The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1929, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1920 | Wonder If the Kellogg Pacts Say Anything About ‘Outlawing? These? ee if i the glove to the Western nations? What will when the 400,000,000 Chinese really get going? will happen when 200,000,000 dark people in Africa that their day is at hand? Lut now, after many sleepless nights worrying the prospective brown, yellow and biack learns from that gloomiest of glooms, Dean the real peril for Burope is that of the United r~* fede.ated Latin-American republics. He He lt 790 | twat by the year 2000 Europe and her civilization will ry Lil ements herve eee vege A athe td tongiy BP « SJujto she rear of the procession by the Americas. Here emmy family of 600) 1; .n: pessimist optimistic enough to believe that the at the average yellow, brown and black races and Europe have had million a year, there ! ei i Ad thet: day. } asking recipe sorceee 350 —_—_——— | rove yd aut in- utes eae STABILIZING EMPLOYMENT the aifferegoss betwess, | i A method of carrying on public works during times cf depression, when they would give employment to labor not needed in other activities and serve as & cushion to minimize the effects of industrial slackness, is 80 desirable that it would not need urging if prac- ticable ways to put it into effect could be formulated. ‘The federal government, which expends many millions on public works and is assured of reasonably steady surzort for them, could be guided, it would seem, by :° 3 such purpose. But the trouble with undertaking it in cities and states is that they aré constantly pushed for means with which to do things for which there is immediate demand. Another difficulty is found in the | hesitancy of voters to tax themselves for funds without | knowing the use to which they are to be put or where | they are to be expended, ‘Wher the city of Detroit sought to adopt such a plan abeut @ year ago, the voters rejected it because they wv <d to keep the’- hands on public improvement fv *s and were unwilling to leave their disposition to the discretion of some future municipal administration. The obstacles to the plan, as applied to municipal and state governments, are obvious, but it should not be Gismissed as being wholly impractical. Prudence sug- gests that in whatever way and to whatever extent public un‘ertakings can be utilized to soften hardships of un- cr~loyment and sustain business, it should be done. i 3! f : Hei il tint | ! i : t ! i G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Pifth Ave. Bidg. CHICAGO yi Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg (Official City, State and County Newspaper) A NORTHWEST CABINET CANDIDATE What use to make of the Elder Statesmen of the nation has long been a profound problem for people who Late to see such important by-products of office- holding go to waste. John Quincy Adams returned to congress and died in the house while serving as a member. Andrew John- gon was re-elected to the senate after he had stormed out of the presidency from which he escaped by one vot: from being kicked out. In the case of former President Taft, the nation has been availing itself of his experience and legal training as chief justice of the federal supreme court. The question of using former prcsidents is simplified by the fact that may not be readily recalled, that he is the only ex-president of the country at the present time and until Calvin Coolidge goes out of office. 5 £ gE 8 a [ ft ity i E g i é 2 i ge i gs ge i x i I ; : & Eyl Work hard and save your money so your children won't have the troubles which made @ mah of you. The joy of doing something for yourself is doubled if you know someone else wants you to do it. YOUR Oo Che ur Yesterdays i gy 5 i Over in Montana they also have Elder Statesmen mos ene and they have given thought on the problem of what| When denying yourself seme pleasure, be sure you CHILDREN way profitable use to make of them. There is, for example,|6#in at least as much a8 you lose. FORTY YEARS AGO longer former Senator and Governor Joe Dixon. As a retired &y Ove Roberts Barton |_ Mrs. E. B. Palmer has returned from ae io pride senatcr, Montana hitched him to the governorship by an | Jcalousy is a green-eyed monster, but it may turn one ‘OFS by NEA Service.ine a visit to Aberdeen. ; ies eh*aee overwhelming vote in 1920, when he defeated Burton K. | OF both of your eyes black. 8, W. Thompson and J. ‘Cooper, SUMNER | with the ‘Whz-eler, running as s Democrat and Nonpartisan. ‘The +::.Arligig of politics, however, turned Dixon out of office at the expiration of his term, when in a bitter feud with the political powers that are concentrated in inacondsa Copper company, he was defeated for re- 4 Ee: poe a STIMULATING NOISE But observing her eat, I decided| A majority of the members of the electicn. Montana was in a desperate fiscal plight at (Outlook) that it was not only baby that was; House have gone to Grand Forks on the time, with = huge deficit of debt piling up day by| por years we have had definite notions about riveters | keeping her thin. Untouched cream | an inspection trip. One lives and learns—and some- - Pieces © fH the 5 ng. ie visting friends here. A young married woman with a; Alex B. Allen, St. Paul, is represent- Editorial Comment ¢ three months’ old baby remarked at | ing the Pioneer Press here during the luncheon table: “Certainly I nurse ; legislative session. my baby. It helps to keep me thin.” : i i i ! | af 3s H Fp day because the state income was insufficient after | and early morning ash can bouncers, and the notion | soup, half i rene a toes of foal neture beets starch widespread paralysis of agriculture had resulted from | that they might be of any use to us was not one of them. salad and a it rest TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO of industry. One bines readily other drought and the deflation policy inaugurated by the | We never thought of them, for instance, as possible mix- of the tale Bhe vas dieting’ | | Miss Mary Johnson left for Tor- |graph peel - led cae ! hades _ * onto, Ont., where she will enter a =:2'* federal government. Dixon had tried to relieve the | 1 certain experiments undertaken on: behalf of the |#f€ We coming to?” thought I, inter-| training school for Salvation Army HERES PROOF state by obtaining the enactment of an inheritance) tional safety council and its committee on the elimin- |€sted in this new aspirant to Poiret | workers. “ marriage could be divorced’ ari mines tax that hit the copper company pretty models. So I ventured a question. ‘In four states - with lews their laughs den’t mean ation of harmful noises make some“sort of @ case for what we customarily regard as the curse of the cities. us. the Mrs. P. C. Remington is entertain- “If we could learn what amount of noise will prop- | cutest thing. ‘We adore him. He's |" 16 ladies at a masquerade party. ; 154 Pree of the council "we could prescribe a nolse cocktail [@Mtze", Now that he notices—" | | w. A. Paleoner left for Fargo to be that would accelerate the workings of everybody's body| «it "ot'tc very. But it's better to| Present at the state poultry show. and mind. , |Iave a baby not too fat, don't you} p. 3. Turner is attending a mect-| “Of course this experimentation is only at its begin- |think? If they get too tat you can't fing of grain growers at Fargo. ning and generalizations must be tentative. But it is|carry them around. He gains about F already obvious that some experts have rated the cost | three or four ounces a week and just TEN YEARS AGO of noise on a basis of assumption not justified.” so he’s gaining it’s all right, I guess.”| irs. Obert A. Olson and children been. This theory is related to the principle that some out-| | A Target for Queries have returned from a visit with Mrs. side stimulus is necessary to spur us to our best efforts. I never thought you'd nurse your | Ojson‘s parents in St. Paul. | It 1s granted, however, via too much noise is as de- | baby, eathie footed the girls. | structive as too much tippling. ‘Doesn’ Governor and Mrs. Lynn J. Frazier Yesmit does. But Til wean him/ have as their guest, F. E. Frazier of OUR MECHANISTIC CIVILIZATION some of these days. - lo it now | Charlevoix, Mich., brother of the partment transacts. He bad much to do with the estab- lishment of irrigation and reclamation projects in Mon- since he’s got his start, but do you (8t. Louis Post-Dispatch) now I'd gain fifteen pounds. Peggy | S°VPr- tana and he was of considerable service in Indian matters! ishorate definitions of our mechanistic civilization | 4 ; é — Guring his term in the senate. He would bring a trained | are laid down by some of the men who contributed to the ee ry rapes dase? dust like R. Pields, manager of the Inter- | made his living, mind to the post and he has the integrity to be| fiftieth anniversary number of the Post-Dispatch, but| ‘Well, in their own parlance kind ae a inc ppt aise la rapier ng thoroughly true to the great trust this office involves, |'0 the average layman the thing is much simpler than |triends, 1 ask, wouldn't it slay you? |nis son, Jack, at Endfield, Il. that, 1 simply give w The former governor is one of the four big men in ply Pp. Home serves as a homely (beg pardon) illustration.| Perhaps that poor baby is getting ' politics in Montana. One 1s Senator Thomas J. Walsh, | purmerly devoid of anything more coniplicated than a| along very well. Who kriows? Three irae Meaioose oriinwogs. pleneet lack ‘who has a mind second to none for learning and keenness | sausage machine and coffee grinder, or four ounces @ week isn't a bad |, visit with his son, Walter J. Mad- im the upper federal chamber and is, moreover, a great | bristle with machinery. What householder goes home in| gain. and she says he is well, 50 | dock, league floor leader in the House. eet 5 anot this country now to find the electric refrigerator, alto- | that’s thet. Bercy on international Jaw; her is Judge George mati: ofl burner, électric sweeper, electric washing ma-| But like the old farmer I must re- He will remain during the session. M. Bourquin, whose legal mind is not excelled by any | chine, electric toaster, the automatic gas heater, electric |mark, “It isn't in nature. It's un-| fiard—4n fact it had to pay most of the $3,000,000 annual increase of state revenue. So he was defeated for governor, while the voters with the same pencil which they used to put their “x” behind the name of his fTiv.1 also marked an approving “x” behind his tax pro- posals and enacted them by referendum. “* Now they are proposing that President-elect Hoover ‘pick Dixon for the post of secretary of the interior in his cabinet. That has quite an element of appropriate- ness about it., Considering him from the standpoint of @Xf--!cace, the former governor and senator has had Close contact with such business as the interior de- Hy “Happy Jimmy Murpiy,” fairly if ! if fF ¥, i g # i f) oF rt E if i i Jurist in the United States and who, in addition, is a man | hair curler, etc., etc., all functioning perfectly? natural.” sopped of ur.commonly high common sense which he applies in| None. If the plumber is not just emerging from the| Her reason was abominable to be- even though | one the Corsand Of affection as his acii-ities as a federal judge in the western district | ccllar the ice machine mechanician pis ert pe ne if the baby doesn’t laugh, clown, toscbers : Net héces- | - of; Montana; Jne Dixon is a third, shining as a tax and , ie pursing mother needs three ed that « We— Bast con.crvation authority and as an administrator; while is whooping meals a day, and a light profession . Leeds @ 8 Burton K. Wheeler is probably the slickest politician in oes aes! sine. pire a needs JANUARY.19 Lani : ry extra, m: water. Both Murphy’ the state and has made quite @ record in the U. 8. ae hed are fattening, but necessary. 1807—Birthday of Robert E. Lee. / senate. Dixon 1s the only one of these gifted men who is not ‘m: the harness, pulling at some task for the welfare of | and | the people. If President-elect, Hoover is looking for a gord man A nursing mother needs as much food as @ man doing heavy manual 1909—Birthday of Edgar Allen Poe. 1948—Gold discovered in California. 1861—Georgia seceded from the Union | t! | OUR BOARDING HOUSE You BIG BARN OWL! ~~~ § Ad, MARTHA M'DEAR UNDER Z Te HALF A MIND -10 SEND “THE VENEER OF NOUR S1ERA You oT CHASING BUTTERFLIES, QUALITIES, 1s A HEART OF AND RENT YouR ROOM “10. A GENEROSITY; GEMTLENESS COUPLE OF ACROBATS f—~ AND SYMPATHY? = Mould ~THE NERVE OF You BRINGING DONT DEAN tT! ue MY “THAT No-GooD FRIEND OF YOURS }'| “FRIED WAS ABSOLUTELY - nutter Observed, “Any high-grade moron chn do house. AND i pve Lew a. ol . ANS ENGLISH VISITOR! we HME. word of vertade and tres dsovery ho which Pot Mast au LETS HEAR NOUR . Saeuiny ter ter edition. ‘toe canen teeta REMOVABLE, BRIDGE without pain and horror the spéctecle ee CHUCKLE THIS, OFF, ~~ , “keen, ; Youre ‘GOING “fo PAY WR Kis ‘ReoM AND : RD !. Fe POGe <a oe : at | for the interlorship, moreover, a man who ta inake @ valuable general adviser to the next presi- Gen:, he might easily pick a less qualified one but he 't do better than select the man from Missoula, as EXQUISITE GIRLS (Baltimore Sun) Some of our most advanced female thinkers have been spreading the gorgeous fruits of their lucubrations be- aa the American Sociological association, in session in Ons of them, Prof. Annie Louise TN A) at fal i t ti 5 8 f 1s Ads & 8 eEgbe FUE foe ais! f ine a ; I f ‘t 38 aH even i al i ie ~ bs -

Other pages from this issue: