The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 11, 1929, Page 4

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whe Bismarck Tribune . An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) sufficiently literate to vote naturally are dissatisfied by being shut off in this way. A difficulty in financing the scholarships in the agri- trouble of the chai i ablished by the Bismarck Tribune Company. BIS: | rection. A statement issued by Secretary Stimson out- ck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | ‘econd class mail matter. ‘ge D. Mann ... Subscription Kates Payable in Advance ly by carrier, per year by . per year (in Bismarck) . . per year. outside Bismarck) ... |. outside of North Dal ekly by mail, in state, per year . 1.00 ekly by mail, in state, three year: of North Dako. Audit Bureau of Circalation Member of The Associated Press republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | lines the nature and cause of the troubles. The usua! President and Publisher | annual allotment of $10,000 for scholarships at the agri- j cultural school had been curtailed by $2,000 to pay necdv students for practical farm work on the school grounds $7.20 | The students went on strike October 31 as a protest Sympathetic strikes were declared in the medical and) 5.00 law schools, | By December 3 the strike movement had spread ‘throughout the country. 2.30 | employes at Port au Prince quit work after destroying | Property and mistreating American officials. The <s- seoeee 1.50) order had reached the point of gravity when last Wed- | nesday the American high commissioner issued a pro- ciamation making effective the technical condition of “ne Assoctited Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use | marital law existing for several years. { This is a political situation, but it is so interwoven | cultural school of the republic was seized on to foment ter usually the percursor of insur- The next day customhousc | ie osrces with the Tribune that such it is—a flouting of a otherwise credited in this newspaper and “Ist Uh? | with possibilitics of expanding into an international in- al news of spontancous origin pub'ished herein All| cident that, as the Washington Star says, while the treaty of 1915 is in effect, this government is bound to | keep the peace in the island, even though in doing 80 it may superscde the native government temporarily. ats of republication of all other matter herelr are | > reserved | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Forcign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS «Incorporated) | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Giving Champions Their Dues To exeol means something greater than pennants and | medals when it brings the tribute and arouses the pride | of the tribe, the community or the nation out of which .) some individual or group has performed a notable or The Puffed-Up Club a Praiscworthy achievement. Acclaim within the fold is a fhe Uniied States senate used to be termed a rich greater reward than a metallic token. It Is retroactive n’s club. It might now be sneered at as an a Its enthusiasm gratifies and inspires those honored, it n’s club. It has been doing so many grouchy acts | quickens the loyalty of those who confer and it unifies Tate. ; ayer | doers and admirers. t assumed te lay down to tanita! a law ea ‘That ts why it was a splendid thought which brought Tngylvania did not presuine to create for itself, 1” about the dinner last night to the Bismarck high selool’s > effect seg if it sent senators-elect to Was! INgton | tate football champions of 1929. It, as well as the prior 4° had 2 money in conducting ied luncheon entertainments of the entire gridiron quad, wwass in a bitter primary campaign—in this case the | tos coaches and school vrincipal and superintendent by tor had not spent as much as his opponents. ne OF the two other service clubs, mean closer ties in the com- 1om at the time sat in the senate—then the senate | munity. Not only are the younger generation and the uld bar the doors to the choice of the state. i if there was too much money spent by William S. | older drawn closer together, but such of the older gen: re, it would seem that that was a matter to concern | fnsyivania primarily. It would seem that the remedy | °f the team will find the bond between each other knit wld be for Pennsylvania to enact a law prohibitin: bh expenditure. Pennsylvania has done nothing ef| jat sort. The senate virtually assumes to step in and perceptions of the younger people are awakened to a new sense of worth and significance. Life and striving as- sume new values. Character is inspired and shaped bv its fiat create such a law not only for Penasylvaina “ for all the states. That is the act, in this case, of | such recognition es the boys were given on the ret a club, not a forum of the nation. | of their accomplishment. ‘i it did not say how much a candidate for th! ‘hate might spend and remain eligible to take the sea: | |which chosen by the votes of the electors of the state. precedent has been set and it is a variable precedent jaica, if followed may have one limit in one case ant | the Biamarck i limit in another instance. It was not only tres- | issive legislation encroaching on the constitutional Fights of the states but it was a slovenly precedent and | ‘scoring 340 points against its opponents without having | goal line crossed once. It included also! loomed the virtual championship crown of 1928, con- - ceded but for one of the teams of the state churlishly When take the tariff wrangle that brought the special | efusing to acknowledge the palpable fact. fasion to a messed-up close. It was a childish, foolish,' State supremacy in the arena of high school athletic: fensible performance between the blocs of vanity into as been established by Bismarck high and there : the upper chamber has degenerated. If this thin; | Pesson to think that it will not soon be dislodged the scnate will resemble one of those European | fom that pedestal. Certainly there exists the will anc talts which function as parliaments, with a | the skill and enthusiasm to hold that point of vantage. of fragmentary parties and legislation possible | 8 for Coach McLeod and his assistants, they tae 'the confidence of their teams and have shown ih vequisite ability to train winning high school squads in various types of competitive intersecttonal ethiccies. ‘Tha | ought to clinch Bismarck’s hopes to dominate the fir!: | of these interschool activities for the remainder of 192° \and the seasons of 1930. The community must not forget that trying also has its claim ‘on recognition such as has been: expressed sc splendidly at this time. It must not let its loyalty and Jultitude fly by tricks and deals or by producing hysteria to drive “majority together. | “hen the senate has arrogated to itself a spscies of {se majeste censorship rivaling the now extinct cacro- ‘nct prestige claimed by the former kaiser. Where in ‘paven’s name does it get this Gesslerlike authority? ‘That right had it to single out Frank A. Kent, a New fork business man, and hale him before the Caraway fymmittee and there lecture and bullyrag him for an | Ipinion he expressed, that the Wall Strect stock debacle | SUPPort become lax. It would be @ tragedy to relax en- ‘as the reaction to the senate’s dillydallying with the | couragement now. Athletics, as Jack West, the univer- aiff? ; sity physicial director, demonstrated to the dinne ‘The Chicago Tribune calls attention to this action as | audience, are too great an influence for good in scholar: “fresh arrogation of power which it thinks flouts the | Stip and in development of personality to suffer neglec’, States constitution, and the Minneapolis Journal | 20W. Generations of self-relinnt Americans cre to ' acing gained from their promotion and application, and Bi ; Marck surely docs not desire ever to become recrea> jin its contribution to the more perfect nation in th: future when it has not so flunked in the past. bnstitution which the senators customarily revere 80 evoutly when the rights and privileges with which it 3 them seem to be in danger. The Journal con- , «hues very pointedly to say: /“What Mr. Kent might or, might not know about dbbying cut little ice with the committec. He had Only a week or two ago, United States senator, un-| Tf you dont lke the present, Just wait a litle while "er the protection of that constitutional guaranty which | &nd it will be the past. ‘wivileges a senator to say with impunily whatever ‘ic | {leases inside the capitol, assailed » citizen's characte: | pee i ei ee Sent nem vom nents scents | H *t spoken anywhere on carth outside the senate cham- | Editorial Comment “er. But a citizen, so it secms, may not even criticiz> , : | © senator or senators, without running the risk of being | Crime and Confusion passed a law making it a crim” in before a committee of senators and punished | hack (kins what press dispatches . Kent's a= | jack in Congress PERSE AE BENS CARE {to know that a felony has been committed and not rc port it to the authorities. In 1928 termed a ‘merciless drubbing.’ ‘Congress passed an: “Are United States senators gods, or merely czars?” other law, the Jones law, making it a felony to break th: Haiti’s Periodic Cocking Main - One of the cockpits of the Antilles again is challeng- the police power which the United States has found be salutory, at least, toward preserving peace in the American toy republics if it has not been able; disclose the sovereignty which should be the basis of armed forces into the territory of another nation. ae You will make a poor job of growing old unless you take your time about it. ‘ ' necessity to act as it has in Nicaragua and Haiti. It) in the latter republic that the latest call for action even a government agent, or any one give information. would convict himself against . Technically America is tion of criminals and informers, but fort fact and the law are not always the same thing. BERS nts that might be produced that the United States has stepping in as a policeman and breaking up these tle game pit ructions. The United States is morally bligeted under the Monroe Doctrine to act. It cannot rmit Europeans an excuse in the many emergencies af- their investments and their nationals that might in to eration as share a parent's pride in the achievements | - | tighter. Civic pride in general is stimulated. The ] En2~4m L one oF THE BOARDERS ?2- HAW, EGAD, SIR ~You ARE Quite pRoLL —~ BUT NOUR MISTAKE |S VERY PARDONABLE 2 -~T WAS Not HERE WHEN You AND YouR WIFE WERE INTRODUCED “To THE HOUSE GUESTS ¢ am AHEM ~ LSIR, AM MAYOR HOOPLE a MINE HOST OF THIS TAVERN: we AND MY WIFE RUNS THE BUSINESS END oF “THE ESTABLISHMENT? HE MISTAKEN IDENTITY fee. MY NAME IS GIMBLER «J. CLARK GIMBLER ! ~ MY WIFE AND IT HAVE “TAKEN QUARTERS HERE UNTIL APTER “HE HOLIDAYS ~ wm THEN WE MAY GO- BERMUDA }}OR HAVANA FoR HE REST OF WHO LANDED ONTHIS WIRE To REST HEIR WINGS AN’ f Give A FEW 2 FoR A DEM |! CHIRPS —~ )-asse W ATHEN “HEYiL a A LARGE FU To ANOTHER] ° iN BOARDING >) YN] SE | | SE, TA SN NW _SY TO SAS TOA SSNS yy e o the assigning of four members of the team to the! mythical all-state eleven. And, in the background | ‘The ti BARBS || m eit industry is threatened | A scrupulous sure to come close. sk ® errapin person with failure, we read, but there al- | the legs taken off the chicken be- ways will be plenty of poor fish. see undisputed claim to the state high championship of the} born board of education. year, but it meant also that that honor was attained by! ‘ally cherished th ideal cab hepseaaie Ford resigned the other day | \4 1.1929 by NEA TMS HAS HAPPENED NUS, amateor arenarte weiter. DAILY SHEPHERD, tearne eee you,” Bert Magnus greet. | ed bis Sunday afternoon caller with | surprising cordiality. you a visit if I didn't have the aerve to butt in. You're certainly ag industrious chap!” : “industrious — yes!” Magnus agreed with’ a bitter twist of his Mouth. “And @ fat lot it’s got me. (¢ L badn’t been eo tndustrious last aight, poor Cora woulda’t be in jail nbw. [ll never forgive myself for not meeting her after the the- |! ater as I promised. The truth ts, 1 forget everything when [I'm ab sorbe@ in tinkering with this fool varo of mine. But all the success ‘a the world wouldn't make up to me tor causing that poor girl one ‘sour's stay in a dirty jail.” “I wish Cora could have heara nim cay that,” Dundee thought, as Magnus took 68 bis a0se glasses and polished them very hard to re- move the moisture whicb bad sud- denly misted the lenses. Aloud he arrange bail the Gret thing tomor. tow after court opens.” “1 wish to heaven | bad the money to go on ber bail myscit,” Magnus worrled, running his left distractedly dark. fore it is placed upon the table. | * ee hq is one who has | about the Philij S. A FURTHER STUDY OF DEAF- NESS (Second article of series) The acuteness of hearing is gen- erally stronger in youth, A child will hear a pin drop when an older person will miss the sound. Too much cof- fee, tea, quinine or alcohol is thought to lessen the acuteness of hearing. The reason we do not hear when we are swallowing or yawning is that the custachian tube which comes from the mouth to the middle ear is tem- porarily blocked during the yawn or the swallow. Because of this tube, we have the rule to open the mouth | when blowing the nose hard, as blow- | ing the nose against the mouth closed | may alter the pressure of the Eus- tachian tube and cause a temporary deafness. Very loud or grating noises are hazards to hearing. Soldiers and sailors exposed to the noise of artil- lery maneuvers may be affected fre- quently, or those who work in boiler factories, or steel riveters of build- ings who often find that the sense of hearing is lessened as the days go by. When there is a sudden loud | noise such as a shot or dynamite go- | ing off close to the ear the ear-drum | may be punctured, especially if the mouth is closed at the time of th explosion. When the noise is not so violent but more continuous, so that the sense of hearing becomes fa: tigued, that kind of deafness may re: sult known as the “boiler-makers deafness.” The symptoms of approaching deafness are, first, a gradual loss of the ability to hear fine sounds; sec- ~ — | ond, ringing in the ears; third, dizzi- i where some-j ness. Contrary to popular mark in the world. but they are pret- | body is always just about to do some- | swimming thing opinion, does not harm the ear by letting water get into it if the ear- ippine: Copyright, 1829, NEA Scrvice, Inc.) | drum is still whole. If the drum is ruptured there is some danger, as The brendfruit, with the cocoanut/ water may enter the middle ear and It’s going to be a White Christmas | Douglas fir. Service, Inc. “I'll stand by, no matier whet they say she earnestly. ever bad, Dundee. I was a fool to ander, | guess, but 1 got the idca do better absolutely on my own, Bot tied to a mother's apron strings. have got twenty or thirty thousand out of them, if I'd known how com- pletely my hand was ruined.” "t you use it at all?” Dundee “I'm homesick ae the devil,” hej asked. acknowledged with e sigh, “but I've got a stubborn streal - talked eo big before I left home. and I hate to go back with empty pockets and — this.” He held out “Your band was — burt after you left home?" Dundee asked. “Yes, and I've never had the lite i if H ii Bg The thumb ts all ft to space with iting. But the a- learned to write or my career as ve been way. ro with en- g < 5 EPs 8 g ily Hi +o i #2, i & $ i i o gz £6 He : 7 a5 Z E35 { § oe fiiz i ‘and banana, furnished the chief food/ cause infection. of the natives of the Pacific Islands. Henry Incidentally, this consisted not only of establishing | from his membership in the Dear- for plenty of people who a year ago' Nearly a fourth of the merchant-| er stick anything into the ear small- Mr. Ford were cuccersiul investors. Wail Street ‘able timber of the United States is|er than the elbow. Many people de- cicaned them. In taking care of your ears, the old- fashioned rule is a good one—to nev- | stroy their ear drums or cause an in- fection by attempting to clear out the ear-wax with such objects as tooth- picks and hairpins, A common cause of ordinary deaf- ness is the accumulation of hard- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to tim, care of The Tribune, Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ened ear-wax against the ear-drum, but the wisest plan for one so affect- ed is to leave the ear strictly alone and consult a physician who can syringe the wax out without endang- ering the ear drum. Besides being the means of hearing, the ear has several other important Posts in the body. It is also your balancer or your means of recogniz- ing if you are in a state of equili- brium. It is the inner ear that lets you know whether you are ing on your head, turning around, or ly- ing on your side. Deafened people do not do so well in high diving into water as those Possessing the normal hearing sense. This is because their balancing canals are also likely to be affected, and once under water they may not know which is the way to the top. They do have an advantage over most of us in that it is very difficult for them to feel dizzy or seasick. In seasick- ness it is thought that the equili- brium finders of the inner ear be- come tired out in trying to send mes- sages while the body is subject to the sudden and perpetual symptoms due to the veers of the boat. Since deaf- ened people do not have such a sen- sitive equilibrium, they do not become fatigued as readily, and do not have to have two or three days for their “sea legs” to arrive. (Continued in tomorrow's article) QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS (Bright's Disease) Question: E. J. P. asks: “I: Bright's Disease fatal. or do people with it live as long as the average person? What are the symptoms?” Answer: Many people who discover they have Bright's Disease adopt bet- | ter habits of living to cure it or, in j any case, often live a good many | Years after this disease is discovered. m | Incipient Bright's Disease is very dif- or = ee, the tierce temper of her grandfather terrify her, for she had Big Buck of the Lonesome Hills to protect her, to shield her against every storm of life, to be the father of the new little lives which would one day make the old homestead ring with happy taughter.’” He laid the script down upon the desk. “That's &@ swell conclusion you have, Mag- aus. The fans will eat it up.” “Cora thought maybe | ought to have Madge and Big Buck walking band ta hand up the bill into the setting sun, with apple blossoms drifting down about them.” Magnus worried. “What do you think? to me like that’s been done “I think your own conclusion ts Gine.” Dundee assi bim menda- clously. “Ob, sorry!” be exclaimed, as bis elbow knocked a book off the edge of the desk. He stopped te retrieve it, saw that the front cover had Gown back, revealing the Gyleat, on which was inscribed: “Herbert 8S. Magnus, Ri Calif, January 10, 1924." eee SCY/OU'VE been working at this game quite E 28 if eat i I ie i Fl he Ht | fit i Bi Ef i fF i 1 ! | fi E if "i Es H ef Z Fe g : ft ie i i 32 H i : | i , ficult to diagnose and almost impos- sible for the patient to ever diagnose. It requires @ very complete physical examination, including an examina- nem of the blood pressure, urinalysis, e (Lime) Question: H. F. M. asks: “What foods contain lime, and of what use is lime in the human body?” Answer: Lime is one of the most valuable minerals in the body enc goes to make up a large part of the bony structure. All vegetables con- tain some lime, the non-starchy veg- etables being particularly rich in this element, (Dirt-eating) Question: Mother writes: “I have | @ child two years old who eats clay jor other dirt at every opportunity. What makes a child do this, and how may I stop him?” {is i robably only child gets into because he is not kept gue® F ff iy

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