THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _ FRIDAY, APRIL 29, 1982 iat oie 1 ible as functions of market-making, if} - Independent woe Ee x Wak acs | When It Comes to ‘Borrowing’ Millions NEWSPAPER g AMERICANS’ Regular Examination Best Insurance for Disease Prevention - Smallpox and Diphtheria Immunization Should Be Given Child ‘Wall Street. Some of these have beef weeded out by the pressure of public ublished by The Bismarck Tribune |Opinion. Many undoubtedly remain a N. D., and en-jand deserve the attention of invest!- ‘85 | gators for the proper protection of the investing public, which is usually handicapped by a lack of knowledge oe RES Editor's Note: This is the third | of scarlet fever are infrequent and in- of a series of six articles by Dr. |0culation is not recommended unless foal Association, and of Hygels, | ‘Peclal berry Others will follow daily. By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Med- ical and of Hygia, the Health Hagasine ‘The laws of most states and munici- Palities now demand that the child be successfully vaccinated against l- pox before it is permitted to enter school. vidence tary ..6720| A New King of the Gypsies Bis- Country gendarmerie posts in Mo- sstseovecssoevesseeseee 7:20] ravia have noted recently that gypsy Dally by mail per year (in state tribes are assembling near the city ete) — Bismarck) ............ 5.00 ot Bi Bivataus ate arii¥- Dakota mail outside of North Ext? « 6.00 jing daily from all parts of Europe Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 [24 ® spirit of unrest seems to per- 1 / worn Wane eo vade these wandering and mysterious years Sweety marek) f BUT THERE ARE A FEW Aig COULD TEACH “ip RACKETEERS/ N\A ty 4 2.50 | people who are persistently secretive 1.50 as to the meaning of it all. ‘5 It now develops that the conclave 2.00 |!s for the purpose of electing that mystical person, “King of the Gyp- sies,” to whom the Romany world pays homage. Nowadays the child should also be given the benefit of immunization against diphtheria with anti-toxin or ~ with toxoid. Here also millions of chil- = dren have had the prevention without Hidden ‘Proverb , harm, and the scientific records show definitely that the death rates and ° HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzsle 27 Kettle. 1 All. 28 Dwelling the amount of illness from diphtheria are steadily decreasing. ‘Today these are the two methods of SON a ee rIth cay woul SBtribed tibéle: places. ~ 8 Hazy mass in 29 Pertaining to the sky. kt aalatd ~ hairs, aecen IRIRIEIET 31 Males. fully established and which may well 14 Characteristic. MPIAIR] 23 'To provide toad. al \ Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively Wie is one royal monarch who om Fpentitied to the use for republication |Si'8 secure upon his throne. | Undis of all news dispatches credited to it ;turbed by the revolutionary changes af not otherwise credited in this/that have deprived other European tho a 2 newspaper and also amiisbed Neral: royal personages of their power and All rights of republication of all other |®uthority, the gypsy king remains in tr ! th matter herein are also reserved. obscurity by tradition, yet his sov- Oil Gin Sluis and County jerelgnty, assured till death, is abso- oo atpepers * Comm tute. “His is an office that has existed from time immemorial, and though he be but a penniless wanderer, he is @ real aristocrat among rulers. (ancorporated) ‘OHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON/ Spread thinly over the surface of the globe, the gypsies remain as one i Stopping Roosevelt primitive people whom contact with + | Conservative forces of the east evi- | civilization has failed to exterminate. be recommended as routine for every child. ‘There are other methods which are fully established and which may well be recommended as routine for every 16 To spring up child. in a flutter. +17 Marsh, 18 Stigmatized. 20 Brink. 21 Deity. iGAID} IL] ; ’ 22 Wages. 23 Duel 25 Behold There are other methods which are sometimes used in the prevention of serious epidemics, The inoculation against scarlet fever has been proved to be practicable. However, epidemics Giant Goliath?, B dently are set against the nomination | They have their own laws by which he of Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt. "sqhis opposition, however, will not in- ) jure his chances in the west or south. Al Smith forces stemmed the march of Roosevelt toward nomination on the Massachusetts’ front this week. At this ‘writing news from the Pennsylvania sector is rather indefinite with the Prospects that the New York Govern- or will pick up a handful of dele- gates. This is the first open, determined stand of the conservative forces un- der the leadership of Shouse, Raskob and Smith to block Roosevelt's nomi- nation. Apparently the recent utter- ances of Roosevelt concerning the “forgotten man” are not sweet music to the ears of either the bulls or the bears of Wall Street.: They see in his candidacy a menace. In his public ut- terances they detect a tendency at least to pander to the passions and prejudices of the proletariat. ‘The diplomacy and suavity of Roose- velt’s St. Paul keynote speech did not placate the elements lined up on the side of their “Happy Warrior.” Al Smith will exercise ail his preroga- tives as titular head of the Demo- cratic party. There must be no deals or political thimble rigging in which he is not consulted or concerned. There must not be too many breaks for the “forgotten” man. That po- litical coinage of Mr. Roosevelt’s made some eastern politicians and those who finance campaigns see red. “Not a dollar” for Roosevelt they declared. Now it takes money to run political campaigns and a consideration of prime importance is how much cash can a nominee bring into the coffers. ‘The political stage is set for an in- teresting drama at Chicago in June. A contest between Roosevelt and Smith promises many interesting and dramatic denouements. Then there is the wet and dry issue, not to be sneesed at as a political thriller. In any event there is enough powder in the political magazines to keep mon- otony away. Stock Market Abuses Not all the odium for stock market abuses should be directed at bear raid- ers who are accused of depressing prices of stocks below their real values. For the moment public attention is centered upon stock market traders who have taken advantage of the strained conditions of credit and the loss of public confidence to hammer down the prices of stocks by consecu- tive sales. Much adverse criticism has been of- fered about this side of stock ex- exists on the long side of the mar- ket. While the “bears” are now the methods of the “bulls” and their un- scrupulous operations during the boom years. Buying pools seeking to boost stocks by converse process from that em- ployed by the bear raiders, attempt to to govern themselves and preserve their identity. Such laws, oral be- cause the gypsies have neither litera- ture nor an alphabet of their own, may vary some with every tribe. Yet the gypsies of Spain, the Balkans, the roaming gypsies of England and ‘the wanderers in the Americas, speak among themselves of a “leis pralo,” the law of the gypsy brotherhood, to which every brown brother submits. So, in mysterious and secret con- clave for the election of a new king as successor to him whose sway ceased only by his death, the gypsies are carrying out tribal customs that have lasted through the centuries and have perpetuated their tribal characteristics as a distinct race of people. Perhaps, after our lightning-like civiilzation has burned itself out, the gypsy caravans will still be winding their way past crumbling skeletons of towering buildings as they roam where’er fancy bids or gather in solemn conclave. Making It Funnier Ringling Brothers-Barnum and Bailey Circus announces that, rather than straining to make the show big- ger and more thrilling, its manage- ment wants to make it funnier. People are in high tension now due to economic conditions, the managers argue, and what is most needed in this crisis is a good laugh or chuckle, not more thrills and additional strain. Doubtless the showmen are excel- lent psychologists. It is their busi- ness to find out what the people | want and to deliver it. Press reports indicate that the cir- cus, which is now showing at New York’s Madison Square Garden, car- ries more clowns than ever before. They swarm out and engulf the spec- tators and fun runs riot. This change in policy has taken well with the cash customers, so the clowns will not get a notice to tone down their an- tics. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of eee by other editors. mherare publ ished without regard whether the ree or disagree with The ‘Tribun policies: It Won’t Be Long Now (Duluth Herald) More North Dakota war veterans want a change in the present prohibi- tion law than are in favor of the so-called soldiers’ bonus. ‘This interesting disclosure in a state that for more than forty years has been known as “bone-dry” war brought out last week when all the American Legion posts in the state were called upon to express their opin- ions about both questions. The vote reported from thirty-two cities shows that 1,849 members were in favor of the immediate payment of the bonus and 288 were opposed, but for the resubmission of the Eighteenth amendment, 1,945 former service men favored it and only 156 were against. In some of the posts sentiment was unanimous on the prohibition ques- tion, Mandan for example casting 172 votes for a referendum and none against it. In Fargo, 457 Legionnaires raise prices to a dizzy and unwar- rantable height, and then unload their Ueve certain securities must have voted for and 32 against resubmission. Whether the post was located in a large town or in a small village, an overwhelming majority favored a new deal on the question. One post, that at Ray, attracted attention by voting seventeen to two against the bonus LET US BE GAY! New York, April 29.—Here it is, fel- lows, right from the old sartorial feed box: you'll have to have the blues to be gay this summer! Yes, sir—royal blue and. oxford blue, slate and pattern blue, with touches of buckthorn green, willow, berry red, corn, raspberry, copper and cranibal brown. The fashion makers are determined that we put on @ bright front. In other words, the Park Avenue and Fifth Avenue men’s shops are going to show anti-gloom clothes. sre It may have been a mild winter, but they're looking for a white sum- mer. And you should see those pas- tel suspenders to match the white! And those blouses, a la Riviera! ... ‘Tra la... and again, tra la! ee * SAILING, SAILING! Flash of new paint and the scratch decks are spring signs along the riv- ers and bays, as the “ho for the sea” season nears, A few hardy boat fans have already spread their white sails. But there’s bitter news for rich Mr. J, Pierpont Morgan. His Corsair, reckoned the most elegant and high- powered yacht, is to be rivaled, and mayhap eclipsed, by that of Mrs. Cadwalader, of the Philadelphia Cad- waladers. Hers, the Savarona, is a mere 7000 horse-power affair. x oR OX Aboard, I am told, are such trifles as a pipe organ, gold doorknobs and @ black Egyptian bath room. The Corsair carries a crew of 58, and they have staterooms—if you Please—not bunks or berths. The wage of Captain Porter is said to be $12,000. And just to show you what can be tossed to that old devil sea, the 191- foot J. A. MacDonald tub has a lat STICKERS A merchant bought amounting to $1450, less and 5 per cent. He sold the $1500. How much did he ga of scrapers at work on hulls and|pied dry bill for “whites” and such of cost of the Manville ark, the Esmaro, has been estimated at $10,000 a sea- son. Mrs. Cadwalader’s china, silver and such was a mere $25,000 item. Rough life, these sailorfolk lead! ee # REVERTING TO TYPES! Of all the adventurers and swash- bucklers I have encountered, Count von Luckner, Felix Reisenberg and Rafael de Nogales, soldier of fortune, seemed more closely hewn to type. Each might have stepped from a movie casting director’s office. On the other hand, Lowell Thomas appears to have been born in a din- ner jacket, yet his Arabian adven- tures alone have filled a couple of books; William Beebe has risked his neck at the sea bottom many times, but is a soft-spoken, gentle fellow; Richard Byrd would have made a grand matinee idol, movie hero or collar ad gent; Bill Leeds looks pretty much the millionaire playboy that he is, but he’s been hero of a dozen haz- ardous exploits; Jimmy Cagney, es- tablished as one of the screen's tough- est characters, is modest and quiet and slightly shy; Richard Halliburton could pass as a tailor's model. ** * Speaking of Cagney reminds me that, while being rediscovered by his old fellow Manhattanites, he occu- @ dais of honor at the Friars’ the other night. Which amused him; for not so many years ago he had been a call boy in the very banquet room. * * * A red-headed product of remoter side streets, Cagney relates how, FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: People are convinced the dry law has shortly after arriving in Hollywood, to talk behind his back and so spoke in the good old East Side lingo. Jim- my all but floored them by coming right back in the same tongue, hav- ing picked up quite a vocabulary on the sidewalks of New York. er, member of the Women’s Organi- $500 a month alone. Table service|two of the Yiddish moguls decided {zation for Prohibition Reform. Ht TODAY On April 29, 1918, a huge German army was hurled at the entire Franco- British front between Zillebeck Lake and Meteran, with only minor ad- If everyone slept out—and espe- cially on these jolly, frosty nights— lwe should all live to be 100.—Lord Baden-Powell of England. vances being reported. The day's fighting was the heaviest since the second German drive began on April 9. troops near Ypres were also Belgian heavily attacked, but managed to re- gain all of their lost ground by a 18 engaged in coal mining sylvania met with an accident in a one-year period.—Miss Beatrice Mc- Connell of the Pennsylvania Depart- ‘ment of Labor. ee % Political leaderg who boasted that ® permanent era of prosperity had arrived are partly responsible for the depression—Richard Whitney, presi- dent, New York Stock Exchange. **# * counter-attack before the end of the day's fighting. American troops took over a sector of the Somme salient created by the great March offensive, releasing tired British troops for service in the re- serve until they had time to recover — more than a month of steady ig! thting. Turkish forces in Mesopotamia were {again defeated by the British and continued their retreat northward. ‘Unless we can show that payment} (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) of the bonus will benefit the country jand promote the general welfare we are not entitled to have this bill passed.—Representative Wright Pat- man, sponsor for the bonus bill. ee Despite all the dry claims to the contrary, the state of Ohio is wet. The London Zoo has a “tigron,” an janimal that had a lioness for a mother and a tiger for a father. Michaelangelo was essentially a sculptor and painted only occasion- ally. the TT) BY BEGIN HERE TODAY CHAPTER XIX Ween Susan alighted from the train at the suburban station she looked about for Mr. Heath’s man, Simon, His smiling, black face gave her a heartening sense of being at home in all this in- , timidating aplendor. A battery of smart motors were drawn up in a circle and the high, shrill voices of young girls and matrons wearing perfect sport clothes pierced the Friday morzing calm, “No wonder,” thought Susan, “this particular section of the Lake shore is chlled the ‘Gold Coast.’” Every one seemed fabu- lously rich. There was an air of AN HUNTEe MABEL. McELLIOTT “Tt is, Miss,” he agreed. He was tooling the car carefully through a narrow lane, avoiding the sharp branches that reached out and might have scratched the glossy surface. Susan leaned back against the cushions and sighed. However could Mr. Heath leave this paradise each morning and come into town to the soot and smoke and noise that mi Chicago's loop? Men were ge. If she lived in such @ place she knew she r, never leave it, There of white through an ambush of pine trees and Simon made a magnificent sweep into a circular drive. The house, com- pletely hidden from the road, sprang into view. It was a long, low. affair of whitewashed brick with a roof of black slate, The blinds were blue. There was about it an air of cool, disarming sim- Plicity, Susan, her heart beating rapidly, alighted. Simon drove slowly away to some retreat of his own. Thus abandoned, there was nothing for Susan to do but to sound the knocker. This she did. The maid who admitted her was in pale green. She had a rosy, im- passive face and cockney accent. “Yes, Miss. From the h’office, Miss? Mr, Heath . HE led Susan into a room panelled in soft, old wood. Put- ting down her dispatch case the Girl looked shyly around her. ‘There were steps in the hall and then a blur of the maid's voice speaking. “Ab, how do you do.” Susan faced Mrs. Heath, cool and arro- gant in fawnolored tweed. “Good morning.” The brisk, superior voice went on. “Mr, Heath will be down di- rectly. I’m very much annoyed at Gis-| his working at all and the doctor rt i i fl a3 i i : i F i g39 | * tit R208 “But Simon, this hadn't expected an: lovely.” ” at Ee Bu i ® a forbade it. But he insists. Ho has e gave itire Ee ges i how a pros Heath's prop readily What do they do the luxuries that ! 26 Swift. 28 Possesset 30 City boy. 322000 pounds. 33 Pine tree fruits. 25 Capital of French Morocco. 36 To harden. 37 Toot, 39 Novel. 41 You and me. 42 To value. 43 Armadillo. 45 South America: 46 Discharges. 47 Sea lettuce. 49 What_metal forms the monetary standard of language. 55 Very high 63 Wrestled, 1 Smoldering coal. She had to abandon this line of thought with alacrity when her em- ployer entered the room. He looked ill. .Susan felt a twinge of mater- nal concern, They sat down after a business-like greeting, Susan at the oaken table and the man in the big chair. She had taken off her hat and the jacket of her serge suit. Susan forgot herself and her surroundings as she worked. The man coughed once or twice, harshly and deeply, and she looked up. “Aren’t you tired? Perhaps we ought to stop now.” Heath frowned. this. off my mind.” ‘When at last they had finished the girl slipped her book and pa- pers back into the dispatch case and said shyly, “It’s eo beautiful here I wonder you ever leave.” Heath’s eyes lighted. “You like itt?” She had touched on bis one hobby. “I wonder if you have time to see the garden?” he said eagerly. “Of course it’s not at its best now but there are still some roses and of course the sinnias—” eee Sesan murmured faintly that she thought she should catch the 11:10 train. Simon had said some- “I want to get | thing about bringing the car around for her then. The familiar mask slipped down once more over Ernest Heath's face, Of course, he thought, this girl wasn’t interested in bis garden. Neither was Ruth. She hated talk of delphinium and cosmos and tulip bods. Ruth thought it was stuffy “I'm sorry you haven't time to tee it,” he said formally. “Some other day, perhaps.” He was amazed at the light that glowed in the girl's lambént eyes. “Oh, I should love it,” she eald VERTICAL une 2 Profanes. 3 Unit of work. 4Second note. ~ way. 5 Constellation. 42 Marked with 6Large colored furrows. handkerchief. , 44 Renovates. 7To assist. 46 Aviat 9 Pound. 48 Antagonist. 10 Rowing im- 50 Thought. plement. 51 Wing part of 11 Makes use of. __ a seed. 12 Evil spirit. 53 Cairo, Esypt, 14 To attempt. isnearthe ! 15To scatter as banks of the hay. 1S Invalid. 19 Excavated. 22 Peg. 24 Idiot. 59 Street (Abbr. 60 Chaos. RV ©/932 BY NEA SERVICE MC. dered, “A heap of roses and some of the tall cosmos. Hurry!” “Shan’t I miss my train?” Susan inquired, delighted yet feartul. “Not a bit of it.” Heath was his old, crisp, didactic self, “Simon can cut corners with the best of them, Can’t you, my lad? Hop out there and have the 6 Tunning £0 no time will be lost.’ ‘There was a great scurry for a few minutes. The maid came rushing in with an armful of blos- soms and Susan made her adieus in an informal whirl of good hu- mor, eee HTH went slowly back up the stairs. Ho sat at the window of his dressing room where he could glimpse the blue water of . which Susan had dreamed. Below him the lawn sloped, a clipped, Breen miracle, to the vegetable garden and the tennis courts be- yond. He rested his head on his hand and sighed. Wonderful to be young like the girl who had just left, he re- flected. How the color had come and gone in her cheeks when she spoke of the flowers! How her eyes had glowed. He tried to remember when, if ever, things had seemed as important to him as they seemed to this child. It ‘Was youth, he supposed, that en- Yeloped everything with that in- credibly rosy glamour. It never came again, once you lost. it, Then he wondered if it were pos sible to recapture it in some meas ure through the eyes of another. That girl, for instance For a moment, when she spoke of the peso he had felt almost trans-- red. Perhaps if he and Ruth hed id a child we eines ‘would ‘have escaped him. Heath felt old, only 48 end men of iat age ie & men of that in his prime, me “It must be this wretched fu," he argued. There was something about Su- san Carey that set her apart from the crowd. Heath didn't quite know what it was. ‘Why had Ruth disliked her so, he wondered? Surely she was too unimportant to mean anything in Ruth’s lite, Heath sighed again and tried to settle himself for the ‘doctor had ordered but somehow sleep would not come, The pearl-pale face of a girl wavered between him and his dream.