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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2U, 1934 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE (Established 1873) Ncube adhe , Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and ‘entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 98 second class mail matter. j GEORGE D. MANN | President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Avance Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...sesesesesesecessees 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years .... ‘Weekly by m: tside of North Dakota, per year ........0... 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per 0 YOAT caccaccceccvccssceeveveres 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 newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Lawyer Owes a Duty to All Society ‘What does it take to make a good Jawyer? Probably there are a lot of answers to that question, Earle W. Evans of Wichita, Kan., president of the American Bar association, sup- plied one version in a recent speech before Harvard Law School students. Here is the program he suggested for budding lawyers: Make speeches which show that you know the law; gotochurch so that the “best citizens” will see you; take part in public affairs; join the Cham- ber of Commerce and a service organ- ization; get known as a public-spirit- ed citizen; be a man of strong con- victions; engage in bill collecting, as that’s a good way to make contacts; join bar associations; get a thorough formulated by Koch 1. The 3. numbers and be such a manritr as to explain the lesions of the disease. 4. The organism should be ob- tained from the vidual and propagated in culture outside of 5. Inoculation of a susceptible animal with a pure culture of the organism obtained by successive transplantations from the smallest particle of matter original diseased individual should Produce the same 6. inoculated animal. Seldom is it necessary to fulfill all) of these rules to the letter in order to be reasonably sure a given germ is) the cause of a given disease, but any| reference to the cause of a disease must at least satis- fy the first two requirements if it is to have any standing in court. University savants and eminent medical prestidigitators who periodi- cally elucidate the nature, cause, pre- one bar a day. vention and cure of the claims set up in found in the bodies of animals (or Persons) having the disease. 2, It should be found in that disease and no other. It should occur A pure culture of the organ- ism should be obtained from this By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink, No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ‘in the scramble for front page men- So we can assure those who record guessing current history that there is darn ing the cause of “the common cold” rational] alive @ bona fide specimen of “the rules! Yes, I know—any fool can enlight- | character. There is no such in such distributed in common cold.” |ave such an | illness, he lets you drift along with your trick diagnosis. He'll find out tomorrow or next week maybe what really ails you. indi- | pure diseased the body. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS They Are in a Huddle From ‘what you say of quacks I be- gin to think I have been victimized by association. I paid them $ $ $ $ for six weeks treatment and am now worse . . . my trouble seems taken from the disease. tobe... (WL. J) Answer—The “trouble” you mention is a normal condition in healthy warn you nitwits that reputable phy- sicians or specialists practice under their own names, and never under {such impersonal aliases as “associa- tion,” “clinic,” “combined specialists” jand the like. Chocolate Do you advise this? “common Is there any danger of eating too cold” know their public. They naive- much chocolate? (P. W.) ly imply that any fool knows what a) Answer—A “bar” is a variable quan- ‘common cold is, and leave it at that. |tity. Such chocolate yields perhaps However, no one has sufficient sci- /200 calories to the ounce. entific assurance to For phy- define such an sically active young people it is oke. entity or malady. The boys who get |For sedentary folk it is not so good. the fine front page publicity in con-|In my opinion bar chocolate or milk nection with the periodic discovery of chocolate is as wholesome as is sugar, young men. How many times must I) T crave chocolate and eat at least) the cause of the common cold na- candy, honey, ice cream or any other turally prefer to keep the thing va- sweet. gue. The more elusive and intangi-| (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) FITIBICITY | and that the work incident thereto was done outside office hours. | “There is serious doubt whether the by law, but rather the more abbrevi- ated memo abstracts for which less Judge Holds Ward County Reg- | ces in this case it appears to the . \court that if there was any failure of ister of Deeds Was Moral- DR AW 5 g i, FINE register of deeds ever made any charge than that provided by law was duty in this case it was merely a tech- ly Guiltless knowledge of accounting, engineering, and chemistry. As a guide book for fledgling at- torneys, this is probably a very handy bit of advice. But to the lay- man it is rather remarkable for the things that it does not say. The modern lawyer often gets in a ‘very peculiar dilemma. His duty to his client, and to himself, can cut directly across his duty to society as a whole. He doesn't perform his functions in a vacuum, but in @ highly complex and delicately inte- grated society where his deeds can have effects that he neither desired nor foresaw. The lawyer, for instance, who spe- 1 keeping gangsters out of 3 eventually may, through no wish of his own, fill a role which is active- Jy anti-: The lawyer who advises great fi- nanciers how to evade income tax payments and sidestep government regulations designed to control the activities of high finance cdn become # man who does society much more harm than good. chattel abstracts as is contemplated jactually made. From all circumstan- nical one.” SWEAR WYNEKOOP JURORS Chicago, Feb. 20.—(#)—Two-thirds of the jury to decide the fate of Dr. Alice Lindsay Wynekoop in her second | trial for the death of her daughter-in- law, Rheta, was sworn in Tuesday. Minot, N. D., Feb. 20.—(#)—Declar- ing it appeared to him “if there was) any failure of duty, it was merely a technical one,” District Judge John C. Lowe Monday imposed a fine of $1 on Miss Nell P. Rose, Ward county registrar of deeds, who several weeks ago pleaded guilty to a charge of fail- ing to charge and account for official fees. In addition to the $1 fine Miss Rose Paid costs of the action amounting to $9.40. In a memorandum opinion, handed The lawyer who shows a stock spe- culator how he can get around the rules which cover stock exchange ac- tivities can become something little better than a parasite on society. This peculiar criss-crossing of the lawyer's public and private duties raise a complex problem which, so far, the legal profession hardly has attempted to solve. Advice to bud- ding lawyers—so the laymen would suppose—might properly touch on it ‘© little. Citizens First! One of the unlooked for by-prod- ucts of the CWA program seems to ‘be a new eagerness for American citi- zenship on the part of residents who ‘were born abroad. Records in a typical American in- down at the time of sentencing, Judge Lowe said “it appears that this charge grew out of a claim that the defend- ant, as register of deeds, had failed to turn in to the county treasurer money received for chattel abstracts. It seems to have been the custom for ™many years for registers of deeds of various counties of the state to make pencil] memos of chattel mortgages instead of formal chattel abstracts, that this work has not been generally considered part of official duties of the office, that money received from such memos was not turned in to the county treasurer, that the same prac- | tice was followed by this defendant! WHERE IS. 4 THE VALLEY OF How Many MILES DID LINDBERGH FLY ON HIS NON-STOP FLIGHT FROM “| WHEN WAS THE FIRST ENGLISH, BIBLE PRINTED? | Popular Actress HORIZONTAL UWho is the Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 And was born in—. @ustrial city recently show that the actress in the 17 Fourth note. demand for naturalization papers i: picture? 18 Senior. many times greater now than it is| Lean, ‘i a Seed eather scarf. ‘2 Blos red, Bee ice (he fast two Meeks! 140 beclond. 25 Manutfactures.. j in ruary, for instance, there were 16 Famous 27 Small oe than 300 applications for first Roman poet. depression. ‘papers; the ordinary monthly aver-} 17 Strong forti- 29 Observed. fge has been around 50. | fied places. 31 Drone bee. The reason for this, of course, is Hs To erase. 33 Stone ‘that men holding jobs under the Be SR HENTY implement. CWA have been threatened with loss} 23 Gender. abTclerram ‘of their work if they remain aliens.| 24’ Within, a eee ‘Hence the sudden rush to get under 25 Mother, 45 To put out of VERTICAL ae Gheacious peepar's wing, = oe d 5h Pa aey ice. Bae sole. plant. 6 28 Rhode Island 51 Gol vice. 2 To leave out. ‘ American citizenship has certain (abbr.). 52 Inlet of the 3 Guided, 44 Chill. very solid advantages, and the war] 29To undermine. Baltic Sea. 4 Bone. 46 And. on the depression seems to be mak- 30 To bow. 54 Browned bread. 5 Black. 47 Pshaw ing them more obvious than ever be- 32 Asp. 55 Sport. 6 To classify 48 Pilgrimage by fore, 34 Rounded 56 An adit. 7 Fruit. a Moslem to molding. 58 Poem. fear 8 Pound. Mecca, A 36 Pitcher. 59 Propelled by 9 Carmine. 49 On the sea. Noise That Is Unheard 37 Fairy. oars, 10 Day in a 50 Street. ‘One of the things the ordinary citi-| 38 Company. 60 She played the Roman month. 51 Rootstock. zen usually finds hard to understand} 39 Southeast. part of ; 11 Engine-room Hi yee prs a 40 Minor note. Ramona in the _ greaser eriform . is the habit some well-meaning folk) 41 Norwest. story by 12 She is famous 57 Myeelf. have of holding demonstrations be- fore the embassies or consulates of foreign powers. F The other day, for example, s siz- able throng of New Yorkers cluster- ed in the street before the Austrian consulate in New York to protest against the Austrian government's) use of violence in its struggle with' the Socialists. Now this may be among the worth- dest of worthy causes—but what: earthly good does a demonstration of this kind do? Could such a thing, conceivably, hhave"any effect on the decisions of the harassed government at Vienna? Could it help the beleaguered Social- ists behind their barricades in far- off Austria? Such demonstrations are common in all countries. But the fact that they happen often doesn't make them any easier to understand. ee een 43 Wing. in the ——. 59 All right. PeFel [6 |e FePs [lett Iii To bac |e bk NNE |o lb NZ 12] ML la LANNE [io [tr ZVAbd\i Sad EN Nal Aiea 2 Ned EN “E+ Ne Ne te at NS 1 aN. | te | TaN lola ls ir NV I a le Wola! alata) at KI TT weeny sneer Varnes “Satie inascny Spoon ome pe we GUESSING IS RIGHT (WRONG) IF | ble it is the greater leeway they have YOU GUESS IT’S A “COLD” In a review of the progress of sci-/ tion. ence in 1933 Ransom Sutton observed | that the doctors are still | about the cause of the common cold.|small chance of anybody really find- That is putting it mildly. In scientific medicine Koch's law is until somebody finds and brings back universally recognized as a test of the putative cause of a dis-' common cold.” ease. Briefly these are the : len me about this at almost any time. | organism should be /But I have quite lost hope of being} introduced to “the common cold” by) @ person of scientific attainment Or|second week in April, and begins | I Seek More Signers To Petition for Bill BLKS WILL PRESENT CIRCUS FOR CHARITY uled for Second Week in April for crippled children and other char- ity works of the organization, accord- ing to announcement Monday by | Walter W. Clark, secretary. The circus is ‘scheduled for the {April 2. It will be held in the World disease as “the| War Memorial building. If you imagine you; G. G. Gray, representative of the heaven only | American Fraternal circus is here this |knows what it will prove to be. Cer-|week making |tainly your doctor doesn’t; that’s why | with the group. He promises real en- final arrangements tertainment when he brings his 22-act circus to Bismarck. The performers are all professional circus people, who are waiting until summer to rejoin their regular shows, he said. According to Clark, J. L. Clifford, exalted ruler; W. E. Doty, general to take charge of the work. Rey. Vater Announces Midweek Sermon Topic Rev. Walter E. Vater, pastor of Mc- Cabe Methodist Episcopal church, has announced “Life's Handicaps” as the subject for the second Lenten medita- |tion service to be held from 7:30 to 8:30 o'clock Wednesday evening at the church auditorium. 3 Mrs. O. I. Devold will sing “Tarry With Me, O My Savior” by Shack- ley, with Miss Ruth Rowley playing her accompaniment on the pipe or- gan. Rev. Vater urges all members and friends of the church to attend this and other services in the series of Lenten meditations which will be ‘continued each Wednesday evening until Easter. AGAIN THIS SEASON Entertainment Features Sched- Bismarck chapter 1216 of B. P. O. {Elks will sponsor a circus again this jyear, the proceeds of which will go Washington, Feb. 20.—(>)—A drive to obtain signatures to a petition bringing the Frazier-Lemke farm re- lief bill out of committee was started ‘Tuesday by a group of supporters of the measure in both houses. The pe- |tition must be signed by 145 members to bring it before the house without committee action. ’ j_A letter inviting all senators and sTepresentatives interested in agricul- ture to discuss farm leigslation at a meeting Wednesday night was sent to |members of congress over the signa- jtures of Senators Thomas (Dem., Okla.), and Frazier (Rep., N, D.), and and Lemke (Rep., N. D.). The Frazier bill, which calls for re- ifinancing of farm mortgages at a low |rate of interest, and other farm legis- lation, will be discussed by John A. Simpson, president of the National | Farmers Union, Lemke said 95 signers already had been obtained. \Hospital Folk Will Meet in Bismarck Representatives of all North Da- kota hospitals will meet here Thurs- ‘day to discuss common problems, it sion will open at 2 p. m, in the committee chairman, and himself wili| World War Memorial building and! Everly Braaten, 4-year-old son of jappoint committees soon between 30 and 40 persons from all jparts of the state are expected to | Representatives Swank (Dem., Okla.),! |was announced Tuesday. The ses-| defeated the margin, 53 to 43. Officials for volleyball were Doro- June Middaugh. Monday night are Grape Nertz vs. Whizzers, Savages vs. Zippers and Krazy Kats vs. Eagles. In basketball, the Sportettes nosed out the Satans by 6 to5 and the White Sox defeated the Comets 12 to 8. Mrs. Mildred Fried Simle, di- rector of women’s athletics, and Betty Leach were officials for the games, Next week's games will see the Sportettes meeting the White Sox and the Satans meeting the Comets. Standings for volleyball and bas- ketball teams follow: Volleyball | Team Won Lost | Grape Nerts 3.00 Whizzers 2041 Savages . a ft Zippers . 1 2 | Krazy Kats i 3 | Eagles ... o 63 Basketball Mandan Child Dies At Local Hospital Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Bradten of Man- |dan died at a local hospital at 1 a. m. ee T Krazy Kats, 68 to 25, and the Savages | Eagles by a 20-point VERSATILE ARTIST thy Lighthizer, Irma Fern Logan and Pairings for next The NewDeal SINGS HERE FRIDAY Nelson Eddy, American Bari- tone, Comes Under Singers’ Guild Management - Senator Cutting Will Get Blessing of Democrats Jurney’s a Big Man... New Names Given The ambition of Nelson Eddy, Amer- pag ered eee Peck ‘stirs Ire of Cab- ican baritone, who will sing in Bis-7 inet Ohiefs, marek Friday evening for the second Soran of the Singers’ Guild Artist Series By RODNEY DUTCHER concert, is “to sing | eventually to (Tribune Washington Correspondent) every man, woman r= iad in Amer“! washington, Feb. 20.—The next Re- “Now that sounds prett: j- {Publican senator to receive a Demo- cal Dut it eelly Iola the [cratic blessing will be Senator Bron- singer who began his musical career /800 M. Cutting of New Mexico. in his home town of Philadelphia in| Cutting, ene of the outstanding 1922 and since then has risen to fame ives up for re-election this in opera, radio, concert and, more re-|year, is about to be endorsed by Sen- cently, movie appearances. The lat-jator Carl A. Hatch, his Democratic ter includes his starring vehicle, “Pri- | colleague. soner of Zenda.” Such announcement by Hatch “I get a kick out of my voice, not | Would be construed as a White House for its own sake, but because of the| accolade for the wealthy young Cut- emotional reactions it stirs in people.|ting since New Mexica's Democratic When I looked down into an audience | Senator maintains close relations with and saw @ tear on an auditor’s face, | Postmaster General Jim Farley, Dem- I realized that perhaps I had a power/Ocratic national chairman. which, for @ little while, might take} Democratic endorsements of Re- People out of themselves, help them | Publicans are a new departure in poli- to forget their worries. tics. The first one came recently, “Bince then I have been almost|When Farley said he hoped Hiram Johnson would be returned to the | attend. |Tuesday morning. Arrangements for : It is expected that a proposal to|the funeral have not yet been com- establish a permanent organization | pleted. to represent hospital managements | will be considered and that attention | will be given to the question of car- ing for indigent patients, FIRE HITS BEMIDJI Bemidji, Minn., Feb. 20.—(7)—Five buildings, including four business es- jtablishments, were destroyed in a fire there early Tuesday, with total dam- age estimated at $50,000. Women’s Teams Hold Top Places in Series peal ada GRAND JURY IS CALLED | The Grape Nerts volleyball and! Fargo, N. D., Feb. 20.—(7)—A fed- Sportette basketball teams retained (eral grand jury was drawn in the U. their positions at the top of the wom-'S. clerk of court's office Tuesday to en's leagues in the games played dur-|convene in Fargo March 8. ing the regular class periods at the| —_—_—CCC- World War Memorial building gym-/|pearance of the Paris Instrumental nasium Monday evening. | Quintet Saturday, Feb. 3. Tickets The Grape Nerts kept their 100 perfor the concert still are available and \cent standing by taking the Zippers,!may be secured through the concert \46 to 32, The Whizzers trounced the | manager. SYNOPSIS Young and beautifal Stanley Paige loses her fortune through market speculation but a harder blow comes when her fiance, the fascinating, irresponsible Drew Armitage, tells her it would be madness to marry on his income and leaves town. Penniless and broken-hearted, Stanley refuses to seek aid from her wealthy friends. Desiring to make her own way, Stanley drops out of her exclusive circle and rents a cheap furnished room. After a week of loneliness and trying to adapt herself to her poor surroundings, Stanley calls on Nigel Stern, one of her society friends, and asks his in secur- ing a position. Nigel urges her to marry the handsome and wealthy young lawyer, Perry Deverest, who has loved her devotedly for years, but Stanley’s heart is with Drew.) Nigel suggests that she think it ever, and then, if she still wants a position, he will try to place her. Stanley does not go back to Nigel, realizing it would mean meeting all her old friends. One » when Stanley is more lonely than usual, she meets John Harmon Northrup, & straggling young author, and is touched by his sincerity. Stanley fi- nally procures a position and grows curiously content. Then, too, hi ing John Harmon waiting for her at the end of the day, helped make things brighter. He had a way of making life seem gay and friendly. CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO And to John Harmon life had be- come, indeed, just that. He had come down from Vermont, a too thin young man, shy, awkward, in- tense; with a too great love for words and a half-realized fear of They were never self-consci interested in each bright and noisy— those girls who had sat beside him in high school and stood talking in groups on snowy street corners and waved to him in the summer from speeding automobiles. They had de- manded so many things that he didn’t have—money, and time, and COPYRIGHT BY ALLENE CORLISS ¢ DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. | miserly in the way I have counted up Concerts the people I have sung to. —and now the movies, Soon I will have come pretty close to singing to everybody. it’s one that gives me pleasure to think about, anyway.” Was A Boy Although Eddy may start out an interview with “I'm kind to my moth- er, don't beat my father and received this gorgeous yellow tie for Christ- mas” there is a long story. He was born in Providence, Rhode Island. With his vocal ability, de- veloping early, he sang as boy so- Prano in the Providence churches. A job in an iron works was followed by @ place in the art department of the Philadelphia Press.” In his spare moments, Eddy learned to write obit- uaries and with that as his only qualification, became a reporter and “covered” dinners, baseball games and speeches for five years until he got @ chance to write advertising copy for N. W. Ayer & Son. The job with Ayer ended when he paid more at- tention to music than to ads about soap. Philadelphia likes to call Nelson Eddy its “own baritone.” Within the Past two seasons he has given 27 con- certs in his home town, where his first appearance in @ society show in 1922 was considered’ so insignificant that his name was not included on the program. Singing and Spaghetti In 1924 he made his debut with the Philadelphia Civic Opera company. That day still found him working with the advertising agency. A rush order for a spaghetti-promoting cam- paign had just come in and Eddy worked on slogans for spaghetti salesmanship until one hour before he was to appear. Eddy is 32 years old, tall, blond, good-looking. He swims, rides, drives a car, plays tennis, sails a boat, dances. He considers singing a hard Job but thinks that the singer should not show the audience the amount of work that it requires. In advance letters, received by Miss Maude A. Tollefsen, manager of the in a hundred cities, radio appearances “It’s a funny ambition maybe—but, Artist Series, Eddy states that he will sing the same program in Bismarck that he sang in Los. Angeles. This concert continues the local series which was opened with the ap- ious, but always intensely other’s opinions, anything except the fact that they ‘were once more looking at her. “I did some swell work last night,” he would tell her, hurrying to meet her, thrusting his arm through her slim one. “Wrote forty pages of darn good stuff—wait till you hear it!” people. As a little boy life had hurt. him badly. There were certain things that he could never remem- ber about his childhood ‘without feeling a little sick. The winter he had had to wear a girl’s coat to school. The coat had belonged to a cousin and was a good coat; but it had a fur collar and big pearl but- tons, He had been nine, a fine-fea- a careless, flippant tude toward life and love. Especially toward love. John Harmon couldn’t be careless about loves or flippant, couldn’t be anything about it, in fact, except afraid of it. Afraid of it as all sensitive, imaginative peo- ple are afraid of things they do not understand, have never encountered, But if John Harmon was afraid He was working days on short stories but his nights were dedi- cated to his novel. He had sold an- other story to Maynard, editor of the Review, and was getting en- SOuPARIOS, letters from other edi- rs, i “It’s only a question of ti: Stan,” he would tell her earnestly, wrinkling his forehead into a sol- tured, horribly sensitive child. One]of love, it was with an exalted night he had taken the coat and|/fear. In his own way he felt that rolled it inte a tight bundle and/there must be, that anyhow there gone down to the river behind the]should be, something fine and house and pushed it through a hole/lovely and a little sacred about, in the ice. The next morning his}love. He couldn't be careless about father had punished him fearfully]it—he couldn’t be flippant. So he but he had bought him a coat. Then/had kept away from it. there was the summer that woman] And then he had come to New had lived at the house. His mother] York, and one night he had sat on had been dead three years then.Ja bench in a little park and had And this woman had come and John|spoken to a girl. That night had Harmon had been glad at first be-/been the beginning eause he no longer had to wash|for John Harmon. Something had dishes and she cooked food that was|happened to him then and in the goi through his mother’s things. For|of the past @ moment he was like a person|that night” and “since that night.” one suddenly mad, and so he|And he thought less and less of He had flung himself on her|“before” and more and more of. and scratched her face and sunk his|“gince” and his eyes lost their fear nails into the soft flesh of her neck, and became confident and his mouth and all the time he had been sob-|iost its tenseness and learned to bing and his eyes had been quite|smile—frequently and with a com- blinded by tears. The woman had|pelling sweetness. left after that, and his father had} And to Stanley. both the smi been better to him. Not exactly|and John Harmon had become vei but more indifferent. His|important. In a world which Aunt Martha came to live with|gone suddenly meaningless them and in ber own way had been| chaotic he, was the one thing good to him. But it hadn’t been s]was sure of—the one thing ¢! happy childhood. ‘made each day different from ¢ Except for bis writing. Jonn Har-|one before, different and a little mon had always had that. He had/lightful. hugged it to his heart and when| No matter how hot it was, everything: else had seemed to fail/how late she was, he was alwa: him he had always had that. It had|there waiting for her, at the taken the place of the mother he|ner of her street or on the steps had never had, the father he had/the old brownstone house; his never foved and the girls he hadjdamp and a little curly always been afraid of. They had!'hest but his eyes gaily ol a5 afse SEEEBE af see | of a new life|days emn scowl, matching his long stride to her briefer one. “They like my stuff. They say it's good, but not quite good enough. But it will be, you wait and see. I’m getting better ‘all the time—the stuff 1 did last night was smooth as silk.” He was not always like this, of course. There were nights, But whatever his mood he was always ridiculously glad to see her, to talk to her. He worried about her and told her so; took her to eat at much more expensive places than he could afford so that she might have better food in a cooler atmosphere. He bought her flowers because she loved them and been without them; and went with he: Th FREE cleaned and Senate from California. Johnson, lke Cutting, bolted Hoover for Roose- velt in the 1932 campaign. Cutting has followings in both the Democratic and Republican parties of New Mexico. He controls his own Progressive party there. The state nominates candidates by polticial convention rather than primaries and it has been doubtful whether Cutting could get the regular Republican nomination again. Roosevelt popularity might beat the regular G. O. P. candidate, anyway. Hence, Cutting might run this year on either the Democratic, Republican, jor Progressive ticket—unopposed by Democrats if he ran as a Progressive. BIG BALLYHOO MAN Chesley Jurney, the Senate serge- ant-at-arms who has had such a hard time with Bill MacCracken, was suc- cessively secretary to former Senator Culberson of Texas and Senator Cope- land of New York. He ran unsuccessfully for Congress in Texas a couple of years-ago, roar- ing around the state in a big, noisy ballyhoo bus which provided music along with speeches. As a senatorial secretary, the corpulent Mr. Jurney aJways stood out from his brethren by reason of his constant affectation of a frocktail coat, white-piped vest, and broad-brimmed black Texas hat. NEW SNAG FOR PEEK Secretaries Wallace, Roper and Hull met to consider George N. Peek's re- port on how foreign trade should be developed. The session developed in- to an indignation meeting; the trio threw up its hands as one man. Peek, assigned by Roosevelt to study the possibilities after he left AAA, pro- posed to set up a foreign trade cor- poration under an administrator who would be second in power only to the president. He would remove function after function from the State, Commerce, and Agriculture departments. The Peek plan, if adopted, will be modified considerably. That might {mean Peek’s final departure from ‘the government. | (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc) A bullfighter knows that if bulls were as alert as cows are, there wouldn't be any bull fights, or buil fighters.—Sidney Franklin, Brooklyn's matador. Washington’s Birthday DANCE Come and enjoy the fun Good Music for Dancing e Stag Mandan ANNOUNCEMENT It’s Here Tn New at Grin Machine tter) FREE Hurry and be among the first 25 to get your hat blocked Free! CAPITOL SHOE HOSPITAL