The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 16, 1937, Page 6

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ms. = The Bi k Trib The Bismarck Tribune f An Independent Newspa: THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) J State, City and County Official Newspaper Mrs. Stella 1. Mann President and Treasurer Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Editor 4 . ‘Vice Pres. and Gen'l. Manager Subscription Rates Payable in Advance per year (in state outside outside of North Dakota ail in stave per year mail outside of North Dakota, per year mail in Canada, per year Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively eatitled to the tion of the news dispatches credited to It or not otherw! Rewspaper ani All rights of Living Standard Key to Child Labor Issue The child labor amendment to the Constitution has been pending ever since 1924, and from the looks of things it may well be pending 10 years hence. It is in an odd spot; it seeks to effect a reform which everybody favors, but it seeks to do it in a way with which a great many people find fault. A lot of people have tried to think of ways to get.around this obstacle. The most recent attempt is being made by Con- gressman Dudley A. White of Ohio and Senator Warren R. Aus- tin of Vermont, who have come up with a substitute amend- ment. It has been objected that the 1924 amendment, if ratified,’ might give the federal governmnet control over child training. and education as well as over child labor. So this substitute jays down strictly limited objectives. It reads: “The Congress shall have power to limit, regulate, and prohibit labor in mines, quarries, mills, workshops, factories and manufaturing establishments, of all persons under 16 years of age.” At first glance, this would seem to do the trick. Certainly it ought to quiet the fears of those who have visions of Uncle Sam stepping into the schoolroom and the home to say how chil- dren shall be reared. But the child labor problem is far from simple. It isn’t merely a matter of children in “mines, quarries, mills, work- shops, factories and manufacturing establishments.” One of the greatest fields of child exploitation, for instance, is to be found in agriculture. Many of the notorious tenant-farmer set-ups are so de- signd that the tenant cannot hope to make a go of it unless he has three or four children and keeps them busy in the fields from dawn to dusk. Many of the farms that use large numbers of seasonal workers hire whole platoons and battalions of chil- for republica- credited in this news of spuntaneous origin published herein. id also local republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. THE WILLIAMSON TALKS S. Ladd of Bismarck on Convention Program dicine samples by physicians are the biggest stumbling blocks in inter- professional relationships between the two groups, Dr. G. M. Williamson, secretary of the state board, of me- dical examiners, pointed out to mem- bers of the North Dakota Pharmaceu- tical association during their third session Wednesday. Legislation affecting pharmacy was reviewed during the final general ses- sion of the convention. Election of officers and selection of a place for the 1938 convention was set for @ closed meeting during the afternoon. W. J. Torgerson of Grand Forks, local secretary, will be toastmaster for the annual banquet Wednesday night. Other speakers are N. N. Brakke of McVille, William Pierce of St. Paul, secretary of the Minnesota druggists fair trade committee; P. H. Costello of Cooperstown, secretary of the state board of pharmacy; Dan Hall of Bismarck, Max Retzlaff of Jamestown, John Nelson and 8. N. Aqua of Minneapolis, members of the Minnesota board of pharmacy. Dr. Maysil M. Williams, state health officer, was the principal speaker at the opening session. C. 8. Ladd of Bismarck, state food and drug commissioner, spoke on “New Legislation Affecting Phar- macies.” Named on the state fair trade com- mittee were Clarence Hay, Fargo, chairman; B. L. Bentson, Fargo; Cap H. Saunders, Minot; Homer Hill, Towner; Nels Brakke, McVille, and John Vold, Grand Forks. Auto Making Delay in USSR Brings Warning Moscow, June 16.—(#)—The Com- munist party newspaper Pravda Wed- nesday warned Valey Ivanovitch Mezhlauk, commissat of heavy indus- tries, that “unsatisfactory conditions” in the automobile industry will not be tolerated. For several days this month three factories failed to turn out any automobiles because it had no generators and inner tubes. At a heavy truck factory, Pravda said, conditions are “alarming.” Wynn Honeymooning With ‘Miss New York’ ~ New York, June 16.—()—Ed Wynn, » was honeymooning aboard dren. No one can object to the ordinary farmer who has his | his yacht Wednesday with the former sons lend a hand with the chores; but without interfering with that sort of thing, it ought to be possible to throw some safe- guards about the youngsters who are exploited in the fields and orchards of commercial farms, . Then there are the sweatshopa-that send work out to be done in the home. It is hard to see how this new amendment would touch them ; yet they offer some of the most vicious exam- ples of child labor in all America. The child that slaves in a slum kitchen on one of the “novelty. trades” needs just as much protection as the child that punches a clock in a factory., In the long run, of course, it is not a constitutional amend- ment that will end child labor, but a general country-wide rise in prosperity ; a rise of the kind that will end the poverty which tompels people to eke out insufficient incomes with the labor of their children. Child labor is nothing more than a by-product pf destitution. It won’t vanish entirely until destitution van- ishes. Meanwhile, however, regulation is needed. And the regu- lation needs to be drafted with extreme care. ; For Old Times’ Sake A return to normalcy in drug stores is indicated by Ford- ham university’s new model “Pharmacy of the Future,” which, it.is promised, will handle nothing but pharmaceutical products. Now there is nothing particularly wrong with the neo- modern drug store, with its wide selection of ogds and ends which the hurried householder can pick up in an urgent moment. But the sentimental victim of today’s furious living, _ who yearns to steal as of old into a quiet apothecary for a re- freshing sniff of tempting aromatic odors, finds that the hustling drug stores in current vogue just don’t quite hit the spot. Without embroiling itself in any dispute over the merits of these types:of business, Fordham seems to have clinched 8 grand idea. But to be perfect, the “Pharmacy of the Future” should concede this one thing: on the back counter it should have three big glass jars, stocked with red, white and pink peppermints. f Slum Clearance Problem Several years ago we heard a great deal of talk about slum clearance. Big projects were announced, even bigger plans were talked of, and there was a general hope that decent hous- ing might at last be made available to the “submerged tenth” i in our great cities. But the problem is extremely complicated. A glimpse at its difficulties is furnished in a speech recently made before the American Institute of Architects by Walter R. McCornack, chairman of the institute’s housing committee. Building costs are so high, said McCornack, that it simply is not possible to build new homes at prices which present slum dwellers can pay. He suggested three remedies: raise the in- come of the whole population, reduce building costs sharply, or bridge the gap by outright gubsidy. Ponder over the difficulty of doing any of these three things and you will understand that slum clearance is one of the knottiest problems we could be called on to solve. Plugging the Source Judge J. M. Braude of the Chicago boys’ court declares the “three G’s”—gin, gas and girls—are bringing more g youngsters into his court these days than ever before. important, he announces that hereafter, when juveniles brought in for driving while under the influence of liquor, will proceed against the tavern owners and saloon keepers have been selling them booze. No one can fail to wish him success in this campaign, or that he deals ‘out the stiffest penalties the law pro- -. It is impossible to think of any excuse for the man bo sells liquor to a minor. A joint where such sales take should be closed permanently, in short order. It is about ) worst kind of public nuisance that can possibly exist, senate Mierse, “Miss New York of 1927,” an ex-Ziegfeld Follies girl. were married Tuesday in the ey hapel of the city’s marriage license dl bureau. Wynn’s former wife obtained & Reno divorce:last month. ‘The new Mra. Wynh said she is 25. The comedian is 50.” St Communities May Pay More of Relief Bills Washington, June 16.—(4#)—Senator Byrnes, (Dem., 8. C.), appealed to the Wednesday to require local communities to provide 40 per cent of relief project costs in seeking adop- tion of 2 committee amendment to the $1,500,000,000 relief appropriation bill which would require a 40 per cent contribution by sponsors of relief projects except when they demon- strated inability to pay that amount. Head Hunter Slew 20 in Rage of Jealousy ‘ — 5 Manila, P. I., June 16. fe Rodolfo Baltazar said Wednesday Kalinga Boli, a head hunter whose reign of terror resulted in 20 violent deaths, confessed he killed his wife and three other persons in a fit of Jealousy. Boli was accused of xilling 13 persons in his mad rampage. MONTANA PROMISED AID Washington, June 16.—()—Mon- tana’s drouth area was promised fed- eral ald Tuesday when Senator Bur- ton K. Wheeler annomnced W. L. ~ BEFORE DRUGGISTS Dan Hall, Dr. Williams and C. Grand Forks, N. D., June 16.—()}— Counter prescribing on the part of pharmacists and distribution of me- family quainted with the addressee dur- ing a visit to Hawail several years ago. They call him ‘just “Mr. PICTURES VIEWED “BY ND MORTIIANS 81 Delegates Registered at Convention in Mandan; Tour Fort M’Keen ! Educational pictures showing con- struction of vaults and metal caskets to 81 del- egates of whom 40 attended the an- jnual breakfast for officers and com- | mittees. L. 8S. Ashley, president of |the Northwest Casket Co., Minneap- | Olis, discussed creative selling. |, Perry O. Powell, field counsel for the National Funeral Directors as- sociation, was slated to speak Wed- nesday afternoon on general advance- ment in.the profession before del- egates tour Fort McKeag, south of Mandan. J. W. Maxwell of Grafton paid tribute to eight members of the North Dakota association who died the last year, and a prayer was offered by the Rev. A. 8. Henry, Mandan, at me- morial services Tuesday. Joe Murray, Cando, reported on 1937 legislation affecting funeral di- rectors, Former Publisher at . Pyaar Pingree Dies in West San Jose, Calif, June 16—(P)— Harry C. Smith, 58 publisher of the weekly Campbell Press and postmas- ter of Campbell from 1920 to 1935, died at his home near here Tuesday might of a heart ailment. Before Smith came to Campbell 24 years ago to publish the weekly he was a pub- Usher in Pingree, N. D. The widow and a daughter, Wilma, survive. Reporter Assigned to Kidnaping Case Killed -Port, Jefferson, N. Y., June 16.—(?) —Arthur E. Calnan, 34, one of the Press reporters assigned to the Parsons kidnaping, was killed early Wednesday when an automobile he was driving crashed into a stone- wall on a Main Street curve here. He was en route from Stony k to nearby Port Jefferson. d OWATONNA GETS DAILY Owatonna, Minn., June 16.—(7)— The Owatonna Journal-Chronicle, consolidation of the Owatonna news- papers published continuously for more than 77 years and one of the pioneer newspapers of Minnesoa, be- came a daily Wednesday. POWER SALE PLANNED Washington, June 16—(?)—Sena- tor Burton K. Wheeler of Mont Tuesday introduced a bill prov! a detailed administration to handle the sale of electric energy at the Fort Peck dam project in Montana. SCHMELING IS HOME Berlin, June 16.—(#)—Returning Wednesday after a seven weeks’ ab- sence, Max Schmeling, German heavyweight boxing contender, left here immediately for his country home for a rest of several weeks. ALBERTA SOLON DIES Rochester, Minn, June 16—(?)— George H. Van Allen, 46, Edmonton, Liberal member of the Alberta legis- lature, Gay. KILLED BY PROPELLER Albert Lea, Minn., June 16—()— Palmer Irving, 10, was killed last night when he stepped out of an air- | No. 4 dark northern, 5¢ Ibs. ‘Wilson of the agricultural department will leave late his week to set up co- ordinated relief organization. HOLSAPLE RESIGNS Minneapolis, June 16.—(7)—R. N. Holsaple, superintendent of the Anti- Saloon League of Minnesota for the past four years, resigned Tuesday to accept a call to be pastor of the Evan- gelical church at Cass City, Mich. He will begin at the church June 27. ‘U’ LOSES LIBRARIAN Tucson, Ariz., June 16—(7)—William Hugh Carlson, University of North Dakota Wwe was » H. plane and was struck by the end of the propeller. That Otherwise By WM. E. McKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) Recently I discussed one of the less reggae forms of the holdup , who resigned which experts recognise which less players faculty of the University of Michigan. by to nap Tod vs I ad TAX a more uni Fe eee eee ED eorge holdup in which the declarer, desp! H. Stanton, Great Falls, Mont. had|® Very attractive opportunity to wis 4 clear record in 1920 income tax re~ two Si etun tan es nee eae furns Wednesiar, aftes, Hie Dowre © with perfect safety. The bureau of internal revenue had : assessed him $4,824. pes se | Additional Markets | —_—______—___—_—_——___—_-* BISMARCK GRAIN June 16. No. 1 dark northern, 58 Ibs.. ednesday librarian at the University of Arizona. himself the contract Today's Contract Problem West's contract is six spades. Its success depends apparently on winning one of two finesses. After drawing t which suit should West next attack? (Blind) $120 1.18 1.16 No. 4 dark northern, 53 Ibs No. § dark northern, 52 Ibs. No. 5 dark northern, 51 Ibs. No. 5 dark northern, 50 Ibs.. Sample Grain— 49 Ibs., 1.06; 48 Ibs., 1.03; 47 Ibs., 1.00; |- 46 ibs.,.97; 45 ibs., 94; 44 Ibs. 91; 43 lbs., 88; 42 Ibs., 85; 41 lbs., 82; 40 Ibs... 19; 29-lbs., 76; 38 lbs., 73, 37 ares None vul. Opener—¥W 9. ‘Solution in next issue. aT Fil 3 g hE i g 2 g Hi see nen SEN HEARN BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, | Writer Must Have Been Dizzy Also DAVIES DESCRIBES RUSS STEEL PLANT Former Construction Engineer Tells Rotarians of Huge Project A giant steel plant at Magnitidorsk, Russia, which may be the largest in the world when completed, was de- scribed to members of the Bismarck Rotary club Wednesday by a man who served two years as @ construc- tion engineer at the plant. The speaker was W. G. Davies, now chief PWA engineer for North Da- characterizations of the Russian peo- Laat Peterson was program chair- man. Russell Freeman, Fargo, was & guest. BISMARCK BIDDING FOR CONVENTION Firemen's Association Winding Up Business With Election of Officers firemen nesday afternoon to elect officers and select @ 1938 meeting place as the final of the 1937 convention bere. An address by Frank Webb, Grand Dakota American Le- sponsoring Boy Scouts and other children’s ac- tivities. ¥ J. B. Wineman, one of the first Bids for the 1938 meeting have come from Mandan, Bismarck, Vs from iwrote soap other. oF ea Deeal bers Tt GIVES UP TWO TRICKS Declarer Delays Cashing His Ace in Dangerous Suit, for Finesse Might Be Fatal However, a number of declarers, holding the ace, jack, and nine of spades, decided that it was safe to SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS aie of sand — not a pair caused the death Sunday of three and a half ton Eva, a circus ele- phant. Officials of the Detroit render- and dirt “but it would appear that Eva over-ate her quota.” REV. KARL GIESER CHOSEN BY CHURCH M’Clusky Clergyman Is Elected Moderator of German Bap- tists Congregations MoClusky, N. D., June 16.—(?)—Rev. Karl Gelser of Turtle Lake was elect- ed moderator of the Dakota confer- ence of German-Baptist churches Wednesday. Reverend Gieser will preside at the conclave, ending Sunday, to which 53 churches in North and South Dakota and Montana sent 145 official dele- gates any many visitors. Other officers elected were Rev. E. Broeckel of Tyndall, 8. D., vice moder- ator; Rev. Thorwald Bender of Emery, 8. D., corresponding secretary, and Rev. Benjamin Schlipf, Bismarck, statistical secretary. A Bible study led by Rev. Samuel Blum of Cleveland, Ohio, editor of |‘! the German-Baptist newspaper, pre- ceded the organization meeting. Re- Ports of the conference secretary and @ quiet hour directed by Prof. O. E. Krueger of Rochester, N. Y., chair- man of the German Baptist triennial conference of the United States, fol- lowed. The conference opened Tuesday with a sermon by Rev. A. W. Lang of TRAIN VICTIM BURIED Aneta, N. D., June 16.—()—Funeral services were held Wednesday for Newel Ulvick, 32, killed in Chicago Saturday in an auto-train accident. Miss Ann Bardril, a friend of Ulvick, also was killed, é 8ST, PAUL STRIKE ENDS St. Paul, June 16.—(7)—St. Paul members of the Plasters, Lathers and Hod Carriers union, were back at work Wednesday after a seven-week strike, BIT OF HUMOR NOW AND THEN 18 RELISHED BY THE BEST OF ‘Tramp — No, ma‘am, I ain’t dirty ‘I'm bound by honor. I & testimonial for a particular! @noce and promised to use no Mrs. Housekeeper—Well, why don’t you use that? ‘Tramp—Because, ma’am, the firm) Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. estions Be ing to health but not dis- rs briefly and in ink. Address Dr. Brau: must be accompanied by a stamp: answer qu Write letter Tribune. All quer J envelope. A LISSOME BELLY PRESERVES VITE Man who has retained extraordinary vitality past ninety ascribes his health to the fact that he has always worn suspenders. The habit of wearing belts, corsets, girdles and other harness that confines, represses, supports, constricts or splints the belly—stomach, ab- domen or diaphragm to you, Aunt Euphemia—lowers vital capacity. Dr. 8. Adolphus Knof, famous authority on tuberculosis, recommends for chronic arthritis, He quotes one physician's endurance. It improves the portal circulation and thus pre- istressing of gas accumulation in the abdomen.” The physician did not mean in the abdomen, of course, but rather gas in the stomach or intestine. 3 Dr. Clelia Duel Mosher, for many years medical adviser to women in Stanford university, has brought relief to thousands of women and girls who suffered from various effects of pelvic congestion, especially painful, excessive or irregular menstruation, by prescribing a simple belly breathing of asthma, emphysema and chronic bronchitis. Dr. Theron'W. Kilmer, New York physician, introduced in band, six to twelve inches wide, three inches shorter than the tient, having inserted in each side a strip of elastic webbing, and in end eyelets.. The belt is put on over the undershirt and laced with a shoelace or narrow tape at the back, so that it gives snug support. This Kilmer belt has proved valuable for patients with whooping cough—pro- tects against hernia, prevents vomiting, lessens severity and frequency of paroxysms. Drs. J. Meakins and R. V. Christie of Montreal, suggested a belly Pa oe es earce ies ges Beet fot, She ee wheezes only when an asthmatic seizure is on. Ol Doc Brady, who n. n. i., puts himself to sleep every night with % dozen belly inflations, in spite of a terrible conscience, and advises reg- ular belly breathing exercise for the following complaints: Hypertension, high blood pressure, arteriosclerosis, chronic myocardial degeneration or slow heart muscle failure, poor circulation, cold feet, nerv- ousness, emyhpsema, asthma, chronic bronchitis, but NOT pulmonary iberculosis unless under your physician’s constant care. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Home Made Ultraviolet Ray Window Any one who finds jain ated ely el ot ters id costly can prepare a satisfactory substitute by paint or varnishing ordinary wire screen heavily with cellulose acetate. This costs about four cents a quart—I believe it is sometimes sold as an egg preserver, as liquid glass, etc. (J. R.) - Answer—Thank you. It is a sound, practical suggestion for use where for any reason it is impossible to enjoy exposure to the sunlight out of doors. A Baby's Smile Maybe I’m sentimental, though only one-fourth Irish, but when every- thing seems wrong and I’m away down in the dumps, I find all the re- assurance and inspiration I need in one little thing—the smile of our eight-months-old baby. He is being raised according to Ol’ Doc Brady, and we believe you'd love him, too. (A. W.) Answer—Right. There's just one greater inspiration in the world than the smile of a healthy, well baby, and that is the smile of the baby’s mother when it is all over but the squalling. Chalk ‘You'told a reader of some tablets to take in place of sode tablets to coun- teract excessive acidity, that would be leas disturbing to the acid-base balance in the blood. (Miss M. C.) Answer—Calcium catbonate, chalk, is a more efficient antacid than sodium bicarbonate and has little effect on the acidbase belance. Ten grains will neutralise stomach acidity for hours. Fair dose, ten grains two or three times daily. (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dille Oo.) that made that soap failed during the early years of the late depression. Customer—Look here, butcher, you are giving me a big piece of With meat as high as it is I want all that bone. \ pretty young wife in the papers? Isn't she beautiful? Henry — Yes, I saw it, and it re- minded me of the strange, but true fact that the biggest fools always seem to get the most beautiful wives. ‘Mrs. Crabshaw—Why, Henry, what Butcher—t'm not, giving,it, to you," Saterer youare! Mister; ‘you're paying for ‘it. \ira. Marigold—Were you » distin. a von guished college graduate dear? Mrs. Crabshaw —,Henry, dear, did| Sally ( a recent grad) — Oh, no, you see the picture of Lawyer Slupp’s| miraculous one. bone. don’t AFRAID 4 love by MARION WHITE CAST OF CHARACTERS JOAN BARRETT, heroine, sce- to John . : JOHN HENDRY, mintag tnvest- ove HENDRY, socialite, John monary" niece and Jean's rival tn love. pad Se SENDRY, sybils Bees Gd, von onsen CRANLES NORTON, California mii erent be eel ewes Yesterday: Philip stumbles = caer eae st ha Sybil. - CHAPTER XXIV boudoir, fathoms deep in dream of contentment. The ‘telephone on her bedside table..jengled, and she stirred restlessly. Within the second, she was asleep again. It rang again, and this time its call was more insistent. Sybil opened her eyes sleepily. A third time it rang, and she sat up quickly. She looked at the tiny clock alongside of her. Two o'clock. Who could be calling at two o'clock in the morning? onto Bar- in San calls G¥BIL lay in the rose and silver Si weg, the, ura slng te (Ol NEA SERVICE. HC She heard him chuckle. “Ele- mentary, my dear Watson,” he said, “elementary. Well, go back to sleep now. So long...” G° back to ‘sleep! She sat up in bed, more wide awake than she had ever been, and hugged the information to her heart. Ps Joan Barrett, the meek-as-a- mouse, doll-faced sweetheart, was the daughter of a murderer. Her father had) been hanged at San Quentin. Who could tell what outrageous ideas lurked behind the sweet blue eyes of the man’s daughter? . And that was the girl Bob An- that she'd rather die than have him find it out. Imagine living one's life with a murderer’s child! Why, at any moment, she might it the same crime herself. It was in her blood, to kill.... Bob would be thunderstruck when he found it out! It was like Sybil not to consider how intense- ly he might be hurt; her mind was too full of the supreme satis-| bed. faction she would know when he learned the truth. But who should be the one to tell him? a i g 5 a F E E fe i gz 3 qe ibe 3 i eg ual fin i caf i i i i i z E ‘ 2 se if i r H g yj Tl but it was strange to see it ajar. Strange, too, she heard no voices. Perhaps Mr. Norton had gone back to town, after all. crossed the hallway to the living room. Suddenly she sto in ped her ' Uncle John sat there, gazing t her from his lifeless eyes even as he had gazed at Joan two hours

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