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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1934 Published by The Bismarck Trib- une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8s second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher _ --___ ahoanan ens edepenaieeeres Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in marck) 12 ers. Dally by mail, outside of Bismarck) ........ Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .......scceseseseseeees 6 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three YEATES... cece seceseceeenescees .2) ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . on Weekly by mail year 8939 38208 82 88 S8_8_9_ Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation 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 spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. th The Search for Freedom "| A great shift in the popular idea Bi of freedom, which will ultimately eet have a very great effect on our po- 1 litical thought, has been taking place he in this country during the last few years, This shift has been moving us away from our traditional notions at a rapid pace. It is giving a new twist to the things we demand from our government, and it is steadily chang- ing our concept of the relation of the individual to the society of which he ds a part. Briefly, the shift can be explained by saying that we are beginning to demand economic freedom rather than political freedom. : Once we demanded freedom from the oppression of rulers—freedom to! talk, write, and worship as we pleased, abolition of inherited caste distinc- tions, formal recognition of the fact that, as far as rights are concerned, all men are created equal. Now we are beginning to demand freedom from economic disabilities; freedom from poverty, for instance, and from the fear of poverty. ‘We are beginning to insist that po- litical equality be balanced with eco- nomic security. Tt is this demand which is back of such pending bills in congress as the ‘Wagner-Lewis unemployment insur- ance law and the Connery 30-hour ‘week bill. Now the thing to notice is that never before, in all the world’s his- tory, could a demand for economic security have been made sensibly, In all former times it was inevit- able that insecurity be the lot of the average man, There simply int wasn’t enough of everything to go nal around. Somebody had to be left out. } Population, as Malthus pointed at ‘out, tended to increase faster than Tu the means of subsistence. Poverty 3 ‘was inescapable. = But today our troubles come be- ho cause there is too much of every- : thing. For the first time since this Ba old planet started spinning, every : man ean get a fair whack of things. tor Insecurity is no longer necessary. vit ‘the abolition of poverty is perfectly pa possible, at The ordinary man has come to M: —srealize this. He knows there is enough Wt of everything to go around and he wants his share; and—which is a a point worth remembering—he doesn’t ‘care very much how he gets it, Pa Therein lies a source of great po- to tential danger which threatens not eh nly our economic but our political ‘vi _ liberties. riy ‘When people seek new opportuni- M: ties in utter oblivion of their past F advances, they open their ears to the ¢, Wiles of demogoguery; place them- “+ selves in a position from which they we | nthy awake to the realization that not a only have they failed to gain any- thing new but have lost what they already had. The best idea is to maintain our political freedom and seek new eco- nomic opportunity under the guaran- tees which it provides. Gangster Brains Most newspaper readers, probably, ‘would like to know more about this Fred Goetz, the gangster who was taken for a ride the other night after Several years of activity as one of that he won't know what hit him. been indulging in a lot of loose talk, monger and discredited forever. Rand, Jr., Pay Up, First! nations which are wholly or partially in default on previous loans, A law embodying this policy is in process of being passed by congress; without waiting for its passage, Treasury Secretary Morgenthau has made it effective in advance by proc- lamation. It may be that all the arguments of the war debt cancellationists are sound. Perhaps our insistence that the debts be paid is delaying world recovery; perhaps we have no moral right to ask that they be repaid. Maybe so. But at least the country is quite within its rights in insisting that no good money is going to go after the bad. We loaned money and we didn't get it back; we can hardly be blamed for concluding that the defaulting bor- rowers are bad risks. Commercial Report Says Business Good New York, March 30.—()—Dun and Bradstreet’s says its reports from all sections of the coutnry this week stress “the persistent extension of consumer demand, despite unseasonal weather in many districts.” Volume has risen as high as 70 per cent over last year, 20 per cent over the same week in 1932 and is only slightly under the 1931 figures, the agency asserts. “Early estimates of Easter buying Ihave been exceeded and the increases recorded for some lines would appear exaggerated if consideration were not taken of the almost complete cessa- tion of merchandise at this time a year ago. “The spring upturn gives no indi- cation of reaching its peak until the latter part of May and may be ex- tended well into June, providing suf- ficient buoyancy to keep the mid- summer recession from easing to its usual seasonal position.” Postpone Argument In Gammons Appeal Oral arguments scheduled to be presented Friday before the North Da- kota supreme court in the appeal of John Gammons, former secretary of the state industrial commission, were Postponed to April 10. Illness of John Burke caused the postponement. Gammons was convicted in Burleigh county district court of embezzling state funds, and is at liberty pending outcome of his appeal. ANNOUNCES PAY BOOST New York, March 30.—(*)—Gerard tric company, announced Friday that, effective April 1, all full-time salaries of $2,600 or less and all hourly rates of pay will be increased 10 per cent. But, on the other hand, if none of this is true—if someone has just) creating a bogey-man out of nothing to scare us out of adopting a law or & set of laws which certain important gentlemen do not like—then the man who started all the talk needs to be shown up as an irresponsible rumor- The charges spread before the house commerce committee in the letter 00| from Dr. Wirt, read by James Henry must be investigated quickly and thoroughly. The public has a right to know the exact facts 50 |!n the matter. It is hard to see how anyone can quarrel with the new administration Policy by which American loans will not be advanced to foreign debtor Swope, president of the General Elec- | By William self-addressed envelope is enclosed. CIRCULAR GARTERS AND VABICOSE VEINS veins—varicose veins, Dr. Norman J. Kilbourne of Los Ang- eles, who has carried out careful ex- not upward (toward the heart), as we have always assumed, but rather hydrostatic pressure or the weight of the blood at least when the patient stands or sits with the legs dependent. By injecting into a vein a substance that is opaque to the X-ray and then watching the blood movement through the fluoroscope, Dr. Kilbourne deter- mined conclusively that the direction of flow is downward in the superficial veins below the level of the great valve in the saphenous vein just be- low the bend of the knee. X-ray pic- tures taken 20 and 80 seconds after injection of such opaque substance showed no movement of the blood upward but only downward. Therefore there is no upward blood flow to be impeded by round garters. Can the blood flow in the main or deep veins of the leg be obstructed or impeded by the wearing of such gar- ters? Of course the direction of this main blood flow in the leg veins is upward, toward the heart. Dr. Kil- bourne answers this question with an assured “no.” He determined this by applying a tourniquet very tight, much tighter than a patient would think of wearing a garter, and yet the opaque medium is carried away in the deep veins so rapidly that it is difficult to take the X-ray picture quickly enough after the injection to catch any of it on the plate. The deep veins, he says, are buried too well near the interosseous membrane under pads of thick calf and thigh muscle to be affected by the pressure of round garters. ‘Where there is a tendency to edema or swelling of the feet or legs, it may be better to avoid tight garters or other constriction around the leg, knee or ankle. But where there are swollen veins about the foot, Dr. Kil- bourne points out that the direction of flow in the veins there is upward. In normal persons, then, it seems there is no good reason to imagine the wearing of round garters causes varicose veins. In persons who have varicose veins, there is not only no sound objection, but perhaps some advantage in wearing round garters. In regard to the treatment of vari- ‘cose veins which distress the expec- tant mother, Dr. Kilbourne cites evi- dence in favor of injection treatment in the fourth to seventh months when THREE GUESSES ‘Wictwas he caier pugPOse: OF pepelpertrroda ee 4 E Diet ste, VARY s ete os OCEAN? . IAT CITY IS KNOWN AS THE- Ree engi fcr 13 Feared reverently. 16 Serrated tools, 18 Myself. w 5] 19 Street. 22She is a = by profession. 14To emulate. 23 Otalgia. is Zo: HE ae. 26 She is head ot 17 Was indebted. 1 18 Encounters. samecien emt 20 Emperor. } en 21 Each (abbr.). INNIE |e happiness. 23 Consisting of 24 -2as 28 Pertaining to threes. R le} S| the cheek. 24 Southwest. IDIAINIAIMIA! 30 What fs her 25 Roed. title? 26 To subsist, 42 Third note. the head? 31 Constellation. 27 Form of “be.” 43Small fish. 62 Right (abbr.), 33 The Creator. spain (abbr), 45To beckslide. — VERTICAL, 39 Mature person 81 Wing part of | 51 Helper. 1Sound of a “headdress, eed. 52 Sable, mink. dove. 44Before. 32 Tatter ete. 20n the sea. 46 Deity. 34 Ancient 54Kind of beer. 3 Accomplished. 47 Young of the Persian coin. 65To put up a 4 Like. sheep. 36 Solitary. poker stake. — § Above. 48 Seaweed. 86 Tree having 56 To mock. 6Deportment. 49 Fairy. tough wood. 58 Blemish. 7Caterpillar 60 Senior (abbr.), 87 Low, vulgar 59 Stranger. hair, 51 Black bird. fellow, 60 And. 8 Either. 53 Dry. %$8Minor note. 611n what city is 9 Pussy. 55 Beer. £0 Southeast. the college of 10To osculate. 57 Sun god. 41 Hour (abbr.). which she is 11 By. 59 August (abbr.) or ee eed NSN Nai Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. It is commonly thought that the is Hkewise an authority on the subject, Practice of wearing hose supporters ject ‘that encircle the leg, or even the jnancy when the patient suffers much modern garterless stockings, tends to|;from them. Nine out of ten such pa- cause or aggravate enlargement of the |tients are gratified with the results, According to the observations of periments and studies by means of |gested by you, when I was 50. Now X-ray, the direction of flow of blood|at the age of 63 I enjoy fine health. in the superficial veins of the leg is Recent test by physician showed downward (away from the heart) from grace of God for a man of your age Brady, M. D. Letters should be brief and written the patient has serious trouble. Dr. H, O. McPheeters of Minneapolis, who of varicose vein treatment, urges in- tion of varicose veins in preg- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Rolling in Health Started rolling somersaults as sug- {blood pressure normal, pulse normal. |The doctor said “Nothing but the |to be in such fine condition.” So I jtold him that perhaps Ol’ Doc Brady’s lessons in health had something to do with it. He did not dissent. (F. F) Answer—A good habit to begin and end the daily Symphony with a few rolls. For complete words and musfc ‘send 10 cents (coin) and stamped en- velope hearing your address, and ask for booklet “The Last Brady Sym- phony.” Sweating in ‘Thank you for the remedy you sug- gested for excessive perspiration in the armpits. I had tried many other remedies without results. The alumi- num_chloride has worked wonders. (A. 0.) Answer—The recipe is simple—dis- solve one ounce of aluminum chloride in three ounces of rain water or dis- itilled water or at least boiled water. ‘Mop some on the armpits once each alternate day for a week or so, and let it dry before you dress. Repeat from time to time as needed. Bonding Fund Loses In WHenry Lawsuit | | color of office for which the upon his official bond is lable.” Howe was accused of machinery valued at about $300 with- out a formal act of the county com- mission, Technicality Saves Man in Murder Case Rockford, Ilk, March 30.—(P)—A matter of 24 hours prevented the state from bringing murder charges against Charles Backus, 48-year-old fruit and vegetable peddler. Backus admitted nearly two months ago that he killed his 8-year-old son and stuffed his body under the ice in Rock river, but police were unable to find the body. Without this evidence, the state sald conviction on @ murder charge would have been virtually impossible. Backus consented to plead guilty to a man- slaughter charge and was sentenced to from one to 14 years. Thursday, less than 24 hours after sentence was the boy's body was found. for further action in the case, under the law, . Veterans to Receive Federal Checks May 1 Washington, March 30.—(?)—War veterans benefiting from the inde- pendent offices bill will receive their | Johnson and told him about it, then government checks on May 1 and the |D0th of us went to the White House government employes will get Pay increases by April 14, their The veterans administration continued study of the bill passed over |@™ment banks all over the country President Roosevelt's _ veto. About |t0 lend money to small business men.” $100,000,000 annually will go to veter- (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) | ans, the largest portion being destined bag for 29,000 cases from the World War. “presumptive” disability TWO KILLED IN MISHAP Ortonville, Minn., March 30.—(®)— The state supreme court Friday|Two farmers, hauling a load of fence held the state bonding fund must pay| Posts, were killed late yesterday when|in fresh fruits and vegetables. The McHenry county for personal prop-|their truck skidded on a snow-cov- establishment is a new idea in gro- erty alleged to have been sold without|/ered highway and craslted into the|cery stores and will be managed by authority of the county commission-|plers of # railroad viaduct near here.|Paul Brown, for nearly 30 years en- Preme court ruled that Howe, assum- Ing to act under authority of his of- fice, sold the property, and thus “com. mitted an unlawful act under the The Bismarck Tribune and the man’s name should be pub. /— —— — ers by C. L. Howe, @ county commis- BUSINESS SUPPORT ae ranged oe = And then the man needs to be P ERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | irrirmiig: (iis OseiNon cx Mc- NEWSPAPER thrown out of Washington so fast Henry county district court, the su- ‘Holler’ of Others Same as His Own Chicago, March 30.—(7)—The small. business man, said Fred P, Mann, of Devils Lake, N. D., Friday, is grad- ually coming to the conclusion that the NRA is a good thing for the coun- try and, if present plans are fulfill-, ed, soon will stop criticizing it, Mann, en route home for a visit, has spent recent months in Wash- ington as a member of the national recovery review board, which, he Pointed out, gave him opportunity for @ first-hand contact with the coun- try’s business man. Added to that, he said, he is one himself, being owner of the largest departinent store in Devils Lake. Mann, born in Batavia, Ill, is a Republican. He stopped in Chicago long enough to meet representatives of several trade and business asso- ciations here. “The small business man,” he said, until the people are buying as they shoul id. “T listened to the small merchants complain for five days down in Wash- ington a couple of weeks ago. I got up and did some complaining myself. ‘We all had the same holler: We couldn't get any money. > “So what did I do? I went to Gen. and told the president about it and three days later the president sent this bill to congress providing for gov- Pay and Take Grocery Store Opens Saturday A Pay and Take store will be op- ened Saturday in the Laskin Block at 105 Fifth street which will specialize SYNOPSIS Michael Lanyard — formerl; known as the “Lone Wolf,” an un derworld ity, but now a re- spected antique dealer—sails for America on the S.S. “Navarre.” id the yout io himself. Mrs. Fay Crozier, one of Lanyard’s wealthy atrons, and her lovely daughter 'enno are also on board. nent Mrs. Crozier’s denial that she been negotiating for the winging why, beca he is no longer in the government iC. CHAPTER IV “Who is that nice boy, monsieur” =Fenno Crozier’s voice penetrated this light preoccupation — “who thinks you are so fascinating?” “Nice boy’2” “Over there, at the other end of the chief engineer's table. 3 table. Don’t look, unless you don’t for he’s watching you like a cat been ave Sinn om eam AD... -. Wait a minute. Now you may look—he's orgie following: er ned, nyard, fo) saw leaving the saloon that young man the sight of whom up on A Deck had him such a bad quarter of an I knew of.” “That's fi ' minds me, too, o Pits delayal eaptihly and La” ‘enno im} al yard, though he withstood. her gaze with entire composure, lamented the impulse in which he had in- dul he now perceived, at the Thought to tite with thie gins wits Rat z sited him in si wouldn’t be so eo to have him in- one I think I might manage it before the end of the voyage.” She had | quiet laugh for at. sponded to this au . “That re-| inds me: you haven’ Who is he?” ion. pent sr sid eyeciem BD ERSo! me toneatly? But why did he keep sii this direction, I don't doabt, iD ast ' It was He Lit i t i pret i ! : i i E iF it Z $ : F U i He EF i i i c E i & Ei i ] ! f i i J i , as f E E ’ el 3 i Hi ii Hl Hf i F iz z ee Ba : : ® H g z B f t i i i ég | i i Hl ; i me.” i me, if that’s what you| childish if downright i i Gl Ff [ E ge "THE LONE. WOLES SON’ by LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE | Sea eaes hehe ee z z rd had api ih whe Perr ed ca vanity would have eaeed any man oes Hf : i { FOR NRA FORECAST nue and Devils Lake Merchant Says/ posed of gaged in the grocery business in Bis- marck. Brown operated the Pearl Grocery and later was a Former School Man At Bottineau Killed sa dt toe Ri nel 1 years he operated a fruit and vegeta- afternoon for Harry E. Layne, 64, pa- ble store at the corner of Main ave-| role agent for the Wisconsin indus- Fourth street, which he dis-/ trial school st Waukesha, who was @ short time ago. killed in an automobile accident near Winter, Wis., Tuesday night. Lahr Will Open New |, Layne was tormeriy superintendent Automobile Agency of schools of Bottineau county, N. D., after having taught in Lansford, F. D,, several years. For two years he was head of the Dunn county, Wis., school system. Wing Woman Is Badly Hurt by Fall From Car Mrs. John Weber, t-yenr-ola Wing t to the Bismarck & m., 3 4 He returned to day. Improvement Loan Is Given Great Northern Washington, March 30.—(%)—More than two million dollars will be add- ed to Great Northern railway pay- rolls in the northwest under terms of @ loan of $3,820,000 announced Fri- day by Harold L. Ickes, federal pub- lic works administrator. Allotment of the loan funds as outlined in the road’s application in- cludes $660,500, of which it is easti- mated $329,000 will be paid employes for repairing locomotives in shops in various northwest points including! Sioux Falls, 8. D., Grand Forks, Far- go, Devils Lake, Minot and Williston, N. D., and Havre, Great Falls and Whitefish, Mont. The remainder of the funds will be spent for miscellaneous repairs to toadbeds, code regulating the industry. They also conferred with the retail code authorities in those towns, HIS FACE WAS RED Omaha, Neb—The Omaha po- For Week of March 30th to April Sth Salad Dressing Scr. ....... 28¢ CATSUP S222 secs, 2 tor ..........25@ OLIVES, 18K Stuffed, 5 0z. jar ..15¢ DILL PICKLES, Carol, 32 oz. jar 18¢ GINGERALE $340"5 cme, 43c CHERRIES ies o9¢ No. 10 can ........+000 age 3 iB i 2 tli : i tf ane al i Re9 EX HE £EER £EKER EH HHH SF F et g E i F E ? f Ht FL i E EF £ 5 i if ; He i‘ F i i : u ie it s F i 2 | | iE [ | i F i s #8 is i ft 3 Hs | F iE i ~ 1 5 F rH fl i i ( i al : ; 3 te & f ie I 8 see A i RK KEK KE KKK KK HH EK EE ? i H i STRAWBERRIES, No. 10 can ...77¢ BLACKBERRIES, No. 10 can ...47¢ FRUIT COCKTAIL :s2"r 2 No. 1 cans PEACHES Kripa § for eee BTC PINEAPPLE Ne tytn sn ....... L9C BEANS Nos can ne ccseccsssseseeees LOC EEE HEEHR HEHE HEHN EH He EER EHR £ HE PORK & BEANS Ho 2%; can, 2 tor ......23C Swansdown CAKE FLOUR, reg. 27¢ CAKE FLOUR 132% 4: .25c¢ BAKING POWDER :7'=""............21c BAKING POWDER 19c IGA, DESSERT POWDER ‘x's... 14¢ CHOCOLATE fea 'n) ater te'.....29C IGA Pure Vanills, EXTRACT, pce nescence LIC JOHNSTON'S Oneiee tie... 21e JELLY BIRD EASTER EGGS, lb. 10¢ COFFEE 3m Peet .35¢ PEAK COFFEE, 1 Ib. alin BLUE “G” COFFEE, 1 Ib. ....... 25c Ha” Coffee pup. 53¢ CORN SUCKERS, Tall, 6for ......5¢ CHERRIES 25c POE TD. ..rrrorererererersercevees SALT erties LSC Specials for Friday and Saturday HEAD LETTUCE 3s: 150 CELERY ive"... 25¢ eee Ee MMR KKK KKK KKK KX