The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 3, 1935, Page 6

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)

oll re ne ‘YH BISMARUK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1955 5 nn The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Established 1873) Behind the SCENES | Washington } ——$— i State, City and County Official Newspaper | i Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and! | Administration Wide Open te Attack entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. | for Mai oe all ‘Oil te Ttaly George D. Mann |... Threats Made te Shippers Leave President and Publisher | Bad thorn ag oye Embargo hag | Right Course, Says Critics ... Fa- Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Treasurer ea - Subscription Rates Payable in Advance By RORNEY DUTCHER Daily by carrier, per year ............- || (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Daily mail, per year (in Bismarck) 2 ||. Washington, Dec. 3—The adminis- mail, per year (in state outside 5.00 |! tration probably is mail outside of North Dakota 6.00 for itse! Weekly by mail in state, per year ... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. a IIgg f two alternatives in e to discourage shipments of other raw materials to Italy. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation a construed as an official desire in position to use neutrality ion and sentiment tk ich to play the game of Member of The Associated Press fer her "t lacking for the way to keep out in from exporting war materials to belligerents. But there will be a large contingept in congress to charge that Roosevelt and Hull should formally have em- rgoed shipmer.ts of oil to Italy and i instead of adopting a od so dangerous in its precedent as that of making extra-legal threats te those engaged in the traffic. ** * Is Oil ‘War Implement’ Deserve Unlimited Support Women participating in the campaign to sell Christmas seals reported Saturday that smiles and cheerful cooperation met them in most places. Everyone knew what they were doing and understood that it was a labor of love. They were familiar | with the immense good which is accomplished with the money obtained from this sale. } Those with children in school know that thous of vlasses of milk are given away annually by the Women’s Com- | # munity Council. One reason they know is that those who can at recess time. Nearly everyone is familiar with the work done at Camp is Grassick, state health center on Lake Isabel conducted by the state Tuberculosis association. It is impossible to estimate %¢ the number of lives which have been saved by this effort, the fr, number of homes which have been brightened by the restoration of an ailing child to heath. One test is an examination of the manner in which the death rate from tuberculosis has decreased | * steadily in recent years. ie an instrument, tool, or by man to accomplish a as the implement of indry, or of war.” aterials, and especially cals, could legally be “implemen! Opinion | ided. 7 a itv have c 7 ae {inition would stand up in The women of the community have conducted this sale fba-eo Many have pointed out with a minimum of fuss but with signal effectiveness. Thejthat oil is an essential of warfare, support to which they are entitled is limited only by the ability petcrngrecreet Leer ipo of the community to give. a in ses xe * Might Bar Aid to Britain ; It seems obvious enough that an administration which has adopted! “Damn the torpedoes” attitude to- ‘d the courts in its legislation was; It Is Neither One Tendencies to label the rammed-earth garage built by Col. Paul S. Bliss as a cure-all for farm housing ills or as a non- ~ sensical and foolish experiment are both wrong. The value of Aupiens Ce alert aauine ee ate such things is never determined by snap judgment nor by the ter the Present neutrality act expires) expression of prejudice. The only real measure is that of actual auneaee | experience, in this case the test of time. | And it can hardly blame outsiders | The value of such structures lies in their low-cost and 2u2,Pcheve, that in the back of the § s r low-cost and mind of Roosevelt and Hull is the! relative solidity, but the cost is not as low as most publications | ‘ear that are, Letina rune) on the subject would indicate at first blush. | epi tree oemclving on pein Deitien | Before the walls can be expected to last indefinitely they oriole who believe it’s important to| must be covered with a moisture resistant substance. And such play no favorites point out that this| things cost money. In addition, the cost of door and window frames and hardware is just as expensive in a structure of thi appears to have | as hole; The chief question raised is wheth- ||! | ' { \ ! With Other TESTING-TIME (New York Times) Reports that Prime Minister Bald- win is now hesitant about complete going through decisively with sanc- tions under Article XVI of the Cove- nant must be graduates. He may be jin doubt just at what date to proceed | with his program, but his intent to proceed cannot well be questioned. Mr. Baldwin may be excused for wait- ing @ little time until France fully makes up her mind, but his own mind is made up. He definitely and re- peatedly declared that the foreign policy of the British government is based upon the League of Nations. He went before the country on Nov. 14 and got an overwhelming mandate in favor of the plan of collective ac- tion to stop the war. His great suc- cess at the polls was called “a Tri- umph of Steadiness.” He cannot al- jready be showing himself unsteady. support of the League of Nations and ITORS Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. degrees minutes, then allowed to cool again. Toys disease germs which may be in the milk, such as germs of tuberculosis, septic sore throat, Malta or diphtheria, typhoid fever, scarlet fever, paratyphoid, dysent- has no objectionable effect on the milk, so far as by I like milk fresh and warm if I can get it that way, but anyway and raw if I have assurance of the freedom of the cow or i § | seit be’ Z flit itl! Ea oie Leeege tite cy eEtEES | mere than Grade A | for infant, child, invalid safe certainly destroy any disease germs in the milk as Infants fed mainly with either pasteurized or scalded milk should receive % Gaily ration of tomato juice (fresh or factory canned) or orange juice or any other fresh fruit juice or fresh vegetable juice if fruit is not available, c: ure adequate vitamin C, for pasteurizing or scalding destroys the small uni of this vitamin in milk, pasteurizing being more destructive to vitamin an is scalding. Vitamin C is essential to prevent scurvy and to maintain goed digestion. - QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Ben Back on Job For six months Ihave been feeding my 20-months old baby some vegetable some fruit every day, at one or two meals. Now Ben Told advises that a yy cannot digest vegetables and fruit in the same meal.... (F. J. W.) Answer—By the time the baby is four months old you should feed daily some well ripened banang. If that is not available, then some scraped apple, or cooked fruit or vegetable run through a seive. It is quack hokum, that & baby cannot digest fruit and vegetable in the same meal. Send ten cents coin and stamped addressed envelope for “Brady Baby Book.” Or write the children’s bureau of the Labor Department, Washington, D. C., for government during the next few days to see how they come out of the test of their sincerity and unselfishness. It is also a time when the League jare several things which it must show November. Is the League of Nations to be able to prove that it is stronger and better than the old theory of keeping the peace by “alliances”? That method has been quietly reas- serting itself in the very presence of the League. But it was swept away, for the time being, when 50-nations took joint action against Italy with- out any regard to treaties of alliance. ;Can this stand be maintained? Men jalso want to know whether the writ as in Europe. They would likewise wish to have it settled that a nation gcvernment beat the League of Na- ‘ons—in whose policy England has/ ed such a big part—to the jump, ; kind as in one of normal design and materials. Nevertheless there are some savings in cost possible and | there also is the chance that such a building would be better than one of flimsier construction. In view of the difficulty our | farmers have experienced in obtaining proper outbuildings, such | as barns and poultry houses, the experiment may prove a boon. | ~ when it officially recognized a e of war between Italy and Ethi- opia and, second, when it began to bring powerful pressure against oil exports to Italy before the league laid down an oil embargo. *' Rk Looks Bad to Italy Without some underlying motive, they feel, this government hardly fp few months hence, when she considers trading him in on © new model. Whatever the result is, it will be well known, for the sould have placed itself in what rammed-earth garage already has attracted sufficient atten- seems a more unneutral position than tion to be the object of continued interest. jit would have assumed by simply o ‘placing oil on the embargo list. The Meanwhile, the western part of the state is indebted to Col. |/atter_ course could easily have been Bliss for having given it an interesting topic for discussion and | “i¢B424 8, 2 cartying out of the Sasa congressional mandate. possibly for pointing the way toward cheaper construction for, But when the administration, with- certain purposes. jout authority of the neutrality or as > other act, proceeds to discourage As for the final outcome, both enthusiasts and skeptics can | trade with belligerents by threats of do nothing intelli: save wait. jcoercion, the’ Italians are able to ng intelligent save wait. | charge unfriendiiness and convince | their own people of it. The course chosen has many more |seeds of war than the other. * * * Cause and Effect Observers of nati i ised a e ’ nat! onal policy were not surprised at the, Threats Leave Bad Taste government’s decision to pass a part of the relief burden back} Some good reason, it is also argued, to local communities for the recent trend of events had led|™ust also lie behind the extraordinary 5 . |decision to use the government's inevitably to that step. | power as a creditor to threaten Amer- First of all there is the consideration of finances. At the | ican een eompantes s Mare bid i 4 : ; {Y Specifically pointing out to eac! bottom of the depression state governments simply were UN-|company its debtor position in the ABLE to meet their obligations and the government HAD to ‘me setae wae ae shipments ot | R aa .|War material to Italy or iopia step in, The ability of state and local governments to give | were Coneany to Scyerinent lke major assistance has improved with the times. j One nepal be a rabid Hepablican . * a . to realize that such a method could ; Now, if there is blame as to the manner in which the job\ne used to threaten bankers, rail- is handled, the states will be “‘on the fire” along with the gov-| TOAdE, JUSUIAnee, form pAlies, Homie ernment. One way to alleviate a difficulty is to get enoug! he (arm cannes Bad many oliers 2 i who owe the government. persons into the hole with you. % | There are mz other complexities If the states protest the change, the political effect will be /At4 Sonflicts in the neutrality prob- good for the administration. It will demonstrate that the meas experience - PeChably vill be to ~ alee fog government were not dictated by a) Soa neutrality teguation be pred e de: spen e money, latory on the executive branch, Another consideration was the trend of public opinion as | SCOpeHEDY Jap: sale Beye nTbe) demonstrated by reliable indices, most significant among them! being the Literary Digest poll on New Deal policies. These show them to be somewhat in disfavor and this is a dange signal to the administration. | Here, again, political expediency caused the government to} adopt a policy of divorcing itself from relief, for the handling of the relief question is the largest single source of discontent. The constitutional issue has become passe. Few can be inter- ested in the administration’s assault on the gold standard. The NRA is dead. The AAA has more friends than enemies in the country as a whole, Relief was the sore spot—and the! weak spot. In this emergency, the thing to do was to get rid of the sheep-killing dog. f The WPA will continue to be accused of boondoggling and similar misdemeanors against the alleged American tradition. The government cannot divorce itself from the issue completely and at once. But it is getting out as fast as it can. In view of the trend it would not be surprising to see the president re- ommend against further’ heavy participation in the relief ef- fort after the present appropriation runs out. e+ 8 Mow that new cars are equipped with cocktail bars, drivers, at least, ‘may benefit, The back-sest driver can be kept busy mixing old-fashioneds.. i eo °¢ . " berate Agttess weds automobile dealer. ‘The experience may come in handy|in ema ot ne eat coe shay toe eons et Gene: BIT OF HUMOR NOW AND THEN | 18 RELISHED BY | THE BEST OF MEN Young Hubby— There's something wrong with this cake. It_doesn’t taste right. Young Wifey—That must be all in your imagination. Th e cookbook says it’s de- licious. Oodles—Senator Clabber always spends a good deal of his time posing on the rear platform of the train when he goes on @ journey. Noodles—Likes the scenery, does he? Oodles—No, it isn’t that. He thinks he looks like the president and wher- ever he goes crowds of people wait and cheer him. He eats it up. Dismuke—They say that man de- scended from a very old and distin- guished family that came over here three centuries ago. Gooberpea—Yes, and he’s still de- scending. es ’ —— | So They Say__.| SS I have no hallowed feeling about the supreme court. No five men—the court majority—should sit as a barrier to the wishes of the nation—Gov. Floyd B. Olson, Minnesota. ese * The American people collectively condemn congressmen for bel spoilsmen, Yet individually each condemns his congressman if he does not play the role for him—Dr. L. J. ecutive. zee Small town boys ... have it over city fellows. We were born with in- satiable curiosity and the places where we were raised did not have enough happening in them to make us blase. O'Rourke, Federal Public Service ex-| keeping us mentally young.—George | Ade. 2 se * + The historians of 2035 will write of |our era as a time when a few brilliant men built an iron man which de- |stroyed civilization.—Charles H. Plat- | tenburg, Iowa editor. xe * We expect to conduct ® vigorous, clean-cut campaign. The Socialist ing | speakers will get hearers, they will get applause, but most of their au- dience will go away and vote for Roosevelt—Norman Thomas, Social- ist leader. x * * If you want something in the way of better government, you must send the roots of a new party down deep into economic groups. ... If you don’t, there will be another Bull Moose flare-up.—Gov. Floyd B. Olson, Min- Now interest in people and things is nesota. 20 Grain. 22 Form of “be.” 24 Female sheep. IN[TIL TE) THE BEAN RIVIBIEIN] STALK EE TT | PIRIG} [SIH TEL [D|S) ‘ | Fine Composer ™ o HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle ane St city, Gea EIAINMEVIVILILIAMEMIOITIS! 19 He studied at wand EE RO IaMMe| 21 ia 5 Showe! 6 Ni 4 (DIATE |S] K OF IMIEITIE|S} 23 To fertilize. isons abe snubs ae [AIPIAIRL.. 25Soup dish. Wells 27 Fire rods. RO felaee| 29 Flay outline. 25 Transposed. —_JAIU/L /AMMUINIOIE IRBESIPIA IR] 26To drink” SILIEWAMEINIAITIEMPIAINITI ,, Daler og Toe tashion [SIEIAILIE ID) IM) WEIAILITIN) 3 cn god. 31 To push. S2 Work of skill. VERTICAL 39 Assumed name 34 Derision. 54 Revolved. + 2Ipecae source. 40 You and I. 35 Soda ash 57 Brooch. 3 Kiln. 43 Drone bee. 36In this place. 59 iter, 4 Cavity. 45 Old garment. 37 To creep. oes 5 Upon. 46 Grape refuse. 41Enthusiasm, 60 Fertile desert” ¢ Doctor. 48 Portal. 42 To require. spot. 7To depart. 49 Net. 44 Beer 61 Inclination. 8 Natural power. 51 In. 45To leak. 62He won fame 9 Either. 53 Light brown. 46 Mother asa —— 10 Existed. 55 To make lace. 47 To bow. pianist. 11 Mathematical 56 Twitching. 49 Genus of 63 He taught term. . 67 Tiny vegetable. rodents. music in 12To recognize. 59 South Carolina 50 Musical note. —, U.S. A. 16He was born 61 Before Christ. Ty | AALS EEEE eee |itself is under a severe test. There| to a skeptical world. Some of them} are enumerated by Professor Zimmer- | man in the Contemporary Review for | of the League runs in Africa as well! pamphlets on Infant Care and Child Care, Pineapple Juice To settle an argument, please tell me what vitamins are contained in pineapple juice... di. 8.) Answer—Vitamins A, B, C. Used Clothing Is it safe to wear such things as furs and coats which have been worn by a tuberculosis patient.? (C. M. E.) ~ A Answer—Yes, if they are not visibly soiled. Ordinary Iaundering makes any washable material safe, Ironing sterilizes. Dry cleaning makes unwash- able garments safe. which is 8 member of the Learu is largely peopied =I be able to appeal for justice League as against a couniry inha! ed by white men On all these points the acti far taken at Geneva is clear and re- Solute. The only doubt is whether it will be continuously backed up by the member nations. This will be the final test of the League. (Copyright 1935, John F. Dille Co.) BEGIN HERE TODAY = homey there, somehow, JEAN DUNN, secretary te DON- | cure better.” ALD MONTAGUE. lawyer, delays "Ue Vel pee Sart z Ber _anewer whee BOBBY WAL | automobile asks Prisoner looked up appre Ie marry ! I — i “At The anes: Weather sight |” hensively. Gunderson, with ex- club che meets SANDY HAR- | aczerated gentleness, helped him to I'm Jeckers came in. “Gunderson, you better sit here; too—be might take Bs into his head to go out the win- low.” 3 Gunderson sat down, tilted his _ chair back against the wall, and lit. a cigaret. Jeckers looked about him irresolutely, sank into a chair, and fixed his gaze on Gunderson’s- capacious boots, The other three returned to Matthews’ office, closing- - the door behind them. Te “Well, it may be a long wait,” - said Larry. “But itll work in the end. Especially since that man has been using the coke so long that. he needs about four times as much. | as the ordinary cokey. He docs, anyhow, if I’m any good at spot | ting a eokey by sight—and I’ve seen quite a few.” Now GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXII T= federal men pushed Doc Jeckers ahead of them, into a|&¢fy and came back with a small Toom which seemed to be both liv-|f0und pill box. He held it up with ing room and waiting room, and|the question, “This? Doe Jeckers dumped him unceremoniously into |20dded and held out his band for a chair, While Larry Glenn and Matthews stood by him, Gunderson |¢te¢ it, shaking his head. walked through the apartment te the back, opened a window and|We've talked.” stuck his head out. In the alley, loitering at the gato in the old|Division of Investigation offices |iu chair’ suits board fence, weve Al Peters and|without incident, Matthews led 2 landed old Dos the way into his inner office, where |2°°ke"S—and ff we should fall to Tony. LaRocco, “Hey,” yelled Gunderson. “Come on up, gents.” He returned to the front room. 5 H 8 e 2 Z s i i i il le, ad 5 eeeeke Ei time came and went, the afternoon wore along. At last Matthews tapped on their door. “Come along.” he said. “He's cracking.” ‘They hurried to Matthews’ office. ‘Through the door where Gunder- son was keeping his weary. vigil heard a voleo—a “Nobody's framing you. You of |treated a man who had-been shot fe & Fis AS HE f alt if iit Hl int PEELE : g i af ti aF : i i z i it By 3 i z j ie ; ; i iF h gai EI i et t i i Hi § £ i Fy Hi Hi 3 HH i E G2 Fa. frill H if 7 oe i GG if i g H i Fi a 4 i i 8 & i rk i i : | J 3 Z : % & i Wt i ef i' E 5 E % ttl Hil Fy : sj bt i f : i ii z ad Hf 3 t s Be | t : if

Other pages from this issue: