The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 30, 1928, Page 4

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la » Taarck as second ¢ The e An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ~ Published by the Bismarck Tribune C.mpany, Bis- marck, N. D., and ered at the postoffice at Bis- mail matter. seeeeee President and Publisher George D. Mann .. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ... Daily by mail, per year, (in B: Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail, in state, per year ... Weekly by mail, :a state, three years Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako‘a, pe- year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other mat- ter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK - - - Fifth Ave. Bidg. CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) > Fed Up on Hokum Democrats at Valley City are going into the primaries next June with a.vengeance. ey intend to rehabilitate their party in this state and the action is most significant. It means the end of a political fusion which has never accomplished anything vital or fundamental. Fusion with the Republicans ‘has been a pie counter agreement. -. “Deliver us so many votes and you get so ‘much patronage,” has been the bargain. The Democrats who care for party principles have become disgusted and the decree of sepa- ration has been written at Valley City. It is good for North Dakota politics that party lines are to be definitely marked in this vstate. This decision not to fuse with the Independents may be a step toward putting the Republican house in order in North Dakota. The action also means the Democrats are ‘Batiated with the political hokum advanced tevery two years in extenuation of fusion which San accomplished nothing. Now if the little clique of pap hunters will: “only quit the red flag wig-wagging, this state ‘may be able to revamp the Republican party ‘@long constructive lines. ‘gaye ~.. Standardized . > Those who believé that some persons are still ‘worth saving from efficiency owe a round of applause to the chemical engineers who are opposing the project of an official list of ap- proved schools of chemical engineering. Their -grgument is that it would tend to stifle individ- tual initiative and to standardize the teaching of ‘chemical engineering throughout the country. That is just what efficiency experts think highly desirable. «, A generation or two ago, when college degrees, ‘were less common and less easily won, people spoke of the “stamp of the college.” It was a good simile and it has proved, alas! to be all ‘too true. The shining, unforged metal of ‘youth is poured into the collegiate machinery, ‘each bit of gold or silver or iron with its own fabbracter and its pwn hopes, or aims, or fears, ‘What seems to be coming out is not a stream - of tempered tools, each one forged and sharp- sence] to suit its own metal and to do its own work in he world. Instead, there is a flow of ptamped tokens,;.each- one labeled with the ‘Bame solidified’ ideas; every one of them, 32 “ar as the machinery will permit, exactly like every other one. The mental product of the ‘modern: college is like so many: standardized in- tellectuat-chiclets. + The increasing mark of the machine on col-| Alege thinking is evident everywhere, but most _i@angerously evident in the fields of science and ineering.. Scientists are increasingly per- q over the- relatively slight contributions vof America to original research, the country’s venormous expenditure and personnel being Aaken into account. What else is responsible or this than the sameness of the college woinage? =; Spring Fever a Rich Blessing, After All % Along about this time of year a strange and ious malady fastens itself on many of our citizens. ¢ It is brought on by bright spring days, and 4ts major symptom is a strong disinclination for any kind of work. In severe cases, this ically incapacitetes the sufferer for use- s on his regular job; where the ailment Jess strong, it renders him reluctant to per- orm such household tasks as carrying out the washing the auto or taking junior for % Tide in his red wagon. « There are in addition, secondary characteris- which are very distressing. Among these aa kind of dementia, giving the patient de- of youth and romance, and followed, ‘rare cases, by acute delirium, in which the babbles of open roads, light 0’ loves far horizons. ~% Such are the ravages of spring fever. There $s no known cure; all that can be done is let ional habit of industry and ward off serious consequences. y, that every man and woman uddenly succumb to 8 ‘dog one year ago today in Little Falls, Minn., |probably only a few residents of that town :would have heard about the incident, provided, impromptu. For spring iever, like other ma! aides, brings moments of abnormally clear vision; moments when we see that life is, after all, a marvelous thing, packed with infinite possibilities; moments when we realize that we are immortal children of a fair world, made for sunshine and happy chances. We need such experiences. -Ordinarily we are too much blinded by the hurry and bustle of g | the daily job. We need to get out in the spring te . eb ipel A where we ts ere that life, after si 7 A ‘ Ss all, was not meant to ledicated to turning ’ lathes and typewriters and ledgers and gaso- Lhasa ha ars 1c line engines. Spring fever is a boon, not a to prepare food for large families, curse. i but ‘ whose . incomes are ited, | Washington Style Note: ‘Party Skirts’ Ate Being Worn Higher | wholesome :when at ey com good Re of meat neve! less : ntalt amount of fat and ta not sites digested as. the ind’ 8 fi often leave meat out of the diet two tou! rom. | are a Reka ! Dull Children \ - Dr. McCoy will gladly answer place. Potatoes, beans, or macaroni The Federal Department of Education, in Bnd cheese. should sot be con dona 6 one a recent bulletin, emphasizes anew the im- sidered meat substitutes,. and if|T ino used at all should be taken at some meal in the which will not in- terfere with the meat or protein meal. Here are some suggestions for those who wish to use meat once a day and still keep the cost.to the minimum. Brisket and rump are the. chea) est cuts of beef meat, and may ie in a wholesome manner by iling. The meat should be tied up to preserve its shape, put into boiling water, plenty vegetables added, and allowed to sinimer gent- ly ‘ntil done. , The present price of bebe) or rump is twenty or twen- tv-five cents a pound. Round steak may be bigots in the same manner by boiling, or may be broiled or pan-boiled if properly hammered to break up the connec- tive tissue. For pan-bro! the fat should be removed and the steak cooked in a dry pan, the meat being turned every second or two so that it is singed each time but not over- ly burned. Round steak may also be prepared into what is called a Salisbury steak. All fat and gristle are wager en the meat and it is run throug! e meat grinder. This ground beef ig then formed into patties one-half to an inch in thickness, placed in a dry pan, and baked ina hot oven for about five| greens. minutes, I believe this is the most Question: M.-L. L. asks: “Is nutritious and healthful way to pre-| peanut butter. with green apples a pare any kind of beef meat, no} good .combination?: . 1 thought any matter what price Ried pay for it. | nut: had: too much :starch.” Please observe that round. steak,) Answer: Peanut’ butter made next to rump and brisket, is from roasted peanuts las complet- cheapest beef meat in the mar! ely lost all df its starch, so it can : most of the time sell! around | be combined with any other kind of thirty cents 7 . When round| food. ‘The nut butters made of nuts. steak sells at this price, sirloin| that ben Fs heen. dextrinized have portance of giving every school child periodic physical examinations. It points out that many a supposedly “dull” pupil merely has poor eyes and can’t see the blackboard plainly. Many a_ well-meaning youngster incurs the wrath of the teacher for inattention when he really has defective hearing and can’t tell what she says to him. These are real tragedies for the children {n- volved. Ev city and village owes it to its children to See that such things don’t happen. Enel tat addressed eavalene ' tor tage which all fat and gristle have been removed. One pound of round steak usually makeg ‘enough Salisbury steak for three people, as there is le iy Hd bed) prio ea ves a qi roof a apiece for each, whichis usually enough meat for the day. The cost, there- fore; is about ten cents 8 person. and a few cents more apiece will supply. all the salad and cooked hhon-starchy vegetables needed, to make a well combined and nutri- tious meal. Kate Adams Comes Back The ancient side-wheel steamer Kate Adams, |. whose name has been famous up and down the Mississippi river for years, is to go into regu- lar service again this summer on the Ohio riv- er, between Pittsburgh and Cincinnati. There was a great deal of color and romance to the old river packet boats, and many people were sorry to see them fall before more effi- cient transportation methods. Let’s hope the Kate Adams can pay her way. We.can stand a little more color in our economic system. | Editorial Comment Politics and Economics (New York Times) A French writer, M. Bernard Fay, who knows the United States well, has an article in the Paris. Figaro pointing out the special signif- icance of Secretary Hoover’s candidacy for the Presidency. He thinks that it marks a new orientation in American politics. He under- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question:: Stan writes: “I have heard of your wonderful cures and I would like you to tell me a remedy for pimples. : Also, why do they come on my face?” + Answer: Pimples usually come from constipation and the use of too much carbohydrates and hydre carbons which mean starch, sugar, and fats or oils.. Take a course of enema treatments for: several weeks and cut’down on all of your heavy foods, using more salads and ‘WASHINGTON LETTER BY RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, h 30.—“From our observation in the manufactur- stands perfectly that Mr. Hoover is not funda-| ing N 105,000 clerks and saleswomen in stores, 35,000 retail dealers, 5000 v i state and federal officials—includ- and industrial pursuits,” says|ihg postmistresses, 62,000 teachers, steak is about fifteen cents more ie pound, and with more waste, h in bone and fat. Sirloin steak should be cooked by advise me in a case of paralysis, whole left side. Hemorrhage of the caused a clot t form which tall d typicall: iti rdi Miss Mary Anderson, director of] 11,000-:trained. 6000 physi- be eal A port oes ete | hasn’t:-dissolved far after t mentally and typically a politician, according the Women’ 1,000. . nurses, physi- pan-l i Porter! in’t dissolved so’ far r ten f of A FF men’s Bureau of the Depart-| cians, ws ealers, 228,- somet like the sirloin, but| weeks: , Patient.is 73 years of age. to American ideas, and that he:is not well liked ment of Labor, “about 95 per cent 600 servants, eto mraitiense: ess ten pith pinmdplig pound.| What causes crrhoad® saupde or favored by the political class in general, But} of married women work these Tears ed (el ecreemate and ee eas atid ecusresan lade especially the election, of the Secretary of Com- ee eres 4 merce all the more significant. In M. Fay’s| Neary Mp0de0 eee ee opinion it would. demonstrate a turning away | are also working. from absorption in domestic politics of the old| An analysis of the distribution of type, and would indicate a willingness of the| martied ne icpreristeeen Sg ob American people to place the direction of their] been made ayailable f this writer affairs in the hands.of “a captain of political | The figures are out of date, but in- economy.” It woeuld.mean the only “dictator- | creases have not been large and this ship” now possible in the United States, name- | it the first time they have been pub- ly, that of the “commercial spirit.” nipcm cians; 28 poricest.-of maevatbe a by the census: t itresses, 7.5 t It is not that Mr. Hoover is considered abroad of trained nurses, 36 "cent 0 Domestic and personal service} of trained nurses, 36 per cent of to be without gtrong nationalistic instincts, or| “nclpding laundries) 635,000, agri-| physicians and healers, 11 per cent te.be entirely. innocent of political motives. cul (mostly cotton picking) |of bookkeepers and cashiers and 7 3: mematacturin 5,000, tendgraphers M. Fay-does not fail to recall the Secretary’s|temie-t66900;-clocical 180,000, oro” | Petiste™t Of, StenouFaphers, "and angry tone in dealing with the British rubber feasional 125,000, seca monopoly. In that particular controversy he Eft transportation e ° jealousy. As you say, I can’: insi 25,000, mining 1300 and public ser-| “From all indications, more wom-, that he keep his record clean as a may not have been entirely right as to the facts, but he stood up stoutly and even violently for vice 7500. en are emplo; than ever, espe-| dutiful husband unless I break with ;what he believed to be American interests as |.ca! cially married women,” says Miss} Billy. But it isn’t fair. Billy thinks Anderson. “Debt, illness and buy-| I’m a saint. And I’m sure that any ‘against British. Europeans who recall ‘that | Pe Pig: incident are not at all dis; to think of * 99 in ing of homes forces them into it.| 91 who calls a man “Old Fruit” Employment of married women is) isn’t. thinking. of ‘him in ne A a 0 in| not so permanent, of course. New| terms. So, to putg stop to that af- u n mining, 35 in public service, 29 in Mr. Hoover as a weakling ready to submit too| domestic service, 12 tn Professional, readily to what he considers foreign discrim-| 25 in manufacturing and 24 in trade. ination against American industry or com- avenues in manufacturing have been|fair I’ve got to wound the feelings pane to them with development of|of a darling boy who is as harm- They are per cent of working - ne : women.. ferce. A captain of: political economy might easily be transformed into a leader of *hostile electrical industries and simpli-|less as a baby. It’s perfectly dis- Jast about odeithird of the work- American opinion 188,000 private laundresses, 26,000 laundry operatives, 27,000 _ mid-, are less. of thei eld and aaron nurses, aa Dearest Mi . Ben hihi i ; 7 usekeepers And stewards, 42,- liom; ..,| loin steak has | bone or-several weeks if necessary. The 000: ° ging p-| , Maybe 7 did read my mind] it sells for eighty, cents sooner this ig-done: after an attack ers, 41, ‘bookkeepers, cashiers | right ‘ab illy aad his presents| while the filet part is of sis the thore hope you can and accountants, and 37,000 sten-| but truth compels me to admi: that/ expensive, bringing ninety cents a &@ quick recovery. It is ographers and typists. rE is just a “choi Answer: ie best way to dis- solve a blood clot on 'the brain is to take a fruit fast‘for several days BY RUTH DEWEY GRovEs| | 7's, was not pulling any wooi over) pound. These expensive steaks are| true that one of the causes of pyor- Less than 20 per cent of store] my own eyes. I haven't mar- thea jis a form of acidosis which clerks and saleswomen are married, | Tied very long, ’tis true, bvt I learn-| to comes from a lowered alkalinity of 10 per cent, of the telephone Spots. ed right away that husbanc3 are| wish to entertain and make.an.im-|the blood. This can be corrected tors, 10 per cent of teachers, 25 ‘per — to take advantage of any lit- ssion, but ‘* ninety cent filet See ‘eli ‘the .acid-form- ie loeds ‘al les and fruits. A excuse for trying to Yo 2 Iou-| is in no way) su] in food value din on the ball and chain now and| to the winy soot omen tee green vege pyorrhea specialist should also be consulted and treatments taken to then.* Many of For this reason I’ve got to dro) afford to Billy. But it isn’t because tiere's remove any tartar on the teeth and infection around the gums.. The teeth. sbe..brushed. two. or ‘three ‘times daily, -using some alka- line dentifrice, each brushing to ex- tend over a period of at least five minutes. cent of music teachers and musi- ivision as shown anything wrong in his- beautiful af- fection for me.~' It’s a sacrifice J've Bot Aovmake to vs ridiculous round steak wi burger sold in the shops. hamburger meat mav be because I can’t get through the] a popular beauty as the “toast of traftic in that part. 9! the towh,” Belle was just that. sides "I want i, princes and “statesnien ‘were on her calling list. Bohemia exist- ting acquainted. I can’t ed then, she will tell you! It’s a land the apartment unless there's a|that the modern has left very far Py sone, o. Maybe Alan will] pening. ven then but if Florence is} “And so, the, other day, Belle Liv- any Hind of, #. Tah athe Ste’ (y on, no lofiger a young woman more and Detroit, and women taxi| can’t yet.see that it isn’t more harm- me thought I'd see what gave Manhattan ity latest thrill py Fr opening @ salon generation drivers elsewhere. ful for Alan to get letters from a| can do before I tell Billy everythi we aro inclined to “Prejudice still exists against| girl who is old enough to know] is off. Parner to break fication of machinery, gusting but what’s the use? Alan “The women miners shown by the|cap’t see that it isn’t a fifty-fifty ing married women are engaged in domestic and service. The census figures aré a mystery to us, | Proposition: at'all. But we know there are a few wom-| Now I think I’ve been beets per cent distribution is agriculture an 19, mam uring 24, trade 8, cleri en street car conductors in Balti-| honest about my motive. cal 7, professional 6.5, and mining one-tenth of 1 per cent. Seventy-five ‘thousand -of them were from 15 to 19 years old, 285,- 00Q.from 20 to 24, 1,150,000 (nearly refer to- women jobholders, but.most} what she is doing when writing to a of it is among other women. Thus| married man than for me to receive many women working claim to be} little notes from a boy who's nass- unmarried. But nearly all of them We Sing of Glamour and the Man (Minneapolis Tribune) Somebody has said that if a man bites a dog it is news, but that if a dog bites a man it is|60 per cent): 25 to 44, and 420,000 | work because they must.” co Son peso ens FR news. ie Who tie delivered him- eee cee aes pe Billy that Florence ts self was on the trail of a definition pf news, but thirds pom were f X THOUGHT. omer ly is ai t he wound up wide of the mark. That is to say asaiad haloes 30 A THOUGHT dhink i that the statement left unqualified, is open to] The census showed 225,000 mar-|* eewics - ried women laborers on home farms, 93,000 working out on farms, 764 coal mine operatives, 120,000 eiething workers, 20,000'shoe work- ers, 13,000 millinery workers, 17,- 000 telephone operators (who came under the head of “transportation”), successful challenge. Tf any part of the epidermis of Charles A. Lindbergh has been broken bythe bite of a Be not forgetful to entertain strangers for thereby some have entertained angels unawares.—Heb. ites, 13:2, jake then. winnie a a holy sensi | ‘UR BOARDING HOUSE New York, March ft gee in’ Manhattan peeing be in-the teleph nl "eras iter The" atu, of Tntogrlty, het] books ie erally Hiei eos fronts the. Stock . Ex oa + ol inaiag and hence relieve tis’ bese. Perhaps ou con. think of pommpehing dom an infinite number of Ma metas all ineis af eae IO ee <coracen bia. stock market. . Which ‘ es T’m going down in a little while to meet Florence at the station. Billy’s going-to drive the car for me of course, there did not follow a serious infec- tion. The rest of the world: would have been without information about the incident. But what about a like incident if it occurred today? If one newspaper man got hold of the item it would be quickly broadcast in the press of the world, and probably in most instances on Tine 0S AMAT ALL HEN SAW os A SAY MASOR, DIC Nou READ 4 we VERILY, w A: PROPHET 15 WITHOUT “Tis 2. HERE'S A sTorV iA7TH sneered rs to wear 80, the, teachers. now will first pages. It most assuredly would be ac- PAPER ABOUT YOUR AVI HONOR AMONG His: OWN: REOPLE f. Ball) WERE SMO cepted and treated as news. ° SAFENY surT! une LSE, vg ‘Grand pact fabs “ teported How comes this? Here is where the necessity “LWCAL MAM CLAIMS GAS-FILLED ’ © iaisbiag’ Chicago Evidentiy some of qualifying the aforesaid definition of news SAFETY SUIT WILL ae "aa + forgot to stick to “his comes in. A vast deal depends on-the identity PARACHISTES PASSE, : i ting | ‘oe of the man bitten by the dog and on his relation- A. HOWPLE, Ct ATS ‘ SS) SPEL IAN NAS : eh) ; seeps” ‘also were ship to the reading public. Let a dog ever so z sf 3 * ; : Meee” other Republicans than . WRONG. VERY WELE, SPELLED () 1s WoRKIAGr1, 7) TAKE MN’ SARE AVIATION Sur, WHERE PERFECT AN EMERGENCY SUIT FoR AVIATORS, — PLAMS “To GIVE DEMONSTRATION FROM PLANE, USING DUMMY, ‘OR HIMSELF FOR DROP”. f tiny ever so lightly bite a man like President Coolidge, Governor Al Smith, Secretary Hoover, or the king of England; and if there was an observer of what happened, we may be quite tances of the little dog’s onslaught. Whether or not i ghoul be so about a quarter of a pound of fat, | ‘Masing’ more of the , aA

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