The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 21, 1929, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

An Independent Newsprper good-natured with an insight which gives him the dis- THE STATES voor Shoah tend cernment necessary to harmonious living. Emerson Published by the Bismarck Tribune: Company, Bis- N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck class mall matter. George D. Mann ............... Presideat and bublisher Rates Payable in Advance ey Daily by.mail, per year, tin state, cutside flsmarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota definition of them, In short, Emerson has defined the manners of the soul; case, an aloofaess which will warrant the absence of the evils of too much familiarity. A gentleman 1s also summarizes this ideal type of human being very hap- pily: “I have seen an individual whose manners, though wholly within the conventions of elegant society, were never iearned there, but were original and comn.and- ing, and held out protection and prosperity ... yet with the port of an emperor, if need be, calm, serious, and fit to stand the gaze of millions!” Manners are fundamental, if one accepts Emerson's One is rich when he can be a friend to any man; he is vulgar when he refuses to be rich. Many who read this daily health column have been discouraged in their, bhai Lg Pat inratate tare Sear te oD the outward manners are significant only in that they eekly by mail, a sees" | are the sign by which men learn the inner. Personal questions woekiy by mall, outside of North Dakota, is Giet, addressed to him, care of the Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use | for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin publishec herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Forcign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. highway accidents by ridiculing carelessness. The seheme is based on the belief that efforts in the past to secure safety through education have been too matter-of- fact. Part of the program will consist of seeking out the causes of accidents and in making them not only instructive but entertaining. and highways is the chief purpose of the organization backing the movement, RIDICULING CARELESSNESS New York has inaugurated a movement to prevent Promotion of safe driving and walking on public streets Its members will concentrate So, and my readers will continue’ find this column filled with the constructive advice I can: -give with very little criticism of the ling art. ‘Yes, I use the “art™ advisedly, for the treat- disease cannot: be called’ a » 88 it is said that mathematics’ exact. sciénce, although he only: Mies wampes Gddreseed envelope for reply. nin! the doctors of today who have | waiting lists. ad QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Liver and Pancreas Question: V. E. T. asks: dicen @ diseased pancreas cause of the liver or @ diseased liver cause @ diseased pancreas? It seems that CHICAGO _ DETROIT | on missing pedestrians and being missed by motor n now Einstein has almost-. con- ointe ekne ot ithe see hago 3 Tower Bldg. __ Kresge Bldg. | yenictes. : backache, can't lit heavy weights, ‘(Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspaper) Past and present methods of educating motorists and burning of the urine, very nervous,'a FOCH Ferdinand Foch won the World war in the first battle | of the Marne. He merely consolidated the victory four years later when American reinforcement of the Allied operations and exhaustion of German resources made it possible to push home the checkmate of the enemy he had, as a subordinate gencral, accomplished in 1914. ‘When Ferdinand Foch drove a wedge into von Kluck’s German right wing on the Marne in September, 1914, the German march on Paris received its first check. The game was foiled right there, but neither side realized it at the time. The triumphant swing of the foe hesitated. then the seemingly invincible advance turned back. The seed of final victory was sown there. France had been saved, but it had not been freed of the invader. It was fated that four years of bloody war first should intervene before that should be accomplished. Other leaders, holding the supreme command without that co- operation that finally won the war for the Allies, had first to fail by the strategy of nibbling before the ablest of the strategists could be recognized and assigned the task of ending the war. The Allies muddled on, blandly insensible to the key {dea which should have made their armies potent to thrust the Germans back all along the line, while show- ing a capacity to do this in spots. It was as though destiny for some inscrutable purpose had to achieve the entry of America into the war before it was willing to confer victory on.the French and their friends. With that addition finally transpiring, ‘came the consolida- tion af the Allied front under the supreme command of Foch., The war rapidly approached its end after these two developments. The German reverse on the Marne came at last: to its natural consequence when it was fol- lowed up as’ victory: required, after four years of floundering, by Foch’s strategy of pushing the fighting along the whole line from Switzerland to the sea. Foch was much like General Grant in the American civil war, but he was in addition to the American's quality ‘Of dogged persistence and refusal to recognize defeat, possessed of a more showy temperament. He sparkled.aa,a, soldier. and strategist. He fought like a YArtignan. | His forte was that of the rapier, he. was al- ways on the alert for a thrust that should penetrate the uversight or the weak spot in the foc. It was these qualities that enabled him to make the master stroke of the war at the Marne in the very beginning. The story is an epic of the titanic struggle. Foch’s army held the line from La Fere Champenoise to Mon- dement, They were opposed by 200,000 Germans. These had bludgeoned their way south through Belgium in ir- resistible: blows in’ every contact with the defenders. ‘The Prussian Guard, flower of the German army, was with them. At times the pressure was s0 great it seemed the thin French line must break. Aides came up to Foch with reports that’ the right and left wings had been com- Pelled to give ground. “In that case there is nothing to do but to smash them “in the center, calmly responded Foch, adding: “Order up the Moors!” General Dubois with the Moroccan riflemen struck 50 ‘hard in the center that the Prussian Guard was thrown back into the St. Gond marshes. Retiring south of Chalons, Foch discovered by an airplane reconnaisance that two German armies had failed to make a junction and left a gap in their line near Vitry-le-Francais, Immediately the French com- mander: thrust a huge wedge of infantry supported by heavy, artillery into this gap and had them well estab- L 1 pedestrians against accident have not proved successful. It is estimated that someone is killed or injured every crashes totals $700,000,000 in a twelvemonth. The toll since 1921 is 100,000 killed and more than 3,600,000 hurt. ing this a nation of scarred and crippled men and women, out tangible foundation. of every community. these facts is badiy needed. Whether or not the new attack on the problem will prove effective remains to be seen. be given a fair trial. no more than partial solutions with much of hardship and injustice. bargain and even for the sake of some great good may work much evil. stable, since they must at last pay the penalty of haste and make concessions to the very conditions which they have ignored or else be constantly attacked by rebellion and discontent. so obvious and inevitable, were made only after long waiting and much weary work. They were wrought out by the alchemy of time. flux of public opinion to prove their worth and gather power. An idea may be born in a moment, but time and patience must attend it to dispel disagreement and wipe out prejudice, to set up a principle and win for it a general consent. tience. They are willing to wait until other men of good intention come to sce with their vision and until doubts and differences are proved to be trifles and the substan- tial agreement of sincere men is revealed. The truth companies than the idle man, says a writer. ance companies should worry. The idle man soon lets his Policy lapse, if any. ered things on parlor tables instead of yellow garments 30 years ago. caus> vexatious problems of mankind remain unsolved. man. Editorial Comment | half minute and that property damage from highway It has been observed that traffic accidents are mak- It is a disturbing thought, and one not with- Facial disfigurements and imps are becoming increasingly common on the streets Some new method of making the public conscious of The plan seems promising, however, and should IT PAYS TO WAIT Emergencies compel quick decisions, which may prove In such crises necessity drives a hard Such decisions, moreover, are rarely For this reason, so many forward steps in history, now They waited upon the slow Wise governors among men learn the habit of pa- can afford to wait for its followers, for in the cause of truth there can be no forced harmony nor any intel- ligence save that which is given freely. The person’ who works is a better risk for insurance But insur- Who recalls when autograph albums were plush-cov- worn by sophomores in the rain? In the average instance no memory course is required to recall something you had a chance to put $125 into Many individuals are able to annex lucrative jobs be- A fetching costume is any costume that will fetch a THE PARK VANDAL (New Orleans Times-Picayune) It long has been our firm belief that park vandalism cause they are good housekeepers, feel that they are discharging to the full their duties as homemakers. As a matter of fact, their children, for all their clean clothes and perfect schedules, are neglected in spirit. girl, or anyone else who is willing to take the toddler off her hands, so that she- may be {reg to attend to tasks which she evidently considers more important. She shows no hes- itation about delegating the task of motherhood to the nearest and most incompetent hands, while she would not think of letting a similarly in- competent person bungle her house- keeping. = “i e | v THE HOMEMAKER By ALICE JUDSON PEALE There are many women who, be Northern Pacific railway. Mother is so busy oiling fursiiture, cooking running the vacuum cleaner, splendid meals complete in all their courses and aesthetic details, doing the marketing on an intelligent basis, that she seldom finds time to talk to her children, to notice them except when they are naughty. She is apt to-hire a high. school The homemaker who finds that she cannot do her job without delegating some part of it to a helper should consider seriously the relative im- ball party tonight at the Elks hall. of motherhood and house- keeping. To the homemaker who finds @ genuine creative joy in moth- erhood, it will seem far better that the furniture should not look its best, that the cooking be less than perfect, that the family linens should suffer from improper laundering, than that receive anything short wise and loving care. In this, as in all vital. matters, it pays to be honest. The mother who looks within her own soul and finds there no talent for motherhood, who knows that she prefers the activities of housekeeping or of a paid job to those of living with her children must discharge her obligation by proxy, placing her child during the waking hours of his day in the skillful and loving hands of a first rate nursery |of today at nine o'clock and it is be- lieved that there is little danger of an ice gorge or floods. marck today and will be given a for- mal reception at the Sheridan house. ticket agent here, has been appointed traveling passenger agent for the spending several days in Bismarck. ‘Vermont on some legal business. bate team won the international de- bate at Winnipeg. day and will return the latter part of the week. court and Mrs. Hoskins left yesterday for Fargo where they will attend the session of the supreme court. Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Drayton, Linton, Spent the week-end in the city. pean refugees was received by Mrs. Robert Orr today. It includes 60 pairs of children’s stockings, 20 mufflers, | that 60 sweaters, and 20 women’s shawls. Waters left today for Florida where Mr. Waters will spend several weeks on business. are Kaspar, Melchior and Balthasar. which. we call ‘finite ‘knowledge. Among the asllopaths, homeopaths, osteopaths, chiropractors and ‘naturo- paths there’are probably as many ‘dis- honest men as in any of the other professions, trades or vocations; also, just as many doctors who would be better plumbers; and also as many plumbers who would make better butehers. ‘The doctors of the ditferent schools have essentially the same training in physiology, anatomy, such subjects as and the dij lagnosis of disease. They their method of Che sDAY.... Cocktails and highballs in social Washington: will be considered bad form and a social pastime suitable for only the raucous hoi polloi and com- mon herd, according to one prognos- tication of the Hoover administra- tion. President Hoover, more or less good authority has it, will ested ban ment een Poem low, but will frown upon even the smartest host- esses who serve amber and ochre ice- tinkling fluids in thin crystal and jade Our Yesterdays on > FORTY YEARS AGO The ice on the Missouri river broke Governor Mellette will arrive in Bis- is that the W. H. Whitaker, St. Paul, formerly Charles H. Stanley, ‘Steele, * lasting ture. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO W. F. Cochrane left yesterday for ‘The North. Dakota University di which has run through social Wash- ington for a long time—just how many beans do a President and First Lady amount to, so far as social Washington-is concerned? secret R. J. Turner went to Gladstone to- Clerk R. D. Hoskins of the supreme feel a bit superior to the tenants of 1600 Pennsylvania avenue—are in- clined to regard them, socially, as more or less frumpy transients with little bearing on the city's social life. ‘ * * & THEY'LL STILL GUZZLE Whether a Mr. President Hoover dictum to the effect that drinking is TEN YEARS AGO The U. C. T. is sponsoring a snow as the idea of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Lynn and ture. The allopa’ differ only: 298, to: treatment.- ‘The: wise-doctor of any School knows that nature is-the great Physician, and that the best he can do is.to teach-the patient -how to Temove those things which are inter- | fering with the healing: power -of na- ith or homeopath may employ ‘drugs for this purpose. ‘The esteopath:. or. chiropractor -.may ; at-. tempt to assist nature by removing such iahace way, and naturopath principally through hydrotherapy and dietetics. From my. viewpoint, when" the pa- tient selects’ physician he should do so with regard to the physician’s-skill, and his local reputation for results. Also eer egsten red en ama’ point. skilled in bringing about a tempor: ina Patients should be and usually ar grateful for any relief given them through the skill of their physician, but the masses are slowly but surely on and out, unless it is really sell- eee wetele aly : PAUSE FOR THOUGHT s Us pause for thought. It means erié Pagal owe Perfume at $59.50 an ounce gives more proof that our: standard of liv- at $59.50 an ounce is as preposterous buying a ‘solid gold street or so in heaven.: ~ eee - shay ce hg STEAKS strangely enough, too, this perfume is probably being bought -not -by women whose incomes are in the sallow color, with sometimes boils and absvesses. A liver stimulant ‘helps, but ‘has to be taken regularly. The doctor says it will not do to drain the liver that often.” Answer: The liver and the pan- creas do affect each other, but use of a correct well balanced diet would doubtless adjust the trouble you have which apparently starts from overs working the liver through the use of too much food., Try cutting down your amount of food to a third, and for a time eliminate starches, sugars and fats. Pepper and Horse-radish Question: -R: F. B. asks: “Is pep- Per harmful to the system?. Is horse< radish a. good vegetable to eat or is it harmful?” Answer: I do not advise the use of pepper. -Horse-radish may be used to a limited amount with a meal. but should not be used with starehes because it stimulates too much hydrochloric acid in the stomach, Heartburn Question: Mrs..McD. writes:. “I am 59 years eld and suffer almost, Continually. from heartburn. Some- times I have very serious attacks, sibs veneurrashat atts had attacks cramps. muscles of legs, at night, and it seems ‘worse rain hard day's work. What would you. ary | suggest?” mechanical cure, should also have a definite phil- osophy about correct living so that the patient placing himself in this Physician's hands will. be further guided in his eating, exercising, think- | ing, ete., to insure a permanent and trouble is there, write me again, giv- ing me your full name and address and I will send you an article ex- plaining how to help the heart through curing flatulence. A ME ME BBS Lala dood THE CODE NAPOLEON One of the three or four great légai Codes in the world’s history to hear the=name of one man was promul- gated in France’125 years today fe ts ee ed » but by wage-earning girls ‘The allotment of knitting for Euro- State Examiner and Mrs. J. R. Their laries : for with salaries which can just comfort- ably care for the necessities of life. The answer is that hundreds and man’s civil rights ever mulgation, March. 21; made necessary by the fact the French revolution the laws o@ the country were ‘their own needs seem so ample that extrava- |; The names of the three wise men Easter is the first Sunday after the first full moon following the 21st March. gance is a natural ‘ result. Charge accounts which may rise to towering Proportions and on which Z This civil code was followed, in next few years, by three ed ilar ‘in form and affecting eriminal law, and and criminal 4s a high school course in the training of the gangster ‘process. and gunman. It is the perpetration of a wanton destruc- tiveness and lawlessness that cannot fail to develop later into more violent forms of criminality. These acts of injury to the plants and properties in places where they have been placed purely for the public good are very rarely committed by mere children. Usually when it| is possible to trace them the miscreants are found to fall into the class of youths. That is to say, they are persons closely verging upon manhood who are feeling within them not thoughtless mischief, but a conscious desire to flout the law and to cause a sensation over which the perpetrators will be able, secretly or in small gangs, to chuckle and exult. It is only a short step therefrom to participation in a holdup and a direct plunge into violent, crime, with the penitentiary, the noose or the chair as its terminus. Our New Orleans parking commission has just of- fered a $50 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of those who committed. a deed of espe- cially revolting vandalism by destroying a number of newly planted magnolias on Melopomene street near Claiborne. The slaughter of these plants could have Profited no one. It was just brutality worse than that of a hog rooting up a flowerbed—worse because the hog may have been searching for food. But the case mentioned is only one of many, including instances of the ruin of park benches as, for example, those in Palm- er park, where a dozen wrought iron seats firmly set in concrete foundations have been struggled with by the ever new crop of vandals until all but a few are mere school-teacher or kindergartner. A million pounds in bar gold A greater percentage of people} weighs 7 tons 8 3-4 cwt., and occu- own their own homes in Des Moines, |pies a space of 17 cubic feet. It con- Towa, than in any other city. [sists of 690 bars. Ushed before the Germans awoke to their oversight. The Tesult was a German panic and retreat in which the in- vaders suffered heavily. Neither defender nor invader was able to see the real consequences of. the Foch feat as the great stroke of the war.at the time. The German advance, once broken and thrust back, never was able to recover its lost ‘The taking of Paris was permanently averted. became a vast irascible deadlock which for four Ideked all accomplishment except to breed mon- engines of destruction while the long stalemate fought‘ out in the trenches. There came the tank, poison gas, the Big Bertha that threw shells into distance of 72 miles. came the two great and decisive events, the entry ‘America and the elevation of Foch to the supreme com- id, with suthority and cooperation which moved the | Allied line as the wheels of a clock move—all to- events might not have meant so much, there not been the military genius of Foch the subsequent Allied operations. With on the right of the line dislodging the OUR BOARDING HOUSE il A,— To SHow f . ZY conection Qu k BET You I HAF ‘STAMPS FROM BLACES IN DER NORLD You NEFYER HEARD FROM Jaw “w-Dol'T BoTHER MIT ANDRODUCTIONS to “ME law. EFERY BODY WHO IS s CLYDE, MLAD, ~~ I WANT You To HAVE THE HoNoR oF ZB MEETING MY H DisriNGuisHEeD FRIEND, ~ PROFESSOR DORK: oF DrespEN / ~——~PROFESSOR, °/ A THIS 1S CLYDE, DB ONE. OF “THe Bos WHo “Room Here / ae i : “BY. WILLEAM E, GILROY, D. D. (Editor of The Congregationalist) How anxious people are to claim.or. -who-could at least z oaseeeny with the great; yet | 3 “neglectful of that greater kin- ‘4 ship .which Jesus made possible for _ Not Jong-ago an expert genealogist’ how me that. i ay : : i had bigh that 4 i E i BIE Fr

Other pages from this issue: