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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1935 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- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second Class mal! matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Kenneth W. Simons Editor Archie O, Johnson Secretary and Treasurer Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Datly by carrier, per year ....... sees + $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . +. 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per is Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tne use for republication of all news dispatches credited C4 it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and a! the local news of spontaneous origin published hi All rights of republication of all other matter here! also reserved. Inspiration for Today ‘Whereupon the princes of Israel and the king humbled themselves; and they said, The Lord is righteous.—IT. Chronicles 12:6. eee ‘They that know God will be humble; they that kmow themselves cannot be proud.—Flavel. ‘An Outlet for Energy Organization of a Junior Chamber of Com- merce in Bismarck, as proposed by a group of young businessmen, can be of inestimable bene- fit to this city and the whole Missouri Slope. Such an organization will not only train Bis- marck’s younger executives for future partic- ipation in wider fields, it will harness energies which the city needs very greatly and which «now are being dissipated because there is no constructive outlet for them. ‘One of the fundamental needs of every city is new ideas—and a junior chamber should supply them in quantity. Not all of them will be good. In fact, some may be harmful rather than helpful, but out of the mass of thinking which these young men are doing will come a beneficial grist. As things stand now, young men who would like to “get into things” and participate actively in the upbuilding of the community are at something of a loss as to how to go about it. The senior chamber and the luncheon clubs do splendid work in their respective fields but there is little there for the younger citizen. The American Legion post, with its fine record of community service, has afforded an outlet to men old enough to have participated in the World War, but they are no longer youngsters. In fact, few of them are eligible for the Junior Chamber of Commerce with its age limit of 35. As a result, there was little left for the men who have come to their majority in the last decade. It was either sit on the sidelines until they were admitted to one of the older organizations or do something about it. The impulse of youth is to act and the Junior Cham- ber is a natural result, The program which this group will offer has not yet been devised. It will take some think- ing and more doing. Money will be scarce with the organization, at least for a while, but youth finds a way where it has a will and enthusiasm has often made an acceptable substitute for cash, particularly in view of the fact that the ehind the Scenes in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER rr a mE Brain Truster’s Wife Will Have That Teaching Job or Somepody'll Be Terribly Sorry ... Carries War to Wyoming U.... “Johnson? Swell Guy,” Says Rich- berg ... New Deal Gets a Freud. Washington, July 16—Seldom does a brain truster’s wife stride into the limelight. -The University of Wyo- ming has reason to wish one never did. The university's trouble is Miss Caroline F. Ware, who threatens to sue because she was hired to teach history at its summer school and later was advised she couldn’t be employed because it had been learned she was married. Miss Ware is the wife of Dr. Gardiner C. Means of AAA, an economist who has made some important studies for the New Deal and who co-authored with A. A. Berle on “The Modern Corporation and Private Property.” A former professor of history at Vassar, she has been working here for the consumer sections of the NRA and National Emergency Council. The position of the university is that the trustees made a rule that it couldn’t employ any married women, that it had no way of knowing Caroline wasn’t single, and that the policy had been kept in force to spread employment among more families. * * * LISTEN TO THIS BARRAGE! Miss Ware, promising to contest cancellation of her contract, has dumped a wagonload of arguments on the university president, Dr. A. G. Crane, to show that such Policy—which some corporations have been known to adopt—is poisonous, both to education and American in- stitutions. From the feminist standpoint, her protest is one of the great documents of the decade. She says: “The university is supposed to be an educational institution, not a work-relief organization. The trustees’ duty is to select the best teachers available. “Education is prostituted when university positions are turned into jobs to be held for the income received instead of jobs to be done with reference to the best interests of the students. Is the university, when it trains women for teaching and other professional positions, condemning them to lives of celibacy or wasting the state’s money training them for positions from which its policy would exclude them? “The rule is a move to relegate women to the posi- tion to which Hitler has openly consigned them in Ger- many and to which ‘American Hitlers’ are pushing them, under cover of ‘emergency action.’ “The trustees cast aside a long tradition under which Wyoming was the first state to adopt woman suffrage, elect a woman governor and choose many women for high Positions. And are the trustees trying to place women in the role of child-bearing for future wars, as in Italy and Germany, or attacking marriage by prescribing single blessedness for all who have any potential usefulness other than child bearing?” And if the university laughs that off, says Miss Ware, she will be in Wyoming with her lawyer. The Nat Woman's party and some other women’s groups are supporting her. xk * HONEST INJUN, DON? The Donald R. Richbergs are taking the summer easy at a cottage on Rehoboth Beach., Del., about four hours from Washington. The former “assistant president” will write a couple of magazine articles and do little else but Plan resumption of law practice in the fall, probably with offices in Washington and Chicago. Richberg had hardly arrived before he was accosted baci acest in the Henlopen hotel, who said: “I want your hand and ask one 2 “What do you think of General Johnson?” paeasy Richberg stammered: “I think he’s a swell guy.” The native thanked him heartily and bowed himself away. * * * 2 EE ae ae you there was any link between the New Deal and Dr. Sigmund Freud, the big psycho- analysis complex and wish-fulfillment man of Vienna— Baby Thomas Freud Wiener, a great-grand- nephew of the old gentleman, was recently born to Esther and Frederick Bernays Wiener, the latter being a grand- Secretary Ickes, lately representing the I ment in its Virgin islands troubles.” eo (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) E With Other DITORS Reprinted to show what they say. We may or may not agree with om. Are We Interested in Peace? (New York Herald-Tribune) Tt may seem a very harmless, indeed only a natural and obvious, gesture for Secretary Hull to call in Am- bassador Rosso and politely intimate to him that the United States would take in a settlement of the Ab; controversy by peaceful means in the ministration regards the move as an unimportant sop to our own pacifist sentiment, while the peace organiza- tlons will feel that nobody could take exception to Mr. Hull's reported explanation to the Italian ambassador that “the United States is deeply concerned in the Nephew of Freud as well as a prominent attorney under pow spirit of the Briand-Kellogg pact. No doubt the ad- pales | DOLITICS NATION'S CAPITOL — 8 By HERBERT PLUMMER Washington — When the supreme court handed down its historic de- cision invalidating that national indus- trial reco’ act criticisms were heard on "all sides, from the White House on down the line, against the power of that tribunal to thwart the will of congress. Remedial sugges- tions were offered by the score. Bills and resolutions were dumped into congressional hoppers embodying all sorts of proposals to curb such powers by the court. g Representative Sisson of New York introduced a resolution to have the house judiciary committee ex- amine the situation and advise that as to methods. Representative Ramsay of West Virginia offered two bills, one providing for a constitu- tional amendment and another re- that three-fourths of the Judges should have to agree in & judgment competent to invalidate. Representative Monaghan of Mon- tana proposed a bill which goes 80 far as to vacate the office of a judge invalidating an act of congress. Sen- ator Norris of Nebraska and Repre- sentative Keller of Ilinois proposed constitutional amendments to passed upon by state conventions outlawing such actions by the court. *** * ®/test of constitutionality before the supreme court. Lewis has filed in that Congression- printed pages setting forth arguments and precedents against what he terms such “usurpation of power” by the su- preme tribunal. His goal is to remove the court completely from the field of deter- mining whether acts of congress are constitutional. rey Parole today is becoming one of the major menaces of America.—J. Edgar Hoover, head of the G men. ee * Real ladies never take their posi- tions too seriously. Only phonies do that.—Elsa sais American writer. * * ‘We hear of the “nine old men” who run the country. What a terrible as- persion that is on nine erudite, great men, learned in the law, who protect the constitution against any one— nine men whom we should thank God for having. — Senator Harry Moore, New Jersey. ee ¢ Iam much happier, believe me, now that I am free from the insincerities of Hollywood.—Ramon Novarro. * ek We are going to clean New York of sin and corruption with the help Of ballots and politicians, or without Talk Buried them. If we don’t get what we want Hern HERE UP tron a ices one | with ballots, we'l get it through men- tal telepathy, through transmission of thought forces.—Father Divine. The U. 8. government distributed more than seven billion fish fry and eggs during 1931. al Record an exhaustive brief of 13/8 Perpetually Out on a Limb Sse en George II, king of Great Britain from 1727 to 1760, was the last Brit- ish sovereign to take active part in military campaign and to partici- pate in battle. Each automobile license plate is- large blank portion on which the mo- torist’s traffic offenses are dt id with a large X. Five X’s automati- cally cancel the lidense. Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. pertaining . sotee but not dis- oe diagnosis, | Write rlefly ani Bika incase of The Tribune, All queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope. DIETARY VAGARIES AND ACNE 3 Acne is the rather frightful name we doctors give to the ordinary black- heads and pimples of youth. A customer of a large hospital clinic sends for my scrap book (but I think it should be filed in the Haw-Haw Corner) Slip F-142 which deals with ACNE. Says the slip, it is not contagious. It is usually due to over- eating or to taking wrong articles of fogd. (It just misses wrong combinations). Then it gives some really funny advice about diet, such as: 1, Do not eat anything containing sugar, such as cake, candy, ice cream or desserts, especially chocolate. Do not eat prunes, raisins, dates, figs, canned fruit, preserved fruit, bananas, cherries, plums or grapes. Do not eat gravies, meat soups, pastries or eggs. Do not eat salt fish or meat. 2. Lamb, chicken ‘or fresh fish may be eaten once a day. All kinds of vegetables can be eaten freely Potatoes. Bread and butter in moceration: Milk or buttermilk freely. Water—at least six or eight glasses a day. There's a diet which defies analysis. No rhyme or reason in it. Purely the old hokum bunkem. There is no sound basis for the quaint notion that too much sugar or sweets has anything to do with acne. There is less ground for the old granny idea that too much butter, gravey or fat or fried food causes blackheads and pimples. ‘When all is said—and a whale of a lot is said in medical books—about blackheads and pimples, it becomes quite obvious that we don’t know why some young persons have more blackheads and pimples than others do. It is not only natural, but healthful for young persons to be fond of sweets and to consume plenty of ice cream, candy, cake, chocolate and whatnot. Aduts past 30 who are fully developed and perhaps inclined to carry excess weight, may fairly hold back a bit on these easy-to-eat things. But when ® doctor, or even a bright clinic clerk, issues blanket instructions warning young persons against eating eggs, bananas, grapes, gravies, etc., I say that is unwarranted. “Bread and butter in moderation.” I ask you, brethren, isn’t that the silliest advice? I dare say boys and girls with pimples and blackheads will get along better if they eat everything good that comes their way than they will if they try to cut. out these essential items which the old fogy medicos imagined responsible for pimples. T have a ittle monograph on blackheads and pimples which any reader may have for the asking, if he provides a stamped envelope bearing his address. But I warn you, it doesn’t advise you to cut out anything good to eat. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS I Now Have Four Dentor Friends I want to tell you how much I enjoyed your article about “Galvanic isos ade I wish every person in this state could read it... (C. DeM, Answer—Thank you, doctor. . Heaven knows, I haven't many friends in your profession. “Galvanic sore mouth,” lay readers will not remember, enttion of SEUAIGAME: And QUlG, cr ele two toseale: le tos sy o gam , OF any two the electro! saliva. Cheap makeshift dentistry is a poor investment. ve Soap and Water Slight irritation in navel, and now and then a discharge. (M. H.) Answer—Wash with plain soap and water, rinse well, dry thoroughly, then just one application of half tincture iodin and half water. When that is dry, powder freely with borated talcum or better zinc stearate powder. Repeat the washing daily, and apply the powder night and morning. In a week, if necessary, repeat the half and half iodin and water once. Seeds Is it harmful to eat the seeds in apples? How can I get rid of a soft corn between the toes? (L. L.) Answer—No. Send for stamped envelope bearing your address for mono- graph on Care of the Feet. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) wh a ttle father ts cieb and ber stepmother ber whe tries to comfort NOW GO ON WITH THE STORE CHAPTER XLVI KATHARINE was ie aol Br of a dream. It was e : was used to fight pleasant one. Michael was in dan- fearfully. She ger—horrible danger—and she was calling to him, calling— But she was tired suddenty and closed her eyes again, There was so much that Michael had to ex plain before things could be straight. She coaldn’t bear to think of it now. Once more she slept. . «« eee Bran the ranch house two young men faced each other angrily. Michael said, “So I'm a’ © Mar, eh?” “You are,” sald Frank, almost affahly. Now that there was im- mediate prospect of a conflict, he was enjoying bimeelt. Fighting— any physical activity—was what he loved most. And was fa- riously angry at this man. There was the slap of sole- leather on the hard packed ground. There were the sounds of blows. Michael feinted. Frank drove a terrific blow to bis adver- sary’s chin. Blood began to trickle in a little stream from the cut. Mra. Darragh came to the kitchen door and watched them a little “Michael, Heve it was you. And then i heard the noise, and I looked out of the ” ing. All the “boys” around bere fought, early and often. But this was & little different. She sensed think that her patient ... and she had only stepped out for o min- ute, You never knew where you community most certainly will support any Preservation of peace everywhere.” ii j ‘ When she awoke there was &/ that. were... worthwhile project which may be placed be-| But is it? And if so, how deeply is the United States lamp lighted in the room and be | «pag, maybe you and Dossy| Michael and Katharine ignored : fore it. goncerned in the preservation of peace “everywhere”? side the narrow bed ® BUTS S8t,| hector go and stop them.” @B¢|the nurse. Michael was kneeling her shadow silhouetted against] ,.:9 anxiously. Hobe DarragD/| by the bed now. Katharine’s head Sponsors of the new organization stress the no clear answer has ever been gi puree the all. heaves grunted, packing the SEDAEOe | ARLERRTAE 8 BRL on i a, i : to his your poor face fact that it proposes to emphasize personal] the lack of any clear answer which has been reeponaisie east the purse ould. */er Do vom goods” he grunted.|he hurt rout” eeity.its members to the community. .Thia Anecean Eiligitenes ; cal Katharine felt her brow: it was |Get it out of their systems. Never| He laughed at her. is very much worthwhile but a still greater] at the Hieg poe Sproush, She Jat —_ gs cool. She wae in one of ber own|saw woman trouble yet but could : “Darling,” | Katharina went eae service can be rendered by the presentation of | alians in s mood of angry bewilderment. ‘They cannot Ce a a ean's Cuck tame oe ae ee ac eemart, thought nis| things -bappen to us Do you fresh and original thoughts and by not being] in Abyssinia, or what poeclbie burtee it aot Ma ae bier, halt-Alled with water, on the] wife proudly. He knew. straight /thinx our Diss uit altage oe ne B afraid. One idea may be of untold value if 5 meaweere peace in an area where American commerce table beside the ge rar on, tle fight meant Re Smee Gen? Tonvest and, jent E » temem! body’ etill oe properly developed but fear, too common| our peace organisations this soay seem only’ s pecs anc per ider the blank sky and thelknow. It was one of the things| “Our lives!” She bad actually among older persons, frequently proves an in-| ill-mannered materialism. Yet it raises a desert sand under her feet and a superable handicap to success. tical point which cannot be sidestepped. bird wheeling ... | } said that. Without asking expla- Bations or demanding excuses. she 4 Exactly what is the American interest in the \ . my dear, you're safe and | sure s pretty piece of goods. Qual-/had admitted him to the inner It is true that youth sometimes is a little|sinian question? It may be sald that the world is se Ga ee soe ‘map clean | ity, all through. Mrs. Darragh ba | court of ber existence. S heedless and headlong—but it is aleo true that 80 closely integrated that it becomes a vitel matter for out of bis head about you,” said | seen the pigskin case, packed with} “I hope not, Katharine dear.’ : i 5 the United States to prevent the outbreak of war of the nurse in a gentle murmur. “It | tortoise backed toilet things, that/His deep, strong, well-remem- a ‘Alexander conquered the world and died its| Whatever kind and wherever it may threaten; yet the {ev't every day a young lady 1s|tbhe Millards bad brought tm thetr/ pered voice. : master while still young enough to be a Junior | fact acted ree Ont, ite, know that we have never rescued from death in that way.|car. It must have cost © emah) “The gentleman vill bave to go ; ied in fact acted upon that theory—that we failed to enter I think {t’s so romantic, my dear.| fortune. Still and all, eres &/now,” trembled the cures. “I. Chamber of Commerce member. the war in 10914, that we hastily got out of the League But you must rest now and not|high-toned girl like this bad her/have to take your temperature. * It is with full appreciation of its possibil-|Martraie es rere” pe raccaived an’ lh cate lated 2 talk, end tomorrow you'll be|love troubles. Two Genias. over Dorks. ri nevis aches: e Dears ities and the need for the service which it can| difticulties. If we are now in fact “deeply” interested in EVOLUTIONS, civil and inter: aa nat young mant” Kath- aly the thrill of that, too, ia ot ourre eo beautiful, render that The Tribune greets the new organ-|feverse that record, sasociate curvelves sctively, ath national ware shave raged aaines (Ibe, mate. sragkee. 998 (Oe oe wi ees ee tan hae Oe Tn Ge ad ee a our insistence upon peace with the force of arms, Since in Marino has stood steadfastly 5} Sh t back to the table with and they did not hear ner. : there is not the slightest possi independent . The smallest Tt would be bard to be ankind to e wen softly, 5 Important News Buty fo cusiie ad te e e e Me Ta ee eats cenallest | Frank Millard if he bad saved her|the blue and white checked cloth | Katharine, exhausted after her Few more important bits of information have been| marches as that of Secretary Hull on ‘Thursday upon square miles), and second small | from the Jaws of death. and tes ong 09 eae eee eg | eee, ee meee ee | iblished recently than those some other concept of American interest. To conduct s est in population (12,000), this She was thinking this when the|she couldn't, 60! ' braced a arm. pul announcing a record mar- 6 in a sprightly tone, | be a pity if that young fellow who ‘Am It” It was heaven to be Ust for Bismarck foreign policy upon the basis simply of pious aspiration is strange country claims also. the purse sal a sp ‘all riage lor in June and telling of a three| as Songer 88 1t 1s confusing; and until we can state distinction of being the world's “why, Mr. Heatheroe, of course. | looked like Dery Coser got like this, together after al) the ber cent increase in the birth-rate throughout the Unit-| more clearly to ourselves just why we are as a nation gldest republic, Your busband.” mussed up, and os ee oe heartbreak and exhaustion and ed States. These are fundamental expressions of the |CoMcerned in Abyssinian peace, to what extent and in San Marino was established b; Katharine thought the dream ing to, like. Merle better/the troubled dreaming. Later people and will have far more permanent effect on the 6 fer is difficult to see how this country can at- He Morin ang As hristian fol- must be going on and on and that © cette ee ae ened one tell ped ae any part in that lem whatever. lewers who fies persecutions a thii nversation ie band | taken long ; future of America than whet any man or group of men prot of Emperor Diocletian at the end | ‘Sire'wert of tt. But she felt ot|over her mouth to atife an in-|could explain the whole wretched may say or do. If this endurance fight craze keeps up, things must of the third century. It has re- the coarse, clean sheet; that was|stinctive scream. Because the | weeks. Lag ad Dresent it was It is clear indication of an improved temper among |°°me to an impasse: you can't refuel all the people all mained an independent state ever real. young lady who'd been lost in the| enough to there, her eyes on the people. Young folks who have been waiting to get | ‘be time. since. ‘Her gown was real, too, and so| desert was standing in the door | his lean face with ite undeniable Lee: Stamp collectors have provided nurse's broad, kindly| way. She had s blue robe on over|look of race abont ft, his lean ¢ married at last have seen their clear to this was the rse' a bprilag Saag bdad taking Colorado father of six finds a gold mine. Must have @ welcome revenue to the repub- face. her night things, and ber fest |brown hand gripping ber own slim moment ” 5 no other way to explain the| been # book of questions and answers. Uc, for its stamps are bought in “Mr.—Mr. Heatheroe?” Kath-|were bare, She was staring out/one. > . sharp gain in marriages. The cynical may talk about ‘Antics apace. large quantities throughout the arine said dimly. ~ : of the open door in a frightened| The nurse, recovering berseit Moung America rushing headlong into wedlock without -fat drug causes A huge price for a world, The stamp shown here il- “Why yes, dear, your husband|way. In the light of the yard/at long last, spoke in tones of thought of the future but they are wrong in think woman to pay in order to be a sight for them. dusiratee praeieay the entire —come on from east to see|lanterns you onsia tg 24 & pag —— Ost be eet . and country, situate on a_ height figures moving be went ar {this typical cf America. Where one couple does a hun- | to insure the future of America as nothing else can. It marked by three peaks, with a rou: 890 sees pti pide aes that dratted ourse,|He would see her in the a ‘dred do not, preferring to suppress their normal desires | means that we shall continue to need school buildings castle on one and a tower on each ma ye gee I declare, if it|thought Mrs. Darragh angrily,|ing.... i for a home and family until things look more propitious.|Tather than convert present structures into old peo- of-the others. isn’t just like the talkies!” bub-|moving as swiftly as her bulk] rank came up to him in the ie ‘The same situation rules with regard to births. It is|Ple’s homes. It means that the cradle manufacturers bled the nurse who enjoyed the| would allow toward the slim fig- snare. ‘ \ 5 @rchaic to contend that the size.of families is not con- | still can look to the future with as much confidence as films and had ber favorite stare jure. But the girl was quicker. For T’m sorry,’ he said. “Didn't fzolled under modern conditions. Birth control oppon- | the makers of carpet slippers. - and cut their pictures out of the |all her weakness, Katharine was| know how it was. j rpet slipper instan' ichael wreng “ the contrary, the modern family is usually of| | Most of all, it means that America will progress masasings. ot te coer ieee foo pees bid hand, net . was bere, then. Kath |of the battling men saw ber. Parrete Sot bim, as she|turned and the other closed ta, did; and be wee |delivering « body blow, and the ough so|man who bad looked at the girl hand | went down like s stone. world. i ‘Mzs, Darragh ren after the S40 °, suc. illo Be: Gentine), ents to fhe size desired, barring religious or other considerations. | naturally and normally, for there is no more fundamental {On this basis it is clear that more parents feel they can | sefeguard than the institution of marriage and no bet- aftord 8 ter assurance of an interesting life then the joys and ; ‘The result of these two fundamental phenomena is | obligations which go with rearing a family. arine bad dr , Ine.) am . ik ake u « ¥