The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 1, 1932, Page 6

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THE BISN ARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY SEPTEMBER 1, 1952 The Bismarck Tribune! # 4! fre agents and can serateh | ie tabeenadent Nenssaper | their ballots as they desire. | THE STATE'S OLDEST | Senator Shortridge, Republican and NEWSPAPER strong supporter of President Hoover, (Established 1873) Was eliminated in the Republican pri- | > | mary. | This constitutes a vital blow to the president himself in his native state. | The fact that Tallant Tubbs, the suc- | cessful candidate, is an avowed weti {also may have more than a little aaa in | nificance. | California voters, Nke those else-} {where, seem to be on a rampage and | the high gods fell. | Politics! Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as vecond class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable Advance Daily by carrier, per year.. Daily by mail per year (in MMATCK) 2.0... c ccs eeesee eee eceee Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... Daily by mail outside of Make It a Hummer | Thousands should be attracted to Bismarc's soon when the corner stone of the new capitol is laid. Many years | ago Bismarck staged a memorable | sctting attended by leading nation- | Weekly by mail i state, per § Weekly HOOVER. al figures. It would be fine if ex- | Pouicies governors still active and former state ARE DOING —__ — — officials, with pioneers representing ! Member of Audit Bureau of ‘each county, could be guests of honor. ' ____Citenlation i There are members of the old con-| Lense Member of The Associated Press | Stitutional convention as well as the ' AND A CERTAIN 3 The Associated Press is exclusively al commission which located the | DEMOCRATIC n | capital here. They should be featured NiCTORY ARE RESPONSIBLE! ae | | A tribute to the past as well as! | future should domi-| | stone laying. { not a pageant reproducing for | s the laying of the corner ota’s first capi-! d of the agricul-| Newspaper) Representatives PENCER, BREW ng on the seri would be inte tract siate-w The event din A state-wide with a local t for a pageant whict and would at-! de interest. ! is too important to be} Getting Fa In “ia| PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | ate should | | S no great achieves | Yet, ii join in its preparation polls S. jing many strong positions and con- | | down in August. in that pe- | | hi lonne, taking more than 2000 prison- ‘gets the business of most big pro- |were simon-pure amateurs, and from ducers and actors. There is a cigar reports, it would seem that the ref- |stand girl at the Algonquin who was jerees were, too. invaluable to her employer. A couple | * eX jof stage-door men, shrewd secretar-! | One complaint made by Mrs. ies, ushers and other minor figures! Keaton was that Buster didn't have become almost as well known! keep his engagements. And just as their superiors—some better. And! to prove her point, he didn’t even many are seen in “the best places.” | show up for his divorce! | * oe OX ee * ! |THE TERROR-TAXI | Kissing is less dangerous than One of the underworld’s darkest |shaking hands, a French physician | Idevices for “taking” victims is the|says. Maybe we never have fully {"lethal taxi” racket. Recently a vis-j realized how dangerous it is to shake jitor entered a “gyp” taxicab. He in-}hands. jSisted that he had not taken a drink * * * Japan explains that she is in- terested only in law and order in Jehol. Perhaps the last word ' of that statement should have | been plural. nor had he told the driver to go toa “clip joint” night place. Yet he found himself robbed and seemingly ‘drugged in such a spot. Investiga- ition showed that an anaesthetic gas had been let loose in the cab and he | had fallen into a stupor—thus be-| When you're checking up to try coming helpless prey to the thieves.|to find what really is bringing us/ out of the depression, don't forget | wt TODAY ¢ ee % jthat we've had several rather juicy 1S THE an ieeAny | (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) PERONNE IS TAKEN On Sept. 1, 1918, Australian troops , V7 stormed the important town of Per- | | Our ship has come through a fi- nancial hurricane with much suffer- | |ing, some broken spars, torn sails | ‘and wreckage on deck. But the hull | is sound and neither passengers nor | crew doubt that we shall come safely | to port—Ogden L, Mills, secretary | ,of the treasury. + # * Germany still has aspirations of | getting some of her colonies back.— | Franz von Papen, chancellor of Ger- | many. ers and many valuable supplies. British forces took Bullecourt, where they had been repulsed the day before, at the point of the bayo- net. They also occupied Hendecourt and several villages north of Ba- paume. Americans, fighting on Belgian soil for the first time, took Voormezeele and nearby villages in a day of hard | fighting and swift advance. North of Juvigny, American troops advanced more than two miles, tak- # # * { As far as I could judge, New York- ers who saw me are convinced I! have no intention of eating them up. | —John N. Garner, Democratic can- didate for vice president. # # * ent officials) should { tinuing the pressure on German forces on that sector. An official allied report said that 324 German planes were brought @ They (gove: Barbs | refrain from such luxury as cone to| to avoid a little heat aon nation is facing such | So far there has been little doubt (Stary and school elections are fairs and a woeful | wn. The cision con’ pe There are many ou hose localities would be pleased te | § them to Bismarck to add color | diagno: By William Brady, M. D. letters pe se ne, not to disea: should be ‘les not conformi! rritten in tructions. to Sof the StU- WHEN NEURALGIA Linco can be NOISE LIKE If it were possib : t of the pageant. be kept open unt hours afforded of u profe: a ae i aes reate that first Medical school handicap a r corner stone pageant. The federal, , “In patients ref ion on the issu + eration ment will si presentatives fing dron of planes lower ri d to give the visitors a due to It might not poe ce r to get one of dirigibles here. car and federal partici- n event should not in the o iodenal in the of the taxpayers more burd: who cai ns at this 2 jis of the facts dis- Tf careful an n the Ind ciose it to be true, the major objec- the Roosevelt cabin, what a tion of most ve been ad what possibilities for {2% #¢ute appendicitis T eee haif of them that the tro A few active com- affair can be whip- Tt is an event i: te will do not opera t the There is the appeal that parents who have students ready want to keep willing to pi this additi costs. Fi should be determined to care for a co % only of books and for t tion but for the use of public schoo: equipment. It was never intended 4 that local taxpayers should provide special facilities for higher education If the city is to have them, those Who reap the benefit should pay the and a proviso to that effect! tire cover this should be written into the law. It is Both Back, Beer regrettable that the school board did! There are scores of not place such a tation in the, It is not a tad t r college em at home and are ion just what ice tomobi place i Is Forgiven sign, “Vote Thi and Prospe! humorous question which the voters must, can get a la Ft decide {predicament there is always hope, [1 It is also a ciebatable question, i thesia and th jobs 1 jobs_here whether cities should enter into ; recognize the presence or absence of : : deta ognize te _P a van em into importance. competition with institutions of|| Editorial Comment ee eee ee nes Square barber Who ‘ a : ‘ appendiceal tenderness. os clei higher education. ‘That is a point| raiteriats printed wetow show the || "MWe need not atvempt to interpret for the voters of the city to weish| wie Watitned without agai {ithe scandalous medicalesc in this. m most carefully. to whether shes agree or disagree |/The lay reader will get the gist of it, e oe | “with The Tribune's policies. namely, that intercostal neuralg Educational innovations establis aan a enent pen Habllshed : due to’ tonsilitis may make a. nois on entra or originally at no cost, experience has Saas !so like appendicitis that a hurry up ‘apitali i o shown, develop certain overhead ex-| g Misery penses which ultimately must come} (New York Times) out of the tax budget. It is not al-| Among the magisterial ways the original cost. Upkeep and Which Secretary Hurley last week | operation may be perpetrated if a. there happens to be a brass surgeon rebukes |at_hand, | Intercostal HORIZONTAL 1Ccmmon com. mercial me- Answer to Previous Puzzle neuralgia may closely je resemble the pain of gallstone colic. male deer, poor guesses as to prebable income | heaped upon the unconscious head of (pr, Carnett declares that the paii dium of ex- Vee (prefix), / from anticipated registrations com-| Governor Roosevelt was one accusing the region of the right shoulder change. a7 Tablet. : } {ni fb: his ts di jade, regarded the world over as ‘ust 20 Cyst tumor. bine to make these ventures, in part! him of basing his campaign on dis- 8 . 4 Custom. To mature. idicative of gall-bladder inflamm tion, is always due to intercostal neu- ralgia in his experiecne. He de- {clares that too many gall-bladders 6 Rubber port in South America. at least, a public charge. This !s also{ Content, and seeking to “make voiitics a matter for earnest study and dis- | Ut of human misery.” In this the sly |secretary of war displayed the en. > Concise. 25 Backless chair, 26 Small arch, ' | thusiasm of a discoverer, Apparently |are being unnecessarily removed in| 12 Box. Drunkard, This city should view all sides of he had never heard of a political the futile expectation of curing pain 13 To scatter as 29 Male title of the picture presented by the sponsors | party appealing to voters in distress. !and tenderness which is actually due hay. courtesy. of a junior coliege before making a/ Republicans themselves have done /to neuralgia in the abdominal wall. 15 Diagonal. 31 Period, ;good campaigning business of that ' sort. $2 Kind of narra- tive poetry. Right here I dare suggest that a of that | 17 Opportunely, It was because of financial} physician whose education, training 18 Stone worker. on. It is to be hoped that a real inter- troubles and unsettled conditions and {and practice are not limited to the, 19 To stitch. 28 Ringworm. est in the proposition will be aroused | prevalent unemployment that Speaker or 21 To prevent. 42 Baking dish. VERTICAL 35 Mattress fill- sentative vote| Reed made his famous predictio: 24 To employ. 43 Cireular. 1 Fuel. ing. [emesided: by ihe erent, in laa ions than is the 25 To mortify, 44 To fondle. letallic rock. 36To lay smooth. | warned the Democrats in the house |row little fellow who purports 27 Refutes. 43 To overlay the 37 To soak flax. mee jthat so many of them would be practice only this or that “paths 29 Russian dicta 5 . 39 Feather scarf. McAdoo Wins Nomination | S!aughtered in the November election Beware of the chap who accepts the ae 6 The tip. 40 Unit. Influence of Alfred E. Smith in the | Of that Year that the trenches would designation of a “pathist” of any 49 pyaltation in 48 Era, 7 Japanese fish. 46 To annoy, c 2 | kind. rank. 49 Metal found 8 Thin metal 47 Card game, California primaries did not prove|so that numbers of them would lie} at any time a handicap for William Intercostal neuralgia has led to unburied. Perhaps Mr. Hurley never| many unnecessary kidney operations, plate. 49 Electrified par near Duluth, 31 To hate. ‘ y] r. Jove \- ticle. .| heard of the “full dinner-pail” slogen {and to countless operations on wom-| 34 Type of chair. 51 In line, 8 Governor pe 5 faiths McAdoo who wins the Demo-| criti; own party. But he can scarcely |en who too readiiy believe the pain| 3870 think, 68 Volume. eral of Canada, 50 To decay. cratic senatorial nomination by a 39 To hoot. 54 Cuckoo. 11 Pertaining to 52 You and I. be ignorant of the fact that four years ago his presidential candidate warned the country of the ruin and desperation which would fill the land if the Democrats won the election. That was clearly one way of “cap- italizing discontent.” To cry cut in dread of human misery is, morally and politically, about the same thing as pointing to it after it has come. The attitude for which Secretary Hurley, in his superior way, re- proaches Governor Roosevelt is really one of the oldest things in politics. It is not at a" the abhorrent novelty which Mr. Hurley professes to imag- ine it. English political history, like Dish Washing our own, has been full of it. Edmund| Is hot water sufficient to wash | Burke spoke of the heavy drafts upon| dishes, without soap? My brother's “the bank of discontent” which are | family will not use soap. (L. B.) always drawn by the people ina time! Answer-—Yes, but the use of soap of party controversy. Reasonable or|makes the job easier, quicker and unreasonable, there it is. It ts a fact requives less hot water. with which economists and financiers Not to the Third Generation and captains of industry have to} Swong, he: , athletic reckon as well as politicians. That it; woman, youngest of five will enter vitally into this presiden- | Father was syphilitic before any of tial election every man in his senses! his children were born. They are all” knows. Partisan orators do not need apparently healthy, except the eld- to dwell upon it or magnify it. It is est. What risk involved in marrying | 5 deeply implanted in the consciousness this young woman? (R. E. C.) | ry. In the fall, the voters | of millions of voters, Answer—So far as syphilis is con; | a mm e originates in tubes or ovaries. i | 53 To exist. In the hands of charlatans run irrigation plants or colon stations a great many gullible v. of intercostal neuralgia are subjected | to endless and vicious “treatment” | for a colitis which does not exist, | further than the mechanical irrita- tion set up by the vicious “treat- ment.” This is one of the new self- | perpetuating lines of business in which the victims seem to like being | | humbugged and to resent being en- | lightened. | large margin. Differences were com- 41 To depart. 55 To lease, the nose. posed between the various factions, the California machine went to Mc- |, doo and he won. i Those who were ardent Smith sup- | Porters at Chicago made a gesture of opposing McAdoo, but it was only that. The Roosevelt and Garner or- @anizations which operated at the | presidential primaries threw their Support to McAdoo. It was all part of a very definite understanding at | Chicago. Be that as it may, the significant thing is the increase in the number | ef Democratic votes polled. “In order | to support certain Republican state f ,candidates many who contemplate jjuvoting Democratic in the fall regis- a8 Republicans for these pri- > Democratic leaders, how- |_| PNT T NE PTT LENS PL oN \ ial * QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | a th Oana } the gi that all the Davis Cup tennis players ister of the Imperial Household, Ja- pan. xe = m Cotton, once king of the econom! world, must be re-established and steel must be subordinated—Rev. Fr. James R. Cox of Pittsburgh, Jobless | Party's nominee for president. Fuji-Yama, the famous Japanese | mountain, is more than two miles high. John, Jim and Jane sold 105 tickets to an entertainment. Jim sold twice as many as John and Jane sold half again as many as Jim and John together. How many did each sell? FLAPP 1O NEA Some people have their big mo- ‘anaka, former min- |ments in the wee honrs. COPYRIGHT 1931, BY INTERNATIONAL MAGAZINE, ING oY DISTRIBUTED Bx SYNOPSIS The Mexican peons, grown tired of Paco Morales’ oppression, await the word from “El Coyote,” their| masked protector, to overthrow him. Morales has enlisted the aid cf the U. S. Cavalry to capture the notori- ous bandit. Ted Radcliffe, a young American, learns that Morales was responsible for his late father’s rain. Bob Harkness, Ted's friend, urge: him not to make an enemy cf Mo- rales, as he has other plans. Ted is enamored of Morales’ beautiful niece, Adela. At a fiesta, Jito. Morales’ ward, jealous of Ted, challenges him to a wrestling match. Ted wins, and Adela, sensing Jito’s hatred, exacts 2 promise from Ted never to fight with him. Morales informs Bob that his men will join in the search for “El Coyote” and that Jito has dedi- cated himself .o kill the bandit OE PLE CHAPTER XIX o Adela tiff lips also el, but a little sadly. “If that were in my power to give, I should give it.” “But that will never be in your power to give away, will it, dear?” asked. She patted his thin ‘You must keep all the love give you, ungracious one, not of- | fer it to every hot-headed boy.” Ted broke the silence. “Why are you so bitter against this border 7 VSN, AWE iN my lifetime hunting down this dog GAY BANDIT of the BORDER by TOM GILL “1 think you'll forget all those fine-spun theories when you really | Ted Radcliffe.” said Adela, eee he represents. And for me it would | thief? have come and gone.” “Sefior, if it were just a few head of cattle or horses he takes, or the few herdsmen of mine he has killed 1 should not greatly care. What are But El Coyote is To me he repre- He carries with him disaster greater than the loss of no mere bandit. } | cows or peons? sents the enemy. those herds. border. That is why. of a wilderness. was their will to rule. their religion. master of yours. I kill his men, against me. the end After all, there have been other bandits and cattle rustlers who He carries with him what might be the end of all that I i and my fathers before me have built up—our right to rule here in the “My fathers carved a domain out They did it by sheer strength and by their will. It That was Ir is my religion. This country is mine. Not so many years ago the peons about here were the slaves of my grandfather. They should still be slaves, and in all but name they are, for | am master, and this, as I see it, is right. and the will of God. And now comes this bandit dog and to the peon says: ‘You are men. This land is yours. Yours is the right to own cattle and graze them, and yours 1s the right to marry and give your daughters in marriage, and if anyone comes between you and your liberty, kill him. See how little | fear this great burn his ranches. J take his best cattle. I cut his fences and I laugh. “And, sefior, he does all these things so that my people whisper and grow discontented and take heart and believe perhaps that they too can do these things and rise up Already [ hear mur- murings. Already my Jito has had to teach fear to them when they re- fused to pay us the rents and the shares that are our due, These times are times of unrest in the border country. and if a leader should find his way to the hearts of these peo-| [Zor my people have built up, t might b+ Rather than that [ shou! see myseli dead. And { shall spend this son of a dog.” Morales had risen, and his face was jerking in anger. Quickly Adela came to his side, and her hand stroked his cheek. “Be not aroused, my uncle,” she whispered in quick Spanish. “You must not do this. Please, for me.” And she petted and scolded tim back to calmness, yet his hand still shook a little as he drained another glass of the straw-colored wine. “You must forgive.” be said at last. “It ts the only subject in which I let myself become a foolish old man. That 1s my folly. But to an- Swer your questions in a word, [ hate this Covote because he breaks my power. He damages my scheme of things.” Resolutely he shook of the moment's weakness and was again able to smile, but the look of anxiety stil! remained in Jito's and Adela’s eyes. All zest fad gone from the little group. The dinner was finished al- most im silence, and later Adela spoke to Ted of ber uncle's outburst against the bandit. “My uncle’s passion in life,” she told him as they stood outside the patio, “is to continue this realm he has built up It is for that he wants me to marry and have children. It was this tragedy that he himself had no children except—you will learn this sooner or later, for it is U]border gossip—except Jito, whose mother I never knew. Jito has come nearest to taking the place of a son, yet he cannot inherit. I wish he could. And now El Coyote threat- ens to arouse the people and topple over my uncle’s kingdom. So for that he has hated the bandit with such haf:as t am afraid to think of. He brog's. It is unhealthy. I have watched ‘him fail during the Past years si ‘e this bandit came.” Yt all this thing that your id's for destined to fall i jwhile the gicl made no pie answer.{ oking out imto the night, The voice shook im a moment's} AC last Jp turned and nodded quick. passion “—for me and for all that/ly. “It ¥ true.” she said. “It seems ‘ason for me to say it, but e otherwise 1 of my uncle and all that Ajit cann Only :t witl] i mean—quien sabe? What would you say Lam fit for, Ted Radcliffe, in that busy world that you come from and that some day is going to ene guif u: re? I often wonder what 1 should be good for. I should be ever so much worse off than you when you found yourself cast adrift without warning. You have been brave not to let it make any differ ence to you,” i | shouldn't say it hasn't made any difference. So far as my future Goes it may have made a great deal. For one thing, I am very nearly pen« niless. That’s bound to create an important difference, whether I go back East or stay here. It shouldn't bur it’s bor to. Today Bob was joking with me about the need to marry a rch girl At the present moment I haven't even the tight to fall in love, and in the old days, when I was one of the world’s eligible young men, I didn’t avail myself of the opportunity.” ; Adela was watching him with a little frown, “You really mean that if vou fell in love you wouldn't feel you had the right? That just bee cause you lacked a few miserable dollars you would kill that love?” “I'd go away, | suppose.” ‘In that case,” she replied in her calm, judicial w “I should sa you were what Jito calls ‘one ve: “ damn fool’ What has love to do re aes tblag but love?” y once thought tha! T never had to think pieernts pert of See meals a day, But vouldn’t be a y, ic would it, for a man en ata with him, even for ieee ‘ec? Love, if it mea i must mean protection ree aum Again she smiled. “I think you'll forget all those fine-spun theories Hieiade really love, Ted Raa- “You're an e subject” “Oh, we Spanish are by i ee orn with @ ‘nowledge about love, [ have been in love so many times,” pres y times,” Pally pert, then, on that ” Her eyes, like stars challenged him, (wums205 9g 03) a

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