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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper Vi THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N, D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck a8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and.Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Pr Daily by carrier, per year ... Daily by mail per year (in marck) Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ Daily by mail outside of “North Weekly by mail in state, per year at 00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years . ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. . A ‘Weekly by mail in Canad per year seve 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation 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. Little Untouched AS congress prepared to end the labors of its special session, it is clear that the last few months will go down in history as more important than any similar period of time in our leg- islative history. How the devices and methods adopted by the lawmakers at the in- sistence of the president will work cut remains to be seen. One com- mentator remarked recently that the executive has been so busy getting congress to grant him new powers he has had little opportunity to use those he has, but this criticism, if it ever was justified, will hardly hold true after the next few days. ‘With the national legislators on 00| powerless to adapt themselves to the cannot be changed,” he said. have built their lives on a plan evolved when they were in their 20s, When they come face to face with a changing social order, such as we are facing today, they are helpless. They must Jean upon the younger gen- eration. “The men of my generation re- ceived their training in the '90s. Suc- cess in those days meant following the example of certain great men. The great men were millionaires, “Where have our examples gone to- day? Many of them have lost their fortunes, their positions. They are new order in which the millionaire has vanished as an ideal.” “They 2.50) set of ideals are urgently required in That a new viewpoint and a new the present time of change is indis- putable. We shall have to evolve them as we go along, for the most part, and before we get through a good many of us of the older genera- tion are likely to find ourselves pretty badly confused; but all in all it should be a time of great hope and great opportunity, For we are not simply engaged in getting the wheels moving again and starting people back to work. To do those things it is necessary for us to re-orlent ourselves completely, to find, as Dean Gauss says, new leaders and new standards, The job will take a generation or more; but it will prove one of the most worthwhile jobs we have ever tackled, Change in Thinking How our manner of thinking has changed is demonstrated by the ap- parent reaction to testimony that the Van Sweringen brothers built a rail- road empire from a shoestring of a mere million dollars. The inference is that this sort of financial manipu- lation is wrong. Whether it is or not is beside the point. The significant thing is that only yesterday men who were able to do this were national heroes. They may be so again tomorrow. But to- the way home, the president will have opportunity to devote his whole time to the tasks of administration. What his new powers are may easily be seen by taking a bird’s eye view of the laws which already have been passed. Most important from the stand- point of North Dakota is the farm bill with its authority to adopt price- raising measures and its refinance section. Tied in with this is wider control of the currency than has ever before ‘been granted to the executive branch of the government and authority to issue either bonds or notes to over- come the processes of deflation. Second in importance is the public works-industrial control bill. It, along with the taxing and control “features of the farm measure, puts Practically every business enterprise under government supervision. WELL, DEAR— WHAT DO SOU SAY WE GO FOR A DRIVE IN THE COUNTRY? self-addressed envelope is enclosed. day they are culprits whose opera- tions are inimical to the common weal. Apparently the Van Sweringens did nothing wrong on the basis of pres- ent laws and the standard concepts of what is fair in business. They merely borrowed money and used it. The real question is whether the peo- Ple want to put an end to the system which makes this sort of develop- ment possible. If they really wish to do so they can, If they are merely venting a little of the spleen stored up during the last few years we shall have much calling of names and a large volume of oratory, but the old conditions will continue to prevail. Twenty Years After It is interesting to notice that Sam- uel Untermeyer, who was counsel to the Pujo committee in !ts investiga- tion into the “money trust” in 1912, The home-refinancing bili will do for urban home owners what the farm bill is intended to do for agri- culture. The railroad bill specifical- ly applies to that industry alone and is regarded as a temporary venture to be supplemented by additional and more permanent legislation| fllates of national banks, interlock- Jater. ing directorates, private banks as de- The financial, farm and industrial] PoSitories and contacts of other banks control measures have committed this| With the Morgans through under- country to @ pioneering venture in| Writings and other privileges. social and political organization] The committee at the time made a which is unique in the history of the] Series of recommendations designed to world. end these evils. For one reason or The professed aims are all good,| another congress failed to act on but then that is true of nearly every/them. Hence today’s investigation Piece of legislation ever offered any-| covers much of the old ground, and where, The means chosen to achieve| shocks us anew with disclosures that the ends are, in some instances, dis-| are really two decades old. tasteful to many individuals. They] There is a moral in that for the constitute weapons which can be used| present congress. Let it not, through for ill as well as for good and there-| inaction, make it necessary for a new in lies the danger of this whole Morgan investigation to be held in Bigantic experiment. Unfair use of| 1953, —the powers granted to the executive eee branch of the government could| As an optimist consider the dande- wreck industry, destroy business and| lion digger. make political liberty practically a joke. In granting these powers, congress has swung far over from its tradi- tional position. Under the stress of emergency, it has granted authority similar to that given to Cincinnatus when the Romans called him from the plow to take’ charge in time of Peril. But whatever the outcome, we are committed to this venture. We all hope that a national reinvigoration will result from the changes made, that freedom from care and new op- portunity will be opened to every- ene, These are dreams which the world has held for ages and toward which it has progressed more or less steadily for thousands of years. since their ons In effect we are going to try to] statistical DRE Eh ee live under a commercial and in- giving the average increase as forty- dustrial autocracy, yet, at the same| two points. Another forty points and time, keep the freedom and privileges they will have reached 1927 levels. which are the blessings of Democracy.| noun Akon ree ar ans We ee Ported running cl eae pried Every citizen of the United States| peaks, electric Tefrigerator Plants ag well es of the world will watch| doing the same, and the Detroit plant the experiment with interest. fe adlens Steel has given it out that shipped more steel during one week History probably will show that this| ject sopetn than during any one week session of congress has touched more| in 1929. lives in more direct ways than any atte are only a few picked at ran- which has ever before gathered to-| ‘om, but they are worth the atten- tion’ of those who are still asking: Sether in time of peace. “Ave there any algns of improvement in business?” The Task Before the New Four doctors are engaged in aerial Generation - | medical work in the interior of Aus- The era that is beginning these ral. ey re Pomesionde Bae days is to be a great time for young of les from a town when Ld “hag fo ded bie called by telephone or telegram. of Princeton. Getting us out of the mess we are in now will be, ulti- mately, the job of the younger gen- eration, he says, Dean Gauss expressed this view- charges that most of the abuses re- vealed by the current Morgan inquiry were laid bare by his committee 20 years ago, The Pujo report, Mr. Untermeyer Points out, condemned security af- 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, Signs That Cheer (Duluth Herald) _ The average increase in the price of all farm products during the last month is about seventeen per cent, aecording to government figures. Wool in some parts of the Northwest brings twenty-two cents a pound Compared with six cents a year ago, and wheat is twenty-five cents a bushel higher than it was a few weeks ago. Many stocks have nearly doubled A pair of rats could invite over 20,000,000 descendants or nine gener- ations to their golden wedding anni- versary. The Seri Indians of Tiburon Island Address Dr. William Brady, 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 wriften in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper. PATIENTS DO NOT DIE OF AP- PENDICITIS IN ENGLAND A motion “That in every case of acute appendicitis immediate opera- tion is indicated” was recently de- bated by the Royal Society of Medi- cine and later by Fellowship of Medi- cine and Postgraduate Association, cal bodies appear to have disagreed, after the traditional manner of the ‘ession. The weight of opinion appears to be evenly divided upon the question of immediate operation in all cases. In some cases it is good judgment on the part of the surgeon to wait a bit, think. These cases, where some ot the best doctors deem it wise to wait, constitute perhaps 2 or 3 per cent ot all the acute cases of appendicitis— so don’t bank on cheating the surgeon out of his opportunity if you come down with an all-wool yard-wide hellyache tomorrow. All the English surgeons and physi- cians seem to be in accord about the wisdom of immediate operation in every case of acute appendicitis in a young child. With older persons it may be a fair gamble to wait a few hours or even a few days; with a child it is not fair to take such a chance, for the changes that happen in such illness in the very young are too sud- den and the effect too disastrous. 1 know something of the pain a parent suffers when a child is in this plight; I know, too, that good, prompt Amer- ican surgery assauges that pain as nothing else can. Lord Moynihan, famous British sur- geon, pulled off one of his aphorisms— wisecracks, as we call ‘em here. Pa- tients never die of appendicitis, he said; they die of its treatment. Now wait a moment, It is vitally important for you to get the drift of this Dr. Robert T. Morris of English has equalized the circulation and in- medicine. He isn’t throwing any bricks at the bunglying work of Eng- lish surgeons. Not he. Moynihan is one of them. What he means is that aperients are fatal in acute appendi- citis. Aperients? Oh, you know the Eng- lish have their affections. Aperients are laxative or cathartic agents— medicines, mineral waters, foods. So that’s what Mr, Moynihan—hic- scuse me, his lordship means. Indeed he went right on to say that he had never seen a gangrenous perforated appendix (which, I assure you, chil- dren, is far worse than it sounds) where an aperient was not the cause (of the perforation or rupture and the dire consequences of this even- tuality). No danger would ensue from expectant treatment (that means watchful waiting) if aperients were withheld and if nothing whatever— Particularly water — was given by mouth. A single drop of water, averrea Lord Moynihan, causes intense activ- ity of the alimentary tract in the ap- pendix region, And that’s a pretty good thing to re- member: Where there is even @ sus- icion of acute appendicitis let notn- mg be given by mouth. External heat, and both representative English medi-|°* Physick, no food, no water, at least till the doctor comes, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Nature Is Kind {am 22 years old. Eight months ago f had mumps, and there was a come Plicating epididymitis, the doctor call- ed it... What effect this will have » WL, E) Answer—No effect. As long as the opposite gland remains intact there is 40 appreciable impairment of any ind, now or later. Circulation Equalizing I find that your advice of a daily walk of about two hours, or several miles, is excellent. For me it has proved a remedy for restless nerves. It Ernee Say Dee ae ERED) mene IRI Oe oe as equalized the circulation and in- duced restful sleep, a priceless boon. (©. W. D.) Answer—For those who can't afford to walk, @ bicycle ride is the next best hing, Dang Your article “Crick in the Back” in- terested me greatly (three pages of history of a case) . .. your opinion of the case... (R. H. A.) Answer—I am sorry now I wrote the article. It brought a great number of letters from gullible folk who are ever ready to believe that when a physician unwittingly describes some of their Present symptoms, he can also divine by long distance second-sight what ails them and what they should do about it. In other words they think the doctor must be @ quack. (Conyris ib lene) ohn ees 1933, John F. Dille Co,) Just to keep a person breathing—. to take care only of his animal wants —is a very small part of the relief Iabor: for thelr men? figure: 23 Fruit. 39 Type mensure. 26 Thing. 40 To besee: preferably moist heat as from a large poultice or flsnnels wrung out of hot water, applied externally for relief, Patient kept as quiet as possible, no in the Gulf of California can run down horses, coyotes, deer, and even Jack rabbits on foot, it 1s claimed. point at Cincinnati the other day. , “The impressions of men over 40 “TIGER NATIVE ? _Chinese Eastern Railway | MORIBONTAL ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 1 Wings part ef job.—Rev. Charles H. LeBlond, char- | 57, ity worker. ee 8 History has taught you nothing if you think you can kill ideas.—Helen Keller, to the Germans. eee Whether I survive or not is of little moment.—Mahatma Gandhi, * % When I was @ boy I remember the first thing we did in the morning was to pick up a newspaper and see what | the price of gold was so that we could determine what money was worth.— B. W. Snow, cen * * He ih his mmasas during the testi- mony. It is a rather curious thing, but that is alwi an indication of lying.—Federal Judge James a Lowell of Massachusetts. IN | NEW YORK By PAUL HARRISON New York, June 10.—In recent years there grew up around the gloomy.old Metropolitan a whispered superstition that grand opera in New York would die when the end came to Captain John Edgar. For more than a quarter of a century he had admitted the great and the near- great through the stage door of the world of musical make-believe. The very sight of his calm smile, his white mustache and his flowing hair seemed to lend confidence to those who entered. Prima donnas and bal- let girls alike always kissed him for luck, The feeling grew that ill for- tune- would come to all of them if Captain Edgar ever left his post. jut_the superstition didn’t prove out. Recent. benefits have assured ane eay backing for another sea- son of Toate And Captain John Ed- gar died the other day. The_venerable doorman was 89 years old, but had celebrated only 22 birthdays because he was born on February 29, In his youth he had had a rich tenor voice, studied in Europe, and once nn Barone, and once sang. ina, chore in a chorus . ol. 30 Thickets ered territory. 28 Portait statue, 20 Price. 58 Shoemaker's t 0 Clan aymbots. Gt Hodgepodge. 62 Lecturer. Went Point. 44 Coffechounes. “ mamener. Ie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 10, 1933 Independence _ |e with Patti, He returned to America @ series of concerts, but was gal Begetel by bad luck. Finally he de- cided to be near music “even if I couldn’t sing myself,” so he went to work at the Met. * + Grave Decision All the elements of potent drama are to be found in the Jewish Court conducted on the lower east side to settle differences involving civil and Jewish law. A rabbi, an attorney and a business man are chosen to preside at each session, and before them passes a strange procession in which the old and new sae ae The other tHe a weeping ee as plaintiff against LS of e any Jewish burial societies. At home, she dead. A rabbi was there, and the neighbors were there, and they had been about to start the funeral. she learned that ‘the burial society had refused to wo ac ey plot; and this in spite of the fac that her husband hed paid his does regularly for many years, Was all this true, the court asked one of the society’s representatives. It was, admitted the latter. But he also produced records to show that one burfal already had been accord- ed the deceased! It seems the man had had a leg amputated several years ago, and that the leg had been fo: lly buried in the cemetery ac- cording to orthodox Jewish custom. for his money, Ghia The court decided that, under the circumstances, he could expect two. the all-wise Judges, hurried ba her house of grief. * * % Movie Folk-lore Hollywood on BroadWay: Norma Talmadge, making personal appear- ances hereabouts, had da cadzel on acoudt of ad addack of rose fever + Jean Fullarton, the stage in- genue who'll soon make her screen debut, insists on the “a” instead of an “e” in her last name because it to means she_came from the lowlands and not the highlands of Scotland - Bette Davis, here for a premiere, flared mightily when an admirer likened her to Constance Bennett, whom, by the way, she never has met... It looked like movie night at Central Park Casino the other evening: Richard Barthelmess and his wife, Ruby Keeler and Joan Blondell, all newly arrived from the west. ‘Additional Churches | ~ GOSPEL TABERNACLE th and Rosser Edwin N. Oster, Acting Pastor Sunday, Sunday, School at 9:: a0 “m. ot Arbitration, a special tribunal | an: said, lay her husband, | @r: Evening service at 7:4! Special music and singing. All heartily welcome. The General Council of the Assemb- Nes of God take this opportunity to invite everyone to the Lake Geneva Camp Meetings to be held. at Alex- andrla, Minn., June 18 to July 4th, fi ae ve. mA Dona. Asse! of tl apeake: 8. Williams, Ge FIRST LUTHERAN CHURCH |, Moody, Pastor omEnlty | Sunday, June 11, 1933 st grnaey School. irs. J. Moody invite the asionary Boclety to, meet at 8 at 703-7th St, el is desired. Sermon subject: ‘The ‘Weary Prodi- , General Supt. of the of ot in Great wal beet, st work will be the main id will meet in the Sunday School at 9:45 a. Wednesda: © fits meetin at room rmasintained at 200: Fourth Street is open daily Mal to 5 m.; Bunday, 3 to 5 p. are’ welcome to the reading room. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 2. U. S. PAT. OFF. m. testimonial att the church services and to make use of church parlors next Thursday at 3:80. ad | Membera and friends are cordially How many funerals cua he expect | tr: Juno i ——-— ZION eae. AO tamil yf Neel es . Richert, . . Divine dervices for "ateinity Sunday, June 11th: 200 a. nt. 10:45 Mrs. F. Peters, ort eieyece “The pane: God. win, W Coleman, org: Bie text: be no evening “This rue God, and ey = haan love in the ‘rtune God, Father, Son and Holy Ghost, for your hear about this And the widow, with a Pe on| saving doctrine of the ‘Trinity as re- salvation? Come ant vealed to us in the Bibl A, cordial welcome a: ek you. There will be no day, June 18, as the vention at June 14-20, wishing to attend tho Synodical serv- ices at Hannover Congregation next Sunday, are most cordially invited. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST Cor. 4th St. & Ave. C Sunday service at 11:00 a. m. Subject: FREIGHT CAR TOADINGS wud. Morning Worship at 10: %. i Potts vane her own resources, | too Mary Lou Thurston, beautiful and | fi vivacious orphan, applies for a position as companion to a semi. invalid in the palatial bo Mrs. Lorrimer at Westmill, Con- necticut, Mrs, Lorrimer explains the ad should have read “male” as the invalid is her son, Travers, sBellsiocked: in the war, As Mary Lou is about to leave, Travers enters. He seizes her in his or calling her “Delight” and “wife.” Then he faints when Mary Lou fails to respond to his caresses. Mrs, Lorrimer persuades Mary Lou to assume the role of Delight Harford, whom Travers claims he married in England, in order to help him regain his health, Mary Lou confides in her | Vi friend, eee Mitchell, young uewspaper reporter. Dr. Mathews tells Travers that as ight wi very young at the time of thelr sateiope and since believed him dead, it is only fair to begin all over with friendship, Mrs, Lor- timer acquaints Mary Lou with the Copyright, , 1930, details regarding Delight and her vain search for the girl. The fol.| 2° of temieg morning, aid Lou is all set for ber new role. CHAPTER XVII. St went down to the white beach and breathed the cold, salt air and watched the rip- ples foam along the shore. There was a swimming pier there with floats and slides and steps at all Points so that the swimmer and beainners alike could be accommo- lated, There was also = boat a and looking in she saw canoes and rowboate and several motor of various sizes housed for the coming Winter. She felt suddenly a little impatient toward Travers Lorrimer, despite all her pity for him. He had so much, so much more, even, than was neces- sary, and certainly more than enough to win him back again to health and happiness and to use- fulness as a citizen of the world. She wondered if Mrs. Lorrimer | it in her fom for him had not per a jiven in to him too much, e had been @ poor man he ela 4 have spent his days and months and years as a semi- invalid, waited on hand and foot. Roa He would have had to earn a liv- ing. Mrs. Lorrimer had told her that there was a good deal of busi- ness connected with her late hus- band’ ‘ ve! ieee sae Hie fon jure ought Mary Lou, certai: pry Gees take over the man- pad of the estate. He was After lored build- oe he Reena gr Oe ar thous through 4 a a little path inthe woods and spent an enchanted gl enarine getting Jos He peal again, to what was left of thelr aut glory, and nA eonrae the living ae morning’s task finished, Mrs. Lorrimer went upstairs and knocked at her son's door, valeted him, ly, and so she found him dressed, standing’ idly by his sitting room windows. pom were comfortable and viens a ces 2 sunlight ah of sun! neither too bright His |it—it see i AKE-BELIEVE” by Fath Belden sapere} 2 the walls’ and the on the eee were filled with the books he had loved as a child and of |a young man. “Well, Travers?” quietly. He put out a hand and drew her close to him. He loved her very much. If only, sometime, he could shake off this dark cloud of doubt of himself and uncertainty of Te past and future and cor so. He despised himself for a ae den, a bit of human which had not, somehow stre! to rebuild himself into some ee ene 3 shee would be useful, alert . she asked eee well,” he- pee “there’s nothing the me really, except my infernal esenees, ing himself together, He now |, with a certain em- ent: “ 2” “She's out walking,” Mrs. rimer told him, easily enough. “She, slept well and bi “Does she want to see me?” he asked, flushing. “Well, of course, she wants to po Urge Pane 4] e events o: w ty of yon, Travers. of you, Travers. You must overlook that; wll have to win her back to—trendshi iendship again.” & m, Services at the Peniten- 9:30 & gm. Sunday School with all Miss Ella le Brelje, superin- Morning wee (German) ak io maglish services on at Bald- services. ia Ute cternal that they might know Thee, the only cht ae whom in Bis- ;marck Congregation this coming Sun- erat will be attending a. District ynedical Con- “God the Preserver of Man” Diatsbuted by King Festeres Syndicate, Ine. really evenness of ae voice. often takes it on the nose. Sy FAITH BALDWIN “She's somewhere on the grounds.” “All right—”" His mother bent over him and kissed his cheek lightly. “I know it’s terribly hard for you, Travers,” she told him, low. Lorrimer, after she had left him, looked for ya found a top coat and cap. He moved reluc- tantly. His heart hammered in bes throat, He was realizing tha’ matter what had been en bis ong dreams, his sense of infinite loss and bewilderment, his hours upon hours of specnlationahie was she? t had become of her? Did she live or had we incredibly, «|died? Did she still care or had she forgotten? The irl he was going to meet that sunny, la, Zomplote stranger to" him. er » Yet, she was his wife! He went downstairs, encounter- re one, stopped in the hall to in the coat closet for a stick, and went on o1 unendurable, abstractedly, sometimes mother, sometimes wit tthe beautiful place which doghood ire but with a te- nacious memory of his old play- mate. Remembered his shrinki: from the animal, shat nerves shrieking against the noi intrusion upon his silence and soli- tude, remembered the way the do; had looked at him, before it slunk away. Well, Reddie was dead now, but there were other sees ia in he answered, a little Bitte, the kennels, kept carefull; be h i aplr the house use their bark don't 1 pea wh 36 Share, 08 ing and leaping friendliness might mother, A grea he disturb l, nate LX Ae ook Bee “T—do admit it. That boy’s dead,” be ad her wearily, “Now, 're sure she wants to see lownstairs.” He hated himself for it, but he couldn’t help it. But it was®at the kennels he gos it of the lor out of the long of w final, herse! wide runways—a setter, two ears, sad two poles et an lary Lou stopped ‘and herself close to the wire ‘She spoke to and was aged of them, ought, who would let her take one out for a run— She loved dogs and hadn't had one of eee own Zor taany years, thought it that of the gardeteras had seen early in her wand 4 or perhaps whoever was looking Terre dar ” exied Lou—“‘co they com alee mer “They are yours, choose from,” a voice replica quite quietly. She whirled around and ot ed her part better than sh for, taken by surprise, the color left her fone and then returned in a bright crimson flood, tinting eve: her at and the tips of her in The girl who's wild to make a hit “ze ; Se Pe ee eee ee en