The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 6, 1937, Page 6

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j Archie O. Johnson Vice Pres. and Gen'l Manager (Established 1873) Sunday by The Bismarck Mrs. Stella I. Mann President and Treasurer 6 e Bismarck Tribune An inéspendent Newspaper ie THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER @tate, City and County Official Newspaper : Gally except Tribune Company, Bis- smarck, N, D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Balter ij Subscription Rates Payable in Advance + year (in Bismarck) year (in state outside of Bismarck) Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation Member of the Associated Press Press is ispatches F also the local news of spuntancous All rights of republication of all other matter here: clusively entitled to t! dited to it or not othe: Slow in Changing Man, take it from Prof. Frederick Tilney of New York, is just in the half-baked stage. He is just as far from his ul- timate development as he is from the ooze and slime of the dark ages when, according to some theories, he was of little more importance than a tadpole. Because, so Prof. Tilney says, one of these days the human ise for republica- 6 credited in this published herein. also reserved, brain is really going to come into its own. Sweet reason will rule the race and intelligence will be the dominating motif. Hear the professor: “The human brain is only in some inter- mediate stage in the ultimate development of the master or- gan of life... all the evidence which is available from the long primate and mammalian history of the brain conveys the strong impression that the evolutionary process has not come to an t end with modern man as its culminating phase.” { The good professor then goes on to advance the theory that ~ tintelligence can be measured by the height of the forehead, pointing to the Piltdown, Neanderthal and Rhodesian men as low-brows. It would be a good deal easier to agree with the professor ff it weren’t for that last proposition. Maybe, as he says, the thinkers of the future will have dome-like heads, but that isn’t true today. Some of the highest high-brows, physically speaking, are prime chuckle heads. In many cases they didn’t have brains enough‘or weren't interested enough to keep their hair from falling out. ; Bulges over the eyes in the frontal area, so cherished by Prof. Tilney, are not always evidence of high-speed cerebra- * tion. They may be merely rolls of fat pushing out the skull. It may be that he is right, but no one now living will ever find it out and history offers no proof. The recorded activities See SEE Announcement by the Irish government that it intends to secede from the British Empire is an event of far-reaching _ significance. Seon pletely. ‘Trish Secession of the human race have covered an appreciable period and man seems to be about the same now as when Adam and Eve got into trouble about eating the apple. It may be that man is changing, as Prof, Tilney says, but nae the changes are slow in making themselves manifest. ing nations, united under the crown, is fast disintegrating. Ire- Jand’s action may be the bombshell which tears it apart com- For England soon will be faced with the question of whethe: go its way in peace. } If armed troops are gent into the country to maintain Brit- _ ish dominance, as was done only a few years ago, the effect on the other dominions will be bad. If the Irish are permitted to secede peacefully it may be even worse. o le to keep Ireland in the family by force or to let the Emerald Isle is Truly great questions face the throne as the stammering | George VI ascends it for his coronation, The English have long | possessed the ability to “muddle through” all kinds of chal- 7 Jenges, but in view of conditions both within and without the - *tight little isle” it is fair to surmise that a major crisis now is impending which may shake the foundations of the empire. Pass the Mavericks! Congressman Maury Maverick started something when he Suggested recently that hors d’oeuvres—those oddments of the dinner table, which few Americans can pronounce and no one can predict—be ‘renamed in simpler form. Mr. Maverick suggested “dingle doos.” But now comes no less a gastronomic authority than George Rector, famous New }| York restaurateur, to urge that they be called “mavericks” in This, says Mr. Rector, would be fitting for two reasons. First, as a tribute to the congressman; second, because “mav- erick” is @ good old American word meaning an unbranded stray _ honor of the congressman. horse or steer which has wandered off by himself and is any odds and ends. ericks, if you please. | Progress in the Air A newspaper item reveals that production of American- i] man’s forthe taking. This, he points out, is a perfect descrip- | tion of a tray full of antipasto, canapes, anchovies, and similar | We hope his campaign succeeds. Waiter—a tray of mav- | type planes is to be an outstandng feature of Russia's plane i building program. This news, coming shortly after revelations ; that Russian American-type craft completely outclassed other |; ships in engagements over Madrid, should bolster this country’s |} pride over its progress in this line of aviation. Zs 8 Another news story reveals that two Akron, O., inventors have patented a new type of airship control that May avert the danger of airships, struck by gusts or squalls, twisting and breaking in midair. It was just such disasters that befell the | Navy’s Shenandoah, Akron, and Macon .and shattered the na- _ ton’s faith in lighter-than.air craft. - Whether the new invention will change this attitude re- | the aviation parade, + mains to be seen. If it does, and somehow dispels the jinx that has dogged our dirigibles, Upcle Sam should just about lead Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. t aise Dr. Brady will answer questions pertaining to health but no! i . Write letters briefly and in inl a Biaay fn cate of The ‘Tribune, All queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope. Beis? Scenes Washington Various Trust Attitudes in Past Cases. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) We 6.—It is rather commonly believed that the anti-trust laws virtually have been emasculated by past decisions of the supreme court. But even the emost conserva- tive lawyer has to admit that when it comes to predicting the court’s present-day position on an old issue, you never can tell. In anti-trust cases the court, per- haps, has demonstrated its mental elasticity more frequently than in any other field. That’s one fact which makes the government's dissolution suit against the Aluminum Company of America so interesting. The court consistently has held against price- fixing agreements among competitors, re- but its decisions as to monopolies— rad grace pe ee ce aa tne Aluminum Company is charged siliency by unchecked Geldings “ As ie ics or funbennal with being a monopoly under the A common, unconsidered pyorrhea ari erman Act—have been varied. impairment of one or two teeth on one side of the mouth, back that Se Re do not show if the mouth is kept carefully closed. ‘This defect soon estab- wide pad purines as to what the lishes the habit of masticating entirely on the other side of the mouth, = py te Serer ts see eres cae eerie oe aie oe ee Peed a many people still under middle age drift along more or leas edentulous, tae pices are it har ieee he a from health to premature senility or semi-invalidism, just because they do Shinada thiece dina totes Naat ia Rob appreciate the valus of good teeth or ecauw they do not appreciate gust, after some major oil companies the Tiles there is some wawasust complication, the well-advised individual Peep poe petogp eos beer who is compelled to have one or more teeth extracted should invariably adie one eee ee the bridge, plate or other denture which is to replace the teeth lost, if li i a : hi rE partment of Justice will soon be pros- ecuting important individuals and corporations in other industries on charges of violating the Sherman Act. ‘The background stretches over dec- ades in which demands for vigorous enforcement, or more teeth in the law in order to prevent concentra- tion of wealth and economic power, have been countered by demands for relaxation on the ground that the law interfered with ‘business efficiency and fostered Eines compen: ” exwrtent so, oa 3 : i i i E f : i booklet “Preparing f * | a (Copyright 1637, John F. Dille Oo) Glitter at Coronation It’s a Broad Law The Sherman Act was passed in "rea a.e| World’s Costliest Jewels to stricting production, it prohibited sup- pression of competition. It declared Rar Ione Oe . ee Mania Ponto inlet ree, toe e form of trust or , OF CON 13 monds. From by four spiracy, in restraint of trade or com- is Regalia Nearly 3 crosses and four fleur-de-lys alter- merce....” Anyone engaging in such a Cer turi Old nately, all crusted with diamonds and @ combination, or monopolizing or at- n les other gems. From the tops of the tempting to monopolize “any part of” ' 3 ¢ that trade was subject to 95,000 fine Deeply English tra- é tertwined arches, From their inter- or @ year in prison. This was a broad oe : sections there is an arch on top of law and some of its earlier victims ‘ which is a golden cross, also set with were labor unions, although the law 3 é ‘ Eagar irne had grown out of agitation against re . colored ee lamonds. the oil, whiskey, lead, sugar and other cane. very 109, of ie cross is a very trusts. it ere Pere ** In 1895 the supreme court took its vi 6 first great whack against the anti- etal Nasty trust laws. The government had sued “he, 2 ‘ z The other crown used in ceremonies Its weight is over 39 ounces. It is a circlet of open work in silver, having in front part of the famous Star of ‘ica diamond previously mentioned. . the reverse side, it has a famous = ret pot a - II. The rest - al bisning., rs Bieler . “ * é é nately emeralds and sapphires en- President Theodore Roosevelt, ier. “‘< ; predominate, ‘The crocus, which rie Hex lero rusts" and from the circlet, have each a fine entiating, between “good and : “pad trusts,” held the Sherman Act ‘ i ; eet ant edvanisdlca diet couldn't be enforced, and proposed 2 ; me _ Prince's ruby. federal incorporations for purposes of eee é _ '5 , tion, ’ . Sec case, the court 4| above is THE crown that will be wed in the corens- solution of a company formed to pold slock of competing northwestern tail- tion. poate pratt elec aye Toads. 2 And in 1906 the government was stroyed in the Cromwell revolution. Histeric draw- able to obtain dissolution of the “Beef} ings served as the model for this replica of the Trust,” a packers’ combination, in a Precious crown of Edward the Confessor (1004-1006). court decision which seemed to over- “ 7 MILTON BRONNER the =| dove. I beak and fee f bringing Se aatntachin tig sine the (ea Bervice Staff Correspondent) hese money aay The ret te aicene eines mCOpe OL /EDO TE) * London, May, 6 — Eight thousand |searching eleptric pate: Sere ceatteg tO" suv Gon na spare muchly-favored guests, sitting in|close scrutiny baubles.! which are of gold and precious stones, ‘The Standard Oil and American to bel there is the famous Jewelled sword of Must Be Wicked Westminster Abbey on May 12 for the | jewels Tobacco companies were dissolved in |Cronation of King George VI, will |crown 1911, Simultaneously the court ag- onized trust-busters by ruling that the Sherman Act must be construed “in the light of reason,” and that/|tion agreements in restraint of trade were | of illegal only when they limited com- petition unreasonably. Later the court was to hold, in effect, that it] -. unless this were done with wicked in- involved an instance of complete mon- regalia! state, the most costly of Jts kind in | the world. It was miade for that fa- 3 a : BRE LG a< i i i wig’ four ransoms. R tke corporation on the grouse, tat ths has eh preveaed nvr a GOOD WORK ON HIGH-BID its merger of plants.and machines made for efficiency. ‘Then, in 1920, the court turned down the government in its suit to dissolve i i r ; Player Develops Game Trick and Discard pf Loser, by Clever Manipulation of His Trumps | | 282, & i i H Corporation, WM. E, McKENNEY th tricks, Fur fuses, a vwith throp dusenting, of Goloceda tn southern Indie, end (daccies ir Auictaone Betdon!haegs) on asiena Dates rae held that dissolution might involve «| | was used in the crowning of the Giamond and s spade as well. ¥ fe Great Moguls, the Moslem rulers of Bridge players and writers have ; loping ON ee re a aman iice a greater part of India, until 1739 discovered that many of the most in-| $QLUTION TO PREVIOUS te ee pain Berge bie when the Shah of Persia, having con- Pipe dermegg en ey derige a CONTRACT PROBLEM thet sa men eonen ty od eee eS ace are ‘ oR Hace fle way beck to indis and when the in which the problem ef play which British conquered the Punjab, they resulted trom the optimistic bidding | eee sent it to Queen Victoria, who wore | more than passing attention. What's in a name?: -Well, the lead, it in a brooch, but Queen Alexan- | ee ane ok mene ace set role) in” The bon Oe eee tare ; Los eats South ruffed. He then retired played by Actor Beery. in the crown, which is placed on the . a y “oe Queen's head at the coronation. | i : A Kokomo, Ind., boy killed a cat because he couldn't find a dead one to swing in a “Tom Sawyer” play. And to think the air was full of them last October. * * ® The Duke of Windsor is very wroth because an author described him nada. Don Pedro, King of Castile, being “muddling, fuddling, meddling.” wanted it, Pinding no other means to | } There was, » 10 of obtain possession, Pedro killed the : cuddling. sas cenctiand nacksed Sea Dae A photograph shows several Okla- with Castilian character. An English | homa desperadoes wearing Mother army under the famous Black Prince i Hubbards. It seems the thing to do after ledrning four old women robbed the treasury. Paes “While sitting beside his girl friend, & youth was shot in a Detroit the- ater. The motive was not spparent, E ze i FF aa? diamond, which reals won with the ace. The queen of clubs was returned, (Copyright, 1981, EA Service, Inc.) mY «iy

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