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The Bristol Daily Courier from Bristol, Pennsylvania • Page 12

Location:
Bristol, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE LATEST NEWS THE BRISTOL DAILY 1 p. m. newt Bewiline latest news and photo coverage of each in Lower Bucks County, the nation and the world. aily ourier THE BEST FEATURES Staff-written Labor, on Sports, on sidelights, on people, places and added punch lo THE DAILY syndicated cartoons and columns. LOWER BUCKS COUNTY'S OWN DAILY PAGE TWELVE AUJXDAY JAXl'AKV 25, 1954 BAHLE OVER BRICKER AMENDMENT UNSEniED, HEADS FOR SENATE FLOOR WASHTNT.TOK i'ontroversial Brickt-r conslilutional amendment to curb presidpntial trpaty-makinp headed for thp Senate floor today with Ke- publicans fearful of lering fight.

A effort fo find compromise, on which both Senator John W. Brkker Ohio, and administration forces could agree, collapsed Stindny night. Senate debate br expected to start Tuesday. Republican Floor F. Knowland.

California, and other fongregsional leaders met with President Eisenhower today to diR- CUP8 ptrategy on the issue. On Ajrreenient At the of a bi-partt- san mf'Pting of key Senator Homer Fergtiaon principal negotiator In efforts to achieve a muttially agreeable formula, reported failure. Pricker announced that he would press for Senate and House approval of the proposed constitutional change One administration Informant said the now is to get Bricker to accept an tion KtibslittJte if he is defeated on his atiffer proponal. Mllllken Those prenent a the Sunday meeting, beaides Ferguson and the Ohio seruitor. Included ference Chairman Eugene n.

Mil likin, Coloriido, Senator Walter George fieorgla, and Sen. McCsrran (I)) Nevada, vigorous supporter of the amendineiit. The amendment would require ratification of treatlea and executive by the llcuiKe aa well as the Senate. No in treaty would be valid If it conflicted with tlie ConKtitution. If donieBtic law were involved the treaty wotild have lo be Hupple- meiitcd by domettfic legislation before it could become effective.

Opponents charge that thia last provision would require approval by atate Legislature and thus tie the hands of a Chief Executive in talks with other itricker denies this. The jidministrution HubHtituie, which Bricker has flatly rejected, would simply aaHert that a treaty can be effective only if it conforms to the constitution. This would clarify the right of to rule on int.ernatioual agreements. Captain Cole's Photos Show Luckier Koreans Falls Twp. Maps Changes In Its Zoning Proposals The Falls towriHliip com miiiSioti yesterfiiiy revised eight of the 22 areas in pro posed zoning ordinHticp, It will not reveal the revision, until the whole code in revaittpid Chairmau Kad F.

Oltoliiii SHld lex aiions included follow- The Tullyldwn FallsiUKUin where a miiiiiiK mtd ItKht ffidualry zone was planned ad.iacent fo iltnwn afid hrojight from residents of ttie community. Kullsingfon Area between I.rfiwei Morrisville and Tyburn roads adjoining: II iiiRton, zones 2 residential. Plots ad.ia< eni to in ilie Fallsinglctn road and of developers In the tuf'H coitunission will tjo kle 14 other area reijuests SnturdHv and Sunday. Oitttlinl said, and then will act i)n for haiiiieB in ilie text of Itie proposeil ziniinK ordi- iiH tlce. Mall Whole Code The coinniission members ed fiot to announce any chHUMes until the whole code is re vised.

Ottolini said. At that time, a new zoning map and code will be published, lie Copb's w'ill lie distrilniled in Itie township and a hearing held. Otto lini said a tentative tiearing dale tias been net for the latter part of Februaiy. The coinnrission, after IS weeks preparation of the ed It piiblit Iy Jan, 8 in ttie midst of protests, UK NAMK BRATTLEHOHO, Vt. Charles S.

Vansunt, Hristol, has Riven the use of the name as a herd name Is his purehreil Holstein Frienian cattle. This prefix luinu' will be recorded by The Holsteiu-Friesian Association of Aiuerica. Moro than 14(H) were rcHcrved breeders in 1 Echoes of The Past THE BRISTOL COURIER Issues of 23 through 2S. 1911 A successful minstrel show w'as given by the members of St. Church Saturday evening in the parish house under the tion of was begun today installing James Emmett, music director, and new telephone exchange in the head by a horse at the farm of James on Bath road was Pat Donnelly, He boarded with M.

J. Asay on Bath road. P. Stradling, stage director Interlocutor, David Neill; end men, I Charles Sims, Harry Burkett, J. mill of William H.

(Jrundy ('o. This system, which will reach every department in the mill, was P. Stradling, J. H. Stephenson; the largest telephone contract ever TIIK.SK AHK SOMK TIIK MJCKV ONKS.

The children piclnred I are nnd tliej about to HelUied. 'I'hejVe from Ihe Korean by .1. ole, in horeo, and Ihe tuen of his 'I how Hie children looked before a ChriHliiias parly, for lliem bj the CAPr. OKK I KIK.NÜS. Pictured with three yoiinff Koreans I ole, of VVashinuton street, Bristol, ole, letter describinir the plight of his friends touched off the Lower Hucks onntj Korean clolhiiitr and food driie, deuites most of his time in Korea in aiding the rehabilitation of homeless Korean and adults.

Ralph Walker. Fred 'fown- end, (ieorge Heath. W. I). Davis, (ieorge I'arkinson, William Hibbs, James Fimmett, Wesley Bunting, G.

B. Stephenson. taken tn Buc ks Co. Minster cried yesterday what he believes to have been his most largely attended sale. It was on the farm of "SMl- liam Ettenger near Emilie, and stock and implements were sold.

started at $'iO and were quickly run up to and The first pair of horses brought Pigs sold for as high as Photos t'apl John .1 OF THK and sotiie of the nieii nork ftilMinie I Hie are phototcraphed by apt. ole at Iheir Chrlstiiias pariv. 'I'he American soIdlerM raised eiioiigh iiioiiet l(t buj Ihein presenfs and refreslnnonls. ('ole wrltes in a lelter; shonld haie seeu how elaled the lltlle th A HAT( Il OF HMJiHKV Noi all Ihe chilldren are as lor as tliosc the Tnited Slales oflicers and eniisted iiti Inne adopted. Mere a nen group of chiltirn are taken in, feti and clothed.

are stili u-ry MMimr, and therefore siili confiised. Treir parents lune iieen kilied diiriiig Ihe or separated iVoni them in fhe thal There passed away early yesterday morning one of Bristol's most venearable figures, Richard Trudgen, who for years was a familiar sight taking his daily walks through the town. He was almost 93 years idd Mr. 'rrudgen was born in Truro, England, and -----to this country in At the annual meeting of Enter--- prise Fire No. 5.

held in the Edmund Phipps, the milk hose house last evening (Jan. was slightly in a runaway the following officers were elec- accident yesterday. Phipps was ted William V. presl- drivniK out Hath street witen the dent. Win.

Giace, president; of the wagon snapped. Thomas Burns, secretary; Charles The horse kept on going with the Finney, treasurer; Nevegold, shaft and the two wheels, Howard S. Appleton; as- Phipps was jolted against the front; sistant foreman, Clifford Hyrons; of the The horses ran trustees. Edward Louder, and for a considerable distance and George Sheppard, then stopped. From BUCKS COUNTY INDEPENDENT (Issue of 27.

the freight wreck iirred The Farmers has signed a contract with the W'es- tern Telegraph Co. to install an electric clock in the bank building. The time is to be ticked from ion the Penna. Railroad last Sunday Washington and the clock will be regulated every hour. The Bricker Amendment Continued from effort to disclaim macJe no the position then or during the campaign; and that I whatever change is involved on the part of the White louse which now wants to disclaim a tacit pledge which represented part of the body of faith he supposedly accepted in accepting Republican concepts.

In truth, wliat Senator cr and his supporters mtc tryingiwriters to guarantee that the lo cJo is to consolidate a princi- American tieople would be able Pacing The Labor Beat Hith The Labor Fdllor pie oi government and ronsti- tutional law which was taken or granted for the better part of a century anci a half in this nation, and under whicli was made all the real progress in up our own mterna- tional prestige and harmonizing the difficulties. I his is not a case of Congress seeking to restrict and curtail the powers of the president, but quite the contrary of a pres- of local unions und their members will be welcoiiUMl hv Ihe Address all BHinicatlons to the Labor Kdltor, The HHISTOK HH Hrisloi, Penna. Thomas Whitaker, of Bristol race was elected assistant slew ard i)f the Kaiser Canberra Plant shift in a contest Friday night, defeating Henry of Fairless Hills. John Brousky, tinopposed, was made chief steward in the 130 Cnitcd Auto Workers (CIO) election. hitteriiess In a xlrlke of London electricians has diiii- nied otherwise be brirht ononilc lit IT I a d.

The strike, plus renerally nn- settled industrial laitor outlook has caused concern on the Fnis- lish stock exchange. mittee on labor and industry. Coun sei Hai'idd Uiegelmun. of the citi budget coinmissitm, praised the pian, but iluillenged (I merita of a section of the bill giving new labor aiul lo become in labor disiiute: in privale induslry. Riegei nujn warned against use of isu( power lo conipete with existing state and labor relaiions mai hincry.

'Ihe union shop, under Ihe I is bc'inir challeiiifed in 'I lo. da.K the AFb in its lu Amarillo, the To peka and Sania Fe Railroad, A proposed munit ipal depart- Ccturf, is itivohed Tuent of labor has been etidorsed In in a uit tlie tinuni shop. 1'hir New York ity by the bud N''cti A 'f and S. F. emploxes are get commission, as an instrument suing etijoiu unions from nomii-t- piedutions of the outlook to create grievance machinery tornni: union for tlie 1 niicd in parlineiit stores In Pittsburgh.

Geoige Woonier has scheiluled an afternoon met ident being led by his associates into trying to vastly in! crease the executive authority, to pile up White 1 louse powers to the point where (no matter how sately one might consider the situation under Mr. some future president might completely override our freedoms and our constitutional government. I go back for a moment principles, bi een represi iitativ es of laiboi Standards Associaiion. which bar hi this country, aping the gains for the stores, and ofticers t)f (H.sastrous course of the I'ah Local of the AFl. Teamsters.

jian who have sti great- 'I tie ledetal jy redui'ed the statu.s of the into the dispute liy the Idtbor Stand ards vNhith rcji'cfed Mayor David Lawrence as a medi.itor. have been tramping pu kei lines siiue the strike began last Last month the AFh 1'eamsteis stniek six Pittsburgh disttnt stoles. to hold on tt) that power just so long as they remained vigi- lent and understanding. Congre.ss was given impeachment power over the president; the Senate was given veto power over treaties written by the C'ongress was empowered to write Al.L the national laws; slates were guaranteed a Republican form of government; a bill of rights assuring the individual citizen immunities and protections which forever been a thorn in the flesh of self-seeking public officials; and the constitution itself was made the supreme law of fhe land, with a Supreme ourt empowered to overrule both president and Congress in clefeniling the concepts of that constitut ion. All this was done for the very simple and direct purpose of seeing to it that the American pcfjple coulil control their own governirient.

So far as the treaty making A look: 'I'he National In- dusirial oufereute H(iard. in ses shills ovt'i'floH ing V(n hotel ballrooms, is juggling eeo- city employes. Backed by Mayor Robert fhe labor department in Ihe Fedeial and announcement of General Mo ciliation Servit Kuiav tries its tors that they are pro ettlUig the 111 AFl, liUetion has cheered up the Mteel hand ai Mothers To Hold March of Dimes Tomorrow Night ICORRECTS QUIRK IN LAW Youth Council Members Push Change in Motor Code Step Farther Is the most lant date on the March of Dimes calendar. the strikes 7 p. m.

an army of fioo women will begin the Mother's March on Polio in ('Ol RTlim SE lUu ks Council mem P.ustraan. of tOugelv. of Michael, of Kaiiiess Hill- the Sou'heastern VMCA Pre Bu; ks County communities. A in tfie Media Court March will be conducted for one lioiir, pasi.t tli, ir iiropcised amendment As Rucks County residents Motor elm le on a porch lamp or put a light in Number a front window tomorrow njght, ainendmeni correcis a there will be a Petuisylvania Venn the W'ay to accept the nsforce- I Names been a school ot thougfU which: believed that the people are PlQnt' EnQiflGOf damn to knowj how to govern thejiiselves, and that they therefore ought cheerfully to surrencJer the principles of sovereignty and allow "their to cio the job for them. No one is going to state in so many words that he holds I such a belief not in the political arena, certainly, where: electrical support is necessary from lime tcv time.

It IS pcnfectly clear that uitfMnatiooalists state disciples, the do goodt'r pro-sociahsts in general, led piecisely that way about it; and moreover than the concept has strong root in certain ot out government, of which the milit.uy and State depaitments are conspicuous Xow it goes with'oji saying thal anyone who wisfies to he masses of 0. ill S( HI Grant D. hlitz has been ap- plant engitu'er for the powers are concerned, the recent concept that these can be usecf to write law which transcends the constitution or invades the domain of state powers is a wholly new (and ex tremely vicious theory.) I his statement is not hard to prove. As recently as 1924 our national government got out an officially annotated copy of the American constitution (under a concurrent resolution, the compilation being done by George Gordon Payne) and this document set forth, with abundant judicial decisions to back it up, the principles that the terms of treaties cannot transcend the they "can not deprive Congress of its legislative treaties "may be abrogated by a later act of and that certain types of provisions in treaties the interposition of Congress to carry them into 1 his list of concepts, virtually universally accepted in I 924, is precisely the objective for which the Bricker amencJment is aimed. No more clear summary of the purposes would be possible than the above list.

If the situation was that the President, the State Depart! ment, and all the Supreme Court, accepted the concept that treaties had to be within the of the constitution. that they could not be used for the purpose of writing laws over Congres.s” head, that i they could not be used to sus- i pend the principles of the Bill of Rights, and that they were not an instrument by which the guarantees of republican gov-j eminent granted to the states might be all this were the case, and if the ad' ministrative view today was what we have seen it to have been in 1924, then there would be neither need nor demand fori the amendment, i Lnfortunately, this is not the case. Vie have had a number of treaties (for example, the Mexican Treaty of 1945) morning near the Jefferson ave. bridge. What might have been I a dreadful loss of life was averted Twenty persons gathered last i through prompt action of Charles evening to pay their respects Kenner, of street.

He Slack at her flagged a passenger train enroiite at Radcliffe and Franklin streets in lionor of her 84th birthday clear signal, and was onlv niversar.v. All were former pupilsi to a standstill a few yards of iMrs. at the old Puickley overlurned box car. that Missicm The Buckley the passenger locomotive St. Mission was founded in 1875 by' would have caused Mrs.

Slack's husband, James N. serious catastrophes Slack, with 17 pupils. Before the history of Bristol. year was over there were 100 pu-i pils. 'riie mission was continued, for 14 years, sometimes with many as 20U children.

The man who died yesterday morning at the Penna. Hospital, after being kicked on the Pair Are Paroled In Street Fracas Kenner is employed as foreman in the railroad yards at Jersey City, and was on his way to an early morning train to report for duty. Arriving at the scene noticed in the distance, a train approaching on the track alongside of the derailed freight. Quickly grasping a lantern he ran towards the oncoming, train and the engineer brought his engine to a stop. Pear.son’s dry goods store was advertising a sale of outing flannel goods, with way Included were: Remnants of outing flannel at a yard; children's blue serge coats, size 1 to years, ladies flannel petticoats (extra sizes), nuc.

Shot Out Lights In Tullytown Two men who went on a light shooting binge last October have American Stores Co. featured been paroled from the Bucks anumg other things in its ty Prison after serving short terms, advertisement; Coffee, 25c best Judge Edwin Satterthwaite corn meal. lb. 2Hc; iirunes, fm granted paroles to Robert ,1. Frink, chetse, lb.

pork and 28, 30 Openwood avenue, Levittown. cans for pork chops or a Bristol taxi driver, and roasts, lb. Die: milk fed roasting Zucliero, 2H, Cedar street, or frying chickens, lb. Edgely. 'fhe two men were sentenced FALIJ.NGS'PON 'riiieves are 12 to a term of not less than 10 again troubling residents.

On Sat- days nor more than three months urday when W. went to and w'ere ordered to pay fines unlock his bread box, he found and costs. the hasp had been cut and the The men pleaded guiltv to a bread stolen, charge of shooting out 1,3 street -----lights In 'Fhey did it In 1022. the hard way from a moving auto, (Rudolph Valentinoi was 'I'ullytown was left in almost at the Forrest Theatre, co-starred complete darkness at the time as with Ayres. 'Pom Mix was the men drove east on street, a Iso scheduled in "The Night llorse- They were nabbed by Police Chief men" and Binney in Walterick.

J. Kratz, former officer William Harth and Edward Bergmann, i At a meeting Harriman elected ofticers President, APFPAI POPI I A'I ion I Leo Crohe; vice president, Edgar WASH1N(5T0N INS The Cen- (Jeoghegan; treasurer Harry sus Bureau estimates that the na- Lester Jones. James I'n- capital now has peo- ruh will manage and Francis Mc- ple. an increase of IK.dUd in the Glynn will the baseball past, year. team.

Greets Wife i'he ami nilmeiil When ih lale of any vehicle is im ed on any witliin a tmsi ne c.r residence distritt wherciiiim wno wisnes to t.fticial speed hmn, signs are ere, that mas.ses of as proMded in thi. seetion for'haven't sense enough to govern Com pa that th.s was a means by which the purpose of as. ertauung wheth themselves is quite clearly en- er or not operator siu ve i Vi I titleci to hold such an opinion nit ie a But such Leonhard, prt'sideni t)f the president and state depart- ompany, has ment might write the laws, and hlitz rtH eixed his eugineer-j let the constitution and ton of this act, such time shall be flight to be tieuree fr.mi Pennsylvanm hang. taken a distant of n.u less to the point, under the tme-eighth of a mile bv a pea.te of the public to admit that engineer. He also is Nations oroaram there' such a view is wholly om- INations program there M.f Asstniation of Irtm and Steel worked out a host patible with the republican pnn- All the workers know the urgency of the polio fund protection of children from infantile paralysis Only by making adequate funds quirts of on an undistru-.

two lane bighwav in fuer using motor ly marked as a ptilit vehicle which shall be etiuippetl with a speiMl- t)meler tested ftsr acciirat within a pt.sted resideni- days prior to the I ili I distr ihc availahle for vital scientific research can this prcjtection be realized. Jn addition to the volunteer Marching Mothers, bank tellers have offered to donate their services to help count and package jibe pttiof clot king hv two alleged violation. all oiher ctnuliiitnis Enuuu'ers anti is an mom- of treaty proposals, covering! ciples of government to the onstitution is The urw plant engineer has been ation, from the tariff to labor a member of the police otficer.s, whereas, if shall be linied in speefiiitk' oecurs on an opeti rtiad Tuaiiner above set forth for a in an unposted area the proof distance of noi less than one quar- the cioeking can be made by only one poiice offici r. This illogicai situation has been rernedied by proposed aniendment presented by ne Constitution cleared acceptecJ the itiea that national government is the property of the and busied itself, not to much "checking and the HI pou TH VOF PV( junior ter mile. and busied itselt, not to much reported a Tlw boys their hill and balancing" people at the ss' eral branches of (he govern-' Lt'gislatiii at Harrisburg next inent as doing everything which the weekend after Paterson hrin which the starry-eyed proponents hope to see jammed through and become statutory requirements without Congress, LONDON INS The Soviet news legislatures, the courts, the the Am-being consult-! I March 12 and 13.

to the ingenuity of the PF.ARL HARBOR. Harine Alartin (anavan his and faniilj upon their recent arrival here. Mrs. (anavan is the former Oorothy M. of Radcliffe street, Bristol.

MSirt. anavan, son of Mr, and Airs, S. anavan, of T-'HI is the (ifticer- Moscow. he need for the Rrirke-n roan. I is the oniniissioned.

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About The Bristol Daily Courier Archive

Pages Available:
119,706
Years Available:
1911-1966