The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 12, 1928, Page 6

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f ee e. Bismarck Tribune THE STATES O Hauer NEWSPAPER Bismarck Tribune Company, by ont enteral at tne potest ot en at the a Second class mail matter. a ident and Publisher ia} Subectiption Rates Payable In Advance by carrier, per year ......... «87. by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) by mail, per year, jin state outside Bismarck) . 2 {Dally by mall, outside of North Da ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year .... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for... Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, pei er sdember Audit Bureau of Circulation’ Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ise for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the i, news of spontaneous origin published herein. All b 78 of republication of all other matter herein are ‘ Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ¥ NEW YORK - «+ « Fifth Ave. Bldg. CHICAGO DETROIT ‘ Bldg. : Kresge Bldg. é (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Asie is 4 The Eternal Appeal _ - 3% Weare told that religion has lost its appeal. 5 le mournfully point out that more persons t in outside the churches than go into them. ) aThe empty pews are the theme of many a ‘ ful disquisition. 4 And yet something occurred the other day * ithat showed this apparent indifference to re- ; Bigion is all surface stuff. The British parlia- al it was discussing a revised prayer book for ‘ Established Church of England. : The mob of people who sought admission to ‘ ‘attend the debates broke all recent precedents. Fe speeches made in the House of Lords and dn the House of Commons broke all records for { eloquence, for intenseness, for earnestness, for ‘ability. * All party ‘lines were smashed. All class lines were forgotten. Bishops, aristocrats and : “workmen on one side opposed bishops, aristo- | crats and workmen on the other. The result jof the voting was awaited with a tenseness ‘that is hard to realize or to picture. Not in recent years has parliamentary action been so ‘keenly watched by a whole nation, It was a derouting thing for the pessimists. <It showed once for all that religion still comes ’ ielose to the hearts and minds of men. The > Jessons learned at the mother’s knee have not been forgotten. They are still cherished. They { ‘have still a place in the innermost being. They _ {still reign in the core of us. » ; War and Mammon and the great deity, Play, ‘and the other deity, Sport, are all right in this ' ordinary workaday world, but in the silent, thoughful hours there is one supreme thing ‘which counts supremely — communion with One advantage in wearing a derby is no- ‘body wants to steal it. Do They Dislike Us? So much has been published about a dislike America-‘that appears to be growing in rope that’ many Americans had begun io ; tt this national unpopularity as an actual condition to be encountered wherever the ‘American tourist turns. But there seems to we been some exaggeration or unwarranted alities. Homecomifig travelers are now that there is no such unanimity of itiments, ! Many Americans who Visited southern Eu- this past year bring the report that the ited States is actually popular in Italy, and it, strange to say, the good feeling is in- ing. Travelers to Czechoslovakia’ repeat story of other recent years—that the still exhibit the same enthusiastic good- howe and for much the same rea- tthe Americans: entertained goodwill France after the American revolution. One of the most inspiring celebrations of erican Independence Day ever encountered prop of American tourists was witnessed ind, and in the allied countries no Armis- lay passes without public recognition of the aid given them in the world war by the American ‘péople. _ It _is not probable that central or southeast- zn Europe has wholly forgotten the post-war Welief that came from beyond the Atlantic. it is not less likely that many Europeans see America’s side in the debt settlement versy. The anti-American utterances SAINT =i SINNER + Phe fog lifted from Faith’s fever- brain miraculously. Even her eyes flew opeu to fasten over I became somewhat alarmed and tried to telephone her here at the Denham. I was told that there and demonstrations, now almost forgotten were but the ravings of politicians and small|| groups spurred by emotion rather than reason. Editorial Comment. A Gift That Ought to Do a Lot of Good (Duluth Herald) Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Lasker of Chicago have made a gift for the public benefit that pee to result in a great deal of good for man- ind, They have given the University of Chicago a million dollars to be used in establishing a foundation for the study of the, degenerative diseases that often occur after the age of fifty, with the hope that this study will develop means of preventing and curing these diseases, thus lengthening human life and averting hu- man misery. That is a fine gift. It.is not as easy to give money wisely .as those who: haven’t any money to give may think. Indeed it is much easier to do harm by thoughtless giving than it is to do good. But this gift by the former chairman of the United States shipping board can pauperize no- body, can get nobody into the habit of leaning on others instead of developing his own re- sources, can do no possible harm. It can, on mae hand, do an enormous amount of ge which there is greater need of study and re- search than that which Mr, and Mrs. Lasker have chosen. It is a field in which a heavy toll of human life is taken every year, and taken at a time when its victims ought to be of the largest use to society. These diseases seem to be increasingly prevalent, too, in these days of soft living and easy luxury, and so far medicine can offer little but amelioration. He who seeks to make it possible to cure dis- eases now generally thought to be incurable is trying to do a great good to his fellow man, and he must be inspired by a loving wish to reduce his neighbor’s distress and increase his There is, perhaps, no field of medicine. in} neighbor's happiness. That makes this a very |— beautiful giving. A Picturesque New Yorker (New York Post) Many an “old grad” must have heaved a reminiscent sigh and smiled a wry smile last night on reading of the death of John Dunston. For Dunston, as the proprietor of Jack’s, the most colorful restaurant of its day, had prob- ably helped entertain and then eject more col- lege students and young men-about-town than any ten of his compeers. Like so many New Yorkers who helped make history over the turn of the century, Dunston came as a lad from|he Ireland. He was a waiter before he opened his own place at Sixth avenue and Forty-third street in 1891. Having thrown away the keys and announced he was ready for business twenty-four hours in the day, the moving*spirit of Jack’s saw to it that his customers were provided with the kind of spirit they wanted, and the place be- came what might be termed the first night club of New York. : College boys in town for a lark and the rich youngsters of the city made Jack’s the fad, and forstwo decades.the early morning hours found the* plate filled to overflowing “and: Dunston| growing rich. But one thing the fighting Irishman who catered to the fast set would not stand for was fighting among his guests, and another thing taboo was disputing a bill. However, these contretemps would happen in a place where the wine list was the largest part of .the meny, and Jack’s “flying wedge” of waiters, which left a record of néver having been defeated, had many a battle royal with obstreperous patrons. Many a man now a re- spected grandfather picked himself up out of the gutter in front of Jack’s at some period of his youthful folly. After twenty years of uninterrupted pros- perity, Dunston began having trouble with the authorities. Mayor Mitchell made the man who boasted he had thrown away his keys| Sa: purchase new ones and close his place at 1 a. m. Then prohibition came and the famous place was finally definitely on the wane. More and more difficult did the old man find it to ad- just himself to the new order of things and two years ago the doors that for nearly a gen- eration were never closed swung together for- ever. Now the spirit of Jack’s is stilled as well as the institution. But it will live in memory for many years to come and will find a place in accounts of the time, in which it will be embalmed for future generations to mar- [BARBS] Folks prick up their ears these days when somebody talks about his ship coming in, rum ship. eee LETTER. BY RODNEY DUTCHER NEA Service Writer Washington, Jan. 12.—Well any- way, Secretary of Commerce er won't have any competition in the race for the Republic: dential nomination from ‘othet' members of the Coolidge cabinet. will seceive considerable sup- Port, At the end of the Wilson regime, the democratic lists were full of hopeful members or ex-members of the Wilson cabinet and some of them: were taken quite : seriously, but if you were to suggest the pres- ent cabinet roster as a list of pres- idential _ possibilities, omitting Hoover, you would only be greeted “there teat Mellon. of th re. is,of course, Mellon of the Treasury ,’ Department, "Gomeone: whispered to me the’ dther’ day that Mellon was taking himself as’a possibility, but that iconce! eS aon is vebptplt and Sed mi os a r- speec! wot an he is wickedly wealthy and there are other things tending to: disqualify.him; despite the high eiteem in which many of his countrymen hold him. Somehow, no one has yet sug- gested Kellogg of the State Depart- ‘ment. <Soniehow) one ‘S¢els that no one will. Forgetting Kellogg’s job in the state ent—if you can— he couldn’t even be elected senator from Minnesota six years ago after being handed the Republican nomi- saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. The suggestion of Davis of the v-| Labor Department is not so impos-| wrote it?” sible, but no one is expected to sik}make it. Davis seems to have,more| He's a sense than some of his colleagues, but he is not exactly White House material and he was born in Wales, lsd one Davis of the War Department might, next to Hoover, make as a president as could be found in the cabinet. But he hasn’t pop- ized himself and has no di matic appeal to business, politic or voters, being merely a good inet officer and an excellent ad- ministrator. . «Harty New, of course, is an ex- e@lént politician—they always put excellent politicians in the Post- office Department. But he is not a r figure despite his good facet the’ vastoftice and, pain’ to relate, is what is technically known as a lame duck, se 8 ‘Work of the Interior Department 8o' lacks appeal and is so manifestly unpopular in some sections, that many of Hoover’s friends fear it would be a bad mistake to make Work: the titular. wantees io the Hoover campaign. So Work won't be proposed for the presidency, any- way. That leaves Jardine of the Depart- ment of Agriculture. Jardine is re- nation. . Neither is there any apparent boom for ‘was ported about to rosie ut if he were to have any political strength farmers and it appears that among it IN NEW YORK | New York, Jan.:12.—In one of Broadway's most popular plays, a veteran actor is shown describing in enthusiastic terms the manu- script of a new play he has just read Another cl asks, Whereupon the old ac- tor replies: “Oh, you wouldn’t know. lessor out in Idaho. Who ‘Believe a col- lege eee knew so much?... cues —— ole sits alone out in desert, ing away’ And at this line the audience in- variably gets Hy large laugh. points involved are very a The New Yorkly folk like to think that nothing is accomplish- ed outside the ‘limits of their slen- : island. ee pe Broadwayese playgoers Proadwayese actors who, doubtless, really @ Idaho to be a desert, with college profes- sors modeled after the musical com edy pattern. And just about eve: one in and out of Man>attan know: ose ergy Shee Ww Haber! me ity, poor lers in the stic! Lae At-cbe mentioned that ‘somcone out in Idaho, Kansas, lowa and way points can sing, dance, write 2 play. or compose a song and youll gen- erally get a laugh from a New York audience, eee Everybody knows by this time that it is the folk from Idaho, Iowa and Saag Bai do sing, dance, pie plays and combnse:¢éngs.: But, when they do it, they immediately become identified as New Yorkers and their nativity is‘ carefullyy covered up. © That the talent, whatever it may be, generally gets its hearing in New York, is sufficient unto itself Sargent, who, until he|it would have to come from the|‘? the New Yorker, ed cceniey. bacgea pis leading on ‘of Lud-|the farmers is just where Jardine} The proof of which is: the verv low, Vt. .No. one really dislikes rgent, for he is a nice old gen- tleman, but it is generally admitted that he doesn’t. have much to do with the administration of his Depart- ment of Justice. has very little political strength. Thus, most of the secretaries af parently being quite aware of the! litical status, are working for cover. If it so happens that Hoover becomes the next president, Play in which the Idaho lines appear was written, in- part, by Edna Fer- ber, who came out of Illinois, and who made her first considerable success by writing of a woman sales- man who “made” the small towns Insof: Washington is concern- | those who have worked for him will|of America. And. one of the out- ed, one of the "mont sacnieiing of be much surer of federal jobs than| standing characters is a caricature all ies would be that of Wil- bur of the Navy. Somehow, nd one has ever thought of that and it Never even occu! those who did not. prey former Harding-Coolidge abinet members now living, of a famous old trouper whose name was better known on Main Street than on Broadway and \-ho could to your cor-|is Hughes, who refuses to run.jstill pack a house in Idaho when dent until this very moment. | There are also Daugherty, Fall and| Broadway had become indifferent. resi Wilbur is an amiable person, too, but he has broken all records for putting his foot in the pudding by OUR BOARDING HOUSE eeeaee By Ahern ||" HAW ww tt WOULD iby. Thus far, those three have ie uaily crane alee sions of possibilities. “WATS No SALE tuE For’ th us’ paerede,ot Broadway ‘or \e ie wa: is nothing more than the parade of wHELL FIND MORE WAVE BEEN WorTH J=/WAIT-—TILL You Go EA -THINGS WRONG WrTH} NoU LADS WHILE, to HAVE HEARD For “TH” MEDICAL EXAMINATION, Nou THAN AN ALTO DEALER DOES Wirt at be eliminated. upon Cherry, cunning her aid. Cherry must not : that she had run m another name de- the intention of kill- d, so that when she was Y could marry without re- i themselves for her unhappy. that she had ‘stalls Pringle to the hoon she had forgotten born even wiilie is was no Mrs, Hathaway registered here. Early this morni: aT tele- phoned her sister, Miss e, and told her all I knew-—-Mrs.-Hatha- way’s husband was out searching for her, and without waiting to locate him I decided to bring Miss —* here with sare fe “The manager ssid she wasn’t here!” Cherry interrupted. “Doc- tor, tell me what’s the matter Faith, lying very still, waited breathlessly » the doctor's an- swer. “I’m afraid it’s nervous collapse in an ed | with my sister?” Lazy people think heaven is 2 place where they will never have to get up, but, of course, it is a place they will have to get up to. see Life is puzsling. A rut is some- thing a man spends half his time digging and the other half trying to keep out of. i ese Nature is consisterft. She never makes an egotist without giving him plenty of tongue. cer | Ivory Ivy is running true to form. ith! she thinks the aesophagus is a book . of fairy tales. We read of a painting that is 125 feet long. Which proves conclusively use| the old saying that art is long. seed f aah it es iti ME ANSWER ALL HE QUESTIONS . NESTERDAY, ON “THE “APPLICATION, FoR INSURANCE?. ~~ EGAD,~ THE AGENT EVEN ON MY READY AND UNFALTERING RESPONSES ! HM-M- WAT “TILL “TH” Doc. Gets TH’ EAST * _ AN WEST ON “THis’ * ROSTRUM OF YouRS!. ~~ HELL DUST CLOSE HIS SATCHEL AN’ )/ DIET A POTENT FACTOR IN EVERY DISEASE (Continued from Yesterday) ‘This is the last of a series of four articles in which I have covered an alphabetically arranged Hst of com- mon disorders in their relation to food. The closing paragraph of the last article concerned heart troubles. Insomnia or sleeplessnes: next time you cannot go to sleep, tap quickly on your abdemen with the ends of your fingers, as you would on a drum, and see if it does not sound just like’ one. “Counting sheep” will not help a great deal if you are so bloated that you can use your abdomen for a drum. Kidney stones are made out of Practically the same material as gallstones, Obesity! Are you too fat? If so, you are using too much food in pro- portion to your physical exercise. Many who have followed my reduc. ing menus have reduced their weight from ten to forty pounds simply by decreasing their food quantity and increasing their daily exercise, Rectal troubles are always caused by constipation and the irritation from poisonous bowel elimination. Rheumatism is developed mainly from hyperacidity of the stomach from inharmonious food mixtures, and can be avoided and cured by @ sensible diet. Tonsillitis (chronic) is curable in a hundred per cent of all cases by dietetic measures alone! This is a strong statement, but can: be dem- onstrated quite easily, as all cases respond quickly to fasting and diet. Tuberculosis is a disease which requires the most careful dietetic regime. Stuffing with such foods as milk and eggs has probably killed more sufferers from this malady than would have died on an ordinary diet. No more food should be given than the-body. can appropriate to its uses, and only those: foods of the finest cell-building quality shoud be used. Any amount above this regulated quantity only enervates the boty all the more, and creates more aatarrhal mucus which must I promised to run through an phabetical list of the common dis- orders, and the list would not be complete if I did not mention: Zymosis, which really means the seme thing as our old enemy, auto- toxemia, and I guess you know by this time what relation food to this condition. I undertook a big task to try to show you wha important factor food plays in use and cure of all diseases not mentioned other contributing ‘causes’ which should be understood, but have em- Dhasized only the dietetic causes which I hope will give you material for new thought on this subject. If I have succeeded in inspiring you to study dietetics more seriously, I Kansazis, Cloradans, Qregonians, Californians and euch, “all-;trans- planted from “thefi* native feaths. And the playwrights, authors, song writers, chorines and actors alike could give former rural addresses did they see fit. Somehow they get the habit of joining in the New York idea. Though, not infrequently, I feel that when they laugh at the various al- lusions :taj the yokelries of the out- lands they are laughing at’ New York and at themselves. s¢es One of the most successful edito7s of one of the most successful maga- zines of the glamorous outddors is & highly strung victim of the nervous tension created by life in this hec- tic hamlet. For years on end he has sought escape from the rigorous life about him by burying himself~in tales of pine woods, sturdy seamen) and frontiersmen. His assistant, they tell me, is a timid little fellow who {s thrilled beyond words at coming across & the copy. T paid.a visit oe riend who edits @ series of magazi levoted to the exploits of ire 5 pronehosti: ters, Canadian mounted police an such. He was bewailing the lack of young men who cot grind out these adventures by the yard. A few weeks before he had tried to hire a number of new writers. Two “tnd Shutsky and hed been tn vitch and’ al jew York-from- Russia‘ but-a great open - was limited to cowboy movies seen from a com- fortable seat in a Broadway movie house. ° “T hired one of them,” he told me, “and he’s turned out to be one of the greatest writers of westerus we ever had.” . a ee A year or so ago I called upon the editor of @ group of highly success- ful confesstom- magazines. She turn- ed out to bea timid little Southern woman, with the quietest sort at | manner and voice. The family back- ground was ultra-conventional and she ‘shuddered with horror at any suggestion of social non-conformity —outside the covers of her maga- zines, of course. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) LR ee E Bais years. Their acquaintance eg Persistent | ice Enclose a stamped_addressed envelope for reply. leve that the essen! all reform lies in the kitchen and dining room! I have written special articles dealing in greater detail with each disease mentioned in this day’s are ticle. Any of these articles will sent to you if you state which one you want and write to me care of this paper. Please enclose a stamp ed, self-addressed, large envelope, This is part of the service your newspaper ig giving to its readers. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: A Seeker of Health writes; “My girl has a very rapid heart, and I re been told that her Ae ind were hamid and were sending poisons through her body causing her heart to” beat faster than /it should. Do you ad- vise removing the tonsils? You have spoken of another method of rid of them. Would you kit exe Plain this through the columns of ie Tribune as soon as possible. I have received a great deal of good from your department, and I think it is very wonderful to have a de- ot like this to read every lay! Answer: It ig doubtless true that heart trouble often develops from diseased tonsils, but the tonsils can ‘be cured without removing them. A short fast followed by the proper diet will create a condition in both the blood and lymphatic system so the tonsils can cufe themselves of any pusy condition which may have developed. Send @r detailed in- formation, asking for the article called “Save the Tonsils.* ° Question: Mrs. R. 8. C. writes: “Please advise in your column if a tablespoonful or two of olive oil can be used on lettuce and tomatoes, etc., when meats or nuts or cheese are used at the same meal.” Answer: It ig pe ly safe to use olive ofl with any other kind of food, as it is a wholesome hydrocar- bon, and unless used in excess does not intefere with the digestion of other foods. ~ Question: Martin B. writes: “I am suffering from a very severe pain in my face. My lpg become very swollen and my gums are like ~ Go to your dentist and see if he cannot find the cause of your trouble in abscessed teeth or pyorrhea. If your dentist does not think the trouble is with your teeth he can eend you to a physician who can properly diagnose your case, will be well satisfied, as I truly be. tial foundation of Leading Pastime at - Jamestown College - Jamestown, N. D., Jan. 12.—(AP) —Roller skatii ‘taken rank as ing the leading winter sport at James- town college. ice skating and the rollers have been called i: as a substi robust “h—I” or “d—n” in| ¢ i is i i b i F ; i E ; 7 = i is ee i i g 2 i ! cF il F tt pi in -22,

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