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eo | 379898_ f-¢seswess ozzee f THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1933" The Bismarck Tribune An Independent THE STATES NEWSPAPER = (Established 1973) os Published by The Bismarck Ben Subscription Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......87.20 Daily \ Ae per year (in Bis- ¢ m tasescescoserecseescess Dally by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail outside oi Dakota ...... oe + 6 ‘Weekly by mail in ) per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in stat 28 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 berein are also reserved. Reception Is Cool Preliminary indications are that Governor Langer’s embargo on wheat ehipments will be short-lived. Even as he prepared his message to the governors of spring wheat states late Tuesday, word came over the press wires that two of them, Governor Berry of South Dakota and Governor Herring of Iowa, had definitely re- jected the idea of applying the em- bargo to their own states. Governor C. W. Bryan of Nebraska was silent, but the attorney general of that state rather ridiculed the idea and Governor Olson of Minnesota, while praising the gesture, confined his promise of action to lip-service. This left the governors of Mon- tana and Kansas still to be heard from. There seems little reason to believe they will be any more enthu- siastic than their fellows in office. Should that prove to be true, North Dakota will be left to fight the em- bargo battle alone, probably to stew in its own juice, Political comment in Bismarck was Noticeably cautious and varied, but ‘one observer, credited with more than ordinary acumen in the past, re- marked that a court action probably would save Governor Langer from what might become @ severe trap. If no one takes the trouble to start a suit, he observed, the governor soon may be inducing someone to start one. The idea back of this is that farm folk are by nature independent) and will not relish interference with their desire to conduct their own business. It is not surprising that the idea has received a kind of support from many persons. In the terms of the embargo proclamation, prices of farm products are “unconscionably low” and the effects of farm aid measures have not been as quickly apparent as those of the NRA, which have been, on the whole, adverse to the farmer. As it is, the only opposition to the embargo is based on the theories that it fs unconstitutional and futile. A good many persons are opposed to unconstitutional acts on the theory that it is bad business to violate the fundamental Jaw of either the state or the nation. Behind this idea is the thought that constitutional vio- lations, once condoned, may become so extensive that the most sacred Tights of person and property will be endangered. ‘Those who believe and fear the gesture is a futile one, base their po- sition on knowledge of the fact that the bread-consuming public will be able to outlast the North Dakota citi- zen if it becomes a contest. There are some 20,000,000 bushels of wheat in elevators at the Head of the Lakes and considerably more in Minneapo- Us. In addition, there is always the system of “milling in bond” wheat from Canada, which has served to keep down the price of home-grown spring wheat in the past. No one will argue with the gover- nor’s statement that these few north- western states raise a special kind of wheat which should command a pre- mium for bread-making purposes. ‘This has long been accepted here as a fact. But it will be hard to con- vince many persons that an embargo will be effective in obtaining it. Not Very Hopeful How strong are the repercussions of the World war is demonstrated fully by the reaction of various na- tions to Germany's withdrawal from the League of Nations and the Dis- armament Conference. None of the former allied nations a i i F & § ER i ee Fu 2 A. Q g '§ 3 29 08 tt manic peoples would return to the ‘strife tomorrow. That is clear on the face of things. Meanwhile, 3,000 miles from the European scene, America prepares to observe within the next month a na- tional holiday honoring those of her sons who died that the world might be made “safe for democracy.” As she does so she sees democracy spat upon and trampled into the dust. Present ambitions and the en- mities of a thousand years have made tude jest. Except in widely scattered places on the globe it is a myth. The German action brings a sharp awakening and its significance should not be overlooked by the American People. More than a hint of what our course should be is contained in the developments of these last few days. It is fair warning that, much as we would like to adopt the altru- istic role, our cue is to check care- fully our own course, avoid any further foreign entanglements. | Water Them Now In view of the prolonged drouth, local horticultural experts suggest that householders will save many fine trees by watering them well be-|. fore freezing weather sets in. A good soaking now may mean a fine tree in the spring, whereas neglect may re- ‘sult in a dead trunk reaching toward the sky as mute evidence of careless- ness. The suggestion is a good one and must be acted upon quickly by Bis- marck residents if they would per- form this task economically. The lawn rate for city water expires Oct. 20, winter schedules becoming effec- tive at that time. This gives but a few days in which to soak trees and d The Very First Lady ' : lawns in preparation for winter. In former years it was the custom of the city water department to cs- tablish winter rates at the end of September but the suggestion that it ‘be continued until a later date was made by a Tribune reader last year because of the drouth then prevail- ing, and the idea was promptly adopted by the city commission. Hence the Oct. 20 ending for sum- mer water rates in 1933. Even this extension may not be long enough, in view of the conditions| From recent reverberations it ap- still prevailing. It might be more|Pears the tariff is as lively a quad- conducive to good public policy to|tennial issue as it was in the days of wait until the freeze-up arrives or|Cleveland and McKinley, tho more the drouth is broken, for a lawn|Complicated by nation-wide hook-up well-soaked now may not be in the|than it was when the orators ad- best of condition if present weather|Gressed throngs of from 150 to 600 conditions continue for another|men, many with torches. month, as they sometimes have been] yoesn't matter where you live, what self-addressed envelope is enclosed. THE TARIFF AND THE RHEU- MATIZ 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, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. But the rheumatiz is different. Ese He known to do. In the effort to save trees, shrubs gnd lawns and preserve the beauty of ur city, the utmost of cooperation, between officials and householders is none too much, Save to Share Wives who think they are econom- ical will have an opportunity to gauge their skill at cooking low-cost meals s0on when the Golden Rule Founda- tion publishes its Golden Rule book. In it will be contained all the cost- saving devices originated by thou- sands of American women during these recent years, both with regard to cooking and other items of family management. ‘The foundation recently awarded prizes to the women who submitted the best menus which were low in cost and consistent with health. The winner fed her family nutritious and palatable food for seven and one- half cents per plate or $11.96 a week for the average family of two adults and three children. ‘The object of the entire movement is to promote the “save-to-share” idea, persons participating sending to the Golden Rule Foundation a part of the amounts they save by follow- ing these thrift suggestions. The foundation, in turn, uses the money for the support of orphan asylums and other institutions which ard hay- ing hard sledding. your interest nor whether the climate or weather is good, bad or indiffer- ent, I am happy to announce that there is no more rheumatiz in North erica. © I do not assume the sole credit for this, altho it is a matter of that I have been fighting for years to tid the country of this incubus. Other ‘members of the party have freely con- wibuted their assistance, and even some of the patriotic and enlightened leaders of the standpatters have helped us in the great work. In the hour of our triumph we can offer our sympathy to the old fogies who are left crippled in diagnostic resource. It must be hard for them to string their credulous patients along now that the rhemuatiz is no more. Without equivocating we may say that the only occasion for suggesting that a patient has some form of “rheumatism” is when the doctor doesn’t know just what ails the pa- tient. That's the simple truth, and you can’t find any physician of standing who will venture to deny it. Not that the doctor knows any more about the nature, cause or cure of your trouble when he calls it “arthritis” instead of “rheumatism,” tho the term arthritis means some- thing definite — joint inflammation. ‘The term rheumatism means nothing at all today; long ago it meant ca- tarrh, a flow. The ancients prob- ably laid it to the weather. Folks at Mandan have uncovered the fact that the C. C. C. men were moved out of North Dakota for the winter because Governor Langer fail- ed to tell the federal government what they could do here during the cold months, Tch, tch. How those things do get overlooked in the major business of campaigning? Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without re: to whether they agree or disat With The Tribune's policies. Truth and the O’Learys (New York World-Telegram) ; ile it Only veritable quacks, within or without regular medical ranks, have MRS. ROOSEVELT BEGINS HER CHRISTMAS SHOPPING. —NBWS (Tem. OF COURSE, YOURE AN NIRA MEMBER? ‘ 5 Letters should be brief and written QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ae Ambidexterity | Son, 5, entering school. I have been @ teacher and have been helping him learn to write. He seems to use the jeft hand as well as the right, and alternates from one hand to the other. (WW). Answer—Do not discourge it. Let him learn to write, and do other fine work with elther hand. Do not per- mit the school people to interfere. Many of the highest type individuals fare ambidextrous, | Some One Please Try This ‘The hint in your column regarding pressing the ball of foot against foot- board of bed to relieve cramp in leg at night has proved invaluable to me. T have a suggestion to offer. When| choking, raise your left arm over and Close tothe head for immediate relief. | (M. McG.) Answer—Now if a few of our ami- oble readers will choke for us and try the treatment and report maybe we'll have something. Breaking a Bad Habit | ‘Thank you ‘for your booket “The; Constipation Habit.” It is almost un- believeable what it has done for me. . «+ The worst part is sticking it out— but after the first few days every- oS aaabaeiata sa ater ja.) AnsWer—Don't start if you are not | going to stick it out. Glad to send any reader copy of booklet on request. Inclose a ips and stamped envelope Two recent new varieties of toma- toes produced at North Dakota agri- cultural experiment station are the Golden Bison and the Fargo Yellow Pear. Both are the short vine type. bearing your address. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) 4 . Cs | Barbs ‘A Londoner died two minutes after|Pied by @ Republican a dozen pairs the time he had predicted for hi death. Death may be late, but it nev- er disappoints. * * ‘With all the NRA is doing, the white collar man is still waiting for his relief—if it’s only a shirt to go with his collar. * * ® HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. to form some sort of protective association, but the public will still be Sgt ok as guard. the fans just to keep herself cool. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) Sally Rand had to appear in New York in long flannel undies, using The New Deal Washington or grag me 9 peated Plenty of gold left. This column, “The New Deal in Washington,” is being conducted by Willis Thornton during the vaéation of Rodney Dutcher. By WILLIS THORNTON Washington, Oct. 18—The row over removal of Federal Trade Com- missioner William E. Humphrey -is| important, but not because of Hum- phrey. | It is important because the Federal | Trade Commission is going to take on heavier and heavier duties in con- nection with enforcement of NRA codes, This commission and the la- ‘bor, justice and commerce depart- ments are going to become more vital factors in making the codes work, now that the more important of them have been adopted and complaints of evasions pile higher and higher. Naturally, President Roosevelt wants men on the trade commission who see eye to eye with him on re- covery and the NRA. He has noth-| ing aginst Humphrey personally. By the way, there’s nothing ¢o that talk of the Republicans making a party issue of this case. i The supreme court, now fortunately in session, may have to decide the question soon—whether the president has the right, arbitrarily and with- out charging inefficiency, neglect, or malfeasance, to remove @ member of @ quasi-judicial body like the trade commission. ‘There are~ many such bodies in Washington, and for every one occu- | ig {Of jealous DeMocratic eyes look over a back of the chair. PRINTERS SET RECORD i Speaking of the government in in-j) dustry, the government might have in the country would have had the resources to turn out such colossal Jobs in such a short time. ’ MAKES MIDAS A PIKER An ingenious agent of the public works administration figured this one out: If that $3,300,000,000 to be distributed for public works were put on a‘train in gold at New York, and a million dollars in gold shoveled off every mile crossing the country westward, there still would be lots of gold aboard when it reached San Francisco . .. that gives you some idea... . A guest arrived late at the white house the other night for a state dinner given for Presi- dent Arias of Panama... that’s un- heard of in Washington etiquet .. . but you can bet it was all right this time—the latecomer was Gen. Hugh 8. Johnson, ... . An enormous five- foot tarpon, beautifully mounted as though in,the act of leaping out of the water, now adorns the wall of the president's executive pffice. .. . to a fellow sportsman, F. D. R. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service; Inc.) i A raindrop can never attain a found itself in a bad hole the last! WHAT HAS, HAPPENED SO FAR. aunts, Evvie and in Sausalito, sends Joan away to Pennsyl. ia to school. home onl; without did not know Bill had ing if he loved her up and not try to find her as h tles in San Francisco Rollo Keyes, ‘thy Rollo’s father, believing have a jearns surveyi! to get in tou oes to her. Bill’s joan’s letters to gularly. Joan bi ds money ret eves Bill no longer cares and - Head of a ai i ERR ‘4 a State the temerity to ascribe acute athri- ore Answer to Previous Puzzle | aoe iis in children or adults to dampness aerate ST heen. fold, DOWROATE, Aid era Sey leader in the 18 Experiment. prefer to do it indirectly or annoy- eeurat IN| 39 Mad 4 mously or without assuming any per- _ picture jade a si , - sonal responsibility for the notion 12 Standard of den invasion. themselves. type measure. UIC IRIAIGIE] 21 Antipathy. There is no dissenting medical} 13 Upon. ISITMMAIL Ole] 22 T° set ready. opinion at present in respect to the| 14 More spacious. £2 Ne iN =me~l 28 To see. infectious character of acute arthri-} 16Sea Dyak. ae. =| 29 Band of war- tis, That is now a well understood| 18 Organs of riors. nathological condition. taste. Nia “3 ‘When it comes to the consideration | 19 Sun god. 5 2 He formerly of chronic arthritis, frankly we are| 20He is the rul- was a —— by still at sea as to the cause and na- ing head of the profession. ture of some cases, tho there is no state of ——, tack. longer any question that in most cases U.S. A 36 His title is 65 Compassion. BS aad i the pathological process is local in-| 22 Mast. ay VERTICAL ere g fection. 24Native metal. 41 Unit. Lace real The kind of chronic arthritis that] 25 Pattern block. 42 Dispute. 1 Monstrous. 37 To emulate. we do not yet understand clearly is} 26 To free. 43Goddess of 2Smoldering 38 A vein of called metabolic arthritis, atrophic! 27 you and me. peace, , coals, feldspathic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, arthri-/ 28 Falsifier. 45 All right. 3 Osseous, rock. tis deformans, etc. Fortunately less| 29 To yield. 46 His predeces- 4 Halfanem. 39River in than one-tenth of all cases of joint! 39 spirit. sor in office * Barterer. Egypt. disease are of this class. 31 Opposite of was —. 6 Honorary 40 Form of jam. Ene tuo. tects T hope to imprest closed, 48 Deity. (obbr.. 42.To perforate. Upon, ras mane ee atte, | 32 Opposite of a 49 Contrary. 7 Ship's record. 44 Tidy. pe. bars " depression. 51 Form of “be.” 8 Mooley apple. 46To soak flax. etna thew! 34 Possessed. 52 Chum. 97To hasten. 47 Age. matism,” and second, there 18 DO} 35 Absence of 63 ,Values. 40 Hodgepodge. 50Go on (music) somnite eriigare Ont eee light. 54 Data. 1iMeasure of 52. Jumbled type. 1 ’ broken-hearted. vain to make her foraet, M daugher, Francine de Guitry, Joana positon modeling towns in her exclusive NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XX “Francine watched Joan like a afraid she would leave her. When Joan shrank | dred men i irae a ecks, jowl who sat in corners mi ered while wives or cousins or nieces or wards beeane dresses, Beane ne ae, at pay any attention—silly! They hawk. She was terribl from the queer, well- with thick necks, and there with a reassu! won't hurt you—” “But they look at me id!” disillusioned. eyes. A cruel wo! * a rotten wore world that she never dreamed lived in the clean, salty the bay, “You're just growing wy a. tothe i at's alt er mi bag because, Bill had and all her old dreams cine must be hiledon't be « pe wi lurphy | i BB Be ij = g FA G i 8 hi | 2 3 3 = [ E 2 flpit 3 if iff Hs ; i a3 §E E Lovely Joan Hastings lives a se- | vied cluded life with her two stern, old Babe Van Fleet, alifornia. She falls in love with Bill Martin, young mechanic, Learning this, Aunt Ev- Enroute, Joan off the train and goes to Bill's to find that he left town leaving an address. She jone to see | $8! her and Evvie upbraided him, say- ‘oan he would give had nothing to offer her. Joan set- wn to he boards with good- Kimmer and store. Bill, befriended by a boy. ill may influence on his son, ives him a position where he He does not try with Joan as he wants to be a success before he 3 ther returns she does not now her son’s address, but she assures Joan he is all right as he ding Maison rancine. She is an instant success. | ba’ 2o—” “Nonsense, Joan—don’t be silly. It strange, new world that was’ unfolding ‘before Joan’s sad; ted when she air across | te i failed her, tite thought Fras ‘were swept svar a ze ] itt et oi HEH F a ibs fll ge Fir # ok = E £ second no sca | how far it falls, s of black hair low over her cheel s but even Joan knew she en-' er. Only Marguerite Sanderson, mortise support a tubercular ex- soldier husband, was different, and nobody minded if she was standof- fish—they called her “poor Marg- uerite” and planned eg ey boxes. for her dying boy. She had an ex- ‘cuse for keeping to herself—she had! a tragedy to live with— “Marguerite’s a saint!” Maud wi id. “Margueri a saint”—and she “For the last time, Hastings, will fe come up to my apartment after liked the £ and me liked her. dinner?” Maud asked. “I swear this is the last time I'll ask you!” patied Jou shoulder, “Yes, 0 joan’s . “Yes, go with the girls, dearie. I’m going to’ run up to Mama’s myself to! T'll tell her where 3 a are. Joan gulped. “All right, “And enackt Sekaie—ted ‘really ike to Oe come!” “Well, let’s start,” Anna said, snuggling into her squirrel coat, fo adinanng her wrist watch over Margusrite: Sanderson wouldn't come with them, she wanted to go! out io the hospital and see her bus- a ; | and a Joan's thoughts so far leo Regniae athing Sse td take us for,’ hicks? Just because five lone i zl ty 3 3 Eh i sats 3 ‘ H = i iz S355 >, aS Bete Biss It's the gift of a Florida fishing club| speed of more than about 30 feet per it— | abor their heads close together, and talked in whispers. Hours passed, past eight! Next day even Maudie was cool. “Gave us the slip, eh? Well, it’s your affair, but you’re not much of * Hastings!” : foan’s attempt to fraternize with “the girls” was a total failure. “Discouraged?” Francine asked the next morning, finding her left out of the chattering coat roo group in the mm. “Yes!” Joan burst out suddenly. She had been this all day. ara made ithering courage for ine, I_wasn’t to_model dresses. : It isn’t I'm foing i leave, Francine, and—” “Yes—oh, not because of the girls —just because of myself—that’s all. I just saw, all of a sudden—that I could—if something with m; life, “But what do you Francine was asking time. “Oh, Joan, don't give it all u sense of color and real I tried real life—" hard—do fight k .. . forget Bill... without any want to do?” ‘ for the third little idiot, ‘You've got a ine. You'll make i