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PAGE FOUR e Bistuarck ‘lribune Am independent Newspaper THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarce + Second class mai] matter. forge D. Mann i Subscription Rates Payable in Advance jaily by carrier, per year ne ‘aly by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . ‘ally by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) ......... ally by mail, outside of North Daxcta ... Yeekiy by mail, in state, per year Yeekly by mail, in state, thr Teekly by mail, outside ot Member Asdit Bureau of Circulation + President and Pubiisner Member of The Associated Press ine local news of 5 "I rights of repub’ re also reserved. Foreign Representatives PAYNE COMPA. Pith Ave. G lo ‘4 NEW “HICAGO Vower Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Ny could not ailed. f your failure “ith which you beg ome a compe werjoyed wher Spire to beco he truck dri mean and ui But if you roungster can put fre earth. vonfidence with wh 5 a who hopes to be.a singer is sure that $alli-Curei and Homer. A boy who snows he will eventually look on squals. Yet the realization, almost always, falls leagues short of he goal. In every city and town there are forgotten submerged men and women who once, far in the past, | tad a glimpse of sunlit heights and broad living. In- | feed, ull of us, to some extent. are in that class, Who | 4as not, tucked away in the back of his mind, a youthful | “sion of glory and m s now quite faded and | dead? | But most of us do not give way to derpair and end our ives, We keep at it, doing what re forced to do in- stead of what we would like to do, keeping our faded dreams as private secrets which we can inspect, once in 2 while, but which we know are only keepsakes of an sarlier day. | How do we managett? Why gloes not the sense of fail- | ure overcome us, as it did this girl school-teacher, and drive us to desperation? Probably it 1s because we come to rea! + experience in living, that such a drea end in itself. It has a value of its own, translated into accomplishment. have had a look at the promised land, even if we never quite got there. Examining our long-lost youthful aspir- ations, we can say: “Here, once, at any rate, I got a glimpse of what life might be. And because I know its possibilities, even if I haven't attained them, I know that it is noble and sig- nificant, and I know that I am not made entirely of the »dust. If I have to live in the valleys, I at least know that Mthere are hilltops, where fresh winds ripple the grass and ‘the trees cast inviting shadows in the sunlight. And knowledge is as good as anything life can bring So we overcome our own failures, ne will outshine plans an army career poleon and Lee as is we gain m or vision is an ven if it is never that me." PLANETARILY MINDED Alexander Hamilton, advising people of his own day to ‘Avoid provincialism and to become acquainted with the (Whole of America, urged them to “think continentally.” ‘But with the advances made in physical and geoeraphical selences we have long since passed beyond continental ‘bounds in our interests. We must think “planetarily” if ‘we are to find our true place in the world and know our ‘obligations and our opportunities, | President-elect Hoover knows the North American con- ‘tinent, east and west, north and south. He will be in close relation with his own hemisphere when he enters ‘office, and withal will have literally done what the poet Jong ago suggested: | “Surveyed mankind from China to Peru.” | It has been said that he ts a man who “thinks planct- ‘ ‘arily,” who is able from his own experience to think of \ America in relation to the rest of this planet. He has ‘lived and worked in every quarter of it and has traversed virtually its entire face. Even now he is supplementing ‘his planetary knowledge by a comprehensive study of South America. j So it was peculiarly fit and proper that a planet, + —}*Hooveria,” should have been christened for Herbert | Hoover. It was in 1920 while the next president of the 5 United States was in charge of American relict among the ‘war refugees of Europe, that the Austrian senate named {the newly discovered planet for him. A POOR PLACE FOR THE YOUNG ‘The badly-scrambled situation in the New York metro- Politan area 1s strikingly emphasized in a current bulletin from the Regional Plan Association of New York. t __ This bulletin points out that the factory towns, where living conditions are poorest, have the highest percent- of children, while residential towns, where conditions re good, have the lowest. In such a manufacturing town Se Perth Amboy, for instance, 46 per cent of the popula- ion 4s under 20; in a residential town like East Orange, 30 per cent are under 20. A big city and its environs may constitute an inspiring ee tor adults to live. But this bulletin only emphasizes ‘at_has long been obvious; it is apt to be a pretty poor for the youngsters, De are ts (< erly it was left for the to punish these prac but there 1s a growing tendency for professional 3 to oust from their ranks those who prove unworthy ‘public confidence. Tt is commendable to see the medica! profession, which @ years has been in need of trimming at the edges, 4ig@ of ‘this means of eliminating quacks. That on is self-purifying 1s evidence of the high standards as a whole. tly @ county medical society suspended from its state It is worth something to ‘3 | feeble a composition as Kurt Atterberg'’s wins the $10,000 | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE__ FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1928 tmony in a number of important murder cases. Subse- Guently the state society sustained the action of the/ county clety, officially ostracizing the physician from | It was held that public confidence in the | weakened by such testimony | | WHAT MAKES PEOPLE BUY? Graws customer: Low prices, courteous se s of appearance ranked as | S of service and Gered goods. Pleasant em-/| vervice were | in third place, | goods ranked fou: and low! der those State troopers turned rand near p! ia was in prog- 4 $50,900 string A ed by what she/ ace, the police. The truth | o incidents. In mond, chance will probably disclose rch has failed to. ‘Treasure hunters 6 day down know this is true, too | | onstrated by expect to see signs advertising 20 1846—Iowa admitted to the Union. 1856—Birthday of Woodrow W 1860—Pre: Editorial! Comment | ‘UNCLE SAM’ | (Detroit Free Pr > A move;ne orial to the ere- | \ ator of “Uncle that the identity of the | man who first used the term has been lost probably will | © not prevent well-intentioned Americans from indulging their penchant for setting up a monument to someone. ory g0e! Ne ‘d with the letters “U. 8.” When this meat | » obviously belongs | ond conflict with m to it than has for originating the nan 1 soldier In our 5: s no more ch « whose dead body this meat buyer branded | it seems. is being a couple eS { that, a good many monuments | dred postmasters ee a : up to men whose claims to recog- | ee = FLYP iS GRANDMAS ae nition we stantia an his. 4 ‘ofessor at the Uni zi mdmothers are -as = | nition wer » substantial than hi |_A pr yp opeae rs are 66 6 | MARRIAGE AND OBEDIENCE in. making the smal n't be for long | | (Indianapolis New: world. We had , een pie cep Se te Ccrrespondents are reporting a falling off in the num- | Were made by city councils an fiying e! c if ali the girls are waiti : ; | ber eta ddings in Poland bi Bee Lote The sale of mistletoe is reverted | with equired to promise year. Gin sales, how- ee es | usband. Bride- said to be inere 's funcral in © cases dismayed at the Lamers oh iagt it should be considered ne | thought an not be pledged to obey their | agements have been broken off because of the different over the pending laws. The eliminating obedience or faithfulness on the part of either {likely to be seriously disturbed even if the wi: } bound by marriage vows to obey her husband. i SWEDISH JOKER (Time) Sad indeed is the state of musical affairs when so | is not | symphonic prize of the Schubert Centennial contest. So did critics in Manhattan last week and in many a major city in Europe—all save Ernest Newman of the London ‘Times who refused even to take it seriously, marked great slices in it as belonging to Dvorak, Berlioz, Strav- insky, to Schubert himself, and iaugned. In Sweden, Composer Aticrberg is also a musical critic. ‘There, reading the estimates of his symphony, he chose to laugh with Ernest Newman's review headed “Attaboy.”” | Critic Newman had called the $10,000 “a fair price for a j fair symphony which is what Atterberg has delivered f, 0, b. as per esteemed order of yesterday's date, and hoping |for continuation of valued custom.” Composer Atter- j berg took the same tack, let his laughter reverberate | through the p1 : that all along he had meant it only as @ joke; that he had deliberately plagiarized and that only one critic had guessed. The $10,000 was his, he said, and |the laugh on them. But to many it scemed singularly {empty laughter. The Columbia Phonograph company, | donors of the prize money, could not believe that anyone would make a joke for the centennial of Schubert's death, cabled Composer Atterberg and chose to accept a rather dubious denial. Others, less interested, reflected that a |really good comedian rarely laughs at his own jokes; th-* zeither the joks nor the laughter had in any way enhanced Composer-critic Atterberg's prestige. JUSTICE BRANDEIS (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Rabbi Stephen 8. Wise once said that the greatest of living Jews was Justice Louis Dembitz Brandeis of the United States supreme court, If non-Jews were permitted expression they likewise would add: “and the greatest liberal of his time.” Few men passing 72 years—as Justice Brandets did this week can look back upon a more noble record of public serv- ice. His first year of law practice was spent in St. Louis. Ee was quickly transplanted to Boston, and there adopted his rule of Ife. He deliberately turned his back upon ted himself to the defense of his ‘deals, ne period of his private practice was de- thout fee. First it was the defense of le of Roston acainst predatory raids of its street it was dsfence of the people of New eal schemes of the New Haven 5 ‘ of my scheme apo of t »’ he remarked, When appointed by President Wilson to be the first Jc. to wear the robes of the highest tribunal in the land, he ‘was bitterly opposed by men who since have come to Yespect and revere him, Chief Justice Taft included. He has kept alight in the court a declaration that personal rights are above property rights—a constant beacon of hope to those who cherish th2 thought that liberty must rn" pass from the face of the earth. In the words of his associate, Justice Stone, “he has supplied the intel’setal fermin’, 97 ener tal bo ihe proc- {i “ Led which we scek to interprot hum-n exporionc> into | jaw, her honesty | © # don't recognize the road to Easy | 1932 John discovered Sam” Wilson, whose memory is to be thus hon- | has been Hampshire meat buyer | Maybe he o' in the War of 1812, who stamped each | hody has rrived in camp some waggish soldier dubbed it “Uncle| Of the 12 ¢: ” Whence came the personification of the United | by Premier s which onists later enlongated and adorned of Coloni set © nd a beaver hat. terior, Wai Corporations are gentleman named Mu: the only thing he can? cruiser legislation, says it’s har get 40 men to agree on anythi: | yc it, senator, until church has assented to the change in the rite, which is | Just you walt, oem pmo epee y with tendencies both inside and out of Po- | United States Genate is full of Ja jar 1. Russian neighbors have gone to the extent of | dies. | bile, suffered concussion of the brain. She is reported to have escaped ser- fous injury, howevert (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) The Light in the Window! ee | Our © est riays.| RS AGO DECEMBER 28 C. Calhoun re: vice president be president's nullif. Jamation. A ident Buchanan envoys of South Carol: private gentlemen, n ficials. BARBS The premier of Ru that an eld Senator Curtis, commenting 0! Wond: sa 8 first nine months of 19238—m: za grand total of about 3,500 in the Province. A recent rep: the Yukon states that Indian trappcrs are us- iz the airplane to reach their trap | lines. Production of gold in Canada in 1927 amounted to 1,852,725 fine ounces valued at $38,300,464. WeLL, I SuPPosE You've MADE NouR RESERVATION ALREADY FoR SPACE UNDER SOME “TABLE FoR NEW YEARS Eve !. a Yous AN’ “TH” OLD YEAR WILL HMY, <THE ENTRY or “He New YEAR WILL FIND ME AT Home Witd MY KIN, SEATED ABOUT “HE HEARTHSIDE ! = AH LADS,~I AM At THE COMFORTABLE Ace, WHEN LiFe Is AT tis MELLoWwEST é: ux WisH None OF HAT NeW YEARS ENE FORCED HILARITY, AND BOISTEROUS NONSENSE fae HM-M ~~ PUFF - PUFF ‘TIS BUT AN | DEMPTY GESTURE by every paper bec charter an airpl: ¢ limited on which the girl was run- | Perhaps there are good reasons Why such to-do should be ade about this particular runaway | girl. But just why much to-do should | be made about runaway girls in gen- | al in this day and age which com- ly proves the average capability ; uth is a question.‘ . ning away. the quai S$ a rare runaway girl these days | o gets into really serious trouble. WOMAN DAY meee carrots and peas, ALLENE SUMNER A girl ran away the other day and became page one news in | Maybe ¢ she was a rich girl—} could afford | to race with in the country. that her fai o THEY LAP IT UP The runaway or missing girl of a jon ago was a really serious She “knew nothing of life,” But old saying goes. the » * # ARE THEY GLAD? ler if today’s grannies h permits such | party ari fares Renee -| In Buffalo 2 man killed himself be- ew Year's watch night perties will of the figurative’ chimney corner Leally: Tard THAUERES OE SIR TaI Ge Leon coh oa online thie cal? eilalin. ever coool ce eld. ab the Swedish Lutheran, knitters left even today. Whether ereeh ie a Rilesian dependency until the end of the | Marry was too beautiful and too Baptist and Methodist churches. one will be joa Se Gt, BrBSny Ot ps " eat (e | good.” Girls heart. ——_—_—_ the cirplane flying kine a choice | World wer, ; to adhere to the ancient family life |@00d.” Girls, have a ae ae ae : s | with its saleguards, ‘The church still has its hold on the | Rs eiacs : Fa a em EEO rae ae Dore We may uaER LGR people, and as long as this is so family relations are not | A movie star, struck by an automo- established in Alberta, Can he ORPHAN BOY The story of an 11 year-old orphan oy found chained and padlocked to ‘a bed in a dark room in an old Chi- cago house because, as he explained, he “did not wash dishes fast enough” to suit the people with whom he lived, shocks us. The shock is good for us OF “TH” FIREPLACE UNTIL SOME PAL OF “TH’ OWL'S CLUB Gives “TH” SIDEWALK SIGNAL, “THEN GANGWAY 4.1 BiG MoTH WITH “Td’ ASBESTOS: WINGS FLITS OUT To “TH’ FLAME f= world as her |. proezeds to open it—ger- | out much need of a sledge | the report of a baby or an es y happened to be grannies ic “go- rather than chimney cor- ner knitting? Still, there are many | the week beginning Sunday, ber : string beans, raw celery. Dinner—Roast chicken, cooked cu- | |cumbers, asparagus. molded salad of | | carrots, peas and cucumbers, apricot | | Whip. j Monday 1 | i | | milk or cream. Lunch—Cooked celery, small lima / | bean (canned) salad of shredded raw | cabbage. | Dinner—vegetable soup, | Steak, cook: as parsley, Moisten the stuffing. | apples. | Tuesday | Breakfast—Coddled | wheat muffins, stewed raisins. | | carrots on lettuce, roast turkey or; | chicken. wholewheat dressing, mashed | | pumpkin, canned hearts of artichokes | | reheated), pineapple snow. | Question: tuce left over from dinner. Wednesday stewed prunes. Lunch—Macaroni, salad of head lettuce. Dinner—Vegetable soup. roast beef, | advice about it. cooked squash. McCoy salad, baked) Answer. Pear. Thursday Breakfast — Cottage cheese, Melba} toast, baked apple. Lunch—Stewed corn, parsnips, sal- ad of raw spinach. Dinner—Broiled lamb chops. cooked string beans. asparagus, stuffed cel- ery, apple whip. Friday Breakfast—Poached egg, small piece order. turnips, cup salad. Dinner—Baker white fish, cooked | spinach, beets, salad of sliced toma- toes, jello or jell-well, no cream. Saturday Lunch—Baked potato, okra (can- Question: Answer: ach-asparagus salad, ice cream. from breakfast) which have been | wholewheat bread which has been | ommend. [fale of diced celery, a cup and a ae cate, Inc.) Dr. McCoy will gladly personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. Breakfast — French omelet, waffle, every morning since that time. | seem to crave it—can’t get along buttered beets, | without it—and my mother tells me it | drys up my blood. I would like your [cCoy’: us suggested for!of minced ripe olives, and three. bgp beer Decem- | fourths cupful of seedless raisins. 30th: | Other vegetables which you may pre- A | |fer may be added in place of or in | Breakfast—Wholewheat mush with addition to the celery and olives, such » ete spinach, asparagus, ingredients with enough | milk to bring to the consistency of a Salisbury Pineapple Snow: To the well beat- tomatoes, brussels and | en whites of three eggs add @ 9-ounce sprouts, celery and nut salad, stewed | can of shredded pineapple from which | |all juice has been drained. Whip one- ‘fourth pint of thick cream and fold eggs, whole- into mixture, adding no sugar. Chill |and serve in sherbet glasses. The Dinner—Celery, salted nuts, grated | amount makes about six servings. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Laxatives Anxious Rose asks: Will Supper—Cold Turkey, or chicken, / you please tell me what magnesium Salad of carrots, artichoke and let- | carbonate is? About three years ago I was told it was good for constipa- tion and have been taking a bite of it PG Magnesium carbonate ir @ mildly aperient antiacid. There is no serious harm from its use except that you are liable to neglect the re- moval of the real cause of your con- | Stipation which is either in wrong |food or a prolapsed and kinked con- dition of your intestines. It is un- | necessary to become a slave to any Grug laxative or medicinal prepara- tion, but they are often temporary lifesavers when you are trying to dis- af {cover the bad habits or faulty func- of broiled ham, re-toasted shredded tioning which is producing your dis- Darkness Around Mouth L. J. asks: | causes darkness around the mouth, mostly under the nose. Is it kidney trouble? Also what causés me to rub my eyes a lot? What wash is good?” Darkness of the skin ned), salad of shredded raw cabbage. | around the mouth usually comes from Dinner—Broiled steak with mush- | some liver derangement which is in- rooms, cooked lettuce, tomato-spin- | variably due to faulty diet. Just what Your |eyes may itch because of irritation of Wholewheat Dressing: Crumble in- | the mucous membrane of the eyelids to a large bowl eight or ten medium | from the discharge of irritating toxins, sized wholewheat muffins (left over | but you may need glasses and should | Surely consult an eye specialist who thoroughly dried out in a slow oven, | can advise you to put on glasses or to or an equal amount of genuine/ use an eye wash which he could rec- slightly toasted. Add about two cup-| (Copyright, 1928, by The Bell Syndi- i minds us that children are sufficient- ly protected today to make such cruelty to them the unusual than the average state of affairs. ‘legumes’ {prey for most anyone who wanted to | moved the skins? exploit it for selfish gain. But now- | on an unprotected child as to fly to | lar food? Mars. The Chicago case proves this, rarity that it is. BOTH HONEST Are men more dishonest than wom- | Stead of before? "jen is one of those how-old-is-Anne | ;Questions of - |do-women-dress-to-please-men and | hurry? which-sex-has-most-courage. Figures | f from the chief probation officer of a} large city court proved that exactly (50 per cent of the year’s broken par- oles were by men and 50 per cent by | ; Women. Incidentally, only two per cent of paroles in general were brok- len. : are monial mates. |and society in general. For it re-}fish, poultry, or eggs, did I serve them dried beans, thoroughly rather | carefuliy seasoned? “If some fruit or About a generation ago. before the ;not agree with them, why was it? development of the child welfare | Did I chop it fine enough, or not cook agency, an orphan boy or girl was it long enough, or should I have re- Peas, or other cooked and vegetable did “Did the children eat sweets be- adays it’s almost as hard to get hands tween meals and neglect their regu- “Were their sweets simple—such as | syrup, lump sugar, honey and plain candy? And did I see that they were jeaten after meals or with meals, in- “Did I permit the children to eat the same breed as | When they were very tired, or in a s 8 These are the questions, Mothers. They may be a general guide to you. It is said that people with the same shape of nose are not suited as matri- | eee LADY MARY’S PEEVE | | Lady Mary Heath, who holds all | sorts of aviation records, such as the British altitude record for women, who hopped from South Africa to England on a non-stop flight, hopped back from Toronto to Ruffalo the | other day, quite riled by reports that she, had given interviews expressing her delight at being in a country where she could get a drink. Lady Mary denied the report and her drinking proclivities. Not only “women are lik? that,” but all of us are “like that”—able to stand the big nonstop endurance test much more easily than the little an- noyance. You CHILDREN by Olive Roberts Barton ©1928 by NEA Service,Inc. I asked an authority on children's | foods about some good general for feeding young the time. printed on a paper. His color was said. “They ‘This is what I read: ~ “At the close of day a mother may Hi “Did I give each child this amount? If I did I ny 7 é 33 herself these questions: He romps about all day, i i Bg g at] : carp z 3 ui E YOUTH WAS ILL MOST OF LIFE His Remarkable Recovery Is Talk of Neighborhood. Hap- py Parents Will Always Be Grateful to Sargon “What has convinced me that Sar- gon is the best medicine for children ‘ jJ8 What it has done for my son, LeRoy. ‘Sargon had done so much for me that I decided to give LeRoy the {treatment—he has be of his life. He never wanted to eat. He always wanted to stay in bed or sit around and always complained of his stomach hurting. We have been treating him for indigestion for three years. Nothing he ate seemed to agree with him and he complained most of en sick mest al) “His kidneys were out of order also. rules , We have spent all we had on medi- children. Cines for him. He used to have to get He handed me a list of questions |UP three or four times every night. bad, and he suffered “I give these to my ‘mothers,’” he from constipation. 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