Last Big Blast of Boulder Dam Project
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set off at Boulder dam. the great flood control-lrrlga
» Photograph made as the last big black powder blast was
tlon-power project __
Camp of the Bonus Army at Fort Hunt, Virginia
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in the camp eslabiislied by the War department at Fort Hunt, Va,, tor the new bonus army that has marched
A group of the men are lined up for "chow.
Scene
to Washington to try to get the legislation some of the veterans want.
T i-H p Time for Michigan Hollanders
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Once a year the residents of Holland, Mich., who are almost all Dutch by
birth or descent, cast off their American habits and return to the customs and
attire of their native land. The town Is noted for Its tulips, about which the
annual festival centers.
Sharkey and Camera Sign for Fight
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Jimmy Johnston (center), the promoter, fondly holds the hands of Jack
Sharkey (left), world's heavyweight boxing champion, and Primo Camera
(right), the challenger, after the two men had signed up for a title match to
take place in June. The two hands will bring what Johnston hopes will be a
million dollar gate to the coffers of the promoter. In the back row are (left
to right) Johnny Buckley, Sharkey's manager; Bill Duffy and Louis Seresl,
managers of Camera.
MINT CONTROLLER
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New portrait of .Mrs. Nellie Tuyloe
Ross, who has become the new control
ler of the mint by appointment of
President Roosevelt. Mrs. Ross was
formerly governor of Wyoming and Is
vice chairman of the Democratic na
tional committee.
RICK WITH RED SOX
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Rick Ferrell, St. Louis Brown catch
er who, along with Southpaw Lloyd
Brown, was traded to the Boston Red
Sox for Catcher Mervin Shea and a
reported $50,000 in cash, in his new
uniform.
From Three Hone«
Every thoroughbred race horse In
the world Is a descendant of one of
three famous horsea—the Byerly Turk,
the Darley Arabian and the Godolphtn
Arabian—that were brought to Eng
land about 200 years ago. The Go
dolphin Arabian came from Paris,
I where he had been used to draw «
1 watercart. Collier's Magazine.
0
d
J
National Topics Interpreted
by William B ruckart
Washington.— The country has just
the move by President
Roosevelt to gather
People Trust to himself another
armful of authority
In his broad program
to put the nation's business hack on
Its feet.
age national recovery and provide for
construction of public works as a
stimulant to the economic machinery,
the President asked for authority to
In his discretion second In amount
only to that accorded him in the tn
fintlnn provisions of .the farm relief
witnessed
Roosevelt
In the legislation to encour
use
program.
It might be assumed that the dele
gation of so much power to the Pres
Idont would create a distrust among
the people of the nation, and that
probably would be the result In any
Here, however.
country save our own.
It appears that the great masses of
the people would rather have that
vested In Mr. Roosevelt than
power
In the 500-odd representatives of
their own selection who sit In the
two houses of congress. I find In my
rounds In Washington that the opinion
of observers Is virtually unanimous.
Their Information comes largely from
as the politicians say.
"back home,'
and so everybody seems to believe the
President Is more capable of doing
things In this crisis than congress, ex
cept congress. I might add par
enthetically the reason congress has
grunted so much Is because Individual
iy and collectively It is afraid to go
against the wishes of a man who has
caught the Imagination of the elec
Presldent Roosevelt has
torate as
done.
Although the legislation accords the
President the sweeping powers only
for two years, his rights during that
time to form a partnership with com
merce and Industry are nlafost limit
less, albeit they depend upon volun
tary co-operation by commerce and
Industry to a certain extent. But by
the system of licensing which is set
up. it Is made to appear without much
analysis that business had better co
operate or else—.
In the first instance, all the long
standing antitrust laws are abrogated,
kicked out of the window, so to speak.
Upon the application of any associ
ation that Is representative of a trade
or group or business, the President Is
empowered to arrange
ganization and Its Individual members
for a code of rules governing Its com
petition. In other words; he ^-em
powered to say In substance that
prices may be set high enough to af
ford all of them a reasonable return
of profit It Is obvious, of course, If
there la a fair return factories will
and normal channels of trade
open
will begin to flow. That means em
ployment, and employment means cre
ation of buying power. But the agree
ment must be within the bounds of
or the President will not ac
reason
cept It
There are only two restrictions to
the President's power In this direc
tion. Let me quote
The Presi
Two
Restrictions
them :
dent may agree- to
those codes of com
petition If he finds "(1) that such as
sociations or groups lmpo*e no In
equitable restrictions on admission to
membership and are truly represent
ative of such trades or Industries or
subdivisions thereof, and (2) that such
code or codes are not designed to pro
mote monopolies or to eliminate or
oppress small enterprises and will not
operate to discriminate against them."
It Is the plain purpose of that pro
vision to see that such things ns chain
stores do not swallow up the corner
and that a great corporation
grocery
not drive lesser ones out of busi
may
ness.
Thus, we see the government fos
tering a program that is designed to
for business a living wage and
assure
In providing that, It Is the hope of the
President that there will be a living
wage for workers, too.
his policies are carried out and that
the code Is observed, the President
has the right to revoke licenses which
he has given with his approval of the
competition agreements or codes.
But the program Is not all a bed
of roses for business.
To see that
Tlie President
condition of his approval
may, as a
of the codes. "Impose such conditions
(including requirements for the mak
ing of reports and the keeping of ac
counts) for the protection of consum
competitors, employees and oth
he may deem necessary In the
public Interest That provision Is a
touchy spot In effect, of course, the
President will take little part In ad
ministration of the law.
done by those to whom he has given
And it nev
era,
era as
It will be
the administrative duty,
er has been and probably never will
be that any group df government offl
Con
dais see things the same way.
sequently. one hears many predictions
that commerce and Industry will he
making reports In such detail and In
such numbers, and Investigations will
to such an extent that
be going on
Industry will be engaged In going over
Us books In one way or another about
all of the time.
Further, It never has been popular
American business men to have
aH of the facts about their affairs dls
It Is predicted now that this
closed.
condition, developed highly by the fed
eral trade commission, will be very
much worse and that one factory will
probably know all about Its corapetl
tor, Including the so-called manufac
turing secrets. From these has come
the progress of modern manufacturing
and distribution.
The public works section of the bill
Is of a leas imaginative character,
Otitright and with
HopetoSpeed no e x c e p t to n s. It
makes provision for
the expenditure of
three billion three hundred million dol
lars for public construction. It pro
poses the expenditure of these funds
over a period of two years, or so much
of It as may be necessary, to provide
employment. The construction work,
of course, will cause all of the lines
of business making or__selllng mate
rial for building to speed up. It ought
to expand pay rolls In a hundred odd
lines as well as give the railroads
some business. It appears to be a gi
gantic effort to Increase the momen
tum of recovery which most everyone
believes to be well under way. If It
succeeds, no one will question the cost.
It holds out that hope anyway, accord
ing to the President.
Mr. Roosevelt has not drafted the
program of construction, nor did he
offer to congress the plan Of taxation
to raise funds for the Interest on the
bonds for financing the work. He left
the tax matter to congress and thus
avoided causing trouble for himself,
for he can say thereafter that the
taxes wore laid by the wisdom of con
gress.
Recovery
« «
After a lapse of twenty years, the
senate of the United States again has
performed the functions of u court of
trial on articles of Impeachment It
has just concluded this task on
charges of Impeachment adopted in
the house of representatives against
Harold Louderback, a federal judge
tn the northern district of California,
marking the tenth time in our history
that the senate, has organized as a
court of trial.
Even blase Washington is not ac
qirainted w&h -ppo gedur-e b e ca u s e
II occurs go MldOQt and tlie trial drew
to the galleries crowds of the propor
tion attracted by the most extraordi
Tbey were,
nary murder case,
most part, curiosity seekers. The thing
Of course, there were some
was new.
seventy witnesses In the gal!erics,
awaiting call, but there were enough
others desiring to see the trial that
the places of the witnesses would have
been taken Instantly had they stayed
away.
• ♦ ♦
Because the senate sits ns a court
seldom, It might be worth while to
recall what the pro
When Senate cedure Is. In gen
Acts as Court
so
eral, the federal Con
stitution prescribes
the work to be done and how It shall
be performed. The house of repre
sentatives sits as a grand jury, hearing
accusations or charges brought against
federal official. The charge orig
inally Is one of "high crimes and mis
demeanors" followed by a statement
of a house member that "I, therefore,
impeach" the Individual named.
The next step^ts performed by a
house committee to which Is referred
resolution of Impeachment and that
committee determines whether It will
recommend a formal vote of Impeach
ment by the house itself,
the matter' Is placed before the house
It votes for or against Impeachment,
which tö all intents and purposes is
like an Indictment by a grand jury.
a
Thus, when
• * •
On March 4. just a few hours be
fore the old congress adjourned, a
senate attache appeared In the middle
aisle of the chamber and addressed
Vice President Curtis, announcing the
arrival of a committee of the house.
Their arrival having been duly noted,
the Vice President Inquired their mis
sion.
"To present articles of impeachment
against Harold Louderback," replied«
Representative Sumners, of Texas, the
chief manager on the part of the
house.
"They will be received," replied Mr.
Curtis, without emotion.
Then the senate sergeant at arms
arose In his place.
"Hear ye! Hear ye! Hear ye!"
cried the sergeant at arras.
commanded to keep silent on
"All per
sons are
pain of Imprisonment while the house
of representatives Is exhibiting to the
senate of the United States articles
of Impeachment against Harold Lou
derback."
And so the senate had been notified
formally and officially, and in due
course It organized itself Into a court
of trial.
The defendant la allowed legal conn
Each side may call witnesses and
they testify under oath In the senate
chamber just as they would In court;.
There Is the direct examination and
cross examination, the house managers
acting at all times In the role of the
prosecution.
Is In the case then la left for decision
by the jury of senators, two-thirds of
whom must vote fdr conviction or the
defendant Is automatically acquitted
of the charges.
©. lilt Western Newspaper Onion.
sei.
When all of the evidence
See No Harm in
Using Left Hand
We have published the fullest and
most considered pronouncement on
left-handed writing which has
reached us In the course of a lively
The topic was
correspondence,
raised by a request for advice
whether it was or was not well to
Insist at school upon the use of the
right hand for writing. The inquir
er's experience was that boys who
wrote with their left hands were
apt to be slovenly not only In their
writing but also In their thinking.
That slovenliness others have stout
ly denied; but one suggestion Is that
the appearance of It may be caused
by a tendency In left-handed people
to rend from right to left, which
would make written and printed
matter, and especially figures, much
more difficult to take In. Then came
the question whether or not compul
sory use of the right hand for writ
ing by left-handed children was
likely to Induce stammering. Our
correspondent "Medlcus" does not
deny this; hut he says that It is dif
ficult to discover what. If any, con
nection exists between stammering
and left-handodness, because stam
mering occurs In right-handed peo
ple. A surgeon thinks that compul
sory right-hand writing Is likely "to
encourage an Inferiority complex";
and It is not unreasonable to sup
pose that a sense of guilt (or, at
least, of being "different") and the
enforced struggle to do as'others do
might easily result In some disabil
ity or trouble of which stammering
might be only one, and not an in
variable sign. The parent of left
handed children may have to choose
between allowing them (or seeing
that others allow them) to write as
comes natural to them and letting
them run the risk of nervous or
other afflictions through being forced
Into the usual practice. The choice
would not he easy. Probably the
most sensible course would be to in
duce a left-handed child, ns gently
and as early as possible, to use his
right hand, not instead of but as
well as his left hand In drawing and
writing, holding out the reward that,
when both are reasonably elficlent,
he shall take his choice and be al
lowed to maintain It at school. On
all hut very highly strung or uncon
querably left-handed children this
ought not to put an undue strain..
And Indeed it would be no had thing
to give right-handed children the
chance of ambidexterity.—
same
London Times.
STOMACH, GAS, PAINS
Cheyenne, Wyo.—
"Last summer I was
very weak. My ne rves
were bad, every
thing irritated me
and I did not rest
well at all. 1 belched
gas continually and
had pains in my
stomach — the gas
seemed to press against my heart I
had hardly any energy and felt dull
and listlesa all the lime," »ald Mr». Eliza
beth simondj of 806 E, 9th St "X decided to
try Dr. Pierce'« Golden MedicaJ Dbcorery.
I used only about four bottlea In all and It
atrengthened me, my appetite Improved, I
waa not nearly so nervous, and alept well^a*
night; In fact I felt better In every way.
Dr. Pier«.*. Qlnle, BuÄalo*
N. T, Io» fr« medleal adrU«.
h
Writ, to
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Bemove. Dandruff-Stop« Hair FalHua
Impart* Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Half
Wc and 11.00 at Dmgglit*.
e.N.T.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for uae in
connection with ParkcT'nHalrBnlBam.Makee the
hair soft and fluffy. BO cent* by mail or at dmr
gizta. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.X.
Chctn. Wk«..P«tc
Weaker Point»
Men more easily renounce their In
terests than their tastes.
Hf
WAS
k
os
WHU§
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.
*Splittinq" Headaches
//_*;/ »he learned why »ho wa» always
L/nHi miserable — and found out about
NR Tablets (Nature'» Remedy). Now «he get»
along fine with everybody. This sale, depend
able, all-vegetable laxative brought quick relief
and quiet nerve« because it cleared her system
of poisonous wastes — made bowel action
easy and regular. Thousands take NR daily.
■ Jit's such a sure, pleasant corrective. Mild,
non-hahit-form- -
ing. No bad after
effects. At your
druggist'»—Z5c
V
».
-I I » ■ c" Quick relief for add indigw
TU Mb V tion. heartburn. Only IOC
//
Id the !ntere»t of Harmony
"You disapprove of the custom of
handshaking?"
"Not at all," replied Senator Sor
ghum. "1 like It But I don't quite
admire the tendency of a crowd to pick
on one man when they might be shak
ing hands among themselves."
Vice Ver.»
Sergeant—If anything moves, you
shoot
Negro Sentinel—Yaasuh, an' If any
thin' shoots, ah moves.
|
|
Doing Hi* Bit
"Just what have you done for hu
manity?" asked the Judge before pass
ing sentence on the pickpocket
"Well," replied the confirmed con
vict, "I've kept three or four detec
tives working regularly."
21—53
WNU—X