The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR |) The Biemarck ‘Tribune sites weer, = 5 These and other projects have long been un- ‘ THE cing oop lle der consideration, and it may have remained —|only for such a great stimulus to public inter- Published the Bismarck Tribune Company,|est in aviation provided by the Lindbergh eemarck. aa, og Bo i postoffice at i one eo Paced vagal second nations woul mefit from the open- \Gecree D. Men President and Publisher | ing of air commerce between them. It would Subscription Rates Payable In Advance have a civilizing effect upon the rural popula- ook 2 taal pj ETERS 4 tion of Mexico, would heal some of the sores ac. and dispel some of the silly fears, and would: (in state outside Bismarck) ....--. increase the national wealth of both countries. by mall, outside of North Dakota .. What Lindbergh did in a large way in restor- ing diplomatic harmony between the two na- tions, international air lines could do in a more Permanent, if less spontaneous, way. cc year . Member of The Associated Press | Editori: m: | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the torial Comment fee ‘not Gtherwise credited in this paper, end also the | _ Ohio's Favorite Sons ocal news of Vcrieneded origin published herein. All (Cleveland Plain Dealer) ‘ ! 4 ; fights of republication of all other matter herein are Ohio Democrats pin their faith to a man of ‘ : ‘ Oy EPPEEE SOpUP DEE EES CEU ERE EGTER PED EREPLEDSEOSTE OE 1 cashed national repute when they decide to give Atlee 4] Foreign Representatives Pomerene their support for president. The G LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY logical man to stand as the state’s favorite son i NEW YORK + e© «© Fifth Ave. Bldg. in the Democratic convention is Vic Donahey, 4 « CHICAGO DETROIT | but the governor declines the honor. His un- \ ‘ Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. common modesty throws the distinction to the 4 ty, State ai ty Newspaper! ormer senator. pene! City Ligh renal nea laa et It seems to be agreed, however, that it f A Flyer From Spokane Ohio’s support of Pomerene on the early bal- | Orogino is a small town in Idaho, with 1,000/lots brings no results the Buckeye delegates : people. The other day floodwaters cut off the| will be free to swing to Donahey when or if a itown from the rest of the world. There was|Donahey movement appears in the offing. The ,no way for horse, automobile or train to reach governor's reluctance to pose as a presidential :it. And Orogino was without bread. possibility has not been strong enough to pre- 1 But sufficient for the day are the inventions | vent such an understanding. } thereof, and it was no-time at all until a plane) This state is usually ready with at least one roared out of the west with enough yeast to| favorite son candidate for a presidential nom- keep Orogino baking for a week. It was care-|ination. In 1912 the Democrats offered Har- fully dropped from low altitude, the people got}mon. In 1916 Theodore E. Burton was the Re- iit and ate their bread again, as usual. The| publican choice. In 1920 we had two candi- emergency had been met. dates in Harding and Cox, and both won. Four * But who brought the yeast to Orogino?| years ago the Democrats again supported Cox. ‘Brief dispatches from the west named the] This time Ohio again offers two, Pomerene and : aviator only as “a’ Spokane flyer.” It was a| Willis. i brave deed, an act of mercy, and the man who] Neither Ohioan, of course, will be a leading flew to Orogino with that yeast made life just}contender at the start. But any candidate ‘a little better for 1,000 people confronted by a| backed by a delegation as large as this state ‘serious emergency. sends has a certain measure of recognition in 4 Most of us never will know his name. Welnational councils and is always a possibility. tonly will know that Orogino needed yeast an‘| Despite primaries, presidential nominations are ‘that “a flyer from Spokane” made the trip.|still made by the time-honored methods of , And to most of us, this is enough. trade and political generalship. One can never It is no great story any more when there is|tell where lightning will strike next. @ man to meet the emergency. We have be- e so accustomed to seeing dangerous, dis- A Tribute to Printers forting situations met by brave coopera- (Brooklyn Eagle) tenets: i Hl “secondary with us to the work he has donv.| which was not reported at the time and has 1 We know there is a man in Spokane who car-| never since been published, has been found in «ried the yeast to Orogino. The people of Or-|the archives of the Printers Pension, Alme- ee (ogino got their yeast, and the excitement end-| house and Orphan Asylum Corporation in Eng- 1 ¢ PVEtP Eber ee ERE ee ed as soon as they got it. land. Dickens was chairman of the corpora~ We are becoming matter of fact about brave|tion in 1843 and 1864. The speech made by deeds in the air, too, and the awe with which | Dickens 63 years ago was as follows: “Wwe beheld aviators a few years ago is gradu-| ‘The printer is a faithful servant not only rally blending to the same respect we have for for those connected with the business, but for ithe family doctor, the telephone lineman, the|the public at large, and has, therefore, when ian who fixes a leaky pipe, repairs a broken laboring under infirmity and disease, an espe- street car trolley, succors a stalled automobile,|cial claim on all for support. Without claim- ~ ¢pute out a fire. ing for him the whole merit of the work pro- 1” Balto and the other dogs who took the serum duced by his skill, labor, endurance and intelli- \ to Nome a couple of years ago were made into] fence, without him what would be the state of i ‘ ic mi . the world at large? Why, tyrants and hum- Vheroes in the public mind for another reason|! or! ‘ge: ly, ty —perhaps man’s sentimental love for dogs,| U&S in all countries would have everything | perhaps the color of that long, bloody pull over their own way. t eS eee tien” creneed Oe might be found in the printing trade. For { phone wires or heals a broken pipe line. The quickness of perception, amount of endurance j hero of the air has joined the great army of and willingness to oblige, I have ever found the ] SEPEPOTE “trouble shooters,” who go quietly about their compositor pre-eminent. ie, heroic work day in and day out as part of their “The afflicted printer who has lost his sight in the service, sitting through long days in his 2 x source of entertainment—being denied him, Py f _—— in Industry aaa his daughter or his wife might read to him; a Many o! pee rE aaa in ey sige aid but the cause of his misfortune would invade passing out of the picture. Some of them dit! even that small solace of his dark seclusion, HUIS OT TATE ORO ETE Ee and its present-day prosperity and indus-| printed he might have assisted to set up. ee ewiestir, and obliteration. of reminis: PrreThe. printer is the fren ot intelligence, of t remnants of them is saddening to those| thought; he is the friend of liberty, of freedom, glory in the past. ; of law; indeed, the printer is the friend of ‘olonial America’s first industry of any|every man who is the friend of order—the itude was the building of sailing vessels,| friend of every man who can read.” art in which it was unexcelled for several aE | a : Py g af generations. These fast Yankee craft carried A Real Job For Congress li masts made from virgin pine trees cut in (New York World) Ze lew England forests. A towering and gaunt! The current report of the federal power com- 'HE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE Walking on Soft-Boiled Eggs 2 oe eo BY RODNEY DUTCHER - NEA Service Writer Washington—There ought to be enough sweet harmony in Demo- cratic throats these next few months to drown out the sour notes which |General Dawes would be nominated. unquestionably will echo until the! A complete canvass of minds is im- | possible and wouldn’t mean anything Il be little more ®82Y way, but some of the wise than a ratification of Governor Al money, if any, is placed on Mr. Smith and that Reed, Ritchie and the Hoover and some of the wise money | ning. others will have to be contented again if any, is place on Mr. with promises of cabinet posts or Dawes. whatever else they decide they | 1 want in case Smith becomes able to, to slow up what Hooverites like to think of as their band wagon, has It seems likely. But the gentle- | begun, emanating from more or less men who predicted a week or even a) mysterious sources. couple of days in advance the selec- | assailed in gumshoe fashion as to tion either of Kansas City or Hous- ton as the next convention site may now rise and tell us with certainty just who the two party nominees will be. Does any gentleman rise? ———— 41 f IN NEW YORK | New York, Jan. 25.—Entertain- ment can be furnished on an hour’s notice in Manhattan; entertainment for’ everything from your little Johnny’s birthday dinner to the stag — of the Ribbon Clerks’ So- In the Republican party, it isn’t as if nearly all the smart politi- cians thought Mr. Hoover would be nominated or as if they thought | dali " A . Gee tion, that the name of the hero has become| A speech made by Charles Dickens in 1864, on seal ikbly that tun Dames cratic convention lass entertainment fu on sl red notice.” The anti-Hoover attack designed hed| continue, it often ecttles in t And, reading on, and from boredom, thanks of this benefactor of Just below the Broadway surface there live eereeatincgae Vege rainy suel These c pations. tainment” eager ne them in money unt can get imate” job—if any. ies In an average evening a hundred or more such are under way in hotel and There is little trouble n juota of ies seek- difficulty a chorine on Broadway his constitutional cligibility and his rd. You have read all about that, but you haven’t read who started it. No one attempted to spread the anti-Hoover propaganda through the medium of this writer and he hasn't inquired as to where it came from, but it is funny how stories will get into the new: be- | sure to be more of an cight-page weekly t appearec here whose | cho: One has a much better chance guessing nominees than on had to guess convention cities. when it comes to guessing as tween Democrats, no one now seems to be guessing anyone but Smith. Guessing as among Republicans) outstanding characteristic has been is much more difficult. It may be, in as the Democrats say, that some- one pushes a button and then the Republican candidate is nominated. If so, Republican guessing becomes all the harder anless one is so ex- tremely fortunate as to know the button-pushers and learn just what is on their minds. think the button Hoover and others that it will be pushed for Dawes. Hoover folks seem to be frothing at the mouth in thei: anxietv to have the button pushed right now, but the butten-pushers are in no! persuaded the Smith generals to the longer they delay| accept Houston. be to} would be likely thatieent an anti-Hoover slant. new anti-Hoover campaign gets anywhete will depend on who’s be- | faces h| friendship and eal Oh Ge there’s nothing left for me to do but is| to'tell Cherry the trutl.—that I went with jealousy of her and Bob and wanted to kill myself, that I’ve been shamming about this amnesia usi “No, Faith!” George sto} her sternly. “You can’t do that! Don't you realize that your goodness is more real to Cherry than ses, that Getting back to democracy, where the only wise money in sight is on Smith, one also finds, within narrow this has been observed especially in discussion of whether Smith's stroke in letting the convention go It is fairly safe to assume that some developmeyt here 1,0t r- ally known, even among polit » nt, som guessers ill bo pushed for h toward laying the foundations of the na-| go, the types from which that very book was| In that case it the more guessers will there figure that the button won’t ever, ernor Dan be pushed for Mr, Hoover. Monee to be the The jing season hasn’t candidate from the arrived yet. Being out in front and! Smith has been looking. still not so far ou’ in front as tv be! isn’t any direct evidence of ith Mr. however, and it wouldn’t be at all were to find himself the folks down home the meee matey ian Sees Sold 8 incipal cas-| fair if Mood: pine felled recently in a Maine town was|missien calls attention to a state of affairs thought to be the last of the so-called marked | which is the direct result of sheer negligence » Mast trees. ‘ z in congress and which needs correction. Con- ¢ Mast trees and mast landings were first so| gress wrote an excellent water power act in ) designated about 1691, when in the Provincisl| 1920 and is now neglecting its enforcement. eerecenneeeretegen vet Peeters sree - ~ { Charter of that year, under which Plymouth| The act of 1920 is the organic act creating 3 Colony and the Province of Maine were united] the federal power commission and endowing it 3 with Massachusetts, it was provided that all] with authority to grant licenses and to super- § trees of the diameter of twenty-four inches| vise the developments thus authorized. One < upward growing upon land not theretofore|of the important duties of the commission is 4 granted to any private person should be re-|to keep an adequate check on construction 1 served for the furnishing of masts for the royal | costs, so that the capital accounts of licensees ; navy. ale y , {Shall contain only the “actual legitimate in- 5 Near the coast all white pines of suitable di-| yestment” Poy the law prescribes. This i mensions were marked with an ax in the de-|work the commission does to the best of its sign of a broad arrow. This was the king’s|ability, but it is badly handicapped by lack of é k, and up to a quarter of a century ago| personnel. For with the exception of the symbols were occasionally found on treea.| salary of its executive secretary the appropri- cuttings were witnessed by men, women | ations of the commission cannot be used for palldren gathered from far and near for pernanal aaeeiens. tee pee is that it raat occasion. ‘ Fi § lepend on the generosity of the various de- The “mast landing” was a designated point| partments and the loan of an expert here and on the (2 eg pally Rg des Deig pega poe there. It is these experts who make the in- ol ; ight for installa-| vestigations hear! - on ships or for shipment to colonial ship- sanaations Ane conduct the anes Tee is. The locations of some of these lan¢l- f are recorded either in history or in the|j, legend of. the localities. i by goi.g ‘among hen it comes, ualty when it co patrcne of aight r, it shoulld be borne in mind,! merely its double-crossing seasor. | use that happens to be a reasonablle guess. OUR BOARDING HOUSE ASN BEGoNE Wit Sormy fo HEAR ABOUT You Bust’ Your \G ANKLE MATOR!~ How’ VT WAPPEAS 2 Dip IT SNAP UNDER TH’ LOAD J OF A CAFETERIA “RAY, —~ oR DID You WWE A “TUMBLE YOUR, N “TEARS. AND MAPATHY fone T HAVE ANoTHER ANKLE LEPT THAT I WILL RISK FRACTURING -To PRESENCE S. A STUDY OF CHRONIC RHEUMATISM For some time physicians have ; Loge! trying to discourage the use the word “rheumatism.” = They ler to classify the different forms of that which has been called rheumatism into “rheumatic fever,” “gout,” “arthritis deformans,” “rheumatoid arthritis,” “osteo- arthritis,” etc. As far as the lay- man is concerned, it is just as well to make the simple classification of “acute rheumatic fever” and “chronic rheumatism.” In a case of chronic rheumatism the area of inflammation is alwa: around the joints, either in the eartilage and bone covering, or in be rie Lote membranes and peri- tissues. When the joints become d from the inflam- mation and subsequent calcification, | vei the condition is then known as is deformans, which simply means deformity of the joints caused by rheumatism. The majority of cases of chronic itism occur between the ages of twenty and fifty; only about five r cent under the age of twenty. arthritis does appear during childhood or adolescence, it ‘jis a t deal more serious and more difficult to eradicate. The first signs of chronic rheu- matism are usually noticed in some soreness in the joints of the fingers, and this gradually extends to the wrist, elbows, and shoulders. It ma: take several months before enough inflammation has developed so that one can be sure he is acquiring theumatism. In mogt cases tenderness in the Joints of the extremities will come and go for a time before settling down into wid permanent locations. There will finally be a noticeable swelling of the joints, and whether his occurs in the synovial mem- » in the cartilage, or in the » itself, it little matters as far as the cause and cure are concerned. After the inflammation has gone on for some time, the patient will sometimes notice little lumps form- ing on the outside of the finger its. This is caused by the de- posit of calcium which is apparently thrown out to protect the joints against irritation. If the causes of rheumatism are not removed, there may be such ex- tensive changes ir the joints of the fingers and toes that the normal hinging tendency is destroyed, and lan-| some of the joints will bend back- of | ward, and even become subluxated, 3] or drawn out of vosition. When arthritis has been allowed to. cota and when bony changes take P in the vertebrae it places the patient in a very helpless condition and makes a cure more difficult. _ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1928 With the desig! involved/ the patient is practically forced to remain in bed, owing to the extreme pa‘n when - nal, on and Bacradaeed to tne are of the Tribune. Tril suveoee tor reply. irritated by Byers normal nfovement against each other. The development of chronic rheu- matism is usually quite slow, so the tient has olenty of time to elimin- tle the causes Leshan eg hegerad gressed suffici lor rae of the spine to be affected. Chronic rheumatism bond be easily cured at the start, but becomes more difficult as each new joint is involved. In tomorrow's article I will dis- cuss the causes wrich lead to chronic rheumatism. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. A. W. J. writes: “I have a most annoying feeling come over me at times. Jt begins in my head, then seems to make my body stiff. Does not last lung, but when it goes away leaves me with a very bad headache All the rest of the day. Could you tell me what it is and what to do about it?” Answer: It would be necessary for me to know more about your trouble in order to give you a‘cor- rect explanation of the cause and cure. I cannot attempt to diagnose cases through this column. Question: Mrs. L. B. asks: “What is a tree-tomato, and is it ever found in this country?” Answer: This is a fruit-veg- etable, native of West India and d.| South America. It is borne on a small tree, is egg-shaped, about two inches long, of a purplish or brown-* ish red color with a f'avor similar to our tomato. When fully ripe it is used as a fruit, both and raw, and is prepared in various ways as a vegetable. Question: Daisy writes: “Am 32 years old and maf hair is just be- ginning to get curly. Could there be anything wrong with my health or scalp? Am feeling fine, but would just like to know the reason for this change in my hair.” Answer: Hair frequenily turns curly toward middle age, this change is no doubt due to the results he|of a bad fever or to a radical change of ciet. I have known many cases where thin, straight hair became curly after a fasting and diet treatment. F Sait “Shes Aerctil conivasanas. For the first time since Faith had known George Pruitt, he failed her. To her agonized cry, “I can’t have Cherry’s life syoiled. There must be some. way out!” he could return no satisfactory answer. ‘aith was furious with him, then abjectly remorseful. “Please don’t be with me, George. You've vokiennif bys 80 wonderful tome I don’t know what !’d do witthout your more. for my awful mist . go < ou t she had vamped your Bos: Many as E i Ei . e asd ‘with, the world. | beseness to her, you'll destroy that ed tangle into which I’ve gotten poor Cherry be unraveled other- wise?” Faith pleaded despairingly. “I simply don’t know,” George confessed ruefully. “I don deserve to get happiness out of all my suspicion and craziness and lying,” Faith told him. “But, oh, George, I am happy! If it weren’t for this wrong that I've done Cherry, I'd be ecstatic. For rea me, George, :nd I—I adore ms “Then forget everything else but those two big facts,” ade vised gently, but Faith saw that he winced with ete “It isn’t right for me to take so much from you and—give you nothing,” she said pityingly, her hand tightening over his. . “You’ve given me your fr’ :nd- ship and you’ve let me help you. Teas and are a eo to ex] rege ', turn. ing away from the ee bother about me. Just get well as influence. wry would b: more deeply hurt than you could guess. make | She talks to me about you, like an|obeying him, for was consum- puede jghild a2out a saintlike “Oh, does she?” Faith’s eyes with tears. “I've thought ee society affuirs ¢ night tnee os three eoctety ots poiny oe e F fer é fast as you can.” Faith had every intention of ed with a desire. to get into her own home an.’ to er new life as a beloved wife, gloriously cured of the disease of A eS fan, oe “ nee ears on st one pe release her from ene feet pital. She admitted to L #F NEXT: Nature's solutionn . (Copyright, 1988, NEA Service, tnc.) Al Smith urges local self-gov- ernment, but it’s what the boys do when they're eway for conventions eee * Pay et your house now: s have that base metal. use —and if you don't believe on figure on getting house br: A man itted to in New York the 1 poet pe'vante' token cut oe the beste eee It is possible for. to live 200 ‘vegetable diet,

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