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The Bismarck Tribune An Ind dent Newspaper } THE STATES OLDEST . NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . Daily by mail per year (in marck) Daily by mi outside Bismarck) Daily by mail outsid Dakota ‘Weekly by 5 Weekly by mail in state, three years .. ‘Weekly by Dakota, per year Weekly by mail in Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation ES ee eee Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to ft 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. th Knell Sounds uric eeiny into the prohibi- tion repeal column by an overwhelm- ing majority Tuesday the death knell of prohibition was sounded loudly and clearly. Not that Iowa wields more influence than other states but simply because its voice is, in a peculiar way, the voice of agricultural America. If re- peal were repugnant to the farmers of Iowa it would have been defeated. But such was not the case. Iowa's farmers, in common with the rest of the nation, have come to regard pro- hibition as a tragic mistake. Other farm states may be expected to fol- low. Despite the optimism of Jouett Shouse, leader of the wet forces, it is Possible that a few states will refuse to support the repeal movement, but that the dry forces can muster 13 seems very improbable. That is the number needed to forestall adoption of the repeal amendment. Expressions by dry leaders after the vote in Iowa would indicate that they have just about given up hope. ‘They should do so and without de- lay, for butting their heads against the solid wall of American public 2.50 but we do not want to see another failure take its place. Ambition’s Leader Action of Chancellor Hitler in sup- pressing the German Nationalist party and its affiliated organizations repre- sents the play of an emotion as old as history. Before the Nazis came to power in the Fatherland, the Nationalists were their allies. During much of the struggle which preceded this unusual powerful than the Hitlerites, There seems no room to doubt that Hitler would never have become chancellor without the support of Hugenberg and his allies. He certainly never could have achieved his present eminence over their opposition. This coalition was carried into the formation of the new government. In fact the presence of Von Papen, Hug- enberg and others was credited with being the factor which permitted Hitler to be named at all. These men were to act as a brake upon his ac- tivities. Their complete failure in this as- signment is demonstrated by events of the last few months. Now they are to be discarded altogether. Dissolution of their effective political organiza- tion is clearly a preliminary step to- ward severing the bonds between the Nazis and the Nationalists. The former will be left supreme. Many explanations of this psycho- logical phenomena are contained in literature but that from Shakespeare's Julius Caesar probably is the most widely known. “Youth (and politics) is young ambition's ladder whereto the climber upward turns his face and, having attained the utmost, round, looks into the clouds, scorning the base degrees by which he did ascend.” The description fits all over-ambi- tious politicians of all times and Places, Halt Pay Slash Of importance to private citizens as well as railroad men is the announce- ment that the government has asked delay in the pending attempt to re- duce the wages of transportation workers. It forecasts the national Policy on such matters much more certainly than anything else could, Railroad executives asked a reduc- tion in the pay scale on the claim that wages being paid to employes revolution the Nationalists were more THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 23, 1933 | ; Times Have Changed a Little FACING GREAT PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. GBHE YOUNG HERO FACING GRear DIFFIQULTIES AND WINNING THE HAND OF THE FAIR LADY. THE YOUNG HERO WINNING THE HAND OF THE FAIR LADY AND DIFFICULTIES. has known that disease all along. so. 8 “Boost Wages, Roosevelt Tells Industry’—headline. Apparently the president, too, believes that } |notocaust which has produced a hun-| side. . Headliners from all the best dred times the hardships and suffer-| shows made up the cabaret. ings that Americans endured during ‘The biggest contrast in the evening the World War—Secretary of Warlcame between the faces made George H. Dern. by eae George Metaxa a 4 “Let's Garis e @ Day” and the ineffable repose in When I was a boy, we didn’t care! face and body of that other George, a tinker's dam f€r a boy who wore] George Gershwin, when he played his shoes. We regarded him as a sissy and wouldn't associate with Senator Carter Glass of famous “Rhapsody in Blue.” ... asta, Staging © competion among ire, stay & com) among women partners for the smoothest, best dancer, approached Mary Pick- ford’s table to ask her to be first... . Nobody could find her... . She had im.— a, IN I riously. .. . Just another perfect clown who-wants to play Hamlet! The most interesting thing, to those concerned at least, was the fact that of 17 newspaper folks sitting at Table No, 23, every single one of them hailed originally from some small town, west, midwest or south, All of them got their training on small town papers. ... Not a native New Yorker in the carload. ... FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: t thing about the way hundreds of New seen out of sight under the table, like child. he had turned away. ... Applause went to Ina Claire, for her incomparable spirit... . Astaire approached her second. She rose, in NEW _YOR New York, June 23.—There’s some- around the room with him as if she were having the time of her life.... ‘The biggest disappointment came him first and slid clear down .. Nor would she emerge until pleased, sprightly manner and sailed| | York cliff dwellers flock down to strangely reminiscent of the way everybody in Los Vegas, N. M., years aera ae ie wharves and pay 10 cents each to go| ™aker e is, “went serious.” aboard big liners the day or night|+.~- She had re crowd chortling over they sall—just to look around—that is| her take-off of Betty Boop and they got up, walked to the piano and sang mped for more. ... Finaly, Fannie Shucks; every family with a small boy| photographers and others crowding 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 instructions. opinion can avail them nothing. Fur-| were relatively much higher than was thermore, America is going to need/the case in unorganized industries their services in the next trying few) where reduction after reduction al- years. ready has been made. ‘We are going to need someone to) ‘The workers, millions of them idle, organize public opinion against the| were in no mood to agree, for lack evils of liquor which are almost cer-| of opportunity to work hgs put many tain to follow this swing away from COME, COME, JUST WHAT ARE YOU AFRAID OF? This and other talks on “nervous- ness” (to follow at intervals of sev- eral days) I affectionately dedicate to the great army of nervous wrecks. You heard me. I said affectionately. You must not think that because I call you names I don’t love you. As these expostulations about nerves must be interspersed with tiresome, of them on near-starvation schedules. prohibition. / Grant the oft-heard contention that prohibition’s chief advocates have been imbued by a rabid fanatic- ism, that the effects of the “noble ex- periment” have been unwholesome and not in the interest of sound pub- lic policy. There still remains work to be done by the forces which have labored in good faith for a reduction in the admitted evils of alcoholic quors. For anyone to contend that the mation favors the unbridled use of alcoholic beverages is to miss the Point of the present phenomenon. Americans, by and large, approve of éobriety and wish to promote it in|. the most feasible fashion. Prohibi- tion has signally failed to do so. We now must turn to some other meth- od. That is the reason for this change in sentiment. ‘When prohibition vanishes we shall have the free and untrammeled flow of liquor again, untrammeled, that is, except for the effective curbs of s0- cial custom which may be set up against it. ‘With liquor back in ordinary chan- nels, we shall need an intensified drive of education to acquaint young and old alike with the evils of over- indulgence. We should strive might- ily to return to that era before pro- -hibition when it was not considered an achievement to serve drinks at every social function, The majority of the American peo- Ple regard liquor as a menace. Their swing away from prohibition rep- resents a change in their ideas as to how best to deal with it, That is all. Many who have been and still are drys have come to recognize this fact. ‘They are concentrating now on how ‘best to improve conditions, The first Step is to get rid of prohibition, A comment by a Bismarck minister, made recently during a private dis- cussion of the subject, illustrates the Point. This man would require that all Places which sell alcoholic beverages be clearly labelled saloons and set apart from the rest of the business community as sharpy as possible. He then would launch a definite cam- paign to induce people not to patron- ize them. He is willing to try the system of bringing out into the open|°%, and an evil which everyone knows exists now in secret. He is willing to sub- stitute @ campaign for the develop- ment of self-control for one of legal control. ‘Those who favor repeal of the pro- | needed. hibition amendment should throw themselves into this effort whole- heartedly. It is good citizenship and good business for them to do so. They must join in seeing to it that the profit motive is definitely soft-pedal- ed under the new system lest we again see the admitted evils of the old saloon days. Prohibition has definitely tailed Into this situation steps the govern- ment with a request for delay. The reason is obvious. Those in charge of our nation’s affairs hope to adopt the other alternative, increase the ‘wages of other industries rather than lower those of the railroad men. The manner in which these alms are carried out will have much to do with pointing our industrial future and with determining the success or failure of the gigantic social experi- ment upon which we have been launched. One way to make light of your troubles is to burn all your bills. —— Beef reached its highest peak when the cow- jumped over the moon. 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. Why Keep Up the Vain Fight? Duluth Herald May we ask the advocates of temp- erance why, in the face of all the facts, including such crushing facts as yesterday's voting in three states on prohibition repeal, they should con- tinue their vain and hopeless fight against repeal? If actually dry states like New Hampshire and Iowa had voted yes- terday against repeal there might not have been so much point in that ques- tion. Connecticut voted wet, six to one, but Connecticut always has been. wet. But fourteen states—all of the peo- ple in fourteen states—now have voted on the repeal amendment. They rep- Tesent every imaginable type from very dry like Iowa to very wet. And the entire fourteen are solidly, and usually overwhelmingly, for repeal. Obviously many people who did not believe in prohibition and were for it because they hoped it would work, no longer believe in it and are against it because they are convinced that it will not work and never can be made to yleld less harm good. ‘The utmost the opponents of repeal can hope to do is to get thirteen states to block the ratify an amendment. There is, as a matter of fact, at this. moment very Uttle chance that they can do that well. But if they did, what would they have gained? They would have kept in the Constitution a provision which @ great majority has repudiat- the continued existence of which can only lead to irritation and strife, Moreover, the quicker repeal is rati- fied, the sooner the shift of earnings out of the liquor traffic from the gangs to the public treasury will be- gin. And that is very desperately Repeal leaves the states free to vote as they please on their own areas. Any state that wants to adopt prohi- bition can do it. It is its right. It is not its right to impose its will on the People of other states which want no Prohibition. Any further fight against the re- discussions of the health problems of other valetudiniarians, some of you neurotics will probably miss the very lesson you need most. In order to checkmate you there, too, I shall re- print the gist of these harangues in @ monograph “Chronic Nervous Im- Position,” which any one may pro- cure by asking for it, and inclosing a dime and a stamped envelope bear- ing the correct address. Clippings will not suffice, nor will trick ad- dresses such as “City” or “Local.” Let it be clearly understood gt the outset that in this course I am feach- er and you are pupil. But this is a free country and you are not com- pelled to take my course if you be- lieve you already know more than I Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ous impostors. Half of you will be- come Class A neurotics and the rest of you will join Class B. Depends on what you're afraid of. (Next lesson we'll let the cat out of the bag). QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS lass G Kindly give an old lady your opinion about glasses. I am 81 and have cata- ract. I can see to read with a cheap 50 cent pair of glasses, better than I can with the glasses from the eye doctor. I wonder if a plain magnify- ing glass would be all right to use for reading.( ©. V. P.). Answer—Yes, an ordinary reading glass, a plain magnifying lens is all the laborer is worthy of his higher, * os % nings and go down to see the tfain come through. ... When Douglas Fairbanks and his | son sailed on the Europa, they drew a big gallery clear® out to where the boat sails. Young Doug gave everybody a surprise. At a fare- well luncheon everybody ragged him about his moustache! He disappeared for a few minutes and came back clean-shaven. ... * he % IT MUST BE SUMMER Summer really has come! The lit- | tle Rainbow Line boats are plying their way to and from Coney Island again. At the reception given aboard the “Empire State,” on its first trip, Al Smith and Mrs. Smith were the popular guests of honor, with hardly room enough for ordinary guests, so crowded was the boat with celebrities. ... Fred Astaire, Luella Gear, Marilyn Miller and several other famous dancers made watching the dancing more fun for once than dancing... . Little Mitzi Green is growing up very fast. ... The child has quite a poised, adult manner, chatted easily with ‘May be Next U. S. ‘Envoy to Reich in... . When the “All Ashore” gong | sounded and her father said she| couldn't go to Coney Island that night, Mitzi broke down and cried just like any other ae oe | CAVORTING CELEBRITIES | Robert P. Skinner (above), dean ‘The best party of the year, and the! of the | : Joe 7 ‘We don’t know what wedding march | prettiest, was the New York Newspa-| service and American Minister to was played when that Irish broker!per Women’s dinner-dance, at the! Latvia, Lithuania and Esthonia, married Ruth Kresge, daughter of the [| rich chain store magnet, but perhaps an appropriate tune would have been “I Found a Million-Dollar Baby in a aiabka aetna aaa \ Government is reported to be planning new drive to collect thousands in delinquent income taxes from Hollywood movie stars. « We can now expect their next pic- tures to bc! — anguish, Despite the heroic efforts of states- men to bring about peace in the world, the number of June marriages this year is just as large as ever. snooty Central Park Casino, super-| is being urged upon President ‘vised by Elsa Maxwell, internationally | Roosevelt for Ambassador to Ger- known for arranging spectacular par-| many. Skinner, now in Washing- ties. . . . Celebrities of society, stage| ton on leave, has been a frequent and screen were to be seen on every White House caller. Travers Lorrimer, shell-shocked war veteran and son of wealthy Copyright, , 1930, by Faith Baldwin tiny diamond watch upon her wrist. “Where are they?” ago, used to dress up summer eve-| 2 straight-away sentimental song, se- United States foreign © AKE-BELIEVE” - Duatribated by King Features Syndicate, Inc. right. The cheap 50-cent glasses are better than any more costly ones if you can see more clearly with them. Raw Milk ‘Taking my 11-months-old baly for @ visit to my sisters in the Catskills. They use raw milk from a dairy farm near by. Sister says it has always been good enough for their children. Should I give it to my baby while I am there? He has been given nothing but pas- teurized grade A in town. Our family physician says he would not hesitate senate investigation. eee do about the subject of nervousness. Almost everybody does, in fact. That’s one reason why there are so many nervous wrecks at large. Keep right on chewing gum, mak- ing funy faces, tapping your foot or twiddling your fingers or jerking or moving about, just as you always do. The fact that you attend these lec- tures shows that you are of “nerv- ous temperament.” So I don’t mind how restless you may be, only please retire to the corridor or somewhere if you're going to have a fit or a petit mal lapse. Of course you are nervous. Of course you are weak. You're like a spoiled child and we can’t expect you to behave like a grown up human being. You haven't been educated’ or’ trained to exercise self-control or self-discipline. On the contrary you’ve been pampered, hu-| . mored, petted, encouraged to think you can do as you please at all times because you are not strong like nor- mal folk. You've been spoiled in your bringing up, allowed to have your own way all your life, at no matter what expense or inconvenience to others. If you haven't had it, it is not be- cause you haven't selfishly tried to take every advantage of your friends, your neighbors and, above all, your own family. The truth is you're afraid of something, but you don’t know it. Sit down. I’m teacher here. If you don’t like the teaching, we are not keeping you. .Your turn, will come later if you have anything to say. AS we get along with our study of nerv- ousness, however, there will be less you want to say. If you get what I hope you may from this course of in- to give the raw milk to his children. (Mrs. H. 8.) Answer—Your family physician's judgment is best. I know nothing of the raw milk in question. In such circumstance, if you bring the milk to ® boil for an instant only and then let it cool again immediately, that will dispose of-any germs the raw milk might happen to contain, and is less destructive to the Vitamin C than is pasteurization. ——___—_—_-+ | Barbs | Alabams doctor at American Med- ical Association convention announced discovery of,a new disease in which the patient is hungry all the time. Youngstown, Ohio. * * *® @ cow in Chicago stockyards. *.8 % more in keeping with the pret West Virginia. . * *# * = ee [ WHO IS SHE? ° | 2t The Indy Im the pleture fs the firnt woman to’ department the lady of ¢ picture an omecial? struction you'll find yourself saying less and DOING more, whining less and demanding less sympathy from the world at large, growing up at last and @ man’s or woman's part in the world. Yes, that is the unvarnished truth, the scientific truth. You're sick with fear, my dear neurotic. Let me help you to face this fundamental truth and acknowledge it, for your own three-fourths required to| f°" peal amendment is an utter waste of time, energy and money that might be much better applied to finding and urging some more effective highway |# temperance. levers — 41 Sei vartientar 4¢ Ne 24The phoebe or 40F > je phoebe or weeagock. "4G e re . a dese! ‘elude. 31 Units of its sare ous! xinte, it (abbr.de of LN S oa ‘This business of being undressed in public every day isn’t as pleasant as it might be—J. P. Morgan, during ‘There are not as many persons go- ing to church today as there used to be, but on the other hand, there are more persons practicing their religion every day.—Rev. L. G. Bateman, pas- tor of First Christian Church of I just wanted to, see if I could still milk a cow.—Stanley Janseki, ex- farmer, arrested when he tried to milk ‘The “New Deal,” while it sings the praises of Jefferson and Jackson, is achings of Norman Thomas, Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler—Senator Hatfield (R.), We are emerging from an economic ibe Soa Lorrimer, mistakes pret- ty Mary Lou Thurston for Delight ‘arford, whom he is supposed to have married in England. Mrs. Lorrimer induces Mary Lou to assume the role of Delight, of whom no trace can found: Travers is told he must begin with friendship. His interest in life is renewed. No mention is made of his marriage until the visit of Larry Mitchell, Mary Lou's friend. Then Travers, be- lieving Larry is in love with Mary Lou, reminds her she is his wife. At Christmas Mary Lou, irritated terms selfish, Brought to his he sles He peothes and ow in delivering gifts to the needy, At the Veterans’ Hos- ital Travers meets his old budd; 'immy McEwan, and plans to help him. Travers gives Mary Lon a seal ring he gave her, Mary Lou believes then that he really mar- ried Delight, using a seal ring. That night he kisses Mary Lou. Realizing she loves him and can- not go on pretending, Mary Lou plans to leave. Later she changes her mind, Mrs.Lorrimer remarks the change in Mary Lou to Dr. Mathews, who tells her he be- lieves Mary Lou loves Travers, CHAPTER XXVIII. H’ sighed, a little dispiritedly. “Oh, what a tangled web we weave,’” he began, half humorously, half gravely. “Don’t say it!” she interrupted. “You're not usually so trite, Dan. It will all straighten out, I am con- vinced of it. And Travers is ba- sically too sane to harbor a grudge | Mary Lo against us long. The situation wasn’t of our making, originally. lary Lou came here quite inno- cently,through the error of a news- paper advertisement, And Travers saw her. And what were we to do when he mistook her for someone else? I think he'll realize all that and also what she’s done for him, when the times comes for him to know the truth.” “They should be in soon,” she murmt Mathews lit a cigar and stretched himself more comfortably in the redus Tients having accumulated and accumt herited ar ae money he, a bache- lor of no extravagant taste, would eed, He had many leisure hours and at portion of them at ‘estwood. The remainder of his free time was given to his hobbies - au ‘waiting of a Rook wiih ee 0 be cal utobio iy a General Practitioner,” and the raising of prize dahlias the flowers of which he exhibit and the bulbs of which he sold. “It's late,” M: marked again and looked at the sapphire ring and speaks of the| fro irs. Lorrimer re-| all “And who are ‘they,’ Margaret? You fuss over that boy far too much.”. . “Do I2—and I try so hard not to,” she murmured. ‘“ ‘They’ are Travers and Mary Lou, of course.” “Some day you'll get confused and call her that,” he warned. “No, I don’t think so,” she told him, “Sometimes I think that’s the only way I can remind myself of the true situation by naming her —just to you. Mitchell is here for the week-end and Jenny Give a dude rancher enough rope apd she'll tie into trouble. 4y FAITH BALDWIN | —Delight,” he corrected himself, “T’ve been up to the hospital as he asked me to and seen McEwan, you know. Lorrimer’s his god. It's amazing. The stories he told me—” “Tell me, Y? she begged. “Not now, wen’t the time. What about Mac anyway, is Lor ig him out of there?” so. He and Mrs. Lor. rimer have been pulling some wires and expect to send him to the Adirondacks in a few weeks’ time,” she answered. “It’s been the best thing in the world for him —for Lorry—to have that inter: Wynne is out with the three of | est. them—they are skating on Willow by Travers’ lack of holiday spirit,| Pond. “Mitchell is a nice youngster,” commented Mathews. “Yes—he’s agai! smitten with Jenny, poor bey. She him outrageously—as she treats every- one.’ Presently the four came back ym the pond, cold and ruddy, trudging up to the house, the com- fort of the hearth fire and tea, laughing all the , their boots crunching in the eh dry snow. ‘The sun was now at its red and gold, a glory of celestial fire, Presently the sky would alter to that strange, chill green of win- ter and the evening star would hang like a silver lamp above the bare aspiring arms of trees. “Lovely,” said Mary Lou — “lovely...” Her voice broke a little. She had always loved beauty, it had an in- timate for her, but latel it seemed, it broke her m , With whom she was walk-| the bountiful looked at her quickly. on,” he murmured, for, it seemed, no reason. It wasn’t until he spoke that ju ret there were sud- den tears in her eyes. : She blinked them away, and said, defensively, “Well, it is lovely—” Jenny broke into a little run. - “Golly! I'm frepen wn cual ‘Travers, you lazy lump, I'll race vou to the house!” % under the pale and amber 1 of the mistletoe 3 Phe hed come to her sil be 1 Play Safe. | Larry said, low: “You're crazy about him, aren’t you? mpreh “I don’t know. See the farce the game somehow. throu, zie neue about you,” Larry “Not me, Del The thinks me.’ Ob, Larry, ite Sch’ miserable tangle!” “What he paar earn fe aT Cs safe ‘Play se suppose. Lean 6 mensred a little brittle laugh, clear i “What else can I do?” meee “I don’t know. I, sorry,” told her, low. “He's for him, p a corker, you've done wond “Delight” "dotting thoes Liner ions | oe not, to normal, |cumb beneath the arch instep. Larry caught her hand. " “Hurry—we've been mooching along and they’ve beaten us to the house,” he said, straining his eyes for a scarlet skating suit. “Jenny’ll keep!” she laughed. “Don’t kid. This is the rea) ” said oy Larry soberly. know it is. I’m glad. Lucky you,” she said, “and lucky Jenny!” ‘I'm not so sure about that. She She’s met me ip town, you know, several times. Lunch, at some funny e. Din- ner too, and a show. And I’m out here whenever I can sneak off. But she won’t listen, she just laughs.” “That's Jenny's way,” said Mary Louw, soothingly. “I wouldn’t lose heart.” “Well,” said Larry gloomily, it’ all pretty much out & the Ad tion, even if she did care ing about me, which she prob- ably doesn’t. That girl’s like quick- silver! I fal ean to ne = cay & rotten reporter, can i ‘And I wouldn’t live on her money, so that's that. I've got to add to my income somehow. Writing a chap- ter a year of a novel or a scene every six months of a play won’t help much. It will be 26 years, I'l) bewenile before I get one published the other produced and even then they'll probably be flops, if they that far,” he prophesied etree jobs ip her ip lunches, She has Sear a jar aaa ” a of a job?” asked I Love’s Unegetainty. [} “Oh, I don’t know. I've heard that I'ean do agenting for oo We. ae bird another seed,” said ae ir. repressi! ‘every fit psa ei, chemi reached the house and went Leoriees and Jenny were alread; ere, standing Petes Bad area eaeetres mt Jenny snd Doctor Mathews bed erie clear voice as a jenny, tn hes the other two en- Lorrimer ed brief moet | He had ey - aay asc Himself, Jenny's effect upon FG ‘usually volatile man, but he was unreasonably uneasy in that curious lover-state of sus- pended between earth, or heaven and hades. It was in. credible to him that anyone know. should prefer Jenny once, - of Delight’s Larry was attractive, (To Be Continued Teavecow) eo Nas