The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1930 _ > s) | peace was established and a dreary succession of minor BISMARCK T R I B U N k civil wars followed, punctuated with sporadic murders ‘ Ag independent Newspapes and culminating in an unusually bloody uprising that “THE STATES OLDES] NEWSPAPER finally brought the United States marines to the scene, sreomimiaos abiad bringing law and order on the gleaming points of their CE ENT TEETER Ne aamaemeeaed + |. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | sharpened bayonets. “march, N. D.. and entered at the pdstoffice 4 Bismarck | Ang now, as a final period to this long tale of trouble, George. Mano... ae comes the hurricane—suddenest and sharpest blow of all, i ~~ with the ancient city of Santo Domingo nearly destroyed, Sebecription Rates Payable tn Advance oy | 9nd with hundreds of people struck dead in an hour's time. ‘There is little that one can say about the hurricane. It is the embodiment of the threat that perpetually hangs over he West Indies; the final curse that Hes per- petually in wait for the people who live about the lovely Carribean; the last chapter in a story of disasters. Which Way Does the Wind Blow? | , Epitaph for a Worker A very curious little dispatch appeared in a New York paper the other day; a brief little item, hidden in an obscure corner of an inside page, that jabs one’s imag- ination and makes one hunger for more information. The story told of a widow in New Zealand who sued her late husband’s employer for $5,000 under the work- men’s compensation act. She charged that the employ- er was really responsible for her being a widow, as her (Official City State and County Newspaper) husband had been “worked to death”; and the court up- Foreign Representatives held her claim and ordered the employer to pay her the ‘ SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS money. $ ¢ ted) That is ali that the story had to say; but no one can F eien non G. a tad OP rane read it without wanting to know more about it. What sort of a job did her husband have, anyway? Was he a Ie clerk or a lumberjack, a stevedore or a private secretary, What's In a Name? a ditch-digger or a mechanic? And how did she prove ‘There is lots in a name when politics is concerned.| that he had been worked to death? Was his employer "The La Follette cognomen is a powerful garner Of} careless, or just plain mean? votes. People vote for La Follette in Wisconsin because} tne whole thing is very puzzling. But, if the truth it has become a habit and the name almost a tradition | were known, this unidentified New Zealander is far from with them. being the only worker whose headstone should bear the ‘The smashing victory of Philip La Follette, a political | inscription, “Worked to death.” In fact, that line might fledgling, over Gov. Kohler, mature, a keen businessm&N/ wey) appear on millions of graves, scattered all over the and an efficient executive, is just one more primary | worig, G : vagary which it is impossible to explain except on one} 1¢ could adorn the tombs of all classes of people, from . ground, the magic of the La Follette name. Presidents and prime ministers to ignorant day laborers. lwith 80 men, the flower of youth of {field shortly thereafter was aban- Robert M. La Follette, Jr, won on his father’s name | Tt symbolizes a fate that overtakes, perhaps, the majority Toduy Is the Essex county, to the assistance of |doned and burned. fust as his brother had done. Neither one had dis-|of al! workers on earth. ‘A niv of towns along the Connecticut river.} King Philip, son of the friendly tinguished himself as a public servant; rane has! ‘The “big man” who dies of overwork has his compen- el were to guard adery Beet Massasolt, began war with the whites the ability of his father, but it sufficed that they were/ sations. At least he has accomplished something worth convey wheat, harvest Deer-| when he fel ey were encroaching ‘ field, to Hadley. Just before arrivingjon his ground. He chose to fight La Follettes and uttered the same polltical battle cry) white; at least he has provided for his family and left an| BLOODY BROOK MASSACRE = |i, m coy, cle te oo ii (rather than recede before the sd. as the father. honored name. If he has given himself to his job so at t known as Bloody Brook, Lathrop fell|/vance of the Colonists. Fighting ‘The voters were not in revolt against Gov. Kohler. He| whole-heartedly that his life has been shortened, he iD Cutlinto ambush, and, after a brave re-|continued throughout Massachusetts has given the state a good administration. While classed| and his family can at least console themselves with the sistance, perished there with all his/for some time after the Deerfield. HERES TO YOUR as conservative, compared with the La Follette political! thought that it was, to some extent, worth it. ee pee eet eee ate school, he was not reactionary and in many of his But the ordinary man who kills himself on the job— Political ideas is both Uberal and progressive. and his name is legion—has no such consolation. He has But the spell which “La Folletteism” has put upon the/ won a living for himself and his dear ones, but that is state was too great a handicap for Kohler, especially | about all. In many cases he cannot even tell himself ‘when he tried to defeat @ scion of the La Follette line. | that he did his job better than it would have been done without him. Most of us are easily replaced. Our pass- : Our Surplus Energies ing doesn’t leave much'of @ hole. The man who works } ‘A 19-year-old South African girl swims the English | himself to death, in most cases; has simply been terribly H channel, two Americans finish driving an sutomobile | cheated. ‘across the continent in reverse gear and a couple of chaps in Los Angeles are preparing to try to capture the airplane refueling endurance record again; from which it appears that the human race, taken begs large, is Edito al Comment not losing any of its energy, however much it may be de- ficient in horse sense. Schools Important Indeed, it is the energy involved in all of these con- The public schools f compen its im: tests that is the most striking thing about the whole ofa are most im- Portant asset. In 1926, according to the calculations of business. A man who will drive an auto backwards for | th. United States Bureau of Education, 23.69 per cent Upeaa ota reuleonplsbipreniragealie: Peary ot all he: taxy collections th the (United States were x he likes to be doing things. The girl who swims the Eng- | pended for elementary and high school education. The lish channel is not, whatever else she may be, anemic Growing need for more and better training is evidenced i field, marched Captain Lathrop had been jarrived too late to help him. Deer-|Falls. Soon thereafter King Philip And Dan said, Mr. Maury.” an increase of high school attendance of 140.9 per or spiritiess. BA bag teeckerdyemmty ie Ae ae Considerirtg the fact that contests and stunts of this increasing complexity and in! ity of modern kind are thicker than the fallen leaves of autumn, the | life, and the application of scientific method, is a force education. Today it is a “far cry” from the “little red school house,” the hickory stick and the three R's, to a pesereae provide people with enough outlets for their energy. In mo SLOAN, Seems Helly- be the search for sultable safety valves through which | "tivation and the science of educational psychology. active men and women can get rid of their excess vim. igure total te a feing aes intense ia ate tee do | youth of our community may find an adequate = The ordinary methods of earning a living nowadays 40 fnity foc self development.” ‘The classification of our not always suffice. In the old days they did, and when school marked an important step in this march of pro- all else failed a man could at least go exploring the | gress. Classification is but one indication of better or- African interior, or take to pioneering on the American | ganization, materials, teachers, building and school spirit. frontier or in the Australian bush; but all the likely pind rs nye ep every pues Le a alae Places have been explored now, and frontiers aren't what eftictent than tei qmoatt. they used to be. Life doesn’t drain us physically and A Startlin; umor spiritually as it did our ancestors. B ing Ee 0 twisting in fury. Maury might do. quickly passed; quite possible to argue that it was this very reservoir | Session of congress to change Mount Vernon from its of stored up, long-balked energy—this restlessness in a | Present status to a public park under the management BB room, 4s said and done, is not quite as inspiring a figure as a lived by the Father of our Country, the nation is deeply trail-blazer of the old frontier. association. It is one of the greatest contributions of Of course, there is still a vast amount of hard, back-|the many made by ‘American ‘women, to napional life. breaking work to be done, and there are still huge prob-| No criticism has ever been directed toward their work Jems to be solved. If we learn how to apply ourselves) ‘this connection and it is deserving of great praise. ‘to these things, our surplus energy will take care of it-| ing toward a change in the maintenance of Mount Ver- And her for such light hair. held Frank Maury walking toward) They had one whole dance to- ‘us for a long time. before sanctioning such a loud Rorimer didn’t mind now; the crowd was congenial; only Maury * Z irritated him. Santo Domingo’s Curse perigee F Ho ‘lost Anne. for 2 while then, Tt sometimes seems as if an unkind providence had js W D and presently, finding himself Gecreed that the sunlit regions about the Carribean-sea -| Without a partner, he wandered in- should be the permanent home of turmoil and disaster. loreigners. They cannot unders! 0 to the patio, where he found Anne ‘This 1s especially true of the island that the Spanish | P.2° : S ; : rata gpa ascar ior ened adventurers called Hispaniola—the island which is the Indians, : whose name he could not remem- home of the Dominican Republic, From the moment.of | kept them the nation instead of fg its discovery to the present day it has had a turbulent them to take their chances with the white folks, history, and misery-and desolation have been visited on Perhaps the earliest Spanish conquerors began it when syitematically exterminated the native inhabitants them with luckless blacks, dragged from in Africa by slavetzadérs. Before the white | ‘B® ™men came Hispaniola was probably peaceful, save for an occasional hurricane. But Columbus’ arrival seems to smiling, have signalized the beginning of a new era—an era in You couldn't even buy it.” ‘which battle, murder and sudden death were to be regu- Maury regarded him rather stu- lar, anticipated events in the lives of the islanders. pidly for a moment and then he Anne, and now by Maris. Maury looked at nim with some hostility, but he said nothing; and Rorimer took no notice of him at} He's over at the dressing|all, but spoke to Maris. * © “how stony-hearted I am. i hatr. She was small and lovely, and he thought her eyes surprisingly dark| black, or nearly ho. eee ; iy dark She inquired after Paul Collter, told him that Paul had written be with anothe: and a girl.|gether, and part of another; but pisggpticaie i her tes ir man be . - rery- self. If not, these trick endurance contests will be with|non. One should think twice—aye a hundred times— s could fear Maury’s voice; it/then someone cut in again. But lng hele Go ow? Roy said Captain Mosley, stationed at Deer-/dians began with their defeat at the| was shot by one of his own men, who to his assistance, but /hands of Captain Turner, at Turners/had turned against him, and the war RNEST LYNN, own and shook it as if he were saying goodby; and as Maury be- gan to fume and struggle he tight- ened the pressure of his grip, so that Maury winced. Maris said, “You'll excuse me for a few minutes, I know, Frank.” “Be bdig-hearted, The girl moved off toward the dressing room, and as Dan started . ir eiag s ar my cd a vio chang: te of Aune F lent tug that swung him around obvious conclusion is that the modern world does not | iat 8 ing method organization and viewpoint in ves qui, Mona womnise! and : and brought a- sudden blase into a all Ps ood director, has 7 “You're pretty fresh, aren't fact, one of the big problems of the next generation may|® socially determined curriculum, child sctivity and eat, in “Anne Winter, . you?” the actor said, his face Dan jerked his hand from the other’s grip, and for a moment he stood there and waited to see what But his anger the man was drunk and he felt it would be childish to quarrel with him. So he said, “I'm sorry.” and he turned away abruptly and left him. } anne caught up with Maris q ‘ / rel e girl gave him a grate- This may seem a minor problem. Yet it would be| It is rumored that a bill will be introduced at the next ful. smlle and took’ his arm and \ they continued toward the dressing world from which #o many hazards have been removed | been made in times past but alk fertmater: hacer feces | Bae leon eng Aap Pa —that made the ordinary people of the world welcome| Since 1860 this patriotic shrine—the home of George th {to know, and Dan shook his head. the World war in 1914. For it is undeniable that they | Washington from 1747 to 1799, and his present burial wit xeon think he's very crasy did, actually, welcome it, Their rulers got them into it,|Plsce—has been owned and managed by the Mount tro about me, though,” he laughed, and bundy Vernon Ladies Association of the Union. .The associa- a “ f he told her of his earlier run-in and in a few months all hands would have liked to be out | tion was formed for the purpose of buying ‘and restoring with the actor. a of it, but when it first came it was hailed with cheers. ae es a, have Seren oak oe plans so well “4 q > } Marie seit, Tag Bae agg fashington aw: emerge from his |. . came e edge pool, an lage 2 gacteallmak rar armen scee arog tomb. Gin tha as, he Id perhaps I that th d she stopped and looked at the wa- safety valves, tremendous popwlari had been so little change in the 131 years since his death. tily. ter, and then at the moon it re- kinds of sport, both mass and professicnal, at'‘Wye present | He would find deer in deer park by the river, flow- : flected, and observed that it was time, seems to indicate a long step ip that direction. Yet | ers growing in the back of the house, and in- f no night te-be indoors, that sort of thing, after all, is a poor substitute. ‘The | tide thi House much of the same furnishings and many : : : . eo 8 grandsons of the men who had the hardihood to push the or the redocasion a! maintenance of Mount Vernon 4 GHB. conttnned s chat, pleasantly Oregon trail across the plains may be working off their | that thousands of citizens yearly may have the pleasure hand ; y a and Dan found occasion to extra spirits on the golf course, but a golfer, when all | 0f visiting there and catching a glimpse of the life i . study her. She was small and ‘lovely, gnd he thought her eyes surprisingly dark for such light eyebrows were passing otit bathing suits,| “Didn't you say something, Miss|™ind for Miss Winter, to go to all and he’s got ainice pink one picked | Farrell, about -wanting: to. find. a|tbat trouble, and especially to give out for you.” bathi rstand | her @ screen test.” Hagberg Dan said he hadn't given that he took Anne away, |Mrs. Collins found.one foryou.” | “You've made an en-| “Ob, I must see it!” Maris sald|angle much thought. “You're very life now, and all on my|at once, and she started off; but|encouraging,” he told her. “I'll be think that was simply|Maury protested. “Now, look/sure to tell her what you said.’ you told him.” But|here—” he began, and ‘be selzed| And Maris, smiling at him, asked &t recollection of it. | Maris by the arm. if Anne Winter was an especial “But Rorlmer smilingly removed | friend of his.” ‘That suits. me fine,” Rorimer : . the actor's hand and took it in.his (To Be Continued) ed by this delectable juice of the fruit of the vine. Grapejuice prepared in various ways excellent makes an it dessert for you to use with your protein meals, and here are some recipes for preparing grape- Juice which I am sure you will find Grape Ice Cream tasteful. desired cy. will make about two . This amount quarts when Grape Gelatin’ Place a pint of grapejuice over fire in a double boiler. add the contents of one envelope of you le @ few minut the When hot Stir con! for then remove from the fire and place in molds. Let cool and place in the ice box just before prefer, you may put in a flat mold and cut it into cubes after it has con- Grape Sundae stirred just before serving. Grape Mint Drink Mix one pint of grapejuice with“ half a cupful of chopped mint leaves. glasses chopped ice. A sprig of mint may be Placed in each glass so served, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Milk of Answer: There is no doubt but What Milk of Magnesia makes cellent anti-acid to use in the relief of hyperacidity of the stomach. have known of many elderly people who ‘claim to have used magnesia, soda or some other alkali all their lives and seem not to have suffered any bad effects. The main thing to remember if you have hyperacidity is to change your eating habits so as to correct this condition by removing the cause which lies mostly in inharmon- ious food combinations. “ care! new FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: (n80. U.S.PAT.OFF. ie ‘strength of your eye will be glad to send you an exercises, but you to an optometrist and examined 4a f | i : wh “sy Va

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