The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 22, 1936, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune y Independent Newspaper an THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Extablished 1873) State. City and County Official Newspaper * Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Compeny, Bis- merck, 6. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mat! ; Mrs. Stella 1. Mann President and Publisher Archie O. Johnson Vice pres, and Gen'l, Manager Subseription Rates Payable in Advance Kenneth W. Simons Sec'y-Treas. and Editor Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press fe exclusively entitled to the use for republica- redited to lt or not otherwise credited in this news of spontaneous origin published herein. all other matter herein are also reserved. The Associate newspaper ani 4 All rights of republication of Welcome Cub Pack Organization this evening of a “Cub Pack” in Bismarck will be a significant event for this community. The new organization, a natural outgrowth of Boy Scout work, will bring to the younger boys of Bismarck the basic elements of the scout program which has been an important factor in reducing juvenile delinquency and promoting the in- terests of an important part of our society. The cub organization will enable adults to give direction to the natural instincts of young boys without seeming to be “butting in.” When adults interest themselves in juvenile affairs they are prone to be somewhat officious. They find it difficult to be a “good sport” in the boy’s eyes. They are awkward and ill at ease for they have invaded a sphere from which they have long since graduated. The cub movement will rationalize these juvenile-adult relationships on a basis which both sides will understand, It will enable the adults to establish a better understanding with the juvenile elements of the community without, at the same time, seeming to invade that privacy of mind which is peculiar- ly boyhood’s own. There is only one better approach to this problem and that is the fine comradeship which CAN be developed between fathers and sons. Do You.....? Do you spit on the floor of your host’s home? Elbow people out of your way so that you may be seated first at a lunch counter? Push with all your might whenever you find yourself in| a crowd. Intentionally step on other people’s feet? Do you make discourtesy and bad manners a fine art? You probably do not, but— Do you dash in and out of traffic when driving your auto- mobile? Do you pass other cars on a curve or when going over hills? Do you refuse to give the other fellow his half of the road? Do you drive across the country like the devil himself was ‘chasing you? a Be honest, now, because you probably are guilty of one or all of these breaches of highway manners. All of which is suggested by the fact that the representa- tive 49 safe drivers of the United States, recently assembled in New’ York to give some practical ideas on the traffic prob- lem, decided that bad manners are the major cause of high- way deaths. And persons who practice them lose just as much or more as others who are the victims. These representative safe drivers have driven millions of miles without so miich as a scratched fender, They may be * classed by some as old fogies but they have motored long and happily. They should know something about it. How are YOUR motoring manners? War Is Coming Fast War is on the way in Europe. There can be no doubt of it. The clash of national interests and the lack of under- standing between peoples have grown worse, rather than bet- « ter, since the World War. The only thing which prevents war from coming immediately as a result of the Spanish crisis, is the fact that Italy and Germany, the two nations having the strongest incentive to war, are not yet “ready.” Either would . start a major war tomorrow if they thought they could win. Economic and political aspirations, rather than incidents, make wars, and if one would seek the source of the next great ~ conflict let him take a look at Germany under Hitler and her % Clearly defined aims. *, These, according to a recent Associated Press dispatch by ~ John Evans, are the return of her colonies, the enlargement of * Germany to rule all German-speaking peoples, and expansion » to make Germany economically strong. The first aim, unless France and England change their attitude, cannot be accomplished without war. Acquisition of control over Austria, part of Czechoslovakia, out war. Economic self-sufficiency would probably include acquisi- tion of the Ukraine, Russia’s great granary; the coal and iron of Alsace-Lorraine and the livestock and oil of Yugoslavia, Ru- mania and Hungary. That could not be done without war. These things are not, of course, the announced intentions of German statesmen, but they are what her neighbors (and _many disinterested observers) think she has in mind. Add to these general beliefs in Europe the pressure of a steadily increasing population in many nations and the result is inevitable. The stage soon will be set. When that task is finished a spark much smaller than the Spanish revolution will set millions of men on the march to glory—AND DEATH. CWE EOENAR AS Hayy ye Tailors in Cleveland get s pay boost, proving that as ye sew, 80 also shall ye reap. lege a Eastern doctors say neuralgia pains be eased by electricity, which may be some consolation to the condembed convict. mm > see Tokio police who arrested a notorious nudist robber, needless to say,| caught him bare-handed. ay, : eee : reveals he has succeeded in changing sawdust into EET UD ISTE KCECH ESSN DEERE dey robber BOTH SIDES of the CAMPAIGN By SEN. JOSEPH C. O’*MAHONEY ‘Vice Chairman, Democratic National ‘The sane and sound leaders of busi- ness should—and most of them do— thank God for Franklin D. Roosevelt. There is a multitude of others, of course, who curse him. The sane and sound leaders of business get beyond the political news pages and the per- tisan editorials of their daily papers into that department where no news- paper pyblisher can afford to toler- ate error. They go to the business pages. About the time that Governor Lan- don was accepting the Republican nomination and the Chicago Tribune, in common with other anti-New Deal papers, was hailing him as the saviour of business, the Tribune printed a remarkable statistical summary in its! business pages. In a graphic and un- derstandable way it told the story of what has actually happened to busi- ness under Franklin D. Roosevelt whom its editorial writers were de- néuncing as a menace to business. Its principal features compared im- portant business factors for the first six months of 1933 with the same fac- tors for 1936. Two of the four months of 1933 were under Hoover, it should be re- membered, the cAndidate who pre-| dicted that the grass would grow in our city streets if Roosevelt was elected to his place. Here are the facts from the Chicago Tribune's summary: Loadings of freight cars—and no- body loads a freight car unless there is an actual business transaction, & sale—increased more than 24 per cent for the first six months of this year over the first six months of 1933. For the same period our foreign trade, which President Roosevelt ruined, according to his opponents, actually anctesss Ag ag cent. Cites Business Recovery Nobody builds an automobile unless it can be quickly sold. In the first six months of 1933 the automobile indus- try built 990,000 cars. In the first six months of 1936 it built almost 2,500,000 cars, an increase of 151 per cent! This despite the shifting of the open- ing of the automobile season into the fall to provide steadier employ- ment through the winter, but tak- ing the first rush of buying new models out of the first six-month period. False leaders of business have criticized the administration for not helping the heavy industries out of the depression, The Chicago Tribune's facts show that steel production, the barometer of heavy industry, rose steadily almost from the beginning of his administration. In the first siz months of 1933 it was less than 8,900,- 000 tons. In 1934 it doubled. In 1935 it held its own at better than 16,- 000,000 tons and for the first six months of this year it has reached 21,300,000 tons. That is an increase of 140 per cent in three years. There can ‘be no better index of the solid permanence of this improve- ment than the remarkable increase of building construction between 1933 and 1936. People do not put their savings or their borrowings into new buildings, industrial or housing, un- leas they feel that a profit on the in- vestment is certain for many years to come. According to the Chicago Tribune's summary of facts, for the first six months of 1933, new building con- struction was valued at only $432,- 000,000, In the first six months or 1934 it jumped to $894,000,000. There was a slight recession in the first six months of 1935. But for the same period in 1936 building construction reached $1,210,000,000. That was an increase of 180 per cent. es & Ghims Credit for Roosevelt And let there be no doubt about it, President Roosevelt and his adminis: tration are responsible for the im- provement. The tycoons of big bust- ness and finance had been in the saddle, riding government as well as business, up to 1933. They dominated congress. Their advice was eagerly accepted at the White House. For 12 years they had been the lords of crea- tion—but they couldn't stop the panic. They couldn’t end the depression. Franklin D. Roosevelt did that, with the mandate of the people, when he took the helm of government and economics. Then they came to Washington and cried for help. They got it. They got more. They got a new viewpoint of the responsibilly of business to the people as a whole. Where necessary they got laws to prevent the follies of charlatanism and inflation that led to the disaster of 1929, And it worked. If you don’t believe Eupen, Malmedy and the Polish corridor could not be had with-| >#! SPECIAL Due ar ge CONTINUE ek ae | Charming, Talented Girl Hunts Danger me, and you'll dine on strawberries and cream like the good little girl in the nursery rhyme.” “No thanks,” Molly had retorted. “Strawberries give me indigestion and cream might make me fat. I'm not a good little girl, and I’m tao old for nursery rhymes.” Brent Stuart, who had been listen- ing in on one of Hubert's numerous and quite casual proposals, had quer- ried, “What do you want, child? Whi kind of girl are you?” ‘i “Don't know, to both your ques- tions,” Molly had replied. “I want to, find out.” * a Thinking about Brent's nice matter- of-factness stilled for the moment the tumult in her mind, a tumult started often these days by the sight of flow- ers and the small white cards with their scrawled messages. They raised interrogation marks, these small white symbols of a decision she must make soon. For, of course, every girl should end her debut with an announcement of her engagement. That was what debuts were for! In Molly’s case it was more ur- gent. It was two years now since her father’s marriage to Donna, who was only five years older thay herself. Donna was getting sick and tired of a stepmother role. It aged her a bit. Pressure, subtle as it was, was being brought to bear on Molly toward a decision. “Goodness, Molly,” Donna had said. “What is the matter with you? Four of the season’s most eligible men at your heels and you can’t make up your mind. You could draw straws and win a husband any girl would be Proud to get.” Molly stirred restlessly on her pil- low. It wouldn’t be Hubert, who bab- bled things like “Golden Girl” at her. Nor Wick, with his casual acceptance of her as a suitable wife. Nor Donald, with his sauve flattery and apprais- ing eyes. That, of course, left Brent, with his teasing gray eyes, his good- looking, but not hero-handsome face, his strong man’s shoulders. The thought of Brent both steadied and stimulated Molly. Strange. But Brent was like that. ‘There was just one thing wrong with choosing Brent. You couldn’ accept a man who hadn’t asked you t marry him. Donna didn’t know that, and persisted in the theory that Se See re ee And all the time there was Brent with his big-brother-like devotion that might mean something and might Perhaps she mean anything. Brent wouldn't call her “Golden Girl.” But he'd be certain to call her “child,” parties, leading finally to a brilliant wedding. The voice over the wire was only *|Hubert’s, “Sorry,” Molly told him, trying to keep boredom from her tone. “I don’t feel up to luncheon today. Give me @, rain check, won’t you Hubert?” Just being polite. The conversation of their crowd was always polite and meaningless,.when it wasn’t brittle and stinging. “Sometime I'll be so bored and bitter that the claws will come out. I'll be like Sophy and Barbara and Donna,” Molly thought. You couldn’t help feeling sorry for Donna, who had gone hither and yon, after an unsuccessful debut, but had finally attached Dad and his mil- lions. Though perhaps marrying one of the richest men in the country (that was what the newspapers and income tax people said), hadn't been a bad compromise for missing romance. The telephone again. Molly an- swered and felt a pleasant, re-assur- ing feeling rushing over her. That couldn’t mean anything more than devotion, since it lacked the strong, wind-in-your-ears sensation which any girl knew meant being in love! “Hit, mutt! I'm coming out.” “I won't be taken for granted this way,” Molly thought suddenly mutin- ous, Aloud she replied sweetly, “No you aren't. I'm feeling not so top, Brent. Cold and headache.” “Rebellion,” declared Brent firmly. “I know the symptoms.” (Continued Below) Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. ceaining, to health but not dis- fly and in ini Dr. r. Braéy will answer thy jes must be accompanied by & flexed ‘and turned outward and the untrained observer is legs paralyzed. “Black and blue” spots appear here and injury to account for them—such spots have often been regarded of mistreatment, especially in institutions, The teeth loosen and out. Red blood corpuscles are found in the urine analysis and ternal or external hemorrhages occur. may All because the baby or child has been confined to @ diet of cooked, dolled, pasteurized, sterilized, canned or preserved food and not given a proper daily ration of fresh raw food of one kind or a! decay of the teeth of older infants and young children. Do not rely on any one item:to furnish vitamin C. Include several in the diet. The daily amount of vitamin C or adult must have to prevent scurvy is only a fraction of the amount e one should have to enjoy the highest attainable degree of health and vitel vigor. | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Beware Pirates A correspondent reports that certain vendors offer a “Dr. Brady. For- mula Perspiration Remedy” and a “Dr, Brady Corn Cure,” and certein charlatans announce to prospective patrons that they use “Dr. Brady's method” for the treatment of one thing and another. Answer—1l warn readers to beware of such pirates. No one is authorized to use my name in that way. Draw your own conclusion as to the honesty or reliability of any one who would pirate on one’s name to bamboozle cred- ulous customers, : ‘ Calories ‘ How many calories has canned pineapple juice? Is canned orange juice Lid acd ian gett nas aa ear iad hag orange juice? . . . (Mra, B, G. . _Answer—Canned pineapple juice yields 16 calories to the ounce. Canned orange juice (Florida) 12 calories, (California) 16 calories, to the ounce. Orange juice fresh contains 14 units of vitamin © per ounce. Tomato juice fresh contains the same amount of vitamin C. Canned orange juice or to- mato juice contains slightly less vitamin C, but is still an excellent source of this vitamin for infants, children or adults.- Orange juice yields 12 calories per ounce, Tomato juice yields 6 calories per ounce. Fresh pineapple juice, about 5 units vitamin C per ounce; canned pineapple juice, about 4 units vitamin C per ounce. The richest known food source, of vitamin C is green pepper, which contains 31 units of vitamin C per ounce. Maltiple Sclerosis Please repeat the diet you mentioned as beneficial for persons with mul- tiple aclerosis.... (R. J. J.) Answer—Mellanby tells about it in his book on Nutrition sd Disease (Oliver and Boyd, London). Particulars in booklet “Chronic Nervous Im- position,” copy of which sets you back ten cents and stamped envelope bearing your address. High vitamin A diet: 1 to 2 pints milk deily, 2 eggs, liver, green vegetables, carrots, two teaspoonful cod liver oll twice = day. Lists of foods richest in vitamins A, B, etc., in booklet “Building Vitality,” available on same terms, Can’t repeat things here casually—haven't space. . (Copyright 1936, John F. Dille Co.) Fach and Reckless CHAPTER I-A Moy laughed at Brent’s re- ply. That was the nice thing He understood, about Brent. without being angry. “Ts it a headache, cold and re- bellion that will continue until evening?” Brent inquired pleas- any. Riscaiord rea occurs to me at the moment it I’m-faking you to Peggy Carlyle’s dance.” “Good memory,” Molly an- . Swered.. “Your name's on my date book, too. As a matter of fact, Brent, I've decided to skip Peggy's dance.” “You can't do that!” Brent ex- claimed. “Besides being a date, it’s a special kind of date. You know I always spend your birth- days with you.” “Just an old childish custom,” Molly replied cooly. “Anyway, I didn’t say I wouldn't spend my birthday with you. I’m counting on your skipping the dance with me.” “Oh, you are.” Brent spoke “Naturally, You don't sound slowly. Molly laxghed ot Brent's Brent, “He understood, without take me, somebody else will. I'm/ Wick hesitated i cheated. Kept housed ‘an orchid.” lifted. and them waste ef impulse, she [ : : ! i Eg i Fe E i apf, Wy ab i i g a i iH i : ee g { i Z i, ai i Fie He i E i fy : i E | f é i i § 4 43 i | i ge ; [ i iff it i r H il : tg 28 ii H FE ii i = if iu gg he sf angry. only a £F i 3 § za we a ee CI ae i i f i 28 g i H! i F } i rr af yi: leat , E t i : i i : if t aE lf = 4! iii ig te fF rf Ey ' F.8 H i 3 i : : F i - Ei Cad

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