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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TU ISDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1929 j checks and some | is in the form of dairy ve fine turkey crops to market this fall | ne agricultural future of the state is safe. | spell has hit even the garden spots of the | substantial retu of them may hi and win " ‘This year’ world, The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLI“ST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Ris- Marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck Qs Kecond class mat) matter. George D. Mann Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year... ‘ Dally by mail, per year dr Bismarck).. Dally by mail, per (in state, outside Bismarck)... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakot A Careless Nation America evidently still needs a lengthy course in safety education before it can handle a major holiday properly. Over the Labor day weck-end, 209 pzople were killed by | accidents of various kinds. Some of these mishaps came in auto traffic, Others ere due to fires, explostons, airplane crashes and the + 6.00 | like. Drowning claimed, as usual, a number of lives. wt oo | It’s too late to do anything about it, of course. But the thing to be remembered ts the fact that nearly ev one fof these 205 deaths was caused by carelessness—caretess- + 1.00) jess on the part of the victim or on the part of someone | ele. A nation that ifices 205 lives to carelessness when | Hit makes a holiday is almost too careless to be trusted with holidays. «President and Publisher Weekly by mail, in state, per year.. Weekly by mail, in state. three years for.. Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, WE YORT Ss. se seen ee ee eee Memb.r Audit Bureau Cirealation Associated Press Member The Associtted Pr for republication of all news dispatche: not otherwise credited in this ne local news of spontancous origin publisi tants of republication of al’ other t fiso reserved aper and ed herein, ter herein More Light Is Needed Tt is to be hoped that the senate will begin an immedt- ute and thorough investigation of the as charges to paid propaga in conzection with the gov- progran, Such an wave jon is called for ali the m: — because of the feet that for American rear admirals |siand accused of fostering “big nav da at a voc when thelr goverianent was Gying to reach agree- Vment win a for or for naval reduction | Bota f of a large navel establishment of experiments performed | shoutd join int 2 Upon ion, The youthful German | diselesures mace so far hint a an ugly situation, and all posrtble Light on the ratier ts im cly needed. An Ancient Conf tand | Par back in Biblical times, Palestine was a turbulent nd MAY | dand, the scene of frequent and violent cont ‘The cont tragedies there are part of a tradition dating back | to the doys of Joshua. The historic lineage of the fighting, however, does not make the position of Great Britain any less ticklish, ay only | Warships and sold! peeding to the Holy Land, will! © of the | enforce Britain’s decision that peace must prevail in | rman | Palestine; and, considering the brutal and barbaric na army, performing his in the front line trenches. | ture of the rioting that began the trouble, the whole Tf any one of several thousand shells that came his way | world will hope that the British act with a firm hand. Had cropped a litte bit nearer to him—it any of the | We are beginning to talk disarmament, but there are Myriad chances of war had been arranged just a little | still places which are not ready for it. Palestine, evi- Dit differently—he would have joined the long list of | dently, is one of them. soldiers who were lacor ly reported “killed inaction,” ) and the scientific world today would be much the poorer, Dr. Bohnhoetfer was lucky, He survived, beeame a} ecientist, and ullimately produced a discovery that may | have incalculable res But, when you think about his case, it makes you won- | 2, potentially as brilliant are | Representatives NCER & LEVINGS u Uncorporated) ¢ Formerly G. Logan Payne Co, CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSION ¢ urgently (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Rare Scientist Spared by War of chemistry have | Bo! The entire may to be rewritten as Uhe result recently by Dr. K.P. Bohhoeffer scientist. Dr. Bohuhoetfer divisible clement His achievement forces revision of ablished theoric: those din splitting a supposedly in- | v clement ‘ ucee hydrogen pas into two rn ome of the old in chemistry most firmly eventually that have Now the interesting part of all the ds this Dr. Bohnboefter, stl through a chance of fate. World war he was a young infantryman ia the Gi momentous discoverte all the world prove one of Untold consequences for to the lay reader, youthful, ts alive In the closing pt dutie Consider the Source It is a little bit hard to subscribe to Professor Robert E.” Rogers’ theory that rica is becoming an effeminate nation because it has women teaching school, Mosi of the schootns'ams of our acquaintance are cap- | able and intelligent young women, as well equipped to y and secondary education to a group of ; you could find. It's hard to be- der—how many other young me ‘and as serviceable to the world as he, were killed during | in the war? | Several millions of lives were erased by the war, Most | * of them were lives that had barely begun, ‘There was no | our nation. i way for anyone to tell which of thesy were too valuable | liowever, we must consider the source of tt mm. . As you may recall, is the same gifted to be thrown away; no way to determine which of them | Pro! Roge * could © the world better by being put in a place of | educator who urged college gradu: \ o pure safety than by being ti J out in the muddy tre eS. sue success by bee snobs and seeking to ry the | c etive boss: matte giters of their re Even if there had been, it wouldn't have War, as you may have heard, ts war, — But how fearfully, unbelievably wastetul it ist About the only difference between a hobby and a job * Phe world was lucky that young Private Bohnhoeffer | is that you gei paid for the job. Gidn't get killed. But there ts not the shadow of a doubt that many, many young men who might have done work } quite as valuable as his were Ktiled; men who might have widened the powers of science, added a Httls beauty to a beauty-starved world, righted a few ancient wrong won Motor Cars for the World | Editorial Comment Are We Sccing Things? rl noored. It is completely upsetting | exhibited at Field Museum in Chi- 2 to see a wheeled conveyance there,! cago. That fish probably has been nd it, or I, will have to go!” It| swimming around in the Detroit river. went. * *k * Julice packed her bags and said! The trouble about pajamas on the that while Junior w charming | golf course is that one never can tell ; baby, dimpled cuddly, his trans-| whether or not the players are | portation problem more than she | asleep. And sometimes you can't be | could bear. There were other piaces,; sure about that when they're all gl ‘ALLENE SUMNER, ' | Where there were elevators, and you| dressed up. There's nothing like a baby for) didn’t have to drag a baby buggy up| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ting living conditions in city| four hills, ete. s. A bride moved into a * ke | story walk-up apartme: and THE SOLUTION Y everything went beautifully until) phen somebody discovered a sub-| Junior came. was alll ¢,, ed for coal, and right, but of course he had to { rranean cell: i iv & perambulator. Babies don was kept the here was some? is- Leer hat tatar Ao ae e| diee Parents ies Surette r decided that since ther : poner a recused ho phe nth hus for O———=<—<<<—<<<<3oo erie - as just x a side the door on the f | THE RIGHT START eee se (By Alice Judson Peale) OBJECTIONS | The school year has just begun. In Then the tenant on ieekionst the las your child had to do He was a ‘an astonishing number of things a fun Ss once, about n he has not had to do for a long { ame looked a i 2 apartment | time, and several, perhaps, that he Show ps mae yt be accepted has never done before. his friends to become . He got tired of and he said it had to go. and final He has had to put behind him the freedom of the summer holiday. He has had to be up and dressed and off to school early each morning. He has had to sive himself to the more or less hai task of learning. He has had to make the acquaintance of new s and new teachers. a good deal to ask of a little more happiness for the mass of mankind, When war-time comes such men are no more valuable than so many ditch diggers, ‘They are rl off to die~ | and if, by chance, » few of them survive, we pat ourselves | on the back and tell ourselves that we are lucky ! as many trucks made in Uhe United Perhaps it was some such thought as that that made | to Argentina, Australia and Brazil, as in the Benjamin Franklin remark that “there never was a good | 1 1828. ee While our farming i: ee PA: peace the raising of so much | foreign countries where prices try is thriving on expo ‘s for the least money al that is to say, the best low-pr (Brooklyn Standard Uni: A million Ame: automobiles be sold abroad th ear if the exp rs are realized. In the fi ne period Flying Repeats Land Tragedies ‘The loss of the San Francisco ts just ons more tragedy | added to the long list the conquest of the air already has | all American cars are equal to 8 scored, but it is not going to check the progres de- | SMe Money. ed by | can live on farms. erhaps things are not going as a proviem. “9 : yey uu could wish. Why not find he best indication of the t your child has made in hoel year is his own atti- ne comes home full of news ences. eager to talk about happenings, you may be e tHat all is going well. case. a morning spent visit- hoo! will not be wasted. Talk principal, taik to his teacher. cially take pains to know the lat- perhood life denied hu * eX ANOTHER FLIGHT he age Wi d floor and e, Julia, th Yelopment of commercial aviation, | Beye htnks etre : Aviation ts an activity of sterner quality than to falter) ample of the creation of a market by over its ploncering tragedies, else 1¢ would have checked , that creates a demand by its low out with the death of Lieutenant Selfridge in the first | 10 Pe no limit to the, hoe Wright plane, when this machine was undergoing tts | pala gaa ee ee Dae RL washington. Since then many flye aa a pape Se, mere ee oe ae sengers have sacrificed their lives in various attempts to advance the cause of air flight (Des Moines Tribunc-Capit Stunt flyers have been dashed to death, but stunt fy- | Do you recall William B. Shearer, who a few ye ing persists. Men have sailed out duo: the | Was one of these “naval experts.” and who ws oceans, bound on feats of crossing, as Lindbergh crossed | HPA Sioned articles and letters for By from New York to Paris, and have vanished into the | Bora tint great mysteries of space, but others rush in to em ad. And those who succeeded, and crossing the ocean persists in| Starmed . new efforts. Abroad and in this country there have! NAY Deen other tragedies on the scaft of the San Franc Dut they made merely a ripple in the scramble to expand “commercial air transportation into a settied and sate business. "Aviation is merely repeating Ue history of all trans- | “portation. The carly railroads—the first improvement | © on the horse—cost many, many lives before they were | ¢ ¢ made safe. The first steambeats killed so many people | that one wonders why people didn't give them up gust. And the automobile continues to kill thou: every year. An Expert Confesse Ss Shearer He has breugh corperation, another nd 2n electric corpar ye Was to be paid that si for the: for his attendance at the Geneva nm: of pri $0 ours cou! eto blame or not tal. But by his M Ase to expertne a hired false calors of pa Market for Dirty Writing (Kansas City Star) or the publisher or The majority of realistic novels just now are dull and dirty. It is hard to say in which of the two respects they most creatly afflict the intelli- gent reader—dorecom or filth. It is astonishing And very likely somewhere in his wr Mankind’s love for speed—its eternal desire to travel | hen AN paettae. gpg i Y geross the carth {aster than defore—has survived a tre- | ARE eas Mendous number of tragedies. The advance of aston | 4s nothing but an extension of this desire for speed, and ‘he latest accident will not check that desire. | When people find » new way of traveling fast, they are | ing a dirty play is to decry th oe apt fo stick to it in spite of all accidents, [Producer or alt of then : eS sae (us things we do ke, things we think the world would 7 : ee e bei . One does nw need to ignere or Others Hit Worse Than State | mi mize the responsibility of the writers, publishers or Bevere as was this summer's drouth, and it ts said py | BROdUCETS to. nus & Bis, share of te ae ™ Weather Observer O. W. Roberts to be the worst recorded | ing current tendencies in novels, William Lyon Phelps. jim the meteorological history of the state, North Dakota | Vals professor. a literary ecitic of note, says in the Au- uttered far less than other parts of the world. | Se Bevbrer: ‘The news from Argentina, for instance, is that last y. the 13th. the first rain in six months broke the FY spell that has afflicted the farmers of that rival agri- empire of the Northwest. The Argentine gov- } and that the rainy season is about to set in. yout heavy rains, much of the wheat and flax of ‘wil be @ loss. Less rain than is néeded to! oe i sin Leet these have handed | r confidence. invite her ne year to a better un- sanding of your child, and to a picture of his needs, his his weaknesses. checking up on he amount of home stu the type of social adjust x child is making, will save of possible complic: contrib: Sn 1S THAT So 9 w WELL LISTEN, You GARGOYLE ~TVe Gor THE MONEY, AND IF You N ly THINK VouR HEAD IS HARDER “THAN “THis BROOMHANDLE, Just ASK ME FOR A DIME OF ITlw ~~ HMF ~~ You NERVY RUBBER FACED BABOON ! ~ SCAMPER RIGHT BACK oO YouR TREE AND “TELL ANY HOOPLE . Wit 7% CLING 7% “He HiGHEST BRANCHES! 9°" ~~ Now, FLATFOOT OUT (ame oF HERE Z WHOLE MATER IS SIMPLY Hilts MRS. HOOPLE w+ BEING } A RELATIVE OF THE MAJOR { L FEEL HAT HE SHouLD DVIDE A PORTION OF THE FORTUNE, LEFT Him BY HIS UNCLE» WiTH HIS KIN ~~ WE ARE ALL OF “THE SAME NOBLE FAMILY, AND wT IS NOT RIGHT “HAT UE RELATIVE SHOULD KEEP ALL “HE MONEY =O HiMSELF f { | VEGETABLES One of the difficulties every doctor | usually predominating. encounters in his practice is to teach his patients to eat enough of the non- starchy vegetables. Many » especially children, have difficulty in learning to like some of the most valuable of the health-building vege- tables and prefer to live principally on an acid-forming diet of bread, cereals and sugar. As the little girl once said’ to her mother, “Mother, | these vegetables to a fine flour makes why didn't God make spinach and] it possible for their complete dis- carrots taste like ice cream?” tribution throughout the food in Almost any food may come on the | which they are incorporated so that disliked list of some people, includ-| they can be mixed with many differ- ing such wholesome vegetables as|ent products, such as biscuits, breads, THE ALKALINE VALUE OF ORE4I | lettuce, tomatoes, celery and similar vegetables with spinach and esisine luc! carrots, parsnips, spinach, tomatoes, or some other perfectly wholesome food. One can usually overcome a disliked food with a large amount of the liked food. This can sometimes be done unknown to the af- fected, and in this way the dislike will gradually be overcome. Many people do not acquire the strong robust health to which they | are entitled simply because they do not eat enough of the alkaline-form- ing vegetables. This leads to acidosis, indigestion, poor teeth, dull complex- ion and a lowered vitality. Often an immediate improvement in health and Personal appearance results when a large quantity of these vegetables are included in the diet. For years scientists have sought to perfect dehydration, that is, the ex- traction of water from the fresh vege- tables and fruits so that the food value may remain unimpaired. The war gave a tremendous impetus to the science of dehydrating foods. Because there was a shortage of containers and transportation room, it became necessary to find some way of re- ducing the bulk and weight of food by drying out the water. This led to the modern perfected system of dry-° ing without the exposure to heat. Chemical tests made by the Uni- versity of California, at Berkeley, found that the water extracted from {dehydrated vegetables is colorless, ledorless and tasteless, showing that | nothing is extracted from the vege- jtables except water. With the new method it was also possible to retain the elusive vitamin C which had hith- erto been destroyed by drying because of oxidation. With the new process, the full mineral salt content is un- macaroni and ice cream. It seems that this new process will actually as- sist in accomplishing what the little girl desired, by making it possible for vegetables to taste like ice cream. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Picks at Nose Question: Mother asks: “What do you suppose is the cause of a boy of thirteen always picking at his nose? I have given him the worm remedy, but still he picks at each side.” Answer: Your boy may be troubled with adenoids or chronic catarrh. In some cases, the nose picking is sim- ply a habit which you correct by hav- ing him wear mittens or gloves as much of the time as possible. Buttermilk Question: Reader asks: “Docs but- termilk tend to produce acidosis on account of the lactic acid it con- tains?” Answer: Buttermilk dict, or the use of buttermilk in place of a meal has a tendency to cure acidosis rather than to cause it. The lactic acid of the buttermilk has a beneficial ef- fect upon the intestinal flora, or vege- table growths in the intestines. Yellow Jaundice Question: D.L. P. asks: “Will you kindly give me some information about yellow jaundice, its cause and cure, and how long it lasts if taken care of immediately?” Answer: Jaundice may be caused by a series of diseases of the liver, such as cancer or cirrhosis, but when it first appears it usually is caused by catarrhal inflammation of the bile ducts or by the bile being stopped through the obstruction caused by gall altered, and vitamin content unde-| stones. The treatment which I would stroyed. : suggest would of course depend upon The clever idea then occurred to/| the cause found through an cxamina- certain manufacturers of mixing a | tion; but on general principles, a fruit powder or flour of the dried most | fast would be effective in stimulating . Miraculously enough, | alkaline-forming vegetables to be added to various other foods. The flour usually produced by these com- panies consists of spinach, carrots, A Me Oe = CONSTITUTION SIGNED | The convention of delegates from | }12 of the 13 states in the Union signed the Constitution of the United States on Sept. 17. 1787. | Rhode Island alone was unrepre- | | sented at the convention sessions in | {Independence Hall, Philadelphia, un- | |der President Washington. months’ work was to com- plete the constitution, with the ex- ception of the amendments, in the | form in which we have it today. ~ The delegates’ work was promptly | approved by congress and at the close of the following year had been adopt- ed by 11 of the states and placed in operation among them. The other two states, North Caro- ilina and Rhode Island, ratified the | constitution and entered into the j American Union in 1789 and 1790, | Fespectively. The constitution replaced the Ar-| | ticles of Confederation by which the ill-fated union of-the 13 original | states was held together from 1779 to | 1789. The articles vested no real authority in the common representa- tives of the several commonwealths. ' i} i 1o [Our Yesterdays | loom FORTY YEARS AGO W. W. Marbourg, Atchison, Kansas, visited here this week with his old friend, Capt. W. S. Moorhouse. Auditor McManima has returned from Pierre where he has been in the midst of the South Dakota capital ‘boom during the past week. A reception for Mrs. Barclay, who leaves soon for Nebraska, was held | last evening at the home of Mr. and | Mrs. J. P. Dunn. the flow of bile and removing the jaundice. at least, temporarily. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) “I am an ardent believer that the Lord helps those who help them- selves."—Henry Ford. (Forbes Maga- zine.) =. 9 zeke “Those who oppose prohibition of- ten talk about ‘intolerable conditions’ —with very little basis of fact. No sensible person can deny that con- Four ; ditions are better now than they ever were.”"—Francis Scott McBride. (For- um.) ee & “In all the difficult callings, those in which sheer luck and low cunning are the least importance, and knowl- edge, power and experience of the greatest, man is just out of school at 60."—George Luks. (Red Book Mag- azine.) s* * “Generally, when I do not reflect, I say what I think.”—Senator William E. Borah, s* * “Prohibition simply demands far too much changes in human naturé in the American climate, American life and in the American citizen.”—Pro- fessor bial Psychologist. se “What young people demand is not | the inconstant flame, but a steady light on the common way that men, @! women and children must travel to- ward mankind's ultimate goal.”—C. G. pesmer, New York University pro- fessor. VALUABLE RUBBISH Rubbish, which has always been considered a nuisance, is now utilized as a source of revenue in Paris where 800,000 tons are collected » Most of this waste is incin- and the gases given off are used to produce electricity. BUS LINE TO MEXICO Monterey, Mex.—It is now possible T. B. Gray has arrived from Toma- hawk, Wis., to accept a position with the jewelry firm of C. H. Phelps. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO John Rea, son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Rea, formerly of Bismarck, but now of Olympia, Wash., is here re- newing old acquaintances. to journey by motor bus from the northernmost corner of the United States to this Mexican city, A bus Une has recently been opened from Laredo, on the Rio Grande, extending 200 miles to this city of about 100,- 000 persons. ‘Two trips are made FLAPPER. FANNY SAYS: