The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 23, 1927, Page 4

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' afly by mail, outside of North Dak YThe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the 5e @al news of spontancous origin published herein. Szhts of republication of all other matter herein are ‘wo reserved. ' :—<— — — — c é SHICAGO DETROIT ower Bidg. Kresge Bldg. t PAYNE, RURNS & SMITH ‘ew yoRK - - _—- _Fifth Ave. Bidg. AY v 1 t ‘od dinner followed by a comfortable nap and wi ht enough. One might do this and still not be i. rT a} t ject upon the reasons that one has for national, #mily and personal thankfulness. Maybe a tance at the pages of a school history of our juntry might help to quicken the pulse and tighten the eye. Possibly a steady gazing on a vin might be an aid to reflection. s , ,ingling with one’s fellows in a congregation € t a 4 ® 1 a t : interesting to say. : ithe sa litici S mat © politician, > qeaks hig mind, he is likely to of- pg be a he says something any of (+ hem are likely to hear or read, he ‘@ooses his words very The sit tem arte “that their views seldom| is at least.a unique explanation of ally by carrier, per year ... ee aily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) aily by mail, per year, aite another to be actually and personally so. Sostles has written, “the letter killeth but the ‘rains of “America the Beautiful” might work Yonders and be better for the heart than a hysician’s. prescription. , Ate the habit of thankfulness; let the lilt of € praise. pirit of gratitude and not only Thanksgiving paeevery day takes on a new meaning and be- Nervotbig with the promise of good will and a ame world. Recall the Pilgrim Fathers that cent Ast » | gatitude spontaneous and profound. That’s i thy we celebrate this day! Fs ‘When t! achusetts Bay Colony, 259 years ago, set. aside sat they really didn’t have a great deal to be 1ankiul for. ving from the inhospitable New England wrest. They had repelled or made friends with %e hostile tribes of Indians; they had estab-| mother. ed their little colony on a firm footing after | well. -' WASHINGTON + But when he talks “not for pub- ' Ani Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) lished by, the Bismarck Tribune Company, ismarck, N. D., and entered at the posteffice at ismarck as second class mail matter. ‘ rge D. Mann........... .President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance (in state outside Bismarck) .. eekly by mail, in state, per year ..... eekly by mail, in state, three years for. . eekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press for republication of all new: patches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also ei Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY (Official City, State and County Newspaper) The Spirit of This Day It is one thing to be officially thankful and accept Thanksgiving as an admittedly wel- me holiday; to spend it at home enjoying a en to go out for a call or two on friends is the spirit of the day. As the greatest of the irit giveth life.” aie To be in the spirit of Thanksgiving is to re- e familiar features of Washington or Lin- Perhaps a id the blending of a thousand voices in the By all means get the spirit of this day, culti- e long meter doxology lift one to the peaks The spirit’s the thing! Possess the the storm they sang.” Yes, they sang ause their spirits were keyed to “the anthem the free.” Before there was an official Thanksgiving America, there was a spiritual experience of Thanksgiving—And Why? he hardy men and women of the Mas- e day in the fall for offering thanks to Divirle idence for the blessings they had received, disinterested observer might have remarked To be suure, they had managed to wrest a ) {all against any very extended spread of civil- __|and the problems that vexed our fathers are no many trials, and the ever-menacing danger of |famine and want had been pushed, temporarily jat least, into the background. * Yet all of those things are things which we today would number among the bare essentials of existence. The colonists were a mere hand- ‘ful of strangers, nesting on a tiny section of a mighty, unexplored cqntinent. They were gov- erned by a corrupt and cynical court, far across the ocean. The bravest of them, looking to the future, might well have doubted if the Mas- \sachusetts Bay Colony would ever be anything more than an isolated colony; the odds seemed ization on these newly-opened shores. Despite all of this, however, the old New Englanders set aside a day for thanksgiving and feasting; and tomorrow we follow the an- cient custom and do likewise. Suppose we compare our position with theirs for a moment. The last of the wilderhesses has been tamed, as far as we are concerned. The remaining red- men are content on reservations, or else are drawing fat royalties from oil wells given them by the Great White Father in a moment,of tem- porary aberration. The threat of famine has been removed, although it is rumored that here soup kitchens are doing business today. None of us need fear anything much more terrifying’ than indigestion today; domestic and foreign enemies have vanished, the country is at peace more. No wonder, then, that we celebrate Thanks- giving. But wait, there is more to it than that. The members of the Massachusetts Bay Colony came to this country, not chiefly for material gains, but for certain intangible spirit- ual ends. They were willing to penetrate wild forests and defy painted savages, and to die thereby, if need be, in order that they might have room for their souls to grow. And the wellsprings of thanksgiving that moved them to make a holiday came not only from the ar- rival of relative prosperity, but more especially from the feeling that at last they had found complete freedom—freedom of spirit as well as of body, freedom in which their most sacred aspirations and ideals could flourish unchecked, It might be interesting for use to assign a statistician or two to see just where we stand today in that regard. If we offer thanks merely for our well-filled stomachs we are allying ourselves, not with the Pilgrim Fathers, but with the swine. But if we give thanks in the same spirit our forefathers gave thanks, the holiday has value for us. , : Which is it? No Pensién Needed (Butte Daily Post) - Missouri congressmen are planning to in- troduce a bill providing for a congressional medal of honor and a pension of $4,500 a year for Col. Charles A. Lindbergh. Nothing is too good for Lindbergh, in view of the stimulus he has given to aviation and the example he has set to American youth in manhood, courage and skill. Let him have the medal, by all means, to add to his collection, But the pension is an- other matter. Of all the young men now in the public eye, it may strike an observer that Lindbergh is least in need of a pension. If that lad has any incapacity for taking care of himself, nobody has ever noticed it. If he were disabled in fly- ing, there might be some point to a pension for h _ LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER something of a bore. best Al Smith. tion,” he is likely to have some- Teason for that is that the if you ws full well that if he someone or express what may deemed a half-baked idea. He ond eye on the voters or or financial backers on his career may depend, and field, we would party. carefully. ituation causes some of become apparent victims of originall; aa in tl ly in the weig! down by dent,; Southerner. capi-| great awe,| cf the One important gentle-| ceptabilit: it interviewed for publication extreme. Ther or else rey able candidate, eee Here’s another of them at ease. Others,| publican politican y newspaper attention, | Cool! u ment: ps the most) | putting ‘the south in the saddle’ + Washington, Nov. 23—When a! and enough of it votes that way * gteaman makes a speech or talks to elect Hardings and Coolidges. be ii “The only solution I see is to ; jf the newspapers, he is apt to break up the solid south and the to _do that is to nominate I admire Smith, but he would take a terrible licking. “Smith wouldn’t carry one gle southern state except Louisi- ana. The more states he carried elsewhere, the better for the party, but he couldn’t win. “Then, with the south an open There wouldn't more of these fearful landslides, and there would be real contests in nearly every state. I don’t see any other way out for us, because ex- cept in case of a terrific depression we're already licked in 1928.” The speaker, incidentally, was a him about the meaningless naire present political lineup, but hep to the fact) his views regardingg Smith's ac- There are many other mere plati-| southern leaders here who. endorse | Smith privately as the best avail- ° but who don’t dare him; or if he were killed, a pension for his Leave Lindbergh alone; he is doing dresses them up in his own words and puts them out as his very own. A ASI eet EE Remember me when I am gone away, Gone Yar’ away into the silent land; When you can no more hold me by the hand, Nor I half turn to go, yet turning st re Remember me when no more, day You deel of our future that you planned: Only ee me; you under- stant It will be late to counsel then or pray. Yet ane should forget me for a while And afterwards remember, do not grieve: For He the darkness and corruption leave A weaties of the thoughts that once Better by far you should forget and smile have a_ national be many may agree with —Christina Georgina Rossetti: ns Remember. the south are A doctor sewed hairs on a girl’s head in New York. That makes Nie Lo ma unpublished or ion—fromy an equally prominent who offers what| haf five-day ne in could be do ’s non-choose announce-|but not in Palcstine. glad to take] figured his Popularity would stretch over the next four hating a fight, trovble was bi tural Al ba tine in the - by next Novembér. decided that ling lead-| and then Of course, the presi-| taken in assuming that he could be himself the other| nominated beliefs which, use him ie Ten : he had in joted he was mi and there in this great land Salvation Army| all [Old Masters || Than that you should remember and 2 +be sad. f___BARBS_{|s reper recrremsrpes, on we Spesees cep seep eeprrereren os THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE CORRECTING FLAT FEET The one suff from often does not feel any local comfort in the foot, itself, endless list of aches and it a} pears be rheumatism in calves in the lower back this deformity. wees doctors for rheumatism of had tinued. I tried ed in a few due to the faulty. arches of the foot of the trouble. Flat fec and calves are too weak to su} restored to their normal shape. When one picks up and lays down two hundred or two hundred and fifty pounds every step, of course a great strain is exerted on the bones and tendons of the foot. If the Rerson weighs two hundred and fifty pounds, it only takes eight steps to raise and lower a ton of, weight. strength to its task, but there is a limit of endurance, and too much weight will eventually make the foot collapse, and the natural spring of the arch will be lost. Un- til the weight is reduced to normal, not muck. success can be hoped for! in the correction of foot trouble. For a time, arch supports will help to relieve the burden, but these only serve as ere and. do not strengthen the feet The most effective means for the correction of flat feet is to take cer- tain systematic exercises to increase the tone and of the foot and calf muscles. of the best exercises can be taken at the time crossed: Pass in front of the left until of the right foot touch the side the left heel. Point the toes as fi back as ible and then, placi the han Pon. me ids on the hips, sway sli; ly to one side and then the er, catching your weight on the big toe of each foot as you throw your of the legs or the knees is many times due solely to fallen arches. Even sciatica and disorders traced to I recently examined the case of a lady who had been treated b; grog low- er limbs, Every medical method been tried, even te blistering the knees with the cautery, but the pain and swelling of both legs con- 5 strapping up the insteps with adhesive plaster, and iptoms in the legs disappear- days. The strain upon the nerves and ligaments in the legs sition of the id caused all are often caused sim- ply because the muscles of the foot ort a body which is overweight. en obesity is cured, the feet are again e ordinary size foot is equal in: j the other. These exercises, ht first to one side and then flat foot gl elias if persisted in, will gradually bring back the mus- cular power. in the necessary mus- cles, and your arches will soon re- t, addressed to the Tribune. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Lape questions on health and et Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. him, care of turn to their normal strength. You can then discard the arch. supports, and your feet will be strong enough to wear shoes with lower heels. At least wear those low-heeled shoes when walking, and continue to take the “pigeon-toe” exercise, and you will eep your feet as strong as nature intended them td be. Question: QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Hopeless writes: “y am a young woman 25 years of age, 5 feet 3 inches tall, Have tried everything on pounds. weigh 91 earth to put on weight. Was on a milk diet for three months and put on two pounds. I have con- sulted several doctors and they all claim I’m tor advis rfectly well. me to remove my ap- One doc- pendix and that would sharpen my appetite. T've done so, and no suc- cess, Walk from three to four miles r day, and very seldom do I feel jungry, and then, if I drink a little water, my ap} advise me w tite is gone. Please it to do, because it will drive me to suicide.” Answer: You may be perfectly healthy and yet only weigh as much as you do. However, e ave: thin woman of your type is usually unable to put on weight because of a systemic pisoning which she gets from a sluggish colon. heidi iat this t usually has a comp! pro- ines of the stomach and intes- tines, and usually holdin, these organs down. esions are broken loose by has adhesions When manipulative treatment the organs may be brought back to normal ° through exercising. position The patient will then soon begin to gain weight bleed stuffing diet. K. writes: Question: _K. 0. “Sometime ago I saw advertised in the paper a new electrical device to cure sleeplessness. As I have been suffering from insomnia for quite a while, I would like to know what you think of this, and where I could find it.” Answer: chines have : Many experimental ma-' levised for use in attempting to induce sleep, but I do not know where any such ap-| ratus in obtainable on the mar- The main objeet is to produce @ sort of hypnosis, but this just as well, yourself, b; pletely relaxing, and ment uu can do com- Te- peating the vii “sleep” over and over again. you have no s long ‘physical irritation which keeps you awake, the repeated suggestion of the word “sleep” or “sleepy” will always get results, cure for insomnia, and isa sure SAINZ wwe SINNER Faith had never met Gerson, of the opera house, al- though he was one of Bob's old- est friends. The tawdriness of the ancient thea with its tranished gilt boxes, plush seats and indecerttly bare s' » seen at ten o'clock - a teagele [Peeper the magic o! » rust audience, and ved dark in an atrocious sult of bright blue I, cncitolly at the, wo, dtepiited figures slumped into the chairs The woman, so plump that wonder- ie eerie t up, wat isappoint iy an ancient Peta coat and a pis pled, dusty velvet hat. The tenor Sunday ‘paper picteres of hm, snd jestingly warned her, and and something in French which Faith could not’ understand, but which she instinctivel; ing. Then felt to be insult- back toward the orchestra pit, the little Orien- beck tal-looking man them to} bal come mn the stage, a prodigious frown creusing the bab;-like fat- ness of his swarthy oil; “All right, sing! God’s sake, with!” he Rhoda im ig, fae. -For and get it over commanded Faith against Faith, with| an expression of such acute poe in her turquoise-blue, childish Faith tool courage to that brave the irate . Mr. San Remo,” she raised her rich, contralto voice almost “Miss imy ' rant, Jonson _ sin, phonograph. I had Srislned to if he might ote if mi not die o! Fhave a talking grain Friday. “I should 2. Mon dieu! this? Gerson! was a bellow of What foolish- Gerson!” rage. jonson has a_ portable wm her,” Faith ex- loudly, to make| famil; ms mow opm om oe TT until the foll ent Bey will ive the @ chance to spend the holiday at their homes. ~ ted Rin hanes te SMianesttn, Mes Soe Or me i- fied local rltives "of his safe oretation Master, Carl Lien will eat iol et eal The| Thanksgiving turkey with his f in the Capital City. ‘ maui Roger Reaman of Hazelton was repairing the telephone line here last week, NEWS [ Mrs. Howard O'Hara is a Hil — at cn “gree home. s Belva Beatty is staying the Oberg home for a while. The P. T. A. in Sterli day night was well atten: Si ie pete nue a gave the e help “their teacher, Miss Feather. Miss Mina Lewis spent Wednes- se night with Florence Gosney. ir. and Mrs. George Lewis were Sterling callers Wednesday. irs, Henry Jesson and Belva Beatty attended the shower (Hee me. Ye for Mrs. Wilbert Koon, at the of Mrs. George Lee Wednesda; Lloyd Nelson, the new milk tester for the Burleigh county circuit, tested at the Gosney home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Fogarty and Rex are moving to Bisma for| the winter. Rex will attend, busi- ness college there this winter. Carl Olson has a Wilcox radio in- stalled at his home on trial. Miss Elnora Hurr is visiting at Ray, No. Dak., for a while. Wilbert Koon called at the Gos- ie © home Saturday evening. r. and Mrs. P. M. Gosney and daughter Ecna and Mrs, Chas. Gas- kill visited the Carl Kositzky home in Bismarck Si '. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Gaskill mo- eae a fine new Atwater Ken radio, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Brownawell of Moffit and Mr, Rei: of Moffit, but who recently moved to near Wilton, were here on busi- ness last week. Jens Jensen and O. B. Swanson sold a couple of truck loads of ho; to a B rchaser with his oil tank one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Saville and family were Sunday guests at the Nels Thompson home. Dwight Carlisle, who has been tored to Tuttle Friday. Miss Vivian| with the Fargo Bridge and Construc- Gaskill returned home with them/|tion Co., all summer, returned home after spending a week with rela-/Thursday and will remain in this tives there, vicinity until the first of December, ‘There was a birthday part given| when he will io to Bismarck to take for W. E. Runey at the Rerling hall|® position with the Maytag company. Saturday night. It was his 72nd| A number of our young folks birthday. re was @ large crowd| motored to Sterling in attendance and all reported a|for the dance there. very nice time. Glennard Esner, eldest son of Mr. isses Vivian Gaskill and Flor-/and Mrs. Adolph Esner, returned home last week'from the west. Frank and Fred Saville, who have been away picking corn at the south state line, returned home last week. Misses Avis Carlisle and Helen abi See attend the Bis- mal school to spend Thanks on jarck Sunday and Monday. i pad Mr. and re. Laverne’ Richard- giving holidays at home. ley Goi teen Sein lay che fer] y_ eens Spar | days visit. . | supper December 6th. Earl Gaskill was visiting in Bis- Mts. egtt 34 taken with a bad stroke of paralysis Sunday, Nov. 13, Mr. Scarborough was away from home, leaving Mrs. Soactorcaet, and her 10-year-old daughter Eva, alone. At the be- pinnin of the attack Mrs. Scar: ugh sent the little girl to Mrs. A. D. Walch, a near neighbor, for Ben Klagenburg was repeiring|help, but when Mrs. Welch arrived Lawrence Goldsmith’s car Wednes-| Mrs. borough was unconscious, day. He finished it Friday after-|She was taken to Bismarck on the noon, Harry Ulfers and Ray oops ate were evening callers at Ed.. Wag- ner’s Wedne he Mr. and Mrs. Bert Glanville and sons took in the opening of the new Wing hall Friday evening. There was & wae given by the resi-/ Mrs. John wine and small sons, dents of Wing and a moving picture] Bobbie and Jack, called on Mrs. show foll by the dance. Music| Robert Welch Monday. Rev. ai was furnished by the Mandan or- in and little daughter of Mrs. chestra. Glencoe also called Mrs. h Mr, and Mrs. Jacob,Kraft visited pohagia hess Mrs. Andrew Kraft’s Arena 4 nd Mrs. Fred Simar and son Keith and little daughter Serine Artios were guests Mrs. Mel from Friday until Sunday., ed the hospital. Lawrence Doppler and Richard Isaacson called at the Alsbury home Sunday evening. Richard e: to start husking corn for ‘Mr. Als- bury soon. ithe same day. Horace Dirlam and his nephew, t Wilson Jessup, drove a bunch of for the Thanksgiving mar-|cattle to Menoken Monday. Messrs ‘hey dressed ducks and tur-|Wilham and Taylor were loading keys. cars of stock there for shipment. ry Ulfers hauled a load of|Joe Hill hauled two loads of hogs grain for Ray Hazelgrove- Wednes-|for Mr. Dirl Others who hauled aay t wd were John Welch mer Drum was a business call-jand his father Oliver Welch, Irvin er in Arena Tuesday. Reed and John Craven, Mrs. John Nieland, tetacher of Boyd School No. 1, moved into her room at Mrs. Robert et. for Thanksgiving. ~ shipped were Andrew Kraft, 0. Mc- Intyre, Bert Glanville and Benj Tu Klagenl » ‘These shipments were principally all chickens except one esday. Earl Snyder and son Ralph with something of an accident ‘rues: which was turkeys and ducks mixed. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. day morning while on the road to the river for a load of wood. Ralph who was driving the truck, me excited at the sight of three deer coming into view, and while watching very bus: them ti the truck over. Neith it two hauling be” ies he nor Peedather was hurt. eae ome Bert Klagenburg is helping] Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Welch’s daugh- im. : = mage arrived from Montana Frederick Si lay. imar,| Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Varnum, oe Mr. and Mrs. and children, Miss Dorothy Simar, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Klagenburg and family and Ed. wege ‘were sup- Dall guests at the McIntyre home esiees caller: in Aseen, Friday were Andrew Kraft, Klagen- » Alex Neff, Bill Gilner and W. #. SI mber P. T. A, met at Boyd School No, 2 Frida; week, Mr. and Mrs. dees Ge eg Andrew Kraft and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. iy Tagner Sunday. and lunch were E d 3 F i i fs Ee i Kes a é F a / i : 4 fl [ | HG z iy FEF Ge et i 2 OF OUR NEIGHBORS a ey ee Scarbo1vugh was soot WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1927 The O, Lp Peterson family are} Regan » formerly | D. iday evening | fc Mesers. Marvin and Marion Al are expected back from Nebrake this week. south of Adolf Krause was a business call- Friday evening. weel \Miss Rande Kettleson spent the week-end at her tal Parental home er _in* Wilton Miss E: South Soo Tuesday, where she enter- “ TWO DAYS ONLY No Charge for Consultation Mr. C. rt the opening in a F. Redlich, the successful ly no mat- body assumes ou weight remarkably short time and strengthen the weak tis- sues (the that previous real cause of rupture natural retaining ir Stomesh trouble, backache and Con: BE 2B tion often caused by Rupture “« \ e\ | ‘4 ' - » “ 4 ‘ ~ b.

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