The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 14, 1928, Page 4

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SRN mmo eres } PAGE FOUR ( ‘Th ee ee, ee err wa _ Daily by carrier, pe! ‘ many and Austria, by villainous design, brought on the * Gn the drama of July and early August of 1914. e Bismarck ‘lribune An independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) fe tric EEE ished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- ergrn Db.” and ch at eos postoffice at Bis- id class mail matter. : onze D. ‘Mann ‘5 re President and Publisher Subscription Rates Pi Dally by mail per year i mail bi Xin state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North in state, per year .... in state, three years for . outside of North Dakot: Weekly by mail, see Weekly by mail, Weekly by mail, YORE secsessseseees eeeeees * Si Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ee iaember of The Associated Press The ‘Aisoelated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives = 5 N PAYNE COMPAN' new TORR e-- Fifth Ave. Bide. TROIT CHICAGO D at Tower Bldg. Kresge lg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) TOWARD A NEW WAR? Every so often a book is written by one or another of the European statesmen who played leading roles Whenever such a book appears it is hopped upon by historians, who immediately dissect it and emerge with certain statements, admissions or inferences with which they seek to prove that one side or the other was chiefly “to blame” for the beginning of the World War. The latest books of this kind come from Serge Sazonov, Russian minister of foreign affairs from 1910 to 1916, and Raymond Poincare, French president when the war started, and now prime minister. Each book has been seized and examined by all man- ner of critics, They prove, cry some critics, that Ger- war. Not so, cry other critics; they prove that France and Russia caused it. And the long argument goes on, * ever hotter, not to be settled in our generation. But such arguments, after all, seem a bit futile. ‘Why, at this date, use up good paper figuring che whether Russia mobilized before or after Austria? 1 » Why bother whether France urged Russia on to war . tem. : outlet to the Mediterranean”; how Austria and Ger- eta s. of influence” across the Adriatic; Jugoslavia has her Se ~ negotiates with France regarding naval spheres in the * so that we can stay clear of it when it breaks. 5 ..ments in a fisherman’s career come on afternoons when. FS his hook goes utterly unmolested, ~ most hardened devotees, the success of a fishing trip de- away from something rather than to get at the fish. | wonder that his temper is reflected in his political judg- ment. th +. or tried to hold her back? } fice or shop, works all day at top speed, snatches twenty What difference does it make? Aren’t these questions rather beside the point? It would be infinitely better for us to understand, ¢ once and for all, that the World War was an inevitable outgrowth of the whole European “world power” sys- It simply had to happen. Glance at Sazonov’s book, for example. He gives an unintentionally damning picture of the great old game vf international politics, He tells how Russia had her “sphere of influence” in the Balkans, working for “an| fi farmer vote would do better many sought a “pathway to the Dardanelles”; how France, fearing Germany, had an understanding with Russia, and how England, also fearful, had an under- standing, too; how every European capital lived in an atmosphere of fear, suspicion, hatred and ambition, with war forever on the horizon, Such being the circumstances, it is hard to see how the war could have been avoided. It came and hit each nation involved a blow from which it has not yet recovered. Have the old circumstances changed? Is there a new atmosphere abroad? No. Italy has her “sphere ii * own ideas of expansion and rivalry; France has her allied “buffer states” to the east of Germany; England Mediterranean; Poland and Lithuania, even now, are at swords’ points over something else. The old play is being reenacted, and there is no reason to doubt that it will have, sooner or later, the same kind of climax. A new war is in the offing; juite a way off, perhaps, but certainly there. While here is still time, we might begin charting our course THE FISH DON’T MATTER ‘A great many men who go fishing every summer ‘would have a hard time explaining just why they do it. It isn’t for the fish, exactly; some of the finest mo- Except among the pends in no way on the size of the catch. Herbert Hoover, who took to the California trout streams to get in shape for the presidential campaign, has found the words to explain it. Fishing, according to Mr. Hoover, is more an escape from a jazz-mad world than any positive enjoyment of angling in itself. Indeed, he believes that as many as Aeven-eighths of the men who go fishing go to get k It is the only occupation, he says, in which the average busy man can be alone and not be criticized or suspected, Probably there is a lot to that explanation. The city dweller these days finds life a pretty com- plex affair. One doesn’t have to be a candidate for the presidency to learn that solitude and privacy can be al- most unattainable. Modern life is restless, founded on smever-ceasing movement. From the time a man gets up in the morning until he goes to bed at night there is mo escaping it. He hurries through his breakfast, races for a trolley or speeds off in his auto to get to the of- minutes for lunch, hurries home in the evening—and + gets, nowhere, any moments in which he can relax, ; commune with himself or take stock of his place in the + lief. Getting the fish is only a minor part of a man’s « dem. A man can rediscover his own personality and general scheme of things. It is from that sort of thing that fishing offers a re- lief. And, obviously, this relief does not in the least lepend on the size of the fisherman’s catch. The mere tmosphere of the fishing country, with silent woods, lonely streams, quiet dawns and lazy afternoons when «the sunlight comes down in wavering patches through rustling leaves to rippled water, is a tonic and a re- business there. The real thing is solitude and free- build up barriers against the ceaseless assaults of mod- i officials of the New Bedford (Mass.) Y. W. C. A., who and had been arrested for their pains. and being arrested will depend on how you look at the strike. Yet it is difficult to see how these two girls de- sible that someone in the organization was giving a thought to possible future contributions from some mill owner? is going to try to rid her neighborhood of mosquitoes by a new method. She is getting from a French scientist a breed of cannibal mosquitoes, which eat other mos- quitoes instead of going around biting human beings. mosquitoes is a praiseworthy idea under any circum- stances; but to do it by turning more mosquitoes loose on them, so that the little pests will have to endure the very thing which they have been inflicting on the rest of us—well, it’s just simply dandy, that’s all. | Editorial Comment | is the market adollar a bushel to the pi nets of words and _theorie: the market reports. % out of the wheat business wherever they find it feasible to substitute other crops, but the price of' wheat still remains the greatest single denominator of the general temper of rural Ameri than the natural human emotions of content or discon- | bi tent, and when this great stapl soil are décidedly not contented. there is, from the rural point of view, not enough dif- ference to accommodate a wisp of hay. Both are classed as hostile to the MeNary-Haugen bill, one by his silence and the other b: time food administration, which many farmers believe held down the price of wheat while othe: permitted to soar. qui equalization fee plan, which farm leaders considered was a plank of the Democratic platform. plan of farm relief nor extended a helping hand to the farmer. Hoover promises something soon, perhaps in his speech of acce} work out a plan i the farmer has become suddenly and very concretely his wheat. This fact transcends every other conside tion in importance to his pocket, and influence on vote. Now indeed is the time of his discontent, and well may the politicians take heed. the fact that on Tuesda; Minneapolis Chamber of Minneapolis, it on the prairies, for the farmer the Northwest as a whole is confronted just now with last year at this tim " means more than six million dollars to the spring wheat | tion. growers of Minnesota and five times that much to those | bers and ‘ of North Dakota. Farmers were getting dollar wheat|i8 its international president, A twenty-five years a $25 and bin by single operation, but these are not complete explana: tions of present price movements. The price is mov: Canada’s eee to speak to the point in their acceptances they can THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Hay Fever Evolution | TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1928 HEALTH DIET ADVICE White. It was he who invented the phrase “Dementia Americana” for Thaw’s mental condition. That, whea you stop to think of it, is a peculiar sort of fame; she fame that comes to a man who, defended America’s most notorious murderer and found a new way to cheat the electric chair. “FOREIGN VOTE” TO SPLIT How is the so-called “foreign vote” of the United States going to go in the coming presidential election? There are approximately 7,000,000 naturalized vo- ters in the country. If they all went one way they might easily have a decisive influence on the election. What's going to happen? The answer, apparently, is that their vote will be split regardless ‘of their nationalities, just like the vote of native-born citizens. The Foreign Language In- formation Service recently reviewed editorial com- ment in several hundred foreign-language newspapers printed in this country. It could find no one group that was anything like unanimous for either candi- date; and it concludes that “there is not only a lack of unity of opinion between the various racial groups, but each group seems to be split within itself.” THE CURE OF ANEMIA In the first I assure you that pernicious anemia is nut pro- duced because the one who is ill has not eaten enough of the iron-contain- ing foods. ie one who has de- velo anemia has probably eaten much the same foods as the other members of the family. And after he is anemic he has doubtlessly con- sumed large quantities of spinach, steak, and even liver, in trying to supply his body with the organic iron which the blood seems to require. Anemia is not alone caused by lack of mineral elements. The fault with the anemic patient is that the iron and other minerals carried iv the food he uses are either destroyed before it reaches the red corpuscles, or the red cells are themselves de- stroyed by the poisons which exist in his body. In many cases it seems that the more food he puts into his body, the more the red cells are destroyed. It does not take a sage to understand that something in the body is destroying these cells, and all the investigation of physiol- ogists has failed to disclose any special place in the body where these cells are killed. The anemic toxemia is like a de- vouring monster in the body which eats up the red blood ceils and drinks up the hemoglobin. Starving this toxic monster out seems to be the only cure of pernicious anemia. While fasting on plain water often brings about very desirable results, my experience has shown taat an orange juice fast is even mote satis- factory. This is because the orange juice supplies the body with calcium and other minerals and with the needed vitamins of which t} has been depleted. At tho same time, due to the stimulating effect of the citric acid of the orange, the Poisons can be more rapidly elimi- nated from the body. Since orange juice does not require much encrgy for its digestion and assimilation, it does not interfere with the eli tive oe of the body. I have never known of a single case of pernicious anemia that did not immediately begin to improve orf an orange fast, and the almost un- believable fact is that the number of red cells are actually increased at a “igor rate when no other food of any kind but orange juice is used. Tam not speaking from mere theory. Labo ry tests will prove this as- sertion, and I have yet to see a case where this change does rot take place. Of course, the usual intestinal ir- tigation should be taken as with any other kind of a fast, and two or three sponge or shower baths used every day. The patient is advised to take some deep breathing exer- cises from the very start and to con- tinue taking these breathing exer- cises indefinitely, even after it seems that a cure has been effected. This extra breathing supplies the blood with more oxygen with which to carry on work, and_ this - extra oxygen is badly needed by the pa- tient. 5 After the orange fast, the diet should ‘be similar to that which I recommend in my weekly health menus, published in many prominent newspapers throughout Canada and the United States. These menus in: clude a plentiful supply of green vegetables which, F course, are needed by everyone, whether or not they have a tendency to anemia. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer oe aie, questions a health an et addressed him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply, At the came time, must take up a re; ir course in physical culture and do everything to increase ne functional activity ° in every muscle and organ of his body. Blood tests should be taken frequently, and if there is any ma- ‘terial loss from the blood cell in- crease, it is .dvisable to take an- other short fast as before, and then return to the diet, alternating with the fasting and dieting for some time if it seems necessary until of the bodily toxins which may have een responsible for the original trouble are entirely removed. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: QO, H. ask: “WI shape of belt would be the best for a floating kidney, one to wear with be worn through the the patient STRIKES AND THE Y. W. C. A. It is a little bit hard to understand the viewpoint of expelled from the association two young women who had acted as pickets in the New Bedford textile strike There are various views as to the rights and wrongs of the strike, of course; and your ideas about picketing served expulsion from the Y. W. C. A. Can it be pos- THE CANNIBAL MOSQUITOES Mrs. Charles B. Williams, who lives in Flushing, L. I., ney poet RP night as well as through the day? taking half a wineglasetol of ands a day any harm to one with a float- ing kidney Answer: I Have attempted to raise floating kidneys through the ressure of belts, but have never en able to do so with any success. le x-ray examination will show that these belts do not actually raise the kidney or any other prolapsed organs, although sometimes the pa- tient feels more comfortable when the belt is worn. Mose People do not have any symptoms from a floating Kidney, and the majority of Patients examined are found to have at least one kidney lower than what is considered normal, A floating 1 kidney would not be harmed by one in nor. fal my ese than sition, stimulation of Meant te ae “ your particular case depends upon many other things besides the po- ee your Kidneys, estion: Mrs, J, 1 any cure for “false” sugiea? pe toe exactly is it, and what causes There’s an idea that we really like. To obliterate | New York, Aug. 14.—Notes on nothing in ‘icular and everything in general: Styles in Broadway plays during the winter of 1928-29 will run to boxing gloves, newspaper scareheads and continued gangsterism. The suc- cessful Gyre of the past sea son will found again: that is, there will be low comedy, high sa- tire, gore and melodram: More power to the cannibal mosquitoes. May they eat heir fill. You are not old, not as long as you enjoy living. BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Aug. 14—The Kel- logg multilateral anti-war treaty, while attacked in some foreign quar- ters as more likely to promote war than discourage it, is nevertheless a source of hope to most of the Amer- ican peace societies. a They are willing to cheer for the moment and attempt later to use the treaty as the basis for more definite and concrete measures against war. Secretary Kellogg’s own assur- ance that the original text of the treaty would stand alone and that is ral. interpretations of it were in no way-a part of the pact and could not be considered as reservations, has, if it has not ex- actly cleared the air, at least quieted the fears of some peace movement leaders that the new covenant itself would leave a large gateway to war wide open. One even hears the ide i. ressed that Mr. Kellogg has at st actually beéfi converted to the war outlawry. cause by Senator Borah and it is oes that the venerable Secretary of State may have an eye on the Nobel peace prize. The hope that gradual disarma- ment may follow the signing of the Kellogg treaty, receiving impetus from it, is naturally uppermést in active in the United States section. Miss Dorothy Detzer, executive secretary of the American branch, has been panning Mr. Kellogg and) Two prize fight opuses which will the State Department as often a8} appear early in the season are Jack anyone was shot in Nicaragua, but} Dempsey’s vehicle, “The Knock- is now enthusiastic over the Kellogg | Out,” sponsored by none other than treaty. David Belasco, and “Ringside,” by [t will hereafter be much more|Ted Parramore and Hy Daab. This difficult,” says Miss Detzer, “to rai latter already has been packing them id it may come in our own day,”|in for weeks in Detroit, where Gene “I think the treaty will definitely | Buck puts on his premieres because help the cause of peace and see no|it happens to be his home town, Buck logic in any suggestion that there|never forgets the town that was is anything in it tending to con-|kind to him in a day when it seemed done any variety of international|certain that his eyesight would be pent who wrete “the Baliad’ of aren 4 .| who wrote e Ballad of BR Ak Len Non she ora it Jake” while newspapering in Port- we were going to prepare for peace land, —a slapstick satire on “We wont ever get ‘Gama: Robert Service which was reprinted ment until we get some kind of |°? four occasions by Vanity Fair. faith in the international machin. |17,%0ld that authors, producers and ery for the preservation of peace. interested parties” expect, this to The Kellogg treaty seems bound to|™aye © second “Broadway. strengthen ‘the existing machinery, i@ newspaper plays will follow In alt law, it ss ing - 1a satirical trend, getting away from taalace dawene ora Pesan the old pattern of “hold-the-press” just what the attitude of the nations | Sramas. te fest sae pee nek of the world is toward war.” ‘a oo Fro Later will come Miss Detzer says peace sentiment |W 2"d,, Morehouse’s “Gentlemen of is on the rise. mien points to the the sereet And eat gangster course of the State Department. in| Merge “Cons ener» ‘Willard pamilabing a: pemehlt Salsicles, oe 8 our policy and action in Nicaragua,| Ofttimes when this-and-that the- prepared after many inqui for| atrical production is mentioned, I re- light had been received from school |ceive a few sarcastic notes from pupils who couldn’t understand what |readers asking how many free tick- the minds of the peace movement.|all the shooting was for. The peace |ets J get for my trouble, or “who The Irish branch of the Women’s|movement is now especially strong|dickens gives a hang about plays International League for Peace and|in England, which has suffered|since they no longer go on the road Freedom long since got on the job|severely in the post-war period. and we can't get to Noe York.” with a campaign to press upon the| “Elimination of war is inevitable envoys to the Paris signing party|end it may come in our own day.” the desirability of beginning to plan for disarmament at once. Secretary Kellogg and all the other signers are consequently re- ceiving petitions from the league, which holds forth in 25 nations, de- mbpding ocinee pn It was 30 cents a bushel higher rancnes Thirty cents on the bushel | Promptly accepted the Irish sugges- The league has 50,000 mem- bers and Jane Addams of Chicago 4 DOLLAR WHEAT (St. Paul Dispatch) i The most important factor in Western politics today rice of wheat, which is yielding less than roducer on the farm. looking in their kits for with which to catch the they started looking at Farmers in Minnesota are going Political wisemen who a ir ign of some i rence with the normal flow of Blosd fee the heart, or due to some nerve de- rangement produced by inflamma. tion of the nerves or Pressure uw those going to the left arm. ‘he angina can often so-called “false” be cured by one or two osteopathic its, “What or chiropractic treatme: trebrass » Hi. would cause a dark to appear ean cheek about the size of Answer: Dark spots are A by some faulty formation occa pigment in your skin. This is us- ually due to faulty metabolism, and can be prevented b; I. anced diet. peprcorrectiy aa Speeches and fine. in arguments are the delight of oliticians, but the price of wheat is more important. Nothi is more potent in determining the tide of votes d cash crop is bring- ing less than a dollar a bushel on the farm, tillers of the Between the farm programs of Hoover and Smith his utterances. Hoover started handicap inherited from his war in the race with an ol they ask my opinion of certain per- formances I can but hang my head and admit that I’ve been too busy to r products were Smith entered a clear field but ly raised a barrier by off-hand repudiation of the natural nariative dealing with the yhuman side of a gang leader and his devotion to a blind street musicia: get around to attending and, what ; ns is worse, I haven’t even read much | Zhe man is so battle-scarred that he about the play in question. They|has become repulsive and won the have, on the other hand, absorbed | nickname of “Handsome.” every line appearing in theatrical Neither candidate has yet promulgated a constructive pee next week. Smith promises to he is elected. ‘f Out of these confusing and vague political conditions, e New York- i er, on the other hand, is prone to Poppi wine to Rieaeate: sie ii ie SINATR 0. world siren, 's the hurry. I'll get aroun delightful as the cafe pianis it sooner or later.” has fallen below his natural nae eee A friend, who fairly lives in the ELTINGE THEA’ Broadway world, took a vacation trip |. Lew Cody and Aileen a through the hills in upper New York | featured at the Eltinge for 1} State, Connecticut und New England. |day and Thutsday in “Wickedness He tells me that, even in the most | Preferred,” the story of a married remote hilltop point, he found the na-|man with young ideas who the tives as conversant with the aff: hag married brought about the wife in re that he is getting less than a dollar a bushel for The fact is that I generally have e ni the line-s ¥ Only rarely, when Arguments are weak and puny weapons compared to wheat touched $1.10'2 on the Commerce. At that price in ing not more than 92 or 93 cents ays the freight, and less than dollar wheat. fairs |he was a caveman and exci of of Broadway as the complete Broad: | interest of a much wayite. The radio was responsible.|woman. The cure I am invariably put to shame by|Even the hillbillies had been listen-|by the shrewdness feeds who drop tn from Michigan, ing 13 on the, broadcasted song Nts |throwing her own batband and the other woman - : or way states. When jeculd whistle the Iatest number from ti biog ‘was more than way hen they could buy mowers for |Number of prominent women are Now a mower will $200, yet he When the this, it is small condi. tions much resembling the stone jinder . bi dollar or less for his lects on such a conditio: Estimates of American production are going up, and ere is a rapid flow of grain to glutted markets caused the new combi WHILE You WERE AWAY, MY ¥ GROCERY AND MEAT, BILL HAD A waWE HAD A FINE VACATION THIS YEAR, wee ONLY WE WERE KEPT os “TH IRIGGER Z EXPECTING “TH” MAJOR “To WALK IN on US ANY DAYS, wr ONE NIGHT WE GoT A BAD SCARE, ~v WE Woke - UP HEARING SOMEONE “RVING GET IN OUR ( SHACK, AN THOUGHT FoR HAD Z\_ SURE IT WASH” MASOR.] FIGHT, oe tT by round and blow by round in slow @| with the fatal tenth i- rom @ oe their own decisi qualification asa which harvests and threshes in a AT Kellogg is bothered about balloting and the people about nary straw. nes Government ers make money in the most difficult way, to make it doubly difficult for counter-| ( feiters.. But that isn’t what father book?" I-WAS AWAY, | Nou CALLED A down at Liverpool under the depressing influence ’s anticipated record-breaking crop of 500 millio This factor, reflected back on the Americ: making a mockery of the American home mar- et with its 42-cent tariff wall. If the two candidates ring forward their 81 tions for giving the farmer an “American protected” price on his cash staples. MR. PEEK’S PART (Des Moines Tribune-Capital) Perhaps not every reader of the Tribune-Capital caught the following. sentences in David Lawrence's recent letter from Washington: I A new rule bars Radcliffe flighis wodecs cite ant bo cixtet,| _ One_of the lnlosh haloes. woes flighty eee ers, a vacuum tube with um Chase’s portrait is to be placed on | of 15,000 watts, IN MY, OL” | PRINGS see «BOT IT WAS ONLY A—-{ MADE ME FEE , i r 5 a LL the new $10,000 bill. Some people | waves only six meters The Z Me tek ee papi angen $= BURGLAR !. Vous BoYs WERE fen Wo De Pne, Coceted ta eonenriny: | S00 IR Sleek he, too, has discarded the equalization fee “RIGHT AT . Home # and the McNary-Haugen plan, largely because the battle against the theory that the fee is unconstitutional is, in his judgment, tao dif- fieult to carry on. But Mr. Peek sponsoted the plank in the Democratic Po ag which did not mention either the McNary-Hs ization fee. platform makers at Houston. And the plank vOrs of controlling the produce Aviators from numerous countries | in nearby spectators and are brewing new fight records: with | s8ges in a glass tube, ocean hops, G (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ele ai g Fe The tact is Peek and is usine & political part in this Jo Wey es mieiee ot BE" ag cone z bs 2 ae a i as ny ogres aE eeue 5 » ES e

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