The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 1, 1932, Page 4

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_THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1982 teceecscsscsccevocsee T Daily by mail per year (in state i Daily by {| Dakota f Pala ; Kh) cesseeseeee 5.00 mail outside of North | ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 ee ee ee, thee by mail outside of North per year ......4..... 1.50 mail in Canada, | a years ‘Weekly | . Dakota, | Weekly by per ; year .. + 2.00 { Member of Audit Bureau o! 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 | mot otherwise credited in this news- paper 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 County Newspaper) quired careful planning for food and the persistent use of “left-overs.” But when the budget was reduced, as it has been in many instances, new economies were necessary, The women are making them, and this without serious damage to the health of their husbands or children. The experience of members of the Edna Homemakers club in Barnes county, as related by the extension department of the state agricultural college, is typical. These women are making use of the wheat grown on their own farms to cut the grocery bill. sf Experience has proved Marquis to be the best variety for home milling. | It is run through a fanning mill and then through a disk mill to remove foreign materials. Dust is removed by pouring from one pan to another, in the open air. Weed seeds and un- desirable wheat grains are removed by hand and the grain is washed through several waters and dipped out to leave the sediment in the bot- tom of the pan. Then the grain is spread on a clean cloth to dry. For use as breakfast food, the wheat may be passed through a Sor) fee grinder. To get flour, hand mills; or feed mills are used and the prod- uct is sifted to obtain flour for whole wheat bread. The coarser parts are served as breakfast cereal. The product is said to be flavorful as well as healthful. It is rich in minerals, vitamins and proteins. This activity constitutes a return Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER ncorporated) | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Sure Fire Education One reason why children leaving * high school have’ a proud certainty | Of what they know and why they | have to unlearn some of the things: taught them, is disclosed by analysis of @ questionnaire recently given to + members of the journalism class at Bismarck high school. ; It was a “current events” test to! | ascertain how well the students keep, ‘ up with the world and how well they remember what they read. Fifteen) questions were listed and all but two of them were such that correct an- sSwers could be given. ‘The two were: “What governor of a southern state recently announced his candidacy. for the presidency” _ and “what college football team won the'national championship.” It so happens that neither of these re susceptible to accurate answers. The expected answer to the first question was “Alfalfa Bill” Murray, of Oklahoma, but it happens to be in error. Murray is known to be a candidate and relatives and friends have announced his candidacy, but the record doesn’t show that he has announced himself as such. If the exigencies of politics made it ad- visable he could declare tomorrow that he is not and never has been @ candidate and nothing which he has said himself could be quoted to Prove the contrary. ‘The expected answer to the second , question is “University of Southern California” but that, too, is subject to argument. The record of the west- ern school's gridiron machine was no better than that of Northwestern, Purdue, Pittsburgh and several other fine teams, each of which lost one game, just as Southern California lost one game. It may be that South- ' ern California has a strong claim to the title, but it is by no means in- disputable. A good many of us envy the stu- the fine certainty of what he we hope that it will much of a mental to learn later that: things he knows are ‘ Doubt- * less @ good many students know this and give the stock answers because it is the expected thing, even though they understand there is a great deal more to be said than appears in the textbooks. Before they leave high school, some students may learn that even the writers of textbooks dis- | agree, so that what a person believes | may depend largely on the authority the has chosen, or which has been chosen for him. Schoo! teachers understand this as | Well as other folk but dare not give ' the juvenile mind more than it can reasonably absorb. They know, also, that education must be ladled out | with certainty and dispatch and that! to give an uncertain answer is, in maby cages, worse than to give no} | answer_at all. Perhaps it “is better, after all, to hand out information on the present aegis and let the student learn later for himself some of the modifications ‘and ramifications which have made the e@ujt mind humble and questing to fundamental methods of living with a vengeance. The surprising thing about it is that it has improved rather than harmed the health of the persons affected. Now Is the Time This is the season of the year when a good many of us peer out of the windows at the snow outside and then seize a seed catalogue and; transport ourselves in a single min- ute to the land of fruits and flowers. What matter if Jack Frost rules our world. Inside all is cozy and sweet dreams come to the man or woman who likes to see things grow and to help them grow. It is a pleasant occupation and al- ways we have the knowledge that some of the hopes which rise now may really come true. It won't be long before seeds for transplanting will be placed in the soil and this, whether we realize it or not, is the first real harbinger of spring. Literally it will be the first stirring of the bosom of mother earth preparatory to the new season. What if the flowers, fruits and vegetables we raise do not look quite the same next July and August as’ the pictures we see now. There is more to gardening than getting a harvest and one of the best of these benefits comes from the pleasure we get from thinking and planning what| we are going to do next spring and summer. Even if the plans do not fructify, we haye had some pleasant winter evenings. Wisconsin’s Experiment It will be interesting to see how Wisconsin's unemployment insurance bill, recently enacted, works out. The bill is apparently a com- promise. On the one hand it has a radical tinge, in that all the cost is to be borne by employers, who must set up funds guaranteeing the pay-| ment of premiums. On the other hand, it surely goes less far than most workers would want, in that it limits each worker's share to not more than ten weeks of unemploy- ment pay in one year—this pay to be not more than 50 per cent of his, average pay. | The measure represents a good! deal more than any other state has been willing to do. Wisconsin's ex- perience with the new law will be well worth watching. Editorial Comment | Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. Parents’ Duty (New York World-Telegram) “Five hundred youngsters in this city now confined to bed with diph- theria represent just five hundred reasons for every mother having her youngsters made safe today.” Health Commissioner Wynne's ad- vice should not go unheeded. Dread epidemics of diphtheria are things of the past. “They are things of the past because most parents have learned that toxin-antitoxin treat- ment can’ make their children safe and immune. That is why diphtheria deaths in the city have been reduced to less than 200 a year since 1929, as against an average of 750 a year for the prior ten-year period. Present increase in diphtheria cases is thought by the health de- partment to be largely due to the fact that during the infantile paraly- sis epidemic of last year many par- ents feared, unnecessarily, to have their children treated with antitoxin. New York, Feb. 1—Notes from a convenient cuff; Guardians of the J. Hill, I've noted, are among the big town’s most watchful... . Any effort signs of loafing is summarily dis-) couraged. ... I've never seen anyone resembling a watchaman about the; uptown Rockefeller residence. Whenever the boys and girls of the; press want to be mean about Greta: Garbo they refer to her feet. In the mannish, underslung brogans she af- fects, they seem to be somewhere) around number sevens. . . . Gloria! Swanson on the other hand— or foot, rather— has the smallest feet among i entertainers. { Heywood Broun, the columinist- critic-actor-producer, and his wife have adopted the Katherine Brush idea of separate penthouses. . . Each has an individual roof: lean-to, adjoining, but allowing indi- vidual freedom. . . Each may decor- ate and 6perate his own menage ac cording to independent tastes. . . And there's no one to say that a fel- low can’t put his feet up on the table. xk * Richard Halliburton’s unsuccessful effort fo fly over Mt. Everest brings from the old cuff a memo concerning the last time I saw this greatest of rover boys. .... A party had been staged for him at one of the swanky New York hotels. . . It so happened that the press-agent who had Halli- burton under his wing also handled publicity for Peggy Joyce... . Both had books coming out.... The p. a thought it would be a good idea to get them together and drop hints of ro- mance. ... “But I,” boasted Hallibur- ton with serious face, “attempt to STICKERS ing across and four down? Do not move fright. tempting. pocket, the letters already placed. ' There should be no such fear now. Every child under the age of 10 years should be promptly taken to the for imn iy |, if necessary, the toxin-antitoxin treatment, which is » safe and effective. If its capnot afford we the achieve only the unusual or impossi- ble... .” The, idea was canceled be- cause Dick threatened to get stage Because she had been away from her hubby so long, Lilyan Tashman usually appeared in the Manhattan night spots with two escorts... .°. People will talk, you know! | Benn Levy, young British play-; wright whose opus, “The Devil Pass-| es,” is one of the immediate Broad- | way hits, had a love-at-first-sight at- jtack when he met his leading lady, Pierpoint Morgan mansion on Murray! Diana Wynyard. . . . The only rea- son they're not married, it’s said, has to do with straightening out family to lean against the fence or show religious notions, ... Benn is Jewish. ae oe St. Malachy’s—generally referred to as “the actor’s church”—still uses the good old “pledge” system for those performers who find their cups too When the “pledge” has been taken, {the reformed one is given a neat little card that can be handily carried in a Not only can this card be flashed boastfully, but if some of the boys suggest “just a little nip” it can |be produced by way of explanation. Scores of stage personalities have been good tipplers and any number of them, having heard of the church’s ,|system which has been functioning for many years, have taken out their cards, ee * Just a few blocks away, snd within jumping distance of the “gay white way,” there is a grammar school. ‘When recess is declared or school is out, the youngsters play about in the theater crowds, quite unconscious, it would seem, of their playground’s lo- cation. Visitors invariably rub their FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: AUG. U. 5. PAT. OFF. It’s tough sledding for the person who's contented just to coast along. — THIS CURIOUS WORLD. — eyes at the spectacle of crowds of school children using theater lobbies for tag games. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) Ae $ MARCH MADE CHIEF On Feb. 1, 1918, Maj.-Gen. Peyton C. March was appointed chief of staff of the United States army. Z Maj. Gen. March succeeded Gen- eral Bliss, who continued on fur- lough as American military repre- sentative on the Interallied War Council. At the.time of his appoint- ment, Maj. Gen. March was chief of artillery under General Pershing. The Ukrainian Republic was recog- nized by Germany and Austria-Hun- gary. The Bolsheviki captured Odessa and Orenburg, and took the Alexan- der Nevsky monastery in Petrograd. A counter-revolutionary movement | ‘Aw, Let’s Give the Little Fellow a Break! dinove London. eee) In Bolivia mines will do away with as much machinery as possible and use more men.—Prafessor E. W. Kem- merer, one Princeton U. s I can see the day not far ahead the will buy their talking for them—Liam O'Flaherty, famous writer. eee —Frank J. Loesch, president Chicago Crime Commission. and government is everlasting.—Gov- Franklin D. Roosevelt of New | A professor says feeding “light” cattle -helps their production. But apparently feeding baloney to the publi¢ doesn’t have ote same effect. es % Newspapers report a lost city was found in India. Maybe Gandhi's been holding out on spade * A newly elected mayor says cham- bers of commerce should be abolished. But then who would take credit for jeverything Lien Aajeed community? Turtles are said to have a larger Percentage of hone than any other animal. But that must have been said before the stock crash called at- tention to poreae oot % ‘An Ontario judge would like to sen- tence radio crooners to life. But that would only be familiarizing them with @ few more bars. + eh & Pierre Laval of France quit one job and got two. But for once France probably will not kick about being two-timed. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) ns SS Daily Health Service Inflammation of Joints Needs Treatment Economic Will Chronic. Arthritis Is Halted Early It By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association In a survey of the significance of chronic inflammation of the joints as an economic problem, Dr. Robert |B: Osgood points out that in a state of four and a half million people there are approximately 10,000 cases of cancer; 25,000 cases of active tu- berculosis; 50,000 cases of diseases ,jof the heart and blood vessels, and 150,000 cases of so-called rheuma- tism. : Patients with any of the first three types of diseases either re- cover or die fairly quickly. Persons with chronic rheumatism, however, neither recover quickly nor a quickly. This condition has affecter animals and man for at least 9 mil- lion years. ‘The fossil remains 0 dinosaur,” said Dr. Ougcod Snake it certain that he suffered from cricks in his back be- fore he became a fossil.” Rheumatic diseases are responsi- ble for a terrific loss of time and thereby of money. In England they caused one and a half million weeks of idleness in one year and cost the relief agency $10,000,000. Far too often chronic inflammation of the f|either permanently Prompt . Disease and Unless It Is ‘Become Incurable able condition and one which is im- possible to control. ‘There seems to be reason for believing, Leegehee that attention given early and ade- ately to this condition will ees about success in its treatment. In \ order that treatment may be given adequately, it is necessarv that it be recognized in its earliest stages. The physician who makes his diag- nosis does so on the basis of beth nite changes that take place in the tissues, including particularly e surface of what are called the syno- vial membranes and of the bones in- volved in the joints. The synovial membranes are the tissues which enable the joints to move freely and which act as lubricating surfaces. In the national hospital for ar- thritis in Sweden it is found that ap- proximately 60 per cent of the pa- tients properly treated early have recovered Or after three years become enabled to take care of themselves. The whole purpose of this discus- sion of the subject is to urge people who have pains in the joints, who suffer with inflammation of the joints, or who have the slightest, notion that they suffer with such in- fections, to get prompt and com- plete medical attention before the condition products permanent dam- joints is looked upon as an incw PEAT CEM S RE eo ESE LETT TTT ha NEW SENATOR FROM LOUISIANA age and crippling. wae Urey PAotO ‘6 Huey P. Long, former gevernor of Louls'ana, at his desk in Wash- Ington a short time after he had been sworn in as a United St: tor. Everything was tranquil in Wa: ington but back home a storm brewed as Pau! Cyr. Long’s rival, planned a fight to oust Alvin O. King, Long supporter, who took over the governor's chair. HREE BY BEGIN HERE TODAY aes date for the same Mary-Francea, 15, school, strikes up at with EARL DE by goin SMITH, CHAPTER*XXXIX you like mother?” “Boloney! inhibitions, Ann. You——' ing a note? “Angel An and I have been married—” ‘i “Maybe?” Kenny was persist- ng. “Maybe, Ann?” fo,” Ann said. Maybe what? thing? might change, mightn’t you? don’t care how unhappy I am, you?" “I care, Kenny. grandparents. I’m beginning other sid But you won't. - you are beautiful.” ‘ *“Beca' aces beat a full house?” exactly?” my values straight.” right. (Course you aren’t. KINDS NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY sow, now, Kenny. How would ft when people came up and asked to meet your You got too many Would Cecily go home to dress and off again to marry Barry without a word to her? Would Cecily do a cruel thing, like leav- "No, not may- that right, or fair, or any- How'd you know what may happen in the future? You wouldn't hurt you to give me a little hope, would it? What is a man going to live for if he can’t hope? But you don’t care. You But, after all, who is happy? I don’t know any- one who is, except, perbaps, my think that young people never are.. That they have to wait until they get through caring so desperately about everything and come out to the—well, calm, is it?—on the “You could, make me happy. You're beautiful and cruel—that’s what you are. Beautiful and cruel. Crueler than I remember that four “Check. But what do you mean ossibly 1 mean that I can kee! “And I'm of no value? All I may not be four aces, but I’m no four-flusher, either.” Ann had time to say only, “Ot idn’t mean KAY CLEAV that,” before Mr. Redfern came into the office. He was a thin man with pro- truding eyes and a long stretch of wrinkled neck between his too large collar and his nervous chin. He always tapped a pencil when he talked, and jiggled his foot up and down, and he fretted when he ae to listen to other persons talk- ing. - He said to Kenneth, “Don’t let me scare you off, young fellow,” and to Ann, “Anything new?” “Nothing,” said Ann, “except that Mr. Isanberg was in to see you about renewing the lease. said he'd come in again at 4 o'clock.” “I met him down the street. I'm waiting for him. You may as well go, if you'd like to, Miss Fen- wick. No reason for us doth sticking around here.” He reached for the telephone. Ann said, “May I get the num- ber for you, Mr. Redfern?” and nodded at Kenny. - “I'll wait outside for you,” he said, and went scowling to the door and out of it. Mr. Redfern explained that he had thought of calling Black & Mauer, but guessed it wouldn’t do any good. “I called them this morning. They said they'd have to let thi discount go—that they didn’t have the money to take advantage of it this month.” Mr. Redfern sighed and tapped his pencil. “By the way, Miss Fen- wick, since you brought up the matter of the lease, I guess I might as well tell you one time as another. Been meaning to tell you for quite a bit now. I’m not going to renew.” “Not” aid Ann, without un- It| derstanding. ‘ “Can't do it.” Mr. Redfern jig- sled his foot as if he had a child riding on it. “Can't strugsl along with this overhead. . . . Presehtly Ann understood. It was confused with what Mrs. Red- fern had said and had been sa: ing for a long time, and with t! basement in the Redfern house, and with old customers who were still to be served, but one fact emerged clearly—in August Ann would be out of a job. cee ENNY said, “Gosh, this ts Breat! Good scotit, your boss though I'd like to choke him, Where'll we go? What'll we do? How about the houseboat and a swim?” “No. I bave to go home.” “ ‘Smatter?” “Everything.” “Gee, Ann, I'm sorry. On the square | am. I'll just run acros: the bridge here.and beck over the other one. Ride will do you good. ‘That old crook esy something to bother you, in there?” do to, of business, for a time, at least— except what he can carry on from “Yes—he did. He's going out | al ACNE his house. It means I’m out of a job—or will be, in August.” “Speaking of jobs,” said Kenny, “I know of one that I'd like to have you consider. The hours are long, but the duties are—how do they say it?—comparatively light. Fact—about all you’d have to do is put up with me hanging around and have your cards engraved Mrs. Kenneth Homer Smith.” For one silly minute Ann had hoped. The disappointment, ad- ministered suddenly, demanded reprisal. “That is simply ab- surd,” she said. “I've told you so often. If you don’t stop boring and bothering me about it all the time I'll stop seeing you. I think I shall anyway. You've agreed over and over to be friends—but you won't try to be. You have no conception of friendship—nor of anything but having your own way. I told you I wished to go straight home. Here we are, go- ing across the river.” went down under {t. In his wail, “Ann, don't gay that. Ann, I try. Ann, I'd die for you this minute. I'd gladly die for you this minute,” there was a tragi-comic youthfulness that made Ann sad and ashamed. “I'm sorry I was mean, Kenny, Tt {s all right. But I am so—so rightfully worried today.” “Something else besides the job?” “Yes. Ever so many things, I'd tather not talk about them, though. Please.” 7 see ypaer had crossed the wide beautiful bridge and had come into the dingy district where shabby men milled about sidewalk blackboards in front of employ- ment offices; where poverty pro- truded like a bony elbow through ‘& ragged sleeve, and want, desper- ate, skulked like a starved cat and mewed and clawed. From the door of a charitable organization &@ queue had formed, had crept almost to the corner, and Ann thought of it as the gently lash- ing tail of a monster, dozing now, but soon to waken and spring on its prey. Even Kenneth had to drive charily through this district. He did not speak until they had come} anything. to the greens of the trees and the shadowed Grass in the park blocks, ‘ann,” be pleaded, “I just want to tell. you one or two more little things, and then I'll promise not to open the subject again. Will you listen while I tell you just one or two more little things?” ‘I suppose so,” said Ann, “I know I’m dumb,” said Ken- ney, “and as homely as a hen's foot, but I'm not deaf nor blind, it I do say it. I know you have wor- ties, Ann. I’ve known {t all along But what cap 1 do? Nothing,” wporget about th Nekays nats get about ‘enny, y 1 right, decal, “No, ‘it’s not all right. But, i listen, Ann, You sald you'd listen, It’s not so hot, bragging about money and so on—but I have wads of it, and it is all yours for the taking. money isn’t everything. In fact, I know it isn’t much of anything— but it does help, Ann. Honest, it does help—lots of times.” “Yes,” said Ann, does.” “What I mean is—you don’t hate me, do you?” “I like you a lot. love you a bit.” What I was going to say was— outside the fact that I love you enough for two and all—that maybe you could sort of look at it unselfishly, I mean—there’s your sisters and your grandparents. Not counting yourself, Ann, there wouldn't be much of anything you couldn't do for your folks. Your little sister, for instance. She's a Peach. You'd like to put her in the best girls’ school in the coun- try—or over in Switzerland or some place, wouldn't you? : you'd like for her to have every- thing just as good as other girls —pretty clothes, and nice places to go, and travel and all. with Cecily. Barry hasn’t much, and we could help them out in lots of ways, and they'd never know we were doing it. Barry’s kind of high-hat, I mean, And then the old people—we could give them every comfort and luz- ury, All like that. It you hated | me, Ann, it would be different. But, since you don’t, it seems as it you might get a big kick out of making me happy and doing things for the family and making ian Lappy. eer Presents, opportunities and ever . You'd like it, Ann.” iis AZTER @ few blocks Kenny said, will you?” “Kenny, you tease so. make ue perrene You bother so, lon’t wish to be bothered, 1’ troubled enough. Nes Ee home, home. I bave a headache.” get 8 bromo or something.” ing when you don’t have “Well, “Please, Kenny. Talk about ; thing else. I don't want to beat any more about that—please.” ~ even let a man talk—’ Ann ial Just given Mary-Fra coat in a big poly ee ee tion, Just it yes or ver’ @ 931 by bleday, id Co, Do Of course, { know “TI believe it But I don't “Never mind rubbing {t in, And Same eee “You won't even answer me, You IT want to go I told you I wanted to go “We'll stop at a drug store and “No. I don’t want a bromo nor Thank you.” “But what's the “I don’t want a bromo,” Kenny sighed and frowned. here's another thing—” Ann put her hand on bis arm. “Well, of course, {f you won't - ” did hot answer. She had “Anyway, answer this one ques- one question, Answer no. Will you think it “No,” said Ana, “1 ” i (To Be Continued)” bs | Ar ne er awe - Cn ce |

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