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

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The Bismarck Tribune An independent Newspaper ' ms i jmerchant. He is not being driven out of business by | the chain stores, contrary te his own fears and the pre- | dictions of the wise men. Rather business is improving, 1 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER and for this, in part, he must thank this new and at one | ' (Established 1873) fos alarming competition. ri Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| That the independent merchant has a secure place in “marek, D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis- | the business of the times, despite the growth of chain > marek Sea ciass mail mister ent and Publisher |St0Fe® == the verdict of government experts who have 4 j made survey of the chain store and other aspects of | retail trading. Under the new order of things, the in- deosece dependent trader has even wider opportunities than efore. ever He must, however, develop resourceful- ness and greater efficiency. per year, outside Bismarck) .... outside of North Dakota mail, in state, per year by mail, in state, three years for outside of North Dakota, RECKLESSNESS IN THE AIR | Accidents in the air are augmenting the week-end [traffic death list. Before society has become shock- proof to the highway casualty lists in Monday's news- papers, ‘essed mind a Monday Member of The Associated Press | column Plane fatalitie The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the} The large’ death list recorded with each recurring se for republication of all news dispatches credited | week-end, both in air travel ard on the roads, is in no to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and e price of carelessness. Whether al the local news of spontaneous origin published a i i f lication of all other mat- UP° : ei Seer ers ca, republication | will take needless chances. ing sense of moral respons greatest of all traffic problem: pe n is to develop ec: DETROIT | out the pilots who take unnece Kresge Bidg.| planes and lives and the lives of {sons below. The passenger flying busi: the mounting lists of fatal accidents accident rate in proportion to number ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County aper) OUR “NATURAL RELIGION” ‘ x Ed Howe, the well-loved Kansas editor, remarks ol ig eensfied hinaenga is ce Malobi i be believes te baa: “oatatal| r ic has reac e stage where large num- — oa: he tgirls | bers of car owners do not unlock their garage doors on ‘ , holidays and Sundays. They are being driven from “If I pass a church,” he writes, “and faintly hear the Ry s hese , is Rei eiitkc, I have heard a sbtaion that dose me | * Porn: Bighways by reckless drivers, ” FHCSLIT SLI eeeenynesenst segs, | | re than by | |congestion. It is impossible to make the highways safe | for the pell-mell driver, but they should be safe for the | baa s Probably a good many of us are in Mr. Howe's class. | in a world in which the requirements of bread | butter compel us to devote most of our time to the of making a living, we fal! out of touch with spir- values. Yet we aren’t entirely out of tune, for all | it; dimly-heard music, caught out of the air, can be to | “when every tear is answered as to Mr. Howe, “a sermon that does us good.” merry May, “w those who These chance eavesdroppings are important. It would | chill December, “bleak and dre & mistake to assume that 2 man can worship only | Tee that colorf: m he has donned his best suit of clothes, composed | object for their art and eulogi mind and seated himself in a pew. Life co’ | “What is so rare as a day in | unles. out accidental little snatches of organ m afternoon in October when the departing sui a hurried moment on a busy street in bi | tint and a mystic charm to all the purple and gold, yel- | rift the clouds and give us a low and brown and green of the trees, the ory and majesty. field? There is a freshness and a life-; ‘When you walk down a city sidewalk, impatient of the | about the air of October unknown to her s: owds that jostle you, you are in reality moving | October is a month of out-of-doors when nature exerts rough a thousand separate human dramas, each one | her utmost magnetism and all humanity strains at the which would move you to your heart if you could see | leash of confining civilization. careful motorist. THE GOOD MONTH The poets have ever sung the praises of stormy | ASHINGTON LETT Maddock is a farmer with a long | legislative career, during part of| j which he was a floor leader. His | admiration for Smith and dislike for | Hoover would not have persuaded | him to bolt had he not been assured | of Powerful support from the Non- | partisans against Shafer, leader of | | the Independent Voters Association, ‘ | the conservative wi ft North Da- Jered certain, although his chances yots politics. “Thorstein Thoresen, (NEA Service Writer) | are by no means equally bright in| state tax commissioner, ran against | . i bily- | The melancholy that has been attributed to October is} Washington, Sept. 29.—The past | 47 electoral / Shafer for the Republican nomina- ¢learly. You encounter, for instance, a shabbily y | month has seen an increasing tend-| |tion and believes “he lost beckusa d je boy, pausing at the | but reflection and pensiveness. October days | in the campaign to most of| | os t shines with the | sober thought and speculation on the beauties of nature |the northwest into the “doubtfal”| reso, Sabin Leberratileenteo>) neal opens ee n't support him. but net ther’s tells of a| and the sheer joy of living. October i | state class along with the border) tion which exists in Worth Dakota! Thoresen doubtless wants to keep time of self-denial and penny hing. The boy | manhood of the year in all its glorious strength; it is | rey frie nots icaithe cased and affords an excellent example of | his present job. ints a grubby finger at some cheap gay toy and looks) symbolic of tasks begun and completed; it is a synonym | .;, amount of political revolt which | mon teebataplitterree| Maddock became governor about questioningly; the mother hesitates, then smiles—|for achievement. lit has bred are ‘the backbone of the | independents held a definite balance! § ied. Belt wc pasta pene they goim You lose them. But the memory of the seeechid emer era) 7 power. The facts have not been! ocrats put pressure on him to Tun f ft = li = a in su i widely printed. — a “la you; a beacon-light of love and en Dakotas, Montana and Nebraska’and|" Governor Walter Maddock, Ri e-| Joa bees ate tod Lee aaater, oe People are infinitely nobler and better than we us- | andidacy To: auxcect bn Ee peroe = oe Repasten iene e ul in nat | ly think. There is a divinity in human nature that mnces forever our sneers and doubts whenever we get BY RODNEY DUTCHER convention, Maddock had been high THE GROWTH OF TOLERANCE man among nine candidates and i nal 2 rivatel: make way for him. mal | F 4 limpse of it. For the most part it goes unnoticed. | Aaron Naumberg of New York, son of a Jewish rabbi, | in some of them | Hung’ om the {21m Democratic vote in'North Dakota is Ten parr nest sate delegation go about our daily routine, through a mass of | had ssed relativel; at weajth before his recent | relief dec! reall = ,| about 20,000, though Davis had only ver. f death. Mr. Naumberg’s will has now been filed. It | Smith was acquainted with this fact | 14.609 of some 200,000 cast tm 1922, | 77% ¢ faces, without ever suspecting that the unknown wple’'wé meet are other than they seem. Then, un- idly, some little thing happens; we hear a stray Byord, catch a sudden smile—and then we know. ‘The organ and the choir! You can hear them every- » if you will listen. They are contained in the » ordinary words and movements of plain human fighting unknown fights and meeting unknown dies; yet they come from a farther place. They that whetever else life may be—however frus- d, unhappy or tragic—it is never mean or ignoble. are glory and splendor in and around it. North Dakota voted for Wilson in 1916, From 1907 to 1913 it had a | Democratic’ Mate Jolin Burke. Since the Nonpartisans became a | factor Democrats in the 1 e run jas ngs fags when they feel the urge for office. when he devised his Omaha speech. | The -speech has unquestionably! strengthened Smith, but not even the | politicians know whether it will) switch any state’s electoral vote. see names a hott of charitable, educational and welfare organizations among the beneficiaries. And it leaves bequests alike to Jewish, Catholic and Protestant organ- izations. Harvard University and Tuskegee Institute are both remembered. : i The late Mr. Naumberg’s disposal of his estate strik- ingly illustrates the present wholly admirable tendency to erase racial and religious lines altogether in matiers concerning charity, education and general welfare work. But if in these things, why not also in other things, including politics? FARMING HIS HOBBY (Kansas City Star) Many statesmen have many hobbies to offer a sur- cease from official cares, but Governor John G. Rich- ards of South Carolina, whose interest in agriculture has always been a paramount one, returns to the soil Thus Maddoek, if he is to win, ap- parently. will find his. vote 80 per cent composed of ticket-splitters. One is also surprised to learn that | Senators Frazier and Nye, The Democrats see hope in the) Sons, il ca ogre madre | fact that none of these six states— against his Republican pec td ttinnesota, North and | George Shafer. At this ‘writing, oa 4a" thee woNtic some well-informed North Dakotans are noted for their political reg- | say, Shades appease io hans tight In fact, they are more | edge on sock Bue reals ee ularity torious than any other group of| A c t states for their lack of it. Frazier support is very likely to put ocrats | him over. | f res ettices The Ne “ee land ar all offices: he Nan EAGUOA | One also hess thal racien will | anti tne othr sates ante at ent tally supported by Mad ! IN.NEW YORK | Sy New York, Sept. 29.—See-sawing up _ an pecan I seem to run in’ rs at every turn. «+» Will’s here rehearsing for are- pearance in the musical merry merries. + Also he’s the sort of EMPLOYMENT INCREASING if to support the prosperity claims of Republi- CATARACTS OF THE EYE Inside the eyeball and just behind verging the rays of light a lens in a telescope. This line lens is transparent, but may come opaque in old people or as result of an accident in young ple. mn this occurs the tion is termed a‘cataract. Many people have the mistaken be- lief that a cataract is a growth or‘on the eye, but this is not true. pears on the outside of the eye, going from the inner corners over the surface of the times a ap operation. or. It the clear transparent |: surrounding tissues, phatic circulation clogged or filled with irritating tox- ins it is apt to cause an opaqueness jof the crystalline lens termed a “cataract.” This interference with the circulation of the lymph is caused by deposits and sluggishness or by inflammation of the eye from eyestrain in old people, but it may be caused in young folks by cuts or its circulation. Most cases of cataract are seen be- tween the ages of sixty and seventy- five, and in almost every instance there is the history of some other chronic trouble that has ent over the course of 20 or 25 years, such as constipation, liver trouble, goitre, diabetes, and pellagra. these cases are very far advanced ean be partly compensated for by wearing thick glasses. In many in- stances, the operation is successful enough to permit the patient to read, but in other cases complete blindness may result. At the first appearance of a cloud- iness of the crystalline lens, strict dietetic treatment should begin at once. In addition to this, exercises of the eye should be used at least twice daily to stimulate the circula- tion. I have prepared a special ar- ticle on exercises for strengthening the eye, which I will be glad to mail to anyone who will send me a large, self-addressed, stamped envelope. It is also advisable for one to drink large quantities of distilled water to assist in washing out.the impurities that may have accumulated in the circulation. From two to three gal- lons per day would not be an exces- sive amount. Most of us who live in cities have @ constant strain on the eyes that can only be relieved by wearing suit- able glasses. My best advice to those who wish to avoid cataracts is to diet, weag properly fitting glasses, and take éye exercises. INCREASING THE VITAL FORCE The disappearance of the eminent financier, Alfred Lowenstein, produced a marked deflation of the stock in his com idea of modern depend upon one individual, we find that in practically every case an or- ganization is-built around one man’s Personality and ideals. been hiding out with the Meighans ca Long Island... E Barrymore, who has at last achieved Thomas « Ethel invariably go Republican from the i dock, wails F. Aides Airesaggiet top of the slate down. 1 agricultural| i8 accountant of the State Mill and st i ight under Governor Maddock, states are fall_of accomplished to, right under Gover s ticket-splitters. They're proud of it, D Te! Soe ee Public protest. too, Few political observers will bers, ig teas! scouts in North Da- surprised this year if Minnesota, for | kota instance, elects, a Farmer-Labor sen- ec carry the state for Smith in Novem- ator and a Bapabiian sSyernot S| ber, ber test ameanit Toller, visitor can get away with a soft shirt, a mirreycy, eed and uncombed hair in a theater box... . And on a night when sear yiee, se is dished out in soup and fish. And where you don’t see Will, you see Jack Dempsey and frau. They’re ringsided at most of thi per clubs after Jack finishes his campaigners and to refute Democratic charges that 8 prosperity is fictitious, an increase in the national oll, beyond any similar advance in the las' Just been-registered. The payroll tells tory of ity more eloquently than could the flight of an for mental and physical tonic. fi Cares of office have prevented him making frequent visits to his country home at Liberty Hill, 45 miles from Columbia, S. C., where he was a successful farmer many years, but the chief executive's interest was stirred when he saw a two acre tract back of his man- sion. Inquiry disclosed that the ground was considered too dry for successful planting. Governor Richards planted ‘The payroll increase in August in actual percent- that status where a new theater is being named for her and, amusingly enough, there was Jack Xearns. oes The allure of those darkened corners under approach o! Brooklyn bridge never changes. Th u will find an eternal ciut- ter of ZounJe and sights which seem nightly job of being a more-or-less actor. ... Incidentally the Denpey show brought out the first hi : was 1.5, and back of this rise lay another, that of loyment, which was 9.2. The per capita rise in ings, compared’ with the same month a year ago, the field in oats and vetch and a billowing field of the grain and purple flowered vetch, standing more than waist high, has attracted admiration from farmers and ocrat. Wisconsin will elect progres- sive Bob La Follette as senator, a conservative for governor, probably 2 casts its presidential vote for a Dem- dock al pr: smi th pr is expected to campai lor ith, but ier and Nye ler Hoover to be her next husband. berries from the mansion house patch can testify, while vegetables from his own back yard contribute to the table of South Carolina’s first citizen. GRAIN STORAGE FACILITIES (St. Paul Dispatch) A marked increase in the storage capacity of Can- adian elevators for the present season is announced. Many country elevators have been built in the past year. At the Canadian head of the lakes and on the Pacific coast the terminal elevator capacity has been greatly, enlarged. The total storage capacity of all tions about what such states may | President without regard do. Smith is the big question mark |other contest. ‘That's the way they in all of them. In none of them can j do and this year no candidate’s fate his victory or defeat yet be consid- bound up with another's. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE : By Ahern | Ais 1s one “ime We YAN’ willte You'Re n is plotted for purposes of industrial survey, August gains both in employment and in wage there was Bebe Daniels, who has unemployment is noted over a wide range of in- from pottery to pianos and from clothing to 5 Among the industries that have felt this surge of production activity are the textile group, steel, and petroleum. The lines that registered d employment were few in comparison. Hoover has said that the nation is recovering UDM-MF¥--¥ , nadii in elevators for the three Wester 2 usiness retrenchment of last winter. es bas ton fhe i d 21 million aabels toa total of ZB “¢ Z ee. the slight busi hi be fa Z ER oat “fo -TH’ KARE KAre ‘words are substantiated by the figures. The period | 203,367,000 bushels, or very close to half the entire Own ‘ OoT oF -B SOLID Rack LEVEL uw OH VERY Feduced employment was but a ripple on the great | Wheat crop of the Dominion. A NCAMT SLIP OF, Z ‘ - [ai ae, of The advance made has been necessary to keep pace We Kiow You HAVE A OF YouR Pocket, WELL, ~ ILL Prosperity. with the increase in production. In wheat, all Canada Z. BLAST if will produce its bumper crop of more than 500 million $1000, ~~so How FF SET OFF A REIMBURSE COMMON SENSE NEEDED r is started periodically for a standardized of signals for automobile drivers, The plan is to bushels this year But a comparison of the elevator fa- cil of the Western provinces with the three states, Minnesota, North and South Dakota, does not seem to show that the Canadian capacity is as yet equal either AS Looseal UP A. "Yous | we HME Tess You owe ME!- BolT PAYING ME 2 : - THE PAIS Is “aT SIX MoSTH DEST pesewmmoended, pony. If anything needs standard- in capacity or in comparison with aoheny aoe or. 57. Z—~ Tu -Take tf Mow, .) wortl He’ ti - in western 51 Ss ce elevators Bs plane, it 6 signals of wytomoblig three nes or, | can cate for 115 million bushels while terminal elevators | fy A QUAMST OL’ ESKIMO OI wie YOUR HORSE ot aid es tose ‘ ‘W°/in Minneapolis, Duluth and St. Paul accommodate 100 OSTOM 10 SQUARE HANI AG His ever employ the same sig-| million bushels, a total of 215 million bushels, which is Cc Is the same as the spring wheat crop while the Canadian Accouts Wea HAY Ss provinces have but half the crop capacity. The Northwest is therefore better able to store its Yet the Canadian grain until a satisfactory price is offered. Chief among the reasons for this superiority in marketing is the or- nized farmer. Upon his organization the Canadian met depends not only for a better price but for the storage ilities with which his organization is which common sense ought to| equipped. On this side of the border 90 per cent of the grain elevators are privately owned and operated. In the three Canadian provinces 50 per cent of the ele- Hssange are government-owned and to the Whest ‘ol or per-cent Broadway crowd of the sea-| horses’ sally cubed a teeecvie Sy Le acne casi id in eee ime, a [mean Lord Northeske . And}? Sosy far away from i great oe lie it outside. There is a clatter vehi hoofs, crunching of city dwellers alike. Spending what hours he can on his| a Socialist congressman and perhaps| 8nd have said so. \dock’s per-{son.... Al Jolson brought out the} wagon rims against stone, the arra: . -: eal linked wi : ‘ little city farm, the Hees. is promised an unusual | on top of there for Smith—the sonal popularity may swing many | second with his new picture. of dingy shops and stands, the old- h es, linked with proportionately high | heavy harvest. : _ | virtually represents four parties. votes to Smith, but the voters who| In the lobby, between acts of the| fashioned street car terminal just show, the wide diffusion of industrial activity.) The grain crop does not monopolize his attention, se 8 will decide the destiny of the state’s | Dempsey openi I saw Peggy! around <°e corner, the Grobyicd S of the nine geographical divisions, into which the | however, as those who have tasted the excellent straw-| Discretion prevents further sug-|electoral vote are going to vote for | Joyce with the ig man scheduled | the half-light and the eternal bustle from Nothing precipitates such a state of confusion in Broadway as an au- tumn storm that breaks while all the fastidiously garbed folk aze attend- ing a premiere. . . . Catapulted out into the stormy night, they huddle at first in the lobbies, or the sidewalk Pa lone i oe aoe hay such.... Duh elbow and chatiar like a o’cloc! subway crowd. tainty overtakes both re bers Chels cadiess chant of ‘all ers endless c car” ma eee ose oe nough to have chauffeurs wa: = patiently for their numbers to be an- nounced. . . . The others petulantly rattle about what’s to be done. ..+ it’s a situation most of them have faced dozens of times before, yet it| Speviighly sults in a similar scene. + oe Taxis, get net, become: ho) the ja hocetbeck, und nadtenly a sense et and su a sense chaotic mob movement overtakes scené>... An undercurrent of strug- gle and battle can be felt, even with the test amount that rancor 6l- Meanwhile the streets flow streams of.water, which twist ions into a thousand desi; Rain whi rstitt wi Umtvelis vend. 5 d a “pterygium” and while not ‘ious, may be removed by a slight The crystalline lens, being trans- rent, is obviously not nourished by | blood which would give it a red col- is rourished by absorbing vie from en this becomes just as does A very large ness failures traced to ill notch condition : 4 A man whose an a fatigue poisons, il.|have been retained in his body ; through the inactivity of its elim- is deadened by by toxins that j inating organs, cannot expect to suc- T have conducted a series of ex- periments with the mentalities of pa- tients before and after various types of diets and fasting regimes, and I have yet to see a case that has not improved’ and brightened mentally after the body has been freed from some of its toxic materials. One of the greatest handicaps to a clear mentality is a sluggish cireu- bruises of the eye that interfere with | mental they can only be operated on. The/ than build operation removes the lens which | it causes the heart to beat faster and Uncer- ised ladies | Manda: lation. Unless the brain is being constantly replenished with a new food supply, it has not the energy to rform its functions properly. If the toxins which form as a result of activity are not removed Promptly, the brain is poisoned by its_own waste products. 2 The only method of securing Tich bk supply to the brain is through using vigorous exercises at pres- | least twice daily. The principal aim of exercising is not to develop an imposing muscular When | physique, with bulging muscles. Ex- ercise has a more important purpose ling the muscular system; the circulation to speed up. To those who desire the attainment of success, this is the most important benefit of exercise. The comforts or conveniences of civilization tend to produce a phys- ical degeneracy in ourselves, and we must combat this tendency by us- ing out-of-door games and athletic sports. Every person who is doing indoor work should be an active member of at least one athletic club. Most 2 othe men realize the need of the best care of their bodies. IT am acquainted with one’ of the wealthiest men in the country who employs a physical director at the modest salary of $1,000 a month. This physical instructor has no other duty than to make this financier get up every morning and exercise, whether he feels like it or not. After a half hour of various calisthenics, the financier is given a vigorous rub- down, followed by hot and cold showers. Our greatest physical and mental enjoyment can only come when we realize the old Roman ideal—“A Healthy. Mind in a Healthy Body.” We sould at all times have an abundance of st: at our com- mand and the ability of sustained effort; we should have a grace that comes from a perfect control of our muscles and nervous system; a sym- ies. While the | metry of figure that gives us a good usiness is not to| presence and appearance before oth- ers; and above all, mental alertness and good nature that can only come from clean living and regular, whole- some recreation. slopping over the flowing gutters, White wraps are swung with the wind. . . » Heads are lowered and hastily covered with old bits of newspaper. Minutes pass. A half hour passes. . « « Slowly the snarl begins to un- le... Taxis move forward, like snails They zig-zar cross and intercross, like Amazons in the old- fashioned burlesque choruses Al the end of an hour a sembl. order has been restored. iracu- lously the street has been cleared and traffic Sages at its normal pace. . . . The wind sweeps lone- somely through the rain-blurred lights... . Broadway has staged an- other of its amazing 5 les, ; GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | Our Yesterdays i TEN YEARS AGO St. Alexius hospital traini for nurses was tally accredi cording to North Dakota laws. All public places in Bismarck and in ‘were closed on account of flu epidemic, Miss Hilma Anderson, former chie ioe in the atate beard of can- offices, t Washington, D. C., to enter war sarvice, Rey. G. B. Newcomb, superintend- ent of Societ school ac- association in New York City. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Welch were on a wedding trip to points in New the} York.

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