The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 14, 1934, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 14, 1934 ‘An Independent Newspaper THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER The Bismarck Tribune fall at Shanghai was only 1.6 inches during June, whereas the normal is 7.4 inches, and that the rice swamps are drying up. Relatively scant rain- fall and excessive heat have dam- Rice is China’s chief cereal crop and, with its production reduced, Chinese are turning to wheat. But this, too, is below normal and ob- servers report a tendency to keep the wheat on the farms. Besides, so many canals are dried up that much of it cannot be brought to market. As @ result, wheat increased five | VACATION POST CARDS we IN AMERICA cents a bushel at Shanghai during A certain NRA official than 600/ June and present quotations are 72.8 stat together Authse of Famous First Poets” cents a bushel for the Argentine follows: product and 75.6 cents for Australian year now are shot. His mental suf-|sent me @ memorandum 50 | Fin. fers. He has outlived mone ot tig |of our baslo ideas ‘Thus the world surplus may be re- great usefulness and many of his|bave no reason to duced by drouth in China, just as Punches swing so far wide of the |f them are not. the American surplus has been cut Mark as to grieve his friends. Be- — by drouth here, and the ultimate Hore, long, he probably will be out of | TUGWEEL Roosevelt carried biel old be higher prices for grain But no one yet can persuade him to| west Indies a Rta Quit—or even rest. Groggy but grim,/dum from Undersecretary beeen ks of NRA as his own |well on “American i news tches credited to it 3 “man show—and plunges on. based on Tugwell’s “3 “ee Meck erealied in tals Back to Grass ed iibae) inside explanation of|hand study of Teenie une ‘also the local news of| One of the first men to advocate potateehtct creation of the Industrial | Virgin Islands. spontaneous origin published herein.|a “back to grass” program for the lergency and appoint-| Roosevelt failed All rights of republication of all other] northwest was Dr. J. H. Shepperd, Donald matter herein are also reserved. | Accurate But Deceiving That even honest figures can -be deceiving is illustrated by the current report of the American Railway as- sociation giving the forecasts of freight movements for the third quarter of 1934 as compiled by the nation’s 13 shippers’ regional advis- for years one of the nation’s out- standing livestock experts and now president of the state agricultural college. For many years, however, his was |@ voice crying in the wilderness rep- resented by dreams of bonanza wheat {and the hope of making an agricul- tural killing. To return plowed acres to grass and forage crops seemed ory boards. silly when wheat yields were good with J wis Se: Geadtite (har Magu ie | tube for studying the impact Leading the list in the percentage | and prices were favorable. NRA. Roosevelt persuaded him to! New Deal on such elements in recal- of increase, for example, is the| In recent years, however, with agin en im |S chance to/citrant human nature as stupidity, northwest region, comprising the|wheat yields falling off, prices poor othered hime’ ‘TIés which most greed, prejudice, superstition, ignor- GTRAUS became secretary of Dakotas, Montana, Minnesota and ®/and drouth taking a heavy annual ‘The original iden was to name | oot erent Political and! commerce and labor during part of Wisconsin, with s gain Of] toll, the wisdom of this advice ts em- & committee to run the recovery .|“"tparenthetion’y, it should be ob-| Thedore Roosevelt's second 152 per cent over the same period of | phasized. rd lone Johnson retired st served that we need mote fuss and fete Nowe year eer NO ante im Wea Ua Saeesel peed least for the reet of the Saminer. |ieathers, more purple and gold, in GT] company with the NC 1 asa Bince freight movement is pre-|taken up the idea and at the Fargo tenes bec Teliae pti a perigee theinges er Bid Laney NC 3, but was the only pilot to sumed to be one of the best indices state fair has an exhibit emphasiz- White House flay de- | plicity ad tenement, ‘The sack| ‘*"!sh the trip. He hopped to of commercial and industrial activity, | ing the importance of adequate pas- clined to leave. suit and Republican austerity of man- BLit veaad eal Tie tae ny the Semicrea te geese. core veceeit || PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE | seat trum (ae Seen ece| Seri ing ing in this area, In this instance the| acreage of harvested crops. The story be satel Fhe But Roosevelt, | tempt. The British, with their scarlet deduction is incorrect, even though| which began in North Dakota, and Hi oe the general, wouldn't tunics, knew their stuff.) 2 By William Brady, M.D. | force out, “The lesson of the tropics is the the figures are apparently reliable. | which was ignored here at the time . | Instead, he named a recovery com-| lesson of the New Deal—a more abun-| [*Perlence Miller is said Twenty-nine classifications are} when it would have done the most be actd — Harbea will be snawerst by cor eee ; Lassiaciee: . mitlee which includes Johnson, but |dant Ife in which the ends of life wane ‘used by the advisory boards in esti-/ good, now is being carried to the en- e ‘ ’ % 7 4 mating freight movements, including about every item in normal com- merce. Of this number 20 show po- tential increases in movement and nine show decreases. Among the latter are grains, potatoes, livestock, and poultry and dairy products, which comprise the bulk of the freight mov- ing from the Dakotas and Montana. In view of this fact it is difficult to understand how an increase could occur for the region as a whole until consideration is had of the tremen- dous importance of iron ore load- ings. In 1933, for example, ore loadings accounted for 200,399 cars whereas the total for the region was only 369,- 647. In 1934 it is estimated that ore lpads will account for 280,000 cars, the entire region for 425,737. Thus, while figures for the third quarter anticipate a decrease of 26,479 cars in loadings of grain, livestock and tire nation as a result of grim neces- sity. The iesson is one, once we learn it, which should never be ignored. If treated properly this region has won- derful possibilities. One of them is that it can become one of the finest beef and dairy producing areas in the world once we see the logic of going back to grass. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they ag or disagree with The Tribun Dolictes. ecretary Wallace’s Frankness (Minneapolis Tribune) No matter what one may think of the policies of the AAA and their applica- tion, it cannot be denied that Secre- tary Wallace is engagingly frank and BRASS SPECIALIST INADVER- TENTLY APPROVES MODERN METHOD patient who had been bleeding for ‘months and had become so anemic she was unable to work, The doctor injected the hemorrhoid (pile), a pain- less office treatment, and instructed the patient to report in a week. When she returned she had not lost a drop of blood nor had the piles troubled. The injected pile had disappeared. In all, four injections were given in ‘@5 many weeks. At this juncture the patient was notified that a hospital bed, for which she hati applied sev- eral weeks before, was now available. She went to the hospital, was exam- ined by the brass surgeon in charge, judicial in all discussions of the points involved. The secretary is always at and dismissed with a note from the brass surgeon saying that the diag- 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. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Have a Baby Do you think it will be all right for me to have a child? I am 43 years old and have never had any. (R, W.) Answer—Yes, if you're married. Se- riously, it doesn’t matter how old you are. The question is, how young are you? Can you roll somersaults? Can you run a mile? If you can you can have a baby. Lime Dust Is it dangerous to inhale the dust of | lime? My husband has a job at the lime kiln. People tell me it is bad Now I am going to bed and sleep away all the misery I have suffered in court, and dream of the day when I shall be dancing again.—Tilly Losch, |of that city) introduces a new era and, femous Viennese dancer, just divorced. I venture to prophesy, will become a | classic in the library of the In connection with the most prac- Practitioner who wishes to tical and instructive book on the “In- his service to his patients, jection Treatment of Hemorrhoids” |he himself administers such the author describes the case of a ment or not. ** * Seneral/ Business and money making are & improve | part of life, but they are not life— whether Raymond J. Knoeppel of New York, former director of Rotary Interna- tional. est Sanatorium. Up to that time,| Where Mark Hillyer, the playright, cri en from arthritis, had been ed. The crime gave him new interest in life. It was he finally solved the to take it up. other agricultural products, this loss 4s much more than offset by an ex- pected gain of 79,000 cars in ore load- Angs. As a result, when the northwest @rea leads the nation with an ex- pected gain of 15.2 per cent in car- Joadings, it is really an index of re- ‘vived activity in the nation’s indus- trial centers where iron ore is con- verted into ingots and manufactured nto articles for commercial use, for your lungs. Mrs. 8. W.) | Answer—Workers in cement plants seem to be remarkably free from tu- jberculosis. Many physicians have be- | lieved that lime dust inhaled at such work tends to prevent tuberculosis. Your husband should hang onto his Job. Please let me know whether a hair pillow is harmful to sleep on. (M. 8.) Answer—Not unless you happen to be sensitized to the animal hair. (Copyright, 1934, John F, Dille Co.) Pains to make it plain that there is] nOSs of hemorrholds had been wrong no pleasant panacea for the cure of 98 the patient had no hemorrhids at cur agricultural ills. In his address|#!l! Too bad the brass surgeon was before the American Institute of Co-|"°t apprised of the fact that the pa- operation at Madison Wednesday | tient had received the injection treat- night, the secretary outlined the three | ment. possible policies which this country] In my lexicon a brass specialist is Muay pursue in its efforts to rehabili-|any physiclan-surgeon who holds him- tate agriculture. Each one of these,|self out to the public as one more the secretary said, has its draw-|skilled in one or more lines than or- backs and its advantages. None is|dinary physician-surgeons are. What Pleasant. stamps him as a quack is the fact “Each one of these three courses|that he competes with the family involves some pain,” he said. “The|physician-surgeon for the patronage rather than a sign of increased ac- tivity on the farms which comprise ® large part of the northwest dis- frict, question is whether we ure willing to suffer a little pain now in order to avoid an infinitely greater pain later on. Because the middie course in- volves perhaps the least discomfort, T have been inclined to favor that and to recognize it as our probable choice.” of the public. The true specialist, on the other hand, is recognized and respected by the family physician- surgeon who calls him in consultation or refers patients to him for the bene- fit of his special training, greater | One of the ‘Musketeers’ | Secession by Inference ‘This middle course of which the |*2OWedge or wider experience in his! HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle“ _ of tar. Particular field. 1 Man in th u One of the troubles with enforce-|sccretary speaks involves the annual 4 6 7To accomplish : : 1-| 22 all cases of piles (hemorrhoids) picture, Doug- 18 Railroad, ment of the law is that, in the hands/aomission ot some two hundred mil-| oxcept thrombotic (clotted) external (Hees 20 — is his of clever attorneys, it sometimes piles, the injection treatment in the ‘means what it doesn’t seem to mean; import and at the same time seeding hands of a skilled physician-surgeon 9He has —— home state. Mark's secre! sees Loren pny ths of the dcewn and reforesting some twenty- for a living. 22 Grief. wat other times the reverse is true. _| five million acres of good plow land oe Book ie neen of seiee beyond) 13 Genuine, 23 To undermine. A splendid example is the conten-| fifty million acres of poor land. q ei Goatneee ee rd ne ndioal 14 Lubricant. 26 Ancient kind What the secretary terms the na-|Sursical gives 15 Double. of theater. tion by Prancis Murphy in the #u-| i nalistic course is one that leads to|ureeons Uttle ground for argument] t6Tiny particle. [g 28 Fatty matter preme court Friday, in answer to ®| uitimate self-containment, which ac-|Sbout this. In my opinion the stan-| 17 A giver. IM LIA in glands. question by Judge A. G. Burr, that|cording to the secretary would be|%#Fd method of operating on hemorr-| 19 Narrative EIATT MEO IQIAIG] 30 Distinctive ‘William Langer could vote an absent| costly in terms of economic sacrifices nae ie ne ot the crudest Of BRET, poem. ISINIOIW) theory. voter's ballot in North Dakota even|#nd extreme regimentation. While fe is some sgh i 21 Light brown, 32 Fabulous bird. if he were imprisoned in the federal] ‘he internationalistic course would not pain or discomfort in the intervals} 22 Marvels, 84 Small crescent ee p she involve any cut in acreage, it would|Dc'ween treatments, the majorty of| 94 stir shaped spot. “Te it trpe penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kan.| require the importation of a half a|Patients who receive the injection} 95 Hour, 43 Road. work is on 36 Booted. him out to which he has been sentenced by|billion dollars more goods than we|treatment for piles or related condi-| 25 yellow Hawal- 44 Slash. the —. 38 Reign. ? Federal Judge Andrew Miller, now import. Hons are enthusiastic in praise of the fan bird. 46 Sons, . 39 Affirmative. ve convinced at Obviously the carrying through of|method and quite satisfied with the! 97 Like, 52 Lion. VERTICAL 45 Precept. pald hare done. s reek Attorney Murphy offered to sub-|any of these courses ie certain, ¢o|sesults, Often they insist they are| 27 Like, 53 To toss slowly. 2 Perfume. 47 Above. fe valle Mmometee eile have 1 mit a brief on this interesting voint| create sectional and class antagonism. | entirely cured even before the doctor 30 Fresh-water 65 To resolve into. 3 To press, 48 Woolly surface fact which he did pany es ‘He ray him ‘which, to the average citizen, is a/ All these courses imply some type of |Can agree that all the piles have dis- fish. its elements. 4 Queer. of cloth. died ignorant of the motive of his|visibl le good deal like the contention that|S0cial discipline and the country as a|appeared. 81 By 86 Genus of 5 To exist. 49 Colored part murderer, and that night, while the|two persons the moon is made of green cheese. whos 45 Bt arcuate to aisepitne, Fly ak ae the paging 33 Otherwise, meadow 6 Midday. of sanatorium danced, sentence ofjers who 5 i h already been passed upon | forth, To the uninitiated citizen, whO| interest and a wide discrepancy in the |by Dr. T. F. McNamara of Rochester,| °° Rude llMbred grasses. LBepareleat. Sage kiln, Ga es, ‘ thinks the law means what it says, 3 the next velues to be attributed to certain|N. Y. (just published by Medical Press achievements. All of which is not in a 37 Abnormal & z i 59 Cavity. 9 Paid publicity. : 52 Opposite of the proviso that a man must be a star (pl.). 16 He represents 58 Northeast. 42 Type standard. 62 His greatest the —— type 60 Before Christ. a la i ii ide es Ed at i enough, as does the provision that a man confined in a federal prison is not a citizen. But lawyers get paid for finding ‘oopholes in the law and putting queer interpretations upon it, so Mr. Murphy can hardly be blamed for his mass of tissue. 60 Piece of 10 Billiard rod. win. afternoon. I awoke with a héad-|billies for Mark. citizen of the United States and s oe att calculated to make the task 39 Liliaceous sculpture. 11 Bark of paper 54 Large. ache snd remained in bed all “For two 2-) citizen of North Dakota to be an|ouers “ny Of sericulture any! FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: ont G1 He ts a suc mulberry "86 To murmur, Th aun planed own from Drasey peseants be Z - or. thin, sstul —— 12To nullify. as a cat. elector in this state seems clear! When we contrast the dispessionate 41 North America, star ( AO wae if i utterances of Mr. Wallace with the cock-sure oratory of the fi of the various agricultural rehabili- tation plans in the past, we can hardly help entertaining an increasing con- ficence in any plan he may espouse. At least, we know that he is not = é ff ii ib | J & is F E : A aya ir it ft Bie 38 ; Hee Ea ik zt ie il 4 i °F it + i Fis BE ak ‘ing paid for. No lawyer minds look- Ing faintly ridiculous if he gets a fat | i i abe ie 8 it 4 i : B l i to A bs +5 init : as \

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