The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 12, 1933, Page 5

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The Bismarck Tribune Hudegendent Newspaper an THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER. (Established 1878) Bismarck Trib- 00008720 Bis- per year (in state scerccsscess OO outside of North in state, per year 1.00 ‘state, three in outside of North ‘The tumult and the shouting about both the NRA and the AAA have died (down in recent weeks because of the! Mecessity of getting these two great Governmental experiments to func-jof the Tllinols state's al is something else again. Any con- gressman who has the nerve to jequawk about this second point auto- matically will convict himself of hav- ing @ peanut-sised conception of his own duties and responsibilities. If Dr. Morgan has turned down the Geserving-Democrat boys, he deserves the thanks of the nation. Al Smith Means It Say one thing for Al Smith, wheth- er you agree with him or not; when he expresses himpelf on a public issue, he uses language which the most casual reader cannot fail to understand, exactly and completely. ‘When he looks, for instance, at the administration's monetary policy and expresses the hope that the Democra- tic party will not always “be the party of greenbackers, paper money printers, free ailverites, currency Managers, rubber stamp manufac- he adds, “I am for gold a8 against baloney dollars,” im a sentence what some may be open to argument. But you have no trouble figuring out just what his views are. Dying Gang Rule It % heartening to read the report WELL, T DON'T SEE WHY NOT? LINDBERGH'S WIFE WENT WITH IM PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. ‘Signed to personal health and hygiene, not to diseare letters pertaining diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed ent in ink. No reply Address is enclosed. Dr. William WHEN YOUR SUGAR RUNS LOW industry|Langer’s embargoes remind him of|to time the peculiar effects of = tem- if gf i i Et i i 2F s Z Ht t § i i Bef F | i 5 E 3 3 i i vif i i| H nl & f Hil lle H i ie be E Ha ef [ z il 3 g B E sf | i 3] E itt ef z at Eats z i F i E ile iH it HH i Tak it 1 i j af i 8 y Re L 5 8 [ sek pe E ef Es fil and the drinkers had the liquor. the governor those who and stuff go right Control by Custom (New York World-Telegram) states are at work on various hy Fe control of legal liquor to Place of prohibition. This and important. something stronger, effective than tl ws that be tom. | 4 he Jay can be de- : cust accomplished by lon_action of Ohio, Utah, let us build which will wisely gov- juor, customs which grew under are out of date. So are Preceded prohibition. Al- Jearn from our experience reeled we must have new cus- FTTH {Pee eal Pa wake | porary deficiency of sugar in the blood. Normally there is certain of sugar, glucose, con- Present in the blood—from ten to fifteen hundredths of one per cent. As a man weighing 150 pounds has 7% pounds of blood in his body, this would fix the average blood sugar content at approximately a heaping teaspoonful. (I do not guarantee the accuracy of my arithmetic—figure it for yourself). ‘This spoonful of sugar every nor- mal person has always available is of vital importance. All fuel food as- similated by the body is converted into glucose for storage in the liver, in ‘muscles and in the blood. It is con- stantly being burned to provide the energy and heat required to carry on. the body functions, and it 1s heavily drawn on and more rapidly consum- ed whenever any strenuous muscular effort is made, for sugar is the fuel which is best adapted for the human machine. Other foods can be utilized if necessary, just as low grade gaso- line or kerosene or oil may be used by an automobile. But not only scien- tific observation but also the exper- the|ience of athletes teaches that some form of sugar is the emergency ration par excellence whenever physical ex- haustion is to be prevented or lieved, as in @ Marathon race or long swimming contest or a football game or any other gruelling physical strain. ‘When physical exhaustion, collapse, Perhaps loss of consciousness, im- imum. Certain individuals are subject to spells of inexplicable weakness, gone- the | ness, confusion, stupidness if not ac- tual stupor or semi-unconsciousness, strange fits of irascability or unrea- sonable behavior quite unlike their Buse “i bell | I [ H s e Ss i i Wf rae & H ae E af "Ee = ? g 35 [ i i ay “gf i | i i é he Ht F i i si 58 =EEaE FEE ao iy i | 5 i t 3 i 1 i Fy Ff E i Hi I é 3 Sz | g t i Le} Ly tle i Hey E : i Pea : | A i i 3 f Ey ge E 4 ‘ i if i : fe E E a [ E I q t a 8 | 5 - é ui a! Letters should be brief and written elope can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Brady, in care of this newspaper. not taste as good as some worthless nostrum, but I assure you no nos- trum is better for simple anemia, Come Back, Old Timer T am close to 50—nevet mind which side—and for the past year or so I have been unpleasantly conscious of @ slowing down or at least a sense that I’m not the girl I was when my husband used to assureme .. . (Mrs. F. K.) Answer—Yes, yes, I know the ol line. Well, if your clutch has slipping only a year you can still show him. Send a dime and a stamped en- velope bearing your address, for “The pends in such circumstances, a chem-| ) Regeneration ~ Regimen.’ (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) The NewDeal —-in— Washington _||stoeina'eis ven” “Model Code” Is Big Argument in NRA. . . “Rubber Dollar” Warren Can't Be Wrong Over Pork at AAA Hearing .... Eastern Shore Talk About Seces- By RODNEY DUTCHER) (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Dec. 12.—The big in- in NRA—oconcealed by the — con- to jndustry and labor, and involves the immediate future of federal par- ticipation in industrial planning. “Model codes” have been in the for weeks. A secret “committee of 20” finally drew one up for Administrator which comprised s10n and Commerce Department. Higher-ups ditched it. They sub- ited, under Johnson's merger of the nine “shore” coun! with Delaware. ! (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) * boys and girls are going lege whom nature intended to working with pick and shovel—Dr. Charles W. Burr of the University of Pennsylvania. Eastern mayos says a woman who takes a drink with a man at a bar is no lady. Neither is the man, drinking at the bar beside a woman who can't rink, a gentleman. ee KE ‘We won't believe repeal is here until we hear of someone start- inga pants) col Southwest winds across Texas, chief source of sandstorms, have been blowing that way for 50,000,000 years, says a scientist. And yet those winds haven't blown the state any good. xe * Now if Huey Long comes out against the president's policies, Roosevelt's success with the peo- Ple will be assured. © * % # Toledo, O., glass plant is way bee hind in orders for stemware. Show- ing the drinkers of America want theirs in glasses, even though they may be in their cups, 14 GET RHAME LETTERS Rhame, N D., Dec. 12—(?)—Four- teen football players on the Rheme high school squad this year received jetters, Ralph D. Criger, coach, said. They are Arnold, Russell, and Gerald Anderson, Weyman Hanson, Russell Milton, Edgar Berg, backs; James Bradley, Chester Long, Albin Erick- son, Ted Blake, Bob Zeller, Harold Fish, Arnold Rolfness and Harold Svendy, Tmemen. There are about two and a half miles of corridors in the famous Law Courts in London, 4 ‘The 1400 movie extras in Hollywood a an average salary of $8.22 a weel ! 1745-Jchnday, fi fre ue Supreme War Waged | tne Political Winner | ‘HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 2-Who is the . * newly elected civic leader in the picture? 9Card game. 10 Queer. 41 Booty. 12 Native metal. 14 Organ of hearing. 16 He was award ed the —— —— for brav- ery. 17 He was an —— in the World War 24 Destiny. ‘26 To require, _ 28 Woven string. 2 t merly interpre: 37 Dating device. terat——. 38 Uncloses. 2 Floating ice. 41 Afresh. 3Opposite of 43 Neat. 50To be in debt. cold. 45 Female sheep. 51 Bright brown 4 Behold, 47 Writing fluid. tincture, 5To accomplish. 49 Golf teacher. §3 Arid. 6 Pish. 50 Upon. $50n Nov. 7, he ¥ Totals. 51 Toward. ‘was elected 8He wasaU 8. 53 Type measure —————, ——, 54 Year. Z | 39 Water barrier. 40 Northeast. 41 Toward sea. Upward Trend Noted By Labor Chieftain Dec.. Watermelons are native to southern and tropical Africa. FANNY SAYS BG. U. 8. PAT. OFF. ’t always a long trip that far away look in a girl's FORBIDDEN VALLEY by Sonya’s faint accent, and a tle offended when she lashes out at him for rejoicing in the downfall Of the Romanoffe, Chapter 18 THE THREAT LITTLE after dark, when Curt and Paul were sitting on a chop- Ping block talking over their plans for that night, old John Paxton came walking into the glow of their campfire. “Have a seat, John,” Curt in- Vited, standing up and offering his own place on the block. He wanted a talk with Paxton, for the guileless old fellow was a mine of information. He was famil- iar with everybod; at Rugsian Lake, knew every river and range be tween there and the Yukon. The Klosohees kept all other whites out of the Lilluars, but kindly old John ran his fur path unmolested. His tent was pitched close to the canoe pier, and his eight sleck huskies were chained along the landwash there, each staked sep- did you got come butt in? Dat not; your wooman: “Well no, wasn't yours either, friend,” Curt pointed out. He added patiently: “Now let me show, you something. Suppose my part- ner and I hadn't come over there, The girl would have repérted you to the Yellowstripes. Soon or late they'd have got you. This country isn't big enough to hold you or any- body else that they really go after. If you look at this right, we saved you from—well, the penalty for what you tried is—hanging.” The ugly| word made the man Jerk. In the dark Curt could feel the man glaring lat him with an animal- ish hatred. He kept an eye on the fellow and joosened the automatic in his pocket. From experience with that gort, he knew he had made a vicigus enemy. “Damn fogls w'at come nose into not-deir-beezness,” the Indian growled, “dey sometam mebbe git catched onder a pile of rocks back in de woods|somew’ere.” Curt’s patience. snapped. He stopped paddling, tapped on the gunwale. “See here, you, If you try any riflé talk with my partner or me, you'd better make your first shot good! Hug your grudge if you want to, but if I/catch you as much as Curt played a Volga folksong. arately, each with its cool burrow dug into the turf. Instead of let- ting his dogs starve through the summer as others did, he kept a gill net anchored near the islets and caught fish for his team every day. “Don’t git up for me,” he bade Curt. “I jist stepped over to say they's goin’ to be a leetle potiateh at my camp in about twenty minits, Ralph an’ Sonya an’ Father Lespér- ance an’ others’ll be there, an’ I fig- gered you b'ys might like to j'in us, bein’ sorta strangers here.” Curt accepted eagerly. That camp- fire, where he would meet people and learn things, was an opportu: nity made to order. And he would get to see*Sonya Nichols again, a last time probably, since she was leaving the next day. Old John went back to his camp. ‘While Paul busie' himself making @ spruce-tip mattress for their sleep- ing pokes, Curt leaned against the cache sapling and looked out upon the dark lake, not thinking sbout his hunt for Igor Karakban but about Sonya Nichols’ flashing eyes and the imperious toss of her head as she read him the riot act. “Our marooned friend over on the island stands to get 8 soaking to night,” Paul broke into bis thoughts, as @ distant mutter of thunder Tolled out of the western mountains, “He deserves worse, that ape, You should have let me shoot him.” Curt straightened up. He had for. gotten all about the man. “I sup pose you're right, Paul. But still, he was so drunk be wasn't alto- gether responsible. { didn't think about this storm coming on. I ought to go and bring him back.” LIPPING his flash and automatic into his pocket, Be stepped down to the latdwash, launched the cance and headed across for the islands. ‘The "breed seemed to have been waiting for him to say something, for he blazed out: “Wat beesness Ipoking cross-eyed at that girl again, you'll be the one to get cached under a pile of rocks, and I don’t mean maybe.” i They skirled on ashore. With a low sinister oath by way of good- bye the ‘breed stalked off into the dark, [RT went up to the tent, where Paul was tuning his guitar. Taking a can of cigarettes and a box of chocolate squures as their con- tribution, they stepped out the path to old John’s “git-togither.” The company had already gath- ered, Curt pulled a log close to the pack- ing box for himself and Paul, and sat down, trying to be as inconspic- uous as possible so that he could watch and listen. Somebody in that company might be Igor Karakhan’s contact man, A word, a glance, a stray little slip might give him a clue. He glanced now and then at Sonya, who sat near him, with the firelight shining in her clear eyes and the glow of it tangled in her hair. She had looked up and nodded when he and Pau! came, but she did not speak, and he believed that she had cast him into the outer dark- ness because of his.good word for the Leninists. © With no/|factual reason for think- ing so, Curt told bimself that Sonya Nichols had known stormy experi- ences in her life, experiences which had left their mark on her. They had given her maturity and strength of character, bat they had robbed ker of any| lightness of heart. The question of ber nationality still troubled him, and he deter- mined to settle it once and for all. Reaching |for Paul's guitar, he plucked a/ chord or two, and then started a Volga folksong, the ony Russian piece he knew. Heads be- gan swaying, moccasins tapping. Watching Sonya, Curt saw that the old melody had cuught her too, He met her smiled at her, nodded; and she began singing softly. As he Istened to| the strange words which came so naturally from her lps, Curt’s last doubt went glimmering. Russian, she was! (Copyright| 1983. William B. Mowery) ‘Thmorrow, Curt ¢ : t

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