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

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the right brand of ” The | Bismarck Tribune | fev, vas ony 33 per cent above ae Independent Newspaper ‘ 3 hours later: THE STATE'S OLDEST Building was more active than & us Boe ene room with NEWSPAPER year ago in all sections except the et otter oe Sidney Hillman of ted GEstablished 1873) mountain and Pacific coast states Thorp, let of Bureau of god Giothing Workers and NRA. Objee- Published by The Bismarck Trib-| Where slight declines were recorded == man Stephens of Commerce Commit- | tive conversation about, , but Saibered ‘at tie postottion'at Blnmarck| aurmnen apatty. the fg W: hi tee scuttled his confirmation, work, |b, embarresrned Ive left ay post as = maar with rolled up in $5 cocondl class mail matter. asumen i ie enue te ASNINGTON | [Rew sleeves roe we A ons | book 00 be pays the QEORGE D. MANN encouraging. At the same time, they ad * bill, President and Publisher cast doubt on the government's nag enporesy job for his close| (Copyright, 1984, NEA Service. Inc.) * ae Rite Pyle proposal to inject new vigor into the friend Keeser before taking big job —_—_ AGaNGe ade building industry by guaranteeing Roosevelt Can Face Music and Take|with National Emergency Council— Daily by carrier, per year....... $7.20| loans made by private individuals for It... Who's Crazy in Washington? | after Congress adjourns. Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- the construction of homes. It is not aK hee cual Memories In| —_willard_hotel, Bo toot en or sear Gn hiats 7.20) in tune with the times to say so, but Clarence Darrow roa a outeide of Bismarck) ........ by)| the fact seems to be that the building By RODNEY DUTCHER aged, inveterate Socialists, totter- Daily by mail outside of North industry may pull out of the doldrums (Tribune Washington Correspondent) | ing to the elevator toward lunch. e' DaKcta .......ssecsseeeesooes 6.00| without government help. If the — . Darrow unkempt as usual; Rus- Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00/ time comes when people can start) Washington, June 16—They had| sell dapper in straw hat, tropical Nothing is a greater disgrace to & Weekly by mail in state, three few hoihes with any assurance of be: one of those highbrow musicales at} suit, cane and sport shoes, country than ingratitude—The Rev. WEUIS cise i cescccseessentesvsas 2.00 u ‘the White House the other night, or-| pon Richberg, biggest NRA shot| Francis W. Walsh, war-time chaplain. Weekly by mail outside of North ing able to pay for them, a real boom ganized by Mrs, Roosevelt, who likes next to Johnson, sticking his head ee * Dakota, per year ..... ... 1.50] will follow immediately. The need to entertaain and make everybody | out office window to signal to Mrs. R.,| ‘The American people have fre- Weekly by mail in Canada, per for them is apparent and the invest- happy. waiting in automobile across the|quently made it unmistakably plain year 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. @ North Dakota and the Poll ‘The first statistical measure of North Dakota’s reaction to the “New Deal” of President Roosevelt is that contained in the current report of the Literary Digest’s poll, in which this state appears for the first time. It shows the president holding the support of most of those who voted for him in 1932 and gaining addition- al converts in other quarters, While the ratio for the “New Deal” is not gs strong as that recorded in the 1932 election, it is sufficiently strong to convince the average observer that North Dakota is, on the whole, favor- ably impressed by the present experi- ment. ‘The basic figures are 1,743 in favor to 1,063 against out of a total of 2,806) votes cast. Of those who voted for Roosevelt 18 months ago, 1,245 like the “New Deal” and 318 are opposed to it, a defection of approximately one vote in five from the president's standard. Of those who voted for Hoover, 425 Ike the proposals of the new era and 695 are opposed to it, indicating a stronger ratio of conversion than of Gefection. Among those who voted for other candidates in 1932 the decision is) much closer, the score being 28 to 23 in favor of the president's policies. It would appear, on this basis, that the Roosevelt experiment is only slightly more popular among the So- cialists and Communists than among the Republicans who stuck with the sinking ship in 1932. Roosevelt gets almost a two-to-one | margin among those who did not vote at all in 1932, the majority of whom may be presumed to be new voters. Among the bankers of the state, the opinion in North Dakota is more closely divided than in most other sections, 83 liking the new setup and 84 being opposed to it. On the whole, the results are not surprising. This state, more than most others, has evidenced a flair for political experiment. It is tradi- tionally “progressive” in outlook and thas never hesitated to try something new. This, added to the difficulties of recent years, has apparently creat- ed a complex favorable to the Roose- yelt experiment. A slant on this situation may be obtained by talking with the average businessman and farmer, since the Poll’s errors in this state have always been on the side of conservatism. rather than otherwise. In the program for the state im- plement dealers’ convention, which will meet here next week, for exam- ple, there appears a plea for renewed cooperation and a stronger integra- tion of interest by the people in that business. It closes with the signifi- cant statement, “The old rugged in- dividualism was fine, but with every other element that we contact fully organized, and with new forms of competition seeking our €ustomers’ trade, can we afford to take a chance single-handed against the odds we face?” This does not, of course, commit the program makers to the “New Deal” or anything approaching it, but that crack about “rugged individ- uslism” may have more than passing significance. At the very least it can be accepted as an indication that the man who wrote the program, if no others, is willing to accept the view that the close relationships of the modern world demand some kind of collective action. ‘That this idea is fairly widespread is evident from the results of the Literary Digest count. Encouragement for Builders Building activity during May reached the largest volume since MLE: jment capital is available. level of income of those who would like to build. America on Wheels the increasing interest in “house where they please at small cost and stay as long as they like. Only recently a Bismarck couple returned home in one of these con- veyances after having been away a year. There are at least half a dozen others in the city and the number is constantly growing. Because they are expensive, these vehicles are not yet as commonly used as they may be later, but that their number is increasing rapidly is sig- nificant. Perhaps, when we reach the halcyon time in which men will have to work only a few days a week to obtain their needs, everyone will have one and the address of entire families may range from Canada to Texas within the month. It will be a complicating thing, if and when it comes, but much less distressing than most of the problems we have en- countered in the past. Lo, the Poor Indian! It is three hundred years and more since the Pilgrims landed in Massa- chusetts and met the Wampanoags, native Indians of the Martha's Vine- yard region. No better reminder of their com- plete submergence under the tide of white invasion could be had than the news that the Rev. Leroy Perry of Gay Head, Mass., is teaching to the few surviving Wampanoags their own tribal language. Forgotten by the tribesmen them- selves, it has been preserved in white men’s collected lore of the Indians, and now a few straggling braves are to learn from a white teacher the language of their fathers. And they'll probably show no par- ticular aptitude for it, either. 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. Responsibility in the Air (New York Herald Tribune) Faced with the disaster in the Cat- skills, one cannot help wondering, at least, whether the tragic conse- quences of air-mail cancellation are still at work. A dozen Army pilots were killed trying to show that the Army could maintain commercial schedules. Are the commercial lines or their pilots crowding things too close in a retailiatory effort to show how pefectly their schedules are maintained? This is the third trans- port liner to be destroyed with all crew and passengers since the cancel- lation, while there have been three lesser crashes—one on the Pacific Coast and two in this area—in which like diasters were averted by pain- fully narrow margins. All six cases were assoicated with bad weather conditions, in which there would seem to have been no reason for risking the ships except overconfidence on the part of either the pilots or the companies. The result is now a death roll for the current six months in regularly scheduled transport twice that re- corded for the last six months of 1933. | | that transport flying has become un- duly hazardous, for the months of 1933 showed passenger fa- talities reduced to one in every 20,- 000,000 passenger miles flown. ard which does remain. The un- certain factor in the situation is the Not the least significant social de- velopment of recent years has been cars” which permit the owners to go Even such a figure does not mean last six It does, however, suggest the question of whether aviation has not already be- come a safe enough means of trans-| respondent sa! bout the value of port to call for a slightly different Hager ‘work Pye daily exercise attitude toward that element of haz-|for the expectant mother. ‘i 7he lenieney in the past has been fo minimize the risks of air travel : even while doing everything possible reek rele, lien to Ws: to remove them. The question now is whether the risks, under proper man- agement and pilotage, have not been reduced so far that the element of danger remaining should not rather be emphasized (as it is in connection self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Address Dr. William Brady, HOW TO BE HAPPY THOUGH BLESSED No irreverence intended. This is about having a baby. Somehow I get the impression that | the first concern of the newly mar-| ried couple nowadays is to have no! babies “for a while.” They have a hifalutin’ notion that they ought to have money laid by, enough to em- ploy fancy specialists and everything, before they consent to be blessed. They think they must have a lot of nifty furniture and snooty clothes and| I don’t know what all before they; start to raise a family. They argue that they must get the piano, radio, jauto or shanty at least partly paid for. Their attitude toward life 1s selfish and cold. There's little ro- mance in it. But of course my view is distorted. I hear from only the wrong ‘uns about this. The great majority of young married people turn to a doctor for instruction and advice when they have reason to think that li'l stranger is on the way. Frail health, lack of sufficient strength, advanced age are some of the excuses’ offered by newly married women who seek advice or informa- tion concerning prevention of concep- tion. Has such a woman a moral right to marry? If she believes her health is too poor, or her strength inadequate for childbirth, or that she is too old to stand the risk, she should not be allowed to marry on; even terms with real women. Her marriage, if it ts sanctioned by the law, should be a contract of lower order. Legal companionship or what-| ever may be the purpose of such a union. At any rate such women should not-be granted the status of mater-familias. They should not be permitted to use the title of Mistress. Madame would suit her, I should think. Women who marry late should not take the fishwife suggestion too se- riously. Since discussing this ques- tion here I have had many letters from women who married at 40 or later, and the trend of all is that they're glad. For example: “I was married late in life and had turned 43 when my baby was born. She is 6 years old now and @ prettier child no one could wish. I worked hard throughout my waiting period right up to about three hours before she was born. Went to hospital, had anesthetic, no trouble at all, either in child- birth or afterward. I believe my hard work kept me physically fit and that made childbirth easier.” There is much in what this cor- It does make childbirth easier. Women who assume the frail or “I am 26, have been married six years. For five years before mar- riage I had never weighed over 98 Pounds, scrawny, lifeless, had an awful complexion, no pep. Dumb 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 Dn Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. in care of this newspaper. enough to think such weakness watural. Shied from having chil- dren because I was sure it would make me worse looking than ever. ... A dear friend had a baby and I think that aroused the maternal instinct in me. So I went to the doctor for an examination. He prescribed lots of sunshine and exercise. I began walking from one to five miles daily, which increased my appetite and gave me v. v. & v. I can truth- fully say I never felt so well in my life as when I was carrying my baby. Baby weighed 8%2 pounds -at birth and now at 2 months weighs 14 pounds. But the change in met I weigh 116 pounds now and have a better figure than lots of girls I know. M complex- ion is marvelous. Besides all that I have a beautiful healthy baby boy, who was delivered with prac- tically no pain. And I'm going to have another and another.” (Happy). QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | We Have No Mailing Lists | Kindly furnish me with a list of| physicians in Brooklyn, N. Y., who are! competent to treat and prescribe for high blood pressure, also a copy of your pamphlet on Hardening of the Arteries. (M. M.) i Answer—The list is rather long,) about 3,800 names, so if you will ex- cuse me I'll name one good physician) for you—by private letter. I have no pamphlets for indiscriminate dis- tribution. I am glad to offer any advice I can when a correspondent |Plaint. Keep Your Hair On 1 am still a youth in years, yet al- ready my hair is beginning to fall out. I don’t relish the idea of being bald at 30. (M. R. A.) Answer—Nor will you relish it at 40 or 50, son. But we can’t have every- thing—one must choose either wis- dom or nice hair. Send a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for the monograph on “Care of the Hair and Tregtment of Dandruff.” Cold Sore, Herpes, Fever Blister What is the difference ...? Are they caused by stomach disorder, con- stipation, indigestion, or catching oold? (E. L.) Answer—Different names for the same thing. No one knows the cause. Avoid salve, apply fléxible collodion at the first sign of outbreak, or after the blisters or sores have developed keep gently sopping on camphor, spirits of camphor preferably, or cam- Phor ice. | (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Barbs | oY A Texan has combined 10 garden tools in one, but it still isn’t perfect as long as you have to go out and operate it. * * We may have streamlined auto- mobiles and streamlined trains, but there's the same wreckage af- ter a crossing crash, anyway. eek kK The fact that half the houses in eight American cities have no bath tubs proves we're not so bad, after all. At least that many families never made gin. x * * The annual crime bill of the United States is computed at $13,000,000,000. Crime may not pay, but we do. * eK What with the Canadian quin- tuplets and the Iowa quadruplets, can’t the AAA do something about this overproduction? tells me he has this or that com- (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service. Inc.) | Eminent Pacifist | . HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle in—. 7 tnast in the FEIUED ™ 17 Maize. picture? OME TIRIY! ISMMA Al 18 South America 13 Peg. ae 4 DI AIGIRIAIMS] 20She was Hun- 4 DIVIOMESE'T] sary'’s —— to er ips ICME] Switzerland. 15 Intention. 22 Bucket. 16 Still. 26 Formal dance. 17 Selects. 26 An item. 19 Not bright. S| IE] 28 Steeped barley 21You and me. {QIE MEL (OIL JMG! 29 Dandy. 22 Bard. MOTE Teel (ST) JOIN 30 Rumanian 23 Russian ruler. fla IOlF coins. 24 Seventh note. =. a fet. 25 Cattle shed. 4 To decay. 27 With might. 47 Thick shrub, 3 To perch. 36 Nominal value 29 Season. 48 Coffee pot. 4 Within. 37 Genus of frogs. 31Coffin cloth. 49 Plug. 5Resembling — 38 God of love. 32Myall tree. 50 Card game. ashes. a wate warriors = pea PP.EREhe saseet: tee at a dove. Cari oe 3470 z0sn. SE ailion B Laadlord. 42.Spng sung by . eee to end the * Hina of fight- one voice. 37 Rodent. World War. 43 Smell. 38 Silkworm. 40 Fore piece of & back it, cap. 44 Rowing device, VERTICAL 45To compress. 2 Composition. 54She persuaded 10 Mother. Henry —— to11In the middle 45 Court (abbr.). 44 Metallic rock. of. 12 To eject. 16 She was brought up 46 Energy. 48 Above, 49 Southeast. 51 Natural power PLOT rrerr rr, er Nee Nil Nail Ss" My CNT Mr. Roosevelt, whose favorite song is “Home on the Range” and who is always up on the current slang, |sudden walked into it on the arm of s colored servant. “You know,” he confided to the servant, “I’m not very strong for this sort of thing. But I can take it!” WHO'S CRAZY? YOUR GUESS A man walked into the Senate gal- lery the other day and he was very nearly nude. To be exact, he wore sandals, a Join cloth and a short white cape over his shoulders. (Later he de- scribed himself as “the American Gandhi.”) Anyway, he wore so little that he caused no end of consternation and was promptly hustled out of view by |Sergeant-at-Arms Chesley Jurney and half a dozen policemen. It was at that point that Sen- ator Frederic C. Walcott of Con- necticut, a Republican if ever there was one, demanded: “What do you want to arrest him for? Probably he’s the only sane man in Washington.” There's a certain amount of evi- dence that Walcott was giving voice to an opinion widely held not only in ‘Washington, but also in the country outside.. To be brutally frank, how- ever, one must admit that nearly all congressmen, as well as most New Dealers, harbor an idea that the rest of the nation is not crazy, but just plain dumb. (Neither idea is com- pletely true.) DAY’S MEMORY JUMBLE Rerest sight in Washington, Miss drink, said the newspaper boys had been nice to him and he wanted to do something nice for them. .. He'd Mullen—the “big three” lobbyists who quit the national committee because F.. D. said they must do that or quit lobbying. High P. O. official con- fides each is as politically potent in home state — New Hampshire, Mon- tana, Nebraska respectively—as ever. Washington hotel coffee shoppe for dinner: Vice President and Mrs. Jack Garner. Jack calls out to a newspaper man: “! » you're looking pale. Trouble with you is you that they are either averse to think- ing or that they are unable to think — Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia ae 8 I sometimes think that one of our weaknesses is a craze for novel and radical ideas in government.—U. 8. Senator Harry F. Byrd of Virginia. Oddly, it’s the fastest girls find it hard to catch up on sleep. CHAPTER XXVIIL Ann and Nance were at a win- dow, looking down on the busy MA CIN DERELLA Y Harold Bell Wright street below and away over the “Uh-hi look hit. wilderness of buildings. ung man entered. While the two| Some ines ical ant eaten “Hit’ ’ Dy ail women watched in’t. Know 2 wanes elgg I erent breathless interest he went to the/ering, do your” cee a bush ner a hill ner nothin’—jest jiles an’ cars an’ ity’s world do. all make out to folks an’ automobi buildings, fer as a How in Gawd-a-1 you reckon the) live? Hit sure beats me.” . “Shucks!” returned Ann. “Hit’s all in the way a body looks at hit. Gown|business with me, I'll with the best. Hit’s Gawd’s truth, Me, I'm a-honin’ to git ri thar amongst 'em an’ rust Nance, I’m a-feelin’ younger a’ready. I warn’t fer Herl a-gettin’ into all so: nice interestin’ troubl song way from the Pine neighborhood—hit sure is!” “Hit’s all right fer sich an’ Herb, mebbe,” returned dolefully. “but I’ve tight now to know stand hit. Vl i “I mean as help what don’t have every time a body turns ‘roun: whar we-uns can 8a) in an’ who ain’t. 1 een ae stop at till « body rs else.” ths retorted Nance. you'll say whar you ‘low fich » thi pic's Gaed-ontal pinet 3 8 z i i i Fy i le F ie rt EET es a i itl ate Fe i ge 8 i She halted and shrank back the danger lights which flashed ip fm, Ann nonest tu Gawd | ain’t meanin’ to nothin’.” tell A ‘The telephone 3 The two backwoods women stared the instrument he. mountain “) ain't meanin’ no ha: a. : “My © Gawd-a-mighty!” led | note occasionally arrival ] Nance “thar hit comes right now. city of important ig Ge That thar's a warnin’ fer we-uns|ple, you who alee Feet a te voliee IN reg, hd of informed an. “| course, matter what ‘ie you open your me that @ were here. fool mouth {'ll peel your scalp if, “I-ain't never been ne important hit’s the last move : make. | mister,” “| we-uns best git Herb.” | Ann, cm ut I'm cas See thi reckon’ i¢” mit | Passed Tihasteppis® high, tikec mots oe? rts of trouble—| Pe as you bd | FUG a6? i | H g A i ibs Fe zl it id gEtet? 7 i 4 i instrument, “Hello! ... This is Mrs, Haskel’s ~ « » » What is your, ith my mother, Mr. With quick decision Ann crossed| the room and placed her hand on her son’s arm. “Wait a minute, Herb, If an: — heed Lic tnpgrenr iver is a “Hah!” cried Ann, with chi t ‘and wonder. Tgounde like arent sed the in this room. ever see. Wal, mother,” whis- “Say some- ; ie 4s sell 3 i PS i : ae sd t it H a) i i F > EE z “EE i i | I can ae ets f i F i ips EE E HE s, ; Fe i i Fy & ; dl i 4 5 i | i iB if } £ 4 Fas ¥ | } ‘ H R : 5 : i | ! Ee in i uy | iF i Ht iH ° & i § é " ; at i li i s g Hf E well didn't z F 8 .*} rh i i t - 4 ai ft i S Levering.’ jest natchally skin pee 8 er, you know Tedge 3 | ied 72... Levering? I do. Rot at the moment recall the name, ne ps Does he practice in i, he doesian’ mebbe he don’t. , lives Pennsyivahia, when he’s to home. “No, I’m quite sure I have never the pleasure of meeting Mr. Cy E “Wal, he’s a fine He’ lawyer, nova he baron or Es that famous, ail versus the D. f Ry & fp y z HE He Hite rf rf; tert i i iF i i i i f E i [ ot ai site 4 Fy He ERS 3 He i i ral i st i 3 f i : i s z : ie i is 4 I [ Ft i i i i a I if i ty j 8 si | [ i i i f 3 pe, uA | fi f ,

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