The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 11, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1930 all practical purposes, state lines have been obliterated. —And It’s Going to Be More Than a One-Club Game, Too! | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Ap inéependent Newspaper Provinclalism has been banished. Much of this is due to the telephone, which has, liter- ally, made the world » One of the greatest aids to national and international understanding and cooper- ation is the fact that for a very little money and in a few minutes of time we can speak to a person across the seas almost as easily as to one in the next township. What Will Happen Next? It will be interesting to see whether any criminal Prosecutions develop out of the Norris senatorial pri- mary hocus-pocus in Nebraska. ‘ Evidence submitted thus far makes it seem probable that some tall lying was indulged in, under oath, by va- tious people. Of course, the whole thing is strictly the business of the people of Nebraska; but the rest of the country will want to see just what, if anything, is to happen next. 4 ‘The effort to beat Senator Norris by digging up a no- body who happened to bear the same name, and inducing him to enter the senatorial primary, was dirty business from the start. i i i WINTER SQUASHES, GOOD STARCHY FOODS ‘The squashes, of which there are some fifty-five varieties, claim the gourd for their remote progenitor. i, B E BE Sharing Our Helium Admiral Moffett’s suggestion that the United -States share its helium gas with other nations, so that dirigibles overseas can have the safety features which previously have been exclusively American, sounds like a very good idea. Helium can be produced in quantity only in the Uni- ted States. However, the supply here seems to be great enough so that we could spare all that is needed over- seas, and except in war time it is hard to see how there could be any objection to such a step. Here would be a humanitarian act; it would also be valuable as a “goodwill” gesture. (Officiad City State and County Newspaper) ae LEVINOS "pene eee, ————————————— The Uses of Adversity If the business depression tnat nas peen riding us for the last few months has done nothing else, it at least has provided a stopper for a lot of the bunk and hot air thet had been infesting the land in brighter days. ‘The easy optimism of the old days of prosperity 1s gone, and in its place there is emerging an attitude of self-criticism and skepticism that is a great deal more wholesome, Up to the stock market disaster of October, 1929, the sky was the limit, People who were old enough to know better went around assuring everybody that we had entered into a new era, in which depression, panic and * disaster would be no more. All tears were to be wiped ‘away, all account books would balance eternally, and prices, wages, production schedules and the spirits of mankind were to keep on rising forever. There was al- mest an apocalyptical character to these prophecies and revelations. ‘We are a little bit wiser now, apparently. This kind of talk is not heard quite so freely; and in that fact lies the one great benefit which this extremely unpleasant de- pression is bringing. It is impossible’ to make much progress when you dis- count all obstacles in advance. Success of any kind is only to be had by hard work and deep thought, Provi- dence, in its inscrutable wisdom, has not yet reached the point where it is going to hand the sons of men all the riches of earth on a silver platter—not even in the United States. “But hard work and deep thinking, oddly enough, were very popular in the period that ended with the great ani Street crash. Instead, we gave our attention to he glib talker, to the bluffer, to the man who could see “ping ahead of us but clear track and green signal ligaité,... Right now we are paying for it. ‘Ot coufee, if we simply sit back now and wail about the cruelty of fate, the depression is not going to do us any good. But if we realize that the bluffer and the high pressure artist have outlived their usefulness, we shall be able to buckle down and pave the way for a teal return to prosperity. ‘The field of economics 'is one of the most complicated fields there is. It holds out tantalizing possibilities, now and then; the last half-dozen years, for instance, came fairly clese to fulfilling all of the gaudy promises that the boosters were making. To find out just what the margin may be between the promise and the reality, and to learn how this margin may be wiped out—these are tasks calling for the best brains the country has. Our present attitude is favorable to the impartial study that such tasks will require. The old attitude wasn't. In the long run the hard times of 1930 will probably be recognized as a salutary experience—even though they are pretty hard to put up with right now. The Real Objection to Gas ‘The use of poison gas is generally listed as one of the supreme horrors of modern warfare. It is interesting, therefore, to note that the surgeon general of the U. 8. army points out that poison gas killed not more than| 1 200 American soldiers during the World war, in com- parison with the 38,147 who were killed by projectiles. Of soldiers sent to hospitals, some 70,000 had been gassed as compared with more than 147,000 who had i i | * Editorial Comment set itariels printed below show the trend of other edit @ publ = thought ‘with out re; to whether they agr The Tribune's policies. The Hot Dog, 1805-1980 (St, Paul Dispatch) America has taken many European institutions and adapted them to its needs. Some of ined being a tit i Shee HATS HO CO ee Sra NOt the MARE OLY os Ook 13) 3814) tia abaoeipmerad The United States, therefore, has a vital interest in| 0! Holland named the country around Manhattan Island “New Netherlands” the celebration in Vienna, Austria, of the one hundred and twenty-fifth birthday of the Frankfurter. The |@9¢ oben & charter for its settle- | Quotations | creator of this well-known sausage was one Johann|™ent to Amsterdam merchants. G 7 eserves @ sort immortalit; The states general previously had is contetbatien Ye the eet ee Oe nn oriailty £05 | passed a law conferring on those who| “If I had a daughter, I would Tie Chicago pctipomensiwass are have a bent for nomenclature will be interested to|Should discover new lands the ex-/her up to be @ clinging vine.”—Mary | 2 ablated aa tf know that the inventor named his product after the] lusive privilege of making four voy-| Lathrop, lawyer, in The Golden Book.| BI we teen pitted aa German city where he had learned the butcher's trade. | ®8es thither before others could have ndehdeh 4 repeoiatibeetsA ryt ha “ge This, no one can deny, was a beautiful sentiment nobly | 8dmission to the traffic. “america is easentially # nation of | Were ot him. expceaed. The ordinance excited considerable|homes.”—Mré. Thomas A. Edison, ; | 0 0 os aoe ceneived activity among adventurers. A num- sss ah tise ate ee a ia ber of merchants of Amsterdam and| ‘The store of the world’s knowledge te at oe he aot om ooaleat ‘odi= Hoorn soon fitted out five ships. This fleet, during a subsequent exploring — according to Warden G. T. expedition, touched the mouth of the ; * e ‘There are about 1,000,000 teachers Great river and the Manhattan, Long a “with the exception of the difficul-|in the country, with nearly half that prreeng bind Cod, ace 4 en lngee other on coast Se ties that have arisen as a result of|number now in schools preparing to deflation in commodity] teach. i explorers were employed lost no time] prices, the business horizon is clear.” in obtaining the exclusive trade of|—Richard Whitney, president of the the countries thus explored. They|New York Stock Exchange. sent deputies to the Hague to report ) ee * their discoveries. As a result, a spe-| “In due time the police force of the cial grant in their favor was issued| world will be in the hands of Amer- and settlement established in the new/ica.”—Sir Oliver Lodge. country. “ke “American women who travel abroad show less intelligence than a flock of geese.”—Fannie Hurst. ec Today Is the ‘Anniversary of DUTCH SETTLEMENTS Ff i FT ae ge z Hi 4 i E | The American improvement on the Frankfurter was its insertion, with plenty of mustard, between the halves of @ bun. By this experiment the Frankfurter was transformed into the hot dog, a typically American institution. This Viennese product has been so thor- oughly assimilated into American life in the course of years that its European antecedents had been quite for- gotten. America is grateful for the reminder. A National Authority on Conservation (Minneapolis Tribune) One of the first and most effective voices raised in the northwest for conservation of wild life and natural resources was that of Carlos N. Avery, who died Sunday at his home in New York, a nationally recognized au- thority on conservation. ‘Twenty years ago Mr. Avery was telling Minnesota that its game and fish were a natural resource adding to its summer charm, attracting new revenue to the state ‘and well worth protecting from needless exploitation. His point of view was often contrary to that of sportsmen and their organizations, yet he urged it with a firmness and conviction which resulted in most of the things he ad- vocated becoming part of their plans and programs. As great & work as he did in Minnesota, however, was the building up at Hutchinson of one of the state’s strongest and most influential country newspapers. In- experienced in the practical sense when he entered the Publishing business, he set @ pace and adopted methods, widely followed later by other publishers which resulted in vast improvement in the quality and influence of the country press, Mr. Avery demonstrated that a country newspaper can be made attractive, have distinct individuality and fill a most important place in any community by assum- ing leadership in many neglected fields. He had char- acter and real ability. Old friends will learn with sin- cere regret of his passing, The Gospel of Confidence (Washington Star) anybody expected President Hoover before the bank- ers at Cleveland last night to deal in concrete prophecy about the business situation, disappointment is the result, The chief executive carefully kept off the perilous ice of prediction. He confined himself to generalities con- cerning the “severe shock” and “disorganization in our America. A The united company by which the|the drastic ‘, 8 others around him, so that, though days. A lot had to be dope be |door he said would like to go|they smarted at times under his fore production started and she was |somewhere with her sometime jruthless exaction and the lash of marking time. Johnny Riddle}when there were “no visiting fire-jhis criticism, they responded, as he occasionally had her to lunch with|men wanting to see th hts.” demanded they respond, in what Dewspaper friends, and someone in} “How about a littl imming|had come to be spoken of around the Grand United publicity depart-|party Sunday?” And he-said, “I'll|the Grand United lot as the “Sloan ment made an appointment for herjask Lester Moore and his wife; | tempo.’ ‘with one of the studio photogra-|you'll like her.” ‘There was no other just like him, hers, so she spent several hours} Anne went with him. Later in|Rorimer learned. He was a tyrant, one day before a “still” camera. jthe week the Moores invited her and Sloan to dinner. Dan Rorimer’s visits to the bun- salow were less frequent now. Anne sald nothing about this to him; she aid not urge him; and he sup- posed she felt that under the cir cumstances things were better this |Changes for his way. lominated the Between them had come a slight Testraint, though both had sought to avoid such a thing. been living with two other MONA MORRISON and HARLEY. The lati DAN RORIMER, former New ork mewsi man and Scenario writer, Ia tn love swith As fi a FE { been wounded. Obviously, poison gas glia come refine aimee wai | nae) heen checked the to yield ‘hi his close to replacing bullets and shells on the battlefield. / march of prosperity.” But he did not fail to preach to that his visitt Dan Rorimer was He said to Pa ing friends were in the keeping himself; Se What causes the agitation against gas, of course, 1s the | {ie masters of the nation party. but tt did not take her long to|®im credit, way it can be used against civilian non-combatants. A sustained gas bombardment from the air might easily destroy half the population of a big city in half an hour. It is for this reason that gas looms as the deadliest “weapon in the modern arsenal—despite these figures| ,.° from the last war. The Last Schooner Is Gone ‘The last of the old fleet of windjammers has vanished from the Great Lakes in the sinking of the schooner Our Son; and those to whom the flavor of the old days ® is attractive will find a melancholy interest in the an- nouncement. ‘The windjammers fared worse on the lakes than they did on the ocean. Coastwise schooners are still in serv- ice on salt-water, and some of them even clear for over- seas ports; but the sailing vessel has been a rarity on the lakes for years, There are too many places like the Detroit and St. Clair rivers, where a schooner must be i “T’ll be glad to go along,” Anne said. Mona saw his car draw up before ‘role. |the bungalow and she would have Tun off if Anne had not insisted on sense that something had happened, and she refrained from asking Questions that might seem pointed. igre prdt too, felt that Lr = shoul 7 © | introducing her. Tut Paul had ® bluse way of ne: Stat |, ,;Dowt be fool she coum ling out suites seled smilingly. “Make an res) “What's th ith 4 sion before he gets away.” ad spree. Mona’s ever-ready wisecracks de- serted her when she shook hands espe yt ‘The vast area of Prete NOW Go ON WITH THE sTORY against @ black dinner|< ‘on the piano bench. CHAPTER XXXVIII coat was overpowering. She could | gers struck # chord. “Ther on MORRISON frequently|*ccomplish little more than &/of satisfaction in that, I observed, with her c smaile, Come clean; what happened? Aippancy, that Anne Winter needed| Sloan said they were to pick up|you propose to Anne and secretary, but to Anne letter writ, | his friends at the Roosevelt, and on ing was a form of recreation and|the drive downtown in the impres- had been since childhood. There|sively long phaecton, gleaming with janother chord “Did yout” was @ not inconsiderable amount of |black and silver, he began to tell fan mail these days, which she at-|her of bis plans concerning the Re for a career has put the prospect of marriage e it a the remote background, ee UL grinned and dropped do f Fy fx f Hf f i E f F ef iH FH as i wie ‘Yet—and herein lies the kernel of President Hoover's auTnoR | ‘ HERE/ATOIYOUR, : HEACKH By'Dr FRANK! NECOY. or me fast Al qeadiene rgeriog Westhead Dict wil be srovere! in the habit of using too many acid- forming foods. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Mitral Stenosis estion: H. G. D. writes: “I am ye old and have had hea» Dr. McCoy wil) gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addresseo envelope for reply. trouble (mitral stenosis) since birth. I have been told that near my 2lst birthday I may expect a change for the better, the explanation being that during youtg at intervals of seven years a change occurs. Is this true?” Answer: It is true that heart dis- orders of childhood often gradually disappear after adolescence, but do not depend too much upon this possi- ble change. Start eating correctly so that you do not have an excessive amount of gas pressure against your heart, as such gas pressure is the most common cause of all heart de- rangements. Milk Question: H. L. asks: “Is it health- ful to drink a glass or two of sweet milk just before retiring every night?” Answer; Not unless you are on an » exclusive milk diet, in which case your schedule might extend to bed- time, dependipg upon how much milk you were ing. Ordinarily, when milk is used at all, it should be used as a meal, itself, and not in addition to any of the customary three meals Stomach Trouble ; Question: Mrs. G. F. writes: “I have ® place at the top of my stomach on the right side that gives me some trouble, something like the colic, every month. Can you tell me what it is and the remedy? I am very ;:. = | day. towed, to enable sail to compete with steam; and the steamboats on the lakes carry bulk freight so cheaply that the schooner’s economic advantage is gone. But the windjammers served the middle west very well, in their day. They helped to build up the interior of the nation, and most of us will be sorry to learn that the last of them has gone. ji tended to personally and briefly; | forthcoming picture, Grand United, but the weekly letter to her mother |he informed her, intended to spend |so he admitted that that was wi and father was fat and invariably |@ lot ef money on it; Lester Moore |had happened. required extra postage. ‘would bave the greatest role of bis| Paul sald, “I thought there About Rorimer she wrote: career. something the matter. Well... “He's as sweet and considerate| And he smiled and said, “For that up from the piano, as he can be—e wonderful friend. | matter, it will be yours teo, won't I feel that it's my own fault in a{it, Anne?” His stnile faded. way, but I'm rather helpless te do anything about it. If I loved a man enough to want to marry him, 2 think I’d know it, don’t you?” Anne murmured something in It was ber father whom , she/srateful reply. Sloan talked on. He really appealed to in telling of |said something mice about her voice Dan's proposal. Her letters slways|and his intention of having a seng were addressed to both parents, but | written for her. Judge Winter knew his daughter] “You didn’t know that, did you?” much better than her mother did.| “Why, no, That's a real gur- Mra. Winter was beset by maternal doubts and misgivings; she expect- ed the worst to happen. Her bus band argued that Anne had mind /a spot for it.” of her own and could use it, He] At dinner he was an attentive rarely counseled his daughter, off-|host, His friends were Easterners, ered specific advice only when it/a New York real estate man—ajold enough to know what she ‘was asked for. classmate of Sloan’s—and his wife | wants, I guess.” His reply was about what Anne |and daughter, a girl about 16, who| The little calendar on Rorimer's |®7enase. | Often th had expected, and so was the com-|was the thrill of her lite/desk shed its top leaf daily, and |i Set ment of her mother. The judge be-|at the sight of screen celebrities|September came to Hollywood, | oust Neved she had done exactly right, |{n the flesh, ‘With it came the start of produc and he expressed his faith in ber;|/ Sloan took pleasure in pointing |tion on his picture. tough, "t you?” but Mra, Winter was horroretruck |eome of them out to her, chuckling] He was having his opportunity |DTettY Reee row at the notion of Anne’s even con-jover her rapture; and afterward |now te observe the famous Garry| But Anne shook her head and sidering for s minute the thought he drove them through Beverly |Sloan at work—and Sloan worked, smiled at him. “I guess I'm too en- of marriage with @ young mah she |Hills to show her the homes of/ The man’s vitality was terrific and |thusiastic to be tired. Dan. had never seen. Anne smiled. some of the stars. it somehow communicated itself to (To Be Continued) i i i Cleveland speech—there is nothing in even so protracted & spell of bad times to dishearten, discourage or de- Fit E é z z f i Usefully polnts out. ‘That they will as in the past; prove mut. ey will, as in the past, prove be the foundation of revived welfare cannot be The president counsels the country to take its history. In the homely vernacular, he says we may be down, but we are far from being Hi = = g 3 i HE i y, Our Responsibility in Cuba Senator David 1. of Massachusetts is not a sena- tor given to the making of wild and irresponsible state- ments; consequently, when he declares—as he did recent- ly—that affsirs in Cuba are in a bad state and that a vielent revolution may develop if this country does not take some sort of action, his assertion deserves some se- le a& EH ce & i i ah bears T didn’t know there was to any singing whatever. “Just one song—for you. There's ‘ase and speed of vocal communication over long dis- tances is an essential factor in keeping the modern world ‘The principal difference between the United States of tedsy and the United States of 50 years ago is that local boundaries have, to a large degree, been forgotten. For ‘4 today,” Mr. Hoover observed st Cleveland, “is continued unity of and establishment of safeguards for the future. American business takes that admonition to existing trials and tribulations will turn out to hai fh | stout, Weighing about 240 pounds. @ > Can you tell me something to reduce my weight?” Answer: The distress you have on \ your right side may be due to gall bladder trouble, to stomach irritation, or to colitis in the hepatic flexure of the colon. As you are overweight, the vetoed thing 2 feed ae diet to re- luce your wei and your symp- toms will no doubt disappear while on the diet which is necessary for you to take to bring about a satis- factory weight reduction. Send large, self-addressed, stamped envelope for complete instructions. < ? BARBS o might be more enthusiasm 4 ‘There H rede the report that Mayor Walker is + the movie industry if it were known for certain he would write the gags. * * & ‘There is always the danger that if Broun is elected to Con- might feel impelled, merely he is @ writer, to be author many bills. Hl il * ek ‘With one party in Turkey favoring the fez and the other the derby for the national top-piece, it is a simple matter for a candidate to announce his platform by throwing his hat in the ring. ) see ( Legionnaires attending the conven- all tion in Boston are looking so pros- Perous that it would not be amiss to call them now “in-the-doughboys.” ¥ * * ‘ ‘The millionaire who attributed his success to golf probably is the sort who could swing his clubs to ad- vantage, * oe * A movement is on foot in Vimou- tiers, France, to erect a statue to the ete of Camembert cheese. Na- ives there are understood to be strong for it. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) [ ClearLake 1, By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN Mrs. Alfred Olson left for Furgo Wednesday due to the serious ill- nee ik her father. 1e Mr, and Mrs. Warren Keeler and Mr. and Mrs. Harold ve were callers at Steele Monday. % wy

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