The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1928, Page 4

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Tk of ‘ofa Er THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE e Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published the Bismarck Tribune Company N. D., and entered at the postoffice at 8 second matter. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable In Advance by carrier, per year ...........00+ -87. by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) vaily by mail, per year, far from the happy golden days of the willow pole with a butcher’s string line, fixed with hooks ten for a dime, whose compelling lure is one segment of an angle worm, and whose incantation is spitting on the bait. Modern tackle makers are nothing if not ingenious. They have invented all manner of preposterous lures that would be laughed off the face of the waters if some fish weren’t fool enough to fall for them. They have scoured the world for bamboo, lacquer, tin, nickel, feathers and all the other accoutrements of rod and reel and fly. Yet to what purpose? The millionaire oo|in all his glory has no more chance than the Cveekly by mail, in state, per year .... eekly by mail, in state, three years for. Veekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, pe a of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the e for republication of all news dispatches credited to or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also 3eal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All fights ‘of republication of all other matter herein are reserved. Foreign Representatives G LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK . Fifth Ave. Bldg. DETROIT Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) A Long Step Ahead of dr@ Burleigh county commissioners have ap- ‘wester ,. amr Mlied to the State Highway Commission for in’ thet id on several projects which when completed much jl] provided-for the graveling of nearly all |. life. day er. ashe program will x r ance of this to Bismarck and surrounding y‘he main highways of the county. Much of will be completed in 1928. The ‘itory is evident. For years the campaign f education and “agitation” has been progress- ‘cation Dg and the fruits are at hand. {tinued The necessity for improved arterial highways : yolum onnecting with those of other counties has on therade territory can be widened only as the roads ON Mimear a practi Members of the county board and citizens wheatf Bismarck who have worked upon a definite trade well dull and Fis-apidly as funds are available. a Mes There is still much to be done to expand the veen evident for several years. Bismarck’s are improved and this is true also of other urleigh county towns. All profit by being . Trade has been diverted tmiles from Burleigh county centers because f the lack of all-weather roads. roads program are to be commended for ¢his action. system as now outlined if the county’s trade to be served with the proper highways, but hose working on such a program have the tter in hand and progress will be made as Our 23,000,000 Cars tures. prot To the harried motorist, to say nothing of feel ine harried pedestrian, the official announce- showment that there are now more than 23,000,000 tinuemotor cars in-operation in the United States were will come as a means for added worry. The nce on our streets and roads of Durg | presel and this swarm of machines has already made our eacv. traffic problem one of our most pressing con- cerns, And when one stops to consider that Ford, General Motors and the other great quan- mandtity producers are preparing for banner years Ryin 1928, one is comapelled to admit that the anithence for situation probably will be a lot worse a year than it is now. 1 What is called for, apparently, is an entirely highnew method of handling the problem. Expert to and: study, expert advice, prompt and farsighted action are urgently needed. No halfway meas- ures, such as widening a street here, making this highway a one-way street, prohibiting here, and so on, are going to solve the difficulty. Application of the best brains ob- tainable is needed. “It is time we awakened to the seriousness of W thing and began looking for these “best brains” and putting them to work on the prob- Jem. Otherwise, we are apt to find ourselves tangled up in traffic beyond all endurance in the near future. Auto Accidents * It is a sad but true commentary on human nature that when road conditions are treacher- ous, traffic accidents decrease. When the highways are clean and dry motorists grow ‘careless and accidents follow, but when motor travel is made precarious by slippery and drift- ed roads drivers are made cautious, minimizing fic accidents, although natural causes for accident become greater. Winter roads affording uncertain traction Serve, for the average motorist, the same pur- pose as warning signs erected at approaches to curves and steep hills. They are the “signs” the motorist believes in and which pre- vent accidents. Another sign, but one that causes accidents, is the long stretch of straight . and level highway which invites speed. It is + th where the going is smoothest and clearest that toes tramp on accelerators and cars test out eir speed. The gambling instinct of the human species is a good enough explanation for the thousands who each year plunge heedlessly across grade death or injury. crossings and highway intersections to their These are occasions when autoists do not believe in “signs.” - Every step on the road to national relief from highway accidents is marked by the hu- man element and its varying regard for rules of safety. Com) of winter and summer accident statistics shows that while all motor- to take a chance, that willing- ness, in all, has limitations. And then, where are there two automobilists who will agree on “just what is meant by a “chance?” The Decline of Fishing In spite of conservation and restocking of -treams fishermen everywhere are lamenting rat the time is getting longer and longer be- veen bites. ‘Tt isn't for lack of tackle. Man has journeyed boy with his worm and rude pole, and for both these are dark days. Millions of dollars are being spent every year by federal and state governments, in- dividuals and organizations of sportsmen in a nation-wide effort to restore good fishing for everyone. There has been gradual im- provement in many sections but fishing is still ‘the |far from being “good” in the old meaning of the word. Experience has shown the conservationists that pouring hatchery-raised fish into the streams is not enough. A large percentage of the protected and hand-fed fish starve to death or are eaten by their more cannibalistic brethren between the time they are placéd in the stream and the time they are large enough to catch. Deforestation has deprived them of their natural food and protection and stream pollution has made their primitive haunts un- inhabitable. : Passing of an Art : If one of the arts of the old-fashioned house- wife is the baking of the family bread, the old- fashioned housewives are few in number. Commercial bakers supply 80 per cent of the bread consumed in the United States, baking 12,240,000,000 loaves a year to meet the de- mand. Baking has become one of the coun- try’s first six industries in value of product. The annual bakery bill of American huosewives is $1,617,000,869, of which $700,000,000 js spent for bread, rolls and coffee cake. Other evidences of the separation of the housewife from the bread board are not lack- ing. They are to be found in the advertise- ments of breads of many names, in the glimpses of great bakeries along railroads and highways. The traveler is reminded of the new order in the baking of bread when he-sees bread being delivered in communities several hundred miles away from the city in which it was baked the night before. There are those who may deplore the pass- ing of the old-time kitchen arts as once prar- ticed in the American home. If those were the “good old times” they have gone never to re- turn. But were those times as good as those who live in the past would have the younger generation believe? Those who can remember back far enough to recall when home-made bread was always on| M the table, and fresh twice a week, have not for- gotten how mother fretted about baking day, made the bread last as long. as possible an‘i made the threat before and after baking that if baker’s bread were fit to eat she would use the bread pans for flower pots. And she made good that theat as soon as the baker learned how to make bread that compared with the kind mother used to make. The first sign of spring is seed catalogs. He who hesitates is old-fashioned. Editorial Comment | “The Great Rajah” $ New York Times In pithily describing the effect upon experts of the announcement that the New York Giants have released Rogers Hornsby to Boston, The Times narrator wrote: “Had the ceiling fallen upon the heads of the astounded base- ball writers there could have been no greater consternation.” This in itself is a warning to those unlearned in the mysteries of Amer- ican sports, to try to understand the curious act. Mr. Hornsby, home-run hitter excelled but little by the great Babe Ruth, fielder, field general, manager and popular idol, traded by New York to Boston for two mediocre players whose total value in the field and with the : public could not be computed in comparison with his! The answer must be in one of those conflicts of positive personalities that, wher- ever they exist—whether in baseball teams or great corporations—are distinctive of effi- ciency. But in that wise reflection there is a flaw, for, after Manager McGraw fell ill, Mr. Horns- by took a fading team and made it a fierce contender for pennant honors in the National League, fielding, batting and managing the while like a paladin. Possibly it then came to a choice between Hornsby and McGraw, and the older man—in view of his great services to the Giants—was preferred by the ownership, which is entirely natural. That, at any rate, seems to be the implication of Mr. Stoneham’s latest statement, though Hornsby denies that there has been any friction between McGraw, and himself. The whole thing was news to Hornsby, if one may judge by his astonishment when the press informed him that he had been traded. To many it is none too clear why a huge pub- lic in this city takes the affairs of the Giants and the Yankees as matters of paramount import, but the fact remains that the enforced hegira of Mr. Hornsby is a major sensation to hundreds of thousands of his fellow-citizens. This exchange of a lion for two lambs brings again to the attention of that public which doesn’t eat, sleep and drink baseball the odd peonage system under which baseball players are shifted from one city to another without having anything fo say about the transfer themselves. They have only the right to de- cline—and be thrown out of the National Asso- ciation for it. sales in the city schools, Miss Isabelle Campbell, delegate teacher from the William Moore school, and Miss Mary Huber, principal of the Will school. ew ¥ Will School Names Honor Roll Pupils The Will school announces the | AT THE SCHOO Certificates Given in Literature Class For Outside Reading Certificates are being awarded this week at the Will school to the pupils who have read 18 approved *. Bentie books ii ecti i id; gey Bergeson, 5 eae eee a betianing cg; Caite De Rochford, Ruth Fries, school last fall. The following pu-| Evelyn, Hannaford, vereven aes) pils have merited certificates: Jack Humphreys, Mi i lis Lee, Claire De Rochford, Marie Nixon, Lloyd Ode, Wallace Pederson, Freda Schlickenmeyer, Marie Nixon, Mabel Boshara, Rosie! Virginia Smith, Richard Tiedman, Schlickenmeyer, Ruth Shuren, Frank| Beatrice Vater and Neva Vettel, Potter, Ruth Jack Kerzilius,| , Zighth grade—Louis Ahlen, Joe Matthew Mille Eve Vogel, Eve. sia Silene ad steel pects lyn Hannaford, Ruth Jordan, Wil. a iA Man ne will ma Wenzel, Annette Liebole, Wi ~apegeet) heck maaee i Wille, liam Little, Wilowbelle Matscheck,| Belle Materheck, | Nina | Melvile, ha Nelson, Ione Noggle, Frank otter, Russell » Charles Shearn, Robert Stackhouse, Omer Walla, Walter Ward, Marian Wor- ner and Joseph Wright. for the seventh and eighth grades: Seventh pra Bankston, Lul aby Miller, Alpha Nelson. lelen Parke, Dorothy Tiedman, Marian Worner, Joseph Wright, Al- thea Hollensworth, Lilly Iilchen, La Verne Bertsch, Lois Ulsrud, Jeanette Anderson, Walter Fossum, Margaret Johnannson and Helen Targart. Seals will be added to these cer- tificates for each additional book read, and class colors for every five reat The literature classes have hand- ed in about 2,400 book reports up to Jan. 15. en Awards Made in Health Seal Sale The Will school and the William Mocre school were both awarded | oat in the competitive sale of alth sales in the public schools during the Christmas season. A total of $299.65 was realized in the entire sale. The Will school chose the picture “The Roman Forum,” “Flower Market” was presented to the William Moore school. The sale in the individual schools outdid former yearr and made a splendid showing. The following results Were submit! Wi .43; William Moore, $73. lary’s, $64,05; Richholt, Roosevelt, $37.34; Wachter, $23.52; high school, $5.02. The pictures were chosen by Mrs. Taylor, chairman of the health seal le in Bismarck, Miss Winnifred Barrington, chairman of the seal The history group of. the eighth grade of the Will school have been working on an interesting class project, Historical America. large mav of the United States has been made upon which all places of historical importance have located by means of pictures and other illustrations. The outline of by nd the members of the class as a whole contributed the rest of the work. Several pupils of the Will school have recently moved to other cities or transferred to other schools dur- ing the holidays. Myrtle Peterson of the seventh js now mak- ing her home in Illinois while Leona Ellison has gone to Roches- ter, Minn. Earl Walgren of the seventh grade is now attending the Mencken consolidated school. Quen Lee has moved to Billings, Mont., to make his home, The following new pupils have recently been admitted to the Will school: Charles Lean of Glen Ulin to the first grade, and Violet Mel: hus of Minot, first grade. In a recent arithmetic test held at the Ricltholt school, Harold Slo- ABOUT INSURANCE, £7, ME AN*-TH’ PARTNER CARRY A POLICY, THATS FROMT PAGE NEWS! WE INSURE OUR Act, I HAVE MY HEAD INSURED Tor “TEN GRAND, ON ACCOUNT OF THINKIN” UP “TH WITTY CRACKS AN’ NIFTIES &, INSURED FoR TEN GRAND! N'SEE, IF ANV- Ors08, OY MEA RERVICR Ine. Ee LS PAT.COF, following pupils on the honor roll] ¢, PUL FOR THe snore! ven and Oscar Jacobsor of 100, while Samuel won third place with 99. Gussner and Hi Schweigert were the winners as match held at the same school Wed- nesday. annie Richard and Helmuth Plausnitzer have transferred fdom the Wachter) school to the Richholt. Bernice Bjelland has heats the Richholt rom a country ol F. E. McCurdy was the principal specher at Ga mean ate Wee: ter Parent-Teachers association which was held at the school Wed- ses Ra: Jenkins of ented the Will — ice the Raymond is forme: pil “at Sacred Heart academy, eee Physical inspection is being held this a at the William core ‘won fends ‘Tolchinsky Robert has The pupils of the fourth grade of the Richholt school are making health posters in connection with their study of hygiene. e e The boys’ basketbal team of the Richholt school held a Wed- y evening the noone after an illness of two months, The total enrollment at the Rich- holt school has reached 280. At the Movies| ELTINGE THEATRE “Early to bed and early to rise and you miss meeting a lot of inter- esting people” George Ade first made that re- mark. Colleen Me ‘the. truth of the famous} Fmoriat’ rey Eling téday, tomorrow al a snes aes Moore is the in is Jck-and-span ttle of o ~~ REMINDS ME OF “TWENTY YEARS AGO IN FRANCE, WHEAT WAS A WINE “TESTER! ae THE COMPANY INSURED MY “TONGUE For A HUNDRED “THOUSAND FRANCS! <<THAT WAS AN ODD POLICY, WHAT 2: THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1928 HEALTH“DIET ADVICE Dr Frank 7 a sits Me Fast Bley. THE VALUE OF MEAT New patients who come to me so often say, “I don’t know why I am sick—I almost never eat any meat.” Thus they show that they think the only important dietetic problem is answered when they say they do not use meat. Yesterday I told you the proper value of meat as a ‘most important and necessary item of food when used correctly. While much has been written on this subject from the standpoint of the vegetarian, my firm conviction is that we need to study the uses of starches, sugars, and other foods equally as well as to understand about the proper and improper uses of meats and other proteins. Cer- tain magazines are doing a great good in giving readers information Tepanding food values, etc. It may be well to point out certain theories to account for the fact that meat has been given such a “bad reputation.” About one-fourth of a pound :ach day is enough to satisfy the body’s requirements. ~ Those doing hard manual labor may be able to use as much as a half poun. of meat daily. As in the use of all: other vital foods the use of meat must be well regulated. The reason why meat is often considered harmful is be- cause it is almost always used in improper combination with other foods. Meat should be com2ined only with the non-starchy vegetables, and an overacidity of the stomach is produced whenever bread or pota- toes are used with meat. This hyperacidity lowers the blood’s kalinity and produces various types of acidosis. I want to tell you how to correctly use meat so that ft can properly be included in your menus. The one who likes meat but has not used it because of bad results will be surprised to notice the dif- ference between the effects pro- duced by eating a meal of meat, spinach, celery and bread, and after eating the same meal with the bread left out! One cannot be a fair judge of whether meat will agree with him or not if he uses only fried meats, as even the healthy man must take twice as long and use twice as much energy to digest fried n.eats com- pared to those which are boiled or roasted. Many people are vegetarians be- cause they do not care “or the flavor of meat, and it is easy for. them to believe it is bad for them if they eat it only in bad mixtures, or pre- pared in such a marner as to dis- F Sait Faith Lane Hathaway had never plumbed such depths of self-loath- ing in all her too-introspective life as she reached that Tuesday morn- ing, the third day of her sudden illness. The thing that plunged her to the very bottom of the pit of de- spair was the realization that both erry and Bob had credited her with only the loftiest sentiments. To them she was blameless, a per- son of such unquestionable nobil- ity that it had never occurred to them to put the true interpretation bo fo her flight and supposed loss memory. had been bewild- ered, frantic with terror for her, but they had never for a moment explained or sought to explain her strange behavior on the grounds of her jealousy for Cherry. And al- though she had fled from her -fam- ily in the company of George Pruitt, a former suitor, a man who still loved her, as they very well knew, neither Bob nor Cherry had for a moment considered the pos- ae eee her flight with George and the taking of an assumed name indicated an intrigue between the two. No. They could think no evil of her, for they both trusted her im- ae Alone, exeept for the nurse, iiss Sutton, Faith turned her face to the wall and wept silently, drear- ily. Not yet could she take com- fort from the very fact of their loyalty and their implicit faith. Her conviction of unworthiness was 80 Jrofouet that again she wanted to die. Who was she to be the wife of a man like Bob Hathaway? Ever since the first week of her mar- riage she had poisoned her happiness glittering whirl of high society at an exclusive Atlantic coast beach. Larry Kent plays the leading role in support of Coll leen Moore with Hallam Cooley, Gwen Lee, Charles aoe and others in important 8. CAPITOL ‘‘tHEATRE “Thunder,” whose performance in we of the Seen | oP ars in his second picture, “Wolf bt oe showing at the Capitol Theatre Fri- and Sai '. | lot or Balane story ives the ani a@ greater oppor- Einity to. ‘display his. intelligent to directi It takes him from a practi- cally wild state and through his “civilized” Lestionts he is rai from the wol and restored to his place with human friends. The picture was filmed Odegon, the Baker which is conceded by forestry en- co Mg nde igh Ainge Ee ue spots in the chain of Na- tional Reserves. Besides Thunder, the canine cast White Fawn, f. beautiful inst fount Senate public lands committee opens renewed effort at Washing- ton to inquire into affairs on Harry “Wings of the Storm” last. season him the title of the “Wonder| J. guise the natural flavor. Many who will not eat a steak may eat hash or chop suey and enjoy the taste of these dishes. Then, when Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on bealth and ddressed to him, care of diet, a the Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. they suffer from indigestion the fault is laid or the meat, and many do not stop to think that the trouble has come fro:a insulting the diges- tive organs with such bad mixtures. opis tke body wit excellent pro- sup] e body excellent pro- tein material with which to build cells and repai wastes. too much meat is used, or in ane mixtures with other fooc or when prepared improperly, § may serve as a source of trouble to the system and prove as harmful as excessive use of the carbohydrates. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: Mrs. J. R. writes: “I have worked hard a’ your exercises for a double chin but so far I have ad no results. Do you recom: the rubber chin straps?” Answer: The exercises I recom- mended yesterday are the ones for you to follow in order to remove the double chin, Look i:. the “Questions and Answers” section ar” see my answer to the one who signed her letter “M. A. A.” No, I do not recommend the chin strap. Question: Mrs, * Mae. asks: “Do the food colorings, sold in paste and liquid form for household use, contain anything that would harmful to one’s health?” - Answer: The various color ex- tracts now on the market are mostly from harmless vegetab:. and other color extracts, supplemented by a number of coal tar, or ine, dyes, approved by. the iment after painstaking investigation an analysis. As long as their us. is solely to enhance the enjoyment of foods and not to conceal their infer- iority, I do not consider these color- ings particularly harmful, especially since they are used in such limited quantities. : Question: .7. G. asks: “What causes pellagra?” Answer: Pellagra is a ‘iisorder caused partly by the absence of or- ganic minerals in your food, and partly because of the acidosis pro- duced from using an excess of over- refined starch—taking for example such devitalized food as corn meal from which the “1111 has been en- tirely removed. z by suspicion and doubt. It was she, not he, who had stipulated that Cherry should make her home with them. Had she hoped, in the depths of evil which lie dormant even in the best of us, that Bob would be rude to Cherry, that he would ignore her beauty and vivacity and show only his distaste. for the girl he had once been in love with? Be ee fit to live,” Faith cried inher heart despairingly. I’ve been called good—the ‘family saint,’ they've always called me—and I'm not worthy to polish his shoes. When I’m thinking the worst of him, he’s doing his bes+ to insure et harness mn ours, by ‘ing her to accept an in her love for Nils, Wher arf away from him, mortally sick with horior of him, he explains my in- sanity by saying—and believing— that it is caused by my re ing love for Hope, hoe Chey would take from me by mai Nils. No, I'm not fit to live.” Her ceaseless wee, and her profound despair whipped up the fever which been all con- quered, and for a few merciful hours she was again too ill for co- herent thought. The doctor, puz- zled, and alarmod excluded visi- tors for the rest of the day. For the girl who hated herself there was a sort of bitter in be- ing denied a sight the man and the sister she . And she had not yet the to plan ion whic! upon the doctor and upon her family. ‘ NEXT: George to the rescue. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) F. Sinclair's Hyva corporation, books and records of which were refused in Teapot Dome inquiry four years ago. Ogden, Utah—Prosperity of the west has been endangered by action of Senator McMaster of South Da- kota in introducing in senate aged of ta: Frank Wool cag Pretec in speech at Ogden, Detroit Lakes, Minn. 7 1. Aantad, Dettolt Laken wes re: elected ‘ion and surround-| of Norwegian Minneapolie—Corn injured durin, tasseling stage has. lee chasce of recovery tha in at other period in life, Professor a Ny. Hume, of agricultural pol Dakota state iL men. —

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