The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1936, Page 4

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, 'TUESDAY, MAY 12, 19386 eee occ ccccces. 3 ¢ ws: Pocecrce The Bismarck Tribune) sehina | Testimonial to the Department of Justi An independent Nemnpe onthe SCENES monanpetnapertineebts forty. riteebners ves Your Personal Health: - : . om at, W hir t By William Brady, M. D. Se nine gunits Sree anay, et ma ada wet e Tribune. Ali que accompanied by 8 GaaPar es tes ousice nt Bicharda uo teccced cas Goad maui,” |Fend Trios Go owen Wale Prsrase arabied snvetones ne Without Law or Facts on His Side Is Revealed . . . Hope for Wide- spread Phone Rate Cuts Grows .. . Profits on Huge Scale Cited. Mrs, Stella I. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Vice Pres, and Gen'l. Manager RICKETS AND SUNSHINE Twelve or fourteen years ago physicians who were recognized au- thorities on the subject were predicting that by 1930 there would be no more rickets. About 1920 the preventive and curative value of cod liver oil had been established, and about 1925 viosterol came into use quite generally in place of the less palatable cod liver oil, particularly for addition to the daily food of the baby in the first year to prevent rickets. Viosterol is , ® fatlike substance naturally present in certain foods and in the skin, activated by untraviolet light. Ultraviolet rays of certain wavelengths change ergosterol into vitamin D. The irradiated product is called viosterol in this country, calciferol in England. Irradiation of ergo- sterol gives a vitamin D concentrate hundreds of tinies more potent than any natural source of vitamin D. Cod liver oil and other fish liver oils are the most potent natural sources of vitamin D. Egg yolk is the most potent natural food source of vitamin D. Butter fat, cream and beef suet contain small amounts of vitamin D, but not enough to supply the requirements of & baby—of course a young infant could take very little of these foods in any ‘The ultraviolet rays of direct sunlight impart vitamin D to the ergos- terol in the skin, and the viosterol thus produced is carried thru the circu- lation to the growing bones and teeth and muscles and glands where it is The baby or young child who gets a daily sunning, a sun bath, of the day, for the sunlight for an hour or two chest in ultraviolet rays, does not need so much food as does the baby or young child who is de- Too Kenneth W. Simons | Sec'y-Treas. and Editor | By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, May 21.—The price of food has begun to go down after an almost continuous ascent since the summer of 1933. Payrolls, on the other hand, have been going up. This makes it nice for practically everybody, since even the unemployed can buy a trifle more with their WPA or dole checks as a result of a decline of 3 per cent shown in the last re- tatl food price figures reported. That decline is for early April this year as against early April a year ago. The comparative figures showed @ slight decline in March, the month which revealed that factory and other payrolls were nearly 7 per cent Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck). Daily by mail outside of North Dakota - Weekly by mail tn state, per year .... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year . Weekly by mai! in Canada, per year Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation Member of The Associated Press EE Ether aR NTE ciated Pres: exclusively entivied to the use for republica- tien ot the we dispatc! credited to tt or not otherw credited in this mewspaper and also the loca! news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. “" higher than a year previously. nied a place gun. man: of people, people who hi Lesson for Dictators ‘ Two questions arise: Will food plate t6 iW, & pasa where sun bios, tall ‘e give their pables ths Boba Observance by Texas of its centennial this year calls to|prices go still lower? How much of of ® daily sun bath. : i the decline has been due to removal of AAA processing taxes? x * * Food Supply Expands The current price drop has been caused chiefly by expansion of food supplies following reduction result- ing from drouth. Normally an in- crease in consumer buying power, as indicated by the payroll figures, would be followed by an increase in prices. Food supplies probably will con- tinue to show an increase this sum- mer, barring drouth or other bad weather factors. But if payrolls con- tinue to go up, they may offset the downward retail price trend because of increased consumption and pur- chasing power. Chief effect of elimination of processing taxes is visible in lower) _ flour prices. National bread price averages remain the same as last By sun bath I mean exposing part or all of the naked body to the sun. If I advised you to give the baby a warm bath, would you scald the baby? | Would. you splash water in the baby’s eyes? Would you leave the baby in | the sink while you ran over to Janet’s for a permanent? Mi ct 28 Every baby should have a sunbath daily from the first day the belly i band is discarded—which ought to be about the third or surely by the fourth week, every day when the outside temperature is above freezing. The first bath should be for five minutes, or only two minutes if the sun is strong, and about one-twelfth of the body surface should be exposed to the sun—say the belly. Next day the same exposure for the same time, then for the same time exposure of one leg in addition. The third day turn the baby over and expose one lég for three to five minutes; then over again and expose the front of yesterday's leg for three to five minutes and the belly for seven to ten minutes. Fourth day go thru the same routine, and finally expose some new surface, say the front of one arm, for three to five minutes. In this way sunburn is avoided and tanning is promoted. In the course of a few weeks the baby can take a total exposure of as much as half an hour at noonday with advantage. Tanning is the guide. Even slight burning must be avoided. Always see that the baby’s eyes are shaded from direct sun glare. Also see that the baby is protected from sharp wind, in- sects, animals and handling or kissing by strangers or friends. mind the history of the Lone Star state and, incidentally, points out the weakness of dictatorial governments. This vast expanse of territory was settled by Americans who crossed the Mississippi river prior to 1830 and in that year there were only 30,000 of them in the territory. Mexico, which had gained her own independence from Spain in 1821, was a little fearful from the first, but it welcomed the newcomers. They were required to become Mexican citizens and to embrace the national religion, but few balked at this and all went well. But the natural ties of the Texans were with the United States. Those who could, sent their children to school in New Orleans and other American cities and their cotton and other products, were exported direct to England. They were good Mexicans, but the central government became suspicious and undertook by a series of repressive meas- ures to subjugate the colonists. Military domination was sub- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pa in Bed a ae ‘ 5 25 year, though lower than in December. stituted for civil liberay. Trial by jury was denied and other] Part of the decrease in pork prices With Other ean fon brat read Re hier pened thn vine E) sini rights which the Texans had considered inalienable were i SHR ie Len tbe bese from behind the plane orn a he ehvogh de ie itaedt RPS mite poaition — Sie * , ——————— in which you read. Convalescents or invalids should have the advice of taken away. As a last straw a colonization law was: enacted in|hog supplies following drouth con- TS ean eerie ane illdg 1880 which forbade further immigation from the United States. | ditions. adins usce| *e * Work for Phone Rate Cuts There may be some reduction in many telephone bills soon. Officials in charge of the investigation of the American Telephone & Telegraph system assert they are laying the basis for rate cuts in every state— which would save money each month for more than 17,000,000 subscribers. Investigators for the Federal Com- munications commission think they are proving that profits have been far in excess of reasonable return on investment and their facts will be at the service of all state regulatory au- thorities. Such facts have not been available heretofore. The largest private business in the | world, with assets of $5,000,C00,000 and said to be collecting a billion dollars @ year from the public, has been able virtually to defy attempts at regulation. i Last night is the first full night’s sleep I have enjoyed for over four months, I slept prone, with only the tail of a soft wool sweater folded un- der my ear to avoid pressure of the ear on the hard bedsheet. I thank you for the suggestion to try sleeping prone . . . (R. W. P.) Answer—Not me, but one of my correspondents. It is a good idea for ssiot! Buen to sleep prone occasionally if not habitually, if the position is le. In 1832 and again in 1838 the Texans met in convention and protested these laws. Stephen F. Austin, whose father had died a year after coming to the state, was sent as an ambassador to protest to the central government and was held in jail for a year. The brief but decisive war broke in 1836 when the Texans wrote a Declaration of Independence and General Antonio Lopez de Santa Ana, president of the Republic, took the field with a large and well-equipped army to subdue the revolt. The initial battles all went against the Texans. Nearly every American has heard about the Alamo where Col. Travis and his fellows died to the last man, but few know about the tragedy of Goliad, one of the most horrible affairs in the re- corded history of the American continent. Col. James W. Fannin and about 400 men, mostly young, were surrounded by the Mexican army on the prairie. They fought all day without food or water. Finally their ammunition became exhausted and they surrendered under promise that they would be treated as prisoners of war. of our homes we shall have neither a mature nor a stable social otder. When millions of young people have to delay their marriages because of economic insecurity, it is a grave symptom of social ill-health. When even more millions of young people Jook out upon a world which seems to offer neither a job nor a fair prospect of a home of their own, some of the roots of idealistic impulse and of force of character are sure to wither. Harmony and security in the home are first and necessary steps to har- mony and security in the wider realm of society. Homes that are tense, chaotic and insecure increase the dis- harmony, the chaos and the insecur- ity of the world. Homes in which to it in his speech as a “monster” pa- rade. the members learn to be peace-makers one with another, produce the sort of people without whom world peace cannot be. Homes which inculcate and practice respect for the rights of others provide « groundwork on which social justice among groups and na- tions ‘can be founded. Our problem, then, is not merely one of adjustment of the family to social changes but of framing a social policy which shall be favorable to the home and under which the home it- self shall be able most effestively to} _ fulfill its high educational task of developing those attitudes and types of behavior which will contribute to the constructive and harmonious in- teraction of groups and nations. ticket agent, a friend from childhood. “To prevent your being burned?” Movie Star (excitedly)—Quick, Op-|uqoin’ away?” 6 erator! Call my husband for me. ' Operator—Number please? THE HOME IN A CHANGING SOCIETY Federal Council Bulletin (Published by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America) Much has been said about the ef- fects of social changes, and of mod- ern city life in particular, upon the family, and the point can hardly be overemphasized. The social order must be shaped for the family rather than the family shaped by unfavor- able elements in the social situation. Indeed, there is no better approach to social questions than from the angle of the family. Until our economic arrangements are more closely geared to the needs A Acne T and my younger sister both have acne. Can you tell us anything to do for it? . . . (Miss M. A) Answer—Send a three-cent-stamped envelope bearing your address, for &@ monograph which gives you instructions. (Copyright 1936, John F. Dille Co.) ‘When you see a man making a bee-| the Federal Bureau of Investigation. line, you can be sure he's after a lit-| They're all yellow rats to us.—J. Ed- , tle honey. gar Hoover, G-men chief, referring to F “public enemies.” ‘ “It required a lot of oil when I took that sunbath in the nude.” The inventor may be a “nut,” but he is an individual who has not lost arrested.”| confidence either in his country or I of himself—A. G. Burns, president, Na- tional Inventors’ Congress. BIT OF HUMOR NOW AND THEN 1S RELISHED BY THE BEST OF MEN The patent monopoly of the Bell | system, it has been declared, enabled the parent company to lease its tele- We don’t give them any rating in ; Movie Star—Now, let me see—is he But the next day they were marched out in small squads SU BOE E ee eS “Let me kiss those |™Y fourth or fifth? d from the mission fortress of Goliad and shot down without|| THE LEGAL MIND EXPOSED ae Beige Air Pilot — Half of those people an mercy. Vultures circled over that bloody field and wolves tore Congressman Cooper of Ten- || ged, "tender! - | down there thought we were going to ! é ca a ne ; y. She BEGIN HERE TODAY 3 5 at their flesh until the bodies eventually were burned. peere ve meen cle OL ere fell’ into. his. arms |T5- LINDA BOURNE, 20 years ol¢, snp anloege ince qarpriee Seat rede dllancoree per et icism about the procedure em- Lone Passenger — So did half the work to do, and worked hard. She That was the background of the Texas bid for independ-|| ployed for the consideration of a he wee patdcced people up here. te sender, Soa is ver inthe,” par stepped into the great had discovered an elderly actress ’ alle ry this bill, which reminds me of the bigaps 4 ‘1 Bewepener jorne’s house. in the ranks of extras and was ence when Col. Sam Houston and 800 ragged, ill equipped old saying with reference to the eu ve ears Core Jones—My wife talks to me posi-; tig reste evel 2 jet ets | He was not there to greet her.| writing her first big role for her. Texans faced Santa Ana, with twice that number of well-trained || experience of lawyers around the {stop them?” he asked breathle ns tively awful. th DIX CARTER, bet he Linda was accustomed to bad man-|She was very careful these days men at San Jacinto on April 21, a month and 19 days after the outbreak of the war. courtroom: ‘When the law is against you, talk about the facts. When the facts are against you, “No,” said Frances; “it's hay fever; but go on with the treatment.” Smith—That’s nothing. Mine talks to me awfully positive. ners, She had met them frequent- ly in the last year, but she was as- tonished that Thorne had been to pick her way surely through the Precipices of judgment. She was A z Z 6 ARM etar, ® success, but, one slip, and sh The situation looked desperate and Houston issued orders|| talk about the law. When both Having been away for some seven BxmE Bamweem. Ale Sm | ity of ouch bad tata. A Cal-| knew she would fal her work wa. ? . . the law and the facts are against ||_ am — Why are all the women/or eight years, Morrison decided to 1 appearanes” tear. She | nese butler took he! 8h to attack the following morning at daybreak, but his staff and yon, ish gale hell tn Moparts |campaigning against Bagley? pay a visit: to his home town in Min- buys a scenarie written by Linde: eekia 6 iene “a pbeaggs sy done. men were impatient and the orders suddenly were changed and aes Jamms—Hadn't you heard? Thelprsota. Recognising none of the thers, Expressing ideas that are |patted her heir and iit clgaret, coh i : woman’s club put on a big parade in|hangers-on at the depot when he ar- sealiy Paterres eke Fee ee che sitolied 1 gd t. | ETONEY HARMON called to tell : the attack made at 4 o’clock in the afternoon. over one period of 11 years, netted 150|his honor and that night he referred |rived, he rushed inside to greet the station for being able to discover | Then she strolled into the living-/ <2 ner that Pete Gardiner’s play, i A tew stars. Toom, +gb By nightfall Santa Ana was captured. He had lost 630|P* pent annual, on the cost of ine) ——_______ — At a warty, stven by Hoaer | “here was an eight-foot lounge jhemambeenee.” was bates dene be b men killed and 208 wounded, and only 40 escaped capture.| subsequently, the licensed com-| * be Hietton “ats gees ent pale the Naren ABE, SPORE: 18 Linda tanked her aaa cone Texas was free. panies paid a percentage of their Th Li ] C l a Beside hier, takes | unlovely slumber, dressed for of being happy that Pete had ar 4 i : : ae is bis ind kisses. her. ressii j This record is one of which all America can be proud. It [STS income as rental for the instru e itt e orpora. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY oe bie at noe sackey coor hen Pinte [Fived, made @ note to send him i . : ‘ i ments, but the profit rate still ranged xIv Inner jacket, was her host! telegram, asked her secretary to re- YY constitutes a bright page in our history. From 28 to 89 per cent, depending on Se SH A UR RE PES a beara ge ae He was snoring sentiy. Not that | mind her to send ff and forgot all oe Also, it is one which the dictators of the world might read |Whether you accept the A. T. & T. HORIZONTAL —_Answer to Previous Pussie 19 To put on. PIDs. zetuand . to. poem meatiy’ Dart Melped. Ee | about tt. | ey i 4 2 or FCC theories of accounting. ere threat in Honey’s voice. There| might have trumpeted and the ef- with interest in this centennial year. It shows what happens * * * 1Who ts the ETVIAINIGIE TL II Tit 20 His place of was no reason for it; therefore it|fect would have been no worse,| That was at the time that “Take when a people with a tradition of bravery and freedom are Ags oe man in the JRIEIBIEIL ISAC exile. couldn't exist. Smiling and friend: |Fastidious Linda shuddered, and|® Letter” was finally being filmed Man Can Control Himself We get accustomed, in an automatic age, to thinking that everything can be controlled automatically, by law or by me- chanics. Somehow we get the idea that a law, or a mechanical says the new instruments made thi old type obsolete as fast as they Chief Investigator Samuel Becker e could be replaced—at new profits— but that A. T. & T. charged a profit of more than 30 per cent on the old| 13 Hair ornament]! |T/E MIRA 15 Rumanian AIRIMERGIATL| oe 8 Wie ubs dry. D 18 Kindled. SALADS a Oe) fy 28To merit. 30 Fiying mammal. 32 Monkey. 34 Hearing distance. il 4 aa Basil Thorne. spoke thickly, “Sorry, Little Linda. Dropped off to nap. Be all right in a minute.” His words slurred sy and he roared, “Cock E ewe : ° After the new hand-set type of ture? AIGINIAIT Eat MRT IO 23 . ‘i He lost to hi and Linda found herself acting as pushed too far along the path of oppression and degradation of feientiene ‘had es ern the 8 ee the (CIOITMETIAIPIE IRIE ID} 24 pig At L Has sale cond, Regn Presb “We was feos of her then and someeknoes, She was on the set the spirit. A. T. é& T. in 1927 sold all its old in- | pi TAIT MERIE INIEIGIAIDIE| 27°70 help. and went sto her room. his eyes, shook his head, |*' Sy. in the projection room struments to its operating companies./ 42 Legal rule. [OMNGIAIDEMT IA] i she pleaded work, breaktasted pri-|rose unsteadily to his feet, and|Vatching the rushes by night, and squeezing sleep in when she could That picture was all hers, Young, slim, executive, she was as attractive to the extra girls as the star herself. They called out shy greetings to her, found ways ics. 1 ones—a profit of $14,000,000, which| 19 Clock faces. Alri ; restriction, will protect us from ourselves. became a part of the rate bases of] 34 Siuiped Sabele TIEIRIOU | GIAIMEILIE IL 35 proae- Fe gy fasgimant | [LINDA took one trom the tray Papen Waeme ea, “— But it is in ourselves that the final resource always lies. |Petatine companies on which pa-| 94 Grice. “42 To strike. VERTICAL 39 Twitehing. dered toward the telephone and|.. Su¢ sipped it. She was strick-|she might help her. sph ‘5 trons even yet are being charged 42 Bide bon n ‘exhilaration |°" silence. The evening had ’ A year ago, horrified by the mounting toll of the streets, | interest as investment. 25 Cavity. 44 Within. 2 Excuse. o each time it rang, gone completely flat, She watched|. Miss Bourne, there's an extra, L ble i Th i 26 Musical note. 45 Pertaining to 3 Father. 43 Blue grass. Ufted her swiftly and left her 88 /momne & boy, who lives at my board: | more terrible in many ways than war, a great cry went up: “Put e old system of license fees in debt. 46 Finch. a that sulp two of the cocktails nial . Pp charged to operating companies, 27 Contract. osinium. 4To be i ewiftly as she heard in quick succession, saw his hand |0U#e Who says he used to know mechanical governors on cars to limit their speed! Pass stricter |originally set up to cover instrument 29 Sound of 47 Therefore. 5 And. 47 Bed lath. ‘Was not steady and his cloud. you,” one of them said to her one ~ i . ness. re , ” But at the same time, newspapers, magazines, and radio|*pnualy, OF, oross business ane ae Si Frepesition. 50 Winged, SNote in scale, 61%. Linda, She expected that he would |4® but when he pulled her down! “srisy Bourne didn't flutter a sin- | throughout the country applied themselves to the more funda-|rendered by the holding companies.| 3 To peruse. §3Door rug. Be float seele. play his game thet way. He knew |i age trom Ris pep, eatin | ele dark eyelash. _ mental side, that of showing people what was going on, telling aan onan Be $800 fH oan metel: aie pal i 54 Company. be would lée fg Wonder & tL He and, still smiling, left him. He i ee oe fastest Of course them of the traffic toll, urging them to be careful for their| Foc ‘experts claim the charge| 38 Upright shaft. $6 His title. 14 Right. 55 Neuter Feckoned without Linde’s didn't realise until she was welll whon'be was in college, Tr diaert ‘own sake shouldn't be made at all, that the| 39 .Light brown. 69 Indian. 16 He met defeat —_ pronoun. fulness. Knowing the situation |40W2 the road in search of & tele-| iow hy was in H ae a . alleged services to operating com- 40 Firgt woma! . 87 Postecript. between Honey and Thorne, phone that she had gone. tke & oe him oa ra Up - ae sitometiie deaths have been 9 per cent fewer | panies actually are performed for the| 41 Either. 61 Before. 17 Sinks. That a ee Thorne with! Linda walted for the next line ear e ; , [benefit of A. T. & T. itself, and that ; F " Linda, not remové him oY That i» splendid, worthwhile shoving. i probably faewmagn agen es tomee| EF PT TT Oe tte ttt mt ute middot Sd etg br MY greater than would have been registered by any new set of laws,|than $135,000.00 » year, instead of HE Bae Ae ‘Thorne od hor tho sisth [Seed for affection to have and to|r kaew tug ss estonia. #0 you. ny set of mechanical restrictions. TOSONE RUBACADETS 50. DAY day of that week and adked her | bestow. Linda smiled and walked ’ That's a point for state rate com- to dine at bis house. To her own ‘The next day he telepnoned. He|She wanted to tell the ail her = missions fe decide—and, after them, eurprite, shé accepted, and spent|called her at the studio, and he number and address, but ube Taxing Divorces in Cichrds a the next bour in a fever of dress |called ber at home. He sent her |she didn't dare. Dix would know / More and more Soviet Russia swings back toward the\go FS, 1d toon Tonbed ten tds too | aoneh eaten as TEM” sa | here to rvach her it be wanted to mental values of the home and of the family. In the last| | So They Say \ hits one too virginal, the Bleck |etoct to Ber foursoom aparteront, | That tate cen aa rae oo entra, perplexed her, and she tried there has been increasing agitation for strengthening the | * * tee Gomes te a te em soe retuned to tae to Aimer to forget tit. She tried not to want position and permaneney of marrige kilo me, see Fale, a’bine't mint te oe | "Arta ae soit no tar [rng toa'St iba" _ And now comes the most significant move in the whole| cross in civil ‘service positions. . - ber shoulders, tations until she was certain that |her secretary to show him in end : proposal to discourage divorces by taxation. It is em-| secret information has a way of leak- to erent ene. nd pall gar ae) a bet soctete. Wi take & message to someone four bodied in the marriage law that is being drafted to double the | {2S very often -.. . but I have never . | tat “shack,” an abe called the 48|the Brown Derby. She met him|swer ns “at for an em 5a e @ case of such leakage being for each divorce after the first. |due to @ woman. — Prime Minister be sied Ly Feminded bi te tes Seciee Athletic Club. | “Hello, Dix,” she sald. ‘What such a tax might do to some of our own 100 per cent | inky Baldw’), of Hhelana of beodling any situation, and that lat the Clover Club, and cach tite lalwess theses yor gan ne sitan divorce court veterans is something to shudder at. workers of this coun- a man caly took edvaniage of alsbe nodded and smiled, but was|but then T thought 1 had. only \ is worth noticing that the Russians believe that its chief | #7 ,sr¢ not bumodies. | We do not Panes, "hen ioe roman wanted jcarefal to, avoid having to speak|imagined tt . . . but, you're fust ey sue will be as a preventive of hasty marriages. To marry in| the governments or the peoples. of made love to her tn Hollywood, |one does not make euamies tn Hal |erery aay thane 2 nee ste and repent at leisure is not so good, if the “leisure” gets| ther countries. — William Green, none bed presumed to treat her as | lywood. : Linds didn't say anything, she ively more costly. Labor. Aiea | Wrlle abo Was Calling hortelé tins | pened G2 nltsey tha ettine. bap jooulda’t any. “I silt love yor, toa"

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