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en A THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1936 Your Personal Health | | Gocccocccccce. Behind Scenes — : Ain’t Nobody Going to Have Anything on Benito! The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLVEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) the j By William Brady, M. D. | Dr. Brady will answer questions pertaining to health but n ease or diagnosis. Write letters briefly and in ink. es ae Brady in care of The Tribune. All queries must be accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelope. Washington Published daily except Sunday by The Bismrack Tribune Company, Bis: | marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mai! |New Dealers’ Wrath Heaped on Sen- | | ator Lonergan... He Balks Big : a “Expo: ’ 6n Campaign Fands xposures’ Labia ey Laity . . Democratic Ire Is Especially Kennet W Sunein | High Over Driscoll Defeat . . . Seorstreay and Baitor | Election Spending Great for Busi- Gobel ethee babes| sy ‘Administration Leaders State, City and County Official Newspaper MUSSOLINI CODE ion OF WTALIAN RENICIAL SYSTEM COUGH IS NOT ALWAYS GENUINE | Ordinarily we think of coughing as concerned with the breathing organs. the lungs, bronchial tubes, windpipe, larynx. In some cases coughing is uf imporfance so far as the act disturbs the pleura or membrane lining the chest and covering the Jungs, especially where this membrane is inflamed (pleurisy or pleuri-pneumonia otherwise known as lobar pneumonia and tung fever). * “We should regard coughing in broader light. Probably a large share of cases in which coug::ing is the complaint which brings patient to physician or physician to patient are not genuine. That is, the cough, which seems {to come from the chest, is actually due to some cause entirely apart from larynx, windpipe, bronchi, lungs or pleuri. Indeed, spurious “broncial trouble gi or “chest” trouble ieeds a great many dabblers in self-medication astray in their selection of reniedies. One of my first patients, durn him, was a-young man with an elephant cough. He seemed to take delight in dropping in first thing in the morning to report that his cough was a little no better. Had me in a state. One morning he reported a curious thing he had noticed. Every time he bathed, ur nearly every time, he coukin’t hear for some time after the bath. I was into his ear in @ brace of shakes, Sure enough, an accumulation of hardened cerumen, ear-wax, which swelled when wet and obstructed hearing. In removing this I found that, whenever anything touched the rear wall of the ear canal the patient put on his elephant act. The skin there is supplied with a branch of the great pneumogastric or vagus nerve which is the main sensory nerve of lungs, bronchi, larynx and pharynx. The elephant cough was a pure reflex ph2nomenon, produced by the irritation of the back of the ear canal by the plug of hardened wax. When we cleaned that out the cough immediately ceased and never returned. Was my face purple? Young children are commonly dosed with cough medicine when their coughing spells, whicn occur chiefly immesiately after the children go to bed at night, are due wholly to comparatively trifling irritations in the nasal Passages and not at all to anything wrong in the chest. In the early stage of acute rhinitis or coryza in a young child harsh brassy cough is a symptom which gives parents considerable anxiety; this may be much relieved by dropping in each nostril as the child lies on back a drop of conDol—the same vitamin D concentrate which is generally used to prevent rickets in infants, Archie O Johnson Vice Pres. and Gen't Manager Subscription Rates Payable in Advan Splat aula acon bad ay ik i) Daily by carrier per year Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) ..... . ‘ Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Daily by mai! outside of North Dakota . ao Weekly by mali in state, per year : Weekly by mat) outside of North Dakota, Weekly by mail in Canada. per year ... Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation (Tribune Washington Correspvadent) Washington, Nov. 21—Senator Augustine Lonergan of Connecticut is in the doghouse with the admin- istration and it seems as if the ad- ministration might also be in the dog- house with Senator Lonergan. The senator is chairman of the committee charged with investigating campaign funds, Because he is a = Democrat and because the Demo- eee eae ne ea te’ it or not oeherwise credited in tia (crats had a majority on the commlt- tion of the news dispatc! ser apaper and alco the local news of spontaneous origin published herein |tee, it had been confidently expected that in time-honored manner the All rights of republication of ail other matter herein are also reserved. committee would provide some spec- " tacular exposures during the cam- The Real Cr ux _ |paign, with especial emphasis on big Enforcement of the liquor ordinances to be adopted by this| Republican contributions “irregular” ste, i 7 * tactics, and other cities will prove to be the crux of the whole matter 3) ronergan not only failed to when we get into the operation of the new law enacted by the |help the New Deal See Ae i manner. He has bloc! efforts 0! people at the last election. 5 other committee members to start The standard ordinance suggested to the city and village authorities of North Dakota by the legal committee of the League of Municipalities, is a good one. | \ : | | By RODNEY DUTCHER | || per year ... | Member of the Associated Press something. It was Senator Lewis B. Schwellen- bach of Washington, not Lonergan, who spilled from committee files the It will need to be changed here and there to meet local con- ditions but, on the whole, its provisions are sound and workable. That puts up to the city authorities the question of whether or not it will be MADE TO WORK. If the proposed ordinance could be improved it probably would be by eliminating some of the things it already contains ruther than by adding anything new. For the simpler the law is and the more generally it is understood the easier it will be 1o keep a check on enforcement practices. ee ara err Remarks made at the meeting here on Thursday showed full well that thousands of persons who voted for prohibition repeal recognize the dangers and difficulties which attend legal- ization of liquor. All these people said at the election was that they would prefer almost anything to the system of lax law en- forcement which has prevailed in recent years. If the committee which drew up the standard ordinance had a weakness in its collective approach, it was the tendency to carry over into an entirely new era the thinking which had interesting information that five du Ponts, three Rockefellers, J. P. Mor- gan, and other wealthy men had con- tributed large sums to the Republi- can campaign in Maine. Schwellen- bach told Jim Farley. * Ok OK ‘Burns Up’ New Dealers Democratic strategists then tried to get Lonergan to put the du Ponts, ; the Rookefellers, and Morgan on the ness stand. Lonergan refused. Schwallenbach’s tactics, however, had the effect of discouraging at least a few wealthy men, who told Republican fund-raisers they feared they'd be haled before the commit- tee if they contributed. Currently, the New Dealers are burned up more than ever because Lonergan has refused an investiga- tion of the defeat of Congressman Dennis Driscoll of Pennsylvania, who says he was beaten by a com- bination of “power trust” effort, em- ployer coercion, and paid whispering campaign, ONTINUE from page one: D By PERTINAX o of the rules may be punished by POLITICS | | enue stamps or if he failed to com ply with the new statute. | ee * | Best crack on the liquor issue City Attorney C. L. Foster, to meeting of city officials: “The fathers of this business.” * * * delinquency; your Community Chest and other private charity expendi- tures for families in slum dwellings Exercise care in making your studies; consider gpnly concrete facts; alyze your slum costs and their ae Them Naw returns, and compare the results with pe eroy il nabouls We bootlegging | entical figures for good residential aregs. Disregard HERsLoKy ‘© 1998, NEA Un an- fu bri all sentimental, invites QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Arsenic Poisoning Please tell me if it is necessary to soak (a fresh leafy vegetable to be eaten raw) in salt water over night to prevent arsenic poisoning? (H. F. C.) Answer—If the vegetable has been treated with an insectical spray con- taining arsenic, it shculd be thoroughly washed in several rinsings of water to remove as much ursenic as possible. I do not think salt water is as good tor the purpose as plain water. Cider Is it harmful to drink cider, either sweet or hard? A doctor told me sour cider would eat the lining out of a man’s stomach in a little while. (Mrs. C.A.C.) Answer—Sweet sider is wholesome, but sour or hard cider is injurious It will cause chronic inflammation of the lining of the stomach and degen- eration of the liver and kidneys. (Copyright, 1936, John F. Dille Co.) ees deutsche Sprache nicht yerloren geht, icht wird gegeben. | Baptist Young People’s | 7 nion in the English Bauer is president of the society. She invites all young folks to attend. 8:00 p. m,—-Deuts ‘Der einzige ehrten nach Rom, ingt uns in das & Du aut dem richtige: was Jesus darueber sa language. Emma che Predigt. Weg." Alle Wege er nur ein Weg h Gottes. Bist Weg? Hoert, t. held in our church on Thursday morn- ing at 10:00 o'clock. We heartily invite you to attend ali our services, FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Fourth and Ave, 1. Ellis L, Jackson, Minister 10:00 a. m.—The church school. Ed- Cole, superintendent, ward Classes revocation of license. q : Utopian, and humanitarian notions | _ 8:00 Mittwoch, Deutsche Bibel—und s class for adults. been generated by years of so-called prohibition. SOR an eget porngerad, wie ox |: sost (Jolntet have: dheeniaecliiun| Cte cee and kecp your researches on the bed-|(evetsiunde,, Thema, Bedingungen | he Quain class for young people. There is, for example, the question of whether lage sees ee kel lectric | quor at all hours of the day and| little straws in the wind show the|rock of actual dollars and cents. |ernstlich weber diesen wichtigen| ‘There fs 'a clase Where you will en- C Pe 4 Se Pace CO Dany Stake fe Cerae cen paeD night. Now their hours of opera- {direction in which the Roosevelt ad-| “I have never posed as a prophet |Gegenstand nachdenken, Gott stellt) Bible study under good leadership where liquor is sold should be permitted to announce the fact to the public. Behind the suggested prohibition of signs and the display during the congressional battle over the holding company bill. Senator Guffey of Pennsylvania urged Lonergan to investigate, citing tion will be limited. The cost of doing business will be higher because of the license fee and there will .be competition for trade, ministration will move during the |0 next term. The president himself |W but I am willing to predict that you |*' has been silent but public utterances |Our | treasury is put there by your|D ill find that the heaviest load on rzliche E ne Bidingungen; sind wir bereit, sie ck und such all dieser Gottesdienste. nladung an alle Umgegend joy 1 The closing day of the pr. jon, Pianist, Mrs, Clarence Gunness. A special order of worship used throughout the preaching mission will E 3, Z evidences of skull y, 1% 12, }of his influential advisers show what} “Der Mensch lebt nicht von Brot! be used. This week of special min- of wares and prices is the thought that such things would en-|supporiea ‘by ‘two coumittes mone both among the on sale and off saie|yill be suggested to him. | hE {alicin, sondern, von elven Jeqlichen | istsy has meant much to us. We ih: “ rinki icizi i bers, Schw ce naes 8 ween the “on” sal On this basis it seems likely that|QNE BIG QUESTION \geht.” Gebt Burer Selle eine Gelegen- | Jo BSE RCE OLORM IE Bey) eee uunane, By, publicizing: atch things, they feel, they | rrton of tadiaee And Senator /and “off” sale licenses, the next congress will be asked io ae eans attitude, Ickes quoted | heit, Leben aus Gott 2u haben! “Sermon, “The New Life.” “ will be encouraging the young and innocent to patronize them Minton of) Abdlarie * * * | igive further to low-cost e 4 Such thinking is a little fatuous unless the teachings of experience have no value whatever. It is an acknowledged fact that bootleggers haven’t advertised and yet the trade has found its way to their places. There is ground for contending that saloons, while they should be kept strictly within the law, should not be made too respectable. If we are to have sanity in our approach to the liquor ques- | tion—and neither the wet fanatics nor the dry fanatics can be ** * Ammunition for Lobbyists The administration is likely to go to extremes in the Driscoll case be- cause it is believed his defeat and that of Sisson of New York, plus nar- row squeezes for other Democratic congressmen prominent in the bitter holding company fight in a year of | Democratic landslides, will give power company lobbyists the chance to tell other congressmen that it’s dangerous to incur enmity of the util- ities. UNCOMFORTABLE UNCERTAINTY Add to this the uncertainty which they face, particularly with regard to new legislation, and it will be seen that prospective liquor sellers could be more comfortable. + The one court action which alread; | has seen filed worries them more|{ because of what it portends than b2- cause of what it involves. The object of the action is to pre- vent the state treasurer from buying; and selling liquor stamps to make the | support housing and slum-clearance. from official testimony before a sen- For made on Nov. 17 by Secretary Ickes Mayors of Cities. His speech was a frank and ou- cperating in this movement on aj dollars and cents basis, “f hardly need again to dwell upon the necessity for frankly facing the sium and low-income housing pro! lem, nor upon the social evils en- | ate committee. proof one need only look at the speech said Cleveland showed 2% per cent of the population causing that city to the United States Conference ot!an annual loss of $1,700,000. Cianapolis city services cost $27 per spoken effort to sell the idea of co- |against $4 in other districts. In Bos- |~; r ton 769 crowded families paid $27,000 Said he: jin taxes and “soaked up $275,000 in services.” that of whether these figures were accurately made. On this authority he In In-|* pita for persons in slum areas as The big question here, of course, is z McCABE Organ offertory for ME prelude, ¢ Ruth Rowle “A Cure tlude, ‘hool, ges). lever r church school at Men iss Ruth Rowley, organist. m, “Thou Crownest the Year Selected,” Mr: Postlude"—Clarke. :00 noon. Business class especially " Acker, y Discontent,” | (Glasses 'y department of your service, The Special’ music in keeping with the theme, “Thanksgiving.” 7:30 p. m.—The closing service of the preaching mission, Pianist, Miss Catherine Mason. A service of worship, “The Recollec- tion of Jesus” wifl be used. The ser- mon for the evening will be based on an address of Dr, 1, Stanley Jones id is entitled, “All Things Are Yours nd Yo Are Christ's.” Our evening service is sponsored by the young people of the church and they invite you to share it with them. 8:30 p. m.—Tho young people's hour. Discussion topic led by Merle Han- son. Good fellowship, high ideals, and a worth while place to spend Sun- ay, 1 night. Why not spend Sunday trusted to promote such an attitude—it must be developed in| Although Lonergan is able to take |laW effective atthe time designated jsendered by The slum. tt dors MO ee, Op rn obey Ment et; the. charon?, You: will sing the minds of individual citizens. | the’ positions thet, he is) refusing) to) ea nn “The ie | | Additional Churches : 5 1 + * * ww let the committee be used as a parti- san instrument, his critics in the ad- the vote is formally announced. The claim is made that he can legally that millions of our citizens are forced te live in dwellings unfit for human] 4 > red to take part in the Wednesday night, 7:30 o'clock: ‘The World Wide Guild at the church, The Open Forum at the parsonage. Pere) Freer ‘ is i spend money only if it is appropriated | habitation, and that slum conditions 0 o'clock, A Before prohibition struck it was beginning to be considered mun aon Stee DER eH IS TERE by the legislature, got may be found in practically every PVs “Pastor und song that) Z10N EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN something of a social stigma to be seen coming out of a saloon. |of 1932, ‘Then the Democratic party| What the wets fear is that thejcommunity from coast to coast. We), Dinink inam of the World W uusie by the cholr | CHURCH it was the progress made by TEMPERANCE which made PRO- HIBITION possible. in Connecticut was widely regarded as a mere adjunct to the Republican machine of J. Henry Roraback, pow- Lonergan voted on the utilities’ side | legal application of the law will be held up and the whole matter throw: into the legislature on a basis which know also that slums furnish the en- vironment most conducive to the existence and communication of} unday school 10:00 iL m. » Mandan, Everybody welcome, [ spel message by (Missouri Synod) 419 Fourth St. J. V. Richert, Pastor “We preach and teach a changeless . m.—Sunday school with all Ve ¢ i vd ituati rful would encourage it to act. They feel!sickness and disease and foster and r . Anthem, “Praise the Lord, O Jeru- | ist for a changing world.” We need a return to that attitude. We want nq situation ertultpolltieal boss and public utilities | ¥0u SEE ETE BRE TE ae oeaey toey | eidolirage jverile Gelinictioy,/erltse) aD. a aay at si0o [28fein las | enty-fourth Sunday after ‘Tein- wherein any young man or woman will walk into a saloon under want it left in the hands of the peo-|vice, and immorality. p.m. at West N ann. | the illusion that it is a book store. A leading Bismarck churchman who always has been against the famous “death sentence.” ple. Also, they are afraid of liquor becoming a football for state poli- “What does this problem mean tol our cities? It means social deteri- 1 ' trio, “Grat "The Voice of Compromise,” eful, O Lord, Am Miss Roselia Brelje, Supt. —Morning worship (English). » narrows tf ee After the first storm, his neigh- ‘ if A local dyed-in-the-wool grid fan, Ane eet mae of Liberty was 50} bors will one | fast baa $5. | years old, recalled seeing the trick pulled last Saturday. > aad on, ae ae A human foot was found buried f é . | oe ED ie ee when they got into an Pe, Gan Een tics, gration and moral loss; it means the walter J Wits, pees erg eV eae y mneeBible hour in charge of against legalizing liquor commented, before the rec oti money SIERS ‘As to the court action which witl|breeding of unrest and disquiet; it ie Organs poatluder 2PerHudes Aah: the salinen Peneue a ae eg : iz ‘| , be: he recent election, President Roosevelt believes the ||pe heard Monday, logic would seem|means unnecessary municipal costs; ay seh ‘or te ei ae be | git, Bvening services. Mrs. M, lat if we were to have saloons he would prefer to have them various organizations, political ma- |/te be on the side of the law. The|unbalanced municipal budgets; lop-| ipon life's way. Give eave z a x Hee openly and flamboyantly designated as such. There is much|| ran ane dndviauals we ae constitution makes initiated meas- |sided ledgers and red ink in the tax | ithe benefit of instruc: Sree ~ PSST e a3 5 lock his re-election spent around | |uyres self-enacting as passed and this|collector's office. i i ion courageously and « ‘ to be said for this line of reasoning. | @ hundred million dollars in the |/one is designed to be pelt tuanclig “These assertions are susceptible of |1 tee toginieee Geely den ee 8 Cee - at jas well. proof. When you go home, I nes cd t eee ie tar Golfer + * 2 “They helped our spending cam- || ‘The court could rule the law effec-|that, as a useful experiment each of | ade ass Perhaps the best approach which eu) be made to the pro-|| paign a great deal,” he remarked || tive at once on the ground of gen-|you would get out the figures show- |w eeay table mit ut o motion of temperance at this time lies in encouraging the “off penne to, fone. frlencs, “All we |/eral policy for, whether stamps are|ing what your own slum areas are: Pea TS Pia 7 ii isti: i: “ ’ hain would need woul @ @ campaign ||issued or not, the old law will cleariy |costing’ you. I want you to take into |, hast) eh HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 11 Northeast. sale” business as distinguished from the “on sale ‘ trade where|| every six months to provide a large be inoperative after the new, one isjaccount all the public funds poured OuplineeDeutsene. wineietier 1.7Golf cham- x7 14 Being. men stand at a bar and purchase liquor by the drink. |) constant stimulus for business.” declared in effect. When tMat tine into these areas for all classes of| Kinder, Karl #. Gutsche, L Sen oaifa0) STATURE ITE IMIPILIE sia This can be done by placing the “on sale” license at a|| , Roosevelt was also amused when ||comes, the liquor seller can't be pros- ‘city services. Count in your fire pro-|@¢t (le Kinder, damit’ ihnen die pion. i lal WIE le MERIEIAIRIS} ! ink, . hich lesa A % ;,|{ told that wags along the lower ||ecuted under the terms of the old law |tection; your health helps; your hos- ' — —...-| 12Bed lath. RIAITIAMEPIE WIE IE MW] LISIE} 18 Sandy tract. point as high as the traffic will bear, making the “off sale’’|| borders of Maine and Vermont |/anq prosecution for violating thé new (pitalization and home care of slun- inhtnleoote ‘ 13 Rime. TAIRICMME IRIRBESITIY MERIEIT) 19 Slipped ticenses relatively cheap. Those holding “off sale” licenses Mateeeiten Wy aoe Tabla the || tat, woulanit standiupiit: ttewere bao} Ered digeases; your pe one sont STORIES iN 16To declam. [PMMHIE| ae) 21 She 1s also the should be permitted to merchandise liquor just as they sell|| United State: : ‘ states fault tat He aan Bae eye goes ioral area pane | : A oe ernein aye ao a SHIRLEY, 22 Be arar other items. ce i ST A M p S ' contradic- TEMPLE. scine bird. ity | tions. (ASS MMAIDIDIUICIE 1S] 25 Lacerated. The point is one of the COST OF THE LIQUOR AND THE Scent High Court Victories 5 i 20 Myself. @ ava AA 28 Pronoun. = y AT AY y i} . PLACE WHERE IT IS DRUNK. Lawyers and. officials connectea|’ SIME GLANCES - ~- By George Clark By 1. S. Klein 21 Voleano vents Ibis] DENCE 20Shower. 1 1} . . Fy with the sections of the New Deal rec ccccccccccrerecoccc cc cc coe coco corer) testi wen cony. DIA ivered, Tf “on sale” places have to charge stiff prices they will get| having to do with utilities are) °""~"7""~ ae | 24 Genus of a ciate A nie Ala] 36 Land right. fewer customers. Even the dumbest buyer will soon learn ener 0 ABERBADE MBI Ely) Sone BARER Beate 1 note (elictrvinve} Spee that it is better economy to buy his liquor—and his mix—in/in the Eateck bis Rovaetl asset era ! *| Q7Sound of 46 Pep. VERTICAL anew with bs quantity and drink it at home than to buy it in a more wasteful |" headed toward it will successively pleasure. 50 Name. 1 Postscript. men manner, unbold tbe night ot athe @overnineny 29 Affected with 51 Hearkens. > Pertaining 40 Asiatic id ‘ Fakes tc hand out loan-grants for public z necrosis. 54 Native metal. z 42 To renovate. Few men get into trouble because of the drinking they do | power plants, the constitutionality of 32 Boundary. 55 Gibbon. to wings. 44Game played by their own firesides. It is “treating” and the tendency to |TV‘: 2"4 religity of othe Sheding s) Welened fore Stoo Se 43.To Hires * A eas i 4 company act. 4 34 tare. amends. to cheek. 'o pack awa: over-estimate one’s capacity when drinking in a public place| The court battle over the holding | 34 Pair 58 Biblical 4 And. 47 Part in Aesth which does the majer damage and which offers the most dif- revetlttee ales oo ree en a HEN Vishnu rides across the | $5 To depart. prophet. 5 To exaggerate 48 To smile : That is the real argument, from a moral standpoint, for Spe EE Eee THER Garuda, the mythical king of work. England. 7 Too late. 52 Street. municipal liquor stores. It is why at least half the public of-| Thomas D. Thacher, former U. 8. | bikes, that is as paar ital sacle abies cote veh tie a naiload a oS Batt an em. ata “ smi: . . fi che ‘ishnu is the god of. the sun, ani jusical , ‘ ficials who were here on Thursday favored limiting licenses in pepe Se faa an chief of all gods in Hindu religion. dramas. — golf title. 10 Above. 58 Type standard their community to “off sale” permits. In a city such as Bismarck the restriction to “off sale” licenses only is hardly feasible. The number of casual visitors to the capital is too large to make such a rule here anything but silly. But we can approach the same end by encouraging those who must drink to buy their liquor by the package and do their drinking at home. Beer was served at a presentation of “The Drunkard,” helping the au- ‘iience get in the spirit of the play. oe e A Wisconsin youth shot himseif in the leg so he could look like a hero to his girl The latest Spanish types, we understand, resemble sieves. eee Derbies apparently are on the way out. The brown one was discarded {n New York, and a noted orchestra leader has decided to drop some wind Instruments. ecse in a New York federal court, cnarged Assistant Attorney General Robert H. Jackson with telling the U 8S. Supreme Court one thing and the New York court another—an of- disbarment. Jackson replied: “I am sending tor vhe stenographic record in Washing- ton.” Next day Thacher apologized and said Jackson had made the issues “perfectly plain.” (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) {BARBS | * as) A friend has told us he argued with & 240-pound traffic cop, and that’s a jot of bull. ee % A farmer just paid $10 for a farm in the dust storm country The story, “It Can’t Happen Here.” deals, some insist, with the theory that mud slinging eventually will be discarded in vote campaigns. sets G # fense which might be grounds for | sportsman, the have returned it to the girl's father. allowed to pay In three mighty strides he trae verses the universe daily, each step being made with the rising, the culmination, and the setting of the sun. The Garuda, which he rides at other times, has the ‘head, wings, beak, and talons of an eagle, while its body and its limbs are those of a human being. Its face is white, its wings ved, and its body is golden. As king of birds, the Garuda @ppears on the royal coat of arms of Siam, and in the ornamentae tion of Siamese stamps. In 1925, Siam issued an airmail stamp pic- turing the Garuda in full flight It is shown here. A