The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 9, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR + built so many factories and banks and sky- The Bism arck Tribune scrapers and railroads that we have lost sight THE Stated CUbbee NEW REAPER of life, Our sky is so black with smoke that (Established 1873) we cannot see the sunrise or the stars. We punlabed the Bis marek “Tribune Company, —" hoarse with shouting that we cannot f Bismarck as cecend class small matter, hoi So we need a dreamer—a seer, in the old lan- ks George D. Mann.__.___.___President and Publisher | guage; one who will tell us that life is still a ( ~~ Subscription Rates Payable In Advance | Mystery, shrouded in everlasting darkness, Dally by carrier, per year ..........0008 7.20| but penetrated by gleams of radiance from an- pa z in nd hg (in Bismarck) .... nee he ea and made comfortable, bed ay ’ q then, by echoes of distant laughter and far-ofz Oa a eg OD 00 trumpet calls from the bugles of the ever- Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota € 3 sons of light. Weekly by mail, in state, per year ....... tcleasiie \euse or ides as Where Vienna Leads Weekly by mail, in state, three years for. eee ee veleide of North | Debi 180} When the great war was over every big city " ¥ suddenly found itself confronted by the same ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1928 | —And Do It Now | WHEN YOU CATCH A COLD the first few hours, not even to give f.|an enema, ifr MS aoe Mae ie i As soon as the temperature is normal, patient must be changed to day’s article will follow my advice you should never need the infor- mation contained in this article to- answer day. But read it carefully in the Ftd pet Bohning A and hope that you will be able to help diet, addressed to him, care of ee eo Pa | problem—where to house the population. The some other member of your family ddress \ Associated Press ati . the Tribune. . The abeiated Pred ts excluiively entitled to the | War whad put a stop to the erection of houses, i 2 Maid ett? et beri Enclose a stamped addressed ase for republication of all news dispatches credited to | but it had drawn thousands of new inhabitants dt tatiote aad pape rata envelope for reply. it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the |to the big cities. Every big town found it- ” ‘ 1 although colds from a Hecterial ; local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All | <9} i ii c . 4 “ ” but ke: Tf v ication of all oth herein are | 8¢lf overcrowded. R: origin may be “caught,” the one| warm, dry clothing but kept wel Fights of republication o: ect are| “Only Vi a | vay toward: . a) catching them must have the proper | covered for several hours. 5 dy mly Vienna has gone a long way towards ad hing the prope! re adhd nnn aimee vii | ‘a —~ : conditions in which the bacteria can| It is,best to wait for a whole day 4 ign Re itati Boat ene segue ae There may be many develop. These conditions are de-| after the temperature is gone before F G. LOGAN PAY NE COMPANY people who doubt the wisdom of the manner pendent upon enervation and wrong | the patient shoud take any exercise, i | NEW YORK - - ~~ Fifth Ave, Bldg. in which the Socialist government of the city é |feeding. but from then on it is important to Hy CHICAGO DETROIT oP tet it, but the fact Meet ie the yy f ilo ies Sereninn ae ites Be Meet each day in iz Tower % Kresge Bldg. | “Reds” have found homes for 150, people f / . body is tr: te| Save today’s and resterday’s (Official City, State tnd County Newspaper) City, State and County Newspaper) and are going, within the’next five years, to y roatiets sda hed Arcade Heme articles, but follow ijenteday’s “AR ———— | find homes for another 150,000. j Branes and by burning them up|vice so that you will not need for The Eyes of the Brave The method is simple. The municipality has / { te ee ee ee Bsa phon ad advice I am giving When Commander Richard E. Byrd sets out | itself built houses and vast flat buildings. It ‘When a eald has ally. uated ‘ on his airplane jaunt to the south pole next|has become a real estate owner on a tremen- 3 the best plan is to assist the body| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS fall, he will be running into dangers as great|dous scale. And to its credit be it said, it has ‘ \ by opening up all of the channels Ae Rb nine os i. ica: as man can find in this carefully regulated age.|not built miserable hovels and unattractive a F E 3 Wie eee ie ee ander year T have been, awakened fora Yet he is having no trouble recruiting com-|slum tenements. _ > thoroughly flush the urinary system | sleep with a numbness creeping over ions. On the contrary, more than 200 men Bs netcaet city fathers have pa to ve . oo ety away liguid wastes. One ay cau viet vac tiee ae help, we written him asking for places in his ex-| give ‘ir tenants comfort, light, air, modern Z or two enemas daily should be I ve 5 er pedition. There is no doubt that, if he want-| fixings and even beauty. Their theory is that Z = Wit Heke Sree Endy te wha Gee ; d to, he could raise a force of 10,000 almost|a workman who is ‘contented in his home will of the pores of the skin should be|minute. I would appreciate it if you o & turn a deaf ear to Communism and Bolshevism < increased by several sponge baths | you would inform me of the cause, Much of this is probably due to the nature] and all the other “isms” that are poisonous. daily or through inducing copious |and if there is danger of paralysis. ‘ 5 P ; Merle Ade ‘i : y i sweati I 30 ld 4 of his projected trip. There is a fascination|They are wise in their generation, ~ ale waceterguen wn re ne ee treat: POETS pee and weigh **! about polar exploration, a fascination that > ‘tins leer ete Set mathod of treatment which can be} eee ee oa eee i must date back to childhood days, when we ‘TINE ‘TO CAN! fe used in getting rid of toxins which|have at night are probably caused 4 lli Joy: | itori t di Id. . |from nervousness and wwld b + read thrilling tales of hardy voyagers who Editorial Comment BEFORE WE HATCH ‘EM 2? Oc ASiar GLitg an cise, putled|clasuad ator the tac Aye, were locked in the ice for months on end, and shoulld then take a hot bath and/teria. There is no reason fr sus- f sit sereeeed pipes over —— He Ur te Tut get wed bed wale ay ere foe ca Gree - Pav ais _ ~ floes and made their way to civilization after (Time) ccna ich are made e1 : inly . : 5 me . of wool. Hot water bottles should|should have a good diagnosis ) incredible hardships. ‘ The musician touched the strings of the WASHINGTON | IN NEW YORK | be placed at the foot of the ‘bed, and study haw'to remove the mag on more omar than ear ea is the a Le igh was decorated with be ee Bed fervourness. fae \ : glamor that has invested Byrd himself. lazuli shells. lozen young ladies of the _ cover the patient. He should then| Question: inois writes: \“I In the middlo ages, great, heroes—ail great| harem lay on their backs in two parallel rows; LETTE dage san thoy gone ‘woasipe fl eames ube or tsng staces | ened cesta, tak Sone in heroes were warriors in those days—swiftly| they were dressed alike, with fascinating head- on the troubled waters of Manhat-|the shoulders, The nurse should|part of the country seems to kn gathered around them numbers of ambitious] bands, large earrings of gold, veils held in place BY RODNEY DUTCHER effect, “are the sort who join! ton’ then prepare an infusion made from | what it is. Will you please tell 1 Join’ ton’s cloak and suit belt. fighting men. There was a sort of common|by slender copper pins. Guardsmen stood at| ,,,Washington, Feb. 9.—Senator) American prohibitionists to enforce} ‘These are the days when every| Pouring boiling hot water aver/also how it is made?” 9 r ty Hiram Bingham of Connecticut has} prohii mn on thei: Tad grapefruit which has been cut into| Answer: The enchilada is a Me: agreement that a man could get the most out/attention. In the offing was the great king's] the most gruesome appearing office p ye ir people other person you meet on the street | Srahy PAS SUKSCHLN acd ail “of|deanWirh similan th etiereamrnles com = ; Rica } Leaving aside old Ib of life by attaching himself to some famous|chariot, drawn by two asses. Grooms held the] on Capitol Hill. was at last accounts the best fight, Sa ote te ee ver rome rena | the grapefruit should be used, one posed of meat, highly seasoned wi fighter, sharing dangers with him and, as it|reins; another flunky was in attendance. Gam-| His walls are covered with huge| ing man in Arabia, the association! of the other way states. quart of boiling water used to each| garlic, pepper, etc. in combination were, imbibing with him the same sharp zest] ing boards with dice, copper bowls, tumblers,| ¢2ttoons, some life-sized, showing: shunned the liberal viewpoint to-| ‘These are the days when the lunch| medium size grapefruit. This stecp-|with one of the meals or flours that life gives to the adventurous. and other diversions awaited his majesty.| o'death in all sorta ‘of unfortu| fist’ Sanding, leer pings Paint ig |gheeks are “on the house”; when the f76,PrOeS on should be carried This @ish fe not. unfamiliar” on the \ It seems as if the same sort of motive were) But he was nowhere to be seen. It did not mat-| nate ways. _ . ..|by his enemies to be more than a auth bem antiay non “stepping out”| on in an ear‘hen jar or an enameled | Pacific coast and in that area of active now. ter, for all these people had been dead since] Bingham picked them up while in| bandit, is a foolishly brave patrict|the prospective customers from| Pa”. After the mixture has been|the country adjacent to Mexico, but For they are glamorous men, these Byrds|circa 3500 B. C. Their flesh and the wood of|China last summer. They are/ unfortunate enough to be opposed| hither-and-yon; when the bootleg-| Slowed to stand for at least thirty|is rarely if ever served in other x - 4 ts Propaganda cartoons issued by| by U. S. Mari Fartherm ger’s wares are hand inutes the patient should then be! parts of the United States. and Lindberghs and Chamberlins. It would] the harp and of the chariot had long ago rotted] Chinese nationalists end seonnmat (a good "fighting men is Sie. ote scrote cats kgs fae ind given drom four to eight ounces “at » Question: M. K. B. asks: “Can seem that they have found some secret that/into nothingness. Only the bones, the metal] ists to illustrate their versions of| Ibn Saud and Sandino inake their a time every thirty or forty|a loop in the colon be cured by di the rest of us have not discovered. They must| strings, the trinkets, the jewels were recently| What foreign imperialists were| troops stay sober it would seem meoperiireneed fatigue duty at any/® ites. ing?” ‘What would you edvin? have clearer eyes than the rest of us, so that|found by scientific diggers in Mesopotamia. | fandsome senator from Connesticut| good. prace ler tine farn ke bent | poutene are the davs when # hotell tine Suitne which has a specific |be corrected throagh proper manip 4 ‘1 ood 1 +1 roo contral fhe which has a specific | be corrected through manipu- they can see clearly that the great prizes of| It seems that the potent king of Ur of the] says the style of the art is Russian foced by tho leey ae York ifr eta esictl effect in eliminating “the “cold” lative treatment, supplemented in life are not peace and soft contentment, but|Chaldees, according to the vogue of 3500 B. C.,| rather than Chinese. ee eet some cases by certain electrical . toxins. danger and hardship and the peril of sudden|had ordered a butchery to make a stage set-|_ The largest cartoon, | covering aes cre hind thee ioral cana The patient should be induced to| treatments. If these treatments are 4 ryote most of one side of Bingham’s in-|. Having panned the association it t fe 1 ntil | not taken we cannot expect diet to death. ting, so that he would not be lacking in enter-| ner office, shows a Chivese BE PS is only fair now, in order to be ging ee when some of the there ele aietcraattemperatiiee! produce a cure, aitngtioss with a them greatly. ‘They prefer to concentrate|arch enemy of the king spoiled the scheme by| Another shows a Chinese enwrap-| question, to turn around and For, as you eee aus; these| Woolen blankets oftener than once|be in better health on a well-bal- - their lives into brief episodes; by risking] stealing the royal body from the grave. ROTA Mtl prota engi” the league. Sed to relate, nothing! are the days when the buyers come|® day, and the sweating should not/anced dict than when eating hap- Length of days does not seem to interest|/tainment after death. Unfortunately, some] killed by a foreigner in uniform.) quite impartial on the prohibition] Poe, jue) (sg hid lira It is not necessary to change the ee or looped colon will certain!: greatly and daring greatly, they know that) These and other matters concerning the life] tiger, a wolf, an alligator and of General Superintendent|*? town in droves and herds; when be interrupted for any reason during | hazardly. shown garroting China, whose head] Sion to make its very low standards paraded yin in the cold, over the ocean or down under the| finding of the gold head of the harp led the continue to hold on. that the stores of this great BANE Austin Ona deaamc.ae. they will live intensely and fully. The high-|and times of the king of Ur were announced a| wasp, representing other evils. ‘In}F; Beott McBride and his to| the, i shows go merrily on est gifts of life, for alee ee not —_ in] few days ago by C. Leonard Woolley, director] another, our own Uncle Sam isyPérsuade the Civil Service Commis- aac ted tae ee I ad = crowded cities or in peaceful, sunlit valleys;/of the joint expedition of the University of| ; ht tight b ‘ for prohibition agents still lower so of manikins i Lines rather they are to be found in the darkness,|Pennsylvania and the British Museum. Thal entitled “unequal treatica” wes (3 the Sener: jobholders may|into the Forties grinds at top speed 4 : ind ‘ world in the land of eternal ice. diggers to the grave. A gent in Pri du Chien, Wis., If the mental tests are made any| may be well stocked 1 before the} Quite suddenly, as if her decision} moved toward the haven of the liv- 4 ‘And who can say that these men are wrong? thinks the House Rules Committee| easier. they will include questions| first robin catches its any worm. |were in answer to the prayers she ing room couch. Before she canched rs : Reli f n makes the baseball rules. like: z ., it the d i i Sievers the 200 young men who asked Byrd “ake en “Inform Rules Committee open| How much whisky is there in alleaie Shine Sit the Mage Sorctseag | had been frantically hurling toward living room noon the hte een for permission to accompany him to the south| , , fli h a7 arg_| the right way to count bases,” he| full quart bottle of whisky, or the land heaven in Cherry's behalf, Faith|torn open, then banged shut, and pole were wiser than we think. To face the large flint spearhead made of material dif-| writes a Minnesota congressman.| When arresting bootleggers| summer and’ what all the nation’s|sprang from the couch where Bob|Cherry, casting her jade vel- ultimate realities of danger and hunger and ferent from Indian spearheads of Maine is| “You should investigate with Con-| should they be put in jail or in the] store windows will be flaunting, It’s|had lovingly made her comfortable|vet evening coat from her, stood death; to face them voluntarily, with a smile,|@"using renewed interest in the stories of has peo TW Nation Gane erate now has two branches, ene .st Dinaha(taniasannnel big sper: |ipssnenyexehions, sac burried. 0) there, ©. tetas rs eat 5 for no prize but the consciousness that one’s| Norse adventures in North America in the) Baseball, no base:to count on fly|the McBride wing which demands o- kitchen, preparing sandwiches and|hired for the uerade bal! | manhood is being tested; this perhaps, is as|eleventh century. The spearhead, which was) bal out on first base, Loe strikes |titfer penalties,” and the Ernest] | Manhattan | snapahots, . . .__A|frult pimeh for a, late supper; Bob had shed ges iret oot at ' i ach at Pemaquid sever: 1s t—.” And moi . | Cherrington wing which see ‘ll i =| good a way to use Jife as can be found. iq val years Be ia dt atenthe publ.” Since tne ue: npeakensy that displays the sly sign, and Nils were still in the sun par-|and her golden eyes glittered wide in the telephone. Rhoda was in the|the jaunty costume which she had tg oui eae Sa ago, is n i i B. 7: Pea u the | ‘Boo teary lor, absorbed in plans for Nils’ new|her shockingly white face. Even h Eh Beyond the Stars Senith Shh ae she Dosen cr ae aun a _the Association Against the Pro-| Bride wing_is out to save jobs for Stn es dairy farm, No one would| ips, on which there was ¢ only a faint q a r » Who ha xtensive studies of 1n-! hibition Ai endment professes to be| present prohibition agents the sug- know, she ‘assured herself, as she|trace of the jium-colored salve ii Swedenborg, famous Swedish mystic, whojdian remains in that region. liberal and tolerant and not phari-| gestion is made gratis that Cher- taking # brisk walk on the Ave-| breathlessly but in a guardedly low|that she used, were bloodless and || believed that providence had opened to him the| In a report on the possibility of finding] sic og Poa rede nue Fington try to teach them to read/nue. . .. The huge new automo-|voice, called the number of the Marl-|curled back against her teeth, as if 4 ( secrets of life, death, heaven and hell, was|traces of the Norsemen,- just made by Mr-| jive up tovits professions, whih! oe WT: bile ee. that threatens to “steal”|boro Country Club. ic i See ee a t pestectiy sane,” according to a New York psy- Seat, he states that the spearhead may be| may be a point for the league, be-|@————-—___@ | all the cat peor telind who Mise ‘Gh tran to see aes thes fe cece her and © ‘chologist. ndian in origin. He*points out, ho , that} cause the league makes no such ug! wrote classic “The Ballad e the dance,” 4 1 The Ercroaeit agg given eho ite study |it is not of flint such = the ated te akg eee roped |___ A Thought | ieee de and . the gtepe Viste the tl phone wien sslnstantiy Cherry sprang forward “ 4 rg’s writings for a year and answer | seer i i vii “ - pas é new play in his 1] a stew: the club answe: the blind brightnes: er eyes giv- ; i Swedenborg’ Pyaar Sear and ane ter cans to be identical with a rock called halle-/1ease” the association, with elab-| Set thine house in order.—Isaish| who's heen cigarets cn After an interminable delay, dur-| ing way to humid pity. “Oh, Faith, the question, y ly|flinta, which is well known in Scandinavia.| orate sarcasm, welcomed into high] 38:1. Broad: i aa a A : rats r iq 31. way window for six months. . . ich Faith imagined Cherry in| I’ve frightened you! I’m sorry! But completed, he answers that he can find no in-|The fact that eleventh century Vikings had| places in the -dry ranks General aa Doesn't Bill Warren’s arms, plighting her|thank you're alone.” she dication that Swedenborg was anything but| passed the age of stone tools adds to the mys- Bugustinn caer Sandino of Nicara-} Order means light and peace, in- troth to him in a Sesyerata attempt | dropped to her knees and burrowed rational. tery. gua and Sultan Ibn.Saud of Nejd. {ward liberty and free command over| the waterfront at dawn to meet im-|to salvage whatever happiness pos- her scene. helmeted head in her sis- 3 — ; “Such his,” i 1 one's self; i guar i , But probably some people will remain un-} Where the Vikings landed in this country is Mi a A ae ee lates vidi TIRROD.« + 2 CA BONS ears Tee, Gee etetard’s ecWvhre's Bill, Cherry?” Faith convinced. The borderland between genius|not exactly known. The place described as asked soothii di ity is shad pee d when al Vinlaal $6 beliéved. to ti jae h crisp, naiiat voice again came over’ oe a, (Ba eae nee be and insanity is shadowy, at best; and when inland is believed to have nm somew! | . z H ses a. man tells us that all the prizes of this world|along the Labrador coast, and the accounts say OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern i ae ee et aus Ret fare inet ae agen a th have been shown to him, in a vision, as mere|that some of the explorers stayed several cy in qe eo eae Cherry sobbed. “Oh, Faith, I've had ry : i the cub tinsel frippery, and that the only realities are| years. discover. Any message, Madame?”|a horrible time, but I’m safe now! the unseen forces of the land beyond the stars,| “If the sagas are true,” Mr. Smith says, “it Z ~WEY fue WAIT A G'WAN 1S, You Bis = Z “No,” Faith answered dully.|1—I—” * | we are apt to brand him as insane and ignore|seems improbable that f th " MINUTE! ~YouRE & tus FALLING IN LoVE,.-BUT “Thank you.” i de ee Tell me, darling,” Faith urged, i im, bays of the extemsive sanet of Ma us.cauki hare INVITIN’ DISASTER beg mend 7 <a prem gal smShe was so. weak with disappoint-|and,, logically, her heart was i That is the fate of seers and mystics. ,..|remained unknown to these hardy voyagers. PUSHIN’ ME AROUND: SEWING, ~~ ASIC Tvée seen ANNBODY Victlon, sont Ecameds bed aatin ress ani ae i ee, To Was hocn im Stockhoim/ They would have heen lured here by the spirit THIS WAY 98 mnmrna HER out to A BEING PUSHED Isl (Tle she was staggering drunken! y as she | (Copysight, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) late in the 17th century, grew up as a matter-jof adventure or the hope of gain, or driven ~~ TL DONT WANT / of-fact scientist—an extremely level-headed! hither by storms.” ' Movie OR A WALK! ep |@ and advanced scientist, for that day. He was _ Mr. Smith has spent some time vainly seek- 90 i “THERE {.. we NIMAKE ME al nd sree ry torino BARBS a civil engineer, an inventor, a mathematician;|ing Indian village sites and burial places LET Go, And “this erates Tooks 50] O— until he reached middle life there was nothing} around Pemaquid, in the hope of finding ob- to t ngeng’ he Pang be Feag tryed ote 2 jects rich the Indians might have obtained 3 as he drew near to old age he began tc} from the Norsemen. A number of shell heaps 2 luring trying see visions. As a biographer puts it, “Heaven | proved that Indians had once lived there, but \ z fest soe ae a iaveany pda nex fens reyes Slag ed unto him”; like John on Patmos,|no trace of European work was found in any a bard eer a | eae ee : that he saw the skies rolled up as|of these. ; . ee. ay ak cael "testes sans eo ed” g scroll, and discerned the hidden secrets of| Tools of iron possessed by the Norsemen » c B cal Lee hotograph galleries,| people back to ffte, according to \e would probably be masses of rust by this time, c Martha slee Max Sennett/a news story. The formula ought tending to, he founded a new/he points out. But most objects of copper, Ji | ubceoe Soe te foeeslinornt almost a new religion; and, 160 years| bronze, lead and silver would be still recogniz- : Ni ; : igned an bilan death, a psychologist was paid $1,000) able. Shards of Norse pottery might still sur- GP Ss rs 0. B.... Fritz Kreis The wild west is a region in which he had not, after all, been‘just crazy. | vive and also glass, particularly beads. ag 4 mute violin music being drawn from{you are not supposed to park in considered insane— is the} “If Norsemen actually discovered North the @ air by the new “ether wave” ma-| front of a b strange in the welter of rumbling trucks and stevedores along the Bat- Dartmouth students who climbed a@ mountain and had their faces Bova and leave your We place a - lpm Areries * oot early date, I believe there is va : er ( Pik 8 #9 She ee coe Nat everlas' m-| still a possibility of finding proof of it, unless ? They tell a story on Broadway timid man is one who feels that ‘ ” H chorit hi into an|he ought to li such proof is already destroyed,” Mr. Smith Zn ‘ Sl etent’s otis “the wan aa Pate lee oe 2 cane. # Mitte ‘when ; , much ex; i eae) “With this possibility in mind it is fitting 74) “Oh,” said she, “I was with Zieg- that collectors of Indian relics, all those who : feld for four and I was @ year | Chicago and dug in shell heaps, the discoveries of unknown y with George and another year inseri on and. anyone who finds y { ; “ Pl objects of metal, pottery or stone, wi are occasionally uncovered from their bai going on 19.” GIEBERT SWAN. 5 burial places along our coast, should save them Z 2. for identification. : 183 J : (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) y “The of such ‘finds’ will, of course, oes g : : | recent high winds, Tan consequence, to & p > 5 ‘ enforcing that curfew law? ie eer De Tound 0 ‘ = u 2 : : y ie BUMPER CROP - far greater significance, such care i “Know anything about 0 we | eegrened, tangible objects of possible Morse “een mived wp wah ae our very doors, re = « ” : Hoek Reema Beemer:

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