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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1934 Tribune ‘paper oe en - MASON ANNOUN—. DRGISION T0 <= PLAGE IN Sao ———_———ar.......$7.20 q Former Secretary to ...... 7.20 " state | Will Try to Unseat So”... 5.0) at Election ing A. Mason, former secretary toforth Lynn J. Frazier, announced didacy against his one-tin'™™ mass meeting of citizens community Saturday nightreau The announcement wa many who had attended: township school which Maged Press ~ when first he came to nial ee vas the first tedvication Migecol d to it been an odd mixture of the very old/ this and the up-to-date. | before the anti-Langer conver news of 4 herein. | Nonpartisans, bah ne all other | the incredibly ancient-oriental dynas-' - the school. Mason's candidacy is expecte/n town Thursday, and he present there a proposed ved. measure to take the appoly > er out of the governor's!€+ 150 cl believe it doesn’t make much differ: ence who holds public office. Tt also would be interesting to | Getting Into Line, Himself know how Mrs, Holley picked her as-| sistant jailers. A good surmise is that those 24 jobs were considered €s manna from the heavens by the| Politicians of Lake county; were fill- ed on that basis. It might, not be far astray to guess that Mrs. Holley is getting the blame for the indif- ference and venality of some male Politicat supporter who probably dominated her actions in office. North Dakota has—and has had— some very fine examples of the way) women, elected on the sympathy plea, like to lean heavily on the judgment| of some male politician. Meanwhile, Dillinger is free, with one known desperate accomplice and| two machine guns. Death lurks just| around the corner for some unsus-| ‘ pecting citizen. Who is to blame? The Old and the New | | Those elaborate coronation cere- monies which made Mr. Henry Pu Yi the Emperor Kang Teh seem to have! All the time-honored formulae of! ty were used; there were sacrifices at) | the altar, ceremonial robes like those worn by Genghis Khan, and s0 on. | major matters and place #gain and) | cabinet to be comprised s may die, tive state officials. Mason came to North ‘Towa 29 years ago, first * in western Barnes co has bereaved | homesteading in Stuts:ir breadwinners ‘was engaged in the Mhesitate to mur- tile, ee atte ids to do so in at various times unt was appointed secre“S °F retain his then governor. Went Out Ik the people of en this job as those of Lake reca! ive years ing the practice of a new recog: ‘When Frazier went‘tance of putting 1923, Mason went oublic office. retary, holding tha'he sheriff from For the next five y tary of the Senate ‘aped is a woman dian Affairs, of w*? 4tument against man. Mason alse Office, though it utive officer of s light on that situa-| appointed bv +? oy fhe conditriticant thing is not that ‘Two y!an Holley held the post but Frezier tier in which she got it. employeisband was sheriff before her ep performance of his duty, practice \d by a madman. Holley, In 1924Y, Was a brave and com- delegatesin and the people of Lake Nonpartiser admired him tremen- for cavulelse were impressed by the Robert ‘lied. ‘Wheelt y rate, his wife was appoint- Presid iceeed him and, a little later, ead elected. The sympathies of perainpllc were aroused. It didn't ‘bond. } much importance and Mrs. in assexot the “sympathy” vote. Frazietyurder probably will be done J the voters of that Indiana denied ity were affected by sym- broughtore than a desire for effici- widows >ffice when they went to cast who pa... ficht or, March 41S. Holley has proved wholly the metent in office goes without auguré If there is any /doubt of it san Bait until you read a news- Washi neadilne saying “Dillinger Mason Bank Murder” or some- employeiilar to it. a senior ley had employed enough ards to bring the num- the bars of 98” Dillinger to 24. Columbia areat preparation to re- United Statesmpt at jail delivery, stead of catch fected at Lima, Ohio, job at once an Fepresent Nort “ith the murder of| legisiation befe. The place bristled tural state. uns. The people of PLAGUE © om siren show. London, Mar ace isicd| hundred person’e @ knife or other week in a plagu' and to whittle on fes of the Unit He was placed in a! Sey Maal voaait?e™ prisoners and —S— Pers* the outside of the jail. Pe® just a little buttercup | rds paid little attention mably they spent their} ‘out of the window or! hie. If any executive eas used by the woman er male assistants, it ;bad, but the crowning! ss the manner in which] heriff was permitted to} Il where Dillinger andj ere kept without anyone There were 24 guards | place so it cannot fairly | {A there was lack of help.| ae man entered the cell e others eased their bones eriff’s office, where they ently were trapped by the The badman probably in- oan’ a@ funny story with his command to “get back do he suddenly appeared in n\_‘*yway. Anyhow, most of the jailers’ fokce were on duty in name only. With this sort of thing going on, the wonder is that Dillinger waited to whittle out a wooden pistol. It would have been relatively easy to have banged the deputy over the head and taken his pistol. It was five against one in that cell block. Leaving all question of her sex and good intentions aside, it would seem CT e he is cap-) But there also were smart Japanese ultra-modern military display; | there were foreign correspondents wearing the evening dress of the | west; and when the ceremonies end- | ed, the new emperor got into an up- | to-date bullet-proof auto to go back | | to his palace, All this is more or less symbolic |of the anachronistic empire of Man- | chukuo itself, It, too, is an odd mix-| | ture of the old and the new. | Whatever else one may think of it, ‘in it is hard to see in it the vitality, the li responsiveness to a pressing need, | that can make it truly enduring. | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Editorial Comment | “illy dangerous crim- | paper, of having traveled on the same | ‘han that. jenemies of the League, the following | j kind) that will prove it is the same | || Edltortals printed below show the | || trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard || to whether they agree or disagrue | with The Tribune's policies, Disturbing the Dead (Aneta Panorama) na ghost of 1920 is beginning to| jaunt our governor. And, bef the | mibdithcotr obi soils aearsaagtibe: This letter is just to add my thanks \haunting is going to get keener and | and grateful appreciation to the many | Stronger. Already are they digging up| you no doubt receive. Bees aie eae I am 49 years old and as far back zine called ‘The Red Flame, prinved|* I can remember I was troubled iduring those hectic days; what the| ith constipation. I relied altogether | farmer-owned newspapers had to say |0P laxatives and enemas. Last March, |about Mr. Langer at that time, and |2fter reading several of your articles |various other little and big ghosts, | elative to this so-called bad habit— jall becoming more powerful as time|, ‘No question about it. It is a bad |goes on—to the June primaries. habit. Nothing so-called about it. If The Williams County Farmers |it isn’t a habit, then my notion about | Press, of Williston, owned now. as well |it is all wrong and my advice can as in 1920, by several hundred farm-|40 the victim of the habit no good). jer Leaguers in that section, devoted| —this so-called bad habit of taking ‘better than half a page of its last|!axatives, I sent for your booklet |week's issue in digging up records of “The Constipation Habit.” I studied jthe past in the nature of articles|the book carefully, lived up to its printed in the press at that time. | teachings and have nothing but the It makes interesting reading—but highest praise for you. It just doesn't ‘not to Mr. Langer, we are sure. seem possible, but I'm regular every | Here is one ghost that is going to '78¥ aoe what a relief not to be a slave rt to physic. fe satin pes ae | My sister followed my example with ‘the same result as I had. (Mrs. G. K. R.) I have had so many similar reports from people who joined The Breakers that I am convinced of the efficacy of psychological treatment for trouble |that is due to wrong thinking. 1 have had a considerable number lof reports from people who say they {followed my instructions but failed \to obtain a cure. Cure is their own ‘word, and the fact that they persist lin regarding the bad habit as an ail- iment explains why they fail to break | the habit, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. PSYCHOLOGY IS AS THINKING DOES A correspondent writes: oe “the attorney general (Wm. Langer) savagely attacked the Nonpartisan League, the con- sumers stores, farmers banks, farmers newspapers and the farm- ers postdated checks . + But the record is even more startling in Langer's office. When Lang- er took his job in 1917, there were only five employes in the attor- ney general's office, including two assistants. The monthly payroll totaled at that time $876.00. The story now is vastly different. Last month there were 21 employes in the attorney general's department, | Then here a week or two ago I re- and the payroll last month was | ceived a report from some one who $4,330.78." . . . | seemed quite indignant about the In view of the fact that Nystul, the Painful condition that followed five League’s executive chairman, was re- | days of waiting. That was all. I ought cently accused in the columns of The | ‘0 be put out of business by the medi- iberties. Treatment |Leader, Mr. Langer’s personal news- |Cal society. I'm glad it was no worse Some critics would ask thus | Whether the medical society pays me commission or something. It is my sincere belief that if all . : | Physics, laxatives, salts, enemas or foe nee atten Sane” | other artificial aids to defecation of the session Langer was found | Were made inaccessible or even as dif- in frequent conferences with one | ficult to get as morphine or cocaine “Happy” Paulson, a press agent | !s. the millions who now weakly cul- for the interests fighting the in- | tivate the constipation habit would dustrial program” . . . get rid of the habit within a few Hence, it \d | Weeks, fitting a ae pe rae al It is a curious fact but you cannot “Happy” Paulson in 1920, but it is/ find in all medical literature a single collusion and treason for Nystul to @uthentic report of any serious results be on the same train with “Happy” | from deprivation of physics in any] in 1934. How times do change. As|Circumstances. That is not because a matter of fact, Mr. Nystul did not | Such deprivation never occurs, but be- know Happy was on the train until ;cause there are no serious results they arrived at Bismarck, and had he | When it does occur. And even the known it, it wouldn't be a crime to | temporary anxiety or actual discom- speak with some one who holds dif-|fort a victim of the habit suffers ferent views in politics. ;When making his fight to break the This is only the beginning. As habit is rarely of more than a week's time goes on Wm. Langer's ghost of | duration. The first five days are the 1920 will continue to haunt him and | hardest. Many recover in less time. bring out facts, (NOT The Leader| The booklet “The Constipation Ha- bit” gives no new laxative so you con- firmed and unrege@erate old physic topers do not want it. But a copy will be sent on request to any cor- Tespondent who has the constipation habit, if he lays down on my desk here a genuine U. S. dime and a 3- cent stamped envelope bearing his ad- dress. - |train with “Happy Paulson,” aiming to show collusion with the |® excerpt will old Bill who denounced everyone who did not agree with him in 1920 as Reds, Socialists, and what-not, and now, through his personal newspaper, The Leader, employes the same tac- ties against those who do not agree with him, personally or officially. The bite of the much-dreaded tsetse fly is not poisonous, but the germ it carries is. The fly conveys to the human system a small in Parasite that causes sleeping sick- ness. Stretched ear lobes are the fashion in Tanganyika Africa; one native was found wearing his ear lobes under his armpits! - ~~ A giraffe has only seven vetebrae, coe a as many as a humming Young ducks are born swimmers, | but young swans have to be taught by | their mothers. In Siberia, in 1906, wind from aj meteor blew down forests over an! area of 100 square miles, Minnesora? Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Letters should be brief and written QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Raw Milk Versus Par-Boiled Please tell me the advantages or disadvantages of raw milk as com- pared with pasteurized milk,in a town where the cows are T. B. tested and the milk is handled under strictly sanitary conditions. (A. E. H.) Answer—For my own home I pre- fer raw milk from tuberculin-tested herd. Of course heating any milk to 145 degrees F. for 20 minutes will kill any disease germs in it. That is pas- teurization. But my own choice is raw milk from tuberculin-tested cows. Probably I should choose goat’s milk if it were available and not too ex- Pensive. Large Order Altho a physician for many years I am rather timid . . . desirous of} obtaining the best information to en- able me to lecture to adults on tem- Perance in food and drink. (—, M. D.) Answer—These sources should give you some ideas: Fisher and Fish’s “How to Live” (Funk & Wagnalls), Rose's “Eat Your Way to Health” (same publisher), Haggard’s “Health and Disease” (Harper & Bros.), “Eat | and Keep Fit” by Dr. Lyman F. Keb- ler (published by the author, 1932) Park Road, Washington, D. C.), Sher- man's “Chemistry of Food and Nu- trition” (Macmillan), McCollum é& Simmonds “Food, Nutrition and Health” (published by authors, Balti- more). (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) The talk of NRA having returned 4,000,000 men to their jobs is a lot of nonsense. The best they were able e Financial and military interests deliberately are planning a war in Europe—Emma Goldman, noted an- archist. nee The American people have been ‘content to turn over their thinking at election time to clever people who invent slogans for them.—Prof. John J. Mahoney of Boston University. * *e * ‘The most poorly trained teachers are getting the jobs today because they are the lowest bidders.—Prof. Arthur B,’Moehlman, University of Michigan. xk We cannot but respect the bravery of the Socialists and the loyalty to their ideals—Chancellor Dollfuss of Austria, after execution of the ninth Socialist. STOP Tae poasskey yl W Parrmiads to do was 1,700,000 at the peak.—How- ard Scott, Technocrat. Friend of Animals HORIZONTAL 2Who popular- izea the bob haircut? 9The elbow. 11 To make smooth. {3 To require. 14 Third note. t5 Pertaining to air. 16 Auto. 17 Twitching. 18 To decorate. 19 And. - 20 Half. ve 21 North America 39 Guided. 22 Small singing 49 Distinctive bird. marks. 'ype standard, 42 tow vulgar 5 Overpowerini lolow. a Rten 43 Hypothetical 27 Ethical. unit. 30 Ranted. , 44 Headstrong. 31 Knock. 45To peruse. 33 Biblical word. 47 Senior. 35 Pitcher. 48 Small tablets. 36 Wounds with 49 On top of. the teeth. 51 She set the 38 Very small. —— in clothes ll ot ot Answer to Previous Puzzle Le (NTI INITIAIST ISAIWIe | so a” alae, 52 And was born 4) 7 Always. 8She works to prevent cruelty to ——s. 10 Tidy. IA} 12 Ireland. 14To imitate. IS} 17 Lukewarm. 20 Eater. 22 Called by a bell boy. 24 Pertaining to a@ fruit acid. 25 Handled. 26 Footway. 28 Bone. air, 29 Lumber of shy * genip trees. VERTICAL 33 Noten, 1 With her hus- 34 Water jar. band, won 36 Double bass. ‘fame as ——, -37 Visible vapor, 2 One who frosts 40 Mohammedan cakes, judge. 3 Wand. 41To surfeit. 4Halfanem. 44Hurrah! 5 To educe. 46 Drone bee, 6 Imitation 48 Postscript. leather, 503.1416, © as well as hi SN eH TS alt PLIES as X by guessing any- where between April 15 and June 15. It’s just a guess, because things may happen to change the mind of Roosevelt, the mind of or both. But correspondent is guessing that adjournment will come nearer the middle of April than the middle of June. One of the most successful gam- blers in town just has bet your cor- respondent three cigars that adjourn- ‘ment will come by the middle of April and your correspondent has taken the bet, to lose. expecting The fact is that no one wants to prolong the session. Controversial issues are arising—such as the bonus iasue—but it’s amazing how quickly the leaders can get together and jam things through. If the Republicans saw any point im dragging out the session, they they may decide to do just that. ‘Roosevelt prefers an early adjourn- ment. As usual, that probably will decide the point. It’s amusing to note, however, that in this instance the president hasn't could combine to cause delay. And ieee and Now everyone ‘who has @ govern- !|ment job in Italy has to salute or be the /ssiuted, and pretty soon babies there injunction, ‘Wallace, while believing that re- ligious pinciples must govern the fu- ture of man, finally ended the di- cussion that he felt the issue wasn't one for the churches. Diplomats and their staffs, what ‘with depreciation added to the 15 per cent federal salary cut, often have found their incomes reduced 50 per cent and more. Some ambassadors, including Claude Bowers at Madrid, have been helping lesser officials by contributions from their own de- pleted salaries. will be born with their hands p, x * * ‘There's no denying, General Johnson has put # lot of NRG in- to the NRA. ne * ‘What's the sense in publishing the high salaries and bonuses of big ex- ecutives? To the little stockholder, who has lost plenty already, that’s rubbing it in —_ more, / Hoinking is the capital of Mame chukuo—a rising town, neverthe> Jess. and “whom” | Speaker Rainey, and he isentence with @ preposition. |remember when teacher used you’d never amount to much if you spoke or wrote like that? (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) Kava, a liquor of the South Sea islands” causes intoxication only from the hips down. FLAPPER. FANNY SAYS: “R00. U.&. PAT. OFF. Other foreign service have returned their wives to this country to live with their parents. An American girl clerk in a consulate! in Italy found the value of her $40-a- month salary reduced more than 50 per cent. | In Spain, the State Department instrument of the White House rather than an independent disturbing fac- tor. ‘The Blue Eagle just has begun to function—Gen. Hugh Johnson. ‘CROPS AND HOLY WRIT The AAA's conference of farm pa- 4y Allene Corl CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR “Oh, here you are, Stan.” Perry interrupted them, drew Stanley's arm through his. “Nigel’s having the room cleared for dancing and you're dancing with me and there’s no cutting in. Is that right?” “I expect it is. See you later,| Marcia.” “At my next dinner-party!” Mar- cia threw after them laughingly as they moved away. “Isn't the real reason why you refuse her invitations—Drew?” Perry asked the question casually, as they walked toward the music. “] suppose it is. I'd be sure to see him there if he happened to be in' New York, but then I’m sure to see him somewhere sooner or later.” “Why evade it, then?” Stanley shrugged. “Oh, I don’t know: I’m an awful darn fool, Perry. 1 ought to hate him but— T'm not at all sure that I do. It's awful—not knowing; it would be worse—finding out.” “But John Harmon?” “Let’s leave John Harmon out of it, please. He’s the one thing in the world Iam sure about.” Tn asiitle nem ab thea yee partment, of it and yet away from ie Dennis St. John was sitting alone with John Harmon. “You probably wonder why I bene ae ie ee t cigarette against ai snapped his own cigarette. “That's what I said but it wasn’t true, of course. A sere tires me. For anyone wi so very) subtleon paper, you're amasingly in person.” got a positive silly rot that passes for clever Your plots are in they life? No, they’re not!” “But what of it?” John aay BERS. ga0 i 5 f » Your love-making is delightful | men; —but is it real? Your people arejon the charming — but are they human? |and ERE mi in iss COPYRIGHT BY ALLENE CORLISS ¢ DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. the sort of thing that and your absolute waste of it. You'velisn’t that but is—life. You don’t gift and you'rejhave to write about dull, uninter. squandering it on, what? A af pene ite People; keep your slim, lovely girls, your attractive, decent but let them live—not just surface—saying and doing experiencing the things we all srelappear to say and do and feel— ‘@ not real writing. Ee aL Then have written something, not » Perhaps, but a book— of life, a bit of human nature forever from oblivion and substance on a printed page. can do, if you there isn't She Fit don't mind I'd rather Harmon got to his feet, was curiously white, ther flattened me out, Pinprick in the balloon, If you don’t mind, f out of here. Ask Perry F3 5 Es you're » Hos satisfied.” John Be Contis 1238, by aliese Corliss features Syndicate, (ne,