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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 1929 HEALTH DIET ADVICE Sea ate eee AS THE TWIG IS BENT that their own emotional conduct has While there is unquestionably a/ bes hove ton go0d.. aren are often great deal to be said on the subject more cranky before company, but the of heredity influences affecting the young child, I am sure that environ- training are most to be con-// persona! questions Seas. ti aiaileg’ WAM ts OHI diet, addressed to him, care of the mind and his body to the normal.|] “‘iciose a stamped sddressed The child's body can be grown to per- |! envelope for reply. fect proportions through ‘scientific feeding, combined with efficient cor- cranky tricks were Fective exercise to shape the muscles./ ‘om “within the family eitcle from ‘The mental forces can likewise be de-| {fom within the family cele from veloped. father, independent Newspaper Dhere to it all. The old isolation, with its self-sufficiency THR STATES OLDESI NEWSPAPER and its occasional heart-crushing loneliness, is ended. {Established 1973) During the last few years a good many books have been ty the Bismarck Tribune Company wis. | Fitter! about this. Half of them hail the change as a . D., @Nd entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs great blessing; the other half bewail it as a loss of some- second class mal) matter. thing precious and fine, pee D. Mann ....,......... President and Publishe: But the important thing, right now, is not analysis so much as simple recognition. The change that has come upon American farm life is only a single aspect of the vaster change that has come upon all American life, tural and urban alike. We need more than anything else 00 to recognize this change and accept it. It may be that the old days were better than the new ones and it may not be; the big thing—the thing that we must all ac- custom ourselves to—is that they are gone. No one is so lost as the man who is unable, or unwill- ing. to see that a time has come for readjustment to new conditions. No task that the nation faces is more press- ing than the task of recognizing its changed ‘circum- ie meriheed Stole Leper bald Sue ah be the use| stancog and devising a way of living and thinking that ie repul News dispatches credited to 1 2. je Ce mot eiedites ip its Gewenager aaa aiac ica enable it to make the change as beneficial aS pos: 7)te local news of spontaneous origin published herein ;All rights of republication of all other matter herein z ‘ Although some children seem! “here is nothing inherently vicious © Qe also reserved. “CRIME DOESN’T PAY” naturally to have more neni herv- in the young child. its habits are all poo It is extremely trite, and sometimes it isn't quite true, ous systems than others, acquired. The child without nervous- ig : Foreign Representatives me that the irritable and highly nerv- ness must live in a family where ous child is made so through very | there is no discord, and where all are to that crim "t H t tl Q. LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY say thal fe doesn’t pay; but every now and then st training by the = .. NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. pean Mee ee ee apparent false training by the Per-! ind and courteous to each other. » CHICAGO DETROIT | Pretty generally valid. ular habits for health. This applies. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg In the New York courts the other day appeared one not only . to. eating and exercising c p in Fingers | George C. Parker, for years tabbed as “the aristocrat of habits but to what may be termed Question: E. E. writes: “Will you ‘ (Offielal City, State and County Newspaper) crookdom.” He had been a confidence ‘man for years. mental habits. - ‘ily please explain the cause and cure of Twice he “sold” the Brooklyn bridge to unsuspecting ikapies udaian: carbene ica cramps in fingers in my left hand QUEST OF THE SUPREME strangers. He used to be known as one of the best ea Husband d ieee PS “It As better to die struggling for the supreme than to|dressed men in New York. For a long time he was a There is more need for model | CO Piiedatina is the let cea We Perish in the dust among the commonplace.” heavy spender and a gay liver. years ago, which left a numbness {dees to teach the child and then un. | from left éibow down. T am a midde- aged man.” i eS OE ee eae | ARONA!“ Cbnmllt) “Ate physician 1; Who uses manipulative therapeutics, Your trouble is likely due to some Pressure on the spinal nerves which go to your left arm. ‘ Eating Whole Oranges Question: Subscriber writes: “1 have two boys, eight and Hews would soon find no friends left. When I give them oranges tl ea Children as well as adults will re-|them through just like apples, peeling spond more willingly to requests than | and all. We have tried to keep them This was the maxim that guided the life of Emil Fuchs,| But when he came into court he didn’t look as if any of ‘world-famous sculptor and painter, who shot himself to| those things had been true. He was old, shabby and Meath in his New York studio the other day. discouraged. He was arrested for cashing a worthless Fuchs was suffering from an incurable disease. That, | check for $150—a sum that would have been small change doubtless, was a strong motive for suicide. Few men can|for him once; and since it was his fourth offense, he ; sit unmoved when death is approaching relentlessly. But | was sent to prison for life. j it is fair to assume that he felt, also, that his life was at] Crime doesn’t pay—at least, not always. & dead end, and that the “dust of the commonplace” was beginning to settle about his studio. For a man with his . SHORT WORDS Philosophy, that would be enough to make life unen- English is rapidly discarding its long words and becom- durable. ing a language of monosyllables, according to Prof. Otto > i mands, The request should al-|from doing it, but they will sneak off Although we do not put it into words, most of us, no Jespersen of Denmark. | for-tat for any greedifess or selfish- hice be a feaachdine cate if the child; by themselves and do it. They are @oubt, feel much the same way about it. To “struggle} British savants, following the national custom of blam- uUR jess it will sober him a hey ae make is to gain confidence in his opinion of }both in the best of he ser all and it Sor the su "—to pack life with high moments, so| ing every new devel t ‘ him less cocky. He will take a cer- nt. If children are| doesn’t seem to cause them. any ipreme”—to pac igi ing every new development on America, say that it’s our | hait tena ata eenlahiient call itmat een tee. trouble. ‘They have been doing this that it glows like a stained cathedral window or flashes| fault. Maybe it is; if so, we ought to be proud of it. |—from other children, when he won't | for @ year. They eat one or two like a golden shield in the sunlight—is the goal we are} Short words make language a flexible, casily mastered p> from you, and he won't, resent it so | orai every day.” much. In time he will learn that inges every day. all looking for. We resent sameness and routine: we instrument. Consider some of the jaw-wrenchers that yy Ole Barton ee i rie tolerate tis mean Answer: There is no harm in your FE er peonle wo! - know that we have the capacity for deep emotional and| other languages contain. In Finlard, for instance @ 5 boys using the entire orange if they x if , and not until then, Spiritual experience, and we hunt eagerly for the chance Troof-paper tar company has to advertise itself as a O18 with eet wil thor lean elinettiing of self-con- 2 broad ager) peti on ini peal: ie aigiae asian Po exercise it. “huopapaperitervakattotervateldasosakeyhtio.” In Dan-| “I don't know what I'm going to do | trot and kindness” Wwoidhd get ints ‘ralachiet were | ABASNGHE Galibe ‘troutie if they used Me But, ordinarily, we fail at it. In the beginning we get ish the old-age pension law is “varemaerkeindregistreren- with Robert” said an anxious | ape terete ene AI I cinder Rear be ere ot tac Reh pinche beste be ; i their chil- |too many each day. ‘ Cum @ ‘i one day. | “He is getting more selfish | what she'd heard preached. And I'll |Court sentence for robbery was sen- | ents control over the : @ hint of what life could be like. A brief experience, a | gskontrolkalerne. Highness,” in Russian, is “vysoko- and headstrong every day.” | warrant that if she follows the advice |tenced to have an abscess removed |dren ake bat! ane. nee HL pte ed “whi mood, shows us a bright and shining land be-| prevoskhoditelstwo.” The abstinence movement in Po-| “Let him play with other children,” igiven her, Robert is going to be/|from his brain. The boy’s record of|trol of their own actions fected! 1 Question: br ee d hold it foe the barriers of every-day existence. But the de-|land is “wstrzemiezliwosc.” she was advised. {chastened gentleman before he is |bad conduct is explained by what the take a deep breath an for “ 5 fs @ few moments in the diaphragm re- of bread and butter, and the necessity of doing} If we are tending more and more to one-syllable words, He pie wie ane Peskin see ening | much older. este By pesnthed ance tone le in the school of life and is/gion I become groggy—in a daze. 1 PWBat is expected of us, shut us out. We plod along, in we may be very glad of it. lives next door. And he treats Der- willing to postpone sentence till sci-|really trying hard to learn how to| feel as if I am about to fall and must ‘tis Gust of the commonplace, and work up a good deal s aft come . di: , ; + * . There is no excuse for becoming | grasp something whenever this hap- Pity for ourselves. om immer. end iS ale CIN, jence had p LP ae ead areas with him because he makes | pens.” a re, | OME ba Answer: overc: Tet only the exceptional man or woman who can es- Editorial Co t ast "ele alte saphesoalisoeds AME RICAN mia shaper Gen tel pee trouble it you will take spevenere Cape and make a life that is truly a “struggle for the ‘al Commen there's about six weeks difference.” HIST O8RY |sre tiving in an era of opportunities | who did tot have an irritable mother? | breathing ceercises, ocak hoe eis \Sapeeme” The most of us have to make the best of the | ————$—=$<$_ —$__—$—$—$_$_$_$_$_$_—$_— “What kind of a child is Derrick?” {All bad boys were treated alike less make excuses for angry out-|with regularity.“ Your trouble is a A Ww) “A little angel, the dearest child 7 @ generatio: The world of | bursts, but the harm is done and hard | common one and due to your not be- Commonplace. And we do fairly well, too. We do the GREAT SHOWMAN i JANUARY 24 than a ge mn ago. ‘wor! wh f th 0 used ch a rapid intake of Gay's job, year after year, and we plod along from youth| (Duluth Herald) ut very umelfish and’ rig, “i |1956—Proposition to purchase Cuba sclence was not yet ready with ajd|to correct when one of these emo-| ing eae eee odern tendency tional explosions occurs bef the/ helpful oxygen and the exhaust of (eFilddle age and from middle age to old age, without| Tex Rickard's story today will be mostly on the sport- rechtat Reon indeed tay siete i soaiiges ae wone.ees en een edie child. Mothers who pomplata of thet 80 paler Soacnins dioxide gas. ie ¥ € ing pages of the newspapers, but it might with equal pro- dT ti 2 y 1861—Mayor of Boston suppressed | regard people as individuals with in- hil a and cranky are| (Copyright, 1029, by the Bell Syndi- @VEF Teaching that pit of despair that drives a man to Priety have been put dn the dramatic pages, for above |a84,2 ty to make the So ateainiay meeting of the Anti-Slavery | dividual needs and to get busy helping | spc bhai lbabrset lage tte fite| ae : all this spectacular figure who lost his last battle at bk rt will learn to be a Uttie gentle. Society. iisd die ect ian eA - yanadnisladnetind Por we discover, as we get experience in living, that | Miami Beach yesterday was a great showman. apenas ie troops se! the U. S.| The trouble today is wilder man. But the scamp only gets worse; ® fered, scholastic those of post-mar- TEN YEARS AGO tt tae Commonplace can shield wonders. In the daily rou-|_ Cowboy, Klondiker, gambling hall proprietor, gold | MAP... But the scam shamefully,” ie ‘ se feb racic donee prt aaa a Mrs. Peter Reid has received word miner, he struck his gait finally as a promoter of prize- | [°.tTe2! 1898—Battleship Maine ordered to! branch and that branch of science in riage, 4 eter Reid has received wo 4 ‘fee strange and noble things; men struggling fights, and in that field blazed a career the like of which creat ae seh wh bd Pee Havana. sisting that it’s what the patient es 8 from her son Niel, telling of his safe 4 fgainst long odds to be decent and horerable, women | the prize ring never saw before—and may never see ‘fis way, you mustn't look ed |needs. The-very array of help offered POOR WOMEN arrival in New York. eA tnt look on Robert | gg | maken parenthood more of @ job than! ‘The queer part of the whole mix-uj fighting loneliness to make someone else’s life easier, |snalh as a bad little boy. If he is all you BARBS ever with the many choices presented noth ihe|_H. H. Bond, superintendent. of fathers and mothers sacrificing in silence for the sake| He made millionaires out of Dempsey, Tunney and say he is, arrogant and strong-willed | | | it as to whatts bee tor the Oftspring, | 5,¢0at Siete hier pin will | Schools in Slope county, is attending Of thelr children. The most uneventful life has a thou-|/imsclf. He took over Madison Square Garden, long a| and selfish, it only classifies him as|@ we owe + Jail, insist that they forgive all, be waiting for him when his prison |the superintendents convention here. white clephant with its bookkeeping all in the red, made .| Correspondents neglected to men- sand leopholes through which may be seen courage, fi- iB ard Bone that 4s quite common. indeed, gabe fs sentence is over, and love him, any- . s vy ES ® success of it, built a new one and put that into the big Some people call it ‘superiority com-|tion that the betrothal of Helen TWO WIV! Gelity and kindness. money. oe : Tex Rickard took |PCt, but. there reelly is no. such | Wills, queen of the tennis courts, and | oe ap Rae ie oa Petr) j litt As an Associate: ‘ess writer says, Tex Rickal 00k | thing. Psychologists know him as an young Moodv of San Franci was salary ¥ Hay one eee oud Ses Srey ie: prizefighting out of the “ham and egg” class and put it ‘extravert.’ The extravert is so sure! a love match. hundreds of dollars short in his ac. Commonplace path a road of wonders, be-|into the field of big business He dramatized the prize-|of himself that he hends everything tone pthey demonstrate that the world is not & mere | fight as it never had been dramatized before. With un- | around him, including his family and|* Popular colors for spring will be turmoil devoid of hope or light, but" place | canny skill he cultivated public snuerest i pepvenning friends, to his own will.” bonnet mpg hoe oleae and love, Prizefights, with the eager and efficient help o: “And can’t we teach him anything? ; rosand. jus are blue, yellow, green Dae a mnerittoent ziving | Poe nenia, (With the: eagee fought for the chance to| Can't we make him behave? Can't I | and rose promoted! b dinner after spending the past year travel- be defeated. And we know if these things pay forty dollars for ringside seats. In another field, he | punish him?” H aed home, eating dessert in cone pe and, ing for several magazines. They to matter in how small quantities, amid the dust of | was a modern P. T. Barnum “Tt will only make him worse, The| Maybe the young man Cleveland an short, putting the deception across have covered most of the southern ‘Sommonplace, somewhere they are ‘nfinite and ever-| Yet even in this outstanding success in this strange | extravert usually resents punishment. | police arrested as he was about to go | for several months. 3 28 and eastern states, field, principle was involved. For Tex Rickard has this | It outrages his conviction of hi; own ‘into a trance shouldn't have been A choral club has been organized in Bismarck with Miss Bergliot Cas- pary as director and business man- ager. Delig# and Betty Clooten and Rose Winkel have returned to Bismarck four-dation for his success: that his word was as good as| importance. There is @ better way {arrested at all. He may have been TO MABRY OR NOT An 83-year-old Civil War veteran of 5 his bond, and that his promises were always kept. He|to teach your headstrong Robert Pat training to become a prohi- ao ee reat ap ner peat Philadelphia, one Joseph Brown, mar- BROADENING JOURNEYS was @ squareshooter. control himself and to consider | bition officer. recent sc ‘under penalty of|tied ® 20-year-old girl the other day. Btates is a nation of travelers. Wander- —_____ others.” Piste Tings cf undergrie es from distant shores settled it and wanderers advancea| WHY CAMERA MEN FOLLOW THE GREAT Seen fe piace, sont dave him And if the American people ever stopped (Devils Lake Journal) will only bulldoze ‘{WEndering, they have revived the custom. In today’s Associated Press story about President-elect | 4 either of them Hoover's trip to Florida where he will spend a short vaca- “About 400,000 Americans visited foreign countries last tion before his inauguration, it is told that the pres- sand the American Automobile Association makes ident-elect's party includes a number of newspapermen i worse. u; Se amazing estimate that 44,000,000 tourists—more than |and newspaper photographers. One might wonder why a} «pave ia third of the population—made long motor trips during- | high Public official may not go about without being f61- | boys, older t lowed by an army of reporters and news camera men. It himse! Ywelve months. The increase in steamship-passage | is something rather new, as far as the age of the world of his feelings and who will | ‘was 21.4 per cent in 1928, is concerned. However, it is merely another effort on oe to use him a little rougi & billion dollars was 5] part of newspapers to not only keep their readers wel any of his come-uppance on drovping off, better investigate. May- foreign countries, which re sbaaeg inane informed as to the doings of the great, but also a con- When he learns that he will get tit- ‘be they have come home. Presents an increase | seientious attempt to preserve for posierity not only the = — - ee of over 1927. An even larger sum must have utterances and activities of the great. but also photo- been. by the millions who did their traveling on the | graphs, “stills” and “movies,” of the doings of our great ; heme grounds, for several hundred dollars can be spent |™en. Had there been motion picture cameras and com: men. Deen, motion picture cameras and | OUR BOARDING HOUSE by @ family party on one vacation auto tour. int Seporvers in the days when Cheops Lies , i fh : osepanenl during the summer months is hav- crs heen owen Ada wife ae he pp : x = et or i est |e nied ity te Seee| | I eaap Sane, cant Woo WY cau Vuanoue IAT] sireasibten the basi of national unity | io written recorts nied thn Siete or ae ant SEE Ym IF I HAD “He RUN Nu. 4 BROTHER OF HISs~ fapding. This nomadic life has created a new| ing today, and, if the world is destroyed there will be no OF THis HouSE,~THAT IS, \ NY “. BUT NOBODY HoLDs T HAVE, 4 Wit “HE “THAT AGAINST ME ,~~ EXCEPTION OF “THe FINANCE: ww AN HE WANTS ME “uBR UMa I LEAVE THAT BEE Hi See its great men today, because the newspaner reporters and the camera men are constantly on their heels. This is an plished nothing else, this “seeing America” age of utmost intimacy between the activities of public more than vindicated by the impetus it has | Officials and the people whom they serve. Ss "| tourist business—which seems to be equit- | one left to want these records or photographs. Further- d, bestowing its benefits upon all forty- | more, the entire nation knows all about the public lives o! = , “fo PAY RaOM. AN’: BOARD FoR VISITA” ]O Shunt Our Yesterdays ee ita aes TO MARTHA ~~ AHEM ~~ FS i TH’ BILL IS the purchase and development of forests ane THE FUTURE OF DURUM a SAVING, | {- HIM?! Soead WHY, Ive 1 “FORTY YEARS AGO Nationa) monuments as public parks. It has cre. WELL, AS I WAS ’ the demand needed to Provide the utilitarian excuse Durum cane Gute te mite ta ee they are get- Z ww IF IT WERE ALL UP BEEN IN wee] MEAN , an 7 peat elle or vith Bienes ‘The n meter for park purposes. ting close to the end of their rope, or else they will some- Z “To ME, YoU COULD STAY “To SMV, PP Get r) rothers ‘ at Hamilton, and will leave pte vi Z (TE BETIER TALITY Sa e soon for the new. location. THE OLD FARM DAYS y HERE INDEFIAITELY Ee : es ‘ WS fan newspaper man, moved to the depths by a | Vailed during the last two years will bring disaster. Italy is our best. in fact practically our only, c 6 weather, writes feelingly of winter life on the | durum. It takes on the average 40 million old days.. 4 @ year, some from North Africa, but moat of i shelled sev 5s aia oe ope rey ‘bushel, has suetdined 1 $ rm | 00. durum cents a § sul easty dawn, wrenching te fertilizer manufacturers and has ordered Ii to use a stated amount on ; = picks si SHows You in : Mrs. Helen M. Baker, territorial ‘ ident of the W. C, T. U., and Mrs. . E. Johnston, publicity worker, have been invited by the local W. C. T. U. to speak on some of the bills before ‘the legislature. i u il ge i Ha i F : i Bage ue Se f il a5 Hl iratéer. iE i a | eli i HY Coes arti Ty a