The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 31, 1928, Page 4

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tamination, anyway. We can preserve the railbirds and bookmakers from sullying con- tact with oil-stained horses. Three cheers! Hooray for Nemesis! , A Prize Fighter In this day of ultra-cultured, gentlemanly prize fighters, it is a positive relief to find one who acts, when out of the ring, like a rather bewildered fish out of water. John Risko, the heavyweight who recently punched Jack Sharkey out of the famous “elim- ination tournament,” was billed to address a rather tony club in Cleveland the other day. Blushing, perspiring and goose-pimpled, the. big boxer got up, gulped, and said: (Established 1873) ; Published by the Bismarck Tribune C-mpany, Bis- marck, N. D. and entered at postoffice at Bis- second class mai] matter. Mano +. .sseeee President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance wveekly by. mall, in state, per year ... ‘eekly by mail, :a state, three years for . eekly by mail, outside of North Dako‘a, pe- year ... seceee Mu t ee = “I—I’m glad—I’m glad I’m up here with all r Member of The Associated Press the gentlemen. I ain’t much on_speakin’. E The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the|Sorry. But I can rassle anybody in the house Gee for republication of all news dispatches credited | —or fight.” x0 it or not otherwise credited im this newspaper, and/ That was all. He sat down, amid thunder- iso the local news of spontaneous origin published) 4115 applause, And, as far as we're concerned, Maa titan ie UT OOM BS hits apecch Was a stcceNe: It’s a relief to find ‘al herein are also reserved. a pug who 5 s like a pug. Foreign Representatives Editorial Comment d — eee DETROIT County Agents in Minnesota (Minneapolis Tribune) i There are 87 counties in Minnesota, and 24 of Bldg. Kresge Bldg. € (Oficial City, State and County Newspaper) them are without the guidance and help of county agents.to put the farming business on Our Growing Airplane Industry a scientific and profitable basis. That is just ¢ When someone tells you, “Oh, the airplane Son never be as roe as Re automobile,” "t be too ready to believe him. A 24 counties too many undergoing this depri- airplane industry in this country is Me vation. Each county should have at least one the best of health right now, In te county agent. That statement is valid in the were 67 airplane factories; at the c! oe simple light of what a good county agent can there were 103. Every one was, 8nd/ Gq and does do, and its validity is reaffirmed working to capacity. More thafi 2,300 air-/4, the experiences of the counties which have planes were sold in this country last. year ithe benefit of the ald of agents. : oe than half of them to private indivic - 8-| Preferably the farmers of a given county There are other indications. Elo Ricken-| should have a part in financing the employment packer, returning from a trip to the far hehe of the agent thereof, but wherever this appears B. that at Portland, Ore. an airplane}ty be too great a burden, some other means ‘School is selling planes “faster than a ee of shouldering this item of expense should be dealer sells cars,” and has 270 students] found in the general interest of the agridultural a training. At Cleveland, O., 25,000 peoplelindustry of the state. The point is that no ed the airport on a spring Sunday, |county should be without the services of a com- h a desire to see airplanes and talk petent county agent. by In recent years there has been very discour- straws showing which way the/ aging cooperation: between farmers and county Blows. It looks"as'though aviation in|scents in Minnesota with the aim of making rica is on the eve of a perfectly amazing) farm income more in line with what it ought to pment. i bsnl day of Sscgora — against the ROR Taran: NCO ice of men who are not themselves owners A Football Valuation .,/and operators of farms, or “dirt farmers,” has 4 Maybe the young men at our college aren't/nassed rather well out in this state. Some of Huite so immersed in a worship of footballlthe old uneconomic standpatism lingers, but : B: S tallava, people have been trying to Ks has no such vogue al ee a or nb ce Ui ive years ago. It is being shoulde: out o} The Yale News recently held its annual poll/the way by the pressure of economic laws re- the senior class, submitting a long question-|jating to the farm industry. e to each member of the fourth-year group.) “Since the county agent came actively upon the of the questions asked which college hon | «cene in Minnescta there has been a remarkable most to be desired. enlargement of alfalfa and corn acreage, and a And-the Yale men, students at a school noteblolifting of theseneral standard of quality here football is sometimes thought a life or|o¢ farm livestock. To say that this change was th matter, voted 89 to 58 in favor of a Phildue alone to the work and influence of county :jcta Kappa scholarship key over a football/agents would be to overstate the fact. Other Ad oh mS influences were at work to bring these results S-rely, ‘the “over-emphasis” on football! about, not the least of which was the chasten- , “yt be quite so serious as we have been told. ‘ing fact that the farmers were not getting the | Ster all. i {returns they should get on their investments, jof money and dabor- -This-situation. was _Racing—Sans eloquent and impelling pleader for a new order In the five years since Teapot Dome came |of business in fields and stock barns. ‘ “9 the public eye no oil operator or cabinet} A county agent is not merely qualified to give | > ‘vr has gone to jail. It has looked, now|sound counsel. He is in a position to correlate | |~d then, as if justice were more than leaden-|the farm activities of the community in which footed. But all is well; justice at last has/he operates and to pass along intelligently to ig to Crowd Him Into the Di an ra : : 4 can’t even seem to make our oil magnates real-' . ; he Bismarck Tribune ize that it is a serious business, But we c: Trin i Me ose ber eee coe i Webeniben prevent the race horses of Maryland from con- deen done. Harry Sincair’s horses cannot race/farmers the experience of their neighbors. He on Maryland’s race tracks! fi is a sort of liaison officer, so to speak, between | The whole Teapot Dome business has been,|failure and success, \with the aim to reduce at times, rather farcical; but never has there/failure and expand success. A good county een any phase of it more supremely smile-|agent is worth much more to a county than his _ provoking than this. compensation suggests. That is a good thing | We can’t seem to punish anyone for bribing|for legislators and state executives to keep in k : officers and Sealing public lands. Wejmind. the city’s ears and it does not hear In a smaller community they fit into their inevitable niche @ certain degree of comfort most folks were more honest ould admit that they came York because they felt in- and that a city where nobody them and “where they could over” would be a fair test. New York, th New any more than would succeed at home. The successful are those who see|@. problems in Manhattan would see in Sauk Centers attack them in much the his'wife menaced by the latter as he lies helplegs, there’s tense, vivid drama—the kind that chills the blood and holds one breathless with horror. Such is one of the situations in “The Country Doctor,” in which Rudolph Schildkraut plays the title role, and which comes to the Capitol theatre on Monday next. Aiding the Radio F IN NEW YORK et ‘yf Ft bet o | of &E Erte i ff In some of the older model re- ceivers, sockets that make contact to the bottoms of the sabe Prange i 5 are still in use. pres- sure by the tubes weakens the spring Manhattan] contact strap of the socket. Dirt olay reception, By bending up tie jon, ing u) contacts and cleaning with a Knife blade, an improvement in signal stre will result in many cases. Socket power devices having fixed ek vol taps for plate supply byt improved somewhat by the ition of external variable re- sisters. In this manner lower volt- are of the eliminator, sometimes facilitat- ing control of oscillation, In = tuned radio Lge ys re; ceiver, where sharpness tuning is Cet Taya control pe periatisn s staggeri mi ‘turns pad the Ag ee exasnie: first 7. J have 50 turns, jthe next 50 1-2 and the third 51. hs Su E Escabe i] :f i ? z EF L i F tf i Eng g f 3 Z ig i & WASHINGTON , LETTER. is not in order under'the unani- BY RODNEY DUTCHER wi sen Service Writer kaye haan periods times for the Federal Radio Commission. Con- Mous-consent agreement. | March 931.—These] jection the joint resolution goes™ over, On ob- Mr. Heflin: Was there objection 8 been accusing the commis-| to its present consideration? woririg the big chain broad-| The’ vice president: The senator the commissioners have} from Idaho asked ” Mr. Borah: up broadcas “oil generad by play-/the consideration of wi is of gumming not exactly unconnected with the commission: In a southern city dwells a mission limited to 1000 watts. Most of his broadcasting phaser records. are most often terrific that it go over. Ye to for the reason that manifestly we! minute rule. Mr. Heflin: We are cuss it a at the owner’s enemies, which in-| mous-consent cludes the commission and those|for the consideration of unobjected'at me than listeners who write in to complain| bills only. Therefore, a motion to'I kicked Florence under the table about the programs. The listeners tuned in on these stations some- times hear bawlings-out directed at @ single person for as long as half an hour, Occasionally the broadcaster con- nouncing to his unseen ment provided’ , I obj os it at this time Mom dari: had: ing to die-! fix blew deal ler the five- maker! wealthy broadcaster whom the com-| minute rule. I nt dtd ed min- utes on eve! tis called, is confined to on 1 oo, ‘all about this propo-; to ther selections from this station|considered by the Senate °* broadsides} The vice president: Si {bling a 201 The unani- nose and hi Alan looked more knives and forks there were at the table. ing politics ES | quiet along the Po- “Hrere’ & story told by a person} cannot dispose of it under the five: tomac since left. 8) in’t been here a day before th? . Talk about a trouble- In the first place I for- to warn her not to mention y’s driving me to the station meet hen, and the first thing it’ she did at dinner was to start war- about his eyes and his wide lapels, wroceed to the consideration of the while I smiled across at him. joint resolution at this time is not in order. resolution. Mr. He his side. Along about midnight he’s| object or not. well Sehadesjed up Ra ie many lurid expressions penerat ether. boss yells to his two or tl thousand more watts The other mornit in Washi mission and complained at the pro- fanity issuing from this station. ., _But we can’t do anything about it,” one is advised. ,“This fellow has the whole southern bloc in Con- gress lined up behind him.” Just a little excerpt from the Con- @ressional Record: The vice president: The joint resolution requesting the president to withdraw the armed forces of the United States from Nicaragua is next in order. Mr. Borah: Let the joint resolu- tion go over. Mr. Heflin: Mr. President, I move that the joint resolution be taken up for consideration. The vice president: an army officer | called up the com-! Senate at the Present Mr. Heflin: The moment. . The/has that right, % Mr, 5 on goes|I can speak f The vi ident: and the big transmitter begins to sideration Pie Soint,“ reaok Objection is made to the she and present consideration of the joint other, I remarked. Then I asked her where they were goi in: I was just saying|date they had next day. She looked firms a general suspicion by an-|that I have a right to discuss for| perfectly audience|five minutes any measure that he has a “bottle of likker” at| called, until I decide whether ident: The senator] knew me pe 4 oe answer. Fi “ey 0 Inder provision| deliver a new car to a customer, lor five ‘minutes. con- But shall receive the crown of life— James 1:12, How oft the sight of means to do ill deeds makes deeds ill Shakespea: OUR BOARDING HOUSE EGAD MRS. HICK, ~ UM NoUR MEAL WAS EXCELLEAT! D To SUCH CULINARY } SAV WHEN You DELIGHTS $<. IT. 1S HoT WITH | tRY oT YouR EXAGBERATION, OR “THE PURPOSE SOF FLATIERY,-THAT T SAV Your W COOKING IS FAR SUPERIOR “To. THe Food OF ALL THE Famous RATS EUROPEAN RESTA! Tt WAVE DINED IAS! os Hieme- SucH age et HAUl-ws- ME THAT ¢ ee she came t! I spread the message to f |has been biected to end ft bee nooe | Senn ie message far corners. ol e | Lu mn. over, so there is nothi ethe| that then ig her to Chi: . his there will be} “We' something before the Senate in a/she said. It was simply marvelous the way Billy had taken to each wet for a minute, but Alan| | it _isjwas watching me and fortunately shall} missed her expression when finally} to she registered comp! She enough about Billy jon. on the articles of ool been used regula: which have interfered Sith health, akan Set bey wi mi y “ing ited health.” Aes obs lealth writers and dietitians are too inclined to lay emphasis upon such disenses ag beri beri, llagea, ind rickets, etc., and point out tat ey are caused b; of the yan absence Uiat thi" aboence produces eens a absence While this is no doubt true in cer- tain parts of the world, such as in India, it is not true that these diseases exist to any great e: in civilized countries, as in Am or Perope. The fault in America is that 999 out of a 1,000 eat too much, and are over-nourished rather than under- nourished, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: J. C. 8, asks: “Will you ple tell me the cause watery eyes? Every time I laugh OE Ree ee! or if I face e wind. There is also an itch All of the common disorders, such ‘ as fevers, headaches, rheumatism, indigestion, ete, are not caused by one pai of food, es- pecially those as the starch and sugar foods which contain an abundance of waste material not necessary for use in the body. Tt is difficult to think of a single common disease which is not caused by over-eating, ed using foods. ‘wrong com le it is true y you will usually find, ju stud; their diet for a week, that they ave used a sufficient amount of all of those natural elements necessary for the body. It is often the case that they do not get the from the vital foods that they do use because of a _ mixture with so many other foods (which produces, indiges- tion) and bar eegs nero 4 the good oa cannot be ted by the: In my experience as a dietii IT have never felt thé asiieiaaey one case of advising a patient to use more food as as the food he was eating was the pee My advice in almost every lisease is invariably to cut down on the food supply—to eliminate this— or to cut down on and if to make! or “Oh, just out to through. told her I had_intended| Bis Wells’ bridge T wanted Alan to know] ¢, before the} that I wasn’t planning to help Billy any cars to customers, "ll be back in time, maybe,” . M 8 | toj harmful effect. :tro food, but by using: kind pe Question: Mrs. | ‘How about canned milk for.coffee?” Answer: Canmed milk would not, make any more trouble than fresh milk, but if you must drink coffee, try using it black. Much of the m coffee is no is However, canned milk is - wholesoine as raw milk if lor cooki purposes. Question: ing B. Mc asks: “Do advise -exerclise for, one with igh blood pressupe?” Answer: One with high blood should take i 5 exercises met be taken slow- ly, and the walkin.g must not be too fast. Question: Mrs. K. L. asks: “Can a child do itself a. hol its Be

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