The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 23, 1929, Page 4

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SATURDAY, MARCH 23, 1929' consisting of states linked together federally, thus min- The Bismarck Tribune co Sn mst ea a Ee EALTH@DIET ADVICE NEWSPAPER sf . ’ mn (Bstablished 1873) languages, customs, religions and even the character of the:r climates and productional zones, from that smooth * eae 5 and close cooperation for peace, commerce and political i felations that the federated character of the American . Presideat and rublisher |UAion provides have in the World court a substitute in- strumentality for the kinship of the American states, to ease and minimize their normal condition of friction. i ‘+ {9 to their interest. since the United States has “| assumed so dominating a role in international affairs, 6.00 | that they st-ould gain ihe ovoperation of this country by Published the Bismarck Tribune , Bts- a ante. the poncottien at Wieesares mat f i EP E i ee i CURING THE IMAGINATION MADAM, " = } The country doctor used to carry Daily by mail, outside of North Dakoti 6.00 | membership in the international tribunal. This country, with him a stock of funny stories Weexly 1.9u | 0% the other hand, can by no means consent to risk, WILL YOU KiNDLY oe in addition to his kit of medicines. = Weexly 2.50 | if not sacrifice, its interests and policics through un- ; B ‘There is no doubt that laughter is a ‘Weekly reserved entry to any form of world council where any, ‘ NY barat becrony ire "uot apt 1. ae per 1.50) other nations would find the instrumentalities to exer- % pe r 07” ~\ fir thon indigestion. cise their jealousies against us because of the ascendancy L > » Have you noticed that troubles Men.ber of The Associated Press in world power we have inherited from their quarrels . 5 Z ! | | never come singly? If you have some ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use | among themsclves. ¢: ‘ . ' ih ag a hee Bie ey po £ eon Wi for republication of all news dispatches credited to it —_ ! E have many more before the day ts ‘and peo- Or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also FOR POSTERITY tl f , - == over. Many a business man has had near to be the loca! news o1 spontaneous origin publ'she herein a day of failures as the result of quar- disciple he All rights of republication of all other matter herein| A fault sometimes found with Americans is that they ‘ y 4 rels over the breakfast table. If one ‘and ‘are also reserved. are so absorbed in the present that few of them have Lf i has good news the first thing in the the donkey Foreign Re! ntatives either the time or the inclination to reflect upon the 3 z \ \ AD y % morning, or a good laugh, the chances value of a " past or tn look beyond the immediate future. Because \ i j BF r, are that the rest of the day will be idea. G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY A : pleasant. You have often heard it you NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. they are az old as most of the monuments about them / . said about a crabby person, “Well, he jas CHICAGO DETROIT | they cannot bring themselves to believe that they arc SZ got up on the wrong side of the bed 's Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg | put temporary sojourners in surroundings that will sur- > : y this morning.” s Br : bps vive thes, a Psychologists know that we tend to wuarthe & ehh Olena ded lb adore al Bo it is that the poople of this throbbing, dramatic Bis ee 4 CE ee ee ee Wine pial Ravens » | nd revolutionary country go about the business of the . 4 meet a friend, give him a firm hand-| Question: Mrs. McM. writes: SHALL WE NOW ENTER WORLD COURT? day giving no thought to recording what is said, heard . AT 1a 7 - — clasp and some cheery news or a good| little five-year-old girl is Proposed entry of the United States into the World and done, because to them these things have become i Qaiss i . story. He will be pleased to have met 5 ci i you and you will be pleased with your- commonplace. When they die most of them leave behind i ‘ \ j self. But if you your f not so much as a tombstone epitah. Of course the i , unhappy by telling them a sad story court at The Hague, which Elihu Root, our elder states- ‘ man, seems to have facilitated by his visit to Geneva, * continues momentous with the possibility of association’) aceaseq leaves behind a personal memory, but that tn Hy ad, nf i or a tale of hard luck, they are not so in the League of Nations. This would mean the in- iV i anxious to meet you again. sputters out with the demise of surviving friends and H * volvement of the United States in the politics of the | ristives, Hit bualittng tema, face te ‘ancl cl ‘ league, for the league is an organization of political Historical societies, newspapers, custodians of govern- _— f "2 ok AG i emotions tear’ down the body’s|children’s diet which, if followed, , Character, particularly in its relations with Europe. ment archives and historians preserve the material form = YA y | strength. Worry and fear have un- | should prove beneficial. It is usually {Should the senate ratify the steps taken by Mr. Root from which future generations may construct a picture H fs doubtedly killed many people. If you eth es Laden ible lead 4 7 i iffer fi fits of ion ren because a it~ ; in devising @ formula by which the embarrassments 10 | cr the obvious and general features of the day, but how 1 Mir ie tiatit of oery, Jou tou do woe self would naturally be handicapped * entry, not only for this coyntry but for European mem- bers and the South American signatories to the court, * would be circumvented, the United States would be com- } mitted to participating in the sessions of the assembly far do they fall short of embalming those intimate de- HW | : Fie ott “ thing possible to change the state of | in oe re ae ait ’ tails that are actually the flesh and blood person? : ey ee your mind and cultivate the habit of lon-starchy Vegetal ‘There is but one seasticds means of filling this need ; i oe fl cheerfulness. The fashion for long} Question: Mrs. L. writes: “In your § : iti faces and melancholy air is as out of | cleansing diet for catarrhal deafness, ee ee ee ee ee eee date as the burning of witches and is | what quantity of the two cooked and | of the league council for the selection of judges. It might 4 Persons. It is merely the keeping of diaries. just about as sensible. one raw non-starchy vegetables + also be compelled to assist in the assembly sessions for |" sro individuals some time or @Mer in their lives i a ca ‘One who imagines sickness is very | should be combined with the quarter * decisions about advisory opinions, for it is the reserva- ; 4 0 Y te: d apt to be sick, and one who imagines | of a pound of lean meat?” * tion set up by the senate as to advisory opinions of oop dite! de a diary but 4 | ur es! rdays health has gone a long distance on} Answer: You may eat as much of : thought before or after a trial because of lack of time, a a a a the road to recovery. There is a Jap- | the non-starchy vegetables as you de- the court that has blocked entry of the United States anese fable that goes something like | sire. You do not have to be too par- loss of interest or the modest argument that there is FORTY YEARS AGO this: ticular with the quantities of these Once there was a shrine greatly | foods, but it is wise to avoid eating a famed for its power to heal the sick.| large amount of the concentrated ALLENE SUMNER, nothing in thelr drab and uneventful lives posterity will 4&&, Parents Mrs. Hugh Cunningham, Fort Lin- be interested in. And yet it is to the diary of such a d coln, is visiting friends in the city. commonplace person, to whom everything of tony sO ——$[—_—$—_—_—_—_ Se news for the next generation, that posterity will turn “BREAKING HIS WILL" Edward Winter, Valley City, is saint. Whenever a sick person came Inhaling Rock Dust for truth about the past. By ALICE JUDSON PEALE spending several days here looking , | to the shrine arid reached down into} Question: Jerry B. writes: “I em ‘The headstrong child with fixity | after business affairs. walarmed | or Lhe upbellion ‘of ti | the Pit and touched the bones of this | working in phosphate rock dust and All . | Saint, he became well. Thousands of | inhale plently of same. Does this HOOVER AND THE PRESS rare oe [cheated i Pree baccarat. SaWvinnans tarmeniy r0t younger generation against conven: into the international tribunal. ‘These limited participations conceivably might involve , this country in other collaboration beyond the bounds . Of the court, that is, again in the deliberations and activities of the assembly of the league council. These circumstances are fraught with possible hostility again when the senate comes to pass on the Root for- , muls and on entry to the court. It is not believed that ’ there will be further opposition from the member na- 2 tions of the tribunal to entry of the United States. The * Root formula has been passed on by the committee of } surists of the league council and modified to meet their = ideas, which has not basically changed it as proposed by Mr. Root. President Hoover has accepted the protocol ; #0 devised, and it remains only for the action of the | senate to decide whether this nation shall enter the ; tribunal or continue the present deadlock on that pro- | The attitude of the United States has been dictated by determination not to sacrifice its Monroe Doctrine , to any intrigues by Europe or South Ameriea on that | article of international policy. Thus, it came about that ; the setsate, in considering American entry into the court : two years ago, added five reservations to the proposal. ’ The fifth has been the stumbling block of the situation. It provided that, after American entry, the court “must not without the consent of the United States, entertain ‘any request for an advisory opinion touching any dis- pute or question in which the United States has, or claims, an interest.” The attitude of the league of nations and the World It was built over the bones of a dead | foods. tional sex standards,” appointed a People came every year and some of | dust hurt the lungs and stomach? Is President Hoover has let it be known that he is aware | the world to deal with. He does not | Bismarck, stopped here yesterday to committee which recently issued its the miracles reported were marvelous. | twelve hours a day too long to work of the degree to which the success of his administration | Jend himself to the well olled routine | visit friends. She was en route to her | first report on “Ideals of Love and| /He Priest who conducted the shrine | in this dust? Is there anything you Of the home nor does he trim his Home at Billings from a visit east. became very wealthy, but he was depends upon a sympathetic, interested and eagerly help- | 54. readily to the winds of parental alee etsecaatel fprotescaial aoe growing old. He had, however, a ful press, and that it will be one of his policies to do| approval. workers, three laymen and one rep- | YOUNE disciple who desired to launch} Answer: It is injurious to the lungs nothing intentionally that might deprive him of the! ie is apt to humiliate his father resentative of the American Social | {orth for himself. Upon hearing of |to brélithe rock dust in quantities. support of the fourth estate. In his first meeting with | and mother by public defiance at| Representatives McNeil and Burn- ham of Cass county were here yester- day to grect the new governor. sented him with a donkey and the|at this would vary considerably with cial worker. The committee decided | o.1° man rode forth into the world, | the amount of dust. It is possible that that— ; he wants to establish a mutually helpful relationship. | vicient coercion. Distinctly he is not TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO “The ‘Christian ‘deal of- marriage ne recebye rerh shige daprintd herd rblahon Pot rdbedaril enor ‘The president will not expect the press to further his/ show child, but‘ he: is generally |‘ Harry Richards, Tacoma, Wash., is |.can make no compromise with lax ; A A own selfish interests, political or private. In exchange | worth the extra demands he makes. here to attend . the funeral of his/ sex relations.” sonia whictasoam wo roles ber Chaseeiponrmasaton anes for the cooperation he will be in « position to extend | UP0M the wisdom and patience of his father, Thomas Richards. “The chief danger ef companionate parents. It is only the strong willed Ws aaa marriage is that it puts sex desire ister” the overture of the Cuban to the newspapers, he asks only that they work together B. , . find themselves mis-mated, agree to | ister” the ov. of gov- People who get anywhere. W. B. Briscoe, Sterling, leaves this | first.” part in friendly fashion, and try |ernment seeking free admission of a for the common good. He regards the press as indis-/ The headstrong youngster used to} week with his family for LaBelle,; ,, pensable to good government. be considered an ‘afflication to. his|Mo., where they will reside for a time. | “The free woman on the basis of | again? Must they feel’ tragic and |certain amount of Cuban sugar. The : <tars, aid it sas believed that net equality and self-respect can be the | humiliated because they have thade | beet sugar people, it seems, are rais- Mr. Hoover has sorely ae han with whom until they had su ded in “t ‘ Mrs. J. W: Folpy en’ ined. 24 life-mate of one man only.” common mistake of youth? _ ing’ cain. the wish was father to the thought ¢hat the nation, as| ing his will” would the foundations | ladies at a luncheon yesterday, ” ‘Divorce, even when allowed by the ek & & i far as the national government was concerned, was in | of the home be secure and the child tor four years of the fascist brand of censorship of news, | !n question saved from a criminal! Hares seomtalaei shat alge a career. humber of girls al ie home o! er At the start he has taken from those lachrymose critics | “rhe child whose will really a something to cry about. broken never will amount to much, | the occasion being her birthday. From the new chief executive comes definite promise | for the submissiveness acquired in re- of fair and liberal treatment for the Washington cor- | Jation to his parents: will, in adult TEN YEARS AGO Hygiene Association as the only so- his disciple’s wish, the old priest pre- | The length of time that you can work the Washington correspondents he made it plain that | their wishes, bringing upon himself a painful contest which often ends in Mary Garden is quoted as saying tragic and humiliating failure.” “And why must the free woman be | talking pictures spell the doom of xe * ‘the Hfe mate of one man only’ if|stand opera and the legitimate DECISION QUESTIONED she is to maintain equality and self-| theater. Well, well, Mary, so you're The magazine, “The Nation,”| respect? Why not leave the choice as | 60ing into the movies! makes the following pertinent com-|to the number of gentlemen to the : ment: _ pore herself hey - ry, free? Bag Sire pe pat pereer 2 life, be carried over into his J. P. Brennan, real estate dealer “Such sweeping generalizations} “We are living it particular ing revived. Won’ respondents. The predicated aloofness and inaccessi-| with his employers, Me esguee and Antler, was a guest of his pontine naturally evoke questions. What,|Part of the Western Hemisphere |the ensemble catch cold when they = must be looked upon as a FREEDOM? bilits were not forthcoming, and, in their stead, comes an | business rivals. He never will be able} Mrs. Johanna Brennan and of his|Precisely are ‘lax sex relations?” Is | which in the early twentieth century |leave the theater after wearing 50 parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tatley, earnest petition from the white house for a conference | to assert himself in a competitive aba al Florence Davis, over the ad ype to be the fuse et rd pelinreyy permite a sct of religious and | many heavy clothes? ..| World. But for the most rt the | week-end. ie younger generation traditions called ‘monogamy.’ between president and press on ways and means of pro-| 2 or' to break a child's will mserdiy the judge? We think it the best form of marriage,| George Bernard Shaw says that 99 moti..g cooperation and understanding between them. | results in making him a belligerent “If the churchmen set up strictly | but like all other moral institutions | Per cent of him is just Mke every- and bad tempered person. paso nes ee eerie for | this one Pa nomad aes be | body else. He must have shaved. New York’s m litan area has been widened to| The disciplining of the strong willed judging marriage, what justification | tested on its meri see if the tra- sectie Oieoneae eben Bit eitae cll, beste oan | hlldcseulices pertinala?. obseryane and body of facts can they bring to| ditional method of sexual life is| (COPYright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) persons. . , loesn’ of those rules which are vital in | the support of their standards? Cer-|sound. This test the Federal Coun- Mrs. 8. L. Swinney has as her guests her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Killious, Helena, Mont. @ thing. Hoboken could do as much. child training. Those who would edu- tainly unless they can supply some- | cil committee has not made—and per- the ce eee rroe to be an asset instead of a y must be at spe- of the United States. cial pains to be fair and consistent Proposed was that the United States be Editorial Comment to éxact obedience only in matters ; that when an occasion arises for of eso vilagag to senore the trivial, no mal iow annoying it may be at on an eaikaagid opinion os which this country feels IN THE GOOD OLD DAYS the moment, to consider his inclina- interest stake, country be given the tions and re: t him as - Dens dissent (s.ibe (Fergus Falls, Minn., Journal) sein an, indl 1 . consideration of | 1, these days, when bribery and corruption are caus- | Vidual. the question referred to the tribunal; and, in case the ing us to lose faith in popular and other kinds of govern- é ‘Wnited States does not consent to consideration of the | ment, it is interesting to get a glimpse of the long ago, good and honest and virtuous. These SAE SAME Judge and Mrs. E. T. Burke have remnes from a trip to Washington, Mrs. Chester Guthrie, Gooseville, Mont., is visiting relatives and friends in the city. AA EB BO thing more than declarations of prin- | haps cannot make because it is bound} (© lel ciple, the younger generation will say | in advance by a preconceived notion OO aly} : r that they are begging the whole ques- | of sexual right and wrong. It has ‘ ® t: tion of sexual conduct. delivered a series of opinions based ip OY “Solomon had 700 wives and 300|upon the assumption thet the pat- ees | concubines, but by the church stand- | tern of monogamous family is xX ae tee own time he was not} good in itself. f oo bo ns Ae hs ts iy of ‘lax sex relations. The} “Because of this preconceived moral LIBER’ Koran allowed a man to take four] pattern the churchmen put the cart eee rene wives, and the Hindu law books do/| before the horse and suggest that the not prohibit polygamy. family as an institution is more im- “The Churchmen’s generalization | portant than human happiness.” on divorce also arouses questions.}| However you may agree or disagree, Must all divorce be looked upon Saxe seers, of Es hota} Put your teeth into it! ’S A TOUGH LIFE “You look very miserable.” “Yes, three weeks ago I drank too much champagne.” “But you must have got over the effects by now.” “Yes, but now I have to pay for it.” : Do you get your alimony regularly? Marie: No, I might just as well be living with him.—Life. —Der Gemuethliche Sachse, Leipzig. | and women who go into marriage to | | OUR BOARDING HOUSE "By Ahern By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D. (Editor of The Congregationalist) =i and inadequate for the greatnees ef we BUT MAJOR,~ IT'S No I'M so sorry,ZA Fiety ME A DvEL? the idea ae USE DRYING To TALK MIT = _A proresson "Quwiy, T coud "4 | found anything that quite so epliy HIM INTELLIGENT CONWERSATIONS 2 DorK fw AWHIHILATE You Wit Mustrates the right attitude of the f wACH, IN DRESDEN, I HAF ~I wit ASK J A FW-SWATTER,~ pe easier story of a TEACH MotckeYs 1 Zoo HIM ‘To ww You conceited wo HAF BESSER BraWs,— 2 Apologizes. Y iirc squeak fs. YAH fw SusT BECAUSE T SAY ) ~AHEM~ wT Pu A HE ISS DUMB,~ WHICH ISS SO,~] CLYDE, ~THE BOTTLE OVER Your VY DEN HE INSULTS ME JI _/ PROFESSOR HEAD, Ad" Pass You ~~ AH ~~~ IF Iv Vos WOT t gthclatye OFF YoR A PICKLE fs DoT T HAF ALREADY KiLL So ff SELEUINE> A vici You A successful, may fates the grain marketing system MANY Big LUMMoX LIKE HIM ol aaa arte tad Steg | YB, WW DUEL I. VouLD Fier production, have ‘just adopted laws whlch are intended HIM DUEL TOMORROW. FoR PT ccecoage Sylow: aatiper ce rian perhaps og His INSULTS To ME Iw feo regulation, ai ve security for bank é I TAU LIKE CHENTLEMAN, Bur HE Iss DUMB // SEARS fie Ht purge tee! deserves ‘There's trouble brewing when the bet cat's milk hhas gobs to the dogs,

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