The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 6, 1930, Page 4

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sudden, forcible revision such as Hitler advocates could only: mean war. This Austrian politician seems to rank now as the leading source of dange® in all Europe. pea Mares Pies and Their Crusts Heresies in the matter of food have been spreading throughout the land of recent years; but no heresy more fundamental or sweeping has yet appeared than thp bland assertion in a recent cnok-book that ples, especial- ly apple pies, should be baked without any bottom crust, “since nobody ever eats the bottom crust anyhow.” — Here is a blow square at the jaw of one of America’s greatest institutions. This nation was nourished through- . | out its youth on apple ple. In Boston, cradle of liberty, they eat apple pie for breakfast, and thrive on it. And any genuine, dyed-in-the-wool pie eater would as soon think of leaving the bottom crust uneaten as he would forget to honor his wife's birthday. 4 The man who, tackling a piece of pie, leaves the bot- tom crust to its own devices, bare and forsaken, is no true pie addict. It was not by such men that our na- tion became great. Pie was made to be eaten, and the under crust is its chief jewel and its greatest glory. the Bismares Tribune Company. Sis- sana gers ibs powstont Bimans ae The Tragedy of Delay Ohio's special commission appointed to study its prison situation following the terrible fire of last spring recom- mends the construction of two new prisons—and illus- trates, thereby, the way in which governments tend to be just one step too late in most of their processes, Ohio has needed those two new prisons for a long time, but nothing whatever was done about it until the fire that killed 320 convicts who were jammed into a dismally antiquated, inefficient old penitentiary. Then, of course, the state got busy. The special commission was put to work, and the legislature will undoubtedly appropriate the necessary money*this winter. All very fine—but why the delay? Why could not this need for decent, modern, commodious prisons have been recognized years ago? If it had been, the state might have been able to avoid burning 320 men to death. The ‘Why’ of Brutality : ‘The committee of the American Bar association, ap- pointed: to study lawless methods of law enforcement, recently made this report concerning police brutality: “We can only say that the ‘third degree’ in the sense of rigid and severe examination of men under arrest by * police officers or prosecuting attorneys or both is in use almost everywhere, if not everywhere, in the United There is nothing in that remark that has not been suspected by most people who devote any thought to such things: | But the statement is disturbing enough, in all conselence, and it probably will be the jumping-off place for a new campaign against third degree methods every- ‘where. Now the third degree is a disgrace to civilization, and eserves no defense. But while we are campaigning against it, we might as well look a little farther and figure out: just what it is that causes the third degree to be so generally used. ; Policemen and prosecutors, to begin with, are no more brutal than the rest of us, Some of them are hard-boiled and a very few are downright cruel, but in the main they are pretty representative citizens, as decent and kind- hearted as their jobs will let them be. Why, then, does the ordinary :nan who is arrested as a suspect in a crime take it for granted that he will be kicked and cuffed and bruised and whipped when he reaches the station house? ‘The real reason probably les, not in the police station, but in the’ courts of justice. The average policeman is pretty cynical about the courts. He sees notorious.rogues go into court and come off scot free because of the machinations of clever lawy- |] The Tribune's policies. ers, the interminable delays of legal procedure, the fav- oritism of judges, the intimidation of juries or the con-| Rich Reward nivance of unscrupulous court attaches. He knows that (Wells County Free Press) arresting a criminal is much easier than convicting him, at oe Seley Speak dt nope se much ae feed ene car al as commu: . = acd ieee aa eee noes Every one of us has a duty to the town or city in which we live, other than the payment of taxes or the form- Bo it has become a police axiom’ that the case against | ance ef our Gelly, eho ee rn tne Perform ® suspect is hardly complete without a signed, sworn Hepa arnt apeooe id De riage Sust Dv. . it is eagerness to this confesajon }.4ng sel lent is sure destruct for any community of cee an bayer it the best-case | Sould its inhabitants attempt it, The man who does his part in the upbuilding of his community should be in the world may fall through—that causes the third | honored for such and is entitled to great rewards, True, degree. the rewards may be slow in coming but they-are certain. All of this, of course, does not form an excuse. No Fopedperbee ol gpl ce dei arm nace language is strong: enough to condemn the practic satisfaction comes of duty truly done; of a ee ae ene ting ccatealons. But an | task, perhaps self-imposed, faithfully and consclentious- pein ly performed. The good community worker has @ sense Gerstanding this background may help us in the task | of pride in his accomplishment—a worthy trait that in- 33 gant * eta aarp ithe a canada {ge t pit that = bles to courts 1 level of @ tolerant sp! enal aq Gn the courts might do mare good than simply calls | chery the bundness of the self-seeking folks who un- * ‘ dermine a town like grubs a garden, without rancor or 4+ E hatred but with infinite pity for. his deformity. it ‘Then there is the honor and respect of neighbors; the ‘Any _ an [anh ag haa and the one | esteem of fellow citizens and co-workers. This money if cannot buy nor power. procure. Only through effort Mew being conducted in Detroit may eventually stand ‘out | is it gained and held. as the most interesting one of the year. Material agrees (ib sf lle partic gy Detroit's new mayor was elected on @ program calling may be endowed with the respect for the relief of unemployment, He has sought to meet Tete wane sold cantik Lay, ae Goer . this pledge by inducing the city's leading automobile bring a makers to rejigger their program so as to provide some ultimate good of all. Sure building 25,000 extra jobs, and it will be worth while watching to making this old earth a better place to See how the project makes out. of e you are builders, destroyers? Do The auto plants were working part time, and fully the that cone ee Whe 75,000 meri were out of work. What the manufacturers harmony with his fellow for the ultimate good @id, apparently, was divide the same amount of work Sure you do, if you want to. It is all with you among a greater number of men, so that there would be A New ‘Snyder-Gray Case’ One is compelled to wonder, sometimes, just how much of a deterrent punishment for crime is, even when it is swift and drastic. It has been several years since Ruth Snyder and Judd Gray, infatuated with one another, conspired to kill Mrs. Snyder's husband and clear the path for their sordid amours. The two were promptly arrested and convict- ed and in due time they were put to death. It should have been a warning. . But since then we have read of many, many replicas of that crime. The latest comes from Ohio, paralleling the Long Island case almost exactly. ‘ Strange, how perverse human nature can be! People see the crime and imitate it. The swift and dreadful Penalty that is exacted seems to worry them not at all. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published with out regard to whet they agree or disagree with Hit g no one else. © part-time jobs for many instead of full-time jobs for a ‘. few. As an experiment this may prove very significant. § Divide Comigy Must Pay As a matter of fact, anything that happens in the De- ? fo uals paces Beene Governor Shafer has decided the latest move in Divide troit factory district is important. Detroit, during the | county’s political maneuvering by dismissing the pro- last 15 years, seems to have become a sort of laboratory, peer eBoy <n Mk wg ey because of lack of wherein new industrial methods can be tested for the nation as 9 whole. Mass production got its start there. ' High wages and small profits were first applied on a _ big scale there. The whole mechanized era takes its tone from Detroit. _ This proposition of dividing up jobs to make them go farther hes far-reaching implications. When you stop |' “te look at it, it is kin to the Utopian dream of a six-hour Gay and a five-day week. It seeks to meet the specter of “unemployment, not by creating. more work, but by mak- | “ing more jobs out of the work that already exists, ‘To be sure, the trade unionist’s vision calls for higher ‘Wages and steady employment, and this, in the nature of things, cannot be had in the present éituation at De- ‘troit. Yet the manufacturers are taking a step in the right direction, just the same, and their action may have For if @ splitting-up of jobs can be had to meet un- employmen: caused‘ by industrial depression, cannot the game thing be. done to meet unemployment caused by Mechsnical improvements? May not this temporary, emergency measure prove something that is worth hang- “ng on to and developing when normal conditions return? ‘May it not lead to a, solution of one of the most per- Plexing problems of the’day? “* — All 6f this, go‘ far, 1s only conjecture, of course. But | Divide county and the taxpayers of this he thing is worth watching, just the same. What hap- associ: Guring the next few months may prove ts, but Governor Shafer said that the costs against either party. Divide county art politicians of Divide county have the people and have lost. This is : 4 3B i é E if uy i e : i i phealing complete defeat and the complete -whom these charges were made. feature about these things is the false g 5 g 2 ae Bs 2,08 a z E gas i i A New Source of Danger It is not especially reassuring to learn that Adolf Hitler iH ae A F | E : fu ll ih i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1930_ ments and miade inventions in rafl- way signals, steam and gas engines, steam turbines and electrical ma- cHinery. He was the pioneer in in- current "machinery, whieh. recdered current A ich / rer BIRTH OF WESTINGHOUSE possible the great development’ of On October 6, 1846, eee oF anc water power. for long distance elec- trical transmission, First Regan Bank Is Paying 10 P. C. More A 10 per cent dividend is being :| paid depositors of the First State | Bank of Regan, through the office of P. A. O'Keefe, Bimarck, according to announcement by L. R. Baird, state bank receiver. This will raise the to- tal of payments by this bank to 30 per cent. frightened from the road if the auto- mobile horn is sounded 200 to 300 feet away. Lack of reasonable care | A ‘Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’! : ‘Whooping cough, one of the most Serious diseases of childhood, is gen- erally conveyel by direct contact from to another, usually in the wh | Quotations “Gone, far gone, are the days when easy conquest awaited the casual ex- ercise of natural talents and capa-| pe; bilities."—Dr. Max Joseph Exner. se * “Time is no good solvent {or in- justice."—Heywood Broun. * * * “Women have ruined the theater.” —St. John Ervine. until the next paroxysm. The num- of these per day varies from four to 24, and are more frequent at night. ing 3 sult fatally the paroxysms sometimes occur as frequently as 100 per day, and may be 80’ severe as to produce @ hemorrhage or a stricture of the Some cases may turn into tuberculosis, pneumonia, asthma, val- disease, escape of air from the lungs into the “The gne thing that hurts more than paying an income tax is not having to pay an income tax.”—Lord ‘Thomas Robert Dewar. “Nothing transfigures the face more than resentment.” — William * % “Variability attests the presence of vitality."—James Branch Cabell. Canning old birds and cockerels is Juice, or what- use of this precaution, is to blame for most casualties among by json. How much do you want for it?” Dan gazed at him rather blankly, and Phillips laughed and told him {not to look so flabbergasted. “Sit down. I just asked you how much you wanted for it, that’s all.” “I haven't thought about that at all,” Dan replied uncertainly. “All I could think~about was whether it would suit you. How much is it worth to you?" Phillips named a figure. “Is that satisfactory? I think it’s very fair. ‘more than you'd get anywhere eleé~probably. It’s pretty high con- sidering what we pay for most original stories, but I like your play and I think it’s worth it.” “That's perfectly satisfactory,” Dan said. it [i rf i in i ti si A i ; i eo 8 66(3.00D. I've been wanting to i i i i se al since I read it, but I've been so busy these last two weeks that I've been dizzy. Your play’s got a wal- lop, all right. You know, the night ; ; / ih Jj Hf i i F : ay whooping cough rarely ever develops into a sefi- ous disease. If these measures are & good way to make use of them, now that market prices are so low. wood NEA SERVICE /203 an quiry he confessed that he had) Phillips nodded, and he suddenly been waiting to hear that very “I had Moore in mind when I wrote that treatment. I was hoping you'd see it.” There was a- mated sound on Phillips’ desk, and he picked up the receiver and spoke with his sec- retary. He rose then. Rorimer; let's go.” Mr. Johnson was very agreeable, He said, after shaking hands warm- ly and offering Rorimer a chai: “T've been inquiring about There’s some great stuff in that play of yours; I like it very much. I understand you were over at Con- tinental for a while. You were un- der contract there, weren't you?” “Why did you leave? sking? Did they fail to exercise He added, smiling: want to find out all 2 CNSR SR As the expert writing his views on the world series told his scrivening aid, “Wither thou ghost I will go.” | * eK OR thought of somet q way Rorimer, you told took your play you'd tell me why you were so keen to sell it to Grand United.” told you I had ity. What was the reason?” Rorimer smiled, 1 terrible curios- and hesitated le sald, “That's so! 1 did say that, ‘didn’t I Mr. Johnson looked inqguiringly from one to the other. this?” he asked. Now or never, Dan thought, “I'll tell you,” he said. “Remember, Mr. Phillips, that I told you I had Lester Moore in mind for the part of Michael? Well, I had someone in mind for the part of Jenny, too. Maybe it I was right once,” Suggested with a weak grin, might be right again. You never talk to you about it ever|_ “It wasn’t exact- “Since you ask “Stranger things hat L, me, I'll have to confess that I = Alten genttn yj if it i bp HE ie il T took it home to read it we had company. Unexpected. They didn’t leave until midnight, and at- ter they’d gone I picked it up and ry i Et */finiah it the. next day. Know what happened? I read it right through. It's got a great kick! I guess my NOW GO ON WITH THE story |secretary told you I was enthusi- astic about it. Where'd you get the dea?” Dan told him. Phillips smiled. “Well, now that we've. agreed on price, I think we ought to have a little Ubation,” he said, and he opened a little cabinet beside his desk and brought out a bottle and two glasses. He poured one glass full, handed it to Rorimer, filled his own, lifted it to his lps, and there he paused. “Happy days,” he said. And when he had set his glass down he spoke through the inter- office phone to his secretary and asked her to find out if Mr. John- son was busy. “The boss wants to see you,” he told Rorimer. “Now that he's sold, he’s sold hard. He's been asking a ,, |lot of questions about you and some them I couldn’t answer. You'll to talk to him. Just between two of us, he's pretty much terested in you. If he makes ghee EM of proposition I hope fk i E a EEE ii good news, Mr. Rorimer, and I'm very glad.” “That's mighty nice of you,” he told her, feeling that the world suddenly had become a much brighter place. “I'll be right something jul, all right, if Johnson was make him an offer. they waited for his:seofe- Ky it to}in* town this moi Dan could not repress a. dees Mr. John-|this, and at the other's didn’t get along very well with Adamson over there. I thought he ‘was intolerable. I tore up my con- tract quite a while ago, and when they reorganized, Adamson fired He grinned then, recalling his last interview with Adamson. “He said I was dead timber,” be told “Who was it? It wasn’t hard to spot Moore, because that’ the kind of stuff he eats up; but—" “I doubt if yod could guess.” Dan looked apologetically at Mr. “She's pretty new,” he explained, “but she’s under contract here. She's Anne Winter.” And Johnson frowned. Winter? But she's an ingenue type. pretty heavy stuff for her, isn’t it?” .He turned to Phillips for corroboration, and Phillips nod- ded his head in agreement. “Her spot is musical comedy or wot a peach of a “I think,” Dan said, “you'll find that Anne Winter can do just about ask her to do.” eyes twinkled. “You & pretty large order, sort of glanced at it, expecting to/| Grand United executive/ This thought that was very funny. see. Well, we might be willing sometime to take a chance on some dead timber, That’s great dialogue in that play of yours; good, authen- You were a newspaper man, weren't you?” “I don’t think you'd find us very unreasonable @round here,” John- son said. “Do you, Phillips?” And Phillips smiled. “There “We thought it would be a good idea,” Mr. Johnson resymed, “if you did the scenario for us; and we'd like to have yoy around to help out on it when production There'll be changes, of course, Here and there. jall about that, though.” “I'll be ticked to death,” Dan as- “And I know you've got to please your director and|Mr. your actors, so I understand per- fectly about the changes, I've made plenty of script changes right on the sets at Continental.” Johnson looked rather . “Phillips will find an office for you to work in. I’m rather hoping you'll want to stay; I think we can us¢ you. When you've fin- ished the rio, come in and see me, and we may have a contract ‘wood, but that's what they spotted “I guess,” he continued earnest- ly, “that’s one of the funny things about the motion picture business, . ttle accidental things get people started off on an entirely different ‘track sometimes. Anne Winter never had a voca} lesson in her life, and yet it was her voice, more than anything else, ‘that caused you to give her a con- tract. She can sing, all right, but she can act, too.” The twinkle had of yours?” he asked. “You seem to be pleading her cause rather well. In fact, I'4 say you were pretty yes.” -Dan smiled. He he lie Doldly, “And I am.” He had said to Pbilli “He back mn prepared to encounter some “ aha was |@Dnoyance on the part of the io ing with him a little whils ago. |@xecutive; Johnson's pleasant He's ‘coming over Inter on to read |ticism troubled him not At all. (To Be Continued) He rested a hand on the manu- script that lay before him on “I think Lester“ Moore be tickled with this envelope for reply. traction of the diaphragm may be so violent as to pull out of rosition some other organ or the body. Ihave seen many cases where a has been jerked out of position. ‘When the whoop has already ‘started, it cannot be stopped in a day or two, but the patient should con- tinue to fast on orange juice about a week before returning to a well bal- anced diet. At the same time, daily treatments should be taken over the chest with a high powered therapeutic light. If this is done, the usual seri- ous consequences can be prevented.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Adhesions and Constipation Question: J. H. G. writes: “I would like to know the symptoms of | adhesions. I was operated on for ruptured appendix about a year ago and suffered no ill effects until a couple of weeks ago. Have had con- tinual headache, as if from stomach, am usually constipated, and have pains in my back that lead up to the back of my head.” Answer: Adhesions binding the intestines together are a common cause of constipation. The only way you can be sure whether or not you have adhesions is to have an X-ray examination made. Adhesions maj produce symptoms in almost any part of the body if they are of sufficient strength to interfere with the func- activity of the stomach, in- w , Or other abdominal organs. No Starch for Diabetics Question: H. G, asks: “Will you please tell me if the entire wheat bread is starchy, and if it is good for the diabetic instead of gluten bread?” Answer: Entire wheat bread or Plain white bread has a preponder- ance of starch over all other food elements. Gluten bread has slightly Jess starch, but the diabetic should not use bread of any kind, as he can get along very nicely if no starches are used, but may be forced to take insulin if he insists‘on using any form of carbohydrates. ‘Corners of Mouth Sore Question: G. H, asks: “Will you’ kindly tell me what causes the cor- ners of the mouth to get sore? Also, Answer: ‘Soreness in the corners of thé mouth may be cause from an irritated stomach or from abscessed The saliva becomes poisonous or irritating and during sleep runs out of the corners of the mouth and causes a burning. Keep your teeth clean and avoid stomach irritation by regulating your mong as not tohave When President Hoover gave his address before bankers in Cleveland recently, it is understood he got. lots of credit, ‘i ek ke ‘The Beebe expedition in Bermuda has discovered an elastic fish. It is not @ new discovery if it refers to the kind which snap at bait. * * * New York is reported projecting the search for its missing judge to _|the moon in hopes of identifying a certain Crater. xk * The least you can say for that woman who offered to buy the Eiffel Tower from the French government is that her hopes were high. xe * What's become of the old-timer who used to refer to the cigaret as a “coffin-nail?” (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) Otter Tail Company, Is Granted Changes FLAPPER, FANNY nto. U8 hk

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