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

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PAGE ur _ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1929 lake. Moreover the ailment is contagious and ener are affected quite as profoundly. Small boys are driven to playing marbles on public highways, housewives to strange outbursts of carpet beating and window washing. High school youths are moved to dark decds of versific: tion and maidens persist in playing jazz love lyrics at all hours of day and night. The cure? Sulphur and molasses, perhaps. Usually, [ George though, it is best to let the fever run its course. Daly by IMPORTANCE OF EXPORTS by mail, Few persons realize how much their daily lives depenu Bally oy meit on the flow of commerce across the seas. The relations (ip state, of foreign trade to the individual are known only to the Daily by mail, economist or to the few others who have observed them Weenly in their actual workings. NOW YOU ARE ON A NON-|] personal questions on health and woul we Trade is such an ordinary thing the beta pays i Hf, i tere! Pelt bathe Sone addressed to him, care of the see wi jappens ti la) are on Pie ae Siar SoEANDS aa pectin Penni y >> diet ade of cnet are called the Enclose a stamped addressed j y i i Wii 5 non-starchy vegetables. The list from |] envelope for reply. half of all the goods they produce. Suppose rome i Ns J which you are selecting your vege- Member of The Assortated reso catastrophe blocked all exports at the American piers cia Uf tals really nainse almost all of te ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use One can imagine the result. Were the United States a o i ; f Aas dain td ee Rudin f for republication of ali news dispetches creditea to it | digcontinue exporting her manufactured products an 4 , brag Pokatoes aha Mabbant: squsen + or not otherwise credited in this newspape: ang alx | raw materials millions would be thrown out of work p are about the only ones you will not the local news 0: spontaneous origin pubi'she: herein | here and foreign factorics consuming raw materials Z y A . find in this list. ‘The tubers, such as All rights of republication of al) other matter herein | oduced here would have to suspend operations. j , ’ , parsnips, beets and carrots, could be ols eda Nine-tenths of the shoes worn in the United States are / listed as medium-starchy vegetables, Foreign Representatives of domestic manufacture, but 12 different countries “4 f; f : { b : per ok of maken | are ie brad G, LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY contribute to their production. The soles come from q A S j tables may be usually placed in the NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. DeTRor | the Argentine, the tips on the laces and the eyelets come k : non-starchy class as their starch is fovw ite. Kresge Bidg | {om Canada, the inner sole is treated with a camphor . J £ 2 not ive Albi to Raced same oa —————— | preparation from Japan. Java and Sumatra send the 4 " = ; . een a oh alchoe ve hie oF iar ath a (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) shellac that is applied to the shoe. Some threads are _ Seg “1 ee fieuts rouusts Made fete “the grat of silk from China; the rubber hecls are from the Straits : % _ are used. THE TYRANNY OF YOUTH Settlements. If the shoes are black their color {s derived i é Witt t the exception of Potatoes and ‘The overestimate of youth is a phase of weakness. from a dyewood grown in Haiti, fe a . jul sq , you can ways ‘The disposition to lament its passing is an evidence Political isolation may be possible in this day ana age. Behe y i Ry d ( " think in ican te ad tes ag te that one has not found the secret of a happy life. but not economic isolation for civilized countries. R ‘ ee, Y 4 always freely used in the diet with Youth is the time of enthusiasms, bright hopes and hot —_ ’ ‘4 - "ig | Zz beth eptans sp head ea are baa desires. The tendency of the immature mind is to con- HE NEEDS NO CREDENTIALS . Sie j F, 4 cially gas-forming in themselves, sut sider these things the best part of existence. Helen Maria, the underslung pipe and plain speech ; . } bay oe NE a ionnenes te eee . If we are fortunate enough to acquire any wisdom | are to be introduced at the court of St. James. Charles ; \ cs ’ | gas may,find that the use of turnips QUESTIONS AND ‘AND ANSWERS as we grow older we find that contentment does not| Gates Dawes, erstwhile vice president of the United r > j and beets iil brine oa Stomach or Coal Oil For h - . SS . intest: si cai : lodge in these one but is a prize to be gained by the | States, is to represent aie republic as ambassador at ks: : Di ; predbget treat ce cheer eae Be *> normal use of our will, our intelligence and our skill in| the seat of King George's government. - Be tables. Lettuce may also be self-mastery. At last something new in diplomats has come to pass. i. et " . A 5 ered as-forming food if afbenir 4 The sentiment which crops out so often in poetry and} This new chapter in diplomacy will be different from all ‘ N A He is used at one time. ‘in novels that the joy of life's morning is all that’s worth | those written before it. Dawes diplomcy will not be done ee Roi oe Ht Spinach, string beans, asparagus, while is closely akin to cynicism. up in soft words with an equivocal meaning. The author - AVUBHE : may ai ayn bo ee ae on Leesa & For it leads to cynicism and to despair when the/of The Plan will constitute a refreshing episode against tables to use by anyone, bo" aiatter Answer: It is all right to rub on early period is once past. the drab background of ordinary diplomacy. victory after a terrific battle more ; how sensitive his digestive organs | coal oil, wintergreen oil, or any kind The impression you get from the average novel is that} Unless Amvassador Dawes has been tamed by the war than easily won pomegranates, may be. Of course, even these foods | of liniment if it brings you temporary the interesting part of life is over when the young people | he started four years ago in the senate there is a pos- iG Ad 3 on en Aad spoiled by improper prepar- needy Lidia must not expect a cure : are married and done for. sibility of another war in diplomatic circles before many Miss Mona Oser, a WlooieRIit;, Minerals and Vitamins N 4 apples saaiytt shied wing i As a matter of faci, the best part of life ought to be| moons. But better, far better, a few plain, hard words transferred 600 Albino rats down While the non-starchy vegetables | you eat nothing else for three or four after 50. between diplomats than a shot-and-shell war born of Fifth avenue the cot had art! 4 Satutanirauie cari eae of bgp tied infection from the ‘We begin life as young animals. We ought to wind | deceit, evasion and circumlocution. If there must be a them from one laboratory to ie 5 ey are, ion primary source of ad it up as great spirits. And age is better than youth, | fight, the former vice president prefers to do the fighting Mian GALS -wan‘die ee Lisp eoatrantete PRAISING THE BABY Ue aneetnartd bahay aa ro Nigh rie Sree cleansing diet ie precisely as the life of the spirit is better than the life | himself. Would there had been more diplomats like him Lady Grace Drummond Hay is|had 604 rats, worth $4 a head. (By Alice Judson Peale) made up of water-and cellulose, but | the spread which is now ts an of the flesh; precisely as an intelligent human being | in that respect. Janning an around-the-world cruise |, That's not the point of the story.! While he is a baby the child knows | the solid material 1s a combination|you. The stiff arm may never be- ought to be happier than an unthinking animal. Great Britain will find her new ambassador from |}! sat j The point is that women are doing | only love and tenderness and appre-| of vitamins and organic minerals} come normal, but you can even in the Graf Zeppelin in which she! more and more interesting things | ciation. which are indispensible to the body's | for a good change in that as I hi The average American family is dominated by the} America pro-American, not anti-British, like his fellow made its first trans-Atlantic trip 83 | these days, even to raising rats with; His first step is a great event and|growth. All of the animal kingdom, | known many badly crippled nts children. Chicagoan, Mayor ‘Thompson. There is but one mani®| the only woman passenger. She thus ian the care given bables, in order to| his fitst word a triumph. Whatever | including man, must use forsee completely recover and regain the This is bad for them and for everybody else. It makes | in the Dawes brain and that is sound sense. got ator Lervecsehi for the Graf than experiment with vitamins upon them. he ees Liege (He Jaugh- taining these substances. The carniy-| normal use of the joints affected, a . er and uncritical » No orous animal = 1 them intolerant, selfish and disagreeable. And it reduccs| Ambassador Dawes will need no credentials. vary tee a kia tee eee Ser he sOeecanee Hepes: alngcorte robe Guecug [lige frat ee Quien aren here “i their parents to a state of peonage. day of the “death of the womanly in- eee cot) = rosy days of babyhood, unwilling to| and flesh of the animals they have | evading mucus-forming foods, should The truth that every parent ought to know is that if NOW EVERYBODY CAN GO UP fluence,” and the “utter destruction AD face a hard, exacting world. eaten, but man who uses only a lim-|I eliminate bacon, mayonnaise, butter ® child’s youth is to be a permanent asset in his life} The tailors have spoken. The correct flying costume | of woman's power,” and yet the com- vi The process of growing up is made | ited amount of flesh foods and Prac- | and oleomargarine? I am very, very it must be made a period of discipline rather than of | for men will be a Norfolk coat and plus fours, The coat | mercial world uses the woman | (4 harder for some children than for | tically no bone must depend upon the| thin, and these are are only fats 1 ence over and over again for com- others, The baby who is exclaimed | vegetable kingdom for his mineral] use.” self-indulgence. must have four buttons, the breast pockets must have mercial gain. | Py, over every time he eats all his spin-| supply which the plants are able to|. Answer: I No one wants to go back to the heartless, callous and | flaps, and the lower pockets must be cut aslant. The * H MN adeud ach, says a new word, or does some] transform from the minerals of the|cannot use acreamanbie aninnt es unsympathetic system of treating children. They should | plus fours must be of the breeches design, with cuffs. “EASY SEX” charming little trick, grows to accept | soil to vegetable minerals, the foods you ask about providing the have their full portion of love, appreciation and under-| Multitudes may now take confidently to the air who ‘Women, they say, are the leew | aregag OBSCURE BATTLE adulation as a natural accompani-| Each cell of the body, whether it | rest of your diet is well a a ey, “whether “tt | Fort of your diet is'well balanced. - “ J ° y is the anniversary of an im-| ment to good behavior. Admiration standing. But at the same time they should be made/ have heretofore been weighted to the ground by fear of sex.” Listen, sistern and brethren. Portant but little-known battle of the | and attention become his daily bread. on ccaieiniammaibe, | ot bis GkGd Goce bject to realize that life is not a matter of having a good time./ sartorial faux pas. There is no need longer to wait | Walter Cyr of Concordia, Kansas, American Revolution—the battle of| Then one day the family decides aie “illo ra tt ga of sewer- It is a matter of self-mastery, of honor and of heroism. | for Emily Post to write a book; the tailors have dispelled Line ans eminence pied eet ‘sway | Hobkirk’s Hill, South Carolina, fought | that the baby is becoming spoiled — Such qualities alone bring permanent happiness. And| uncertainty, and cutting remarks are in order. The faa ute insurange agents whom hi on Eneta dare AY nites eaceiind bidet vain, or Leet &@ new baby AGO such qualities do not grow in a soil of continual in-| decreed style has many advantages. When the engine| could never turn down. wee as amd mabet Boas tg thoes babty ees Bottles ,B. Bollinger, dulgence. goes dead, father may stcp out of the plane hanging to| Few indeed are the families which! cans under Nathaniel Greene, tem- phere of the nursery changes quite : Polite 45 aoe ee nee naw 20 Tt 1s not a choice between whether one shall be happy the parachute, and the children can hang to father's |d0 not have their legends of the set | norarily retreated. But as they had | suddenly for one of severity, i sojourn in southern California, when he is old or when he is young. It is rather an in-| Norfolk belt. If the parachute fails to open, the plus pa bapsl Eala when the | done so often before, they retreated in] No wonder the dethroned one} “I have hardly spoken of independ- ? “ such a way as to place the British ) sometimes goes on strike and refuses |ence since I came back from the Ge telligent taking up of the problem how so to govern] fours will. The aviator's headdress, recommended by in a worse position than they hadjto do any of the things which have | united States. This is because I don’t Parlor haa tee ce mee we the pleasures of all our days with temperance as to| the tailors, may prove us¢ful when coming back to earth. 4 ° been before their “victory.” Famill- | won him approbation in the past. He ing w s make one’s whole life worth while. The tailors have supplied a manifest need. Every vince eeririrraantee ore is | 8tity with the countryside, of course,| who not many months ago was such ae Aeteres when we have no dmerian army. in France with the the other kind of expert has had 2 finger in the aviation | probably @ reversal of an old adage | €abled them to do this. a bright, responsive little creature, | Oe to fight with."—President Quezon THE BOSS HAS TO KNOW ple, Meteorologists, psychologists, geographers, econo- | now being said concerning Mrs. Min- Shoo tant get F Pnivereerey ss eaten dicot pirnaponeiye, hea of the Benne. en ene Islands. Mrs, L. E. Maynard was hostess to If you want to teach a man how to do something, be| mists, jologists, physiologists, and engineers—internal | Mie Kennedy, mother of famous re: h fougl ie battle | trary. ps he even develops the Minishoshe chapter of the y mists, sociologists, physiologists, rs headed. evangelist, Aimee Semple Mc- | fund that his lines of communica- | jer tantrums and night terrors. “Now that war has become a mat- | Daughters of the American Revolu- sure you first know how to do it well yourself. combustion, electrical, petroleum and plain aviation—| person, Aimee was accused, though | tion had been cut by two wings of| I: is wise, therefore, to refrain from | ter of industries, we are the best pre- | tion this week. Mrs. C. W. McGray This advice isn’t especially new, perhaps; but it 181 a1 have had their say. But the tailors have rightly said | acquitted, of “love-nesting,” and now | G?eene’s army, and was forced to re- | constant praise and attention even to| pared nation in’ the world’. sehis gave report of the recent Conti. given new force by a recent interview in which Henry! tne jast word. her mama is accused of trying to in- pe immediately from his newly-|a little baby, for, while he may not brings us a frightful responsibility | nental congress at ‘Washington. Ford revealed that that is the rule he goes on in every veigle some old geezer into matri- ea pores. 4 know the meaning of a single word, | to do straight thinking on the sub- — mony. Why quibble at the romantic fe battle of HMobkirk’s Hill pre- | he understands perfectly the admira- | ject."—Maj. Gen. John F. O'Ryan, Phase of his life. REMORSE COMES TOO LATE strain in human souls? After all, | eded the surrender of General Corn- | tion of those around him, U. 8. A,, retired; former commander i He uses it in his history and he uses it in his recrea-| ‘The hardest thing in the world for a man to face is/ Aimee puts on a good show, and s0 wallis at Yorktown and the end of} When the time comes, as it Inevit- 27th Division, A. E. F. tion. For instance: the disillusionment and heartache of those who have|does her mama, the Revolution by just six months. | ably must, that he can no longer be x ek x He took up the old-fashioned dances a few years 9go| loved and trusted him, After all, too, blackmail Is always | Zt undoubtedly hastened that surren- | continually adored, he will be saved| «r believe that intoxicating liquor der because Rawdon's forced retreat a profound disillusionment. sold as a bevera: ? because he noticed that at most dances the elderly peo-} When H. Colin Campbell, New Jersey engineer, was on ae Tapco ra SHA even te following it added a final blow to a} He will have learned to be good for | than ay pest ee cr areal ple simply sat around watching the younger ones, and he | arrested for the notorious “torch murder,” he kept his see series of harassing incidents the|the sake of quiet approval and to be Albert C. Saunders, premier of Prince | thought that the old-time dances should be revived for | composure and related his story coolly and with sclf-| yaype ALL THE SWEETER Ce eee their North igpsensaey ncaa Power over | Edward Island, Canada, } their benefit. So he set to work to do it. possession. He knew he had committed a crime, he| somehow it seems too bad that : “The Great nee pe St. Lawrence | _ First, however, he had to learn how to dance the old| said, and he would pay the penalty without whimpering.| when Mrs. Gann, half-sister and| The chambor of commerce of Fair- SMART BOY river extend the generous hand of in- } _| dances himself. He got a teacher and made himself) But when his wife visited the jail to see him, and | Official hostess of Vice President | banks, Alaska, is advocating the con-| Young Sprout: I want a collar for | vitation to us. They fairly beseech [| Brofielent in all the old steps that had gone out of! stood outside the barred door with tears in her eyes, | Curts.,was invited to that nice dinner | struction of 760 miles of highway be- | my father. us to co-operate in executing the most | A salvo of 21 guna was fired when | , favor. Then he considered himself qualified to lead the} protesting that her love and confidence were still un-|fook her seat of honor as ranking | (rer tien nk Columbia, Sey. ae deesmine? frivial works that, will convert them | King Victor Emmanuel left his palace No; @ clean one./into a new Mediterranean for the in Rome the other open movement for the old dances, diminished, the self-confessed slayer broke down com- | lady present, she had that distinction —Tit-Bits, newer continent.”—Jam G ‘liament re meats 4 “I always learn to do things myself before I try to! pletely. He could face a possible death sentence with | Only after all the tumult and shouting} Pitty-eight Cuban school teachers secretary of war, ere ease mole iit, foe ae le to do them,” he said. “I never ask any- : about it. will leave Havana May 28 for a sev-| Cubans like to have their pictures zee get other peop! em, ¥~| equanimity; he could not face his wife. Still, perhaps not so bad at that.leral weeks’ tour of the eastern and|taken. Havana has more than 2,000 “Happiness is a by-product of self- @ne in the Ford Motor company to do anything I can-| Unfortunately, men usually remember such things) Some personalities enjoy the fruits of | southeastern United States, photographers’ studios. fulfillment which is the most impor- not do. I learn it first and then I turn it over to some-| too jate. If Campbell had thought of it sooner, the — tant thing in the world.—Arnold Ben- @me else, In that way I can turn my attention to some-| “torch murder” might never have taken place. nett, British author. thing else.” . ** & Obvious as this lession is, there are a great many peo-) Rubber hose as a correctional device will never get OUR BOARDING HOUSE ip ated I ine uh ot a aoe ple who could take the kc to capiels it. - the results achieved by the old hickory paddle. . pioneer episit. That is oahy oy George | abriagh them. grog you' pet gpg : eke Z nee ie, exténding our air re- sty || positions of responsibility—though they don’t often stay ~Yod SAY THE Cottision -MY NocTuRNAL WANDERINGS 2 children. When they grow up aeroe | =n’ DPS) q ; Editorial Comment BETWEEN THE AutomosLEe Ae GAD. MR planes will be more common. than there very long. They're full of energy, full of ideas, full UMF — KAFF. KAFF ~ EGAD, ° Z motor cars, and fear of the air will Of ambition—but they can’t get the best results out of the AND MILK WAGON occURRED ATTORNEY, ~-I AM AN ASTRONOMER / Ion % have been banished.”—Sir Alan Cob- People who work for them because they themselves can’t PRISON ESCAPES ar 3: Kae he MORNING, THE STUDY oF MY SCIENCE REQUIRES ham, British pol do the things they expect their subordinates to do. — AND THAT THE DRIVER THAT I BE OUT AFTER NIGHT-FALL,~ Peet A iderable ber of prison from ° In the old sailing ship days, a first mate whose han-/ genitentiaries, jells and other penal institutions from | 1 OF THE AUTOMOBILE WAS “INDEED, ALMOST UNTIL DAWN, ~~ suseies Wy @iing of his men was unjustly criticized always had a/ time to time, They gain their freedom by means of in- ENTIRELY AT FAULT Pa ¥ rt Teady comeback. It was: struments smuggled to them, by ruse on by mutiny. Har I MAY Nore AND oBseRVE plea ““E didn’t come in through the cabin window!” We are apt to become hotly indignant when hardened ZA NERY WELL, we Now THE PosiTion OF STARS AND Pranerts J , ‘ee oe ( Feenibeion. ff Rea oat criminals escape the punishment asscsstd against them MR. HOOPLE . a ISH'T RUME ~ oN (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) What he meant, of course, was that he had work ed his | for their crimes by breaking out of prison by any means. T TRUE THAT You mm HARR-RRUMF ~ Seciligy MIE AE ili cia. ot way up to the officer's rank by doing a seaman’s work | We censure prison officials for not preventing escapes. A THAT PARTICULAR parrots and adopting” canaries himself. If he was a good officer, he knew that he! and so far as escapes are due to carelessness or conniv- HAVE ACCEPTED RIDES ‘MORNING. “THE Gould éo sny Job on the ship better than the sailors ance, such censure is properly placed. But at most the HOME ON MILK WAGONS, ‘PLANET " Who worked under him. An officer of that kind, no mat- | ---20¢5 in our courts because of defective laws, loose : FRom ‘ouR NecTURNAL , MARS ~- ter how brutal or overbearing he might be, always | codure and the cleverness of criminal lawyers , WANDERWES ?: = dad the respect it their business to get murderers, bandits hated was the one who had | {clonious law-breakers dut of the clutches rl. Joseph peary left for (Grand Forks We are much more indifferent to the prevailing ‘ 1 Sol 8 meetin of ee pve g of our legal system to convict in many cases democratic commit evidence is Oe cor we ere i a

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