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_ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE; MONDAY, JULY 8, 1933 The Bismarck Tribune} :* An Independent Newspaper vay Hl t THE STATE'S OLDEST I NEWSPAPER aH Established 1873) A a Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN \ President and Publisher ___ ESE ee eee Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Wally by mail per, year (in state outside Bismarck) ...... Daily by mail outside of Dakota .....0eee0e ‘Weekly by mail in stat Weekly by North 6. years ....... Pereereeeeree ee 2.50 150 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year Weekly by mail in Canada, per A YOAT caccceccseereveseeee af 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 {t or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of Ypontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Not Just a Holiday ‘The Fourth of July, which we will celebrate tomorow, is more than a holiday. It is the anniversary of the nation’s birthday. As such it is worthy of more medi- tation than most of us ive to it. To the man with a job, it brings per year $1.00 This organization's annual report | shows that its membership has de- clined steadily during hard times and that its income has been reduced by one half. On the other hand, the report complains that church mem- bership has increased constantly all through the depression, so that more than 50,000,000 Americans today are vegular church communicants, And all of this, somehow, sheds an interesting little sidelight on human nature. It’s easy enough to be an atheist, militant or otherwise, when everything is going swimmingly and o}every stock market flurry increases the size of your bank account. But when the bottom falls out of things, and you find that you aren’t quite as all-wise and eternally lucky as you had thought—well, atheism be- comes a non-essential luxury then, in short order. 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, Unwarranted Complaints (New York Times) Prime Minister MacDonald showed a certain degree of irritation when he Summoned the press correspondents and reproached them for giving mis- leading reports of the Economic Con- ference. Secretary Hull on Saturday took up the tale more indirectly and gently. He intimated that a mistake had been made in picturing the American delegation as divided, and in representing the whole program of the Conference as made up of pro- with extinction for want of “WONDER WHAT THEM LOONIES: THINte THERE Dow’ * WELL, U Trent THERE TRIN’ To BRENK THER, {, Fool. NECKS, 1 +: You ASK MES . " WHY,IN THE NEXT 25 YEARS Youll SEE REAL PROGRESS! DAILY SERVICE AROUND THE WORLD, gts cd AUTOMATIC. AND’ FOOLPROOF = WE'LL FLY MILES AM HOUR IN THE STRATOSPHERE IN AIR TIGHT CABING — PowER BY WIRELESS FROM ‘THe EARTH To RESIS GRAVITY — PLANES ALL NON-FALEA) NON INFLAMMABLE AND ((4 NON WRECKAGE SHUG MURMEIPRL ammpont WHEN PREDICTIONS CAN’T KEEP UP WITH PERFORMANCE = wary, SAY, | PREDICT THAT WN THE NEXT 25 YEARS THESE HERE AIREOPLANES WiLL ALY A MILE IN TEN SECONDS, GO ROUND THE WORLD IN 8 DAYS, Cums 45000 FEET UP IN ‘THE AIR, CARRY 162 PASSENGERS, Caos: ALL THE OCEANS WITHOUT’, STOPPING AND THAT PEOALE WILL TRAVEL ON REGUL. AIR LINES WITHOUT-A-THG foned garden with lemon verbena, geraniums and sweet alyssum. * * % Rhapsody in Blue Morrie Ryskind, co-author of “Of Thee I Sing,” goes in for blooming window boxes all around his terrace atop an old New York hotel in the Village. ... Gilbert Gabrielle, music critic and author, and his artistic Ada, have a pent-house which uses @ blue color scheme in every room and only blue flowers in their exten- sive garden.... Probably because Ada has blue eyes.... Alexander) Woollcott's gardens overlook the East * % ‘We have nothing live here —Alfred E. Smith. In case |dirigibles, with their long Lieut.-Com. J. L. Kenworthy, Jr. Lakehurst naval air station. * 4 % @ little graveled walk between oddly shaped flower beds.... Elizabeth Arden has a sumptuous duplex pent- house, all interior-decorated in the {tant phases of life—Judge Henry 8. Sweeny, Detroit. —actually three complete gardens third are unusually landscaped small borders in vi foliage plants. Kreuger Boasted Trees were unbelievably lovely. . . in six feet of dirt atop the Park Ave- nue apartment, trees bloomed and bore fruit, roses: of exotic loveliness came to gorgeous blossom and one pond held several kinds of gorgeous gent lilies, * On Farrell's Arm Victorian manner in ivory and pale green, and gorgeous gardens on three different levels. ‘ **# & Sky-Scraped Terraces Barbs dens probably are the ones just com-|to figure pleted for the Harold K. Hochschilds| from the in Dates ara with dit ties feel dep = a4 From our observation, girls are wearing this summer are used more for posing than for dozing. . wwe Mich., farmer narrowly escap- those with little steps running up and down between them. On one level is an ‘out-door playground, all in grass, for the children. On another are foun- tains, garden walks and seats. On the Iona, trees, staggered flower gardens with ia ol day the farm relief bill became effec- tive. We always predicted that heavens would fall if something done for the eobean * * Worry over the depression has increased baldness, says a Chicago scientist. And we always thought the crisis the nation has just gone through was a hairraising experience, **% *% “They hired the money, The late Ivar Kreuger’s gardens . Planted all kinds of fruit Mary Pickford, sojourning here which claims to be civilized—Dr. rsa Hoffman, insurance statis- * to fear in this country from a dictatorship; it cannot cruising range, high speed and scouting planes which they carry, would afford a pro- |tective weapon of unequaled value— |. Our progress in dealing with crime River and have shrubs, a hedge, and /has not kept pace with our advances in science, industry and other impor- tee onuge gas-| tng tough tine these days in trying jo] a h time 3 in ee ane Cie oak out whether the fog arises weather or fom the Econo- ed being hit by a falling meteor on the! the was | Diapers can be whitened by boiling for a half hour in strong suds made ‘with yellow soap, milk and water. Then wash in hot ordinary suds, rinse in clear hot water and finally in cold blued water. Greek’ fire was an incendiary com- Position of asphalt, saltpeter, and sul- phur, which was used by the Byzan- tine Greeks and which would burn on ted, Queeh Victoria. Pacary as SLiver purchases. vice-presidency bul oe FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:; RSG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. didn’t | they?” said Mr. Coolidge in his fa- | opportunity to vary his routine, per- haps to go on a picnic with his fam- ily, to do this, or that thing for which while hubby Doug is in Europe with | mous observatjon about the war debts | his son, is being squired everywhere |Owed us by European nations. Looks by Charley Farrell. Also she seems | like now they have decided to give it | to be catching up on her reading. . . .|® Permanent job. At @ dinner John Erskine gave for| (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) | her, not @ single book was mentioned le} on which Mary couldn't and didn’t|_The Escurial, royal palace of the/ comment. Spanish kings, near Madrid, is the four days to go through the palace | i and the distance covered on a tour; ' of the buildings is 120 miles. i | posals warring with each other. Mr. Hull wants his fellow-countrymen to understand that there is, in eae . To the man| “united front” both on the part of the = one Pe isiasay: Ane a chance|American delegates and generally Reeeny ate a among the representatives of other to fill in at this or’ that position|nations, Yet the facts are of public while its regular occupant enjoys the}record. They do not depend upon holiday. the say-so bh Gee De ATKIREeT) Paper man. . MacDonal imself, Almost certainly it will be a day Of] 50° s 5. hoy vianey eddies 10 the oor- heavy automobile travel, too many) respondents, was forced to admit that largest palace in Europe. It requires | accidents, too many fatalities. This is the normal course of July Fourth observances in this country. Formal programs will be numerous and orators will spout, but it is doubtful if the nation as a whole will drink quite as deeply at the eprings of patriotism as it should. It is perfectly all right to make this day one of enjoyment, but it will do none of us harm to spend a few moments meditating on the his- tory of this republic, on the signifi- cance of this day and on the part which we are called to play in the further development of the nation. It is beneficial for us to realize that this day, 157 years ago, marked the birth of a new idea in govern- ment. It brought the severing of ties which bound loyal subjects to their king and their traditional homeland. It was a time when real patriots, many of them men of af- fluence, risked both their property and their necks to support political freedom and humanistic ideals. It brought the formal beginning of that period of travail and misery from which, eventually, the world’s greatest nation was to be born. That date marked the beginning of our national history, on the whole a glorious and honorable one. It was the start of our progress, a pathway which still looms ahead of us, shrouded in the impenetrable mists of the future. Life was pretty cheap and the av- erage man was pretty small when our Declaration of Independence was written. Our ancestors lived under conditions which, to us, would be in- tolerable. Freedom of speech, of re- ligion and of thought could be, and frequently were, banned. Slavery was an accepted fact and prisons were filled with men whose only crime was that they had contracted debts. Might usually was the mas- ter of right and justice depended upon the temper of a select class at the time it was doled out. There ‘was no such thing as individual lib- erty as we know it, or of constitu- tional rights. ‘The country was small then. This vast western empire in which we live, was undreamed of. It was to remain a myth for 27 years after the declaration was issued, was not to be settled for almost another cen- tuy. These items in our history should be of special significance to us now because of the troublous times. Un- der the stress of material hardships, we have shown a tendency to hold our constitutional rights lightly, to forget the principles for which the founders of this nation risked their lives. Faced with dictatorships in many European nations, we have felt the urge toward dictatorship here at home. Some have advocated it openly. Most of us have stood su- Pinely by and watched attempts at dictatorship on our own soil. Too many have lost sight of the fact that principle is a higher guide than ex- Pediency, On this day we should review these things and each man would do well to check over the record of his own citizenship, see if it measures up to the tremendous obligations which shave been handed down to us. If our record of patriotism, of observ- ‘ance of our ordinary duties of citi- venship, is susceptible of improve- ment, this is the day for making ‘high resolve to do so. | Exit the Atheists It 1s possible to get two or three AUttle smiles out of the news that the depression has so sharply reduced the number of militant atheists that the American Association for the Advancement of Atheism is theat- yy there had been a “setback” in the original plans for the Conference, and that the order of business had been radically changed. His rebuke was really for telegraphing not much more than what he thus confessed to be the truth. It is palpably absurd to try to blame the press for what has been happen- ing at London. The correspondents do not invent; they merely report. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Theiy endeavor is to make their in- quiries as broad and impartial as pos- sible and then to state honestly what they find to be the truth. The respon- sibility for such confusion and cross- Purposes as developed in the first two weeks of the Economic Conference is not theirs. It necessarily falls back upon governments and authorities that did not sufficiently prepare the way, were not sure of their own minds, and intervened from time to time with unhappy effect. What was there for the correspondents to do but Set forth the case as they saw it? They are not novices. Most of them have had experience with previous in- ternational conferences, are familiar with the personalities and idiosyn- crasies of the public men with whom they have to deal, and have no pos- sible motive except to make their work informative and accurate. One or more of them may, indeed, be sub- Ject to a certain amount of prejudice, individual or nationalistic, but that can be always checked off and bal- anced against other accounts, so that. the total impression to be gained from the dispatches and reports of competent correspondents for French and English and American news- Papers can be taken as very near the actual fact. If Prime Minister Mac- Donald has reason for complaining of anybody, it is not the representatives of the press at the Conference. They are not infallible. Especially when they too readily or prematurely don the mantle of prophecy they may Go astray. It is true that at the Lau- Sanne Conference many of them pre- dicted, almost to the very end, that it would be a failure. There was some force in Mr. MacDonald’s reminder that the first two weeks of any inter- national conference always disclose so many conflicting interests that suc- cess seems well-nigh impossible. On the other hand, the history of such gatherings does not justify his too easy assumption that they cannot be Permitted to fail. The naval confer- ence at Geneva did fail. Mr. Mac- Donald himself knows from melan- choly experience what has been the fate of the successive disarmament conferences. When he went before the Jast one in March of this year he was insistent that it must succeed unless civilization itself were to be further disheartened and thrown into despair. But his own plan was accepted mere- ly in principle, and has since been Postponed from week to week and month to month, until it has now been put over to next October, with nothing done. The British prime min- ister, when giving an account of his stewardship to the House of Commons, explained that the slow and unsatis- factory progress of the Disarmament Conference was due to the “extraordi- nary difficulty” caused by “diverse in- terests, diverse points of view and diverse needs” of the nations con- cerned. He spoke also of the “trem- endous differences” that divided “del- egation from delegation and nation from nation.” Finally, he reminded his hearers that “the last word in these matters is the political word.” If that was true at Lausanne and Geneva, why is it not at London? It is as certain as anything in the future can be that the omic Con- ference will reach certain Egreements, The danger is that these will be em- bodied in plous aspirations and meaningless forms of words. But the business before the delegates really in control is to make the proposals in which they unite definite, timely, healing and with all the plans fitted to fact and urgent needs. Cranberries were originally called crane-berries; the fruit is borne on a curved stalk which suggests the neck of a crane, The 20th meridian west of Green- wich is generally used as the official dividing line between the eastern and western hemispheres. ‘The Hooker Oak, of California, is the largest leafing tree in America; 8,000 people could be shaded when it is in leaf, Many tribes of savages do not know 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 wriften in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. || Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. AS NERVOUS AS A CAT In foregoing lessons in this course on “Chronic Nervous Imposition” you will have learned a bit of physiol- ogy which uncompromisingly conflicts with the notion that there is a mys- terious force, power, strength, vitality, energy or vigor apart from ordinary muscular or physical power, in the nervous system, an occult store of “nerve force” which may become ex- hausted if one tries to carry on too long “on his nerve”. If you have not yet grasped this important physiolog- ical fact you will not derive the bene- fit you should from the coming les- sons in the course. If you have missed any of the earlier lessons, you will find the gist of the entire course in @ monograph on nervousness. Any reader may obtain a copy by asking for it (no clipping will suffice) ‘and inclosing a dime and a stamped en- velope bearing his address. ‘When you are quite sure you have assimilated the little lesson in physi- ology and that it will not be imme- diately lost amongst all the hokum of the quack nerve specialists and nostrum mongers which gullible ginks so fondly cherish, you should be able to comprehend an additional fact that tends to give an honest neurotic further assurance. It is this: In ac- tual practice patients who have def- inite lesions or diseases of nerves, brain or spinal cord are not less serene, cheerful, patient or self con- trolled than are patients with lesions of liver, lungs or ankles, “As nervous as a cat” and “so ner- vous I could fly” are familiar expres- sions. These and other exclamations line and behavior on school children, and the repression of all natural and normal motion or action during school hours by these inadequately trained teachers contributes much to- ward the development of-the “nerves” of American people. Needless to say, only your own phy- sician can decide whether rest or ex- ercise is indicated in your case. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS What To Do Please send a diet for a woman who has had a stroke of paralysis.. The doctor says she can have anything she wants to eat. It is nine weeks. since she had the stroke. What do you think? (M. M. K.) Answer—Follow your doctor's ad- vice or else fire him and call in an- other. Good Mousers We are overrun with mice. Some time ago you gave the name of a Poison for them... . (Mrs. R. J.) Answer—Well, that’s some time ago. The only remedies I can recom- mend are to keep a good cat or two, or @ pet snake. The Quack in the Clinic A skin specialist here in the...... clinic said he can cure my ac! or $60, with X-ray treatments. .... @, A. ED Answer—How many times must I warn you to beware of physicians or specialists who practice under any other name than their own? Beware, +|pent-house and terrace is ‘on lower the most fantastic prediction te be improbable. . too, of any doctor who promises or guarantees a cure. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) | IN | NEW _ YORK BY JULIA BLANSHARD New York, July 3—The hanging gardens of Babylon (one of the Seven. Wonders of the World) certainly had nothing on New York's pent-house gardens. Forty stories or 80 above dens bloom with all the abandon and variety of the best formal or coun- try gardens, And they give visitors @ thrill of admiration the best ordi- nary garden never can attain. * % Ivy-Clad Pent-House! Otis Weise, editor of McCall's, is perhaps New York’s best sky-scraper gardener. His pent-house has a spaci- ous yard on three sides, with ivy growing over the outside wall and against the house, with 16 kinds of flowers blooming right this minute, all planted and cared for by Mr. and Mrs. Weise. ... Helena Rubenstein goes in for California cactus, orange trees and sword plants, on her ter- race overlooking Central Park on the West Side.... Zita Johann, whose Fifth Avenue, has a prize imported hedge and clover. She is the only sky-scraper dweller who keeps a huge white Russian wolf-hound in her gar- den.... Achmed Abdullah, the au- thor, has @ quaint duplex pent-house on a hotel roof nearby with old-fash- of similar import imply a natural de- sire to DO SOMETHING but an ar- tificial restraint or checking of the impulse. The restraint, inhibition, brake or check is applied for various reasons, nearly all of which are im- posed by the conventions of civilized life or by rules or customs related to our artificial mode of living. Naturally, primitively, the reaction to the emotion of fear is the motion of fighting or running away. When circumstances, customs or the ameni- ties render such natural reaction im- Prudent or disadvantageous, one can either apply the energy suddenly re- leased by the emotion to some alter- native ACTION (work, play, contest, exercise) or else one can just jam on the brakes and try to absorb the shock, try to be “nonchalant”. This latter ideal of culture is disastrous to the health of the race. It is a le in itself, and it makes hypocrites, lars, perverts and criminals out of us all. In old-fashioned schoolrooms ruled by old-fashioned martinets, the foun- dation for much of our national “ner- vousness” is laid. Better educated Pedagogues have done away with some of the most ridiculous school- room abuses in recent years, but we still have too many old fossils impos- ing their neurotic notions of discip- rt | tn he pleure? OLICTONT AIL |e BWIA! Ici 1A ITE LAID! LE ICI ul BI tig A MEE ish RU TK EE \ hs REPRESENTATIVES OF WHAT NATION HAVE WON MOST NOBEL AWARDS? ii WHAT IS THE NAME OF THIS ISLAND ?—3 that the sun is the source of day- light. ” & DO YOU KNOW HER? HORIZONTAL ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE DIBIE TRIG IH] Alt VERMA IRIU} a IEINISIt A CHAS. A. ArT |UNDBERGHT ™ 11 The Eo ig Vai | 2 | erre 15 Foreordained by divine decree. MS Al ip Each (abbr.). Raise Ether. AIRI IO o chic aa On aan ay tn ELIAS | PIUIL IL] EL from Austria? VERTICAL )br.). 40 Black. 45 Mother. 46 Seaweed. 47 Tot 53 Label, 55 Italian river. 57 Neuter pronoun, ‘30 Violent whirl PPP \wi the hot streets, these sky-scraper gar-| France it may be productive of good conversation, in Germany of music| and in England of social living, here! iL makes fools out of gentlemen— ‘Henry Noble MacCracken, president of Vassar. FOV Drinking is an art, and while in Columbus sailed on his first great voyage on Friday, started back on Friday, and again landed in Spain on Friday; he starter his second voyage on Friday and discovered the Isle of Pines on Friday the 13th. Pigeons tend two nests at the same pair of eggs when one set of young- eeane Sters is only two days old. Human life was never so cheap and| No particular star in the American insecure in the United States as it is|flag represents any particular state; at the present time, and murder is de- cidedly more common in this country the stars represent the states collec- tively, not individually. AKE-BELIEVE" Copyright, , 1930, by Faith Baldwin Vy i | time; they begin setting on another | Some girls think they’re hot sketches just because they can. draw attention 4y FAITH BALDWIN Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. Pretty Mary Lou Thurston pre-_ “For goodness sake.” said Mary |from deception, make an end of tends she is Delight Harford to help | Travers Lorrimer, shell- shocked son of the wealthy Mar- og Lorrimer, regain his health. asperated, “what’s the matter with you, Larry? What did you want to see me about? Is it Jenny? ‘ravers had mistaken Mary Lou| Have you quarreled? But I’m sure for Delight, whom he is supposed| you haven’t—she was over here to have married in England. Noj|today as full of plans as a bun trace can be found of Delight.) of currants! a Travers agrees to start all over| ‘Well, here goes,” said Larry, in with friendship. Months of happy|a tone of voice unlike himself— companionship follow with Trav-| “look here, I know you won't be- ers more in love with Delight than| lieve me—but I’ve found her.” ever, At Christmas he presents} “Found who, for Pete’s sake?” Mary Lou with a sapphire ring,|asked Mary Lou. referring to her not wearing the| “Her, Delight Harford. The real “seal” ring. This leads Mary Lou| one,” he said. to believe that he really married) 14 was out. Delight, using a seal ring. Mary Lon loves Travers and finds de- one eee Rigened is mnomeny small ” ception hai Travers and Mary widened eyes, the red lips’ that Lou visit friends in Florida. Mrs. diook. Lorrimer breaks her arm and they Hed home. The memory of r ight prevents Mary Lou from| and touched his sleeve. revealing her love. She believes| ‘“Found—Delight? Do you mean Travers loves her because he|that ? Are you sure? Who thinks she is Delight. Larry|is she? Mitchells, Mary Lou's newspaper | kee friend, young cou, long he must wait. realizes the masquerade cannot go on much longer, Larry interviews Diana Hackett, an actress, and learns she is Delight Harford. She thinks Travers is dead. The news stuns Mary Lou. CHAPTER XXXVI. Mary Lou had been left alone, Larry arrived, full of his news, very important. But all the way up in the train he had been dreading 4 the interview. What would happen | jf to Mary Lou? She loved this man and he loved her. Or thought he loved her! ] Dreaded Ordeal and someone was going to hurt. And Larry didn’t want someone to be Mary Lou. He was. too fond of her; he felt res) - ble for her presence in Westwood House, for her hay been in- volved in this curious chain of begged pitifally, “please tell me— please!’ bens didn’t tell her, it was on the cards| Di: Funny that the Lady Diana would go her|terpolated, “how peop! way and be none the wiser, unless |change their names f¢ me Gok it auto her hennaed heed to look uj rrimer’s family., But much water had under the dam since she an been crazy yo and haps it would’ hhever occur to er semblance to you—but. x if eho had married ise ro awfully hard, Yet I not be natural for good scout—but—" find his family? After all, the Lorrimers were almost ythcall rich—and this girl had against it, was still, for all ae ell lest it | self No, best to t come out in another way. Mary Lou would never forgive him for not telling, loved him, didn’t she once she learned the truth throug) other, less friendly channels, ‘They sat together in a corner of |her own? the library and Larry looked des-|ter. Now that the real Delight had perately about him and longed for|'been found, she could go away, es- escape, cape from love and grief, escape te “One Siesta to another. said she'd mitted she wasn’t English, let alone err And after a time she spoke 01 breath, tightened. Tell me what she said! married?” Mary Lou reached out a hand/| edly: Lou, half laughing and half ex-|lies. “She told me,” Larry answered. She mn born here. She ad- rrimer,” he went on miser- ably, forced to it by Mary Lou's eyes on his own. “Of—Lorry?” She drew a deep The hand on his sleeve “What did she say? “Not much. Said I reminded her of a boy she’d known. Told me his name. Said he had died.” “Did she say they had—been whispered Mary Lou. “No.” The Only Way | a moment he said, wretch- . didn’t want to tell you.” “You had to tell me. I would After never have forgiven you if you re is she? Oh, don’t | hadn’t and I found out,” she an- she rose and began “I know you won't believe me—but Pve found her,” fe te walk about the big room. beautiful room. She loved = uf Delight ni thad c Te Be Continued