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PAGE FOUR : EThe Bismarck. Tribune |! "mnt. to furnishings which will lend a l THE BISMARCK TRIBUN. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1925 — HEALTH “DIET ADVICE —|demand and provide amply for it, but it is HN Dr Frank ic i) . ” bab ts) McCoy Po soenggl by the Bismarck Tribune Company, | manifest that the wide choice of the new stocks A — > SNe “Me Seat. Iaclthe KN. Da and entered at the postoftice 8 /can not be maintained to the end of the season. Z ae RY Atle Miy.70 ie ad th gr ieee pected . one 8 a si their ’ Z ae We a] Ay a MESSED, Cie te PAPER e passing of winter. ers a ce their \ Daily | pcchraetgpenl iadeead in raise peabortal Saying a few weeks and give them- Gog $ \~ QNCLOSE STAMPED HODRESSED ENVELOPE f REPLY Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . selves the privilege of leisurely shopping and — ——— = ie ae J per is Se The a shopper saves no Mes - Datly by mail outside of North Dakota 6.00 ty hereasty vi olde le satisfaction given only By Weekly by mail, tn state, per year .... Spring stocks are fresh on the counters. The Weekly by mail, in state, three years for very first choices are xlready being made. He Weekly by mall, outside of North Dakota, per | || and she who hesitate will lose. Shop early for FORT i ens2s Audit Bureau of Circulation” | Spring as well as for Christmas. cool summery atmosphere to the city home f a’ THE An tatepeatent Nore Sr APER and to the multitude of accessories to summer : (Established 1873) play. Our merchants recognize this seasonal SUCCESS AND EARLY DEATHS! degree of success in the business or It might be well for all of us to| professional world and yet, at be- occasionally make a check-up of our | tween forty-five to fifty-five years oe epi tee a analysis | se habits may startle us! 4) ladly answer ‘We can perhaps classify our hab- Rue os health and its into those which are good. those |] Giet, addressed to him, care of not so good, and those not good; or, as some would have it, good, toler- the Tribune. tamped ad 4 envelope for, reply. able, and bad. We will be surprised Enclose a to find how many of our daily prac- Member of The Associated Press y 3 Te lusively entitled to the Chamberlin’s Tour tices actually belong in the “bad” The Associated Press is exc! . se for republication of all news dispatches credited to And now Clarence Chamberlin, who made a of age—at the height of their matur- : lass. ¥ mt ‘or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the! very notable flight across the Atlantic last email habits; whether good or bad, | * local i 4 ; b ity—they rea) early deaths from hom og lerpataed origin, pal ts Al summer, has begun an serial tour of America rapidly gain in strengtt when often |what they apes in bad habits, “ pdkadlag similar to the one Lindbergh made a few Mactan ome: which ay at first such as indiscretions in eating, a at months ago. oe ey aro ae ingly bind us | ack OF Physica er chould mean ictal = ; j . final ; dh (Official City, State and County Newspaper) _| His tour has much the same aims as Lind- With chains of stecl. It ma, seem| something to us. % Men bergh’s—to foster civilian aviation and create more difficult to cultivate good| Jt js ridiculous for any of us to habits, but when they are once de-| consider ourselve: wholly | success- veloped they are just as hard to' ful if we have not succeeded in mas- charge and really as difficult to, tering ourselve:! break as bad habits. It is up to us, as captains of our Good or bad habits of eating are! ships, to so steer our course that usually developed haphazardly, and we may come to the port of a suc- bed SLA he ee An cessful and, at the same time, a eating what are used to, i the chef finds profitable to serve. SS a jo not suffer from the celusion y 'D ANSWERS ge ake on ee | SS eee AI SecA LER a a an ‘ly ¢ newer through the Ques- ree ede ae shed seg ee hoe utd don Sd: AHEWOC column the best juse of e same misapprehen- sid sion. Now ‘3 a new time—with new ee to follow for ¢ tubercular | possibilities and new problems which ip? i » must be met in a new way! Answer: Tlie treatment fora oe - A haphazard diet might have \bercular hip would depend upon ‘ e \ seemed sufficient for your grand- | exact condition of the tubercular it) \ parents, but you are living in a new change which has taken place. A Waa ANT Pime—s scientific age—when your|diet treatment is always essential il I ’ | 4 diet must be as scientific as the new|to a cure, though sometimes vari- {S| Wi We 9 evolutions in commerce and inven- | ous physio-therapy treatments will p Personalities change from generation to|new public confidence in airplanes. This is a W generation. There are styles in types of man job worth doing. @ just as there are in hats and automobiles. One] Chamberlin doubtless will get a warm recep- type of man is in vogue today and tomorrow | tion from all of the cities he visits. He deserves a vastly different type wil find popular favor.|it. His fame has been slightly dimmed, it Insight into the type of man most popular|/through no fault of his own, because of the = in the early nineteenth century is afforded by|fact that his flight across the Atlantic came & Balzac, the French novelist and satirist, in this| right on the heels of Lindbergh’s. But Cham- @ extract: berlin, as an aviator, apparently is fully Lind- ‘© “Gentleness in the gait is what simplicity|bergh’s equal—if anyone on earth can be said ® isin the dress. Violent gesture or quick move-|to be that amazing young man’s equal—and k ment inspires involuntary disrespect. One} he has conducted himself since the conclusion 7 looks for a moment at a cascade; but one sits|of his great flight with just as much com- fi for hours, lost in thought, and. gazing upon the] posure and good taste as Lindbergh showed. ‘g still water of a lake. A deliberate gait, gentic] A forced landing marred the first leg of his 4 manners, and a gracious tone of voice—all of} perial tour. Let’s hope that bad luck leaves which may be acquired—give a mediocre man) him alone for a while now, so that he can have t, an immense advantage over those vastly supe-| an entirely successful and enjoyable trip. ¢ rior to him. To be bodily tranquil, to speak! He is a credit to the country and he deserves Be | ied id to meg ene or aa Lr all the good fortune an aviator can have. ie ceca aie lutely necessary to - $ i uestion: Mrs. K. W. asks: “Wil ‘ presence, or to proper development of ade N {IN NEW YORK etal ot fed “tnited es ‘mans On Diese erate ee My ae coddled a vas success y i ° . [ \ present evolutionary development.|eggs and French omekt * { wer tg Repeal Be tr [ Editorial Comment | WY SHI GTON ° IN NEW YORK ! If you use an over-abundance of! Answer: Coddled eggs: To each even the best kind of food, you will | two whole eggs pour over one quart tion. prove effective in bringing about a If you would show the pep and ef-|cure. Complete rest is sometimes ficiency necesscry to excel today /necessary, but only in advanced you must not burder. yourself with | cases. ® today. When you describe the popular type Md New York, Feb. 1.—Ni \f be speedily ouidistanced ‘by the of boiling water and allow to stand -\ of man today it is the kind ey cs ant Kicked Upstairs | A ? [ I i R —— theatrical clubs of New York one, itving on a more frugal diet. ae ae 10 es ee and walks rapidly, gets on and off the elevator wit! (Nashville Banner) allow actors to bring their wives, juccess men are often slug-;be no fire undernea' i ge Bh i " Pathe eethea: riend i ye= broke n th 4 snap and precision and qualifies for the new] In October, 1926, after a controversy with BY RODNEY DUTCHER examination will be held in those | ™gethearts or women friends. Cotes ene eee cnn sien ne ere solly-like. consistency 1 high-powered salesmanship and fits the mod-| politically chosen trustees, Dr. Henry Suzzalo) bretinsb tania districts. PG pera ghee ie 5 diweys find that the’ success |but should, at the same time, be so : ern word “pep.” Balzac’s description inscribes| was dismissed as president of the University Washington, Feb. 1—The govern-| But meanwhile, the Civil Service taining the tired business man or up- came before the chains of bad habits well cooked seals seateing. in iss 4% a picture of @ philosophical recluse in the| of Washington at Seattle. Dr. Suzzalo’s emi-| ment has found itself in :. bad mess Commission has been subjected to| lifting the tireless. esthete. Here, oye pa et re ESAs ee eee a there oan _mind’s eye of modernity. Modern business has| nent fitness for the position from which he] over rohibition enforcement and| powerful pressuze, political and Sbout their dinner tables, pool tables | 8) Sround the corner for them un-/ manner have an entirely different » developed the present-day style of man, or,|was ousted, the success he had attained at mat ei yet how it’s going to) otherwise, and if it succumbs and | CF card tables meee Oe eee suse they right-avout-face and live| flavor from solf poiled eggs. i perhaps, the man and business have developed | Seattle, and the petty and unworthy motives] It’s a gooey mess, for it involves lets down the bars for the existing | stories out of school, many of which |in the same abtemious manner in! ee pees To a serie ’ together, each exerting an influence on the|of those who schemed for and obtained his dis- such components as graft, corrup-| Personnel as is demanded, there will |are not intended for feminine ears. which they lived while gaining suc- 6” net Arorita slaw dirwant: t other. missal caused nation-wide comment. As an tion, the hidden hand of rolitics and|be no assurance of an intelligent, Here they may gather without any | °¢55. ld lik eee absieee t ele ‘and egg together. Stir a ‘The typical business man followed in favor] interesting commentary on the affair, then, seis, whieh oe ae ae competent service. The politicians pie dll ——isiogred My ebay Pbk a eieenaate arulation of and beat constantly so that it doesn’t ~ , the he-man species which was a product of|comes the announcement of the Carnegie en-|with incompetence, viciousness and| Whe tezard See aeimavtbE to follow in the wake of actors’ gath- road ed si feltered Cieeered stil teoeritare A aly: ; ea cities, advancing frontiers and gold|dowment for international peace that Dr. Suz-|brutality, | tine to make a|Dational patronage orchard have ee iciisincactan ca: |= prea let which I will gladly like consistency. Do not fail to rushes, zalo has been chosen visiting professor of in-| ,otution vitally important. In the shared Doran’s dismay, for most of! ..¢ edi — st. dignified, ohio send to you on request. Address keep on stirring the mixture even 2 ternational relations in Europe. His mission | present row between the Prohibition the present agents are connected ; Beal icon ime care of this newspaper and ask’ after it has been taken from the { Paying in Europe will be to interpret America’s sys- Facenu-atd the Oui Gervivetom= |" “ome political machine, doors to “the 8” but one night | gor th ial article called “A fire, as the frying pan will retain a i Oe ures a . The Lambs, Friars and| (rq Guy Lovee ga di, d deal of heat which will con- e _ Alarmists, inspired more by bad nerves than} tem of education in the interest of intellectual | mission over ee hp en-| 1 eight years, some 1300 prohi-|the others make their various ap- peripee i alge for your, tinue to cook the egg. Serve in i € facts, have been predicting a collapse of the| understanding, according to the officials of ths | fotos it ia eairaae ep pian tbe: (iT erensabava been) fired oahd peals to the bachelor instincts. | reply. | sauce dishes or ega cups. Yau wall t whole American credit structure ever since the|Carnegie foundation. He will be cbsent a year|that the service was put on a co etween 600 and 700 prosecuted in! 4 year ago the expression “big As I think back, over the past iyo incest aulean hin: pay will 1 installment plan came into general use. Ts|and has been accredited to the universities of| petitive merit basis only after Con- |S" <7 Un cuit Service Gow aigion| DUCE andege man” swept the cigs oadepe apie) deaths ly serve one person, and exactly fill them this collapse appears always just around| Vienna, Budapest, Bucharest, Sofia, Belgrade, | ress, the Bureau, the Anti-Saloon | cisims to have weeded out country. When introduced, a8 8| friends, ‘Th had at least | the large end of an egg cup. er, ? ague and nearly everyone else had ~~ it ref vi iends. ese men al i the corner. Zagreb, Padua, Bologna and Florence. The| gered that prohibition enforeement |20 the illiterate and now to be en; 9 eed ‘by virgen » ness and financial state of the nation as being| depended upon to make the most of them. And. So. today, the great issue is!tno service who may have passed Sty of the fat pursed gentry who , tion, With its hand on the financial.pulse of | though the trustees of the University of Wash-|less. The former may take years Wee ene aso are eigen theo pictured as the chumps who were ByAnte wstin ee { But the treasury department at Washington, | possibilities for distinguished serviceon such|was a national scandal which must |£aged in disqualifying the crooked | one 4 ee ‘ i id Pate y was used to back theatrical 4 ' differing with the panicky, reports the busi-|a mission are marked, and Dr. Suzzalo may be| be cleaned up. orate ot gers grafters in| Productions. It came to refer to Sanit gid Snmer 1 most stable without a symptom of degenera-|in the language of the streets, it seems as ieierieaph mibe atic op pesca ae the first two tests may have trouble nape eaten y were f the country this department fails to detect a| ington merely kicked Dr. Suzzalo upstairs. | te achieve; the latter can be ‘i psy marks for the gay girlies of| Faith was luxuriously comfortable ‘I've got to pay for it, and paying fei ce iuinsing beat. ingt y ss at once and may even be necess feeder for several years | Broad in her bed, from which she would not means—missing the biggest thing in + And on top of this testimony on the coun- Born Wrong ior te ae ome estimate that all but sbout 2: man ‘has vanished from che Tp be permitted to rise unti time to tienes eee Se: try’s financial stability comes from the Na- . (New York Times) vee Pe er aoe Ee ee rehibitior ling | Most of this season's productions on | dress for the two o'clock Sunday din- ated childishly. nodding her head tional Association of Credit Men an explana-| yy. Henry Morgenthau, in his article in the Prohibition Commissioner Doran,| "Cunt make $50,000 a year if he| broadway | have been financed | ner which Rhoda was preparing to solemnly, but the pain ana despair in tion why this stability has stood unfaltering paraleiaery linge ye ics ¢| finding nearly 75 per cent of his! Gesires is a dub. Who thinks that [either out of Wall Street or by the|the gay accompaniment of an aria her eyes were rot. Seale f Z| forthcoming Review of Reviews, bluntly states] 2,000 prohibition agent: di fied private capital of some over-night|from “Carmen.' | “You mean—Nils?” Faith asked these several years while the volume of credit ites: st ele mental avritten civil ser- most of these fellows go to work at |iillionaire of the stock market. A ho hi hed upon the ‘softl: busi by I d bounds. What|® homely fact when he writes: v m $1,84p a year just for the salary?” |™ stock market. As| Cherry, who had perched upon the | softly. i putas, business mounted by leaps an junds. ai vice examinations and with ,erhap: Déran, demandi re-examina-| Usual the greatest success:s are put|edge of the bed, looked about the! “Of course!” Cherry cried. “I’m is that explanation? The simple truth is that if Governor |10 or 15 per cent more tlmost sure tions, said many ae disqualified [O" by the old line, producers toom as if she were seeing it for the |in love, Faith, terribly in love, for ~ “People are paying their bills.” Smith, instead of having been born in |‘@ {slow bas shonted for help and 'agents would turn to graft in dis- aes Tint time—seeing it, rot merely as|the first time in my life, and I’ve a Q 9 ” + 4 As for the easy spenders, Broad-|a room, but as Faith always saw it: jlost him. Oh, he wanted me at first, righ, comprehensive survey covering | many Oliver Street of Catholic parents, had first |inless he can keep his. men. The fhxt'by now inthe realization that [WAY £8, Wondering, where they are.|the heart of her home and of her until I showed him the kind of girl ines of business and all classes of buyers| seen the light of day in some Protestant | Anti-Saloon League has been worry- hay must be made rapidly while the The “sucker” night clubs have the proves that the average consumer does his| parsonage, as Presidents Cleveland and |'%, ie sun still shines, taste of dust in their mouths and|ered to love. Then she suddenly |tried to. make him want me more hare fully toward supporting the larger| Wilson did; nobod; ld doubt for an he plain truth is that no one had | ""hovan ‘had the privile~e of re-| ‘he successful ones have the patron-|bent her bright head until her cop-| by flirting violently with Bruce - coat yer ecceraned pporting the larger} Wilson did; nobody would dou | over” Puspetted that’ prohibition! ,,Doran had the privileve of e"|age of the “people. of importance,” |per-and-gold curls lay against the | Patton. cheap little rules of the credit structure of the nation. That only sixty-| instant that he would be the next Presi- | agents were so dumb. pene, porary | +fho do not come under the heading | shining, sleek brownness of Faith’s|game! ‘Make him jealou., let marriage, the chamber that was sa-|I’ve become. Like an utter fool, I oo meee enter meme Es 4 : ry piss intees who-had passed the first ” (i i eight cents is defaulted out of every $100 of] dent. ‘The Civil Service Commission | 2bPO Tier: first! of “soft spenders.” For this reason, | hair. him see that others want you’—m pedi business is eloquent pedir dig the calmly replies that it has only ol. | Ramon Da Be oe Cera the midnight resorts of the “big| “It pays to be good, doesn’t it,|God! she groaned, strikiae small inherent honesty of the great American This is a pungent and conclusive way of stat-|lowed its usual procedure and that {het administrators whom he quoted street” are not Hl. The |darling?” she murmured huskily, |quivering lips with her small family. ing the one great obstacle—r eligious intoler- eal oe ae, Oral Seas attacking the commission’s tests pce rg po nat rs it frelg Toate ieee eae coe OH Oi ns afraid of him, tried to . A great volume of credit business is not ance—which today stands in the way of Gov-| cluding only 500 prohibition job- "Only, est OF te oe: Sealine 4 changed complexion so that it is dif-|s0 good, so good all your life, and|make yourself css attractive at necessarily promiscuous credit. Retail mer-|@T0r Smith’s political advancement. Mr. Mor-|holders, who are candidates for 2,000 service being those at Boston and ficult to recognize him. you're happy now—’ first, were delikerately rude to him, mthau undertal swer the question] agent jobs, are proceeding. - “No, no!” Faith cried protesting-|Faith | reminded her. “Why, aie he “3 a Catholic me a Wet, nie porte ‘A rigid character examination will PUA And speaking of putting on shows, |1y, the memory of her recent sins of | Cherry?” y ", id % follow. Then, if in some enforce-| Dance tonight at Patt yg|the process of creating a star| jealousy and suspicion hurting in-) “Because I kn.v. he was bigger ber of Tammany Hall, should be so eager to| ment districts there aren't enough * ferson’s| changes little fror season to season. |tolerably. “I haven't been good,|than I, stronger, that he'd master see Governor Smith nominated for the Presi-|eligibles sifted from the rest, re- There are certcin recognized celebri- | Cherry, but—I am happy, or I would |me once I let him see I loved him,” dency by the Democratic Party. The ordinary pea SRR SSS (ck cn nnn ee cantiuzacmamarccaudmemniioiasns ono Gea. be if you were. I’m glad you want|Cherry ‘ated duily. “And I didn't political reasons for such a nomination are ofall Hie Abo i Sa it all out,” t= healed off to ':. farm to obvious and numerous. Against it there is, Che: uivered, raising her head so| “But—now?” Faith prodded in reality, only one. Governor Smith is a that Fel Catholic. He belongs to what has come to be ith could see the humility | gently. and despair in her eyes. “I’m not| “Now I'd follow him to the An- thought of in America as a “prescribed class.” Z PTH" No one of his religious faith can be elected wSUST fo SIPT-TH” ASHES 7, bec: I don’t de to be.|tipodes, wherever the: if he boner, fe at & the cony-book Hoots me!” Cherry dy is “Now President. This is not openly proclaimed ex- OF YoUR MEMORY, DAKE, cept by a few hardened fanatics or brazen rules were silly, concocted for mor- | I’m willing to have him conquer me. demagogues. But it is quietly asserted in thou- chants are doing vastly more credit business but it is being done with people who pay their bills promptly. Modern credit is on a scien- tific basis reducing losses to a fraction of those } under the face-reading method of yesterday. The White House Flag : Gridley Adams of New Rochelle, N. Y., : chairman of the National Flag Code Commit- : tee, tells a congressional committee that flag ethics are violated even by our White House. - "The eagle in the president’s flag, it seems, : ‘points the wrong way. This has pained Mr. .. Adams, and he wants something done about it. fae paras thon | Mahe out gw SO |, 80 e most gor- | —but loesn’t know it!” LAST YEAR “THIS “TIME 4 pod things could be left to the| “Then why not write and tell him You DID A BLACK-ouT 3° i magnificent sinners, I’ve had a lot |so?” Faith suggested softly. Protably he's right. These sticklers for|#ands of homes and in hundreds of villages Wt yard A PAIR OF House of fun out of life—probably a lot “ 4 ‘ and cities throughout the country. It is this more than if I had beea good—like NEXT: A letter from Nils. _ | for yg paged get, Be Pyeng deep intolerance which rouses the special in- SLIPPERS “THAT I Got you. But now that I've had my fun, | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | ©. We hope it is not unpatriotic for us to re- dignation, of py ol a Morgenthau, and : ties who, but for temperamental rea-| show in Boston the other day. We mark that there is just a wee bit too much], es them feel tha‘ there are enough "i . EZ sons, do not need their names in| always have been great cdmire fussing nowadays about “ethics of the flag.”|Pigots in the Uniteds States to force this polit- J the bright lights. And getting an|of the skunk’s facial efter cll, the flag itself is the important thing, | @! issue to the front in the Presidential elec- 4 ee” meee” we sie anda “se | Gt is a symbol of our country and the love we saa, Hen it ought to be met and FOuRnE as the ? Be 4 oat coaiut of stardom | Clothes are c.stroying morality in _-- have for it; an emblem of our patriotism. So irate pred & democracy > ee the is only a matter of money. the South Sea Islands, says a British |. that it be honored in spirit, who cares whether ine of the career, even up to the very The process ic sitaple. Just official. At any rate, America ig | the formal details be absolutely letter perfect ?| highest, open to talent, NE “Too much officious Ea to a pein Mr. Morgenthau takes up some of the minor doesn’t do a bit of good. play that can be picked uo for some ° ; Perhaps one of the reasons the a sum. Serhaps you can get ” fo: a few ‘honeand dol-| Anti-Saloon League doesn’t run lars. For a few thousand more you|ceuple of dry newspapers is tl % lance along Broadway until you find a,getting more Fighteous every day. = Record. se 8 can put it on. Then get on the phone on tae Cast her int len, President Cosgrave called Chi» a for her. r len ve ps \ put her name in the t lights—|cago an “uneblievable city.” = and there you ar. If, by secident, ‘here, all the time, we thought ) she really can act, you may have aj it was only the mayor who wad, : } gold mine in your hands. If, as |spoofing us. ese / 417, y most often happens, she can’ act, | eee ct NARA i : you are no worse off than a hundi Geraldine Farrar says youth i ; ; : Sthers that have tried it. largely im the mind. We've se People sed 44 Sieh, Ss was Then ‘t was.found round. Bul it's sill just a crooked in \. (Copyright, 1928; NEA Service, Inc.] | ae ee ‘tor gether in unity Pas 18:1, Peace is Mberty in tranquillity President? = | Be 3 1 An animal that skunk and half cat was ribieed at a cat | Cicero,