The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1933, Page 4

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Bismarck Trib the nature of the game, it is one om Independent — which ts easy to “fix” if the particl- ;* ‘THE STATE'S OLDEST Pants are willing and there were oc- casions when many of them were willing. And so interest waned and crowds Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-|‘ropped off. No one knew who was tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as|the heavyweight wrestling champion . and no one cared a great deal after the great Frank Gotch retired from wali competition along about 1906. He Subscription Rates Payable in was, by the way, the last undisputed Advance champion of the world. It took Gus Sonnenburg and an im- 7.20 Pulsive wager to put wrestling back in the Hmelight. Sonnenburg, a famous football player, went with a friend to see a wrestling match and offered to bet that he could toss the winner. The Weekly by mail in state, three seccecccccccccceccvers 2.50] friend took him up and arranged the years ... . . ‘Weekly by mail outside of North ‘Weekly by mail in Canad YOAT cecessescesccecceees Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation 150 match. Gus took some wrestling les- sons, but when he got into the ring ++ 2.00/ he forgot all about that and reverted to the tactics of the gridiron. With a flying tackle he nailed his man, knocked the wind out of him and pinned him to the mat. A new sen- Mir aatesctiiod Pree tr exchisteely sation had been born and people entitled to the use for republication | flocked to see the pigskin toter stand of all news dispatches credited to/the puff and grunt experts on their ¢jears. Eventually this one “hold” and spontaneous origin published herein. |"0t much else carried Sonnenburg to All rights of republication of all other/a claim on the heavyweight cham- patter herein are also reserved. plonship. Others took up his tactics and the game became both faster and rougher. C It got to a point where hardly any- CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON |thing was barred, a sort of public mayhem, and the crowds liked it, In Doctor G. A. Rawlings the last few years wrestling shows Forty-nine years agé on Monday | have pulled larger gates than boxing of last week there arrived in Bis-|exhibitions in many metropolitan marck @ young man. He had come |Ccenters. This is the atmosphere behind the Ilinols for the purpose of establishing | Presentation here. Whatever else you ‘a wheat farm on the virgin prairie|may call it, the modern wrestling of this county. Any honest effort to} match is interesting. Meanwhile, it is not to be over- calls for but begets strength of char-| looked that wrestling has persisted as acter, The young man carried in his}® sport in the rural sections of the blood @ rich inheritance, accumulated|!and throughout all these years. through generations of pioneers who| Many of the smaller centers still have had in succession been helping to ex-|their local wrestling champions and tend the frontier farther and farther |50me hot matches are staged between westward and who had contributed to|this or that local champion. The their communities the men and|SPort lends itself to impromptu ex- women who have laid the foundation | hibitions since nothing is required in upon which has risen the United|the way of equipment. States of America. —_—$______. His first hand experience gained on the Dakota prairie not only tested but enriched that inheritance. Thus six years later, through his own un- daunted efforts, the young man was able to realize a cherished ambition to enter the University of Michigan. An unusual capacity to interpret and execute the intricate art of his pro- (N. ¥. World-Telegram) fessional work so impressed his uni-| The nation should learn from the versity associates that he was urged experience of the States in the matter to establish himself in one of the|° the so-called bank poner le ear! ears 0! Cc metropolitan centers of the Rast, but) croup of ‘Western and ‘Southwestern the flavor of the broad open spaces |States tried the “guarantee.” In each appealed more strongly and soon af-|case the trial failed. ter eration be otaran o Daa |, fae Ya Gi ne ab and began his practice in Bismarck.|The public was led to beleve that the Here he continued to practice for 40/state, with all its resources and all years. Seldom has it been the good /|its power of taxation, was behind the fortune of any community to enjoy|suarantee. As a matter of fact there was no so rich @ blessing of matchless Pro-|.arantee, in the common under- fessional service. standing of the term. There was a His philosophy of life and his pro-|protective fund, subscribed to by the fessional standards required that he Layee Plater oral poise pede a rey, not contribute and was in no way re-j lived simply, because he considered it sponsible as an administrator. @ high duty to conserve his mental] But because the fund was advertised and physical fitness so as to do well/as ay pec arleged ue Level cease: discriminate in matter the task at hand. Flay and the/or where it made its deposits. One sports were to him but @ means tO/nank looked as good as another, so achieve well-rounded professional|iong as the State seemed to be back life. See ees fo: dima. griviloge. (ot Ee = Pree es ult, any banker, ‘The completion af a difficult Job xined, honest or crooked. could ge meant only increased capacity for/nis share of the public's deposits. A performing a harder one. bank charter was much to be prized. ‘The legacy which he leaves consists | Politics entered into that. ‘Roo many not of @ vast accumulation of ma- banks remmien ene loose banking ices l. terial things, which the past few|Poro ‘rst failure was “bailed out” years have proved to be so elusive. |py the fund. And the second and the His memory will not be cherished|third. Each of the early failures becat pleasan' .|therefore favorably advertised the nay aya cent and con | “guarantee.” Tt worked. But the pi - higgeid fund was shrinking. Finally there great contribution is the deep, endur-| wasn’t any more. ing influence which will continue to} And the whole thing blew up, along inspire ional with the banks. erent Beeeren 2 Had the system not sailed under 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 Guarantee Misnomer n FR.-COM'ON IN, Tue warer’s Fine!” Sketches of the News 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 self-addressed envelope is enclosed. HOW THE BARONESS MUN- CHAUSEN DID IT Every five years or so the conduc- tor prints some mean little wisecrack here about a reducing joke... say reducing by putting some salts in your bath or by wearing a magic gar- ment or by having some esoteric mas- sage or electric or ray treatment that melts the fat and disposes of it while you read the funny paper. The bald assertion invariably brings a number of peppery letters, most of them more or less anonymous, The latest thrust in that direction brought a letter from a reader, and the yarn she spins wins for her the title above conferred. Incidentally, her narrative conveys & good health lesson if you can between the lines. sence of it: Dear Sir: Some time ago you made the statement that no reducing roll- ers etc. would really reduce flesh and you said only diet and exer- cise could do so safely and ef- fectively. Well, let me tell you my ex- perience. All diets failed. Even Dr. Brady's whole wheat, flax- seeds etc., and walking two miles a day, eating fruits and veget- ables etc. TI bought @ reducing roller hav- ing four rubber suction cups. . tummy and ch rolls, each having . I rolled my five minutes, also my hips, back, etc., five min- utes, night and morning, and finaly I rolled for twenty minutes night and morning. What is the result after two Need no diet, than ever, months? circulation better waist slender and curves in naturally, hips slender, complexion clear and pink, tient always on Pa- her toes, ready to jump over the moon. Right there was where the title of Baroness ane ncreie. io. tele sivice to false colors, had the general assump- thelr fellow men. tion that the State was not guarantor In these days of uncertainty, un-|not been allowed to grow up—had the tion out of a folder, what? There is more to come. The Bar- rest and disappointment, when people | Plan been called what it was, a bank- oness is just betting warmed up: ad of a State [One I er tried it oa her left ers’ protective fund instes are seemingly at a loas for standards Se ceerariae the ‘vicious misrep- of stability and worth, it is well tolresentation and the loose banking reflect on a life that has been so rich| which grew out of it would have been in all the things that make life worth | @voided. Now most of the present national while and that has mesnt so much to! Konosals involve the same general Such is the| formula that was tried by the States . heritage left by Doctor G. A. Raw-|—a fund subscribd to by the banks to but only up to Ghee the fund, ‘The responsibility for the guar- An Ancient Sport antee would run to that fund, not to the Revival by the American Legion in government. Bismarck of wrestling as a spectacle| In so far as such a plan is put forth calls to mind the fact that this is one upd dennsined 204 tapelias Rea of the oldest of all sports as well the|%s.% might be helpful. Dit it tte most universal. nomer of governmental guarantee it Probably the first cave man wres-|will be as dangerous as was the State system, and will come to the same pa- with his enemies when he could ond. wy A i i knee, that was painful. | getting stiff and all better nem, 50 Here is the es- conferred age when the lady's personality under- went the sudden change. From first person to third in a line. Sounds as though she were copying the descrip- taste, look or smell “qu eer (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) ‘The one redeeming feature of these new on relief to disabled by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and weitten in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. regulations ‘World War veterans is that the suf- ‘fering will be such that there will be Saws. 18 Twitching. 19 Suitable. 20 Evil. : 21 Accomplished. 23 Where ts the | Wonders of the World | | HORIZONTAL. Answer to Previous Puzsie 10ne of the. mM - “Great itt 40 Three (prefiz). 25 Measure of ~ 42 Dyewood tree. 55 speeded. cloth. 43 Lubricant. °° 26To help. 28 Poem. i | ‘ bel ail agre og He if & g ponent. Strauss, composer. clalty.) Morvay carries of cheese in his little shop with a big reputation in East 59th street, just off Fifth avenue. His clientele in- cludes 16 different nationalities and many socially prominent cheese con- ‘Strangely, this Hungarian got cheese start in Yonkers, N. ¥., where trrival in thi cperents ceitled UPOD | what your nationality, his delicates-|THE SHRINKING SHAW went to work "Wisdom often comes after week- ae sity Cummings. ‘We have always shown self-control. ‘We can remain perfectly calm despite the situation on every side—Ray- errermnnnen omen eonranacbien caiman WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1988 take in ly the various com- of a new work.—Richard eee No matter what the legislation, I myself do not drink anything with alcoholic content, but that is purely an individual thing—Mrs, Franklin D. Roosevelt. eae For their heroism in rescuing five members of the Navy jon: Hong which crashed into the sea while searching for survivors of the Police Commissioner Edward P. Mulrooney congratulates Sergeant Joseph Foraythe (center) and Patrolman Otto Kafka (right) who manned the rescue seaplane. His proud boest is that no matter sen will have something from home. st teens, Illustrating, he will show you smoked reindeer meat for the Eskimos; Riga fifties, with very little gray hair in his black head and the snap of youth in his dark eyes. He recommends as the ideal night-cap a limburger cheese and onion sandwich, on pumpernickel, with a big schooner of becr. es * ONE DEGREE BELOW Other unusual cheese include Swiss Finnish Gruyere, Danish SYNOPSIS And the family asked questions| some 2+. some day, in some pele ager fag tr ‘what Sat of poe rey gat sh a son fat 9 her opportunity for an operatic co-|did you rent? Is ite grand? Do| She tock to pitying girls whom reer to marry wealthy Ken Sargent. | you mind the heat? Is your work|she met in employment agencies, Ken’s parents had hoped their son|hard? How much do you get? Is|and lunch counters, and on the fessor frend meeee—nsecs |e a Aa ae ad pester cpa mop pin rpae the marriage annulled. The young) What could she tell them? ‘That/ thing, nobody ever loved her .. .” couple go housekeeping and are|she hadn't found work, and her|And she'd think of Ken, and her ideally happy. Then Ken loses his|money was oozing away, and she|heart would be warm until some- position and, one night, Lily Leujhadn’t rented a plane, and she|thing reminded her that if she hears him sobbing. Next day, Ken’s| hadn't gone to see Tolari, and she| didn’t get work pretty soon.... | father calls on Lily Low. He stuns | didn’t know a soul? «Two days in an office, address- her with the news that her marriage} She decided that it must have|ing envelopes. An odd day or two has been annulled, and gives her|been the heat that made her so ill|in department store, jerked from $500 and 2 railroad ticket to Newjon the train, and when she first|department to department, super- - York. Feeling that Ken ne lenger|came to New York. She felt quite| vised, questioned, advised ... sales- Pag ag Ser rier imei peaelrrrran deep rc eargano / voarearppamerucnegearns em- lew takes « furnished doesn’ ‘at once.|ployment secretaries, promises to reom, and searches for work. [Hegre rend ray comagermar| por yreear hypay rey od ggg Pe work when she was so ill—she had|couldn’t go on. She'd have to get ‘CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX | the piano job in the chop susy|something permanent... . ‘ The pare Place then, and now that she felt] She got it at last. Went to work ae 4 » the land-| "ll agata, she couldn't find work, |in a map and globe factory one hot ae ae press Anyway, they didn’t ask about| day in September, when the air was arn aimevs it juse|Ken. After her mother's first be-/heavy and damp, and she felt too vance. I knew wildered protest, and May’s “I-| discouraged and sick to care very, slipped your mind, so I thought P'd):<id-you-so,” and Beas’ indignant| much whether the hesitant forelady speak of it. « ; did T do right t0ltirade fall’ of veiled hints about| decided on her or not. cet (gg expecting | what she knew about the Sargents| It was piece-work. Painting, yep yey she | #24 could tell if she wished to, the/™eps with water-color paint. It wee surprised ... he incident was closed. ‘was interesting, when you took. Tas 1ot Feslized «- - time goes 20] There was no doubt about it, she| time to discover whether it was the i She paid the rent for snother| bed done the right thing to come ee month, You must have a place to| =*st- There would have been awk- you were doing. . .. Some days Lily live, even if you haven't enough to|wardness if she had stayed. at| ‘ou made only 80 or 90 cents. » ncbody’s ‘really hungry | home, oF gone back to Woodlake as ‘The forelady, a tall angular wo- ‘when it's 20 hot... . Perhaps there| be hed longed to in her fist des-| "as These, sarawny,, rattled neck Ti, honaas ples ie bat ahe P's made i asar forthe family, | Sol, swmed take dag tn bad enough, so dark and murty,|t® bave her gone, too, She could|mdemning Lily Lou’s work: with its damp, sonp-smelling lino-|P*8® her mother saying, proudly], \7ny 12 Smudeed—we can't use Joum covered halls’ ang the huge,|;: daring them to doubt ber, “Oh,| thet! Your blues are dirty—throw cold looking bathroom that reeked| {ily Lou is in New York studying |*45 ont! of lysol. now. We all felt that abe and Ken} Win’ would she do? What can + “I pride myself on keeping a| bag ps fms heen ON are Tnprofitable ‘o> tke gate Rem nor Oday 0a Sl Mant Gey ju ater nea” ane gee you like things nice, dear. Well ey want t aad told the girl who had the hall bed- ie Promise you I'm always ‘The Lansings were all proud, |toom upstairs, when they happened Lily Lou had not known that| rev'd pretend. | Ni would] tb,’ landing that evenings cleanliness could be so dismal, The |K20™, her mother's paios| a could eet you's tong that Manse Grampa s|Det father's smouldering hate for aan yen 8 Serapecacy job Mnoleum everyone who bore the name of|Dl@ving the piano for s children’s sluiced down every day with strong dancing school, It would pay so fui ler fy lek "Ty woe snd an thay ware Rac poe, zo fcr St smell of and dust, and lann.|clannish. Nobody, not even Bess,| 00°45 ink it pay pepe the time there were|evet made Dad feel that he was 37°" re ‘ fo carteins st the windows. Mrs.| ‘sum. clerking now and then inj, Ully Tou was elated. She Grampas, skits ‘planed "back tol Strate ts ansett Ri"fasin|tader her breath: Shed gv tat et show sagging cotton hose, _jall right. Make it permanent, . ‘They were even sweet to Uncle! My, late Mr. Gremues’ Mowers Wels, h, who kept nine whisk Ret i was Tocky to have met that ‘And when ‘the curtains went up|!® his chaps in the bare. And |arerae 17am she soemed to nov again they were as gray as.when|® if they could hold up their they came down. heads in spite of Uncle Zeph Pc doe’ esmananetag.” Mrs. Lily Lou began a humorous let-|024 all the wagging tongues of] the landlady oyu ter to Bess about it. She wrote a| Woodlake, manage to do ite ry te be ee Just page about ‘Mrs. Grampas and|£°F her, too, no dis-| © Pe ie Sho Nall, end I Kor “dearle” and “darting” and al SP00t; beving, your Toe ry Suipped lke bonsy. from her taght,| 0st people woulda’y think so... DEVE?” listen in, but the door was pale ia, Her “Don't mind my bash, Wy fd have to happend |" sce though; deat how f Ese dearie, I was ’ to sneak oe sere Se At this point she always stopped] co 000 © Sit! evt in wrong when she wave, but I thought 1d fost clean| Worrying about wok, and ber co-lit Woe only my dety'io tol eore™™ 20 ion homme, rte fem ab Bs SOs ETS «I wall I can't prove it or out she . appreciate it!” She smiled to her-|living when you're dead inside, . . «1 -Ud shat Shave good reason .gelf as she-wrote about the land-| To have to get ifs With-l That ees well se, ain't the sticky heat of summer and her| Never to in arms again,| angry color ris- fallen arches, Neves to stroke bis hate, Never t6]'"firs sure you meen to be Lind” » But ft did not sound funny when| kiss the faintly freckled opt on his|ahe srurmurcd, and whine shen roe st inane ee | wage ian hot neh sh Src eta the woman, Mr, | She tore up the letter, Thought, | lay over agein ber! «7 hope 1 don't do ‘wildly, “What can I write about? |brief sweet life him. ioe ithe Sa ae the funny places Tent?) Tva Little by little she forgot thal sr cg eniat ae ue is no peges the sutomats,|things she wanted to forget... .| nd ‘keon away fey aeeay uP the basement tearooms, and the |Pergy Sage ». that last scene with] fase crowd, bet bar and ber Couns tan Mane aceon taal Task ie vomaaen lasted. ‘The | ll -« » she's NOT’ nice gist” the Statne of Liberty” - vo Ulove thet had besa herp, and that! conrricm wi Ring Nssans Padins,toe, 2 “i _ — _ ——— - we man Edelweiss and Alsace Rahm /jget the cap and gown?” he answered ‘Munster. with dignity, ee Madam.” _* 8 ih ‘ ‘pa they

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