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Se a ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ...... wsdeees ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year 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. Integrity Vs. Shame North Dakotans owe a debt of) gratitude to Governor Ole Olson for) his fearless challenge to the right of| @ felon to sit in the executive chair.| The act was inspired by no desire| for self-promotion.. Those who have known Ole Olson during the 40 years he has been on the firing line for North Dakota’s farmers know better than that. Its inspiration lay in a respect for law and order which the| Langer administration has sadly/ lacked. In his effort, therefore, Olson | deserves the support and encourage-/| ment of every honest citizen who be- | lieves in the law and in our form of government. Contempt for law is an unfailing sign of autocracy. The brazen selfishness of William Langer in attempting to hold the of-/ fice, despite his conviction on a crim- inal charge and the clear intent of the state law, is beyond measure. It constitutes an insult to the intel- Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper CONGENITAL HEART DEFECT T hesitate to use the term ni- | @ Teasonably active life. tal, because it is so likely to MBpear as| All this is a highly technical prob- Congenita! means pres- ent at birth, born with. Congenital conditions, such as hare- lip, cleft palate, club foot, hip disloca-| tency. First the purpose is to give tion, spina bifida and various stains So eee ee ene eeity the supersui:| This with the idea of enabling the tion of “marking” or “prenatal im- pression,” as the more pretentious call not explain any such congen- ital abnormalities. The fishwife yarns __ |by which the ignorant account for) these congenital defects simply do not) fit in with our knowledge of embry-|the increased quantity of blood ology or development and growth be- | lem for the best of physicians. Medi- fore birth. Rarely does the time of|cines play a minor part. I mean a the alleged “marking” of the mother| good family physician, not a specialist. coincide with the time when we know SS the departure from or the delay of QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS normal development occurred. Dickens treated the legend of David; The most efficacious remedy we Copperfield being born with a “caul”|have for acute poliomyelitis (infantile with a restraint which is foreign to paralysis) is blood serum from a per- the present style in writing. Today |son who has recovered from the acute every writer who gains any popularity |or feverish stage of the disease. From or prominence offers his or her phi-|3 to 12 ounces of convalescent’s serum losophy and advice on health, disease, |should be given by transfusion into diet, hygiene, control of nerves, child/the patient’s vein or by injection into training and the like. The medical, |the spinal canal. Every efficient physiological or health notions of jhealth department should have a list these novelists or popular writers are| of convalescent’s blood donors, so that generally absurd, but being clothed in| this treatment may be employed with- imposing language they make a strong | out loss of time. appeal to the unsophisticated wiseacre Effect of Exercise on Digestion PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. 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 in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ! , Sufficient to enable the patient to live The management or treatment of |the infant with congenital heart de- fect is in principle quite the same as jthe treatment of valvular incompe- the heart rest and avoid putting any |greater load on it than is necessary. handicapped heart to develop a little reserve power. Later, if the course of |the trouble is favorable, the idea is | to add little by little to the work of the heart, and thus to “train” it, to overdevelop the heart muscle, so that Serum for Infantile Paralysis Please inform your readers of the Before birth there is an opening be- danger of active exercise immediately tween the right or venous side and the left or arterial side of the heart, |S{t" & meal. In a resort such as this through the wall or partition which, at or shortly after birth, normally sep- erates the arterial from the venous circulation. Sometimes this opening tails to close completely, and more or tele They Ser sere one |this question has shown that vigorous child begins breathing. This consti- |¢xercise, such as running from one tutes the most common congenital|t© four miles, immediately after @ heart defect. In some cases the open-|meal delays digestion. But light ex- ing becomes completely closed in a/etcise, such as a walk right after a few weeks and then the baby is all|meal has no ill effect. People unac- In other cases it never closes|Ccustomed to brisk exercise should not ccmpletely, and such a child is com-|80 in swimming or enter any active monly called a “blue baby.” Several|game immediately after a full meal. other conditions may account for Lamp This blueness or cyanosis of a newborn| Please be so kind as to tell me the one sees a great many people going in bathing or participating in games or sports right after eating. And then they wonder why so many tragic acci- dents . . . (F. A. H,) Answer—Careful investigation of difference between an ultraviolet ray The child with a congenital heart lamp and an infrared ray lamp. Which ligence and the decency of the pe0-| defect is in precisely the same predic-|is more penetrating . . . (K.A) I ple of the state. By “use of force if necessary,” he proposes to upset the orderly workings of government for his own selfish ends. Everyone grants the right of Lang- er to appeal from the decision of the federal jury which convicted him, even though that conviction was just beyond question. The right of ap- peal is guaranteed by law, even though there seems little chance of Langer’s obtaining either a new trial or a reversal of the verdict of guilty. But no one can grant the right of any man to hold this state up to scorn and ridicule and to openly thwart its laws. The breaking of one law resulted in Langer’s conviction. He might break others in an effort to retain the enormous power which he induced the legislature to place in the executive's hands at the 1933 ses- sion, In his latest attempt to override the will of the people as expressed in the law, Langer presents the picture of a malefactor attempting to sit) on the state pardon board and grant ¢lemency to other criminals. He offers the spectacle of a man, convicted of being unworthy of trust, wielding almost dictatorial powers over tremendous sums of the people's money. The whole business is an affront to honesty and decency, regardless of political or other considerations. For the good of the state, the mat- ter should be dealt with quickly. Legal technicalities and quibbles should not be permitted to interfere with the administration of justice. ‘There should be no beating about the bush in so vital an issue. The shameful situation of a felon in office should not be permitted to continue a moment longer than is necessary for the orderly processes of law to move him out. ee if Additional Society re ee Major and Mrs. A. C. Young and their .children, John and Betsy, who have resided at 600 Broadway avenue, mented at many social functions giv- en by her friends in Bismarck and at fe ee ean mallltsty Dost. ‘Miss Lucile Coghlan, 622 Third 8t., hhas returned from the University of North Dakota, where she is a law stu- dent, and has resumed her work with Miss the Bank of North Dakota. 23 White poplar. 24 College official. aaa PC fe ament as an adult with valvular leak-|claim there is nothing goes thru the In either case the circulation|skin . . . is handicapped and the heart has to] Answer—Ultraviolet ray is light. In- labor the harder in order to main-|fra red ray is heat. Unwise to mon- tain sufficient circulatior. to compen-|key with either kind of lamp, in my sate for the leakage. opinion. If a physician prescribes pumped at each beat and the increas- | such treatment he will instruct about which it is sent thru/the lamp and its use. the arteries will maintain a circulation (Copyright 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Here’s Resume of Work Done by Congress shington, June 19.—(#)—Here |ruary, 1935 and increasing borrowing are the principal bills passed by the | Power by $850,000,000. session of congress just closed: Appropriation measures including | Ulate communications. relief, totaling more than $6,800,-| Johnson bill barring federal court Federal commission of seven to reg- injunctions against state public ser- Corporation, municipal and farm | Vice commission rate decisions. Johnson bill preventing financial Devaluation of gold dollar and cur- transactions with foreign debtors in rency stabilization fund. ; ‘ Silver purchases designed to in- Restoration, over veto, of millions of crease silver backing for currency to | dollars in veterans compensation and one-fourth of all metalic reserves. | Pensions. Stock exchange control and liberal-| dozen anti-crime measures. ization of securities act. Federal guarantee for $4,000,000,000 | tiate reciprocal tariff trading agree- of farm and home mortgage bonds. | Ment with foreign powers. More than half a billicn dollars for| Bill to raise approximately $400,000,- RFC and Federal Reserve loans to |000 in taxation through higher levies private industry. Extending temporary bank deposit |tigthtening of law against tax-avoid- guarantee one year and boosting de- | ers. Dosits to be insured from $2,500 to| Liquor taxation. $5,000, along with more liberal loans; Revision of air mail laws, with au- on an authority to purchase assets of | thority for the Interstate Commerce Extends Life of RFO A Extending life of RFC until Feb- Authorizing seven-year naval build- ila en ee a aca esc aaiRN acil default. Authority for the president to nego- on estates, gifts, corporations and Commission to regulate rates. uthorize Big Navy Smallpox Curer HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle = 21 High com- 1,7 Who discov- ered the small- pox preventive? mendation. 26 To steal a per MIAIRIRIV] THO IK] INS) JE INDIE RIOIDe HED IAI LV WIALTITIE (RIS) SITIAIBy son. Alvi 27He used the a 60 sVirus of —— as an inocula tion. IN . 8 At Fe HOPKINS p My 20 Small body of iS ma lOINMES IO] | water. HIEMEBIANITIE RISMESICI. 32 Accomplishes. All RISMELIEIAIVIE MS! 34 Hour (abbr.). WATON 2M 36 Either. laa 38 To fit out. 40 Sarcasm. 83 To vex. 4 War flyer. 43.Chafty part of 30Jumbled type. 55 The ankle. 5 Second note, rain. 31 Alleged force. 56 Johnnycake. 6 Yellowish gray 44 Slavic person. 33 He was a —— 57 Armadillos. 7 Prison. 46 And. 59 Male. 8 Deity. 47 Branches. 60 Trunk com- 9 Insect’s egg. 48 Scheme. partments. 10 Annelid. 49 Moon goddess. 61 What is this 11 Compound 80 Corpse. preventive ether. §1To groan. called? 12 He was ——~” So Reamingtion. by race. Epoch. VERTICAL 15 Usual. 56 Golt teacher. 2 Right. 17 Metallic rocks. 58 South Carolina 3 Stinging insect 19 Northeast. 60 Seventh note. = CANADIANS GU OF KIWANIS’ GLUB sitors, Here on Goodwill Tour, Are Members of Brandon, represented and persecuted and to prison unjustly, ing program to bring ee et Latin WR TT a . Lada tor the cause of the treaty strength. » whose indictment and | ha Huge home building and moderniz- ing program with government partial- ly insuring private concerns against Joss on loans for such purpose. Authority for creation of boards to investigate labor disputes and order elections of worker representatives in collective bargaining negotiations. New board for settlement of rail- way labor disputes. ‘Three year federal aid road con- struction authorization of more than counting unexpended balances of prior appropriations. New Philippine independence law. 1934 crop loan bill $40,000,000. Bills making sugar, cattle, flax, rye, barley, peanuts and grain sorghums basic commodities under the AAA conviction came partly as the result of Nye’s demand in the senate last winter that the North Dakots relief eituation be investigated. * * * DUFFY DEFENDS CONSTITU- TION Carrying the Independent attack over the air, Clyde Duffy, party cam- Paign manager, called on all Inde- Pendent Republicans to “get into the harness and clean the stable” of the corruption which has been disclosed to exist in the Langer administration. He dismissed as unimportant the manner in which the money collect- ed from the five-per-cent “Leader” Tacket was used, asserting the speculation in the wheat may- the important thing is that the state governor did levy tribute on the em- Ployes of the state for his own per- ‘He asserted no past administration has ever done anything comparable asserting that solicitations which Langer cities as a for his actions always were conducted by the employes themselves and the money expended directly for cam- . He said no one ever ited highway maintenance men and janitors in the educational, penal and charitable institutions. Putting the annual state payroll at $3,000,000 and five per cent of that at $150,000 a year, Duffy as- serted that “no political organization needs or should have such @ cam- paign fund and no executive should be permitted to exact such tribute.” He announced the Independents ‘would be on the air every night from 9 to 9:10 and that former Governor Nestos would be the speaker on | Thursday ual LANGERITES IGNORE VERDICT H. C. Peterson, a member of the Langer executive committee, James Mulloy, Langer appointee as secretary of the state securities com- mission, broadcast a plea for their thousands of farms an¢/Search Unsuccessful _ as For Missing Fargoan|:;. Brandon, Man., Kiwanis club and the ‘women were wives of two of the mem- bers, ‘The visitors, in North Dakota on had been unsuccessful up 0}, good-will tour, furnished the enter- t ded Al Prugh, Chester Chol- ving homes and said the opposed Langer because he wanted to bear “their just share of the Bankhead compulsory cotton con- PAGE SIR OLIVER LODGE Kerr compulsory tobacco control. Authority to ban arms shipments to SHOTS ALONG THE POLITICAL FRONT With the Langer trial out of the way, all Republican factions opened up in earnest Monday in a final drive toward the primary election a week trom Wednesday. 'T. H. Thoresen and the anti-Langer Nonpartisans continued to beat the hustings, as did their two factional rivals, the Independent Republicans and the Langer Nonpartisans. The latter two groups also put radio speakers on the air. iJ NYE HURRYING HOME Chief news development of the day was the announcement that U. 8. Senator Gerald P. Nye would return to the state immediately and launch a whirlwind campaign for the Thore- sen-Olson ticket. He was spending Tuesday in Wash- ington in conference with Harry Hopkins and others on the relief situ- ation and was to leave Tuesday night, arriving in North Dakota not later Between his arrival in the state and election day he will speak over every radio station in North Dakota, Thoresen-Olson campaign headquar- ters here said Tuesday. tainment. They incl i Lord Mr. Simpson is taking at the request of his late father.” A movement was on feot Tuesday to) e notify Sir Oliver Lodge, British scient-| ist, who long has been exploring field of communication with the dead. * * OPENS OLD LEAGUE WOUND Mulloy also re-opened an old politi-| cal sore by calling attention to the Halling Norwegians Meet at Grand Forks! persecut the recall in 1921 of Frazier, and John N. Hagen. He pleaded “let us insure ourselves against this sort of mistake by turning Langer to office by a majority fo great there will be complete vindi- cation of the governor and his admin- istration. A vindication which will be final and which will ring in the sen- ate chambers at Wi . Mulloy made no mention of the fact that much of the “propaganda, mis- representation, slander and persecu- tien” mentioned as having occurred in 1921 was the personal work of Wile CAMPAIGN PLANS OUTLINED Langerite plans for the remainder of the campaign were outlined with announcement of county meetings to be held by Langer workers at 2 p. m. Friday in the county seats to lay Pians to get out the yote, and the assertion that J. M. Hanley, one of the defense attorneys in the Langer trial, would go on the air at 9:30 p. dent, and Nels Sarteberg, hold over for another year. ly 400 “Hallings” from five states and Canada were here to- day as attendance reached its peak. Evangelical Singers Draw Large Audiences Attendance is increasing daily at the revival services being conducted by the Edward Evangelical quartet on the second floor of the building at Mulloy read Attorney General P. O. Sathre'’s opinion that Langer’s sta- tus as the chief executive is unchang- ed and said Langer would appeal from He attempted to discount the jury's ” verdict with the assertion that “friends of progressive goverti- ment have often been criticized, mis- CHAPTER XXX. While Ni Je with the in- | wim: stinet of lid catmal body mistake ‘em f it the gro Haskel and her son went again from room to room, commenting freely | body'd je: now, as they had not done when in wr ee led ee "cause Still Group to Give Achievement Program a volume from its place to reverently, a his moth tention to the binding, true bookl tice. Ann, as she listened, watched him | natc! intently. She did not understand | hoss hated him the same way. much of what he said, but from his | sir, a “What bell be you talkin’ “bout?” “The cail bell!" He pointed to utton, at} The danger lights gave a twinkle of humor. “You mean that thar itton dingus rings a bell rs fer you to come?” “Yes, madam, when it is pt makes books like I never felt before—jest the idee, I mean.’ “Is thar one of ‘em in every from the floor almost ‘aq “Just mothe: FRUITS and VEGETABLES “Always Kept Fresh” By Our Adequate Refrigeration Facilities NEW POTATOES xi: 5 lbs. 14c PEAS rater .....escssssssneeeses Q lbs 27 RADISHES £328 ....................5 beh. 10¢ ASPARAGUSE2? LETTUCE 8 ............4..2 heads 19¢ Ata ee; s 3 | = Hit F aE Cy . 2 beh. 19¢ : Z CAN RASPBERRIES NOW FANCY - - - DRY i i his arm) noticed| | ORANGES zi" L t ? Fis 2 doz. 63c seve IDS. Vle WATERMELONS ie’... 59¢ — MEATS — 23c | Spiced Loin Perk, Ib. Thuringer Summer Sausage, Ib. ... Lunch. 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