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_ PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘ ___TUESDAY, JANUARY 81, 1928 “The Bismarck Tribune 2 Sate Date | v pm EATEN ong uses id 8 soung Wiha Howard Be soe i eee | | HEALTH “DIET ADVICE (Enaied 18 Be $1 Dr Frank Mc . - 1. Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, |boy’s mother. oy nb, ‘er ard at the postoffice at} ‘That is not to say that her plight should ‘George D. Mans. Ponident and Publisher |Make his punishment less severe. It should not. | The fact that she is an innocent sufferer should ‘ Sabecription Rates Payabl not be offered in extenuation of the dreadful 4 by carrier, per year .. #220 |thing he did, ‘ ad a aa Lad uae Us Bis : But she merits our pity, nevertheless. The “(in state outside Bismarck) .....- . 600| greatest sorrow that can come to a mother is Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . ¢.00/hers; and while we can demand strict punish- ment for her son, we can at the same time give | Weekly Braet we tte Ten maa tse 260 |her our deepest sympathy. “Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako hts De ast hley.70 YOUR CHILD'S EYES {defect continues, or the causative A good deal of good has been ac-|scidosis ie not catty eg ire) eyes complished in the past few years | itl nore tied sch day o ters through the dissemination of inform- ation about the care which should Dr. McCoy will gladly snswer r " be given in protecting th ye of DU esahissidcjosseccoeussesesssises 180] It’s getting so that children have a hard time the young child. Infections from|| Bereonal questions om henlks eng Member Audit Bureac of Circulation making parents agree with them. carelessness at childbirth were form-|] the Tribune. : pritnherintpcctherctisete ea erly responsible for many thousands | Enclose a stamped addressed of cases of blindness each year with re in children who become blind even be- ee fore one year of age. In most states the laws require|}may be dread of light, watering, ¢ the physician to sterilize the baby’s | sties, cross-eyes, and often frequent Member of The Associated ‘ Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the I dispatches credited to ; 4 fe oe not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the Editorial Comment focal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of lication of all other matter herein are Taxi Driver Philosophy e i = as a the child in born. blinking. ree false rieerel. Or Hd sd) i ff P less practitioner iad tag midwife to an existent eats and ua by. x ie var over years an ey git aroun’ use sterlizing measures even thou; use of certain eye exercises. re { G Loan PAYNE COMPANY to ater a siontnient today In the rush they are not otherwise permitted ci eral excellent books with illustra- H coca, 2 . | Pal Prt » if they use medicinal preparations. It has| tions have been written explaining H NEW YORK ¢ « « Fifth Ave. Bldg. ‘ik hour! This ’ud oe a cute nies Tl eit they been found a the use of a mild| these exercises. CHI DETR ut up a moniment every day in rus. our.’ antiseptic to: cleanse the lids will] I have alread; pared a special {ewer Bide. Kresge Bide. |" “Funny thing, lady, about hotels. I wouldn't Kill almost any kind of infection if| article on exereieing the eyes and I {TCorticial City, State and County Newspaper) | take a fare from that there place if I could. SNE UAT: Conon re ee | Cenc eean wate le akta ene be ‘ '. a ews; ’ : ” es not usu: Trecog- | dress me care is jus t (Official City, y —|They’re a cheap 10-cent tip bunch. nize objects until about ax snontte, ask for the article entitied, “Exer- : ‘Are Toll Roads the Solution? “Say, lady, are you sure you a the tka and cede are frequently alarmed ns the Byes.” fais ? si ‘ In New Jersey arises a plea for super-high-|right? I used to be a private shover myse le ae eee et move in aa soon 5a he i le to read, bs 4 } ways certain to be echoed in other parts of the —monkey jacket and all—and one day my lady yout. Somplete coordination: oh ye re ontonereist woo will aevine the jcountry. Automobile owners are demanding|give me an address in Chinatown. I calcu- ; movements usually does not occur| proper care of the child’s eyes so until the baby is about three months | that defects may be corrected and old. the eyes strengthened to rormal, wide, protected concrete speedways connecting | lated she knew where she wanted to get to, the great centers and free of highway and rail-| but she didn’t and a bunch o’ bums down there Toad grade crossings. damn near pulled my uniform offen me before Recognizing that the cost of construction|we got out o’ the place. So ever since, when ‘and maintenance would soon bankrupt the|I see what looks like a lady goin’ to a bum ad- ‘state, it is suggested that the super-highways| dress, I ask if she’s right.” be built by private enterprise, much as were } Mothers must be warned to keep —_— their babies’ eyes protected from| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS strong lights during the first few| Question: N. V. writes: “I wish x months of life and at least until the! you would tell me a cure for a per- baby is old enough to sit up and|son that is always half frozen. ie strong enough to protect himself by|only time I am ever comfortably ‘ : : turning away from strong lights. warm is on a hot summer day. These ‘the railroads, and that a toll be collected until Wanted: A Progressive In good health the baby’s eyes are |cold mornings I just shiver from head ‘they are paid for. (New York Times) not apt to give much trouble, but if! to foot. I take a lot of exercise and the feeding is improper, surround-{ get plenty of fresh air, also eat the The idea is not altogether new, but has nct| There is something almost pathetic in the in- ings unhealthy, and sanitary habits| most wholesome food I know how, : ‘been much discussed in recent years, owing to! sistence of certain political left-overs that some- X Not practiced, there may develop a|but nothing seems to help my shiv- the prevalent hope that federal, state and lo-/body run for the Presidency this year with a 2 cae ot childhood disorders which | ers.” cal governments would be able to improve ex-|big and distinct label as a “Progressive” on his not only affect the future health of] Answer: You must depend upon or rey rf . . y the child, but also have a distinct|increasing your circulation through isting roads and build additional mileage to/hack. This demand springs up every day or if IN NEW YORK effect upon producing errors in vis-| taking more exercise, and esneclally meet the nation’s needs. But that the use cf/two. That the supply is not forthcoming al- | |iots or eye diseases. through taking long walks each day. the roads is and will continue to be far in ex-|most makes one doubt the fundamental law. aS SASS ea ES i are toe which more common- | After returning from your walk take cess of the rate of building and repair now|Perhaps the supply looks too quizzically at the a New York, Jan. 31—A vast for-| 2 Sipe, Chudren during early, life |a cold shower each time. ae Hi seems established. nature of the demand. This rests not so much tune in Jewels is left by guests in|tiva, the membrane which lines the|much water should a person drink Aside from the constant increase in private|upon actual conditions as upon political mem- : hotel rooms in Manhattan each year. | eyelids and extends over the outside | during the day?” po |automobiles and motor trucks, the bus system|ories. We had a Progressive Party in 1912. To| (Editor's Note: This is the last presented a full explanation of the) And pretty close to 90 per cent|of the eyeball. When these mem-) | Answer: | The quantity of water ‘promises to grow so fast as to add to the con-|be sure, it got pretty well submerged, at the of 3 ete be three articles on the | test by L. J. O'Rourke, its director of | f it gets back to its owners. A mil- Seekune reer Pe See on y eee oni ebacclentld va : ‘gestion and to increase the wear and tear on|orders of Colonel Roosevelt, in the Republican eae Personnel research, in which it ap-|lion dollars in gems alone found |diet composed principally of devital- | dividual case. A good rule is to take : the roads. Each new invention which cheap-| Party of 1916, but only four years ago Senator | BY RODNEY DUTCHER pears that experienced agents were \ their way to the various Property |ized foods. A plain milk diet, sup-/as much water as necessary to keep ens the cost of motoring will increase the|La Follette took the name again, to the great NEA Service Writer actually given credit in ratings over |‘lerks. And there was a similar rey aeteaiviia na te ot pee the urine strain on the highways and the traffic using|delight of its old devotees, and in that sign led} Washington, Jan. 31.—Postoffices|those applicants who hadn't served Minuit in stocks “bonds andvectual| #4 Simost) any of the diseases. of (it 1s-a aan you are not using acon ‘ : them. To meet this will require ever-grow- his party to overwhelming defeat and virtual ed ae a. Hee RE ae cere ae ci tae Bina ccna ae the eyelids which are supposed to|water. The additional water should ing sums of money which will have to come obliteration. ; A suppose that the Postoffice Denes | written examination was closely re- pearls ned: a entcuan ate trode oe eS ee be taken between meals and not with from the taxpayers in some form or other. That makes no difference. It is a good name, | ment would be advertising them. But|!ated to prohibition, work,” says| Pennsylvania left $50,000 worth of |fectious origin, will not-develop if| Gestion: Mrs. D, Le asks: “Woul Whatever system be adopted, the country} Progressive, and somebody has got to take it.|there was nothing in the annual re-|O’Rourke. The commission prepared negotiable bonds in a wallet. the child i petty ded and ths P ad ri ore . L. asks: “Would will have to reexamine the entire problem of|Qn the theory that the Scripps-Howard news- | Port of the postmaster general to in-|® spe:ial exan-nation in which the see is properly fed and the eyes |you advise X-ray treatment for dis- ‘ . kept clean by being washed with | eased tonsils and adenoids? Is thei t i : 4 ~, |dieate that any were for sale or that | Subject matter dealt entirely with| Hotel men tell me that the rush i i i ie oe Iighways in the light of the needs of tomor-|papers are Progressive, and that. they have|sny Postmaster jobs had been sold| Prohibition work, and this test was|of getting about the city and of|'™y" water two or three times daily. |any danger of drying up the glands row. Numbers, weight and speed are th2|/made first choice of Mr. Hoover, it has been as-|dusing the year. Probably the omis-|used in preference to the tests of|catching trains is to bame for the peat A elles Blass rtd a ee We hes by ry ‘ a fe ig not spreading infections through|ment? A woman who has taken principal determining factors. The intensity! sumed by some that the Secretary of Commerce] sion was a correct one, because the | general adaptability already in use)great percentage of such breaches) the usc of common towels, and every |this treatment ‘8 troubled with i i v i i - roceeds from sale of postmaster-|in other examinations. By trialjof memory. re is somethi q 3 t ‘s_troul a of traffic will have to determine the bed les would at once bloom out as a full fledged Pro- eps go ines the, oaks ny poke tests, it was also proved that this | about New: York’s hectic swirl ve has Rie SE eee bonsenola should pus discharge from the throat, What different roads. The weight of the vehicles| gressive. He has shown no signs of doing 80.|ticians instead of into the depart-| test actually did measure general|soon produces absent-mindedness. A | j ae $ st eee goal phate taieliat tal Fae eet will have to determine the foundation and sur-|Yet the argument is made that, whether he|ment’s receipts. adaptability. : psychologist once told mo that there|'“Chittren wiv sufger from eyc-| sila ence ge remtment for ton- facing. Throughout the country as a whole/does or not, Governor Smith must announce| _ It remained for the Civil Service cles, fa were designed to test are more absent-minded men in New| strain do so because of definite oie fisted to cae ae ee oe highway and traffic problems are bound to in-|himself a red-hot Progressive, or else abandon Meco lnc it ceeslaiy meted ahs cin scene eae abe ri tagatiieg: Terni oe wali defects or because of a systematic|in the throat and even the brain. it- crease. his campaign. i its annual report that “in certain| arise in prohibition work. The prac-jon their minds. acidosis which irritates the eyes the jself, may be injured. | The toxic ei. The joke of it all is that the palaver wholly | states pine sere to local positions, ticability of a test which measures) Most Manhettanites forget names; tive parts of the body A anid ees ae ea eae iene ee ak i Robbing William J. Burns concerns names, not things. Either of the can-|such as postmasters, have been made j reasoning ability is apparent: when} nd an almost equal number forge: even if these gl are shrun! William J. Burns, head. of the detective|didates mentioned might say that he was aby virtual purchase of the office |it is realized that a prohibition of-|faces. Tho c cts with new saces Melon Reaaches roremenn iis (oer an ee 1 ine a n t w * ig - icer: in: the field are utc 1 7 velop headaches, nevousness, irrita-|may continue to have an excess agency that bears his name, complains in Wash- | Progressive, or deny that he was, without in the|{mough the guise of political con-| icst in the etd mit ohne ing ste: |the average memoey to “tora: Mac | bility, drowsiness, digestive disturb. |formation of mucus or till be | ington that someone rifled his rooms the other |least affecting the things which he has done) out that there is a fine and impris- | portant situations, of the most absent-minded find their | #2°C®, dizziness, car-cickness, and) troubled with pus pockets in the + way to the highest places, in. spite be backward in school. If the eye |throat. ‘ . a : ook a certain document bearing on/and for which he stands. The whole thing is|onment penalty for such offenses. | ss , 4 cg ten Rotem case which now has Burns|simply a question of a vacant political ie Certain members of the Republi-| “Items designed to measure thejof all the advertising to the con- : ; " ‘ i ittee fi licant's abili interpyetor-|trary. > Lg 4 in court. The inference, unexpressed, is that|What actor will apply for it? Apparently, any- pesky pon wero Facets aera fr peampenue ee seed oe ony rr banat eee x CG aid 4 ‘ et agents We: at fault. feat b body can nave Ma for the — ent whether | cused ot paracioalne in the traffic raat ain Ee saae paiant aeons wide) ne: l ‘or all we know Burns’ complaint may be|anybody wou interested enough in his act-|in postmasterships. ase his action on his interpretation | claimed new am! lor lexi " true. Possibly his rooms were invaded. But it] ing to sit the thing out through the campaign| en the commission goes on to|headesmtersn: Tuines issued by | hed the reputation of being the most BYARINC 10 eaveenas. 5 : is terribly, terribly hard for us to work up much |js quite another affair. However, it is a clear al itt ‘S F talk about women government work-| “Vocabulary items were included | yet he became a partner in the Mor- ration over i. i hen Mr.| 22 of a vt ce fretful peoole who ane not bejers..as follows: eae {te tat Mnowlosge of the. menaninee A ey es piste i a tld of how ‘ou remember a few years ago, when 4 r..| happy until t] ey see a ribbon stucl in some-| .“Women in e government ser-j t v regu- secretary. Burns was head of the Depachnent J — body's coat with the word Progressive on it in! hers and. gumereasing bold acon eehde 8 aceae | in ples ee viene wen bails ae atid certain senators were assailing Harry |big letters. duties. Their advance is especially | terpreted without a knowledge of the | with some papers on his jesk. The Daugherty, Burns’ superior? If you do, you) , noticeable in the biological, eco-| meaning of the words in the regula- stood for a moment and oe De t of Justi its nomic and physical science branches,| tions. Previous studies, moreover,|then asked Morrow what he wanted. at that ne a roma of some at mame a manana and in law. *| have indicated that vocabulary items| “What are you doing there?” ‘i i “Th re nearly 80,000 women , have also a high value in selecting | Morrow asked, these senators, searched their desks and broke| Reassuring word comes from the Canal Zone|emploves in the executive civil ser-| individuals of superior general in-| “You rang for me, sir. I thought ae n locked drawers. It seems just to presume|that Colonel Lindbergh is still physically fit.|vice. Women probably fill more than | telligence.” perhaps—” t Burns knew what was going on. The Lone Eagle has taken pains to correct the| 24 womet are equally suitable mer femme abn Make rat What do ten sane bataaa tee Accordingly, we repeat, it is terribly hard to| report of a few days ago that he is extremely | sitions of letter carrier, railway pos-|dent that any person who fails to|for? Well, come back in ten min- feel very much sympathy for him now—grant-| nervous and worn, and wishes it known that his| tal clerk and mechanic ... . are illus-| make a passing score does not pos-| utes and remind me that I want you ing, of course, that he is telling the truth. health is quite as good today as it has been at| trations of positions not suitable to| sess the qualifications that would/again, will you, please?” It was a subdued, sad-eyed little|was responsible. The postman made Cherry who devoted herself to her/his morning delivery about half past baby and her sister that first week pada and Silt invariably flew after Faith’s return from the hos-!(2 answer his knock, her golden f s brilliant with . pital. She seemed to’resent the! she seturned to. he ‘peakfert bin hours that she was necessarily away | with the mail her cheeks from the house in Sc nity Boule-|and her eyes dull again, eed vard, attending to her duties asiFaith, watching her with pitying Bob's secretary, hastening home in|eyes, knew that Nils h 1 not yet the late afternoon to flutter about! written. As soon as she returned x Faith with anxio.. offers of service,|from the office in the afternoon she and then to wheel little Hope out for ; searched the smal: stack of mail on a long brisk walk in the early No-|tho table with quick, trembling vember cold. The baby was becom-| hands, then turned ly away, 80 ing more of a problem. She was|that Faith, if -he weir Present, no longer an unnoticing infant that| should not see her tears. ij i | | | A 4 A 1 igned There ‘another | slept half the time, but an exuber-| A do: ti “4 | = any time during the six years he has been|*°me™ eee fostity his Peng Sree moar row Gound himself on pela ant, healthy, demanding baby of six| made up her oe) farite ite at { “Idol Worship’ flying. As if foreseeing the furore that Philadelphia one months. ‘During that first week, of he had carried the thing far enough, , ener ere”, afternoon. iv- ‘An article in ae cueTeae Magazine on wal It is noteworthy, however, that Colonel Lind- wonld fallow whee, Prohibition of- cold ae it saath, Movida, ing there he couldn’ 't remen,ber what iy “i x ip” is a hi i ci jearne most of their] wi ef ly came for. He on phone i Prest tet factor in stock market dealings. |hintrecently, that ihe would welcome a "double”| agents nad. flunked the writien| corded st several points; thin See|and called his wife in New York. She |. By this it means that there is a whole host of |to take over some of his onerous social duties. mean) MEER NAH ORS He OMMENAEEE | SOTA Den” he wes 4g mane Aspeesh at investors and speculators in Wall Street which| Very likely the wish was whimsically made, but ‘|follows implicitly the moves of certain “big|very likely, too, it reveals a cross-section of the . names.” If William C. Durant, for instance, is| young aviator’s inner mind. If we may assume _ reported buying stock in a certain corporation, | that Lindbergh is human, we may assume that the “idol worshipers” rush to do likewise—with | his experiences of the last eight months have the result that the price goes sailing. been mentally, if not physically, fatiguing. ‘| To some extent this is based on sound reason-|Since last May his daily routine has been as that Cherry ha. been sufficiently i i piqued by his silence, that she was cooking and caring for the baby, to| starving for a word from him. But which she was slavishly devoted. just as often she reluctantly de- But it was Cherry who surprised | cided to keep her finger out of this them all by suddenly taking her re-| particular pie. ner Nils was sponsibilities as a mother very seri-|wiser than she, LT hag knew ously indeed. In some queer way,|Cherry better than she did. He had Faith’s expectations of a child of|said that Cherry merely desired con- her own aroused a fierce, maternal | quest, that when she was sure of a jealousy in Cherry’s heart. She|r.an she lost iaterest, that 20 man seemed almost to resent that Faith’s|had ever really given Cherry a coming child was al: reconcil- chance to fall hotly in love with hands full, with the housework, AN HAVENT CHANGED A MUCH IN A YEAR, SAKE THAN EVER Gor ing her sister to the possible loss of | him; bec: t . Ifa successful financier like Durant full and exacting as any presidential routine. It] Bwexcert tH’ Nose HAS ANEW SOB “HAT I Sepe; kat bet Jeslousy. Srentieied je [bean unt terest ae oe i enough of a stock to invest in it, it ought | is safe to say, in fact, that no individual in his- TAKEN DEEPE! 1 For R a her meace, to be good enough for other people to invest in,/tory has been feted and dined and paraded, yA aA “TUT fe WATCHED Out eration to kee Bane though her heart ached for her sis- She refused all evening invita-|ter. On Si x tions, on the ground that her baby oy from tee hospi ay hee needed her. Hope r sponded by be-|her rewacd, fo. Pentog: er} into ing her most ace self when | her room, her lips quivering over her Tenn, By ae home, a t age ee Bi wooding shadows in i the girl’s eyes. But regi ‘was not | —Nils.’ ‘wank to tall: to rom -ehont pelted out to Faith, that the eisl| NEXT: Chersy'e” confession, pe out ‘ai e gi iS was half sick, and that Nils Jonson| (Copyright, 1988 NEA Bete foo) plicit canes ida tiekdieds saab i dal itll a ciara a big dinner that night and then ke|? BARBS : recalled his engagement. 4 ‘ .* Pressure of That new loud -pcaker that would sets many ofthe New Yorker that [eMabe 8 speaker to addraa to. en way. Concentratio:. on big deals| at all necessar~ for some ory! le to ¢ and big problems is anothe: respons-| make themselves heard. f ible factor. Men forget all but th immodiate things before thelr minds, A Fitelarsh court bes bold that It is told of a certain important bus-| volte too laws Anoth iota cone iness man that his wife stepped in-|to the dogs, to his office unexpectedly and wait- e 98 , ed for @ moment, rather than disturb] Man’s cycle of life, will be 100 When the man looked Sore |years soot, say acteutiots. 's and saw her standing | almost enough to pay fo three ue YOU'RE FAT AN’ HEALTHY || M’SELT, ~~ ANT “TH? LooKiIAy— BUT THEN, CIty oF CHICAGO EACH YEAR SCIENCE IS . MADE ME A COMMISSIONER Se joo, But the magazine writer points out one|cheered and lionized and milled over, with quite in the practice. — : the same intensity that has marked the world’s - When one of the “big names” sells his hold-/ovation to Lindbergh. Yet Lindbergh is essen- , the fact usually is not advertised. Thus, |tially an aviator. He is not a Ward McAllister writer says, “the idol worshipers follow the|or a Prince of Wales. And where the strenu- footsteps into the stock market but/ous business of flying leaves him virtually un- out of it.” The net result is apt to be that/harmed, the unbroken round of banquets, re- unthinking investor loses his shirt. |ceptions, speeches and hand-shaking is at least old rule still holds good ; don’t buy stocks |a threat, if not an imminent one, to the young tunless you know exactly what you are doing. [man’s physical well being. : Lindbergh is deserting the crowds to hide Farm and Industry away for a brief vacation now and then. In A new solution for the lack of prosperity in|that he shows good sense. Those who are in ll agricultural communities is proposed by|the path of his future flights will also show R. Preston, president of the American Bank-| good sense, and a fine courtesy, if they will at- Association. tempt to make moderation the keynote of their He suggests that industries locate in the|social programs. No one can double for Lind- ler cities of farm regions. This, he says,|bergh, but everyone can see to it that Lind- iid increase local markets for farm produce, |bergh, the social lion, is shoved just as far into Bcrease public revenues and reduce taxes. |the background as Lindbergh, aviator extra- | This dovetails somewhat with Henry Ford’s /ordinary, desires. As far as aviation is con- s—that industry and agriculture ought to|cerned, the Minnesota boy is practically his own i ck, so that farm hands could spend the|master. He plans his own ts z ce FF a there ie soegied: “As dinyee, Meare washing machines, . ths working in factories. ib tat vo e The hour was 3 o'ock in the at] | The annual cost of higher educa- some whylhands. But as fa see 000,000, edseators ectimated at's ree r. Ford, for instance ?—to give|gerous business o: Figs in tye Tine foe Suara in s ye | o2h we Tasty ammeter nc ang tayo air, there is little doubt of The big department stores report eee - which blow about the similar experiences. on. wens, A man married three , encki banquet boards and through the reception halls Corrine bracken che ed tee id |nemes Een ne sles ‘ are something else again. These ground haz- the she it in one "8 ocan't include ards are not to be ignored for all Lindbergh has By remembering the (Bn. gh a Surv! hem, extraordinary good health, in the hectic months since Le Bourget. GILBRET BWAN. ‘