Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE SUNDAY MORNING JUNE 6 D 5 1937 ‘Candid Shot’ Wins First Place in Tribune Photo Contest Cameras Click In All Quarters ‘School’s Out’ Chosen as Theme for These Take Prises for Second Week’s Photographs Senate House Members Have Become Balky This Week’s — President Finding That Rubber Stamp Method Competition Offers Wealth of Picture Ideas The kind of a "shot" that is easily caught if the cameraman is on the alert — in other words a picture in Which a "candid caipera” idea was used— stole the show to capture first prize in The Tribune-Telegrasnapshot contest for the second Week of competition “Where’s My Spoon?” winner of first place in the "Children at Home" division was submitted by Earl J Olade Jr 1479 Logan avenue Salt Lake City and annexed the week’s $5 prise in a walk by surpassing the flood of entries received by the amateur snapshot editor Little Norma Joan Glade the cameraman’s daughter was busy toying with her mother’s ' silverware when the photo was taken She had her mind on something else and it was not a posed picture- - That picture brought out ’"candid” element the generally lacking in 'such a photograph Second prize of $3 went to Robert Funk 161)4 Fourth avenue for his snapshot "Sunday Funnies” which shows Tommy and Carl going through the weekly The— Tribune -- routine— of —reading comic section For the third prize of $2 little Sherry Kay Roth and her doll are wondering “Where to The picture Go— What to Do?” was submitted by the child's mother Mrs Reta D Roth 254 South Third East street Each week The Tribune-Telegraawards the three prizes for the best snapshots submitted relating This week’s to a given subject contest which closes Saturday offers to prospective entrants an entirely new field the subject being "School’s Out” Get out your little box camera or your German "minnie" One will have as good a chance as the other Let your imagination wander over possibilities for such a subject Entrants will strive for the in a picture Something unusual is bound to create interest on the part of the contest editor But selections are not always made on this basis For instance last week's winning picture was one that any person could snap any day The picture of that little girl peer m 1 i 1 - al ofzLegislation Ends r into a cupboard drawer was anything but unusual It however carried all the interest of the unusual because it was not a posed ing By HARRY J BROWN Tribune Washington Bureau WASHINGTON June 6— President Roosevelt is finding it more ? and more difficult to get what he n — wants from congress Both senate ' and house have become balky The rubber stamp congress that was no- torious during the first new deal administration is passing into history This is trueTn face of the fact that Democratic majorities in both senate and house are larger today than at any time during the first Rposevelt term A multiplicity of causes have brought about this change First and foremost was the president's demand for legislation that would -enable him to pack the eupreme court by adding six additional judges " Resent Surprise Move Congress and in particular a large part of the Democratic membership resented this surprise move president Some among them heart- lly disagreed with the president fact the presiothers did not like-th- e dent called in Postmaster General Farley chairman of the Democratic r national committee and began at once intensively to put on pressure to force unwilling senators and con- gressmen to rush through the court picture Speaking of "School’s Out” perhaps the first thing you think about is the child tossing his books aside favor In of the old swimmin’ hole But how about some other camera Ideas? That one is likely to be overworked Get your child with his dog Or if you wish forget the child and get back to nature Almost any picture that depicts the laziness of early summer carries with it the “School’s Out’’ idea Most contestants however will take pictures that deal with chit dren Snap your boy or girl in anything that he or she is doing the day school closes Ten to one that candid snap will more realistically depict the theme than would any posed picture Each week the contest is wide open to amateurs of photographic Of course all employes of bent The Tribune-Telegra- and m persons the manufacture sale commercial finishing or professional us- e- oLphotographic' goods "along with members of their families ’are barred from entrance Any kind of a snapshot goes — as long as it depicts some phase of the weekly theme Rules for the contest will be found elsewhere in today’s Tribune Snapshots may be made on any type of film but must not ’be made on glass plates oh negatives Entrants should keep all negatives for their pictures for the prints will not be returned becoming the property of The Trib when entered in the contest Be Sure to get the names and addresses of all persons appear If you win a ing in your pictures will be this information prize needed At the close of the contest a grand prize of $10 will be paid the final winner in each of four national engaged in classifications ning pictures national prizes So get out Your chances other fellow’s plan Congress has been in session five to compete $10000 for your camera today are ge as good as the Hull ‘at Bat’ for Friend By KIRKE SIMPSON WASHINGTON— When President Roosevelt made up his cabinet in '33 there was no particular argument "" over who was to be secretary 'of state (X Cordell Hull then senator from Tennessee and a veteran house was a natural His view that trade barriers were jibed with the doctrine the new president so soon would pronounce But Hull would take over an army of foreign service workers He had William Phillips little experience and less taste for the administrative detail involved It became necessary for somebodyto of departmental experience on stand at his right hand and help administrative details That’s where William Phillips came in Phillips had climbed the ladder of career service Ho had been undersecretary minister ambassador and then voluntarily stepped back to minister only to resign in a huff at the department in Republican times That gave Hull not by his own but by White House selection his first lieutenant The parking of Dr as an Ray Moley in his department House assistant also was a White move It wanted that original Roosevelt brain truster closeT at ' hand Hull’s only personal choice among his aids was his old house colleague Judge Moore of Virginia it worked out fine The career service bloomed under the skillful hand of Phillips But the restlessness his careef Indicates beset him again and he’returned to ambassa— dorial life -- going to Rome All this is necessary to understand the peculiar situation arising from the special act of congress giving Hull two first lieutenants He has ’a counselor— Judge—Moore — end a new undersecretary Sumner man The Welles a career-traine- d have oddity is that they nominally coequal authority Either could act war-make- rs May Sufferers Expect Relief from HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE? T many sufferer may expect relief from High Blood Pressure and the attending symptoms of headache and dlnineaa if they will continue to taka Easence of Garlic Parsley Tablet according to directions on the V- rpackage Who says this T I (l s A well-knophysician (name on request) who used the tablets uoceeafully in many cases of high blood pressure ALLIM1N Easence of Garlie Pers-- ’ ley Tablets make it possible to ret such relief quickly and inexpensively These tablets are tasteless odorless and absolutely free from harmful drugs of every kind Sold By good druggists everywhere Large bos box only $100 anl y 60c fiuper-eia-e (Advertisement) i the secretary in his absence for is that only explanation Welles is to carry on with the administrative work where Phillips left off Judge Moore is to help Hull at major policy making Presumably Hull will designate which is to be acting secretary whenever he is not available The underlying factor is that mildness conceals a deterHull’s mined fighter So it is a reasonable guess that Hull would have nobody old stepped over the head of his unfriend Judge Moore when the dersecretary vacancy occurred The The Moore-Well- es situation was the re- sult Social History Covers Pueblos N M (UP)— population study of San Juan parish here is being conducted by Dr J H Watkins assistant professor of public health at the Yale university school of medi- k ALBUQUERQUE two-mon- th f full months and the supreme court bill has just reached a stage where t it becomes the legitimate topic of open debate in the senate Normally this bill would have been reported first to the house and would have been rushed through that body but administration strategy required that the house mark time while Senator Joe Robinson and Senator ‘ Ashurst'were pushing the court bill through the senate Next in Importance Next to the court bill in lmpor- - 4 tance is the president’s hill for a general reorganization of govern- ment service This was submitted only a few days a 'ter the court mei-sahad been sent In and the re- organization bill has yet to emerge from committee Unquestionably the bad feeling growing out of the i court fight has some bearing on the reorganization bill but in the main t that measure has been delayed be- cause the bpecial joint committee set up by senate and house has dis- covered the president lacked entire frankness in submitting this pro- posal In plain truth congress having -halted the president in his attempt ' to rush the court bill and the reor- - -ganizatlon bill through to final en- - ? actment has begun to feel its oats With the president on the one hand seeking to usurp more of the powers that normally have been conceded to congress and with congress on the other hand developing some—’ thing of its old spirit of Independence plans to recapture pow- ere which were passed to President Roosevelt during the depression years There is less and less pros- pect for harmony and more and 7 more opportunity for clashes Committee Rebels to now all President Roosevelt ‘ Up has needed to do was to Indicate to congress how much of a lump sum he wanted for relief But this sum- mer when the president asked for a lump sum of $1500000000 the house appropriations committee rebelled and recommended only one — billion This cut was quickly overriden and the total raised to a billion and a half but while increasing the total the house contrary to the wishes of the president deliberately and by substantial mapjorities proceeded to earmark part of this total — d of it in fact — for spec- - the four final winto be entered in a contest totaling by-the- — By SIGRID ARNE WASHINGTON GW- -In February Senator Edward Raymond Burke of Nebraska climbed on a horse named “No” and rode straight into the limelight Until then the casual observer was likely to mumble “Let’s see Norris— and who’s the other Nebraska senator?” Now they know it’s Brother Burke Burke had been a quiet enough d member of congress since March 1933 He Leads the Choir Then February 5 came along and President Roosevelt announced his plan to reorganize the supreme court Plenty of august congressmen acted though they’d lost their hat in a wind Not Burke of Nebraska He stood up and shouted a loud “No” The chorus has grown but Burke still leads the choir So much so that he is struggling to keep up with his speaking engagements And it was a speaking engagement that made him No 1 broncho of the Roosevelt stables In 1935 the South Dakota Bar association wanted to hear Burke on “The Constitution and the Supreme Court” Burke accepted but when the date arrived congress still was in session The engagement was can- -- square-shouldere- “Where’s My Spoon?” first prize winner upper right was submitted by Earl J Glade Jr 1479 Logan avenue Salt Lake City The little girl is Norma Joan Glsade Second prize went to Robert Funk 161)4 Fourth avenue for his photograph "Sunday Funnies” below and showing Tommy and Carl Anderton poring over Tribune comics Mrs Reta D Roth 254 South Third East street was awarded third prize for “Where to Go— What to Do?” a picture of her little daughter Sherry Kay upper left The International Silly Season We By WASHINGTON D C June 5— cine St Bernard dog kills inExtra! have been preDocuments which rescues traveler through of stead of San the the old served by priests in 600 Juan church are among the oldest Alps ! First event of kind years of oi records any populasystems Extra! Mussolini tells American tion in America he wants Roosevelt to Baptisms marriages and deaths journalist conference! call disarmament and of the San Juan Pueblo Indians bounded the great Down the Spanish colonists have beep re- animal the pass little flask of welcome corded in these documents and kept to his neck flung strapped brandy to as far back as 1726 according himself on a little French girl — Dr Watkins and tore“ Her throat outi ’ Into the Although records rivaling those of Palazzo Chigl bounded William P San Juan in age have been discovSimms of the United Press to be ered along the Atlantic coast in the scowling duce that Italy told New England and California none wouldbywelcome a conference for the of them furnish the complete picif our Mr armaments of limitation recture of a Single race that the initiathe “take Roosevelt would Inords here do of the San Juan whose legions are Mussolini tive” dians from the rape of Abysstill The documents at the San Juan sinia!reeking whose gallant airMussolini parish have preserved for more than men are bombing Catholic Basque 200 and trends the population babies into eternity for the greater jears fluctuations of a Clearly defined glory of fascism! Mussolini warns stock unaffected by the waves of Mr Roosevelt that unless the mad immigration and migrations that race of armaments is stopped complicate the records of other there will either be a dreadful war North American social groups or another world depression! Dr Watkins' chief concern in his Silly Season Again Here study is the historical significance of the San Juan records which are By these signs you shall know kept in the archives of the Catholic that the diplomatic silly season is archdiocese at Santa Fe N Ml again upon us and that our statesHe is endeavoring to find how this men had better be very very carepopulation has reacted to climatic ful not to believe in any of the poconditions and disease how its litical sea Berpent stories and Intergrowth has compared with that of national perpetual motion devices other races chiefly Spanish under the old world is ready to put on the similar conditions and what defi- wires nite population trends are shown Quite seriously President Roose--A secondary part of his study will velt would be very poorly advised if include the application of his find- he took any initiative whatsoever in ings in predicting future growth of relation to armaments or any other the Indians The primary purpose political phases of the European of the study is to correlate the his- situation We did not cause the torical facts of the San Juan parish armament race we did not start it Dr Watklmi said although any and we are not whining about it trends discovered will be used in an It is true that the extraordinary eneffort to project into the future voy of the United States Norman and any ’conclusions found will be Davis has returned from London used in further studies with a proposal that we hasten to The study is financed by a grant build three battleships but Mr from the Carnegie Foundation and has not been much more than since the the completed survey will be turned a human smoke-scree- n over to the government collapse of the league disarmament Da-V- is the People Jay Franklin conference and is no longer taken seriously in international affairs Situation Obvious ' What is happening is quite obvious For some time Inside rumor's have beefc coming to Washington that Mussolini was withm sight n skids The Italian the g people patient and adaptable are equally ready to cheer the victor or to get out from under a failure" During the Ethiopian campaign Mussolini undertook to bluff the British out of the Mediterranean The admiralty was ready to meet the risk but the politicians at London feared lest the loss of some capital ships might encourage Hitler to revive the pren naval race and war Since then England played safe has embarked on a dollar rearmament program (50 per cent bluff) has largely succeeded in dissociating Hitler from Mussolini (a deal for the nazlfication of Austria?) and has shown a growing lack of enthusiasm for Italian military antics in Spain Italy is a poor country lacking-fueiron and other industrial raw Mussolini’s materials Ethiopian and Spanish adventures have put a heavy strain on Italian economics and he is nearing the end of the trail of Italy’s diplomatic independence Japan is also reported in a like condition The Manchurian conquest has not panned out and complications in China have been greater than anticipated Neither Russia nor France has rewarded Hitler’s hopes of an early collapse due to their radical heresies The World is getting set for an era of peace Bluffs Have Been Called — “In other words the bluffs have been called all around and Mussolini if not yet ready to say “Uncle!’ is beginning to run for cover The bluffs have been called but the situation which provoked five years of acute tension in Europe has not yet been faced by the European na ol well-know- hard-workin- Anglo-Germa- l For peace to be consolidated the old world requires concessions from France Russia and above all from Great Britain These concessions will be partly political and partly economic For our poor dear state department to rush in where England fears to tread would celed be ignorantly to take sides and in Summer 1936 came and South advertently to accept responsibilities Dakota still wanted to hear Burke — in Europe so he made his speech This country Is not ready for It With Both Feet and does not want it We tried to To hie 'delight the constitution promote European disarmament on court became the several occasions: At Washington and the supreme session He m 1921-2- 2 at Geneva in 1927 at major fightwithof Mhls both feet and was London in 1931 and again in 1935 jumped in the bailor the opand continuously at the league For named to incarry the senate committee perfectly sound political reasons the position weren’t Europeans having any hearings S D - Born in Running Water while the world economic conference at London in the summer of he lived all over the country- with hauled who father railroader his 1933 came to an ominous stop when one book around with them: James we refused to fnter-anoth- er ar G Blaine's “My Twenty Years m rangement by which we supplied Papa Burke would snap the capital while the others supplied Congress” book shut each night and say the experience It has been made the “Some 'day you’re going to conabundantly clear that European natbut the ions have been arming fpr their gress” The son made good to see his sucown reasons and that our innocent father didn’t live cess disapproval of their weapons does Burke earned his way through not weigh heavily with European and Beloit Wis Beloit college diplomats They have not hesitated to default on their war debts to our through Harvard law school one makeshift job he was printreasury— debts incurred the last In The young mutime we "took the initiative” in a cipal of an academy sic teacher there became Mrs big way Burke They have two daughters For European Reasons So now if Europe decides to dis- tively by recalling his army units arm it must be for European reas- and military equipment from the ons We can quite easily afford civil war than by suddenly to go along with the others if there Spanish a wandering journalist of is any general limitation or reduct- telling his faith In the “humamtarianism" ion of armaments but there is no of President Roosevelt and the great reason on God’s green earth why American nation The elder Roosewe should pick up the hints dropvelt had a painful experience in pullso across the Atlantic ping freely ing other nations' chestnuts out of and assume the responsibility for the fire at the Portsmouth conferto do what calling aconference ence of 1905 His successor might are nations European discovering well continue to suck our burnt dipthey may have to do anyhow lomatic fingers from that little epiAnd if Mussolini wants to impress sode g Americans with his character he caii do it more effec- - Copyright 1937 for The Tribune tions in peace-lpvin- Senator Burke Cities Enlarge one-thir- Office Staffs’ Raise Salaries CHICAGO (UP)— City governments the country over are responding to the employment upswing by increasing department appointees and salary scales according to the Municipal Year Book The report issued by the International City Managers' association said there were 0 5 per cent more employes per 1000 people in 1936 than in 1935 Greater employment opportunities lie in the service of larger cities the report finds where the ratio of e emnew appointments to ployes jumped from 5 7 to 70 per cent last year Average salary for about a half million employes in the 781 citiek reported was $1765 Largest salary gains over the 1934 comparative 0 period were made by cities over and cities 30000 to 100000 which averaged $200 per employe In cities betwene 200000 and 500000- ’ however" the average decreased $64 the report eaid The average number of municipal employes per 1000 people in 1936 Was 9 9 The figures yenfy a tendency noted in previous years that the number of employes per thousand Increases with the size of the full-tim- 500-00- city Cities over 500000 -- for example hired 12 6 employes per thousand and those from 200000 to 500 000 0 over 10 Those from 100 000 to employed 8 6 from 30000 to 100000 7 8 and from’ 10000 to 200-00- 6 6 -- 30-0- i ific purposes including $300000000 ” for P W A The eenate is threat- -' ening to cut the relief total to $1- 000000000 — It was necessary for the administration forces in and out of con- gress to adjourn the house for three days in order to bring about even a partial compromise between the president and a recalcitrant house J The president's sugar bill le an- other administration measure that ' long since ran afoul of opposition in the house of representatives j This time-i-t was southern Demo- crats who did tnost of the rebelling ' Bill Held Lp —For two months tney have held i up the bill which Secretary Wallace submitted in the expectation that it would be rushed to speedy enact- ment The administration includ- ing Secretary Wallace Secretary of State Hull and Secretary of the Interior Ickes have all insisted on ’ what the Louisiana and Florida Democrats consider far too lenient treatment of Cuba and our Insular possessions and too much restraint first administration sugar bill was ' upon domestic sugar production It is to be recalled that when the ” sent to congress four years ago the president made clear his foremost ' desire to “do something for Cuba” and at that same time Secretary Wallace and his then assistant Professor Rex Tugwell disclosed their belief that the beet sugar Industry of the United States was a “hot- house” industry that in time might well be exterminated Also with his minimum wage and hours of labor bill the president seems to be encountering new opposition that will delay if not ma- teriaily amend that bill before it goes to final passage if it is to go to final passage r' |