The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 20, 1933, Page 4

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Bay s=oea-mam 88895 “? QF292 > . SERESSSE =. RY2TAZ zee QSZ8H2RRbse ROQks aba code shaw ! in Independent Newspaper v THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ; Published by The Bismarck ‘Trib- Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- pay by oad seseeesoeees KORA 720 per year (in state outside Bismarck) .......... Daily by mail outaide of North DAkOta 22... sceceeesesereveee GE ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . . Weekly by mail in Canada, per 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. Will Washington Be Fair or ._ Fascist? If there is truth in the report that the federal government is preparing to crack down hard on strikers whose cause is labeled “unjustified” by fed- eral investigators, the administration would seem to have bitten off a mouthful which will take a great deal of very energetic chewing. In any other country on earth, such a step would be taken as prima facie evidence of a swing to the extreme right—toward Fascism, to be blunt. ‘The one thing that would prevent Americans from looking at it in that light would be the reputation for fairness and liberalism which the Roosevelt administration has built up thus far, For the implications of the program are clear. Labor is warned not to manufacturing trade failed to grow to the sive it had before the prohibi- tion era? An Orchid for Uncle Sam. The Bismarck Tribune] ¥. be * good thing if the Liquor and]. tt may be quite true that our dip- lomatic representatives in Cuba have not been very successful lately in es- timating the strength of the various revolutionary factions there. But it does seem that our state department as a unit deserves a few bouquets for the patience with which it has handled a very difficult situation. ‘We have come to realize that American intervention in Cuba is a thing to be avoided as long as is humanly possible. It is to be avoided, if for no other reason, because it would hamper American interests in Latin America as a whole. And the state department has done a pretty good job of holding off. Under all ordinary precedents, we long since had ample excuse for in- tervention. So far, however, our ma- rines have remained aboard ship and our naval guns have been used for nothing more serious than target practice. The responsible officials in Washington deserve a good deal of praise for their intelligent forbear- ance, It Must Be Told The nation-wide contest for plans to end crime and racketeering, held by the United States Flag associa- tion, has been won by a gentleman who suggests strict censorship of criminal charges, criminal news, and reports of criminal trials. Thus once again we meet the familiar old theory that everything will be all right if only we ignore the existence of evil; the theory which mistakes the symptom for the disease and tries to fight typhoid fever with an aspirin tablet. It is dreary business to see a wealth of crime news in the papers. Granted. But the solution does not and never can lie in suppressing the crime news. It goes right to the strike without governmental permis- sion. The last-resort weapon of the working man is to be used only when Washington believes its use to be justified. By withholding relief from, so-called “unjustified” strikers, the government reserves the right to de- cide when a walkout may be called. All this brings with it a tremendous responsibility for the people at Wash- ington. If the government can tell labor when not to strike, it logically fol- lows that it is up to the government to see that labor gets the squarest, kind of deal in its negotiations with industrial management. Washington has to fight the work- ing man's battles for him. A govern- ment which undertakes to break strikes when it feels such course ad- visable also must undertake to make them, on occasion. ! This brings us into a field so new and unexplored that no living mortal can say what we are going to see when we cet to the other side. It also brings the New Deal to its acid test. Nothing could make the ordinary working man swallow a dose like this except the previously mentioned rep- utation for fairness and liberalism possessed by the present administra- tion. And nothing could harm that reputation as much as a couple of ill- Judged decisions as to the “justifi- ability” of certain strikes. The success or failure of the whole New Deal easily might hinge on the way this new policy is handled, t Politics or Business Dr. Arthur E. Morgan, chairman of the government body which has the vast Muscle Shoals development in charge, plans to have everybody who works on that project—even down to Pick-and-shovel laborers — chosen through civil service tests, Political pressure from congress- men who want jobs for their con- stituents has become so great that he has been forced to this step, he Says; and he adds significantly: “If the government goes into busi- ness, it has got to go into it in a business-like way.” Right there Dr. Morgan has put his finger on one of the most important elements in the whole case. Much of the fear of “the government in business” arises from the justifiable belief that big government jobs are Tf Uncle Sam is going into business on & large scale—as, apparently, he is—it is highly important that poli- ties be divorced from the passing out, of jobs. The Liquor Tariff ‘One of the jobs the next congress it hl gilts Tail a8 elistete acl fundamentals of our social organiza- tions. ‘Until the causes of crime are re- moved from the bedrock of American society, we shall continue to have gangs and racketeers; and we shan’t know how menacing they are unless our newspapers tell us about them. How the Forest Army Pays A glimpse at the potential useful- ness of the forest camp outfit is pro- vided by a recent bulletin from the Charles Lathrop Pack Forestry Foun- dation. This bulletin asserts that the white pine blister rust, now spreading through American forests, menaces no less than half a billion dollars’ worth of timber. To check the menace, there now are at work some 12,000 members of the Civilian Conservation Corps in 22 states; and, as the bulletin states, “for the first time since a defensive battle against this insidious forest disease was declared in 1918 there are men and money available in a degree commensurate with the value of the standing timber at stake.” A diminution of half a billion dol- lars in the value of its timber re- serves would be # hard loss for the nation to take. If the C. C. C. can prevent such loss, it will pay for it- self many times over. According to the reports of thc| census takers, the women at the sea- side last summer were in a bare ma- jority. One idea of shell-shock is some- thing that the cook suffers when she cracks open an ancient egg. Someone has said that a safe place to stop when on an automobile tour, is at the railroad crossings. An ideal happy married state is one where the wife goes her way and the husband goes hers. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other edito! ‘They are published without rega! to whether they agree or disa, With The Tribune's policies Around the Horizon (Beach Advance) North Dakota is one of the few states where political medicine ‘is brewed all the year around. The next primaries are nearly a year away but much dope is being manufactured already. For a change this time the fight bids fair to be entirely within the Nonpartisan League trenches, as there no longer seems to be any or- ganization on the part of the IVAs, the Democrats being the enemy the League will have to confront in the next general election. That there is a lively fight between the forces of the governor and the other state of- ficers, backed by their respective fol- Jowings, is much in evidence, the A Bird Can’t Fly With One Wing | CE DAL 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 in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ASCARIASIS AIN'T WHAT SHE USED TO BE Seems little doubt that they were the cause of the symptoms... . As in the case of the abdominal symptoms, however, intestinal worms are only one of the possible causes of such nervous distur- bances, and certainly not a freq- Many years ago the neighborhood ; Saireygamps had a fine time going | about diagnosing worms in children) and plying the luckless youngsters | with favorite worm medicines. a ) ent one.” Today many a child grows up with-1 go even a conservative au ty 2a out ever having been “wormed,” | gecade thority though it would not be acuracte t0/the ripened pnts ac nae say these fortunate ones have never) toms alone. : symp- had worms. a 5 Most children atone time or an-|,,2,S0me such “puraling” cases the other harbor worms, either round) +, sree be rhe a f y 8 4 clue worms (lumbricoid) or pinwWorms)i¢ the inness is di panies that is, (oxyuris) or both, and the presence /r.totion ets cite header ne of these parasites as likely as not,| ‘propirtlon of white fesiag causes no more definite trouble or that take a red stain—they are called symptoms than some external itching. le cells, Careful study of a large series of children with worms, compared with | a similar group of children who had QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS No Universal Doctor Book i no worms, has proved that bei are no characteristic effects or symptoms; Kindly recommend a good h produced by these common intestinal enedioal book, one which abs eahauee tively into all matters pertaining to! Parasites. Vague complaint of “belly- the human system ... (J. B.) ache,” restless sleep, and sop of | the abdomen are perhaps more fre-| Answer—Only queck doctor books | quent in children who have worms! purport to mae ee If you eo ae | dicate what subject you wish to study | than in children who ee peu a grinding of the teeth, foul tongue and/y be able to rei mend books | heavy breath, white lines around the to you, but I do het advice @ ley coon | mouth, feverishness and spasmodicjer to study works on symp’ or! twitchings occur as frequently in chil- diagnosis or therapeutics. dren who have no worms as in chil-! | dren who have worms. i Color Blindness ‘Therefore the only way the presence; Is there any possible cure for color | of worms can be diagnosed is by find-| blindness? I am 19 years old and ing the eggs (microscopic) of the|keen to learn to fly but when I took | worms, or by the finding of the worms |the physical examination I was re- Jected_on account of color blindness ... DRT) Answer—If it is congenital (that is, if it was present at birth) it is not curable. If it is acquired, it may be Piffle How does this square with your theories? (R. A. B.) . Answer—Clipping inclosed quotes a Physician as disagreeing with two ex- Perts who had testified that a man could not have died from the effects of one-fourth grain of cyanide ab- sorbed through the skin. My theor- ies have nothing to do with it. No one has ever proved that cyanide or anything else is absorbed through the unbroken skin—and this goes for Prof. Muehlenberg' or Kalenberg, which- ever it is whose old students are for- ever citing as an “authority” who has proved this. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) y Secretary Woodin, looking very The New Deal Washington gE ‘This column, “The New Deal in Washington,” is being conducted by Willis Thornton during the vacation of Rodney Dutcher. xk * By WILLIS THORNTON (Tribune Washington Correspondent) | white Washington, Oct. 20.—Filling of that | shoes. vacancy on the Federal Trade Com- mission by selection of Prof. James M. Landis is another typical “New Deal” appointment. Landis is a sort of minor “brain-truster,” a protege of Felix Frankfurther at Harvard, and thus makes one more of the bright young collegians who have been lending their brains to the Roosevelt administration. Landis had a big hand in drawing the “Truth in Secruities” bill, and nothing could be more appropriate than to put him in the place where he must help enforce it. Ever since |’ the bill’s passage, he has been organ- izing the section of the Federal Trade Commission which will supervise security issues. This appointment seems to serve notice that despite the succession of squawks from New York on the bill, the president is determined to give it a real try under sympathetic ad- ministration. \ Landis, in his mid-thirties, plays “STOLEN LOVE’ by HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. WHAT HAS HAPPENED SO FAR. state of feverish energy now. She) utes assed.’ The two big tears moment. Tea Y wanted to be busy every that ered in her eyes Lovely Joan Hastings lives a se-| There must be no time to think. splashed on her silk dress. cluded life with her two stern, old] Curtis gave her friendliness, and| _ “Guess where I found ‘em?” Mrs. Martin came back chuckling. “In the cooler. I must have left them there when I went out to get the milk. An’ don’t forget to:write me aunts, Evvie and Babe Van Fleet, in Sausalito, California. She falls in love with Bill Martin, young mechanic. Learning this, Aunt Ev- she took it gratefully. When the day’s work was over, and a . empty evening stretched there he was, suggesting a pis ’ vie sends Joan away to Pennsyl-|When Sunday came and Riste|down your address when you go vania to pleosity fnroute, -Joan| wend out for er: ‘afternoon |dearie, I losp that other piece of slips off the train and goes to Bill’s| visit with Mis’ Harvey, Curtis’ car] Paper I had it on. I'll tell Bill to home only to find that he left town| was ready to cai her off to the fe. and see you when he comes without leavi: She| summer countryside, where the air “ataen gies i themselves. ae There are many worm medicines or treatments which can be given a child known to have worms, but none that! I can recommend as effective and| safe, except as given under the per- sonal direction of the physician. Round worms (Ascaris Lumbricold- es) are five to 10 inches long, paler} than earthworms, live in the small in- | testine, lay millions of eggs, some: times occur in masses which may te! Porarily obstruct the intestine. They occasionally migrate into the stomach | MORIZONTAL land 5 Who is the woman io the picture? - 10 Horses’ bed- ding material. 12. Ever (con- and are vomited, or into the a traction). ducts, causing obstructive jaundice,| 43 strong smell- leven into the Eustachian tube. ing bulb vege- A medical textbook which was once table. @ classic (Holt'’s Disease of Infancy vty and Childhood) mentions as recently Demet On: 15 Overalls. as the 1922 edition, the following symptoms of round worms: “The most frequent abdominal 17 Automobile. 18 Pertaining to symptoms are colic, tympanities the sun. 35 Unit. (distension), and other symptoms 20 Exhibited 36 Beer. of indigestion, loss of appetite, . dramatically, 37 Northeast. disturbed sleep, and grinding of 21 Structural 38 She was chair- the teeth at night. These symp- unit. man of the toms are much more frequently 23South America American due to other causes than to worms (abbr.). committee to The symptoms may be of 24 Measure of help ——d puzzling character. area. France. ~ the most see prolonged low fever, chills, convul- sions, tetany, transient paralyses, squint) and “hy hemiplegis even (paralysis of one side of the body) and asphasia (loss of speech). All these have been observed in connection with intestinal worms, and from the fact that the symp- 26 Provided. 26 To sin. 28 Bustle. 29 To shower. 31 Consumer. 82Genus of vines. 43 Sentor (abbr.). 44To decay. 45 Meadow. 46 To devour. 48 Folding bed. 49 White poplar. 51 Tatter. 34 Invisible 63 Target in i ing SEs een al vapor from quoits. toms disappeared com} after sand boiling water. 54 She is well- the worms were expelled there Ww wnat COUNTRY 1S THIG CITY LOCATED > ‘Philanthropist | Answer to Previous Puzzle 55 Witticiem. 14One who is 4 ready to act. 5) 15 What was the first part of her father's name? 16 Mast. 4 18 To remain. 19She is one of our most dili- ~ gent ——. 22 Missel thrush, iL} 26 Standards of perfection. 27 To ascend. 280On the sea. known for her 30 Chaos. interest in 31 Note in scale, —— organiza- 33 To encounter. tions, 34 Local position. 38 Period. VERTICAL 39 Very old type of verse, 2ore, 40 Prophet. 3 Close. 41 Ankles, 48ea eagles. 42 Organ of & Month (abbr.). hearing. One time. 44To steal. TInlets. 47 Beret. 8To pierce by 48 Company (abbr.). Variant of “a.” 49 Exclamation 10 To retain. of surprise, 11 Collection of 5 And. facts. S2to depart. was sweet with ing apaas, and| She'd tell Bill. Ask him to go bees and lies blundered]and see her. Joan’s throat seemed in the|to close up again, choking her. “Didn't he—ever ask about me?” “Well, now, boys don’t i much in letters,” the kind old voice “But I know he'll be real to see you. She said he he'd stay right on in the south permanent, but I guess he'll be coming home for Thanksgiving any . Bill always said there was nobody like Ma for mince pie. 1 always made eee ips on 5 giving, a mince a up. Tt was just as L a wit would be. He hadn't He hadn't cared. It was all say- ing if he loved Joan he would give her up not Bis to her as he had nothing to offer her. Joan set- tles in San-Francisco unknown to her aunts. She boards with good. natured Mrs. Maisie Kimmer. Bill, Rollo, ‘ayes, “wealthy “playboy. ‘ollo| Keyes, wealthy y Rollo's father, believing 5 have a d influence on his son, ives him a position where he learns surveying. He does not try to get in touch with Joan as he wants to be a success before he to her. Joan believes Bill no| Fy longer cares. Maisi jughter, Francine de Guitry, gives Joan a position sanding soe gowns in her exclusive Maison Francine. is an instant success. Mrs. Curtis Barstow, wealthy patron of the M: nm Francine, asks Joan to tea. Curtis Barstow, the home unexpectedly and Joan’s hostess have her leave. It i against the windshield y sun. Once a baby rabbit, energie ¢ through the a park, brought the sud f e: Why did it make her sil soa to see a ty go ho} across hei ill may| then she Temembered. 2. 3 > 3 tal th? And en nce when she was walking with Bill, in the hills, home. ‘There was no use dark couldn't be, she knew Bill . . . but she'd follow, dashing ahead of automobiles, pushing pe- destrians aside. Hope dies so hard. Perhaps Bill did write for her letter went astray. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. CHAPTER XXII When Curtis pogeesed drivit home by way of the Park “for | ly da little air,” Joan just nodded. There was a strength about him, a quiet smiling determination .. . no use fighting it, and besides, it didn’t matter. At the door he waited, barehead- ed, smiling, while she searched for the key. “And when am I going to see you gE a8 5p 83 i Hs ers oR? i 2 ap Eye 4 Es TG ir i again?” You've good deal Joan thought of Mrs, Barstow.| Sure. Here Tiger, here Tige!”|self. I'm Mrs. Gerwin, I under: Hilda. E . “T always sta re Hie. Evaraiog, (La vere cay They, seampered, back to, the stand we had 8 mutual frien ” quickly. Too quickly. been in Horner's. Joan| “A mutual friend. Bill Martin “Poor child!” he murmured.| brushed the dust from her dress,|you know. He sure did my husband “We'll have $0 pat a sip, to so much mined her cheek where his & bum turn, Quit without a min- see AiLeo ey peed Tongue hed need ier Capra | give etic, After all he. dd for ight—h lorner... dead... him, used pees al sien axe bared fiyl Por aad Paar piace at night" am greene , but he would come| through the dust house pate ys gone, but he would come |in the hollow, near the fishery ana) “Yes, T'd ace him as P'd go by for he didn’t know whether she|the old saloons. Beads of sweat|ms evening walk. I always was glad or . She tried to] stood out on her Her hair ‘It’s none of my business, think it out, but the ‘came| curled damply all over her head.|but was her, I sure wouldn't back. Sho ‘crept into bed, shiver {sed house wick tho red gevant-| "“l'm afraid T haven't the time to ‘All night, in her dreams, she ran, the k biasing is -the porise. Spoon ma sold oe eat, ff now, aan coating, 2 Te ayne cf. That it would be gone, gone) | oHe was a chaser, if ever there at ar ta pv ee | ag Aah joan! Come Hight int”| never, He used to try to make up fell exhausted, clutching at some.|Mre. Martin's wrinkled Uitte face] me, but I wouldn't look at him— one who to be Bill he turned| PT Ge rockin? chase in the in| “I'm so sorry, bud I can't miss ipte Curtis Barston canning 7.7) Sow Where you'll cool off, and Tii| beat, Mrs. Gerwin.” Not even Aunt She woke up sobbing. ' ee a nico cool dtink of Uy Gant than Joan more frig- We ite} The little room where twins watched ‘The Van Fleet Aunt Ev. had played und, the otheines| ply furs chook, under fe rfl FI ag Nay me og FE FS hg er to 7 ow fd Tove instead. iy cain bac ovens new rocking, chats Bame:|=—t hat ber aad her now, that same fierce pride that thing had happened Some 1“ deed fa eben tediped ye) Certainly, Are prazll sleset” Joan| ply attar her callers akopbed we know Joan is in San Francisco waited, waited for what a daring’ bes “and sent the a are oer aiped by and the| "Whe ve, Dia all you Bu-| Soon. Aa she fie pie yal Se Peet Ee relia rene ee ear ee re squared her supple spire the what ond ferry paged aie Sage go me 6 did I do b pd fan bs in San And suddenly she wanted: new darning Tis! nut. Barstow. Yes, I'l wait toe seen, Sara bac Ganja et vOe weg were aways! pidge Ld) ‘smile per han neat a sor at spa ee mae a beauty out of you!” And| 2. He Angora the of to her friend Mis’ Harvey she add-' rs on his desk, struggling to | iad aed gioco tiatiass Soleet his, thoughts, It ‘was the aie het want co much to bs best a Fr want so mi I tiful now? Was it for Curtis Bar- His Spee Craraiel tiacca the tow that she brushed her soft hair clock, minutes past five. An- till it layin big waves of burnished] T! jothér hour and he'd see ber, this 1d? Was it for him that shel my di lovely golden git he was—why not t the smart, expensive frocks? } close face the fact?. in love with. soa ow, ine cheek, # oy daacntl Tha wi! (Tp Be Ceninned omesrow? : One trouble with the theater now is that it’s become a cult.—George M. ‘Cohan. | (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.), py

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