The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 10, 1929, Page 6

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The Bismarck Tribune|s" eee * se An Indepenéent Newspaper All of this, of course, is from the standpoint of the oe THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER building owner. The thing now needs to be figured from (Established 1873) the viewpoint of the city as a whole. It fs a grave ques- Published the Bismarck ‘Fribune Company, Bis- | tion whether the giant skyscraper may not do a city more natck, N. De and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | harm than good, by increasing traffic past the saturation 48 second class mail matter. 4 Publ Point. What is needed is a study that will show just how eorge D. Mann ............ thie atl ot het | any skyscrapers the large city can bear. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance z re % ‘Daily by carrier, per year Splendid Isolation a Myth ; | d ¢ : off by mal, aes oe For a good many years the people of this nation have j THE i pd OF —aabioet Hig oA asc due to glandu- ; (in state, outside Bismarck) ........ been very proud of their “splendid isolation.” \ a WAM ‘ Oven twenty-five poly when I| ‘To those who have been told that ‘Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . Cut off from other countries by wide oceans, the coun- k : 5 first heard of fasting for the cure of | their trouble comes from some gland- « din utiite; Get yeak: try is also blessed with tremendous natural resources. Oil, , H . j j disease, I was impressed by the start- ae went u et in atate, thiee yeah foe iron, coal, copper, lumber, cotton—we out-produce the 5 / - |_| ling claims made by the advocates of gladly Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako! | rest of the world, and the knowledge soothes us. It makes \ i i per year ssseeeee 1.50] our “splendid isolation” possible, enables us to be pretty t Member Audit Bureau of Circulation self-sufficient. Member of The Associated Press Yet this blissful state of affairs isn't quite as complete | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use | #5 we usually think. We are calling ourselves econom- i . for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | ically independent when, we are not. ngth | ular derangements, I would suggest not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also jel Theodore Knappen, a writer for the Magazine of Wall was given even to patients who were | at least a trial of the fasting cure. i local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All| street, recently set out to study the matter. He found acutely sick. It seemed to me that} To any reader who is interested, 1 ; rights of republication of all other matter herein are 4 such advice at these times must be| Will: be glad to send my special | reserved. that many of the products essential to a modern civiliza- . wrong, but it was hard to understand | Cleansing Diet Course which explains . | tion are not produced in the United States at all. We are fi . the theories advancedd about fasting | how to take a short fast followed by Le “ Foreign Representatives | dependent on foreign nations for euch important things 29 : ZA pers Ri for Jone periods of time for the cure | well balanced curative die. : ; , y chronic disease. — ¢ emi aa tin, potash, chronitimy, ‘antltiony, metignbese, ticket, py. further, I found that such marvelous| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ‘ ; Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. tungsten, rubber, jute, asbestos; the list is a long one, and & if | Ss cures did take place, but in many Hot Lemon ‘Water Upon Arising CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | our expanding industries tend to make it longer and not j cases it seemed hard to believe the| Question: D. G. writes: “I drint shorter. y q theories given to account for the phe- bad a aa caaminen Pohl little 1 . 1 ie Y nomenal cures. lem every x (Official, City, State and County Newspaper) What would happen, then, if war should cut us off x oe days we knew very little | morning, as I have heard this wes a from the rest of the world? . about glands and their functions, but | good for billousness, but also heard it ¢ Freedom of the Seas as Sabotage Mr. Knappen’s studied conclusion is simply this: the f T aid make an attempt, to explain a | was hard on the kidneys. “Please ad- P A possibly serious issue has been injected into the | united States is not self-contained. new theory I developed about these . ; * qhaval limitation conference situation by Senator Borah. | “we could not exist at all, according to our en j : fo ular iibaith Tnagntion tn then rage in the morning never actually eases iThe Idahoan and chairman of the senate foreign af- | standards, if we were cut off from the rest of the world,” , = gested that cures through fasting |the kidneys. All of the citric acid airs committee wants the matter of the freedom of | he remarks bluntly. - might come about through some | fruits are ee to the body if the seas considered in the London conference which it] Now this, when you stop to think about it, has a direct ) rea Rage edt in the bain or Bins Ari beh but sre pe fone a thas been decided shall open January 20. bearing on the coming Anglo-American naval conference, | . % aN fy { metabolism. It seemed pel Rt the | fect on the eidheye, Be sure to take § The United States and England once fought a war | the Kellogg peace treaties and the whole perplexing ques- f Y ‘all ' . Processes of nutrition which go on/| your water and lemon juice at least «over this issue, that of 1812, without settling it. During | tion of our foreign policy. HIN ARNT GH ‘ ~~ ape our orien Spl ht yout aes gh toortagae ed at >» fe your civil war it Kept the two nations dangerously near| It might, of course, be an argument for building a navy eat | y > corrected through the fasting cure. |and induces the flow cf bls horn ecoming embroiled. One war probably staved off an-| twice the size of any other navy on earth; an argument =a tu tll Such a vague theory as I had at that | best used far enough away from a é ‘ther, in fact. England then stood for the freedom of | for maintaining an enormous standing army and a stu- time has been amplified and, of | meal. e he seas, so her swift blockade runners could run | pendous fleet of airplanes, so that we would assuredly be < 5 2 Montes Lend Goel ‘eran a ager Cae pa 6 Bs foes to the aid of the Confederacy out of the near- | the victors in any war we might get into. * en knowledge I have gaii In recent estion: F. H. ot ° 34 i } | years about the functions of the duct- | you think of the banana-nut combin ; Toy port of » United States protested this | But that would be quite a job. It would be fearfully ex- less.glands. ation which all health magazines rec- thod of outhern states with contra-/| pensive, in the first place. And, in the second place, it The fasting patient undoubtedly| ommend? Isn't this a protein-starch ~ Piet Slowed them to prolong the war. A good | might not work. In 1914 Germany had the world's great- Che ‘and Tooke, ‘and is creay ennagt abot “sweeping te» all seem to Be throws out vast quantities of epee ee ee and nuts ‘a0 not ss over what happened in this connec- | est army—but it was of no avail. In 1914 England had a him, she can go easy on the gray mat- eee bony ig ee sect Aon bend mares tee ot elk ed y into the pressure with which the fleet equal to any two other fleets—but England would ter. ‘The odd part of this Shearer in- fluence upon the glands of internal | standpoint of physiological chemistry. i Inited States forced the arbitration of its Alabama | have been beaten if she had not had outside help. If Rudy is really expecting to find secretion. The thyroid, parathyroid, Subnormal Temperature i H s i ns such a girl, he will never find her ex- | named Shearer Question: A. U. L. asks: “What ; aims, resulting in a verdict aga’ Great Britain for) So President Hoover and other leaders of American cept in his own mind. Fortunately 5 itary, errr He other gpd Beco ad oH © } x | thought assume it would be wiser for us to make sure only an ideal, carefully cherished, and Chena bodily mirwoning ed from one to two en? It runs . Hi pe issu in 1812 was the impressment of | that war never comes. The thing is quite possible, if we ALLENE SUMNER, a ee functions must become more normal | from two degrees in the morning to . into the crews of Engiish men-of-war. | only set our minds to it. The pending naval agreement ter, 2 eps 4 as the body is freed from irritating | one below in the afternoon. My blood ‘i has died out, but the attitude of the two with England is not a matter of national self-sacrifice: | ycu@sins,,.tt the matter. 1 sup-| | Gther youne Prapleshe og taearan toning, mle may enticely explain| pressure is low and Yam cold all the * . | Mations on tine question of the freedom to be allowed neu- | it 1s simply good sense. It will be a step leading away | love with Rudy Vallee—whose hearts | stitute offered, found the high de- std een Ear A wun tnvean | tees anon waa |} ‘tral commerce by belligerents in time of war still remains | from war, and that is recommendation enough for it. have ‘i been won by his romantic, | gree of adventure and hazard in- over-secretion of glandular extracts} Answer: A subnormal temperature, to be brought up nee table, | The plain fact seems to be that this modern world is OR Pain ie with: tonsa acd Braet that Lite had ‘are -benefited so much by the fast-| with a low blood pressure, shows that , Senator Borah up concurrently with | so compiicated, with all nations so dependent on one an- i bachelor unless he can temper his re- | its own neat way of showing up us ing cure. you are greatly enervated and re- ion at London of naval limitation. Prime Min: j other, that war is just naturally out of date. And sad hig eee in Le cert tie which ee in our vet one might hope docs mot want the old specter to in-) sooner we realize that our “splendid isolation” isn’t what | He sets down quite calmly in a mag- | Rudy found this dream girl, married IFFERENT k to normal.. Besides regulating vernment is in the minority as far as his | it used to be, the sooner we'll be willing to do all that we pati eneg aceon mgagi pues het preg ae —, beat, when the blood | your diet carefully, the one thought perty, is concerned and the issue | ecn to make peace everlasting. r face and form must be beau-| not want it at all, and realize that | Amohg recently acquired | stream is cl pin aasrineay. Gaal We eee é : other than to create trouble says he. That's not so hard. | you had the wrong iden all the time. ian in avteneatemtcet vases absiganbetle each day, both by tak * fer the premier, possibly result in the overthrow of the Shootin: g at a Toothache Mei Si nod sf nici ees ae see the same iiviras ie true about the | ints calisthenie exercises and by long Bae ce A pretty kettle of fish that wouldibe for] scan in the town of Rantunder eisathscasrena-lisscactay nee act see a ees IDEAL WILL ELUDE HIM ail of the other glands. | walks. him, his followers and for President Hoover. The whole | : scone trouble there. Fate has allowed us all this slight T have seen some startling cures take | (Copyright, 1929, by ‘The Bell Syndi- "4 ., | the other night with a toothache. He paced the floor for es ? Place through fasting all of the dis-| cate, Inc.) scheme of naval reciuction on a basis of parity between | I want her to realize that if any 3 ee e a the United States an” ~*~’ smashed by divided coun-|* “hie, cufsed in elegant Spanish, and did the other |teeway is to be given on elther side eniiveail Sie (eros aeacieen Hc, * President Hoover wit ~fand for the injection of the mat- | ee st sey ‘Yes, yes, go on— anyhow. to elakdh ie tops ted | to succeed Louis J. Hill § j and shot the offending tooth to kingdom come—inei- i < i iv.) R ter at this time. | seer tee sf “I want her to love me more than ¥ y 7 tx Im the event that Senator Borah is turned down he | 4¢htally inflicting a grievous wound in his cheek. anyone else in the world—to love me \ EQS wean at deal of trouble from his vantage place |. TNC FePorter who wrote ‘the cable dispatch describing | when I'm right and when I'm wrong.” : 3 bl oy ou eee ee) of trouble from /his-vantage place | is ciacint remarked that; this Spaniard had more| And if she loves him when he does seus eepwwe of foreign relations chairman in the senate, when the courage than most sufferers with toothache. And that is ceorarey it, it will be all to the suits of the naval conference are brought before it. a eae es good, he allows, 4 oom Be cis, bei confronts the president | * @tcment with which we would like to take issue, ** ® | not be disturbed by “ead . If a toothache is bad enough the sufferer will do any- NO BREAD WINNERS! was all wrong. j ‘ning. How many of us have not, at times, reached the} A girl that insists on paying her -“The role of the thinkers of our we power to interfere with commerce of ae aiens dee would gladly use a revolver on the offend- own checks or'in making her own every : day consists of nothing less than savy- neutrals in any war in which it is engaged is rather iis fabniioaes Sabai arsine Od ad popes out. postage in | ing mankind.” vital irom the British viewpoint. The strength of Eng-| “phere are two maladies that pple agen himsett: | manding and needing protection, - : | git & welts. dand has consisted in her navy, its tremendous power t0| toothache and seasickness. ‘The Spaniard’s action is per-| When she dances with other men, S : ,| “Unless industry bestirs itself to co- ¢ ° blockade an enemy and starve him into subjection. It is 1 he wants her to show reserve—yea, not some ax to grind with our chil- functioning so as to fectly understandable. 60, ‘hot conceivable that the English people ever under pres- frigidity. But prog ran yr erg jher. She dren. We respect: for single letters. The | grapple painstakingly and conscienti- ent nature of war will be willing to forego that advan- . tome ar with alluring : law @ single letter as a single | Ously with the unemployment evil, it ’ « Enemies No Longer en pepe a) bla sheet or piece of paper. is a foregone conclusion that govern- tage. ' ge! F . light and he wants warmth and con- party ‘The letters consisted of | ment action by and by will be insti- , _ It was in accord with this principle of-what England| The story of the nine former German soldiers who are | sciousness of his Presence. ®5 | single sheets of paper folded and ad- | tuted.” . "conceives to be international law that American ships | living in Lancaster, N. ¥., and making buddies of the By this time, most women-will real- dressed upon the sheet. An envelope} —B. C. Forts, (Forbes Magazine.) | were interfered with in the early part of the World war,| members of the American Legion there, makes mighty * % would have subjected them to double “tt ts my pea * ne ee | before the United States joined in the cause of the Allies, | Pleasant reading. Winter is coming: The ladies have Postage. a first issued at | viotion ts eee paegert ten-dadn tee _ England held that, while their cargoes might be in-| The incident proves, for one thing, that our war with | tile. ‘quit wearing fur neckpieccs and are meres in 1847; oaaaed envelopes | I can assemble, that our national pro- + “tended for other neutrals, these neutrals were so located | Germany left us with no such heritage of hatred and dis- taking up bend arena: were first issued in 1853; letters were | hibition policy is sound and will be } that their ports were merely bases for contraband sup- | trust as the Civil war, for instance, bequeathed to the President Hoover seems. to be do- first registered in 1855; free city de- “7 { Plies reaching Germany—as the ports of Norway and country. A scant 11 years after the armistice, veterans ing ® pretty good job of it, though cL orga ona Ne ot p orarmiay Doran, prohibition com ; “Sweden. ‘nd almost every conceivable type of raw prod- | Of the rival armies are glad to fraternize with one an- | him we can't be quite sure of him until 1964, se * ucts and manufactured goods had become through the | other. Ce ee eee Gh tae a Com ‘Two years Sree eernen At ie Wows ar | highly technical character of modern war articles of | War's worst feature is the bitterness that follows in its wi 0 eget nar a pong ol yg Selena anes rede contraband. train. We seem to be discarding the bitterness of the a. See een rural | thing that I cai ¥ England, in fact, cleverly adopted and adapted a prin- } World war very rapidly. It can't be done too fast. delivery first began in 1896. ciple Jaid down by this country in the Civil war—that of the “doctrine of continuous voyage.” This contention | We spend so much for fun and have so little of it. ‘against contraband shipped ostensibly for the Ba- _ -hamas but in reality destined for the South Atlantic ports { .0f the Confederacy, was vigorously advanced by the Lin- _(eoln administration in Minister Adams’ protests at St. “(dames against the virtual alliance of England with the cause of the Southern states against the Union. In the VELL, \F Yéu ARE fe : Mew we UMeme oro ‘ety mister HooPLes Tam Pe eee pet ‘Neutrals of Europe. {fiction it entailed will be re- De MAN VoT You SEND : ° |} membered. ht have led to serious , Night. : ~ Vou WoN “HE AUTO! ] ‘had it not i mec fn yg be fair DE PUSTCARD TELLING ME ~ CONGRATULATIONS? ie one. I WA DE AUTOMOBILE aw MY WORD ww tl BY A RAFFLES? AND YaUR Vacation 3 LOOK, HERE IS DE RAFFLES Ticket I Gort VorT Is yy DE VINNING NUMBER f IS COLLECTING g ae 5 id eult to expect that the naval conference would escape all sabotage. This already seems to be impending. i ee Ey # box Was setting up the “emotional insanity” racket & Gefense, and it was pointed out to this peychiatrist Once, repairing & radio set, Peacox had become so that he smashed the set all to pieces. This, it }Was asserted, proved that he was emotionally unstable Mot responsible for the murder of his wife. But the trist said ‘was not 8 symptom of emotional instability, It un anger. Xt could have been cured by s spanking.” do wish that a little common, ordinary horse sense Haim Saeed into 6 ten thre of our murder jf Hi r gtue it rif

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