The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 3, 1933, Page 4

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. The Bismarck Tribune une Company, Bismarck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @s second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher “~ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . $7.20 r year (in Daily by mail outside Dakota ‘Weekly by years se epeseee ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .........++ oes 1.50 Weekly by mai] in Canada, pe 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. Really a Confession If one accepts the premises of any | focialistic orator it is impossible to} disagree with his conclusions. The only basis for argument in such dis- 50 | tion, at least on the level which will 9 |the mind of the president. agencies could function. It was and is not the government's plan to send men out with bales of money and do the job overnight. It should not be, for the money which goes in- to these enterprises will come direct- ly from the people. There are chances enough for fraud as it is. The demand for “inflation, properly safeguarded and controlled” seems to, have been met by the president's gold operations. That is patently an ef- fort to inflate the dollar and, at the same time, control it much more de- finitely than could be the case if the presses were started at the job of! rolling out new paper money. H Immediate fixation of prices for farm products seems unlikely of adop- be suggested. There are many argu- ments which will operate against it in There is, for example, the situation in the cities and the reaction of city folk to such a The request that an NRA code be adopted for the farmer seems a lit- tle nebulous. If one could be devised which would meet with widespread approval there Would be no objection to it, provided that it were placed on such a basis that it would work. An answer to this would seem to be to let its advocates draw up and submit a code. Then there would be something definite to talk about. As it is, the suggestion consists of just So many words, settlements. | the hearing staved off indefinitely. Finally, Chairman Wagner made it plain that the dispute must be con- to its regional of that term is But elsewhere one gets the official | tor. ee sidered without further delay, and Swope withdrew from the case. A few more days and the strike. might have been broken. * ek GARNER PLAYS SAFE | So far, no one has cought up Post- | master General Jim Farley on that what the vice president has done.” The one thing Jack Garner has done since tional a EGG NOG IN DISTANCE Despite rumors of hi and the prospect that will be served House, the date tive. The attorney general finally ruled line in his Texas speech which said, that Washington must stay dry‘unti! that “Every person connected with Congress repeals the Sheppard act. the administration is grateful for It is estimated that Congress, meeting | Jan. 10, will take at least 30 days to frame @ new control act. congress adjourned is to! (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) keep out of Washington and the na-! when that great domicile legally can go wet is specula- | | Davison, | Museum of pies ae pith Audiences today are not altogether pagan. They have no desire to see a man butehered to make a ‘Roman holiday.—Ernst Lubitech, film diree- i Mozart, the great composer, died jat the age of 36, after having com- pleted 600 compositions. ‘s FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: cussions is whether the groundwork of | facts is correctly stated. | This truism holds in the case of A. C. Townley, now touring the state to acquaint the people with his ideas about proper organization of the body Politic for the common good, No North Dakotan will disagree with the aims which Townley sets In reviewing the whole situation, ‘including the governors meeting at Des Moines, the fact that considerable {political maneuvering has been going jon cannot be ignored. The governors may think it to their advantage to sound off in fine phrases, then pass the buck to the president. after recognition, so that all our ex-j ports there won’t be bought with e jAmerican credits. Furs and caviar; The machine age we talk so much seem to be the most popular sugges-| about has only begun—Auguste Pic- | tions so far. | card. Here, as in Latin-American trade! xe * agreement negotiations, the great dif-| I've been losing money for 12 yea! ficulty is in finding goods for import | Recently T've been forced to borrow which will not compete with some/on my insurance policies to meet run- | domestic product. * * BENEFITS AND LOSSES Officials are figuring what goods | we best can afford to buy from Rus- | sia in return for what we sell her) 2 A girl has to step out to keep ne forth. The picture which he paints is very attractive. All of us would like to see the countryside dotted with small factories which would give our People employment during such sea- sons as they are not occupied on the farm. No one will disagree with the idea that a better exchange of prod- ucts between farmers and workers is desirable. But one wonders a little if Townley knows what he is talking about when he discusses means. He suggests, for example, that the government will supply the money to construct these | But the president can play some Politics, too, if he will. If he chooses to do so he can pit the corn farmer of Iowa against the wheat farmer of North Dakota, Then pit both of them against the cotton raiser of the south, On top of that he could pit all of them against the man in industry. It is quite certain that, if he wish- es to be as irresponsible as some who Presume to advise him, he can easily make a very bad mess infinitely worse. Editorial Comment YOUR CIRCULATION Take care lest you betray your ig- 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, || self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conformihg ¢o instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ties in young women. |The New Deal -in-- Washington USE YOUR BELLY TO BOOST lieves or prevents menstrual difficul- | Labor Board Job Is Serious Matter to Teagle of Standard Oil ... Swope Not So Happy ... Garner Plays CHAPTER XXXIV The worn front steps of the old under Mrs, Van Fleet house Though the gains| ning expenses, and I don’t know what H i “STOLEN by HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIONT BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. long stems sticking out Ross, of lig ht LOVE like tails. ‘wasn't ex-| them, hid her face ap with the p With a little sob she went into ‘ ainst the rough wool of his sleeve. This was of his is aaa factories. Would it? crenteuctnnapite ny other sditcre |{norance, my friend, by seeing an im- mame hPa ANSWERS Rat oe we —, reread bes perrtefedeb nt ee » The door os or his rites “dene ever let. If it financed the construction of a | (O'S nethe thoy wares oct eace | propriety where there is none. ‘There vie adil | Pewee | = il Jangied complainingly. After peg oneal , ; shoe factory it would put itself into | with The ‘Trinune's policies: | is no other term in the English lan-|,,,USe of lime water, as mouth ilove en hag steps, the door swung oper |, “Joan kind of wanted to be quiet| “My dear, of course I won't . . * competition with the shoe makers—! ______.___|\guage for what I intend to express. nee ingly. today,” she began dou and shoe workers—in Massachusetts | end certain midwestern centers, Tf it financed operation of a wool) Blanket factory, it would be cutting! the ground from beneath the feet of private manufacturers in Wisconsin, Oregon and other states, and so on down the list. If the government of the United States were designed exclusively for | Pression of sympathy for his freight the benefit of the people of North Da-| kota the idea might be sound. But, the fact is that we are only one of 48! states in the union, and not’ the most / important one at that. The govern- ment would be far more likely to fi- nance farmers in the eastern states to| raise wheat in order to knock down | our prices than it would be to finance & shoe factory for us in order to re- duce the income of eastern labor.| The one suggestion is about as rea-|Steel, grain cottonseed, livestock, hay,jthe benefits derived from Belly Bonable as the other. Ic is notable that Townley’s bright {share of the country’s transportation |instituted inquiries into levels of | Western class rates, and rates on cot- an {of 1932 they had decided, as stated in A Prophecy Come True (Chicago Tribune) The interstate commerce commis- sion has announced that proceedings under the Hoch-Smith rate structure investigation are at an end. In Jan- uary, 1925, congress passed the Hoch- Smith resolution as a gesture intend- ed to convey to the farmer the im- rate burden. Under its terms the en- tire freight rate structure of the country was to be examined to deter- mine if each commodity and each in- dividual movement was paying its fair bill. If not, readjustments were to be made. Industries in distress were to be given favorable consideration. The interstate commerce commis- sion took congress at its word and ton, petroleum, furniture, iron and sand and gravel, nonferrous metals id salt—as a starter. By the end} It would be awkward and prudish to say anterior wall of the abdomen when this perfectly good Anglo-Saxon word precisely signifies bellows. Natural use of the bellows in breathing distinctly promotes good circulation. Unnatural chest breath- ing, on the other hand, does not aid the circulation. This is fundamental physiology, not just my notion. The diaphragm, the chief breath- ing muscle,.when its functioning is not inhibited by faulty physical edu- cation and bad habits based on faulty training, serves as a booster pump for the circulation, aiding the return of blood through the veins to the right side of the heart, which then drives it on to the lungs for oxygenation. The Belly Breathing exercise which I recommend is one which some good physicians have prescribed for pa- tients with high blood pressure from various causes, and other physicians have praised as a help in the treat- ment of asthma. In both conditions Breathing are no doubt due to the booster pump action of the diaphragm which prevents.blood from stagnating Picture is based on the idea of gov- their report, that Hoch-Smith cases in the veins. ernment rather than of state spon- sorship. % There may be two reasons for this. ‘The first is that Townley is obvious- jy in no position to speak for the’ government, If he has any influence "tes extending from 1925 to 1928 the | amount of exercise daily, say six miles’ with those who now py the na. commission reached a decision as to|ot oxygen on the hoof or its equivalent had “developed into unwieldly propor- tions” and that “the country is too big to make it generally practicable to deal with it as a whole or even with the major classification territories.” In recommending to all and sundry my hope to undo some of the harm that, has been one hi, nior Pasay After hearings relating to grain would remind the reader that a fair tion’s destinies it does not appear on the surface, The second is that by so doing he | draws attention away from the pos-| sibility of his new program costing the |tion of the traffic of the carriers in a {vast territory, cannot be regarded as |. Btate money, In effect he makes s confession, casts the shadow upon his assertion | 28, in 1931, That record pertains to a that he is out to revive the Nonpartisan League program. Were he really doing as he says, he would of this case, “It is plain that a record which was closed in September, 1928, relating to rates on a major descrip- representative of the conditions exist- different economic era and furnishes no adequate criterion of present re- quirements.” The same remarks will apply to the jits idea of proper grain rate levels and ther kinds of work, play or exer- jordered that they be made effective |" OvnPr RM"Bese tonite to the cireula |June 1, 1931. The supreme court said|tion, Every muscular movement pro- pels blood through the veins upon which the muscle or muscles press when they contract. tion or inflation of ‘blood out of the rich network of veins in the abdomen on toward the heart which then pumps it into the lungs for oxy the practice of Belly Breathing it is|? it_will prevent decay of the teeth. (H.C. F.) Answer—Nonsense. No mouthwash will do that. Send stamped envelope bearing your address and ask for | (Tribune Washington Correspendent) BY RODNEY DUTCHER ‘Washington, Nov. 3.—Big, raw- monograph on Care and Preservation | of the Teeth. and Pimples Please send intsructions for treat- | ing acne. You're right about rich foods not causing it. We have very little pastry or sweets but I am always fighting pimples... (Miss D.E.C.) Answer—dhe notion that rich foods, Pastry, fats, sugar, candy or cakes or | sweets cause pimples is just one of those quaint old medical notions that quaint old specialists still entertain in spite of all evidence. I am glad to send intsructions to any correspondent who tells me he or she has acne or | blackheads and pimples and incloses | @ stamped addressed envelope. Re-' member, this is not a leaflet for in-: discriminate distribution; if you fail! . to mention that you have the trouble, , T shall send no advice. It’s a Great Imposition Have you issued a pamphlet or; booklet on the subject of “Nervous! Troubles’? If so, I should like to/ know how to obtain @ copy. (M. D.| ) | Answer—Send a dime and a stamp- ed envelope bearing your address and | ask for booklet entitled “Chronic Ner-| vous Imposition.” (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) boned Walter Teagle of Standard Oil HORIZONTAL land 6 Who was the famous ship owner in the picture? 11 To drain. 12 Intended. 14 Forehead. 16 Custom. Ship Owner Answer to Previous Puzzle = PE INFIVIAIWIAIL IL AIC 5 Al A. BAI Fa WALLACE IDMRE OTT ITIORISHETIA! ERMORIAITIE RETO! J 17 Hugeness, 18 Letting down. 21 In his youth he worked in 23 Bullfighter on ~ @ foot. YJ 28 Prefix for half, Tecommend that the state finapce |!vestigations into freight rates on! Sedentary persons are certain to} 17 Local. 27 Eagle. ties. When decisions tion of blood IE IRENA IGIOMECIAIR! 29 Left-hand these enterprises by the issuance of| were made they suited nobody, added |#ve more or less stagna\ 19 Bustle. IF |e IREAIGIONECIAIR a in iB de more bonds. nothing to the revenue of the carriers, |", 20 velns especially the veins 20 Member of PEE OMSIEIOWARRU! | page (abbr) But maybe he knows that the pro- jand generally forced: a dislocation of markets. the abdomen, even if they notice no undue fulness or prominence of veins Parliament ETAL (abbr.) DION'S} ee 21Early English (abbr.). sround her head and in a li through the crack. An old woman with a long yellow Hod pega cope pias al le knot under her chin, stared at her he was alréady pulling “You can wait in the parlor,” she said when she w was a caller for the Misses Van Fleet. only she. over her queer How cold it was in the long, high- | tions . . . I’ll just go and get di damp and th: musty! Mrs. Baratow fingered the its faded To tapestry. covering. i FY covering. dsome. _ The ne ceilinged room. How Really very han . The heavy Persian rugs, soft as silk, glowing wit East. But the stained wall paper, the mas in even in that darkened room, the strong, vital colors of the in the engra\ gold ot aces ire? And nly, crazy ant! - Maisie tell yo han king old serv- ‘Tick tock, tick tock, tiek tock, the ios viesk cen tha crhies emeaie bronze clock on No- inner :“Why, Curtis Barstow! jidn’t | you do love me, Johnnie... - You do, rom id out uu to away me and my cold!” But Joan hel both her|running away from it, she had to ly, but|Joan, you’ve never kissed me... Curtis always over-awed her, and/| will you?” off his big coat. “There's a man for you,” Maisie exulted when he waived aside her she. gave him her lips, crying “Johnnie, don’t ery! It’s nothing you want to Jove me, Joan?” ’ She was quivering in his arms, quivering as if she were afraid. ‘Johnnie, stop being foolish and ”’| smile at me... look up tell me ,—don't you?” fo putting it off. any longer, no it now. “Don't you ee he was ask- 3 -. Tam glad you came... .|ing. “Don’t truly, And a box—whats in the Be And how could she tell? What answer was there to give him? Once gE En os F ¢ H too ty to associate with of us. So Curtis is interested in the oe ‘What's she SIE | gram which he advocated in 1916 al-' ‘jon the surface of the body. They are 21 To sto) iss IAlY|Sf 37 Recipient. Tr, 3 21 | ‘When the Cullom act, which created » op eIS'S oe ready has people orth | likewise certain to benefit from Belly 40 Liquid part haven't seen her in years. Rather| Dakota Rete soe, win cost rae Be eee er bates te one nate in eaveltine if they practice it faith- coc pee isnecligae dan ne - 't she?” With a little sob she went into his arms. “Curtis, don’t ever let me go!” 5 2 Poem. 2 before it is finished. 1686, Senator E. C. Walthall of Mis- |" eee with swollen or congested| 22Coin aperture. “ nog, 3To exist. aa Trill pre “Open it and sée.” He smiled) she had thought she knew what love He may be fully aware that the |sissippl said, “How long would it take! veins or varicose veins, can obtain| 24 Senior (abbr.) 4 poo, 4¥Fence bar . we Goren ot hor gravely, not offering te was. Once she had snatched it Bank of North Dakota is at! the commission to perform even im-| considerable relief by practicing Belly 25 Possesses. 50 Almond. 5 Mattress 44 Preposition, —she has been s0 about help while her fingers eagerly, in the pride and arrogance tempting | perfectly the duty of gathering the |foesting 26 Grief, SEs caireas eee. 45 To press. them... what sort of girl was she,|with the knots in the broad. ¢reen ef youth, And the great flame of it to refinance its land loans through | data on which to ‘From six to a dozen inflations of} 28 Occurrence. hen 46 Cotton fiber. 2 How ‘was, her seared her heart, burnt it out, the new federal set-up. He may real- 30 Sinned. Bi 6 Lairs. 47 Frozen water. i ize that the one argument made for 32 Type of 53 lamar a athable land 48 Northeast, the recent attempt to saddle a sales’ apa ca welth feces, eee : forever, tax on the people was the need for T venture to say, that before the com: ieee ree Sitting eer San Jatt «- - ha MERE ABET, paying bonds which were floated in| pletion of. the work the changes in 25 Wrath. 57Lemur. 10 Wands. 53 Because. pir wy. 36 Paid publicity 59 and 60 His——~ 31 What was his 54 Standard of of 38 Like. is one of the first successful type measure. ‘peta te 39 Negative. largest in the job? 55 Sound of 40 Natural power. orld, 13 Third note. inquiry . ‘whispe: 41 Blow on the VERTICAL 15 His shi 57 Minor note. don’t ki head. 1A file. ‘intere: But F] s Thee a artis bahay (To Be Continued Tomorrow)

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