The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 12, 1935, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1985 The Bismarck Tribune An independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Extablished 1673) State, City and County Official Newspaper The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bie- Bismarck Published by ‘marok, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at @s second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson W Simons Secretary and Treasurer Bdltor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by mail, per year (in Daily by mail outside of North Weekly by mail in state. per year Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Assoctated Pret exclusively entitied to the ews dispatches credited to rand also news of spontaneous origin oublished herein. of republication of all other matter herein are ve Inspiration for Today Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.—St. Matthew 11:28. eee Rest is valuable only so far as it is a contrast. Pursued as an end, it becomes a most pitiable con- dition.—Swing. Improvement in Health The great strides that public health has made in America in the present generation are strikingly illustrated by a remark by Dr. George Crile of Cleveland before the 25th clin- ical congress of the American College of Sur- geons, in San Francisco. “One of every 17 persons in the United States and Canada went to hospitals last year,” said Dr. Crile. “But that is much less than one decade ago, when one of 10 went to a hospital annually.” Here is unmistakable evidence of a sharp rise in the general level of public health. A number of factors are responsible; advances in the science of medicine itself, unceasing vig- ilance on the part of public health departments, and general improvement in health education of the public at large. : The result is a large plume for the cap of the medical profession. Genius in the Kitchen It has long been obvious that tremendous talents and abilities are manifest in the American home. Some women, lacking the obligations of wife and motherhood, make outstanding successes in the business, professional ‘and artistic world. Others, facing the usual responsibilities of woman- hood, bring to those tasks an even greater devotion and talents of the highest order. The rearing of children to be upstanding men and women, the turning of a house into a home, often under the pinch of poverty, either dire or comparative, are achievements of the Greatest importance to the race. But who can say that these abilities, directed in other fields, would not have been outstanding? Does it take less skill to put together a pie which melts in the mouth than to perform a brilliant business stroke? Is one less important than the other? On the whole, and considered in its proper relation to the eternal scheme of things, the palm would go to the pie. But now and then one catches in a homemaker—| & plemaker if you will—a flash of that genius which might have gone far in other directions. Visitors to the education convention caught such a glimpse when Mrs, Eva K. Anglesburg, the mother of six and a pie and homemaker, appeared before them. Her poesy had the charm and vitality which flows from our prairies. Its quality was such that a North Dakotan, reading it in Timbuctoo, would think of home without ever knowing that a North Dakotan wrote it. Comparisons are always odious. To say that Mrs. Anglesburg is the best of North Dakota’s contemporary » chind the Scenes in Washington By RODNEY DUTCHER Harvard Law School Graduates Replace Inept Staff That Lost Other Supreme Court Battles ... War Dope Sheet Indicates Defeat for Italians . . . Huey Was Viewed as Real 1936 Threat. ‘ soe ‘Washington, Noy. 12.—Although the news may break General Hugh Johnson’s heart, the Frankfurter boys have moved in on the department of justice. After the celebrated Dr. Felix Frankfurter of Har- vard law school refused: President Roosevelt's offer of the solicitor-generalship in 1933, hardly one of his nu- merous pupils entered the service of Attorney General Homer Cummings, though they poured into New Deal ranks nearly everywhere else except NRA. Solicitor General J. Crawford Biggs and his staff sloshed around through the courts, making @ sorry show- ing on nearly all fronts, The Frankfurter boys (whom General Johnson calls the “Happy Hot Dogs”), some of whom had written laws the inept Biggs was trying to i defend, alternately jibed and groaned at the: spectacle. Even the supreme court apparently was “suffering,” with the result that Biggs was moved to a soft and un- important post. Along came Stanley Reed of RFC to be solicitor gen- eral and to renovate the staff. In the last few weeks he has picked some of the brightest of the ex-Frankfurter pupils here to help him defend New Deal legislation in @ big winter of test cases. cee THEY’RE ON THE SPOT | Their friends and their enemies will be watching them closely. For they're now on the spot and, although their briefs and arguments will be more graceful and to the point, it's a question whether they'll have any better luck before the supreme court. Among the group of Frankfurter’s smart young men now working for Reed are: Alger Hiss, former secretary to the late Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, former assistant general counsel at AAA and counsel for the senate munitions committee, drafter of the Bankhead cotton and Kerr tobacco con- trol acts, now preparing the supreme court brief defend- ing the AAA in the Hoosac case. Paul Freund, former secretary to Justice Brandeis, formerly with RFC, now specializing on TVA and PWA cases. Charles Horsky, former secretary to Judge Learned Hand of New York, working on defense of the Bankhead act. Arnold Raum, ex-RFC lawyer, specializing on pro- cessing and other tax cases. One thing about the Frankfurter boys. So many of them have served as secretaries to supreme court and other justices that they ought to have a fairly good pic- ture of the judicial mind. eee THE DOPE’S AGAINST ITALY Perhaps it doesn’t mean a thing. But correspondents at the state department press room idled a half hour away the other day figuring out that Italy, by all prece- dent, stands to lose the Italo-Ethiopian war. The idea being that wars are commonly designated by hyphenating names of the nations involved and that the nation mentioned first always gets licked. For in- stance, in the Franco-Prussian war it was France which was defeated. Other instances: ‘The Russo-Japanese war. The Turco-Italian war. The Spanish-American war. The Sino-Japanese war. The Bolivian-Paraguayan war. The Austro-German war. No one could think of any exceptions. ewe HUEY WAS REAL THREAT Few but the innermost insiders realize even yet how badly Roosevelt was worried, up to the time of Huey Long’s assassination, for fear that Huey would draw a large vote from him by running as a third party candi- date. Point was recently given to this fear by evidence that certain interests were willing to provide Long with a large campaign fund. Roosevelt, it is whispered by one or two of those he consulted about it, was making a personal survey of the vote Huey would be likely to get. He had given up Louisiana and Georgia (where he figured both Huey and Governor Talmadge would work against him), according to this tale, and was disturbed about Arkansas and South Carolina. He asked a trusted Ohio politician about that state bere was told Huey probably could poll 250,000 votes there. At the time of Long's death, the administration was grooming Senator Bilbo of Mississippi, an outstanding rabble-rouser and vote-getter in southern rural regions, to take the stump against Long in the campaign. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) E With Other | aie || We may or DITORS | wz 38 | Ways That Are Strange (New York Herald-Tribune) Some little time ago Ohio regaled the rest of America with the tale of an interracial romance. It was an- nounced that James Lin, a son of the president of China, the venerable Mr. Lin Sen, had married a five-and-ten elerk, a Miss Viola Brown, who had honestly returned to Washington—The body of Huey Long lies buried in the broad terrac- ed acres surrounding the state house he built in Baton Rouge, but the na- tional capital where he projected Your Personal Health ' By William Brady, M. D. ters briefly and in ink, Address Dr. Sede in cate Se Ths aries eta queries must be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope. - RAPHY OF A BOTTLE BABY A mother dee ing opin that condensed milk is adequate food for a xperience: a ede pelts baby on the bottle at six weeks. From then until he was five months old I tried many foods on the advice of my physician, giving each a fair trial. Nothing would stay down. Meantime I heard of one baby after another that had had the same difficulty and had been settled by the use of a (a brand of) condensed milk. I fought its use, and my doctor would not hear of it. But finally, about ten weeks ago I succumbed. He started to gain immediately and the vomiting stopped, He also started to sleep. By the age of six months he weighed seventeen pounds, just double his birth weight. A week ago I stopped the condensed milk and started on cow's milk, He has no trouble whatever to digest this now. Each feeding is five ounces of milk with two Lest a! oa with a teaspoonful of lime water in it teaspoonful of corn syrup. Of course i te while eg ‘were giving the baby condensed milk we gave him also a ful of cod liver oil three times daily with the juice of an orange and two slices of banana mashed. At seven months he weighed 19% pounds—but he is not flabby fat. He ts very sound My physician recently examined and passed him as 0. k. Now I am still uncertain whether condensed milk is adequate diet in spite of my experience. But I vega e tell you of my experience with the sugary concoct * cle aliadingins (Mrs, W. H. McK.) I would not and never did go so far as to say that condensed milk, with daily rations of orange juice, cod liver oil and ripe banana, is not adequate food for a baby. Mrs, McK’s experience would indicate that it is entirely adequate. Nor would I infer from this brief biography of a bottle baby that such a diet is adequate were it not for the fact that Mrs. McK’s physician has found the infant's nutritional condition normal. The condensed milk I considered in adequate food for a baby was not quite the same as the condensed milk of today. Condensed or evaporated milk today is equivalent to fresh milk in vitamin values, perhaps superior in vitamin D, Sweetened condensed milk or evaporated milk keeps well, does not freeze readily, and is always safe where there is any doubt about the character of the fresh milk available, Evaporated milk is fresh pure sweet whole cows’ milk concentrated by removing half of the water and sterilized. Condensed milk is concentrated in the same way, but has 40% of sugar added as a preservative. For infant feeding or any other purpose, so far as I can learn (and frankly I was formerly prejudiced against condensed milk), condensed or evaporated milk, sweetened or unsweetened, is no less wholesome nor de- sirable than fresh milk. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cataract I am 67. Cataract has formed on my right eye. At my age would you advise removal of cataract? Is there # better way to remove cataract than by operation? (Mrs. N. L. E.) Answer—Cataract does not form on the eye. It is rather an opacity, a clouding in the crystalline lens within the eye. There is no other way to remove or cure cataract. I believe most successful cataract operations are done on patients of your age or a few years older. Your oculist and your family physician should decide whether you should have the operation now. Dr. Brady will answer | | | | | old haunts into the corridors lead-|er who took over leadership of Long’s ing to the chamber now occupied by | Shere-the-Wealth clubs, the house of representatives. * * There was considerable disagree-| Frankly, there was no particular ment at the outset as to.which sta-|bitterness in England. You ask about tues should be moved. An argument,/the fleet being sent to the Mediter- for example, can be started any time|ranean, Well, there was nothing par-|!8 Very sallow. . . (Mrs. G. B.) Z between two Mississippians as to| ticularly wrong about that—Sir Ron-| |, Answer—Eating raw carrot is a healthful habit. Where a great quantity whether Jefferson Davis or James Z.| ald Lindsay, British ambassador to|°f carrots, raw or cooked, is eaten, the yellow pigment in them may give George is the state’s most illustrious| U. 8. |the skin @ sallow hue, especially the palms, but this clears up soon after son, Both statues are in the Hall and —— en Ge ee one had to go, f i An agreement finally was reached R Boe. Suggest some good daily exercise to keep ® person fit hi he stat fi I in ‘the gi! beers traied tel pe aaratn en Answer—Send dime and stamped envelope bearing your address, for OLITICS - at the - NATION'S CAPITOL Carrots Craving for carrots. Eat several pounds of them a week. My skin By HERBERT PLUMMER A recent survey indicates that 220 cities in the United States with pop- ulations of 10,000 or more are adja- cent to adequate water landing areas |booklet “Last Brady Symphony. himself into world-wide attention is|would go outside. Davis stayed. and could greatly benefit by marine | to have a constant reminder of the * * * air facilities. | (Copyright, 1985, John F, Dille Co.) self-styled Louisiana “Kingfish.” Fleeting Fame jeer Tear Te Just off the senate chamber, in Statuary Hall, space has been allo- cated for a statue of Long. It was at the request of the state official- dom—remnants of the political em- pire he left when removed by an as- sassin’s bullet—that a place for Long has been made. The law governing Statuary Hall provides that each .state may place there statues of its two most illus- trious sons. Louisiana at present is the only southern state not repre- sented. There a likeness of the Huey of the days when he was the most talk- ed of man in the United States sen- ate and probably that body's greatest individualist of recent times will stand. * Oe OK Chamber Crowded Authorized by an act of congress, July 2, 1864, the Hall now has 36 states represented by marble or bronze statues of one or more of their il- |] {lustrious sons. So many have been crowded into the chamber, once occupied by the house of representatives, that engi- neers of the capitol recently decreed the statues would have to be more widely separated over the building for the sake of safety. During the last few months workmen with block and tackle have been lifting General Joe Wheeler of Alabama, John Win- throp of Massachusetts, John Sevier him a wallet that he had left on her counter. The dis- enchanting sequel to this story was almost instantaneous, thanks to modern communications and Mr. Lin Sen’s vul- poets might be to do an injustice to someone else, The important thing js that these flashes of genius came from a housewife whose peculiar domain is her modest home. The thoughts which she puts down on paper are Most often developed amid the rattling of pots and pans. A Comrade Looks Back ‘The Communist party in Russia rose in its wrath the other day and heaved out of its ranks Comrade Mikhail Saveliev, who used to be a private chauffeur for the @tand duke Mikhail Alexandrovitch. Comrade Saveliev's offense seems to have consisted of telling his friends that the best years of his life were those he spent in chauf- feuring for the grand duke. It is hard not to suspect that « rich and ironic little human interest story lies back of all this. Comrade Save- ev was a benighted wage slave before the revolution, and there was a vast gulf fixed between him and his titled employer. Came the revolution and he was freed of all that. But somehow Comrade Saveliev seems to have had more fun under the old system. He actually enjoyed his pitiable lot. ‘The pickings which @ grand duke’s chauffeur could lay hands on, one gathers, were not inconsiderable. And nerability to publicity. Assiduous Chinese reporters brought to light a be- wildering view of marital conditions in Mr. James Lin's homeland. They promptly revealed that Mr. James Lin was not a son of the president, but a nephew who was being brought up and educated as a son, and they also alleged that, because of the strange Occidental prejudice against plural marriages, this Lin-Brown alliance was technically illegal. The cabled reports had it that Mr. James Lin had already married two daughters of » prom- inent official in China, and they have more recently alleged that since President Lin Sen has recalled his nephew the latter has been giving one of the earlier wives & belated honeymoon in the vicinity of Peiping. Whether these reports are true or not, such things do happen, Indeed, they often happen, though they seldom attract the publicity due the foster son of the president of China. In all conservative Far Eastern circles mar- riages are arranged to cement interfamily treaties, often in the infancy of the bride and bridegroom. Whether the latter is present or absent, pleased or displeased, such marriages are often consummated, sight unseen, and the of Tennessee and others from their At that, fame is fleeting in Statuary Hall, as any of the score of guides who daily conduct thousands of peo- ple through the capitol will tell you. “Some of ’em need a little oil add- ed to their lamps of fame,” says C. R. Evans, a veteran who has usher- ed countless thousands through the Place. “The public is forgetting rapidly who some of those famous men were. ;Some of them are no longer even a name.” So to keep the memory of the men in Statuary Hall alive, Evans has dug linto the history of their lives. “I tell the public little stories about them,” he says, “to refresh their memories.” rey A man with only a $500 income should contribute some income tax, if only enough to make him conscious of government burdens.—Walter C. Teagle, president, Standard Oil. * * * Who knows? I may be the next president of the United States. Stranger things have happened.— Gerald L. K. Smigh, Louisiana preach- 2. HORIZONTAL 1, 6 Internation- Answer to Previous Puzzle iwid!o[D [Rio [wiwit[L [S |OIN} lO[RIE} .. Famous Artist | in —. 14He won many ally famous [AILIO[ETS MMA IRIEIA] : artiat CILIAM! 16 stustcal note 12 Acidity. opRoWwIOMMOLRIAT 19 Therefore. 13 Vacant. TLSON IRI 20 Pussies.” 16 Bone. 22 Method of 17To redact. DIET O@n procedure. 19 River mud. [ENT] LIN IDIETEID} 24 Long speeches Ki TH ICRBAITIE!) 26 To depart. 1UITIS MBAS |SMESIHIAICIK] 28 Danger. 23 Separate IRIOISIEMEPIRIO|PIS MMI |SILIE} 32 Light eteel, incident. TIRIE|E MEE IEIR|| (EMENIEIOIN) helmet. 24 Japanese fish. “TAIRIMILISITIVICIES IDIAIYS 33 Poison. 25 Wild ducks. 34 Perished. 27.Dog. é 47 Structural VERTICAL 36 To appear. 29 One time. unit. 2 Laughter 37 To preen. 30 Gaelic. 48 Burden. sound, 39 He studied in 31 Slight flap. © 49.Genus of frogs. 3 Frozen water. ——. France, 33 Constellation. 51 Mister. 4 Mineral 42 To meditate. 34 Prima donna. 52 Inspires 3 43 Postscript. 35 Frees. reverence. 44 Either. 37 Weights. 58 Cod. 7 Eager. 45 Float. 38 To nap. 55He was an = 8Shoe bottoms. 48 To possess. 40 Thing. American ——. 9 To perch. 50 Tree. | 41To beg. 56 He was also a 10 Paid publicity. 52 Sloth. 46 Ocean. fine —— (pl.).11 He was born 54 Pronoun. \ il Ni BEGIN HERE TODAY pcAERU Ena aoe. when BousY wal business conncetion fe vague. She alse meets LARRY GLENN, federal agent. te trying te locate WINGY 8. te sell some m vaca im am answer when NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY ’ CHAPTER XV - she re- i kg was just one week after this that Mr. Knuckles Welsh dropped dead. Knuckles Welsh was technically unknown to fame, but his ac- quaintance was wide and varied. He lacked visible means of sup- port, but he drove a 16-cylinder car and ate and drank—frequently —of the best. He drifted silently up and down the back ways of Dover, and although nobody had ever proved anything on him, which was his proudest boast, it was nevertheless common gossiD/ Red nally! member reading about it. I be- that whenever an raw deal was pulled off anywhere in the city Knuckles Welsh would be found to have drawn cards in it somewhere, if you could only trace things far enough. Rumor, busy on many things, may have wronged him here and there, although it is not very likely; but at any rate, among the things rumor said about him was that he was Dover's unofficial chief of police. He had never in his life held any. elective or ap- pointive office—nor, for that mat- ter, had he ever done any honest labor—but he held a wide and mysterious influence among peo- ple who did, and he found it lucrative. ‘The money that reached him in these ways went to various des- tinations, but a good share of it remained in his possession, so that when he was at last, and unexpectedly, gathered to his fathers, he left quite an estate. Furthermore, his domestic affairs having got rather tangled during two decades of gay living, this estate was left in a badly jumbled condition. So jumbled was it, in fact, that the court had to appoint officers to see just what was what and who was to get it. It was for this reason that a cer- opened circumstances quite different from anything he would have he said, “ Hughes in the bond department.” And whet Mr, Hughes got on the wire he said, “Hughes—this is Bert Thompson. I've got some bonds here and I think there's something phony about some- where. Can you give me @ report on ‘om? te By, B Hy i its valet fs ae “Okay. Here they are. Five per cent gold bonds of the Atlés & Iron River Railroad, issued 1928, $600 denomination. Serial numbers 13560 to 13689, inclu- sive. Will you check on ‘em and let me know? Thanks.” A tow minutes later his phone rang. He answered, said, “Yeah +. yeah, I see... . Thanks @ lot,” and hung up. He turned to his colleague and tapped the desk softly with a little sheat of bonds. “Well,” he said, “I know some- thing.” “Sor” “Yeah. These bonds here were stolen from the National Bank of Neola—you know, that little town downstate?—about a month and @ half ago in a holdup.” The other man raised his eye- brows, ,! “No trace of ‘em since,” con- tinued Thompson. “Here they are, tucked away in Welsh’s| @atety deposit box.” “Well,” said the other, “I ex- eve I'll give their local office a call.” see A®? so, half an hour later, Larry Glenn came into office, looked at the bonds, made notes, and heard the story. half an hour after that he was back in his own counsel with geant in the Dover “Who was this Welsh, any- way?” he asked. “Who'd he be “So that he'got the bonds as @ payment for something, and didn’t just buy them?" fAGAN nodded. There was an- other ailence, during which the detective continued to rub his chin thoughtfully. “Here’s the only bhuneb I got, and it's nothing more than a ago, I hear a fellow is opening a mew string of bookie joints through the east side. This fel- low is a policy operator—you know, sells those ‘numbers’ tick- ete—and he’s starting to branch out in the gambling racket, I’m . Rot on that detail, so I don’t know much about it, but one of the boys tells me this fellow gets wired in ‘with the city administration and isn’t bothered. “Anyhow, the take on a thing apt to be dealing with that'd slip|like that'd be pretty big; and it him a package like this?” he got himself wired in, he most “Most anybody. He was e fixer, |likely did it through Knuckles see—a high-grade lecte@ for”—Mike gulped dened slightly—“for the police, fixer. He col-| Welsh, because Knuckles was the and red-|bird to see on things like that.” Larry thought for a minute. big shots. Any racketeer in Dover} “Who is this bird?” he asked. might've handed them to him.” Larry looked at the slip of paper on which he had written’ the description of the bonds. “Hot bonds,” he said medita- tively, “Good as can be, even- tually, but poison to put on the market right now. Did you ever hear that Welsh acted as @ fence for securities of this kind?” Hagan shook bis bead, “That wasn’t his line,” he said. “I'd say he probably got ’em from some racketeer or other who hap- pened to be stuck with ‘em. Kauckles had contacts all around. He wouldn't have expected to keep ‘em very long. Most likely HE through some regular ie: “Then he probably them just recently?” eng weenie Ya say within week, most likely.” Larry looked thoughtfdlly at the-sheet of paper. ' “That's a pretty good-sised wad,” he safc “These they must have changed hands a within a couple of thousand or so of their face value.” He paused, and re was a Maple silence. Thep be went on: Tdaten, Mike, Have you got “Name's Boyd—Sonny Boyd, they call him. He's been in the Ley racket for years. Oh, and ty peptie bet securities now i : et 3 E ay eeeelenie ip H a8 He nprete Raetee i i FLY it i : rj ge Marty,” said Hagan. in to see Sonny, siti ot @ friend here wants *35 3 the way—I have heard that: 4 ’ . » « ” i . *

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