The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 23, 1928, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _. MONDAY, APRIL 23, 1928 The Bismarck | Tribune| Editorial Comment Scylla and Charybdis THE STATE'S OLDEST NEW: (Established 1873) oo ee hilo is Matas he ‘argo Forum Published by the Bismarck Tribane C-mpany, Bis-| A study of “Rural Changes in Western Bante ks aceon ateret a aaihe, Dostoftice at Ble-!North Dakota,” recently made by Mr. E. A. ..President and Publisher | Willson, Mr. H. C. Hoffsommer and Dr. A. H. ——_— ———— Benton, under the auspices of the North Da- ; Subscription Rates Payable in Advance », | kota Experiment Station, is an interesting and Bree PE elie ois “ois {valuable contribution to current information i oe Sees ui Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . YOUTHFUL GLANDS vigorous physical culture exercises, + Daily by mail, per year, . jabout that area. H 1 . 4 | (in state outside Bismarck) ..... 6.00; This study, made public in a bulletin known : ; : The theory that eal and men-|and ad youthful attitudes of eee ees eb Oe North Dakoes £60! as Bulletin No. 214 of the Experiment Sta- ; ; ee *o\ Pert ag ae Ry be penal! oan ia i im state, per year ........-..... 1.00, tion, throws a clarifying light on the move- UY use of glandular i bent eibetion oC the seeblem eat the 5 fhe toni nee for . 2, oy of vale ssi farms, oie ES DE NS ‘ to! oe {the numbers of farms in western No a= : ‘ . LJ _ 159 ‘kota. The bulletin and the information it con- ‘ Aptis 1 jj Zi unced before an assemblage of Pps: Baty ing SB pei) i |tains is presented more at length elsewhere in ? su & “4 diet, addressed to him. care of ; Member of The Associated Press {this e the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed t all of western North Dakota was eavelies th 1041. , and the greater The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the} Alm we for republication of all news uispatches credited | homestcaded from 1900 to 1 to. the local news of apostaneous ‘origin published Part of it from 1910 to 1920. ‘This then has RSE A tun tae cas anes Thity to Wing aioet 0 terein. All rights of republication of all other mat-, been a period of pioneering. The country is ‘ ill iy, Z f for only belef perk permanent cure, ter herein are also reserved. i still new, still in the very early sani) of ce 4 bn, % s his laboratory, Become Ret) ex- iors ane, for re; ci esd has jopment, and conditions necessarily have been Zs eS - - rs 4 hausted by suppertime, unable to n helpful inasmuch as it has en- G. cain Farte COMDLAY such as to draw some criticism from those ac- AX Dy 2 ; ea night, and then tortured by tic HI of levee NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. customed to living in older settled regions. ey ‘An amazing transformation was| golf several days week, and, wom- CHICAGO DETPOIT Naturally it has been a period of readjust- ‘ Z “ a brought about within a month after|en are also taking up golf and horse- Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg.! ment. Thousands of the original homesteaders Pegs beginning the treatment. He pur-| back riding, in a frantic ea to (Official City. State and County Newspaper) “|have pulled stakes and gone. This was to be ; = . tii, hg,” Bae to have cond 8 vi a get apne Eggers] wauty (et eit: Althhenhdletallh teeth tata A expected. It has been the experience of every . ci ; whith had chatacteri him twens Le arr was theirs when younger. Coolidge to Gettysburg section of America, west of the Allegheny TF : . ty years earlier. His experience] This interest in athletics f cote President Coolid break te a mountains. Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Wis- i: \ ‘ mea High © F led many other investigators and|to be of immeasurable benefit with- sat S EFoCMAANE this year by makin ie hi pest hatin consin, Minnesota, all went through this pe- 1 iat Z y 7 ‘ of SH) try out these glandular UM Re ER edt frat se oe) ~ rial Day address on the Gettysburg battlefield "0d of readjustment, | F , s Ze: ae 34 can be no question but that|gland therapist for calling our at- instead of in the Arlington cemetery. That The important thing is, that with the going C - ¢ ‘ some remarkable improvements have| tention to the need for rejuvenation. feoWe conteriplati i ea the: ta a Ci i 08 the horde of free land seekers, great num- aie ' AF been obtained by this miethod of — e Is contemplating visming the lamous VIV!' | bers of whom took the land only as a matter J ie, treatment, but from thousands of QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS war battlefield on May 30 is known. 4 pereoivaiend “ ; ay and , 7 carefully selected cases which have| Question: R. H. writes: “I read Though idential add Arlingt of speculation, and with no intent to stay an . . t i been studied, the percentage of re- tad article recommending fasting jough a presidential address at Arlington! farm jt, the real farmers who have stuck have - Z y - has been found to be very|for absorbing a clot of blood from . rye ry Its has has become a Memorial Day tradition, it seems|found it possible to create a farm unit large all, the good results, at best,|the brain. I know a person who had fitting that a president should make a pilgrim-; enough to make it possible to operate on an i by ‘ : lasting only two or three with| stroke from a clot of blood on the age on that day to the scene of the decisive Senorita aH nayiie® basis. : ; f , a tfects at the end of tet Ee i ie arg battle of the war that preserved the union of| ‘this bulletin shows that, while there was a 2 J a The one single important fact|hasn’t spoken a word since. She states. It was there President Lincoln made | hig decrease in the number of farms and farm- és ; brought out by these i tions| moves her lips and mumbles, but his immortal address, and it is a shrine tojers shown by the census report of 1920 and Z © ' is that a person in good health has!cannot form words. Do you think _ which every president since Lincoln has trav-| 1925, the acreage in crops in 1926 was “un- ‘ f ; cut nation one ailatee tte fong standing? she {fe about 4b, : eled and which every American hopes to see. |doubtedly the greatest in the history of the lands of the generative organs. weighs 150, and is the picture of Arlington is a national Valhalla, sacred to| area.” ll of = Elana § oe weet at iii ence the heroes of all the wars in which the Unit-| There is an ever increasing competition for semer medal for having “done the |U%der emotional excitemen d : LE al REL ed States has engaged. As the national cem-)this western land by farmers who want to build WASHI NGTON most for steel.” We thought that Sigorves iy unaes't the tthouletion of would tak tasted ari writes etery and last “bivouac” of veterans of all the| permanent farm homes for themselves. Many f prize was all set for some Chicago |tiose emotions which are connected| weeks to accomplish good results. |, country’s wars, it is an appropriate setting for; who have been renting are buying. Vr} gece eee with that emotion called love. The best plan would be to have her | * the Memorial Day address of the chief execu-| From 1924 to 1926 there was an increase of I E i i i R Congress finally got around to] 4 en meget ni deed ~ dled re bese creping lied » tive. ; : nine per cent in the number of farms in twelve Haven es But ie understand | ot in love is finned very od, mo | would encourage her ae watch her However, the president's address will lose | typical areas of one township each, studied in BY RODNEY DUTCHER April 1: Rationing scheduled to be Sotlintvehitecn aa ve anything | hatter how many years one has|case during the fast. none of its solemn significance by being i investigation, compared to a decrease of| Washington, April 23—A year| definitely concluded. o's he af eel instinct Record ft jeceethy‘wpeat G. os writes: | livered at Gettysburg. Upon this famous and/}21.5 per cent during the five previous years. after the Mississippi flood reached| Food supplies cf unfortunate fam-| A newspaper in Mexico’ City has | lost, wi le love of com-| “General ing, what are the beautiful field of battle stand side by side| This study presents information of great sig-|the proportions af’ great disaster,|ilies gave out easly in the winter ee right idea about news. A top Ee cetliee emateniy anrenee Serer agra The: grains, and: those monuments to both the Blue and the Gray.|nificance to the State as a whole. It shows that si Be lel peony — | ne Ror i REE te Lop nperegrre re saeceal his gait will be heavy and clumsy; | vegetables daieet an Gabers: end F lot ee soni ee ih ‘bead to a Hil this area has now reached the stage where it|tims as effectively as it could with|tided over until the spring planting.| without a murder or @ robbery. he likewise often becomes fat and|which grow under the ground nation, both figuratively and literally, for the ° as Q Co reme! i lazy. With the female, the Question: O. M. M. asks: “Will has become a factor of tremendous importance | the $17,000,000 relief fund at its dis-|Last summer, ut the peak of the iiashiiva specs aca ae are: thathgs of pier. you Kindly date otete of tho-nymp: | “bloody shirt” no longer waves at Gettysburg|as a wealth producing arca. Western North | posal. blem, the Red Cross claims to} hension, fainti lis, hot | toms the stomach? i rt s i ): rOvil ° ‘As late as March some 54,000 vic-|have served more than 1,000,000} = paragraph recently appeared ipprehension, ing spel “3 i ebteatebe aa Boe and South mingle ‘Butle “erp emerged ou toate an ever are Still being fed by the Red| meals a day. : in this column stating that for- id cold sensations, and hot flushes. |Is there any pain or bloating? ; fi ee mer Judge Ben Lindsey received it piles up at an corp rapid) Answer: Sometimes there is a : : ; Cee earn a eae eenite’| Ite expenditures included $5,000,-| $6500 for a debate in New York |Fate, especially around the hips snd|certain amount of pain and some line officers, the aviators and the! ¢. families, their needs carefully | 000 for food, $2,250,000 for seed, $1,-| City on companionate marriage. buttocks, trated of cv vod cases the tank men, a staff officer, no mat- investigated ‘by local cha: ‘are| 750,000 for building and repairs,) Judge Lindsey received only a enough eat ote ae lon seem to be ter how essential his work or how] investigated by loca) chapters, Ore] $755,000 for household furnishings | small percentage of — that gland- jou by cot he Ra high his rank, feels, like standing} )° ving and $300,000 for livestock and poul-| | amount, and the error is great. |Ular e: be felt, that very little pain is at salute. At least I do.’ Th $17,000,000 has all spent| ‘ty. More than 1,680,000 acres of ly regretted. come all of these symptoms of pre: | el te tae is usually ccnsid- Sei nf Pp erga _ land are said to have been planted mature old age, but at the present! eral loating, 2specially oes TOMORROW: "Hell an’ Maria!” |excent for & small amount needed! vith Red Cross seed, o_o | time the only hope for Seal re-|the | intestines You may bs tor, tried to induce Dawes to join SEE the hardest hit counties of Illi The flood-stricken area covered|| JN NEW YORK __||iuvenation in that wi can|needlessly worry! over the hi nats "| —— ——__—_____9| the about 20,000 square miles, ‘ better health. /symptoms of gastritis or stomach ales lela taal Br oes But { PEOPLE 'S FORUM | Missouri, Arkansas, Mississippi 2 The largest expenditures by states - Thi mpi alone, Do not guess about it, and i! by living [Dicwon -rdtuwed; be wanted th.go sti coe ge were, $5,500,000 in Louisiana, $5. New York, April 23.—Years ago,|O% & carefully studied diet, taking |do not try to diagnose your own case. Fi . THE NORTH DAKOTA DEMO- 350, in Mississippi an ,000,-| when grandfathers wore whiskers 5, . ] afi thiadtinouheiaee gut to ag CRATIC MULE That great relief fund, sccording| 009 in Arkansas. The other $2,000,-|and grandmothers hadn't learned |stein buy their, imitations. of Fitth shing, and Pershing promptly called Medina, N. D., tha 000 in| 000 was divided between Tennessee,|how to peroxide their silver hair, ‘urs the sons and grand- Dawes to direct the supply forces]. : April 19, 1928.) ong ‘way or another. i: arr Missouri, Illinéis and secs lly highly Pies eres ea brid ete in ances ior Tene in ot Nin Smee al et elmira | Os Svomenta of n-| St Tarr nee pce BY ROBERT TALLEY terial wherever he could find it injDakota is a very tough but much|the form of secon poh in eiold construction workers was the re-|rough girlies who had wandered ASHINGTON,|Europe, a very important job in view|abused animal. He was never very|'™® homes, procuring household! moval of the town of Columbus, Ky.,| over from the Bowery and by the Py Apri ia Thelof the’ fact that’ submarines. were | large, although at one time he was|®°0d® clothing, livestock and Poul- half a mile from its river bank site|colorful characters one found on Wa ctor of ‘ig. Gen, | sinki of the cargoes that{ very lively “and always ready to|t¥, feed, seed, farm implements/t, 4 bluff above as the water cor-|this gay highway of New York's Cert at Gris, Gerc| started from this country," "| kick the elephant who, ,o the mule's| Md Providing food and medical care. |roded its foundations and the excava-| East Side. : in the World W: Dawes bovight everything from!way of thinking, was not walking it is stil He pr sa plsbie3 Yition of flooded Melville, La., out of| It put Avenue A on the map, as|®@! Ee hers he first|hay to locomotives and organizediin the narrow path. eps ae eh hones ‘hie from six to ten feet of mud. surely as the Bowery was tattooed became a national| labor battalions to build railroads,|_ The mule even grew large enough] tinuation mn aber Tie cae Obit the biggest relief job in|on the public mind by that bawd: = and international|highways and mine coal. Supplies|to carry one Democrat to the gov- “hese . an to the thou- American history. old song: “The Bowery, the Bowery’ iy figure—runs paral- had ito,gome and difficulties had to ernor's chair, hut aad a ay eas role yo - hey ae such things and they say ii ts. rushed aside. Once, wh in} fallen into the hands of bad hostlers. h " + a enn SUC. ings. . i ear ot dire need of Reullery share re ha They should have known that his} 4 pithonte nations Meee BARBS | ° General John J. finally found a number in Spain. pence! foeg vag eareate ae Peas cccath:ce dara, the nasiber.of cases = Neate Lanta gy : i i i v ited | stea eding hi 8) i i e of Avenue Pershing, his|Spanish law, however, prohibited|stead of feeding him ballo ‘s)|cared for was higher last February] A man without arms got married|or something equally refined. friend of a life-|their exportation. A neat little! fed the ballots to the elephant. So és 5 or 8 time. smuggling plot soived the difficulty.;now poor donk is quite a runt. We| tan Pegg osot Dorr cgay 9 ‘ed in Cleveland the other day. How|is, if somebody doesn’t s| Presidential Campaign Portraits—No. 1 Charles G. Dawes Pershing Helped Put Dawes in Limelight Editor’s Note: This, the 13th in a series of Presidential Cam- paign Portraits written for the Tribune by Robert Talley, is the second of four articles dis- cussing the career of Vice Pres- ident Charles G. Dawes. The third article on Dawes will be printed tomorrow. Their fri é Often Dawes negotiated single.lare afraid he will not survive the in the world is he going to defend] Not that this is likely to mal f ene peomen ie handed with whole Soe June primary because we hear that] table Gees on nerd or dieal ieanelt 2 eee difference to someone reading his our way to find eron’s 15-cent lunch room out in| Went at their commissions hammer! Mr. Simons, the chief hostler, says |USees given rd enter, y ._|favorite newspaper in Colorado, Lincoln, Neb. 40 years ago when|and tongs, casting military etiquet;not to feed any ballots which are|ttention or of service from/ In olden days they used to kiss| Missouri and way states. But it's "t much impressed Dawes was a struggling young law-|to the winds, bellowing his demands| cast by Democratic friends of the I,] month to month and make up; now the make-up| going to make a lot of difference to ing to the aad Rawitenent Pershing, not|and largely’ over-aweing their at.{V. A. party. May (1927) comes ahead of everything. the East Side. It’s another sign of ° tirst—goi ie June long out of West Point, was a mili-|tempts at the tricks of diplomacy.|, In view of the fact the I. V. A. the influence over that section which tary instructor a iversi His language was often unpolished, |boys are going to quit feeding him, The Bremen flyers contributed to| the untown belt 's exerting. Nebraska. Villines sence Boras bet usually effective. F d, it is for us tong Haleed sadicale July our education, anyway. We didn’t] Second Avenue, in what was once pool another famous resident of Lincoln, Often Together !to quit also and help feed the ele- Seen ee ete ae. many ways of | admittedly the Ghetto, is the Broad- coalel enters the picture, but soon fades! Pershing and Dew fre. {Phant- : October spelling Greenely Island,'didn’t know | way, or main ste.n, of the East Side. Bat it was simply enchanting out. tl pk a9 pts ae a We often hear the saying, “A where Greenley Island was—in fact,|And Avenue A is the Fifth Avenue fntred they'd the tea is Peniident: Dawes. explode _ DB ‘oe ne ew about that) house divided against itself can not Danke we never had heard of Greenly|of the melting pot section. Here oageed, rose the legend that in his first leweuit| lished dine: ns vue im his pub-| stand.” Will that apply to this Island, Note are the snappiest shops to be found a | Bryan was attorney for the other| “I peels with G Per. | ne? | Ae Sepenee that this mule te February les M. Schwab i - cver that way, Here the deugh- side. Bryan's law firm—Talbot and| shin h day, taking rat perl radical at one end and conservative 54 Charles M. Schwab is to sail for} ters-and granddaughters of T. . ig each day, taking lunch on|at the other end. The poor donk . England soon to receive the Bes-|Spillani, Igor Yedinov and Moe Bryan—once opposed him in a rate|Friday at the house, or rather the|® is balance. fase as counsel for the Missouri P: | palace, where he is staying. Dear sey ie ot be that Ses he spas cific, Dawes says, but Talbot con-|fellow and loyal friend... . Wei should be able to take care of her ducted it and Bryan remained pret-| have both passed through the great-| Own business, should be able to store OUR BOARDING HOUSE ty much in the background. est grief which can come to a man.|her own grain, and should be able to A Bond of Tragedy As we rode up together there oc-| manufacture it into finished prod- The bond between Dawes and Per-|curred an instance of telepathy! yt; without help from outside shing, when the war broke out, was| Which was too much for either of us.| states or dictation from any one. on Bo¥s,~ Tm So Hi Be* g deeper than friendship which had| “Neither of us was saying any- & ripened throughout the years; it| thing, but I was thinking of my lost Tan oat thin “f logs i on WorRED ABouT sake B WORRY You, Miss cHurcH! fe, bay was the bond of tragedy. boy and of John's} inZipears to me that that is the end wuDAKE WENT To It came about this way: out of the window, and he was doing| which does not think at all. vl a Duri: Pershing’: bseni in| the same thing on the other side of Mexico, fire destroyed the Pershing| the automobile, cred at | githere Was, @ time when Me. pee and bis wife cal ee oe shale the same time, and h_ was in double harness but now we ap- children were bur te th. . . 1, & Dawes had one son—Rufus Fear-| War can’t keep it out of my mind." Us ta ee eee ‘on much SHootuia AWD |. POST-CARD From. HIM GANGSTER “CES ing Dawes “who was making a rec-| Nevertheless they had their Jokes |copt ‘unhiteh and each one go his YESTERDAY, Asking 4 4 POP AT’ iM, 7 9 it for himself at Princeton. No|together and each helped lift the] own w: father was ever prouder of his boy;|other's burden. Once, while lunch-|°"Th “the article in’ the Bismarck ; ME “O LOOK UNDER T Hope HE'S A i~¥e™ . fgone ever hoped, or dreamed | ing together in the former palace of Tribune on April 14, signed by one e aay J ING ROOM MIDGET, AN him. Hi ofa ter for his child.! Napoleon’s Marshal Lannes, Dawes ‘And on the threshold of man-| Surveyed the magnificent splendors | ee 4 vee, ay cals TABLE FoR A COUPLE SHoaTs Low fe hood, Rufus Fearing Dawes was! and then turned to the commander-|t, radicalism to register as Repub- Hi Vest : lad while bathing in Lake incriat * 4 licans. What they mean by radical- pert, Wisconsin. nat Gen ene oa soins Contrast, iem is interfering with the big boys \- itl sk pauls ar cg: Map oe t'Ait have always controlled the mar- luxuriousness of our early life in! }.44 fead at the funeral is a cimssic.| Lincoln, Neb., it does seem that 8 ee een frog NL eongpe bal After reciting in a tender, sympa-|£00d man has no chance in the|, “ive committee may be opposed to manner, the material successes | World. Fs 4 the plan of the Nonpartisan League, t his boy was winning, Dawes|, “Don’t it beat hell!” but ‘curely not @ majority. of the h Es Pam il ‘ i Hid fi sity ul Hey Pershing : f z - 4 5 continued: laughed. Democratic voters. So the register- body, who is anybody in the A: “My boy lived long enough to ‘win|, Another time Dawes thrilled al; cablicess a . ‘out.’ Whatever the years would|board of officers with an eloquent a Bales Senne whee been to Paris met Peg shave added would be only material. description of “General Pershing’s|Counted aft , Ip a man’s character is his real ag Spanish friend, the famous | will ernie fhe Joos Reiner”, we . n Cameron.” Dawes prated on, and if he survives there may be a died suddenty, fa the midst|deseribing a Spanish grandee of | chance in the future to get him a dif, his} #0me who was noted as an epi-| ferent chief hostl Pershin, was convulsed; me ee with Silent laughter, remembering 0. H. McCULLOUGH. Dan Cameron of 15-cent lunch] EXACTLY SUITS ELDERLY PER- . SONS lost | fame back in Nebraska. Foley’s Honey and Tar Compound eee} HI E pi BF B ape teens se ae effort Dawes suc-! quickly _ sto) > hal ceeded shortly before the war ended Pie that ae out and ee nel getting the alte fe snity. Abele sleep, Immediately relieves a tick- in i hack-' was de-|A joint board, with him as chair:| ing ‘Containg ne shortorm teats up secretions, no “opiates to cause constipation, that ‘bear of ad- a brigadier general—oecasional-| vancing years. Mrs, A. S— ly visited the front line and the hos-| Fort Worth, Texas, says: “I find ~ tals. ) Foley's Honey and ‘Tar Compound I have seen war as it is,” he} absolutely reliable and it has helped says in his book.- “Before the front-| me wonderfully.” Ideal for elderly private soldier and the. front-| persons, Try it—Adv. . »

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