Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1983 into the substratum of civilized so- ciety as might be wished. If it is to be preserved, we must be eternally vigilant. i ‘We need to realize, too, that it is{ One of the essential ingredients in the democracy which we cherish. As the first nation to make a go of democracy, we have an especial rea- son for defending it. Democracy is more than just the abolition of autocratic government. carriet, per year ......87.20/ In its broad sense, it is a scheme of dn society under which each individual " is permitted to live his own life as Lagoa Meet ried 8.00] he sees fit. He not only has his vote, and his + $00! free and unchallenged choice of oc- cupation; he has the right to wor- The Bismarck Tribune an Ne Published by The Bismarck ‘Trib: une , Bismarck, N. D., Envered at the peotottion’ at B BS class tail matter. out suffering the slightest discrimi- nation, in any form, because of it. Per 2.00| Any infringement on this right is | % dental of the very essence of de-| + 150 Harvest Moon mocracy. “Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively credited to it/mocracy, or ‘not otherwiee credited in this|their democracy wortt newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other full religious tolerance, because of! the simple fact that the moment it entitled to the use for republication | C888 to do so it ceases to be a de- sutomatically must be defenders of Teligious tolerance. A democracy must have; All Americans who think; preserving matter herein are also reserved. a i wope’s Suggestion Spout by Curent Swope that In- dustry adopt a measure of self-con- trol to supplant the NRA when that instrument of national policy has run its two-year course will command much thought and attention in com- ing weeks. Intelligent and forward-looking men will support it, particularly if they are strong supporters of the capital- istic system. The reasons are rather obvious. The National Recovery Act is an emergency measure with a limited life. It was designed to get the wheels started again without thought to what the situation would be over a long term of years. Temporarily it puts certain restrictions on business and makes certain requirements, presum- ably in the public interest. The Sherman anti-trust law is set aside and business is given an opportunity to enter into agreements which used clined. Until 1930, there had been All this is worth repeating these days, even though there is no sign that a revival of intolerance threat- ens us. Unbridled intolerance is aflame beyond the sea. There is in America, unfortunately, enough ig- norance and prejudice to provide a feeding ground for it if embers should fly our way, By re-examining the question now. and reaffirming our determination not to let intolerance get a foothold, we can strengthen the foundations of our free society. Sign of Improvement Officials in charge of Yellowstone Park have a little bit of evidence to support the belief that prosperity is returning to the land. They found it dn the roll of visitors to the park. For three consecutive years the number of visitors to Yellowstone de- & steady annual increase; for the next three years the trend was rever- PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | By William Brady, M. D. Si letters ining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease caaneals or Abeateaec 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 conforming ¢o instructions. \Estimate of Canada’s | Wheat Yield Reduced | ‘Winnipeg, Nov. 4.—(#)—The North- west Grain Dealers association esti- {mate of the 1933 Prairie wheat pro- auction made Saturday was the ‘smallest of current estimates, indi- (2 ORGANZATIONS SHARE COMMUNITY CHES FUNDS HERE Single Campaign Obviates Sep.| arate Drives, Secretary Points Out Money raised in Bismarck’s annual community chest drive, beginning next Tuesday, will be divided among 12 re- ef organizations and funds, obviat- ing separate campaigns for each, ac- cording to H. P. Goddard, secretary. Bismarck’s quota, $10,000 will be divided among the Bismarck district Boy Scouts of America, Bismarck! Girls Scouts council, Bismarck juve- nile band, Bismarck community coun- cil, American Red Cross, Salvation Army, Florence Crittenton home, N.' 'D. Children’s home, St. John’s age, N. D. House of Mercy, Commun- | Advances Will Be Based on ity Christmas and campaign and emergency fund of the community . chest. | More than 60 local businessmen | have volunteered to serve as solicitors | Cn aE) | Sally Rand Is Ready | To Give Up Her Fans for Number two ‘December corn, but for grades three, four and five at the same rate, The will be made in states DAENe f potiels to Chae ee mi in ware. house certificates showing the grade and amount of corn and certifying that it is lodged in sealed cribs, Officials said no list of the 14 cities would be announced pending final xc. tion on them. Farm adjustment administration Officials indicated Saturday that en initial processing tax of five cents a bushel would be levied on corn, Tt was said, however, that an initial tax of eight cents had been proposed also and that the matter had not been definitely settled. the tax would ‘be 28 cents a Processing bushel, but a hearing ‘was called to determine whether this \figure might not result in a heavy eevee in consumption of corn pro- jucta. } Testimony at the hearing was that jthe 28-cents a bushel tax was far |too high and that the levy would | handicap businesses which have floor pe | stocks of corn products. ‘Pavlak and Schrimpf Open Drug Store Here A new drugtsore opened for busi- ness in Bismarck Saturday. More Marketing Points and Lower Grades for the drive. They will assemble in ington, Go It is the Broadway Drug Store, to- the dining room of the World War | poraen of Tova said: Maen aay Seore. | cated at 505 Broadway avenue, under Memorial building at 9 o'clock Tues- \tary Wallace had informed him that/ “he management of Theodore E. Pay- day morning to receive instructions !the government's corn loan plan will lak and Frederick J, Schrimpf, who and start their canvass. |be greatly broadened with loan prices|have lived in the Capital City for rhe traditional breakfast with) to be established for 14 base points! many years. which the drive has been launched in instead of Chicago alone. Schrimpf has been a registered the past has been abandoned this year! ‘Herring said the change will make | pharmacist for the last 35 while in the interests of economy. ‘it possible for farmers in the corn! Paviak has been in the drug business Solicitors who “for good ” | belt to get substantially larger loans for more than 16 years. it] "AB GRDowged by the taranseiain=| Co pital conn ot Pharmascy eben As announced by the farm admin- | Capi lege of Phai at Den- ‘once, so that they may be replaced to | istration, the original plan contem- | ver, Colo. Prevent confusion and lack of man-/piated loans on corn in sealed bins) The Broadway Drug Store will deal power when the drive opens. jdled by drug stores, drive, with teams directed to complete | ¥.0.B. Chicago. ' : the work in specific districts. Cards) This meant that the loan value of oo ee ee ‘ is drive will be given to the solicitors’ in proportion to the distance of their , Tuesday morning. farms from Chicago. | ' itl who's becoming masculine will be lump sums to the solicitor or sign) that the loans will be based on a & ine agreements to pay thelr pledges in| price of 50 cents at 14 points in the, ®, Sexual neuter. ‘The real “It” girl 1933, Feb. 1, May 1 and Aug. 1, 1934. | Towa, and Omaha, Neb. ga! | Covers All Grades Another scientist finds that more the life of man. But you won't getithat the loans will be made on the;en. But that’s only in dreams, them until you've reached 60, ‘basis of 50 cents a bushel, not only (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) The city will be dlstricted for the [bushel for number two Decetnber Coen | ret eager foods customarily han- and other materials necessary for the corn held by farmers was reduced | | Donors may pay their pledges in! The new program contemplates; Now scientists say the California four equal installments on Dec. 1,/corn belt including Cedar Rapids.! Seven years have been added to: In addition, Wallace informed him; men dream they go nude than wom- Address Dr. ‘William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ‘cating a wheat crop of only 238,180,- sed, mirroring the general decline in to be illegal. business conditions. |000 bushels in western Canada. Dis- appointing returns, especially from But less than two years hence the emergency act will expire. Business will be free to do as it pleases. What will happen then? Will the old types of destructive competition reappear? Will it again become necessary for employers to get the last ounce of blood from labor in order to stay in business? Will we have again the same set of conditions which contributed so much to our recent downfall? One hopes not.) Few, if any, in- dividuals will profit under such a situation. Society as a whole unques- tionably would suffer immeasurable Joss. But that is just what will happen unless definite and constructive steps are taken. We are by no means out a R Now, however, things are looking up. This year, the number of visi- tors at Yellowstone was 4,134 above the total for 1932, every state in the Union being represented. Yellowstone is one of the nation’s greatest playgrounds. If more people took advantage of it this year than last, it stands to reason that things are getting better. a They’ll Be Happier, Too Down in Rockford, Ill., there lives man by the name of LeVern T. yder, who hag blossomed out with a bright idea. His suggestion is that the million or £0 men in the nation who like to! |*fool around” with tools during their ; Spare ti of the woods and it ts improbable that | Pare, time and who possess home workshops, all of our troubles will have been) 4. pcunsipre Teens : cleared away two years hence. But/ aust jd fat ag know, ttmt\ theuoad-se aw! levote some of their time to making are traveling will end then. Swope does the country @ service by point- ing out that such a time is fast-ap- Proaching and that we must be pre- pared to meet it. The solution which he suggests seems sound and sensible. It will have to be worked out in de- tail, but the intelligence which has directed industry in the past should} be equal to the task. Tt must be if| Gemocracy, as we know it, is to sur- vive, ‘The demand for’ socialization of in- dustry already is being strongly urged ‘and by many persons who would re- {iy |] to whether th: ‘toys. These would be distributed at | Christmastime to the poor, particular- to orphan asylums and children’s | hospitals. If it “takes” the idea should help to make many children happier at |Christmastime. And it will make the ‘donors happy, too. {| Editorial Comment | Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard ey agree or disagree With The Tribune's policies, sent being called socialists. It will be urged more strongly if we return to chaos instead of pursuing the pathway toward a larger life and leisure for! la the average individual. At the same time, it is to the ad-| vantage of everyone that government be taken out of business as rapidly as/ Possible. If it is not, we soon may! jJearn that a new ruling class has| sprung up in America and that pub- lic officials can become public de- Spots. ' Swope’s proposal provides for the Gemocratization of business without surrendering individual initiative or | evading responsibility te the public} interest. The man is a forward-looking thinker with a sense of social respon- sibility. His record as head of the General Electric company proves that. He is not insensible to the rights and needs of labor or of the average citi- zen. It was he who suggested two years ago that industry would hve to do something drastic or submit to Religious Tolerance, Mark of Democracy The Boss (Omaha World-Herald) During’ these changing days when bor is going on the forty-hour week. and men by the hundreds of thou- sands are going to have more leisure than they ever had before, it is well, Perhaps, to give thought for a moment to the one who isn’t going to be quite sc happy. We mean the boss. He's the man that the national recovery administration refers to as aN executive who is exempt from the code provisions for the shorter week. He is exempt for the simple reason that he is going to work harder and longer hours and carry greater bur- dens than before. He's the guy who Must think up ways and means of changing his business methods to sible, keep out of the red. He's the fellow who has to dig up the newer and higher wage scale cash, so that the pay envelope will still be avail- able on Saturday night. He's the man who must answer “I will” to the presi- dent, and, in order to get that pre- cious eagle emblem think and work and worry as never before. In some future day when, we all hope, historians will look back upon the summer of 1933 and record it as the period of s new ema: During the next three months a|the Frovestan minister, a Catholic priest, end @ Jewish rabbi will tour the|ST@P United States together, to preside in 87 cities at ini DEGENERATION AND REGENER- | putrefies in the alimentary canal and meet code conditions and still, if pos- |¢ ATION TB in common parlance means tuberculosis, but Setromd the lees was primarily used by physicians signify tubercle bacilli—the old time doctor could tell a colleague in the presence of the patient or family that he had found turbercle bacilli in the sputum. The correct abbre- viation for tuberculosis, if an abbe- viation must be used, is the. But the use of an abbrevation when you refer to tuberculosis is too quaint now that education has removed the stigma of suberculosis, CVD in medical parlance means heart and artery disease or degenera- tion. In the past few decades CVD ‘has accounted for more deaths than has tuberculosis which was formely cnampion in the lists. We believe this is due to the enlightenment of the public concerning the nature, cause, prevention and cure of <uberculosis. Meanwhile the public has not learned much about the nature or prevention of CVD. The public is not likely to learn much about it. This is rather a matter of individual hygiene or personal health. Degeneration—well, that's the fate in store for every man and woman who survives middle age, whatever age you elect that to be. In old age we all degenerate. Some of us get started earlier than others in the degenera- tion business. Of course, you are as old as your arteries—or as old as your lungs or your muscies. Do not fall into the error of assuming that because the arteries are hard and brittle in old age that is why old age comes. It would be as sensible to think that gray hair brings on old age. As explained in an earlier talk, SVD (cardio-vascular disease or de- generation) comprises not only ar- teriosclerosis or hardening of the ar- teries but also many cases of myo- carditis (organic impairment of the {heart muscle), angina pectoris, apo- vlexy (cerebral hemorrhage, stroke or shock of paralysis) and chronic ne- phritis (Bright's disease), as well as [Vague “general breakdown” or physi- eal decay in which the degenerative Process is not particularly marked in any of these special manifestations. | In my opinion, “rejuvenation,” as | it has been sold to the public of late {vears, is sheer quackery. However, | I do believe that men and women in} the incipient stage of CVD, that is, | when they are just a bit “stale” and} before they are quite down and compelled to seek or anything like it. ahem—a little monograph for older boys and girls or for tl are feeling a little older than Teally ought to be. In short, ¥ {the products of putrefaction are ab- | sorbed and produce “autointoxication” —has been exploded.-Have some meat {and don’t worry about your arteries, QUESTIONS AN ANSWERS i Appendicitis | My son aged 14 and I aged 44 each have a chronic appendix. What is| Proper diet for us, to thwart off at-| tacks of appendicitis? Please tell me about eating fast, large quanities of food, and alcoholic cocktails and | Eighballs, tess chronic appendix until some of appendicitis, I should say removal 1s recognized. Should starches and sugars be eaten | fad her gall bladder removed? (Mrs. M. L. EB) eperiyged epee rreeas Se restriction je ordinary dietary its. So That's How Blackheads Hafpen clogging the ofl ducts (which you ad- | 8. A. 8.) ble (not otherwise) and inclosing a stamped addressed envelope. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) Blackheads ARE caused by dirt | Answer—I think not. Any one ee troubled with blackheads or pimples | northern areas of Alberta and Sas- katchewan, were said to be the rea- sons for the lower estimates now be- ing made. The Grain Dealers’ estimate, how- ever, is based on its own acreage fig- ; ates of 24,055,600 acres, which is 1,- 900,000 acres less than government figures. T always find it difficult not to give my children too much advice—Anna Roosevelt Dall. (A. 8, W.) | Answer—Everybody has ® more or | {surgeon gets it. If you mean your son | and you have had one or more attacks | of the appendix is the best course. No! such condition as chronic appendicitis | Have Some Cake and Ice Cream | sparingly ‘f at all by a person who has | Answer—So far as I know, the re- | moval of the gall-bladder entails no; | mit people have). Ask any one who! works in a shop where oil is used... ./ sacne) may have my instructions and | advice by mentioning his or her trou- | HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. CHAPTER XXXV oe “J don’t play with me!” at, wi she eaying th is girl he loved? 'm not she went, 'm not playing,’ - Twice she was on the ing about it, but with ican #0} the step igo rr perhaps she had better|ing for orbs come, not. Better not beteont aa joan, do you mean of roud Curtis!” She took te Amt ptowarl him, not wait- not caring for you want me, can’t it om Joan again. costs. that?” “Yes—yes—” She went into his rying at the her eo, ui. ile ? E i alt 8 4 § bl ain re bal [ F i; 8. Hf i a i 4] ri Se Ht 2 i ay iy zi i ni i iY A 3 F E i i gi £ i f i i F fF | a3 ft HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle HF » 1 Who is the novelist in the picture? 11 Misrepre- sented. 42 Departed by + boat. 143.1416. 15 Washes. 11To drag through mud. 19 Snake. 21To lease. 22 Nothing. 23 Pronoun. 26 Inlet. 26To exist. 27 Pertaining to the poles. 29 Measure of 42 The pictured lady is a suc- cessful ——ess. 51 Pertaining to animals. vation. 58 Biblical 33 Roof covering = ian: 27 She won the, —— brize for “One of Ours.” 28To repulse. start writing 30 Homes for fora —— bees. (pl). VERTICAL 1 You and I. 2 Sick. 3 Falsifier. 4 Starting bar, 5 General glandular enlargement. 32 Verses. 34 One who writes tediously. 36 Quotes. 39 Fate. 41 Bulb flower. piel J + Hell < | was of life from and thot Joan. Set ie your time getti a 4 i £ B° EA ie i is fe i Je é aff : li! f pt f ie i 5 ef :8 s § | i f f 4 § EF i i i ie he fi ii il Hi i iEE i FS # £ 2 : 8 rf 3 é i i J Fi ee Bg Eke wee i fe if if ah EE a f E i ! if z 3 F £ i f z F et I Hi il f e 5 E i? : af i ES FE F il r ef : z cy E ri s Fg H Hy ts Ex g: fi Fi |