The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 19, 1929, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ___ Where the “Boot” Pinches! a -, i the economic side of the question must be given first consideration. Without economic prosperity all would } ger tnapd have to move out. \ The business of the people of Bismarck 1s to do bus!- ness here, if it can be done with reason and to advant- age. And we believe it can. Every dollar spent in Bistaarck makes it that much easier for the other fellow to spend his money here and the community dividends are ever cumuia:ive, Investing in your home town ts like getting compound interest, with the privilege to cash in on the principal. 3 ‘ { Published the Bismarck Tribunz Company. Bis- i! entered at the postoffice at Bismarck + Presideat and tublisher " 00,00! RY 0081 BUT WOOD-ALCOHOL BLINDNESS | the preservation of life and partial RY THIS i$ BAD Poisoning from wood-alcohol is one | recovery of vision. Likewise, prompt tepals CONQUERING NATURE vicious that prevent blindness, Since man’s beginning he has waged an unceasing bat- \.. "CORN" WEATHER ! by in Anes people ies ge experts vin ante. wood alcohol tle to subject nature to his will and wish. Though the f ee? : i : encing. Owing to its cheapness, wood- j battle has now waged for thousands of years, nature is ‘ Wig? fg 4 KB foubciig eel into early bet Dr. McOoy will sind saree ql still the master of man. Ni! \ i adoption of the National Prohibition Sion ead sddreased to biti, care of the oa Victory is not yet in sight for man but his advance, ad ee = . Beer Amendment in the United States, |] qripune, | though slow, is unchecked. Nature may never be entirely 5 “Neer od inlay a se nities Te in|} ‘gnelose a stamped " number of cases from 4 e| ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use |WHier the control of man. who is actually & part of the number of cases or bas persons go |] envelope for reply, | for republication of all news dispatches credited to it |fature, but her many clements are being subdued one ! about the country, selling poisonous rie y | or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also | by one. liquors in containers bearing counter- the Leora a pee ony an i the local news o1 spontaneous origin publisher herein. Men's greatest struggle with nature has been the pro- 4 feit labels and revenue stamps. . bind foe ‘ite » i a Sy Pervel sale ssl be i rh fateh oatdelaaa tl longation of human life, a thing over which nature for | ssnhd deoark Gis wen, geiclek rt os pork i -_—— | ages held complete and uncontested sway. Science, hi haled, wedecaleotiol often causes QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Forcign Representatives medicine, education and sanitation as conceived by the q rapid, severe and permanent damage : Locomotor Ataxia _ & Ga. a FOE Ave. ak genius of the human mind, are successfully driving back : to the vision. ter highend id wood ices chaos a Sivoo wits uae . NEW ¥ sees ne the forces of nature toward the lengthening of the aver- Y ager tgorriity titers, pcb motor ataxia to be cured with diet?” age span of life. On the basis of the progress made in refinement from a nauseous, vile] Answer: A great deal of good can | the last three decades toward prolongation of human life 4 i i smelling compound, to one which is | be accomplished in the cure of loco- (Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspa; we can hope to have an average life span of three- : : ey oy Legere as Kaci fina ining. “Vattocs Gay nccierken| sears ; secondly, its cl SS - i a \ MODERN SHAKESPEARES NOPEE RESTS AY AUT GaE : ; sulted from increased output and im- | ments are also helpful, ineluding the | A New York minister complains that America is sadly | | 7H¢ automobile, the railroad, the airship, the tcle- } - |proved methods of manufacture; | re-education of the muscles through H etic: in kien vf’ geatus graph and the radio are excmplifications of man’s con- | thirdly, its unusual solvent power,|the use of what is known as the | We ne izy ath ak) the admits, but we have no quest of nature. Astronomy and archacology—man’s E “ which bo greatly encouraged its use | Frenkel pe eaab © ona to lead ofmnnre of art. ; Fee tice nave Decug bis w/t Tus Kee the ‘Univereermna ; : 1” tethst (wood alcohol) impurities} Question: Mrs. K. J. asks: “Has the 3 { “Show me,” he says, “an American Shakespeare, a Rail ot we é have been found in bay rum, lilac and | Spanish bayonet so frequently found a 3 i Anything man can think of he can do if he works at violet waters, different hair tonics, | in our western states any food value?” Caruso or a Michacl Angelo, America’s art has become - ‘i \ hi hee : ge ni ik i ite Bands it long enough. We have abolished the plagues and 4 witch hazel, paregoric, Jamaica gin- areas Rue waynes Renate [complement | aevastating epidemics of our eay history and we shall : . ; Poses, The soccalied “anti-freeze” | food. The immature "flower stalk ‘ kL i ff rapa, ish “toed Seenindn “erlkteinn innae ot abolish the diseases which take their toll of human life = cE ae rN, mixtures which have been sold so| when baked and dried has a sweetish 3 La 3 today. Nature is surrendering to man inch by inch and| r 1 OY r a freely for use in engines of automo- | pleasing flavor. The seed pods while ae ep Cee modern civilisation. Any man who is in slossiny, | making man greater for the struggle. When the time 5 i biles are almost wholly composed of | still green may also be cooked similar a thats cae iB ishioy “= atte Seana Lchteeriiig peated it should—when man no longer has to struggle m . j ; ‘ : have bien een by ceeuoyees ‘and Poe alkalies and Gas z "| for supremacy the decay of the human mind will be " ‘ sold to unwary victims. . H. G. : “What { patronizingly, on our leaders in sade and commerce. swift and sure. a ; i "s: This esa nuntanbiiea: “tit of milk of magnesia Bl va aiding onan ie eho ey ieierrainht ety enormous quantities, and constitutes iret ary iagneeia, ind what i the some! essential “in trade,” Is still with us. . a menace to tl and lives of | advan of mi ja over soda RPMs avs teen’ a tong tine in the process of rlatng ETHEREAL INTERFERENCE te toomunty, relieve gas?” from darkness to light, and they have had various kinds | The severest critics of the federal radio commission In the great majority of cases of | Answer: The hydrochloric acid of i lize thi be ogee wood-alcohol poisoning, the agent has | the stomach is counteracted by the of leaders to help them. ‘They have had great poets and | Testine that it has been handicapped from the start. Our Yesterd: been taken by the mouth. When in-|use of alkalies, If this treatment artists, to convince them of their own nobility and inspire | Unfavorable legislation has hindered it, and pressure | ur Yesterdays gested, it acts quickly. A single tea-| seems advisable, either soda, dry : them to higher intellectual levels; and they have also | ‘om the public, the broadcasting business and politics 7 spoonful of pure wood-alcohol can | magnesia or milk of magnesia would had more material-minded men, to take the material | 45 denied it that free reign which might have resulted FORTY YEARS AGO cause blindness, an ounce can cause | accomplish this purpose. The pref- ‘ in th lish: the great Mrs. McCormack left yesterday for Also inhalation of the fumes | erence of one alkali over the other ‘obstacles out of their way and give them the leisure and |!" the accomplishment of Hoe Fe tdarbeehid Minneapolis where she will spend a can cause blindness, would depend upon the individual the means to respond to the spiritual leaders. And the The commission may have erred on the side of timidity. a Still, it put top ito waved I ia onal tld month with relatives. ieacite cea action of methyl- | case and toe es be determined by Mere fact that America produces more of the second kind Diet seh tedihed J Leech cin dd tipanaling = ALLENE SUMNER, |#lcohol is manifested by headache, | your consulting physician. of leaders than of the sah is no indictment of American |°M08 of the air of the lawless months during which “GOODBY” J. G. Hamilton, chief clerk in the nausea, vomiting, dizziness, a cold Lining of Eggshell culture. nobody had radio jurisdiction. (By ALICE JUDSON PEALE) eorieen a the Rirts Keer pee That women do not create in the Lhd Lata a my and weak pulse, Pil olaptserth eae 8 ely oes oo 3 | ismarc! Pens | Michael Angelo, and the other great ones of the Italian | Had the commission refused and revoked licenses right | To the discerning eye the manner of | Several weeks here working on the | Honuentiy load: geared po mien saicaeraacand) cassis Bane people say it te hana renaissance, helped move the world into a new and |#d left, reducing the number of broadcasting stations | ® mother’s Baad od vk ar ae records. ‘ona to point to the great musi-| ‘The eye symptoms include loss of | ful to eat, but I don’t seem to suffer | better civilization. So did Shakespeare and his confreres |°" th? ground of “public interest, convenience or neces- | Teveals the quality and wisdom cians, scientists] writers of their sex.| vision, which may be sudden and |any ill effect. So what would make of Elizabethan England. ‘That is what t sity,” tt would have invited Mtigation that might have |") C. E. Blackwell, Jamestown, is the | and woman's weak explanation that | complete, widely dilated pupils, pain|me crave it and is it harmful?” in England. at is what all great men, dpa cues aad, A certain type of mother when / guest of friends in the city. women have always been too bound |in the eyeball, and occasionally par- | Answer: There is nothing in any of whatever calling, always do; and it is precisely what |“led its hands. The p to close stations without | parting from her child for more than up in the persorial life of caring for | alysis of one or more eye muscles | way harmful about eating the skin our own great men are doing today. compensation is bound to be adjudicated, so whether | few hours makes a great scene, dra-} Hon. E. G. Smith, Yankton, ar- | those about them in order that they,| which results in the person seeing | which lines an eggshell, but it occurs We have quite a galaxy of great names in this year |P0StPonement or aggressive action has been wise or | matizing her own emotions. She is rived yesterday and will spend several | in turn, may achieve, finds little | double. to me that you had better consult a 1929. We have Ford, Edison, Milliken, Wright, Rocke- | £00lish 1s problematical. dita seuteee peunlte sian oaroeetestinee | days here. heed. a Early and persistent vomiting favors | psychologist. feller and a host of others—all of them touched with | When the first radio law was passed congress thought | tional state of mind, and perhaps | ‘TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO _ | j,ui#jmia, Woolf tries to explain why the indubitable mark of genius. They tower above the that a year would be time enough to lay down definite | even soniewhat pleased at the novel; Mrs. Robert Orr entertained the la- writers. The number of a woman’s rest of us precisely as Michael Angelo towered above the | Policies and carry them beyond the experimental stage. | Prospect of being carcd for by some- | dies of the Monday club at a costume | children, her income, her servants, if tangible remains of a woman’s day. | sults Taft wore when he was presi- The food she has cooked is eaten; | dent, and if it fits the man he sent 3 one else, has been reduced to an orgy ; party at her home yesterday. ether or not | the children have gone into the | it to, well, the poor man’s not starv- P| ignorant Italian masses of his day. ‘They have had the ia aR two years have passed and still the extremely | of tears which certainly hurt him the’ hes’ a room of her own: “ex: | World.” ‘True, but how much “tang- | ing anyway. vision to see a new kind of world lying ahcad of us; | ™POrtant question of short wave-length assignments | more than they do his mother. Rev. A. W. Hayes has returned from | pains much,” she says. ible” remains of a man’s day either? | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) @ marvelous new world, in which matter can become |!5 #lmost entirely in abeyance. the servant of mind, and in which every soul can be The problems of the other will still be in process of freed of the shackles of poverty and drudgery that have solution years hence. There is now too much interference Sh kes her ft ell as long as } Pennsylvania where he has been vis- Tt us that Jane Austin,| 0-called “sex injustices” have a possible, fines: ees her soy Viting for several weeks and will again mae pee pe loos Bronte, and| Way of being found out as human telis him not to cry and, of course, | Occupy the pulpit in the Presbyterian | George Eliot, perhaps outstanding | Tce handicaps and injustices, if that Me MB Oo Pee ss des- | church. hil all | 's what they are, been man’s lot since the dawn of time. between stations, as a consequence of which the millions sation enices she VAY teteeee, Not | é ‘ Told, and that two of them colle iy fod ‘They are working to bring that world into existence, |! OWNEFS of receiving sets are discontented. satisfied with this, she is likely to|_E. E. Robideau, Minneapolis, is in| married, GRAND DIVA It is as fine a work as men have ever undertaken. It come back several times, “Just to see | Bismarck for a visit, with friends. Lop eag Heuk cinioin sites uaa a gions is bringing into our modern age a strong, heady opti- 40,000 MILLLIONAIRES ip eran | THEIR ODD JOBS d j F. G. Grambs left yesterday for a ® woman, is very wise when she says this it it st that thi 5 » a ‘ stop hile mism—a confidence in man’s ability to solve all of his| If you have been having any doubts as to the real, papiee ett id, relied eieeh tener re Saale Vad AE foe Pisoeg sll anlioy ia lineal. fates that she will singing wi the GRANT’S FIRST MOVES Problems and raise himself to the full height that his |enduring achievements of our country during the last | port that during his mother’s absence ) °?SY!vanla. to nurse; that Charlotte Bronte wrote postage rd ipccesbliorpeiy a ee Sixty-five years ago today the Fed- God-given powers make possible. dozen years, you may lay them to rest forever now. | the child was deeply unhappy and a: TEN YEARS AGO as she could after picking eyes out of too, to make the ultimate use of her eral offensive, under General U. 8. i It 4s foolish to complain because we have no great |The country has nearly 40,000 millionaires! parently inconsolable. ‘The wonder is) ismarck citizens to date have | Potatocs, and she might have re- power by singling out a young girl| Gt@nt, who had just assumed com- that ildrei h : Potts, painters and musicians. We have another kind of | ‘This 1s on the word of Carl Snyder of the Federal | healthy spirite thet after mother hae | 8d0Dted, 150 little French waifs who | Minded us of the domestic respons\-| tov her descending mantle. pond nt Se ae aoe One Ene vert i dreds of other women u - Work to do—work that is equally important, and, if |Reserve Bank of New York, who recently addressed the | actually gone they at once regain NG “fumed” chairman of the wots wee ve Wank of New York 2 seer is tory forthe Union eduse understood properly, equally spiritual. We have great | American Statistical association in Chicago. their cheerfulness and become ab-j state committee in charge of the| And yet, we can as logically remind | Woy tn ieensas City who fae just men just as the bygone ages had. And in the future,| In 1914, says Mr. Snyder, America had approximately aay sate cnnpu pane Ane Aee= | work. Pace econ aoeking thet eignt been sent abroad to study, will be her ‘When our. present-day leaders have prepared the way, | 7000 millionaires. The number has grown to more than} There is, however, another type of! A peremptory demand that the |r ten-hour day at some bread-and- | Successor. It was La Helnk, too, who / tt Is aafe to predict that we shall have the singers and |{five times its original size since then, and is still going | mother who says “goodby” affection- | united Consumers Stores company | butter task, and confronted with their | Champ ceaiuae thee one | Se the critics were against her. One the artists as well. . MI . | ately, cheerfully and quickly. If, she own domestic jobs of furnace to stoke up. luch of the increase is attributable to the war; discusses the impending tion it rage tpg oo the mae pa comcnes pee ns to put in and awnings to might argue that the pine tree can —_—_. much more to the recent stock market boom. is in terms of the delightful things | non the officers of the comeans by | repair. and all the odd jobs quite as nap ir age yaagps age en aaa THE SLOW PACE KILLS ‘We may have, our problems. Some industries may be| they will both be doing while she is | tho North Dakota banking board. imposing in their way as their wives,’ higher the tree the less aaas it “The pace that kills is the crawl,” Dr. A. L. Goldwater, | stagnant. Textile workers may be underpaid, coal miners | 4ay and the many things he must be stu try to “write” and even achieve | vives to things below it, _ Of New York City, who made a survey among American | MAY be starving, the power trust may be propagandizing | fure,./° tell her about when she re- | Mr. and Mrs, ME. Hibbs and Miss ** phis assumption that it is only the ae, Jeaders of industry, announces as a result of his investi- | OUr schools and the farmers may be in despair—but we This mother and child, although \ geles, Calif., where they spent the | woman who is unable to cleave to the Advice Rode A pcre mate, he _ | gation. have 40,000 millionaires, anyway. Doesn't that encourage | they do not weep at parting and are | winter. straight undeviating line of one main ne: val? or she be not ‘above one’s own level” _ The inquiry disclosed work hardest, | YOU? quite happy during the separation, do job, is unfair. On the whole, though, Ro ft ‘with consideration for oo ing wen : i me not lack love for each. other. But) Mrs. Minnie Clark Budlong. secre- | when a man reaches the place where tee unicenae se Pittebureis adastase ei et » Not only live hi A 7 their love is wholesomely grounded in| tary of the public library commis- | his writing is his profession, he is un- ing the ss iety’s the longest, but they get greater enjoyment out of their » more we study man’s efforts to judge man, the | mutual trust and affection rather |sion, is in the eastern part of the | hampered by which the American Eugenics society Period of labor. The man who relaxes in middle life is |™0re stateful we are for the mercy of God. than in sentimentality and self pity.| state organizing community librar- comenlties Poron ps a af panos bed ptible to the ailments of life. After an Algerian wedding the ee ——- tt seems paired to find parca The conclusion, gathered from replies of several hundred || 1" the wicked old days you could be a good host without ome bac! d man of the bridegroom e! hi: k-| The fi f babies in India and house when it is | Business men, is that “constant activity is productive of | knowing anything about first aid measures. my anes oe roe Pepe ; for a man of n ward, holding a dagger in his hand | Persia are often washed in the liquid | mite imvossible to get them for the Jonger life, better health and greater happiness than Editorial! Comment and the bride follows, touching the | in which holly bark has been soaked, | lady of the house. | @arly retirement to passive indolence.” blade with the tip of her finger. a a charm against evil spirits. wits, Woolf reminds us that nothing LITTLE SLAMS AT THE SEX (Boston Transcript) | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern When a woman goes up in the air she usually lands on her husband. EA f About the only place where a woman dare not stop BUSTER, M'LAD, —~ I WANT You 0 AA LET'S SEE ,wIWELVE MONTHS to powder hi . OF SiX WEEKS EACH WouLD Girls who are easy on the eyes are often hard on the ee i yer GIVE US 72 SUNDAYS, ww terest in current events and in the affairs of the com- | Munity. Such # person may be afflicted with physical infirmity, but he seems to have the knack of living ot efforts of Father Time to make him succumb. mistakes any person can make seems work at Some of the finest accom- men and women have been given to the i pocketbook. “ ~~ SATURDAY AFTERHOoNS sist Moa tovthoy wos er cuts nt o> ‘hn singe all SHOOPLE CALENDAR "/ rei THIRTY OFF WouLD GWE US 36 The modern girl would make a wonderful cook if she DAYS TO THE MONTH, ~~ EACH Mond MORE DAYS OFF IN A YEAR coud find @ Milshen thet was run by 8 steering wheel To Be DIVIDED Wi siX FINE-DAY w~ AN THERE'S 6 spent in this country by railroads and overweight girls WEEKS, DOING AWAY WITH MONDAYS HOLIDAYS IN A YEAR, w b | siot IMC to" Re ara al lta grees AND THURSDAYS, m THAT WILL GIVE THAT MAKES AH, ~ 1/4 Botnetina: 7: eet Seve ie. may need 's new EVERYBODY Six SUNDAYS A Moni DANS OF LOAFING != ea ENE Se aay FoR REST, ww ALL HOLIDAYS WILL BE a A SINISTER TREND IN TAXATION PERMANENTLY FIXED To Follow A ion out fom ae A tax-burdoned pele hoe aaa is watch very care- Sud DAY, THERE WILL BE 360 DAYS VACATioN WOULD BE 4 bd fully 4 wend that is visible in the legislatures now sit To A NEAR WITH MY CALENDAR, mm THe EXTRAS 15 DAYS MORE, w~ : teu tuaes sme mien ee , i . rt 3 int Ee is pacts find new ways of ¢xtraciing money FINE DAYS % ad i poten rag sg je deg pial us ssa beeaeh H LE ‘The old ways of taxing real estate and personal = 7 erty, the home and furniture of the people, hav6 been ; YEAR, we That 10 BE used to the point where furtner ir igh! : KNowN 7 a congress, His experience with the er increases it . r : a ie levine Bodies to ‘mob furs. coded HooPt ; underworld should st last preve val- methods of raising tax t increasing the ; , é i 3 ef i ft BE ge 5 page Ht tte ie i Hai} + BE these types they are £s E

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