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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS. CASTLE DALE. UTAH ews to National Topics Interpreted by William Bruckart Waftbington, D. C. Kationat PrtM Building ftaV Washington. i The President" a lat- est message to congress, asking more than a billion and a Thunder half In new money sPai on rellef as he sees fit has caused political thnnder to rumble It has brought out In the again. open much of the undercurrent cf gossip that has been going on about with federal political racketeering funds and it has brought into sharp relief, Just ahead of the spring campaigning, the fact that the federal government haB used something like under the guise of re$S,0O0,000,000 lief since President Koosevelt took of- Over Relief fice. Naturally, the situation Is Immersed All of the charges that at Mr. Roosevelt during previous sessions of congress when he had requested that he be given, as he was given, blank checks on the treasury, have been revived. In addition, new accusatlous and disclosures of petty graft and political machinations have been dug up and flaunted In the face of the New Deal leaders. More and more of these are coming to the surface and there Is no longer any question that throughout the relief organization there Is politics. This is true notwithstanding the strongly worded statemeut by Mr. Roosevelt that politics was not to figure in the administration of relief in any way. All of this leads up to the conclusion that whenever the federal government horns In on administrative affairs of states, counties or municipalities, the organization becomes so extensive that It Is impossible for those at the top in Washington to know what goes on. It Is but another way of saying that the federal government ought to confine Itself to federal affairs, matters of national scope instead of attempting to supersede the local governments In any function. in politics. were flung h. '.Wli: issue of the Federal llegteter. the BvemmW.t s new dally newspaper, coming off derailed and upset at Sussex. N. J., when track was undermined serloS ,Chief Justice Alfred A. Wheat of the District of Colllmhia Supreme court committee. hj the senate lobby lFirst J at " W ashlngton. xZiTS Governor and Daughter Go Ridin"o the East telegrams Dick Shikat Regains Title as Wrestler Champ By his iecent victory over Danno O'Mahoney of Ireland, Dick Shikat re- f; fW'sl $sy &ff- - , pizkh' ' ..VtL. - 4 t iiwaaiirnifnifitii" When the cares of his office are not too exacting, Gov. Alfred M. Landon 0f Kansas turns to the saddle for relaxation. In this snapshot the state executive, who is also one of the outstanding figures among those who are being considered for the Republican Presidential nomination, Is sharing his saddle with his young Landon, age three. daughter, Nancy Josephine V Kansan Is Landon Organizer Will Seek fid-- - il4fcO Delegates for G. 0. P. Convention - ' 1 1 John Hamilton of Kansas resigned from the headquarters staff of the Republican national committee In order to become national organizer for Gov. Alf M. Landon of Kansas, candidate for the Republican nomination for 'resident. lltfflf Flag Before Businest Oak Bluffs, Mass. The regular town demeeting held here recently was John Hamilton. I Since we are heading Into a campaign In which Mr. Roosevelt Is seekhis ing Charge opposition is making much of two phases Waste of the spending and relief situations. They ace stressing the waste that they charge has permeated every phase of the relief effort In the last three years as well as the waste that has taken place in the countless alphabetical agencies that Mr. Roosevelt has built up in the federal government. The relief machinery, Roosevelt op1 ponents claim, has been converted Into a gigantic political machine, the chief Mr. gained his title of champion heavy- object of which is to weight wrestler of the world. He for- Roosevelt. They claim as well that there has been created a bureaucracy merly was champion of Germany. that makes us, as Individuals, responsible to a thousand little dictators who HE'S A NATIONALIST act as prosecution, Judge and jury over our every coming and going. a tana All of these are harsh accusations Nw. i. jUJiiuiTlWluifc... but there Is enough evidence available now to make it appear that there is, at least, some truth upon which such charges can be based. Of course, politicians will magnify all phases of every subject which they discuss. The opposition will make the crimes look heinous and the administration spokesmen will make everything look pure. Neither one Is justified In going quite to the extent of the indicated trend. It seems to me that m "fvoters ought not be fully convinced by either side but that they ought to examine the picture from the local viewpoint where the evidence is firsthand and where the people who did a good job or who were guilty of fraud or corruption are known to the voters. if In November the election reThen, fllfi nun tmtttut v,. sults for the whole country show a mi preponderance one way or another, the Pedro Alzibu Campos, a graduate of voters will have established their will Harvard university and prominent San as being either in favor of or definiteJuan lawyer, who Is head of the na- ly opposed to management of such tionalist party which is fostering a things from Washington. movement to sever connections between Puerto Rico and the United There are 3,071 counties in the UnitStates. ed States. In nearly every one of them, there are a More Republican and a Democratic county Politics chairman. In many of the counties the Democratic county chairmen are trying to use the WPA and its relief setup for political advantage. In an equal number of counties Republican county chairmen are watching for and reporting Irregularities. There can be no doubt, therefore, that the charges about relief being used politically will increase in number as the campaign progresses if there is ground for the charges. So, it Is made to appear that the local voters will have a complete picture of conditions upon which to base their judg- 'ff f7 1 TVs " V layed several minutes because somebody forgot to display the American flag! On opening the meeting, Stephen Itae, official of the local Legion, said no meeting could be held until the flag was on hand. Newest Locomotive Compared With the Old Type ment Two recent Instances where impor- tant Individuals have called attention t ty " -- "JF - - - Jjrr- - t a speed. -- v . jBMgl-MTi- - streamlined steam engine of the P081" most h lBwj englnt The ,ocomotlT sald t0 be "the Is reputed resistance. ad of reduction science for the Ti,e newest ce us Z4 -- -- " r"S Ig ghown nere fl nin.ii ln.ini.il ith the old standard heavy ,nd advanced engine design yet produced & redUcUon af one-thir- d " World Not a Spectator in wind real' to alleged corruption and political maneuvering under guidance of relief leaders serve to support the contention I have just advanced that the local communities will have complete facts before them. I refer to the charges by Senator Holt. Democrat, of West Virginia, that the whole relief organization in his state Is honeycombed with politics and the bitter attack by Governor Pinchot, Pennsylvania Republican, upon what he called the manhandling of relief administration in the state in which he formerly the chief executive. Rellef Administrator H')j''lns, with the aid of s Over-Sensiti- On ve A good deal of discomfort arises from about what people may say of you or your actions. Many unhappy persons seem to Imagine that they are always la an amphitheater, with the assembled world as spectators ; whereas all th while, they are playing to empty benches. Sir A. Helps. politicians, bas denied these charges Senator Holt called the Uop-kin- 's denial a whitewash of his own appointees and Mr. Pinchot turned loose a fresh fire. This sort of thing probably will develop In every state In the Union. In toto. I referred to the Presidential message asking an additional billion and a half for relief. And Atkt This would not have ' New Taxes created quite so . much of a storm had .. , tt not followed closely on the heels of Juit Man the White House request for new One may be prouder of his son If and taxes taxes. The combination of he is a but perhaps fonder an additional appropriation to be used of him Ifgenius; he is "Just man" and all as previous blank checks have been to the good. used by Mr. Roosevelt has enabled those who are opposed to the President and those who, while they may support are not in accord bin) for with some of bis policies, to make public statements of their positions to a better advantage than was possible before. If they had been able only to oppose relief, administration supporters could have accused them of being opposed to the rellef of destitute. To Gas Pressure May Cause Discomfort. Right Side Best put taxes and a blank check together simply offers additional ammunition If you tosi in bed and can't sleep oa and a good many members of congress right side, try Adlerika. Just ONE dose will use it before the new relief aprelieves stomach GAS pressing on heart so you sleep soundly all night, propriation Is voted. I thluk there Is no doubt that Mr. Adlerika acts on BOTH upper and lower Roosevelt will get the money but there bowels and brings out foul matter you would never believe was in your system. will be a great deal of accusing and This old matter may have poisoned denying, respectively, before the vote you for months and caused GAS, sour is taken. That will be necessary In stomach, headache or nervousness. order to "make a record" upon which Dr. H. L. Shoub, Now York, reports! senators and representatives can seek "In addition to in teat trial cleanaingt DON'T SLEEP ON LEFT SIDE, AFFECTS HEART Adlerika greatly reduces bacteria When Mr. Roosevelt was voted a year ago, his opponents threw up their hands and said that "you can't beat $4,880,000,000 for reelection." Now, one hears observations frequently expressed that while "you can't beat $4,8S0,O0O,OOO for it Is entirely possible that plus almost that much more may beat Itself. In other words, 1 have attempted here to present a comprehensive analysis of the pros and cons In order to show that since poll-tic- s has crept In, has permeated the relief setup, the AAA organization and other New Deal agencies, It Is entirely possible for a reaction to develop whereby the vast sum of money would be the cause of defeat rather than the for Mr. Roosevelt cause of I am making no election prediction. That would be utterly foolish. What I have sought to do, however, plainly and simply, is to show how local communities are going to rule the roost to a greater extent In the 1930 election than usually is the case. Much Is being made of the President's proposal to tax the surpluses I of corporations. Split on have hitherto report-TaPlan ed t0 yu something of the nature of the tax proposals but there have been developments that bring the subject again to the fore. One of these, perhaps the most Interesting one, Is differences that have arisen between men who are supposed to be the PresProfessor ident's closest advisers. Raymond Moley, now a magazine editor, lately criticized the tax plan most vigorously in his publication. At the same time, attention was directed here to the recorded attitude of Prof. Rex-forGuy Tugweli. Professor Tugwel) published' a book called "The Industrial Decline" not so long ago and in that volume he advocated the control of capital by the "driving of corporate surpluses into the open investment market" by taxation. These two views simply cannot be reconciled and yet they came from two individuals who have been very close to Mr. Roosevelt In an advisory way ever since Mr. Roosevelt entered the White House. Professor Moley takes the position, editorially, that if, during the depression, American industry had been stripped of all surpluses, few of even the greatest corporations could have survived. He regards surpluses as life Insurance policies for corporations and holds the conviction that unless a corporation Is permitted to retain funds as it sees fit, it cannot protect itself when our economic structure goes Into a tailspin such as that through which we have been passing. The difference In viewpoint of these two men shows a sad state of confusion among the "economic planners of the more abundant life," and demonstrates, among other things, that Professor Tugweli still has very great While influence with the President. we have not heard many of Professor Tugwell's speeches lately, and It is probably true, as publicly stated by the opposition, that Professor Tugweli has been muzzled for the period of the campaign, there are many things being done under Presidential orders that have their origin In the Tugweli brain. He Is proceeding merrily on his way with the Resettlement Administration program, of which he Is head, and has 14.000 employees on his pay roll. All of which seems to Indicate that while Professor Tugweli will not make aoy more speeches calling upon farmers themselves and laborers to ally against "our common enemy," he is still a very effective member of the New Deal administration. Westers Newapipar L'aloa. and colon bacilli." Mrs. Jas. Filler: "Gas on my stomach was so bad I could not eat or sleep. Evea my heart hurt. The first dose of Adlerika brought me relief. Now I eat as I wish,' sleep fine and never felt better." Give your stomach and bowels a REAL cleansing with Adlerika and see bow good you feel. Just ONE dose relieves GAS and chronic constipation. Sold by all druggists and drug departments PAINFUL PinCHItlG on any Apply Dr.Scholl'sZino-pad-s sensitive spots caused by shoe pres- sure or friction and you'll have in- stant relief. They stop pain of corns, callouses and bunions; prevent sore toes, bos bin ten; ease tight shoes. Get today. Sold everywhere. 25 and 354. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Bamma landrufftopi Hair falling Imparts Color and Baautjr to Gray and Faded Hair we ana (iwu uraffffUKa. rriiem Chain. Win.. Patehoroa. NT, FLOKESTON SHAMPOO Ideal for nsa la connection with Parker's Hair Balaam. Makeatha hair soft and fluffy. 60 rents by mail or at drn gists. Uiscoz Chemical Works, Fatchogue, N.x. 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