The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 29, 1934, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a. {The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘ane Company, Bismarck, N. D., and @ntered at the postoffice at Bismarck @& eecond class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher ismarck) . . Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ....... seeeee aoe 6. ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ........+6 oe. 150, ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per FORE oso scse cesses setae odes 2.00 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. Gangsterism Depends on Corrupt Politics It is reported in Washington that federal agents who investigated the famous Kansas City Union Station “massacre” have uncovered a start- ling tie-up between gangsters and Politicians in that city. ‘They have found so much evidence, it is said, that a federal grand jury is to be impaneled to hear all about it. Now the only really surprising thing about this is the fact that such ® disclosure should come as a sur- prise. As a general rule, you may take it for granted that when any city is plagued by gangsters, those gangsters have some kind of under- standing with someone in the city's Political life. | This does not refer to Kansas City alone, nor does it refer to any par- ticular group in Kansas City's poli- tics. It is simply an axiom of mod- ern American life; and the way we THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1984 ture that can be inflicted on any man, Our legal system, in other words, was unable to correct an obvious mistake without inflicting an appall- ing injustice which can never quite be righted. Now look at it from the other angle—the case where a real crim- inal {s convicted and appeals. In hts case, too, there is a long delay. The deterrent effect of his sentence is automatically lessened. If he awaits execution, he, too, suf- fers long-drawn mental torture; if convicted of a lesser crime, he may actually be out on bail for a year or more after his sentence, free to re- peat the offense for which he was originally arrested. Either way, this long delay is an intolerable thing. If we are the effi- cient nation we believe ourselves to be, we should find some way of rush- ing things so that only a few weeks may elapse between sentence and final disposition of the case. The present system is unendurably clumsy. ‘Red’ Idea, But Good! It seems to be heresy of the black- est—or reddest—sort to suggest that the Russians ever have a notion worth copying in this country. Still the land of the Soviets does seem to sprout a bright idea once in a while. Probably you read about the solemn trial in which a pair of galoshes was convicted and found guilty of being of inferior workmanship. The galosh- es were formally arraigned before a Moscow court. Witnesses testified that they just weren't good for any- thing—they leaked, they fell apart, they didn’t fit, they looked like the dickens, ‘The result was a sentence order- ing the quality of the galoshes to be improved at once. Now this notion that it is a crime to inflict shoddy goods on the public —well, those of us who have occasion- ally paid good money for articles that proved practically worthless might: easily feel that that is a pretty sen- sible sort of idea. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below part the a - oO it nes | F Instructions for the New Pilot | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE ae pare tee of a construction job without a hard- boiled contractor at his aide, Apparently he felt he had a chance to realize dreams of a lifetime as to tors of America, which protested bit- terly because private contractors i i : i fe : 5 a g f E 8 9 E of auch flour beetles. If hot water Gisposes of them, why not depend on By William Brady, M. D. wg Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease Would a throat specialist be the ets cavaet -addreased envelope fm ink. No reply can be made to quer’es not conforming to instructions. ||choose? (M. E.) Address will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, || proper doctor for bronchitis? If not, is enclosed. , Letters should be brief and written ||what kind of specialist should one Dr. William Brady, i. care of this newspaper. Answer—No. better consult @ phr- sician. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) i I f H i A i patient would probably Ls peas po Find any 4 re NAA ed < two. The ite pores. explain that ‘che ‘man was poisoned |#ll that anything, food, water, gas, @ solution of arsenic and nicotine oe ee poison or any as (day COMIMIIBS tay LAGER Geo absorbed through Communism may supplant capi- St the wan’ OY “Brough the Pores) cobroken skin and Tl publish an |talism, but this is perhaps 100 or i : i g : i : E F 1000 years hence—Roger Babson, economist, manner in |lead the public about this. But for wick’ ine polsoning occurred. “Phy: |heaven's sake, dont cite some long sa sicians are getting more cautious | dead doctor or some slippery German | ‘The English people descended from every day about committing them-|medical writer who impli.s, without |a unique stock and as a result are selves like that. How is the doctor to | frankly saying so, that in some cir-|the finest fighting race known.—Vice know in such a case that some parlor | Cumstances certain chemicals or poi- | Admiral C. K. Chetwode of British practitioner or other may not pounce |80ns may be absorbed through the |navy. on the thing and play it up in the | skin. No fun tilting with windmills, ze * 2 2 The man poisoned by the spray} ‘The poorhouse is one of the great- same, mail came another |€ither inhaled it or actually swallow- jest blots on the history of this coun- reader who encloses a|€d some of the poison. That's thejtry. It is utterly wrong that such letter from a clipping of a story about the rescue | Only way painters or others are likely|an institution should exist.—U. 8. or ft the Conni cr sii an Se ell to suffer from lead poisoning. — Royal 8. Copeland, New ping another eminent colleague, ? — head of a hospital, is quoted as a QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS xe strong believer in pores, This savant Nataral Breathing I dare the government to go to makes no bones of it at all, but comes; A says the expansion of the chest/ trial. I have too strong a case.—Fred it out in unmistakable quotation |is the important thing in breathing.|C. Perkins, York, Pa., batteryman ac- marks saying that a rainstorm on B says doctors nowadays pay no at-|cused of NRA code violation. the child was lost may tention to that. Please tell us about * * * The politicians may give up the enough water could have en-| Answer—Never mind your chest.| struggle against world armament, but lieved tered the infant's system through the | Expand your belly. Send 10 cents|the church must never give it up— pores 3 cent stamped envelope bear-|The Rev. Walter W. Van Kirk,'sec- , address, for booklet Bd retary reek ete atl of Churches, ~~ to breat Never give anything to the poor. ithe. tor evidently decided to ease down Seeds Have Werms They are useless, dangerous, and it on that. Or other doctors,| Entire family taking flaxseeds as|Oought to be abolished.—George Ber- ito print, thought it well to| you suggested, with great benefit.jnard Shaw. One | However, we are unable to buy flax- * * * quoted as follows: }seeds without worms. When hot wa-| The suggestion that the bureau- on the flaxseeds in-/crats of Washington have saved us Se the eee EI De variably one or two worms appear.|from revolution belittles the common Oars. B. B.) sense of the American people.—Col. IN THE FAMILY” BEATRICE BURTON * persistently shut our eyes to it is|| trend of thought by other editors, 1 a mune weren't hired for the job and re- iDivectte:|itvemn ° the chief reason we continue to have io whelcae air tenrearerdinaeres byte van wane seandal is bonly engaged iasooen to it that wis eee, Susan piedegen reall and bak Bagg sn, Jb peoglnmntiontt id Susan's father ted is soieett ra gangs. with The ribune’s policies. Finds Way ‘Toward Tugwell’s Door | Rex gets his share of the dead cats. A Gypsy newspaper is now being pretty member of a poor but aris-/ers. Why had she had to reach out | surprise and indiznation. He half ‘There is nothing mysterious about ... British Expert Clamors in printer Letrascer MenagT abe bd sha tecratle family, pc scape ee aed another | rose in rea angry modern gangs. They aren't such ex- Robbing the Insured Se ee ANOTHER WAE IN AIR dellvered ctreulstion. . 34 re ig ol is exceptionally “ah at once it flashed across Su- Bans’e tues’ to Liutie’s, “Those are cessively secret organizations that (Chicago Daily Tribune) By RODNEY DUTCHER Major C. J. H. MacKerisie-Ken- | (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) fond of Wallace but is not sure|san’s mind that she was thinking | mine—to give away or not to give honest, efficient, and unhampered| The acquiescence with which peo-| (rribune Washington Correspondent) | "ed, British aviation expert who was Hae ore i gia amare | eas Bone of her affair what Mary |""Avat Bana loved at him, her lips police forces cannot cope with them. ‘The cops almost invariably have a pretty fair idea who runs them, how they operate, what they do, and when ‘and why they do it. And any city government that honestly wants to do so can usually drive them out of business in short order. This is a it that needs to be made over over again. Gang- sterism is part of the price we pay for rotten municipal politics. This is truer now than ever before, since re- peal has knocked out public support of the underworld’s chief source of revenue, 5 To be sure, it remains perfectly true that the roots of American crime go deep in the social fabric. Slums have a part in it, and faulty legal machinery helps it to sprout. Our emphasis on money as the sole yardstick to be used in measuring a man’s success or failure is a big fac- tor. Our diversified population, the absence of a unifying national tra- dition, the lawless temper of the land generally—all these help gangsterism But in the last analysis the city ple have accepted the inflation of their currency recalls the story of the French Communist who was talking about the equal distribution of all property. Someone said to him, “Why see here, Gaston, if you di- vided all the property it would only mean a few hundred: francs each.” sum to take care of a man in his old age.” Those who are in debt on property and have welcomed the coming of inflation to restore the pre-boom value may in the end realize that ob- fective, but suffer a far greater loss in the diminution of the value of life insurance which they have made life- long sacrifices to keep up. Life in- surance outstanding in this country amounts to a total of a hundred bil- Mon dollars and it is widely distrib- uted. By the legislation rushed through congress by the administra- tion last year the dollar was devalu- ated. This has already resulted in the destruction of 41 per cent of the ity in the president, and he has not it he would not use it, to re- duce the dollar by another 9 per cent. In addition, according to Senator Bulkley of Ohio, a close Democratic adviser of the president, the next congress will be asked to give the president Washington, Oct. 29.—As far as the administration is concerned, General Johnson hit the nail squarely on the thumb in his last press conference, when he extolled the virtues of the direct cash dole. When the incredible general de- eried other forms of relief—such as work programs—he. arrayed himself in direct opposition to the whole acheme of Roosevelt policy ag it is now being secretly formulated to meet the winter relief load. Roosevelt has decided that the New Deal should get as far away from straight relief as it possibly can. His plan, now in embryo, aims to take everyone off the relief rolls and goal. But he is tired of relief of the present type, thinks the country also is tired of it, believes it is bad for verybody’s morale, and recalls the tonic nature of CWA last winter. Hopkins, Ickes, and Richberg agree. branded as a “spy” last spring by ex- citable members of a House Naval Affairs sub-committee when he sought to show in elaborate charts that American war planes were inferior, has vainly sought an invitation to appear before the President’s Avia- tion Last April, former Assistant Sec- retary of the Navy Edward P. Warner challenged MacKenzie-Kennedy's data and said he would “be delighted to appear at any time before any technically competent. ae unbiased mission. zie-Kennedy to appear and the Eng- lishman, now associated with some Americans in an aviation venture in| this country, is pointing out to: all! who will listen that Warner runs an| aviation magazine which derives in-! come from commercial - interests manufacturing our war planes. Dr. Albert F. Zahm, chief of the Library of Congress aeronautics divi- sion, recently described MacKenzie- as the third most important Kennedy man in the scientific development of aviation. (Copyright, 1034, NEA Service, Inc.) —.--— FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: £ if doesn’t realize it, Susan is more 5 attracted by Allen Sholes, the new/|did or did not do to fascinate Mr. parted in an O of astonishment. roomer, whom her snobbish rela- you don’t have any ,” she said, “and other's, They're Hight, ith a ‘C’ for Cullen. Morris Broderick smile?, his one tegard beneath hand | small dark mustache lifting to show That is they discourage Su-| with Wallace's ring on it like a seal, |his full red lips. He was much san’e and John’s (her brother) | pressed under one cheek. smarter than usual this morning, wing collar and a white pip- his vest. a matter of fact, I am going @ use for them,” he said. i f ' 4 3 f F £ 2 Hf H iE e i : i A & 7 ing and talbing having 8 fine it authority to devaluate the 4 7 ith ruption, No one need be surprised | Bes! sdrers ihe |; A S ting time. Mary would be to hear that this or that city is af- reli acer per rteen perl a Ps utumn port esr colled emetic. Sen ee) ites ky & catguer-poulician ai\|ef ieee, a pep gan ‘and her eyes lance. If the gangsters are present,| This progressive devaluation went ‘HORIZONTAL —Answer to Previous Puzzle would shing like emeralds under the uch alliance ‘may be taken for|On tn Maly until the insurance that S What is the gy MElars hich MAlitle after, eleven she heard sranted. oem of what the loeaed hed boa Dopular John and Mr. Sholes come up the = paying for. France similarly extin- setae gor stairs together, and a minute after w’s Delay Unfair guished 80 per cent of the outstand- id Q} poche was on,” he said ‘The law's delay has been proverbial| 1g life insurance. And in Russia SOne of the = Ey saw that your light Wand { thought since the time of Shakespeare. But| S04 in Germany the write-off be- Dlayers 18: thie t like to start this to- Mark *arked | 2im2_ 100 ‘per cent. 80 far only 41 ‘game, a: Tighe Mary sent it to you.” =e Twain once remarked! per cent of the real value of insur- plet 12To detace, wie AT | mg panded her a new novel of about the weather—although every-| ance policies has been wiped out here, 13To respond to Se i CN Hough Walpole’s. Mary often sent body talks about it, nobody ever|But the administration which took astinuu. ff SmETILe ls new books over to her when they seems to do anything about it. this outrageous action is now asking 15 Intention, came in to the library. remains cadig ering anda for approval of what it has done and 16 Avenging “How did Mr. Sholes and the Cul- ys add a | authority to go further. The Ameri- ae A lens get on?” she asked. calculable element to our adminis-| can people will say by their votes at bandry section and Earl Sheets, chief pir FE RIAINKIE INSITE! a house afire.” John tration of criminal justice. They cut Se Ree Seclion, wheter {hey | of the Animal Husbandry Division,| ‘* anes, 44 Bail 3 Rowing imple- ee him ine Big’ way. Ske ways—against rests: ion ir “4 is. re society as a whole, nnd gain thy| Smaragd ‘and of the further of fn Charge ‘of the en-| {2'Te burst, | 47 Before cm we beget eee 7 as was carri rt tantal t rights of aa accused et <a. by the French, Ttallan, ang Geren Bion fe foliar Sere made weltles and cates Just | sary was really entertaining with her banjo and her husky voice. . Consider case A.| governments. They are offered 23 Crescent 531 phe) aren. ‘after ey Lamson, the young Stanford Uni.| €¥ard for indorsing such action. a Te | "shaped shield. 64 Shtewder, “°e ¢put end trae and Lethe Pasay gives | oe Sold Rees ee bre sweat [becmuarried omoreoy aeons” ‘versity Press executive who was con-| Possible rise in the value of their anl- | 24 Therefor. §54 play in this 7 Hobbling. him around this house.” little wrist watch He glanced around the table to see victed ne an pedis People will deny the more 26 Bone. “ sport, the fore g Court. Susan went back to bed and | diamonds. ¢]how everyone was teking his news year ago mi i his| authority for doing this unless they and 26 Kindred. ward —., 7 the Walpole book. But she “My word! But he's simply show. before he went on: t wife, and to whom the California su-| are as foolish and as blind as Gaston.| Sheets, in disgrace, has de- 29 Tree bearing 56 Posts at the 44To drink dog- Ea not reed it. She lay thinking ‘you with diamonds, i” | _ “The children are grown now. t Preme court only recently granted s ie are to = department field sta- acorns. ends of the fashi about Mary calle: « +. me : ‘cried when she sow it. z zene corning bis own living, and Pam el apy Staff for Yearbook —: | le 45 Wing part of Hous way of wecping het long e76- Probably got thes both at the same ieaeht fod tres to lve may lite” 3 dead in their home on the morning noun ed by Seniors 34Not as many. in this as 14 Food con- Mie Becky sot or way. of | tite picked up the lid of the gray trom Aunt Bang Well inate § of Memorial Day, 1933. Lamson was| The members of the epee ee! tah perty. them all about box. “this came from Si ertataly ® priceless remark, com- a staff for the 37 Obese. 2 fi sitting back to listen with | she said. “Is that where he ing from you! Just tell me when accused of killing her and was/ 1935 Prairie Breezes, the annual rmat! VERTICAL 16 Opening play 49 Since. i interest when they ve ever done ? brought to trial early in the fall. He| BOOK of the senlor class of Bismarck Bittle by title, 2 ME PAM $0 50 sites. wide-eyed inter Nore was more |" M1 ae know.” Susan snapped |tituer 0 the ghllarse, Mors Py was convicted and sentenced to hang,| SH school, have been announced je. 2 Foretoken, to her than just a little bag of co-|the bracelet around her wrist. . . .| Broderick! been my job 4 and was lodged in a condemned cell fy Mas himan, editor-in-chief, ie * a quettish She was en-|Some day she would ask Wallace |for fifteen or long years, t fen Gasctin oe oe en Daa business manager. (a ay a bad a ae a ie pe a tertaining with her banjo ont a shock the xi box from the Ludlow ped. Gan wee tareeh 1 You've { “ts atoroapeprneosted an appeal |lnaat” eer bt the tuned pt NTT NS TT Slope seve | am, ae eh ie all sence ene $ patna came, et the au | genie anit Otter nose PT Cee Ce) |. Se rece eeiaelee ee ! Preme court several weeks ago. Inj the staff are Ruth Christiansoy and N WN a no beauty at all. cause you'll have to have so many |ever him for it—’ a ite decision, just handed down, this| Jane La r Ne ~ ‘Besides her own attractions, she for your trousseau. But your’ fed him and kept a roof t : jane Lawyer, snap-shots; Eugene Fe- rte TT ONE NST eee had the attractions of the Cullen | Aunt Edna and I went up into thelover his head?” interrupted his bf court orders a new trial, stating that vold, Robert Vogel, and Ruth Rand, IN SS i house for a Susan went | attic the other pov Y= Poston father, “I didn’t, I suppose?” 4 the evidence upon which the young | literary; Be Flaherty and Lil- : | NN on thinking. Aunt Nell’s, pantry |some of T mether's things that} Aunt Edna . “Sometimes , Ene delaras ete NS Sin_trars fle with slices |e Coons ze to he, ory [Zu bad beard here eed ere than mere suspicion.” and humor; Mavis Mitchell, organi YP ‘and @ phonograph, for mu- | your own.” “Well. Jet's not do all this Tuss- Consider the ations; Ma: y 2 opines, wanted to on ‘Christmas in the - we , nneneiiie: ean avis and Bath's ae ee fed Une A trom the top of oe nigbegr et ling Lat hom mere: Here is a man convicted of an atro- | anton. stenographers; Hudson LeRoy, tier ia tee Foom, too, 8¢ Tining poor wail and set it down ia and most strained smiles, “I think cious erime on exceedingly flimsy the and friends front of Susan. It was tied with| we've all helped to bring up John . that the girls soe tre a, Try mt Peoeatimer ere (ie are ake Bae aaa Rese i happen, occasionally, under the best| in this country, but the city also has Hie"Shclo bgt not had a good ine |eotee ‘and’ neplins, allot them |eultcon—fut tha news abott Soa Jegal systems; appellate courts exist |® Small postoffice, measuring 7 feet there after the wintry of the | monogrammed with the letter “C.” gad Bye. 8 per, Morris! It’s won- to correct such mistakes. But think |°,® feet 4 inches, which is the of- Center Street house. They were yellow with time, but Ans you know they soy ctl 4 ficial postoffice for the city’s China- “I could be interesting to him, Hay Wace eeoeth spt miner 00 8 eed Caines come in thy 80 now ‘what society has done to this man, | town. if Thad half » chance,” thought Su-/they had been ironed be- you and Susan are getting mar- % i in the meantime. san, “Even if I can’t play the banjo /fore. On the very top of them was|ried maybe I'll be the next one to a It has confined him in the death|. For ® short period during the 24 like a darky.” a fiat blue velvet case which re-|find a mate. Stranger things have of the the first time in her life some- | vealed a row of silver teaspoous|nappened!” roa house for hours equinoxes, the sun does For 4 & solid year—one of the| not shine on any part of the territory thing like o fapling of dislike af | when, Susan took of the cover. (To Be Continued) 4 ‘gneat excruciating bits of mental tor-| cr posseasions of the United States. | Mary crept into Mary! “Why, those are my 1” | eapgright, 1089, by Sing Postares srncicat, tn, he J "

Other pages from this issue: