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BI : | : : : Behind Scenes The Bismarck Tribu Your Personal Health al <= < =z a bal = il iy dads ‘Write in care of The Tribune. AL - itt il il atl ll : ii u 2 i Hyes4 coe a By William Brady, M. D. ease or dintacsts, i! Ht HL tile il teal i TUT F | stamped, colf-addressed envelope, 5 i a 4 Hill ee ody 2452 aaey tit ul Re a ne : ic ay i qa Hint ell ii ene lig i TOTHER ITNT iin fit HEE smut CHAPTER I The June sun struck his shoulders with to as he parted the brush, bridged a wide ditch int that ~” ag sy 9 onl = He w. enthusiastic tail be gic, Soy a ht Pt bove him. And into little crinkles around his rows on a broad brow . He thrust his n backwoods road. gan. his shoulders and He squinted eyes a trifle pe Over his shoulder he addressed “Now, my good as the sky al toward lunch.” tive audience, “if on the o} ie i hair be; cb 3s 1 calls “graft,” in the form of payment for | #2 Appeals, executit day in he vice sick iclearess leet, aa 3 mental alertness and/on But Steph to case. Later he himself, at @ Washington Much-Disctssed Retirement Age, Jack x * * They Smell—and Worse Anyone who knows Vice = John N. Garner knows that his aver- the othe: , endorsements or other uses ignorance of those sentiment = poses, Garner's Pronounced Views on Cig- arets, and Poetry Quoted by Labor Leader John Lewis Figure in Wash- ington News. By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, March. 1—In March, 10935, Assistant Attorney General Har- old M. Stephens was arguing the con- “It is 2 commonplace,” he said, “that Not one of the more ‘CHATTERING BEINGS’ Mr. James Francis erred ew congressman from Mont But an advertising He said he knew didn’ i FE sion to cigarets—he smokes = he saw the ment act, which provided pensions for is only exceeded by his contempt for railroad employes after age 65. ec-operativeness tend to fail after a man is 65.” stitutionality of the railroad retires ‘50, was appointed a judge on the officials who take what he physical ability, Company, Bis- Kenneth W. Simons batted an eye. trict of Columbia Court of articles, under which a war-time on Garner Secretary and Editor President and Treasurer Mrs, Stella I, Mann an indopsniest Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Member of Audit Bureay of Cireulation Member of the Associated Preas i except Sunday by The march, N. D. and catered at the pontottice eb Biamarck as stoond claus mail Pree, and Gen‘ Manager and siso the los of republication o! ———$—$———_ Archie ©. Johnson After a great many months of study and discussion, con- gress is at last about to settle down to a discussion of a new This would at least be a situation strikingly different from the one we saw in the last war. The foreign customer then was handled with gloves. His credit was good, and the things he It ought to be possible for us to understand the evils of such a course without leaping to the easy conclusion that low- minded bankers and munitions makers connived in the dead of night to get us into the war. The principal evil was that such a system, made us, to all intents and purposes, part of the allied war machine. That be Published BESS j i) mull Would Cash-Carry Law Keep Us Out of War? on the barrel-head and coming across the ocean with his market basket in his hand. bought were delivered at his door, as far as the rather anemic condition of the American merchant marine permitted. was why Germany was willing to start unrestricted submarine neutrality law. The best forecast now is that it will offer the country a straight cash-and-carry law, . Customer could get essential supplies only by laying the money f ite liad Says; qe i a2" 338 6 Gi aif iH eile th ii uy Hig Pal ui adytrst iinet i a i ea al: iu eae aie Aine ea a ania g = re Pe ty Rue a at ql: . a ke Hiatal fain ro etal ty baie Hie i He i he i will i pe a Pen HN RIEL [eee tie ih “hie tele 2 ira 23 i He iis ; ite a 3 i a8 § 2 43 ab ik £ cy id as gee, ae8 e233 an ’ “Ig that so?’ he peat Billy been?’” (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) iyi owe: d. | the allies help. It woul bottom of the sea. But there is one factor in the equation that we too often forget can ask is at all, we shall be selling them Two Editors Two great American newspapermen have died in recent |. 4 months and have thereby drawn a contrast between what might |" be called the “opportunist” press and the press as the founders of this nation envisioned it. the British navy. “Don’t sell America short” was his slogan in the halcyon; ays leading up to the debacle of 1929 and there is no question that his writings increased the speed of that ill-fated merry- go-round. When disaster struck he did not recant his previous philosophy but neither did he do anything to dispel the gloom. First to die and best known was Arthur Brisbane, of a brilliant mind and adept in the use of words. He made a That is not to say that the law would not But whether it would help enough to keep us out of war is As long af that navy remains dominant, only one side will| come to our shores to trade in any European war which involves England. If we sell any goods There is the point of the whole business. Our policy caused the side which could not take advantage of our markets to look . It would obviously help. We would not have Aurea Would the proposed cash-and-carry policy do that? dollars financing a European war. We would not have Amer- Now we can’t expect any neutrality law to absolutely certain. The most that we fortune variously estimated at $20,000,000 to $30,000,000 by which American shippers were atill responsible. We would not with deuk consistently playing to the crowd. warfare at the risk of an Amerioan declaration of war; the Germans simply felt that America in the war would do no ican ships steaming into submarine zones laden with svods for 7, have 1, hue and cry running across this country every time a more harm than America on the sidelines furnishing with unlimited money and goods. on us as an enemy. It made that side ready to adopt a course that would compel us to declare war. to England and her allies and toao one else. To the extent of law will make it easier for us to atay out of war. We those sales, we shall have 1917 all over again. ation. tramp freighter full of cotton went to the | | it te i a hes This CURIOUS WORLD “utece N 2y Hn ah24 9 aay 1 di! i ai i ; i Ve if 3 ie a auue ia 3 3! Tue et Cara mas i oe Een, it ft Gah rt ari iy Hil i mild ie yi fa i i, Ha a oy tt fi hie iF stave fle ne i AE ee ou ea it Ha ae tl He Ls iif: f ih ? “I am not lew, York at my job. : said be Par “T e ae saith ae i Rt ab ili ll ji ae y lt rH bea | 3 te fad Be al aj ae abit ih en if i Fail ae! Eid oll Hiab ear dine ie a a issued warnings that it couldn’t newspaper toward sup- damaged economic struc- deacon of light in a distressed and fi lerneath the surface and advised all who policies designed to repair the His editorials were a oe "Worthwhile Contest =. __ Feminine beauty contests are generally a pain in the neck. ‘The contestants pose and strut and simper and get their heads into the future and When the stock market began getting out of hand Ogden ._ The other day Rollo Ogden, editor of the powerful New York Times, gave up the ghost. He, too, had a keen mind, a wide range of information and a mastery over words. he directed the influence of his : He looked und ‘Would listen that the country was heading for trouble. of He was a great writer but also a great opportunist. - When the crash came be never said “I told you so.” In- _ stuffed full of phoney values, the general atmosphere is a little | |