The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1934, Page 4

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An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck Qs second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher on inane area aantinentel aa Subscription Rates Payable in ., Advance Daily by cartier, per year . jarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state Outside of Bismarck) ......... 5K Daily by mail outside of North Dakota «......... ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00, ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years ... + 2.00 Weekly by ih Dakota, per year + 1.50, Weekly hy mail in Canada, per year ........... see + 2.00 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. Banging at the Tariff It might confuse many voters of North Dakota, in listening to certain campaign “orators” speaking in their own behalf as candidates or for oth- ers on the Republican state ticket, to find that the tariff has been dragged in as a state issue. Of course it has no place there. It is being used to arouse the farmers unfairly against the federal admin- istration. The North Dakota farmer is operating today under a Repub- lean high tariff, practically the same which he has prospered or suffered under, as the case may be, when Harding, Coolidge and Hoover were Presidents. This mouthing about the tariff, the sins of importations from Finland, the Argentine or Brazil, is probably one of the most humorous attempts to put something over on the North Dakota farmer that the so-called Re- Publican candidates nominated in June have attempted. Some radio speeches released over the air at Mandan and other places recently by Republicans scored their own tariff arrangements but tried to assume that the farmers are so dumb as to believe that any appreciable changes have been made in the agri- cultural tariff schedules since the days of President Hoover and the Grundy high tariff walls. ‘The Democrats are gingerly walk- ing on eggs when it comes to the tar- iff. For the most part, the Demo- cratic leaders have been content to let well enough alone except to shift the tariff negotiations of the future over to the president, where so many congressional prerogatives are being transferred as part of the New Deal. President Roosevelt now has the Power to raise or lower the tariff rates, but only after elaborate notices of hearings. His powers over the tariff have been restricted because the United States tariff is so won- derfully and mysteriously made and at present writing reflects the Re- Publican theory of high tariffs. Some Democrats, too, have changed their ideas on tariffs within the last dec- ade. The Bismarck Tribune] = of a party on thelr hands. It has been brought to its present low estate largely because of the devital- izing and demoralizing effect of pri- mary laws as they now operate. Here in North Dakota, the Repub- lican party as an effective instrument to control principles died in 1917. Both the Nonpartisans and their op- ponents discarded all party principles then and reduced party action merely to the quest for office. The name Re- publican now is being used merely as & label. Many running under that label could not define what a Re- publican is, and care less. We have 00) had fusionists under several labels| who have sought to combat the lar- ceny of the party label and restore some semblance of concerted political: action in behalf of certain principles. But for the most part these efforts have only been partially effective in this state. Since 1917, the Republican party has been under the control of the Nonpartisans, many of whose leaders fight the Republican national party and its principles in and out of sea- son. They are Republicans only on election day. In many states the same poltical revolution has taken place, We even witness in some states the open sup- port by Democrats of Republican pro- gressives. Party lines have been shattered throughout the nation. The Republicans should hold a birthday and follow it up by a resur- rection day. Page Gabriel and his horn. Cooperatives Still Needed Interested as they are in getting the farmer on a permanently sound basis, officials of the department of agriculture have made it plain that they do not regard the farm coopera- tive organization as an outmoded method for bringing prosperity to rural America, They have no desire to take over jobs which farmers can better do for themselves, hence they are anxious for the cooperatives to remain in ex- istence that they may aid in the work now going forward and take it over completely when the emergency has passed. That this would not only be good government but good busi- ness is agreed by all competent agri- cultural observers, Proof of the value of cooperative enterprises, even under the emer- gency agricultural meagures, is of- fered by the California Fruit Grow- ers Exchange, one of the greatest or- ganizations of its kind in the coun- try. In addition to its marketing activi- ties, which have included such things as the development of juice extrac- tors and the design of booths for serving drinks made from citrus fruits, it recently has developed a popular cosmetic made! from lemon Juice and established @ laboratory for the propagation of lady bugs. The lady bugs, by the way, are im- portant, for they feed on the mealy bug, @ serious pest in the citrus dis- tricts. ‘These things could be done for the citrus growers by the government, but it ts doubtful if they could be done as cheaply or efficiently as the fruit men do it for themselves and there is always to be remembered the fact that men appreciate things more if they are the product of their own effort. There are so many vital state is- sues to explain that the Republicans might well let the tariff alone. To continue the ranting to an exclusion of other issues will surely be em- barrassing when once the farmers Tealize that the nation still enjoys a Republican made tariff and that the Democrats feel that the rates are about as beneficial as any that can be devised in the face of present world economic conditions. An ad- justment at this time might bring in its train many reprisals in those few markets which still afford an outlet for some of the farm surpluses, ‘This is just one of the many ghosts which the head of the state Repub- lican ticket loves to dance before the North Dakota farmers. But he should honestly tell them, if he knows it himself, that the rates he attacks were approved and effected by his own party. More reason here in North Dakota for a compaign of education on state as well as national issues. Both of the dominant parties seem to be in a truce over the tariff tasue. Maybe word of this has not reached our state Republican “leadership” or its sponsors would cease hammering their own tariff and seeking to fool the North Dakota farmer. Mere Labels Now met recently in Jack- Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disa; with The Tribune's polici of acreage reduction, no theories of economics can prevail. What is prob- ably to the more practical point is the necessity for a general realization of the fact that only by acreage re- duction on a world-wide basis can the producing countries must contend with unceasingly. There is a definite mathematical relationship between the world wheat acreage and the world production of wheat. In this matter, the law of averages prevails with the same ac- curacy that it does in life insurance statistics. Crop failure in North Da- kota or in Kansas is almost invari- compensated for by a bumper in Rumania or New South Wales. acreage reduction on one conti- is balanced by an acreage in- HEHE SRL E E Epicure” whose doctrines was that one should chew every morsel of food 32 times before swallowing it, refers to the com- mon idea that there should be one bowel movement a day and asserts that on his regimen a movement once @ week or once in ten days was suf- ficient. tle Creek, whose teachings about food are not altogether bad but whose no- tions about exposure to cold are fun- ny, I think, has held that a healthy individual should have three evacua- tions daily. of Health” Habit” Ol Doc Brady strives to as- sure the victim of that habit that there is no danger whatever in wait- ing a week or more for nature to re- sume control when you swear off trom all physic. would think this doctrine as funny as I think his notions about “lowered resistance” are. doctor. Now, now, I mean no di paragement at all, but although I was greatly interested in his teach- ings and his achievements still I never could reconcile his theories with our knowledge of physiology, and reluctantly I classified him in my own estimation as a nut. THE BISMARCK -TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1934 _ VACATION POST CARDS gid 7 oats GOVERNMENT @ 1S, REPLANTING THE TREES PHOW ABOUT THROWING IN) A FEWOLD> FASHIONED SWIMMING HOLES? LE TTT Giese ee haggling seems due for a long! tun. Litvinov told his Moscow bosses | that we had trade credits’ Official American memory seems blank at that point. We're insisting, on some definite pay-off promises be- fore granting credits. ‘One also learns that the subordinate officials in the state and commerce were vilenty oppesed to Tecognttons were that Senator Hiram Johnson—whose bill barring loans to debt defaulters specifically exempted Export-Im bank ‘trade credite—was angry bank directors publicly resolved not to deal with Russia until che submitted 3G. 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. HOW MANY TIMES A DAY? In his curious book “Glutton or Horace Fletcher, one of viser that a delay or postponement of defecation for a day or two in no way imperils a healthy person's health or well being. When I say healthy Person I mean one who has @ sound mind in a sound body. I do not mean to deny that a person with morbid introspection and much misinforma- tion about physiology and pathology is likely to get a headache and all sorts of wretched feelings or symp- toms if for any reason he misses his usual evacuation. Especially custom- ers of the quacks and nostrum mong- ers who use a large share of the prof- its to keep ‘em scared about “autoin- toxication” and all that line of bunk. On the.other hand the Sage of Bat- In the “Little Lesson in the Ways on “The Constipation QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Carbon Dioxide Treatment To stop an attack of hiccups I found it handy to slip a hat bag over my head and tighten it around my neck. (A. L. R.) Answer—Inhalations of carbon dio- xide and air or oxygen are effective in relieving obstinate hiccup. Re- breathing of course increases the pro- portion of carbon dioxide in the air to 5 or 10 per cent. So if you breathe for a time into a grocer’s paper bag held closely over nose and mouth, you get the effect of carboxygen in- halations. Or you get the same effect by holding the hat bag over the head as described. Salt and Obesity I suppose Dr. Kellogg Of course Horace Fletcher wasn’t &@ Aren’t we all, large amount of salt has anything to do with overweight? I can’t seem to Teduce, and J use a lot more salt in and on my food than any one I know. (Mrs, R. G.) Answer—Yes, much salt not only encourages overeating but tends to re- tain an excess of water in the tissues, and that makes flabby overweight. Better banish the salt cellar from your table, and limit yourself to the salt naturally in such foods ,as meat, milk, cheese or fish and the salt add- ed in cooking. ‘Growing’ Pains Daughter, 9, growing fast, com- Plains pains in legs and arms. She is normal and healthy in other res- pects. (M. A.C.) Answer—It never hurts to grow. Common cause of “growing pains” is infection in tonsil. Better have your doctor investigate the condition of the tonsils, and the dentist the con- dition of the child’s teeth. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Washington Cause of Russian-U. S. Trade Hitch Remains Secret . Ickes Refuses to Be Misled by “Sweet Charity” af snenisiee Get Cold Comfort From By RODNEY DUTCHER Washington Washington, July 13.—When Roose- Please tell me whether the use of a in one respect or another? Canute = | * Dickens Illustrator rm PTT Ng SNe ¢ 2 er eRe PENT TT als o—ttfS id ed ol d\n dN N velt and Maxim Litvinov negotiated HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle —_12 Twice. Mrator of Dick: -ROTCCTUAMATIC DIED, 18 He illustrated with nothing serious on his conscience ens’ stories, Bae ORO a eee rs rgee—. [RA Al 8K ere cee aoe set ious erkemes| 10 Professional’ LLIMOMMEINOMMAITIE MMSIAIT] 26.Night betore, influencing his metabolism, with no| tramp. THEI MSIE IRIVIE MESH ILO} 19 Kettles, drug or enema habit and no morbid| 14 Malicious EKCILIATTMMF BIE MRF IVINIE IES 21 Hair on em. misini burning of OME IVIORNEESIW! | INIGHES) 23 To wither. property. ( IBIUILIL[ 25 Point in an 15 To expiate. ISIE |AY orbit. 17 Tobe ill. 28 Skin. 18 Storehouse. AIH IQ] 30 One of a Malay 20.4n old card = N ILIOITMO] tribe. game. CrIEININD UST RHIAMPITIOIN) 32 Any wrong- 22 Provided. ful act. nH reales smell 50 First day of England. x dantal. the impulses or put incyst August. rucifix. off, especially tumors. 55 Winter pre- VERTICAL 39 Established been a slave 27 Auto. cipitation. 1He won world _ values. vinced that 29 Ceases. 57 Ports fame for his 42Geld house. istaltic function has 31 Entrance. acca — 44 Dating device. fered with or 33,Type of hemp. 59 Apportioned — 2. Rajlroad. 47 Balsam. need seldom be inconvenienced by this Singing voice, 48 cards. 3. Custom. 49 Spur. final disposal of waste. 7 ‘Ten cents. 60 Hodgepodge. 4A particle. 51 Paid publicity B8To let fall. 62 To relieve. 5 Burrs in wood. 52 Base. 40 To sink. 64 Three-toed GResembling 53 Girl. 41 Ream (abbr.). sloths, blood. 54 Too, 43 Tailless am- ‘65 He depicted 7Preposition. 56 Opposite of phil the downfall 8 Neither. lose, 46 Minor note, of the——. 9Recognized. 58 Like. 46To devour, 66 He was born 11 Rowing 61 All right. 48 To trail. 2, devices. 63 Deity. SS Nag aS : an acceptable debt offer; that none of the directors—whose resolution cre- reneged on debt promises because war clouds i es emmy ine e. You can tell a man by the way he Neither Roosevelt nor Litvinov will tell me a thing and all the others tell| eveegiee Detail, Sars & Columbia pushes tae ane ing, e's ail w boy. SLAP FOR ‘SWEET CHARITY A circus advertions it has 160 Sweet charity got little sympathy| clowns. Still can’t match the cir- SYNOPSIS In August, Seifert Vail was mur- lered at a clastee eben lari er, arehrit ay The crime F stn i 3 i 8 : } i f HE ‘. aE fi Ff BE ERE! ine: aT i Ie il ee & : 4 & 3 ; | BE E iH 4 § z i aE , EB gE F E nf f iH iE a i Et rl i a = : F E FE. id iH ¥ : E # . i 4 tf ERE | £ Er ty F ! B i i c i 5 j if i Ey E> E E fr F $ z z i E é [ | ike ex I z il ‘ a i if Hi He : : iu f 3 i E i fi Li : Fath f I F e E a g E B é EES 7 : a i t i x; s fi E il MW af a ue 7 E if i & ? Erap j i i i : a . 3 als i i iH ie y : Eg Bitte i i ‘ ‘ i ; | ie i i i F 7 se | i I i i i i i : i ik 4 F j ir Hi i j ) i F + | : L F i i i Hl i At Ff E i : ERE x rt if a ; F ee : a in i i ¢ uf iH i fF, i AG FEF s t i z : ie f E | 4 av 5 F i F z i RE! cif iF ERE E i F br Hl g & sfE A : <i 2! s i se : fl i . 5 j i i | Fite Feas H [ i i i tht it ee és af zi . Ei f 5 i i i E 3 3 Ht iF if F pe = Fr i fe put and took his arm. started into the singer’s Dr. agitated eves as be looked at Vail, Then yeected ,the G00, some, woman aE ee a eae, ar Sept dance with Vail” tae pati, atti “alma rane 4 overcame him and ue instore gee ra Se. are "Seaealy 1 ered As Veil waiaes aed bona cena F ih i Hi a

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