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The Bismarck Tribune ‘An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Hate, City and County Official News- paper. Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and @ptered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year.......$7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bis- marck) . see 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) ........ 6.00 Daily by mail outside of North DAKOR once cecececeeeseeeeeee 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, peryear 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail outside of North ie . | 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. The Changing Situation Figures recently compiled by fed- eral finance agencies, showing their activities in North Dakota during 1934, will cause the thoughtful citi- ven of this state to wonder if we have not reached a stage at which it would be wise to change our approach to the entire problem of depression. Statistics show that the federal land bank, the federal loan commis- sioner, the bank for cooperatives, the intermediate credit bank and the pro- duction credit associations have, among them, poured $87,130,751 into North Dakota during the last calen- dar year. | Of this total $37,313,600 was in land bank loans; $29,788,000 in commis- sioners’ loans; $379,050 in loans from the bank for cooperatives; $18,782,139 in discounts with the intermediate eredit bank and $867,962 in loans by production credit associations. Figures showing the number of loans, where these are available, also are interesting. They disclose that 11,788 loans were made directly by the land bank, 16,151 by the commis- sioner and 55 by the bank for co- operatives, The number of customers affected was not listed by the other agencies. Careful consideration of these facts indicates that our major problem is not so much how to still further re- duce the debt burden but how to in- crease our earning capacity. It is true that many farmers still need refinancing. For one reason or nother they have been unable to strike compromises with their credi- tors and the effort to rehabilitate them must goon. But at least 11,788 have had their difficulties adjusted upon a@ bearable basis through the land bank refinancing. It would seem that we are well on the way to complete adjustment of the debt situation, for this is a substantial fraction of farm owners. It is impossible to tell from avail- @ble records how many of the 11,788 who received land bank loans also Teceived commissioners’ loans, but ‘based on the experience of the Bank of North Dakota, which has redis- counted many of its land loans, it ‘would seem to be a considerable num- ber. Since all of these loans were for the purpose of refinancing the farm- er and none of them was made with- out compromising his entire debt situation, it would appear that the number actually benefited is repre- sented by the larger of the two fig- ‘ures, hence it is a still larger fraction of our farm population. All of these people, presumably, are in shape where they reasonably can expect to meet their obligations, granted fair average conditions. As soon as other farmers complete their adjustments, our major struggle with the farm debt, situation will be over and we shall be able to turn our at- tention to the subject of how to im- Prove and increase our agricultural Production as well as to methods of maintaining prices. This, judging by the date obtained in the various control plans, is more of an issue than most of them have realized. Wheat figures, for example, show that we would have had no real prosperity during the last five years regardless of the price situation. In Burleigh county we would not have had good times during that period had wheat been held continuously at $2 a bushel, simply because we did j experienced all sorts of trouble with Brazil Tried It First While it is true that ideas are the lifeblood of our commercial, indus- trial and social advancement, it doesn’t follow that every new sug- gestion made has merit. Proof of this is contained in the results obtained in Brazil with the law requiring a certain amount of alcohol to be blended with gasoline sold as motor fuel. The idea behind this measure was the same as that advanced by sponsors of @ similar Proposal at recent sessions of con- gress, It was felt that, since alcohol is made from farm products, the lew would improve the farm market. Brazil has suffered just as much as we have from agricultural depres- sion and the scheme was seized upon there as worthy of trial. Now the law has been rescinded following protests by motorists who the blended fuel. Their motors were willing to pay whatever was neces- sary to obtain straight gasoline rather than buy the blended article at any Price. Besides, trouble with gasoline bootleggers was encountered, In view of the fact that American farmers make more use of motor ve- hicles than any other class of citi- zens, it appears just as well that we were not treated to this particular form of farm relief. Incidentally, it Proves that our lawmakers are not the only ones who go in for experi- ments, Constructive Move From Washington comes word that the American Legion, tiring of having its bonus payment proposal hooked up with all kinds of schemes for in- flating the currency, has put a meas- ure of its own into the hopper. ‘Thus the payment of adjusted com- pensation for veterans is divorced from such things as the Patman Greenback proposal, the numerous free silver schemes and half a dozen other ideas for tinkering with the Money standard. In this the veteran leaders were wise. It did their cause no good to have it made a football for those whose main object was to effect same so-called reform. More than 40 bills already had been introduced to pay the bonus and prac- tically every one of them offered a different method of raising the money. By its action the Legion indicates that it regards this question as one entirely aside from the main issue, The effect is to make the question @ clean-cut one of for or against pay- ment of the adjusted compensation, not for or against any particular monetary scheme. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies, A New Democracy (Valley City Times-Record) Secretary of Agriculture Henry A. ‘Wallace believes that the time is com- ing when we shall have to revamp our Political machinery to put economic democracy on the footing of political democracy. Writing in a recent issue of Collier's Weekly, Secretary Wallace dips into the future and foresees a new govern- mental unit, a sort of cross between @ president's cabinet and a supreme court, existing across the terms of va- rious administrations and empowered to sound out public sentiment and make decisions on the great economic issues of the day. Such unit, he suggests, might con- sist of four councillors representing, respectively, industry, agriculture, la- be above class narrowness just as the supreme court is above it; they would hold office for terms of a dozen years or more, so that the council would not change color with each change of ad- ministration. ‘Most important, they would be em- powered to conduct referenda on vital issues. Suppose, for example, that the cancellation of war debts, or the wis- dom of certain “social planning” schemes for re-employment, were up for consideration; the council would poll the country, find out just what the voters would or would not stand for, and then order it done. Now it is obvious that such a pro- posal as this could not be accepted without years of debate and study. The secretary does not suggest it as a Teform to be adopted day after to- morrow. But in the mere fact of its being advanced there is a significant reve- lation of our growing realization that that machinery designed to insure the latter does not always gain the for- mer. t ‘When our government was estab- lished, it was political democracy that was all-importent. If a man could be governed only by laws in whose mak- ing he himself had had a part, he was @ free man, and the freedom thus gained was the only kind of freedom worth worrying about. But the course of events moved out from under us, If you are a business man. for instance, or a mechanic, or an ordinary laborer, your life may be far more dependent on the decision of some distant corporation, or on the mysterious and incalculable shift of demand for inflation should be msa- it was ‘What we need now is s realization that we are approaching period of normalcy, granted fair crops end a ©ontinuance of the present price trend. We should edjust our think- ing for the long pull ahead, be pre- pared to change our operations as fb ccems best calgulated to increase farm tneeme, economic forces, than upon any law that Congress or your state legislature ay would be impractical. But he does us @ service by reminding us that the battle front of democracy must be extended somehow—if not in his way, then in another — if our cherished freedom is to remain a living reality. Carbon monoxide, a deadly exhaust gas formed by imperfect combustion, and therefore plentiful during cold weather, is one of the most insidious dangers confronting motorists. In- visible and odorless, it strikes without warning, seizing its victims with an overpowering drowsiness, often before they realize they are in danger. not designed for it and many were] ‘ bor, and the consumers. They would me Everything Will Soon Be Simplified THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1935 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. INSIDE INFORMATION ON INDIGESTION Before we go to the mat today, folks, I beg leave to reiterate a funda- mental fact, to wit, that there is no such malady or ailment or “indiges- tion.” Unless we see “indigestion” eye to eye there is no use talking, for we don’t speak the same language. I suppose some of you would utter the same impatient snort if I were to assert that there is no such thing as red blood, or even red blood corpuscles. But that is precisely true, too, Put a drop of the “red” blood under a mi- croscope and have a little closer look at it, and you'll find it isn’t red, nor are the “red” corpuscles red. The fluid is a pale straw color and the blood cells are a rather dull salmon pink. It is only a kind of illusion that makes this pale watery fluid ap- pear scarlet red when regarded in the ordinary way; the aggregate of some billions of these salmon in each ounce of the fluid makes the fluid look red. ‘What got me down when I had ap- tributive justice which worried me for the first hour or two of the attack. What a tragic fate, to be seized like this with acute indigestion after all I have done to discourage that notion. But there I was groaning with it, an hour or two after I had gorged a lot of cocoanut, which had never before given me any trouble, nor had any- thing else “disagreed” with me, for, that matter. I tell you I was a pretty sick man for an hour. Then we had in a real doctor and it didn’t take him long to decide on operation. As soon as I learned it was appendicitis I felt quite happy about it. What a com- fort it is to know where you are at! Yet it is sad to think of all the poor misguided ginks who fiddle around been attempted can be done on a/W. W. Walters, head of that ermy,|or even years until some grave emer-| excellen xe * a THE | | Profitable basis (socially profitable, at) job. Well, that puts one of the/gency calls a halt to the nonsense|Lanolin . I do not want Philippine independ- least, and perhaps profitable in dol-/trouble-makers out of the way. and reveals the true nature of the ence to be a reason for some nation NEW DEAL lars and cents). * * * trouble. to gobble up the Philippines—Pedro ‘The Forest Service, which for years Russia now is. making 57 vari- Scores of ailments masquerade un-' Guevara, Philippine resident come IN had the problem of trying to figure) ties of sausage, but is sticking to |der the name of chronic dyspepsia, missioner in U, 8. out how to get the most vital work] only one line of boloney. [ASHINGTO: done with too few men to do it, has ee * amma ici td aoe sestd od ‘ipa tely| If you don’t think much of all this OW mal use RODNEY DUTCHER—b |S Cotte? min eens eee aan ” (ARTHUR “ for forest work throug! ccc. inst Ms Ins tly got (Tribune Washington Correspondent) | "T's "Gone a great job of it, too. |oeiy saree ieee, cau Pecently 4y |SHUMWAY a. Te ee 8 Pap 3a Si Tom Bk, T°) nec DOES GOOD 308 This ood" Tati, te Ballot Sep . . . CCC Will Stay and] Another New Deal agency in aa Peerage Ade ty hct oe CHAPTER XLV poop eae Sitting g gray suit, but Kay, looking: s Likely Expand ... RFC Also Is sent on its way wil rs by be took ‘worse for wear in eve- High in Favor. congress is sure to be the REC. Tt] ftom Huey Long while it lasted. ergy and fered for a mute [ad Salty wm ning dress she bad worn to his —— as authorized ai allocat nearly ‘igaret' asked, fe fo Washington, Feb, 1.—Now that the| nine billion dollars in industrial, pub-| A midwestern judge ruled that an The kid shook his head, Pete ran back to the bedroom. Lied Democratic party’s national organiza-|lic and relief loans since President |8-year-old girl must be taught to love ‘Got a match?” Pete asked. followed Harrow rushed forward and: tion is embarking on a drive to wipe | Hoover started it back in 1932. her divorced mother. No riches were ‘The kid put his left hand inte the! Pay cmp yestilaty rhyeld epimers ree Perper out that, $500,000 deficit by the eariy| Of that amount it has actually dis-| involved, so the Gloria Vanderbilt tide ‘poet St Sis neh a | an eas nena LS Tony, oeing | by bes Shoals ak Baki nena at part of this year, you may expect the| bursed nearly seven billions, and al-|case didn’t apply. _- ‘igen See neeiae Kay and Pete ran through the| “Lord, but peeking st ioenee! demands to be redoubled that Post-| most three billions of that have been| (Copyright, 1935, NET Service, Inc.) then casually took out his soiled | flat to the back door. As they left/again! And you're all. be master General Jim Farley step out/paid back. That's more than some handkerchief and touched the flame | Pete heard another door open some- tked anxiouly. of elther one of his twin jobs. |_| People thought would ever come back) FY APPER FANNY SAYS: | to it. From the comer of his eye| Where in the fat. He locked the| “Absolutely!” she asmuved. him, t fall, mn the ocrats | at all. watching back door, seizing ‘under | “I expect sight.” made a conclusive effort to get out| So here again there's little doubt LS SAT OT See still no ex-jone Font aoe Hey ste] rSreece mea ett Iwas of debt, there was a great deal of| that congress will extend it and per- ceasina onthe evil Rote Gertlimautino-abcartns baltlcraxy: ‘with someeer rere criticism of the fact that the man|haps even enlarge it for two more liquid eyes had eens half sya | the aie What's hay to you?” who was asking for the money as| years. To offset partly the unavoid- ete dropped the handkerchief | who was losing her rh-} It wasa tic story that Pete chairman of the Democratic National] able losses on loans made for relief onto the cheap cotton rug beside the peproeae pena Above in the fiat,|told. “They nabbed me on the i lebige ee a ig cece neral, pal * o 7a *Bpasmodic efforts have been made|RFC has actually turned up profits but lay back ri ahhh es know, ‘when I left, and a car picked from time to time to pry national]of $65,000,000 on various deals. puffed at his as if, Once more Earl Harrow was hat-|™e up to give me a lift. The next committeemen out of all connection} And they are more substantial suddenly lost his mind, the situa-|ing himself — It ping, J knew I was tied up and with the actual government, and some] profits than Postmaster-General Far- tion sat him perfectly. was a state he found in with a folded. They carried me some- progress was made in forbidding them | ley's much-mooted postal surplus. boy looked at Pete for the| some regularity but not very often. sia adc city. I knew that, to practice as lawyers before the gov-| (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) a with * real expression on|This time it was worse than ever. little y eae ma in a stuff; ernment departments. But Farley Lebsthem eas seoainaent pasodir ‘This was Parca ‘out of a oy erie hed Foe and put some til tena eg = i Barbs Big ine; that was clear. reat a tees of he had] man on me as a eoard. Nothing more squeamish Democrats are going |g. | ovainagin aoiian Eten eae mg rg erg toe to join in the chorus this time. But but. still Pete lay back, a could not be sure that Caspar—he| they blindfolded me again, it’s @ long time until 1936, when Far-| German university students are smile on his face, as if sun-bathing| knew well enough was be-|me to @ telephone and ley could make the race for governor |striking against a professor who on the pleasant sands of Daytona|hind it—would keep bargain,|*3id he was going to ring your of New York as has been suggested|Wouldn’t help collect charity funds and he not be sure that Cas-|®umber and get Kay, and I was to (Governor Lehmann is supposed tolon the streets. Now he has to go Soddenly the boy snarled and|nes Hoclawt Rod beeen retae | may Iwas bere ant waned Toe look favorably on Farley as his heir| for himself. rose, began stamping at the Rant him down, If he did then cer-/come to me at a certain address, apparent) and Farley is one of the ** * with narrow foot. ‘This| tainly Caspar migh’ take revenge Of course, I wouldn't do it and better sitter-tighters. ‘The DuPonts, it seems, tested brought him nearer to Pete than he| through Kay, or might at the very a een, eating up on me- reoe He'll probably just laugh off the] their own foolproof explosive oer been before, And, putting least, refuse to turn her over with-|S% weil as I co till finally the attacks, as he is also one of the bet-| with everything except an insane 5 Papp penpurpryregenyers out further payment. Harrow bless fellow told them to stop ter laugher-offers. Patient wtih s revolver. his ‘heavily shed foot, He en pelsive and vindieive peta ie “He aid ‘Listen, eet telat Sees . se 8 ey and cpon him astantiy, the two of to get Caspar instead of being eatio-| sucker! "You're not wort a ustie - ae m Douglas MacArthur, who them in the burning rug. One punch that the ransom was no | to us t to save a little time Residents poiphaagial pout! lum-/equashed the bonus army, has given| A powerful) line may be shocking She boy, anctier put him out.|Cartainly Kay was. well it,| trouble. We're goii fe ae seenenanay. snemwel P fe) Rete pulled im off the x , threw e7en from a business point of view, Sree kid at7var. wo dat et course you know that residents of rede 4 and began to act switily, maki s| admitting won| she Renate, thea, tomorrow ny ‘Washington (the stepchild city) don't, M t M: Plans as he worked, He peeled off| his ¢, had evened up for Har- get esac, even pond Tee aft Rove Wake aster. Magician thea pe Uo iy Sat ls |6 heat clan beter 2 [PS of nes fo ef Ingtonians to elect. tlvelr ‘owt: Scio] | 8 the of his head and put the|. And that wasn't all, Harrow re-|Get that one, 49,00, bat, board. HORIZONTAL —_ Answer to Previous Puzsle 18 To spout forth. two guna in his hip pockets. ‘The ected bittasty, as be peced and|business proposition with us. But Never a session goes 1.5 Who was the 21 Edge of a clothes were much too small but he|down in his study. had aif we have to grab her ‘foree, without some proposal to give the “magician in Cop ettetin LAIN RTS 2 au. wasn’t going O let that mae. ‘wrong perhaps to Pete Ryan, he had [haces going to aise oF vote to voteless District residents. the picture? INICIOINRO) AST os To bind. nt eee to she cone, Fright fo Kay by trifiing with Fisted it be her, just Capper’s present proposal would at] 11 spar. DREN 2S sun ced. foetleasts the bop tarengh | sliowine one to by nt in ease anything Kanne t least allow them to go through the] 12 ynevited. ISIE IA} 25 Sun sod. canyipusi, drageed the boy ine ber even to suspect that he} So, if you want to do the right motions on 20 purely log) an: Mave |, 14 Lacarated. D o8 init: post. a better plan came to him. He ‘Ant, now the lata was the wari | do ost ext onto this phone and their school . 16 Hist ‘moun: 30 Hawaiian root- the Kid aod stale along, Raig Panes that Ceriotta, Vestzn wes back in| Pete Id his part in the trap ‘ rae 5 meone started| town, read in a Broadway | obvious v7 D with CCC STAYS, GROWS iene. ey. stock shooting, He took one of the kid's| column the night before: |way be talderas wet 3M it the Don't be surprised if the Civilian] 197To mingle. 31 Knob. guns in his own right hand, cocked] “. . . Carlotta Vestra and that oly he lained. ot two Conservation Corps is increased to 88| 29 To. depart. 33 To permit. it for quick action, itready. | Prince cooled in Europe and she’s ‘ou did the only thing many as 8 million men this summer.| 61 aia MAT Fr] 35 And. He met no one. he was back ix town, veddy veddy mysteri- do,” Harrow assured hin? oes It now has about 370,000 men in 1728] 92 Cian group. MALTA 36 Second note. in a flat, not farnished except] ous about it ell. Earl Harrow who! ‘Of course, Pete,” Kay said, camps. It expires ‘March 31 unless) 34 spain er] ot Ee ree 39 Curse, i for the cubbyhole in which he had| used fo tondem with Car. mall that’s what” happened, congress extends ay 25 Long grass. a OS ” ae fully but heard nothing, Florida redhead whe’ “paved Stuck me back in is Br ia. oem hess bom 27 Destruction. 52 To grate. 4To submit. a al the kid oma divan be beans 3 [evel act when ppt 4 once tT as al tended, but greatly increased in| °° Balding de- 56 Pertaining to Hae J fowl. 43 aoe en looking for this fall... .” Peta told of his experience vith the numbers, with the age limited raised) 45 °F MtHon P48 To love exces Saddenty £ came to him| when be need Ghat Rem He diges|caped: teri (and ay, tad eee Probably from 26 to 20. wwersal| 32 Rolls of films. 58 He made halr- 7'To say. sively. trom, the ball ontaide. He fan tol know whether to be glad Gatista ane had Saree aha Be alley approval than almost any other of| 34 Harbor. breadth —— SNeuter pro. 46 Tissue. Pere Weaihcs be toon and hel Ptiat the worl ee ) aye fy, Here pursued, the New Deal agencies, and it offers) 31 Tiny. from watery noun. st To droep. gol behind it Limselt, A tock clicked, | ea the tnntion, Uf Hast Doers | got Wasee Boge Oe cab Ell we &@ great chance to take up some more] 35TO exchange. prisons. 9 Name. 49 Pronoun, & door opened and a dark, heavy- being glad of the Intter’ he] Outside now, negyremaried. “He's of that unemployed slack in a popu-| 39 Waser. 59 He could free 10Rainbow. 50 Reign. lidded young man in a snow. *e have been able to tell im-| “He'll get fe ong 22% bis money.” of Eas net 41 Native metal. himself from 11 He wrote many 51 Era. hat, snw-gvay spaia and a brillant self bonestly that be was mecty said: waster sre more” Harrow Forester Silcox has been working} ‘42 Chum. straight ——. books on ——.52 Musical note. blue suit, came FS ‘a key- Carlotta would be by | Ine! You fern’ ben inly was out data that shows how a great deal| 44 Road. VERTICAL 12 To doze. 53 Like. ting in his hand. wi to a} at @ little on for Cad telling more forest work than has even yet| (6 2000 pounds. 15 He wrote —<—s54 South Caro: oor, put the ey, tn,” turned rotting of to the and get-| with a sigh of faire, et? aaked 47Grief. 1 Nimbus. on spiritual. Nina. the door, and started inside. | ting Prince who now fend a Harrow said, r 48 Cleaved. 2 Snake. ism. 85 Father. “Well, howait today, kid?” helbe (at least temporarily) on ice.| second aris fs the S1To assist, 3 Righ 17 Pri ' said, as he closed the door, Women, women . . . some| 1 own Syme fom ae sal MAN Tigh Instinct tensed all Pete's mus- ay, maybe, bed lear He'd thought | time you're saved Kay's srorteo2d ties. Ho stole forward, to that door at thirty, and he| What you intend dove, Icnow, and just in time to catch! was sil log fy bee how with ing you what yore bat U's tall- the words, “ir. Harrow.” And the|s eyniciama, Atmost| 7OU're golng to slat tosh, 02 do voice was his past and present, Roast tee ay, ete with us at Tre rled the gu, throw open been because he had been sus- sately andor way wh havea at the man. wala nei Semetbery 1 o 4 Sion ‘o take ‘no for an ane ‘The man stared at him ncredi-| did it have to be now? AY) pote sepliod ante Me. Harrow,” but slowiy begun to rae bs Be wanted po trouble with Car 9 BhIY. Edom eae? ning dren ‘aed itn sqeal To | het thet he nee oe aT: Pout fell a band, 0 ene, i to smile with utmost relief, mate, umaiovably ‘that *, not going to let you “Petal fo bale tranecestiod tere ingss:| Peta sale" ica es “Kay—reach under his coat and| ity but reached epic proportions “Good get his Then a little | quiring musical ‘accompaniment by| “Now Tn exclaimed. End seo it there's sort of combined Wi Peto eab driver,® tetaT ie 3, Se, Sas eld onda. a Beciottat "he| ful ae f Stalling rg. only the one revolver in a bell inowa plenty of teaperamenta can fem to etay elias ate ie” “Keep ieee none of them had been) = " middle. thoughts were taking Fete stepped back and locked ont course wheu, be beard stepa cutatde | what she's to tal Bes into the No one was there but | his 2 familiar voice: “Mr.| gave it but Sp Kid ond Se Wns cl wnsem | Rercew 2 oe comes a would Soe mae uer-cing Petal He sigh ol Sal appear todd ir several keys to the backdoor, nally | To his surprise he saw not Cra meh mattered, Getting coe to C He opened the| Pete, bearded and gewky ia ta ily Ry. with “chronic indigestion” for months Pendicitis was the suggestion of re-| Speed nervous dyspepsia or indigestion of one kind or another. Some very grave illnesses are mistreated under the plausible fancy that they are “acute indigestion.” Indeed, the fatal outcome of many of the “at- tacks” of “acute indigestion” report- ed in the news has made intelligent folk suspicious of such a diagnosis. Even if you are as ignorant of Physiology as the ordinary educated Jayman, still your common sense should raise in your mind this ques- tion: How come so many sinners abuse their digestive organs with im- punity, and yet a few unfortunates who carefully avoid dietary excesses nevertheless suffer acute “attacks” of “indigestion?” Of course the only answer is that there is no such ill- ness as “acute indigestion.” If for any reason digestion is suddenly halt- ed or greatly retarded, one may ex- perience vague discomfort. Or if the peristaltic process is reversed one may experience waterbrash, nausea or even vomiting. If peristalsis is much led up ... but none of these effects of deranged digestion makes one seriously ill. So I warn you— don’t deceive yourself that any real illness is an “attack of indigestion.” QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Itching After Bathing I come as-a recruit to your school of dry cleaners. I am getting to dread my bath, for week by week I suffer more and more from itching after the bath ... (Mrs. T. 8.) Answer—A wet wash is quite un- necessary for cleanliness, unless one gets very, very grimy at work or play. Ordinarily a half hour air bath each morning, or evening, or whenever convenient, is sufficient. For relief or rather prevention of bath pruritus you will find Bulkley’s skin cream ly sparingly to the irritated or hing areas of skin. pried Swayback fou any Suge 7 ed form for Tapeh i correct SWAY: (Miss F. D. G.) 2 bacnower_—Send a 3-cent stamped ae velope bearing your address, an close @ dime for a copy of Tee ean Brady Symphony,” & set mete i (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) pi sttnieseaesee By If a man worked hard at it, he couldn’t work up a bigger list of enemies than I have made—Secre- tary of Interior ee L, Ickes. * Hitler's great victory in the Saar plebiscite marks the opening of a new phase of Nazism—that of an old- fashioned military dictatorship—Dr. Paul Hutchinson of Chicago. se * ‘There is more legislation put across in the name of national defense than any other one misrepresentation— |U, 8, Senator Burton K, Wheeler. * * OK ‘Once infected, you cannot get the political germ out of your system, but I'm going easy and do not intend to hold office again—Jimmy Walker, |former mayor of New York. * * * : An attempt at the rationalization of shipping on an international basis must take into account the hidden factors of trade and defense—R. J. Baker, president, American Steam- ship Owners’ Association. * * * Beginning at 11:45, we'd like to be resuming our normal lives as ordi« nary Americans—John Boettiger, President Roosevelt's new son-in-law, at 11:15, ** * ‘There's no way for us to keep out of European questions if we got into the World Court—Senator William E. Borah, TE 4 |