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PAGE SIX - WHICH SHALL ~ TT BE, HOOVER OR COOLIDGE Commerce Secretary Said to Be Ccolidge’s Secdnd Choice For President (BY CHARL _ Washington, M yVART) general that re 1928, b; nominated in however, r nomination for himself, it's inferred he’d be for Hoover in 1% Hoover would be 58 the! nd it's | a long tin | The 1 idge thinks merce see es sident he know i elf. ds On Him dent depends 1 other the single y of the T That the pre: Hoover than any his cabinet, with tion of Secreta Mellon, in the } artment, isn't his is speak yre on | chief execu timate with gent. | Hoover's department is near the} foot of the list, in formal order of cabinet seniority, ranking only Department of Labor, but actually the Californian has succeeded making it the most import in many ways. Offered Other Places Barring the portfolio of justice for which he lacks the legal train- ing, and of the treasury, so long as it remains in Mellon’s hands, Hoov enld have had any other place the president's off: family long ugo, uad he wished. Indeed, at various times the presi- Attorn dent has wanted to transfer him, but Hoover preferred not. Ws ensy to understand why. Nomi- nally ge, except downward, into th bor Department, would | be promotion for him, but really he'd have less authority any rate t i e he was expanding his . as he has the one} From the process of assimilation, merce Department, of a bureau here, n division there, a commission some other place, has been going on. Anywhere he went it’s a certainty the same thing would begin, only it} would have to begin at the begin- ning. Gets What He Wants For instance, as secretary of com- merce, Hoover gazed covetuously up- on the Bu Mines and the pat- ent office, originally appendages of} the Interior Department. He wanted ’em for his department and he got ‘em. the soul of efficiency, but: y—except political effi- asset to a politician? 1] wonder. Still, Coolidge evidently believes in him political And nobody doesn’t know h an say Cal Coolidge noliti The super session W: e Mr. and Mrs. was » the p the hospi Now covered that the: Wednesday rents too it has so in these parts Mr. and Mrs. marek shoppers ‘The Miller and in Bismarck Fr good, much Gierke were for a few Bismarck la: and was enjoyed by George and Will doctoring cars up hi days. L. H. Speaks, from south of Meno- ken, was a caller in this neighborhood é Tuesday. I Mr. and Mrs, John Mr. Herman ( ew Mr. Joc Fisheher was fa load of wheat Wednesday morning. shoppers Tuesday. = a - Mothers Look for the Quaker’s picture ~ when buying oats. HEN children say they don’t et like oats, it’s usually because rich Quaker flavor is missing. : Children who ordinarily don’t take to.oats are often quickly won to this important food, simply by giving “Phe flavor is uniquely different; toasty, rich and creamy, Quaker @ats alone has it. Some SO years were spent in perfecting it. 2 combine in making (Get Que Quer (cnn 05 3 ( a Quaker Oats today at | PURE {month ago I took a of | These two factors are the very foun- Compiled by the Bismarck | | 7 DAR. Grand Pacific B.D. O. P. me Indian Auditori 1,0. 0. F, Ene: 1.0.Q. ughters of Norway ci CT. & ULC. 1. Auxiliary Lions Club —G, P. Hotel Club) Mrs, M. We Sisters mmission Canton hs 1.0.0. 8 Yeomen % y Club Legion Aux Legion A. O, By “A” Third and preign W Mall. BP. O. 10, 0. 23) Knights of 24 Lions Club—Grand Px Pythian Sisters—A. O. U, W. City Com! City Hall 1.0. 0. Club—G, P, Hotel W, Club—Club Room Foredters Mary’; bordinate—I v's. 0. 0. 0. O. I onic Chapter—Temple . £ men--A. O. U, W. Hall 26 Rotary Club Hotel. American Legion Auxitia American on—A. O. UL W. 7 Company “. Third and in... 8 Rebekah Lod. 1. 0. 0. Hall... 3L Lions Club. - ¢ Hotel City Commission—City Hall ..... MILK The following address on Pure Milk Control, delivered yesterday by A. W. Ecklund, bacteriologist, at the mect- ing of the North Dakota Public Health’ Officers’ association, will be of interest to all persons interested in health measur 8 a « The Necessity of Milk Inspection Tt is obvious from a consideration t of the subject that the produc disribution, handling and final dis- position of milk must come under scientific investigation and control, Milk and its products are used in enormous quantities as a food, over! billion pounds per year in the U. aw average of pout 750 ands person, Seven hun. d pounds of — excel-| 1 medium A milk ae, per fifty culture ja as well as » dre lent t sample of n from a certain dairy ms t and found that in’a single gla his milk there would be approximate 2 billion bacteria. When it is realized that sewage in the same amount would contain only about one-sev: is | 0 can have some conception of the process that milk undergoes while deteriorating when handled un- der improper conditions. Pure milk is an excellent need food containing all essen ements for body metabolism and growth, it is easily digested by most people, is ca- pable of being modified into a great variety of healthful, wholesome and tasty food, such as ice cream, che butter, ete., and is the perfect food for babies. On the other hand im- pure milk has caused and is respon- jsible for more sickness and death chan all other foods combined. The reasons for this are in the inherent qualities of milk itself which are: A) Milk is an excellent culture medium for bacteria, and a slight in- fection may cause wide spread re- sults. (b) It is a fluid, consequently it takes into solution all soluble mater- ial that it comes in contact with, and its white color prevents the easy de- tection of dirt. (c) It is the me posable of all foods, duc to the ease ith which fermentation and putrify- ing bacteria may attack and break down the lactose and protein, (d)_ It is the only standard article of dict obtained from animal sources te. © t readily decom- and consumed in | These four characteristi make it necessary and imperati its production, handling and disposi- tion should be supervised by the state or city before it is sold as food. A direct relation between a milk supply and the health of a community exists, dirty and bacterially decomopsed milk will reap a_ rich harvest from the babies expec in the summertime. So apparent h ei norant or the prejudiced will adyo- cate anything but the most strenuous enforcement of a modern milk ordi- nance? If it were possible to divert jonly a small portion of the moncy and ! effort used in the enforcement of the 18th amendment as it stands, into the enforcement of a nation-wide crusade for pure milk, I believe many more lives would be saved and milk-borne diseases would vanish, Methods of Control After six years of constant activity as a bacteriologist and chemist, two outstanding thoughts impress them- selves along this linc First, “No money, no milk control,” second, “No [iegal”’ support, no milk control.” dation of all subsequent activities, and without them milk control will -become simply a farce—giving a false ‘sense of security and accomplishing nothing, breaking down at the most. critical time, leaving the ‘health ficer high and dry to ind the criti- cism that will inevitably result. Assuming that a finencial and legal foundation has been secured, the health officer wilt then concern him- self with the laboratory, Since a city of 10,000 afford to maintein a laboratory with: out state sid, two other possibilities ives, first, to.send, th DATE SCHEDULE FOR THE MONTH OF MAY i er Columbus 15 Rainbow Girls ~Ms Tempic 17 Lions Club ic Hotel City Commission Hall Masonic Blue Lo ‘emple 18 ¥ Grand Pacifie Hotel Temple : ae ALO. UW, Hall... 5 ubordinate 1. 0. 0. F. Hall Hail | “Hall. Country Club Tati Usk By A. W. Ecklund publ. office of a who, with the aid of a portable labora- 01 of the milk supply of the smaller proved very satisfactory. ices of the laborato most solv his assistant will first determine the names of all parties selling milk in| jumbled up, his town, and after the inspection of cach dairy, i tions as ordinance with regard to cquipment and metho¢ mit, this gi period Milk samples, usually one quart, are da sent to the laboratory for analy: necessary for the satisfactory contro! | of the milk supply by the inspection of the ter fat, solids not fat and total solids, ‘teria per ce and special examinations for pathogenic bacteri of the first three, in any wa: bacteriological standard is by far the |" most important. concerned chiefly w someness of milk, independent its chemical or physical con Unie duction, handling and storage, milk undergoes rapid changes which ren-/ der it an unwholesome food, expecial- ly changes are about, by and multiply therein. cow stable, thing that the milk comes in contact | ulation or less cannot |'whi THE BISMARCK F Whether the lactic acid bacteria or the putrefacttve organisms predomi- nate in milk depends Jargely upon the temperature at which the milk is kept. If the milk has nof heen chill- ed directly after milking and has been i allowed to remain at room tempe [ture or in the sun, the putrefactive organisms are likely to predominate and render the milk unwholesome or dangerous before it sour: If it i Association of Commerce 1:00 Hall. é kept in an ice box the lactic bacteria 0. U. W. Hall usually predominate and the milk ks Hall will remain wholesome until it turns sour, | as is the case of bovine tuberculosis and streptococci. Most frequently, however, milk becomes infected from human sources, cither at the farm, dairy, during transportation and through the agency of flies. Tubercu- losis, typhoid fever, dysentery, vcar- let. fever, diphtheria, septic sore throat and infantile diarrheas are a few of the diseases that have been idirgetly traced ‘to an infected milk { supply. 4. Inert Bacteria. These are harm- less saprophytic organisms of which over a hundred and twenty species \have been found in milk: They are neither beneficial nor detrimental and, therefore, give us little concern, The bacteriologist after having per- formed the necessary examinations on the milk, namely, the physical, chem- cifie Hotel . Hotel s Club Room, 4 jrand Pacifig Hotel he ical and bacteriological, will then be Catholic Order of Foresters —St. Mary's in a position to interpret the condi- Knights of Pythias-A, 0. U. W. Hall... tion of the milk. He will then in- ion of Com urd of Directors —G, form the health officer of the results Hotel naa of his examination. and will cither grade the milk or make such recom- mendations as he sees fit. The health officer will either approve, change or disapprove such recommendations and if the occasion warrants, will proceed legally with the aid of the city at- torney against the violators of the milk ordinance. If @ less drastic course is desired, either the bacteri- ologist or the health officer will in- terview the offender, point out his errorvand advise him accordingly, for it must be remembered that one of the principal lines of work of a pub- lic health laboratory is educational. VOTE FOR STECK QUEEREST EVER CAST IN SENATE BY CHARLES P. STEWART Washington, May 7.—On the ques- tion whether Smi W. Brookhart of {Towa should keep his seat in the Unit- ed States senate or give it up to Dan- amples of milk to the nearest state|iel F. Steck—Steck won—some of the health laboratory for analysis | queerest votes were cast that the old- nd second, the state may create the |hanger-on around the Capitol can re- traveling bacteriologist | member. 5s It wasn’t that regular party lines ‘were shot completely full of ‘holes. That's become the rule rather than e exception in the last two or three If the ser can be secured,| But in this case the senators were he question of milk sanitation is al-| regardless not alone of party. They The health officer or| didn’t even break into liberal and con” servative groups. They were all UL W. Hall CONTROL , will make periodic examinatio ies. In practice this method has | 3. Pathogenic Bacteria. Specific! disease producing organisms may come originally from the cow itself! ary, to his backbone. present scrambled state of politi TRIBUNE They Wear , Man’s Collar: Republican can as the and Curtis Steck, on licans and He These two Manistee, Mich., girls have introduced a new fad—dog col- lars for semi-formal afternoon wear. ey have thcir names engraved on ’em too. Left to right, they are Katherine Bigge and Rogene Daniels. He plunked for Brookhart when his name wa It may seem odd to marvel tha Republicans voted to seat a Republi- gan—but not when one considers the Take Senator Bruce, a very, very conservative Democrat. The very, very conservatively Democratic Si just the man to catch Bruce’s vate, and so the did. But it would have been a good deal Democrats and Republi- cans, Farmer-Laborites, liberals and they mect the condi- conservatives alike. To sort ‘em out looks like a hopeless job Some of the Votes i Brookhart’s a radical Republican, Senator Ashurst’s a liberal Democrat. ege of selling milk and cream for a| It was natural for Ashurst to vote for ‘ar, provided such|Brookhart in preference to the Dem- specified require- | ocratic but conservative Steck. milk ordinance.| Senator Butler's an ultra-conserv- ative Republican. It was equally na- tural for him to vote for Steck. Bute note—the ultra-conservatively Republican Senator Bingham was for, Brookhart. Still, though conservative, Bingham’s extra conscientious. He voted, not the way he felt, but as he thought he ought. So he doesn’t count. : Glancing on down the list we come! to another Brookhart vote that cer- ical standard as specific! tainly surprises us—the vote of the mperature, taste, color, re-| dyed-in-the-wool regular Republican e index, dirt, ete. | Senator Curtis, senate majority floor) The chemical’ standard \ieader, whom Brookhart's radicalism! in the 68th congress nearly drove wild. Reed of Missouri voted for Brook- hart, but Reed’s a notorious Demo cratic insurgent and Brookhart was kind of a senator, regardless of party label. P Reed of Pennsylvania, And ‘his colleague, Pepper? licans, yes, but as regular as two clocks, and with no more in common “| with Brookhart’s kind of Republic than they have with Trotsky They cast Brookhart votes. ‘And, of all senators, Read Smoot- --not only conservative but reaction- ——————— specified in the local milk he will then issue a per- ig the owner the privi- collected at itnervals"tnknown to the | ry men, at least once a month and) Milk is judged by four standards, | one by ithe milk inspector and three y the laboratory are! They ar 1. Saintary standard as determined s but- Bacteriological standard bac. Without underestimating the wale y, the however? A health officer is} the whole- great care is taken in its pro. ildren and babies. These | produced, or brought |” bacteria which enter the milk after it is drawn from the cow Their source is from the dust and manure of the the hands of the milkers, utensils, milk rooms, and in fact any-| for cl Women’s Health with, Cleanliness is the secret of wholesome milk production. Certified milk should, contain not over ten thousand bacteria per cc, grade A not more than 20,000 per ¢ Is protected and charm as- and grade B not more than 100,00 Any figures above these numiers in-| sured this NEW way of solving their oldest hygi- dicate that the milk is dirty, old, con- | taminated or ‘warm and, therefore, + unsuitable for human consumption.|| €Mic problem; true protec- The number of bacteria per cc is the! tion; discards like tissue best single index awe have of the gen- nee ex- eral sanitary character of milk the importance attached to this pisses it CORES of ‘women's disorders _Kinds of Bacteria in Milk | are largely traced today to old- _ This is the erucial point of the sub-| time “sanitary pads,” insecure and milk may contain more bacteria unsanitar: any other known substance—! UNsanitary- many more than sewage. The num-| Eight in 10 better-class women ber of bacteria per ce need not alarm| today employ “KOTEX.” Wear lightest gowns and frocks the consumer, it is the kind of type | that most concerns us. It is the con- without a second thought, any day, anywhere. yensus af opinion, nothwithstanding, that “milk contains an excessive num: ber of miscellancous bacteria is not NO LAUNDRY Y Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads! i suitable for infant feeding. Four groups of bacteria are or may be present in milk as purchased. 1. Fermentation of lactic acid bacteria. Lactic acid and other sub- ‘ Deodorizes. Ends ALL fear of offending. Bs: You get it at any drug or depart- ment store simply by saying “KOTEX.” No embarrassment. stances produced by lactic acid bac- teria .are not harmful, and milk soured by these organisms under! proper conditions is bencfigial. Aci dolphilus milk is an example of this ‘type and is used to reduce or prevent the growth of putrefactive bacteria in the intestinal cana) 2, Putrefactive Bacteria. hese gain entrance into the milk through dirty and careless methods, and pri duce a series of changes in the milk h finally result in its decompo- tion. These bac- harmgel roducinig new yer wos only a KOTEX sition and pytre: teria and the! and often Bh ae 3 fe Repub-| Sunday May 9% : What is more beautiful than to Say Tt With Flowers OSCAR H. WILL & COMPANY FLOWER PHONE 784 319 3RD ST. pretty less astonishing to have seen Bruce | 192 yote for Brookhart than it was to sce |a reg Curtis and Smovt voting for him. Helped Democrats Brookhert, remeniber, has claims on the Democrats. H of the time, in the 68th Congress. H fought the Coolidge administration in ‘the last national campaign. In the reular Republicans’ side tre was a dreadfully pei opinion, a Republican. they sce it, half as good a Republi- ator Underwood. Yet men like Smoot ingly, indeed. Here’s Christian char> ity—or something. things to endear J&P Coats Thread 100-yd. way you want them a 7. SPOOLS 25c Gilbrae Gingham The ve French inches wide.. 60c value Ladies’ Silk Ladies’ $2.50 silk rayon Un- derwear in peach, flesh, or- chig. One ninety-cight Levi Strauss Alls Blue denim, copper riveted Overalls, ly superior to any made and every pair guaranteed. One ninety-five pair Ladies’ and Chil- dren’s Footwear All sizes and kinds are in- cluded in this lot. blacks, tans and satins. clean them. up we are selling them for one dollar Ladies’ Silk Jersey Sli Ladies’ silk Jersey Slips in high colors and all sizes, Regular price $2.45. ene eighty-nine FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1926 thou; ular h he says he’s going to mocrat now. doesn’t make sense any more. DESIGNS HELICOPTER London——Si: ous bridge builder, is finishing a sign of a helicopter which, if it fl will become the ice of the Bi ish government.. Sir le helped them most He ‘ul thorn— who wasn’t, in their He isn’t, 15 years. BUILDING IN ROME Rome.—The building program old-line Democratic Sen- 1926 includes were for ihim—unavail- | 990,990 lire, or $2,400,000 pet teh aed hi ATE PLENTY MEAT Washington.—-The average co er ate: 154.3 pounds of meat in 192) the other hand,Vhas dono n to the Repub- ‘win dislike from Demo- plugged for Coolidge ‘i Meat and Livestock Board. J.N. McCRACKEN STORES The Golden Rule —, Quality Merchandise for Less Men’s Caps Men’s Dress Caps, in light colors, adjustable sizes. Will fit any head. One dollar $1.00 \ Hope Muslin Hope Muslin, finished soft for the rfeedle, 36 inches wide. Fifteen cents yard 1 5¢ “YARD Limit 5 yds. to customer spools, assorted; any ree of imported ingham. Thirty-two 39 Men’s Horsehide Gloves Men’s good horschide leather Gloves, well made and all sizes, ninety-cight cents 98c 81-in. Pepperell Sheeting Bleached Pepperell Sheeting, 81 inches wide. A real value. Limit 5 yds. Thirty-nine cents yard 39c ¥ARD Rayon Teddies $1.98 They are positive- $1.95 cording to a report, of the National be Ain't it a mixed up mess? Politics Bradford Leslie, fam- de- ies, rit- radford, who is 95, has been working on the model for construction of 2300 small apartments at a cost of 60,- um- ac. one <aecgrence ee sé Little Gents’ Tennis Shoes White™ canvas, leather trim with good crepe rubber sole. Lace_to toe style. One dol- lar ten cents for small si: larger sizes $1.25 and $1.3 $1.10 81x90 Pepperell Sheets Hemmed Pepperell Sheets, 81-90 inches, and is one of the best made. One nineteen each. Limit: two to a cus- tomer $1.19 eacu There are To $1.00 lips flounced —_ bottoms. Now $1.89 AUDITORIUM THURSDAY, MAY 13 YOu AN In fairness to yourself, try this few cetts. I Go tose COM ‘NONO ANETTE PRESENTED BY EOWARD O.SMITH IN 4 ASSOCIATION WITH HARRY H FRALEE TONLOR HOLMES fad LOR geaurituL SintceN IN 3 _ . CURTAIN 9:00 P, M. PRICES—$2.75, $2.20 and $1.65; Gallery, $1.10 Seat Sale, Harris & Woodmansee, Tuesday, May ‘lth. . Mail orders now if accompanied by check ? ANNOUNCEMENT We are now open.to do busi- ness in the cash. buying of* loose. eggs direct from the producers, also from the mer- chants. , We are located on Broadway vat Tenth St., across from the Catholic school. We solicit your bisiness.,, , 1 x North Aimerieati Creamery Company