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Weekly by $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years by mail in Ci Weekly year ing more goods than they can sell. For the period of the emergency, such steps are good. Sooner or later, however, we must find a better way It is physically possible now for the world to produce at such a rate that every mortal can have all that he needs of everything. Somehow, onee a fair measure of prosperity has been restored, we must find out how to do that. We shall have to start thinking about increasing pro- duction instead of checking it—our fields, our mines, our factories and our wells must bring forth more in- stead of less. That is the direction toward which the next step after the NRA program must carry us. Touring Without a Map The man who wants to get a good idea of the way the whole aliminis- tration recovery program is going to work out can't do much else than ‘come back about two years from now. ‘The one thing that is clear today is that all signs fail in a time like the present. We're trying something in-!g0 completely new that the man who matter herein are also reserved. Better as Beef Latest entrant into that broad field which marks the exponents of farm relief plans is Mrs. Cornelia Bryce Pinchot, wife of Pennsyl- vaia’s governor, who has a scheme for assisting the dairyman. Ordinarily we think of Pennsyl- vania as an industrial state, what with its factories, mines and mills. ‘We overlook the fact that it has great cities as Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. It is of these that Mrs. Pinchot speaks in advocating her plan of re- Nef for the dairy farmer, for the milk producers of the Philadelphia district are up in arms as the result business is just a great fascist coup/ designed to enthrone privileged wealth forever. wants to do a little prognosticating has nothing to go on. Eevrything is adrift, and about the only predic: tion that seems safe is that when the the various blocks have all been put together again the picture will look like nothing we ever saw before. It is for this reason that all the learned attempts to analyze and dis- sect the recovery program are so con- tradictory. No two critics of the program get the same result. Does the arch-conservative com- plain—as one did, recently—that it is getting almost impossible to tell the news from Moscow from the news from Washington these days? On another page you can find the arch- radical protesting that the whole Does the studious economist prove of a new agreement negotiated there cry is that the mid- most deal while the consumer hold the stick. ing in the effort to assist the hog made to control the raising of heifer calves and farmers would be forced immediate result, she says, ‘would be to remove the surplus of fluid milk from the market and, eventually, to permit a lower price for milk by more efficient produc- tion, since approximately one-third conclusively, with graphs and columns King, milk adminis-|(¢ tigures, that the kind of economy department of S8ti-|reonresented in the industrial and|| i | agricultural control plans cannot of the] nossibly work? You can find books/THAT GONE SENSATION FOOLS by equally studious economists (writ- ten before March 4 last) proving that a only through a planned economy sim-/ sensations aroused Pinchot's dairy plan 1s essen-|i1sr to the one now being attempted|taste and smell and tially the same as that now operat-| 4. 2 mechanized modern society|Sensory nerves in the stomach. It is ‘survive. ‘The doctors, in other words, dis- seem to differ with one another. & road so new that we have got to make up our maps as we go along. ‘That, in turn, brings our democra- tic society up against its supreme test. Have we enough intelligence, enough aptitude for the science of polities, enough training in the busi- ness of self-government, to carry this of the cows in the nation are kept at a loss now. To North Dakota farmers the price of butterfat is the important thing, since little of our milk production is sold in the fluid state. We are not directly concerned with conditions in the great metropolitan milk sheds. Nevertheless, they are of interest to us, for we have our full share of low-producing cows and we, too, feel th need for improved prices for dairy Products. ‘Whether or not the plan proposed by Mrs. Pinchot is feasible is not a thing to be determined at a glance. Tt must be kept ip mind that the federal treasury is not inexhaustible and that the cost of the scheme ‘would be great. Nevertheless, no good purpose is served, either to the individual or to the nation, by keeping in production @ lot of cows which might better be translated into beef stew for the needy. Just a First Step More and more it becomes clear that no matter what direction the great NRA program is taking us it can hardly be regarded as more than @ tentative first step. If it fails, the second step will un- doubtedly be productive of even more fundamental and far-reaching, changes than those which have al- ready taken place. We cannot can- cel @ year’s endeavor and sit back to wait for something to turn up. We are committed to a course of drastic experiment through successfully? If you doubt it you had better start looking for # cyclone cellar, But if you believe that we have—and there are good reasons for so believing— you can face the future with con- fidence. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard te whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, ENGINEER NO RADICAL (Billings Gazette) The Engineering Foundation, New York, recently set out to discover just how unemployment affects the morale and the ideals of men who are out of work. It learned, oddly enough, that engi- neers as a class are not filled with aan notions when they lose their Ss. couraged, naturally—but they don't swing off toward communism or simi- lar panaceas, as some jobless men do. Most of them are content to have the old All they want is to get their jobs back. sociations Hun rather agree about as thoroughly as can be/sensation produced by contract imagined; and the more thoughtful|the stomach when it is empty. and learned they are, the more they] Some persons experience a sensation,” a feeling of ‘And what it all comes down to 1s| "tte corauonie the fact that we are starting out On|good meal. This ‘They get resentful and dis-|the pancreas, RIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1983. = _- PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease | diagnosis, or treatment, will be answe red by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written |. in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. | | Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. SOME OF THE PEOPLE SOME OF THE TIME Appetite is the sum = dependent of an agreeable character. er is a faintness hunger, and this a few gone at all like appetite or May not recognize its nature That is too bad, for Proper relief of the distress bi reputation and maintain good will, For example ® young professional woman who is charming an patient, even quarrelsome, if chance her regular meal time Poned an hour. But a few |sumption of extra food bring on jobesity in time. after she takes food she is h good natured self again. sensation” in her case simply tal the form of irritability. In some instances it takes the form of great restlessness, or mental con- fusion, or a kind of lethargy or stupor. Probably the basis of the “gone feel- ing” in all cases is a temporary short- pees the quantity of sugar in At all times healthy persons tely li in| ne muscular work. It store of glycogen liver contains perha| a of glycogen—otherwise known as “an- imal starch.” All food is converted into glycogen by \. Only when an excess is taken is it converted into fat. ‘The secretion of insulin, by cells in urning of fy And all of this simply shows how |SUser little meaning that word “radicalism” teally has nowadays. generally ultraconservative in their political and economic beliefs. This survey has shown that they mostly |1o), stay that way even under the pressure of unemployment. And yet engineers a8 a class probably have done more to our form of society, our scheme of government and our eco- nomic organization than any other class alive, To be sure, they ggg? 38 Be id ee J QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Economical Vitamin D Ee iil i The New Deal | Washington | Business Improvement Expected to Steadily Gets Better, Advance In- side Figures Show. By RODNEY DUTCHER ‘Washington, Sept. 12.—First figures measuring the amount of new em- Ployment created by the NRA codes won't inspire any bonfires. ‘To many industries the codes mean gz rd ch ii HORIZONTAL . 1 Who is the 41 Popular trees. 43 Peaceful. torious. /89 War flyer. 36 Mover's truck. 60 35 Exists, : gained world. wide fame in and 61 The man 9 in the picture tain. hi —_— 15 He is the most famous —— his industry _ produced (pl.) 416 Rodent. | 117 Melody. 19 Crystalline substance. 21 Cavity. 22Beret. _ 25 The pictured VERTICAL man was bors 2 Painful emo- in —. tion of fear.' | 26 Seaweeds, dread and ab- 429 Fate. horrence. “31 Tardy 3An assumed’ 36 To ‘strike. name. , 38 Hairy man. 4Roll of film. 39 Falsifier. 5 Cover. 40 To weary. GHalfanem. 42 Not far from) 44 At no time. 50 Three. 52 Toward. 53 Point. _ 54 Prophi , 10 Deck above the 55 Small shield. 57 Nay. laughter. High moun- { The Agricultural Adjustment ministration’s goal is parity with the rela which existed on an sv- erage in what the farmer sells a activity will automatically mean the taking on of more people virtually in Proportion. “share the work” idea was with proportionately less pay. The re-employment figures are be- ing worked out with the aid of Labor Statistics, trade associations, the Na- tional Industrial Conference Board land questionnaires to members of each industry. eee 2,000,000 RE-EMPLOYED There was no “baloney” in Gen. Hugh Johnson's assertion that 2,000,= 000 persons had been re-employed since March. Experts who were quick to puncture inflated employment claims in the Hoover regime say that’s a conserva- tive estimate, inasmuch as about 1,- 000,000 persons had been employed by mid-June and 400,000 more by July. * *e * CHAMPION COMMUNTER Frank C. Walker, secretary to the President's Executive Council and sometimes called the “assistant presi- dent,” is the capital’s champion com- muter. Late Thursday of each ‘week he takes a train or # plane to New York and hustles out on a two hour ride to “what he buys” price 53 for last year and only 40 Tuary, it is now 65. It wert to 7) cent during the July price The farmer is still the 100 per cent goal—and the 91 per cent average of 1! but AAA officials are encouraged. Their program has only begun. (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) aw | The State Department has often been singularly futile and unintelli- gent in its dealings with the Senate. '—President Nicholas Murray Butler of Columbia University. * eB e i This NRA—if it don’t work, Tl walk | in and say, “Mr. President, You said | you were going to redistribute wealth | 5 | when its citizens mistook. Huntington, Long Island, where his family is spending the summer. Friday morning he commutes back to New York for « visit to his law and here's my plan,” and he'll do it. | |—Senator Huey P. Long. * 8 & eed portation competing now wath the Tallroads, there will be four times as much when we ey ae : how to build automobiles for rn y and economy; and that 1s but a few. years off—William B. Stout, automo- tive engineer. aes Hollywood is a light disease—Henrt Matisse. e% * an old man and if I smiled peo- pie would think I was pretending— John D. Rockefeller, —_—— ‘The eruption of the Nicaraguan volcano, , in 1835, was 60; terrific that in Belize, more than 300 were mi miles AWAY ts mistook the distant rumbling for the booming of enemy’ guns in the harbor. 4 gece an een ‘At the battle of Arbels, Alexander was only 25 years old. AC DONAL 1G‘ FEATURES SYNDICATE, After a space in which he seem- ed to meditate, he said: “I think we'd better be leaving for New York tomorrow night. I’ve been looking up sailings and have wired for reservations on the Majestic on the fourteenth, It had come ... the dread bat- tle. Oh, it’s so hard .. .| But I've got to... Will he make a row? . +. He never has... Oh, I couldn’t bear it... . .“Dadums, I'm afraid you'll be disappointed; but I’ve changed my. mind. I don’t care to go to Paris.” Now for it... Oh, now for it... ‘Will he be like all the other parents after all? It’s the first time I've ever opposed him . ... The first test... “Yes, I’m rather disappointed,” he replied mildly. “It’s been years since I was in Paris, and I fear I had my heart set on browsing around the famous old places.” This hurt her. But, she re! he doesn’t suspect. I'll have to tell him . . . I won't deceive him .. . “Couldn’t you take a little trip over anyway?” she asked. “I could visit one or two of the girls while you're gone.” “No. Your capital is too small to permit it.” “My capital?” “Of course. The money is yours. It pg porinea tor you.” en I order you to go,” she cried gaily. His eyes smiled. “Sorry, Captain; but the weather won't permit.” Adding seriously, “It will take three to four times as much for gen to live sa New Kork ap dn Baris, very She didn’t like his choice of pro- nouns, Always it had been we; now,| all at once, you—— She felt miserable, too, over the money question. How wonderful he was! Knowing it would cost so much more to live in New York; / not one of them was in my mind.| settled your problem. I was think. | ing of my own.” “Your own?” I was in New Orleans. He's been/he said sadly. appointed Attorney General for the| me.” ne ‘3 no disgrace {1 a cna em fd i There! It i = E 2 batt “Well what, my child?” “Out with it. I've been di it long erfough.” “Dreading what?” a “['m going beeanse T’'m in love with Jimmie.Warren and he loves me,” said Pat. a pressing, or your own? Certainly|“I won't go down there with you.” “I said nothing about your go- In fact I was thinking of some-jing. I said I'd go. You've alread; thing quite foreign to that. You've} settled your future. Surely you fg cord me the right to settle mine.” “Do you mean you're going to my child,” “You are leaving leave me?” “I'm not leaving you, T have brought you ratanding that you A g 28 gF & Bi or any other, You announced Are you going ‘® moment ago that 8 word of re-/04 to give t you had ‘Up your arguing with me? that pay might re aeaies ian s 0 me decid. order York The lecture you're going to give 7H i s E Aren’ “No, But I've never defied you aes iaperestns 18 wet! before, I never did disa) fail! ne ” H Dect me to Ber, volee wa loa q 1 O.iawy Mash