The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 11, 1937, Page 6

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1987 Be Bismarck Tribune [ Behind mn The Hand Is Quicker Than the Eye ek Your eons H ealth ey : z pee SE IS THE‘STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER __ ame ; By William Brady, M. D. Merson Wa S hington ean2y; Brady, welt answer questions pertaining te Malt® Aarons Dr. jak. 5 Brady in care of The Tribune. queries must be scoompanied by © Seers Split Over Policy elope. “ Company, Bis- Washington Gtamped, self-addressed env: lished daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune G ‘Trade Upewing. B.D, and entered at the at Bismarck as second class mall = Ms ~ Btate, City and County Official Newspaper patter. By RODNEY DUTCHER ‘ Mrs. Stella 1. Mann (Tribune Washington ) President and Publisher Washington, Feb. 11—The edmin- Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons istration’s five-billion-dollar public : Vice Pres. and Gen'l. Manager Sdc'y-Treas. and Editor works program, in its function as ’ something to be used quickly against Subscription Rates Payable in Advance next depression is a long way off. Predominaht administration policy is now based ‘on the gamble that up- ward swing in business activity will continue for the next two of three years, eral reserve, Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Paes ce oe policy all tle in with | Steele eta edad atte Artic Pe ey : br Member of the Associated Press forces ya eee The Associated Press | lusively entitled to the use fer republica pair: charté aoaaral Ene arn PCT arty 2 | the present up! continues 4 to I there! dited in thie phcee, iso" the local news. of epnacanseus Grist § ean Were ry on three el oi payin rei gedta ublication of all other matter herein are also ret ords, Must Recognize the Facts Reted inion dle ettrieed vary Request by the president’s drouth committee that the na- le and that fe ane which tion recognize the facts involved in any effort to rehabilitate | con! anne or eee * the Great Plains region strikes with equal force this part of ee aoe aauvitg Ab now in ite [i nation and those far removed from the scene of the drouth | 48th month. ill gee fifteen drops, naked skin is ig jet Hn eoeeel disasters which have occurred here twice in the last three years. Paces dea desert ash basco : One of the facts which doubtless was considered by the} ness expansion period usually runs ‘committee in preparing its report was the huge sum of money kamen Coabearee imp estira ied ‘which the government has found it necessary to expend in this|in the 1929-33 period lasted for 45 ‘region that its people may continue to live here. There is no} months. ‘need to emphasize the dark side of the picture, but there is no | denying the truth that people would have starved here or the! Roughly speaking, sdministration ‘region would have been depopulated—or both—had not this| policymakers tend to divide into two “section been made the beneficiary of money from the federal treasury. i No one here has relished this condition. North Dakotans ‘would much prefer to be independent and beholden to no one for ‘a living. Neither can it be attractive to other regions which, ze GGE ta fellt i A & Z for the day. Assimilation of iron is i f | when the bill is presented, will have to carry a major part of - Slelaticn the tax burden. Both natural desire and common sense made it| Harriman, head of the sdministra- eee ee ee It has me almost completely ad | imperative that the facts be assembled and each given its rela-| Hor eialiees avery Boe ‘AnsveEend, stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for : ; _ tive importance. North Dakota does not want to go on living] ‘The other group, including many | as it has these last few years and the government doesn’t want of oe more liberal New Deal econo- | to continue spending—at least not the same kind of spending.| power has it As to the methods outlined there is no question as to their | to recovery, ani Reprinted te show what they say. We may or may not agree with them. president emeritus, University of Illi- nols. —— OP We want an increased output of ) DESIRABILITY. The trouble comes in trying to make them Long experience has caused me to i NATIONAL “PLANNING” unfortunate connotation becat venture in national “planning” Goods, but not balanced output. : effective. The president is quite right when he says the prob- (New York Times) of the manner in which -one school ai in the sense that it is an effort oe ee bpp the gored come | Hecretary of, Azula Wallace. from tiene to time ate the result of seen like simple hats, but are in for lem can be solved “but the solution will take time.” Before it) tying’ or business recovery. President Roosevelt wet a oad of post-depression t gress yesterday a report of the Na-|overworked the word. By national/‘oresight the priority of public | polttical action.—Sir George Parish, ®@ shock, We have some ving can be made effective it will require tremendous sums of money| Economic forecasters in the tes8-| tional Resources committee, carrying| “planning” they mean a great super-| works as the acini | and the enthusiastic support of the people most concerned—|\ty are guessing Cont businees eure a six-year program of public works.|scheme of centralized control in| take in future. : as i those who now live in the drouth district. Lag The period of six years has been} which the government, acting some-| why such an effort should be made,| Now I’m here and I'm not lea Bee ree Castel McLane aha chosen arbitrarily, and the president} what on the model of the Russianjand why it would constitute until I get an answer—Harold Hulen, |“ * - j Before, for example, farms now too small to maintain fam- fave spout 1929, notes that it can, of course, be modi-| “five-year plan” attempts to set aside| provement over the who is on 8 love aitdown in his abcad ‘ -¥ dies can be enlarged, a way must be found to care for those who| “Score than 2,000,000 persons went | fled in accordance with future sppro-|the law of supply and demand and|oeeding blindly Br Hida COGEEON, ak Reoelaior sxill over Hurope people are going to ’ -| would yield prairie land to others that their farms may bel tack to work last year and the gam-|2r"eoetan incge!” ood. control wisdom, how maany barrels of oll and| "The Getals of any 1 Bead low a middle course are having s hard larger and they may go on living here under more desirable bridges, highways, and so forth. ‘The|how many bags of flour and how|as the president himself notes, ‘The depiiniters “hae sped up the time—Sir Keith Murdoch, Australian conditions. A way must be found to finance the transfer of function of the National Resources| many thousands of motor cars and subjected to close sor creative impulse of the mation, | TAPS PUL i and and it is possible that the land must be revalued. In| wil ; specific projects, with due considera-|tow many pepers of pins and needles | dies unless thelr merits can Bee Sakoet hares itdls sr ny eae Coomainle do enter f addition, governmental services mist be reorganized that those ,{tlon of the elements ,of timing and/and how many units of everything |onstrated. But “ ” artist. enemy, as an author Crema who remain may not be overburdened with taxes. That, prob- : A gen a ge ae [ened peu element pire Lett vem’ tee comamuntam” te rectaomlcallp sn. | Srawiaent, Bezon, Ryan Fox, Union ably, is the reason for suggesting consolidation of local govern- Lo 5 The president speaks of the report/ There is nothing of this sort in the I Genefit of expert engineering counsel, | sound, religiously atheistic, » aoolally College, he codyab Y. as a forward step in national “plan-|report which the president has sent | 4s in itself a thoroughly sound method | destructive, ethically indefensible, Opera to me is @ bore—Richard mental units. Tt aleo believes that witti ning.” His we of that word ought|to congress—nothing which limits in|of procedure. jand mortally debasing. —Dr. Kinley, Crooks, noted tenor. The government could, of course, force these changes. It/of the capital goods industry, not frighten away people who might/-any way the play of individual enter- could have done it at any time during the last few years by | “5 of 0 per cent pened pe gre eae ue erat ad ovr eng Hcl stopping the flow of relief checks, In that event natural foree| fal expends or simulation dae ced ea ka eae would have come into play and the decks would have been| dustry may now practically stop. | old men.” If this continues, the su- BY ROBERT DICKSON \cleared either for development on a new basis or a new develop-| conditioned’ bythe, fissal group's BARBS | | Breme ‘court will be looking like a | ment on the old basis. theories. he pnekaloke is that gov- | Townsend bec tara © 1936 NEA Service, Inc. ernment should be careful to do noth-| A government bureau urges thi Sh But such a refusal to recognize the tragedy of human need An actor refuses to gaze at himself ing to interfere with the continuing | citizens homes. Ohio| ..“tne aereon for fewr of becoming -| would have been wholly unjustified and the net result would| upturn—“Don't rock the boat!” residents might begin scraping) oy of himself. And making it BEGIN HERE TODAY Giving the Prelinger ane the mutes ee renee, pyantea someone around to talk the \ | |have been bad for the government as well as disastrous to the| Strikers are considered bad medi |off the barnacles. unanim of twenithy (PHILIP, CANE! bay le | to, + | 6 4 cine. investigations which sesh Knows the, berheod ta bese |—end she sub} ting mar: | people involved. It would have meant disaster for business as} reveal post by irae Franco still t i the gate of Ma- ibid eed oye sha, gmases ainnnpenee it, For a while, about the reds wint Sie ae home he and ; May e rooms she had created, she had ees walk well as for the farmer, for the businessman and city worker|sn¢ financial sacketesring among/drid. Maybe | he needs One-Eyed) A Pennsylvanian is playing chest) These sngatem™' jince "Lis ais: [been proud, pleased, and a bit sfternooh. “A piece o¢'land at the pares depend on the farmer in North Dakota. law. revblonerto rele etteln at ek * — ete aiscovercs, |softened. Her expression had been |crest of a hill; the real estate ' Zealand. This would be too feverish What the government now is trying to do is to give leader-| leged burdens on business are being| The president wants to make jt “15) for the old-time chess expert. ship and direction to a movement which needs to be carried out. is giedenpiegn pete eee va “aad undoubtedly would prefer that such leadership were | be we Just now. a . eloped locally but, because of the very magnitude of the and hour legislation also / problem, that is an obvious impossibility. . Nii ia) pp ge Penge i Philanthropist It remains, then, for the people of the drouth area'to accept sisting on more and more produc- ; fears “labor monopoly” end| HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pursie 14 Minister. i 9, tion, the government’s leadership and co-operate in the efforts to/ higher wage scales as peasible re-| 1,6Red Cross CTHITIAINGIRIAITIS THI TRL... 16 The Red Cross ia retaerant esse vine that was | defiant look of a hypersensi her mother’s. who is adjust the situation which undoubtedly will be made. They | covery deterrents. ‘worker. TALE IR N 5 gives services should do 20 as a matter of self-preservation and in an honest | ,¢/1.°f which ads up to move ot iene) 11 Portrait BORER NSE MSGS in an | effort to relieve present conditions and prevent their recurrence | promises in his Madison Square Gar-| 12 carelet EMP MS AD MESIPA 20 ernie Gen aod inaugural addresses con-| 12. Grctrercock, CEMEAIS MME IRIAIYEESIR] 2: Burdens 1 cerning legislation to curb menopoly,| 15 Having toes ARRAY) 25 Fold of string. to ralse wages and reduce hours, to 27 Heavenly against MMeua ™ body. Completing a Job seas on. Request by the Works Progress administration for a \a again. 142,600 appropriation to defray the cost of publishing a North| ATICMISTFIOI! 20 Biscuit. guide offers illustration of the opportunity for co-| tor saan, ISTEIRTN OWS) 32 Verbal. tion between the state and federal government which| living curve on CITATIONS} HR oA below ts from the activities and expenditures of the federal reedbuck. 46 Pair. * Climbing 40'Smell. Dorothy Osborn leased with gccongal in thd aap’ to work. ynere 31Marked with 47 Affirmative, _ plant. Sonammer besa | O'S PSerae set aston Weck | Gee oie ot tae ee takeee | tla 4a By ater last yea co-operation mg existed in the projects of the| (on tne spots. 48Garden tool, 3Skin disease. 45 Drop of eye were devoting considerable thought | riving room, bedroom, bath and |ér engagement. If she was de- “A in its relations to cities and counties. Where it has been| up alongside 4 83 Forgers. 50To observe. 4Eggs of fluid. ' to the subject of their material en- | » room that served as studio—his | termined—” highly developed the WPA is best, for in such com-| se te 35To defame. 52 Female deer. fishes. - 47Ye. vironment and to Marcia Canfeld.| own private world. The rooms| What was the matter with the ial pica ” Usual ten - $7 Prayer beads. 53 Sawlike 5 Form of “a.” 48 Feminine Such is coincidence. comprised the second floor of the guy, that Marcia had flown after Lois eae sl oop “ . ba “ ayia useful Gate oy bere $5 Full-length i coms, 49 he faction with her lot in life had the | a widow of Indotnitely great her low picts which he had ob va e long-time benefit of the com.) | The 39 Gave out vestment, 8 Decay. 51 Prophet. redeeming feature of sporadic ef- | whose spinster daughter taught in |#erved in the Chicago coffee shop, "No one despises so-called “leaf-raking” projects more than | group i aShetieed: otthe Americ hom. accomplish eorccent” Reveyed ine living | thong Pant aie vices, hn | oe whence she came “betore hed Si erie 5 5 " * A leaders, but in communities where direct and poe: ble of pirchasng eb 58 Her Rise 3 Vola oo 54 Form of *be room and dining room of the Os-| been chairman of the casting com- ere: that fate would tantalize 5! js by ‘orm of “be.” was not forthcoming they have been the only thing|tekien “75 ‘e solden eee 43 By. Day mtre 110 Meee ge Before Chris. ‘Well, whatever it was, what dif- ference did it make? Marcia was ich could be financed under WPA rules, which require the sie ona je oa i ; Marcia bulk of federal expenditures to go for labor. which contro! prices, while fi ; iccommodati was, the evidence said, hopelessly __ihe WPA has paid out thousands of dollars in compiling any measures wae will tend to Ine mation aboyt North Dakota, its resources and history.| (reese wages end purchasing powes, ta on the state’s resources and possibilities for commercial Tes toes ae be Lage, in even industrial development are included, along with mention of | balance. The artist dressed. state’s historical and beauty spots and instructions as to| (CoP/7#Hb 1997 NEA Service, Inc.) | pe =n precede oalg gat the ght tnd can be reached. It is the kind of book which should |, At one time Americana abroad were t iowusinted /There was an extention le in every school room that North Dakota’s children may know | 2Roomls, who left a trail of gold dole 0 he wat |downstairs, instrument | in his about their own state. as as any European ve and giad tai all up the sais: “10s or sop! It also will be valuable in promoting tourist traffic and in| fevcier' (hey even expect to get thele invita- . the question of “where to go,” often asked by North ih eA “> Cy Sia 5 Osborn. folk with time on their hands. ; formation Bg ae [i “Are you all settled in your I home, ive you rememe piling the information. A much smaller expenditure by the ut of the Der tonight?” ore ee oe ate now is asked to make it available to everyone, way of be-| | “Of course I've remembered. 1 ; was just leaving. Or will that . . yore hats are prescribed for weat by the man-about-towh. The poll- eee aaa 5 d ' " course, wil have 1%, coutiing the coe 10 taik tarough- a 0 aiden

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