The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 2, 1934, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune ‘An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ___ aes ina ee Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and projects are profoundly unwise and ought to be abandoned. But however opinion may run in those respects, one thing is obvious: Since we are more or less committed | to a trial of a vast extension of ac- tivity by the central government, ‘entered at the postoffice at Bismarck|that trial ought to be as business- ‘ws second class mail matter. ‘ GEORGE D. MANN ’ President and Publisher : Subscription Rates Payable in Advance like and straightforward as is hu- manly possible. If it fails, it ought to fail because of its own inherent contradictions and not because of political inepti- kick and political manager of Smith, he ran for a borough presidency last jfall and was the one man Al Smith supported in the New York election. Roosevelt made him New York's collector of internal revenue after his defeat, which was interpreted as a The NewDeal Washington THEN F. B. LISPS President Roosevelt has a lower front tooth missing. Usually he wears 2 dummy tooth in the hole, but sometimes he forgets it. t|* ‘Then the result is startling. With he almost | Hell bid for Smith’s friendship, but wasn’t. en Lee Eames Doherty, daughter of the utilities magnate—Henry L. Miss Doherty, heroine of @ $100,- 000 debutante party here a season or two ago, cabled from Denmark, where she is secretarying to U. s. Minister Ruth Bryan Owen, | (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.20]tude. Springs Lisp {f He Forgets Dum-| ‘he dummy sbsent, Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) 5s Daily by mail outside of North Dakota cersesescseseseseeeees 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three YEATS sisesessessereseecssveees 250 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year Weekly by mail in Canada, pe 15 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 Spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Humble and Happy President Roosevelt referred to the birthday celebration staged for him by admiring fellow citizens as the happiest of his life, and this probably ‘was true. In characteristic fashion, he said {t made him humble as well as proud and thankful, both on his own behalf ‘and that of thousands of other crip- ples who have faced the handicap of shrunken and deformed limbs due to infantile paralysis. Nearly all of us have an ingrained sympathy for those who have suffer- ed this affliction, But the president hhas more than that. He has a kin- ship with every little boy and girl who has fallen beneath the scourge of this dread disease. One can ima- gine his gratitude then, when the na- tion made his favorite cause its own and took upon itself the opportunity of joining in this worthwhile move- ment. His intimate friends never com- ment on it, but it is probable that those years in the clutch of a disease from which there appeared no escape were the most formative ones of the president's career. He had gone far before that, to be sure, for he was comparatively young when his party chose him as its can- didate for vice president. He has al- ways had a magnetic personality and a brilliant mind and the courage of the Roosevelts is traditional. Yet the fire of those years of helplessness wrought changes in the man. They seem to have forged his spirit and his mind into a finer steel than was the case before. After coming to grips with the grim specter which he faced, the man need have no fear of anyone or anything. | eside that struggle, those which he is making now on behalf of the na- tion must seem relatively easy. But there was plenty of pride in the Roosevelt family on the occasion of that 52nd anniversary. It was ex- pressed by Mrs, Sara Delano Roose- velt, his mother, who recalled for re- Porters the various high spots in her son's career, We have been spared the usual line of “all that I am I owe to my moth- er” in the president's case, but the maternal influence was and is strong, just the same. It is so in all families where pride and tradition Play an important part. And so we have the aged Mrs. Roo- gevelt telling of her ambitions for her son that day 52 years ago when she cuddled him to her breast. She had dreams for him, as all mothers dream for their offspring, and, nat- urally enough, they were about the same as other mothers dream. She hoped he would grow to be a fine, upstanding citizen “just like his father.” There was no vision of high place fand tremendous acclaim. No clair- ‘voyance as to the tremendous power which would one day be his. Just the natural expression of hope that he ‘would grow up to do her credit. That the has done so is probably a greater satisfaction to her than the fact that ve is president. Politics Threatens CWA Success ‘There is something rather ominous ‘about all these reports of graft and double-dealing in operations of the ‘CWA. ‘They have been widespread enough to cause Department of Justice agents to get busy, and the story they tell isn’t a pretty one. Public officials, in some localities calmly have put themselves on the CWA payrolls; in others they have con- nived at a racket whereby CWA men had to fork over part of their pay; in others they have passed out jobs precisely as a rapacious city machine hands out plums at the city hall. Part of this is due to local political conditions, and part of it may be due to the federal administration’s failure to proceed sharply enough Sgainst the spoils system. There still ‘are too many men who see in gov- ‘ernment jobs only a new opportunity grave doubts of the vast effect to go {be on trial Not Really Courageous How quickly the bravado of our arch-criminals weakens under press- ure from the law is illustrated by John Dillinger, head of as vicious a band of bandits as ever terrorized} America. There is always a natural tendency to think of men who raid banks, kill- ing ruthlessly in the process, as cour- | ageous. The natural inference is that | it takes nerve to walk into an insti- tution, subdue anyone who happens) to be present, and make a getaway. But this can hardly be called cour- age, or if it is, it is not of the praise- worthy sort. The kind of courage which is truly, admirable is that which keeps a man in the fight, day after day, no mat-| ter what the odds; the kind of cour- | age which causes him to stand against private indecency and public corrup- tion alike. The kind of courage} which is based on considerations other than material self-interest. This is the thing which has made America great and which has proved | her saivation in every time of trial. | That Dillinger lacks it is shown by | his actions since his capture. First there was the effort to get himself extradited to Wisconsin, where there | is no capital punishment. His frantic | efforts to prevent, by physical resis-| tance, his removal from Arizona be- fore a habeas corpus writ could be issued. Gone is the braggadocio| |which made him one of the nation’s | most feared criminals. And there is} no inner courage to take its place. | Dillinger, on trial, will offer as} good an example of the futility of a} crime career as we have had in many | a day. A Double Boon Relief for unemployed musicians, | i burgh, | Plans are being made in that city| for a municipal symphony orchestra, | to be supported by CWA funds which | have been allotted for employment of idle musicians. If the plans go through, nearly 100 ment, and concerts will in Pittsburgh. Here is a cultural gain worth copy- | } of music available to people who have not been able to hear such mu- sic before. once launched, might easily be made self-supporting, if the right kind of handling were available. In any case, the project is a praiseworthy one. Editorial Comment 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. | Se i Dillinger and His Gangsters (Chicago Tribune) The attempts of Wisconsin authori- ties to get possession of John Dillinger out in Tucson were unreasonable. They were calculated to obstruct jus- tice. Both Indiana and Ohio can put jthese four killers on trial for murder, both states have capital punishment, | and each has a case of murder in| which an officer of the law, doing his cuty, was killed by the gangsters. Wisconsin wanted the desperadoes for \@ bank robbery in Racine. The pros- |pect of standing trial for that crime | Was so attractive that the four killers signed extradition waivers offered them by the Wisconsin officials in Tucson and welcomed a trip to Wis- | consin as a haven. It was a chance to| escape. If the Arizona officials had not been wholly out of sympathy with the ef- fort of one state to take the prisoners away from two others which claimed them for murder, a serious complica- tion working against justice and for | the benefit of criminals might have arisen. It appears that the Wisconsin officials even tempted the Arizona police with a halt of rewards offered for the capture and return of the prisoners for bank robbery. If Dillinger and his gangsters are sentenced to death in either Indiana or Ohio and are executed the crime of bank robbery in Racine will have been expiated. If the four were sent to a Wisconsin penitentiary for the bank robbery the murders in Ohio and In- diana would be left crying vainly for justice. The Wisconsin attempt to take the prisoners was inconsiderate and as an example of improper proce- dvre censurable. In any such case of disputed jurisdiction the community which has suffered the greatest injury is the one to bring the criminal to trial, and even if the charge in Wis- consin were murder the Wisconsin authorities would have been asked to stand aside because their state does not execute murders and Dillinger’s Gangsters have proved that prisons do not hold them very long. Their dep- Tedations since they broke out of the penitentiary are proof enough that tne execution of a capital sentence ipon which people ean rely. Indians has Dillinger. Indiana po- litical manegement of a prison al- lowed him to get his gangsters out of the Michigen City penitentiary. That of the Suse i eee fe Bell Os ew PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE Barbs A Chicago woman joined a flea cir- |RFC. my Tooth ... Carrie Catt Holds | Power . Forged Check ‘Reward’ For Faithful Toller . . . One Table At Birthday Ball—$1,000! F BY ues DUTCHER ‘Washington, Feb. 2—White-hatres Democrats of other days still stalk about the capital, as well as young Professors of the New Deal. Just a big joke to the Democratic party less than five years ago, Jesse is now chairman of the RFC and one most puissant gents in town. deals in billions. lured the 1928 convention to his Tex., where Democrats he was secretary to Woodrow Wilson in wartime. Now he’s an obscure lawyer here, seldom heard of and quite content with During the long, savage Madison Square Garden convention of ‘24, Shaver labored incessantly for Dark Horse John W. Davis. Nominated, Davis lifted his pal Clem from law Practice in a West Virginia town to chairmanship of the national com- mittee. Shaver met inevitable defeat, then labored four years with a deficit. Now he's a “special assistant” in Roosevelt ese | An aroused public conscience knows esi |no insurmountable obstacles—James |M. Ogden, president of the National | Association of Attorneys-General. | * ok OK France does not wish an inch of lisps. The days is almost invariably one of blue silk, crossed diagonally with close thin white stripes. POWER AT 75 | Carrie Chapman Catt, annual National Conference on Cause | and Cure of War, at the age of 75. ways full of humor. Corbett-Ashby of London, only wom- jan delegate to the disarmament con- ference, had taken a navy plane from New York. And you should have heard the peace ladies grouse and gossip! about that! | Many were restless during ‘the last |speech—that of Ruth Morgan, Mrs. \Catt’s right-hand woman, and there ‘was a rush for the doors at the close.’ Mrs. Catt announced that the ar- rangements chairman had said she must inform everyone that it wasn't proper for anyone to leave until Mrs. Roosevelt left. | So everyone stopped in his or her | tracks till the First Lady had been | ushered out. REWARD FOR TOIL Jim Landis—federal trade com- missioner, former se@zetary to Justice Brandeis, and author of the securities act—works till 7 each night and drives to his home in Alexandria, Va... . The other day someone forged his name to a 6100 check. $1000 FOR TABLE | | Ten “honor tables” at the presi-| To get here on time for the con- Bailey, former ference dinner,. handsome Margaret — oe |dent’s birthday ball at the Shoreham | the Iowa|ground belonging to anyone else and girl who led the women’s suffrage never will engage in aggressive war. \fight for 30 years, still dominates the |—Premier eee of France, * * a've had my ups and downs, Right It’s her simple, direct personality, al- now I’m down. I'm hoping the breaks {soon will come my W “ballet” queen, FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: f ay—Frankie 4 By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. | mended |without standing as physicians or Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. FREEZING FRECKLES M. Matarasso, French specialist— but don’t let that fact prejudice you coupled with a boon for music-lovers | against the man. French specialists | —this, apparently, will be one of the!are probably as good as American} fruits of the CWA work in Pitts- Specialists are. Some people are much {too credulous about Harley street specialists, French specialists and seventh sons of seventh sons of guns ... M. Matarasso considers freezing with carbon dioxide the best way to remove freckles. Sorry, girls, but the remedy can be japplied only by the skilled physician. Carbon dioxide is served at all soda musicians will get full-time employ- fountains—the bubbles. Solidfied car-, be given bon dioxide is the “dry ice” now usedj throughout Pennsylvania as well as|for packing ice cream and other | Smattering of knowledge about such | |frozen delicacies for shipment or|Staple medicines as any grocer might temporary storage. When it comes to freezing freckles |ing elsewhere, and it is the sort of or any other skin lesion with carbon |ing to take iron at all, take plenty.| Scheme that kills two birds with one’ dioxide, great skill and care is neces-| It’s cheap. Doses of a grain or two stone. It would make the best kind sary to avoid hideous scarring. Any|Might as well be dropped directly woman who values her complexion, such as it is, will certainly not take any chances in the hands of beauty parlor operators or other unqualified Furthermore such an orchestra, | persons when any such surgical treat- | ask for it. ment is to be undergone. It is aston- ishing how lightly even fairly intelli- crude “beauty” surgery of self-com- “experts” or “specialists” surgeons. Here is a bit of common sense hard to pound into the head of the woman who wants her feautures or form remodeled: If a plastic or sculptural surgeon is good, his pleased. patients and his general colleagues will send him enough work to keep him busy. If he is not so good he has to fish for unwary new customers however and wherever he can catch them. ‘Treatment of freckles with decolori- zing or bleaching agents, or with desquamative chemicals (irritants which cause more or less peeling of the skin) is never satisfactory but is always painful. Treatment with carbon dioxide snow is inoffensive and almost painless. Each spot is lightly touched sep- arately with the thin pencil.q The application is for 3 seconds. Follow- ing this, desquamation occurs in about a week. No scarring occurs. From 100 to 150 freckles may be dealt with at one sitting. Sittings may be repeated every eight or 10 days. This treatment is for honest-to- goodness freckles, and not for tiny spots that young people are forever discovering on close scrutiny of the complexion. The same treatment is used for freckles on the arms or body, but in these situations the treatment may be a little more vigorous. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS The Galvanized Tomato Problem Canned some tomatoes last Octo- ber, cooking them in a galvanized Pan. When I took them out of the pan it was all black inside. Now I am afraid to use the tomatoes ... (Mrs, B. V.) * Answer—If the food tastes all right there need be no fear of any Poisoning. However, tomatoes, gent women subject themselves to the | containers, nor in aluminum ware, for either may impart a disagreeable | taste to the food. i Iron Is Cheap I have tried your recommendation of iron and ammonium citrate though I fail to feel the benefit antic- \ipated. I did not take the prodigious quantity suggested in your article, however. That was a serious error. My druggist said it might be dan- gerous. He put the proper dose up for me... (Mrs. R. 8.) Answer—You got what you deserv- ed. Your druggist is one of those| ante-diluvian shopkeepers with a) dispense, but he evidently has little | experience in pharmacy. If you're go-| {down the sink. Full instructions and jadvice in the pamphlet “Blood and |Health”—send a dime and stamped Jenvelope bearing your address and Nails Grow From Root Does the fingernail grow from tip or from base? When very young I {cut the nail of forefinger from tip to base. Why has the cut never grown out? (L. M. B.) Answer—The nail grows from the base. For such split let the two parts |grow long enough to permit drilling holes on each side of cleft and in- serting silk ligatures and tying firm- lly, to keep the edges drawn together. |In two or three months you can get @ whole nail. (Copyright 1934, John F, Dille Co.) |cus when her husband brought home |@ bear. She might have stayed if he |had brought home a dog. * ek There’s just about one ounce of matter to every quadrillion cubic miles of space, says an astronom- er. Some heads do seem so big, on the morning after. xk * The birth control investigation held by a congressional commit- tee shouldn't bother the congresse men, since they have been born already. x ek kK A French audience pulled bricks from a theater wall to throw at the actors when the actors themselves failed to bring down the house. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) 1 Deified title of the pictured Teligious teacher. 6 His name was [9g — Sid- dhartha, | 12 Hodgepodge. 13Grassy plots. [Bic] 16 Part of theeye [FFFiAl 17 Wayside hotel. IAI 18To drink deeply. 20 Bronze. 21 Minor note. 22 Credit. Mizell le aM) IC ‘Mates 4 sheep. 23 Toward. 42To retrieve. 25 Northeast. 46 Hurrah! 26 Form of “be.” 47 Bottles. 27 Food con- 49 Reverence. tainer. 50 Dwelling. 29 His religion 1852 Too. practiced in 853 Ringlet. large part of 55 Mohammedan judge. 86 Mesh of lace. 67 Pastry. 58. Beverage. 60 Thing. 38 Small cask. * 35 Exists. 37 Therefore. oranges, lemons, grapefruit, cherries, berries and some vegetables should not be cooked or kept in galvanized lion can carry a full-grown cow a fence. ? ' 38 Type staddard. 62 He was a —— Rey fouled Thy 1, | HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 10 Deportment. 61 Paid publicity. 11 Valuable 14 Measure of area, 15 Grief. 18 Those who produce. 19 And so forth. 22 Weeps. 24 Calking material. 26 Snake. I ISIC MALY REA! (6! 63 Right. VERTICAL 1 Sores. 2 Forearm bone. . 3 Noise. 41 Long pole. 4To accomplish. 48 Felt concern. 5 Wing. 44To be in debt. 6 African 45 Waistcoats. antelope. 46 To bellow. 7Onager. 48:Behold, 8Seventh note. 51 Before Christ 9 Constellation» 53 Baking dish. 54 Ocean. 573.1416, property. August (abbr.) el Baw MLL lo Walls INT Le Ti la. Ne lala lo ob eNe|S ENE RT a eI | INSP Je | aA [A ON NIA ro Nel AWN ANGIE AS MENT lo NTT RUST ER. Wa) pled ele, ew IS rik Hoey isn’t white-haired yet, but. adds weight each year. An old side- sold for $1,000 apiece. Many a girl doesn’t catch on to First to seize the “honor” was Miss| herself until she begins to slide. by Allene Corliss COPYRIGHT BY ALLENE CORLISS ¢ DISTRIBUIED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. £4. SYNOPSIS After three years’ travel in Earope, where she had gone f lowing her father’s death, young CHAPTER SEVEN Marcia’s dinners were always pleasant affairs. She liked to enter-| tain and did it graciously and in- zF H Pi “He's certait thi: i till i “3 le’s alr ane he, pieene § searing. 5 handling your schools where she had never really lost her shyness, then those years abroad with that impossible per- son, her aunt. There had been that eyes back to Ned, smiled at him absently. “Full power of attorney, I sup. ' don't pose?” “I suppose so—I really know much about it. I’m like father, Ned, I hate business. I don’t understand it—he didn’t either, you know. Charles Carleton always managed everything for him, they were very close friends.” “Yes.” Ned nodded slowly, “I’ve heard my dad tell about them, Well, I was rather shocked to see the old boy looking so ragged. You en Derren to know what your money’s invested do Bian?" in, you, nj “Oh, the usual thing, I fell,]—whatever money is inverteh in on Wall Street,” she shrugged lightly, “It’s never interested me much.” “No,” replied Ned, equally care- gy 5 aia 4 & s E ig 8 i E i i i f 8 F i I ; z A! sort of cards—as heart-twisting line of his hed at her heart, left shaker n, tthe’ lnb. this etarnoon at e n. le’s certainly gone to pieces this ring. ae handling your affairs, 7" ‘Ob, yes" She brought ber less, “I suppose not. Everyt! "a Probably all right, Pegs when I saw Carleton 80 sort, of photo Btn wondered, ey say he’s playing the market pretty hard, Stan.” Stanley tossed her cigarette into the darkness; she wondered if Drew had missed her. If he would look up from hjs table and smile at her when she went back in. If she only imagined it, or if he did have a different in his eyes, which was just for her, “I thought men who had offices on Wall Street always played the market hard,” she told Ned light- ly. “Anyhow, he's made a lot of money for me—I can afford to lose some.” “You probably won't. Carleton’s Pretty shrewd. He’s been in the game a long time.” “Hey, you two out there,” called Johnnie Grampton, “arc you play- bridge—or aren't you?” They went in. Drew did look at her and Stanley felt suddenly warm and breathless. She slipped into her chair and failed to raise Nigel’s heart bid. They made three extra tricks, They had needed them for game. Badia Heped, Nigel didn't mind too much; ass he didn't, mate "0 BeContinued) ol aa

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