The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 27, 1933, Page 4

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The Daily by carrier;fer year .......67.20| necessity. World trade cannot pro- Daily by mail per year (in state Daily by mail outside of North Dakota seeeeee seeeees 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 knows how much a thing is worth in +-. 250] Silver, of course, is an entirely ex- 150 Dakota, per Nag ‘china Weel mail fanada, per WE tesee sivieits 2.00] money markets for decades, yet it Member of Audit Bureas of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively | piace in the financial sun a long step entitled to the use for republication | would be taken toward improved trade to eee ea ee eee ehig| with orlental nations, where silver newspaper and also the local news of | rules supreme. spontaneous origin published eae On top of economic considerations All rights of Py er es iy et | which can, now or later, be reduced matter herein also reserved. Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-|>Ut hard to boil down to concrete tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as|facts. It could mean much or iittle. 5.00} values to @ given standard. One of ____.] Europe or America have used it as @ back to the free flow of commodities between nations. ‘World expansion of credit is an- other term with many implications Capital expenditures by governments to stimulate business raises the ques- tion of how this shall be done. Re-establishment of an internation- al monetary standard is an obvious gress unless there is a basic common denominator for the reduction of the present difficulties is that no one terms of the other fellow’s money. perimental thing if we accept the standard of those who have ruled the need not be so. Governments vastly older than any now functioning in basis for centuries. By granting it a —WE Must AVOID to concrete terms, there are the more USELESS WASTE AND All in One Bill SEMI aeaee cy arama an ? EXTRAVAGANCE WHICH ‘When the farm bill now before con- | Political relations. WOBLD BRING ON gress gets through that body it will] Judging by what Norman Thomas GREATER: DANGERS, constitute the most important single told the nations at Geneva, the Unit- piece of legislation in the peacetime | ¢¢ States is ready to abandon its tra- history of this republic. ‘Tariff measures, which have been|® More active interest in world af- major bones of contention in the past,/ ‘airs. Both political parties indorsed will not be a marker to it in scope|the proposal to have America consult and importance. ‘Take, first of all, its provisions for] *#éression and it is only reasonable lifting the prices of farm products, | that we accept some responsibility in overlooked now in the heat of con-|helping to maintain peace. As the tests over other provisions, It con- stitutes an internal tariff and, at the same time, a bold plunge into the field of “managed” economics. The granting of power to force curtail- ment of farm acreages and to regu- late businesses is unprecedented in this country. It contains also a farm mortgage refinance feature. -/ In addition to these it will carry some sort of inflation clause when it comes to final vote, materially re- vising the nation’s money standard or at least making provision for such changes as the administration deems necessary, Any one of these things is of suffi- cient importance to give any congress 8 place in history. Yet all four of them now are before the special ses- tion and incorporated in a single bill. Any hope of passing the farm bill in time to be of material assistance in regulating the planting of this year's crop has long since vanished. The inflation and other features have 80 FY attracted public attention that we are liable to forget that it really is a farm Dill at all. This is unfortunate, for inflation is, after all, a secondary consideration. It may be of primary importance to the bankers and to certain businesses generally but to the farmer it is mere- ly a desirable detail. What we want most of all is action to restore farm prices to a level somewhere near what they should be. Few if any citizens in this part of the country are afraid of inflation. Most North Dakotans look upon it with an open mind and have judged it for what it is, a means to an end rather than an end in itself. We have no fear of the proposal that the amount of gold in the dollar be made ® variable factor; no sympathy with the somewhat specious arguments of those contending for a bankers money standard. Out here in the west there are few who value money for what it \s. The question with us is what it will buy. The commodity money theory has many advocates in this section. This school contends that money should be merely a means of indicating tangible values such as wheat and cattle and other things which people eat, wear or use. ditional hands-off policy and to take with other nations in case of armed tment of Captain Ernest J. ‘ 2 (above) to succeed the late Rear Admiral William A. Moffett as chief of the Navy Bureau of " world’s greatest creditor nation and ¢ its largest producer of manufactured goods, we could do much to halt an —— incipient war in Europe. Aeronautics made good the ad- ministration’s promise to choose \ a flyer for the post. Captain : % King, holder of the Navy Cross for distinguished service, has had more than 400 hours in the air In estimating the possible success with practically all: of the city’s as a pilot. of the plans which have been outlin- PERSON. A l HEALTH SERVICE hotels, Sana and night eee ed at the White House it must be re- And a staff men collect, membered that other nations have perioencyenrs Sime eanious brnncand H been suffering just as we have. The By William Brady, M. D. stored ‘until they may’ be shipped F long and tortuous process of defla-|| Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease || away in carload lots. E # tion has brought evils in its train|| diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, ‘The bottle-man always has orl everywhere, but if it also has brought || 5¢lf-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written ||amused by the idea of prohibit ¥ i rought || ‘in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. ||“In the old days,” he said, “about 20 AN @ realization that a spirit of interna- Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. per cent of the bottles we collected tional brotherhood is necessary to were oe comariie and ‘now bring about improved conditions it CAN CATCH UP ON LOST {able quantity of banana. For instruc- ea scotch omits, will not have been wholly in vain. we SLEEP tions about this and other fine points pea tette cant ception ‘The bleak background for this whole Wo ial say ny ate st nies) ase ie oa ainibg youre there have been a few million beer |° -|Sleep any int requires? There| stamped envelope “| bottles in with the lot.” aig thane ipoelberieg pec is me arbitrary rule. Eight hours each | dress for Lesson No. 7 in the Ways ‘The firm wouldn’t think of Lily Loe Lansing, and Picture. It oper-|ignt is a fair average for adults,|of Health, “The Brady Baby Book. ioissey ete wonton etooonaes ustty tihighions airahie, qivestal ates as 8 compelling force upon the/ younger persons require more; older} (Copyright, John F. Dille Co.) | gaia. ‘The bottles are sold to job-| her opportunity for an operatic nations which are seeking the way to/ persons less. Infants should sleep bers instead. Thus the containers,| career to marry wealthy Ken Sar- better times. most of the time, Children in thelr freshly filled and labeled, get back! gent. Ken’s parents had hoped their ‘teens ought to have 10 hours of sleep, IN | into circulation. Bulk of the business, son would marry the socially promi- = Se aes ee ee eaaeed| nent Peggy Sage and threaten to| See Me women who work water bottles. Nearly every annulled. How- Editorial Comment || nara neea more sleep than those who Fotel has two or thres hundred of| have the marriage Hew: Editorials printed below show the ||live by thelr wits or by bounty of the N E these for sale every morning. Keeping ‘Thea trend of thought by other editors. || fools who support parasites. The loses ight, They are published without regard In short, sleep in all cases is & shi A —end Loa ext | to whether they agree or disagree installation v1 ? down for repairs or with The Tribuno’s policies. Gown machinery or accumulation of new material or @ new reserve of Sunflower and Tarheel fuel. Those who have the most re- (New York Times) pairing to do must have the most Dr. White of The Emporia Gazette | sleep. is not a happy man. He trembles} The legendary short sleep “Agog lest the refusal of the Kansas legis-|the late Thos. Edison may ace lature to provide for a state conven-|counted for in that way. Mr. Edison tion should provoke Young Kansas/| lived by his wits. Thinking uses Pre to mutiny and rage against prohibi-| tically no energy. His oure a tion. Before the reappearance of beer | Was little more than vegetating bei he proclaimed his Spartan intention | just sitting around doing gerentt to reject all offered advertisements of| all. Therefore his sleep or repair that so powerful intoxicant, in case | Wirements were trifling. win the statesmen at Topeka should ever} I suppose the wiseacre reader be so lost to manhood and a long find something odd about this state tradition as to sanction the forbid-|ment of the physiological facts, . den thing. But now the chug and|I state the facts nevertheless. toot of multitudinous automobiles) It is not at all the so-called yey rushing into less virtuous Common-|Uous life, the “high tension” life wealths in pursuit of Three-Point-|all that bunk, that makes full sleep Two saddens and disturbs him. rations so essential. It is the natural Curiously enough, he prints as an|life, the animal life, the physically | factories. editorial a letter from his poet, Walt active life, that does that.. Sleep.time Mason, sojourning in California. Walt |is repair time. i drank six bottles of beer. It was ‘no|, A great many people habit pally good, or my works are no good.” He|take more sleep than they cong means his insides, not his poems.|deserve and more than is good Exhilaration was slow and feeble. The|them; idle people; parasites; old-time “kick” was wanting. He had|Who do no honest work and No appetite for his breakfast the next |Or Never play at anything morning. He might have flooded his|Strenuous than bridge or driving a interior with half-a-dozen of sarsa-|car. On the other harid s great mary) 7Hard money. parilla and had the same result; but|People who do more than their f¢ 13 Writer's mark,{t| he seems to regard his experience as|Share of the drudgery and work of Ma of general significance. He finds that |the world are forced by one , his friends are disappointed. “Few |Stance or another to get along the People will want beer when they can| best they can on short sleep rations. get it.” In short, he shows that it's|But the working man or woman or @ non-intoxicating drink such as Dr.|the young athlete can never make up. ESF. \ i 2 wine or pt caoeemanasascutions <a aeeaieaaie pect to have plenty of the “real er because Mr. Gotennaes is rep “in a happens to be the biggest collector |°f the warehouse, too, ; and seller. of empty bottles in the|Upon hundreds of thousands of fat world. He has a big warehouse on| champagne bottles that have been Tenth Avenue, with five floors and| hopefully accumulated for years, i i : think that the But a good many will wish that this mone union een inn a a, on aa [gece hw a —E-Ep H w want it, i tied up with the farm bill. We would] sdvertising is the more urrce’’” "| _ Right here I beg to remind a lot of peo tas. the, guasip prefer that the main issue be gotten| In North Carolina, now a beer state, |¢lderly persons who are too, too early Unless Wands Pillsbury, the : out of the way and not mixed up with|® tavern-keeper puts in a newspaper | birds for normal people to live with, cnt ury of Mrs. Manchester's other things which are, in themselves, | *Mis ambiguous or perfidious notice: |1n Peace or comfort, that one afflict bonne “A bright girl can hii , 5, For Sale Cheap—Hotel Lilling- | ed with the early rising habit ough! examining cho ‘wants ia thin ighly controversial. ton. Reason for selling: Do not | to keep his loathesome habit ae secret objects of me,” Maxine said, ‘com: ‘The probability is that the whole} care to handle beer. as possible. These offenders who get tables, with fortable arms in the crepe thing will get sufficient votes to pass,| The ingenious advertisement gets |UP at an unearthly hour in the night discovering bathrobe she had wheedled away but we, who are dependent on farm|the attention it deserves. ‘The local /and bang about as though they Just His pupil from Mrs, Manchester. py wits are puzzled. Is the advertiser a | dote on ruining the best sleep of way he “I hitch-hiked all the way from brices and farm prosperity for success, | conscientious Dry, looking for a Dry|the honest people in the block, de- someone Les I started with ten dol- will be infinitely relieved when the| purchaser who will take sccount of| serve @ suitable degree—I should say real lars and arrived in New York City . last rollcall is taken and the measure|that virtue in considering the price |the second degree of murder. If their at all. two thin dimes and no joh. actuslly becomes 2 Jaw. Congress on Se Dennameue, Ceamoe yee conecinane 5 2 an eaee £ pool But if he ete aoe Fant Swell clothes, clientele . a means well but it gives a lot of peo-| merchant who seeks to attract buyers that they might retire three hours adap swell address, swell friends, swell, ple the jitters. by the subtle intimation that the | later at night and give the rest of the «, —all because of my swell per- The Past Goes Overboard 3 i 3 2 E i 1 i g i i I i : i / ¥ i F Ht F Ht Judging from the seven-point pro-| interpretation and ethics. ‘ - | family should be the last to retire at milk bottles when eame gram announced at Washington fol-| der it might assuage Dr. Whites’ un-| ight as well as the first up in the town. Did I ever tell you, Lansing? «| easiness when he is awakened by the | Morning. trouble “You have] When I lived at Mrs, Grampas'— lowing the conferences between Pres!- | °20,"Cf' young Kansas = time he té}d] before I began to get on. It’s quite dent Roosevelt and Prime Minister; the Guest of Bete ee TE! «QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS fingers ached. severely. easy, caly you must get up early, or McDonald it is apparent that we are Fraud in Marriage she loved it. She Lily Lou Pp re oa . to have a sharp departure from Amer- | ? Barbs A man has hed petit mal all Wie Jearned. She took to she ce |EROw how. Some-| She laughed, and showed her un- lean foreign policies of the past. {L ay ee For three eprlpi| Me ing | times she 20 longer joven white teeth, in a fagh of tmp. Of the seven things mentioned, it Tae teers he has “grand mal. ar chew right remembering. : ls not now apparent how we are to| , Dlpetch from Germany says an od-|Oniy when the attacth became gon- beara) ete te dof she do? Lily Lou laughed, too, It sounded have increased prices except as mone- cartooned Hitler unfavorably | vulsive did his wife learn that it is she was ba innocent. But_sbe has been taken into “protective cus-|epilepsy ... (K. M. 8.) lace in the |‘0_ bet Bow know that it was stealing... What tary stability and the abandonment tody” by the Nasis. Who, we pre-| Answer—I don’t know the law, but every | Suting she would the folks think, back in of cut-throst competition among na- Beating. | ben #ive lim 2 benevolent | it seems frandulens 6 meals’ s saat caress. Ee Waemane’ ey Deating. tract conceal s have a baby ®@ moment Om See se empene etider Pepi Pog ggg pn hy tickets. There was coca real agats. Bus'd tps tt se makes this possible. Hawaii is out of beer already, why every responsible parent, shoud “They're | one to care. was on the day she was married, “Re-crientation of commercial poll-| and the nearest brewery ts 2006 |require health @ certi- well use! of the An old, shabby little town cles” ts rather @ vague term, but if Sie Seas. Satie, woter exses- Sieate of Steep Ser marina Meee of the main str and ft means that ali netions will chart| "Mt*. sad net a drop to drink! sting to 0 dha engagement ch, Sha | ogee we their courses on the basis of things as stocks certainly fell down far|Every young man who is ope- to him.| would wonder Then that too they are and with due regard for one | enough. It "t to be @ surprise |lessly unfit should es @ matter of she'd be-|if they knew. | another, the movement is one worthy | ¢0 #8¢ them go “Boom!” form, present his health certificate to mS tes fre i BU aims to save the govern- | approval of an ous mae ‘ sant 0080 0 day by cating down, |" Time te Food a gh egthhed Hosoda iron memes Sa, six monte id vay? oars =) op cheap” ——~ i should trave disposed of a consider+

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