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THE BISMARCK The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper | §HE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Your Per. sonal Health (Established 1873) a or By William Brady, M. D. —_——$—$ $$ / ) $ State, City and County Official Newspaper ( y wi "ae Seasons pevteining g health but not . 4 a Tribune, All queries must be an. by The wana i beens Cero Bis- envelope. GEORGE D. MANN compromise to be worked out in the senate man bonus bill. ble in Ad itt Gh Gatdanba aa oe eka aeeiee vance to leated merely by the administration com- Subscription Rates Paya manding sufficient strength in the senate to sustain Daily by carrier, per year ............. ‘ presidential veto, Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . : out: Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Should the senate sustain the Bismarck .... + 5.00 || ised veto of the bonus bill as Datly by mail outside of North gs the door would be closed Weekly by mail in state, per year tatives who voted for the bill, Weekly by mail outside of Ni way for them to bridge the! The urge to “Run With Roosevelt” will many, necessary. Unless given an opportunity to Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation to the fold their position might prove embarrassing. DISPOSAL NECESSARY Member of The Associated Press Not to dispose of the bonus issue in one way or tl pre, pantie one i eta acc acediveucte! other now may be politically dangerous to t atches credite: istration. mere! gas fr republication of ail news alapatches credited to [istration, It merely means prolonging the the local news of spontaneous origin published herein, | Pres! year. All rights of republication of all other matter here! Some political onlookers profess to also reserved. the senate handled the work-relief bill in its some hint the White House and | on Capitol Hill are thinking along this line. cee BONUS VOTE POSTPONED ‘While the threat of Long might have been the reasons for haste, it was fairly evident as well the administration leaders were determined that Inspiration for Today And if thou wilt walk in my ways, ... then I will lengthen thy days.—I Kings, 4:14. on the rungs of a high chair ‘or painted woodwork Better have AW None but God can satisfy the longings of the dmmortel soul; as the heart was made for him, he only can fill it—Trench, a Back to the Middle Ages An enterprising British real estate firm, marketing a new residential subdivision in Middlesex, has equipped its new estates with built-in dugouts, guaranteed gasproof and bombproof, and is making quite a point of the matter in its advertising. | | ] | . “Live here and be safe in time of war,” is ° {ts sales slogan. It would be hard to find a grimmer bit of testimony to the insecurity of life in the face of modern warfare. Centuries ago, people built their houses without windows so that each home could stand a siege. Today we have ad- vanced immeasurably from the disordered con- ditions which made such architecture neces- sary. But if we have to equip our homes with bombproof dugouts, where is the gain? We have simply gone back to conditions of the mid- dle ages. Labor Clears Economic Sky Washington observers now believe that the threat- ened wave of strikes in major industries will not ma- terialize this spring, after all. A few weeks ago the outlook was dark. Leaders of organized labor were on the outs with the administra- tion. Serious trouble threatened in soft coal, automo- bile, steel, rubber tire, and textile trades; and no one needs to meditate very long to realize what a succession of strikes in these basic industries would do to the re- covery program. | | premature vote on the Patman bill should be had in senate. ‘The modified silver inflation amendment offered Thomas of Oklahoma was consented to because he threatened if it was not accepted he would offer bonus as a rider. While Senator Glass of Virginia vehemently clared he would tell no ong what he would do in confer: ence, the impression was that both the Thomas and McCarran amendments were agreed to because it was thought they could be knocked out in conference later. While such action does not remove the threat of a filibuster on the work-relief bill later, it did sidetrack expression by the senate on the bonus until later wi the whole question can be threshed out with the White He ,e gz & ¢ &E | Pehind the Scenes in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) a. Anti-New Deal Machines as Well as Corruption Targets In Relief War... Much Dirt Dug Up in Survey... Hopkins Put on Pan Lady Is Mrs. Greenway. Washington, March 30. federal-state relief system has been used widely for po- litical . But it isn’t going to be used to build up anti-admin- istration state machines—not if Roosevelt and Harry Hopkins can help it. That's a considerable part of the great moral lesson to be drawn from the onslaught. against Governor Mar- tin L. Davey of Ohio, who faces charges of “political corruption” and “shakedown” in the relief administration of his state. The Roosevelt administration is shooting at the po- state committee as well as at the alleged corruption. At the same time, Hopkins is given a chance to offset. mounting complaints of political interference and in- efficiency in relief. A large national organization of social welfare agencies has secretly circulated its people throughout the country to learn to what extent conditions in Ohio are duplicated in other states. ices for fourth Sunday FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH. ba 7 jo Street and Avenue B H H [ i iH ih | ‘onquest of Fear,” by m.—The Senior B. Y. P. U. 01 of the church in action. Il young people who! here. Hy Se litical leadership of Davey and the Ohio Democratic ie " i MY rf FF; 7 ri Fs, ht tr | { F i A rabbit drive near Lodi, Cal., net- 4500 rabbits in 2 40-square mile Answer—Yes, oculist or plastic surgeon can take s tuck in the skin of eyelid and correct the ptosis or drooping. (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) <x DARK BLOND (S108s NEA BERAOR NEC, i Hi bee Ez i ' ' ae A i i Now, however, the sky is brighter. Concessions have + -® been made by both sides. President Roosevelt's dream angus Pregroaipeciasresonpete Wednesday, Me bs of -) In doing so, Teproduced and circulated a re- ee ee Poa saber Wy semen Cloner’ : rere Port from Ohio—without mentioning names—which| pastors, subject will be “He ‘Took It) with labor leaders mollified by assurance of administra- | shows how the governor was bringing @ previously rather tion support for at least part of labor's legislative pro-| decent relief system back into the hands of local po- liticians. fal i bey! is It is to be hoped that this new optimism is justified. ‘Widespread labor trouble is always costly to everyone @oncerned. It would be especially costly just now. It is the responsibility of labor, industry, and govern- ‘ment to find a peaceful solution for current difficulties. Accident Preventers ‘Dr. Frederic W. Bancroft, associate professor of clin- fical surgery at Columbia university, reveals that there is ® movement among medical men to foster the establish- tment of a long chain of medical first-aid stations along American highways for traffic accident victims. Frequency of such accidents, he points out, makes % necessary to provide some means of giving first-aid Tt might also have another good effect. The pres- ence of such @ chain of dressing stations might shock us {nto realizing how intolerable our traffic accident toll peally is, Properly shocked, we might some day be stirred into faking action that would make highway traffic safer. No Price to Love ‘When Meredith Nicholson's daughter-in-law induced the Indiana legislature to outlaw “heart balm” damage Social workers have more or less similar complaints from other states and have been especially incensed by Political incidents in Tennessee, Colorado, Arkansas, and California. They privately have been “All they have to do is show Harry some money,” one nationally-known social agency official recently declared, “and then they can have their way.” Other complaints have concerned inefficiency of Hopkins’ helpers, the general fogginess at FERA head- quarters here, and the failure of New Dealers to work out a definite program for use of the $4,000,000,000 work relief fund Roosevelt has asked. Between one thing and another, Davey's performance gave Hopkins a welcomed chance to “make an example” of somebody. eee BETTING AGAINST DAVEY form, successively criticized New Deal persuad. ed Hopkins to.approve his home town superintendent of schools as relief administrator for a million needy per- ‘sons, refused to put up Ohio's stipulated two millions of ey A Sane go FERA’s, demanded FERA vi funds, mi speeches against Hopkins’ administration, and was otherwise obstreperous. ‘That's the FERA side of the story, anyway, plus @ belief that Davey hopes to work up enough through anti-New Deal attacks to defeat Senator Buck- & Es § i bey af i i i gu i ip ft e 8 3 3 Fe } iF He stared at Millicent with slow appraisal and slowly nodded. "| Keep away from Robert if you want to hold your job. Use your eyes.” “Who's Robert?” she asked. “Cynthia's son.” “Who's Cynthia?” ‘Millicent, to her surprise, an entirely different tone of voice issuing from the lips of the man who had figured so prominently in her lite during the past 3¢ rs. “I’m not certain,” he said cas- she'll do.” af et FEE i i Ft i at)ek Jey in 1938. Davey seems to have stuck his neck out and the betting here is all against him in this test of political FER He. qecbeds ; ith ig: eB .gee befseii 28 eg ce iit i i sBS ae alt j i a e E i i al i f g fe i ) | £36aF if ce sf i dl Pil | 3 i i E | i I ita i : tl i atl iq i ‘who lived on coarse, tough foods all their lives, had cavi- ties m plenty, suffered from toothache just as we do, ‘and also had pyorrhes. And one must shudder painfully to think of having of3 lis TER rete aE e i i ital we it i E § Hi i ao af E fit i | tooth out of your head with s pointed stone! sbi i it] le iH FI it