The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 10, 1937, Page 6

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e Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Established 1873) Six-Point Program Outlined for Burleigh County Group Here Tuesday State, City and County Official Newspaper . Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- fmarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mall matter. ; Mrs. Stella I. Mann Publisher six-point program of public health eae administration, vital statistics, mater- \ Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons health, Vice Pres and Gen'l. Manager Sec'y-Treas. and Editor nal and child }» communicable diseases, public health nursing and sanitary engineering has been laid out ) }for the Burleigh County Advisory By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent! Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Sat 1d vedi ged pay epee 120 Washington, Feb. 10.—The , prest-|committee on health, Daily 7 mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck). 500 || dent's abrupt ersiing ict De, negOpn | Meambets hip 10e) 8 ror meen mai) outside of North Dakota . ~ 6.00 ions toward pooling power drawn from the city and county Daily by 100 || the electricity of the private power|commissions, community council, by mail in state per year ...... mail outside of North Dakota, ail in Canada, per year..... 150 companies should give you some idea|county medical society, county dental 2.00 of the type of programs which will|society, Parent-Teachers associations, be recommended by his new, hand-|school board, county agent's office, Picked National Power Policy Com- welfare board, American Legion aux- Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation mittee. iary and any other interested health If something doesn’t happen to/ Soups. Member of the Associated Press throw it off the track, this committee} Program and membership of the ad- wo eed ye ecag of the cyt ee 4 a exclusively entitled to the use for repubilcns Lsedpeua aerate plea yy ne boards of health and the state board redited to It or not otherwise credite in by public =o peolecia led ot health here Tuesday evening which ; ae labove), year. ‘ The Associated Presi preset ine ey apne local news of spentancous origin published herein by Public power |p led | a re eee cee se a cn ley, with little if any com; eee tl, eos Renae ct Rewer TAYier, No Alternative Aoting 94 st exseulliyp emma 1s on state relfof In his Wen - such as might be forced by decisions =| Brugh, In te Since the beginning of the General Motors strike the cor-| of the supreme court. Lalonde ore ety eel and ald, We: gebeseenr bey BA so i ide for Roosevelt that the TVA coives $16 service giving its side of the argument. It has been informa-| foo) negotiations “should” be called| the {rat,zeeulat monthly. meeting of) elves Persons zi him whi -| as eivecied tobe, ment with him when the president who will be invited to join the organi- Six-Day Week Started : ‘| In Brainerd N.P. Shops the management and strikers resumed conferences after Presi- court sults — ms Cc. A. Lemeeree ae Victor Ander- ae ip dent Sloan refused to confer with Secretary Perkins and Labor oli a Ee Be Node 4 2 > | Near] eaten Leader Lewis in Washington. The committee, under chairmanship| Mrs, 8, T. Parke, Sterling, Pacttic! sopa here Weetmesagy fer tive vice-president, to Governor Frank Murphy of Michigan, in Men eats meses. Ba Be i ceenaing. Pheri erect were pee a payroll increase ‘, i Eventually, according to those who|Skaarup, acting state supervisor of|was also announced. Resum of in which the governor asked for a conference the following 5 on ai Ke Mo eae DEW tated le ae ee rarer ine npn ? r{mann and Irma Smith, city nurses; | sched 5 United States.” Bepliey Tennestes Valley, meee beg aE ponnesnar! pGeiecly schedule in nearly three years. 7 iaraatl : A. W. McALPIN DIES president of the United States leaves no alternative except com-| other big federal power developments I 5 W. McAlpin, 75, for many years an man Ohl 1 phe country. /Lumbermen Urged to | attendant af the North Dakota state 4 ‘All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserve with private power companies except tne formation of the new group, those} home town of Holmesville, Neb. poration has been sending out to newspapers an information| If the power policy committee didn’t/ney George 8. Register to preside at] would come to his ald. He re. tive and more impartial than such a thing could reasonably be| off, it was at least in complete agree- from outside of Bismarck From this source comes information as to the reason why| which the industry: had pressed its|Mrs. Jordis R. Adams, A gon, f orities’ ; Brainerd, Feb. 10. — () — ote “Atte : ne Zollar, BS Minn, 7) Disclosure is made of a letter by William S. Knudsen, execu-| of Secretary Harold Ickes, will con-| Wetzel, Arena. turned to a six-day week working which the former confirms a 10 p. m. telephone conversation] in the northwest. fees) state health officer; Margaret | of 35 employes in the car department morning “in accordance with the wish of the president of the} there probably will be “authorities”|county health officer; Esther Teich- | employment has been placed on « full In his reply Mr. Knudsen asserted that “the wish of the] rawrence, Ohio Valley, and perhaps|#nd Miss Huber. Jamestown, N. D., Feb. 10.—(7)—A. pliance and therefore we accede to your request for a conference ‘sn Ohio Tear sorte eit becomes. with Mr. Lewis in the morning with a view to formulating a daily a more fixed idea with Roosevelt Cc rate With FHA basis for negotiation.” percep banded ey Raiiadlierr pe , On this basis it would seem that the president is in close] control in that ares and, of course,| Fargo, N. D., Peb. 10—(?)—North touch with the situation and is using the powers of his office] prefer to tle it in with power develop-| Dakota lumbermen were urged to co- to effect a settlement. Sans &. program faces a hot fight, not only with the power companies died Tuesday. to Clarinda, Iows, for burial. ‘Ambassadors’ Foreign trade is under suspicion these days, what with neutrality legislation, and delicate questions of which side is going to use what purchases in what war. That is why it is good news to learn that an American truck- builder has just contracted to send 130 heavy trucks to Iran (Persia that used to be) to replace camel trains on an Iranian government transport line between Teheran and the Persian Gulf. And the same company is sending 36 more such trucks to Mexico to help build a government railroad line in Yucatan. Foreign trade like this is the best sort of American am- bassador abroad. The purposes of peace are served, friendly neighbors get used to using sturdy, honestly built American equipment, and everybody is the gainer. If one-tenth of the elaborate machinery of international relations, the intriguing and scheming for international advan- tage that takes so much time and money, were applied to ends fi such as this, the world would be a more peaceable and a better place in which to live. It isa reminder that peace has her vic- the| to go out without one’s rubbers.” tories, no less than war, and they are better, more lasting, and ; Latina d AC one lives in the made ee * greater victories. That foreign community in which huge coins of stone are used would ith every the financial future of the abdicated monarch had been # principal sub- Ject of discussion. ei in With some people praying and ot! a ey Mn her yeighbors think she’s good. xe Oe snd/ Central Co-operative Made Money in 1936 8t. Paul, Feb. 10—(—The Cen- Civie Pride Breathes there a man with soul so dead that he has no civic pride? Apparently not, even in the most obscure of towns. An amusing news incident seems to illustrate this truth. In one of the flood-endangered towns on the Mississippi, so much water had seeped through levee openings that several acres of the town were flooded to a depth of two or three feet. Accord- ing to a reporter, however, local residents were busy trying to convince visitors that this water came from melting snow, and drippings from the boots of levee workers. : If humorists are correct, certain west coast residents boast of bathing in golden sunshine even on the foggiest of days; and a Floridan wouldn’t mention to an outsider the word “hurricane” even if one had blown him a hundred yards, : An old maxim has it that love is blind. Civic pride must be similarly afflicted. coe ‘Thumbing’ on Way Out? A feature of American life that has flourished since a lad . tirst asked for a ride on a hay wagon seems to be on the way out. According to a veteran hitch-hiker, who has thumbed his way for some 60,000 miles in 41 states, it is growing. harder daily to obtain rides by this method. Speed, he believes, is mak- ing hitch-hiking a dying art. a And the Interstate Commerce Commission has recom- mended that states enact legislation barring ride-thumbers from _ trucks and other vehicles subject to the Motor Carrier Act. If the wagging thumb and the pleading eye are rendered ineffective, it would seem to be a good thing all around. There ‘would be no more instances in which drivers are robbed, or even slain, by hitch-hikers to whom they were giving rides. And, undoubtedly, more American youths would remain at home. Hard to Do ( In an appeal for a change in the North Dakota laws to ‘take politics out of the state game and fish commission by plac- ing its affairs in the hands of a non-paid six-man board, the North Dakota Wildlife association asserts that “the game and fish commission, since its inception, has been nothing but a > football, with an inexperienced man appointed with “each change of administration and the deputy under him chosen for political prowess rather than knowledge or efficiency as a ‘eputy.” branch, he said, were $1,313,639, with) A glass, level full of water, with ice net earnings of nearly $8,000 for its| extending above the water line, will first year of existence. Not overflow when the ice melts. [ Foreign General A 3 5 i He § I Bese] Get ae i fl i 29 ‘. 30 Work of skill. accuses. 31 Wine vessel. 58 Solemn: 33 Duration. 60 His native 34 Harasses. land. 35 Part of a play61 He is —— in 11 Retains. 37.Poem. his 12 He was. -— pronoun. 7 Doctor. mua at December. os Onager. cercts: verrica, ) peavesly ye 43 Musical note. 1Bottle sound. 17Sloths. _ 59 Sun ‘god. i Ea A i 3 TERE LY Few who know will doubt the accuracy of this indictment the people of the state will wish the association well in the to changeit. But it should be recognized at the beginning ‘that it is a hard and difficult job and that success is doubtful. ana Zee all all wil ol “he fellow who used to sit up with » sick friend now has a better alibi; sitting down with the boys at the plant. fey ’ eee earthquake toppled household articles to the floor in Jt ” The} - probably can be wanted to a butter-fingered husband. rene ‘The elecizician who went to the Bloomington, Ul., hospital to repair and steyed there as s patient, apparently had no sales resistance. son, _WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1937 ___ Me es rand For ies Grand Pocks, ND, Feb. 10—")— Your HEALTH COMMITTEE creates ca Prominent clubwoman, died early Wednesday af- ba Z a an 2 & 3 2 H cet @ : i e g f i i i i EE H Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. You have to ignore physiology before you can develop substances formed as by-prod' yf . It is bad for the health if you get such an obsession, himself sick over it. And many another of real symptoms by constantly dosing ecreritasniiig with bowel washes and the like. monkeying with diet old: poisoning occurs in RE g aBe. E & F 2: envelope bearing your wanted to rub it in I 5 iy F] 3 & E i F E 8 i = = g Ing to health but not éise ay ni in ink, Address Dr. les must be accompanied by ® PHYSIOLOGY VERSUS “AUTOINTOXICATION” al features of diges- Fermentation and putrefaction are natural, normal (cho ttago of “gutointoxication.” ‘Autointoxication,’ modern charlatans call it, “autotoxicosis” is an im! ucts of fermentation or putrefac= ‘accepted the hypothetical “autoin- hysicians tion for all sorts of vague complaints they did not scientific authority has educed evidence to ‘an individual who can still walk about. still in practice, and plenty of quacks and nostrum mongers, today. As long as this morbid concept is taken seriously umber of untutored victims, the physic habit will pre- fear of dire effects from 51 ‘poison= or physic habit, I should think, might himself for life by simply ceasing to inter- an’s notions about this, and no won~ ideas in view of what he has always uniformly successful victims of the habit can be cajoled or persuaded to resist | pill or other artifice for five days in deal of cajolery and persussion—that's why I pation Habit,” which sets you back a dime and address, but then, what do you pay per might recite a list of side-effects from hich often masquerade as chronic ailments of is still a health column and we've gone as far ly many laymen dope themselves with harmful by-effects. A mother today says “When three and six years, contract a cold, I immediately nostrum which benumbs sensation, kills value so far not « few instances—edema of lips, eyelids, nose, face, , hives, nauseau, cyanosis, Surely no physician would with such stuff in any circumstances. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ‘Mumps Can a man who had mumps complicated with orchitis at the age of 25 as we know, and certainly produces years become the father of children? (G. A. E.) Hospital Patient for 20 Years Is Stricken, | Minot, N. D., » 10. 3 ; ea 8 3 ‘Tasday more BARBS (a | ‘Injured ins tractor accident many years ago, in which he suffered 8 praying they criny,|spinal fracture, Barron had been bed- here suffering | idden nearly 20 years. Death was due BEGIN HERE TODAY |ARCIA CANFIELD, kno’ neighberheed is bus- the wuthen disappent- ance of FRANK KEN D cox, i ! 4 FE bt ne ia iM 2 4 mien ice ! t i i el ane i E He iti D 2) : il ; i i} iw int i i pli i i ¥. tH tty a ef rf iN ee | } ged Bp £ af La E bere : : if i E i EK i i? i a - oF ege yl ce abe Es fat li R323 i E i : Ez ft il ig HH z or boiled rain or snow wat 8 i E E it carry guns; it’s haven't someone! The trouble is not what 2 Hd E : BES Ef j | i 82 i 8 8 it ge Bea 3 E. a be Ee see if F £ 4 é i : LE af Le dl it i i Re § I F Z 2 E i é v E A [ i A i f EE H i f i i é g i i : | ti ub tl on haf By i cy I z i i ge i gi i 3 F F f : 5 E s E i i EEE | E x 3 A F : so 4 tt Fis BEE Ey te & i rr ta 7 s BITE eR? tu ii [ 8 F F és i F i i 3 cE i i ree i Bi [ gf ok E i By z Ee i i i : i z ag i ' EE 8S § A i 8 5 E ff i : i ge HS Fly i: lA i a FR is a i f EY : & E if Answer—Yes. Rarely does such complication involve both glands. Sahara Dew of repeat the recipe and directions for the létion you recommended for relief of excessive dryness, itching and irritation of the skin, especially i 1 tragaca 0 1; Gly- nth one dram (teaspoonful); Phenol; fs 3 Oil of bergamot, of each 5 drops; Olive oll four ounces; Distilled water s enough to fill up the pint bottle. Use warm, not hot water and shake frequently to form an emulsion. Label “Dew of E as often as needed. your remedy for stage fright, my position calls for frequent any sufferer who asks for it and dress. F. Dille Co.) ay 5 up then no rain—onion closing save water—Tom Yuen, Chi- tor, explaining a weather fore- method. ee % is not for us to urge, or connive, and BY ROBERT DICKSON ©1936 NEA Service, Inc. | al were hot out here they wouldn’t come back.” His manner swept Marcia’s syme aside. i i i i Z E i E ae iu | i i i 3 g ie i EE Be E d E g f F if bread i § F REE ff sé ie ye H i 2 re He Peligte fue aie ge Efgtetal : ag i i :

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