The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 5, 1935, Page 6

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The Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Btate, City and County Official Ne _ a Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘ne Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.2 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- marck) . +. 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) 6.00 1.00 Weekly by in state, per y Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ............. Weekly by mail in Canada, per 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 A‘l rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Winter Events Vary With the; Weather New England weather prophets are muttering in their beards these days. All bets on the weather are off in ‘Vermont because a Burlington hunter shot the ground-hog just before Sround-hog day, while in Maine a flock of wild geese was seen heading due north during one of the coldest Spells of the winter, leading people to Suspect that something is wrong either with the winter or the geese. But these incidents are only sam-| ples of the general midwinter topsy- turviness. | The Japanese government an-| nounces that it will seek to restore | friendship between Japan and China, | and on the same day starts 4,000 men | heading for the borders of Chahar Province with all the implements of | war. Lupe Velez and Johnny Weissmul- Jer have undergone their 11th recon- cillation and the state of Nevada has filed sult to collect taxes on ten| steamships operated out of the port | of New York. ! ‘The chief of the fire department at Marblehead, Mass., has resigned Decause he can’t induce his firemen! to go to fires with him any more, and ® merchant in Birmingham, Ala., has won @ $500 verdict against his lodge | brothers because they kicked him in the pants giving him a fraternal ini-| t' ton. A New York gentleman is taken in he police for begging, and he ex- | 1s in court that he was simply wding in the strect with his hat ¢.f so that the breeze would make his pair grow, and could he help it if i-meaning strangers worth of nicke hat while he was doing it? Meanwhile, a St. Louis girl, who couldn't take e off from her job to go to the m: nse bureau. sends a girl friend off with her fiance to get the document, and learns to her horror that the two not only ob- w dropped $3) tained the license, but got married |), with it. ‘The sheriff of Robertson county, | the Tenn., running shy of deputies, has|under arrest. And the moral is too \which will eventually provide a con- |Direction of the Republic of Mexico, igove jcomplete the job. and dimes into his! If and when that time comes Amer- ica may really take to the air in the manner which many enthusiasts long have envisioned. Community Spirit Indications multiply that North Dakota is beginning to experience a |rennaisance of community spirit, the ldriving force which maxes any lo- | cality a better place in which to live. Down in Slope county a group of farmers appeared before the local re- \hief board, not to demand more help ‘but to make it clear that all who re- ceive go ment money should work for it. They wanted the men who were employed to dig gravel to per- | form their job, not sit around a fire. Their criticism of the relief system was that it was too easy on chronic loafers. | This was real community spirit, for Hif loafing becomes habitual in any | community it is headed for quick de- struction. Up in Nelson county snow blocked the roads around Aneta, Petersburg ‘and Sharon. The usual thing would | be to demand help from the state highway department or suggest that |a squad of relief workers be assigned |to the job of opening them, But instead of turning to these “modern” methods of having “George” do it, the citizens of those towns adopted an old-time idea. They sim- ply got their shovels and went to work. Soon the job was done. North Dakota needs more of that spirit. It speaks of the energy and self-reliance upon which this country was built. Working on New Road Something was written here re- cently about the progress of work on the great Pan-American highway, tinuous motor road from Alaska to the Argentine. A great deal more of this road is now in service than most of us realize; however, it seems that it was an error to report that the highway is open for motor traffic from Texas to Mexico City. W. H. Furlong, United States rep- resentative on the National Highway reports that one sector of this road has been closed for repairs. The road through the mountain area around Tamazunchale is being widened and equipped with guard rails, and until this is finished through traffic is bi d. So—if you're planning to drive to Mexico City, better give the Mexican | ment a few more weeks to Not Trusting the Doctor The queer things people ean do |when they set out to follow their own | |ideas about health are sometimes al- | [most beyond belief. A father is facing a men: slaughi arge because of what the | police say he did in an effort to make | |his 13-month-old daughter well and BUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1935. . THE NEW DEAL IN [ASHINGTO! —BY RODNEY DUTCHER— (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Roosevelt Economic Plan Is Main Conversation Topic in Washing- ton .. . Why Convicts Revolt Is Demonstrated in California ... Old Fire Gone From Hiram Johnson. Washington, Feb. 5. — President Roosevelt's big economic program is the talk of Washington and has} shoved even the gold clause trial out of the cony nomists and dinner sophists. Bis business men wag their heads, saying it's too big a slice to cut at one sitting. Left-wingers wag their heads because they think it's too small a 1 The great midde-of-the-road ig labor unionists, think pened to the United States in decades. Indeed, it does mark a_ historic abandonment of the whole theory of the Rugged Individualists. That a |strong. First he plunged the little girl into, 4 tub of ice water, to give her aj healthy body. Then he stood her on | her head—to drain an infected ear. | {Then he laid down and sat on! her—to complete the drainage. | | He accompanied these acts with the ex at the dector didn't | know what it all about, but that the father, would fix things. The little girl died as a result of treatment, and the father is| taken to arresting people by telephone | obvious to need comment. and reports that so far no one has |-——— Tefused to come into the jail and be | Jocked up on request. Another tele- | phone angle gets into the day's news | when a New York phone girl has her ex-sweetie arrested for calling her up 135 times in one evening. And, to cap the climax, Chicago detectives arrest two colored men for trying to operate a “rent a gun and shoot it yourself” agency, seizing the 28 revolvers with which the men were equipped and lodging the men in jail. To all of which you may add what- ever moral seems to you possible in }There would also be about one-half) the circumstances. Just Beginning With airplancs roaring over Bis- marck at the rate of 200 miles an hour there seems reason for the gen- eral tendency to belicve that we are approaching the zenith in airplane development, but this view is clearly not supported by the facts. For example, the federal bureau of aeronautics now is experimenting with a tail-less airplane and a wing- Jess autogiro. It has regretfully turn- ed down proposals to examine other designs because it lacks money to conduct the work. Another section of the department is testing new engine designs, hopes to produce soon a power unit for * small aircraft which will weigh only two pounds per horsepower and which can be sold for $5 per horsepower rather than the usual $10. A machine with new types of ailerons and slots has been ordered for testing purposes. If it is suc- cessful it may entirely eliminate rud- der control and simplify control of climbing and gliding angles. 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 Tribuno’s policies. | | | | We're For It (The Killdeer Herald) | Senatot Bonzer has introduced a \bill in the state legislature which {would amend the constitution to pro- |vide for a one-house legislature. There would be no representatives ‘and senators as we know them now. jas many legislators elected and one- ihalf the expense. It is also possible that there would be an increase in the independence and the intelli- gence of the smaller number. | As the bill is drawn there would be ,bo less than thirty members of the assembly and not more than 50 and the compensation would be $10 in- stead of $5 per day as at present. Each county should then constitute a legislative district. This would give | Dunn county a representative instead of as at present having two other counties help elect one for us and |having one senator for the three counties of Oliver, Mercer and Dunn. The Herald hopes that Senator Bonzer’s initiative is unanimously endorsed by our state legislature even though it will mean that some of them who have more politics than brains will be left at home hence- forth. [Barks J Its a good thing we remember {the crippled children on President Roosevelt's birthday, since there's no telling what we'll do when the pres- ident is retired. * ek * Ohio is collecting a sales tax to prove to the rest of the coun- ‘All of these tt enter into the} 'Y (Bet people $y bovine: fact that there is, as yet, no mass) Ip other words, by turning down production of airplanes anywhere.|the World Court, we refuse to court Prices are still too high and most /the world. nares models become obsolete too rapidly 4 ‘This movement for le house to permit of heavy investments in| state ites Gees ae the necessary machinery. Besides,! » step toward no legislatures at present designs do not lend them- , the tail-less plane. It it proves satisfactory it can be Produced in quantities at s low price. xe * An English physician is curing rheumatism with injections of gold solutions. But that’s out in America We're off the gold standard, you know. jas taxpayers only about $100,000,000 government which three years ago re- fused to accept the burden of feeding even the hungry should now propose e over the beginnings of @ se- y system fox 20.000,000 wage earn- s, and even to sell annuities to the idle classes, is said to amount to little short of a revolution, TOWNSEND PLAN AGAIN So far business men have been sit- ting more or less silent on the anxious seat. They will be mollified by the fact that the program will cost them this year; thal workers must con- tribute half of their security funds; that the states are being left to choose their own systems, subject only to federal guidance and minimum standards, Many enlightened employers al- ready had come to accept industry's responsibility for its hazards. Left- wingers are more vocal. Ready to hurl forensic thunderbolts at the pro- gram are the vociferous members of the Townsend bioc in Congress. Con- gressman John Stevens McGroarty, California's poet laureate and author of the Townsend plan bill to pension sations of parlor €co-!been too poor to build up to their in- ¢ thing that has hap-.led PWA loans to states to industrialize | certain controversial features. He also wants health insurance. WHY CONVICTS REVOLT California not only furnishes Town- send plan headaches for the govern- ment. It just has supplied an object lession in its recent San Quentin prison break. Dr. F. L. Bixby, assistant director of federal prisons, recalls that a friend of his, after a recent trip to Califor- nia’s great fortress-prison, wrote that a break was inevitable, owing to the overcrowded condition of the place. ‘The prison wes built to house 3,500. It houses 6.000 prisoners. The federal government took warning from recent jail breaks, built a new prison, and enlarged several of its old ones. Then it took pressure off the walls by re- Pealing the 18th amendment. The states for the most part have creasing prison population. “The two most frequent causes of jail disorders, ‘said Dr. Bixby, “are overcrowding and idleness among convicts,” A recent NRA report by the so- called Ullman committee recommend- prisons and establish factories for) making state-use furniture and other articles. HIRAM IS LICKED And, speaking of California, it was noted that Senator Hiram Johnson of that land of sunshine, fruit, and flow- rs, had lost much of his old vigor in his latest atttack onthe World Court. In the 15 years he has fought the League of Nations and World Court across the continent and back, he has never unfixed his fighting fist or }modulated his high-pitched voice. This time he seemed to realize he was licked—and he was. Even the galleries that usually fill up to hear a Johnson speech were sparsely oc- cupied. (Copyright, 1935, NRA Service, Inc.) Ernest Blessing is the name of a i ogist. According to my .way. of thinking, @ liberal is a person who does not imagine himself to be God, endowed with omniscience capable of saying the right thing and doing the right thing for humanity, always and every- where.—Prof. Charles A. Beard, his- torian. * ek k I am surprised at Mr. (Al) Smith. He has forsaken the brown derby of democracy for the high hat of puri- tanism—The Rey. Dr. Charles Francis Potter of New York. * * * Give an hour @ day to your brain. Think—and think regularly—every day.—Fay Wray, ee se ‘Women have become independent and more self-assertive, which car- ties with it a domination of char- acter, with freedom of habits so ex- panded that it frequently obliterates their sex.—Carleton Simon, criminol- * The most flagrant waste - that is going on in the country today is in our oil fields—Secretary of Interior Harold L. Ickes. es * Strange as it may seem, sound or Phylactic mean. 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 Dr. Brady, if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. PROPHYLAXIS AND ANAPHY- LAXIS Most laymen know more or less definitely what prophylaxis and pro- Pro means for, be- fore, in behalf of, and phyla means a Letters should be brief and written instructions. horse serum at some previous time, or if the patient is subject to asthma, horse serum should not be adminis- tered without preliminary desensiti- zation of the patient. Bovine serum should be used in such circumstances. 3 |. Prophylaxis is prevention of disease; a prophylactic being an agent which prevents disease. I am our medical course prophylaxis may apply to pre- vention of other things as well as disease. Then sensitiveness or effects of any foreign protein sub- stance introduced into the body by other route than normal digestion. And when this peculiar reaction oc- curs physicians assume that the spe- cific foreign protein has been intro- duced into the ‘one route or another. The most familiar anaphylactic reaction is the distress which occurs in certain individuals the first time they receive a dose of horse serum, or in some instances the second time such serum is administered. The re- action may manifest itself as intense itching with erythema (reddening of the skin) or hives, or as an asthmatic attack, or as a violent gastro-intest- inal disturbance or colic, diarrhea. As 8 precaution against such dis- tress, when it is ister a serum, the physician may, if there is time, first test the patient by injecting only in that time it is ister the full dose, though annoying hives or similar discomfort may occur after a dose of serum in ny case. If a patient has received a few da’ Pete Ryan tow’s guests in and chan = Pete knelt er off,” he gan tu; took out, back on his. to Harrow’s “Anybody Kay shook Pete said. stable money has never existed ex- cept recently in Sweden. England is close on the heels of Sweden, and America, under Mr. Roosevelt's guid- ance, is also on the road. —Prof. Irving Fisher of Yale. . * * * The Manchukuoan regime's estab- lishment has marked the first step in the consolidation of peace in the Far East and in Japan's fundamental |Policy of guaranteeing peace and or- de er, —General Jiro Minami, to Manchukuo, clergyman living aj Peters Landing, Tenn. HORIZON’ all oldsters past 60 at $200 a month for life, provided they spend every- thing they get each month, said he would wait until the president's Wag- ner bill got to the House floor and then offer the Townsend plan as an amendment to the old age security section. JUST ‘PAUPER RELIEF’ In this way he. will get the plan, now interred in the Ways and Means committee, to the floor for a free-for- all argument, McGrorarty und his fellow Califor- nian, Dr, Townsend, say it’s “pauper relief” to offer only $30 a.month to the aged poor. Likely to make trouble also ts little Dr. Abraham Epstein. moving spirit of the Association for Social Secur- ity. Dr. Epstein thinks old age pen- sions, for which he's battled for seven years, should be voted on separately instead of blanketed into a bill with National- Banner Answer to Previous Puzzle ambassador . (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) 13 Narrow fillet. 1 The national pep ee nage banner of —. 20 Vulgar fellow. 27 Merriment. 6 Ready. AISOMAINT MIA 28 ¥ heep. ° oval ons RM SOUMLL OIE fers.” country.” AS) x0 1$ Dog chain. 32 Constellation. 15 Age. 35 Work of skill. 16 Jockey. Clive 36 Capuchin ti Sbeerved. = FTIOOITILIESMNC RIE OU ITIS] _ monkey. Di Seaky ten, RANITIV TE MMAIGIONNOIONIEIE! 37.Beins. 31 Snaky fish. PSE eT BBCI IOMPMMESIEIENN] 38 Hurrah. 22 . ete = A= t) cul 23 Note in scale.) INSICCIEITIARIIEIST 1 4 ee 24 Lava. 41 Measure of 25 Beer. 3 Conwheed. areu: 26 Gilds. 51 ite fabric. 3. To gape. 44 Plural of this 29 Book ot maps. 51 Pitchers. 4Postscript. 46 Unsuited. 33 Meadow. 56 Land measures. § resayx, 47 Homeless 34 Loom bar, 57 Courtyard of ¢ Bronze. child. 39 Falsifier. - Pray 7 Abdul Fattah 48 Unbleactied 40 Rican pillar ad of Yehia Pasha is color, mage. . —— ofthis 49 ton, 42 Genus of frogs, 5° Confidence, country. Sore sel - 43 One receiving 67 Js this Sight brown, 52 International a legacy. a pote NS. 9 To crimp. strifes, 45In 1922 the saz, 20Sloth. 53 Toilet box. — protec- VERTICAL 11 Thought. 54 To scratch, torate ended, 1 Otherwise, 12 Roll of film. 55 Drunkards. Perr ane dRERR PTs he hand, held it tightly in bo “Pete che sighed. Pete .. .' He kissed her tenderly on the forehead, then on her closed eyelids, and was surprised to see that she lifted her term in a still more special sense, to signify a surface cleaning of the teeth. Anaphylaxis is not so familiar. It means the opposite, increased suscep- tibility. Anaphylaxis is the opposite of immunity. As physicians use this term it applies to the peculiar hyper- CHAPTER XLVIII ter the shooting. He found the two|! women bending over Harrow. The un lay on the floor. “Kay! What's happened?” “He's dead!” sete wail ing at Carlotta’s arm. Pete \is watch, rubbed the shiny hand he felt for the man’s pulse. In a few seconds he looked at the back of the watch, then at Harrow’s|!: face, then at Kay. Within a remarkably short while posal ee be- ing rus! i e nied by the doctor; Carlotta Vestra was in bed, ha giving interpretation. Of the dentors use the susceptibility to the body previously, by with vomitting, pain necessary to admin- a minute fraction of quite safe to admin- citis. was the first of Har- to reach the study af- ‘down quickly. “Drag| what pe Eero and held it close lips. With his other Phone the doctor?” he ire her head. “Do it, then,” 1s, Was arlotta Vestra the very hard water. gest anything to put in the water or anything to take to prevent this? (6. the dose and waiting for an hour. If/M.) no unpleasant reaction occurs with- There is no instance on record fication for hestitating to give a per- son ill of diphtheria the full antitoxin immediately, and if I were the patient I should want all of the antitoxin in the first dose—I'd rather receive 50,000 or more units at once than to fiddle along with 10,000 or dose of toxin in the system, the superfluous antitoxin is absolutely harmless. If my condition were not too Td want the doctor to drop first, then play me a few of red dog or a game of checkers an hour, and then if I were still feel ing comfortable, I'd want him shoot the remaining 79,975 unit home and call it a day. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ay icitis, I have lived in this small town’ if inject a aa Priends are sweet when they give their candied opinions, & practice of eating some plain wheat every day, either raw, or run through the coffee mill and cooked as por- ridge, cooked # short time or # long time, as you prefer. Baby's Head Out of Shape 1, ths, well, bright, Son, aged & months, aia te head will be where foot now is, or else move it to the opposite side of the room in relation to the door or window. Sweaty Hands In my work handling fine fabrics, sweating of the hands is a serious handicap. My hands sweat too much Answer—So far as we know, the hardness of water never causes any|up an ounce of simple ointment con- injury to health, as Jong as the taste/ taining of the water is satisfactory. I know|collapsible tube. of no means of preventing sppendi-| portion to palms every day or two. It would be beneficial to make meyers fel tatounead| th jext morning S; le chaige ol everfaing. seemed pl with Kay's work, “Not, of 8 gets out,” he The papers were fall of Spike’s said. y and Pete agreed, the assembled servants nodded sol-|PF° emnly, and Carlotta vy- gyed, haggard and aulak, eonieely ferent person from the mad woman of the night before—nodded drilled him ri rough As it is, it di n't so much as lek a Bei ja your for the hot seat.” Carlotta winced and closed her eyes. Sti » Kay found her- self feeling sorry ‘woman arlotta per-jin the midst of all this excitement. to | started egy once more, ing | they were lost in the thunder of ap- ly |Plause. What from then goon Kay scarcely » There were for-|curtain calls. She was out front ive me at least. That's all I ask. ing. Boris Wi in an old, must have been insane last night. ture ue Fit SqRbRt ie i 4 r 4 a i if Fy 1 3 PS 2 a bo} 3 i A is Fo = eit Rs H zt ef th weren't for that you’ ) now 3 i HH i FEE i } 3 ei ol ota cL Ue fis i "i oe A 8H) Answer—Have the pharmacist put 2 per cent of formalin, in Apply a pea-size ‘Copyright, 1935, John P. Dille Co.) bad Hig aun <f i EL te 78 i Bt Hi e Fa folzii ee ef Hinde her at bil ‘3 Hie fel iH a i i a e Hy F i aE | | t TE i 5 Uk i t e f ul : f i i : : i if F i i xB J : tft, ic tie il sit Eyer i rit I FG [ i i f nad been fu monthe, tn Sockvonvile they took the train to Daytona Beach. So far they had told no none of or sot Reeenat sesso ‘At last the conductor called cut, Kay squeezed ete's hard-mus- eled arm. “Won't it be grand!” she Thay. soed_ dows the Upon, familiar of Hittle Sanit ie relied ation when rushed oR ‘to them. $ Ay fate ne end it : ithe calengs were on thelr iter, ate forth a tegen said proudly, 3 : a ‘ HURRICAN! ANTS LEAD STOP "Beer Wines E2OM SPIKE, CARLOTTA AND —EARL HARROW, “He must be s nice man after mnt Owen remarked naively,

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