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THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 1985 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck fas second class mail matter. : George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons @ecretary and Treasurer Editor i Subscription Rates Payable in Advance a Daily by carrier, per year .......... o 7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state outside o! Bismarck) . Daily by mail outside of North Dakots ....... Weekly by mail in state, per year . Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to tne 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, Inspiration for Today If ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it will be done ‘unto you—St. John 15:7, see “Blessings ever wait on virtuous deeds, and though a late, a sure reward succeeds.—Congreve. te ee The Shelterbelt Grows ¥or those who think the federal shelterbelt project is dead as a dodo the report of Paul H. Roberts, acting director, is revealing. Pleasing would be a better word for Roberts states that that North Dakota has the largest mileage of » strip plantings of any of the states in which this reforestation project is being developed. As of June 15 there were 35 miles of seed- lings rearing their green heads to the turquoise skies in this state. Not much, we grant, but some indication of what North Dakota can ex- pect as the seedling forests expand. More than 125 miles of plantings have been completed in the six states through which the bhelterbelt will meander. In addition 4,800 acres of special tree plantings have been made on 1,800 farms. And nurseries are being ra- pidly developed from the Canadian line to the Gulf of Mexico. Barring extreme weather conditions or un- foreseen insect infestations, declares Roberts, ft is expected that about 75 million seedlings will be available for planting next year. That will make a sizeable forest. While the great drouth of 1984 played havoc with tree life on the Great Plains, the spring rains have proved that our hardy trees have great recuperative powers. Wherever trees grow naturally along our rivers, beside our lakes, bordering our sloughs, the luxuriant foliage is a beacon bidding our foresters to suc- cessfully complete the shelterbelt. North Dakotans, hoping some day to see the prairie rich in tree life, have little critic- . ism to make of this experiment. There is every reason to believe that man can duplicate what nature has so successfully proven. The Value of Paint Nothing better illustrates the value of paint than the Bank of North Dakota’s announcement that their It just a little over a year ago that the FERA ap- Proved application of the Bank of North Dakota for a repainting and repairing project. The bank was anxious to make its saleable properties attractive. Buildings were | first patched by carpenters. Farm fencing was realigned, new posts added where needed, new wire strung. Then } the painters got busy. Over the length and width of the ‘ state, the Bank of North Dakota’s farm properties were refurbished. In Sheridan county, the bank owns 27 farms. Five of these farms have been sold in recent weeks. Invari- + ably the purchasers commented on the fact that the buildings did not look run down, tributes to what paint, Mails and odd pieces of lumber can do in making a sale. Of course nature has provided an emerald setting This: year, & setting that makes all North Dakota land Biluring. But the same soil freshness does not extend to that farm property that is drab and forbidding for want pf hammer and brush. ‘The enterprising real estate owner who wishes to Hispose of his property can learn something from the (Bank of North Dakota’s success, i Some Adventure Left In a prosaic and materialistic world bowed down With economic, political and social woes, it is refreshing fo find here and there that the spirit of conquest and Bdventure still inspires men. i Take Richard B. Black as an example. Black has ust returned to his native Grand Forks after more than ® year spent with Admiral Richard E. Byrd at the bottom. of the world. In the Antarctic where penguins are the only perma- nent residents and ice encompasses a frigid world, Black found adventure in scientific pioneering, Forgotten in his work of sounding the ocean bottom wes the fact that the sun never showed above the horizon for months on end. Forgotten was the 80 below sero weather, the whining winds, the oppressive stillness, the insecurity of ® camp built on a sheet of ice 800 feet thick. As for the outer world it was far away with its troubles. There ‘was work to do. LE atl i ci left jn this world for those Hy 7 Fs H Ss Je ehind the Scenes in Washington “On Our Way.” indeed. tion. tors behind Roosevelt's bold move at this time. fight.” DRIVE ON “BIGNESS” Political and economic life. While the whole program is of a piece with the in- formal alliance recently cemented by Roosevelt and sen- ate progressives at a secret White House conference de- scribed exclusively in this column—and even exceeds fondest dreams of many progressives, the corporation tax schedule reflects persistent advice by Dr. Felix Frank- futer and Justice Brandeis that big business and finance should be broken into smaller, more efficient and less powerful units by taxation, 6 * UNDERSTANDABLE ISSUE Political implications: Roosevelt has simultaneously accentuated the outline of the battle between himself as the liberal candidate and Big Business-Big Finance, smothered Huey Long and corraled wavering left-wing- ers, appealed to great masses of people who think it’s just swell when the rich are soaked, and marched on to a new battle-field with a new issue which leaves him far stronger politically than he would be in any fight over the Constitution with an inferential defense of the not very popular NRA, His new plunge serves to cover up the confusion which envelops the big work-relief program and, for better or worse, should dispel much of the popular apathy which has grown up as to the president himself. But perhaps more than anything else, you should watch the reaction of the “small business man.” eee BIG AND LITTLE BUSINESS Support of millions of small and middle-sized busi- ness men is important to the New Deal. Usually they take their ideas from the bigger fellows and inevitably the mass effect of their own influence in their limited sphere is enormous, Roosevelt offers lower taxes for smaller corporations, higher taxes for bigger corporations —& penalty and curb on size. The political effect of a cleavage between “big” business and “little” business, such as Roosevelt would like to drive, might have in- calculable effect on our economic system. * ed REAL FIGHT LOOMS “I'm not fraid of the liberals, but I am afraid of the reactionaries,” @ widely known Wall Street man explain- ed at a dinner table here the other night between ap- pearances before the Securities Exchange commission to explain a big tion. “The liberals are just saps and the man on the street is just a sucker. But the reactionaries are so unwilling to compromise that they kill the golden goose.” Possibly there’s something to that. In recent months every large group of big business men has attacked the Roosevelt congressional program more or less savagely. coal bills, (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) With Other | 3a" DITORS | 23,58 An Impartial Picture Needed (Minneapolis Tribune) James L. O'Neill, who was appointed administrator of the little NRA only a few days ago, is already able to report that “a good deal of chiseling” has resulted from the abandonment of the codes, Since one of the duties of this skeletonized recovery agency is to check up on the consequences of that abandonment, it can hardly be said that Mr. O'Neill is neglecting this partic- ity. The alacrity with which he attacked chiseling gives promise of even more comprehensive reports and interviews to Whether Mr. O'Neill Anstructed, 01 J F : ag a2 3 ? 45 gee Be Fy é £ : 5 g a a Eses vend 86 E i | [ i : i E 4 Z 8 i : F i 4 é BE ie s § ‘; i Bg Eb sF i L ! mployment increases in spite of the of the codes, that fact will be legitimate O'Neill's statistical mill. So, too, any improvement over the old code eee Mussolini must to scram. eee Greta Garbo says “Ay tank ay go home, orite novel. They probably read it in relays, ‘Three men, dressed as police officers, robbed Chi- cago company of $3,800. An alarm goon brought s num- ber of others, that “Adam ’n Eve on a raft” cee ‘We can’t understand why they're going to run the the Orient, and not to giant Pan-American Clipper to Washington, June 26.—There is little reason left for anyone to be confused as to what Roosevelt means by After looking at the administration’s tax program, your correspondent bows in acknowledgment to certain old-time intimates of the president who always have kept whispering that F, D. would push persistently to the “left” and in time would become very “radical” But until recently all grapevines twining from the : White “House agreed that the inevitable “soak-the-rich” came taxation program would be postponed until after elec- s Grim attacks on the administration by the Big Business-Wall Street group and the effect of the ad- verse supreme court NRA decision were the chief nee o8e developments clinched the argument for the liberals who were telling the president he must “get out and The graduated tax on corpation profits according to size is the most revolutionary of the proposals. It prob- ably is more revolutionary than any other ever made by & president. Other items of the program were bound to come along. This one is # declaration of war on the huge corporations and financial combinations which have come to exert such powerful influence on American cone ae amare St at SPRING By FRANK R. KENT Copyright, 1935, by The Baltimore Sun HE WHO GETS SOAKED Washington, June 26.—It may be profitable politically for Mr. Roose- velt to project at this time s “soak- the-rich” message, written in the best Moley-Eccles style, and thus capture the Huey Long audience, with an even shriller “share the wealth” sug- : envy Japan. He can’t just tell the ,” and does so. It might pay congressmen to practice the Swedish gestion. congressman. the wind at the mere thus branded. ee The point, however, upon which beating friends of the the incon- ebay 2 a z i epee iif i upon the big corporations and the veary wealthy employers, or by injury to dusiness generally, or by reduced 8 g p SERERE fee i gE Roosevelt, show that LaPollette idea—and Senator extremely. sevelt—is to “Increase. The Seasons in Congress ne z é ft Beg EF | 5 AEE ey EEFEE Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. r. uestions pertaining to health but not dis- ease vor disgacsis, “Write letters briefly and in ink. Address Dr. Brady in care of The Tribune. queries must be accompanied by &@ stamped, self-addressed envelope. CROW'S FEET AND OTHER MARKS OF SENILITY The last year, complains Miss J. J- , I have noticed horrid crows- feet under my eyes over the cheek bone. Can this be caused by improper diet or need of glasses? How can I get rid of them? I have tried many creams but to no avail. Therefore I come to you, a famous doctor feeling skin when @ woman is never mind how old Gosh, girls, this pains me as much as it does you, but stay with us a while and maybe you'll learn something to your boy friend’s satisfaction. - Miss J. J———, naturally enough, gives no hint whether she is six- teen or sixty, but it doesn’t matter at all. chronological age may be, what concerns me is how old she feels. Let me feel of her artery, you know, take her pulse in that knowing way a wise doc has, and while I’m pretending to count it and judge the tension and force and so on I'm really determining the texture and elasticity of her skin the presence or absence of the arcus eyes, and pretty soon I have a very good idea how long appearing spell one thing, senility. ney. accept it or even to take it seriously. By the same line of fer that these crowsfeet and other wrinkles appearing in the skin before one is really old enough to deserve them, are likewise a nutritional de- ficiency. Especially vitamin G deficiency, but vitamins never occur singly in nature and I believe it is always more efficacious to take # good ration of all the vitamins whenever there is reason to one of them, i ground to believe and harshness Bs ‘There is just as good that such premature wrinkling and sallowness and dryness of the skin of a woman of say thirty or forty—at which age a woman should be at-her very top condition in every way—is due to hypochronic anemia in many cases and is remedied by jarger doses of iron than we formerly deemed necessary in any case. health, vitality and appearance may tamins in the more liberal variety and quantity of foods the patient takes under the effects of the iron, or something like that. Anyway, you Dumb Doras who monkey with creams hope of doing anything to incipient wrinkles had better advice and save the difference. \ QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Seasickness I heartily recommend your method of preventing seasickness to all my friends. My wife had always suffered even on a short ride on a lake boat, but shel followed your instructions strictly when we went to Europe and never had any trouble going or returning, altho there was some rough weather which upset # lot of hardened travelers . G.) Answer—Thank you. I am glad to send the instructions to any one who asks for them and incloses a stamped envelope bearing his address, Tough Bimbo Have been giving our ten months old baby baked potato, spinach and carrots. Can you suggest other vegetable that would be good for 5 eo ee ee ee eee Answer—Green peas, sweet potatoes, squash and turnip, pureed or mashed or baked or otherwise .well cooked and run thru coarse sieve. Banana, well ripened, is excellent food for a baby and a daily ration of it will prevent constipation. Send ten cents coin and stamped envelope bearing your address, for copy of Brady Baby Book. e (Copyright 1935, John ¥F. Dille Co.) man getting $1,000 a year. * % # As for Mr. Morgenthau’s inheri- tance schedule, one senator who had! ‘The president’s opposition to imme- studied it made this explanation of} diate payment of the entire face value what it would do to him. “I have,”|of the bonus certificates is based on he said, “a plant which I have spent sound principles and deserves to be up- twenty-five years building up. It is|held—American Liberty League. worth easily $150,000 and there is a ae tk good living in it'for my three boys.| The last I saw of the ship (the But, under the Morgenthau schedule,|Macon) was the nose sticking up iike when I die, on the estimated value of/a cone above the water.—Lieut.-Com. $150,000, in inheritance tax of $50,000] Herbert V. Wiley. AY UIMNINCT I will not be able to leave my boys anything like $50,000 cash. The only way they could get the cash would be to sell the plant. Under such con- ditions they would be lucky if they could get $50,000 cash for it. The a hh 4 & E 8. rh Las) A ra probable result would be that the gov- W908, NEA Service, Ine ernment would have to take the plant BEGIN SERB TODAY ATER ®& procession of such|this, When he went. inside he over for taxes and my boys would meaningless days, punctuated |found thst, eure enough, the room obi cate only by trays and pills and visits with the narrow bed and the oaken kids crbaasee uname cement iiial from ‘a tall, melancholy doetor chest of drawers meant something only about the “very rich,” but neither Goatees heeiesc eh games aca Ca ‘Mr. Morgenthau nor Senator LaFol- lette’s schedules apply only to the Drodded Michael and asked him} getty cooed over him after he Tich—not at all. Mr. Morgen- questions, be was able to sit @D./came out on to the veranda once thau's achedule, in fact, would make The dark cir! (her name was! more. Was he sure he'd be all 1¢ almost impossible for 8 man of the Sally Moon, it seemed) came) right? They didn’ like leaving most moderate means to leave his often now. And there was &8/nim here. He ought to come back family even reasonably secure. It Bnglishman named Downrigg who|t their house with them, only would, in fact, make it ridiculous for made them move Michael trom! people talked so, And, after all, @ man to waste his time trying to the ward tos private room. Mt-|the wedding was to be next week. achieve economic independence either chael couldn't quite anderstand/ Then ehe could take care of bim for himself or for those dependent why it mattered or why Mr./ top aiways—her great big, naughty upon him. The only thing to Downrigg cared, but there it was. | hoy who had been so very ill! do under the Morgenthau schedule is One day Downrigg came and! pichael was glad when she'd $0 Saeed hes Pou shake a6 pels gone away. The colored boy whose as you can, borrow as much more as tame, Michael bad learned, was you are able and give no thought for Tipe, came out and said that his Sioa: ACR REN, BS SRY, TAsS. ale tather had had to go to Harttoré put one in tune with the New Deal vilion. Downrigg talked & 10t/ because somebody in the family was financial theories. about the estate Cwhat estate? Mi-/sick, fed be back next Thursday. chael wanted to ask but didn't! wichee! sald, not caring at all bat bother) and said there was 8 €004/ very politely, that be was sure deal of money tied up, slthougd | everything would be all right. Rot, of course, as much as one| Ting asked rather timidly it . would like. Death duties and £0/ michael wanted to have e look at on, be had eaid portentiously.|the horses, and Michael) followed “You'll be sailing, 1 suppose,| him out into a shabby stableyard, ; Mise had said. “And after you'te| wainnied at him. ‘This was good, Few major leaguers last over five rigg had said. you're| whinnied at was good, ee eee citer ince fifty. married.” Michael thought. It was a home- |—Walter Hagen. After he was married. The/!ike place. Obviously he belonged eee phrase, for an instant, stirred| here, although that cloudy eensa- ‘There is no tension today between some memory in Michael, but it| on, wavering always at the back Catholics and Protestants, but only passed. It had been like 9/0t bis mind, made him feel a bit between them and heathenism—Car- breese passing over a wheat field, | unsure. dinal Faulhaber, archibshop of Mun- bending the stalks only for a mo- Cie aa! ich. aw ment. Attar. na. Seno meset ied | FACE: 30: her ensesanes.betzpem was oj well, men marri every ' with mullioned windows Every woman who does a new thing] S0in. Just Iittle, There, wa ©) Tats schiy-girl was solicitions. Sbe|and the rich, tasteless furnitare, is blazing a trail. If one woman fails) Fits gmiting eyes. She had a|kissed him when she came and|Sally sat, surrounded by e rain- in a conspicuous position. she sets all) thermometer in her hand and she He | bow of frocks: shoes, still in their ° & = 5 z H 8 tf 5 z shook it a little, smiling down at Roosevelt. oe * him. her, though. And couldn't. oxen been ane — sbe had . i—all it. gloated, After many, many years, accidents “Well. we're ane A tot better eave nena Oe oe Nel SiS a sort of wild ghee, over tne still happen on land and sea, but we today, aren't we ie 3 row, he said. They could find| thought of her coming triumph. don’t quit because of that.—Dr. Hugo Michael would have frowned it him’ in London. He left Michaei|4t first she had been attracted Eckener, commander of the Graf) frowning, like the square of light, /1 1. 214 On this side, he eald,|t0 Michael merely because of his matey aut him. Hares alnare the affairs were in the hands of |DAndsome masculinity—partly be- ‘way, We can investigate Jim Farley for| ‘aiked that way, aa if the patlest| Whitbread & Forrest in Wall) cause of his indifference. But her nature took fire always at any sign of opposition and, although she bad been more than once tempted to let the engagement she had heard of his street, He wrote the address didn’t know. . that he had been really il is| Goma. Michael could draw on rk. ae S00 mane. semeble 18 Aa) “That's nice,” *Michael said, The nurse wrote somethiDS|jocing down at his oddly thin, wo on a chart that hung on : oddly helpless hands. Once they the foot of the bed: Michael could) 14 ‘been brown. . . « less money than was spent investigat- oan to hog the whole show.—Huey Long. s* * The United States military service has not one plane in service which is FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: cloudy draught which she held to his lips. + “Ob, good!” The words came .drowsily, almost involuntarily and he could feels very vibration of triumph go through the nurse’s body as she kept cool professional Singers on bis wrist. “Well now, isn’t that splendid! He likes bis medicine, does net Well, if be’s very good be shall see somebody after a bit, and that will make him better still.” ef i Fea FY i § B : it pute atu 7H} ie igi i Fe i zg ° § F I F i E i : : ‘ i age rt i Th ‘i | i i i gE Ht Fi i i , i Hi fe ers g gPg it Fh af a8 L 3 i ttt i the room was ouree told him It was, the brightly, another cooler. SE E i i di aE j I don’t care what a woman’s . suspect a deficiency of any |