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a2443400 ov i 18298888 | shee sd? H DTHREHE saste THE BISMAR! A R Ve ‘ The Bismarck Tribune |*°"7s 804 fret over his troubles than | ‘An Independent Newspaper 2088 he. i THE STATES OLDEST | Yet there is hardiy a picture of him NEWSPAPER ithat doesn't show his contagious (Established 1873) ismile, there is hardly an interview Published by The Bismarck Trib- that doesn't carry a line of happiness une Company, Bismarck, D., and | and hope. oes BE | Imagine a Mussolini, @ Hitler, a secon’ BORGE D. MANN ;Stalin in the same situation. A, President and Publis photograph of any one of these dig- | —~gubscription Rates Payable in| ,Titaries with a smile on his face is) ae rc * - worth framing as a rarity. An ex-/ Day by mal per vers Bie ete aldme, | ) eased Daily by mail per year cin state Perhaps the Italians, the Germans | outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 and the Russians have much more; Dewy mail outside of North cause to be somber and sad than have We in America. To be sure. they have Weekly by mail in si had to suffer the consequences of the| years .. . 250 last war much more than we. | Weekly we ie a 3% But it has not helped the European | “al ARN La Eh a BRO --- 200 peoples any to acquire such dour | Mei by mail in Canada, a 2.00 |e8ders to help them out of their | Member of Audit Buresa of Toubles. ' It is @ serious business, of course, | Circulation i tis he | be wanting for clothes and nour- Member of The Associated Press (icnment. But is there anything 60 | The Associated Press is exclusively | entitled to the use for republication | Serious as to lack a gleam of bright-/ of all news dispatches credited to it ness and cheer somewhere within its/ or not otherwise naeery in this folds? | newspaper and also the news of + Spontan-ous origin published herein.| There is misery aplenty in this: ‘All rights of republication of all other Country, and those of us who are matter herein are also reserved. j more fortunate than the rest should; = = \keep this in mind. At the same time, | For Winter Driving however, we never should relinquish | ‘There was a time when North Da- that sense of humor which distin- Xotans put away their automobiles /Suishes us from the other nations. | t im Inte November, or whenever the| 7 8 Our saving grace. 3t prevents) z oh no intention 7eoutHon and turmoll. Tt gives us a, first snow arrived. es : no art point of view apart from our | of taking them out of the sarage UN-' condition and permits us to judge! til spring. ourselves from a cool and sani j 5 { in e at) But that age is long since past and tirade, \ the probiem of most motorists Now 48/ r+ is such that, if we had a Hitler | how to run their cars through the|inciead of a Roosevelt to lead winter with the least possible cost ltt ralibries sand raneovance: wid ago would have laughed him; ‘The best advice seems to be that of & noted expert who has had plenty of experience and knows all of the tech- nical factors. His suggestions are: 1. See that your car is in good mechanical condition. Many winter troubles can be eliminated by fore- thought and careful preparation. See that your tires are sound, your spark- plugs clean and give the old bus as thorough an overhauling as you can— if you do your own work—or as good as you can afford if you don’t, 2. Select a gasoline that is adjust- ed to the season and climate in which | pics boheme ot ager He went to prison and came out to! rents —_— |start on the garish career that ended | {© ink. ation about their ‘products and if FOUl when foes beat him to death in De- hunt around @ little you can find troit and threw his body in @ ditch. | ‘what is best for you. | He slew without mercy, wielding 3. See that the car is greased With | machine gun as an a | t a ordinary marks-/ the proper lubricant for Your M&-|man handles a revolver. He shot chine. If you don't, you may not Be fiowen four peace obticaee tn tesmae | able to start some morning. Use the/ ae grade recommended for your car by eae Te, according to the vis the popular press. Even when the the oi company or by the motor manufacturer. Pay special attention | Sitter to the steering gear, transmission and | differential Have your battery) checked and know what to expect from it. See that the cooling system of your ear is properly protected. These things done, there is littie else to do but go ahead and drive, praying all the while that you will’ not encounter any of those situations | which no machine could be expected, t© overcome or that you won't be, caught out in « biizsard. vakota . ‘Weekly b, mai | { Too Tough to Live | “He was so tough that even the gangs couldn't stand him.” | This is the epitaph that might be; written on the tombstone of Verne ‘Miller, war hero-sheriff, turned gang killer. Miller won a great reputation with | the A. E. F., as one of the quickest “on the draw” of all our soldiers, a dead shot. and fearless. He came capable sheriff. envelope is enclosed. $0 BEE STING IS GOOD FOR RHEUMATIZ? Personally I don't believe more than @ small fraction of the tales of great The ral t 1 this seems the correspond Ithar say siericten to be of his medical cronies. H even gangsters can’t stand ‘em Bur here is one that gives me pause. too tough. Even they apparently tire It comes from our regular cotresponc- {of killing someone just to see how the ent in Paris, I mean the correspond- jent of our leading medical journal. $0 listen. Prof. Maurice Perrin an Mr. Alain Cuenot of the Nancy med: cal school decided to try some experi- ments to test the popular belief that bee stings are good for the rheuma- tism. Now. right here I wash my (hands of this. I dont even know \ What rheumatism is, if anything. and ji warn you that I can se ee ee information than you Will find in this Gov. Rolph’s Encouragement | articie. of Lynching | ‘The gentiemen began their investi- (Chicago Tribune) igation with great skepticism. Or so ules of safet; ral high- | f . se ru ety in using rural high. ee nh of | aA OR nee ther ways and city streets they are likely +o Tun up against state laws and local jhave saved himself from a lot of cri- ¢qund that bee venom actually does ate jticism if be had realized that it penetit victims of rheumatism. (You ordinances compelling them to do S0./ wasn’t necessary for him to say any- know as well as I do what they mean This was indicated in a report given | thing about the lynching of the two by rheumatism). Among the co at the recent Annual Safety Congress | Men who kidnaped and killed Brooke ‘tions ther studied were cases of a! here. | Hart. As governor of the state he ritis, deformans, articular theumatism Rieasic <oeesbatt Seecall wioiens: of could not properly condone this sum- (this quaint diagnosis is extinct in ie 5 oe ol Reaid execution of private justice, america), arthritis, rheumateid pains. accidents are pedes-|however much as a man he might+museular pains, lumbago and scia- according to the Nationaljhave been in sympathy with the ticg) There you have the works, = to{|lymchers. In this particular lynching ghould say. About all the painful meelg|the guilt of the victims was proved meiadies not included are neuritis. | beyond doubt, and it is probably true pursitis. felon and corn. Bi the oie jthat No one’s instincts were horrified prench are that way. Eversthing goes the Council's! by the act of the imnchers. It is als0 in the soup. i problems re-|true a familiar excuse for MC The technic these Nancy investi- 2 ordinances be passed | Justice was lacking. In this case it emplored was quite simple. walking and state laws /Baé Mot been proved that the law’ They collected bees by holding a wide cring pedestrians to was not about to proceed expeditious- mouth bottle before the opening of oy anion. {2 hold the prisoners to account the beehive. They took up the bees s© as 10 face vehicu- for their terrible crime. The lynch- one by one with forceps and pisced az trafic on rural highways. The/ers could not show that the processes g gufficient number in s cupping committee also said consideratioh of justice were failing giags on a sheet of paper. The cup- should be given to laws punishing! The authorities in Caifornia might ' ping was then placed on the pedestrians for violations of these Rave sccepied <be fact as @ closed skin site chosen. the paper REESE either by fines or by re-/ er to quickly withdrawn. and the bees set regulations, A = jany one responsible for :t without eX-/t> work promptly, being somewhat lnquishing certain rights in civil ac-iposing themselves to the criticisM’gnnosed at the indignity. tions resulting from accidents. | ynise would De inviven by the lic! ‘The experiments assert that the That enforcement of regulations | Satisfaction expressed by the gover- caused the stings is much ‘nor. Mr. Roiph pi himself (2 the 2" ul ith rheu- Position of considerable responsibili for a recurrence of such private exe- eution of justice When sensible people are in con- Editorial Comment ow the editors. regaré disagree icies, Blame the Pedestrian Unless pedestrians show better | spirit in observing the common sen- trans the Safety Congress. Offering re- wards for information leading to the artes. and conviction of hit-and-run ¢ drivers, basing sutomobdile insurance rates strictly upom the individ: drivers’ records, and executive orders vo eliminate tag-fixing through the, use of triplicate reports anc sudits were just a few of the methods | by the traffie officiais for the recuc- |: tion of highway accidents. Speeding, drunken driving andj sancti and reckless driving are the three viola- /sausfaction which good citizens found tions which cause a large proportion | they instinctively got from the lynch stings must be applied painful of affected spot. the of venom may be ex ithe popular verdict on the eastern shore supporting a lynching and tried to hold the ringleaders to account in le | fs be ist it } s fh In the Path of Progress! | ‘Fakburt in Washington Daily Neve j | | games Couzens, in Senate Finance | | Committee Bote | * |Z believe in the saloon, because T/ think if properly and re-/ istricted it is the poor man’s club.— | gamuel Untermyer, New York attor- ney. . | ** * ° | | ‘There can be no status of inferior-| lity for Germany. Germany needs | peace. Does she want it? We hope! go and we must find out—Stanley xe * ‘A good many divorces have been | averted by a wife remembering to | wave goodby to s husband when he} leaves for Work.—Judge Joseph Sa-/ bath, famous Chicago divorce Judge. | ‘ Anatomy class of the University of j among 265,000 persons who voted for i him should know where he is. | GRIM COMEBACK { | “as long as I live.” insisted Presi- Ident W. A. Irvin of the Steel Corpoua-| tion, discussing the captive mines,/ “my company never Will recognize the | United Mine Workers of America.” | | That's too bad.” replied the Rev. Father Francis J. Haas of the Na-' tional Labor Board. “I thought you'd | live a lot longer than that.” { (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) | ————_—_—_—_? 1 Barbs | | Amelia Earhart says old men should | ibe the first to be called to arms in case of war. Only, they're sure to be hard of hearing. | ee * Doesn't the Nazi swastika re- mind you of a burnt-out Fourth | of July pinwheel? | xe * Smithsonian scientists have discov- | ered that a bee stings hardest sit-| jting down. Now we need only sing! |the national anthem to keep ‘bees | from stinging us. | xe | Tests by 3 Chicago University | professor show that 22 beer is | not intoxicating. } he tried it on continued to cut | their classes. - 4 se | Another set of scientists exhaust \the air in big radio tubes down to Sa"or‘ict era | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | By William Brady, M. D. eae money ran through his fingers | gigned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to diseare | e water. He stole county funds.!] diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. it would take. as I had lost the clip- ping, but it made me retch and vomit quickly each time I tried to take it. (airs. S. A. ED) Answer—One grain of copper sul- new cures that come out of Europe. phate dissolved in a tablespoonful of ) cons: water, is a quick emetic for child or! tity. The tonic is simpiy a of one ounce of the old off: medicine. called iron and ammonium citrate. in four ounces of water. this take a teaspoonful in water fiav- ,Ored or sweetened as you like, af ution ‘food three times a day for at leas: ing and Currene two or three times @ day for at least two or three months. The iron neither injures the teeth nor causes | investigation, any digestive disturbances. thouch 0: course it will and should blacken Gejecta. Carbon Dioxide Snow I noticed you advocate surgic: moval of warts. For 15 years I h used earbon dioxide snow for war. and similar blemishes. It prod little pain or discomfort, takes o: 8 few minutes, does mot scar, in the great majority of cases there is no recurrence. ( , M.D.) Answer—Thank you, Doctor. Lay- ,men take notice that carbon diox snow is not safe except in the hi ‘of the skilled physician. It destroys the tissue by fr «Copyright, 1933, John F. ‘The NewDeal _ Washington Fire of Administration Foes of" i tone and one-half billionths of an at- mosphere. But they can't cut down on the hot air that goes through it. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) him because of his activity for food and drug legistation and rigid alcohol control. The gold standard crowd wants his scalp because he’s a chief backer of the Roosevelt monetary policy. Al/ H ith’s slur on “experimenting pro- was aimed partly at Tug- though he once was one of Al's S77 | own “brain trust.” iS | e | Since Moley was retired to the side- lines, Tugwell—abler and shrewder— | ‘Mr. Aldrich has been reminded be-| Roosevelt “brain trust.’ In the) fore that this committee will con- agriculture department, he has) duct its own investigation in its own aroused dislike of food industries andj way, and will not be dictated to by middlemen by stressing farmer and/ Mr. Aldrich or any one else—Senator interests over theirs. hinks farmers should receive | in the He best police evidence, and in his zeal yarn is replete with circumstance and adult, in poisoning emergencies. One more than their present 37 per cent; killed even the outlaw he had started names of the savants who figure in grain of copper sulphate is enough ‘of the consumer's dollar. it, I just admire the imagination of for a pint of the iron tonic, or one-| dent or the imagination fourth grain in the four ounce quan-| PROFIT IN PROBES Senate investigations have profited the nation far more than their cost! vitness Teapot Dome and resultant return of the naval oil reserves: The latest profitable probe is the Bank-/ Committee’ vestigation of Wall Street. Dece 1542-Mary Queen 1 of Seats born. = ‘ nee “Delaware is Dieta welcomed rene {| ist state to : Wil revurn a han¢-| ratify U.S, Cone stitution. nand Pecora. “ some profit.” | Members of the House Ways and) Means Committee think they now] have information which may enable; them to save $400,000.00 by plugging That's extremely optim-: 1 MODEST LIKE A VIOLET { Acting Secretary of the Treas- | ury Henry Morgenthaz, Jr. is ill | at ease on his new job. He hasn't | had much experience, of course. | Also, he's practically new in the | public gaze and suffers from i | World-Famous Writer | . 2 HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle Bug” is one of 1 Who was the his — author in the stories. picture? 1 Elder. 13 To value. 20 Toward. 14 Sack. 22 To drive in. 15 First man. 25 Songstress. 1% Corpse. 28 To telegraph. 19 He gained 31 Harasses. fame as a ——. [} M32 Giver. 21Gun. | 33 Towropes. = are. 36 Chairs onze. 39 German title. 26 Farm tool. 43 Talented. 27 Marble. 45 Aromatic 29 Symbol for berry. “most holy.” 48 Slanting. 20 One. 50 Game on 32 To abdicate. 3 Aperture. Roreabark 34 Prong. 40n top of. os 35 He also wrote 5 Roll of film 52 Three. 6 Pound. 53 Sun god. 7 To loiter 54 Farewell. 8Glas marble. 55 Saucy. 9 Dad. 37 Genus of 10 Queer turtles. 11 Organs of 59 Aye. hearing. 61 Neither. 12 His poetry is 64Mountain. « known for its 66 South America. 68 Italian river, 37A philosophy. 38 No good. 62 Night before. 40 Pitcher. Fragrant 63 oleoresin. 65 God of lore. 67 To look about. 69 He was born 2. 16"The Gold ‘Washington was drafted to help pre- serve the skeleton of Tusko, an ele-| phant whose bones and hide weighed | three tons. se) Paper was invented about the year | 105 A. D., but ink was not invented | until 500 A. D. ‘The brink of Niagara Falls is re-| ceding at the rate of 212 feet a year. FLAPPER FANNY 76. U, S. PAT. OFF. SAYs, Many ea girl hasn't a thing on her mind when left to her thoushts. FORBIDDEN VALLEY $y Wittiam Byron Mowou SYNOPSIS: Curt Tennyson had come down out of the far North 0 Edmonton. expecting to tcke a new End good Job, But he decides that h id chief in the Loyal Mounted, 4_K. Merlin needs him worse. and s ‘out to treck down the inter national crook. Igor Karakhen At Vancouver he catches Karckhan’s aid follows it inso the wild erritory et the mouth of the Lil i River. echere parton, Paul St, fo land at Rustion Le Chapter Nine IN DANGER AG they drew near the landing Curt looked down the shore eeven hundred yards and saw four old stone houses in the middi¢ of a second-growth clearing. 4 He krew what the: re; at Tel Tacet he had heard stories about those ruins. An ancient Russian fur post, located there when Washing ton was leading the new-born Amer- ican Republic, it was a relic of the days when Russia ruled western America from Nome to northern California, and predatory Cossacks. with “musket, eword and the help of God,” gathered tribute for the Little White Father in faraway St Petersburg. Except for inland stations in Alaska, it was one of the few posts which the Cossack expecition bad established at any distance from tidewater. The four stone structures. Tearing above the second growth. were half-hidden by wood vines and wild ivy, much as their actual his- tory had been overgrown with tale and superstition. The canoe nosed {n to the pier. Paul jumped out and lapped the painter around a cleat As Curt tossed their duffle on the planking, he purposely made a display of their two gold pans and short-bandled shovels. Among the men watching them a trapper nudged another and remarked, “Prospectors, John.” Heads nodded. Tt was as Curt had wished—let them draw their own conclusion and they would believe it far more im- Plicitly than if Paul and be should announce their business. He introduced Paul and himself to the old trapper called John, who then introduced them to the others. As Curt shook bands around, be sized up the men swiftly. Corporal Hodkias, the Mounted Policeman, was @ stolid negligible fellow who would be neither a belp nor hindrance, Missioner Lespér The main building was tumbling to decay; briar and vine covered the slave quarters ;the prison house had been struck by @ blast of lightning, No tepee or cabin stood near the an cient post; its very vicinity was shunned like a haunted place. Paul started driving tent pecs, Curt stepped inside and began ex. amining their duffle, to make sure he had overlooked no label or {2:tial. ing which might give them away to a suspicious prowler. While he way doing this, he heard Paul stop pound ing and eay “Bon soir” to somecne, Glancing out the flap-front ne saw a girl go past, carrying @ fish rod, creel and canoe paddle. He had only a fleeting glimpse of her, but that glimpse made bin straighten up and stare. She ras wearing a blue corduroy dress, laced moccasins, a tam, and @ sweater blouse with one elbow worn throuzh, Her hair was a brownish golden; she walked along with a lancelike erectness of body: and her face—he saw it only in profile—was so beau- tiful and so strange in its type of beauty that he kept staring throuch the flap-front for moments after she had gone by. When he finished and went out side she was already out upon the lake in a birchbark canoe, skirling toward @ cluster of wooded islets half a mile offshore. Trouting, be guessed. If she was anything of & fisherman ehe ought to snag some big ones in the shallows aroun those islands; but from the avs ward way she handled the paddle she was plainly a tenderfoot. He turned to Paul, who was watch- ing her too, “Who is she, d’you know?” “A stranger to me, to my regret.” Curt smiled at his rapt gaze. “You find her pretty, don’t you? As pretty as p’tite Régina Ducharme a: Fo" Chipewyan?” “almost!” “Humph! That's a big admission from you!” HE girl disappeared among the islands. Curt went on with the camp work. Bending down 8 searty Sapling, he tied their grub pack to the top of it and flipped the sap!ing op again, safely caching the supplies trom stray baskies. He stepped back into the tinder to find a dead birch for fuel The tropical luxuriance of the woods amazed him, even though he tad made trips up Juneau way and ance, a youngish scholar with the eyes of a mystic, seemed to have stepped right out of some medieral cloister. Besides the Bay ‘actor, Hig- ginbotbam, there were three young trappers, a prospector, @ man called Ralph Nichols and a middleaged city sportsman with @ brasey roice and know-ererything manner. The Indian men, standing off by themselves, were a shabby racant- faced lot. Under a fish scaffolding Just ashore seven halt-breeds were smoking, drinking, quarreling. Hod- Kins was a poor excuse of a Mounty, Curt thought, to let men drink open- ly in Indian territory. The man Nichois, quiet and unob- trusive, was the most interesting of the group. No outdoors person at all Dut plainly from the city, he ap peared to be some minor govern- ment official or a teacher vacation- ing in the mountains, Cc liked him from their first handclasp. And that liking never stew less, in the days they were to spend together. He Little knew that, be was destined to travel a long path with Ralph Nichols and be with him, his only friend, when Ralph lay Gring beside a lonely campfire. “Didn't I meet you over at Chipe ‘Wyn once?” he asked, to draw Nich: ols out : “No, I never was there.” With his reticent smile, Nichols added, “I'm © Prospector for bugs—an entomelo- gist.” ‘ “I see. I don't suppose mach competition in ad pedines iter on an have og of ate on havea ge a mag of tea with Picking up their duffle, he and Paul went down the shore to camp. Before dark came they €d to get squared around and also attend to a certain scouting job which they had mapped out as their frst step there Sipenien Lake. Midway between the modera post and the old ruins they found a suit. able spot close to the woods edga and began pitching their tent. Pig 8 the old post now, Cart could Barrow musketelit win the platforms for mounting pa brass canzons, and all the fortlixe Arrangement of the ruins. it had been more @ garrison than a far post, for the Cossacks bad not been | traders bat extorters of tribute, and | thes had needed detonsa, =| knew the “drizzle country” well. The pines and cedars were lordly things, eight feet across the st2=) and towering above two bundre‘. The air was heavy with the odor of summer flowers banked {a creat heaps in the open spots. The =0s8 under bis feet was like walkin: 02 three inches of softest plush. The whole woods was dominated bY moss. It carpeted the ground sxd windfall logs. ran over the bou!cers and up the tree trunks, and b20% in festoons from the branches. “I'm plain lucky.” be thougtt gratefully, “to be hunting Karaik>s3 in a country like this.” He pushed over a dead birch g dragged it back to camp, and told Paul: “I'd better step out to the trading store now and get the 32g of things there, so that tonight we can put across the job we talked about. While I'm gone, you ca2 be bringing our canoe from the pier" When he returned, half an tour later, Paul was standing on the land wash. The young Canadian beckozed him down, - “That girl over among those !* lands ts likely to experience trozb!t if we don’t go over there.” “What's ap?” Pau! told him. A few mizates after the girl bad paddled in among th? islands, one of those balt-preets bad come down the shore, furtively hould have known Ddetier away at twiltett le mes were loa ing about the post. Bat still, she was a gir, aloze ott She was conscious of no danse’ (Copyright, 3882, Watkem B. xerrw?! a tomorrow, takee-@ ——