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The _ aa State, City and County Official News-|him will bar normal development, Paper. Bis- Esl tion that the jam over the relief bill .20 | is about to be broken in Washington. Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ......... 5.00 of North ws Weekly by mailinstate, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail outside of North 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. No Tears or Regrets J. P, Morgan, high mogul among America’s money princes, has quit ‘Wall Street to make his home in Eng- Jand. The nation watches him go without tears and no particular re- egrets. If Mr. Morgan can get along ‘without America we can manage to struggle along without him. ‘Those who fear that this transfer of interest will make Mr. Morgan in- different to the future of this coun- try and hence unsettle the investment situation need not worry. He will continue to be as interested as he ever has been, that is, when he can make @ profit. In financing business ventures Morgan was only an agent, enyway. He merely obtained the money from the people through his ‘banking connections. ‘The incident does indicate the in- ternational character of wealth. ‘Money owes no allegiance to anyone and Morgan is essentially a man of money. It may be that he is going to live in England because he feels Toll of his kind will get better treat- ment there. If so, this nation has no apologies to offer. If and when ‘we lose our traditional belief that all men are born equal we shall be on ‘the way to that decadence which has beset Europe. If he is going abroad ‘because he fears what may happen here, it is merely proof of the inter- national character of his citizenship. By his actions it is clear that Mor- gan intends to live the rest of his life in England, forget the land which made him and his ancestors tremen- dously wealthy. There can be no valid objection to this. He has the same right of choice as the poorest citizen, Meanwhile, there is no point in try- ing to estimate what he owes the na- tion or what the nation owes him— if anything. In so far as his record shows we can be sure of only one thing. That is the laugh which he Bave America when the midget sat in his lap to have her picture taken during the banking probe in Wash- ington two years ago. Bismarck Tribune king. The average American boy will 150 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation may be expected. When it is reached it quite probably will be a victory for the president. wish that judicial processes could in some way be speeded up just a little. Tt has been upward of a year and a get @ lot more fun out of life than this little fellow who doesn’t know what it is all about and possibly never will, for the atmosphere surrounding He is entitled to sympathy. He would get a lot more fun fishing with & bent pin or playing marbles with his fellows than trying to live up to the obligations of a throne, A Break Is in Sight Despite the fact that a decision has been slow in coming, there is no ques- Beaten in the senate on the wage question, the president merely sent the bill back to committee, there to wait until the public roused itself to demand action, for inaction is the one thing which the people will not tolerate under present conditions. Involved in this fight are a large number of things which the people want and which are of more impor- tance to them than the wage ques- tion. Chief among these in North Dakota is the CCC program. Many commu- nitles look forward to a continuation of conservation work this summer. They will not get it unless the dead- lock is broken and money for further support of the CCC is made avail- able. Numerous camps have been asked for this state but not one has been approved. Decision awaits ac- tion by congress on the relief biil, The point to the whole matter is that demands for more relief and for higher pay, which is the stand of the senate majority, will quickly vanish when the issue becomes one of get- ting elther something or nothing. ‘The maxim that half a loaf is better than no bread will very quickly be applied by those who are causing the ‘trouble, This probably explains the presi- dent's tactics in handling this mat- ter, his failure to carry his case direct to the people. If the people whip the recalcitrant senators into line without direct suggestion from him, the result will be to strengthen his hand immeasurably in connection with future legislation. ‘Whether or not one likes Mr. Roose- velt, there is no denying that he is An early decision in the controversy More Speed Would Help |i Scuaiors: w In this connection, one can only Poor Little Brown Boy Prajadhipok, son of the sun and Tuler of the winds and tides, vacates ‘the throne of Siam and an 11-year-old ‘boy will be elevated to the throne to take his place. Thus another pawn is set upon the international chess board and the heart of the average American, who makes something of a fool of himself over children, will go out to this little brown boy who is cast in the role of a plaything of the fates. For times have changed in Siam, just as elsewhere throughout the ‘world, The days when men were men, end nothing could be done about it hhave vanished there just as they have here, Prajadhipok’s father, who had hun- dreds of wives and some 700 children, of @ program and final decision as to its legality is a help to none of the parties involved. seed catalogue. Editorial Comment ||"r=: Rosenblatt will have an impressive: lineup of similar figures to show to Congress. half since most of these issues were | "7 28ainst him. first brought forward. i NEW DEAL IN [ASHINGTO —BY RODNEY DUTCHE! & cagy individual and one who has | (Tribune Washington Correspondent) better understanding of the public — mind than those who are aligned against him. for prosecution, Rosenblatt decided to throw them into court as fast as they were found to warrant it. Fear Grips Chiselers as NRA Cracks Down Without Blare of Trumpets + + Rosenblatt Shows How Codes Can Be Enforced . . It and Likes It .. . Democrats Smell of the Rosenblatt drive. Beginning oo Meaning, of Pie and Rush for It, t in Apnea ing was oe brome to| Pi organize nine regional compliance councils with a legal staff at each one |be checked, now that they've tasted and to bundle 17,000 complaints filed |blood. Thousands of here back to those councils, Washington, March 5.—Investigat- discover at least one thing to cheer about when they ‘The whole network of laws, execu- | scrutinize NRA. tive orders, and public agreements which constitute the New Deal seems to be heading into that somewhat constricted funnel that has its out- genial aes Hay pera cases |T@ther than beforehand. was just the beginning. Now we are reminded that this court is to have the final word on many other things —on section 7-A, on the TVA pro- gram, on the bituminous coal code, on the lumber code, and probably on Pretty nearly all the rest. able to average a mere 10 days be- tween the time a complaint is re- ceived and the time it’s prosecuted, in case it can’t be adjusted. Thousands of chiselers are being Scared who never were scared before. NRA has been making a big stab at ithout saying anything about it, because it hoped to be able to brag after a record was achieved, enforcement ICKES MADE TO LIKE IT tive branch extends even to senatorial messengers, one of whom walked into the office of Secretary Ickes with a copy of a Senate resolution for which he requested a receipt. Almost from the beginning, the most common complaint against NRA has been its failure in code enforce- ment, especially on the wage and hour The complaint came not so much from labor as from thou- sands of business men operating in the secondary corporate strata of con- cerns worth $5,000,000 or less. General Johnson's old NRA asso- clates think his failure to enforce had more than anything else to do with his enforced retirement. “Little busi- ness”—not big business—became bit- provisions, ed, “of walking into offices unan- nounced?” aged gent, barked back even loud ontside the office and when you ain't got no doorbell.” to his papers. It was hard to observe code labor PIE COUNTER OPEN Provisions and still compete with code. ci i I F E BRE g ri ‘i E F York, found numerous violators, and by threat of action brought the whole . industry into line. ably these He finds many employers who don't | picked by Jim Farley understand code provisions and think |the administration’s political they're complying when they're not. Speaker Byrns has told that about 10,000 jobs as superint CHISELERS FEEL TEETH ents and foremen of Instead of carefully selecting cases That course has a deterrent effect on chiselers and if cases are thrown |@mendment which out again by the judges, NRA can|HOLC 90 days to Profit by the experience. not residents of the states are working and make it It's too early to judge the full effect emergent agency employes, meanwhile, aren't sleeping so well. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Ei sa sisi Before long, Rosenblatt hopes to be Senate independence of the execu- you in the habit,” Ickes bark- The messenger, a dignified middle- “Yes, I am—when there's no one Mr. Ickes signed and turned back Bitter, concerted howls of Demo- The long delay between beginning | Violators, cratic congressmen for more patron- age—some of them made in group visits to the White House—have be- gun to have results, ROSENBLATT CRACKS DOWN In one recent week about 300 NRA cases, mostly involving labor, were The president has promised that thrown into the courts of New York —_——____ ‘The real book of the month is the|state alone. That resulted from the government department and every agency will have a special “person- Policy of Sol A. Rosenblatt, the rath- nel” officer who will listen to congres- er dynamic new NRA compliance di- Editorials printed below show the trend of th by other editors. without regard Probably would turn over in his royal grave could he know the turn affairs But the dapper little ex-: own generation. knows | @tisen, mde ™ the state is in dire such @ tax appears to be the to get the money. that the day of absolute based on heredity alone, is dead. It ‘was @ long time passing in Siam cause the level of knowledge and telligence is low there, but it FF i Hl FY li peu site i al : 4 The number of wage restitutions Whether they agree or disagree ||from code violators has increased with The Tribune's policies, more than 100 per cent. Rosenblatt has gone back to the old NRA principle that you can get nearly everybody in an industry to obey the code if you can assure all hands that enforcement will be universal, Recently, on the basis of one com- Plaint, he sent a group of investiga- tors into a certain industry in New ————— ee Regardless of whether we like this of tax or another better, & Fre ig Hee 5g rf lel fap fall 1 i tH i g : : FE HE H Ex Egéa ved ui i i H i F i ; F iy Hf | RA hi l th i ill Eeetl z y i iy inl ‘fl in Cuba discovered that yellow fe ver, the disease which ravaged the tropics, was spread by a certain type of mosquito, the “stegomyia.” The discoverer was Dr Carlos J. Finlay, a Cuban, By clearing up the swamps where this insect bred, Maj. William C as, in 1914, reduced the death from yellow fever in the Canal Zone to six per thousand. Today Dr. Finlay is honored by of two commemora- tive stamps marking the centenary of his birth. ® Cuban iss (Copynignt, 1938, The Last Czar HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle —_ 12 Bugle plant. I3TT) 13 To be sick. IEIN 16 To pare. 8He was em- val © Fees: peror of —. 22 Measure. 14 Destruction. 23 Back of the 15 Opening. neck. 47 Birthmarks, 27 Energy. 18 English titles. PIE WI 29 Totals. 19 Beer. Ui 30 Woolly. 20 Standard of IE IVIE F2] 31 Learning (pl). perfection. A IVE | 32 Denied. 21 Act of en- v 3 Steg 1) ICIE1S} 34 Knock. veloping. nTTIAILTTIAINI-K FAS] 36 Not to tose. 24 Born. LUTIAIL TAINS TGIOIL IF TE eas nye 25Small area. 46 Place wherea ——. 40 Fright. 26 Structural unit trial is held. VERTILAL 41 Sac. 27 Play on words. 47 Melody. 42 Form of “a.” 28 Father. 48 Weights of 2 Pressed. 43 Golfer's device 30 Lawful. containers, 3 Round bend. 45 Branches. $2 Scarlet. 60Small drum. 4 To secrete. 47 Labor. 33 Diagram. 52 Citric fruit. 6 Attack. * 49 Bird. 35 To be indebted 53 Courage. 6 Gaping. 51 Genus of 37 Hastened. 55 He —— his 7 Fish. cattle. 88 Duties. throne, 9 One, 62 Pound. 41 Baseball stick. 56 He and his 10 Sorrowful. 53 Pronoun. 44 Armadillo. family were 11To observe. 54 Musical note. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady, if a stamped, bel wens eacloeed. Lattars ahouid be Iwief and ‘wriven in ink. 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