The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 5, 1929, Page 4

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4 The Bismarck Tribune | dians, and built his own ship. This ship. named the Griffon, was about the size of a modern fishing tug, but La Salle crowded all his party aboard and set sail up Lake Erie. He had nothing re- sembiing a chart. Jealous rivals had told him the lakes | were full of reefs and sand bars. No one knew just what | (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Compary. Bis- Marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs &s second class mai] matter. George D. Mann .... +++...-Presi¢ent and Puplisner | a Subscription Rates Payable in Advance lay ahead. But the Griffon sailed steadily west, and in Daly by carrier ver year three days reached the mouth of the Detroit river. 4 4 Daily by mail. per year «in Up cr went La Salle; up past the “flats” of Lake | : aa roy dh gt St. Clair and Lake Huron. North it went, to 4 i : A rereoion ea ‘ait of Mackinac, and en into Lake Michigan, dropping ee eee ot oe eee anchor at last off the Wisconsin shore in Green Bay, | ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ....... where a camp was established. 4 Weekly by mail. in state. three years for ¢ was heavily in debt. His party spent weeks i ee ee ee 1so| collecting furs. Pinally the Griffon was loaded with them ES Mile isk beac cae and sent back, to carry them to Montreal and pay off La Salle’s creditors. Member of The Asseciated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for republication of news dispatches credited to it of Mot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also tne neous Ofigin Dublishea herein AU tion of all other matter herein are clear morning and vanished from sight forever. The first | p om the lakes had a short career. Somewhere be- | Green Bay and the head of the Niagara river the | down with all hands—the t of a long be lest to the fury of the inland seas. seems as if more attention should have something su- t diminutive ship on all the thousands of miles / darkness of 250 years ago. Its voyage | crew helped. in a very real sense, to | way for the present great traffic of the | Why could we not have date some recognition? Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ' MODEL FOR THE WORLD | A former finance officer of the British government, after a study of British and American methods of cen-| | tral banking, declared the federal rese: r *, Of England. and suggests that some such system might , aid his country in its present financial and economic PS | an a ‘azbacks out of the | d by Stephen H.! Beet Sugar associa- certain bankers maintain th is not applicable to London. But ¢! the fact that the comparison constitut: handsome bit of approbation from a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 5, 1929 as ss ss ss _ _==__ es: and nearly made the entire American interior for a long time @ pert of Prance. When he reached Buffaio he | 7 i kin Ev 9, ust! Ap ineepentent Nranpayes decided not to trust himcelf to the frail canoes of the In- Getting Tired Ta! g Everybody’s Dust! THE STATE'S ULDESI NEWSPaPER i SA Dr STAMMERING AND STUTTERING Stammering has an unfortunate ef- fect upon the personality and char- acter out of all proportion to the speech defect, itself. A child so af- fected will usually be mentally re- tarded or at least seem so. He will be backward and shy, and show anti-so- cial characteristies and will have a tendency toward an inferiority com- plex. The ridicule and giggles oi nis | school companions only add to an em- jbarrassment that is already keen, land such a child is to be pitied when {he is called upon to recite and tries his | | best to do so, only to be unable to | correctly enunciate his sentences. | Stammering children often appear to be stupid and backward, when! {actually they have brilliant qualifi- | cations. All scolding and teasing at home should be carefully avoided, and | cmpathy and understanding ‘sub- stituted. : It is generally admitted that imita- tion plays an important part in the jhabit of stammering. The fact that | the child hears its parents stutter and imitates, will tend to make him a; tammerer, too. HEALTH DIET ADVICE 483 the Seat May to cl SEP ne cee naee wee normalities of the uvula, or an enlargement of the tongue. A cleft palate or wrongly formed dental arch, Dr. McCoy will giedly answer personal questions on health and diet, addressed to him, care of the Tribune. | Enclose @ stamped addressed adefective sense of hearing, or a nasal obstruction may all be con- | tributing factors. (Concluded in tomorrow’s article) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Diet in Low Blood Pressure Question: Mrs. F. G. R. asks: “Will you kindly advise proper diet for one | with low blood pressure?” | Answer: One with low blood pres- | sure should live on a well balanced diet. No special foods are required. but simply good combinations, suck as I suggest in my weekly menus. In- creasing your physical exercise each day will do more than anything else to bring up your ! blood pressure. Mill It is interesting to note that at least 85 per cent of all children who stam-| mer are boys. It is also interesting! to note that many who stammer while | talking can sing without the least im- | pediment. Stammering is usually the effect of and all stammerers are Question: Mrs. J. D. asks: “What is the matter with which after standing a weck does not curdle but merely acquires a bad odor? Is pa teurized milk in any way more desir- able than condensed milk?” Answer: Ido not know what could be the trouble with the milk not cur- highly impressionable, nervous, exci able children who will stammer mor jdling unless a preservative has been e | added to it. I would suggest that you during emotional excitement than| take a sample of the miik to your local they do ordinarily. Their trouble is| board of health and have it examined. werse particularly in social gather- | Condensed and pasteurized milk are ings where they would most like to of about the same value. I usually shine, and they retire, covered with | reccommend the raw certified milk. defeat and laughter. i Dislocated Shoulder ution for 100} It is doubtful if the most ardent belie | ciples of the federal reserve system fores: Teachers should give these unfortu- | nate children the most careful atten- tion and consideration. Unfortunate- Question: A. H. writes: “I am 19 years old and vant to take up boxing in order to help pay my way through Mr. With wheat eac done in the East Gr tloaded | crated it, the widespread recognition es as iS | would gain within a few years. They on of the Red river item as a remedy for the banking and in time find it area also in Mon! y of Ne- | suitabie for their needs. braska, in Love! Torrington. Wyoming, and in sev- | No other reserve machinery worked so smoothiy and | eral districts of Colorado given over to the culture of the | stood up so stoutly under the test imposed by the World | beets. The Billings area sells a $2.500,000 bect crop each | war. Other less fortunate countries saw their systems + fall. collapse under war conditions and these, as soon as Since the United States now grows far more wheat than | normal conditions were restored, turned to those bank- to actress C it consumes and millions of tons of sugar less than the do-| ing methods which had proved so conspicuously suc- place two or t mestic market can absorb, Mr. Love is recommending ful in this country. Padstett that farmers be encouraged to turn from one crop to the le, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia are among Melon other. Expressing the opinion that the program would ions which have already adopted in whole or in cost far less than any other plan, he said it would bring | part the principles and methods of the American 5; few w h about a permanent solution to the recurring problems| tem. And now the Bank of Enziand—traditional | Place within a few days after his created by the constant surplus of smail grains. of world finance—is advised to smother her vena e os the mother of Milli “In 17 states in which beet sugar is produced,” Mr. | Pride and learn something from a rival banking sys- ho became Countess Salm Love declared, “wheat also is a staple crop and there | ‘¢m. | with havoc to all. | is no reason why large areas now devoted to wheat could | not profitably be turned to beet culture. If the program NO TEARS CALLED FOR ere to be undertaken on a large scale, it would have a| Gulbert Swan writes from San Prancisco that the ‘o-fold result of decreasing the wheat surplus, there- | famous oid Barbary Coast has lost all of its glory, being j advancing the farm price of that commodity, and | now a quiet commercial street of garages, warehouses at tit same time expanding an industry which guaran- | and lunchrooms; and. quite illogically, most of us, no tees its returns to the farm: doubt, feel a sort of pang of regret at the news Mr. Love cites figures to that a rotation of sugar In its heyday the Barbary Coast was known. w good beets with wheat is highly desirable because of the ef-! reason, as the wickedest spot on earth. Sailormen were fect it exerts on succeeding crops. Seme time ago, he | robbed. beaten. shanghaied and murdered in its dens. said, the United States Beet Sugar association gathered | Every form of vice and crime existed there, unchecked. reports from 500 farmers engaged in beet culture. The! To contemporaries the piace seemed like a genuine reports indicated the following increased yield after beets | hell-hole. had been introduced into the cycle of rotation: 49.87 per And yet, so smoothly does time gild bygone things wi cent increase in the yield of wheat, 29 per cent in corn, | the color of romance, our first reaction to Swan's news 50.49 per cent in oats, 56 per cent in barley, 120 per cent | to feel sorry! in rye, 71 per cent in peas and 45 per cent in potatoes. ‘We may as weil save our grief. The Barbary Coast was The sugar beet grower, he said, has an important ad- | horrible, not romantic. The world is better off without it. vantage over the grain farmer, in that the sugar fac- tories guarantee a price of $6.50 to $8 a ton for the beets even before the crop is planted. In addition, the farmers under some contracts, as those at Billings, are granted an increased price if the sugar content of their crop is un- usually high, and they also share in the net proceeds of ij the sale of the sugar. venture the between th To wink at the law i change the law th | DID HE REALLY WANT TO DIE? It is always hard to understand the complex motives of @ man who decides to end his life. But sometimes the n of Chicago, 11 y desire for suicide gogs hand in hand, to the last minute, | old, is just one of hu is of th | With en equal desire to live; and in that case the affair is | sands of boy more apt to be more than usually puzzling. | than anything else Cyril : : | saved all his pennies and nickels and A Chicago man drank poison, purposely, the other day- | dines and even dollar bills that rela- NY AND BOY are they Perhaps RINGING “HE e only difference between them and me.” It is pleasant to hear a successful man talk that way vircues and abilities, helped along by rigid routine and Painful sacrifice. But it isn’t much more convincing. some few success does come as the result of “95 per luck and 5 per cent ability.” By others it is won by 95 per cent ability attended by only 5 per cent luck. It "t require any ability at all to hay on your farm and make you —HoUGHT NO WO N NN s TAN AN } RIGHTS OF ADVERTISERS Then, lying down to die, he wrote a note explaining what | tives who knew his dream gave him. ‘The courts have upheld the right of the advertiser | h¢ Bad done—and adding that the antidote for the par- | _ He got his pony. He ha i ridden his to exaggerate the advantage of his product just a little, | ticular kind of poison he had taken was such and such a | Mieeaee any ates ane prea deciding that a “slight puff” in advertising—as con- | ™xture; milk and vinegar, or something of the kind. |.) beneath its sharp hoofs. trasted with downright misrepresentation—was held to! Naturally, when he was discovered he was given the} Cyril's heartbroken par be in accordance with “time-honored custom” and not | 2Mtidote and hustled to a hospital, and thereby balked of | probably wondering now why calculated to deceive the consuming public. his suicidal aim. And the question is, did he reaily want ¢ver let him have his pony. Hereafter, apparently, the greatest show on earth can | ‘© die or to live? 2 a . be so labeled even if it is in reality only the greatest | show west of Suez, and condensed milk may be adver- | tised as coming from contented cows even though a few H .. { of the cows are, obviously, ill at case. | Editorial Comment | ‘The court decision reversed an order of the federal } j trade commission which held it to be “fraudulent ad- DON’T COUNT ON ‘THE BREAKS’ vertising” for a mattress manufacturer to picture his Ae Ane womans Pali -Herald) ig eerie Product ‘so as to “imply a resiliency or elasticity far| “Some of the biggest I know are t! ithiest.’ Cut-away mattress on the manufacturer's trademark | Taze my own casey I know that there are any number | ‘Were not strictly true to nature. of men in my employ who could run my business just Picture the dire consequences had the courts sustained | the commission in its revolutionary decision. Every manufacturer claims his is the world’s “best” product and his sales and advertising managers have probably convinced him of the truth of those claims. More than that, each has customers who believe as he does. The; To adjective “best” precludes superiority or equality and! cont yet in its common advertising usage it is not calculated to deceive the public. And what a prosaic and uninteresting “pi” of type an advertisement would be without these little hyperboles which “lie without deceiving.” They are as necessary to |. The really able man, the art of advertising as such hyperboles as “by a mile” ay go hunting for oil all ar4 “not in a lifetime” are to conversation. : you reasonably happy and content \Y oe THE FIRST SHIP ON THE LAKES | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | EGAD!.-THERE SEEMS “To BE NoBoDY AT HOME! L've BEEN gel ~—~THE ‘HOUSE APPEARS “To BE DESERTED! “THiS DomMociLE ,~~ INDEED! ~~ ONE WOULD FANCY THEY parents mony was being performed. They nacar, made him go through with it, how- I ever. eee An Indiana man has invented a golf | hat hums for 15 minutes after it} When a golfer drives into! th that ball he has to face eee Leon Trotzky reminds you of a ¥ automobile—rou no sooner have | than you begin to wonder how you! jt of it. Service, Inc.) ENGLAND DECLARES WAR Fifteen years ago today, on Au-| S gust 5, 1914, England declared war upon Germany for violation of Bel- gium’s neutrality. On August 2. Germany informed j the Belgian government of its inten- , provoked by alleged French ac- ties, to enter Belgian territory andj to advance up the Meuse alley to at-! tack France. The following day, Belgium reached its heroic decision to defend its own neutrality and responded to the Ger- man ultimatum with the declaration she purposed to defend her soil against German violation. Eelgium also asserted that she had at all times been equally prepared to defend hersclf against France or Britain and thus demolished the whole German edifice of allegation that France was planning to attack Ger- many through Belgium. The crisis was reached August 4, when King Albert, in presence of ac- tual invasion, appealed to Great Brit- ain, Russia and France, to help him defend his country. Great Britain |sent an ultimatum to Germany, which i expired at midnight, demanding that | When the day comes when the meek | satisfactory assurances be furnished | shall inherit the earth, what will be- |of German determination to respect come of truck drive: Belgium neutrality. ee: ee ‘Admitting the invasion of Belgium An optimist is a bridge player who was in violation of international law, passcs after his partner has bid “one | German officials declared there could weak no trump.” You might also | be no drawing back. call him a pess' Accordingly with expiration of the see tets time-limit of the ultimatum at mid- A Pennsylvania bridegroom col- night, August 4, Great Britain de- lapsed twice while the wedding cere- clared war on Germany. JOB of being a par- ve kids ponies, ‘em. It’s hare s hard to burn because hard to know. hands will help any more than whipping. The hardest job in the world pays no sala’ not even one of grateful A doctor says that man will be wit! out toes in 590 centuries. Ju vill people do with old safety razor blades then? e8 ly, teachers are sometimes so rushed school. About a year and a half ago ith work that they may not have the |I badly dislocated my left shoulder time to understand the youngster. The and am at present working at a trade child may be blamed for not knowing, | that requires quite a bit of heavy li when he knows pericctly well, butjing. Can anything be done to re: would rather be marked as “dumb” | edy this condition, and will a straight than go through the ordeal of reciting | left jab throw the shoulder out of the when others of his classmates laugh at him. | We always find that stammerers are in a state of mental haste and anxiety, which only impedes them the more. Sometimes the victim can ‘only stand still, being totally unable to say anything at all. Most of these youngsters have trouble with words or sentences be- ginning with W, B, P, T and D, and | they may have trouble with their own | names, or difficulty only with the be- | ginning of sentences; or, they stand and hopelessly repeat syllab! While stammering is usually a/ habit spasm of mental origin and cap- | able of being overcome, there may be other causes such as adenoids, ab- Talks TOSS, | BRINGING UP BROTHER | (By Alice Judson Peale) Mother read aloud a letter which ‘ommy had _ written from camp: “Dear Mom, Sis is spoiling my sum- mer. She dosnt mind her own bisnis. | She thinks she hes to take care of mej but she dosnt. I can take care of self. Please tell her to but out. Your loving son Tom.” “Geod for him! Written like a man,” said his father. “I think it's high; time sis stopped thinking she’s re-| sponsible for Tommy’s behavior. One| mother is enough, I say.” “But, my dea*, you know sis has al- ways watched over Tommy and she’s perfectly devoted. I’m sure she pre- vents him from getting into a lot of trouble. You know how thoughtless and headstrong Tommy is. I’m sure Ghat halenes, she does is for his own g ‘Maybe, but he’s got to learn to take care of himself some timé and camp | is a fine place for him to begin,” said | the father. “I think we ought to! write him that he needn’t pay any | attention to sis. I think we ought to} write sis and tell her that Tommy isn’t ie worry; the camp is responsible for | im.” | Sisterly devotion often is mixed | with a desire to dominate a younger | child. Because there is so often a good deal of affection in this type of BELL FoR TEA MINUTES, I WENT FoR A STROLL UP THE STREET, relation and because it is a conven- ience to a busy mother to let big sis- ter take some of her responsibilities, a situation is created which is harm- ful to both children. Don’t let big sister bring up her younger brother or sister. Many chil- dren less up and coming than Tommy never succeed in establishing their in- dependence of such an elder dom- inating child: It isn't fair. As Tom- my’s father justly said, “One mother is enough!” {grave as the theory |socket again? The shoulder out of the socket on thre occasions before, being set by a phy- ‘ian, and I suffer from a numb feel- ing continually. Answer: Once a shouider has be. come dislocated the ligaments remain stretched for a long time and it is very easy for the shoulder to become dislocated again. The best plan i: avoid the exercises of the joints which tend to dislocate the shoulder for at least a year. If thi: up may be able to strap your s in some way with adhesive tape to protect it against the more severe strai (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) time, and will return to the city with them. TEN YEARS AGO Miss Zena Irma inka, Dickinson librarian and author of the books, “North Dakota of Today” and “Where ‘the West Begins,” stopped here today for a visit. A special car containing more than 50 representatives of the Provident Life Insurance company will leave tomorrow for Duluth to attend the annual meeting of the Northwestern Underwriters association. After several months under govern- ment control, telegraph and telephone companies were turned back to pri- vate ownership July 31. Miss Helen Riley left this morning for Fargo and Minneapolis, where she will spend a three-weeks vacation. “Never wait for your ships to come in. The ships will come in, all right, as long as you keep sending them out.”—Captain Robert Dollar. * “As a matter of fact, most of us are managed very foolishly as chil- dren when our two greatest urges be- set us—sex and hunger.”—T, Swann Harding. (Harper's.) 5 “If, in five years, all the enter- tainment facilities in the country the theaters, picture producers, sonz publishing firms, and the radio and phonograph companies—are in the hands of one group (and the evidence Points to this being the case), youcan expect new levels of absolute monot- ony and_ mediocrity offered.” — Thomas MacKnight. (Scribner’s.) _ “This peace pact... great as it is, is only a step in the cause of peace. An armed world is a fighting world.”— Senator Borah, es “T feel that it is desirable to main- tain a strong defense, which I con- sider the greatest assurance against [rouble Senator Oddie, of Ne- vi “The theory that machinery and good methods make for unemploy- ment should be laid away in the same that low wages make for low-priced "—| Ford. (The North American Review. aa

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