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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1934 The Bismarck Tribune] > PP who feel that, if he does An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) “Puplished by The Bismarck Trib.| Which is boiling up from the bottom du cone sumnitee N Sai kt of the kettle and which is bound to entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | have an outlet. as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in ce Advance =. Daily by carrier, per year “ Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- marck) .. +. 7.2 Daily by mail ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per it Circulation é Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it|devising some sort of broad plan that or not neil arsed ar will enable us to do it, the number newspaper and also the local news of Spontaneous origin published herein. a Lali mae es ~~ ee ie All rights of republication of all other| the thought of Huey ‘J e matter herein are also reserved. We Thank Thee, Lord America will observe tomorrow its one national holiday which is semi- religious in nature. In_ their homes and churches the people will) wealth next year, tells interviewers in give thanks for the blessings and benefits they have received during the last year, invoke the beneficence of the Almighty for the days to come. It is the perpetuation of an old custom, instituted first in Newfound- Jand and later by the Pilgrims: in Massachusetts, and still later pro- * claimed as a national observance by George Washington. Because it directs attention toward the Creator of all things, the holiday has a distinctly religious toné, even though affairs of church and state are separate under the American scheme. But the occasion is so universal that it embraces all creeds and all out- looks on life, As a result, it has never been challenged as not in keeping with American ideals. In fact, the contrary is true, since this is essen- tially a Christian nation and the basic tenets of the Prince of Peace are ob- served here as almost nowhere else on this planet, Perhaps one of the reasons for the universal observance of Thanksgiv- ing in this country is its status as a family occasion. In that respect it +=: 4s second only to Christmas, a reli- gious rather than a secular holiday. ~ At this season all who can do so re- , turn to the parental roof and family reunions are the rule. Like Christ- 00 it has been without any obvious phys- not speak for them, nobody will, He may represent demagoguery at sents a blind but powerful resentment People do not hand political power over to such men out of pure per- versity or wrong-headedness. They do it out of desperation. Such men come to the top on a | wave of public unrest; and this un- irest appears only when large numbers of people grow convinced that it is jhopeless for them to expect to get |anywhere by proceeding along more orthodox lines. The great irritating factor in all this depression has been the fact that ical cause. We have the plant to provide all our people with an abun- dance of everything they need, if we can only find the way to set it going. If we don’t succeed pretty soon in White House is apt to swell to an its most dangerous, but he also repre- | ~ alarming total. A Billion Dollar Trade Manuel L. Quezon, slated to be president of the Philippine common- Baltimore that he will do his utmost |to help American business men re- tain their present $1,000,000,000 mar- ket in the islands after independence goes into effect. But he points out, also, that wheth- er this market is kept depends chiefly on the American congress. The Phil- ippine government, he says, will pro- tect the United States with quotas or tariffs if assured of preferential entry into the American market for Philip- pine goods. This trade with the islands 1s large enough to be well worth keeping. It can be kept, as Mr. Quezon says, if we approach the problem intelligently. It should not be too hard to find a way of doing it without, at the same time, working any injustice on Amer- ican producers, A Hemisphere Apart The great gulf that separates the occidental and oriental viewpoints could hardly be illustrated more PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease @ stamped, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. THE FAMILY PHYSICIAN IS A BEAUTY DOCTOR If your victuals be doctored they are unwholesome. If your drink be doctored you would better go dry. ‘When you be; ty the melancholy days are here and no mistake. Beauty specialists or beauty doctors, self-qualified may be more romantic and mysterious and have more im- ity specialists pressive stage properties around them, | doctors outside of the law regulating but if you need advice on the cultiva- tion of beauty or treatment for faults compare ‘with ‘the’ real physician tl = surgeon as a cracker from a pretty vo ind compares with @ square me Beauty experts market a good deal of extravagant romance about plump- ing you out or thinning you down here and there or smoothing out your wrinkles or moulding your snub nose into a Grecian one or causing what- ever blemish you have to “vanish.” They accomplish these miracles by mysterious remedies of sharply than by the recent attempt of a Tokyo traffic policeman to com- mit suicide, This officer was detailed to route the Emperor Hirohito’s entourage through a certain stretch of country. Somehow he made a mistake. Traf- fic got tangled, and the emperor's car was delayed 30 minutes. So the po- ever of the handsome Rex—jaunty in blue tie and gray suit this time — Other board members and. staff members, almost jittery, seemed to be f Barbs i ae Mary Pickford: says she’s writing a story about money. Can’t Wash- ington and Wall Street hold up their financial plans until the book comes out? eee Japan is going to raise the big- gest national defense fund in its history, since the Bogey Man has been seen to take in Manchukuo as well. * French, Egyptian or Circassian origin that work in defiance of the laws of physiology and common sense, Fill fancy jar with a short two ounces of some poor substitute for standard cold cream (Ointment of Rose Water, U. 8. P.) and wrap it in some amazing literature and offer it The cultivation of beauty or the closest approximation thereto that gin doctoring your beau- | face, your complexion, your skin, your Brady, M. D. waa oo pairment of vision. If you have lung, nerve, stomach or hair deserve as much consideration the practice of medicine is that at- tribute of femininity which is so de- experts|Plorable yet sometimes so fortunate | kinds of cheese, fresh for the ‘race, credulity. me One young woman begged tell‘her how she could have her thick Seale ae I referred eg & repul iptural surgeon. doctor ‘declined to do the operation because he.did not believe the circum. complained about her roouth ‘woman —I forget whether her mouth was too large or too small. But I referred een Tata GR sure aEaIH i tlie 2 nn RRC! BF - mas, it is a time for good cheer and/liceman felt that he could redeem his Seiaen peace porary rtd for sharing the blessings which have| honor only by killing himself, Senate. been received during the year, Suppose President Roosevelt trav-| Attacks against Joe are most com- This year, more than most, we have | els by auto from Washington to Phil- + much to be thankful for. As a na+|adelphia and runs into a traffic jam tion we seem to be slowly emerging|en route; will the traffic cop who from the agricultural, industrial and|should have prevented the jam put commercial paralysis which has/a bullet through his heart out of Gripped us for so long. We are not|sheer chagrin? =. yet out of the woods, but things are} The mere fact that the question is . Gistinctly better. ” : utterly ridiculous shows how greatly ~ We should be grateful, too, for the| the Japanese attitude toward duty, sits 3 zi 2 ish af ty Hi f he power companies. Recently, Joe had gone into New Mexico to try «- Fesurgence of American spirit which © helps us to face the future with hope * and confidence and for the history of > these last few years which proves that we retain within ourselves the the government, and life in general differs from our own. Business Man’s Legacy Considering of the Arkansas statesman, these repeated prods at The late William Lawrence Clem-|Joe and the more important fact that ability to meet and solve our own|lents, Michigan manufacturer who|the administration for 20 months has *| problems, In spite of attacks from without nd boring from within, we have maintained inviolate the basic prin- ciples upon which our government ‘was founded. Although other na- tions have gone in for dictatorships , and oppression rules in many lands, = America still is the land of the free {and the home of the brave and op- ~ portunity again beckons to all. ‘We have proved our ability to with- * stand the trials of adversity as well fas those of prosperity. We enter this ‘Thanksgiving season with a spirit of humility in our hearts and a new de- ; termination to work for social justice _ and a better order of things. It is } ; Something to have the opportunity res eperorceerevrrrrrr rc ro loony _ to do a0. A Violent Explosion Sometimes the different items in the day's news tie up together more you'd think at first |Chairs when the pruning hook de- _ Ficher life for the masses and an in- @ispensable bulwark against violent Pertenece’ Hi for @-lerge gum- 9 wealth for the benefit of his state. of tracking down and buying original can Revolution. In 1923 he gave his death he added to it liberally. learn about the Revolution go to Ann lection that it is still yielding to research new discoveries about col- onial life. For generations to come, historians business man. 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. Any Commodity Acceptable (New York Herald Tribune) Are bond salesmen sissies? Do languish in idleness and overstuffed taches them from their vocation in such a time as this year has been in ‘Wall Street, when, according to the recent survey made by the Herald Tribune, about 18,000 aides in the Street have been let out (since No- vember, 1933)? Every one knows of former brokerage house lads who have stepped down but not out—cheerfully selling notions in department store basements, turning the crank in fill- ing stations, valeting the cows and the chickens, deckhanding or stew- arding on the seven seas, making change on the night shift in subway booths, and what else have you? The prize should go, it may be, to one who has been doing a Trader Horn in African gray parrots. How this James Abbott came to go into such a business has not yet been re- vealed, but no one can deny that he| has shown initiative. Dry nursing through psittacosis quarantine forty- seven ¢: les of Psittacus erithacus, the formér bond salesman has just been freed from exile on Hoffman Island, where he prepared grand bie for an invasion of the parrot mari Well, what next? rom Peruvian bonds to parrots is a big step, but the famous security salesman’s initiative must be prewar Rasning tke pilot Ugh, during sald to be Project, pnd Joe’s own business, of course. will be indebted ut that isn’t the way to get on the lel to this Michigan supreme pony se tration! The ance, Very Babylonian Captivity of Wall Street, operating on whatever offers along basement bar- gain counters’ or the west coast of Africa. died the other day, was a fine exam-|had an almost daily woruouy kicking ple of the business man who uses his ee Joe the courage of his convict Mr. Clements had made a hobby |remarkably tough hide. ioe recent days, Joe has 5 se party with his friend, President documents connected with the Ameri. Harvey Couch of the Arkansas Power ant Co. Owen D. ¥ . collection to the University of Mich-|Charles G. Dawes, several other util igan, and from that time until his/|ties officials—including the Washing- ton lobbyist for the Daugherty in- As a result, scholars who wish to| sort op the Anos panty, Bresl- ciation and hero of the Union Indem- Arbor instead of to London or Bos-|nity-Hibernia Bank scandal in New ton or New York. So rich is the col- | Orleans, party was at Couchwood, the Couch place at Hot Springs, and was discussing a new power you now has tions or & been on a Not in this adminis- \ PRESS PARLEY FLASHBACKS REX TUGWELL — Back Europe, no longer the supercilious schoolmaster who seemed to enjoy emphasizing @ correspondent’s ignor- gracious and suave in fact, even following the celebrated Roose- velt’ press conference technique of addr correspondents by their they | first names, Stood swapping from stories a the bora lage the meet- . cee pS ‘up, special in- terest anti-New Dealers won't him so vulnerable.) All the clerical girls in the Agri- culture front office, worshipful as ——— ee eee FLAPPER FANNY SAYs: find Sol—only either |/sugntiy profane, grinning, big-nosed, quick- minded, and afraid of r. (Copyright, 1934, NEA ice, Inc.) 34, forceful, National Banner HORIZONTAL 1 tures. 18 Pertaining to 37 You and me, tallow. 38 Unbleached 23 Myself. color. 24 To doze. 39 Blemishes. 26 Flour factory. 40 Form of “a.” 26 Since. 41 Theater 27 Beam. platforms. 28 Masculine. 43.Cry of a wild 29 Insinuation. goose. 30 Fifth month. 44 Et. 31 Ferocious. 45 Singing voice. 32 Monetary unit. 46 Withered. 33 Preserve. 47 Small. rodents. 34 Your mother’s 48 English coin. sister. 49 The capital of 35 Apparatus for this country. ae ia rt tT NETS rt TT NS Answer to Previous Puzzle LO JANE] RIE IDIDIE IN ig i u N 18 Threshold. * ae SREB ol i i is Ee We a ao BN 21 State of being 32 Public garden 35 Walking sticks. 39 One of a Philip 11 Chief industry pine tribe. of this country 42 Data. 13 Small tablet. 43 Fowl. {7 Right vo speak $6 Southeast 17 Right to speal 1 47 Musical note. 4 i i Fa 35252) in ei # a 2 BF : Et) the ap U § ay 4 il a i A } i ai iP i i it a | ge ny are 4 TEeey | i tt i & > : Ki 8 i Ht ais Ei | is ge e? : i FH Hi i it ree Fn be Ppt i fi i zur His Fe Eve fe 3 FLEE Es ! ti if ; 4 H EGE seit. crit} 2 Ba ee ft | ee B 3 BEF ik fee 4 tid Hla ay Faye BS i i re E fr H H z i te BF i i ait: reree egal uy HL it i : i i i Fy ij uit r rE Es ig E F i a “ Hl ir 58, aft 5-4 F. - i ‘ H 4 Hy Fi f i i xf i [ : ij : H i s vee! 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