The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1935, Page 4

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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1935 The Bi: An State, City and County Official News-|the American baseball players who Fay ihe Bae have just returned from Japan can't une © , Bi ne N. D, and get over the enthusiastic reception entered at the postotfice at Bismarck |‘hey got there. ‘Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) @8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN Facts on Usurpation ‘Now that the move to impeach Governor Moodie has been halted, at least temporarily, time is afforded in which to look at the reasons given for this action and to weigh their In fact that is the only adequately housed. This suggest- Ph tmpnorenent, ahold. win ocmeig it # quletiy and silently taking place. Tt should be everlastingly empha- interested in both developments. Be-|cized that the tax problem is every tween them, these organizations|citizen’s problem—whether he is a should arrange to see that Bismarck | millionaire or a worker for wages. 4s well represented at the coming con- ference and that her needs are press- ed for consideration. pishieg it Hy 4 a ie ii, Hi Hf | if ismarck Tribune -|0f both children and adults; and in , jcontinue to decline. Island, N. Y., proposes construction} of @ tunnel under Long Island Sound to furnish a way for the escape of the island’s inhabitants in case of invasion by a foreign power, while A doctor, out all hours of the night, gets a ticket for parking his car on his own lawn overnight in Wash- ington, while the same city's police are still looking for the burglars who stripped the Washington monument of the 107 gold-plated, platinum-tip- ped lightning rod points. In Chicago, a restaurant owner, three patrons, and half a dozen law- yers are wrangling over the owner- ship of a $1900 pearl found in an oyster served to one of the customers, ‘and in Mexico City and Warsaw, Poland, workers threaten mass sul- cide unless their demands for more [pay and better working conditions are Granted. A child specialist in Madison, Wis., tells us that cheese and beer are ex- ceedingly beneficial in nervous cases Martinsville, Va. a 10-year-old child threw away a piece of candy and nibbled at a miniature bomb, result- ing in the child’s death. The great Abbe Moreaux, of the Bourges Observatory, informs us that the brightest rays of the sun on earth correspond to the heat of 103,000 candlepower from @ distance of only 3% feet, while a woman in White Plains, N. Y., testifies that for the last six months she had been sleep- ing in kennels with her 19 English sheep dogs, to keep them quiet. And 80, you see, the new year goes ‘on just as dizaily, and as unconven- tionally as any of its predecessors. We Grow Older Some of the influences that are effecting the future of the country &re plain and on the surface. But some are hidden, and move onward| unseen. One of the latter is this fact: We are getting older, not only as a na- tion, but as @ mass of individuals. A recent report to the Association of Life Insurance Presidents indicates that the present expectation of life is @0 years. That is 15 years or so more than it used to be. From this President Thomas 1. Parkinson, of the Equitable Life As- surance society, drew this conclu- sion: “Grave consequences involv- ing the relation of the individual to the state may follow the transfer of the balance of voting power from those under 40 to those over 50. This tendency is likely to be reflected in changed attitudes toward spending and saving and, indeed, toward in- dividualism as distinguished from collectivism.” Already such a change is seen. The widespread agitation for the Town- send old age pension plan is certainly the greatest political demonstration of old people as such that the country has ever seen. ‘They will be a greater power in future rather than a less, as science Gradually lengthens the life span, while the birth rate and immigration A host of No one can tell just what effect this increasing dominance of old people will have; all we know is that ‘The stewed motorist should be giv- en & roasting. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. Who Suffers Most from Heavy Taxation? (Napoleon Homestead) THE NEW DEAL [ASHINGTO! i—BY RODNEY DUTCH! (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Jan, 21—If you never happened to think how completely you're governed by seems like a good time. The president, who proposes the New Deal laws, is an ex-lawyer. Con- gress, which mulls over and passes them, is made up chiefly of lawyers. lawyers, this lawyers in the federal agencies helps prepare and admin- ister legislation and then defends it in the courts. Most of the administrators are law- yers—Richberg, Ickes, Hull, and so on, Finally, the laws are approved or tossed out by nine ex-lawyers known as the Supreme Court. ‘That last group of lawyers has just expressed an angry peeve against the rest of the gang and served notice that both the laws and the cases be- fore the court must be properly pre- pared. One result of its blast is likely to be a shakeup in the solicitor general's office at the Department of Justice. This interpretation of the court's rejection of Section 9c of NIRA—in the oll case, first big test of New Deal legislation—is the one I get after dis- seemed to threat danger to pd, Geauld Hkewise be emphasiand |soaee Unless mistakes are prob! of greater | made. significance to the man of small| Everybody had known the oil case means than to the man with large|Was @ weak one, though means. In spite of all the talk about | most blame should attach to the “taxing the rich,” government sub-| Justice Department for dragging it sists principally from revenue derived|to the court or to the from taxes on things bought by the|Board for insisting on fighting it millions of representative Americans. | through is still being The rich are taxed heavily, it is true se & —but the revenue from that source|MEANT AS A ‘barely makes a dent in government| The forcement section of the oil receipts. The rich are so few and far |code had omit- i | i E i i i a B Ba 28 = & = Et a f z i z E g 3 | i 7 } i E i le ei i Ba EE at! 8 it H — E Bg id [ 5 8128 33 & » & a5 4 i i : i His fi i E i ! i i i ! . case and left only the presidential regulations, Lawyers most intimate with the court and its members insist that the good good legal work, as well as flawless legislation—was simply good and sore and intent on delivering a rebuke. Secretaries to justices have com- Plained they were getting government briefs so unsatisfactory that, whereas they had usually relied on such briefs for source material, their bosses had made them go back to original sources and virtually compile new briefs for guidance, sk ke SORENESS LEAKS OUT Justices have been “leaking” word to the White House ior some time that they felt insulted by some of the D. J. presentations, but the most satisfaction they got was tacit assur- ance that Solicitor General J. Craw- ford Biggs wouldn't be inflicted on them in any future important cases. Assistant Attorney General Herold Stephens was considered the best lawyer in the D. J., but when he ap- pared with the oil case the court took him for a bad ride. Chief Justice Hughes, Brandeis, and other justices were sharp and sarcastic in questions as to how the government operated under executive canny and code decrees. * PRESENTATION AT FAULT ‘New Deal lawyers still argue, how- ever, whether an abler presentation might not have wou even the petro- Jeum case, ‘They know that some of the eight the New Deal and 19 moans, a ORO) wie ASSENT IE To UM nx 22Coin elit EINITINICIE IS 23 Ie tL 24Courageoun, 38 Deadly pale. 25 Consumed. 89 Sixth note Hawaiian «#0 Thrashes, rootstock. 42 Dandy. 28 House canary. 43 Light brown. 29She appeared 44 To coat with on the screen 8 thin alloy. fn Lehar’s #5 Game played on horses. 46 Principal. 47She is a good —- of —. against Cardozo MENUHIN FTIAICION ia (pl). 48 She fs a native decision was made was the fact that) congress was in session and could easily remedy the defection in Sec-' tion 9c overnight if it desired. court ever held that congress gone too far in delegating power. And the young New Deal lawyers) are loudly insisting that Attorney General Cummings can't expect to swap the country a dead Dillinger for an oil law or @ “Baby Face” Nelson for an AAA, 4 (ats 30 Knowledge. VERTICAL 31 Pasha of Tunis, 34 Person, 36 Heaven-sent food. 6 Tree. 87 To caution, 7 Paid publicity.38 Large room. 8 Calendar 39 Secular. period. 41 Rumanian 9 Toward. coins. 10 Note tn scale. 42 To accomplish, 11 Corpse. 43 Japanese fist 12 A bulk. 45 Postscript. 13 Short letter. 46 Mister. eS 5 my ln ait aE eelf-ad THD Hi se i & | taE i : 4 i E | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Signed letters pertaining diagnosis, or treatment, dressed. H aE : i i i z : f & By William Brady, M. D. to personal health and hygiene, not to disease will be answered by Dr. Brady, if a stamped, envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written i Z iE ue | ? i i oR Last year I gave son, now appear @ snob,|2% years, 10 bof rc Ey £243 Some time ago you wrote that fo- dine, when taken as a liquid or tablets, could. not be absorbed by the system; now suddenly you recommend it for acute anemia . . . (“White- collar”), % Answer—You are in error in both The Charlatan Eeraed want only hard-boiled em- Maybe It's Rheumatis I know you do not admit there is such @ malady as rheumatism, but all but crippled . . . (E. W. B..) Answer—Send 10 cents and stamp- ed addressed envelope for booklet “The Ills Called Rheumatism.” (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) Barbs | ae | As an admiral, a general and chief marshal of the air force, the Prince of Wales might have less time to dance with so many good-looking a rs—or so King George may *** * Huey Long not only is good as a song writer, but he's made nearly every one in Louisiana dance to his tunes. * ek * Kingfish Levinsky really turn- ed out to be fish for Max Baer. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) [Mg Ag time Harrow turned and looked des-| like this in her little boat, He took Sipaer" cried. rately toward sea, to sight] out his and followed the lever the rod,” Commander toward | course of the weak: [end rently, strogeling to his eet them, but the yacht was farther|ine for a glimpses of a tbob- looked at his away than before. There was noth-| craft somewhere » Harrow, ERE ahead then but disaster and the followed minute and hejhis head at Spike, and to ing ahead then but dleaster and the| wondered. tf be had eome for no on his feet. reach shore in their Iifebelts. It was|teason. Perhaps he should have! the—” Spike blurted, and not far now, per’ @ mile, per-|taken Kay into his confidence, He the gun in the sand, whiri- haps less, but with the storm realized with a bitter littlejing on Pete. His left shot out and ing this way, that was o [ree per tay at oy oa le mitered And Ida was exhausted from her | takes lately by not taking ov @ sickening smacking t and her nausea. his confidence end it was sound. had not to watt, The|ting that this be another; he de-| Pete tried to shake the mist ong oe walt acts [served it, Nevertheless, be waited, |from his eyes. How that, guy could Ce ae Taye o oeers wt deus [keeping the glasses upon the Com: |nock! He Knew now that he bad a pon it, pitching them all to star-|mander'’s stern. real fight on his hands. Doard, and capsizing the launch.| LT rpg fem ro Snags ig Spike came weaving, Harrow rose to the s rumble of an ‘Was it|the trained fighter, Pete had reece Genel tee aie thunder? But it couldn't be; there | sense enough to recognize it at once. hardiness, and determined to do any-|8ad_been Bo oe ie the|No al now. He'd have to thing at any cost.to himself rather | Whine ef the wind and the pounding | keep out of this guy’s way, box him, than cause the injury of one of|°f the curt, He kept the infight with him, keep him from these men and women with him. trained on the big|ancorking the full force of those Kay was without a ‘bat |yachd te oe easel fa he she was balding Tae, who tad letter Be goemed to smaing| coc ggr typ tetera] Gerri fe Ha dems coe ie ocr rs eye cae sea mire gr woes wes at = stomach sad Sone in The ints Alone it wouldn’t matter, but this}, Then he eaw them lowering the|each trying to tie the other up way, and him unable to help—Ob,| boat. He followed it carefully, los-} drill on the middle. why the devil couldn’t Johnson see | ing it now and then with the move-} One of Spike's fists got loose, them his glasses and under- | ment of the ocean, but always pick-|¢ame up in an uppercut and sent stand the sight ‘were in! ing it up. There were four people| Pete backward, Floundering about in the water,|in the boat and they were rowing,| he sat down heavily. He all were making desperate ef-|coming toward shore, toward him. a sonia. clearing away the jo Ore ‘with the wind,|, He moved the glasses southward, | mist, struggled to rise. The toward shore. A mi » maybe | but saw no ef another bost, | moment he was off his knees Spike leon, bot the longest mile any of | hen northwa SS ace [rm Sea sending merci ‘nd te wind driving in from the upon the a lifeboat. ig at him with a deadly me: sea, the rain down denly he saw it and capsisejehanicel precision. Somehow, them ‘merciless. » ° Spo" | as it swung about broadside to the with his hands up and hls On the morning the Commander He began to wonder if the Sarees Te fa Ge Sea chev Piland |i the ectoally sia ba | down wiy end try ty linc Harrow | ought to to But to tie to him Foom, Tathing. He Pay chiasioll| watched, covering the surrounding | weigh him deen. It weslall bs cold Seaae sey Mert ae [egret eee elementos os ee was It was of Me beniome, » feat googing fe ts dane 2 ais [be prevaed, bet he bled wien [ett Se | ats ee skippers who, fr; struck him as cheap and petty, re Buddenly—be never knew how it coer ret cas hocied ond Darrow might have been’ |give sad Boeke’ One ness bo strong, a ee AG watched Kaye pict fore Some. in the socead of rel ne the four then turn Feta pat everything he bad, coat i eT at the weather- | heed in toward the fnlet. Soon, with |into a right to the Jay and'saw the eaten sailor. good luck, they be Little go down, roll over, strug- to HgT bad do you think it’s going ad bo west have So bo.ont get |g ther 5 in down below,” ‘And Tckily. As be, lifted ‘the |Rarl Harrow selcs: °77 “a pre a i iene. He pred Ferrell ime for setier to 3 Fete engi be was, dvaming tie river toward the z eld tab ont the ocnag on young Samra for Pack of fools! Thought Johnecn | open his tecth pare Seva then, Pete chose had more wen ast tothe ct. Weases again, tried to clear his move the river a piece,” betibos or te weal Hiar-| Eat! Harrow amiled row in his place. is, at Pete. “You pack a author to move gt all today it| ill lived "when be reeched them. [tative wallop, young llow:" be they don't have to.” ‘The skipper | Serve skunk to let him | said, shook his bead sadly, smiling to ay ba and. im the| Pete was too surprised to answer. himself and drawing st his ie a ‘ pebpite, Winet, om the sand, was .Ctaey ,banch anyway hours had came jing himself oid aa spied Spons to sen 13 as Semtes = eg. [Mg hand, and blinking is es te te aye ee ted the Commander|Kay, Who was swimming without Yong Compbell was stinating the dock, Sho was s beaut. /°5, Ida who by now had begun to take po phe Pe ge pay ‘The relief on thetr was in-|an in life again, and Kay, Sosa kaaee tires eerearenee eee ae oa ay foe eimtration her as she nosed | gratitude and eTiand, Pet trom Potato Bartow to Sp serenely out into the wind-lashed |stragzied to gut the Hosier, Seepped over and picked: Helifax, elect snd as if Once she was out of the water| ead x to wi; fie drew hie tlMiea the Commander was. well herself, she insisted with mitied to wipe the gun, bat po dogs ‘borrowed, next, then ber how! when he comes clean Bete repeat Pee |e feet mig lems Bm Soe hen Ho peed ext of ngbed sd ein (nO ane com oe Pete turned to Kay. “Let's gob erted, soloing ot vere Se lp deeds nee |Meara's be said dally ort er ae tor the ince , Quen they ware on lend he turned | gasied* * isute,” Harrow sug. ‘well behind the Com- narrow. turned andar apd Tole om : Meceee this, Rea.” as Conpbelie ca uty, a7, Pete ‘At the Inlet he saw the Com-|S Sin you won't!” he 10h be Dee aking Windy apolo, mander heading out into the ses | bled, » AE, ‘Barrow, I said. “Needless to ret ite fools!” Bud] “tent . oem and hits rac He sipeet Foe boat will sree - ope : lheere mui eter ae she ape bet onl of thing I’ to talk over with ae it. ‘— $e Sous ta0t Se Harrow was to tiee and later.” (Te Be : Kay ‘nla have more sense than’ ean ties comin ——~.—__..- } Caavataht, 1094, ing Posters Byationte tea,

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