The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 4, 1933, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1933 Tun under its own power. Instead of Private initiative beginning to take | over the burden of supplying jobs) and getting things beck to an even keel, more and more has been left to government enterprise. The result is to make apparent a need for some sort of truce in this whole money business. We hope the President will hurry toward where he is going—whatever the goal may be —and let the world know when he tter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher , many of him, great and small, that . year . 1.50 ‘Weekly by mail in year . “~~ Memi 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 spontansous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Let’s Hurry and Get There With the money battle raging on many fronts, it behooves the average American to stop and take stock of the situation. Not that the argument is one in which he has a direct immediate in- terest but because its ramifications are certain to affect him, one way or the other, in the end. Few people have enough money to be greatly concerned about ite immediate status but we are @ race of incurable opti- mists and have hopes for the future. Hence the justification for interest. As it stands now, the argument is between the “sound money” men and the “Inflationiste,” names given to ‘the two separate groups which claim to know the most about a very abstruse subject, Between these extremes stands the/is great body of our citizenry, too con- cerned with opportunities to make a dollar to give much thought to its quality after it is obtained. This vast majority finds it easy to agree with both sides, paradoxical as that may seem. They want their dollar to be spendably sound if they manage to get it and they also want more dol- lars. On this basis it is a good deal like telling the waiter at a restaurant|is to “bring me a little of everything.” Also, dancing between the two ex- tremes like @ shadow-boxer or a tight-rope walker, is the president's gold program. The people don’t un- derstand that fully, either. There must be some arguments for, it or the president would not be so insist- ent upon trying it. There must be some arguments against it or its op- all is Gets there, since it obviously is his intention to keep on the way. When that time comes it may be that the/ boys will quit using catchwords and get down to brass tacks on their own! account, Must We Learn? With prohibition’s demise immi- nent, it has become almost a ritual for the savants who can remember back beyond 1920 to pop out with the best available information on the art of drinking. | For the business of imbibing potent | fluids, the connoisseur would have us understand, is something not té be} taken lightly. The drinking habits of the post-Volstead era are passe. ‘We are to return once more to the lleged gentler habits and more lei- surely ways of the days before the ‘war. Hence magazines and some news- Papers, aided and abetted by the Tadio, tell the anxious housewife just how to go about serving those rare old vintages which many fondly pre- sume will return after the period of legal aridity, We are told in all seriousness that the invariable rule is “white wines with white meats; red wines with dark meats.” Such words as Chablis, Reisling, treuse and others which have long since disappeared from the language are given brisk revival. Chianti, Sauterne, Char- We are told what wines to serve to be sipped; that sweet liquers are not to be served before dinner and a host of other things regarding the “art” of drinking. All this is well and good. Many individuals will feel that the times are again in tune if they can indulge their fancies in this respect. If one to serve such things at all he cer- tainly should do it in the most grace- ful and pleasing way possible. There no harm in doing the thing right. But one thing should not be over- dooked in all this pother of what and {| how. That is the simple fact that many persons are not going to bother about it at all. good wine was not available many Persons learned they could get along just as well without it. these are not going back to it ex- cept, perhaps, for the special occa- In the days when Many of ponents wouldn't be hollering so loud./sion when they want to serve “a lit- But one thing all of us can be sure|tle something extra.” of. That is the desire to have the thing over and done with it. Rightly or wrongly, there is no question that the whole business is giving a lot of people, notably those with moncy, the Jitters. Whether or not the condition of their nerves is justified is beside the point. The inescapable thing is that their mental situation is prov- ing a handicap to private business— and it is upon private business that all of us are pinning our hopes for ultimate recovery. Officeholders may not believe it, but there still are for themselves, or for others, to working for the government. These folks know that private initiative and the investment of private capital will provide jobs for the unemployed, get commodities to circulating freely, lift the prices of farm products and ac- complish other results which we long have sought by other processes. It is hard for the people who have little or nothing to feel sorry for those who have lost anything less important than their shirts. Yet these same people should not overlook the hardships which the investor has encountered in recent years and the situation he faces now. There are so he his reactions come pretty close to In the late 1920's he was loaded co Guardsmen Refuse D | Entry to Olsness NTINUE from page one: And Several Aides |%% cerned, the whole staff could return to the office immediately. Olsness said, however, that only a stenographer or two would be need- ed “temporarily” to take care of cor- respondence during tne course of the many persons who prefer working} audit. staff of the department would inter- fere with the audit unnecessarily. He suggested that the whole Order Is Modified Cathro told a reporter that an or- der to make a “complete audit” of the department's affairs probably would be modified, declaring that an ex- #mination of the books of the depart- ment over its life period of 14 years would be expensive and take consid- erable time. Just how far back his audit will go, ie said he could not tell until he starts to work. Asked by Olsness whether the theory of an audit is to proceed with an “assumption of examiner declared he planned to go ahead with an “open mind,” on the | alert for discrepancies but feeling | reasonably sure that none besides pa already confessed would be found. suspicion.” the Cathro told a newspaper man that he had no idea how long Governor Langer intended to keep the guard on duty but ventured a guess that down with “gilt-edged” stocks and|they would be on duty throughout the iced and what at room temperature; |capacity is urged and encouraged to what wines will keep and what must be tossed off at once if their good- ness is to be preserved; that brandy| cools by evaporating water from the surface. The water evaporated in in- er Dam have remained practically exposed sometimes to extreme sum- cent. Down in the canyon tempera- drink water in large quantities at all sunstroke, heat cramps probably all spell dehydration. The first aid measure that has proved most effica- cious in any of these conditions is the | Weather Report {| eee FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Occa- sional snow probable ht and Wor North Dac —. kota: ee fn night and Tues- ag eal ae: South Da- WATER AND SALT PREVENT HEAT PROSTRATION A while ago I quoted here a shrewd observation made by Dr. H. C. Worth- ington from many years of experience. Many years ago he discovered that when hot and tired and sweating from bicycling he could get far more refreshment and invigoration from a draft of common table salt in @ glass of water than from any of the drinks he could get along the road. Now, when golfing (at 72) and sweating and when plain water does not seem to go anywhere or relieve thirst, he finds that the addition of salt is a Prompt and noticetble stimulant. Dr. Worthington lives in a suburb of Chi- cago. Dr. C. Van Zwaluwenberg, who lives in a suburb of Los Angeles, ob- serves that a day on the desert dem- onstrates that the three or four quarts of water taken leaves the body by transpiration (evaporation from the skin) and perspiration visible or invisible, and taste of the skin shows that it takes the chlorides with it. The salty taste of the arms when one 4s out on the desert is one of the sen- sations for the tenderfoot. The body visible sweat keeps one cool even in the extreme heat of the desert, even tho there be little or no visible sweat- At Las Vegas workers on the Bould- exempt from heat prostration altho mer heat. Average maximum tem- Perature in July and August 700 to 800 feet above the level of the river bed there is 108, average minimum 90, high range 126, average humidity 50 per ture ranges 10 degrees higher. Every- body working or living there in any times and to use salt freely too. Heat exhaustion, heat prostration, administration of large quantities of salt solution by injection into a vein./a ii dextrose—is admin- | is urease advantage in it. istered in the same way. The salt, and in less marked de- 34 to 18 And the second 46 to 6. . &—Ashley at Wishek. . 13—Ashley at Lehr. . 20—Ashley at Strasburg. . 19—Lehr at Ashley. . 26—Strasburg at Ashley. . 2—Ashley at Napoleon. . 8—Wishek at Ashley. Feb. 16—Kulm at Ashley. Ashley has several open dates and teams desiring to play are urged to communicate with Quigg. ay SOE elgie jonight. Por Montana: Unsettled tonight and Tuesday; colder northeast - His Sonlitt and extreme east ion 1a.) y. For Minnesota: Unsettled, snow or rain probable in west portion tonight and Tuesday and in east Tuesday; colder in east and north Portions tonight and in northwest portion Tuesday. GENERAL CONDITIONS A low pressure area is centered over Minnesota this morning (Minne- Sole ne) hie 8B h pressure area ay ‘ove! coast (Roseburg 30.20). Les i- itation has occurred from real Bakes region northwestward to Brit ish Columbia and from Utah ne: Pp. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.7 ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Bismarck station barometer, 27.94- Reduced to sea level, 29.75. PRECIPITATION k station: Normal, this month to date . 05, Total, January Ist to date .... 10.43 Normal, January ist to date .. 15.82 | Accumulated deliciency to date 5.39 | NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 1 Low. PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to diseane Giagnosis, 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 conforming ¢o instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. _ gree the sugar, tends to retain more water, more fluid in the body. US. TAX STRUCTURE) rel uve oa Js Harvard university investigators who studied the question at Boulder Dam, concluded that it is of great import- ‘ance that one exposed to such heat consume an abundance of table salt with meals or otherwise, in order to Testore the chlorides lost in sweat. Dr. Dill himself lost 20 pounds weight in seven hours’ exercise covering a 20 mile walk in a shade temperature of 104 degrees F. In the course of this experiment he drank 13 pounds of water, thus netting a loss of Pounds weight. tempt to reduce by means of sweat baths of various kinds may sweat several pounds of water in the agony of the “treatment,” nearer to regaining the weight so lost, by the intake of fluid in the next 24 hours, than Dr, Dill did. too bad, but if you want the weight to stay off you have to work it off yourself. Not even the most positive masseuse can take your exercise for you. Perhaps this explains why the very Dumbest Doras turn sadly from the magic bath to the latest trick gadget for dissolving, melting, shak- ing of conjuring it off. stomach avoid? Is it true that a per- son with excessive acidity is likely to have @ stomach ulcer in time? W. de J.) stomach is more likely to get gastric or duodenal ulcer. Avoid highly sea- Soned sauces, catsup, mustard, vine- gar, tomatoes, oranges, grapefruit, cheese, nuts, tea, coffee, beer, pastries velope and 10 cents in coin for book- let “Guide to Right Eating.” saccharin tablets instead of sugar in tea and coffee. chemical Which imparts a sweetish taste to food and is therefore used as NAVY 1S URGED BY SECRETARY SWANSON Naval Chief Recommends U. S. Swanson Monday sought conversa- tions with President Roosevelt in fur- therance of pleas contained in his annual report for an American navy second to none and an abandonment by the United States of its “lead in disarmament.” action from abroad to his frank sug- gestions. Reports from London indi- cated little stir over his statement, While from Tokyo came word that Japan is dissatisfied with its small end of the 5-5-3 ration. ties report to the president, Swanson remarked this country’s disarmament moves since the world war had set. an example for the rest of the world, but had impaired America’s relative naval strength. we can no longer afford to lead in isarmam “Other powers have not followed our « example. . . - | ton does not serve the cause of peace. armament fortifies diplomacy and is, an important element in preserving! Peace and justice, whereas undue} weakness breeding violation of one’s rights.” strength, the secretary urged adoption ne lof a progressive building program, providing construction of a specified number of vessels each year and allow inches: | for replacement of over-age ships. i | Swanson said by the end of the! on Time-Worn Job of Seek- ing New Revenues Dr. D. P. Dill, heading @ group of Washington, Dec. 4.—(#}—The big job of revising the tax structure to increase federal income by $400,000,000 house ways afid means committee. ‘This congressional unit, which orig- inates all revenue measures, had be- lore it recommendations of a sub- committee which has conducted an exhaustive study of methods by which the income tax may be administered to bring in extra revenue without in- creasing rates. It will consider, also, seven Dumb dames or damsels who at- PST nen foint hearings Inter with the senate finance committee. As the full house committee began its study of the sub-committee re- Commendations, it was informed by Acting Secretary Morgenthau of the treasury, that the treasury would not Nave its proposals ready until about December 15. Alcohol Group Busy Meanwhile, the president's interde- Partmental alcohol committee is pre- paring recommendations for increases in levies on liquor. The present tax {s $1.10 @ gallon. With the adminis- tration expecting to receive about $500,000,000 in the first full year after repeal and the treasury estimating consumption for that period will be 105,000,000 gallons, the levy would have to be greatly increased to ob- tain that amount. Indications are that it will be doubled to $2.20 a gallon. The tariff on imported liquors amounts to $5 a gallon and about 14,000,000 gallons are expected to be brought in. Besides planning to make ‘ions and individuals deduct their Josses from income in the years they are sustained, the committee expects to strengthen the capital gains and loss provisions of the law. Taxes imposed in the national re- covery act, estimated to return $212,- 000,000 to retire the $3,300,000,000 Fublic works loan fund, will be re- Pealed along with prohibition repeal. Taxes and federal needs slso held the treasury’s attention Monday with President Roosevelt re- turning to the White House apparent- ly unperturbed by public controversy ever his monetary policy. New Ready Ready for the chief executive after his train arrived just before noon were new figures on domestic and interna- tional economic conditions, portrayed from the viewpoint of the govern- ment's gold purchases. Lacking, how- ever, were official indications of any shift in the gold plan. Just ahead was the problem of bor- Towing more than $700,000,000 to meet, ‘December 15 maturities and the com- Gletion of recommendations on taxa- jton for submission to congressional 2ommittees, Acting Secretary Morgenthau was due at his desk after a Thanksgiving holiday. An early conference with Roosevelt on taxes, financing and next steps in R. F. C. gold buying was scheduled. As the president came back to the White House from a two weeks vaca- -ion at Warm Springs, Georgia, there was no indication of an immediate new move in his program for a man- aged currency. On Wednesday he speaks before the federal council of churches, but there were signs that he would steer clear of money in that address, COLD WAVE HITS EUROPE Paris, Dec. 4.—(P)—Several deaths Tt is just QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS What to Eat What foods should one with acid Answer—Probably one with acid + « . Send stamped addressed en- Saccharin as Sugar Substitute Please tell me the benefit of using (M. T.) Answer—Saccharin is a synthetic Sugar substitute. Used sparingly it harmless, but there is little or no (Copyright 1933, John F., Dille Co.) Abandon Its Lead in Dis- armament Parade ‘Washington, Dec. ¥.—()—Secretary The navy secretary also studied re- Submitting his annual naval activi- cold wave swept all Europe. Lakes in Paris froze for the first time this year, “The time has come, however, when lent by example,” he said. Our weakened posi- | Weakness Invites Attack “It jeopordizes it, because balanced s HORIZONTAL 2, 5-Author of the most y famous World War poem. 11 Part of the invites aggressive, war- To maintain a navy at full treaty palate. 13 Resembling salt. 14 Fourth note. 15 To burst. 16 He was 2 native of —. 17-To, sin. 18 Driving a 19 Product gath- ae ile oneteny, ered . 20 Variant of “a.” 33 Sleigh, q 34 lates, 21 Sufix forming 3¢ Deprec 5 40 What flower 23 Lines. wad war - pm 41 To make lace. 3 ve OF As Like. ; 29 Minor -note, nouns. 22 Public : immediately Ways and Means Body oa ae san Conlec, chairman annually was tackled Monday by thelthe Whi experiment te socialism. shouldered the burden and made were reported in France Monday as‘ajof i Te- plies that have become classics in ‘Washington. Once when he was in a row with ‘Senator Caraway, Democrat, of Ar- fect agreement.” After this had sunk in, he added: “Each of us believes that nothing ieee Gained by talking to the to prices of in years. The reporters believed the board had lost ‘millions of dollars and would lose mil- ‘When he resigned, he reaffirmed his faith in the farm board. He said it would be in existence long after “you and I are gone.” ‘While in Washington, Legge avoid- ed social life. He worked early and late, but wanted nothing to do with dinners and receptions, The farm board was entertained one night at the White House. When it was 9:45, the chairman-announced he was tired and sleepy and was going home. A fellow member exclaimed: “But that isn’t etiquette. You must. bind until the president says ‘good- night’.” am tired and sleepy. oo could be put into fect When the United States went the World War, Bernard M. chairman of the War Industry Board, needed someone to head the Allied “There's. your man,” said an as- sistant. “He knows Europe, he knows human nature, is a shrewd trader and straight as a die. He is an unbeatable fighter and has a rare combination of talent for leadership and gentie- ness.” fensive that ended the 13 Skeins of yarn. 14¢He died in —— in 1918, 16 Bottle stoppers. 4 19 Seraglio. 23 Walked. 23 Allotted. 24 Monsters. 26 Male fowls. 28 Small bodies of land. 47,48 His most 79 Thbse that Fete a5 Ons who sips. VERTICAL 3476 éreach. 1 He was a well- 35 Thing. Keown —. 36 Like. e i 5 z 3 Gg kanses, he astonished newspaper men | the liquor taxes to follow repeal, in| by saying: “Benator Caraway and I are in per- Legse lates of an Legge 4 2 8 SYNOPSIS: Curt Tenn: turne to Edmonton after aw — Chapter Six OATE FoR CURT BAtown flust ub, took trips up the coast,” Curt noticed the fush and the hes itation, He wondered what Bald. win’s reluetance to talk about meant. Was he holding something back? “Do you kaow her well enough to get me a date for this evening?” “Ob, let ber alone, Tennyson. covered that lead. She doesn’t know anything important, That Russian was too cagey to tell her anything be bimeelt. He didn’t tell any. “T'm not going to grill ber. I just want a talk.” “She won't date with a stranger.” “Try her, won't you? By the way, better use a fake will do, Curt Rolston. And I'm a fiyer Minerals.” with the Consolidated Baldwin was willing facing a lonesome i gE PT & i E ff f i i a 32 = fF Bes real i [ a ® : FORBIDDEN VALLEY by Wittiom Byron Mower re. winter Of wots” hungen fi ready to take fos that ell pay slightly. “Miss Mathieson and Karakhaa were! together @ deal here in town, and— enough to co- Operate, for he felt conddent that ~ curt thought she was merely a client. Rothing would come of it. Picking up the phone he called 2 number “and got Miss Mathieson. “Helen? Arn Baldwin speaking. How are you?... Glad to hear that. 1 eay, Helen, are you free this eve- ning? Why I ask, I've a friend here in town, Curt Ralston, an aviator with @ prospecting company. He's evening, and i i 1 a Hi g 223 Prelate Apologizes Di to demand, with vigorous! For Uncharitable Act TASK OF REVISING|"Fatai to One-Time |sssncurs eer mere il, De. Aen ane etary program and in receipt of a tele- gram of regrets from one of his critics the Rey. Fr. Charles E. Coughlin, pas- tor of the Shrine of the Little Flow- er, Monday awaited similar messages which he predicted would be forth- coming from Alfred E. Smith and John J. Raskob. Shortly before he started a speech Sunday, Fr. Coughlin received a tele- gram from the Rt. Rev. Msgr. John L. Belford, of Brooklyn, expressing the latter's regret for an “uncharit- Z| able interview” he gave following Fr. Coughlin’s address at a New York mass meeting last Monday night. ihietey ater ing, ye Ld next and Al jer ,” Fr. Coughlin = mented. bia Beth Mr. Raskob and Mr. Smith have taken issue with some of Fr. ee, Looe ae e interview last week Msgr Belford referred to Fr, Coughlin as “an infernal nuisance” and “a public enemy.” — A total of 1,292 buck deer were kill- t./ed in Mason county, Tt the 1932 ' by, Texas, during and honeyeuckles, made him think ‘of the many evenings he had spent there with Rosalie during the sum- mer vacation or when she was home from girls’ school; but his thoughts of her now were not very kindly, He resented her attitude last night in Edmonton when he told her he had turned down the Consoli- dated offer. She had quarreled with him, then eulked and kept away from him, and spoiled the whole eve- Bing. She could be kittenish and companionable when she wanted to, but her pleasantness did not seem to go very deep. He suspected, too, that her en- gagement rested pretty lightly with her. For all her childish irresponal- bility in most ways, she was heady enough on some points, and one of them was the matter of her mar- vlage. He believed that their engage ment was a kind of anchor to wind- ward with her; that besides himeelf she was keeping a whole string of possible husbands, much as prospec- tors liked to keep a large number of - claims—in the hope that some par ticular one of them might come through big. 1 Wek changing clothes, he taxied back to Kirk Street for his strange date withthe Mathieson Tre girl. In spite of what Baldwin had sald be expected to find her worldly-wise creature of the gold. digger type. She thust be a pretty shrewd thing, to run in Igor Karakhan's company; and he would have to handle her carefully. She might know nothing worth while, and then she might give him some priceless little clue, He walked into the reception room of the beauty parlor. On a lounge, a girl sat reading a maga. sine, ® dark-haired, dark-eyed gir? in & pretty black-and-white sille frock. Curt thought she was merely some client of the shop. She laid the magazine aside and rose up. “Are you—you're Mr. Ral- aton, aren't you?” she asked, “Yes. Is Miss Mathieson ar—r" He bit the question off short, For suddenly noticed that the core she was wearing was his, and 8s she confronted him under the Ught be her as of the pi on Baldwin's ge that a girl like her could ever bav: in love with the Cossack, suggested They taxied to the park, rented s canoe and drifted out Upon the la. (Copyrioht, 1988, Wwittiam B. Mowery) sas

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