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# , e ° none FeSRS SGuubossssessese The Bismarck Tribune [Bering The Wedding of the Winds | ealth| ° ain wine the SCENES our Personal Healt THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER -in— (Established 1873) hi By William Brady, M. D. State, City and County Officiai Newspaper Was ington ei pty i sugges questi — a is Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and Sambed Saifeedartened envelope. ae entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mai} matter. Rush Holt Tosses Away His Good Mrs. Stella 1. Mann Start... Young Senator Is Capi- President and Publisher | tal's Most Isolated Man .. . Lan- DIET OF THE NUBSING MOTHER ee Archie ©. Johnson Kenneth W Simons | in WPA and CCU Is a Btixed-op ae ener ane tor hervelf ou of fear thas it may Bot “agree” Vice Pres. and Gen'l. Manager Sec'y-Tr and Editor vi eG a Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | By RODNEY DUTCHER more of fresh fruit daily, wi © oa et 4 Daily by carrier, per year | (Tribune Washington Correspondent) | peed of pure Pgh ergy ie eee Siaeeti Lea hg tere og laenasoee, GT ae Daily by mat) per year (in Bismarck) 7.20 Washington, July 25.—The position | really keep the tissues and blood on the alkaline side and are important Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck) §.00 | | of young Senator Rush Holt of West for preventing scurvy. Daily by mai) outside of North Dakota . 6.00 Virginia is as peculiar as it is sur- nursing mother usually requires an fodin ration just as she did Weekly by mail in state, per year .... 1.00 prising. take prising. | before the baby came. She must use no alcoholic beverages. She may “ Weekly by mai! outside of North Dakota, per year 150 Nominated and elected as a liberal tea, coffee or cocon moderately. Aside from these special rules, her diet Weekly by mail tn Canada, per year boy wonder while still under the re- ahould be practically the same as that of the rest of the family. It is im- quired senatorial age of 35, Holt however, that her diet be supplemented by additional rations of Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation found the whole capital friendly Member of The Associated Press Issue. when he came here. But by his own assiduous efforts he has queered himself with the na- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 25, 1936 j i t E baby a daily at the of one month, and gradually the daily requirement in- tional administration, the Democratic creases up to at the age of six months and 1,000 a day at the age of eo The percutts tre to exclusively, entiiied te the u for republl -|machine which dominates West Vir- one year. The nursing mother herself requires from 2,700 to 3,100 calories Rewspaper and aino the local news of spontancous origin published Herein |Sinia, the union mine workers who daily, according to the amount of exercise, play or work she does d: All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. helped elect hirh, and other elements, Meny nursing mothers, responding to the natural increase in appetite ——— ee ____| uni] hee is periaps the most isolated which lactation produces, eat too much and rapidly accumulate superfit Just iS * man in the senate. fat. a ust a Suggestion He has 4!5 more years to serve. T suggest that this undesirable obesity is due to the consumption of de- Petitions now are being circulated for the initiation of aj _ It started in a patronage row with naturalized food, and that the nuraing mother’s appetite will be satisfied, new liquor law in North Dakota but its terms and conditions evidently are planned as a glad surprise for the electorate be- cause no one seems to know anything about its details. The names of at least two men, one of them a Bismarck resident, appear on the petition BUT THEIR NAMES ARE BEING USED WITHOUT THEIR AUTHORIZATION. THEY KNOW NO MORE ABOUT THE PROPOSAL THAN THE AVERAGE CITIZEN. All of which has a bad odor and may be taken as a fair indication that the bill will be slaughtered by the electorate in the fall if the sponsors of this bill—whoever they may be—per- sist in this course. That SOMETHING OUGHT TO BE DONE ABOUT THE LIQUOR QUESTION IN NORTH DAKOTA IS OBVIOUS TO EVERY DECENT CITIZEN. The present situation is bad and rapidly growing worse. THERE OUGHT TO BE SOME SOLUTION BETTER THAN UNENFORCED AND UNENFORCIBLE PROHIBITION AND ILLEGAL SALE. The unfortunate thing is that leadership in efforts to reach a solution is in the hands of ardent and avowed drys on the one hand and in the hands of ardent and avowed wets on the other. NEITHER GROUP SPEAKS FOR NORTH DAKOTA. The fact is that the average citizen, strange as it may seem, can either take it or leave it alone when it comes to liquor. He has no burning desire to see the state either wet or dry. He does want to see the best conditions possible and, if he understands what is going on about him, regards the’ present situation as pretty much intolerable. The drys are quite frank in their position. By keeping liquor legally outlawed they hope that a public reaction will set in because of present abuses which will make the prohibi- tion law enforciblee THEY KNOW IT ISN’T BEING EN. FORCED NOW. The wets are just as frank. They say that liquor is easily obtainable from outside the state and that, whenever there is a public demand for something, that demand will be filled. The average citizen is thus caught between the upper and lower millstones. Those who are most actively interested in the liquor question think of everyone and everything else but him. Yet it is he who must decide the issue in the end. The proposed law voted down at the last election might have been a cure. It certainly would have created better con- ditions than now prevail and would have provided revenue from a business which should be taxed heavily in the public interest. Some political observers believe that the bill would have been approved had it not been for the landslide of negative votes which greeted the huge and unwieldy initiative ballot, containing items some of which were silly or offensive to the public’s sense of propriety. But a bill conceived in secrecy, as is the new proposal, is no cure and almost certainly will again be defeated. If the people of North Dakota are to be asked again to vote on this subject, the best brains available should be brought to the formulation of a bill which will be free from the bias of either the wets or the drys. From the dry side it should contain clear-eyed recognition of the situation as it exists. From the wet side there should be recognition of the essential fact that liquor once was outlawed because of the lawlessness and excesses of those who sold it for profit. The drys can be expected to vote against any legalization proposal on moral grounds, but this should not prevent them from going into conference with other well-meaning elements in the state to devise a bill which, if enacted, would be fair and enforcible. The wets should not be too greedy. But if we are to have anything approaching a solution— and the liquor question will never be solved with entire satisfac- tion—it is necessary that the average citizen, neither rabidly wet nor ardently dry, exercise a much louder voice than he has ever displayed in the past. Why not a conference of all elements interested to work out a bill on the basis of the best information available and the experience of other states. Then let the wets support it and the drys oppose it—and let the people vote as they choose? It may be that by such a systenr we will be able to at least approach a workable answer to a problem which worries every citizen interested in the future of our state and nation. ‘Star Session’ Justice The decision of a New York supreme court justice uphold- ing the right of newspapers to print news of “star session” trials—if they can get it—will be applauded by all who believe in freedom of the press. In this case Justice William F. Bleakley refused to cite a reporter for contempt because he had written the story of a libel suit after the court had sealed the papers in the action. The reporter said he had obtained his news from sources inde- pendent of the court. Justice Bleakley ruled that it is a fundamental principle of law that publication of an article may not be restrained in ad- vance, and he warned that, “unless that principle is observed in its strictest sense, the right of the freedom of the press is abridged.” ‘Thus he struck at the growing practice of holding trials im aéeret, and simultaneously reaffirmed constitutional guaran- of a newspaper's rights. Senator Mat Neely and some of the latter's political associates. Holt stumped the state against Neely for the May primaries and Holt’s man was badly licked. Then Holt lost practically his last friend here—at least in his own party —by filibustering the second Guffey coal bill to death at the end of the} session. | A gob of his filibuster speech, re-| cently printed in an appendix to the Congressional Record and full of fables from Aesop, gives little indica- tion of what caused Holt to kee; competing for the “most unpopular man” prize. But there's some point to a fable interpolated by Senator Bennett Clark of Missouri, who told of “the famous tenderfoot who went out to hunt bears, and upon whose tomb- Stone it was wirtten: “‘He whistled for the grizzly and the grizzly came.’” i Landon Not ‘Native Son’ | Don’t let anybody rib you or win any bets with cracks about the “Kansas-born candidate” for the presidency or the “native son of Kansas” who is running against Roosevelt. The only such presidential “as- pirant” is Earl Browder, nominat- is largely due to an instinctive demand for vitamins which such refined food (constituting the greater part of everyday dietaries) cannot supply. The most practical way to insure an optimal ration of vitamin B is to eat daily at least five ounces of plain wheat, cracked or cooked in various 5 & & FE i g ss i E £8 i < 5 Fi 8 i & cine daily—the correct dose of drops daily up to the end of thi QUES' Tumor Is there any danger of fatty tumors becoming cancerous? ... (Mrs. W. A.) Answer—Practically no danger. oe Looking at the Campaign (Copyright, 1936, By David Lawrence) jbe making a political mistake of the at the Patrick Henry celebration in David Lawrence horse | I have w little lump on my leg above the ankle, which came when I | strained a tendon. Would exercise and mgssage help to take it away, or is surgery necessary? ... (Mrs. C. P, McK.) Answer—As a rule such lumps (called “charleyhorse”) disappear in a month or so. The rupture of tendon, however, is followed by scar which may permanently impair the function of the muscle. To prevent that effect, surgical repair of the injury is sometimes advisable. Contact Lenses My optometrist denounced the idea of contact lenses so heatedly that I came away feeling there is something he hates to admit . . . I must soon ; ed by the Communist party, who was born in Wichita. Governor Landon was born in Pennsylvania and lived for some years in Ohio. Washington, July 25.— Republican j Chairman Hamilton's effort to change |Al Smith’s “walk” into a talk for | Governor Landon has raised the ques- tion here of what several Democrats Another Mixed-Up Issue 1c Uke cated may do in the present It is easy to get mixed up on one | °@mpaisn. campaign issue when you hear cer-' For purposes of party regularity, tain “WPA workers” or “CCC work- | Democrats who are opposed to the ers” have or have not been required | Policies of the New Deal do not wish to furnish political endorsements to to come out in support of any Re- get their jobs. publican nominee, but, at the same If a politician means that WPA is time, they do not wish their silence hiring work-relief labor at WPA wage |to be construed as even tacit support scales or CCC boys at the $30 a month \for the re-clection of Mr. Roosevelt. CCC pay on a political basis, that’s; The reason why the Democrats wish one thing. If he means that admin- to preserve their record is that a bolt istrative employes, from supervisors | from the party means, as a rule, an and foremen up, are being required to|end to influence inside the party. If show politicial backing, that’s an-/Governor Smith, for instance, is other. jready to burn all bridges for the fu- first order in coming out for Governor | virginia recently what amounted to a \Landon, but it may be that he feels | scathing attack on New Deal policies. his political career is finished and |ir the purpose of former Governor \that the time has come to make his Smith is to spread his influence in the fight for principles, irrespective of the |campaign, the fact that he goes fish- effect it has on his own political for-|ing on election day and doesn’t cast tunes. It may be that Al Smith is/his own individual ballot for either |ready to turn away from future polit- Mr, Landon or Mr. Roosevelt is only ical combat in the Democratic party |of academic importance alongside a i I don’t want to be an American in New York state or New York city. | series of speeches intended to arouse |citizen; you don’t get enough relief.| believed in my plan to elect me change my glasses and would like to change to the inconspicuous blown contact lenses your correspondent praised. ... Answer—They are not satisfactory for general use. Only in excep- tional circumstances. I have no additional information about them. Glad to give the address of the firm that supplied them to the correspondent, if you ask for it and inclose stampéd envelope bearing your addfess. (Mrs, R. H.) (Copyright, 1936, John F. Dille Co.) = If there were enough people £4 | There's a middle course, and it may ! public opinion generally to what he!—Albert Martinet, New York, lone| ident, I wouldn't need to worry about be adopted by the man who was thrice ‘governor of New York state and in | 1928 the standard bearer of the na- considers are the dangers to the na- tion in continuing the New Deal. white leader of a protesting Harlem /|its enactment—Dr. Francis E. Town: group. send. | tional ticket. He can refrain from an-) nouncing his support of Governor | Landon, he can criticize those portions ct the Republican platform with which he disagrees and he can at the same time repeat his previously expressed views in opposition to New Deal policies. about tl idea that subsistence wages | used as substitutes for dole to avert starvation are conditioned on poli! | Republican Manager John Ham-j} ilton has answered Democratic Man- | ager Jim Farley's question: “Has anybody who is listening to this speech ever heard of a man or} woman being asked whether he or she is a Democrat or a Republican! before getting the dole or an emerg- | ency job?” if * % % | Some Politics in Relicf It's a fair guess that Farley meant recipients of cash or work relief, al- though he may have figured listeners | would think he covered more ground. | But Hamilton comes back with evidence that an applicant for a job | as a non-technical foreman in a CCC camp was asked by Wyoming's Gov- ernor Miller to fill out an application blank requiring him to give his po- litical record. Evidence that work-relicfers and CCC enrollees have been required to leap political hurdles hasn’t yet ap- peared—although it may, local poli- ticians being what they so ofien are. In many states, however, WPA ai ministrative staffs and CCC non- technical foremen are employed largely on a political basis. That's | been true in CCC since the late Speaker Byrns and an unofficial pa- | tronage committee of congressmen} went to the White House and put up, a big holler for more pie. (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) Goer n nnn nnn nnn nnn y BIT OF HUMOR NOW AND THEN 1S RELISHED BY | | | THE BUST OF MEN oe) i Mrs, Jawish—John, | the lecturer at our club this afternoon | said that in the! South Sea islands wives are sold for| $20! How disgrace- ful! = John J. — Yes, that is a lot of money, but if they are good humored, good looking and good workers they may be bargains at that. Mr. Scribbler — How much board will you charge me for a few weeks while I gather material for my new country novel? Hi Cornsilk — Five dollars a week unless we have to talk dialect—that’ll be $3 extra. Professor —Can you tell me what would happen if an irresistible force would meet up with an immovable object? Student—Yes; the same thing that would happen if two women drivers met in the middle of a one-way bridge. . Frogmore—I wonder what has be- come of the old-fashioned mother who spanked her son for smoking tes? oth — Oh, she's the grand- There's something more nauscating |ture and take himself out of the; 4 If Governor Smith wishes to speak, Democratic party, he might consider he can talk under independent aus- seriously announcing himself for the pices entirely apart from those of the Republican nominee. There are oth- | Republican national committee or the er Democrats who feel that Mr.| American Liberty League. Last win- Roosevelt will not always be in com- ' ter his speech before the league was a mand of the party and that, after | forceful exposition of his views, and the coming election, especially if he | yet, because it was delivered at a is defeated, the opportunity for those ' Liberty League banquet, it did not who stayed insid2 the party ranks! have as wide an influence as it would will be greater than for those who are have had if the auspices had been outside of it. different. Rightly or wrongly, the In the case of the 1912 election, the | Liberty League has come to be asso- bolting was of a different ehenncver| pale in the public mind with one A progressive Republican movement | class, whereas Mr. Smith’s public life was available to those who wanted to|and record is a demonstration of his bolt the regular Republican ticket. To- | interest in and devotion to the com- day there is no independent Demo-|mon man. cratic movement to which a man like | There are various Democrats who Al Smith can turn. This is the essen- | would like to express themselves in tial weakness of the situation so far|the present campaign. They manage as many Democrats of the Jeffersonian | to find opportunities to say what they ype are concerned, |think under non-political auspices. Strictly speaking, Al Smith would | Thus, Senator Carter Glass delivered Valuable Animal | HORIZONTAL 1 Ruminant pictured here] 6 It belongs to the genus. Answer to Previous Puzzle 18 Portion. pb] 21 To handle iS |W] 1} roughly. INJOITIE [O} 22 Kindred. 1F MEL JOINIG] 23 Death notice. IRIE|LIAIT IE} 26 Male sheep. EV IAIDIE|R] 2? Smell. mala lu} IR] 9 Iris rootstock. [BIRIAIDIE] CONE] 11 Upon. 13 French FISITIEIR! BALE measure. 14 Act of holding 17 Custom. 18 Young dog. 19 Ocean, 20 Southeast. IClUl le 28 VII. AISISIESMMPTE [AIR] 30 Ireland. lu SIEIRIAN RRAIRT IA)» molars (PIRIEIMITIEIRY (EIAISICITISiMy = 21 Apparent. 44 Distant. 33 To turn aside, 4 59 Its‘young is 36 Upon. a Rowing tool. 45 peak. called —. u Tone B. 25 God of love. 47 Northeast. , VERTICAL 29Contradicts. 48 Antiquated. ‘2 Residence.. 32 Exchanged. 50 Evil being. 3 Sea eagle. 34 Seed covering. 52 Sand. 4 Before. 46 Backstitch. 35 Balance, 53 Age. 53.1416. 48 Golf teacher. 38To advance. 55 Oak, 7 Mover's truck 49 Snaky fish. 39 Kindled. 57Its ——— and 8 Ulcers. 50 Aeriform fuel, 40 More a) skin are 10 To stupety. 51 Meadow. masculine. valuable. ‘ 12 Tidier. 52 To depurt. 42To soak flax. 58Its —— is 13 It is raised in 54 Musical note. 43 Within. called mutton. great numbers 56 Type standard (0 Spar. 41 Plant part. 44 To become bankrupt. eae ee « Ea ah In this musty old mansion high in the mountains, a beautiful girl risked her life trying to find. a jewel she wasn’t sure was there. Deep in the gloom of a giant tree’s long shadows, she met a series of pulse-quickening adventures Read Ida R. Gleason’s New Mystery Thriller u Beginning Monday, July 27, in The Bismarck Tribune : Fishneck | You never know what he's to do next, imagine our| mother who spanks her grandson for surprise shat the sarwuwey found aboard tne Queen Mary wasnt Zloncheck swiping her cigarettes. : Some species of cactus have fiowers. | am not a candidate,” said Hoover. We