The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 28, 1929, Page 4

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on cnactectnne Slt “short-term loans cost ® lot of interest, when money for PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1929 ‘The Bismarck Tribune an ‘ gent Ne buy a spade and package of seeds? These exotic colors | and those pictures of gargantuan vegetables which “any- | body can raise with our seeds” are irresistible, especial- ly when spring with her magic elixir of youth gives one that lick-your-weight-in-wildcats feeling. ‘The complaint here made is not that the back yard flowers and vegetables could not possibly rival those of the seed catalog illustrations, but that these fascinating illustrations convince so many, otherwise mentally nor- mal, that they are budding Burbanks, and then let Old Sol and the bugs disillusion them. Millions each spring are inspired by the purposely Profusely illustrated seed catalogs to take up the shovel and the hoe, but even these magic books cannot keep the ranks of the twilight farmers from thinning as the evenings grow hotter and the earth harder. TOWN PRIDE There is in many cities and towns a conflict between people whose first thought is to make money, and those whose first thought is to make an attractive home town. The first named people are constantly seeking chances to make money through some kind of development: en- terprise. If such promoters lack good taste, they are ‘apt to cut up real estate in an undesirable way, or erect fiimsy-looking dwellings, put in unsuitable business build- ings or erect them in places where they injure the ap- pearance of the town. They may sincerely believe their Projects help the town grow and are commendable. These people show enterprise, and if they had more sense of fitness and taste they would do much good. In a town where there is not much pride or community spirit, people of that type have things about their own way. They go ahead with their commercialized projects and the town grows without semblance of plan, suffering forever after. But in a city with live community spirit, these money makers find that it pays to conform to a higher stan- dard. They learn that the average run of people take pride in their community, and want it made attractive and beautiful. They realize that unless their develop- ments are in keeping with the standards desired, their enterprises will become boomerangs. iH WOOL GROWERS SEE LIGHT ‘The Slope wool men took an important step, Wednes- ay, when they decided to go ahead and incorporate their pool. In a state where the sheep holdings are in small lots on individual farms, as # part of the diversified agri- culture to which North Dakota has turned, the need of cooperation is almost imperative. It is, at least, more im- portant here than in states where there still is range for grazing large herds, as in Montana and Wyoming. ip | A Silent Drama—Not a ‘Tal HEALTH “DIET ADVICE 10its Me Saat Way, to Maal’ TO HEALTH € DIET WiLL WHO CAN 0 CARE OF Enclose STANDED MODMESEED BAVEGNE POR REPLY MILK DIETS You may expect two or e If there is a definite ulcer of the | months to elapse before the ulc stomach or small intestine, or even | 2nd inflammation have sufficient! severe gastritis, it is sometimes neces- sary to use an exclusive fg ero ri {il the inflammation sul 5 Only small quantities of milk should |] heremes questions on health end be taken at a time and under a regu- |] Tribune. lar schedule to avoid having the milk Enclose @ stamped sddressed form in large curds. It may be ad- |} envelope for reply. visable to use a small amount of milk of magnesia in addition to the cow’s milk. My usual procedure is to | healed to adopt a general diet regi-| give the patient an eight-ounce glass|men, and by this time the patient of raw or certified milk at one-hour | should be thoroughly familiar with intervals as long as he remains | the changes necessary in his dietetic! awake, although sometimes a smaller | habits to prevent any subsequent de-' quantity is indicated. velopment of ulcers. ‘The milk should be slightly warmed | In tomorrow's article I will tell by placing the glass in a pan of warm | about the citrus and vegetable broth! water. The water must not be hot | diets. enough to pasteurize the milk, how- ever. A good way to test the tem- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS perature of the water is to place the Discarding Glasses hand in the water and allow the] Question: J. H. writes: “I have water to reach a temperature as hot | worn glasses for about ten years, but, as can be permitted, or about 120 de- | recently after reading some literature grees Fahrenheit. If the water is no|I have discarded them. Will this be hotter than this the milk will not ke | helpful or injurious to the eyes, or is pasteurized but warmed just enough | there anything I can do to help; to sooth an irritated stomach. them?” i] No water should be used with this} Answer: The eyes bear a close re- diet, and the patient is not usually} lation to health and you should not thirsty because of the large amount | discard the glasses without consult} of water contained in the milk. The|ing an optometrist. There are some| milk should be sipped slowly and|exercises which can be used which taken exactly on a one-hour schedule. | will in many cases strengthen the If taken on the forty-five minute | eyes so that glasses may eventually be! schedule one time, and an hour and | discarded. @ half schedule at another, the milk Melba Toast and Milk In Montana, individual sheep men market what, in effect, are small pools, in their own clip. Yet the big- scale sheep and wool operators are largely found allied with pools. Some of these individual wool men produce clips ranging from 150,000 to 300,000 pounds. Wool buy- ers are anxious to bid these in. They like to buy wool in large bulk. The wool pools in the neighboring states to the west re compounded of clips ranging from 3,000 to 40,000 pounds. Sheep raising has not yet come down to the small-farm basis of flocks under a hundred head. The Big Stillwater, Montana, pool runs beyond 2,000,000 pounds. The Gallatin Valley pool markets 650,000 pounds annually. A pool at Ingomar sold 1,000,000 pounds last year and marketed 100,000 ewe lambs, in addition. The Roundup pool, also in Montana, totaled 450,000 pounds. ‘Then there are the Carbon county and the Beaverhead pools, also with vast poundages. The Montana pools continue to grow larger each year. ‘Wool growers are realizing that they must stick to- gether or suffer reduction in prices, for the wool busi- ness overhead is so tremendous that wool warehouses naturally try to bear the market. The capital required to handle a commodity of such tremendous quantity - compels large-scale financing and, at this time especially, They find that if they put up ugly houses, people are slow to buy or rent them, and if they erect unattractive stores in unsuitable places, people may not patronize them. It is a pleasure to be able to say that on the whole excellent standards of taste have prevailed in the de- velopment of Bismarck. We have built a city to be Proud of, yet there is always room for improvement, and the goal is ever higher standards. GREATNESS A book, characteristic of America, is that classic en- titled, “Who's Who,” the true inwardness of which is only discerned when one knows that the contents were writ- ten by each personage himself. A search through these pages of self-praise is a re- warding work. But the question of who is great cannot always be fathomed in this volume of greatness. Here and there the truly great have penned a few terse sen- tences, confined to pure fact; while the half-great and the would-be-great have adorned their names with degrees and affiliations, and have not spared the ad- Jectives of honor. : Which reminds us, by way of contrast, of the sclf- writen eulogy of Thomas Jefferson, in the form of an epitaph. Twice president of the United States, this man wrote an estimate of his importance to the world in gen- eral, in one brief paragraph, to be chiseled on the en- during marble for the contemplation of the ages: “Here lies buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the such purposes is not as cheap as it was a few years ago. The wool corporations, firms and dealers are a long time in getting their money out of their stocks. Where they > topdliar of the price at the time of making the| Declaration of Independence, of the Statute of Virginia contract, thus allowing growers the use of the advanced | fr Religious Freedom, and Father of the University of suins for almost six months, they often do not’ get. the | Virginia. ig wool so bought off their hands until Iate in the year.| TWice @ resident of the White House, and yet no refer- ‘The pressure of their overhead may be imagined. That is | ©M¢e to it as @ mark of greatness. Nor was Jefferson's why they try to keep wool prices down, and keeping| Judgment at fault. The Declaration still lives, religious will not agree with the patient, and/ Question: E. J. B. asks: “Would one who is suffering cannot afford to | melba toast with milk, either hot or be careless. Pure Holstein milk should | cold, be harmful or could it be used, be used and no extra cream added. |as a meal?” It is sometimes advisable to precede| Answer: Melba toast does nob| each glass of milk with a teaspoonful | make a good meal by itself. It is pre- of lemon juice to assist in the diges- | scribed in my diets mainly to take! tion of the milk. the place of bread in the diet, as| Ciat been is date in oh ANS ode ace te pee |S oe eee weeks, and while taking this diet it is | wise to use them at the same time! &y Olwe Roberts Barton | — @ good plan to use hot applications | unless a large amount of leafy vege- ©1928 by NBA Service,Ine. FEBRUARY 2 on the abdomen in the region of the | tables are used with the milk and! stomach and if possible a large ther- | toast combination. Chewing - ; 1680-Father Hennepin, explored’ the ALLENE SUMNER, _| tines daily. Question: K. G. F. asks: “Is ft Smile if you wish at the recollec- e apuetic lamp may be used several Hy Pues Massage treatments should be used | necessary to chew on both sides of tion of one Monsieur Coue, and his pict ag ee rater Women are generally accepted'asjover the entire body. To retain his|the mouth? I had two teeth ex- happy little doctrine of “Every day |278—John Wesley established the | the religious sex, infinitely more cap- | strength the patient should exercise | tracted from my lower left molars so YOUR in every way—” ‘The world is no Methodist conference system. able of religious abandon to the | in bed, using tensing exercises for the | that I became in the habit of chew- worse for it. Whether or not we em- | 1844—the great gun Peacemaker on | point of fanaticism than men. Many|arms and legs. While the patient |ing with the right side of my moutitn brace personally any of the creeds steamer Princeton exploded and’ | a stage play has revolved about | may arise to go to the toilet as often | Would it be all right to continue that reduce trouble to a minimum killed Secretary of War Ushe.'! women finding through religious ex-|as necessary, he should be back in| chewing in this way?” prices down is what ought to drive the wool growers| liberty is nation-wide, and the university he founded is together for mutual advantage. still serving his native state, ‘That is why it is important to maintain cooperation in alist? saber true greatness would prove an ab- & state lke North Dakota. Wool growers of this state] 5") 0 Sauie it recorded the great ideas sponsored have not always been enlightened on these conditions—in | 1, faracters, and not the petty milestones of a busy the economics of the wool trade. Individually, the Da- Incl dentally, it kota wool growers are in the business on too small a scale ly, it would not bulk large. to expect best results, for, to the buyer, the small grower is likely to be somewhat a negligible quantity. To get the buyer's attention it is necessary to combine small quan- tity into large volume and that is possible only by a pool- ing arrangement. The Slope pool is an important or- ganization to the wool men of this area, but a state pool ‘would be better. The Agricultural college has labored untiringly for several years on this sort of a pool, and, eventually, it would seem, the interests of all would be better served if the Slope pool combined with this state organization. It did market through it last year, but if the Slope wool men are willing to accept the benefits of the state organization, it would seem no more than re- ciprocal cooperation to enter into State pool membership. The steps taken Wednesday ultimately may lead up to this. Expansion of the Slope pool and its incorporation can be devoted to permanency of the Slope combination, if that be desired, or it can be made the first step to merger in the state body. Owing to overhead stress in the wholesale wool trade, it 4s believed that pressure will be exerted this spring to bear down primary prices. If that be the prospect, it is all the more to the interest of the wool growers to com- bine into an air-tight cooperative association to protect the'r investment and productica. The Slope pool is such a means. POWER CONSOLIDATIONS Creation of gigantic power pools is an ordinary in- cident of the day. If the process excites some apprehen- sion because of possible lack of ability to control it, there seems to be general acquiescence in the claim that it is essential to development of hydroelectric resources and to economical use of electric power, however generated. In s0 far as individual states are concerned, almost all of them have commissions through which they seek to supervise rates and service. To what extent it will be necessary to resort to federal supervision the future must determine. On the side of development of the industry there is no reason to doubt that if electricity is ever to be put to use in small towns and on farms, and made available for in- dustrial and domestic purposes on the great scale that is now anticipated, the accomplishment must be wrought through cheapening the cost of production and distribu tion. The hitch-up of plant with plant and pool with Pool is a logical scheme of service, making it possible to meet demands that can be met in no other way. America is witnessing another demonstration of the unlimited energy and initiative of its captains of in- dustry. It may be that in this day of higher standards they will have the wisdom and the vision to pursue their aims in enlightened spirit and with recognition of the Public’s right to share ABOUT WOMEN It bas ever been the complaint of woman that she is not appreciated by the opposite sex, that man has ever held her inferior to himself, and that society has done woman the gross injustice of classifying her below un- skilled labor of the male sex. Masculinity is expected, obviously, to assume from this Jeminine protest that femininity has been underrated by the self-styled stronger sex and that woman holds her- self in much greater esteem than she is held by the male of the species. If such an assumption is correct, the: utterances of the acknowledged leaders of the fair sex should bear it out, but that they do not has been shown to the ‘satisfaction of at least the members of one sex by ® bibliophile. He quotes fram famous women: THE DU PONTS FADE OUT (Detroit News) 3 Resignation of T. Coleman du Pont from the United States senate and the appointment af Daniel O. close of ica in the polit histary of the dt a era ju Pons far back a8 1605 Henry Algernon di ae sae far a5 ry lu ran for . ‘The legislature F Besee? ie 31. PINESSING TOWARDS THR WRONG HAND FORTY YEARS AGO" North (Dummy)— 3 old time and stumbling over one’s 2 and stamp their seal of approval on and Secretary of Navy Gilmer. | c¢ss all the romance denied them by |bed as soon as possible to keep the| Answer: It is better to use both a happy. irame of mind, we must con- tt ae seized the mint at/jife, There was “The Pride of the |abdcminal muscles relaxed. sides of the jaw in chewing. The cede that it is great step in the| 14.) Oa ree ssed the thirteenth | U2™».” for instance, revolving about | After all soreness has disappeared side that is not used becomes weak- right direction. fini i mes alee quveceeened see latrescay naa non we bearer upon oe he Senet of exercise and the « a is existence who fell vic! 0 the - | patient can cautiously ange em: may gather deposits ae See oe Bad 1861—Territory of Colorado organized. | crant revivalist, to the destruction of | another food. As soon as the acute | which will cause decay of the teeth easily grow up from childhood with Pete sane tat herself and her family. symptoms have subsided, the patient |or inflammation of the gum. One the habit: of- aniffing trouble around B a RBS * * should be encouraged to leave the bed | should keep the teeth in good condi- the corner and then in maturity, a _TO SAVE PA and walk as much as possible, taking | tion and if the fibrous, tough foods when that pessimism is part of our |@————— But convinted though we are that |care-not-to bring on further irrita- | are chewed, the diseases affecting the fully, or at least without a terrible | vard College Observatory just reaches | there are occasional exceptions, Por | 3 struggle. We cannot be happy all at | us, treating of the Coma Virgo Galax- | instance, there is a cyea? old Fred once if we have never learned how | jes, It doesn’t say anything about | Conrad of ‘Wapakoneta, O., who went | ly called mother and grandmother of to be happy. It is difficult then to| scenery by Urban so it mustn't be a] on a 35-day hunger strike in order |Gordon Northcott recently condemned . pecome an optimist, as many of US | Ziegfeld show. to chase devils out of his father and | swing from the gallows for the 2 eau c force him to join the.church. murder of some small boys. Happiness is necessary to perfect The postmaster at the Welsh vil- His concern ‘with the souls of others | Mrs. Northcett, under sentence of development in childhood. Material | lage of Llanfairpwllgwndysiliogogoch as well as one’s own is another sup- lfe-imprisonment herself for the happiness in its many forms, mental | has resigned. You can’t blame him posedly pectiliar feminine trait, but |Murder of a nine-year-old boy, flew happiness, and physical happiness,| tor that, here again is disproven the idea that |into open rages in court at sight of make one great essential whole. But * * x . 4 all men cling to traditional male} her son’s plight. to make these three forms of hap-| Warden Lawes of Sing Sing finds | actions or that all women do the tra-|_ This super-maternity which sticks Piness possible, there must be a| that the average robbery nets $30.75. | gitionally feminine. by one’s Own offspring through any- wholesome, heaithy state of mind to| He ought ‘to get some figures from a * Ok * thing, has been lauded enough by the begin with. couple of the Senate investigating THE “GABBIES” poets. Sometimes one glimpses its Happiness is such a big word, it is | committees. Here's another annoyance, if not |Power to make, rather than prevent, difficult to analyze. Mr. Edison says Hey B®: actual tragedy, brought about by the | Gordon Northcotts. he does not know anyone who is| Senator Heflin called the reporters “talkies,” whom our favorite movie happy. I do not believe that happi- | Squirrels the other day. You can’t | critic calls “the gabbies.” It seems pets eee) cendren, are happy. Haaser petites pa cae! ie ttle | that because the usual movie house re) Y t j ‘The trouble is that’they are trained | ! vi 5 a be nuts | interruptions of le arrivil it any ur out of Happiness in so many cases. | around. He aye Gene este: ys One time a man approaching eighty * * * knees during the picture cannot be quoted to me, “I am an old man and} The Westinghouse Televox has ears | tolerated when talking films are in have had many troubles, most of |and eyes now. If the engineers will | order, the movies are going on aj Patsy Cardiff, champion of the a9S84 which neyer happened,” and hg added, | teach him how, to wave the Star | matinee and one evening performance | Northwest, will give an exhibition at VA 098 “If you want to be happy, try’ to | Spangled Banner Televox might run | shift just like the regular stage pro- the Antheneum next Monday. Cardiff Q7 legrn this lesson before you are any, | for congress one of these days. grams, with no admission during a aly osss older. Stop dreading trouble. “It’s #. Ok! Performance. is en route to San Francisco to fight x @ real curse.” ‘ ae “on the tariff free list are asafetida,| Oh géet For years the chi Peter Jackson. Just as he presented that golden) manna, palaezoic fossils, broken bells, | the movies to me has been ears advice to me, I am handing it on to | natural teeth, Bibles and joss sticks. | ability at any old hour of the day or you, to use on your children. Hasn't there been some oversight? | night—an odd hour or so to fill, and as, them up ites one sneha. Fear | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | there were the movies! But now—t e hidden cause of most complexes. }* .- _*: - Who ever got this smart ‘The human race seems to be. born, COMMUNISTS, INCREASE idea, Rae tang snare eae the bass rales ‘, onlytoo ready. ag wigan the last five * Dayton, Mandan, performed the cere- spring lossom. » . .| years the, number of women, com- MATERNAL INSTINCT mony in the presence of a number of . —* :-»|munists im.the communist party has} Insane or sane, depraved or noble, | friends and relatives. By the offering of municipal prizes | increased by 132,173, making a total] the mother: instinct seems to -have ARK silk culture -is being. encouraged. in| Of. 172,107. ‘This is-13.1 per cent of| strange way of flourishing. Here’ Col. E. C. Geary arrived yesterday the Brazilian state of Sao Paulo. ,|the total membership of 1,317,369, Mrs. Sarah Louisa Northcott, various- | from Fargo for a short visit. a at Bis a “|, The Bidding: South obtains con- D. Dwing and D. M. Smith, Car- | tract for one no-trump. 4 Hneco, are spending the week in the; Deciding the Play: West leads 7 of | OUR BOARDING HOUSE : - By Ahern cit ee clubs; 3 of clubs is ; - TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ine = Miss Flora Hughes and Lillian f..€E~GAD, BUT YouR NERVE ZF Gosh, BUT You'RE GETTIN” Y —_| Garrett have gone to Boseman where MS. COLOSSAL fm Hue-Spur-r.r GZ FUSSY FOR A GUY WHO the telephone company. A “GET THAT DRATTED - SLEEPS HIS SoUNDEST IN i: SIMIAN oUT oF MY Bed! = PATROL WAGONS | a. Ive returned Tom a trip to the he im BAD ENOUGH AS IT IS, SEEN SomME OF TH" GORILLAS Hee e THAT I HAVE To SHARE My. AT TH’ OWL'S CLUB» THAT axe visiting friends ia the oify. °° UARTERS WITH A_ BLANKeT- You SNEAKED IN OUT OF ae - MONOPOLIZING, Foo-SHoRIG OH" RAM So SHA THe, ixinaca to be the roast of Mir ana | ft Di STALL WITH YOU;w AN? Pcrinto tg be tee, Buee af Ar. ara Cora Barnes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Barnes, became the bride of Thomas Herron at the home of the bride's -parents last- evening. Rev. Leads & 7 East—~ ‘LUNK LIKE You, THAN I : ; His MONK IS A GRAND “SHOULD, w~ GREAT CAESAR.’ ae COMPARED 70 'Em!s TEN YEARS AGO ~ WHAT~- js - THAT MY i; bce Phy TAKE YouR far . FPlergpeitts Sagi A visting in the city. Mr. Patrick has recently re- turned from service t NM HAT Goop IN (TF ANYWAY / |. Ohester A. Marr has been appointed assistant general by Attor- Langer.

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