The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 13, 1929, Page 4

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e Bismarck ‘Tribune AD independent Newspapers THE STATE'S OLVAS] NEWSPAPER (Zyablishes 1873) Published by the Bismarck [ribune Uompany wis- N. D., and entered at the postoftice at Bismarcs mal) matter, eves President ana Publisne farms. However, no way of breeding the infection out entirely has been found by plant scientists, but the Mar. quis variety of wheat is not so susceptible. achieve results by seed lot breeding is to gradually in- Oats and corn as well, especially corn. ‘The local office of the county agent is conducting an active smut campaign and Burleigh county wheat grow- ers owe it to themselves and the community to tall in 5 j } Sevecription Kates Payable tp Advance line with the movement and get results. It costs about \ Daily by carries. per soeseseeseas . five cents to the acre to treat seed, and it is calculated Bee es eee yoke that smut does about 45 cents an acre harm if there is ! Mer tar aster bans failure to disinfect seed. There ought to be no argument Dally 09 as to the wisdom of seed treatment in view of those two facts, if Oy mall, in state per year . g g : & i 3 3 & PLAYING THE GAME There is something inspiring about achievement. When one journeys to a famous city and sees wonderful build- ings, fine artistic homes, a tremendous fabric of com- merce and industry, he is incited to go back and try to do something along the line of attsinment. And the way to success is always open to those who know how to play the game. x Fortune does not come by luck. Success comes from playing the recognized game of business, taking ad- vantage of economic law, giving the people some better service than they had before. The pages of any well-circulated magazine or news- Paper will give the ambitious man hints about the way of business. In the magazines he will see the notices ot Products that have been developed by advertising. He will note many articles that have becomes s household word through the power of publicity. A few years ago the producers of these articles may have been obscure men. But they had faith to go ahead and promote their productsethrough publicity, and a great harvest has re- sulted. bs So it is in the use of publicity in the newspaper field. All big successes in retail trade have been produced by advertising. A number of years ago in many cases these firms were unknown or non-existent, or only starting in a@ small way. Their owners were students of human nature. They knew that if a concern kept its name and its business before the eyes of the people, if it constantly told about the things it was selling, it would arouse public interest and get more than its share of trade. When people get that idea and advertise intelligently and turn out a good Product, success is as sure to come as anything can be in this world of change. It is a short path of success, and the door is always open to newcomers. PATRIOTISM Civic pride {s but local patriotism. In fact, civic pride is the most common manifestation of patriotism. Every citizen of a community who feels a sense of responsibil- ity toward that community and who is convinced that his community :s superior to most others, is a patriot and differs from the national patriot only in that he has brought his patriotism home to himself. But this civic pride is not merely a manifestation of a communal superiority complex. It is based upon some- thing more than vain boasting and blind patriotism. It springs from the stern conviction among the citizens of the community that their home town offers something fe i 4 ; ireaw of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The (Associated Press is exciusively entitied to the use fepublication of all news dispatches credited to It Mot otherwise credited in this newspupe: and aise loca! news of spontaneous origin published nerein fights of republication of el! other matter herein SeEes, Foreign Kepresentatives G. LUGAN PAYNE COMPANY . Fifth Ave. Blag. : DETRO!I1 Kresge Bidg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ! COOLIDGE REVEALS HiMSELF The striking thing about Calvin Cooiidge was his | gradual transformation from the silent, frigid sphinx ut j the White House to the yielding man who turned to sport , | im the final years of his presidency and became submis- ‘sive to requests upon his time and attention. So sub- missive that he allowed the Terry cowboys to deck him out in chaps and ten-gallon Stetson in the Black Hills, § that he allowed himself to be lured into fishing and be- yeame ardent with the hook and line, so submissive that {he then yielded to the temptation to gun and filled a ‘whole vacation with the pleasure of ducking off the Georgia coast. Mr. Coolidge entered the White House with a taci- turnity that speedily established for him the reputation "of being a dour man. Perhaps he really was like his ‘bleak Vermont home hills, It takes # lot of effort to get | anything out of them. But no sooner is he, out of the ‘White House than he raises a doubt that he may have been the grim man he seemed to be. He has speedily , Shown that the same emotions o1 joy and grief animate ' him that animate other men. Perhaps it was the gloomy g@uspices under which he assumed the presidency that made him seem so glum for so long. He went into the ‘ * office as wu result of the death of his predecessor. Soon grave trouble developed in his official amily. He hi. to bear with a great national scandal. It cam) as a Peculias emba <:ent to the man he rind to <1: * ‘on I" predecessor's policies anc with “ls hoice «7 ad- ‘visers, s0 as not to shake the confidence of the people in the wisdom cf his administra. »n. There was no rea- gon there for affability. The situation demanded a stilt ) upper lip and action alone could speak. So Calvin Cool- F ‘tional mind became that of the oo tyracahdrlmal a4 i that no other community offers in an equal degree. i « | Civic pride is especially pronounced in self-made com- -¢ It was.after he went to the Black Hills, to “choose get to rin again for the presidency that he began to munities, The city which has only preserved its natural Peharaibecome i sf, resources or attributes also provokes civic pride, because change the man who inherits his success is no loss proud of his Now his countrymen are permitted to know that all this time Mr. Coolidge was a very, very human man and aay than the mari who began on the proverbial shoe eet ae gaara ean Fe pera Patna an Without civic pride or this community superiority fils official family nor the heritage of a sort of official complex there would be no public improvements and no . sourning based on the nature of his succession, In part | O™munity plan. Civic pride is tp the community what Mr. Coolidge was silent and unemotional because for | ‘deals and ambitions are to the incividual. him the path of glory, somewhat in the language of Gray, was very poignantly associated with the grave. CRIMINALS AT THE WHEEL He tells it himself in the March issue of Cosmopolitan.| O"fhand, one would say that the truly dangerous law- ‘The death of his son Calvin took away for him all the bre.ke. is the man who commits some major crime— glory of the presidency. He writes—and his words best} ™urcer, robbery, burglary or the like—rather than the explain some of the psychology that Calvin Coolidge | “itizer. who violates the traffic laws. fevealed in those days of the presidency—as follows: But there are times when the traffic law violator is “My own participation in the campaign of 1924 was ge- | ® menace of the first water. Jayed by the death of my son, Calvin, which occurred} In Kansas City recently a drunken man drove his On July 7. He was a boy of much promsie, proficient in|car down a@ street at 40 miles an hour, ignored police hhis studies, with a scholarly mind, who had just turned | signals to stop, and finally crashed into a group of 26. He had a remarkable insight into things. school children who were crossing the street, By a | “The day I became president he had just started to| miracle, no one was killed, although three of the young- ‘fork in @ tobacto field. When one of his fellow laborers | sters vcr. painfully hurt. ‘said to him: ‘If my father was president, I would not} This driver never had committed any crime, He had work in @ tobacco field,’ Calvin replied: ‘If my father | the best intentions in the world. Yet. at that particular were your father you would.’ time, he was the most dangerous man in Kansas City. : A year in the penitentiary would be a very moderate Penaity for him to pay. b ns | “After he was gone someone sent us a letter he had {written about the same time to a young man who had Congratulated him on being the first boy in the land. To Bhis he had replied that he had done nothing and so did Pot merit the title, which should go ‘to some boy who had @istinguished himself through his own actions.’ “We do not know what mignt have happened to him Sunder other circumstances but if I had not been presi- Bent he would not have raised a blister on his toe which Sesulted in blocd poisoning, playing lawn tennis in the @outh grounds, “In his suffering he was asking me to make him well. f could not. | 4, “When he went, the power and glory of the presidency with him. _ “The ways of providence are often veyond our under- It seemed to me that the world Lad need of inl genupadrerdiapalpal _ “I do not know why such a price was exacted for oc- ; | BURLEIGH SMUT CAMPAIGN Privileged class: Those who have more than we have. The world needs more lubricating oil and not so much sand in the bearings. Editorial Comment - THE CAUSE OF HEAT (Des Moines Tribune-Capital) The scientists who are meeting in New York have helped along one cause—the possibility of getting heat, and therefore energy, from the subterranean deposits. One of them reported that much of the heat found deep in the earth is from mere pressure of the great weight above. This accounts zones. If we can mod! winters.we can add considerably to our civ! for. that matter expeditions to the poles So useless if we can expect some day to transf e those colder regions into places capable of supporting life. THAT CHINESE WAR j (Current History » 4 Explaining of the Kuomintang, or Nationalist party, in China, . Roy 8. Lautenschlager of Hangchow pte a says: “Dur- ing recent years there have been other groups, factions, chiefly organised areund some al hed wholly lacking in purpose and cohesion. The eae a form founder & i GH ill] el How 4 Crease the volume of clean seed. This applies to rye, Magazine 5 the causes that have led to the triumph 1M REGARD TO HEALTH ¢ DIET WiLL ™ SLIECOY WHO OM 88 ADDRESSED ancL0s6 S$: GOOD FOOD FOK THIRTY-ONE CENTS ‘DAILY In ’g urticle I gave you a menu which if repeated each day for & month would cost only $7.80 per person. This cost could be still fur- ther reduced with menus which would include large quantities of the dried cereals and legumes. From a health standpoint, many of these foods are not so desirable, although they may be used to a ronsiderable extent in very cold climates. Here is another menu today con- : taining wholewheat bread as a cercal food, but still no legumes, as dried be etc. an inexpensive Menu No. 2 Breakfast—French omelet, toast, stewed prunes. Luncheon—Cabbage and beet soup, wholewheat bread and peanut butter, oleomargarined beets. Dinner—Cottage cheese, stewed to- matoes (canned), salad of grated raw carrots on lettuce, jello. melba | ¢ th would cost $0.50 per person 8 ten is slightly more than the cosi Tribune. Enclose @ stamped eddressed envelope for reply. of those given in the first menu in yesterday's article. The total cost of food per person for the entire day would be slightly over 31c. If the same menus were re- peated each day for a month the cost would be only $29.50 for a family of hree. (Another inexpensive menu tomor- row). QUESTIONS . ND ANSWERS pilepsy 3 “Would epi- OUR WHOLE SYSTEM OF SELF-GOVERNMENT WILL CRUMBLE EMHER, Tr OFFICIALS. ELECT WHAT LAWS THEY WILL PAFORCE OR CTITENS ELECT WHAT LAWS — SEY WILL Support” Ef => HOOVER INAUGURAL ADORESS- pa Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh hesi- tatingly admits that his forthcoming marriage will trim his wings a little, keep him on the ground more than heretofore, make him a bit more re- luctant to take unnecessary risks, and ‘all that. Many interesting observations can be made from this little news note. One wonders ii Lindy had been in state in May of 1027 Moet. epochal state, 5 flight would have. ene “ engaged or Wed, True, other men, attempted the same thing, time with- out number. Three of them, whose marital affairs seemed on the surface quite satisfactory, made the same flight westward. undoubtedly Byrd, love with his wife and family and years of hardship atid’danger and‘the possibility that he will never return Las the frozen wastes of the fer sout It is evident that some men find even the pleasantest of romances no barrier to their own “careers.” Men themselves have helped their int highly?” what is this ‘honor’ that men prize so And the same bitter analysis, quite unobstructed by personal emotion, is often forced to admit that the glib & little boy’s plaything, his toy some “honor” of the couplet is really just where out there away from home and the responsibilties and even the plea sures of home. A Me BO THE FRENCH PACT One hundred and fifty-one years There are women, too, so “sold” |280 today, the Marquis de Noailles, en a the idea that a rus helpmeet |French ambassador in London, an- se! er man forth with this poetical “honor” of which she hes |that his country recognized the in- heard so much; s0 “sold” on the idea | dependence of the struggling Ameri- that the more power a woman has |°&M colonies, and that it had formed over her man, the more will she jounced to the British government @ treaty of friendship and commerce him into doing the difficult thing of | With them. flying from her side to the tasks and challenges “out there,” that they feel @ little bit hurt if their men do re too It is conceivable that an Anne Mor row, who falls in love with an eagle of the skies is to have a bit dif: ferent attitude when the eagle be comes a ground sparrow or, at best, a hawk with wings :.uch less fleet than those of the bird he once was. s 4 BARBS A prominent doctor told an one cause of having their cake and eating | aids it, too—namely, having their romance and their life apart from romance, by coining various epigrams and poems and platitudes aimed to make the most rebellious woman feel that she is a piker indeed if she does not tamely acquiesce and accept the idea that woman's lot is to tend the hearth while her man goes down to in ships or up in the air in ical birds. * * % VERSE TELLS IT There's the sweet couplet— “I could not love thee, sweet, so much, Loved I not honor more.” ‘What woman can resist that in all rhyme and asked, a bit bitterly. "just Anyway, it’s all interesting specu- home, has voluntarily left themtor | lation! e . r | ° mute between their farms and the Colorado trout brooks. who have been pressing for farm re: lief probably would tell the; have to catch fish to keep from starv: An elephant’s bath worth of soap and more worth of Indian oil. you’ve been hunting for to decora\ that income tax blank. * ok Citizen Coolidge is to zine articles, in which to explain some of the health lems of a president. Are we to find out what kind of kept him s0 robust? pretty well led. (Copyright, Ts, NEA AH-H- MISTAIR YILSTADS, ~~ »T AM OVERCOME wiz soy / You Have wit GRAN” AWARD OF FIFTY DoLLAIRE, AND ZE FIRST PRIZE ON YouR VAR MAGHIFIQUE STATUE OF ' ARY MopeRNe fu. ZE JURY PROCLAIM YouR STATUE AS BEST WAN OF ALL EXHIBIT: WEETH MUCH MERIT /~I SALUTE, ~ Some people's brain’ children. seem ‘ famous Service, Inc.) | to join a church that The treaty had actually been several months before. Im- Patented the surrender of Eggs are the fairly expensive items in this menu, but a French omelet large ‘enough for three people can be made with three eggs by mixing the eggs with evaporated milk. Fifteen slices of melba toast may be mode from a 10c loaf of bread, making each slice cost about two-thirds o: a cent. Prunes or the other dried fruits are always in season and may be used to Tound out a meal. A breakfast as listed above would cost approximately 2% for three people, or 9c apicce. I have listed cabbage and veet soup in the luncheon because a portion of the cabbage may have been used the previous day as coleslaw and, in order to prevent waste, the remainder should be used in some form at a sub- sequent meal. The cost of the lunch- eon listed above would be 19c for three people, or 6 1-3c per person. Cottage cheese is very wholesome protein, easily made from sour milk. if you cannot obtain the fresh cot- tage cheese. It is about the least ex- pensive of all the proteins. Grated carrots are listed because carrots are inexpensive and can be obtained in any part of the world. If fresh toma- toes are not obtainable, canned toma- toes may be used, and if the entire can is not used at one meal, the re- maining portion may be used the fol- lowing day for tomato soup. Let- tuce may be expensive in some parts of the world, in which case other fresh green leaves should be substi- tuted for the sake of health. Jello or the other forms of gelatin are in- expensive desserts, and a 10c pack- age provides enough for three peo- ple. By purchasing gelatin in quanti- ties this cost can be still further re- duced. The cost of the dinner will be about 47c or 15 2-3c per person. These meals if repeated daily for its portals the great matter of love to God and man as the simple test of membership, expressed what is still to] in the minds of many people. sessions gave her a finger in the American pie, likewise resented the WILLIAM E. GILROY, D. D. (Editor of The Congregationalist) pected said that ie declaration of | OUR BOARDING HOUSE ‘igi HeY /. witar. ARE Y'GoNWA PAY HIM OFF Nw CASH, oR But churches since Lincoln’s day have change. very greatly in this today would accept in membership & man of Lincoln’s type who frankly stated his difficulty with the creeds, but who equally emphasized his pur- pose to live according to the law of Chuiist. It is unfortunate that ali whose lives are constructively Christian in fare not definitely associated | "ect with the churches, but the fault does not rest entirely with individuals, The churches will have to lay in- creasing stress upon the things that Jesus made pre-eminent. Living 1s chiefly a matter of loving. is Our Yesterdays ] FORTY YEARS AGO President Harrison today appointed A. C. Mellette, Watertown, 8. D., gov- ernor of D kota. L. B. Richardton, aa Forks, was appointed secre- Secretary McCormick now has a large force at ~york copying the laws and arranging for publishing them, to have everything in readiness for his successor, L. B, Richardton. president of the W. C. T. U., spoke at & meeting of the local unit today. David Goodman, Jamestown, for- merly of this city, is visiting friends ener net Me, ) rel ti from Epiphany, 8. D., where he went to consult Dr. Kruger. Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Poole are visit- ing friends in Jamestown. N. F. Boucher, M. H. Jewell, and W. ©. Gilbreath went to Fargo a to attend a state committee meeting. Ee i ge abe fa i e iu a E i Ha i z E 3 I BRE i i P 5 i le oP aE ana i lepsy be caused by bones being out of place in the spine? If so, could they be reset or cured?” Answer: I have known many cases usually things which belt} repr thor- oughly clean con of Evaporated Milk bo Question: O, M. L. asks: “Is it all right to use evaporated milk for pudding and creaming vegetables? What I mean, is the food value cone tained in each nearly alike?” Answer: It is just as well to use evaporated milk for creaming vege- tables, as there is less water in the evaporated milk and it is really richer in food value and a smaller quantity is required. Sugar and Diabetes Question: Joe W. asks: “Will you Please tell me if sugar causes diae betes? Can it be cured by fasting and dieting?” Answer: Diabetes is caused from an inability of the pancreas to se- crete its normal amount of fluid, the active ingredient of which is insulin. This substance is necessary for the digestion of starches and sugars. The use of too much starch or sugar in the diet may indirectly be the cause Targe quantities of carbonydrate foods large quantities is likewise the direct or indirect cause of many diseases. The only cure of diabetes is through fasting and diet- ing. The diet should exclude both starches and sugars for a consider- able period of time. (Copyright by The Bell Syndicate, Inc,, 1929.) i Federal Farm Facts | The U. 8. Department of Agricul- ture supplies farmers of this country with the best market news service in the world, News Service, tells how the informa- tion is gathered and how it is dis- tributed to farmers’ News from all over the world is sent to Washington, where it is charted and, through leased wires, sent to branch offices, newspapers and radio stations and di- to farmers. eek The most important problem that has to do with the use of our most vital resources—the land—is the loss of soil through runi water, ace cording to Hugh H. Bennett of the U. ment, conservation for f{ or grazing of sharply sloping lands that are sure to wash away if cultivated and attention to gullies while they are small to Tepred enlargement. * * The purchase of 234920 acres of forest Jand in the east, to be Mra. Helen M, Barker, territorial | 4 s national forest units, has been Proved by the National Forest ervation The total chase price will be $944,217, or an acre. exe * ‘Two agricultural explorers of U. 8. Department-of Agriculture, ifs & is H, Dorsett and W. J. left for a two-year tour of the ellivation of soy seane vat tain varieties ct persian crousnt and cold-resistant trees j ay Ht z ERE “I WANTA GO WHERE—” Detroit. — Hubby wouldn't tell Daisy M. Mallett where he was was ee a as ee nding at least a income, according to her Rene a in divorce court, Because of that and alleged cruelty, Mrs. Mallett was granted her freedom. = ht rays, X-rays, heat rays, and all travel came speed but vary in length, 2

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