The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 28, 1934, Page 6

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abr FL itw time Dan pap tell! ting 3 ini hon plac opir v dere D dec trut ual pre: poli ist Nor reo ow 1 tru pet cor pay Jies the wh cin dir pe ‘MOnNPuSYRTe RERBTRRA SERIF. Aer <a ee / THE BISMA. {_Weather Report__ |i Hoover’s Book Scores ‘New Deal’ FORECAST * ee ** * * ee # For Bismarck and vicinity: Unset- | turday, ibly | ae rt Presents Old Line Reaction eee ee * * # * # eee me, Una Liberali Hope of World tontent ‘and Sat- Sees Iberalism as rope 0 or! urday, possibly lo- oa ie tore | Few recent books have created Under such pressure, he contends, tions; not much quite the same interest in the Unit- the nation has stumbled into path- change in temper-'¢q States as that attending publica- ways which, while they may not lead — pa- tion and releaso today of Herbert’ to accepted forms of Fascism, Social Kcr South Das Hoover's new volume, “The Challenge ism or Communism, inevitably lead tonight and Sat- to Libe: * by Charles Scribner's away from Liberty. His theory is urday; not much Sons, New Yorx. that the appetite for power grows change in tem-| Mr. Hoover presents in an author. [ee grey opportunity to aalise a finnesota: iday itative way the reactions of the Old an at power over the rigl aight Re eee say eettled Friday |Order to the New Deal, something | men “leads not to humility but to ar- showers, except in extreme north; which has been very badly necded in/rogance.” With a political astute- Not much change in temperature. order to make sharp differentiation | ness which he rarely displayed while For Montana: Generally fair to- between the policies of Mr. Roosevelt in office, Mr. Hoover harks back to 20 night and Saturday; cooler south por- 44 those which have dominated the| years ago when America sought to Sill pron jnation in the past. “make the world safe for Demo- GENERAL CONDITIONS | Essentially, of course, it is one) cracy,” at the same time pointing out Low pure, extends from the man’s reaction to the changes in the|that none who espoused the then eastern Rocky Mountains to the Lake american scene, but New Dealers and/ popular slogan could vision the fact Pee greece, N Dake O20: Old Dealers alike will read it witn|that Democracy would be endanger- and eastern portion of the coun! interest because it bids fair to become ed in America itself within their own In the last 24 hours precipitation has |a Republican campaign text book, not times. ocurred over the western Canadian | only for the remainder of this year) Shows Sentimental Side Provinces, Montana, North Dakota. /put tor 1938, Although his public and private pistera Minnesota and the Southern | “4. a political document it: shows an record discloses Mr. Hoover as a ma morning in northern North jakota.|unchanged Hoover. The man who terialist, his book shows another side Along the extreme northern border |struggled mightily with the forces of of his nature, for in it he becomes of the United States and Canada the | depression from 1931 to March, 1933,'something of a sentimentalist, as Gaperenires have aa cea sta | still is the same strange combination witness the language of his attack low freezing, while elsewhere “over jof Fealist and optimist. A tonic to, on Socialism and the espousal of Lib- the district temperatures have risen, | flagging Republican hopes, he sounds eralism as a fundamental doctrine: with rises of more than 20 degress anew the battle cry of individualism “True Liberalism insists that to reported from Kansas and Oklahoma.|at the same time that he looks for-| equalize rewards and possession of ae AB ee ae rd, a little vaguely it is true, to an material things robs the individual of Missouri river stage at 7a. m. -1.8 -™proved social order. |free imagination, inventiveness, risk, ft, 24 hour change, +02 ft. It is a well-intentioned and sincere | adventure, individual attainment, de- SS criticism of the New Deal by one who | velopment of personality and inde- PRECIPITATION |helped, at least indirectly, to bring it; pendence from @ monotony that ere eee iste |into being, for there is no escaping would sentence the soul to imprison- Normal, this month to date... 1113|the belief that the events of Hoover's ment.” The only alternative to So- Total, January 1st to date .... 6.53|last two years in office paved the|cialism he sees as Fascism and pre- Normal, January Ist to date .. 14.16 |way—even forced—the Roosevelt ex-' dicts that it may come as America Accumulated deficiency to date 7.61 | perimentation. reacts and swings ae ee The book, of course, does not con-; But, as much oppose rasc! poe oneura me’ Ewe cern itself solely with recent Ameri- |as to Socialism and Communism, he ' It goes abroad to|brands it “the flat contradiction of ‘the Declaration of Independence and est 62 ithe bill of rights” and sees no hope est Pct, (can developments. 44 00 | disclose the rise of dictatorships and -90 subsequent loss of liberty there. It BISMARCK, Beach, cldy. . Carrington. NRA as the most “stupendous” ine vasion of liberty since colonial days and the foreign trade policy as a mistake since it has forced the gov- ernment to join in the international economic war already in progress, As & political document, the book has one outstanding weakness—its failure to suggest any method of re- turning definitely to the paths of Liberalism. The inference is that this could be achieved by having the nation again espouse the doctrines ‘exemplified by Mr. Hoover as presi- dent. That they could be better ap- plied than ever before was the case he admits, at least indirectly, by call- ing attention to the fact that the de- pression disclosed the faults, weak- nesses and wickednesses of the old order which, presumably, was in line with Mr. Hoover's ideas of Liberal- ism. But there is no exposition of as a sign of affection. Civilization seems to be doing away with the an- cient custom of rubbing noses instead of kissing. RCK TRIBUNE. FRIDAY, SEPLEMBEK 28, 1934 —[[—[———>——————————————_—_—_—_—_— what these faults and weaknesses| were or of how they might be cured /are so delicate that it is possible to in the event former conditions were | measure one one-thousandth of a mil- restored. There is much food for thought in the book. Its sincerity is above chal- lenge. Because it is propaganda against the New Deal it serves the useful purpose of offsetting propa+ ganda for the New Deal. But one wonders, after reading it, whether it will get the open-minded reception which every work of this kind de- serves, After all, it is too soon to forget that Mr. Hoover-was one of America’s few one-term presidents and the reasons why this is so, Papuan natives are learrgng to kiss Phone Concords, Celery, extra Ige., well bleached, beh. 14c Fancy Sweet Spuds, 4 Ibs. .... Z2l1c SOAP FLAKES IGA Toilet Tissue, 3 for .... 19c| Swift or Cudahy Smoked Pi... 20C DICKS EARL OWENS, Prop. ‘Wash-All, 5 Ib. pkg. 710 Thayer Niche. GOC eit S127 Oval- tine Beef Roast, fancy steer, »... 10c Spring Chickens, fresh peri ......... 18¢ per Ib. ... Jp analyzes the economic forces which 00 jare the master key to political situs ‘00 | tions. . Crosby, cidy. Devils Lake, rain e, rain . Dunn Center, 13 Grand Forks, cldy. — eldy. Sees Social Disintegration In a time when social integration is the announced intention of gov- ernment, it discerns the seeds of so- cial disintegration as having been widely sown. The spirit of the book | is best disclosed by the author him- Ol /self in the words “I should be un- true to that service (his record as a » peldy. Parshall, rain public man) did I not raise my voice Williston, rain . (from it if Liberty is to be main- jtention to the farm problem, with tained. The book devotes considerable at- which Mr. Hoover himself struggled in vain, declaring in effect that more liberty has been lost in agri- cultural America than elsewhere be- cause of the nature of the govern- mental farm relief plan. He asserts “there is no greater usurpation of the private liberty of men by government yet invented than the whole thesis SOUTH DAKOTA POINTS High: Huron, peldy. Rapid ‘City, ck MINNESOTA POINTS High- Low- est est Pet. 68 Minneapolis, peldy. ... 50.00 Moorhead, sidy. 2.22 ee 22 38 WEATHER IN OTHER STATES h- Low- Amarillo, Tex., peldy. a 8 P35 | Boise, Idaho, ‘clear x Seeeeeis Des ee Ii oat Dodge City, Kans., cldy. Edmonton, Alta. . Sheridan, hs dy, Sioux Cliy. ta." clear ie, Wash., peldy. SRELSRSSLSLSLSSSRASESSAASSSASISLSSSTSV: = BeeResessrssssescsssssssrsknesR Sept. 28.—()}—Twenty-six miners were entombed in the.collapse of @ gypsum mine in Fukushima pre- fecture, north of Tokyo, Friday. Res- cue efforts appeared to be futile and it was believed all the miners would Perish, manufacturing men’s cloth- ing in England now than there were now has only one maker nails; C. Williams turns of giant barge nails in ‘The Red & White Stores Scott's Grocery 311 3th St. 816—Phoue—81? FREE DELIVERY jin protest, not at reform, |Of the eclipse of Liberty.” behind this program. It is the es- ‘sence of the theory that man is but the pawn of the state.” Thereafter he rises to defend the term “rugged individualism,” there- by showing a pride of authorship or at least a desire to espouse it as a slogan. His reaction to it is that “to maintain the varied individuality of men and women is one of the assur- ances of progress.” He says he should have been proud to originate the not at emergency actions, but at the threat Discussing emergency measures, Mr. Hoover sees danger that they may be made permanent and notes therein the pathway to the “danger- ous quicksands of governmental dic- tation.” He doubts that Americans can espouse governmental control, even for a time, without unhappy Permanent effects. He sees no paral- ane Large Juicy 8 einers, 1 per Ib. ...... Butter, per Ib. ..... Phone 47 423 3rd St. term, declaring that it “gives life- biood to such basic principles as free- dom of speech, conscience, press and equality before the law, regardless of race or religion,” and “contributes to the saving of our souls.” Condemns NRA With regard to definite policies of the present government, Mr. Hoover Jel between this nation and ancient Rome which called Cincinnatus from the plow to the seat of power in time of emergency, only to return him to the farm when it had passed. There- in, perhaps, he is right. American politicians, of whatever party, have never relinquished authority so easily. Raps Roosevelt Theory Thrusting directly at the Roose- veltian theory of using public money to “prime the economic pump,” Hoo- ver asserts that the priming water is really an “exhaustion of the living water of the public credit” and there- fore both ineffective and harmful. Besides, he contends, the power de- livered to the pump is being dimin- ished by “stifling confidence and en- terprise,” In essence he borrows from Poor Richard's alamanac to ob- serve that “so far no nation or in- dividual has been able to squander’ itself into prosperity” and adds that history discloses the only ways a bor- rowing government has of discharg- ing its obligations is by mortgaging the social development of the next generation or by desperate measures of repudiation, brought about by in- flation in its own generation. Denying oft repeated assertions that “revolution” has swept the coun- try, Mr. Hoover sees little chance of this but comments on the “vocal technique” of those who apparently | are trying to bring it about. One has to use little imagination as to who is meant when he says “Their slogans; their promises of utopia; their denunciation of individual wickednesses as if these were the wards of liberty; their misrepresent- ation of deep-seated causes; their will to destruction of confidence and! consequent disorganization in order! to justify action; their stirring of | class feeling and hatred; their will to clip and atrophy the legislative arm; their resentment of criticism; their chatter of boycott, of threat and of force—all are typical enough of| the methods of more violent action.” | Stepping Into Hot Water ‘We wonder, after all, if it’s bet- ter to be a widow's second hus- band rather than her first. First quality bread builds first quality health. Every loaf of Purity bread is baked of carefully se- lected and prepared ingredients that contain essential vitamins for the growing child. Its taste, too, is deliciously appetizing with that fine cake like texture that agrees with the most critical digestion. Sunshine in Every Slice Purity Bakery Bismarck “Often Buttered—Never Bettered” (Continued Next Friday) re per Ib, APPLES, Jonathan, 10 Ibs. Alaska, 1 lb. can .. PEACHES, Halves or Sliced, No. 2% can ..... SWEET POTATOES, SYRUP, pint bottle ....29C GRAPEFRUIT, BANANAS, mgt coc “The Store That Saves You Money” . APPLES, Wrapped Jonathans, 40 Ib. box ..... $1.35 CONCORDS—NEW SHIPMENT — GET YOURS ‘NOW! PRINCESS PATT COFFEE, 1 Ib. tin, special ,. RED KIDNEY BEANS, Minneopa fancy, No. 2 tin ASPARAGUS, Minneopa All Green, Special . MACARONI, per package, snecial .......... CORN FLAKES, large package, special ...... SALAD BOWL DRESSING, per quart, special +29 POWDERED SUGAR. 2 Ib. pkg., special ...........18¢ SAUERKRAUT, No, 2% tin, special, 2 for .... MACKEREL, Fancy Pack, No, 2 tin ........ MARKET DAY RAISINS, 4 Ib. pkg, special . BACON, % Ib. pkg., Swift’s, special ...............15¢ _ FRESH MEATS — FRUITS and VEGETABLES —— a Let us have your meat order. We will see that it will be carefully selected FOR LESS MONEY L, E. SMITH —WE DELIVER— _—sF. E. SMITH FRUITS — MEATS — VEGETABLES Sec. AO Some. teste 2HC Shoe... LLC tens bor... DOC beef, 2 Ibe. -... LOC soc, .21e mean 2oec mu ..40c eS .. 28e Miracle Whip, 29 c Toilet Tissue HAMBURGER (ground beef), 3 Ibs. 25c- pl dense ce i en eared Apples, Jona- Liver, fresh Mustard, salad, Veal Chops, te. tee fancy, leew tb... LOC We Deliver All Orders. Bring Us Your Eggs. Farmers’ Cut Rate Meat Market 612 Broadway Phone 216 We Deliver on Saturdays SATURDAY SPECIALS FANCY STEAKS CHICKENS Round Steak, Fat Young Hens, 12 c '-Bone . Fat Springers, ee a. per Ib, ......... 18c. 8c aon... Se Calf Liver, 20c per lb. ... Beef Tongues, OB 6 10c 15c Hamburger, 10c 15c Beef Liver, CHOICE VEAL cuTs | et! see Veal Round Steak, 1 5c “4 LBC 6c Veal Stew, ..18¢ .18c .10c Pork Link Sau- sage, per Ib. .... Beef ‘Pot Roast, The scales on which gold is weighed |ligram; even a pencil mark on a piece of paper may be weighed on the bal- ances. A herd of reindeer constitues wealth in Siberia, where they provide milk, flesh, skins and transportation. What ! Soak Out Dirt from Clothes in iS Minutes -Safely STOP! mar SOAP WILL RUIN YOUR CLOTHES ITS ABSOLUTELY SAFE = AND I'LL PROVE IT/ Heated controversy rages over science’s new million dollar faster. washing soap discovery. How disastrous experiences with old-type fast-washing soaps have made women wary. How they are amazed to find that this new soap not only does in 15 minutes’ soaking what other soaps take hours of scrubbing and boiling to do, but also works with utter safety to colors, fabrics, hands. And—gets clothes 4 to 5 shades whiter, without one bit of washboard wear and tear. And every “4 thousands more women are finding that sis true, That this new and amazing soap invent ing Oxyoot gets clothes # shades whiter én 25 minutes’ soaking than other soaps en agi tt dial scrubbing and boiling. — it does this utterly without harm to colors, fabrics, hands, An Utterly New-Type Soap ‘The result of some 4 years’ experimentatic and the expenditure of over one million yt) the Seeman ta Oxypot is ly different from anything you have tried before. It is new in le. (Process patented.) Itisuen isucton, Itteneninteodee 4 ‘It does these 3 things that no other scapcan. do now or has ever succeeded in doing: Loosens dirt out of clothes in 15 minutes’ ing. Thus, banishes all the back-break- ing rul and ecrubbing. And cuts wash- ing time 25% to 40% in tub or machine— gives you afternoons free! Gets clothes 4.to 5 shades witter than i itometer test. Whiter in ONE wash- it’s ing than other granulated soaps can Go in Yct it's absolutly safe, Two washings! Yet, due to the of its ind deproved formula! colors won't fades fabric won't suffer! Even cotton prints and chil- fabrics, or colors. temarkable Ox’ to its special formula—its special protective combination REGULAR or R SIZE 2108 BIG, ECONOMICAL HOUSEHOLD Size 76: ogee CUULTIDLIES TIME. IN SUDS ATS EASY TO MAKE RIPE GRAPE JAM, TOO, WITH CERTO. AND YOU SAVE TIME AND MONEY AS WELL Grapes are cheap in price and perfect in flavor... So now’s the time to get your Certo and stock your cupboard to overflowing! rt t00 much of this Y cniciou ly. And ight nov, wih ing most State Fair Champions—use Certo in all their jam and jelly makiog. FRUIT BARGAINS—AT YOUR GROCER'’S NOW Certo lets you use fruits at their ripest and. when ‘Atiathed to Lid and most economical. ‘(Certo bottle is a booklet of 89 pes for making these matchless jams and.

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