The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 7, 1929, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, MARCH 7, 19% old sense, was ended.-Forts were held nothing better than traps for their garrisons. Now, however, France is spending huge sums on fron- f tier fortifications. ty Careful study of the war’s developments, it is said, has convinced the French army men that the forts were more valuable than was supposed. Alterations have been made in design, to be sure; but since any new war be- YOU WON'T tween France and Germany would doubtless be another KNOW WHAT trench war, the French are determined to have the nu- ( Lend rm cleus of a great trench system ready for use if the of- HIT YOU! Daily casion arises. = ‘THE COLOR SENSE a : one oatee ae brakemen mot en must sub- HEROES OF TODAY : _——_ oe mit before being sccepted for hele Weenty ‘The education of a boy is not merely a matter of ; F : positions e color ness Wass exiy schooling and discipline. The boy himself does more wa BEL gh clecoyee bed re Liege Ms per than his teachers to lay the deeper foundations of his i : Ss by se inguish life in the hours he spends with his heroes, who teach 7 ee ois It has been determined that ap- { proximately from four to five per cent of men and about one per cent cf women have a defective color vision. ‘ The most common defect is green- | ilar “\ blindness and the next red-blindness. A green-red blind individual cannot him ideals and ambitions and write their message deep in his heart. These heroes, mythical and shadowy though they be, have power over him and gain his love and confidence, and the bént and fiber of his character will inevitably reflect their inspiration. Siantnerulahs na r each | wools of the same inguish green and red from Tt used to be that knights of old or spectacular heroes z other or from various shades of gray | totally color blind person of pioneer days were the boon companions of the youth- which reflect light with the same in- | difference between the various sam. peay “ee segs ful spirit. But the daily newspaper in every household - i é tensity. Complete color blindness, or | ples except shades of gray. With the 6 s termed Stilling’s, one) has wrought its miracle even with the boy. His heroes = ( the inability to distingtish lights and | chart, ordinarily G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY ; yo \ . shadows only, is rare. Very rare, too,|can place a color, likely to be named, NEW YORE .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. Let fach sh tll ttet thle pohSRE lid ARB ALI f Z Sma ~ ws is the inability to distinguish yellows | wrong by a partly color blind person, CHICAGO DETROIT | letes, soldiers and sailors, aviators and explorers, and HUN. A 5 or blues, upon the chart, and if the patient is Tower Bldg. Kresge Bidg.| men everywhere who give their strength or hazard their y Sometimes color blind individuals | color blind, he will not recognize any p aus are not aware of their defect, since | difference between that special color; lives in some deed of unselfishness and sacrifice. Uy, I (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Boy nature demands heroes, and the boy's heroes to "1 they have learned to apply the bet} and the general color of the chart. a 2 3 “green” to grasses, trees, etc. an 6 day are of his own generation and very much alive in i Hl \" i ; “red” to bricks, and they may be able QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS MADNESS IN THE CROWD tl 1d with him. He may see them, hear their voices " v F ¥ ‘\ to distinguish the slight difference in Abscess of Bladder te he wor! y 4 eer ced of homenoleg workers Packea | 804 follow thelr story from day to day. The picture of : the intensity of illumination between | Question: R. O. asks: “What are| Z jammed with a crowd home-goi workers. : 4-| closely together, men and women waited restlessly for their trains. 5 > a these objects, but they do not dis- | the causes and symptoms of abscess! Lindbergh hangs on the wall of countless boys’ bedrooms; - é 25 tinguish the sharp sensations of color | of the bladder? And what can be they can read the book he has written and catch a Y 7 which are so striking to a normal in- | done for this trouble? Is it the same! glimpse of him as he rides his swift steed above the cities » y dividual. ‘ as cystitis?” | & 2 Suddenly a panic broke out. A stocky laborer, de-| O° arnerics, The wise Color-blindness is practically always | Answer: Cystitis means inflam-| ~ 4 4 parent and teacher will encourage 7 “ mented, drew a long knife, and began slashing indis- y ee? j P congenital and is hereditary in some | mation of the bladder and of course such hero worship, so that the torch of high empire cases, but it may occur from disease | this is always present when there is : anyone to fri away; AAT te Sass an pasion ‘oan may one day pass to hands that are ready for it. or accident. The exact cause of this|an abscess. The symptoms may be i —_—_—_—_—_—_—_—_ — e ie & F: phenomenon is unknown, although | very much the same, but if the abscess; ; 4 half a dozen or more people were cut before the mad- - t oe there are ‘several theories. is discharging there will be large £ 2 man could be subdued. TOOLS OF DEATH ete S 4 j It is believed that some of the, quantities of pus voided with the’ All of this made only # brief newspaper item. Yet the] In Salford, England, they are breaking up a tank ae : a eee AIL, THIS'IEGMOOET 0 OR” cries OF | VOUME US TAUGHT tne mae LTRS taerta| story gave a graphic picture of the terror that held| which was bestowed on the city as a memorial of the ; : the cat and dog which respond very |cut down the amount of irritating! ie that crowd during the few moments that the maniac | world war. The people got tired of seeing it around. = at = = paras Naveniosd @ moving object, but ap-| toxins in the urine but, of course, Q wielded his knife. It was to see the whole thing; = parently do not distinguish any dif-| any local treatment would depend! g seri | After the conflict the British war office bestowed cap ference between the various colors of | upon a correct diagnosis. % the mass of people, waiting for a train just as they al-| tured German guns on a number of communities which 7 money {a béiigcepent on thete edu: ‘ objects. Home Brew ¢ ways did, suspecting nothing, suddenly driven wild by | noq asked for them. In many places the ex-soldiers got YOUR cation. They feel morally obliged to Che Images of color following the stim-| Question: 8. J. asks: “Will you * fear when one of their number went insane and drew ulus of a colored light are of the op- | please answer in the column just how | Zi together, went out on a dark night, and threw these guns follow their parents’ wishes. 4% | © knife. None of us would envy any man his place in| ito the nearest river. ‘They said they were sick of guns. CHILDREN But if your boy has come to the posite or what has been termed com- | injurious home brew is? My husband | 4 “1. that mob that night, crossing of the ways I should heark- Plementary color. Red, therefore, | says it is all right and drinks abou ‘4 Ne he us so much as madness, We can un-| 2 thls country, thousands of bills were introduced in| i ——<_—_\/\—s [ci very seriously to any preference stimulates a green image, yellow, vio- | three quarts each night, and has been | i: rotons downright malice, hatred or wickedness; a| Onstess in the months after the armistice, asking that y Olve. Roberts Barton, {he shows for a career. myeeld ele css ee Ge! shed EB Tech GAT nad a . o orials of a ee colors may woul we ore i, .%° tineture of those qualities is always present in our own ou: we abbas iedilolieted paar Gately raed (©1926 by NBA ServiceIne, = |. —________« "ALLENE SUMNER, | also be induced by contrast, that is,|now if it were ever going to.” * “hearts. We know how to to cope with such things, But oe ee ee eny = coat sous aboy AH hobby? | Our Yesterdays | by placing a dull gray piece of paper] Answer: Some people can stand | ‘ i eaiaada nua tnunar tds otek Podsan WA iba be are not conspicuous. Bie serees adh ve a ; ol ae | $a A eer reo al “thie just wal need i erly surface of any bright | more than others byt I am sure that | £ , and its impl ts excite onl; e wanting him to prac- | ae lescended to make a little spare cash | color, loes not appear a pure gray | three quarts daily of any kind of! come uncontrolled fury, unpredictable and unreasoning,| War is a nasty business, plements ex Pil dteasonthisiainlin dase sneaking off FORTY YEARS AGO iby painting a picture for a soap ad.|but has a faint tint of the comple-| beer will finally prove injurious to/ disgust in the normal-minded citizen. That is. why|+,"i16 garage or the attic to make| H. H. Day left yesterday’ for the|He painted a picture of a beautifully | mentary color to that of the back-| anyone. Perhaps your husband would |, People don't want them lying around. They are all/things out of wood and old hinges | west and will be absent several weeks. |radiant mother and child, the infer-|ground. For instance, a gray piece of | prefer living dangerously, but you'd right in armories and on vessels of war, but they don't |and knobs? ence being that would ye, too, be| paper lying upon a green background | better be sure to keep his life insur- belong in public aq ‘and in parks where little chil-|_ Last summer when you were try-| Mrs. J. W. Cone arrived yesterday | beautiful ‘as this, ye should scrub|has a red tint, and while lying upon | ance premiums paid. drenplay. sag ing to get him at his Latin that he |from Mitchell, 8. D., and will remain | yourself with the particular soap ad-| an orange colored paper has a bluish Not Enough Acid “ had to'make up before the fall term, | with her husband until the close of;vertised. = tint, Question: Mrs. F. J. B. asks: “What was he out in the woods? Does he|the session. The ad did bring in returns, but} The usual method of testing the|can be done for a stomach which has bring everything home from snakes of a sort rather unexpected. Hun-|color vision is to use either a series} no acid?” to groundhogs for you to bed and! Judge Rose and Editor Kellogg,|4reds of protesting letters remon-| of colored wools or some charts con-} Answer: The fruit fast is a great Z Yet the psychologists tell us that our modern life breeds madness more than any former era, The pace is so fast that only the hardy can stand up under it. The weak, who might get along well enough in ® more leisurely, placid time, give way—and we have horrible outbreaks 5 ranging all the way from this subway slashing to the JAZZ IN JERUSALEM i i Hickman case, Nothing so illustrates the spread of American in- | board? Jamestown, are among the visitors to|Strated with the company for daring| taining a mosaic of colored areas.| help in restoring the stomach to its | ‘That is one of the prices we pay for trying to move| fuence and Am all over the world as the|,-A:Parent usually can tell the dif-| the legislature this week. . jto foist upon the public a Madonna} For the wools, usually Holmgren’s| normal tone so that it can again | ti ‘We ‘nob. ly where we are going, | way in nie ae a usic is played in distant ference between: short-lived notion ‘Sora with no wedding ring upon her/| standard is used, consisting of a large] secrete gastric juice containing the and:a reat hobby. A boy may tire of| Senator Robert Lowry:. and son j hand. All the advertising was re-| collection of different colored wools,| normal amount of hydrochloric acid.’ I para a sah ttc chia ns Nenana tS! eikaisymcccloaleessaand his carpenter work after a week or!Robert, jr. errived yesterday from; Called, and the artist got busy put- SAP Me EB BSS as = coe S wy Z 20 but we are all quite sure that we want to get there | jands. ‘ “Rose |two. and look for other diversions. -D. ting the little gold circlet upon the Rudolph Friml, compoter of such musical hits as “Rose | re. ani lock for other diversions: Huron, S. D offending bare finger. * Marie” and “The Vagebond King,” recently made ®/ affinity for construction, and fin-| . TWENTY-“IVE YEARS AGO round-the-world cruise. While visiting Palestine, he|ishes one job only to begin another, ‘Dr. 'V. J. LaRose of this:city will I DON’T LIKE IT found a band in Jerusalem playing the famous “Song|then you may be pretty sure that in move to Mandan next ‘month where| The company gives forth the story of the Vagabonds” from the latter show. Introducing his case it is more than # pearing hg.will practicesin the future. Hd is|@8 a tribute to modern morals and children were almost dead from ex- posure and starvation. Which rather looks as if occasionally this much tooted maternal instinct was over- rated, our daily jobs becomes a matter of jams and hectic con- fusion, We never get a chance to get away from one 6, another. Always, from one year’s end to another, we are thée’victims of crowds. - _. In most people, of course, this produces Uttle more| himself to the leader, he took the baton and himselt| “Him. 1 shouldn't compel ‘him to! -3y"in Bt. Paul attend ‘matters |Tighteous womarthood. Somehow I sleds , “+ than s mild, nervous irritation, But it 18 small wonder | conducted thé band in ari encore rendition of the tune, |Prectic® Onghe hated violin. peresiner: erie ily of degteee etemebend JE -meuemtry cece er ace tie en - ; UnWO 'y of modern woman 5 i i is = iat occasionally ® man breaks down and goes on & Nothing could be much more striking than that. A|_Or the reverse may be the case. State Superintendent Stockwell has | Sounds like a straining at a gnat, a Spjating -sgain of this) “mother ee vied 2 . uM A love,” Mrs. Ada Bonner Leboeuf| One hundred and sixty-for rousing Brosdway song in the holy city of Palestine! | He may be begging you to buy hint| tured from Atlanta, Ga., where he ideliberate search for evil when | called “mother” several times as the| ago today the British ies of lords Our music, at any rate, is going all over the world. . attended the convention of the Na-|Peauty is offered one. It’s nasty-|black hood was fitted over her face| passed the samp act, and made war Most bi i i i poor id aa heya anger ane tional Education association. He also; iceness and the sort of pettiness] just before being taken to the gal-| with the American colonies only a rampage. The New York man, cutting indiscriminately at the crowd that oppressed him, was only doing what a Great many perfectly sane people have often felt like x) doing. ; 5 isited historic spots in thé south on| Which scourges too many human be-|jows for the murder of her husband,| matter of ti ; one boy who kept at it consistently | ¥ eee Da ie, . d, of time. It gave the colonists Probably it will bes long time before we get this REDUCING RAIL CASUALTIES from the time he could go out alone, Ms tip. z ee eek paeucs poe 1 old ety this biele sroates! sloann—‘axasicn with » » matter of crowds and hurried movements settled. But] In 1923 the railroads of the country surveyed their Sapa aera: but atthe. first ‘Miss Dell Olson, who has spent the AIMEE'S MOTHER ae tain ‘i hi My ment, but “old stuff” seems to hold} Practically every business transac- settle it we must, sooner or Inter, ‘The huamn soul has|employe casualty record and resolved to cut it by at|frost had cracker the chorus ne |Past year in Minneapolis, is the guest blested mene ae tse henson of ltrue even in an age constantly de-| tion in Id SUR es Leeann * ~ few needs more imperative than the need for frequent | least 35 per cent by 1930. kept up his excursions to the woods. |°f friends here for a few days. her mother’ i ae] ee tHe REP ROA RESE: a ang ees pe We a t- . cl 5 jother’s town without stopping xk Oe 3 PI ¢ Meese iin. As lore ks.ss, cottiniolio cies en , nang. |HP,before daylight, gone after dark!| _." ; to see her. The moth : Poo! ee Mr ene 5S. roto = As ® result, various safety campaigns were inaug-|" ‘He endured a good bit at home for| F. P. Leamy, who-has been in Bis- |t?, Kennedy, ae pages tieRtakeen R DENTISTS! all : “For every or urated, old hazards were eliminated, and employers and/the family ‘was completely out of|Marck during the winter, returned]. ¢; ‘ A child should be taken to the| Piece of vellum or parchment, or employes cooperated to take the element of danger |sympathy with his vagabond habits. |today to his home: at Steele. Pee nid rea sppeineee Tian dentist several times before te sheet or piece of paper, on which out of the railroad worker’s, job. They. had..great things planned Angeles who parted ways with her|@entist ever touches him. This from shall be engrossed, written or printed ak fe ahead. He’ was--to be a lawyer as TEN YEARS AGO illustrious daughter some time ago.|D%; John B. Watson, leader of the}... a stamp duty of (amount).” “A ¥ A bulletin from the Committee on Public Relations of /his father and grandfather had been|_ Mayor A. W. Lucas and daughter | mother Kennedy rémarked apropros |Pehaviorists. He explains that dur-| license for retailing of spirituous the Eastern Railroads shows how well the job has been|ahead of him. They took no pride in| Miss Helen have returned from 8] Aimee’s snub of the other day: “A|in& these preliminary sessions liquors” cost three pounds. Packs of done. With 1980 nearly a year away, the railroads have the show-window exhibitions of the |month’s buying trip in the east. daughter may leave a mother, but a the dentists the child should be gi * _ continue to be under a strain that will irritate us all + | and’ madden’s- few. , a “No mote crowding” would be a fine slogan for some- Jag} one'to‘put on’ banner and wave up and down the land. ae r like a'war flag. It would draw a huge army of eager, % ; if'slightly tired, recruits, town (for the merchants were al- : i en candy and toys and, in gener: i * ppp pee ier own Lar piling reser €m-| ways eager to display pair of owls aan sopeyell arta, was bp: oer will never leave a associate the dentist Teh guste 1g oa 3 baie more than since 1923. ./or some young groundhogs or a sa- inspector yester- x * * pleasure rather than pain. y AB AMERICANS PAY LESS Nothing that the railread men have done in recent|lamander Preside by the young|day by Governor Lynn J. Frazier, who LISTEN! - Wonder what the dentists think of EY Washington was either fortifying income taxpayers| years is much more to their credit than this. Thoreau). ‘Their faces were set to-| also commissioned Roscoe Biegle to ine times out of ten that’s true.|this propaganda and just how much ; & | againsf-the inevitable shock of March 15 or trying to ward the Court House! be te eral: of the state board of | still, they found six little children |™ore terrific our own dentist bills ; “ anaesth¢tize: them for this annual extraction when it : But pine: meat the long ecu ranging in ae fo 7 ft tressing iat bee corre is eee Hera feng ip ie er jac pasts ni . 5 n J : compiled‘and made public a tabulated statement, show- AT THE RINGSIDE run. He is-now one of. our greatest]. The Industrial Commission of shack te Mons ake, Michigan, Mhe can be touched. Producing sheep had to be increased, ing that'no major nation of the world pays so small a t . percentage of its income for the support of government + national, state and municipal—as the United States. » | Americans, according to the survey, pay 10.2:per cent } of their income to their government, compared with an - average for Europe of 18.6 per cent. But this does not tell the whole story. Not only do Americans pay out » less in taxes, but their per capita income is greater, be- Sports writers have made much of the fact that the|naturalists and ethnologists. His|North Dakota held its first meeting|other day. The mother, Mrs. Frank Sharkey-Stribling fight drew a “society crowd.” Mil- lionaires old and new, social leaders, business men and Public officials were present’ at the ringside, and this ‘was presented as something new in the pugilistic world. As a matter of fact, it isn't anything new at, all— except, perhaps, for the presence of women. Prize fight- ing, for many years, was a sport—or whatever you: want to.caill it—nourished by the rich and socially prominent. The gay “young bloods” of England’s best families kept the game alive through a long period. They put up the purses and made the thing profitable. Society has always patronized fights. The only dif- ference is that it is doing it openly now. One sometimes wonders, too, if] ‘The time soon came, however, atest bow is on habit and heredity, |today. ‘There were present Governor |Stewart, was found gaily lunching |this new policy of sparing the child| sterner opposition than this had to Sometimes these boys win out, |Frazier, John N. Hagen, commissioner |in a restaurant of the nearest town |¢Verything makes any stronger| be made. but too often they cannot overcome |of agriculture and labor, and William|when-they told her that her baby |®dults than the old-fashioned meth- family prejudice, particularly where|Langer, attorney general. had his toes frozen and that all the ons, of Paving. Be tooth oe out °—— and letting nny learn: it pain exists and that pain must be en- ) BARBS { lured. °o [ oUR BOARDING HOUSE "By Ahern le A 16 yeas old wats 6 . , [Dally Lenten i ee ‘Thought . By WM. E. GILROY, D..D. (Editor of The Congre; alist) There is a story of a Bavarian In the recent election in Chicago #|six sitting aldermen were defeated. Moral: Even an alderman should learn to stand iP. Pore in a while. WAW EGAD, wr AND THERE 1S MY RIDICULOUS SCULPTURAL MASTERPIECE, THAT I WILL EXHIBIT IN THAT DOWNTOWN GALLERY, GREAT fu. LET ME BE YouR MANAGER /. You - JusT CAME OVER FROM ,» government. Lacking these triumphs, other countries impost in groaning Europe is the income tax, which has A notary public in Omaha com- ghobeor SERED HS , Ampost in groaning Ei A naturalist says all nature detests’ an FINLAND AND CAN'T ,. - |péasant who bought an alarm clock | mitted jail f 1 ibetn’ made extremely This la especialy trae of the dead-beat FEATURING THE STUFF AND Nousense- 7: SPEAK ENGLISH VET fm G4 |to Tein him, got up camly in the|to talk, What's ‘wiong ‘wih tet ery ———— OF MODERN ART Jue HAW=-HAW-w~ A <-Nou'Lt” BE VERY idly, tsusting the slarw Gock| ne he I WILL GIVE 11 THE MEANINGLESS)” “ECCENTRIC AND CARRY, erent eu pe Decaeaemuneey | Eines Guitat, st, Avraden visited ‘TITLE or "THE SYMPHONIC EMOTION A PockETFULL OF DRIED tening for the alarm elotk to-etriks. Sigarct girl a aie ta tan can ¢ OF NIL” DoNeE IN PUTTY AND SoAP/ ww HERRING WHICH: You / ES ators past HEE g dine and the janager of oT wile EXPLAIN IT AS My PSYCHIC ‘NIBBLE AT INTERVALS J s life; and nathan oe not it be true|for the pepning, Bees tise bil INTERPRETATION. OF THE worp a WELL BUILD THIS Slarm veloc, ie. Miusteates' exactiy| money's worth, nt "mote 69t Bis “NOTHING “/ a JUST WHAT 1S p ee a Ae ofl .. hee se wince, in eenny Temple sn eee q NOTHING 2 a iF NoTHNG iswr / Tee Ts: CH Fins oeetinet se #4) csamee hove ietalod nck esta | peace. ~ poss ~¥ The sacred writer of old repre-|is that the prescription business was ANYTHING, wIHEN I HAVE are | F or et Y Mm ._|sented God“as ‘saying; “I will keep | falling off. GIVEN (7 AN UNDENIABLE y him in perfect hi i * * * Form 1h This STALE , : y is stayed on MecP it io said that the ity “2 har CANNOT BE : great statesman William Ewa to drcoration > CCRITICISED, EGAD ! a 4 mlm and tha ts pessiols an thes tare thiere *| tater té thee : - £ £ y his” id stability through the|that: interest them, Lots of youre z 5 & ‘long years. of his political career, ,men,. of -course, will refuse ‘to at« ean of Lagi the midst of tain baat) Noe Heh et s f 'y and si ts Op! Service, Inc. “But how ‘often our trust in God ~ ‘ ‘{is apparent rather than real. We |pray for idance. We pray for peace, And then we take into \ our own hands and worry as if we e u ‘ %) had no confidence whatever in God. ps our distrust is bo: iH yee a ae fe could on! God, we should realize the fi be of His Peveiiael c- ‘él 5 ‘|s8uI in} tude to be like the peasant ijt Y for the alarm. by

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