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e ‘The Bismarck Tribune An Independent New: THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) [2 SEES ESESnen enh erected Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, Biemarck, , and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck’ as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ............+ 1, pay by mail, per year, (in Bismarck)... Daily by mail, Per year, (in state outside Bismarck) } Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota lember Audit Bureau of Circul Member of The Associated Pres: The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin Br published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. t (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Red Cross Vegetables Just at a time when it was believed that the BE greatest problems of flood relief in the Missis- sippi valley had been solved so effectively, comes t : the disconcerting news that the more unfortunate Sa of the valley people are in grave danger of an epidemic of pellagra—a terrible disease. Major disasters in the history of mankind often have been more awful in their after effects than in their immediate inflictions. Large as have been fatalities from earthquakes and floods, the greatest loss of life has always been caused by epidemics wEth followed the catastrophes, In war, too, up to the World War, when medical science invaded the ‘wattlefield, the loss of life through epidemics rag- ing among troops has been greater than the loss ‘ef tife through shelifire. Yt is in fighting these epidemics which come in the -wake of every major catastrophe that the Red Cross, the army medical corps, and the United States health service have done their greatest work and performed their largest service to mankind. That 4 these organizations can rise to meet the present cmergnecy in the flood areas seems fairly well as- sured, for the nature of pellagra is known and its prevention and cure have been proven. Pellagra, in its final analysis, resolves itself into a matter of proper feeding. Too many of the flood victims have returned to their barren lands stricken ; by poverty, and have attempted to maintain life on such slender diet as cornbread, molasses and sow- belly. With their gardens all gone, no fresh fruits and vegetables have been obtainable, and for lack of these vitamin containing foods, the flood victims face the danger of pellagra. Secretary Hoover, who directed the flood relief work, has already planned for just such an emer- genéy as this, and when he announced recently that reconstruction workers would not be withdrawn from the flood area for 18 months, he appreciated the seriousness of the problem that his forces had to meet. The Red Cross, in its infinite mercy, has been catted upon for many strange services, but in its new role as a purveyor of fresh vegetables to the “poverty-stricken, it is only fulfilling its mission as a battler of disease. Pipes Versus Cigarettes “The once popular pipe is losing ground to the cigarette. This is the only conclusion that can be . drawn from the various statistics that have been published showing that the sales of pipe tobacco -have ‘steadily declined while the sales of cigarettes have steadily mounted and at present are at a high level, in fact, the highest ever recorded. For instance, the word comes from London that the use of the calabash, meerschaum, and briar is on the wane. In the theatres and the clubs, particu- larly, the cigarette is displacing the once popular man’s smoke. The pipe’s history is long and picturesque. In each country the pipe has its own past. For in- stance, when the pipe came into vogue in England there appeared professors of the art who gave les- sons for a moderate charge. Books and pamphlets expounded the proper technique, how the smoke should not be drawn into the nose or lungs, but be drawn into the mouth and then expelled through the lips. The Indians of America had the calumet before Columbus arrived. Pipes have been found in dif- ferent parts of the world made of leaves, bamboo stalks, stone, bones, pottery, brass and iron. Amer- ice - le its unique . cpntril ytion to pipe history with the corncob, perfected by'a middle west smoker whose identity is unknown. * But. no matter what a pipe is made of it even- tually will stink to high heaven. Women do not like to smell them, neither do they like to smoke them. Thus we suspect that the fair sex has been somewhat responsible for the decline in popularity of. the pipe and the increase in popularity of the cigarette. Whether it is a good tendency or not yet remains to be seen. ESEE S545 88. 322F_ Sess. Europe and Foreign Markets Real competition with restored European countries is something the United States is going to face soon, in the opinion of Governor Fisher of Pennsylvania. Governor Fisher points out that the time is past when we can consider Europe’s economic condition as something so fragile that her trade interests _gapnot successfully compete with ours, On the con- ae y, Europe has made perhaps more rapid strides war than we have. ‘thing about European trade which makes it for us is the low price at which they sell across the Atlantic. They are not such:.well- ie. goods, but they do look just as attractive as put forth and for that rea- rate had very steadily declined. Thus this slight rise may be just a small fluctuation in a general Committee on Public Relations of the Eastern Rait- roads regarding the work these lines did during the recent flood in the south. ry of the sout ardiess of the tremen- heen “This yt should rank with that of ren ot Jour fanily. chetted you out | Cherry reader we wonder!to some extent by the fact that the}: the Red Cross and other leading relief agencies as nee a fine thing, proving that the railroads are ready,| wilderment. “But how can you ‘give born, with Rho eit which Geo: in time of need, to throw their resources into the ,it to me, George? erated, child?|ttied’to give her, Faith. And as.a scales in an effort to prevent loss of life and a!- {he acknowledged, his, head cocked 0 | y, leviate suffering. | several of his co-workers into a small laboratory! ¢ifui, that you have ‘it, room, started a crude wax disc revolving and while | they listened awestruck a few lines of poetry were repeated from the tin horn of the apparatus. Thur (body, soul and mind the ability to| began a business which now sells millions of dol- hold love which is given to you. Tian sorts of love—the 4 think my own ‘unwavering devotion F; “accidents ena A lars worth of its products every year and is a fa-|to you proves that, doesn't it? Oh, people, of children, of dog: ee to sebmi clwayarts bave an seaaeanes : nd 1 women. You will not b abt to walk loth ‘when there are miliar thing in almost every home. don’t be afraid! Vm not going to| Sows the street without attracting In 51 cases, Friction | between the Kis a onee in, hele sci f Fustajingle t peared that the new invention would soon, supersede the older machine. But the phonograph people put | broad mouth. their heads together and the result was the new tyPe | you're 9 aerton te the sith phonograph we now know, with sales higher than | softly. 2 er gett a? salah ee | Editorial Comment | OUT OUR WAY ee Raicosgies Tae er ne te A a ae fs , ay ringing attitade rr lor, boxer, Syee ter ae couhts: for} “nae BISKLAROK Time .» Speaking of Bouquets If this could be accomplished in other countries, | there would be no need to cheapen our goods simply | to stem the tide of underpriced articles coming from the other side of the Atlantic. 4 Infant Mortality The cities of the Pacific coast continue to lead Editor's Note: , This Ma chapter . end iedsot cy boggy Ps wef eee tide the country in having the lowest baby death rates. Paul Adame ert d This is one of the conclusions to be reached from a et a fee study of the annual report on infant mortality for 1926, just issued by the New York office of the American Child Health association, of which Herbert > 4 CHAPTER xv A Hoover is president. The figures are based on / wa anyone mhe atin ‘ahd has col-|.4' convention in, preliminary reports and records received from a lected. that unigue experience wel | the U. S. d_ local » ing awakened from a cramped:s *% ote Census Bureau and from state and loc: { Jone banat h by the accurate Tet. a is i ‘dea’ ese a ‘s ‘of a ‘cop's club on the soles Stone-flegged. oe These annual reports on infant mortality in cities ; ot. hogs that ‘were none $0 en ick, ithe ful of the United States have been issued by this as- = esa el gerne ‘publie sociation cach year since 1919, with the object of Ge we havens tet the ne ger interesting the entire country in the reduction of Wy ate those who. trove, as no infant mortality and the necessity for complete - ¥ s iea'foet or ffowsy pate to 3 zip m fay, birth registration. /j circulation. Thus, while the Pacific coast cities are to be ‘ = 3 Do congratulated for having a lower rate of infant { y 4 )// contrary, ‘they a “deat: with gather} q thie is herr mortality than other cities of the country, never- \ severely. But the gentlemen: of no- he’ i theless the rate throughout the nation for 1926 ‘Af madie &, 36, Ra rf pg nie ae represents an increase rather than a reduction over ‘ 6 } ris vascetol ‘snooze, day or night! he. had accumulated the previous year; and in that fact lies the start- eues : ae Tear interruption beast an tresses hoe : # padding eel im ing point of a renewed campaign to be put on by official source. he. - arent ry ace vie the association during the current year. 5 : : Not 20 long s¢9. ll ela MR had The fact that the infant mortality rate has in- g Sk, \. padded aon creased, despite all the new discoveries of science Lf kd atchitettura * TOMORROW: 1 Rabbit Skins. and medicine tending to decrease it, is a puzzling — / Z Qne of the semi-circular = matter. Experts busy in analyzing the report have . . fied’ ‘as oversolicitous. “ ‘lS the Movies not yet arrived at the actual reason. for this un- E Byers ea No Rly At The Movies favorable conclusion, yet apparently it is true. z were proud to eit of thelr a et Yet, taking the previous five years, the mortality devotion to their children, ‘especial THEATRE rt + All. song should take their mothers ei ey is to ape “Private -Issy Murphy,” the ' 5 f N : phy: decline that for a short time has been interrupted. e 4“ KF; SS —— ‘ Tetinguent childre <Onetthird pra Warner picture, now at the Capitol Certainly we hope that this is so an@'that the as-| - — ' é 3 Meats x seas ree. al atect whieh Ly . In the ede a, a ol a ptssiy - scitacnie i my Ss : it i ible for ¢ 0 , scciation still has the situation’ well ‘in'-hand er tin cual wih cit Fe Hos i ary ar and re = e communi ‘hearts, Irish and What the Railroads Did - tm practleally alt Investigations of Laticfg pearls,’ made ane By" things | Pertinent indced are figures just released by the Golingestt us rete eeable vps mightier than disputes and preju- suffer from isatld corrected | dices.. George biaagh bes is starred, pareliat st reeteety ai is personally a pal of his Shother. h ng Be BARBS] ie te Ht i Trish sweet th “who is ie ish 81 4 pes LOST a— za heart in HK the picture, is noted in een rane }q for er A sgt mer it ren es y for the gets lait tiin ie officers Pie ia the ‘and. her mother are ly inseparable, even having Here is what the railroads did: , Operated 304 special relief trains. Brought out 104.788 refugees. Saved 2,749 carloads of household goods and live- ES ( rest attention, and “ne AIN Ss N NI ER Daily H eee iatctin metal hair-bobs! Vera Gordon, ror — gong epee sthagie | dae Aus ae The last of the Florida. Seminotea| who ig one ef. the irgneorn| pla; at Transported 504 carloads of food and supplies. have capitulated. and want to €omé|is perhape the most. celebrate Lose In addition to all this, thousands of their em- + into the Unien. robably, with he egeratere a BY. DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN, tensive reservatio ployes labored to strengthen levees; thousands of} “Do you know what thé greatest;had been ina fever to paint we Editor Journal of American tl gift Faith?” George asked quis- she found herself responding slow! band eh bri dow! their cars were used to transport sand, rock and {| 7; but his eyes were Neny. ten-|to the magic of the aift ‘with which Hteical Assacatin and of ‘ayecias Pa ree micah bat ot be oll bree of Photoplay, wa i saveatare, lumber used in protecting levees. he had presented her. Her heart,! Four hundred children who came if | ioe Lyon and All of this was without charge—a service esti-| “Love, I suppose,” Faith answered which had been beating to one of ‘the ‘Massachusetts clinics| “The man who is. continually erac! war and pease, ‘and over at ‘ 5 reluctantly. os eee for mental hygiene were. studied by|ing jokes about women’s clothes, ha: rican eagle — Tel th not ye mated by relief ators to have been worth not “Wrong!” George Soha cheer-| came aa more. meempl. | The Nav 6 deeetmine~ enme very, He 1k bout. ‘ Go less than five million dollars. fully. rif you have this gift I’m! vmP aloe aster at “melted, ole king of, You'll eet ton cift lm’ giving her a feeling of ease and light-| °'sisty-six per cent came from homes | “Thé . Join # shneon- THEATR: It is pleasant to read about this. Tt shows that | spray evitable ressit, The gift fa) ett, "RICH last, Might she hed be-| wich foreign customs. Forty-three ‘cert of mations ion St ours. For: fhe th Se the railroad corporations, which too many of us Belief in yourself, bes| ligyed sh auae A earee feel again: per cent were of’ Halian sprrencare | jsel9 ability. hes * Tture bi star allows: not . are inclined to think of as cold-blooded and heartless, your power to attract and hold|1¢ ‘tne beneficent effect of being | ‘enty-three., per cent é ina fellow ‘whe* deagh’s ‘on the contrary have taken a leading part in abating love, belief in your beauty and!ioved, she reflected. George was parentage ‘and about twenty-five per] A hick ia: a ello 0 * sh't own | produc charm. You've never had that belie! cent of American-born parents. The! know the taste ‘of ore, _tban two “The . General, tecl tight. It. gave her a new sense of| Porcentage -was naturally. influenced brands of" lipstick, EN Ww Cherry bore her small such gallahryicarried: her! Bonatifel, cree petheed or Ariadblogeeayig ns Flt: ent le A Sb forel; brigh ihe ap RiGh: “Bie ‘had been tone classified “ab lowe ariddle c 7 In most of these re little read- mi one side as he studied - first the|” Now”. George said abruptly, as nt of the ehild sketch he had made of her the day £5 ked’ any’ educational op) am ‘ 2 pefare, thet: the living picture before | Pe, laid “down hia pencil, “I want to of Os ate the fell of tes | New : ‘York, Avg. o" Faith's eyes were round with be. “T may have conneqnenee all things had come her ask you to promi hattan “but: hi it After Fifty Years ae ae sharing see hg ee Ci ry i your mind-al | eeech ce as ergcchemas 3 cl pene pees toothed series “tee * The phonograph is 50 years old this month. it would make me very happy if | Walk, pn mth hey 8 -Ithird of the children. lacked nor- i ‘ou see, I k it beau- i “4 ae, Secearted neighbo: ie] ey” lived. Glyn calls personality, that you are} Women... Love will pour in on you)” An - investigation showed that finely” worthy of lover and. that [ip augh flneds that You canoe antl | mach of ihe Sbucin. ‘charecter of ‘ou have within your very beautifu these children was due to the fact maidens.“of. ‘thé: hotel immeasurably. 1 don’ just hi ite'fowe of tien seeking a mate, gt] that the mothers alte te te ae | mnie and the betage, Sub. anty, Wi x It was in 1877 that Thomas A. Edison called; io would take that gift from me. mal opportunity for aay. boone : SE PRIOR: «2 past ot the yout”? ions, eral Nnea\ neh ¥ which certainly could not claim beauty. Its records|me except a: riend, but I want with, drink, gama 3 were crude ae squeaky. It could not Feasatiioe tone you ‘to use my eit to fortify Maden ton, aie wit be lack Gs dasgetnt s fee ibility en the . if Passos i ay And then she ar bation “fn values well. Then an effort to improve the machine your ‘spirit now. If I'm any judge,| prateful to you, glad to ieee seen | {atl ot gig! parents quatre! corémony ‘has ‘been pel ‘The gown was so. extremely you're rather in need of spiritual Rha constant the vei fects a. og chil- ‘Buch « fellow, wwho'for'ma The all flew eff, began and in a few years there has been developed seesreate: FieRt now. el Eiger gif enreaaY Feith. ee “itn are prom i lceable erg hoy buttons » a.machine which reproduces nearly perfectly and pate wy ‘palette, “that's ny gift,|¥ou Promise m: bial gS gak vol head! hy Le all “ timbre a volume of any singer, any in- Fale it 7 on aera at en NEXT—Bob delivers an ullfinatum,| es Tinea the p aatees Be being " 7 strument, any orchestra. Se tet ie bee beautiful : pelied to be away in order to 4 imself; = The radio appeared to have dealt a death blow to rly eee Makned, pati (ot a jae. “~z a t the Wamily LF a guessers ‘ite Pierre 8. the phonograph industry.’ Sales slunaped and it ap- with a lovely tight of tend ‘A Though in the canes of 75. 0f the _childrhn, | nen ; see wrareall und ox-Gov: la i i p ROY sired oesiti | both of th iller of New York Pid ld NES inn ett of oe/ = sbieeogand 3 age ot coarse, rad toe Mee at thi rel “Thank you—fo: i nd Indians in war by their parents. I . =a Larne. efare | Frese ever before. ‘And knowing that, in George's a ay i re ater a ies of a brave/ the child wa: only child ‘with o he 5 eyes at least, her face and figure| mind thi and.—Shake- | neurotic ‘moth The Jewish mothers A far. as to} sch 8D. i ras caaeara a Ek I were very lovely, so: lovely that he| spea made up 58 per cent of re elassi- i i i Bi nage ‘at’ Terre Haute, Ind., “we” i ahene’ “wigs. (Fargo Forum) \ _ Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh's own story has 4 x: a marksman] er, | eee epee deer finally reached the public, and, strange as it may} | - WONT FINO “TEM ALL ‘ ee ES Z 8 ‘ate 5 feruvt for Me anne of pate my J and: rileaned seem, it is a well-written, interesting, informa- , me WE VE: ONLY FOUND ONE ” og " eee: We - é tive and entertaining book. Best of all it is Lind- IN ALL THIS DISTANCE. bergh’s own writing, original material from his OW WHY DID THAT STRING” own pen and not by. some “ghost writer.” HANIE TO Go. AND BREAK ?/ When the publishers announced Lindbergh's book within a fow days after his memorable flight. the critical world showed little interest in it, for it was believed that, it would be another one of those things written by some newspaper potboiler and would be largely .a re-write of the article he had written for The New York Times. But “We” is nothing of the kind. It is a straight: forward autobiography, written without flourish and-no-strainings for effect. There. are no embel- lishments to it at all, nothing but a delightful, stim- ulating account of the aviator’s life. The personal element is stra lacking save when it is nec- essary, and then it is related with the same modesty that .has characterized Lindbergh since he landed fg ae field to prepare for his transatlantic “To Lindbergh his early barnstorming. ng geal -Tetrospect. glam- } rich in}