tog-Tired Congress Wants To Quit But FDR Insists On *ax Bill First; He Doesn't Care To Run For Election light On Top Of Boost In Taxes; Suit Against Anna oosevelt Is For Money Raised For Her Ex-Husband; 'rivate Companies See No Profit In Federal Built Rural 'ower Lines. by DREW PEARSON and ROBERT S. ALLEN Washington—What the boys :ally are talking about on Capi .1 Hill.these blistering days is Jt the headline issues of lobby ig, taxation, holding company eli ination, or- the central bank bill. The big topic of conversation : “When do we quit?” But a kradoxical situation exists on is moot question. Everybody is agreed on the isirability of a prompt adjourn ent. Congress, left to its own iVices, would shut up shop and t for home in a rush. The Members are dog-tired. The ses >n has been the most exhaust |g in many years. Dr. George Galver, House phy :ian, is treating more than irty members for heart trouble. The President is no less eager get Congress off his hands. i seven months of hectic and rbulent deliberations have been i pleasure junket for him. But saving squarely athwart this un imity is a potent dissenting fac r—the 1936 presidential cam ign. Urgently desirous as the Presi nt is to get rid of Congress, is more anxious to get his tax ogram disposed of at this ses >n. The reason for this is secretly hostile to imocrats, 'her taxes, see in delay a chance NOTICE OF SALE )RTH CAROLINA, XEGHANY COUNTY THE SUPERIOR COURT IFORE THE CLERK , Administrator F. Carter, de ilbur G. Carter, c, L a. of J. ceased. nple: Mr. Roosevelt has no intention, he can possibly help it, of run ng for re-election right on top a tax boost certain to raise e temperature of a great many ople. Obviously it is better tactics do the tax-upping job now and ire the country a year in which forget about it. Staging an action campaign right after a it wallop is like pouring salt on fresh wound. This, of course, is exactly what i Republicans want. It would all to their advantage to have 5 tax-kiting issue a fresh mem y in next year’s political joust '. This was what whs behind i move by Senator Dan Hast es, chairman of the Joint Re blican Congressional Campaign mmittee, to lay over consider >on of the tax bill until the fall. PROCRASTINATION To many weary Democratic imbers, in whose minds there is permost only one thought— tting home—Hastings’ idea of three or four months recess is jwerfully appealing. Other to whittle down. They also are strongly behind Hastings. Latest procrastination scheme is to let the House pass a tax bill, then Congress would recess until November, at which time the Sen ate would act. The Senate, it is argued, would use the interim to study the House bill. All of which is pure alibi talk. If Congress quits without enact ing a tax it is a 100 to 1 bet that tax legislation will be drag ged into the next session. The President knows this full well, and he is standing pat for a bill this session. The issue is by no means set tled. As Washington tempera ture and Congressional tempers shoot skyward, pressure for ad journment keeps step. It is not "unlikely that the fight may break into the open. The odds, however, are with the President. The boys, sticky with heat and complaining of fatigue, probably will have to stick it out. MORTGAGED Behind the foreclosure suit brought against Mrs. Anna Roose velt Boettiger, daughter of the President, is a hitherto untold story. Anna Roosevelt’s first husband, Curtis Dali, desired to become a member of a New York broker age firm, and to this end was re quired to put up a certain amount of money. In order to raise the fund, a mortgage was placed on the prop erty occupied by the then Mr. aid Mrs. Dali near Ossining," N. Y. The mortgage was for $65, 000. The bank insisted that Mrs. Dali be jointnly responsible with her husband. Subsequently Dali was not able to make payments on the note. Although few outside the Roosevelt family know it, this was the reason for Anna Roose: velt’s efforts to raise money by radio broadcasting and magazine writing. For a time she helped materially to keep up payments on the note. Finally the payments ceased. This was about the time she went to Reno to divorce Dali. A total of $7,000 had been paid off. The Westchester Title and Trust Company, which held the mortgage, now has filed a fore closure suit in the New York Supreme Court. SPECIAL SESSIONS Washington experts expect a whole flock of special sessions of State legislatures next fall and winter. Reason for this unwonted ac tivity is to enable the States to take advantage of the Federal subsidies for old-age pensions and unemployment insurance authoriz ed in the Social Security Act. Under this law, States whose old-age pension systems meet cer tain requirements will be paid a monthly $15-per-person subsidy by the Treasury. Thirty-five States have old-age pension acts, but less than half come up to Federal standards. In the unemployment insurance sphere, changes in State laws will be necessary in all but six states —Washington, New York, Utah, California, Wisconsin and New Hampshire. These changes are to enable employers to make full use of the Federal statute that grants them a 90 per cent pay roll tax exemption if they set up unemployment insurance funds. A majority of the States also will have to adopt laws to make operative for their citizens the blind-aid, mothers’ pensions and maternity-infancy features of the Social Security Act. K.INGF1SH ECONOMY Huey Long has been trimming his budget. Mail has been drop ping off, and the Kingflsh wants to save money. The other day his force of 22 clerks was cut to 16. Another economy has been ef fected in his newspaper, "The American Progress.’’ Hereafter it will be published monthly in stead of approximately bi-weekly. Subscription rates have been cut proportionately—from $1.00 year ly to 60 cents. MOUNTAINS OF PAPER There will be no lack of “arch ives” when the new $12,000,000 Archives Building on lower Penn sylvania Avenue opens for busi ness next month. Inr fact, Archivist R. D. W. Conner already is worrying whether the vast granite and lime stone structure will house the bil lions of government documents awaiting storage. So staggering is the number of these documents that they are no longer counted. Instead they are measured for the amount of space they occupy. The new Archives Building— the first of its kind in the his tory of the Federal government— will have 2,600,000 cubic feet of storage space. But in 1930, when the last survey was made, 2,641, 678 cubic feet of government documents were gathering dust in Washington. Since then, Conner says, the annual increment has been not less than "260,000 cubic feet, and more likely a great deal more. Two big problems face Conner and the staff of experts he has assembled: 1. Weeding out “dead” docu ments, expected to run into the millions. 2. Classifying, filing and cata loguing those documents worth preserving. Both are tremendous undertak ings. The latter is particularly tough, because there never has been tc systematic preservation of documents. At present government records and files are scattered in more than 150 places in the Capital, [■liiefly cellars, attics, boiler rooms, vacant theatres, and even in the White House garage. In many instances the files are all mixed up. The documents, when finally sorted, will be stored in a, vast system of steel “stacks” protect ed by elaborate anti-theft, anti deterioration and anti-fire me chanisms. The stacks and ac companying equipment cost $6, 000.000, as much as the rest of the new building. RURAL ELECTRIFICATION Ihe Rural Electrification Ad ministration is getting the merry ha-ha from private companies on ils idea of stringing wires through out sparsely-settled farm areas. Originally, REA figured on se curing the cooperation of private companies by letting them take over the lines—at a price—after installation by the Government. But private operators, having skimmed the cream off the rural electricity market, see no profit in the milk. They say there is no money in most rural areas. The farmer will not make the dials click fast enough on his meter. A few light bulbs suspended from the ceil ing won’t build up a pay load. Even with an iron, a toaster, an electric fan, and a cream sepa rator, the load is low. Before the farmer can be a good customer he must put in an electric stove, a hot water heater and electric machinery for the barn and the field. The farmer may find the money for the poles and wires, private operators argue, but not for the appliances. REA’s Administrator Morris L. Cooke thinks otherwise. “It’s sheer nonsense,” he says, “to say the farmer can’t afford electric service.” Though still seeking coopera tion, Cooke is preparing an attack on two fronts: 1. He will push the sale of ap pliances on installment buying by “an intensified educational pro gram.” 2. His competition, he thinks, will force private companies to reduce rates in rural areas. The companies, however, re main skeptical. MERRY-GO-ROUND Prohibition chieftains are map ping plans for a revival of the dry crusade. A national rally of Prohibition forces has been called in Washington for November. One of the chief proposals to be laid before it is a plan to' go before the two major party presi dential conventions next June and demand platform plans to curb liquor advertising. . ’. . Republi can members of the House Ways and Means Committee complain bitterly that their Democratic colleagues never notify them when the subcommittees of the body hold meetings. . . Congres sional Republican leaders give Arch Coleman, Fourth Assistant Postmaster General in the Hoover Cabinet, responsibility for the re port that the former President is planning an early announcement taking himself out of the ,1935 race. They say they hope the report is true, but they are doubtful. , . . Dr. Hugh Magill, leading utility lobbyist against the President’s Holding Company Bill, was once a militant anti power crusader. Backed by Sec retary Ickes and other leading Republican Independents, Magill opposed the senatorial candidacy of Frank Smith, whom the Sen ate refused to seat after a sen sational investigation disclosing that one of his big campaign contributors was Samuel Insull. . . . The vast labyrinth of stor age stacks of the new Archives Building are divided into 130 “zones,” each consisting of 21 tiers of stacks. Directly in charge of the stacks will be twelve sec tion chiefs who will supervise ten “zones” each. (Copyright, 193J5, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.) Finally The editor of the country news paper went home to dinner smil ing radiantly. “You must have had some good fortune this morning,” greeted his wife. “Indeed I did,” announced the editor. “Jim Smith, who hasn’t paid his subscription for ten years, came in and stopped his paper.” —Unidentified. CHILD' 'AND THE SCHOOL X % Dr. ALLEN G. IRELAND Dhtttsr, Hysitml amd Health Education 9 tar Department 0/ PnUit Interaction Summer Heat Too many cautions cannot Be printed against sunburn. No mat ter boar much is said or written, no natter what one’s past ezperi ence may nave Deen, the majority of people show unrea sonable haste in ac quiring a sunburn. “Pm going to be tanned like an Indi an,” they say, for getting that the In dian's red-brown skin is natural. Children are in danger, because they don’t know there is any dan ger. In the summer, they have all day for play. The release from sohool is tempting, with so many things to do. If parents aren’t mindful and watching, the first day or two in the summer sun may bring a serious burn. Then a week of suffering, often confined to bed. And it isn’t always as simple as that. Burn from the sun is no dif ferent from any burn. It isn't con fined to a sore skin. Poisons, or body toxins, are formed. The child may be feverish and nauseated. In attempting to throw off the poisons, the kidneys may be injured. Some times severe prostration results. In all cases of sunburn, it is ad visable to place a child in a physi cian’s care. Wise treatment will prevent the complications. But the greatest wisdom is shown at the beginning. Take the sunburn grad ually, a little each day. Give the skin a chance to tan painlessly. One Feather » “I shall have to put you fellows in the same room,” said the host. “That’s all right,” the guests replied. “Well, I think,” said the host, “you’ll have a comfortable night. It’s a feather bed.” At 2 o’clock in the morning one of the guests awoke his companion. “Change places with me, Dick,” he groaned. “It’s my turn to lie, on the feather.”—Grit. Twin Oaks Sparta P. 0., July 22.—Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wiles, Welch, W. Va., after spending a few days with relatives and friends here, returned home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Petty visited Mrs- Petty’s mother, Mrs. Alice Sanders, Sunday. Eugene Fender, Boone, and Max Hannah, of Bagdad, Asia, stopped here Sunday enroute to visit Mr. Fender’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fender, White head. Mr. Hannah is a native of Asia and has just graduated from a four-year college course at Boone. When he entered school there, it is reported that he could not speak a word of English. Ray Funderburk and family, of Wilmington, who came to the mountains last week to spend a month on account of Mr. Funder burk’s health, left Saturday morn ing to take Mr. Funderburk to a hospital in Durham. Mr. and Mrs. Rob Gambill visited friends here Monday night. Little Pine Ennice P. 0-, July 23.—A large crowd attended the com munion meeting at Pleasant Home Sunday. Edd Carico entertained a num ber of his friends Saturday night with a social gathering. Misses Mabel Mains and Zelma Greene spent Saturday night with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Wilson. Miss Lucille Andrews spent Saturday night with Miss Bessie Chappell. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Tompkins spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Wilson. Leonard Cain visited at I. M. Cheek’s home Sunday. Handy Murphy and Homer Wilson made a business trip “south” last week. Miss Zelma Greene spent Fri day afternoon with Miss Mabel Maines. Ray Greene left Saturday for the CCC camp. English As She 1* Spoke Teacher: “John Henry, your work has fallen down; and if you are going to pick it up, you’ll have to step on it." Wrapping Paper The little girl was soliciting funds for her Sunday school, A gentleman dug into his pocket and pulled out several coins and a dollar bill. He asked the little girl to take what she needed. “I do not wish to be piggish,” she said. “I’ll just take this penny. But, please sir, may I have the paper to wrap it up in’” TRUSTEE’S SALE OF LAND North Carolina, Alleghany County. By virtue of authority confer red in a certain Deed of Trust, executed by F. M. Tompkins and wife, Edna Tompkins, to the undersigned Trustee, 'dated July I, 1933, recorded in Book 18, Page 114, Alleghany County Reg istry, securing the payment of $70.00, default being made and demand for sale having been made, I will on Monday, August 12, 1935, at 1 o’clock P. M., at the court house door in Sparta, County and State aforesaid, offer for sale to the 'highest bidder for cash the following described par cel of lan'd: In Glade Creek Township, ad joining the lands of Will Carrock, J. C. 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