Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
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- Yarck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck BS second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per es Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ehind the Scenes in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER F. R, Must Tell Nation Why Millions Remain Jobless... . Speeding Up Productivity, New Inventions Form Gist ef Answer . . . Little Hope for Huge Army’s Empley- ment. 2 . Washington, Sept. 12.—Some day, perhaps before @lection, President Roosevelt will have to admit to the country that business activity has returned to normal, but that there are still six to eight million unemployed. He will have to explain that the efficiency of private industry, expressing itself in a saving of labor costs, has Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). : 7.20 ||largely brought about that condition. And doubtless add Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of that until industry can think up some way of absorb- Bismarck) - 5. ing those millions, it will have to pay for their subsis- tence through taxes. This problem—call it technological unemployment or the increased productivity per man per hour, which gain- ed enormously during the depression—is one of the big- gest stories in the: country. The highest officials often discuss it privately, though only an occasional labor lead- er talks of it publicly. Everybody knows that Roosevelt must eventually meet the issue with something more than an optimistic assumption that improving business conditions will ab- sorb the surplus of labor. ioe ealth but not ais- Dr. Brady will answer questions pertaining to me put in oase, Weill ters brief! in ink. Brady in cafe of The ie le All queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed env: that now ptf hypochromic anemia, which has years, being as common hypochrom: mia is the same as that of chlorosis be tn f mmatter (hemoglobin), often 50% oF use for.republication of all news dispatches credited to ‘The most scientific chart of unemployment in the coloring ht diminution in the number i therwise credited in this newspaper and also " but a comparatively slight the local news of spontancour origin published Nerein,| yet devised by the government (it’s kept secret % below normal, In this respect hypo- All rights of republication of all other matter herein are for the time being) indicates that 800,000 more also reserved. Inspiration for Today Take heed that ye despise not one of these lit- tle ones; for I say unto you, that in heaven their | angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven.—St. Matthew 18:10. The gfirst duty to children is to make them happy. If you have not made them so, you have wronged them. No other good they may get can make up for that.—Buxton. Golden Anniversary | September 19 will mark the Golden Anni- versary of the founding of St. Alexius hospital, an event which all of North Dakota will join the city of Bismarck in celebrating. This anniversary is comparable in impor- tance to that of the first rude frontier school, for ministration to the ills of the body is as persons were unemployed in June, 1935, than in June, 1934. True, this counts in some 300,000 of “new population available for employment” and about as many more displaced from road building and other public works, but— In that same period, the Federal Reserve index of manufacturing production rose from 83 to 86, which you might well suppose would have meant re-employ- ment of several hundred thousand men. Remember that this was in the NRA period, before codes were canceled and employers began to increase hours. eee THOUSANDS BEING DISPLACED The answer is that workers, at an ever-accelerating. rate, are being displaced by better management, elim- ination of the least efficient plants and equipment—and the least efficient labor—pressure through sweatshop, stretchout and speedup methods, new machinery and new inventions. This goes on in agriculture, mining, transportation, and other fields, as. well as in the factories. No one knows the relative importance of those causative factors. But the best available studies show that in the 10 years ended in 1929, the average ’ production increased 45 per cent. ‘ Subsequent studies iridicate the output per man hour rose 24 to 28 per cent in 1929-32 and "© 1908 NEA ambassador in Washington. he was starting out from New York every romic means low in color) is the opposite to pernic- fous anemia, in which there is a diminution of the number of red cor- puscles the blood but a comparatively slight diminution in the amount anemia is sallow, and her skin -becomes prematurely wrinkled, inelastic and dry. Her hair is lustreless ang dry and tends to tum gray too early The nails become brittle, flattened, perhaps concave ‘of spooned; they lack the natural luster and are often ridged vertically. A frequent complaint is sore tongue and many patients complain of some difficulty in swallowing and a tendency to choke on swallowing meat. The tongue in éarly cases is intensely red and looks inflamed; the papillae cannot be seen, and the normal coat is absent . In long standing cases the tongue is atrophied, much smaller Ga eee naa bac the rough and slight coat of a normal tongue. “! ” tongue, it is cates mere is Fst absence of hydrochloric acid in the gastric juice, and insufficient gastric juice secreted to digest foad properly, these being indications of nutritional deficiency. The nutritional deficiency will be discussed in an early article. Probably the failure of gastric juice ac- counts for the failure of the system to assimilate iron. That, too, will be discussed in the article to follow. : QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS < Rash e I am serious and mean it when I say if this keeps on I'll disappear «+» (Miss D. W.) | | | | Pes lea oe é ‘ 4 4 — woe . : minister to the Netherlands. fall—Charles T. Dazey, dean of Amer- Answer—Don’t do anything rash, daughter. Sign your name, mention necessary as is instruction to the mind. about 12 per cent for 1932-24, meaning at least OLITICS nok ie can playwrights. |that you have blackheads and pimples, and inclose stamped en- Mind can hardly encompass and pen cér-| =» 33 per cent gain in the depression period. . Minus the Desire’ ar velope. You'll receive instructions which will make you feel better and per- tainly can not portray the true history of those| Dr. Tsador Lubin ts now in an official position as + at the - Ncueeee TE HIER: ay ee How much did the World War ac- |haps clear up the rash, too. gases | ” com! loner of} sl ics t Iking pub- 7 — a va Prolonged Local Anest “golden years” as James W. Foley terms them |{icy about the matter any more. ‘But in 1082 he told a NATION’S CAPITOL |]|ably explains why privately he may complish? Contentment and pros: to injection treatment of prepatellar bursitis you men- in a poem dedicated to this occasion. But a fertile imagination can faintly glimpse the thousands of hours of toil, the persever- ing patience, the unflagging loyalty and the senate committee that even if business reached its 1929 level, there would still be at least 5,000,000 unemployed. ose INVENTIONS KILL JOBS Productivity has since increased and nobody is an- ticipating any early arrival at the 1929 industrial pro- Washington—Friends of the Japan- ese ambassador, Hirosi Saito, declare it went rather “against the grain” have disliked having to make a fuss over the magazine caricature. ‘There's a story told of him which illustrates this mischievous flavor ‘When he was Japanese consul at New York several years ago, he invited a perity of the world? Overthrow o! the Kingdom of Mars? “The war end war”’—the very irony of the ex- In | toned treatmient by injection of a local anesthetic with prolonged action . B.D. K.,, MD) Answer—I cannot recall the item. In the injection treatment of hydro- it to pression answers that question.—Dr. |cele by the Kilbourne method (Dr. Norman J. Kilbourne, Los Angeles) some Mary E, Woolley, Holyoke Coolege. president, Mt, such mild local anesthetic with prolonged effect is employed. (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) SUN-TANES © exci uence rvpar when he was compelled to make a formal protest against a caricature of Emperor Hirohito appearing .in an American magazine. » j Old world diplomats assigned to| Washington are known to cdmpara- tively few people, but not so with Mr. Saito, He is easly the best known member of the Washington diploma- | tic corps both to officialdom and un-' Officialdom. | An entertaining companion, a bril- Mant conversationalist, and a poet, his fluency in English and his disarming candor about Japanese policies have | made him a striking figure in Wash- | ington diplomatic circles. | Elms’ | |Tokyo of being the “indiscreet dip- | NZ e Mr. Saito has the reputation at) jlomat” and he delights in the title.| x * * | Talks ‘Off the Record’ | When he headed the publicity of-| If my interpretation of Mr. Roose- jvelt is correct, the business commun- fice in Tokyo, It was his custom 10 ity will henceforth observe in Waah- meticulous attention to duty which have gone into the building of this institution. Fine and well-equipped buildings have risen to take the place of that first, poorly-lighted, ill-equipped haven of refuge, but these are as nothing in comparison with the spirit which brought them into being. | large group of prominent leaders of industry and commerce, including jOwen D. Young, Herbert Bayard jSwope and John W. Davis, to a din- ner to get acquainted with former Ambassador, and then Foreign Min- ister, Matsudaira, Introducing Japan’s eminent dip- lomat, Mr. Saito said: “Matsudaira means, in Japanese, ‘under the pines.’ It has no associa- tion, however, with ‘Desire Under the bora index figure, which was 119 as against the re- cent 86, * From every front come reports of new inventions certain to ‘displace human labor. Was! this fall will watch clogely the performance of the mechanical cotton picker, ballyhooed as able to pick 1,000 an hour as against a man’s 10 pounds, a potential in- strument of unemployment for hundreds of thousands. Everyone is talking of pre-fabricated houses—and sqme warn of what it will do to building trades workers. New. single-unit trains threaten the jobs of shopmen, This spirit has been magnified, rather than diminished through the years. Does death |Gperations’ duaseanctiie tobe Sh name ot hoceawea: threaten? The good sisters of St. Alexius are |!umbermen. always there to keep the last, long vigil. Does the body cry out from pain? The latest and best which science has to offer is there to ease} the insufferable burden. Do tortured minds seek relief? There is understanding and true compassion available for all. A president-to-be of the United States inst the earth, She was ready waiting ‘when the deor was opened and she saw the portable steps ceneath ber tect. Alighting, she expected to see Dougias Marab. or at least one of the nouse ooys trom the ton Lo her astonishment oefther. was in sight. end she picked up her cage and started for the little building. hoping she would for-hire car parked oearby. Suddenly she stepped. and one of the cage (ell neavil; Bret Pan! i) You nad to use a trick—" “But that doesn’t— “You had to use a trick. and now that you've done that you still don’t ¢ believe in me You thine I'm dil \ ferent trom the Jo Dartep you used to know. and it’s thie different Jo Darien you're interested in. The lone who went away with Fragonet. The one you think is—ts Dils Sdunders. for instance! He was silent ® moment. not looking at her. “You're wrong, Jo.” be told ner weakly. “Oh, out I'm aot wrong, Bret. 2 ee OUTPUT PER MAN GROWS NRA halted the process awhile through spreading work by shortening hours and by protecting obsolete plants. But now the chains are off. | And even in the NRA period (1933-35), gov- ernment figures show output per man increased 29 per cent in oll production, 40 per cent in steel mills, 21 per cent in automobiles, 23 per cent in rubber tires, 29 In woolens and worsteds, 28 per cent in cigars and cigarets, and 14 per cent in enaenerte Puree he om hheramen friend 7” Glew re de A MONTES, with LOU, erect and smilin Unless something no one can now foresee happens to absorb millions of workers, this problem holds the : rig dh : : _ .|t tele it to the tetter you wrote me, made a fight for life within the walls of this} bituminous coal mining. permit newspapermen covering the |iroton a president who is anxious to et tim en Oe ee NAP cach treeate tall ore foreign office to read certain docu- out-Coolidge Coolidge in giving in- fo deur Craconete mramines ane yatarily she -an to’ tim. put A my: institution in its early days, but he received no better care than the man who was a charity ments marked “confidential.” This her hands against oie chest eas|Was imagining things And cow example of his trust in them had the Austral prosperity to Americs.—Maj. that 1 cap see you again, and hear sprouting seeds of future political issues, future economic |efrect, his friends say, of- leading |L: L B. Angas, British economist, selkias deen. on seb ae, eee eee ore 7" yom, | koow (ew teue® > case. And the facilities available to all now]| Progress, future depressions and the future, if any, Of |tne correspondents to rely on him 7 * Sp when Wes Pracenet theeatees | “Hello, Jo.” He grinned down| “Woman's intuition?” he sup far outrank those of that period for no one|™*#0ns! economic planning. when he gave out unquotable state-| | In my opinion it is the beginning} ** ,S0e (TS seesam enat Gret [at ber. gested insolentiy. : ne (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) ments setting forth Japan's foreign|of a long and + one of the tet) ond wektow to come te | “Bret—how did you get well 80! Ca ever has been turned away in all of those 50; policy. oe and nein aaa: ~ Greet Cake. the takes the Sent | oor” what was wronsT itary replete ie | “ ““ wor! ever own... jen, J. B, M. Pe if age Wi h oO her Repeintere siaooes ae, 4s young | fertzog, South African premier, re- NOW GO ON WITH THE stoRY Bed pongo dong Nebereen a8 fie |know.” : In view of this record of service Bismarck tt ti show what Wilhad a remarkable record, for he play-|ferring to the Italo-Ethiopian crisis. CHAPTER XLV Peta Eae ae Load should be both proud and humble. Proud be- We may or |jjed a big role at the London naval inet was not anti! Jo was settled) <you—weren't il BEHIND them the dig transport rs os = DITOR may not conference in 1930. He was charge} I’ve seen the rise and am now see- safely in the big transport plane “Nope Sound as a dollar—gold Diane swung suddenly with o cause this city was chosen as the site for the agree iwith Hlqattaire of the Japanese embassy |ing the decline of the American thea-| that she bad e chance to think |ssndard.” be told her foviaily.|foar of three motors. tazied along | organization of this hospital, humble because | fg a 2) os ____jUjhere before he became ambassador.|ter. It’s frightfully sad. I've known} gain of the disterbing telegram |-whatys wrong? You seem ditap |the emoothly rolled eround for its ia Immediately prier to his becoming « Musical Instrument HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 1 What musical [TAIN [ec /SlololNye} pictured here? jolvioti-lo} 6 Nicola ——° was a famous maker of this instrument. 10 Advertisement. 110ne in cards. 12 To bow 13 Tip. the time when 400 companies were which had caused ter to make the air journey to Crestmont. so few have the greatness of heart and mind to even approach its record of achievement for humanity. ° As a commercial asset, this institution is among our most valuable, As a harbinger of good will for Bismarck throughout all the ter- ritory served by this city it is unequalled. If one wishes to think in a wholly material way, there is ample cause for self-congratulation. But the service of St. Alexius is not render- ed on that plane and there is*no hint of com- mercial exploitation in Bismarck’s invitation to its friends and neighbors to come and join with poteted." takeoft. With stowly gathering ‘speed tt bounced along, lifted erace fully. {te gray outlines lost for s moment tp the dusk—and then i } appeared above the line of tree tops. srowing smaller with each Rew second. “You can't go even as far as your money will take you sow,” Bret id. returning his gase to Jo ‘Might as tet-me drive you back to the Inn... . ff you-cant Dave Fragonet. and won't take me, there's stil) Todd Barston Fle’s hanging eround the {nn, waiting _|foF you to come back.” : The implication of nis w Wholesale Heroism (New York Herald-Tribune) It is impossible to rejoice over a shipwreck, but it is possible to say in the case of the Morgan liner Dixie that the splendid manner in which crew, passengers, line and vessel met the supreme test goes far to offset the damage done, mental and material. Not only were no lives lost, thanks to a combination of luck, skillful handling and the staunch qualities of the vessel, but neither, it would appear, was there any loss of that morale which men and women of ‘ity and courage prize more highly than life, -For » no doubt, the fine example of captain and crew was mainly responsible. Apparently they arose to the occasion in the best tradi- tions of the sea and with their calm cheerfulness and discipline inspired the passengers to follow suit. No less @ tribute is due the passengers for their ability to}. respond to such leadership. Let no one belittle the ordeal. “Ob. 1 cent that wire.” “You sent tt? Jo searched “Sure Marsh tim in The thought ting thi must have fured tm some way, and Jo's bral showed her frightening images. ee she might to evoid them. th appeared even when she dozed from sheer uerve weariness. She remembered again Bret’s let: nd saw it differently sow discharges. 22 Consumer. 24 To say further 25 Hybrid animal when she had received it. but a0# re belfeved that this must 0 4 nd Jo reco! as it 20 Corded cloths. 23 Constellation. 40 Meadows. 42 Rubber whee! pad. im Al : = ty s * rie A tropical hurricane i ie z been simply deca pees ue a paying neue $n 8n ep ag whose | at set or ashore is a terrifying ‘vistor, however, stout te Fiightiess bird PASICAlR aioe Perret 38 Deck above Pep yee grnmrorgr 4 baer a e one’s defenses. The Dixie, hard : ato : Ww wol can never be measured in terms of ieee fin the cade ae le, hua sr gga 18 Beer. TINIDLTIAINPIKIEINITlulciRiy) the spar danger. ing b C | money. x What price could we place upon the lives; completely at its mercy. Passengers have testified that not one of them honestly expected the ship to survive the furious punishment long enough to permit of the 51 To depart by 69 This instru- boat. 26 To regret. ment has —— which its service has saved, the hearts made| rescue which 27 Most famous 53 God of love. 44To support Promised in the offing. And yet the VERTICAL glad, the burdens lightened? How ean we esti-| Wale for those raging, hark-infested waters io engult | ‘700 of this STATO DARE. ovary erucy, ‘6 Aforal gonye domer—sertape the levabie mate its value when its major work has been|*e™.—Walted quietly and sanely. Their behavior en-| 44 south Carofina 58 To halt. 2 Thought. 48 Browned bread | ~—saw that she meast more than hances one’s pride in the race. f 3 Musical note. to change tears of fearful sorrow to those of Yesterday was the first anniversary of tle Morro| 35 Sea eagle. 60 Devours. » $0 Flat round anything ip the world to Bret. Castle disaster. Opposed to the confusion, inefficiency | 36 Yellowish gray 62Italtan river. {Proven water plate. ‘It only sbe were ost. . . hopeful gladness. and worse which disgraced that great tragedy the episode | 37 To strike. 63 Tot coins home. 52 Diving-bird. late.‘ During the long grip this was And in honoring the record of St. Alexius, ot Be Disie warms the heart as a sone of film. oe Sue 2 ait ae es A Prong whieh z 4 ; 10! : . tantactie ‘Bismarck takes pride and pleasure in again sear ern veg 43To run away. 68City of Italy, 8 Snake. SoTiny vegetable | ere Giled with camelees: bortere paying its respects to Sister M. Boniface, its lutions signed by the Dixie's passengers in praise of its| 45 Observed. center of ‘9 Neuter It only .... she were act... pronoun. 14 Wheedles. ° 17 Musical 47To prepare for publication. 49 Wrongful act. manufacture of finest instruments. crew and owners. Hereafter as September rolls. and we are reminded of the Morro Castle it help to remember too that other American a still caught on its reef, though not for ope. . director for 42 of its 50 years. This grand old too tate. Nun has received the plaudits of Bismarck before, but the city is glad to renew its acclaim for to many residents of this part of the west, the terms St. Alexius hospital and Sister Boni- face are almost interchangeable. It is almost impossible to think of one without calling the ‘other to mind. . To this great: soul, St. Alexius hospital will| wnere the money to pay is coming from. a lasting and enduring monument, It will] service continues in tongues of fire. long after she has gone! ple are er reward, of the self-sacrifice and eridless which she and her associates have put a if eee 8 it Ki which have come from the schools and other pul Porations. gilicstee i p Hey 323 i aT au Pr iy il i aa