The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 17, 1933, Page 4

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The | Bismarck Tribune)‘. ° ‘ THE STATE'S OLDEST A neat little demonstration, this, NEWSP. that the NRA insignia has a very good (Established 1873) _— | cash value for the business man. Published by The - 5 il —— ple gd ‘pimercx| Let Us Not Overlook Those entered at the postoffice at Bismarck fs second class mail matter. Huge Profits Sadan tn bowie When Senate investigators uncov- said, “Oh, boy, am I glad to have ‘em! soon you will be rid of that fat feel- ing, and you will look more slender, too. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dille Co.) The NewDeal have been left hanging in midair be- cause valid objections to them oP peared overnight. Other programs have gone on leav- ing problems still to be solved—such ‘as what becomes of the hundreds of thousands of tenant farmers who may become homeless as a result of the cotton acreage reduction program. HE'S CAR ON BOOZE Private conferences of the committee taking 4,000,000 unemployed persons off the relief rolls. |. But the committee—also including Relief Administrator Hopkins, Sec- retaries Wallace of Agriculture and Ickes of Interior and Prof. James Harvey Rogers—could not see it. ‘Wages will be paid at prevailing local ered the facts about the fat salaries rates for similar labor. all over ‘the place by é 4 g ft i eft Daily by mail per year (in state Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .......... Reseee seoeees BI ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1. ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years : see Weekly by mail outside of North secee seseceeee UL. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Their Jobs At Stake Rabble rousing demagogues and their minions, numbering in their Tanks state and national office-hold- ers, see in any economic recovery the Joss of their jobs. §9|0f the later revelations of which such men as Wiggin and Mit- chell enjoyed in recent years, the man in the street was not slow in expressing complete disapproval. Incomes that are figured in quarter- .00 | million lots don’t look so good against 09 |® background of 12,000,000 men out of work. The uproar that greeted the news was quite justified. Less fuss is being made about some “easy money” in Wall Street. Yet these revelations are in fact more important than those which had to do with the swollen salaries of the big shot money changers. It can be claimed, after all, that a salary is a matter between a man and his stockholders; but a system which creates millions in profits for men who have rendered society no return what- soever admits of no such a defense. Consider the little matter of the stock transactions about which Ar- thur W. Cutten told the senators the other day. Back in 1929, a group of men headed by Cutten, Harry F. Sinclair and Wig- gin organized a get-rich-quick oil stock syndicate. ‘This syndicate promptly bought some 1,130,000 shares of Sinclair oil stock. Before they paid for it, how- ever, they sold it—at a very neat little Profit of $12,000,000. The participants in this gay little The Renos and their ilk, would throw wrenches into any plan, NRA or AAA, which might alleviate farm conditions. ‘These men and their paid followers thrive on class agitation. It is their Profession to whip up class conscious- ness. They are disciples of discon- tent. party used none of their own money. Everyone will admit, even adminis- | They didn’t have to. When you can tration leaders, that there is much | *¢!!, at @ profit, an article which you to be desired in the NRA and AAA, | &@ve not yet paid for, you don't really ‘These plans were conceived in » spirit |¢ed much of @ bankroll to finance of public cooperation and enthusiasm, |YOUF deal. It was freely admitted by President| Now the more you think about this, Roosevelt that the people could des- the odder it all seems. You can cook troy the efficacy of one or all of the|UP #0me sort of justification for a various federal projects to build up stock gambling system by which a public morale and restore confidence |™8M who risks his money can get a and banish fear. There are many |feturn on it if he ts lucky; but what snipers at work now. are you going to say about a system It should not. be forgotten, either, | hich permits a high pressure crew to that much of the Roosevelt recovery |Clean up $12,000,000 without putting Program was fashioned from recom-|UP ® nickel? mendations of prominent farm lead-| 2¢ was this sort of thing, and not ers. Of course it is hard to formulate |the Prevalence of unjustifiably high an agrarian plan which will please salaries, that constituted the real the many so-called farm leaders. But | Weekness of the boom era. after many conferences with farm groupe, the national administration| “Hand Outs” For Teachers adopted an economic experiment to{ Chicago's school teachers haven't establish parity between prices of what | been paid in heaven knows when, but the farmer sells and what he buys. jat least they aren't going to starve President Roosevelt publicly an-|this winter. The Illinois Emergency nounced that he would be the first | Relief Commission has announced to admit failure of the NRA and the|that it will provide them with food, AAA if they were not successful and | fuel and clothing throughout the win- warned city and farm folk alike not jter, accepting salary assignments in to expect any magic or speedy recov- | payment. ery. Right here there is an ironic com- Fair minded people must admit that mentary on the breakdown of our pub- the various plans are far too young to|lic school system. Suppose you were be dismissed as a failure. & teacher, and had worked hard to Some progress has been made.|get the education necessary for your ‘Those of an opposite political faith | job, and had toiled for years in your from the party in power may refuse| chosen profession—and then, in the to give any of the recovery plansjend, found that your reward was to credit, but the fact remains that more | get packages of groceries and bundles People are employed, the farmer 1s/ of coal precisely as if you were a down- receiving between fifteen and twenty | and-outer subsisting on charity. per cent more for the products of the} Wouldn't you in that case, begin to jarm than a year ago. Not enough | feel that there was something tre- gain, of course, but progress, and there | mendously wrong with the Profession jas been a quickening of trade in other | you had chosen? industries. ‘The plight of our school system real- This surely is no time for farm|ly is one of the most shocking fea- strikes, foolish and ineffective em-j tures of the entire depression. bargoes, wild ranting on the hustings Weegiecty 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 im ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. THE PHYSIOLOGY OF BREATHING Old timers assumed that the “type” of breathing was determined by sex; that in men the breathing is “‘abdog- inal” and in women it is “costal,” that is, more a matter of rise and fall of the upper chest and ribs. More precise observations and measure- ments made with the hindrance of clothing removed have shown that sex has nothing to do with it, and that gas tanks. any case. It is quite harmless in| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Iron Is Cheap | Indeed “Four Bits is Enough’—too much. Iron and ammonium citrate costs the druggist a few cents an ounce. Water doesn’t cost much. It dissolves instantly. I buy. four ounces of iron and ammonium citrate for less | tions. the natural and efficient breathing for every one is the breathing I call belly or bellows breathing. Vital Capacity. This is the meas- urement of the quantity of air that can be breathed out by the deepest possible expiration after one has taken the deepest possible inspiration. This total lung capacity measured with & spirometer amounts to approximately @ gallon. Tidal Air. This is the amount of air breathed out in a normal quiet expiration, approximately a pint. Complemental Air is the amount of air one can breathe in by an effort, over and above the tidal air, and measures @ little over three pints. Supplemental Air is the amount one can breathe out or blow out by an ef- fort after the ordinary quiet expira- tion of tidal air, and this also meas- ures @ little over three pints. Residual Air, approximately a quart, always remains in the lungs after the most forcible expiration one can make. During ordinary, quiet, unconscious breathing there is a reserve supply of air in the lungs amounting to two quarts, or half the vital capacity—the residual air plus the supplemental air. Don’t get confused about all these airs, We are not trying to air our erudition. We just thought you might, than “four bits,” and dissolve it in a pint of water—that is the formula you advise. (F. V. 0.) People are fond of that dumb: hypnotic feeling they get from the mystery of such things. Especially people who are sound—from the eyebrows down. The dose of the medicine, prepared as you describe, is a teaspoonful after each meal, best taken in a little water flavored if you please with fruit juice. three months, for simple anemia, No matter if it blackens everything. Iron naturally does that. Bathing Eyes. ing weak eyes. (T. P. J.) Answer—Please inform me in your own words what you mean by weak eyes. I know of nothing of the, sort which will strengthen eyesight. Agree- ably, warm salt solution is the best wash for the eyes, when it is advisable to wash the eyes. Dissolve a teaspoon- ful of ordinary table salt in the pint of boiled water. It is not advisable to wash the eyes, aside from ordinary lexternal washing of the face, as a rule. Ambulant Treatment of Rupture Please tell me what you think of Answer—Thank you. But you know |, It should be continued for two or|+ Please suggest a solution for bath- + treating rupture-with serum injec- My husband had an opera- tion'for double rupture 18 months ago. Now it has broken out again ... (R. R. M.) Answer—a few progressive phygic- jans are. successfully treating ruptt (hernia, breach) with injections of medicine, not serum. I should want to have this treatment before I should care to undergo the radical operation, if I had rupture. It is as likely to prove successful, or to fail, as is the operation. Maybe You Need to Train I'am 18, weigh 122 pounds, 61 inches tall. I look too fat. Please give me @ well-balanced diet ... (C. N.) Answer—No, daughter, you are not too heavy, but perhaps you have ne- glected physical training. Send a dime (not stamps) and a stamped en- velope bearing your address, for the booklet “The Last Brady Symphony.” Follow the exercises regularly and and the turning to leadérs who have The latest NRA story concerns the| wish to know. : | E done nothing else in their lives but stir}$d fate of a man who was given up strife and discontent. Tuesday off as a result of the five- Let the farmers check up these| day week and his wife changed wash farm leaders and certain office holders | 48¥ to Tuesday. who are their puppets. Let them as-| - certain what success they ever made at farming or in any enterprise. It might be well for them to go over cazefully the political records of the United States senators, governors and congressmen who follow the dema- gogues, and try and tie down anything constructive they have done. A little Ww K stock taking might be timely, as an jae ee antidote to the tub thumpings of the/to serve by his fake election is not pelican i ee ee ae as a free e! 5 No one claims for the NRA oF AAA| the Nazi dictator has only to read the the power of an Aladdin's Lamp to|foreign press to discover that the rest satisfy every wish and whim. They |of the worid is not deceived by his are but agencies in mortal and fall- baronet palate. fea _ re! le not that Lope ae RD; |ninety per cent of those allowed to working vote did so but that almost ten per aecord in the spirit of fair play. As|cent had the great courage to stay the poet expressed it: i away from the goose-step polls. The “Tt ain't the guns nor armament, |88¢d Duke Albrecht, a World War general, was expelled from the Steel nor funds that we can pay, Helmet organization and sent to jail Editorial Comment The Hitler Racket but close tion that helps | for failure to vote. What will happen to win the Hi to less famous and powerful per- It ain't the individual, nor the |s0ns? army as 8 whole Three factory directors were im- 1 as if the Semcon pied most of Biers People are perfectly willing to go out |imprisoned, or disqualified, the fact that more than 3,000,000 citizens dared against ip is ! & i : | H i ! + tion—Minimal Air, This is the small There is still one more air to men- amount of air that remains in the of oxygen and 0.0¢ parts of carbon dioxide. In the lungs some of the oxygen is absorbed and considerable carbon dioxide given off from the blood is added to the air, so that the bird. . 20 Transmitter. 21 Speck. . 22 Like. 23 He is the —— 37 To challenge. There.” 35 Senior (abbr.). 36 Hod. 8 What street air expired is a mixture of 79 parts of numerous of nitrogen, 16.02 parts of oxygen and} _ plays. sees he er 4.38 parts of carbon dixide. The in-} 25 Exists. Eegrere jae creased proportion of carbon dioxide} 27 Contraltos. BBE. fone? in the expired air is put to good prac- 28 Exclamation 42 Happens well tical use in a simple home treatment of inquiry. or ill, that has proved efficacious in cases} 29 Higher. 43 Gaseous of intractable hiccups. Hold an ordi-| 81Road (abbr.). _ element. nary paper bag over the patient's nose] 328econd note. 44 Lubricant. and mouth and let him breathe into} 33 Rubber treés.. 45 Tuning the bag for a few minutes. He thus} 340ne of the devices. inhales a concentration of carbon dioxide and oxygen similar to that administered from an inhalator and most famous 46 Devoured. | Wegnaensee, IN FRANCE 1915-18, In the Theater lungs after the gbage Senses been eee « . ed. Opening o! rax sul or aceldentally causes the lung to anon Answer to Previous Puzzle : $ Caustic, collapse, but while collapse of the lung} 1 Who pe ao a Hee. drives out the residual and sup- man ‘ Pe pady plemental air, enough is trapped in theater in the Fowl. the air cells to make the lungs float, picture? leasure of even if pieces of lung are entirely re-| 11 Sun god. u a moved from the body. The minimal] 13He is ac- HH Sg -up. air makes the lungs “lights.” If the claimed one of a You lung will float it is proof that a child America’s a fagalds for was born alive and breathed at least finest ——. FI thing. eta once. It is not of definite significance “4 Comment al a seat of “as it » for in most drown- 15 . ep. IL j Enron tittle or wio water in the} 16 Put on shoes. RIAITIVITIAIE) 21 Silent letters. lungs. 17Genus of * MAUMIETTI UILINIAIRIE} 23 Lane. Exchange of Oxygen and Carbon sluge.- MALL IDIOM IORILIEIAINIST 24 Made amends. Dioxide. Air ordinarily is a mixture 18 Manufactured. Seance man AfAmRCRALIOOL x” Desserts, of 79 parts of nitrogen with 20.96 parts} 19 Hawaiian his, “Over ny aoce dues lett 7'To pacity. 30 Pertaining to after pressing the ear. Brapes. 31 Leas common. 49 Postscript. 34 Merchandise. 50 What adjective 36 Ridicules. describes the 37He is also a pictured man?_ . professional 51 Paid publicity. VERTICAL 39 Eggs of fishes 40 Upon. 1Chandeliers 41 Agent. (variant). 42 To-rall.- 2Repetitiow of 43'To doze. sound. 45 Fish. 3 Indian. 47 Myself. 4 Wands. 48 Mountain 5Grain (abbr.). (abbr.). Washington Damned harassed and impatient farmers, the Agricultural: Adjustment Administra- tion may assume an heroic aspect for the rest of the nation when it sets up codes for distillers and brewers. ‘Those codes are likely to provide a framework of federal regulation of lquor in the post-repeal period during which conditions otherwise might be chaotic. nt) Secretary of Agriculture Wallace, og sore tena se - to ent liquor jashington, Nov. 17.—Two years! traftic if he so desires. He can pro- oe old-time opera was revived in| vide against unfair competition—such Tt crested what now is a problem | **, that of the boolleggers fix prices, for NRA. having financial interest in retail es- The women of the cast wore felt/taptishments, set closing hours, and generally control the handling of atrong drink from the time it is mere kernels of grain almost to the time could not be sold. And about 60 per | "e Consumes It. cent-of the millinery velvets made in| 1931 remains unsold for consumption. BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington 3 PUREST OF ALL IS GIN } The velvet industry was nearly| Preliminary conferences on the AAA ruined, a fact which NRA must con- | distillers’ agreement reveal that chem- sider carefully in its study of the vel- | {ally pure alcohol is being made out | vet code. of natural’ gas. Distillers probably | will agree to buy only American grains ONE EVERY HOUR for their product and the gas-alcohol That's a sample of the innumerable | folks will be only too glad to pay any far-fetched hitches which pop up/Processing tax that may be imposed. daily in the New Deal program. Few Alcohol manufacturers say the; purest drink you can take is “bath- but the unemployed realized previous- ly that life was so complicated. The rapidity with which unforeseen ob- structive factors appear is equaled only by President Roosevelt's speed Some major programs, all an- tub gin’—if the alcohol used is pure. | 30-CENT PAY LOSES | Thirty cents an hour as a minimum wage and 30 hours as a maximum working week doesn’t seem extravag- ant. Secretary of Labor Frances Per- CHAPTER XLVI “Curtis!” There was a sharp note of terror in Joan’s voice now. and tried to search his| ‘ae lonely, eating alone every dim starlight. “Curtis, it. you because I—be- cause'of what I told you—you don’t She stop} face in mean that it to marry me’ a a i i it of hi all the iness going out of her, like rings gro geaden loon. “Oh, why doesn’t he speak to me? Why doesn’t he tell me he didn’t mean that—” It seemed hours before the words came: “Don’t be silly, Joan!” “Silly!” “Morbid—imagining a lot of rot. , Joan—are you listening’ Well then, I was just eee: out. loud, thinking about all the futile marriages—I thought you'd under- stand. I thought I could say. what I thought, and you’d understand me, without flying up in the air, and it ining—” _He stopped and kissed her, and his ended in a moan, “I do love you—Joan—I do love you—so much—” She felt the throbbing sincerity of his (ae ee ery. A cry almost of pain. Her small, cold hand found his. They s! ed and stud- ied each other hut ly, in the dim, deserted street. “Sometimes I don’t understand you, Curtis. Sometimes I think that you do not understand me. But if we love each other— isn’t that all that matters? Won't yep. toceive me, if sometimes I ail?” ‘ “Just love me,” he said hoarsely. pli that, Joan—that’s all I asl And they went on in the dark, sainking their alien, loving joughts. “I must be morbid, imagining he meant... /_- away from _him, bal-| on the kitchen table. Th | ing the evidence in his pocket! “It’s kins vehemently advocated both in (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) France is planning to make an in- land sea of the Sahara, depriving the drys even of a favorite symbol. The keynote of success is the abil- ity to conquer the things in which you have failed.—Marle Dressler. FLAPPER, FANNY SAY: Girls who keep up on their HAZEL LIVINGSTON these days. “You never see such a pees girl!” Maisie er friend Mis’ Harvey. ding helped a lot. She hada fine, ae Fiperotstta story; propped agains' up bottle, rein- forced by the holder, while she was having her solitary dinner ey were just arresting Roger whom she was sure was as innocent as a baby when the doorbell rang. “Darn!” Maisie swallowed the last bite Aa van Viel and turned a pi see ley were going to let nie ge: Mercy. They were that slick butler planted it on him —I never trusted Sim from the first page!” "And there was the bell again, so she had to go. As she told Mis’ Harvey after- wards, it almost bowled her over. There he was, bold as brass, and against him, mind you. think my_nephew—” “Well, I’m glad you think I done the ri i tily. listen to a lot of talk about that nephew again, side add After all I reading show lots of back-bone. he app 1 Ay Hi I wish to} you mild ave resen thier | a's face Still it} when she come in the other night. ‘Maisie,’ she says, ‘There is nobody in the whole world like Curtis’—and her little face all shining—it almost made me ery just to see her so tickled—” “Well, in that case,” Mis’ Harvey agreed, “you done the only thing to do. Still, I never was one to admire Barstow myself. He has that hard look about the mouth I don’t like—” “Oh, all men in the legal profes- sion—” “Maybe. I’m not seve atsere ut I still it thing,” Maisie cut in has- he didn’t want to have to ‘Joan thought she saw him out- the apartment last night,” she . “But I talked her out of it. said to her I guess The minutes melted away. The; were almost at night. A man was standing in the doorway. He slipped into shad- ows as they came near. “Why Joan, you're trembling!” Curtis cried. “It’s nothing—that—that man— frightened me—' ‘ou are upset, Joan, It’s noth- ing, ca me, hopest Ceey wait- ing for riend, a good look at him under the light, he was no burglar.” “Yes—I am vu nei many things in eae ni wee her over. Well "a aucide sake—John- nie—what “Oh, Maisie—outside—I saw Bill —I'm almost eure it was he. I looked—and he turned awa: Maisie’s door. She Fvous. So it. Curtis, please unlock the door for me—I'm seeing 4 was in love with him for a while, and you “I should say not!” Mis’ Harvey Curtis was so silent; so sunk in » I) know 5 toe was irae | fea et on |S ei, eter eo ‘s feet the larity that bubbled d shad at Sees Wan roa | ss bat pop bene her oneness oe itened Joan. aie he wanted? Why should be pet heard of cases | “Just don't pay any, attention to he came here—” “y, Mis’ Harvey| Bit”, his mother sald, “All men srt ‘es, indeed,” Mis’ Harvey that just bef don ean Cao i wee hi. |p, ling er acing chee A Ravned, Tee fu wonasragy ‘wouldn't come back—not him—now abil diy you say?’ lina don’t the drawit you imaginin’ things. I de-|_ “Well, Leas E cmephrormnnpel room drapes seem just at ae tad- T maver caw such s girl Zor | Preath, “I said, ‘Young man, fad Merritt where she got that delicious and pinched Joan's cheek ox, Bay what oog Mi Hastings be gake for Betty's It was ee Pak ee eee rant to ed your twits Ceaien | en oat fy ads oe gente? ae ing the last time you was here— "| if there ts one th T can not en- sigs 2 tet Cartis, doar) She, broke of in quidasion. No oan. Ae: dies she had way Oe apaak sbout that— _ esse wae be anpeei jing to Mrs. She met ‘s “I|_ “I said, just’as cool and calm as| Barstow for help. saw no need Pipers ae nb eee ene eaten ae Prone ie 5 in eo parece at Ae rel Ga gt cements eee fees ate ney make t with u, to a girl seks Tino Tome ling era cos is|eat retene a Wat keow Tm right” ———_\ | rasopted By, fhe time 1 was] everything but that she ‘was, But after Joan's door was closed, with (Gd general, ordering ing, plan: and the Persian kitten was put to! kind of a fellow was he?” | ning syeryining, ding a bed, Maisie opened the win-| Mis ‘wanted to know. thing, J Curtis were pawns fim AEDT, nd Rane. ont of JF 8, bed losking, Dut, 1] im ber hands, Fawns without real Jong .time, rehing 8 trouble lee ee re a . She couldn't see anyone, She put al kim! He fu justaboat “It he isn't happy—” Joan ‘the Kitchen’ Gi Toc ser" nese | Nome eat coe an SOR sear Oe tn wot be happy aces, geod. “Just in case—” shes se Nappy ‘sad enclisd ‘about ha hing were 9 rue ke, and rasaly home to dinger "Le She BOOT, se Pa Maisie?" tmp. | (Tp Be Continued Tomorrow),

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