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‘} « aieither see nor know either suitor, a An Independent Newspaper f THE STATE'S OLDEST’ NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as Second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. ine Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.. Pe outside Bismarck)..........-++ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...cececescsscessesceee 6 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three YEATS ....eeeeeeseeeee seeseeee + 250 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .........eee+ 151 Weekly by mail in Canada, per a Siseesicess seeees ‘ Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news-) paper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. State and County wspaper) (Official Cit; Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) a | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON) Ousting of Judge Jean Norris) of the law, as it may be. New York City tried the experiment of appointing a woman as magistrate | in the belief that her knowledge of | the problems of the gentler sex would temper justice with mercy. The | quality of mercy evidently was badly strained or something, for she hi high office and) Wha! isl Ae eR aie 'These men were rich, had powerful political connections, and the best! shorn of judicial robes. It is not necessary to get cynical | or draw any moral from the incident. \e ‘This editorial desires to do none of} these two things. Failure of Jean Norris does not mean that women cannot administer justice. New York picked the wrong woman; one tem- peramentally unfit for the job, A little authority went to her head and steeled her heart against litigants, whom she brow-beat and mistreated. The woman took her task too hard. She may have striven to shatter the popular fallacy. that women in such positions are too easy, too soft- hearted and allow sob tactics to turn reason and warp judgment. Judge Jean Norris began to dispel such an impression as rank heresy with an] iron hand and was making the old} ladies of French Revolution fame look | like mealy mouthed sentimentalists | when a higher authority checked her cateer. | Her removal, however, dees hit i. popular fallacy. That is that even though women have the vote, it does | , not follow per se that there should | 5, be women in office. Too many ad-! }ei i votates of women’s rights go to the| oa. ang begap reduction of her | extreme of urging appointment of women, whether qualified or not.) ‘The essential thing is that since suf- si pee and women: Dave about sought, through one subterfuge or the same kind of political reactions |. nother, to delay the day of reckon- and the net results have not been), changed by the woman vote. Women | apply about the same rules to the po- litical game as men and play it in about the same way. t! Jean Norris’ failure as a magistrate is merely an incident. Her choice was | unfortunate in the first instance. One ponders if her character had House type whether she would not have succeeded? It is a matter of record too that practically all victims of Judge Nor- ris’ intemperate severity were women. | ¢; Girls were placed on trial without the | ¢ benefit of counsel or being told their constitutional rights. Her failure is summed up in the investigator's find- ings: “Severity, unjudicial conduct} and callous disregard of the rights of defendants in the Women’s Court.” ra No Color Line in Court | Georgia’s Court of Appeals, in a} recent decision involving a bottling company which had been sued for) damages for alleged injuries received) from particles of glass in a bottled drink, discusses cclor in court. In directing a new trial, the court dia 50 because the plaintiff sought to show that the women employed by the defendant company were negroes merely by comment. The negroes were not called as witnesses. This comment upset an otherwise suffi- cient finding, in the eyes of the court. Says the court: “The law will not presume that be- cause a person is a member of one race or another race, he is competent or incompetent. Whether a person, upon whom a duty is imposed by law 4s a Caucasian, or an African, a Chinaman, or Japanese, or an Indian, is immaterial. The law takes no care as to color. The law knows no color; indeed, it is color blind. The goddess of justice is represented with bandaged eyes in order that she may ab she holds the scales of justice with ;@m even and impartial hand.” i of course, is the theory of The Bismarck Tribune Published by The Bismarck Tribune | politics. _ |Exchequer, financial wizard who not “million.” Sing! as |mcexied Bank of United States, proves t fearless prosecutors can do,| ments, it’s a pity congress can't have | Something like an oratorium, |'Tombs and, after the usual delay in- jfurnished the temptation to loot the; bank deposits by illegal and viciously criminal loans. Hundreds of deposit- ors who had lost their money and were without employment gathered to his and execrate the men convicted lof betrayal of trust. | dollars. | | can Republic while appreciative of th declaration, but none was reported. manner in which the British Empire her history. | Hoover offer. a must bicker over the terms. : where to call a special session of the | been more of the Jane Adams of Hull) North Dakota legislature to cope with drought conditions, it should be dis- American Red Cross can deal with in- dividual cases and there 1s still fed- diet and affect the Ghandi loin | The Cure for Prison Mutinies) Quick to Apply the Principle Labor party leaders of England were not slow to apply President Hoover's scheme of a war debt mor- atorium to the British dominions. It was wise economics as well as good Stanley Baldwin, leader of the Conservative opposition, and David Lloyd George both endorsed the | Promptness with which the Labor |government approved the Hoover plan, and its application to the do- minions was just 4 logical develop- jment. The dominions have not | asked for it. It is just a spontane- }ous act and marks another and very important milestone in the career of |Philip Snowden, Chancellor of the |so long ago disturbed the placidity and curbed the cupldity of certain 'French statesmen and came home |with considerable glory and substan- | tial cash for the British Empire. |; Snowden’s action doubtless will aid |in composing conditions in certain parts of the dominion where the Labor party is threatened by unrest and rebellion. Especially is this true of India and other dominions where the tax problems are acute and the financing of governmental obliga- jtions has been a hard task. In some portions of the dominion the har.- dling of internal finances has been censored by the mother country. The moratorium affecting the dominions and India will relieve the pressure and give time for important readjust- ments, | You Can’t Jail a Million Dollars} We used to hear a lot about rich men escaping the strong or weak arm ‘THIS FLYING BUSINESS 1S GETTING TOBE Just B ONE THING AFTER, lye But recent developments indicate that prosecut-/ ing officials in some instances at least are about to or have actually jailed a ° | Marcus and| late la- conviction of executives of the Th If hey spent several hot nights in the ident to appeals, doubtless will serve som three to six years at Sing Sing. Speculation in the stock market Yes, it is possible to jail a million) B Won’t Delay Payment Gen. Jan Smuts of the South Afri mother country’s offer to delay war debt payments, asserts that South) Africa will carry on. He probably | added the English “cheerio” to his| There can be no criticism of the ackled the in sturdy Brit tarted at once to put its house in e of war obligations. h style, the Empire | taggering public debt, the greatest in| Other nations able to pay have} Even now France complicates s by taking issue with the The French, highly ocal as usual, commend the spirit of he war debt moratorium but they If there is any serious intent any- ouraged. County boards and the ral aid that can be used without re- ourse to extra sessions. | i | Hot weather suggestion: Restricted | loth. i Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. (Minneapolis Tribune) | The notion that a new type of; penitentiary providing more adequate| inmate facilities is the answer to prison mutinies and riots of the past few years leaves us frankly skeptical| even when advanced by so eminent) @ penologist as Sanford Bates, fed. eral director of prisons, who ad dressed a gathering of social worke: in Minneapolis recently. Whatevel they have professed to want in the) way of pleasanter prison accommo- dations, the fact remains that the toughs and incorrigibles and despera- does who have been the ringleaders in these mutinies were seeking noth- ing more mysterious than their lib- erty, and that prison conditions, in the last analysis, were simply the excuse for seeking it. If wretched food or miserable quarters drive prisoners to mutiny, one mght reasonably suppose that the ry Onur Ey You can't blame the man who mar- ried the girl he met at the beach for calling the place a sand trap. ee a moratorium delays debt pay- * * * The proper method of prune cul- egal counsel money could buy, but/ture is being shown in a government cuff, observes the office sage, usually has something more up his sleeve. * on its high officers. eral reduction, as it were, that he will push a perambulator film. Makeup men will instinetly!around the ; eradicate the wrinkles. if rn esying ‘teed for the that there is a crying need for the feat. xe * The trouble with young men who yearn to be in other people’s shoes is that they are not so anxious to fol- low in their footsteps. * * * A man is being sued for divorce be- cause he put pepper in his wife's Powder. And did she get red! 3 (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) * * A man who writes things on his * * The Spanish army is cutting down Making a Gen- * * * The London man who announces BEGIN HERE TODAY adiANE BARRETT, 18 and beau. | goes to dinner with MOLLY ading policeman in chai ple: hs summer theater aponsores wealthy MRS, EB ™ oMce duties wi MURIEL LADD, “= soclety Git Shane McDermid tell ia relleved, Linne t her at t name fs VAN ROBARD. Mra, Cleespnugh asi Jet Liane atay with he: NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER V I IANE stood in the wings. Her 4 mother was just coming off the stage, rather triumphant after her bout with those impudent lines from Congreve, The second act was nearly over. ‘There was only a bare chance that some latecomer might arrive, de- manding tickets. Liane crept through the darkened house to the tune of well-bred laughter from the subscribers as the bon mots wet tossed over the footlights, lobby with its modernistic zigzags of silver on a slate-blue background, its astonishing mural showing Circe among her swine, made her catch her breath as usual. It was such a bold riot of color and design. She took her place demurely behind the gilded bars and fell to sorting stubs with an idle hand. Liane was in a dream, remembering the party of the night before, Van Robard bend- ing over her hand. His dark eyes + + » full on hers, eee SHE was interrupted in her rey- *" erie by a soft voice at the win- dow. Liane looked up to see a strange man standing there, regai ing her fixedly. A lean man with a soft gray hat pulled well down over his eyes. ‘oo late for the fun?” he asked, “I really don’t think it would be worth your while coming in so late,” Liane told him. “How about tickets for tomorrow night?” “T've come all the way from town, To do a review for The Sphere,” the lean man amplified. “Give me one in the rear, there's a good girl. I can get some of it, anyway.” “You have credentials?” Liane asked, grown up and important. The lean young man looked faintly amused. He pulled from his pocket a soiled and battered police card which gave his name as Charles Desmond. * “All right, Mr. Desmond.” Liane punched a blue ticket with due so- lemnity and handed it to him. Then she locked up the cage, opened the front door cautiously and showed him to a seat. Muriel was off duty See so Liane was doubling for “a “Thanks.” The young man set- tled down in a lazy posture. As Aane fled back she had an impres- sion of long legs, a shabby gray suit which somehow suited the) rangy figure, the scent of Turkish cigarets. “Fresh, “but rather nice,” she commented to herself. Too bad Muriel had missed him. Muriel professed to a “yen” for newspaper men, thought them “so frightfully romantic.” Well, maybe they were. Liane didn’t know much about them. She went to the screen doors and looked out into the sweet-scented night. It was infinitely dark. Only @ faint powdering of far-off stars hinted of a sky arching that black velvet darkness. What a night! As she stood there Liane heard a faint whisth a et describe an arc in the dimness of the circular drive before the theater. “Hello, there,” called a gay voice, She peered out. “Oh, it’s you, Muriel?” She was conscious of a vague feeling of disappointment. Whom she had been expecting she couldn’t have said.- The other girl came out of the darkness with a rush and a swirl, bringing with her the faint, sweet odor of jasmine. She was all in white, white taffeta frock swirling around her ankles, creamy white velvet wrap, pearls at her throat, a sparkle of crystal at her small, high-arched white slippers. Dazzling Liane thought her, as she stood there. She was tentously, “I’m going in to sit with him. Wait! Who's here tonight? The Wakenings or the Bairds or the Stapletons?” Liane wrinkled her brows. “Let's see? No, none of those. But your cousins, Grace and Sylvia Masters, are. down in B.” “Oh, hell, I don’t want to be seen,” muttered Muriel, rebellious- ly. “Those old scarecrows will be sure to run to mother the instant| I she arrives. But I've got to see him. Look, you romp in and tell him I'll wait in the car. Down at the end of the drive. Tell him to leave early and we'}l break away. Or no, you can’t say all that. The whole gang will stop watching the show and listen in. Give me some paper and I'll write him a note.” Murlel’s fingers shook a little as she wrote, “My friend for life,” she told Liane, dramatically, handing her the missive, e Desmond cocked a humorous eye at the tall girl who bent over his shoulder with the folded “Thanks,” the deep. voice said laconically and several dowagers turned to glare as Liane slid out. and down, her taffeta skirts crack- Ming. She turned to‘atare at Liane, “Thanks,” she said. “I'd have died if I’d missed that message tonight, panting, a little, as if she had been| Haven't seen him since Wednes- running. day.” “You didn’t expect me, I know,”|..Then she threw back her head she sa{d, smiling. “But I just had| and laughed soundlessly at Liane’s to come. Tell me—did Chuck stop| amazed look. “Yes, I'm absolutely by yet?” ; head over heels with the young’ “Chuck?” man,” she explained. “Don't be a “Ob, heavenly day!” Muriel evi-| goof. He's the most absolutely denced impatience. “Chuck Des-| priceless lamb. Oh, you should hear mond from The Sphere. Grimes| him talk! It’s too marvelous, told me when I got in from grand- mother’s that he'd phoned he was on his way. I'm iad to see him.| me at tea at the Colony last winter Where is he” with him, wanted to know who his| gan, on a note of faint protest. Re i Ly grandfather was, all that rot.| sentment colored her tone, Smiling MURIEL’ eves were starry. Her) Chuck just laughed in her face.|@ little grimly, the mam in the young bosom heaved with ex-| Treated her rough. She forbade me| driver's seat halt turned to look at cltement. Liane thought she had|to see him again. Forbade! How’s| her. never seen her look £0 lovely, that for a laugh? IfI had my hands/ “Don't you, sweet?” -he said, soft- ‘I put bim in 8-1, on the left,” she said automatically. “Now, look,” began Muriel por- “Muriel’s fingers shook a little as she wrote.” ye ‘ dozens of girls after him. Too dev astating!” sive him? Why, my dear, he’s abso- lutely a knockout, a smoothy. I'm 80 afraid someone will run off with him before I have a chance that the door, threw away the halt- smoked cigaret and began meticu- lously to redden her fuchsia-colored mouth, me,” she cautioned as she tripped down the steps, She ‘felt curiously drab in her last year’s blue crepe, a very Cinderella mulling over the embers, How rich and lovely and full of life Muriel seemed. Liane door open and the lean young man flash past. She must have been sit- slip,| ting there five minutes when she was startled by the appearance of Van Robard, hatless, » Muriel was strolling restlessly up | lessly. paused to Don Knowles, the company man- * ager. Knowles smiled at her humor- ously, knowingly. “You get along with your boy friend,” he said, “I'll finish here.” ‘wanted to know as she ran, stum- bling in the dark, beside Van Ro bard on the way to his car. Rewspaper chap,” Van growled, slip- Of| ping the motor into gear, Liane’s heart turned sick with pain and Jealousy. “I don’t understand—”" she be on that money grandfather left mej ly. “Don't you even want to belp Me find the little New York, June 30.—From a phys- ical standpoint, Hell’s Kitchen ap- pears as depressingly ramshackle es ever. Its tenements present the same uninviting appearance. But its repu- tation as an unsavory and unsafe neighborhood has been fairly well erased during the past five years. An almost complete turnover in Population has been partially respon- sible. And an army of Irish cops, who were just a little bit tougher than any of the gang-kids of the “kitchen,” took a lot of “playfulness” out of many of the harder mugs. The newcomers to the district make up a vast colony of Poles and Greeks, pee“sful folk who work hard and live th:@.jly. It was this change in pop- ulation that brouglit also a push-cart belt that is now second only to the historic East Side curbstone market. The famous old fighting Irish-Amer- foan stock has moved on to other sec- tions. Those left behind have changed with the times. Even in its most terrifying days, “the kitchen” knew no such rack- eteering and gansterism as exist to- day. The Irishers may have liked their brawls and their youngsters ‘/may have been as tough citizens as could be found in Manhattan but the fear they inspired was quite different from that caused by the cowardly gun-tactics of the moment. About 12 years ago, a big film con- cern found if convenient to locate a large plant in the very heart of “the kitchen.” For years, employes who were detained by night work left only in a body, and frequently with police protection. When George McLaughlin became By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association, Most of the deaths due to the in- halation of exhaust gas from auto- mobiles occur in the winter when men attempt to work under cars in closed garages. Cases occur also, however, in other periods of the year, Particularly among people who work constantly in the automobile indus- try. In order to prevent such deaths and in order to aid as much as pos- sible those who are exposed to car- bon monoxide poisoning, the New York State Department of Labor has issued ja bulletin on the subject with special warnings and advice. Here is a list of “things to do” for workers exposed to automobile exhaust gag: 1, Keep windows open-as much as possible, 2. Do not permit the engine to run and discharge exhaust gas directly into the air of the work-room. Every workroom should have a flexible tube which can be attached to the exhaust pipe, and through which the exhaust gas may then be carried out of doors. 8. Remember that carbon mon- oxide gas has no smell. You cannot, therefore, know if carbon monoxide gas is in the air by the smell of the room or by the cloudiness of the air. These are produced by burning oil and gasoline. 4. If you suffer with headaches report this fact at once so that the conditions of the air may be investi- gated, and proper ventilation estab- lished. a 5. If you do not feel well, see a doctor at once. You may be particu- larly sensitive to carbon monoxide gas, more so than others. In that case you had better change your oc- cupation. It is not safe for. you to @ police commissioner he sent so many fight-loving cops into the dis- trict that the gangsters grew tired of getting the worst of it. In the older gang days, this neigh- borhood was looked upon as a pretty good recruiting ground. The bullet- saturat “Legs” Diamond was & fairly typical graduate, since he started his career down by the Hell's Kitchen docks as a boy-thief who lifted packages from parked trucks. The dock section in the mid- Forties, which was a stamping ground “iy MABEL CELLIOTT cA \ for young gents such as Diamond, now has a mixed-German population. Little eating spots appeal to sailors drifting into port. The windows re- veal miniatures of famous ships and a seafaring atmosphere pervades the neighborhood. Pink-cheeked and clear-complexioned frauleins may be seen in garbs resembling those of Eu- ropean bar-maids. And there are those who will tell you that, if you know your way around these parts, you can come upon a good glass of beer. ** * And now comes word that things don’t travel fast enough in this town, so they're going to speed the elevat- ors ‘up a bit. The newer buildings will have “ex- press” elevators that travel 1200 feet per minute, which is 500 feet faster than they have gone before. The “speed limit” on elevators was set at 700 feet to the minute, but the in- creasing height of ‘uildings has caused @ change. ees And here’s one on Hollywood, which is fast becoming one of Manhattan’s favorite gag-towns. “Recently, it may be recalled, P. G. Wodehouse reported that he had been out in the Holly- woods for a year at a salary of $2,000 @ week, and couldn’t figure out what he had drawn it for, since the domos eee stemmed the tide momen- . “He seems—attractive,” “Attractive? Is that all you can can’t sleep nights.” She went to “Don’t tell" anyone you've seen Liane went back to her counting. searcely noticed the “Seen Muriel?” he cried breath- “Come along,” he cried as Liane « to turn over her cash bor “Whatever is it all about?” Liane “Muriel’s run away with that ivvilt” : (To Be Continués) had given him practically nothing to do. The producer of “Once in @ Life- time,” a travesty on this sort of cin- ema experience, wired Wodehouse urging that the funny writer appear in the play. “The sudden work might prove fatal,” Wodehouse wired back. GILBERT SWAN, (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.)+ Quotations oo —? All a fellow has to do is to swear once or twice and a reputation is fas- tened on him for life—Major Gen- eral Smedley D. Butler. *e * We are in vastly greater danger as @ people from New Yorkism than we are from Communism.—Joy Elme: Morgan. * ok ® Fifty million Frenchmen CAN be wrong.—Texas Guinan. * ee The legal profession is unpopular because it has to bear the mistakes of both the law-makers and the law- breakers—Sir Ernest Wild. * * * To have a distribution of the sec- ond-rate so universal that it elimi- nates the first-rate cannot be r Ie ed as wholly beneficial.—' lam Lyon Phelps, uf ** * ‘We are living in a time of great op- Portunity, of stimulating to the imagination —Walter 8. Gifford. ** * Divorces should not be obtained so easily. Matrimony is a serious busi- ness.—Peggy Hopkins Joyce, s* & Millionaires! They are becoming @s common as bags of popcorn.— Theodore Dreiser. s* & 5 ‘Women today are better educated than men.—Cosmo Hamilton. * s* ® The situation is daily improving; many men who have been idle are returning to work, and labor condi- tions in this beloved land of ours are bound to get better— Secretary of Labor Doak. * * People will do anything nowadays to save a few minutes, though what they mean to do with these few min- utes is another question—Dr. Cyril Norwood. Daily Health Service Precautions For Workers Exposed To Exhaust Gas be exposed to even very small amounts of the gas. The labor department: bulletin rec- ommended ‘these first aid measures: “If you get a headache, or feel faint, nervous or irritable, go out into the fresh air at once and stay there until you feel better. When you go out go out slowly and when you get out sit down quietly. Do not go for a walk. You may not have enough oxygen in your blood to permit you to take any additional exercise, or exert yourself in any way. Any added exertion at such a time is us and may be sufficient to cause you to become unconscious. Wrap up warmly, therefore, and sit down out, Of doors until you feel better. “Do not hurry around unnec- sarily at your work. The more exer- cise you take, the more carbon mon- oxide gas will get into your blood. “If one of your comrades faints, get him out into the fresh air at once. Put blankets under and over him, and surround him with hot water bottles or hot bricks. Keep him warm at all costs or he may develop pneumonia, Persons who become asphyxiated with carbon monoxide gas are peculiarly susceptible to pneumonia. Call up the gas company and an ambulafice at once. You must always call both of these, because ambulances are not equipped with resusciation apparatus, In the meantime the patient should be given artificial respiration, by what is known as the ‘Manual’ or ‘Schaefer’ method. Everyone working in industries where there is a possi- bility of exposure to carbon mon- oxide gas should be familiar with this method of resuscitation. It is very easily carried out. Anyone can learn how to do it. He may thus by his Lr efelaaa be able to save someone’s papering, are packed into this picture epitomizing the metropolitan press. Howard Hughes, who gave the pub- lic “Hell Angels,” “The Racket,” and other pictures, has made no conces- sions to. things that are “typically movie.” ,““The Front Page” is unadul- terated. It hasn’t been soft-soaped. And as such, newspaper men and women are the first to acclaim its veracity. Pat O’Brien, a newcomer to the screen, will long be remembered in the role of Hildy Johnson, the happy- go-lucky star reporter of a Chicago paper who tries to break away from his ruthless managing editor. Walter Burns, has become a_ resvectable writer of advertising copy. He yearns for marriage, a little home in the sub- urbs, an orderly life, and an existence where he doesn’t have to steal stom- achs from the coroners office to have them tested for poison. Sargent Is Named For Railroad Man Editor's Note: The following is one of a series of articles dealing with the history of North Da- kota counties. (By the Associated Press) Sargent—General H. E. Sargent, at ne time superintendent of the North- ern Pacific railroad, is honored in the naming of the county. He was active in promoting the welfare of the new county, which was created by legislative act, March 3, 1883. It was formed out of parts of Ransom county and the Sisseton and Wahpeton In- dian reservations. The first settler in the county is said to have been John Langies, located in Tewaukon town- ship in May, 1873. Forman is the county seat. Bismarck Trio On Nonpartisan Program Mrs. Alfred Dale, Bismarck, was to give the president's address at 1:30 Pp. m. Tuesday before the annual meeting of the Nonpartisan club board meeting at Spiritwood Lake. Miss Aldeth Ward and Alfred Dale, also of Bismarck, are among the speakers on Tuesday afternoon's pro- gram. Senator Lynn J. Frazier spoke at Monday night’s session. The meeting opened Monday morning. A. E. Thompson, Washburn; Congressman J. H, Sinclair and Senator Gerald P. Nye will be other speakers on the four-day program. Harvard Instructor Visits In Bismarck Ian Campbell, Harvard instructor of minerology, and son of Dugald Campbell, pioneer Emmons county rancher spent several days in Bis- marck last week visiting with friends. Mrs. Campbell is accompanying her husband on a transcontinental trip from Cambridge, Mass., to Eugene, Ore. They will visit Dugald Camp- bell, now a resident of Eugene. Tan Campbell has accepted a pro- fessorship of petrology at the Pasa- dena Institute of Technology. World Has Had Rain 1,500,000,000 Years Washington, June 30.—(#)—Geolo- gists believe rain has fallen on earth for at least a billion and a half years, says Dr. William Bowie of the U. 8. coast and Geodetic survey. The oldest sedimentary rocks, esti- mated to be a billion and a half years * old, could not nave been formed with- s* In a London drawing room one would no more talk about one’s stocks than about one's stomach.—James Truslow Adams. out running water to wash sediments from. land surfaces, he says. STICKERS ‘ ¥ y —— ie SR ORES ES eee a — py, «