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The Sheboygan Press from Sheboygan, Wisconsin • Page 12

Location:
Sheboygan, Wisconsin
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ite PJheb0igidiB rrr7 xTTF is cone we face a v. Ljia The Sheboygan t- Th market at 1:30 p. in. la Milwaukee, Chicago. Kansas City.

St. Paul and New York and are in our office ten minutes later, thus making it possible to furnish them to our readers the same afternoon. of the Associate! Free, i i i i accent. This is a fundamental error and makes the law un district has been receive Attv. fienroo a t.

District Delegates Appointed Che heboggan Ifress ev. iKA'Tnia1 vealed today. The district attorney tocl( warning lightly. 4 For National Legion Convention Tlireat Note Sent District Attorney George Bowman i Milwaukee. (JP) A letter, threatening his life if he persisted in his drive against disorderly houses on the fringe of Milwaukee's business 5 SHEBOYGAN, WISCONSIN Founded December 17, 1907 Published every evening except Sunday at 626-636 Center Ave.

Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at Sheboygan, under the Act of March 3, 1879. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Je. Sheboygan were Su-day the former's mt.M, workable.

"Third Prohibition has failed because it is not enforcible. It is an attempt to regulate the habits of our. people by law, which has always failed. It is an attempt of one class of our people to enforce its will upon another a different class, against their will. Only one result can follow this policy, and that is failure.

"Fourth Prohibition has failed because it violates the basic principles of our laws. Every attempt to enforce prohibition has been productive of many evils and abuses, including disrespect for law, corruption of public officials, abuse of legal process; and violations of the other constitutional rights of our people, such as immunity from double jeopardy and illegal search and seizure. In fact, the enforcement of the act violates the underlying spirit of our whole constitution." Editor C. E. Broughton Auxiliary delegates to Louisville, are: Mrs.

W. H. Cudworth, Milwaukee; Miss Harriett Wealten, Racine; Mrs. Helen Stuart, Neenah; Mrs. H.

Mitchell, Beloit; Miss Goldie Freeman, Horicon; Mrs. H. A. Keenan, Stoughton; Mrs. Hebard, Milwaukee; "Mrs.

R. C. Risch, Milwaukee; Mrs. Lyla Zick, Manitowoc; Mrs. Margaret Brown, LaCrosse; Mrs.

L. J. Mauske New London; Mrs. Norma Mathewson, Horton-ville; Mrs. Louise Pfefferkorn, Augusta; Mrs.

Grace McDonald, Ashland. t3 SUBSCRIPTION KATES. Br Carrier-In cltr of fcheboyean, per year In adrance, six months, three months, one week, loc. and postage added, per year. OF THE ASSOCIATED TRESS Th isolated Prps Is excluMrelr entitled to the use for repnbllcatlon of all neJs dlipaui.es credited to It or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news pabllshed herein.

he.boygan AUGUST 15, 1929 THURSDAY OPENS BARBER SHOP A. F. Eickhoff has opened a barber shop at 1140 Geele avenue. He has had five years of experience and will no doubt enjoy a large patronage. He is a graduate of the Twin City Barber college and has been in Sheboygan since 1923.

I hy Douglas Malloch A THOUGHT FOR TODAY The foolish shall not stand in thy sight; thou hatest all workers of Iniquity. Psalms 4:5. After a man has sown his wild oats in the years of his youth, he has still every year to get over a few weeks and days of folly. Richter. County 4J4 Highway Bonds Due June 1, 1938 100 and Accrued Interest Kenosha, (P) Wisconsin American legionnaires before leaving here last night at the close of their annual state convention submitted to Adjutant A.

A. Peterson, Milwaukee, their district delegates to the national convention at Louisville, next month. Auxiliary delegates also were selected. They are as follows: District 1 L. Wilson, Whitewater; Herb Swensen, Kenosha; John V.

Gross, Janesville; Carl Dudley, Waukesha. Alternates. Tom Morrissey, Delavan; V. Aultman, Kenosha; E. E.

Crowley, Beloit; J. J. Herold, Waukesha. District 3 Roy Nelson, Mount Horeb; William Kislingbury, Mineral Point. Alternates, John Sanders, Cross Plains; R.

C. Groewin, Boscobel. District 4 George Weber, and W. J. Boyle, Milwaukee.

Alternates, John Bertling and Frank Greensa, Milwaukee. District 5 Henry B. Greiser, Milwaukee. District 6 F. R.

Duffy, Fond du Lac; J. Barnett, Oshkosh; E. Cary. Reedsville. Alternates, Allen Weh-lan, Ripon; W.

Clark, Manitowoc; L. C. DeBruin, Fond du Lac. District 7 Erwin Holmstad, Black River Falls; R. J.

Keller, Sauk City. Alternates, William B. Johnson, LaCrosse; Joe Sleings, Lacrosse. District 8 F. A.

Hirzy, Stevens Point, and Borchert, New London. Alternates, Nelson, Iola; Krieger, Waupaca. District 9 James McGillaw, Harold Appleton; Robert Hatch-am. Alternates, Oscar Hartman, Shawano; F. McKeogh, DePere; James Durfy, Antigo.

District 10 Roy L. Brecke, Chippewa Falls; J. W. MacCauley, Menominee; Miles McNally, New Rich-mend. Alternates, Louie Larson, Whitehall; Carl Bylander and Geo.

Armstrong, Eau Claire. District 11 O. J. Clemens, Superior; J. Carl Nelson, Medford; C.

W. Richardson, Ladysmith. Alternates, Dave Rabenovich, Park Falls; H. Hendricks, Merrill; Elmer Eklund, Tomahawk. Maryland and Wisconsin You cannot lose when selling STOCKS at a profit and investing the proceeds in sound 1st Mortgage ABOUT HALFWAY The greatest failure in our town Lives in a leaky, tumbledown Old house up alley, not up street, And yet he has a grin to greet The solemn world in which he failed, And not a baby ever wailed He couldn't hush, and every cur Wags tail for him, and all cats purr.

Our great success, our biggest man, Makes money as few mortals can, But doesn't care a lot for jokes; And I have heard his daughter smokes, His youngster drinks. Hi3 house is grand, But little more, I understand. It must be joy, a wealth like his, Unless it's all the joy there is. Now, I'm not arguing success Is poverty and shiftlessness, Or wealth a failure. There must be Some middle ground for you and me, Some middle place about halfway, With joy and substance, work and play, Not up too high nor down too far And that is where most people are.

Tomorrow: The Prisoner. (Copyright, 1929, by Douglas Malloch) Governor Albert C. Ritchie of Maryland, the state that is charged with nullification of the Eighteenth Amendment, defends that commonwealth and her lawmakers who have religiously refrained from the enactment of a state enforcement law. He was speaking before the Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia last night and his logical interpretation of the law is being commented on by the press throughout the United States today. Maryland refused to enact a state iOFIBS of S.

W. Straus Co. to net over 6 for a permanent investment. SAFE INVESTMENTS A Bowler Building 3 IP. Meyer 1417 N.

2nd St. Phone 3491- 809N.8Ih SI. OFFICE CAT Prohibition law. Wisconsin enacted one but recently repealed itand within the last few days Senator Teasdale is attempting to have the Severson Act written in the state statutes so that it can apply to those counties which want it. In other words, it is a resurrection of a dead issue and aimed to bring to life a law that was overwhelmingly defeated in the election last spring.

Out of seventy-one counties in the state, forty-one voted in favor of the repeal of the Severson Act. Senator Teasdale contends that he is doing it for the thirty counties favoring the retention of the state Prohibition law. Any one of those counties can adopt its own ordinances without state interference. Inasmuch as there is a constant attempt to usurp the rights of the people by federal legislation, the masterly address of Governor Ritchie is worthy of a place in every home. The Prohibitionist, whether in Wisconsin or Maryland, has the same line of attack.

It was raised in the campaign last spring. They openly declared that if Wisconsin repealed the Severson Act we would be seceders from the union, a rebel state, and traitors to our country, but in the face of these over-exaggerated charges Wisconsin did repeal its dry act and we did it in the interest of the great majority of sane and wrell meaning people. Governor Ritchie in his address declared that the confederation of states was not expected to enforce federal acts and in support of this he referred to several laws, including the Federal Income Tax law, the Harrison Anti-Narcotic law, the Mann Act, the White Slave law and numerous other federal laws. We have repeatedly contended that it is not the duty of the state to become a police department or clearing house for the enforcement of the Eighteenth Amendment, any more than the United States is supposed to apprehend and try those charged with murder from Wisconsin. We have our machinery for state problems and the federal government its machinery to see that federal laws are enforced.

0 Governor Ritchie last night made these pertinent statements: "Maryland's position, instead of being an effort at nulli My girl has quite upset the dope That fools the public very much, She doesn't use that fancy soap Yet has a skin I love to touch. "Daddy, may I have a dime?" asked little Georgie. Dad obliged with a smile. "This time you won't make me give it back after the company's gone, will you, daddy?" was Georgia's loud remark. CHIP OFF THE OLD BLOCK A .45 calibre revolver had been fired point-blank at him, the bullet penetrating his skull and entering the woodwork.

Tampa (Fla.) News. MAYBE THEN If rocks were made of. jelly, And pavements made of mush, And roofs were soft as mattresses, And chimneys lined with, plush; If I could pass through wires The way I pass through rain; Why, then I think I'd like a ride Upon, an aeroplane. Some who have the "writing itch" should scratch instead of write. Comic Artist This joke ought to be good.

I've had it in my head for ten years. Heartless Editor Sorta aged in the wood, as It were. Love may be the greatest thing in the world but it won't make some folks do things that pride will. Fond Father: "What's the matter, my dear?" Daughter: "Freddie and have parted forever." "Um! In that case I suppose he won't be around here for a couple 01 mgnts. It takes a lot of hard practice to give some girls that charming naturalness.

All there is to be known about human nature from books may be learneu irom onaKeEpeare ana tne nioie. A man should never be ashamed to own that he has been in the fication, is in fact a protest against nullification. Maryland feels that congress and its sister states have nullified certain rights and immunities guaranteed to it under the express and implied covenants of our federal compact. "They have nullified our right to govern ourselves in a do wrong; it is but saying in other words that he is wiser today than he was yesterday. The road to ruin is plainly sign-boarded: "Living Beyond One's Income." Life's uncertainties certainly make it interesting.

Business demands faith; and if business is to be done in a large way, it demands great faith. "Was Jane's wedding a swell affair?" "Positively. They even used puffed rice." main where only self-government can work. Our houses are no longer our castles; we are denied the right in certain cases to be judged by a jury of our peers; we can be halted and searched as we go about our lawful adventures and can be hectored, brow-beaten and even cold-bloodedly shot down all in the name of the law. We can be punished twice for the same of Assembly Reverses Stand By Approving County Park Aid fense, have our property seized for wrongs we did not our selves commit, and we can have our homes padlocked on orders that are more executive than judicial.

If all this is not the nullification of supposedly inalienable rights and liberties, what U-21 5.83 5.25-20 fM fj 5.25-21 6.00-21 'ffj compensation of prisoners in the state prison and to creation of annuity and benefit funds in cities for firemen, their widows and children, were concurred in. is it? "Yet, Maryland as a state, offers no resistance of any kind to the law which does these things. Maryland makes not the slightest attempt to abrogate it or to nullify it. We simply say it is a federal law, not Maryland law, and it is no part of Dr. Rose, Dentist, 716 N.

Sth St. Casa Loina Club Faces 2 Actions Of Foreclosure Madison, Wis. (UP) State aid for county parks, limited to for the biennium, received approval of the asembly today, a reversal of its previous stand. By a vote of 42 to 39 the assembly concurred in Sen. Thomas M.

Duncan's bill amended to provide that the state may, with approval of the governor, pay 10 per cent of the cost of county parks acquired on any lake or stream in or bordering the state. The original bill applied only to Lake Michigan. This amendment has yet to meet senate consideration. The Langve resolution to exclude lobbyists from the assembly chambers and galleries was tabled by a vote of 42 to 40, after being amended to exempt the galleries. Another amendment which would have excluded, in addition to registered lobbyists, the president of the university, its professors, state officers, heads of boards, bureaus, and Here are prices that are taking the car owners of this town by storm.

Think of it! Firestone Tires, at prices below that of even ordinary tires made possible by manufacturing' and marketing- economies never before equalled. Get your set now! Equip all around with new FIRESTONE Oldficlds -the tires that have the exclusive Gum-Dipped carcass construction that has brought all world records for safety, endurance and mileage to Firestone. our duty as a state to adopt it as our own and set up state machinery to carry it out. We leave its enforcement in our state to the federal government, which made it. To call that nullification is absurd." 1 This is good sound doctrine, in line with the ideas of the framers of the federal Constitution.

It is diametrically opposed to the narrow plan originated by those tinkering with the Constitution in more recent years. The doctrine preached by Governor Ritchie is identical with the policy and the stand of this newspaper. In the debate with Dr. Gordon some months ago, we laid down these four points, so forcibly covered in the address of Governor Ritchie: "First Prohibition has failed because it sets up a form of government contrary to the ideas and customs of the American people. It attempts by force that which we resented when this nation was born.

The security and permanence of government rests not on law, but on respect for law. "Second Prohibition has tailed because it is an attempt to impose on all the people a rule which onlv a minority will Kenosha. Wis () Two foreclosure actions were started here today against the Casa Loma Country club property on Powers Lake which is used as a resort by Chicago Negroes. Complainants in the case are William Protzman and William Buck, who hold first and second mortgages on the property. The mortgages were drawn while the Aquila club held title to the property.

The Casa Loma club, located in the heart cf an exclusive summer home neighborhood, has been the object of much indignation on the part of whites owning cottages on the- lake. Threats were made against the negroes, who retaliated by posting- armed e-uards ahemt their COME IN TODAY! Call and get one of the road maps which are announced over the radio every Monday night by the The Voice of Firestone commissions, the governor's private secretary, members of the Anti-Saloon League and the association against the prohibition amendment was defeated 44 to 39. The covernor's veto of th rn. mis bill relative to railroads r. Suites funding switchins costs tn indus tries doing their own work of this Corner Sth and Jefferson Kina was sustained.

F. W. Janssen I Phone 3488 Two senate bills, relating- to ground. 41.

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Pages Available:
962,830
Years Available:
1904-2024