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applies his intelligence to the far corners of the world, new impetus is given to the development of resources | and, presumably, mankind is the bene- ficiary. It would be, if it knew how to distribute and use the good things} which are at its command. velopments frequently mean distress because of added competition for home-grown products or home-oper- ated enterprises. may some day have an important bear- ing on the American beef industry. The days of the old, open range are gone and it costs more now to pro- duce a hundred pounds of beef on the hoof than it did in the days when trail herds annually made the jour- ney from Texas to North Dakota and southern Canada. that of reindeer grazing in the north- ern reaches of the Canadian prov- imees. A herd of 2,300 reindeer has been purchased from an American corporation in Alaska and soon will arrive at the delta of Mackenzie river. supply meat and hides for the Indians living in that neighborhood and is ex- pected to flourish. Conditions are said to be very favorable to their de- velopment. The cost of a reindeer hide or carcass to the Indians will be the cost of catching it and killing it. ‘This will be practically nothing, since the reindeer is almost as much a domesticated animal as the horse. | President and Publisher. she has been near perfection. embargoes on the sale or delivery of for such action would not exist after March 4, @ bit by enthusiasm for Democracy and its successful candidate for the Presidency, but the statement con- tained the essense of a very import- ant fact. everything. It cannot cure situations which are too big and too widespread for any state legislature to cope with. Some jobs of correcting present con- ditions must be done by the national congress if they are to be done at all. fact in mind. ant and its obligations are heavy, but the whole weight of the world does not rest on the shoulders of state lawmakers. They have a right to re- || ject some problems as not coming within their purview and to pass them || on to the national lawmakers, for bet-| ter or for worse. There is no need to attempt moving a mountain with a crowbar, | tie —————— The Bismarck Tribune Ag Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST é NEWSPAPER \ @stablished 1873) ——<— Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as @econd class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year $7. Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) . Daily by mail per year outside Bismarck) ............ 5. Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ....... seeeeseseees ose 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years .......... 0.0, Seeeeeeens 2.50 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per.year ...........045 5 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .... A (in state Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation a 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 newspaper and also the local news of Spontaneous origin published herein, All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Fe incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON The Woman Sneaks For nearly 50 days Mrs. Mary H.j| Rathbun, Pembina county's woman / legislator, has sat in the house of representatives listening to discussions on many different subjects. During all of that time she has held her peace, kept her own coun- sel, intruded none of her thoughts on} her fellow lawmakers. As an audience But the other day the long silence was broken. She rose in her place to discuss the proposal to authorize North Dakota farm produce. Her remarks were brief and sim- ple. She is a farm woman, No one has more sympathy for the farmer's} plight than she, but why take a leap in the dark? And anyhow the need The remarks may have been tinged This legislature cannot do} The legislature should keep this Its duties are import- More Competition As man spreads his domination and But under the present order the de- | Such a development in the far north | The development in question is This herd is intended, primarily, to | farmers would be willing to cooperate this | ‘oreign Representatives ' SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER | chesty nimrod indeed, From there it spread rapidly until now for geese off the coast of Nova Scotia where thousands of these fine game birds are in the habit of wintering. Spoiler of our natural resources but even at his worst he can hardly rival debts is not considered.” chance to save their property and their lifetime savings.” | into debt. reach a total of more than $1,000,000,- 000. This is the largest total of farm mortgage indebtedness in any state of the union. Critics point out that Iowa is the most fertile large arca in the United States, world. Also that it has been under cultivation for generations, and that been able to sustain themselves with- out shouldering the enormous burden of debt. ers who are loaded down with mort- gages would admit they made mistakes years ago when they undertook to buy more acreage and put up what land they had as security. man told Mr. Skelley, he was able to carry the burden of his mortgage at the time it was negotiated. what came afterward that made things impossible for this farmer, and he is one of thousands in the state. Most of them could have paid out, or at least could have carried the burden of indebtedness, if their dollar, mean- ing the prices of their commodities, had retained its value. this time, the situation is one that must be handled as a condition, not a theory. Even if some farmers did that ,.‘Hon of the farmer's crop which goes . :> domestic consump- tion. It permits him to plant as much as he pleases but to receive the benefits of the allotment only on a portion. Carried over a period of years it would have the effect of educating the producer to what the surplus Means and might, at long last, in- duce him to abandon the fond hope of higher prices on a full crop. The argument that the acreage re- duction feature would be difficult to enforce has some merit but it is not an insuperable objection. A relative- ly easy manner for the federal gov- ernment to dispose of this question would be to subdivide the allotment into states, assigning each one a fair Proportion of the crop to be market- ed. The states could then subdivide this figure into counties and set up voluntary organizations to handle the matter. | There would be inequalities, of| course. There always are. But the to raise the price of thelr product. It would be a good deal easier than Participating in farm strikes and stmilar movements. And with a specified portion of the allotment assigned to each county we could be pretty sure that each man would get his share. No one would be backward about asking and the fellow who wanted too much would have a hard time getting away with it. A Poor Second So much has been said about the ravages made by sportsmen among our wild game that it is interesting to note a Canadian dispatch which re- cites that scarcity of eel grass in cer- tain sections along the Atlantic coast is seriously reducing the number of wild geese. ‘This used to be a goose - hunting State and many still alive can tell true stories of their slaughter by the wag- onload. Now, however, the North Da- kotan who bags a goose becomes a In the face of this inability of man to deplete their ranks comes the fact that thousands of geese are dying be- cause of the scarcity of a natural food. The disease which is apparently wiping out the eel grass first made its appearance along the Atlantic coast from Virginia to New Jersey. it has affected a great feeding ground Man may sometimes become a de~ mother nature in the pranks she plays upon her furred and feathered children. Editorial Comment Editorlals 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 polictes, What Iowa Farmers Want (Sioux City Journal) L. E. Skelley's dispatch in the Jour- nal from Des Moines describing what Iowa farmers in seeking moratoriums really want is believed to be typical of the great majority. Mr. Skelley wrote that “wholesale repudiation of What the farmers do demand is a “fighting Iowa farmers have been rather se- verely criticized for going so deeply Farm mortgages in Iowa Perhaps in all the the owners of the land should have No doubt a good many Iowa farm- But, as one It was So, as the whole thing is viewed at make mistakes, or even if all of them were in error, the unprecedented sit- uation is one from which they ought to be given a chance to emerge. If a Parent tells & child not to play near the river and the child makes the est, confidence at all. It would be about time for could not be restored {theless they do not suffer from de- h, Boy—It Won’t Be Long Now!” can find the bleeding spot and the bleeding with elec! 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, 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. put an end to the trouble. (Copyright, John F, Dille Co.) POOR TEETH IN HAWAII Recently some medical missional ies published a report of their ob- servations on the preservation of the teeth of the people in the community they served in Asia. The conclusion they drew from their experience is that a diet that includes plenty of fresh eggs, fresh raw milk, cheese, some fresh vegetables and fruits, to- gether with a mode of life that ex- poses the naked skin to direct sun- light, insures good sound teeth, bet- ter teeth by far than our funny Yankee notion about tooth brushing and all that nonsense has ever given the people of this country. Although the teeth of these Chinese are usually in what most Americans would call a foul condition, so that the examiner has to scrape away the debris in or- der to get down to the tooth, never- constrained to relinquish the theory of tooth decay or disintegration from some mouth or saliva acid, and to ascribe the decay of teeth to a deeper rause, or in other words “we believe the conditions presented (early decay of teeth) are of biologic significance and offer a new approach to the Problem ‘of dental decay.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pure Water IT am 7 years old. The water we have here in Oregon is snow water. ‘Will it be harmful if I use the iodin ration oftener than one month in three? I feel better when I am tak- ing it. (W. B. H.) Answer—Snow water is next only ‘@ fresh rain water in purity. Of coursé neither would contain any jodin, unless perchance a little blows over in vapor from the sea. In such a@ country I think you might well continue your iodin ration through- out most of the year. Plants in the House Geraniums and ferns growing in sun porch. Son sleeps there. Is there any harmful efefct from the growing plants in the sleeping room? (Mrs. R. N.C.) Answer—No, rather @ beneficial ef- \1 » for they evaporate some mois- ture which the air in any artificially heated room needs. losebleed My son has nosebleed frequently, sometimes when he picks his nose, but often if he merely blows it... C. EL) Answer—Usually the bleeding is from @ minute ulcer on the cartila- ginous septum a little way back in the nostril. Physician who treats JIG-SAW MAD vitation to a party. cay, caries, cavities. At the same time comes a report from Hawaii, which indicates that abundance of sunshine, cod liver oil and other factors which we believe essential to make good teeth do not rrevent rampant disintegration of the teeth of babies in Hawaii. The teeth of babies there, both native and white, are usually soft and chalky and are crumbling or disin- tegrating when first cut. Doctors Martha Jones, Nils Larsen and George Pritchard, (of philos- ophy, medicine and dental surgery respectively) have been investigating this striking prevalence of tooth de- cay in Honolulu for several years and their studies show that, contrary to an old belief of dentists, the decay of the teeth is well advanced before the infant cuts them. Formerly there was a dictum that unerupted teeth cannot decay. This theory of the immunity of the tooth crypt to decay prior to eruption was part of the smug notion, still fatuously cher- ished by many dentists, that a “clean day, for a small of the new jig-saw valentines. aes ON HIS KNEES their evenings at farget practice. Dart games are considered tooth never decays.” You see, as HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 10365 days, lag as the tooth is covered by the! 1Cactaceous NN gum tissues, neither the “acid” sa- Mexican plant, FLU NAb liva nor germs nor decomposing of 6 When a young ONG) 7 food particles can reach it to begin] ° man George (LIOLTMNC! their deadly work. But this quaint Waghington = {LIN theory of tooth decay is discarded was 8 profes: now, by all but the old timers who sional ——? still coast along on what they learned 13 Decorative _ when they were young and what they glean in support thereof from the “literature” so generously provided material laid. on, 14 Mover’s truck. by nostrum interests. 15 Center of an N age the ; enlenlitio knoxades we amphitheater, ISIE] N ‘ ve acqui late in relation to} 16One. RICHIE OIUle 1a io 32 To apportion tooth decay indicates that it is a| 17Inflextble ADUGIGIRIGIUIEIY CLOUT Ip pg 82 a question of nutrition mainly. There 19 A shower. : 63 What was the 34 Bellow’, 4 is no substantial evidence that any 20 Pecan. 40 A Chinese name ofthe 36 To take away. acid in the saliva or any acid prod- 21 Pertaining to dependency. army George 38 Perishes. uct of bacterial fermentation ig the 42 Den. 40 Point. © mouth is a factor. This theory of 44 Short sleep. 41 Also. some acid dissolving calcium or Phosphorus or something out of the tooth structure is the bunk, Profes- sor McCollum of vitamin fame to the cn, Our monograph “How to Have Sound Teeth” costs a dime. The Hawaiian investigators were —————_ FLAPPER FANNY SAYs: rat 45 Inlet. 43 Preferably. : 46 Digit of the foot. 45 Tatter. VERTICAL erto finish. 1 Home of Wash: 50 Fiat-hottomed, - ington. oat.” 2 Tedium. 24 Seventh note. 25 Bell sound. . . 26]Ages. <i 48 Meadow. 28\Nay. « “, 49 Either. 29|Substance that 50 Soft food. promotes 51 Sarcasm. 3 Slashed. Dutrefaction. 53 Street. + ,4 Pussy. 31 Stepped upon. ;54Excavated. ©, SYen 55 Constellation, 6Kind of 56 Simpleton. * starch. Toward, 582000 pounds. -7 To consolidate. 59 Half an em. 39 State of dis» 59 Eon. 8Go on (music). 60 Exclamattc organized 61 Manufactured. 9To fh. 62 To accom it. BL Form of steel, 52 Sweet potato, 54 To put on.” Bead dle eee re THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1988 himself on his knees in some Park|pen to have a great deal—Adolf |and has been piloting planes on the Avenue apartment playing fish-pond,| Hitler, new chancellor of the Ger- is. York-Cleveland division since sometimes for high stakes for the best/man Republic. 929. indoor Isaac Walton. xe ® . BH The pope's own beautiful frescoes,| There are about 125,000 dead ac- GARBO IN PORCELAIN the finest thing in the Vatican Pal-|counts in American savings banks to- Along with such entertainment,/ace, and a customs inspector art is undergoing a change, it seems.|them obscene. It's the funniest thing |e tnlor me Delieved to be secret You don’t have to have palette and/I ever heard of —Erhard Weyhe, New paint to be an artist these days. is doing portraits in aluminum, kitchen brushes, marshmallow arid chicken feathers. . He has the original idea that dif- ferent personalities call for widely varied materials to express them. For George Bernard Shaw’s famous mustaches he uses those little kitchen brushes that you clean out baby’ bottle with. And against the alu- minum that sculpts the face, there's no denying that they do express Shaw's polished, sharp, brilliant wit. Herbert Hoover he makes out of marshmallows. Chiffon and feath- ers were chosen for the mask of Pope Pius, the filmy silk and downy feathers creating an effect of spir- itual tenderness. Royalty to Wright, doesn’t neces- sarily mean ermine and crown jew- els. He does a handsome mask of King George V of British tweed! His most’ satisfactory achievement Probably, from the viewpoint of beauty is Garbo. He catches her mystery in porcelain for the face which does give you that pale sad- ness she has made famous and a sense of her fragile, unreal person- ality. Then for her hair he uses spun glass, which gives an eerie quality of moonlight and creates an York art connoisseur. ee # with shadows rewriting in the mode of Dickens, Thackery and Wilkie Col- lins—Norman Collins, London pub- Usher on England's literary trend. ——— | Barbs | ——-4 “Make people smile again,” is one of Bernard Baruch’s suggestions for combating the depression. Maybe somebody ought to hitch a horse to an automobile. eek Michigan's governor issued a proclamation to prevent banks from opening. In some states the governors might try procla- mations to prevent them from closing. e * * * Secretary Wilbur says the govern- ment has turned to science to solve the Indian problem. If the scien- tists can explain how 1000 acres in Manhattan are worth a pint of whisky, we'll buy a copy of their re- Port. * # The nation must have been pretty excited with a prize fighter killed and the president shot at in the same week. aura of magic about her appealing face. * RK The senate probably agrees that brevity is the scul of wit af- England is a musty museum filled ordinary nose and throat ailments stop ition or by cauterizing, heal the ulcer, and New York, Feb. 22~Sophisticated New York is jig-saw puzzle mad. The other day I got a formal looking en- velope which enclosed another en- velope out of which hurtled a collec- tion of odd-looking bits, of paste- board. Just because I had nothing to do for the moment, I began putting them together. The result was an in- For an evening's amusement, now- adays, you may run into a group of serious pegple all low over card tables, competing in the amount of time it takes them to work the identical jig- saw puzzle, The celebrated Professor John Dewey, who formerly used to take his relaxation in working cross- word puzzles, has transferred his fav- or to the popular jig-saw. Circulating Ubraries report a falling-off in rental they now rent jig-saw pussies by the ey now rent jig-saw les by consideration. Per- haps you know, or even sent for, some ‘This pre-occupation with games ex- tends into other fields as well. They tell me that 100,000 popguns and B-B guns have been sold in the past year, and @ majority to adults who spend sport for an evening's party on i ! ter hearing Huey Long. i * A New York “customs inspector was shocked at a photograph of one of | Michel Angelo's sacred” paintings. It} that had been a modern painting it | might have passed without question | —no customs inspector could under- | stand it. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) The theater is not married to Broadway. It existed and flourished in other cities when Broadway hardly went beyond Wall street, and it can continue to exist and flourish if it should decide to separate from Broadway.—Frank Gilmore, presi- dent of the Actors Equity. ok ok T cannot tell 65,000,000 Germans that they should be satisfied with nothing because 50,000 Germans hap- MILLIONTH MILE PASSED | Cleveland, O.—Warren D. Williams, pilot on a New York-Cleveland’ air line, has completed more than a mil- lion miles in the air without injury to @ passenger or letter. His first flight was made in 1916 as a member of the First Aero Squadron on the! Mexican expedition. He became an; air mail pilot after the World War/ NAME GIVEN *: Z or THIS PART OF — NAME THE JOCKE' A:‘STEP? — WHORODE 212 WIN- NERS IN 1932. / eerie over to cover her, own warm onc. \ “Ah, little don’t let it crush | glistened between hi ii the next day, when’ she 8 4 een her 07 ips. came into the Caprice and yon, it poner feild =a The first time Cecile had come th CHAPTER XXVI. sophistries with Cyril Un- ‘ARY EASTWOOD felt this derhill while her sharp little teeth to The Caprice since her marriage, Ardeth felt her heart contract as ‘i a a hot hand squeezed it. She bit her lower lip until the pain brought her back to herself. Had she imagined it—or had Cecile flung her a swift sidewise look of contemptuous triumph as she walked by into the Smokerie. Ardeth was grateful for the hesi- tation of the stout woman she was waiting upon. That fraction of time iets her a chance to crush back her heart. To put on her mask again before the world. Cecile rather ostentatiously went into pete’ for Ken’s mother. She knew the expensive black crepe and chiffons lent pretty em- phasis to her milky oval face, to the Naples yellow waves of her hair, It gave a touch of diablerie Yeet appreciatl nied ta Ent recial notice Under” shane “You are a seductive siren to- day,” he murmured, his black eyes brushing her face in bold walked directly over to Ardeth, who was checking stock in the back of, the store. Mary’s dark eyes were soft with 3 earare . ‘She put her arms ut Ardeth and kissed her. “Poor child... poor child . . .” Ardeth gently drew out of her embrace and turned back to her| ese things just got in. Aren’t, they lovely?” she nodded to the bar slave braeelet of silver and. matrix which lay on the table Fegehiok re a i waodies of riental silk with an intricate ivory f clasp; at the shell-back hand milvaas Skestureae mi happi- id ness in store for you. M capable white hands took i the gi face between them and zen cant now, f know 8 turns hen it a to are ona, really 1 doo —" about, Ardeth, leth—you know " j i The lovely face worked for a ane ze vase railed weakly away; ‘moment 3 “Of course,” she replied huskily. ings potley exe pean mare know- 5 e. s hands dropped and ¢ ‘ 3 clenched. “Oh, damn?’ she pers ‘Ken’s mother died this morn “This will pass, dear, know that you don’t feel tainment. And more than one digni- fied Wall Street banker has found | George Washington out between her teeth. “Life’s so} A bitter shiver went through| caress. “A beautiful bad spirit. unfair.” her heart. Her lips moved witty. You are La Belle Dame sans irl drew a long breath.| Courteously, “I’m yg Merci,” Retu to her checking. But ate ‘was not. ‘om’s words ad Onn, gray eyes narrowed were without m . cou ecile’s thin orange li A Real Friend not be sorry now. Not even for| curled enticingly. “But. any Neither spoke for a moment, than: atbert locking. co, Araeth herself. She was benumbed. of life had become meaningless All] one Gens you do not crave, said, was what you meant and she struggled to kee so.| Ah Ling, collecting © sq¢ about comforting me?” One should live on the surface of| saw the leo which a3 yet “Yes,” said Mary. things, tween them and the little maid’s The girl went on, a rush in her) Something she had read long| slanting eyes were scornful. Not by ike Poshos pts lonely te ago ae to her vee “Dig deep thus. dia Chinese brides behave. ways afraid of something. I think a D er ateand won E: te water. Dig deep into life and you come to tears.” a in the day im easy en a time to keep u the pretense to herself, She Blled every hour| had make. Christmas with work. She courted responsi-| happy for...Yet the day before bility. Going down to the import] as the walked the houses in search of curios. Inter-| colored shops pg had viewing drummers, Tri: win- turned Fs ~ and made her way. 5 ie le nt. She picked rary for books wi gut gal dees would give her the history of these] A cate! Sy ty for ran lovely exotic things w! found] for Paul. She ordered their way to Jeanette’s store. She/to the Fell street flat, was the down in the morning, It had been a sudden impulse the last to leave at night, The| but the act warmed store became her world. After that-she felt not But at night—when she had/ forlorn, She wi yy locked the front door and started] interest and bor a. frivolous her lonely way home— the/ little vanity-case for Ah Don’t you! mood had its way with her. Lit- her? She’ had been Old Reliable i tle thi tortured her, keeping the bc always ‘open—the sight Looking aby pa Corbett came into the 1 knew that it could never come true. From the very first it didn’t “Cecile no one Ardeth he? she— . nally Tove in ua “gy was dry. e Me ga ae enough Ardeth turned around. Leaned on the table, turning her piteous *cbut, why...why...without “She wasn’t blind, for all she pretended not to see or care how much he was with you. see, it was an affront to vain as the de 3 as Ken ublicly labeled i ho op accede. Be wae r. She poing to have another girl show fer up. And there was something else, too. The Ts arg new- as such things Fe. vg hat pracy goog Ken's mel = nged to aristocracy, Su count with Cecile.” was bitter emphasis to x ywness of the flower-stand at the corner where Ken had always waited for her. The sound of an auto horn, like the one on Ken's car. The glint of a man’s hair in the Win- ter sunhsine or the sound of a voice—these could make her heart nfull T leay % in a moment she would be torn by the hot fingers of jealousy so that she ran up the steep hill attempt to outtly her geet mn} out ef. Nights whan she walked aim-|this Jesaly’ into the early hours, hold- wet face up to the sky,|n Poeun gene armed SEAOREY $8) n08 Suh. aotrep. Crucified by|peals of laughter re. jus Tom| B i outtit” le gave a slight); od toward the Smokerle were Fes} sagem" tone Hy contemptuous: where But Ardeth shook Panic looked out of the Flv gangtle St oi Now that the prettier and| from their Eire cartons seen tn younger sister was married,|this Christmas ich she had once, genneiee fait the role san Plenned to spend with Ken! Oh, upon, ier Cecile in. the ‘part of Tet tee ound sae fal her head young matron filled her| said on the snow party, sister with a hel malice v . sh featned trun “het| on fgsien ine Thence a up dear,’ i Ai “joddenly tt lying in As though she suspected this light her, ie was le and took de! in Cecile hyd down at more than . nent often ever, He found of a bird with its rt L F ed, looking a Lai mot in the window. He ay indulgence at Je observations. Gossl; ‘a| bells ri over iping over boc beast teks with fonellanee AD Bc Fe-| (To Be Continued Tomorrew.)!