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PAGE FOUR - ex The Bismarck Tribume | om’: tise sends ns une woking for tna voller preset ll bade once It makes a difference, apparently, whether a place 1s THE STA ( heen ‘a your home town or just a vacation spot. ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 23, 1929 HEALTH DIET ADVICE * . _ Published by the Bismarck [ribune Company His- WE KEEP ON HOPING Marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice et Bismarck) 1 the town of Orrville, O., a four-year-old boy was -* . Se sesond class, mal) matter. kidnaped eight weeks ago. Since his disappearance the 1 RECARD To HEAL! ME George D. Mann ............., President ano Pubusnes | KanaPed clsht weeks ago. Since his disappearance the Fa: E I Py! byt at Bubecription Kates Payable tn Advance zens have helped. A famous private detective has been aNncLOSse Yr CN G8 MOORES eevnone yy Daily by + $7.20 / retained. But no trace has been found. Apparently he A 9 P Daily a ont is gone rae sis id ick ots tain BEA AND Uak #108 cosine ‘pation and tis Ga tthe ietie Rea i fu ya ‘ There is no doubt that the mental ‘ i tant some people suffer from sea- G ha is ed in the living room of her home. It was just two aicnaas vhigs 6h part in |_, While peopl A fegftthe ha days after Christmas that the boy disappeared, and the Christmas tree was still standing. The mother has kept it there ever since with the little chap’s toys grouped the production of seasickness, Pas- sengers on a boat. will sometimes be- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer sez nEEE ggg mail, even before the boat a) questions on health end De: year ioc epdon Een 1.50 | around it on the floor. Every night the tree is lighted. a rags tay a ye oe q fe bunks Gare OP tte ae Bureao of Circelation “He'll come back, some day,” she says. “And when he sailed, the hein ise. Tribune. derecho ais does he'll be terribly disappointed if the tree isn't there. a haere ee ear ack Oo, Enclose @ stamped eddressea Member of The Associated Press He loved it so much. So we're keeping it ready for him.” almost anything which will remind || envelope for reply. the, arhtpe apa Ge a ia probable that death has never re. e symptoms one Is of ®/ ts ~ sensitive nature. For instance, the | sulted-from this cause alone, even ‘smell of grease near a train may pro- |though the symptoms are most dis- duce car-sickness, or looking at the | tressing and un| swaying motion of a boat. Everi mo-| In seasickness there is usually a tion pictures showing waves and/general discomfort and perhaps a ships have produced seasickness in | headache, a large production of saliva, susceptible people. Usually, however, | and nausea soon followed by there is some physical cause in addi-| and vomiting. Some relief is usually tion to the psychic impulses. Some | experienced after the stomach has of the physical factors are: an over- | been emptied of its contents and the loaded stomach, congestfon of the | bowels moved. This indicates the liver, tumors, pregnancy, visual de- | proper course of treatment. fects, or a disturbance of the balanc- om ing fluid in the inner ear. Usually, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS some one or more of these physical Spinal Meningitis factors are present in addition to} Question: E. W. asks: “Will you holding the thought of expecting sea- | please give me a thorough descrip- sickness. tion, cause, symptoms, etc., of spinal Most passenger boats have the/| meningitis? What ages are most lia- American plan of serving food, and |ble to have it, and is there a cure?” Passengers take advantage of this sit-/ Answer: I have written several vation by cating all they can as often | special articles on this subject, and as possible, and they may have over- | will be glad to send them to you if eaten even before going on a trip. / you will only send your address the By being comparatively inactive on | next time you write. It is impossible board the boat or train, they do not) to give a satisfactory answer to four digest and assimilate as large a quan- | question in this column, as space does tity of food as normally. It is a good | not permit. Plan to start these trips with an Rye Bread empty stomach and to eat sparingly! Question: Mrs. B. W. asks: . “Is until one has become accustomed ‘to| rye bread starchy, and would it be the motion of traveling. * harmful for one to eat who is on a If the visual defect is responsible | diet for inward goitre which causes for your seasickness, you can be easily | rapid heart beat and whose blood cured by having properly fitted | pressure is at times above normal?” ee A pregnant woman becomes icp kl It i very difficult to then everything will be fine. CHIL DREN la: easily nauseated from the pressure | obtain bread made from rye flour, as height of the storm the daughter of a stock- | yes, and a plane of a sort to take off a Sas ra cs ene Geite prasiare The near-| The Christmas tree, blazing in that Ohio home for a d {rough places and splinters, and I am upon. the sensitive nerve-plexuses. most of this bread contains only from ma | @ carpenter not to be despised. And Many persons find that the swaying | 10 to 15 Per cent of rye flour mixed z oy who probably will never come’ back, is a SYMbO) 00 6 fe 30 miles away, at the town of Cotton- 3 movement of the body such as in the | with wheat flour. In any case all ot 2 ’ all of us, And there is in it just a faint ray of en-| 4y Olive Roberts Barton ‘1 think other mothers will be as much rolling chair or in a swing will bring | bread is starchy, and I do not recom- ALLENE SUMNER, The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use} Strange, how people cling to hope. The hardest thing tor republication of all news dispatches credited rel "on earth, for most of us, is to accept tragedy at its worst. or not otherwise Papeutalienis origin auktatibo Gorath So long as there is the faintest gleam of hope we will SE an fants cf sonibllcebon of al) other matter herein | hold fast to it, even though it stretches our misery out are also reserved. over many days and weeks. We can’t get ourselves to face the ultimate calamity if there is any way of dodging We Foreign Representatives it. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Yet it may be that this is a good thing. cwIcAGo NEW YORE .... Fifth Ave. Siig. DETROI1 How many of us are kept going by the fact that deep Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg | down we keep the faded remnant of an ancient hope that we long since ought to have discarded? Most of us, (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Probably. We delude ourselves with worn-out dreams, A ii THE FRONTIER SPIRIT and pretend that the hard reality is softer than it looks; Ser die pal ; and thereby we manage to keep at work and do our ‘We like to say that we have left the frontier a long parts in the world. way behind us. Our grandfathers, living in Isolated} probably that’s inevitable. All of us start out with wilderness settlements, used to have to battle mightily high dreams and brave plans. We tell ourselves that last Cvery winter with snow, cold and loneliness, but We| some day—ten or twenty years hence—we shall have have a habit of saying that all of that sort of thing 18] made the world our oyster and opened it. Perhaps we buried in the past. Automobiles, telephones, good roads | gre after some very material bit of success in the work- and @ rapidly increasing population—so they tell us— aday world, or perhaps it is a more vague desire to get of have set us free. rich experience and full development of our hidden ‘We — Maybe so. But there are still plenty of places in the | powers; it doesn’t matter, that early desire is the main- United States where a winter blizzard calls for just as | spring that keeps us plodding forward. much fortitude, endurance and bravery as it did two| Unfortunately, most of us miss our aim by a mile. Generations ago. The frontier, at times, is nearer than | We fail to get the success we had in mind, we fail to we think. achieve the™full experience and the emergence of our A terrific snowstorm struck the northwest recently. | latent abilities as we had planned; and if we made our- In Idaho the drifts were 10 feet deep. Roads were im-| Selves realize it, it would be too much for us. So we passable; a high wind and bitter cold added to the| whistle to keep our courage up. We tell ourselves that le I am passing the YOUR dal Givi ea - difficulties of dwellers in lonely ranches. some day, somehow, we shall get what we are after, and eee picks mine wee el Beery g85. 5.822 5 surprised and pleased as I was when \ " Couragement. There is just an outside chance that NBA Service,I about the same feeling as that pro-| mend either bread or anything made ‘The father put his daughter in a covered sleigh and ky Lat citing bby di one aoe fae! Aer ors by ne. it turned out my first piece of play- cued the ae Haetetth “om boat. ie Neen eel the time one is try- R ss 2 ere, ‘i iz. sometimes a mental sugges- recover from any kind of thy- rest of us: by @ lucky chance, our hidden dreams may | | any eee atte tone tet | gpoenells canbe Reet nc, Pale). atha--tulcia'” says Invector Err tied | Smt WAFOUD CELA gBOMUNIIOR OF neneae ried derangement or when one’s blood yet come true. So we keep on hoping. ! on a level witl: your chin, chairs had esohinelia bunnies ibomgrery ny De , will make en English- ae be overcome to a large ex-| pressure is too high. i i Goose char world of women wear the | tent Positive autosuggestion. The Ache in Back of Neck Somehow they got word to some neighbors. The next . THE WILD HO ef see Bereithog hi recleelnemrrnernnnen | greatly to the general ensemble if the peers fashions. It's all because Amer- | Secret is to think about other things| Question: Mrs. M.T. C. writes: morning a handful of cowbo: heir G PASSETH brush is dipped into a contrasting . 10) “ ys appeared. Driving the Wood containing drawers as impos- | color of aid aoe jican producers got the “talkie” idea |@nd develop concentration upon some-| “For about a year I have suffered animals ahead of the sleigh, the cowboys plunged to| The wild razorback hog, for years one of the most | "OM open as the sides of Pikes|crcr Yoeunt buy enamel now they | first and are spreading their English. | thing’ to be desired rather than upon | with am ache Lo tre back of my neck. their necks in the drifted snow to break the path for Striking bits of animal life in the state of Arkansas, | Soe ahecin aioe na | speaking wares abroad. the swaying’ motion. It does not ache constantly, but at hout the day they kept at it. The| ‘5 @pparently on the verge of extinction. Living with all that over-sized fur- Judging by most of the “talkies”| It is a wise plan to cleanse the | different times during the day. Can Br cremnont the day they kept at it. Students at the University of Arkanses plan to present | Riture you would get very tired, would le © | Save, heard, it's too bad if little In- | system thoroughly before starting on | you tell me what is the cause of aa sleigh moved forward by inches. Men and horses forced Sack is you not? Everything over your head BARBS dians, Sioux and Crow, little frosty |@ Journey if you are afraid of sea or| Answer: Such an ache in the beck themselves to keep at it to the limit of their endurance, | @ "20rback to the undergraduate who is held to have everything to be reached for, i] '! Eskimos, and all the rest get to jab-|Car sickness. This can be done by | of the neck with a woman always in- Bravely and painfully, they made their way over the | done the most for the university during the present school tugged at, climbed on! ° © | bering in English the way the movie | ©#ting sparingly for a few days upon | dicates some pelvic derangement, or by ‘ong 30-mile stretch of blocked roads to the town of | Year When they adopted this plan they figured that| Our houses are very tiring to little GLORITYING GOLDFISH actors and actresses do. & Careful diet and also using enemas. | misplacement of the abdominal or- bs getting the porker would be the least of their troubles, {children That is why parents are|, The Illinois Humane Society has| To me, nothing: in the world has | Seasickness is always enervating to| ane ‘The wone ‘Ce the neck is a Cottonwood. ifts | But now they are finding that the razorback is by no|™aking so much effort now to put {begun the inspection of Chicago's | ever been as futile; annoying and the system and should be avoided if' definite reflex from these organs Finally, late at night, they passed the last of the drifts y no little chairs, tables, and beds in play- 10,000 goldfish residents to see that together unnecessary as the “talkies,” | Possible. In some cases severe col-| which are located at exactly the other and reached the town. The girl was operated on and|™€&ns as common as he used to be. rooms and nurseries. It used to be | ‘hey are properly housed, : watered | and I'm no conservative either. lapee is noticed and may result in an|end of the spine. = a cacgatnsnatd she secuid sescver. Accordingly, @ bulletin from the university's news| considered a luxury but now it 1¢|8nd fed. And kept away from the ee % ‘That sort of thing used to be commonplace in America, | DUTeau says that the students are going to make a state- looked upon as well-nigh a necessity. | flowing bowl! . . . Why doesn't the CHILD PRODIGIES Popular z humane society go in for giving suck- In the old days every small town in the northern part | Wide search for a razorback. Time was when wild hogs Cull¢’s ‘Fernitare ers an even break? ... Some bi Nathalia Crane, the child wonder n pis : ig | poo i of the country took such experiences as part of the | WeFe So plentiful as to be a veritable nuisance—but that Lenton thie sapien oo movement like this might prove the Lot awasicicy esol cpa iba A E RI c ‘AN reguiir winter routine. = has passed. Arkansas is no longer a backwoods | and it is now possible to buy the most. Rian wants matioas anecr antici (thor, William J. Locke, in a talking M : Naturally, such conditions called fos physical endur- | 5‘4te. 7 F brs haga children’s furniture imagin- inquire earnestly about farm re- pte (Bisa boca debt Ean aed H | ST ORY ance and courage. No race of weaklings could survive . Re Gn eee But when the household budget | ef... We had been thinking that Nathalia is rapidiy approaching the in such circumstances. It is probably true that a good| Medical scientists have figured there are 400 ways to| yout budge enough to allow us to | 80ldfish, in order to live in a tough | tate of Jackie Coogan; she's 15 now FEBRUARY 23 | part of what we like to consider our typically American at suicide, or 472 inclusive of current brands of | walk into a store and send home one te Clana cee gi rere and it won't be long that the world|isi3 British cutter “Caledonian” | energy, fortitude and daring are the product of the i : of these quaint little painted sets, captured U. 8. “Albion.” rigorous training school of the old-fashioned winter. will marvel at her genius, even though 2 Do -Something- Big-For-A- Goldfish | .. tl is ‘eal reason why chil- some of her output should b2 mar- here is no i a why the chil- | Weck? .. . It probably is a whale wha 1848—John Quincy Adams, ex-presi- drei id - veled at, no matter what he Such things don't happen as often as they used to. MERIC tenicae ne Tg idea, but it certainly sounds pedi ee dent of the United States, | ‘They are the exception now, and not the rule. But it is | Editori: . P “ “OBSCENE” ied. comforting to see that when they do happen, people itorial Comment pillaged With all the tumult and shouting |1861—Presicent-elect LineoIn ar-| a Rs IE RS ington Who remembers the dim, distant he trial of rit it W: are still capable of meeting them. The ability to face ance, They ea, With & ttle assist- | day when a lady used to complain |SeUt the trial of Mrs,"Mary Ware ner Bt Was cold,. darkness and storm is one of our most valuable LINDBERGH FAILS TO MEASURE UP ae ipaethagsthss poten ae me boat getting wed, on her aa i See nies, eon ia 1870—Mississippi admitted to rep-| heritages. So long as we continue to possess it we can (McLean County Independent) or’ blue enamel, and ipboisered’ on Lage cd snip | the same “obscene matter” being her resentation in Congress, hat the mews Dave served us all’ They have proved! with matrimonial entanglements, And the public, gene] 27ght cretonne. Presto—a stool or started out. All day they fought the blizzard. By night ; room furniture. they had made so little headway that they had to turn back. RSBRTRISISSER F Secssags is date in vesncaaeres Acheearo 47. FAILURE TO USK IN. d © FORMATION GalNED “The Sex Side of Life, An Explana- | Our Yesterdays | FROM BIDDING atmosphere they created for the rep- ¥ shat the strain of the hardy frontiersmen is still strong. | crally, may see it as quite the most improper thing that | all divant erations conference. {ign for Young People,” most of the | Our Yesterdays a North (Dummy) ~— a932 f Q4 Q1073 Q Old} anies can be sawed off and * 4% Siinpent geomet eno have ure ; painted match. Oblong boxes “ , | anything of sex literature for e : OUR- FOOLISHNESS Wall Street beney 1 eo Rie gut the, daughtex of | fumed on end make cute little cup: Nee yecrman., “the silent barber” | young. can only remark that this FORTY YEARS. AGO our iis coffee and darn his socks, | hoards if cretonne curtains are hung |C! New York, has retired with a for- |Zoune grown, prenet its Rind 4 The present age, according to Congressman Huddle-| especially when there are an abundance of prairie fo NE | tune of @ half million. Not so dumb. PS eaieapl “ . | Hon. Thomas Elliott, has returned | ston of Alabama, is the most foolish age in history. daughters who might more fittingly play that role. opening. Small boxes can ** * F. - to his home in Ransom county, ‘After flying al th Li has finally de- | ¢ fitted inside to hold various be- You'll know when tea 'AMILY DOCTOR eae Pi We have been indulging in so loud a chorus of self- T flying all over the earth Lindy Y de- | iongings, spring is just! Morris L. Ernst, who defended Mrs.| Onty 93 bers of the h - late! cided that the daughter of Dwight Morrow, Wall Street > around the corner—it’s just before Dennett and asked dismissal of th ly members jouse re- w | Praise lately that this is a rather jarring note. Surely, banker, ahd present Ain dor to Mexico, out of all Put-on Your Thinking Cap the lady of the house begins casting | jn ‘die the 2 t main in the city. Many of those who est— £ $e must be wiser than the Alabama gentleman thinks. | the fair daughters-of earth is the only damsel fit to eit |, T°. make Sey eee an, lithe |a disgusted eye at the winter's grime | ‘ntl cher ened the argument | aid not accompany the legislative ex. | Leads @ ¢ | Let's look into the matter. . across the table from him three times daily. pean "Agei thaw sleet bones on the front porch. family physician for séx instruction, _ | CU’s!on to Helena, have gone to their } A little more than 10 years ago the nations of the world We are not greatly concerned with-whom Lindbergh onan tia ‘very handy. ome CF ima tad * #* 2, ‘ ~ ways afterwards that child homes over Sunday. tinished fighting a war that nearly wrecked all but a few | 110, marry, but we do see this decision as a gesture of | Sot may te sana’ two-inch Lei - ersome and | will inevitably associate in his mind a humble newspaper man might do to criticise great FOS PRD East~ 1 South (Declarer)— his attitude and how it with the teachings of his that, but just think of the number tere aiid. Sores Pores: Suantoby ta tbe t of them—a war fought to end war. Today all of them father, the ate reeaean Lindbergh of ‘Minnesota, soft aes sey, procarene at a plan- a male lives it saves, oan teat tae gla pede of Sripnss pa $ Rio's : na breparing for a new war more energetically than ever Lindbesghis tastier ea “ end of the People, an oppon- ae ty pasteded on Fcc = (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Ine.) | akin to a disease, and as such fear- TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO O98 : ore. of interests: of reet, and he gave e | sawed into pieces at home. As T have some and unpleasant.” 4 . AI9865 4 Tt costs $600 cd a Lon-| which does sound sensible , ts ial United States has more money than any other the feaen omen of conditions for the general run of done these things Pres ee to fecd a anise rather: ee. page eter) nie : Country on earth and enjoys a greater Prosperity; yet a} His famous son, following in the footsteps of his = e -son, and to look after some land in- : eh aenpagsord like the late Senator Oscar Underwood parit could do more to bring about the betterment of terests in Morton county. . ae an te of but $50,000, while an Arnold Roth- | Conditions for the people his father loved than any oth- Bs pA bids one spade. South bids no-trump. F 4 stein—gambler, dope purveyor and racketeer —leaves |" M&M now living. Were the young Lindbergh to lift : ~ =~ By Ahern A reward of $1,000 for the appre-| West bids two spades. North bic: © about $3,000,000. up his voice in protest against the same interests against hension of the men who removed a |two no-trump ‘and all pass, 3 whom his father worked, the cause of the common people rail from the Northern Pacific tracks ‘1 Our largest city, New York, tied into a knot by traffic | could be advanced materially. But he rejects his fath- |. @ongestion and unbearable crowding, continues to erect | €*’s teachings, and entangles himself with the gang that | SO-story skyscrapers that will make the congestion and drove his father to his. death, the gang that persecuted AH, BuT JOUN MY FRIEND, EA oo, infinitely worse. : “Young Lisdbeye coud inte men tees for good in CHARGEE You oS Him TH’ MAJOR MY ER + HAS. fo ng penn oui paleo gid whose chief | the Hatton, a Jeader ot te Seogressive Bamement who BLoot / You PAY STRUCK on OW HIS LAND A ~ qualification , and then won- | Could have gone far people's deliverance. eal e si Fe a Se pane a aes eas ER aman et| |} ME DOLLA Steitees Jp You SAVY Min Ou 2 yas » le our young people to. here fe # 7 : Spend ts 0. college Ass Adee ia that he has-capitulated to Big Business, and has sunk CENT LIGHT Now J. OF DOLLARS f TH mMa3or cent for each gopher destroyed in the | MAY not hold King of clubs. There his opportunity to serve humanit the merging of \ 1 his life work with that of the explgtiers of ‘humanity. ee ME NO CARE IF county during the month of April, _| !5 no necessity of taking an unneces- YoU MAJA -HooPLa social life 1s infinitely more important than scholarship, sary risk, "And then wonder why there is so much “materialism” is Ric y PR in the land, GLORIFYING A MAKER OF HISTORY BLUDDA |e HE Owe. ‘Soot! WEALTHY: MituanaiRe t., ° # “Big Bill” ME T0O LOTSA money! = May hence Fe bat ee Hy : diamonds e No ‘ “ > TH” JOR 9 n- | OF King of clubs.’ West’s raise how- | ainsi eu, il ray ashe fects TELLING “WAT: HE IS Goma < peer suse rel tad Tie Sab aes on learning that. Premier Mussolini has been following Bae : \ ‘lo Buy You, a held act te besa ear Peep lore deter- in use. The geographies, it , | | \roe = j f — “thts tt Pros- | are too conservative in.their delineations of Italy's fron- = H Pe " me P bonis a eee : tiers and future expansion, and the histories, Uke those Se 3s ; , in American schools, fail to do full justice to the nation’s