The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 17, 1929, Page 4

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)

a Newspy THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribuna Company Bis- ‘Marck. N D., and entered at the postoffice .t Bismarck Weekly by mail. in state. per year .... ‘Weekly by mail. in state. three years for f Weekly vy mail. outside ot North Dakota, DOT VEAL . 2... cece eee eee eee e tees ee eeeeees . 1.50] or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also , CHICAGO DETROI1 | More. A child whose home was a haven of love and hap- Tower Bidg. Kresge Bidg | piness will have echoes of that love and that happiness a a to draw on, decades later, as long as life lasts. What if misfortune, hard times, poverty, may come later? -Bit- are also reserved. piness.” ‘ es G. LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK . t (Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspaper) 1 r € On a subject which has been controversial and gives | € & That is, he sounded the summons to the task, showed «remedy to the lawmakers. There was no suggestion of ldictation in what he said of the stress of agriculture. tHe handed down no ready-made plan. No lawmaker was asked to be a rubber stamp. The way is left open to the statesmen of the house and senate to win fame, sinconceivably by formulating a magic solution, though $not inconceivably by some practical, workable start, as ) by a farm board and a revolving fund to inaugurate or- derly production and marketing in place of the present ¢ Surplus of one crop and deficit of another. 4 Most members of congress as shown by their comment Vin the newspapers agreed that it was a sqne presenta- tion of the matter which the president made and was, therefore, a good message. It was a message which ful- filled the constitutional requirements in the situation. : The president is charged to lay conditions inviting or re- {quiring legislation before the attention of the congress «and to suggest action. The business of writing the leg- | islation and enacting it is the province of the lawmakers. ‘The distinction was concisely and meticulously observed ; by the president. . The prospect is that a measure shaped on the proposal ‘of a farm board with a revolving fund to use toward ‘striving for an orderly marketing system will become which if it does not command sup;ort necessary for en- Adroit politicians, according to the word from Washing- increasing prominence in the news and comment from board idea being credited with having the sanction of President Hoover. ture certificate not a paper payable in cash by the gov- € ernment, but applicable to redemption in payment of sion from the crop exporter by traders who import goods and have duties to pay. To begin with, it is proposed that a government com- mission would decide that a certain premium should be Paid on certain exports, thereby being enabled to reach the farm surpluses. If the commission should decide that this premium should be 50 cents a bushel on wheat. the exporter would pay the grower approximately 60 cents a bushel above the normal market price for his | series, ‘wheat, knowing that he would receive this amount back | Mexico. A eS sereets ereny. emule: with airplanes bombs fe held, to advance the price of all wheat 50 cents a bushel, been aloi rae spectacular demonstrations of it have e border, for if the local trade would not pay the price, the export } some desire to make the ‘United Btatee eset itself in i trade would. self-defense. Of course somebody is paving the bill. The rebellion must cost a pretty penny purses of any of the Dullwhscke Pigecdare intl tthe wl ts of any duties on imports, he can vend it to someone | surrectos, Ti Ree re Just another evidence of human greed. Mexico's rich ot ans snnoral resources and its tremendous natural ash, except for commissions shaved off in the transac- Ploitetion pee barprre pantera ad | fon by which the debenture certificate is cashed. So the ‘On the house side the debenture plan has found hardly | tive way to gain their ends and the shortest cut to their ‘ ‘any favor. The house agricultural committee has re- | Seedy desires. Probably when the whole matter is sifted Ind that some of our own meglo- degree of responsibility. re we should step in and adopt tat. The man who fires his neigh- cable beyond description. What shall foster's war in his neighbor's 4s going on in Mexico. pe AND THIS FROM PARIS! (Omaha World-Herald)“ SS et brccen stein | 3m Sethation to bir teal es nae rea tate Seas of asa ion er soul, e went toa vad Pes seken 20. sand pn to have them made beautiful. The ut gangrene se! al J the opinion of Senator Ceraway that with the! sued for damages and the first civil court of Paris plan in the measure, the agricultural problem | awarded her $8,000. The surgeon was not mulcted on-account of careless- ness or lack of skill, but on the principle that he may use his knife to save life or health but not to seve beauty. “Despite the doctor's honest court, “his high professional integrity interestedness, the fact of his having operation involving grave risks on @ healthy limb without any therapeutic necessity for such opera- tion or even any usefulness whatever to the health from the government. The effect of this would be, it is ‘The exporter, say, of wheat receives a debenture cartitieate for the premium amount due on his exporta- | 01,8 scale that indicates ; tion and if he has no use for the certificate in payment | who can so use it. In operation, the result is indirectly the game as if the government had paid the exporter in | the agricultural committee members have definitely ‘While there is as yet no certainty that a majority has won over, it is the opinion of many committee mem- that the plan has an excellent chance of becoming of the senate farm bill unless President Hoover HT. nearer @ solution than it ever was. He is in- believe that President Hoover would not veto with the plan in it, if it were provided that the farm board could invoke the plan at its will and played in every town in the United States, the old songs are working for her, nevertheless. Never does she hear @ snatch of one of them that it does not bring her father back to her. She shares in’ the music that a nation loves; is almost a part of it. ‘That is her legacy. It has given her a happy life; and mo man can possibly give his children anything more than that. It ts forever paying dividends. The little lady's visit to New York the other day was occasioned by the fact that she had been invited to be guest of honor at a big party given in the gilded Ritz Hotel by the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. “And what do you suppose?” she said excitedly to a reporter afterward. “When I came in they all clapped the and wanted me to make a speech before I got a chance to sit down!” There are other dividends, too. She strolls down a Member Audit Bureau of Circalation street—and, like as not, from the first house she passes there come the strains of “Swance River,”’ painstakingly Men.ber of The Assoriated Press rendered by some unskilled pianist to whom that old The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use| folksong is one of the things that make life easier and for republication of al) news di:patches credited to It! the world more companionable. And this, every time, I the iocai news 01 spontaneous origin publ'sier herein | >Fings before her the image of her father—“all he All rights .f republication of all other matter herein | thought of,” she explains “was ma and me—and our hap- Things like that are the most precious legacies on Forcign Representatives earth. Money can do a great deal to smooth out the | Pifth Ave. Bldg. rough places in life, but memories can do a great deal z TS i % terness and utter hopelessness are always held at a dis- THE MESSAGE AND FARM RELIEF _ | tance by the remembrance of old days and old ways. And that, probably, is the great redeeming feature of cevidence of possibly becoming such again, President a world that sometimes seems very heartless and cruel. T Hoover spoke Tuesday in his message opening the spe- Things born of kindness and love are immortal. cial session of the congress, with both leadership and | remain as long as anyone can use them. Their fortunate 1 Festraint as to farm relief. Possessor can draw on them without limit. Work ‘to leave money to your children, by all means. ‘the need of doing something for an industry vital to the! But remember that there is another kind of Jegacy that {Nation's welfare and wisely left the formulation of the| is far more valuable. FLYING TO THE EXPOSITION Tf aviation in this country develops with anything like the speed that the leaders in the industry are predicting ~—and there isn't any very good reason for thinking it will not—we are going to see & growth that will surprise us. Here's a sample. Chicago is going te hold a great international exposition in 1934. And aviation leaders are predicting now that Chicago's hotels will not be over- crowded, no matter how great the throngs that go to see it. Why? Because, they say, aviation will be so far developed by that time that visitors will stop in cities like Detroit, Cleveland, Indianapolis and St. Louis, if they cannot find accommodations in Chicago, and will fly back and forth to the exposition daily. That sounds almost incredible. quite within the realm of possibilities. The airplane may yet work as profound a change in our. social and economic organization as the automobile has done. THE TARIFF AND THE CANAL The matter of the tariff is apt to give Congress some the main project before the lawmakers, but there also is|! the most puzzling problems it has had to solve in ' some possibility of an attempt to put over another plan, | Y€27S- ol pi sf a A tariff, unfortunately, has so many complications: ~ actment, may be made the device for political capital, | ‘M&t don’t appear on the surface. ‘ Take the matter of a tariff on imports from Canada, for instance. It is now being reported reliably in Wash- ton, are seeking for just such a medium of opposition. ‘The president, Lowever, rather confuted these by recom- ington that if such a tariff is raised, Canada will refuse mending no plan against which partisan hostility could to cooperate heat the building of the St. Lawrence ship 2e concentrated for factional advantage or party divi- canal. And while that may be a minor matter to some 8 tion. Sections, the great middle west has its heart set on that If any other plan gains conspicuousness in the rivalry Sms some of its leading advocates in Congress ” of proposals it may be that of the debenture device, which | *7¢ men who ordinarily would be the staunchest of high tariff men, is, in effect, a bounty plan. This has been receiviny ve . There are half a dozen similar quirks to the situa- the capital and there is asserted ‘to be a disposition on| 100. A good many congressional brows are apt to be = the part of some radical and Democratic leaders to back | *¢lY creased and furrowed before the subject is finally it as an opposition measure to any board plan, the farm disposed of. = {of satiety and blunted appreciations. Yet it 1s, obviously, | ‘ner, obviously mother and daugh- |! satiety and blunted apprec | ter, The daughter, smartly tailor-/¢ion of real appreciation of the small- | ed, very much,a woman of the world, ' est experience—even to unnecessary ; & bit dered at the ordeal of order- j plates with the morning grapefruit. | ing, handling the menu with ex-/|" 4 disgressive thought, too, was the jedtohel Ate peogatebirn realization of the ay) petty at- lenging “4 titude of the mass of toda: fruit is well-iced.” on their own. I watched them in VIRGINIA SECEDES that I am suggesting for you. You & woman of the world; awed’ and | hotel the other night. Men, for in- | exception of the counties which later | WhY. some of these disorders have | sary to give salts as a La green and very conscious of the fun of breakfast! daughter both amused and even em-|many plates of roast beef and lamb| ‘The action followed President xin. | 6ct?” This curative diet system does | of the latest books on child psychol- barrassed in a ‘sophisticated way at | chops dispatched back to the kitchen “|help in all of these cases and, al- her mother's evident provincialism. | gece coln’s proclamation of two days be: ogy. A most obsequious waiter bore in) sisted the meat was over or under- | 75, troops from states 1 the|/#bor; that docs not have every “ the grapefruit. The golden halvesjdone. I never heard such universal aor The Teoetaten nent seane stimulation to accomplish the fullest ‘ were resting on glossy hothouse |attempts to order the table d’hote! it impossible for Virginia to delay |° its capacities. . violet leaves which, in turn, were | dinner but to substitute this vegetable | any longer the taking of a definite —President Herbert Hoover. topping scoopfuls of crushed ice inj} or that meat from the other menu, -/stand, although just two weeks be- esi Y deep silver Bowls. He also bore in| Is woman's fairly new independ-| fore the convention had refused to| “There is a grave danger that the as. ] two Sob be preemie plates. dotly-| ence too much for her? Is she still! secede by a vote of 89 to 45. The| World will allow itself to be chloro- 2 —Lord Riddell, British journalist fruit from the bowl, while her mother | ¢____—__________ | Confederacy was not the first dis- | ne" wise” (hiv ) meekly submitted to the: transfer to iE BARBS j sension between the two sections. B . ne Age. congenial Poel pea mcrey center iad ° existed between them. “It is one of womans ancient priv- |The child becomes “lazy” through what she described as “the asinine! A bishop from Sweden says he| On the same day that Virginia] ileges to be knockéd about. They eating P ena Wouldn't it have been nicer if he|°f his first proclamations as presi- Fn aiged Nichols, author. (Out- Under Television: Jones (to Central, who has given ‘The debenture plan links up the idea of a bounty and him eight bibaiied faces in succession): “Bay, listen, the tariff by making the proposed crop surplus deben- | °P¢Fator, I didn't ask for Lon Chaney.” With Hollywood full of promoters of all kinds it is 4j tariff duties. It would thus become an instrument of |O¢4 no one has thought to engineer a “Pay-a-Littie financial barter, bought up at discount or on commis- | Attention-to-Your-Own-Wife Week.” Editorial Comment MEXICO AND THE MEGLOMANIACS (Renville County Farmer) The Mexican revolution current is one of the most in- y has had in a rather impressive ther larger scale than usual in teresting that the countr; Tt is on a ral gestures of commerc’al “swank.” goes hand in hand with political preferment. looting politicians start wars as the most effec- * Jected it, 17 to 4. But on the senate side, some of pe ory That is the place whe ; frned to the plan as a part of the farm relief plan in pall gon hac . "s home es} Place of the equalization fee. we ay he tae house? Yet that is what surgeon patient lost a leg. ea Fa BE at Bak i s E id ih i 4 a8 E i gE : 3 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Mec Mts She Fast Mey. GET RID OF THE TOXINS This is the second article of a ser- ies which will run for two weeks. It will be a cleansing diet course which must be read each day and followed closely by those who wish to get good results in a spring bodily houseclean- ing diet. Look up yesterday's paper, and save these articles for reference. ‘The first plan in this course is for you to use a method by which you can get rid of the accumulated toxins that are present with every disease. Ihave never + whether well or sick, who would not benefit by a few days bodily house- cleaning! ‘Those living on the ordinary meals | corresponde are found ‘aus too much of certain readers of ne kinds of foods, to use bad mixtures of | me for advice. o foods, and to commit other dietetic | this simple plan mistakes from which the body will| condensing @ good suffer from what is commonly called | advice which has “ “auto-intoxication” or -self-poisoning. ; marvelous ody This may not produce an acute or | others, and there sori ae chronic illness until after many years, | you should not benefit ae but much sickness could be avoided | way if you will strictly follow if everyone who thinks he is weJl| structions. - * would, at periodical times, adopt a| Because of the limited amount regime which would produce an ex- | space which I can use for this Ae traordinary amount of elimination of |each day, the instructions must ‘ any toxins which may have accumu- | given a little at a time, and you must lated in the body. So this course is] save these articles for reference 80 for even those who seem to be well at | that you will not miss any of the the present time. ii Loo gtd want to bring out in these One Regime For Many ers | series.” fs Those who are suffering from any} Tomorrow's article will give you definite disorder will, of course, re-| very definite instructions on how to ceive a great deal of benefit from this | start with the body-cleansing course short course of diet treatment, and | on the first day. Watch for tomor- from this they may ‘ager see cell de Tow’s paper. a more extended treatment 4 ie own case. This treatment will QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS prove effective in the relief of any of (Combihing Melba Teast) the following eae en . H Acne, anemia, appendicitis, asth- a, ma, auto-toxemia, backache, high or ; milk combinations? low blood pressure, bronchitis, catarrh} Answer: Melbh' toast may be used saa A VIVAC” CRIS arms and ammunition to the Mexi-| sna colds, constipation, cystitis, de-| with any other kind of food, AULA CIMINO fective circulation, deafness, diabetes, | combines well with milk and fruit. reactions of two utterly diverse types | couple of Texas cowboys? digestive ‘disorders, dropay, chtéuls Salts For at scariapg Aieevinrlalide: Raney are spies discharge from the ears, eczema and| Question: O. L. B. asks: “Wha' aii ipabass life, engl tok - A erties critic reeled New ihe psoriasis, enervation, epilepsy, fata 2 te ior of es ie it her too-experienced daughter scorned. | similar ideas. And maybe it wouldn't | ence, gallstones, goitre, hay fever, ishment? My mother gives ALLENE SUMNER, » ine It gave one food for thonght about | hurt to clothe those ideas a bit once beer combdlocg isnicte Tay every time he is late from painful or excessive menstruation, | Tuns across the street, etc. If 5 nephritis, rectal troubles, rheumatism, | continued, will it not cause Be ZIAAS Se diseased tonsils, tuberculosis-of the | have chronic constipation? I normalizing the weight of the indi- | good for him—that they never hi vepws Jee eum i ae this thing known as the law of com- | in a while just for variety'’s sake. jPensation; a realization that too com- They sat opposite me in the limited jPlete experience brought its own price is cE Fed {whereas too little had its compensa- | 5 vidual who is either too fat or too} @nyone. Which is right?” tin ad about. Mussolini's treatment of T have just named a list of the most al 's common disorders which have been | Italian labor agitators. You know, successfully treated by this method | he has been giving castor-oil to some The mother was as‘ obviously, not | action in the restaurant of a woman's} On April 17, 1861, Virginia, with the | Will say, “It seems almost impossible! posed “ » | becam: been pronounced incurable! How can | child, and certainly not as a punish- ing on the limited, with Soeur hake food, but pen care | pnaenccinumoleesane one kind of dieting have such an ef-| ment. Tell your mother to read some Pronto, because the fair orderer in-: fore, calling for the assembling of to transfer | 50 unaccustomed to it that she fights | ordinance acted upon 68 years ago|formed by general declarations in the fruit from the ice-bedded bowls | to force the fact of its existence upon | today, however, passed by a vote of |favor of peaceful intentions. If a LAZINI to the plates. jthe world at large, even if this fight | 88 nf 55 and was auiod oy the peo- | man says he is against shooting and, (By Alice J “sed ) se takes the form of nothing more than! pie by a large majority. at the same time, purchases two new y ludson Peale! KNOWING GAL! im-ySending, her meal back to ther se refusal of the western counties | TeVOlvers, what would you think of] Contrary to popular belief, laziness Daughter stopped him with an im-] Kitchen? to join the others as allies of the him?” is unnatural. perious, gesture, proceeding to eat her From pre-revolutionary days, friction constantly being asked to do things he does yot want to do and sees no reason for doing. finds America is a land of work.| seceded, Jefferson Davis issued one | like it.” “It's perfectly obvious,” she said, | had said “achievement”? dent of the Confederacy. It called “that this fruit should be eaten from ** for owners of ships to volunteer them * * & in the morning, whose home work Pee er mrecenie ey ca ager says the day is coming when pleasure] President Lincoln responded with ajica is incurably religious. Your fas rerntpadenprert gens mera as plate. Why, then, in the name of|cars will attain a speed of two miles | Proclamation announcing a blockade ringtapes Ca Le tay, aaa teat: who does not shine in neatness and Tomfoolery submit to some commer-|a minute. But the fellow just ahead | °f Confederate ports. es eae oes ul ett Sanat tee i cial concern’s idea of what is good/of you in the Sunday parade still agi i. icienc: house, prov form? Look at these scrambled eggs; | will go too slowly. Sroguelgn dr apnt remap pure ayer é eee aii ter, but insist that they be taken o! Some of the cri are questioning i onto a plate, even though the food|the authenticity of Joan Lowell's oe sae beg ope es alae gets cold in the transfer.” story of the sea. “The Cradle of the from Dr. John H. Harriss of New York | to the service of the southern states.| “I have come to believe that Amer- | frequently is not done, shows an ou rand Duke of Rus-| highly competent as chairman of the ANE S {committee in charge of arrangements * * * ’. “But all those dishes look nice, any-| Deep.” They don’t think it holds i epelnere Fst ap and domina- aigth pei bowl with tbe violet | see “Racial progress pon —C. M. Keys, president Transcon- em wl verge pre non John D. Rockefeller says every-| feet of healthy and instru tinental Air Transport. (Forbes Daughter scorned, too, the little|/body should have ideals. Most|dren. There Magazine.) salver of assorted mints and gold-tip- | everybody we know has, but buying | America that is n rets passed with the finger | them is another matter. not live under sound conditions of |?——7)~—~~>__, owl, but mother took her's 5 happy ar =. health; that does Our Yesterdays as a child, while again sophisticated} A couple of cattlemen drove 60] portunity of education from Bey daughter babbled of the inane silly| Mexican rebels into a corral ‘and| ginning to the end of our institu- FORTY YEARS AGO Cc. W. le left last evening for Chalor, to be -with his mother, | terest. who is seriously ill. Captain Belk has returned from *|shut the gate. Instead of sending /| tions; that is not free from injurious ; a a Hi we He’D HAVE A Hold svitt. Tite I HEAD on HIM LIke F. A. Ryno, Bt. Paul, is enjoying a FAUGH /. Away : SEE, ~ YEP, BY GEoRcE,~ with You! /. ‘A. BADGER few days’ visit with friends in the city. for one A ~THERE'S QUITE A Few 5 Mere Never SHAVING BRUSH, W. H. Antmore, St. Paul, and R. P. Y GREY Twics sPRouTiNG HAS BEEN A IF He DIDA*T Antmore, Milwaukee, arrived in Bis- y TH OL’ HicKoRY /. GREY HAIR on ToucH uP HIS NORE TRIMER. —Mou"te ALIBI 11'S ONLY A MALE HOOPLE HAIR: WITH CAMP - TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO WHITEWASH THAT RUBBED FY 4) over Foo BLACK fun GET gett OFF THe FLoor Joists YEARS oF HIM AFTER A oF 2 PAL’S CELLAR, ~ AUTHENTIC ! SHAMPoo, AN* HIS a I KNow 6reyY FAMILY Tree /- Toupee HAS Buffalo, N. ¥., who will visit here. - WHEN I See 1T, ris = EGAD, ~ we SHAFTS. OF GREY T, H. Poole returned today t “>__\W A WIG OR Soup / WERE KNowN ‘LIKE DAWN on land leasing trip in Ward end other % AS “HooPLe Ww Aatuane / counties in the northern part of the THE RAVEN ues. _— % Mrs. M. Eppinger and Miss Nathan tertained friends at # progressive party yesterday. . Edick, representative of the ork ‘Life Insurance company, business trip to Linton yes- bi ga i] TEN YEARS AGO 7 ANN OKO

Other pages from this issue: