The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 9, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 9, 1931 An Newspaper THR STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER Established 1873) by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- ., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck mail matter. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Published N. Marck, N. D. | ya EEE | cresintennsanhe slatted ede ‘Weekly by mail Weekly by mail Y Weetiy by mall sas ‘Weekly by mail Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the for republication of all news dispatches credited to it not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also tl local news of spontaneous origin published herein. rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Es (Offictal City, State and County Newspaper) Mother A reverent America today pays homage to both a tra- @ition and a person. ‘ It bows before the nation’s motherhood in grateful Obeisance and recognition of the sacrifices and the services which “Mother” has performed. if It is one of the finest traditions of the human race | | that it has deep regard for the women who brought its individuals into the world. This fact has a refining in- | fluence upon the hearts and minds of men and women and, inevitably, draws them toward a deeper appreciation of the problems of humankind. s For the burden of solving the human difficulties of our | @ay fali, in a large measure, upon women and particularly upon mothers. Few persons toil so diligently and 60 faithfully for the upbuilding of the nation. Few persons have so many burdens to bear or problems to solve and no one bears them more nobly or serves more honorably. Around mother is gathered much of the sentiment of homelife. It is she who completes the family circle and who, in many instances, holds it together as long as Possible. It is she who serves as a lodestone to draw her sons and daughters home from far corners of the earth. For mother, even though she has served heroically and has braved a thousand terrors, is recognized as a person both deserving of homage and needing protection. Father stands upon a somewhat different plane in the family circle. His is a place of honor, also, but as the breadwinner he has dealt with the major problems. Be- cause of the duty which stern necessity has always placed upon him, the average father misses many of the little tendernesses and intimate details of human companion- ship with his children which fall to the lot of the mother. How often do we hear a man declare of his father that he “is a good scout and always was a good pal.” That is high praise for a father from his son for it implies a comradeship and an understanding which is of benefit pleasure to both. Ba} when speaking of mother we conjure a wholly dif- picture and we speak of her in an entirely differ- emt manner, even in a different voice. She js the em- bodiment of a ministering angel sent from heaven to minister to our wants. It was she who bound up the ‘wounds of childhood, who sat in sleepless vigil by our bed when we were ill, who petted the wounds of the mind and goul as well as those of the body; who was, in short, per- fection set upon the earth by God for our use and benefit. A thousand orators have called upon their genius to epitomize the virtues of motherhood. A thousand quota- tions from their speeches, still recognized as true, fill our literature, but the best mark of respect on Mothers’ Day, in all probability, is the true and deep expression of filial devotion on the part of the sons and daughters of the land. ‘There will be thousands of family reunions through- out America tomorrow in honor of mothers still alive, and those women will be made happy by the fact that the children for whom they suffered are once more gathered around them. They will be happier still if they can be sure that those sons and those daughters are living up to the ideals which they learned at mother’s knee. Simple rules but important ones. Not to lie, but to tell the truth; to fulfill any obligation which may be incurred; to be respectful and kind to the aged and courteous and @ college course. None of Antioch’s young men have Startled the world as yet, but it seems a safe bet that they are fully as well equipped to take their places in commerce and industry as the boys who spent their en- tire time in the classroom. Another example of competition for the current system of education is found in the creation, by a leading auto- mobile firm, of a school for young men in which is taught the theory as well as the practice of the various func- tions of automobile manufacture. The students are care- fully selected and the school has a long waiting list. The management asserts that it expects these boys to take Places in the factory as mechanical experts. They are hand-picked and trained for the work by a man who al- ready has served as instructor at one of the leading engi- neering schools in the country. It isn’t exactly apprenticeship as we used to know it but it amounts to the same thing, for it is learning by application simultaneous with instruction. If this trend develops further it may be that our present educational system will find in the new one a real com- petitor. It Does Seem Unfair Pressed on all sides by many different problems, the railroads of the country are beginning to complain about, the provision in the Panama Canal law which prohibits them from operating steamships. The idea back of the regulation was to make water and rail transportation competitors and thereby benefit the consumer. With business consolidations and mergers seen on every hand, however, and with the railroads having some- thing of a difficult struggle to make both ends meet and Pay @ modest dividend, it does seem rather out of date. The provision has never benefited the shippers in this part of the country, just as we never have received any direct benefit from the operations of the canal. With- out minimizing the benefits of the canal to the United States as a whole, it cannot be denied that the trans- continental lines which serve this section would be doing more business if it were not for the water-route com- petition. On the theory that volume results in economies, we may justifiably assume that our own freight rates would be lower if more use were made of the rails which now serve relatively few trains. An effort now is being made to bar the railroads from highway transportation, just as use of the canal was denied them. Commenting on this fact a spokesman for the railroads said recently: “Under the Panama Canal act the railways are now prohibited from engaging in water trans- portation. Efforts are being made to secure leg- islation that will exclude them from engaging in highway transportation. We constantly hear the theory advanced that our various means of trans- portation should not compete with but should supplement one another, but the obvious pur- pose of such legislation is to promote, and even compel, unrestricted competition between the different kinds of carriers. If we are to have a system of transportation coordinated in a way that is economically sound the railways must be given the same freedom as other companies to en- gage in all forms of water and highway trans- Portation. ‘To us it seems rather obvious that, by all the principles of justice and fair play, he is right in his contention. The President’s 24c Dinner President and Mrs. Herbert Hoover, accompanied by six invited guests, went over to the Girl Scouts’ “Little House” at Washington, D. C., April 23, and partook of @ frugal but very substantial dinner, which cost a fraction less than 24 cents for each guest, The dinner consisted ! PITCHI | |] SUPPOSE the word “if” plays a mighty big part in our | lives. If I hadn’t taken too much for granted and driven jaway from Mavis Merrill’s home when I saw her on the jterrace—if I hadn't believed that the young man with his arm about her was her lover—if I had made my presence known despite all of this, and demanded the kiss I had won on a wager, all would have been well. _ |, At least I wouldn’t have had such a miserable time of it. For it was a terrific jolt to me, because I had planned to not only collect from the beautiful Mavis Merrill the kiss I had won, but to produce the handsome ring and once more Propose to her. ee ee ea, | All the gl of the San Guardo “I'm going back East. I'll let you victory over ‘Avalda team was | know later; it all ds on a lot mm, and there was no merriment | of thi outside base! as the secret that I owned the | well as on my offer from the Iri- Avalda outfit. State,” and I tried to about that. “T don’t want to lose you, Bert, 4 but I yee] I can’t hope to keep Ea as ventures jup big with the couldn’t have evel just then “eve: couldn’t be with her. was still in love with her and that she had every right to do as “I'm Darwin from the Chi she was doing. told me Pii-Btate League,” was his greet- a ee es 1a “It's @ strong league, Mr. Dar- | to ‘up with the Chesters in the 2 * ‘Tri-State league. it evel I met this Mr. Dar- win at the “When can I let you know—i a or words. mean, the latest?” I asked. “Well, how about it?” “Like to know now,” he declared. “I'm asking you, Rushe.” deck: Toe lockering, but 1 cant « sure, think sleep before midnight is better] ,,.JuSt to maxe cont not be back in the lea versation or are you making @ bid to sign me up?” than after?” ‘asked. He at me. Answer: Scientists have found + AY, a) that there is no difference in sleep. ucteecnees = as ‘would ic ‘You will sleep just as soundly before| [Bid From a Minor League| | ' ow early 5 Vv ~— 32 as after and vice verse, The frst [Bid From a Minor League | | oe a lew of sleep are the deepest, “I come out here on business i re was no need for me to w BR. i“ mc coy however, and a person who goes to| year. I saw you ay last year and | around San Guardo and bang bed at nine o'clock will sleep the| 70t interested. I saw you again dur- | girl I loved going about with this ty) from then until 12 oclock; | ing, the past fortnight. ‘We could | good-looking chap wno was evident QUESTIONS to bed at 12 o'clock, he wii| [8d you a place with our outtit,” | Iy far more to her likin 1 Br eee RETARD TO WEALTH {DIET wit be meswenen soundest from about 12 until| "4 "Pee sutine tor the Chesters ‘ote 6 ly oF gouty about iP Howe er do you own the team?” » 't make me any happier ENCLOSE STAMPED NOORESSED ENVELOPE FOR REPLY Polypt uNelther; my wife's brother owns re and see ‘the © 1926 MPCOY HEALTH SERVICE -L0S, ANGELES- CAL: Question: M, L. asks: “Is there| the team and I'm always interested. | other chap, who evidently had all heain’ 1 in ti in I was in time to take » the World's Series and to see the ms, to the Cards. After a_visit in Worcester with He asked me to keep a lookout for * Ge‘sat down beside the fountain lo’ le fount LE hotel yard and talked for a cure other than surgically re- polypi of the nasal passage?” Answer: A diet taken to cure ca- tarrhal troubles will often reduce RETURNING TO A GENERAL DIET length of time of inhaling and exhal- The process of elimination should ing so that you can take five steps now be well established with those | while inhaling and five while exhal- | nasal passages. Such a treatment This particular Tri-State League | my sister I " - bed started this spring eliminative| ing. Then increase these to six, and | should be combined with ultra-violet] Was @ corker, one of the stronger fon ‘and went een. tot ns bie vine course. The first two days of the | 50 on, until as high as 14 steps can | light treatments directly to the polypi.| Of the minor leagues and far and | on the Pot . I had a particular course consisted of an acide fruit diet. | finally be taken while you are draw-| If this is not effective, one can al-| 2WY bove the average so-called | reason for wanting to go there this bush league. ‘Their cities were fairly big ones, they had an immense { 4 made re he poe that—it was ote The following five days of the course is a non-starchy vegetable diet, of Sa Sa oe seven days Many of you have undoubtedly ways fall back on surgical measures. In such a case the operation is simple ‘and not dangerous. It was evident, that be: was evident the break be- Harry and his wife bg) m4 WW mn Dr. McCoy will gladly answer wl er Personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of More For weeks Harry was “fed up” of split pea soup, Melba toast, rice and meat loaf, brown. sauce, carrot and cabbage salad, graham muffins, lemon bread pudding and tea. ‘The occasion was the opening of Better Homes Week, and it gave the Girl Scouts an opportunity to demon- strate their skill in the culinary art. The dinner was best times for this is in the evening just before you go to bed. Do not walk long enough to tire yourself out at first. Try to increase the dis- tance a little each day. Suppose you can walk a half mile without tiring cannot be permanent, whether it is brought about by a special diet or by ® drug, unless you are constantly on the alert to correct your everyday habits of eating, exercising and thinking to allow the body to func- captured Fresnoy at the height of battle of Arras. ss 5 describes the capture as follows: the neighboring ground the enemy Philip Gibbs, war correspondent, “Upon this village (Fresnoy) and Sem Sa ant o's Mba E she wanted. e sueibadlatte con The Tribune. ny, from @ baseball wit usec ores = te Ara senior Raton Enclose a ‘stamped addressed Pon the other hand, I had much with eo te ater yd red siesta envelope for reply. to think of. Sam Merrill hadn't | him out. I knew well ye let simple and you are not mentioned my coming to the | I had improved. Ts means interfering with the digestive proc- San Guardos, but had seemed to | know it and to admit ines esses by using the usual bad combi- | ing the air in and the same number take it for granted. 1 could sell my “I suppose you have to keep in nations. You have also been increas- | While exhaling. Avalda team to John Merrill any | practice for that fast bush league ing the elimination of toxins through | _ Walking is one of the most health- time, as he had said that he wanted | of yours,” he said, with a tinge of the eliminative organs. But you | ful forms of exercising which you can pretondiag te be = rgure>* should remember that @ cure is at| indulge in and you should plan on APTURE OF FRESNOY Peek eo bare ie Paik layla) oncas i best but a temporary change and it| having a good daily walk. One ofthe] On May 9, 1917, the re-| gad _there was bis daughter | Ont sage ween there—some “No, there is no out there truthfelly enouehe "I felt nese rut enough. I felt OE ean Mi erril, a ia “Must be the climate,” he mut- Preserve the Films Mary Pickford’s decision to buy all the films in which she has appeared in order to protect her name and fame egainst derision is to be regretted. Mary is super- sensitive. She says: “The motion pictures are in a very crude state now and would be simply laughable in 20 years.” Why should Mary fear posterity? Her old films may be re-run in some historical review of the development of cinema. They may create a few good laughs but in reality these films have a certain historical value which should be preserved. She should change her plans and! let them rest in the archives of the various studios, friendly to everyone. These are rules which, were every on and daughter to live up to them, would solve most of the problems of our modern world. They are so simple and yet they are so effective. Millions of Americans will wear white flowers tomor- row in honor of mothers who have gone to the special place which God must have in heaven for those mothers who have laid down their burdens. Of those mothers i there will be pleasant, if melancholy, memories. To them will go up silent hymns of praise that they lived and contributed their share toward the advancement of the 4 race before they were called to their rewards. A million different thoughts will flit through a million different minds and all of them will have to do with “Mother.” H ® fitting season of the year. And all that one can say or + do is feeble and inadequate to express the true sentiment ‘1 of a great nation on this occasion. i Educational Competition >! ‘With the passing of the era in which most manufac- turing was done at home, the apprenticeship system of training workers went out of style in America, There are plenty of men still living who can remember when the boy who wanted to be a shoemaker was apprenticed to @ shoemaker. His brother was apprenticed to te har- ness-maker and his numerous cousins to the tinner, the printer, the plumber and a host of other tradesmen. It was all a part of the boy's education and, since it was suitable to the times, it often worked out to the ad- vantage of the boy as well as to that of the man who had undertaken to educate him. “Book learning” was scarce enough in those days and, under the circumstances, was fore machinery msde mass-production possible it was ® good deal more important to do a whole job and do 1t well than to be able to talk about it. In that period the hops and business houses competed more actively with * ‘the schools for the time of the youth of the land than is the case today. Of the old apprenticeships only the printers “devil,” the ee ie wt wt oO ‘The rest have to the modern trail and the present-day shoe- gaker knows, as a Tule, only how to operate 9 certain the 10 years ago, b ecsomagi Antioch College, a little institution down | Ohio, Under this the college assigned Ho hogs to & fob provided for them by business organ- bation ¢ 4m the experiment. During six months For, after all, living or dead, it is her day, observed at ¢; rightly regarded as less important than it is now. Be-| economic Editorial Comment Patierials zeintet, below show the trend of thought by other editors. T! hey are published without regare they agree or disagree with The Srib- to whet or ‘une's policies, The Undeceived Mr. Mellon (Devils Lake Journal) Andrew W. Mellon, secretary of the treasury, has no fanciful illusions regarding economic conditions through- out the world. In his address yesterday before the visit- is world wide, and that the “world is passing through one of the most extensive depressions it has ever known.” He apparently is not joshing himself into the belief that the depression will end abruptly, but he is convinced that the reversal will not be an easy or fast one. “Solu- tions which some times appear ideal,” he said, “cannot always be put into effect for various reasons. One is that in each country government must deal with the facts of their own case, and are free to act only by national traditions, economic organization, and the limited that exists in every country of other peoples’ problems and of the extent to which all of us are affected by con- ditions outside of our own borders.” ‘The secretary of the treasury is one of the world’s equipped to give authoritative opinions on these mat- ters, and inasmuch as it has been s habit of his to i 5 b i $ i z § z il a 85 Fy Hint PETE aaatat FEET g a | | : ! i : Hl E aif itt 3 i f § i I i : Prepared as recommended to families throughout the/ tion ina normal way without con-| the first day. Try to add maybe an| concentrated e Darwin told me what country by the Bureau of Home Economics. The f00d| flicting with the unchangeable laws| eighth of a mile a day until you are | artillery eoivedbtl nd auecten, a Pay me. Naturally it ‘may “Sway I tried out some of my new specialists of the bureau stated that such meal might/ of nature. able to walk four or five miles with- | this sector of the front, and in addi-| S22ve the money the bush Jeagues | on him ‘and he missed ‘most of sotve as the Sunday dinner for a family of adults who,| Now is s good time to build into| out becoming tired. You will find in| tion to the ordinary high explosives | “rit Yell tou what, Mr. Darwin | ‘eM nose to live by the| Your mind these health habits. this way you can build up your vital-| and shrapnel, he flung a storm of gas| I finally safd, “I cannot de “I always told you that you had a ring ten samnalernens seers, # We know that the function of | ity to an amazing shells wherever he thought the Brit-| tomorrow night. T have lot to do | ‘%,ticky curves, Bert,” ie agreed minimum food guide developed by the department. breathing is so important that if the| ‘This 4s the fifth day of the elimi-| ish had battery positions. tomorrow, a lot of business to trans | “wen Momine, cise? inhalation and exhalation of air to| native diet, and you should continue] “Presnoy itself had been a difficult | Sct .and——" T hesitated. I couldn't | Toss’ a few" the lungs is stopped for only @ few| with the non-starchy vegetable diet place to hold since the Canadians| CXPlain that 2 wanted just @ word | He did and.he was no slouch of a for two more days, also using the ih Mavis—“some of things. minutes death must take place. It is took it so gallantly on May 3..... lepen ” hurler, at that, I showed him that therefore important for us to learn to| enemas, sponge baths, etc. After| The enemy had marked ieaown for eet cerey erie right with tay mek work tied ereatly im breathe properly so that the body can | this, use the diet outlined in my Fri-| attack, and for several days made| him. He would be there another ‘And the began obtain a greater supply of oxygen and | day menus. strong counterthrusts on each side of | week, he told me, down. T wade intta adeaty hat I am sure that ali of those who are My first move next ie taking this course will notice a great when he said I would never have ‘was to Salat Ore John Merrill ut the | anything but a few ‘tricky curves = la team. ss he was wrong. I had acquired dectared, and ndaed a be ‘would eyes him Grive into town right away. tetested in tay” seure &°8 im tn- “More than a few curves?” J it a order to prevent British troops forward to benefit at the end of that time and a Soper eenre line. i} I would be glad to have any of you i write to me if any special problems | fury.” have arisen, and I would also like to hear of the benefits which have been caneliminate the gasous waste prod- ucts through the lungs. Such games as basketball, baseball, wrestling, boxing, etc., which produce heavy breathing tend to develop the diaphragm be- the sports which compel deep breath- | received. had a littl than ‘mone; OM , for those of cine ao Re the — ck sides th, small ta cf Fe ass rw setting majority, it is advisable to start some| QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS profit it hed made for me during | "“Wenl' then, for the fur time, form of’ breathing exercises to de- Good Blood No one objects to the epithets of a] “Ht seanom In all seriousness, I am going to velop diaphragmatic strength and| Question: B. J. ©. asks: “What| 72 Who swears off smoking, se Te Red ms ‘at this | ask you to fix it for me to go down control. One of the simplest exercises Royle pee aed * * * fe ae with Jone Merit, | Snd,try out for the major league, do you think of cocoa and apricots as the best foods for the marrow in the bones? Also, what is the importance of the marrow in building blood blood To bring a poetic thought up to date: Aprii showers bring May showers. se * ‘Those girls at a western university the circumference around thi = an Goer ee oe who reported for the men’s track sible. Do this ‘lowly ‘while, taking an should know, of course, that not four steps and wi taking dashing young men at school com] PS hile the the ‘cinder path. ang was ree te into my car as | ‘oPyrieht, 1929, Graphic Gyndicate, Inc.) next four steps force the air out of your lungs until your waist meas- ures the smallest possible circumfer- The last breath should be out with a kind of grunt. Every few days you can increase the ** 2 Motorists may be increasing, but the pedestrian is getting along in leaps and bounds. ae * . ‘The new hairdressing style covering the ears should make the girls sit up and listen. dition and to health. build up the general Sleeping Soundly Question: V.R. H. asks: “Do you BE SURE YOU'RE RIGHT— Ten million pounds of pecans are expected to be marketed by 2,700 Growers in ten states this year through the National Pecan Market- ing Association, J. C. Holton, commissioner of agri- culture in Mississippi, says 350,000 es (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc) | onthe Aveldsa” Mern anid “Bie | bales of cotton would he required for TO HAVENTILLED SCORES Tilooked at Bed and foeh began | praPing the Rales, and for making Quotations. 1 ede 3 aale, “Tr not |e, feller and cotton seed great disaster of our civiliza- z Led Approximately 40,000,000 straw- berry plants were shipped from the weinity of Judsonia, Ark., this spring H. Lawrence. * * America it is the men who are the harem.—Michael Arlen. see to make men feel big to accomplish big things. said, Schwab. Shc, spe Ba , ity, should 4 ‘Lyon orders that ILLED EVEN to vel hu Meret” cred “and ONE. i i i G FLAPPER FANny SAYs: Bie pee is vor, ss MANY THIS THE MOST WIDELY READ BOOK. THAT Dis TINCTION BELONGS 10 THE KORAN, AE MOHAMMEDAN PRAYER BOOT. order to get $100 for 100 head of cows at $10, pigs at $3 and sheep at 50 cents, the fi ne farmer must have 94 sheep, one pig and five cows. Light thoughts are difficult on dark Vv?

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