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

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PAGE FOUR = The Bismarck Tribune Ap independent Newsprper THE STAI'TS OLVESI NEWSPAPER (Established '873) ee aeiearctast atten Publishea by the Bismarck [ribune Company bts: | marct, N. D., and entered at the postoffice vt Bismarce | Sececription Kates Payable in Advance Daily oy mau per year, \in Bismarck) .. Daily by mall. se: year. (ip state, outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota Weekly by mall. in state. per year Weekly by mail in state, three years for . Weekly oy mail outside of North Dakota, | ber year . Member Aadit Bareao of Circulation Men.ber ot The Assoctated ress The Associated Press 9 exclusively entitied to the use for republication of ali news dispatchza credited to it or not otherwise credited tn this newspaper and also | the loca) news o1 spontaneous origin oubi'sliec herein | All rights +f republication of al) other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LUGAN PAYNE COMFANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. CHICAGO Tower Bidg. (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) ——————— OUTDOING JULES VERNE | One by one, the improbable romances that delighted an | earlier generation are being turned by modern science into something very like the truth. ‘When Jules Verne wrote his “Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea,” he proved himself one of the most dar- ingly imaginative writers who ever lived. He depicted a gigantic submarine, fitted out with. all the splendor of a private yacht, in which people could cruise about the world, descend to the bottom of the sea, explore the se- crets of the great deep and, in general, live like wizards. No submarine of that kind has yet been built, although the giant cruising submarines launched since the war by the British and American navies do not fall far short of Verne’s mark. But Sir Hubert Wilkins, famous polar flyer, is now planning to duplicate the most far-fetched and improbable part of the whole tale. He plans to go to the north pole by submarine. If you have read Verne’s book, you will recall that the most exciting part of it dealt with the inventor's trip to the south pole. Verne assumed that there was water -instead of land at the south pole—water, covered with limitless ice floes. He had his submarine dive under these floes and gain the pole, where no other ship could have come within hundreds of miles of it; and his account of the submarine's adventures on its way north, when it got imprisoned beneath an iceberg and nearly became a tomb for its crew, is one of the most thrilling things in fiction. ‘Thrilling—and improbable. Even a generation that knows what submarines did in the World war is inclined to balk at that part of the book Yet that is precisely what Wilkins proposes to do. Using a specially equipped submarine, Wilkins plans to dive under the great Arctic ice floes and go to the north pole just as. Verne had his boat go to the south pole. He is making allowances for the predicament of Verne's crew, too; his submarine will have a special lock, so that if it is caught under the ice a diver can go out and plant explosives thet will open the ice and allow the ship to come to the surface. It will also carry chemicals that can be used to melt the ice. ‘The proposal looks like as risky a jaunt as a man could well imagine. Yet Wilkins, while admitting there will be | state and federal agencies report a steady increase in the | volume of employment. the spirit of enterprise and hustle seems to prevail. A concern that makes it a regular practice to advertise. eve. if it dees not take any great s:nount of space, will have a constant stream of inquirers entering its doors, who will more than make up for old customers who go elserh-~* | INCREASING EMPLOYMENT While political controversialists still seek to confuse each other with home-made statistics on unemployment. According to these agencies. which alone are equipped to gather the figures, there has been a steady decrease in unemployment, and the demand for labor is of a character that is expected to in- crease. | Automobile and allied industries report a demand for additional workers. Business, and consequently the rate | of employment, has improved in the steel and iron in- | dustry ‘The building trades have been organizing their | working forces for the spring and summer peak | outdoor activities are in the market for men. In some fields there is @ shortage of skilled labor. The flow of labor is dependent to a large extent upon weather conditions. Seasonal labor, for which there is the greatest demand in spring, summer and fall, cannot hope to be absorbed in the winter months until the na- tion’s industrial system has been drastically reorganized. Unskilled workers of this class find it hard to fit into a system that puts a premium upon skilled labor. The re- vival of construction and the needs of agriculture sum- | mon such men during only a part of the year. For the hext six months at least the nation’s employment worries will be nil. FAILURE AND SUCCESS Are you discouraged by failure? Then you will fail. Most of the little failures and little successes are un- important skirmishes in the battle of life. They are the maneuvering, the testing of the opening lines, the find- ing of the weak spots and strong spots. In the hour of skirmish lost, or in the zest of skirmish won, it is well to remember that the great battle is yet to be fought. The man who is stricken in heart by the little defeats and the man who is palsied in mind by the little victories will be on a par when the real test comes. Our little failures and little successes are about gqually willing to serve us. They will be very useful if we will give them the chance. But if we accept either blindly, as the gift of fate and circumstance, we might as well quit the fight. The man who, in defeat, can put his finger on the cause of his defeat—the where, and why, the how of it— is already well on the road to ultimate victory. And the man who, in victory, knows how he won, and wherefore, will win again, and more gloriously. Stepping to one side never gets you any nearer to the front. This last word you hear about women having is the last word in clothes. Two popular musical instruments are the dinner horn and the horn of plenty. Love in a cottage isn’t what it was when one cou‘ be rented for $10 a month. Many a man calls his wife the better half, when she is about 90 per cent of the family. How dull business would be if every man refrained from buying until he could afford it. Long legs are pronounced a sign of intelligence. At an element of danger, thinks that the trip, on the whole, will be rather less risky than trips across the Polar ocean by plane. His submarine is now being prepared, and he hopes to get started in July. A very few years ago Verne's book was considered just about the most wildly improbable tale in all literature. Now its essential elements are being fulfilled in a way that probably would have surprised Verne himself as much as any of his readers. The plain facts of today eclipse the imaginative wonders of a generation ago. THE BANK OF HEALTH . In the interests of good health, someone has likened the body to a checking account in the bank. The check- ing account will continue growing as long as the deposits exceed the withdrawals. Neglect to make regular de- Posits and the account is soon overdrawn. Drawing checks before making deposits to cover them is bad bank- ing, and neither banker nor depositor feels at ease when withdrawals keep too close step with the deposits. ‘ Isn't it very much the same with your private “health bank?” As long as you deposit a lot of health to your credit you will have a lot of health at the disposal of your check book. The blank checks in a check book in the “bank of health” are not any more inexhaustible than those in any other sort of check book. Unlike financial banks, the “bank, of health” doesn’t provide additional checks when your iat check is gone. Deposits in your health bank may be made in many forms. They may be regular sleep, proper eating, exer- cising or recreation, plenty of work with both mind and body, right posture, fresh air, «2mmunion with nature and othe: health deposits. Every waking and sleeping hour ma; thus be made a deposit in the bank of health. ‘When people are not making deposits they are quite often drawing checks. In the bank of health every de-) Posit which is withheld is a withdrawal. You observe regular hours of sleep or draw a check on your health balance. You eat at regular hours and the proper kind of feod in the proper way or you make a demand on that health balance. You must work, play, think, and laugh or cause a run on the bank of health. Deposits in this bank are always working capital but they require de- posits to keep that capital working. ‘i People in poor health know that the bank of health pays a high rate of interest, compounded, to its consist- ent depositors. GETTING NEW BUSINESS ‘The progressive business firm finds that it .. vo be constantly making hew friends and creating a ‘new circle any rate, a long step in that direction. | Editorial Comment | REPEALING A PROHIBITION (Brooklyn Standard-Union) Explaining carefully that he is just as much in favor of the abolition of religion as ever, a Soviet official an- | nounces that he will propose an amendment to the con- stitution of Russia repealing the laws that make religious worship a crime. He gives as his reason the fact that the prohibitory law against worship cannot be enforced. A good reason for the repeal of any law. Success of any plan of government is dependent upon public ap- proval; the continuance of religion is assured by an in- eluctable sentiment of the human heart. The Soviet gov- ernment has already tried abolishing capital, abolishing private ownership, abolishing private trading and abol- ishing life insurance. Most of its abolitions have had to be retracted because they simply couldn't work. The faster Russia learns to appreciate the lessons of human experiences the better. ‘VIVE L’ALLEMAGNE” (Omaha World-Herald) So the good townsfolk of the friendly French village of Cuers bravely shouted as they assisted the German crew of the Graf Zeppelin to make repairs to the motors of the stricken ship. “It was a friendly crowd. The utmost camaraderie was exhibited between the French mechanics and the members of the crew.” And a few hours pre- viously the entire government of the republic had devoted itself to aidingf the giant dirigible to bring its human cargo safely to earth—on the soil of France. “Vive l'Allemagne!” And 10,000,000 dead men rot in Flanders, in the Argonne, in Champagne, at Viny, at Ypress, on the Marne and Somme and Ourcq and Meuse. “Vive l'Allemagne!” And mothers of France and of Germany and of America and of a dozen other lands sit the lonely years through with a photograph and a bitter memory. “Vive l'Allemagne!” And Pierre, back again at Munich or Heidelburg or Leipsic, will soon be marrying Gretchen, the winsome daughter of Hans, who led a platoon of crack soldaten at Verdun. Surely this world one day will learn the lesson taught by friendships restored above countless graves—graves that need ever have been dug. graves in which dead men vainly sleep, graves that hold the shattered dreams of youth—countless graves with their countless dead. Dead that sleep on, their ears all deaf to the sound of the new huzzas— “Hoch Frankreich “Vive l'Allemagne' FIFTY YEARS AFTER (Time) After the Civil war sevéral negroes were elected from Ahoy, There! | kad would rise | is mea iDAY.... Now the marriage of Madame Louisa Tetrazinni aged more than 60, to Pietro Vernati, 25, has been an- nulled by the Rome tribunal. The boy was supposed to have fallen in love with the voice of the prima donna. It takes more than voice and much romance to bridge a chasm of 40 years, and even shame for being married to a world famous prima donna could not balance shame for being married to a very fat old woman, 16 if it hadn't been legs. rance, or permit vamp's boudoir. sk * ROMANCE A LA TROLLEY And here's the romance of one neither so fat nor famous as Tet- razinni. She is Mrs. Grace Hardin of Chicago, who always took his lunch to her motorman husband on car No. | ¢ 6 on the 61st street line. While he | was eating it she would perambulate ° to the rear and converse with Con- ductor William Hayes. If Motorman Hardin essayed to protest Conductor Hayes would give him the signal to proceed down the car track with his car. Now Mrs, Hardin has divorced the ; clean. motorman and announced her en-{ gagement to the conductor. The street car company has transferred the conductor to another line. * * THEIR WEDDING PRESENTS ‘That's right—Anne and Lindy must. have a terrific wedding present prob- lem! Think of the attic they'll have | to have for all the atrocities that come in! Wonder if they'll like the painting that President and Mrs. want their gifts or Tam still sighing movie! evaded the crowds. People have a way thin air. Rest assured that, no matter what for Dad or Mom to buy those silk hose, the damsels wouldn't follow suit for any reason other than style—for thrift, never! Seriously, I know several girls who might have had high school edu tions and not been sent to work at ings problem—it's either silk or bare ee ke “THE SMELLIES” The “smellies” will follow the talk- ies,” we are told, with ‘the news of an invention which will permit the movie set flower garden to throw off frag- voluptuous incense burned in the Verily, verily, there is no end to what the gods send us, whether we sweet good old days of the silent RBS Liquor was being peddled from house to house in one Illinois city, ac- cording to a Chicago newspaper. It’s nice to know there are newspapers in Chicago to keep the cities downstate xe * The middle-of-the-road policy may| jbe all right for congress, but it cer-; j tainly is a bad idea for slow drivers. | eee Colonel Lindbergh and his bride zk ke The air endurance record is 172 up and call her WHY NOT COOPERATE for the silk stock- (By Alice Judson Peale) walking or watching them play. us to sniff the deal of your very busy time and ben- little cooperation in their care? not! for the peacefully | Worked out such a scheme of co- operation. There were three of them and there were five youngsters all be- tween three and five years of age. Each mother assumed entire responsi- bility for taking all of the children out Each mother thereby gained four free days @ week in which to do extra home- shopping, part time work or the attendance of “courses” ° d to play two days of the week. keeping jobs, and club meetings. | rangement. mate. Those two young of vanishing into petent in their task of motherhood. Emilio Portes Gil of Mexico are said td have purchased for them. It is called “Mexican Flowers” by Ramos Martinez, Mexican painter; is said to Marion Talley’s have taken 15 years to paint, and | acres large. Even a saxophone player represents four types of Mexican | Would be safe in practicing art on a womanhood. farm that pie * kOe NO STOCKINGS Rosa Milano can't go to school in| friendship ‘il to we - | deed, more till she agrees to wear stock: tia eat. ings, which, to date, she hasn't agreed | from to do. Here's wagering that if pretty Rosa could start a stockingless fad so that | the parents of all the other damsels could be spared a weekly two dollars|0f @ smoke cloud for their offsprings’ silk hose, which is | Vessels containing a most conservative estimate, said! compound. a street car rider will put up with. * ee A man in Atchison, Kas., told the truth to a friend about what a dealer Wilmington, Del. high school any, had given him for his old car. In-} (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) hours, but nobody knows how much| For the first time they were able to see their children with some of that detachment which characterizes the They were able to consult each other in their difficulties and give each other new farm is 640; good nursery school teacher. helpful advice. + | Our Yesterdays _ has not vanished |* FORTY YEARS AGO which rose from jing a loss of five million dollars. a secret chemical | Miss Mamie ~AND AFTER THE SETTLEMENT oF my UNCLE'S EsTate , I WiLL TouR stHrd ENGLAND A FEW WEEKS, —~ THEN, ~AH,-~ DEAR oLp Paris J: ~EGAD, How I Love PARIS, WITH IT's FAMOUS HISTORICAL OLD SPOTS Ju Hm-m~ THE CAFE DE LA PAIX, —~ ZELLI'S CAFE,—~ CAFE PIGALL’S,. MAXIM'S, w~ CIRO'S, ~~ L' HERMITAGE ~~ RECTORS, ~ LE CRILLON,—~ AND, OH YES, ~~ FRETS SM, IF You Go oO IRELAND, ’ T WANT You To Look Up Some Z COUSINS OF MINE BY TH NAME 4 OF KELLY J ESPECIALLY MIKE KELLY ww HE Lives IW county GY GoNG 7% miss You HERE THIS SUMMER, MASORE ~~ WE GOT ScHuLTZ's Piciic GROVE DATED for EVERY SUNDAY UNTIL 1G LABOR DAYS If you are the mother of a small child and you live anywhere except in the wide open spaces of the coun- try, you doubtless meet your neigh- bors every morning and every after- noon shepherding their little ones out Has it ever occurred to you that you and a few of those other young mothers might save yourselves a great efit your children incalculably by a I know of one group of mothers who The children thrived under the ar- It was much more fun {for them to play together than to take lonely airings with an adult wha, after all was said and done, certainly was @ sorry substitute for a real play- The mothers not only won for them- selves some of that freedom from the constant society of their children which every mother ought to have both for her own sake and theirs, but also they learned to be far more com- of > All of the business section of Se- attle (Washington) territory, was com- A whole German town was recently | pletely wiped out as a result of a fire made invisible from the air by means | which swept the city yesterday, caus- Tuhoy, sister of W. H. GAS POISONING Breathing poisonous gases still seems to be a favorite method used by those who wish to commit suicide. Usually, the gas from a stove or from a gas jet is turned on and the doors and windows stuffed with cloths to keep it from escaping. In a room thus prepared, the one attempting suicide will find release from this life in from thirty to sixty minutes. Accidental deaths from this kind of gas will usually take much longer, owing to the fact that a great deal of @as escapes through openings in the room, such as the cracks in the door and windows. In spite of all warnings, there are many deaths each day from carbon monoxid gas poisoning. This gas is formed at times from the improper combustion of the ordinary natural or artificial gase used in stoves. The fumes from burning gas are ordinarily not highly poisonous, and only at times is the carbon monoxid gas produced. A housewife who does not have the proper vent to the cook- ing stove or to small heating stoves is constantly in danger of getting a breath of the carbon monoxid gas at any time. The important point to remember is that this gas is prac- tically odorless and is also colorless. Any exhaust from a gasoline engine may contain some of this poisonous gas. Most deaths from carbon monoxid gas poisoning that are reported have occurred in garages. The engine is left running while the driver is in the garage and if for a few seconds the gasoline combustion is imperfect, enough carbon monoxid may be gen- erated to make the victim unconscious almost as quickly as if he were felled with an ax. There is very little warning. One full breath of air containing this gas may be sufficient to cause uncon- sciousness. This is because the car- bon monoxid gas combines with the hemoglobin of the blood and destroys its ability to carry oxygen. Even if the victim is discovered and carried to fresh air, he may not recover, due to the serious blood change which has been produced. In case of recovery it may take months for the blood to be restored to its normal condition. ‘The air of the city streets is being more polluted each day with the ex- haust gas from automobiles and al- though these odors may not be pleas- ant, there is only a small amount of danger from carbon monoxid due to its rapid mixture with freshly moving air. ‘The great danger lies in the closed garage and in the heating gas de- vices without the proper vents. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Arms Get Numb Question: M. J. writes: “Please tell me what causes the arms to go to Tuhoy, arrived today from Erie, for 9 visit. Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Hall, Brookville, Pa., are visiting in Bismarck this week. R. M. Donnelly and Fred E. Bailey were visitors in the city from Ster- ling today. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ©. N. Dunham has arrived from Minneapolis to take charge of the Lamb Lumber company’s yards in the city. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Watson and family left for St. Louis to attend} the St. Louis exposition. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Pollard left yes- terday for the west. Mr. Pollard will be in charge of the work on the bridge at Lewistown, Idaho, and Mrs. Pollard will visit in Seattle, Miss Fay Anderson of Fargo is the guest of Miss Kupitz this week. TEN YEARS AGO Miss Leila Diesem of the offices of the secretary of state, has returned from a visit with relatives at La Mrs. L. A. Whitney, who has been visiting her son, J. L. Whitney, left today for Portland, Ore., to visit a daughter. Curtis M. Johnson, Rush City, Minn., will give the commencement address to the Bismarck high school Graduating class this evening. A| te, Class of 32 will receive their diplomas. ing friends here for CHATEAU THIERRY In the spring of 1918, Allied hopes HEALTH’DIET W Dr Frank 43 ‘the Ses? May Jo Meld “ ADVICE TH sleep and get numb at night. Is this because of high blood pressure?” Answer: If you know you have high blood pressure you have doubtless an- \ Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the ‘Tribune, Enclose @ stamped sddressed envelope for reply. swered your own question, as this does cause the arms to become numb. Valvular leakage of the heart is also sometimes responsible for ‘poor cir- , i a culation and numbness of the arms. Pella, sre Question: Mrs. R. C. H. writes: “1 would like some information about Pellagra. Can it be cured?” Answer: The best dietetic treatment seems to be an occasional short fruit fast for.four or five days at intervals of about a month apart, followed by @ well balanced diet as outlined in my weekly menus. It is especially im- portant that you obtain sufficient Protein, such as meat, in ing this trouble. Sauce for Vegetables Question: . N. asks: “How can one prepare a palatable sauce for green peas without discarding the juice, and without making a ‘wrong’ combination?” Answer: A palatable sauce can be made by adding cream and butter tc the desired amount of juice, and thickening with a little dextrinized, or browned, flour. The juice that is not used should be saved for~soup, which may be made very appetizing by the addition of milk or cream and any finely chopped non-starchy vege- table you may wish. Cysts on Eyelids Question: E. A. P. writes: “Please tell me how to prevent cysts forming on my eyelids. I have been having them cut out, but is there not some preventive? An examination shows nothing wrong with the vision. I hav been told that a poultice made wi’ milk and the bark of slippery elm, be applied for an hour, would be help- ful. Please advise me.” rn 4 formation of cysts seems to be by a condition of acidosis. This can be overcome by the use of a fasting and diet regime, as outlined in my Cleansing Diet course, which I will be glad to send you. Local applica- tions of wet compresses to the eyes for about 20 minutes each morning and evening would be helpful. The efficacy of the remedy you inquire about is probably due to its demul- cent mucilaginous property. This could also be obtained by various sub- stances added to the wet compresses, such as flaxseed, Irish moss, glycerin, gum arabic, or starch paste. (Copyright, 1929, by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc. “People want to hear good music— stirring music that grips the heart. I find the marches I use liberally for encores count for a lot. They tend to yrejuvenate the tired business man and weary housewife just as they cause troops to march with a quicker, springier step."—John Philip Sousa. | * ek & “I do not believe in denouncing salacious plays. This only serves to ¥ relieve the speaker and does not rem- edy the situation. Furthermore, it gives publicity to the very plays that should not have any.”—Dr. 8. Parkes Cadman, president of the Church Drama ‘Asmoriadiot of nee York. “If the matter is important and you are sure of your ground, never fear to be in the minority. The world turns aside to let any man pass who knows where he is going.”—David Starr Jor- dan, president emeritus Leland Stan- ford University. s* ¢ “A people that puts too much con- fidence in legislation leans upon slender and fragile reed.”—Governor ‘Theodore Cheigienete of Minnesota, * “More erroneous conclusions are due to lack of information than to errors of judgment.”—Justice Louis Brandeis, United States supreme ‘ x ee “Bincerely reli Mrs. Cecil Proctor, Beulah, is vistt- | magazine) Answer: The tendency toward the \ 4 caused | x HE LouVRe,~ ONE sHouULD Nor fe MISTAIR MAYO fz = PoLleet2 -~ Go To PARIS, WiTHoUT SPENDING A me oly Be HALF HOUR IN THAT wh DEET cooDR ay sax moostH f Southern states to take seats in the house of represent- i me ME Wo Ste Americans, fighting their first independent at- atives. Soon these negroes nominated youths ot their of customers. If it just depends on satisfying those who have previously bought its goods, it is likely to see its trade diminished. Population changes more rapidly now than formerly, and if a firm has a certain list of cus- tomers this ‘year, it can expect, as the result of all the own race for the U. 8. service academies at Annapolis aud West Point. In 1873 two young negroes passed the An- napolis entrance examinations and were admitted. Within the year both resigned because of “deficiencies in their studies.” The next year another negro went to study at the naval academy. Before his plebe (first) term was out he was dismissed for using “profane ana vile” to a classmate, flared the only negroes ever admitted to Annapolis. negroes have fared better. Of 12 who were were . The bones of aries Young, today rest in sacred work well done in far-off Li- Deez Fine To GNE THE EIFFEL TOWER A GLANCE, tack of the war. But the Germans

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