The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 18, 1937, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1937 The Bismarck Tribunel/isici Scenes Your Personal Health | By William Brady, M. D. z . Brady will answer questions pertaining to health but not dis vs: dlaguonle., Write letters bristly and (a ink ee Eibes All queries must be accompanied by a s! nv An Independent Newspaper the THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) : Biate, City and County Official Newspaper Was hington Published except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- fers Mey end ecere tthe pesttie wt Bmare as second Ca mal Maley Ad ee Fee ee ee Washington, Sept. 18. presi- dents have had “brain trusts.” Some of them even have had brains in their own cabinets. From before the time of Andrew Jackson's “kitchen cabi- net,” to economical Calvin Coolidge’s dependence on Dwight Morrow, the Morgan partner, and Frank Stearns, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation the department store owner, all have solved the problems of state with the Member of the Associated Press uid of men who were not especially The Associated Press ie exclusively entitled to the for repubiica- | elected to advise them. tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this| | Never before the Roosevelt admin- Rewapaper and also the local news of spontaneous ori ublished herein. | istration, however, had there been All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. such a remarkable galaxy of advisers <= ; = and Stalin Se ceiate pee comes: law- In the Right Direction _ Tien coon aos es ee ‘Announcements made Friday by representatives of the/ behind the scenes in Washington Farm, Security administration and the Works Progress ad-| since 1938. eae | ministration are encouraging to the people of North Dakota. ‘ If, as promised, the FSA increases its grants to farmers msearire grist iors | © who actually are in serious need, it will relieve much human] of a asc es ' suffering and do much to re-establish the prestige of the federal ene bbe) ing fgencies dealing with farm relief. Promise will not be confused Shubenas Lay te Poneniis _ _ with performance, but the promises made Friday were evidently | eset Dice tlt _ Richberg, made in good faith and will not be difficult to keep. ‘Third, the current phase starring & No one can disagree with the policy of requiring that need sroup which eae close wie agen | be shown before increases are granted. No one advocates that| pudiates what it calls the New Deal's the government adopt a WASTEFUL policy. But even those | “economic follies.” _ most ardently interested in balancing the budget will agree that| yarreetratie eles Neos) _ the relief of severe human suffering is an aboslute necessity | picked for Roosevelt by Judge Sam which takes precedence over that highly desirable end. moseniien Of ie eee ee Tf, as is often contended, some families are in want because | advisers. And before Moley there was the father uses the relief check to get drunk, the answer is| Louis Howe. The original “trust” was simple. Take HIM off the relief rolls and give the check to| Soutie tena ak. A herle ond’ Bugh the MOTHER of the family. And be not too squeamish about | Johnson, then representing B. M.|, letting the world know the reason for so doing. Right-think-|~ Moley became the man whom ing people will applaud. Roosevelt needed to gather data and The WPA announcement that it is anxiously waiting for the | prominent of the group because he ptate water conservation commission to propose irrigation proj- Eaveled with F.D.R. on campaign isory Groupa : 4 Mrz. Stella I. Mann ‘rhs We the tibet Gr ais bad te ee | | eee ; | ies Fat cas aes mazaser Secretary and Editor aos By RODNEY DUTCHER | Subscription Rates Payable in Advance (Tribune Washington Correspondent) f i i rr 4 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ‘Would it be possible to extract the blood from the body, have it sterilized, or from all foreign matter and put back again, causing & trains aide and chief Fei a ee oe a ee te niin Bea. * as an ani ghost political dicta‘ ip. It can take the advice of the Social- SMa veiings and that is coon the state apes: [Rete ee aie ek Slee rhe Daly Worter, organ of the|# Oal ad form ew pari; ort wency. as his recent pro-| } Copyright 1987, by The Baltimore Su 7 party, is as strongly|Ca® follow the Dally Worker and cast iculti ich | fessorial research in it and ___ It, in turn, has faced the troubles and difficulties which polltical sloence. sorernmen| 3 inst a Labor party as the Social-|its lot wholly with the Roosevelt an —_ a aha those us enter unknown fields. It isn’t eee *T00 ae FOR ee RANTS: Rae heen Darien) she grotesque jous labor groups. The best evidence ma an a ae ip ‘The Worker oa id party; a it san Bold to the old A. F. lo ever ing i ‘Tried ‘When consid e volume leas along these lines. However, no found. arious orm of a Popular Front/of L. cy of kee} litically in- possi i rything in a day, and haste often does make After secs Math ae back as character of the one-sided legislation |clear-headed person with any knowl- pe alas ete se an te along the Tugwellian lines,~ «which Gopeinant of all Lcd The’ bite | Waste. However, the public statement of Mr. Howard Drew, in| phin's cmet intures adviner ‘outs Dut on the books in the last four years /ecige of the facts takes the least stock |tsboe Pears. The one weed a . 1. O- terness between the leaders and the 1, which Mr, Thomas H. Moodie concurred, constitutes a definite| Howe, although as close as is any man [#lely for its benefit, it is not sur-/in the suggestion of a labor can- |aéTee on is that "American Labor is| Leet groups | is Ne nge to the water mission to get goi If it could be, was intensely jealous. But|Prising that organized Iabor in Amer- Gidate in 1940, or a labor congress in |at the Cross-roads.” What they dis- Daily| such as to make anything ited hallenge x 3 comn js) get going. it can get Moley was practical, hard-boiled and |@ should have become more politi- |1938, or a farmer-labor alliance that jagree about is the direction that capture| political action next year or in 1940 ae 3 enough irrigation projects in shape to occupy all of the avail-| urbane. A big, husky French-Irish- |°#lly conscious than ever before. will replace the Democratic party and should be taken. On that no two of tic party. “To urge,”| impossible, The fact is that the epi- | able WPA clients and more too, there will be no prejudice against | ma" who could “take 1” he tried to ae Ree ree ie Hee Det RAO el peed wills iecvioe diet) comes pres | ees et iean ettiatet ora se Fy fi do everything for Roosevelt, In the| irst, through ihe old NRA, which cther bizarre proposals which re-|accord, while advice that comes their} country has been sfflicted—and still + putting farmers to work on them. critical emergency period he got peo-|it is planned to revive under the |cently have appeared in print. Poli-|from the organs of the minor poli- and/|is—has created a middle-class reac- Thus the WPA and the water commission are placed in the| Ple to do big jobs and sought to take |name of @ wage-and-hour-control bill|ticians are shy about starting these |tical parties with deep labor sym- this} tion against labor unions, which the t siti Crunuil friendl to hic economic policy and legislative prob-|in the next session; then through the things because of the fear of being |pathies is completely contradictory. | time is to urge them to bi ties| more astute politicians believe will position of running a friendly race to see which can get the most | tems to his bosom. Wagner Act, with its strong anti-em-|accused of being unsympathetic with|For example, the Socialist Call is/with the progressive masses ~ make mt Pee? La less ef- 1 an than it was ii done for the people of North Dakota. Under the circumstances| Government at first was s ployer slant, and later with the com-|labor. Next to being the “farmer's {strongly in favor. of a Labor party| leaders of the Democratic party, vacuum, i" ‘busine “ “s | along English party ment from) busin | the Water Conservation commission should. try to offer the we tee nea corel Plone Petra it has born nipe of friend” is the boat popular et ail po- St ithe name and calle upor Mr, John its sites ‘Te in the Boctalist Call oreedone, There ls a Saree . | + WPA more projects than it can accomplish, The work very | failed. New men and new policies tured, catered to, conciliated, coddled | litical rackets and the most general-|L. Lewis to join the Socialists. On| replies that “the Communist party,| tion to think that labor leaders have } BrURT risen to \be done andthe attitude of th arid new laws had to hot off the |@Nd cajoled to an extraordinary ex-|ly practiced. In this administration |the other hand, the People’s Lobby,|once a revolutionary organisation, is| gotten “too big for their pants.” The { ‘ n ie and the attitude of the federal agency | grade. Er Sas onan 4. Mne|tent and in an unprecedented way. |it has been carried to extremes never through its executive secretary, Mr.|now little more than Roosevelt's! public is beginning to get bored by ' ; insures complete co-operation. evitably, Moley made many quick an-| Trough administration support it has before approached and it is practically | Marsh, warns against alliance with | ‘left hand’.” 7 $ their belligerency. It was a “break” ‘ There are obstacles in the way, to be swers when he didn’t know the an- |#hieved advantages of an unusual impossible to get a politician to be|any political party, contending that for the president to have Mr, Lewis j ? Ys sure. swers, and of se decisi ‘on (nature and acquired an enrolled, dues- realistic about it in public. such # course ultimately will extin-| ‘Thus, there are three roads open|lambast him. an ar) a a this country was settled by overcoming obstacles and| insufficient information. He took his roe membership not far from its iz ; . * The truth, h , is that the ef- wi ve to be saved the same way. Poilbcal life oe ee eer fora of Inbor leaders om = late 5 ‘ | $ ss 6 Under such conditions, it was|their enhanced strength and new ad- Cupid and the Economic Rescue Tapped His Cables faesarell [as arlene) CRE Maa a oy an iber Of purty el political . = | nullified by ber of perfectly well ban ool, the naked little fellow with the darts, still is| seni? San smmacr meray of tion, sou develop. among” abo |inowa and ‘undisputed facts a mar. S S alr. | on America, state, he dwarfed Secretary in | leaders an exaggerated notion of z 4 x . | im . their political importance . » thi the f if Ip .JC ‘ Capngnaht _ A 4 That is the most encouraging factor noted by men in- pa eeprrttegen Pred reheat Both these things have been fostered sceept ths top estitiate of orpeuieed By NARD JONES opytigh 7 NEA Service, Inc d |.) ferested in getting the construction industry back on its feet, | against Moley, never popular in the |larsely by two kinds of publicity. First, /labor’s strength, it is still true that CANT OF CHARACTERS — |Or perhaps the owner's made a/the light of the room, and he stood i Rinss the ture of th | diplomatic seevice ‘or the state de-|there was the publicity of the labor | four-fifths of the laborers of the KAY DEARBORN—Bereine whe 5 a moment until his usted = Since the e depression marriages have been in-| pertment here, was thet the amer.|lesders themselves, put out by their |country are nob members of any| taberits a yeeht for vacation. |Visit since we saw % themselves to the devkness! But @reasing and the upward trend continues at an accelerated pace. paid propoganda bureaus and de-/ union at: all. MELITA HO WAR D—Kay's aes even then he could see only the Se signed to make it appear that or-| Second, there is the fact that labor roommate ané co-adventurer. EADING the way toward the solid out of ica Pye That, according to spokesmen for the building industry, is ganised labor with its large contribu-| leaders cannot and never have been PRISCILLA DUNN—the eird |" cabin Mac flashed his light|fer Come abe eee ae ee 44 Bhe best sign on their horizon. Marriages usually mean babies tions of money and votes was solely |able to deliver their own troops in| adventurer. Seba eome Above nim, She SKY, fs4 und babies mean homes. The f fi li responsible for the Roosevelt re-elec- | the way the Anti-Saloon League used FORREST BROTHERS and |2gainst the trees. Up beyond the as stygian as the earth. : 6 pressure of family obligations "|tlan. Second, there was the unpaid | to deliver its—and for a number of GRANT WARPER—yeung scien- |beach they saw the familiar out-| The side of the cabin revealed : re 8 riruaels fer 2 place to lios an Lice Alicea dhe aa eeghec reasons which there is ho space to Sate hess eee ee Serre lines of the lonely cabin. The win- Petrie agmecrigtiea ea rear| guch struggles usualy are crowned with success if carried on | Amrican delegates matic figure of Mr. Lewis and drug- | rnird, there see dow panes reflected the fashlight’s ne could hear the muffled voices “h with determination and a modicum of opportunity. ged by the New Deal Risnenb inet fe velba atirrnoe Renmoee: yess Yesterday: Mom ase glare back to them. There was no|of Mac and. Melita, hee their " Other things, too, cheer the builders. Despite the recent thelr sere of proportion and turned | the leaders of iabor. On the contrary,| cuest,»” May of mardes, Danes Jace on the hearth as there had| footsteps on the board flooring. petbacks in th : : 4 Soe loose a mass of journalistic specula-| their feuds are unexampled in bitter-| oy, g bing rage set" Ibeen the night the three girls|Suddenly he stopped. He was 3 a! B Spek. and fares veohocy moastets, doe $0 war Hon about s labor party, « labor ean-| ness and their Jealousles and hates wanes made thelr horrible discovery |“ouscious of figure by his side :& peares, the national incom i - See ane aren mina, intense. CHAPTER XVII Pan ne saw i : e can be expected to continue ex. wd warning note did not | Within those walls, ss heard the labored breathing of 2 3 ‘The intoxicating effect of this kind pe tion of| “Better douse that light,” Tom)man. He tumed swiftly—but not Power demands are rising and nearly every public utility Dt SAIC Mipon’® erraln| type, of labor But more Important still are the ie weaken the determination of| 141.24 cautiously, “He may be|swiftly enough, for the hands ies the ity for i y leader 1s very great and there is no| reconcilable differences of opinion as| the quartet aboard the “Mistral. watching and take a shot at us.”|teached out and gripped his body sca OOOO necess! u an expansion program in the near future. doubt whatever that some of them/| to political strategy among the vari- On the contrary, it galvanized| “ ,, * .,|with frightening strength. } #4 __ Rentals are increasing in most areas and the percentage of = them into renewed action, for now |, o°,mush, the better! anewerss! ‘Tom squirmed desperately, { S41 Weeancies, in business property as well as in homes, is declining. By Will they realized that if Kay Dear-|) 00 Sine ne is, But we'd bet- lana thon coint itt is ‘lett fist i # In addition, factories are beginning to expand in suburban This Curious WorRLD piston born and Grant Harper were not|1 ing out along the path.” times he connected, telttthe hens father than in metropolitan areas, thus causing a shift i . : discovered very soon tt would! ‘1.4 you figured there may be|Telease their holds, heard the body in popu you may be |reles ¥ Jaton. —s — = ee es wcis aaa more than one?” a man stumbling back into the The sum of ali of these factors is optimism on the part of No, Q hace gat geese peerage Ei I ects yap eee Completely forgetting the re- ; fhe very same people who, a year ago, prophesied only a mod- sistance to friends. And to| ke the doing of one man to me—Tvolver at his belt, young Forrest ‘i grate increase in building activity for 1937. Two very cultured matrons were ‘eal ey and a man who's off his nut.” plunged madly an enemy he y for 1987. : moved to go and see a matinee of the ee Nevertheless, as the four neared could not clearly see. He threshed vile language agave the cabin Mac released the flash- tangle konwn for the vile used by “Do—do you think that means hundred yards Grand Hodge Podge the characters, : piicicpafon Cae sectice sare [EME Button, plunged them into Malees that! cea lone ine In the days when prohibition repeal was an issue the voter | _,A!! through the show, the dignified the darkness of the wood. Slowly /mean death. Cursing his ill for- Seeaicdlwith ‘stupierius ‘dees as to what “might” be white-heired women set in silence, tered. he reached out to touch the door. |tune he hurried back to the cabin, ;: ; his in t were again made legal. The: oe Gone | wen ie Ih cassato Fen fore “It can't be,” Mac Forrest a0-|1¢ gave essily to his fingertips,|™met Priscilla’s started glance i ws to systems for the saiesatt'g " 1 of ti eh CE ae swered quickly. “Tom, this is 20/ ung back with a slight squeak | “6, doorway. s hed ind control of—liquor. Everybody “tate set the hell out of here.” -~ Ae wats until marning, Let's et hinges. Focrest stepped inside, Peet al ae cried. “Tom, what's et shout ihe only thing on which the nation could agree |“? **Pped my - ! pth gorge areal uae Swiftly the flashlight’s beam was is ths eure cals was that prohibition had failed and it wi = youn pales ee surveyed the room, came to rest| Mac Forrest hurried across the | as time to try some- ee sae Have your hens “Not on your life,” Priscilla told|o Papa room, pressing his brother with | of thing else. ; figs be Bs rey ey, him shakily. “We're going, aren't|out. ‘The next moment Mec had |Uestions. But Tom could tell The nation is doing it. And with a vengeance. them have stopped in the last few Met” lighted the cabin lamp which |qvom litte about his assailant. The __ A recent survey of new laws by the Public Administration | “*¥*. wi ietita nodded. poe s (csciagerlentad ne ef that haif-ighted oom, starieg a” F45 Clearing House, an agency devoted to service of public ofticials, | cauet = Cet wae the “All right .. .” Mac started for |walls ant calling. on ®*inetplessiy at each other, wonder- = showed that almost every stute in the union did some tinkering | _ F#*mer Goober—Too much summer the door of the cabin. i There's no one here, beth ade ee ete ee, a with its liquor laws at legislative sessions this year and that| Within a few seconds they were | sain,” Melita whispered. “Tt JEVEN as they stood thus they be 4& nearly every known system of sale and control is being tried.| ef, THEW GAY © in the spemiboat again, bending eee heard the strangely hushed The i i -|| SOTHEY SAY | for shore. Now Mac made no at- : .»|shot, followed by a scream, both § general tendency is toward stricter control, most of | 4 sla 4 tempt to throttle down the engine. a have a look, anyhow,” /of which seemed actually to come a a tthe legal changes having been directed toward an effort to © he 8d | watch ee ee too Ca eens [from beneath them, and a great Press agents surround one with 90 “Make plenty of noise, ‘watch at the door. Can you see|way off. = cure manifest abuses in the systems now in effect. many assertions of happiness that it vised. “Maybe we can draw this/the speedboat from there?” “That! was Kay screaming!” The problem is one which interests the whole country | #,"°ns*rtl.to have at last one par- bird into the open.” Fitch it closely, Were’ not| "Mae Forrest | since only in Tennessee, Georgia, Kansas, Mississippi and then do something to ‘The powerboat rolled roughly| " Piles had dropped to his Donne a the sale of liquor still legal. And Tebenies valet | that way. — irene Dune, tov act Into the sad, and Mao leaped] HS Whe P got an eye on|over the loon, ttn ree ae on ue Sept. 28. from the wheel, “Come on, Tom.”/us the boat may decoy him to the|pounding with his fists, d In all of these five states the sale of 8.2 beer is legal and in I. should lite (6 stipmoraie inten He_ motioned toward the wood.|beach.” He stepped to the door-| | “Here! Here it is. Tom, give Georgia and Mississippi it is legal to sell light wi | fact, concluding » chapter in German “You slits leg beck © Mite, ead tove a the outalde of| "The hatch wines. history: the V. if it looks like trouble you'd better have a look around the outside of/ The hatch-like cover lifted, re- Sot having declared war, 3 find it sligh is dead; secondly, Germany is tree; beeak for the boat, The man who|"£5E27"" Ju give the room a good| Mec was the frst deve, and ten 4 war, Japan may t tly embarrassing ly, our army is guarantor of our be t , @hen the as wrote that note won't be pleasant! going over. There ought to bejafter him, his oe ie en freedom. Agolt Hitler of Germany. : so taane a" fometning tn bere that would give hit hase uke ee ‘When Wo be finding the proper ile for ie enrny: Mis blenet sie ite or leturs wb Ener “Where are you headed?” Tom tm epped out int the leit fle slong dene together, . “ve come here meiner tote “The cabin. Maybe theres | Seceditte Gane aus Mile ee ee ee something thete that we missed.|The night was dead black after (Te Be Conctuded). vo nit far off ’s left of the stove league already int criticlam,—Pather tog Satins far basscburics "hat woo crack when they apt ons" | Cousin, in England for na Beat j ‘ i

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