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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) * State, City and County Official Newspaper ———$— $$ $$ Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Compeny, Bis- marek, N. D., Payee at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mat) matter. . : Mrs, Stella 1. Mann N President and Treasurer é Archie O, Johnson Kenneth W. Simons Vice Pres. and Gen’l. Manager Secretary and Editor Subscription Rates Payable in Advance tT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 17, 1937 ; Behind ‘Ha, Ha, Ha! Did You Think Santa Claus Was Mad at You?’ enhe SCENES ||! — Washington Gotham Mayoralty Race Tests New Deal Strength . . . Administration May Back LaGuardia ator Roosevelt Against + ++ Old Al Smith- Feud Flares Anew... Parties Scrambled in Primary Con- tests. By RODNEY DUTCHER ne 2 an our Personal Health! By William Brady, M. D. byron eo ‘ ‘ ‘ stio’ ining to health but not ais ATE Pere nit er aiors briefly and in ink. Address Dr. ‘racy case or diagnot name Ail queries must be accompanied by e stamped, If-addressed envelope. GUIDE TO RIGHT aspen eo 4 clear in your mind the a stomach is not aN erg Bea these states are often confused in the popular fancy, you will not worry so much about the so-called acid-forming foods in your diet. Iam not a food specialist, just a doctor, and what I don’t know abou, eating or not eating this and that fills many circulars, brochures and books, for Yankee wiseacres. Once when a callow medical student tried to uphold a Sen- it) Daily by carrier, per year .......- o (Tribune Washington " viltnge/ daehca: iain) ease oF belly : Washington, Aug. 17.—Hypocrisy in na . % diagnosis of appendicitis made by the vache Daly ey ca eee een arate ieee 00 ||politice—although it is virtually uni- : dAuntle Binnel, the village seer, disposed of the upstast by observing that te Daily by mail outside of North Dakota versal—seldom blooms into its quin- y . probably know more when he got a little older. [eed studied ' Weekly by mail in state per year Limepep aliens Mevrerope tenderness 2 hard and T still belleve the notion that certain foods make the stomach and : 01 ear. times when @ na‘ : r ( the system acid is wrong. | Weekly ey tall Titec par veut fs y insists it is taking’ no part in the 4 / : . Wiidosle is diminution of the alkaline reserve of the blood and tissues mayoralty politics of New York City. of the body, a lowering of the normal alkalinity of blood ues, Acidosis | This year’s New York fight also inr i i is practically always a consequence of disease and not ie cause Of disease, : Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation dicates what a mess politics is com- we } Only under extraordinary circumstances which restrict eee of food is ing to, when you recall that Mayor as ~s oe a significant degree of acidosis from faulty diet concei' . every in- Member of the Associated Press Fiorello LaGuardia probably will be anne stance where apparent benefit to aa ie GHearrraeoent peas | The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republica- |;unning on the Republican, Fusion, ’ : ) foods the real explanation, in my opinion, is elther, (> the needed rest trom | tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this |American Labor Party and Commu-| « * F over-eating, or (2) the increased a 5a " mn Newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. | nist tickets. And that the Roosevelt i eS Q of minerals the individual enjoys while following the regimen. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. administration covertly will be work- \ cy 4 However, if you must know, here are lists of foods which leave acid-as} \ 5 ing for LaGuardia—probably openly : i ' type and foods which have alkali-ash: ‘Plowing One Under’ to Check Population it, case, snti-sdministration Senator oe Acid-Ash rf 4 Copeland, Tammany’s can- Pork Oats Corn meal For a dime or a quarter, any fortune teller will look into the | cidate, should win in the ‘city’s Dem- Oysters White exeae Peanuts future and unravel any question about life or death, time or |ocralic Primaries. Copeland has also _ Fish pk ela reaiu cma tcd tide, or whether you'll ever meet the attractive person who sat xe * Celery Bananas Peaches at the next table in the restaurant. Out to Beat Copeland eters Geran ‘Almonds ( But if you’re wise, you’ll classify the results more as amuse-|_From now on there will be emis- Lettuce Lemons Pecans ‘ : eae 5 saries shooting in and out.of Wash- Muskmelon Walnuts ; ment than anything else. Legitimate science and the products |ington with various assurances that : iN Se rearae P of long research by learned men provide much more reliable Codes Cae pecking . \ A Cabbage a Neutral-Ash methods of predicting where the human race will be and how it|he is really behind LaGuardia, whom , / ae Butter mile es eel a Pee will be living one or 1,000 years from now. aad Ae ue impostent oe ine Ss y Milk, skim beet By ‘Acidophilus Milk Honey Because most people have made this distinction and have |tive split of 1940. ‘No one will ever : 2 5 Milk, sour i cheers serie easy ioe tor Par warkinte © play. come to rely on the judgment of our intellectual leaders, it is |suggest that there's any chance me OES 2 ? ing individuals, youthful or mature, to eat cheese, cottage, Dutch, or ai unfortunate to see any of them go on record with such a grim|heerlediy support Coperund, altuough ¥ / : Kind of cheese one lkes, instead of meat, fish or fow a one meal every dr. philosophy as that expressed at the International Congress of come tasters wil, assert that Rots s : See eins tnt llbaly to be deficient, Population in Paris. badibe ae Picea ie nominee. ‘The following, quoted from Sansum’s monograph on Diabetes Mellitus In one of the reports before the congress, Dr. Frank W. ina’: ion i: + |whereas he would do everything in his ee o = . “ 7 e lines se sae we FONE Dh tO baight ana, His wife: wens i talks & : - Cc alee to have a favorable influence upon high blood pressure.” tion, after which there will be a decrease. Between the statements of these men, there seems to arise The hottest tip this writer gets is Notestein of Princeton university declared that a war in China |‘s! tne hep gener eattes might be that nation’s salvation from ruin by over-population. |not get in his way—in any event, to Republican , 80 administra- z At the same congress, Prof. Pascal Whelpton of Miami uni-|tion apposition wilt be more than a |00ue the senator at a press confer versity indicated agreement of American authorities that the pron serene hegre oer But Copeland has « big record as | SO THEY SAY United States will reach its population peak in the next genera-|court plan. Court Reprisals Copeland has no illusions. He pub- a conflict. The United States, without appreciable benefit of |!\cly declares that Roosevelt is break- sek (Harpe: ) fairly reflects a view accepted by many good physicians: Cd FURS Zak had an excessively acid urine often complained of certain symptoms. The acidity of the urine was often associated with frequent and burning urination. Dyspepsia and an ‘acid’ mouth also occur- red. Such individuals seemed prone to sick headaches. These manifesta- —M. D. Collins, state superintendent QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Georgia. Fiat Feet | of schools in ee -months-old has flat feet. 1s this Informed by a clinic that my 15- baby is a vote-getter. One of his strongest." The Japanese war lords never will| I think if you can see the sunny| serious? What do you recommend to correct it? (Mrs. D. Q.) supporters in the present contest 18 /awaken to their mistakes until they |side of some things it’s easier now and ‘Answer—Sounds a silly notion. Exposure of the naked skin to sunlight Al Smith. have been completely defeated by the|then.—Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, | daily, and a good daily ration of vitamin D in one form or another, would (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) |Chinese—Marshal Feng Yu-Hslang, x * e- help correct flatfoot in a child. If you mean the baby has club feet, that — Nanking, China. Iam no man’s man, and I am con-| requires orthopedic or surgical correction—a series of plaster casts, or pos- ence, A * Serena ‘ ** & trolled by no individual of group of|sibly operation, or both, famine, pestilence and war, is riding high, without a poulation Be wD ee Panos eet petal Lopes 1 BARBS } We make plenty of mistakes; we're | individuals. — Judge J. T. Mahoney, : Very Well ‘ral i : is i S cones nal Snend en: ¢ hum beings tor 'W. H. Cit al (Third page). Now please do not tell me to consult a physician. In the problem in sight. Yet for China, war is regarded as the only |limiting a president to two terms. Al-| That patented devies which -pro- [Drones ter of the Gemen, | V* | emtering New York Olty mayoraty) coats t have no felth im the incompetenta around here (D.W.K) fl ¢ salvation—unless the population is checked first by some other told Uppoaition peniges that in ende print to the film, wil be lite bard se * ** * Answer—Just as you wish. But you needn’t have gone to so much trouble. Mi scourge. ing the court plan fight there would of the; No one has fired rocket to the) sxperience will show in the future, Aluminum cl be no reprisals by the administration, moon, or devised @ golf ball that) s. i has in the past, that a supreme Is the use of aluminum as a relining for dental plates injurious to the re This solution is an application of the theory of Thomas ualized by this theory. economic doctrine disproved by events of the last few years, it may be definitely on the skids. If Americans could believe in such a theory, China’s present trouble with Japan would be welcomed here as a great event in|’ the march toward a better world and we could feel happy every time a report came through telling how many more hundreds had been slain. This is the kind of fortune telling that leaves a bad taste. ' Gold in the Junk Yards Chemists have not been able to transmute basic elements into gold. But the scrap iron dealers have. : Senator Gerald P. Nye revealed this in his dissertation in congress the other day on the danger the United States faces of having its reserves of scrap iron and scrap steel depleted. He showed that a firm of Philadelphia dealers had reaped over $3,000,000 last year selling scrap metal to foreign nations, pri- marily Japan. ’ From a normal exporting of 300,000 tons a year, the busi- ness has boomed to the point where 2,134,000 tons were shipped in the first six months of this year. IGF ‘ Pertinent was Senator Nye’s comment that it is not at all unlikely that some of that scrap metal one day will be brought back to the United States in the shrapnel-riddled bodies of Amer- ican boys. i Pointing out that American industry consumes some 20 million tons of scrap metal a year, Senator Nye sees the nation stripped of basic war materials essential to the country’s de- fense. Further he emphasized the fact that those who are profit- ing are a handful of men—less than a half dozen companies engaging in the export of the scrap metal. Is it good for the national economy to permit the stripping of our backyards and farm fields of scrap metal? Senator Nye did not answer the question directly. He pre- sented the facts, infered the senate should do something about it. * Probably nothing will be done. So long as foreigners are willing to pay $28.75 per ton for No. 1 scrap the:vicious business will continue. A presidential embargo might solve the ques- tion, but with the state department fearful of: arousing inter- national antagonism, it is not likely the White House will deign to notice the business. ' : Bad Bigness é About the best argument against huge centralized organ- izations to do the country’s business is the case of Reno E. Stitley. Stitley was a voucher clerk in the park service in Wash- ington, drawing $2;300 a year. But it cramped his style. Through his hands passed vouchers to pay for work in CCC camps. So Stitley created a CCC camp in his own mind, invented names of imaginary people on the payroll, {maginary projects, and even wrote imaginary complaints from the imag- inary workmen. More important, he cashed the checks with which the government paid the imaginary workmen. Fantastic? Certainly! Yet Stitley got away with it for three years, swindling the government out of more than $84,000. The shuddery thing about this is that it took three years to catch him and find out that $84,000 of tax money had been tossed into a CCC camp that didn’t exist. And that speaks more than ‘a big. volume ‘on the dangers of a great centralized | Historians now trying to discern the outstanding public figures of the 3 oe i promises speedier news of gulf hurricanes, a boon to ‘The government wouldn’t hook, but some real boons to health? (G. B.) 3 Copeland knows better and is pub- * * 4 court is an essential part of a consti- Malthus, an English economist, long dead, who saw world popu- leising the Jac that ey ond be.| ‘The Chicago quack who could. |mSnkind have turned up—Albert G.| titional system: of government, —| Answer—No. : :. . :. as made mayor: lation running wild unless certain natural or man-made checks |atthough it seemed sure to be any-| step, shouldn't have hed trouble restrained it. War and pestilence are among the checks vis-|way, a test of New Deal strength in} diagnosing the situation when Both. metropolis. i o* 4 Copeland and his Tammany * oe ‘ Long taught in economics and sociology, classes, the Mal-|cohorts have begun to shout that| Strikers hed to picket New York [Seiden sale, ag and I am eae 2 aa ae cedaee nothing to do with it, Discard those silly notions and consult a t i is sti! i i LaGuardia, not Mahoney, is Roose-|automats. You can’t sit down on jocracy - | God. — Tommy Farr, husian theory is still believed by many. But, like many another yell's real candidate, S ectiee aplgot * Burns, president of the National In- Sleep As You Like ventors’ congress commenting on the | Justice Willis an Deventer: retired. Have always slept without a pillow, but now everything seems to whirl bright ideas of 1937, around even with the pillow under my head and when I lie on left side. 1s x ee Tl beat Joe Louis because I have! this what any woman should expect at a certain time in life? (A. R.) The plan of proper education is the| never been knocked out in my life, Answer—Nonsense. Your pillow, your age and the position in which you fight,} tell a “bad liver” just by a foot- sran police walked in his office. * not live on the memory of past deeds.| Joe Louis soon. (Copyright, 1987, John F Dille Co.) s * The case of the New York state woman, who found a table leg sprouting branches, will discour- . age apartment dwellers who ; G a aS can’t coax ivy to grow in a six- 4 ‘J » B foot window box. Y ; i _ ‘ i ** ‘The Japanese attitude in China BY IDA RINER GLEASON Gopyright; 1937, NB Service; Ine. is a little reminiscent of woman 1 , shopper in @ bargain basement on eae oe : KATHLEEN | 0’SHAN—heroine, sale day. ace Wonder what the first snow- WHOS “MSTAVIsi—ucre, astec- storm will do to peeping-toe- ve story writer. _ Shoes, halo hats and net gloves? Oot tee he vinvet ee ‘The DUCHESS—patron of sure An engineer who predicts 37 mil- | Fealist art. a : Find more ple,” had lion cars by 1960, maps the highway Ginko. BRACEY Rare = invariable ee whi eee Yesterday: Bob and Kathleen cir respec , Studion in th riment ‘at lays dents = of that date—with dugouts for pedes- trians, maybe? ‘The senate okays a 10-cent loan on cotton. But the farmer can hardly get relief workers to pick it for that. (Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc.) CHAPTER II S¢YVONDER, what that little eawe:s o-oo] FOF OTF f BVeEetohsatnrtpra Irishman meant?” muttered 8 Cc £ "Bob McTavish, as he closed the c Coat o S door behind Pat. “Probably an i ‘ old shack like this is lousy with " J writers, and artists and aay rl firm, which was almost true. Any- s HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Pussle BCom: have to make it plain that I : than Glovers- é ;: have to work for my living, Can’t 5 IR} 12 Small child, be having the neighbors running 15 Musical note, in.” He retrieved a crumpled cig- i Sei 22 Work ot aret from underneath a pile of M us. LIAIRIDISMMEIVIEMMOISICIAIN 23 2¢ hours, _ Per eres ame at aie t IRIE RE TIAINIAIGIE RIMOIL ID} 25 This country’s ie 3 GIATITIEIRISMEGIRIAIPIPILIE] largest city ‘Well, Schmatz, it’s up to us to . : i Cheer, near, hear, dear — that IRIE ae Ait} Nn; ——! get unpacked if we are going to erst had had ee dearest, peat G 18 Assum uA wAOA ue 26 Force. finish that last chapter tonight.” : ’ ick eyes, and such a cut ' coun AITIEMMEIEIRINICMMEIEILT 28To abdicate. . He took off his coat-and hung it : f M@ tongue. Schmatz was what the 19 Amphibian, RIOTS MAIC TRIAL SIH 90:70 give on the back of a chair, rolled up : p 20 Nets in scale, CIE Oe rah his sleeves, and went to work. nerae” Maybe somelgiri bad given v : 41Sloping way. has a great 5 After several hours of sorting him to his master. course there 22 Scarlet. 44 Bed lath, centrale’ tgp ee euoeious things, and shifting them around would be a girl. No fellow that 24 Railroad. 621t is rich in 38 Butter lump. Aol the ‘best advantage, hestood good looking could possibly ti 25 Behold. mineral ——. 40 Coral island. J escape. She hadn't seen Pat yet o 26 Pair. VERTICAL °42Soft mute, back and surveyed his future ,|to ask about the new tenant. Oh be 27 Paid publicity i” = home; It had evidently been the dear, where was she? Pp 43 Lost to view. % By Slee bedroom of the one-time mansion. A frown creased her pretty aL Peeing bed. An ornate fireplace with a large m0 cs forehead, and she wrote down a tree. Tanguis! 48 Olive shrab mirror above it took up one end : Se ted : 34Vessel's bow. 86 Maple shrub. {Italian doin. 51 War flyers, petisive soem, Tae walle were Wath) ris is\pretty slick, Schaols.” b 35.A greater 580On the lee. 4Fish, (52 Spigot. the woodwork plain, and the long,| 419 his gpd pleaded See he told the dog. He stretched a 59 Heathen gods. 5Persia. _ $3 To narrow windows had scalloped wu 60 Tribal town- 6 Large rcém. | 55 green blinds and little inside|city,” his father had retorted, mop of tousled hair, drew his se Pie Hee shutters that looked as though | “while the other boys are making |chair up to his typewriter, M is country athe flax. Giay Glad never: Been usted! a snug berth for themsélves. Well! “This is pretty slick, Schmatz,” x Be cee Az2e aaa a But Bob had flung them all|s0 ahead and let me know when |he told the dog. “About two more lother cupful that the teapot held. i eT] a : open at his back, moved his big| You're ready iy come back home.” |real snappy murders, and we can ue ance cre abot) the ae a chair and typewriter stand in eae begin to think about buyin, {dio It was really quite pretty. front of the bookcase, and noted BT 80 far, Bob had been able|cent couch and maybe a a tet Gay cretonne drapes and zed with ansacton that ‘ie ony, 2 Hee Stone Sump aead ve mov, the, ell te, sing git spitdev fu thece: | view was the blank wall. Blank|°f the wolf, which always lurked |e. \vith a sigh of somite ton |tainly ought to be able to rhyme ; walls were highly conducive to| Within sight of his door. He had “Down stairs in studio one, Kath- |“nee?_ and dear—it only that creative work. He could weave |CV> been able to move into this|leen resolutely thumbed through |2Wing loneliness would let her. - the threads of his plot and pursue |"€ Place, which was vastly bet- heey rhyming shistionary, trying a are ee} ei the dastardly villain without any- teehee hee ait /her tack. ‘The sight of the goode| That Young fellow upstairs did p thing to distract his attention. And ct'Y, llooking stranger who had dashed |3¢e™ 8 likely prospect as a friend fe Bob had to run. just so many |°%2 Schmatz had always had hislup the stairs behind the movers, |{F Miss Kathy, but how to bring is criminals to earth each week, i¢| Pe: Take it all in all, they had|intruded on her thoughts to an|him to her notice, She wasn't like he and Schmatz expected to eat, |B0t done so badly. The men down |@Mmazing degree. What difference |‘#€ Duchess now, who'd speak to he heen at Poli - {could it possibly make to her that |@"Y man if she took a notion. dened been 8 very hecartous sep t Sra iahdesa were bs he owned a cute dog, and had a| ‘The terrier came scampering er La re Be eres seit come ginning ow now, when |gay, breezy manner? If she did|through the door just then, dived ode Piped! he came nosing around for a pos-|not finish a certain number of|between Pat's legs and knocked rea his Haracdipaey a eieee sible plot, and were willing that|jingles before night, she wouldn’t |the broom from his hand. h eo ulsttwo citer machen oa he go through the place in search |have the rent money when it was| “Hey ye little divil ye! Where te pitas of ideas. Several of them had|due. Then she would have to go|ye goin’?” He grasped the wrig- “Pa smother with 50 much fame |°V07 Soe £0 far as to read some|back home to Gloversville and|gling creature. “Listen, ye don't ily hung about my oe had |cetus Yarns when they were pub-|teach the third grade and prob-|nade to be rushin’ up to yer mas- b ia. neck,’ ited re Mechs Abe cohen ey him ably eventually ascent Joe Wil-|ter’s room yit. It’s a good turn yé a ve aa 5 jams, wi ulging eyes, tt to be doin’ a loidy, see.” [And you'll likely starye-ig-the|,. He ran his Angers through bis ber” aut and una hossdsiad’” coa'ma coumccage