The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1933, Page 4

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BE tana nnninn a ened dots 0o de SOE a 7 ° Se ee aa Oe PENRO MME aeMAHA mm mem >ZAZA fo} SSaeesjeonngnnmyyoyozeesKeernnmmmaveoUAaw>D & 1. 88GRy acee_ ‘he Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper + THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) pe Published by The Bismarck Trib- fane Company, Bismarck, N. D., and bntered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘eB second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN \ President and Publisher Babscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- MATCK) soreeeesssers seceseseee T Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ......... 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ..... seeeees sveecsceess 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three YEATS seesssceecsesees aoe 2.50 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dekota, per year . ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, vear .. + 200 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 90 | tragedies, at one time or another, Finding Recompense for A Vital Loss One of the hardest things any man can be asked to do is to find some meaning in the acute personal tragedy that arises from the loss of a loved one. Such @ loss always seems cruel, unjust, reasonless; often it is a long time before one can regain his old faith in the rightness of the world, ‘Decause @ world in which such @ loss can happen seems blind and sense- Jess. But we all have to face such and we have to fight our way back afterward; and sometimes it helps to know how other people have met the test and solved the problem. The newspapers recently carried a story about just such a case. Probably you saw it. A Kentucky doctor, @ quarter century ago, had to stand by helpless and watch his ‘small child die of an infection of the tonsils. Surgical technique for removing the tonsils of babies suffering with high fever had not been Perfected; | there was nothing the young father; could do to save his child's life. | After it was over, he devoted all! mntaneous origin published herein. ‘Ail rights of republication of all other fuatter herein are also reserved. Cuban Repudiation ‘ fm these fast-moving days, tt {eeems, one has to judge the stability ——a«, with News dispatches Wednesday car- led the announcement that the Cu- ban government of President Grau Gan Martin will refuse to pay bonds fesued by the Machado regime to the Chase National Bank of New York om the ground that Machado was not Yegitimately in control of the Cuban Oubs were aired at some length by Senate investigators and they were! ‘unsavory. Relatives of Machado were put on the bank's payroll in order that it might get the business. Con- eessions were made in the way of re- ‘Dates to certain Cuban officials and material factors were overlooked having to do with the soundness of the securities. But these were crimes against the American investing public, not against the Cuban government. It is possible that the loans should not! hhave been granted because of the methods used to consummate the deal, A sounder reason, in so far as| the public is concerned, is that the bonds were essentially unsound and rot backed by the security that was claimed for them, There can be no other interpreta- tion of San Martin's attitude than that he is attempting to “run out” on a debt on a rather specious pre- text. It is an open secret that Ameri- can pressure ousted Machado from control in Cuba and gave San Martin opportunity to rise to power, For him now to lay an added burden on American investors is unfair and not, conducive to good relations. Espousal of this principle opens the way for repudiation of debts on alleged moral grounds whenever the fancy strikes ® nation which has sustained @ ¢hange in government personnel. Beside this stand, the attitude of. the Bolsheviks in refusing to pay Czarist debts was pink tea stuff. Those Livestock Buyers One of the battles looming for the coming session of congress is that centering around a proposal to pro- hibit packers from buying livestock E i 21s will support it, even his efforts to develop such a tech-| nique. He worked hard and studied hard and mastered the job he had set for himself. ‘The other day @ dramatic incident showed how the fruits of those years of endeavor are being reaped. A New York woman, wiio once had Served as this doctor's nurse, and knew about his especial skill in his chosen field, had @ sick baby—a baby suffering from just the kind of infec- tion that had killed the doctor’s child 28 years before. Her own doctor dared not operate. She telephoned the Kentuckian. He hurried to New York by air- “ior tix of ow, sz ene | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. illustration. Few of us are in & posi-| tion where it is possible for us to| build @ life of service directly on our | bitterest loss. Yet there usually can! be some sort of parallel for us. | ‘We can at the very least draw sym- pathy and a knowledge of life from, our tragedies, We can build those| Signed letters pertaining to personal diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Address Dr. William Brady, alitic rsonalities, HOW A QUACK DOES HIS SPADE ' corset or corselet has been discovered. Scania Ras UavGaatcca:| WORK | Well trained muscles keep the figure ‘We heard e broadcast claiming that | trim and resilient. The way to do is Medical Diathermy will cure most ail-| omit the support a little longer each And, sooner or later, those qualities) ments due to Rheumatism, Gout, |day or each week, until you feel com- will enable us to make the world @/Lumbago, etc. We were deeply in- fortable without it at all times. er as & result. little bit better for the people about terested because a member of our) family has suffered ore Rpts need ..|pains in legs . . . I sent a le en Oe ee ae PAP lto the (let us call it) Health Building | oot eet the ache easily. ' Institute explaining the case, and they but we can draw strength and wis-|sent a representative to demonstrate dom from our suffering. the machine. He explained that when applied to the affected part the ma- s. A \chine produces an internal heat Editorial Comment ||thich induces the biood to circulate |imore actively in the veins. He diag-i Baitoriats. _Drinted below show the |\nosed the case as simply due to poor Of thought by other editors. | circulation in the legs. Also he said fo Chether they saree oe dieeres | that if it is not attended to sciatica with The Tribune's policies. may result or a collapse of the veins |which may make amputation ee ‘ : sary. You may well imagine, . Poor ‘Adolph |Brady, how we felt when we heard argent County News) this. But he told us the condition is ngege i ain, who un-| sti curable, only we must decide sleged by state inspectors from snoga (quickly Whether to rent or buy the "il cigs meant fave - iris - |machine. The price seems exorbitant Mefiat all and with reife €-' but that would be a secondary con- hedged New| sideration if it cures . . . (P. G.) So far as the application of dia- thermy is concerned apparatus at least as efficient as such use requires |may be bought outright for approxi- inspectors. | 3 mately the sum this faker would soak that he nearly collapses before he) tie guilible peopip for a month's rent~ al! Notice how the quack machinery works. on, pay mg First, the renegade physician or the ph” didn’t like all that stuff ee but Saar en trick “doctor” who has just come by geen nuthin’ yet. He was promised the title as aristocratic gentlemen (weren't we all?) anyway, he was/ Used to come by the title of “Colonel” promised that he wouldn't be pestered |down south, goes into a huddle with from morn ‘til night by a horde of himself or another bird of his feather handshaking who would|2nd adopts some such imposing name tell him what a fine government we |®5 “Clinic.” “institute,” “certified med- had, and what a splendid governor|ical specialists” or “national health we have—well, things were just going} builders.” Then the impersonal firm to be different, that’s all, because the|Or corporation buys some time on the air, from gyp radio stations. If a thousand persons listen to the “pro- ” “could go about his busi-/gram” the chances are that one or two will be taken in and these hooked course, nobody was certain away | suckers must pay for the whole works, if the racket is to be a going one. Notice how the “representative” sent by the fakers threw a@ scare into the poor simple dupes. He made the aches in grandpa’s legs pretty serious, and when they still hesitated to hand pitfoieet i eg : 2 3 ¢ B sty sae Bre e a g i a t, the inspectors in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to health and hygiene, not to diseane Letters should be brief and written instructions, in care of this newspaper. (Copyright’ 1933, John F. Dille Co.) The NewDeal Washington Washington Finds It Hard to Drink Legal’ . . . There's One Picture That Johnson Ignores . . . New Brand of Trade War Found . . . NRA—No Rats Allowed.’ By RODNEY DUTCHER Bismarck Tribune Washington Correspondent Washington, Dec. gressional roars over liquor prices come straight from the heart. The boys are returning here to firid a miserable post-repeal situa- tion and, if congressmen are as prone to human weakness as heretofore, 28.—()—Con-| * mysterous. He lobbied all over the place for the price-fixing provisions, which opponents said would result in soaking the consumer, Finally it was learned that he rep- resented coal interests. He hoped oil prices would go high. So did all the coal operators. That was only one of many in- stances which have attracted NRA attention to the problem of the Struggle between competing commod- ities as affected by codes, Fuels are an excellent example. Coal competes with oil, gas, and even electricity. In such cases, NRA offi- cials believe they may have to deal with competing commodities in groups. Competing foods and compensatory taxes to offset the effect of process- ing taxes long have been @ chief AAA problem. Down there they find all types of fish, flesh, and fowl—not to mention oils, greases, syrups, cereals, and so on—competing with one an- other for places in the national diet. NRA—NO RATS ALLOWED | Even the government finally got yaround to recognizing use of the let- ters “N.R.A.” for something else than the National Recovery Administrator. ‘The Bureau of Biological Survey an- nounces “No Rats Allowed” as the slogan for some of its community anti-rat campaigns, (Previous unofficial slogans: Nomi- nate Roosevelt Again, No Recovery Apparent, Nuts Run America, No Re- publicans Allowed, National Ruin As- sociation, No Relief Ahead, and other nasty ones.) (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) ee | Barbs > England's vice admiral, the Hon. Ernle-Erle-Drax, was a U. 8. visitor. Washington’s bootleggers will con- tinue to enjoy profitable relations with Capitol Hill. Suburban Montgomery county in Maryland is this city’s nearest source of supply for bottled goods. County dispensaries will sell you gin at $2.50 a quart, blended rye at $5 a quart, and Scotch whisky at $5.50 a fifth. A private test was made here of] son by pitching and batting his team | @ pint of dispensary rye, a pint from of the Maryland woods. The chemist reported the only whisky he found in the lot was the bootleg product. Thus, even a con; can tell that legal liquor is inconvenient, ex- pensive, and usually not so good. The illegal Maryland rye is deliv- ered to the home at $15 a charred keg of five gallons. That means 75 cents a quart and a little patience for in stronger numbers than |over their loose change he added the bumping into each other|threat that unless they shelled out in ly ala hurry Gramp would be stumping inspector inspected the “Adolphs” around yelling for expensive new ar- tificial limbs . . . went through the entire . Probably figured Adolph didn’t to this inquiry were it not for the fact we have or that the first inspec-| deserves. Now I wish to war all |readers against the machinations of are just © charlatans who seek to exploit credu- 8rMY.\jous laymen on the strength of the good name I have given this method of treatment. In many instances the application of diathermy by the phy- sician will give grateful relief to pain and soreness in such cases as the cor- respondent mentions, but do not be- lieve that diathermy will cure such illnesses. If it is used at all it is but @ minor part of the treatment requir- ed to bring about recovery. QUESTIONS AND ANSWEBS - Acne and X-rays In your helpful monograph on “Blackheads and Pimples” you men- tion the value of X-ray treatments in many cases. Must one go to a hospi- tal for such treatment? (8. R. L.) Answer—No, your physician should give such treatment. One skin spe- cialist, summarizing his experience, Says “My statistics show that X-rays will permanently cure 87 per cent of unselected cases (of acne) in four months or less without injury to the skin. Without X-rays the percentage of cures drops below 60.” discarding of restricting in| garments, especially girdles and cor- figure will spread and become ungain- ly about the hips if I go without ade- ,|Quate support . . . (Mrs. G. K.) Answer—By omitting the artificial supports you train you own muscles jiles, a distance still EI selets. But many friends tell me my| @ month or more while it ages. It may not be good stuff, but ‘Washingtonians have grown fond of it and it’s hard to wean them away. juor soon will be legal locally. Lig T should pay no particular attention | But a local tax of $1.10 a gallon prob-| ably will be added to the federal tax that I have promoted diathermy, both of about $2.20. Tealize what | medical and surgical, with all the en-| The amount of those two taxes thusiasm the method of treatment alone will exceed cost of the beverage| to which Washington is accustomed. “* * GLORIES IN BATTLE Win or lose, General Johnson seems to glory in his fights. The most con- are cartoons show! the NRA ad- ing ministrator doing battle with Henry Ford. ‘There's no cartoon, however, show- ing Henry atop Johnson's prostrate form. ronsidered good for a free balloo. is graceful in the way of girdle, e to support you, and nothing neater or| spicuous pictures on his office walls; Englishmen who can’t visit us. ** * Guglielmo Marconi, now in this country, will admit he’s re- sponsible for the radio. But don't blame him for the Droeens. * * . Babe Ruth ended the baseball sea- {Reginald Aylmer Ranfurly Plunkett- | A good way to make up for all the| through? * * *® No matter how high Com- mander Settle thinks he can go with that stratosphere balloon of his, he should realize that even- tually he'll have to come down to earth, es * e * Now we learn that furs may cause hay fever. We weren't so sure of that, although we knew furs have brought teares to many @ woman's eyes, (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) Neither Europe nor Asia will start another war, unless they have gone mad, And if they have, my advice to our country is to keep our sanity and stay out of it—World Court Jus- Life without imagination would be like the bare walls of a vacant room— intolerable-—Henry Gerguson (“Prince Michael Romanoff”). * ke * ‘The declining birth rate in America is a social menace that can be cor- rected only by a revival of religion and an adequate conception of morals, —Msgr. John A Ryan, Catholic Uni- versity of America. xe * Any man who wants to pay a dol- lar debt with a 50-cent dollar is not honest.—Senator James A. Reed of ‘Missouri, xe k Having been a professor of econom- ics myself, I recognize in President Roosevelt a master of this science— Dr. Gabriel Terra, president of Uru- guay. Import Quota Slash Is Planned by France Paris, Dec. 28—(?)—A cut in French quotas to a basis of 75 per cent of the present allotments, to. swell French commerce and reduce the deficit in the balance of trade, will be put into effect the first of the new year, min- ister of commerce Laurent Eyenac announced Thursday. ‘The commerce minister said nego- tiations with other countries, looking to complete rearrangement of quotas about the same time. The French plan is to use this curtailed import as @ leverage for striking new bargains abroad. Arsonists Sentenced To Canadian Prison Yorkton, Sask., Dec. 28—(?)—Jail sentences of a year and two months were given here Wednesday to Martin Weise and Walter J. Weise, respect- ively, by Magistrate A. McDonald. ‘The two recently were brought to Yorkton from Grand Forks, N. D., and Pleaded guilty to charges of arson. European Leader To depart. 55 Injury. Sit part of 56 His country is 2 Substance trom 16 Woodrow —— 55 Exclamation of establish ‘his country’s constitution, 17 Weapons. 18 Consumed. | 20Capital of his country. 22 Secluded LINE] valley. E (VIE IN] 23 Pretense, IE MG! 26 Silkworm. “28 Conjunction. 5] 31 Energetic, 32 Within. 33 Pertaining to tides. 36 Falsehood. 38 Snaky fish, 89To fre a gum ie EVIE] 3 Kiln. 4 Insane 5 Morindin dye. 6 Authority. 78outh 41 Malaria. America. 43 Wrath. 8 Work of skill. 44 House cat. 9 Long grass. 46Ketch common 10 Mandarin's in the Levant residence. 49 Fairy. 11 City in 51 Tarboosh. Florida, ~. 52 Wild ox. 14 African river. 54 Southeast. helped him laughter, te victory. Has he no feeling for all} They were apprehended the critics who have been saying he’s |sheriff at Grand Forks in connection i cuse those chapt by the with a fire that destroyed @ barn and Gemolished five sets of harness, two loads of oats and a load of hay on the | farm of George Weise, another rela- tive, in the Barvas district east of here, Oct, 14. BLAMES FIRE FOR ‘FLOODS Dec, Slag has been found to be of use to the oyster industry. of finding material to which young oysters could fasten themselves was solved when some slag was lost overboard from barges. SYNOPSI8: Curt Tonnyeon, and Paw St. Clatr, in Northwestern Canada on the trail of Igor Kera- han, arias ice, ook, form Bi Ralgh and Senya Nich- Is. attac! by the cua. Indlaye Tole” BEE By. his etreating band, rn that here not ‘attack: el sieepe to Disk eSTotanetmoatn, Dale Chapter 26 TANGLED THREADS i the pier office Curt called the Marlin home, talked briefly with A-K, promised him a report later that evening, and sent Smash out there. At Mounted headquarters he found Holden and Inspector Bald- ‘win in the latter’s private office, Polishing their plans for a narcotic raid that night. When he knocked and went in, Baldwin looked around and saw him, “Hello, Curt, old man!” He got up, shook hands warmly. “Holden and I have been wondering how you were making out. But I say, where's our friend Karakhan? We fancied that when you showed up you'd have him in tow.” He made Curt take his swivel chair and shoved him the cigarettes. Curt was surprised at his friend- Mness, so different from his resent- ment two weeks ago. Something had brought about a complete change of heart. He took a cigarette and lit it from Baldwin's match, “Oh, I’m letting Karakhan run loose a little longer while I follow up a side lead, Arn. *If you're not too busy I'd appreciate some help.” “Which youll get. Holden, take over this hop raid.” Holden nodded and went out to the squad room. Across the desk Curt sketched his work at Tellacet, at Russian Lake, and his trip up the Lilluar, “Why I came down here to Van- couver, Arn,” he explained, “I've got to get complete data on Ralph Nichols and Sonya, and I'd like tor you to help me, We won't hat much trouble with Nichols. Hi from Vancouver; I saw the labels on his clothes and outSt. Here's a roll of films; you'll find two snaps of him on it—the man with the cap. When we place Nichols, we'll go after his acquaintances and get ev- erything we can.” Baldwin scratched notes on a pad. Curt went on: “We may have more trouble with Sonya. I don’t know her last name or where she's from; but I've got four snaps of her tn that roll, and I think that when we once place Nich- ols it'll be easy to get a lead on her. They're close friends and should have mutual acquaintances.” “Right!” Baldwin agreed. He Dressed @ button and @ Mounted constable came in. “Otis, take this roll of films and have prints in half an hour. Don't tussle this.” He turned to Curt. “While I'm working on Nichols, you can be reporting to A-K, My car's outside. Take it.” “Thanks, Arn, I'll go now.” Baldwin walked out to the curb with him. “Old man,” as he gave Curt the keys, “I read that letter you wrote A-K from Tellacet.” “He showed it to you?” “Yes, I say, it was damned gener- ous of you to tell him that I helped pick up Karakhan's trail, I didn't have a blighted thing to do with it, except to sit back and feel cocksure you'd fail. I acted small then, and T’ve been wanting to say 80,” Cur was glad he had put that sentence into his report. A few generous words, costing nothing, had wiped out hard feelings and made Baldwin his old friend again. “By the way,” Baldwin remarked offhand, “Helen Mathieson bas men- tioned you several times. If you get @ chance, call her up and say bello, won't you? You never told what you thought of her.” “She took me a real surprise, Arn. I thought she was as likable and sweet a girl as I'd met in a long time.” Saat because, chew "anesetad just associated with Karakban, most people think she's of s sort with bim. 1 don't an- derstand what the women like in the fellow but he’s certainly got a way ‘with them. She’s pulling out of it.” “I'm glad she's forgetting. You've geen her since | was here?” “We-ub, take an evening drive Dow and then. Yes, she’s forgetting; but what 1’ like, Curt, is for her to have the whole truth about him. She knows about his swindle game here in Vancouver; and excuses it, in @ way; but she’s never heard a whis- per about Buenos Aires and those other fncidents. She woulde’t “You know as much ag I do; why don't you tell hary? FORBIDDEN VALLEY Wiliam Byron Moweu, | FLAPPER FANNY Savg People hoping to set the world on fi ft begin re often begin by ‘buraing “Well, you see, it'd be deucea awkward for me to do it. She knows T'm a professional bloodhound, and besides she might think that the— uh, personal element was coloring what I said.” Curt suddenly realized that Bald win’s interest in Helen Mathieson cut a lot deeper than a professional interest. 3trange—an officer of the Mounted, and the girl whom the Cossack Karakhan had thrown aside. Luck dealt queer cards sometimes. “Til do what I can, Arn,” he prom. iseq. ‘Witt you? Old man, I'll depend on you for that! Wknow she'd listen to you. On this other matter, I'll be phoning you before midnight.” Curt left. On his drive out to the Marlin home he prayed that Rosalie would be gone for the week-end, as she usually was. He had no definite thought of ever marrying Sonya Nichols; the whole situation be tween Sonya and himself was so un- certain and unpredictable that he could not look ahead with any as- surance whatever. But his intimacy with Sonya had revealed to him a new strange vista, ungaessed at in all his previous life, He had known Rosalie for eight years without their association quickening into life or deepening be- yond a casual comradeship; he had known Sonya lesq than two weeks, but it seemed to him that destiny itself had led him to take up the Karakhan hunt merely that he might meet and know her. T the Marlin home A-K answered his ring. Smash had gone to bed, A-K informed, as he took Curt out om the porch. Rosalie too was gone—on a week’s yachting trip to Seattle. “Sorry,” Curt mumbled, when he heard that. A-K brought a pitcher of iced drink, drew two chairs beside tho magazine stand, and listened closely to the detailed report. The account left him uneasy. The big part of the hunt, and the worst part, still lay ahead, and several features of it looked ominous. Two men against three dozen—for Curt to g0 back into those mountains and con- tinue the hunt was like a tryst with death, And this girl Sonya—who was she, what was she doing in there, and why under heaven had Curt handicapped himself with her in a situation where be needed above everything else to be absolutely free? Curt must be interested in her, to put it.mildly. “Curt, d’you suppose this gir! can be an agent of European police? Enough of them want Karakhan badly. Maybe they sent a woman to take him.” Curt shook his head emphatically. “It can’t be, A-K. I know that post 3 she couldn't have fooled me “What do you believe she is then?” “I haven't the faintest idea, Dx cept.” he added, “she’s a most ex: traordinary person, I wish you Inew her, A-K.” Marlin glanced at him. “Why?” he asked, suspicion almost a cer tainty. As he listened to Curt’s halting at- tempt to describe her, Marlin felt that instead of liking this RussiaD girl he would dislike her intensely. He disliked her even then, without eve: having seen her, for he 62” that she had crowded Rosalie ¢0- tirely out of Curt’s thoughts. He looked away, to keep Curt from seeing his shock an¢ pain. It seemed incredible that Curt, who had always been so rational in such matters, should fall in love with a girl of whom be knew noth: ing and whom he had met less that 8 fortnight ago. Her alien origiz, her secrecy, her going off on a long trip with a man who was no relation at all, stronsiy suggested that she was some sort of adventuress, No doubt she was & brilliant girl—she appeared to be &® match for Curt at Curt’s own game; and no doubt she had cherm- ing qualities or she could not have swept him off his feet as she hed done, But nevertheless she was an ad- Venturess, and Curt had an,awaker ing ahead. He kept bis conviction to himself. {t was not a matter in which one mar could counsel another. Curt had to choose and travel bis own path. Perhaps, God willing, that At eleven the phone rang. Bald- ye ™ calling from a down-tows tel, “Curt? Arn speaking. Some news for you, (Copyright, 1983, Willlam B. Mowery) A-K gives Cust-0 eunpelons (o° erage x wane mROQROer>aoP mH ecvece aoue TROEGUIAEEa E ROdadcaa 20: 2286 8235578 gevZzZotzcacms se sc ss Ss eFe3 ~ Beessovme Sma—g> sPoyree B2e52 ae er fr et

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