The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 14, 1933, Page 4

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+ \ 1 money is backed by sound assets but that is no concern of the bureau of the new bills will not be up to stan- dard because of the rush. Ordinarily, i¢ takes a week to pro- 00 | duce a new batch of bank notes. The dies and other factors must be adjust- ed to thousandths of an inch and the finished product must be dried care- fully. This process takes time; under normal conditions about a week. During the emergency, however, the completed product has been shipped in three days. The result, to an expert, may be to make the notes & little smudgy. But smudgy or not, they will be/ dentine to the use for republication welcome to the average citizen if he ef all news dispatehes credited to it|/c@n get his hands on them. or not otherwise credited in this hewspaper and also the local news of Home to Roost @ontaneous origin published herein.} A few years ago, before the finan- ue cSt i ieeeea th hr Magma cial scandals made them run for cov- ———-—____-—.______-___—] er, one of the favorite pastimes of Bourbons was to see & hind every bush, a commun- ist on every street corner. The nation spent considerable money unearthing terrible plots and The catastrophe which struck | alleged facts in an effort to take the Gouthern California last Friday night} mind of the people off the main aerves to illustrate again that every| thing. There was a time when a good region has its own pecullar assets and | “Red” hunt, if the people could have debits. been properly excited, would have Under ordinary circumstances, 0} served the purpose of distracting at- section of our country appears to bet-/ tention from many in high places, ter advantage than the district which! Most notable among the investiga- has been so suddenly devastated with | tions of Communist activities was that tremendous property damage and/conducted by a congressional commit- heavy loss of life. tee with Hamilton Fish of New York i Here, apparently, nature's elements/as chairman. And one of Fish’s most ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1933 ‘ conspired to lavish her choicest gifts.| vigorous aides in this hunt for trou- | ——— It i @ land of sunshine and flowers,/bie was John Edward Nelson, con- ‘where cold breeses rarely blow and where the natural elements which Join to make it « favored land. And yet, underlying it all, is the geological fault which exists as a con- meant threat to the happiness and well-being of those who have flocked to this normal paradise on earth. The area goes along for years, making The sequel to it all came the other|| self-addressed envelope 1s enclosed. ident Roosevelt issued a statement against it but the police acted any- way. Several were arrested. Many philosophers, ancient and Among them was one Margaret perp have abpend Srna ne nang marvelous development, and then dis-|Nelson. She happened to be the |°!l wisecracks concern! influ- aster strikes. daughter of the red-baiting con pence of diet on health and longevity. eTeSS-! at first impact some of these sage By contrast, North Dakota is a/man, sayings seem impressive, but even- @terner land under normal conditions. _—_— tually somehow one classifies ae ‘The climate, good though it is,| A while back a Bismarck wag re-|junder the heading of poetry rather changes more frequently and more|marked: “The depression wouldn’t|than truth. Dr. Osler himself got violently, Its natural resources are be so hard to take if we only had a Stetitnalo Hagens a pater Jess obvious, its advantages less| keg of beer in the cellar.” It looks as| Bible” quotations of others from an- @rongly marked. though he might soon have oppor-|cient classics. But its handicaps are offset by its|tunity to try his theory out. Dr. Osler died before the dawn of the science of nutrition. We must eer hed Morne are 00) ||keep that fact in mind, while we con- fare here as to be almost non-existent. Edi i Co sider his teaching, for he was the ‘This broad prairie country does not an — seeps greatest medical teacher we mere ave inted b know the meaning of earthquake from|| trend of thought by other editors, || nt, Speaking, of the causation 6 chronic Bright's disease (chronic actual experience. They are published without regard to whether they disagree ||nephritis, chronic inflammation of the Apparently the law of compensa- with The Trib: Dolictes, kidneys), which is generally associated Won operates as inexorably in nature | _____ Qs/in the lives of men. FOOD AND THE ARTERIES nein _....__!| with artertosclerosis (hardening of the . arteries) and myocarditis (slow heart This Is Action muscle impairment), Osler said: (New York World-Telegram) “Alcohol plays an important The president's call for a special] Pert, particularly in conjunction .; With other factors. Among the session of congress to attack the de. better cl in: Amerita chronis pression is action. That is what the) Bright's disease is very common, Public wants—action. and is, I believe, caused more fre- When, in his inaugural address, he| quently by overeating than by ex- declared war on Wall Street domina- | _ ess in alcohol.” tion he expressed the bitterness of Speaking of the treatment of chronic millions who have been sold out by |>¥sht's disease, Dr. Osler said: A Place at Home The belief held in some quarters that homemaking does not interest the modern girl has been refuted by ‘@ check-up of home economics courses fm 80,644 public echools throughout the country. The study was made by teams on ture.‘tevee sll PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE play so large # part in our daily lives| radical to Nelson. An innocent pack- liam Brad: D. appear well adjusted to man’s needs/age under an arm easily was turned By wi = i ¥ tte and desires. Sun and sea and air|into » bomb in his imagination, rita etre iota merci alts intact diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written day in @ raid made by Washington po-|| in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instruc- lice to pick up radical agitators, Pres- tions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. i ach contents should be sour and acid when food is digesting. If vomiting happens or is induced from any cause it is natural that the chyme should appear sour and acid. In any case where an alkali is to be used to neu- tralize excessive acid in the stomach, it is better to take prepared chalk (alcium carbonate), a dose of 10 grains being sufficient to neutralize excessive stomach acidity for a few hours. Such a dose may be taken two or three times a day if necessary, and it does not disturb the acid-base bal- ance in the blood and tissues as does bicarbonate of soda. If the child's vomiting is habitual or neurotic medi- cine is scarcely the right treatment. The Appendix 1. Does the appendix function in the human body? 2. At the removal of the appendix does another one grow? 3. How does removal of of the appen- dix affect the person mentally and physically? 4, At the removal of the appendix is it necessary to follow a special diet? Answer—1. No, the appendix is the vestage of a portion of the intestine whose function has been lost in evo- lution, 2. No, 3. No effect. 4. No, Soap and Water Is Best Parents say dishes held under hoz jwater faucet are sufficiently cleaned for the next user. I say that they termine the present status of home| Not since Woodrow Wilson has) iowabic, ‘The diet should be light economies in the public elementary | ‘here fairy hedegpsamc np rrr and nourishing (sic), and the pa- and high schools, Among 1,404,985] stand up in public and tell the truth] tent should be warned not to eat girls in the high schools reporting] about the money power. Instead, dur-| ¢xcessively, and ao ake Eien or 386 per cent, were en-| ing the Inst 12 years administration) more than once @ day. | The pas va iieseg ey officials and political hangers-on| tient should keep the urinary se- economics courses 10! have taken most of their ideas and| cretion free by drinking daily the achool year 1931-1932. Policies from Wall Street. definite amount of either distilled In North Dakota, among 8,373 girls ae have ha Soverninent by money pyc oF some pleasant mineral enrolled in the high achools report-| Changers. real government was " inj but fi Somewhere else in his writings (I ing, 2,246 were enrolled, or 268 per gry ridaag ol Queer miedetsiey cannot find it at the moment) Oslec must mean moving the government quotes some old master to the effect im respect to the proportion of high peck. 20. Warinaeen. i sans fhe Binion Ril ane Hae girls taking home economics} Since the bankers’ gambling orgy | sword. collapsed in 1929 the financial mag-| That advice that the diet should be Work during the school year of 1931-| Sates have been suspect. ‘The Tnsuil nourising is like advising ions ,leading into the Chicago | tha’ economics courses were reported as revelations, leading into the Chicago/ and wet, or that the patient must have being offered in sentiment to positive distrust. With] good ventilation but no drafts or that city high echools and in 54 the recent senate expose of the Na-/ we should have plenty of fresh air but #4 per cent! tional City Bank came public con-|avold exposure. Today if any phy- of all county high schools, tempt for bankers who have betrayed|sician prescribes restriction of your The study revealed that while home| their trust. diet to things which are nourishing economics courses have been intro-| 80 President Roosevelt, in his} but easily digested he is just stringing duced extensively into the ele pledged crusade to clean up banking, | you along, and that’s all there is about y elementery| is not a voice crying in the wilder-| it. In Sir William's day the doctors grades, the work has not yet been 90) ness. If he follows through on this|really imagined sick-room pap was generally taken up in the elementary aia: he will have a united nation | “easily digested.” We know better schools as in the high schools. 5 now. > ly ga tee inder public pressure the new con-| Overeating, that 1s, consuming being - it_meets Thursday, will] greater quantity of food than is re- offered in €4 per cent of the quired for growth, repair and mainte- elementary schools in cities of 100,000 fe nance of body weight within normai bounds, is perhaps a more important cause of C. V. D. (artery-heart-kidney impairment, premature old age) today than it was in Osler’s day. “| we eat more, but mainly i I & E : i i ! é i i anything the government does an improvement on the old discredit- i : which had hap- neu- ys 4 should be washed with hot soapy wa- ter and then rinsed with clear water. Who is right? I have been a patien: HORIZONTAL 1 Chart. 4Existing in name only. 11 Loggers felt boot. 14 Custom. 16 Sandy. 16 River. 44 Chinese money of account. 46 Young sal- mons. 53 Cal ure! 64 Iniquity. 85 Variant of 38 Searches dill. - “a.” gently after. 66 To eject. 40 Measure of 57 Beret. area. 68 Slab as of {1 Tract of land marble. of the Nile. regulat 42 Timber tree. speed. Y. * ~yeih <_ a = ky SS = j aie Esoucege naa feat ze a g. an i thy ll in tuberculosis sanatorium, that’s why I am particular. (P. B. E.) g & » - | * a bh i i i i g | fi if é apie il rts tel ue fest et 5 i E 28 3 é 5 Bg fl | i f i : spectatse, weilwet | Women’ exactly | as men's duty.” ‘The sine is called) requires courage on everybody's if be 3 i its § ese i ey Answer—You are right. Dishes are) Bearer of another famous name is! economically more thoroughly and cleaned with soap and water. (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) tt i A MAGIC NIGHT New York, March 14—If all the Noel Cowards. Katharine Cornells, Durantes, Barrymores and their il- lustrious ilk of the theater were placed side by side on any stage, they wouldn’t draw half the rabid enthu- siasm and absorption that a little Jane Thurston, 21- fi | g group of performers, part of them| Not that there is really any greatly amateurs, did the other night. Nor| increased interest in spiritualism, but such a curiously assorted assemblage, either, ranging from the Rockefellers t Fishes to the Gold- rob bank messengers in this town will have to be # kidnaper as well as 2 Bank clerks who carry from ‘ARE LARGER THAN SOUGHT THE FABLED THE PHILIPPINE "Seven Cimes oF Cieoua'? ISLANDS ? cask one ne ‘tA —— and Stuyvesan' blotzes and Jitterwhisks of Second Avenue. It was the annual benefit show of the Society of American Magicians. Prestidigitators are like trained seals; you either don’t like them or you're cur-r-r-azy about them. And so it was that the house was sold out far| in advance to the hundreds of Goth- am’s magic fans. These included, by the way, in addition to the above- mentioned socialites, the Colgates, Goelets and Mr. Roosevelt's gga and son-in-law, the Curtis Dalls. 49 Old card game. 52 Bid of big business men, as well as doc- 9 Onager. 10 To ogle. 11 Study hour. 12 Irish tribal society title. 13 Toryism., 18 Peremptory. 20 Advised. 22 Beasts. 23 Large noctur nal animal. 24 Pieced out. 26 Mineral spring. 27 Before. 29Gold mone- 30 Japanese coin; 33 Measure of cloth. 34To devour. tion plants on 39 Helix. the Tennessee 41 To dedicate. river, U. 8. A.? 43 Empty. 2 Tor 46 Begging 30f what coun-- vagabond. try is Lima = 45 Eagle's home the capital? 47 Deposited. 4@Back of the 48 Vessel for neck. heating S Native metal. _ liquids. 6 Myself. 50 51 Gunlock catch 3 Foot i i CHAPTER XLIII. Some of these are amateur m OWN the hall, almost run- gicians themselves, for the lay mem- ning to keep pace with bership of the society includes scores ‘Tom’s long strides. tors, teachers, and ministers. Dr. *a caeth matt te selon atm") | _ Capital Question —_| when Tom tried the knob. “Ken!” his voice was cautiously low.“ know, there. Let me in, old fellow.” Silence. The hea rou're & fit of iit 7 i Bs i ; i ms aaa a f due i ei fl wk he f z 13 rf Fi Pht f Le 3E aor Hi

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