The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 2, 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)

-The Bismarck Tribune events is further “special” days. If the minister responded to every worthy request to give recognition in his services to the opening of “dedi- cated” week. he would have to preach not only one prop- iritumbered by legal holidays and About This Time o’ Year! | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- ganda sermon a Sunday but three, or else throw his ~ marek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | prayer meeting in. f the schools allowed a place on GOSh! THESE as second class mai) matter. their programs for all the causes represented, the curric- FLANNELS ITCH George D. Mann ulum and recesses could be dispensed with. The conse- ia ER 1 vf Rates Payable in Advance quei.ce has been that no proclamation or appeal, however KE EVERYTHING! e Daily fey Sarrere pony . $7.20 | meritorious, arrests universal attention. Daily by mail, per One of the meritorious dedicated days ts Child Health Daily by mail, per day, because it is aiding in the fight to reduce the infant WHAT PAE soe ‘Baily ty eral, on death rate, improve the growing generation mentally ine wine often develops great i and physically, and improve the general well-being of the nation. It would work inestimable harm if the pub- powers of observation after years of ‘Week: pra uch Weekly lic were to place this day and the great number of dedi- Labeckes hore Arg ean tiie Mes ‘Weekly 1.50 cated days and weeks in a common category. ter is usually aware. Often a doc- DOE FEAT ...ccscccecssscnseeceverseee steeseeeee tor of many years’ experience can Member Aedit Bureae of Circulation Member of The Associated ‘The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it otherwise credited in this newspaper and also GUNNI FOR THE ‘LAME DUCK’ ‘The “lame duck” is again an issue before the United States senat through the favorable report of the senate judiciary committee which sent to the upper chamber of _ | congress the Norris amendment changing the dates of the presidential inauguration and convening of congress. The proposal has twice won the approval of the senate, only to fail in the house. Under the provisions of the proposed amendment the almost diagnose a case by merely looking at the patient. the doctor does not realize the actual definite physical changes which led type of disease. Just to illus- > trate, I am going to give you a few Of | ago, etc. the pointers that a doctor may learn from observing a patient's hands. QUESTIONS ¢ YNE COMPANY It is often easy to determine a pa- Large etter. . Fifth Ave. Bldg. term of the president would begin on January 15 and tient's tceupation without asking! Question: Mrs. 8. i CA i DETROIT | sessions of congress would convene on January 2 follow- questions, For erin Se antihe Lae beryl LaLa neck j CHICAGO e Bldg. : i Practically the skin of loctor says it’s not Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | ing the naticnal election in November. It would eliminate palm of the right hand thickened and | large lump. this the long period—13 months, unless an extra session Is called—now intervening between the election of a con- gress and its first session, and also end the short session in which a congress carries on for three months after its successor has been elected. These reforms would end the anomaly, sometimes seen, of a party continuing to control national legislation long after its defeat at the polls and they would slaughter the whole brood of “lame ducks.” Abolition of the short session would also eliminate one excuse for log rolling calloused through pressure upon the! away without an operation?’ plane, and small hard patches of skin] Answer: There are are usually formed upon the first and | glands in the neck besides the second points of the thumb and lower | which swell out of part of the forefinger. shape. Most of these The violinist usually has flattened, | duced through the calloused fingertips. sometimes the ‘The tailor shows small puncture] treatments. If you marks of the needle on the fore-| act diagnosis made of your trouble, I finger of his left hand. will be glad to send you my The or clerk usually has | about your case and the possibility ‘a thick callous of the skin just above | a cure. (Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspaper) < THE NEW CREED OF THE CHILD 1 ‘The child is the world’s greatest asset. Child con- servation measures the evolution of a race in the scale of humanized civilization. Not in civilization itself. An- cient races and nations disproved that by their barbar- ities toward their children, in spite of the high state of their political, military and artistic development. Ev- rs olution of humanity had to continue for centuries until and filibuster the last joint of the middle f! t 5 Ing, two evils more associated with short e middle finger. Artichokes children began to come into their “bill of rights. Typists often have the tips of the} Question: O.M. J. asks: “What do sessions thar with the long session. first two fingers of both hands rough-| you think of artichokes as a food? % ‘As Judge A. M. Christianson reminded the Bismarck ‘ Lutheran Men's club, Wednesday evening, the present- day conception of what is due children is a quite recent x development. The world has been steadily growing i better in its attitude toward children, but the really sane attitude may be traced back to the time of Theo- es Gore Roosevelt, with a likelihood of losing the trail there. : Bom> of the attitudes society now manifests toward childhood do not even go back that far. And it is con- ceivable that still saner relationships may be established in the near future, out of the social flux and ferment of today. On every hand society is concerned with beneficent movements for childhood, Service organizations aré eager. to ameliorate the afflictions, cultivate the mind and talents and safeguard the health and vitality of children. Just the other day a sample of these activities was cited when the work of the Red Cross among the crippled chil- dren of Burleigh county was revealed. In a quiet way the workers of the organization had been conducting @ survey of the county so that cases not having the means for alleviation by medical and surgical treatment might be so provided through the benevolences of the organiza- tion and certain fraternal orders which have taken up the cause of the crippled child. ‘Then consider the: widespread interest in behalf of the underprivileged and undernourished child. For him and her there exist also many movements designed to tip the scales of poverty, neglect and handicap into that balance wherein there is opportunity. Schools, hospitals, orphanages, homes—these are some ‘ of the farms chiid.benefactions assume to meet the vary- F =. ang nature of the child problem With them advances the : growing conception also that a child has a right to be born well. The race may well be on the way headed for the day of the super-child. And the child is father to the man, it was well said by Alexander Pope. One visions a future not only splendid for the young but for all the races of men who practice this new creed or humanity. ‘Thus it was fitting that Child Health day, Wednesday, was observed here by Judge Christianson’s talk on the child, the law and the’ state, by the Rotary symposium on the various duties owing the boy and by the consid- eration of professional means for combating diseases which especially afflict children, in the meeting of the state health officers. TENNESSEE CAN LAUGH AT NEW YORK ‘The citizens of Tennessee, who had to stand for a good deal of high-toned criticism from sophisticated New ‘Yorkers at the time of the famous Scopes trial, can turn ‘around now arid hand the'sneers right back, with inter- est added. If Tennessee had its monkey law, New York has just eclipsed it with its conviction of Mrs. Mary Ware Dennett on a charge of sending obscene matter through the mails. ‘Whatever may be said of the anti-evolution Jaw, it at Jeast represented an honest effort on the part of sincere, well-intentioned folk to preserve @ faith that they felt ‘was being undermined by forces which they did not quite comprehénd. Their attitude, mistaken or otherwise, was at. least quite understandable. But the trial of Mrs. Dennett is another matter. It represents narrow-minded fanaticism at its worst. New ~ York, which prides itself on its liberality and emancipa- ‘tion, has been guilty of one of the most amazing bits of bigoted nonsense of recent years. Consider the facts in the case for a minute. t Mrs. Dennett is 8 grandmother—a woman of culture by and standing. Some years ago, wishing to give her young sons some plain information about the facts of sex, she ‘wrote @ score or more of pages of exposition for them; ‘wrote it as carefully, intelligently and earnestly as any mother trying to give essential information to her sons could wish. ‘The editor of s substantial medical magazine saw what she had written and induced her to have it printed in pamphlet form. He praised it as the best thing of its kind he had seen. The Y. M. C. A. endorsed the pam- phiet, and distributed thousands of copies of it to its members. Church organizations also distributed it. The ‘United States Health Service endorsed it, as did the New ‘Were the great body of voters to give serious thought to the subject a wave of public opinion probably would force the Norris amendment or a similar measure through both branches of congress and bring it out of the White house with the executive signature. Of lesser importance is the clause of the amendment resolution providing for the contingency of a deadlock in Congres; following one in the electoral college over the choice of a president. It provides that if the house fails to clect a president, the person chosen by the senate as vice president shall act as president. ened and cracked as well as the out-!| What is their food value? How do side of the thumb of the right hand.| they combine with other foods?” The painter can usually be detected} Answer: The French artichoke is by small particles of paint at the base| a non-starchy vegetable, while the of the fingernails. Jerusalem artichoke is starchy. Both Dyers, photographers and those| have excellent food value, but the who work in chemicals almost always| French artichoke is richer in vitae have characteristic stains upon the| mins and mineral elements. These fingers. artichokes look something like this- Horny, thickened fingers almost al-| tles, and the French artichoke can ways indicate a hardy son of toil. be used in combination with any Bank cashiers usually have 2 cal-| other kind of food, but the Jerusalem. lous on the outside of the thumb of| artichoke should only be used with the right hand. the non-starchy vegetables and not A woodsman usually has a thick-| with meat or other proteins, ened skin over the entire inner sur- Pains in Ribs face of the palm and well defined cal-| Questio1 F. B. D. writes: louses upon the first finger and|the past three years I have thumb of the right hand, caused by| many cramps in my ribs the hand sliding up and down the ax/|cles underneath them. handle, body to look back, or ‘The doctor is also able to determine} to reach for anything, I much about the patient’s general | Sometimes they will last health from the appearance of the| utes and I have to move hands and from the patient's method | shapes to get rid of t! of holding and moving them, and| asked several doctors much can also be determined from | say what it is. I the texture of the skin of the hands} Answer: and from the appearance of the fin-| you dislocate your ribs when gernails, other and this will ago, but one sees it in the eyes of women whose last year’s suits and hats tell the story of trudging the town for work. “I tell every woman over 30 to adopt a business age of at least five years less,” an employment manager ALLENE poet} a Lay ago. eA ler Woman in Industry,” SUMNER, by @ Mrs. Lobsenz, bravely sets forth Now comes Congressman Sol Bloom|the spectre of “what comes after?” (By Alice Judson Peale) of New York with his own pet little that haunts many a woman confront-}_ When Marion's mother was in- theory as to what is menacing the{ed at that age for the first time with | formed that she again had been Great American home. And how|the problem of making a livelihood, | blessed with a daughter, she cried: much. He says that it’s the lack of |The author says that it is not at all) “What, another girl! Throw her out domestic help. & fantastic possibility that if employ-| Of the window; I haven't any use for In an attempt to stave off this|ers’ prejudice towards the employed | Sirs! catastrophe, Bloom plans to introduce! woman of over 35 continues, society| Whereat, the story went on, her in Congress a bill amending the im- | will have to work out a dole system | &tandmother came to her rescue, say- migration law to admit without quota!for the older woman who is denied | ing that she liked all babies, and that restriction European domestics. ithe right to make a livelihood. she was perfectly willing to adopt this He believes aaa would help eek resin south a — told Marion on solve Europe's problem of the sur- ‘WOMEN’! and she was expected plus female as well as help solve the} Tales of special are ieee women in| 8t ® hearty laugh out of it. American housewife’s problem. Paris with a brass footrail ’n every-| , Duting her growing years she un- *** thing, with shaded lights and cre- derstood from her mother that to be THEY'D LEARN tonned chairs, will bring a gasp from rae te pastapbeaca tea psaced He says that there is no use avold-|the woman raised in the teetotaler| thot she “pare asin again and again ing the fact that all American girlsjera. To tell Grandma that there is| tne'diy nes fave been a boy. And prefer anything in the world to do-|probably little more ribaldry or “Me idl her. best to be one. mestic service, and that the servant |drunkenness in these emporiums than | . "4.5 Ape cora in heavy shoes problem will continue till his bill is!in a tea and pastry shoppe would be} 2p? wore hideous athletic sweaters, in effect. unbelievable to her. = saps solitary 30 mile hikes during Tt does not seem to occur to the| The teetotaler still believes that the| ye°k-ends, played violent games, and man that as soon as these/lips tat touch liquor are doomed to) 3h cven’, Possible way scorned the foreign-trained girls in the art ofia drunkard's grave. Our grandmoth- | pl inl pp eireeerpem of her sex. domestic work become Americanized, |ers would rise up in holy horror if} eee riends remonstrated, her and learn that to labor in the kitch-|told that their own intemperance in rar would say laughingly: “Oh, en is infinitely more below caste than; gorging at box. socials and church) en" 8% It will make a man of laboring in a factory, they, too, will /suppers was probably infinitely great- take up hairdressing and typewriting, [er than the intemperance of the av-| in itboust few parents are 20 open and the sme an problem of nobody erage, woman she takes an verage | them, whether they ardghpeogse for the dishwashing will be with us.|occasional cocktail. id admit " * - * noua nae cisepninieeas a a NOT SO DIFFERENT! born before they have ac- “Don't wear embroidered pink silk quired a son. The little girl-child is fully aware of this. underwear.” This is just one of the don'ts in a book of instructions on When parental disappointment is how to crash into society, and espe- Se aus fete olen cially into Chicago society. written by ure and essential inferiority, Such an & Chicago university student. attitude forms the basis of profound Pe sccccpatag ne wear sosleny pee a maladjustment in later life. The lecloth or lamp, ever serve dinner : without candles, permit a maid to ae for @ hard and los- remove more than one plate at a time z from the table, neve’ say “pleased to meet you” when introduced, or ever carry an umbrella or package. This is certainly the height of silli- ness. These “don'ts” apply no more to the job of breaking into Chicago society than to the job of being ac- cepted as rains: ‘aut anywhere! ‘The man who never takes a long shot never shoots very far. MAKING A MAN OF HER You have to work your way through the school of ex- perience. Pedestrians don't make very good shock absorbers. [Battorat Comment OUR PEACETIME KILLINGS (St. Paul Daily News) One sure sign of approaching summer is the increasing toll of motorcar deaths and accidents. Over the last week-end there were 84 persons killed, according to a national survey made by the United Press. No doubt such a survey each Monday would re- veal about the same number of fatalities—and it would not be inclusive since not all the accidents find their way into the official records. Not many years ago people were horrified when even less persons were killed from fireworks on the Fourth of July. This was but one annual holiday during which the lid was off and people were permitted to kill and maim themselves as freely as they pleased. Now many more are killed each week-end without any particular excuse or_ occasion. It is easy to believe that some 100,000 persons are killed in the course of the year in accidents of all kinds—more than even a good sized war demands. ‘When will the problem of this peacetime murder be attacked with a determination to solve it? THE STATUE OF COLUMBUS (St. Paul Dispatch) On the heights above Palos, Spain, a marble statue of Christopher Columbus looks down upon the harbor whence the discoverer and his three ships sailed out to find a new world. The statue, the work of an Ameri- can sculptor, is 70 feet high and stands on @ 54-foot base. Tt cost $250,000 and is given by Americans to Spain as a token of amity and goodwill between the two nations. The statue was formally unveiled this week in the presence of Infante Carlos, representing his father King Alfonso, Premier Primo de Rivera, United States Am- bassador Hamniond, Vice Admiral John H. Dayton, com- mander of the American naval forces in Europe, and many other notables of both countries. Great crowds of n tourists thronged the highways holiday. Americ: an sail- ors from the Raleigh and Almi Tt is even possible to sometimes de- fold over the term: ng since Patient | cause pain until it is replaced. has had an acute illness because the] an osteopathic or chiropractic ol nutrition of the nail suffers greatly | ician examine your ribs and see if this during an acute illness and a trans- , verse groove will usually form in the | (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi« cate, I nail. The time can be calculated by charge of the land office agents, is spending a few days in the city, himself wide open for perjury pro- ceedings. Prohibition on ‘si ificers in Ohio shot the pfoprietor of a soft drink estab- lishment. Now someone ought io go after the hot pg salesmen, ** An incendiary fire destroyed a me- chanical organ in a Chicago movie house. Police haven't even mentioned the theory that it was some Boy Scout doing his daily good deed. * * Tammany Hall seems to have ob- served Foot Health Week by booting out a few of i es favorites, * A Boston man gave up golf in order to win a girl. Reform is difficult pas “ig saya Leip ‘woman often can man out of the poorest kind of material, bad (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) TEN YEARS AGO Mrs. C. B. Little, Mrs. H. C. Brads ley and small daughter have returned to Bismarck from their winter's so Journ in California. rl” Preme court is spending a few visiting in Grand Forks, o Mrs. Eee Zuger entertained @ | company lends at a thea ‘at the auditorium. z - ag’ | i { SUED FOR SILENCE Hoboken.—Because her husband had refused to talk to her for a year, Mrs. Anna Rautenkranz went to court and demanded reconciliation or separation. Her husband told the judge that he had been nagged for 25 years and had taken to silence in self-defense.. They finally agreed to Ee see along with a little less of Mr. and Mrs. John Parkinson yesterday on a trip visit in Chicago, Ne Island and Washington, SAFE AND SOBER It was the morning after the night | | |__ BARBS Pidoalt is itider a ee eae be Searing reer geyren i Nistaeh | PEL AAA SS morning?” asked one wan participator | his machine up to 224 miles an of another. but couldn't touch Segrave's 230-1 Ey srpniine ety St jut looked | speed record. You know how it is under le, re I was.”—|—probably some van Tit-Bits. its nose out of a irae nee Paris bartenders have organized an international association. They plan to exchange ideas with Americans, several of whom are members. “Now that I am older I no sailors from the cruiser Sewers think of sex sentimentally Ld irante Cervera formed a joint guard of honor at the heh adhnt OLD AT 35 The problem of “the older woman in industry” is the problem of the woman over 35. That makes one shudder a little in an age which makes 35 look as 22 of a few years s* & The prohibition agent who testi- fied in a New York night club hostess’ trial that he drank champagne there several nights a week certainly laid the statue at Palos is a symbol of the new friendship between the two countries. This event will be followed government. The quarrel which buried in the 30 years that have passed ~ MR. HOOPLE, mw I AM MR.-HoBBS; MANAGER OF THE DAWN DAIRY A company f Your EXCELLENT “TESTIMONY IN COURT, AS “THE ONLY WITNESS To THE CoLLISION Between AN AUTOMOBILE AND one oF OUR WAGONS, WAS SoLELY THE REASON FoR us WINNING THe DAmMace surr/= aww To SHOW OUR APPRECIATION oF YouR VALUABLE Time WHICH You NoLUNTEERED AS A WrNESS WW ovR BEHALF, WE WISH TO REPAY You WITH EITHER A DELIVERY OVER A LENGTH OF TiME EQUIVALENT ‘To EGAD, MR. HOBBS, wu. You MAKE IT DIFFICULT For ME fo DECIDE BETWEEN YouR wo GeNeRoUS oFFeRs / wm BY JOVE, IT WouLD TAX he JUDGMENT OF A SOLOMON Fe HM-M ame awe WELL, we SINCE WE Have No Fans iW THE House THAT REQUIRE MILK, wae DT AH, a ERowe UM—~I DEEM THE $25. W CASH A wiser cHoice / ~ YES,—AH—~ HA-HAwe LoverY evenwWe, ISN'T 17, MR. HOBBS? Beate MILK, we OR . Brought to trial, and convicted in short order. ‘The judge | to abandon iW CASH Je limited the trial solely to & reading of the pamphlet. He SSN SS S SSSSAXASSSort a NY Aas SSSs Sass db VPope he CREAM 1 MY ROO

Other pages from this issue: