The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1933, Page 4

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An Independent Ni | f THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- +tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as (pecond class mail 5 GEORGE D. MANN | President and Publisher, Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail per year (in marck) mewspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. > All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. tatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (ncorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON — h Whither Away? Because of the times, the discus- Bion about Technocracy, the obvious Snequalities and maladjustments un- Ger which we labor, practically every- one has given thought to the subject * of what the future holds. Most of us view the issue from our wn personal standpoint; that of a roof over our heads, bread and butter, and shoes for the children, ‘Few can take the philosophical view, and pessimism is more rampant than optimism, There is much talk, some of it unwise, and always there fs the tendency to blame someone else for our troubles, whereas the man. ‘accused may be quite as innocent as ‘we are. The radical wants to change or tear down everything. The conserva- tive wants to change nothing. The bulk of the people are caught be- tween the upper and nether mill- &tones of opinion, not knowing which way to turn, although advocates of change are clearly in the majority now. With this ebb and flow going on mbout us, it is refreshing to hear the ‘voice of a man who takes the Iong- time view. In a recent interview John Dewey, educator and philosopher, said: “I have no doubt that the capitalist system will disappear in time as have other socio-economic systems. I see no signs of its immediate total col- lapse in the sense of its being re- Placed by a definitely different sys- tem. It has many roots or bulwarks and I expect to see these disappear or be taken over one by one and not in a sensational wholesale way.” Added to this opinion is that of Henry Ford who feels that the present difficult times are merely the fore- runner of a better day. They are necessary, in his view, to bring about the adjustments which will correct inequalities. In fact the motor maker is almost Pollyannaish in his view of the future, which he regrets he will not live to see. That both of these men are at least partly correct in their view is dem- onstrated by current conditions. Not| in many years have so many people given the same intense thought to the same subject as is the case to- day. In many cases they are acting, not always with intelligence or dis- cretion, but with whole-souled pur- pose to improve conditions. Eventually these efforts will succeed. The “bul- ‘warks” are going one by one, for bet- ter or for worse. A Possible Outcome Though the legislatures of this and Other states struggle with foreclosure nd finance problems and the voice of the stricken agricultural west rings Joud in Washington, it is impossible for anyone to say what the upshot ‘will be. To most persons it is obvious that Palliatives. The job, if it is to be done, must be given national treat- ment. It seems obvious that we shall have Bismarck Tribune] ts coos, be gorernent pay him off. For the investor this may sound like bitter medicine but it is not as severe as that dished out to him in the stock market, where values are 80 per cent less than they were at the peak in 1929. If the two ideas ‘re combined a surprising number of creditors will “take the cash and let the credit go.” The mortgagees as well as the mortgagors are losing money now. He who forecloses must pay -taxes and, in addition, loses the interest on his money for an indefinite period. It is a wise man who can take his losses and get out of a deal, but the Present situation breeds wisdom. An Important Question By offering a bill to require the Bank of North Dakota to pay taxes on land held by it, Rep. Milton. Rue of Burleigh county has brought the state legislature face to face with an issue which is important now and which may be increasingly so unless something is done at once. The issue is not that something needs to be done but what to do about it. In part it also is a sectional question, since the land taken off the tax rolls in the western part of the state is much more extensive than in the eastern section, ‘The demand for revision of the Present situation comes from town- ships and school districts which have felt the pinch of the steadily decreas- ing tax base. They want land fore- closed or held by the bank to pay taxes in order that local schools and local government may survive. On the other hand action such as Rue proposes will not react to the benefit of the Bank of North Dakota. Its farm loan department is in the hole now and taxes must be levied to pay bond interest. One thing would be done, however, and that would be to distribute the burden more equitably. As it stands now the brunt of a difficult situa- tion is being borne by the farmer. The bank has made no foreclosures in city taxing districts, It is generally conceded by econo- mists that before the United States lowers its tariff rates the world cur- rencies must be revamped. In the Present state of international ex- change, trade between nations, some with stabilized and others with de- Preciated currencies, becomes a dan- gerous operation. This issue, along with inter-governmental debt policies, seems to be the major problem clam- oring for settlement before world trade can be placed upon a sound and profitable basis. Technocracy bases some of its theories and conclusions upon its own and not actual statistics. Meas- ‘ured by government data on the ma- chine age, the technocrat's arguments are not always sound. The magic wand of the machine age has not arrived yet. Man power is still .a prime necessity in industry and is a long way from being eliminated as the technocrat fears. Senator Martin's secession resolu- tion, doubtless propounded in a spirit of levity, brought considerable notori- ety for North Dakota. None of the advertising has any intrinsic value and the resolution slumbers in com- mittee where probably it will stay, Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, The Last Forsyte (Minneapolis Tribune) The death of John Galsworthy so close upon the awarding of the Nobel prize for literature to him finds his life and work the subject of more se- rious consideration than might other- wise have been the case. As far as it is possible for contemporary criti- cism to speak authoritatively, John Galsworthy was a great novelist, the author of several books that today seem certain to enjoy more than a momentary audience. Although Gals- worthy was not the type of writer whose work was likely to engender the enthusiasm which makes and breaks best sellers, his audience was appreciative and steady. Like his work and his characters, Galsworthy’s audiences were sedate people whose literary tastes were no longer subject to serious changes. Although Mr. Galsworthy was al- most as thoroughly English as any THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1938 a Chidwick, pastor of St. Agnes’ Church, New a * I am afraid we are now in & very arid period of culture. Maybe there will be a return to absolute simplicity. Ignace Paderewski, pianist. ——_—_ T00 TOUGH FOR THUGS and most widely known of Village|to fight for her share of the, bed | Reversing the Usual Game feta. Marie has been. moved about| covers. given up. The old village knew her | in Christopher Street cellars or Greenwich Avenue. She moved from ‘one place to another, according to trade. FEouLe buane aad Wattee an "a 8 entn sivcet’” cool carmhesrri A cable reports that a Solomon} yox angeles—Two youthful bandits, eke Island native “has just paid $1800)... 4, hardly appearing on their Known World Over for a wife on the installment plan, vheeks, held up A. W. Bowman, Marie's fame does not end at the|and will be the rest of his life paying | young cheeks, “This 8 & borders of Manhattan. Wanderers|for her.” Well, well. Things are/theater manager here. “we're from Europe, particularly artists,|pretty much the'same this world Over,| Hoidup,” one of them sald. e' critics, writers and such, invariably|uren’t they? gonna take you for a se an eh seek her out. And only tife “regulars” v1 replied, “Please don’ know how many jobless artists have Bowe a ride. ‘I catch cold easily. been ag thelr tes, food a hang- But the youths insisted that Bowman out—and no check tendered. Scores go for a ride and be robbed. bg drop in, as they would in ire bs bandits,” he yelled, “r'm end an twas at Marie's thet T ‘used to see * * % a two youths “‘scrammed” and ‘The new fishing tackle catalogs are : Eratie survey, drooping his long figure|oul—e bit prematurely it might seem.| The Macon, new Navy, dirigibie. over a tableand spinning endless tales|But then anglers might catch on if|will have a gas capacity of 6,500, and weaving endless dreams. Almost the annual crop of fantastic new/cubic feet. every habitue of Marie's had heard|balts were offered them around seven new comets were sighted dure thorty, Sadakici was known about the Jong, lank figure draped about tables ee 8 Bohemianism back—wants its mer- the technocratic theories being built |TCO™ Th i995 wea service, Inc) |ing the year 1032. world. Many of his books are still in “the old spots,” Sadakici again pa-; Technocracy is a prophecy of doom. chants to be “Villagy”— for years. * * ® collectors’ items. = rades the village. It presents no charity and isnot quite ‘Well, maybe they are not too late. * * * New York lawyers have formed an organization to advise tenants how to-get out of their leases. To do any business, their fees will have to be less than the cost of @ saxophone. 1933- ental Hartman Still About Sadakici Hartman is another “reg- ular” and perhaps the most pic- turesque survivor of the old brigade. A brilliant critic, essayist and art au- e But pa seid hand oy reget Your depression is much superior to iterary and new theories KnoW!our prosperity in Italy.—Baroness little of him. So with unruly, steel Ot S@e SI strands of hair blowing out from un-|Margit Veszi-Mantica, visiting in der his wide-brimmed black hat, his| United States. ‘ ee * so respectable as the Communist who a Comeback knows what he wants.—Dr. William And the Village wants to bring them|E. Wickenden, president of Case all back—wants new artistic figures to|School of Applied Science, Cleve- rise to romantic heights—wants its|land, O. eee In the future, we are going to take more of an interest in politics—L. A.. ‘We have a set of godless politicians ‘We can look for an increase in the|/and a set of godless men in social divorce rate. An Ohio judge has/work. God is crowded out of every granted a decree to a wife who had/department of life—Mgr. John P. is the excessive use of tobacco that ——$—___—__1__.. 4 | Johnson, national commander of the does harm, not temperate smoking. f Barbs || American Sea oe ' (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) o —_—_——_—4 By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, 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 tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. A LARGE REPERTOIRE OF As a rule @ reasonable amount of * COUGHS coughing is good for what ails you, An infant or young child will cough an if it comes to a seetnetd of quiet- — most alarmingly (to mother or nurse) i or suppressing the cough the | Prosperit; Gone, the Village Sees from a simple coryza, especially in| method or means of doing this should | Return a Its Famed Bohemianism the early hours of the night. Much|be left entirely to your physician's} New York, Feb. 2.—Greenwich Vil- of this useless coughing may be pre- | judgment. lage desperately seeks to recapture its’ RDETH CARROLL is just a shopgirl, leading a very simple life, vented by placing the child prone, if — reputation for “Bohemianism” and A ,but her ideals on high She ope beyond the arab existence you are sure you know what biel QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | ‘“color.” Its little journals of opinion meariage to Neil Burke would mean, Seeing handsome Ken Gleason . ¢, opens a 5; sl We described in an earlier winter-| Baby three months old has pro- Sap eeatne: ar acese take charge. Ardeth coaster Ken at the shop. tly after, ane view the elephant cough that may be|truding ears. They seem very soft The “Village” they cry, built a na- ing Jeanette has left for the day, Ken calls, feigning he had planned caused by irritation of Arnold's nerve, | and they turn over at every move. . «| tional reputation on its unconvention- @ branch of the great Pneumogastric| (Mrs. R. M.) ality and this reputation must be re- or lung-stomach nerve, that supplies} Answer—They'll toughen as hej contured. Village “revolt,” they be- sensation to the skin in the outer ear| erows older and hears all the funny| -coch, was its greatest asset. canal. Accumulation of hardened ear} talk. Some mothers believe the /""pi¢' alas and alack, in those boom- wax has kept many a patient cough- | wearing of a bonnet at night corrects days when money was being tossed in- ing elephantly and a doctor guessing | Protruding ears. to new buildings and even artists and indefatigably for months on end. Sun Glasses poets made money, things changed Just to give you a general idea of| Which are best to wear when one down in the Village. how much territory a doctor has for|has to ae ee of the ns ee # guessing about the cause of cough, | smoked s, blue, green or amber y Prosperi let me mention a few of the possibili- | Goggles? aie acbaindgeacs onieds times find ties, as noted by Dr. Charles Lyman] Answer—Greenish or amber tinted the Village reblossoming with little Greene in his textbook on Medical gine ee eee pean vary groups of debaters; cellar coffee clubs Diagnosis: ultraviolet rays. Various special 2 “Aenoids,” enlarged tonsils, iin- | glasses used for goggles are excellent. aud nnemstene pees fice pacted cerumen, granular pharyn- |If you wear glasses ordinarily, it is the sp pa frroding “verse read- gitis, hypertrophy of the lingual | better to have a pair of plain tinted bs Os aatlata sCLMMRY ceheate cerdzen cha tonsil, enlarged turbinates, chronic |r Smoked glasses to wear over them | B=; Ariisis Ctsplay Sele wares _ disease of the accessory sinuses, |When you have to face the strong | Paty and ae a Pesaran goiter, chronic heart disease, dis- | Sunlight. = agi che ie Le eases of the liver, enlarged bron- Apology to Our Smoking Readers a as oe ey - chial glands, aneurysm, medias- A year ago you gave us an interest- nae d we pao tinal growths, dorsal caries, occu- | ing article on Thromboangiitis Obli Coffee an ses are warm pation, habit, and imitation, are | €rans and you said excessive smoking | Spots for ous crowds. They lost some of the other potential or {is an important contributing cause.| much of their following when most possible conditions to be consid- |Recently you gave another talk onj folk had money and could go to the ered aside from affections of the |the effects of tobacco on health | better speakeasies or the chop-houses. bronchi, lungs and pleurae. and mentioned numerous ailments|Scéres of Ute places disappeared ‘The experienced physician can rule|it causes but said nothing about| with good times; now they all flock out most of these possibilities on rou- | thrombo angitis obterans. As a pipe| back. Russian smocks come out of tine examination, but the layman can | Smoker I am interested. (W.N.S.) | the moth-balls and poetic lads have never tell from his own sensations} Answer—I like to have readers in-| found their old corduroys and lumber or from the character of the cough | terested, but not scared. I did omit | shirts, what may or may not be causing it,|thrombo-angiitis obliterans from the {It is remarkable that the cough pro- | list of ill effects of excessive use of] Romany Marie Still There duced by a deep seated lung or pleu- | tobacco. An oversight. Note that it} Romany Marie’s remains the oldest ral lesion often feels as though it =. were just a slight throat tickling, and on the other hand a cough really due to trifling nose or throat irritation may feel and sound as though it comes from away down deep in the chest. These are some of the things a doc- room, and this other is just se much waste space now.” The room behind the main shop was a long, narrow apartment, with one window looking out on a dreary little alley. But Jeanette’s logical energy was equal to ie task. She paced the floor all day in a fine frenzy of creation. “Pll have the window painted and seth Put in couches and soft-shaded lamps and thick rugs pl to drive Jeanette home. He asks Ardeth to go instead. Ken plans a foursome of Ardeth, Jeanette, Tom Corbett and himself. Jeanette and Tom are unable to go, so Ken is alone with Ardeth. T! SS together, their hearts racing with each other's nearness. Ken es Ardeth. meas CS | make it like an Oriental den. CHAPTER IX. Then the heart stopped pumping] We'll serve orange pekoe tea free, JHE ark was casting a long]and you were on the other side, and charge them fancy prices for sunset shadow, the air was|, Here! Snap out of it! Noth-|cigarettes—remind me to lay ina capt -\ing very original a that] stock of holders and enamel cases, ool and the bay had taken] thought it wi rs ug] and what a gloom he|Ardeth. And it will move the on a cold violet tinge when Ardeth| was getting to be! is in the front shop, too!” and Ken left the little duck shack.| They were getting in—the| Ardeth listencd, applauded, sug- Something of sadness touched|creaking piles sliding by the|gested. No one watching her the girl as they walked over the|dark windows. Ken lool swiftly | would have gucssed that her heart plank runway to where the blue|@round to make sure no one from| was aching. That all of life had automobile waited on the road. cars could see,| gone flat and gray before her sick Some minutes after thty had/then he leaned down and woke| eyes. started she looked back. The ark |Ardeth with a hasty kiss. Three o'clock four o’clock was almost swallowed up in the ian) oo Tiere get ... six o'clock. ‘The day dragged ensity of the marshes. . mot en i i sine p thing e stopped the Ro by fa eesinabls, and Ken did not is lien day—| Strange! ac! i ais " ae els Hane 8 crying veers a 5 a a Aaah eek iow when she would see In the days which fol t d ; again. When he would call her| golden Saturday Tani ee ing into her mind, weaving them-| up. But words would not come to regs of humiliation. ‘selves with the wide marshes and| her lips. : She had beer a fool! She had ithe sad sunset light. She did not| | He kissed her good-by, not with| fallen in love with a mac’ wh lrealize she was singing them until | the fire of a few hours before, but| cared nothing for her. What had ishe heard Ken’s p asant baritone| gently—a kiss somehow wistful. |becn to her a glorious dream had hemasiag pan 4 = ieiseulictes Then she was standing alone on| been to him merely another neck, the surroundii thougl peor Ken's arm went around her. Her {cheek brushed the shoulder of his coat. Something pleasantly mas- uline about that rough tweed .. . wes memory, has painted the per- fect day— In colors which will not fade, {And ye find at the end of a per- fect day y— The heart of a friend you've made...” Governor Question HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle = 24 Dry table-land 1 Young cow. — in South Glancing down, Ken caught the peter pipe peo 5 Smallest THe glint of tears on her lashes. He by morphine in a harmless little particle. TILIA ira fa ad tie car Ba Sed her face cough cure recommended to the ig-] 10 Stitches. . norant parents by the kind gentle-| 14 Changing col- APEC Anne “You funny, adorable ery eo tee Stinvigorstiog — | atabborniy Shuts Pt Bet ever . Q invigorating ly shu Pleurisy and certain cases of pul-} 46-79 escape medicine. “It’s just the sunset and—and monary tuberculosis are the only con- through a "29 Center of all. ditions I can think of, where it is for the patient's benefit to suppress the cough. In all other conditions of which cough is a symptom the use of opium, morphine, codeine, heroin, chloroform, paregoric, dionin and other narcotics is generally harmful It is just that it seems too amphitheater, beautiful to ied 30 Part of coat ords went on echoing in co}lar. the man’s mind long after they 33 Strife. had been spoken. They wove in- 39 Ladle. to the hum of the engine, 40 Subject of » fiazeiating le she biewing. of 6: crevice as gas, 17 Herbert Leh- man is gover 42 Prong. VERTICAL imes 19Ex premier 43°To beseech. 1To peruse. portrait. jonely oy oo m coments es ide rom of Hungary. 45 Appropriate 2 Monkey. 410ne who type stepped Sor. dinner, at a poisoning, these so called cough seda-| 21 To devour. for song. 3 Legal rule, writes, roadside tavern—a frame tives lull the victim into a false sense| 22 Frost bite. 41To place. 4 Aviators. 42 Long-drawn ct improvement when perhaps the ill-| 23 Moved along 48 Estimated per- 5 Fur called speech. ness is rapidly growing worse. I the edge. fect golf score, sable. 44 Billiard rod, jieve the early resort to one or an-| 27 Vegetative. 49 Rugs. 6 Kind. 46 Hastened. other nostrum purporting to “cure” 31Small tablets. 53Slender lofty 7 Negative. 49 Vulgar fellow, -| cough is the straw that converts} 32 Later. tower. 8 Writing fluid. 50 Since, d again the young fellow felt his we He ative. 1am ane Pe ue many a mild bronchitis into a grave| 34Short-billed 57 State of 9 Baser. 51To regret heart’ moved bye her unusual What than most of his contemporaries on | Pneumonia. rail. shaking. 10 Slants. exceedingly, beauty. ; had been to her the other side of the Atlantic may | 7 > ————————_————_———-—— be Fora of be, Hh Comiloris. : s any, fish, 52 ores had remembered this road se. jet magis- monkey, account tor this fact tm part at walt.) FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | itGiunr ot "trate ot!” IstueeeG onow- ss mieie the pavement, watching the red Ing party. matter and characterization his nov- wool fibers. Venice, shoe. 54 Wand. tail-light of his car turn around Memory fi els were dealing with traits that ap- 88 Street. 61 Agent. 18 Grain. 55 Embryo bird, the corner—and there was a little | ment her. Ker pealed to certain groups in America 40 Inferior cotton 62 Laughing. 20 Outfit. 56Golf device. | forlorn ache in her heart. into her almost as much as they did to the loth. 63 Brink. 28 Booms or gaffe. 59 South America By morning her spirite, had Fiuting, native Englishman. Whether | Mr. lifted. Another day. ee ven fe on Sn English family under, capitalism, brit ovalde air into | hands’ to as he did in “The Man of Property,” or to portray that little understood, Ha several acute social as has introduced bill similar to that Ghose eats 8 problems ss od ante bess never & crusader and, particularly in seenas ; He would n0¢/ the case.of his novels, he seemed sat- ye han to interpret. te problem with mortgages but only if the mortgage holder scales down his claim 60 per|wrich he deett, |i te motinet has saad ds, if the mort-| made him a less positive figure than poste will acept halt of what ne be- | he might have been. le, this ferry ride. Passage’ Yetireen ports the ¢ ses? brie! th ing of a mighty heart. *sGontinued Tein onze)

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