The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 31, 1935, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribunelf An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper pee eee Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Treasurer Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).. +. 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside of Bismarck) .. +» 5.00 Daily by mail outs: 6.00 Weekly by mail in state, per year .. 1.00 Weekly by mail outside of North Dak A 2.00 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 ft 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 xlso reserved. Ye have heard that it hath been said, an eye for an eye and a tooth for a toothSt Matthew 5:38. eee He that studieth revenge keepeth his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well.—Bacon. | Inspiration for Today | More Encouragement Inability of the government to sell a recent bond issue is one of the best signs of improved sentiment which has come to light in some ‘time. It may be distressing to the treasury de- partment but it should be cheering to the ehind the Scenes in Washington WITH RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Aug. 3i—Displays of genuine emotion, as distinguished from the simulated variety, are so rare in congress that they shouldn’t pass without mention. Nor is it every day that a president of the United States clambers rapidly and awkwardly down from a high perch. Those two phenomena. however. acted respectively as cause and effect in the sequence of events leading up to passage of the first piece of neutrality legislation to go on the law books. It was the red-hot indignation of cer- tain members, conspicuously Senator Homer Bone of Washington and Representative Maury Maverick of ‘Texas, which impressed and infected others to the extent of wrecking a neat plan to bury the proposals designed to keep us out of war. Four days before the anticipated adjournment date, Bone got word that the Nye-Clark resolutions, one of the fruits of the munitions committee investigation, were to be sidetracked. “ eee BONE BLASTS WAR MONGERS Bone rushed onto the senate floor and held it’ most of the day with as passionate, forceful, and effective a delivery as one has heard since Costigan of Colorado spoke for unemployment relief in the ruggedly individu- alistic Hoover period. Tracing the 1914-17 “road te war” through state department documents recently unearthed, ably seconded by Nye, Clark, and Vandenberg, Bone poured out a scorn for bureaucrats and plutocrats who might again bungle us into war which was equaled only by his contempt for a congress which would ignore European war clouds and teddle home without action to insure this country against participation. Senators and galleryites sat tense. When Bone had finished, it was obvious that neutrality legislation would pass the senate. It quickly did, almost unanimously. oes F. R. FIRMLY SQUELCHED The house foreign relations committee was framing @ relatively innocuous bill and few believed even that would reach the house floor. The senators went to house members and demanded strong action. Bone demanded of Rules Chairman John O'Connor that his committee let the neutrality proposals onto the floor, “in the name of your mother and every other mother .. .” and O'Con- nor caved in. Meanwhile, Maverick and eight other congressmen went to the White House about it. Roosevelt at once complained to them about the mandatory provisions of The Most Important Labor Movement Right Now THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1935 ingitis, tonsillitis, pneumonia, bronchitis, tuberculosis, and with others. Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Dr. Brady will answer questions pertaining to health but not dis- ease or diagnosis, Write letters briefly and in ink, Address Dr. Brady in care of The Tribune. All queries must be accompanied by @ stamped, self-addressed envelope. JUST AN ORDINARY COLD PROVES FATAL Child seven years of age succumbed to diphtheria in hospital, scarcely 24 hours after having been brought there by the parents, On entering the hospital the child was cyanotic (blue or dusky), lips blanched, gasping and fighting for breath. In thé emergency a tube had to be placed in the larynx OE ee elie aetna Fe a Toe eran pereaiea Was. y ‘particular ion By Parents, teachers, children who read this story aid =e The parents said chilé had been all right until the night before, when they noticed he could not breathe properly. They had called a doctor who prescribed for the child and instructed the parents to was not better in two hours. The doctor’s medicine see! vomiting, after which the child seemed better, so the the doctor again until next morning. When the doc child was in a desperate state and rushed him to the hospital for intubation. Besides inserting the tube in the throat, the hospit child immediately 60,000 units of antitoxin in the units in dextrose solution directly into the vein. Now on closer questioning the child's father said the boy had been suf- fering with just an ordinary cold for several days, but as he had not seemed feverish and kept at play and at school, the parents had paid little attention to it. Oh, yes, the child’s voice had become hoarse, too, but still the parents thought it was just an ordinary cold, and indeed they had not thought of having medical advice until they noticed the difficulty in breathing. I should like to repeat a few things I have said many times before, and Weide or eteet 1, ere is no such condition as a “common cold,” “ordinary ” “slight cold,” “bad cold” or just a “cold.” shi ba 2. An honest name for it, when you don’t know what is developing, CRI (kree), which means common reepiratery infection. i. 3. Diphtheria, measles, scarlet fever, influenza, infantile paralysis, men- even a doctor can’t tell in the iy hours precisely can’ ear! what is developing. Call it cri, until you do know. Be honest with yourself 4. No one, whether school child, teacher, worker or executive, has a moral right to associate intimately with other persons w! aepbd *eihipie cana” itely pel hen he has cri or an 5. To ignore the cri in the hope that it will not prove serious is perhaps ® fair gamble for an adult whose life is not worth much, but it is unjusti- fiable where the life of a child is concerned. biphig 6. The history of this tragic case reflects upon the ability of the doctor who first shw the child. Evidently he acquiesced in the treacherous notion tare it was “just an ordinary cold.” leve there is such an entity as a “cold,” though no doctor can define it or give an intelligent view of its nature or cause. Unfortunately some doctors still be- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Lancheon for Two * the senate resolution. - © 1085 NEA FERA, the WPA and other federal agencies “I want the power to exercise executive discretion,”| To every employer and employe; What the Wagner-Connery act will/the manner of control of capital, and eae ttn the See one mimi presage? sated eon charged with seeing that people have enough |he said. there comes today the opportunity to} mean to labor is not yet clear. Much | driving bureaucracy may be as hard! and eat two Swiss cheese sandwiches every afternoon at 4:30. Is it injurious? vhich to live “But you're not going to get it!” blurted Mav- make the coming year one of sanity,| depends on who is appointed to the|a master as the unenlighened capital-| (G, w. B.) (aged 78). on w . da, wheat Allh ady exigpied them wounds ve> toleration and justice in the condi-| labor board which has such wide pow-|ist. Before there can be enterprise Answer—It is not injurious, but sounds enough for two. May I drop in Th best b fs i“ v tions under which men work. ers in administering it. But it is cer-/and production under modern condi-| and hel; ju dispose of it afternoon‘ e ie reason may best be explained by con- ceived in the last war, in what was probably an Ip yor some ? I could manage the sandwiches i i i unprecedented outburst at the White House Recent weeks have seen a marked/tain that in such industries as steel, |tions there must be capital. while you drink the flaxseed tea, or if you prefer you may take the tea while trasting the new development with the situa-| “pprecedsm why you, as president, should _—| tendency to adjust long-standing la-/ automobiles ard rubber, another de-) ‘There must be labor, too. And|I deal with the sandwiches. tion which has existed for the last five years. have the power to steer us toward war. That bor troubles, to arrive at sane, fair/ termined effort will be made to or-| siamese twins, though they may not Lead Poisoning A ‘ ‘ 5 kind of legislation will never go through the | Agreements by discussing rather than} ganize workers. Those groups whose {like each other at all times, have no doctor wonders whether my trouble may be due to chronic le . My my y ad poi. Prior to 1929 no one was afraid to invest in house or the senate.” dragging through mutvally-exhaust-| object is to raise a rumpus rather |siternative than to live 8| soning from my work ... you told of a test by painting something on wuythin A man could inco: te t ing strikes. With measurable busi-| than wages will renew their activity.|narmoniously as possible. Neither| skin (R. M. MD) ything. : rporate a peanu The other eight supported Maverick and threatened! ness improvement already apparent|There will probably be conflicts, as|can be well if the other is sick, “Answer—Paint carefully cleansed area of the skin with a solution of stand, apparently, issue some nicely engraved | ® filibuster. and in sight for fall and winter, there| there unfortunately must ever be in/ rt is in this spirit that American| one-eighth ounce of pure crystals of lead sulphide (which are colorless, shares of stock and sell them to the giulllible| 1p viii halt an hour, the White House had sent word /is every incentive for a period of wise| any democratic system where neither} workmen and employers must ap-| transparent) in one-half ounce of distilled water. If excess of lead is being ‘ a e a res thaestaetioPett Ee | thinking and action on the part both| labor or capital is under the thumb | proach the coming year if the present| eliminated the painted area turns biatk in « few hours. While the test is public. It was the era when the “plateau of | 0m munitions until March, and to the rest of the senate/or those who work and those who] of a dictatorial government. signs of improvement are to fulfill] being made you must avoid exposure to lead fumes or dust. high living” theory ruled America. The public an eee direct. gases. spina ‘sean Past esas ie cna (Copyright, 1935, John F. Dille Co.) eye was fixed on the goal of two cars in every eine Fete islet steed Te ee t's state-| The rise of movements like the To-| tolerance, sanity and decency on both 3 5 5 Then came the slump, the disclosure that|**4,Re: . think that 1, as an old soldier, betteve [than those of the factions directly in-| silk-hatted capitalist shaking hands = many supposed investments were worthless and| that ‘march’ talk is all glory, flags, and bugles. Like hell! SOTA Dieu iat iet civil ne Haag Pryce ctr needa z the chilling fear of uncertainty. The rich took Herta este he corer eae of ts blood and €uts,/ubite a chance to be heard, too. For| capital are indispensable parts of the BEGIN HERE TODAY Fragonet two hours ago,” she ex-|for hours,” Jo lied. “Can’t you tell a licking along with the moderately well off| after that, the house session became simost revival oie me it is bape egreeateod suffers Cras "Cantal that ea ll as n20, DARIEN brenke her engase- plained. Ri) Gene eope ma over the plaaeoae ic i i meeting as mem! gave testimony. for instance, violent # sacecnpenrs may have happen im, lot very wel over and the small investor. Things looked gloomy | Mee. sr Onio, whe said, to loud spplause: and widespread. | Soctalist state—all that is changed is you'd please call his home and tel! |right away.” —and there is nothing more scary than money. “I would like to say that I served ws Seer ard 7 * Ta" r =o them—" “Please don't—" = * . * the World war and there is not a vol en cast r = “1 don’t know his home aum-| But already he had replaced the No one would invest in anything. There that I regret today as the vote I cast against the pantenaip hens gh irl pestle ber.” said the operator again. receiver at his end of the wire. He ,, Was plenty of money in the country—there al-| McLemore tenes Gee Winery American Geek and diffused \ownership of the cor- “Then have you any idea where | would be at the apartment, as he'd 1 to keep off the high seas and res! Passports). I am o — lf he ht be tonight at this hour?” j. Hurri ¥ indy ~ oan ne oe — to 6 the) nappy to vote for this resolution.” \ Ve a ee os Camel eo E should, think be [ene: bathed her face in cold. water, risk of putting it to productive use. e rea- ani ‘The surest way to involve America Rim ac scon as he ean |OUSht to be over at Grauman’s Chi- | rearranged her hair, busied herself 1 sons for this attitude were mai aplenty gien ations in war is to let the rest of the world . Je becomes frtend- | nese.” with rouge and powder. - She i ae ny and some of The law congress passed imposes the arms embargo, “ know we will not fight under any cft- LOLA MONTER. Glm | “Where?” asked Jo, pussled. mustn't let him see how disturbed them were sound, but the effect was to further | licenses munitions exports and lets the eevee lay Gown) women want péace and” they will| cumstances—Senater Tom , “Grauman’s Chinese, The thea-|she'd been. She mustn't let him {reduce employment and restrain initiative. Larehaegl watetoury pera ee ee alan niaesipeal fight for it, paradoxical though that) Texas. ter. They're having an Atlas pre-|know it could matter. ; ey eee { From the gambling spirit of 1929 the pendulum | ordinary exports to warring nations—two major routes|™AY sound. Wars are made by men haat miler over. these, tonight, apa most i ‘otis b to the last war. The'senate munitions group and the|®"d sometimes they are unavoidable.| The New Deal record is one of of the Atlas stars are there.’ IN a few minutes he was swung to the other extreme. Banks stressed house “mavericks” are satisfied fairly well, believing they|—Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, noted|squandermania, blundermanis, and ‘But I’m sure—you see, he was at the door, When he saw , xtreme liquidity. So did the private investor. | got the most they could in the face of a hostile state de-|Champion of blair rights. Hoar ecole Priel alpet iar ome acid the Atlas stuaio|Be? fully dressed for the jaresing } Fear dominated the men in charge of our eco- | Partment. nary, and White House, but planning t0 83/5144 sn, poiey toon in world-wide] ative Hamilton Pish, New Yor NOW Oo COTE XEXV! [laughed “Well, sister, Mr. Frago- Farley ereret ese meee $ nomic machinery, Senator Clark says: “It's better to have a little bit /@ffect in 1776, it is doubtful if the 13 +e * : .g| net always was absent-minded) 1. ned J "tne FY A ee | of consetiiing this & great deal of notuing” colonies would have achieved their} It is a great mistake to say we have| [RUE to Fragonet’s promise. 40'S | about those things.” aeenined 30 BEEN. os F Driven by such impulses, they hit upon the| ‘Copyright, 4995, NEA Bervice, tne.) independence. —Representative J. W.|® property or privileged class in this telephone aroused ber tn the} angrily Jo replaced the receiver. | ‘ruth was that I'd been asleep. It’ 10 idea of putting their money int t i i zeces Wadsworth, New York, referring to|country.~ Lincoln said property is early evening. When sbe bad|~ze) surely come.” she thought. | fortunate we Sega aggro 30 y into government |m: = — Glarms embargo provision of neutral-|only the fruit of lsbor—Ex-Gov.| . thanked the operator and walked |-He wouldn't let me down like this/Grove really. | Td beve u bonds. They are tax free. If anything is | With Oth Reprinted to ity bill. ae Alfred E. Smith. * ~~ wintow toe soaee vane the very first Ce cae = seme onan at the tal a deadly sort sag é ‘ show what —_——_— of her new unavoidable to t_ Fragonet 21 secure it is the government itself. And so the U er | twe'y “aay. ||] me rules that governed an em-| One-third of the world’s sugar| that the big sign on the foothills |trass mim tater si ous. “Jo, { couldn't help what hap- 1 market for “governments” boomed. The gov- , may" et. |]|ploye in a blacksmith shop in the} production is consumed by Americans, was obscured by the gathering| put still another hour passed and|Dened tonight. I'@ no ides Edne i ernment was able to sell its issues at progr DITORS | agreo with |{/days of Washington cannot of neces-| who comprise one-fifth of the world’s} . dusk. Peter Fragonet had neither ap-|Was in town. { thought she was in i sively lower interest rates. The i Fa ae sity govern the relationship between population. . “Jo bathed lelourely, enjoying the Lpeared nor telephoned. Really wor |‘ east. But, tonight. just as I q v ates. e issue whic! ers See 3 a ftush phon- | W258! _ " i the bankers failed to completely subscribe bore ii Sith the floor’ the gleaming black foe the famous “Chinese” A hur. {the she oes id a half i i The Average Man : : and-gold fixtures, the soothing |rieq voice answered her after a|cbiet at Atlas, He said one and a half per cent interest. People with (Bruce Catton in N.E. A. Service) am 10n Sle eroma of the bath salts she hed |short wait. been gossip and that I'd better ap gilt-edge commercial paper recently have been mei nelle Sg Plot pene prvpasssts Dp eper found packaged and ready in their | «11 interested to know if Peter They ee mee warty peg getting money for as low as one quarter of one| men. Unfortunately, however, he does not seem to be ; ea a te cha wa |Fragouet ts attending the Premier |ty of friends and all. 1 couldn't per cent on a demand basis. the favorite of anyone else, and of late he has been get-| MORIZONTAL —_Answer to Previous Pussle 22 Advertisement. © little sorry ahe hadn't overcome [tere tontsht.” Jo sald. her telephone you until just a few min- Ree sak ting it in the neck with dismaying and monotonous regu- 1,4,7 The hero 24Sun god. trembling. utes ago.” He stopped. “What are Now, however, the indication is that people] larity. of a story 26 Possesees. her conscience am“ ironses the had | The voice replied as if it had an- |yoq smiling at, Jo?” with money are beginning to look around them] ,,, WhO ‘s the average man, anyhow, in these days when from the grad emo bought for her ob at Crest Lake, |svered hundreds of similar ques| «Was I smiling? 1 dido't meas 5 : | all averages have failed? “§ketch-Book.” find eRe SOF Bee G she | tions that night. “Yes,” it safd./to But I was thinking about how for commercial investments. The blood in| Well, he is a hard-working American citizen who has sigaal cxetenil =— re sore ot eat oer How |"ME. and Mrs, Fragonet have a box | you said you'd be 80 quick to give their veins, frozen for five years, has begun to| #™ehow managed to keep his job, his farm or his source| {2 Die a bad Sea ppoelgenggetoad with a party of friends.” up pictures.” Jo shook her head h M 4 i Deh of business all through the depression. He is the chap| (7 paris or olanth through. would her one, Leg resiagerier ove | 11 eee. Thank you very|siowiy. “You couldn't ever d thaw out. Money, the lifeblood of industry and | who buys the new autos and goes to the new movies and On [RIE] 30 Brooch. ‘ing gown look im those gtamorows | 1, 2” thet. You'll always jump when i i 18 Music drama. : surroundings? Jo knew the an Boece ‘oul al 41 commerce, has begun to circulate at a little] (ndses hopetully Off to the polls every, so often to SAY! 19 Poem, ry si Gall devion, swer as well as any girl would eau they crack the whip— because 4 higher rate of speed. The interest rate is| He is the fellow who provides the retail stores with| 20 Meadow. fr] fm know it—bat like many asotber | JO snk me ad thoagnt, ome |Poter Fraguact and sen, dares't &0 always a good index of investment t their patrons, the railroads and bus lines with their pas-| °1 Beret. 0 BIB) 35 His wil girl she shrugged her pretty shoul-|“ wildered beyond thought. = nm H y' investment tempera- | <ongers and the morticians with their clients. He is the| 23 Three. elolRinga | ota a ag: ders and concluded that it would |how she bad believed that Mrs.|tear him down. %0 ture. | wage-earner, the small-scale business and professional| 25 Alleged force. OIL [/ OMMSITIAIN|OMMR| IME] = ——. have to do. Fragonet was not in Hollywood at] He took s step toward her. “I : The cartoon in Friday's Tribune hints at a/™#" and the ultimate consumer, all in one. résecretea.| | LAIVISITISINAT TEST ATT eI) oe ro lingers al when. she had.-put om the Al. and cortelaly. Erngrast bax seat atte victures. un Je. f swear 9: i ‘And he is the chap whose nose has been fixed firmly| 28 Form of “a.” . 3 Beers dress she: had to confess, with a|been emphatic enough in his state-|itt . . . Only I can’t afford to have 38:0 return to normalcy on the part of the public, | against the grindstone ever since the bottom fell out of | 29 Skillet. 48 Precious metal 3 By. 39 Momth's ro9g: shade of egotism, that she didn't | ments that he would have nothing |trouble now, just when they're 10:3 even as it conveys a warning to the small in-| the stock market. 30 Kettle. pete throb. 5 Particle. 40 You. Took badly at all to do with her ageim. And now—|about to release a new picture of 21:0 A ‘4 Do the city fathers misgovern his town so flagrantly| 32 Part of Roman 5! Century plants 6 To bow. 42 Work of She had dressed in a hurry, for|£428 Fragonet was not only im|mine. When that’s done—then I'l! 31:3 vestor not to fall into the pitfalls of the past. | that real estate taxes go up, schools deteriorate, street pav- month, So Terpeulio. 8 Washington gents. Fornnett bad been a bit Yague|Hollrwood, but Fragonet was with |tel! Boleson and Edne where to s But the trend, if continued, will be bene- | D8 805 ‘0 pleces and stick-up men ren ee Lon oe 34 Bewitching mcr Rena: ei rh Sit of fare about the hour he would call; and | Ber im ig Wes aE enemas Shia aie aD) y | The average man e taxes, sent man. 3 z 2 3 theater! think 1:0 ficial to the nation. It means that money lying aeteiatine acbook Gand provides the teachers with sg 58 Pedal digit. = 9 Nay. 46 Local position. heh bs Mid Mek aupeey St ance te Suddenly Jo wilted. Suddenly | Fragonet ‘ue sa as posi 2 + euchipag as the able to collect), ri oat 36 To sin. 59 He was an idle10 Measure. 47 36 inches, began nervously going over her #01 idle in banks will be put back to work. Our, Suh DAY as tey are able to collect), rides on the DUMPY| 37To coagulate. " —~wettler. 11 Lieutenant. 49 To let fall. tollet. Then, realizing that im her |she felt more tired even than che |Teputation after . . . what's hap- 8:3 capital goods industries, which have suffered ide, iP 3 rk-| 39 Wages. 60 Finish, 12 Corpse, 50 Offer. nervousness she was ruining what-|had that morning upon her arrival. | pened.” Jo said. 2 Does employment subside, so that some former wot 41 To handl hi ‘ble to| With a choked sob she flung her-| “Decent?” cried Fragonet. “She Py the worst during the depression, will be restored BS are suppstied by ee others me carried by is bt le 61 He —— for ty pating his nap a Pome os pele am pet fea be attjeelf on the bed. How long ehe|docsnt want my new picture to %: pa : i ymmunity t and still more are taken care of ae years. ie —— jusical note. % to activity. Experts estimate that replace-| Uncle Sam? Mr. Average man plays the triple part of| 43 Festival. VERTICAL became the = 54 House cat. down and quietly lit a cigaret. | lay there, fully jones. she did not bes so on Ber | that 4 aciliti i kindly relative, Community Chest contributor and federal| 45 Nothing more . B.A. 58 Sound of aavats eer at Saloons | pe ere. ese Oe oe ment of worn-out facilities alone will mean an aenaser J thas. 14 Silk fabric. Aj HAUP hour pessed—an hour— rang it roused her from a trou-| bleed me for in the divorce settle expenditure of $19,000,000,000. That would! ‘Do mismanaged banks fail and utility empires col-| 46 Eye tumor. _ 2 Thought. 16 Still. “and still another hour which |bled, Wp gy hws —— "yee silent @ moment. Then, mean more jobs, more prosperity, a definite end| lapse? Mr. Average Man had his savings in the banks serene te Aree oot bod Pes | piggedlire y Pgs guarded sowiy: "One thing is certain, . al investment e ul y Si ; ane e as the jo coul ° ad to the depression. pays light and phone bills which financial phenagling it no longer, and she took up the wen x re tase in soning hare sf all-out Such a development would be in line with |5®S caused to be higher than is necessary. telephone directory, resolving to « « » Jo, darling, ter ‘ : seieig 2 Does the federal government invest millions in an . 4 Fragonet at his home. She /|ribly sorry. now that {t's done I must forget American commercial history. This nation has | experiment with publicly-owned utilities? ‘Then Mr. Av- rT TTT NL LN I po that his residence was in| -Tr's—it's quite right” Jo|! ever knew you. And you'll have been developed by the investment urge. Call | ®T#8e Man puts up that dough also. S pS Beverly Hills, but to her disap-| managed to say. “After all, what's [oly code ole ee ee it a gambling spirit if you will. Fortunes have| Do strikes break out in the home town? The average ety | earl med pot segeey iste bon. Thee ace Feet ne peor gat ord “It will, Jo. When this is over been made because of man’s willingness to risk Han Bands Tae Be rats ns en. Lise wie & she rémembered that the more|rather than take me to Cocoanut Ne Tomerrow Tl move his life or his money in the hope of obtaining | bakes their own bread. If power men strike, the average oy gala ila a aA | aay into a cheaper place and start hunt- a fuller life or of making more money. man burns oll lamps and candles. If it is the filling sta- Se list them under other names. But ‘Then you know what hap/ing for a job” The revival of that spirit will mean new life | gas tor is car, nn’ ne Serag® mah Goes without * she did find the oumber of the At-|"*S°T “hoogue something, bad | move, Cartas: lcene tates 8 mo- in America. We still pba a young nation SN AC all ties he runs the chance of stopping # rok tw RS = Loptee, ake "atiget’ prevail ‘pon [Mappened to you. I telephoned the Jou end 1 can dash rw to\ Las J J or a policeman’s nightstick that was meant for somebody PT oT ON’ | Nid Bid bid hee vy vig {studio and they told me about the|Vegas and be mai secretly. Gol, Frank Knox, prospective G. O. P. presidential |“: iia BS = tember nis" |premier. 80 1 called to make sure] and as for your moving away trom oe Moers fects” Bul then the | paid gis te Auceane game who supports the ermy god) EY 7 | eB For a long time the telephone at |700 were there here—that’s atter ‘monsense. I've YWemecrats prefer Frank Knox to sly innuendo. average man who pays the real estate tax, the income 5 5) Ms the other end of the line eeemed| “Jo. f've got to see hig right [leased this spartm/ent for you, and tax, the sales tax, and all the hundred and one indirect to be bussing fo an aay fiom. era’. I've got to explain how it he are t Some to me” The Detroit ball club has begun a war on scalpers, | taxes which keep the wheels turning. He gets it going N \ 3 but finally a weary night o; ir b ma S . “Explanations aren't really nec: | blow. For t time she real geri are eee | PO | Sree es tr arrar generat But if he ever decides that he has had enough of ; For proof of the Californian’s claim that a man can S Bid\eee * number, and that she didn’t know “But I'm going to make one, tf | id Tt be ever all of this, and really gets up on. Ijs hind legs to equawk ' = what It wap anyhow, you'll believe me. be frozen, then thawed out. ask a banker for a loan, | about it—then let politicians of 41! parties, persuasions | 4eaRaes Jo refused te believe ber. “1)fgbt away. j.and colors hunt for the nearest e then offer him gilt-edged security. » prm cellar! ae eke had“eb Uppointment with Mr. toe late. I've bees in bed net to rysb her ‘headiong into s position ceritain to mean dis aster for /hem h. ; Be z ened) / |

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