The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 16, 1934, Page 4

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T. The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper Ad Daily by carrier, per year ......$7.20 record carefully to determine his fit- ness for office. The job is one for all good citizens, not merely that of the executive committee of the Nonpartisan League whose quarrel is partly political in nature. crats’ who sense the direction ‘in present predatory administration, must have the courage and deter- mination of the vigilantes of old. A few brave, honest and efficient Leaguers, Republicans and Demo-| which the state is drifting under its ‘The |to save the city, elected LaG BACK SLAPPERS BACK Greek met Greek the day when he said that ards to go Middle West grocer advertises, “Presh Eggs, Delicately Mild in Flavor.” That's a to eet Congress Here's hope for the school teach- opened, when the world’s two cham- |ers—chorus girls are getting higher MiSopyright, 1994, NEA Service, Inc) ~ To Cafes in Fargo although the people that, ‘The Alamo was & San Antonio, Texas. ——=—$—— ‘Texas has more miles of railroads than any other state. ewan any other state, | FLAPPER: FANNY SAYS: mission chapel in : i Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily by mail, per ye: outside of Bismarck) 5.00; 7.0 | office holders in the state house have borne the brunt of the fight long! enough. They must have spirited o}Support if the power-mad political machine now in the saddle is to be defeated. | 2.50} The state situation merits more consideration than would a mere po- litical fight within the League. It| demands the attention and action of | —levery citizen who values the name, credit and future of North Dakota. abt Fargo, Jan. 16—Uniess conditions in several Fargo cafes are changed immediately, action is to be begun by the atate’s attorney's office which may result in padlock proceedings, A. R. Bergesen, states attorney, an- nounced Monday. to put a stop to begun Dakota ........ Weekly by mail in state, Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by Dakota, per year . Weekly by mail in year autographed by velt. It was taken early in December, to include Secretary of State Hull, then about to leave for Montevideo. But because the president wanted to use it for gifts it was not released for newspapers until Christmas time. Ex- ‘The campaign ‘Member of Audit Bureau of — Circulation : | Ss ae Member of The Associated Press | >, ; | tet Hived SRE | pore oat srr cener walter | a cies Mepatehes credited to it) Brown would seem to be in a spot| or not otherwise credited in this, Where some sort of explanation is mewspaper and also the local news of | due. i Del tigete ot ferutiectaan oF ait otbes | A senate committee is told by his former stenographer that he ordered | matter herein are also reserved. | postettice itlies?) containitg Paktay On| Governor Langer’s First Year |°ce2" and air mail subsidies, burned | Political manipulation character-| Just before he left office last March. | tzes Governor Langer's first year in| Mr. Brown denies it, asserting that | anger ‘is often measured by the foot. office. only his private correspondence was | put in the fire. In either case, the Ballyhoo tactics, aided by the state} 3 7 sought-for-files seem to be missing. militia, have brought ridicule upon the state and seriously injured its credit and good name, His various moratoria have im-) peded business, emphasized uncer- tainty and brought embarrassment and direct loss to thousands whom the governor blatantly asserts have been benefited. | Two trips to Washington have not; improved the situation of this state in the matter of federal relief. Fed- eral officials look with suspicion up- on a state whose governor permits Political parasites to hi-jack public employes out of five per cent of their salaries. One of the first evidences of fed- eral reaction to our governor's in-) attention to his duties was removal from the state of the CCC, prob- ably the only state in the union where this happened. Government officials had ‘more to do than to repeatedly importune him to take care of his work andvadvise them if there was anything in this state which the CCC could do in the cold “months. North Dakota's public works ap- propriations move slowly at Wash- ington. It is not to be wondered at. Governor Langer denounced Pres- ident Roosevelt's economic policies from the White House steps and, in brawling language, opened fire on/ Secretary Wallace of the department| of agriculture. There are evidences that the De-/ mocrats are about ready to d something about the governor’ racketeering tactics in attempting to build up a personal political machine whole lot of daylight. If a former government documents just before | going out of office, the country has| a right to know all about it. | If, on the other hand, he did no-| thing of the kind, and the impor- | tant documents just happened to get| mislaid, that fact also should be) substantiated. i Either way, Mr. Brown would seem to be due for an appearance before | the senate committee. Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. E Te An Apple of Discord and the Love Feast (Williams County Farmers Press) With the approach of county and state convent occasion to give some serious thought to the future of the organization. | Since its tenure in office with a complete ticks, the governor has been an apple of ord, Now is a time to face the fact! He and other constitutional officers have very evi- dently failed to ¥ in harmony. Nor has all this row the sta’ executive committee ser any good purpose. \ To the rank and file of the Non- | partisan League, these men it elects to office are only incidental to a cause. Nonpartisans maintain first interest in their organizction, and the men they elect merely serve as instruments in carrying out the will) more responsive government. | Some of the things that Governor | Here is a situation that needs aj cabinet member destroyed important} PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal 1 health and hygiene, not to diseare 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 Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. THE SCOUNDRE! WHO PEDDLE THE CRI to cri. Gowan I've defined it often enough, Mature or elderly adults are | Nonpartisans have|notably less likely to catch whatever | |mother herself, provided the situa- tion is clearly explained to her. The | Children are notoriously susceptible | prospective mother might wish to |consult her spiritual adviser. Immunity to Scariet Fever Is there a practical, satisfactory going around. To my mind there | method to immunize children ‘against nothing strange about that. The explanation is that children are more intimate, careless and gregarious than older folk. Notwithstanding the periodic labo- rious bulletins to the newspapers by jthe Johns-Hopkins expedition, no one knows any more about “the common | old” than ever. For that matter, no| mon cold.” In fact “ihe common cold” is so vague a conception that the doc- tors who use it as a diagnostic make- shift are quite safe, for no one can jtell at the onset what the alleged “cold” is going to be. Thus it is easy to stall along on the fake diagnosis of the organization to have a better,/of a “cold” until the actual nature of the illness becomes manifest. As long as the big shots in the pub- scarlet fever? (Mrs. R. 8. F.) | Answer—None that I can recom- mend, but such a method may be javailable in the near future. | Carrots tell me if it is harmful to my health to eat a lot of carrots. Lately I have (Mrs. M. V.) Answer—The cuticle may become stained by carrotin, a yellow dye in carrots, if one eats a great deal of the vegetable, But the stain disappears efits and you can sise up first results of the crop reduction program. That's the way the New Dealers now themselves. It’s the emergency expenses $7,500,000,000 this fiscal year to $2,- 000,000 next year and nothing at all the next. I would rather save a home than| * save @ politician—Mayor Fiorello La Guardia of New Ss zk The repeal of prohibition will be ‘The Japanese empire is destined to exercise its influence as a nation of If the economic picture still is sour rs in May, it will be hard to stand off the greenback boys, IN IRISH WE TRUST You can trust an Irishman, accord- ticns than it would to most other diplomats. MacWhite sought a big market for irish whisky in America. He couldn't tell just how mi Treland States in Thave .a craving for carrots. Please! Trish quota, byt he tory quid pro quo. Our officials took one ean define or describe “the com- {noticed my skin is turning yellow./>!s soon after you cease eating carrots.|? I think the habit of eating some such raw vegetable every day is fine for the health, teeth, looks and every- thing, only you must always take| ke Pains to wash the vegetable carefully, ; 0 ras decree * Congress ham legalized drinking in the District of Columbia, and now our representatives can get down to work with a 100-proof conscience. zee Billy Sunday is back in New York SYNOPSIS: @ a weni to kill is" story’ end strngplen fo reach Sonya and protect her. Chapter 41 NO SMASH URT took one glance along the south shore and groaned—halt a curse and half a cry of tragic disap- pointment, The plano was not in sight. They fired shots in the hope that Smash might have drawn it back into some little bay. But they got no answer. Smash had failed them. They paddled over toward the cabin, As they drew in, Paul noticed a bit of white hanging from a low pine branch. It was Smash's hand- kerchief, put there to draw atten- tion. A tin cigarette box was tied to the limb beside it. As Curt suspected, the box held a note. Old Timer: I'm clearing out for Tellacet. Our left be? tank sprung: a slow leak and I thought it ought to be fixed. I'll get tomorrow morn- ing without fail, ‘Smash P, S. There's a dance at Lake Marianne tomorrow, night, and 1 may hop over there; but I'll’ be back bright and early the next morning. Curt turned the note over, looking for the date. There was none. Smash had crazily forgotten even to date his message. In the furious anger of helpless- ness he tore the note to bits. It was seldom that he lost complete control of himself, but that idiotic message and the crack-up of his plans sent him tramping the landwash in a blind fury. In wishful fancy she tried to imag- ine him there with her, his rifle between his knees, his lean bard face between herself and danger; but the memory of his change and his withering coldness drove the fancy away. He had even ignored her overture to him that last eve- ning. Her cheeks burned at the thougat of her confession, and his silent scorn of it; anid yet she knew that if she came out of thi jhe would write to him and ask come to see her. A tew yards down the portage trail two Indians unexpectedly came swinging around @ buckbrush thick- et. They were carrying a loaded ~ canoe, and behind them came others, & large party. Sonya started to her feet in surprise. falls had muffied the nol not known they were about till they suddenly appeared. They were Klosohees. Why, they were the main band!—there were Siam-Klale and LeNoir! A sudden fear surged through her. Ralph and Curt and Paul—what bad happened to them? This band had intended to stay down there and hem that little istand ia till they had killed the three men. Had they made another attack, successful this time? ENOIR’S glum face reassured her/As she went up tocamp with the party, he told her the news. Nich- ols had been wounded, he said; the other two had made a shelter for him the next day and he had not been seen walking about. Shortly after dark that evening they had es- caped, in some unknown fashion, They had whipped south; an un!- dentified canoe had slipped through that bottle neck and it must have been theirs. They probably were get- ting out of the country, but on the chance that they might swing north again he was taking the main band and fatten his cohorts on federal Lea She acre ele money. The investigation about |and'qnat’ che Nonpartisan, League Me health world persist in the fletion which District Attorney Lanier com-| would expect from any man it put) diagnostic skullduggery but also the mented on his return from Washing-|in the governor's chair, In other vicious practice of peddling respira- ton Saturday is long overdue, |B comings, He estabished a news-| ‘0% nections thru, the community Beer taxes, levied to ease an OVer-jnaner with contributions from em- |} encouraged and iver reroectsialy burned citizenry, are being squan- ployees, but since its issuance it ap-|, Most agra aca, will dered to build up a political ma-|pears to be solicitous of Governor Pendeany cack chataeonle ought ta dee cxrbiepe 0) Sts aims anid callous oe ears aaiiaet be careful about sneezing and cough- pate peli wellare. though The Leader may think so,/ing all over the environment when Eastern consumers are getting|Governor Langer alone isn't the Non-|they have “colds.” But tell me the North Dakota flour at prices below name of any health officer who has the cost of production. They pay partisan League by a long shot. much less than does the North Da- home to protect his chief. Sonya guessed that Curt and Paul were hurrying Ralph out to civiliza- tion where he could get medical at: tention. She prayed he was not bad- ly burt. She was glad of their es- cape, but in another way the news plunged her into a black dejection. Hitherto she could feel that Curt was within two or three days’ swift travel of her and that she might pos sibly get back to him. She had even hoped that he might be coming north on her tra{l. But now when he was heading south, out of the Lil- A tank leak—hell! Smash had got tired of being alone and had flounced off to soak up some of his sociability. He had not been asked to share any of those dangers up the Lilluar; his Job was nothing more onerous than standing by with the plane; and he had flunked it. Now when they desperately need- ed him and the very hours were pre- cious, he was Lochinvaring around somewhere, several hundred miles away. At the critical time when Sonya would reach that lake, they when you are going to eat it whole, as you should. Cooked carrots, of course, are healthful for every one. Raw car- rots are rich in Vitamins A, B, C and for all we know X, ¥ and (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) FRANK, SAYS FRANK “It’s the most brutally frank bud- get message ever sent in,” President Roosevelt said just before he revealed this year’s $7,000,000,000 deficit. lions this year,” he said, “but not one A current political rumor is to the|ever warned the public about the effect that there will be a general|peril in the conversational spray of) jlovefeast some time in the near fu-|the scoundrel who purports to have ‘kota farmer for his “Dakota Maid.” Why? So the mill can run full blast and employ more machine politicians, thereby increasing the shock troops of our North Dakota Hitler. Duties given over to a beer com- missioner and the state regulatory department could be taken care of without extra cost by county and city police officers, but the waste goes on while Governor Langer tells the peo- ple about the taxes he has saved them. All the taxpayer has to do is look at his bill, payable March 1, to know how he is being exploited to create @ political machine of menacing pro- portions. While Governor Langer blatantly claims credit due the legislature for reducing certain state expenses, and points to a few kitchen economies of his own, he maintains an eloquent silence upon the exploitation of clerks and public officials, the extra- vagances of departments under his control and the lavish management ture, and all the differences that have grown so bitter will be patched up. For the future of the organizatiol | they had better be, or a leader will) be needed who can get along with others that the organization has seen fit to recommend. And the others shouldn't have to be yes-men to the governor's office as a primary re- commendation. ‘ Through the years that the organ- ization has struggled and been kept alive to vindicate its existence in the| last election, it hasn't been an execu- tive committee league, a Langer league, or the exclusive property of any individual. That idea is out of harmony with the high ideals that gave birth to the league. A. -~C. Townley is to be credited with its founding, to be sure, but he left the organization when he began to think more of A. C. Townley and his! schemes than he did of the cause he! represented. Nonpartisans needn't kid them-/ selves about the next election. The} Democrats will be a potent factor. The party in the state has been un der the control of reactionaries and} for that reason the real Democrats) have joined with Nonpartisans op- posing the tories who represented the party in elections. The Democratic | candidate will, of course, run on @ of the mill and elevator. With one APACE HERES Roosevelt platform, but the fact that the leopard can't change its spots will give Nonpartisans their oppor- tunity to again serve the state. The convention in March will tell the story. If leaguers are to enter an election contest divided and con- fused by the attitude of men chosen to represent it, the organization will be well on its way to complete dis- integration. It has survived internal | dissention before, however, and it may do so again. The easiest way would be to be sure that the man who is nominated for governor de- serves and can have the support of the entire organization. There is no place in the league for these Caesars who feed upon its substance until Grow 80 great, that they forget the parent that fostered them. By treating their seed with radio waves, a German scientist succeeded in producing certain vegetables in half their normal time, even when they ‘were grown in poor soil The civilian conservation corps has completed @ 2,000,000 seedling locust nursery at Angols, Ind. a “cold.” In addition I hereby offer; @ reward of ten dollars for proof that any health officer or health author- ity of standing has ever dared to deny that there is the same peril in con- yersational spray as there is in the spray of the uncovered cough or sneeze. There is just this difference between being coughed on and being talked to, by a person who has the cri (any common respiratory infection which may masquerade at first as a “cold”). ‘The effective range of cough spray is ten to twelve feet, whereas the effec- tive range of conversational spray is less than 5 feet. It is more difficult to keep beyond the conversational spray range than it is to keep outside of the cough spray range, because coughing in it- self is, like sneezing, ground for suspicion that the scoundrel has some- | thing catching. But conversation is not a suspicious sign, and so the con- versational spray is deadly. In my opinion the chief cause of the cri, that is any and all of the common respira- tory infections which account for three-fourths of the illness in the community, is the germ-laden spray of invisibly fine droplets of moisture that shoots forth to a distance of two or three feet, never over five feet, from the speaker's mouth, dur- ing ordinary conversation. And ac- cordingly I believe that the most ef- fective prophylaxis against such in- fection consists in the effort to re- main beyond the conversational spray range whenever you can manage to do 80, or if your occupation requires that you come into intimate contact with then arrange a suit- what, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cancer If an expectant mother has cancer of the uterus month must she wait till Old U. into pulp and sold. SSBB A ES, T. pene mone ermnd) timistic. under NRA codes, received about a billion dollars in ben- Washington, Jan. 16.- the recovery program now is expected nation will be well up the vt aides share his confidence. In May the president up the civil works program. those 4,000,000 persons employed federal funds can be absorbed by vate industry. That's extremely op- hopes He ‘The bulk of the vast flood of emerg- a Microbe Discoverer | | tools. 44He special- ised in tuberculosis “if othe — 46 Either.@ 47 Gaelic. 49 Astringent. 51 Sun god. 53 Chest jbone, Paley [44-4 ANS) vi VERTICAL 1He was a with as tin practicing ‘alloy. uid 40 Threw. 2 Lac. 41 Silkworm. 3 Huge. 42 French 4 Always. military cap. 5 Uncommon. 43 End of a 6 Recognizes as heir. 8 Custom. 9 He discovered 52 Onager. the —— 54 Before bacillus ¢pl.). 87 Like. PTTT Tr ttt would not be there, he and Paul. They were stranded, in a God-for saken wilderness, with two hundred and forty mountain miles between themselves and her. eevee O*. the evening of the third day Sonya’s party stopped at twi- light and made camp in a drogue of river-bank pines, The three Indians, her escort on the trip north, built her a little lean-to, deftly wove a bdalsam-twig mattress for her bian- ‘kets, and otherwise made her as ‘comfortable as they could. | The leader of the three, an older hale brother of Tenn-Og, called the halt, out of consideration for the white girl in his charge. Sonya her- self would rather have pushed on to the Headwaters lake ‘hat night. It ‘was only twenty miles farther and they could reach it by dawn. Now when the end of her long quest was in sight, she wanted it and its har towing uncertainty over with. F In spite of the hard trip that day she did not feel tired. She was at too high a tension. While the Indians were broiling trout for a meal, she walked back the trail to an overfalis around which her ‘party had just mrenet and sat down on the lip of the rock thirty feet above the plung- fog water. Dusk was creeping into the moun- tain valley. The poorwilis were be- ginning to call, and owls drifted on nolseless wing through the heavy timber. The twilight, the solitude, the song of the waters, seemed to her a kind of pause and self-com- munion before tomorrow came, With a secret rejoicing she had heard how Curt and Paul had beaten off those fourteen canoes. But she had known they'd do it! Tenn-Og.no doubt hag teken them a boat atter the attack, and they were safe now. But where were they? It was pos- sible that Raiph had weakened luars, she felt completely and final- ly abandoned. At the camp LeNoir sent Tenn- Og’s ual brother and two ether In- dians on ahead to take Karakhan the news. The main party was to travel on that night, too; but they would have to pause for supper and go more slowly and so could not reach the lake: till morning. Sonya wondered why LeNoir in- sisted on traveling that night. For some reason he seemed in a great hurry to deliver her to Karakhan. He commanded her gruffly, as be brought her some fish and dried meat: “Tonight, on res’ of dis treep, you stay close by me. Don’ step into de dark; don’ get vut my canoe; keep hold my belt wen we walk ‘cross any portage. Onderstand?” Sonya promised to obey him. Dur- ing the hasty meal she was aware of Siam-Klale ogling her with nar rowed eyes, as he had done at the Lilluar forks; but now his stare was so brazen that it unnerved ber. As the party was setting the boats to water, he trundied over to Le Noir and said something to him and Jerked a thumb In her direction, Im- mediately a violent juarrel sprang up between them, and Son: ithe ered that Siam-Klale was Jemand- ing she should go fn bis canoe. LeNoir won the argument, and . she stepped into his canoe. She was srateful to him in @ way, but she could read his secret thoughts and they frightened her. His proprietary attitude was veiled now, because he was afraid of Karakhao; but what ¢ about the time, only a few hours ahead, when Karakhan would lie dead in his cabin? That incident at Russian Lake.showed her what she could expect from 'Teeste LeNoir, Tm that whole band she had but one friend, Tenn-Oz’s halt brother. Like Tenn-Og, he seemed less bound than the others to the benighted customs of bis tribe; and he ap- | eared to have a certain influence . her north and try to help her out? She wanted to think so. Even the faint possibility of it buoyed her up. Alone now, with her bridges burned and utterly on her own resources, be realized hov: completely she had with the other men. For-an indian, he had been good to her on the trip. He might possibly take her across the mountains by ret trail and hand her over'to some treaty band who would get her back among white people. But it was 9 slender (Copyright, 1988, William B. Mowery)

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