The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 13, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, ‘APRIL 18, 1931 fits. The stumbling block is that no tariff is effective as long as we have a domestic surplus. THE BISM ARCK T RI B U N Fy more competition tor the American farmer. It is time - ug AB IMevendent Newepaper Lagi Wels lected? upeainas uvetee x too, | Keeping Their Ears Close to the Ground! (Established 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- BY PR.FRANK MCCOY | / - marek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck Navigable Water . President and Publisher| 5: 4. Thompson, secretary of the National Rivers and 5 second class mail matter. George D, Mann ............ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .... Daily by mail per year (in Bism: Daily by mail per year dn state, outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail outside of North Dakot ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year .... Weekly by mail in state, three years ... ‘Weekly by. mail outside of North Dakota, CAL sassseee see eeeee per yt ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter -herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and Qounty Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Corn Sugar Advances By a recent order of the department of agriculture Corn sugar was given a place on the American food list without the. handicap of having. the world “doubtful” marked after it, Heretofore, persons using corn sugar in food articles manufactured for sale were required to specify if corn Sugar were used, .The new ruling changes this and corn sugar takes its place along with other sweetening agents of recognized value. * It seems, however, that packers and.canners are going to be slow in taking advantage of the opportunity. Corn sugar is relatively cheap and if manufactured in larger quantities ‘would be cheaper, but certain chemical and technical problems must be solved before its use will be widespread. One of the largest refiners of corn products, in a) at the same time, we maintain our old-time friendliness SYNOPSIS: ‘Bert Rushe, younger brother of Harry, the bulletin on the subject, prepared by a noted research| toward the railroads. Home Run King, has a tough struggle in hls desire to become a sional ball player. Every one him that all he has is expert, warns against its indiscriminate use. It says: “The use of pure, refined corn sugar in improper pro- portion or in products for which it is not adapted, and the use of imperfectly purified corn sugar not suitable| selves under the circumstances and conditions which for foods, would, without doubt, seriously damage the} their fathers enccuntered, according to an official of the prospects of not only the corn sugar manufacturers but | women’s division of the National Amateur Athletic Fed- eration, which met recently in Detroit. the packers of food products as well. The cooyeration! between the producers of dextrose (corm sugar) and its users, as has been done with confectioners and others, will evolve correct formulae to insure the proper use of the proper grade.” That is a frank, fair statement typical of the best in American industry. The company with a product to Sell does not want it sold or used until the way has been prepared for it to be successful. It knows that only by getting repeat orders can the production of corn sugar be made profitable, and so it bides its time. ‘The answer should come soon and it should be @ profitable one for both the packer, the corn processor and the farmer, for widespread use of corn sugar will ‘add considerably to the value of the nation’s corn crop, An advance has been made by removing the restriction on the use of the product. This will be followed by an advance in its preparation and its use. It begins to look as though the chemists are the real hope for increased prosperity on American farms. Cupid on the Campus cities and to other railroads as inland waterway trans- | portation 4s developed. Harbors congress, takes the bit in his teeth and champs Thompson, as much as the railroad men he attacks, is a propagandist and his statements should be salted liberally for that reason if for no other. There is no denying, however, the truth of his basic claim which, boiled down, is that “business: begets business.” a His theory with regard to tonnage is a good deal like that of the old couplet. “Little fleas have lesser fleas upon their backs to bite ‘em, “And these small fleas have smaller fleas and so ad infinitum.” : That, Thompson would have us understand, is how freight traffic develops. It seems reasonable. He offers the case of Frankfort, Germany, as an example. This city, he tells us, had a population of some 140,000 in 1881, although it was then some 1,700 years old, having been founded by the Romans about 150 A. D. In the 20 years following 1886, however, it grew more than during the first 1,700 years of its existence. Thomp- son says construction of a channel in the Main river was the cause. Water traffic, theretofore almost negligible, increased by leaps and bounds and so did the popula-| | tion of the town but, curiously enough, the rail traffic jalmost kept pace with the water traffic and ‘German |railroads had to increase terminal facilities and build new lines. ‘The same thing, Thompson says, will happen to other ‘We, who live in Bismarck, hope so. i Because they have proved themselves a benefit and because it was they which developed this city to its present status, we are sympathetic to the railroads. But because we hope for and have dreams of a much; bigger and greater Bismarck, we look with friendly eyes; upon whatever promises to aid in achieving those ends. viciously as he discusses the attempts of the railroads to! $7.20 throw stumbling blocks in the path of inland waterway + 7.20| development. My Mhe Tadt Wag 10. pares in Ley srop 10 HEALTH & DIET WILL BE ANSWERED ENCLOSE stareneo Aeoneree ai einee tom nnrey © 1926 MFCoY HEALTH SERVICE “LOS ANGELES” CAL: PREVENTING BLOOD POISONING | everyten minutes dip the leg and foot In any case where an injury has | nto very cold water for one minute. pierced through the skin, it is im-| This may be continued for several portant to remember that rire is far more important than the ap- Dr. McCoy will gladly answer while valuable, very deeply, age rae of goad € him, care iodine or any of antiseptic to a Enclose a stamped addressed punctured wound that may reach in ve . @ half inch or more is not very effec- envelope for reply. tive. hours, to stimulate the circulation - ti nile physician may use antisep” | and assist the body in walling off, or thing Tat @ amity anwe to wash the blood to carry away, the pus, By out a wound. This dées not mean petri Bargin yo tip oat 5 o 3 few days seen the ex washing the wound in any water, be-| rough the original opening of ob- ego Vide band ed cole roan: Jects oe splinters, sand, glass, and enamel. Susly heated to a high temperature. | " Most of the soaking should be done = iarcinn snociunche pid Id be wash- | ‘he first day, and the process may be ed or pulled out. After the part has |,TePe Sara tae LEC oat ~ | following day until the wound attaizis been cleansed thoroughly by the a- | ‘hhesithy appearance, after which it is only necessary to cover the wound Cee ee eee’ tatetie The| With sterile bandage to prevent dirt | danger of using the antiseptic first is | 0m entering. i; It is good to allow bleeding at the that it may coagulate the tissue and seal in sons poisonous matter that | Start to wash out any foreign sub- could have otherwise been removed, | Stance. Then use this washing treat If the cut is wide, it is well to then | ment without waiting to find out if bring the edges together with very breed Poisoning is going to develop. narrow strips of adhesive which may re taken in this manner may avoid be cut in the form of two triangles,|™uch misery and prevent serious with the narrow ends joined together. | COmSequences. The narrow part may be placed over Serre the cut, but by no means allow the; @UESTIONS AND ANSWERS ‘Jentire opening to be covered, since Empyema there must be adequate room for| Question: R. K. asks: “After a drainage of any poisons that may | Patient has had empyema how long form. After this the cut should be | does it take before it stops draining?” Development of the Missouri fiver holds out such a promise and hence we are friendly to it, although, and Inner Resources Modern people might have difficulty in amusing them-/ ' ball down there, but he hopes to get by. He meets a sh entertainment has become largely mechanical because of the radio, the motion picture, the automobile and “Too many of our women are physically lazy and are mentally without sufficient resources to provide them It probably is true that many of our people, partic- * worse, ularly those blessed with a plenitude of this world’s goods,| pin "zr he was a jealous lover, this ‘When we went out to warm up are facing this problem. But is it not one which worries} might snap him out of it. If it | there was Dolly and her brother, ‘They are draw-| a5 just a hoax, so much the bet- | with a group of their friends, all ter. I wasn’t any hero, but I wasn’t | in a group down front in the ing on their inner resources, to be sure, but the facilities) quite a sap. It looked phony to | They gave me, 33 yell. oe being called upon are those of hope and nerve and cour-| me, being asked by Dolly to call! hands and ys to the bulk of our citizens at this writing. with a minor league in the Southwest. To his surprise in the East, calls at her request and is confronted by a a big gun and dragged into a room. shall we do? The answer indicates the standards of a] at you—and give her a good laugh,’ None of our crowd I said. e cited over the matter. I Blustering wouldn't get me any- | Dolly’s brother owned a where, Showing fear would stable there and was one of s Tass “ = ly best line was to kid | town’s better cl on her at this hour and then meet- | Nils had sprung:— age. Few of us are worrying about how to spend our | ing a bad looking guy with a “she’s @ good girl!” leisure time. When the people generally start to worry, young cannon. That got a shout. about that condition a cure for it will be found. | “She’s a Good At present, however, the problem, for most of us, is about as important as that of how to cure the pip in| ajone,” he bellowed. The way he said it, like a ham | towns in the league. A woman who made a survey of the subject for a) actor trying to do tragedy, con- ‘We were to pla: leading magazine finds that college-made romances last z a i pia saeeas pesca vinced me more than ever that “Tor th babies, han the ordinary kind. To be specific, she ac+| Americans sometimes think of | there was something phony here. ae they. SA aaa ne atives of the only nation in the world blessed with “Now, Hortense,” i said, “you ae we vances figures to show that only one marriage of every 15 between college folks goes on the rocks whereas the record for the nation at large is one in every six. lared, initiative. ‘They might ponder @ little about the British] PS. nice boy” ov, | lettuce firm which built a big steamboat, then took it apart and; tinued to use the basso-profundo | but if ener be a nice boy!” ‘The data upon which the conclusion was based were| Shipped it to South America inne oe aa = esens done: es @ good gal; leave her some, ee obtained by a survey of 100 co-educational schools and,| 12,500 feet above sea level. It is an arduous task w! or ‘Don't be like that, nobody will was | y, Initia-| Pet you,” I answered, “and, be- the pill in contrary to what one might expect, give the campus| challenges English ingenuity, but it will be done. Initia-) taA.Y9t the had girls Pieines anal curve or two, but he leaves college, and, under an.assumed name, S°Now ft was the eighth and we had low we ch three ‘runs ‘to get the game. Before I went into the eighth, Nils Swanson bellowed o “Hey, z n, youre done—your arm’s gone “Go and order those dinners!” I threw a kiss at me ughingly SUPPOSE, by all rules of precedent, I eer have been ‘The reason, it is explained, is that our amusement and) 5, ee jpurple et ee a nee yanked me into the 4 Fe 5s The reason that I wasn’t frightened was my sense of humor. It struck me as regular opera bouffe stuff, this call- ing to meet.a pretty girl and having this thing happen. “What do you want of the gal?” this man growled. ; I looked him up and down, squinted one eye and looked with sane outlets for energy,” says this authority, And/ 3+ the big revolver, and then I smiled blandly at him. further we read “When we have nothing to do, what “I want to let her take a t 23 of ue 8 gi i EE Just before the game | | heard Manager Gibson “She's @ good gal; you leave her | fans had come over to size be obtained from any drugstore, or if this is not obtainable one should use cloths that have been boiled or baked. Accidental injuries are almost in- evitable, and it is advisable that every household have a simple first-aid kit on hand to care for these emergen- cies, Blood poisoning is not the common occurrence that it was a half century ag®. This is because of the improved sanitary measures that are now em- Ployed. It is possible that at some future time a surgical asepsis will be When blood poisoning develops in the person who received ordinary an- tiseptic measures, it is usually be- cause his blood is of poor quality, and this permits the infection to spread. It is wonderful to see the effect of diet on these cases. If the rich foods like starches, fats and proteins are eliminated from the diet, and fresh fruits and non-starchy vegetables are substituted, the body seems to take a new lease on life, and the healing processes take place more rapidly. ‘When a child runs a nail into its foot, it is not as important for the mother to see if the nail was rusty as to see that the foot is soaked in clean hot water. Even if blood poisoning is actually forming, one should soak the foot arid leg in ‘hot water, and opines the office sage, are the bread- makers. ze Talkies are soon to be shown in trains. As if train journeys were not boring enough as it is, (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) eer | KFYR | oe ‘TUESDAY, APRIL 14 550 Kilocycles—-545.1 Meters covered with sterile gauze which may; Answer: Empyema indicates an accumulation of pus in the body, us- ually in the chest. Generally this has to be drained through surgical meth- ods. It would be difficult to estimate any definite length of time that the draining might have to continue without knowing more about the pa- tient, and the size of the cavity, etc. Beans Soy Question: J. F. asks: “Will you Please give me the value of the soy bean as a food and the best way to use it. Can @ soup that is palatable be made of these beans the same way that navy beans are made into soup? Can any palatable dish be made from the soy bean flour?” Answer: The soy bean is a legume which is valued for the large amount of protein which it contains, as it has from 33 per cent to 36 per cent of this important substance, It is often used by diabetics, as it contains practically no starch. It may be used for about any dish in which cornmeal could be Exercises Question: Mrs. O. H. writes: “Please explain the difference between. reducing and developing exercises.” Answer: . Exercises tend to produce the normal weight whether one is too fat or too thin. Rapid exercises help to reduce the weight, and the exer- cises taken slowly are of assistance in increasing the weight. * seen standing and an appreciation of i in their hearts, we thereby increase our aristocracy in the best meaning of that word—Walter Damrosch. * ek * I should say that writing odes is ®& good step toward writ ads, and contributing poems is Hen step to- ward selling bonds.—Robert Frost, **k * The American intellect is, today, the least intelligent type of the pres- ent age.—Count Hermann Keyserling. ** * A.M. 7:00—Farm Flashes—Weather Re- vinced My uniform experience has con- cupids no credit for wielding a more powerful bow or| tive doesn't reach its full bloom unless backed by bulldog pot Strong for good girls. Buddy, | In hetwe awa: : having sharper darts with deeper penetrating power.| tenacity. Euised a8 pee ind nah (lye! fi Sat oul ly.” , Were ee aca it would appear, lie on the surface where ‘This sounds like bravado, but it | Little Walters ll who look may see. wasn’t anything of the sort. Across | bagger and I First of all, there is the factor of age. College folks marry at a later age than the average. The student has no place in either his social or economic scheme for a bride and so the brides must come after the educational stint has been finished. A study of the general divorce situation shows that many of those couples which later separate are wed before they are 20 or in their early twenties. In the case of college folk the bells do not peal out the glad news until the contracting parties are, as a rule, beginning to crowd the thirty mark. pert (who by the way is a “Miss”) is that “college boys and girls have equal advantages and have come to regard each other as intellectual equals. The result is that after the first romantic period of marriage has passed they have intellectual companionships to fall back upon. nd are not so likely to bore each other as they might $f they were on different intellectual planes. “Most important, probably, is the fact that the college boy and girl have the opportunity to judge each other under many conditions and over a long period. “The usual co-educational courtship is carried on over ® period of years, and at a time when boys and girls are keen in observation and tremendously critical—which is important when choosing a life partner. During that time they have opportunity to see each other under all conditions, in the class room and on the athletic field, 4n the fraternity house and the social hall, under con- ditions of stress as well as under happier conditions. A girl is given the opportunity to know that the socially attractive boy may be only that, while others that do mot shine socially have the real qualities that make for stability in marriage and in life, - The young man, too, has had time to see beneath the surface prettiness that has caught his eye.” | The moral, if it is necessary to draw one, seems to be either send your child to college or else keep him out of Cupid’s way until he is sure of his mental equilibrium. More Competition It is not surprising, but it is news nevertheless, that a South American railroad has written to the Northern port 7:15—Morning Devotions me that there is no other God than truth—Mahatma Gandhi. Editorial Comment an’s skirt behind a partly opene door. Somebody was Eying have Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are: published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- ‘une’s policies. Passing the Buck (La Moure Chronicle) ‘The general public rarely has an opportunity to see as AS 2 flagrant an example of passing the buck as the Logical ‘The second reason, according to this investigating ex-| City campaign committee of Jamestown exhibited last week when they gave widespread publicity to an in- solent letter sent to Governor George F. Shafer request- ing that no special election be called to vote on their petitions. i That the committee members were merely attempting to climb out from under the load of opprobrium natur- ally descending upon them in their stubborn refusals to’ give up the fight to obtain the state capitol is so obvious that it is funny. That they should so impudently dare to command what the governor shall or shall not do in the matter is less humorous. The further the James- town committee pursues its course, the less admirable it becomes. In the letter to the governor, the committee requests that no special election be held, and declines to be held responsible for the unnecessary expense to the taxpayers should the election be called. Where have we heard about the “unnecessary expense” idea before? According to the committee, the decision on the peti- tions for removal should be voted upon at the next reg- ular election in March, 1932, since it will take all of a year to get the plans and specifications ready. Has the committee forgotten that plans and specifications neces- sarily must take account of the location—and that if their Plan {1s followed two sets of plans must be made, on the off chance that Jamestown wins the capitol? The committee scoffs at the idea that the delay in making definite decisions on the capitol site is costly to the state in the matter of office rentals and getting actual work on the capitol started. The committee says it would make no difference—the rest of the state is in- clined to believe it will. How ridiculous was that puerile letter may be in- dicated by the fact that the Stutsman County Record, the Jamestown weekly newspaper scorns the action. That Newspaper Says: Mita big ek havi e chap was having a strug- gle, by. time. to keep un his mueroics. He wanted to laugh. 4 was sure of that. “What are your intentions—you so-and-so Eastern lounge lizard?” he managed to bellow. “My intentions are to take Dolly to the movies and bring you home @ pound of fudge, if you are a good ne eal Furth for th ot_ no further, for there was a shrill, feminine scream of laughter pod ted sounds of deep-toned male ughter. Dolly came out from behind the door and a couple of men came in from the next room. ‘The “bad man” was Nils Swan- ei son, ng as brother. Dolly introduced me all aroun One of the other men was Dolly’ brother-in- > owner of the restau- fi pulled a gun on you?” ‘T’'m Betting Against You | “I'd have batted it out of your mitt and spate’ you,” he assured me. And I am sure he could have done just that. “I’m betting against you in to- morrow’s game. Ridley,” he said. Dolly had been nice about my request, evidently, and not told my name. “It's un home team, why not?” “Do I lose?” “If I have any luck you lose,” 2 ITT Lose Pl bl te iz lose I'll blow your team toa big dinner—that’s how much of! a chance T think you Mesa City lads have,” Nils Swanson assured me. We shook on it. I had a pleasant evening at the She was h Today Is the ‘Anniversary of F BeBe HEE 3 At 5, BB * Dorothy thinks that a southern ex- posure is the revelation of some Dixie * The only ones who interest in the “early to Stickler Solution 30—Cheerio * * * cao eae We are not only more free from 15—Radio Floor Walker attack, but our people are more free eu, Serve rama from the haunting fear ‘of attack 28—World ‘Bookman than any other people in the world — 9:30—U. S, Marine Band President Hoover. 9:45—Empress Coffee Program 10:00—Opening Markets and Weather eport * 10—Aunt Sammy Newly-Published Book S8—Arlington Time Signals Ri ived-in Bi 1:05—Grace Duryee Morris, Organist eceived in Bismarck m A copy or the newly-published book, ata “Paris and All the World Besides,” by Robert N. Keely, M. D., has been received in Bismarck. It is an unusual volume of travel, Close—News, stock Markets 2:80—Slesta Hour :00—Music 2:15—Markets + High, Low and “! eather, Live- 2:45—Good News Magazine covering many years, starting with 3:00—Dance Program the author's experiences in Paris as 3 & medical student. The author un- 4:30—50th Anni: Tusk In- A udio eS Of 3 in Alger) 545 —Stoene Sond Bonds — News—| Stion nor a coarse Word in the book. ‘eather The hook contains vivid persona! eo ence, Durves Morris, Organist] memory pictures of the South Seas 45—Rat Oo—Minintere Recital and Robert Louis Stevenson, and 1:30—-Harmony Sisters other characters and events in that HE eg en part of the world, as well as of the 8:45—Tim Healy No. 2 Arctic regions and Amiral Peary's 9:00—Orchestra party. The Dreyfus affair, from be- i anno. | ci the operation of a 7... 4.42, | Guillotine, the amorous antics of King Quotations 1 Leopold and Cleo de Merode, and @| consequent vitriol throwing by jilted lovers, as well as other outstun As & sex women are, I think, fun-| events of the time, are related ii Gamentally less honest and more de-| unaffected but powerful way. and ‘It makes a difference to an. actor | vious than men:—Mrs. Cecil Chester- e whether he ranks or is regarded as | ton. It is pubiished by Howard C, Myers, FY 3027 Midvale avenue, Philadelphia. There are 2124 ways in which chil- |—————_—__-_ FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Pacific railroad asking for information about the agri- opposition to the ‘stage’ to which capitol ‘removal movie with 3 home cultural development work done by the American organ- has come. ~ for only a month, she going {zation. i “If innuendo, personalities and vituperations Pere ates eee ator @ summer We have come to take for granted the efforts of the| Sf What is left of what at one time railroads to improve conditions along their lines by ad- ‘vising and assisting the farmers to grow more and better {interested motive. ‘They admit that thelr alm is to build. up business for themselves, both by carrying the r ‘which the farmer raises and those which he fbuys. A prosperous agriculture means business for the| agencies. . ’ tatles ‘were fo" conse to Wa fave body and forpt into’ a Reeaeece and four Teview be- foc ts teats, y former chairman of the Farm i Our ts har . tiara es be thinkers—Sesbury Brewer, hhave anid that god music reg Bd dy nig Meath bought to bear apon:them to ai ext tent which will devélop an under: esata Farner a RES ER TESA. EI

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