Cardozo, sixty-six. berg, Wagner, Landis, Frankfurter, Rosenman and Corcoran. By WILLIAM C. UTLEY HOULD President Roosevelt succeed in his proposal to in- crease the number of justices on the bench of the United States Supreme court, such changes would by no means be without precedent, except in their scope. The number of justices has been changed by act of congress no less than seven times dur- ing the 148 years of its existence, but never by more than three justices. There have been in- stances of clashes between a Presi- dent and the Suprer ourt. Origi- nally the court was composed of six members, but during the of the clash between Jefferson in 1801 reduced to six. Un heavily loaded doc country was grow was increased to se 30 years later was inc to nine. Further exp: in the addition of s : tice, and in 1863 the Supreme cour reached its peak of ten justices In 1866 the number was reduced again to seven, ] back to nine again; I was at that time popul of having ‘‘packed” numerous the but i 69 it ient Grant went court to torians absolve him from any intention. Now comes President with his proposal to appoint federal court (including to each Su- the ment age of seventy but has nc tired. Apparently it is bey power of congress to requ tices to retire at seventy, Constitution expressly provide they shall serve during goo havior. Appointments Permanent. There are now nine Supreme court justices, of whom gix are past the retirement age. It follows that, at the present time, bership on the Supreme court bench could not be increased to more than 15 under the President's proposal New judgeships on that and other federal court benches would be permanent. then the mem- seems immediately apparent one of the President's securing the proposed legis] to nullify possible adverse ings on New Deal acts by older justices who have been in the habit of vot- ing to declare New Deal legislation unconstitutional. Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, seventy-five, has voted sometimes to uphold, sometimes to nullify New Deal acts; he once ran as the Republican candidate for the Presidency. Louis Dembitz Bran- deis, eighty, has voted to sustain all New Deal legislation except in the case of the NRA in which the vote was unanimously against. But Justices Willis Van Deventer, sev- enty-eight; James Clarke Mec- Reynolds, seventy - five; George Sutherland, seventy-five; and Pierce Butler, seventy-one, have voted in- variably against the New Deal. The New Deal has suffered de- feat in 9 out of 11 major decisions of the court. In at least four cases a change of four votes could have reversed the decision. Up to June, 1935, the Supreme court had held a total of 73 acts of congress unconstitutional. Fifty-five of these were in the period from 1789 to June, 1924. Then in 11 years, the court held unconstitutional 18 acts rul Decisions Make History. The court has hardly ever ceased to be the subject of much political speculation and controversy in the “hot stove league.” Perhaps this is because the court as an institu- tion is unique among governments, in its function of interpreting and halting encroachments upon the br -ir law ~f the country. “Every decision of } ' wrote Chis noted work on the Supreme ory of the United les Warren, as been written not merely f congress, in the exec- and on the battlefields, in the cham- me court of the career of period of na- 35: (b) the at the foot of Broad iew York on February 1, of its justices ad been set by the judiciary 24, 1789 Edicts Free of Politics. The present chief justice, Hughes, once said of the court, ‘at s it has had the most se- »8.”" Tradition has it that rendered political partisan- there are incidents to uphold the tradition Justices appointed President Jefferson helped to de- velop the nationalistic interpretation of the Constitution which he de- plored; justices appointed by Pres- act of September Mr. without indeed more pretation, der policy unconstitutional. history of the court,” “than the manner in which been disappointed.” Changes in membership of overwhelming defeat. The lame duck congress, between the time of Jefferson's election and his inaug- uration, to prevent the new Presi- dent from filling a vacancy on the bench with one of his own appoint- ees, reduced the number of justices to five. It also relieved Supreme court justices from circuit court duties, established six new circuits with sixteen new judges and at- taches, and filled all the vacancies with staunch Federalists. Adams’ appointments were confirmed by the senate the day before Jefferson's inauguration. The next congress, controlled by Jefferson, abolished two terms of court, repealed the judiciary act of the Adams congress, abolished the new circuits and restored the Su- preme court to its original member- ship of six. Ironically enough, it was the Federalist - appointed Su- preme court which, in 1803, upheld the constitutionality of Jefferson's repeal act. This was in the case of Marbury vs. Madison. The former had been appointed to a judgeship of the peace in the Distrigt of Columbia by President Adams, but his com- mission had not been delivered to him at the time of Jefferson's in- auguration. He sought a writ of mandamus to compel the secretary of state to deliver his commission. The court ruled that the manda- mus was the proper procedure, but that congress in delegating to the Supreme court the power to issue such a writ (by the judiciary act of 1789) had acted in excess of the powers granted to it under the Con- stitution. This was the first instance in which the court had acted upon constitutionality of an act of and established its right Jackson Battles Court. The first time that any c act of ¢ clared uncon Dred Scott c: unconstitutional during the years of its exist had hened the federal considerably. It had inval laws made by the states constitutional however, it streng During of offic Andrew Jackson's tem ¢ the state of Georgis a law of state to which the Che held title: decided this was division of son the dians the Supren outside its tion. The state then passed requiring all whites in the C territory to take an giance to the state. When two mis- sionaries refused they were impris- oned. The Supreme court issued a writ of error and declared that the statute was unconstitutional becaus the federal government alone had herokee oath of their territory. The country was growing, and crowded court dockets made it ad- visable, on the last day of the Jack- son administration, to increase the were then eight, one having been As the West began to expand another justice was added in 1863, During the reconstruction period in 18668 President Johnson was on trial on impeachment charges, his leniency toward the South having angered party leaders. Congress ber of justices to seven. Johnson vetoed it, but the reduction was car- ried over his veto. A bill requiring a two-thirds vote of the court to de- to pass in congress about that time: the court would declare the recon- struction laws invalid. Grant Appoints Two. President Lincoln clashed with Chief Justice Taney when, soon after Fort Sumter was attacked, John Merryman, a Confederate licu- tenant, was arrested on charges of aiding the enemy. Taney gave him a habeas corpus to get released from Fort McHenry, but the officer in charge, acting under the Presi- dent's instructions, refused to obey the writ. Taney ordered the arrest of the officer, but the civilian who bore the writ was refused admission to the fort. Taney wrote an opinion declaring that a writ of habeas corpus could not be suspended, The number of justices was in- creased from seven to nine shortly after Ulysses S. Grant became President. The court, by a vote of 4 to 3, held unconstitutional the le- gal tender act which was passed during the Civil war; there were two vacancies on the bench at that time. The day the opinion was de- livered by Chief Justice Chase, President Grant nominated two new members, and soon after the court ordered that the “greenbacks’’ case be re-argued. There was a great storm of in- dignation when the new justices joined with the three who had voted to uphold the act, and the legal tender act was declared constitu- tional. Most persons, of course, believed that Grant had intentionally packed the court to secure this decision, but historians do not agree ® Western Newspaper Union, i i i i Cobb Zhumks about The Drift of Scotland. ANTA MONICA, CALIF .— So high an authority as the Associated Press gives out a dispatch stating that Scotland is drifting toward America at the rate of eight feet a year. This would be an excuse for the unthoughted to say that the Scots always had a reputation for being close and now are becoming still closer. To me, though, the main question is whether Scotland is going to bring Eng- land along with her Among themselves, at least, the Scots have always had the reputation of bring- ing England along through the centu. ries. And if don't believe it any true Scot stands ready to supporting dates, names and statistics. - you ask He offer Irvin 8. Cobb By the way, I've noticed one out- standing difference between the two greatest groups of the Celtic race. To an Irishman’s face you can joke about Ireland and he remains calm. But poke fun at an individual Irish- man and you are hunting for trou- ble — and probably will soon be hunting for a doctor. Inversely you may jibe a Scot and get away with it. But just say the least little thing in derision of his native land and you'd better start runnin » * » So-Called Modern Art. GUESS 1 must belong to a most ancient vanished not quite when indeed, an It's enough I PeCies— most I'm member species old they sh ! } tands and was called it I do date back to ted, re- where the city hall now Peggy Love Apples. | where a painting motely, at least, to resemble the object it purported to represent, veo Hopkins Je 3s > neg was CRD stages tives I lived through the early of the artis swolt—prim post-impress aitramodert ‘ dadaists and so on on- ! cubists, without ever becoming reconciled to the prevalent idea that a vas apparently depicting a bundle of laths coming undone posed to be a nude or that a spirited yellow cat having an in a mess of tomato soup wa [talian sunset. can- wag sup- dy's portrait an Lately I've seen examples of the latest school — the surrealistic school. And if the practitioners of this form of beauty are artists, then I'm a kind-faced old Swiss watch mender. They're actually giving certain of these geniuses medals. What they ought to give ‘em is something for their respec- tive livers. * » * Uncle Sam the Spendthrift. \ ELL, we were good fellows while we had it, weren't we? We destroyed our forests. Result: Up water courses. . We indulged in an orgy of so- called “reclamation” schemes to drain unneeded swamplands, there- by destroying the breeding grounds and the natural resting places of emigrating wild fowl so that the once vast flocks are gone, probably forever. We wasted our heritage of wild game, formerly a great factor in food supply aside from being a source of healthful joy to gunners. We needlessly polluted our streams, But we're a resourceful race; give us credit for that. Now, through speed madness and drunken driving, we're preying merrily on human life, It's getting so that the citizen who insists on dying a natural death, instead of waiting for some mad wag of a road-hog to mow him down, can be regarded only as a spoilsport. » * * Cruelty to Wild Life. OMETIMES women are almost as inconsistent as men-—-which is a frightful indictment to bring against any sex. Az a boy, I remember being se- verealy lectured by a lady for robbing birds’ nests— a lady whose nodding hat was crowned with at least four stuffed meadowlarks. A few years ago, 1 saw women prominent in humane movements and good deeds, like that woman of the Scriptures who was called Dorcas—saw these women wearing each pitiable feathered wisp meant a cruel murder and a brood of fledg- of common humanity. And only lately, at 2 meeting to forward the prevention of cruelty to dumb beasts, 1 saw women swathed to their earlobes in furs work with, inexpensive, lovely when done, and wears like iron. If it’s gifts you're thinking of, use a finer cotton and make a pillow top, vanity set or other small ar- ticles that take but a few squares, In pattern 5738 you will find in. structions and charts for making the squares shown; an illustration of them and of the stitches used; material requirements. To obtain this pattern send 13 cents in stamps or coins (eocins preferred) to The Sewing Circle Household Arts Dept.,, 250 W. Fourteenth St., New York, N. Y. pattern number, and address. Write plainly your name Unicameral Legislatures F tried the uni- wuse) legisla- til 1776; Penn- gia, 17717- Your states have Wisdom From Oneself Unless you grow wise of self you will listen in vain wise. ~Publius Syrus. Morality Morality i morality; there about it, in can't be any dispute reasoners. Steadfast $4 spite of slick and false PLEASE ACCEPT for only 25¢ complete with your purchase of one can of B. T. Babbitt’s Nationally Known Brand of Lye This lovely pure silver-plated Set knife, fork, soup spoon and teaspoon in aristo. cratic Empire design is offered solely to get you to try the pure brands of lye with 100 uses, shown at right. Use lye for cleaning clogged and frozen drain pipes, for making finer soap, for sweetening swill, ete. You'll use no other Lye once you've tried one of these brands, How to Get Your Silver Set To get your 4 piece Silver Set, merely send the band from any can of Lye shown st right, with 25 (to cover handling, mailing, ete.) with your name and address to B. T. Babbitt, Inc, Dept. WN, 886 Fourth Ave, New York City, N. Y. Your Set will reach you promptly, postage mid. You'll thank us for the Set and for introducing these brands of Lye to you. OFFER QOOD WITH ANY BRAND SHOWN BELOW Hop in—we'll grow old Sogeter! ing Corporation, Oil City, Pa.