Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
= * Sugar company has a large summer palace of this mate- . houses. The idea of the Washington house was derived PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune AB Independent Newspaper THE STATES OLDES] NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | manifests Ms divinity in strangely beautiful ways; what lis tt manifesting here? We cannot find the answers to these questions. We only know that side by side with the poets and heroes and capiains and magnificently gallant. self-sacrificing wip. | BEN and women who convince us of the world’s ulti- mate nobility and beauty there exist things like this; lives that are shaded and stunted and turned iuto Te twisted parodies of humanity. These things ye They are unspeakably dreadful. And we never ourselves on our advancement until we have | sed, somehow, to alter conditions so that such | cannot happen. by the Bismarck Iribune Company D., and entered at the postoifice at Bismarcs class mail matter. acccccceesceee President ano Publisner t | THE WOOL FOOL | A group of business men to whom North Dakoia con- | fides some of its expectations of a greater future for | | the state is meeting here today. They are the members | 1.50! of the Slope Wool Growers pool. | | In the new agriculture to which the decline of wheat }a@s a profitable crop at all times has led, sheep raising The Associated Press ts exciusively entitied to the ed Pa — haat Std oe snes asin ae fr! peal lor republication of all news dispatches credited tc nt oa Udo aha Not only in hope but here . | or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and alse] in fact. as well. i the local news of spontaneous origin publishea herein Sheep, lamb and wool prices have been high for, All rights of republication of all other matter Berein co, ora) years, and farmers who have had the benefit ot | ere also ncome have not only been able to offset the adver- | sities of grain but have prospered the fortunes of the | state in general with the wealth brought in from the Nocks. Is tatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Firth Ave Bidg. | : : ! { cHIcAGO Kresge Bidg | THe sheep industry of North Dakota is one to be| Tower Bigg | wisely encouraged. Every farm should have some wool- (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ‘ies. Thus they would provide little rills of income for | the owners and these little rills, flowing together, mean PHILIPPINES A TIMBER HOPE ) a considerable stream of wealth brought into the state. As the timber supplies of the nation become more and Tnere can, in fact, be no real diversification without more depleted and reforestation lags hopelessly be-| creep They thrive where other farm animals will not. | hind the ever-increasing demand for lumber, what is | They keep down weeds. They provide the wool crop at | this country going to do about it? Jone season and the lamb crop at the other end of the | For one thing, it will have to turn to substitutes. More | year. homes will have to be built of Hebron brick and concrete; The Slope pool marketed 226,000 pounds of woo! last | _ around here. In places, perhaps, the old house whose; season and brought in $94,000. By pooling, the sheep | © walls are constructed of tamped soil will become a sub- men obtained a higher price than otherwise might have | | been the case. However, not all wool growers of this | territory are in the pool. It would seem to be to their | interest to get in and cooperate with those now consti- | tuting the organization, for whatever benefits the pool ; creates must more or less slop over into the pockets | of those outside. They should give their membership and support in return. There are signs of such a move- ment, as recent wool meetings at Hebron and other; points on the edge of the Slope territory. The pool meets here to set its house in order for the stitute type. The vice president of the Great Western rial and form of structure in California and a scientist at Georgetown university has a large mansion built of the same material opposite Washington. Both structures are substantial and comfortable from knowledge of similar buildings hundreds of years old and as hard as rock, in England. The California house was the outcome of the sugar company’s experi- mentation in building adobe cottages for the Mexican | approaching wool season. May the same wisdom guide it sugar beet labor in Colorado and Montana. The Mon- | that made last season such a successful one. tana gumbo made durable sun-dried building blocks the iittala i size of an ordinary loaf of bread. Coated with liquid TWO CAN EARN MORE THAN ONE cement the outer wall surface of the buildings became | Investigations conducted in various cities disclose an | impervious to rain and snow and the blocks have be- ; increasing tendency among married women and mothers come so hard they drill like stone. | to enter into gainful occupations. One-third of the 40,- But wood has so many more uses than merely form- | 000 employed women in the nation’s capital are mar- ing the walls of homes, that the lumber problem re- | Ticd and many of that number are mothers. Many are mains even after greater use of brick and cement and ated by the desire for financial independence and even pounded earth are weighed in the scales of sub- | others by economic necessity. stitution. America will have to find supplies in some | 4 family are often necessary to make both ends meet. way if it is to go on fabricating as it has in this mate-| Here is a subject demanding serious cpnsideration. If rial, wood. the time comes when the vast majority of women must There is no article of commerce into which the cost of wood is not figured somewhere. From baby-car- riages to coffins, there is the constant call for wood. The radio, automobile and aeroplane have increased the de- mand for lumber. The basis of nearly every industry | is wood. Our population is increasing about 1,000.000 a year. North America uses about one-half of all the timber consumed in the world. The railroads of the United States use about 130,000,000 new ties every year—about 3.000 to a mile. About 5,000,000 trees are cut annually j homes and support children the inevitable outcome will tion would mean race suicide. | And, in the final analysis, the fact must not be lost | sight of that economic laws work both ways. Large fam- | lies are now forcing mothers into gainful occupations. | be fewer homes and children. To permit such a condi- | Veloping every mental and physical | P |spends hours aimlessly idle he will 18 With large numbers of women thus engaged the birth jone trouble with too much time spent | ¢ rate must fall. The receding birth rate and children /on books. A child who reads con- | | reaching the self-supporting age will release more |Stantly is living vicariously—picking | 4 mothers and wives from outside employment, with the |UP impressions through the experi- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Speaking of ‘Blindfold Tests CHILDREN | & Olive Roberts Barton ©1928 by NBA ServiceInc The human body and human mind ae are peculiar things. They do not; _ February 27 i wear out with use, but with abuse—/1815—Congress awarded Maj. Ge and one of the most pernicious forms of abuse is idleness. ' A body will rust out and a mind} all-round boy or girl. of New Orleans. they will wear out. Too much work } is bad, but too little is worse. This ; goes for children, too, although in; their case we must class work and Congressional resolution. | enter the factories, stores and offices to help maintain | play together under the head of “ac- | 1875—Spain paid $80,000 indemnity ; } to America for families of the | men shot in the “Virginius : Tt ti Play is Nature’s way of de-/| rocess a child possesses. If he’ Massacre.” become a dullard. bill. Don’t Overdo Reading tered Reading is excellent, but there is! BARBS much of anything makes the good, | AME RICAN HIS TORY An inaugural ball without either a n. | President or First Lady smacks of a Andrew Jackson a gold medal | Bice breakfast of ham and eggs with- for services at the victory of Out the ham or eggs. But the sale of tickets at $15 a couple goes mer- ee ik i );rily on. Since they can't lure Presi- Two bread winners in will rust out, much, more easily than gaara te A vOnIEeine Lon ali gent and Mrs. Hoover to their own restricting franchise because ; of race or color proposed by ball, the committee has hopes of in- ducing John Coolidge and his fiancee, Florence Trumbull, to attend. | * * * CATS AND KINGS will be interesting to see how country responds to an inaug- ; Without one. I am inclined to believe !1s97—Indemnity for lors of regis-|that what with all forms of modern | | h science, the radio, telephoto. news | reel, talking film. and all that. bring- | ing the great of the earth nearer to 1, the humble man and woman. the cats | will not rush to look at kings, even jit kings aren't there. as they HEALTH “DIET ADVICE WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1929 SOFT DIETS ‘While fasting must not be consid- ered a “cure-all,” it is indicated at the beginning of the treatment for any disorder, as practicaily any pa- tient is benefited by seg vegetable or milk diet for a \e. I do not advocate the ordinary soft which consist of a mixture of milk custards, gruels and soups. This diet is sometimes given after an opera- tion by the doctor who believes that these foods are more readily digested than the ordinary food served in the hospital. This assumption is a serious mistake, and I am sure that some of the complications from operations arise because of the wrong diet. If custards are properly made with- out the addition of sugars and | starches they will be quite readily di- gested and not produce unpleasant {disturbances in the alimentary canal. Milk requires much time for its di- }gection and unless used in the right | *¥ay more harm can result from the foods were used. It takes from four to six hours for a glass of milk to leave the stomach and if other foods {are used at the same time it may take longer. {| Mushes of all kinds are inclined to lcause digestive disturbances because ;of the large amount of starch they |contain. Oatmeal mush or gruel. | Which is commonly used, is irritating |to the stomach and should be used jonly by those who are in good health. There is no reason for giving this highly starchy food to a patient who is confined to bed. One of the great- est difficulties efter an abdominel {operation of any kind is to avoid ex- cessive flatulence, and for this rea- son starches and sugars should be avoided. If there is a reason Soft dict, it is far better to use a soft cooked egg combined with some of the non-starchy vegetables, such as spinach, summer squash, string beans, eic. These vegetables should be cooked in a small amount of water mashed and seasoned with cream, if desired. In place of the egg it is all right to substitute Salisbury steak to a limited amount. Occasionally, I still advise an exclu- sive water fast but only for a few days to assist in flushinz the system. This is sometimes advisable ct the start of the treatment for arthritis, rheumatism, cystitis and various toxic diseases. The best method is for the Patient to drink one or two glasses of distilled water every half hour dur- | ing his waking hours. In this manner | from three to four gallons of distilled land fathers trot out their quarters in order that the ung people” may have a new skating rink or a new, Social hall or a blow-out with “swell eats” while the Paws and Maws con- tinue to slide around on run-over heels and eat Ean and hamburg. = * sits ee Sast hhey. to healt Sep sea tue eee an exclusive diets sometimes given in hospitals thickened curds than if ordinary | for using a) MeCoy water can be consumed daily. Enemas should also be used because of the Dr. McCoy will gladly answer | Personal questions on nealth end ° diet, addressed to him. care of the / Tribune. Enclose a stamped sddressed envelope for reply. i i lack of solid matter for the bowels, This is also true of all liquid diets. I rarely have a patient continue an exclusive water fast for more than a [few days without changing to some of the other liquid diets or to the solid foods. . In tomorrow's article I will describe the method which I have found most Suitable for using the milk diet. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Indigestion and Magnesia Question: Mrs. R. V. asks: “Is constant indigestion a cause of thin- ness? Will milk of magnesia if taken after every meal correct this condi- tion?” Answer: Milk of magnesia will {Sometimes give a temporary relief but cannot be considered a cure. Con- stant indigestion undoubtedly would | tend to keep one thin. You would have to have a diagnosis to deter- mine the cause of your indizestion. Stimulation Question: K. J. A. asks: “Why is it that I do not feel strengthened or energized after a meal which does not contain starchy foods? I am much ‘ underweight.” Answer: All highly starchy or sugar foods tend to produce quite rapid stimulation within a short time after they have been eaten. We are suncertain as to whether this comes entirely from the food value contained in these foods or from some influ- ence made upon the digestive organs —possibly the effect upon the secre- ltion of digestive fluids. It is quite certain in any case that the stimula- tion does not indicate real strength and that there is no food which actu- ally produces a better muscular tone in a short time after it is eaten. Real strengtn must come from museu:a training and the use of foods con- taining the proteins and the organic minerals. Snoring Question: Mrs. C. M. writes: “Please tell me what makes people snore. My husband snores so loudly he keeps me awake nights. Is there a cure?” Answer: Snoring is usually caused by some obstruction of the nasal pas- sages. Most cases can be benefited by following a fasting and dietinz regime for colds and catarrh. '95—Cleveland vetoed the pension; Ural ball after several inaugurations EO cated shoulder last night while haul- ing hay. He was thrown from th2 wagon and his shoulder struck a fence post. TEN YEARS AGO W. H. Webb is home from a buying for telegraph and telephone lines. fence posts every year. Forest fires cost nearly $100,000 a day. Many million feet of pulpwood are used every year by the newspaper industry. About two-thirds of the population uses wood for fuel. Cubs has turned much of its former forest land over | the flying machine may eventually be made fool-proof—| He should read, of course, not only to sugar-cane; so have Santo Domingo and Porto Rico. joan So that it will be almost mechanically im-|for the knowledge gained but to The latter is even now in the grip of a very real timber | famine, and gets the greater part of her timber from | the United States. ‘The American Tree association has just sounded an-| tric device was set up beside the flying field. Far in other alarm over the steady decline of timber in the | the distance an airplane approached. As the first sounds b i ¢ = . United States. A country that has developed as rapidly of its humming motor reached the field, the electric {Should not tax him too much nor |ture in Iowa. Too many Dittoes, in as this has must look sharply to its forest resources, the | *PParatus promptly turned on all the flood lights so that Tree association warns. Since we are using—or de- | ‘he flyer could see to land. stroying by fire—our own forests about four times fast- | er than we are renewing them, foresters long have been | dy there is a device that tells a pilot, without need of concerned as to where the timber supplies of the future | SP or lights. whether he is on his course. A wing slot are to be obtained. Predicting a timber famine unless |‘ eliminate tail spins is now being tried out. Another a reforestation program is adopted, the Tree associa- | 2Vention will show the pilot at all times—in darkness, tion wants to know what is to be done in the mean- | £8 OF snow storms—exactly how far his plane is above time about the situation. How about the forests in the Philippines? somebody : rises to remark. We have 120,000 square miles of won- | Foul! come mighty close to making flying fool-proof jences of others, either in fact or fic- jtion. He is not coming. into first-| hand contact with life—not getting | jhis knowledge and impressions from ; actual experiences of his own. Read- ing should never monopolize a child’s time to the exclusion of other things. We use 500,000,000 | Tesult that pe birth rate will again climb. From here | the process will begin all over again. FOOL-PROOF AIRCRAFT Probably it is going altogether too far to predict that Possible for a pilot to come to grief. Yet there are times when one wonders. At the Newark (N. J.) airport the other day an elec- exercise that necessary and whole- some thing called his imagination. But he must do other things too. He should have work to do, certain du- ties every day that he must feel ab- tsolutely responsible for; but it jtake all of his time out of school. The greatest harm we can do chil- i @ {dren is to allow them to be habitu- ‘That is the sort of thing that makes one wonder. Al- | ally idle. Encourage Activity They should be mentally or phy: cally active, or better still, both, most of their waking hours. Little | children, of course, must have inter- vals for sleep and rest—and for that H the ground. | Put together a few more inventions like those and day. the length of time depending on their age, strength and health. Accept the inevitable. Dentists might have involden days wherf the are supposed to conduct their oper-| Price of an inaugural ball ations with great pains. ee The shoe men have been asking; for a 20 per cent tariff, and here we had been thinking all the time they were pretty well heeled. y pre! ~e . A report of a revolt in Mexico was denied the other day. Are they there? getting modest down se * A man named Ditto won an elec- ; conditions. A much smaller per cent ition contest for the state legis the count, it seems. *x* * * New York, say the A funeral in Chicago costs less , than half as much as it would in| factory home conditions.” but I am Chicago under- | Som ticket j meant much more to the average per- | $on than it does today. ee * RUNAWAY YOUNG FOLKS Why do boys and girls run away? This question asked by the Travelers’ j Ai@ Society of a large city brought forth the fact that 40 per cent of runaway girls and 50 per cent of run- away boys are driven from home be- cause of dissatisfaction over home \- | leave because of the lure of adven- ture, love. entanglements, or any of the more to be expected causes. Perhaps the parents have a whaling jcoming to them for these “unsatis- times inclined to believe that takers. We can't understand why | Parents get forced into more unsatis- Woolworth hasn't opened a five-an dime coffin store there. zs 2 ¢ St. John Ervine, guest critic from matter older children should rest,|/ England, says the movies are writ- too, for a short time through the/ten by the half educated for the half - | factory “home conditions” because of verse. s* € RUN WILD a We have gone a littie wild over this witted. We wish that guy would stop | Propaganda about siving the young being so conservative. _ “Tm ashamed of ma She ough: to be ashamed cf Beh of her to kill my babr~ derful territory, all rich in timber, in the Philippines. Sober fact. and yet every now and then somebody chatters about | disposing of the archipelago or giving tem self-govern- | ment. which at this time would be hardly more than | the opportunity to turn loose a factional battle royal. | Retaining the islands is worth while for their “timber resources alone it would seem. Wha: this particular winter has created a demand for Spring: Mad season when boys run away, natiof® | make war and people plan matrimony. j ' LIFE'S DARK BYWAYS oS a Editorial Comment ‘There are queer, dark pockets in this modern civiliza- tion of ours. j Most of the time we dont see them; but once in aj while we stumble on them by accident and get a peek | into black depths that seem to give the Le to all our ‘Omaha ie boasts of progress and culture. We Amerikan Mee ts Cater ot on th In a city in Michigan two women. mother and daugh- we have developed a new type: that whatever ter, are under arrest, accused of killing the daughter's Pe@0 origins we have fused them into a new race, geven children. nat this new race has cut loose entirely from ii3 survivals of medievalism. ASIA IS WEST AND NOT EAST, AS THIS PROVES ‘What one might look for in a peasant’s hut in the middie So=s The two women have dull lackluster eres. dis- @wuraged faces. The daughter. accusing her mother of the crimes. underionk to tell an officer about one of the murders, After deseribing the way in which she said her mother had killed her youngest son. the woman said: erectl. She might as well admit she killed him because | ‘Se Knows she Git Im mad at her. ton It wasnt j MO sige thet either realizes the hideous nature of the’ of which they are accused. What are we to make of all thix anyway? How ‘appen thet in this land which we love to [ h ft i / 1 Hi iH : 8 i | driven, pl death, nor imposed upon, but busy! thermometer that can take a drop or let it alone. |is waste time. What a fallacy! people a chance. The sky's the limit But children should be busy—not | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | for them, and the kitchen floor the remember, nor run to |link to take the place A little of everything and not too | watch. and A German has invented a watch | Any church or any school has So many parents think play time} smali enough to be worn in a cuff | send out a fleet of solici of a wrist | “young people's cause” and all the in- firm, decrepit, overrorked mothers | proper level for mothers fathers. only to tors for some their children, rather than the re-! trip to New York and other eastern WANTS PALACES merkets. | Youth is so accustomed to its lux- | urious, exotic, opulent standards of | Howard Dakin has returned to his jliving that it demands palaces and | home in Fargo after a visit here with mansions, and calls an ordinary mid- j his sister, Miss Emily Dakin. die-class home which would have been palatial to their parents in their } Miss Elizabeth Fischer, a member own youth, « hove! lo, I can’t get | Of the St. Alexius hospital nursing yexcited absut th ‘unsatisfactory | staff, became the bride of Martin | home conditions” as cited by youth. | Schall, Hague, N. D., this morning in My sympathies are inclined to be a | the chapel of the hospital. They will j dit more with the parents in those | make their home at Hague. ; Same “unsatisfactory conditions.” *e & General Angus Fraser has as his “MAREE4-MARIA” | guest Captain R. F. E. Colley, Parga, By the way, a new slant on the|a member of the second North Da- mother and daughter-in-law question | kota regiment. is the theme of Sophie Kerr's new novel, “Mareea-Maria.” Suppose you had always been a mother of the conservative, dignified, sober, aid- society type, whese son suddenly | brought forth a wild, exotic, illiterate | girl from the tomato canning factory for a bride. uppase you were forced to sit back | While your son's wife became mistress of Aon the cherished | Which she really despised, asking ‘ |to Work out in the , mot in-law of pretty A readab! OUR BOARDING HOUSE ih THIS HoUSE wTH FANOU AND THE MAJOR, WITHOUT BRINGING B IS A RELATION fun -GET THAT CouSIN Pows FRoM THere, AND OUT OF THIS House fun A maw \g ts Kuowss BY THE AAD ComPAnsyY HE KEEPS,~ S27 fame BUT I DoT A MEANS THAT AS A REFLECTions Pe, ay ~BUT MARTHA, IL BE LEAVING uS A Few ng MYSELF, ~~~ AN Wor’T MIND IF TH’ MoNK WITH ME 2 ae He'LL SHARE TH’ Room witH ME AN” TH MAIOR, ~~~ THAT 1s, OBSECT To HIM ! = FUNNY THE, ~Y‘kuow ( a ETNA De et ME Cane 1F TH’ MoNK DoEsu'T < lem. * * * COLLEGE HEALTHS Opponents of higher education may find some support in the belief Dean P. Smiley. ie ill: book replete with a big human Prob- | | i 30, FAILTRE TO ESTABLISH i WIGHT SUIT AT RIGHT TIME Xorth (Dummy) — Fast and ae>. iding the Play: West amy Queen ef spades. Deciarer wins | With King >