The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 19, 1935, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

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 @8 second class. mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons @ecretary and Treasurer Editor | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | Daily by carrier, per year «+ 87.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck). rie | Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) wee 5. Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state. per year ... 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 aiso the local news of spontaneour origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Inspiration for Today For the Lord will judge his people, and he will repent himself concerning his servants.—Psalm 135:14, oe When the soul has laid down its faults at the | feet of God, it feels as though it had wings.—E. |]| Guerin. Politics Starts Show ' It begins to look as if the innocent citizen who sets out to get a little harmless amuse- ment for himself during the next 12 months is apt to find himself up to his elbows in a mess of underdone political propaganda. The Democrats are going to the movies and the Republicans are heading for the radio, and the political strategists are hastening to learn the inside secrets of scenario construction, plot development, joke concoction and the like. There arrived in Hollywood recently the austere and legendary figure of Rexford Guy Tugwell, who is unquestionably the handsom- chind the Scenes in Washington | By RODNEY DUTCRER New Dealers See Re-Election of F. R.—After Dirtiest of i All Campaign Fights . . . But their Surveys Show There's Plenty of Dissatisfaction . . . Voters Fail te Enthate Over G. O. P. Candidates and Issues . . . However, There's Big Chance for 1936 Swing. Washington, Oct. 19.—Scads of New Dealers have been out around the country lately and many of them are now back on their jobs. A symposium of off-the-record reports from these fellows shows they're distinctly more optimistic about the 1936 election than they were one month or two months ago. They agree Roosevelt will have a “fight” and most of them insist it will be the “dirtiest fight” ever seen in an election campaign. They are just as bitter about the millions they expect big business to raise to defeat the president as Républicans have been about the billions of work-relief money which the G. O. P. terms a “campaign fund.” Most New Dealers used to regard the work-relief money as a sort of campaign fund, too. But now they’re worried over the extent to which the WPA program may also become a liability. ary RESENT LOOSE SPENDING The stronger belief here in the inevitability of Roose- velt’s re-election has been partly due to the good popular reception F. D. had on his cross-country trip. But it’s much more due to the fact that the traveling observers (find, as they found a year ago, that neither Republican candidates nor issues are stirring up popular enthusiasm. Which perhaps is a lucky thing for Democrats, because these observers also found almost universally: 1, General resentment about the looseness of relief expenditures, Harry Hopkins can reply that responsibility for this rests with local ad- ministration, but nobody pays any attention. Graft, inefficiency and odorous politics are all charged up to Roosevelt. 2 The cities are still convinced that AAA’s “slaughter of little pigs” is to blame for the high price of meat. And most people in the cities judge AAA on the basis of that. 3. People are bewildered as to where we're going from here and young people, especially wonder what they’re going to do for a living. And in vast numbers, administration men admit, cit- izens are worrying as to “where all the money is coming from.” eee HURT BY CIVIL WAR In one state after another, Democratic politicians have reverted to type and are engaged in vicious factional battles. This is going to weaken the national ticket to a degree and will certainly result in some Republican vic- tories in state elections where control is now held by Democrats. (Ohio and Iowa, for instance, seem fairly certain to elect Republican governors.) Despite all that, returning political correspondents as well as interested administrationists are impressed by _nteabsthaat ons ene THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19,1985 'B| the great champion of the Constitu- tion. All of the talk of Borah for presi- dent, in any except western liberal G. O. P. circles, grew out of his stand on keeping inviolate the Constitu- tion as it now stands. Shortly after President Roosevelt's famous “horse OLITICS ~ at the - NATION'S CAPITOL est man who ever was accused of having an undue amount of brains. It is his notion to put through a movie de- q picting the familiar old rags-to-riches story in @ new guise, with the federal resettlement ad- ministration, which he leads, in the role of hero, According to preliminary announcements, & movie is to be constructed showing the dev- astating effects of the great drouth. At the crucial moment, up will come the gallant men of the resettlement outfit—landing just in the nick of time, like the marines or the U. S. cav- alry—to transplant the harassed victims of the drouth to greener fields. The idea, one gathers, is that spectators will go away from this entertainment purged, by the traditional emotions of pity and terror and filled unconsciously with admiration for the administration at Washington. But if this looks like a low Democratic trick to steal a march on the Republicans, it must be recorded that the Republicans are ready to pull a low trick of their own. . The theatrical trade paper Variety an- nounces that the Republicans are preparing a radio show entitled “Liberty at the Cross- roads.” This, it is said, is to be made up of a series of dramatic episodes somewhat on the order of the “March of Time” broadcasts, con- the failure of voters to demonstrate any love and affec- tion for the Republican party, to indicate any desire to return to the “good old days,” or to become particularly steamed up over anything Republicans are now offering. soe BORAH HAS MOST APPEAL Little enthusiasm for any of the candidates for Re- publican nomination has been noted. There is more for Senator Borah than for anyone else, chiefly—according to most viewpoints here—because his name has long been @ household word. ‘Someone may come along to burn up the prairies and stir up the emotions of urban workingmen, but even Re- publcians here can't see him quite yet. Some of Roosevelt's closest advisers have told him he must prepare to take off his coat and fight without gloves. They expect him to dram- atize the issue as one between the people and the “power trust,” bankers and big corporations. Meanwhile, they say, he is pursuing a quiet, middle- of-the-road policy. | The president, they say, doesn’t want to stimulate the enemy to more active organization. oem PARTISAN—BUT HONEST While this dispatch is chiefly a concensus of partisan opinion, the opinion is honest and many Republicans agree with the details of the picture. The chief point of disagreement between the groups is as to the political importance of widespread dissatis~ faction with the New Deal and the extent to which that dissatisfaction will grow. Any impartial observer must assert that although at present Roosevelt's path to re-election may seem relative- ly clear, there are menacing boulders which may come hurtling down the mountains to block him. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service Inc.) With Other Reprinted to show what they say. We may or By HERBERT PLUMMER ‘Washington—Col. Theodore Roose- velt must have found it difficult to restrain himself as much as he did when he sat down to repif to Senator Borah’s invitation that he join with him in making “trust busting” the real issue in the ’36 presidential cam- paign. “T. R.,” the younger, hardly could have failed to recall those momen- tous days of 1912 when his illustri- ous father broke away from the Re- publican party and run for president on the Bull Moose ticket with “trust busting” as the principal issue. | Senator Borah at the time was as/| enthusiastic as he professes to be) now in his view that the “question, of monoply lies at the base” of cam- and buggy” press conference which followed the outlawing of NRA, it was Borah who said the “Constitution should be changed by the people alone” and not in Ws 5 Now he says in his letter to Roose- velt, “It stirs my blood to have men talk about the preservation of Con- stitutional government, who are the liveried servants of those artificially combined economic forces, monopo- les which are now fixing prices and levying tolls on millions of distressed people.” * * * Sets Up New Issue The Idaho senator has set up a totally different and, to the conserv- ative Republicans of the east, a far less welcome issue by his stand on “trust busting.” Many here regard it as a deliber- | ate rejection on his part of any at- trasting the dismal lot of citizens who live un- der a Democratic regime with the happy lot which was theirs when Republicans were in may not agree with them. | Eprrons paign issue-making. But when the elder “T. R.” walked} out of the Republican convention be- | cause the Old Guard insisted on re- nominating Taft, Senator Borah did not follow him. However longingly he may have gazed after Roosevelt and the other Bull Moosers, he neither followed nor raised his voice in their behalf during the ensuing campaign. tempt to have a compromise ticket in the field for the Republicans in 1936—that is, to split the ticket by nominating a man from the west and another from the east in an attempt to consolidate party strength by Pleasing both. In short, Borah’s letter leaves him in a position where he could accept the G. O. P. presidential nomination ee % in '36 only on his own platform in- seme cin Tnconseney |i te rat ing To most of the politicians and stu- | So They Say j > dents of politics in Washington, Borah’s letter to Colonel Roosevelt | + I think that in speeds of more than 45 miles an hour you are safer in the isn’t quite consistent. Close analysis shows that while the Idaho senator reveals himself in a receptive mood|air than on the ground. — Amelia Earhart, Euinam, ae, for the G. O. P. nomination in 1936, obviously the tone and substance of his letter must more than offset in eastern Republican circles the delight with which they have hailed him as The curse of modern woman is dieting. Look at the beauties of the Victorian Age. They were all plump, buxom. And they were beautiful.— Helen Hayes. x * * One set of (goverment) executives is busy creating scarcity and high prices while another is aiming at abundance and cheapness. — Robert Moses, New York park commissioner. _ ee * The public will get what it wants, pout it won’t bother much about the legislator who votes against its wishes. It figures that one legislator is about as bad as another.—Franklin Moore, Harrisburg, Pa. addressing hotel men’s convention. Your Personal Health By William Brady,M.D. © ny jaéstions pertaining to health but not dis- genes Ung Dt ttt Stace aaa aed es” ates ‘oe Brady in care of The Tribune, All queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope, began making Quinine, calomel and digitalis were no been taught to believe, and as for the bewildering blunderbusses in our armamentarium, well I felt there was more than poetry in Dr. Holme’s p Bilaud’s pills at pale, and ts fith ‘sche pillen, Neimeyer's 5 prescription bonatis) ens big medicine for anemia in those days. I believe the wiseacre laity still has some regard for ready-made concoctions bearing a similar name. But the genuine old pills were always freshly made by the pharma- cist, and probably remained more or less soluble for ten days or two weeks, The mixtute of iron sulphate, potassium carbonate, sugar, tragacanth, althea, glycerin and water of which these pills are made undergoes a chemical change which renders the iron quite insoluble and probably inert in that length of time. ‘ However, it didn’t seem to matter what form of iron or in what manner it was administered, it proved as disappointing in practice as did quinine, calomel and digitalis. No doubt my experience was not different from the experience of physicians in general. That would account for the innumer- able forms of iron and the ingenious ways, sometimes painfully ingenious ways of administering it. Iron is perhaps as essential as calcium or phosphorus in the human economy, but it is no longer of paramount importance in the treatment of anemia. The diet is of paramount importance. Recent advances in our knowledge of nutrition indicate that the diet must provide an optimal ration of vitamins B and G particularly but fair amounts of all the vitamins as they occur in nature. In any case of anemia an excellent diet includes plain wheat as the main item, supplemented with milk and eggs, if possible with meat, fresh veget- ables and greens, and fresh fruit in season. : QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS X-Ray for Prostatic Enlargement Pleast advise whether X-ray treatment is of any benefit in enlargement of the prostate. (T. M.) ; Answer—X-ray treatment has no effect on thi some cases gives prolonged relief to the symptoms. Education versus i Quarantine Why quarantine measles and not tuberculosis? Is the government doing all it can to prevent tuberculosis when it fails to quarantine those who have it. . .? LY) Answer—The necessity for isolation of persons ill of communicable dis- ease varies inversely with the intelligence of the community. The state as- sumes, properly, that the intelligence level of the community now makes isolation (quarantine, as you call it) of the tuberculosis patient unneces- sary. It would be a fine thing for the community if persons with your.no- tions about tuberculosis were compelled to live for a month or two in a tuberculosis sanatorium. Besides benefiting your health it would educate you, and thru you many of your friends and neighbors. (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) i dine of the gland but in BEGIN HERE TODAY’ RUTR WOODSON, « high-spirited girl of 19, tn werk, seeks reftug a clothes. Elaine ith before driving ber @ 1933 NEA Service, inc. {t developea that an important part had broken and must be re- Placed before tfe journey could be resumed. The part could be supplied then was marcelling a customer's hair. “Maude end Gracie Louise have to be at schoo} by 8:30, and. I've got to be bere even earlier. That means the gir) and 1 have to get and there, but meither the driver nor his worried wife could pre- duce the $7 necessary to pay for it. They bad been on @ tong trip and were almost down te their fast dollar, It was finally er- ranged by the easy-going garage owner that his customers should up at 6 every morning.” Mrs. Jones further explained, “I send all the clothes to the wet wash and the girl's expected ta iron them. I've got a good mangle im the basement. Ever run one?” Ruth sald proudly. “Once « dem- onstrater in @ department store let give him a check for the amount. Thfs Mr. Segwick did, writing bts Cleveland address below bis name at the mechanic's request. When they were on their way again Ruth said regretfully, “I wish 1 could have lent you the money till you got home, But { haven't a cent myself.” Mrs. Segwick replied, “That's all right. If you nad money to lend you likely wouldn't be hitch- me try one, just for fun. 1! got along very well with ft. I'd need hiking. Have you got a job wait- ing for you in the city?” “No,” Ruth admitted. “Not a sign of a job. 1 hope to stay at Ww “Te BLUE DOOR | Rachel “Mack. ; fi 4 the Salvation Army home till 1|pogiee iquor Store _-~ NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY was a trivial one. The chik rover. Paying Taxes at the Liqu ° oe as CHAPTER EXVit_ 5 |"“iaraSegwick -cltcked her contas' ting ‘toles’ar mettaaagts i t is rumored that thii i ‘With the return of legalized liquor, Minnesota per- F N 1 NGER that was tongue in eh Saab at this will be only the first] Witt tot, tmunieipelities, if they 20, desired, to etter oreign ovelist i Anttlarating. carried Roth|(ouete im sympathy and chansed/ena: when they arrived home to "i a series of such shows, and that a $2,000,000) the retail liquor business. This type of Raver sige is the s ” through the Grst stage of her) to it, showing it had been on her pale cir teggoce fog died a ° drink an baking m ___ Pot is being sought to finance the production of | only oe ee Or sett it most closely | ‘HORIZONTAL ¢ Answer to Previous Puro’ of an ese’? donraey... Sis malkes past the P| mind, | they took it as a matter of course. er nce. approximates the “old” saloon. Whether putting a village) 1. € Author of FETTTRTBVISTEMAIRTEOTTa] 11 His novels fisld avenue to where the PAVIRE|-go you think Mien Wootsou would | ner Miss, Woodson.” Ruth told ? ; ; tef- is , from a social 0 RIE ION Rilo t nee Sti ed does look as if our rival party chief Beet oe Ge: ie open to daimge: The aepect of” the Horsemen oR PA REDLINE into fine — sift and. the: Bishwey TEND. suit your Couste Bllat” il pete eeee eee tad anne |- tains have got us between the devil and the|Propiem, however, proved no barrier to the nearly 100 of the Aaa int Siitiete 13 To dine. 1 means. of transportation other|,, 1,70 gem wondering that, too.” |ask you if you'd rather have white | deep blue sea. If we go to the movies, they | Minnesota towns that availed themselves of this novel Apocalypse.” peBIAIRIS] GLADYS IDITISIET 5 peched. Iready weary fect. Two|"ebiied Mr. Segwick. “In 0m@/bread of brown for supper.” © will h imbibi kind | Opportunity to go into the liquor business. After more} 11 Bucket. RIAIV IE BE SWARTHO (BS IU] 22 Hourly. ied tn mocebenien, eat ra 1 sinh she would.” “White.” they replied in concert. ’ ave us imbibing one kind of propaganda;| than » year the financial reports submitted to the state| 12Center ot —_{AIGIE! 23 Insect’s ogs. cocupante eyed ber| cer wict sete. enough.” Mrs.| arcef staring at Ruth boldly for s If we stay at home and turn on the radio, they | Hquor control otfioes iadieste tat these iicly owned | amphitheater. 24 Brute. ~ = suspiciously and sped on. 4 third!” Ruth sat on the edge of the back [ren momens they, went ris Z n . of love. 26 Name. car, a large sedan, slowed down small rear room o! box-like lit- will pour another kind down our throats. Per-|""?Nor a single municipality that has gone into the | s6 Thought, 27 Bugle plant. to pick ter up, but when she saw| pot lisiewing As they areued it /cte house to inspect her possessions. haps we'd all better go in for working in the lune business Pog! lost mane? £8 ee weiee, In Poly (7 Stigma. 28 Measure. ” at close range the two men who intrigued. She wished they woula | N° doudt the meagerness of Ruth's garden for the coming year, their liquor profits to the general treasury and are thereby HH oe el 31 To implore Fase we oe gare speak out plainly about Cousin Eile, ey yet they ten - reducing the size of the local tax levy. According to®| 9 mitten. OIBIETRIAITITICPPISICINIEIEIN’ 3a scessne walked ou, tooking straight ahead, | Whoever she might be, and be more iout to play with meighbor children Blowing Up Hornblowers tabulation of the receipts and net earnings of these stores,| 91 70 lease, J Those men could bave been cast| Specific about the mysterious fob. | next door, not even’ bot! New York which appeared in the Sunday ‘Tribune, per capita profits : ; 34 Maintenance. without evgn|She finally interrupted the argu: Y Raaeak eth Te ew seems to be tackling the nuisance of the ftom a high of $19.66 in Red Lake Falls to.» low| 22 Possesses. 45 Mass of VERTICAL 36 Your mother’ as movie gangsters ment to say, “I'm willing to do ask the questions Ruth had Butomobile horn. Henceforth, s motorist who toots his| of 4.09 in Adams. ‘Ten Minnesota municipalities showed | %3 Tip. floating ice. 1 Proffered. sisters. 7 Hee ee ae macathed,” top| BODbst work to support myselt. -1|<"eaeee- horn in the city between 11 p. m, and 7 a. m. will be| per capita profits of more than $10 @ year and net earn- = Earn fe §6To coat with 2 maisehoods. 37 Axillary. pe rec fee ‘cross-country | Wouldn't promise to the gop,| When she called them in to get Wable to arrest; and the city authorities meanwhile are io et mote tha % for every man, woman and child in) = 3) o> ee. Pe Sy 3 Sound of ae ae seeds. caval but I'd do my best at it till I could peer, pot — pl re “Do trying some .| the town were ly common. . . juisance, “ something that sult or you Be wertalewee 1s ie bears ns Sat ay The unusually high volume of business reported by| 31 Flying 49 Organs of sorrow. 40 Constellation, Ruth walked on and was ng e. sulted me bet- |r ave cocoa {a the evening?” ! y in 08 some municipalities is often due to local conditions and mammal. hearing. 4Taxj driver. 41 Spread of an mayed to find the wind mush | "That's tair enough,” Mr. Seg.| “Neither one” answered Gracie It is to be hoped that they do find such » way, and| does not necessarily reflect a phenomenal consumption| 82 Originated. . 50Growing out. Iris rootstock. arch. sharper out op the open sl wick ssid, “Tell her, Lou, about |Lulse. the elder, “Tea.” | that their example will be followed in cities all across|of liquor on the part of the home folks. Some of these} 3¢ You and me. $1 Flatboats. 6 Wayside hotel. 42 Pertaining Betore discouragement could) what wila’s lookin for.” “That's a lie,” stated Maude / ae liquor stores are “oases in dry areas, of are located neat | ° 15 Limb. 52 This — was 7 Burrowing to air, = eee watt. cee: Were supposed to bare milk al cS Dakot ‘many tances these large y. Popular in animal. 4 He 3 SEC’ voices rose shrill ” There are motorists who seem to feel that an accel-| \clumes may not be maintained as the dry areas become| 37 Snake. America (pl.). 8 Close. ‘eeuner, A staall sedan pearing © milddie-| MRS. SEGWICK obtved. “Well.| onde of argument which Reth to t erator, @ steering wheel, and a horn are all the equip-| fewer. But whether they are or not, the fact that muni-| 40 Sea bird. S3He was —- 9 Eagle. 45 Not many, and women drew up|). its this way. Mrs, Ells Jouss.|terrupted to call them to supper . ment any auto needs. As one of the New York officials|cipalities are balancing their budgets with Uquor ssles| 41 Mentfoned. by birth. 10 Animal born 47 Being. eae fled Perey nd bas to be ot work all day Ghee| WE they sat down at the table remarked, such a motorist “blasts his way through cross-| represents another means of taxes. leaned out to ask a welcome ques- idow and ip a |she noticed that they slumped un- ings, blasts his way on turns, and blasts his way past|, Judged purely as a business venture, and ton, “Want to ride avi she's got two children leaity and spilled thelr water , d the highly miportant social aspects of the problem, the “Yes!” called Ruth gladly, and |‘? de looked after. und house be- ran! ” ™ v cautious drivers.” He ts, of course, one of the most ob-| municipal liquor store is a successful tax revenue inno- ciaina Neids sides, and she bap a tine anding | POY - noxious public nuisnces the race has yet developed. | vation. Despite the anomaly of the same authority which| + “We're going to Cleveland,” |® Teliable girl she can trust to do see SONA: er. ew ae : It is perfectly possible to do an entire day's driving| enforces ordinances against the woman said. “Are you going|‘= Looks Itke she changes about |10 ‘sir stratent as Tra faae ore without touching the horn button, Most motorists know |the intoxicating beverages, some villages report that that far, of Just to the college?” |¢"ery month or two, unfold your vapkin this this, ‘The few who do not, need to be taught—with fines /Tunicipal, dispensaries have simplified the problem of Roth it gratified that abe bad | row old are the childrear”|7oq: age Then break your eres f . tever tages this system can claim, been mistaken for & college stu 4n police court, if necessary. the fact remains that large profits at municipal liquor dont. She told them, “I'm going| “Mande's 10 and Gracie Louise ts Metre You butter tt Your mother ‘ stores are, in reality, the result of a tax on consumption. to Cleveland, too. i'a certainiy|12. Old enough to be helpful if ¢, to be careful about your Auto Slaughter Continues Towns with publicly owned liquor stores, however, Appreciate ft if you'd let me ride| Person knows how to get ft out of | ™anners. “The nation reckoned its highway dead st more than| i hot the only ones that are Resting fiers Seennene with you. {t's hard to get a ride|them. But: Bila's spoiled them a; let nl remarked Gracie 100 in partial reports from 30 states during the last week- months of legal liquor the state alone has ‘collected Gee a pon ee ag a wearing 1 mie ene .” nee ot ae toy cman The couple evidently were|pick up and leave. Ells $10 | was Ing ltpetick. ft of ’ f that the federal and local governments are Losier Pg ail old Rl nhey ct Panny Pes it todd 4 r pil pepe . Sort of people” by this pretry,| Ruth eatd eagerly, “I'd itke to|te? on her bread. Ruth, remember. ee Uaioe, Sinai | purine ope) well-mannered girl, and conversa-|try it; Mrs. Segwick. Would you |!28 Gracie Louige’s 12 tender ples ed in concerns of most units tlon developed without effort.| be willing to take me there when |7eSTs, was a little horrified, She pees sot Mr abaienGorwiky |e to om tan {'conle wre| Eig Jeu, wen ipa amar : a 6 1 as 0 you in I could ever haghgiered hora gl Lagi jones fagietiossoy a me they were named. tell you.” Gracie Louise. ‘ LY one aes marked the tone 4 ae her fast te Mise: Angee’ Ruth te © lle.” sald Maude. : uty shop—a busy, gaudily pros If a foreign ship finds Ea3 in ore straits these ride to Cleveland, About mid-| perous little establishment called |was buabiy Erotal eae ie ‘son te those of Gibraltar. way of the distance the car begen|“Bila’s Band Boz.” tocated in an |this shelter which hed so unexpect> . = Pe : to “act queer,” according to Mr.) cutlying shopping district. edly fatien to ber lot. Sut che We the <Gonears.. He. drove tole 8’ village with» Orek. maaeee epee (enum tnere waa ullnees 086 ase D I v a or Cry Ipterviewes | gerage to. 40, whet was wrons. manber eso iy aud loneliness ahead. Ruth to lietle booth where eho

Other pages from this issue: