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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 10, 1930 ap THE STATES O} (Established 1873) | es second clase mai) matter. i : i g z 5 Fy § ggge8 af gal i als exe 8 BE His (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (incorporated) CHIC. Mother’s Day Tomorrow is Mother’s day—the beautiful inspiration of Anna Jarvis, of Philadelphia, since she instituted it for herself adopted by the nation for general observance an- nually on May 11. Cnce in a while a woman goes forth to high conquest, Jed by voices that whisper of fame and laurels and far, glad things that wait for those who ride gallantly down the highways of the world. To the privileged few comes the clarion call, but to a myriad army an older, lovelier dream, soft as voices of little children at story-telling time, brings a challenge as simple as it is beautiful, It does not lead to a world where banners fly and bugles blow, but to a little home where gardens and chil- ren grow, where there are cookie jars to be filled, torn trousers to be mended, bruises to be bound, tears to be kissed away from trusting eyes, and laughter and sacri- fice and sympathy to be fostered in the brave eyes of little boys and the trusting eyes of little girls. Mother Goose and her fairy crew come back; knights who have been victorious on far crusades climb the gar- den wall to show the paths to children who are prepar- ing for the day when they, too, shall go forth to win an accolade. And all the while the one who opens the door to the glorious world of make-believe makes another pudding, re-trims an old hat, and buys a flowered ribbon or a new cap to surprise the child to whom she has given the shining vision. She teaches her children to sing through the twilight when the morrow is far away; she tells them that there is a land where dreams come true but only those who are faithful to the tryst of simple things will find it; and she repeats again and again that life is a gay adventure to } those who will wear the scarlet plume of valor, chivalry, | and loving kindness. To the mothers of the world: The old-fashioned mothers and the laughing young mothers, the mothers who have vanished down the winding streets of memory, and the widowed mothers who flung their heads against. the wind and went out to take a father’s place, coming home at dusk to be mothers again, the world offers trib- ute, sade. | cerity and an injustice. | It is hard to see how the senate can persist further , 4n heckling the president in this supreme court appoint- ment. The politics played by the upper chamber are more than ordinarily harmful it this instance. They tend to lower the sanctity of this high court with suspi- cion and to impair the prestige for probity which here- tofore has been the accepted impression of the nation _ toward the supreme bench. The court has been regard- ed as a body of jurists with minds detached from politi- cal and partisan bias, fulfilling its functions of consti- %utional interpretation in the spirit of exact and balanced solicitude for the intest and operation of the laws within | the mandate of the ration’s charter. Now the senate has $cen busy tearing at that impres- sion. It has by implication alleged that the supreme court is a body which presidents are not above packing in order that certain views which may be the subject of controversy, in spirit if not in letter, within the nation may be buttressed by a set-up tribunal. But, as the Minneapolis Journal observes, would a court packed by Biased senators be any better than a court packed by a biased president? That is what the rejection of Judge “Parker implies. The senators who voted against him id s0 because his views did not coincide with theirs on | matters on which théfe ls "a division ‘of opinion in the -), nation, ‘It is like an echo of this deception that Senator Mor- | Program ris Sheppard, of Texas, promptly invokes that line of} 10. argument against Nominee Roberts. He raises the wet- (ary issue by asserting that Roberts is wet and he wants him rejected for that reason, as though the alleged wet- {Rees were in conflict with the prevailing opinion of the ‘electorate—whose attitude, if it is to be brought up in |the arguments over the nomination might well be as- mere in line with facts, from the evidence of the being taken now on that question. This, then, again |)4s the untenable position taken in the Parker case, where F grounds for prejudging the nominee ‘om labor case circuit court ruling in line with supreme Precedent and comments relating to the color neither being in line with senate opinion bring the nominee defeat by the votes. . is \ The senate outcome in the Parker case would destroy the supreme court, in fact, instead of liberalizing it. If only judges of the same mind as the senate are to be al- The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper LDESI NEWSP! lowed on its bench, what becomes of the court except that it is turned into a supine and pliant adjunct of the . An Ideal legislative branch? in the face of the clear-cut purpose oa Mo er’s Day and plan of the founders that it should be a separate and distinctly independent branch of the national gov- ! ernment, coordinate with those of legislation and execu- q tive administration. The whole scheme and tradition of the federal government thus would be toppled if the} . if -_ 4 ref x dictum of the senate majority—of two, be it noted—Is to| ° Hf F f ad want On 70 ere ey 4 Prevail. ¢ Wag F ENCLOSE Td srr ENVELOPE FOR REPLY | The senate perverts its function of consent in the mat- i = WC. COV MEALS SEUUCE LOS AMOMLES- CAL. ter of nations if it insists on carrying this attitude Whee caiee fe STUDY BODILY CHEMISTRY _ not because one has lived in # certain further, as Senator Sheppard already has given notice Chemistry has made some wonder-| place but because one has lived in a it should. There is a remedy. The electorate should see ful strides within recent years, but| certain way. The restoration of health that the upper chamber is “packed” by it with men who even yet chemists are unable will deai sincerely with their duty. A great many sena- of the chemical tors seem not to be in accord with their people at home and certainly not in accord with the traditions which gave this nation shape politically, socially and industri- ally. rH gSeEaell rete Peter aL fii EE i eeltice Miracles of the Air For an example of the miracles which modern inven- tion can work, we commend to you an event that took i iy i SEs Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. AGO NEW YORE It does not matter so much if a woman comes to the ending of the way with trumpet songs in the dusk, stars | in the packet of visions that she has fulfilled, and laurel leaves on her hair. If the crown of mother love is not there, she has missed the happiest pth on the long cru- The Senate Trumped in a Misplay It is refreshing to note the president's course in meet- | Ing the politics of the senate upon the appointment of a supreme court justice to fill the vacancy caused by the @incere. It has required so much explanation from the opponents of this nomination that the arguments against Judge Parker seem more like an apology for ap insin- President Hoover accepted the situation that develop- ed with the rejection of Judge Parker with the calmness and control of @ sincere, earnest and resourceful man. Even more so he revealed this spirit in coming back at | 1 ‘the senate with his second nominee. It was like playing a trump card to name Owen J. Roberts for the post after Judge Parker had been turned down. The senators who opposed Parker had camouflaged their stand with speci- |. tications as to what should be the social views of a su- Breme court justice, and the president gave them a man + of that type, his attitude toward human rights as well; an | as what he must feel on the matter of property rights’ © both embodied in his record as special prosecutor in the {Teapot Dome and Elk Hills oil scandal cases of the gov- i place recently during the army-navy “war games” at San Francisco. An army airplane, circling over the Golden Gate, spotted two “enemy” submarines coming in toward that famous entrance to San Francisco's harbor. e228 its ‘ dei 8 One of the observers in the airplane hastily drew a Power has bal one bg cae sketch map of the position of the two submarines. He pres eae} some be handed the map to a radio engineer who was seated in me would the plane. This man inserted the paper in a little cylin- ot would| Each year the drical machine. Just 47 seconds later a complete re- they spend more than i i Production of the map was transcribed on & receiving apparatus at an army airport, 75 miles away. Instantly @ fleet of bombers took off to go out and “destroy” the invading submarines. ‘There is an uncanny quality to that miracle that is fairly staggering. Imagine it: A man seated in an air- g F 2s8 cere ACh Lt i ge hi i plane a thousand or more feet above the earth draws a animals. laboratories to picture, which is reproduced almost simultaneously on Health atter of al-| ease, ris to the ground 75 miles away ne beets a eA of aku oie cotte cures. I hope to it and sink two vessels w! are even - Mice Its beered at sche of the water! ernment at Washington, where he/genthaler’s invention it could be done People | tional You could not go much farther in performing the im- Today Is the [Kept in order clocks and electric bells|by machine, enabling one man to do the i the work of five ordinary printers. possible. 5583 e i Anniversary 0! || throughout the various government lize that this particu- f buildings. Four years later he re-| Instead of setting type, the machine It is a little bit disturbing to real pal moved to Balti to kK sets the mold f ai lar miracle was devised for the purpose of taking human ee oe typesetting acted hte parts ping them rod bi? as fs. ‘3 the lives and destroying property. Sometimes it seems as if] On peay 10, 1854, Ottmar Mergen- experiences involving wasted fortunes| operator touches the keys, until the mankind's inventive faculties work best only when some-|thejer, inventor of the typesetting| and the severest kind of toll, Morgen-|line is completed, when the moving one is preparing to wipe some of his fellow mortals off machine bearing his name, was born|thaler finally invented the ingenious|of @ lever forces molten type metal Unotype machine. against the matrices and casts 2 solid the face of the earth. sisi ueeniike ee Cer Before this time typsetting was|line. The molds distribute themselves Yet there is a bright ee Bs. oe At 18 he came to the United States/done by hand, just as it had been!automatically and are ready to be|work or while Shortly after causing the “destruction” of the submer- ang entered the employ of the gov-idone for 400 years. But. with Mer-|used again when the next line is set, Climate. If sickness ines, these two airmen, still circling high in the air, saw u | #¢ Husband g Hunter trol,. saw its pilot leap into the air with a parachute to inictes that this amaing device for making detruc- ©1950 &Y NEA ‘SERVICE INC. RUTH DEWEY i i E sf fee cation of the accident could be made known and aid rushed to the spot at once. This stunt was a sort of afterthought, of course; yet it save his life. Promptly they dashed off another sketch and transmitted it to headquarters, so that the exact lo- tion certain can also be used for more humanitarian pur- BEGIN HERE TODAY Cal ae SPS Poses. NATALIE CONVERSE, ivies to gone, Gladys and George left. Alone Tn that respect, an optimist can find the whole busi semts her when ether women a6- with Natalle, Alan weakened, and ness symbolic, if he wants to. ye i I gn gave her a béseeching look tnat ‘The human brain is capable of performing genuine {All te the Rome of BERNADINE might have brought them together miracles. It can take liberties with time and space that [ocr il cee tl Self —— at enealnrneea fe would have seemed wildly incredible a few years ago. pm Mi mee ag re ‘West- Me vagal ce been ol : 7 Just at present many of these devices are used, not to = meme Proragry blagnm Ratan She said good night briefly, and serve humanity but to destroy it. Some day, however, {hat be give up the trekerass hurried up the stairs. He was in- we shall have sense enough—let’s hopg—to put them to be ag Ae ye Remy dignant and disgusted. the widew of a war buddy whe more constructive uses. : Natalie was down to breakfast. ‘By morning she was always half way prepared to sue for pardon. But her tongue invariably. betrayed her heart. Alan never guessed the longing to restore their happiness and understanding that lay bebind her bitterness. This morning it was the same. Everything she said was caustic. Alan departed for the office with a chip on his shoulder. His news paper took his mind off his do- mestic trouble on the train, and as | Editoria] Comment | Phelan Called for Service (Hettinger County Herald, New England) ges sie 3, it #2 the man least interested in the outcome of the request of Slope service clubs that C. J. Phelan of Bowman be ted a member of the state highway Mr, Phelan has never aspired to i H 3 i | He has never sought. public office, but he has never soon as he reached his office, and ° SMMembery of service clubs all over the Slope distrct sent for his secretary, he felt even || Quotations | fellows all over the state ‘better. need panera ‘WEST had been with him a year—much longer than fel it n strange request bat when hb Thea be sot home Natalie was NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY any other secretary had stayed. PTER Greadiess defiance into ire iad Phillips was not beautitul. Netalle tremulous —menen ~ 2. it makes H= better judgment was caution- made no trouble for her. In ‘fact, a pega self-denial, and ing Natalie to hold back her she encouraged Alan to keep her ives even to hard vanity the glance ‘when in the beginning he had com- plained Phillipa was-not efficient. “Give her s chance,” Natalie pad said; “she may improve.” eaustic comment upon Alan’s visit to Bernadine Lamont, but it lost to her ungovernable jealousy. “I hope you were able to be of And indeed had. She hadn't ee service to. Mrs, Lamont,” she said been in Alan's employ more than “One mother is & bun- P Raa two weeks before she discovéred bis dred i seridirrae Aine Orie statin she wite was furiously jealous. And ae eee: ier cup of coffee she offered bim, “end then she learned it was Natalie's * that you won't bave to make an- other call tonight.” custom to threaten to leave him. Her work began to improve. E S85 af le ili ae She did not to turn the or That's “Why for tonight?” Alan tn- Phillipa West had been with Alan Converse a year. Kher pecsetay Si arntiep en ate “notin tate eee arengr 08 | Bh it would help her to avold irritating Ups and hearts of me i “Because the Wynnes are coming | home was nothing to shout hallelu- sate Paryaiie of edie rg by nis a man whose home life was any- ia fer bridge.” Natalie explained. | Jab over. thing but peaceful. She concen- Aiea sbrunpe Heed dg |e pas atthe fot ofc sara] ats Gee, made true tpn he ce dtp oe but not the Wynnes. However, they | ¥8en the radio song reminded bim | nis office thereafter. elimination of all else, until the played contract acceptably, and he|°t Bernadine, He turned ang went| Before he was ready to go down,|Work Was eal for Ber forgave them much on that accpunt,|t the telephone Nellie's voice/be heard Natalie come up and ar et ee poe me mone ppghetagh pee dgyea Para is that Bernadine | !!e hstd benieaien ot one sf these ae se ae cL Doodle to all over th evenings w! e 2, chairs,” he peor “He teats was better, “She acts like she's) Ap he expected, the waitress told) And she was getting prettier. hairs like that rabbit ermi: got no more troubles,” the girl con-| him Mrs. Converse bad a slight|Untfailing devotion to the grooming Aunt Emme gave you." | ded, ané Alan could hear the ring|eadache, and was having a tray/of her person was bringing ber the Natalie rao yea oe Than | eee nnate ie her voice, Ma eee Nutalle most hor for the arst time you will be here?” phy reseed. om | "How's the little boy, Bobby?” he| she did not come down uni! the|on this morning when she entered as Le inguired immeasurably relieved. Wynnes arrived. Then she was/|Alan’s private office with demure , Alen frowned. “As farasl know,| Robby, he was told, had been eak-|civil to Alem, but as cold as ice.|grace and perfect bob she would Heian aaa payee a ing for him; wanted to know when peat Meat Alan rose Fadl ia Bee have beeh so complacent about of. plunteg him down, se tig|be was coming to pay that prom-|?eq ganna! underwear to keep off| But Natalle had pigeon-holed her thunder, be esked ised visit. the chill. long ago as harmless, and nothing under, he asked himself, a6 bel ~relt nim very soon,” Alan eald, eee had happened to draw her atten- hastily donned bis hat and coat for plessed, and bung up to find Natalie| RUT Alen knew the flame wasjtion to Phillipa anew. When she the street, coyld she expect him to Dractieally at his shoulder. ready to burst through the ice|came to th on one of her control the unexpected? She lifted her eyebrows 4 lat any moment. He walked lightly | frequent visits, ipa somehow He was teo much angoyed with and|and spoke softly for the rest of the| faded into the background as much ete fete | Uanved 08 Into the living room. But evening. ‘8s possible, and remained there ane Temember, betore be left not before Alan bad caught an ex-| Gladys tried to engage him in a|Uatil she left. is e house, that he had intended tele-| préasion ip the tightness of her|mild flirtation when they went out| | Also, on oe. Ealuipe. het phoning Bernsdine’s residence to] tine that ‘warned him this would|{o the pantry to mix some drinks, |FuMled the perfect bob uabecom te .ask how she-was. Oh well, he'd 46 be no good time to attem, to inter. |2% they chose to do while Natalie ie it at the office, But at the office he 9 ot and George Wynne fooled away der off her nose until it shone. est her in Bobby Lamont’s futvre. | their ‘with a trick top, but he|&® old house which grows shabby was time was bestegd by business callérs,| Natalie, coming out of her room absent-minded, unresponsive. | Without the occupants’ knowledge, and again forgot. after an hour of making her beauty | Gladys gave it up. She wasn't Phillipa had grown more attractive It was the same at lunch. He) perfect, for Alan's sake, had heard |*rious*anyway. panetiotd.:. oe a went to bis club and talked market./nim inquiring about Bernadine. to ‘guests| But it was not ‘without effect. Bat at home he thought of it again. | siowiy and quietiy, she had slipped |at least did Justice to the care that|Alan gave her a welcoming smile, Someone was singing the song that |down the stairs, ashamed of her|had gone into the Preparation of which, had he thought of it at all, es. . a Ea # BS g aE iE at i i a Hl EF z i z : i BE li i i : Es i : : ‘ Bernadine had plugged in her ni self for eavesdropping, yet excusing tiny open-faced he would have fancied was the club. He whs sick of it trins|it'om the ground thet abe was not Natalie, watching fat Genes sume Kind 9€ sasile he'd hare wert time you tuned im you got it. hiding aut of sight to do it, or pry-| Wynne devour them greedily, won-| to welcome anything a ing. Alan could see her simply by | dered been worth while| Well, that was welcome! o 08 by | dered if it had been worth wile | she'd been off the day before, and 1 eee was conscious that his en-|science. Alan ate one or two, without prats-|things didn’t go well without her. tire day bad seemed somebow| But he did not, and the fact fur-|ingthem. And Natalie remembered He asked, and she told him that shadowed, heavy, but: te hede’t|tber inflamed Natalie, She thought|how he bad complimented her for | she'd had a splendid time. sought the reason for it he was too much absorbed with bis|ber skill and originality when she| “That's fine,” he said, and added interest in Bernadine to be aware|preparéa them for him before they | Suddenly: “Miss West, do you know One thing. be knéw when be/of anything extraneous, re-|were married. And for @ short |Soytbing about children?” epened the front door—coming| quired all the self-possession she (To \Be Continued) Men are Uke puppies; you have to are ees along or they'll get ‘ \ ert Osom g429ae PYBSWS Fss Qmer>eeose Pues ~ saseauss Pesy eroue= P= | 4 2g 8 @O SG@oSer 2w2@®use32 srvrasne