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4 j P . Tro: The Bismarck Tribune! ome ‘An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | «Established 1873) "EL een aaaninnstithn nde arene Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bts- | narck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs | 8 second class nail matter. | | i ’ e D. Mann ................President and Publisher Subscription Kates Payable in Advance lly by carrier, per year by mail, per year (in ly by mail, per year (in state. outside Bismarck) .... ly by mail. outside of North Dakota w i 900 i f + 6.00 feekiv ®y mail, in state. per year } ‘Weekly by mail. in state, three years for -- Weekly by mail outs'~ of North Dako.a, per year ..... . ous 8a) Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Is Member of The Associated Press The Assoctated Press is exclusively entitled to the use + oF republication of all news dispatches credited to it or + rot otherwise credited in this newspaper and ‘Isc th? | cal news of spontaneous origin puolished herein. All| ‘ights of republication of all other matter hereir are REulso reserved. . 2.50 Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS ! (Incorporated) ' Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) See at Honest Waterway Projects Acceptable Waterway improvement used to provide the “pork 4of sarrel” of congress. In part the policy embraced projects Bods¢ merit in the deepening of navigable streams and in P¥e8 ie construction of harbors. The dredging of the Ohio Ppiver to nine {cet depth and the construction of the! onPelaware breakwater off Lewes, where ships might seek Memshelter from the terrific storms around the Delaware E @t-apes, were such improvements. | er But there were many grandiose projects on which mil wothiions of dollars were frittered away. The late Senator | ‘SOUBurton exposed some such in a waterways bill debate 20, 4tS vears ago. He showed how sums as large as $1,000,000 | / PFC.ad been expended on building locks in Kentucky and Part West Virginia streams without a ton of freight moving hover them in the year following the construction. #4 waterway projects are emerging from this era of ®) pork.” It is probable that shortly there will be no ques- Ps Lion as to the merit of any proposal dealing with inland BE2™avigation that is brought before congress. The reallv| ig projects will be so numerous and of such undoubted , PGosoundness that the grabs for appropriations to spent! | eback home which a certain type of congressman has feen reaching for each time a waterways bill has beer! ‘ jp will be submerged in the serious. nation-wide move- | for restoring water transportation in the interior) “and speeding up this form of traffic on the two ocean | its, especially in the East. H Four factors have contributed to bringing rivers and 5 harbors expenditures within the purview of a practical | # syspolicy which has no leeway for the old practice of grab- “ ing “pork.” { miproject imparted as its immense possibilities in naviga- Wacrdien and power production were grasped by the people: n second was the plan for harnessing the Mississippi | floods; the third was the completion of the nine- td “foot channel in the Ohio from Pittsburgh to Cairo, with , s lions of tonnage going up and down the stream; and E Tegthe fourth, capping all these, was the pronouncement 2f | p28 *president Hoover for a system of canalization converting e.MSthe lareer rivers into navigable channels and enlarging e he coastal canals in the East. It showed the president ins ind his administration committed definitely, whole- eartedly and unzeservedly not only to the continued pemdeepening and improvement of the American lake and ga ocean harbors but also to the prompt construction of a} SB gereat connected system of inland waterways, affording © raythe farmers cheap transportation for the crops they ship pand for the goods they purchase. | 2 The country around iBsmarck is with the president fs, this stand. North Dakota cherishes hopes that wigation will some day be restored on the Missouri. qneAny honest effort at developing the rivers of the coun- | ¥ for transportation will bring that dream nearer Fealization. Any trifling with the Hoover program ts! lapt to defer the day when boats again will ply the Big | ddy. All this must work a revival of waterway legislation | m congress. For three years no rivers and harbors bill | been passed. This sort of legislation had to yield to| athe Coolidge policy of economy and to the disrepute | 9 which the old “pork barrel” system had fallen. I efforts to reduce taxes and economize expenditure y conforming to solely practical and feasable proposals, shelved. When the policy is revived it will be essential, how- » that it deal with honest needs. The old system graft must not be allowed to come back. There are vt many reasons why 100 cents value should be got ovt of every dollar to be expended on waterway improve- 4 ‘ment for any of the funds congress can find availabie | Pl being frittered away on piffling projects that merely te the public substance. Congress can probably find no better guidance in this tter than to adhere to the program which President will lay down for it to follow. He is an engineer if | two and the result that wheat has been raised to higher | , more prizes there this year. harbors bill must authorize expenditures amounting to $100,000,000 or more. As sald, however, whatever rivers and harbors bill ‘sj passed, {i any, it should conform with the program of President Hoover. The nation has faith in the honesty, integrity and practicability of his plans. If congress cunningly seeks to steal “pork” again, he should veto any such measure that is enacted, Stock Show an Inspiration The stimulating power of a dynamo is in the great, International Livestock, Grain and Hay show, opened at Chicago Friday for its annual display of what 15 best in the products of agriculture and animal husbancy throughout the United States and Canada. No section receives this dynamic stimulation in greater degree or proportion than the Northwest. For years the how has supplied the incentive for better bred grains e. cattle and draft stock. It has encouraged adult farmers and has aroused the ambitions of the boys and girls of the rural areas to compete with the experts tn improving the standards of the nation’s agriculture and animal industry. It has kept up a ceaseless rivalry between the wheat rowers cf Canada and Montana to produce thé bes: ypes of wheat, with varying triumphs between these quality by the tircless competition. | It has done much for livestock breeding and raising. | Better cattle, hogs and sheep have been produced. Mar- keting conditions have become better realized. stock growers have been able to adapt themselves for ready re- action to the public and trade demands for certain types | of meat animals. North Dakota has not participated as generally the show as its agricultural importance would merit. Last year a start was made in grain competition and in} in _THE BISMARC a Fargo area grower showed the best flax at the ex- position. He won a $1,000 check from the Greater North Dakota association, as a testimonial that such efforts! to honor the agriculture of the siate are appreciated at home. | It is a commendable move that the state will seex Any success that may come} to the exhibitors of North Dakota will redound to the] reputation of the entire state and its agriculture. i} And the show will make a valuable impression on the | club boys and girls to be taken to Chicago to view it and sec the sights of the city, especially those linked to agricultural production. Almost inevitably it must be| the inspiration to the coming generation of expert till-| ers, the cattle men and the sheep growers of the coun-j{ Dakota is so conspicuous an agricultural element. An Actor of Merit Gone Wanamaker, the accession of Raymond Hitchcock, one of its most brilliant and popular musical comedy stars. who died the other day at Los Angeles of a heart at- tack at 64. Hitchcock was on the way to becoming 2 confirmed shoe salesman and stockroom custodian when Wanamaker discharged him. 2 spear bearer in a drama then appearing in his home city of Philadelphia. The first was the stimulation to the na-| ‘The years developed him into one of the leading | ional imagination which the Great Lakes-St. Lawrence | actors of the American stage. He made an appeal to all) classes of theatergoers. He was matinee idol. popular with the old and with the young and he played comedy parts with the adaptability of genius for those roles. He scored high in “King Dodo,” remembered as a fantastic musical play, in the "Yankee Consul” and in “Hitchy Koo.” He made his reputation when the American stage was at the peak in such entertainment and when brilliant rivals of the Montgomery and Stone type were also in their prime. That he stood out among these on his own merits is an evidence that he was a thespian worthy of having his name permapently inscribed on the scroll of American theatrical mimicry. ’ 3 One disturbing feature of traveling slong Easy stree: is the large volume of traffic coming the other way. South Dakota Stamps (St. Paul Dispatch) If the next mail from South Dakota is decorated with a handsome stamp in four colors which affirms that “You have not seen America until you have seen the Black Hills,” take it in good part. It is merely one of nearly four million issued by the state chamber of com- reece ot Smee Dakota to proclaim the advantages of st a Thirty different legends tell of the state's resources and attractions. The stamps carry the information that South Dakota has the world’s mine, the largest tin mill in America, em oe and has undeveloped lignite cite the water, the Orman. biggest dirt dam in fishing and scenic beauties get their share on the As a new method of iblicity for the and diversified Serer aaa industrial of the state the stamps should serve their purpose. vision and he is supported by a large staff of army sin of undoubted professional acumen. Their opin- e of waterway transportation. The chief fight n waterway development will come from the rE. E. Loomis, president of the Delaware and Hudson oad, clready has becn spreading a great deal verse publicity on the subject, particularly the G: Tawrence project. Much of his argument n spiked by engineers and by link improvements in th: made by the Canadian a FES Rak | | E E i i E Hil it ‘HE md i eel i nil | i ti il 3 5 “j ez 8 & FH g Hitchcock at once became | earthquake in the east the other day. But then you never can tell. try, particularly those of the Northwest, of which North| have been merely a family moving out of an upstairs apartment. xk * | | ij |OUR BOARDING HOUSE While President Hoover was con- | ferring with those big railroad offi- The theater owed to the late merchant prince, John | °l#ls. he should heve sald a little K TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1929 SOY HAW, EGAD ~AND Now my WSS DEAR BROTHER, “He SHoE \ IS ON THE LARGER Foot oDAy J~\\N wm YESTERDAY You DID MAKE SPoRT OF ME BEING ILL, BECAUSE OF OVER-EATING “THE THANKSGIVING DINNER unr AND You BRAGGED LIKE CELLINI ABOUT YouR MARVELOUS CONSTITUTION ! we HMemM-e TAKE THIS DINK PELLET AND GLASS OF WATER -~~IT WILL BRACE You uP uNnTIL [ CAN CALL IN A SPECIALIST IN RESTORING ANTIQUES ! St N PUT A CK, ~~ DUST A VERTEBRA THAT WENT OUT OF PLACE SOME EARS AGo, WHEN IT PULLED You UP FROM UNDER A TABLE AT “HEINIE'S (DLE HeuR!” AEG. U.S. PAT, OFF. ©1029, ey nea eeRvice, tee something about the way of an en- 2 BARBS | gineer with a Pullman in the yards. e eek A headline says that learned men There were reports of a slight are still seeking the fountain of eternal youth. Why don’t they ask grandma what drug store she pa- tronizes? It may * ek In New York the milk companies are experimenting with rubber shoes for the horses. But how is anyone THIS HAS HAPPENED Servi ted frequently changed 10 | “wane laverite ameng ¢! BON E, young deo ebleft, LIEUT. | imventigation. hing of PN. CORA BARK. fe west given degree. again, and then she came out and knocked at my door again. We beard her say, ‘Your water's ru! ning, Norma.’ Then she went into ;her room and when her door had NOW GO ON WITH THE STORE (closed. I ran across the hall and CHAPTER XIV into the bathroom. I took my bath | 66470U have no right to make such | 224 bad just gotten into bed when | insinuations against Walter tae AF gpd knock on Mrs. Styles!” Norma flamed. “He was logarth’s door, or on some door, 1 only thinking of me—of my reputa. | ‘ought it was Mrs. Hogarth’s, but I didn’t look out to make sure. tion in a gossipy boarding house. If anyone had discovered 1 was in| Aout 10 or 15 minutes later a man id Mrs, Rhodes came to my doo! Walter's room, so late at night, |." arene’ ant ane~" a told me that Mrs. Hogarth wi Mas de oe bh thant’ |pegie that's absolutely all 1 Strann laterregiee, bis voice gentle | fe ae a ai iting in. ao 7H aa could haraty |*Yf88 PAIGE.” strawn bezan talk i the hall, with me crying a5! 4044, “Owly, “there is small I was, But we left the door slight. | 7oubt that Mrs, Hogarth was ly ajar, and stood near it. We did ‘murdered and robbed during those not even sit down t whole time. minutes you say you spent with I told him, because urged me to, your flance in his room. . . . No, just what Mrs. Hogarth had sald, Wait. Please! I am making no about bis asking her to lend him |7°cusstions. I morely want you money for his business, and—and to try very hard to remember if her wager that he wouldn't want /2Cu, beard or saw anything else to marry me after she had cut me while you stood near Mr. Style: out of ber will—” d0pk, SAIER: . “No,” she said at ‘And your flance was very/no one at all. Of course, Walter angry, of course?” and I were both afraid, and kept | “Of course!” Norma agreed ve-|looking out of the door, wut we hemently, then gasped as she real-/#2w no one.” jestion. “He; “You can vouch for the fact that Mr. Sharp, for instance, did not come out of bis room?” “Ob; yes! I'm eure of that.” Dundee's quick mind took note of the fact that her earnest words had given Lawrence Sharp a perfect alibi, For the Sharps’ room did Bot open upon a convenient stairs porch, leading to Mrs. Ho- room, entering by her window—" |sarth'’s room. Their window was “He did no such thing!” the girl | et in the west wall of the house, almost screamed. “He didn't leave the driveway. We stood Pad hes talking io whis | s¢mID you hear anything—any- fast bow long DY. Strawn pe-sisted. saw Mra! “No. Ob. yes, we did!” the girl or corrected herself hastily. “One reason we talked in whis; was answer, and foned pal we were afraid of Mr Magaus ing us, We knew he was in must have seen my towel and 8089 | his rooni and awake, for he was berpenrong galled Lic {hea | typing nearly all the time. fi tothe tare tha teak barber, room {is next to Walter's, you know.” or I suppose she did, for she was in| “Nearly all tho time?” Strawn there long enough to bathe, repeated, “Just how long a time “We heard her turn the water on | was his machine silent?” going to know when it's time to end the pokcr game? ses 8 What this country needs is a of robots to do service in dentist chairs. * * * About the safest way to escape in- jury in the woods these days is to dis- ' guise yourself as a deer. rabbit anything else that the hunters are after. «Copyright, 1929. NEA Service. Inc.) AEA “Not nearly long enough for him to murder poor Mrs. Hogarth and search her room!” Norma flashed. “If that's what you're wondering! He was typing along steadily, as if he were copying something that had already been written. He said at dinner tonight—or rather, last night—that he was going to revise his story that had just been ro- turned by @ studio. Then while Mrs. Sharp was taking her bath, and I was just about to slip across to my own room, ‘to be there in case she came to speak to me, he stopped, and Walter and I were scared to death he bad heard us, I—I had become almost hysterical, because of Mrs, Sharp's looking for me, and my not being able to get back to my room, and—and every- thing, and we were afraid Bert— Mr. Magous—had heard me cry- ing, for he stopped typing for two or three minutes. We heard him moving about in his room, and for fear he might open his door and look out, I stayed in Walter's room »{umtil he began to type again.” TH sirl, dismissed at Mast, al- most ran from the room, her hands groping before her as if she were blind with tears. “Boyle!” Strawn bawled. “Tell Payne I want him, And when you see him leave, bring in Walter Styles.” When Payne appeared, he shook bis head before Strawn could put a question. “Nothing in the girl's room. chief. Her wardrobe trunk, her closet and her desk were all un- lock No money anywhere.” “All right, Payne. I'm having Styles in now. Go over bis room with a fine tooth comb.” Walter Styles, when he appeared, was wearing a rather handsome silk dressing gown over shirt and trousers, His brown bair was brushed sleekly smooth, and his light-brown eyes were calm, but there was a betraying tightness about his mouth, After a few preliminary ques- tions, Strawn asked abruptly: “Where were you between 11 end say 10 minutes after 12 tonight, Styles?” A muscle jerked in the young man‘s cheek, but his volce was steady: “I was in my room.” flock | By Ahern | SAY, ~ GET ouT OF N HERE fae 1 AIN'T SO Weak THAT [ CANT GET UP AN" BULt- FIDDLE LIKE Vou OUTA TUNE Furl At jthe anus, which is controlled by aj | Because of constipation or any un- THE CAUSE AND CURE OF {| The last five to eight inches of the large intestine is called the rectum. ‘The external opening of the colon is | sphincter muscle, called the external | sphincter. /The internal sphincter muscle is lecated five to eight inches above the external opening and fhe section between these two muscles is called the rectum. The most common rectal trouble is | caused by an enlargement of the veins at the opening of the rectum at the anus. In this section, there 1s | an unusually large number of veins. | usual nervous contraction of the anus, these veins are squeezed so tightly es-to make them enlarge. With most | people, there is a slight protrusion of the veins at the anus and these are called hemorrhoids. It is very rare | to find these enlarged veins any place in the intestines, except the lower last inch of the rectum. In addition to constipation being | the principal cause of hemorrhoids, there is another factor of a chemical | more than a mechanical nature. The feces passing through the rectum is, of course, the most poisonous sub- stance eliminated from the body, and as it passes over the membranes there must necessarily be some irri- tation. If one is especially toxic, the feces is, of course, more poisonous; therefore, more irritating to the del- icate membranes lining the colon. If the rectum has been stretched by constipated feces, and especially if fissures or cracks have been made in the membranes through this stretching, the feces, loaded with toxins, will burn into the membranes and produce larger fissures, which HEALTH@DIET HEMORRHOIDS | tio jin case of hemorrhoids, ADVICE to Sate SES sa CAA Of TH PAPER SUVELOPE FOR REPLY | chanical injury caused by constipa- in. The cure consists in getting rid of the constipation, and in using proper 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. In treatments to the rectum, itself. curing constipation, remember these four important pcints: (1) Go to the toilet regularly a a certain time each day. (2) Assume a squatting position on the toilet. This can be accomplished by putting the feet on the rungs of a chair in front of you. (3) Take plenty of vigorous phys- ical exercise, especially the setting up exercises. (4) Eat a large amount of non- starchy vegetables, both cooked and raw. For local treatments in the rectum there is nothing better than the application of ice. A good way to apply ice is to break a piece into small pieces and force a pointed piece into the rectum and hold it at the opening, partially inside the anus, until it melts, or for four of five minutes. This is as good as any electrical treatments you can take in a doctor's office, as it will shrink the hemorrhoids and help the veins recover their muscular tone. Before and after this treatment, keep the rectum well lubricated with plain vaseline, Use an enema once dady, if necessary, to keep the bowels open. When you have succeeded in over- ts? develop into fistulas, and often per- manent openings through the intes- tinal walls. if anyone is suffering from 1i trouble, the poisons the morbid functioning of the 1 or MLA rot It is easy to understand then that iver thrown off from iver will be an added chemical irritation to the rectum in addition to the me- coming constipation, you will find that these ice treatments will be par- ticularly effective and will assist you in bringing about a complete cure. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (Eczema) Question: Constant Reader asks: “Would eating too much albumincus food, such as eggs, cause one to have eczema? What foods are to be avoided by one suffering from this trouble?” Answer: The use of an excess amount of any kind of food, such as proteins or starches, may be a con- tributing cause in the development of eczema or any other skin disorder. The trouble comes mostly, however. t Oe “Not nearly long enough for him to murder poor Mrs. Hogarth and search her room!” she flashed. “Alone? Strawn asked, with ap parent casualn: Again the spasmodic jerking of @ muscle, Then, calmly, “Yes, alone.” Dundee, behind the screen, felt an unwilling admiration for the man he already looked upon with Jealous envy. “Spoken like a gentleman, Mr. Styles,” Strawn applauded dry! “But it happens that Miss your fiancee, has already told me different story. Now, I'd like your version of that story.” 2 Walter Styles took a quick step toward the detective, his clenched fist upraised. “If you've been badgering and insulting Norma—" he began violently. '“you"have a pretty hot temper, ;haven't you, Mr. Styles?” Strawn {drawled. “You must remember that murder has been committed here tonight. Sit down and keep your fist to yourself, young man. . + « Now tell me exactly what you did between 11 o'clock last night and.the time you were informed by Mrs. Rhodes and Detective Payne of Mrs. Hogarth’s murder.” Walter Styles obeyed, speaki i: bneig Ee furious Pig He gan wi irs. Hogai angry refusal to admit bim to her room, along with Norma Paige; told of going to his own room and there awaiting word from Norma as to the result of her interview with Mrs, Hogarth; of Norma's coming {nto his room, at his request; of Mrs. Sharp's trips to the bathroom and to Norma's room; of Norma's departure to take her own delayed bath after Mrs. Sharp, He told the bare facts, enlarging upon them not at all, and Strawn silently beard ee the end. fou were very angry with Mrs, Hogarth, for her treatment of Miss Paige and because of the charges she had brought against you, were you not, Mr, Styles?” Strawn asked Mid when the brief recital had e “I was!” Strawn stared at the unexpected ness of the admission, then he Your room at all during the times m at al the ¢! I have mentioned? i aan “Yes—I did!” (To Be Continued) from using wrong combinations of all kinds of food. Study my weekly menus, and you will have a weckly lesson in food combinations. Writc for @ special article on “Eczema.” (Dried Freits) Question: P. E. F. writes: “I re- ceive a great deal of help througt your daily writings, and am wonder- ing if you would advise eating dried figs, prunes, and fruits of that kind without being stewed.” Answer: The dried fruits you men- tion can be used without cooking, and ‘re even more wholesome when used in this manner. Some enjoy the flavor of the fruits when they are soaked overnight in a small amount of water, and then eaten. without being cooked. (Protruding Abdomen) Question: Ruth writes: “I have followed your diet, exercise, etc., and have been helped very much in re- ducing all parts of my body but my stomach. Some people tell me a large stomach is hereditary. Is it correct?” Answer: The only way you can re- duce the size of your abdomen is through taking vigorous physical cul- ture exercises, principally those tak- en while lying on the back. Dieting. alone, will not reduce a protruding abdomen, although the size will di- minish somewhat if only a small amount of food is used. Measure your circumference with a tape-measure. then start in \:th the exercises, and every week you will be able to note @ reduction in the size of this part of your body. (Copyright, 1929, by Tite Bell Syndicate, Inc.) OO | Our Yesterdays | FORTY YEARS AGO Archie Currie of/Grand Forks has been appointed deputy state auditor. Andrew Blewett, Jamestown, a member of the Constitutional conven- tion, has taken his place in the third Major Van Eps, Sioux Falls Demo- on left for his South Dakota home lay. Union Thanksgiving services in which the various churches of the Mr. and Mrs. Otto Grethem, Good- rich, are guests at the home of Mr f f F i i cy li i f iE gE i i i : ; ae zis