The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 19, 1929, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPaPER nance of the leading men of today w countenances” of the Victorians. ith the “magnificent Of course there have been men to come to defense of | the masculine pulchritude of today, but so far the dean (Established 1873) seems to be having the best of the argument. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- | marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. George D. Mann -- Presiden! UP TO THE PARENTS The announcement of the intention of the American ind Publisner | Federation of Teachers to work for a universal compul- ——-———— | sory education law for all children under 18 years of Subscrintion Rates Payable in Advance age as a remedy for juvenile delinquency appears to be Daily by carrier per year Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside ot North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state. per year Weekly by mail, in state. three years tor i ‘Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, | per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation + $7-20] be-- on the assumption that moral delinquency may be prevented by quantity rather than the quality of the in- . 500 | Struction. It may be desirable that no child be per- - 6.00 | mitted to end its schooling until the age specified. but adding a year or more to the compulsory age will not | Of its: 1f operate to attain the end sought. It is said that inadequately educated young persons 1.50 | are revealed to grow delinquent morally as well as in in- dustrial and commercial advance, but by no means all of ; ¢ducation ts in the schools. By far the more valuable part Member of The Associated Press is recived in the home, if it be had at all. More school- ‘The Associated Press ts exclusively entitied to the use| ing might help much but it would not do all desirable for republication ot all news dispatches credited to It OF) in diminishing delinquency. If the right kind of prin- not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the | oii. are inculcated even though schooling be ended be- local news of spontaneous origin publishea herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are | fore o also reserved. : Foreign Representative. SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS is 13 there ts very little peril of lapsing into de- ~uency. LABELED CITIES There is nothing fantastic about the suggestion that (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. comes from the federal department of commerce that CHICAGO IEW YORK BOSTON those cities aspiring to a place in the rapidly growing (Official City, State and County Newspaper) BECOMING CONVENTION CITY This is the kind of Bismarck we all love to see— something doing every minute this week, something worthwhile. field of commercial aviation shall label themselves so they can be.recognized from the air. Names prominently dis- played and arrows indicating the approach to the' landing ficlds are all within the possibilities of the immediate future, and the method and style of marking are a sub- ject for practical ingenuity. It might not be out of place to make similar provision It is the kind of Bismarck that is coming. When the | for the benefit of motor tourists. Many postoffices are city voted approval of the memorial community building already suitably labeled, but it would help if all towns project it set the wheels in motion for just such activities | ang cities would suitably identify themselves by signs. as are under way here this week. The French, in their Morocco protectorate, have recog- State firemen, circus, county fair races, street dances, | nized this need, and their location and distance signs are insurance men meeting, county club organizations con- | painted on white fences or walls and are thus made vis- ferring. tourists pouring in—this is an advance picture of | ible for miles. They cannot be very ornamental, but are what may be expected next year, when the city will have | certainly less offensive than the advertising boards that @ home for all such gatherings as choose to come here | everywhere disfigure American highways, to the, then, best prepared city in the state to entertain them. It is am encouraging picture to those who conducted the memorial community building campaign on the platform | we that Bismarck must prepare to accommodate the various A LIGHT BULB AND A TRAGEDY A very small thing can cause a tragedy in this modern orld. 3 Investigators have proved that an ordinary electric state bodies which will be glad to come here, because of | light bulb caused the dreadful fire and explosion in the the fine hotel accommodations, if but a meeting place | Cleveland Clinic hospital, where 126 people lost their adequate to their deliberations be provided. lives. A good start already has been made for next year. It wasn't the fault of the light bulb, of course. It had Three major conventions or state meetings have re-| simply been left hanging too close to the inflammable cently decided to hold their annual sessions here. The | X-ray films. Turned on for a long time, the bulb got welfare workers of the state, meeting at Grand Forks, | overheated and set the film on fire—and a terrible picked this city for next year's gathering. It is an im- | tragedy was the result. portant conference and a considerable number of work- Fate strikes its blows in a strange way, sometimes. ers participate im it. E Who would have thought that an ordinary light bulb Likewise that large and notable body, the State Medi-|could be the means of bringing 126 people to their cal association, is booked to hold its 1930 convention here. | dcaths? : It is an honor to get the annual mecting of such an im- portant bewy of professional men. Vying with the physicians and surgeons in importance and dignity is the State Bankers as$clation. That met at Minot this year and decided to come here next year. The Association of Commerce convention committee OUR NATIONAL MEAT If England's great staple of diet is supposed to be roast beef, the national meat of the United States seems to be pork, At any rate, the American people eat more pork than headed by Tom Allen can perform no more valuable any other meat. Figures compiled in the Outline of Bus- service to the city than to keep on adding state gathcr-| inoss, issued by the Central National bank of Cleveland, ings to the list starting off so auspiciously for 1930. show that more than one-half of all the mcat eaten in the United States is pork, with beef ranking second and REVOLT TURNS TO PIRACY veal, lamb and mutton trailing in the rear. It is all very well to explain that the recent attack on Incidentally, we are eating more meat now than ever the city of Willemstad, in the Dutch West Indies Island | before. In 1919 the per capita consumption of meat in of Curacao, was the work of disgruntled revolutionists | this country was 130 Pounds; now it has gone up to 138, from Venezucla. We know better than to believe any- | and it’s still rising. thing like that. The pirates are coming back! Willemstad, you must remember, is a town that has The only key to fame and fortune you'll ever be able known piracy from of old. It lies right in the middle of | to find is yourself. the great stamping ground of the buccancers; it has known forays like this of the Venezuclans, time without Bragging about what you are doing leaves very little number. time for accomplishment. To be sure, this is the year 1929, and the Caribbean sea has been free from pirates for many years. Yet this story is too good to spoil. Every man who has any taste at all for the wild tales of an earlier day will insist that ‘Willemstad was raided, not by crack-brained insurrectos, but by regular, sure-enough pirates. Consider the facts of the case. In the dead of night a band of some 200 armed men creep into the peaceful har- Editorial Comment GRAVEL ROADS PASSING (Spooner, Wis., Advocate) __A few years ago it was hard to believe that hard sur- faced roads would supplant the graveled highways of bor. They seize the governor and various other function- northern Wisconsin, just! 5 ly famed for their good condi- aries, shoot down sundry policemen, take possession of an | tion. But the ever-increasing traffic has shown that American steamer and clear out, in typical pirate fashion, | gravel surfaced roads cannot withstand the grind of mo- just as the tropic dawn comes out over the sea to the tor car wheels, so that minds are open today for the building of concrete highways. With Chippewa county east. ri Paving Highway 53, the last link to be finished this Naturally this has caused a stir. The Dutch have sent | year, and with Barron county to start its program on a warship or two to the spot, post-haste. Gomez, swarthy | paving Highway 53 next year, it will soon be up to Wash- dictator of Venezuela, protests that the business was none | Urn county to entertain such program. of his doing. The American state department, mindful of the Monroe doctrine, cocks a wary eye toward Curacao and prepares to do what may be necessary. But the rest of us, who have no direct concern ip it,| canal would carry all traffic offered for perhaps a cen- must not let it be dismissed as an act of revolutionists. If | tury and that the waterway would be capable of passing WWe have any love at all for the romance that is fast dis- | 190000000 tons annually at, hes lame, he shi oes ENLARGING AT PANAMA’ (New Orleans Times Picayune) It is estimated that a third set of locks for the Panama appearing from a mechanized world, we must insist, to| continuous operation, even during the period of overhaul the last gasp, that it was piracy. We must scan the Car- bay greg two years, fbbean horizon for the Jolly Roger, and prepare to read given a thorough overhauling every four that the raiders’ captives have been made to walk the | Years which necessitates the closing of one set of cham- bers for about four months each two years. At present plank. the locks on the Pacific side at Pedro Miguel and Mira- ‘Think of it—around Point Gallinas, a few miles west of | flores are undergoing repairs, which makes it necessary ‘Willemstad, lies the fabled city of Cartagena, sacked by 2 Operate for 24 hours day the remaining single set Drake. To the eastward is Port of Spain, famed in pirate lore for centuries. Northward is the magic isle of His- ‘The repairs, which have been under way since late in January, will cost approximately $700,000. No further paniola (called Haiti by a prosaic age), where pirates got | Overhauling will be necessary until 1931, when the Gatum the name Buccaneers. Toward the sunrise lie the Lee- | !ocks on the Atlantic side will undergo repairs. ward islands—Tortuga, Antigua, Barbados, San Domingo and “-e rest. The stubby carronades of unwashed pirates havo crashed and rumbled all over this part of the map: Hardly a cove along the shore line but has harbored some battle-smitten galleon or other. ‘We must stick to it. Presently, let us hope, ‘hese raid- is fi it SPECULATION AND WHEAT PRICES (Duluth Herald) One of the easiest things in the world is to suggest overnment interference in business for the public bene- it. One of the hardest things in the world is to devise any method of government interference, however well meant, zs will be captured—to be hanged on execution dock, | that does not do more harm than good. r-4 then exposed in chains for weeks afterward, to ter- evil-doers. It be - | the present pathetic slump in the price of wheat is that rity tala. would ® splendid ending for a re there is no speculative element in the grain market any freshing . more to support the market, _ MANLY PULCHRITUDE For instance, it seems very clear that one reason for G as milling, it couldn't. So it adopted an elaborate system or by strenuous exercise, which is destroying the round- of department of agriculture supervision over grain trad- fess and softness of the feminine contour. They have | !78- All deals must be reported, and are subject to gov- heard these things so often they have become indif- ph gees When trading totels more than cer- s ified figures, the dealers may be compelled to decorating themselves a about every trader and every trade. hasn't forbidders speculation in farm government products. But it has made it so uncomfortable that: it ESDAY, JUNE 19, 1920 gone E BISMARCK TRIBUNE’ oe sts Ihe Sast Ihey.0 Malle CHRONIC AND ACUTE BRON- CHITIS Acute bronchitis is sometimes known as a cold on the chest. It is not us- ually serious with healthy adults, but may turn into bronchial pneumonia in the very young or very old. Us- ually it begins as in cold, but parr into the large air passages «the verrachea and bronchial tubes) which become inflamed, con- gested, and covered with mucus and Pus. In its acute form, bronchitis is juite contagious. ni ‘The disease seems to be predisposed by overheated rooms, bad air, or con- tact with fumes or dust. The bron- chial tubes become less resistant when there are diseases of the heart, kid- neys or liver, and almost always be- flammed during measles, ty- phoid fever, asthma and whooping The beginning spreads to the trachea and bronchi, producing @ cough, with a feeling of oppression and pain in the bones and back. The fever may be very mild, or range up|, legrees. There is also a con- stant desire to clear the throat. There may be a very intense oppressive feel- ing in the chest and the cough may be very distressing. The secretions are at first scanty and tenacious, but after a few days become softer and more abundant. As soon as a large amount of sputum can be raised, much relief is experienced. In healthy Persons, the fever should subside by the end of a week and recovery should have taken place by the end of an- other few days. In children and elderly people, the bronchial tubes do not seem to expel the mucus as readily, and it oozes in- to the lower parts, spreading inflam- mation throughout the lungs and smaller tubes. If you have had sev- eral attacks of acute bronchitis or are troubled with lung infections, heart or kidney disease or gout, the probability is that you will develop a chronic bronchitis, producing a shortness of breath, chronic cough, especially se- vere in the winter months and more distressing at night. Sometimes there is no expectoration. At other times, the mucus may be abundant and very acrid. Fever is not usually pres- In children, chronic bronchitis is usually accompanied by enlarged ton- sils and adenoids. The chest is us- ually thin and under-developed. Per- haps a slight fever will occur toward Sometimes this trouble is mistaken for tuberculosis and there is & tendency in this direction. An X-ray study of the chest is especially luable. A cure cannot be expect by any medicines, but it can be complished through the use of a good fasting and dieting regime in either acute or chronic bronchitis. Bronchitis often results from im- Properly treated acute eruptive dis- eases, or colds that have been stuffed with food. Anything which will tend to build a catarrhal state of the body will prevent a cure of bronchitis. (Cure of Bronchitis—tomorrow) QUESTIONS Penal ANSWERS Question—A. M. asks: please advise me what to do? I have ‘an acid system.” Answer—What you probably mean is that you have hyperacidity of the stomach. This can be cured if you will learn to live on the proper food combinations. Follow the menus sug- gested in this column, and you will soon notice a change for the better. Symptoms of Poor Elimination Question—C. J. asks: 8 bad taste in my mouth in the morn- ing and sometimes all day? Also, what causes my tongue and mouth and throat to be always coated? Does the fact that I don’t drink very much water have anything to do with this?” Answer—Insufficient elimination of toxins from the body is probably re- sponsible for the coating of your tongue and the bad taste in your mouth. You can increase kidney elimination through drinking large quantities of water, diet and exercise to overcome the sluggish condition of your colon and to make the bile from your liver flow Cereals and High Blood Pressure Question—J. L. B. asks: seed meal good to use as breakfast food? And should a person with high blood pressure use cereals but you must also WITHA BOW WiUAMS Aum Our ayn way!" employes not only want but almost insist on male bosses, For once I am not inclined to ar- are all hoping he makes a name for himself. necessary to sever diplomatic relations with undiplo- matic relatives. Answer —It is better to mix the flaxseed meal with some other break- fast food, such as real wholewheat grain, or with one of the dextrinized flake breakfast foods. Those with a very high blood pressure should not any time until they the tendency to tension or hardening of the WA Babe Ruth, not so many weeks ago, sent a note of sympathy to his kid pes -aneey worshipers in the hospital who were caught in the rain stampede in the | a Yank stadium. He postscripted, Ruth sends her love and. will visit | the wi BACK TO HOBBLES Just as we are shrieking and in- sisting that modern woman can do anything a man can—and more— comes an occasional discordant note. comes from the Ken- tucky Education association which is investigating the damage done girl thietes by playing basketball under rules. This association quotes omens division of the National Amateur Athletic Federation of Amer- ica as recently saying that it was “alarmed at the undesirable trends developing in athletics for girls.” You can’t deny, however, that an era which permits girls to be more -like than any preceding is pro- ing some pretty sound specimens of womanhood. Let us consider today the floor- walker—he Cl his heart and sole (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) use cereal foods at Psoriasis Question—Mrs. J. K. writes: “I have found President Hoover sent several hun- dred notes and wires of sympathy and congratulation recently, and in each of them he mentioned that “Mrs. Hoover joins me in congratulations,” or sympathy, as the case might be. The job of public wives is infinitely | quci more important today than in the days when some of our first presi- dents referred to First Ladies as “the ! woman who runs the house,” and who no more dreamed that their wives shared in their public station than that airplanes would some day dot 5 skin failed to help me.” Answer—Your trouble can be en- tirely cured if you will follow the cor- Tect diet treatment. Space does not Permit me to print the complete in- structions, but if you wall write to me again, sending your name and ad- dress, I will be glad to send such in- formation to you. & position with the Ford Motor com- pany. (By Alice Judson Peale) At an exhibit of children’s paintings recently held at a modern school there ea @ life size picture of a 10-year-old ir “HERE YOU ARE, LADY!” “You are so low you could creep under a worm with a top hat on. ; This is just a sample of her husband’ nifty wise cracks as quoted to the judge’ by Mrs. Claire McKillips of New York when asking for a separation. She a other favorite spousely wise cracl It represented # slim brown maiden rising from the chalice of an opening flower. About her body budding vines twisted upward and from her head Tose a circle of bright flame. The picture was childishly out of Proportion. The body was unsym- and quite unanatomical, The arms were long. Yet with all its of ridiculous divorce charges, this one | imperfections the picture suggested jof wise cracking seems as important | real beauty. to me as non-support or any form SCE A AAAS SN waitel= aly} 5 Thee STATUE OF LIBERTY Forty-four years ago today the statue of liberty was received for New York harbor from France. ‘The statue was presented in com- memoration of the traditional will existing between the two tries and is situated on Lil x o* DADDY'S TOYS A five million-dollar toy fund for! children's institutions is being estab- lished by notorious “Daddy” Brown- ing of “Peaches” fame. to maintain a toy office with about @ thousand sample toys on display from which representatives of vari- ous child institutions can choose those Mrs. Robert Flynn left today for Jamestown to spend a week visiting While we are continuously hearing Perhaps the reason was that the vision which the child had tried to If I were a judge, the mere whiff | put on paper was in a profound sense her own and sprang from the intu- itions cf her growing girlhood. She had had the courage to express that inner vision and the courage to le it stand with all the imperfections of | of eae ese like rahe viper make Atd “Daddy” will probably learn’ me haul out with a flourish my pret- that the tastes of the human species | tlest gold-edged divorce to award to are so warped that he won't get near the attention on this truly laudable venture as he did in his sensational | ® marriage and divorce which much ore appealed to public appetite and the one wise-cracked at. “Don’t ask me about men. I have never had time to study them in my career.”—Jane Cowl, actress, * “The talkies certainly have a tre- mendous future. They will develop a jnelgene of ee own, and I believe eventually bring al - duction in the polis teyeigi ing picture actor. * ke “If the sin of the small town ear : will-o’-the-wisp that has misled many . But! a loving parent and many an other- haven't the wires been full of human | wise inspiring teacher. touches for years? { * The telegraph companies are trying “AND COFFEE?” ir service One of our largest railroads is re- placing its men waiters with girls. The superintendent of the line ex-j plains that the move is in order with j the company’s desire to cater to wom- Giving women waitresses rather} the Verge of a Merge.” than waiters is a funny way in which to appeal to feminine taste. Most i of us prefer a waiter. MEN BOSSES One wonders a little about the boss of the new train waitresses, & department store | personnel manager, recently declared before the National Retail Dry Goods association convention that women number of plays rthe! ae A New York song writer got mar- ried the other day and for the theme song of the wedding wrote “I'm on beauty the child is striving for, freely offer him- advice and correction. sight” ofthat young artist painting young uneven shoulders and a lopsided face. , the sin of the big city underfamiliarity.’ ‘That word also rhymes with dirge. s* & A professor comes out with the statement that bulls are the only creatures that close their eyes when they charge. How about the proprie- tors of aS eur Pedal singer named Kerelin- evski has been successful in his early appearances. The headline writers Bishop Edwin A HS 5 i ry ri & i H BF 2 5 é E OUR BOARDING HOUSE so ~~ MEAN Yo" WANT Vg ME TO BUTTLE LAK I SEED DEM BUTLERS Do iN TH" MOVIES? ae WEAR KNEE PANTS, AN? Come WALKIN" IN WIF A SILER PL. MA WAY IN ‘TH? AIR, AN? “MISTAH AN" MISsUS ZZ ~ EGAD, ~~ JASON, Do You Fancy, « \F I MADE You MASTE FORMAL LIVERY, THAT You CoULD "TAKE CHARGE OF A DozeN House I RETURN FROM ABROAD, AFTER IT oF MY UNCLE’S ESTATE, TY, WiLL BE QUITE KEEPING |. WiTH R BUTLER, IN Servants 2 THE SETTLEMEN I,IN ALL PROBA WEALTHY | ~~ AND, IN MY SOCIAL PositioN, I WILL ESTABLISH A LARGE “Town p EquIP IT WITH EVERY Wee OF SERVANT, ~BY gove / \7 ——_—_ At one time kings and nobles were the only ones permitted to wear House, AND FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: | i Z é | i [ i 5 F : il i i ; E i yl | F F ff Ht Fj i E : i z E | : & & 3 i 5 t | E : t 5 $ a| F E F 5 Mich., where he i 5 E ‘ \ » x ” , A . f iN | | 4 a ra > (hs ry ae

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