The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 20, 1933, Page 4

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e Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ' Published by The Bismarck Tribune beter: Bismarck, N. D., and en- at the postoffice at Bismarck as Second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5 Daily by ‘mail outside of North Dakota ........cccsseseseseeee 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1. ‘Weekly by mail in state, three FJOATS ..cccccscccescceesscseces 2 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ..........006+ 1 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per & Member of Audit Bureaa of Circulation ee Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively @ntitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this mewspaper 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 [America and the world. Those same (Incorporated) (CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ii Business Following Farmer One of the most unique suggestions yet made for improving business is that by the head of a large Amercan manufacturing concern to authorize the consolidation of groups within in- dustries, and of industries themselves, either by fiscal amalgamation or by cooperative agreement. The idea is based on the contention that unrestrained competition, as well as being the “life” of trade also can ‘be the death of trade; that cut-throat tactics have created a situation in which only a few strong firms will be able to survive in some industries, To meet this condition the author of the new scheme would let the pres- ent restraint-of-trade laws remain on the books and would license such in- dustries as wished to enter into com- binations. Income would be taxed in the usual manner and the books of Buch corporations would be audited annually by certified accountants ap- Proved by the government. Unregis- tered corporations would be permitted to conduct their affairs in the regu- Jar way and would pay no license fee. The admitted object of the plan is to make business profitable, the as- sertion being made that this would be of great benefit to both the people and the government, since unprofita- ble business pays little or no taxes and is a poor employer. That the suggestion will win im- mediate support is improbable. The distrust of industrial and commercial combination is pretty deeply ingrain- ed in the American public and this Proposal is one which has as its ad- mitted intention the elimination of competition with a consequent in- crease in prices. Yet it is, in essence, little different from the various plans to help the farmer by inducing him to curtail his Production. If industry has suffered once from competition, the farmer | has suffered a hundredfold. If it were not for the terrific Kansas wheat | crop a year ago, for example, the North Dakota farmer would not now be getting a card price of 30 cents for No. 1 dark northern. | The demand ‘from the farm for some sort of government regulation or assistance is not new. We have been laboring under present condi- tions for 10 years or more without im- provement of the situation. Now, however, corporation balance sheets have been appearing in red ink. The shoe is on the other foot and it pinches. The commercial blood transfusions by the R. F. C. have kept || the patient alive but have not re- invigorated him. Industry is as be- draggled as the farmer because it lacks || those things which give the farmer staying power in the face of adversity. ‘The call for “industrial relief” is be- ginning to be raised in the same man- ner and for the same reasons that “farm relief” has been demanded. From the standpoint of a farming community such as ours, there is something significant about this pro- posal, isolated’ though it be at the Present. It shows a weakening of in- dustry’s adherence to the old order of “dog-eat-dog” which we have known since the nation was born. It Points to a more sympathetic atti- tude toward the farmer's problem, which has been clearly one of too much competition. Also, it has a broader national sig- nificance. With means to produce untold wealth listed in our national assets, we are not producing it. The Present system has been unable, as yet, to adjust itself. Industry as well as the farmer is beginning to look with friendly eye upon a so-called “managed economy” which would make the government supreme in whatever business fields came under its jurisdiction. North Dakota Is 0. K. With the optimism characteristic of the west, North Dakota will tell the world, through license tags on its au- tomobiles, that she is “OK” if the bill approved by the senate passes the house. It is impossible to see how the pro- ‘Posal will do any harm and the slo- gan may have some advertising value. ‘he only objection to the measure 00) used in 21. In 22 states and the Dis-|. 50/ it on the right side and two on the that it makes the license tags a little read at a glance. In adopting a state slogan, how- ever, North Dakota would by no means be a pioneer, five states hav- ing had symbols or slogans on their license tags in 1932. Louisiana has a Pelican, Montana an outline of the state. Pennsylvania a keystone, South Carolina offers a lirie reading “The fodone products state,” and Texas has a lone star, Current tags carry the names of 27 states in full while abbreviations are trict of Columbia the name of the state is shown at the bottom; 22 states have the name at the top; seven have left side. Little Man Pictures of Guiseppe Zangara, wrapped only in a towel and pinioned by two burly officers of the law, indi- cate that the man is rather an in- significant human specimen. Granted that he could not be expected to look his best, it is certain that he would hardly be selected as a man of mark- ed physical or mental ability under any circumstances, Yet this individual fired shots which have reverberated through shots might have wrought a major disaster to this nation, in view of the rather touchy condition of affairs. Because of a twisted brain and the Possession of a gun, Guiseppe Zangara came close to changing the course of some rather important history. The American Nation has chosen Frank- lin D. Roosevelt to lead it during the next four years in hopes that he will] __ find a way out of the morass which has impeded progress. Had Zangara’s aim been better, that selection of the people would have been nullified. An- other would have had to take his There is no universal preventive for twisted brains or the possession of revolvers but there could be no better evidence that they are a bad combination. Canning in Vogue Hydrocyanic (prussic) acid is a no-|had taken about 15 grains of potassi- Believe it or not, but the “good old ae Urea a re eee batted ein awe oar roreneninto ees his ” i1s | ate far less spectacular fact in | friends al ‘was brought into the days” when mother and the giils they are in legend and fiction. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. place. 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 instruc- tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. A NEW ANTIDOTE FOR CYANIDE |lessness the authorities never learned. A few months later a young man who In| hospital unconscious, with slow shal- canned enough garden “sass” to last fiction this poison makes a neat|low respirations, feeble pulse, vermi- through the winter are with us again | enough job of Old Skinner Churl and | lion lips, etc. This patient received and the standard of the work they do | Provides a chapter or two of creepy an injection of 50 cc. of 1 per cent is higher than ever. girls. The claim is made that the cause of improved methods and equip- dream of any woman 20 years ago. come of $831 from this source in 1932. reducing their household expenses. Nor is the canning season limited servation of fruits and vegetables. Editorial Comment | trend of thought by other editors. | They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. The Farmer (From “The American Boy”) industrial workers depended for em- unpopular. growing just outside the library window, and crush some of the leaves and arrange them sentl- Incidentally, according to this sur- | mentally about the serene old boy vey, some of the girls who enter these ae petcene coroner arrives. cone titi ranted to fool everybody except your competitions make more money than own copyrighted criminologist, who do their fathers in the operation of casually notices and labels all the an entire farm under current condi-| exotic plants about the premises as for Bran Gems, and it was a gem, for tions. Waneta Guthrie, 15-year-old {he rolls up the winding drive from the |i ntrul, But when w d I mis. . | avenue to the forbidding bronze doors aoe ley py aati champion of Kansas, reported an in. of Churl Hall. ae Sas REA A Potassium cyanid is eon meee ne Sheppard of Alabama, 17 years/in metal polishing and p! i, wi old, paid her own high school ex- Jewelers employe it with atte concern | ne cupful of sweet milk. Add a piece about its poisonous character. Penses and sent enough canned goods Hydrocyanic acid gas or vapor to her brother and sister in college tO | heen used as @ fumigant for dt materially reduce their living ex- | ing vermin, especially rats in the man, penses. The champion of Michigan | of ships and bedbugs and other pests donated a vast quantity of material Hy Bouse. Pb soepe aan Pessoal to the poor and taught many women |for this use in human habitations, |G@ndruff again. Since I began using to can on @ “budget” plan, thereby | though it is still advantageously em-|it my coat collar is clean. Lost part ployed for the extermination of rats in the holds of ships under the rigid ontrol of th nit author- to the summer and fall or to the pre- ities, Ot the Reet enter: Hitherto there has been no very ef- Many a North Dakota farm woman | fective antidote for hydrocyanic pol- ry has been busy this winter canning | Sohing. If the dose is a fatal one death ensues in from one to 49 min- sausage, other pork products and beef | utes, If the victim survives as long against a demand for them next sum- | as one hour the chances are good for mer. complete recovery. The effects of the poison are speedy, but if recovery fol- i lows the symptoms abate as rapidly as they came on. | Ordinary hydrogen peconids one 7 |] antidote for prussic a or for cy- | Editorials printed below show the || Snit00\8 isoning—a. tablespoonful oF two of the pure peroxide given in a little water as quickly as possible. - || Recently two traffic officers in San oy Sa —_ == | Francisco took a drink of liquor with the manager of an office building in U.S. A. his office, Within 15 minutes all three collapsed and lost consciousness and Consider the American farmer. In| were hurried to hospital. All were 1919, at the peak of our agricultural | given artificial respiration and other production, there were 6,500,000 of |emergency remedies, but all died, one him, supporting a total farm popula- in 10 minutes, another in five es tion’ of 31,500,000. One-half of our/Utes. the third after more than hours. In the locker of the office business catching the butler in the |solution of methylene blue in water. ims pete) from |*°t of burying a paper of crumbled |He recovered in 15 mtautes. tet this fact comes from) peach pits, but in fact the tell-tale! Methylene blue is a familiar old dye, the group which supervises the an-jodor of bitter almonds that hangs|but a novel antidote for cyanide poi- nual national competition of 4-H club |®bout the corpes renders this poison | soning. : Notwithstanding ears: jatility of hydrogen cynaid or ro= modern woman produces foods of | cyanic acid its presence has been de- uniformly higher grade and palata-]| tected in the body two months after bility than formerly was the case be- | 4eath—sorry if this gums the plot of @ germinating mystery story. It is still a simple matter for a facile au- ment, worked out by scientific study.!thor to get around the difficulty. Very frequently the modern kitchen|Have a cherry-laurel tree (PrunuS|necota, The “clinic” is in Missouri: has utensils and devices beyond the | Laurocerasus) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A Long Step Downward Please tell me your estimation of Clinic and where they rank in the treatment of rectal dis- (A, M, E.) Answer—A. M. E. writes from Min- In my judgment hundreds of phy- siclans and scores of hospitals or other institutions for the treatment of the sick in Minnesota will give the best treatment available. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1933 Pe film houses of the big street. Runs more complicated and may make the | A Few Additions to the Original Monument are shorter tnd. competion” weekly {aplan license numbers a little harder to grows keener. At least three compa- lof it and druggist thought he could guess, but I said No. (C. H. K.) Answer—Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for in- structions fér Care of Hair and con- trol of dandruff. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) DON'T YOU REMEMBER? New York, Feb. 20—When they clamped the doors on the Rialto The- ater, which adjoins “the crossroads of the world,” old-timers began to hark back to the time when this was Ham- mersetein’s Victoria. 2000 persons—imagine! for fifty cents. The Victoria was They Hold the Hired Man Several years ago you gave a recipe I used it and we found the gems de- laid it... (Mrs, B. L.) |, Answer—Mix one cupful of white flour, one cupful of wheat bran and of butter the size of a walnut, melted. has | One egg, well beaten. A pinch of salt. A teaspoonful of baking powder. Bake hold |!" gem tins. Hide ‘em from the hired Dandruff Better Please give me the prescriptions for rurnish manager several bottles of whiskey 32 Relieves... 60 Portrait Pee Ome sae aod were found, one containing # large 36 Skating hall. statue. ing power was $16,000,000,000, and he amount of sodium cyanide. Whether 37 Augurs. 61 Uneven. used this vast sum to buy in |the cases were murder and suicide or] 29Tokillasa 62 Drive. products and 60 to keep turning the | accidental poisorling by error or care- fly. 63 Naked. wi of American He a FLAPPER F, Y SA ier at circle. 64 Toothlike the man who made America, for ‘LAP! ANN ing e notches. George Wi 3 time yp ae ‘REO. U. 8. PAT. OFF. YS: one of 65 Entreaty. our ‘was engaged ° ings. cultural activities. Yet trom 1990 on, 43 Frozen water, VERTICAL the farmer has grown poorer and 44 Hatter’s 1 Brought up. his farm and became a renter. | all this while America was ris-| to meet the greatest boom of its this while America was | e i Wise men, such as Owen D. Young, see in the impoverishment of | . a of healthy, self-respecting, comfortable farming group this country will find itself standing on one leg. "Mert girls dont ike square meals | because they make them round. key musical spot as well.and the the- Hammerstein houses and pay off such songbirds as Tetrazzini, Mary Garden and Melba. Paramount took the house about ten years ago, and Paramount-Publix went into receivership. The Rialto shut down and the fate of the Cri- terion, something of a showroom for Paramount's - et is uncertain. PLENTY OF WOES The Broadway wise gents will tell you that receivership or no receiver- ship, there are not enough good pic- tures coming out to feed the hungry cy | Borgia Pope | eT | HORIZONTAL’ Answer to Previous Pussle 26 Second .note. 1Thin nail. i 27 Constellation 5 Serf. Cancer. 10 Armadillo. 28 Irish tribal 14Part ina society. see 29 Indian tribe. 16 Back of neck. 30 Electrified 17 To level. particle. 18Center of 31 Mesh of lace. amphitheater. 33 To set up taut 19 War flyers. 34 Every. 20 To opine. 35 Let it stand. 21 Source of AIN } 37 Scolded. Sit IR a governmental 38 Tennis game, income. mallet. 2To wander with two 22 Birds’ home. 46,Cipher. about. players. 23 Onager. 48 Pile. 3Qpposite of 41 Driving 25 Silkworm, 50 Embryo birds. _aweather. command. . 27City near the 51 Fairy. 4 Where is 42 Wooden tooth «Nile. 54Sum. Copenhagen 45 Yours. 30 Wayside hotel. 56 One. 5 Gaiters. 47 To arrogate. 6 Monstory unit 49 Tiny opening of Italy. $n_skii 7 Famous Borgia 50 rea Pope, —— VI? 51 Peg. 8 Weathercock. 52 Small 9To rub out. 53 Wand. 10 A famous liar. 55 2000 pounds. 11Step. - 57 Nothing. 12 Imitates. 58 Fish. 13 Slumber. 59 English 24 Therefore. beverage. Other oldsters scratched their heads and recalled the time when Roxy stepped into the Broadway picture through his successful management ;of a theater which actually seated The first reminiscers remembered that the hey-day of the original Ham- merstein house was associated with a bar in the theater. Then there were fourteen acts of the best vaudeville ater was then sufficiently prosperous to support a couple of other thing else again. 2% ® BEER AND THE WENDELS And I am told that the proposed | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) IT was rather afraid of shaking | hands with him (Jack Dempsey). 1 .|was afraid he might crush my fing- ers; but he didn’t—that is, not exact- Cheaper grade productions or at|ly—Sergei Rachmaninoff, noted Rus- least $3 or $4 per seat over a period of several weeks are alternatives as recited by the more pessimistic prophe: * # # ENTERTAINING CHARITY Meanwhile the recent incorporation of the Actors’ Dinner Club adds a sigh to the many already caused by topical conditions. This very busi- ness-like procedure indicates that the important stage personages operating this charitable enterprise place an in- definite time upon relief; they imply @ far-off future for general employ- ment of players in general. ‘Their own career has been spotty, thanks to uncertain leases. Begin- ning in a Broadway basement, with Selena Boyd, Bessie Beatty, Rachel Crothers and other stage figures in charge, they were forced to move by the rental of their quarters; took harbor in Forty-second street and seem to have found a permanent home in the old Great Northern Hotel in 57th street. This, by the way, is one spot I would advise visitors to peep in on. At $1 per chance to sit down and eat well, the visitor is certain of the presence of many Broadway celebrities. At the same time 50 cents of each dollar sian pianist, upon meeting the former heavyweight oe champion. * Man was put on earth for the di- vine purpose of reproducing his kind and we have no right to take God’s law into our hands—John F. Ryan, Indiana state representative, opposing bill for sterilization of criminals. zee If you appeal to the base feelings of anyone you can always get a hearty and full response—Mr. G, Buchanan, member of British parliament. ee & ‘We should get nowhere in science or engineering if problems were han- dled in the manner in which economic Problems have always been handled. — H. C. Dickinson, president of the So- ‘icety of ae meg Engineers. * * When overproduction has broughi on us a tremendous economic crisis, isn’t it hypocritical to thank God for the abundance?—The Rev. Charles Francis Potter, New York clergyman and author. One Chinese army compels its sol- diers to be thrifty. Ten per cent of the rate of pay must be saved) monthly, and none is exempt. spent goes to feed some jobless the- | | } | WuAt 1S THE NAME GIVEN THESE ANIMALS 2 WHAT HAS HAPPENED BEFORE. Ardeth Carroll has ci wealthy Jeanette Parker. Jeanette's sister, Cecile, and they fall in love. Their marriage is revented by Ken’s mother’s wish that he marry Cecile. When Ken ‘ails to keep an appointment with Ardeth, Tom Corbett takes her to Ken and Cecile. Later Ken tells Ardeth fear dinner. They meet to attend Cecile’s party. at his mountain cabin. Mary fying him of his mother’ must see her. CHAPTER XXIV. speaking voice, “now we can mustn’t To tell you—to tell you ing to. marry Cecile.” stunned animal, He drew in whistling sigh. ‘omo! in St. tthew’s Church. church my mother was marri “On.” n, sharp! mews sunk in. “Oh!” She face pressed »..” His hu lown on Madness bursti like a flash of red light. \of defiance, her wi fly smothered against his lips. ™ “No! You can’t! You're mine. Z i Gently Wi the thrust her away, holding her chands this own, ‘tense, unnatural voice. H Her Last Wish. one thing. That I Cecile. What can I do?” No answer but her torn sobs. After a moment he tk poe bad ee af a little, broken cry. already given her up in ff thi jialty sho; ed ie rmeets ‘Kon Clessoe, Hance ot of disappointing his mother, whose days are numbe: ‘Tom invites Ken and Ardeth to a party Tom, warning her of impending disaster where Ken is concerned. Tom and a Pied one another iio qrhwainis on epee Tom ori to leth. Ken's proposal is interrupt: a telegram not A illness. Ardeth i filled with fore. boding. Ken feels the net closing when his mother calls Cecile and him to her bedside. Late one night he phones Ardeth that he NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. small, dark park suddenly A loomed in their path. Ken swung the machine into the|his face in her hair so that hi drive. The headlights gleamed on] Vice came muffled. glossy shrubs, seeming a theatrical green in the glare. Then blackness eee ute rushed about them as he stopped belo the engine and snapped off the|@¥ing! What can I do?” current. The watching girl could barely make out his face by the he turned to her, ‘She sat as still as some small, |—0—Ken wet che against wet cheek. 2 bees in. S Toeaeed by her love. rol weave of his overcoat. Dreadful mane, Tents torn out of ‘ered against hair le ou. I plied off her hat, pressed his face i out.” in her brain hind them. itched his face down in an eaten (vet come Be? sem in Naren he ome a in a forlorn little asks marry leason, fiance of red, forced him urges Ardeth to encourage “Ken! Don’t let me go! Ken! I love you so!” He snatched her to him. Buried “What can | do? God, what fpiaeecd than love you. We long to each other! but—she’s She heard a small voice whis} ing—a small, tired voice, which she did not recognize as her own. “I think I'll die, too. I don’t want to live without you.” Touched: pment with frantic e comforter. ing! darling, don’t! No Pressing him Ey in her arms, a few moments Ken got control of himself. His chest rose pee i arted the engine, mov- low! e @ vel man. wt the sound of the motor alit- tle moan broke from Ardeth. “Oh, no!” This couldn’t be the ones Ay tired, “Must, voice was ve! “Mu: dear. I don’t face cag away an’ y ied| in.” He was painfull: is in a long sigh. Gently he put her 4 Then, sharply as the | aside an . She could feel his body shaking. | “! i in that new tight| she put up a hand and touched iis talk. But we} face. It was wet. ja oy coger tag eee ack. to see you, though. | _.,, I’m go- By bad became noises of pain. Oh, it wasn’t pos- sible that Ken was really lost to her! Such things didn’t happen A a end It was like ree cet old plays of long ago — like those sentimental novels she had found ay cord at cha th — ses — oh, people In” make them any more! Oh, they couldn’t! Cheeks hot. Heart pumpin . The light in the room suddenly bearable. She reached over, the dark, bowed over, hands ground hard against her _ to keep from bursting into 80) Later she got up and pulled off her clothes, moving as slowly as Ken had done at the last. She got into bed. |____Beokewhenrted. | Grief, suddenly tearing at her throat, so that she flattened her face in the wet pillow lest the bere Wild anger’ shock, through er. © shoo! her like a hot wind, murderous anger at Cecile. At the dying woman who was 58! away her happiness. Even at Ken himself, that he should give her Pies very intensity wore it out. Followed a period of dreary calm when it seemed the heart within her had died. She had died. Ken had died. Dead hinge moving through a dead world. There wou! never be anything but this hopeless ache in her heart . . . eriods when she lost herself in dreams as depressing as reality. Swimming up through reeling blackness to face memory. She lay flat, her face upturned to the back room, stupidly whis- “Ken... Ken. . .” ‘ears rolled out of the outer cor- ners of her eyes. Trickled into her ears, wet her hair, so that she rolled her head restless!; low, .. I shouldn't tne longer. She's so have left at all—but I had to see uldn’t let you... just The dark little park dropping be- : tele park dropping now... just a little while and id yenld be hal ie hee ieeerer wa: Deside him like, this, i was like ‘al the end draw pg : She was cryi , slumped that gf For a felt the insane im- to swing the car down Van toward the dark bay. jess—down wgAite pe bars ont, To drive off the wharf—a toppling this over hall today—all to- fe, than lite ‘apart perhaps. 1] Here—pull himself wae It’s | it harder for her. : aE i eG ie ae Ee dies He 22k fe F ill a | Her fr see H F it ist i & F mE - 4 ES F' She could not believe it. This é adtul dream which would pos Toh it couldn't be] a true *| Ardeth asked The hateful morning was here at last. She whispered, “Today . . . Ken will be married...” "More dreadful to face it in this rainy, light than it had been last night. Rain, drip-dripping on the roofs outside with the sound of heavy “*Avould it always be like this? ‘oul always be like herself pieeesty, Would this raw pain in her heart ever slow to a dull ache? When she was old—as old as Aunt Stel, say—would all of this have receded so it didn’t matter? When she was old—but how could she live to grow old with this grief pressing on her heart? If Ken’s mother should die— sul she were dead now—what Re sulew i secre a A she were no longer here urt at his refusal, Ken wouldn’t have ts i

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