The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 29, 1928, Page 4

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e Bismarck Tribune AB ladepencent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER > (Established 1878) eet ne menenmmeemeend the Bismarck Tribune C mpany, Bie- nie ioe bgpob at on, postoftice at Bis- second class mail matter. ‘D MABE ..00......... President anc Publisher ee aes {in state ovteltg Bismarck)... e by mall, vetalde of North Dakota Dako a, re ceccscsccsccccccettecceessecccosecccos OO Member Audit Bareae of Circulation Member of The Aseociated “reve Associated tes fe exclusively entitled to the NoWeT, gop republication of all news .iepatches credited cline or not otherwise credited in this newspeper, and off to the locsl pews of spontaneous origin jublished setbacln, All rights of republication ef all other mst- Houerein are also reserved. spic wheat Foreign Represestative, a @. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY wEW YORK --- Fifth Ave. Bids. averag: + wheat again! weathe dhe DETPOIT of favrer Bide. Kresge Bids. sie (Official City. Stato and County Newspaper) ow oe Oe in the MEANING OF TITINA : fastanee some obscure reason it did us a great deal of * mar! ‘Ted. ted to read that Titins, the bright-eyed little dog that i times.s, Umberto Nobile took with him on his serial ‘yains ursion to the North Pole, survived the crash hinders, dirigible and awaited rescue, with her master, : WHE:s érifting ice floe in the Arctic. “CLOSwe gyistor who circled over the stranded party and had "ypped supplies reported that Titins was in the best -%c Lhealth. Unworried by her plight, she scampered peterout over the jee, yip-yipping and chasing the speed- ety ae shadow of the airplane as it slid over the snow t July, fts. fp And, as we said, for some reason we're mighty glad ‘futurQesr it. There is something extremely sppealing eat oat the thought of that little dog riding clear across the n top of the world in an airship, surviving the perils “count shipwreck in the fer north and living te gnaw bones Gasltaly after an adventure sush as few men have ever ‘erated. Titine has been so unconscious of what was hap- outsi@ing; to her, undoubtedly, the whole thing has just bettcyn 9 new kind of outing—a bit unusual, perhaps, but coNNcthing to get excited about. ” 12.50Titina, however, is not so much different than the POUNCE of us, after all. We'd realize the gravity of the sorte action if we were wrecked on an Arctic iee floe; wit in our daily life at home we utterly fail, for the Dupst part, to see where we are going or to appreciate firme significance of our life-long voyage through the over #4. 25 ctNo more than that frisky little dog knew what her undege to the Pole was all about do we grasp the real red ‘rport of our lives. T seems to us that we ere here to faite comprehensibly, and our obvious duty is to work, Ovarry, raise children and live as comfortably and R as we may; but beyond thet we are befuddled. manbe tremendous implications of the fact that we sortare at all; the illimitable possibilities of man! Tan@sver-ending voyage upward from savagery to civil- wwotation; these things never bother our minds. No. We slways underestimate life. We do not realize overgat it is an everlasting, flame-girt mystery. We fail OVET, gee that humanity’s slow progress up from ignor- , barbarity and superstition te freedom, intelli- scence and idealism is the mest magnificent, awe-in- S. biring spectacle in the universe. The thing is as Ste@yeh outside our comprehension as Nobile's flight to Tibehe North Pole was outside the comprehension of his 14.6 Some day we will have better vision. Then we will _B.75° Sway with wars, which blast the miracle of life out ito ‘f millions of young men; with poverty, which eramps feedmmortal souls in strait-jackets of want and disease; Ceith hatred, which poisons hearts that were meant for And then we shall begin really to live. AGE BRINGS GIFTS, TOO Dr. Voronoff, the gland expert, announced could rejuvenate people who had passed the mark and give them an added forty years of life, philosophers and others leaped yject eagerly and began to give voice. exception they replied thet they 5 They had lived for q long time, they said, “and were ready to die. Not willingly would they re- Temmain on this earth longer than nature intended. They it. g ik 5 & sé wealthy government such as ours to handle the prob- lem of Jaw enforcement with just a little less scandal than that. The argument about the benefits of prohibition is going on apace. Meanwhile it seems safe to remark that there are sections where prohibition has hardly had a real chance, INTERNATIONAL FAMILIARITY Dr. John R. Mitt, general secretary of the Y. M. C. A. national council, told a meeting of New York busi- men the other day that as nations are being ight closer together by improved transportation and communication they are reacting on each other “with increasing virulence” and are thereby drifting gradualy closer toward war. That is rather surprising. We used to assume that bringing the nations closer together would make them more neighborly; every advance in transportation and communication, such as the airplane and the radio, has been hailed as a force that would make for world peaee. But Dr. Mott doesn't see it that way. Maybe it’s only natural that it should work out that way, at that. Individuals often remain more friendly if they don’t see each other too often; it’s usually easier to be friends with a man living a block away than with the next-door neighbor. Perhaps it’s the same with nations, AVIATION AS A VOCATION A young man planning to take up aviation as a profession would do well to heed the most recent of the Daniel Guggenheim Fund for the Promotion of Aeronautics. This organization recently questioned leading air transport companies about new pilots. The majority of the replies received stated that experience has shown that the best pilots come from the regular army and navy flying schools. Commercial air schools, it was said, do not quite offer pilots the variety of ex- perience needed to make first-class flyers. It wi ded, however, that as aviation grows the commercial schools undoubtedly will increase in effec- tiveness. One interesting comment was that barn- storming by the individual pilot after graduation from flying school is an excellent means of training. It will be recalled that Lindbergh had a good dose of that. ; ARCTIC PROSPERITY Three decades ago, when the Alaskan gold rush was at its height, the town of Fairbanks, Alaska, was en- joying boom times. It had a population of 20,000, and was sending back to the United States a steady stream of gold. The boom passed, and Fairbanks dropped to a tenth of its former population. Now, however, according to a statement from the De- partment of the Interior, Fairbanks is coming back as @ produeer of gold. More than $10,000,000 has been spent in preparation for large-scale hydraulic mining. Pairbanks’ population has doubled and is still rising; the Alaska railroad has shown its first profit. The Interior Department estimates that the new mining activities will continue for at least 25 years. The result, it believes, will be a great development of Aleska’s other resources. Prosperity is about to re- turn to the Arctic circle. | Editorial Comment | AIRPORTS TAKE IN MONEY, TOO ‘Duluth Herald) A report from Montreal, published by the Gazette of that city, is a reminder of the fact that airports are not all expense to a community. The Gazette, speaking of the Reid airport near Mon- treal, says that it has proved unexpectedly profitable from the start. One unanticipated source of revenue is from the sale of gasoline, which airplanes consume in large quantities. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘Here Comes the Bride | | | ft | that I cannot look so much without havi disposition and character similar to hers, and he needs must know me better. It may be a mere excuse, but a vather interesting one, I think, and T have a theory of my own—that {men with that pcculiar triek of op ; erating their eyeborws so different! 4 must have some corresponding quirl of temperament. I feel I ought to | investigate that hunch, now that the material is right here waiting to under my microccope. Di 2 erefore our acquaintance starts ear Mom: out on a highly scientific and com- After my last outburst, which |mendable basis. MARYE. must have stunned you somewhat, 1} NEXT: Mom discusses modernism. am sure you will be relieved to have | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Serviee, Inc.) me be my frivolous self. ——— I think, possibly, that seeing so f IN NEw YorREK (| many people every day, and findii IN NEW YORK | arr lb fhetginas who have such | ¢———__________» jecl opinions on everyth! re 7 making a changed woman in) me.| New York, June 29—An indefi- Jane and — hav. snade srod nite number of New Yorkers stay jane is more exe! wake throug’ | about business all the tims, and she |* . indie Adobe is making her plans to get one of |rving to figure out new means of | the eo denigean here tir ose laces entertainment that will shop. Before she opens it will |keep them from going to bed. (4 to Paris to select the fittings for! To stay out all night in Manhat- er shop and to bring back seme|tan ig « very simple matter. In French seamstre ‘ v spite of a 8 o'clock in the morning She wants me to go into business! curfew law, which governs a certain with her—I even can come in wit ‘number of night clubs, it’s quite out any capital, since her father is jeasy to amuse one’s self until the atte hing: to inane a sxe at last stenographer starts for work. and - im seriously cons! ing se ii For I find that Nee parses much PP per eines fe more pleasantly for me when I am ly to leave his apartment, hotel Duluth in its municipal airport could sell gasoline or lease the privilege, in either event drawing revenue out of it to balance the cost of creating and conduct- ing the field. But a city makes money indirectly, as well as direct- ly, from having an airport. There are many industries which make and sell supplies, from airplanes down, used in air traffic, that profit when a community is put on the air map. Duluth is going to have an airport. It is true that, as usual, the process is much clut- tered up and delayed by a confusion of counsel. For instance, after the city has spent many months in a careful investigation which resulted in selecting a site for the air port, a committee of the Engineers’ club enters with the belated suggestion that Duluth ought not to do anything about an airport until there has been a careful investigation. But ultimately all these confusions and delays will be overcome, and Duluth will be an airport. In the meantime, every day's necdless delay is costly to the city in many ways. SUMMER IN HIGH PLACES (New York Times) : From two days’ visit to the Presidential Summer home on the Brule the Chairman of the National Re- iblican Committee seems to have taken away with an extra degree of caution based, perhaps, on recent experiences. Mr. Butler told the reporters at a poe that he does not know whether the President will write any letters or make any radio speeches, or, in fact, what he will do in the campaign. This would suggest that Mr. Butler is as fully informed on Mr. Coolidge’s eercon tention state at mind as he was about the President's pre-convention ideas. There was not the slightest suggestion by the National Chairman that Mr. Coolidge might be drafted into making radio speeches or writing letters; enough is soough, fo well was the lesson learned at Kansas City that even on the subject of fishing Mr. Butler would not commit himself. To inquiries concerning the President's luck with the rod in the waters of the Brule the former from Massachusetts declared. firmly: “Oh, I can’t tell you anything about the President; I can tell re only about myseli This was more than Mr, Butler could have told at Kansas City before Vare spoke up. Yet it is not inconceivable that to the historian of the future Mr. Coolidge’s fishing may yet present itself as a factor in the President’s late career as ga . It is now definitely established that when Mr. Coolidge said “I do not choose” he meant that he did not choose. But why he did not choose remains a fruitful subject for speculation. Until it is busy, and there is a f-scination in i business that I .eadily respond to. !TOom oF house, go to dinner, arrive But whether I want to devote the ® Dit late at the theater and then rest of ay life to clothes or not, 1|t#ke himself to any of the various her pildaceres What with such entertainment it is not hard, taking time out for black coffee and spirits of ammo- nia, to come snapping home about 9 or 10 o'clock in t t morning. Perhaps it’s because there has been little or no summer to date. At any rate, this is the first season in many a year wherein, charting Broadway from end to end, it’s pos- sible to find but one typical “sum- mer au show.” on Pam told, is now in process o! ing slapped to- gether 4 Atlantic City, Philadel. phia and way stops. Of the 29 at- tractions still alive upon the big street, some half of them are musi- cal shows. But they do not come under the heading of what they term typically summer shows. 7 ee At four o'clock in the afternoon it one lingers along Park Avenue in the vicinity of the Eighties, it is possible to see a venerable-looking phaeton sweep by, with all the aristocratic dignity of a by-gone day. Leaning back, unconscious of the craning necks in the passing taxis and autos, you would catch a glimpse at a white-haired woman, whose head turns neither to the right or to the left, and whose eyes seem to be fastened upon the trim hat of the driver. There are few of thece left—even in Manhattan. Horse-drawn vehicles are for tour- ists, and for Manhattanites seeking novelty, eee Stopping at the Broadway lane , |dancing establishments, whether on or: Pe Any Se De ‘lthis be a night club or a “nickel- You may be pleased to now that |°deon.” Or, if he prefers, there’ I have been formally introduced to;#!ways the midnight sailing of a the handsome man with the eye-| Dost, or any one of brows that don’t match. He bears|the midnight lormances — ra the prosaic name of Shelton—Will- | which, at present, the most popular iam J., I believe. happens to be “Diamond Lil.” Th When he found that I did not re-| midnight auditions, which in spond to his flirtation—and appar-/P¢s day we ealled “try - outs” and ently he did not realize that it wasjeven ‘amateur nights,” get a big) lack of time rather than disinclina-jhand at the Earl Carroll Opry) tion that caused me to pass him by|House. For the “hot spots” the! with a duchess air—he set about to leader is “Blackbirds of 1928,” an-! be introduced properly. * sother midnight affair. It seems he knows Madame Elsie! Any of indo the chill owning air aboot 2:30 | very well, so he just asked her to chill morning air 380,! present him, which she did. And |or thereabouts, ready to go. then when he invited me to luncheon} This is the hour when Harlem it seemed perfectly proper for me to| just begins to come to life. Also accept. This P did, and tomorrow |it’s the hour when Texas Guinan we dine in state. has perched herself solidly upon the | His excuse for wanting to know |becks of two chairs and is tossing me is that I resemble some dear but certain noise-making devices at the departed friend of his, and he feels|sleepy “souse” in corner while | OUR BOARDING HOUSE A \\EN- HEY~ mistad eZ, WHut Time rr is 2 (ZF —aeTHREE “CLOCK IN “\. DE APT'Noon !~- Yo" SHo IS LATE FoR DAT CONVENTION Now fone aaa MAN, we AW THOUGHT AW couULp sLeeP~sut ‘\’ wt] ae Pe demonstrated that one answer is not as good as an- other the theory is tenable‘that Mr. Coolidge did not choose to run for President because he shrank from the t_of four more summer vacations in the lime- light. With the succeeding years in office it is evi- dent that Mr, Coolidge learned how to make holiday. At Swampscott it was the general testimony of the newspaper men that Mr. Coolidge was bored. His recreation wes confined to walking. His tempts with the fishing rod, if any, were half-hearted. In the Adirondacks it was much better. a] EH Z ~~ AH YES, ~SASON UM-M~~ YAM- ~~ YAM- > KARE A PIICHER OF WATER SASON,~— Wr PLENTY OF (ce A Tle SOME KENTUCKY DELEGATES LAST NIGHT. ~a<THEY WANTED “To Vist? AN AMUSEMENT RIDING He DRATTED CONTRAPTION, cai I WAVE A VERN DIZZY HEAD “TODAY, VES, ~\VERN DIZZY = mints, I am told that the lates ad-! ditions to the language include the ‘ollowing: To “melt” is to “duck out” on a boy friend who “isn't so good.”. One says, for instance, “let’s melt.” A. discarded, sweetie is now a “knight before last.” A sunimer romance is a “Coney Island,” or, if not a New Yorker, a “sun spot.” If, a8 a good husband, you take wee wife to Atlantic pel for in- stance, you're “excess baggage,” or Pod the tags they’ tl they’re pulling on the Hoover cabinet, we leave to your various im: tions. . GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Inc) The bone in the human body po breastbon: ularly called the e is really known as the sternum, and the clavicle is often called the collar By Ahern WAS ENTERTAINING SPENT-TWo. HOURS ‘to '—Modern Version I); ‘ N. OUR THIRD SET OF TETTH There were teeth before there were dentists—but there were also tooth aches, Since a tooth pain is about as agonizing a thing as one can feel, various races in the past have found means of extracting the teeth. Tongs or pincers were used by some of them for this purpose, but the original method was to hammer the tooth loose with a mal- let and crude bone maul so that it could be pulled out with the fingers. In some countries, various prayer methods were used in cases of tooth ache, and even yet in Catholic terri- tories, St. oa is the patron Saint of tooth ache. The Chinese have a very effective method of curing tooth ache by puncturing the gum under the ach- ing tooth and inserting capsicum or some other counter-irritant into the wound. This is still a useful rem- edy. You should have a small vial of tincture of capsicum in your home, and and the next time you have a tooth ache, just dip a small Piece of cotton on the end of a tooth- pick into the capsicum and then place the cotton in the cavity of the This will usually give im- mediate relief. Be-careful not to get any of the capsicum on the tongue, however, since it is manufactured out of the same kind of hot stuff as Tabasco sauce. The art of manufacturing false teeth is not a new one, since the Eskimo and a fev other primitive races manufactured false teeth by carving them out of tusks, hard bones, and horns of various animals. Some aborigines have a very pain- ful and useless custom of mutilating the teeth by knocking out or filing down to a point some of their front! teeth. This is considered a proof of their courage and an enhancement of their beauty. At least there may be some truth in the first statement. There are said to have been sev- eral individuals who grew a third set of teeth, but most of us will have to be satisfied with our third set in the way the dentists make ther. The dentists have developed @ wonderful skill in advancing _ their profession. It may be interesting to my readers to know that mary den- tists are referring their patients to my menus for keeping their teeth in good condition. They are realiz- ing that teeth may be destroyed as much by acidosis as by uncleantiness, and that the daily use of the tooth- brush will not magically brush away the cause of tooth decay when the teeth require special foods contain- ing mineral elements for their nour- ishment. In treating pyorrhea, it is advis- able that a patient go on an orange Juice fast for a few days to alkali- nize the blood and then to the den- tist for local treatments. If the pa- tient will then follow a correctly combined diet during the course of his dental treatments, he is sure to get more permanent results. Do not have teeth pulled unless HISTORY June 29 1612—A lottery was drawn in Lon- don for the benefit of the Virginia plantations. 1852—Henry Clay, statesman and orstor, died. 1858—Third and successful attempt to lay an Atlantic cable com- pleted. 1863—Confederate main army turned toward Gettysburg. ELTINGE THEATRE When Harold Lloyd is seen root- ing for Babe Ruth in his latest laugh-provoker, “Speedy,” now show- ing at the Eltinge theatre, there is no make-believe about it. While the Sultan of Swat was straining every nerve and muscle last year to ex- ceed his home run record for 59 in a season Lloyd was pulling for him every day., When the comedian went back east to make his New York street scenes for “Speedy,” every opportunity he had to get away from work found him at the Yankee stadium rooting for all he could for the Babe. He was there the day the king of the home run ring shot his sixtieth four-ply drive into the right field bleachers, and no one was more demonstrative than Lloyd. : In return the Babe is a great Lloyd enthusiast. That is the only reason he a to work with the i in “Speedy.” The Babe has a bit to perform in the Serpeciactod comic’s new offering, and did it mighty well. CAPITOL THEATRE Vienna—the gayest and most col- orth court. le of the e* co fe 9 "3 court of Emperor we The military Daseanry of @ great European monarchy fore the leidoscopie, psy-' eareseenset park of this pad bed "The daze aresque street ling, pict 8 s and nooks and crannies of this courtesan sone cities. And with all this, a dramatic realistic tale in which drama, com- edy, pathos, startling realism are combined in an euag mixture. This is “Love Me the World Is Mine,” the feature attraction now si at the Capitol theatre. Norman and Phil- bin, the roma: lovers “The Phantom of the ” and “Mer- -Go-Round” are again in Brundage, -fartha Mattox, Charles Robert roy, and the support’ 1g cast. DISGUISED BLESSING Port: Your tov is Songwe-tied 8 slight operation cure him. Father: No, let him alore; I want a radio announcer out of absolutely ni » _. Children in sa fablon, og ced raw an turnips, cucumbers, beets and celery. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and ae addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. The fibers of ‘hese vegetables will require enough chewing to strength- en the teeth and pretty nearly keep them clean. And, most important, these vegetables will supply the ele- ments to maintain the teeth’s nour- ishment. The foods that are best suited for tooth development are: Spinach, lettuce, tomatoes, celery, beets and beet greens, blackberries, figs, as- ‘Anderson, ans Joby, Emily Fitz- See tay ied etek ob |e paragus, cucumbers, dandelions, strawberries, watercress, cabbage, turnips, milk, rutabagas, pine nuts and cottage cheese. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Anxious writes: “Please tell me is it possible for a person to have pernicious anemia and high blood pressure at the same time? What would be the cure?” Answer: Pernicious anemia and high blood pressure seldom go to- gether but it is quite common to see secondary anemia with ‘arterial hy- pertension. Diet is the most prom- inent factor in the treatment of any of these conditions, but I would have to know more about the par- ticular case in que before it would be wise to give any definite advice. Question: Mother writes: “My baby two years old has 15 teeth, but there are two milk teeth that will not come through. Why is thet, and should the gums be lanced ” Answer: Do not be too quick to lance the gums. The full set of milk teeth, 28 in all, does not come through until the child is about three years of age. If you will give the baby plenty of greens and milk he will be sure to develop a good set of teeth. Question: Reader asks: “Can a dropped stomach be cured, ande how?” Answer: A prolapsed stomach can always be raised to its Proper Pposi- tion through taking the “setting-up” exercises. If any adhesions exist which are holding the stomach down, these must be broken loose first by manipulative treatment. Question: Mrs. H. G. writes: “I read your article in which you stated that asthma could be cured by diet. Will you kindly tell me what the diet is?” Answer: The answer to your question is too long to be printed in this column. If you will send me a large, self-addressed, stamped en- velope, I will be glad to send you full instructions, [| BARBS } —__________4 A plumber in Memphis, Tenn., was robbed by taxicab bandits. They ought to get a medal. oe 8 George Gershwin, composer of “Rhapsody in Blue,” is writing a new symphony and is using auto- mobile horns to furnish the inspira- tion. He ought to call this one “Rhapsody in Blue language.” Headlines you never see: “No, I Never Read Books,” Says Movie Star. see Sometimes when the ladies pause to look into the store windows they @/are merely pausing for reflection. Keeping to the straight and nar- row path is becoming incresingly difficult these days—if you're a pedestrian. rast Who remembers the old days when ladies used to faint instead of swearing? ag Questionnaires sent to the alum- ni of Oberlin will be used to ad- jut Peale ie the seamity 5 mene > a opportu lor the fellow wh flunked in Latin! Amelie Earhart has received sev- eral dozen poems in commemoration of her transatlantic flight. She has our sympathy. | a The Nationalists have renamed Peking “Peiping.” Not so very much difference. ae A dispatch says there have been few insect pests this year. But Fee prt ats ae their horns in the Sunday parela. The radio is to be used largel; in the presidential campaign. "ind = static what it is summer, te oe ee ad A train was delayed in New Jer- eR was chasing her the tracks with a hatchet. Ho hum, bably she thought an ax was too vy. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) —___.. sUMMO! STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Comme at Burleigh—es, pe trict Court, Fourth Judicial forma Ash, Plsiatun va, in ‘Dated et 31 this 23th day of Baye’ and Bow office 4 - Sune eevee .

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