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Show THE LEW SUN, LEHL UTAH Pictal ITninn , 1 I Bruckart's Washington Digest Wisdom of Constitution Is Seen In Revolt of House on Spending Not Politics Alone Involved in Congress' Opposition to President's Spending Policy; Response to Will of People at Last Reflected in Members' Action. By WILLIAM BRUCKART WNU Service, National Press Bid., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. The Constitution of the United States that document that has served us so well notwithstanding notwith-standing the razzing given it by enlightened en-lightened thinkers of recent years says in Article 1 that "all bills for raising revenue shall originate in the house of representatives." It further says with an emphasis that, "no moneys shall be drawn from the treasury but in consequence of appropriations ap-propriations made by law." There is, of course, nothing at all new in the above paragraph. It is important, however, to remember those provisions of the basic law of our nation for in them again we see wisdom and a rather clear understanding under-standing of what happened just before be-fore congress adjourned its first session. ses-sion. It is as though the authors of the Constitution were laying a prophecy when one considers the recent re-cent revolt of the house of representatives repre-sentatives against President Roosevelt's Roose-velt's spending-lending program. (And, by the way, during the debates de-bates on this program it became known as the "splending" program among those terrible people who opposed op-posed it.) I assume that throughout the land there was much talk about the revolt re-volt against the President's policies for current spending as being purely pure-ly politics. I have heard from many sections of the country, and the story sto-ry was the same; politics. That is only partly true. Obviously, the house members had their weather eye on the political aftermath of what they were doing when they refused re-fused even to give consideration to Mr. Roosevelt's spending-lending plan that originally involved more than $3,000,000,000. They considered politics, too, when they refused to debate the merits of the $800,000,000 housing bill, although I believe they should have debated that thing in order that the country could know that it would have coat several billion bil-lion dollars of taxpayers' money before be-fore it is finally wound up 60 years hence. Aof Politics Alone Moved House to Oppose President The refusal of the house members to do the bidding of the Chief Executive Execu-tive must be examined In something more than just a political light, however, how-ever, because of the two provisions of the Constitution that I quoted. It must be recalled that the authors of the Constitution contrived to build a national legislative body with a dual purpose: 1. to represent the Union of states which is accomplished accom-plished through the senate, and, 2. to represent the individual citizens which is accomplished through the house of representatives. The house, therefore, is held to be the body more responsive to individual think- ing among the people and to react more quickly to changes In public v sentiment. That matter of having taxation originate in the house, therefore, is seen to be an attempt to reflect in the legislative acts the willingness or unwillingness of the people to stand for taxes, since the house members must stand for election elec-tion each two years. Again, when the Constitution said that appropriations had to be enacted en-acted as law before money Is paid out of the treasury, there was a patent curb on wild and profligate spending. The house, being closer to the people, first felt the call of the people for government spending and responded. Since the senators, too, are elected by direct vote of the people, they also beard the siren call and voted out money with the greatest of ease. But the house led the way. Lately, however, there has been a change In that individual thinking. think-ing. The majority of the people have begun to wonder where all of this spending was going to end; they began to wonder how the national debt now well above $45,000,000,000 would ever be paid. They smelled fresh taxes. The senate heard, but failed to heed, this new call. Senators Sena-tors chiseled and nibbled at curtailment, curtail-ment, but they did not put their mind to the business of cutting expenditures. ex-penditures. It was the house that led the way, again. And, as I said earlier, they acted definitely by refusing re-fusing even to debate the two cornerstone cor-nerstone bills the spending-lending bill and the housing bill. Action of House Reflects Will of People on Spending It is made to appear, therefore, that the concept of the Constitution's authors was correct They felt that the house would hear from home, as we say these days. And the house has heard. Politics, alone, was not responsible except insofar as politics represents the shifts In position that statesmen must take to meet the changes in public sentiment The bulk of the people, it seems, have suddenly awakened to the fact that something must be done about the continued spree upon which the federal government his been en-taged en-taged in the last five r sw y-. The refusal of the house to act cannot can-not be catalogued otherwise than as reflecting the will of the people, for the politician who knows his onions seldom is seen going in the wrong direction if the votes of his constituents constitu-ents are concerned. Whether the economy wave that swept through the house in the last few weeks of a session that is destined des-tined to be historically Important will be maintained in the next ses-sion ses-sion of the Seventy-sixth congress, of course, is a matter of conjecture. It is to be noted that primaries for nominations come along early next spring and summer. Following those primaries in natural sequence are the November elections. If the members mem-bers of the house and senate who have balked at running the federal government further into debt take the same position in the session starting next January, then I am inclined in-clined to the opinion that our nation will be on the way out of its troubles. trou-bles. I always hedge statements about congress, however, because politicians will sometimes place party par-ty above principle. They might deem it necessary to buy a few votes with taxpayers' money in advance ad-vance of the primaries next year. Whether the representatives and senators have such ideas in mind, or not, I wish the voters would put every ev-ery one of them on the spot by demanding de-manding to know whether they are going to let this nation go any further fur-ther into debt. The debt now is so large that each of us is going to pay and pay and pay in taxes, and after we have passed on, our children and theirs will pay. Congress Failed to See That Money Was Properly Spent I always have opposed congressional congres-sional action that delegates power settled on the congress by the Constitution. Con-stitution. In these columns, there has never been any deviation from that conviction. Since 1933, there has been a constant trend in the wrong direction. New powers have been given the President time after time. Particularly, has this been true in the matter of handling money, mon-ey, Congress obeyed the dictates o( the Constitution by appropriating the money, but it did not do that which there certainly is a duty to do, namely, see that the money is spent properly. In an examination of the latest spending-lending scheme put forward for-ward by the President and rudely shattered by the house, therefore. It strikes me that another device to get more power away from congress con-gress was being proposed. In the first place, there was little, if any, hope that recovery could come out of the program. We have seen only slightly different schemes flop annually annu-ally for several years. Further, these plans that are temporarily out of the window appeared to me to be a trick to evade the law in that the financing was to be done without consideration of the national budget and finances. None of these new debts would show in the budget The program resembled a road that is cut around the edge of a town to avoid the business section, a bypass. by-pass. Respecting the merit of the spending-lending bill, itself, there is little In my opinion to warrant its adoption. adop-tion. In plain language, the proposal would have socialized credit in the United States and I can not believe that the United States is ready to take up state socialism after the manner of Mussolini or Hitler, President's Hints Sound Like Admission of Failure The smashing of the administration's administra-tion's scheme, of course, did have its political repercussions and Mr. Roosevelt, feeling the toe of a stiff boot as he obviously did feel such a political blow, will be carrying his case to "the people" soon. He said in a press conference one day that "the people were entitled to know who was responsible," meaning the congress. He also suggested that the people ought to know in advance why there would be more unemployment unemploy-ment and why there would be new taxes to pay for relief. All of which sounds rather like an admission of failure. That is to say. these schemes of spending, of pump priming, prim-ing, of creating new and greater debt 11 have failed In returning the country to anything like a normal nor-mal condition. We have nothing to show for something like $25,000,000,-000 $25,000,000,-000 so expended excepting the bonds of the United States govern ment that are outstanding. New Dealers, however, are still battling. I noted one of them said the other day that an extra session of congress in November of this year was surely a necessity. That proposal will bear watching. I have talked with many, many leaders in congress men cf long experience and understanding and none of them believes an extra session to be necessary. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS BY JOSEPH W. LaBINE President's Political Activity Since Congress' Adjournment Shows Heavy Interest in 1940 (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are those of the news analyst and .Released by Western POLITICS: Rebuttal Home in Hyde Park, Franklin Roosevelt probably reviewed editorial edito-rial opinion on his recent seven-month seven-month debate with congress. The public thought congress had won, for it killed his lend-spend and housing hous-ing bills, defeated his neutrality program pro-gram and passed the Hatch "clean politics" bill. Not so evident were his victorious defense and relief programs pro-grams and his retention of the $2, 000,000 currency stabilization fund. On three successive days, therefore, he went before the people, first to boast, next to scold, last to warn. Signing the Ashurst bill (creating an administrative officer to supervise super-vise federal court budgets) he announced an-nounced that all goals of his 1937 UTAH'S SEN. KING "l don't see how , . court reorganization proposal had been realized, six of them by laws and the seventh (change in attitude) "through opinions of the Supreme Court itself. Next day observers thought he let a cat from the bag. Discussing his neutrality and lend-spend defeats, he borrowed an analogy suggested by his wife a precipice to which he said congress is leading business, and over which it may plunge "next spring." Placing it on a gambling basis, the President said a G. O. P. -Democratic coalition had made "two bets with the nation": (1) On continued peace, and (2) business' ability to absorb wage earners who lose VPA and PWA jobs "next spring." Some thought'it possible the President Presi-dent was gambling too, staking his 1940 candidacy on next spring's prospects. If there is a war andor heavy unemployment, congress will be wrong and Mr. Roosevelt right, thus justifying a tliird term attempt. Certain it was that no politician without interest in 1940 would have delivered the message President Roosevelt sent next day to young Democrats convening in Pittsburgh. Smoothly laying the groundwork for some action, perhaps a retirement from politics, possibly a coup to keep the Democratic party "liberal," "liber-al," or possibly for a new third party, he sent this warning: "If we nominate conservative candidates, or lip-service candidates, on a strad-dlebug strad-dlebug platform, I personally for my own self-respect and because of my long service to, and belief in liberal democracy, will find it impossible im-possible to have an active part in such an unfortunate suicide of the old Democratic party." . Meanwhile, members of congress took exception to the precipice analogy anal-ogy and wondered if Mr. Roosevelt had the right man leading the right horse to doom. Said Michigan's Rep. Earl Michener: "The coalition . . . has stopped the American people just before they went over the financial finan-cial precipice." Said Utah's Sen. William IL King: "I don't see how anyone can contend consistently that when we appropriated nearly $13,-000,000,000 $13,-000,000,000 for next year, congress was not doing everything within its power, provided spending is the answer." an-swer." CONGRESS: How Much? How much a so-called "$13,000,-000,000 "$13,000,-000,000 congress" actually appropriated appropri-ated and spent became the compu- NEWS BITS TAXES In Washington, the National Association of Manufacturers Manufac-turers brought out figures alleging alleg-ing that U. S. taxes have climbed 640 per cent since 1913, much more than Britain (430 per cent), whose exorbitant levies are often used as a basis of comparison with U. S. taxes. DICTATOR In Spain, Gen. Francisco Franco made himself supreme dictator, set prisoners to work digging trenches 20 feet from the frontiers of Britain's Gi-bralter. Gi-bralter. WED. at Chicago in his iron lung, the self-styled "boiler kid" of infantile paralysis fame, Fred Snite, and Miss Teresa Larkin, 25. - v ' - , H' r- K ; : j? fc. j i X ' I k-. . v.: . w.-. v.- VJ.Vf..VMw.s.w.svv..-.v--Wic-' -&0M64MMiial are expressed In these columns, they not necessarily of this newspaper.) Newspaper Union. tation job of Budget Director Harold D. Smith. His decision: Congress appropriated more than $13,000,000,-000 $13,000,000,-000 but included some funds spent before July 1 end some to be spent in future fiscal years. For the 1939-40 1939-40 year he figured the total was $10,472,354,914, or $260,937,376 more than President Roosevelt's budget estimate. Previous year's record: $9,208,338,030, which exceeded treasury treas-ury receipts by $3,600,514,404. Meanwhile the matter of appropriations appro-priations became a political football. Senate Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley said it was less than $10,-000,000,000 $10,-000,000,000 because several re-appropriations were included. New York's Rep. John Taber placed it at $14,-061,596,619, $14,-061,596,619, with about $1,000,000,000 each being spent before and after the current fiscal year. Publicly denouncing de-nouncing a public debt he said had reached $33,895,100,000 (including $13,000,000,000 government corporation corpora-tion debts) and pointing to an alleged al-leged 60 per cent payroll increase since 1933, Mr. Taber probably helped speed President Roosevelt's appeal next day that departments and agencies slash their next year's budget requests. Also In Washington: C Social security stopped receiving claims for lump-sum old age insurance insur-ance benefits, and prepared to inaugurate in-augurate new monthly benefit payments pay-ments to workers over 65 who have paid taxes on their incomes the past 18 months. C California's Rep. Frank Buck, after conferring with the President, predicted serious consideration of a plan to broaden the personal income tax base and increase the basic rate. C House Minority Leader Joseph Martin announced Republicans will have definite programs on at least three major topics housing, agrl culture and reciprocal trade agree mentsto present at the next con gress as alternatives to administra tion measures. EUROPE: Tension Up "Hostilities began at Rom. The dec. laration of tear between Eastland and Weslland was quickly followed by series of bombing raids by Eastland along the east coast of Westland from Wash to points north of the Thames . . ,, .. estuary, eleven suaaen raids were made on thi territory during the first jorty minutes . . . wo raids have been made on South London and anti-air' craft batteries have been heavily c gaged . . ." in jonaon eariy-io-Deaaers were irked because Sir John Anderson. chief of air-raid precautions, made them stay up late to test effective' ness of their new dark shades. It was "blackout" night, the most comprehensive trial yet made of fa cilities with which England hopes to foil an Invader from the continent When "morning came, Londoners ALBERT FORSTER T;r read the above account of proceedings, proceed-ings, also reading that nine army air pilots had been killed. What made the "war" news seem the more realistic was word from the continent that Albert Forster. the Nazi "fuehrer" of Danzig, had flown to Berchtesgaden for conferences with Adolf Hitler. German-Polish tension had previously previ-ously been heightened when (1) a German airliner was fired upon while passing over Gydnia; (2) a Warsaw paper had warned Poland would bombard Danzig if political union with the Reich were proclaimed, pro-claimed, and (3) Danzig's semi-official newspaper Vorposten, asserted the city was "prepared for defense against Poland's war threats." All Europe watched Fuehrer For-ster's For-ster's return from Berchtesgaden. Interest heightened when he proclaimed pro-claimed a Danzig mass meeting. That night while his mob cried "Pfui!" at every mention of Poland, shrewd Fuehrer Forster resorted to time-tested dictator tactics. On Poland's Po-land's shoulders he heaped a charge of plotting to seize not only Danzig but East Prussia as welL No sooner had this untruth raised German-Danziger German-Danziger resentment to a fever pitch than Hcrr Forster made the simple announcement that his brown shirted follow?rs have made full preparations to reunite the Jree city with Ger.sny. i ic;orl I - 'I - s l m jmr wri-rt'frr IftfttiTlUM AGRICULTURE: More Stamps in Washington. Secretary of Agri culture Wallace at last took out of the experimentation stage his lat estand one of his most successful plans to get rid of food surpluses. For three months the food stamp plan was tested in Rochester, Dayton Day-ton and Seattle, expanded to Bir mingham and Des Moines, and cnai-ly cnai-ly to Shawnee, Okla. At all but the latter place, relief families were fed by sale of orange stamps (for Duy-ing Duy-ing regular foods) and free distribution distribu-tion of blue stamps (for buying surplus sur-plus foods). At Shawnee, low-income families tried the plan. Not until early August did Mr. Wallace uncross his fingers. Then, t f SECRETARY WALLACE Uncrossed his fingers. pronouncing the stamp plan successful, success-ful, he announced it will be expanded expand-ed on a national basis very soon. If it works nationally like it has at Rochester, farmers will be happy. In the three-month trial there, food sales were upped 8 per cent Forecast Not until August 1 can any year's agricultural yield be accurately gauged. Simultaneously this August the U. S. department of agriculture and European sources released their predictions, the first on cotton, the latter on grains alone. Both looked bad: Wheat. If big crops bode war, Europe must have war this autumn. Germany stored her surplus wheat in dance halls and gymnasiums. In the hot Danube basin, the Ukraine and the Vistula's valleys peasants brought in a crop that sold at the lowest price since 1592. In Rome, the International Institute of Agriculture Agri-culture forecast the largest wheat crop since the World war, excepting except-ing last year. With Soviet and Canadian Ca-nadian production up, with devaluation devalua-tion of far eastern silver destroying purchasing power, the institute gloomily predicted a glutted market mar-ket through 1940 and 1941. Meanwhile U. S. farmers considered consid-ered themselves lucky. Although Chicago wheat prices would normally normal-ly be between 35 and 40 cents, and pn the farm, 30 cents (customary differential under Liverpool prices), they are actually about 10 cents above Liverpool. Reasons: (1) U. S. loans to farmers on stored wheat keeps the supply down and the price up; (2) production ' this year was down 20 per cent, producing a crop about equal to the nation's need; (3) the U. S. pays a bounty to exporters of wheat, amounting to $28,000,000 on 118,000,000 bushels last season. Cotton. Biggest cotton news was the Export-Import bank's credit sale of 250,000 bales to Spain, taken as a gesture to woo General Franco away from the Rome-Berlin axis. Meanwhile the International Cotton federation closed its Zurich meeting by cabling Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. Wallace in protest against U. S. export subsidies. In Washing. ton the August 1 forecast was re leased, painting a somewhat bright er picture: Placed at 11,412,000 bales, the yield would be 531,000 bales under last year, and 2,388,000 bales less than the 10-year (1928-37) average. But there will still be a carryover of about 13,000,000 bales. MEDICINE: Mary Heart Into a little maternity hospital in the center of Manila's slums walked Mrs. Manuel Quezon, wife of the Philippine commonwealth's ores! dent Like scores of others, she came to- see a nhenomenon record. ed only once before In medical his tory. Sound asleep after feeding irom an eye-dropDer was a seven. pound baby, normal in every way except that her heart was complete ly outside her body. While physi Clans watcned fascinated throueh stemless cocktail glass placed over the heart, they wondered whether to operate. Having baptized her child Mary Heart, the devout moth er said she believed her infant's con dition was caused by her worship of a picture which showed Jesus Christ witn nis neart exposed. ASIA: Hush Settlement une monm ago itussia and Japan were ready to wage war over oil and coal resources In Russia's half of Sakhalin island. Reason: Jap concessionaires refused to hike wages oi itussian worKers. Both na tions reinforced border garrisons and Jap warships rushed to the scene. At both Moscow and Tokyo, there was no sign of surrender. Al most unnoticed in the press a few weeks later was the humiliating out me ior japan oncessionaires I k V 4 ' J 't " , i gianted a 15 per cent wage increase. t,. TTnfted States and England Ura members of the Universal Post al Onion, which standardizes rates of postage betwen nations, vvnue the general postage rate on ieuers to foreign countries is nve cents ior the first ounce or fraction, we have established a three-cent rate for most countries on the American continents, con-tinents, as well as for Spain and Spanish possessions. Great Britain has the three-cent rate for most of the British empire, Train Angers Elephant Whfither an elephant or a mail trail would have the right of way near Kampala, Uganda, was In doubt for a while, recently, ana the heast Droved a poor but fighting los er. According to .the engineer's re port, the elephant persisted In run-nine run-nine in front of the engine. "I sounded the whistle several times," he said, "but the elephant continued on the track Increasing its speed. When the engine nearly reached it the elephant turned and moved slowly oft the track. 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