The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1932, Page 4

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: ' - situation brought a sharp retort from The Bismarck Tribune . An Independent Newspa| 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 Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year marck) .. Dally by ma! outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail outside Dakota ...... a eeeeeeeaes asses 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three b Dakota, per year ...........++ 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . 2. Member of Audit Burea 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 herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON To Be Commended John Huseby, candidate for Com- missioner of Agriculture and Labor, and A. J. Gronna, who seeks the of- fice of attorney general, are to be commended for their logical stand regarding economic issues, Both are students of economic con- ditions and they know full well that millennium cannot come overnight. Both, having served the public before, realize also that public officials have certain limitations and that wild Promises, like chickens, do come home to roost. Their Position generally is being up- held by all Republican nominees with the exception of one who proposes more extreme action without definite Promise or knowledge that such ac- tion will lead anywhere. At New Rockford, Mr. Huseby’s sensible remarks upon the economic $7.20 William Langer, Republican nominee for governor. Mr. Huseby stood his ground logically, The farmers of this state have no better friend than John Huseby. He has worked day and night to improve their economic con- dition and he has yet to tell them from the stump or from any other the oil crisis in Oklahoma which caused Governor William Murray to call out the militia to protect that market. Oklahoma has some very definite laws governing the handling law which seeks to protect the oil business from destruction and to make it possible for the banks of the product. constitutional lawyer, called out the state police force when he was con- vinced that state laws and practices in the oil fields were being outrage- ously violated. This interference was brief in duration. Under a deliberate attempt to drain Oklahoma oil fields and fill tanks at la ridiculously low figure, the price fell to below 15 cents a barrel in Ok- 00 | !ahoma. At this price the state's gross production tax shrunk fo an extent that threatened the school system and the security of the finances of the state government. Many Oklahoma banks were threatened with failure. The militia was called out, not to prevent the marketing of oil, but to enforce state laws and regulation in its production. As @ result crude oi! advanced in price and the oil indus- try in Oklahoma was saved from chaos. But wheat is not oil. There are no wheat proration laws. If Gov. Mur- ray could have produced dollar wheat legally by recourse to the militia, he would have called it out. Prices of wheat and other farm products were languishing when Gov. Murray pro- tected the great oil reserves of the state by policing the fields. Of course he was powerless to force farm prices up by resorting to martial law. It is just as well for the farmers of North Dakota to know what took place in the Oklahoma oil fields and why such action in North Dakota to protect wheat against a bearish mar- ket would be futile and illegal. ‘The entire world raises wheat just as many politicians raise their loud voices in silly drivel. North Dakota farmers by now should be fed up on the husks of political promises. No of oi] products. There is a proration | state to advance money on the raw Gov. Murray, who is an excellent BUNION IS IN THE FOOT, NOT wonder they have economic belly- ache, But calling out the state militia will not bring dollar wheat or take the pains out of the stomach pit. Farmers should organize among themselves to control their products, and curtail their production of food- stuffs. This cannot be done along Political lines.° That has been tried repeatedly. Legislation has been as ineffective as many fantastic coopera- tive schemes and campaign promises. In any event, the farmers should be told the truth about the oil contro- versy in Oklahoma and why it could rostrum that they can hoist them- selves by their bootstraps. Keeping Our Feet on the Ground North Dakota farmers are receiving the deepest kind of sympathy in their Present plight from citizens in every walk of life. This public sentiment should not be destroyed. Many wild remedies are being suggested even to calling out the militia to prohibit the movement of wheat. Why should any sane man suggest calling out the militia to prevent a farmer from moving his wheat to market if he so desires? Such action would not only violate @ right guaranteed him under the State and federal constitutions but would be as effective in influencing Prices as a snowball could in lower- ing the temperature of the proverbial hot place. a Farmers must be on their guard against candidates who will promise them anything to gain their votes. It is necessary for them to debunk many statements and take with a grain of salt the sputterings on the hustings. There is a right and a wrong way to go about the process of marketing. Force and violence will avail not a whit, Efforts of a few farmers at iso- Jated places will not add one dollar to the price of wheat or any farm Product. As a protest against present deplorable conditions, a farmers’ holi- day movement, unaccompanied by force, is a most excellent weapon. If there was ever a time calling for steadiness at the helm it is now. How easy it is for a candidate to capital- ize the farmers’ plight. Such sym- Pathy, in the place of sound construc- tive leadership, might get the farmer sinto @ worse predicament than he is now. The real remedy lies in cooperation between -farmers, not in the use of coercive measures to force theories which are futile, to say the least. If the farmers want to hold their ‘wheat and products from market that 4s clearly their right. Many econo- mists think it is a wise course, at this time, to withhold non-perishable Products from the market. That Seems to be the concensus of opinion. Such an end can be accomplished in ‘an orderly, legal way. On the other hand, if a farmer wants to sell his Produce, his marketing efforts should not be tampered with by militia or ‘ny other means. Of course a gov- ernor of this state has no constitu- not possibly work out in North Da- kota if applied to the wheat fields. To deceive farmers in their present dis- tress is to add insult to injury. Some of his friends, after reading ‘iliam Langer’s speech at New Rockford, probably will agree that he will not need a secretary if elected governor. They may be beginning to suspect, however, that he will need a guardian, It is reported the recent eclipse cost United States scientific circles some $7,000,000. Just what the depression saved over former eclipses is not given. A EERE, Hanford MacNider resigns as am-j bassador to Canada to devote his time to private business. The “private business” is doubtless lining up the Legion vote for the G. O. P. ‘There will be no wet-dry contest in Kansas. Both parties have decided on @ dry platform. Maybe that is what is really the matter with Kansas after all. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of en by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, Roosevelt, Walker and Tamman, Mi (New York Times) Governor Roosevelt acted with great dignity and, we believe, with good po- litical judgment when he received Mayor Walker's resignation without comment. Why should he answer Mr. Walker's virulent and hysterical attack upon him for the manner in which he has conducted the hearing at Albany? The thing speaks for it- self, As the governor stated, the pro- fore him are “closed”— ting an BE BE8 ¥ i i Fil Bsee. Gone overwhel against him. It would not, be Say that his resignation is a sion of guilt. But it is a confessi that he had no hope of establish: his innocence to the satisfaction Governor Roosevelt, FrEE tional power to call out the militia to prevent marketing of wheat or | @nything else. : | stood decision of Judge Staley as an excuse for crying out that he was not given o “fair trial” by the governor. -|removable as is congenital dislocation ON IT Bunion is an internal derangement or deformity of the foot and is as ir- of the hip. It is futile to apply a remedy to the bunion and hope it will bring about a cure, The deformity consists in a devia- tion of the great toe outward toward the other toes, and this unnatural position in time produces partial dis- location at the metatarso-phalangeal joint, with thickening or enlargement of the head of the metatarsal bone and chronic inflammation of the bursa pad over the joint. In some cases this bursa becomes infected and suppurates, Footwear that crowds the_forefoot and forces the great toe out of its natural straight position causes bun- ion. The special faults to be avoided are pointed soles, short shoes, and shoes narrower across the ball of the foot than the barefoot is when bear- ing the weight of the body. An af- fectation formerly taught but now regarded as ridiculous, that is, toeing out, probably contributed toward the development of bunion. Anyhow it is always best to toe in, if anything, at least to avoid toeing out in any circumstance. Toeing out favors not only bunion but pronation of the feet and falling of the arch. The soreness or pain of bunion may be relieved by painting the swelling with tincture of iodin, but this should not be repeated in less than a week or more. When there is a lighting up of the inflammation apply large com- presses or thick folds of gauze (cheesecloth) and keep these com- presses moistened constantly with witch hazel, alcohol or cologne water, all night. Nothing but a radical operation will cure bunion. Usually the bursa is removed and a portion of the en- larged head of the metatarsal bone is trimmed off, the dislocation reduced, and the foot placed in a suitable splint for two weeks. Such an opera- tion does not affect the patient’s gait unless to improve it, One just training for bunion should become a crank about shoes—that is, insist on selecting the last you want and do not permit the shoe salesman to influence your choice. The last you need has straight inside lines and reasonably wide rounded soles. Lines lengthwise bisecting sole and heel should meet at an angle. The idea is to favor toeing in. The less heel the better for the fand was soon so stupified that he tinued their advance on a 50-mile front in northern France. In places, | miles, although the total ground re- taken during the day's fight did not match that recovered during the pre- la nearly 250,000, had been in reserve on the Hindenburg line, and the pres- ence of these soldiers lent a new in- couldn’t untwist himself. A room- mate ap te him and rushed for room for but a few. Many have turned to adagio dancing and general acro- GERMANS THROW IN RESERVES On Bept. 7, 1918, allied forces con- |“ iper. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) their net gain was as much as five; | Barbs * Senator Reed Smoot predicts thai the next congress will pass the sales tax. But first they will pass the Vari- ous appropriation bills to make the tax necessary to balance the budget. x * * A doctor says he can’t account for the great increase in hay fever suf- ferers this year. Maybe he’s forgot- ten that Hawaiian dancers have vious day. German resistance stiffened notice- ably as the tired’troops reached the tions from which their great of- fensives of March and May had been unched. Fresh German forces, numbering form, ® candidate says. And always slenty Of Sane tp: Woe * foot Wiser oeeeding rylo4 the an to the lovelorn. We had to read that twice to make sure that she didn’t China has’ an ares of 4,000,000 ‘square miles. STICKERS A media betula 32 ‘quis of Ycherries at 15 cents per quart. Two j quarts spoiled and he sold the remainder ata profit of 25 per cent of the cost. How # amuch did he receive per quart? FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: U9. PAT. OFF: ‘Copyright, 1982, NEA Service, Inc.) | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygienc, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady. if a stamped, self- 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. for it (no clipping) and incloses- 3- cent stamped envelope bearing his address. Acid Fumes t I work in a dental laboratory. We. use quite a bit of nitric acid to boil crowns in, and the fumes blow in our faces. What harm would such fumes do?—(V. 8.) Answer—Inflammation of nose and throat, laryngitis, in some cases ul- ceration of the mucous membrahe of the breathing passages is caused by the frequent inhalation of such acid fumes. Suitable exhaust ventilating equipment should be provided tocarry off the fumes and protect the worker. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) GRIM EPITAPH New York, Sept. 7.—Several cronies of Wilton Lackaye, who died the other day, gathered in the Lambs Club on the night of the veteran actor’s death and sought to writing a fitting epi- taph. This one was considered particu- larly fitting: “For once he has no comeback!” * * * Lackaye’s quick and trenchant wit was all too little known outside the- atrical circles. It will be surprising if someone fails to collect the best of his fe mots, many of them sting- ingly barbed when aimed at a con- versational adversary. Unwise the & 66 Napoleot #7 Sociable. a 14 Public speakers: 115 Liquid medi: « cine for bath- ‘ing skin. 16 Insect’s egg. 17 Pecan. if foot. If heels are worn, the wider the better. However, the girl who gives her dogs a break by wearing’ sensible shoes ordinarily may step out in the freakiest of French heels on occa- sions. Everyone should go barefoot or with only soft pliable foot coverings at every opportunity. When wi alking, running, or playing around barefoot it is always beneficial to the feet to practice toeing in. For protection uppers may be nec- ba ahaa? AND ANSWERS eah In every society meeting I have at- nded- 5 eeiicaral thing. * Bromidrosis 1 Eighteen years ago I cured my 5 Now is no time for wild statements, | Even Judge Staley had to admit that | promidrosis (fowl sweating) of the ites who utter them are hurt- nomic recovery. tion operate , of laws, The game must be played “Apeording to the rules, else there will! hastened to seize upon. confusion twice confounded. Oil and Wheat ‘These is nothing identical in the Wheat of North Dakota and | uayor the incidental remarks by him had no opportunity for the kind ery which Mr. Walker and legal points at’ issue can Clear to any one who will mind to them closely, but the Public, it must be conceded, misled by all the clamor Walker. real be: - ves and postponing eco- | 20,7." api upon the Walker de-| cerin, This state and na-| interfere with the performance of an| tried cresol and lysol without. effect. under a definite system | €xecutive act. But he furnished an/The trouble must be due to some germ to| midrosis feet by saturating the feet with gly- cured I axillary bro- (armpits) with borax, I had i 119 Sea gull. 20 Church title. 21 Permits: ¢ 23 Valuable fur, 52 Supreme deity \ of Norse @~ 290ssa., mythology. 30 Counsel or ad- 53 To total. re vice. + ~ 64 Every, 32To exile. . 55 Ewer. + 34 King of beasts. 57 Hastened. 36Underanged. 58 Cash box. 38 Lapidates. ’ 60 Medicine. 40 Jointed stem of 62 Plants. grass. 63 One who does 43 Any group of + eight. 45 Tiny. ' 47 To glide. 49 Close. 50 Inclosu: tic feats. VERTICAL oo OS OO a % dari nag. 9 Watch pocket, ve from, eats, 10 Preposition Governor of .,12 Lax or slack. ~ i West Virginia.18To put in a,~ 59 South Cerolina about a field.~~ 2Large recessed , mask, -- fellow who tried to match remarks him. with 5 When Lackaye, due to heart trou- ble, went into “involuntary retire- ment” some six years ago, he took an old brownstone house at 30th and Fifth Avenue. Commenting about it at the club, Lackaye said: “You see, we use the 30th Street side for the ehtrance and the Fifth Avenue side for the entree.” x % & A BRILLIANT WIT The Lambs Club still chuckles over ‘an occasion, some years ago, when one of Lackaye’s favorite cuff but- tons came up missing. That evening, on the bulletin board appeared the other button, with a little note: “Mate Asked one evening what was his definition of “tact,” Lackaye replied: “If a gentleman happens inadver- tently into a bathroom, observes a lady “bathing in the tub and then backs away saying: ‘Oh, pardon me, sir—pardon me, sir!’—that’s tact.” * * * FREDDIE THE FROG In the old days of Rector’s, Lackaye -| was pictured sitting at a round table with his fellow wags and players, George M. Cohan, Willie Collier and Rennold Wolf. It was on such an evening that the legend of Freddie the Frog was said to have been born. This has re- mained one of the prize George Cohan anecdotes. And the truth of portions of it was solemnly sworn to even to this day. Freddie the Frog was a contortion- ist. He was one of the roomers at an old actor’s boarding house where Cohan was dwelling. Other roomers included @ snake charmer, a flo¢. of midgets, a Hindu side-show fakir ar@ other show world folk. ** % YOU NEEDN'T BELIEVE IT Freddie the Frog was an inventive fellow. New ideas for contortions would come to him in the night. He would leap out of bed and grab his frog suit which always was on a chair close at hand. He would rehearse a new stunt and then return to sleep. On this night, Freddie used the chandelier for a trapeze and man- aged to get himself beautifully twist- ed. In so doing, he turned on the gas — ee “ty +18 To make lace. 19 Rolls up. 3” 22 Furnace for refining * Re 33-Moccasin; _ CITT 1E) 35 Upright post. ISIEIRIED x. CLE2” Where is am 9 #* Monte Carlo? window. $8 Kind of range ZAnything, / finder. ‘;which catches 29 Measure. __ / vats, @ ¥41 Central vein of 4 Street. at hid SBlectritea | {2 Small Spantet. particle. "44 Tree. &_ 6The shank. ‘46 Small ‘shield. 8 Free mass Big moon. wit Wfloating ice. 50 To run away ‘\81 Form of blood ye fine. 54 Tough tree., 56 Neither. 61 To accomplish, x eb Pls TTT i of this button lost—will either buy or of German war- ships cruising off the island of Ame- land ran into a mine and sank. British airplanes bombed the Ger- man munition and chemical plants at Mannheim. U. S. Cavalry to capture the notori- ous bandit. Ted Radcliffe, a young learns that Morales was responsible for his late father’s ruin. Bob Harkness, Ted’s friend, urges ‘him not to make an enemy of Mo- rales, as he has other plans. Ted is enamored of Morales’ beautiful niece, ‘Adela. At a fiesta, Adela, sensing the hatred of Jito, Morales’ ward, love. Bob receives a note and leaves the disarm the vaqueros and Mo- rales is informed his rule is over. CHAPTER XXIII Stepping directly before Adela, the masked man’s sombrero swept the ground. “Go in peace, sefiorita,” he said. “The peon in his hut remem- bers Dona Adela in his prayers.” Turning again to the vaqueros he pointed toward the village. “El Coy- ~ ote bids me tell you for this one time to go. Next time it will be a different tale. Your horses and guns stay here.” Jito shrugged his great shoulders, Deliberately he rolled a cigarette, then walked over to the old rancher, still-bound to the door, and pulling ~ out his knife severed the bonds. He turned. “Tonight is yours, sefior,” he said indifferently. “Tomorrow is yet an- other day. And sometime when your coyote leader wishes to settle all dis- putes hand to hand or knife to knife with Jito—” He raised the heavy knife aloft. A blue blaze of light burst from out of the darkness and an automatic barked. The blade of Jito’s knife leaped upward, then fell at his feet with a dull tinkle of broken steel. Only the handle remained in the great vaquero’s hand. “Now by the blood of all the saints,” Jito marveled. “El Coyote shoots straight.” It was a silent group that returned to the hacienda. Music still played within the patio, but the grounds were deserted. The people had fled. Don Bob sat smoking beside the fountain, and to him Morales told the brief tale of their past hour. Then again silence fell. The little lanterns were swinging in the night wind that blew fitfully from the desert, and a few stars hung low over the hills. For a time Adela stood watching them, until at last Morales touched her arm, “Go, my dear. You are tired.” She turned and smiled a little weary smile. “Until tomorrow,” she said, and left.them, Morales watched her pass up the stairs, “Only the very young know how to suffer,” he thed, and turned toward his guests, “It is yet too ‘early for bed. Let us join Jito in the smoking-room. We will all be the better for a little brandy and a cigar.” He, too, seemed: worn, and his eyes weary, but he smiled that courteous smile of his, and walked toward the outer room. Jito, enveloped in cigar smoke, sulked in a corner. As the three sank into the deep leather chairs, Morales staged a comeback. * of ies : — ~ COPYRIGHT 2951, BY INTERNATIONAL. * * Few golfers ever land in asylums, according to a health writer. enough. That’s why the golf courses are so crowded. * * * ‘You can find boloney in any plat- True GAY BANDIT the BOR.DE ty TOM —— said: “Gentlemen, there is no ade- quate way of apologizing for this so painful episode of tonight. Tomor- row I shall want to know from you, Jito, why it was allowed. No, not tonight, tomorrow. Tonight I am cansado—tired of the stupidity of your herdsmen. Personally I have not the slightest-care what they do, but they must not molest Adela or my guests.” He poured out another brandy. “And now let us talk of more pleas- ant things, such as—” He waved a hand toward Radcliffe. “I am told that tomorrow Adela will take you out to the Spring of the Saints. It is a very beautiful spot. A good fif- teen miles from here, but you are a meat horseman, It will be child's play.” “Who attends them?” asked Jito suddenly from his corner. Morales looked sharply up. “No ‘one. You know Adela will not have servants on her rides.” But Jito had risen. “I will not have her going unattended. It is——” “It is what?” Ted asked quietly, but a flush had crept to his face. For a moment the two men stood at gaze, while Jito seemed to con- sider his reply. For one thing, it is not safe. My uncle knows that. None of the foot- hill country is safe.” Again Morales raised his hand. “With ten servants or with twenty, would it be any safer? You know it would not.” But Jito only answered stubborn- ly: “You should not let her go. You should forbid it.” , With a faintly amused air the old) Spaniard answered: “I should forbid it. Who forbids Adela to do as she likes? , Suppose you forbid it, Jito, my child.” Jito walked the length of the room. “I.shall tomorrow. You shall see.” “I shall see once more your great eanacty for making a fool of your-' self." He turned with the same look of amusement to the others. “This thing called love, sefiors, it does not make for rational action. It is to some men as strong drink. It makes thy good Jito here act even like a smaller child than God himself made him.” A sudden noise in the doorway drew his attention. A tall vaquero MAGAZINE 02, INC. o~* DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES “SYNDICATE, INC.“ Rp! GILL stood in the entrance, dusty som- brero in hand. “What now?” barked Morales. “Sefior, I would speak with Jito. It is very important,” he added quickly. Jito rose. “What the devil is it, Pedro?” “They have killed Arturo, sefior.” “Who has killed him?” “Anton, the Yaqui.” “Anton! That Indian killed one of my vaqueros?” He buckled on his spurs, “I go to find Anton.” “We have him outside, sefior. We thought it should be you to say whether to kill him or put him in the cell.” Jito turned toward Morales. “Could I have this Indian brought in?” As Morales nodded, Don Bob rose. “Perhaps we had better go,” he suge gested, but Morales waved his hand. “Please stay.” Then he added with a thin smile: “This may be interest- ing. Not often do Jito’s boys get themselves killed.” He nodded to his ward. “Bring him in, Jito mio. You would seem to have your hands well filled with vaqueros and their jubilant ways this night.” The old man’s spare form shook in silent laughter that was rather horrible to watch, In a moment two vaqueros had led forward the Yaqui chieftain, his hands bound behind him, his great chest bare. He stood before his cap- tors and his gaze passed rapidly over the faces of all the men, then came to rest on Jito. The Indian waited for no questioning, but spoke in rapid Spanish, “Since what time have you mis- taken the Yaqui people for peon dogs, big one? Since when is it per» mitted that your horsemen ride « through my village and stampede say horses and frighten my women?“ is not very wise for the few to make enemies of the many. Jito, the Mex- ican, is big and broad of shoulders, and as I stand here he could kill me with those great hands of his, or could call his horsemen to shoot me down, But that, too, would not be wise.‘ My people back in the hills are not so easily killed. Within two days they would sweep over your land like a tea, and the hacienda of Don Paco Morales would be as yes- terday.” ; cas MB@ Be Continued) a® oF

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