The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1929, Page 4

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ss TUESDAY, MAY 7, 1924 realizatic . that such a state of affairs is eternally wrong | —there will be hope that a change can be made. | This ‘Air-Mindedness’ in ington | 5 a ‘Then there won't be so many contrasts—nor so much di 88 1 Washi gto: ! THE STAVES ULVES] NEWSPAPER (Established 1078) Ceo HR _* Publishea by the Bismarck Tribune Company Bis- SAFEST marek, N. D., and entered at the oustoffice st Bismarck | Accurate statistics show that a person is safer on board Georee D. Mann an Presideat and eubusher | ® train than at home, which speaks more of the security i ra of railroad transportation than of the insecurity of ay Swoccription Rates Payable tn Advance man’s “castle.” Daily by carrier per year .... te] Railroad travel is 100 per cent safer today than it was ’ Daily by mal, per year, «in Bism: five years ago. Last year there was only one fatality as a Beir ate Gcuioe wismalce) ... 6.00 | result of a railroad accident for every 49,000,000 passen- Daily by mail. outside ot North Dako' 6.00 | gers carried. Five years ago the average was one fatality _—_—_— rrr | for cach 24,000,000 passengers. When it is considered erent ey) Orsi. 10 wtate. per yeas «4. --- ote + 1M] that only 16 of the 800,000,000 persons transported on ‘Weekly by mat! in state. three years for .. . 280 = Di have a permanent camp it would be well for you to stock up with a num- ber of canned vegetables, such ad BEANS IN THE MOUNTAINS Recently I received the following inquiry from one of my readers. Be- lieving this inquiry has many points of interest, I am herewith giving the trains in the United States last year were killed, the letter and my answer: bape operand eerie . 1.$u ; safe * of this mode of travel causes greater wonder. nee eee the Member Asdit Bureav of Circulation When the railroads were in their early stages the cau- hehe | tious kept to the canal and carriage. And when the au envelope for reply. Men.ber of The Assortated Press tomobile made iis appearance the cautious kept to the The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitied to the use | aitroad and horse. This does not hold true today, for string beans and asparagus. Even though you are in the country you low | will, of course, obtain as much benefit, from observing correct food combina- ws dispatches credited to it : te toe ciherwue credited tn this newspaper ano elsc {though the hazards of motoring are many times greater the loca! news o1 spontaneous origin publ'sier herein | than the dangers of travel by rail, the ratlroads are still All rights +f republication of al) other matter nerein | ioging business to the motor car and bus. (lh Rail trave' is being made safe by the annual expendi: nig. as you would while living in Foreign Representatives ture cf $40,000,000 by the railroads of the United States. i G. LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY They are constantly adding safety equipment, devising QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Removal of the Thyroid Gland Question.—K. N. G. asks: “When all of the thyroid gland is removed docs the patient become prematurely sc- nile? Iam deeply concerned about my daughter, who was operated on for goitre. Her health has been failing since then. She has suffered a com- plete nervous breakdown, followed by fits of insanity and despondency. She has become gray, shuns amusements, is often fretful, and has developed th> slow movements of a very old Person. I do so want your advice.” Answer.—If all of the thyroid gland is removed the patient generally dies within a short time, but if only a Portion of it is removed it is possible that enough remains to supply the‘ need. However, a lack of thyroid se-_ cretion does produce premature age-' ing and may cause some mental dis- | turbance. Your daughter may have some other condition as well as the, thyroid trouble, but of course it is impossible for me to diagnose her case without first having the oppor- tunity of examining her. Queensland Nut Question—Mrs. K. L. writes: “I NEW YORE .... Fifth Ave. Bldg. new safety apparatus and setting aside larger sums for CHICAGO oO taking the risk out of this mode of travel. The time may Tower Bidg. ai be near at hand when they will reap their reward in the (Official City, State and Coun‘y Newspaper) form of a swing hack tc rail travel. The safety factor, if ——_—__——. sufficiently broadcast, would influence many tourists to FARMING GROWS MORE CHEMICAL lock the car in the garage and go by rail. ¥ Farming is a natural chemical process when analyzed down to its essential nature. Combination of elements ‘I LOVED HER’ contained in the soil are what build up the plant, they! ‘The young man recently arrested in New York, accused are the magic process which creates the fruit and the} of strangling his young wife, taking her body to a seed, ready for the cycle of reproduction and growth to | deserted spot in the country, drenching it with kerosene Tepeat itself. More and more direct chemistry is being | anq setting it afire, has voiced the usual protest of the applied to agriculture. Sometimes the possibility of com- | man caught in an act of that kind. pounding foods dircct out of chemical elements is vir] «1 Joved her,” he cries. “I loved her madly. Don't let sioned by the dreamers of science. When that day 8f-/ there pe any doubt about that. I wanted her to come rives, farming will be a purely laboratory process. Mean- | nacx and live with me.” while the chemistry that enters into the processes Of] rime after time this sort of remark has been made by agriculture makes steady progress in the course of arti} nen who have committed similar crimes. Sometimes, ficial application over the slower natural processes. no doubt, the murderer means it; and sometimes, per- ‘There is another side to the chemistry of the farm and haps, he ts thinking of its possible effect on a sentimental that is in the derivation of chemical products from the jury. produce of agriculture. The part that this chemical pro- |" Onan, however, one would say that choking a woman Che : duction is playing in the economy of the farm WAS | to death and burning her body is a peculiar way of dem- ; stressed at the recent meeting of the American Chemical | onstrating affection for her. unable to recommend because they contain oe no doul ergencies, such as a forced stay in the mountains, when no other food can be obtained, in which dried beans may be kept for @ long period of time and used as needed. In this event, they should be combined, if possible, with less con- centrated foods, such as the non- starchy vegetables. Dried beans are less apt to cause injury if one uses vigorous physical exercise such as might be necessary in long and forced marching. One who is leading an out- 7 Feed can undoubtedly nek and So hold personal individual satisfaction ; tivities, but a little more than a year |Similate many foods which we for her. later announced anew aay of sink | cause TABOETCHG Worst disturbances * ok % ing all ships found within the waters 3 surrounding the allied countries. It is a good plan. to take, in ad- E WISE OLD DAME dition to the foods which you have|have just returned from Australia, ey Seely at Columbus, Ohio. Major T. P. pero age susricarenaage ISSR Old Dame Nature is smart in other listed, some of the dehydrated vege-| where I enjoyed eating the Queens- f} —-— authority on various forms of commercial chemistry,| ENGLAND TAKES TO GRAPEFRUIT ways than in the mere propagation of 4 tables, which weigh very little and] land nut. Do you believe that this, H spoke on the increased utilization of farm products in fruit, these days, is an established part of the race, in which she excels. She is would provide mineral elements to as-| could be grown in California, and t this form of industry. Speaking of the direct production| The grapefruit, these days, “ALLENE SUMNER, | ually smart in producing men and sist in avoiding the dangers of such] What is its food value?” 4 hemical products direct on the farm, the | the great American breakfast. women with an urge to dedicate their & preponderately acid-forming diet as] Answer.—This nut is already being id es coy chemical’ 4 Every morning it appears on millions of breakfast} pressed in the white uniform of a {lives to some direct goal for the good the one on which you are at present | successfully cultivated to a limitéd ex- , major said that the increased processing of other prod- ucts is going to be of benefit to the farmer but it is not going to fill the role of messiah to the industry of the tent in California, The nut is very ‘of mankind—a goal more far-flung} subsisting. It would also be a good | similar in food value to the Brazil nut. medical research worker, Dr. Flor-j than the one of happy personal rela- ence R. Sabin of Rockefeller Institute { tionships generally chosen as their tables. It is a fine starter for the regular bacon-and- egg program. 2 * | Plan to take with you some of the | dried berries and non-sulphured figs, 5 Now, it appears, the British are getting fac anne was photographed at her desk the jchannel of life by the majority of pena amine prunes, ete. There are quite nourish- : “Will, you 2 ‘tment of Commerce has just discovered that } Persons. ‘ANT , and at the same time are pro- can do to i Corn and cotton, so far, are the major crops entering Shire: best foreign reel for grapefruit. Micah be ee sity pbanogrenh | Sontertunstely, she. not pi leiever (By Alice Judson Peale) mite foods. It is also possible Hoke strengthen my fingers? I play the 7 into chemical utilization of farm products. Corn crops, le country : that she is able to make human be-| We are so eager to have our chil-|cure dried meat and fish, both of| piano, and my teacher says that my a . | Last year, for example, more than 421,000 boxes of the] after years of grilling, detailed, un- | ings, women especially, who start out |dren behave well, appear clever, and j eee sto whisky, nats er eaters sericea fruit were shipped from the United States to England—| obtrusive labor she suddenly became | with a bent for the impersonal life | Feflect credit upon thelr home’ that Dr vaniabie wien peaichease aout f vent; fcr us in the lacquer industry. The prod as contraste:’ with a mere 15,000 boxes five years ago. famous because she had, after analyz- | of ministering to all humanity rather | We tend to teach them those habits| rresh game. butyl alcohol, acetone and ethyl alcohol by fermentation ‘This is good for everybody concerned—good for the |!9& millions of tuberculosis ger than to just their own possessive | which will do just this without first) ‘There are many wild edible herbs consum:; annually 8,000,000 to 10,000,000 bushels of corn, aed cdg oeierea ah fon to his | {2UNd, & Phosphorus-like sebstance. | fragment of it, and who, content with | 8iving thoughtful consideration to] which would be a valuable and palat- 5 cent as much as was formerly employed in the | English householder, who gets a nice addition to his| named phosphatid, which acts upon! that in their earlier years, reach out {their value in terms of growth and| Jule addition to the somewhat lime 2 Pitan Se desis ania lanes, breakfast menu, and good for the American fruit grower, |the human system as does the tu |for nothing more warmly and com- j development. ited menu which you are forced to mi ‘ a More than 50 chemical products are derived from the { fingers are weak, especially on the left hand. Answer.— A good exercise to strengthen the fingers is to spread out @ full-size sheet of newspaper and grasp one corner with the fingers at arm’s length, and then with the fin- gers pull the newspaper to the hand, trying to crush it into a ball. (Copyright, 1929, by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) i bercle germ. This means new hope of | fortably personal until it is too late,| Thus, table manners, polite forms, becai f tact ied ada omy cA * gure for the deadly disease... ,.,coutent with the bare knowledge that | the memorizing of thymes, the art of so persed pens reaped h ait EN PLES The picture is not printed just be-| their life has meant much to count-{ counting, prompt obedience and an a The eee anf gL A sound argument docs not require as much sound as} cause a woman did this thing. It is! tess thousands. Rare indeed is the | attractive exterior receive @ large ceereraen 4 ee aa Phas articles as table oil, soap sly fe, Tul not printed in the same spirit as that | woman who does not know in her | Proportion of our attention. “I do a great deal of traveling in ‘Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed spinach, beets, sauerkraut, tomatoes, . weak one. tute, fertilizer, starch, corn syrup, tanners’ sugar and |* of a more than usually comely girl heart of hearts that she would much| But are they really worth the time vegetable glue. . who happens to do little or nothing, | have preferred it to count with just|and energy we spend on them? It!» ° nat th: agit time 11 companies in the United States The man who bets on a sure thing usually deserves | put who is good “page one art.” lone of two who were her own. ° "| would seem that they are not. Re- | BARBS | ae Jn | 25 much sympathy as he gets. Dr. Sabin is comely in an elderly, —_—_—___8 cent studies of children show more ° are engaged in the manufacture of corn products suc! a Se ae dignified way. But the picture would | and more the importance of dynamic, | as starch, corn syrup, corn oil. About 80,000,000 to 85,002,009 bushels, one-third of the corn that reaches the primary market, is employed in this industry. The growth of the nitrocellulose lacquer industry, with have been printed and the fact made! as much of if a Mr. Sabin had; achieved this triumph. see FEC GOSS SSS aes alert attitudes rather than of fixed| Cleveland police arrested hundreds Patterns of response. of bootleggers after the homes of two I oo slo Hore ot rae oe Policemen were bombed. The nerd 0 the cl 0 learn express is that the bootleggers wouldn't “A great many of our people, even thoughts in words with freedom and ¥ our literate people, do not like ta,read | Editorial Comment THE WORLD'S ACCLAIM —| > hey its resultant demand for solvents, has added a corn-con- poise than to be able to repeat ver- * * difficult books hich they have suming chemical industry, which consumes annually eae dne cd cin Humanity hails no one so much as ee TTT (| batim a dozen nursery rhymes. The headline. “WOMEN VOTERS | {ftlcilt books over, which they have ¥ (St. pat the man or woman who helps pre- . It 1s more important that he should | pick NEW HEADS” may not be s0) pendent thinking. Th fer a eight to ten million bushels. In April Current History, John A. Eubank discusses the | serve and maintain human lives. LUSITANIA SINKING meet people with friendly feelings| misleading after all. thing recommended ‘by’ the Crim d Total corn consumption by American industries as a relation of aviation to the old legal maxim that he who| “ask anyone who has done more for! Fourteen years ago today a German | than that he should be expert in the se * Club, so engrosring that you can't whole is between 90,000,000 and 100,000,000 bushels an- | Owns the soll also owns downward to the center of the | earth, Dr. Sabin and all her kind—| submarine, U-20, torpedoed the| use of “please” and “thank you.” ‘A Massachusetts professor has dis- | hear yourself think.”"—Dean Christian nually. earth and upward to the zenith. This old maxim is by | women who have given long and|Cunard liner Lusitania and made| It is better for him to find out} covered an alcohol without a kick.! Gauss of Princeton University. : Ss dnchis pert | W8¥,0% being scrapped. In two recent court decisions, one | arduous years to an attempt to find| America’s entry into the World war | through his own initiative and ex- Maybe he has been touring the New sk * 2 It is estimated that the nine sta in the corn belt | in Pennsylvania and the other in Minnesota, it was held | one fact which will help the race—or | inevitable. Perimentation how to ride his kiddie | york night clubs. “Mass production is making a bet yield enough stalks annually to produce 12,000,000 tons | that an airplane does not commit a trespass in flying |the woman who marries, cares for; The giant ship sank prow first} car, or make his coaster wagon go, xe Oe ter world.”—Edward A. Filene, Boston of pape:. But it is probable that it would not prove |Over the lands of another. When airplanes are more | home and husband and children in| within 20 minutes after it had been| than to be taught these things by 8] One of the bills proposed in con- | merchant, : ‘ } numerous, the question of their rights in the air will! an effective way, and is personally | hit, carrying wth her 1195 persons, of | supervising grown-up. gress let farmers manufacture ‘. economical or feasible to utilize them except in the most | undoubted’: become acute. Farmers in the neighborhood happy and making a handful of other | whom 291 were women and 94 small| It is easy to teach patterns of re-| beer and ne At least that would : jum i ** favorablo location, because of the cost of collecting and of st. Louis have several times registered their private s happy—and the answer will| children. Of the 188 Americans who | sponse but it is difficult to be patient | relieve the tediuin, ats ok aries an Bive tossauch ad is vice to the young.”—Lady Astor. transporting such bulky material. protest by peppering planes with birdshot. It is com- | be that the Dr. Sabins count most. | were on board, 114 lost their lives. __| in allowing children to find their own ee * * * crop, plained that the noise of the motors disturbs farm ani-| Ask the Dr. Sabins if this quest for] The effect of the tragedy on Amer- | Words, their own use of materials and womai nced “ ihe other large agricultural Diivgeuantegecnate se mals. In the air age, however, it is inevitable that the | some impersonal fact which will aid | ica was comparable to that which was | their own slowly evolving adaptations ng egy yes ig TE eid: dlea -ain-cioctor's orders most important products of material with which the of ownership of air to the zenith, if it survives i ag have not been obeyed, the parents eae principle of ow: ip of 5 the world has been as truly heart- | aroused by the sinking of the Maine. | to social requirements. Ponement of her sentence s0 she| may be charged with manslaughter.” ) © ebemist works. at all. must become nothing but a pretty fiction. Avia-| satisfying as the occasionally As soon as possible the German| We must be content to let the tod- | Poutd peta permanent wave. Wonder pa el a aici i Formerly cotton was raised solely for the lint used in j tion, like radio, breaks new legal ground. glimpsed. nisaee of the alae that loreian. pition sent a note to Secretary Seen posi Doncectons than theli¢ Harry Sinclair has thought about Pare . ; Lqapaiggengegpragepeepned “most women we,” al they, if] of State Bryan expressing deep sym- | nel rs? , while new un- ' eee oe 008 th.n9 08s ese Allowed to. 50% THE GOLD STANDARD AGAIN honest, would say “"no.” pathy over the loss of lives aboard | derstanding we permit him to follow | t#*? sex Me ee , 4m immense heaps around gins. They were ‘Spokane Spokesman-Review) And yet—just as no woman, or| the Lusitania and excusing the sink- | the laws of his natural growth. A new mechanical device will do| opposed and shall sonthive te Hoa ' such an extensive refuse at one time as to necessitate the| the president alifornia mit man, ever marries as a duty to the |ing on the grounds that such meas: work cash register, book- Passage of sanitary laws providing for their disposal. came pilin ty @ means of fete sopeel aad race, but as a choice which seems | ures were necessary against Britain’ ‘We use about 23 billion cubic feet eed Ayer machine, Cone a What 7 believe to be unreasonable and Cotton seeds now produce refined oils, synthetic stearin, | gold, we should not make use of it.” best eae foe Anaividual Pesacal | airs 0 RIAL e: GRTERHY’S. posta | bigot ie ata ie poh complete record of a sale as it is be- es happiness, just so joubtful if | lation. sect about 2, made. Now should Soap and soap powders, nitroglycerin, roofing paint, writ-| _ This, it will be generally admitted, is very kind of him. | any "woman ever chose a career. as a| President Wilson replied with a| more. ine invent a conn oe grey could it He has a new electrical device that will do spectacular only it ing paper, nitrocellulose, smokeless powder, gun cotton, tricks with unbelievable numbers of volts at @ time, and duty to the race, or for the sake of | note which caused Germany to yield spell dictation. “I do tl am a ioe 5 . . not think there can y Jacquers, artificial leather, celluloid, rayon and photo- naturally wants to allay any general alarm that may finding a salient fact for the good of | half-heartedly. She made some pre-| British lifeboat crews saved 572 ‘Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | question that we have in | graphts films. be felt. the race, if the pursuit in itself didn’t | tense of curbing her submarine ac- | lives in 1928, an 8 voney. t mee It would be most unpleasant for people to start chang- ——— 3 S| rine. It is a matter of official statis- A STUDY IN CONTRASTS ing mereury to gold. if Our Yesterdays 4 teal record thet between 35 and 40 Dally lie in this country is s0 full of contrasts that we | That i's national sport of mane seary’ stenting, and || OUR BOARDING HOUSE then es Sere don’: ordinarily pay much attention to them. should not be disturbed. To be sure, gentlemanly agents EARS flag.”—Ernest Lec Sometimes, though, they're sharp enough to make us| Would at once pass among us selling stock in mercury the Prechyterion ‘churein' te oupested | Uanneke, Navy Department, stop and do a little thinking, That's always good for us | mines. but the 9 to arrive with his family this week. ‘Trees ‘equivalent to 600,000,000 and sometimes it results in progress. cold’ but that is not the point ~MATOR,~ Youve Been “ume sol wei, G wo KipDn6,~ fence posts are cut every year for A certain mid-western manufacturing city recently! Gold still has the glamour of tradition, although it has Neetecrinie YouR FWanciar usteN To Me, WHY Doi)’ You ’ that purpose in the United States. os Its nsive public audi- | lost caste socially. Only the proletariat and the lower in Y Go W TH’ Los’ forum housed the vent Every night bg automobiles | tye, urea sl near ornaments ot gad | YA PAGE OF LATE Jue HeRe's A 7 KAYE T po Y7GO NTS eee {His HeartIson ~? rolled up to the entrance, and expensively-clad men and | are able to find a metal more expensive. As far as some JZ QuovatioN RIGHT IN ouUR ey SA ANiee io. MAJOR Q— ] we is Hie | women alighted, paused on the sidewalk to be seen by the | People are concerned, the alchemists could transmute NEIGHBoRHooD. w "LoSt:- LOST CANINE HAVE PLENTY | His Right Side gold into scrap iron and no harm done. Heir OWNERS : ° ° i POLICE DoG,—~IN ViciniTY aie ucteney oF MME THe oF ysilwoop.— allswens ST é PROrESsION To NAME oF FrRiTz Vo! ~ oF the sei — f Doss AVE Lost $l00. REWARD, ~ PHONE) FouilD, m Hor FINDING I HIERN eee esr ONE TARTHING —°) CoRPoRATIOM * Jess resplendent citizens, and went inside. " ) HAVE I acceptep { ~~ INSTeaD = LISTING IN TODAY'S For “HEIR OF A REWARD, \ STocK MARKET, RETURN, EGAD f CHARGE THE MAZOR fs "7 CUENT 50¢ AN HodR UP To oe wis ToUND /~ There's A WOWr oF i [: i Ae in ie ; ~ >. n~

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