The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 5, 1937, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune ETT BITTER I HE STATES OLDEST NEW! NEEDED, LADD SAYS; BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, APRIL 5, 1987_ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Kstablished 1873) a rad, taining to health but not ache : ae: = nae igs tari aang Aart, Sit be acnnpaicg 07 © jemist No’ ality ts to the help-' ts and running a Bway in onte of tue Tribune. except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bl : “piped ary! oan vuatotiioe ot Fe ieee eal Improving But Has Far =| magenta nail slowly down the first colurhn. Betty to Go Yet blond as Martha was dark, ‘ STREAMLINE DIAGNOSIS joo] or method Mrs, Stella I, Mann port, 5 stands to reason, doesn’t it, that a healer of whatever sch ees cn cree “You're certainly ptimist if y qe ping Jo ‘ Ee rs ea a io rear on before be can apply the right treatment or giv® ‘ Archie ©, Johnson Kenneth W. Stmons patols cameras in tae compaige|poP Tight out and a job when we don’t know a soul in é relief. Vice Pres. and Gea’ Manager Secretary and Editor THE ae arnt “Gt Bo iego,” she told “Besides, you'll catch cold ly on ‘make butter was voiced Monday by|the floor. All we'd need to make our trip complete be you Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Culver 8. Ladd, state food commis-jin bed with influensa.” fare even better at 81. sae “This is the best way in the world to read 8 treatment is best for a given oom: ile practically al of 281 sn-| ortha said imperturbably. “I found it out at the age of seven| “2a oe : is wen ou fall uncom and provement over samples ftom the| When I started to read the funnies.” ; Her exhaustion or some kind of polson- same examined year and “I can’t see anything very funny about a help-wanted| was Neal” Seal, covebral emmorrhage there is a reporter handy to creameries two yearg ago,” he said, “they still in-| column.” isnt 8 nbee tor a pee Martha leaned over on one elbow to look at her companion.| Flames and Bombings containing lees than 80 per cent Zat,| “Want to weaken and wite home that we spent too much money] Hit Doukhobor Area Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation which constitutes practically no im-|on our wacation?” ities provement over previous years, it] “I do not!” Betty sat straighter and = Member of the Associated Press : means this department must institute wide blue Don See be haibke ee ae = prosecution if the desired result is to x) < The Associated Press is exclusively entitieg to the use for, republiog- | be ” . sed Monday of © seties of tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otnerwise credited In ti ui are aper and aiso the local news of spuntaneous origin published herein. tights of republication of all other mat heréia are also reserved, b tition, No creamery Control at the Source Tun 20 close to the legal limit that a Hope for a good crop, stimulated by the recent snowfall, | ccasional churning or part of now rests largely in the question of how many acres the farmers Pr ig a ie as 2 will be able to plant this year. Analysis show ercrnee This, in turn, depends in most cases upon the generosity pele inp pl hore} popghey with which the government grants applications for seed loans. | cent fat. The butter report also listed Only small proportion of North Dakota farmers have seed|%, simples OF 35% per cant short of their own and this is generally true elsewhere in the spring] ing over 16 per cent water afd 87 or wheat country, just as it was partially true in the winter wheat | 2% per cent with less than 90 per area at planting time last fall. (ee : The current trend seems to be to reduce the applications |Log Angeles Brickbat substantially before they are approved. Almost no farmer is F Gating all the seed be arks for. "This, cf course, has the affect| ulet Of Two Hunted of penalizing the serious-minded man who asks only for what | , 10s Angeles, Apr. 5—(h)—Smudgy he thinks he really should have, but then the government has |, had much experience in this field and may know what it is doing. Certainly, the necessity for these loans brings the government no joy. No matter what the farmer thinks his prospect is, the record is not an encouraging one. Luckily, most of the seed sown last year was the light-weight grain raised in 1935, but |"#e in three of the last four years the government has put out large sums for seed and has got very little of it back. Meanwhile, Secretary Wallace, despite the drouth, obvi- ously is influenced by the surplus bugaboo. He had to deal with it when he took office in 1988 and the memory still remains. He can hardly be blamed for that. His control of the seed thus gives him control of the acre- : we power which vanished with the supreme court decision P zs : gn e AAA, For Bismarck and vicinity: Some- ‘ = - ‘ ach laine can hardly be blamed for taking advantage mae ea seer and Suscaly: =| BY NARD JONES : It is not altogether a bad thing for the farmers, either. A |ssttied,fonieht. and Tussdanc rising ©1937, NEA Ine. “cepa part of the plowed area in this district is not really | st. see ey: axota! \pactiy elonay - z et = ‘or grain and should be returned to grass. If a farmer | to BG. Papsder reine torere is forced by the seed shortage to plant only those fields which | 4a give the best promise of a crop he may be better off in the end. tieaday, Btebebly. suow oF _ There is more profit in high yields on a small acreage than | tewperaturs aoe < : in smaller average production on more acres. cloudy tonlent and Dueriayy vistas ry : wo] J The seed shortage will force better farming. It is not an|tweeltonisse nn” *4 '® “xtreme eG thsch'tacicica' ibs dep witch tinned aig tlocnas | ES jose Zarmers who are oans USE | over the Plal : they have bad records on previous deals with the government, | 8th } } they have only themselves to blame. Such cases are merely "| proof that chickens come home to roost. : § or disease. The physician’s interest, formerly centered on the ultimate effects of disease, is now engaged with causes and beginnings of disease and hence with ve of preventive remedies. old timer diagnosed pulmonary tuberculosis when signs of cavity and heotic fever made it cert&in the patient had—consumption. Today the com~ diagnose tuberculosis int ; East série lla sel HE when the ss it ih HH that can be settled by machine. ‘Tuberculine test, X-ray picture, cal test, etc., can only confirm the opinion of the physician in any case. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pneumothorax . Coe a Oh Th ae pommeetnetae treatment of ‘lung. tubaroglogie? * Answer—That is injection of air or gas into the pleural cavity to col- lapse the sick lung, giving it a reat of many weeks (until the alr or gas i gradually absorbed and the lung resumes work. Where the disease is con~ fined to one lung % is of great: value. (@opyright 1937, John F. Dille Co.) iH iE i i 5 ie BE & gE fi isk i t : [ E i F iH i i i E i i! i Z i & Z He E é criminally tacked, A, F. Wagne, autopsy su- geon, said, sts WRATHER FOREC. E} i z E 3 i iz 8 3e Fa 5 j ay i ey E af H ae i ce 5 3 g 3 eg sees! nid sit ete ii | z z z ea re z region southwestward to the south- ; ern Rocky in regio in north Pacific c w d Normal Hazards cmperat om Dr. Paul B. Sears, Oklahoma's famous soil conservation Hasteaieel Valley. | | authority, remarked in an interview the other day that drouths | ,,3!*™arck station baro should be accepted as normal hazards of the farmer's life, just | ,, Missourl rive as traffic accidents are normal hazards for an insurance com-| Ice reading. ic a they . so accepted, he said, due provision can be le for them and they can be robbed of many of their terrors. And what are these “due provisions”? Well, says Dr.| ror pistnteaminne _ Sears, strip planting fs one—ribboning wheat fields with narrow | 32:4! {hi month to date | | strips of tough grasses which help to hold moisture in the soil | 7°:2!, Januery ist to, 4 || after rain. Another is the making of regular tests of soil mois- |A°cumulated excess to si and “iii aieal planting crops when these tests are unfavorable. rg lie fallow in dry years would help. _ Between the thoughtless optimist who proclaims that |Re’sa" “i drouths on the western plains are exceptional, and the pessimist Croat. eldy. who would clear those plains of farms altogether, there is a wide Drake, clay. middle ground. Dr. Sears seems ideally equipped for thé task |Gcriscs” of making this middle ground familiar to us. : Pyrrhic Victo: De re, cl The way in which spoils politics esc the ordinary pro- Hankineon, clear” cesses of government is graphically illustrated in the grief P megs. which has descended upon the sturdy Irish shoulders of Martin| a L, O'Donnell, sheriff of Cuyahoga county, Ohio. . O'Donnell was elected last fall in the Roosevelt landslide _ and took office in January. Ever since then, his office has been | $rorhen’,,'%A5 *+: the goal of innumerable loyal party workers seeking jobs. Al- SOUTH DAKOTA _POINT! "Most every day, there has been a long lineup outside his door opche from early morning until late at night. Aberdeen, (cis __ Now the strain has proved too great for his health, and] bridge, cle the has had to go on vacation—forced to recuperate, not from f the strain of his official duties, but from the strain of handling the unending stream of party hacks who consider themselves g entitled to jobs. g2%: Te | i t Sunrise, 6:14 a, m. Sunset, 7:17 p. mo bi ni a as ERE it i Le fe ide latched Martha's arm-end whispered, “Look.” A caging @ suitcase, had ap- EAU atvteady tam ox horkee o hla.” Metteest sheet to de tekiel Be hal tee she ied him ax Neal.’ . “What's the ” le “J Martha, |sked ‘Marthe ‘when’ they ety “But you can’t carry a revolver | well on their way. police permit. I don’t} “The Golden State Auto Park in ES i : f i SR ESEEE | ; aH inh the Ks ah bay ek Hel Keck 4 : I TE f if & i 5 gt 3 i E Ha Ege 3 i Hy ii af ! i ij i Could s better argument for civil service reform be| Sat wonghsesdo’ce| _mamuadstncion to toe couple of| hansy to scare fod‘ Marths fmagined? Above record is for 4 a ane her face id eer with the tiny WEATHER AT Thele letters fnished, ber pee Logg igen icin alibase| bere hel No More ‘Monkey Trials’ c Se as ee P5| Were wot going % ciop tor ang’| fanny, ont The flurry over the teaching of evolution in public schools | Cs counter. ir oon gee eae fun. si| thumb Jerker sre we? to inspect it ceme to a head at the time of the Scopes trial in Tennessee, some- * gume clothes we'd better cash the| WoDCe ctor BB iE red hy Celgene thing like a decade ago. Since then little has been heard about | S2""s advance check that Carrington) is,0 at snap-on a lonely scotch of highway.”| thanked hee 3 but'aow it pops up again, with an Indiana minister challeng- | gave ia,” Betty sald. “Thay prob-| shot showing bim oes "| way a ing ~ New York historian to public debate and declaring that he|& ably know us here well enough | and m0 a T cout MAT y beewees es ing: more will not stop until “a law prohibiting the teaching of evolution” Lagodoel dusters.” ail Diego and Los ry ever'ye is on the Indiana statute books. x Mate te. cota anal what | they | few stretches of,tonely Airspeed's Fortunately, the New York writer involved has decided that his = & H £ i H i ii [ ? it f i i i i t ie | he is too weary and too busy to engage in the debate; and it may he that this flare-up will die down presently and be heard of no| 8,22 ta It is to be hoped that this is what will happen. ‘The ground| st Hi i i . ; BF. a ! [ het i E I [ 7 | fi 4 i i l HS i I i { if i i E E j i a E ga § i I F : rt 1 3 are you? the | start intent on Was pretty well covered in that earlier evolution fight. Little ot the money youl change your | Te Siactony tony ‘added two rer | “Tae Deen broken in| whedl ‘is to be gained by raking over the old embers at this late dat | Sere Correa, ‘And when they reeched the| SNe Batty aaid|to rt exceed the nation has better things to engage its attention than a repe- Winsemucos Nev. ey bank and the teller cashed Car- oe the shop sure to getlenter of the Scopes case. . k rington’s check without a mo-| loaded “How permits in|noon mant’s hesitation, Martha did have | about to a T've got { admit thet she felt much | both of} ti Punk, editor of the ue No, they af i [i tr i : ; gt

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