The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 16, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 199 7 be that the police on each side of the border could find some way of restraining these impetuous dare-devils. ‘The cards are stacked against the venturer at Niagara. If his barrel hits the rocks a good whack he is done for, no matter how strongly it is built. If it misses, there is The Bismarck Tribu.e An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | ® 800d chance that it will be held behind the falls until marck, N. tana entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | the rider is suffocated. There isn’t much chance for vic- as second class mail matter. tory, either way. Let's hope there won’t be any more George D. Mann..... +-President ana Publisher | attempts to carry through this risky, senseless stunt. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance toy phenols ates ll = ’ x : 5 Daily ‘by carrier, per year ............ It’s a Complex World THE TOMATO Ly HEALTH an mien hat they ihe Gee Daily by erty ber year (in Bismarck) No nation lives for itself alone in this modern world. es \ The tomato ls sa ; jigs tt is during the summer Per ate cess wiantarck) .00 | Isolation is a thing of the past. Things that happen on : “ . ¢ the f "3 ee a 2 ‘Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. one side of the world have their effect clear around on fH . " 9 Dr. McCoy will gladly answer 2 ti the other side. Dersonal queens co bealin ‘and " j Weekly by mail, in state, per year The Indian boycott on British cloth, and the resultant et care of F Wann ie cial cutsds be torte Dako, depression in England's cotton mills, have hit Germany's Te es a : cotton textile industry a severe blow. ' envelope for reply. dressed 1! + 2.00) The boycott, cutting down the British:textile manu- | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation facturers’ market, has given Europe a surplus of textiles .| that the ‘crop is most plentiful and ( Member of The Associated Press nd "bas coud priom fo So dayne Seen ’ 3 : wits r the fruit is least expensive, so that ’ The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use | WhO have nothing whatever to do with the Anglo-Indian we * , everyone should make use of this ¢ for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | question, are suffering the effects of it just as the Eng- F . Nabetg panels | fruit’ while I not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the | lish are. ‘ 5 i é is bree is lant tie aateee local news of spontaneous origin published herein, All} ‘That is the way the nations are tied together in this mas ee & a |mintoes which practically are ai we ot este of all other matter herein @r2) ootury, Byvents that are seemingly entirely unrelated i 2 * $ healthful as the raw, fresh vegetable. . F : bi exert a profound effect on one another. A ap ’\, y x y anes ae Hes tomatoes uted for fticia jewspal —__—_———_ ag than of any vegetable, 2 Lt ee = g p iS ited and for this reason the price always 1 Foreign Representatives Forgetful Investors . . i , {is Within’ the reach of every family. . joa “SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Apparently a great many of the people who bought ; 4 is S q hey ¢ ‘pécome ji Tt is estimated that more than 250,- 1 (Incorporated) Liberty bonds were inspired more by patriotism than by { : (int ee “a 000,000 cans are packed annually on ‘ Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. & desire to put thelr money iri a sound investment. f = Y p ‘ Spon on Sone oo Dredge Mscpariol 7 ' Henle lit dst ene Tae ee eee Eecestt aie tcares aie improved in to ten times and still be beneficial to buyers of such bonds are losing about $1,000,000 a year in ’ ; . 4 careful selection and cultivation, and|the general health. The Voice in the Flame interest through failure to Fedeem bonds on which in- i i h a s f this no doubt has contributed to an| The tomato has a distinctly bene- 4 < 5 ' —d "A increased larity. ficial effect in increasing the func- Pa Neal a eben ke del ede lb esd iar pacar food: snes ‘seated Wa. Deal’ Blseoee pom - \ 7 fn P Ms r id A At Bea tee are several hun-| tioning of the liver. A tomato fast can usually stage something that makes ordinary vaude- Y ome 2) dred varieties -vatying ‘in shape and|Produces marvelous results in the ] ville wonders look simple. still in the hands of investors. 7 rr : ; color from the old red currant and| treatment of liver disorders. : ‘A group of the General Electric company’s enginecre} Most of them, probably, lie in various safety deposit Lat " a ¥9 Ly Hi P ‘ 5g small yellow pear varieties to large} The tomato stands near the top of ] the other day set up a radio device to make light waves| boxes, half forgotten by their owners. If you happen to I 5 = : red, white and pink types. The large|the lst of healthful foods as it con- 1 agate id such bonds, it would be idea { je tere tw” ‘ J J i fruits of from two to four|tains so many vitamins and organic audible, just for the edification of the convention of the hold su nds, @ good idea for you to ree) : eter are ee = |minerals and valuable fruit acids. ] American Society of Civil Engineers. deem them and put your money where it can earn an diam : most market ‘The tomato is rich in fat soluble, vi- First one of the engineers held a lighted match in frontj income for you. It is startling to think that $37,000,000 toes are raiged in so many cli-/tamin A, which is the anti-ricketic ‘ F of @ photo-electric cell. A dull rumbling, like thunder, | {s lying idle simply because of carelessness. shipping’ and storage con-| Vitamin. Vitamins B and D which 7 came from an attached loudspeaker, Then a Neon SSS ee _—— F| The first thought of executing the floor. All of them, the ex-Czsar ‘been ected to stich he eis, ie OP oreaey ae (id : lamp was passed before the cell. A steady hum pro- Victory for Non-Resistance? | Today Is the |]Romanhoffs came when it was ru-|Nicholas Alexandrovich, his wife matoes should be good in nervous ; ceeded from the loudspeaker. Following this an ordinary! Sardar Vallabhai Patal, leader of the Indian National- lers. $ jored that the - monarchist Alexandra, . his son Alexei, |expected news shocked the doomed Anniversary of | gore plotiing ¥0 release them. “With isuphters, Patsy Physteien, motes i disorders. Physician ‘ones, and only the ex-Czer spoké,| ‘Te yi on 2 fs gate baa ie vitamin C, or the vitamin incandescent bulb was put in front of the “mouthpiece,”| ist movement now that Gandhi’is in jail, tells an inter- ‘ - 1 e growing anger and a roar thet almost shook the building was forth-| viewer that England's effort to choke the independence] ROMANOFF EXECUTIONS | sailors and workers toward the royal |governess “of the ‘princesses went é ue ee Ce ! coming. ‘ movement will surely be defeated by the Indians’ cam-} On July 16, 1918, the Czar of Rus-|family, it was ecided to dispose of |downstairs . . . where were di-/end to the doomed ones. four!this valuable fruit. Because of the ; ‘There were other tricks of a similar order. A spectally| paign of non-resistance—a move, he says, to which “the | sia and his family and their attend-| them at once. rected to stand against the wall. perecns were Dresent who carried out/ presence of citric and malic acid the siren of & » ants were officially murdered in @| The execution is described as fol-|’ “Then the house commandant,|the execution. About 1 a. m. the|tomato Z made German lamp produced a noise like the sirci west has yet found no answer. P is not alkaline ‘when being . lattip ‘piwlis ise like a hoot owl.| « house at Ekaterinburg, where they|lows by W. Duranty: “The Romanoff | Avdeev ‘the death senténce, | bodies were taken out to the forest eaten, but after being oxidized in the fire engine. A Swiss lamp made a no! ‘You can beat us, you can shoot us—but as long as We| were held prisoners following the|family, were informed that they must pang ¢ where they were burned the next noay-leaves valuable alkaline ‘salts of A battery lamp gave out sounds like the thumping of 8/ do not hit back, you carinot defeat us,” he says. “We | Revolution. move from the upper to the lower| were futile; Potassium, me, magnesium and iron. bass drum. And so on, through marvel after marvel. have shown not only the world but ourselves our capac- Now all of this, on the surface, may not look like much; | ity for suffering. And after a while you will begin to but it is just a reminder of the fact that scientists have | feel ashamed of yourselves.” uncovered a whole universe of profound mysteries, lying} ‘There is food for a good deal of thought in that re- hidden ell about us. Listening to the queer noises made| mark. It is just within the bounds of possibility that by light waves is a miraculous act, when you stop to/ may prove it correct. At any rate, it is a dignified ex- think about it. The medieval alchemist hunting for the! pression of a very noble ideal. elixir of life was never on the trail of anything half Money spent for tomatoes always is well invested. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Dark Circles Under Eyes :) Question: I. H. writes: “I have large’ black circles under my eyes. So far as I know am quite healthy. ‘What do you suppose’ causes them?” < so thrilling. seein sensi nesiinmtiatsiabinicinns aie ka ‘ ae eg te ae ‘Tennyson, observing a common flower blooming in a e, . chink in a stone wall, remarked that if he could but fully Editorial Comment Maney: or drtin s cnattin ores : understand that bit of vegetable growth, from heginning — —S—— = . su a =< = = intoxication from food fermenting in 4 to end, he “would know what God and man is.” The i ii BEGIN HERE TODAY "t express it. And that’s what the “Intestines. If you are troubled : modern scientist is in the same position. If one could A Family Reaches an Unde rstanding JUDITH GRANT, beautifal no a pao me a little afraid of happi- in this way you should send for my fully understand this business of light waves that produce} A notable event has just taken place in international artist's model, sharen her Green- ~ f Goes Gs oe : ‘Gon’t you see? It's come article on auto-intoxication, Enclose : fucainy cairovea ah ta the cia treaty: of “sini wick Village i ine 90 suddenly; even A it’ large self-addressed stamped envelope q 5 would have a * i thunder, drum beats and siren wails, one e by Abe Ne Mond tres, ie pod old.” when you write again. clearer picture of the universe than any mortal that) ©) v°o 04 pinland. ae te — ‘There was a ailence, during Baseball Pitcher’s Complaint ever lived. ‘They pledge themselves, when they have troubles in s' ai re which Judy heard her own heart ri S. J. writes: “I haves = All of which is just another way of saying that the| the future, to talk them over and settle them around a co 7 rete E bea Serenesreenen Yery bad pain in my right arm when ts. * ” I tense thé muscles. When I straight- cht hte Dee the gtd en Out my arm it hds a popping girl in the world!” — f si sound. Could baseball pitching have “I am,” answered Chummy in a anything to do with this?” low votee, and with o deop sigh. “Answer: You may have dislocated : oe next evening Judy took Bruce Gideon to a eerth is compacted of profound mysteries, The scientists are poking into these mysteries bravely, but each one when solved merely uncovers a new one beyond it. They discover just enough to demonstrate that we live in a world of wonder. And that, perhaps, is their chief service to us. Who| Outsider who attempts to interfere. e can be cock-sure, in @ world where the tinlest flame| 80 the long-discussed entente of Scandinavian coun oné of” the ligaments “in your’ arm while pitching” ball. Professiona! baseball players often require fre- juent osteophatic manipuation in or- : : : can speak with a voice like thunder? Its basis seems to be the significant and well under- Tg Chummy < 4 der to keeptheir arm ligaments in ‘ : jown to 8 ds, Ne Broper 3 e tctore trouble than around a table after trouble, t ered: Steyne, Rewever, Chummy sor Alan” Steyne was “9 Po Talceted Finger Frankness of Anger gph ada ' p r sna ¢ ers. “Gideon did “hot “datice, But Question: MF writes: “I have an | ‘When a public official loses his temper and his Job : - : ie nt ee intacted figs, Ries asst behind the qi A . as 5 nail, How the infection?” simultaneously, he is apt to do some highly interesting : Why Noise? ; si re ‘promines to Bastien Pemoat was a ay Answer: You are Peoneely iit tee : talking. ; (Minneapolis Journal) A 7 . dancer, and the rich man watched infection this time—before you \ / Major Maurice Campbell, retiring as- New York's ee pe Sore on Rariinise ae Now Go ON WITH THE STORY y : the pair gyrating in perfect read this ie wee. It is unwise ed v3 ta: i Prohibition administrator, emits a swan song in which he Z t, Piypined Bt. Louls olga 1d 2 rhythm and harmony to the tunes any of my correspondents to wait for r ‘accuses certain New York politicians and Washington of- De SAye, streetcars UDY ‘said nothing to Chummy. of @ wheezy but powerful phono- answer in this column in order to fictals of insincerity in regard to the dry law, and as- about her dinner with Bruce Gid-| aH — : graph between the yellow-washed find out’how to treat an acute trou- 5 . erity h 2 eon. She merely told her that she : walls of a large, disused garage, on ble. A safe treatment for an infected : serts that party politics called for the restoration of was dining out with a friend, and : a A: | which were painted rows of stiff finger is to soak the entire hand in would like to hear a few names mentioned. 2 dreamed of him during her illness, | che spilled a glass of wine over the ® moment, because all her ; af certain liquor permits which he had revoked. she came back quite early. ae lemon trees in full flower. water as hot as can be borne, using : Unfortunately, Major Campbell was not quite angry Chummy did not ask any ques- é Judy wore black, and seemed to this tréatment for as long as thirty : enough to mention any names. The general public, then, tions. She was still too. much un-} ss float like little storm cloud minutes at a time and repeating it . ' balanced—poised, as it were, on a among the multicolored figures Several times daily. In between times, : is left just about where it was before. Its long-standing gre, suspicion that there is a good deal of back-stage skull- knife edge between memory and * about her, drawn largely from the @ mild antiseptic should be applied r in tion with the law is confirmed, forgetfulness. \Sbe fully realized ‘ foreign residents in the Village. to the affected parts. ee eoeeer7. in connection ory 189 : now th ; “You love. dancing, don’t’ you?” (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell / but it isn’t given any definite evidence on which it can ity “plete blank in. some respects. it| @ asked Gideon, as he left the club Syndicate, Inc.) i go out and detach a few scalps. ‘@ . was most probable that Judy had ‘ ; with her, followed by the furious Nevertheless, it is better off than it was before. When friends of whom she had known| ? eyes of Dumont. if KFYR 3 there are queer doings in connection with any public ching nothing in the somnolent state of ‘a ‘adore if Teplied. : Office, the best way to start their correction is to start her brain. * * i you hee eegnen (esd 1 e — ; : : : n't know what. My vocabulary THURSDAY, the officeholders, present and past, to talking. Get them There was something rather : fails me. Have you never thought 800 Kilocycles--345-4 Meters r 4} sore enough and you'll eventually, learn something. ae TE og aR cermias ny pg Lua Aagesareor, of dancing on the stage?” 4:06—Dawn revellle Early Risers. Indeed, it might be to the public interest to have 4 Bat ter ®. omen : “I've done it—in a chorus; but 0—Farm flashes.” : realize that Judy had been seeing I'v had hi 5—Time signal. some system whereby every man who held any public her lover, and had been going about ree the anal ted dott 0—Farm reporter in Washington, ‘ office would be grossly insulted when it came time for with him quite frequently, without : arta adage peg shoppers’ wnide program. him to leave. This, of course, would make him angry and . No other ex-president knowing who he was. His return, : r, an 808 to i oes Gideon in in markets. : would fill him with hatred for the higher-ups; and quite like this. Colonel Roosevelt,| fj §° far as Chummy was concerned, j businesslike tone. “I don't 3 : “The Outlook | & took place on the day when she \ hy e businesslike tone. pba! 4 . ‘ while it might work an injustice on some; in the long house, wrote for ‘The what you think. Dancers shouldn't 2 7 to Kansas City Star. Benjamin came into her room in the Village og at you ncers shouldn’ ( run it would cause others to tell tales out of school, and ‘William Howard Taft contributed to and found him with Judy. sing. You shall have the best show. ram: Clara Morris. 1 the general public would get a much clearer picture of becoming ex-presidents, but dealt pales = ‘Indy had be bi: aa. te : i in’New York. I can arrange it. Each Dawe 208 : what was going on. 7 ; and constitutional questions, Calvin Coolidge eenody at the Bb about ‘thie |”. <The third morning she received .¢ letter from Gideon, asking her | Whet do you say to that?” 6 olce of the Wheat Pool. 2 At all events,-Major Campbell has done the American x na task quite different. He is to be, for 5 was the most mysterious fact of| fo talk over a “business proposition. panes A nothing Ye nd ie Bruce eg me s: high, low, and people a service by speaking out frankly about conditions | 8 inde , Seodoon umpoy's condition. The “nice, |i was possible to be. She knew all] served look that always slightly| ‘To becin oi 1 aes wan tine’ to 145—Bismarck Tribune news surrounding the prohibition office in dur largést city. pepee ie bes whee ee eat ae that—knew it by comparing herself | awed her friend. death, and in some way the evening :00—Musieay matines.. wu, Nvestock ‘The only trouble is that he has not been frank enough. her reawakened mind, not the| Witt the other women, with their!” “piease “don't talk ghout that,|bad Jarred om her. ‘Th man 2:30—Slesta hour: Good News radio ‘ t 5 l ; Having said so much, he has practically put himself ; = sligh strikingly simple clothes and their * , was undoubtedly as much out of i ‘ ee the obligation Gf siting a good ‘deal’ mole, We part: ei is test oeee with Alan sparse but splendid jewelry. She Judy,” she said. “You gee, it's still Bisco at the Lemob Grive as he Music. 5 : ning | yne. And yet, when she badiwas nervous and laughed loudly.|all so trange. I mean”—she|nad been at the Cafe Turc. « 3 1 it had been as he was now, and not She and Gideon reached the door reser err way of her building before had . . The ‘Safe and Sane’ Fourth ‘ i Shine DOE Ne teamarres: Me tbe ery fsitar, degree the fest [time to ety anything more sboxt scores. Surveying, at a slight distance, the Fourth of July ; “But Gideon had only elaborated | her guardian engel in her time of |her. She bade him good aight’ and :80—Studio piogram. casualties, one is struck by the thought that we have fk ae pg Riad he ste that idea of bis that they ae Teas that Alen and I he aaked ae to think t aM a 3 been. putting most of the emphasis in the wrong place in ruce leon, Judy |two friends, exploring each r’s | must get used to each other allover] The next two days passed 1 % Grol caralen fer a alo anti aahe Sarit. could find notiiag amiss with’ Tt | separa main. ” pear ees out ineldent. ‘On the third mo FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: and nothing particularly in its! 4 day or two later she nerved ee she received the following lett lives. Of these, 14 were taken by fireworks, 107 by autos ‘ which It has already been said that she favor. herself for a’ talk with Chummy.| rUDy, frankly speaking, could not ar Miss Judy: I have been Ki , Chummy bad come in, alert and thie reticen king 0 ‘and 65 by drownings, with the rest due to miscellaneous knew life, but she knew it chiefly | vigorous, 1! the young Diana pr eay sul "° datjectee of her tances Mt Sones by me rs : ws s ; i in one respect as far es men were|with whom ‘Btorhaway bad com- frlend’s mi © ie: business proposition. I believe Our safety campaigns have nearly sll hinged on fire- Sonne bay. To her all men were|pared her. She had been making “But you are going to marry| you would haye an enormous ‘ eat tke Mot? gt the [peeps fo return to Wel-lnim? she ‘asked, Ter purple eyes| success. I should like to talk : s a oo Sees umont, Steyne, ‘s art I and take up her opening wi 3 it over seriously with you. ‘ } and extraordinary characters like| painting again. se!” And Chummy’s face} Will you lunch with me at th ? q F Max Dickbréad and" Doctor! aier aunt, Misa Morley, had in-| 10% 2% ° with Picardy, Hotel at two o'clock ‘The answer can be summed up in one word—careless- O'Shane. None of those had evet on giving ber an allowance |" Yen ‘ete ht awtully,| today? Yours sincerely, 7 sisted ness. Lopg-continued educational work has reduced the Ye A e made love to her. All others had}untii she sound her feet. "t © you, 3: Bruce Gideon. fixeworks hazard to a minimum, but the motorict and the Senger wares cue ind’ love | “sua, x shall do somethins—1 Saco. wok Ag atmiss opiate!’ sui) aucsssa tG eee ate ae bather still fail to take the proper precautions. Until know I quail!” she cried, fiinging could do no harm to hear what he I But Gideon was. difierent. He of s th oor nie {sway her bettered hat and throw- had to say. was not enamored they eS ee aps will remain as the deaditest Re ate ee ing out her long, thin arms in a ot Ah Ng Bs of he: ties coon Tt was very haley Peeneat. tana to onan ara ait oe Sweeping gesture of victory. rt her own cheek. |hard work, and mon either made , *, opinion, to treat her as he might o you sen Mr. Steyne to- she Seren ant: Her Sete BFE | ove to Feu oF tooked oe Niagara Claims Another have treated a girl of his own|{#y?” asked Judy, all smiles of ad-|eglemn. * mere lay figure. At least, that was ‘The fate of the sanguine philosopher who went over world. He took her to @ swell res-| Miting devotfon. “Of course, you'll| “Judy, do you know, it's rather | Judy’s experience of them, with the Magara Falls in a barrel, to die/of suffocation when the ‘‘ back-wash of the cataract imprisoned him for a longer time than his oxygen supply would last, is hardly ‘sur- i EY i ; fi i i g iJ F, | & i 2 i i i 3 : i Great artist—the best of the/like a dream to me, but it seems tojexception of Stornaway; who cioiea: Wats Git ct sine. oy ih [et that all the time I was queer [seemed to be frankly friendly, for . she did not wear gloves. or that “Yes, I saw Alan this morning./and you now it was years and/no particutar reason. She adored her makeup was badly put on. He’s gone back to Welford’s, too.|years—I was only liv’ for the/dancing. If it was really a busi- petty : He's going to take up painting|day when Alan cam sk. Of/ness proposition, there could be again.” course, I didn’t know it, but it was | nothing sinister in it. She did not DY had resumed her likeness to] “And when are you going to be} there deep down inside me. Though | like Mr. Punch, but had never a dyed nareissus, and that night | married, you two?” asked Judy. loved him when be went away, I} been afraid of any man. , She looked as gaud; id terrible as! Chummy’s face put on the re-|love him so much. more now that I (To Be Continued) « i i é I bE i ‘This cataract is a dangerous thing to monkey with. You ‘fan count on the fingers of one hand the people who have game over it and lived—three is the exact total ) believe. If @ man wishes to risk his neck there may : ; : . i Antiques be authentic, but seem to be any way of stopping him; still it might i 7 a os ee V3 v7 rr ~\I there's generally @ catch somewhere.

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