The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 27, 1929, Page 4

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e Bisimarck Tribune| An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER i » ek. N. D.. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs ‘ econd class mai) matter. Tee D. Mann Subscription Kates Payable in Advance \__ly by carrier, per year oe : mb by mail. per year (in Bismarck) . as by President and Publisher Py $7.20 7.20 mail. per year. din state. outside Bismarck) ... sy by mail. outside of North Dako’ tkly by mail in state per year skly by mail in state. three years for skly by mail outs‘ of North Dako @ q Member Audit Bureaw of Circulation Figt Member of The Associated Press ‘he Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use fepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or Otherwise credited in this newspaper and “isc th? al news of spontaneous origin puoi; a herein All ats of republication of all other matter hereir are ») reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL. SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated ty G. Logan Payne Co NEW YORK BOSTON | In got sot apol In Former! CHICAGO (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ors | The Ages, Too, Call for Gratitude WOCkmerica and Americans have a vast heritage of his- Not 2! ual and material bounty to be thankfu! dian tom tion's annual Thaniseiving mem arrives again in i y ‘ounds outs far n 1 civilization goes, they will BweMa it neer adventure that brought the Pil- | to country and established the day for grati- | tionle even in the bieak wilderness of New England, with; deat wintry privations and its living so meager as to ap- & Den starvation. cause for gratitude and thankfulness docs not WAVE more perfect political and spiritual relations. For of these came this great land, this inspiring hav “Jat exalts and embellishes modern life. | aramerica more than any other land can be thankful | AVCTrorrow for Progress. It can be thankful for what in- {De sugence gnd culture and the spirit of freedom have t d for this nation, for the world on which the “Gnignant light of American achievement has shed M@iSGneticent rays. It can even discount the future and Neeuw be thankful for the ‘splendid promises the present hold for its successors in a better, pleasanter and 322 liveable world. pwOUBach racial fiber of the nation’s warp and woof has Analy elements of great contributions to the weave of the qiole. Anglo-Saxon, Latin, French, German, Italian, / othew, Gentile Catholic and non-Catholic—all these have [& flought political, intellectual and spiritual gifts to the YUaking of the American prople. pwe-giness which would think in terms of fatness of the publunties of a single year tomorrow and overlook the great "coulm of human happiness and evolution that the ages “BY {a the races have bequeathed to this land. focra aetna |, Tittere in North Dakota there is cause for thankfulness i ing iat if nature has not blessed the people with the ‘Thewal fecundity of soll and climate, in the things of the “comrth, it ‘has been sufficiently bountcous in its sub- ‘OVeian:: to make life pleasant and comfortable, as Pastor fittater said in his service club address Monday. ~ “And, as he added, there is cause for thankfulness in ‘Trace, in spiritual blessings, in educational advantages dng 1d in the stored-up resources under the earth in which 7in Ly the future industrial heritage of the state, waiting * be called to the uses of men and the development of “ger.lis potential empire. the eee “hav How about the individual? Each one of us doubtless much to be thankful for. Healih, happiness and | prosperity have been with most of us. Fortune has in “beese main besn kind—if «qe believes that fortune ac- /M2omplishes these blessings—but whatever the reason, Walost of us are better off than a ycar ago. Tit h Life ts proof that we have health in the sense of carry- if forward the great adventure of existence. Those have in full that priceless possession without which joys are real and with which even misfortune is will apered will find tomorrow a day for the finest senti- qpent of man toward himself, a sense of cratefulness to | plete exterior source of his happiness. | U We still have our friends—and real friends are among “}—}¢ most precious possessions in the world, for they stand ¥ us at all times, tempering our sorrows in time of ad- aersity and encouraging us on in time of success. The tan without friends is poor, indeed. fig We still have our happiness—and that, in its many a morms, is really what makes life worth while. There ar> -Higany, perhaps mistaking mere financial success, wealth nd position for true happiness, who have gained these ‘ut lost their happiness entirely. @ We have been prosperous—but we should regard pros- 1 eity merely as a means for obtaining happiness, and p Ani as an end; for wealth without happiness is poverty Yes we—certainly the most of us—have reason to Dese thankful. eee 778 But have we the right to be thankful? ‘Het The answer can be found if one will only consider him- Karel for a moment. The decision is one’s own, and the Ru dge is one’s conscience. No other judge is needed. Have we been as considerate of our health as it has een kind to us? Have we been fair to our minds and ‘fur bodies, or have we placed an unnecessary burden n them by neglect, indifference and perhaps oc- taj Have we been as true to our friends as they have been St. © us? Have we comforted and aided them in times of as they have comforted and aided us? Aside our intimate friends, have we been considerate of as a whole and opened our hearts (and our teo) to those who suffer and are in distress? fhe Have we confused happiness with those gaudier, tin- Lf of life that are so often mistaken for Witeal happiness? Have we realized that true happiness @ messured—unconsciously, perhaps, but nevertheless a een : our return on the good we have done to “Have we regarded prosperity merely as a means fo: | rf ourselves, or as 8 means for improving ourselves benefiting others? Have we been selfish with the ee oy ae or Bane We Been uff ipa It were scant thank-| THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 27, 1929 The Man Who Made Clemenceau The deaih of Georges Clemenceau has brought into ¢ light the fact that his career was largely influcuced This soldier was Gustave Cluseret, : (Established 1873) | by “a soldier of fortune named Cluseret”. .—— __ i ; by the Bismarck Tribune Company. BIS- | tioure very much like the Tiger. obituary merely as Cluseret in his time a He is referred to 19 sketches of Clemenceau in American papers | Yet he was, in the time of the Commune in Paris foliow-| ing the Franco-Prussian war, the military chief of that | period of incendiarism and execu! Generals Thomas and as they were lined up in a saturnalia of anarc! He ruled y nat of Rus: nary as tion, hism almost ‘Under his orders! Lecomte fell before firing squads | against stone walls; and mary a| clerical met the same fate on the Paris execution ‘ounds. | sangul- | ia’s Red Square in St. Petersburg. | - General Cluseret was chosen by the Fenians to) heir projected movement to invade England | was the military dictator, the commander-in- the Irish armies to be raised. Every state :n y was organized in the cause. The fact that! 4 served under the general in the American Civt!! ‘ed many an Irish-American with flaming ardct | move under such a musketeer as Cluscret | ral for a time during the Civil war w | brigadier general undsr Major General Milroy in the Shenandoah valley. The few survivors of the Fight; seve! Pennevivania regiment of infantry will rem: ber him well. The romantic Frenchman, graduate of es best military school, St. Cyr, took a strong et Zouaves. to this regiment because of its perfection in the drill, end he moved heaven and earth to induce mixture ef Pennsylvania Dutch, Quakers and Scotch- | h to change the title of their regiment to “Cluseret’s ! If they would do that he offered to uniform | the whole regiment like the Ancient Arabic Order. Nobies of the Mystic Shrine, or, as it would have been ex- pressed in that day, the famous French Foreign Legion of Algeria. Cluseret ard Miiroy had a quarrel and the French- man resigned and went back to France. There he met young Clemenceau and told him of America with such fervor and effect that the son of the Vendee physician became imbued with the spirit of Washington. Jef- ferson and Franklin. of France wes born. war, In that contact, the future Tiger All his subsequent career was “pp there, however. It goes back in time to all the grc@t! shaned and determined. It made him the saviour of his zovevements of the races by which mankind achieved | country in tie darkest days for France of the World | For Clemenceau came to America and on thi Ny : m », | foundation of the structure Cluseret had inspired, hi ry ‘to teivilization, all the modern miracles of invention—a!l’ Hut that superstructure of radical democracy that flowered in love and loyalty for France all the rest of his life. war. ing literary canvas. | sound as ever. | it was a question of life or death. at the last moment. moment. —by mailing early. economy. them. they have to. Thomas Power Was John Morley talking | active part in a grea 4 Fe il HL | il i | Human beings, it seems, like to procrastinate. most of us, there is a pervailing tendency to let matters | wait until the last moment and then go after them like O’Connor (New York Times) ‘There is a fascination in thinking how closely through these two figures, Gustave Cluseret and Georges Clemen- ceau, the Tiger, a great epoch in our own history was linked with the appalling drama of the world’s greatest ‘There is in the adventure the material with which the elder Dumas would have limned « vivid and thrill- Perhaps some day some great ra- conteur of romance and adventure may construct an epic tale out of the transit of the lives of these two soldiers of fortune, the one of war and the other of politics. ‘Mail Them Early’ There's nothing new in the advice to “Mail You: | Christmas Presents Early” this year, but it is just as ‘With And the mailing of Christmas presents is no exception. There is no sound reason why Christmas presents can- not be posted well in advance to avoid flooding the mails At best, the postal. system has to handle a tremendously increased volume of mail during the holiday season and this is all the more reason why it should not be flooded with the bulk of it at the last You can do your part—play fair with the postman and at the same time insure prompt delivery of your parcels About the most expensive thing on earth is too much The kings can do no wrong. The dictators won't let Married men are said to work harder; single ones say “In this country, to which he often came, he won 5 -wealth of esteem; and the bitterness of division that {|OUR BOARDING HOUSE Only 20 were killed the other day | Ss when Mexico voted on a new presi- | woman, shot her in the leg accident- dent. We can do almost that well in | ally. Chicago A night club in Cleveland caught fire the other night. There ought to ) 2 be some law about keeping those red | television within five years. But vet (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | late in the intestines. - Was shut. Norma ran down the hati HERE MRS. HOOPLE, I'M SUPPLYING -—TH’ MAIN EVENT FoR “TOMORROW'S ° STUFF AN” GRUNT! ~~ TH? BOSS GAVE EVERYBODY AT -TH’ OFFICE A TURKEY ~ ~~ S0 TH” THANKSGIVING INDIGESTION FoR TH’ HOUSE “THiS YEAR \S oN me? * HAR-RR-UMF ~QUT OF RESPECT FoR ME M'DEAR, AS LAIRD QF ~THE MANOR, PREPARE THIS “TURKEY FoR HE FESTIVE BOARD “ToMaRROW! ~~ EGAD, I Won) THis cHoice GOBBLER ATA RAFFLE? alone. * * eAY THIS HAS HAPPENED comer ont ef work, and DUSTY, Mra. Rhoden’ warthiens beshand. mit SE: ence ire. Strawe learns be left town agitation om the one CHAPTER XIt soyaT do you mean, sir?” Mr, Lawrence Sharp asked blankly, ' “I mean—can you swear that It was Mrs. Hogarth’s voice you heard telling Norma Paige scod right, and not the voice of the parrot?” “The parrot knows you bot, of | course.” Strawn suggested. “Do| you think you could conx him to! talk?” 2 ‘Their reception of this eugges tion was vastly different from Cora Barker's. Sharp, swelling out bis chest a little with {mportance, stepped up to the bird's cage, reached {n fearlessly and stroked | the rumpled feathers of the par. rot’s head. woe Cap'n!” be boomed heart. “Hullo, bullo!” the bird answered sulkily. e “Good night, Cap'n, Good night!” Sharp continued, while Mrs. Sharp plucked nervously at his sleeve ip & futile effort to make bim desist. The parrot turned about on his perch, but crooked one bright ese at his dead mistress’s friend. “Guod !* Cap'n answered, and to Dundee, behind the screen, the volce seemed to be that of the mur- dered woman herself. eee SCYAS it that voice or airs. Ho | gerth’s bat you heard an | Swering Norma Paige?” Strawo de manded.’ with slow empbasis. | “I—" Lawrence Sharp wiped his brow. “I—can't swear which voice ft was, but 1 believe it was Mrs Hogarth’s.” “Now, Mr. Sharp. did you bear or see anyone else as you returned to your room about haif-past 112” “No— Yes! | heard Bert Magnus’s typewriter, His room is directly across the hall from mine, you know.” “Did you see Miss Paige, too?” “No, he couldn't have. His door to her room and closed the door— , with a bang,” he admitted reluc | tantly, “Just as 1 was closing my: own door. Her Best to, ours, you know. { 't speak to! the reiief, anyway. * Lee De Forest predic saxophones away from the drapes. * ok * An Ohio man, ro poetry to a ye ougint to be grateful for * satisfactory By Ahern | GREAT SfaRS -I'u HAVING AN EPIDEMIC OF “URKEYS ~I ORDERED ONE TROM MY MEAT MARKET we THEN JAKE WON A“URKEY AT "KENO” we AND Now You Wo BRING HOME A COUPLE mMoRE! ~~ Nou Wor CARE FI ave We MY LAUNDRESS , Fi MILKMAN AND MAILMAN, Wit Vau J | * * * ‘ They ought to run for office. | * % rel, deer, rabbit or quail. ging '©.1929 by NEA“ Gervice,Inc. ys find some- I ODA, MN a Rr anceo: Acne vulgaris is the name of | common form of acne, | acter | treating it. There are several factors th thy HEALTH “DIET ‘ADVICE | itp Ihe Sst My 0 Fale zed by pimples and blackheads ing principally on the face, ! H k and chest. This is an unsightly | | trouble, and will continue to persist | |if only local measures are used in which | have an effect in producing this; | trouble. Whenever pimples or acne jappear there is an inflammation of | sebaceous glands just under the | are aw: \skin, This inflammation is caused! feres with the development of the principally from a toxic condition of | genital organs the metabolism in the blood. Certain poisons from auto- cells may become so perverted that | intoxication and intestinal putrefac-| not only acne but also nervousness, FOR REPLY }' the| which is char- | frequently with young people between isin eruptions of all kinds occur | the ages of 12 and 14. This is the age | Of puberty, when the sexual functions Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ning, and if anything inter- tion are responsible for this chemical | epilepsy and anemia may develop. If | inrit It i: mat ion. the proper physical culture regimen is evident that the tallow-like | followed during this period the gen- ial which stuffs up in these | erative organs will develop normally, glands must come from the use of! as nature intended. | too much greasy food, such as pan- | . doughnuts, and sausages. The ve amounts of butter the surface of the skin. Fr body has not been complete. To overcome this tendency it is The hoboes are asking for a four-' necessary to go to the toilet at regular ‘day working week of two hours daily. times, and to use more of the starchy vegetables, both in salad and cooked form, in order to give the intestines | ‘The season of the year is at hand plenty of bulk with which to elim- ‘ when a cow locks exactly like 2 squir- | inate the more concentrated food ma- terials and the toxins which accumu- c Strawn summoned Payne and told him to brin; in Norma Paige. Dundce's pulse quickened at the thought of seeing her again. our room, I found the wife packing. I told her about the tral id the upper berth, and wrote out a check for $100 for bail—" i “Not for the $300 also, to pay for | the car?” Strawn interrupted with lightning quickness, “Why, no. I shall have to get the $300 from the savings bank, when it opens Monday morning.” Sharp answered. “I don’t keep that much iu my checking account.” “May I see your savings bank book, please?” Strawn asked. “Sir! Are you intimating that t—I!—one of Mrs. Hogarth’s closest friends for two years— murdered her for such a ridiculous reason as to get a paltry $300 for my son?” Strawn grinned crookedly. “I'm Not insinuating anything, Mr. Sharp, but—I'd like to see that bank book, {f you please... . Thanks! ... Hmm! 1| see that you have a bal- ance of $410.03. Destined to pay the boy's tuition, 1 suspect?” “My financial affairs are my own concern, ." Sharp answered | stiffly. “Just what is your occupation, Mr. Sharp?” “I am head of one of the hquse furnishings departments at Marcus- Crane’s—the linoleum department,” Sharp answered with dignity. “My salary is—entirely adequate to the needs of myself. my wife and son.” “Yes, yes,” Strawn interrupted impatiently. “Now, Mrs. Sharp, I should like you to tell me why you were afraid that Norma Paige knows something about this bad business.” “Well, but I can tell you right Bow, that no matter tchere Norma was, she didn't have anything to do with this terrible murder!” Mrs. Sharp assured him indignantly: “I did see Norma. After 1 finished Packing, 1 was awfully hot, and decided to take a cool bath before going to the train. That was about up—* “About 11:40?” “Yes. I opened my door, to go to the bathroom, and I saw Norma come out of her room and start | down the hall toward the bathroom. 1 could see she was going to take a bath, for she had her bath towel j over her arm, and was wearing bed- room slippers, pajamas, and a ki- |mono. I started to ask if she'd let me have my bath first, but Mr. Sharp had told me about Norma's crying, and I thought the quicker she got a nice cool bath the better she'd feel, and there was plenty of time before I had to leave for my train. “1 went back into my room, and wrote out a telegram to send to Poor Larry from the station, and also one to a lawyer we know at the capital, and then—it was about 15 minutes, 1 guess—1 thought Norma would be through with her bath, and | took my towel and soap and started for the bathroom again. The door was closed, and I could hear ater running. “I thought Norma might just be rinsing out the tub, and I'd call to her to let the water run for me. So I did, but there wasn't any answer. Since that bath s for women only, and there’s only Norma and | on this floor to use it now, I tried the door, it wasn't locked. [ stepped in und saw Norma's bath towel— she has her own, with her mono- Sram on them—lying with her soap dish on the little stool—” ~ eee ‘AD the towel been used?” Strawn tnterrupted. “Ob, no. It was neatly folded, and quite dry. 1 touched it to see. ‘The soap was dry, too—a new cake. So 1 thought maybe Norma had gone back to her room for some thing she'd forgotten, and I'd ask her if { could have my bath frat, since it ‘was getting later all the time. 1 went to her room—it’s next 6 her, of she to me. When | entered |10 minutes after Mr. Sharp came/to the bath, you know-—and knocked on her door, but she didn’t answer, although I could see through the transom that her light was on. I didn’t know what to think, but then it occurred to me she might have gone downstairs to tele- phone.” ‘ “Then what did you do, Mra. Sharp?” Strawn asked, to stem the tide-of useless words. “Why, I took my bath, I was going to apologize to Norma if she came and found the bathroom in use, but she didn’t come. But wher I'd finished and rinsed the tub I left the water running for her again, and went back to my room. + + + Ob, yes.” she caught herself up, “I did stop and knock on Norma's door again, to tell her I'@ left the water running, but she still didn’t answer. I suddenly thought maybe she was in there crying, and I just said, ‘Your water's running, Norma dear,’ and went on to my room. { intended to go back to the bathroom in a minute or two to see that the tub didn’t run over, but Magnus's typewriter, and I to myself that he writing so late at ai; work till 12 last Satu: account of people not going to early, and everything, but I think—” “Thank. you very much, Mra, Sharp. And you, too, Mr. Sharp. I see no reason why you can't take the next train to your boy, Mrs, Sharp.” g of seeing her again. (To Be Continued) nd eream also will furnish additional material that will fill the pores | ing several miles daily. All who are ugh which the sebaceous glands to empty their contents through re is no question but that this | ¢ is made more serious if the jskin is not kept as clean as possible. 1 ing of the skin with ter will prevent de- ment of any more pimples and blackheads, and will assist in cleans- jing the skin of those already formed. | Constipation may be cited as one of the principal causes of skin disorders. This is not always due to the fact that poisons are retained in the skin, -|but when one suffers from constipa- | tion it also indicates that elimination of the toxins from the tissues of the At any time in life it is always ad- | visable to keep up a daily systematic | regimen of physical culture exercises, |combined with outdoor games or walk- \ troubled with acne will find that it is | Necessary to do everything to promote |the efficiency of the intestines, and physical culture exercise is indis- pensable in eccomplishing this pur- pose. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (Brown Patches) Question: Mrs. H. asks: “Will you jplease recommend some kind of ibleach that will peel my skin, as a jspell of sickness has left my facc {covered with ugly brown patches.” | Answer: I do not advise faco pecl- jing by any method except the ultra iviolet, light. The skin of different peoplé varies in thickness and if the peel should penetrate too deeply iv would leave permanent scars and dis- colorations. (Mil and Teeth) Question: Mrs. Y. H. writes: “My baby girl is nine months old, and I have fed her since birth according to your instructions. She is the best baby of my five children, but she has no sign of teeth, while the others had teeth at eight months. However, [ can't see that she necds any teeth if I keep her on a milk diet for two years, but ! ind friends, neighbors and relatives are beginning to suggest so many ways of improvement over your method that I want definite enc agement and instruction from you Answer: Some babies are naturaliy slower than others in devcloping teeth, and I see no reason to be wor- ried because the baby has not devel- oped any teeth as yet. However, you may speed up the process by giving the child shortly daily sunbaths. ( Sarcoma) Question: F. F. asks: “Will you please tell me what a sarcoma is, and the best procedure in the way of = cure?” Answer: A sarcoma is @ serious form of tumor. Some cases are bene- fited by following the fasting and dieting regimen, such as outlined in my Cleansing Diet Course, which I will be glad to mail to you; while others require an operation, much de- pending upon the position of the tumor and its size. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) OP | Our Yesterdays | —_—_——_— FORTY YEARS AGO D. B. Wellman, recently elected speaker of the house, was presented with a big mallet weighing 12 pounds by the farmer boys. John Gilman, U. 8. agricultural fair manager, is here to make arrange- ments for a car load of products which are to be exhibited throughout the east. Dr. John Harcourt of Steele, will address the teachers institute at the Baptist church Thanksgiving eve- ning. Miss Mabel Marsh entertained at # dancing party last evening, the occa- being her birthday. yi Thanksgiving is always observec it Wards palatial resort or street, and tomorrow egg-nog Tom and Jerty will be dispensed that artistic style for which this terer to the public taste is famous. 'WENT-FIVE YEARS AGO Dr. and Mrs. G. E. Chamberlain left today for Seattle, Wash., where they will reside in the future. E Miss Ethel Rupert entertained a number of her small friends at a par- ty yesterday. Mrs. J. D. Wakeman and Mrs. J. B. ‘| Taylor entertained guests for eleven tables at a progressive euchre party yesterday afternoon. Mrs. A. Hughes returned to Minne- | |apolis this afternoon.

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