The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 8, 1929, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR . The Bismarck Tribune |i iseican ure pendent Newspaper THE BIATER ULUES! NBWSPAPER «Ratabdiishea 1673) Qa second class mall mat’ George LD, Mann .. Subecription Kates Payable in Daily by carrier, per yeas ... Daily by mai, per year, (in Bi Daily oy mail. per year, « President ang Publisner ‘ € uy seni. o cade ot North Dak 6.00 | nation. Rey oe a iy erates cage pone f0 4 ‘TRAFFIC PALLIATIVES Weekly oy mail, in state, three years for Weekly by mall, outside of North Uakota, DEE YORE veeesccrreverererensererss Member Audit Bureau of Circe! Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitied to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It We local pews of spontaneous origin published herein ‘are also reserved, Foreign Representatives G. LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave. Bidg. QHICAGO Tower Bidg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ere chi. see ——— ENGLAND'S INDUSTRIAL ANEMIA Were there more night trucking where it is {s ten years since the war which dislocated the indus- | be gained by abolishing the parking of passengers cars. For the community which for financial or other rea- Isles ended. Worse yet, the situation seems to be getting | Sons cannot widen its streets there is but one road to more acute all the time. There are, it is estimated, 1,400,- traffic relief. That way is by the process of elimination. _| Parking, rerouting and loading regulations would clear tries and disorganized the commerce of the British 000 men and women now out of work in that country. reckless, violent and lusty. It was the perfect miror Thus Chicago has exhibited our national failings more strikingly than any other city. But, as Mr. Ervine points Hee e eee ccc ee cama unnaaaaneeRemn tes aan REESE out, the city also exhibits our national virtues. New Published by the Bismarck Iribune Company Bis- | York is detached, following a culture of its own, a show marek, N. L., and entered at the postoifice at Kismarcs | piace and a banker's office, strangled in its own size. Chicago is a magnified cross-section of America. If Chi- cago has gangsters and grafting politicians, it means that all the rest of us have these things, too; but if Chicago $7.20] is also showing strength, vitality and a growing apprevia- tion of beauty and civic conscience—that, too, means that bwu those qualities are coming to flower ir. the rest of the Most’ suggestions for the solution of traffic-congestion 1.50 | problems in the big cities are palliatives, not cures. But pending the finding of a cure, palliatives are needed. Among the useful palliatives are regulations for the collection of street refuse and the repair of strect-paving and sewer, water and gas mains. The hauling of heavy a @e not otherwise credited inp this newspaper, and ‘aiso | building and other materials at night, the possible elim- ination of horse-drawn vehicles from congested streets Aji rights of republication of all other matter herein) and the rerouting of busses away from crowded thorough- fares are other suggestions. These things are all pos- sible and likely to be put in force sooner or later. to load or unload on a congested street, traffic arteries DETROI1 | would be cleared of one of the most troublesome and Kresge Bidg.| common obstructions. Trucks parked double or backed y up to the curb not only interfere with the orderly and ' expeditious dispatch of traffic but cause accidents. Much of this carting could be done aftcr the traffic rush hours. be England's unemployment problem persists though it} As long as these obstructions are permitted nothing is to ] j : necessary Though such a condition embodies the possibilities of a the streets during the rush hours of much traffic not commercial decline which shall bring Britannia down there by necessity. So great is this communtty’s invest- off the pedestal of supremacy which it has graced in ment in good streets that several hours of disuse a day finance and industry since the era of the corn laws, fol- amounts to economic waste. Jowing the Napoleonic wars, the nation seems unable’ to find a means of stemming the steady sag. THE DELICATESSEN AGE Sending unemployed to Canada was tried and proved One of those numerous organizations whose specialty @ failure as @ solution of the depression. Supplied with} is viewing with alarm bewails the rapidly approaching loans, 8,900 of the idle were sent over to the Dominion | passing of the American family. Its gloomy prediction f Jast summer and were placed on farms as laborers. They | is based on the increasing popularity of the delicatessen. were artisans and artisans they remained, unable to adapt themselves to the change of employment. Most cooked-food shop flourishes, ment had ended in @ fluke. In cash the failure cost|in the house. Shops specializing $850,000. The real gloom of it, however, was in disap- | ready-made salads, to be wrapped u| pointed hopes for relieving the home situation and turn-| would be have gone bankrupt in those days. ing the depression to the advantage of Canada in de-| are almost as numerous and prosperous as drug stores velopment of its agriculture and settlement. So the normal condition of unemployment that has and corner groceries, a i q competition of other nations, especially Germany and| formerly was invested in shoes for children the United States. The fact that these industries were | for tips. specialized and standardised was what made their idle farming. ment of coal mining that lifted English industry as high | week. i ~~ above normal prosperity and power as it had been below i that. A too-conservative policy in industry gradually « permitted American industry, with its spirit of continual FLOUNDERING Economic recuperation in Russia has been | | innovation, and German manufacture, with its cheap-/ table in agriculture, less successful in industry and least ji Ress and international penetration, to take away much | of all in marketing. Crop production is now running i q of British trade volume as the century drew to its close. | along at about pre-war level. the Napoleonic wars. be even more effective as fuel after that treatment than | shevist press. before, if made into briquettes, as is being done at 1 an effective agent in the production of electrical energy | of manufactured goods. ment, there still remains the problem of markets. serious condition of depression from out of which, un- | American observers would suggest. less an unexpected development ensue, the isles will make| Another reason for the high prices is the { their way only after long and patient exercise of that} of the soviet administrators to show results. This eager- « British characteristic which is known as “muddling | ness has inspired them to go after profits with a ferocity t- “af that would do eredit to a capitalistic war profiteer. Eager for the approval of their superiors, meaning through. “Chicago is a city of shining towers, a city which one day, I believe, will excite the envy of all civilized men. It q H PRAISE FOR CHICAGO Promotion, there has been frenzied competition among 1 During the last few years Chicago has been known | the state “business men” to make the largest profits. {as a sort of bad boy among American cities. It is the i horrible example to which we point when we want to set «forth a moral. Its maladorous underworld is the final °, . 1 argument in a dozen different attacks on current social Editorial! Comment | + trends. }/ _Now a cultured and scholarly Englishman—St. John PEOPLE READ MORE i" hy pr AGA, salen os connceeabte.renviesien In spite of ciety aerate Wh continue to read james cof cia a tow th cy nse tn nt i ‘ontrary to the fears expressed, reading has not been much of our time. Between 1914 and 1925 the population increased 15 persisted ten years drags on. It is the heritage of spe-| per cent, while bakery production increased 660 per cent. cialization as well as war. England has beer dependent | From 1900 to 1920 the number of restaurant waiters in- ‘on its shipbuilding, its steel, coal mining, pottery and | creased three times as fast as the number of families, shipping industries, and each has been hard hit by the indicating that a large proportion of the money that To those who place implicit faith in statistics and the workers so incompetent when they tried Canadian | conclusions therefrom it is all very sad. Suppressing the delicatessen by law might help to cncourage home- 4 It is too soon to say what the end will be. As said,| cooking and the production of pie and biscuit such as | @ngland has been through such stagnation before. In| mother used to bake, and thus restore the attractiveness 1815, notably, when it emerged from the Napoleonic wars | of family life. It might be well, however, for the anti- _ vietor but industrially so anemic it seemed permanent | delicatessen league, before it writes into the constitution L decline must set in. Then came the era of machinery| another form of prohibition, to consult the wives and i of all kinds, a new epoch in civilization, the steamship, | mothcrs as to their desire and willingness to’ go back to the locomotive, the power-driven loom and @ develop- | the days of 14 hours in a hot kitchen seven days of the Industrial production is ‘Then came the war. Again a depression like that after | reported to be approximating the pre-war level. In- dustries like coal and oil have done well, while factory How the nation is ever going to pull itself out of the | production, which involves greater complexities and more ‘ pit is not apparent now. It still has coal as a resource. | skillful. management, is still lagging behind 1913. But | bi Germany has contrived methods for eating its coal cake | when it comes to government trade, the failure is con- 4 and still having it—that 1s, it has found that coal from | spicuous and admitted. Soviet trading methods and re- 4 which valuable chemical by-products are extracted may | sults are subjects of outspoken criticism from the bol- Where any price can be asked and some one to pay 4’ Lehigh, in this state. This fuel then also has been found | it found, it would appear there ought to be no shortage A hungry market in capital- at the pithead. If England can apply these processes, | istic countries would mean booming factories. there still is a future with a silver lining to the present | Russian industry, under such conditions, should be com- clouds of gloom, but after that much progress to adjust- | plaining of lack of money for plant and machinery re- habilitation argues that the problems of governmental! { Viewing the field of economic and industrial possibil-| industry have not been so successfully solved as reports ities it, therefore, seems that England is mired in a| brought home by enthusiastic if somewhat hurried lessened by the new tools and toys which consume 60 Where family life seems to be decreasing the ready- When families of eight of them needed loans to get back home after the experi- | and 10 were the rule, the kitchen was the busiest room in roast turkeys or and carried home, Now they now goes most no- That cagerness greater liberty for children, we must | » not lose sight of one great truth. | We are creatures of habit. it. It is the man or woman of 40 who is able to get a perspective on his own life and who will soberly tell you that he is what he was taught to be as a little child. have stuck, on, So many parents don’t realize the importance of it until the bad habit of sleeping-in is formed. It is not only the fact that getting up early rheseee the any cee fon ayer any? at is true, but it isn’t all the truth. 7: The other thing is that it takes | is to legal matters. morale to hop out of bed at a given time—morale and courage. It is the best starch I know of for that poor flimsy thing we mis-name our “will.” course, is going to bed right on time. One is as necessary as the other. grow into liking it wher wr 7" ' or if we don't learn to accept it and «like young. No matter how much moncy we|bers of the house and senate this |the ca have, or haven't, we should teach the | afternoon. children to work. Far be it from me to see them imposed upon, as chil- dren too often are. That is the thing Tam trying to warn a big job ahead for all of our chil- dren. The world must be run when | spend several months. we are dead and gone, and the push- button age has not yet arrived. And I hope. it never will, The child brought up without the habit of | today. beauty.” is in this place and not in neurotic New York that the genius of America is found. Here is energy, here is be- wildered but’ indubitable strength, here, too, is emerging ‘That: isn’t the sort of thing we're used to hear about | V5 published. Fiction grows but the great development Not a word about gangsters, beer runners, Big | the life of a spectacular man or to interpret the mean- In- | ing of some great scientific advance are welcomed by “There is a social censciousness spreading thro it the citizens are pats to make tte copies of books were prinied Sn Shia eunery. «Rtus basen I believe they will do it. ‘will eventually make Chicago the most and town in the world. they ‘There is a vitality in the this country every year. We have found recreation in the automobile, the radio, the phonograph and the moving picture. We give more and more time to games and sports. Bridge and golf alone consume many of our waking hours. This past year a larger number of: books of all classes is in biography and science. Serious efforts to portray thousands and even hundreds of thousands of readers. During the 1925 census year more than 200,000,000 no account of pamphlets, newspapers and inagazines, 1| the total of whieh for any year now runs inte the billions, Between 7,000 and 8,000 new books are published in You can’t predict what author will be the favorite of a particular year. A university professor, a theatrical press THE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE Going After the Higher-Ups! Give children little tasks to do work of one kind or another cannot Che possibly amount to much. CHILDREN by Ole Roberts Barton ©1928 by NBA Service.Inc. Under all the new teaching of | Begin ver: proved upon. The parent of 25 now may not see | The habits trained into him then character traits tater And—“Early to Bed” The twin of this little habit, of Another habit is work. We seldom it when we are very | Snight But the fact remains that there is regularly at a certain hour every day and see that they are done right. young and increase the responsibility as he grows older, Punctuality and work! Two ex- cellent habits that cannot be im- Our Yesterdays FORTY YEARS AGO Marshall McClure, Minot, a veteran | North Dakota newspaperman, is here | famous Charlie’s al to witness the closing scenes of the North Dakota legislature. 2 " L. L. Dundes has returned from a I should make certain things very | trip to Mingusville, Montana. rigid in a_ little child’s program. First, of all he should learn what the little clock on his table means. It means business, does that little Mrs. John D. Lawler gave a lunch- ; eon in honor of her mother, Mrs. | General Sturgis. Guests were Mrs. | Clock! When its hands point to 7:30/ Church, Mrs. Cornelius, Mrs. J. A. —he must learn to get up then. Not} ward, Mrs. five or ten minutes later. That lit-} Hughes, Mrs. tle habit of hitting the floor on the dot is going to be the keynote of a hundred good Asa Fisher, Mrs. A. C. B, Little, Mrs, E. H. Wilson, Mrs. W, T. Perkins, Mrs. W. M. Tahoy and Mrs. M. H. Jewell. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO A. D. Comstock, former attorney general, is visiting in the city. Mayor Register has returned from Dickinson where he has been attend- Miss Mabel Walton was sad moet at a surprise party given by her hig] h gehool class on her birthday. thousands of Haven, Conn. He addressed the mem- |a frequent, T. J. Nelson, secretary of the In- dependent Voters association, left to-|to be held in high rents against | day for Farzo where he will estab- every day, and so it is with trepida- | lish headquarters. ti hat I touch on the subject. ae Rar suite Mrs. K; Jameson, Meffit, left last |fed. A passenger, night for Los Angeles where she will Angus Macdonald and John East- wood, Glencoe, are visitors in the city ify the world of one’s ! i wed a man who, so © | self knows, is hi trying the discovery | a year’s teaching in days ago. mether son in tears, at denying her own happy family in San Charley’s attorneys that something must this “canard.” * * Mrs. Lindbergh: is have learned— on its romance ab R. J. Turner went to Gladstone this | yh . morning for a short visit. whose hemp it touch TEN YEARS AGO Members of the Knights of Colum- 'bus from all parts of the state are gathered here teday ta meet Supreme James A. Flaherty, pui preas—and hovering stork, and penalty of fame. It probably is very trying, at the apple, melba toast. * least, to have the public prints noti- pily wed with wife |of celery and tomatoes, prune whip. and bairns awaiting him at home. But Mrs. Evangeline Lindbergh, thoroughly in several waters to re- | bother her at all.” ihad been told, simultaneously with ture for cooking in one of the heavy |that she is developing a form of ar- announcement of her son’s engage- % ment, that she herself was to wed aluminum pans tightly covered. After tnt perked ra ati Captain F. E, Anderson, commander of the liner “President Wilson,” on which Mrs. Lindbergh returned from The famous lady is said to have the “skipper” who scems to have a PENALTY OF FAME that rumors of|hankering for fame not to be ¢ marriage, divorce, remarriage and|cessively annoyed even by false ru-| ance and to the trivial things of hu- mings of romance, are an inevitable In this particular case, Mrs. Lind-|ancee, who, when sympathized with Sunday Breaktast—Walfles, with a smell : as M atedtiis || DF moOoy, will gladly, enrwet Berner Hy string |] Giet, addressed to him, care of (he Dinner—Roast veal, cooked spinach tomatoes, bage, grapejuice whi 5 pea iui weedey even become tough through actual Breakfast—Wholewheat mush with |cooking. Serve immediately, while milk or cream, stewed raisins. hot. Lunch—Bight ounce glass of orange) = Gugsriqng AND ANSWERS Straightening Question: Pat asks: “Will you tell me how I can straighten my feet? The great toe on each foot has grown to- toasted | ward the other toes until the large joint below protrudes out in # great of ‘bump. I ti ht of putting a non- , | flexible rod {1 grate Sey ant tee carota, A ing large toes , but wanted Dinner—Roast of mutton, baked | ask ap hop) eee Fiennes this do parsnips, cauliflower salad, cu: - | more harm than il tard. = ree Answer: Moat chiropodists will be Thursday able to fit you with a brace similar to Breakfast—Cornmeal mush with | the one you describe. You can wear milk. these braces at night, and if you wear Lunch—Baked squash, cooked let- | sensible shoes there is chance for tuce, salad of grated raw carrots. you to return your large toes to their Dinner. 4 roast pork, | natural vga “Would egg be a good shampoo?” Friday rates Kidd is nothing harmful Breakfast—As many oranges as de- | 4! use of eggs as a material sired. for shampoos and many people claim Lunch — Spinach -and cheese en|that such a shampoo keeps the hair casserole, shredded lettuce. in excellent a Dinner—Tomato and celery vege- table broth, broiled white fish,| Question: G, M. M. asks: “Is it mashed turnips, combination salad |all right to use lodised salt in our of raw tomatoes and eelery, stewed | food?” Answer: It is unwise to use iodine ie , Ghee cian's , Breakfast—Cottage ehesse, i ta Question: R. K. L. writes: “My Jello or Jell-well (no cream). Lunch—Baked lant, strin; beans, lettuce. adi = | mother 1s 45 years old and there Dinner—Roast ach, salad | seems to be a swelling on her knee. ee ee Is this ‘water on the knee’ and if 50 Spinach and cheese en casserole: If | what is this the indication of? Is it the fresh spinach is available, wash | very seri She says it docs not engagement to far as he him- most-as-famous| ove all traces of grit. The water| Answer: Of course, I cannot diag- mother, seemed to find more than! 10+” clings to the leaves after the | nose your mother's case through this that the world! rina) washing affords enough mois-|colmun but it is more than likely about ten minutes’ cooking, fill the lady’s complete break-down on the! @ subject. After morc than a year and a half of having her every move and word watched and reported for the curious public, she must have/® suffered enough pre Jar or- deals to be rather hard aps, though, is never hardened to auch] gir A. T. Quiller-Couch, the emi- Daily Lenten if Thought | By WILLIAM E. GILROY, D.D. (Editor of The Congregationalist) Turkey a few more concerned engagement to Francisco, than true gentle- AK 3 ‘wom reer resba orphan mee humiliations as being forced to de-| nent novelist, preaching in @ London ‘whom she had|"y her engagement to every man to| church during the late war from radioed him to bring, and indicated |Whom she so much as speaks, wheth- be done about already has one or more wives, * comforts us 1 learning what. brities before her|beset the groat. Being humble has|war, when an appeal t the world insists | its disadvantages. But it also has its|through the churehes for men and out the great|charms. Though, being perfectly) women to show s greater it of es through the|honest, most of us have sufficient Lisp lint related very largely all the trim- “eo tehgeereenip k Fl man conduct, which, as Mr. Quiller- fasn’t it delightfully fran! lors out, had little place in co Tencsball Hohn. Coolldge's. 1i-| Goriite-ewa tn the iives of people. He New | bergh was doubtless, very naturally,|for all the publicity given her every less shown all the could show a woman country. public demanding rot considerations which the captain|like being a Mrs, Lindbergh, even But the great yawning maw of the haps radiced|own home town that romance was In the air; why|Johnson of Evanston, Ill, until the if not constant, guest at| move, remarked that she “loved it”? in’s table. She was doubt- Few of us are so frank, even, courtesies and|though we knew we would rather whom he knew | with all the necessitated rumors and esteem by his|counter FUROR. +e MRS. JOHNSON: Nobody: ever hi outside her. mance must o Mrs. Ferdinand | inquire as to the akippers present | other day, Jt was at a school moth-! matrimonial status quo spike a good story. It's easier to ex things come about That might |ers’ meeting in that city she made her mark, Someone suggested that lain how such | the children have orchestras and give n explain the! concerts after school hours, It was T AM HIS MANAGER / wm YILSTADT Nic” IS YouR EXHIBITION fs THE FAME ‘To: YouR,GALLERY/ You HAVE THE HoWoR, SIR, OF MEETING THe FAMOUS YILSTADZ oF FINLAND! HNILSTADT 1S THE NoRTHERN wor-tp's GIFT To THE MODERN ScHooL OF ART / “HE DOESN'T SPEAK ANY ENGLISH, ~AND WOULD LIKE To ENTER HIS SENSATIONAL. STATUE, “THE SYMPHONIC EMOTION OF MAN 1s A GENwWS IN The MopeRN ART, AND WILL BRING INTERNATIONAL : * wae sting culture business OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern _|!is overburdening wear chikren, ies I AM DELIGHT ~I AM HEARTBR GZ -AW-H-H~ NEXT ) how, A week we JUDGE 2€ ScuLPTURE AN’ AWARD VAR FINE ‘PRIZE To ZE MUS. wark of MERIT Jw FROM RAIN COME ceN Las’ NIGHT AN’ DEESTROY GRAND then that Mrs, Ferdinand Johnson i 83 i fh H theaters, classical dancing, culture this and culture that. The place for a child school is out urine. She’ ated. on. ree , ‘Some- ee hy ae al a Fee 2s 8 , one imagines the lady is some- oy right. S88 a ky i i ia it 3 ty an Eg —_—_—_—$—<$—< $$$ > BARBS ! As King George grows stronger and stronger each day, we can hardly wait to find out what kind of vege- table oil rest sis health. bs So Fi 3 a ii sist AK i i E ll STATUS MADE. WEETH

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