The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 28, 1935, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1935 } 4 i The Bismarck Tribune] PES ern paceman eee beneapannnvegeetererae 1.5 scope of the president's new tax pro- BEGIN HERE TODAY cut dark frock te] The memory of Katharine’s de When that season comes, with grain in the | debt, rcacrenpetig ee be tesa la cal gent.cflgram that until some definition is party in 1936, Kar = ste . ran was. Vite baving his |speiring voice steadied Viclet and bin or elevator, fat hogs, fat cattle, sheep and |to get 100 per cent grants later from Hopkins. ee eet ae anata tare Rater repemieeer Seantieal, 30, catte te wove “#8 | usual hour of dalliance with thie | strengthened her for what she had poultry to sell, the wheels of business will re- pfs: had about #100,000,000 tn apoiisations: for proj-|thig where the line is to be drawn, |cais behind him, The step is a long Stings tnthes’ Gotice ene ber itera trestsicn PPoaed pr Bipecwe| apd well, then. If you won't, ceive an impetus such as they have rarely known |withdrawn, while applicants wait to see what their [DOW much, in the way of surplus ts '@ Jone in thelr direction, pe ta so |cool atid hard aff certain of Ber|you won't. 1 warn you, though, it in this part of the’country. The prospect is ajchances are with Hopkins’ work progress division, m Rte 4 SALLY MOOR. lecal coanetie, due |sclf. Besides Victor now was Gé@-| may be unpleasant . . .” ; ; Ickes probably will be lucky if he gets a third of |*uditional load is to be imposed on tee ies ts spite of | nitely “an older man.” The male| “What do you meen?” He had delightful one to which we all look forward. a evatetereyare of /corporations—until these things are ba rg lee Sek mah 4 : ead = & a 2 $900,000,000. known, the business of the country marry bim and, impalsively, che |charm and stréngth she had 60 04-/risen, as had she. They faced each Business is pretty good now but “we ain’t| Hopkins sits on top. He has the job of putting 3,-|4in not be in position to think a. ee ee mired in him were no longer e0/other across an expanse of gleam: seen nothin’ yet.” 500,000 people to work, of certifying them from his relief | ciesriy about the effect arine and Michael eneh ge te theis | Powerful. ing mahogany. rolls, of getting projects under way and passing on their i own homes. Almest e “Mr. Strykhurst will see you! «7 meen,” said Violet easily, employment possibilities before approval of the Ickes! ~ wow migninel, learns be, bts takerite’ | now.” The secretary looked Violet |=unst Fve often been tempted to A Lesson Learned Late board can become final. It will know, of course, that what e New York te see lawyer im | over appraisingly, tating to 88 | ten your daughter about our asso (Gk Aeubdc (Ak Sonat, the Getenan umiibatiahs 6 He also has the job of bossing the investigative staff |is proposed is not going to do it any feel da ta @ tamie linch the definitely modish costume | ciation, I've never quite got to the 4 3 an seem for the entire work-relief setup, and of fixing labor rates.|good. Even the least enlightened Men learn, when they are small, not ‘Sally, ana ot Miehacts [Of summer eflk, charming but 12° | point” fhave learned from the World War; it is bad policy for Which doesn’t seem to leave much power for Mr.|Chamber of Commerce leader can see to say everything they think. If they marriage te, Ratharing, tocates |expensive. Violet smiled and went - any European power to enter a naval building race with |Ickes. But you never can tell. that, But the extent and degree of|do, somebody knocks their block off. Le? ase on cheetah, nt takes Tinto the inner office. “You wouldn't dare!” His eyes Great Britain. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) the discouragement remains to be re-|Nobody knocks a little girl's block off rine, bet Michael bas de- | He had risen to greet her; amd | “aay woutan'tt If” She snapped However, much they may differ on some matters, mivoalsa. “Nop even. the president “cap: ae oa a Serre? selva pa wints to we away, bee bee, there was just a trace of apprehen-| 40, 5 petit-point compact and statesmen of England and Germany are now in agree- With Other Reprinted to i tases pongoraey ately poner Charles Claypool, Beattie justice of Sother epvecse the by peer ogee Violet |icoked at herself in {te mirror. ment on naval policies. Germany willingly accepts a pro- U show what |! | ruccess of the La Follettes of the sen- | peace. f NOW GO ON Wirm THE sTomY |"“"... about Katharine.” ee i hn is gram by which her total naval tonnage cannot exceed 35 We may or | late in getting White House support tie Ne His brows drew together in 8! .c00 with the voice ris per cent of the British strength, and the program is em- DITOR may net | lbecause the real leadership in this! When the country goes by 7,00000| \JIOLET MERSIR bad nerved) town “My daughter? Ab, .yes. ot 8 bodied in a two-power treaty which is valid regardless of them. radical plan is now in the hands of|for house cleaning, you don’t want herself for the taterview. It|you know her. 1 forgot.” and (she heped) the wisdom of the She maval programs of other powers, ‘ ‘eo eee Te ee ical amet taiaant| Was not one she faced with pleas: the went rent |onee T'was jest thet When Ta One cannot help thinking how different world his- The Town Families ame secretary of commerce. ure, but Katherine's worn faoe and /£00, to BA©, 20S lice the taots [refused to go away og a tittle trip ; tory might have been if such agreement could have been (New York Herald Tribune) irs Phar uind: Bteoncrh bis daacoee sac ae 8 the tragic expression in her dark|engs one day might be useful to| Witt Jour, It wouldn't have looked pene: Mey, tm 1010. Two gentlemen trom Hanover, Germany, have ar-|,,7he weeular, Democrats lenders onc |,,.The, ticks of course, should bear! eyeg the day before had decided |htm were always pigsauholed somse- | jor ‘7 ‘be Newspapers later, Pear of Germany's naval ambitions was the one rived in this country with the object of photographing they do not like it, they wish it had their full share, but to destroy estates hie: where in his memory. | great motive that drove England into the each of the seventy-seven American Hanovers, the films | not peen ‘suggested, and they were— is to destroy the goose that lays the A “She's anxious te ge on a trip oe * jan entente. Be-|to be assembled with those of Hanovers in other lands |onq still are deeply Xhat Mr, |golden egg—Senator Elmer Thomas Mr. Strykhurst's secretary sald} _."S*eicnd of ours, Miss Vin-|CHE loathed herselt for the words i tween 1914 and 1918 German statesmen learned once and | for the glorification of the German city as a community | Roosevelt, without warning, should|°f Utah. she would see it her employer was! cont she'd have a chance to peint.|~ and the manner, but she kept / for all that Germany's way to greatness does not lie in a | Which has spread to the ends of the earth. It san inter-|have sprung such a tax measure on bE yd busy. Violet, looking about het | Evelyn Vincent ts a splendié wom-|the memory of Katharine before | naval program. That much, at least, can be written down | sting idea; it is also an excuse for losing one’s self in|them. As well as they can they con-|,_ In their struggle to escape the aoe with recognition, was surprised to|an—she thinks Katharine hes tal- | as Gefinite and positive fruit of the war the fascinating, the always mysterious, pages of the !ceai their feelings and simulate en- | ination of men, women have neglected should » | *T don't know what you're talk- ar. United States Postal Guide, ‘The guide lite only @ score |°etl,thel® feelings and simulate en-|+i 210 spiritual powers to become] nd everything so unchanged, Rev-| nt that should be encouraged’ | ot Son wie i or 80 of Hanovers, No matter, the others doubtless exist, | hollow sound and their faces a strain-|Amazons by using man’s weapons.— enteen yéirs since she herself had ‘Not fer worlds| “Don’t you?” said Violet slowly. For Quick Settlement. either without benefit: of postoffices or else concealed Dr. Alan Chester Valentine of Pierson greatest caxtion. you fe é under the points of the compass which so many [2 100K 08 they discuss the subject. Col been 20, anid ensconced behind that/ would she have him suspect the| Really, don’t you remember? Be vaeagel siaiiay qropocal for a constitutional amend- | american place names. But how far precede German se & eee ae 8 desk (or at least, ene very Itke ft), | secret that ate at Katharine's very jcause, if not, I have three letters ment to prevent five-to-four decisions by the U. &.|city claim them as offsprings, or how much would it| ‘They seem to have been treated like| Society has always evinced a mark-| feeling important and soul. which might refresh your mem- ®upreme Court on constitutional questions will provoke | want to claim some of them? backward children, told what to do|ed reluctance to exchange the reali- adult, He shook his head, obdyrate, | 7: B great deal of debate, certainly; but there is one part| There must be considerable obscurity in the genealo-|and when to do it, but not informed | ties of the present for the promise of Victor Strykhurst’s hair had mot |~ny wife and 1 talked it over last| Sere of her, her youth and fn- a pf his plan which should meet wide acceptance, and that | SiS of these families of place names scattered across |in advance because it was unnecessary |the future—Dean Paul Klapper of deen white then; it had been black | night. Mra Strykhuret te very|Bocence and admiration, he hed fs his scheme for giving the supreme court original and| ‘C2, United States. In general, of course, they record the |for them to know and they couldn't |New York School of Education. —ebony black with a deep, rich| much opposed to it. Later we may| Written them to her that wild exclusive jurisdiction in all 1 western sweeping waves of emigration. There are the|understand anyhow. After the pro- * % % wave in it. He had exuded a cort|run over to Europe with her. @he |*pfins. all lawsuits involving constitu- | elght Eimiras, which accurately chart the course of em-|gram has been decided on, it is tol-| The quality you get these days is} of power. She had beem exceed: /can look im on the galleries.” “Tou're out of your mind.” He tional questions. pire from New York through West Virginia, Ohio, Mich- Jerantly explained to them in words|not so hot. The sold bet-| ingly and inexperienced.| yieise suppressed a shudder at | ‘Brew % dulck, apprehensive glance As things are now, if you wish to teat the con-|!88n, Missouri and Idaho to end with one in Oregon |of one syllable and a carefully drawn|ter stuff in prohibition days. — Issy Small she had fallen fm love! 140 thought of the unhappy giri|**.cbe doer. i. stitutionality of a law, you file suit in any federal district |*2¢ Smother in California, The dozen Essexes and the |map furnished to guide them in the| Einstein, famous prohibition sleuth. with him... trailing the two smug, middleaged “Perhaps I am.’ eee eit oe eno - eight Litchfields follow a similar pattern. Perhaps in|direction they must go. Thus they * + And in love she hed fallen, head | nies Sree fa her own Diack |g fmt know whet my daugh Aceh ceateain ont unconstitutional, | most cases the town was named by settlers who had come|are saved from the headaches which} The shorter catechism once had it over heels. There had been 20/1) ough we ter’s life means te you.” enforcement of the law; and many |from the preceding one, but there must have been a|might develop if they started think-|that “I am a child of sin and the heir} reservations in the affection she wat “I'm fond of her,” Violet anid months may elapse before the question finally reaches | ot of cross-breeding and quite a few cases where some-|ing for themselves. of hell.” The new catechism asserts had poured out upon him, this) “Z rather hoped you would eay|slowly. “By every right, I ought the supreme court. body happened fo like the name, e*8 that I am a child of the government| motherless girl who had been poor | ‘7*- to hate her. Once I did—fest the Benator Norris would have the issue taken directly | qhi,mte ‘WeBty Cantons are scarcely an indlcation of| 1 45n't a pleasant position in which|Nd heir of my neighbor's industry| and restricted and unhappy. He| His keen eves raked her Rand thought ot er, I mean; when 3 fo the supreme court, without sll these intervening try, even though the first ones were ®|:hese leaders are put. They not only|@"d prudence—Dr. Isaiah Bowman had been flatteringly kind to her—|eome, expressive face. “You con-| was young reckless and want steps, and his idea looks sensible, “Tt might, in fact, be|ot the other favorites n'a trifle bathing Ave the ven [nave (0 follow in a direction they do|0f Johns Hopiths University ted teen fitile attentions, presents, | come down tomnits ase ine sunAT! fe cost son wens have Tubes 6 ” 5. r s even more sensible to have the court decide on a law's Addisons tribute jlo literature or local piety, and why os. wan ia ee. But nee pra More divorces ‘and more unhappy| the extraordinary homage of cer-| She shrugged her shoulders. “Z| divorce—everything, if tt weren't Constitutionality the moment it is passed, before any |iongest liste of oll? pipe 5) Fiorences one of th® |ment and look as if they liked it, If|homes are caused by women who talk) tain veiled locks. was in the neighborhood . . . just |for the child pene at enforcement is made. Failing that, the Nor-| history, or to the ladies who bore that Phi lg na those in position to know can be re- abou He had known the game so well. | thought I'd rep. in-' p “What do you want me to do?” ge a PE © sian the rien) Mere pare? 21 is onvaral tint Aeariy Alt foe Fresiaenis sould Ronenit’ inthis tax message were| FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ihe fret taille of the rales" |vionee eurriheret sesed, belting mene View sa ke Genes : from Frorlda all the, rat pow id Oeceola’s fame reach |e, Felix Frankfurter, who has fur- pot. v8 PAT. OF. His wite, he had told her, was|the tips of his beentifally mani-|e bully, she reminded herself, keep- rim Pay for a Crime of fifteen towns? Perhaps some of the Hanovers, like |Nished most of the brains for the fil, had been an invalid for years.|cured hands together and regaré-|ing her sense of triumph carefully The famous Kansas City “Union Station massacre” |some of the Osceolas, reflect a paucity of imagination |2'#i0 Trust and had more to do with Divorce was out of the question. ling them. “She seems to have| hidden behind a mask of indifter- —that shooting affray of two years ago in which five|rather than legitimate descent. Confronting the many shaping administration policies than Proud, loving, fierce in her loy-| made frieeds with you. Her step fo-eag He always admired people i men were killed by gunfire when gangland tried to rescue | fePetitions of 20 many names one is inclined to feel that |‘ Senerally realised; Mr. Marriner alties, stormiity innocent, she had| mother and I are sometimes baified stood up to him. & Buddy wi American town fathers we: Eccles, the young Utah banker, now believed all of this. It had taken '!by her - “T want to ket i ly who had been caught by the government— re not on the whole original. |1034 R Board, you Katharine go i seems to have been pretty well cleaned up. But America is a big place, and fhe gentmoen who believes, ig Ahr her, ostensibly eer et Sas Bee viseeee, hare Der i Pretty Boy Floyd, prime mover in the massacre, has| British ¢| proper among other unorthodox things, that fe a leds erand. 6 ber | VIOLET fatt almost om imyuion | (77 O+ PAOtEne. FY 0 sort of echoat i Peep in hls be ree et amount of time | deficits “ in "3 of pity. Perhaps he wasa't as |{B7 Bave there. Open air stuif. i Grave for months, now—put there by the! to devote to lunch is two hours. Before can cubl ir A are eee pe eyes. She hed seen him for ang a os be |Snetl thrive om ft. She's been : bullets of federal operatives who caught up with him| thelr luncheon period, howeevr, Americans require | penthes, UE ene an what he really was—a rich man |5™US sure of himself ‘chink | 00kine badly anyhow. I think she } ab © farts in southern Obio speedier waiters, became secretary of the treasury, greedy for all life’s sensations, lov- Seemed. Perhaps there was o could stand @ change.” i Verne ‘ eee was a tree specialist, and Professor ing not her but the new experience |!2 that selfish armer. She tried aw He tor i Jislcg » second gangster in the killing, is also] In this era of after-dinner speakers, Wisconsin peo- |™MOley, Whose closeness to the presi- she promised. other tack. naa Pepe ioced the space of |, dead. His own gangland associates killed him, in Michi-| ple should not criticize that law compelling them to take |4ent 1s hard to exaggerate Horrorstruck, she hed shrank| “I know you want to do what's|E oe ite ttm fe etyety eee | gan—furlous, it is sald, because his feat had caused the|# plece of cheese at every meal, After ell, they don't eee from Bim, She hed bees. tao ev |beet for her,” she began. “We éo| re, vee,liue Bim to sive ta grace q “G men” to put the heat on so many gangland haunts. | 58¥é to listen to one. There may have been others, but sentially honest. to face the inev-|feel che might Blossom out im 8/610 was ont of his oe | Now Adam‘ Richetti, Floyd's sidekick, has been con- hak ~ \these are believed to have been the {table diffcutties of the affair be|difterent atmosphere. My husbend | my wes cet of is Bande. Almost it GCM king (ait in the meaner ie ee Doctors and dentists may deduct the cost of maga- |president’s' chief counselors. Not offered her. But the struggia, te |thinks she ts very good. Have yoRl uals py = : wurder. higher | zines they keep in thelr offices, in figuring thelr income | Democratic leader in the house or the days thet followed, bad been|tccn ber Sower sketchest” spoke ageta. courts uphold its conviction, he will die on the gal-|taxes. Provided they remember, so far back, what they|senate was . The - a frightful one, Temptation, time| By the darkening ef Ris tece cho| “Well, you may bo right about fows, ald for the magasines, = . dent’s business advisory committee of and again, hed almost overwhelmed |knew she had touched some raw | Yee. Parents oftem are teo close to All in all, the officers who died in the Kansas City A Miah fifty knew nothing until it was print~ her, Ghe had loved him so ter-| spot. thetr children to sce the best for : {Union Atation plaza seem to have been pretty thor- Now that the Prince of Wales has composed a piece jed in the papers. Exactly what keeps ribly. “Ghe never speaks to ws of her|them. Thank you, Violet. IB win a paaty avenged for , he has something to blow 4 that ttee from, In the end her strength had been |ambitions,” be said jealously. “I|™Y wife over. She's always over: i : rhe ves hard to say. Pretty soon it will be the superior to his, She hed ' gone|must confess I think it extremly |S8ziows about Katharine, She ; pecreinee, the Japanese have made such success selling |recognized outstanding joke, a syn- away, lett his employ. She had|odd of her to confide im perfect |feels the responsibility keealy— 4 ‘Moscow has a theater in which the actors are all deaf in Germany, they might next try watches in Swits-|onym for sucker. Not even a Demo- for a long time, that ehe|strangers.” He smiled, as if ter |Stother woman's child, after all.” 4 and dumb. Very‘few of America’s movie stars, we believe, erland and coal in Newcastle, cratic senate leader is treated less < hated all men. minating the interview. “I'm eor| He carried i of well, Not a # tere deaf. Miare Rul Orobabis be ciecescnoe ce 4a pera, What te peseenens (13 eee ry but I'm afraid we must let the tet ot Os romney be ane . , mand really soak-the- YW . HE thought of this as she walt-|New Mexican iden ride just sow. have | Six Russian girls jump 4% miles with parachutes, | 800th liquor following the newest appearance of the|program, long cherished by the pro-| oM't spere the rod. it you spolt: Ss - ; Probably Soviet leap year. Loch Ness monster, gressive group, and throw it into the for a chance to 4 for the trim young women 'She must stay ot home: _. (ie Bo Gonitanct An Independent Newspaper ehind the Scenes | THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matier. : George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O, Johnson Kenneth W. Simons in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER ca Use, if it Will. and Sharpen Knives . Edge. . » Hopkins and Ickes Talk Amity New Dealers Still Hope for That Amendment to Curb Supreme Court .. . Congress Has Weapon It Can . . Harry Seems to Have the In Financial Terms s | (T SEEMS THAT I'M ALL RIGHT IN PRINCIPLE — BUT | CAN'T DRAW MUCH INTEREST Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady will answer brie pertainin, to ith but not dis- PG a ays tae ge a staniped, rete cdaresocd ¢ ie PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE OF VITAMINS Secretary and Treasurer Lond Washington, June 28—The administration hasn’t not inely to suffer any ot ‘these grave atitional diseases. He is inter- been ‘scared away from the idea of a constitutional ested, however, when Ike McCollum and Simmonds describe Subscription Rates Payable in Advance amendment to meet U. 8. Supreme Court decisions as the presétvation of the of youth the better than average by carrier, per year .. .$7.20 ||against the New Deal. Anyway, not more than tem- nutritional maintained by a more liberal intake of Daily by mail, per year (in Daily by mail, per year (in state oul Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail outside of North Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press All rig! also reserved. porarily. Many of Roosevelt's advisers still are frequently found in huddles, discussing the possibilities. One group meets regularly once a week and exchanges ideas as to how an amendment curbing the supreme court’s powers should be framed and as to when the campaign for it should begin. These fellows claim to have assurance that Roose- velt will support such amendment when the time is ripe. Some of the president's progressive advisers would like to see the fight begin at once. But Roosevelt is fond of saying: “I time my punches.” And most New Dealers believe he should say nothing more about the supreme court issue until the court strikes a blow at AAA. Few doubt that AAA, the Wag- ner labor disputes act and the security program will be in serious danger. If the court knocks one or two of them out, it is guished authority, Sherman, certain foods) and of vitamins A, C and Gare the important factors in the attainment and maintenance of this [ | believed, plenty of popular support can be recruited for bor by do not believe are borne " an amendment. Inspiration for Today eee es Rigar nature, vitamins never occur singly, but always in combinations . CONGRESS CAN CU! Leveorbo For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, Legal sharks have been studying a precedent where In practice that the best effects are neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved.—St. John 3:20. congress passed a law stipulating that it should not be subject to judicial review and the court respected the | ae 383 2 eee admonition to keep its hands off, vitamins of enormous potency (theoretically), but combinations of many or ‘There are thousands hacking at the branches ‘The precedent was in the case of U. 8. versus Mc- all the vitamins, from natural sources, in form which insures the regular of evil to one who is striking at the root.—Thoreau. Ardle and involved one of the laws passed during the ration. | Pott -Civil War reconstruction period. Ideally, of course our food should furnish all the vitamins we require. Sentiment leans toward an amendment rather than i i i : : resurrection of that precedent. But you may hear more ing customs or practices much of our food is robbed Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet about the latter as the delays involved in getting an ies not eaay te Olt an adequate fetion of Vitatainy ‘veer Tod even sf tore Reports of a steady business upturn in the | FIBA te Avia FenReeeTtg iat subaseeinn 1° Section 2, a on choice of food, voluntary, obligstory or seasonal or northwest are encouraging but the man whol Article I1I of the Constitution, after defining the court's Ofie of the scientists who isolated vitamin C—known i , jurisdiction and original jurisdiction, says: as ascorbic acid or has looked over North Dakota’s crop prospects PIR CEN Che’ Glitee’ nAceay warns iumnrioiad SRE ceblon—reported his opinion that this vitamin protects against is tempted to remark that “you ain’t seen nothin’ yet,” for the business now being experi- enced will be small in comparison with what the immediate future holds. Certain items of farm income, upon which all of us rely, already have jumped upward. Prices for butterfat are lower but the income from dairying has increased sharply because of Last winter it took about all the income from a cow to keep her in high-priced feed and the farmer got little for his labor. Now the feed again is coming from old mother nature and without higher production and decreased costs. immediate cost. But for the most part the business increase fis due to heavier borrowing of money and a higher rate of activity as both farmers and busi- nessmen prepare for 4 busy period. Thus we |of a PWA nature may be too optimistic. still are in the season of anticipation rather than ee of realization from a business standpoint. preme court shall have appellate jurisdiction both as to law and to fact, with such exceptions and under such regulations as the congress shall make.” Customary failure of congress ‘to make exceptions is a matter of usage rather than obeisance to a consti- tutional prerogative of the court. eee WHET KNIVES BEHIND SCREEN Smart readers will not need to be told that dis- claimers by Mr. Hopkins and Mr. Ickes that each harbors the destre to cut the other's throat are so much apple- sauce for the benefit of Papa Roosevelt, who deplores public fights among his boys and girls. You ought to hear Harry and Harold discuss each other in private! In the contest for power in the big work-relief pro- gram, Ickes has seesawed up and down and lately it has been made to appear that he was up on top again. But, although Ickes has an enviable reputation for bounc- ing back into power and favor with the White House, this appearance may be illusory. £ He seems to have the $250,000,000 approved for slum clearance and low cost housing firmly tacked down, after & period of doubt as to whether he would get even that. But his belief that he will also have the spending of the $900,000,000 scheduled for non-federal projects HOPKINS ON TOP Cities and states, already heavily burdened with The Great Game of | Politics By FRANK 8. KENT ‘opyright, 1936, by The Baltimore Sun TAX BILL AND LEADERS Washington, June 28—There is so much uncertainty as to rates and | a ™§/lap of congress with orders to put it through. * *k &e The details will be. determined largely by the La Follettes, because theirs is the real ardor and they will too much than by any other thing—/ doctor says Charles Claypool, Seattle justice of | vises I the peace, W.F) It is not the fast tempo of modern life that kills, but the boredom, a lack of strong interest, and failure to grow | livery that destroy. — Dr. Hafold Willis associated with nutrition- ration of vitamins to supplement the ne

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