The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 20, 1933, Page 4

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iia ee are THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 198%» PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE |IPICKETS ABANDON |WELLRS SENT BACK By Wiliam Brady, M.D. WISCONSIN ROADS | 0 CUBAN CAPITAL ’ through the northwest and 2 former Bt. Paul Rape are denly Saturday in his home ° cer, Iowa, according to word received here by relatives. ; liquor tax situation there went Mon- day a recommendation that federal beer taxes scale upward with the al- ‘coholic content of the brew. 1, Brewers decided ata just-concluded meeting that the tax, from « temper- both high and low murder ratios. Maine and Vermont, for example, are at the bottom of the list—or the Pe A __ |top as you choose—with only 1.3 mur- Published by The Bismarck Trib-|ders per 100,000. The high-homicide The Bismarck Tribune):7e whieh surround states with A on lewspaper Bigned letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease ance as well as a fiscal standpoint, | Sl une , Bismarck, N. D. and! rates among the white population are|| diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, should be $3 « barrel on 3.2 beer and/Ttaly Threatening “ entered at the postoffice at Bismarck) -sntrated in the southeastern|| self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written FOLLOWING TRUCE $7 @ barrel on brew containing more To Abandon League os bye phan sates SHG (it tha RiOUNtALnnS in ink, Ea a be made to on Jee ied to instructions. President Makes Brief An-|#cohol. 0 andon : z President and Publisher with Oklahoma as a connecting link. sherbet Banh acted nouncement After Confer- Rome, Nov, 20—(P)—Belief that The middle west and the far west have comparatively good ratios, North Dakota, for example, being classed Italy would withdraw from the League of Nations unless France con- sents to a four-power disarmament LIVER COMPLAINT HAS GONE OUT OF FASHION after which some fat (butter or-egg ence at Warm Sprii yolk) is necessary to stimulate con- hes ‘ia CUBAN POLICE HEAD Many Find Old Markets Gone as Pes toak cnt Z holecystitis (ko l-e-sist-e ye-tis) |traction of the gall-bladder and ex-| They Attempt to Again among states with a range of from 2 has pele] liver complains a8 &/pulsion of its ohnteats into the duo- u Sell Preis “4 ‘Warm Springs, Ga., Nov. 20—(P)— WORRIED BY REVOLT coped in eared bed A darene in 3.9 murders per 100,000 of population, | never failing subject of bridge table/denum (intestine)—in other words, President Roosevelt is sending Am- ‘The possibility became the subject Beginning with our dour New Eng-| conversation, now Mined bape ad a Rtg tPbioy Lagteabed Sie eee im er, ees a bassador Sumner Welles back to Ha- . of unofficial discussion after it be- land cousins, it 1s easy enough to see body has learned where an ww nal tul may produce the con-| Milwaukee, Nov. 20.—' —Farm |vana to carry on the United States came known that the Fascist grand gall-bladder lies. Many cases of gall-bladder trouble, with or without gallstones, present complications which demand surgical relief pronto. Some cases, with or without gallstones, present no trouble- some symptoms for years or perhaps ever. Between these two groups is another group of cases of chronic in- flammation of the gall-bladder which tractions of the gall-bladder when the tube is introduced in the ordinary method of biliary drainage. The results of this simpler method of biliary drainage are judged by the Telief of distress and by the dark green or black dejecta, obviously from the flow of bile. The drainage favors the passage of small gallstones when these are present. When the drainage may be successfully treated without |causes pain or fails to give relief, it operation. is time to consider surgical interven- In a recent contribution to Ameri-| tion. produce moved to markets Monday /|policy calling for establishment of Without obstruction of plekets as term {definite stability inthe troubled | Asserts Real Leaders of Last a) ecatea rie a "3 wee i 1% Outbreak Neither Dead + was a cessat of activity which announcement by the pres- strike leaders insist is temporary. The |ident Sunday night after a five-hour Nor in Prison future course of the agricultural anti-|talk with Welles that the Ambassa- selling movement they said might be|dor would return to his post was ac- determined in large measure at/cepted here as meaning there would Omaha Tuesday where national di-j|be no immediate change in the Amer- rectors of the Farm Holiday associa- |ican attitude of non-recognition of the tion and representatives of the Wis-/Grau San Martin government and of consin cooperative milk pool are to/non-intervention in the island. jineet. In other words, Roosevelt is wait- why they do not go in strongly for blood-letting. They are proverbially a canny and self-controlled people. If they have quarrels and differences their natural tendency is to settle them by peaceful means. These dis- tricts have personal feuds as long- standing and as bitter as any West Virginia ever knew, yet few of them are settled by knife-play or gunfire. council will be convoked December 5 ‘ to discuss the continuance of Italy's membership in the league. Such a development was strongly suggested Sunday as the rumble of opposition to the league deepened with three newspapers hinting at the possibility of Italy’s withdrawal. or One was Premier Mussolini's Popolc D'ltalia, The others were the Cor- riere Della Sera of Milan and the Gazette Del Popolo of Turin. Havana, Nov. 20.—(#)—Asserting the “real leaders of thé November 8 re- volution‘are neither in prison nor are they dead,” Colonel Fulgencio Batista held his Cuban loyal in read- imess Monday for any new outbreak “Member of The Associated Press” The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication 4 The population is more stable and/can medicine an Iowa physician, Dr.| Many patients using this simple) Arnold Gill state president of |ing to see what the San Martin group/ against the government. of all news dispatches creqited tous |more thickly settled. Tt is an’ old|B. L. Knight of Cedar Rapids, offers|piliary drainage from three to six|the Farm Holiday association, ex-|can do to maintain peace and stabil-| Soldiers spent a busy night in which | F'armers Cash Income newspaper and also the local news of |:tate and age, perhaps, induces decor-|80me Practical observations on gall-|times a year experience enough relief |pressed the belief that the truce ef- lity. The views of Ambassador Welles shots were e: presumably bladder trouble. So far as the diet ig concerned Dr. Knight is a butter and egg man—altho a fat free diet is usually advised in the more acute or severe cases of gall-sac trouble, the feeding of butter, egg yolk and other fats is actually beneficial in the more chronic or milder cases, particularly in the periods between attacks. You see, the fats in foods cause contrac- tion of the gall-bladder, emptying and draining it. This might be painful in the presence of acute inflamma- tion, but is not painful, and is rather Shows Sharp Advance Minneapoils, No. 20.—()—Cash in- come to ninth district farmers in October showed a nine per cent gain over the same month last year, the district federal reserve bank an- nounced Monday. with snipers, in midtown Havana. A Communist meeting was broken up at Matanzas and 16 were arrested. Mireigite of republication of all other |", wht vel. Nevada, on the other hand, is a — =< - young state. The population is com- Chiseling the Allotment posed of more volatile people who ‘When Williams county’s wheat al- {Have gone there of their own enter- Jotment committee attempted to | Prise, bespeaking a certain adventure- match the government's acreage fig- | SOmeness. Its tradition calls for the ures with those submitted by resi-/!ersonal settlement of difficulties in dents of the district it found they|the most direct and obvious way—or didn’t jibe, and so the allotment at least that is the tradition some of checks will be held up until the ait-| the newcomers ascribe to it. to carry on in comfort. The medicine consists of all the epsom salts three ounces of elixir of lactated pepsin will dissolve, with one ounce of glycerin added after the salts are dissolved. fected in Madison turday _will/in this regard were kept confidential. tmhean at least a temporary calling} After devoting his first day at off of the strike in other states. ‘Warm Springs to the Cuban situation, Meanwhile Walter M. Singler, pres-| Roosevelt cast aside official calls ident of the milk pool, was exhorting | Monday to enter into the relaxation farmers to consider a buying holiday./he intends to have here in the quiet As a consequence of Wisconsin's |hills of his “other state.” three fartn strikes this year several] Warm, sunny weather again lured hundred farmers, now willing to sell,/the president out in his runabout car have found their old markets taken|for a ride about the town where he ‘away from them. Milwaukee dairies |fought his way back to health several are refusing to buy from about 100/years ago from an attack of infantile who withheld milk. paralysis, It As near as possible, pclae lal ANSWERS er bloodshed that hung over precau- tionary measures taken by the soldiers, | such as strengthening the guard in- side and outside the presidential pal- ace, conversation centered almost re on the impending return Whoever done it, you got to hide, you low-down polecat scoundrel.— Sena, Long, when an egg was thrown at 5 Please tell me what iritis is and if it is harmful to the eyes. (H. M.) Answer—Inflammation of the iris. The iris is the curtain of the eye, that ficulty is ironed out. The only way to do so, according to announcement by the government, is to pare the figures submitted by individuals until they check with the government data, The result, obviously, may be to work a hardship on some Williams county farmers. Even so, there can be little quarrel with the govern- ment’s attitude. Its experts did the ‘best they could in allocating produc- tion as between more than 3,000 coun- ties in the United States and to re- vise the figures for one would force tevision of them all. Information comes from the state egricultural college, which has a big hand in directing the allotment work, tnat other counties have met with the same difficulty but that there is no remedy for it and the thing to do is get the matter straightened out so In addition, it has a relatively large Mexican population, proverbially vola- tile in settling quarrels and classed as white. - In the mountainous states a rela- tively large proportion of the popula- tion is of pure white stock, largely Anglo-Saxon in origin, Many of these people really live in past ages. In some sections of Tennessee, Kentucky and West Virginia, for example, the People have had so little cultural con- tact with the outside world that their language is more Chaucerian than American, and they cling to the ideas cf centuries ago in their personal habits, Hence the hills of Kentucky recent- iy reported 15 killings on election day. In many cases old enemies met at the polls, bitterness flared and guns set- tied the argument. Tradition calls for the use of lethal weapons. These beneficial, in the more chronic cases. Years ago “non-surgical billiary drainage” was introduced and widely used in the conservative treatment of chronic cholesystitis. This involved the use of the duodenal tube—a re- fined but somewhat extended stomach tube—thru which the medication was injected into the duodenum and the bile specimen was withdrawn for ex- amination. Such drainage is accomplished practically as well in the simpler way described by Dr. Knight: colored ring around the pupil. iris contains pigment which gives the eye its characteristic color, and muscle jfibres which enable it to contract or dilate the pupil or the size of the aper- ture thru which light enters the eye. In albinos the pigment is absent and the pinkish hue is due to the reflec- tion thru the iris of the red blood ves- sels in the eyeball. All eyes are blue at birth, becoming pigmented after several weeks. All eyes are brown when pigmented. “Blue” eyes or “gray” eyes or “black” eyes are so on- The patient must go without food or water four hours before starting treatment. Then he must lie on the right side and must not arise for any purpose within two hours. He receives every 15 min- utes a tablespoonful of the medi- cine. No other liquids are allow- ed during the treatment, which comprises from four to six of these quarter-hourly doses by mouth. One-holf hour after the last dose of medicine the patient must take ly figuratively. The pigment of the iris is brown in all races and all persons. Inflammation of the iris, iritis, is dangerous because the exudate may cause adhesions of the iris to the Jens and so impair vision. ‘This is least likely to happen if the trouble is promptly treated by the eye Physician. ‘ Brown Paper I press breakfast bacon between folds of brown paper to get some of the grease and smoky taste out of it. aee| Police Are Probing | stery of Skulls San Francisco, Nov. 20.—(#)— Three human skulls, believed by police to have been taken from an abandoned cemetery, were ob- jects of an investigation here Monday. Nick Lloyd, trucking service operator in whose possession the skulls were found, said they were among belongings of E. L. Mellon, @ cook, which he had held for a moving bill. 4 Mellon told police he obtained the skulls from a man named Jack Love and had planned to use them as ornaments. Milton Paoli, a friend of Love's told of- ficers he believed Love had tak- en them from the cemetery where he had been in the habit of visit- ing the caretaker. The cemetery, in a San Fran- cisco residential section, has been ee Roosevelt is here again as just one of the citi- zens. He did not bring the White House automobile and when he goes out he drives himself in a small open car. The folks here also regard him as one of their own, unhesitatingly going up to speak with hith when he is about. WOULD KEEP BEER SOFT ‘Washington, Nov. 20.—()—To con- gressional committees considering the ‘S everywhel of United States Ambassador Sumner Welles from the, United States. After word of his: conference with President Roosevelt at Warm Springs, Ga., was received here, however, the government clapped on an o! silence that would permit of no - ficant comment. THEATER MANAGER DIES St. Paul, Nov. 20.—(#)—James T. Stroud, 55, prominent theater man- OLEN hy HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIONT ‘BY KINO FEATURES SYNDICATES, INC. The Isle of Man has been taken in turn by the Irish, the Norse Vikings, the Danes, the Scots, and the Eng- lish, Forty thousand of the laborers who ‘worked on the Panama canal are stilb ar, Panama and refuse to leave. | At 230 feet under water, pressure is og than 99 pounds to the square people rarely fig .| @ slice of heavily buttered toast [Is there anything in the composition} condemned and most of the bodies CHAPTER XLVIII that—he's a prince, Ruthie. When; The taxi chugged away, her Se en te Ce lence will eibhed tikes ees oa So saneae-cae- ‘of brown paper to do harm? (Mrs. 8.| moved. One of the skulls, that of “I thought you and Joan were|¥ou know him better—” bright face at the window blurred to those ‘who have signed up and, 2) Y) Dr. Knight thinks the medicine (de- |R.) a gitl, still had some blonde hair sweethearts,” Ruth said slyly. I'm never going to know him any |and was gone. little later, send out their checks. will sock him on the nose. seribed below) merely removes edema! Answer—No. on it. Bill didn’t raise his eyes from his ata I see him first! Slowly he walked to the hotel, N, D. Gorman, supervisor of field] I brief, murder is most common |o, bogey swelling from the bile tract, (Copyright 1933, John F. Dile Co.) plate, but the knuckles of his hand. you see|buying all the evening papers on activities in farm adjustment work among people with primitive instincts issuance of a large amount of non- stood out whitely. “Where did you come, come—don’d that all this will put Rollo feet too? You didn’t think I’d for- on his| the way. One of them might have a v get that idea?” Picture of Joan. for the state college extension serv-|‘T those living in primitive surround- rest ng d cost of SAYS: " get a pal, did you? Why Ruth, it ice, explains the situation as follows: |!88. The neighborhood attitude has INF Raheey 425 beeline i FLAPPER, F, “ANNY tee 4 F nace won't Be ‘any time before you and ees “The wheat section has taken | Jot to do with it, Education and | While the farmers union conven- suppose one might call it that,” | Rollo— The Farley's dinner was over he said after a pause, “I thought She leaned over and took his early, thank goodness. Joan came the position that in every state | Culture are its bitterest foes. | tion is in session Tuesday, the execu-| an awful lot of her anyway, when I\hand again. “Will'um—don’t. Don’t| in yawning, although it was just the total of the wheat acreage If this hypothesis is accepted, North | BIT TER DEBATE AT tive council of the National Farm was a kid.” say any more until I tell you—|hal past“ ten. “Ooh, rm i ye reported on applications, plus the | Dakota can take pride in the fact | Holiday association will meet here,| Her brown eyes were soft with sf They’re the dullest people I ever acreage and production reported possibly to decide the fate of the cur- someth: “Why uth—you aren’t crying! | _w YY ” met in my life. But old, old friends by non-applicants, must be with- | ‘"@t her showing is among the best. | rent farm strike. Evergrey ella _ Well, for—" of the Barstows, so we had to go. in the federal estimate for the SiS: M Same ae sip uablimiad heart was broke!” She Necguedl wh ee me jig brown eves ident aon: wees “ lod bef tracts will 7 3, inv speak ai nationi again. brim . 88: ‘is—’ ie yeas ince the oe, Editorial Comment |; convention of the Farmers Union at on hope she will be very happy,”| ®™ ‘Will'um—I didn’t want to tell|laughed unsteadily. “Can you of the wheat production control program depends on a reduction of wheat production, to allow the acreage to exceed the figure on which the allotments are based Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without rega: to whether they agree or disagree With The Tribune's policies, Not All Members of Big Farm Organization Would Fool With Currency {opened Monday Omaha, through Tuesday. Governor William Langer plans to leave tonight to appear on ‘Tuesday's program. The convention and continues) he said finally. “She's a fine girl. | YOU but “Yes, I know him,” she said. He: thoughts were darting back an she was, with her lovely Diol ski and her round brown eyes, soft a1 sppealing now, brimming with ars. ‘You know the man, don’t you? He has a mighty fine reputation—” imagine Curtis being cross, Mai- sie?” “Well, most men get that way once in a while—” “Yes, but Curtis isn’t most men! would be to defeat the purpose of al SE TELS forth, scheming, planning, quickl; squeezed her hand, comfort- You know it sort of strikes me rng he mente. | |< iy cin-_He ie really erut-|ingiy, andthe iene” crerdowed|santy.ip away. Km amos: glad be “Several North Dakota counties | A successful farm leader's stock in) Boise, Idaho, Nov. 20—()—Thel ‘Mammy Song’ Star y nice sort, and they're frightful down her cheeks. | failings like me. It almost. scares have succeeded in keeping within their allotments. The work of getting the contracts signed has already begun, with the likeli- trade apparently consists of a perpet- ual bellyache. In order to get his daily bread he Must dispense discontent. Grange Monday reached the busiest part of its annual 10-day national |convention with its views appearing |Senerally in harmony on the liquor Hollywood, Nov. 14.—(?)—In “Won- To Abandon Movies, in love—it embarrasses me to lool at ‘em!” She saw him wince, but he spoke heartily enough. “Well, that’s the rolled jeorgnn “It’s about Rollo,” she said, be- tween sobs. “We about hi ou_ don’t have to wo: n He'll be faithful to the me sometimes—he’s 50 And the thi his mother tells about him! He’s certainly been a wonder- ful son to her—” - there ught 5 imagit it . heed (slot perp ei wiser When federal government gives | Question, but diverging on inflation. | der Bar,” Al Jolson will sing his swan ; Say Konett io cho, Cane teams — judgme oon Saat it—I'm not going to|_ “Why don’t, you go to bed if a me zallions to wheat farmers as a Christ- The Grange long has favored probl-| song to motion pictures. \ | not in love. When is your trait for any man till the judgment fy a ploeey? Bleep om. S present the far st . 2 comi ” , gettil fH ‘County production control as- | sok the gift horse Mite eaten Government control of the liquor] The famous Mammy singer has an-| ' nates t Bari £6 lucas aaital pg t— me wal FY little rest, you stand around and sociations that are delaying ad- | expound upon the terrible condition |Dusiness under such conditions as| nounced that because he is a happy | chance I have of getting married| ‘But Ruth, I was just telling you ae I : : een of pee serene, on of the teeth. ie “largely pee a ee . Sere man, having the “most wonderful wife | with the old ogre of a father of gone faite face, id dabbed | the week-end, Maisie: would: a be ad st of such widely separa ” cr y iti a an ry = ry * ny pee total auien ae pies When the government pays premi- Berri) 7 HR a ok. ‘with | 22 the world,” and “a couple of million Rollo’s sitting on hi lonely if I went up to the cabin are merely postponing the date on ams for hogs the farm leader urges his followers to strike against the in- the western state adding a sugges- collars,” he has decided to give up the Pace ’ ans growling tooth—" is money bags, like'a bulldog with a sore | St her Curtis—” a s “ is ‘k required in screening “It hat?” Shenk, De members will receive | justice of accepting anything except |tion in a resolution that part of the hits, although he may continue on | _ If the “kick” were taken out “Oh, come off that, Ruth. Old aod yon ase interreeems. ROWS) nog) Maiaie-~rou do. look. 50 sorscat ‘a wheat allot. | te Whole hog. io a: theaeries Rient fiom mel the stage. | of dancing—more girls would be Man Keyes is a wonder—’ Pediat he genes attae ong,|fenny!” Joan dropped into. the Why well-to-do farmers like to be |/ndustry Jolson is 47 years old. happy. “Wonder! Wonder of a tightwad | I've lost in Will’'um. I've lost| Focker, and shook with laughter. of 102,254,800 bushels and a seed- | Seekers tor ounn ey en te gy uct | At wide variance were the views of| Beret ete eels Ea OUT Ce coe, eth on [memmtalio whiee eae ak ed acreage of 10,469,600 acres. | never fails. Call a farmer a rg aH many Grangers on the resolution of 2 cause he gave you a job, and made| wouldn't on Bi 79" Thanksgiving, Mrs. Barstow and Summarization of the applica- . we and) arthur A. Sherman, Rhode Island a work like 5 er ae a can’t tell] « eg Mrs. Cunningham, I think—some tions from the various counties |%¢t his vote, says the professional po- | tate master, who branded inflation Tre—I know. Rollo himeelf said you| it thee when | ply fects call | riend of hers a) another by the Agricultural College ex- | nore radical in ease cee 2,bit as “unsound and dangerous to the| & : = . slaved for him—" on’himm for year and a half [couple, the Latrdn, tbelleve. Won't Hroduction has been exceeded." > |peig0, to retain his standing with |reeorded’ tie “protest with the Na-| HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Pussle 11 Source of _7OR otha im's 20, Ho—wel | gettin hain and new you tall He bs greet! A whole week-wod, and 2 ‘hose contin s a starch. 8 been rl. t 4 The matter is not properly aub-lieaders ” “euAMG PY farm tional Grange against any action by| 2 Who ts the = TETTRISTTCRITET TET 12 Weasel Pe _ziding brekreae Sats mi nrte [fie So rane” ae meermared, (SOU es near sy Cet ne ae. Ject for argument because the gov-| Farm leaders are generally quite |Grterey avorins, aula ania ihe AIL IOIUDMOIVING| MW 16He is a —. ee same/iy, Maisie?” i ernment will not argue, but if it were | successful as capitalists but delight to egy Fe oat master, Louis J. Ta- picture? CUINEMOIE NE MM. (O} 19 Ho was — “Say, he didn’t settle something] “Don’t be absurd, Ruth—” Maisie beamed. “Well—if that org me seem ae et sett chance | call ees maelves red radleals ze aS ber, in his annual message advocated u Shere. md | : a el on you, did het” Her shrewd ¢ cree to Abeer i Aas Dever 20. ape dont work out ust fine, Here 1 had CE mene mig! Proved)‘: sickening but simple. e Taber ‘was reelected master Monday a gece 10 years (pl.). Prospe 7 I can tell you. I tell Fe bes. in Stockton, asking me for Lid Should one say things sarcastic|and Hartford, Conn., was expected to| 15 Proboscis of EIA 24 Lubricant. was 8 different alr about kim iis) von suytting. [dent know why—| S00 paadine anauversely on cata. Few North Dakotans believe that|about hypocrites who lead farmers |be chosen for the next convention, bees (pl.). ISINIAIG] 26 Anctent., fain. | Ae alr ot AOearaee.. ell for you the first time T ever | dey. They're going to ead our average production over the last| deeper into the slough of despond he| A recommendation for issuance of] 16 Rescues. HBT IAIRIO) 26Born. - ' bet pata ig Sys ne ed pad ig ‘fatal ” he | Wve never even seen little Geraldine five years has been more than 102,- |! branded as an “enemy” by the con- |$3,300,000,000 of non-interest bearing| 17 F¥s as 28 Rowing device. RE fhe aren “she knew —~she'd| but the Lateh Cras'bliot’® wevehes: | —itmagine me a grandmother!—ant f 254,000 bushels, The recurring drouths | ‘rolled press of the professional |treasury notes to be used instead of] 18 To arrogate. AINITS | MMALT| 28 To observe. seen — sled uneasily, Why didn’t the|! suppose I can put up with Alice luave seen to that. Ee OF Seve darian, bonds to finance the public works ily. ITICH SIT 20 Age. He now, “Bet-| waiter come? “Gosh, it’s hot in here 's Gerald’s wife, for a couple It be that mistakes have been Supinely we are supposed to sit |program was made by Herman Ihde, TIEIRIMI Tie} 34 To mollity. ter than that. Want to hear about ‘we of days, what he ever'saw Soaps between counties within the | queer ites te eaceeapet male raaater, 8 sad ab He, as Sore itt Yum—" not J til T fini Hoe Sie, Plano legs, an’ a voice state, But these should not provide | farm ie ‘They oF peony oa — indisposed. against iretond. : Pay ; {os Niued Rihana, plead Paint I'm being to aa for any large percentage of error. | “WS. SIMPSON WOULD ISSUE | 49 The utmost property. — 37 angle of fis nice strong hand, with the elen-| tall you T set Packing. ‘The small flat was in We do not mean to take in too|27 BILLION AT ONCE extant. 5 Insertions. branch or leat. - der brown fingers. married it’s going to be for one of |20 uproar. Pi . Expressmen. The most reasonable view is that) much territory in slamming the obvi. | Omaha, Neb. Nov. 20.—()—Curtail- collec 50 Ascended. 6 Post marking “We're partners!” he laughed,|two th ‘money. A| Delivery boys, Mai the Nok Bees fome farmer: have tried to “chisel”|ous fakes who parade as farm lead-|ment of the power of ‘big bankers’) tion of papers, 51 Fish. goal ihe a8 Fammport, and thumped hischest. whole lot of Go on—call me fhe months at the N the plan sy getting more than their|crs. We speak princi of $2 Pertaining to’ 52 Those who . indorsement. “No!—In partnership with Em-|a gold-digger!” She gulped, and of three at Si dluare, thereby throwing the figures| called farm leadership of the North: |greenbeck currency ‘was tryed Bun-| aif «fost cakes, SA OT 8 NO 9 Typen ot beers melon Fest « amet alee vale down Ber Gerald” Gite fers ts fos : . \- — mf 1 cut of line. West, the politicians, the strikers, the |ay night by John A. Simpson, presi-| 33 Senior. S2Bndured, 70 UNA... 40 Deposited. exelent BO Oe ‘sounds gebts| *Bo'you don’t love Bello,” be said| Alice. ‘She'd never make the be If they have, their fellow farmers hed agarnase dent of the National Farmers’ Union) Sear tica, 54 Excessive 9 Tenaclous sub- 42 Musical doesn't it? You see it was this way. . s+ never... but all of = sudden : great farm organizations, |as Omaha prepared to play host dur- decoration. I—well—I of blew up I] “I never said I did.” the fattest suitcase clicked shut, i should give them short shrift because | which dominate different parts of the|ing the next few days to s peir of| 40 Varnish forget Sa . back. I were hit-| | “But he thinks you do—he with just a little piece of kimono i wny money the “chiseler” manages | United States, the Grange, the Farm |important farm meetings. ~ ingredient. VERTICAL sives adhesive-4¢ Chinese - ree up pretty high, Rollo ‘world and sll of re ee st out, and she was to divert into his own pocket will |Bureau, the Farmers Union, have con-| Simpson predicted that the union's} 43.Beaver color. 2 Persia, ness to dough. staple food.’ Py EE ‘sorrow, and I helping "t you think you ‘over—" | her and bags sroand beh come directly from the pockets of his |*fuctive programs actually helpful to|national convention, which opens to-) 47Banishment. 3 Molten rock. 10Genus of rose 45 Sheaf. him and—well—the old man. of » “L wish you] and the taxi man waiting at the vcore een gt ep a a nec, Smell ie Seat ft bn ht ft The Tendency to Murder _{ticough strikes the: fomentation | enon Of aver fro i? Ho OPT Socom whe train ail| there's ns one alse T eoula teil it vo| some if you got ome before T det You better call up Mis’ Hervey, an‘ on homicides in the|rlots, the arousing of support for sel- Fight, but] ide's put off 0 ase | eee ered duet Gone ees have her come tiay with yen’ United States show that the highest {ish political purposes. Politicians, Pele. S i dbo tea Te didnt sooms | what bo do. Ob; darn that walter| well ie all right if you don'o wand murder fs not that| Who are little better than parasites, oh a in her... aoe iis bs rate in Anais 5 oe nacht ves to movements fot “Boys il be atthe time—” eae Sor fe tae Maisie was on her # re gang-ridden Chicago or crime-! publicity aren eae Pere pow warleuke oo open window: ie tied New Yor but hat of sare ahem, caring not for the dma mug they Bit ‘all io gre aah “Spat t epuldn' tonight, Rath." she morning ar tn with s yay qiinon ee eee ae engagements I ; rernctien ates” She finished -, In its relatively few cities and | moral code, or the morale of their fol- \ But it didn’t work out. I got| “Two other he smiled, and her ewn pack: song tava | ey etna neh oe Lig ey nl ie ea eae ala oe i rate of violent death during the last |} poe ook -~ Got a the oil fields for a|I ought to dash up to the hotel and fool of the fussy whita tion has been 165 per 100,000, three} If we must have farm strikes let pose preg dg bore tnag By] aFaet Cite top nee ian tal Eeliod shows thet amid ray fae, times the average rate for the white| there be s strike against farm leaders {Pihort it wasn't all talk, {t looked | and send you home.” for hikes with Cust sine : opulation as a whole. with a perpetual » like a big thing to me, and I thought “But when am I to see you| the fiends played. ... i ay ‘Among colored persons Missouri |P@rasites, professional saviors, hair- ype ge of making up Will'um? You hat]. Curtis... her mouth twit j i to the old man for tho Faw Y ‘ts when he gets his mind on} She sank, in an tngraceful little lead the lat with» sat of 2 pet | eters Hf we must strike let the handed him, walking out, withoot|a v9 626 £0 help me oe oe is for beside the open 100,000, average persons strikers demand s return constitu- reason, beat it back and—’ ven a erat eae tae, |i es me» mal TI] wiles Sata to Soe een teeter =| oe he survey desis only with the r0- | Srement let us, declare % ‘ellday \ sins and you're in on it with Ohi] “Wilfum, are you trying to ditch | n sults and inakes no guesses peeing mel regi causes of these remarkable figures, | tor state ine to Sie aa fae \g RE *Well—it nay not amount to so/ “No, but I couldn't come then. 4 dting ; much,” he said with a little ‘The day after—will that do?” but some sound deductions can be holiday from the perennial bellyache ‘og Re BE ae ing grin. “Bull, it's = bie “he ‘Will'am, | te! gangling, made by peering into the circum- |-f the self-appointed farm leader, or me, in with Keyes Uke | honeyw-se0 you pres Be Continued »

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