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SIORRLVAD Clean Beeach Hnewmee THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16, 1934 The Bismarck Tribune NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher ~ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside Dakota ....... + 6.00 ‘Weekly by in 5 1.00 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year 150 ‘Weekly by mail in year Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation 2.00 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. A Bit of Sentiment In all of the recurring blasts ‘against reckless driving, too little at- tention is given to the human trage- dies which are caused by failure to observe the laws of courtesy and of the road. Newspaper accounts of fatal acci- dents make no mention of the grief and misery which are caused by them. The world moves too swiftly for anyone to remember what be- comes of the widows and children who are left to fight their way in the world when a breadwinner is killed. It would be sensational journalism to tell of the feelings of parents whose lives are blighted by the un- timely death of a child, stricken down on the street. If one could de- scribe the needless heartaches which are directly traceable to most of these unnecessary deaths there would be ™more care and less of carelessness behind the wheels of many motor cars. law toward which as a people we aspire, we must replace every slum everywhere with a habitation which is fit for human beings. Slums will have no place in the newer and finer social order in these United States.” World Still Requires Safety of Democracy This troubled world may yet be forced to understand that it will have to make itself safe for democracy be- fore it can carry on with the ordinary business of living. ' Democracy has gone out of style since the war. That magnificent slogan that Woodrow Wilson handed out in war days has become some- thing to laugh at—partly because the war no longer looks like the holy cru- sade we once thought it, and partly because democracy itself has shown more defects than we used to think it had. But when all the shams and hyp- Ocrisies of the war are admitted and all the faults of democratic govern- ment are reviewed, it is still true that democracy does provide a safety valve which eases tensions and pre- vents the kind of explosions that have been tormenting Europe lately. Historians are still arguing about what caused the World war, and the argument won't be settled for a long time to come. One thing, however, is very clear; a large part of the trouble was the ceaseless struggle of op- pressed minorities to win their free- dom. ‘This struggle centered in the old Austro-Hungarian empire, and it touched off the war. The finest thing Wilson ever did was to tell the whole world that freedom and self- determination must be the heritage of all peoples if a repetition of the holocaust was to be avoided. But the post-war readjustments failed to reach this goal. Democracy was discarded. Croats, Austrians, Russians, Germans, Italians, one peo- ple after another, were forced into the strait-jacket of autocratic gov- ernment. That priceless safety valve, the ballot box, was tossed out of the window. The result? Violence and blood- shed. In country after country the secret police must go about smelling ‘empe! Zz ZE The NewDeal All of which is brought forcibly home by an anonymous poem printed by the North Dakota state railroad board in its current bulletin. This newspaper has @ rule against the publication of poetry but the bars are lifted for this bit of sentiment. It may do more to make motor car drivers aware of their tremendous power for evil than a whole volume of common sense reasons why laws of the road should be observed and excessive speeds avoided. Here it is, under the heading “Somebody's Boy”: Somebody's boy was crossing the street, Innocent, young and fair; oka ad the judgment of older He didn’t see danger there. Somebody's boy had a song on his But it died in an instant away, For an automobile struck the little) boy down, And he passed at the close of the day. Somebody's Boy! O, somebody's heart, Was broken with that bitter blow— Somebody knelt at an empty bed And fondled an empty shoe. Somebody looked through the empty years ‘Where no little boy would be— oO, cee there need for this sacri- Somebody make this plea: ‘Will you not watch for the little boys, rivers, in city and town? ‘Will you not count it the greatest crime ‘To strike somebody's boy down? Some! Come and See Us With Burleigh county's schools op- erating full blast, The Bismarck Tribune takes opportunity to invite all teachers to bring their classes to \ts plant and see how a modern daily Newspaper is produced. Last week 40 students of the jour- nalism class at St. Mary’s high school took advantage of this opportunity, were told the processes by which a ‘uewspaper comes into being. This week several rural teachers will bring their students to Bismarck on a combination pleasure and in- struction trip, The Tribune is glad to have them and will be equally pleased to greet others, All any teacher need do is to give notice as to when she and her Pupils will arrive. A guide will be on hand to show them through The Tribune establishment, In this interest displayed in the making of a newspaper lies « signifi- cant hint for every Bismarck busi- mess house. Under the leadership of our Association of Commerce they tould join in issuing special invita- tions to these young citizens. Such visits would do much to bring city and countryfolk closer together, a de- sirable end in view of the efforts made by self-seeking individuals to develop antagonism where there should be only friendship and mutual effort for a better North Dakota. For a Finer Social Order Existence of the slum is one of the worst blots on modern civilization. out plots and conspiracies. Prisons must be enlarged, executioners must be kept busy, ‘The dictators fear their own peo- ecptinter lll ecb ecalictetatcacyal| SiR ere ee 8 and assassinations come in atl ever. | Waren melons horde ont increasing crop; and each one dis-| AAA Is Plenty Worried as Cost turbs an unstable equilibrium so dan-| Living Climbs... And Farners May gerously that people catch their] Stampede Out of Line. breath and wonder, “Will this start & new war?” Maybe it's time to revive that old war slogan. A world that was safe for democracy would certainly have fewer danger spots than the one in which we now are living. Dimmed Torchlights It is interesting to note that the earnest young Democrats of Has- tings, Neb., were unable to hold the old-time torchlight parade they had Planned—because they couldn't find anyone in town who knew how to make the old-time torches. - Interesting—because it exemplifies & sweeping change that has come over American politics. There was a time, still within me- mory of an aging generation, when & political campaign without a torch- Ught parade just wasn’t a campaign at all. People took their politics with an intense, nervous seriousness, in those days. Campaign processions were colorful and boisterous affairs. And now they can't even find any- one who knows how to make the torches! Editorial Comment printed below show of thought by other edi They are published without ri to whether they agree or di with The Tribune's policies. Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Oct. 16. — Now that ham and eggs, bacon and eggs, and Pork chops are reserved almost ex- clusively to the plutocracy, it may give you s certain sour consolation to know that the AAA—which set out to raise the prices of such things—is brated more about it than most ‘us. Food prices have gone scooting up @ lot faster than the unofficial esti- mates which Secretary Wallace's eco- nomists confessed to one another when they saw how bad the drouth ‘was going to be. High prices which they didn’t expect before the end of the year already are with us. In five months the general retail food average has jumped more than 10 per cent, meats more than 20 per cent, and pork about 50 per cent. Pork includes ham and bacon and you might get around that by adding another egg if it weren't that eggs were up about 50 per cent, too. Bet- ter make it more toast! Pork has been the poor man’s meat. Millions of people never have any- thing but salt pork, which provides the only flavor they get with their Potatoes, rice, and flour and is im- Portant for its contribution of energy. Now pork goes beyond the reach of many of them and the AAA Is getting some pitiful Jetters about it, includ- ing some from the share-croppers and tenant farmers, already hard hit as a group by the tendency of the AAA crop reduction programs to force them out of existence. Why Blame Italy? AND JUST BEFORE ELECTION! (New York Herald-Tribune) The food price rise is a tough thing It was inevitable that the charge|to have happening just before elec- would be freely made in Yugoslavia |tions—tough fcr the administration that Italy had a part in the murder |asa whole. The “common people,” for of King Alexander. Tension between | whom the New Deal is primarily de- wo countries has been acute for |signed, usually get sorer about high- ast three years. The Italians|er food prices than about anything been charged before with incit-|else. ts against the Serbs. By| Don Richberg's estimate of 5,000,000 the Italians for this latest | families on relief this winter probably | is possible to deflect blame | will have to be revised upward. And Croats and so to make it|the administration is darned lucky that there 1s greater political|that the elections aren't being held than is im-|next spring, when it will have to do a lot faster explaining about food prices than it is doing now. (Watch pork!) But what the AAA really fears is EERE Ub iil i a i iE cultural program by walking out on it, Many surpluses are being eliminated and the questior is whether AAA can keep the farmers in line for further king | control programs. High corn prices have given every- the| one the jitters here, because they nd for coming generations that! ‘> ‘he, taiellg of eqporiuplty under the +|that the farmers will scuttle its agri- | . a The T I a a eae ramental Artist and the Unfinished. Masterpiece | C Bm ina LF kE ZAMEEN, REORGANZATION all the earnest ballyhoo about the /pretended to organize a plot to picket next corn-hog program, the 15,000 or |Frank’s house with placards accusing more town meetings on it, and other /him as «Killer of Little Pigs’ argh “Sir,” announced Frank, “you want FEAR MEATLESS UPRISING to make the world safe for little pigs. ‘The AAA fellows also mention in|I want to make it safe for human their prayers the an that consum- | beings!” ers won't go on meatless diets—which NEA Service, > just piles up a lot more trouble for | COPyNsht, 1954, esc sc epee: planning a balanced agricul- ure, One of the things the figures don’t tell is the fact that the meat for which the consumers pay 20 to 25 per cent more is of cheaper quality than they used to get for the same price. If you insist on the same old quality, the added sock is even more painful than that. But it is argued with much force that the consumer hasn't so much, relatively speaking, to beef about. Last June, Dr. Isador Lubin, chief of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, put out some figures which show how va- tious items in the cost of living had advanced before 1913. The price of food was up only 9 per cent. But clothing had increased 36 per cent, household furnishings 68, fuel and light 56, and “miscellaneous” —which includes other necessities — 96 per cent. Incidentally, if all those little pigs slaughtered by AAA had been allowed to live, the price of corn might have pushed pork prices up about as high as they are. (It takes about 20 bush- els of corn to make a good hog). POINTS A MORAL For the moral of this, I refer you to Secretary Wallace's latest book, which contains plenty of them. But I am also reminded of a crack by Jerome Frank, general counsel of AAA. Frank was summer vacationing at Martha's Vineyard and ran into Carlo 7 ato Tresca, the veteran Italian anarchist. _ — Tresca, who likes to have fun, be-| The modern girl packs her hope moaned the fate of the shoats and| chest with college clothes, —— Child Prodigy HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 Who is the child star in the picture? (2To ree. (3 Constellation, Lion. \tspssumed name. (6 Badly fitting garment. 18 Burden. (9 Negative. 21 Oceans. r. 22 Class of verte- Fam brates. . A rainbow trout caught at Port ‘Washington, Mich., was tagged and thrown back into the lake. Seven days later it was caught again at Grand Haven, Mich. on the opposite shore of the lake. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: RED. U.S. PAT. OFF. 11 Each. Fj] 12 She is an ex pert tap —— 4 15 And a good _— 17 Card game. 18 Above. | 20 Tree bearing acorns, 22 Monkey. 4 27 Alleged force. as 28 To complain. BMC an om polated root, = VERTICAL 30Gitt of charity at. lusical note, . 82 Identical. 26 Marched-on. 45 Laufhter 2 reegetor: 34 Cotton, fabric 8 Tatter, sound. 3Cow-headed . 35 Caustic. 12 Flees out. 46 Bun god. goddess, 36 Lunatic. 12 Witherea, “Neuter pro 4 To change a $9 Trenton Mitie 13To skip. wae fem setting. 41 Sugar sand, is v. endocrine. * papal ts Fereoe of 45 Feminine plies as 53 One who serve a writ, 37 Amidic, forms thread. ¢ still, 39 Fainte! + 66 What is the 40 Tooth of joint. child's pro- 42 Conjunction, fession? 43 Covering for 57 She works in the apex of a 7 Toward. 8 Having a mane 52 Postscript. 9 An added 53 Spain. quantity, S4Jumbled type. motion ——s, 10Circular ine 65 Chaos. * i ts Nail i it or treatment, will. be ANGINA PECTORIS OR ANGINA OF EFFORT Angina pectoris, breast pang, “neu- ralgia of the heart,” is not @ definite disease. So designated are various cases of arterial hardening or heart deficiency in which effort, strain or emotional excitement gives rise to the victim, being a wiseacre, ascribes it to “indigestion” and plies his stomach with all sorts of things for that “acid” or “gas” or whatever the indulgence in tobacco, That this is PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, answered by Niasting, say half an hour or 0, and hence the dose should be By the help of frequent nips at the true we infer from the ineffective- nitroglycerin bottle victims of angina’ ness of treatment as long as the pa- tient persists in the tobacco habit, are enabled to enjoy more active lives, to do a mile or two of hoofing gaily, and the complete cessation of at-jor to play a little golf or bowl a tacks after the habit is broken. People—formerly we might have/ ‘said men, but not now—who suffer helped friendly game on the green—no con- tests. Some of my medical critics will say I am prescribing. But I don’t care. Hippokrates approves of it. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Whatever a Tonic May Be Your iodipe tonic treatment has me wonderfully. My mother is 79 and has high blood pressure. hoggishness may require months or| Would it be safe for her to try it? years to repair. Think of this, dim-| (Mrs. H. G.) wit, next time you smoke before eat- ing or while pretending to be at work. can smoke himself or herself half Answer—The iodin ration is safe for any one. Send 10 cents and . stamped envelope bearing your ad- Childish, is it not, to think the/ dress, ration structions and also and ask for copy of “Regene- ” which gives in- suggestions about blind (amblyopia) and then expect| diet and general hygiene. tinued for a while? Nitroglycerin, now called glyceryl trinitrate, is the tired and true rem- edy for emergency relief of anginal attacks, and for preventing attacks. The victim should carry a vial of tablets and take one into the mouth (it need not be swallowed, for it is quickly absorbed from the mouth and produces its characteristic effect in a few seconds) whenever he expects or feels an attack coming. SYNOPSIS Susan Broderick and her aunt, Lutie, who had seen more prosper- ous times, order a pillow at Hart's polar store where the family had a charge account for years. They are summoned to the office of the manager, Mr. Dillon, who in- forms them the account has been discontinued as it had not been paid for five months. CHAPTER II Susan’s face was as scarlet as Lutie’s and she never knew just how the two of them got out of the office. As its door closed after them she heard Mr. Dillon say again that he was very in a voice in a nightmare. Then they were in the elevator once more, packed in with other women whose clothes looked glossy and new even if they were not made of mink as Lutie’s that looked rusty and “ratty” after winters. Toure shabby-genteel, Lutie and 2,” she told herself as they got out| of the elevator at the ‘ware phiny, si eel ana ine trom $00 rt ¥ 1 slenply “connst pass’ that, sales: 8) ly oa: sal woman, at the lace counter,” Lutie said in a whisper, as if she were afraid that someone in the throng might hear of their Her eyeb: re | E is ~ money. pened tous. I declare, feel jike a criminal. Don’t you?” “Certainly not, and answered stu or is the rer? (L. K.) sorry, that sounded far away like a voice! she first floor.| very Tl get on a street car here. I feel] her. someone had’ imoeked" ue hap- just mustn't,” | lil as Lutie’s| evenings at thine tablets all morphine mixed with some car- Answer—Usually tablets are made Are m with some carrier in addition to the pure alkaloid. Vertules ‘What will remove small blood veins or venules from the sides and tip of a an over the cheeks? (Miss Answer—Physician ekilled in der- j matotogical surgery can obliterate (GIRL IN THE FAMILY” ment, frowning dit ir into the snow-filled dark- nes Then. as ‘and FFE at i F SF icf i] age eet GUTEe z Ay ts ag bret Ey E J fy i yee it ‘ F Ff i ii ‘ee 2 Reis ee by rHaElEe iheadle FREY | i l i | Fi i i it ; i fl i A ake, Bat f rit Fesz gee : i | Hi 34 He # : il i if : i eee ae aE t I a ie BS aE se i itt ag id FoF father that she wanted to be trained the venules by chemical injection (with aid of lens and fine needle) or by electro-desiocation. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) GY I understand that formerly I used to have the reputation of being im- way. I just hated publicity—Mrs. uel Insull. x ‘Thespoils system of governing cities is definitely on the rocks. Those who ‘would coin money under it had better hurry up.—Prof. Charles E. Merriam of Chicago University. ee * The bankers of this ‘country want Tecovery just as much as anybody else, and maybe a little more.—Fran- cis M. Law, president, American Bank- panty 22 & It is only when an artist feels he no longer cares to perform that he ceases to perform.—Fritz Krelsler, fa- mous violinist, An earthquake shock was felt in Cuba, and everybody grabbed his gun or = ee aus cellar. A shirt and collar manufacturer New Yor, it ‘his opponents proms lew ut ts, ° ise to take a of him, ‘Women still seem to be going to Reno for their divorces, after their husbands have told them to meeps ze Ever since the abdication of King Alfonso, the seem to be finding more fun in revolutions than in bull fights, ze & Prussian boys and girls must work on farms for one year after finishing school, so they'll really know their onions. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc. $ BY BEATRICE BURTON #4 z 4 3 $ v a z g 5 Fe Hl rf ute Urry He il 3 H i I F) i a it L id F E £ I fl Be 7 et fi ERUEB a fq! Beta Eke 4 i i £ Fer Ng 4 E 5 ae anal ys : He just Ii wit u nf fe see 3 i i Hi i s i i 4285 1 E A H a 8 : ng Re SEzeR RE 3 i FF fe Hy F He 1H 54 Zj 5 : g fy at . Z i & 3 rl tt ee Hy He i Be Egy HY Protectiveness 4 (To Be Continued) Grveright, 1883, by King Pestares Bretiods. tap perious. I’m sorry I appeared that .