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he Bismarck Tribune yore owopeper NEWSPAPER CEatablished 1673) Bismarck Trib- Gompany, Bismarck, N. D., and Bismarck da Bis- cecee 3.20 00) would have to tend to his knitting. fact of which all of us have been) ware whenever we stopped to think @bout it. ‘That fact pointe out the need for ® recovery in which people will no Jonger need to seek employment on Public payrolls but will be steadily and profitably occupied on a normal pasis, ‘The president hopes that time will come within two years and all of us Gevoutly echo the wish. ‘We should also do whatever lies ‘within our power to bring about that ment at first hand, watch how execu- tives and solons do their work, and jattend lectures by cabinet officers and others, In many ways this is a very sensible suggestion. It would be fine train- ing for the young collegians, for one thing; for another, it ought also to be @ good thing for the government quick to see through sham and bluff. A politician functioning for three months under the eyes of a gang of boys and girls from the campuses Hot air and bunk would get him no Place. He would have to be good to make an impression. Death for Reckless Driving Some sort of record for severity in dealing with reckless driving seems to have been set by the Russian court in Moscow, which recently imposed the death penalty on a motorist who ket his car get out of control, caromed into a marching column of troops, and jcaused the death of four men. ‘This sentence is all the more as- tounding when one considers the fact that, except in cases of counter-revo- lutionary activity, Russian eourts are reluctant to impose the death pen- alty at all, even for cold-blooded murder, It isn’t likely that very many Americans would favor the adoption of such stringent measures in this country. Nevertheless. there is some- thing to be said for the adoption of extreme severity toward the man who handles his car so poorly that he de- stroys the lives of his fellow men. ‘We have a lot of public menaces of that variety in America, and so far we do not seem to have found any very effective way of dealing with them. Labor and the Law One thing the present congress properly might do is to clarify the labor union provisions of the NIRA. | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. LUISA seam aM TIE My ambition for 1934 is to make Max Baer heavyweight champion.—| Jack Dempsey. ee % ‘The whole purpose of education—| * ® I am against the complete revision of the constitution by congress. If authority is given the president, I not know what congress will have to do—Senator L. J. Dickinson of “ek * If I play a concerto, it must have its framework, like a picture.—Jose Tturbi, famous pianist. xk * Love in the movies now is sweet “Jand simple. Not that love is simple— To be sure, congress probably would. get into the hottest kind of argument while doing it. Some people would 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 ‘warns all of us to pull together now as never before in our history. Grisly Warning to Us Death of a young boy in a coasting accident at Mandan emphasizes anew the necessity for instruction and cau- tion during this season when weather conditions permit winter sports. It is several years now since Bis- marek has had a fatality of this nature and provisions have been made to guard against them. It is are the instruction of children re- garding the danger attendant upon hooking their sleds behind automo- Diles and coasting upon streets not designated for that purpose. Unfortunately, Bismarck has not enough coasting hills to accommodate its junior population and as a result sehind their vehicles. This is great un but the point of it all is that Musement may very quickly be turn- like to see these provisions tightened; others would like to see them loos- ened, Congress could not touch the sub- ject without stirring » pretty exten- sive kind of storm. Nevertheless, regardless which di- rection congress finally chose to go, the job ought to be done. Right now there is a great deal of confusion about what the labor provisions of the NIRA really mean. Do they make unionization com- [pulsory? Do they weaken or strength- en the company union? Do they weaken or strengthen the working man’s right to strike? The law is somewhat obscure on these points. Whether we tighten or relax the section dealing with organ- ized labor, we at least ought to make its meaning clear. The. Ring Tightens Slowly but surely, the law seems to be catching up with the gunmen. The last year’s most impressive de- velopment, in this field, was the rounding up and imprisonment of the Urschel kidnaping gang. Recently certain other notorious outlaws have come to the end of their rope. Wil- bur Underhill, Oklahoma bad man, | dies of wounds inflicted by officers of the law. An associate, Elmer In- man, is wounded and captured. Chi- cago'’s Jack Klutas goes down before Police bullets. And so it goes. Bit by bit, the au-| thorities are succeeding in their fight | to make the nation an unhealthy | Place for the strong-arm tribe. Thej| fight is by no means over, of course. Plenty of desperate criminals still) are at large. But it is becoming evident that of-| ficals all over the country at last are carrying on their fight with deter- mination and a good deal of effi- dren of Bismarck, Jest we, too, have a Late Hour Dangers One of the odd things which the Ohio State Highway Department has discovered is that the accident rate on country roads is highest between the hours of 3 and 4 s. m.—precisely the moment when the stream of traf- fic is at its thinnest. Part of this is due to the fact that ® certain percentage of intoxicated clency. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of th ey agree or disagree ibune’s policies, A Good Recommendation (Washington Star) Suppose a government worker has accumulated a thousand dollars or over in his retirement fund when he dies. Under the present rules and ERSE2, i vt jries. THE FIRST TWENTY YEARS ARE THE HARDEST Minnesota correspondent writes: Just a few lines—I fear the auto- matic chucker and we all know you Plead for brevity. I began reading daily your health column when I was quite a young! mother, so my three sons have been| Brady fans for years. Friend Hus- band used to bellow like a wild man when I quoted Dr. Brady as my au- thority. But . . . all that has Passed and he now accepts you with good grace as one more of the insti- tutions of civilization. Those were days of pioneer efforts. A short while ago my eldest son, now 25, reminded me of a time when: I had been quite ill and things were disturbing and he piped up “Never mind, mother, I will call Dr. Brady!” But I want to express my apprecia- tion. Yours has been a service which called for a pioneer effort. You have given much to help your reading pub- lic understand vital facts. May you continue... End of quotation Now Ol’ Brady will take the floor and do his own boasting. Pioneer is right. I am the first that ever burst into the public prints—I mean the first physician in good standing who ventured to hold forth in the papers merely because he had something to say for the good of everybody. I have been at it now for twenty years, and I am proud to say that with all my antics and my clash- es with the big noises who think they represent American medicine, my pro- fessional standing is today as good as ever and I defy any one to ques- tion it. It won't be long now until the chil- dren of my fanster children begin to ask me about their pimples and wor- This Minnesota mother doesn’t say, but between the lines we may read that her three sons are healthy lads. That's the trouble about this health-columning too. It is just like family doctoring. In either case the better you are at your trade the soon- er you are out of @ job. Kill or cure —it’s all the same to the doctor; whichever he does to you, he gets no more trade out of you. The nostrum business—ah, that’s the ideal line for the doctor who yearns to make a soft living without any work or worry. Concoct a cheap nostrum, preferably @ physic or a tonic, and plug hard on it till the sucker buys the first pack- age—after that he will have the habit in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. eyes) is communicable, but only thru intimate contact or by the agency of such things as rollers towels, common, handkerchief, etc. The Melancholy Days Am I an exception or do all women become depressed and miserable and irritable and unhappy over nothing. when they approach the critical time of life?... (Mrs. F. R.) Answer—Don’t be silly, sister. Noth- ing critical about it. Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for monograph on menopause. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) The New Deal Washington BY RODNEY DUTCHER Tribune’s Washington it Washington, Jan. 13—A Caesarian operation will be performed on the goose with the golden eggs. Roosevelt has become interested increasingly in the to take don’t “adopt an attitude of concilia- tion” is so much moonshine. “Executive Order No, 53” already has piled up more congressional trouble for Johnson. Distillers Feel Spur Members of the Federal Alcohol Administration met and privately be- quoting Rex Tugwell as criticizing their fail- ure to prevent sale of expensive bad liquor. stick pins . The distillers had taken their time organizing a code authority and it! finally dawned on the FACA that they might be stalling, preferring tq reap the largest possible harvest be- ey coming under real federal con- Questions of quality and labeling lare supposed to be determined by the code authority, composed of distillers, subject to FACA approval. So the FACA had felt reluctant to act un- til the code authority began to func- tion. But finally it has demanded action, One member promises that federal labeling requirements will permit the drinker to know just what's in his bottle and how much blending has been -—* * A Tip From Prison Prison magazines published by in- mates of federal institutions often contain helpful hints. Here's one Just culled: “A TIP-OFF: Police of Boston, Mass., use an ultra-violet ray camera for detection of forged documents and checks, counterfeit money and ‘spurious works of art.” (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘Tanks were first used in warfare by the British. Proposal nearly $4,000,000,000 “profit” out of the gold in the Federal Reserve banks when the dollar is devalued. Many of his advisers regard the opération as inevitable. No one will admit it, but it was costs you only 40 per cent of the take. The role played by father in the Minnesotan’s letter is good enough for him. Father is the original yes-man in American family life. To save his face he must do a tolerable amount of bellowing, of course, but eventually , |he acquiesces in whatever mother and QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Going to Hold » Convention? money. (Gresham's law: Bad money ives out good money.) se * More Grief for Johnson ! The sensational NRA “Executive Order No. 53” was aimed at certain 1 Who is the ruler in the picture? 10 Deposited. 11To put on. 13 High mountain 14 Self. 15 Italian river. 16He is an official in HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 18 Chum. 19 Rowing tool. 20To diversify. 21 Hops kiln. 22 Pussy. 23 Having no hair. 26 Owed. 27 Payment demand. 28Go on (music). 29 Rubber tree. 30 By. 31 Encountered. 32 Knave of with lines, 37 Night before. 38 He has been his country's since 1923. 41 Era. 43 Perfect type 45 Senior. @ 46 Lyrelike instruments, 47To betroth. 48 By protes- sion he is s—_— allied to the camels. 35 Edge of a skirt. MIL gaara aI 42 Landing places, but you know what I mean.—Claire ‘Trevor, movie actress. ‘ Barbs NW CATHOLIO eae 45, and ill. Nine is for children. ST. MARYS Ri Rev, Father R. A. Broadway Avenui Mass 4 o'clock NITY 1 Ww Avenue A ‘ourth opie B Rindaht, Pastor “There is 8, cordial ‘welcome at ‘rinity” Second Sunday after Bpiphany, January 14: Church school, 9:45 a, Morning worship, 11 Anthem: nity church chi y mparing Spiritum Vat- w ening service, 1:80 o'clock. Music, Sermon: FIRST CHURCH OF CHEST, SCIENTIST 728-4th wie | Sunday service at 11:00 a, m. Subject: s es meeting at 8 o'clock. A reading room retire in the ith Street, is open iy from 12 to 6 p. m.; Sunday, 3 to 5 p. church and to make use of the reading room. Sunday ‘Bohool’ at 9:68 Wednes ing testimonial Hoskins Block, 300% 4! It, All welcome to attend the In Indie, after the wedding cere- Two Yale professors report cases|Garments to signify that of a rare disease in which persons are very slow to remember things. Rare, that is, except among the professor's students, ee & Following the return of Vietor- fan fashions, and repeal in the United States, money was report- ed tighter in Paris. xk Half of the world, says a mission- ary, is beyond the reach of doctors and hospitals. We knew the medical pro- fession found it hard to make collec- tions, but we didn’t think it was as ‘bad as this. ese * Singers now can see their voices im a new sort of vibrating mirror —if their tonsils don’t get in the way. ek * A new mechanical nose, called an », 1s 80 delicate it will smell impurities in water before any chem- icals can detect them. Some of the water we drink would break the in- strument at the first whiff. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service Inc.) ‘Tests made in Iowa showed that in order to maintain a speed of 45 miles per hour into a head wind blowing 20 miles per hour an automobile had to exert 36 horsepower. With no wind at all only 24 horsepower had to be exerted to maintain the same speed. A 20-mile per hour tail wind required the expenditure of only 15 horsepow- er at a speed of 45 miles, There are 82 appointments-at- large to the U. 8. Military Academy at West Point, two of which are made upon recommendation of the vice president, especially conferred by the President of the United States. Ruling Pasha was abolished by law. 14 Ever (con- traction). = IN 15 Nominal value 17 Arabian shrub. 18 Butter lump. er 20 Mover's truck, 5] 21 Your and my. 1 22 Slash. 24 Brisk (music). 25 To depart. 26 Notwith- standing. * 27 Halt. ° 28 Superior opportunity. 30 Father. 31 Hodgepodge 4 Dog-rose. 32 Resembling 5 Paid publicity. pine cone. 6 Disagreeably 34 Myself. sharp. 35 Pronoun. 7To low as @ 36 Rocky shelf. cow. 39 Back. 8 Variant of “a.” 40 To eat. 9The chief 41 Onager. city of his 42 Taro paste. country is 44 Guided. _ 46 Road. 1231p 1925 —— 47 And. ISODISixi 1] lO iwie ie) aS IAL] 49 Made obdurate. VERTICAL united for life, YNOPSIB: By the help of Tenn- if ee phew be hod ire Tennyson and we eaca; £0" get Rath. ¢ pos to have owe of enya Vole ov, whom he loves although she has'run away to Karakhan, Dand of Klosohee Indians hia just has halted, Tenn-Og has with them, Chapter 89 NEWS OF SONYA ‘HE main band, Tenn-Og said, had discovered the éscape of the whites and had started north to Karakhan’s place to guard him. ‘These six runners had been sent south on the chance that they might catch up with the whites and am- bush them, Sonya was on her way north; ‘nothing had been heard of her since she left with her three guides. “Do you know where this white oe is hiding?” Curt asked Tenn- e. At the headwaters lake of the Lilluar, the Indian told him. He him- self had once lived at that lake, al- most at the very place where the white man’s cabin now stood. A week ago Curt would have con- sidered that information priceless, but now it meant little. In a general way he did plan to return later and make a second attempt to get Karak- han; but in all probability the Rus- eian would be out of the Lilluars and gone by that time. He was nobody's fool; he eer- tainly had read the handwriting on the wall. He had a plane and plenty of gas for it, as LeNoir’s trading ac- count showed. The wearisome job of following his trackless air path would have to be done all over again. “How can you go back to your People, Tenn-Og?” he asked. “Those six are going to tell the others that you were with us, helping us.” With a grunt and shrug Tenn-Og stated that he did not care whether he went back or not. He was almost an outcast now, he said, because of Siam-Kiale. Ever since his talk with Tenn-Og that first night, when the Indian gave him so much information vol- untarily, Curt had felt that he stood off somehow from the other Klo- sohees, His tones now and his ref- erence to the subject implied there ‘was some bitter personal feud be- tween Siam-Klale and him. The etories about the brutality in Siam-Klale’s nature, made Curt sharply uneasy about Sonya. She up in that country alone, in the charge of Indians who were com- pletely under the thumb of the sub- chief, If he and the main band overtook her party, he might seize her, brush LeNoir aside, and disappear with her somewhere in that unknown coun- try. Once she reached Karakhan probably would be safe; but any one of a dozen accidents might inter- vene to strand her in those wild ae and keep her from reach- berceptible change came over Ralph. At first Curt could not decide what the change boded; but as the signs became more pronounced, he recog- nized their grim meaning. He could mever get Ralph out, or even get to the plane with him. \ i brightened as night shut down. Fil- tering through the pine branches, cast filigree shadows on the woods, floor and lay in a wan ghostly flood) over Ralph and the wolf-foot and the, plot of black lilies, Far away, so far| it seemed a mere pinpoint of ca in the night silence, a cresceni wailing arose, and was taken up answered from a dozen mountain! peaks. Z In the last two hours, since realis+ ing that Ralpi was not to be with them, Curt had made up his mind to go back north and try to capture’ Karakhan. Tonn-Og could take them to that headwater lake, If Smash had kept his rendezvous, they would have a plane and could make the trip in less than three hours. With any luck at all, he would not; only end his long hunt then and there, but he could shield Sonya and bring her out. In spite of her associa- tion with Karakhan he felt it his duty, as a man, to look after her, safety. She was a white girl, she had shot square with him and helped him and Paul out of a desperate plight. Besides, he was vaguely beginning to suspect that there was something to her relations with the Russian which he knew nothing about. Her letter to the man and her talk with LeNoir stood as mountainous facts against her, but still he was troubled. His bad mistake about Tenn-Og, of whose treachery he had been so sure, made him wonder whether he might not be partly mis- taken about Sonya too. Fi peed time verged on midnight. Red Antares, glittering in the southwest, hung low over the dis- tant peakline. Through the trees he watched it sink and vanish. When he glanced again at Ralph he was surprised to see that the latter’s eyes were open, He took Ralph’s hand, to let him know that a friend was with him. Ralph looked around, evidently look- ing for Sonya, The delirium had passed, he seemed to be in no pain whatever; but he was not altogether clear-headed, and his consciousness was the last faint flare-up. He gazed up at Curt for a moment. His lips parted. Curt bent lower, “Where are—we, Curt?” “Down river, Ralph. Back at the Iskitimwah.” voice. “Where's Sonya, Curt? I'd like her—a little talk—” Curt started to say that Sonya F] b i fh i j Fly iH rl i e i Fi : E : i FE zg i z H i ff E ? | 4 iF eS rf if i E F i i i (Copyright, 1938, Watlam B. Mowery)