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4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1929 ———————e ——<————$————— . : s that he will retain “the greatest secretary of the treas- | 7 ‘he Bismarc k Tribune ury since Alexander Hamilton.” t THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Much as Secretary Mellon may be unlikable person- q Piatabilshea 1872) jally, because of his austerity—and that doesn’t mattcr | bed PRE ee en A OMNI much—there can be no question of his financial gen‘us. | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- |1t would be difficult to find another man like him to ck, N. D., and eed at the postoffice at Bismarck | take his place. Men of his genius are not given to accept- Second class mail matter. ing ouch onerous posts as the treasury secretaryship for . President and Publisher ‘ s taryship fo1 D. Mann ...........-.--President and Put the insignificant stipend it pays. His calibre of admin- Subscription Rates Payable in Advance |istrator prefers the world of business and its vast re ‘ards. | ly by carrier, per year .. aie j Perhaps Mr. Mellon also would have ciung to business | ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . | had he not amassed such tremendous wealth that it no . | he use of bran in overcoming Cou-. eee Pa en jlonger matters that he retire and had he not reached | ne at Sato aig peels have Hipation, I would especially recom- Dy by ail, cutsice | years which now provide time to devote himself to the | taken to the eating of bran in an ef-|mend that they first try using bread honor of doing his country a great service as the best eH fort to overcome constipation and all red cond by re rerere er se no application of the sunset period of life. DS SAKE! of its attendant Ce) eS ane Dr. gen ie Lege Mapped | 5 y mail, in state, fia | 7 he ordinary rsonal ly by mail, outside of North Dakota, : i s> WHERE WILL tontein sufficient fibrous material to |] Sup madressed to him, care of The POr year ....... cee ee eee eee eee ees seeeeeees 150 Memorial Road Needs Patrol | \ Put ‘EM stimulate the peters eee sovel Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Sunday's oridge tragedy calls renewed attention to the / ALL? teronny Se erat inineaied MERRIE | savenpe tor teas. Member of The Associated Press slatternly w: in which traffic is allowed to operate on | E of fruits and vegetables without Le , . highw s amounts The Associated Press ts exclusively cot uy anne | this most traveled highway point in North Dakota. Y bere the eating of large or muffins made from finely ground ir republication of all news dispatches ana also the | Both because of the volume of car travel on the me- Aad, / 3 Those who insist on living on the|entire wholewheat flour. This con- Bt otherwise credited in this newspiprtd herein, All| orlal highway to and from Mandan and Bismarck and aw ~ 4 d . common mixed diet are foreed to use |tains all the bran necessary. in & hts of republication of all othe: matter herein are | because of the bibulous character of some of it, tiis road as much as eight ounces of se Tats baal Unban Ho an D reserved. a should be under traffic control. What is needed on it Fife A GoaRBA Gee Aicbie. | tating effect. yi iw cies is a traffic patrol such as the city supplies at this end spoon of bran at each meal is not ' Gg Reaaamiag SINGS in the iatermittent service of a motorcycle policeman. sufficient to make any appreciable ef-| QUESTIONS A — SMALL, SPENCER & L erica Pe RoE fect upon the ordinary constipated, Liniments and Oils (incorporated) Had there been such control Sunday, the car which j lumpy bowel contents. Question: Mrs. H. F. W. asks: “Are fobs Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. N crashed into the bridge girders with death to one of its { There is practically no constipation | there any oils or liniments that will CHICAGO vee hei beatoct ed occupants and near-death to the other three could have without colitis. ‘This word “colitis” | penetrate an_ unbroken skin? mas (Official, City, State and County Newspaper) Brea comen wit tee sees, Bree owe Have Sreries the AIC REAREE See ceainacy teats at My nelghbor claims there is at oil amd wa | tragedy which befell it and incidentally would have re- used in large quantities to overcome | that will cure a growth in the neck.” Tariff or stored a stolen automobile to its owner. constipation, must always have the| Answer: Oil and liquid will pene- oe But there is more to condemn in the Sunday tragedy eftect of further irritating the in-|trate the skin to some extent, as tests Puerility seems to have become the keynote of the pres- obtiekanss flamed mucus membrane and al-|have shown that certain medicines ht tariff legislation, So much so that a doubt has arisen | than merely what befell it and its occupants. This auto though some good is echieved through |rubbed on the skin can be afterwards 1 session ever will reach the stage of | Patty was @ positive menace to all other traffic on the izritating the intestines to the point found in the urine. I do not know of ee eal sesso A é road in view of the alleged condition of the quartet— of increased peristalsis, yet it seems |any oil which will have any effect ssing the measure which the house has voted and is oe tel to me that this good effect is more |ot curing a growth in the neck. ich the senate has been making a pretense of bettering, | Which the presence of beer and moonshine in the car than counteracted by the injuries Training Diet it in reality loading down with the sinking weight of would seem to corroborate. from the irritation produced. Question: B. G. writes: “I am done protection. There shouid by all means be a patrol established to ing oe Haeaned esheets ssts going to participate in a coming ath- “5 ‘ Stine e aig bar drunken and reckless drivers from the highway. the market the manufacturers of /letic exhibition, and I wish you would When the farm relief bill was got out of the way there which claim for them a high bran | inform me of a suitable diet on which eon las just one course for the house and senate to follow | Surely this would be mere common sense on a road which content. Most of these are toasted, | ty train.” that had been laid down by the president when he | lias been found by actual count of the vehicles passing ae also re Hea pk rier Answer: The weekly menus which E ‘ 5 | ove : ve i © improve the flavor. I prescribe in this column would con- ommended readjustment of agricultural schedules as) Ove eo a cee ewer will, in most cases, make the particles | stitute a good training diet, On the of the program of aiding the farmer. ‘The house per- | Sale. * of spicate more brittle and therefore | day of your contest stop all regular med its part of the program. It not only passed the] Make the road safe! less irritating but, at the same time, | meals and use only crange or grap? irm relief measure but preserved it from the necessity | Also why not light the bridge? Ae amet eetae ss eet vate eid juice. If your stomach is rested in @ veto when it held out against the inclusion of the undoubtedly coutilting, Breakfast for. your sslen'an se in your athe nture provision. ‘Then it passed a tariff bill in which It’s Getting Tiresome Che tues aes in id manner sre not letic endeavors. J YU " Usely to produce ie effect les @ feature of protection of agriculture by increased) Wo have heard just a little bit more than enough in attempting to overcome co:3tipa- Varicose Veins meee wepermost. There was ae ee Gans about the “social war” in Washington, and the antics of a ic oaeetnts: Gat anersetl nae the SE oe ne aro at eee ae eats mens, | ival dipnttaries—or, perhaps, of the dignitaries’ rival in ee a | ao eae aaa ee | a aasdinal te ail Au alie ELiDeS oat ee tt could LSsan women-folk—are beginning to give us an acute, gnawing |words to dr that a large amount of water should |c0se Veins? Have taken a half grain land concluded the special session. qe | PU: | poets that hi be used at the same time and for an] Of suprarenal extract every day for i ‘Howe’ ve al reasons for the hold- ing her ma neod o1 i about iree months bi hike it wae set “cibiete ie a: ‘The action of one of Washington's most prominent ee te ceant we he TODDLER CLOTH Ne tan sheets ‘ Ouurwe iti any improvement, Tisliow your diet adap Lp alatah alse women in refusing an invitation to a dinner in honor of saat ke a hit with |Peal—and put some more words into (By Alice Judson Peale) lis Hable to be a scrious impaction of |Nd exercises.” its wanted to find in it an issue with which to attack If you want to make a hit with! Tae In chousiig the wititer clothes for impact oe : 4 administration and to usc in the coming congres- | Premier MacDonald because she was going to be out-!Clara Bow, don't mention “It” in rte thacataall id“ ANeRe oues wleeata |e in) the oe ss meg ceed ay a tbreate cuentas e Pe (cate bo y e matt : tds le 8 rhild ore certs becn noted where a compiete obstruc- i nh campaign of 1930, To allow the bill to become ranked by another woman seems res chtetaecrerl like the her presence, warns Dan Thomas, | pi points which it is well to keep inition of the bowel revs vbw place, | Walls of the veins. If the veins ex- Without some assault on it was to pass up opportun- | “ction of a spoiled girl in pigtails who won't go to a party | Hollywood correspondent. ‘© | mind. . ne from the bran being too dry and|tend over both legs it is sure to be fm the Democratic mind, ‘Then there was the his- | P°ause the little girl next door is going to have the} Doubtless many ther women, | | |, Clothing for the small child must having collected in some kink in the {ue to @ lack of organic mincrais prieal Democratic attitude of opposition toward the tarift | Howor of cutting the cake. ee eer ee ced auanie Se patra ined Penere | ena cate ne ettreae: | hl ocioore MMSE ReTE Cnc ¥6 4 urder Clara’s reque: | vestigeati ' si an . jue to spastic colitis and contrac- SUOYS | ia f preceden’, to follow. And there was the rift in the} After all, this ecuntry of ours is a democracy, and the |" Kor ‘that insignificant little five- mate dnvestigation of the capital | Jeavy overcoats which seem so] tion due to chronic irritation, erals after they are assimilated. If epublican party between the Old Guard and the so-|‘mall-minded battle for social precedence is just a trifle |cent word has been so overworked | Gry. but so lous as they kecp printing | Weetuate_and sensible are really not] One of the best ways to use bran Ry of the ducticss glands over-se- inline vid All this would be capital | Ut of place, If some of our highly-publicized Wash- | is recent years that it has no mean-jthe Congressional Record there will | jis satisfactory | as soft, rather/is to cook it along with some other | Crete or under-secrete it is bound to en ee dreaian’ linigtac women would feel more comfortable in a mon-| (Dé at all, and is just a blanket ex- ye one very dry article there anyway. {lightweight | coats which may be/kind of breakfast food, as the cook | affect the metabolism to some extent, the Democrats in the Osi pera sae fa sti (id RIEHL aes RUE = enc pression for any form of feminine egsinged yway. peat rites ee ae rey eee = eae aoe see pen te es the rd be ogg ee will extended into the next presidential election itself. edoryan ede 8 i a {attraction, | Pee . ape: Sad OR Fae sng spine fel : iro jose. ‘Or is correc! leficiency ‘ne States, we feet sure, could manage to get along. Not only is the word cheap, shop- ahgine Semators ore said to Beiviece play suit with hookless |one-fifth cellulose, and in addition | ftom which the veins suffer in the | Thus, political considerations now have been for worn, tattered and torn, but the [fo tated thee advice on es stener down the front is an ideal/ecntains one hundred and nineteen | trouble known as varicose veins. ie 122 caiises wf the tariff legislation drifting aim- Tae ; fact ‘that one word is so utterly |! ele tanta : ibe a5; ¢ ae ae jovter garment for the little child| grains of potash to the pound. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- ssly in the senate. Also for the senate vote for ex- A New ‘Giant Industry [adequate to describe all the infinite | mendation in ease the president | teeing the coe Etat’ SHOW] ‘To those who are contemplating | cate, Inc.) rae sion of the flexible tariff provision from the existing} Among the giant industries of America you might list jaeidenaeare puis 2) should resign and hunt up another | Children who live in a well hented fw. It was a feature which the president intensely de- | the garage business. It’s a whole lot bigger than you may! | remember a middle-aged man J°% house all winter may be kept in —_ s retained, so that the tariff can be adjusted in| have suspected. —a literary celebrity he was—view-| vitamins hi: - ra * ica cotton underwear throughout the eee cane 9 ae iw : rh s is not in session or could not | A writer in the current American Architect reveals that | int with obvious disapproval a par- | Mice Gk Glee ict Eee ee eee doa! \ pergencics when congress is ni S05 Ss that | i that was predominatingly flap-|2°Cordine to a dispatch, but it isn’t |for the out of doors being obtained ¢ fet with promptness. It had been used to advantage by | there are more than 51,000 commercial garancs in this | yer ‘and commenting scathingly upon |5%d Whether or not someone cracked | by dressing them in more woolen on i loolicie in raising the tariff duties on wheat when so| country, representing a total investment of $3,000,000.000. | the younger set. eS ee agieretaderex ROSS PE orereer a pose “ es i ihe oiegetey| Ree : Couns ink,” said he, “that j ; ‘otton underelothing is desirable commended by the tariff orimlasion: aud it was us: & Thi ee course, Goes not include the countless millions mes ipso Suan re ‘t at | ‘Daylight saving time may be all | not only Peleg i dpe Oslagetr veur/eeeueue Hoover to raise the duty on flax to 5$ cents and thus | of | eepouoacin eration, the way they high hat an |Tisht in suminer but it's a bad habit | fertable and healthy in the modern | “Europeans know how to mind their ncourage North Dakota farmers to sow the large acre-| ‘he cevelopment of the commercial garaze, incident- | , mer like myself. And you |t® teach the roosters. furnace heated house but also be- WILLIAM PENN BORN own business."—Frank Ward O'- ise they did last season. The dairy intcrests also attested | ally, has brought vast problems for the architect. When ‘think that sex -appeil es | oo Er Graies cays hei will ie uesiodie nee ihe boiling which] Today {s the 285th anniversary of | Malley. > its efficacy as a result of the president increasing | a garage rises to a height of more then two storics, it is|Scmething discovered by Eleanor! The Prince of Wales says he will | is desirable for the really exquisite | the birth of William Penn, founder of + a Pe ct : cin omen eicenuacdat ot 4 é G except something as old as | not cons ides a mi Fir of conven a apines bat which ou to! Pennsylvania and leader of Quakersin| “What the prohibition situation es on their products. necessary to dev rom x cent of its space ©. ience. That's one thing he won't fall! start the little one out of the nurs- "i ¢ ; if ‘i . ey = 2 % needs, first of all, is disarmament.”— » ete si - | lamps, Griveways and other space for manipulating cars. “Ww iia lh Ww -.|for, anyway. ery cach day, ‘ America. a ‘The excuse or apology given for the opposition to Hoo: : : When I was an eae wwe fa ee The child of two or more {s nor-| ‘The son of Sir William Penn. the Jane Addams. (Graphic.) er in voting repeal of the provision was that some day| This, of course, is a great waste. The architects now | ognized sex appeal: Si rams President Hoover has designated | mally to h to dre: d 1 T ee Oe president might be in the white house who could ne: | &f¢ busy devising means of handling the problem more co Tat pine se coanelt ys firta:| Yohn “Menab pegpedl ead nee Lett nd a hele His clothing should Sit Tonnes a Be is tose an “Never has Europe been 80 con: ’ te pm . 3 mI i ayy | ton, . fascination, dash, verve, | aD - chang Sry age ae iy 5 + » 14, 5 ie p trusted to administer the provision honestly. This | CConomically, When they do, this new giant indusiry will | Oe any poh ats eee Coe and in the prohibition enforcement ma-|be devised with an idea of making | was educated chiefly at Christ church, isha! its relative poverty (to the had a false ring about it, as no president can act | 9 0” to an even greater prosprrity. we had sirens in those days, too, chinery. The last part of the ap-|usc of this first urge toward inde-| Oxford, where he became Quaker. | Vniics, Lvpregs 8s in these post-war 1 4 Henny Today they are just ‘hot babies, Pointco’s name carries an ominous | pendence. Fastenings should be as| His enthusiasm for his new faith | ¥¢9"S."—H. N. Brailsford, (New Re- . nless the tariff commission recommends action, en Once the unsophisticated thought the world flat; now |#nd any form of charm is ‘it’” | suggestion. simple — as possible. They should | assumed a pugnacious form and he public.) can prociaim either increases or decreases in duties, as they think Jb seuare e . 2 xk * «Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) come ae front ones he can easily | was expelled from the university after se com ission, to t a : EX APPEAL MINUS = learn to manage them. his violent st aga! “Aviation is no 1 te omemission, of he on mea eee H SEE ee en that the young INVENTS SHORTHAND The perfect underclothing for the| the Neve er Ge ER or eee It has gone far as eo ige oe imendation by refusing to act. Coolidge did that in Pe went On tO: aay ee ee | ay : . small child is not the familiar “com- es! . But “4 bee | men of today were the laziest of ondon.—It has recentiy been anetiaae bet 2 familiar “col eet land and wearing the surplice of aj. ++. It still needs and appreciates case of the recommended increase of sugar duties, be- | uitors because women demanded no brought to notice that Dr. Timothy |bination” but separate shirt and/ student, the attention and sympathetic inter- use of the effect on our insular sugar commerce which ! Editori: Comment lantry of them, scorned it, in| Bright, physician at St. Partholo-| drawers or bloomers. These last/ after numerous escapades, for | est of the public."—William P. Mac- feared. t, and that girls, in spite of ail | iew's Racpital in ue. ae the ae | should he sails ais a smooth erg which he was punished by confine- |Cracken, Jr. (World's Work.) ; A . they were supposed to know about | ventor of ¢ modern shortnan in elastic across the! ment in the Tower, Penn turned his **e & "Thus, in addition to the dillydallying on the mere re- Teaching Bandits a Lesson sex, were the feast. captivating they |<Vstem. A patent vas granted to him |beek, ‘The two-year-old readily | attention to the new world. = “The modern method of ins on of the bill, the senate has provided the basis for (Devils Lake Journal) had been at any time in their his-|Which licensed him to “teache, im- | learns to manage them without help| tn 1631, he obtained from the crown | propaganda serves best in a short pother delay in enacting it, for with repeal of the flex-| The people of Garske the other day taught bank | tory. : i prynte and publishe. or cause to be| and. with a resulting growth in his/a grant of territory from which the | campaign which its ob- ile provision written into the measure there is sure to be | bandits a lesson which they will not soon forget. The T think he was a little unfair pnd | ue Snnryated sae pabicned in ‘ecling of independence, boundaries of the present state of | ject before the public takes sober sec- ‘ ; chen the legislation | B&nk of Garske has been the victim of two bandit raids | naturally so. He was having a rather /or by characters not before this time) pop BURLESQUE THEATRE _ | Pennsylvania were determined. ond thought.”—Will Irwin. (Scrib- eadlock between the two houses when the legislation | Vithin two years, and after the first attempt, when the | ull time, since none of the smart |commonly knowne and used by any! g paul, Oct. 14.—2)—A bandit |_ By @ royal charter Penn was Lord | ner's,) into conference between them, if it ever docs. The! cashier was shot, precautions were taken by the people | locking youngsters were paying other oure subjects. held up Goodman Banks, treasurer, | Proprietor of the territory and estab- ses & e undoubtedly will insist on the flexible provision | against the next. Some of them secured high-powered | much attention to him, and the Jae ee ies ACG in the box office of the Lyceum The- | ished a home for his co-religionists| “We are sorry that prohibition de- e ng left in the present law. That means a long fight | Tifles to be used in the pursuit of bandits, and how well sonal bias may have influenced his e first flying-machi is Now in | tre, downtown burlesque house, ob- |i America. He laid out a site for a| prives the moderate drinker. It was ins pr g 1S TINK | hese rifles worked Monday has been told in the Journal's} “ords. It takes youth to under-/the South Kensington Museum in . new capital and called it Phila-| not aimed *, ; ween the conference committees. sa ; ae stand youth, and no one can really | England. taining $200. Four hundred dollars | fron: at him."—Rev. Dr. J. E. news account of the robbery. a in a drawer was overlooked. leiphia. Skillington. here is thus possible the making of a ridiculous fiasco ; a driver of the peers Ser ie cenuaren A stter - site —————___----—----- Se pee tt nce meen wee ewe de A a Penn died in 1718. pages eS eae it of the attempt to give the farmers the benefit of in- | lentless chase over 40 m ways and countless JUESTION? MILK BOTTLES! is trails, and it was because one of the men in the pursuing oT eT Pe ee Toronto.—(NEA)—The prob! jeased tariff protection. This was recommended by | car—the assistant cashier of the bank—was armed with || OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern Our Yesterdays of broken milk bottles ne aa @ president, moreover, it was pledged by the Republi- | a high-powered rifle and possessed of a good marksman's _ @ | emedy it will be the problem of dis- national platform, adopted at Kansas City June | eye that the bandit car was captured and the driver ar- - cussion when 1,500 milkmen conven? 2-15, 1928, in the following terms: rested. Moreover, it is evident that the essistant cashier a FORTY YEARS here from all nations of the world. IMA protective tariff is as vital to Anierican agriculture | 7; ORS of the bandits, who now probably is hiding with me WHY CERTAINLY IT Your Rey “ EGAD, DoNir BE SILiV! steather this "winter ond have te tn | ere a ME containers cost the in- i a rifle in his : PROTH ® cae - ve lustry $6,500,000 a it is to American manufacturing. The Republican] ‘This only goes to demonstrate the advisability of all IER JAKE ¢ My BEARD | wHERE, TAKE “THIS RAKE AND readiness for river traffic by spring. | Other poeesscogn eS 8 ie. arty believes that the home market, built up under the | small towns in which banks are located to be ever pre- IS GETTING -Too HEAVY “To PASS GATHER UP “THE OLD LEAVES § —- the horse-drawn milk cart against the 1 q| Prepared for a bandit raid. The bank bandit will kill FOR LITTLE EVA ANYMORE ! wx John Satterlund and B. B. Peterson | motor vehicle, sterilization of milk, ; © policy, belongs to the American farmer. and| when he finds it necessary in order to complete his “| ‘ So You WILL MAKE A are visitors in the city from McLean |and the prosperity of dairy {; ppledges its support of legislation wiich will give this | work, or in pursult, as was demonstrated Monday by the faaae AN DOM GIVE ME “HOSE FAVORABLE IMPRESSION, county. University heads and officials trom eo to him to the full extent of his ability to sup-| fact that those in the bandit car shot at their pursuers. K EVES oF Ri ty it. A machine gun, similar to that possessed by Police SPoo! F su RPRISE ~ Witd MARTHA, FoR —HE ¥ ¥ Vipera rr Chief Peter G. Timboe of this city, would be a valuable ~You KNow WHAT Im HERE BEGINING OF YoUR ' fe favor ee tariff ve eae pty our addition anti-bandit armament in all smail towns, FOR ~“"10 GET MV CUT ont BRIEF vViscr?é ural products as are ec y fore come e these things throw terror into the hearts the - foe x TH? HALF MILLION LEFT BY e Republican party pledges itself to the develop- : 7 OUR UACLE RUFUS ~Yed / and enactment of measures which will place the Business Men as Diplomats cultural interests of America on a basis of economic (Chicago News) with other industries to insure its prosperity and would seem that the senators who gained election er the mantle of the Republican party should make 5 an endeavor as the president to give effect to upper chamber. ¢ , J Mellon Stays on Team Ww Mellon is to remain at the head of the federal byte of rumor which the Washington news Were wont to ride trom time to time when they ‘tilt s lance at the administration or the head It also will serve notice on hostile sen- igation of political agitation against Secretary Mellon is American intervention under ed soil, They can’t budge him from the oe eerie waren ae te Une with other ‘ at Havana by a man ness i or pry him out of the job he holds. Nor : ‘and sympathy with the tes Roosevelt £ y Mrs. Gi ® type, the type of Morrow, Dawes, heim, will know from her Rev. z