;r CATtTis re Washington. During the next tew month President 'Roosevelt will seem to be moving a little to ward the right, on every Issue of ' any consequence except the public valines. Actually there will- he, jrery little change, but the appear ; ance will aeem very Important, and there will he loud owe mm w radicals, - 1 ' In fact, the left' fringe of the brain trust la already disturbed. So much aft that It Is feeding out " propaganda intended to hare a di rect effect On Roosevelt personally.. It Is certainly not Intended for any one, else, for the last thing these particular radicals, want to do la to hurt bint The trouble with them " la that they have not analyzed the ti higher politics of ;the situation, f Jhey are worried about an eddy ta- stead of the main , course n. we river. And their conversation. Is ao free, at aU times, that, even if the President was concerned about their attitude he would not dare v tell them. For' In that .case they f would not be able to rest until they bad told their favorite column eon s doctors. Just to show ' they were still In the "Inner,, circle" and knew what was going on.;. J v- . The present situation starts, not with the President, but Inside the v nkitH . van arrange aa JtqiUUUau wmn - 'St may seem there Is attU Stt.cn a i thing. The Republicans, not aU of them but some of their strategists, ' ' are simply delighted With the Hpey- lAmg-rather fjougnun . biiub.uuu. : What they want more than any " thing else In the world Is to see a ... third party a very radical , third ' - party with a Presidential ticket In the field next year. . '- nw1r thenr Is. Of COUrse, that this radical party will garner a few lartnrai votes Wisconsin, the Pa- kotas, possibly Montana, and may . fc TOaahlnvton and Nebraska i that It will poll a- very large tote In some of the big eastern states " such as Massachusetts. New Tork, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, , Ohio, .,, Indiana and nilnolo enough votes ' In this last group to make sure that i. r the ' Republican candidate would walk off with the electoral votes. ' '. They are not worrying about 0n . nerti cut which stood by ' Hoover, although the-' majority, was very mall, nor Rhode Island, which has f suffered so in its textile industry . that Republicans feel it is ,in the , Se California Safe ; Nor are they worried about Callr fornla, whose big electoral, vote Is now so essential. The Golden Gate ' 'atate'a rejection of Upton Sinclair, ' and Its outraged protests about the reciprocal traae ireaura, iuu.w ' them sure of It. - - Altogether, they think, their only , problem is to get the right candl . .- date and the right platform I - ; ; Of course, in the Roosevelt view, : , : (QIC MM JUBfc, hard, r Who, Roosevelt's friends ta '. 'quire, ' cynically, would the candl v date be? And what could the plafc " rm ssy.4 ' ' .. Ttnt it has never been oart of any ' J Kooserelt strategy to underrate an 'K opponent, nor to leave any stone un , ... iuumium ft 'Aid nnt imdi f ' S lUXlTCU JU wn"u7 - 4 mn.. it - As witness the efforts In last fall's election. ' go Roosevelt is maneuvering into bis favorite middle ground position, , between the - Tories and the rad- ' leal. And to make this more so o '. cure, he is going, to aeem a little ' ; ' conservative for a while. He con f " iitntlv noects to scare the Repub- ."' llcans to death by this course, for " V natural .reaction Will be Just . ; .'what they have been planning, with . ; one important exception, i; V Roosevelt plans to have the rad- icals grow in streogin, wuuo no ' grows in strength with voters who are normally Republican! But who "'x : i are frightened at the radical men ' t ace. "'. ' ' ' Meanwhile the radical fringe of his own supporter, trying to figure bis course out, have come to the conclusion that the trouble. is that i Ixuls Mcuenry ' nowe mm uvea . sick, So they say M. H. Mclntyre, . the secretary who makes ail tue ' president's appointment, will not let anyonV r except conservatives see w,n, ..... ' "ScotcV Tied Up t . Million of gallons of fine and -'' 'perhaps pot so good Scotch whls- " : : v r. iTintr in sovernment ware- houses, under the eagle eye of Uncle . nam's customs officers, and with - ' little apparent prospect of being " marketed through ordinary 'chain "nels." '''KS , This stock offers a One chance . ' for bargains, ,if one could only ap praise the quality, of the liquor In some fashion.;' But how' to do.ltt " , How to- tell what is really good , liquor, so to speak, and what would ' bave no appeal whatever? ' For the trouble Is that this whl - ky is what the trade call tunanown " brands.' It 1 perhaps the best ar in fnTnr of heavy, advertis ing for brands -and labels that has ever ' been presented. For, while ,:.;s whisky Is lying, unsolicited and unwanted In th warehouses, run- Sng up storage charge nd threat ening to add freight Shipment clim-ges boffle, ,the resnlnr i brand f i i- ving about a exi sctc4 i nia:;y, such a stotk of , any j lu i It t -jari : I uiere I known, t The n- ky norni He may -But win buys w! favorites. some 1; ...ever .,i t be, for f an un- ..." t .(. r ks Scotch wblsv i a certain brand, f a dozen brands. . i buying whisky he inks. Is one of his a la not interested in 1 that he never heard of hcfnrn at a rreat sacrifice to Uss price. And with an Import duty if $5 a gallon, plus an excise duty of $2 a gallon, plus stamp and other taxes, it la not possible to of fer these unknown oranas . wi (Antra lllra Mil himlD. ThO tX collectors a're.not.offerlnr to share Uie loss. They Insist on weir i w 99 tax on each gallon regardless of, quality or marketability. . ( Tried for fleaa-up f- This ' big I undigested stock v of Scotch, much of which Is In New Tork, Boston and Baltimore, la the result of two attempts at specnla tioa when the prohibition ban was first lifted. In the first rush, ,a great many foreigners saw a good chance to make a:clean-up. They, knew that Americana had been buy tag from bootlegger- all possible sorts of liquor with apparently very little concern as to brands or varle- m And at verr htzh Drlrea. So they, thought they could buy up a lot of tvhtskv chean . In Scotland. ship, to this -country on conslgnr. ment, ana two weir pronia. .Meanwhile an equal number of neenlatlvely Inclined persons in this country, who had never beea In the Uqnor distributing easiness nil knew Httlft. If an vtblnf. about its ramifications, took out import ers' permits, and appued tor urge nnntaa. V." Then thev broceeded to kn larm, nnnntltlM of UauoT. BOmO times In bottles and sometimes having It bottled. AH Went nicely until the liquor arrived In, the ports of entry.- - v frtiMt rams the nroblem of Selling It 1 And there were no -offers. The drinkers,' who, during prohibition, had taken anything xnai was- wet. Inside ' good-looking package, were Imbued with the idea that they wanted particular brands. The flvrilnarr Honor trade knew how to handle the well-advertised brands, and had no idea Of tying up s lot of mnnev In thnnda that might not move, and at any rate would nave to be pushed. The real muraer, oi course, lies in the fact that so large a percentage of the total cost of s hnrtla of lmnorted whisky is tax. and therefore not susceptible of be ta n- ahaved. A severe cut on the part Of the price exclusive of tax would not appear , to the customer such a big reduction f It would not deter him from taking his favorite brand. Unpleasant Surprises President Roosevelt baa had - a number of unpleasant surprises In his attempt to swat the stllltles-r particularly on the Wheeler-Bay-burn holding -company bllL It Is no secret that one of the surprise ha made one of the bill's "authors Senator Barton . K. Wheeler of Montana Just little sorry that he sponsored It Then the local yelp I For instance, Pres ton S. Arkwright, president .of the Georgia Power company, who ex pressed the opinion that the blD would "limit Georgia more ,r than New Tork," , - . ' . perhaps the Senator Wheeler case la the most Interesting of the sur mises. "As 1 soon as the utility crowd - realized v what waa hap. nening.. ihey got very busy, .In deed, In Montana. ' The situation Is .nmpthinir like this: The utility in terests, alone, are not very Impor tant in numbers or Influence In Mon tana, but they are allied with, if not controlled by. the same interests that mtntml Anaconda Conner, - Now' Anaconda Is very Influential, Indeed, in Montana In fact, they that Anaconda renerallv sets precisely what tt wants, even on election day. And It so happens that as these gentlemen want not only that their utility, .interests should do well, but their copper In terests also, tney nave seen io u that their, utility Interests .buy all their copper, for wires, etc, from Montana conner mines. ' ' Now-It happens further that the ramifications of the holding com nan Interests involved stretch to many far distant states. " , If the proposed legislation should break up the holding companies, and all the operating, companies should be independent, presumably. It has been carefully pointed out to mine workers of Senator wneeiers state that .the operating companies not In' Montana would buy their copper In the cheapest market It Is also pointed out with much force that the cheapest copper to be ob tained,, despite the tariff, is not Montana mined metal. , but Import ed, whether from Africa or Chile. ( . All of which has brought a re markable deluge of protests against the holding company bill from Mon tana. th Conner miners Joining the shareholders and bondholders. Moi tana la not a- large state In ponula- mml thoueh the third largest In the Union In area but enough people became excited about the situation tn'rnn an jiveraee of about 600 let ters of protest a day to the senior Montana senators office. Ana not onminh letters of approval to be worth considering! - " Stay ?pomUl' CAPITAL PUNISHMENT) r ' . i. Dome light wioxn?v nv TOP. FORCE : 1 : "IS HBRTSJSf iHft NEVER i ' l -iSZ PlDrVf- f WHAT SAJJ W. !MAl f U ; -1 THAT 0U . -ril7 VOU SoT EIP H6APEPI ; )J T rot"f RUVT; : J , 0 lL'( y !Tr-UOKM , l : . ' ..... ....... , fj-: !, '-",.'.('', ,.:.(; -i!-' ' THiE FEATHERHEADS . . ' R OalMrn - e nun HMraanr ha TREi... I TRIFLE - . ""IO SCOTT s WATSON. - . :rr.T, ancient citv n i IN r.1, an Irishman named' Pat tynch roped S ,. wild steer .to noriliwesrem Colorado. The ani mal, crazed by the lasso that was tied to the cowboy's saddle horn, dragged horse, and rider-over the rim- of, a -great chasm.. r' A 'sturdy plnon tree grew on the edge of. the cliff and the rope 4. caught around . this long enough for Lynch to throw himself clear. His borse hung on one end of the lasso and the steer. on the 'other.. There they swung like lead tois on a stick. Then, as the rope broke under their ' com bined weights, they plunged" iptp the canyon far below. lynch, miraculously .enough, land ed on a narrow shelf. There was no wav for him to escape from the smooth walls that rose steep above him,' and below was .the Chasm. There was no room to turn around, but he slowly worked his way along the shelf until at last he louna a ledge Just below. . ' 4 -.sinwlv ha alM down and fell Into soft sand. ' All about him were the ruins of ancient cliff bouses that no white man bad ever seen. The mmaina of a man-made trail, led around a corner, of the rock -wan and Lvnch climbed to safety. t He told hlsstory,' but at thst tima the cattlemen were not , Inter ested to the crumbling bits of an andent Civilization. In 1933, how- jwar: a small exnloring party went Into the region.. The government lias now reserved this area as the Tampa Canyon national monument If Pat Lynch had missed bis throw, a slumbering -canyon might still be waiting for tne wnite mer to. discover that ancient -city SPEEDOMETER t. & QTEP on. It, boy I" And, the & nuAin:, nn. the" sneedometer climbs up op up-f-fifty sixty seventy eighty miles sn hour I - It wasn't tnus oacK in ioto wneu vtristham Tonnit was leading his Mormon colony across the; plains to mah .. ; Then ' the wason- trains crawled painfully, along and eighty .. . . , -1 . K . . miiM waa r lournev w wwa. ... ... y Somewhere In Nebraska the Mor mon leader pushed -on to find the hMt 'rnnta. leaving the slower-mov-. Ing wagons behind, to follow along the trail wmcn ae woum uuua, u. for them. One of these "parties was in charge of a young feUow named William Clayton. - ' A long road and weary rpaa- & was for the westward-farinrf home- seekers. - Their goal seemed so far distant and they probably i pesterea young William Clayton a great deal with Uielr questions of "How far have we come today? - , , , go, being 'sn ingenious young mas, be devised a way to answer. He measured a mile on the "trail that they traversed one day. then marked a wagon wheel at a certain point on Its circumference. 'Keep ing his eye on the marked spoke he counted Its revolutions to the mile. Next he .devised ar ratchet which moved a cogwneei . wigt reK"""" aniTatpi the distance the caravan. traveled dally. That same, principle is used in speedometers toaay. , . SLOGANS 1 , r root J -C'-u-'sp- i 3 V to t to f re .. "f el fl x ous , C t.i fehi'T t t C" ', v i a c t .a., r ,.! t o. . I Vt ditiona." v H 1 us. of Spin1' r, VLla. V - cleans Xht s-V-m and n Ihuch better alter tuoi g it. Freshen up by taking t i vegetable laxative, if you hdve - Minr tn conatioation or slui- ' THEDFpKD'S BLACK-dAI. , v . . Sit Steady Paddle your own Canoe, and di stand up to It " , .... 0 I i 9 w f' V.D'A Mail coupon below. Learn how to rid henhouse of , lice and mites overnight 1 Ktr ponltrr rtliej fliould read thl rnmluabla bookletl It is full of Intornu. , tion oa now o rid tha bcahouu of lies and rfiitet at leu con . , . and will ma . heal thief fatal, mora es and Kin f proals. , "-! ..... i . : ;j. Also, It telle of that remartaWe ew 'patented formtdl . .'. Acmm Nicotina Poultry Deiouier. Spread on perchev . . this amarina, ilow-fumina: formula km a . Ec and mues OTemiaht. while hei ileept And it oel fartiiex. lomici. Costs leu to um. -'With tha prios M-ITlas Season on tha war, it is important that you hive- ' this informatioa at once, fill out and .mail coupon NOW while you think of it. No cost or obligation. AeitH Nleotlna Poultry . .. SUde By tha makm at Aomm Inewitmrns . SfatiHaerwrvd cmi wmvf o a cm o iviuiMinfiiiaii niuiuniui N Barking Aloud fM 60IMJ-OVER AND TALK To V POc5 OP HiS HE'LL HAVE Tb . OET RID PF jT.y. j AJELL KEEr5 lOtURL lehAKCtS. -pgArV J Ml l-SO 4 WAMTED To APPRBClATfcT ACOlXT-THE WO -JUST. VJHAi. tt "T-rVNOTi. AAlPKlT .'jVA ; VaiID ' ToTM&AUHOKI HCS II OOJfctuuiH r-r 'H J wm l-&Tri . As 1 1 set .1 . v.. I ' 1,.,AUB k.11 TUTS . AA vsiattT ABOU i is-"- ..4,"- HAVE ""-V. a., -AC.T. r? crsrs. .tTin . ITS A CACr tTHAN HI5l ':Lili Iff YOn ant to be electeqr I'resi- I riont ret a : . sloean 1 Make It short s,And If you can Include to 4 m.m. int rtt nlltoratlon-.flns1 it, auv .i . ! "Tlppecano and .Tyier,vTooH re wlnaed the natiotf that Gen .Will i ian fernnrv. Harrison , had won an important -Indian battle at the, be ' ginning of a war wmcn was none too well-filled with land victories i for the American arms, so the Tnriinna frontiersman went .to , the whitsi House. - : Tn "FJftv.fnnr Portv or Fleht 1 uraa crvstallized the dissatisfaction L of Americans over a proposed triotv with Encland. establlshlns a boundary line to the: Oregon conn- try.- True, we inter . compromised An h fortv-nlntn . parallel of latt- tude far south of fifty-four forty,' bnt i the slogan . naa aireaay sent i,mH K Polk to washlncton "Grants ; li us. nave peace- nas been called "the minimum in ex i nroaaivpnpRii" but It helDed elect him President and during the next I plirht sears that pnrase bad an ironical sound to the Bouth, sut- ferlng -under the Reconstruction regime. "He kept us out of war" tiAlnml re-elect Woodrow Wilson to 1. 1916 but within one month after he was inaugurated we - were In the war y v ' "The full dinner pall", appealed to I enough Americans to make them elect William McKlniey. Later, they - and their sons wanted to "get back to normalcy'' with Warren G. Hard- ' In and boos thereafter they , were willing to "Keep cool with Coo- ! lldce So out . "See America First," And what phrases will tickle ' the fancy of Its people! Then got a slo. ftt a-1 1 tfo to Tn'-iInr"sn s Pre Mtl Detroit" a . tutm mtt CMM- -a dSt.laBMntt,aiea. ' Fleaaa sentt free Information on how to rlA mx henhouse of llee and inltea-suul tune eieaaor. healthier hens. j ' I own Pooltry Ikm .O Hatchery JToau.............. 4aaYest(...,,.,MhM, JS J1... Town ...,,. ,.,...ann.. FEEL TIHED, fsC:iY "ALL ijonn 00T?" 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