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4 An Independent News| THE STATE'S OLD! NEWSP. *~APER: (Established 1873) per iT Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subse iption Rates Advance Daily by carrier, per year .......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) . Daily by mail per year (in stat outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mafl in state, three years 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year - 150 Weekly by mail in Canada, per iv wwe me of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published here- in. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SEIALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Smith-Roosevelt, Contention Minnesota Democrats have been} noted for their contentious conven- | tions. A gathering of the clans in that state, followers of the Jefferson- ian principles, is usually colored by| action. Not so very long ago, the fight in Minnesota was always between ad- herents of Bryan and the conservative wing. Every four years, as long as the great Commoner lived, the strug- gle for control was between the Bryan} and anti-Bryan faction. Usually enough heat engendered to make | @ fight of interesting proportions. The militant wets of Minnesota, and there are many of them located in Stearns, Ramsey and other moist bailiwicks, want a rabid wet, Smith, in preference to a negative wet, Roose- velt. The governor of New York, while described as wet and favoring repeal of the dry amendment, has hedged since entering the presidential | lists. This, of course, in deference to that faction of the party which wants to ignore the issue entirely. Smith ‘and Raskob are militantly against Prohibition and willing to stake the future of the party in a knockdown and drag-out fight on that issue. Bill Murray says bread, butter,| bacon and beans form the issue, not) juleps. Then, too, the Smith supporters view Roosevelt as having been made po-j ltically by them and by New York Tammany. While Roosevelt has not} been as stern with Tammany as his} friend Judge Seabury demanded, he| has probably gone far enough in dis- cipling Tammany to hold the “up-) staters” and still not completely drive | away all Tammany men. It is the hedging, backing and filling on po- litical issues which Smith and his co- horts attack. They think, too, that| he has disciplined Tammany in an at- tempt to play to the galleries. Governor Murray has challenged | Roosevelt to make his rather vague Preachments on public issues more definite in the North Dakota prim- aries. j As to-Murray, it canttot be said that | he dodges any issues. He meets them more than half way. Results in the North Dakota prim- fries will be interesting as an indica-| tion of political trends in this state. Can the Democratic leaders, in a state 85 per cent rural, sell a New York lawyer, man of wealth and wet. in his political convictions as against @ a Goy. Murray, farmer, progressive, | . fairly dry and committed to a pro-! gram which the farmers of this state have been agitating ever since the palmy days of George Loftus, “Bil”! Lemke, Frazier, et al? | } Will the candidate in the shade of Wall Street and with capitalistic Ieanings defeat the lanky “Alfalfa Bill,” the friend of the common peo- | ple, the bearer of the agrarian suffer- er’s burden? ‘That .is a contest worth watching. | Will Harlem and its Tammany tinged minion win or will the prairies | of North Dakota thump and throb for Gov. Bill, the sod buster of Okla- homa? Uneasy Lies the Head _ It may not be. because uneasy lies the head that wears a crown, that this * type of headgear is not in much favor with the rising generation. Lately in Reumania a young prince defied every tradition and swept aside ambition for pomp and power by a morganatic alliance. Now comes prince Lennart, grand- son of King Gustav of Sweden, plac- ing love above his title and sacrificing succession to the throne. He marries fer love and along with it secures Probably a very useful bank account. “The king and prince business for some * time has not been as brisk as of yore. “A comely commoner with a fat bank account is, under any conditions, better than titles and crowns with a depleted treasury and revolution al- in the ‘a wige selection in marrying for ~ The Bismarck Tribune 00 | weeks. 0|back any of the faithful who might jn 1904 at St. Louis it was “The Pike” | vices |The question will be voted on at the —_ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1982 speaking it is usually the case. There have been many instances of happy morganatic marriages. New Hampshire Speaks Presidential primaries are not al- ways conclusive. Often they are even poor straws to indicate which way the political wind is blowing. The promoters of Gov. Roosevelt will {make the most of the New Hampshire Democratic action last Tuesday. It is being hailed as an omen and the most will be made of this pre-con- vention advantage in the state pri- !maries to follow during the next few In North Dakota, Gov. Murray in- dulges in a vigorous but brief beating of the political bushes and the re- ception which he received throws a scare into the camp of the Roose- jVelt backers, so Senator Wheeler is [eset pell mell to this state to win prefer a Murray to a Roosevelt, | Of such is this political game. But the presidential race is not always to the swift nor the battle to the strong. Parties sitting in national conven- tions have placed very little weight jon state preferences if party consid- erations were at stake. Most presi- dential primary instructions are weak and fragile, giving the delegates great Icbway. In this state support- ing a primary preference is left to the honor of the delegate. He is to support the preference as long as he himself beiieves there is any chance of that preference being nominated. So liberal are the instructions under the law, however, that the preference may mean nothing more than a com- plimentary vote. | The Master Craftsman of Locarno! 9 & ‘AnisTive fh BRIAND. fg 1862-1932 The two-thirds rule which obtains in the Democratic national conven- tion probably makes it impossible for any candidate to win on an early bailot. Victory will be impossible without deals, trades and conferences in which the preferences expressed at the primaries will not weigh as much as most voters believe. Political manipulators have a fi- nesse all their own. Hallelujah and Whoopee! 3 jaa Sa New York, March 12.—Manhattan's World's Fair Problem laugh-of-the-minute concerns the Believe it or not, but the manage-| casting of Texas Guinan for the role ment of the World’s Fair to be held|of “Sister Aimee” in a play dealing at Chicago in 1933 is worried about a| With the life of a go-getting feminine evangelist. name for the amusement center which fo is not the first time these two is expected to attract a great deal of most spectacular “showmen” have attention at the exposition. found their names linked on the same Every World's Fair has one of these Program. areas with rides of all kinds, cham- Several years ago, when Aimee Semple McPherson arrived in New bers of horrors and similar wonders York to clean up the wicked city, Tex Guinan was operating one of Broad- to =e folks from the tall grass way's hottest spots. When Aimee op- country. In 1893 at Chicago it waS/ened her tabernacle sessions, Texas “The Midway” and many will re- member the wonders to be seen there. arrived with her girlies and gave “the little girl a hand.” ‘The incident attracted so much at- tention that Tex decided to keep the publicity boiling. So she invited Aimee to come over and see what the hotcha night life was like. So Aimee showed up at the naughty-naughty spots.and @ good time seems to have been had by all. The report went around that Aimee and Tex became pretty chummy and parted the best of friends. So when Charles Hopkins was cast- ing about for someone to play the dra- which attracted attention and in 1915 San Francisco, more polished, called it “The Zone.” But the 1933 model must have a new name for new de- will be offered to thrill and amuse the crowds and old names will not do. | Among the riding devices is one which will take patrons not only to the water but under it. The dip, or ee ao ayer he camera, y, vi thoug! of Tex. lo wonder ey're scenic railway, will apparently drop chuckling. 4 off of sheer precipices and into the mouths of lurking monsters. In addition to the amusement zone Proper, there will a a “Chicago Holly- wood,” a fairyland for children, a 200- logical garden with animals in the open, Indian villages, South Sea say- ages and African pygmies. One of America’s greatest cities is getting ready to do its stuff in the grand manner. It seems a little ridic- ulous that it is troubled about a name for its center of wonders. * * * Tough Times for Tex Incidentally, La Guinan has been spinning about like a carnival car- ousal for the past couple of years. Once the “queen of Broadway"—so- called—Texes has taken a lot of bumping from the jesters. Broadway heard some time ago that she had “tangled” once tco often with a certain high police official of New York. Raided several times, she moved into a hotel to get by the 3 o'clock curfew ruling. Her flip de- fiance, wise-cracked from the club floor and in the news paragraphs, re- sulted in a series of padlockings. The Broadway night-club zone has never been particularly healthy for Editorial Comment Editorials printed below: show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard 0 whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's polici AeoE eho I E£e& eAe E5oeh,s (Selfridge Journal) Those having the western part of North Dakota and Sioux county at heart, should make the vote solid for Bismarck to keep the captial, is the talk these days in Selfridge and Sioux county. In a circular letter sent to every school teacher and school officer in Sioux county last week, by E. Helen Texas from that time. She tried the | roadhouse circuit and then moved on to Paris, only to be routed back home. She tried a road tour with a barn- storming troupe of snappy girlies. She reappeared in Chicago, only to be | raided on New Year's Eve, when a clean-up halted gay preparations. A few breaks more of this sort and Texas may take her new role seriously and turn reformer. “ee | Washington Kin Song Author Sequel—The other day this. de- partment announced the arrival of the first peace song, with the Chinese-Japan situation as its basis: “Let Them Fight It Out in Their Own Back Yard, It’s Ne body's Business But Their Own. Now, I learn that the author is kin to that particular George ‘Washington whose bicentennial is now being celebrated. His name is Edward Washington, but he’s called Ned in Tin Pan Alley. Ned arrived from the old Washington estate in Norfolk, Va., about a year ago. His father is a retired capital- ist, so.Ned didn’t have to worry about putting over an immediate hit. He did get a number into the Carroll “Vanities.” His connection with the nation’s father is through the elder st instructor. those heavyweights fight. xe & another, but most of the presidential candidates say one thing and mean nothing. * * * Herr Einstein plays the fiddle for recreation, but there's still hope for him if he doesn’t listen to the croon- ers, eK OK ‘The dance will never die, says an No, not as long as they let If Alfalfa Bill Murray lives up to his name, he will top the presidential iraw votes by a whole stack. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Iinc.) gay The British empire, I am afraid, has served its purpose.—H. G. Wells, Brit- ish author. * * * Depression is due to the vanity of half-brother, Lawrence Washington. | j Ned figures that he is about five gen- erations removed. ed Barbs ee Jess Willard is broke, he told a Los Angeles court. Time for another come- back? | . eee | Many men say one thing and mean | FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: =| STICKERS | A storm seldom rages as much as the people who get caught in it. Jorns, Supt. of Schools, we publish following her timely letter: “Shortly after the burning of the state capitol building, petitions were circulated in the state asking that the capital be moved to Jamestown. state-wide election on March 15, 1932. “This movement to change the lo- cation of the state capital was con- ceived by a small group of Jamestown men whose sole purpose was to build up their town at the expense of an- other. A large number of business- men of Jamestown have tried repeat- edly but unsuccessfully to stop this movement. “Jamestown already has one of the largest state institutions and is so located geographically as to be incon- venient to the majority of our citizens. Bismarck has been the capital of the state since 1889 when North Dakota was admitted to the Union. Large sums of money have been invested by the state in buildings and real estate. We cannot understand why all of this should be sacrificed in order to satis- fy the selfish aim of a small group of Jamestown men. “We realize that moving the state capital from Bismarck would be a serious handicap to western North Da- kota. We realize that we owe our|— support to western enterprises. There- fore, if we have interests of western North Dakota and Sioux county at heart, we will e the Sioux county vote a solid “NO” on the constitution- al amendment to remove the state capital from Bismarck at the Presi- dential Primary election, on Tuesday, March 16th. Mark your ballot thus: Yes ....... NO : “Your taxes and your Sioux County interests are at stake. You are urged to go to the polls on Tuesday, March 15th. Vote, and urge your friends and ‘Time only, of course, can con- that statement, but generally love. firm | neighbors to vote “NO.” THIS CURIOUS WORLD BEGIN HERE TODAY Beautiful ELLEN ROSSITER, Depart- oe She lives with MOLLY ROSSITER, iter, MYRA, and her employed at Barclay's nights brother, MIKE. of time he kisnes her. ay Ellen ree date. In a newspaper she reads that ai wet. Gradually think leas of Larry and more of Steven Barclay. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVI pan morning at the store had been a happy one for Ellen. The pleasantness of the evening before lingered through the open- ing hours of the day. Noon came. hour. ion. said suddenly: line. window display from there.” “Oh!” said Ellen, thrilled. good bet, I think, too fancy. coming “back till tomorrow. ing anyhow.” Ellen began inarticulately. “Forget it! enough! will.” the rich, the envy of the poor and the greed of the merchants.—Ignace Pad- sreiteaad Pianist and éx-premier of Po- ee The program for the protection of China from outside aggression is an international justice and peace).— Henry L, whe ae ele of state. If there were no short selling, I am confident our market would have closed months ago.—Richard Whitney, president, the New York Stock Ex- change. ee % An improvement in the buying pow- er of the farm population would quickly start the wheels of industry turning.—Alexander Legge, president, International Harvester Company. ee % We are fighting, not for liquor, but for the preservation of a principle on which our government was founded — Henry H. Curran, president of the As- sociation Against the Prohibition Amendment. x TODAY i 7 WORLD. W ANNIVERSARY Sees of eee PARIS IS BOMBED On March 12, 1918, German planes bombed Paris, killing 34 persons and injuring 76 others. Sixty-six more were suffocated in a subway stam- pede. Four German planes were brought down during the raid by French anti- aircraft guns. German troops entered the out- skirts of Odessa, principal Russian port on the Black sea and third city in size in Russia proper, before the outbreak of the World War. The Russian Black sea fleet was re- ported preparing to leave Odessa. Numerous German raids character- ized the activities on the western front. Many of the attacks were made in force and were preceded by heavy artillery bombardments. FOR A RAINY DAY Fort Worth, Tex—It was a rainy morning when J. M. Powell piled out of bed and took his umbrella for a trip to the corner store. The grocer hadn't yet arrived, and Powell stood in the doorway waiting for him. A car drove up to the curb. Sensing he was to be the victim of a holdup, Powell slipped $15 out of his pocket and put it in his closed umbrella. The robbers searched him and found but 35 cents. In disgust they re- turned the change to him and drove off. . SEEK RARE BIRDS ‘Washington.—Naturalists are con- Stantly on the lookout for five birds, once discovered by an explorer, but BARCLAY, 57 an@ Z in love e Elizabeth Bowes, casually that she is inch day. For Next ven a note from Larry, saying'he cannot keep the Ellen and Lorene yawned, looked at each other in- terrogatively and began tidying up for lunch. Lorene tentatively suggested a newly discovered tea room with a bangup 75-cent luncheon. They set off and talked shop through the lazy, unhurried Ellen found it pleasant to lunch in such a comfortable fash- Afterwards when they were strolling back to the store, Lorene “I've decided to let you try Blumstein’s. yourself this after- noon. I hear they have some cute sports dresses at $9.10—a new Carney & Co. has a whole flushed and “Get three or four. Green fs a And nothing Use your own judg- ment. Afterwards, if you want to, “ou can go on home and not bother Your Jogt won't be delivered till morn- “You don't know how proud—” If you make any|. bloomers I'll come down hard jot that I think you Tt was 4 o'clock when Ellen ‘fin- ished with the manufacturers and walked up Pine street toward never since located. According to the American Nature association, the five rarest are the “Sylvia montana,” Townsend's bunting, Audubon’s “Re- gulus -cuvieri”—a species of kinglet, his small-headed fly-catcher, and a rare species of the argus pheasant. essential part of any development (of By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association. Fatigue for the athlete, as a rule, is anes and prepared for in ad- vance. For that reason, ordinary fa- tigue is not dangerous for the track man, for instance. But if “that tired feeling” persists after the body has been given ample time to repay the energy “debt’ against the body, then it is time to study the causes and remove them. ‘Research has shown that a track athlete in good condition, can recover 46 per cent of his lost energy in five minutes after an exhausting dash. Within 15 minutes, his recovery is 64 per cent complete; in 45 minutes, it is 95 per cent complete, and the ath- lete is ready to give his best efforts in another event. The events in most track meets are so arranged that preliminary heats are run early, with finals coming af- ter other events have given the ath- letes time to recover the energy ex- pended in their earlier exertions. x RO Training enables the athlete tp re- place used energy more rapidly than the ordinary person can, but if over- Daily Health News THAT TIRED FEELNG! ‘Athletes in Training Must hates Since They Should Watch Continued Fatigue, Recover Rapidly ‘The best remedy for staleness is a complete rest for several days and then a gradual resumption, of training activities. ‘The principal reason for fatigue in athletes is the fact that thelr great exertions cause a great deal more lac. tic acid in the system than can be ox- idized at the time. This condition results in the rapid breathing and quickened pulse of the athlete, which continues long after his exertion period is over. Increases in the amount of oxygen taken. in, however, is valuable only in so far as the increase does not go be- yond the amount the blood vessels are able to carry to the body. Increased pulse is valuable only to the point where the heart is receiving blood as rapidly as it trie sto send it out. This speed is governed by the rapidity of the circulation back to the heart and not by the rate at which the heart can pump it back. These relative increases are high in the trained athlete and allow him to recover quickly. In persons not in training, they occur in lesser degree. These rules apply principally to short distance or dash men. Tomor- row’s article will go into the matter training has been indulged in stale- ness will result. from the standpoint of the distance or endurance runner. A BATTLEFIELD BEAUTY PARLOR Associated ‘ress Phote tm an Improvised beauty parlor near the front lin soldiers of the Japanese army are shown taking advanta, fighting to get their hair clipped and mustaches trimmed. She reviewed the pur. chases she had made and found home. them good. Underneath lay the pleased consciousness that she was through with Barcla; for the day. Myra shduld be home from the library. Tea and muffins in the kitchen, perhaps. Ellen's steps hastened. © She entered the dusky hallway and had started up the stairs when Myra, wearing an old faded apron and bedroom slippers, her head wrapped in a towel, came flying down. Ellen saw disaster in her sister’s eyes. “Ellen! Mike's been hurt. An accident—!"” “Mike! Ellen leaned against the ban- nister. Her heart seemed to stop. Her brain — everything—seemed to stop for a terrible, timeless mo- ment, “He's unconscious. They. car- ried him in our bedroom.” Myra was gone. Ellen ran up the stairs and into the shabby familiar living room filled with s!- lent people, women in dust caps and aprons, @ few coatless per- spiring men. Mike's bicycle was propped against the wall. They were all looking at it. “It’s the other sister,” Ellen heard someone say. “Poor thing! Let her through.” SURaine, moving uneasily, they made a path for her, all the curious, kindly neighbors, but El- len did not notice. She ran past them to the bedroom. Mike lay unconscious on the bed, Mrs. Clancy, concerned and anxious, was leaning over him. Molly sat still and white in @ chair drawn close. She did not move as Ellen entered. i “Oh, Ellen, it’s you! I thought Myra—" Mrs. Clancy turned and spoke quietly. Ellen’s breath came in great gasps. She could not speak. “sit down.” The Irishwoman left the bed and took her hands in an effort to force her to a chair. Ellen leaned against her, spent, ex- hausted, her eyes on the little mo- tionless figure on the high white bed. — “What happened?” “It was the bicycle,” said Mrs. Clancy patiently. “At Pine and Chestnut. He was. wheeling it across when a truck, a big truck— he pushed the bicycle clear but—” “The doctor?” “We've called him. Myra’s gone to see.” a Myra came in just then. “Dr. Ellis is on his way,” she said. “Till go clear out the living room,” Mrs, Clancy offered and left. “Oh, Myra, Myra!” Ellen whis- pered. “He—he's breathing, Ellen. Wel have to hope and pray.” Their fingers closed together tightly; their terrified eyes met and failed of reassurance. Molly sat motionless, - tearless, speechless. Myra tried to make her leave but she would not, Ellen knelt beside the bed, not daring to touch Mike except to take one of his stubby nailed hands, still grimy from play. She hardly knew what went on about her. je was not aware that Myra had at last suc- ceeded in getting Molly into her own bedroom. She was aware only of Mike and his death-like pallor and His death-like stillness. Dr, Ellis came. Another doctor came. Ellen hardly understood that they had forced her from the room se they could make the ex- amination. After a long while—it was dark outside now—the doctors reluctantly announced they still could not say how gravely the boy was injured. Internal injuries un- doubtedly—the persistent coma due to that—one leg. broken, perhaps his spine affected. The child should be in @ hospital. They wanted an- other opinion before moving him, “How soon will we know the best or the worst?” i It was the ghost of Molly’s voice. “We- Dr. Ellis hesitated, “it he holds out through the night we should be able to move him by morning, An immediate operation | Would be too dangerous.” EME returned to her vigil be- side Mike. Myra moved in and out, but most of the time she stayed in the next room with Molly who sleepless, ‘aring, tearless. Sometimes Mike’s breathing grew heavy and the strange, stertorous sound filled the watcher with panic. Yet never would Ellen allow her hopes to flag. Toward morning Mike stirred for the first time and murmured something incoherent about @ bicycle. llen looked quickly toward Dr. Ellis at the other aide of the bed. Thursday at 3 o'clock, In view of “That's good,” he said, the circumstances if you come early Presently the doctor gave a deep| ‘Morrow we might make an éx- em Ral a8 tell your mother aie an ra we'll be moving the len’s eyes appealed young ‘man to the hospital in anj lis. “But. won't. Mike Beet bel hour-or so.” by himself, special nurses and all He bent and fumbled for Mike's Pulse, looked across at Ellen and smiled wearily. ‘The ambulance came for Mike, There was a crowd on the street when they carried‘him out into the morning sunshine. Molly rode in the ambulance. Ellen and Myra saw Mike wheeled away. long, white, brightly lighted hall, heavy with the smell of ether and fodoform, the three women waited. Again and again Myra or Ellen would importune a crisp, starched nurse for news that did not come, They started at every ring of the telephone and then sank back look- ing at each other with bleak eyes and faltering hearts. The ‘great hospital seemed to have swallowed up little Mike as though he had never existed, 11 o'clock Ellen, heavy-eyed, remembered that she had not’ notified Lorene of her ab- - sence from the store, ered to Myra and slipped to the telephone, haunted by a viston of Molly's face. If anything happened. to Mike she was afraid that Molly... Good news! until that moment how great fear had been, * * am doctor told afraid for a while that he wouldn't rally from the operation,” Molly began to sob. gled to her feet, tears raining down her face, the first tears she had Abed since the accident, lesperato fingers tugged at tor’s sleeve. . ee: “Where is he? Let meee” et me go to him Ellis said gravely, intervened, sible, The little boy is very tired now and sick, He's in a ward with & number of other children who also cannot be disturbed. ing hours are Saar Ae Sani gs meces- "Ble Atew at he oe inlexiog of their poverty, Hike must have eretyattgtont followed in a cab and told each other with courageous lips and frightened eyes that everything would be all right. said... Dr. Ellis had They reached the hospital and In a At haggard and She whis- Lorene answered the call and Ellen tore her thoughts from the unthinkable future, what had happened and was back on the bench again. Hours had never been so long or so empty, She explained It was 12 o'clock. Then 1, 2, and nearly 3. Still no word. Dr, Ellis appeared but he could tell them ae At 3 o'clock he approached D. eee dha time Ellen read the news on. is weary face before he spoke. She had not known “He's going to pull through,” the them. “We were “Oh!” She strug- Her cold, “I'm aft ‘ald you can't now,” Dr, The nurse, standing at his elbow, “That will be impos on Tuesday and She ‘stepped (To Be Continued)