The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 25, 1929, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR" The Bismarck Tribune MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1929 HEALTH “DIET ADVICE W Dr Frank Mc > thts ee Sast hay.70 10 REGARD TO HEALTH € DIET WiLL See ee WHY BE AFRAID? Sudden fears are ‘an ers of Most people do not realize how | No consequence, as can usu- much their lives are controlled | lly react temporarily to these sud: through the fears they have de- veloped. Most of these fears are look up into the star-clouded sky and take a deep breath of the spring air; and in that moment there comes to him, deeper and more sure than anything that can be obtained from books or pulpits, the conviction that life 4s essentially glorious and nobit, and vhat the race lics - Published by the Bismarck Tribun: Company, Bis- | cradled in an immensity of color and harmony. He : marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | knows that it ts good to live. class mail . . A woman sits on a chair, in an interval of housework soe Preside.st and rublisher and watches a baby rolling and tumbling across a rug in pursuit of some toy, chuckling and gurgling with $1.20 | babyish delight; and she knows, with a surety nothing 1:20 | can shake, that the laughter of that child, and the 6.0u | motions it arouses in her own breast, arc worth as v.00 | much a@s anything life can possibly bring to her. With that knowledge, she can never again worry about the “meaning of life"; she knows what it is. Those are the important things. It is out of such in- 1.00 POM M RON ee ec cic aa eda leaks cidents that most people fashion their undying hope that 8 ip } i . c needlessly grown through habits of goodness and kindness. and not despair and frustration. i "4 i; P preci oy Gra As ee ans we Wile at TEx Assocuasa Pete are at the bottom of things in this world. ‘They are not —! 4 ; can ascertain at the presest, the new len.ber of The hone often to be found in times of activity. They pop up ie ( i born baby has only two inherited Spe eco pertte F Spa eee aupeiciioa eee flat unexpectedly. The man who has time to be idle oc- ~ fears: one, a fear of loud Gece 4 Spevnlisa:” GAH die 1H ‘or wot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also |Casionally is the man who is most apt to experience : . — os oe nas “on erred at eh es, ; ‘a igor) ‘the loca! news ot spontaneous origin publisher herein | them. = dition” i ‘oa make up 998 | greater gates nenkas ee tae All rights of republication of all other matter herein (2 eal seal RELINKING DUAL MONARCHY " ‘ out of a thousand fears we entertain, | @ thousand times more of these fears | p compared to these other two “that |and also because we seldom realize anything about it. Foreign Representatives Romance in the form of the royal marriage between il | be Rg world we would| ‘The science and art of psychoan- G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Crown Prince Olaf, son cf King Haakon, of Norway, and q i be living in if we could all by some | alysis has of late years proved help- NEW YORE .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. Princess Martha, nicce of King Gustaf, of Sweden, means a magic lose these extra fears! It is | ful in understanding the various hid- CHICA! DETROIT | 9 great deal more to these two kingdoms than it would i : the fear of what you think is going to | den processes of the mind and in un- ‘Tower Kresge Bidg happen that causes the most trouble. | covering long forgotten fears which —..-—- ———— | in the case of any two others. It exercises an influence Of course, distressing things such as | have turned into repressions and have (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) on two peoples whose racial relationship once united 7” failure, sickness, and various disasters | served to inhibit the patient from de- them monarchically, but this union came to be sundered do occur, but the trouble is we poi-| veloping into a normal person with GREAT EXPECTATIONS FROM HOOVER | ">t without considerable feeling being excited, even to 7 gi “fil a8 Gea by to suet Wholesome, healthful habits. If President Hoover measures up to the estimates of {the point of suggestions of war. The marriage uniting / tl I il H Cincy iets ThA We te. jousant QUES TIONS AND ANSWERS e men who are close to him and in his confidence, | the two royal houses can not fall to draw the two peoples = ~ ! BREE togethi ain h y, ZZ It is wise to use eas ee ai Bevel aes aeration: *t place dential history will be that of admin- | ‘osether again with something of the old degree of jj , é -|ciding all of the actions of our lives, ion: ©. A. M. : “I am istrator Riis areaten cra ef piekihealvenias in Amerie | fraternity. oO o ‘ but nae oe never be al- ‘3 ic of eee aonpel old. mee lowed to develop into a fear. asthm: r since I was three history. Both nations are democratic. Royalty is but a respect- . . of PAT f I assume that most of my readers | months old. Do you think it will ever } This is the prophecy they are making in the East. is aaron or be hea of sovereignty in the former i } | } follow this daily column tes woey peti) ee i " pendulum, in the opinion of Icaders in the senate | [uel monarchy of the north. It was this issue of royalty Wal AT WW Wy d wish to have health more abundantly. wer: fe do see a few cases 0! Period of Coolidge, with its retrenchments and | 1905. so the breach had no very grave basis, in fact. fn : “53 ? te 1 a Sule also causes tiapene and yet |Pule tint ‘esthina turns into tuberca- ies, to a period of great constructiveness, in which | Good feeling was bound to reassert itself after the first : many will be surprised to know that | losis? Why not cure the asthma, de- vill function only as value re-| flurry of disunion. As far as the people were concerned Z there are even more important fears | velop strong lungs and avoid tuber- Coolidge economy will fu ly ved for every dollar spent. The predicted era is not relations have been singularly’amicable since the sever- : - ‘ Z which affect health and leave their |culosis? Send for some special artic.es be one of extravagance, but of substantial results on] *Nce. The marriage of the crown prince and the ne : So mark in physical dis- ber tienent ot a ered i the de- great scale, Princess thus adds an additional sentimental link to : ; “phe It has been found that fear of Currants Most of this super-constructiveness, however, is of | ‘hat of race toward the increasing political placidity Ou ey Peres & failure is the greatest of these, and| Question: Mrs. K. asks: “May cur- bet the i KAD it of thos its be used in pil f ral type which does not involve expenditure. It is in ween the two kingdoms, and a permanent basis of _ that at least 7) per cent e ex | rani used lace of raisins in ‘the domain of international relations, and here Presi- | Mutual good feeling seems at hand in the royal match. stituting fresh vegetables and fruits . amined psychologically have this fail- | your menus?” . ure fear. Of course, this may refer to} Answer: Yes, especially the sweeter failure in health, or failure in busi- | varieties. Ness, finances, love, success, etc. Acid in System for meat. While meat consumption ‘ent Hoover is expected by his friends and admirers to| Bjornstjerne Bjornson, Norway's gran@ old man, used hhas decreased 45 per cent in ten years, function with impressive results. Our relations with to indulge the dream of a Scandinavian alliance of Nor- | {South America, with the former allies of the World war| Way, Sweden and Denmark, but the tendency of the fervor ties oe, Baptista) Ue Other important fears are fear ea os Bh opm Mrs. N. F. P. asks: | fin the matter of their debts, with all the world in ob-| Scandinavian peoples has been away from federation. ‘Seems to be just the old story of . Q teenie ster BOMs pegs ieee they fonling oacay Teauenie pero Htaining expansion of our markets, with the adjustment | Not only have Norway and Sweden dissolved their con- robbing Peter to pay Paul. . But : will be ‘misunderstood, while others |the top of my mouth? if it is acid {pf the farm problem, with law enforcement and with | nections as a dual monarchy, but Iceland has divested it- esr netele Aichnig ine ne ees COXEY’s MARCH fear they will be found out—like the |in the system, kindly tell me if ‘the more firm establishment of peace policies designed | Self of the dominion of Denmark and has set itself up ALLENE SUMNER. | fettuce and tomato era does not yield ‘Thirty-five years ago today, Amer- | 22, Who sald he didn't mind how |oranges and lemons are countéractors ; many lies they told about him as long jof acid. Also does acid in the sys- A few years ago State Senator|to the side pork and bean one of | ica, in the throes of an industrial de-|as they didn’t tell the truth. tem affect one’s eyes so that it sae jultimately to eliminate war in the settlement of inter- | ®S 4 virtually independent state. In the form of entente, ‘pational disputes—all are considered fields in which] it would seem, lies the real unity of the Scandinavian | Norman B. Horton of Michigan got | decades ago. } President Hoover will accomplish epochal results. states. The marriage of the royal young couple is an | all worked up about how easy it was eS A Letra erecta cay mie ibina a ie Eee ee ee " Senator Walter Edge, of New Jersey, made an ad-| event which must contribute to relations of that nature. | for, “fool kids” to get, married 1p his still a mystery, but it appears that | Answer: The condition often cated state. So he voted “yea” on a bill} If the girls.keep up their good | tory—the beginning of the march of “ oj ress to a Republican club in New York last week in| At any even} It can not be interpreted otherwise than a5] requiring a five-day Interval between { fight, all this antedeluvian idea that | Coxey's army” from Massillon, ©. uctlnes ptatiaa weer kie Ciaaly ont tte labeiseaee teemiaeae atin a as lwhich he expressed some-of the hopes felt by Hoover | marking the disappearance of the last vestiges of resent- | the time of application for a marriage | Wife's residence is where her hus- | to Washington. ses “ 's alkalinity. The right track in clearing up this mys- | use of citrus fruits will hel; supporters that he will develop into an outstanding | ment that were aroused when Norway severed its con-|license and the actual marriage. — |band dictates it shall be, may be| ‘the “army,” which consisted of |tery. We do not know. that, such |this condition, principally through in the ensuing four years. nection with Sweden at the Karlstad conference in 1905 The other day the senator and a} quashed. Ganna falska, wife of | some 350 men when it reached the glands as the adrenals, thyroid snd | stimulating the flow of more bile, Miss Klea Smith eloped to Ohio, to be | Harold McCormick, and a few other | capital, was under the leadership of direct! I in- “In its selection of executives, the United States has | and set up a kingdom of its own with the Danish prince | married because the law was not so| National Woman's Party girls, have | gecob &, Goxey. self-styled “Chenerale | oe Ce eee met in~ |which is alkall. This may also get stantly affected through certain emo- |rid of the dizzi pertainly in recent years and in anticipation of the | Haakon as its king. stringent there. ee hitatony ee on the New | He was one of three leaders of the | tions. i caused by bilioamase ae future been mighty fortunate,” said Senator Edge. “It ee aa AEltoe aebatate’ lsgpUnerallice ne |unemployed who had a definite plan} 07 would have been impossible to have discovered a man WILL THERE BE ENOUGH ng Se ERE tee eae | Wid of action. He was the most explicit i take a dose which he does not want | Wives. ment dealers from Mandan, New | Mexico should be sent to Washington. detter equipped to meet the policy of retrenchment and| 17 the good old days, when fishing was fishing, the to swallow himself. The madame got quite riled when, sigan ay ay semen Salem, Wilton, Washburn, and Glen | Maybe these are the very horses to poonomy, absolutely essential following the World war, | Point being to catch ‘em, the ordinary bait was worms— geles than Calvin Coolidge. the garden variety—carried in a tin can and covered xe Oe returning from her home in Paris } formed similar “ ” Ullin were present. unseat a few of the hardshells who “PAPA” LENGLEN | where she runs a business to boot, the l Genatoceseaienennwnaieny have been decorating the Capitol so “Herbert Hoover assumes the presidency at a time| With dirt. Then there came into being a new-fangled| There is something pathetic in the j Cour ener nen charged her duty | Coxey planned to lead his men into idea called fly fishing, which in time made worm bait |‘¢ath of famous “Papa” Lenglen, | 0” asis that her home was in /the Capitol building and to overawe Miss Edna Winchester has returned | long. from Carleton college for a two- ceil | when the eountry is looking forward to aggressive con- father of the once brilliant Suzanne, | Chicago which was her husband’s| Co; into passi weeks’ vacation. Up in the air hours, setting a “structive development and Herbert Hoover, if I analyze | ®S Tare as blacksmith shops. who made her famous girl she was, | legal residence. that #500,000,000 ea “ot Rise new endurance record for women, was * his determination correctly, will lead in the greatest era] A summer or two ago Calvin Coolidge on vacation—|and who lost heart and interest in| At that, the girl's protest does sound | be issued and spent to improve the| Pr! C. B. Waldron of the state | Miss McPhetridge’s accomplishment or was it on location for the ne . ri life when she turned professional. | Sensible. The right of a husband to | highways. agricultural college was here On| the other day. But when she came = wspaper cameramen and po ntly, too, came all of Suz- | establish residence goes back to a day wis the steps of the Capitol, business today. down and asked for a cigaret—and correspondents?—had the country at war over the ques- Spices ety. ing hi when women had nothing to do with Lee eect dential then we understood. tion whether it 1s the correct thing to fish for trout |snle marriage to, Baldwite My eles | this bi f J and his men were turned back BY! miss Sarah Millet: has returned to : ut} able marriage to Baldwin M. Bald- | this business of pase earning. | police who invoked an old statute to oe gga of progressivences history has ever recorded. “Oonsider the two men, Coolidge, the economist and | wesident during a period when economy was absolutely tssential. Hoover the engineer, visualizing the possibil- | With worms. win if and when he got his decree se * make the “army” leave the grounds, |" home here after completing ®/ It remained for a 13-year old girl ‘ties of the country in its world leadership and prepar-| Oldtimers still maintain the former president was| from a lady first on the scene. lise Rdeestdn Were ibe Coxey and one of his lieutenants were | e'™ of school near Goodrich. “ call Taft's attention to the fact : right, both from the standpoint of ethics and of prac- Charles Lenglen is said to have y reading the oncoming | arrested and convicted of a mis- hat he used the wrong words in ad- ‘mg to perform greater and more wonderful things. | “More and more it is becoming emphasized that the | Pnited States cannot maintain a selfish or isolated inter- almost literally died of a broken | years and think of 40 or 50 as the end TEN YEARS AGO ministering the oath to Presi tical consideration of the business in hand. Latter-day |heart. If true, it's just one more|0f all joy and pleasure proceed to aie apne they attempted to! » 1. Conklin has been appointed Hoover. ne send the girlie recy fishermen lay much stress on sportsmanship and giv-|sample of the folly of parents in| read “Vagabonding at Fifty” by Elsie 2 vocational aide of the Red Cross | the golf courses. * st = 2 R ei : ice committee of Burleigh role. It has been our traditional policy to con- | !ng the fish a sporting chance; the whole tribe of cotton- | building too much on the expecta- | Reed Mitchell and Helen Calita Wil- |g@———________ , | home serv! q thread tion that their offsprings’ lives wi!l|S0n. ‘These two women, both well county. ° o cuersives mostly with ourselves and yet to be tered antlers Professes to treat fishing as an artistic develop according to parental ideas | OVer 50, equipped with two knapsacks, | Our Yesterdays | Stei f and desirous, through it all, of doing business ¢ only. a bed roll, a hatchet and a fox ter-|* Lieut. Ward Preston is home after ° teiber the world, and, if possible, not being misunderstood Be that as it may, what the worm and fly fishermen ** * rier, traveled the 7700 miles be- FORTY YEARS AGO more than a year’s service overseas. ° yy the world.” | Suggesting that most of America’s present problems concerned with foreign markets duc to America’s surplus products, Senator Edge asserted that the was not to be found in paternalism and that if United States was to stimulate employment it must foreign markets. He further asserted that if the States had foreign markets, it must purchase want to know now is not the etiquette of bait, but WHY NOT? tween Russia and Samarkand on foot.| Captain J. C. Barr, - By MRS. C. L. MALONE whether there is to be enough ue go around this|, Some little mention is made of the | horseback, train and boat and spent | out the Missouri valley arrive eet | Mrs. A. M. Packard had as her — year, and if hi fact that a Mrs. Luella Gear Heck- | Only $350. They slept in haystacks |city yesterday and is renewing ac-|Suvest this week Miss Olivia Draper) A meeting of the township board . so, where. Spring fever in the follower | soher, a Broadway star. gave $100,000 /and rude peasant hovels. They quaintances, of Mandan. was held at the home of the clerk, C. of Izaak Walton takes the form of tackle rummaging | of her savings to help settle her hus- |@limbed mountains and danced at L. Malone, on Tuesday. and cross-examining every passerby who knows the | band’s bankruptcy case amounting to | Peasant weddings, ate piaff and kib-| Leonard A. Rose, Fargo, appointed |, Mrs. A. G. Jacobson left today for) Dave Dixon has purchased a new best holes and the latest news in fish conservation and | Nearly $7,000,000. The very fact that | abs and ate bow!fuls of clabbered milk |.superintendent of public instruction | ¢t former home at New Lisbon, Wis., | sedan. propagation. much attention is given the item | \-th spoons licked off by their peas- | by Governor Church, came in from |‘ be with her grandmother, who] Gerald Jones hauled a load of goods Proves that we do not even yet sub- | ant hostesses “so that they would be | the east yesterday. is ill. for his father’s store Devotees of the gentle art of casting in the waters| scribe to the belief that woman’s| really clean. goods or their equivalent to maintain a balance | #4 waiting upon the shores are thankful that anothzr | earnings are much more than pin J. W. Bailey arrived yesterday from | > 37>? ‘ trade. He then said: of their clan is in the White House. Being practical Hey oa thal husband's business oe ee ee thie ‘ Sioux Falls to assume his new duties | Daily Lenten “Tf our prosperity is to continue parallel with increas-| men, the fishermen hope he will use his influence to py a REY Roem ns: are Dis ‘He opened a auea rome” ae feriborial peer, | Thought PS population and responsibilities, we must do business | Promote still more federal stocking of fishing streams, eee Successfully?” W. C. Middleton, Milwaukee, is here | © . h the world and thus justify increased production AVAUNT, “SOW BELL’ “No, he was caught.” —Fliegende| for a visit with friends, BY WILLIAN E. GILROY, D. D. Saturday evening visitors at W. 8. our own country.” America is now turning out airplanes at the rate of | We are eating 45 per cent less meat | Blaetter, Munich. (Editor of The Congregationalist) | Oder's. RY as a nation than we did ten years TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Why is it that almost everybody| Mr. and Mrs. Robert Patzner. were ‘He referred to the possibility of danger of reprisals|10 ® day. This fs not a tremendous number, but it is ago, ‘according to rather desperate} When the skin is moist, the re-| Implement dealers and hardware | thinks of prayer in terms of receiv- | Regan : shoppers 2 other nations if America made it difficult for them | Moré than ever before and it is an indication of crowded | officials of the Livestock Echange and ' sistance to electricity is greatly de-|men of the Missouri slope organized | ing or getting, and so little in terms| William vitae f family are export their goods to the United States. airways in the future. the Packer's Institute. They blame jcreased and serious shock may re-|@ permanent auxiliary at a meeting | of giving? Uving on the D. E. Mattis farm. ‘Paying yet another tribute to the leadership of Presi- all “the diet propaganda” about sub- | sult from relatively low voltage. held in the city hall today. Imple-| In Paul’s thought of prayer the| Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Hickel and son ent Hoover, Senator Edge : ee ue : Eee ae a . deepest thing was gratitude—the note | Wayne and Mr. and Mrs. John Bjerke pa : pesitive to.9ay: of thankfuiness for what God had | of Regan were Sunday guests at John “Herbert Hoover is destined to lead the nation through done. So it was that he burst out | Carlson's. period of unprecedented prosperity, to. be made pos- | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern into such exultations as, “Thanks be | Johnnie Anderson accompanied his by taking a proper advantage of the great op-| It takes little to make some folk contented with them- be “careful for nothing,’ before us. selves, “with thanksgiving” to known “Weeld’s Jeadership has its sobering responsibilities, exercised with firmness, always associated with a it. Editorial Co we DON'T BRING THAT WART ~ HAW, CLYDE, EGAD THE mment vacnsinon Dork ARoUND HERE Ton, Is Ky) ne = ger i fo MNSELT we ol fe] DARWIN S VIEWS AGAIN, OR I'LL PUT A MOP-HANDLE { d, unselfish conception of duty at home and abroad. thtinder Wis Neck Al” WAX EVERY, DoRK OF DRESDEN, 1S My OLD 4 Charles Dacetn eer belsved thatsthe, tuman sao FLOOR W “His HOUSE WITH HIM/a Br FRIEND CHARLEY LUKS Jum comes @ means on | Miss Vina Oder, who is attending we Now, I MEAN ifr NeveR 44 ~ CHARLEY Is AN EXPERT with God and a sharing of God’s lov- | the minot Normal, is expected home w AL. MY LIFE HAD Au BODY GoAT- GETTER aw fe HE can ms ing purposes, the last of the week. BURN ME LIKE THAT BoLL~ work BoDY INTO A FRENTZ' spoiled WEEVIL WITH His ARGUING fs WITH HIS IRRITATHIG TALK filter tree cooeeiant nan coeaie Ganon a “Righy | concentrated we HE ISN'T MY SIZE, BUT AND SEEMING INSULTS Ju 7 — [parent Christian thought ae ee ie ee Yu Pur oghen STILTS, AN ~ Nor A WORD To MAcic y cals rom the Black Forest = SLAP HIM UNTIL HIS EARS LS START FLAPPING. /s 1" aus dice eae wy ON THEM, AND You CAH BE IN ON "He FUN Je How peaceful it would seem if only the nation not guilty of imperialism would throw the first stone. IN A LEISURE MOMENT how « young Harvard graduate, the son of a well- ey rs eater, © fom comnieting. hie) ee ee apes and nine tamely, ho terounte that ie ee | ere as maa se aan be 9 res See, ily life in the United States too complicated and im- | Progenitor of So now he lives alone on a South Sea island, SAD SSM MIST A a oe

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