The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 14, 1929, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1929 The Bismarck Tribune Ap Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) + Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarcs us second class mai) matter. Beorge D. Mann ................ President and Publisher Sebecription tates Payable in Advance ‘Daily by carrier, per year Daily by mail, per year ‘in Bismarck) + ally by, maul, per yeur, (in state. outside Bismarck) Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota » $7.20 + 1.20 5.00 6.90 Weekly by mail, in state, per year .... Weekly by mail. in state, three years for Weekly by mail outs'* of North Dako. Mer YEAT ....... cesses eee e ween seeeeeee 1.50 Member Audit Bureau of Circulatio ‘ Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news fot otherwise credited in this newspaper and isc the local news of spontaneous origin pub'ished herein. All rights of republication of all other matter hereis are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON The Real Boy at Christmas Who is the real boy at Christmas? The rapid ap- proach of Christmas brings us once more to that old ‘and interesting question: who gets the bigger kick out of junior’s new toys—junior, or junior’s daddy? A small boy turned loose in the toy department of a big store just before Christmas is an interesting and wist- ful sight; yet he is not half so wistful or interesting as his father usually is under the same circumstances. Similarly, on Christmas morning it is can't keep his eyes off of the new clectric train, the auto- matic whirligig or the toy set of structural steel pieces Sonny takes them all in, and crows with delight; but the light that shines in his father’s eyes is the light that never was on land or sca. Some day, no doubt, we shall have to start a move- ment to provide toys for grown-ups. Be honest, now; couldn't you=if you were sure no one would see, and laugh—spend a perfectly delightful afternoon down on your hands and knees playing with a toy train, or a regi- ment of Icad soldiers, or a miniature steam engine? Of course you could; but, like all the rest of us, you don't do it. The closest we come to it is when we steal half an hour with junior’s stuff—pretending that we are “showing him how it works.” All of this is rather puzzling. Underneath the dignity of the banker, the serious inteniness of the lawyer and the hard alterness of the factory hand there seems, in every instance, to lie concealed a wistful, slightly be- wildered small boy, who is forever out of place, forever disappointed, in this busy workaday world in which he as, unaccountably, taken his place. ‘That lost boy is forever with us. He comes close to the surface at Christmas time. Then, it seems, for a moment as if he could break loose and come into his own once more. But he never, quite, can make it. The world is always a bit too much for him. People might laugh—and a small boy fears ridicule more than he fears anything else on earth. But he betrays his presence, just the same. For a little While, Chrisimas brings us knowledge. Back of the pompous, energetic grown-up we can see the towsled head and wide eyes of the boy that used to be—the boy that never quite died, but that remains hidden, biding his the way he used to. Maybe that day will come, sometime. Aft fre all our efforts, all our ambitions, all our but attempts to make the world— it, at any rate—into a place where that lost boy can feet #t home? What we have never satisfies him. The world is never made to his liking. So, ridden by the insistent prodding of the lad he used to be, each man goes about the daily task, always hoping “that some day he will be able to look his juvenile self in the“eye and say, “There—doesn’! that suit you, at. last?” Radicals ‘The word “radical,” as we use it in this country, has been a word to frighten children. It represents every- thing that we fear and hate; uncouth and bewhiskered men, dangerous dreamers, long-haired meddlers who would tear down our old institutions and launch us.on uncharted and dangerous seas of experiment. As it happens, though, we don’t really understand the word. If we did, we might realize that our greatest Tadicals are not our Socialists or our Communists, but our wealthy, conservative industrialists. Rodney Dutcher recently pointed this fact out very clearly. Washington heard two proposals looking toward the abolition of war the other day. One of them came from Berirand Russell, famous Eng- lish Socialist. Russell proposed that war be ended by control of essen- tial raw materials. He would have such materials denied “tO all belligerents, thus crippling them so that war would be impossible. Russell admitted that his idea was somewhat visionary, and sald it would take years of education and study be- fore it could be tried. _ The other anti-war proposal came from Edward N. Murley, of Chicago, the very wealthy industrialist. Hurley's idea was the same as Russell's, except that it was more drastic. , He pointed out that a dozen or more industrialists of three or four different nations, by their control of raw materials such as rubber, copper and the like, could nd war overnight. He wants them to organize and get tly:to do it. Unlike Russell, he doesn’t think the plan is pary.- He doesn't think it will take “years of e@ijeation and study.” He thinks it can be put into “ eltegt ‘and he wants to see it done. {Ga-we have the strange spectacle of a conservative and “Wealuliy. industrialist going far beyond a daring Socialist t si We ‘needn't be surprised, though. Our biggest. business Acatfers are.our greatest radicats. "They are changing the eomditions of \ife-with a speed to make the theorists : We don't notice it—so we call them conservatives. Proposed such a radical change in industrial kefeller put into effect? Whoever was is as radical spatches credited to it or | ly dad who | in proposing a remedy for the ills that beset medern | tically | —Provide just under 40 per cent of the university's total operating income, In other words, for every four doilars that the student spends on his college course, the university spends six more. It ts paying more of the cost of his education | than he is, Obviously, then, the student who refuses to study, who spends his timé as an idler and a “collegiate” do-no‘hiug. is literally cheating his college. For it should be noted that similar conditions prevail at every college and unt- versity in the land. No student really pays his way. ~1 HEARD WE HAD New BOARDERS HERE. BUT I AIN'T HAD A CHANCE “To meet You AS* YouR FRAU VET! ~T'm SAKE HOOPLE, TH’ masoR's BROTHER, AN’ Y'SEE I'm WORKIN’ DAYS AN’ NIGHTS NOW, AS A SANTA CLAUS IW TH TOY DEPARTMENT oF A DOWNTOWN STORE ! .. pRoP IN AM’ SEB ME SOMETIME | AT CARSON'S -m~ SUST ASK FOR OL” SANTAS HELPER ~ The Danger poh | ‘The self-respecting American lawyer is an honor to , his profession and he is a majority in his profession. | But the high standards of worthier members of the bar cannot conceal the low standards of conduct of a con- siderable number of lawyers. These latter are a minority. But there are enough of | them to challenge attention, to lower the esteem in which | the profssion is held and to interfere seriously with the administration of justice. wAN ODD OCCUPATIONS ~ BUT quite AMUSING £ | When the lay public declares there is too much sharp | practice on the part of lawyers defending criminals, too | many framed defenses, too much subornation of prejury, | too much exploitation of involved procedure in order | to delay trials, the bar association cannot dodge the issue |by trying to minimize the number of lawyers guilty uf such practices. Pointing to the best of the bar won't | hide the worst. | ‘The public makes no charges in this direction not al- |teady made by some of the most eminent lawyers and | jurists in the land. It is not indicting all lawyers. It {is indicting only practices so patent, so common with a ' certain class of lawyers that the nation is in danger of | accepting them as necessary evils in a system of justice which it is asked to regard as too established, too time- honored to change. Zz same time. a Zz News Travels Fast When you stop to think about it, the real marvel in connection with Byrd's flight over the South Pole isn't the fact that he made the flight so much as the fact that the whole world knew all about it the next day. The speed with which modern communication is car- ried on is an amazing thing. A couple of decades ago Perry went to the North Pole; but it was months before —- anyone knew anything about it. Now news travels more | ® B ° Perhaps swiftly than anything else on earth, | ARBS | errs aa ee The greatest battle of the war of 1812—Jackson's fight | © nr g 3 i i 4 Es at New Orleans—was fought after peace had actually ‘ ee stricken by war. But been signed. It took a month to get the news across | internal sore rsa the Atlantic. What a contrast with today, where a trip <ppbbopien * . e to the South Pole is known all over the world less than 24 hours after it happens! waterways idea because he greater moral, sensible and wellbred thinks it will bring down the price the road. { Watch Out for the Flu sf eae 5. This is an excellent time of year to keep one eye} One thing you can borrow easily cocked on that familiar old enemy, the flu. and don't have to pay. back is trou- The flu is a puzzling sort of malady. It is almighty | ble easy to acquire; a few hours exposure to bad weather bp Avoid exposure, keep warmly dressed, get plenty of fresh air at night and don't let any little cold get the better of you—and, if one does, call a doctor at once. The flu is abroad in the land, and there's no sense in| trifling with it. If you get a touch of it, lie low until it is gone. He who hesitates gets run over. ‘THIS HAS HAPPENED jthe other boarders at the Rhodes |“mealers,”. among them a half- R. LAWRENCE SHARP was mye pelo MOGARTH, cald ce | House toward Cora Barker? I eup|dozen young men and two girls still endeavoring to obey her, Senator Nye’s Advice oa the ore cor of tums. |pose you know ehe has been re-| who, by their professionally probing | down to the minutest.detail, when i RHO! ing hemee, se | leased on bail, furnished by Hart-| questions, betrayed themselves as| Dundee made excuse to leave Bee <(Dexits take Journal) “ signr Seas se. | man, manager of the Little Queen?” | reporters taking this method of|the table before dessert was served. Senator Nye Dakota yesterday urged the non INDEK. Sus’ aeteee | “I'm glad to hear it.” Dundee| getting news and “human interest” | He had heard « boy's soprano pi {farmers to rally to the support of the Federal Farm tive, LIEUTENANT | said heartily. “All of us feel sin-| angles the sensational case. sand “ng | board in its “warfare” with the commission grain dealers. ate, Seepicton at once Salle pia tei i orphan ing: “Telegram.” and bad seen Mrs. While we are not at this time competent to deter- sa rin aceeses of pi hialprovaiee yrange gs rire Boeiar tone va wine the Kind of “warfare” in-which the Farm boart|(™ ~ stylae tad wae bee chs sien, Geeecee Ap lumnntns at she | Socetse the: Wires, tt anlgtt Se Sor: and the commission men are involved, we do feel, how- —— ‘eanihi house, be found Sr. Sharp, boom (Bist 5 i 8 ever, that inasmuch as the farmers for a number of one ane. or putt years have demanded some form of farm relief, it is in- when abe confesses cumbent upon them to rally to the support of the Farm | allies dias board with the feeling that at least they have a govern- oar: fl deder sangicien mental organization which is desirous of aiding them. are: HENRY DOWD. HR. and Chairman Legge of the Farm board, in an address be- Witree eevee kee temee, fore the American Farm Bureau Federation yesterday, whe hes ee ‘etsh mes. te urged that the agricultural interests cooperate not only worthy jAGnUs, with the board but among themselves, adding that “co- bag re acti iss |ward the boarding-house. operation is the keystone in the arch of agricultural ana 0 GARTH WITNESS OUT ‘ON BAIL” the f prosperity.” was the strea: er headline. s B the utterance . - “ ; by CAPR. Bes, re parrot, to the mewspaper ac- volua- Minnesota Editors Start Something shen be Gade io seGer- | count, the preliminary hearing bad ence to ‘ot whem che lived (Minneapolis Journal) ‘The ‘vie. | been exremely brief, sufficient only bot Congress yesterday heard a new voice from the North- ae oman to justify Cora's being granted bail weren't west. It discovered, to the of many of its mem- Sati AVES. ta Hew as & material witness against Emil Sbe bers, that Minnesota is not an , selfish com Benale, es Sevier, regarded by the press after a monwealth, seeking only its own ends and reckless of Geaves, one as the Suspect. . She's what may happen to other sections of the Union. trank and finde a But if there was little news, the tray in The Statement to Congress emphasis, np sta® photographers bad not been Published as a page advertisement in the W: roa & ee |\dle. There_were snapshots of all| 1.0309 1 editors the dtary sats 4 the boarders taken OR DAMIEL GRIFRL wee cope im the case of Paige thetie commonplace And ail but a few are “rural” Nestes See nition wimetag Dusare |and Walter Styles, as they lett for|much madeup circulation and contacts are largely among te charge of the cone. work that moraiag. Site Sone Geen Population. Their editors know, none better, the NOW GO ON WITH TAR STORY end flung herself, state of the farmer mind in this region on tariff revi- CHAPTER XXVI vacant chair sion as a means of farm relief. nearly noon Bonsle “He ‘What do these experts in farmer opinion tell congress? an Laser Among other things— r Dundee left police headquarters, That the Tariff Bill should be passed quickly with adequate farm rates. That this is more important, from the stand- - point of farm prosperity, than anything congress can now do, That the Bill's increased farm rates mean a larger home market for farm That efforts to make indiscriminate reductions of existing industrial rates would, besides involv- i ir i i i it e | EF Z 3 f 3 iF iz g 4 5 g i Board's building of marketing Daley Gbepberd, as the bearer whe had Ged trom the|“Where have you been all my life, pene adhais yo hed rated an in-| Precious?” ne 8 ustrial rates would threaten terview “studle| “Looking you,” Dundes FO tery Kotamony labor with unem- “ever ‘he required thelr servives. portrait.” sut ad | laughed, though he colored to the ent, and that this would react seriously on ~ The telephone company bed been | *lisingiy told | roots of his air. aerioulture, woes nest cuales ie i. git given b-rusb order for a direct line | DUaéee sothiag al Thee vo west make up tor beat western) pe mere tame: oe aa 4 tobe Installed trom Dundes’s thiré- wee ee een Drwety | thmney” th Cragg Diggs eet ; i HH | af floor room in the : fi if g i i F it al iy et : i i i is ie if 534 ad i ¢ i 5 i 3 iil itt pe Ht i 1 FRUIT JUICES ‘There is @ tantalizing and refresh-|mint leaves can also be squeezed ou: |ing flavor to fruits, and for this rea- json they are often used in flavoring drinks and desserts. Real fruit juices are not only pleasant to the appetite, but they possess real value in con- taining important minerals which are necessary for the body. fruit juices possess these minerals which have a tendency to neutralize alkaline reserve of the blood. Three of the best fruit juices are orange juice, cider anu ae Hare 2 possess a di e value ati fe enegry soon a: wholesome juices. ing it through @ cloth bag. A potato ‘They may be used for eliminative | of a perforated drum and a plunzer fasts, as they do not require much |inside. This type of ricer serves very effort of the body to digest them and | they do not interfere with its efforts|very convenient where small quanti- at eliminating impurities. also the reason why many patients | those who wish juice in larger quan- living exclusively on the fruit juice | tities, there are several fruit presscs diets for a time are able to continue /and fruit mills, the latter grinding jwith their daily activities and often notice an increase in strength at the/from the pulp. Every home should oe fruit juice which are health prgmot-|can move them about with my finz- 9 f culing the frat flee imitations. sometimes, the |Selling the fruit ju . Almost any of the fruits can be| whatever, but would like to be rid of % made into wholesome drinks. Among ithem. Would also like to know what —Agnes Maude Royden. |these we find orange, lemons, grap>-|causes them.” ** *& fruit, limes, apples, grapes, pineapple, pl —Cowper. | pomegranates. plums, and in fact any (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) jot the juicy fruits or berries. Pleas- it drinks can also be made from 's any of the dried fruits by soaking }faulty metabolism and the need for . {them overnight in water and then /living slowly simmering the juice and the jfruit for a few minutes, straining out the pulp. Among these we find un- sulphured peaches, figs, prunes, pears, ‘We have al right There vegetal in insufficient clothing usually suffice to give it a foot-| hurry along or we'll re ue “Obedience Pte ell the right to which kewise aa. Sa same hold. And, once it gets established, it is hard to shake ses 8 command.” —Emerson.; Bankers of Louisa county, Iowa, en- |¥or example the juice can be extract- off. If it is trifled with it can lay a man up for weeks. statistical fact that there are ee tertained the local vigilantes at an ap- jed from raw rhubarb and mixed with 612 broadcasting stations in this} “To some of us at all times, and to! propriate event—a “shoot.” water and honey with perhaps a lit- {tle beet coloring. The juice fr--- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer Personal questions on health and diet addressed to tim, care of All of the acidity in the body and add to the|#nd used as can sassafras root, lico- A very simple method of extracting ‘They the juice is first tc mash the fruit with a potato masher or fork. or by ricer is sold on the market consisting well as a fruit press as well, and is This 4S/ties of fruit juice are desired. For the fruit and separating the juicc have some sort of convenient juicc There is quite a bit of differenec, in|extractor. Fruit juice can also be jthe pure crushed fruit juices and the |pottled and pasteurized for future flavorings in artificial drinks which | use, using just the same processes a: can be manufactured at a much less} you would in canning fruit. cost, and most of the drinks and punches are made from artificial colorings, cane sugar, water and some acid, usually citric acid or phosphoric acid. It is a good idea to encourage |three or four lumps on my head. They drinking fountains to serve the rei QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cysts on Head Question: T. J. writes: “T have are about as big as marbles, and | ers just like a little piece of loose bone under the skin. There is no pain Answer: The cysts you write about ‘are probably fatty tumors caused from an unnatural growth of fat cells & seat in the Third Housc a i & i i i Be i 3 i ; 23 Hy it is i Hi | E a4 f ’ it . | | i if 3 s q g & fe | : ill He i i E 3 | | sez al) i i i Pp

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