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THE BISMARCK FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1987 _ _— anata © Published dally except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | white Convinced Strikes puaes HD end seer wn pote at Busch a oovad aw Mining aepeme Come Fre- 5 Mrs. Stella I. Mann ee President and Treasurer RODNEY -DUTCHER Kenneth W. Simons (Trtwane Washington Correspondent) Secretary and Rditor BRE aE ie Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press wen oe Seg Sea ae a and y Rows nf spo: ts of republication of all other matter her: Crisis in Spain Spain, troubled these many months, faces a crisis which may either end the Franco revolution—or plunge all Europe into war. It has long been obvious that Franco was merely the pup- pet of Mussolini and of Hitler, that the people of Spain were not supporting him, The manner in which the so-called Loyalist government has been able to hold out, coupled with Franco's use of Morroccan troops, proved that long ago. Recently Mussolini and Hitler have admitted their very di-| appears rect interest, France and England have been unable to establish | AY smons white-solla tees thn the blockade which would localize the conflict, keep outsiders | amiable attitude toward the Michi- ae a Sr or attivude that it had Now Franco is attacked from the rear by an uprising of | become imperative to balk-it in sny people in the area he controls. They resent foreign domination. ae et : Ee fe ll Hele liptle sySeeee i 4a BF f i gs 3 E+ i Ft is ape reach for power. Ruthless slaughter has been used to put down the revolt, prebeiy wl be oot, Sul here A When, as one Franco commander sald, 6,000 persons were | 22, 16%, 7et of any messive vt tried by military court-martial in 24 hours and “only 600” were a the chief pressure condemned to death, we have 2 modern picture of a nation in|SfouP bene, ven conseat, Mey of his friends‘on the wrist—-not until Most signiticant in the developments, however, is the fact | “!* Ssht © our, Ot that the hands of Mussolini and Hitler are being strongly forced Always One Idea by these reverses as well as by the more belligerent attitude of Ped ghana gegen gh aa : and 4 fred N Ips, England, on the other hand, has made financial commit-|%*., of Connecticut, has seen to, it ments with Franco which makes her reluctant to get into the |appoint in thet respect. Spanish imbroglio, The best information is that, {2 Franco| Fhilline proposes inal. poloncre wins, English financiers would get more concessions from the p e Wi Thus we have the spectacle of an entire people made the victims of predatory international wolves, None of them seeks the welfare of Spain, None shrinks at the thought of building prestige and profit on the misery of a nation. of the two sides iy the Spanish wer. Prejudice, rather than in- | foreseen formation, fg rarapant on all sides. But no one who believes in | Doe) the principles of z can disagree with the thought/that | purposes the Spanish people should be left to work out their own destiny. will be distasteful to organized . Organised labor is travail, over, at least, France, tative Alfred N. that the current session doesn’t dis- means the ones in the soos, point- Fascist government than elther Italy or Germany. é Many people have different ideas about the relative merits That destiny now has approached a new crisis. - .. 1 Success Story Lo, Happy is the man who, early in life, finds the work for Such a man was Joseph Kennedy, dean emeritus at the Uni- versity of North Dakota, His impress upon the present and the future of this state | ely manner of thinking. They crossed with him the frontiers of knowledge. In his of a friend he taught them to look at-life senely and with intel- but it must have been considerable, To mould the minds and) the‘hesrts of men and-women who later became the leaders of |} state and community is no small distinction. Dean Kennedy had it, in greater measure perhaps, than can truly be sald of any other educator in the history of this state. As he neared life's sunset the record of his achievements must have been a satisfaction to him. He part in the history of North | and acq honor, In his passing the state has lost a thousands of men and women who knew him students have lost a friend, Why Not Hobbies, Too? Articles made by the boys and girls of Bismarck are displayed soon in a handicraft show, sponsored by erans of Foreign Wars. It is a good idea for it may to everyone the dignity and beauty of work done hands. < That is a lesson which most of us need to and over again, There always is danger that we may in ay gle ae collar” occupations and div : it the show t be made more interesting if it included] Jane—You men ia section for the display of articles made by adults with hob- | “ack. i thet eo? Then why do bies. The variety and quality of the things made as pastime oc- cupations by the people of Bismarck would everyone—if they knew. If the hobby riders would come out into the open many of us would ‘have. a: new understanding and greater appreciation of our neighbors. ——- ~ e ) The underworld is: popularly supposed to be peopled ag tight-pped gentlemen who are hard, emotionless, Maybe they are—when things are going their way. But it becomes increasingly evident that, when the breaks go them, they are even readier than law-abiding mortals to pleat, and whine, , became so hysterical he had to be removed. Tough guys—these? Imagine the contempt a real tough | tion. ‘Guys Billy the Kid, for example—would feel toward them. es Temperature Variations in Washington During March ECONOMICS IN THE NEWS | | GHBE, in Christian Sclence (epee! In the spring of 1929 I happened to-be in Berlin. It was my to to| “In fact, so’ important is nowthe ~position of the’ finance company in:the American credit structure that it is questionable if the his» torical series of ‘banking data are wiSGE> AHL CY Alte! | erst B17 Ales PAVIAMIACINEMICIAINE Ii AL MASE T MAIO TUMN PIRIOSIAL SIM eyladlad | Mofs 71. 1 NCIRMNOIVIE Sia | [CeMALIER emer DE RIS! BIAILIUEINIT MAT EM |O10) PERK TEDL UAIN th nad td we Pa ialliall rT Your Personal Health| - By William Brady, M. D. ini health ‘Dr. Dr. Brady will answer questions pertaining Me Addrens briefly and in ied by & ee le eee ns Tribune Alt queries must be accompen led by & stamped, self-addressed envelope. determine in plexy, cerebral nize si tion is to sah eae aren eclerosis Cr to the substance of the brain a) (ee eee or an accident in the Of the sclerosis or hardening of the arteries, |. os what the Da- toms, Sympto! ‘Tecte the ‘doctor learns by questioning by examining the patient and can be diagnosed etd TRAINING FOR A STBONE advance that @ pe or years there are no Poeasiy informed layman an inkling 36 3 there are no specific manifestations, of! verything bu the vast majort re Fea teens with incipient or very early cardiovascular degeneration or hardening of the arteries do not gone nes ‘medical observation at all; they prefer to try various nostrums, diets, ¢ 4 of climate, baths, manipulations, which they fancy will help their Hehe “circulation,” “digestion” or “autointoxication.” ae oa cha phy- recognise incipient OVD or arteria ASO ion of candidates for varioug appointments, applicants for insuranpe OF oce ‘wish periodic health examination. # oe recognizable signs of ‘arteriosclerosis is visible in the physician inspects these vessels in the back of popular: notion: off florid, full-blooded appearance and ig more characteristic in the early stages of pressure is increased or not, Blood pressure wishes to determine @ patients physi- the pulse and looks at the eyes. Feele gree of thickening or hardening of the Q the feel of the skin, Looking at the eyes he whether there is an arcus senilis, a cloudy grayish ring or bow near 2 part of the eye. Longevity is # vascular question, that a man is as old as his arteries. QUESTIONS AND ANSWEES Nitrous Ether Bmployed in chemical plant making nitrous ether, which, diluted with 21 parts alcoho) becomes Bibs spirits of nitre. Cannot help breathing some of the vapors, and sometimes become stupid, lips blue. Will this injure my health in time? (W. 0.) ‘Answer — Not seriously, Effects are same as other nitrites: or nitiroe Skin ‘itamin D 1s it tre that the more a white skin becomes tanned the less benef the ye vitamin D of sunshine? (J. D. ape es ‘aclentific.evidence to warrant that belief. Children unbath treatment for .all forms of tuberculosis epperently east Poor in V! -Z-use 8 yeast.starter for bread, saving 8 little each time to start next batch. Would this yeast have the vitamin B one would get. in. other “Aragon ceoch i tis tively poor in vitamins, ‘The. yeast “8c! “compara 5. A G) is brewer's yeast that has been pasteurized— , J _ (bpyright 1991, John: F. Dille Co): Beleritists agree fiat it, ts: not too|.. , Tt might be wise, therefore, for fantastic @ possibility. thet. modern] those who hear to study the sign man some day may. lose -his hearing. | language of those who do not.—E. R. ‘The loss has, in fact, already sterted.| Thurston, Murray, Uteh, dest mute. R FANNY GY WEA GERVIOT, reg. “S pose these will be as big and beautiful as their pictures, Fanny? “I don’t care whether they come up to their descriptions—if they'll just ‘come up.” 5 By William ‘Fergueon | Tuis Curious Wortp GORS FOR UNCANNY THEFTS \ CRAFTY ANIMALS —_ WERE IN POR THE MANRACTURE Ome ARTIFICIAL TERTH, _ e seems ., “4 fobbing a trap of its cantar it Pure malice. Not content eit of the trap and hide them Often it Anke tap a it takes all the food it can a fio in, and then fouls with. saliva that which it _ THE wolveriny