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The Bismarck Tribune will never ask too much of it. And it is the great ask- ia t Newspaper ere—the men and women who demand that their fe ie pendent APER lows transcend their limitations of selfishness, blind- s ee eatakes if) a ness and timidity—that push the world forward. LS BI Cynicism would have helped Washington endure his ie rn be a Gears at toe podtstensy a Bis. squabbles with the Continental congress, the grasping sal rek as second class mail matter. Tory traders and the self-seeking army officers with Ceorge D. Mann ..-+.....++-President arc Publisber| much more comfort. It would have made Valley Forge more bearable. But it would not have won the Revolu- ‘sci iy canes bie ee Payable tp Advance $2.20| Hon. That took visionary idealism that could persist in Daily 4 mail, per year, (in Bismarck) .. '20 | Spite of plain common sense. - Me eae by mail, ah 4 Hy Likewise a cynical Lincoln would have been happier (in state outside Bismarck) .....+0- than the gaunt idealist who occupied the White House Daily by mail, vutside of North Dakota from 1861 to 1865; happier, and less successful. For ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ......° the world somehow does not respond to cynicism. It ‘Weekly by mail, :2 state, three years for demands ideals, even if it flouts them. Seeing as Weekly by mail, outside of North Dako 6, re through a glass, darkly, it nevertheless can recognize | Just a Minute, Folks, While We Harness the Other Horse —= i'd If we wish to have a correctly balanced diet, it is necessary that we understand the different food 2! ‘ications and their use in the year ad # el the ed aoe Or realisation that which is higher than itself; and, in the fullness etd RI tod) ave! care of the pa of time, it will follow it. : even if they alco contain peels || Enclose a stamped addressed Se This is especially true in a democracy, like ours. To T have not listed them in the pro.|| emvelope for reply. > ie w a rehe republication ot ail gore Peete he | the cynic the problems of democracy are insoluble. : to 4 teins, as is sometimes done by diet- They call for an impossible improvement in human lows to do the impossible. starches, Patients will s0 the cereal products, complain that the combinations| dried beans, tapi THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ____sATURDAY, JULY 14, 1 Dr. McCoy will gladly answer id tet, addressed to bim, rs of the Tribune. FATS, PROTEINS, AND CARBO- | vermicelli, noodles, Hubbard squaea, HYDRATES rice, cornbread, corn! wheat biscuits, wholewheat wholes itians who.do not understand food! giuten bread, Shreded Wheat, bare combinations. crackers, t tic also the local news of spentaneous origin subi! nature. Yet they will be solved, in time; solved be- One of the difficulties which 1} /*¥» cant brn ni spatial and > fo Rereta, All rights of republication of all other cause there will be, from time to time, Lincolns, frequently encounter is in teaching | Moree re, rraae include ail of + bi ter herein a a ved, Roosevelts and Wilsons who dare appeal to their fel- een brace ath ace | ae roduets, ban loca, sage, pote + m G. LOGAN PAYNE Se Le me one gees cok rol I = and most of the fully developed root eT ilaalaatalalaialiab lata THE ANNALS OF THE ARCTIC bined tomatoes with peas, under the| Sugars combine better than the . Se Tower Bldg. LS The world thrilled yesterday to a dramatic story of feat Sat Ue bores De * By thelr ion may be recognized SG rescue in the Arctic. It was a grim story of stark Protein food is the ¢ impor-| Fats and oils, or rocarbons, aad (Official City, State and County Newspaper) suffering, death and despair, but it was shot through tant material tor building aaa t0- are present in most s, especially a | THE COMBINE ON THE FARM with deeds of heroism that warmed the heart of human- — the pos. eal’ ii aa ia Pec so A he eg id of News that a survey is being made in the state to ae this, it can be converted into energy.| This may be used in Iimited quantity - HH determine results attending use of harvester-' her} Probably never before in the history of the world eae is Hin wd ae for heating and lubrication. * 5: combines here suggests that a new era of machine| have men gone further in the face of great obstacles of eve! 5 iT eXx- re tr farming may be near in North Dakota. Combines|in the cause of science, in the search of adventure, ‘ear Lag eho eh ol mae SHlausbbdos 4 oie mean tea Ti have already revolutionized agricultural methods in than they go today. And the pace grows faster. The drama of an ice-breaking ship battling polar fee reaches, the story of an aviator who risked all to save others and at the end was himself marooned, are compelling evidence that the century has its knights unselfed as brave and bold as those of any day. The annals of the Arctic are replete with grim stories like that of yesterday. But yesterday's story is proof that it is no longer as inaccessible as once it Rescues like that of yesterday would have been impos: lecade ago. There is inspiration in such stories for all. They prove the pace, but they prove, too, that the age is not lacking in spirit or in regard for = the duties of unselfish service to others. following classification with regard | 85 years of to their use in the body. snored befo: Good proteins are lean beef, mut- ton, chicken, turkey, rabbit, fresh| year or so. I shall £ such as sole, halibut, black| very much if you will many sections of the country. 9 Until recently, however, they have been considered i impractical for hard wheat areas. They seem to be q ming in North Dakota, for a survey by the Agricul- * ct tural college shows the state had only two in 1925, 27 * | in 1926 and 200 in 1927. For the combine it is claimed that it reduces cost saves labor in the home and on the farm, elimin 1 the necessity for transient labor, reduces power re- quirements and clears fields quickly for fall tillage. Its use brings practical problems now being investi- tt gated in a survey by the Agricultural college. Mean- time there are examples of farmers using combines eero35 id cottage cheese, gelatin,| and dieting. @ frog legs, turtle, and milk. S fresh tongue, veal, lamb, wild fowl, and crab. ‘- The not advisable proteins are kidney, lungs, liver, smoked tongue, cided to open the antique shop, even|hiding all these years?... Re-| saus ey dogs, bologna, brai thongh I have not decided to go in]member when we used to wreck all a farms larger it would follow naturally that production P would increase. There would have to be considerable adjustments all along the line if that were true. If Prisoners should not be pampered. Ye®, at the same time, he thinks they ought to get a square deal. So he has devised a plan that sounds like a good one. chest in hae I was surprised at|gling shop gizls getting their pic-| the! appreciate it savise me in cod, perch and tuna, eggs,| regard to your treatment of fasting usually ns" noring is Fair proteins are dried beef, pork, | caused by inability to breathe freely hrough the nose whil lle you are roug! salted cod, salmon, lobster, clams,! sleeping. This is because of an in- shrimp, oysters, crawfish, nuts,| flamed condition of the membrane. mackerel, domestic goose, ducks, | inside of the nose which is engorged ' with catarrhal mucus. ; ig get rid of your catarrh throug! fi on the proper diet, your _ maa de ny will be delighted iF notice i at y Ro longer snoring. car ed sks: “Stow As soon land and making money by with her. I shall help her at first,/the barrels in sight to get tl pig’ cann Question: Anabelle 4 hte ee . i A CHANCE Fo! 4 and see how I like ie ...« Girl trying on bathing sui » salt mac! ham-| did "Roquefort’ cheese get its y . | R PRISONERS We bought some very interesting|open window. ... And street all beret steak, or dried beat name é If introduction of the combine would tend to make} Sheriff Kramback of Deadwood, S. D., believes that little mahogany stools which a wom-|but blocked outside. Giggling rbohydrates include both] Answer: This cheese was named an had stored in jher attic, and she spinsters putting pennies in the for- epee petlie rte Mant) at ee ed ee, i very ti t tell chines. . - ir an shee} picked up a very interesting blanket |tune-telling machines. nd gig i bod! ri Producn that supply. the sallk "aie paeen : what she had to pay for these things. jtures in the automobile photo | fermentation, stomach acidity, bil-| Much given to the diet of * it would lower production costs that would be an ad-| Prisoners confined in his jail for minor offenses are Apparently anyone with any 6 galleries. Small boys sneaking ‘ an a Pi ierake oa sapped: Ha ved cyl § vantge, however. given the chance to undertake road construction work ld Og art sags see ae igi ised < kidney disorders. Starch is not| barley-flour. Roquefort cheese, Forty years ago in many sections grain was cut by|in the Black Hills. They are credited with $4 for each The goes cbout all the details! suggestion of cool greenery ca essential to life, and J obtain better | istelf, goes through s very lon hand with the old cradle. That was the pioneer method. |day’s work; those who are working off fines can apply! nea, starve: in the most enthusiastic manner, and|the mid-town ‘1otel roof gardens. . .| results with sick people by ¢limin-| process of preparation | before i Then came the machines that cut with a sickle, the/ this money on their fines, while others can let it pile Us seus what she knows about grains, eee mere Adri alg thos eldr precept pr 4 “2 i It’s superfluous advice, my child, | y, i i sweeprake harvester, the wire binder and finally the/up until they are freed, or can have it sent to their] to ask you to look where pea at sree: pete Sane aes ela twine binder. The general effect of modern machinery] families. going, or to stop any adventure that| studying it for years, just for her| East Side that the hot days leave! people, provided they will take the on the farm seems to have been to increase produc- Thi like od QT gener Teen fst ae tre | am amusement, never penises ent coors © gutters os in an oven | Chat te <ot00"tiar have ont - r- 1 uae " ce Mic tasibasa to detn: Wittl is seems like good sense. The state gains, for/T suppose I might just as well not do anything with it. heat seems to gather, as in an oven.| that the saliva may have an oppor- tion, while lowering costs. i" -jthe men are doing useful work instead of living inj warn you to be careful this summer.| © Do write often, MOM. |The roof-tops and fire esc:.pes sud-| tunity to act upon the starch before 1 If the combine is another step in progress of this! ide, tate expense; and while the prisoners are| Rather, I should remember that ee denly surge with perspiring human-| the latter enters the stomach. kind it will mean much to North Dakota. not being pampered, they are nevertheless being given (bbe usually ind on both feet,| NEXT: Mary finds the tables ity, tiered deere os pipet Racoon yen with ] fe “ey a chance to support their families or earn their own Fe eet caee veut shee: | Cura the'ola fell, sitting eilentiy’ tearing | 3 " * with ina hose regain their health. It may be used|® very good protein food when used It is upon the highways of in moderate amounts i} healthy in proper combination with other s. Qu ‘V. L. writes: 1NDS CALL tnedom Ea poe de eee Cen | (Core 0, MA deve tn | ei aca ok neces Tan eg Pee ee A high nila bao he up, penniless, in New _ I wish Alan did not trust you so |@——_-_______________ | selves with huge palm-leaf fans. At|take a small amount of real wholg-| stomach is ‘acid and will irritate ‘igh scl is pi iP, saa implicity mean, I wish he did not | | IN NEW YORK || sun-down, the streets become an out- | w! read with the ordinary meal| your gums if it comes into the t York the other day. He had run away from his middle GENIUS AND THE ROD give you so much leeway. The old- ° @ | coor hostelry. Men lie stretched out of combinations. mouth. Live on good food com- t western home to go to sea; and he confided to the of-| “gpare the rod and spoil the child,” is a very ancient fashioned man who protected his on copies of the afternoon papers. good starches are potatoes,| binations to overcome the hyper- C ficers who took him in tow that it was all the fault of| gag Now comes Miss Fi M. Hal wife and daughters seems to me| New York, July 14.—Scattered|In the streets youngsters, stark om, macaroni, spaghetti,| acidity of the stomach. f the west wind. rae pe ss Florence M. Hale, editor of| much wiser in the long run, than the notes from Manhattan ramble. naked, play in the gushing waters of t — the magazine “Kindergarten” of Boston, and state su- jouses become deserted, hollow 4 man who gives them unlimited free-|The over-flashy, pimpled youth the fire hydrants. Now and then |h a He didn’t exactly put it that way, of course. What] pervisor of rural schools in Maine, to declare that| dom. 3 stops you in the Times Square belt | the street sprinklers come by, trailed|shells. All vegacind is in the he said was that every morning, as he went about his/ “genius cannot be slapped into a child with a strap.” For I think you are right whenland tries to sell you phonograph] by a horde of shouting youngster: — trying to catcl re Shredded Wheat Biscuit, stewed igs. a breath of STanch: Pint of buttermilk, 10 or r 4 ey . i, ou say it is usually the idea of the rds of unmentionable nature. . .| most of them in misfit bathing suits 12 dates, ee ae co peal Ly libeneepiirenihid at Too often, says Miss Hale, parents try to make their laces, rather than the man him- Mine juleps in the snappier speak- | or ancient shirts. GILBERT SWAN. Dinner: Broiled mutton chops, 3 i children learn to do things which are beyond their| Self, that prompts you to be reckless.jeasies... And the slender Amelia eee & scent of a country dawn. It stirred strany 1 in his breast; his attempted flight to sea wi to realize those obscure urges. He vweas given a railway ticket ad sent back home. He may never see salt water again. But the wind 4 probably will continue to torment him. It is one of the “3 little spurs with which the earth rowels her children + now and then, so that they may not be content to be- 1 come clods or automatons. ’ There are many similar little spurs in this life; longings in effort powers, Instead of finding out what a child is fitted| And if you once got the idea that in-|Farhart being entertained at | The young of the East Side take for, a parent often tries, willy nilly, to force the child| (regan a crriage donot go hand/night-club. ... Seemingly the re-lthe hot days as they would the eir- . and, you might sublimate your] y, vi inan’s. ... ” into a preconceived mold—and then punishes the| desire for heart entanglements. Pe Re caras ate eae ane St renin nia cade ; FH A coachman sits eating his lunch ‘i youngster when it won't work. : eae seallas how wholly lout of an old kona Two lvoe oe anil ee superior i i a " ly is made to feel that it is inferior when it really is| before or since, it seems incredible {There is an odd game of “wig-wag’ Labor” sign, walk back and forth! gj. a a to me how you play fast and loose|in front of a 44th Street cafe, hand signals by means from one fire es. if cape to another by means of the Parents have a terrific responsibility in this matter. with his devotion. Long study and careful planning are essential. No|Marye. Nothing gives a woman ; ‘ father or mother should shirk the duty. such a sense of values, or such a! The wax models in a clothing HISTO street. % Then there are those Jack Fear- ratified the new Constitution. (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) | baked egg plant, cooked greens, head "| lettuce, stewed apricots. 4 *Stuffed celery: Mix with peanut H date in butter the desired quantit of minced ripe olives, cho’ MERICAN | nd enough of the pulp y ‘rained from cong we to meer e Cerise st ork ingredi together With a fork and fill the gooves 2) crisp, well bleached celery stalks ; eu JULY 14 uniform length. Place on ee for a You ought to have children, |<lasped, in hand... Ain't loveliaundry that swings above the| 179g ‘The old Continental congress| little white ketore serving, ° things that stir us to sudden longings for escape, that ot store window, modeled after Lindy.|nots who perch at the precarious| 1798—Congress passed last of the BARBS —*| persuade us that there are rich experiences in the eee aver life, important) "om A news stand that till sells|roof tip and. there sway back and alien and sedition laws. | BARBS world which our daily lives miss. Yet to yield to these to consider the future and the wel.|@ faded paper covered document forth, pretendin to be about to fall| 1870—A $3000 pension was voted | @————__--_________-@ moods—to run away to sea, ak this farmer's bey did | Editorial Comment fare of those dependent on her. titled, “The aiteiet Bisoips Valen- | off, = ie horstied Tolattvon nue Seen of President Lin- Measuring Our Emotions a 7 .itino.” ... ‘onder if anyone ever | stree! low shout vain wat 8. —is to miss the point entirely. AAO Rissa | PE previa btean mod’ |buys one now... A midget smok- |Rooftop ball games go on as soon as| 1886—Congress ordered the Treas- ee Falter in Co- . _ Consider the farmer’s boy for s minute. He stends} AN UNDERPASS CAN BE A DEATH TRAP lack of mutual dependence. jing a cigar almost as big as him-|the sun begins to set. And there's ury Department to reduce the | lumbus, jo, “displayed several ‘ fn a dewy pasture, just at dawn, and the morning So the mode: menage has to/self.... The stage struck damsel/a game they play with the pi 5 national debt at least $10,- (St. Paul Dispatch) h h whose voice carries to you over ajwhich circle about from the 000,000 a month. breeze sweeps in on him and makes him feel that there) On a gravel highway so heavily traveled that chuck together with much less foun- capt rerngh 3 er are far places and great events awaiting him else-| holes, ruts and cross furrows are continually oc- dation than the old one had. It may)couple of table tops: “And io ‘ be better, but I doubt it. There’s|him, I'd rather have a single line in i where; so he wants to go to sea. Yet if he should Fle regardless of pear. speintenance expenditure, nothing Tike the feeling ‘that. somes | piay than be a buyer, at the big- y, and faerie castle, and ship for Gingapors.or @eesten, tos y cree where sr potee aye hoes sereratad one else needs you and is dependent |gest department store.”. of certain number of point: Menus For a Week is | upon you, to keep you from selfish- nese youngsters ooting | When, at last, sleep overtakes th would be no better off. The wind and the dawn would the traditionally deadly grade crossing itself.| ness and flightiness. marbles. And being mighty ex- | cluttered jtreets, humans are|@ still delude him, though his ship were anchored at Man-| Where the underpass is narrow. most of them terday afternoon Mrs. Mor-|pert at + ,A youngster rolling |stretched in solid masses along the! n, mocoy'’s menus suggested for dalay itself. Biy fet or other rough spot in the road within and I went out on a buying|® hoop o1 Central Park gravel|walks, along the curbs, 2 » along the . For the truth is that these disquieting hints given| Aity feet je geome ing is a constant threat of death,| expedition. She has definitely de- |path.... Where have hoops been |fire escapes, slong the roofs. The the week beginning § 15th: us by nature are ends in themselves. They are not] 4 car traveling at only moderate speed can be 80 Sunday meant to be acted on, for that is impossible. When you| diverted from its course that it caroms into the side . e Breakfast: Coddled 5 “ 4 n : a toast, ripe figs and 8 ure, look down your street on a quiet moonlight night, and| Wall of the underpass, or into the central pillar, if Ahern : J lok down your street ona gut momligh nigh and| Sal of the untrue, oF nn Gh cet oie tl OUR BOARDING HOUSE Br ee moment and seeking to avoid it, can come to grief be- that life somehow ought to be richer and more besu-| fore he has opportunity t n tiful than you have found it—that, in itself, is enough.| the straightawey pon TES POR TERA EE IRD rs). ’ Dinner: Broiled chicken, zucchini poles (lettuce, tomatoes and cucum-|biack and white they y { wVES,« SPEAKING | ue " GOOD FoR You (small Italian squash), ‘Salad of Unless you are more fortunate than most you never ee dan 't exist f . The ti HetLo f~ 3 ° eal Where one all Meiiiie ails. to indulge the wandetiost thes a. freah cominge‘anese “Minnesota ‘voters nest November ott HELLO WILTON! EGAD, How MILTON, WHOEVER You ser aragr tne alta as clery| gow, eaeca fis morning inspires; but to feel your heart beat in unsion| {°0lishly wreck their State High Fund through : 5 t ARE ! You'RE “TAKING § aia ei the 3 4 of Amendment Number when every ARE Nou 2 ux EH Ze WHAT e AM Monday w morning is sufficient, i Trunk Highway carrying | tic that is too heavy for \ a o—He NEXT MONT. 2u A BIG WART OFF OUR Breakfast: Baked stuffed apple,|,,.W*,Sf* Re ty on P pnd The savor of life is made up of just such trifles. To| gravel, will be paved. eanwhile, we believe, hig DOING FoR “th 8 HANDS fu.-TAKE HIM with cream if desired. torists is sbout tinty pallens “ua be able to catch the hints that nature throws out, even| WAY Pege sical patrols should be particularly vi NY eee NOTHING, BY SOVE Fe WHAT Zur Varn You To HE Lunch: | All desired of one kind of | us" y an you cannot act on them—that is the sectet. Thet| sdlscent to unlerpassse Beto ee oueh spore SAV THAT AGAIND —+ WILL I ALONG Wi pp I aa iat 2.8 Wings conviction that the earth is lovely. It brings| be the laying of a few feet of paving on either side of 14. oad OTOR CANADIAN ROCKIES, SO Dinner: Salisbury steak, string|_, Distance doesn't always lend on- inderstanding—and a measure of deliverance. every on a heavily traveled gravel highway. gerne = a Me ban 4 He CAN MEET “TH beans, combination salad of toma- {see of opportunity isthe tal lige TRIP To D oc is , celery, Or cabbage, ane nity MONUMENTS TO HATE : cot whip. 5 FAITH AND CYNICISM pageipa MeWHY WILTON, You OLD RASCAL, saat, Tacmaey, nie cinta nae ae Ernest Boyd writes s spirited defense of eynicism| ‘Mob Tears Down Anti-Hate Pillars in Louvain Dis- RTAINLY I { Breakfast: Poached eggs, crisp | °F! ee 8 in the current issue of Harper's Magasine. Pore reads a headline. Whereupon we pause in our ~~ Ce WILL fas YES, ‘ " ii tg okra, sbred-| Don’t feel too sure. A house of The cynic, he says, is the man who, by sad experi-| wee negheie (roveh,t0 regret that some Americans By (YOS CAM COUNT OM ME! a ae Z ded lettuce. cards is shaky even if it is » full ence, has been disillusioned about human nature. He| Back in 1914 when the kaiser’s legions trampled over| wer TLL SEE You AT “THe connate et sation, svinachy ee th wort sce he inews thet what mented | Eames wut none Se Cling Gc Owns CLUB, cert a ea ana le ate . e by od worst, since we t is what mankind 90) (00y) ata i mune, mal both meet. Wednesda: Since a ae Baged was A. in the Uelted Ye: Breakfast: Wholewhest mI States brary. hitney ly - a sweet butter, con, American architect, designed the new seractu ’ , iption across the raw Wasren insists it shall read “ Whit ed by German Fury; Rebuilt by American Generosity,” and backing him are many students and citizens of the Especially it cannot do with] town. Its great need is for people), Opposed to this faction is M \ tes serene ey the . He is all for ti \ \ Lunch: Cantaloupe as desized. the » not the worst; people who why, he asks, should anybody want Dinner: , between peoples, in stone which the ages? rector had the workers install the the and PRE-ARRANGED PHONY CALL= wouldn’t Secogane each other more if they sid (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) primes. ppt Luneh: \w apples and pecans. MOTHERLESS TOTS WIN Binses: “Brotha steak, beats, FREEDOM FOR FATHER i ‘Es: flour, d