great, tax victory just spoken of stands the. monetary policies now being put into effect throughout the year 1933. The revaluation of the dollar, recognition of silver, and the general expansion of credit throughout the nation by governmental activities, constitute an epoch in the fiscal policies of our na- tion. j LANGER RESORTED TO DRASTIC MOVES DURING LAST YEAR Executive Orders Unparalleled in State History Issued By Governor Cambridge, Mass., Dec. 28.—>) —The first universal. scientific war curve. plotting 902 major wars since 500 years before Christ shows the late World War eight times bigger than all the others | volled into one. All of ancient Greece, of Rome and 10 centuries of Europe's eight foremost fighting nations dwindle before the statistics and implica- tions of 1914 to 1919 as presented to the American Association for the Advancement of Science Thursday by Prof. Pitirim A. Sorokin, Harvard sociologist. and ; Lieut. General N. N. Golovin. | Their curve, showing nearly the | whole historical rise and fall in warlike spirit among men, points to universal peace, in their own words, as only a “mirack.” It shows wars steadily worse in modern times; their apex nearly always at the peak of “cultural and commercial influence. The analysts do not say what with which two Americans, Mr. and Mrs.. Arvid Jacobson of Michigan, were arrested Oct. 27. @ mathematics instructor in Northville, Mich., high school three years. The body to be exhumed is that of Lieut. Friz Walter Asplund, direetor of the state munitions works until his sudden death last April. Police phy- (By The Associated Press) sicians will eonduct an autopsy to de- Nothing like the comforts of home, says Roland Mackenzie, former amateur golf star who recently turned pro. problem by taking his apartment along on the winter golf tour. The home is huilt into a trailer for his car, and he is shown above about te enjoy a lunch prepared by the Missus. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1933 He solved the twists in this snakeline curve may give hopes of peace; but there is one upon which many statisticians might seize. That is the com- pletely erratic flow, with longtime variations, suggesting that in the past man has done nothing about it. x Prof. Pitirim is a prominent sociologist, chairman of the di- vision of sociology at Harvard, a / native of Russia, k an eminent | teacher there, imprisoned three | times for being too conservative | and three more for being too rad- | ical; now banished and a naturale | ized citizen of the United States. General Golovin is a former Lieut. General of the general staff, im- perial Russian army, noted as a teacher, historian and strategist. The modern nations in the | curve, with the wars of each, are: | Austria 131, France 185; Hol- land 23; Spain 75; England 176; Germany 24; Italy 32 and Russia N. ¥., 21 below at Con- cord, N. H., (the coldest in 63 years), and 30 below at Montpelier, Vt. | Fire early Thursday destroyed the! Soldiers Memofial building at Hib-/ bing, Minn., valued at $500,000, de-/ spite efforts of firemen and 250 citi- zens who fought the blaze in a 33-/ degree below zero temperature. The, building was used as a community hall and sports building. | | PROSPERITY |TO BIG PACKING i of huge fortunes from one generation vestors, the possibil-| Proclamations of far-reaching effect | termine whether he really died from! The fishing schooner Sunapee was ves would offset revenue gain, and'ing 1933 to give North Dakotans/@iven on his death certificate. |Thursday when she arrived in port. | ity of selling such something new in state government. | She had been reported missing with | tax-exempt. | Gov. William Langer’s administra- three other Miane fishing craft after! Publicity Asked on Tax tion of the last year shows a record C ONTINUE D jthe blizzard Tuesday. She had nine | from page ene’ } excess prone nv av cena rate be ia Ble Dunn: i ae ae eal themes re raised by Morgenthau’s suf 2 several routine holi nose, + tee nae Anse profite 2 Sa ae nani ise Mercury Plunges Benjamin Thompson, with a 10-man/ large business be considered. jeame out of the governor's office and To 37 Below Zero crew and the Bernie and Bessie, with | come tax payments as a method of year. preventing tax evasions. moe dah of the Pale executive oneal Western Capede. tin Senator Norris of Nebrasl aS was the bank holiday proclamation Showing scant signs a promised an attack for inheritance issued March 4, closing banks in the Sd® and 42 below at Bolsters Mills, cold north winds which have dis- taxes such as Will prevent the passage state in line with action of other New snow flurried over the lake re- for the last six days unleashed a blast States and e national government... oe ty to another, and progressives general- At the same time a moratorium on enh ine eee rarrens ies Leste pe toast cance ton ED ly feel that surtaxes should be in- debts and mortgage foreclosures WaS North pacific slope ‘Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al- creased from their present maximum proclaimed in North Dakota. be: i . 35 per cent levy on net incomes above, On March 13 came another pro-' Blizzard in New York i coeieae is separ ert 000. 5 clamation liberalizing the regulations A blizzard raged about Malone, in The heart of the cold area centered ¢ necessarily higher interest came out of the governor's office dur- inflammation of the lungs, the cause checked from the list of missing Progressive hopes for return of the of drastic executive orders unparalle- men aboard. \ They also will as« publicity for in- many continue in effect into the new | | At Forks Thursday |=". I eae i | Were inclined to agree with John- eight men aboard, were unreported | ‘nt, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) under which banks were operating. the Adirondacks. Another swept off around Fort Smith and Fort Simp- YOUNG SOLON TO WED Butie, Mont., Dec. 28.—?—Joseph P. Monaghan. youngest member of the of representatives. will married here Saturday to Miss ne McDermott of Butte, the parents announced Thursday. Monaghan ts 26. we Bismarck station barometer. inches: 28.80. Reduced to sea 1 30.79. _ PRECIPITATION For Bismarck station: ‘Total this month to date ... Normal. this: month to date Total, January Ist to date . A third proclamation was &N-' Lake Erie to strike Watertown, N. Y. son, on the Great Slate river, 450 commissioner control over assets of ore insurance companies. In another’ cnads. nounced April 1 giving the insurance, Presh drifts made transportation miles north of Edmonton. The for- o'clock, at Elks Hall for Elks | 1933. friends. i ifficult on already clogged mer point posted a 60-degree-below | and mark while the latter ran a close sec- proclamation it was ordered that alli Coast guardsmen put out from Chi- ‘ond with 54. savings-building and loan accounts be governed by regulations covered in the bank proclamation. ago to seek a Lake Michigan fishing Cutting a swath on its way east, vessel with three aboard. Three street the nipping sub-zero cold left behind \department employes of Superior,,a 52-degree-below registration at Then on April 18, an executive order’ Wis, were drowned in St. Louis Bay, Prince Albert, in northern Saskatche- [was issued modifying the moratorium when a heavy snow plough broke wan, and continued with a 38-below proclamation to exempt regional agri- through the ice. mark at Battleford, 46 below at The |cultural credit corporation loans, RFC Temperatures of 6 at Chicago, 10 at Pas, northern Menitoba, and a 47- loans and crop production loans made Boston represented partial relief from through the department of agricul-'s bitter night. ture. below mark at Winnipeg. New England and New York state. A song sparrow was caught in the same bird-branding trap more than moratorium order, the governor on low zero—26 below at Upton, Mass. 200 times in 1932 at Crystal Bay, June 9 extended the proclamation to below at Albany, N. Y., 10 below at! Minn. | In an order re-proclaiming the semperatures generally were far be- \North Dakotans who lost title to 2) 16.26 Normal, January Ist to date Accumulated 5.42 deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA poeeas a.m. est. Pet. Solution to Previous Contract Problem By WM. E. MCKENNEY Secretary, American Bridge League d, played incinnat! {their homes since Jan. 1, 1931. | On August 12, a proclamation was Today's Contract Problem iasued calling a special election for South has this hand atthree | | gepte:pber 22 to vote on initiated and, no trump. One player made | referred measures. ! | "A proclamation that stirred nation- Shift Helm of U. S. Treasury Jamestown, clear . 0 Grand Forks, clear 34 WEATHER IN THE NATION Low- Hi id made Jefferson Glick Cleveland in the first of the final sessions of the open contract pair cham ‘ip. i At rubber play we are sat make our contract, but in tourna- ment play it is nec ry to make the maximum number of tricks to receive a good score. e no trump took top score on this board, and Glick made it in the following manner. Kamloops, B. C., snow. Xansas City. Mo.. clear Lanéer. ye og clear.... 2¢ Moedieine Hat. A. clay. -8 Miles City, Mont., cldy. 0 Minneapolis, M,, clear -16 Modena, Utah, clear... 24 Moorhead, Minn., Seat ae SBRBeeseRsBexeeeaeReRe® Duplicate—N. and S. vul. Opening lead—@ 4 South West North East 1N.T. Pass 29 Pass 3N.T. Pass Pass Pass ithe ace. He led a small club, went SBSCh SUVs Basssessscssses - West opened the four of spades, | whieh Glick in the South won with | would with dummy’s queen and East trumyfor top score on the board. wide interest came on August 17,; when the shipment of wheat out of the state was ordered halted by the) ‘proclamation on Nov. 17 to permit | }shipment of durum for a six-day pe- Ten days later, county officials! were ordered by the governors to de- sist from issuing foreclosures oat deeds in proceedings affecting farm |bomes, lands farmed and homes in | won with the ace, returning the seven of spades, which dummy won with) the queen. A club was returned and Glick ran off four club tricks, West discardi a heart and a spade. Two diamonds | and heart were discarded from dum- my, while East discarded a spade jand a diamond. Glick then led the king of hearts, which West won with the ace, and returned the jack of spades, thereby squeezing his partner. Easp was down to the jack and eight pf hearts and the jack and ten of diamonds. Ifa aes : discarded, dummy’s queen and p . - ‘good, while if East A monumental task changes hands here, as outgoing and incoming aed the poe ana! U. 8. treasury heads meet. Secretary W. H. Woodin, lett, taking » ‘win three diamond tricks. leave of abaanct. ae 8, weet juck shi x to Henry Hereeatha Jr. center, former farm ci dl now acting secretary of the treasury, The squsese bad profecs’ five no | part of ‘as Dean Achesgs, retiring actiog secretary, stands at the right. Finns Scent Plot to Murder Army Chiefs AID HOG PRODUC Declares Local Buyers, Small Processors and Others Gypping Farmers Harmonious Session Forecast by Rainey to have a short, har. and constructive session, <aid be a very important but 8 working one rather than Buyers who Price offered farmers Ket, because country buyers . not slaughter hogs are not 10 pay the Processing tax, ne deed. France Would Scrap RETURNS Half Bombing Planes Chicago, Dec. 28—(P)—American| Paris, Dec. 28.—(P)—With a slaughtering establishments enjoyed «/ posal to destroy half of her ake month of prosperity during Novem-|ing planes, France offered proof though distribution declined | Thursday of the government's de- fusday. _|armiament witein tow League of ie: In the matter of production, the ‘tions as now constituted. sees Teport said, there was an expansion Provided other nations ‘ould of 15 Pee a ect get 17 pet! agree to do likewise. it was learned on cent over per cent/ high authority Wednesda: ht, average. \iately upon signing of a disarmament ‘The gains were reflected in the pay- | convention now being drafted in con: rolls which showed an improvement sultation with France's allies for sub- of tie ler Se cieeuenin cert in the; mission at Geneva. number of employes, 4% per cent in| Broadly, the proposed disarm: hours worked, and 5 per cent in the program reas casera as coreg total amount of wages paid. one formulated at Paris last Sep:em- ieee , Coyote and Master | Arrested at Minot _ \o-——__——____+ ‘Facing New Era Is Minot, N. D., Dec. 28—)—If the accusations of a deputy game warden are correct, a tame coyote owned by a Minot man has been catching game birds for his mas- ter. The man, Charles J. Johnson, and the coyote, “King,” were taken into custody Thursday by Deputy , Sheriff R. L. Dierdorff and Dep- uty Game Warden H. D. Small- wood. President’s Stand ; . Washington, Dec. 28—()—Presi- dent Roosevelt expressed the view | Thursday that “we enter the new year with a realization that we have cross- ‘ed the threshold of a new era.” | ‘This was contained in a letter he ; Wrote to Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole. ‘president of the general federation of 5 women’s clubs. it oer tS |p, puting os ce tonight, Dec. 28. 9 country on a leash and turn him | greioek, at Elks Hall for Elks mal would return to him when he ‘and friends. whistled or called him. | The two officers who took John- | gon and the coyote into custody NOTICE TO CREDITORS. IN_THE MATTER OF THE Es- NELS LUNDE, Say son that “King” is a pretty smart animal for within lesa than a R hour after the animal ;CEASED. LUnp! & bar coun’ | NOTICE is hereby given by the ed tos he oo oe \dersigned, Administratrix with building, he had escaped. jAnnexed of the Last Will and Test “T'm an old man, jment of the above named decéde great pals,” Johnson late of the City of St. Paul, Cou ing about his coyote. tame coyote before I got tihs person King certainly has always | decede: » necessary vouchers, within haved wel’ | from first. publication. of. thi to said Administratrix at 1412 24th, St. Minneay |a. 34. Bruschw 14 Administratrix, who! jare: Driscoll, North lis, Minnesota or to BOMBS JAR HAVANA PTAEnt ak of ly t z Burleigh County, ment leaders talked new plans for “Novice is hereby further |political peace in Cuba : — {that the time and place fixed The detonations resounded through | jclaims are the 27th. day of June, seattered sections of the capital. No| st, “Cctock Ar Moin. the Court |casualties were reported. Rooms of said Court in the Court House in the City ef Bismarck, North Dakota. Dated this 11th. day of December, BERTHA LUNDE, Admini with Will Ani et night, Dec. 28, A.0.U.W. Hall,| of’ December, 1953. i 200 o'clock. 12-14-21-28, BISMARCK TRIBUNE PATTERNS Make This Model at Home Dance tonight, Dec. 28, 9: trix. the 1