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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1932 Soe aR The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. ! Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by currier, per year ......$7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) ............ 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . ~ 6.00; ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00! ‘Weekly by mail in state, three VATS .....0.eee00es sescceseees 2.60 Weekly by mail outside of North i Dakota, per year ......-.+...+ Ls Weekly by mail in Canada, per | VOAT ceceesreccereererensecenen Sul Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also tne local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County | Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON A Brother’s Heroic Example | Recent months have not been a good time for people who like to keep a strong faith in human _ nature. There has been a good deal of news| of stupidity, venality and perversity in high places—almost enough to| convince one that the race is a pretty shabby affair. But now and then there will be a! Kittle story about some utterly un-| known, perfectly ordinary individual | that will turn the tide; a story that! helps to restore one’s belief that man- | kind is, after all, capable of very great and noble things. Such a story got into the papers the other day from Canon City, Colo. Tom and George Embleton, broth- ers, were digging a well, assisted by) their father. They got the well shaft) 60 feet deep, and then George was lowered to the bottom in a bucket to! set off a dynamite blast. He lit the fuse and ordered them to hoist him out. They began to do so—and the rope broke. George fell to the bot- tom, knocked unconscious, and lay right on top of a charge of dynamite that was certain to explode very shortly. The two men at the top would have been amply justified in staying there, | waiting in frozen herror for the trag- | edy. But Tom, without hesitation, got into the bucket and ordered his father to lower him into the well— into the well where a high explosive was due to go off in a few seconds. Unfortunately, he was unable to! save his brother. The dynamite went | off when Tom was only half way down the shaft. He went on to the bottom, picked up his brother's broken | body and brought it to the surface, | but it was too late. George was fa-; tally injured. | But you will go a long way before you find a finer example of real bravery than Tom displayed. Physical courage, of course, is com- mon enough. Millions of soldiers dis-| played it in profusion during the World war. But there is always something immensely heartening about it. To see a man who is ready to act on the belief that there is something immensely more important than saving his own skin restores one’s faith in the entire race. Grand Opera and Its ‘Angels’ One of the unfortunate results of Samuel Insull’s financial crash is the closing of Chicago’s magnificent new opera house. This theater is among the most beautiful and costly on earth. Insull gave it to Chicago. He was the “an- gel” on whom the opera company could always rely for funds to meet a deficit that might arise during a season. Now Insull is broke—so Chicago will have no opera. The singers have been dismissed, a $500,000 deficit left over from the 1932 season is still un- paid and people are wondering what is to be done about the huge mortgage which hangs over the opera house— @ matter of around $17,000,000. Judging solely by this, one would be forced to the conclusion that grand opera in the United States is strictly a rich man’s plaything—an art form that cannot possibly pay its way and that exists, when it exists at all, only because the wealthy can be induced to subsidize it. If that were true the outlook for grand cpera would be very dark in- deed. But it just happens that other American cities have shown that | case opera can stand on its own legs in the United States if it is stripped of its fancy frills. Several of the larger inland cities have repeatedly proved that summer 50/27: ought to be easy enough—but New theater is generally pressed into serv- ice. Tickets are sold at prices that can compete with the movies. The result is excellent musical entertain- ment that needs no subsidies. If grand opera ever flourishes in the United States it will be in some such way as that. Subsidies, fabu- jlous salaries and the support of so- ciety are drawbacks, not helps. A Salary Too Small Most state governments are having trouble because the salaries they have to pay seem to big; but New Jersey, by an odd quirk, is having trouble | because one of its salaries is so small. New Jersey has Quartermaster Gen- ‘eral E. Edward Murray on its rolls at $1 a year, a nominal compensation which recently replaced a $6,000 sal- Paying a dollar-a-year salary 00 | Jersey law provides that all state em- ployes must be paid in semi-monthly checks. And now New Jersey's audi- tors are trying to find some way of dividing a dollar into 24 equal parts without either gypping the general or giving him more than he is entitled to. It may be a hard little problem. But New Jersey would be happy if that were the extent of its payroll worries. H. R. H. Michael—Boy Scout Crown Prince Michael of Rumania, who was a sure-enough king for a while, despite his extreme youth, un- til his father, Carol, decided to re- turn to the throne, is now a member of the Boy Scouts. A recent news dispatch remarks that he became a member at the suggestion of his father. Americans who got used to photo- graphs of the chubby-faced young- ster during his brief career as king will undoubtedly agree that he ought to be happier now than he was in his kingship. A boy of Michael's years has no business being king, or even crown prince—there isn’t any {fun in it; but being a Boy Scout is something else again, If his membership in the famous organization helps Michael to forget that he is hedged about with the dis- tinctions of royalty, and enables him to get a little of that carefree out- door play which is the heritage of children of more lowly birth, he will be very much better off. Air Traffic Cases The growth of airplane traffic is| going to bring the courts some diffi- cult new problems during the next few decades. Indeed, the process has begun already, and precedents are now being made for what may ulti- mately become an entirely new body of law. Right now the New York courts are trying to figure out the way to deal with a lawsuit arising out of a mid- air collision between two planes. What makes the lawsuit difficult is the fact that there are few estab- lished rules to govern air traffic. The question of who has the right-of-way, and when, is not as clearly defined in the air as it is on land and sea. Prob- ably it will be a good many years before aerial lawsuits cease to perplex judges and befuddle jurors. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, Why Delinquent Taxes? (Minneapolis Tribune) Any numper of explanations have undoubtedly been offered for the doubling and trebling of the amount of tax delinquency in Minnesota counties, but none of them have in- cluded the reasons suggested by As- sistant County Attorney Frank J. Williams. It is his opinion that one of the chief underlying causes for the increase in tax delinquency is the “propaganda designed to awaken tax consciousness and bring about reduc- tion in expenditures.” This has been carried so far, he feels, that it has built up “a spirit of tax resistance bordering on anarchy where each in- dividual seeks to dictate the amount of taxes he should pay, if any.” He also cited two contradictory attitudes toward penalties that he thought were contributing factors. It can be safely admitted that the tax reduction wave that has swept the state has not been without its elements of hysteria and that in some quarters it has been overemphasized. It is no less true that in many sec- tions of the state taxes are being re- duced. The $7,800,000 that was cut from the levies last year, and the ad- ditional millions that are now being removed by counties and local sub- divisions, have reduced rates. But in hunting for reasons for these tax reductions one must place the very propaganda which Mr. Williams criti- cizes as one of the important factors. Tax delinquency is not a new prob- lem. It is as old as taxation and it has been present in years when there were no campaigns being waged for tax reduction. The fact that it has increased now, when the taxpayer has been forced to make a concerted ef- fort to reduce his tax bill, does not prove that the methods the taxpayer has adopted to bring his side of the to the attention of the officials is responsible for the delinquency. It would seem more logical to int both of them as having their in the same basic difficulty—that present taxes are too high for pres- ent incomes. opera seasons at popular prices can no highly press-agented stars with organized folk is called on uency, are symptoms of a funda- ‘and foot ops tein pechg igre a onde é SRS Shee’, pave been. tisrants of concerted organize Minnesota citizens not to pay taxes. The effort to reduce expen- increasing tax de- a colossal scheme to dodge the tax- Questions of the Hour in Germany! A CURB FOR COMMUNISM 2? --- - OR ---/ THE END OF THE REPUBLIC ? ry Signed letters pertaining to personal ink. Address Dr. William Brady, BREATHING TO HELP THE CIRCULATION The large veins in the thorax and abdomen hold perhaps a pint of shut off from that in the veins of the legs by valves, likewise from the veins of the neck and head, the valves pre- venting backflow of the blood after great veins in the thorax and abdo- men. provision for lowering pressure upon the fluid to be pumped or for increas-! ing pressure upon it. In this case it pressure within the thorax is lowered | when you draw in breath. With this lowering of intrathoracic pressure during the act of inspiration there is a suction effect exerted upon | the great veins, so that more blood is drawn into them from the blood in the veins of the limbs, head and neck. Not only that, but there is also| a suction which tends to draw the | blood from the abdominal veins into the thoracic veins and the right side of the heart. This effect is aided by the increase of pressure within the abdomen by the downward push of the diaphragm in the act of inspira- tion or drawing in air. There you have it, all complete. Trouble is you probably don’t know how to breathe to help your circula- tion. A few moments devoted to belly breathing even just twice a day (on} retiring and on awaking in the morn-} ing) will definitely improve the circu- lation in many instances, and if you get the hang of the thing and practice it regularly for a few moments every hour or two, it will prove a real boost- er, no matter what causes the poor circulation. In proper belly breathing, to gain the advantages suggested, it is neces- sary in most cases to re-educate the belly first. The regular conscientious practice of belly breathing as I instruct, has a quieting influence which enables rest- Jess persons to get to sleep nights. It relieves and cures functional difficul- ties of young women. It tends to bring down excessively high blood pressure and keep it down. It warms up cold feet. It serves as a natural massage for the liver and bile appar- many who are subject to emphysema, bronchiectasis, bronchial asthma or chronic bronchitis. If you want the instructions say so, but do not send @ clipping of this. Inclose with your request a 3-cent Stamped envelope bearing your address. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Whitfield’s Ointment Words fail to express my gratitude to you for telling us about Whitfield’s ointment for foot itch. It has com- pletely relieved three in our family who had suffered over two years... —(S. M. J.) Answer—Glad to send formula and directions to any reader who asks for it and incloses 3-cent stamped enve- lope bearing his address. Dangerous Practice Using mercury tablets in douche— each tablet, according to the label, contains 1% grains corrosive sublim- ate, and one is to be dissolved in a pint of water—(Mrs. A. I. T.) Answer—It is a dangerous practice. There is no legitimate reason why the sale of such poison should be per- mitted. Tragic consequences have been reported in numerous cases. Pleurisy Fifteen-year-old daughter conval- escing from pleurisy. Previous to this she had pneumonia three times. Doc- tor wants me to have X-ray examina- tion when she gets well, to see if the lungs are clear. I have heard pleur- isy is a forerunner of tuberculosis. «+. —(Mrs. J. 8.) Answer—In many cases pleurisy is tuberculosis. So is alleged pneu- monia that recurs. Your daughter should have careful medieal attention for the next three years. - Join the Breakers I have had the constipation habit, as you call it, for 40 years. How shall I break it?—(L. B. L.) Answer—Repeat your sad confes- sion, inclose a dime and a 3-cent stamped envelope bearing your ad- dress. The booklet, “The Constipa- tion Habit,” will tell you how. (Copyright, John F, Dille Co.) Oo Even dry flies for trout fishing} From whet they're saying now, are now being made of cellophane. o ~ PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self- addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. blood. ‘The blood in these veins is| it has come through the veins to the} Besides valves, a pump must have | 4 JOURNAL OF SOCIETY 5 i is lowering pressure, suction, and the ee catalogued the conduct of the | promises to reopen this winter. Jour- atus. It gives considerable relief to' 1 health and hygiene, not to discase , in care of this newspaper, Now York, Aug, 5.—For two genera- tions the eagle eye of Charlie Journal! Blue Book set's younger folk. Char- lie, suave, discreet and wise gentlé- man of the world, has been the most | trusted and socially accepted figure | in New York's night world. In a sense he has been a sort of | chaperone and mentor. As overlord of the famous old Montmarte club, gathering place of the elite, Journal would receive many calls an evening from worried dowagers. Their daughters were stepping out, they would say, and would he please keep an eye on them—see that they didn’t drink much, if they drank at all. Journal was adopted as part and parcel of Manhattan’s swanky social picture. ee * Well, that generation grew up and today has children of its own. The old Montmarte is gone,- though it nal is temporarily out of the Broad- way picture. He now plays entre- preneur to a Friday night supper club at Monmouth, N. J., also known as the Montmarte. Worried dowagers call up as they did in the yesteryears, But he finds that much discussed younger genera- tion of today are quite as smart as their fathers—if not a bit smarter. And just as simple to handle! x * IT’S ALL IN THE GAME And there’s a chuckle for newspa- per folk in the recent experience of bel Ross, one of New York's best newspaper women. In the course of being a general assignment worker, Miss Ross has attended many festive parties staged for authors, actors and such. But recently the moment came ‘when Miss Ross herself was to be starred. She had written a novel, “Promenade Deck.” And her pub- lishers decided to present her as guest of honor at a gala reception. The liner Paris was hired for an afternoon. An elaborate program was arranged. Hundreds of invita- tions were sent out. Miss Ross pre- pared for one of the thrills of her life. A few days before the event, Miss Ross was summoned to the city edi- tor’s desk. “Better get right down to Winston- Salem for the Libby Holman story!” he said. There was no party on the Paris. Miss Ross was turning out her 1,000 words at the moment when she was to have been a guest of honor. Which is the way things are in the newspa- per business. * * JUST CHATTER Old Massa Ben Bernie has com- posed the official jazz anthem for the Chicago Exposition. He calls it “Chi- cagoana” and it is the first effort at going semi-classical... And Old Massa Vincent Lopez, preparing to leave the St. Regis roof for a western tour, was faced by the tough assign- ment—tough to a performer, that is— of picking out a band as good as his own. Who ever heard of a leader who thought any band as good as his own? ... Vincent nominated Dick Gasparre’s organization. And, while on musicians, Howard Lanin claims the largest musical family in this land . There are eight brothers and one sister and all of them have been successful in mu- sic ... His father and mother met on @ concert tour and were married. . « » Howard's father has never sur- rendered his classical traditions nor accepted jazz... To please his dad, Howard has never played a syncopat- ed version of any musical classic .. . Smith Ballew is the tallest of the “orc pilots,” measuring six feet six. . ROR: eAeing HN Tees 6X. | Barbs | the inflation bill is just a lot of hot air, ek ot A statistician tells us that the motorist pays one-third of a cent a mile for the use of the high- ways. The cost of the abuse hasn’t yet been figured out. * eR Just after the last windy spell, a Danbury hat manufacturer comes out with the statement that at last the straws are blowing in the right direc- tion. * * University of California has added a course in air law for its prospective barristers, Now they'll have to know the law of the land- ing as well as the law of the land, eo The speed of the clubhead of a driver has been established at 125 miles per hour at the point of im- pact, or one-tenth the rate the news travels in the event the ball trickles into the cup for a hole-in-one. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) ie TODAY AN “1S 4 YH UAY GERMANS MAKE STAND On Aug. 5, 1918, German replace- ment divisions made a determined stand on the Vesle river and suc- ¢-—_______— material toa third beeping rin hich was salt ave 2 | Supreme Court | anteed by the eal ie ee isi holds this agreement no! coon statute of frauds and that note given by third person to respondent for material was received by him as col- lateral for the purchase. oO State of North Dakote, plaintiff, vs. Farmers’ State Bank of Mandan, in re application of Farmers’ Union ce eet tendant ge gosta a Shafer to Headline lon sus- pends business and closes its doors Speaking Program and, at the same time, takes from a customer checks for collection and de- Posit without notifying him of such suspension, an implied trust is cre- ated and the proceeds from the check become a special deposit. The checks in the case were cleared to another bank. The decision holds that the depositor had traced the checks into the bank’s clearing fund and was entitled to a preference over Minneapolis, Aug. 5.—(?)—Governor George F. Shafer of North Dakota will be accompanied by at least four candidates on the Republican state and congressional ticket when he speaks at the community picnic to be held at Mound, Minn., Sunday. Mayor J. C. Krause, chairman of other creditors in such fund and to have a trust in his favor impressed on such cash on hand in the bank at the time of closing. Decision reverses that of Morton county district court. R. O. Richardson, plaintiff and re- spondent, vs. W. H. Thomas, defend- ant and appellant. Action on a promissory note, given in payment for a flour mill, which was taken back by the vendors after default. Evidence held sufficient to support findings of Bowman county district court that plaintiff repurchased the mill for an agreed consideration which was credited upon the defend- ant’s indebtedness. State, ex rel Torkel Nyland, plain- tiff and respondent, vs. Northern Packing company. An employe, injured in course of employment by an employer not in- sured under the state workmen’s compensation act, may file his appli- cation with the workmen's compen- sation bureau for an award, but may not maintain a court action for a re- covery until the bureau has disposed of the matter in a final award. Decision reverses Grand Forks county district court and dismisses case. Ella G. Bolen, plaintiff and re- spondent, vs. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin W. Dolph, defendants and appellants. Action for damages to an automo- bile with a counter claim for damages to another automobile. Decision of Ward county district court affirmed. Thomas Holden, plaintiff and re- spondent, vs. Eva S. Walker and oth- ers, and Eva 8, Walker and Charles W. Morris, defendants and appellants. Decision holds that, where a trans- fer of property is fraudulent as to a creditor, the creditor may treat the conveyance as void against him and the property as still that of the debtor. He may attach such property, though held by a third person, and institute action to determine adverse claims against it. If the creditor does not consent to the terms of such transfer to a third person, his lien against the interest of his debtor in the property is superior to the inter- ests of the grantee. Affirms decision of Ramsey county district court. State of North Dakota, plaintiff and respondent, vs. Gilbert Rudy, defend- ant and appellant. In an action to establish the pa- ternity of a child born out of wed- lock, defendant may show illicit re- lations between the mother and other men at or about the time the child may have been begotten as tending to show that someone other than he is the father of the child, but such evidence is not admissible as tending ceeded in slowing up the victorious drive of French and American troops. British troops resumed the offen- sive in Picardy and made several mi- nor gains. Paris was again bombarded by the long-range German gun. Slight dam- age was reported. Submarines were again active. The British transport Warilda, carrying 800 wounded, was torpedoed in the English channel and 123 lives were lost. The American tanker Luz Blanca was sunk off Halifax and the schooner Stanley L. Seaman was tor- pedoed 100 miles off Cape Hatteras. Onions peeled under water will not bring tears to the eyes. to impeach the character of the prose- cutrix or to prove an immoral dis- Position on her part. Decision affirms judgment of Em- mons county district court. Security Building and Loan associ- ation, plaintiff and appellant, vs. J. Warren Bacon and others, and the Rogers Lumber company, defendant and respondent. Reversing action of Ward county district court in case involving a real estate mortgage in which defendant set up a claim under a subsequent mortgage and asked that it be ad- judged superior to that of plaintiff which it was sought to foreclose. Case involved furnishing of building Li . HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle building, 1 Pace, 18 Harbor. 5 Expositor of 19 Sordidness, marred mys: ic Ns) 20 Types of doors, 13 Grinding tooth. | AMISIFIOINE MEDIAS °? Oforiess anti- 15 Beverage. KE PIE INIDEEMIAIRIS) aE ROR HOE: 16 Solitary. 24 Street. 17 To plump. ¢j 25 Cord worn 19 Lifeless, around a sail- 21 ieevent note. or’s neck, 23'Needy. Rl 26 President of 25:Falsifier, ONE Ie Cuba. 26 Mother. 28 Sandpiper. 27'Derby. 30 Telegraphed. 29'Refractory. 31 Precept. 81-Perthed. 48 To inhume. ing at Wash: 33 Sesame. B2Let it stand. 49 To let fall. ington. 35 Any flatfish, 84 Spot or infec. 51 Yellow 2 Toward. 40 Swell of the seq tion. Hawaiian bird. 3-pairy, striking the 85 Tube or vessel. 52 Close-fitting 4 Jointed sense shore, 86 Iris. cap, . ra 41 Sour. 37 Arid, 54 Lacerated. organ of in: 44 Completely, 88Form of pot- 56 Fortification, _ Sects 45 Axe. ter’s wheel. 5701d French © Neuter pro 48 Cold wind. $9 Christmas coin, murs 50 Fulcrum, carol. 59To frown. 7Ever (contrac: 52 Pass between 40To perspire, 61Phonetic sys» _ tion). peaks. 42Chaffy part of © tem. 8 Sun god. 53 Demure. ground grain. 62 Pigsties, 9To supplicate. 55 Female sheep. 43 Kind. VERTICAL 10 Venerable, 56 Fourth note. 44 Block of type. 11Conjunction. 57 Street (abbr.). 46 To total. 1 National insti- 12 Northeast. 58 Above, s2.Like. tution of learn- 14 Covering of a 60 Half an em. ia aaa 1 a | NN" a it seem that @ lot of people think TT FPIPIPerery CLE eC B\dnd oe PTT PL a wok HS \ iad il PEL ONC RT \ d\n PCCP ee PT CCN LP \ iT Sid ad PTCA PTI il 2 es VEE of LT NG TT Za the committee in charge of the gath- ering, expects more than 10,000 per- ae at ‘the fourth annual twenty- niners’ celebration, at which the North Dakota executive will be the chief attraction. ‘Ward Senn, chairman of the Hen- |Bismarck Men Will Speak at Garrison Garrison, N. D., Aug. 5—Four Bis- marck men are on the program for the second good will dinner to be They are William Langer, Republican gubernatorial candidate; R. B. Mur- phy, Democratic congressional candi- date; A. D. McKinnon, chief highway commissioner, and Walter Maddock, vice president of the North Dakota Farmers’ Union. Langer has been designated as the principal guest of honor. Others who will speak are Halvor L. Halvorson, Minot; Waldo Smith and Dr. E. C. Stucke, Garri- son. Dr. J. W. Robinson is chairman of the Garrison Civic club committee in charge of the dinner and J. A. Reu- ther, club president, will be toast- master. Members of St. Ann’s Altar society of St. Nicholas’ Catholic church will prepare and serve the dinner. About 200 are expected to attend. nepin county Republican committee, will introduce Governor Shafer. N. J. Holmberg, candidate for congress; Henry Benson, attorney general; Jul- ius Schmahl, state treasurer, and Mike Holm, secretary of state, also will attend the meeting. ——_——$—$—— AT REGAN TABERNACLE Regan, N. D., Aug. 5.—Announce- ment was made here Thursday by Rev. A. Christenson, pastor of the Gospel Tabernacle, that Rev. J. N. Hoover, famous evangelist and a cou- sin of President Herbert Hoover, will speak at a special service here Aug. 8. He will speak at an evening meeting, taking for his subject, “Mussolini and Is the World Preparing for Anti- Christ?” PROMOTES TRENCH SILOS | Stanley, N. D., Avg. 5—Many Mountrail county farmers are plan-| ning to build trench si according to County Agent C. A. STICKER S| ALLOA © SORA See if you can arrange the above let- ters m the order that will spell a nine-let- ter word. In only one case can a border be next-to one of the same shape. When a person always over-eats, the result is a great waist. SHIP TO WOOL POOL Stanley, N. D., Aug. 5.—Mountrail county farmers have consigned 43,000 pounds of wool to the National Wool Pool. This represents a larger per- centage of wool marketed coopera- tively from this county than ever be- fore, since there now are fewer sheep and clips were lighter. One carload was loaded at Van Hook and another at Stanley. The pool operations are believed by many farmers to have increased the prices offered for wool by independent buyers, according to County Agent C. A. Fiske. DEVILS LAKE WOMAN DIES Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 5—(P)— Mrs. R. H. Snyder of Devils Lake died here Wednesday after a brief illness. She leaves her husband, four brothers and two sisters, Funeral services will be Saturday. FIND ALL-BRAN HAS TWICE THE USABLE IRON IN LIVER Also Furnishes “Bulk” and Vitamin B to Overcome Common Constipation | _Liver is known as a good source of iron for the blood. Now, new tests show Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN con- tains twice as much blood-building iron as an equal amount by weight of beef liver. But more important still, labora- tory experiments show ALL-BRAN provides “bulk” to exercise the in- testines, and Vitamin B to tone the intestinal tract. This means Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is a fine way to overcome constipa- tion — with the headaches, loss of appetite and energy that so fre- quently result. The “bulk” in ALt-Bran is much like that of lettuce. Inside the body, it absorbs moisture, forming a soft mass, which gently clears the in- testines of wastes. Special cooking Processes make ALL-BRAN finer, milder, more palatable. How much better than risking ll Gots ed Se habit- ‘orming. Just eat two tablespoon- fuls of Att-Bran daily for Trost types of Geese It is not habit-forming. If your intestinal | trouble is not relieved this way, see | your doctor. Appetizing recipes on the red- | and-green pea At all grocers. | Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. SS sealed in vacuum like your coffee. er cacy Tat se! BLUE R 1M E you find this malt always packed full 3 pounds Tod. i packed full 3 pounds : ae can) fd whet is far more im than Gunton Oe unmatched quality in fiobon Mate you set the most of the best. Sire. staged at Garrison next Tuesday. - te ‘f | nn * » ' a ' y ~ 4 t » @ 4 > 4 » he