The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 4, 1929, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune ‘ An Independent Newspaper i THE STATE'S OLI'“ST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- tmarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘a8 second class mail matter. George D. Mann........... ++-President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Dally by carrier per year............ {Daily by mail, per year (ir Bismarck Daily by mail, per year, i (in state, outside Bismarck).... Dally by mail. outside of North Dakot ) Weekly by mail, in state, per year.... ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakot: Membcr Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press | ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the Jocal news of spontancous origin published herein. All fights of republication of al' other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON ——__—. (Official City, State an@ County Newspaper) ‘OLE SWIMMIN’ HOLE’ ‘They tell him they would like to take him out to the | old swimming hole they used as boys. He replies, “no, | thank you,” that he knows something about swimming | holes. But they say this one is quite different from all the others, that it is quite as comfortable as a private | pool. ‘The water? Why, it is so clear you can see straight to the bottom. And there is a nice shelving beach, with clean, firm sand, and another place where the bank gocs straight down and you can dive right off into ten fcet of water. And then there are nice tree trunks cut off at a Tevel with the water to which you can swim and rest. In fact, it would appear that in this instance nature had provided a perfect swimming hole. * Go he says, very well, then he will go with them and see this wonderful place. They approach the swimming ‘hole by a path that has not stood up so well for the last 20 years. The smooth, pebbly bank on which they are to undress has grown up considerably in briars. Evi- @ently the boys of this generation do not use the old hole very much, they say. He takes off his clothes and enters the water by way of “the nice sandy bottom.” He Temarks that it feels very much like mud to him, and beats a retreat. They explain that it must have got that ‘way recently and suggest his trying the diving place. So | the goes to that end and, by way of precaution, takes a _ shallow dive. It is a wise precaution. He comes up with ‘two handfuls of mud. He looks at his body, which ap- 3} pears a good rich amber color under the water. = ‘They say that something must have happened to the | old swimming hole in the last 30 years. It seems to be @rying up, as it is much smaller than when they were | boys and the water is no longer clear. | Bat he only smiles in a superior way. He says that all & swimmin’ holes are like that. They ned not bother to explain. He knew what it would be before he came. NOTE ON A PLEA Harry F. Sinclair, the of! man, has petitioned Mr. Her- bert Hoover to reicase him from the Washington fail, ‘where he is serving a sentence for jury tampering. Just how Mr. Hoover qill reply to this appeal for clem- ency we have no means of knowing, but, certainly, if Mr. | Hoover believes that there should be one law for every- ‘one he will give serious consideration to Sinclair's plea. Por we have it on the authority of no less person than @ former assistant attorney general of the United States | that the government itself, through its agents, does ex- | actly the thing for which Sinclair is incarcerated. ‘There was a man in Missouri whom the government ‘was anxious to get. Three juries refused to convict him, tout he was brought to trial for the fourth time. Here is | the outcome, as narrated by the former assistant attorney general: “The result was that when De Mayo was again brought ‘to trial the jury, which had been carefully guarded from | @utside approach, even before it was selected and sworn | im, and which was sequestrated during the trial, brought in a verdict of guilty.” _ There seems littic doubt that Harry Sinclair, through this agents, actually tampered with the jury which was to | try him. But we have never heard it suggested that even | partments under reform commissioners and chiefs are fre opposition de: some of this humber may not return to Washington in 1931. National interest will also take in the fights in Massa- chusetts, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Delaware, West Vir- ginia, Kentucky and Oklahoma whcre administration seats are im danger and must be won by the Republi- cans if senatorial support for Mr. Hoover is to be main- tained during the remainder of his term. STRONG-ARM TACTICS Ukases, pronunciamentos and shake-ups. of police de- confined not clone to the Philadelphia of General Smed- ley Butler's time and Grover A. Whalen’s New York. They are the ear-marks of city police administration in this more or Jess lawless age. Here and there across the length and breadth of this land of the free and equal crusading policemen are or- ganizing strong-arm squads, whose pleasant duty it is to handle vicious Individuals in so firm and positive a man- her as to strike terror to their ebony-tinted hearts. The strong-arm squad, it would seem, is a handpicked aggre- gation of brutsers sent forth like the well-known raging lion in search of whomsoever they may devour. The matter is of more concern to the hapless victim of the squad, but humane souls who will never fall foul of the law hope, for their sakes, the gentlemen chosen to execute strong-arm maneuvers are gifted with divina- tion or endowed with some subtle sense that will enable them to distinguish between the lawless and the lawful. Unhappy moments always result when strong-arm squads follow the usual procedure of pummeling first and investigating afterward. * UNPREPARED IN THE AIR Despite all the progress America has made in aviation in recent years, the nation cannot yet consider itscif | Properly prepared in the air, in a military sense, accord- ing to Rear Admiral W. A. Moffett, chief of aeronautics in the U.S. navy. Admiral Moffett told Culver Military Academy summer | school students the other day that Germany, despite her defeat in the World war, leads the entire world in avia- tion, “both in expenditurcs and progress.” He urged an upbullding of Uncle Sam’s aerial defense. remarking that the navy necds at least four more modern aircraft car- riers, Probably it is a surprise to most of us to hear that our military aviation is not yet up to standard. There is one | comfort, however; we are undoubtedly making vast prog- ress. The quick development of a huge alr force in time of war would be a far casier task now than it was in 1917. TWO GREAT LAKES WATERWAYS The middle west, probably, is a unit in demanding that the Great Lakes be connected with salt water by an ade- quate ship canal. But, until recently, at least, there has been a division of opinion about the route to be chosen. Some cities have urged the St. Lawrence canal, and oth- ers have supported Chicago in her plea for a waterway from the lower end of Lake Michigan to the gulf of Mex- ico, via the Mississippi river. Now it is beginning to look as if the two factions are getting together. Each side is coming to sec that both waterways would be highly valuable. The busy, produc- tive middle west could provide traffic enough for both, | | | A New York beauty specialist, whose jars of cold cream are works of art, and their contents a delight to women who save up their money to buy them, always washes her own face in soap and water. “Not.” she explained to me, “that I don't think cream is better, but it's quicker and easier to use water. After all, I never think much about my own looks—I just make the best of beyond a doubt. And the general stimulus to business aciivity which would result would be very likely to pro- | vide more commerce for the railroads as well. j Editorial Comment REAL INDUSTRY LOATH TO MOVE (Minneapolis Journal) Many American communities have passed through the “booster” era, during which they made frenzied attempts | to secure new industries. An attractive bonus was of- fered to induce some small factory to move from another town. Free factory sites, even free buildings were of- fered, and some held out inducements of almost total ex- emption from taxation. Experience has shown that most of the itinerant fac- tories failed to last. The towns acquiring them had small temporary gains, followed by disheartening losses. | The thing many a city has found out for itself is proved | statistically now in a survey made for the National Elec- trle Light association by the economic service of the | Metropolitan life Insurance company. It covered more than two thousand towns for 1926 and 1927. These places gained more than ten thousand plants, but more than 80 per cent of them were new industries and less than 10 per cent were accounted for by “relocation.” New branch plants made nearly another ten per cent, and ee for 25 per cent of the increases in total em- | Ployees. On the other hand, of 5.908 only 18 per cent moved, business. From tifs survey it is clear that industries spring up in great numbers, that a large percentage of them dic, but that only a few, comparatively, seek new homes. The | average city gains more by encouraging the industries it has and by making conditions attractive for new ones, Plants lost in the two years, | while 82 per cent went out of | | @inclair tried to hand-pick his jury as this one was hand- " ploked by the government. 43f jury tampering is an offense, then not only Sinclair | But the man that fixed this De Mayo jury ought to be in geil. If it is not an offense, then Sinclair should be free. _.. MULCTING THE UNEMPLOYED ‘The most despicable enemy is the one who strikes 4 ® man is down. In this class is the fake trade pa which takes the last dollar of the jobless and _ @ives them nothing in return except a worthless diploma, indictment should include employment agencies x are guilty of similar practices. men, who in their eagerness to find work are ‘unusually gullible, easily fall victim to these swindles, ... fs, who make employment agencies their hunting Jure them in with promises of good jobs on com- Of @ short easy course, a fat tuition is collected in ‘and the promise of a job is forgotten. Distinction must, of course, be made between swindling and the legitimate trade schools and em- ‘agencies, The latter fill a public need and ren- f valuable service to persons wishing to learn a trade or fob. But there are sufficient fake organisations of _ POLITICAL COGITATIONS lively speaking, this is the dead season in politics, | yet there seems no lack of public interest in what l than it can hope to gain by luring established plants from some other elty. Opportunity for the city, as for the individual, lies often in its own dooryard. pun acca OBSERVERS AT MOSCOW (New York Times) From Moscow The Times correspondent reports that American tourists of the “intellectual” type now visiting Russia find themselves baffled by the contradictions of soviet policy and practice. In particular it is difficult for American “liberals” to make up their minds whether the soviet government is liberal or illiberal. On the one hand are many innovations in social legislation having to! do with women and children, which commend them- selves as forward-looking. There is also the democracy free speech and assembly, and a general absence of the democratic atmosphere, ‘There functions in that country a dictatorship devoted to the single purpose of the Communist mode of life a ee that all policies, all standards. all i iW 2 | | ! if HE E | : é ih extatence of such teres $s tow - i E i H 1 ik * ! Se what I have, and let it go at that.” In which she shows the wisdom that has built up a big business, and put millions in the bank for her. “I can’t see,” she exclaimed, “why women who are short worry about making themselves look tall—they can't possibly do it, or why a woman who is built like an ox imagines that by starving herself to death she will look like a greyhound, when there is absolutely nothing in common with their frames. I believe in being what you are—and making people like it.” Which is all very well, but if all women were as sane and sensible as she, she would have had to make her fortune some other way. ee x < ABOUT THE MILLAYS It is more than ten years now since Edna St. Vincent Millay began pub- Mshing her exquisite verses and made the name Millay famous. She was the oldest of three sisters, each un- usually beautiful, each talented as well. Norma. the middle daughter, turned her talents toward the stage. and developed her voice, so that there was no clash of literary careers, but Kathleen, the younger, took to poetry. and has written many creditable verses, that have had the misfortune always to be compared to Edna’s verses rather than taken on their own | merit. Whereas Edna produces compar- atively little now, Kathleen is a tire- j less worker and has had two novels and two books of verse in about the | same amount of time that Edna has contributed one volume of verse. Kathleen always maintained that, having a famous sister had its dis advantages as well as its advantages, and that she had to work twice as hard for recognition being Edna’ ter as she would have if she had merely come along unknown—that is, OUR BOARDING HOUSE HERE'S AN ODD TELEGRAM TH’ FIRST EVER SEAT To THis HOUSE THAT DIDA'T Come MARKED COLLECT! ITS FROM YOUR WIFE SEAT (TO ME,» THINKING You WERE STILL I EUROPE, OR DAIL | ~~” ARRIVING “oMoRROW EVENING — ORDER GROCERIES AND THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1929 she had to work hard to get over be- ing just Edna's sister. | “American life is on the whole too ; Serious, in that most Americans take themselves too much in dead earn- est.”"—Hermann Keyserling. (The At- lantic Monthly.) eee “People who have no time. don't think. The more you think, the more | time you have."—Henry Ford. (Forbes Magazine.) * * “Any calling is great when it is greatly pursued, so it does not mat- ter what we do so long as we do not regard a living."—Charles J. Turck, president Centre College. : xk * “In both home and school the ef- fort must be made to make whatever is being taught as interesting as pos- | Sible."—Theodore Roosevelt. erty xe 8 | “Whatever scientists of other na- j tions can accomplish, so also may | scientists of our own, and our need is , to bring all American industries to a {Proper recognition of this necessity.” —F. Edson White, president Armour !and Company. x oe OK “Trying to ‘beat the market’ is a losing game for the vast majority.” —A. P. Giannini, San Francisco banker. FRED JUST SIGNS Mankato. Sept. 4—()\—Fred Just, former athlete at the University of Minnesota. former coach at Willmar, |Minn., high, and last year athletic ector at Columbiis college, Sioux Falls, was signed &9 football coach at Mankato State Teachers college. PRISON POLE VAULT BANNED Ossining, N. ¥., Sept. 4.—()—The |poie vault has been abolished in big athletics at Sing Sing. You're right. have been that some one of the state's guests would be prompted to scale the wi of t residents. The two satellites of Mars are very much nearer to the planet than our | tree outside hi is to the earth, but are of al- | when they insignificant sige compared to| with them. head. moo most our moon. (Lib- | Of course the reason must |. CARESSES (By Alice Judson Peale) Uncle Ben is said to be a great lover ! of children. | Wherever he goes there are one or ;two tn his lap and three or four | clambering on the arms of his chair. | He walks down the street with them | hand in hand or with his arms about | their shoulders. He kisses them hello | 8nd goodby, hugs them and pinches | their plump cheeks. | The atmosphere is ever so warm | and loving, but is not, one is inclined | to feel, quite wholesome. There is an only as a means of making | overconsciousness of the personal ele- ment in all Uncle Ben's relationships vith children. Of course the children ilove Uncie Ben, for he is really inter- j esting and jolly, but it is a love ex- | Pressed too much in terms of caresses. Such a relationship, charming as it May appear to the casual bystander, is far from ideal. So much demon- |‘ stration of affection is not good. The child who is caressed much by peo- ple other than those very few who are | especially near and dear to him loses @ certain delicacy. Physical intimacy which should be reserved for moments of special love and tenderness becomes something ‘easily given and without fine signifi- cance. The child's spirit loses a value which, if we wish him to learn to live deeply and beautifully, we should help him preserve. The Uncle Bens of this world mean Well enough, but they need to be edu- cated. If indeed they possess great love for children they must learn to express it less in terms of caresses, more in terms of talk and work and play. your child before they have won their way to such intimacy by the proof of an affection which can keep its dis- tance while making friends, old, recently 5 we SHE REDUCING THE BUST The question of bust reduction is generally the most active during the summer season when the revealing bathing suit tells all, whether the telling is embarrassing or not. The very modern bathing suit, which con- sists of one piece, with much of the underarm cut away and with the back as low as possible, tells even more than it has in years gone by. The size of the breast varies ac- cording to the woman's weight, and her type of temperament. The breasts are composed of mammary glands, with the addition of fatty deposits. Where the glands are naturally large it is impossible to bring about much reduction in weight in these parts except to harden the surrounding tis- sues and remove the fatty deposits. Large deposits of fat on the breasts or any part of the body interfere with the circulation of blood, and are lation of lard or tallow. As a rule, this excessive fat comes entirely from lack of exercise and a fattening diet. As with the reduction of other parts of the body, special kinds of exercises will harden the muscles and tissues in these local parts, and then with a general reducing system of diet, woman can get all the results possible without injury to the delicate mt mary glands. Swimming is perhaps the best exercises for bust reduction, and swimming in cold water is of added benefit because of the con- tracting, hardening effect of the cold water upon the tissues. If ordinary housework is indulged in vigorously enough, the housewife can expect some results from sweep- ing, dusting, washing clothes, wash- ing windows, waxing floors, or any work which requires reaching and stretching movements. Tennis is a valuable game, es- pecially if one spends some time prat- ticing strokes with both the right and left hand. Classical dancing which includes the arm movements, and the bending and twisting involved are also helpful. The whole chest can| be strengthened through deep breath- ing exercises. These exercises also have a special effect upon increasing is to inhale every four steps and ex- hale the next four steps, keeping this up over a three or four mile walk. To summarize, for the reduction of fatty busts: exercise vigorously with Tribune. Enclose tamped addressed envelope tore feely. any exercises using the chest mus- cles—take special deep breathing ex-. ercises, and use a carefully planned reducing diet. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Sunbathing Question: Mrs. H. G. asks: “Are sunbaths as good as the violet ray lamps? How can I really cure pleur- nothing more than so much accumu- | is; Answer: I consider sunbathing to be superior to treatments with the ultra-violet Jamps, as the sun's rays doubtless contain other beneficial rays besides the ultra-violet. To cure pleurisy, you must first find the cause, which may be due to tuberculosis, a tight diaphragm, or the irritation from excessive gas pressure. Neck Snaps Question: Mrs. A. R. D. writes: “Every time I turn my head to the left my neck snaps. What causes it? Also, my arms at the elbows and legs at the knees become numb and ache if I don’t keep them perfectly straight when I sleep. Is it improper circu- lation, or my nerves?” Answer: The neck-snapping is caused from some faulty position of the vertebrae or ligaments in your neck, This can probably be corrected by osteopathic or chiropractic treat- ments. The numbness of your elbows and knees may be caused by a mild form of rheumatism or by poor circu- lation due to insufficient exercise. Dizziness Question: O. J. asks ‘Will you please tell me the cause of a stagger- ing and dizzy feeling in my head in the mornings, and the remedy? Also the reason for a rash completely cov- metabolism and burning up fatty tis- sue. The average person inhales and ex- | hales over 25,000 times every 2¢ hours. {When swimming or walking fast, breathing is, of course, increased to more than the regular rate of 18 times a minute. More oxygen is taken into the body and, therefore, more is available for the oxidation of tissues. The fatty tissues are the first burned up. Special breathing exercises can be used while taking the daily long walk so necessary in reducing. A good way A Me BBO Chine tstead es es op es A FRANCE TURNS REPUBLIC On Sept. 4, 1870, the third Republic ering the body when a person gets excited? I was listed as 50 per cent anemic two years ago. Would this have anything to do with it? My weight is about 170 pounds.” Answer: If The visit of the Graf Zeppelin to this country was unofficially report- ed to be merely a plot to make Amer- ‘ggeaaamaasnge aan * * Ruth Elder and Walter Camp, Jr., was declared in France. Rarely has the bubble of power been too sud- denly pricked as in Imperial France | of that year. | After a series of defeats suffered | by Napoleon, in the Franco-German Don't let well meaning adults caress og ratified by the assembly. France ceded Alsace, together with parts of Lorraine, to Germany and agreed to Pay an indemnity of 5,000,000,000 A violent outbreak of the com- The king and Queen of Belgium, disguised as tourists, have been trav- eling in the Alps. Do they have to look as terrible aot that? it is tude record for North result of # recent flight in which he 11,000 feet above Garrison. \\ See

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