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“e The Bismarck Tribune |!2*e Premier Inukai just after his re: hi Ni de br oad yi G B B a u o ra si § b ¢ a s Vv E 1 E J iq 4 rt J q : i cent assassination. They looked pre- cisely like any policemen—except that each one carried, along with his wea- pons, a typical, lawn-festival Japan- ese lantern! To most of us, Japanese lanterns are just things you hang up at gar- den parties. But apparently they’re still regulation equipment for the ul- ——!tra-modern and efficient Tokio po- An Independent Newspaper 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ae 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. ! Subscription Rates Payable in lice force. Advance i ‘ Daily by carrier, per year ...... AP, a * A Parallel Case for Germany PURATCE) veutcreresersesscssesy 749| Probably history never exactly Te- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail outside Dakota . |peats itself, but now and then it ‘comes close enough to give nervous | shudders. | Right now students of the Euro- pean situation are asking themselves if Republican Germany is about to Weekly Ey mail outside of North | follow the course steered by Republi- Dakota, per year ........ sess, 1.50/can France in 1848. There are two Weekly by mail in Canada, per jor three little indications that it may; Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three year ‘sw. and, if it does, all a lover of peace gee cera ae nurean of (c#n do is pray that history will re- jureau of fae Chet | peat itself so far but no farther. In 1848 France was a republic. Na-! fatoe i aaively |poleon Bonaparte had been gone for The Associate ress is exclusively | e the ree decades, a 1 entitled to the use for republication ;™0re than three decades, and with | of all news dispatches credited to it | him had gone—as Frenchmen saw it—j or not otherwise credited in this/all of the glory and _ prestige that! newspaper and also the local news of | prance had had under the first em-| spontancous origin published herein. | pire i if republication of all other aA even 2 So, in that year, the French elected matter herein are also reserved. | —_—— ~ as their president Prince Louis Napo- (Official City, State and County |) .0., nephew of Bonaparte. The elec= el 3 | tion came as a climax to a turbulent year of revolution—a year not greatly Junlike that which Germany is living jthrough now, And shortly after his jelection, Louis Napoleon changed France from a republic to an empire id had himself proclaimed emperor. The emperor then led his nation Member of The Associated Press Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON The Poor Folks Pay Those who relish the phrase “poor but honest” are not far from the into an erratic foreign policy that} = truth, according to a recent survey of | culminated in the Franco-Prussian the dental profession made by the war, in which France suffered a} committee which is investigating the crushing defeat and almost declined! cost of medical care in all its phases./to the position of a second-class In a recent report of this organization | power, we find this illuminating statement: | The parallel with modern Germany “Dentists practicing among wealthy | is inescapable. clientele s"ffer a larger percentage of) Germany has lost her emperor, as | uncollectible bills than do those}France had lost her Napoleon. Hard | whose patients are of lower financial| times have followed his departure | levels.” |The power and the glory that the na- One of the reasons for this may be | tion knew under him have flitted over that the man to whom credit in small) the horizon. A powerful clique of things is of real value is less liable to/army officers and aristocratic land- abuse it. Another may be that more | owners wants the monarchy restored, strenuous efforts are made to collect! precisely as was the case in France in from the poor and those in moderate | 1343. circumstances than from the wealthy.} Furthermore, it is constantly re- Whatever the cause, the fact set forth} ported that the son of the ex-kaiser, is rather an interesting commentary |the former Crown Prince William, will on human nature in the upper and'seek the presidency of Germany lower financial brackets. {Shortly, with Von Hindenburg resign- For those who are interested, the ing to make way for him. William report contains some other facts. | does not deny it. It is an open secret ‘These are that the average dentist in! that the Junkers want him to. the United States nets $4,100 a year}; what would happen then? Restor- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JUNE 21, 1932 Wha t’s Wrong With This Picture? | yy), ERSTWHILE. MY, DRX / ig ra car’ SG a PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE ° By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper, DOCTORS HAVE TO BE GOOD DETECTIVES Dr. Thorndye, Dr. Hailey and the others may be good, but they're out- classed by tectives whose exploits are scribed in books. a good many medical de- not de- jon a long journey and as soon as all traces of her feathers were cleaned out of the house the patient found {complete and permanent relief. | There are a lot of similar stories in which cats, dogs, canaries, geese, horses, camels, or their hair or feath- ers or “dander” have been found re- sponsible for the asthma, alleged hay fever or hyperesthetic rhinitis, Pittsburgh physician reports a case | of dermatitis of the right upper eye- lid of a married woman. After six |weeks the left upper eyelid became | affected too. Much itching and burn-} ing with the rash, worse mornings. | Lady said she always slept on her right side with her head buried in a long bolster. On the same bolster} her husband's head lay beside her. The lady had recently tried a pro- Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- friend husband got immediate relief. Then there was the case of the Washington man who had suffered almost constantly from alleged hay fever for two or three years, with all the characteristic symptoms except seasonal periodicty. The only relief A later examination of the/use for an eyebath. Should one bathe stuf t the eyes twice daily?—(Mrs. W.) stuff by one of the state agriculture departments showed it still contained} Answer—External washing is suffi- considerable arsenic. cient. If any eyewash is used, better The doctor therefore advised both| use normal salt solution. husband and wife to take a eee Cryptorchidism the bourse add the “hate tante, Pris | _T have oa el ni Sree is ths bed A undescended gland. Whel brought about prompt recovery of the time to operate for this?—(E. 8.) patient. ike Answer—If the gland is in the in. isct colle Secs Gols Deets Ue guinal canal, now is the time to op- perfect crime is the one nobody dis: rate, If it is retained in the abdo- hi lous Hacioal ‘sasen, ge Fiery : Seana or |men, wait until some acute symptoms are wrongly diagnosed. tal indicate operation — your physician should judge that. Plantar Wart Please inform me what causes plan- r wart, a foot infection, what pre- cautions should be taken, and how it should be remedied.—(H. Answer—Warts on the sole of the foot are no more infectious than warts elsewhere and require similar treat- ment. with a patch of tricophytosis (ring- worm or “athlete’s itch”). X-ray gives Vv. H) Do not confuse plantar wart excellent results. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ear Wax What do you recommend to soften ear wax s0 it can be easily washed out?—(N, L. A.) Answer—Better leave that little op- eration to your physician's skill. Gen- erally agreeably warm water contain- ing a tablespoonful of soda (salera- tus) to the pint is used. This must be allowed to run from a blunt nozzle into the ear canal, from a reservoir not more than a foot above the ear, and the flow from the ear canal caught in a receptacle held under the ear. What is it about a cu Eye Bath Kindly let me know what is best to STICKERS —EF-E-E- -A-A-A Four consonants are from the upper line and three from the lower line. See if you can fill them mn to complete the two words. Select it 2 FLAPPER. FANNY SAYS: (RES. U. S. PAT. OFF. looking for. Try Wi Schilling the morning that fortifies the soul of a man—when it’s good. So, make it with care. with equal care. Fine coffee is worth co fGgfe e p of good coffee in gs of the Morning! FOR TH Remember here, of the young benedict who suf- fered with a kind of pseudo hay fe- ver, an out of season affection? doctor did what I call keen detective work in that case, for after a short intensive study of the data he found the young man was root and then investigated the young wife's vanity equipment and discov- ered she used a powder containing or- ris root. the case we reported The sensitized to orris She changed her brand, and city. his trouble recurred. nearly a hundred tests on the patient and he seemed to be immune to everything. Then one day in casual conversation the doctor learned the patient kept a parrot at home. making a skin test with parrot feath- er the doctor found that this was the he enjoyed was when he spent a vaca- tion at Atlantic City, or in New York | As soon as he returned home His doctor tried On factory. larly. prietary “hair tonic,” but she applied it only a few times and then gave up | using it, because it seemed unsatis- But her husband, being a thrifty man, began using it on his head and he was still using it regu- According to analyses of the prepa- ration made years ago by Dr. Wiley it [contained a quantity of arsenic and cause of the trouble. Polly went away also a phenol derivative, probably re- f . JULY HOLIDAYS To and From All A blow-hard is always ready to give himcelf a puff. from a gross income of $6,900. The /ation of the Hohenzollern monarchy, difference between gross and net in-/a fight to regain the lost “place in come is accounted for by the cost Of! the sun,” a new war with France—! doing business. the possibilities are ominous. We can, They treat approximately 20 per! only hope that in this instance his-| cent of the population each year and | tory will not even come close to re- collect an average of $18 from each | peating itself. patient. The average number of pa-| tients each day is eight. | 500,000 Tax Spending Bodies | Approximately 56,800 dentists are| The statement was recently made | engaged in private practice and the from an authoritative source that | Profession collected, in 1929, about there are upwards of 500,000 tax $446,000,000 from the 24,000,000 indi- | spending bodies in the United States. viduals treated. | It ts estimated that during the fis- _ ‘cal year to end June 30, these bodies Automobile Financial Respon-| will have spent the sum of $14,000,- sibility Laws 000,000—one-fifth of the national in-| One of the greatest problems inci-|come. Where, in 1903, the per capita! dent to the distressing automobile ac- | annual cost of government was $19.39, cident situation is the financial irre- jit is now about $125—an increase well sponsibility of a surprising number) in excess of 600 per cent! of persons who operate automobiles} The present predicament of the | on state highways. country is largely the result of these | Many states have already recog-|tax increases, made necessary by po-| nized the immediate necessity of elim- | litical waste, inefficiency and selfish- inating this danger. According to the/ ness, and by the creation of new bu- National Bureau of Casualty and|reaus and boards, each with its list Surety Underwriters 20 states have | of employes, and by unwarranted ex- | enacted financial responsibility laws| tension of government activities into as have four of the Canadian proy-| fields which should properly be left inces. One state, Louisiana, is con-/|to private initiative. Unless a start | sidering the passage of such a law, | is made toward genuine government | and congress is determining its ad-| economy, which will lop off unneces- | visability for the District of Colum- | sary commissions and eliminate waste bia. and duplication of effort, the wealth These laws have obvious advan- | and earning power of our citizens will | tages. Primarily, they avoid compul-/ be confiscated by taxation. | sory insurance, an idea obnoxious both to insurance companies and the insuring public as has been aptly | demonstrated in Massachusetts. They! promote the cause of safe driving and! help to eliminate reckless, careless | and incompetent drivers. They are one of the greatest aids to the en-| forcement of traffic laws and ordi- | | nances. Above all, they are a strong (Beach Advance} | assurance that those injured ‘in au-| The more we note doings at Wash- tomobile accidents will not suffer a! es ee mere, oontinoad ae an | “farmer friends” eee ty lag eae a | in the senate forgotten all about other | | things and devoted themselves to get- justice is done to a person who has @|ting the Frazier bill before and good claim against an automobile|through that body, that measure | owner, and cannot collect it because Busts Haye Jigen, Aaey Belore ‘ee ar A dpe = : thaf automobile owner is financially Bie toe ony nalines Ritcaetea irresponsible. their attention until half a hundred The laws are enthusiastically sup- Money-raising measures for various Ported by the American Automobile|things took the center of the floor association. In fact, in most of the and the Seana much-needed legis- | vhi man} states where the statutes are in force, ee ee We poe with meee the law has been patterned after the 0 one drawn up by the A. A. A. The others, that the farm bloc went to sleep on the job, or the sidelines were law in New Hampshire is generally recognized as the ideal type. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other 0 They are published withou: to Whether they agree or with The Tribune's po! Wants Frazier Bill too attractive to be resisted, but it does seem to us that if we were in congress from a farm state that we'd forget about everything else, and would trade our boots, if necessary, to get through the legislation our peo- ple needed. There are some features of the Frazier bill that we are not in favor of, but none can deny that it would mean the salvation of hun- dreds of thousands of farmers, which to our way of thinking, is just as im-| portant as the salvation of industrial interests, which generally get what they want. “BLACK LIGHT” Bloomfield, N. J.—A “black light” for use in airplane instrument panels, has been perfected by engineers of the Westinghouse Lamp Co. here. This ” it” makes redium dial markings Parr Pictoprenn appeered tie] (2 maken verines dial markings other day showing Japanese police on| 514 etiminates the use of artificial guard outside the residence of the | light in the cockpit. Japanese Lanterns The people of Japan have made as thorough-going a use of modern in- ventions, in the past generation, as Anyone has. Recent events in Man- ehuria and Shanghai have shown that their army and navy are as up-to- date as any on earth; and the Jap- |mmese etties have about as much to show in the way of modern equip- ‘ment a3 any cities in Europe and "America. Just the same, some of the old cus- toms evidently die hard. > * LOM NELLIS SEARS A EO ONS NERA NIE PO RNB BINGE ARIS UNTOArNT vert TTT THUR E 2 . Feally appreciate him. BEGIN HERE TODAY CHERRY D! ‘, 19 and pretty, falls in love with DAN PHILLIPS, rep whom her fati and threatens to se fornia, Cherry defies orders her to ie: She goe: has happened marry her. The cere per- formed that night by a justice of ft Dan's stage a Next day Cherry, Cherry i chases back it aight Dan te! r MAX PEAR- SON will arrive next day. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIIL (CBERARY put down her cup of cof- fee and raised her eyes to Dan's, “Who is Max Pearson?” she asked. “Mean to say you don’t—why, say, haven't I ever told you about Max?” “No, I don't think so. he?" “Well, that’s funny!” Phillips looked at the girl across the table and marveled that he and Cherry who had come to mean so much to each other could, have gone on for years knowing different people, go- ing different piaces, taiking about different things and never encoun- tering each other. It was almost impossible now to think of himself as having an existence separate from Cherry's or her having an ex- istence separate from his. “Max is a great boy,” he told her enthusiastically. “I know you'll like him. He works on the News —Tewrite man. And, boy, can he write! One of the best newspaper men in town. Come to think of it, it’s not so strange if I haven’t men- tioned him. Max has been in a hos- pital. Operated on for. appendici- tis about a month ago. Since then he’s been down state with some relatives. Getting along o. k. I guess. Anyhow he’s coming back to work tomorrow.” She could tell by the light in Dan’s eyes that Max Pearson was more than an ordinary acquaint- ance. Cherry said: “Of course if he’s a friend of yours I'll like him. Tell me about him.” “Well, you have to know Max to He isn’t like other people. I mean he's bril- lant and some people think he’s hard-boiled and cynical, but that’s because they don’t understand him. Give bis last dime for a friend, Max would, Lots of nights we've sat around talking until two or three o'clock. Just talking. Max thinks our economic system {s all wrong. He's a pacifist too and dead against war. Sometimes when he’s in the mood for it he'll quote you poetry by the hour. Keats and Housman and Swinburne, Knows them all—”" Who is > “But I'd be afraid to talk to any- one who knows so much!” Cherry protested. “No, you won't. You'll like him. You see old Max is real. He doesn’t just fake this literary racket. Some day he'll write a great novel. He's read everything but that doesn't make him high hat. You'll be crazy about him—I know you will!” “Well, I hope he’ll like me.” “As though anyone could help that! I'll admit Max doesn’t care much for most girls. Never goes around with them. Down at the of- fice they call him a ‘woman hater,’ but he'll go for you all right!” cee For another 10 minutes Dan sang the praises of his friend. Cher- ry, listening, thought Max Pearson must certainly be unlike anyone she knew. There were still doubts in her mind that she would be quite comfortable talking to a pcrson of so much learning. Then she put the whole matter aside as unimpor- tant. What really counted was that for a few hours she and Dan were to be together. They finished their coffee, left the restaurant and strolled out on the street considering how to spend the eveniug. Dan suggested they might rent a car at one of those “drive-it-yourself” agencies and take a spin out on Stewart road. Or would Cherry like to drop in to see the Norma Shearer picture? How about dancing? Cherry voted for none of those things. They settled the problem by boarding a double-deck open air bus and climbing the perilous cylin- drical stairway to the top deck. They found seats near the rear. The seat across the aisle was vacant so there was no one to notice when Dan’s arm slipped about Cherry, Her soft, fragrant hair blew against his cheek and Dan’s arm tightened, drawing her close. The other passengers, sitting two by two, were mostly boys and girls as young-looking as Dan and Cher- ty. Each couple seemed oblivious to the others. Overhead in a sky of midnight velvet the stars shim- mered and twinkled as though sym- bolic of all the gems by which lovers since time began have plighted their troth. Great planets, glowing with fiery radiance. Cool, silvery star spray made up of infinitesimal, unimaginably distant worlds, Stars-and the night breeze and darkness blotting out unpleasant realities. The bus top, jolting over elty pavement, hecame young love's paradise. Dan's lips brushed the forehead of the girl beside him. Her hand, stealing into his, clung warm and trusting. “Fun, isn’t it?” she whispered, “Great!” They rode to the end of the bus line and then back again. The girl who had seen spring cast its magic over Paris boulevards, whose costume was the exact and expen- LEAD YEAR BRIDE tsi. 6 sive duplicate of a French original and the young man who had been farm hand, book salesman, who had “bummed the rails” and—once— stood in a breadline, held hands and smiled into each other's eyes during the 10 cent bus ride exactly as hun- dreds of other sweethearts in hun- dreds of other cities were doing. “It was lovely.” Cherry said soft- ly as they returned to the hotel. “Let’s take the same ride again soon.” ATER she and ‘Dan checked ad- dresses in the want ad pages that might prove to be desirable apartments. Cherry was anxious to leave the hotel, to have a home they could feel was distinctly their own. She was going to learn to cook and do all her own housework. Cherry knew how to preside with dignity at a tea table. She could distinguish choice caviar from infe rior and order a perfect luncheon from a menu card in French. As to actual cooking she had never so much is boiled an egg or made a Dot of coffee. Cherry admitted her lack of housewifely knowledge. It was a standing joke between herself and Dan. That she could learn to man- age a Lome quickly and easily she had not the slightest doubt. With the want ad list folded away in her purse Cherry set out next morning to look at apartments. There were two desirable residence neighborhoods iu Wellington. Sher- wood Heigits, the most exclusive, was out of the question, not only because of expense but becauso Cherry’s parents lived there. East- we -4, 1. orpesi*- side of town, boasted the newes: and most at- tractive apartment buildings, She knew exactly the sort of place she wanted. It must be fur- nished because buying furniture would take time and besides Dan was opposed to going into debt. Mentally Cherry pictured the cozy, studio-type of living room. It should be large enough for one end to serve as the dining room. A little kitchen off at one side. The bed- room might be small, or with th right kind of couch they could even do without a bedroom. Furniture that was simple and comfortable. The vision was attractive. Cherry hoped to locate such quarters for $45 a@ month. Dan had been paying $40 at the Bismark and they had set $60 as the absolute maximum. One. fourth of their income seemed all that could be devoted to the single item of rent, “Oh, I don’t think it will be hard to find,” Cherry had assured Dan as she bid him goodby in the morn- ing. “There must be lots of nice Places and I'll just look around and Pick out the best.” ‘ee 8 Tr was 10 o'clock when Cherry left the hotel. She boarded a street car that would take her to the neighborhood of Eastwood. She SNe eterna sinensis ecictensdeoleinnniainanenttiine srascaomammepamenicienee Beles Points on the (Ope aa some ae missed the green roadster in which she could have driven the distance in half the time. Well—the road- ster was part of a life she had left behind. Following the street car conduc- tor’s directions Cherry left the car and walked two blocks to the first address on her list. She had se lected it oecause the name of the buf'ding, “The Elmsmere,” attract- ed her and because the building faced an Eastwood park. “The Elmrmere” was a dignified brick building with a tastefully ture nished entrance. Cherry liked it. “I've come to look at the apart- ment you're advertising,” told the custodian. “Which one, ma’am? Toom or three?” Cherry said it was the three-room apartment in which she was inter. ested. They rode in an automatic ele- vator to the third floor and walked down a corridor. The custodian turned a key, opening the door. “Here it is,” he said, “and not a better value to be had in the city.: Two windows in this room. A good sized closet, The whole place, floors and walls, just refinished. There's a wall bed. Everything in the kitchenette is first class and if you like we can furnish maid service at $2.50 a half day. There's an elec tric refrigerator. You can have this suite at $110 or unfurnished at $95.” The man had rattled off his speech in a sing-song tone. Cherry turned startled eyes on him. “How much?” she asked, incred- ulous, “It's $110 furnished or $95 un- furnished.” “You mean $110 a month!” The man laughed. “Why, sure, lady. What did you think I meant? This is a fine location and vacan- cies fill up quickly here. Of course all our tenants sign a year's lease, We just have this one and the five room suite—” Cherry said rather hurriedly that she'd look further and return if she found nothing she liked better. S| even wrote down the custodian’s telephone number, feeling hypocrit- {cal as she did so. Outside the build- ing shé breathed a sigh of relief. A hundred and ten dollars for a stuffy little box like that! She couldn’t believe people paid such prices. Three more hours of searching en- lightened Cherry. By the end of that time she had visited two-thirds of the places on the list. She had walked, ridden on street cars and climbed stairs until she was con- vinced that she had covered miles. And in dil that time she had found not a single apartment remotely within thelr price. Cherry was too tired to stop for Innch, She went to hotel, threw herself down on the bed and then, because she was so weary and disappointed, cried herself to sleep. The strident ringing of the tele phone awakened her. (To Be Continued) The five 304 Fourth Street | Get the car that’s _ really aerodynamic! Rockne give the car startling beauty. And they serve the practical purpose of reducing wind resist- ance and increasing speed. And what speed! Get in the aerodynamic Rockne ‘ and put its rubber pillowed engine through the paces! Watch it step you up to 50 miles an hour in 17 seconds on the getaway—up to 75 miles an hour in 21 seconds in high! Feel for yourself how much steadier the Rockne is on the turns than any low Priced car you ever drove! You get size and stamina as well as speed and style when you put your money in a Rockne. There's no extra charge for Free Wheeling, Full Synchro- nized Shifting, Silent Second, Automatic Switch-key Starting, 4-Point Cushioned Power. Take a trial ~ drive today in a Rockne—the car that brought quality into the low priced field! . Every closed body wired fos radio Sandin-Wilde Motors, Inc. Bismarck, N. Dak. C vee MILE | AB LEAVE tisrd.3?saneso RETURN BARGAIN COACH EXCURSIONS At about mile or 60% of the one seay fare for ie BARGAIN EXCURSIONS GOOD IN PULLMANS. Or can make a round trip and en; more than the regular one way. TRAVEL BY TRAIN Cheapest and Safest Transportation PLEASE SEE SOO LINE AGENT $1.00 by midnight Tuesday, July 12 the roun jor sleeper service for 25 cae fare and your Pullman ticket. Phone 1500 tt | ' th. | x Vy « ’ A a ‘ “ke