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rE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1937 . e 3 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper | Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company Bis- : marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail > matter. : Mrs. Stella I. Mann a President and Publisher ‘ Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons ‘Vice Pres and Gen'l. Manager Sec'y-Treas and Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press lusively entitled to the use for republica- : e e a . The Bismarck Tribune Behind Scones Due for Another Seasonal Rise By William Brady, M. D. CHART OF PUBLIC INTEREST IN GOVERNMENT Washington er ey Liberal Democracy Is FDR's Deter- ited to it or not otherwise credited in this Sere per, ana the I news of spontaneous or published herela. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved, Takes Time to Learn Estimates that the seamen’s strike cost $686,000,000 dur- ing the 98 days it lasted throw into sharp relief the idiosyncra- cies and frailties of human nature when it is called upon to ad- just economic relations. The strike meant distress and suffering for the men, be- cause stoppage of a pay check is a serious matter for every in- dustrial family. : It meant losses heaped on losses for the employers because many of their expenses went on just the same and they were re- ceiving no revenue. Because of this fact the final settlement was the product of mutual suffering rather than of any basic improvement in the mental outlook of the antagonistic parties. The agreement which sent the men back to work could have been reached just as sensibly before the strike started but, men being what they are, there first had-to be a big and costly fight about it. Then, after both sides had been sorely tried and grievously injured, common sense finally asserted itself and adjustment was made. of income. mined Aim . . . Bogie of Fascism ~ Gives Cabinet Members Insomnia «.. Trial of Trotskyists Dazes U. 8. 8. R. Defenders in U. S.... Fas- cism Causes Most Worry. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Feb. 6.—Anyone who knows the New Deal inside out real- e izes that one of its most praise’ aes has been eee the United re tates on the middle road of democ- inal some ee ee cu ove fe bane geared ono, ope, sone, Stalin, Hitler, Mussolini, and other caugh, especially when the miscreant Js obviously coming down with or suf- Satellites are still saying it can’t be fering from a Gee And all pears and health ai there same being spattered by the spray of polite done. Events in Europe, however, cont eee oa ‘such an path ey éven though reli hctaotndie| spray 16. a have intensified the determination doesn’t feel them Practically be so fine that one "t feel the face. the ot Ropeerett and his most thoughtful oni? difference between the of Gangs of. sneeze and foes fed deedioel The administration continues to be Hon ts tn ee, the ai okay than fir pila the conversa’ two or three feet, rarely more than five attacked from both the right and the Unconsidered but, I fear; factors in the spread of the flu and left, and it has been called both other ory infections’ dre physicians, surgeons, specialists, nurses, “Communist” and “Fascist” by per- teachers, big business executives or large employers, who choose to remain sons who usually knew better, but it at work all th obviously suffering with what they brazenly try to pass will blend itself more forcefully, as off a as “slight cold.” They do pas it off, all right, but unhappily for their arising circumstances require, to victims, it too atten proves to be a serious illness. maintaining a liberal democracy. Courts today are giving judgments against corporations or commun- All of which is more than @ few Heer raps Hic gant cage been irate cag pc beetroot a Leader meta & couple is tect rs ae rege’ pollution, when Metazed eo bring reasonable 1S derstood Broo! they typhoid fever from such . i lle awake nights occasionally worry- It is time that physicians, surgeons, dentists, nurses, f° ip ing about the menace of Fascism. health commissioners or health officers, big business executives and employ- Some of the most “radical” brain- ers were compelled to récognize the sheer criminality of conduct on trusters have been almost fatalistic- their part, and nothing impresses that upon the transgressor so effectively 8s & judgment of the court. ally despondent in the belief that Fascism is on the way. * * OK Opinion Divided There are many in the government who favor one extreme system or the other, and many more who believe a choice between the philosophy of Moscow and that of Berlin canont for many years be escaped. And there are still many others who insist that no effort should be spared to avoid the choice. In fact, the issue has become a lugubrious but persistent topic of conversation, and the election hasn’t caused it to subside. Roosevelt will continue to preach democracy. His pointed remarks in the direction of Nazis and Fascist! i E i i | i : : i i i Please give me full information on diathermy treatment of hyperthy- , how to obtain parathyroid hormone. A) ‘ Answer—Both can be obtained only from your physician. In some cases . ! i : Belligerent spirits had been chastened by adversity. Hot blood! nave been more than rhetoric, and he ‘Gums j cooled under the very effective treatment administered by loss Roast bere © Riss puaeene at one ime you recommended ® mouth wash for hardening soft, tender a s whose instinctive faith in humanity With Other Baprinced Answer—A drop or two of fluid extract of ipecac in a glass of water; All of this occurred because the contesting parties finally| made them want to believe that, in may or may not or # drop of the following solution on the moistened tooth brush twice a day: realized that they were being foolish, Neither group had any {he 1eng run, cenocrecy Youd OO aa Pea creas ot Spas Morea eager omen particular regard for the interests of the public, yet the public government as & process of setting we. ae a Conspicaoes ‘Venules LORE was a major party at interest. It was as much entitled to rep-| action w action was wisdom, THE RAILROAD VIEW {ready ordered this year as shown by; impossible. It has been repeatedly ay chests 3 ra fle woe! 01 Breken welds On . 0. resentation—and its views and needs were fully as important—| jnc'w,.ne fPintual sacrifices which) Rellway buying of locomotives, figures given above, | eee (Gat baitibn ot goractinens ater ee anree careines eseiaw, yes sadres ss for monograph on pitied, id its full sh: f that| act.” freight cars and passenger-train cars| But there has occurred no reduc$ion | ownership would do more to bring] to that used for varicose veins. a as those of the opposing interests. It paid its full share o! ae has started at @ higher rate in 1937| of demands for action that would s¢-| 01°. state socialism than any other (Copyright, 1037, John F. Dille Co.) : 686,000,000 loss. Tesaiiipaen than it did in 1936 in spite of the|riously hinder or stop railroad buy-! © pr ST : : 3 No provision now is made for such a thing and labor has} The first draft of the inaugural ies that it wae tee ee end oa ing. Shippers still array baipagg cd Hes a polls Monel public remain| @———~———-_—-__—@| that my little boy will have to go to ‘ 4 : ; speech was even more emphatic and|!2 any year ‘ mestic/ against needed freight rates. e tie regarding the ruinous legis-| | SO THEY SAY | |war. ‘That is Europe. In America py , always opposed it, yet the nation should consider the remedy specific at that point, but the prest-|Tders for eqyipment reported in Jan-| railway labor unions have had in- sree 4 regi Dechd 1s this you do not rear your children with ry “ * . , 4 . because | @ ————$___4 i of forcing arbitration in such disputes. The public shouldn’t be| dent toned it down. If he had felt|Uar¥ were fOr 46 locomotives, 10,881 | troduced both in congress and state| 18 and pubes AS Be, ad that feeling. — Plerre Clemenceau, i io.) her iti completely uninhibited in his lang-| {relight cars and 70 passenger-train | legislatures bills to reduce the length | PIFs® ‘The time has now come for con-| praising America’s neutrality stand. ; made to suffer for pig-headedness, whether it is on the part of ees he Joula have boasted that tivs| cars. Since the January figures were|of trains, require the employment of| With the demands ae sallway li greas not to delegate powers to the ee 8 ql the worker, the employer or both. country did not yet suffer from any|Complled additional orders have been | extra men on them and otherwise in-|PeF unions? Or ts 1 ease tee told! president, but to take them back—| Father told me just before he died : such Fascist-Communist split. as|Placed for 15 locomotives and nearly || crease operating expenses. The train, O° ney ot, Uoveeucy ot be. U, 8, Representative Hamilton Fish,|that he did not feel he belonged to = threatened France and England, after] 7,000 freight cars, while pending in-| service brotherhoods have announced they believe there is chance, New York. these times—John Coolidge, son of Special Talents bringing dictatorship or destraction|quiries and programs under consid-|a demand for s 20-per-cent advance | Solu they Unsere these Xs bm, clmete eee former president, explaining his lack Interesti f that some persons are best fitted for one| ‘0 other nations. And he would have| ration contemplate the purchase or) in wages. All the labor unions d@-| Costeqe Or is it because they do| Look at the hats women weer, It's| of interest in polltics. interesting proof tha! Pp added that he would work to see there | Sbout 50 more locomotives and 9,000) mand a 6-hour day at 8 hours’ pay. not care whether the railway indus-|®Wful. But life is always amusing— e* 8 thing and some for another is offered by Prof. Robert B. Walls} was no such split. . ie pest ear ne ae Ns ; The Sat has Ce under) try is bankrupted and foreed into why not senene poet eo You vou Shed papriod fed my i il The many persons in the New De: large headlines throug! coun-, Dongen, . sleeves ughs run , of tae Valley City BEND wo ets coleke nOmeaibeen anak who’ have been sympathetic—or at/ placed for 52 passenger-train cars and’ try information showing that the, Soong aay 3 opragsee peck gerd ees up and down them.—Former Mayor ef ? tests to determine the relationship between native intelligence] jeast open-minded—toward the Com-|the purchase of 181 more is contem-| railways in 1936 increased thelr pur-|*,oigimma stately have a lttle boy at home, and I|New York James J. Walker, observ- and musical ability. GS ete A ee pees i even Seales snp plans.) chases from the manufacturing in- must remind myself that it t likely! ing politics. : i “ rey "5 dazed tl locomot = i } \ From data acquired by examining 280 junior and senior| 2°" {7 10° or teisis of Trotayisis,| ported in January compare with | nestedly has been called to the facts high school students over a three-year period he has reached| with the amazing confessions from|orders for 18 in January, 1036. nt| inst, thls increase of railway buying, ‘ H ALF a ACRE ; the conclusion that “there is no correlation between the intel-| ‘old, bolsheviks” mow doomed to eilarolpotbakedit diet aod [pues lala tae BY ROBERT DICKSON ligence quotient of the students and their musical talent,| attempts to figure out a logical ex-|reported in January, 1936. ‘The 1936| railways to provide adequate and im- in E © 1936 NEA Service, | i though of course one has to possess high intelligence to be a| planation have merely resulted inj business in this category did not cross | proving service, that it is contrib- Dial » hundreds of headaches, and, lacking| the 10,000 mark until the middle of uting to re-employment and recov- om~ a great artist. authentic information, insiders here| April, whereas figures given above| ery and that it would virtually stop Outstanding in his tests was the fact that a student with Rellors thas) ae a ae cor oe Bow, Hae eo cars already ord-| if fo legislation largely iosronsing wa REG" HERE TODAY (t been a unknowing model|continued Joan. “Rings and things. 4 A ypnotism e . railway labor costs luc! - ir a sketch; uncon- | Marcia Canfield—there one of the lowest “I. Q.” ratings had musical ability well above) S/>i? tnemscives, or even stories that | ‘The 20 passenger-train cars ordered | way net operating income that is be- gt iweslthy FRILIE CANEIEUD: |sclous Of hia: but there wane vat |ecate domes Ey an eae w the average. the defendants aren't being shot, are|/in January compare with 32 reported| ing demanded were passed. It has bussing with gossip over the snd- | difference in her. beautiful ring that she wouldn't All of which is something which we instinctively have just as likely as any other solution./in January of last year. In February,| been repeatedly pointed out that the irance ef FRANK ece have parted with...” : : se % 1936, orders for 37 passenger-train | destruction of railway earning power ITTING alone and watching| She rattled on, but McDougall, known but which sometimes is lost sight of. This is the pos- Fascism Chiet Worry oa jet) fee a for te by such gaan neonaby would her, as he had sae before, he|unheeding, was struck by the ex- ¥ i i in ki ee The net effect convince many wo months of last year make continuance Pl owner- remembered her as hae session of natural aptitudes for certain kinds of work. iikteaie, eo Hemilotees save been las compere te rittr a tocalion ass alanine oat leet Pesprsta ba = tan pesesive Koha sae as (on A great musician might not have been a great surgeon or a great painter. A great financier might have been a very poor mechanic. Men who fail in one field make good in another. The obvious moral is that success in one line of endeavor does not necessarily signify talent in another. Neither does it justify anyone in posing as an authority on one subject when his success has been in another field. Also it explains why a man who is “as dumb as an oyster” in many things can be surprisingly intelligent in his specialty. It also shows that, no matter how greatly below average an individual seems, there probably is hope for him if we can touch the spring which opens up the way to use of the talents God gave him. Bogey Man It is a little difficult to follow the reasoning which caused | R. 1. Mansfield, addressing North Dakota grain dealers at Grand! Forks, to emphasize the fact that every dictator-controlled na- tion has a shortage of wheat. The inference is that wheat is temperamental and hence Tefuses to produce for lands ruled under such a political system. In its essence it is a good deal like the thought behind the claim that America had a drouth because farmers failed to plant up to the full capacity of their acres, due to government fiscal interference in the form of checks. : No one ever heard of a shoe manufaturer incurring the wrath of nature because he failed to run his plant 24 hours a | day, but the farmer’s job, it seems, is to produce regardless of frice or market. __ Now, we are given to understand that agricultural pro-| ‘action also is dependent upon the form of government, Thus’ «ow bogey man rises. | It might help some if Mr. Mansfield would inform us it ether Fascsit or Communist dictatorship has the worst effect ‘on growing things—if there is any difference. “ Thoughtful persons used to a democracy will agree that dictatorship is a blight upon any land, but extending the idea| | tocover the things growing in the soil does seem like stretching ! a bit far. If the drive against ambulance chasers continues, an auto crash victim | ‘may be able to come to without finding himself gripping a lawyer's card. eee a A local can't remember much of “After the Thin ” bee | canwe of sitting 8 tall one. mee eee victim was advised to keep her mouth wide | a A Massachusetts hiccough | open in an auto driven 60 miles an hour. We thought women always did. 4 eee |. _& Prench clergyman, in America, spoke on the “Right and Left in Litera- | ure,”’which probably has something to de with Gene Tunney. willing to defen¢ Russia, that some- caused her mood? Now she was thing is rotten in the U. 8.8.R. and) . playing a part; then she had been | she couldn’t give up! ! that, consequently, it all the more be- herself. Tony served courteously and ! The appearance of embarrass- efficiently, but as he leaned against ment wits alteady had become/the cash register and watched Dougall as he realized that al-|fecling of ‘pride though he had followed pace and action on the stage he [Sinope aeares . hooves them to battle for preserva- tion of our own type of government, subject to reforms. There is more worry in high places} & about Fascism than about Commun:| HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pustle_ 18 Dirt in smoke. sce COMMA LA ELEN [AICTOISIS] 20 Plant shoot. Young Actress that Communism is making no head- 1,5 Popular had been conscious only of move-| turning by which of re- oa in this country, Pesceeubaiece: actress, EILIEIMEIHELENMNGIOIRIEIE] 21 Her beauty “iarcle, learning ber tetp was im [ment and tone. found ‘in his Crothers ieee pected that some powerful interests) 10Source of [RIAIMITIE CIAINIDILJE] is —. TeeeetNne Sidne sewe wad’ ‘sass | He was aware of whispers be-| had not ceased to be troubled be. q in’ America lean toward Fascism as ipecac. ‘TOIT, O tL} i sengers neck. shelter in a farm- | i [Tio JACOBS CRETE Ic] 25 Conceives. nee in term {hind him. cause the problem still had no so- i an ideal, because Fascism 1s on the| 11 To rescue. EINES T| ILIAMBRIE!S! 96 morsel SO “But how silly of Marcia,” said| tution, i aggressive throughout most of the "i Hnseets cee. ICIHIATMIPTTIOINISMESIP! 97 range of view rela has encountered twice be- Ione On ay vito. fy to| As the crowd started out he re- d world, because nearly everyone has inquiry sound.1 | MECIO! INME UMBRIOMTISMEO) 98 7 carry. ‘Marcia artives home. Shortly god cages x sponded absently to their goodbys » 4 taken the Nazi-Fascist invasion of) 10 For fear ihat, PUARIT SMELL MINEIWIENB) 29 crucinx. Ler TREES ties ara nee lton from “the pinnacle vot “her [ond ,Plessantries. Someone said, : Spain with equanimity, and because) oer erat EPIOISMEPIRIOIOF MEMIAILITI 30 Queer. the lr friends, the Bradtorés. |ereater experience, "e women duce) Fave You done your oe may te or eaeae that the var-} 21 You and me. Mele mmens bauesiel 22 To doze. awe oN aid ‘THE STORY some funny things when she's in fat paces case wee ant right fous estimable officials who worry| 22 Hawaiian ‘ ate cle SE 34 Dawdles. CHAPTER XIII love with a man.” away.” a ird. 36 Dower “I think I could give him i are merely ‘eveing things under the) © ne FUEITIAWIEIST ISWUNGIIENS) property. rpeuE: % ee srrengenent made|under the piesa tid fe yey main change, sresped ; + : 38 Not uch. al joan Bradford ap-|othy remarked. 2 Even so, It seems worth reporting) 38 Musical "le 4esmall Dutch VERTICAL 39 Ostentatious peared at the following night's re- returning, interrupted the|trnu tee Deceaeel, Why hadn't he that there ts this’ rest ideal ot Res |e peo: coin. arhies person, hearsal of “Half-Acre in Eden” | flow of information to McDougall’s|haps’he had, boris vo he cog eee | tine concern in Washington over ‘urren Rei ee wag oicthed. with Bruce McDougall in tow. |ears. speslet cached s0 he had dis- ! American citizen’s right to think, talk, story. 2 Wrongdoings. Since the artist virtually had been| “There's a lot of people I want it because he wh write, and move sround es he darn) 31 One. 50To soak flax. 3 Network. 43 pre who lays won over to # decision to makelyou to meet,” she told him. “Do| ou? at go oD the local post- ; yal ee aay ema portion! eed |e Foe Se ink spots. 4 Musical note. 45,Narrative bis fine eiaeoeee, ee eae you mind sticking around just | police ‘without the bertalty cr ire » , id ~ . 'wice, we (eee sone nce 37 Perched. 5 Upset. poem. advisable that he “get to kuow|yet” incident and his identity being re- Bre OF HUMOR }| 2Medicinal aed person Electrical $O etmomo sash, | Beople” as soon aspossible-“And|" At the end of the second act [Eg ry re 5 of 4 . l= RTE Aad 40 Ratite bird. a ae 7 Anger. 50 Eggs of fishes | husband, “will you find more peo- |rector, announced that that would par pCANFIELD returned | THE GFST OF MEN A te ene Eained = gManifest. 54 Beverage. Pile in a bunch shan af a Stage-|be all for ‘an- Airphsl diten von’ Carataes, f \ a sustaining. motion —— 9Fishing bag. 55 Mister. pees — a that they |tlon to the jill ye aslo being a miserable holiday for ! He — could you| {4 Street. GE ee would “only took in for a minute” |Berehip, to attend a Chu Se TE ee on ne ot q 2 ae z o and then meet Mike upon ‘ar- | afternoon reception home, bo eta ll “1 rival on the 10 o'clock train from |#nd then the players, the scatter-lom the tail of fines Meese wee |e lol > En i ee ce o ond act. ‘Osborn, finished | AS usual, a party was made up cake terest, she conte ental eka ail (i ond act, Dorothy Osborn, Anshed | AS ee nactbinger and dates [ad resolutely followed thet tral ee. make household | é more to do until the third, on at oe oe Wane. Pe ae tn ties “f come off the stage and was Joan thoughtfully instructed the . Oe Beierndiied budget balance. the early part of the day with as Mrs. O'Pinch—Indeed it is. Why the door on her way to a seat taxi drivers at the station to di- great a show of spirits as Marcia | ast month 1 had to put tn four mis- the two entered. Tat Mike, upon his arrival, across |could manage, left home in the a takes to make ours come out right #0 pewisbougall was introduced to een Sarr piglets afternoon to attend Mrs. Hender- | : my husband would okay it. * a naper one pees: know who the lady is that’s asking Gaul, for the Stagecraft ae stage, |tor him”—and then piloted Mc- renee of Staylate—You know, I heard the and Dorothy had started to Move |nougall to. a place among the|_ “AWkins and the other servants j worst ghost story the other night. It On when Mrs. 22: crowd that was giving its unvary-|With the rest of the day free, sat | was so eery it actually made me start. Proached on tiptoe with a sum~| iio Orders to their 3 Miss Bored — Gee, I wish I knew! chairman |" Saeteey Brellied | that story. oe ‘Any more sa Tony?” |_ Johnny = Say, Ded, are Jettace B robbery” here.” | worms good to eat? she to McDougall. “A | Dad—Young men, haven't 1 teught ows was) held jyou better than to mention such orPtada nie, , things at the table? i be Mother — Why, Johnny, I'm sur- them, prised. Why did you ask such a ques-' Han | tion? : i ey Johnny—Well, I just saw one on 2 | Dad's leltuce, but it’s gone now. eae