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can Legion, by far the largest and most powerful group of its kind, has taken no stand on the matter. In- stead, it is pushing a four-point pro- gram designed to care for the sick and disabled and the widows and or- phans. To a large extent, therefore, the movement originated with and has been agitated by politicians who seek the votes of veterans and their fami- lies. They want to convince this ele- ment in the population of their earn- est stewardship. What better way than to make a donation from the ; The Bismarck Tribune THE STATES OLDEST NBWSPAPER. | marek) Daily by mail, per year outside of Bismarck) ........ 6.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ....0.s0ee00+ 6.00; Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three id per year + 150 ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per YOAT vercrecccccececscrcssssees 200 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation —$ Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively to the use for republication | all news dispatches credited to it) not otherwise credited in this per and also the local news of origin published herein. Tights of republication of all other jtter herein are also reserved. ‘An Intelligent Move @iforts to maintain the proper at- among our juvenile visitors for the state basketball tourna- its ‘deserve the help and support every right-minded citizen. The of this annual athletic event, Well as the good name of Bismarck the reputation of many young may be at stake as the effort forward to prevent drinking and [bther abuses among these young peo- Xt ts probable that @ large number € persons were shocked to learn that is and has been such @ prob- but school officials long have familiar with it. In fact, they]Doumergue government remains in 20) public till? Tragedy of Work One of the most pathetic spectacles human life affords is that of the man who has worked hard all his life and has reached the time when he is able to retire—and then discov- ers that his life will be perfectly flat and empty if he leaves his job. Last spring a 72-year-old federal judge in Seattle informed the presi- dent that he wished to be put on the retirement list, but asked that he be given the privilege of continuing to preside over admiralty cases—a field in which he has made a considerable} reputation. The other day he explained why he wanted to keep on working. “I never have learned to pls said. “If I should quit work now, my friends would have to hire somebody within 90 days to watch me.” ‘The period that begins with retire- ment should be one of the happiest and most fruitful in a man’s whole life. It is tragic to find men who look upon it with dread—because they never learned how to play! Surprise! Cables from Paris bring the sur- prising news that the French actual- ly may resume payments on their war debt to the United States. ‘The next installment is due June 15, and it is said that if the present | PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE jdeal with i% more or less regularly |Power the interest on the debt, at/ By William Brady,. M. D. fn their everyday lives, for youth to-| least, will be paid. The total due on Bey is venturesome and inquiring | June 15 is slightly more than $55,000,- Just as it has always been in the 000, of which $19,000,000 is interest. (past. In every school there are boys| All this, to the ordinary American, and girls wise beyond their years and| Probably will come -under the head- these, very frequently, are sources of |ing of news which is too good to be Wifficulty. Any schoolman who has/true. Most Americans have made up tmade a success in’his job has Iearned| their minds that the French war debt to deal with such problems, Let any| Was ® thing which might as well be fwho are incredulous sit down some /|kissed goodby forever, so far as any {ime and have a heart-to-heart talk|Chance of collecting any of it is con- {with the school superintendent in any | cerned. farge city. He will learn something. | To read that some of it actually 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 FROM THE TIPS OF YOUR FINGERS ‘The bell rang just as we were dem- oustrating the circulation in the cap- iliaries the other day. By pressing gently on a finger nail you can see the wavering Yine between the flush and the blanching, provided your in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Speeds up circulation and carries the jblood around the complete circuit in — time. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Blackheads, Pimples and Bamps I am 19 and for some time have ‘Why this should be so is difficult|may be paid is a surprise—and an/nails are not decorated in the late|suffered from disgusting _ pimples, to answer. The real solution lies 20|texpectedly pleasant one—even @eep in the history’ of the human|though the payment may be only one race that no one can be quite sure/Of those “token-payments,” a drop about it, But every age and every|in the bucket, so to speak. generation hag produced its black}. == A ae ee ee eel! Editorial Comment ber of boys—and girls—who will go|| Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. appalling fashion. Capillaries are not blood vessels, but merely spaces between the cells, through which the blood seeps as water seeps through sand. No one smallest artery, which physiologists: call arteriole. ‘The blood that has seeped through the capillary spaces—it is here that the interchange of oxygen and car- has ever a blood vessel finer than the 'physiological blackheads and bumps on my face. I suppose it is what you call acne. (Miss P. L. A.) Answer—Yes, it is more or less or normal in youth. Bend @ stamped envelope your Radress and ask for mi on acne, Wine ra Is there enough nourishment con- the limit if given the opportunity, ‘and those who are tempted to berate the present generation had better think before speaking. I may be that the manifestations are different, but every generation has faced the same issue, and probably with the They are published without regard to whether they agrea or disagroe with The Tribune's policies. Prices and Profits (Chicago Tribune) ‘In February of this year there was @ 12 per cent increase in travel on bon dioxide occurs, oxygen carried|tained in wine to warrant including to the tissues from the lungs, carbon/it in the dietary of a family with a dioxide picked up from the tissues to|limited income? (Mrs. L. B.) be taken back to the lungs. Also} Hitherto you have always been lu- other substances are exchanged—nu-|cid in answering tritive material given to the cells,|medicinal or 5 waste material picked up to be car- same ineptitude and lack of confi-|the street cars in Chicago. The fare ence, is 7 cents. In the same month, the ‘The school and public officials, and sleraies. ee ee 10 cents) cyaite no gain an ie bus company (fare itizens who have interested |19 cents) showed a decline of more emseives in the matter are to bel than 3.7 per cent. Pongratulated for the earnestness and} Here is another illustration of the with which they have faced|fact, familiar to most business men, difficult situation. It was either|that a higher price does not always fo ignore what schoolmen de- mean a greater profit. They know that in most businesses the largest gross plared was » bad condition or attempt! income as well as the largest net in- {he correct it, They have chosen the/come are achieved when prices are fatter course and every right-minded paipaed ee peer large sales at a small profit on eacl om. fan and woman, particularly every ‘The government’s indiscriminate ether and mothes, will wish them price-raising policies. suggest pretty As to the proprietors of places eeien tals elementary relavonsiip tf is sold, one warning should | they ever knew it. The price-raising their] fixation is the more remarkable when it is viewed in connection with the the! government’s frantic efforts to in- bev-| crease employment. It should be ob- to a| vious that higher prices mean restrict- ed sales and must lead, in turn, to re- stricted employment not only in the Particular industry concerned but in all the other industries to which it looks for supplies and services. If, for example, the government forces retailers to raise the price of shoes, fewer shoes will be sold than might otherwise be disposed of. In turn, there will be less employment in it lolat ry Z the sale ample cause for drastic ac- FEE Boe I ‘The vast majority of our young vis- ftors are “on their own” and free from Hormal restraints while here. A little Cooperation by the public will help them to find themselves and discour- ‘age any attempts to “run wild” just because the normal bars have been let down. . Sign of Election Year ¥f he had no other means of know- if the existing supply of goods is to move into consumption. Any inter- ference with this elementary relation- ship is almost certain to produce un-~ and cotton, and more recently in milk, demonstrate the dangers. The British trol tells the same story. The Greek government's venture in currents is another example. The manipulation of copper prices before the depression is still another. Economic history is strongly that the bureaucrats have for- | Hm! government's venture in rubber con- |p ried to the excretory organs. From the capillary spaces, in all tissues of the body, the blood is collected in the very. smallest veins, called venules, and these join again to form larger veins, and finally the great vein, called vena cava carries the blood to the right auricle of the heart. Through an oversight, as it seems a’ first, no valves were installed be- tween the vena cava and the right auricle-full of blood from backing into auricle-ful of blood from backing into the vena cava hag pain ered Nothing apparent. But act is no such fault. The breathing tert ais 8 E enoug! they hold nearly a Probably that pint of into the venous cistern Ha Hf 4 i Six ounces pumped out by every heart beat. How does it all figure out? Bg Ha into the great artery once 23 seconds flat, unless hurry. Any brisk exercise drinks half milk or a bottle (say 12 Deer, a slther yields 116 coucienene v oxidized ani MB. HE) health or remedial value goes. If half 2 pint of milk is more nourishing than a Pint of beer—as any competent au- thority must admit—is it necessary to dwell on the unwisdom of buying the alcoholic beverage? (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Frankly, I have grave fears that we (the Republican party) cannot elect’ ‘any new senators. On the other hand, we ought to be able to elect 7% new representatives—Former Sen- ator James E. Watson of Indiana. * * * ‘The world has reached @ critical point of extreme delicacy in the mat- ter of disarmament.—Sir Philip Sas- soon, British for avia- se * I would not consider selling the Giants unless s0 much money were offered that no sensible man could refuse—Charles A. Stoneham, presi- dent of New York Giants. [__‘Old Lady 31’ HORIZONTAL 1,6 Who is the author in the picture? 12 To secure a ve 13 City of Egypt. R 14Second note 18 Special taste. 17To pant with ¥ te Ha —~ See SS es ils at 44 Myself. 45 You and I. coer a a} Ne ial S\ea eee a\eane the government on a subsistence. ba- siz, to be reabsorbed into private em- Ployment in proportion as industry proved That balances no budgets. It re- quires the type of taxes business men hate. ‘The lack of eri or tee) Program on lustry’s marked by an utter absence of labor Jeadershij Since the government, as if by default, of- the ent, as i! lefault, of- fers the only semblance Magee , crisscross, stumble, falter, and get all balled up “ithe NRA itaslt—that “partnership it of government, industry, and labor”— is pretty well bogged as it now stands, and the greatest wonder is that Gen- eral Johnson, floundering byrinth of economic complexities, hone gone stark, raving mad long nce. eek But the thing you realized as watched and talked with the code au- tori c ine covery than is involved in the sug- gestion that we'll somehow “muddle . One example of that: constant the| Ohio. She is considered employed before it was ready to do 50. ‘ sk k The millions ahould be employed by system g0- by the we're through here—if it lasts ” ee * SUPREME COURT BOUND Judge Florence E. Allen of is headed straight toward a seat on the United States supreme court, if you can believe all the gossip that has followed her elevation to the federal time that) You! circuit court of appeals. Anyway, Roosevelt is understood to ‘be open-minded about it. He hasn't ‘any more objection to appointing a woman to the high bench than he had to naming Frances Perkins to his cabinet. te to have to fil three below the supreme court, has served 12 years on the supreme court of & liberal, is 50 years old, ho ‘mh led. NOT 80 APPETIZING Milk at three cents a quart is prom- ised by the department of agriculture for those who would appreciate the Price. Dried skimmed milk, mixed if Additional Churches FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, si }CIE) 723 Fourth Street Sunday Bade) Y . a Th ol at 9: Wednceday evening testimontat 8 4 areas toot nt tate Hoskins Block, aally ‘trom 12 to 56 Dp ms ‘Sunda 3 tob p.m * ‘Au’ are welcome to attend tite church ‘services and to make use of the reading room, GOSPEL TABERNACLE Corner Rosser and Eleventh ‘Herman G. Johnson, Pastor Sunday School, Mra ‘Gh Mandigo, tenden| “Good Bible class for adulte, Classes ty 5 for ornite worship 11 8, m. Special message for Christians. Radio service from station KGCU, landan 3 p. m. Evangelistic service 7: A special evangel message. Music by the Tabernacle orchestra, and special singing. A service you should not mise. jay, preaching service and oe on the Holy Spirit. day evening, announced on ? Sunday. ‘Thursday, Tarrying service 8p. mi.” For all who desire a deeper exper- fence with God. A brief message, and time to pray. 5 ae Christ's ambassadors serv- ice 8 p. m. ‘The young people take full charge of this service of song, testimonies and preaching. ‘You are cheerfully invited~to the Tabernacle services. You will find ‘them a blessing to The music beat against them|eluded him. softly, vehemently, yearningly,| fsbo jira Aloud he said: “I’ve got to have|correctly, mber they were? Was your mouth as » “Not tonight, Drew.” sweet?” “Tomorrow. If I tell you thi address—can you remember it?’ “Could I ever forget it?” i a ZF. a Bt Ey i ml ere rik i [ta i : i i E | g FEE HE: EE bee. i if i i g2 | ni fee if i Fr F i? “a Til id i af iy if | F Fy i fi iby He SFE t gf F E E | i i if anit ie it | ad E | Eg E i nt i i i é i H i? 8 r I ee if aight Ht F tie i ? "= | : i Har i Hel! 1G il E ef i i ee 2 g g E i i TF # alr FzE ad He know, darling, that you can't be sweetly indifferent to me? You | love me, Stanley, nothing else mat. ‘” i i z 8 F éF Hd & i ge it a E a F E § iF Hie g i z } E I ul i i : i I ji Er nett! f 5ger uf i AR TE i Fe fi lee [ ilftte r : = f roy if i uf | fe. I i i ¢ i t :