The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 31, 1937, Page 4

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t i criticisms of America, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _MONDAY, MAY 31, 1937 inl Your Personal Health | By William Brady, M. D. not De, Baty ct gun surg pecaaeaee MRR RS in care, oe vo ase \ jes ‘must be accompanied by a stamped, self-adgressed envelope. The Bismarck Tribune Behind Scones he THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ’ > cepa ~|| Washington State, City and County Official Newspaper except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- v f . BY GEORGE MORIARTY Published daily marek, N. D, and entered at the postoffice at Blemarck as second clags mai} } ‘American League Umpire : Mrs. Stella I. Mann President and Treasurer Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Vice Pres. and Gen'l Manager Secretary and Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press Tho Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republica- tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this merepere id also the local news of spuntaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Patriots Needed “No more we fear disunion will rend our land in twain “For mourning wreaths on grass-grown graves have knit love's links again.” This quotation from the poem by Linda W. Slaughter, re- produced in Saturday’s issue of The Tribune, voices the hopes and aspirations of those who, 25 years after the close of the ee Civil war, remembered all too keenly the trials and heartaches caused by that conflict. The “mourning wreaths on grass-grown graves” marked the resting places of the Blue and the Grey alike. United love of country had superseded the bitterness and hate which marked the war period and the Bismarck of 47 years ago united in sor- rowful memory of those who had passed into the shadow. The assumption then was that this nation would never again know internal strife such as that, and in this those early residents were correct, But they could not envision what the future would bring any better than we can and. those who sur- vive must have a twinge today at the strife and bitterness which still pervades the land. For we live in a time when patriotism is needed just as much as it was then; just as much as it was needed when bh fruit ...5.... 38D another generation went out to fight in 1917. } These days call for sober, patriotic and unbigsed thinking; for unselfish action. For the nation is as much endangered now as it has ever been. We see the clash of conflicting social forces, all too few of them interested in the general welfare. We see the conflict between economic ideas, carried on with a strict adherence to the old law of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth—and the devil take the hindmost. We see a land where the doctrine of greed wins vast acclaim and. unself- ish patriotism is a laughing stock for all too many people. We see a nation where the value of services-rendered is estimated i ef i ; i: o ry r= & g i % E & Ee3 4 a ae i Li e Cs ES Se i eg rll i I N rE 8 13 Z 3 i é i i i 3 | i I i R¢ 4 ee! i R i | iF iu Le. Ae Fe i} 4 RRS ie z HG Hi g. i ais ie ai4i,e Es much thought is personal and sel t } little shoug! w sure one y dis r go f given to the future generations who will inhabit this country. | Tyre? "604 poss, | ideas of ts the|and thet smtens it may never. €0 But we also see a land where deep, patriotic fervor is ex- pressed by millions in their unflagging allegiance to the ideals of America; a country where every man is a potential hero; a nation which has always risen to an emergency; a people in whom faith and truth and honor still are homely, average vir- tues, the leaven in the loaf for a great race. We need not despair for this land of ours but we should recognize the dangers which it faces, prepare ourselves to com- bat the forces of darkness with the power of light; the light which comes to us from those whose “grass-grown graves have Init love's links again.” te 2 : EB [ rE if ea? See it Z speull eye AI gg F é je is TT By FE = i geheme that will JOAN BARRETT, heroine, “It wouldn't your fault,| Perhaps it would better to : leave no agricultural yearning un- “His mENDeY. minieg tavest- | Dorothy. Sybil asked—” 4 have a stieod me ae ee Beautiful Sunday Floto resimentation which was “the EbaTrones, mrstars |. Srtils a, tet titen tabbe* | Wag live, te Probie, hod bees Bismarck has rarely enjoyed a Sunday such as yesterday | n° baslo thought behind the wltBiL BENURY, protaute: John | Eiuebeard's sister, 1 wouldn't give ceaies to, Ence Dacacnb Sate wep when most folks had nothing to do but sit and watch the rain aes —. MSiginie MENDY, arte ee ee mee sisesel| Aster s moment, she sald: “I It may have spoiled many a holiday plan but no one who realizes the value of rain to this vicinity will mourn that fact. | ‘2 In almost every respect it was an ideal day and Bismarck en- Joyed it to the full. Just looking at the rain was a most satis- fying diversion for many persons. yaya i Z It did immeasurable benefit to the crops, almost as much boiaed sec) CHAPTER X [given choked in her throat, but| “Let's forget it!” she cried. “HHére good to the spirits of the people of Western North Dakota, It Maephoos ouetid te ting Shs | ane? Tent Oe snemer: Im bert ie 00 Nepby of Sting an oid pulled them back from the brink of another disastrous drouth, Jeb breathed easier in the silence that| “You do love him. And you'd ‘aichid cut tua 3 weelen Avena: insured at least some hay and pasture crops and gave the strug- senator has paca beg re oct oda er reno 0 ore ee Been Deere) ee sling grain another lease on life. paovers FOUR-FOUR SUIT SAFEST Bob's stood on the| Dully Joan shook her heed. “I| bags of yours all pecked. Additional rains are needed, of course, but nature proved slg peteondibag) a) ae Een ae ae irae gated wall as tat aed Sunday that it still CAN rain in this area. That was worth a lapees from|Declarer Holds Short Trump, Ten High, Yet Makes Contract] {the clear, smiling gray o: e8 berate. I'm starving, aren't your lot: a recint| by Clever Handling of His Cards ber own fled with tate fonigt “YOUD rather have hin ct] TSE nada ‘thought of Hy" Som ; wich bound them, In the morning she|tainty?” Dorothy persisted, dis-| “I hope I wasn't expected to Busy Summer Ahead The Forever Tare could be no dicen: |retnar teve hin wets, his “tel Hondrs’s ‘puny bors doeuvees.” Opening lead was woo with} Forever. There could be no dream|rather have him waste his life|Herdry’s puny hors d'oeuvres. ; You ean get a pretty fair line on the health of American ummy's nine, the sce of clubs was} of meeting him again. Not ever,| searching for you, fellowing you/She beld wp a black, velvet dress industry by measuring the heaviness of the bulk freight traffic ‘SOLUTION TO PREVIOUS be eee oe eee yen jore, tee wer ia are Sai hove fun togetuer, Sean. on the Great Lakes. The big lake freighters carry coal to the ae | |The same cold Wate which hid! “Eo could forget me,” Joan re-|Just lke we did in schol. Bex head of the lakes and bring back iron ore; when they are active, 10875 taken her father from: her mether plead yeeekly. to ini; | ohairce’ tmactachon the ene it is obvious that bysiness generally must be pretty good. oKse a ene eee at oe tt ttt | as soon 43 you to serene who tried so hard to teach us That being the case, it is extremely encouraging to read of Zasess path alone, her heart slowiy| “Forget Bob?” Tear seent eee stave bom io Boast the high degree of activity now evident on the lakes. During |"*#! Withering within ber Breese, Like attse she repented.” “As long as| ish?” one 24-hour period recently, for instance, the amazing number es Ps Sonn | I live, there'll never be a mement B28. d ber final reward in a lonely room, toe him.| JOAN smiled reminiscently. of 67 steamers arrived at or departed from the port of Duluth, end forgotten. Fe re eee oer i| “conor kong are ee gang to Steamers that have been laid up for years are being’ fitted ”» Bob,” she s won't shut my eyes dreaming of|stay in the east, Dorothy?” she out for service. Warnings have already been issued that traffic "Ee stan aqntan te wall, toa |2H, 0%; Deel, e's Bown the saked. replacing “ngere nthe will be so heavy as to make necessary unusual care to avoid picture chutchel te bes heert’ ant Papp cost et tos “Two or three months, anyway. collisions, tears streamed down her cheeks. Which tallews sae comt) Motier snd Dad are in Honcluls eee ” winter, By that gauge, we seem to be in for a busy, prosperous JIE, was. knock on her door, “Ting away trom it wo'| ihe ble purbiee of comping summer, sharp and imperative, which re- Yott've got to stay and see/an art course. Maybe I can find called her to the present. First] it through, if it ever comes up.” |a job when I finish. Who knows? it the phone, now the door... .| “I can't. Ican't marry Bob and| She spun around suddenly, as Ni Need Good-Wi it be? him know about my fether.|a new idea occurred to her. azis ill WaSocni” A voles called brightiy.|Icon't have bm look at me and|” “Say, Joan, why dont you come The German government would be well-advised if it paid Pig Mt ‘|tuhink what all the rest of thelout and stay there with ie while some attention to a' warning voiced the other day by Prof, Fried- seer se] | lean opened the door. Dorethy | world oon kane thay eald| TAs toe Denese rich Schoenemann of the University of Berlin, who feels that teh real Yoo diet come the Bo. Sas” yee Reid they| “Of course.” the state-controlled press is entirely too free with its blanket phone, but the. room-clerk saw| ssid that shout me in Seattle.” | Joan hesitated. “I'd feel as it I, you come in... Joan, what's the} “There's. to run ee Micros Recalling that the German press goes into a lather of | ate if [ I it abuse whenever an American says something derogatory to * room, at the two bags ready for] changed anything, you see? ‘all alone, the Nazi government, Professor Soea ene waes's cab. vas py be ee fits loo ‘im the o* Oh meee Ape per “I think it is rather foolish and dangerous to indulge in his heart “Joan—you weren't going—" 1 Joan, won't you believe that your ‘stay at the house with me, it wholesale criticism and denunciation of American civilization | many return from dum- ee ae Ge ages Nah bray Slaese hig Dorothy,” woe would Te han” Jouy ad- as a whole. We underestimated America once and lost both | woonie, “Sette cn his last club, and. volce was hollow, “They didn’t/ Joan answered, and suddenly she| mitted. Certainly the German press lately has done little to create Pre tin uters| - “Donses sat down beside’ her|FOROTHY was right ‘There lnvitation tomorrow 2 +. Wig in good-will toward Germany in America. And good-will abroad The toughest parses in the world to declarer, gave} and pot 20 cai eieyret ied Chyler = e bythe world aides I think of that pappens to be rather important to the German people these days. | isnot, Var dense tal “brea Service, Inc)| _cerely, “you don't think TA tall| might still be'as she hed’ marc ee ‘ F Bb atic ng ig Cn G0 Bent mar. dase lhe is ls Dit: a Re Seaton

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