The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1929, Page 4

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eretres 28 ~ 8 inno is Ae... ooAaled SARBESHROSSUE SEGLRAT vesss i es Sr Tribun The Bismarck Tribune ‘i THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Eatablished 1873) rm E. EF & t EER Member Audit Berea of Member of The Associated Press Circulation The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use tepublication ot all news dispatches credited to tt of spontaneous origin published herein. GERSS Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. DETROIT CHICAGO Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) KEEP DAKOTA A TOURIST ROUTE Governor Shafer’s recommendation that the state take steps to have the federal government create Roosevelt Memorial park out of the Bad Lands of North Dakota deserves early attention from the legislature. It should not be neglected till the final rush of the session, when it might be slighted or even fail of enactment into law. ‘The Bad Lands are North Dakota's chief asset to the continental scenic trail that serves the summer tourist travel between the two oceans. Without them the state becomes a mere cross-country stretch for the stream of summer motor travel. Or the stream may not even choose to cross this state. It may select a route through ® state to the south and make it via the Elack Hills and the Devil's Tower and Wyoming on the way in and out of the Yellowstone. The Bad Lands are not only an attraction for tourists headed for the great national playgrounds of Ye'low- stone, Glacier and Yosemi:>, but they ere also an at- traction in themselves. It is conceivable that tourists finding themselves short on time to make the trip farther west might, after getting close to Dakota, decide to make the Bad Lands their destination instead of omitting the state altogether. As Governor Shafer put it in his message, the fegeral government makes it a rule to create no national parks unless the area is deeded to it. What North Dakota might, therefore, be asked to do is to turn the Bad Lands over to the nation. That could be done with the main portion of the area, which is held by the state. A fund could be created to buy the remainder of the lands, the governor suggested. That also could be deeded over to the government. It is now for the legislature to act. TYING UP BOULDER DAM The Boulder dam bill having been p2ssed and signed by the president and thus having become a full-fledged law, the fight of the advocates of the big engineering en- terprise ordinarily would have been regarded as won. However, the public was a bit skeptical about that. The doubt was justified. There is too much power at stake and too many cross-interests involved to allow the proj- ect to proceed without another attempt to head it off. That route is by the courts and Arizona will take it. Whatever ulterior purpose might be behind the move decided on, Arizona is not bringing up any new oppo- sition. That state opposed the law, while still a bill in the Bismarck Tribune Company, wis- N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck $7.20 |C4n never be led quickly into an era of eternal peace. 1.20 6.00 1.50 Qot otherwise credited in this newspaper. and also rights of republication of all other matter herein also passed the Kellogg treaty, we are apt to think we have done a good deal; and when government officials take occasion to announce that war with such and such a na- tion is “unthinkable” we shall be further encouraged But we've only scratched the surface. War is an institution—one of the oldest in existence. It can’t be put out of existence by a few treaties or by well- intentioned speeches. When war is finally abolished it will be because the great mass of the people are de- termined in their hearts that it shall be abolished. We That's the way it is with every reform. They have to well up from underneath to be effective. If you doubt it, ask Amanulah. FORTUNE IN SHAVES A quarter of a century ago a safety razor company had @ nominal capital of $5,000, Today the market value of its shares is approximately $200,000,000. Merely as an industrial phenomenon this capital growth challenges at- tention. The growth and expansion of this business were not the result of a monopoly. There were safety razors before this particular make was heard of and at no time during the history of this company was it without competitive Tazors in wide demand. Some of the figures of this company are almost stag- gering. Take the fact that it has sold 3,500,000,000 blades in 25 years. This proves there is as,much truth as wit in the statement that the disposal of used blades is one of humanity's great unsolved problems. One reason for the phenomenal success of the safety razor is that\it was invented at a most opportune time. Had this genius evolved his famous shaving device in Civil war times, when it was the fashion to be bearded like the Smith brothers, his capital stock might now be worth nothing instead of millions, Old-timers€&n recollect the time when barbers looked upon the safety razor with disfavor because there were many men who could not, or feared to, shave with the old style razor. Shaves were then the chief source of in- come for the barber. Today the barber says he loses money on shaves and urges his customers to shave them- selves. Weekly haircuts, massages, shampoos, tonics, lo- tions, singes and electric treatments, all at higher prices, have placed the barber within the reach of the income| tax collector. A DOLLAR DOWN Widespread attention has been attracted to the recent survey giving general approval to installment selling as economically sound when properly carried on. The con- clusion arrived at has been referred to in the stock mar- ket as a bull argument. This may Prove unfortunate be- cause if there is anything consumer credit does not need {t is incitement to splurge. Those who made the survey do not ignore the dangers of high-pressure salesmanship, of over-persuading the consumer, or of unwise credit extension in the com- petitive drive for business. The fact is not dismissed that in installment selling responsibility of the buyer is given no such thorough investigation as is ordinarily exercised in producer and bank credits. ! | | CHILDREN : a enrreent tanning &y Olwe Roberts Barton ©1928 by NBA Service,Ine. | lin Childron in these days of inten-| sive analysis are divided roughly in-! to two classes. Either a child is| “normal” or he isn’t. i It must bother parents n lot, this ; i To most people it doesn't | Intelligently handled the system is an important con- tribution to industrial progress, stabilizing output, in- rousing Production, lowering costs and working for im- Proved standards of living. The plan is abused, just as the cash and thirty-days credit plans were abused, but the abuses are gradually being eliminated, The partial payment plan has demonstrated that most People are honest even to the extent of Paying their bills, and that there are not enough who buy beyond their in- comes to make the system unprofitable for merchant and manufacturer. However, the success of the system and the latest study nancing this vast volume of credit to relax vigilance or neglect precautions which the very nature of the business demands. of its workings should not Prompt those who are fi- vert. mean a thing in the world. Normal! | 17 What is normal? | They gaze uneasily at Tom, or Ruth, or the twins, and wonder if. 18 they are of the elect. If so, why? And if not, why not? So it seems only fair to give them something to go by, a sort of scale { of psychological weights and meas- ures, so to speak, by which they may classify their offspring. Extraverts—and Introverts To be more precise there are two general classes of children, but not “normal” and abnormal. These oth- er classifications go by much more formidable names. One is. “intro-| ; The pure type of introvert is a dreamer. He is happier in his|ch thoughts than in his surroundings. | chi He might be described as feeding on his feel: Usually he is artistic an merely mean that he has a tendency ee usage of a word so vaguely de- | 162 ined. plains the old profanity is inade- quate and no effective new cuss- words have been invented. The pro- fessor must be getting ready to run into an opened door in the dark. other day with 2,000,000 pounds of weight fighters in the there? . . -And Besides, He’s Used to Waitin vor ly pure often call a certain child “introvert” or an “extravert” hen he really isn’t at all. We that airection. AME RICAN HISTORY January 22 21—Erection of bui Plymouth, Mass. ‘91—Wa: gton appointed com- missioners to survey the Dis- tr f Columbia. 21—Mexico permitted Americans to colonize Texas. BARBS * A ship docked at Brooklyn the reese from Mew Zealand. lot, were SHucKs! GO ANEAD-- (iL WAIT FOR THE NEXT CARe-$0 | CAN Gh ra At first thought it may seem rather queer for a second wife to pay the alimony to a first wife as the singer, Irene Pavioska, did, guaranteeing the wife of Dr. Maurice Mesirow $45 gs bean in| weekly alimony, and proceeding to marry the doctor herself. And yet why the wonder? Women are cer- tainly demonstrating these days, the humblest. as well as prima donnas, that they will go to most any lengths to achieve matrimony. women in New Jersey ‘@ | swapped her husband for a nice house the other day, too. The name has ° jescaped me, for she was not a grand * | opera diva, Here's a funny quirk, Professor Burges Johnson com-| though; one guarantees alimony to get a husband, and the other is only too glad to swap a husband for the alimony or a house. look green.” . Some ose @ THE MAMA JOB Two small children, aged 2 and 4, ‘were locked in the kitchen by thoir A By/ mother while she ran down on ari ence there weren't any heavy- | errand to her sister-in-law’s home four doors away. When the mother came homé the house was ablaze and not Lane, have pointed out that there is a connection between intestinal poisoning and certain forms of epi- lepsy. Dr. Lane even went so far as to try to cure patients by removing a section of the intestine. This was an attempt to get rid of a particu- larly weak place in the intestine where there was evidence that much few months the trouble usually returned. tinal toxemia is the most frequent to be proven by the fact tl be avoided. results, it is advisable, at the start for two or three weeks. different one each day. With this disease, as bots Seen either the orange or the gra; seems to be the best fruit to use to assist in producing the best elimination of toxins. Occasionally the spells increase in number during the first few days of the fast and then wha oid disap- pear, but in most cases the seizures stop at once as soon as the fast is started. In some of the cases com- ing under my supervision, patients having as many as twenty-five spells a day had no recurrence after start- ing the eliminative treatment. if the patient has been taking luminal, bromids, __nitro-glycerin, chloral or other sedatives or depres- sors, such treatment must be dis- continued at the start of the fasting treatment or no good results can be expected. While these drugs are ex- cellent in warding off attacks and have proved a great relief to suf- ferers from epilepsy, their action in- terferes with the real cure through fasting and dieting. A treatment by manual manipu- which would result in intestinal pu- this is not done, it would be neces- use of enemas indefinitely. used daily all during the acta pe- riod and at least one each day for a month or two after starting on the tion of carbohydrates for several son of the Women’s Bureau. She re- Peats the opinion of most economists and sociologists that the women who work for pin money or because they don’t like staying at home are a neg- ligible quantity as compared with those who work for checks be- ‘cause they must. "s figure is one working married woman in every 11 as contrasted with one in every 22 about thirty years ago. “Far pastures | sary for the patient to continue the|foods are used in excess, congress, on the same grounds that are now put forward UNWIELDY CITIES and imagi ative, 1 Tt is quite possible that in some not-distant day city|ive and withdraws himself from peo- He is not assert- Mrs. Houdini claims to have re-| the children were found charred to death, ‘€8 reason for asking the federal courts to halt any move to make the dam law operative. Suit will be filed in the federal supreme court to head off the construction of the dam on the ground that southern California is al- located water from the Colorado river that rightfully is due its neighbor. News from Utah is that the whole controversy has been stirred up again in that state by the intent of Ari- zona. The assent of six states is necessary to inaugur- uate the enterprise. California has all the others with it except Utah and Arizona, and it was intended to make the law operative gaining the assent of Utah. Opposi- tion there in the legislature is strengthened by the balk from Arizona. As the bill reads, there is not any too much encour- ‘agement for the project. It provides that the govern- ment may construct and operate a power plant at Boulder canyon. The secretary of the interior may do that if he Sees fit, or he may lease either the power or the power Tights to private companies. The big power enterprises . Were expected to seek to get out of that what they were “not able to get in the legislation before congress, and there will, doubtiess, be many who will see in the Arizona move @ sinister corporate hand rather than the grievance of @ state which was not given the full allocation of water that it had asked. Anyhow, it begins to look as though Boulder dam Would suffer the same fettering that has tied up Muscle Shoals—only, in this case, before the project is con- Os guia AMANULLAH’S LESSON as Afghanistan may be. hardly the place for such things. It had existed in semi- folk didn’t like the idea of change. the airplanes, European clothes, electric lights, bar- boosters and chambers of commerce will be trying, not to exaggerate their city’s population figures, but to under- estimate them. It is slowly becoming evident that it is it is a hindrance. New York, choked nearly to death by, traffic, is trying out a series of new and drastic regulations. If they re- duce congestion, a new skyscraper will go up and make the situation as bad as before. The situation is des- In all this semi-ludicrous business of King Amanullah of. Afghanistan, who lost his throne because he tried to modernise his somewhat stiff-necked subjects, there is ‘mote or less food for thought for us Americans, distant Amanullah, petty and pompous as he ray have been, was @ man with rather advanced ideas. Afghanistan was par seclusion for centuries, and its wild: untamed erate, and there doesn’t seem to be any relief in sight. Chicago, forced to provide an adequate sewage dis- Posal system for its millions, faces the expenditure of frightful sums on vast engineering works, The city’s Great size, like New York's, is Proving a drawback. Sooner or later we probably will stop trying to make our cities bigger and content ourselves with making them better. MELLON ON FAILURE Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon is not one of those who believe that the rise of large-scale industria] and business organizations has diminished the ambitious young man’s chance to succeed in the world. Writing in the February issue of the Cosmopolitan Magazine, Secretary Mellon declares that, on the con- trary, be believes that opportunities are “infinitely more varied” than formerly, that rewards are greater and that the enjoyment is more immediate. ‘ “It should be pointed out,” he writes, “that as part of & large organization, adequately financed and directed by men in touch with market conditions throughout the world, the average man’s chance of failure is far less than it would be outside. I remember the time when we lived in @ world of small/competing units, and it seemed to me that the casualty list was very great.” , Editorial Comment quite possible for mere size to Progress to a point where ea ple and events. He is not neces- sarily morbid but often is thought! parted husband. This type of child is sensitive|could send them, 80, and usually possessed of what we call inferiority complex. Quite oft- he is unhappy. Posite. He draws his interest from People and things around him, is in- clined to dominate others, and usu- ally tries to work things out to his |W: own advantage. tremely selfish and domineering. He|to Is cont e thinks at all. He has what we call, incommon parlance, a superiority complex. The true extravert is not a likable child, as a rule. He is likely to be unreasonable, quarrel- ago, Y. Posthuma sent a letter to a some, and to develop sudden tem-! mining company ijn Colombia, South. America, applying for a job. laid in a Colombia postoffice for ; more than six years, and finally was Fers. The normal child is about half- way in between these two classes. Probably most children lean a lit-| ret tle either,one way or the other, or | for both, for it is quite possible to pos-|er sess traits belonging to both elasses. 1 ceived spirit messages from her de- sentenced to life plus 114 years. They The extravert is exactly the op- | now have what you might call a Often he is ex-!gents to provide a place for them eight years. Well, Houdini would. Four of the Birger gangsters were rmanent residence. ‘ Co-eds in one of the University of isconsin dormitories have asked re- smoke. Pretty soon the men will LUCKY HE DIDN’T WAIT Pasadena, Calif.—Fifteen turned to the sender. It has now und'its way back to Posthuma, aft- being on the road for more than 2 The woman is near death pros- if anyone! trated with grief and remorse and, no doubt, censure not only from her- self but from her husband. These arcn’t the first children maimed or killed because mama went away. But What's the answer? Why blame wom- en workers in a system which gives them only constant day and night re- sponsibility and no time off? oo WHAT IS “NECESSITY” The real ident and assured. What he | be demanding a place to practice that | makes the does is always right, he thinks, if he ) effeminate habit, too. wo! (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) living. demanding luxurief which the Par aptamer gs aay women would never have i ed of, preferring her full-time years ; sojourn in the home to the luxuries deemed “necessities” today. nt for or against the custom, of course. see THESE MARRIED WOMEN Twice as many married work in the United States today as in 1890. The increase is due to neces- | the sity, according to Miss Mary Ander- 890 dream is no argume: It| present [ Our Yesterdays | FORTY YEARS AGO Hon. James McDonald, who form- erly lived in Bismarck, but now re- siding in Hyde county, 8 Dak., is spending a few days here. Mr. Mc- Donald was superintendent of the railway mail service at the time he lived here, —_— W. S. Casselman of Armstrong visited friends in Bismarck this week. Members of the senate and house who made the trip to Grand Forks were entertained by a drive about the city, a visit to the. mills, and state university, where they were guests at a dinner. Later a special pro- gram was given in their honor. On the return trip the legislators were entertained at Fargo and Jamestown. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Judes Morgan left on a trip to east. Which women F, B. Allen and Walter Skelton | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ; AH, GREETINGS DEAR BROTHER Amos! PuottS LITLE SAKE HIMSELF, ~<TH’ OLY SouUND AUT oH” + Y'DoT SEEM “To HooPLE FAMILY “TREE! BE OVERJOVED “fo SEE ME, You BIG NAK! a KAFF, «~ UM-M-- HELLO SACOB!. WHY AH,+ER- i UM-M- -~ HIM—TO VISIT US, we JUST APTER ME By Ahern OH ~UMF- KAFF- YZ. INOPPORTUNE TIME Tor. )* have gone to Oregon where they will spend two ee ag a4 Bassi Nelson, local hotel clerk, has resigned and with Mrs, Nelson will 60 to Parkers Prairie, Minn., to e their home, ISNT ‘STAKE | Mla vink er mires oer tor HOOPLE »="tH TEN YEARS AGO Dr. and Mrs, F. B. Strauss have issued invitations for a dinner dance, H. K. Keller has as his guest his brother, Lieut. Keller, who is-en route to Salt Lake City. Miss Priscilla Taylor of La Moure is the guest of her aunt, Miss Liela Diesem, ‘ Miss Christine Kvale of ‘Sheyenne | shops and automobiles that the worthy Amanullah ‘Atted to compel his subjects to take to their bosoms be- Game @ source of friction. The Afghanistans, as one man, Fone and Amanullah over the borders. They will GETING OUT OF A DOMESTIC WRANGLE WITH THE WIFE, on Kvale. NOTICE oF js Bice for a visit with her sisters Ida Pu aston, or State of North Dakota, County of Bur. continue iti the “good old ways” of thelr grandfathers. sympathies, naturally, are all with Amanullah. The ACCOUNT OF MY Jf, BRINGING A FRIED ounty Auditor, Bismarck, Brown, Pertiand Oregon, meccial “National Bank, are “hereby netified that the nd herein Ase described Ta in-your Geo. Ww. he Co} ‘ouncil aa taliowes ea ea te oN Le at this teigh t Bi? ‘Dame {and which th se teh ‘i fection late, see TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1929 THE CURE OF EPILEPSY _ regular diet regime. The diet fol- Some investigators such as the fa-| lowing mous English surgeon, Sir Arbuth-/anced, but with a complete elimina- the fast needs to be well bal- &@ stamped eddressed Enclose envelope for reply. absorption of poison was taking/months. The menus described in my place. The cases operated on showed | newspaper columns may be used by a marked improvement for the first | leaving opt the meals where starches But after a short time/are si ited, and substituting a meal of fruit or non-starchy vege- The theory that a definite intes- | tables. The enemas will guarantee a clean eems {colon until such time as it seems sabe gravee be te ent ‘s if the wise to wait for the bowels to move * |colon, and small intestine are kept ithe thoroughly clean, future attacks may | tempt In order to get the best | after the fast. This should not be at- for at least a month or two If these directions are carefully of the treatment, to take a fruit fast | adhered to, the majority of the cases Only one|of of the acid fruits may be used, or a|cural spilepsy will prove to be readily ie. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pinworms Question—Mrs. E. Asks: “Will you please give your advice on pinworms both in adults and children? And how to treat them. Are they seri- ous?” _ Answer: Pinworms are not par- ticularly injurious but indicate an unclean condition of your colon which you can quickly get rid of through a short course of enemas, using them at least twice daily for several days. Raisins Question—Mrs. A. C. T. writes: “I am on your diet for rheumatism. You state to use cooked raisins. Is it all right to eat them uncooked al- So, as a fruit?” Answer: It is just as well to use the dried raisins without being cooked, but raisins are a very nour- ishing food and should not be uscd in too large quantities, Oily Skin Question—G. T. S. asks: “What lation of the bowels will prove help-| would cause oily skin and hair when ful in: stimulating peristaltic action! plenty of vegetables and milk are and will assist in intestinal elimina-|taken, and sweets and pastry but sel- tion. A prolapsed or kinked colon,|dom?. How can this be overcome?” Answer: The butter fat from milk trefaction, should be corrected by|or cream, and the oil from olives, suitable physiotherapy treatment. If|avacados, and such oily fruit may tend to promote the oily skin if these Stop all vegetables, animal and fruit fats Two or three enemas should be;for a short time and then learn to use the right amount which your sys- tem needs. (Copyright 1929 by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) as. INTRO! OF TRUMP SUI iz North (Dummy)— ar43 9 10 92783 SKQI96 West— Leads @ K Rat South S Destanaedese Saxass OASe 10633 e with Ace of clubs and leads a spade. card should Declarer now play? ‘The Error: Declarer trumps with Jack of hearts. ; So Cearekt Matead Declarer re- fuses to trump discards @ losing diamond. Opponents are then rea- sonably sure to lead another spade and discards another ——— NOTICE OF B: v4 REDESET on oy OF State of Nortu Dakota, County of Bure Office of County Auditor, Bismarck, ‘0 Gao. Ww. . t os Fieve. Portland, Oregén: N. Dik. O1 ene “wid” y Roti tled that fee

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