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1 + The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- tin tS ae class mail matter. George D. Mann : President and Publisher Archie O, Johnson Kenneth W. Simons @ecretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily year $7.20 Daily b; ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail outside of North Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tne @ for republication of all news dispatches cred' it or not otherwise credited in this ne EE and the local news of spontaneous origin published of republication of all other matter her ed. to ls0 . Inspiration for Today Violence shall no more be heard in thy land, wasting nor destruction within thy borders; but thou shalt call thy walls Salvation, and thy gates Praise.—Isaiah 60:18, ae When thou receivest praise, take it indiffer- ently, and return it to God, the giver of the gift, or blesser of the action—Jeremy Taylor. iy : Things Are Better , Things are MUCH better in Burleigh county. There are any number of cold facts to prove fhe statement but better proof than any that an be expressed in figures was to be found at the achievement day program of the county Blomemakers clubs here on Saturday. One need be neither a prophet nor the son pf a prophet to sense the attitude of a crowd @nd that which gathered here was notable for | ts optimistic outlook. ea Consisting mostly of farm folks, it was fiotably well dressed. Farm women haven’t had much to “do with” this last year or more but + pne would never know it to look at this group. may be that many had made a little go a long { fway, but whatever the cause, the result was “ee It was such a crowd as would do credit any American community—at ANY TIME, bet alone at the end of a long depression. pressed it to his table companion, “Isn’t it grand the way things are looking?” That was the keynote of the whole as- semblage. All of us have something to look ‘ forward to and reasonable expectation that our hopes will come true. This man, for example, just managed to pull some milk cows through the winter but they are doing well, now that the grass is green again. Soon he hopes to have an income of $40 : or $50 a week from his dairy herd. The cows ; ate Russian thistles and straw during the win- 3 ter but that is only added cause for joy now that pastures are green again. q Even the children seemed to reflect an at- 1 mosphere totally different from that of a year bgo when black devastation swept this part of fhe country. There were 500 persons at the ficnic dinner and and not a worried look in the lace except some regretful expressions which Beveloped when one or two clubs found that Bomeone had forgot the sugar, and that still more solicitous look with which the hostesses | firged their guests to have a bit more ice cream pr some more potato salad. | Here were assembled the heart, the sinew The men, too, were cheerful. As one ex-/|s ehind the Scenes |), . Your Personal Health| « in Washington zm Me By William Brady, M. D. WITH RODNEY ‘CHER ree : ’ 4 swer questions pertaining to health but not dis- — o i ease or diagnosis. Fite letters briefly and in ink. Address Di Ir. Brady in care of The Tribune, All queries must be accompanied by New Deal May Be Staggered, But it Still Needs Space : & stamped, self-addressed enve! en en Space for Help . .« Just See All the Jobs z . a: eller Got for His Home Folks ... Think of It! i i ‘ A Real Poet in Congress, te * ‘ WORD FROM THE MAN BEHIND — Fe " ‘What seems a ae pie of the Washington, June 10.—Try to understand it if you N : ¥ * the wretched habit ve making can. At a time when the New Deal is popularly sup- i I quote from a letter written by the posed to have received a crushing, decimating blow from § of the N. the U. 8. supreme court, it is actually bulging out of the District of Columbia into Maryland and Virginia. Mr. Roosevelt's administration filled all the old office buildings, moved into thousands of new offices created by Mr. ght big federal building program, and grad- ‘ . get, “ i sees, ually came to occupy every spare inch of space in private Mi " t a office buildings through the city. aah i ie , In view of Dr. Brady’s articles (syndicated in the daily newspapers). we Cs Now Dr. Tugwell is trying to move his cramped rural & mF : ei will not be inclined to accept any article on the injection treatment of settlement administration—which will have several hun- : j dred employes—across the Potomac to Arlington, Va., ied the agricultural department has an experiment plant. ‘The census bureau will set up headquarters for its next big special census in Baltimore and other agencies are also investigating space in the Maryland city. eee THEY HOWL FOR SPACE Dr. Morris Cooke and his rural electrification admin- istration are quartered at the old James G. Blaine man- sion off Du Pont Circle. Sections of other agencies are in what used to be apartments. ‘The fellow who is charged with finding space for the t i Dr, Brady will ? New Deal—and is suffering from incipient claustrophobia —has been trying to get an option on the big Washing- ton auditorium as well as other mansions. Dismantling of NRA will help the problem a bit, but. government officials are clawing for its space like a pack of hyenas and at last reports various agencies—especially those concerned with work relief—still needed 300,000 to 400,000 more square feet. LOOK WHAT KENT DID About 80 young people had a big party the other night for Congressman Kent Keller of Illinois, who had gotten them all jobs in Washington. Keller had the boys and girls rise and tell how well they were getting along—thanks to Congressman Keller. ‘Then he told them about other of his constituents who had good federal jobs outside Washington, naming them off and referring to their nice salaries. “Keep your eyes open for other jobs we can get for southern Illinois,” the congressman urged. Then he noticed Joe Tumulty, once Woodrow Wil- son’s secretary, seated at a nearby table. He demanded a few words from Joe. Joe spoke. His topic: Gratitude. cee AND ALSO WHAT FRITZ DID @|the 1936 campaign. In brief, every- No end of congressmen have perpetrated poetry. But | | thing that was said at the “memor- E * © *M.D. Representative Fritz Garland Lanham of Fort Worth, Salve like that makes » fellow less sensitive to spider bites. ‘Tex., recently wrote the words to a song which he natfi¢d eat . Soon, alka “Blue Bonnet Sweetheart” for the Blue Bonnet luncheon velops into a mass of hair-like QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS of the Business and Professional Women’s Club in his ‘A Viclous Racket jome city. | I am soon to enter a walkathon . . . if I should fall asleep Just so you won’t miss the point, here’s the.chorus: G f partner is sleeping on shoulder and let “Blue bonnets over the prairie, blue bonnet over her hair, | | ame O Our 1933 total gold production ren her slip to the floor ¢ amounted to 2,552,459 ounces, with a|Tuled out. Then I must solo, and sleepiness will soon overcome valuation of $52,764,028. ing elimination. Blue bonnie skies and her blue bonnie eyes o58 congressional Politics leaders, whose méntal equipment does cacti: not readjust quickly. More than 300 army officers were Make Texas so fair it’s beyond all compare; The old ‘Lone Star State’ is not lonely, ‘With her as lone star to shine; zee Let me bask day and night in that heavenly light By FRANK R. KENT retired for physical disability by the ‘With that blue bonnet sweetheart of mine!” | }_What actually happened is simple. |war department in 1933. printer made a bad mistake in the picture of the Copyright, 1935, by The Baltimore Sun fs girl on the title page—which will be corrected later. UP THE HILL AND DOWN He put « red bonnet on her! Washington, June 10—The admin- (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) istration sings & very different tune today than it did a week ago—and |i, * Reprinted to so do its Wahington propagandists, With Other | tier wnat | |journaistic ana polltical. ‘They are they say. | | ail on « key less shrill and in a mood militant ‘We may or ID may not || |less ti. ’ BEGIN HERE ToDaY landscaping lay bathed tn.a wash had been practicing dimpling, be- I I ORS asree wits Ee Ee * * ae PR eo seid bi etbe of clear late sunshine, Every spear | fore her mirror, since she was 11. of STRYKHUBST, to deep! of grass stood “Yo t. conference #0' unusual as to in-|tives against Mr. oa by MICHAEL “UEATHEROE sud’ every. single pocante. tn fhe] That t2--o en) Te cpariay ene at / Time for Faith Seige ta iner ated nad: fonntep |Found beds biased with added|mized up. He di@ come home, (New York Times) Seder ker chopmetnere” "rele |color. Several stout, weary women | about 5. But he had td rush right Bince the founding of this nation, the American peo- H tothe hone of VIOLET nansen | with Little children im tow sat/off again and I told him you r ha’ ‘been searching for the right answer to the jues- si whe ence was ta love with Kath- |/imply on the benches in the sta-| wanted to see him and he sald to- ple have q For more than an hour he talked to arine’s father. Violet ts drawn |tion park. would do = tion raised by the 5 president in his talk to a) newspaper |his newspaper audience on the sub- to the girl and they become | prichael’s car turned right, off menThen he’s perro aay correo es path a Ai ri Seaiamin attiseatoes ject of the supreme court cece) being pushed into a position of hostil- DR. JOHN KAYE, just sack | Main Street, and sought a broad| away?” Michael asked, relief ob- a Soierithe thatee arid the ‘Union, for thé very purpose of | tome sommes coment, De pena ity to the supreme court, dissatisfac- from Europe, visits the Str7k-/ treet sloping down to the blue| vious in his voice. ia safeguarding the iberty of the individual, what are the oS Sending us back to a ¢| ton with the constitution and op- Z0B PARKER, Katharise'’s | Water of the Sound, clearly seen| “Listen to the man! Of course, f prover limits of centralized authority? No'other question |PUEEY dave,’ forecasting 20-cenl Wheat |position to the rights of the states. stasent Feicads to in love wits (ahead. ‘This was a street of big./he tm’t. ‘That's what I've been Bn Sere ct heehee Heke cmon, tof Sst "gly ela ase athe Sore | Saver EL Hs | eae. acer ta eran Zee chates See and proper, since what is sought 1s a just balance be- [Securities Act and the Stocs 2 /hill again De, Maze ite help. ber Kees See | most pretentious in the block Re Rae iehincimciaetaen nS sre changing content, "My Rewevelsbelgves” that | omaled inionalalncy in the court's Sis" Scr dint ‘eit s'secztecs |/"there wees soute tow Rendred [someone "haeall "the." tiacr™ “over the next five or ten years” the So pvilee 22 Re eee cant Toman. Lee threatens to doaway |reet of grounds about this par-| Michael said, with hie rie ecall creaeinety cmcerned with the climgreaat wi is eek fase, to wit, “Is the federal govern- Now GO ON wirs Tam stony | ticular ones embroidered and| masculine air of sticking to the minister laws bearing on national economic, problems SS aL ences CHAPTER XVI landocape artist "wtitwe. There| “Well, sayhow, youre bh ; | with lems or mus MUCHABL HEATHERON went I you! ere But it was inevitable, even before this prediction was ” were rhododendro! their now, made, that the American people should continue to de- | Problems be left wholly to the states? down into the paddock. Prince! 8, dark,|now, and what do we do about deed slossy leaves rich and thick, /it?” Sally demanded htly. bate @ question which in one form or another has been| me result was to send correspond- Cher lemns Par eae ei ite banked in the background. There |“I'm terribly sorry, but se eens before them ever since the authors of the constitution | ents rushing back to their offices, had the night Katharine had devised the federal form of government. from which ceivable variety, dwarf ma) rees, ‘Meantime, because the supreme court has declared in| "0m W Shey sent ub, over. the Cie aecen him at Mrs, Merser’s house. : pee the case of NIRA that congress now lacks power to reg- A He patted Prince Charlie and led butterfly ma ee aces paid by an srapisser who does not par- ; oat a a Soggy Paige toa gether. iene eeiea 2 ery a firitee mich dlenetis atteet aut earatce ie lt meee: ie ‘The constitution was put in writ-| tion, Bury, im her stall, stamped) Zine serous the fall width of the sary to take a dark oe of the outlook either for social ee weadinrs, S20 eae ing to be inflexible, not to be elastic. and neighed and pawed the straw —— py poeta line st progress or for an effective contribution by the national | butties] Gareer on the Outeome” and |e eet ren, propositions, pur-} under her feet. But Michael dis-| couches, Everything was lavish -| Bnd a great deal of the brains of Burleigh @ounty, both male and female. In the picnic group was a perhaps better-than-average cross fection of our population. Here were people who had suffered the buffetings of fate and pome through buoyant. » If there are any who doubt the immediate ture of this region they should have attended is picnic, It was much more convincing than finy argument which could be mustered into prords. \ Sound Analysis ! Because The Tribune feels its readers are interested Het @& views other than those to which it may give expres- et this newspaper prints regularly editorials from { } newspapers. In so doing it very carefully stipulates that the mere of reprinting an editorial does not indicate agreement ith what it says. It may be violently opposed to what ‘Tribune believes to’be the right course—but intensely foteresting, nevertheless. Occasionally, however, there appears an editorial which merits special attention. < Such a one is that reprinted by The Tribune in this issue. It deals with a matter of vital interest. Could there be higher praise from any newspaper than to say that it says exactly what The Tribune would have said had its editor the breadth of information therein repre- ‘gented and could he have found the words to state the ‘ease so clearly and with such complete impartiality. lve and forget at once.” We agree if he'll change that Hora “forgive” to “borrow government to the achievement of economic recovery? | . G'|Portedly emergency measures but in} appointed the nervous little horse The situation does not warrant such a conclusion, Child | Lines Fixed for Next Campaign: Ob; Jemergencies which are quickly past] by" giving no sign of noticing. ge oceans lgroge ay seevers Bay: ‘aimost |are yay rang and s labor was being eliminated, working conditions improved | saenimous impression the president Usually he spent @ good deal of/ neat middle-aged maid in a@ and business standards raised before NIRA was written. | 74. time with the animals after din-| ,eroon uniform came to the door. It is true that, in the light of the court's decision, the ner. Fury rolled her eyes so that} iss Moon said to federal government will now have to move forward on & only the whites were visible, if/ sno74 be right down.” narrower front and with less dramatic measures. But you stood at the stable door. But “[—" Michael b it has other effective powers and instruments at its dis- Michael paid no attention to her eaitated over se posal than those provided by NIRA, and its progress in —only gave Prince Charlie a lump | *Ushtly. “I was to see Mr. Moon. the field of social change will be more substantial if it of sugar, sald a word or two to rise, to esta on surer ground. - dey by Tips, who was reading a week- | SUD! dinreanee hee -cald for the effect of the court's decision on the out- old comic section, and was on his|*estures, look for recovery; what reason is there for disappoint- ot “Mr. Moon is in the city,” she AGE, Stan? picak coneannlets, BAe. a see. ca vig ow to ay 1 with t one of his steeds sed “But Miss Moon willbe stitution after its thorough study : peacicted. a king without’his king- bad whole retarded recovery,” and that “the retarding gone, in pusslement. When be * © * has been substantial.” It was correct and proper " car incongruous vehicle | hag Bah to mention that ‘ was an the President to point out that the return to competitit for the tall, rangy young Mman/morning that he had to go to prices in some trades may With ten crestere Sana his beee her father on business some and cheeks. ee aman to | curing the day Sally had sal er wouldn't ome uni ume of buying and hence a larger volume of alide down the incline away from evening, that he was pees duction, more employment and_beti ; probably on the morrow, for The senate itself had reached this conclusion, e - | long vacation. fore the court’s decision was announced, and a} “Why not run in to see him 8 resolution which would have reduced NIRA tonight?” she had said, so very shell of its former self. The termination of artlessly. Sally was a friendly lit- ment, = ae form in which it developed, sling, crystaline coolness, but an/tle thing. It was a wonder peo- obstac! recovery. Voluntary coopera' eastern twilight, warm and heavy /ple roundabout didn’t appreciate much that is worth saving and turn it her. So full of fun and spirits, Nor is this the only factor which warrant LL ae ves ai Present situation. At many point rit i g Father's card and I was just dying to go...” Michael i 2 i i z z Be looked down at his sE Fl ai ee =” H HH i E i z & 5 F & i F i : 5 shoulders in the ghost of a shrug. “Oh, don’t be a donkey! It’s the kind of place where you dont 55 4 i ca 5 Hy E a = ? & : i Se i f e g F = 8. ® cigaret. Something must On the porch of che Merser/have gone wrong in Mr. Moon's i i ; : aay ! Y . > been out. Burdensome surpluses of wheat ties have been fetes} or peered | gE i i el 3 F stant laughter. “Michael, I am so sorry! What- ever must you think of me?” Nice kids. Good kids. Their] He stood, smiling down at her, é & i i mother was a nice woman, too./at her troubled eyes, at the bait- with fine eyes. If Michael could|earnest, half-pretended serious- get a few more clients like them, |ness of her tone. A small girl, instant, to shake her. Sut lab would be on ite feet. Sally Moon, although one day she| was friendly, he told himselt. Y He frowned. The mortgage on|would be on the plu: side— |Like a cuddlesome little kitten, al- : the place, the old Rogers’ place|smaller by far than a girl most. Not all the people around Queen Mary, the papers say, is 68. It’s hard to r that he had bought so confidently here were really friendly. believe that her hat’s only that old. would “ I can sign checks,” Bally Judging by those casualties, the navy seems to these war games too seriously. Michael frowned Michael was going dowa tonight /again, shaking the thought from to peas enbat you will, the chain letter fad is » good way $0 900 heat &, See it he couldn't be ay d eet @ renew! 43 sally! pouted. Lee kid “He's not even listening to ‘B went through the shabby|me!” ehe cried, addressing an portion of the village that lay | imaginary audience. just west of the railroad tracks.| ‘“I am so!” The old red brick station with s| Sally dimpled. It was one of | tated. moders background of up-to-date/ the things abe did very well, Ghe| peas Sas met ‘The papers say Mrs. Roosevelt indicate ‘the htm i . It is abroad ration, shortly. When did she get back? = ned having no, thought whatever: When dresses have trains they're apt to get tracked on,