The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 13, 1928, Page 4

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orm on ose wrRmeessco> SOT SS>Sipe sce voraeeeence Stes OB ee mR em mR men ; 8] 4, - 4 v + % be N 8 B dred millions for a workable program that will give ic D D D iG yi L Aa ihe tion. I stand pledged to these proposals. The object nar a | dustry where I and my forefathers were born and PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- marck as second class mail matter. " George D. Mann ............President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in A Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year, (in 20 Daily by mail, per year, ‘in state outside Bismarck) ..... . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota _ ~tae Bl E lthesla ASAE ATER SS Weekly by mail, in state, per year ... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for . Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, PEF YeAr ....ses.esee soesennes os 8es sees Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the! hes credited paper, and ed i‘ use for republication of all news dispa: to it or not otherwise credited in thi also the local news of spontan herein. All rights of republi ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK Ave. Bld. CHICAGO Tower Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Kresge Bldg. HOOVER'S ACCEPTANCE SPEECH “The most urgent economic problem in our nation today is in agriculture. It must be solved if we are to bring prosperity and con- tentment to one-third of our people directly and to all of our people indirectly. We have pledged ourselves to find a solution.” In these words Herbert Hoover introduces his dis- cussion of the agricultural issue which features a major portion of his acceptance address delivered at Stanford University. He establishes as a premise that agriculture is not one industry but a dozen distinct industries “incapable of the same organization.” In- ability to recognize the multi-sided phases of the agrarian issue in Mr. Hoover's opinion is the reason why so many agricultural discussions, to use his own words, “go wrong.” The second false premise, he de- fines is “that rehabilitation will be complete when it has reached a point comparable with pre-war.” He declares that pre-war agricultural conditions were not satisfactory and cites the abandoned farms of the northeastern section of the nation. Mr. Hoover sees in tariff relief one way but not the only way toward @n alleviation of agricultural condi- tions. He says: “The tariff on some products is proving inadequate to protect from imports abroad.” This is a direct admission that tariff revision must place agriculture on an equal footing with other and =. DETROIT) Mr. Hoover firmly believes in its paramountcy as a campaign issue. The Bride’s First Biscuits! eee Probably the two outstanding issues of the 1928 campaign will be that touching upon prohibition and the other involves farm relief. Mr. Hoover is definite on farm relief; he is equally definite on the dry issue. He says unequivocally: “I recently stated my position upon the 18th Amend- ment which I again repeat: “‘I DO NOT FAVOR the repeal of the 18th Amend- ment. I stand for the efficient enforcement of the laws - g enacted thereunder, Whoever is chosen President has THE CAUSES OF ANEMIA _|tion that has been written about ) under his oath the solemn duty to pursue this course.’” I find many patients who arej anemia, and claims that have been sol y e obscessed with the idea that they are| made that the cause is unknown, I He takes the definite stand that modification of the suffering from anemia. Sometimes| assure you that this disease is not doctors have told them this, but us- ually it is their own idea, which they have formed—probably from the fact that their general rundown con- dition has given them the impres- sion that their blood must be weak. Anemia comes from the Greek, and means “without blood.” When this condition is present, there is either a deficiency in the amount of blood or a lessened number of red corpuscles. An anemic condition usually refers to the entire body, but is may only apply to a restricted area. Pernicious anemia is quite rare— perhi not oftener than once in a thousand cases, Secondary or simple anemia is much more fre- uently found. Practically all of e cases, who imagine they are suf- fering from anemia, are suffering from some perfectly definite disease which they imagine is anemia. This is particularly true of such diseases as: tuberculosis, cancer, chronic ap- pendicitis, and other disorders where there is a large amount of pus ac- cumluation in some part of the body. Contrary to the generally accepted belief, anemic patients are not al- ways thin and frail looking, but in many cases, they are fat and de ently ovér-fed, There is no reliable way determining the degree of anemia except by a careful blood examination with the microscope. The average person is certainly no more than 80 per cent or 90 per cent normal in every way, and those who think themselves ill enough to go to a doctor will usually show a hemoglobin or red blood test of somewhere between 80 per cent and 90 per cent of normal. This then is the average condition which doctors contend with,but of course the few who are in perfect health will show a hemoglobin test of 100 per cent, with the red cells numbering over 5,000,000, and the leukocytes or white cells 7,500. In some cases the white blood cells become so numerous that they pro- duce a pale complexion, and this disease is te-med leukemia. It is very closely related to anemia, and the cure for these two conditions is similar. A ae of the blood’s color, or the number of red cor- puscles, cannot be called a sign of enforcement laws as agitated by wet adherents is in | effect nullification of the Constitution and “this,” he says, “the American people will not countenance.” eee And finally here is Mr. Hoover's conception of the sidency: ‘he presidency is more than an administrative of- e. It must be the symbol of American ideals. The h and the lowly must be seep with the same eyes, t in the same spirit. It must be the instrument by j which the national conscience is livened and it must | under the guidance of the Almighty interpret and fol- | low that conscience.” Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and di to him, Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. so mysterious; and although we have not isolated and named -the poison which produces it, we never- theless know that anemia is due to definite toxins, and that most pa- tients can be cured through simple plan of eliminating these disease poisons from the body. Through this method, we rid the body of all anemic toxins, even though we do not know them by definite names. JUESTIONS AND ANSWERS uestion: Roy W. asks: “I what manner do three drops ot arsenic in a glass of water as a tonic, affect a relief from pimples, and clarify the skin in a sixteen- year-old boy?” mene tiers Ltd a wade effect upon stopping skin eruptions, but I do not recommend the form used in medicines. There is a slight amount of arsenic in carrots when used raw and unpeeled. Usea Pp. erly balanced diet and a_ liberal amount of raw carrots. You will then get the same effect as you would from taking the medicinal ar- senic, and have no bad results, Question: Mrs. J. asks: “May fruits be combined with protein foods?” Answer: Any one kind of fruit may be used with any one kind of protein food. Question: M. J.B. writes: “Iam arth of the nose, troubled with also have acne. Is there any sae e8 2, HOOVER PROMISES FARM RELIEF The most urgent economic problem in our nation today is in agriculture. It must be solved if we are to bring prosperity and contentment to one-third of our people directly and to all of our people indirectly. We have pledged ourselves to find a solution. In my mind most agricultural discussions go wrong because of two false premises. The first is that agri- culture is one industry. It is a dozen distinct indus- tries incapable of the same organization, The second false premise is that rehabilitation will be complete when it has reached a point comparable with pre-war. Agriculture was not upon a satisfactory basis before the war. The abandoned farms of the northeast bear their own testimony. Generally there was but little profit in midwest agriculture for many years except that derived from the slow increases in farm land values. Even of more importance is the great advance in standards of living of all occupations since the war. Some branches of agriculture have greatly recovered, but taken as a whole it is not keeping’ pace with the onward march in other industries. There are many causes for failure of agriculture to win its full share of national prosperity. The after- war deflation of prices not only brought great direct losses to the farmer but he was often left indebted in inflated dollars to be paid in deflated dollars. Prices are often demoralized through gluts in our markets during the harvest season. Local taxes have been in- creased to provide the improved roads and schools. The tariff on some products is proving inadequate to protect him from imports from abroad. The increases in transportation rates since the war has greatly af- fected the price which he receives for his products| upon to furnish initial capital with which to build up the farmer to the control of his own destinies. This program adapts itself to the variable problems of agriculture not only today but which will a1 in the future. I do not believe that any single human being or any group of human beings can determine in advance all questions that will arise in so vast and complicated an industry over a term of years. The first step is to create an effective agency directly for these purposes and to give it authority and resources. These are solemn pledges and they will be fulfilled the Republican Party. It is a definite plan of relief. It needs only the detailed elaboration of legislation and appropriations to put it into force, They have secured progress in the industries, remedy for abuses, ination of waste, reduction of cost in production and distribution, lower prices to the con- sumer, and more stable employment and profit. While the problem varies with every different commodity and with every different part of our great country, I should wish to apply the same method to agriculture so that the leaders of every phase of each group can advise and organize on policies and constructive measures. I am convinced that this form of action, as it has done in other industries, can greatly benefit farmer, dis- tributor and consumer. The working out of agricultural relief constitutes the most important obligation of the next Administra- nection between the two Am also underweight.” P, Answer: Catarrh of the nose and also acne may be caused by intestinal pean . short fruit fast would helpful at the beginning of the treatment of either of these dis- orders, Then use a diet free from © fats, sugars and starches. Do not “stuff” to gain weight, but use a proper amount of the right kinds of food, and avoid constipation. more favored industries. Mr. Hoover's recqgnition of this is a step in the right direction and the fact that he voices such a conviction should do much to allay a feeling of hostility that exists toward the Republican presidential candidate in many agrarian centers. He touches another vital phase of the agrarian situa- tion when he cites the “field of distribution” as the proper place to effect some reforms which will yield the farmer more adequate return on his investment. But sweeping all other phases of the agricultural issue aside such as cooperatives and pools, Mr. Hoover definitely declares that “an adequate tariff is the : foundation of farm relief.” He says further: “I would use my office and influence to give the farmer the full benefit of our historic tariff policy.” Such has not been the case according to Mr. Hoover. There have been discriminations. He says emphatical- ly: “Foreign products raised under lower standards of living are today competing in our home markets.” As an engineer, he tackles the problem of transpor- tation which he conceives as one of the elements in solving some of the economic phases of the agricul- tural problem. “Increase in railway rates,” he says, “has been one of the penalties of the war. These increases have been added to the cost to the farmer of reaching sea- board and foreign markets and result, therefore, in reduction of his prices.” He calls attention to the great natural system of inland waterways and the fact that the modernization of this system will comprise a substantial “contribu- tion to midwest farm relief.” Mr. Hoover urges a reorganization of the marketing system as a vital method of farm relief. He urges governmental assistance in the advancement of capi- tal without obligation upon the individual farmer. “Objection has been made,” he states, “that this Program as laid down by the Party Program, may re- iT quire that several million dollars of capital be advanced by the Federal Government without obligation upon the individual farmer. With that objection I have little patience. A nation which is spending ninety billions ® year can well afford an expenditure of a few hun- to one-third of its population their fair share of the nation’s prosperity. Nor does this proposal put the government into business except so far as it is called upon to furnish initial capital with which to build up the farmer to the control of his own destinies. In the final words of this section of his acceptance ‘address, Mr. Hoover plainly indicates that he is not in favor of any equalization fee or the handling of surpluses through government selling agencies. He takes direct issue then with the proponents of the 7 discussed and much agitated McNary-Haugen And finally Mr. Hoover brings this message to the farmers of the nation: * “The working out of agricultural relief constitutes the most important obligation of the next administra- of our policies is to establish for our farmers an in- come equal to those of other occupations; for the ;, farmer's wife the same comforts in her home as women in other groups; for the farm boys and girls the same opportunities in life as other boys and girls. So far ’ a8 my abilitics may be of service, I dedicate them to yy help secure prosperity and contentment in that in- | nearly all my family still obtain their livelihood.” ; Reconstruction under the leadership of the Republican party. With the exception of the agricul- tural, coal and textile industries, he declares commerce Ba og Sn He draws a vivid word true anemia until the percentage of reduction is at least below 80 per cent of the normal. Secondary anemia is present in any disease where there is a forma- tion of pus, as in appendicitis, liver abscesses, ulcers, etc., and when these pus pockets are removed by surgery, or through absorption and elimination, the white cell count, be- comes reduced to normal, and the red cells and hemoglobin are auto- matically increased. a In spite of all the nonsensical fic- Question: Ida asks: “Are sun- baths as good as the violef ray How can I really cure I consider sunbathing to be superior to treatments with the ultra-violet lamps, as the sun’s rays doubtless contain other beneficial rays besides the ultra-violet. To cure plew you must first find the cause which may be due to tuber- culosis, a tight diaphragm, or the irritation from excessive gas pres- During my term as Secretary of Commerce I have steadily endeavored to build up a system of cooperation between the government and business. Under these cooperative actions all elements interested in the prob- lem of a particular industry such as manufacturer, distributor, worker, and consumer have been called into council together, not for a single occasion but for con- tion. I stand pledged to these proposals. The object of our policies is to establish for our farmers an in- come equal to those of other occupations; for the farm- ers’ wife the same comforts in her home as women in other groups; for the farm boys and girls the same op- Portunities in life as other boys and girls. So far as my own abilities may be of service, I dedicate them to tinuous work. These efforts have been successful| help secure prosperity and contentment in that in- beyond any expectation. They have been accomplished] dustry where I and my forefathers were born and without: interference or regulation by the government.| nearly all my family still obtain their livelihood. f IN NEW YORK | oO New York, Aug. 13.—Those very gay ladies of the Scott Fitzgerald stories and the Long Island stage sets come quite vividly to life on a midsummer Saturday evening or Sunday afternoon. They may be found in endless va- Over six million farmers in times of surplus engage in destructive competition with one another in the sale of their product, often depressing prices below those levels that could be maintained. The whole tendency of our civilization during the last 50 years has been toward an increase in the size of the units of production in order to secure lower costs and a more orderly adjustment of the flow of commodities to the demand. Rut the organization of agriculture into larger units must not be by enlarged farms. The farmer has shown he can increase the skill of his industry without large operations. He is today producing 20 per cent more than eight years ago with about the same acreage and personnel. Farming is and must continue to be an individualistic business of small units and independent ownership. The farm is more than a business; it is a state of living. We do not wish it converted into a mass production machine. Therefore, if the farmers’ position is to be improved by larger operations it must be done not on against the chair, a package of cig-|ber check” or an unpaid “I. 0, U.” ets within easy reach, and a bot-| would spell the end. tle of ginger ale on a neighboring 2 ee tabaret. These, however, make up but a They are small percentage of the gay throng ap} arenes. exrserte ree Geaneed to be found of a Saturday and Sun- and somewhere in their ear! it-|day at the swanky Long Island They are what is termed “very | sorts, There are thousands who seck vy handle their men with ex- | only the healthful recreation and co- ee in step with the latest sallies spoersly. attractive in ll, and manage somehow to eae contact of these fashionable re- sorts. the farm but in the field of distribution. Agriculture riety in the ultra-exclusive yacht|end small-talk, Frequently they are see ih has partially advanced in this direction through co-|clubs that dot Long Island sound or | young women who attempted stage| ‘This season the “yacht dweller” BY RODNEY DUTCHER Obregon, in the revolutionary operatives and pools. But the traditional cooperative|the equally ultra country clubs not carers: dale at anion ee paths has me a popular and common (NEA Service Writer) days, made Saenz his chief of staff is often not a complete solution. far distant. 2 ara Piped 3 ,minor roles |figure. He’s the family man who is| Washington, Aug. 13—If you|and the two continued to be closel Differences of opini to both A d They belong to a mysterious tribe |over long periods of time. tired of summering in the city and|can’t decide what to name the new|associated and attached to eac! i of opinion as. causes and remedy that lives by its wit and its wits.| Or they are girls from good fam-|can’t afford the luxury of the club | baby, write the Children’s Bureau. | other. have retarded the completion of a constructive pro-|Michael Arlenesque patter comes | ilies, whose parents can't scrape to-|life. So he makes a down payment| Lots of people do that. The reason Obregon made Saenz gram of relief. It is our plain duty to search out the|glibly to their lips. Their afternoons, gether enough money to keep them|on a yacht, sublets his city apart-| |The Children’s Bureau has a list/his chief of staff, according to a common ground on which we may mobilize the sound|When in New York, are spent at the |in the social whirl, and have hard-|ment, and moves his eat aboard|of names, probably culled from a/man who knew them both in those letna cl ecules, ieualvanely 0 late bridge table or at poker. It is no|jened themselves to “play the game”|the yacht. Thus for three or four |large dictionary, which it sends out|days, was that Saenz was the only _ agricultural reconstruction, Our platform | secret that dozens of them live from | according to self-made rules. months he is able to live without |on mimeographed sheets in answer |man he could trust with the army’s ’ ree 4 solid basis upon which we can build, It offers week to ee upon ae winnings at} Or they 8 are girls whose attractive paying rent, and thus meet his yacht |to Fre such mereeste, ey ional payroll, an affirmative program, cards. eir chief contributions res and faces brought them the| payments. He rows ashore in the woman in Kentucky has solv. aan ‘An adequate tariff is the foundation of farm relief.|come from yoong, women whose fenton of a wealthy man. What morning and rows to the ship in the |her Leige wr nantly, seconding to te Possibly some other presidential Cab concen. panei Aaa our producers.|Puzsee, are well lined, an o can med thereafter is one of thejevening. Meanwhile the wife and|zeport of a c flare authority | candidate in the past has allowed e than °rs./ stand their losses witlr good grace. |things people don’t talk about—that| kiddies have a grand time on the |from that state visiting here. himself to be photographed in a The domestic market must be protected. Foreign|These are quite willing to take this |is, openly. Once they have swung | slightest possible overhead. She had lost every child she ever| bathing suit, but Al Smith is certain-’ products raised under lower standards of living are|loss in exchange for the into the proper circle, Tefuse GILBERT SWAN, _|had and someone had suggested that |ly the first one in 1928. The photo- today competing in our home markets. I would use|@%d “sophisticated” education, re-|to swing out agai hen their (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) |this time she apply to the State|graph disclosed no resemblance to my office and indi i: the f y ceived at the hands of the glamor- the gir.” Their — Board of Health for the Bureau’s|the god known as Apollo, but the benefit of our historic tariff ni amas ce awa eee yee segs a cea ee saseh ana eoicaea |ETin on Alla taco indicated that be ’. , or more of 2. e, dic » Studied ai followed | wasn’t worryii t A large portion of the spread between what the] Of a Saturday night, with an all-|them, who have become chummy, to instructions and this time her child The Tee “candidate never farmer receives for his products and what the ultimate| ight voker session in the making, | share losses and gains, thus a1 ing 3 Well? did not die at the time of birth. bothers about on to be dignified pelt an A i | it is not an uncommon sight to come|embarrassment when particularly] Son: He isn't. When I bit his} The mother was so grateful that! except when d alty is fumer pays is due to increased transportation| upon such Jadies-of-fortune, with a|hard luck overtakes one of them, — |finger he yelled like mad.—Passing| she named the infant State Board of |called for. charges, Increase in railway rates has been one of the|large hip flask of gin leaning] They know full well that one “rub-| Show. Health. 7 It is virtually certain that Her- penalties of the war. These increases have been added And she calls him “Statie” for | bert Hoover will not before the to the cost to the farmer of reaching seaboard and shart! sie ak Somes DS, Deen peer foreign markets and result therefore in reduction of ARDIN SE By Ah Gasolineconsum in the United | rit; dn’t get from the Pa-* aia’ ihe farmers of foreign countries have thus OUR BO. G HOU ern States oe er showing ania cif Coast without ing on the nm indi ded in thei: titi ny crease al per cen! sands with a few cnadee nl oe sompenon with, the 7 . . rate of consumption for fuel oil has |fornia’s famous bathing beat rican farmer, jature has endowed us with a remained p! stationary. Use | but one fears that he will. If your rest Cpe of inland waterways. Their moderniza-|, a SIR, Mrfd MY Loves $s! of kerosene and 1} ting oil has | correspondent ever becomes a ion will comprise a most substantial contribution to P INTHE ADIROADACKS w1MY COUNTRY slightly decreased. date for anything, public demand midwest farm relief i aed ; ‘United States continues to|such spectacle: will never be of ain interi rellet and to the development of twenty ‘CLUBS WHE cry SUBURBS, uw. MY Wa YEARS, AN! (Fe consume about 70 per cent of the| Probably Tae of us have al 4 y our rior states. This modernization includes B THe BAY. Somet CAN GIVE world’s oil luction, had a secret hankering to see ae | : not only the great Mississippi system, with its joining NACHT in pve HMcAA ve EVEN OME BODY Gi oe dent Coolidge in a keting sae of the Great Lakes and of the beast of midwest agri-| |(? MY) VILLA‘AT NICE,» HAW SIR, ALL reputation tor beoenty bs word nt | Cols phoues thee hats that elie ig ee is , but 4 S Tagg tad from sg Gest tHose T-WRA ASIDE For “HE - be slated to be the next president of | with is clothes on, But ¢ mean so large an increment in farmers’ prices rip RIMCNVE SOLACE oF “His HUMBLE é ba owes his rise in Mexican cei eraat so tee camneee, Be is warrant their construction many times over. There TENTS aw HERE, T AM Not HARRASSED ‘ . polities to the late President-elect |some doubt whether he ever 4 is no more vital method of farm relief. . BY‘ MY SECRETARIES, we SOCIAL ii ' But we must not stop here. An outstanding proposal of the Party m is the whole-hearted pledge to undertake the eatin. tion of the marketing system upon sounder and more economical lines. We have already contributed greatly to this purpose by the acts supporting farm coopera- tives, the establishment of intermediate credit banks, the regulation of stockyards, public exchanges and the expansion of the Department of Agriculture. The platform proposes to go much farther. It pledges the creation of a Federal Farm Board of representa- tive farmers to be clothed with authority and re- sources with which not only to still further aid farm- ers’ cooperatives and pools and to assist generally in solution of farm problems but e: specially to build up with federal finance, farmer-owned and farmer-con- trolled stabilization corporations which will protect OBLIGATIONS, "THE RISE AND DECLINES OF STocKs ! ~~ AH SiR,~HERE, : wrth Noe BUT MY VALET, I COMMUNE WITH THe SIMPLICIY oF NATURE! 4.9 Movies by radio can be red at gh near p be snore ” the reads the subtitles out on @,. “McAdoo’s Silence Arouses Gos- ; Pinder aa esi that would be NEWS! \ "re ol Py > BE E : |

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