The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 3, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 38, 1931 ») people ‘are more or less touched with cynicism because —— —_— THE BISMARCK TRIBU NE] 5.32 2 = =, ts, otc mona Nccas ¥oereand \ An Independent Newspaper that they like better than to find proof that perhaps - : ri . & O) THE a Sune iar "APER some of it is an unnecessary protection. (iyi i] — | yO Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- Tomorrow vs. Yesterday ) BY DR. K mc COY marck, N. ae and rine at the postoffice at Bismarck) Business structures in the advanced styles of tomor- “ + @s second clas mai! matter. 8 in the fashi ter- Shé tf 0 G D. rae t and Pul row and residences e fashions of a thousand yester: days is the incongruous picture which every American REGARD TO TH E DIET WILL bE ANSWERED Subscription Rates Payable in Advance city offers as a matter of course. Fae day 1H CARE OF THIS PAPER Daily by carrier, per year ....... $7.20/ An argument for the adwancement of dwelling design LOSE STAMPED HOORESSEO ENVELOPE FOR REPLY vue oe ++ 120/into the free realm which business building form has att © 1926 MECOY HEALTH SERVICE -LOS ANGELES- CALt Rib Weate. coisite BilalGe) entered is made on the grounds of utility and taste by Dally by mail outside of North Dakota Francis Keally, a member of the American Institute of GOOD MASSAGE TECHNIQUE IS | nerve or moving too vigorously an in- Architects, in the current number of The American IMPORTANT flamed joint. Mowild by ae in Lert yo year. Architect. . Properly applied we! oye mi rears ropes . - esas EY Gian couine i forty oak To use a 50-year old building as a model for a mod- very outer aii Une ot De tebbtiene catia llc sch ber year... mieeis ern residence is like offering a horse and buggy to a massage in ri . in ur or give massage answer ‘Weekl7 Sy mail in Canada, per year . man in a hurry to get somewhere, says Keally. In| tiebielbaee ote penis special peeyeen Lge and Member Audit Bureao of Circelation designing buildings he sees architects as too ready to techniques which they cel Uae diet addressed to him, care of. { | 4 start with the style of the roof and outer walls, making larly valuable. For example, in my |} ‘The Tribune. Member of The Associated Press EW being ‘GontBeR, | {own office I have developed a mass- Enclose a stamped addressed The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use o age movement for adhesions which envelope for reply. 4 for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or! Time was when the automobile was new. Those who} brings splendid results which could}{ 0 4 Not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the! had stables turned them into garages. Those who had/ not be achieved in any other way, é only windl byAll-hegin- v loral news of spontaneous origin published herein All! no stables built what looked like little stables, put them especially in internal adhesions gf| take hyise mt tbo heaviiy-apen i rights of republication of all other matter herein are | the abdominal organs. Such adhe-| ners is to massagt iS tobervod. at the back of the house where a stable belonged, and! ee saeco fallow operations, but are | the affected region, when more bene- called the result garages. Some venturous fellow finally | often formed during any inflamma- | fil sometimes comes from massage of (Official City, State and County Newspaper) decided that the place for a garage was near the road! tory condition in the abdomen. Oft- | other parts ot He eed or thbrate and he built his at the front of the lot, improving upon: én the intestines become prolapsed | gentle or lig] Sa Dh pe od and then finally adhere or grow to- | fected part. 8M. SPENCER & LEVINGS its appearance at the same time so that it no longer. = sil gecther in the wrong position so that | aii me looked like a miniature stable. Years and years later peer a uly tia almost impossible for them to} QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. a man who had a gas or oil furnace made his basement | itt return to their normal place. These F bd eo enitek: lage CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON from something resembling a large trash bin into a part | f Patients will always be constipated | Question: t ta ine SH with a ———____————_ " until the adhesions are broken down | months ago I became , |of the human habitation. ond the bowel freed. muscles of the heart, but I am appar- He'll Land Someplace | “Costume design has always followed architectural de- | | vit is often possible to see the actual ently all right now. The doctor Down in Greenville, Illinois, there is a young man/Sign,” writes Keally, “and has often been in harmony | |effect by doing the movement while | claims my heart is hegee Fecha named Arthur H. Koonce who wants to go to work for|with it. Consider the beautiful Venetian costumes that | the patient is under the X-ray so that | 1 Poe estat had SG feet sivas in hi ith te pal: Today, however, the exact changes taking place canj Tights, and hands and fee vy! . ‘& newspaper as a reporter, copy reader or advertising! were in harmony wi ornate palaces. jay, however, be noted. In many cases, quite severe | cold. I always have a feeling that I 4 ms salesman. He wanted to work for The Tribune and we/ the keynote of our clothes is comfort and simplicity, yet adhesions may be relieved by this| Will drop dead. Can you tell me what were sorry we had no place for him, for he looks like} we go on building Elizabethan manors, French chateaux skillful stretching of the adhering tis- | causes that? Will I ever overcome @ “comer.” and Italian villas.” sues. Sometimes, people with consti- | this feeling? How do we know? The answer is easy. EP aeamentoroen i pation have tried a fruit fast or a caer Gisele ou cee : st Coz ¢ Shi good diet for a long time with no|are no do ° His application was “different.” | West Coast Gets a New Passenger Ship | | Tasting success. In these eases it is| tion. You are probably not exercising Mr. Koonce, who says he is 22 years old and unmar-! The launching of the electrically propelled liner, “Pres!- | usual that the trouble is coming from | enough because, of the former heart pergrenges like way,| ent Coolidge” at Newport News Feb. 2ist, has added a Tae A adhesions around the bowels or kinks. | trouble. You should take a regular : PUWIES Ge aaron Gan tebteadl beating {very splendid passenger ship to the Dollar Line en- in the uenagement of | stalrWay | also, in these cases there is no other | system of exercising, both with calis- He had his application printed on a letterhead bearing : marching, reading, etc. In large UP- | treatment which proves as satisfac-|thenics and walking long distances his own name and carrying his picture. It sets forth | 8aged in west coast-Asiatic commerce. to-date prisons vocational education | tory as she massage technique. each day. his qualifications and aims for success in the newspaper} The ship is a twin-screw vessel of nine decks, has @ pao ble if Pay et if it yin | The ideal hand for massage is a ___ Fruit Juice i business. As a postscript, he asks that anyone not hav-| displacement of 33,800 tons and will have a cruising speed, ae ctr is sen tente, ta un institution | Pfoad. strong well padded flexible; Question: Mrs. F. H. asks: | “Will * 1 of 21 knots. It has accommodations for 1,260 passengers Pleting his sentence, to an institution | hand. Tie nails must be short and of | you kindly inform me if it is all right ing an opening now keep him in mind for the future. “ for the blind, there to be taught how! course the hands washed before and| to mix iemon and grapefruit juice? Because his application will stand out from the host; #nd a crew of 300. There is no other agency in the gypsies, and a few Italians and Span- | 0 read and write, and learn some after treatment. Either talcum pow- |Luse lemon juice in hot water every , of letters which every newspaper receives, Koonce is| The ship is one of the first to be run entirely by elec-| world that can answer as many legit- | iards. trade at which to earn his living. | der or a lubricating oil may be used | morning upon arising, but I find it f \ pretty sure to “land” somewhere. His method in-/ ‘tical power. The equipment ranges from giant machines welded (aareuric eet peal ee ah: ave tSbaeseeiRE one| @. How can two grades of finished while massaging. The oil is often used | more palsiable yadine Ae jae j ‘ \ .D.C.| Q. ne} 2 grades of fin fer t ; i ver: The juices of oranges, dleates some originality, some knowledge of his prospects t? tiny motors that will run the fans and other con-| ‘nis highly organized institution has | region or couritny 7 0) Be | paper be joined together to give the ene steed of massage, just mraparrait and lemons may be nixed, } and nerve enough to follow his own ideas. These are|tTivances for the comfort of passengers. A gyroscopic} been built up and is under the per-| A. Wild roses of many varieties | fect of.one paper's being coated by ‘ou would with exercises— | as they contain essentially the same feces valuable assets in the newspaper business, steering device, which steers the ship automatically with-| sonal direction of Frederic J. Haskin. | are found in abundance in practically | the other? Ea a con 2 mild treatments. Too heavy | Clements. The principal acid con- out human aid, is one of the numerous improvements| BY keeping in constant touch with | all the teperate regions of theearth.|| A. Two thicknesses of paper mai nt in the beginning will | tained in them is citric acid. No oth- His use of printed material 1s peculiarly apt. Con- P federal bureaus and other education- be joined together (laminat enn wae Ae Ler friilts show’ be ‘combined in this sciously or unconsciously, he hit upon the fact that good that makes this vessel a wonder house of modern science. 9) enterprises it is in a position to| @ What becomes of electricity | Out difficulty by simply p: tte padi oabditee! fect= | wayi printed matter appeals to everyone and to whom more ann Pass on to you authoritative infor- | after it is used? G. N. arti is ras ig Net with the nerves | : Colitis than a man who constantly deals with type? eae mation wedaiehy te ciniedt toes . Submit | A. The Bureau of Standards says preeaite ts shan pee general feeling of well| Question: E. G. asks: “What are ‘ Editorial Comment your queries e st of experts| that electricity is simply a form of hae the causes and symptoms of colitis? Presentation of his picture completes his story as every whose services are put at your free | motion. “When electricity is “used” looks easy it is nev-|I think I am in the first stages, and qualified advertising man knows. ws a s disposal. There is no charge except | the energy given out appears in some Ae cine oe sq 2 of a number of |am entirely ignorant of what I shoula Young Koonce gives the printed word credit for having|| i" jther editors: They ‘are published without regard || trey Conte, 12 Colm OF stamps for re-| other form such as heat or work of | Alte Wo otos can ements, each one in- ;¢o, At times'I am very light-head- {ts own appeal. ‘This, alone, will recommend him to more|] to whether they agree or “isagree with The ‘tribe || tum . Address the Bismarck | some kind. elnino pecial purpose. The | ed and weak.” une’s policies. {Tribune Information ‘Bureau, Fred- by using cage traps inne “vtappinl ‘Answer: The symptoms you write than one newspaper which finds itself in need of young erick J. Haskin, Director, Washing-} @. Please state how Mary Had a ding, “wringing, ate of are often found with colitis; there men with ideas. ton, D, C. Little Lanfb happened to be written. Today Is th tolling. pressing, | are also many other symptoms in this ais fest en ed Seven Years aacae eee Tee ee ‘oday Is the a4 friction. Each parti- cisorder, and if I were to write about o *, em not ly News) Z Pong been q 7 S a special pur- them all it would fill a book. An Too Quick a Diagnosis Thomas A. Edison on his 8th birthday told the re-| Played? L. P. Massachusetts, a little girl named| Anniversary of | ot-mmovemants des | Xeray skatnink ite ol?yaue anteadnes One of two things is generally wrong with discussions| porters that business had started a three-year trend up-| _4. Its invention is credited to|Mary fed and cared for a lamb her ¢ region treated would be the most accurate method ! of the nation’s business situation. Either it is taken for; W@td toward the recent high level. pharapie Gibb See pe rege father gave her. They Deven ey, FEAST OF DOLLS _ er which may be for determining the degree of colitis z | He added that business moves in fairly regular cycles,| OU+ the game between ant . | attached to each other and play On the third day of the third | which exists. Most eyeryone who is granted that the country has gone to the dogs and will) which we shall never be able to control. They lie, he| It was then called Table Tennis. Aj together. One day Mary's brother} month, which in our calendar may applied may not perfectly well has some degree 4 \ never be able to lift its head from the pillow again, or Says, “in the very nature of man.” t sporting goods house manufactured | suggested they take the lamb to| correspond with the middle or last narm. such as press-|cf colitis, which simply means in- i it is assumed that everything is really all right and that) Tt wulmost@seems as if Mr. Edison has a strain of|® Set of the 90'8 and gave it the | school, which they did, creating fun | day of April, the festival of dolls is| ing upon an inflamed | fiammation of the colon. we need only a little bit of Pollyanna gladness and hope| Mysticism in him, when you ponder over this tsatement.| "ame, Ping Pong. cree healer tain poner B Qne!celebrated in Japan. The festival is 1 a: ‘ | Give us three years to regain tire former business level, ee ‘at day, | specially dedicated to girls. ae to be as prosperous and happy as we ever were. then a couple of years more at the top before we start|, @ 8 immigration increasing or | Mr. John Roustone, told of thelamb’s| “as the sakura trees, which are , SH0uld be a eood place for president | ¢—————_______@ Recovery will come, of course—will come, probably,!down again, and we'll have a seven-year period. The| !@lling off?. T. F. visit. \The day after,,he rode back to | somewhat similar to our peach trees, | @14kers—and breakers. { KFYR | vefore we have stopped wailing about hard times. Sooner| mystics have always represented seven as a “sacred”| A. It is estimated that at the end the schoolhouse and handed Marythe | burst into bloom at this period. Eu-! 1 oo Fee ea ‘o grubs seat { page ve| umber. Orfentalists have long spoken of the “septenary| °F the fiscal year, June 30, 1931, it|three stanzas He had written. In| roneans have named this the festival| Tt is the hove of every baseball | rEDNUSDAY, ; int ater, we shall be more prosperous and busy than we) 7 ion of man.” ‘Prenat | will be found that there is a decrease | 1829, in a book of poems for children, | $f peach flowers. manager, of course, to make jack of | Gee ieee ecm cic were in 1928 and 1929, and the time may not be as far! “The business cycle in ancient Egypt seems to have ait-|% 87.000 in number of immigrants | published by Sarah Joseph, three| On this day Japanese girls and #l! trades. | pops Gest ica off as we suppose. |fered in duration from ours, with seven lean years and| Compared with, the 242,000 for the | more stanzas were added. women dress themselvesin holiday at-| 5. wouty Soeh : tap =v en thioninenart:ntachitian ken f On the other hand, there is no sense in trying to pre-| seven fat years, making a 14-year cycle. But possibly | “ce! year, 1930. earet pul te aeslanspel tire. The mothers adorn the chamber| , "Butler Would Speak to Aid Un-) 7 oe i ee ae, ebro oe that was exceptional. Or possibly we hav ededantes —< Q. Whe 1 will the Indianapo'is au-/ o¢ ‘state with blossoming sakura | ¢mployed. eadiine. Would you! 7:30—old-time mus , tend that there is nothing the matter with us except a Rees, >. ene ae me Ae rand — i up. Q. To what degree in American | tomobile race take place? When was/ poughs and arrange an ex! ion of | Call that idle talk? ea ‘Meditation period. ' pessimistic frame of mind, The bread lines have been) chart for the last few dcerieny ais gan at da suepeis, | Universities does the License of the | the first one? D. B. C. __|all the dolls which their daughters | (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | $:00—Around the town: Radio floor- Teal enough; the Red Cross and other relief organiza-/ ing tendency for crests of business waves to appear | octet is sieved arligeernyr ots ae ol area BA have received. The children prepare a | 3:20 cSunshine hour. aI 7 G . t for them which is eaten | * 5 : Yorld Bookman. (eee gen ig mai aay, RO sitet thease farts Sores] Ste sna navo been hed nc Sy oammeet fy sem Be Sen Quotations ||t#apiuhe yt arnas nou . i. given in our universities. 1911, have 120:10— aan ier However, it is possible to strike a happy medium in| Up to the Senate feats sts are supposed to have RE TC TS an | 10:10. ane Sammy: daily household isi he situatic » Paul patch) Q. How did Captain Sir George} @Q. Hew does a person know when i v1 is festiv: am, by the grace of God, a very |10: rimer for town farmers, ee oa Passed by the house of representatives the Brigham/ Hubert Wilkins gain his knighthood? | the police department is going to| apthe dls disPlaved at this festival | indolent person—John Barrymore.» |10:97—Arlington. time signals. | in the current Magazine of Wall Street, Theodore) pit} Alevaliawioll eat ; 9| are used only on formal occasions |11:00—Grain markets, a | to tax all yellow oleomargarine ten cents a pound now| M. F. 8. ; auction off confiscated automobiles? | ang are not regarded as toys. Jap- | * * |11:16—German program. ¢ ry Knappen reviews things and finds that while conditions| goes to the senate where it will have to be given quick} A. Captain Wilkins was born in| F, W. anese boys have their doll festival, too,| Business becomes better when |11:30—Organ program: Grace Duryee : are bad enough, 1930 has not by any means been aj action if the farmers of the northwest are to profit by} Australia. He has been engaged in| A. The sales are in most placeS| put their dolls consist of toy images | People feel better about it—Sir Reg- 2: Morris. i total loss. the good work of their representatives. ‘arctic exploration for many years. In| announced in the daily papers. pephacc lg 8° | inald McKenna. Dake ete amarok Trib: For example, he points out that the brunt of the busi-| ., The, bill introduces no new legislative principle and| April, 1928, he flew from Alaska to i | ‘+s } Bae neon 3 yt, s she pi le “| should have been passed long ago. It only closes a loop-| Spitzbergen and for this feat was| @. Whenis beloved pronounced as |g. | The greatest number of failures) 2:00—Grain mthkets; Bismarck Trib- ¥ ness depression fell on the steel, construction and auto-/ hole in the odd law by which the manufacturers of oleo| knighted by King George V of Eng- | two syllables, and when has it three BARBS are among those who were pampered Ae ee eau mobile industries. But even so, these industries were| have been able to evade the law. The present statutes| land. syllables? M. A. B. jor dependent children—Dr. Alfred - better off than in 1920. put the tax on such butter substitutes as are artificially . 5 A. There is a rule to the effect *) Adler, peasad News radio magazine. Bunilarly, the total’ volume of manufactures in America| colored. By employing a palm oil, as both an ingredient! What is the size of the original|that when an adjective which ends) Beauty shops are now said to rank x * * 0— Music. ae . S 3 and coloring agent, the oleo manufacturers have been painting Mona Lisa? W. T. K. in “ed” is used as a substantive, as in| sixth in American industry. Thebus-| People of Michigan do not want 5—Uncle Paul’s kiddie time. was far above the total for 1920. There was only) able to place on the market a product closely imitating] A. This canvas is two feet six|the case of “Oh my beloved,” the] iness has advanced many good fea-! school teachers who smoke.—Charles 5—Stocks and bonds. ® slight drop in electric power output from 1929, The) butter in color without paying the tax. inches by one foot nine inches. syllable “ed” is pronounced separately. | tures. McKenny, president of Michighh fale Tb ee ee ! gasoline consumption for 1930 was the largest in Ameri-' The Brigham bill will remove the distinction between ; x KK State Normal school, isuaveaien } can history. Department store sales in 1930 equaled oleo colored artificially and that deriving its color from/ @Q. Is there any civilized country; @. What would be done with &| If Cal Coolidge accepts that $1,000,- * * 1 19 %4 i actual ingredients. The tax will apply uniformly on all| where the men of today wear ear-| person who went blind while serving | 000 job as head of the New England Why is it that when women’s Ce avai. Morris. those of 1929 in volume, and were only slightly below them| oleomargarine resembling butter whether the perfection| rings? R. B. a prison sentence? F. G. dairy interests, he'll doubtless make | skirts grow longer, a business depres- thel Moore Bauer, nem 4° in value. Chain store sales increased in volume, and| of the color imitation has been attained by artificial col-| A. Earrings are still worn bysome| A. A person who becomes blind! his own hay while the sun shines. sion is approaching, and when the wscasting, fell off in value only fractionally. orants or not. fishermca on the Belgian coast. They | while serving a prison sentence is ** * skirts grow shorter, good times are Oty, Lutheran mixed quar- : Nor is that all. Savings banks deposits gained during Farm organizations have estimated that the subterfuge | are rarely worn by men elsewhere, but | cared for in the same manner asprior| Atlantic City has made a bid for | coming?—Professor Baker Brownell’s Legislative ttabite. 2 posits g by which the “artificially colored” clause is now being| are sometimes seen in the ears of | to his loss of sight, except of course] the next Republican convention. It| query to a Northwestern university Jackie Sherman, — 1930. The aggregate of interest and dividend payments} eyaded is costing dairymen a million dollars a day. The class, rt a udio program, on securities was considerably ahead of that of 1929. ange should add its action to that of the house to stop i fe see —Music, Capital issues of domestic securities were larger than in| this loss and restore to effect a protection which has a leave the American people to @——— ’ é been rendered inoperative by means of a technicality. OUT OUK WAY W judge between General Butler and i : . TE aigd Sieiy except 1288 08 ADE. Agriculture now awaits only the favorable action of the By Williams mvselt, and 1 am satisfied to abige|| LOday in Congress | j : at_does all of this mean? Why, obviously, that] senate to obtain a practical and immediate variety. of by their verdict—Al Capone, angered | °———__—_—_ the country is in better health than we have supposed.| farm relief. GET OVER ray Ss by reports that Butler had said the TUESDAY ‘This is not to say that there has not been much suffer- sean y ey BE Om WHEY SEE Bang chieftain would be deported) | TE ing. It is not to say that there has not been a great The Reapportibnment Act'Stands THAT SIDE, EXPLAIN TAT. 1 ME =A / WELL 22 ‘when Tallalc opinion ecm armused, |, Goh Gaty SOuteNBHCELteDDEE on sec: feaiict ancmployment, aigreat deall of hunger, a pan (Minneapolis Tribune) Quick} IF HE CAREFUL, | WO BIG MILUONAIRES,) DUNNO - BUT. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | titer pills UY = “PPFepriation and c Meieralacutavesent, PA eines tan (iat the sme | see tm census committee has done the nation & GETS Away mito | CAREFUL! wrio Wins CALMLY =| 1 seECT ITS | OTA ciatat ; , “| good turn by tabling all measures which would have in- TRE Busnes, We LL ONT AN’ A . A ra miscellaneous legislation. try is on a very sound basis for a healthy trade revival—|creased the membership of the lower house and by re- oe RS REY oe AKE Cc, Day GY soe BG TA AME acs Committee Would CUTTING DOWN CUTTING 4 which can hardly be postponed much longer. moving, at the same time, the last element of doubt and| 4 AMY LIONS ts THAT MAKES Sell Station at U)., “Because of the long drought,’ says uncertainty as to eapportionment, As a result of ita! CAN RUN UKE Bic id MAGES, A eet A sword a New York newspaper, “the city's * action, reapportionment act of June, 1929, will stand, ACH LIVE COUPLE { SWALLOWER ae water supply is very low.” T! ¢ A Fine Spectacle and for the first time in two decades there will be a re- MOVES | oO HENS. aBout A scRaTtH cae re Denes Son state af- | tax of are We honevescr thee Somehow, for no good reasan at all, we are glad to|deal of house membership among the states. Minnesota, AND Wear A MosourTto sage a bill giving the board of admin. | 58 1 thelr Scotch —Lite, hear that David S. Ingalls, assistant secretary of the | Course, will lose one representative in this redeal. as DOAGIE CAFF IN, Bite. istration authority to transfer the Il-| «rey offices Ghind GOT navy for air, has reported that the war games now being| must forfelt tae consressinen te teamportioament’ ‘The cense of radio station located at the | rm oxi fon eee ree eo carried on by the U. 8. fleet in Caribbean waters have, effect of this act is to take 27 house seats away from Pnlveraity of North Dakota at Grand |biooks up an’ two to me leftPo rte definitely proved the necessity for big dirigibles like the| 21 states and turn them over to 11; California will be The bill, which has ad th : eS Angie. its chief beneficiary with nine new representatives, and genie was itoancad ty eater ae ae We say this, not because we are convinced that the SS Sschediiled ‘sorlcliaine ot ine, bax meee 8. Whitman, Grand Forks, FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ” | ‘ giant dirigible is particularly effective as a naval auxiliary; The reapportionment legislation adopted in 1929 be- RED. U.S. PAT.OFF. —we know nothing about it—but because a large dirigible | comes automatically effective for the seventy-third con- *. is one of the most inspiring sights modern life affords. | ee vee we elected in Roreees, 1932, and hee Minnesota Elevator vene in . means that every state affected Commerce does not yet seem quite sure thet it can use| it, including Minnesota, must take some action on re- Destroy ed by Blaze ; these giant ships, and they are top big and expensive! apportionment within the next 21 months. It will be Lake Lillian, Minn. Mi for private use. It is up to the navy to keep them alive;! possible for states gaining representation to avoid re- Fire destroyed Seite ease irae tees and simply because they are fine things to look at, we| ‘stricting by leaving their present congressional dis- here Monday night, with loss of ap. tricts untouched and electing representatives-at-large, but (i . - are glad that the navy feels them to be essential com-/ the josing states have no other choice than to rearrange proximately $18,000. 3 About 27,000 bushels of oats and ponents of its fleet. their district lines. e] oats ani If there 1s any consolation for the northwest in the feveral thousand bushels of wheat * « ian of Pe Rares ahhh has been made were in the elevator. A train was de- : Make-Believe and Realism a hg ge layed when grain covered the tracks final, it lies chiefly in the fact that the plan is the only several feet deep as the elevator fair and reasonable one possible and that - walls gave way. Cause of the fire ‘The attempts which were made during the Bas sich. Been Getermiped: Rd to alter the present scheme of reapportion- | the membership of the house were . A ° and ill-advised: where hey wire isended $9 | Stickler Solution | losing they PEPE a eee eget ie 2 Parpose, in the last enaly- aA ° bs \ ve additional bulk to a which is al- i ready far too bulky and which fairly creaks beneath the, cop Is NICE. IT weight of membership. The best thing the losing states “ LURES. A CAT, Sit | Gast so 0 BEMow Unels Grids sue diearsionaeee Bai a (phi e d that there is something te the moonlight-and- their plans for redisti before November, 1932. letters, from sentence, It should not be so very difficult to be philosophical COD, IS NICE, when rearranged, will theme of love which sparkles on the allver screen. ‘and composed over the inevitable, reapportionment. 2 D spell the word COINCIDES, and the let- ma GUNbyS Pree brought the make-believe world and the everyday | since it is dictated by the constitution and population ma AMS, ters from the second sentence, when re- i) Suva ORNS of us know a little closer together. ‘Most | shifts, is certainly that. THE MOUSE AND THE ELEPHANTS eer ge arranged, will spell ARTICULATES, t a * Bs 2 Late hours end in early morning.

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