The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The Bismarck Tribune | is tired uf rhe fireside, she con] OUT OUR WAY ‘By Williams 9 gan KEEP CHILD’S FEET BARE An Independent Newspaper But wlever she may do, or achieve, her tradi OS THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER tional place wothe fireside. And the moders | { — | AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE (Bstablisheg 1873) woman who achieves is always at war with tradi | | A ‘ ‘. | tj arg iu wo who has a successful career ma | y DR.-HUGH S. CUMMING | toes, deform the arch of the foot, Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company ‘0M. \ Soman : ful career’ muy HOLD Hart FELLERS! eee |shotien the muscles, of, the hack of Bismarck, N. 1., and entered at the poatoffice at live it at expense of her home Ti Because | | Surgeon General, United States | the calf and to disturb the relations Surg . Bismarck, ag second class mall matter, atten ain, th e's eateers and their) | i; HERE “TOD, PUT | | Hublie ‘Health Service," [of our internal organs, © 1 ie d . Preside| e: ' ery ap | , | 2 care 0 feet can be dis-| nealities nd pollu- SOS 2 ME tea OU ee " Pyne every | THESE BACK ON [each Scene" uctices pres [ot ane phan Wer eel tt ars os | jtive and corrective. children to walk around bare-footed Dally ay mation ee ae ey a pie this time we have ized thi i \ FORE WA COME OUT! VMAs ‘te the Tormer the care of the; in warm weather. Of course in Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... without taking any We have taken \ ifeet should begin al places where hook worm is prevalent, “IA LOST UM! , ifule, it is a comparatively easy mat- this ‘should not be. done. |ter ‘for an Srthopedie surgeon to] Children should be taught to walk [correct congenital deformities of the| with the toes pointing directly for- ‘feet without a cutting operation, if| ward, the feet being parallel. the child is brought to him in its| It is a fallacy to think that toe- l first. year. ing out is the correct method of | By “skillful manipulation which | walking. Toeing out tends to weak- Daily by mail, per year i (in state outside Bismarck). Dally by il, outside of North D: Member Audit Bureau of Clreulation Member of The Associated Press ted it must Mothe interests ime and greater; of the institute for sts that has been mith College, to be tinaneed for three The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to th a " i fresults in the stretching en the arches. use for republication of all news dispatches credited aur Spe nek ler Founda ened tendons and ligament y | Exercises Hi Wid | to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and als jolding the deformed foot i ter ae shan Taba {fo the local news of spontaneous origin published here to find ition for the problen | prover position and shape and hold-| | Certain simple exercises tend to in. All rlghis of republication of all uther matte every educated woman to | leasts, congenital deformities of the | healthy condition, Moving. the toes herein are also reserved, eaie lem aeemel the of en : jfeet of young children ean very of-| in sll directions is one of them; oe ams is H i a jten be cured. A good exercise for the toes is to Forelgn Representatlves nd mothernood with a life of intellectual activity | | Weak ankles and weak feet oc-|try to grasp a small marble with G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY wofessional or otherwise ‘curring in childhood are usually due| them. Moving the foot in all direc- CHICAGO DETROI Whethot tne anstitateckolves Ane problem OF net] to general debility and lack of mus-| tions is another good exercise. Ris- Tower Bldg. Kresge Bld aNeX ds: am e ¥ He (OOP are cle tone. Therefore the nutrition! ing on the toes and heels is also ex- PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH t ought to bring light very modern and per} of the infant should. be properly su-| cellent. ahete) jens cae _be NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave Blo. lexing problem ! pervised ty 8 pnyiel fh te a thet [tater “uber auene * Hig, apnine: | it receives the prop nd_of food. efore retiring a nt. r r |. The covering of the child's foot is! When the nails are cut, it is het- __(Oflclal City, State and County Newspaper) Thanksgiving — then DO Your Nmas Shopping i ant. The bones, ligaments! ter to cut them straight across and They ch va Early rtilages in childhood are soft: not to round off the corners because Why Students Fail OES y tight stock-;by rounding off these corners, in- Each year through we United States “failure | ings and ill-f The child's | rowing nails are encouraged. | - lens 1 i eet should be bare as many hours’ Persons in certain occupations, takes a heavy toll ang colle lente j jas possibl y when he ix in| such as waiters, policemen, letter eae cumini pee Editorial Comment | Pa ie: vache eo, dak wll eee eee ee : — | w. nd shoes or san Those engaged in such occupations y in order to protec The should be encouraged to ex; the toes to prevent cramping. Great change to fre! ¢ should be taken to select shoes | ings. nd sandals that are roomy, softand| In the morning, fresh, clean, soft, fexibl well-fitting stockings should be put son on and shoes of sufficient lengt Shoes broad and roomy at the toes, well- eels should n fitting around the instep, with soft should bathe the feet every evening upon their r What Motivated Locarno? (Minneapolis Journal What motivation that operated at) Locarno, was the Gern lor, Dr. Luther curope expected to maintain urn from work and h shoes and stoeck- expressed an Chane His idea w that, r in the world, the States of at the Uni-; her posit nrop. ieotonial yp formation, he [ay and economically, their last colonial habit of | | cornfield,” said! is hund up} ever so! nether what L had ju knew what would kick u “E don't | are fadcless forever. | Jac Italian sonnets of such it hurts. sae tone cease quarreling and cooperate, : or child jleather tops and low heels should be —e P h 3 Lf j meant us to stand worn. ling students, made to mh was I sand that was about ally TR Leaws 79 2 position that the heel. In this corns, callouses, bun- vard student necd s Unat jon » The other continents, | jsame level as the toes. ions, ingrowing nails, over-lapping . 1. Dean P. } except as they contained European colonies oy rep. | UNDER COVER. 0.1925 OY NEA SERVICE. INC! |" High heels tend to toes’ and a host of other foot ills sing hand, Dean Paseh inet H py 2 ne | forward, to bene our -waight 'would be avoided. flanks without th ented dominions, scareeiy counted in | k el eras what we zation. Where today, if the | C { \for in High Jinks I " La fl 2 e s of the ages. They q that Bi éesives to continue his sazerainty over | jtern was a real i E r the permanencies. ‘ the yellow, brown and bhick races, he must cease | ia eta | fectly rms and legs, & i s peare knew nothing of. instructors eee te : * ws ee | z ithe rest of him was hollow. 7 sex-complexes, but he t Instrictors | eXpending ene ting is ther white man | 5% ; swell, are!” said Mrs. :.|sounded the depths of human pas- ire ton little whether a student. stands /8Nd conserve all the force of the white race. Where foci | “1 see n Just us I] sion. i \ mut vesterd an colonies. i er conti | worried him : ; saw in the Scare Yes, ived in a limited and child- i ater as but yesterday I an colonies in other cont ink thatehe would have i MSGi Pherae’ 1, ied it with pic- i ny woul i nents remained colonial ors “hie A | Po dissemination 0 lind disippeared in the vortex of the World ¥ hefore in adan . . is as refreshing as the whey student! The United wentelly emancipated itself 1 wom; a Hikes to think Lid Mrs showers of April with which in their offices. ‘These (Some time ago, as a time ago it had politic | ane Se ee i Oru tie uthfa m 1 nous Prologue begins. that John hes the | could se ome way e|his mother what I h [his face lighted up membered that my — moth arting home next week. i T tell you what we can ¢ h id pu ean ot other will t, of cour ition. e and Milton and Goethe lift to the ultimate peks of ima: prout the ination, Or, if these supreme au- d to you v thors are too much, the cultured vine with| leisure of the British'c and the z the ground | older novelists offers a fine antidote for the hectic stress of modern life. elf, for an evening or two re born. tle seed, the War's outbreak the United State: | it. However, 1 rope, to Great Brits jot. | Hf he: we curope, to Great Britain, Hot] if i Today finds the United nation in every ¢ the ‘richest | had no discussion with | ally: but their instructors; they did not seck their instruc: | Wes sal tors, so the did not seek them land and Germ ont the ny [States a credit debtor to you w would | thing th ny main enee throi him and Lillze their physiew),¢reditor nation in istory, its last ¢ Eu cornstalks. you do know a lot of id Jack O” Lantern admir-| a we to the generations What was 1 next, Mrs.{when men had time. . “Pep” may be necess' Next you were x little green hard] row; let “ dpe gone amd fisted its superior vid Buddy down, he placed his arm. pro- | Le tectingly over him, and as he always | mot rope cannot mend | goes, he rai to mine and | h ys Dean Paschal, “no | esteblished. {kur y the C tomor- roan we permit our fancies end whims or even Europe or the Continent of Most of us our traditions to determine our rules and ony it piccer, some parts at the expense of others, as ven minty than “usw | ti n her home but mental daredevils. We enjoy! yyy °at, pan ma ina’ be ‘the word tonight. ' methods.” of yore. old fashion has departed into the lover; di ietauseswo | aillcome. See snd here will tet: be iitakine: things that Burt: us, Irs you prom -entes: chad ©) : So he has installed at the University of Avizona limbo of dead things. Western Europe, this side of asked me to, lam going tot so . - A woman can’t ask a man to marry | FTe™ ane § baa fine he traditional oo ak i tosystem of saving the failures through coop: the Carpathians ani the Vistula anyhow, must im of Bundy ane dove Hin Seng | t thinks Is Ted for the first time | her But that’s no. hat ship. Aman ee thothévthel(tliude: Mas been! -one: 6 Uaupartor loafing, he says, are not causes of tailure; they are # lump, In other words, the collective interest of! Ruth, if, Mrs. Preseo ad take /1 could see that John was _ It's an awful world. But it could | eiakincthetircey. eit zat ay teak istrict . i oa Inadequate preparation by the high schools and |terests, and that fact has reached bot French and She's a meddling old marplot ‘nd (1 | something John would h ‘ ~ £o.enee oe Or Lawton wy he coarse: eee ey mee ne { lack of Knowing how to study force more students | German apprehensions {miei he wouldnt Heys, to live we Fit tmaelt He had ete ees 7 Sendingiiomeone else Cade a ant ; mmoré’fomune? ked iNew York rises to defend itself. ‘ out of college than other individual causes, Dean | Sir Edward Grey, in’ his al turn Jack's mother oyt of doors. | then beth out irdoldu kim sthat. my [ae i. eee opportunity. 13 MoMtacd@ipey: «Tonge. 0 is Me Cais souehavactenee feaneutat Paschal found remarks that the Continent eritieized England, be-| Nevertheless, when Jack hé'| imgthor Was goilig to : ‘bik kelfaoe eee Pe lies dgeaaso. mostly. for eountreicon- “Perllaps our policy may seem too paternalistic,” cause England was always taking a part but sel he ioe the se ee Ae $0, We couldnt ase that exe More shepalners as found “oh dear! That makes me ner-jsumers. Which is doubtless partly ‘ he comments. “However, most college students a dom a side in Continental aff But England terfering with the children, T would|er, Jack, that after this shi (Copyright, , NEA Servic Mrs. Gipsy. “Th: [Most of the “Frenchiness” of % thrown on their own feet too suddenly, We can took so effective a side in the World War that now Neronlige date say thal she could not | not interfere with ¢ my house 7 —— e your tecnk’ Ht nade =| Baris, foe Ulat matter, ts tar Amer: to or my ehildr MY, Say ‘ ical person’ out of you. Just as I{icea tourists. But the main thing kCopyrignt, 1 aba aa ES told Beare Crow that clothes made {is that New York cares. TOMORROW Letter from Leslie jthe man, I must tell vou that in sour| | Whenever a community think make competent students of at st some of the jays, uncriticized she has been resuming her old failures,” role of “honest broker” among nations, to bo: iT him in de il, just what 1h: nd John saw ime row role in 1878 tismarck’s description of German Austen Chamberlain at Locarno , se, a knife made you. ‘the only|charge of immorality is worth d Prescott to Ruth Burke—Continued. e, a knife made y lendip test caste Shas com: ‘munity is on the way to reform. certainly surprised,” said | * Lantern. “Is there anythin; Deaths From Lightning r of ligatning is one of man's oldest emotions, ing of the minds wh itated the me ch Berlin and Pari finally Prehistoric man feared lightning as the weapon o! elfected. i ws unseen spirits, Al of the old mythoiogies made Locarno ought to furnish a name for the new SD “Whose fortune shall I tell now?” lightning the servant of the chief god. ‘The Gr hinge upon which history this October has probably asked Mrs. Gipsy. ‘erence between a pumpkin and 9 2 ¢ 5 2 3 > = z Tonight’s Radio — SS ” cried Jack O’ Lantern. | A tabi said Mrs. Gipsy. “Some for example gave the thunderbolt to Zeus turned, said. Jack):O' Lana d presentation of Gounod’s se tell my es!” eried all the people in’ «f, ‘i Records tell us that both Julius Cae: Here is a six-| pigh sake bend eg hard at enue ar on oer ced and Ne ult Sympathies of Youth | Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter) poleon were dof lightning, It is not di en York into temptation.—Mark 14:18. e pate lent mes 6 (bia Pieman to see if he knew any-| are scheduled for tonight by broad- j to understand their fear. They felt themselves the (New York Times) ithe oe ony sles thing about it. | casters, Satan trembles when he see weakest man upon his knee Cowper. ie “[ shall have to tell you_ the! EASTERN TIME » he may keep it,” called the truth!” said Mrs. Gipsy. “The farm-| WEAF (492) 7—Variety selections. “| Crooked Man. “It’s crooked any-| ex's wife took your flesh and blood! WGY (319.5) 7:40—Comedy drama, H Vand made it into: pumpkin pies. And «pis Family.” : Saw Seiiec ea As fee “Well, I hone his fortune won't! fo frntars childten ate. them.” ’ ay » jovial producer,| “The Iron Horse,” a virile; come out crooked,” said Mrs. Gipsy. | Sgt Ons “Ohi cried posted nek Nee tane by Leas wie, Press of equal of all earthly foes but the lightning out of the Statistic: astic; and every statistician has sky was something against which they could not de- it in his power, in the penumbra of standardized | jut iM (he jeter where he could look fend themselves, official records, to make his own. In yesterda: candescent Bouley But Dr. Arthur W achusetts state Times the director of a training school for delin- Arthur Hopkins, t Goldenesque pl: - in the Astor where he could look Gilbert, Mas commissioner of agriculture, points out, on the quent boys said that young men under 25 are “re-| tu conaduced ee tite oF tribute to the old west—Cap- | “Put Til do the best T can ta make | g Se eee eee eer tne ma CAL (218), 9:45-—Rennie Cor. hasis. of a survey which he has just completed, that | sponsible for three-fourths of the nation’s annual flunked out within the] itel Theatre, fours days com- | your —-Band concert. And, by the bye, both pl from the Maxwell Aj Stallings combin right one, Mister Jack O’ Lan-| yuftin Man who was a bit jealous of) WRNY (258.5) 9:4 fear of lightning is all out of proportion to th $10,000,000,000 ‘crime bil | chances of death by lightning. ;ask for the items in a bill The chance ef death by lightning is less than one permit ourselves to deny Without stopping to pably modest, we ny interest, for the in a million, Dr, Gilbert collected the statistics moment, in crimes committed by persons unworthy for Massachusetts for five In that time 19 of the d people were killed by lightning, an average of 3. ” tern. : aay \"*Sack O° Lantern held out his hand,| MM anyways iw said Mes. | Si sy a Montonse and ees tagion of Gounod’s “Faust.” 7" |Pieman had nothing to do with it.| “WWDAF (365.6) 8—Varied musical EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO Besides Mister Jack 0’ Lantern was! program, not himself until after he. was mur- |" WoOAW 68 2 ‘ ‘ dered. He doesn't need flesh and} WHT (2 blood anymore than a pop-over| Weco (4 Novec!) [needs i CENTRAL TIME said the muck, popular song writer. KSD (545.1) 7:30—Tabloid presen- 4 oF n-| mencing Monday. tion. s eorge M. Cohan, eternal song and dance man, ping a iscretion and virtue inherent in the “voting w To the freshmen and sub-freshmen of iniq- nz his bel meth to me THERE! UVES FINISHED Tels i a ones fa ieee aoe i : The hollower the better!”| WHO 1—Dance om persons per year. Dividing this into the population | uity, our heart, like that of the rest of the com-|whom the Tischtly ie one ance program. yy s 0. eye cht) " = oe ee ¥ “That's so,” said Jack O° Lantern MOUNTAIN TI of the state, it means that one ont of every 1.013770 | munity, most freely “goes ont.” An ounce of con-) With great favor... Saw a Meu MUST READ \T, Tes. IT’S A in a . “Am 1 going! ! Paneer presen- persons were struck during the year, jereteness is worth a pound of generality, A year | MAU 8 doe through he eed PSALTITVL STORY. to live tation of three-act comedy, “Duley.” The danger from speeding autos, for example, i. ago youth whose domicile was in Washing | gestion a humans became comes next to have his KPO (42: ce selections. g mf to) | 4 & 4 several thousand times a greater menace to lift s paroled. He was serving a sentence in the °f such proportions that traffic told. REL; GBT) AS sorephine E~ Se stopped, I pught me. “opyri 9 . ‘ r than is Jightning. uisetts State Prison. He was “doing” five tere ts a nntneaett me it (Copysight, ADEE NEA Serv jDawler, soprone, and aasiphing mttieke, 2 Dr. Gilbert's survey shows that you are ten ani | y for “conveying” an automobile, probably a in the advertising wh sed hur- - r | ur li u half times as safe from lightning in a city as you | Ford, technically the property of a oe of the Jelne: the HePne eS Payot fe Me pales e in the county {Superior Court. Ipassenger on the bi h brought} if ee Y him back from E the most. popula j with the complete HAPPI- NESS of the wonderful “Ground Gripper” shoe. Sold excluntvely by Alex Rosen & -* cots ro. me he is use in the city, steel frame buildings. | ‘The other day this brand plucked from the burn ‘| x with dittle and the like draw much of the elec-/ing was found in a still highly combustible condi: | children he ever did ces rgy out of the atmosphere while a storm | tion. He wa ted after a long search, Ae |Muggsy McGraw, as the Le is brewing and therefore the resulting storm usually | cording to the State Police, by means of an ingen- [URC dine was once does not possess the electrical intensity of a thu ious system he has prigged and sold more than 150]and he seems to have been derstorm in the country jautomobiles, Such is the hopetulness of youth and | changed by the years. now Wires and steel frameworks also act as lightning | such at times or oftener the working of the genial f protectors while a storm is in progress, habit of parole. It is to pe wished that no uncon Dy. Gilbert thinks, however, that a farmhous’ scious remembrance of that Superior Court Judge's which is properly protected by lightning rods cor | automobile wag in the mind of that other Superi¢ rectly installed, is as safe as a city dwelling during | Court Judge at Brockton, who, sentencing thre This is be Ae") L Me ey "BEAUTIFUUW” Story !) I DON’T WANT TO WASTE MY TIM] READING Nove cs! L WANT STUEE THATS TRYVE TO Cire !! Two complaints \of American drinking habits come from Europe. One is that Ameri tourists drink too much. The other is that they drink too littl In the hectic resorts, they storm the bar and make nuisances of them- selves. In German restaurants,they order lemonade and pass up even the ful broker. pronounce the Ei right good time j playwright, and i ‘nights Saw ugene ‘0 P = rc > ABBE Neill and am told ghat that good light wines and b€er of the country. ‘ a thunderstorm. youths for assault on and robbery of an old man, | Noman is soon to become as famous Doubtless most of these lemonade p. { Raga a j used this regrettable language: “No lawyer need |i tas her famo hus- drinkers in Germany belong to that Worthy of Study ask me to grant probation for any crime of vio-[P®™s 07, Ly Yate omalonliy OL auedcans (np Life must have been considerably simpler in the | lence, During the op 1 have drinking or have got out of the ha- good old days when the male went forth after bis} Tne case of the young gentlemen with a passion , been much game and the female stayed at home by the fireside! for other people's c: aveling, ew Engla waiting to cook what her man caught. by the benevolent as burgh, bit of it since. prohibition, and’ who now find. themselves more comfort- | sble without it in a country where there is no legal or social objection, or purses should be regarded an exception to the general and other i i i Es ‘There was a distinct division of labor. A man! yule and a youthful error. If the number of juvenile | A See ee cn ee And fhe KoesSS: and here the Revexagea are aa. Ma mh mn ral one comparis e e betwee joubtless also some had his job and a woman had hers. These didn’t | criminals is great, what better means of decreasing New York and other cities of the A UT RUT TO UFe’ —— seems =e pes Mthe Mdentical *Sadividuals whe conflict, jit can there be than to sive the offenders from country, more evident than anyother, MS COU'D GET GNOUGH OF THAT It imade such frantic spectacles of Men and women may not have been any happier punishment? When they find how easy justice is /'* that of ie Sean Rea - = = . 22) j shemselyes pele peerage Jandag, in those less complicated days, but much of the with youth, naturally and inevitably won't they turn York which make it an abnormal ' ica who have had the drink complex. frigtion and struggle that goes on today in the 80"! from the error of their wa: At worst, shouldn’: jand uncomfortable place In which to HThey did not particularly want | cial and economic world did not trouble Mr. and | they have a chance to show that they are bound to'g? the country soon tires of it, ‘Yet eee Be ene want the priv’ ae Mrs, Primitive. be “hardened criminals” before their peccadillocs | wit®4l New York has the best police So, long brooding on the idea,they leap'to the chance when they reach a\“free” country—and then’ they tment in the country. Its Today those definite barriers have been eradi-! are treated seriously? A youth who steals may yet SPER iitiee ape? batten CALs Senet camer eanee teem TT Tat Teter Tees {. ated. We can no longer say positively—this is | commit murder; but why not give him the benefit of streets are cleaner. Its service to find they don’t like it. *° man’s job or this is a woman's job. As a matter of| the doubt and wait till he does? Why not protect crayilons at tie depots ts pe they oon 2m ier in Sols x i , re er. e 2 ii fi Z fact, we don't care whether a job is done by a man/ nim? Soctety to strong and needs no protection, | ts hotels, are, better. fhe external Cecumed: (ber -auiis eialeees * or by a woman, £0 long as it is well done. One can’t be too tender with the young, the prom- any other part of the universe, even’| drink lemonade. : ‘ F . i If 2 woman isn't satisfied with the pay' check her jising.. We have sometimes felt that no so-called ;*ough the inner man may grow und Ath He's ‘a diptotiiat” who» ¥emembers ; warped and cankerous. We might do well to revive a taste | hi y husband brings home shé-can go out and get one | criminal under 45 or 50 should-be-puntshed,.~ ome —JAMES W. DEAN. | | forthe’ eld-"books:-oPhey are "the | aye Girls birthdays: Dpt' forgets: per pres 2 18 NRE AE Ag ' Ps ad wap 4 ' e

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