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, The Bismarck Tribune 2 Aa it Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER dn Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state taide Bismarck) out sy sevssseee . Daily by mail outside of North ote . . .00 Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by mail. outside Dakotg, per year ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per secssecee 2. of North 1.50 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. The Next Big Battle Slowly but surely the forces are Bathering for the next great battle on public policy in America. ‘We always have one in the making or in the fighting so the timid need not become alarmed about the fact. Because this is a young nation and we are a virile people we always find something to discuss and argue about. In recent years we have had the war debts, cashing of the bonus, farm relief, business assistance and now the NRA and the rest of the “new deal” program, to gnaw as bones of contention. There is no question that these discussions were good for) the country as a whole. They stimu- lated interest in public questions, continually brought home to the av- erage man that he is a part of the government and that his interest in it is necessary if it is to continue on @ sound basis. What the next battleground will be is clearly indicated by the resolu- tions of the American Legion and the American Federation of Labor. Both big groups took strong stands against two things. One was inflation of the currency, the other was recognition of Soviet Russia. Of the two, the former will occupy the main ring and the second will be in the dideshow during the coming although they may trade places later. For months the demand for more and cheaper money has been voiced insistently by many political leaders, particularly those from certain sec- tions of the farm belt. Inflation has begn pictured as a cure-all which would lift’ agriculture and industry from their beds of pain almost over- night and make them well again. Until recently only the voices of bankers were raised against the idea, and they had little effect on pubiic opinion. A peculiar psychological twist makes some people oppose any- thing a banker supports, regardless of whether he is right or wrong. But the American Legion and the Federation of Labor are a different death takes a tremendous toll in pro- @uctive capacity. In addition, many of these deaths have placed an addi- tional burden upon society to care for many who have been made helpless, ‘We have had all sorts of safety movements but none has been a aig- nal success. What we need, apparent- ly, is for every motor car driver to appoint himself a committee of one to see that he figures in no accidents. Individual concentration on the job will do the trick. Expansive talking and careless driving certainly is no 5,00 | Temedy. A Worth While Competition Annually many cities in this coun- .50| try take part in a. fire-prevention contest. Tt is staged during October and at its close the records are checked to see which community has made the best record. The winner always is Proud of its achievement and public bodies make mention of the fact when calling the advantages of their home town to notice by the rest of the country. This, it would seem, is one of those things which should be encouraged by all reasonable means. A good rec- ord as to fire losses is quite as im- Portant, in the list of public assets, as parks, playgrounds, and other fa- cilities. It gives the community a reputation as a place where lives and Property are safe from one of the greatest common hazards. It 18 too late for Bismarck to enter this competition this year, but it would do no harm if a note were made now to enter North Dakota's capital in this friendly contest a year story. Each group is peculiarly rep- resentative of the rank and file of American opinion. The unity of their action indicates a swing in popular thinking away from the left or ultra- radical position, and toward the right, or more conservative stand. ‘These, and other popular organi- zations like them, will be the shock troops of the anti-inflation army. It is they who will preserve sound money for America, if it is to be maintained at all. Without Tom Toms Without fuss or feathers the “buy now” campaign is taking hold in Bis- marck and North Dakota, Mer- ants everywhere report that their wsiness is better and people gener- ally seem to be in a more cheerful mood, Increased prices, presumably chargeable to the NRA, are drawing no enthusiastic cheers in this dis- trict, but those who have money are spending it now, both because they need many things and because of the Prospect that prices will go higher. It is a matter of sheer self-inter- can to protect himself. In some sections the “buy now” has been accompanied by Publicity. and the beat- concern te those deprived of « bread- winner or a loved one, but untimely hence. It would serve to stimulate interest in fire prevention and, in the event our record was the best for cities of our class, it would enhance the good reputation which Bismarck already has achieved in many other things. Let the Boy Alone Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., now a student at Harvard, seems to be learning what an unenviable posi- tion that of president's son can be. John Coolidge, trailed across the herst campus by a secret service some years ago, learned the same lesson, and it’s not the pleas- antest lesson a youth can learn. Young Roosevelt planned to go out for football. He drew his uniform, started out on the field—and saw such a crew of photographers await- ing him that he turned back and surrendered his outfit. Then he de- cided to try out for the crew—and again the photographers were await- ing him. This time he threatened to punch one cameraman in the nose. It’s natural, of course, that the Photographers should be eager to get lots of pictures of the lad. But it's @ foul break for the boy himself. He has a right to a normal life at col- Jege—the pleasant obscurity that is every young undergraduate’s birth- right. It isn’t fair that he should be denied it just because his father is President of the United States. 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. Strikes and Public Opinion (Minneapolis Tribune) In his address to the American Federation of Labor General Johnson had no difficulty in making out a strong case for his point that strikes are an unwanted hindrance in work- ing out the recovery program of which | he is administrator. Although he re- affirmed the right of labor to organ- ize, and declared it to be an essential Part of the scheme, he minced no words when he declared that neither labor nor the country as a whole could tolerate strikes. Since labor organiz- ation derives strength from the fact that it is able to hold the ultimate resort to the strike as part of its Power, the suspension of that power suggests the changes General John- son is trying to bring about in the Processes of settling industrial dis- putes. Just as the recovery administration has accomplished some changes in the conditions and wages alloted to labor, so will it ultimately work changes in the nature of labor organ- ization and the purpose to which it is put. General Johnson demands that differences between employer and employe be arbitrated before re- course is had to the strike and that disputes between individual unions be ended. Since both parties in dis- putes of this kind consider their tights as absolute, however, arbitra- tion is not easy, nor is public opinion in & position to exercise any over- influence in forcing agree- ment. Public opinion is all too fre- pany ® phantom rather than a force. Within the structure of the recov- ery administration, as it affects the ‘Say, I Guess Dese Federal Guys Mean {treat the trouble. More detailed sug- Business’ | N | Fe veeccctctiatyhiaielted “5 Ss | de ogicety PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written Instructions. in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to i Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. OXYURIS VERMICULARIS The thread worm (also called seat worm, pin worm) is one-fourth or one-third of an inch long, and re- sembles a bit of white thread. The worms live in the large bowel and sometimes in the appendix. Their eggs are microscopic in size and due to uncleanly personal habits of children the eggs commonly contaminate water and food or find their way on unclean fingers directly to the child's mouth, This intestinal parasite sometimes causes chronic inflammation of the colon in children or in adults, with production of much mucus—one of the various conditions which wiseacre victims call’ “mucous colitis.” The prudery of the public forbids more candid description of the effects of infestation. Probably the eggs of pin worms, as well as the eggs of round worms, are carried by flies and deposited on fruits, vegetables and in drinking water. The eggs are discharged in enormous numbers. Pruritus (itching) is due to oxyuris infestation in more cases than are definitely sv diagnosed. Any one who suffers with pruritis in any degree deserves to suffer if he or she fails to undergo a proper examination for accurate diagnosis. In children the presence of these worms may cause frequent micturi- t‘on, balanitis, vaginitis or other in- flammations or irritations, and such irritation may lead to bad habits. An injection (enema) of soapy wa- ter, followed, after’ it has passed, with an injection-of a pint of water in which one-half ounce of quassia chips has been boiled, is a good way to gestions are given in the booklet “Our Unbidden Guests” which readers may obtain by sending a dime and a stamped envelope bearing the correct address, Rigid adherence to the rules of per- sonal cleanliness is the best insurance against infestation with round worms or pinworms. One of the chief rules and habits to inculcate in childhood is that of washing the hands before eating, not merely before the formal meals but before eating anything at any time or place. This may seem finical or fussy, in some circumstances, and it is indeed a needless rite on many occasions, but so is shaking haps invisibly soiled) hands can touch mouth or other object which may carry contamination to the mouth. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS lee P ‘Will you please give your recipe for making coffee?. (M. W.) Answer—Grind your own for each fresh brew. Coffee in pot with a little cold water and let stand a while, over night perhaps. When ready add more water and a bit of egg white, stir up, and put on fire. Watch pot and take off fire when it is ready to boil. The important thing is that coffee must never boil. Boiling drives off the aroma and brings out the bitter flavor of Tannin. If you can smell the cof- fee when it is brewing, depend on it the brew is ruined; that is, if you are | going to drink it. Basal Metabolism Please explain what basal metabol- ism is. What must a person do to cure himself of it? (M. W.) Answer — Basal metabolism is the rate at which the chemical processes of life go on when one is at rest and child will cease eating such things when she gets a little older® Just see that she gets nothing that is polluted and do not let her nibble on painted things. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) —_—_—_—_——_____ | Barbs | | Man in Bi » Pa, had a piece of his shin bone grafted on his spine, and now will be able to tell us whether barking our shins is worse than being kicked in the back. es * We wouldn’t mind it Politicians would only | income. | ee * Scientist reports that in New Guinea people sell their songs for pigs. In the United States we've been asked to sell our pigs for a song. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) at all, if the ive within our free from influences which tend to Speed up metabolism. I think most of the basal metabolism tests or measurements made by machine practitioners are a poor substitute for good medical meer: Child 22 months old, weighs 30 pounds, gets everything she wants to eat, but as soon as she sees dirt she eats it—licks the soles of shoe: the ends of linoleum ,,,. ¢ W. J.) Answer—Clean earth, sand, wood or paper will do no harm. mous bard in the picture? 12 Heap. 13 To elude. 14 To vex. 16 Heavy blow 17 Blackbird. 18 New star. 19 Self. 20 Softens in temper. HORIZONTAL 1 Who is the fa- VIAIGIUIA! iC Te mV hands, and sometimes shaking hands may spread disease, but who ever heard of any injury to health from unnecessary washing of the hands? It 1s a fine complex for anyone to cul- tivate, keeping the hands clean. But that is only half of it. It is just as important to cultivate the habit of avoiding unnecessary contact of the hands with anything that may be con- taminated—bearing in mind that a surface may be contemplated even tho it be white, fresh, new, bright, nickle plated or glass covered. The abode of the most virulent disease germs is sometimes immaculate in sppearance. Teach the children, too, that they must never pet the dog or cat or relationship between capital and! to progress. If strikes are not erated, these changes become inevitable. WHOIS THIS ASSISTANT SECRET, ‘OF STATE’ 22 Letter “t” 23 Toward. 24 Masculine Pronoun, 40 Organ of 25 Stand still. ° _ hearing. 27Near (abbr.). 42 The pictured 38 Bronze. man is a na- 29 Wing part of tive of ——. a a 48Cry of @ dove, At Official exami- 49 Toward sea. nation of ac- 51 To place in counts. Une. 32To 52 Successively. 33 English money 53 Wild duek. 34 Pastry. 54Grain. 35 Second note 655A small in scale. number. 37 Street (abbr). 56 Besides being 38 Half an em, & well-known 39 Pair (abbr.). bard, and nov- IAININIADIAIV], JOWIAT je] 12 The pictured man is his country’s —— 154 man with 3] the above title is considered worthy of the Muses’ ——. 3 20To say again. 21 Raised in pitch. 24 Those who inherit. 26 Liquid part elist, this man of fat. is also a——. 28 Stir. (ph). 30 Monkey. 36To leve. YaRnical 39Tndigent. . 1Chauvinist; oF 41 To harvest. @ jocular oath. 43 North 2011 (suffix). America. 3 Pronoun. 44Warmth of 4.Nothing more color. 45 Falsifier. than. 5S Grandparental. 46 Person op- 6To rescue. posed. 7 Paradise, 47 Northeast. S8Remnant of 48The shank. 50 Every. r cloth. 9 Sea eagle. 52To perform. 28 LS 8 tt |i NTT TIS a dl aes lied oth WE ee ‘WOME \\ al BE tt Ld The New Deal Washington wored Referee, Role of Dictator... lay Show Its Teeth ... Act Under Fire... First Early on Christmas 8) It St This column, “The New Deal in Washington,” is being conducted by Willis Thornton during the va- cation of Rodney Dutcher. Peers By WILLIS THORNTON (Tribune_Washington Correspondent) ‘Washington, Oct. 14. — You don’t often her the NRA spoken of as America’s Two-Year Plan, but that’s|! what it really amounts to. As the NRA crystallizes into the permanent organization that will carry on for the two years of its present legal tenure (and as the idea becomes accepted more' generally that it will go on and on after that), two courses of development are open: One is the mofe or less complete socialization of industry under the complete control of this federal bu- reaucracy. The other is to make the NRA a referee in the battle of competitive in- dustry, the maker of the rules, and the referee of the battle, who is to prevent biting, gouging and hitting in|. the clinches. Right now it looks as though the latter view is prevailing. Industry is being organized so that each may ad- Ment companies make up the new ventures. FIRST LADY SHOPS EARLY be i Hu a5 ~~ i i fe | é 8 eee Baucation is the vaccination and the spinach and the cod liver ofl of the body politic—Dr. Hans Zinsser ly. | of Harvard. WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. Joan Hasti: seventeen and | beautiful, lives” with two old maiden aunts, Evvie and Babe Van|hi Fleet, in Sausalito, Cal. Joan falls | in love with Bill Martin, a penni- less young mechanic. Bill, an in- ets victim fi ots poetic gang, is sent to joan, beg- ging for bail money from the aunts, confesses her love for him. She is put on a train for school. Bill, freed, rushes to the Van Fleet home to see\Joan and Aunt Evvie tells him she has gone and per- suades him the kindest thing he can do is never try to see her again. He bids goodbye to his mother and goes away, leaving no ad- dress. Joan, escaping from the train, reaches his home just after he has gone. She goes to San Francisco and is befriended by Walter Dunne, the motorist who drove her home when she left the train. He arranges for her to live with good-natured Maisie Kimmer, a friend. She secures a position in a department store. All her thoughts are of Bill, and M "s a to make her forget in vain, NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XVII. Bill was bumming his way South. Not that it mattered which way he mea sort would have done as' well. A brakeman booted him off the freight train somewhere near Sali- nas, so he walked the rest of the way into town and spent his cent for coffee and doughnuts. After that he walked around aim- lessly for a while, with his hands in his pockets. It occurred to him that he might as well work his way to Los Angeles, he had never n there. Work his way how? It was still too early to “work in the fruit” and he had made up his mind about one thing—he wouldn't stay in a city. Oh, well—he’d be on his way. he struck the highway he got a few lifts, but he walked a good many miles. By sun he was ti and hungry. A woman in a service station gave him a sand- wich. He smoked his last cigarette. Two more miles, and he had had enough. He crawled under a barbed oe | the ditch really hadn't much hope of com really in’t much hope. back. Evvie had done her wel, He came w a car in e suddenly; It had no lights,- Surely it was de- serted—stop| there—alone, at that hour of the night. He looked in the window. “Don't shoot—for God’s sake— don’t shoot—here” « hand came out the window—“take the whole works!” A watch and a wallet were laid in find mil, ingetsitive epee, appeared mild, inquisitive eyes, a) "Bil ale mont Taughed, “My jail imo: . “My jail sen- tence must have made me ick like a yeae or something!” he and aloud he said, “ idea—I’m no holdup!” Pockets, He/ ti HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIOHT ‘BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. “STOLEN LOVE’ ‘warmth and well being stole éver Bill. He had a cigarette, and felt almost happy. “Y'know—I like you,” Rollo said. He slapped Bill on the back. A sen- iment tear coursed down his high-bridged nose. “That's the kind of a fellow I am—true frien’. Now we'll home. Got ‘nother case liquor home. No coffee for you nex’ time—” y Bill offered to drive, but Rollo wouldn't hear of it. He drove ex- pertly, with elaborate caution, At train crossings he got out and and down the track. “Al- ways look out for the cars,” he said Toward daylight Rollo’s hands relaxed. He brought the car to the side of the road. “Now you take ‘er,” he murmured. “Hundred and fifty-one Marina Drive Bill walked around aimlessly for a while. “No?” the wire fence, burrowed into a stack|t? be of fragrant, drying alfalfa. His tired limbs relaxed, he slept heav- ily, dreamlessly. When he awoke the moon was shining full in his face. He was as wide a1 as if it were day. Far ‘away a train whistled. A dog barked across the fields. He lay there in the moonlight, trying to slee} saeie It had turned oats cold an he was hungry, and ly. More lonely than he had ever been before. He thought of Joan, mise: “I wish I had a ci; rink fe guy Lam. Kayes i baby Bole Kayer, Heck ‘ees i zs > SRL AAR REA fore Eunice .. . Eunice who was once 80 rt and “Ginger,” he Saed to call i kids, And it—it isn’t Fleet f il igi ieee vatita the nen ale * Got te be moving—ca road. back He on y was South, Evvie Van Fleet Bill ned. It Q and a Befusaled boy whos’ brea Porgpel aged No, I'm no res- cue crew,’ said, “but T might give you ® hand. What's “Everything,” replied the strand- ed one, “Everything but gas. Got ples of, ‘ust thinkin’ of mak- in’ a tents oft tae ‘What do you say? Like the idea? Blow her up—| get me?” Bill opened the door and came in, “Have a dtink first. Share last di with you. That's ’ “Let's have a look.” of a name. her! Wished on me. Here—help your: self. Good stuff.” Bill took the wheel, He tired, and he didn’t like was very i rs e idea of He tried to think it all out, to plan the explanation he would make when asked him who he was, and what he meent by driving their car, but he was so tired... so tired +. and all he could think of was Joan, Joan with her fair hair blow: ing in the wi ind. A boy in a blue shirt waved from the roadside. The air was sweet with the smell of the wet, freshly turned earth. The warm f. of the roses some farmer's wife had plates in a sturdy row near the “T can't ” he cried miser- ably, “dare tend cane et Rollo car gal speed. stirred uneasily. “Look out { Pain he said Thicicly, drive rae rally —' we Nobody asked any questions. They took it quite Rollo ’ French car to the Know | ad lend hast ae cae? tae door, the house. aie epi nasa aval ae cl the inert form ‘under the wes: he fi seit fal Teng on the, bed be de . Just for a minute, e minute, . ; to vest his eyéh ‘ad To-Be Continued toe