The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 7, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE7, 1930 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- narck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 4s second class mail matter. Seorge D. Mann. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance * Daily by carrier, per year .......... Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year ‘Gin state, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by. mail, outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail, in state, per year....... eee Weekly by mail, in state, three years for...... eekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, + per year ....,... ‘Weekly by mail ; ye ? Member Audit Bureau of PPA Member of The Associated Press } The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use Yor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or ‘ot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the jocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All tights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) . Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. i | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON : Bringing the Navy to Bismarck + The project to bring here a government motor launch and a dingey to be used on the Missouri river for train- eng in the line of naval kindergartenism is another of ‘hose moves of which there can not be too many for tine good of Bismarck. | For here the future which the boys and girls of the pity face when they leave school is a serious problem in the absence of industries for training in trades and tech- nical activities. Obviously the city boys can not all turn jawyers and doctors. Nor can all the rural boys even cemain on the farms. Something has got to be done to d4ind other avenues of avocation for both. } Now, it so happens that the United States navy is an ideal field for boys from states such as North Dakota to devote a few years of their live lives to. Not solely be- sause of the opportunities it affords to see the world, thus broadening the mind, gaining useful discipline and giving a breathing spell to mature a boy's outlook. but Decause the navy has become the great university of the common people. . In its 50 courses of cultural and manual education the navy offers boys from cities like Bismarck the opportuni- ties the Eastern youth finds in his home’ city with var- {ed industries and technical enterprises to afford trade eraining, but which here and in so many other cities of his plains country are lacking. A few years service in she navy, therefore, can be utilized to study some of these correspondence courses or be devoted to actual technical training aboard ship, so that when the recruit Sompletes his enlistment he can return to civil life pre- pared to pursue some trade for a livelihood. | ‘The presence of a motor launch such as proposed will Jo far to make the Boy Scouts of Bismarck naval minded ‘and fit them in some of the fundamentals of a sailor's tife, prepared to serve their country and get for them- selves in so doing some craft from which to derive their ‘uture wage-earning existence. For these reasons the idea implanted here by Chief Metalsmith Benjamin Franklin Brown was a splendid and timely suggestion. The sooner it is carried out, the retter. Leaving Something at Hoover’s Door Congress is finally at the point of leaving a more or ess misbegotten offspring at the door of the white house. After more than a year of tariff revision prostituted to dolitical conspiracy the two houses have come to the stage of compromise where their previous passage of the dawley-Smoot bill can be adjusted upon disputed pro- visions and rates and the bill submitted for executive ac- don. The tariff bill is part of the farm relief program un- iertaken by the president, but since it was launched in she house, its status in that respect has been widely di- verted, due to the coalition between lukewarm or even rostile Republican elements in the senate combining with the traditional enemy of the tariff, the Southern Democrats—one bent on humiliating President Hoover, he other seeking selfish partisan advantage—and to the aid guard Republican element of the East typified in Senator Joseph R. Grundy, of Pennsylvania. Grundy and his type did more than the coalition, in fact, to be- sloud the minds of the people on the tariff. He gave a verformance that tended to place the tariff in the public nind in the light of a system of greed by taxation for ‘he benefit of industrial selfishness, which in its essence he tariff system of course is not. Fundamentally the dea of the tariff is to combine the production of revenue vith restriction of imports so that native manufactures may secure the home market to themselves and thus {ford employment to American labor. Buying at home 8 essential if there also is to be selling at home. ‘Thus the original intent of the bill, to afford relief to sgriculture, was based on an increase of rates on farm wroduce which would keep out competitive produce from ather countries and give the American farmer a larger * epg of the greatest home market in the world, While at the same time building that market up by keep- more consumers employed in the nation’s industries through tariff giving them protection. These consider- ations must not be forgotten in passing judgment on ‘the deformed Hawley-Smoot measure that is to come out of congress just in time to be made the football of poli- tics in the November congressional election. Anyhow, the effect of criticised portions of its duties 4s only theoretical. In actual operation it will be more clearly seen just what effect these assailed rates will | Produce. Farmer and industrial worker will be inter- ested in this respect. Actually some of the things that ‘will happen may not be due at all to the tariff, but more to other economic factors. The East will be critical of ny increased cost of living that may follow, while the farming West will hail any higher prices for its produce with exactly the opposite feeling. Then the East will also be critical of any adverse turn in our foreign trade, for with protests from other countries against higher duties on their staple products any loss of foreign commerce is bound to be laid at the door of the bill. President Hoover has indicated that he will give these phases intensive consideration before he acts on the bill. ‘There is hardly the speck of a doubt as to what he will do, and that is approve the measure. It has been re- ieved of the most odious provisions which the senate trove to put in so as to stultify Hoover, and those were the debenture bounty plan for farm products and the of the flexible provision for executive modifica: tion of duties in emergencies, such as when, congress not being in session, there could be no legislation. As the Provision has been reshaped finally, the president seems even gainer by the attempt to embarrass him. [| Palpably the excuse of the senate coalition, that the if) e provision transferred to the executive legisiative /@wer was false and for political confusion only. The ‘Making of freight rates, for instance, transfers similar “uthority to the: Interstate Commerce commission, but tho hears the coalition senators raving that therein is * | Usurpation of the powers of congress by a branch of 9 executive department? The Walton League Meeting Fish and game resources are a business asset which no state can afford to neglect or to treat merely as a mat- ter of idle recreation. That is why the state meeting of ; the Izaak Walton league here next week is such an im- | portant conference of sportsmen interested in seeing North Dakota handle these resources wisely. North Dakota is not so highly developed in the matter | of fish. The character of the terrain does not lend itself to this form of wild life. Minnesota on the east and Montana on the west do. Those states have the streams and lakes for propagating fish. Moreover, in Montana the mountain streams and lakes are ideal trout preserves and trout fishing is the beau ideal of outdoor piscatorial sport. North Dakota, on the other hand, has only the muddy Missouri and the slough-like lakes as habitats for its fish, and this narrows the supply down to certain plebeian varieties not considered gamy in comparison to the what one finds in the neighboring state waters. Nev- ertheless North Dakota's fish potentialities are import- ant and worth developing. It is in its feathered game that North Dakota shines. | It has the making of a feathcred paradise in this respect in the presence of wild duck and prairie chickens, grouse and Chinese pheasants, The ponds and lakes which do not afford good fishing waters are idcal resorts for the wild water fowl. Nature, more or less, claims this phase of game life as its own activity. The regular seasonal migrations of the wild water fowl north and south keep up the supply. They are not fowl which the state can stock. If the supply is to be preserved the only aid that a state can extend is in the closed seasons which permit Propagation to increase the numbers. But in the matter of upland birds, both restriction and stocking can build up this game resource. Both of these practices are being applied in North Dakota to the dissemination of the Chinese pheasant over its terri- tory. But in its handling of the propagation of game North Dakota has hardly kept pace with other states, which have gone about the job with system and science. Penn- sylvania, for instance, almost denuded of game, under the regime of Gifford Pinchot as governor and Dr. Joseph Kalbfus as commissioner, was made over into a paradise in which deer, bear, elk, quail, pheasants and rabbits again abound. In this state, charge the sportsmen, the stocking with | birds like the pheasant has been carried on almost solely by individual initiative through such organizations as the Izaak Walton league. The money realized in hunting li- censes, instead of being applied to purchase of young birds to release on the various game preserves, it is charged, has been frittered away in game commission expenses. This issue will come up in the election in the form of a referendum to approve the law passed by the legislative session of 1929 creating a one-man game ad- ministration. In this way the overhead can be lowered, the sportsmen feel, and more of the game and fish in- come devoted to propagating activities. The Walton league is planning to make a deep im- press on the public by its mecting here. It wants Da- kotans to become fish and game minded, to take a great- er interest in its wild life, such as it is. In a state which once numbered among 1.s dwellers such a mighty hunter as Theodore Roosevelt, the goal and ideal of the league are fitting. The more such ideas permeate the public, the better for North Dakota. Insofar as the Walton league can increase the respect of Dakotans for the state’s wild life resources it will be doing the common- wealth a benefit. | Editorial Comment | Typhoid on the Way Out (Detroit News) An annual report by the American Medical association shows that in 1910, seventy-four cities of the United States, with an aggregate population of 22,286,000, had a typhoid death rate of 20.58 per 100,000 inhabitants. Last year these same seventy-four cities, with a population of 33,984,261, had a typhoid death rate of 1.56, That is to say, if there had been no progress in clean- ing up water supplies and milk supplies, in constructing sewers and in general sanitation, as well as in the treat- ment of typhoid cases and the inoculation of large num- bers against the disease, the deaths from typhoid in these seventy-four cities last year would have numbered, on the 1910 basis, 6,976. Actually, the number of deaths was 531. Here is shown a saving of over 6,400 lives. The num- ber of cases of sickness avoided was many times greater. During the Boer war the British army suffered sev- erely from the ravages of typhoid. In the World war, typhoid was rare; the soldiers were inoculated against it. The time is coming when typhoid will be as rare in a civilized country as leprosy. America Leads the World in Murder (Literary Digest) In deaths by violence, America still leads the world. And the rate continues to creep upward. In 141 American cities, with a total population of about 38,000,000, there occurred 3,993 deaths from homicide in 1929, or a rate of 10.5 per 100,000. This compared with 10.4 in 1928. These figures are supplied by Dr. Frederick L. Hoffman, who has been making a study of such statistics for thir- ty years. “Of all the problems, social and economic, con- fronting the nation, none is of greater importance than its growing insecurity of human life,” he writes in the Spectator, an insurance journal. Among the ing facts found in the report is that whereas the homicide rate for thirteen Canadian cities was 1.7 per 100,000 in 1928, and that for England and ‘Wales was only 0.5 per 100,000, in the United States reg- istration area in the same year it was 8.8. An “excessive Southern homicide death rate” is cited by Dr. Hoffman. e Pointing out that “constant attention is being di- rected to the city of Chicago as the center of organ- ized crime and criminals,” Dr. Hoffman notes that the city’s homicide death rate was 12.7, “or not much above the average for the country at large.” New York City, “likewise often referred to as a center of organized crime,” had a rate of 7.1, “decidedly below the average for the | country at large.” The Salt Water Laureate (Philadelphia Public Ledger) ‘There is a gesture of the times in Prime Minister Mac- Donald's choice of John panelled ae pees faurenie at land. Robert Bridges was a classicist, a man = ret in step with the England of Victorian tradition. John Masefield is a singer of modern England, a salty, | earthy singer, gloring in the life of calloused hands. He is the man who wrote “The Everlasting Mercy,” @ poem of lowly men raised to spiritual heights; “Dauber,” of a crude sailorman who learned to paint pictures out of his soul; “The Widow in the Bye-Street,” also of humble folk. But Mr. Masefield also wrote “Reynard, the Fox,” the classic of English fox hunting. And he wrote “Salt Water Ballads,” which exalt Great Britain's traditional pride—the sea and the ships. Other English laureates have known poverty and strug- gles, but probably none has known them better than Mr. Masefield. Born obscurely in Liverpool fifty-five years ago, his early life is little known. At the age of 14 he went to sea and for a number of years sailed before the mast on wind-jammers.’ Then he tramped ashore, and finally came to America on a vagabonding trip. Here he finally worked in a Greenwich Village saloon in New York. Quitting that job, he returned to England, and a few years later spent several months in the company of W. B. Yeats, the Irish poet—who, oddly, was a strong candidate for the laureateship to which Mr. Masefield has just been named. : Mr. Masefield’s self-education flowered into “Salt Water Ballads” in 1902, and from then on his face was |, set toward literary success, which first arrived when his “The Everlasting Mercy” won the Edmond de Polignac prize of the Royal Society of Literature in 1912. In the eighteen years since, Mr. Masefield has produced about forty volumes of poetry, fiction and drama. Now risen to comparative wealth, he has never lost contact | with the humble life of which he first wrote, and England | unanimously applauds his present honor, a feather not | only in Mr. Masefieid'’s cap but also in the cap of the MacDonald government. | Poor Little Red Riding Hood! | A , i } iy } ———— ) Today Is the Anniversary of | —$—$— $$ << _—_ RECIPROCITY TREATY On June 7, 1854, the Marcy - Elgin | treaty between the United States and Great Britain, which regulated reciprocal commercial relations with Canada and Newfoundland, was signed. Under terms of the treaty the cellulose, the raw material of paper, may soon be obtained from the air. Some day that’s going to be news. natural products of each country were to Be exchanged without duty. The articles exchanged were to oe the produce of the farm, forest, mine and fisheries. The treaty also provided for the liberal fishing privileges for American fishermen and mutual transportation rights. Although the treaty was to remain in force for 10 years it was actually in operation for 11. At the outset it was beneficial to both contracting Parties but as time progressed the preponderance of commercial adven- tage was heavily in favor of Canada. One of the reasons why the United} States abrogated the treaty was that sistance to Confederate refugees in {|their hostile movements along the border during the Civil War. meeting with great success in Bom- bay. There's a case where ignorance :of American dialogue is bliss. have engaged in a horseshoe pitching tournament, you may expect they will be called before-a naive Senate in- vestigating committee to explain all about those “ringers.” men might get enough exercise from log rolling, they no doubt feel there is more at stake in horseshoe pitch- ing. Canada extended sympathy and as- © 1950 LY NEA BEGIN HERE TODAY of losing obliged to ject her je will be NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVIIL “y MAY be late.” Phillipa thought of the words time and again, as siz o'clock came, six-thirty, seven, seven-thirty, and Alan had not appeared to take ber to dine. She grew fretful, and rebuffed her mother's attempts to talk with her. The one black look she gave her father silenced him when he offered a sulky greeting to her in the kitchen, where she was putting the electric fron to heat. Mr. and Mrs. West had decided Rot to interfere with her. Both knew she would not tolerate it, and Mrs. West had begged, that for Phillipa’s own good, they let her alone. “She'll leave if we quarrel with her anymore, and 1 want her here, where I can keep an eye on her, at least part of the time,” she had said, Her mother saw she was upset, and wanted to comfort her. It-eut her to the heart to have Phillipa spurn her sympathy. She felt that she had in some manner failed her girl, little dreaming the truth that Phillipa, while of her flesh and blood, was no more kindred to her in spirit than the veriest stranger. The air of the household had grown difficult to breath by eight o'clock, It was all the strain that Phil- Mpa was laboring under, throwing a cloud over those who came in contact with her. Through her mind there went a continuous reel of pictures of Alan and\Natalle, to- gether here, there, everywhere. She could not console herself with the possibility that the train, Natalio’s train, was late. She had called up the Grand Central Sta- tion, and learned it had come in on time, BARBS i American talkies, it is reported, are xe * A British’ chemist predicts that ze Now that a group of congressmen xe * While you might think congress- | xe * awarded an honorable degree. Well, Judge Parker, who was rejected for! the office, was given a third degree, you recall. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | PTL ATT ] Quotations | ct a lg “So far as I know, there is but one living thing that, without provoca- ; tion, may be depended upon to take| the offensive against man. That is the King Cobra.” — Frank. H. Buck, collector of wild animals, * oe “The nearer women’s dress can ap- proach nudity, having regard to rea-/ sonable decency, the better it will be; for them.”—Sir William A. Lane. | x ok O* “The greatest single element in anyone's career is work.”—Mary Gar- Gen, opera singer. “We have with us always a noisy} smart aleck group that sneers in s* & Owen J. Roberts, newly-appointed SERVICE INC. i grad minutes after eight she was setting wild. Then Alan came. She saw him, from a window, jump out of a taxicab and pay the driver, with a wave of the hand that she knew meant the man was to keep the change. Well, he certainly looked happy. Seemed to have not the slightest idea of having committed an of- fense. Phillipa was so glad to see him that suddenly she was a bit less Teady to pounce on him; though she could cheerfully have wiped the smile off his face with a resound: ing slap. * She hurried to her room, and permitted her mother to admit Alan, knowing that neither would be likely to say anything that would embarrass her. Besides, she would not give them time. She wanted only @ moment or two to collect herself, along with her hat and wrap, before returning to the liv- ing room. When Alan saw her, the fire had gone out of her eyes, the hard, set look from her lips. She -was pen- sively quiet, but not martyr-like enough to be irritating. Remem- bering what Natalie had done to Alan, she wanted him to think that she, Phillipa, had implicit trust in him. But it was hard for her to keep from stamping her foot and de manding to know what he meant by keeping her waiting like that. Especially, as she saw in his eyes a light that reflected bubbling spirits. Alan, touched by her attitude, felt that an explanation of bis tar- diness was due her, even though he had prepared her to expect it. “I had to take Natalie home,” he said simply, as they walked a few blocks to a restaurant where they | had eaten once or. twice. Phillipa maintained a silence which she somehow kept from be ing sullen; perhaps because she tucked her hand in his arm for answer. “She had her sister Florence with her,” he added, and Phillipa tucked her arm a little tighter. “It would have been beastly to let them go up there alone to that house,” Alan went on, and was not aware that he was speaking apolo- getically. “You had ti: furnace started. didn’t yout” Phillipa asked, and she said it pleasantly. “Oh yes, yes, of course. But there were certain little things that I should have looked after before.” Phillipa smiled. She knew he was not looking at her. If his gaze was anywhere in particular, it was up toward the star-sprinkled sky. “And you had th aid there, and the groceries?” she queried. aturally I did everything Nat- alie asked me to do,” Alan an- swered. “But you know how it is, [her through it.” Phillipa, coming back to.a house that’s been closed up, I had to see} . : chorus at every conscientious effort toward better morals.”—Loring A. Schuler, editor of Ladies’ Home Jour- HAY FEVER UNNECESSARY Now that the summer and fall are coming, over @ million hay fever pa- tients are looking forward with dread to the new-mown hay, or rag weed, or golden rod, or any of the pollens which seem to cause their attacks to descend on them. With hay fever the attacks are usually seasonable, that is, the pa- tient at times when he is usually free from them. During the attack the nose itches, the eyes water and smart, patient sneezes and is extremely rest- Jess at night. The mucous mem- leranes of the nasal passages swell, causing @ contricted feeling and an excess of mucus is secreted. It should be remembered that a disease of this kind is really constitu- tional and the patient already has a congested mucous membrane which only needs the invasion of bacteria, or the breathing of dust or flower pollen to bring on an acute attack because of the congestion and serum already there. Many kinds of foblish advice are hay fever, but the cure is really very simple and depends entirely on dietetic treatment. The first thing to do if you have this disease is to take a short fast to cleanse the blood stream of excess accumulation of toxins and relieve the congestion in the mucous membrane. Water should be taken copiously to drink, and one enema should be used daily of one quart of warin water. The congestion in the mucous membranes can be relieved by stimu- lating the skin by using two sponge or shower baths daily, using a rough towel afterwards to rub down the body vigorously until the entire skin surface is glowing. This treatment will increase the activity of the mil- lions of pores and increase elimina- tion of body poisons. You witl find that the hay fever symptoms disap-/| pear in a very short time with this/ method of treatment, but if the con- dition is chronic you must persist faithfully with your diet for some time in order that your mucous mem- branes which have become virtually eliminating organs may be restored to normal. This change is necessarily slow, but it can be hastened with the use of local actinic rays directed into the nose where the membranes are irritated. The diet should be free for a con- siderable length of time of all starch and sugar foods. In most cases it is also advisable to discontinue milk and cream for a time. A little butter may be used. but not over two or three ounces daily. Keep up the skin elimination and try to sweat each day through exer- jsupreme court justice, was recently | nal. te Husband ner with them?” Phillipa could not suppress this sarcasm. “No, she didn’t,” Alan told her shortly, but Phillipa sensed that there was a great deal more be- hind the words than he wanted ber to know. Her question had brought up in Alan’s mind for the hundreth time @ certain query. Had Natalie, or had she not, been on the verge of asking him to stay and dine with her and Florence? Another thing; he could almost swear that she had wanted him to kiss her- when they met at the station. He wished now that he had; probably wouldn’t have an- other chance. And he couldn't forget that warm, eager, reaching handclasp she had given him; the slight swaying of her body toward him, and the instant her eyelids had covered her eyes and hid what they had to tell. Perhaps it might have been differ- ent; he might have braved her displeasure and kissed her if Flor- ence had not been there. He had wondered then, and he wondered now, what Natalie's family thought of him. Mrs, Jayhunter wanted a reconciliation between him and Natalle, of course. But Florence had acted strangely. The girl had been different—a most unusual way for Florence to be. But then she was thinking of what Natalie had told her on the train, Faced with the possibility that Alan would refuse to become reconciled with her, Natalie had been forced to tell Florence of their And she had warned Flor- jainst being affectionately rative with him, lest he think that she’d been put up to it. eee MES. JAYHUNTER had tried to keep Florence from accompany- ing Natalie on her return home, but Natalie preferred to have her. She had a dread, that fairly made her sick, of failing with Alan. She would want someone, even Flor- ence, with her then. As it takes a great crisis to level all barriers between two persons who have failed in understanding, in most cases at least, and there was none for this, Natalie and Alan missed their moment of rushing to- gether with all else but their love forgotten. Natalie was chilled to the heart with disappointment. She had hoped that Alan would take her in his arms when they met and kiss her until she'd have to beg him to stop. Now, if anything was to come of her return, she would have to him to forgive her. She was will- ing to do that, but her dream of a perfect reconciliation was over. It couldn't ever be what she had hoped. On the way up to Hillshire, in Alan's car, which he had been keeping in New York, she talked with forced ease, telling Alan of Andrew, and why she had brought! Florence along. Not, however, a: Florence would have told it. The ca Hunter ‘RUTH DEWEY GROVES “Didn't she ask you to have din-,younger girl would have said frankly that she was pursuing the of objection, and it being ridiculous to crowd in after her when there Was so much more room in front. Every foot of the drive was poig- nantly familiar to Natalie. She and Alan had been over the route many times. She wondered if he recalled those times, too. Frequently she stole a sidelong glance at him. He had changed; not much, but enough to hurt her. There was a worn, haggard look about him. Perhaps she took a lit- tle too much responsibility for it unto herself, not knowing that Alan had lost a great deal of sleep tak- ing Phillipa out. At any rate, it softened her feel- ings toward him still further. It almost caused her to invite him to stay to dinner. But he hadn't kissed her. She couldn’t forget that. Oh, if he'd only kissed her in spite of everything! Another thing that caused her to hesitate—the desire to have him remain did not leave her—was that Alan showed no sign of wanting to stay. Although he did, very much, It would have been like opening up the gates of paradise to him. But on his mind was his promise to Phillipa to return, He was dreadfully afraid that Natalie would see how much he wanted to stay and, perhaps out of pity, tell him he might. That would be disastrous, He couldn't fail Phillipa, and if he re- fused Natalie, she would be cere tain to misunderstand and not ask bim again. He was tempted, as he was tak- ing his reluctant departure, to tell her some lie about a dinner engago- ment with “one of the boys.” But the searching quality of her eyes made such prevaricating unthink- able, Lord, what a beauty she was! How could he ever have been any- thing but blinded by her lovell- ness? She gave him her hand in part- ing, and Alan trembled over it. He let it go quickly. He thought, as he walked along with Phillipa, of the way Natalie's expression had changed then. He wished ho knew what thought bad flashed through her mind. Good lord, couldn’t she guess that it was impossible for him to hang on to her hand and keep his head? But suppose he wasn’t expected to keep his head? Suppose she really were willing to let bygones be by- gones? A touch of panic seized him. Had he spoiled everything? It was all & mess, but they might find a way out if Natalie didn’t give up. He only half heard what Phillipa vas saying to ‘him. (To Be Continued) cising and follow this with a cold shower. The sweats are best pro- duced by exercising and are more beneficial than by artificial means. ‘These rules are very casily followed 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. _ and they will bring about a very sat- isfactory cure so that all of the hay fields and pollens in the world would no longer affect you. | QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS The Mind of the Diabetic Question: R. H. asks: “Does dia- betes affect the mind? Should allow- ance be made for a diabetic who is addicted to the very reprehensible habit of lying?” Answer: Every cell and functior of the body is affected in the dis- order called diabetes, but this 1s alsc true of every disease of faulty meta- given these sufferers for curing thelr /polism. The diabetic is liable to for- get easily, and so your friend may not remember what you think to be the truth. , Vitamins and Colories Question: K. F. writes: “One hears So much about vitamins and calories, and the difference between them is not quite clear to me. Perhaps there are others likewise puzzled.” Answer: Vitamins and calories are entirely different. A calory is a unit of energy indicating the amount of heat generated when food is oxidized or burned. A vitamin is a substance of unknown composition which exists in minute quantities in natural foods but which is necessary for growth since its absence will producé defici- ency diseases. A detailed account would be too long to give in this col- umn. However, I have special ar- ticles on vitamins and calories which I will be pleased to send if you will send me a large self-addressed stamped envelope. Bronchial Tumor Question: Mrs. A. C. X. asks: “Could a bronchial tumor lead to tu- berculosis of the throat? Also, can bronchial trouble be cured through your Cleansing Diet system?” Answer: The formation of a tumor on the bronchi may be a contributing cause for the development of tuber- culosis of the throat. Many types of bronchial troubles will entirely dis- appear under the Cleansing Diet method. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) ' KFYR SUNDAY, JUNE 8 550 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters Weather report. :30—First Presbyterian church seryices. 12:00—Weather report. MONDAY, JUNE 9 of 5—Time signal. 0—Farm reporter in Washington. anan> 7:45—Meditation period: Rev. Ellis young man. i L, Jackson, $:00—Shoppers’ guide. But Florence was bobbing around | 9:00—Opening grain markets. in the tonneau with the hand lug- 118: a jgage. This was not Natalie's ar- \10 rangement, but a matter of neces- | 10 sity, since Florence had climbed i in before she could offer a word 12 Bismarck Tribune news and i weather. saerstsrmorercienes totes ee eet! 1 18—Farm notes. :45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock, 00—-Good cheer. 3 sporti 1:20—Bai: tha 8:00—Music, i; bits of this and | BLACK SUITS? THEN WHITE HATS ARE CHIO Paris.—(?)—Parisians are wearing white hats and gloves with dark tail- ored suits and don’t forget the white | buttonhole. Real gems and discretion are crowding gobs of glass and hunks of pened Pottery out of the jewelry | trade. Only brilliant multi-strands of bright beads are permissible among femmes chic and largely limited to white sport costumes otherwise un- adorned. June brides-to-be please note: | | Anne Tyrrell, daughter of the British ambassador who was married at Notre Dame cathedral to Adrian Holman, diplomat, chose the head- Gress many fashionable brides are se- lecting, a simple wreath of orange blossoms. FLAPPER, FANNY: SAYS: stenographer makes good if the her type, ¢ ae . 4 , ’ t ; ‘ , 4 j 4 ' v rv) ‘ 4) t ,

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