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COMMITTEE WOULD TIMI TAX LEVIES PROPOSED FOR BILL Decides Against Sales Taxes 1 and Other ‘Nuisance’ Measures Considered ‘Washington, ‘ways and means committee, for broadening President to include sales taxes, other “nuisance” levies as well as other revenue problems were discussed before the decision was reached to confine the legislation to the points outlined originally by the Proposals Roosevelt’s tax program president. After a brief committee session duly 9.—(?)—Unani- mous decision to limit the tax bill to levies only on individual and corpor- ate incomes, inheritances and gifts ‘was reached Tuesday by the house but both were paroled on condition of good behavior. Appearing before the Fourth dis- trict court judge, the two local men changed their former pleas of “not guilty” and were sentenced in con- nection with an attempted robbery here last winter. Local peace officers meanwhile continued an intensive search for John Garberich, who escaped from the county jail here a week ago Fri- day. Garberich was being held as a material witness in the robbery case to which he had previously jail break- if he week has been recovered at Freeport, TL, where it was abandoned on the berich’s escape but at present has no definite clues which point in that di- 1,500 CCC Recruits Allocated to State Aim of New Enlistments Is to rolled in the state during the last two camps allocated to North Dakota or being trained in preparation to bring- strength been established THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 9, 1935 permanent buildings, including a mess hall and kitchen and officers’ quar- ters, were constructed last year. Work will be started us soon as organization details have been completed, Reid DISCUSSES CANPING IN SOUT’ PROGRAM Executive Gives Comprehensive Description of Outing Work With Boys her,. using Both have removed her from his mother-in-law’s| aftermath of a family quarrel which] Officers said the Ulrichs quarreled | Ulrich came and seized home Sunday, is to be given a hear-| resulted in issuance of an abduction/and after Mrs. Ulrich hitch-hiked to| threatening language, ing in justice court July 15 as the| warrant. her mother’s home, 15 miles away,|been married twice. Bring All Companies to Full Strength Fifteen hundred CCC workers, en- weeks, are being moved into the 20 ing those companies up to full as soon as the camps have for the summer Progress toward making camping & “year-around” activity for Boy Scouts of the Missouri Valley Area Council was reported by Paul O. Net- land, area executive, in a talk before the Bismarck Kiwanis club Tues- day noon, Week-end trips to the Boy Scout cabin near Bismarck, area jamborees, work. The aim of the 1,500 new enlist- ments is to pring each camp up to the regular strength of 210 men and the distribution of the new recruits to the hobbelg geld expected to be complet Mba sessions at Cam) ip Chan Owapi on Several of the five permanent state Wildwood Lake and a trip to the na- ile | tional jamboree at Washington next month were listed by Netland as the major camping activities of Missouri What to Approve? What to Condemn? . Slope scouts. He lauded Bismarck’s service clubs and other organizations for making & full camping program, possible, de- claring that the area now has 1,400 scouts in 22 counties who are benefit- ting from it. The executive described in detail the daily routine of the three-week ses- sion held recently at Camp Chan Ow- api, where 150 boys were enrolled for education as well as recreation. He Pointed out how the program stresses discipline and safety. The camp was much more successful this year than in the last few years, largely he said, because the CCC turned over six squad tents and 48 cots to the boys. Netland said 27 boys from Bis- marck and 51 from the entire area will attend the national jamboree at Wash- ington next month, leaving here on @ special train Aug. 18. The executive was introduced by Otto J. Bowman, program chairman. Guests at the luncheon included C. G. Dosland, Kiwanian from Moorhead, Minn., J. E, Hendrickson, Fargo; and Joe Byrne, Washington, D. C., a son of P. E. Byrne, member of the Bis- marck Kiwanis club. Minnesotan Is Held On Abduction Charge Moorhead, Minn, July 9—(P)— Mrs. Marcus Ulrich, wife of a farmer imum quota. All work, a portion of which has held up while the new camps established, is expected to way within the next two of the camps, ’s 20 camps are divided classifications, namely, » coil conservation and au of biological survey. ‘Three Park Camps Added In addition to the five permanent} park service camps, two of which are’ located south of Watford City on the Little Missouri river, and one each at Fargo, Medora and Mandan, three new service camps have been added in the state, according to Rus- sel Reid, procurement officer. ‘The three new park service camps are located at Bismarck, Larimore and one near Dunseith at the Inter- national Peace gardens. Possibility agreed the hearings to the proposals outlined in the president’s message. Every- tbody knows we cannot go over the whole tax field without indefinitely prolonging the hearings and the ses- sion of congress.” Members interpreted the decision to limit hearings as a tacit agreement ‘to limit the finally-approved bill. The New York board of trade's support for increased taxation as a means of balancing the budget but its strong opposition to any “class legis- lation” taxes were expressed before the committee. Testifying on President Roosevelt's tax program, M. L. Seidman, repre- senting the New York agency, inter- preted the president’s suggestions as ‘having been made not only to raise revenue “but also, and perhaps chiefly, with the view of redistribution of wealth.” ‘The board of trade, he said, “is un- equivocally and most emphatically for increased taxation,” but “voices bette its opposition to class legis- Robert V. Fletcher, general coursel for the Association of Railway Exe- cutives, contended the graduated tax- es the president wants to apply to corporate income would penalize big- ness in the railroad field after con- gress had encouraged mergers. Dralle, Sundland Plead Guilty and Are Paroled Herbert Dralle and Floyd Sund- land, pleading guilty to charges of robbery before Judge Fred Jansonius here Monday, were sentenced to five years each in the state penitentiary, Many banking practices which were considered “old-fashioned” by the public in the years immediately preceding 1929, have been thoroughly vindicated since that time. But a large part of the public is still not quite sure what to approve and what to condemn in banking. When earned for this reason, she term “old-fashioned” was and is, an honorable one, Public-minded bankers today recognize that they must play an important part in rebuilding prosperity: They know that the greatest public service they can perform is —as it was in the past—to conserve produc. tive wealth by the wise lending of the funds of their depositors and stockholders: MAINE SOLON CALLS RRC LAWYER ‘AR Representative Brewster Blows Up at Hearing Before Lobby Probers in all state’ three servic Some bankers earned, and deserved, the term “old-fashioned” because they refused to adopt improved methods of operation and service, even when the old became in- In the words of a recent newspaper edi- efficient and wasteful: torial: ‘The task ahead is not the creation of 2 new and hitherto unknown type of American banker, but reversion to 2 well- known type which had much to do with building up the country’s past prosperity"s FIRST NATIONAL BANK “The Pioneer Bank” BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Others were called “old-fashioned” be- cause they refused to “liberalize” their lend- ing policy beyond the limits of prudence: close of its first hearing Tuesday when he shouted “you're a liar” at ‘Thomas Corcoran, RFC attorney, who/that fourth new camp may be estab- was on the eae filet thea an] eed 8 Jamestown also was seen Corcoran descr! 8S\by Reid, although no definite word “baseless” an assertion by Brewster,/in this regard has been received from Maine governor, that the|neadquarters at Omaha. RFC attorney had threatened to stop! ‘The five bureau of biological survey work on the Passamaquoddy tide-|camps will be stationed at Kenmare, Foxholm, Upham and near Edmunds support President on the James river. sevelt on the utlities bill before the! geven soil conservation camps house. have been located here since May 1. Concluding a long recitation of his They are at Wishek, Mandan, New contacts with the former Maine g0V-!zngiand, Watford City, Park River, fe areas find badl tore | Lakota and Valley City. near here, was back in the home of ie Bismarck’s park service camp is lo-| her mother Tuesday, and her hus- cated in Riverside Park, where several| band, who is alleged to have forcibly Vy Affiliated with FIRST BANK STOCK CORPORATION LONGER DOES YOUR CALL YOU GROUCHY? Hii tea retresen eats ieee a offishaezcaad irritability. He can’t uns WHEN YOU NEED AN EXCUSE TO STAY A LITTLE HOW ABOUT JUST ONE MORE LUCKY, ANGEL? THEN I'LL GO. Dm Gruening port President Roosevelt. 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