The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 14, 1934, Page 4

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fhe Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Estal 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- Company, Bismarck, N. D., and at the postoffice at Bismarck second class mail matter. f GEORGE D. MANN i President and Publisher F |“ Gubscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ........ 5.00 hi Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ‘per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three HW _ YEAS ooo. eess es escsscseseeens 3.50 L Weekly by mail outside of North a Dakota, per year ..........66 ir Weekly by mail in Canada, per 2 Pp YORE oeeesessccecccevesersesers 2.00 c Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation on ae a ee ain haga eS eee 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. §Foolhardy’ Pioneer Was Man of Vision ‘Walter Wellman died the other day ft 75. He was the first man to try to fly across the Atlantic ocean, and awhen he made the attempt the stunt ‘was looked on as the ultimate in foolhardy daring. But he lived to see the number of those who have crossed the sea by @ir rise far into three figures, It’s a commonplace to say that Berial science has developed rapidly | 4n the last quarter century. One hardly realizes how true that saying 4s, however, until one glances at the career of a man like Wellman, It was on Oct. 15, 1910, that Mr. ame mA ORO atTHOUIeR atlantic flight. The takeoff was from ‘ affair 164 feet long, with a gas bag Graf Zeppelin as one of Columbus’ caravels compares with the Levia- than, Underneath the bag was slung a lifeboat, stocked with provisions, Down into the sea trailed a device called an “equilibrator’—a series of cylindrical tanks which floated on the ocean, expected to act as a sort of stabilizer, to keep the ship from rising too high in the air. Besides Mr. Wellman, five men were aboard. The takeoff was at 8 in the morn- ing. Twenty-four hours later—half of the first day having been spent repairing one of the two engines, which had quit cold—the dirigible had reached a point some 250 miles northeast of its starting point. The voyage had been excessively ously, nearly pitching the ship into the water, A collision with a steamer narrowly was averted. nearly set the bag on fire. The expected, made the ship almost im- Possible to steer. Another 24 hours passed, and con- Gitions became worse. The dirigible ‘was some 400 miles out now, and it ‘was pretty plain that Europe never would be reached, Preparations were lifeboat, but it was found impossible to launch it. Next morning, providentially, a steamer showed up, Signaled by the Girigible, it came alongside, Wellman nd his crew came aboard, and the firigible was left to float out to sea 0 ended the first transatlantic flight attempt. It took place less than 25 years ego. Since then, enormous dirigibles Jhave crossed and recrossed the At- Jantic times without number. Ocean lying is almost ready to play a use- ful part in the everyday life of the world. And a good part of the credit must @0 to daring, “foolhardy” pioneers like Walter Wellman. Protect the Eyes Importance of finding out at the farliest possible moment whether a ehild’s sight is normal is brought forcibly to our attention by Dr. Ar- thur P. Wilkinson of Detroit, in an wrticle recently disseminated by the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness. A child who suffers from near- sightedness, points out Dr. Wilkinson, is under @ great handicap, even if his affliction is not very marked. He isn’t wanted on a baseball team, for instance, because he can’t see the ball until it is close to him. As a result, he tends to become unpopular with his playmates, to lose a lot of the fun of normal child- hood, and to become adjusted poorly to his surroundings, Early discovery of his defect, fol- lowed by corrective measures, would give him a far richer and happier life. |A little attention to his sight can make the difference between a happy and ‘an unhappy childhood. For Simpler Justice ‘The first trial of the Touhy gang for the Factor kidvaping in Chicago ‘brought one innovation in legal prac- tice which well might be copied ‘widely. ‘Under a new Illinois court prac- tice act, the -judge’s instructions to the jury, after both sides had made their final pleas, were devoid of the complicated legal verbiage which or- ee a ed One of the engines’ exhaust pipes |rapidly as possible. dinarily make such instructions more or less mysterious to the lay- man. They were couched in plain, straightforward English, and instead of being read to the jury by the judge, they were printed and given to the jury to study at its leisure. Any step in the direction of mak- ing legal processes simpler and more direct is pretty apt to be a good one, and that is especially true of this one. A jury usually has a hard enough time in assessing the plain facts, in ® long trial of this kind; its work can ‘be lightened materially by simplify- ing the judge’s charge and making it, not a speech that soon is forgotten, but a text that can be referred to for guidance as the deliberations are in progress. Modern Fairy Tale There is something oddly anachro- nistic about a little news dispatch from Switzerland, telling how the Emperor Haile Selassie of Abyssinia| just has bought a new three-motored | Swiss airplane and is having a throne! installed in it. ‘The emperor, it seems, wants to make some plane flights. But he sees no reason why a king who goes up in the air should leave the trap- pings of royalty behind him on the ground. So he will have a flying throne— the first monarch in all history to carry his throne into the clouds. Now the airplane ts the very in- carnation of up-to-date modernism; and the throne is a vestigial survival of an outworn day. ‘The queer way in which the bust- ling present and the distant past dovetail nowadays never was illus- trated better than in this queer busi- ness of the Emperor Selassie’s aerial throne, The Dog Nuisance ‘The town of McGraw, N. Y., has ‘Wellman started his projected trans-/go¢ into the headlines recently be- cause of the misbehavior of some pet Atlantic City; the ship was @ NON-ldogs owned by its citizens. Four + Figid dirigible, a clumsy and fragile|dogs attacked a lttle girl, mangled her arm 80 badly that it may have , Capacity of 350,000 cubic feet. to be amputated—and were, as a re- Tt compares with a Macon OF Alsuit, sentenced to death by a justice of the peace. Here is just the sort of item that is sure to arouse the indignation of who like to keep dogs as pets, A dog which is surly or vicious is a neighborhood nuisance, and often is) or tethered at all times, If he fails to do so, he hardly can complain if his neighbors insist that the animal be destroyed—no matter | the ordinary dog may be. A Healthy Sign It is not only Detroit that has rea- workers a 10 per cent pay increase | and that he plans to restore the| wages.” A whole lot of Americans will agree with that; and there is nothing so persuasive, in such a mat- ter, as the power of example. The effect of an action like this is apt to spread far beyond the con- | fines of the plant in which it takes made to take to the water in the|place. Pay scales of many American work- ers who never saw a Ford factory. Editorial Comment Fditorlals printed below show the || trend of thought by other editers. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, A Good Old Custom (Williams County Farmers Press) It 4s a good old custom of the news- paper business to turn the columns of @ paper over to such organizations as the chamber of commerce, the Ameri- can Legion and similar public minded groups whenever they plan some gath- ering. In the course of a year they devote hundreds of dollars worth of space plugging for something or other for the cities in which they are located. Mr. and Mrs. John Citizen don’t go into a grocery store and ask for a| couple cans of beans, to the butcher | shop and ask for a few pounds of stake, to the baker and ask for free bread, | or to the doctor and ask for a free ton- silectimy but the newspaper is a source of perpetual bounty whether it be for a few sheets of “waste paper” or free advertising of anything from a fourth of July celebration to a church sup- per. In large cities newspapers have broken with traditions to a certain ex- tent but in the smaller places it is still a spring of unfailing bounty. Of course & newspaper man’s sorrows are best known to himself. Only a newspaper man realizes that three fourths of the people know more about running a paper than he does. If some scoundrel is caught in the act, and a newspaper passes up a perfectly good story for the sake of an innocent fam- ily, those smart people in the know, see & sinister design. If a busines# firm doesn’t like something that is said, ret- ribution is simply by withdrawal of Patronage. If there is a difference in the editor is a liar, a rascal, and an idiot. And there is a time in every newspaper man’s life when he wond- ers if he isn't. In the larger cities, force of cir- cumstances caused larger newspapers to stop the constant flow of charity. People by nature appreciate least those things which they get easiest. Ah, but how sadly newspaper men are aware of the fact. But they haven't any kick coming. People who expect gratitude in this hard headed and hard hearted workeday world, need a good swift kick. am papmighnppiapagapap ps5 es ee i neem ee ep en ae aren ae on 6= Wn am You can compound your own psycho- dog-lovers. But it also contains aljogy when you will have learned useful ttle lesson for those of us|something about the anatomy, physi- ology and pathology of fat. Indeed, I am only a lowbrow medical student but there is’always a crazy notion rolling around in the back of my an actual menace to public safety./head, to wit, that a fair elementary ‘The man who owns such a dog owes|course in Anatomy and Physiology in it to his neighbors to keep it caged|the grammar or high school, with a term of Pathology the last year of high school, would be a long step in advance in Education. how deserving of human affection capillary vessels and lymphatic ves- sels, pointing out that so far as I have and fibres of the tissue—a bald as- | doctor, to begin with, perilous. The hydrogen in the en-|son to rejoice at Henry Ford's an-|sertion which any one is welcome to|Sion of your mode of life when the a 4 i how me an iso- i velope cooled and contracted danger-|nouncement that he has given 20,000 iba eer otien aol a yniptiee | slowly dying. Obviously you are far tic vessel—I had sailed along with great assurance up to that point, and minimum pay scale of $6 a day as|then suddenly found myself in an embarrassing predicament—how was “The best economy industry can | to get the lymph from these mere equilil , f worl ne “ |spaces or channels between cells and quilibrator, instead of working as|practice,” says Ford, “is to ralse | ribres inn the ieee act Une |promising receptaculum chylae which, I am scarcely preparéd to deny, con- directly into the blood stream, |chyle receptacle emptying into the in- jof the neck. Ford's action may help to raise the over it. What's the dif, whether there WHO CARRIED ON THE WORK OF EDUCATION) ASTER THE POLITICIANS HAD RUN THE LOCAL GOVERNMENTS INTO A DITCH PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE 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. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ‘THE PHILOSOPHY OF FAT _ [explain the troubles of skinny, under- I mean philosophy and no fooling. | nourished folk from floating kidneys. Ditto other abdominal organs. Some persons store fat in humps like camels, or in veritable girdles. The distribution of the stored fat de- pends upon individual characteristics determined by heredity and environ- ment and controlled by the ductless gland function. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Snap Out Of It There is not a thing physically wrong with me, but I'm lazy and I'm In the last set-to I had just de- ee pages sie pests sever ventional theory of seem to get enough sleep no matter ee icaad Yes: |how early I go to bed or how late I getup... (B.M.H.) been able to see, both capillary blood “vessels” and lymphatic “vessels” are the matter with you. neesaty tae piety between cells complete health exaninatice by sont en a revi- doctor determines just how you are from being entirely alive. Iron have iron and ammonium citrate, both the brown and the green scales. Of course this is the commercial pro- duct. Is this the kind you recommend for anemia? (K. R. M.) Answer—I do not know. Anyway, iron and ammonium citrate is so cheap that it would be inadvisable to experiment with the possibly impure commercial .product. Complete in- structions for the use of this remedy for simple anemia are given in the booklet “Blood and Health,” which will be mailed on request, if you in- close @ dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address. Charcoal Eater veys the lymph and chyle (emulsi- fied fat absorbed from the intestine) e ternal jugular vein in the left side Oh, well, let's not get all in a stew are lymph vessels or not? Personally I'd never say a word about such trifles were it not for the annoying habit of certain bombastic “author- Answer—There is evidently plenty | You need a} In my work, photo-engraving, we| all my life. Recently I have soaked it in mineral oil and eating it that way. I make my own charcoal out of oak wood. Is it harmful? (Miss L. G) Answer—No. Medicinal charcoal is made from willow. In some circum- stances it is rather healthful. (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Religion does not consist in doing special things, but in doing all things with a special quality—Dr. Glenn’ Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin, ** * The average woman is a better bridge player than the average man, but the average husband won't give his wife credit for knowing anything. —P. Hal Sims, bridge authority. xk * Properly regulated, and under tHe expert direction of medical men, ‘sterilization is the most beneficial social measure we know.—Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, anthropologist. I have craved and eaten charcoal ities’ who bolster up their funny teachings by referring to capillary or, lymphatic “vessels” as tho they know all about such elementary matters. Suffice that the oil or fat food is emulsified in the intestine, absorbed thru the lacteals and villi, which are minute finger-like projections of the mucous membrane well designed to such in the milk-white emulsified fat or chyle. The chyle enters the re- ceptaculum chylae and is conveyed thru the thoracid duct, a tube half as large around as a lead pencil, to mix with the lymph in the duct and be emptied into the: left internal HORIZONTAL 1 Who was the song writer in the picture? 14 Crescent, fa 15 Tiny vegetable F> 16Oily ketone. [JOM 17 Entrance. Sey 18 Little pie. 19 Branches of PLISRM ITZ) RAID! IO} y DF fuel pick up from the blood the fat they need. The surplus fat is stored in various places until it is needed. Most of it is stored in the panniculus 24 Hawailan bird. 44 Serbian. 25 Exclamation, 46 Resembling 26 Second note, —a wall. 27 Wayside hotel. 47 To relieve. becomes emaciated from any cause. The masses of fat about the kidneys Pt tN erty r | NST BAND at fl a Be ra EIRIODIE}] ORTIZ IG! R E Pom RUBIO Frio} jugular vein in the neck. It mixes learning. with the blood and is carried in the 20 Small vein to the right side of the heart, memorial. Pumped from there into the lungs, 22 Valuable back to left side of heart, and then property. out thru the arteries to the whole 23 Suffix forming body. Such cells or tissues as need nouns. 43 Mesh of lace, ae a a a RR Nga 7 Pia rel \ ia Ol ol [ ‘On! Say, Can You See?’ | Answer to Previous Puzzle measures, 5] 12To come in. 13 Pertaining to : yesterday. 21 Kind of eel. 22'Main trunks of arterial (=}(8)1=300e) TAIZ IE IDF RPI 111] ic} 30 Male ancestor. WI VIS! 32 Observes. ISIAIGIA] 33 Sucks in again IAININY) 35 Horses. 38 Type standard. 2 More uncouth. 39 Trilled 3 Source of pronunciation. indigo. 40 Ascended. 4This song 1s 41To drive in. ly—the blanket of fat just un Ue a i AE normally—the blanket of fat ju | 28 An outfit. 48 Ratite bird. anthem of the 45A boatswain, der the skin. Much 1s stored in the] 39 Broken tooth. so Gypsy. ne U.S. A. 47 Units of work. form of leaf lard around the kidneys 31 Afternoon 51 Eye, 5 Credit. 49 Devoured. and other organs, and the omentum meals. 52 Railroad, 6 Mineral spring 51 Unit. or apron that covers the al 33 Gun. 54,58 His famous 7To harden. §3Sun god. organs within the cavity is more OF! 34 Constellation song. 8 Pussy.- 55 Measure of less larded, according to the individ- pictured as & 59 Besieges. @Seventh note. ares. ual corpulency. Pads of fat behind ram, és 10 More like: | 56 Month in Jew- the eyeballs explain the sunken eyes 36 Silkworm. VERTICAL rubbish. ish calendar. of the person who diets unwisely oF | 37 Payments back 1 Flames. 11 Hebrew 87 And. B\a N eae A Washington Distillers Are ‘the Dog’ in First Trial of Fair Profits ... Hastings Reserves the Right to Squawk .... Every- body's Ont of Step Except Terrell «.. No New Party for F. R. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) ‘Washington, Feb. 14—When you're & little timid about experimenting with a major policy, first you try it «ut on the dog. That's the way the administration is working in its admitted plan toward redistribution of income through dis- couragement of unfair profits., The distillers aren’t very popular and their business is such as to call for close supervision. The consuming public has been hollering louder at their price list than at any other. So the distilling industry will be the first to have its private books studied, in an effort to determine its costs and profits. That's the sort of thing the “young liberals” in the administration have been aiming for. Roosevelt himself has insisted that the return on cap- ital must be smaller, to maintain ade- quate purchasing power, Nearly all AAA marketing agree- ments have carried provisions enab- ling the government to inspect books of processors, although there's only One approved NRA code of that type 80 far—the fertilizer code. But the administration has pro- oreded cautiously and, except for 9 few individual milk companies, the distillers will have the distinction of being the first patient to go on this New Deal operating table. ‘The FACA, which is about to per- form the operation, hasn’t any power sepresenting his home town in fight- ing the administration.” — But Terrell says he has had about 50 letters and telegrams about it, all ‘patting him on the back. He says he wouldn’t care if they all denounced to re-set prices. But it can provide @ Wt of publicity. HE'LL STILL SQUAWK _" Senator Dan Hastings of Dela- ware, was roundly denouncing ind Mr £060,000,000 ‘ctvtlvorks Tolstates. | Copyright, 1094, NEA Service, Ine) Well, demanded McKellar of Ten- | Barb nesste—who was in charge of the | | ards bl eal aed haa A bill for government control of |stock exchanges is proposed in con- “Oh, well,” answered Hastings, , all ress, The stock exchanges didn’t nok need @ bill to control the government, * *e * not stop criticizing it.” British audiences continue to get thrills out of American gang- ster movies. We wish they could import some of the gangsters too. x oR * New Paris frocks are to have soft- er lines but they'll probably harden the lines in father’s worried brow. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: "REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. NO NEW PARTY FOR F. D. Roosevelt’s friends are letting it be snown that he has no thought of a new liberal party which would scrap the Democratic label and present Demo- cratic machinery. He wants to main- tain his old party as the liberal party and attract as many independents and progressives into it as he can— both by principles and patronage. And he expects to lose some of the Democratic conservatives in the 4y Allene Corliss process. But he will work under the Demo- cratic label with present Democratic political lesders as long as they pley | ball with the New Deal, | JUST ONE MAN IN STEP Merciless limelight for the first time beats on Congressman George B. Terrell of Texas. The House voted 362 to 1 for the civil works-relief bill, which also carried $235,000,000 for farmers, and the gent on the short end turned out to be Mr. Terrell. ‘The Texan shouted that “the others | can go through on these things like, dumb driven cattle if they want to, but I don’t intend to. Terrell is a ‘l-year-old farmer. bald, gray, slightly stooped. This is his first term. He lives on @ farm in East Texas and works on it when he's there. He was a’ legislator and state! agriculture commissioner in Texas| and beat his Republican opponent for congressman-at-large in 1932 —798,- 647 votes to 60,905. He's strong for state rights and dead against all this “government in- terference in private business.” Mayor E. P. Palmer of Alto, Tex., wired Roosevelt that Terrell “is not Girls good at a number of things are the ones who count. COPYRIGHT BY ALLENE CORLISS ¢ DISTRIBUTED BY KIN FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC, SYNOPSIS Levely Stanley Paige could have| married any eligible man in her set —there was, for instance, the young lawyer, Perry Deverest, reliable, leyal and love with dashing, Drew but she fell in irresponsible’ Drew told Dennis) Armitage. St. John, his former sweetheart, that although he would have loved Stanley ‘ander any circumstances, he would never have become en-| gaged te her had she ‘Then comes the crash Poor. ‘Stanley’s fortune is wiped out. She does not! care as long as she has Drew's love, but... he says it would be mad- ness te marry on his income. Se ramatic . . . “Stanley, I shall never forget you a I shall! ys regret having hart you — but never having leved yeu!” he out ef her life. Though where she meets Valerie Blair, a saleagirl. Valerie is very kind te Stanley. Warning against poverty,| moré wisely had she married Perry. CHAPTER SEVENTEEN “If 1 were you, Marsh, I wouldn't say anything about it. Stanley’s dropped out of things, let it go at that, eh?” “Feeling the way she did about _ Drew I just can’t see her marrying “Oh, I don’t know, Sandra — if| Drew left her flat. She wouldn’t be the first girl to rush into a spite .” Gerda’s voice was coolly: impersonal. “I rather imagine Stanley would- n't see it that way,” persisted San- dra carelessly. more to her than met the eye.” “Good heavens, Stanley was beau- tifull” “Oh, beauty—of course.” Sandra|have d ing for her, He’ She had a habit of dis- ae feng oe rene beauty, she had never|has been transferred back to the counting found it necessary. come the men!” Marcialed to be.” it the soft whir of Ned’s motor] “What savoneh Soe distant gate| Ned?” Diane Truesdale added] Stanley he ever.left Chi touch of powder to her| we'd better be laa hoped her husband would did demonstrations; in months of marriage move. Shel stairs slumped in herjfingers slowly along the and 8 gray car Ht FA 3 E But some: Nigel Stern.’ 5 one ” ‘” i g ® second -rate/ substantially through fitat She|connections with certain wall-knonrs somewhere, I don’t understand—|when he was with them he talked te do—really!”| their language and played their {t}] games. Women liked him for the can't make » “In view of what not care for/later, They can’t stay over th pes eae ae ae ith ther ering fi Sesponsirasianh operation.” sidlbioiae Si reel Be ais ee and ugl nm our fe the others—and|the ios what she wanted|open windows, rotfed up the eraveled driveway and) F, tossing} tastes than American, He went to| t letters. fart exhibitions, who has seen|now and then to dark little shops “Why didn’t you tell me before when you first came?” “Before all those women? Not a chance! And if I were you, Marsh, I wouldn’t say anything about it. Stanley’s dropped out of things, let’ it go at that, eh?” “Just as you say, Ned. Do you think Perry knows—where she is I mean?” “I rather imagine he does. Did- n't say anything, as I told you, but T’'ve got a hunch he’s heard from| her. I know darn well he would to them. When they ceased to in- terest him he was still kind to them, but he contrived to see much le of them. At forty he was slender, with hair going slightly gray at the temples and a mouth that was at ouce desirous and ine different. He was completely sure of himself and what he wanted from life; as a consequence, he was charming, untemperament seldom bored, se oe He was also seldom surprised He was not surprised, for instanea when Stanley telephoned him in the middle of the afternoon, a weet after she had walked out of her apartment on Park Avenue and ap- parently disappeared from sight. He told her that he was in, that he would be glad to see her and te come up at once. When she rang he admitted her himself, In the late afternoon su she found the room ees charming than she had remembered it. Swept clean of smoke and Peo. ple, filled only with the fragrance 2 pink snapdragons and the still, polished surfaces of ina mae objects, ae Place gave one an impression o; graci i ease and ious She walked slowly across the toom and sat down on a divan that wn close to a tea-table, A ber divan. A low, ebony le. Eyes, lonesome for auty, took in every detail of the subdued colors, the tong, unclute tered spaces, the deep, flections of the roo: Drew Armitage Chicago office, I understand he ask- do you make of him, “Just what I always did, he’s a prime horse’s necktie, Too bad for going up.” “The Cramptons are coming ont| tiresome relative ‘They went up the wide mahogan: polished slightly. She liked She liked smell of roses coming in through the shine of lamp- light .on. soft silk, the delightful anticipation of a perfectly served ia, that 8) at Mrs. Foley's she ces mced much of dragging loneliness, heartache and dull fear, In the nar- tow room beneath the mansard “ Toof, she had tried desperately to make order out of chaos, to push Drew out of her thoughts, to keep Physically cool.\She had failed mis- erably to do any of these things; but she had p ed gradually through the period where no effort fad all wes possible and had reached point where inerti; inflate rtia had become jo she had gone to thi drug store and stood in a “Soot that was suffocatingly hot and call- ed Nigel Stern, mn, and because when he| Copyriag ree Continued) Se interested in thom be wan Kind! nigsball' kine Peis GOS ty manners, morals and iymphony concert: ‘an occasional fashion show ——and on the East Side. He had a com- fortable income which he increased ‘art dealers. Men liked him because ‘ !

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