The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 31, 1935, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JANUARY 31, 1935 a i es +f | id collection but that the total is ‘—|_ Answer—BBs or CRs? Never mind The Bismarck Tribune)" iF % mi : reater than thi xpayer = end dime and stamped envelope aaa a Cellmates ||| PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE |jsitue'teu‘siuca%s t's fj THE STATES | OLDEST y vente Kees “Unbidden Guests.” It tells IEWSPAPER 5 alli: you how to deal with bedbugs, cock- é (Established 1873) o Scout Anniversary By William Brady, M. D. roaches, cooties, itch mites, pinworms, F | erie aaa hans Gilda Hie aders of the Boy Scout move- Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease || Tingworms, ants or what have you. : ey nor Cagery Cree NOE | wee preparing to observe the 25th diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady, if @ stamped, ‘The Way to Breathe j oe eee acl ad —--- | anniversary of scouting from Feb- self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written Much interested in the suggestion Hi Published by The Bismarck | i 1 vith prid in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. || that belly breathing is beneficial for ? une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and|Uary 8 to 14, can look with pride up- 4 Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. one with chronic arthritis, Will you entered at the postoffice at Bismarck/on the accomplishments of the or- bags tell 4 ihe rates Se hel seco lass il matter. vhi nswer—Dr. 8. lolphus ‘opt, i SGRORGE b. “MANN ceneation wo how numbers more ESCAROLE AND ANTITOXIN | will presently begin to grow, to in-| famous authority on tuberculosis, sug: Weaneuct ana Puaanet jthan 1,000,000 boys and which has If I had acute sore throat with on-| crease in weight in a normal way, and| gested it, in a discussion of arthritis President anc = .|aided in the training of 6,425,511 lads ly moderate fever and just a general|the eye disease clears up. A unit/ at the last meeting of the American ai ‘ Subscription Rates Payable in [since it was formed in this country wretched feeling, and so we should|of vitamin A is the quantity neces-| Medical association. But Dr. Knopf ‘} ws Advance a quarter century ago. deem it wise to take a culture, and|sary to induce the standard rate of| calls it diaphragmatic breathing, Di- {3 Daily by carrier, per year. ......$7.20) Whett A He NOpLaRD Wa the laboratory reported next day| growth which has been adopted as| rections for belly breathing are giv- °, Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- | hether or not the boy who was a that it was diphtheria, and the doctor | basis for such tests—usually three| en in the booklet, “The Art of Easy t MACK)... ee eeeeee esses, 7:20) SCOUL grows Up to be a better citizen came fiddling around with a dinky| grams weight per weck—for a period| Breathing.” For a copy, send 10 a Daily by mail, per year (in state ithan the one who lacked these ad- 10,000 or 20,000 unit dose of antitoxin,| of four to eight weeks. cents in coin and stamped envelope e outside of Bi : 5.00 vantages is open to argument, but Td be inclined to wave him aside and} It is all on a comparative basis,) bearing your address, a 6 Daily by mail outs | thers te Ho doubt that He olla Be duck the dose for a bit. But if the|and gives the arbitrary figures by| (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) ih Dakota ...... = 0100] CHEFS 28 2G cpieiigeeres ih , doctor purposed to shoot at least| which Wwe guage the vitamin values| Weekly by mailins 100 ‘or the ideals of scouting are ex- 50,000 units of antitoxin into my sys-| of various foods. But after all it is Weekly by mail outside of North 1 and are brought tem in the first dose, I'd say oke to| not too scientific or precise, and i. Dakota, per year . 150 ce in a forceful way. that, for I'd feel that he knew his! moreover you can't always judge the ‘ Weekly by mail in Canada, per ist because a. boy liolds tip His business. value of food in human nutrition by year ears ue Wet because a (boy nelub. up. After all, 50,000 units of antitoxin is| its value in the nutrition of lower 3 a hand an recites the scout oath a ny Member of Audit Bureau of ee ene ae: @ very moderate dose if you really| animals. doe nean he is going to live up believe you are dealing with diph-| These nutrition chemists and lab- e ii ted Pi to it day in every The ae oF bint take a very a oratory expects and animal research Associated Press abit f grace oftel re case of diphthera to produce 000; workers give us most of our new ively |BESt of iI from grace often, are units of diphtheria poison or toxin in| knowledge, to be sure. Yet when all| We are improving and repairing tion forced to pick up our shattered con- the blood. Why putter with timid|is said and done, the best authority and making more humanly tolerable of all news to it setences a in, we hope, Uttle 10,000 unit doses when you are) in medicine is clinical experience and ‘one . antpar a iy local news of | 20 Detter things. giving an antidote to a poison? the — doctors accept only the eae wit) hewspaper a pebble dls P 3 y Sc y Just stop and think how many red} method or principle that proves cf- spontanecus origin ed herein because a Boy eee aye blood corpunctes in a single ap of] fective in actual Dretie, What would become of German All rights of republication of all other ingly devil- blood—I dare not estimate the num- pene music if political denunciation matter herein are also reserved. al to boy ber, lest some better mathematician QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS should interfere with art?—Wilhelm —— wenn ee — ture, it cannot be interpreted as a pronounce my figures erratic, but I Air in School Room Furtwaengler, resigned leader of the _» Ay The Power t 2 of scout training. The idea is am safe in saying there are several/ where it has long been the cus- | Berlin Philharmonic Orchestra, eu. better men of our boys; and million red corpuscles in a wee drop! tom to overheat the schoolroom the vdealtbd It may be t : Sener Fy of blood. jchildren are not suitably clothed for | We should make our cry of “Back vocal than ot THEN SOU: Wear tipsy Ur DIASVES, Why, for that matter, have you! an ideal schoolroom temperature (not |to the Land,” because of the electri- but whatever But in their everyday associa- ever scrutinized your escarole thoro-| over 67 degrees F.) That handicaps |fication and of the automobile which continue to for bject for tons a fine ideal is constantly before ly? Escarole is chock full of vitamin] our efforts to improve ventilation in | facilitates travel—Frank Lloyd Wright, non both ton and them and it cannot do otherwise than A. A pound of it contains 96,000! the school room. I think lowering | famous architect. deliberation both ton and oe hee ery are arte units of vitamin A. That's more than| of vitality through overheating and * ee in our state 1c iain: z four times as much vitamin A as you poor ventilation might even have a| while admiring President Roosevelt The a get in good fresh pasture butter or in| bad moral effect on children as well I feel that we need someone he significant thing about the the finest cream cheese, and both of! as a bad physical and mental effect. |i... ‘ te, however, t t is who can diagnose our ills and use a note, however, t : aia a these dairy products are justly famed | (C, C, E.) . *s , scout movement is not that many surgeon's knife—someone who is not different fro; at he woul 2 itl REACTS e for their vitamin A content, | Answer—I agree with you. It should , fine men are devoting time to it but an eighteenth century family doctor. doibe. Vi in the street ; How in the world can we tell| be forbidden to heat a schoolroom —Max Eastman, poet and philoso- feels that he t Ot OS Ree mae Whether food has vitamin A in it?| above 68 degrees F. ‘The most effec- | pher. . i : y are its best salesmen. To the nutrition experts it is easy | tive, and economical, way to insure aa xe * of the t | smaller brothers, not yet old enough. They feed accurately mea-| good ventilation in the schoolroom is . our state a aribuph {i6) Jot Le Tanker OBE ten? sured quantities of standard feed by means of full sash window screens| The Eighteenth Amendment has the problem of hot Seen ay aime ara that is adequate in all other respects | of unbleached muslin, as introduced |"t been repealed in the hearts and sibs. ward to the time when they, too, can but without vitamin A to young white! by Dr. John B. Todd of Syracuse, |minds of the American people. Repeal : | become members and enjoy the ad- rats. Soon the young animals cease! N. Y. |has not restored prosperity.—Sergt. @ . A splendid ¢ |Ventures of hiking, camping, swim- to grow, to gain in weight, and | Unbidden Guests Alvin C. York. current talk MS! ming, woodcraft and handicraft gin to show characteristic eye in-| We moved last autumn into a near- and gross income taxes. These difier | snich are integral parts of the move-| # Christmas. He supposed it was a gift| brated lobbyist whom the president|flammation. Now these EIEN eE | CAGE eee ates tarna oben itanin anvealiee eats Peer coulis, for cet of each ment and which throw a glamour THE from @ constituent, so took it home| made resign ss secretary of the|with their avitaminous A feed. If the| have not left yet, in spite of all the | fires causing $40,000,000 worth of dam- is the same. The reasons given for) around it, to be opened up with others. Democratic national committee. substance contains vitamin A the rats| things we have tried... (Mrs. 8. E.) |age annually. oF hy Promoting this plan are that the| yy 95 years scouting has not only NEW DEAL The “gift” turned out to be 8,000} Which seems further confirmation = people haven't the money to Pay CUr-jhecome well established in America petitions from citizens of Walla Walla of a well-established fact that Roose- : edpercal\ estate taxes and it-is'nevess|. Z : IN for his endorsement of the ‘Townsend| velts, from Papa and Mama down the find @ levy which they can, |‘t 238 developed into one of our most old age pension plan. line, do pretty much as they darn ARTHUR sary to find a levy which they cal- | important methods of citizenship JASHINGT Is Hill now supporting the Town- | Please. bi not escape. In other words, the @P- | training. send plan? He is. (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Y | SHUMWAY proach is from the angle of how to Sie Sacer —BY RODNEY DUTCHER. Abasaiator saat aibwednine ene atee obtain more rather than of how to} Editorial Comment (Tribune Washington Correspondent) |10Wing excerpt from one of his let- lepeeuane ial mr psdpectonnr : spend less, a discouraging thing for| ters: - worth her fe nd loathi f him in-) bl that recklessness might y . 5 ‘ditorial 4 below show th “The report has gone the rounds | business from railroads entering New we fear and loathing of ee the family man who has hard enough || eee ees by ther caltate, ||Flames of Strife Mounting Higher in ites 46 gece te indry expenses con-|'York, creased. She tugged at the cords|overcome caution and strategy and, sledding as it is. They are published without regard || Virgin Islands . . . Fur Will Fly beoehirt fits attention binding her wrists but without suc-| dead or wounded, he would be even || to whether they agree or disagree || When Ernst Arrives . . . Voice of | tessmen give their dirty towels away J. movement didn’t escape|less use to Kay than he had been. It is only natural that, under the with The Tribune's policies People Heard on To’ nd Plan each time one takes a bath and buys him; it made him grin broadly. What he feared was that he would stress of the times, public officials|| Capital Dirt Tosscrs Busy. & nice expensive one for the next} FLAPPER FANNY SAYs: When he was standing directly in| rush the kid next time he came should look about for means to keep iia “i occasion. If reports are true, each FEG.U. 8. PAT.OFF.. front of her, he over and/ getting at least one smack at that saree Penalizing Progress or __. [man in warm weather takes several touched her hair, pale, angelic face before the the various departments of govern- (Fargo News) Washington, Jan. 31.—The Virgin! paths a day, so if this practice is stop- “Looks like the McCoy,” he said.| started to talk. His hate had to v) ment functioning. They have a vital) The majority caucus of the House Islands are a couple of small infected! ped tt would help wonderfully to fi- he had been doing in such a part| “No be: huh?” have a concrete object and the kid and personal interest in that. But it of Representatives early this week ap-jspots which for a long time have| nance the Townsend plan.” of New York when he was supposed His hand stole down to her throat | was reper | just that. would seem the part of statesman. |Proved @ proposed bill to levy @ Pro- been acting like big bad boils. You to be on his way back to Florida or/and his long, moist fingers moved) Fete heard @ knob turn, @, lock ° 3 duction tax of 25 cents per ton on| ~~, a . DIRT SLINGERS BUSY | to New Orleans she had no idea, over her skin as if they were so|click; then etd soft, steps. That ship to view the government's plight lignite mined in the state. Every in- {Cut tell where they'll spread next. Washington gossip probably is no Kay found the street, then the| many cold worms. Cupping his hand| would be the kid, coming to visit merely as a reflection of the situa-|dication shows that sentiment in the| _APologies by Secretary Ickes to! dirtier than the gossip anywhere else, building. It was, like those sur-|under her chin, he lifted her face to| him, for what reason no one seemed tion besetting the people and devote | house is strongly in favor of the mea-|Jim Farley, Homer Cummings, andj but it’s often difficult for celebrities rounding it, a grimy old stone flat goer * | eae parte fl tie lesan 8 sure because of the need of raising|Pat Harrison for his department’s/to act like human beings without the building, undistinguished, 0s- jot ba-ad,” he commented, slow-| ing in st le 1 eee = Mower Liehiening tee ee citional fanés, “| bungling distribution to the press of| more inveterate dirt-tossers figuring | pitable. She parked the car, hurried|ly. “Tasty little dish. Well, kid, cou rote eo epee ot burden rather than readjusting the|""Tne measure, if passed, will be a/@ Magazine article criticizing them|out something more or less sinister. | pothesiepsiend in the hall searche: | me an’ You are moiag to\get slong; | poses; mnleas perpen Pack so the poor tax-paying donkey |rank discrimination against our min-|inferentially along with their friend,| ‘Thus the latest insinuations are pled enirvonae i are line san —_— ies a could it be fastened, and why should can be made to carry more. jing industry as the original proposal | Federal Judge T. Webber Wilson, sit-| based on the sequence of events in) the Fell side It. There ponte ‘short| At Harrow’s Long Island house| they care? There was no furniture Two current examples prove the | Would exempt eastern coals because | ting in the Virgins, was but the eli-| which Mr. John Boettiger was men- | wait when suddenly a door opened| the party was going on gaily. For a| but the bed, there was no way of int and emphasize the ari numents |Of the fact that it is a production tax |max of a whole string of irritations.| tioned as Mrs. Anna Dall’s future almost by her elbow and a woman’s| long time no one noticed ’s ab-| getting out unless by breaking the a ase land not a sales tax on coal in gen-| What between noble attempts to| husband, the government investigated voice came to her through the dim | sence, until Boris began to hunt for| window, and even then it would be against the sales tax which was de- | ¢,q], rehablitate the poverty-stricken 1s-,the alleged movie trust, the movies | hall: “Miss Owen?” her again and failed to find her.|a long drop into a cement-paved feated at the special election in 1933.| Every possible step for the protec-|lands and incessant warfare between | hired Mr. Boettiger, the alleged movie| “Yes,” Kay eee eagerly. He ran upstairs, taking the steps|court. Most of the time the door was The first illustration of what a/tion and encouragement of our coal| Wilson and his political backers on | trust was indicted, and Mr. Boettiger “Oh my,” said the voice sadly.|three at a time with an easy lope,| kept locked and what lay beyond it sales tax can do is contained in the |Mining industry should be taken, It|one side and Gov. Paul Pearson,| thereupon married Mrs. Dall. “Come in.’ and went to her room. ‘The door was| was a mystery to Pete. © # is true we are an agricultural state.| supported by Ickes and other liberals,| Of course Mr. Boettiger was pre- “What's the matter?” Kay de- open and the room was dark, The door lock clicked, the knob November report of the tederal emer-| However, this is no excuse for dis-|a prodigiously disproportionate! viously a Washington correspondent | manded anxiously, as she stepped| “Kay?” he called. turned and the kid came in to take lief administra for North the grow y vot Ne . \for the New Deal's most virulent! through the door. ‘There was no answer. his vigil on the window sill. Pete gency relief administration for North |couraging the growth of an industry | amount of New Deal time has been ; ! ; . i : r] exibil 1 i yorryi is-| Journalistic foe, so there seemed to} “Nothing!” the woman sna He went downstairs, puzzled and|sat up on the bed and rubbed his Dakota. It shows a total expendlbis | Naas ponies of development are| spent in worrying about those is- be something graceful in his retire- | as quick, strong bands seized began another when he|face. His fingers encountered the 1,460,264.77, of which $1,262,152.84 | 4lmost unlimited. lands, 6 1 vant, stubble of lected beard. He Abs 2) OF Min STORIE Trstendl ott jmpteoiing —whiab i-wne | “ieee ient isl iatiel aceene inane EE from that Job. : Pea) sorgeapallg pepapecpiocars| [aera pesboge NR) a ra just ewell, not having had went directly for relief. The remain- eit eerecal tae pacer 5 poserel Meanwhile, you hear one day that | rust @ gag er mou you . = doubtedly will some day develop into Tugwell, and many others have been Prankiin) Hocscvelt, Jc. ie doing sto | and a bandage over her eyes while Harrow Mr. Warren?” his clothes off in three days, he der was used for special programs one of the most important industries | interested. Alternating complaints | Fran} Hetig ipcahmesiiepaa she could do no more than groan| Boris helped locate Harrow. thought. Three days? Two days? and administrativ Jn the state, second only to agricul-| against Pearson and Wilson have re~| marry one of the du Pont munitions Ta a and struggle vainly. ‘The next she| “Telephone, Mr. Harrow’ said| Or four? How long had they bad The effect of any : acs |ture, the proposed measure for pen | sulted in investigation after investi- | helresses. and next that. it vill be | When you're KOInE to 88, knew she was being borne by at] the servant. him? He smiled grimly to himself tions levy would be to tax this money, /#li#ing the concerns developing our| gation by Ickes. Dismissals have re-| the daughter of cilia g least, two men, through doors, up|, Harrow went to the telephone, at the thought that he might be go. ’ \ Y § sss: “* {natural resources will destroy this in- | sulted. and down stairs, and finally into the | lifted the receiver. ri ing just a little “squirrelly.” It all to further raise the cost of goods and/ dustry while still in its infancy. The administration political ma-| © cool night air. She heard an auto-| “Harrow speaking. fitted in with hie desire to toss the thereby impose new hardships upon} Nowhere in the world is there a|chine under Farley has been cee pele! onan alt bareelt hens iy ay) Parana ai Head a ne Uby-faced aire prrann ae i . elief clients who have all too little |larger store of natural fuel. Nowhere|stantly irritated because the ideal- O S « d S int mneau 8 _ oor, ° . : a it is. = addition, {t would raise |@S¢ in the country is fuel so easily| istic Pearson, a Hoover appointee, n tage an creen then heard the door slam shut and igriper yy find nee: ean you Breet 28 ueeali inet Se soft Pof-living for everyone resid. (2ccemible. ‘Today. nearly 2,000 men| was retained by (okes., Exocpl (| (Mec felt the car start. pal neepedeg at x bighage eer igean] Forge gat gil po 4 the cost of living for everyone resid~' are employed in the lignite mines of | Wilson, a lame duck ex-congressman ° How far or in which direction the| piece you better listen to what we|quiet wal a ment ores and a8) h Dakot Vhate fa Fe thi é Mississippi, islands HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle Birth of a car went she had no idea, but at|got to say.’ gingerly as usual on the window w v ing in North Dakota. Whatever tax | and more than 5,000 persons | {from Mississippi, the islands have B fast it stopped and once more arms|~ Harrow’s teeth clicked together |sill, stopping, as usual, to give it a relief might be granted to tangible /d or indirectly earn their been kept out of the hands of the po- haste tlie “Ten ifted her and she felt the ‘cool,|and he gripped the telephone vi- ful stoppin with a large property would be shared equally by uis rapidly growing industry, | liticlans. eciseeinekee Cie ion.” fresh air, welcome sensation afver|ciously. Sut, as usual, - | handkerchief. tate who happen | law the above mea- Oonure: DIO Moy 7 ing gagged and blindfolded in the| self under stern control. The mere sight of him made Pete Bre ne DERPER St ase the price of our| FUR WILL FLY 10 Midday. SNOW SMESINIAI] «02 Sor. bottom of the stuffy sedan. “Spill it!” he snapped. begin to feel perverse. altoandin many| The latest amusing note on the] 1 To perform OM SRE SINIAT) 21 College official en the men finally put her] “That’s the way. Okay then rT oe kon rome bates benale ice of eastern prod- | situation concerns departure for the (2 Fine particles CHARLES OR 23 Burden. down she knew that she was in a| There'll be a letter for you in a|fast?” ed. | islands of Morris L. Ernst, New York of earth, IT OME IL] 24 Those who chair. Hands fumbled behind her|can behind the white stone where] The youth wasa long time answer er encourag! competition ; lawyer, who will investigate for the 13 Italian river. CINGSHORDAILILIUIRIE} create. nd came off, then the| the road turns to the right up aboveling. That, too, was as usual. Pon. 4 cur home mined coal would; American Civil Liberties Union 14 Form of “be. LIES 26 Above, blindfold. looked up quickly| your place. Get it and read i Then casing. the kid’s habits when Pete taxing the down of the! charges that Wilson, in his campaign 16 Befor. IRIABBHIAL 27 race. Pid saw that she as a oe i- on RE SaTE free Bad fin hin, he spacennd 3 nd ill ng orn ainst Pearson, acted as prosecutor, 7 Dow on: HIE AIWIA « ge. lurnished room. cou! see e becar ‘ying Beis iy ea eee nese AO) alors: ous | UEy anid JUGEE to adiemee pablie|. See mat BSC CRAIC eer ecrad who was behind her, but sitting| Harrow figeled the signal fran-|decido whether it would take more - the |€a™ers to our army of unemployed. | works employe to prison. Pree as MEIDIGIE] _ mistake. across the room was a dark, heavy-| tically until the operator answered. enerey to put a slug through ya pe eon ona 1 mined in the /""no conscientious citizen of North| Wilson's chief distinction as @ con- 19 To exint RIE INIT 3ETo scold con who reminded her th Get (wre the supervises, Hare siease ie fi ae eae ae erie _ ‘ state, reported to i Dakota should sit idly by while our! gressman was his sponsorship of @ ) Hither, = i There was vin ln. emesis He jumped up and began to hurry |if he were an altar boy during high @ majority caucus uf house members. iuw making bodies draft the death| national board of magazine censorship cht, 44 Father, 3 Opposite of him. He smiled at her, showing ex-|about the house, issuing orders.|mass. The coal industry already has been warrant for an industry so vital to} Which would have censored every line in. 46 Paid pub. win, white teeth, and] Within a few minutes he and Spike,| Finally the kid said: “Why?” revamped by adherence to NRA the welfare of our state, of copy entering a magazine ieee b char licity 4 Quantity, ffed slowly on a cigaret which| with three of the bodyguards, were] His voice was thin, uncertain, < : wouiq , The inconsistency of this measure| Penalty of long imprisonment anc '$ Implement AS Door rug. 5 Withi recariously from the cor-|at the whitewashed stone which|nob at all the smooth instrument Standards, ‘The proposed tax would i. ctearly seen when compared with | large fines for anyone who avoided) 2Stmplements, 45 Door rus. ene pip qatar ner of his mouth, Ho had his hat| marked the turn in the road. Spike|one would expect in such a silken, sequire still further adjustment with |the efforts of other states in protect-| the censorship. 28 Courtyard of AA eee pore on, a light-gray hat, almost white, | jumped out of the car, ran forward|cat-like creature. every prospect of working damage, |ing and developing to the fullest pos-| _ Ernst, on the other hand, is this) °° Caurtye gel Gaci tipped far back on his head of glossy| and found the tin can. “Because I could eat better if I not so much to investors in coal prop-|sible extent their own natural re-| country's outstanding legal crusader] | ® house. 7To chatter. » 43 Sanskrit dia. black hair, and his ankles were| “It’s here," he said, didn’t see you first,” Pete said with Pabst | sources. against literary censorship and has} 34 Bed lath. 8 Frozen des- __ lect. snugly clad in gray spats to match] Harrow seized the envelope,|a cool pleasantness, a saccharine erties as to ae employes and | Further indication of how little| Won many court cases involving at ue tate for ee ee serts. qe the bat. Hiss a it wan brilliant blue. ripped it open and read the typed ssi. ed ah suming public. -| tempted suppression of books ai psig de 2 7 Pertshes, wai for him to 3] message: ie ’s long lashes 3 Tose. at A : | Speuabt has been back.ot the propos: | PeanRes Saebee 37Gaseous ele 59She started in 9To Buide a8 48 Witticigm, ana long tine stout I tudyine| GET FIFTY GRAND CASH|He mit ‘ad sound, no further ‘The inevitable result would be to al of this movement is shown by the/ meéi ment. — pictures __& boat. 49 Myself, her with unconcealed amusement as] AND NO PHONEYS OR FAST | movement. raise the price of coal, a prime neces- ews faethe Be, whether production PEOPLE'S VOICE 18 HEARD 438 Structural in 1914, 12She made her 503.1416, if savoring her helplessness and}ONES AND HAVE I EADY] “I suppose you muggs have got sity in those regions where other |°" Sales, is being placed on a commo-| Tire ee an Knute Hill of Wash- unit. 60 She is now —— as an ac: 59 Tatter, perplexity, until finally he said) WHEN PHONE CALL COMES|what you were after,” Pete sug- ‘ i 11 (ity purchased largely by the poorer eee i 3 = start fi 'Howzit, kid?” TO YOU AT HOME TOMORROW “You did, didn’t you? You fuels are not available. It would still | classes of our citizens and the present | ington received a large package from| 39 Optical effects, starring on tress at five 54 To accomplish ‘Ka it, te cae AT NOON IF YOU WANT TO]|got the girl, didn’t a further encourage the use of gas.jcost of our home mined coal, low as| his home state a few days before) 41 Point. We ee Pe ABW oi, RMA Ae em, He chuckled to himself, “Put to-|SEE THE OWEN KID ALIVE. |~ Another of the kid's pauses, un- . where this fuel is available, and of it is, is as much as they can afford (oho depart. NEUES, 18 Vieah of amine. BE Carpee. ain’t you?” he said unctious- oes til he said: “It don’t matter to ee ree tue stats, would [tO DAY: 43 Energy. 2 To habituate, 15 She appeared 58 Musical note. re was evil in his very voice.| Pete Ryan had no knowledge of|you. You want to know too much.” r ‘ be ii 4 fh *| Surely there should be other sources about it made her think| the “I do, do I? Well, all I want to by taxation, be imposing a handicap or obtaining revenue without impos- now is how long I’m going to have ed upon the operation and further de-|ing a greater burden upon our farm- Sunpone you're going to keep 1d jto camp in this louse-infested dive. ‘ velopment of its second most impor- ers and laboring classes. me, bere? 4 she amet How If seam p got the girl, what are you tant industry. To make st worse, the | gest ia hiss time the boy answered ogy ee i proposal would discriminate against Barbs | “Where's Pete Ryan?” she de-|si Prom tly: a home industry since imported fuels manded. T don’t know! . tear thik Bind This ° ————— “Pete Ryan?” the man said. He/ th: That was all Pete needed to know. mai ps bear = ‘The administration made mistake to chuckle again. “‘She wants Accidentally he had come upon the ‘would be a serious blow to the lignite trying to gag congress. It’s the only to where Pete Ryan is. You're | Pi |stratagem that told him his answer, dae ace iit, & Mrondet [chance the congressmen have to * Stor hart you tll me,” she the dae, there was Wothing We Sead market in the eastern part of ourown|talk freely, with their wives back remarked bitterly. “Is he hurt?’ Is do here without needless tisk to state and in neighboring states and|home. ce bois Seager? ae Nerney But he gave no sign of amount i ‘man again. He ing stood. ‘would reduce the it of employ: ‘A child was born in Baltimore mee, lames seal “Yuh Pete remarked sullenly: “You ment. with @ closed gullet. Any child kid,” he said. “Why don’t| one. don’t to get sore. least It may be trite to quote the maxim) who shows this to his parents yous pottes ap yaar lip and sit you can do is answer a fellow’s that “the power to tax is the power| gets an extra plece of cake. bef< get me burned up hha 4 if you'd to destroy,” but the legislature might ee over and Ect the sit. faturally, I want to 9 ,. Japan has ordered the members of on yuh? If there's anything I can’t that. For one thing, she was remember that to tax necessities 15] 11° "Rome embassy to take up golf. stand it’s a talky twist.’ my girl for a while, and for another, ‘to destroy in part the ability to buy| Thinking of putting through some : . He rose idly and hitched up want to get out of this dump.” a a those necessities. tax an industry deal with Mussolini. his high- trousers. His eyes ut tl; ie kid had real- = a. big eee on hers, he began to come toward ized his slip and was making no 4s to impose new burdens upon that her, chuckling a little under his more of . , A shark caught off Bermuds breath. She to draw back in- wasn't one of his accor 4 industry. gave birth to 49 little sharks, anf wished the eseld lor pleasures, and he knew it cal Our Inwmakers might properly real-| without the aid of Dr. DaFoe, vanish the chair. She could J Sue that the public protest about texes| either. not tell what he intended to do, but (To Be Continued) es each step brought him nearer Coortignt, 1934, King Pestares Syadieate, ina, * 46 not against the methods of levy (Copyright, 193}, NEA Service, Inc.) ‘ . u ?

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