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a ¥ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1987 (3 The Bismarck Tribune THE STATE 8 OLDE ane Wer aren 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 1. Mann President and Treasurer Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Pres. and Gen'l Manager Secretary and Bdltor Vico Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) . 1 Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck) 5.00 Daily by mai) outside of North Dakota nes Weekly by mail in state, per year . Weekly by mail in Canada. per year . Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, pe! Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press t* exclusively entitied to the tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otherw! Rewspaver and also the loca) news of spontaneous or! All rights of republication of all other matter herein ari Her Memory Will Be Blessed Many beautiful and sincere tributes to the Venerable Sis- ter Boniface, who died Friday night, have been expressed by civic and cultural leaders of state and community. They came from the heart and gave expression to the feeling of thousands of persons who knew and loved this fine woman who played so prominent a part in the development of civilization in Western North Dakota. Indeed, in the state as a whole. But able as these men are, as facile with words as they may be, none of them quite hit the mark. In dealing with a life so useful and so many-sided as that of the venerable nun, it was| impossible to put into words the feeling and the admiration which they had for her. They were in somewhat the same position as Abraham Lincoln when, standing on the battlefield at Gettysburg, he delivered one of the great orations of all time. Lincoln’s “The world will little note nor long remember what we say here. It can never forget what they did here” might also be said of Sister Boniface. Who can ‘put ‘into adequate words the love and devotion which went into the building of a great institution? Where is the man who can pay fitting tribute to the unceasing labor which marked her career? How can parents be expected to give expression to their gratitude at a precious little life snatched back from the brink because this woman lived among us? for republica- edited in this published herein. igo reserved. Beholding untold deeds of charity and kindness, the human ls Rev. W. E. Vater, a minister not of her faith but a long-time friend, all that can be done by the thousands whom she served is to “rise up and call her memory blessed.” But in paying tribute to the spirit which activated this great career, it is easy to overlook the keen mind and the marked executive ability which this woman brought to her life’s work. Sister Boniface .would have been outstanding had she entered any other career. She had an instinctive regard for people which enabled her to deal with them successfully and to make them friends, Bound by her vows to a sectarian order, hers was a non- sectarian service. To serve her community was to serve her God. Most women who consecrate themselves to such service consign themselves to life-long obscurity. It would have been so with Sister Boniface had not the character of her work been so outstanding as to cause the public to search her out. Strange as it seems, she was at the same time a convent nun and one of the leading public women of North Dakota. ‘ Also, she was a pride and glory to North, Dakota outside the boundaries of this state. A pioneer in the work of the National Catholic Hospital association, she left an impress not only upon her own community and state but upon the nursing profession throughout the nation. Her passing marks the closing of an epoch in public service in North Dakota, As the years accumulated upon her, without seeming to dim either her mind or her spirit, she came to be more and more representative of an era which has gone. She saw most of the pioneers—and all the pioneer doctors—vanish. Young men took their places in the medical profession and they, too, grew old and retired from service. Sister Boniface re- mained, serving and guiding the new with the'same faithful- ness that marked her co-operation with the old. _ The work which she so ably began and carried forward .will goon. Other and younger hands carry on the burden which . she has laid down, Sister Boniface earned the rest of the eternal sleep which has descended upon her. As is true of few people, she leaves behind her both a material and a spiritual monument. What men say about her is unimportant in the light of her accomplishments. But if North Dakota little notes or long re- members what is said of her, it will not soon forget “what she did here.” Truly, “thousands will call her memory blessed.” Mountain Justice Wild applause marked the decision of a jury at Shelbyville, Ky., that Roy Garr was legally innocent of murder in connec- tion with the death of Brig. Gen. Henry H. Denhardt, thereby proving that Southern chivalry still lives, even amid peculiar surroundings. The history of this case proves that the unwritten law still plays an important part in the administration of justice in the Kentucky hills. Life isn’t any cheaper there than it is elsewhere but when a man “earns a shootin’ ” and gets it juries are slow to punish. In the Denhardt case the politician and soldier was accused of murdering the sister of the Garr brothers. The claim was that he made love to her, then shot her rather than face the | responsibilities which his torrid declarations of affection had created. The law was noncommittal on the subject. It didn’t acquit but it failed to convict. The Garr brothers probably felt it had been given a fair chance when they turned their guns loose on the general. There is something to be said against this kind of justice but it does have the virtue of making men think twice before they play fast and loose with a woman’s heart. Particularly if she has brothers or other male relatives who are handy with a shootin’ iron. Luckless Ireland, some years ago, had her Black and Tan t: . ‘us, nowadays, it’s Black and Klan, troubles. oun. Wain oe 2 ‘Broadway's unemployed wiseguys are resting easily once more. Ni that the Legion has left town, there's room for them in the hotel Tobby chairs fore congress is one which would be designed to curb the supreme court. The President, having had his fingers badly burned on that issue, will lay off it—at least for awhile. the last session—wage-hour bill, farm legislation, tion and the seven regional planning developments. —according to present plans—any pos- actually will happen to this program must inquire into the reasons for the President's confidence that it can be seme congress didn’t pass it last put a large dent in the wage-hour bill, A original measure has passed Geubrenly will be wrested in Novem- Behitd Scenes Washington Why Roosevelt Believes He Can Put Over His Special Session Program. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune W: Cc it) Washington, Oct. 25.—Mr. Rouse- velt’s confidence in himself and the achievement of his current program has not been diminished by the de- bacle of the last session of congress. Hence a new special session at which he expects rapid action on major leg- islation. If there was ever a time when the President’s spirits sank, that period is over now. The Black-Klan issue has been blurred off the front pages by the international situation as it Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Brady will answer tiene Laetieitye| te health be ieee wi jetiy fi ik, Address Dr. 1} Se. mh itibe Nad cry auerles, mast be Socompanied by a ai C eadressed avelepe. bas appeared since the Speech, and Roosevelt, although la- boring in a period of manifest uncer- tainties, is convinced as ever that the people with him and that con- gress will accept his leadership. The only item conspicuous for its absence from the menu to be put be- Water . oe: Melt these together in a filled with heated air with a satt paint bea If the court gives the New Deal bad breaks in pending power cases—TVA, PWA grants and the holding company act— he will take up the shillalah again with proposal presumably different from the last one. Roosevelt never will be quite happy until Chief Justice Hughes is off the bench and replaced by Herbert Hoo- ver’s old medicine ball playmate, Justice Harlan F. Stone. x * * Pepped Up by Crowds The four main items presented to the new session will be left-overs from government reorganiza- Taxation, anti-monopoly laws and sible changes in the neutrality act will be left for the regular session beginning in January. Anyone who wants to guess what af put over in face of the fact that the The Great Game of POLITIC S summer, 3 - stem leas lopsided,| In the In the first place, Roosevelt is still iss plan from which! now to Copyright 1937, by The Baltimore Sen By FRANK R. KENT receive one hundred | that the 2 > benefits, if any. are to be — will have THE GREAT GRANARY GADGET | proposed the fi is 4 we sy ve tat fe hed lost none of his hold 0D} with the intolerance and bad tem~ theory is that surpluses will be|sence of the Large, cheering crowds always pep | Per which seem to be growing on him, darkets ie yours of ebuninnes, caus | as up a president, Roosevelt feels he has | the president in his most recent *fire- prices up to p favorable level. t side chat” endeavored to classify as “enemies of democracy” all those who : E st ef 4 ge uF i 5 ge & 7 #35 formidable opposition from the * * Has a Lever Now His hardest fight will be version i al a | [ dl ag g i : 5 i rp j li on of the ate and was held up in the Rules committee, from which - BEd i ee g i § = 4 Qe EE F F Hl te z a plan was just an alluring phrase, =|meaning of which was not even re- motely clear. They not only could no explain it to anyone else but th could not understand it themsejves. That atill holds good. The experts in the department of agriculture, the lobbyists: of certain farm organiza- tions, the professional “friends of the farmer,” in and out of congress, and one or two brain trusters, perhaps, can talk intelligently on the subject. Bu hey Are a poate bangeuland 5 § i a2 i [ : E ie r. The real backbone of the opposi- tion to this bill was.furnished by the natural for the administration think that the current cotton crisis in the south will provide a lever with which to soften opposition to the wage-hour bill, affecting southern workers, by keeping that well-ad- vanced measure ahead of action af- fecting southern f F i g RR Bs ; [ E i E eae before pr rived, lump together all who might raise their voices against, as “enemies or “little Lord Ma- Bg a By hasiest notion of what it is all about. The clearest explanation of what the ever-normal granary idea involves has been given by Mr. Wheeler Mc- Millen, editor of the Country Home Magazine, who recently wrote as fol- lows—“The ever-normal granary con- templates that when the land blesses its people with abundance, a part of that abundance is to be withheld from the market, through government; loans, in order to protect the prices paid to farmers. Then it is to be stored, for use in less fruitful years in order to protect consumers from high support when he is fighting a busi- ness recession or a threatening inter- rational situation. If business doesn’t pick up between now and Nov. 16, Roosevelt will have both those po- tential aids. Already, in his “fireside chat,” he has pictured the wage-hour bill as “necessary to keep our factories and farms fully running” through in- crease of employment and Power. And there will be much more cf the same Has a argument: Real Werry There No move in the international field None is quite as adept at this game as Mr. Roosevelt himself, but he has many imitators, both journalistic and political. It is, of course, cheap stuff; but it atill enables the New Dealers to away with a good many unsound unworthy schemes which ought a vicious fist. “No, damn it, we haven't! My|be. No matter who rings God, to think we were only 10/bell, or whom you see seconds behind him... .” there in the hall, é open the door. weight. For ex- this “ever-normal prepare for which, has made plain, is to be of the extra ses- Lace ready aD ces deeded that quant produced shall Yesterday: me ==> under regulation the proauction of all Mots apartment, 2 ‘The more this device which it is| farms is to be planned in advance. fa Pane Seer as and holed reane t for pres who free oe the light. A to be alte oppose recent movement { ae a European President ee ren st oe amy Some lees worry in the White House-State De- Citly|in_ Brooklyn. Mrs Elliot is a) «on, Fartment area over the threat of Ja- Phony. So I came back 6% | sssured fan Jet teh bee Saar ce aoaek| MORIZONTAL — Answer to Previews Purse 11 Fishing bag.) sete'|Johntoa here to Jet moe into 2-A rar stration might want to do sbout it in ee ok E Sa +H biog tity. This was the murderer... ./a5 we opened the, door, wo beard a sagged Ripon cckany xe long run. RIA AIRIEIR MAIR | I fe 4 something crunching, (Copyright, 1987, NEA Service, Inc.) RIVIGISMMINMMAIRMMRII ITE] 21 Seed bag. ae ee ee rt te the thie we got into the |a8 she had pretended to the ser- : EILIOIPI INIGEESIAIRICIAISM) 23 Grain. world spun madly bedroom, the bird. flown, |geant. She sat there on the divan, ‘ is] iC] 24 Important Down the fite escape, course.| where he had left her, straining BIT OF OR river in his hands|There wasn't a trace of him, ex-|her eyes to watch every nook and NOW AND ae cquntry. her|capt the. whee Oe ee ee ee ae Cala 18 RELISHED 26 Villain. ber, |Janded when he jumped, A, diners could & ue THE BEST OF MEN E i ib Fy at Ais] SILIEIDIGIE |G) TEMMOIAIRIK 30 Horse. 4 sf Mother — Mary, where have you been until 3 a. m.? Mary—Walking, Mother. Mother—For goodness sake! Mary—Yes, Mother. She: “You say I'm the most beau- tiful, divine, and gorgeous creature in, he: woke “wont Ase: yaa Gying t2 kid me’ He: “No, I’m trying to kiss you.” Sally — We've been waiting a long ‘time for that mother of mine. & i 8 : i 34 Senior. 36 Unit of force. 37 To hoist. 39 To mature. 1To perform. 2Slack. 3 Vessel. i : ele i f i i Se ii rt All. 40 Native metal. 41 Within. — people, fingers .. . she remem- 42 Scarlet. $6 He succeeded 9Garment. as it slowly, cau- 43 Scabies. —. in and switched (canon Toa music, ts. Pape te “That's right, young lady,” Ser- cus the eeaamenly, sie wanted to ecream. i geant Dolan ‘said kindly, “open expty imagined could see Pad | hast of the, man‘ hand now, reaching to the switch is them, Joked|Ss* Kasren -atmoephere vot the| noes eonglicg angers ‘oe fet eee ds | was back in| room, as if it were not really althrost.... £8. ; : i F ii aH ee i é i g i 4 i z i ee lh Fe Z £ I i = i g° i F | i e* Ey 8 i 3 e i A E i rl ERS FRE fds i z : & [ a [ [ : z i a] a L ! 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