The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1934, Page 6

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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) SSS Sorters th ee Published by The Bismarck Trib- ume Company, Bismarck, N. D., and ‘entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @s second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Adi Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of Dakota +» 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, baked Dakota, per year . a ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. 2.00 Member of lit Burea 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 hercin. All rights of republication of all other! matter herein are also reserved. i Japan’s Monroe Doctrine Japan seems to have borrowed a} new version of Uncle Sam's ancient Monroe doctrine for application in| Eastern Asia and the result certainly | is something for the white races to| think about. In effect, Japan now is proposing | that the Occidental nations acknowl- | edge her suzerainty over the western | shore of the Pacific ocean as the Orientals already have done. She is proposing to shut the “open | door” which long has been a tenet | of American diplomacy and obtain| Tecognition for a situation which, loath as we may be to admit it, al-| Teady exists in the Far East. | The underlying reasons for this are | commercial. More than any other | nation, Japan is beset by the internal pressure of an expanding Population. | Either she must have new places for) her people to live, or she must Pro-| vide them with employment in fac- tories manufacturing things for other millions to use. | ‘The immediate pretense for Japan's | new declaration of policy, however, is indicated by press dispatches to be her assumption of a policeman’s powers. In clear and unmistakable , language she declares it her mission to “maintain the peace in East Asia” | and there is no doubting her inten-| tion to preserve that peace on a Ja-| panese basis. Objections to activities by Ameri-| ans in China are based on the fact| that they are supplying airplanes, | developing airlines, training aviators and helping to build airports. The claim also is being made that some of the loans to the Chinese govern-/ ment are “political” in their nature, designed to cement the Chinese| friendship for the United States and) diminish the power of the policeman's | club. In asking the rest of the world to, Tecognize her “special responsibility, and unique position as guardian of| the peace in East Asia” Japan serves notice that she has adopted a “hands off and stay out” policy far more ex- tensive and fully as important as| Monroe's declaration that foreign) powers should not invade the soil of the Americas. It is a demand for economic as well as political domina- tion and may be the forerunner of a united Asia under the guidance of the Nipponese. Incidentally, it gives hint of a con- fession of weakness. Japan already rules the western shore of the Pa- cific, She already controls, very di- rectly, the internal policies of what- ever government China boasts. She already has driven her white com- mercial competitors from many fields and is eliminating them from others. Even without political advantages she is in excellent position to more than hold her own and to consolidate her What, then, is the cause of this vane i i : land certain phases of the new deal |about military planes is that their the old plaint of “let well enough alone.” They want no further tin- kering. They want opportunity to as- similate the innovations we already have without facing the job of try- | ing to digest more, ‘There is justification in this, too. There is @ limit to the number of new things any people, no matter how enlightened, can get to running smoothly in a given period of time are obviously in need of smoother- working machinery. Not Cheapest But Best , With an independent investigating doard looking into the questicn cf| our military aviation, it is sincerely | to be hoped that the nation will have the benefit of an impartial analysis of our air defenses. Congressional probers, occupied as they have been with questions of ex- Penditure, apparently have failed to Properly evaluate the functions of military aviation or to appreciate its needs. They have talked in dollars and cents, whereas warplanes must be considered in terms of victories won and enemies shot down. No mat- | ter what they cost, there is no other means of estimating their worth in time of trial. Much of the talk we have heard manufacturers have made exorbitant Profits. This, of course, should be stopped: Our national defenses are too important to become a feeding ground for profiteers, But if war comes, cost will be a relatively unimportant item, No mat- ter how little planes cost, they would | be useless if they could not compete | with the craft of an enemy. To talk | price alone is like making it the de- elding factor in the construction of a racing automobile, despite the fact that winning the race is the impor- tant thing. We want no waste or graft in our military affairs but we do want the utmost in efficiency. We can be con- tent with nothing less than planes which will fly faster, higher and far- ther and maneuver more quickly than those of other nations, regardless of cost. It is to be hoped that the board which recently began studying the airplane question will emphasize this Point. It has been too long over- looked. Jobholders All Alike Those who feel that the payments to World War veterans constitute an undue drain on the American treas- ury, which no government can reduce without running great political risks, should cast their eyes for a moment at the difficulties the French gov- ernment is having with its bureau- eracy. The French government has some 800,000 employes. They are well or- ganized and militant. For years they resisted efforts to reduce either their numbers or their pay. Successive parliaments shied away from the job of cutting the federal payroll. Now the government is moving. A tenth of the 800,000 have been ord- ered discharged, and 10 per cent of the pay of those who remain is to be slashed. Otherwise, the French bud- get cannot be balanced. And the workers are up in arms. New riots are feared as a result of the move. All in all, the French face a problem so knotty it makes our difficulties over Veterans’ Bureau expenses seem rather mild. 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, Dr. ‘What a Man’ Wirt (Minneapolis Tribune) As we have indicated previously in| these columns, we do not hold Dr. Wirt in very high regard. The gentle- man is too much given to shudder- ing at shadows on the wall; he needs to keep his imagination more firmly in leash; he seems, among other things, to have the soul of a tattler. Altogether, one finds a great many items on the debit side of the ledger when one comes to assay the true worth and character of the Gary edu- cator. We are pleased to note, however, that Dr. Wirt seems to have done a fairly good job of standing off the brain trusters conversationally at that now famous dinner in Virginia. Rob- ert W. Bruere, one of his fellow guests at that dinner, now comes forward with the story of how Dr. Wirt lec- tured that little group of so-called intellectuals for three solid hours. The more the brain trusters yawned and squirmed and wiggled in their chairs, the more tenaciously the In- dianan stuck to his rhetorical guns. When one of them tried to turn the conversation to education and school buildings, Dr. Wirt kept right on talk- ing about gold. A lady brain truster even went to sleep, and still the doc- tor’s tongue wagged on and on. Just what Emily Post would say to that sort of behavior we do not 8o while this may have cially unpardonable, ae does '—In De Land ob Cotton, Old Times Dar Am Not ear SSN Forgotten diagnosis, or treatment, will be self-addressed envelope is enclosed. HOW LONG SINCE YOU HAD YOUR OIL CHANGED? Itching without apparent cause and irritation of the skin are commonly due to lack of oil. Skin oil is called sebum, and in health is secreted by the sebaceous glands which are near- ly as numerous as the sweat glands and generally pour their oil into the well around a hair shaft through the same opening as that of the sweat gland. These common mouths of the sweat and oil glands are not “pores”—nothing is or cam possibly be absorbed into the system through these openings. Secretion or excre- tion is a glandular function which cannot be reversed. Some persons have an idea that it is not natural to oil the skin or -to use cosmetics which serve instead of the natural sebum to keep the skin soft, smooth, warm and pliable and to keep the complexion bright and clear. It may not be “natural” but neither is the use of soap and water or other detergents which wash off the natural skin oil and leave the skin dry and harsh. Nor is it natural to live in overheated and excessively dried out inclosures as we do most of the year. Nor is it natural to exclude as much as possible the sun- light and air from contact with the skin. Nor is it natural to expose the PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, 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. Production ... My wife and I are at a loss just how to do this. Can you suggest pamphlets or books to help us or perhaps for the children themselves? (H. H.) Answer—I have a letter I'm glad to send to any boy who asks for sex instruction and incloses stamped en- velope bearing his address, A grad- uate nurse, a medical woman, or a girls’ physical director or teacher could best instruct your daughter. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) C ONTINUE D Srem page one 358 Delegates to Attend Convention In Capital Friday Presbyterian Tuxis society—Jack Harris, Donald Bowman, Henricka Beach, Emerson Logee, Al Rannald, Robelt Vogel, Henrietta Ode, Day- ton Shipley, Phyllis Olson, Marjorie McIntyre, John Cameron, Marcia and Alice LaGrave, Mary Jean Johnson, Jean Gulson, Thomas Dohn, Del Perry and Winona Haggerty. Salvation Army Christian Endea- vor—Maurice and Edith Agre, Gladys Murphy, Verna and Vernon Radspin- skin constantly to the grime of civil- ization, with its chemical irritants. All smug little jokes aside, in my opinion many persons bathe much too often for the good of health and com- fort. Bathing. becomes a kind of nutty obsession with them. After all, it seems that the nastiest characters one encounters are likely to be phy- ically the most immaculate. Serious- ly I always get a little suspicious of any one who is too painfully or too obviously fresh from the bath. The less clothing one wears the less washing one requires in any case. The better the ventilation of the dwelling or place of occupation the less washing the body requires. People who suffer with itching or irritation of the skin ater a bath should not bathe. A complete wet wash is rarely necessary for cleanli- ness anyway. If they must bathe, the bath should be tepid or cool, not hot, and the shorter the better. No soap, or the less soap the better. In- stead use cold cream or fresh olive oil or any fresh vegetable oil for cleansing. Following the bath im- mediately dry and anoint the skin sparingly with a bit of this skin cream: grains of menthol may be incorpo- rated in the cream. Many young women who use vari- ous creams as cosmetics do not realize that they are only adding to their complexion troubles, for the natural oil secreted by the skin is enough to keep it in the finest condition, pro- vided other things applied in the toilet do not irritate. Young skins generally benefit from plenty of soap and water scrubbing. Older ner, Leona and Ellen Sjoblom, Mar- fon and Grace Wilcox, Ray Wirth, Captain and Mrs. Fred Corliss, Paul and Grace Raber, Harold Smith, Mr. and Mrs. George Stebbins, Adjutant and Mrs. Herbert Smith, » Rosebud Smith and Alice Meador. Baptist Young Peoples’ Union— Anita Mercer, Evan Kennedy, Esther Wilson, Marvin, May and Abbie Well- iver, William and Robert Mueller, Edward Cole, Ruth Rand and Nellie Orlock. McCabe Methodist Episcopal Ep- worth League—Mr. and Mrs. John Ehrmantraut, Marjorie Dean, Phyllis Brainerd, Edna McCrorie, Doreen ‘Church, Isabelle Gordon, Earl Benesh, Harley Hugelman, Ruby Wil- ‘mot, Wanda Stroup, Dorothy Mutch- ler, Mary Helen Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Al Anderson, Stanton Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred 8, Dale, Mrs. Phil Nelson, Grace Abbott, Dorothy Arness, Evan Digby, Arleen Sanborn, George Register, Essie Rishworth, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Hample, Irene Britton, Clarence Hoover, Lyle Clark, Nelsan A. Mason, Mr. and Mrs, George Mey- er, Arthur Huber, Mr. and Mrs. Law- rence V. Nelson, Homer Boss, Ruth Rowley, Ione Noggle, Hubert Smith, Edwin Welch, Donna Jean Davis and Lillian Hedstrom. | Group Sending 8 | First Evangelical Christian Endea- | vor—Mildred Britton, Verna and Car- \rol Grimstvedt, Mr. and Mrs. John Schuler, Winifred and Loren Burk- hart, Sara Benedict, Mrs. Jack Feil, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Bischof, Iris and William Schwartz, Gladys Maier, Grace Hoefs, Pauline Munsch, Mrs. | Elizabeth Suckow, Mr. and Mrs. Mere jrill Larkin, Mr. and Mrs, Alvin | Strutz, Merle Graunke, Esther Krem- ler, Mr. and Mrs. William Martin, Lonnie Kunkel, Luella Potter, Ben | Goehener, Dora Bischof, Rev. and Mrs, Ira E. Herzberg, Robert Herzberg, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Erickson, Della and Helen Erickson, Clara and Verna Mack, Mr. and Mrs. Ben C. Larkin, Clara and Hilda Bredy, Abigail Bliss, Lila and Arnold Schneider, Clara Brown, Viola Martin, Verna Graunke, Cora Buechele, Elda Urbin, Edna Hageman, Esther Ketterling, Alma Blumer, Mrs. A. Herzberg, Julius Bis- chof, Wilma Burkmeier, Dorothy At- wood, Marie Kummer, Pearl and Winifred Frankhauser, Justice Bah- mer, Ruby Guthrie, Miss Lydia Al- bright, Miss Helen Rebsch, Christ Delzer, Nila Smith, Esther, Viola and Mormon Leader HORIZONTAL 1,7 Who was the ‘Mormon leader in the picture? 11 Thin tin plate. 12 Old-womanish, 14 Pshaw! 16 Venomous snake. 17 Helixes. 19 Silkworm. 20 Mormon church official. 22 Insect's leg. 23 Half an em. 24Genus of turtles. 26 You and me. 27 Wine vessel. 28To drink dog- fashion. 30 Doses. 32 Bristle. 49 Pitcher. 34 Era, 50 Rowing tool. 35The Mormons 51 Otherwise. are called —— 52.54 The Mor- day Seints. mons’ center 36 Company. —— 37 Misplaces. City, Utah. 38 Retired nook... 53 Giver. 39Small drums. 44 Exultant. 46 Part of the mouth. 48To change a gem ‘setting. (a IGIOIAIL | Alice Martin, Esther Teichmann, Ne- vada Fuller, Marjorie Heidinger, Mrs, A. W. Heidinger, Mr. and Mrs. Mar- tel, Isabelle Overmoen, Francis Bergeland, Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Graunke, Lloyd Graunke, Pearl Schwarts and Bertha Bredy. RENEWS APPEAL FOR CORN-HOG CONTRACTS County Agricultural Agent Sends Cards to Non-Sign- ers in Burleigh An appeal to farmers of Burleigh county to sign federal corn-hog allot- ment contracts before next Saturday night was renewed Thursday by H. O. Putnam, Burleigh county agricul- tural agent. So far less than 500 Burleigh county farmers have signed contracts, Put- nam said, while it is estimated that about 1,000 are eligible to receive gov- ernment benefits in return for reduc- tion of production. - “The government, tl the corn-hog administration,” Putnam said on a card mailed to non-signers| to Thursday, “requests that corn, hog and crop data be compiled for all farmers with 10 acres or more of corn / holt and two or more brood sows. Will you please cooperate in the agricul- tural adjustment program by furnish- ing this information “Our local corn-hog association must bear the expense of collecting this data. Therefore, will you please answer questions on attached card and return by early mail? This will avoid expense of a visit from your local committeeman. Of necessity, land they will farm in 1934, total acres tillable land on their farms, all ed for grain, number of litters farrow- ed, number of hogs raised from these filters, number already slaughtered for home use, number to be slaugh- tered for home use and number of purchased feeder pigs now on hand. Utility Company Is Declared Solvent ‘The Central West Public Service Co., which owns and operates considerable utility properties in North Dakota, and of which Frank Milhollan, former chairman of the North Dakota Rail- road commission is president, was declared solvent by the United States Court of Appeals in a mandate filed at Omaha, April 7, according to ad- vices received in Bismarck. ‘The court reversed a recent decision of Federal District Judge J. A. Don- ahoe who had upheld an exparte re- ceivership. The higher court ordered the receivership vacated. i) The Central West Company, with headquarters in Omaha, Nebr., op- erates electric, telephone, ice and other companies in nine states. Its assets are estimated by officials, at approximately $25,000,000. The man- date of the court orders expenses of the receivership and $616 in court costs be assessed against the original Petitioners for receivership, a group of ag and Omaha stock and bond ers, ae tia is [ Additional Society | enenreieerntehicrtceiemnastrintiicths. camer} War Mothers to Sell Special Stamp Issue Fort Lincoln chapter, American War Mothers, will place on sale about May 1 the first of the War Mothers’ field corn seeded, corn acres harvest- |’ victory over Washington Thursday, their first win of the sea- son, KASHEY THROWS WORTH Faribault, Minn., April 19—(#)—Abe Kashey of New York threw Ed Worth, Portland, Ore., in 25 minutes and 25 seconds in the feature match of @ wrestling card Wednesday night. CUYLER A WALTZ KING In addition to his grace in the your reports may be only estimates.” On the attached card the farmers are urged to state total acres of all Postage stamps ta be received in Bis- marek, The special stamp issue, engraved Cubs’ outfield, “Kiki” Cuylet is also @ graceful dancer. He has a whole roomful of prises won for waltzing. 'THE LONE WOLES SON by LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE bound tes New: York, Michas} and ld celebrity, i united with his ‘son 2 Basel th it dead. lormed “Lone Wolf” €ritical Groster, lovely, daughter" of the rozier, ter wealthy’ Mrs, "pay saves his father by substituting imitations and secretly placing the i's care for 's n is suspi- cious of him. Later, when one of “Jack Knife's” accomplices tries to intimida Enocks the gangster unconsci: nt of pearls stolen Tess B in the se ‘ess Bo: thug’s Tess, in gratitude to Maurice ief, giv: of the society of Tess Bi el but Fenno asks him to ave Maurice to her. Discussing the Boyce robbery, Plon informs rd her the prisoner swore 11 Huge Mormon edifice. 13 Minor note. 15 He was —— ——of the Mormons. 17 East Indian shrub. 18 Senior. 21 Skirt edges. S| 25 Long cuts. 26 To overturn. 27 Monkey. 29 Kind of well. 31 Since. 32 Vile, VERTICAL 33 Formerly. 1 Shallow dish. 35 Organ secret- 2Teare stitches... os mile, 3 Within, Otel 4 Joyous. 38 Fish bas! 5 Black bird. 40 Form of “! 6Soft mud. 41 Gong. 7 Barks shrilly. 42 Bones. 8 Above. 43 Disagreeable 9 Christmas smell, carol. 45 Meadow. INTISHEW| TOAD) SIUDIPIE! li} 10 To pierce 46 Card game. with horns. 47 Golf teacher. ° of our senses at “Wouldn't it slay ? Why, if| hadn't turned out the-way 1¢ did, if they'd left it to me to pick out “I see what you mean.” The woman of a sudden sloughed her show of naiveté: the wide eyes nar- rowed and gave out wicked glim-| Mad: mers; the wide mouth went into its “If hadn't ht him with the goods id twes the same fellow,” sai: 2 4 ome af rr if i 2 i} & aE FY its i i i EF “BE Ea tie iii shee i : i p it S va nye never’ve believed at

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