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

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' (PAGE FouR. r . i | «The Bismarck Tribune & An Independent Newspaper V THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER : (Established 1873) | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis marck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ............ President and Publisher aieniaestt tL resident and Publisher Subscription Rates P Daily by carrier, per yeur Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) . Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck) ..... a Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail, in state, per yea | Weekly by mail, in state, three yea Weekly by mail, outside of North per year ............. : Member Audit Bureau of Circulati Member of The Associated Press ~ The Associated Pres exch ly entitled to the = use for republication patches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and also the local news of ntaneous origin published herein. All rights cation of all other mat- ter herein are also reser mse Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PA COMPANY NEW YORK - fifth Ave. Bldg. | CHICAGO DETROIT | Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. gned to re-| | seems to|t gobs | ‘ ing | 1 Gen, Umbert dound to the g: be turning into of glory f that Fasci If it were not for the Nobile himse!f would be less expeditio great leaders, Krassin, has s the grip of death and restor Fascism's leader, Mussolini. ssia, 9 jl ick- | fi of the d for one atched en from t This, to be sure, doesn’t prove anything about the | respective merits of these two divergent social phil-| ! osophies. It does reemphasize on , though, a platitude that we find easy to f ; the old, hack- neyed truth that differences of have a w up against the fundamental realities There are men who are fitted to stay at home and do the uneventful work of the world, and there are men who were made for daring adventures, hair-breadth | P chances and flirtation with death. Up on the world’s | 4 highest rim, where desolate ice fields stretch out like 8 the empty plains of a forgotten planet, there has been| near Elk Point, S. D unfolding an epic tale of courage, hardihood and peril. t Some men, vanishing into the void, have been seen no t more; others, given up for lost, have been caught up| si northland was but a parade ground for the primitive . virtues of daring and endurance. Russian, Italian, Norwegian, Swedish, French—the | g, were all Vikings. That strange human urge to forget] © oneself for the sake of another gripped them all. A All of us are the gainers by this. There is never too off when, in the unpredictable shift of things, certain | 4 of these men will be at one another's throats, crying | d out battle shouts about God, home and fatherland; yet, | t! for the moment, they have clasped hands—and we have | © had a vision. Complaints that the entire Italia expedition was al ri course, it was worth it. Visions are rare. The world| has more brave and good men than we dream. It can! more the glowing altar fires of unity and concord.| Those men with unpronounceable names—Lunborg,| Chuchnov advance, which is often slowed up but which never They all were Vikings. And they demonstrated | ‘: yet be brothers. u S to the men who are seeking a treasure ship in the|TI don’t lie—much—and nothing riles|denly appear with “dear old moth- iste A CAPTAIN'S SUICIDE plains of South Dakota, me more than to be put ina position| ers”: even if they have to resent précedtings egsinet 20 SOBA] sw ence, Germany and Great Brit-| woTTATION # of the Third Report of Dispatches from Chile regarding the loss of the sree ee Nec where I seem to be that sort of a) them; indignation spouts from the| If an endewed committee and ain all like Secretary Kellogg’s pro-| Admini nd for Continuance Chilean transport Angamos, which hit a rock and sank ORIGIN OF THE BRULE person. I'd ten times rather stand) accused and the accusers; yellow| y, ament cannet d pact to outlaw war. Wonder OF NORTH DAKOTA, Bis, ne Wes when che anaes etars (The Register-Gazette, Rockford, Ill.) my ground, and take the conse-| journals take the opportunity to go| Brosdway strain, t's wrong with it? county at Bale ees tea ; tL the|..It took a vacation visit by the President to bring| quences than have anything on my| “moral” by draggingout the last sug-| sugar papa? ° onarng In county court, Before Hon. 1. C, Ismael Suarez, found himself unable to prevent the| the Brule river into the spotlight, but where the stream | conscience, gestive detail that can be printed GILBERT SWAN, asked by cemetery as-| 1, 29'St, Judes, ceMastrophe he committed suicide on the steamer’s| into which the distinguished fisherman casts bridge. ° i ince interesting story as related by Malcolm McDowel One can easily understand that a captain might be former Chicago newspaper man, now secretary of the} It Mian commissioners derarument of. tha| casually, and Uipevensthoighe i ae ee cost many lives. Yet Capt. Suarez hardly acted in the] interior. It goes back to the romantic days of the) important enough to call attention! One vear it’s the theater that gets unnerved at the prospect of a shipwreck that would be | in his vicinity. for thesg days.” older people, sitting on nearby benches, promptly f Bolshevism’s | ganda throughout the nation. A few of those revela- them to the service of | highly important. a tirvialttay aval | : . en Lond lilies il aah | Editorial Comment | of becoming insignificant when men come} Kansas City and St. Louis, ripped its kgel open on a at the very last by adventurers to whom the menacing | ment of furs and a large number of kegs of whiskey. harmed by its long burial; indeed, it would probably it, be improved. They also have reason to believe, they} Dearest Mom: poetic effusions, and he brought me| For there are, play-1 limits of nation and class were transcended. They | in all, the steamer’s cargo would be well worth recov- with snags, given to changing its channel. | Railway and the rest—are outriders on the great/ transportation proved swifter and surer. stops. There was a glamour to the old river steamers that ae joicing in the superior comfort and speed of the rail- something the Vikings never knew—that all men may road, have a secret longing for the old glorified scows, | so! which state he lives, has a strict drivers’ license law, |= and its officials are apt to decide that a man S| has seven accidents a month ought to lose his license. If they do they’re quite right. We don't know a/ thing about these accidents; but mere bad luck couldn’t account for all seven. A man who gets in that many smashups ought not to be allowed to drive at all. He is @ menace to every other motorist and pedestrian THE MIND OF EVIL In the middle of the famous Boston Common is a pool where little children go bathing on hot summer days. The thing is very informal; most of the young- sters come from very poor families, and most of the costumes are quite sketchy. But Boston, staid as it is, is used to them and doesn’t mind. The other day, though, a stout and testy gentleman happened along and was horrified. He summoned al group of six-year-olds and harangued them: “You children should be ashamed for appearing in such indecent attire. If I had anything to say about it I would forbid you to come on the Common. It’s positively disgusting what decent people have to stand We are very, very happy to report that a group of ‘ose and tossed the evil-minded old meddler into pond. THE POWER TRUST PROBE | A big middle western newspaper runs a story by | ts Washington correspondent saying that the federal rade commission's investigation of the power trust failed of its purpose,” and protesting that public money is being spent on its continuation. Maybe the investigation has failed, for all we know. t does seem, though, as if it was worth all it cost to} ind out how the utility barons are spreading propa- | ions about doctored text books were, to our notion, It is hard to see just wherein the investigation has been a flop. To us it seems as if the country has got its money’s worth out of it. SHIPS IN THE DAKOTAS (Minot Daily News) Y Nearly seventy years ago a wheezy packet steamer, lying along the upper Missouri river between the! ‘rontier outposts and trade centers like Omaha, unken snag and went to the bottom in a deep spot ! Two men are now preparing to engage in a hunt ‘or treasure in the vessel’s hull, deeply imbedded in he mud. For, according to old documents, when the | teamer went down it was loaded with a big consign- The whiskey, these men believe, could not have been ay, that the furs would not be greatly damaged. All ring. The men are preparing to locate the sunken ull, remove the mud that has settled on and about it| make for romance, They don’t, I ind bring its cargo to the surface. unk po hte eiircandies dinner not returned. I think I'll just be the| mighty Texas Guinan, followed by &/ method is to boil Hunts for sunken treasure ships are relatively com-! ar much unity in this world. The vision of brotherhood | mon; yet, for some reason, there is an unusual appeal| al hone : is all too easily forgotten. The time may not be far|‘? this one. The thought of anyone seeking to tind| more romantic than murmuring! bring him back to earth after his| and that one should learn to discrim-| alt added. of a : ‘ing destroys some reasure in the hull of,a ship in South Dakota seems| pines and hemlocks. Ae le i inate, to be less loose of the elements just under the skin, | derangement which is usually ca omehow fantastic. South Dakota, in the heart of the| You sce, here everything is so) Pleasant ride. | MARYE e. If, for instance, bot ft makes the rate, Ser sad: |by the preasare of excessive pee ry, level wheat belt, well over a thousand miles from| set for romance, and nothing hap- iene z. & naan to be ily Frying is the worst | an overloaded stomach crowding the he ocean—one could hardly pick a more incongruous] pens, At least, any little flutters! yey, Marye tells more of her|® lady, it seemed but ln ged ing them and| heart. Try eating a smaller meal at pot to look for a sunken steamboat. you have here are so out of scale | troubles, proper to Téxas that you should always be avoi Potatoes | night, and be careful about the food We are apt to forget, in this day of railroad trains| with the extraordinary beauty of and automobiles, the extent to which the Missouri 8 iver served as a highway in the old days. Many| particularly when there are'po few useless waste seem puerile in the face of this, Of|and many a steamer went up a stream that is no| m longer considered navigable, bearing the goods of civil- ization to frontier outposts in the Dakotas and bring-| a ing back furs and gold dust. The Missouri was for} stone, where you have no_ beauty always spare a few if their deaths will light once! long a highly important trade artery. to . is umerous to mention. The coming of the railroads ended it. The stream| emotional experience promises a| going through its annual motions of | °° ™ er) Hy little color and an escape, being shocked. The aftermath of the s winding and treacherous, shallow in places, infested Yet it is absorbing to read and think of the old days.| th ith’ paddlewheels astern, that once navigated the| fel Missouri. For this reason we can’t help wishing luck line btained its name is not generally known. It joard of In best traditions of the sea. French voyageur. to. Maritime records are full of tales of captains who went down with their ships. The stern rules of the pI Sea require a captain to do all he can for the safety| Potomac did, of the ship, pass eae tht j The canoes of early French explorers, famous Jesuit erences: sonniicheys-thinking sat himeelti Ts coaicn, anit tun. teadare wa rand Lines tal last of all. The underwater ghosts of the old-time| ¢ skippers, lolling in Davy Jones’ locker, will hardly] k award a place of honor to this Chilean ship master who] ¢ » lost his head, li redge whom all holdup men would do well to avoid Instead of submitting, Kittredge grappled with him. qt More men showed the spirit and courage dis- played by Kittredge, there would be fewer holdups. A bandit is essentially a coward; the average holdup man would give up in fear if he thought he were going to run any real risk. The Lowell citizen who defended i The. officials who have the final say-so on aerial | | traffic laws seem to be rather hard-boiled. Reputa- amashu; without regard for big names. That is as it should company canceled an accident and liability was one of the first, if not the first, of white men to HARRY KITTREDGE’S DEED see the waters of Lake Huron and Lake Superior and In Lowell, Mass., lives a man named Harry Kitt-| to discover the copper mines which gave the Indians the soft metal they used for ornamental and trading purposes. He was one of the first early French ex- hereafter. plorers to visit the home lands of the Indians who lived a A bandit attacked Kittredge and his wife late one| along the southern shores of Lake Superior and who F ; night recently as they returned home after a drive.| Sed the Bois Brule portage. i 1608, and when Champlain, in 1610, was making The two fought vigorously, until Kittredge got his preparations to explore the interior of the country he hands on the bandit’s throat. Then he tightened his RONCENSE OF tne prenen cron, he ment several youne i i it? men to Indian tribes to learn their language so tha’ Seip and Reld on. After a time the bandit's body | he could have interpraters with him, Among them Was relaxed and he fell, unconscious. Mrs. Kittredge called Brule, who wandered with the Hurons along the upper the police. roaches of the a Lanrence river during. the winter When t! is i Pes of 1610 and 1611, learning their tongue and ways, an esnalisp abrived the bandit was dead. was the first white man so far as known, to visit this country.” tions mean nothing at all to them. cently been sogaged in making some remar! ] ith | 28 to the effect of sleep on the human brain. This has Bert Acosta, who flew across the Atlantic with | heen che by Searing the soundness of sleep with an Byrd, recently was fined heavily for breaking vari-| instrument which somewhat resembles an earthquake ous air regulations, Now comes word from Montreal nee reseed Folge no hers that Duke Shiller, one of Canada’s most distinguished | Pittsburgh university were the subjects upon w! ; fi Dr. Johi rimented. After having their slee: Myers, has lost his license for six months because the Tchsuad they Bere chee tests G different times ce officials held him responsible for a recent airplane|day to determine the P. with 10 per cent ‘The rules, evidently, are being enforced to the hilt in the Hades r eight hours of sound slee; “There was a time, some 300 years ago,” Mr. Mc-| 1 Dowell says, “when the Bois Brule figured more] with me. I probably rominently upon the white man’s map than the| bh ‘or it was a much used portage route. rsed its placid stream in the olden time when the| I ing of France held dominion over the great lakes} she told Alan—I suppose in some! An organization, termed | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ee By Ahera |= di ‘ountry. : “Etienne Brule, whose name has been given to the ttle river which so suddenly has been spotlighted, “He came to Canada with the great Champlain in THE MIND AT ITS BEST (Boston Transcript) When is your mind at its best? Do you choose the 4 early morning hours to prepare for your quiz or to himself instead of submitting is to be commended. compose your masterpiece? Or do you choose the late afternoon or night? In all probability your answer will be “early morning after a good night’s AERIAL TRAFFIC LAWS sleep.” That is eines have been Pane it up to be- jieve, but are we right? Dr. Johnson of Mellon Institute, Pittaburen has re- able tests rit seismograph. Twenty-one students of ation of their mental alert- ness and it was discovered that their minds worked ter efficiency at night than early The deduction reac! from these investigations is be. It makes for safety and security. that fat isons the system and acts much as cer- SEVEN ACCIDENTS A MONTH on first awakentng the mind may be'slert and able to ‘A New England motorist the other day wrote to/| function atisfactoril Yor a short time, but it is uneasy the newspapers raising a how! because a liability | and Snsurance n not capable concentration until it has been stimulated by fatigue, strange as that may seem. That is why vigorous setting up exercises or other energetic nctiee on eae ty: s ed seepere i bing for its morning tasks, ivnces, thé mind responds more and more to the stimulation of these fatigue poisons. Dr. Johnson claims that from 2 o'clock on to highest point of later the brain is at {te ‘for sustained maptal effort. and the moon, and the silent places! Taged. He was remarkably consid-| esses what are the setting, that it all falls. fiat—| (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Ine.) | * fades iodo ton was utterly ruined because of| what goes on before its eyes, New note. In Now that she is having the timé of} ing surprise! when a reform o! =| clubs runs int ‘annot be replaced. Probably most of us, while re-| her young life with Alan—and 1) ization makes a report about it. must admit her vamping is a fair| tabloids screech, the parties of the| fre Susshinea’ Rereath an ae anything about having met|goes. A few weeks 1,| Mr. ._ Besides, I really liked him, and| “cleaned out” and another year it’s| The navy is Sveptiontinn, to find POTATOES ARE WHOLESOME | like French iried potatoes, salted, Potatoes were unknown in Europe | and then baked without grease. New | before a f the Ameri- potatoes may have their skins Srl ri-| Tabbed off before boiling without cas. They were probably first in- to the continent by the Dr. McCo; 1 Spaniards, Euro: - 5 yy will gladly answer ere: personal questions on health I an to the reste for a bgp ied and diet, uddressed to him, food in the new world. This was |] SO 108 caniped addressed use of the peculiar i toes were pre- in wins, le ees iring their nutritive qualities. ickle juice, | impairin; ir it 5 = 2 A ae iH water placed in the ‘oven 0 is now one of the most | in which potatoes are baking will foods. Today Ger-| prevent the potatoes from becoming world in the number | too dry. ae per capita. In| After potatoes have been lying in envelope for reply. uy fey Hy h of bushels grown many parts of the world the potato| the sun for a few days they develop is served three times daily. 1h Sins a green color which indicates the bination with bread, this is more| presence of a poisonous alkaloid rch than can be readily handled. | called solanin. » These potatoes Potatoes can be substituted to aj should be discarded or the green part large extent for other foods with| entirely cut away. This poison is benefit to henlth, as was proved in| also produced in a small degree by Denmark during the late war. I do| potatoes that have sprouted. The not advise the use of any starchy | amount of solanin in a potato may foods during the dietetic treatment | be reduced by slicing the affected of certain fi » and of course,| potato and -llowing it to stand for this includes the potato, but any/| one or two hours in cold water be- thy person will find them whole- | fore using. some and nutritious. eer dal Potatoes should be stored in a QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS cool, dark, well ventilated place,| Question: W.K. asks: “What with an atmosphere of about 38 de-| causes the white cellular formations is a tendency to rot,| which periodically form in the should be sprinkled with lime. | throat opposite the palate? They potato is a member of the| cause a slight soreness until they nightshade family, and is a close} loosen and come out. What can be relative to the tomato, the egg plant, | done to prevent their formation?” and 0. Answer: The cheesy masses Potatoes should never be eaten at | which form in the crypts of the ton- the same meal with tomatoes or any | sils can be prevented from forming kind of stewed or raw fruit. They | if you will be more careful with your form the best combination when eat-| ciet. A good local treatment may be en exclusively with raw and cooked | taken with the ultraviolet light. This non-starchy vegetables. application of actinic rays will kill t mittee of Fourteen,” has stirred up| Potatoes have a ee reputa- rh pst danas el tonsils, ved secret in my life. the present state of affairs by show- | ~ e most starchy | and also tends to shrin! ie mem- At any rate, last nigh! r din- ed foods in 5; of the fact that they | branes to normal size. If your phy- 1 oxlae Lorie ane ing how wi a wicked city c80| have oly a third or a fourth rid sician does not have this equipment much starch as the grain products. | he can treat your throat with some Those who to reduce usually | medicinal preparation such as silver eliminate the potatoes from their) nitrate. ee diet when they would have better re-| Question: C.H. asks: “Does chilj sults by avoiding the bread. contain any nourishment?” I consider the Irish potato one of| Answer: Chili is very high in se-ealled | the finest forms of starchy food. It | nourishment, being made mostly of dance.” “hostesses” in public dance-halls and | is one of the few starchy foods that| meat. It is highly flavored with With that he departed, leaving} pseudo-brothels. alkaline forming. Even whole-| peppers and therefore is irritating to me too furious to speak. I was in| It was the use of the word “host-| wheat bread contains from three to| the stomach and cannot be consid- | no mood for any of Mr. Shelton’s four times as much starch as the|ered a wholesome food except for average potato. those who have been accustomed for Steaming, boiling and baking are | years to its use. hostesses. 4 the best methods of preparation. The} Question: Mrs. G. D. asks: “Will jerate and nice. With harsh words being directed | most valuable alkaline elements are | you please tell me what to do for It is now after one, and Alan has $ a the| in and just under my arms? They get numb up to great entourage, to assert that there |akin, after which the Pknewsrs | Soman pro devoted little spouse, and wait for it ento’ to al which they may be peeled Answer: You are probably suf- him. A few wifely remarks may | were ” and “hestesses”| and mashed, =e a little cream and fering from some kind of circulatory I told Alan I was going out re 4 with Mr. Shelton—and Ij be when it goes about being wicked. really hoped he might show a It aca to locate a large number ous pang or so—but instead he said | of drinki 0 are 20,000 very calmly, “That ought to be very| it is seid By © iiew York State Con- pleasant for you, since he is an old it gives a great deal flame, I understand. Helen and 1| of attention to the fate of girls who are driving over to Beechlawn tojare called upen to be Cy It’s all the bunk that the sea,| home early, after I had raved and| of supper-clubs lo your clothes is infinitely disorder, possibly due to some heart are delicious when cut into strips | combinations. i We thought most of the/has combined pathos and comedy in atready were being/her role of an unsophisticated girl pretty well taken care of. from a small town who becomes the pitine tee wife of a city card-sharp. city all built up with brick and|@. ‘was, too, i whose songs from her Bic vou take an ugly nlacy ine! IN NEW YORK | Roepe nr a de live up to and practically any| New York, July 19.—Manhattan is sely ia: the “Gers In the recent report of a com- mittee | investigating |New York! © FINANCE WHEAT POOL Sette ti ant ee piGtand Forks, ND. July 18" memes of these have been made pub-| Wrect tro corse espe tn kota itors eat Growers association passed Me 00 visitors con ayoid them. resolutions prescribing for financing alith Ford for Hoover, most of diy, seeion here today. oe He ee ot nee the complete z irst, moms pao yr ten et red prohibition activities for Smith Here’ a chance for the BE cy aes eleraters apdsother ine i ever met one. ignant a e statements have eurtailed because le some You know, I’m not deceitful, and|newspapers; hard-boiled ladies sud- pe ane This me sis get fe pub: | gram, s My moonlizht sail with Mr. Shel-] Having winked for 360 days at! of Fourteen’s report e duplicity of my friend Helen.| York generally spends five days be- Besos Erevent couples petting In the Matter of the Estate of Carrie ‘aylor, also known as Caroline Donnelly ‘Taylor, Deceased. J. L. Bell, Administrator, Petitioner, ys. John McCrory, Sarah Preavey, Day, Florence Cochran, Emma Salzer, Edith Harma, Will McCrory, Sarah Butler, Anna Butler, Bliza Terhune, Frank Chesrown, Will (Ghesrown, Joseph Chesrown, Guy na CAUITOL pry and the heirs, devisees As I wrote to you, I never told| under the postal laws. And 0, it] (Copyright, 1998, NEA Service, snc.) ‘what will Shelton before I came out here.| city sits back and wo! ist never happened to come up| be next. realized he was not just flirting; the naughty books. This season it! out whether or not alized then, happens to be a certain sort of dance! should receive more pay than ees under the will of Cath- THE a sentimentalist, and that his | hall, spea und night club that it they | __ Never has there been turned e Miler aok Rae ee aes i HW be shor ee is angen flee Reegaeee speaking chewld- being “ruste”“ahitied in “the gach (riot Of fan eet | Eeeailie and, ea wilt aaa on d tell Helen—certainly, it’s the resort that combines ali way of battle. one picture as there is| other persons interested in the J had shougi it was vi y inn tnt theese “Ytle, drinking, | lite eee Big War haitors Go Wrong,” which| Sssstacu, "teenie, saree D> Tavlor, would not have done so. And so{ dancing and le t-elul Work \ showing at the | Tn i Y k the "Com: | te the Ba ios ta this proigentiel| Captal theatre yesterday. "rus int | Mose hutteg erpemcets, © est Fox Films feature is the story | ,,%o" 8nd each of you are hereby | ofa boy and 1, by Sall clted and required to appear before and seatee and two Bvecighe tn Sold state st hen oteice | pic 7 Men all of whom are made | of the County Judge of sald County, at the Court = ist day 0 A.D. A928, & tropical island. the hour of 10 o'clock: In'the forenoon, adventures with lions, apes, | °f that day, to show cause, if any you crocodiles, and cannibals are filled | Courtine of 3. ie Ba sed with thrills, suspense, and, above|istrator of the estate’ of sige else, with — hilarious, | Se#sed, late of the city of Biamarcic in Burleigh County, on file in said . “Pro sit . Court, covering the period {rom Jan ere is a that is sure ta SoD ea, tor et ee , to Ju A. D. ihould not be allowed and = ni tg the busi: of sald \ should not be continued by i} adminis lor for the period ked for in report. Let service made of this citation oun aan as required by law. ELTINGE THEATRE iapated this 11th day of July, A.D. H | the world might be a landing ai® Court: <h | if e 3 : if i | fe the oti ot De uncle, Walter the boted director DW Gti a Gr was impressed by the vi- vaeity of the sixteen-year-old thie f i F i Fa actress, Pod cee fo her mathor 22d seen” d iH i if 4

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