The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 10, 1929, Page 4

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ee ae PAGE FOUR Ne WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 192y The Bismarck Tribune Ap Independent Newspiper THE STATE'S OLDESI] NEWSPAPER (Established 1673) Publishea by the Bismarck Tribune Company Bis: marek, N. D., and entered at the postotfice .t Bismarck as second class mail matter. Daily by mail, ser year, , Un state, outside Bismarck) ........ eeeeeceees Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota .. ‘Weekly by mail, in state. per year ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for ... Weekly by mail. outside of North Dakota, ber year Member Audit Bureav of Circulation Men.ber of The Assortated Presa The Associated Press ts exclusively entitied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and ulso the local news 01 spontaneous origin publ'she: herein All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also Forcign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. CHICAGO DETROI1 Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) GIVE UNSELFISHLY FOR FOURTH In a few days solicitors for the Fourth of July cele- bration will make the rounds of the business community, listing subscriptions to the guaranty fund for the big shor. The Association of Commerce committee feels that this year's observance will call for a total of about $4000. The celebration has been expanded a bit and more free features are to be added this year. The cause on which the canvassers will call is both @ sentimental and practical one. As far as the nature of the day is concerned, the occasion is one for the dis- play of that sentiment known as patriotism, and this patriotism must be of a joyous character as befits the birth of a nation. For the city of Bismarck this patriot- ism and this joyousness must be made practical, for the city will be host to a large gathering of people out of its contiguous territory, neighbors coming in to their biggest communal center to be guests and to be enter- tained. It is an occasion on which Bismarck has the reputation to sustain which as a center of population to @ large section of the state—irrespective of the fact that it is the state capital—it thereby inherits. It must be @ good and thoroughgoing host. There ought, therefore, to be a generous giving, so that the financial means for the celebration will be ample. A point made at the annual meeting of the Association of Commerce, at which the circulation of the conven- tion dollar was analyzed, is germane to the coming occa- sion for which the present canvass is to be made. It was that everybody gets the benefit of these public-affair dollars, even though hotels and restaurants get the initial benefit. The point was that other places get their share indirectly after the hotels and restaurants have had this initie! use of the dollar. On occasions when all business is open, the division of the dollar, a survey has shown, is that hotels receive 23 cents out of the 100; retail stores get 31, restaurants 18, garages 10, theaters 8, and mis- cellaneous channels absorb the remaining 10. ‘vhen i: comes to subdividing the hotel dollar, it was found that the hotels spend 31 cents in wages and sal- aries, on merchandise 19'3, on sundries 23's, on taxes and insurance 6'%, on interest and returns to capital 12, while 7's represents depreciation. Wobody, therefore, need take a selfish view of the contributions and hold back. The $4000 guarantee will be returned amply in forms that only a survey trailing the expenditure could determine. That is a commercial view of the matter, which may appeal most when the canvassers appear. But there is a higher motive to be found, and that is national patriotism, joined with the pride of community prestige. Hand a little of that over with the dollars subscribed. FOLLOWING THE DREAM A middle-western millionaire has bought a yacht and is on his way to the Pacific ocean to look for a sunken island paradise which was revealed to him in a dream. Dreams, in themselves, are hardly enough evidence even for rich men. So this man, before buying his yacht, went to California, chartered an airplane, and flew out ov. - that part of the ocean where his dream had told him his island lay buried. Lo! There it was, some 15 or 20 feet velow the surface. So now he's going out in his yacht to give it a thorough examination. He plans to build a breakwater all around the place, pump in sand from the bottom of the sea, and make an Island vacation spot out of it. ‘This business of looking for island Edens in the Pacific 4s not new. The old Spaniards had the idea just as de=p.,, implanted as this modern millionaire. In their day, just as now, it took a good deal of money to go on such an expedition. One had to buy or charter a ship, or a fleet of them, hire crews, lay in a great stock of Provisions, get the consent of the king and the blessing of the church—and then sail thousands of miles across almost uncharted seas. But there was this difference: All of the places the old explorers went looking for were right on the sur- face There was no need to build breakwaters and in- stall costl, pumping systems. The ocean fairly teemed with islands. A ship simply couldn't miss them. Most of them had never been seen by white men. Any valiant adventurer could take possession of one and leave the life ~f Burope forever behind him. alow, of course, they've all been discovered. All that’s left to 2 man who is guided by a vision is to pull up the bottom of the sea, wipe it off and make an island where formerly there was nothing but ocean. It’s a lot * b. quite as satisfactory. However, that's the way it is with nearly cverything in this modern world. All of the {frontiers bave been pusted back: The era of hard facts and automatic machinery is hard to escape. Just the same escape is still possible. You have to have EVOLUTION OF THE FLAPPER Even the flapper is reported to have yielded to prog: tess. We have the word of a fiapper alumnus that the flapp. 1. extinct. he flapper’s successor is an improvement, it is said, becaure she does well what her forerunner did crudely Tt.2 ilapper was not half as sophisticated as the present- day who is smoother and more polished. She wears black satin instead of cerise; she blends her rouge evenly; sneé kuwaies her cigarettes languorously instead of pulf- ing furiously, she dances gracefully to muffled jazz and duints quit as much of the forbidden stuff, but from a teacua rater than a flask. She is more refined and veils he: frankness with artful politeness, takes life for grantea, anc lives frankly and calmly, if not always wisely, It may be doubted from the foregoing that the flapper is really dead. She seems merely to have developed into a haoi’ certain sophistications and done away with a certain amateurishness. She has become more dangerous, but hardly different. Zo: a t.me flapperdom had the sedate and suspicious Generation all hot and bothered. as the flapper saying wees. Like most scares over the rising generation the fancies were 10 times as bad as the facts. When young girls parade their “wickedness,” it is a good sign of saintiiness. i during the fasting treatment. I have carried some patients through several days of delirium while the pus was being reabsorbed, but in every case the patient got well. Do not delay in following out these of beginning the treatment early enough you can save yourself much time and avoid much discomfort. If you have not had an attack of acute appen- dicitis, but feel a discomfort in the lower right section of your abdomen, it 1s a good plan to undergo a correc- tive diet so that you will not develop appendicitis. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Baby Perspires Question: Mrs. O. J. O. writes: “Our baby boy nearly four months old is in the best of health, but per- spires so much about the head. When he wakes up his pillow will be soaked, and when he nurses (he is breast fed) the sweat just pours off his head. T have been told that it is the sign of rickets. Is this so? Also, he is very constipated and I give him milk of magnesia every day.” Answer: The cause of the baby Perspiring heavily is probably due to the fact that you have too many ' clothes on him, or that he is wrapped too warmly when nursing. It is not necessary to have a great deal of covering on babies, and this is a great mistake that so many mothers make. Of course, I cannot tell you whether or not the cause of this condition in your baby. is rickets without having the opportunity of making an exam- ination, but will gladly send you an article on this subject if your doctor believes this to be responsible. Meat Substitutes Question: Mrs. B. H. writes: “I have been a vegetarian for a number of years but notice that you advo- cate meat in your menus frequently. What could I use as a substitute?” 8 elbeeahee CONTINUING A GREAT WORK The Gorgas Laboratory of Tropical Research, which Was dedicates a few days ago in Panama City, perpetu- ates n © only the name but the work of General William Crawforu Gorgas, the famous army sanitary engineer. Tt is such a memorial as he himself would have wished, not because it would honor him but because it would continue the great work he was unable to complete in one shor. life. " In the establishment and maintenance of this institu- tion the three American continents are working hand in hanc for their common welfare. The site and permanent laboratory building are the gift of the republic of Pan- ama. It will be maintained by the United States and Cen ral and South American nations. Thus will it con- tribute to Pan-American comity as well as to immunity from disease and to economic advantage. General Gorgas brought honor to the United States army. H- did much to conquer the Panaman jungles and to make them habitable for white men. He con- tributed much to the world’s knowledge of tropical disease- and their prevention and remedy. His notable career stands as an example of what young physicians can do in the military service of their country in peace time. His example will be a continuing inspiration for the members of the army medical corps. Ege al Uy aT as Third, eat a large quantity of green and non-starchy vegetables both in the cooked and raw forms. Fourth, walk three to five miles daily. Fitth, whenever you feel a discom- fort in the intestines, it is a good plan to use no food but some acid fruit for a few days. Do not use too many sugars and starches, and avoid any combination of food which will produce flatulence. If you will follow these rules it will be impossible for you to develop colitis and will, therefore, be impossible for you to develop appen- dicitis. Until constipation and bowel fer- mentation have been overcome en- tirely, it is a good plan to take at least one enema daily to keep the bowels as clean as possible. Out of thousands of cases of| vegetarian who insists on no animal chronic and acute appendicitis which | products would necessarily be limited 1 have handled in the past twenty | to the nuts and legumes for the foods years, I have never yet had to sign a! which are rich in protein as well— single death certificate, and the treat- | even vereals and potatoes. I advocate ment used has been essentially the/meat in the menus because I hi seme in all cases as that described | found it is more readily digested, i yesterday's article. In some cases| assimilated than the other protein was apparent that the pus sac had | foods. theory of a dish drainer as simpler and more sanitary than “drying” with a towel, and nothing in the bosom of the family precipitates such quar- reling. I know a mother-in-law who doesn't speak to her son-in-law because he essayed to tell her daughter that cer- tain of her housekeeping Pons {handed on as traditions from her For over six months, Miss Nellie ‘mother were all wrong, mostly be- Vedder, a student in the University of ; cause they were dissimilar from cer. Chicago, got meals three times a day, | tain methods of his own mother. washed dishes three times a day, and | patie Mid did all the orthodox “redding up” while one assistant held a stop-watch and another counted her movements, | A ME BO THE TITANIC SAILS Seventeen years ago today a giant ocean liner, bound for New York, pulled slowly away from her South- ampton pier. The Titanic, largest vessel constructed up ePheep time, i a ‘was startinc on her maiden voyage. WISE CRACKS DUE Myriad bright handkerchiefs waved Many raucous wise cracks will be|from the decks to the crowds that made, too, at the idea of a scientific {had come to bid the ship Godspeed as she tried various methods. {collegiate thesis on the subject of} on its first sailing. A blare of mar- ‘When the six months were up she | dishwashing. Queer tial music rolled back from the upper wrote a thesis about it, almed to show | Many wise cracks will be made by | deck of the ship. Flags rippled gaily that most, if not all housewives, since | Women who like to pretend that they | in the breeze. the day of Eve, had wasted millions | @¥@ engaged in a serious and noble} Four days later the vessel sank off of yards of energy and time, all told, ! profession as by men who have an | the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. by their hit-and-miss methods in do- eet (reo aemaren| Sa aett eiedin = Papin knife-like edge,” says nothin; ch than a sw =f report, “ h en have discovered that it is both comfortable and be- I eins thesis discussed sucker. bottom ike a racer Be coming, and all the shouts of the hairdressers have not | three methods of table setting, dish-! Which is exactly why vee are eset and eal the moved them. The old quip a ve a washing and general “redd: uy more wasted motions in the job do- | ill-fat ip num! 5 ness may need ivi. ip about woman's changeable- eed ae tr chard Rig |mestic today than in any other. | these, 1635 were lost, including scores i minutes, 8 seconds, and 1954 motions | Women themselves have done more to | Of notables. The tragedy was the for a day's worth of dishes in the hamper the same advance in substi- | greatest in the history of modern average family of four, the fastest re- {tutes for drudgery that has been | Ocean traffic. The Lusitania disaster quiring only 22 minutes, 31 seconds, | made in the outside-the-home realm j Claimed but 1200. and 1015 motions. | than anyone else. j The iceberg was rammed at 11:40 x ke OK ' Sometimes one wonders if sub- | P. an reer a ance’. 1912. red a ony > OTT Ane THE BETTER WAY | consciously it isn't a whole-hearted | vessel went down jay morning HOW TO KNOW YOUR EGGS while Ree abie has not as yet: Wifely attempt to make oF world on, pata aid could Teach eS (Time) easto}cling to the idea that domestic Survivors were rescu yy the Car- What is a bag egg? One that stinks with hydrogen Me aieEes Ei ee ft ig drudgery 1s Just that and nothing j Pathia after they had taken to life- sulphide or one that contains a partially formed chick. | revealed that for the housewife who | more, so that wifely rewards and ap- | boats. What is a god egg? One that has a thick jelly-like| insists on “doing” the dishes after | Preciations will be gveater than if it white, an upstanding yolk, a firm membrane separating | each meal, though the author implies lis generally accepted that they don't white and yolk, a sheen over the whole contents. that she really thinks the once-a-day , have it so hard after all. «What is a poor egg? One with either tery or turbid | method is most efficient, the prefer- | For instance, just how many haus- White, a yolk that flattens out or bursts because of its] able process is to have all the dishes | fraus will really try to find out which pone: membrane, a dull appearance throughout the| passed at the end of the meal to didi sabing: qusiiod hates ey the ; mama, who scraj them as she | 15 minutes, 37 scconds an mo- Poor eggs are practically as edible and nourishing as| places them on Rater at her ! tions a day. Sood eggs, merely less pleasant to look at and hence less| right. They are then rolled into the | hat does she know about it?” appetizing. kitchen, given a rapid cold rinse, | they'll ask, and perhaps they're right. Cornell university has been making a study of egg| washed under the tap in the hot; Timing one’s movements in a class- deterioration and preservation. Last week Paul Francis | water, placed in a wire drained with {room is one thing. Trying to wash Sharp, Cornell's professor of dairy chemistry, who has | hot rinsing water poured over them, | dishes with the kids fighting and a been working on the matter with other Cornell men,|and thus steam-dried. Miss Vedder |peddler at the door is another. wrote a preliminary report to Science. Eggs spoil, he | intimates that “wiping the dishes” is | stated, because: (1) they contain erms caught from | as archaic as making bread or saus- | Munich.—(?)—The cities of Mun- the hen or absorbed through the shell pores; (2) they | age. jich and Strassburg have exchanged lose water by evaporation ‘through the shell, a condi- Now, harmless and innocent as this | monuments. In return for a foun- tion which helps break down the membrane between | treatise seems, one can imagine no tain symbolizing ther Rhine” pre: yellow and white; (3) they are kept at a temperature | more brilliant scarlet fiag-wafted in sented by Stzassburg, this city has too high,.which causes chemical reactions, if not the | the faces of womankind, for if there's | sent to the other municipality a sta- formation of embryos; (4) most important and only | one thing which the mass of women ‘tue known locally as “the mice temp- newly discovered, the alkalinity of white and yolk has in- | resent it’s any other woman's intima- ter,” the nickname of Strassburgers. creased. : tion that she knows more about how Alkalinity increases because carbon dioxide escapes | housewifely duties shculd be per- ! Charles Rigoulet of Bordeaux, {through the shell from the white. Then the white ab- | formed than does she. | France, protested against cold soup. sorbs carbon dic le from the yolk, unly to lose it again} 1 know a certain daughter who has | The waiters attempted to eject him through the shi Result of the loss is that the yolks struggled, really tactfully, for.severai and he threw three of them into the get flabby, the whites watery. te t. P. S—HKe ‘These observations suggested to Prof. Sharp's group j years io pleas sta sini tothe | stree! ae aes Bi ins the way of preserving eggs in their newly laid condition | @ way which they have found efficacious. It is simple: Store th i Nace fill vith a low | concentration of ee deride. That mene oe i OUR BOARD HOU E By Ahern dioxide balance within and without the eggs. Cost is 1 cent per case of eggs. 3 cents per dozen. ‘ miler - WHERE SILENCE IS GOLDEN i (Wall Street Journal) There has been a lot of talk about George F. Baker's fortune having increased a paltry 850,000,000 or so through a 2,500-point rise in First National bank stock. The public has been doing more talking about it than Mr. Baker, because Mr. Baker is not saying anything at j all. He may not even know that he has been made $50,- 000,000 richer in a few days. If he does, he got little thrill out of it. N WOMAN KEEPS THE BOB For a great many years one of mankind's favorite jokes has been the fondness of woman for changing styles. However, it is beginning to look as if this joke might be & wee bit overdrawn. When women find a style that really suits them they are quite capable of hanging on to it with a great deal of tenacity. For the last three or four years the spokesmen for the hairdressers have raised their voices, every now and then, to announce that the bob was doomed. Long hair, they kept saying, was about to return. Soon the bobbed- haired maiden would be as rare as in pre-war days. And what has happened? Nothing whatever, The bob is precisely as popular as it was four years ago. Wom- pure races. There is no such thing &s a pure race. ‘There ain't any such animal.’”—Dr. Herbert Friedenwald, retired of Washington, D. C., testify- ing on the National Origins Provision of the Immigration law before the Senate Committee on Immigration. xe * “There is an element in America which hates Britain and would wel- come the idea of. attacking, while another element does not particularly want war, but is determined that America shall replace Britain as the mistress of the seas.”—Rev. R. J. Campbell, British pastor. ** * “It is a wholly undesirable idea to “This life is only the beginning of | introduce into this country any the next. Some people say that they |SToup or any race, whether they be believe in the future life, but you | international bankers or whether they would never suspect it by the manner | be the poorest immigrants from Italy, in which they conduct themselves,”— | Who decide questions for us on Euro- Rev. J. Harry Hornung, Wichita} Pean _ideas.”—Senator Hiram John- (Kan.) pastor. son, California. see ee * “President Hoover's intention to! “In advising younger men I always appoint a special fact-finding com- | emphasize the difference between the mission to investigate and report on | Mind that is a storehouse for facts the problem of prohibition enforce- | @nd the mind that is a factory. The ment is one of the most encouraging | Useful brain is one that creates con- signs of what professes to be a dis- Editorial Comment 4&3, Parents THE CHILDREN’S TABLE By ALICE JUDSON PEALE In many homes prevails an excel- lent custom of giving the children an early supper which they eat by them- Selves. Children must go to bed be- times and must content themselves structive ideas."—Eugene M. Stevens, President Continental Illinois Bank and Trust Company, Chicago. “Take my family. I do not know | ——————--——-o what it is, Take the Jews, particu-|| Qur Yesterdays | ~~ FORTY YEARS AGO larly. They probably are about as Pure a race as exists. There are no Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Reed and baby of Chicago are spending some time in\the city. Frank LaWall was appointed to fil] school board left s i ES gee =~ HAVE No coNceRN ABOUT THE PAINTING AND HANGING oF THE WINDOW SCREENS, MRS. Hoople / , ~1.HAVE A FRIEND wWHo IS A PAINTER GY TRADE,~AND HE OWES ME $9, ~~ I HAVE MADE A DEAL WITH HIM, WHEREBY HE WiLL PAINT AND HANG THe Screens W PAMENT OF THe DEBT /—~ ——~ EGAD, ww I Trust You REALIZE THaT THE TRANSACTION IS A COSTLY SACRIFICE on MY zg 2 a § <gr ~ HAVE You ANY FRienDS: A wio owe You MoNEY WHO ARE RUG- BEATERS, ~ Willdow WASHERS, ~ AND WoopworK CLEANERS 2 w~ iF You HAVE, THe You ARE NICELY ELIMINATED FROM MY SPRING HoUSE-CLEANIWG PROGRAM /~ woTHERWISE THe NOBLE g HOOPLE QoAT-oF-ARMS ARE IN FOR A LOT OF ELgow worK /, E i afl ast o& EE r-¥ 3 ett greater thrill. The aged banker's fortune is so large a change of a few million daily means little. mate that the market value of Mr. Baker's holdings has Increased $250,000,000 over the last five years. Talking about big fortunes it seems that those who do & lot of talking are less fortunate in the matter of amass- ing wealth than those who say little. The late H. H Rogers entertained Mr. Stillman on his yacht one day. “Did Mr. Stillman have much to say?” asked a friend. ‘Four words,” replied Mr. Rogers, “Good morning and good night.” The late J. P. Morgan was a quiet man and talked little. One day ne broke the silence and mentioned something about undigested securities and the market | broke badly. Afier that he was more reticent than ever. ‘The late Mr. Frick was known to many of 5g u manners is much more effective than that given by correction and critiz his | _ friends as the ux. One permitted a writer | ODUCERS FIGU to “inerview bin Wie at down." rewesied Mr. Pret | Px of bs es taken | with the interview and ae cope tase ed over to Mr | MOMS 1S one THATS Frick. It came back an hour or so later well edited A SOUND | three lines. <* until he became a4 Rockefeller said little v6 in the same Just think of the ted if he had bas been a new ete mens st for them. I thy » 4 a e £ Talks ToZS, «

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