The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 25, 1937, Page 6

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Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) State, City ana County Official Newspaper Published except Sun The Tribune Com; , Bis- mee BD ad entered at the hoclatite at Dicaerse as rr Mrs. Stella 1. aD President and Treasurer Johnson F . Ker « Vieo Byes. and Gen'l Meuager nneth W Secretary and Editor Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press The Sytem Pairid is gee ee the news @ spaper and also” the local news. of spu a rights of republication of all other mat edited to" or ot to the use for republica- it edited In ee ublished h “a iso reserved. Goods Count, Not Figures After spending six years in a frantic effort to attain re- covery this nation now seems to be worrying for fear that it may be recovering too fast. * Chairman Eccles of the Federal Reserve warns that we shall have trouble if prices and wages go on increasing too fast and too far. Secretary Wallace follows suit with a similar warning, and is followed by Secretary Roper. Secretary Wallace summarizes the danger very neatly: “There is danger from business men, in search of profits, cutting down production to a point that is bad for the general welfare. : “There is danger that labor, in search of higher wages and shorter hours, will restrict production to a point that is bad for the general welfare. -“There is danger of agriculture, in search of higher prices, herein a cutting production to a point that is bad for the general welfare. | those , |eyele of soaring _ THE. BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH, 1987 consequence can ie text national PROD that many economists foresee as apes rewull of, 8 rapidly rising government ously with a definite industrial pro- gram, it could break up the familiar prices and scaring profits, and relatively lower purchas- ing power. This results in decreased consumer demand -and, unemployment and spigerege The second group is not fident of adequate action. With = opedahipntrt labor leaders farmers: all on the band-wagon higher prices, s, Ses eee er wages, the group di the sdministration ‘will the drastic brakes sary. * * Only Plan One preventive * ‘Se Far program is pre: sented herewith, in rough outline, not because the economists who suggest it_are necessarily correct in their plan, vat becatae it ds the cnly’ peanpratians Hive pian (of the sort soar sigpepted here by anyone. Leon Henderson, who was chief of Tesearch and planning in the most concerned with preserv- “Tf all three worked together, they would get more and ins cone consumer more money for less and legs goods.” purchasing power. fii ier page 1, Federal action to break It would be perilously easy for the nation to step off into polistic devices, such as the maa this spiral—if, indeed, it has not already done so. And perhaps pease allocation as good a way as any to fortify ourselves against it would be to| government purchases. That this ‘& weapon of some power has been in- dicated in the history of the Welsh- Healy bill requiring maintenance of certain labor ‘standards by recipients of. government contracts. Government remember just what it is that constitutes wealth, from the na- tional standpoint. The nation can be just as poor in an era of high prices and system in the steel industry. 2. Pressure’ through i high wages as ‘in an era of low ones. For it is not the figures} insistence on - enforcement helped on the ledgers that make national prosperity; it is the bulk of eee about the 40-hour week and the country’s prodyction of goods. the early opposition to the NRA and AAA programs. Everybody realized that the farmer had to get higher prices. Everybody realized that the business man had to sell | ¢.,, bed his goods at a profit. Everybody realized that if the working man didn’t get decent wages, he could not buy the things busi- ness man and farmer were producing. her wages in the steel industry. Selective taxation on profits 20 ieee 4. Patent law revision in an. effort cath _petpas saat sited tstonet se tent monopolies. 5. Anti-trust Jaw 6 Yet balanced against those facts was the inescapable fact demand Sor! that the way to increase its wealth is to increase its production, | Plottation. ‘of consumer co- not to decrease it. Offhand, one would certainly say that a| operatives as id another curb on nation which turns out necessities and luxuries enough to supply | Prices. and a means of preserving mass 100,000,000 people is considerably wealthier than one which pro-|s. Redurtion of of’ tariff. barriers in duces enough for only half that number—regardiess of price bats tags. Just how to regulate those price tags so that the individual producer can prosper and the country as a whole can increase] sv at it since 1980, or thereabout, and haven’t solved it yet. Cupid’s Handicap Frequently there are plans for universal enactment of leg- islation requiring pre-marital physical examinations. Some- how, the movement hasn’t made much headway, though -the idea seems feasible. It is wondered, however, why some group doesn’t: plug for another type of test; one that would determine beforehand just what the prospective bride or groom does in the way of snoring. The thought, arises in connection with a Chicago alienation of affections case. Because he snored rather ostentatiously, no & man claims, his wife made him sleep in an attic room for three years. His wife is suing the “other. woman,” to whom, she maintains, her husband turned his affections. Now all this might have been avoided had the plaintiff known, before her marriage, that her fiance was a nocturnal basso. When she took him “for better or for worse,” she had not known that the “worse” might include lying awake, trying to ignore a sound that suggested ‘a sawmill at the height of a/ 700s Jumber boom. eae So that.a bride or groom can: learn beforehand that his mate-to-be has sonorous feet of slays to mix a metaphor, there oughta be'a law! A Welcome Pact Even: more significant and encouraging, in some respects, than the original:contract between the steel workers’ union and _ the U. S. Steel subsidiary companies is the supplementary ~ agreement just signed which provides for orderly, peaceable os adjustment of disputes. ' + This agreement. sets up grievance committees, labor _ “courts,” and the'machinery for selecting and using the services ofan impartigl‘arbitrator. The parties to the agreement pledge themselves to. settle their. disputes through this’ machinery “without suspension of work.” In some ways this is the best news that has yet come out ‘the steel-labor situation. For. if the great industry’s em- ployers and employes have at last hit upon.a formula that will Igy the specter of 9 steel strike, once and fo ah Shee have rendered the entire country a great service. , wes panty. & 30)-von bi yergiesen thera ag Mls dpe dain sslachaia Grim Reaper at arm's toi cant Tr aoe naa otiners, chocolate ple, afid cheese is ‘ye esol a a Sd he fre ee he ie caked ei Workers of an ety, Sot only tows of gangsters.” eas power projects, its wealth is a man-sized problem. We have been pecking away ate: beget to allow certain foreign prod. comme She magn cveaeed Oo in: this. country. 9..Government yardsticks, such as are being attempted by federal water such as was sug- of the government steel for the navy in ‘to sorts postin Set ‘Yet, most agree that the 1 meeting the ext erisis would be combination of i i ies and purchasing power, and uléting volume ae of Broa at Yow pees. ee dustrial-financial. system: just operate toward ‘volume’ Heather low. peices, it is. argued, but: rather baleen direction. ut @ year ago the face of , Commission, in rail: frre ie, sees casera i fs § a i EF] at iff Li s. $ & 1g ‘ae est li & coming collapse. - (Covi 1937, NEA Saevicn Lat ‘SO THEY: SAY | f Spain is lost either way the civil Won Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. —_—_—_—_— it dis~ will answer questions pertaining to Health yep no! abe wetdieoon's. ‘Write letters briefly and in ink. the get Brady in care of The Tribune. All queries must be ‘accompan! ye stamped, self-addressed envelope. ‘J PARATHYROID AND CHRONIC ARTHRITIS A talk about the treatment of chronic nutrtione er ee expos: mentioned calc! vitamin D, parathyroid hormone, expos- ultra-violet of sunlight or artificial source and artificial fever or outstanding methods of treatment which have | cases. It is not feasible to consider here other — may be of equal importance or value in many _ casen: Buicoeasful treatment of chronic arthritis of any type requires the judgment of the physician who knows the patient's individual condition, - in the Perens talk, the artificial fever or hyperpyrexia treatment has been found most helpful in conjunction with massive doses. of vitamin D (200,000 to 600,000 units daily). Treatment with massive doses | of vitamin D is most effective if the patient receives also an optimal With Other * “MODERN VANDALS (From Newsdom) (National Newspaper of the News- paper World) less. Its ae I ee power! property is no longer safe, Vandalism is rife. The strong arm is rampant. Professional labor agitators have fevered.the brains of innocent work- ers and transformed them into public fellow worker of the right to for himself without paying to Caesar. . “elassic example of a dictator- i | EDITORS |: ship of Reprinted te show ther sty. We ee not agree with nem, labor is Russia, the so-called |law and: order to satisfy the whim of paradise of the worker. But has the!» conscienceless labor leader who has Worker any rights in Russia? Is he pes aenad ecto hasicorin wae pclae fed and well paid? Have his to do their bidding just as they. ha intimidated our public officials. deus and working sonaitions Bi nt wages and wi iy means call the occasional exploiting employer to the bar of justice and make him amend his abusive ways. But under no circumstances permit labor agitators and hoodlums to defy best: movie actors. are tables Edgar Dale, motion picture | on [ _ Huge Manimal | chairman, National Congress of Par- ents and Teachers. * * * Ae A bee's sting is only one-thirty- second of an inch long, and the other two feet jal Tame 5 tok faucet fo dimots » You see, now I don't have to mix dates and lesson prepar- ations.—Mrs. J. W. Elliot, of Oxford, ‘Mass. who won a fight against a ban on married school teachers. seit is'a warm, Hes ab ‘mammal 8 ort belongs to 9 Fastidious. ae “leale ration of vitamin B. i carbohydrate metabolism in the body. Its eftect in that respect is comparable with the effect of insulin. In fact diabetic - patients who require a certain amount of insulin daily find that if they get vitamin B they need less insulin. promotes metabolism absorption and utilization of calcium, ‘any doubt that the diet provides an abundance of calcium, jess, to include in the regimen daily doses three times daily after meals. Calcium in form of five-grain tablets, with a good of water or better milk to wash them dow2. Exposure of naked skin to direct sunlight or to the ultra-violet rays from carbon arc lamp, mercury vapor quartz lamp or other artificial sources, pro- duces vitamin D in the body. Daily hypodermic or intramuscular injections of parathyroid hormone have been enthusiastically praised by French physicians for the treatment of chronic deforming arthritis. Half an hour afier an injection the patient increased facility of movemen!, an exiraordinary ees of the stiff or stiffening joints, and a marked feeiing of well-being. This lasts for ten or twelve hours, and while the patient is on such a higher metabolism &@ good deal can be done in the way of passive manipulation, massage or active exercise, which would be difficult or impossible otherwise. The effect of the - injection is comparable with the effect of an insulin injection in diabetes. While the effect of the insulin lasts the patient can consume and utilize a larger amount of carbohydrate food which the body greatly needs. The bene- fits of the extra food thus utilized are permanent gain. So are the benefits of the massage, manipulation or exercise the patient en, Told buoys him up. There is no more danger of a “habit” fi parathyroid hormone in chronic arthritis than there is of insulin habit in @iabetes or other condition where insulin may be administered. @f course payee Seiya onraer aa) oa Raasiniates paces tvrOld in Sy ciTCUn Hay: arene about i. Nothing more I can do about it. Ask your doctor. QUESTIONS AND The cane sugar or corn syrup (glucose) for infant feeding or for adult feeding, for that matter. Hydrechleric Acid i What types of food produce the greatest amount of hydrochloric acid in the digestive system? Do acid foods turn alkaline in the digestive system? (V. P. 8.) Answer—Source of the hydrochloric acid in the normal gastric juice is not known, perhaps sodium chloride (salt) in blood. Probably animal pro- teins (lean meat, egg white) which are the natural sources of salt for man, Produce greatest amount of hydrochloric. So-called “acid” fruits such as citrus fruits, tomatoes, etc, render blood and tissues more alkaline, not diges- tive system. z (Copyright 1937 John F. Dille Co.) his wife was a well-known movie blond, HER NAME. _IN LIGHTS BEGIN HERE TODAY PHNE BRETT loved LARRY are aeetateet Piers pat ha had accumulated fake up, lumb. chown me Louise” “Oh, please, Mr. Herzberg. I’m not an actress and I didn’t mean for you to. . .” She broke off prettily. “About what?” she responded and sipped her tea. “What would you say if Loffered | you the part of Louise?” Day “It’s 25 of 12. Did you say your train leaves at noon?” When Jennifer had gone, Daphne went back to bed. She wished that she could sleep for- ever and forget Larry as she had seen him last night. Just to see again had been exquisite ony and to know that she would on seeing him—with Jennifer to twist the pain. She er eyes. boy she asked, iphne placed her cup on the ee and played with her col- “I wouldn't know what to say, You can’t mean it?” . “Why not? I know a capable actress when I see one. I gave Jennifer a part when she had h had no experience.” “But Jennifer! Oh, she didn’t really have a part. This is the one she wants. I couldn’t do that. I couldn't do that to Jennifer.” eee «ey 1 hs dear young lady, if you wil! not accept it, I will not give it to Jennifer. I shall find an actress who will play it your way. Jennifer can’t do it. She is a different type.” “Will you let me think it over?” knowing what her answer was to be. “You'll have to make up dae mind by tomorrow ‘want to open January 15. There'll be only two weeks of rehearsal.” “I'l let you know tomorrow "| morning,” she promised. Daphne said her prayers. Oh, Lord, please let this be the right thing to do. I am not selfish, I am not cruel. I am not doing this for my own sake. I’m only || trying to do what Father would pint gene have wanted me to do. I'm do- ing this for Jennifer’s sake. I need Your help so badiy. I don’t know any other way to be strong enough to show Jennifer what she must learn. Please give me and Your help. Plesse don’t let it hurt Jennifer. 1 don’t care if she is angry if only she will see what fair play means. Some day this lesson will mean more to her than the injury. It will make her grow up and real- ize that other people have rights. By knowing that, she will be able to balance her values, to get more out of life. ees JENNIFER Icaned on the palms of.her hands. Her face was white and her eyes blazed. “Daphne, answer me, is it true ‘that Herzberg has given you my part? It is! I can see it, Bee hind my back, you did this un- speakable, perfidious thing to your own sister! I hate you, Daphne Brett!” (To Be Continued)

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