The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 27, 1935, Page 6

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An Independent Newspaper ! THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as 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 ..... feanteses Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of “Bismarek) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year .. Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per y Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ......... seeeee $7.20 7.20 5.00 6.00 100 1.50 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press 6 The Bismarck Tribune 3c | Behind dhe Scenes: | | Washing a) By RODNEY DUTCHER Faint Ray of Hope Ilumines London Naval Conference . ,. United Front May Curb Tokio Demands for Par- ity ... British Change Policy of Playing U. S. and Japan Against Each Other ... But There’s Slim Chance of Averting Sea Power Race. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Nov. 27.—Naval and diplomatic gossip here is that the naval conference about to be conven- ed in London is a futile gesture and that nothing will come of it but ex- cuses for Japan, England, and the United States to tell their taxpayers that the other nations will not com- promise and that the only recourse Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady will answer questions itary st to health but not disease or diagnosis. Write ters briefly and in ink, Add: yg Dr. Brady ts " ‘oar reo The Tri Mourne. CAll ‘queries must be accompanied by a stamped Selteaddressed envelope. DON’T NURSE THAT PAINFUL SHOULDER Various names are given to lame shoulder, Subdeltoid bursitis, sub- acromial bursitis, calcification of the supraspinatus tendon, periarthritis, sprain, strain and eke ye rheumatism. If pain is felt down the arm wise- acres are likely to assume it is neuritis. . In perhaps one-third of the cases the origin of the trouble is a’ definite injury of the shoulder. In another third the symptoms develop gradually, without apparent cause. In the remaining third patients report that. the lameness began with some over use of the arm or some unaccustomed ef- fort, such as “washing windows,” “throwing a snowball,” “painting the ceiling,” “spading the garden,” “polishing the car.” The pain in or about the shoulder is at first sharp and stabbing with certain limited movements, and even when the patient tries to rest at night it may be so painful that a shot of morphine or something is pretty darn welcome relief, I'm telling the world. Pain continues more or less con- stantly for days, With the pain there is increasing stiffness or limitation of motion in the shoulder, because movement induces pain, If not properly treated at this acute stage the trouble is likely to drift The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republica- HI to enter the international naval into a chronic disability of the shoulder which cripples the victim more ton of all hows ircatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In this te then tt P dtdttnet or less. newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. evertheless, ere is a distinct 2. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. | hope—and it can be said with au- Roentgenograms reveal ealclum deposits in the bursa or in the supris Thanksgiving Observance by America of Thanksgiving Day tomorrow is one of the things which sets this nation off from others in the world. No other nation has anything like it. This day marks the closest America ever comes toward official approval of the spiritual forces which have played so marked a part in our development.. On this day Americans of all creeds, races and colors pay tribute to a common God, and this in a nation where the church and state are held separate by wise constitutional provision. For Thanksgiving is an offi- cial holiday with a vast religious significance. Seen against the background of our history, it is not diffi- | cult to understand the appeal which this occasion makes to is true American. During the last year this newspaper has carried numerous | news articles relating the religious exploits of all denomina- tions now active in North Dakota. They appeared naturally and as part of the news because the churches of this state have been an integral part of it ever since civilization came to these prairies. It is a part of the warp and woof of American life and even the non-churchgoer feels it. Thanksgiving offers oppor- tunity to make public expression of this basic attitude, This day, perhaps more than any other, emphasizes the brotherhood of man and the responsibility of the individual to # Guiding Power, by whatever name he wishes to call it, for on Thanksgiving we are called to look outside ourselves and to thank Providence for the blessings bestowed upon us, That these blessings are many and comparatively lavish cannot be denied. Despite the ills which it has suffer ed, no na- tion is more highly favored than these United States and no people has received greater blessings than we. After recent years of hardship, America is one a wiser and a better nation. It is one of the few lands left on earth where government is responsive and responsible to the will of the people; where one man stands before the law the equal of another and where opportunity calls to all who have ears to listen. \ Were those blessings accompanied by the most grinding | poverty they alone would be much to be thankful for, because in these liberties lies the seed of all advancement, both for the nation and the individual. But they are more than abstract things to be compared against privation and an empty stomach. They are the means! | thority that it persists with the American delegation—that naval limitation can be continued and Ja- pan made to modify her insistence on parity with Great Britain and the United States. This administration has gone so long on the theory that Japan was bluffing and could be out-bluffed that most of the bystanders have decided the theory was all wet. The only thing tending to streng- then the first belief as the delegation sails is a hope that all other nations at the conference can be brought in- to a united front against Japan, thereby persuading her that it would be a good thing to back down for the present from her complete denuncia- tion of the Wahsington and Londoa treaties. * eR Britain Changes Policy Hope to slow up Japan rests pri- marily on the fact that Britain and America will have a more sym- pathetic understanding together than at any previous international confer- ence. Until rather recently the Brit- ish have followed their long-stand- ing tradition and sought to play off the Americans and Japanese against each other. Lately, however, according to diplomatic insiders, the British have been developing a wholesome fear of Japan and a belief that Japanese ag- gression will sooner or later lead to a British-Japanese clash in the Far East. This time it is expected the British and the Americans will work cogether to head off a gigantic naval race and will try to get other nations—not only those attending the conference—to join them, Japan wants a 5-5-5 ship parity be- cause she expects to rank equally as a first-class power with England and America after she spreads her sphere of influence through further Chinese territory and because she wants to be sure of being able to hold and protect all she takes. ee # Japan Safe from Attack Every naval expert knows that neither the British nor the American fleet could successfully attack Japan, even with the 5-5-3 ratio prevailing. The Japanese islands are so far away and easy to protect that American naval officers view the thought of war on Nippon with actual horror. It is even very doubtful whether the Reprinted to show what they say. We may or may not agree with them. HARD TO UNDERSTAND jis because its interests are af- (The Texas Weekly) fected. It may have a broader vision ‘The poll just taken by the Ameri-| than we have. It usually does look in- can Institute of Public Opinion re-|to the future, while we act for the veals that three out of seven citizens! day. After all, it is a matter of self- of the United States are opposed to interest with both that creates public this government’s taking any part)sentiment. And public sentiment in an effort to compel another nation! changes with the night, Let Italy sink to stop its attack on a rival. That/an American ship and take the lives is encouraging to those who hold of a hundred Americans and the that we can, and should live for our-| United States would be aflame with selves. In spite of this attitude of| the war spirit before the sun rose and the public, it heartily commends the set again. But they must be indeed president for taking part in an effort) few in number who will not voice a to compel Italy to cease iis war on| prayerful hope that this never hap- Ethiopia. The embargo President| pens, It is becoming increasingly plain Roosevelt has placed on the shipment/ that wars never benefit a people and of materials to Italy is nothing more/that the economic results of them nor less than an effort to stop Italian| must always be written in red ink. aggressions. Yet the same men who) And if the economic loss is to be con- condemn any joint effort with other > & So They Say | ° powers to prevent war heartily com- mend the embargo. Reconcile the ‘There's nothing artificial about Mr. | Roosevelt's smile. It is not a culti- two positions of the public if you can, It’s more than we can do. But we can commend the administration for its action in declaring the embargo o— sidered great, how much greater is the human loss, The poll taken by the American Institute of Public Opinion was not needed to prove that the American people are opposed to war, for their sentiment can be de- termined by listening to them talk wherever they gather. America wants no war. BEGIN HERE TODAY JEAN DUNN, secretary to DON- ALD MONTAGUE, lawyer, delays er when BOBBY «WAL- her ami cla, she | mee jean rR. MRS. 1 Bobby arranges to sell ‘At ‘The Golde’ Weather might SANDY HAI pinatus tendon in about one-third of all cases after two or three weeks. ‘The presence of such calcification seems to have no particular relation to the symptoms or to the treatment. The calcified area may show in the X-ray picture long after the patient has recovered; or it may disappear long before the shoulder disability has been cured. Best treatment appears to be complete rest of the shoulder, not merely in splint or sling, but in apparatus to hold the arm abducted and externally rotated and with a moderate pull maintained on the arm. This must be continued for several days. In this stage cold applications or ice bags on the sMoulder give more relief than heat. After perhaps four or five days of this, the arm must be passively meved by the doctor, and now is the time when diathermy treatment is of great value. Daily the diathermy should be applied, for perhaps half an hour, folowed by moderate manipulation of the arm by the doctor. This mani- pulation is bound to hurt a bit, but better a little discomfort now than a stiff and useless shoulder for life. Day by day the extent of movement (abduction and rotation) is increased, until in a month or more the shoul- der is nearly as mobile as the well shoulder. Meanwhile the patient carries on regular exercises daily, as instructed. In neglected cases it may-be necessary to put the patient under anes- thesi and carefully free adhesions before the physical therapy is instituted. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Fasting . Is it scientifieally established that intelligent fasting occasionally is con- ducive toward good health and longevity? What is considered overcast”? Eating.as much as one wants? (8. C.) Answer—One should fast only for specific purpose under medical advice. Overweight ig the most common evidence of overeating. One should eat as much as one needs. What one wants and what the body requires are often quite different: matters, For example, the common craving for excessive sweets, carbohydrates, which are easy to eat even when one doesn’t ‘need such food and is only handicapped by it. The Color Impresses I gave a cheer when I found your fine article on the antiseptic value of soap .... relatives who are horrified when I insist on washing my child’s cat scratches and abrasions with soap and water in preference to (a brilliant hued chemical) which they press upon me, They simply can’t gainsay “Ol Doc Brady”—who, I happen to know, is not. so old as he pretends to be. (Mrs. R. D.) Answer—Thank you, Ma’am. I still prefer immediate application of tincture of iodin for my own cuts, abrasions, etc. Soapy water is an ex- cellent antiseptic solution for mouthwash, gargle, douche, or wet dressing on an infected wound.” (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) © 1933 NEA Service, nc, watchfully up and down the street. Then they ran down the steps and crammed themselves into the car. Oklahoma stumbled, and the red- haired man pushed him in. The doors slammed and the car shot away from the curb like a stone out of a boy’s slingshot. ing with the county sheriff, who had hurried over from the county seat 12 miles away. “There's nothing more we can do now,” said the sheriff, folding his notebook. “There’s nothing much we can do at all, for that matter. It’s a lead-pipe cinch 4 | i Buddy McGinnis had just raised |they’re out of the county by this bit American fleets| nd on forsaking the old policy of} vated smile. He is cultured—a fine lor Lewis. He sells li is of filling our wants, of leading us to a brighter day. | anal CeLconearlG beet Me denne declaring (and fighting) for the|character. Whenever I go out of the id Montague. Lewis his head over the fourth-Seor ae time. I've got oa of my epunticn Thus Thanksgiving Day of 1985 finds most of the clouds |#¢,this time on their home grounds.| “freedom of the seas.” A poll of the)way to do little things for him he " TARRY GLENN, federal agent, | ow sill. He rested his gun on the | over at the telephone office, calling English public shows an exactly op- sill again and fired his remaining all the cities and towns around Fy ares And the idea of any such attempts says, “That’s nice of you, thank you!” is trying te locate WINGY LEW- i e which have beset us drifting away. The sun shines strong and | now is Boers The cen posite attitude. The English citizens|—I. H. McDuffie, the president's valet. TS, bank robber. He learns about |shots at the car; Be alincees) this | here telling ‘em to be on the look- clear upon a saner, better and finer America, a nation entering situation requires England to keep|are as strongly in favor of England’s * Oe OK Ho. jobby. The bon was a target altogether too big to|out, and a car-full of the boys are ed a upon what promises to be a period of unparalleled prosperity. We have much to be thankful for and much to look forward to. There is real cause for feasting and merry-making and the skeletons are gone from the closet; the specters have vanished from before our eyes. It may be that we do not DESERVE to be a chosen people but any dispassionate stocktaking reveals that WE ARE A CHOSEN PEOPLE. | much of her strength in European waters. To move the bulk of it into the Pacific would be to expose the British Isles and the vital Mediter- ranean-Egyptian-Suez Canal line to India, And the United States is experi- encing such a fervor for neutrality that it’s doubtful whether even Ja- panese seizure of the Philippines—a | far-off possibility—could bring about real warfare in the Pacific. taking part with other nations in compelling an aggressor nation to keep its pledge not to engage in war, and to assist with arms, if necessary, to bring submission. The English know the horrors of war much better than we do, but they are ready to go to the limit to prevent war. War in Europe, Asia or Africa directly threat- ens their peace and security. There- fore they are ready to go to any length to prevent another world con- Unless a drastic reduction of motor fatalities is brought about, highway transport will be put into leading strings and revert to the horse and buggy days.—Thomas P. Hardy, pres- ident, American Automobile Associa- tion. * *e * There is much that is good in ath- letic competition, but when victory becomes a necessity to maintain the morale of students and alumni, a uni- "The father te president “{s ‘robbed. ‘ CHAPTER XXVIII Ls Delleves the "ear he ered. Bob- which. Jean's NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY miss the bullets seemed to have no effect, At any rate, the big car sped down the street, its motor roaring to a high crescendo, took a corner on two wheels, and disap- peared. out on the road chasing these birds. “But shucks! We've got one chance in a hundred. We don’t even know for sure what road those fellows left on. We got their li- cense number, but if they don’t stop out in the country somewhere * and change plates, I miss my guess. We're just helpless on a thing like this, Mr. Dunn.” Mr. Dunn nodded agreement. 'N the town there was the kind of confusion that prevails when you withdraw a destructive stick from one of the buster ant hills. ‘HE clatter of nfire in the “There's nothing much we can ene * * flict, We feel secure in our isolation,| versity has sold its birthright—Alan| —"T'itrect jarred sharply on the| ai.rte Deople who had been on the) 4,» no" gamittod, After a briet Perhaps sublime faith in our destiny as a nation and in the and say: “It’s not our affair. Tend to| Valentine, president, University of ears of the people inside the bank. ered in door.|Pause he said, “I had hoped, when a One Club Over Mignon it yourself.” England is interested| Rochester. a nally enoust, nw we got that tear gas installed, that benevolence of a Guiding Hand has played a great part in mak-| The one punitive measure which : fs To the victims, standing helplessly | ways, dodged bebind parked cars “ta. ‘all Hobart . could bring Japan to her knees, in the by the wall with upraised hands,!or ducked off down alleys when | “© bagel ang ae ae opinion of officials here, would be an| © 2 it brought a sudden stab of hope: lhe shooting began. Now they all pat fost Pagel ag ae. at basis. anksgiving becomes an expressio: he| economic embargo. Japan has re- ~ ° to the gunmen it sound ie im- came st ing toward the bank topped * Peg saci oe 5 Bresson ony cently observed that nations of the k orel n Statesman Perative need for hurry. —to stop, most of them, in a hor-|them. But he never had a chance. essential solidarity of this nation. There is something of vast) world are able to combine in such a The red-hatred man’ prodded the|rorstruck circle about ‘the fallen |TBat man shot him before he could significance in the sight of Protestant and Catholic, Jew and|step. She would not like to be the 2 back of the trembling clerk with | policeman, who still fay quite mo- ge Sesser ihn ami ik Gentile, believer and unbeliever, joining in tribute to the “Divin- ea of one: f the facts that HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Puzzle 10 Ovule. his. subamatie. tionless. tae cat HE oat Gs ta eae ak . ” ‘ ereee eRe, BEE) MORE rite 13 He is ——'s ‘Come on, dopey!” he snarled.| Inside the bank there was less |®4F gene! ity which shapes our ends,” both as a nation and as individuals, | arise in the minds of Americans par- 1, 6 European (HETAIRTT JETRIELSAITITIATR] © cSkesman “Get goin’ or I'l plug you. Hurry!” |confusion, chiefly because there |Tection of a waste basket, and be- . ticipating in the naval conference as diplomat. EMBAILIOINEMMRIOIT] 1, ie disagreed ‘They had finished with the safe|were fewer people there. Mr. Dunn | £0 to smoke. ; thay date bape toe paneling beer | ‘ - +1 Interiwined IEMMILITIEIREBAITION) ©° vith the and the cage in which Mr. Hobart |led the trembling stenographer to| “No, we're licked in these small Trusteeship of Wealth than a Dosen ail mevalitace |” satostabrle AIDIOIRINMEMIEINIU] «yn tte lay Jn @ erotesquo sprawl on the|the door and instructed her to tell|towns—Hicked before wo start,” he Be Ppnervance donday,of the senteniual ot ener Carnegie’s| that the Buranean eiiauon: 16,001. 8 Sunperied, LAT: regret. a aa ths sleek geatabiog tile orn the tarimak owt wae andiog, He brooded over this for a mo birth calls to mind some of the ideas of this canny Scotsman| complicated, 80 felcate pads. ube] as Amray, Aun erie: from the cash drawer—there|to his secret shame, that his chief|ment. Then he looked up sudden- which modern America might profitably ponder. Po tone tees gee OF) 16 Diminished. eee Weren't many, but this redhaired Jemction was one ot relief at the . A eas . : iJ . s lieved in being thorough— | fact that, the robbers not both- As mentioned in Monday’s edition of The Tribune, he felt| And the pessimism they leave be-| 16 Consumer. 23 Edge. aa ener tuffed them into the flour|ered to take his own money away : % A hind as they quit these shores sug- 17 Mineral 2 ‘ ox : ‘that possession of wealth was a matter of trusteeship and the gests that theirs is not much more ee 2 ual sack VAL teat Wan EME 1) oe hiss he, went back iene holder thereof was accountable to humanity for its use in the ee Cassy Cee vice, Inc) | (9 Half an em. IM] 27 Meadow. ait. The bandit coolly took the! mr, Hobart still lay where he|aren’t you? Well, robbery ered é common good. melita Braid 21 Watery. 3 eae oak bay Band, ewting ‘ne Sun | had fallen. His head was in a pool |Federal Reservo bank ts a foderal 3, * : 7 1 i . against the clerk’s mple w! f blood, in his|offense. Get the government men : - This seems to have been a development of his later years BIT OF HUMOR 26 To expand. HEAD + RAT + TEN 34 Goit teacher. iran Ghat neaned (isa eacastnes’ paste ane br vei ee loge oa ee . ior no biographer of the great steel master paints him as giving NOW AND THEN Sree cdate =n SHEART | 3270 make lace, Orr ee ee ee yettea, [200K Father dreadful; but Mr. Dunn} Mr. Dunn reached for a tele “| way to eleemosynary impulses on a grand scale during the time A tur nest or ‘te ii Te ecatune. Pl VERTICAL 36 Aye. ; “We got to step on it!” "a ae As he was making his money. During the time Carnegie was win- 34Citrus fruit. 49Grazed. 2 Inspires 38 Locked. He opened the door and came out | was still alive. ” he said. rhe tees of the Do. nit for himself a position unparalleled in the steel industry, = 35 Orderly 51 Minute skin reverence. 39 Station, on the steps just as the village po-|carried the wounded man into Mr.| comes is @ Maplehurst man— i Use ing 1 : “Sometimes it’s awfully difficult be; collection. openings. 3 Part in a 410n top of. liceman crossed the street 50 yards |Dunn’s office and laid him on a Larry Glenn. I’ve known him he was hard and shrewd and far-seeing, though there are few ing a minister's wife.” 37 Unsorted 52 Molding. drama. 42 Type of plum. away. leather couch, and then Mr. Dunn | since he was a baby.” who claim that he was not strictly honest. “But I'm the kind who practices mheaten. meal. 5% Foe, § Aver. 43 Narrow valley On the steps stood the sandy-|reached for a telephone and bur- peed , ae ae fi gas what I-preach, am I not, my dear?”| 28 Whipped. 54 Fillet. 5 Born. 45 Flower parts, haired chap they called Oklahoma. |riedly called s doctor, while the In estimating Carnegie’s benefactions, however, it is inter-|" "Taye just’ the trouble. "You try| 10 Scolded 55 Spendthrift. 6 Degraded. 46 Shaft surface. He ‘was swaying slightly, and his|farmer soaked a handkerchief in LA hed Jot. #0 Pak aa inite di i tant! 6 7'To throw. 47 Observed. ti beneath its tan, and t th in th came 48 He is a native delegate. beneath his clothes, and made his right foot feel sickeningly wet and warm; and he held his sub-machine gun at his waist and peered grim- ly up at the window from which Buddy McGinnis had shot him. He did not see the ay Policeman, but the red-haired man did; and he stood there, his right arm extended, and fired three shots. sunlight on the pavement was be- guiling;, so much so that it mad him think of the baseball park, and) he was just reviewing the current: state of affairs in his mind, to see whether he would be justified in: “sneaking off to the ball game”, when his telephone bell tinkled. ~~ “Maplehurst is‘calling. Will you: bart’s forehead with clumsy ten- derness, The young clerk who had been slugged into unconsciousness came to and .sat up groggily, ‘his head wobbling a little. He raised one hand and touched his aching tem- cation for the masses, for that requires initiative and enter- prise on the part of the person who would take advantage of the benefits which Carnegie made available to them. In the Bismarck public library, founded with a $25,000 donation from the steel king, there is the nucleus of a college education for any one who would take advantage of it. All that men know and most of their enlightening thoughts have been down in. books for the benefit of succeeding generations. | ins The books are in our own library and available to those who|seunerims heas mune have been denied access to information through pedagogical) “Yes, I had to iron that out.” channels. sure you get ® good looking Tf more of our enormously wealthy citizens took this atti- ieee for the baby.” tude there would be less cause for worry on the part of such) y’t%% nim to have police protec- men as J. Pierpont Morgan, who has never been listed as a| tion.” donor tos great public cause. There would be less “So your wife's teeth are false?” “Yes, they bit my best friend's ear instead of mine.” “If I had a wife lik like yours, I'd stay home every night in the week.” “Tl say you would or get your neck broken!” “My wife fired the laundress the instant she caught me kissing her.” S\4088 id NNNG teat git

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