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al Nene EEE ORE NTO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ‘WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 1930 he Bismarck Tribune following your instructions as nearly general director of the Association for Improving the as I can in regard to diet and exer- Condition of the Poor, “the change that takes place when Member Audit Bureau of Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Syracuse, N. Y., distinguishes between surgical cleanliness or absence of germs, and social cleanliness or absence of icine at the Medical School of Virginia, The same con- ‘Answer: You may take short walks that do not tire you, and as your gen- Daily by carrier, per year ...... Daily fyieee phy year (in Bismarck! visible dirt, he says the latter “is increasingly regarded hg? lopey bach tted ianese hey ie Daily by mall per year é as at least the outward evidence by which the well-bred Hy gig aaa arian) outside Bismarck) ... are distinguished from those who are indifferent to or (Copyri: ight, 1930, by The Bell Daily by mail, outside of North Dako! ignorant of social custom.” ye Syndicate Ine.) free oo A eral ois ‘Weekly “With the degree of community sanitation we now have Britisn ‘crown, and wou in many places, the lack of personal cleanliness is the b SRR EES OTT TT ° connection e beef principal factor in the filth-borne diseases we still have,” | Quotations | State of Great Br! —————— Weekly per writes Dr. Fred J. Wampler, professor of preventive med- “It takes @ whole lifetime to build the character of a noble man.”—Prof. P viction is carried in other letters, such as that of an In- ‘The ipuusbiaten Press 18 eschuarealy eoHist, to the use| diana county nurse who reports that in her experience for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or rural schools which are careful and thorough about epee credited in this Feaehs reeree ‘ae ae a handwashing do not have as high an absence rate from jocal news of spontaneous origin publish toot communicable diseases as other schools. ry 5. rights of republication of all other matter Laberiics On the all-important subject of food, replies are even Arthur Compton, scientist. * OK “The $1,000,000 salary—a holdover from the days of individual promotion —seems to be out of date.”—RalpN | th orefore his! Corporation. also reserved. + more definite that in its public aspects food is a neces- * July, 1776, will be the most memorable (Official City, State and County Newspaper) sary field for papeenilins ake for Totdatsaaih of sani- as are Woes but tn ‘Giteranice 1s epoch fo Ee eT ba concen Sy Foreign Representatives tary regulations, Cooks, waiters, and employes in food that in the dry territory they Bet it petted en generations as the great SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS factories, in fact all who prepare or handle food, whether eae Red hod bebadiscsicatlhes sg anniversary festival.” ioe és in public establichments or at home, are included in the’ Be ent a . 5 Bias fat a Feta ans Former! Logan Payne Co. recommendations for scrupulous cleanlii . Gmcaco NEw YORE __ s0#TON aisles coat, comine, of, pronieson, | Deciaraton is that dtm Slancock and The Unmarked Death Traps Uttle worse than thelr fellows in other | retary respectively of the Continental large American and European cities.” —Edgar Wallace, writer. KFYR Spare the Hospitals Noise! All Fourth of July noise makers, attention: Increased railroad safety is being sought this week at If you must celebrate the national ‘holiday Chinese | the tenth annual safety section of the American Railway Btyle, by noise, commit that old-fashioned foolishness | a:oclation, mecting at Denver. This is in line with past where it will not disturb the sick and injured. Policy of the roads which has resulted in a steady im- ‘That means, -mainly, do not shoot fireworks off around provement of safety both for passengers and crews. The hospitals. gain has been particularly noticeable in the last ten ‘There are a larger number of accident victims in the) years. The big rail disasters, once so numerous, especial- Bismarck hospitals at this time than is usual. Some of | ly at holiday times when travel was heavy, sometimes to them are critically ill, others have serious or critical in-| the extent of demoralizing operation systems, are rarer juries. It will not help them to be subjected to a fire- | today. i cracker bombardment, for instance. This steady improvement in safety on the railroads has In fact, the tendency of a sick or injured person is to been brought about not-only as a'result of safety cam- grow highly nervous under subjection to noise. paigns but also as a result of the expenditure of mil- “@herefore do not mar Bismarck’s Fourth by such forms | lions of dollars for improvements in equipment, heavier of celebration as might have fatal effects on the patients |Tails, elimination of grade crossings, and installation of in hospitals. The same caution also should be exercised | 8@fety devices of various kinds, all designed to provide in- around homes where it is known someone’ is ill or in- creased protection for human life. gured. The big element of danger that remains is the un- ‘As children are the most likely offenders in this re-| Protected grade crossing. In fact, it is by solving this spect, parents have a responsibility in restraining the problem that the Denver meeting would insure the in- celebrations of their youngsters as indicated. creased safety which is the goal of that section of th were the only the real declaration. 4 the original document. 3 \ BARBS THURSDAY, JULY 3 850 Kilocycles—545.4 Meters 6:06—Down reveille. marly Risers club, pee 6:30—Farm flashes. fend sageotelimggge 4 —Time signal. (00—Farm reporter in Washington. —Meditation period. 0—Shoppers’ guide program, :00—Opening grain market, Sunshine hour. match, probably. ses 32 how can one gain in weight without taking a milk diet?” Answer: The best way to gain good weight is to get yourself in good health, after which your weight will 10—Aunt Sammy. 7—Arlington time signal. 00—Grain markets. 03—Organ program: Clara Morris, 0—Bismarck Tribune news and Weather. ently, is nothing. ¥* * in our j—Luncheon program. i— Voice of the bier abe a 15—Grain markets: high, low and | soe the other day for $1. 18—Farm notes. * * * 1:45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Musical matinee. 2:30—Slesta hour: Good News radio envelope for reply. CHERRIES AND MILK massage, osteopathy, chiropractic and an ln atemarari ; — : felectrotherapy will be helpful in re- yo _spagazine. fielder himself. French Evacuation Briand’s Gesture This problem has become all the more complex, due| During the cherry season it is often | storing the circulation to the affected | gradually adjust itself to the normal. Bo eineks and’ bonds: eee to the i ‘hs a good plan to take a few days’ fruit I do not advise the use of|I do not approve of any plan of stuff- ‘The great thorn has been drawn from the World war.| © seaea i bei ora eee this year in the | ast, using nothing else but fresh ripe|milk or buttermilk for anyone who] ing to gain weight, as such diet treat- "The French army of occupation has quit German soil and obiles in use, but this is a problem that |cherries. This is a cherry cure some-|has catarrhal trouble. has gone home. cA vandal solved with the cooperation of the public. what similar to the “grape cure” of Gaining Weight ae i ‘i Rt S no} in The Tribune in a special article on the | Europe. In cases of anemia, in which’ Question; K. A. asks: “If starch, psoeunation acing Ue Btwn ae Coonan s eee subject from the national street and high’ _|the iron in the body is low, it is es-jsugar and fat should be restricted, @ situation that conduced to healing the wounds the war eet_ and highway safety con: pecially desirable to use. the Jeft in European national memories. Not alone Ger- ference, there are 240,000 grade railroad crossings in the : many, but all Europe, felt the trritation of it. ‘The fight-| United States, Of these 205,938 are protected by. fixed Pip ccuiifriée oil semained in o state of partial unsettie. | “WD*: S707 have befety ates; 7397 have watchinen; s,008 jashy of the other desicels Satie ent while French soldiers continued to hold cities and have both visible and audible signals; 3,635 have visible| The directions for taking the cher- ve s signals only; 4,572 have audible signal ; ry fast are very simple. Just buy. two nat 3 fe au is.only; while 4,941 towns in the Rhineland. have no signals or kings whatey or three pounds of cherries a day and Great Britain and the United States realized that oc- maareanes, ech eat them whenever desired. ¢upation was no way to obtain real peace and they with- The Denver meeting wants to. go after those undes-| bag of them on hand, eating & @rew their troops years ago, while Poincare, provoking ignated death traps if it wants to promote safety on the|a time whenever you think about it. railways, Rerouting main highways, as is being done|_ Jf any hunger is felt, or if the Ruhr troubles, used his own intrigues as the mantle if ing lonesome for other food, just ‘with which to cloak fresh Invasion across the Rhine, | “270ush the sparsely settled West in reconstructing and .. ni In fact, French occupation looked at one time as an improving the great national trails, as the government is imperial trick to dislodge the Rhineland from the Ger- '15—Bismarck Tribune sports items. 25—Bismarck Tribune news. ment usually results in bad conse-| fo—tive signal quences, : scoret wscasting. mr English. @ Studio program. Walking Question: Mrs. A. V. writes: “I am doing in its federal aid system, is helping some. At oth- er points the roads and counties of cities dre joining in |days and see how good you feel from it up as a buffer state with the design ning Br iinatay aero ksh area in the French re- constructing subways. That helps, too, only the subways sivingsthe vista & ee began 3 ate: thing like this made A i of the often are so expensive that their multiplication is re- oath aie i gi using. * French empire when France was waging war on the dis- alt by the present unprofitable operations of the] Cherries 3 contatn more blood build- united German states in the Louis eta. It was because), ° ing ‘properties than any other fruit aia 55 at sea German territory that Biamarck These circumstances should not deter the roads and penne Be sai pert iv msi Like all other a t took it from France at the close of the Franco-Prussisn pera, from doing semething. Those unmarked |>6 "iced by themselves oF vith avast war of 1870, He merely took back stolen property which | TSSings, at least, might be marked while wating for |mink, had been so long under French rule that it had become | "me other plan of safety to suggest itself. Cherries and milk together make = perfect food combination. But cher- sufficiently Gallicized to forget that it once had been ries, milk and bread probably form German. That was why the annexing of Alsace, along : the worst combination that could be with Lorraine, by the Iron Chancellor under old Wil- Editorial Comment put together. , helm I, so wounded the sensibilities of France and creat- ae is ates pet that the 4 combination~of cherries milk is e“the international Franco-German feud that lasted | i 4 from 1871,to 1914, to take its place as an element in the Dr. Einstein’s Latest peta gun Tren ope an World war and the peace of Versailles. (St, Paul Dispatch) that this is not true and that the In a militery sense, Germany now is free. That will Dr. Einstein is at it again. According to the German | combination seems to be perfect. The help her to bear the burden of reparations, the only syotied net Say. whieh be Semana eos acid of the cherries seems to assist penalty left to remind the Germans of that dotted line| Nothing elfe réally-cxists, Not only that, but space gave | ne"Seoc seston oF ene mae ao tat or Versailles. Zt will be an inspiration for German in. | birth to matter, and is now, in cannibalistic fashion, | e,cnorrses And mals togeiner are ie dustry to work all the harder for world trade and fo pur- | ©@ting it up, having its revenge, as the professor melo- | mink were used alone. dramatically puts it. Time, space, inertia, gravitation, sue the career disarmament has opened to the reich. 80 | jignt and electricity, all the hallowed concepts of physics, Of course, if bread or any other fat that term: imposed by the Allies has been salutary. | in fact, are from Einstein's point of view only aspects of |t@rch is added, fermentation is set Germany has, in fact, outstripped England in recovery | the single underlying reality which is space. up guia oe ste. vit of the cherries, from the effects of war. Evacuation of the Rhineland | ,, The new theory is not likely to speak to the imagina- w d ey ye vi ye ae id. strong will add new impetus to that phase of peace tion of the average man. His belief in the outspread | 224 no kind of starcl at any mill add new impe' Pp Peace. spectacle of the world in all its variety of sound, move- | time be mixed with this fruit, wheth- Evacuation is one of the gestures which Aristide Briand| ment and color is as le as the everlasting rock. |" the cherries be in the raw, canned, from tifne to time makes for the promotion of better feel-| Tell him hat thete things are an dlusion and he may |" Gnert.¢ Siig oats cherves, bread ing in Europe. It was arranged between him and the late | 7@md you as profound or queer or both, but he will , not believe you, Such timidity ts anathema to the|#"d milk, you may expect intense Gustav Stresemann, German foreign minister. If the re-/ philosopher, but even he in his less guarded moments |Stomach cramps, as such @ combina- Jations of Germany and France could be left in the hands | believes in the existence of rock and tree, ti ide,|tion of foodstufts makes stomach- , time and tide, of men such as these two, the world might look for the | Or at bacyeats as if he did. 3 posed The eee, hoesye is caine i e Samuel Johnson kicked a stone by way of answer to} entirely by the fac bread fina) effacement of the old Franco-German feud and| ,.) philosopher who denied that stones are real. As an|been added to what would otherwise f6r the promotion of a solidarity in western Europe that | argument Johnson's answer was lacking in polish, but |have been a perfect combination. might go far toward establishing the dream of M. Briand | as a refutation its forcibleness was overwhelming. "Bin- for. organization of a new United States there. stein is not so easily refuted. You may gnash your ane yes ANSWERS Mt Sclerosis ee pat a fa (gna formals. put ame cannot kick it. ei ver, there is a ray of hope in the fact that the| Question: Mrs. G. Y. writes: Are We Sufficiently Cleanly? learned doctor is becoming daily more intelligible. His Does Uncle Sam still have to be reminded to bathe and Satlence -Grindiee, as his repeancn increases. Many read: plist we been damned praise, but this is change his Hinen, or is cleanliness y established 85 | 7 excellent example of how a man may be damned with ‘® national virtue? too loud praise, Health officers, school administrators, social workers gee and other leaders in all parts of the country to whom| A British Admiral Is Too Generous this question was put returned 60 replies to Roscoe C. Edlund, general director of the Cleanliness institute, casting doubt on any claims to lily-whiteness but indi- cating that the traditional Saturday night bath is grad- |. Peace proclamation to take its - ally yielding ground to the twice-a-week and the dally | mont clong with the Desiratice or sade aay tub. ‘ the Monroe Doctrine, one which would declare an act of From the arid plains where in winter snow has to be bg Rens 12 suberieelon. ot CU gett alagers ‘melted to supply water for washing to the crowded tene- dangerous erican peace ety Err aides where children Une up for the mttiemios |G nee ee ee house bathtub, testimony is offered that in many places| Rotary is a. brotherly institution with ideals which do in the United States cleanliness is less easy to attain | run & bit strong on the international side and at the clos- ing meeting of its convention a few aspirations might be than yodliness, and that even the simple routine of | estected to take the air. ‘The Rotstians would not have |” (Chicago Tribune) Tinovex COMPETENCE, the individual rises to positions of responsibility and respect. Through washing hands before eating is by no means a national | ail their pores closed to altruistic ions, Admiral y dependability of taste, a cigarette attains ever greater habit. - | Kerr probably felt the contagion of the occasion and, poy sei a Although these leaders urge the enforcement of all ex- Me, Sood, Satie, saw an American opportunity for cig {sting sanitary regulations, they do not ask for more laws. | “"an8, "Ot: e4. states, however, will not be equipped as : INCREASING MILLIONS of Chesterfields are Instead, they recommend more education, especially of | an international policeman, particularly on a water beat, lighted each day because smokers find that in this school children, in the value of keeping clean, pointing | fter the London treaty has been put through the sen- cigarette good taste is unfailing. out that such habits affect not only the health and ef- | Ste, if it is, by the American secretary of state. Grea‘ . Britain will have the cruiser fleet for the control of CHESTERFIELDS ARE RICH IN AROMA, flavor and fragrance, which come from the right selection of choice tobaccos, blended and cross-blended to 8 rate cigarette goodness. They offer the utmost in, smoking enjoyment ... “TASTE above everything”. ficiency of the person but his attitude toward clean trade routes and it will be the implement of boycott of it, ‘The admiral’s suggestion is that the United States keep an i nation from getting food and supplies, but \\ ie nica j : aah director of the Girl Scouts, who adds: emphasis should be placed on education, so every person will be taught that soap and water are that they are not the luxuries of the rich. This sree many the sural districts are without bath- ‘People i Admiral s Firemen in an Illinois town isht, 1930, NEA Service. My, What Big Teeth You Have, Grandma! THE STATES OLDEST NEWSEAPER Betta bt ND ce Rls lk Mose A “Aa ~/ = rogue se fartys thou A ide, (Established 1873) no facilities for keeping clean, to a home where there ‘ p Then, too, when my day isgione Iam j Suished by th) Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- is running water, and particularly where there is hot wa- ey. tired. How about this walking we f ggg Bismarck Tribune rg . 4 ter available, is frequently very striking. One is often to five, when one is 0 tired? am as oro Shas. a masa. ee Hoe surprised that there is as much cleanliness as there is.” eaenea rors ce mae a ani. ret parte Bs Lee of Virginia de- George D. Mann............+.«-President and Publisher] While Dr. George C. Ruhland, health commissioner of rice heavy? : Rene the Uaked States free and Lee introduced his measure on June Gwynn, of the Pennsylvania Gwynn) ams prophesied wrongly when he wrote his wife, “The second day of men to sign affixed their signatures to a copy of ———— “Money,” says Max Schmeling, “is not everything.” And: to those who 00—Weather report; grain market. | paid to see him fight money, appar- The plane that made the record is the one built last year for the Schneider cup races at a cost of $90,000 and put up for “Congressmen.” says Art Shires, “are just a bunch of piowhands.” The Great One shouldn't talk. He's a ‘The return of, horses is being urged now as a more écouomical means of transportation than the motor. But | the problem of shoes will still be with —- : wi 3 1 Bidelights on the reputed “age of sanitation” are flash- a be i (od in such notes as these. In Montana @ county school ac an Doves tl / a fuperintendent writes that, except for the county seat, pmwanns, |. Te Om come > ‘water has to he’deltvered to the homes at 75 cents a bar- ; ie Semn. AB: Gettain. Domaibee , ; ; 4 : | © gel, and some schools are without drinking water. From an international policeman ; the Southwest s homes. economies leader reports that a. 5 HAE: nce te a i ae 8 e d at can . have all alarms clad in their pajamas. With hose Inc.) he | aad a a v ‘ aA i