Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
-g¢-tme Company, Bismarck, N. D., and + tellectuslly, to see if tt would actually _work; and by giving ourselves emo- | show themselves great.—Emerson. _ their hearts rather than with their ¥ $ 3 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER d_ 1873) Official News- Published by The Bismarck ‘Trib- entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher bscription Rates Payable in tionally to this plan, we make the task of evolving a practical security program just that much more diffi- cult. The greatest difficulty modern {democracy faces is this universal hu- man propensity for letting emotion {take the place of honest thought. | Benefits of Chance | People who talk of and yearn for security—and that includes nearly __ everyone these days—are quite likely {to forget that efforts to insure it by Advance public action may have the effect Daily by Gea Per Yeae aioe 20140 | both of defeating that end and of 4 3 pie, mail, per y id 7.20 | hampering progress, The thought is suggested in a cur- 00 rent review of economic conditions by ‘Dun and Bradstreets which says that Daily by mail, per year ‘in state outside of Bismarck) .. ...... Daily by mail outside of North Gee by. Wl euie, BESS 100 | business advancement has taken the Weekly by mail outside of North | edge off many “fantastic schemes for Dakota, per year . 150/ insuring security which would keep Weekly by mail in |well beyond the grasp of attainment Peay 2.00 even in prolonged periods of sustained Member of Audit Bureau of | prosperity. The elements of chance Circulation ee * eee jand uncertainty always have engen- Member of The Associated Pi |dered one of the strongest forces for ‘The Associated Press is exclusively | caution, restraint and lasting con- entitled to the use for republication | structive effort.” of all news dispatches credited to it) or not otherwise credited in this| newspaper and also the local news of ;Couclusion but as a fact of business Spontaneous origin published herein. and there is no doubting its truth. All rights of republication of all other What a great many persons mean, matter herein are also reserved. | when they talk about security, is free- yan. wy, [dom from the consequences of their We Need the Facts jown laziness or improvidence. Any Even though many will think the} system which might accomplish this ground already has been pretty well! end would do so only at the expense covered, there is good reason for the of their more energetic or more action of the United States senate in | thoughtful neighbors. approving @ probe of farm conditions} yt has been a cardinal principle of and voting $150,000 to finance the/ american life that anyone who takes work. la risk in order to make a gain must ‘The main idea 1s to investigate the | be prepared to stand the loss if any income of farmers and of food pro- should be incurred. ‘The man who vessors and examine into the work-|is willing to accept the benefits of ings of the marketing system, mat-| chance must also be willing to accept ters about which there has been much the penalties. Any other system discussion in recent years. {would not only be harmful to the The natural tendency is to think’ state, it would be bad for the indi- that we need no more information | vidual. than we have now; that we know all _—_— we need to know about this impor- Black Magic in America tant subject. But that idea prob-| If you are ever inclined to feel that ably is erroneous. We do not knowj public education has been pushed all we think we know and much of |about as far as it need be pushed in the information we have is based on|modern America, you might find it belief rather than upon sound exam-jhelpful to reflect on these strange ination of the facts. An intelligent |“hex” cases that continue to pop up inquiry will do much to reveal truths|in Pennsylvania. which may be of great value in de-| The latest is a case in which a termining a proper course for agri-|5-year-old boy was “cured of a spell” culture. The sum appropriated is|by a witch doctor. The fact that the little enough for this purpose. jchild, after being “cured,” got a All of us know only too well the| butcher knife and carved his eight- effects of the condition in which ag-| month-old brother almost to death riculture has found itself but our/|does not shake the parents’ faith in knowledge as to the causes is largely|the efficacy of the hexer's mumbo- &@ matter of opinion. The tendency | jumbo. is always to overlook our own faults} Now Pennsylvania is far from be- and blame the other fellow. An im- |ing a backward state. The general Partial examination would hold all!level of intelligence and education | bill. of us up to the light, give us oppor- tunity to see ourselves as others see us. there is probably above the national average. Yet even In view of the fact that agriculture | lingers this relic of medieval belief dented delegation of power to the still is our most important industry, }in black magic! we ean not know too much about the factors which affect its prosperity. By ample of the need for broader and following our grain, livestock and | more thorough educational policies? | other produce from the farm to the} Ae sips ates: | consumer's: table in an intelligent | Editorial Comment Manner we may learn much which|; _ Will be of benefit to all parties con- || HONG Printed below show cerned. They are published w: to whether they 2 Shiga <o—ereeee with Th Thinking With the Heart | ‘The chief trouble which the mod- | em educator faces, suggests Eleanor (New York Herald Tribune) Rowland Wembridge, Cleveland's} The spectacle of all but two of the famous juvenile court expert, is the Republican members of the Senate vith | Cnrolling under the banner of Huey fact that most people think with|T7O0 ‘ard the A. F. of ©, lobby in order to triumph over the President minds, | on an issue in which he happened to Mrs. Wembridge, who used to be a| 2 mene i not an edifying pie aie 4 a though the more conservative Repub- schoolma’am herself, told assembled | [:1008! i os educators at Atlantic City that teach- yailing wage amendment to the relict ers make their appeal to the “cold! bill with the idea of forcing the Ad- intellect” and consequently are exert-{ Aes ctiiag ie abandon ne eles jaltogether, they were still playing ing less and Jess influence on the| tonkey wrech politics by a dangerous affairs of the country. jand uninspiring kind. It is not For most of us find it a great deal | through the intricate arts of “putting easier to fecl than to think. On an| ibs Seana in a hole” that the oe 4 publican party is going to return to pee oTmoblen:. which: does not Dower in the nation; and it is unlike- touch us closely, we can use Ur! jy to rogain the enthusiasm of the brains as iinpartially as the next|eiectorate by a policy of subtle ob- man; but when something comes up| struction carried on beneath the sign which cuts right across our emotions, jot the monkey wrench and managed *| by the Senator from Louisiana, the natural tendency is to let the| “The President ought not to have a emotions handle it from start to fin- | five-billion-dollar blank check at all— ish. jcertainly not until he can give some ‘i clearer idea than he has yet done of ppm ie Pimiep trait which makes | how he expects to use it. But to sive the path of ® political democracy s0/ him @ five-billion-dollar check with very difficult in these trying times. | this prevailing wage amendment ‘The demagogs and the dictators| tacked on to it 1s to provide a perfect j engine for the creation of chaos. It poey Ma denorant of many things, bat |4s practically to assure that any work they are fully aware of the ease with | relief undertaken must be competi- which people can be persuaded to tive, in one way or another, with pri- use their hearts rather than their | vate industry, relatively ineffective headi |as a method of relief, impossible of abandonment and a further drag up- A Hitler, for instance, can seize | on the “normal” processes of recovery the enormous amount of emotional) at the same time that it is insuffi- resentment against postwar condi-| ning to Preece recovery ee mel ‘i |istic or any other sort. And even tons in Germany and ride to power | ti; money wrench turns out tobe big on it. | enough to wreck the whole relief pro- What if his program, intellectually | gram it still substitutes nothing in its considered, is empty and contradic- Piers aoe ia Tp Dracaena against juces a of substitutes which the tery? He tod pean to feet abet Longs and Thomases, the Townsend it rather than to think about it. planners and currency cranks, will be Emotionally, they cannot help be- | quick to offer. ing for it. Consequently it goes over| The Republican with a bang. It is the same way here at home. Tribune's policies, The Wrong Kind of Victory vote,” however cheers from those who believe that based upon firm principle. The prin- ciple raised by the Ptesident’s bill still seems clear to us. you; treet them greatly and they will if This is not stated as a philosophic political opposition can and should be It requires that the money necessary to sustain the present relief system should be voted Promptly, but that additional billions for starting @ wholly new relief sys- | tem should be appropriated only it,! and when, the executive branch car "| present some coherent account of Rot | what this new system is and to what | in Pennsylvania there Could there be a more striking ex- |lawyers make these points: he || hout regard || or disagree || | | astute as a maneuver, will evoke no! NAL HEALTH SERVICE William Brady, M.D. Signed lettat&-pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady, if a stamped, self-addressed -ettvelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in can be made to queries not conforming to Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. they did at ie a Cooper. de with | We shall never achieve economic baer’ book or pamphlet dealing with ate OwETt ‘The author shows how by real rest | Wagner, New York. jone can reduce the number of move- * ments of the affected lung by 5,000 breaths a day. She shows how heal- 4 Most men know more at 30 than * If we are satisfied with relief alone, rn While Communism might become dangerous in the navy, it certainly is | maternity act was told by the supreme ealled “Want to Get into my hands june time. allowed car rides lite eae me began-1 color in my sput- um Saar: had my privil- aken away. A. very discouraged, but a fine book by Fannie gave me strength to keep on trying. guch a cheerful tone to cheerful and happy, me, is half the battle. f@an be done, as I myself and this little book to do this. it is a fine book for with tuberculosis, also for ves. the book to all who have, have or are likely to is. “Wart to Get Well?” by Fannie Rogers, has been recommend- ed. to | its by many of the most distinguished tuberculosis specialists country. book, I think, deserves a place of Dr. Lawrason Brown's for Recovery.” which has been and guide for many a pa- tubercle, these many years. larly proud of “Want to 5; |?” because I urged and help- author to write it. I am as {of it is I am of Dr. Don Duf- M famous-little “Book for Us es” and Dr. T. F. McNami book for physicians on a IT Mstigated the writing of these fine _oOoOoOoOO®! | pre-eminence of the whiskers of Jus- |tant act of congress was challenged. |baoks, too. Some day I hope to add THE tice Charles Evans. Hughes as the |Government attorneys wanted a quick}tWo others to my list, viz, Dr. Lewis Most famous in the world. decision on the important points|J. @ilver's “Diathermy Extirpation of NEW DEAL Hughes told a friend the other day jraised, to guide them as to how far * and Dr. Paul Levi's “Am- IN that as a boy he had been so pale |they might go without supreme court/@ulant Treatment of Hernia.” and weak that his mama often told |interference. | Fannie Benson Rogers published him: If the case went against them im}ter book in an attractive limp leath- “Well, Charlie, you will never have |the lower court, they could get -@j@P-like binding. I don't know just, to ain with the trouble of a/jdecision from on miyisey 7 it is, ae no bivepbeil It is oat beard.” months sooner in if they won §¢jinsides you buy, je cover. —BY RODNEY DUTCHE — land then had to fight an appel rely sedi teed rod Legging , % SPARRING OVER RUSSIA So they spoke to the judge, or friend of @ patient can (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Tee mtate ¢ acold |sympathies were New Dealish & dollar as much help ment and benefit in “Want, might have been expected to shower on a certain influential group ; Might pect Ge Well?” of American business men when it jfor the government. irtually ‘dismant our| The judge saw the point. The coababiy: cornea acne 8. district attorney lost the case: ‘Thm Commerce Department fellows |Department of Justice took an sympathetic Lawyers Refuse to Worry Over Con- stitutionality of Huge Spending ... Hughes Has Prize Whiskers After Slow Start . . . Business Men Want Trade Attache in Russia ... New Dealers Do Next ‘Fix.’ can be had in any peal direct to the highest court. time this spring you'll read the sion and it will be enormously impor> tant. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Ine), Washington, Feb. 28—Smart law-| yers in the government laugh when you question them about constitutionality peceiregpetem} with the wooded of the five billion dollar work-relief} mercial represent ibe there to collect authentic information They're worried enough, heaven 28 to the Russian market and Amer- knows, about other New Deal legis- lation. But this huge spending pro- gram, carrying with it an unprece- was stationed at Petrograd before the Russian revolution. But the State Department frowned 1, No act is “unconstitutional” un- bn ertgieioire pyaar mente. til passed on by the supreme court, ki Ww and even then the chief factor in the | teen’ nee tia as eas and, now ‘gotiations ai suspended Gecision may be the state of a single |the embassy staff drastically reduced, justice's digestion. it appears certain we will be too 2. The money probably will be all/ proud to send an official to help stim- spent and the exercise of the delegat- | ulate business. ed powers a thing of the past before anyone can get a test case up to the court. 3. The spending power of congress is unassailable in the courts. No taxpayer ever had any luck in chal- lenging it. A Mrs. Frothingham who challenged grant-in-aid appropria- tions under the Sheppard-Towner president, is something else. The it, 2 “Trial ~g@nd rapped sharply on the panel. trade and a belief the two nations will get together sooner or later. In- siders suggest that the first indica- tion of melting ice will be an assign- ment of that commercial attache. A SMOOTH BIT OF ‘FIXING’ New Deal lawyers would hate to bore that they ever “fixed” a fed- Judge. So would the judge! But it happened recently in a case! where constitutionality of an impor- the ‘door loo! court she had no standing as a tax- payer before the court. In Massachusetts vs. Mellon, when. a state tried to get the same act knocked out, the court said the state didn't have to take the federal aid money if it didn't want to—and up- —- held the congressional power, HUGHES FOOLED HIS MA Current excitement over supreme court decisions has established the HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle chronologically ‘ 14 Thick slice. Y 2 tot Liye eo = ARTGORAIE Ny St prano io the “TEI MMOL ILE] Compe nse de ‘ories in 4 picture. LU IALY} mE DILIEN America. ST A M p Ss & | s2Portuguese JAL wy f 21 Boggy land. i lady. nie 7] 23 Afternoon meal LOCO OOM EOP 28 Plerces with re} ENDERSO vie pany (bine 27 Genuine. 5 29 Common verb. 15 Open-cotton 4 31 Alms box. fabric. 32 Nothing. 17 Threebanded 33 Three. 35 Egyptian rives armadillo. 18 To render Hoags ne 38 Paid publicity: , knotty 36 To decay VERTICAL 49 Pertaining to 19 Hanilet. 37 Hair orna 1To canter. epic postry. 20%. ment 2 Being of one 41 she made her. : ‘ 39 Silkworm. mind debut in —. 21 Lawyer's 40 Small shield. 3 Vehicle. , charge. 41 To clash. 4 instigated, 42 Arm joints. 22 Grain. 43 Prophet. 5 Temperature 44 To confine to 24 Eggs of fishes. 45 Turkish title _ division. one locality. 26 Frosted. 46 Freighted 6God of war. 48 Beer. 28 Part of a TPertaining 49 Battering pole HUNDRED years ago, rosary. 51 Pope's scarf. to air. machine. Father Jose de Anchieta, a 20 Friend of 55 Winged 9 Ancient. 50 Indian. voung Portuguese @ missionary Pythi: 56 Wire trapper 10 Ordered again.52 Tetear stitches ventured among the savage In- 32 Mesh of lace. §7 Citrus fruit. 11 Girdle re- 53 Constellation. dians of Brazil and within a year 36Center of an $8 She was born _ceptacle. 54 Rumanian made them his most devoted fol amphitheater. .—. 12 Reckoned coins. lowers, Once. when the Tamoyo Indiana attacked the Portuguese immi- sranta, Father Anchieta induced the invaders to come to terms with the Europeans and accept him as a human bond to guaran- tee the faith of his countrymen. For three years they kept him hostage, until the Portuguese had tulfilled their pledge. Today this missionary, now St Anchiet ‘he Apos tle of ."" OF Apostle of | the New World. {1 has just honored him with a commemora tive stamp insue of four valu Perr Nt Femedied and s certain disillusion- | ends it is designed to work. ment is the result today. a ‘Then there are old age pensions |f for another example. We are shown |}, A Thought | ® picture of a system which pays > some $900 8 month to all aged folk.| cane Sway. therefore your Our hearts respond instantly—as| recompense of reward—! : whose hearts would not? 10;35. wae We refuse to analyze the plan in- SEE plop RR i : : a [ (Copyright, 1935, NIA Service, Inc.) |, i i ‘what I though when I re-|My own, he Fire!” he murmured, Li called a voico—Vanya’s He deliberately turned the knob; ave and he stepped in. sur- : i if i His ! not now and there seems no likeli- hood of it so developing—Secretary of Navy Soe A. Swanson. 2 * TI can’t say yet whether this is the end of polar exploration for me.—Rear ing occurs in any climate. In the trying problem of handling relatives and well meaning friends she offers wise practical suggestions from her own experience and wide observation, and reminds you that while your friends or relatives may plan your | Admiral bce OS a ach CO dial di ed ed The Nal am ‘You can get a copy to present to a friend by mailing a dollar plus six cents postage to Fannie Benson Rog- | tional ers, Colorado Springs, Colo. I re- commend it as a fine investment to make, if you have a friend who Wants to Get Well. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Should a Man Be as Old as His Wife? |° Tam 28. The girl I want to marry is 32. We are both in excellent health. A ae — @ girl older than myself. (B. H. A.) Answer—Such difference a in age is immaterial. Perhaps mother is just a little jealous about taking second place in your affections. Perborate ‘We are grateful to you for a sug- gestion that celared up trench mouth in two members of our family. It was the use of sodium perborate. A was cured in about a week, but B complained of the disagreeable taste and did not use it so regularly, so that it was several weeks before her gums and mouth were all well... (Mrs. N. E. FP.) Answer—The taste of sodium per- borate is le to many. A pleasant preparation of it containing nearly pure perborate is called “8y- lac.” For “trench beet (Vincent's angina) use a teas; of sodium} life, probably figuring that he perborate in @ half glassful of water) might collect under the Town- as mouthwash and gargle several) send plan. times a day, and use the powder as) tooth powder. Any ulcers or raw spots on gums should be covered with a paste made by moistening with water some perborate and the paste on the sore spot with the fin- ger, allowing it to remain a minute or more, once a day. (Copyright, 1! John F. Dille Co.) Insect outbreaks kill from 50 to 90) per cent of the forest trees in the affected area. Some of these share-the-wealth advocates might benefit by a lit- tle advice from Al Capone. He tried it and eons oc President Roosevelt has got the * A Texan of 75, pronounced dead for five minutes, came back to the goose. if hi ey HG f | i fl sf 3 ky | iri Ht rf E E z Hf Pret tease reed i i & Biss i i F f i E if ‘ i E F 3 £ : el ig Fs i i i Py : ¢ = Fr i in i i i Fh EF | i i fi : ef td it) i 3 LS Fy s a i Hi i iH fi att capegnt Sue, bevel definite S iani he was going | or rough with it, A burst of sound from below in- 3 il Ht Es! { | “A : E ing a ih te Bt BE HY 7 fi : 3 : ii i ; Er 3 i bE 4 4 U } 2 H q z i L fl Fy : 3 £ B : i eee iE teneeth ber & f