The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 16, 1937, Page 6

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= octane acme tea ' The Bismarck Tribune THE-BI'4uARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, MARCH 16, 1987 Danger From Behind | Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- Warck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. ' By William Brady, M. D. De Pratrcl TS 4 fia nea uh att Ge ener tbe Tribune. ‘All queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope. S Mrs, Stella I. Mann President and Treasurer Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Vico Pres. ané Gen'l Manager Secretary and Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance EEE i & Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to thi tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otner: Rewspaper and also the local news of spuntaneous orig! All rights of republication of al! other matter herein are a! Tax Bill Tells the Tale North Dakotans, shuddering at the prospective cost of the state government during the coming biennium as represented by legislative appropriations, may get some comfort from the Privately, leaders of the C. realization that it is part of a general trend. and apparently | rently gathered 5 concede that di inescapable. Reports from other states indicate that the same thing is happening elsewhere and even the cost of city government is shoving a substantial increase in the larger communities. In the 94 American cities having a population: of (100,000 or more, for example, the cost of government in 1985 was $47.78 per capita as compared with $46.48 in 1984 and $41.25 in 1926. What has happened in the national government is, of course, well known. The reason, in all instances, is the same. People are de- manding more and more from government, local, state and na- tional, The pressure has been too strong for public officials to resist. In fact, many of them have been elected to office on the promise that they would still further extend public services. The result is inevitable. Money doesn’t grow on trees for government any more than it does for the public. And the only place government has to get money is FROM THE PEO- PLE THROUGH TAX COLLECTIONS. In America the people get what they want. The fact that they are the final arbiters assures that. \ But they also are re- Guired to pay for what they get. It is an old and inexorable law. They can borrow from the future by running into debt, as the national government is trying to quit doing, but that only accumulates the burden and postpones the day of reckon- ing. Eventually the piper must be paid. Students of government know that this tendency to pile more and more obligations upon government is doing more to advance us toward state socialism than any other development. {f and when we reach a situation wherein government plays a dominant part in our every-day affairs state socialism will have errived, no matter by what name we choose to call it. Advocates of this trend contend that it will work in Amer- ica because we have an enlightened public and the will to co-|. | gE 3 ae R itt sli His it F i 5 i E i s pages vitriolic comment, the writer con- cluded: i “Please, Senator, excuse the pen- Ege u j TT ? j fl 2 [ ee fie Baal: | a i Jone to got up eid resume nocual activities instead of lying about and” for weeks, months or years efter a trifling laparatomy. gE : ran lh ‘Would it be ali right for me to try your somersaults for my circulation? blood . (Mrs, H, P.) am #4 years old and high high pressure. Sitios waving pale i : E i i aE HE AY ait 4 it is harmful (J. such tablets to cause ringing in the overdose of the acetanilid, antipyrin, Godum salicylate is another I should not advise monkeying i g Z z aE ERE yhEae TER reat i iil wea if, He ual Ha i § i BS g fs EET; i nif ! $F f i a ti it ai A SHEE que at Fe ‘The Swedish four daler, said to be the world’s largest coin, weighs mors pounds, There should be for dalers from heaven. 37, NEA Service, Inc.) E é fl aT EB i i F i | E FL it Ee 28 ' Hf] Fr i ant ‘The sting of death is sin; and the when an up-| strength of sin is the law.—I Corin- i Flt, thians 15:56. i of operate which will make it beneficially effective, ‘That remains| °U4,2nd teported, by_ direction of gry to.be seen. Thereis no assurance that they are right. Biba! you: buy @ loaf of bread, the political and 28 ge a a { BS & HI The trend has been evident for more than 25 years. At times it has developed by leaps and bounds. At others its prog- ress has been creeping. But always the direction has remained bae i Be HER NAME ite caine. per’ cent law in the! court Most conserva: . verage tely better) . The precedent of any congress Commun- administration changing R And the tax bill tells the tale. ‘nywbere in the] of ot the court inv LIGHT S fe consequences: Marital Bliss and Longevity Whatever the reason, married men live longer than single men and married women live longer than single women. , It isn’t a matter of opinion. . The mortality records com- piled by life insurance companies prove it. With regard to males the disparity is very pronounced, In the age range from 30 to 45 the death rate for married men is E j 1 by MARIE BLIZARD, © 1907, NEA Senien, fos, 2 A caret Seis ine aoe let me down. You know I eearen: cont you? Jen is @ RETT, © © |always admired you tremendous-| lovely le thing and we. . . Tintire, te, iniove wate LARRY vee you always played so pan it epee ke 3 eons oe ere, ares ) course 2 sai pati angpelicresy sanhires. He didn’t say anything. Hejstoutly, “But I’m sure that you tempts te guide her career. First | poured himself a high ball and|weren't getting the right break. BEGIN HERE TODAY r \CKER AINSLEY, | made getting exactly the} You'd that jounce less than half of that for single men and the Benedict has a Frenkche plarber, tm gedance of nit “Gount ‘of soda, “Have| the engagement, wouldn't rears marked edge at other peridds in life, In other words, Dad is fhe sisters resch a skewsews, bet [Str thank you,” she answered | ayy eset his under lip and more likely to live to a ripe old age than is his bachelor brother iets ae geoues Gee Paty thought: "Teauatee coat eh pac eh fo-think abo Oscar. Srienprype Larry y preponen mar- to say the right thing. mean heath angle. pote al- Women get less of a break by reason of saying “I do.” = meet pate, Menyressee Seas pile aber dia! wae ay dar atid Ten 25, fe Gate Young wives between the ages of 20 and 24 make a poorer caren “Lerty, withent tnowing [there is else. I used/it over some other time.” showing than their unmarried sisters because of the hazards of lise Teles ber 250, and te Bez< |the right complement for you.” [You talk fy onsen cheerful. chid-irth, but in the age range from 80 to 65 they are 10- Tare, Peraesiesieeateee jose | “What do you mean?” he asked | Now, hurry.” E per-cent better risk, ; POH a ery Dephee | teaves and put down his glass. Pp = Larry marriage. ‘Tuck We ted 5 On.the other hand, removal. of the mate by death makes ee Go ise ey TRE sToRY |, ee Lash Soller) dered her ES ‘the th thought: both men and women poorer insurance risks. At the age of 35 CHAPTER XV ~ oh, You've the Coiesene’ peed Piaget (dd the mortality among widows is 5.76 per 1,000 as compared with (THEIR text slid sround 2 cor:|(Wiare the, Wind. of a man, i] te exciting things into. your ite 4.11 for married women, while the rate for bereaved males is si a Pallas arts Pogea thought should marry a girl who} Well, a ae Led Upatick might 9.22 as compared with 4.42 for those who still have the benefit though to urge it on to greater| Would be glamorous, A woman peg e ; 4 of the world. A woman who was/ Because, my girl, there will be . ff a-wife’s care. speed, fell back in a heap. always assured and, well, grown-| fireworks when sister gets this The figure experts do not attempt to state the reasons why. ‘Darling, keep your head. We'll up, “where is she?” she asked {They merely cite the facts and every one can be his own Philo- sopher. Is it that married men are better fed and better cared for than their single brothers or are they more careful? Certainly the husband who knows the “little woman” is the theater with the Bakers./knew that sacrifice in from the edge of a waiting up for him is less likely to indulge in those carousals so rela Saeoy ete eros pees ine ae Toved ‘la hai eergnee arith the Bakers. Hear to the average masculine heart than is the single man, Or Pre sis thaater to meet him at oor a ay Shoe “Ehewr ete were going to El Matador. I'm even if he does fall from grace occasionally his lapses are fewer his apartment or at your own? took all his income to keep them | picking her up there.” and their severity less pronounced, 1 Sead toe Conblensbe hour tolup, She ay watt, the dubious ieee rratd and I had Is- male singleness synonomous with recklessness?’ Do ageing oe isn’t here?” * - “Bhe'll be true to you, Tuck.| “Darling, we'll be able to go bachelors take chances which married men would eschew? Or He was. Tuck answered’ the| She's that_kind because she {s/o #1 Matador, after all,” she said is it that married men get better cooking and are more content? Goorbell ring himself. Paci god“ Piskie she|ing squeeze of the aria tera = ; “Hello, Tuck. Surprised to see But has got it, it/lence, when they were three in Food for German Thought me? Daphne, outwardly col, |Fotongs to her,’ I admire ner pos-| the taxi, or German Thoug! smiling and beautiful in her white aaame nea go-gettedness,| Jennif them before th The people of Germany. are under instructions to eat more evening clothes, greeted him. | feonveness and ber saw her. She was seated at corn. There is a shortage of wheat, and it must be made up pate oes won't ca fade ns hat eee tees ‘wbietle. veer Fa a deepened ad Sahai Sn ape agen from Berlin says the people are in?” cs a Instead he ook a Jone swallow, less memes ae though it had taking to the change, as “corn is not widely regarded “Certainly,” she said, and a matter ‘wouldn’ 5 somehow in the Reich as suitable for human consumption.” seat mie twanian paces den wae eabeelg genniters” plans snd bad spoiled fre +». Tt occurs to us that here is an excellent chance for Ameri- ie : - Pare case on the lounge. “It was,” he said unexpectedly| For the next two hours while cans todo a little missionary work and cement friendly rela- ‘ PTT | al “Going bec Ly leila ont | end Dacha espe Dae xe lic ye Hi sins oe ‘tions between two great nations. 94 ann Pe Senet <iMr*| TUCK got up and picked up the| they went to hear te songs of -., Cannot a few farm belt housewives be sent to Germany to ! “Yes,” he said, “I was. . . er| Suitcase. Bia ete He eho Hs | Sie latest French, disorae, Jone -Whow those people how good corn really is? There is corn on| WhO 3" Mtey ace oat oe ‘of re-| But when Daphne spoke to Jenni- ” the of a sigh iphne the cob, for instance—one of the great unsung blessings of life. or Eat Pinon ai’ aber itt Hieber delete bade oe, cen a8 santas ‘There is hot corn bread, with plenty of butter and a jar of| a She kept her tone light and| "ph es he ceme beck | | At las, they were in their ~ strawberry jam. There is southern spoon bread, for another : . : P| Pleasant. but she couldn't lsht|sturry up and get into your din- Jennifer undressed silently, instance; there are corn meal griddle cakes, accompanied by : x Po | re Pe er Socket and we'll have a party.|bathed and got into her those sausages whose secrets the Germans so well undergtand; D H gx : so ne Es Picking Jennifer Is “Daphne, I warned “there is corn meal mush, sliced, fried, and served with maple P Sera ages st gd she ita gor” ait ene tat rc (STE ad Ee nd 7 oe ‘The Germans ought to know about these things. PET TLILCitt EL. pan sem the oui, “Tucks | hack” he Cds “Se da awed se Re Seales

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