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[he Bismarck Tribune ° Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) econd class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........97.20 seeeeee sevcessesesceese 120 Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years .... seseeeee seeseeeee 2.50 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ...........005 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. + 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation OT SRE 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. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) | (CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ; A Good Reaction Perhaps the most notable thing ebout the attempt to assassinate | President-elect Roosevelt is the evident reaction of the man and his wife to what might have been a great| tragedy. It is erroneous to say that Roose-} Velt was unconcerned. No man could be after so close a call, but it is) evident that he was not afraid. His erento attach Published by The Bismarck Tribune |informal talk with President-elect Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-| Roosevelt, this statement of MacDon- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as| giq's may be taken as representing 00 joffering something substantial in {to present the repeal resolution to the lout some ridiculous amendments, it ville Chamberlain that his country had no concessions to make in re- turn for scaling down the debts. Following closely as it does the visit of Sir Ronald Lindsay after his the official position of the existing {British government and no doubt is now given utterance to counteract the extremely unfavorable reaction in the. United States to Chamberlain's uncompromising attitude. The British are a practical people and they un- derstand perfectly that they cannot get concessions on the debts without return, Along with MacDonald's statement we are likely to find that a morator- jum has been declared on debt speeches or on any further bluffing in this international poker game. It will doubtless be the last to emanate from any official British source until the boys get their feet under the table at Washington next month and get down to business, If and When | ‘We may get the major elements of this prohibition business straight- ened out at this session of congress after all. When the senate voted Thursday} States, after having first straightened did a good piece of work. Neither the wets nor the drys can reason- ably object to having this question| passed back to the states for deci-} sion in the light of present condi-! tions. i Speaker Garner may or may not! be right in his declaration that the! house will take similar action next. Monday, but there is no denying his cheering words to his friends in the} hospital at Miami, his refusal to! leave the scene despite the frantic, efforts of secret service men to get} him away, combine to give us the} picture of a man who is unafraid in| time of crisis. Personal fearlessness is a trait o the entire Roosevelt family. The great Theodore Roosevelt had it in} full measure and his distinguished cousin is one of the breed. Inci- dentally, they deserve a tradition for enjoying good fortune. When Theo- dore Roosevelt was shot in the breast at Milwaukee during the campaign) of 1912 he might have been fatally ‘wounded were it not for a bulky manuscript and his spectacle case in| his breast pocket. Wednesday night at Miami, Franklin D. Roosevelt sat unharmed, although six persons! around him were wounded. | Mrs. Roosevelt's attitude also is} notable. In the best tradition of American womanhood, she went ahead with her planned routine, re-| alizing that there was nothing she | could do to improve the situation. To! one on the outside it is easy enough | to ask “what else was there for her} to do?” but that pre-supposes a logic | which might very easily have deserted | f woman in time of crisis and thought of danger to one who is very dear to her. / The whole business, tragic as it was, augurs well for the future of} the nation. If Franklin D. Roosevelt! is as fearless in the face of political| pressure as he was in the face of a} gunman's bullets, America will bene- fit. Now, if ever, we need fearless- ness and consecrated devotion to tight and justice in high places. Of course, it is not as though Roosevelt had not looked upon the} face of. approaching death before. ‘The attack of infantile paralysis which he suffered was just as real a! menace as the bullets from a would-| be assassin’s gun. ' There can be no sympathy toward the man who might have brought! this tragedy upon the nation except} that sympathy which all of us must feel toward a person with a deranged i mind. Aid for Homeless Boys Social problems of vast importance are contained in a proposal by the United States senate to enroll and train 88,000 homeless and idle Amer- ican youths in year-round citizens’ military training camps. Twenty- two million dollars has been added to the war department appropriation bill for this purpose. It is estimated that there are to-! day nearly 300,000 of these homeless boys wandering aimlessly about the United States. Uprooted by the eco- nomic and social crisis they seek they know not what in traveling back and forth, hitch-hiking, “riding the rods,” ‘and otherwise subjecting themselves to experience that is quite apt to sap their vitality and initiate them into @ life of dependence, shiftlessness and crime. Many communities have found the existent; but it is probably true that their number is in excess of esti- mates. It is a serious problem facing society and one which has threat- ened to assume such dimensions as [ MacDonald has announced that Great Britain is willing to discuss trade relations and other economic problems at the com- ing war debt conference, thus con- tradicting the recent blunt statement of Chancellor of the Exchequer Ne- | swashbucklers who sailed the Spanish Kime. Condens tens ws ey wre(! PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE 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, Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instruc- tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. it is probable that the resolution will pass. ‘This new turn in the situation calls! for quick action on the part of the| ate legislature if the prohibition, uation in this state is not to be further complicated during the next} ster Kennel Show is held, Mrs. Dodge nobody seems to know exactly how|day. many pooches she has rescued and given homes. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1933 Well, We Asked for It | 4 ‘Dodge stro! in Central Parklobserved the particular episode from} allotment for failing to attend van ihe wen Lace Loule was ap-/down front, he protested; told county health board meeting. Mrs. Dodge picked up Loule and transplanted him suddenly to the luxuries and appointments of her Fifth Avenue mansion. More recent- ly she rescued another hungry mutt from the predatory life of a park Tanger. When she doesn’t know fa beep to do with such strays, she turns them /is wel lover to swanky friends whose young- | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) listers. seem to appreciate mutts of itionable ancestry. —— heen xe f Barbs | KEPT Latah ES ar een ® — * There's another interesting young married couples to get Mrs. a interests in dogs. seem he began rae fancier and breeder |along best when near relatives are far as @ gesture of revolt. Her father, /away. pe the late William Rockefeller, was & horse expert. He did not approve of A scientist says we could live his daughter's interest in dogs. So| indefinitely, like that 21-year-old she began to convert him. chicken heart, if it weren’t for our This season, when the Westmin- f the best dog a Aimetcs, banal Further proof that silence is gold- ‘Her own kennels, containing at least |en—‘Kingfish” Long's one-man fili- 150 iblue-bloods, will not compete. And | buster cost the taxpayers $15,000 a en 8 The fellow with a capacity for ee grasping things quickly stands a good chance of success. But even purse- CHANGING FACES snatchers get tripped up now and Chinatown’s younger generation, then. thty tell me, is keeping the plastic surgeons busy. Having learned to wear snappy Occidental attier and to go about with collegiate Nordics, they seek to remove the slant-eyed sign of the Oriental. Scores, I am informed, are haunting the offices of the face changers. ee MODESTY AND ROMANCE Banker Otto Kahn, to Sarah Jane Heliker, one-time music show figure, recalls an amusing chapter from the romance. modern girl's heart so deeply as the other men are affected... (A. B. M.) Answer—Perhaps tobacco poisoning, first or second hand, or carbon-mon- oxide gassing (some carbon monoxide in tobacco smoke), or possibly carbon monoxide gassing from the stove that heats the kitchen—you being more sensitive to such mild poisoning than your companions. Blow Buglerette, Blow My daughter, 14 years of age, a Girl Scout, is interested in bugle blowing. self-addressed envelope is enclosed. two years. Since the resolution—and quite properly —refers the issue to state conventions for settlement, provision! cussion of evolution. should be made at this legislative; It is talk about a subj session for the calling of such a con-|Perhaps talked about lother health subject, common cold.” vention if and when the national re- between the end of this legislative oes The Jolly Roger | We doubt that the mutineers who be so busy at the masthead and felt the thrill) Without which must have come to those old tinous crew probably are not so| imaginative. Being a simpler and less Nevertheless they do bring to mind | and booty. All of us, probably, have felt vague| bacterial flora. stirrings of desire to participate in| Worker's mask as notin Discesmnen Rich bold events the the culture was obtained. However if put to the test, eam St Of US| the chimpanzees and all the workers ie ; or attendants were in good health and everything when it arrived. We can} had been free from any signs of cri, get our thrills vicariously, in the ease | if you sue mney Bg mag if you | vori don't, ci colds, you dumb egg. and comfort of our favorite chair. The day after he iittle argument between ape and worker, the worker | quieting in the thought of those brown | complained of sneezing, lacrimation, men behind the guns on that Dutch | fulness a nee and Varnet ana the varshi| 7 any second day she was suffering from Warahlp, Mere. are so maany.of: them. | what the Paavo medical authorities pronounced a typical severe common heads to challenge white supremacy? | cold, which lasted two weeks. Oh, well, I was not there, Baron, so Nevertheless there is something dis-| What if all of them took it into their | % , ~ "| let it go. | Editorial Comment | hey are published without regard | to whethe: - jed nasal discharge and obstruction wiih he eeaaeres Seiteiaee® |! Gnd some fever and passed: through ines what these same medical authorities a z designated as the typical stages of the If It Were War mmon cold. No other infections de- (Duluth Herald) ‘eloped among the nine other apes in Some time we shall attack really | ‘Ne 8TOUP. then we shall get somewhere. “If we declared war on unemploy- ment with the same zeal we declared war on Germany, we could remedy conditio: And undoubtedly we | could and would. Yet somehow the fact that neighbors are in dark dis- tress through unemployment does not Stir us up to the pitch we reached bothered about matters in Europe which really, after all, were none of our business, And there are automobile killings. This nation has had six major wars —the Revolutionary war, the war of 1812, the Mexican war, the Civil war, the Spanish-American war and the World war. And the Travelers In- surance company, in its annual broad- side against automobile carelessness, shows that in these six wars the num- bers killed in action and died of wounds were fewer than three hun- dred thousand. ‘Yet in the last fifteen years, a peri- od approximating the duration of all these wars, Americans killed in auto- mobile accidents or dead from auto- mobile injuries have numbered three hundred and twenty-five thousand! More people killed by automobiles in fifteen years than in all our wars, and we still suffer careless drivers to have their witless will! ‘When ten per cent of the zeal and pirty Agtied to Bid toy of war war-provi upidity of Preparing for war can be pee Gs into = against such really im- Portant issues as unemployment and sutomobile tragedies, there will be no mit to our achievements, > Do you think this is conducive to goiter? (F. P. R.) Answer—No. I often wonder why,| this popular delusion persists, that Playing wind instruments tends to ‘cause goiter. There is no foundation (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) FROM APE TO MAN OR FROM |the docile ape’s cri? The docile one submitted to the leap of the shertd i ‘i i .}| culture without any fuss, and the lab- Calm yourself. This is not a dis oratory worker's mask was in place ect that is}When she took the culture. So the savants calmly ignore the fact that “the | the intractable ape may have passed a sample of the infection to the docile one. They hold rather that the gauze mask over nose and mouth is not a No health authority or complete protection against the com- 3 moi MAN TO APE? more than any Just what a “common peal amendment is presented to this} cold” may be is a question for every state. Prompt action now might pre-|one to answer to suit his own pecu- vent public disorder and prevent a ele +f apes LS 5 s medical authority can be inveig’ - much bitterness during the interim ty defining or describing, much less identifying a case of “common cold.” session and the beginning of the} You just have to take it for granted next. yours is it—until you find you've got something not contemplated in the provisional or tentative diagnosis of your indisposition. By that time you'll battling whatever you've captured a Dutch warship in the! got that you'll quite forget to task the South Seas broke out the Jolly Roger | near-doctor with his error. admitting that knows what the alleged cold” is, we have sent out several ex- Peditions in recent years in quest of Main. the nature and cause of the putative ‘The Maiays who mace up that mu-|™alady. One such intensive research has included observation of a group of chimpanzees. Recently a laboratory worker, try: subtle people they concentrate on the! ing to take cultures from the throats main chance and let the accouter-| of the snipers Leceranilastere) men a re selves ; animal that did not submit gracefully prake seas ol temselyes to the taking of the culture. The lab- oratory worker had to open the ape's visions of Captain Kidd, Sir Francis} mouth forcibly. As a rule workers Drake, La Fitte and scores of others| taking the euler rae carefully who on so |scrub their hands and then don-.a once put to sea in search of blood } gauze mask, to guard against contam- ination by their own nose or throat But this time the ‘Well, it is all pretty muddied, how- ever you look at it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Please tell me what drug store sells the five cent tincture of iodine you recommend. I have tried about a doz- en and they all ask at least 20 cents for an ounce vial. (Mrs. I. L, D.) Answer—I have never given any in- formation about the price of tincture of iodin. Perhaps you saw something about a five per cent tincture of iodin. At present the drug stores furnish a weaker tincture (2 per cent) or a stronger tincture (7 per cent) when you buy tincture of iodin. More eco- omical to buy the stronger tincture | (7 per cent), in a one ounce glass stoppered or hard rubber screw capped vial. For general use this may be mixed half and half with glycerin, and it will still be stronger than the 5 per cent tincture. We Can Only Gas I am 49, have never been sick, spend most of my time outdoors winter and summer. This winter I have been Playing cards once a week with three other men. To save heat we play in the kitchen. All of us smoke. All the doors and windows are closed. Several times I have become faint and white around the gills after an hour and a half, so I had to stop and go out in the air to get over it. None of the DOG'S BEST FRIEND New York, Feb. 17.—The dogs of the universe, in convention assembled, should get together and give this lit- tle girl a great big bark. I refer to Mrs. Geraldine Rocke- feller Dodge, rich social leader upon whom the snootiest kennel show of Manhattan has thrown the spotlight ‘the best judge of No canine is too nondescript to win her attention, yet she owns and breeds some of the finest dog flesh in the To be more specific: Mrs. Dodge has a 7000-acre country place near Madison, N. J. Kennels pop up every- where and scores of gold-ribbon win- ners have been born and raised there. Among her dog stars is the interna- tionally famous “Tuethilde,” better known as “Tillie on this side of the pond. This German shepherd boasts of 28 championships, won on both sides of the Atlantic. eee THE RESCUE OF “LOUIE” Yet, just a few months ago, Mrs. by electing her dogs in America.” Racial Questions HORIZONTAL 1 What is.the Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 What race of mankind is the most numerous But now the plot thickens. It ap- Pears that two days after the set-to | Editorials printed below show the | described the intractable ape and a | Bend of thought by other editors. || docile chimpanzee in the group show- 9 Assumed name. 19 International ; DIPINTAITIIZOIN tS i 12 Small army 15 Hybrids be- tween ass and important problems with the ardor| mat, ‘Re, Opinion of the Baron = and patriotism that we unbottle so ground the intractable ape was in- freely when war is in the air, And ected by the laboratory worker who Norman Thomas said the other da: et oe tee a know hat some of the specific respiratory infections, such as measles, scarlet fever, cerebro-spinal meningitis, are contagious or communicable before the onset of actual illness or definite symptoms. But how to account for 27 Thick shrub, 37 Pedal digit. 39 One who tells 37 Any poisonous 23To prepare for 43 Sea gulls, 38 Death notice. 6 Frozen water. 40 Kindled again, 28 Mineral spring. 50 Fertilizer for 45 One row of a — in 1 ; F ER FANN 4 in 1918 when we got all hot and LAPP R FANNY SAYS: 11 Embryo plants. 31 Type of poem. 53 Razor clam, 47 Flour factory. 14A falling in A bird's life at best is a crumbly existence: Marriage of Gilbert Kahn, son of own shoulder Pg hed wheel, There's nothing that touches the Sarah Jane, as she was known tc|tender sentiment of a valentine—un- the show world, had ». little part in less it’s the five pounds of assorted “Take a Chance,” which was certain |bonbons she knows she'll find under to become a hit. The role she played | the cover. called for a partial disrobing. The show went to Newark for a try-out and young Kahn sat in. When he! lest a $5 wage and $1.40 mileage *** John D. Rockefeller’s grandson ences Pohl Se Lich? rte eaten by ey, let’s take the jump. Let’s get tdeth Carrol charge o! shop owned Phen Jeanette aintcae they allt + Sletton, seer S| reumi a sits hod oe esas eanett ile, a fall in love, ir marriage is aaa yy Ken’s mother’s wish that he marry Cecile. ‘When Ken Mary Eastwood's agitated figure fails to keep an appointment with Ardeth, Tom Corbett takes her to |suddenly appearing above them on dinner. They meet Ken and Cecile. Later Ken tells Ardeth fear |the porch, so that they drew apart of disappointing his mother, whose days are numbered, forced him in confusion. to attend Cecile ty, Tom invites Ken and Ardeth to a party |i? onggpiedy i at his mountain cabin. Mary Eastwood urges Ardeth to encourage | Mary's voice with a strained Tom, warning her of impending disaster where Ken is concerned. | frightened note. Tom and Ken vie with one another for Ardeth’s attentions. “Ken—come in at once! A tele- NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. Pec tcuaitteaea) Deedee CHAPTER XXII. head when he had her for a dance.| pose . . . your mother. . .” HEY were hung between|“Like it, Ardeth?” They were in the cabin with heaven and earth on the He had a glowing look for reply.| the others. Ken was ripping the 1 rs th “All right—it’s all yours,” ae of a Sage Sper snowy slope—between the} His words were Jaughing, but} He looked up, his face ashen. crowd at the bottom of the grade|there was a serious note in the|“It’s from the doctor. Mother’s and the little group at the top, | man’s voice, very ill. I'll have to go.” Ken bent his head close to her! ¢o, “ahah adopted a purposely light] A. sense of disaster crashing in own. “Kiss me!” he ordered, his| "You mean I can hein witeps on Ardeth. Fora moment ‘he true i osage eyes brimming with love and|thing?” She waved her hand st|trecsey ec ace cacaped her, i to laughter. ate sere Fede cio and: Ken's last words to her. He jak ke Long after Ardeth remembered at’; marriage and was immediately the incident in its smallest detail,| 20m! ‘That's too much——” snatched away, 8 “ “Don’t pretend to misunderstand} = Th, No foreboding chill to tell her of| me! he returned roughl “y, en her heart went out in a : Y » “You wee Hs gd at tee'sed or eagw tm every about You, Ar-l whe, So tunned:”"But there mes her happiness and thought it was|“°\On chn-hi” She was sud- poring she could do, He did not begit ae denly in ‘ic to keep him from Ken long aide: "Azicth clinging Breath] *eURL POPE other clothes “wnt Rom aioe leshys With: tightly chute eyes tol» “Not @ chance, have I? Not alis car up to the omy crore Pe iy» Pe . te shut ee chance—yet.” rs aitinbee cal prada to be in ne ™ ey an om waiting at| She was suddenly and unreason- feeling here 2 oe only stand, ae of the runway. ably angry, “Why do you say] *¢ ling pee shaken by a sense e turned on Ken, laughing but/ that_yet?” ar. Hearing the excited re- jealous, wxou highbinder! snitch-| “Qh, because someday maybe prceted voices of the others, ing a ride! - he | there will be. ‘Things don’t abvays| ,,, Ken came running downstairs in ‘here followed a scuffle in the! turn out the way one figures them. 9 eee erereont. His eyes went snow, which became a free-for-all! |. Don’t look at me like that, : ms ly oe her as they did when Fred and Bill Lane were|‘ardeth. What's so wrong with|°Vver , the others. He A dragged into it. {what I say? You might change | Mary’ tions mechanically, in lore breath-taking rides—first| your mind. Other girls have; soy off. with one then the other. Sriowball/ that’s my hope.” re le refused Tom’s offer to fights when the men pelted the} But is was the unspoken mean- Hone bruskly. He'd be all right. girls and were secretly amazed at ing under his words which stuck ss aa 't need anyone. the vigor of their defense. like a sword in her heart. That| lights danced on the snow Then, a eful twilight hour,| same w: she in|-,-.- The roar of his motor quickly when dusk drove them back to the| Mary Eastwood’s words the other! ee ot tie was gone. And cabin to sit around the stove dry-' day, An echo of that unreasoning ittle group in the cabin seemed ing their wet feet. fear which underlay all her forlorn. (Pesce and Contentment. “1 Stam; forever on Ardeth’s Pag hour. She lay back “Poor Ken,” Mary. “If it’s the end it. will hard ite nea He’s de to his Was it her fancy, thought Ar. $n a low wicker chair, comfortabl; deth, or did 9 Y still dancing!” » Mary’s gaze brush h ‘hive is ogee pence at it all She drew out of his arms and sompesecnstely for a moment as: ‘The last thick day! t straining} Walked to Ts. i through the turkey-red curtains at the window. Smell of pipe smoke and. fresh lumber and wet wool drying. Laughing, effortless talk. The sprawling raures about her— yt grace in " hig in the rough sport c! Ss ‘And under everything—the fe Sinking Heart. ee Later that night, whe awake on the ae cot whine ny been prepared for her, Ardeth hersel ing the inci- dents with a sinking heart. Why. ro . aay pity her? Suppose such] Ken’s mother...Oh, nol poses think of that! Never wish to draw, par awe happiness through Ken’s ry wood look thick and clumsy. Ken’s Ha iceed’ boost made Bill Lane's tisborate sparta print saieulom. All er love mag: net, drawing her close to Thrilling just to be beside feeling that he was Seameeedeeny aware of her in every inch of body, though he kept on talking to FF the black mountains, . Did he feel this great : love felt for hint? Dla it Gring hie Hours later Ken reached the end or teased Maida and Phyilis}’ “pundled in their conta they made| of his journey. "Dark aid cient in turn, their slow way down the snowy/the city lay, drenched jj The consciousness of him put a] ai over e hard packed snow.|Heavy, sluggish di in rain, ‘i own laugh when A 0 rops, like heavy silver edge fie him st dinner. Her| Zbeir flashlights played back and tears... . Lik checks tsk one eves 2m Mee 4, §, painful dream an be talked tering birds, know-| ing ey a oe then’ Ken’s| Plack and papa) came stealthily around to a le cabins, the r with a look which was a caress. beards les of warms Tight small sh ats In that moment the room reced- Lane, an arm about Maida| before hi tt, ed to Ardeth and the others be-| ..q Phyllis, led the way. They blue chiffon thi ear came pale shadows, Only Ken and) were singing. ‘The voices fi white oval face and + « vital cree back thin and sweet and a little|yellow waves of her hair soft and thrilling to the marvelous fact wigntet fe the Renety. of Se eiget, | Cppenling. Gone, the orange lip- Tom, silent since last dance je mauve shadow was Be wes bere! ibe ae filled} with Ardeth walked with Mary and Iiasing, eo, ‘and ‘her pale humble, Only Ken and herself} Ken, who had maneuvred to In response to his amazed with Ing} walk with Ardeth, behind] tion she answered in a pla 2 fame between thew. | the others and when thay had dis-| “I've Bren ‘here since a] cal as was showed is ,betfhce sn tarned to|fhy gi nia his’ arms Fe baa tee, ! i # i ? note from her voice. in cold faces, She knew the sweet| “V: gM oe UT Tas Pras hela in the room bebind ‘yen dasing. ©, Ake coud| son an the general store. A long wooden|see his ardent shining down | where tence, ested be 8 Seerel Sere |into hes exe: *: fire sweet-| nurse i £08 romans an ness you are. £208, Ener, bows] opened ‘Tom looked. down at her taway|you dancing with Yom.” Au hon, cond Erne |