The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 29, 1925, Page 4

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P ‘GE FOUR An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) shed by the Bismarck Tribune Company, 1onarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice a Lt smurek, ag second class mall matter, George D Mann... . President and Publisher ubseription Rates Payable In Advance teuy by carrier, per year....... Vousy by mail, per year (in Bismarck)... Jey by mail, per year ‘| (in state outside Bismarck). .. 6.00 Ch iissy by mati, outside of North Dakota 2 6.00 ’ Member Audit Bureau of Cireulatl Member of The Assoclated Press Ihe Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the | u* ior republication of all news dispatche {itor not otherwise credited in this pape tae socal news of spontaneous origin published here iw AMl rights of republication of all uther matter hore are also reserved credited Forelgn Representatives ‘Che Bismarck Tribune! More discourteous than they would ever think of doing in their offiee or their home | | Possibly such action ix necessary in self defense these d when so many auto drivers seem to think | they ought to have all the road, but the automobile is certainly making this country forget all about politeness and courtesy | School of Agriculture | h | | Harvard | school univer tabl graduate a ch in agri t upon the report ty may & | griculture for jeultural problems if the trustees jal pe re jmade to it by a special committe {This committee recommenda such a school with Fan endowment of $12,000,000, ‘This endowment would provide $150,000. ye for the maintenance of It ould provide another SLS0,000 for the upkeep of laboratories and $24,009 fessorshigs | a year for providing fellowship committee estimates t such a school would juve an enrollment of about 400 graduate students. | Chinese cricagon LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY, i | Judges in Cleveland have ordered the release 0! | Taser Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | several hundred Chinese, arrested after a tong mur Me _. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH Ider. ‘They were rounded up on police orders to ar Gorn NEWYORK - - Fitth Ave. BIE! peg) ail Chinese in the city, All their places of | a ‘Official City, State and County Newspaper) | business: were closed. one se ‘Tong warfare should be eliminated from all Amer koe Getting Down to Facts Jican elt but suppose mit Mank ©. Lowden in’ October's World's Work) wo Americans got into a fight in a Chinese city Oh OF lenges statement that frequently made) ong one murdered the other, And suppose the Chi be American farmer is inefficient, He points! nese police arrested every American in the city and det 10 Gre fact chat 4 percent of tie farmers and {20M 1 cape yim in jail for a day ar two. tha lab are found in Amertes, hut that the Amer Would this country protest? It probably) would Ley nearly TH per cent OF Te bag more than that 60 per eent of the world’s cotton, 4 - 7 P ¢ I's lobaces percent of the rs and hay, 20 per cent of the world's , é: | MPev beat ind caxseed, 18 per vent of the world’s ba Editorial Comment | ne ey cent of the world’s potatoes — : | in v nposing figures and utt School For Parents ' une state atten made that Am (Ft. Wayne News-Sentinel) i al it and ineffective, kt is shown can The school for parents bids fair to become ar Cousive enment figures that in Americ: | institution among us. Fairhope School, an Alabama | the production of cereals yer person en: | experiment, olfers six weeks courses to mothers | sa tons and for the rest of the world it is/#nd fwthers in manual training, nature study and | ail = | other ttvored activities of childhood. The idea is \merican farmer has heen able to do} to furnish parents with a more systematic under- u ny evelous record in face of the handicaps | Stinding: of the things their children are doing 0: sig confronted, Statistics show that | like to do, to keep alive their interests in childish ; neat yoara OPUPFOUILIFe ihe Anietl pleasures, and to make them grownup pals anc veal-on net capital invested hut 61 pee! Playmates as well as mentors and counsellors of « ve carned less than he paid upon capital | Meir charge There is much merit in the plan. borrowed .n the form of mortgage and other in-| To frequently we find fathers and mothers living tedie | with their boys and girls in body only, with no Mr. 1 a emphasizes a fact peculiar to modern | Spiritual contacts and with their interests and men ggricultuce | tal attitudes wholly out of harmony with those of “Today all is changed,” he writes. ‘The farmer | Wondering perplexed youngsters who can’t bring a bus’ in other large. 1 ing for t ters he, t duction, | mainly, | man bound by the laws which oper ness fields, His cash expenditures is to prodce enough of food and cloti- ieeming millions in the industrial cen . must employ industrial means in prov} is a producer no longer for himsel! to supply the needs of this indust ages ‘The surplus which he produces is now the import: 1 ving.” : oie Speclii upon the future of cooperative market att ee: ie ton of the farmers for the purpose of iy their crops collectively is progressing cou 1 belie + me day it will cover entire fleld, st denm. ts shown how, under the most advers ge circu es, it can transform the iculture of} ne a peaj Wherever cooperative marketing is far- tel the fe en cd, either in the United States or abroad sur ty v ‘nd agriculture in its best estate; violent py. fle in the markets climinated; — bett ee producers without an increase in cc ant u (nos with an actual decrease to the con- um ) proach to standardization of product; icligent effort to adjust production te pont of time for the farm surpluses what we have ‘omplished in point of place for the credit re ources of the country, we would have come our troubles.” ely over. Smart Crimina You can't get away with it. A Los Angeles councilman was arrested for brib and his brother sought to divert sympathy by writing a fake letter to himself and pretending tc Is A> eynamite his house. He overdid the explosion and wrecked the house and injured himself, and the de ception was discovered within a few hours A San Francisco murderer beheaded his victim, eut the head into small bits, and scattered them iu ~/.im isolated swamp. Se Some children playing found an ear. fic’ Search revcaled a wisp of"hair and some teeth, uw" wrom’ these, the victim was identified in a few : hours, and clues of the suspected murderer revealed, You don't fet away with it. Not with the “smart” crimes, are so many of these that some of them get away. The smart ones all fail. Discourtesy » What is it that changes the disposition of so many _, People as soon as they sit behind the wheel of an t automobile? i _ There are thousands of people who are extremely polite and ccurteous as long as they are not driving r.. . if ‘But as soon as they start driving they try to crowd other people off the road, to cut corners on bel pedestrians, to force other cars to stop, so they can a.turn a corner and do countless other things far >| their et p nand; a,finer and more ing com- mari : » many years, however, before the co- ot the staple farm products are suffi- Cent y inized to take care of this ever-present i >» curplus. And this is ituation which, ‘ self, tends constantly to grow worse. ! ie jor Ely points out, when a mana- ives that he cannot market his product so of production, he can stop or reduce pro- tin at the same time reduce expenses, The ruet do this, His expenses largely go on | het acreage planted mewhat smaller n s to mect these expenses anyway, the ters lowe niece the larger must his acreage be to pli Pho oy effective means to relieve agriculture, wi ! ees it, is to take “from the back of the ' meric mer the burden of his surplus.” the e follawing pertinent query: a ts some way by which the surpluses of jat sa produc.s can Me mobilized and thus be made prt) serve the future If we could accomplish in Ifyou must be a criminal, be a stupid one. There | themselve dar to feel comfortable in tie company ot Jazz Menaces Formal Arts | (Joha McClure in the American Mereury) A wave or symbolism is engulfing poetry, paint: | jing and sculpture. A determined effort. is afoot to destroy these fine arts, whose existence has always j been ideal, remote and disassociated from life, and ; to substitute for them that immediate criticism of ; ich js simply literature, i The very basis of man's sense of formal beauty is under attack. pressionists under one name or an- attempting to demolish the principles of ty which man arrived at only after lite w | \ | b | uges of travail. | The ace to the formal arts today is the effort | that is being made to establish literary significance , ence of the form, Literary significance is of course the essence of nothing but Iterature. The fallacy that it is the essence of all the arts | has affected music, painting, sculpture and poetry to a very great degree. In poetry it has swept the field. Hardly one person in a thousand considers ! poetry as anything except simple literature. It is {read (and written) ag if it were prose, appraised for its literary’ qualities and declared to be nothing but idea (with strange sentimental distinctions as to what ideas are poetry and what are not) or emo- tion. Music called back to its savage utility of expressing idea or emotion. H The amusing thing in the literary movement in painting is that it began in a rebellion against liter- ature in art. ‘the rebels escaped by plunging into pure literature, i Those of us ;who cherish formal beauty cannot | but regret the affort to discredit it. Is there, after | all, any need to destroy form because we admire | symbol? . | 1 see | A British Farm Program | (St. Paul Dispatch) | Before an audience of 25,000 that patientiy stood | in the rain to hear him, Lloyd George, former prime minister, outlined at eter on Thursday an agri- cultural program for Great Britain that he offers with the hope of resus: ing agriculture and at the same time restoring the waning fortunes of the | Liberal party, ‘ae problem of the British farmer | is in an advanced stage, as compared to the Amer- j ican farmer's. here agriculture is in decline ; and the soil is being deserted, just as it was in the latter years of the Roman empire, and the farm population flocks to the towns to swell the army of dole-taking unemployed. British farmers produce less than the domestic requirements, on a continu- ously diminishing’ scale. They cannot compete with the lower-priced American and Canadian im- ports and are virtually starved off the land. Amer: {ican farmers produ surplus over domestic re- quirements, and result receive less than the a cost of production, thus injuring themselves and | their fellows acros:; the sea.’ Lloyd George's program is of littie interest to the American farmer because it seeks to meet .a siti tion that does not yet exist here Jt is socialistic in its outline, providing for government contro} of all farm lands; the renting of such lands to farmers on a perpetual tenure, with assurance of fair wage: and profits of cultivation as a first charge; the establishment of land banks to finance the drainage and development o{ the land, now impossible by the overtaxed land awners; and an assurance to tho | land owner of his present net rent. That such a | program should be proposed indicates the desperate | plight of farming in Grent Britain, Until farmers in the United States are driven from the land be- cause they cannot mike a living and get a decent¥ return on their inves{ment, no such program is like ly to be considered, here. The thought for the American farmer in |the case is how to avoid such {a situation here and jhat is to be attained by diver- - | not dispose of stamps in THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Phooey!- -: The Tangle .ESLIE PRESCOTT She was the logical woman LE MARQUISE, this matter up, and hers PHE SECRET effigient business manner in wl LETTER FROM I TO THE CARE 6 DRAWER—CONTINUED do it. case oie mae) | Hurriedly 1 called up Jimmie Con- Did you ever, Little Marquise,}don, : come in contact with a situation| “Jimmie, this is Mrs. Prescott. tuivial, almost ridiculous in. itself,! ‘t Mrs. Atherton coming home to- which ‘still presented a problem al- | most impossible to solve? I knew that something must bel at done with a vulgar young — woman | who refused to tell Jack that his wile | was calling, and most “Yes, Mrs. Preseott, She'll be here : o'clock, thank the Lord.” You'll be very glad to see her, won't you, Jimmie?” “You bet your life [ will! Pardon me she \w not sur as Mr me, Mrs. Prescott, but I will be aw- Prescott, The action in itself did} fully glad to see Sally. There are a! not amount to much, but if she spoke! jot of things around this offi that that way to me, sue would speak in| need her and need her badly. | Mr. Prescott misses her too. Sometimes I think he misses her more than he is really conscious of.” Is Mr. Pres been in confe “Not that I ki the same manner to others, and’ it} would hurt not only Jack's’ reputa-! tion but his. business | Twas almost sure she would not] say anything so peremptory to «| man, but it certainly would be im of, M possible to~kéep such an employce| He has been visiting with me most ubout the office, although I did net! or the afternoon, telling me about know how to get her discharged with- | you and the boys. He told me he out making a scene, I had never] just going to let things ride until interfered before in any of Jack’s| Sally got herc. 1 think he's so glad Lusiness methods, hut it seemed tol she is coming that he can hardly me this fi e that shoud) contain himself. The girl he be_interf some one. in his office mixed things up 4 was wondering just how to dosit, fer fair, Mrs. Prescott. 1 have never without appearing in it_ myself} fi, been able®to® und nd why Sally Jack would be sure to jump at tha! picked her out, Usually she has conclusion that my feelings had ben Turt or that Twas jealous. Jealous! It made me think of my being j good judgment. "If it were any other woman but Sally, I'd-think that she put that little piece of pretty incom- petence in there to show the boss person#-for jealousy ‘how much better she is than the implied a feeling of inferiority.| average woman, but I hardly think Suddenly the thought came to me.‘ Sally would do such a thing. Wasn't Sally to arrive home todxy?. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ——— ——___-_ | A THOUGHT The effectual fervent prayer of 2 a Yighteous man availeth ~much.— James 5:16. More things are wrought by prayer | than this world dreams of.—Tenny- New York, Sept. 29.—You may have | 50” a fortune hidden in your attic. Some, day you may go rummaging through{ all the odds and ends stored there and throw the fortune away or burn it up. Don’t destroy an old stamp until you determine its value. One stamp may mean a life pension to you, oat t have considered stamp collecting as pretty much of an idle hobby for the rich, but last night I met Frank Sekula, who earns his livelihood, and a comfortuble one, in buying and selling stamps. He tells me that when _ Iettie Green died the stamp collection she left to her son was appraised at three million dollars. Steinway, the piano man, has a collection valued at more than a million dollars. All of the rich Rothschilds of Europe are stamp collectors and one of them has a col- lection valued at two million dollars, Among the royalty the most en- thusiastic stamp collectors are the King of England and Fuad of Egypt. Sekula tells of an incident which happened several years ago to the King of England. His royal nibs coveted one certain stamp very much, but was unable to buy it because a broker outbid him. “I'm too poor to bid any higher,” the sovereign sighed, “I’m only a king.” Sekula tells of a stockbroker who collects stamps as an investment and not as a hobby. He has failed in business several times, but couped.through his stamps In ‘the Charleston, a step in time is too ty t months to get full value out jof a collection, This prevents the ‘broker from throwing all of h | sets into one wild plunge on the mar- a The most famous stamp personality is Queen Her features adorn 260 different species of stamps. You probably have heard stage comedians joke about sailors spend- ing their shore leave in a row boat. Many of them really do that. One|’ day after the fleet. came into the Hudson River recently I saw twenty gailors in rowbonts on Central Park joke. Yes, and T know a_ young New York newspaperman who has passed 'his two-week vacation perlods for | the past six years in acting as a re- | porter, without salary, for his old \home town semi-weekly | —JAMES W. DEAN. | sification to restrict the surplus and by cooperative ] \ marketing methods td assure a fair financial return. \ , A bowhead whale is valued aply 915,000. a ose pci | with a dozen eggs in either hand? It TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1925 HUGH S. CUMMING | Surgeon Generi nited States Pub- lic Health Service Tt is a common fallacy in many minds that there exists somewhere in the wotld an ideal food—some one material that will satisfy all the needs of the body and that could this material be found we would be able to save much of the thought an) expense of arranging our meals and be freed from the danger of eating the wrong kind of food. | Careful studies of food substances and their effects upon the human hody, however, have taught us~ that [there are few substances that con- [tain the proportions of protein and fuel foods necessary to meet our needs. If, for instance, you eat enough heef to satisfy the protein needs of the hody and eat nothing else. you will have an insufficient supply of fuel. If vou eat enough beef to sup- ply the fuel needs of the body you will take in too much protein. On the other hand if you try to live on fruit ‘you will have to eat about the equivalent of thirty-five pounds of anples to supply the nec- essary protein, whereas’ nine pounds would supply ‘sufficient energy, but there would be a shortage of pro- tein, : Baked potatoes. onions, corn, al- monds and bread approach a’ bal- anced diet, but even these fall far short. Potatoes and corn alone would have to be consumed in large quan- tities to meet the needs, Taken by itself, good hread, made of whole grain, comes the nearest, perhaps, of all fond articles to: fur- nishing a balanced food diet of sat- isfactory bulk. BY DR. SAYS VARIETY IN FOOD IS ESSENTIAL of balance has been found to be a ‘frequent cause of malnutrition, The resort to cheap foods,may lead to malnutrition through an excessive amount of starches. Meat. is a valuable food, but the are objections to the excessive use meat. Bacteria thrive better in the in- testines of those who eat too much meat and while there are both good and bad bacteria the products of the activity of these intestinal bacte may sometimes be injurious. Also, with ‘the excessive use of meat you are likely to accumulate an excess of protein. Any excess of proteins, unless burned up by physical exercise, must be thrown off from the body by the action of the liver and kidneys he- cause the body has no way of storing up a surplus of proteins. If wo take too much fat or carbo-hydrates we are usually able to convert come carbo-hydrates into fat, but this is undersirable and overweight ts dan- gerous after forty. Fallacy of Old Superstition There is an old superstition that has gained much general credence. You probably have heard ji <:id is, thee Ke oeds should be eat- en for the benefit of special parts o the body. crayon If you stop to consider that in ihe Process of digestion all carbo-hy. dates are chanwed to simple sugars, all fats to simnle emulsions and gle cerine and all proteins to simple nitrogenous compounds, vou will sen how absurd it is to claim a special value for one kind of food in connec- tion with the building up of any spe- ciel nort or tissue, Ordinary food materiale eantain ony abundance of salts in their natural With bread is included a variety of flour prenorations such as macaroni, biscuits, Vienna rolls, and crackers, ,|but to try to live on these alone would be manifestly absurd. Combination of Foods Necessary If we cannot live on bread alone. certainly we shall not be able to find any other one substance that will fiset the dietary requirements of the do~ It is necessary to combjne high Protein foods with low protein foods in such proportions as will furnish bulk, the proper nutritive ratio, and will, at the sume time, suit the taste, Persons unacquainted with the importance of a balanced diet often purchase food entirely on the basis of appetite or the teniptations of the market; also there are those who are so poor as to be unable ta buy any- thing but the cheanest articles to be obtained, and such persons often suffer from malnutrition. In the case of school children the indulgence of the appetite in an ex- ve amount of sweets arid the quent throwing of the diet out 4 In.doing the Charleston you throw all caution to the wind sand let St. Vitus be your guide. There are ways of learning the js Charleston, One way is hunt a col-| lar button in your bare feet in a dark room. 1 ADVENTURE OF THE FWINS BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON Ifyou have a corn on every: too, put on some tight day and you are doing the Chatles- ton, . \ THE STONE IN THE ROAD Cutie Cottontail and Mosey Mud Turtle sat talking and talking, and Cutie told him all about his plan to save Grubby Woodchuck from having a bad accident. “Well, I'll do it,” s do what you ask me, | /a risky business.” Look closely next. time you bump! «Qh, not so very,” said Cutie mys- a pedestrian’ with your auto.- You terjously. “But thank you a lot. may elarn a new Charleston step. And now I'll make some other visits.” So he said good-morning und went off to the place where Sammy Snake ived. ‘ And they talked and talked, “Yes, I'll do it,” said Sammy final- Count your legs after doing the ly, “But it’s a ticklish business.” Charleston, See ‘that they are all "+Qh, not so very,” sald Cutie, And there. You should have two. \away he hopped to Prickles Poreu- pine’s house. And they sat and talked and talked, | too. “Um, h'm!” said Priekles. “I'l do Fhe Charleston invented! by some timid soul jumping» from a snake and landing on a porcupine. d when he gets the bill fall hat. He -will.do a step. Wateh d for wife's Charleston ye SE But it’s Don’t worry when the cook drops a plate, Take off your shoes and learn a Chatleston step on. the, pieces, 4 And, after doing the Charleston, see that you get your right feet back. You may have your partner's, rit Ever stand “on a red hot stove; And after that Cutie flew around {to other houses asking everybody to help him to save Grubby. All this time Grubby was “step- ping on the gas” in the little blue {automobile and having the time of his life. Up hill and down dale he | went like a tiny blue comet, whiz- ‘zing under people’s noses so fast théy didn’t know he was there until he was gone. “Honk! Honk! Honk!” went his horn impudently, as much as to say, is a Charleston step. He who dances must pay the fid-| dler, and he who does the Chatrles- ton must pay the shoemaker, Output of crude oil has fallen off a little, while the intake of crude movies is increasing. The state of Indiana has 33 vil- lages and towns with names contain- ing but three letters. | j excuse yourselves for living.” The morning was fine and the road was clear and everything was lovely, when suddenly on rounding a curve, didn’t Grubby see .an énormous rock lying right in the middle of the road —right straight in front of him not ten yards away. To an ordinary: sized automobile, like a taxi-cab, the rock wouldn't have looked so, vy. automobile just big enough for a groundhog family the, rock loomed like a house. Grubby tried to. think, but he couldn’t. However, he managed to push both feet on th pedals as hard as he could, That threw out the clutch and put,on the brake at the same time, if you- know what that means. And of course he tried to 2, BvERETT ock. ‘ But it all happened“so quickly’ that he couldn’t: do much’ guiding. . The mud guard hit the'rock and tor. it clear off, then the car ‘bounced over in_a ditch and stopped. But that durietes “was nothing to what followed. The roek suddenly’ began to move and a cross-looking head with a crooked beak pushed it- self out from underneath, “For murder’s sake!” said Mosey, Mud Turtle, for that is who the rock | was, ““why don’t you watch where you're going? You gave my back- bone an ‘awful bruise. I think I'm dinged for life”. “Don’t you tulk,” shouted Grubby. ; “What were you doing in the middle, of the road? You might have killed me.” . “No, you might have killed your-! self, id Mosey: .“I wasn’t meving and you we jing entire}; fast; | The’. ign Curve thea seat | slow.’ I’ve a good notion to tell your fathe: “Youn dan’t need. to,” said Grubby | ruefully, “He'll see it soon enough. It's got to be fixed and paid for.” But Grubby: had’ more lessons to learn. 5 (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, ‘Inc.) The first American newspaper, the ost News tter, started pub- Heation in April, 1704 Shirts, hundredg of received: ~ Klein’ Boys’ them 3 large, but to an; i Watch results each week. ‘ guide “his automebiie around the low the SucceS$ful.’? 2nd Fall term, to the edge of the road and al condition and except in goitrous dis- tricts it used to be unusual to see a person suffering from lack of minerals in the diet. velopment’ of manufacturing proc- esses, however, and the over-retine- ment of certain foods which are pre- pered for the market, some lime, much of the phosphorus, and other of the mineral sdhstances are fre- uently lost. Much vitamin is also lost in some of these processes. The digestive svstem is subject to individual peculiarities, but there are some foods that are more easily digested than others, Milk contains fats, carbo-hydrates, proteins, and salts in a very easilv digested form. Meat proteins and fats of all kinds are digested with relative ease, but the protein and fats of meat are inclosed within cell walls, The material of which these cell walls are composed is not so e: digested. In cooking much of this material is broken up, but here again the manner of cooking has an im- portant influence upon digestion. MANDAN NEWS overnor Ed Silberstein, Duluth, us a guest of the Mandan Rotary club Monday noon, in his official capacity as governor of the Ninth district, Rotary, There was a: full attendance of the members. lining the principles of Rotary, Mr. Silberstein brought out many ‘new | thoughts. After the luncheon. Gov- ernor Silberstein met with the com- {mittee chairmen for an hour's con- ference. ‘ Three of five youths chorged: with malicious mischief in connection with the destruction of watermelons in the gardens of Albert Storey and (. B. Leder, farmers near Flasher, were ound guilty and assessed fines of $25 and costs. The . brothers, a fourth lad titned state's evidence and the fifth has not yet been .apprehended Anna Mary Ries, aged one yeur and | six months, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Chris Ries, died Monday morning at their home in Fifth Avenue, N. E., ‘following a week's illnss. The fun- eral was held tl o'clock from the | Clement officiating. home, Rev. Fr. | Coal mine accidents in the United States during the first half of 192 Fegulted in the loss of 1989 lives. | MANY OPENINGS "et off the ety, evervbeds, ond) FOR “DAKOTANS” One good reason why employers | prefer office help from Dakota ! Business College, Fargo, is this: | These students having practiced | actual banking andcommercial deals at school (a, copyrighted course) don’t need ‘‘breaking in,”” which ; Costs time and money, ElsieTitus was sentto the Nation- al Securities Co., before complet- ing her course, A. C. Bjerken was sent to the McGeehan Motor Co. on his graduation day, “Fol. Oct. 5. Write F. L. Watkins |Pres., 806 Front St, Fargo, She’s a clever gi who, can re- member to call her aan fellow by hig right: Namé-;when she Urns from @ vacation. : = that “every part feeds a part.” that» With the de- , afternoon at two -* ” Sle \ \ i —

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