The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 18, 1933, Page 4

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SOAS yee ee, ~ ae snes OLS LALA LEAL REALL DA LLL LN EAE poeta: : revolving |Garten—where in the old days mére The Bismarck Tribune]**"* 24 which probably wit cause etore ‘t= | beer was consumed than in any other An Independent Newspaper you further losses after you get it. Nearly |establishment in the world. Charles STA’ Your trouble is you are trying to col- i son of the founder, will pre- THE ‘TES OLDEST ventor | Feltman, of t tebe ert lect too much. The value of your et the |side over a ager armen (Established 1873) stocks, bonds and other investments auto- | tree-shaded ‘Al P by The Bi ory =m has gone down and the value of the te per i waters) sat Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-|Jones mortgage has gone down too, ‘and will| Across the river in picturesque Ho- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as | Only you are trying to collect on the ight, |boken, the return of legal beer will Aas second class mail matter. same basis as before. Now we will for the | bring little change. For there = GEORGE D. MANN turn it into cash for you on the basis buy |swinging doors aera | Pred President and Publisher of what it actually is worth.” Tound on the house once in # while |swing through ta: ‘There isn’t a lender in the country By PAUL HARRISON unless these mechanistic marvels | burghers have lined the bars of sa New York, 18.—As beer — a8, i who will not say “yes” to such a the brewers are experimenting wink apes they te declared ilega Daly by carrier, per year . $7.20 | proposal ir 99 cases out of a hundred. tatanee beverages for in eee es ee Daily by mail per year (in oe os -and-ermine trade. While - |“ACH DU LIEBER...” marck) . And so the government refinance nary brews will sell Zor @ nickel a| As beer nears, the brauhauses in ; by mail system revalues the property and the glass, & few allegedly superior varie-|the theater district and up in the a outside Bismarck) .. -. 5.00 " ts ma tles will bring 25 cents the foil-|German section called Yorkville are Daily by mail outside of North loan. It says to Farmer Jones: “On wral bottle—and even 50 cents in ir schniteefbank and Dakota ....... scsececeseeeeess 6.00] the basis of its actual value, your the big hotels... . Many a debbie and | Tyrolean fol-de-rol, Among the best ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00] farm which was worth $8,000 when dandy is trying to cultivate a taste/are Maxl's Braus Tuberl, Cafe Zep- ‘Weekly by mail in state, three uu got that loan is only worth for the strange which seems|pelin and the Restaurant Platz’l, all you g ly years ....... i eee 50 $4,000 it ‘ dein slated, for the first time, for social|on 86th Street; Suesskind’s, on Lex- ‘Weekly by mail outside of Nort! ctl hdd you keep on working prestige. Costly taprooms are being|ington Avenue, famous for its sauer- Dakota, per year ..... +++. 1.50] a8 you are now you will be working installed in some of Park Avenue's|braten made by an old and secret “ ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per ong| for the insurance company with penthouses. In building two ; the Brewery Restaurant, in FEAT cerececereseserees 2.00! nothing left for your family, and wealthy bachelors occupying - | the old Peter Doelger brewery build- 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 the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ; Good for Everyone The farm and home finance bills now in congress are almost identical in their nature and may, therefore, ‘be discussed together. Senator Borah says he will’ vote for the farm-relief bill, of which the re- finance provision is a part, because of the splendid qualities of this fea- ture. He is not so sure about that part of the measure designed to lift farm prices. “A leading local merchant com- ments that it is the best thing the government has done in a long time and should have been done long ago. His explanation is simple. Times have been difficult and incomes re- duced for everyone. Fear has come into almost every heart at thought ot losing the mortgaged farm or home. People have refused to show confidence in the future by going ahead with normal business and that is one of the major things wrong with us. ‘This bill, he contends, will lift the shadow of despair from many who otherwise might lose the farm or home, it will give them renewed con- fidence and they will return to a normal attitude. The reasoning seems sound enough. ‘There can be no doubting the temper which many persons have displayed during these last few years. We have all been bewildered and uncertainty 4s the twin brother of fear, Some protests have been made by some so-called “progressive” elements in congress that this bill, like most of the Hoover business hypodermic at- tempts, will aid the insurance com- Panies and “big business.” It will and we should all be glad of the fact. We want no epidemic of insurance company failures in ad- dition to our other troubles. Mil- you can’t do that. But are you will- ing to start over if we cut that mort- gage to $2,000, which is 50 per cent of the present value?” Jones’ reply is a loud and thank- ful “yes.” The lender then is told: “That Jones farm is only worth $4,000. By the time you get control of it and Pay the taxes and other charges you are going to be in for $5,000 and your money still will be tied up with no in- terest coming in. No one knows when you'll get it back. We'll give you $2,000 for it in government bonds with the interest guaranteed and take the deal off your hands, The answer, in a majority of cases, 4s going to be “Go to it.” In addition to refinancing the mortgage, the government then adds enough to clear the taxes and put Jones in shape to go ahead on a modern and wholly deflated basis. He is down to rock bottom but in a Position where he can make the Grade if he wills. After that it is up to him, In a pinch the government will extend the time for paying the loan. The plan ends there. Presumably, if Jones fails on the new basis, the government will have to take over YourseLe THERE 1S NO Gloom SO DEEP AS the land and salvage its investment as best it can. It can’t get hurt much because land prices will hardly go any lower than they are now. Short of repudiation, Jones cannot expect @ better deal; and with prospects of collection what they are the lender should be glad that he got out with half a loaf. * * * The refinance scheme makes prac- tical the end which has been sought in some localities by setting up con- ciliation courts to adjust debts. These have failed because lenders were unwilling to scale down their claims and still face the prospect of slow pay, or possibly of no Pay. Set up to ald the farmer, these tribunals didn't pay much attention to the ideas of the lender and the latter, in many instances, refused to play. He would rather dream of a full loaf than of half a loaf. But a half-loaf in the hand is a different thing. It is probable, of course, that few revaluations will result in a 50 per cent scale-down, but they will be sub- stantial in many cases and everyone will be benefited. The excesses of the past in land valuation and specu- lions rest their hope of the future and the hopes of their dependents in insurance policies. There could be few greater calamities than the wip- ing out of these equities. But the bill looks beyond these and similar corporate interests to the welfare of the farm and home owner himself. It will help him and help business at the same time. The farm- er has been demanding that for a jong time, using the “help business” Plea to enlist assistance. Now he is, getting it. “es * The fundamental point in both the farm and city home bills, and the se- cret of their success, if they do suc- ceed, lies in the revaluation feature which will be called into play before any refinancing is done. The easiest way to illustrate the matter is by taking the mythical case of farmer John Jones who owes $4,000 on a mortgage held by the Whoosis Insurance company. His position is the same as that of home-owner John Smith. With prices what they have been, from growing. Through no fault of Farmer Jones and no fault of the rf Ba22 3 ! i i 4 i aa LEE f i t i i z § i | i t f E i 1 ay tl i i i a i \ 4 lation will have been wiped out and agriculture will truly have received @ new deal, 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. self-addressed envelope is enclosed. in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Ad in care of this newspaper. dress Dr. William Brady, By WILLIAM BRADY, M. D. SOMETHING FOR CUTS, BURNS, STINGS AND SKIN IKRITATIONS Some of your articles I am saving for future reference, writes @ man, as I intend to spend the greater part of my life in the tropics away from civilization where a good knowledge of hygiene and sanitation is more necessary than it is here where one can call in @ physician. Are boric acid and boracic acid the same thing or are they different? I understand that some hospitals use refined borax as an antiseptic instead of boric acid. Is this true? Is borax @ good antiseptic? Would a mixture PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, Letters should be brief and written feet (weak arches) it is important to TOE IN when walking, standing. Playing, dancing, etc. to strengthen the weak feet or legs. For bow leg it may be better to TOE OUT. The Way to Quit It to Quit ‘That little booklet on “The Consti- entirely cured. I still take a teaspoon- ful or two of flaxseeds on my cereal nearly every morning, but that ts rather because I like it. There is no difference in the normal functioning days when I do not take any. (V. A.) Answer—Were it not for the “auto- intoxication” obsession so thoroughly of powdered boric acid and petrolatum be a good application for cuts, burns, ete.? If so, what proportions of each should be used? (C. C, P.) ‘Yes, boric acid is the modern spell- ing for the same substance formerly called boracic acid. Boric acid is less freely soluble in water than borax, but more freely soluble in alcohol which does not dissolve borax at all. Borax is the sodium salt of boric acid —sodium borate, and it is alkaline in taste and reaction. Either borax or boric acid is a com- paratively feeble antiseptic, but these feeble antiseptics are popular in of doing harm. In my opinion—I can find no dis-| standards is not checked we will face interested scientific comparison. ineulcated in the mind of the Ameri- can wiseacre, it would be easy to per- jsuade people en masse to quit the con- stipation habit. If you want to break the habit, send a dime and a stamped envelope bearing your address and ask ir, the booklet, “The Constipatiog | (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) Foy If this downward trend of living economic disaster and chaos.—Sidney Hilman, labor leader. 8 ® The people have learned a lot in the last two years—Senator Elmer Oklahoma. Thomas of se * For the merely average, music 1s not a profession—it is starvation— Josef Hofmann, pianist. xe & I believe that English writing is go- ing down while American writing is going up. There are 2 * The medical profession cannot be 'Fordized until human beings become robots—Dr. Edward H. Carey, presi- dent American Medical Association. ., th f boric acid (I don't know Speed Range in the Air | Vhy we prefer boric acid to borax in (New York Times) general practice today) as an anti- Patient effort, great mechanical| septic medicament or agent tet ote| HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puxile 13 Hair dye. Skill and courage of the highest order |°@"_ expect from any an! 1Vitamin Bis ODE rm 15 Sea eagle. Fee, TEwatded when the Ttallan air|°Ptain Borie Acid Ointment is offi- pecoary f° (BIEREIAVE! Jat HATTIE! 21 Paid publicity Peron. cial in the British PIAIL IAIVIEIR] 24 Aurora. ‘in Tiated the world's record for |i,’ made of one ounce of boric acid in| 8 Vitamin A is ‘a Re) arene. shred in the air from Great Britain | ine powder with nine ounces of white| essential for RIACIE Me SiSIEG im sole. by sending @ Machi seaplane over the ‘ointment. Paraffin ointment — of the i EMME | SMBSIE IC] 26 Zeress. Lake Garda ae fulometer course at lif" mixture of three ounces of hard body? PRBS|| MONmESiOmT) Py aie aa Garda six times for an average ‘wax ‘seven ounces of soft 14 Covetousness. ‘ather’s siste:: siete, of A227, miles an hour. Plight |Doraitin, which is the same es pure| 16To love. 31 Lifeless. Teutenant Stainforth’s previous rec called petrolatum in the| 378un god. [AJ 32'To abandon. hich the allan plot fang to's | United, State. ‘or tropical climate] 8 Before Has part. st tot Glalized: "ree tie Suree, highly spe- | Seout hhalf and half. Such a 10 per| 33 Convent iE] 26 Map. veloping 2, yn be Ge- | cent boric acid ointment is an excel- worker. 38 — I, Coeur uted pany g Mey total weight pyre lent all-around salve to use as @ first} 93 scented. de Lion? tons. Its wing surface 161 | #!d or home dressing for burns, cuts | 25 Millstone part. 44 Scarlet. 60 Rolled. 40 To twist about. square feet and its minimum lediee {stings or skin irritations where an| 2¢ Paradise, 45 Ship. 61 To test again. 41To encourage. Speed 190 miles an hour—a terrific | antiseptic, non-irriating | Deoieelge io — ee = vemmcan,. {370 Sine. bined, at b wets So saa make contact with “healing” and. caibing. a Bo Fy 29Chopping tool. 47 Baa, 1 Dimunition asa je desi pecially | Temedy can be, 30 Pronoun. 49 Final. ae in pchiepes fare has been | ™any nostrums offered for such use: | 31 gand hill. 50 Vitamin Cis 2 Dad. 46 Yields, held to justify the high cost in men a re ee eaten 32.24 sheets of sential tor 3 0ccurrence, 45-Fo select and money involved in establishing | tards or prevent paper. good —— ? jour. hew air speed records. "Of more obs | tion of becteris) one Sie IRE! sXe 51 Child. 5 Wrath, 49 Pound. Tous value to aviation as a whole and/ #1 to" cerm-free) petrolatum or| 35 Flock, 52Death notice, 6 Seventh note, 50As soon. to commercial flight with passengers| Sterile (germ-free) pelrdisiius ays| 26Flat boat. 53 To help. 7 Copy. 52 Native metal in particular, however, is the combin. | Parattt. Tor inet Ster to apply such| 37 Credit (abbr.). 54 Each. 9 Beam. 53 Ready. ation of high top speed with slow| more ¢ i a collapsible tube.| 39Perspiration. 55 Anesthetic. 10 Force. 56 Deity. landing speed which marks some of |selve ditectly from © onto prevent | 4170 flutter. 570ne who 11 Marvel. 8 Mysolt Sp eres Ameren, Gan Lypes. The plane | entamination of a box or Jer of salve| 42 Japanese fish. entices. 12 Genuine. ight Hawks is flying, for example, has a|once the container has been opened top speed, with load, of 250 miles an and agmne of the etrimnect Sateo 0m, hour. But it is equipped with split|People who keep Lg hE flaps at the trailing edge of the wing | Petrolatum pochrracg Mg a Fe 4 which can be lowered to act as brakes | house should sterilize cooking for in the air. Coming to a landing, it | time to time by boiling or slows like s shot bird when these | 30 minutes. neh flaps are lowered and seems almost | Borie acid is one of the ingredients to float to the ground, touching at | of “Old Doc Salve,” a tube of which from 42 to 50 miles an hour. Agello’s is included in the Pocket Emergency seaplane has a speed range of about | Kit. We are glad to mail to any cor: 3.25 to 1, Commander Hawks’s 5 to 1.| respondent who incloses stamped en- The newer transport planes, the | velope bearing bis address instruc: Northrops, Boeings and Condors, at-|tions for assembling and using tacking the problem from nie Pocket Emergency Kit. above 4 to 1. This is an outstanding QUESTIONS ANSWERS long step on the foe woeshiye "| adra. D. 7. repotia that her child A cluster of faint stars, known only | legs by doing a simple stunt many as catalog Mo. N. G. C. 7006, is so|times a day. Stand in a doorway far away from the earth that it re-| where you can get some support at quires 220,000 years for its light to| first, and turn both feet as far out, i Tatbndammcis ah soma tht ao eae miles fo one During 1931, 1,800,000 wore and ‘ecks ef logs together’ while you % traveled 94,000,000 miles over vantous stand erect. It sounds plausible. In American alr lines. ‘cases of knock-knees and pronated - As beer nears, and literally scores | dishes. of Broadway promoters plan to ex- Ploit it, the Gay Way fears that it may be turned into Beer Alley, In addition to various parlors and gar- dens, the street may be cluttered with automatic beverage vendors, nick- ing on East Fifty-fifth Street; the Franziskaner, and the Turtle Bay, both on Second Avenue; Luchow’s on East Fourteenth Street—and . Here, as at Suesskind’s, the sauerbraten mit kartoffelklossen (pot Toast and potato-pancakes) is a prize dish. The orchestra still plays Wag- ner and Beethoven, and Hans Luchow still talks of the days when the clien- tele included Victor Herbert, De Pach- tamed “technocratic bartenders.” For |mann and Richard Strauss. @ nickel in the slot of a shiny ma- *¢¢ chine, the customer sees a paper cup| CONEY PREPARES x swing into place and fill from a jet Another famous place is down at It takes the breath out of a gir! of amber liquid. Then the foam is/Goney Island—Feltman’s Deutscher to see all her bubbles burst. SYNOPSIS Lily Lou Lansing, young and pretty telephone operator, gives cares, Lily Lon leaves. CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE It was a breathlessly hot day. On the New York train electric fans whirred, waiters hurried back and forth with frosty, clinking pitchers of iced punch, trays of ginger-ale and bowls of ice. Everyone com- vlained, Everyone but Lily Dou. She hardly noticed the weather. It was just @ train ride to her, somethi was so ill that she was frightened. Actively sick now. Sick to her stomach. ... . “This is what comes of giving in ing a a ing with distaste at her inuga ia the bal oaeaeeee Ee HET pardon, Miss, afraid that you were ill.” i Pee ® E pt a i ? g et E F i 9 5 ii EE tT i it gs HHyreee F inf | | i} i By P Hi 3F i $8n 8 ay i = jr FE a z E & Hy if i g HE i fhe RE F ial ‘th * i iu i Mi ils Hdl Ey bit Hae hy ree ci Es i fi: = il #H Hf i & j if i ete il FE i & i E, I HE g i I et H Hy # I ii H & i i I 4 5 wo

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