The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 15, 1937, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune|NEW FUNERAL HOME THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER I$ VIEWED BY 700 Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marok, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail mater. Mrs, Stella I. Mann Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. Licenses Victor YondsieoBrisn, ‘Wilton, and s Dagmar ry at 7: Asora Nord, Meklund | te) by President Trinity Lutheran Pastor and|townenie Rranactions @ Choir Members Present | miss Pauline Decktor, Medina.” mum, there will be a . Louisiana Purchase, Evo- Program Sunday lution of State ai ie Wat tere betetly and in ink. jdress Di Brady in o tthe relbann: ah auerles must be Accompanied by stamped, solf-addresned ehvelipe SSSSSSESSS: WHERE DOR OBESITY BEGIN Dr. Brady will a! au wyatton peetatnug to health but not oF Daughter, Mr. and Mi 926 Fourth Bt, at 618 @, m, Monday, ! Sure ae More than 700 persons called dur-|Pisnarst “ra'is, ximer Dutton,| Young Nonpartisans | History of the Louisiana Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons ing the formal opening of O. A. Con-| soffit, at 5:52 p. m., Saturday, St. and the evolution 50. ‘Vice Pres. Lear Manager Secretary and Editor yervs beautiful new funeral home ar hospital. pen B ns Call Off Convention) Dakota through torial d take his ey hpeticl he oat it any wonder . sf such queer a turds junday. t Left ; pe ES statehood was : and neast—to understand that Gleease begins pices Aaah ease Tf ott Bt ”’| Grand Forks, N. D, Mar. 15—()—|a¥ by Mrs. Florence H. Davis, lt . All visitors were taken through the/ Meinhover home, 53: Subscription Rates Payable in Advance atuaty aia the a i — . which have been built in connection./ re, Lulu Amelia Kellog, Schafer, Numerous floral pieces and baskets] at 12:41 p. m., Sunday, local hospital. of flowers, the gifts of friends and) , Gl enti vere business associates of Mr. and Mrs.|4on* Regan, Friday: Convert, local business firms and| hospital. supply houses, decorated the home for Indefinite postponement of the state|Drarian for the state historical so- the occasion. Bunaay, Pkeetcraes a Re = sf votions arr fe Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation roe ohare Sees BAY. Member of the Associated Press ity Lutheran church, and Mrs, Rin- dahl was given. r republica-| Rev. Rindahl read a scripture les- {n this! son, gave the dedicatory address. and Pronounced the invocation and bene- i i f The Associated Press {3 exclusively entitled to the us tion of the news dispatches credited to Ii Bewspaper and also the lo hewa of epuntaneous orig! All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also re: g ¥ e 8 City Sesquicentennial F i diction, 3 i Is Chosen hich in- Musical feat four. violin Wednes-| Committee Is rrr ment week: Backwash of the Flood numbes by Mrs, Clinton © Bwacw, usband, four treasurer of the ms i — Jamestown, <4 ft Fy 5 , C. L, Young has been named/ trict for Lions International, was From a Detroit fire house comes an intensely tragic story. fae peated Sean G. Hreirgcty ininlan of the Bumanrek onmtite: = tion committee, chosen to Recently one of the city’s firemen learned that his brother had| male octet of the Trinity choir. Mrs. eter Cone = With the national United States <oa| House for Accepting died as a result of the Ohio river flood, and left for Kentucky ae Played se econ eee to bury his dead, and Mrs, Convert entertained thoes Mellon’s Gift of Art Several days later a secretary at Detroit fire headquarters| who had given the program at tea. got a telegram stating that another of the fireman’s brothers Kellow, roses ene toners sapere had died. Then another wire revealed that their mother had|and Helge Zethren presided. Mrs, followed her two boys in death. From the fireman’s wife came Serie was assisted by Mrs, another message to the secretary that her husband was crit- : : ically ill; then one that he had died. A final wire revealed that the fireman’s sister had passed away. C 0 NT I NU E D The entire family, it seems, had been wiped out by pneu- Fed 1D vadli monia, the result of living in a house left waterlogged, dank, and] ~ Cera! Je ine chill by flood waters. For Payments Is Since deaths from illness rarely reach news columns, Midnight Monday ‘tragedies such as this may not be unusual in the wake of the great flood—just another reason why authorities should not ee ee casaincas wae relax efforts to stave off other such catastrophes. May Grant Extensions af att every one: Never mind your blood pressure. If your health or efficiency is Physician. An Object Lesson slons of time for filing reports, when not what it should be, consult ; The seizure of the munitions-laden freighter Mar Cantabrico Learnt Lae ator Please tell me what causes ulcers of the cornea. Have been troubled phy- - by 2 Spanish rebel cruiser ought to help us to understand the| Utilized in determining the delinquent | value of a strong neutrality law. genera etapa eaa a The Mar Cantabrico cleared from an American port, laden| terly, will be due, > with American-made munitions, just before our munitions em-| ,, Us must be filed with the state bargo law went into effect. There will be no more such ship-| Besides limiting to $500 the amount | ments; the Mar Cantabrico did not fly the American flag; title | °f iss sustained trom operation. of any farming or agricultural pursuit icon aria SEK tn page ab HEE be KR DAK IE oe uNG thine we Poor f; to the goods she carried had passed to foreign purchasers before| that may be deducted from profit in sea-blue seah on her party frock and + g citrus growers can do in emergency . . . (Mrs, 8. M.) F) she left our shores. Because of these facts, the steamer’s loss| Another business, the new law esttb- | the one who wore her mother’s cast- scholastic and)" Answer—The carbon inhaled or ingested is harmless. F does not affect us. property, ql But suppose that there were no embargo law. Suppose that! Eravides ee, AeA 4 ; vebel cruisers were seizing two or three munitions carriers a sduiaeenaeaot the act, the tax |, week—American-flag ships, bearing goods whose loss would| commissioner is authorised to appoint hit the pockets of Argerican shippers. Is it not easy to see how| The following schedule will give as , very apt we would be to become involved in the Spanish war? individual taxpayers an opportunity And is not the case of the Mar Cantabrico excellent proof that brdistiigeddll gard te be pei on ach thousand of taxable income or our munitions embargo is a good law? ns Ah ve aeons . and the cumulative total if you are The Old ‘Come On’? balsa eid hese eee Ever since the World war ended, sad disillusionment has dae Per ‘Taxon been the lot of America. Immediately after the “war to end|Taxsble Cent _ Each wars,” for instance, foreign nations began to hatch another! ¢ 1,000 embroglio, America has had to whistle for most of the money| 20 it loaned abroad. In addition, it has had to listen to numerous overseas contentions that the United States played a minor role in the winning of the great war. Suddenly, however, we are beginning to learn that debtor nations are considering paying off, and to find out—as Lord Lothian expressed himself in the house of lords the other day— that Britain could not have emerged victor from the World war Hy is id ll j R NAME IN LIGHTS @ 1097, NEA Service, tas, we Eg 3 HE Te ge ce as without Uncle Sam's aid. ede Honeyed words, these, but are they sincere? Or are they Tass | our land just part of a campaign to cement tattered bonds of Anglo- American understanding, and to lure Uncle Sam back into his role of 1917-18? Rega g ee | SO THEY SAY { ——————— His ; Pale theorists and financial jugglers Larry. ‘This develope a * yout Passing of an Oracle have turned, the currency polly of ie Secrest, eae tren 0 [J wan People who have been acclaiming Postmaster General James| Benhara Koehler, Naat economist. S at rying me’ i it A. Farley’s uncanny skill as a political prophet might give a Hecawaile "Daghse sees, Lane? pee aide thought to the coming resignation of Emil Hurja, for years area onet this eck and Shalt in Sete epsoes marriage sever the ee er Farley's tight-hand man, the Ror wents footy creer bet | eves. He sald: Mr. Hurja has announced that he will presently leave poli- deantter mesial Satie tet you il tics to return to private business, and it is quite possible that jue i, ok “aie Sutme’ with |, ‘I can't tell this may have an effect on Mr. Farley's gifts as a prognosticator. Eo Samo on) ae For it was Hurja, by all accounts, who collected the statis- i 8 : cE searched tics ere the graphs on which the postmaster general| ;, yy CHAPTER XIV wil sont tell me that based his forecasts. Hurja knew politics as few men know it. Be are, yorieg ee ae eke ae For years, Washington correspondents have marked him down Hes roam. 4 lights of Manhattan blinked Prides as 2 man who had an uncanny way of telling just how the cat J belie! J 30 Skillet. out the outlines of the city streets|her two words meant 4 : tim! ISIE |W) 33 Si that spread beneath them like a/would always love him, was going to jump, come election day. : poly village, Overhead the stars|her tenderly for a s It will be interesting to see how the rare Farley gift ‘sur- y . ly, a 39 Drone bee, S0Note in scale. geet shone down uoon, hem and a new fect aaain enya ‘ Sy re are ives the loss of this talented lieutenant. children, advising @-year-old ora] 3 S2Cutom, ‘2028 terrace om the Star Light ager a way, you cane 5 , mnessee, Withstande. 3 Yellow Brotherhood ee te oo betta Nes When news dispatches brought word the other day that Japan has decided to treat China as an equal, they mentioned aeybins which may be of great importance to the future of world, 38 Et SRSsuyy i 5 34 Ventilating consort of bs her ‘\ f Asia has tremendous potential resources but its powers ‘|o | machine, — rug. 4 cesgiae sage ee yy tau sone, Daphne, 3 ean eve | 60 (aes San ater. k _ have been kept leashed by ignorance, superstition and distrust. perl tga hale Bah 48 but still her iets didn't meee Bi. Tee had other girls, Deen infatu- “I ee honey. P ‘The Japanese have long evidenced an attitude of superiority . Appertains. . “There isn't anything the mat-| ateq, romantic, but you are the| Would you like to know how I toward their Chinese brothers. They have-been great imita- Mee. Wine dae alt ee sek ok es ee es ane watt” she cone : { ~a of the white man’s progress, whereas China has lagged be- i etme Smee ites Ga. [nent ices ‘enmwer ties Bs ; ird. Manpower rules there, rather than machinery. I feel that you have withdrawn | feels as I do.” “About the wedding But if Japanese ivis: into yourself. All evening long 7” her voice was soft but! “Oh, the wedding license. Yes : panese progressivism is, through the forces of ac- T’'ve,had the feeling that you'’ve|her tones were tense, “please|. . . yes, I would.” bil brotherhood, applied to the opportunities which abound in festn SVE Meee ent [tor ge Sega une ea tte clos wie ee ee hee ina, a the Chinese accept Japanese leadership without hegring re mean to,” she said. [ie the last time but] pened to in _ Feservation, the effect COULD be startling. “Last nigat on. the telephone I/Pve got to tell yeu, at sever arr a9 my eurrae to tnd ‘Tuck Under such circumstances the yellow race would be in good tol zou shat genital Fs mortow Tit me this Panta Renee teiet Well, on I as biaey > Position to make a bid for world supremacy. Haven't ruch to offer you, Daph- and I can’t explain it but there|right in,,big as you please, said iN a Bet oreey tai) 2 ere, | ie: WAS mo eee Somere eee ane wraeed oe ‘ | __An Arizona chemist says he can get gold from the air. It beats the er pall paegrsy ie o a 4 5 next ‘our firm is branch-/to tell me you have a past?” lit was: a license sold (fooner, whose supreme effort nets only coppers from heaven. oe or is bis wey ‘Will you “No, a present,” she said enig-|sued to Tucker Ainsley and Sor: ‘The heed of « London debutante school says, “Modern girls are not Lcaitiggeainrs tnd dance, Did I forget to tell|dige't fool mea beet At to sinking upon their knees.” At least, not since the end of . caught her breath and/ you that you're my favorite danc-| Daphne's face had gone whiter cee closed her eyes. | Nothing, et |ing pee simerue ee She wet Speer m ig whet Iepublica piseia Noe sid, ‘You Gabrite, D'Annunale (above), eat ccsacy bat se coud ope. snaeed Sat DP you feel like be- cn pry tad said and rR Af 8 mreaiist exhibition, » woman will not leave her hat lying around,| “4th birthday cn March 12, He re low abe could hardly hear i. | Daphne sald she ic Pe Lany, Weve got to stop paren pompolition. aralea circles by a letter tn which he oe ee et want ta” |S6(.00D. Its not quite eleven. the’ stale fee ning BD “Operations are rather expensive in Americs. In Hungary, for instance,| ted, 'e might saad Tener why cant Four” CCiny don't we go. to {er at the ton tury 4 } e6B eacape the cost by insulting thit duelling doctor. : (Apeselaned Brose Pony) She turned away again, “Larry,| Broadway night club and blow (To Be Continuew 7 \ Hr

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