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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1986 q i The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper { THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ' (Established 1873) Behind Scenes e Washington State, City and County Official Newspaper ha we oor Boo Birds Tune Up to Greet Al Smith at Philadelphia .. . Landon Is “Vice President Frat” Member . . . Louisi- Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mai] matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Is Gone ... WPA Hits Back at Its Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Critics, Secretary and Treasurer Editor — By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, March 17.—Twelve years ago that doughty old warrior, William Jennings Bryan, -took the platform in the Smith-McAdoo fight at the Madison Square Garden con- vention and received a terrible booing from the anti-McAdoo delegates and galleries packed by Tammany. Today Democrats gre discussing the likelihood that Al Smith will receive &@ similar but perhaps worse dose of the same if he rises to attack the New Deal at his party's convention in Philadelphia—perhaps worse, because ‘ton of th fi Roosevelt forces will control nearly mewspape: 0 local news of spontaneous origin published herein. | all the delegates, as well as the galler- Ailthents of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. | {es, It would be the first time, politi- clans point out, that Al ever had to “Nine Fart Hurja strategy will be i The ley-Hurja strategy wi Whether or not Col. Frank Knox of Chicago ever gets to ccigned tbe canis Be we tite be president, there is no doubt that he is a great publisher. doubtedly will be a member of the i i New York delegation, look as lone- The other day friends were shocked to see in print a de- cieb Ge pobaiblen But ib Bea Cclbar yet tlaration by Howard Vincent O'Brien, columnist for the Chicago | just what Al intends to do. Daily News, that “the bogs won’t like this but he hasn’t a ware pT Serenhions He Chinaman’s chance of being nominated for president.” may sit tight and reserve comment i i i: i until afterward. : In view of the fact that being nominated for president by Asp ek cracls: gkhlira daca the Republicans is obviously very close to Col. Knox’s heart, | wate” from the convention hall some of his friends were surprised and shocked, assumed that| Would be ereeted by a tremendous Mr. O’Brien would soon be looking for a job. He isn’t and he won't be, for the simple reason that he isn’t going to be fired. The history of the case is that O’Brien is one of those ebullient souls with sufficient gift of language and ideas to fiustify the Chicago Daily News in paying him for writing what Hiyehl Oaena bale . he thinks about events of the day. ; ; a hier campaien A woman had written to him and challenged his independ-|| ers assert, were Vice len Calvin Coolidge, Vice President pnce of thought on the ground that he would have to subordi-|| Gneries K- Fairbanks, ana’ Vise. nate his own ideas to the interests of his employer’s candidacy. || President Thomas R. Marshall. Thereupon O’Brien exercised his Irish independence by|| gam ‘just hesn's the Enack of pre Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail in state, per year ...... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. Weekly by mai] in Canada, per year ............ es Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ted Press is exclusively entitled to the dispatches credited to it or not otherw! The Ass Adherence to an Ideal A Vice President “Frat” ‘The latest bit of lowdown prop- agenda the confident Landon leaders have to combat is based on he fact that the Kansas governor @ member of the college frater- ana Women Fight on After Huey Snow Sculpture Your . Personal I Health By William Brady, M. D. yr. Brady ld answer Dr. uestions pertaining te health but sot diséass or diagnosis. Write Dr tters briefly and in-ink. Adé! All queries must be accompanied by a ADMONITION TO THE CORPULENT Most so-calied “standard” tables of “correct” weight for various ages and heights give merely the average of a number of persons, not necessarily the ideal from the viewpoint of health, physical efficiency and longevity. In GUT THEY DON'T STAND THE HEAT IN ITALY AND fact no arbitrary figure can be regarded as the ideal for, say, women aged 30 and 65 inches in stature. One woman of that age and height may have a other of like age and stature. Racial, family and individual types of skeletal structure may make a difference of as much as fifteen pounds weight in the skeletal framework quite different in capacity from the framework of an- normal nutritional state of a woman of that age and height. Depth of chest or thorax, length of body compared with length of limb, and breadth of Although I still like ’em’ plump, this is not an attempt to console the outsize women. But I find so many young women who want to reduce when in fact they are not corpulent at all. There is considerable risk involved in any restriction of the diet of a person who has not yet attained full adult growth and development. Therefore I warn all girls against trying to reduce without the supervision of a physician. Women or men past thirty may safely follow a sound, rational design for dwindling and actually gain increased health and vitality from the improved nutrition, irrespective of the change in measurements. 8 ; The explanation of all this is given in the booklet, “Design for Dwindling” which will be mailed if you send ten cents in coin and a stamped envelope for my convenience. A person on a diet low in carbohydrate but yielding only two thousand calories (from fats and proteins) more quickly loses weight than one on a diet yielding the same number of calories but including more carbohydrate. Car- bohydrate food (any form of starch or sugar) tends to hold a larger propor- tion of water in the tissues, and even though the patient is actually dwind- ling in flesh, in measurements, the larger proportion of water retained in the cells and tissues of the body keeps the weight up. If the moderate reduction diet (a diet yielding 2000 calories a day in a moderate reduction diet for s corpulent adult) is adhered to, in the course of two weeks, more or less, the water balance of the body automatically adjusts itself and there follows a dumping of the overload of water, through the various excretory channels, and a corresponding lowering of body weight, though the real test of the efficacy of a lessening regimen is always the tapemeasure. If individuals who seek to dwindle would remember this, perhaps they would not so easily be- come discouraged and weakly give up a course undertaken with earnest. Keep off the scales for a few weeks, and let your tape measure be your gauge. Remember, too, that muscle, water, blood, bone, and the substance of or- gans are all heavier than fat. Fat is just bulkier. Your natural increase in physical activity, when you have disposed of a part of the slacker flesh,’ will increase muscular development and this.of course affects weight. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS \ A Lucky One Please advise if you mean nudism when you speak of “air baths.” If so, we have a place on the roof ideally suited for it and I should like to take the air au naturel every day ... (Mrs. C. F. T.) Answer—Yes. You are fortunate. From half an hour to an hour of it every day is an excellent health habit. Better still, 24 hours a day. Always with due regard for personal comfort, the law, the pain of sunburn, and the sensibilities of the neighbors. bony pervis must all be taken Into consideration when determining the ideal bulk. HIGH-HANDED SENATOR court says in effect that congress|iness it may be about. Congress can (St. Paul Dispatch) cannot go snooping around into peo-| not go around breaking down doors Senator Black, chairman of the| Ple’s affairs to see what it can find! just for the sport of seeing what is felling her—and the world—what he thought of Col. Knox’s|| ducing presidents. phances. What to E: » Please repeat the recipe you gave for wheat “muncharoons.” (L. F.) Answer—Send stamped addressed envelope for monograph, “What to Knox saw the article before it was published but refused to iret Mista Becrring ¥ Le thange it. He was under implied contract with the readers of his the oolng squads mean anything. ‘ newspaper to let O’Brien say what he thought, so the thing eidshrsd prresothee ti Phares yan “as was. anti-Roosevelt delegates threatened i i i to emerge. Death of ex-Go' Which recalls an event in the campaign of 1920 when fiche oh Ea inet James M. Cox, another great publisher, was an unsuccessful | faced in Maryland and willingness of candidate for the presidency. Senator Walsh and Governor Curley togethi Roose’ Cox had contracted with a well-known commentator to ouneiion eroua “atameectisietts i i i i i i aided him and he to hi write a series of pre-election articles for his newspapers and ab SuEteatEl EEE Ave wilt ite the man started on a tour of the country. From almost every | few voices raised against the presi- amid io ack. state he sent back the flat prediction that Warren G. Harding nine ivan siiieine cate sian was going ea win, ‘ides Pe the Commener attempted to persuade Cox’s editors, anxious for their boss to win, finally got s e convention not lenounce the of these blue observations and one of them dropped the articles Paewan rrr areetig pbicit ria from one of the Cox newspapers. terests). The candidate was campaigning in the west at the time but two days later that editor received instruction to resume pub- scared laid foifeerad in bs grave lication of the articles and to “pick up” those which had been|Gommittee ‘of ‘Louisiana organized left out. Cox lost the election but he enhanced his reputation as oF drive Huey from public life—is a publisher and proved to the readers of his newspapers that |Su,ecc Mis Collesgue, Senator John he would print the news no matter what the situation. Charging that the senate has used Thus both Knox and Cox, one a Republican and the other a Pieroigb picierresy esr prepreg ggened Democrat, adhere to and support a great tradition, that the|mittee’s petition containing sworn press must be free within as well as without. Editorial expres- Sacaee demeusaneava: and _alleging sion is one thing, but to tamper with the news is another. even been referred to a senate com- ___ Cox will never be president and Knox’s chances are none Eudeneieey by Hilda eee too good but each has contributed something to the American | mond, is circulating # chain letter de- Beene by refusing to pollute the wells of public opinion. By | Signed to incite protests to Vice Pres- * * * Louisiana Women Fight On just been checked in what the Dis- trict of Columbia court calls a viola- tion of the constitutional guaranty against unreasonable searches and seizures. Senator Black threatens to put.a law through congress destroy- ing the power of courts to pass,on the rights or wrongs of what a congres- sional investigating committee may do. In this way he hopes to make it possible for his committee and all other investigating committees to be just as unreasonable and high-handed as they please in carrying out searches for and seizures of evidence. This is a rash threat of which the senator will probably think better as he considers the matter more fully. The constitution says that “The ju- dicial power shall extend to all cases in law and equity arising under this constitution.” If congress were 50 minded, it could destroy the courts of the District of Columbia, or any other of the lower federal courts. But it would have to create new ones to take their place and not even Senator Black would be able to change the constitutional power of the courts to hear and decide “all cases in law and equity arising under the constitution.” Whether @ congressional committee violates the “unreasonable search and seizure” clause of the constitution when it orders a telegraph company to hand over to it all the telegrams received and sent by a firm of law- mittee investigating the;0Ut unless it can show good reason/ on the other side, any more than can | Eat.” Ser cr atieresslonial ipubles, has that is related to whateevr public bus-| the Police. Just that they were all standing #0 near she couldn't help it. Toby y was moving away when Mise Bur- & ruai tows called to her. it, Miss Burrows?” (Copyright, 1936, John F. Dille Co.) BEGIN MERB TODAY TOBY RYAN, 19, works behing ‘wanted to buy an enormous rhine- stone bracelet. A minute later Toby was busy with a customer, and the rest of the day went in brisk routine. Toby forgot the fourth floor “Beauty Bar” and the glaring lights and how awkward she had felt before the camera. She fore got Gladys’ warning that Maurine was “sore.” Lunch hour came and went, the afternoon brought & new stream of shoppers. By 6 o'clock, when the first closing gong sounded, Toby sighed grate- fully. In the milling crowd in the locker room sbe got into her last season’s brown coat, managed to catch a fleeting glimpse of her- self in a mirror, and adjusted the little green hat. Then she was in the elevator, descending to the street. She stepped out into the Feb- dusk, raised her head in- voluntarily, and drew a deep breath. The good, cold, fresh air smote her cheeks. To left and im an ad- Vertisement when Mins Collins a- torrupts. NOW GO ON WITH TUE STORY CHAPTER Il BY hadnt meant to -overhear any of the conversation. It was She turned and said, “What ts their example they may have benefited the country more than ee x yers is another matter, and oné for ‘The right, lights gleamed in the al- A : we. Back the courts to decide. The supreme ‘ Jewelry buyer looked ot ready darkened streets. News- either could do if elected to the presidency. ae aeat the District of Columbia has Maurine and eaid, “I'm sorry, dear. boys were crying the day's head- WPA finally is getting out some : counter-propaganda which may prove a, Season of Crucifixion srorwhere are being ad af the pe nglewood, New Jersey, long has been rated as one of the|°e™ be hick money going int wealthiest and most exclusive communities in the country. It Betas pt ay . fis known to nearly every American as the home of Mrs. Dwight eee Parks, playgrounds, public W. Morrow, mother-in-law of Col. Lindbergh, but it numbers | Harry Hopkins Ices vor tha so found in connection with the order affecting Silas Strawn’s law com- pany, to the extent of granting a temporary injunction which prob- ably will be made permanent. The framers of the Bill of Rights knew what they were talking about when they put into the constitution a prohibition against unréasonable “They won't need you, after all—" ‘Then, to Toby, “This ts Miss Col- ‘ins from the advertising depart: mént, and this fe Mr. Hiatt They want you to pose in some photo Srapbs they're making up om the third floor. You're to go with lines in their indistinguishable Jargon. Toby stood for @ moment, tak- ing it all in—the lights and noise and pushing crowd. It was all familiar; nevertheless, it was im- pressive. en Toby tugged at her hat brim, settling it more firmly on her head, and set off among its residen' 1 ili assertion that 86 per cent of all WPA} searches and seizures, They knew them—" : down the street. - ay ane its a large pumbergan other millionaires and projects consist of “additions and im-|from experience under Tin bk dee tn ee : or; 2 pote J recreates to pues p_prewerty, The tornpny tas oe neceeree?, pore 2 16 minutes later Toby Ryan found | | 4 At the same time Tim Jamieson, There may be some significance, therefore, in the fact that | other 14 per cen unds goes | search for evidence seize it, leaning ‘against a ber in the to whitecollar projects, sewing, and the Rev. Archey D, Ball, pastor of the Methodist Episcopal | otner production projects for use by| fully safeguarded. It can be used as church in Englewood, has been ousted from his charge on de-| he unemployed. mand of the conservative members of his congregation who re- politics’ in WPA administration in gard him as too liberal. . Dr. Ball, be it said, made no effort to stay, but turned the eee Pegs taittegeal i ig aye other cheek. His observations, as revealed in the press, are} (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) worthy of attention. F After stating his belief that “religion is not so much a matter of attending church as of applying the principles of Christianity in everyday life,” Rev. Ball went on to say: “the conservative members of my congregation really believe this. We do not disagree on that point. The difference arrives when direct application of these principles is demanded. “.,... When I attribute war fundamentally to economic causes and try to educate the people to believe in this practical the floor. theory, it cuts into busiffess practice, and yet if the church doesn’t start soon to realize its obligation in these matters it will disintegrate and become an irrelevant part of our life, as it has in so many countries.” our campaign speeches this year. There seems an echo in those remarks from a distant day. heuer oy gaenam ease oak BIT OF HUMOR NOW AND THEN 18 RELISHED BY THE BEST OF MEN It comes down to us with particular clarity during this Lenten| world she wants to marry that man | 20, nis files was an attempt to pun~ season when the Christian world is doing penance in anticipa-| Brown for. He has a wooden leg, a tion of the crucifixion. And it makes one wonder what chance a modern Redeemer would have for acceptance if he chose instinct that makes them hanker| | Englewood, New Jersey, as the site for a second sermon on the he ae ‘The answer to charges of vicious|Therefore they put into the consti- several states hasn’t been found. If| that government officials can not go “[I] Senator Wigmoor| erty League connection. The Liberty j —I hear you are in| League itself says that if that is all he favor of a rule re-| wants,e can have their whole file stricting speeches on| of telegrams to and from the Strawn Senator Dumdum| taken back and lamely tells the Lib- —T'll say I am. If] erty League to submit the evidence we had had such @/and the committee will then decide rule last year we! whether or not it wants the tele- wouldn't have so much to explain in| grams. glass eye, false teeth and wears a wig. Jimmie—It must be the feminine |¢ possible of grave abuse unless care- an instrument of political oppression. tution itself a safeguard which means on “fishing expeditions” to pry and prod around in the personal affairs of individuals to see what they have been saying or doing and what may possibly be found that can be used Mr. Strawn apparently believes that Senator Black's fishing expedition ish him for being a Republican. The So They Say | ¢——_———___—_——_———"° herself standing before the new and Gassiing black. and chromium “Beauty Bar” with three biasing electric Nights bathing her im their yellow glare and a camera directly before ber. The photographer (be bad removed the trench coat end bat, displaying a crest of very red bair and a gray suit somewhat out @f press) dodged forward and back- ward, the biack focusing cloth about bis shoulders, Every sow and then he would pull the cloth over bis head, peer through the camera, and then dart forward again to change the position of a Nght, alter Toby’s pose, or rear. Tange the background. “Turn your face to the left a little, Miss Ryan. ‘That's right—no, not so far. Back again, the way you were. Now try i egain—” felt uncomfortable, She had on coat with a heavy mink collar and @ bat from the French reom. She was supposed to be es customer about te make s purchase at the “Beauty Bar.” east fifties, helped himself to s cigaret ‘from the package his companion held. Tim touched a match to the cigaret, watched the fragile ribbon of smoke rise trom its tip. Then he said, “I saw a girl today—" “Remarkable!” The other's tone was good-naturediy jeering. The photogr. said, “Ni it, That's t—I” and there was py ors discanble “cee a 4 ARTY said to Toby, “Might as ‘Toby slipped out of me one well sit down and rest. Don’t| with the heavy mink collar an want you to look stiff and un- the expensive Bee oe said, “Is pee ai cay al ee wYea,| HOW, 49 You account for 112" older woman ni . Fy Gratefally, she sank into alr teil Miss Burrows you were|hear “She hes blue orees te chair, She watched curiously as! great help.” went on, reflectively—“at least 1 the photographer worked over his eed hope cag won't think I've ag sarire Hae ‘They're big " Present used be- gone too long.” and sort of— swell, And berg ale gba o right,”| “Don't worry.” Miss Collins|she's got the cutest Httle e yy smiled. “I'll take care of that.|She had on a green hat—” he told her. “Absolutely okay-/ Perhaps we can use you again| The other man raised his glass. Bver do any posing before?” some day—” “I've seen girls myself—one or aaa iat BY slipped Sea suins Om cok wats ak ° : ipped away. 6 "t | eyes an and ears snd ate neteet. 7 ba ign 70 EL rabey im being “used”|and legs and—er, and so forth. were a little nervous, Jagain. She hoped fervently that|Lots of ‘em have green hats, too. “Just the same, you're all right.| Miss Burrows would not be T can find you a doten—” That other girl downstaire—the|noyed because she had been away| “This one,” Tim interrupted, lone Miss Collins wanted to uee—/from the department so long. “4s special. I've got to find her.” she'd have been terrible.” Apperently Miss Burrows was| ‘Find her? Is she lost?” “why,” Toby exclaimed, “I not, Glddys Sorenson, when the} “I mean,” Tim explained, “that 2 A ro opportunity came, plied Toby/I saw her this on the think Maurine’s beautifa! ith questions about what it was|street. Ran into her—no, that's “gure, she’s good enough look- ue to aay for BP Soro ieteoaR, not ear ran into On ing—but not before a camera.jwhat the new uty ir’ |@ corner. almost bum; Features are too small. and 1|lcoked like, when they were go-|!nto my arms and she loauad’ an ing to see the pictures, etc. urprised and eute and—” don’t like her chin. You've got “ I camera face, Aid sou tenow thett| comm Marve they won't] Oh foraet it! Mute abeat.o Suddenly the photographer |t spotted you the very Grat thing.|surorised it th Cagairld you don’t even know! ‘The lights were hot and Toby Paris Tepresent France. it they didn't. I felt ,all the’ crack-brained, { mount. Pete—When I arrived in Washing- | This sed wa not follow the cap!- called, “Now you've got it! That's|Round face, big eyes, cute Uttle/roolish, and I'll bet I looked that |ots!” ton I didn’t have @ single cent in my |tal in either revolution or reaction {t—" and there was a barely dis |D0#e—" too.” Jamieson shook his ead. pockets. In fact, I didn’t even have | as it once did.—Julien Benda, French cernible “click.” "1b bet you looked swell,”|“No,” he said. “I don't know Ohio gas station attendants want to know how to tell a drunk, to whom ‘kets. ae es fet ens, He's the one who, after the window's polished, extends Gere pen? Lied Pete—Oh, I was born there. ak BepriCoentn tt ung |_Depesons tn core some | ot averting men and women |vhan in Gling append. [or Bele ay ont ot ber wr|Muulet nd Guy” dts oi 0; congestion of persons en, mint more, at's my advice.” 1 i—what’s hy Fae ae oe eae is pepinnin ane, fe vee. The Mickey Mowe| seastic. to be carried on a silver platter Tats what you want?” he asked) 04 before the lights and| Toby said, “It she really cares,|Maribelle? What about ten’ od onearth did that hap- philosopher. q ** * Without government assistance, if possible, but with government help, if necessary, industry must be made Interne—Oh, yes, we had a lot of|to take care of its own the year Patients admitted during the cold and | around.—Gov. Frank D. Fitsgerald, time when Manhattanites were agog over the Walkers,|SnOwy spell—all of them victims of | Michigan. c ongestion. Reporter—Congestion of the lungs? Mrs, —Are these | Hoff: » New Je fe poms tiging. tr, sil the trouble to which Tl Duce ts going in Afric perhaps] actaisiniy oak egtat pie cael doy better ask him if he doesn’t bave it confused with Utopia. se @ : Our team looked like a bunch of farmer who brings them to me re-|street-car conductors.—Avery Brund- American _ Some people are never satisfied. After being injured abroad in an auto| fuses to keep chickens which lay|age, president of the fresh, @ baroness sues for 1,000,000 more marks, ¥ Olympic want you to try one from the other side,” she eald. “I'd like to show that beckground—”" work to change the lights again. He was accustomed to the whims/nical explanation, ® moment later, over ope shoul-|watched, apparently registering der. rapt delight over the array of ment later she was called to an- ewer a telephone somewhere in/nified that the posing was at an|was called away then to wait on a| dat bd as ae ‘te with her!’ Gtadys insisted loyally.’ She went|her name or where she ons “Bit, say—Mauri: her telephone number. “Maybe. But pretty girls)s boll because they asked you to|know anything abou; er—except ways photograph that|be in those pictures instead of|that I’ve got to find her.” way,” be snioreas aon “You've her. She looked mad enough to| The other Ss - got to be able to em up. bite nails after you left.” ‘Okay.” Marty Hiatt set tolyo. seo, it’s all'im the camera—"| “But I didn’t have anything to He went into an favolved, tech-/do with it—!” interrupted/ “I know. Just the same, she’sjanything at all? What about Miss Collins stepped forward. “I I'm sorry I did it.” Bat Tim Jamieson Stics"efmnaine ene ina sapere ones pt eta Rs Olas Sa uty preparat er. emp! Pilesd me good said abra Mie Coins bodst. A mor At last Marty Hiatt announced to see that dame get taken down |i will, where triumphantly, “Got {t!” and sig-|a peg once in a while!” Gladys|that within 2. .