Show THE BALT LAKE TRIBUNE SATURDAY MORNINO pad swi ffjjrf alt 31 r ! Hwl Ut t tt Tribund m pilmiw aianint M tb FubUahln Company or (mscBirnoNi ‘0£rd 0 I put and Sunday ona month 10 50 Pally and Sunday ana year 4ihd' abon ratoa apply In otaru Idaho Werad and wyomtna) ' la United Btatea bally and ' tfamppdr Sunday ana month ii "Th Ttlbana la an tala In ba rUad-art eyonant ally la tha United State may aaoartatn aanta In any elty by ' thla office r Tba TriMin ta a aiambar of tha Cl a lad Frea Tha Aaxwlalyd Praaa ‘ eluaimly antltled to tha uaa for ri Una of all new dlapatchaa cradltad to ' tt oa not othar wlta credited In thla paper and alio tha local new puhllahed barrio -- ui mil the poatoftlcd tl Bait M wcend diu mattai tl Tha Trlbuna la a charter mamba Audit Bureau ofC' of tba Tha Iriauna la a membei of Media Record Inc troup national Ine Hanolda fitiaerald City rapraaantatleea Older: haw560Tort N Mich I Waat tath Street I Chlcato Oenaral Motor Detroit Iran Ae Bids! Baa Pranclaca 66 Buttar Street i Lot laelea Ill W Ith Buaatt Baaitl Lloyd Bulldln Foreltn burtaua of1 Informauno of Tha Borlba Pan B Trlbuna ara: Anrlandi nr I ntaf $anYfn ValUoryioQ Oarmaoyl Ira llal Bolal Horn Italy Today Back in Circulation and Tomorrow — 0 No doubt it te a ign of recovery that men fhould be increasingly in terested in long term problems When 1 crlsLi is acute the frfrilH thing that matter te how to weather it T r: I1 I’m Si seema to 13 1934 DEPOSITS UP TWW INSURED -- fcdcral DePOsiT iNSURANCe COtLPi t-i ' !' of iclentlflff planning a ‘vital establishes in of use factor in the military activities Furthermore planes 'Jt fixes with reasonable certainty the proximity of the Islands ef our western naval baser The imagination can conjure many tuations Which" would' lend themselves - to practical benefits 'from flights auchag this one As practical Information it undoubtedly Is of inestimable value to the naval authorities and it y ihe government although In the public mind it may be nothing !aore than the completion of another daring adventure Indicative of man’s ability to make himself at home in the air i Finding the Way Out ve and-courag- e ' In the first place he thinks we are confusing the aims and techniques of recovery— where speed and quick results are essenreform where haste la tial— with the problem of wisdom purpose imperative To and injurious but this the president might simply reply that the time to usher in belated reforms long overdue is now while the irpn Is hot " Mr Keynes levels another criticism at official Conception of what he calls the "order of urgencies" The N R A for example with Its deliberate attempt to increase prime costs should have been undertaken— in his opinion— after rather than befora the effort to increase the nation’! purchasing power There ia without doubt validity In this criticism However one part ©fx Our recovery program followed 10 closely upon the heels of ttte ether that we are inclined to think the result will be essentially ' ihe same in the end Even more fallacious in Mr Keynes’ view is our monetary policy which assumes that output and income can be raised by‘ Increasing the quantity of money This he cleverly says is like itrylng to get fat by buying larger belt While monetary reform possibly should be secondary to the central problem of increasing output and employment there Is nevertheless ample Justifl-- 1 f itlon for the president’s experimentation with our currency The fact Is of course that all of these problems are Inextricably Moreover when cause and effect relationships are interwoven ef the vicious-circvariety it makes little difference at what ara the Intercepted gyrations £olnt With most of the other proposals contained in Mr Keynes' itefreshlng criticism we are in essential accord JHis jastigation ‘tt current practices in exchange speculation 1 sound and timely in wisely chosen pa plan to accelerate capital expenditures fields and his emphasis upon the need for cheap and abundant credit are equally wise Such criticism-frien-dly intelligent and instructive— Is piost stimulating long-tim- long-ran- e ge 1 - ’ le s v vt p— J 'An Ominous 'hoUCE Warning afflicted with stomach trouble and that tha jail term might t -- danger his health Judge Harrington pertinently reminded the defendant that 15 should have thought of his stomach before he imbibed Too many public offender court personal considerations when they give none to their fellow citizens Drunken driving is a flagrant Abuse of the public rights and a menace to life and limb The penalties of this offense do not always accrue to the offender Frequently Innocent pedestrian are maimed for life or killed " it Drunken drivers are not martyrs before the law but victims 'tecause of ef their own indiscretions They are deserving of no public rympathles Heavy jail sentences can be considered severe only sentence appear dis‘'s they become discriminatory A sentence' proportionate only when it is contrasted with a e? less for a commensurate offense If all drunken driver who are convicted get 60 days in Jail there will be no general complaint The Offense 1 a potential death threat and one to be suppressed at the earliest poas- l“ ‘tie moment If anything short of in Jail doe not Jtop‘ it then six' months is 'little enough and-1 The sentence of Judge Harrington should pondered by all who 'are given to nihfoig' gasoline and booze-‘I- t Is a solemn warning If It is consistently and Uniformly exacted ' 60-d- ay 30-d- ay T rd 0 0 iv rjf ja v Review Sees First Question as Major One The Harvard Law Review believes that the first question whethsr the control of industry contemplated in the et is within the constitutional sower of congress la the moat serious The sponsors ot the act have argued that tha necessary authority is to be found in three parts of the constitution in the preamble which speaks about promoting “the general welfare" In Article I which' speaks about congress power to lay taxaa for the "general welfare" and In Article I which gives congress power "to This imperative volume of government bonds are 1C Itioh as boneless regulate commerce among the Writer Urge Teacher must be the sufficient excuse to 1 compared with money circula duty several states" The Law review distt ®n i needed for teacher to in- To Attack Political Vice vade misses the preamble it having been command the money sup with every increasing energy tion They decided by the supreme court that ply qf the nation prevent buyers and fields number of the politics Editor Tribune: The great cultures from buying consumers from conthese phrases confer no power on eon economics industry and finance as workgrass Likewise it dismisses the "gen- of the past have lived and maintained critics and as rebate against any pre- suming builders from building eral welfare" clause on the’ ground their greatness only by an acceptance vailing working snd are the predain these ers from practices corrupt that this is not a grant of power but tory emblems of wealth fields If $20000000000 of legal tender a description of- - the purposes for and devotion to high Individual and And so up to date and schools notes had been issued instead of which money may be appropriated! social virtues— JwnestfK-eouregZv Mledin II is under the commerce clause tlence altruism and co- their fullest attainment because of bonds the people would have had then that the act must stand or fall employment Every man and their undemocratic administration full operation machine in the nation would be acThe Law Review find that in aplte adherence all tradition to above and educational our Under syspresent of the famous decision invalidating purchasing power of the a lack of to the social tive therestored the child labor law It te not improba- tem it is doubtful whether we can ex- economic responsiveness millions of new people ef br°blems and political homes would have been built and ble that tha court could sustain aome pect these virtues to endure and individual and1 public the fecting the Invisible government would not important parts cf N I R A Omitting thrive? Wave after wave of youth t J WALDO PARRY have been the only managing directhe reasoning let us look at the con- comes out of the schools taught to beeweeww j tor acting under the terma of a new clusions It appears to be very proba- lieve in these virtues yet they are deal ble that congress baa the power to thrown in an organized world which Taxes Cannot Belarice J E EDMUNDS regulate businesses which ship aU of reward! rascality and greed They their produota in interstate commerce see corporate devices legalized end Budget Writer It is also probable that it may regu- set up for whet amounts to a virtual late those which are "within the ’legal embezzlement" of private aqd Editor Tribune Was the budget stream of interstate commerce" as public wealth They see social and balanced by cutting the veterans’ profor example the stockyards But political usurpation of power to per- tection? All the spending for pubwhat about those businesses now reg- sonal interests Such maaa corrup- lic works etc surely will not balulated by codes which produce goods tions destroy the teachings and ruin ance it If taxes cannot balance it for consumption wholly-- within a the products of the schools Through- before the appropriations were made state? The Law Review believes out the United” States we are now it ia certain they cannot afterward that there is much greater doubt aware of corporations and public ser- Any attempt to make taxes balance here' but that the supreme court vice Institutions going much the the budget Is a beating post Peomight stretch the commerce clause limit in usurping the wealth rlghta ple do not get enough to pay taxes some are already unemployed and to cover such enterprises on the and privileges ot the ions 11 appropriaground that companies with high which come through custodies taxes cannot return standards engaged In Interstate busi- granted by the people Great banki tions Who said taxes were honest? It you only make $1 you must pay ness should be protected against de- and savings institutions indiscrimstructive competition by Intrastate inately manipulate Individual and it before you eat or pay your bills or companies with low standards But public fundi to their personal ends before your table is set to feed one when it comes to business which is public Utilities through corporate de- who baa more much more and if you entirely Iocs! in character tn the vice! charge all the traffic will bear do not you will be slandered 5imprisIt te oned or charged interest of question which worries Mr James M Through aU tho exposures therete Beck so much as to whether a fed- till Job of civilizing to do and thte starvation infringement and intimieral law can determine how much a ia a task for the schools The teach dation tq make ene pay as such wfyj man who presses trouseri in Tampa ing profession must attack and de- hss not a steady income The difference between PWA Fla must charge the Law Review stroy the sources of social economic C W A wage and N R A code salaries m as certain as scholars ever like to and political corruption where they and hours is the answer for individualexist or yield the battle of clviliza- ism and the wrong kind of govern(OootlauaS a Tact Votirtaan) ment If the wages are reduced it proves that necessities and the standard of living is corrupt If government employes are to get an increase in salaries in accordance with increased prices or the standIf you keep your fact to the' sun and Larry Claylon They seemed to ard of living bow about increasing tho shadows will always fall behind be welcome and on good torma with all other workers who get less than At our table were either $100 a month or are we going to everyone --B H Taylor politicians or railroad men— about’ keep them as forgotten citizens and — workers? If“industry cannot pay —— The above quotation was written for B H were Th railroaders Taylor that standard it is unfair competime by Mr Taylor who has exempliI got tion and unfair bargaining Is fedQ A Kellogg and A-- J Cronin fied his philosophy by starting si th'e to wondering about the initials Have eral control Impossible? bottom rung of the ladder and climb- you ever noticed that successful men What are the stock markets goqd JOHN M PIERCE ing unassisted to one right near the often have famous "given" names? for? top' Re Is now vice president in You know like George Washington charge of traffic for the Denver 6c Hill for Instance ’'Well as I said I Currency Issuance Urged Rio Grande Western railroad got to wondering what tho !B H” e of Mr- - Taylor's name stood for Then Insteed of Federel Bonds We met t the Ogden stock show I thourht ot Andy Cronin— surely of was I "Jack-son"where the guest the "J" In Bis nanqe stood for banquet Tribune: In 1933 the bondsd Andrew Jackson Cronin? There Editor Mayor Harman Peery and Commissioner! Fred Williams and’ George was the clue Following that tin bt Indebtedness of th United States will it interest paybe O’Connor— but that’s getting ahead of deduction the rest waa easy B H ment$32843000000 at 4 per esnt wilt be $1 313361? my story Taylor became Benjamin Harrison 000 per ennum 121 had read about a Holstein bull by Taylor and Q A Kallogg Quincy vTbe bond art nontaxafcle as to tha name of "Ham" that hod won a Adama Kallogg Simple isn’t it? ®nd Interest States ara first prize or eomething and I thought F H Hocken assistant freight traf- principal it might do my morale tome good if fic manager of the Western Pacific prohibited from taxing the bonds the I eaw him' So I hied me to Ogden railroad and story teller par excel- government releases their earnings Pres - representatives lence stopped by long enough to tell from taxes and creates a 100 per cent Wednesday took me in charge They had been us the latest yarn going the rounds in tax exemption on about thirty-fou- r billions of the best assets ef the nathere emce the opening ot the sow San Francisco and 'knew all the bovine poroine the lobby I saw P J Peckns tion ia The exemption of bond from taxequine end muttoa-inaristocrats by Ray Owen and Jack Hunter Tbf ation creates a deficiency in the na nsmas their fust place was filled with railroad men tional and state budgets which la reTo sty that I was disappointed when 1 was presented to Crown Prince Brigham City wa creditably repre-sente- placed by additional tax upon the peo “Ham" of the Holstein royal family ia by Lee Holst J C Knudsen Jr pie If the )32$34 000000 invested in bonds had remained invested in the putting It mildly The virile arro- and Eric W Olieq Dr V L Ward statu it would have paid state tax gance I bad noticed in the scions of ot Ogden bad them In’ tew so that the Hereford and Shorthorn nobility they wouldn't Ft confused by tijs of $1 $13 380000 or 4 pep rant per annum If income taxes had been was entirely absent Ho looked sleek huge crowd collected from money invested in end well fed ot course but there was la his attitude a disappointing lack Of Another enjoyable feature fo (he bonds it could pot have been less tbpn — well— osprit-debul-l Ho didn’t even trip was 'riding back with Mrs Clyde $1000000000 per annum rise when we entered his staU—royel Epperson of Kaysville Never again It ia certain that the bonds menprerogative I suppose—but lay there will 1 criticise a woman’s driving It tioned pay no national or state tag few The interest and exemptions are apchewing hit cud with e tar eway look wouldn’t hurt Clyde to takeN: leatona from his wife proximate figures In hte big brown eyes showing the P H Muleahy who happened along We stopped long enough in Kaye-vill- money paid by the people in excess for me to go through Clyde's of their own toxu for the royal famright then stopped and said: "Calm placid critter isn’t he Senator? He’a printing establishment and meet the ily of bondholders which amounts te a Jittln too young to bo able to tell foree" and for Mrf Epperson to $$628739000 per annum The bonds mentioned are eligible for aura but we think he’ll turn out pick up another passenger— Faye SanTres securities tt the federal Teservs to be the herd phllnsopherandjths ders Kaysville bankerette chic tre charmante Whn we got banks —stabilized - bjt- - government humorist HmnnphF to town and I was asked where 1 money ‘to prevent loss bought te 'Adjoining our table at the banquet wanted to go 1 and I was that proud avoid income tax payments and told vu the banker’ table Among them " J ust drive down Maid (treet so tvqry-- on e fUbtiized government money nUfksi q ihtir i " pu)£ bicib 3 t'l THE' FORUto -- -- IQonttmiM en Pare PiHirteerl Tho Greatest - CL'ovd: By Our Readers e of all timQ have visited-ourst- ore to see the splen- did fascinating display of Boulder Dam I’d like to have a job but one of thoee pace killing posts with continuous terror of dismissal no longer internets be - Something around $2000 year would suffice our needs and pay for a little lift insurance Never again can the benklng boys entice me with their philosophy of thrift This same thing that happened to me happened to father and my grandfather" It will happen 1o the next generation Humanity's texture does s not soften It will always be pull find ravel Only a few days more and the m b d e 1 will be gone Roc-qpu- "What I dredged out of a fairly successful career now that we ean view It in a cold analysis was far from a sense of happiness I was more worried then with plenty than I am now with nothing go I prefer the lees traveled tobacco road Of many friendships three remained and they have grown fluttery Staunch friendship Is not a thing I care to take up again very seriously The public it cordially ioriicd to c ibe Government’s Greatest V Project! ' Stnra WiU Be Open Sunday from 1 to f p m for Inspection ot tba Boulder Dam "It took this walloping cataclysm to teach the fun of nights at home around the parlor lamp either reading to my wife or listening to her trad to me-are not troubled by those after dark horrors of someone getting my Job We have no interest in what eur neighbors think My wife ’is quite happy In her 2028 nutria snd the shins to my breeches is all right with 9M3M We xS3NVrinrii(ff f tOS iliiiiiMT'iar East 21st So 1050 me- - So are mountains reduced to the Biblical molehills by a depression It's unbelievable how crushed we used to Aerti From 8 In Other Words The Senator people-usurpat- From Sandpit Means— - The Senator From Sandpit ’ one-lun- e d DIO OUT THAT “OLD STUFF” IN ATTIC GARAGE AND' “CASHED NOT-NIEDE- ON THEIR IN’ POSSESSIONS D “Sold Bike nm Several Calls!" nd puts vwhlns 74l-aitcblpf (IS to J kill Brook Blcvol naq “Sold Washer Good elec lnt w tmr-tp-- i Calls!" tt Hr “Sold Burgy 161 Lloyd Robert Hi baby Snd South X “Sold Lady’s Coat tody’s Pleased!" cloth winter coat Sor Mle v Hy SS14Mr I4A Wa 366 Wentworth “8eld Rug Range and AU!" hifh pile Simla ter rur oot IT’S WORTH DOLLARS TO SOME QNK 190 19 Kitchen WU 5306 125 raa tit0- - heater Set Range and AU!" walnut dlnlnr room set che-Altrut and- - f as range Hy 781-“Sold Furnace 7 Calls!" ’ “Sold 8-- W Rudy fur- For tale cheap used nace HO Hy 2WQ-- J “Sold Car fey 1159 Thanks!" 1630 Oakland fc lllft flayhotlSf 18 ftrage JBout State L “Sold Gun S CaUsl" WILL tell ot trade nr pew Remlnrten pump allots up for SO Waahlnrton atreel if bapja “Sold Radio— and How!" Lowboy cabinet radio eyoeUrnt conditio lObj $2S irat aVa Hy 1731-- f “Sold Typewriter! Calls!" Underwood Vo- - 4 candltioo 110 iO Was ST25-Sit Fourth at t ‘“Swapped Sewing Machine For Bed Springs!” tor A- -l - WAS 890 Drophead sewins rood bed aprlnm Waa Readers Are Waiting" for Tour Sunday Ad t ut-- THESE ADVERTISERS - - 11 1934 g --b- Attic-"- — - Tribune Jan I think the thing I miss most In my apartment te not having an attic In which to store things My folks lived In the same house for more than 40 years and we had a real attic Mother never threw anyShe just piled it In' thing away the attic When I came home from the east with a wife mother and father had the attic made Into an apartment for us After the Junk man came I helped him sort out a 20 year accumulation of relics for cash I found a couple of mustache g bicycle pump a cups a ping-ponset two badly worn bustle a switch of dark brown hair two or three brunette “rats” a "peach basket" hat some photographs “taken in an auto" at La-Mother started a new colgoon lection in the cellar and about' every five years we'd sort It Over in That Thar fifty-fifty- h tvm I- “There’s Gold - izysstiW a' —a ei - JUDOS DANIEL HARRINGTON makes )t plain that A drunken drivers may txpect no leniency when brought into 'Ll court One of tha first offenders to be convicted before him 'Ij sentenced to 60 days in the pity Jail Counsel for the defendant sought leniency on tha grounds that the prisoner was d ! be when we wers left out at a dinner party In our set We Were more dispirited when we felt our car would have to last another season than we ara row by penny pinching we have to do for my commuting to New York to search for a Job that does not eem to exist We want comfort but notaoo much of it If it entails reHeine said life’ greatsponsibilities est handicaps are possessions “Most of us Were being gorged with When I used to velvety nothings enlarge end complete refit a sumptiB ous bathroom It gave me wily a single “With myself as well as others there operates a compensatory law when one te squeezed ary of ambition This long coast down bill was unpleasant but we hit bottom with this bump: We would not want to return to the grandeur at least grandeur to us that we left That 1s no metaphysical effort It's something entirely physiological that has taken place in our makeup As much of mystery to us as it would be to our acquaintances qf the night clubs afternoon teas and tho theaters 1 'tirHATEVER else this country lack Just now It seems to be A I assured a plentiful supply of gratuitous advice The White ftouse we understand' is deluged with panaceas and criticisms from all sorts of people at hom® and abroad regarding the elu-dproblem of recovery Tha task of sifting these suggestions nd difficult Indeed fnffrt wry Ona of the most incisive criticisms of the recovery program that has come to public attention however is the open letter recently addressed to president Roosevelt by John Maynard Keynes of Cambridge university an eminent economist and a consultant to the British treasury With characteristic tact Mr Keynes calls attention to what he thinks are the Weaknesses in our program and makes some constructive proposals m By O O McINTYRE- - rte-Uveno- Vy S Day-by-D- ay NEW YORK Jan 12— Saturday inspire a sort of letdown In every cellFor unexing Including columnln plainable reasons columns ere mors difficult the mood more melancholy So as a whipper up of drooping spirsecond its J commend Uni letter opened in the morning mail and bless the writer thereof: "I have watched this world singing a gay way suddenly veer from its smooth course and ricochet toward no one knows where! ( At 40 I have been two years jobless s aero in the I lost $114000 buyworld interger ing bonds a rsputshje institution assured me were safe 1 am without faith "From s $7500 s year apartment 1 am writing from a $35 a month walk-uin Tensfly N J Unleu a mins in Illinois popw through with a check by next Wednesday we my wife gnd two smell children— will move again Oh hurl ouraelvea on eharlty's mercies "A fairly four picture but without exaggeration Naturally we are dazed by these lightning shifts but it's astounding how calm A year ago wa passed the crying snd feeling sorry or ouraelvea stage The resignation to our fate' 1s passive but not dumbly so Permanent? N R A Conquering the Air V New York By WALTER LIFPMANN It e - -- when b crisla te pasaing it becomes possible once again to think about question which transcend the emini One of ergency man ‘HI’ ORE and morethe element urrendertktIiejnlndLo the most Important of these questions McOln-- " completion of the flight of Lieutenant Commander te how much of the national Indus jila U S N and his equadron of planes to Hawaii makes aviation trial recovery act 2400 covered TranclscO history The flight starting at San Qould be made permanent under the toilet and waa made In a little more than 24 hours It success-fiill- y Constitution d grave--yarWalter lippmaaa Not being a lawtransported thirty men over waters regarded as the yer I am obviousaventurers of foolhardy ly not entitled to an opinion But r Admiral there la available in the November - The event constitutes a scientific achievement tesue of the Harvard Law Review a careful study of the act and it may XL P Sellers reminds the American people that the flight "was be useful to briefly what not conceived as a publicity stunt Rather It was carefully are the mainsummarize constitutional questions they are seen by the very compejplanned and executed with precision The success of the effort as tent student who wrote the article of the planning N I R A a everybody knows te a is' testimonial to the absolute precision short granting tremendous The flight was accomplished with the same dispatch that powera itatute In the most general terms If it lasts long enough to be tested fully It as planned It was without loss of life and without mishap in the courts it will probably be ex The to the Is not event public patent amined under these heads: First k 3I16 significance of the it within the power of congress to naval authorities did not and probably will not disclose the regulate the matters which the act ‘technical reasons for the experiment Certainly the flight bears poversf Second doe thte regulation violate the fifth amendment which to comifio immediate significance It however Is not difficult forbid the taking of property without "due process of law?" Third has prehend the importance of the experiment to future naval congress improperly delegated its powers to the executive? planning - " - Balt Lake City Utah Saturday Morning January JANUARY 15 1851 40 07 machine 2430 So trade Sth 17 a Line Daily 20d a Line Sunday 4 Days IncI Sunday 58 it a Line I |