The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 10, 1937, Page 4

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~ ’ _ The Bismarck Tribune i ‘Ap Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1878) State, City and County Official Newspaper Published except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- march, H. De and tatered as tne poetortice ot BUTGArek os enccod tay well Mrs. Stella I. Mann President and Treasurer Behind Scenes Washington Archie O. Kenneth W. Simons Vico Pres. ané Gen'l Manager Secretary ané Editor H Hy iid g & F R g Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press of sat aman the oes of rrobeetion ag ‘The Associated Press is exclu tion of the news dispatches credit iy entitled to the use for republion: | tariff was $34,000,000. No it or not otherwise credited in this poses seriously to consumers SIPPRAve? rhaaitg cht lenl teaser epeatangous ovale pulaed pocelx | Poses seriou jo save consumers any centers on the question of how Nog How U.S. Can Help waete veneer aa 5 ot Possibly in time the Sugar Section The quaint notion that the best way America can help| ,,7 oe ‘AAA will put up & commemora- the people of Europe is by tending strictly to her own business the tablet to the lowe and devoting all her best thought to her domestic problems got | ¥! to some confirmation the other evening from Count Jerzy Potocki, an name of Jack Dalton, f Polish ambassador to the United States, head of Cane Speaking at a banquet in Boston, Count Potocki remarked Association’ that the world’s most pressing task today is to find some way bay Dickey, peg cet of reconciling economic security and individual rights. Euro- Dudley pean nations have tried to do this in divers ways, and have Bulli, another erstwhile AAA expert. erected some odd-looking governments asa result. And Europe,| Chaucey Wightman, another for saya Count Potocki, is hoping desperately that the United States tling for the Hawalians againet pro- will be able to find the solution, posed discrimination based on their Europeans, he continues, “believe that in the desperate Peed respectively ‘the section's search for economic and political security, the United States| former administrative assistant and may achieve without invading its own traditions of the rights betiger pis under Dalton and the of others that which some of us in Europe have attempted re-| three occupy a mansion in the ae gardless of any consequences.” ‘ This country could make no greater contribution to the cena ony. eels world’s well-being than to do just that. And it can best do| _ All these boys had their training in that by staying at home and tending to its knitting. i government expense. ; a poe eta te St Timely Advice 3 legal division, now represents Florida Vacation time is near, once more, when the ocean and in-| *n4 Toulsiens cane growers, among Jand lakes will lure throngs of pleasure-seekers. And, just as in| with writing the Jones-Contigan act. previous years, there are thousands who will never return from | 90 4i4 Chaties F. Boots, who was with these watering places. For drownings are a major cause of acci-| is now with the Amesican Sugar Re- dental deaths. 3 fining Oo. Ellsha Lee, Jr., left the And so the words of Dr. Bayard T. Horton of Rochester, ‘tonal Sugar Refining Co, Minn.,. may well be heeded. According to him, recent studies Yds ts have revealed that hypersensitivity to cold water has been re-|* ana, reaghdiotg inl Undersecre- sponsible for many drownings, persons afflicted in this way be-| tay of Agriculture Rex “Tugwell is ing apt to collapse after entering the water. irtig Saget mae nal i To determine whether you have the weakness, immerse| ested in sugar legislation, But nel- * one hand in ice water for five minutes. If your hand swells Lrsadet Pade 3 Freda Ble 3] after removal, you are hypersensitive, Most persons, Dr. Hor-| “brain truster”—have been lobbying ton advises, ea be “desensitized” to-cold by inimersizg’ one hard rhe “treak” Ay" the plows -Dr in ice water for a minute or two twice a day for three or four| Joshua Bernhardt, present bead of weeks, the AAA Sugar Section, who is said A simple procedure, certainly, if it means lessening the peel peal pags ered states danger of losing one’s life this summer. Bernhardt is “brains” of the Cea On Its Own Feet i The recovery movement has been in progress now for some D. Robbins, | four years. It has faltered and stumbled pretty badly, at times, | has i | but at last it seems to have settled down to a steady gait; but ities them. Bernhardt is hero- | | the thing to remember about it is that, from the very start, it | ized by many sincere, idealistic New | | has been based on a policy of heavy government spending. ee es aia Guahis shooting's Since the government can’t go on spending much longer, | sbout— pending nger, ture, Interior, Labor, | | it is encouraging to notice that the business summary recently]. The Agricul Departments’ submit-| | | made public by the Federal Reserve System shows indications es iy bet bill by ron ii | that the recovery movement is beginning to walk alone, Production of such basic commodities as steel, minerals, | naa hiked ‘sugar profits and left lumber, autos, and cotton are sharply up this spring. Employ-| provisions and « child labor ban as | ment snd payroll indices are rising faster than the usual sea-| saiwoeable. | (Meese oe ere. | sonal rate. And as publicly-financed.work declines, the amount | tail price of 5.7 cents @ pound while of privately-financed work is going up. the world raw material price has been one cent is based on the need of sus- It looks very much as if the time has come when Uncle Sam| taining the economy of Howall can pull in his purse strings without halting the recovery move- at ee Bio, ee ii pegacesd in ment. 17 beet-growing and two cane-grow- ee ase ta te ‘Devil Dan’s’ Reward . chaos and preserving a large market One of the strongest arguments cited against war is the| ‘ete for American goods) fact that even the victor loses. The story of “Devil Dan” Daly | influenced, perhaps by refiners’ lob- proves that this truth applies to individuals, as well as to whole| byists and chairmaned by s former, armies. One of the fightingest. marines ever, Daly won glory in i Bi i i several wars. Inthe Boxer rebellion he held a bastion single-| here, cutting the Cuban quote and { handed against a horde of yellow men; in Haiti he routed a| generally crippling Secretary Hull's detachment of Cacos; in one of the hottest engagements of the| ‘** “esty program. | | World war, single handed, he captured a machine gun nest and Claim 100 Congressmen 14 of the enemy. PP gral eicie sees All this valor won him a hatful of medals—but when he| sugar Refiners’ Association, niet, | wealth, the Y wi returned to private life he had a hard time getting a job, finally | #0r to the Suger Institute which the Janded one as bank nightwatchman, and, when he died of heart ‘| disease the other day, was practically penniless. @ or different ways. If Americans will study the story of “Devil Dan” and learn| pt, myocistion insists Hawall end how poorly glory pays, it may be still easier for us to keep out| sugar than they do now. Claiming to of the next war. * haveenlisted mare than a hundred con- ages i pags support it by threatening Fatal Mixture The coroner of Cuyahoga county, most populous county in Ohio, has investigated all auto traffic deaths for the first quar- ter of 1937, and he announces that 58 per cent of the persons Killed had been drinking. ‘The ratio was about the same for| | Administration stiitude: | The ad: drivers who were killed and for pedestrian victims. (Copyright, 1937. NIRA Service, i i | Ine) Now the point is that in most of these cases the victims tT BARBS - were not what we call drunk. By no means. They had “just | _ BARBS’! had a few drinks’—just enqugh to dull that hairline quickness |" rhe mirror at Mount Wilson Ob- of observation and reaction which is the price of safety in the|servatory is polished with rouge.” It’s a hackneyed old saying, but it is still true—gasoline and alcohol are a fatal mixture, even when the proportion of alcohol | ambassador“ is very small. was in long pants.” modern big-city traffic stream. blond, why women should not drink. way Michigan girl was forced to drive 190 miles by an cross: his long fast until the Lord speaks to Still, might have been worse; he might have taken|him. As he specifies the Lord, it wheel. would do no good to appeal to the ied Berlin partner. i 4 i i i| § i A i i ge ; Your Personal Health for defi somersault as & leap in w Be essere tens tocvese ceipackWward without touching the any ii defined mislead a lot of le rectly defined and not tities is going aver the work it might be a gogd-time i 4 i ee ie i ! Z EE Be Ee & a g. E George III Lost American Colonies for Britain But Won Subjects’ Esteem As Family Man # HELE favorite be- : g f : ‘ i ee fy E SERE i Hf E E i Si iE it 8 = i § Fi : if i E 4 | i ii 38 Evi i Hil a H I I Z § i i f & c : if ay Hl 58 E ii g 4 + | fi vblbe ni e Ge é i 4 i Ht £ E 5 H il i it; ab ERE ita sEEBeee: i BEctE F if z 5 li E [ f z g if fie] Fi Hi i i vt FH g [ £ | By William Brady, M. D. health but not @is- Dr. Brady will answer uestions peresinis to health bul ters briefly and ip ini reas. Pr “Th queries must be accompanied by & stamped, self-addressed envelope. ¥ FREEDOM OF THE BELLY Z hope the first galoot who breaks hs neck tryling to turn an sir 5 i ii portion of the body. I‘ roll twenty somersaults first thing ‘airspring for years. My advice to Mphin uk Ws keep ti blood from stagnating in the great Its, forward or backward every tary folk who wish to keep their rsa! ese eattos pea ade ai ded oie re floor, Nothing to be gained by g Zz 2 3 i 5 i if you used to do it with the greatest of ease. who wish to be intelligent. And, serap the Victorian belly and explain that since the gay nine- aE version of belly so belly with stomach or abdomen in. good breeding, The stomach is one of the organs con- order to show 5. ‘the ‘abdomen with the accent on the do. The belly Shae Maal wall ot te abdomen, and there is no other word for it English. : word derived from an Anglo-Saxon word meaning bellows. In ideal ea id abe hha hes or practically inflates with though it were s bellows, The elastic from the lungs. On the elasticity or tonus eae eee ete sacle in the belly depends to a considerable degree the individuals vital capacity and longevity. lows muscle depends on the individual's The elasticity or tonus of the bel- vite or nutrition, and on the freedom and training or education give the belly. ‘The posture exhibited in caricature by the musical comedy butler and former! ht in the U. 8. Army and in thousands of schools and gymnas- jums Tas lowecel the vital capacity of millions of men. The straight-front corset is not now in vogue but the restraint it imposed upon women is still ty experts and physical culture instructors still urge women to retract or draw up the belly—only, good gracious, they never call it by such a vulgar name. jormal profile of the belly is convex, rounded outward, Tet 2 Raphael bulging or protruberant. Neglect of general i x 5 a nor exercise and belly breathing exercise, as well as nutritional deficiency, ac- yunts for sere ater belly in most instances. Wearing corsets, girdles, supports, always favors this manifestation of physical weak- ‘Muscles soon go flabby if their work is taken away. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS = Bone Meal T have been taking bone meal for some time. One doctor says that this is likely to damage the heart and blood vessels in time. Another doctor says It is harmless, | (J. L.) ‘Answer—I think it is harmless, But why take it? I believe you will get from milk and milk-producte—skim milk, cheese, buttermilk, cream, butter— everything essential you can get from bone meal. (Copyright 1937, John F. Dille Co.) s g H BE 8 ai io i Hs ty i ze af E3 a a H i i fi i a iH Ay 2s é tleman of Europe.” few, died at Windsor, June 26, 1830.

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