The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1927, Page 4

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‘AGE FOUR _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1927 gaining of old trading lands. During and aft a s 5 a id he Bismarck Tribune er the war; the United States scored heavi Good: Luck ; | HE “DIET ADVICE i *f An RES BLUE Newspaper — yf ea American and far eastern Aaa “ — ¥ f 'HE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPA: at once was European territory, and the new xe Frank i! (Established 1873) trust seeks to win it back. . J WN Dr Me Ld ‘ The whole question now revoives about cheap- ness of production and shipping cost. If the nited States can gain favorable rates, and reduce overhead cost, it may be able to hold its own in South America, at any rate. The ublished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Fire D . second class mail matter. thts Ie Sast Wey. 7o Stille QUESTIONS 1N REGARD TO HEALTH C DIET WiLL opt eis Ao dys | errr 0 ms Ce FOR figs President and Publisher aily by carrier, per year .. aily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) aily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ply by mail, outside of North Dakota far east is more likely to turn to Europe again. It will be interesting to see how “American aggressiveness,” transplanted to Europe, will do in this battle of giants in a giant industry, MEDICINES AND DISEASE SYMPTOMS If we are to accomplish anything | worth while in our of y ticular time. Indiscretions in eating, both in extravagant quantities and poorly chosen combinations, are re- sponsible for most of the discomforts ib conquest i : ‘ disease, we must not be satisfied|0f, child-bearing. Wrong combin- “eekly by mail, in state, per year ... An American Credo with only the alleviation of symp-| ations of even the best foods pro- ‘eekly by mail, in state, three years ‘eekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year Member of The Associated Press “The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Se for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the ‘cal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All ghts of republication of all other matter herein are iso reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Thomas W. Lamont, J. P. Morgan & Co. of- ficial, expressed the sentiments of the great udohleley of Americans in a recent talk in To- ‘io. Said Mr. Lamont: “The credo of myself and my associates is: ‘We believe in Japan; we belicve in her peace- ful intentions; we believe in her courage, her patience, her good faith and her loyal friend- ship for America’.” That is about as fine a way of expressing the American sentiment toward Japan as can be found anywhere. In his belief that the wild toms. The laws of cause and effect in the material world are immutable. This is true in a consideration of all physical phenomena, whether in the clinical laboratory or in the human If pain appears in the body, it is not enough that we discover some trick treatment which will make the pain disap- pear, but we must go farther back than that and, at duce disturbances in the digestive tract which are not alone harmful to the mother, but even more so to the tender growth, entrusted to her care by the Creator. If you have not made a study of food science for your own better- ment before this wonderful event of your life, do not neglect to do so now if you appreciate tue great op- jortunity before you create a new ing, perfect in body and mind, un- hampered by weaknesses which you alone can give to it. The size of the child can be con- trolled by reducing the amount of CHICAGO DETROIT | tales of the “yellow peril” and the hysterical the same time,|Wcight-producing foods, such as the ower Bldg. wen Kresge Bldg.) tomes on “the sriaihy tide of color,” ate, Lamont ei Al Jearn to discover ith a ani Lian vel = ale BURNS & S) Fifth Ave. Bidg.|i8 not alone. Despite the desperate efforts of Dr. McCoy = pe pain Gihich gejWateh her weight and see that it (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Roosevelt and Navy Day Joint observance of Navy Day and Roosevelt Yay is to be made in North Dakota, and the ppropriateness of the occasion demands com- nent, North Dakota must always look with a par- icular feeling of affection on the late presi- ient*because of the fact that some of the most mportant years of his life were spent here. And North Dakota, with the rest of the coun- ry, feels affection for him because he always ‘ealized the necessity of adequate military de- ‘ense and was strongly in favor of the United 3tates navy, not only as a defense organiza- ion, but also as an instrument for creating soodwill. President Roosevelt realized, too, that a strong navy was essential to the development of foreign trade. Throughout his term in of- ‘ice and thereafter he was militantly in favor of expansion of the outer guard of this coun- ry. North Dakota, because of its personal inter- 2st in Roosevelt, will enter whole-heartedly in- 30 the observance of this day. Though this is an inland state, its people realize the value of an adeuqate navy and they appreciate what an important part President Roosevelt played in the development of the fleet. Mrs. Logan’s ‘Swim’ The inevitable reflection when it comes to discussion of the case of Dr. Dorothy Cochran Logan, who said she swam the English channel, is this: “Maybe Mrs. Logan’s act wasn’t so ri- diculous or so abhorrent as it seems on the face of it.” ’ There has been much gnashing of teeth and tearing of hair because Dr. Logan declared her swim was merely a hoax, to impress the pub- some jingoists, most of us have yet to be con- vinced that Japan has any designs on us. | Editorial Comment Mighty Mean Men (Grand Forks Herald) The story is told of a young man who moved rom the old home to another state, and who shortly after his arrival wired his father, “Get out here quick. Mighty mean men get office in this state.” The story has been told with reference to many states, but there are rea- sons to believe that the telegram may actually kave been sent from Indiana. The governor of the state has just been toned from the penitentiary, where he was sent for misappro- priation of funds. The mayor of the largest city has been sentenced to fine end imprison- ment for ccrrupt p: in an election. The one-time leader of a w robed band of seli- styled 100-per-centers is serving a prison term for murder, and a whole fleck of politicians, high and iow, are shaking in their shoas be- cause of disclosures made by this same fellow in an effert to get even with pe-sons who, he says, have double-crossed him. It is certainly a stinking mess.. Press-agenting Michael (Oakland Tribune) All of the stories which come from Rumania concerning the boy King Michael, suggest but one thing. Someone is grooming the little monarch for an American lecture tour! When we read that little Mike cares for no breakfast food save that which is manufac- tured in the United States we offer him our congratulations and understand his preferences and, at the same time, scent an international plot. The suspicion grows to certainty with CBD HIOSIPRS BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, Oct. 25.—Here in the effete east, where almost any- one from west of Chicago is re- garded as a radical, many persons regard Senator Burton K Wheeler of Montana as a radical who will bear watching. : Especially in the smug national capital, it is felt that if Wheeler isn’t a radical there isn’t one in the Senate. But out in Montana, one learns with astonishment, Wheeler is be- ing panned as a reactionary. Some of the voters out there are much more radical tan Wheeler and if there were enough of them, as there aren’t, Wheeler might be defeated in his campaign for relection next year, see The anti-Wheeler feeling genters in Sheridan county, in the northeast’ WASHINGTON £ LETTER Every store in Plentywood, the county seat of Sheridan, is said to grant such a discount. in this way members are guaranteed savings amounting to more than the mem- bership dues. .Ofter the council steps in und persuades a banker to hold off on a “ortgage foreclosure against a farmer. When a court ruled that a Sheri- dan county moctgage-holder was entitled to a portion of the debtor’s crop, a crowd of the boys went right out to the debtor’s farm, threshed his crop and hauled it away and! sold it before the court could en-! force the decrec. An ex-sheriif, sent by _a court with papers containing bad tidings.to a straitened ,farmer, was seized and threatened with a noose. After : promise not to re- turn, a pint of castor oil was senators, Wheeler nd Tom Walsh, accusing Wheele. of being the hire- ling of the Anazonda Copper Co. and Walsh the servant of Standard Oil. It prints an old photo of Walsh with the caption, “The famous walrus moustache, worn by the senior senator before he met Mrs. Borden Harriman, is~ shown in the above picture. Senator Walsh, like Samson of old, has ‘ost much of his political virility since its edgés were shorn.” * * @ \ Sheridan divides its. vote in the primaries between the Republican conservative ticket and the Farmer- Labor radical ticket. It knows its political onions, and wastes no time when Democratic candidates up for state-wide vote appear on the ticket. Wheeler, for instauce, got 17 votes in the last senatorial primary and then carried the county by a major- ity of more than 800 votes! Next November it probably will vote against Wheeler. the “reac- tionary.” Radicals ir Butte Great Falls and elsewhere m.; join in poured dowa his throat as a “les- zon.” He has since been known as! the anti-Wheele: movement, but many of Wheelcr’s friends bctieve usually not removed by the remedy which relieves the pain. Dr. Osler has aptly said that, “Medicines prob- ably have no effect whatsoever upon the diseases for which they are administered.” What did he mean? Simply this: that at best drugs can only relieve symptoms, and if the disease disappears the remedy given to relieve the pain did not contribute in any way in removing the real cause of the pain. Often the patient gets well in spite of the treatment used. If the actual cause is not banished there will be a return of the same symptoms or some other will occur which might seem to have no connection with the former trouble. 2 Only today I met a man who was complaining of how often he was forced to have .his: frontal sinus drained of pus. The pain became almost unbearable every few days and the only relief he could find was to have his nose specialist puncture the sinus and extract the disturbing pus which had accumulated. Here was a man eminently suc- cessful in the manufacturing field who seemed surprised when I sug- gested to him that the best plan would be to remove the real source of the trouble which, in his case, lay in a polluted blood stream. If the engine of his automobile constantly became stuffed with carbon, do you suppose he would have been satisfied to have it cleaned out every week? Of course not! He would have found out what was wrong with his gas- oline or with his “mixture” in the carburetor, and would quickly de- cide that tke cause did not lie in the engine, itself. But he failed to apply the same sensible reasoning to_his own ailment. How many take headache remedies without consideration of the origin of the agency which produced the headache? In this hurry-up age it is no doubt pardonable to relieve does not go above normal, as the haby will gain excess weight of a fatty nature at the same time and will have difficulty in emerging into the outside world with this \di- cap. The foods most needed are the blood and nerve building ones, such as the succulent non-starchy vege- tables, both cooked and raw. Next in importance is a moderate quantity of the protein elements found in lean meats, eggs, cheese, nuts, fish, ete. Fruits should be used with caution until it is understood how Ba to combine them with other oods. Flatulence, at this time, will create many unpleasant symptoms and the pressure on the baby of the gas pro- duced, will interfere with its normal growth, Wrong combinations of food must be avoided if the digestive tract is not to be a battle ground of conflicting elements which would be good fe if used judiciously. On- ions, garlic, dry beans, cabbage, and all such combustible vegetables must be eliminated, for they invariably produce such disturbances ‘no matter how they are used. The expectant mother must study her diet problems conscientiously, for her duty and opportunity is two- fold. If she does this she will be amply repaid with the first smile from her perfect baby and a knowl- edge that she has not betrayed the trust imposed in her by Divine Providence, wel Question: A Reader writes: “Your articles are most interesting and educational. We certainly think them full-of good suggestions and common sense. Will you kindly state what is meant by the following: ‘A. colon bordering on diverticulosis.’ (1) What are some of the causes of colitis? (2) Should one suffer- ing from colitis be on a diet? If so, will you kindly suggest what one bein ; ; ie word that the king has kicked a Bulgarian kid-| section of Montana, along the Cana-|“Castor Oil Collins.” Otitet by “the attraction’ af seat | physical distress as soon as possible,|should refrain from eating? (3) a er crncings pea yaya die car down stairs that he may ride upon one|dian border and North Dakota. “They raise hell with bankers sured! Cysortativor se hi bares [Out the danger always lies in making |Do you think colonic irrigations are a possibility that she is right in her idea. it cannot be doubted that Gertrude Ederle swom the channel. There were unbiased wit- made and assembled in the U.S. A. Obviously, everyone likes a king, particularly when he is too small to cause trouble. A king Experts say that you can’t find a more radical section in the country than Sheridan county. The folks out there boast 0” it, too. And it’s who try to foreclos: on farmers,” mays a county and admires its people. 1a. who knows Sheridan! wh Mere progressives Qvill ail vote for eeler. There is a chance that “radical a habit of doing this without a more serious contemplation of the reasons for the unpleasant indication that you have broken some of Nature’s very helpful?” Answer: This simply means that pockets are forming in the colon in which food lodges, where it decom- 4 rs ete it * le” in Sheridan county may be| jaws, 4 ; fan ‘i i who really does not know he is one; a king| peculiar in more ways than that. The county sheriff h 1 splendid] Spset. Sheriden has many Danish | oS : Poses and putrefies more readily. Mille ty aging ees at ee oubied pak who chases around the yard with his dog and| By electing farmer-labor county reputation for catching border.rum-| farmers, most of. tham religious,| shy mee, y ut Bive more thought to| (1) Wrong food, too much food, bad gets his face and hands dirty appeals to our tickets each year, these radicals runners, but he is h rd on would-be the cause of disease in your body combinations, and everything which i *, bg d they are said to believe the| th, ’ abbot ‘ t s ; i 4 = é the ted oe, ‘4 : than you do to the effec’ . If you!can produce constipation. (2) Di followed ee meth made the SRE coe romantic fancies. When that king is surround. eters hares aoe alee: Eran whe aoe “Ineldentally, | armerlaborites are atheists or/do this, you will be readily rewarded|is. the only cure, and no : paral ee eee veener every One Chane Won ed by a corps of gentlemen who send out over|ning it. They drov a small-time| some of the big farmers i; Montana iciiahabis in increased health and more com-|“queer” foods are necessary. Just and men who swam the channel actually did Ith bles all of the cute little tricks which crooked regime out of office when| pre‘er I. WW. workers, ihsisting | plete freedom from the danger of | follow the dict recommended in my After the first excitement had died down, there his ae dei SS es Be ree | ey sete ped An: that although they demand reason- A Th ht | {recurring and changing signs of ill| weekly menus. (3) The daily enema were no tugboats to accompany those who made] 8 anc give for American readers a list of his Sheridan is altogether a farm|able hours and wages they aren’t | oug' ! Bee which afe the inevitable re-|is perhaps the best single treatment ‘the trip. Not always were newspaper men or royal niblet’s American preferences, we may|county and is run in the interests|as shiftless as the ordinary ndn- ° ome attempting to suppress symp-|that can be given for colitis, In ther impartial observers along. suspect there is a publicity agency at work andj of the farmer. The stat law pre-|nion hand. Charity envieth not. . . think-|‘°™h | 5, tant. Mother’s Di severe cases, two or three enemas eoer ampa ; i it. {t|Michael is being groomed for popularity in this| vents any chang- in the form of| In Plenjywood they have erected! eth no evil—1 Corinthians xiii: 4, 5.| qy,n° PxPectant er’s Diet __|daily should be used, and at least one So Dr. Logan’s act may prove of benefit. It country. Willie come here to lecture: S| county government, but the Sheri-}a FarmerLabor temple, which is a oe 8 ap neeerpecant mnolee must first| enema taken over a period of several should at least insure scrupulous honesty in iad : © aere to lecture, to See! danites don’t mind that. They have|community affair where are held all) Charity resembleth fire, which Hee che ea mind’ of the false be-|weeks. They are always helpful future. channel swims. a wife, or write testimonials for our manu- just the kind of a government they|county events from dances ‘nd la-| inflameth all things which it touch-|/&f that it is necessary for her to|and can be no more 1 than A Place For Teachers Occasionally we hear of a college president who knows just what a college should be. Ernest Hatch Wilkins, new president of Ober- lin, seems to be well fitted to carry the werk from where Henry Churchill King left it after 25 years of splendid teaching. : In his inauguration speech at the Ohio school, Dr. Wilkins, among other things, said: “What shall it profit a college to add to its teaching staff a man who has a fine voice, is a natural mixer, plays golf in the eighties, is a tireless and efficient committeeman, a pro- ductive scholar, an idealist in life and work— and cannot teach? Teaching is the soul of the enterprise. Unto the teacher these other qua!- ities may well be added; but teaching ability must be there as the basic quality of all.” It is refreshing in these days of educational frills to be reminded that a college staff should consist of teachers. Common Sense in Football We read in novels of how Tom Trowbridge pieyed the last quarter against Siwash with a roken shoulder. We’ve always wondered what ~ kind of man Trowbridge’s coach was and why he let him play. For such things are very well in novels, but very different in real life. In a high school football game in New Jersey the other day a player was taken out early in the game because he hurt his back. He ' Pleaded to be allowed to go back in, Finally the coach sent him back and he scored the win- ning touchdown. Later on it was discovered - ne had a broken back. Life doesn’t end with the close of the foot- ball season, though a great many football coaches seem to think it does. Incidents like this not only hurt the game,-but leave young * men cripples. A little more common sense should be shown about this. Europe Combines to Recoup Losses Decidedly interesting is the information from Paris that a European chemical trust, capital- at slightly over a billion doilars and bring- pe er ct Eran, Tralee, en m. is in process of formation. ~ ‘The real Is little of the coalition—and there _ the world chemical since | by the United States If about that—is to gain control of | Dakota the war held|a serious agricultur; factured products? Let North Dakota Climb (Minneapolis Journal) Add to the other evidence of North Dakota’s comeback, the testimony of Rex E. Willard, farm economist of the North Dakota state agri- cultural college. In Minneapolis to testify at the Interstate Commerce Commission’s grain rate hearing, Mr, Willard made the point that the North Da- kota farmer, emerging from the slough of de- pression, and with his feet once more on the upgrade, is manifesting an ability to climo that grade, if the powers that rule will only re- frain from tripping him. Give him his chance, and this agricultural- ist’s return up the hill to prosperity will pro- ceed without interruption. Trip him now with higher freight rates, which must be paid out of the margin of profit on his produce, and he may go tumbling back. Mr. Willard’s stand is sound, his point well taken. With the farming once more looking up, but with the farmer needing encouragement and in no condition to bear a new load of dis- couragement, there could be no worse time than the present, or the near future, to increase freight charges on grain in the Dakotas and Minnesota. Here is what the North Dakota farmer, by his own hard work, is just now accomplishing, according to Mr. Willard: The volume of farm production per man has been increased at least twenty per cent, in the last ten years, through better or- ganization of the farm business, use of more labor-saving machinery, and elimina- tion of wasté. There are fewer bank failures than around 1923. Deposits in state banks have held fairly constant now for two or three years. The number of farm foreclosures has been greatly reduced. ve Land sales for delinquent taxes in 1926 were less than half the total for 1923. The number of farm bankruptcies has decreased by more than half since 1924. Here, then, are all the symptons of a North ’ steadily and surely convalescing from depression. plea should be heeded. Here is-a large tory, which, when it re- entitled, com} the to which it is ] furnish Figen Oy in increased ten dollars of net revenues for every by any want. see The dominant force in Sheridan county is the United Farmers, a secret agrarian organizatio:. which Has also made heacway in Wash- ington stat., Minnesota ane North Dakota. This group is_ organized both for economic and political action, Its number: and member- ship lists are kept secret-and when it endorses a candidate for office the fact is kept secret so that if perchance it takes a political lick- ing the. fact remains unknown. Meanwhile, it arrange’ with local merchants to give all card-carrying ' Socialist or Communist or Labcr pa- members a discount when they! pers. come to town for purchases, | OUR’ BOARDING HOUSE EZ SE . A inppy Arsinice You ARE ONLY YORTY-FIVE BIRTHDAY ); MAZSOR 4. ~e LAY “TH? LIP ON THis OLLYPOP! “TODAN, dies’ aid meetings to prize fights. The Krazy Kats (an orchestra) plays for dancing. Are the bol- sheviks of Moscow elated when Chi- nese peasant Communists win mili- tary victory? Not a bit more than, the good folk of Sheridan county. The Producers News of Plentywood, which “goes into every home in the county,” banners the report in an eight-column headline and yo: can’t find in that weekly more than two ‘news. The Producers * ews receives HAD -To CuT- BACK “TWENTY YEARS -fo BE -IN PROPORTION! or three other items of outside Federated Press, zal labor news to the services of tl. which serves ra eth—Erasmus. f Justajingle | “I've got to work tonight,” said he, “The past few days I've shirked.” His wife said, “I'll come down and help’ That's why he really worked. LOCATES IN CARSON Hebron—Sam Weinstein, who has been proprietor of the Moscow Cash store at Hebron for the past 10 years, has. leased his store to Carl It delivers horrendous blasts at Montana’s two “reactionary” A) —f gs WE WERE IT Not w WAR- RR-RUMF.cf WHAT MANAER® OF HORSE PLAY Is “THis 2 we EGAD NATAL DAY, I WOULD SuBsECT You-THREE SILLY Metzger, and will enter the merchan- dise business in Carson, By Ahern COULDAT Get ALL TH’ CANDLES ON YOUR CAKE MASOR, S0. WE FIGURE “THis “TALLOW LIGHT House WILL Count FROM FORT+-FIVE uPt. EF] MY «| thi that! I didn’t expect anything bet- eat for two. The average person eats about five pounds of food daily, although about two pounds would be plenty if the quality of the food were correct. The normal grain in weight of the unborn child should not be more than one half ounce daily, which would make the weight at birth almost nine pounds; so you see that from the usual food supply the expectant mother will have more than suf; cient to nourish herself and to pro- vide ample material for her baby. As excess of food burdens the body at any time, it is even more impog- tant during gestation that unreason- able ees i not be used under the mistaker. idea that such superfluous amounts are necessary or advisable at this p: “For a dreadful minute, while she bit the knuckles of her clenched hand to keep from crying aloud a more abject plea to him, Faith thought he was not going to answer. But his voice came at last, a quieter, shamed voice, as if Bob too realized the precipice to which their quarrel had brought them: “Why did you say that, Faith— ‘for the sake of what little love I ever had for you’? Have you found it so—little 2” “It must have been only a feeble love, dear, since it has not survived even the first year of marriage. But you are putting me off, and I want the truth at last, I asked you to be honest with me, to tell me what's! really in your heart and mind, It isn’t jealousy of Bruce Patton or of George Pruitt. | wish it were. That would prove that you love me—” “Don't be so damned sure,” Bob interrupted, as if grateful for the opening, “that I’m not jealous! suppose you think it was pleasant for me to see you gl sparkling and smiling and fluttering your eyes at a man you know I de- test, a professional philanderer, who doesn’t even take the trouble to think up a new line. I suppose,” his voice’ grew bitter, “he told you that ies of nourishment should | AINF 4 SINNER Anne Th) ig and, wit washing the face as long’as you use only plain water. ne a Question: Boy of 17 writes: “I have had pimples for about a year. My weight is about right, but I drink cream to get a little heavier. Could too much cream, butter, or tomatoes be the cause?” Answer: Certain kinds of pimples are no doubt caused by the use of too much oil and fat. Try a diet free from butter, milk, cream, and the fat of meat and see if your skin trouble does not clear up. Question: K. L, usks: “What causes a child to grind its teeth in its sleep?” | ‘ Answer: The common cause is from indigestion, but sometimes stgmach or intestinal worms are Aus give a prim married woman a thrill—” “Then you thrilled!” “Yes, I admit I reacted in a per- fectly normal way to a good-look- ing man’s flattery,” she retorted, “Perhaps if I were a little more ac- customed to admiration and flst- tery I shouldn't be so eusily pleased with a shop-worn variety.” “Rot!” Bob repudiated her heavy | Sarcasm rudely. “He got you going in about one-tenth the time it takes hin#to a fla) fora adie a atte wld | you were going to kiss him right | there in front of us all. A pleasant little scene for Cherry, I must say! I suppose she'll be pretty skittish about brin; home any more of her sheiks! Not so different after all, you two girls!” he added bitter- answered “Perha} would admit you were ly. TEAS not,” Faith ous quietness, : A I were more ike Cherry iove me mol faint resemblen ce A) Ne Place, : “Out at last!” Bob’s your husband doesn’t understand! the you, and that he does! God! To ink you would fall for a line like ter of Cherry, but—you!” She snatched at that, drew co: fort from it, lean though it wa comfort. “Don’t you think I’m hu- ma: ? Any woman likes admiration, even if it is only lip-service from a prepesicnal flatterer, Don’t think fooled me! I know it’s Cherry he's crazy about, that he was simply unable to resist the temptation to | 3 each Eo, hour of able with foolish

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