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ie Bismarck Tribune 00} high seas in the lawless 16th cen- 0! goviet-American negotiations for set- tlement of all those old debts and > ind unt do the newspaper and also the local news of bln thedienassemnceath te Mid “spontaneous origin published herein. Tepublication of all other also reserved. Douglas Resigns ‘The resignation of Lewis Douglas as director of the national budget is neither a bombshell, as the shattered ranks of the Grand Old Party would have us believe, nor, on the other hand, a matter which the New Deal. can accept lightly in view of facts It is unfortunate that the admin- istration cannot tolerate a few stolid conservatives among its many young Mberals. For its own good, the New Deal can stand a more balanced diet Douglas is a dyed-in-the-wool con- No one incident, but a series with which Douglas was out of sympathy, led to his decision to resign. He had been one of the etely—the national bank holiday— _ Was enough to discourage the strong- est character. He met the crisis as "—with rare good judg: We Learn Slowly Deaths resulting from automobile “ccidents in North Dakota this year THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1934 corsairs got their hands on plenty of it. The noble art of hi-jacking was performed in a way to turn the Span- jards’ hair gray. One is reminded of this, somehow, by the extreme precautions that had to be taken when the federal gov- ernment began to move $2,000,000,000 in gold from the San Francisco mint to the Denver mint. A small army of Police, federal men, and soldiers was on hand to guard it. Two hundred machine guns were ready to shoot down hi-jackers. ‘The moral is unpleasant, but cleat. Conditions in the United States to- day are very much like those on the tury. Room for Leniency The stalemate which has held up claims continues unbroken. So far, no very definite details about it have been made public; all that can be ascertained is that the two nations are finding it impossible to come to hoped-for revival of Russian-Ameri- can trade cannot begin. attempting to unionize South Car- are meeting to determine how best to combat the strike. To combat the strike will be of no avail.” Firemen Extinguish 100 DAMS, BUILT BY CCC, WILL CONSERVE WATER NEXT SPRING Largest Project Near Regent Creates Lake Covering Over 200 Acres PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to diagnosis, or treatment, will 7 self-addressed envelope is enclosed, in ink.* No reply can be made to qi Shuine ‘pam. "Approtiataly” 35 mills in Nosth and Sout idle because of strike. refuses to send national guardsmen where 4,000 operatives are WHY BE A HOLY FRIGHT? Although I like ‘em plump I do not subscribe to the common idea that fat folk are naturally good natured and thin folk crabid. In fact the frights are generally amiable enough and often quite cheerful souls. It is only that you are constantly minded to handle them carefully, they’re 80 fragile, and from that is an easy step to feeling sorry for the poor things. Perhaps a contributing factor of the/of the common notion about the obese being such gentle, easy-going eggs arises from such misinterpretation of their inactivity and docility; we forget that they have to be passive because it’s too strenuous for them to:throw their As I wish to keep the confidence of readers I shall not estimate how many tons of slacker flesh overweight Persons have cast off in the past few months by following the new scien- tific method of reduction which I am glad to give any reader who tells me he or she is overweight and encloses 2 i ident to Nam Special Board for Strike Mediation instruct the patient how to own shots between times. Physicians with much in the treatment of Poor nutrition with insulin 5 to 15 units, more or less, aday. The patient is ad ‘and soon will crave, a Besides building up the wei flesh, this treatment gen new feeling of well interest in life. The E E iH i ii : E i 6 Ht é Hy if Some of the debt is accounted for|stamped addressed envelope. But by loans made to the ill-fated Ker- ensky government, just before the Bolshevik revolution. The rest is made up of private claims for prop- erty lost or destroyed during the up- heaval. It is worth considering whether the United States would not be wise to adopt an exceedingly lenient attitude in connection with these claims. If Russia is prepared to buy heavily from American manufacturers once & debt settlement is reached, we may ‘be losing more than we gain by hold- ing out for a full settlement. : while all this remarkably easy slen- erizing has been going on I have never for a moment lost sight of the plight of the frights. This talk is for their especial benefit. For several years I have been urg- ing the insulin treatment on skinny readers. From the letters they write I estimate that one in three sought such treatment got it variably those who received added much desired weight or Two out of three who sought treatment met with rebuffs or dumbness. But grad year, the rank and file of the fession is learning about this day there is scarcely a village where there is not a dt Proves. There is better Course the insulin insures similation. The number of Puscles in the blood shows a Besides this, for those who skinny and tight, I have a graph on “Gaining Weight’ it and enclose stamped envel bearing your correct address. FQFs if aah $ LJ tile '. “We learn that the code authorities three divisions of the industry | with fixed ff QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Plain Tea Please let me know what-kind of tea that was I saw recommended in your column to darken gray Answer—Pending settlement negotiations with a number of tea! Forest cam) Gite High Cost of Strikes or two who can and will give ingulin If you have ever doubted that the strike is the most expensive way of settling labor difficulties, you might scan the figures presented by the Minneapolis Junior Chamber of Com- merce, dealing with the recent truck atrike in that city. The truck drivers themselves, in wages, lost $575,000. Employers lost, in diminished busi- ness, $20,000,000. Taxpayers, through the calling of the National Guard, had to foot a bill of $450,000. treatment to a healthy thin person to make him put on weight. Typical is this report from my Micl “I have mentioned several times to our doctor that I would like to take the treatment, but he has always brushed the suggestion aside... . At first he said I would add weight naturally after my baby.... but Iam thinner than ever. Last week I asked the doc. tor if he couldn’t teach me how to take the insulin myself ... He said he might, but hastened to make me promise to take egg- ip Rutledges and Yuave bons enmaies tor|" "When sactawnes, she E E if ak i §} i if i Mists i i Democrats Active, jit a aa cre wen. POLICEMEN RECOVER juries, much property damage, wage losses to thousands of workers not directly involved in the dispute, and the loss of much business, some of which will never return, All this makes a pretty heavy bill for a community to pay. Almost any kind of peaceful settlement would have been cheaper than that, in the Jong run. Townley Challenges eg Minnesota Governor St. Paul, Minn., Sept. 5.—(@)—A. C. Townley, founder of the old Nonpar- tisan League, was injected into the Minnesota political situation Wednes- day when he threatened to run as an independent candidate against Gov. — B. Olson, Farmer-Labor chief- |. Charging that “the Farmer-Labor administration is in the hands of re- actionary Republican and Democratic appointees,” a committee called on Governor Olson late Tuesday and ask- ed he remove eight heads of state de- partments and twg of the five mem- bers of the conservation commission. The commiteee, claiming Farmer- Labor representation in every county of the state, was appointed at a meet- ing at Benson to wait on the gover- ner. At this meeting, Townley an- ‘nounced he would file as an independ- total 74 compared with 64 during the/ent gubernatorial candidate if the de- same period last year. Approximately | mands were not met within a week. 200 persons have been injured in the more than 200 accidents listed by the| Child, Feared Victim state highway maintenance men thus Last year establisiied a new high Of Kidnapers, Is Safe Oakland, Calif. ' record for casualties. But the 1933/da Cardihet. 13, whose wanderings led figures have been exceeded by a con-|to the belief that she had been kid- Casualties from this source is a prob- Jem which continues without solu-|own for a li é i E F i “I thought that if I went out 8 ag & i i ‘3 ips? i 2 i | i | iy E t i g % i tty f | i E Kostelecky Retains Honors at Glendive Dickinson, N. D., Sept. 5.—(/)—Wil- Mam Kostelecky, eee Dickinson, defending champion, won the eastern Montana and western Dakota golf Hr camment at Glendive by defeating Kostelecky shot a par 72 in the round to take | Press) (Over Counter at New yor) Quart. Inc. Sh., 1.19; 1.30, I i i are operating in this persone ing activity and interest by! Dittman Reendorsed By Arizona Ballot ? i i r i Says Woman Leader Kine campe oh If q° if I THREE STOLEN CARS Steve Mossbrucker Pleads Guil- be ty to Theft Charge; Two Others Arrested i | f i I k i F ? i i | F i s ' | i rt F Ut i [ RL : if i { i re a 4 Ei i Three stolen automobiles were re- covered by local police over the week- i et Fey Fe F “+ rt aT 3 rH E | | 3 HI I i af fi if} H oti rE aoe is i i A E i i | i a i | ft i by young men seeking “joy rides” but warned that the culprits would be Prosecuted if caught. Steve Mossbrucker was arrested for petty larceny Saturday. guilty to the charge, was a before City Judge Edward 8. Allen and given 30 days in jail and $100 fine # F i was furnished the Kulm band and a baseball = i i rT i E vi FR EY i H i i i I i i H iu i i i t i i i it Be? Fy $ Hi ft Fu 5 +1 i £ ; ff [ : i E & i é i Ly 8 f cof Fy Hf 4 i £ i al ! i ti: E te 5 H f f i, [ [ 4 both of Bismarck, are being held $1,000 bond each. 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