The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 19, 1937, Page 4

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ae ee _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1937 aint = >) Beahh | : _ The Bismarck Tribu Behind Scenes Political Mathematics | Your Personal Health | ! THE. STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER =o parlalnine te Maalth bet not ae. | Established 1873) “ ” * ion i c i 2 briefly and in tal 2 acu NIE aid th Washington , Se ee eee ee eae atboaaisd ty Prctna | i Grate, City and County Official Newspaper ; dnvelope. - I Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck TyYibune Company, Bis- | Here's How House and Senate Will 'S NO PARTICULAR COMPLAINT @arck, N. D, and erie at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail| Shape Up if Democratic Party THE UNDER-PAR PATIENT WHO Hort, I got so run down and nervous matter. Split Comes ... as Certain Men Lest summer, reports a cobtmly read where you said lack of vitamins Mrs. Stella 1. Mann Close to White House Feel Very that I could hardly ‘work or ike mine, and ‘also that lack of vitamins President and Treasurer Surely 1¢ will. ' would cause under par condConn Oty ‘and poor growth of the ails and | Vice eo ca rasotr stanegie secre ca Ealtor By RODNEY DUTCHER womaths shin pointed Ua heneney mentionet attention ates : = (Tribune Washington Correspondent) ly. I his to my ately began taking Uberal daily tion. hington, July 19. — Certain men ‘ gees an to show improvement in less ren ieitaal to the White House, con- : f dition begat Sarted on the vitamins and vinced that the Democratic party is H 3 3 I like my work and I like Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) ........ oing to split and frothing with im- ‘ouble a very good doctor said he thought Daily ty mail per year (in state outside of Bismarck) Cmts over the delay, already have / my " fed ee ean take the foods he said I needed—1 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota .. t begun to list the goats they expect to I was getting pellagr Now Ican eat anything ‘and like it, Thanks to your Weekly by mail in state per year ...... 1.00 go galloping—or to be pushed—to- couldn’t at foes a ax realise how much good you sre doing. I know Weekly by mai) outside of North Dakota, per yei 1.60 ward the Republican party. And the fine column. Yot bother to tell you when we have obtained great help from Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ............006 +. 200 |! sheep they expect to remain in the t / = moat of us do not te na al cae “a Bek ' | "i think it is unfortunate thal tonal y hnically, there are 75 Democrats Sometimes iven that name. I suppose it was Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Paige aera eer pod / ign disease known as pellagra was ever ¢! the house. = Fi 2 Member of the Associated Press Actually, says a high official about as close F. D. R. as ay White / ; Kclusively entitled to the use for repubiiea- | House secretary — and whose name ‘ ; , » in the earlier stages. yreedeere to It or not otherwise credited in this| would make a large page one head- fi / the south, but everywhere in the United anada, Y 1 ished herein. Es ; f : ' ring not only in the 2 nutritional deficiencies, of republication of all ether matter herein are Siso ed. | line if your correspondent were al: recognized 98 les, é; chance of being erved. | towed to use it—there are about 55 . Would have a betlefeticiencies, if the vague symptoms were called simpis *, ie See ee ee enators and 275 representatives who 3 P eas / . a ” or “under-par” or poor health. Not by the old timers, Placing the U. S. Flag Back on the High Sea | can be counted as Democrats. ‘They . / i? ‘run down condition” oF “istacyio is getiing a better training in the diag- but by ys 5 5 i 4 ch for a ve New Mo ; } i One of the queerest things in American history has been A such Aipecrrets out- - i i; 5 ‘ opener eap ener deficiency in the country today is vitamin the way in which the country has allowed its merchant marine|1ined by Roosevelt, the party leader. , : B deficiency, ‘It is true, however, that the condition of the nails and the s ty ‘ Z ‘s no to prolonged 3 to | This man goes on to talk as if he ex: : fake pe Ls : ted by the correspondent is more specifically due —once one of the finest and most famous on the seven seas—to pected the other Democratic members i OK: Cor i pere eine in vitamins G and D. sink to the position of unwanted and undernourished stepchild. | tu be sloughed off. In any circumstance it is extremely difficult to get an optimal or ade. the globe, and the flag was a familiar sight on every sea, This | says this New Deal nose-counter. “But a : : aes i; tolerate fish liver oil as “steady diet.” In another talk wen oer to i s i they'll take it!” 4 show why the majority of people get insufficient vitamin maintain not only meant that American exporters were doing a whale of risk ‘Wan His bles 6 j yak Pregl a business; it meant that the nation was fully alive to its mem-| significant of Republican aitoca to raed d ead ais in ii | i honey up to southern conservatives is : te QUESEIONS AND |WERS perp Wa hevorld coma .__ [a bill by Congressman Hamilton Fish Flake White Is Lead Carbonate But during the past generation the merchant marine|oz New York, who led a regiment of You showed your ignorance when you said flake ary 1s blamuth sub. dwindled and almost died. Save for the coastwise trades, Amer- colores evens in te Wes aoe /- nitrate and harmless in a face powder. Flake white carbonate, and ican-flag ships were rarely seen. An enormous fleet had been| or statue here i honor of the aouthe Z . * d thank you. Flake white is lead carbonate ilt duri wi i in re-jern hero, Gen. Robert E. Lee. He and if used as face powder or cosmetic it might produce chronic lead poison- built during the war, but it was rusting to obsolescence in re fre orien oe ey est uk ay th subniicate or other bismuth salts are often used tn cometie mote harbors. Keller of Illinois, chairman of the li- preparations, sometimes called “orchard white,” and bismuth salts in cos- A few years ago, attempts were made to revive the mer- | brary committee which has to do with : " metics are comparatively harmless. ‘ : ; hhings, about it. Milk chant marine. The government awarded mail-carrying con- | Uh {ings al Having touble getting Going on trip. Do not like any of the canned milks, Friend says thers tracts to divers steamship lines, paying out fabulous sums so soymting out ots a Democratic Bebe) is some kind of dried age milk eebain wholesome and containing that a packet of a dozen letters might be dropped off at out-of- Bile Mis eacutiny Peed : the roe ry oe ens milk is available, Water edded makes the-way ports. The contracts were really subsidies, to enable | ure of the fact that Mrs. Roosevelt has it practically the same as fresh aa steamers to make runs which otherwise would not pay. Since aaa ad pared Ores tS teaneas. “OF paying income tax h Your position regarding glasses for near-sigh' course, ix isgui idi i in- h it one’s best friend or lose life in contest with auto traffic, mo oo disguised subsidies, they were expensive and in-|on them ie Wil Be Ad I e Great Game of P O l l I | ( S sift on seit cl cas es Tree oso ie i a ies John L. Lewis is going to get some Answer—It is not my position. All oculists urge near-sighted persons Now, at long last, it begins to look as if the merchant ma-|tree advice on personal publicity. (myopia) to wear suitable glasses for close work in order to conserve vision. Pes ict ney ; ; . yright 1987, by The Baltimore Sun By FRANK R. KENT rine is to be established on a straightforward basis. The old omelet ne, ponte ie scenes are |} Coorrient 10%) by Se ‘Without such glasses the strain of using the eyes for close work tends ta mail contracts have been canceled. In their place are a set of |rubticity breaks, and thet much of it THE 1938 SENATORS Ei oa G, cudis aiuee socom til ehin > panes /eeniier (orioppos |g (Copyright, 1987, John F. Dille Co.) straight-out subsidies. The government has signed contracts |is his own fault. So they plan to sit Whether they are spurred by their| their unredeemable iniquity. ing it. which the Democratic party is split|ing, that plants derive great acysa, , * * * Fy <1) |down with Lewis and make some sug- — with 23 steamship companies, under which the companies will victior moved wholly by ex- and the character of the struggle for|tages from cross-pollination. 2 gestions. convene test room For another, in several states receive direct money payments from Uncle Sam so that they can| This group believes Lewis does not|pediency, it is inevitable that the) There is not slightest 0 | aie is already under way for Repub- | control which 1s coming. plants which benefit by this ; : i ; appreciate the importance of middle| Democratic senators engaged in the| doubt that, win or lose in the court | Tite, ls Rinihaly niet Ay oe en depend on wind and insects to do thé compete with foreign-flag lines on an equal basis. class opinion, that he should make it|debate over the court-packing bill| fight, Mr. Roosevelt wants to defeat) Boabs to, change pei. | Foreign pollen usually is more ef-| work. i 5 for renomimation the Democratic tive than n. from the same 4 Oddly enough, the direct payments are proving less expen- | more obvious he is a human being, that|should think constantly of the po- ab pairs up next year and| maries and thus protect Democratic fests iP : sels in, grbat matete| The. paleh fens HIS Teinps on ‘ Herd A - uences, This is as true sive than the indirect ones which were made under the mail con- Caste een ace, Taprel Dress.” confer) teal eonesibenices 2a Aree arssagalnth tis court Olan now. It penalass 8 dna lor, alist, showed, by years of experiment-|1 1-6 times per second. tract system. For instance: agreements which will keep 151|public relations technique and or-|who oppose. And it is particularly| would in fact be abnormal un- tro onniacrea It Pp posted | these various things ships in operation during the next six months are costing the |2*mzation are more important than |true of those who come up next year) natural if he didnt. | And no is by no means clear that the admin- Pi P' Dene nen 2 Awe is they were when he was simply head |for renomination and re-election, | person doubts that the. threats and | ‘8 Uy fo mivins Sess Tas Se BO government $4,600,000; under the mail contract system, the/of the United Mine Workers. warnings which nar been poured its planned “party purge.” Certain- cost for the same ships in the same period would have been|, “Fact is the Lewis press confer-| | The interesting thing is that the) out by administration people sgains’| 1° fr *the general election the Dem- ences, usually attracting 30 to 50| concern of the latter is about the/ these senators are a true reflection ocratic senators who oppose the court $7,600,000. Dep men) are ated as lnsprestive primaries, wails the former pepe rls coatings, Bondy 3 at lcd bill have added to their strength and iat i as Roosevelt's, stands, | more afraid o! general . another inspired i i Furthermore, the subsidies are set up in such a way that correspondents sit in handsome brass-| Pull appreciation of those two facts istic interpreter does not point out| practically ees ae ogee? the steamship companies, by returning to the government all studded, leather chairs, Lewis rum. tells the real story of the situation| the risks they run, assert that they ren: poled Pena ‘anti-New vod profits above 12 per cent, actually stand in some cases to return |>les, seldom smiles and then but| created by this issue more eignificant-| are marked for destruction next year, oe aebondsrehey wil get 4 4 ? faintly, addresses correspondents as| ly than anything else. What it means| are first on the Farley list. Their ‘of the New Dealers because in the full sudsidy price. “Mr, ,” never by first names, as |is that the Democrats who are op-| annihiliation is referred to by the| support of the New Dealers becauuse tn The net result of this new system should be all to the good. | Roosevelt does. No gales of laughter | posing Mr. Roosevelt in this fight risk | “Janissaries of the palace,” to use one | the gene! ‘ ear . th ; i vivid phre ternative, save the Republican candi- In the first place, it should revive the American merchant ma-|fewis is at his best tetery © long, | oe meine Tenominated, but those who ) become es: | date—and they can’t take him; third, are with him risk not being re- parts become they will get the votes of many Re- rine on a sound, healthy basis. In the second place, it will lead | but indifferent on the radio.) elected. Another way of saying it is . publicans who have given up hope of ‘ ends of Lewis ip hope to much new ship building—it is estimated that 100 new ocean | snbitd nat tod oe or ee he | that, the Farley machine exerts its ., | effective opposition to the New Deal eka Hes Shoda uave Srpien ehs)s p= | greatest influence in the party pri-| Obviously, open threat of this sort | from thelr own party. Finally, there ships will be built in the next few years. Eon perky ieee tee Goviet flyers | martes, but once over that hurdle the| are well calcualted to make a dissent-| fs the chance that In some states the Lastly, it will prove a stimulus to American commerce. |{oes go and you set secctinnen eee | snti-court: Packing senators are safe Republicans, as they did last year in fi A because the bulk of the voters are on Glass, will not j Our eyes will be turned beyond the seas once more, as in the|publicans as well as radical New| their side the case of Senator , 5 i De Th - - nominate against an anti-court-pack- great old days before the Civil war. We may get away from| Dealers. There were a thousand per. | ne ae OR You may y ons there that night. ing Democratic senator at all. “ BE AI the Chinese wall theory of prosperity—and, with the world for| But the photo of Mr .and Mrs,| 16%," cxample, the case of the — BSENF MINDED Mu au lacdeece the eight Democratic senators ‘When all this is added up, it seems a market, find a strong new prop for our industrial richness. _| After staying briefly, probeoin war try | OBR opponents of the Roosevelt pro- that the place where adminstration | | . --OR YOU MAY HAVE only one you sam. Bitterness of the New Dealers poitic| WOO ZUR, thteats can be effective isin the pri APOOR MEMORY ations maries; that m anti-court- ‘ Pleasing Neither Side Ped egeeerrelyertt api report Loreto akc ao saact a eed ; packing Democrats who run next year \ 9 If President Roosevelt has learned nothing else from the that teception’s outstanding feature— ‘And those among them who ek eae ee oe a ee Bur WHEN YOU START ti f th A ‘i the atmosphere. The wave of execu-|think that because Mr. Roosevelt p ACAR INSIDE A 6 ‘ARAGE, reaction of the country to his various proposals he should under- | tions in Russia cast @ pall. Some of | «first-named” them in his jolly way MISTER, You'D BETTER | ( stand by now that the way of the reformer is indeed hard. shoe aye an ‘agen? at all. Oth-) at Jefferson Island, he does not share primary outcome. | For ' ] The nation as a whole hasn’t had a picture of the president| ‘Those remaining looked vainly for aplenty eee the federal oftice-holders : j . REMEMBER, To engaging in a love feast with Wall Street, In fact the impres- Fertain attaches and guessed as 01 shout alone, Nothing sillier has been| tergely agg ict ponhie cca especial LEAVE “THE DOORS sion seems to be quite general that they do not see eye to eye| whispered about popular Ambassador ee gee eee jit’ Sica see ee WIDE OPEN! CD any TanUes: Russia Tor G tine, Gomnerit Macias’ | MANE that the wonderful thing sbout| font the welght of the Parley-Hopkins Yet the current issue of Congressman William Lemke’s | ovsky's best triends—Doleteky, Romm, | Mi; Roosevelt was that he does not] machine could be nullified. : Q 1 anybody. It might A i weekly letter to his constituents declares boldly that “Congress Mikhallsky—had been arrested, ‘pre- igen Stans Lye ise Gate Ba areas adie) Rial Ot ete ent j is again beginning to represent the people in defiance of the arnt ee Troyanovaky | well-known fact being that no presi- i A fear the worst, secretly in his heart? | dont ever carried around a greater ; Wall Street influence at the executive end of our government.” No ees DEY: But many felt tension | tga of political hates than he; ever cing plan and will hardly be dis- The subject under discussion by Mr. Lemke was the veto|'"st was Congressman Sirovich of | had 85 much personal feeling against | Poged “at the crack of the Farley by the president of a bill relating to insurance for World War |New York who approached Troy- | those who differ with him politically,| veterans and his veto of the bill retaining a low interest rate on | S0°VSKY and Lewis as they stood talk- { SIDEGLANCES - - By George Clark ing, and blurted out: ~ farm mortgages. “Say, what about all these generals ; The former was over-ridden by the house and senate and |P¢ins shot over in your country?” i .” intervented Lewis, i the latter has been over-ridden by the house, probably will be obviously trving to relieve the soba! passed over the veto by the senate. be just eee Scene Commenting on his bill to appropriate $500,000,000 to re- | esd to naa eroPrinte for the ambas- habilitate the drouth area, Lemke said his recent investigation | ¥°"ers who are being shot in your 5 A ee 5 ; «q. | Country? convinced him that “grain farming must give way to stock rais-| Troyanoveky, with » grateful smile ing,” but that is beside the point in this editorial. See” rar ieee TAPiy, -mmored The purpose here is to show, by such records as are avail- (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service Inc.) able, how it often is impossible to please either side. —— | | BARBS ] Everywhere the Same > a See One of the great handicaps to a sound labor movement any- | ,.7 Payments on the 15 cents a 2 . ay savings plan Telleved auto where is the fact that positions of leadership in “labor unions | makers of one job. Buyers are nickel- everywhere are, all too often, posts of pelf and power. PIRI ae, en Dee anone sera aes In this country, of course, we have John L. Lewis and nu-| Balloons will be sent up to look merous others whose hearts bleed in labor’s cause but who live| ito the “eye” of hurricanes. It ‘ ; A 4 ; be well to ber that | | in $50,000 houses and have 12-cylinder automobiles with liveried ae of dust has ined Shy NOTHIN' BUT Js SOME PANS FELL. TM GETTIN' MY OWN BREAKFAST... YOU STAY RIGHT IN BED, AN! SLEEP. chauffeurs. Some of them, feeling the acute envy which their| %%, effort to outstare an antog- prosperity inspires, even have armored automobiles, * * * rah 4 5 Mich now has a law designed i That this is not confined to the United States is proved by |,, pte e satallastaal level Pipi} i news from Mexico where two separate unions are fighting for ae at that, it might be good for a tri control of the textile unions in the state of Vera Cruz. Peay | They are in about the same position as the CIO and the me man we Joins an Ananias | A. F. of L. in the United States. Here, President Roosevelt | ‘lub usually is the who coul make his bed lad | clearly favors the labor movement. The same is true of Presi-| lie in it) ‘ a pe eae dent Lazaro Cardenas in Mexico. A takeeaitactacts The organ of the National Revolutionary party in Mexico, eliminate errors in iocating ore, wit which is to that country about what the Communist party is to|£° into, mass rapes rede dendd Russis, commente that “so far all efforts on the part of pro-labor | gold inlay. government to establish peace between the opposed labor bodies | ‘C°PYFight, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) have resulted in failure.” Although coyotes choose special That result is only natural. Men have fought over money | Pisces to meet and yelp their weird ‘and power since the dawn of civilization. tne blace feos in smccenion | whl? “ Mil WHY MOTHERS GET G RAY , OPn, 1987 BY eA SamneE, moe aT-OP ae 2 Tumeauenneg tta>

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