The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 29, 1935, Page 4

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yore ne Rs eoscRSs peo cHenaraees wn een. wn tener ato e 2. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1935 Ss ilaaciaaiatia ee 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 @s second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O, Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Gecretary and Treasurer wattor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily year. 3 $7.20 Daily by mail, Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Weekly by mail in state, per year ......... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per 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 to it or not otherwise credited in this Bewspaper and also the local news of spontaneous pa] al published herein All rights of republication of all ether matter herein are also reserved. } s. : | Inspiration for Today | 1 was not in safety, neither had I rest, neither | Ty | ‘was I quiet; yet trouble came.—Job 3:26. || eee | Trouble is the next best thing to enjoyment; | there is no fate in the world so horrible as to have | no share in either its joys or sorrows.—Longfellow. a aie 8 Ideal Testing Ground There is no better place in North Dakota to test the efficiency of the new state highway patrol than the six-mile stretch of road between Bismarck and Mandan. Here, usually, one sees automobile drivers at their worst. Historically, this stretch of con- crete is strewn with the wreckage of many au- tomobiles, in places is dyed red with the blood of killed and injured persons. Officials of both Morton and Burleigh coun- ties have been unable to cope with the situation. Lack of authority and the difficulty of prose- cuting charges in a county other than that which an officer serves has been a handicap to law enforcement. State police officers will be under no such handicap. Their powers will be as effective in one county as in another. A few lessons, well taught, might make their task much easier. If they can convince the public that it will be hard on the pocketbook or otherwise disagreeable if it drives too fast or recklessly, they will save many lives and much human suffering. The road itself is one of the safest in the state. It is clearly outlined in fair weather or foul. The stripe down the center is encourage- ment to motorists to stay-on their own side of the road. It is well marked to guard against coming upon curves and other hazards unex- pectedly. But all of these things only emphasize the importance of the human factor in the develop- ment of traffic safety. No matter how well de- signed a road may be, recklessness and careless- ness can turn it into a shambles. It will not be enough, however, to have this highway properly patrolled, for catching the offender is only the first step in improving a bad situation. After he is nabbed, he must be given his just desserts when arraigned before a court.’ The judiciary as well as the police must be active. If a man is proved guilty of violating the law, punishment in accord with the offense must be meted out. And this pun- ishment must be made certain. If reckless drivers realize they are pretty sure to be caught if they break the law on this inviting stretch of road, and pretty sure to be dealt with severely after they are caught, con- ditions will be immensely improved. Saluting With a Snap Commenting on changes in the physique and attitude of the boys in the C.M.T. camp at Fort Lincoln, Chaplain ‘Will A. Sessions puts emphasis on the manner in which they have learned to “salute with a snap.” To the uninitiated, he remarks, the military salute is a sign of servility, whereas in fact it is merely an evi- dence of respect for authority in which both men and officers can properly, take pride. Other lessons learned, as emphasized by Chaplain Sessions, are such as to make C.M.T.C. trainees ideal hus- bands. They have learned to wear their clothing neatly, properly buttoned and cleaned; to make their own beds; to keep their tents neat and clean and to hang away their clothing, something the average husband never learns in a lifetime. Company streets are kept clean. No litter is thrown around, Thus the trainees are made better citizens, from both @ private and a public standpoint. If everyone, for example, learned not to litter up the streets, our cities would present a much more attractive appearance than they do. But these things, after all, are only incidents to the real work of the training camp. It is improbable that any of these boys ever will be called upon to defend their country in time of war, but if this should come to pass, they will have at least a smattering of the necessary knowledge. They will not be entirely raw and green to the military arts as was the case with 4,000,000 men called out in the World war. Most important of all, the C.M.T.C. provides a solid body of patriotism which is a good thing for the country. ‘There is something about the military system which em- Phasizes the importance of the country as a whole and of the flag as its symbol, It is practically impossible to participate in a parade at retreat, or any of the numer- ous other military exercises, without getting a tingle along the spine, a new realization that this is a great| ing period last year. What hurts is being obliged to take country and that it is the duty of the true citizen to pro-| 't from the New Deal, tect it. ‘The military sciences change with new inventions! governed by goats. There has been talk of an attempt but there never will be any substitute for the spirit of| like that in this country. _. real Americanism without which this country would suf- eee . fer disintegration under the stresses of peacetime and, An Argentine senator was killed during a long debate defeat at the hands of an enemy in time of war. - / "ne New Yorker who has been forecasting earth-: fh fe See) is, | quakes with such accuracy probably can tell the Repub-| Denver woman teacher wants the “strong language” licans whether anything will happen the first Tuesday of the old west revived. It might be better to let her spank ip No of 1998, in Washington | WITH RODNEY DUTCHER Memmieh Hifident Morgan, Filing. Syecon ‘Prevents Fight... Ei it Morgan ‘Holdout’ on Secrets... Private Letters Reveal Europe’s War Terror .. . Abyssinian Croés One of i Cathedral's ‘Treasures. Washington, July 20.—If a certain bi-partisan group of determined senators can be counted on to go through with their private assurances, this heated session of con- gress will feature an outstanding battle for “war insur- ance.” Members of the senate munitions committee, with a unanimity seldom found in such @ congressional group, are getting set to tack their neutrality bills onto the big’ tax measure if they can’t get the program reported out by an apparently hostile foreign relations committee, Similar action is likely on their bill to tax the profits out of war, now buried with the finance committee, Various other groups—conspicuously the inflationists —intend to urge pet plans as riders to the tax bill when it reaches the senate floor. If Senator Borah had known about the munitions committee plan, he might have pre- dicted adjournment in December instead of November, The neutrality program, introduced in three resolu- tions by Senators Nye and Clark, would prohibit loans or credits to warring nations, restrict trips by Americans into war zones, prohibit export of munitions to belliger- ents, and cause all shipments of commoditiés to bellig- erents to be made at the buyers’ risk. State, war, and navy departments—and even the White House—seem to be cold to these measures at this session. Hence their bottled-up status in committee, All the munitions committee members, recalling the last war’s lessons and believing that European war clouds | are menacing, are willing to take the and holler loudly for action at this session. eee MORGAN SYSTEM AIDS PROBE The House of Morgan has one of the most efficient cross-filing and indexing systems in the world. The mu- nitions committee investigators, who have been searching the Morgan files for evidence showing how we get into the last war to protect American loans and exports to the Allies, have found occasion for great glee in that. Original fear that important docurnents might have been mysteriously mislaid before or after afrrival of the investigators has diminished considerably. Through & numerical and alphabetical code, it appears, practically every paper is linked up with other papers and it would be very difficult to hold anything out. That doesn’t mean that all the sensational facts being unearthed from the files will ever be publicly re- vealed. The Morgan firm and the British government, whose fiscal agent it was while this. country was taking the road to war, can exert powerful influence in Wash- ington when their secrets are imperiled. OLITICS NO FALSE MODESTY at the - Congressman Maury Maverick of Texas, before the house rules committee, investigating lobbyists: NATION'S CAP! ITOL “Yes, I asked them for help on a speech. I'm al- ways asking for help. Thats the reason I make | | ee Washington—The former senator from Washington, Clarence C: Dill, WAR TERROR GRIPS EUROPE who retired voluntarily last year after th houses Private letters received by this writer indicate the|@ period of service in bot! extent to which everyone over there is thinking in terms | dating back to 1915, has hit upon an of war. One hears: idea for “cashing in” on the lessons Nothing but war talk in Germany—“of the most|he learned as a member of congress. acute and apprehensive and hell-quivering sort,” with| A school teacher before he turned most of the German people in a “white heat of fear.” .. .|to politics, an important part of his Common belief in England that Italy will have a bad|strategy in campaigning for public time in Ethiopia, whereupon Germany will walk into|office was centered around school Austria and all hands probably will be drawn in... .|children. His theory was, if you “get England re-establishing sphere of influence in Greece|the kids interested in you the votes sinee marriage of Princess Marina to the Duke of Kent/of mama and papa likely will come and probably backing restoration of the Greek monarchy| your way.” He rarely missed an op- as well as increased armaments in a nation strategically | portunity while campaigning to visit important when Italy invades Abyssinia. . . . German |the schools ‘in the towns he happened ships, under naval agreement with Britain, to be largely|to be in. of the shallow draft type which could operate in the; “Almost invariably,” he says, “the Gulf of Finland and bombard Leningrad. .. . Of a “silent/ first question asked me was how oes airplane” finally developed by Germany to a point where| congress pass a bill? And strangely ft can balk aerial sound detectors. (Aviation experts/ enough it was ubout the most difficult here say this probably is the “steam engine plane” of| question to answer I encountered.” which they have heard rumors, alleged to be operated; 1+ started him to thinking after he by crude oil and able to stay in the air for days.) decided to quit politics and he hit pile # upon the idea of writing a book to CROSS IS ABYSSINIAN GIFT be used as a text book for schools and The crucifer at National Cathedral ‘here carries, On| gor information to older persons who special occasions, a gold Abyssinian cross (forméd Of| ae not familiar with the principles many small crosses in lace-like design) sent: to Bishop and the working of the government. James E. Freeman by Emperor Haile Selassie after the .* * bishop had ordered a special prayer on the day of the ‘Loads of Bills’ Christian ruler’s coronation. The cross is kept in @ red! 5:6 nas gone ubout che task in quite unorthodox fashion. When completed Plush box, lined with purple. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) {t probably will be one of the most o unusual text books ever published. Starting with the premise that the Wi h O her cinted, subject of government at best is one ut t t lHlof the most uninteresting and dryest may or of questions, one of the first things may net DITORS | #338 The general strike which began in Terre Haute, Ind.,/has a cartoon labeled, “To the Capitol! on To the Capitol!” The cartoonist has ler strike in San Francisco s year ago. It‘was prompted| pictured the representatives and sena- by @ dispute between an enameling company and its em-| tors rushing to Washington by every a means of transportation carrying loads of bills to the capitol for in- Not) troduction. * 4% % he did was to employ a cartoonist. He had him make some 30 or 40 car- toons depicting the intricate and tedi- ous parliamentary practices used to Haute. It was authorized by the unions at a rump meet- Thinks It’s Fun ing not convened by the central labor organization. The! 4 pictorial journey of the bill from responsibility for resorting to a weapon used omly twice|the time it is introduced until it is before in American labor history—at San Francisco in| signed by the president is set forth in J graphic fashion. It is an attempt to From the start the strike was effective. It succeeded/ teach government by a new method. in forms of transportation, closing restaur- Dill is not sure how his attempt ants and retail stores and preventing the delivery of such | win be received. He has gone to con- essential goods as milk and ice. But the very effective-| siderable pains o find out from teach- ‘4 ue ey tg be its undoing. ita toeabye4 ers and others in the field of educa- 63 at Francisco, . am tion whether ‘hey think his scheme pe Tecg igh fopgphiioend gcighenagnreate Public is practical, opinion is swif alienated by a course of action which < deprives a whole community of the necessities of life,| _esardless of whether he makes a go of it, Dill is having a lot of fun Perolyaes tts business, destroys its revenues and threatens’ with the idea, High atop an office t] General Strikes ess, delay and kill bills in congress. For example, just before congress (New York Times) meets on January 3rd of each year he pees in us ri 12 ad @ day at it. jot even the com; Political sit- general strike inevitably fails in the same measure that vation in the capital is able to dis- pared tract attention. Efforts to draw Saurus preieend it tal Care hecal eat him out on politics even for “off the to preserve order and to supply, the community with}Tecord” consumption are useless. those things without which it cafnot live. That is why|_ “I can’t remember,” he says, “when the general strike is properly regarded, by those who un-|! didn’t want o be a senator. Strange- instrument of social than as a serviceable weapon in an ordinary In the present case the general strike has been called off forty-eight hours after it was proclaimed, but the strike at the enameling plant continues. Federal con- ciliators are attempting to settle it and thereby to remove the cause of @ dispute which violently interrupted a pe- riod of gradual improvement in industrial relations. The threat of a coal strike still hovers in the background. But when data are available the record of the last six months will probably show that the number of hours of employ- ment lost through strikes has been considerably less than the comparable figure for the corresponding period last year. ‘FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: pete The company operated by one of the New Deal's most violent critics reports a net income for the last three months almost three times that of the correspond-' eee There's an island in the Pacific that is said to be in the senate chamber. It took some time for news of | Huey Long's filibuster to get down there. e i >.4 | ehin d th e Scen: es | Making Confetti for the N ext War Celebration , Y our P ers onal aH. e alth enough years ago I ‘The schools and colleges are doing mind that I didn’t wan more for real freedom of the land being one and now that than the scores of blazing patriots of spinach. Is it fattening? What bene- am sure I never want who infest legislative -halls, calling ? Does inhaling cigarette smoke cause a growth of Well. vacations are more or less of | think sacred.—Bishop Frances J. Mc- v @ luxury, anyway.—Senator William | Connell of the Methodist Episcopal 8 can eat. So far as I E. Borah. church, 7 + I won't believe it when I wake up cumstances, except to move to break the strike in the|Duilding in downtown Washington he’s By William Brady, M. D. Dr. bei will anew pimciingd peneining 5 = oe net b 4 ss Dr. Trib All queries must be accompanied rin isiiaaetenecs envelope. © eepeniec 7. poisoning after childbirth, was only one- 225 women in Sheffield University hospital who vitamins A and D for a few weeks prior to child- ‘among 225 women in the same hospital who did not receive the vita- i A ge for oaths of devotion to the Consti- tution or whatever the patrioteers F y £ BEGIN HERE TODAY JO DARIEN, Gatching her rot yenr tm college, learns her father {s out of work. Je gets a job as beckkeeper tm a small marine eupply house. She ts engaged to BRET PAUL, athletic star. DOUGLAS MARSH, handsome, wealthy, comes te the stere to buy equipment for the summer colony he ts establishing at Crest Lake, Je works overtime, ansiat- ing with the order, and Marsh asks her to have dinner with him. She agrees. When Bret telephones é J Aim che bas extra work ‘ fiatabit: Gress and go out for breakfast be- to Marsh takes her te a ftashion- . 4 fore Marsh telephoned. To her able resteerant. He tells her |] i faint discomfort she found heréelf about his summer colony at Crest ¢ 7 | | looking forward to the sound of his Lake and offers Je the job of : hostess there. Searcely able to she were attracted by believe such goed luck, she ac- J any silly school girl; and cepts. ° Dancing with Marsh, Je secs BABS MONTGOMERY, « school mequaintance. Jo is sure Babs will tell Bret about seeing Jo with Marsh. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORE CHAPTER VII Wen Douglas Marsh’s car had been brought to the curb of the Olympic Bow! and he and Jo had stepped inside, Marsh asked, “Would you like to ride around bit before I take you back to the apartment?” “It’s a heavenly night for it,” Jo admitted. “But—the truth {s, I'm Just a little tired. I think it’s from the shock of being appointed the hostess at Crest Lake Inn. I know ere i in the morning!” Dougl: “In that case I'll telephone just y aeeee saying the whole thing was to reassure you. Say about 9?” al acai a a Jo nodded. “I'm afraid I'l need] py, ee, see oor. ler letter was Selig A hate seen moto: afer foo of her apartment the telephone was sab fs legis sages lagi. it Douglas Marsh. ringing frantically. A little breath- 0} Pay vere ine Min, | of last night, Wide awake, she It was Tubby; and just » bit ox- roadster to see Jo to the door. Jopked at har wate. Tt wan, needle @ “Really,” Jo said, “I can’t thank |& o'clock. es you enough for a delightful evening | "Four hours wntil he telephones,” S06 Zo lgoehed *'sh dart and for the opportunity at Crest |*he told herself. “And I actually | swore so tanghed. “It's true.| come in from bone? Te tte e” won't be able to believe it until he} you certainly get your news fast, - “I didn't mean to make a bust- | 4°es telephone.” ee that tre man ty pvarir igh ery But Jo Darien was too young and| “A bunch of us were in the Uni- phen vce. ie ness conference of it,” Marsh . ‘wasn't the music and it wasn't the laughed. “But I'm leaving for the |*live not to believe that’ good for- ity Inn last night when Babs lake tomorrow afternoon and 1) *t8e 1s always s possibility. Atte thought I'd better every-|* delicious stretch between the cov- thing tonight. Do you suppose you “I'll be there,” said Jo gayly. could come down day after tomor- i And then, as a pang of conscience tow?” “I think so.” “I'll seo that your ticket is de ‘ivered to the apartment by tomor row afternoon, And I'll make ar rangements at Lytsen's for things to be charged to Crest Lake Inn. If they don't have just what you want I'm sure they'll get it for you.” He held out his hand. “Good night, Miss Darien—but couldn’t I call you Janet?” , /” Jo wrote her moles, ae “Janet?” just because I know you're always “You don’t owe me anything,” Jo “Ion't that itt” he teughed, “1] Worrying I want to tell you that assured him. “If I hadn't been in . . mother, is your office yesterday morning I'd noticed the initials ‘J. D.’ on your never have had this ch: band bag at Brown’s this morning, | bidding person, thi summer, Tubby.” Goodby, and good luck” * and I'm just guessing. Suppose you |much chance “Tl try my best. 1 Soally got] She turned from the telephone sive me the right name?” affair with a millionaire, even if 1 |everything packed, and I’m taking/ ana walked to her window, looked “It'a. Jo." wanted to!” the ‘afternoon train for home,” /dowm at the hurrying crowds be He amlled. “I like that . . . Jo.*|, JO thought tt best not to men-| Tubby told her. 1 could ao eiereatfa) moment Once again he took her hand for }{i0@ the matter of the new clothes. Jo replaced the receiver after |she eould not believe that this had mee, AGATA he took fer han ‘That would be a little dificult to|Tubby's reiterated promise that she|/bappened to her, out of all the the fraction of a moment. “Goodlexplaia to Mré. Arthur I, Darien,| Would try to plan at least a few/young women down there who night, Jo, I'll see you at Crest Lake| who had very definite ideas about |days at Crest Lake. It would be| wanted it to happen to them, if day after tomorrow.” bar male ge addresst: hile, Jo. told bere ars ig oot Bist Phaei ° ia e »| She had just finished ing | While, Jo erse! e was ret would be at Right,” enid Jo, “Good nisht.”| st envelope when the telephone Beach. ? rang. It was just seven—two bourse | st NE==T morning she awoke with | before Marsh f the first pink streaks of dawa,|—end Je wendered who eould beja lot of money, 76 and lay abed. reviewing the events telephoning her at this hour. he'd really eee

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