The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 29, 1929, Page 4

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I nee eo eS aes PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1929 The Bismarck * Tribune Can He Make Him Drink? s THE STAIE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ’ (Established 1673) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ............... Presidest and rublishes authority argues that the board's policy is an attempt to aid im European financial stabilization to the disad- vantage of American industry. These extreme views are inspiring most of the angry talk in congress, and they come from sources which cannot tbe ignored. However, hot-heads do no good and may work serious injury to a mechanism as highly sensi- tive as a credit system. Let congress proceed with cau- tion, and let the reserve board and talkative economists do likewise. MERIT IN LIONS’ AMBITION Bismarck Lions are seeking the district presidency, and all who have been taking note of the local club's activ- ities cannot feel otherwise than hope that they will bring the honor back from the district convention at Minot, May 22-24. There are two merits on which the club enters the contest for the highest office in the states of North and Sout! Dakota and Minnesota and the provinces of Men,ber of The Associated Press Manitoba and Saskatchewan. One is the club record for The Associated Press ts exclusively entitied to the use | achicvemen: both in behalf of the organization and of for republication of ali news dispatches credited to it , or not otherwise credited in thts newspaper ang also the community. The other merit is in the character from which all starches should be ex- cluded, Tt is best to leave out even these starches if there is any tendency to ss HOW TO USE STARCHES ‘Today's diet contains as much pro- tein as I believe any one should use who wishes to remain in good health. Many who have followed this series of articles have been waiting to see when I would prescribe bread and po- t atoes. Although I do not believe that the | excessive gas, or catarrhal disorders, % strictly starchy foods are ever neces- | diabetes, tuberculosis, or any disorder the local news o! spontaneous origin publ'she herein | Of the candidate the club has offered the district in Dr. Y sary in the diet, nevertheless I know | where starches should be eliminated, All rights of republication of all other matter herein | Frederick B. Strauss. i fi that so many are fond of starchy! Experiment with one of these are also reserved. Both as local president and as district deputy for tb ys = 3 Z foods and will insist on ot them starchy food additions with tomor- ST eT North Dakota, Dr. Strauss has been an untiring Lion 1a! t Nadel : | ti ; tele in this sates, Ween wil be f pubs G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY worker and administrator. He has charge of the local f 4 i lished Tuesday and which will contain NEW YORK .... Fifth Ave..Bidg. den for his fourth ycar as club president. In that time 1 eobibe |! $ . ip ‘ @ general regime for you to follow CHICAGO DETRO!1 | he has brought the organization to the very forefront in qi nda 4 afterwards. Tower Bidg. Kresge Bldg | civic service. The club has been galvanized, it has taken y tang organ ie sate ane aati The QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS —— d on the strenuous life in behalf of local causes for the ; } . potato and Hubbard squash are two (Muscle Jerk.) betterment of Bismarck. Last year, its cleanup of the foods containing the least amount of| Question. J. G. C. asks: “Will you city won first place in the state. Last Christmas it starch of any of those called “starchy” | please tell me what causes a twitch- demonstrated a capacity for effective good fellowship "Best Ways to Use Grains tere tatiele that’ "ees: mt norte toward the boys and girls of the city in the Christ- ss — i oan Most of the other starchy foods | with my arm but has gone to my side. mas celebration it staged at the Auditorium. It has S : H . are the grains, or foods made of flour | Can it be stopped?” done good service for its troop of boy scouts. At present r , 5 f = from grains. In my opinion, it is un-} Answer: You need a good diag- (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) ONE MYSTERY SUCCEEDS ANOTHER Life is chiefly a matter of electricity, according to Dr. George W. Crile of Cleveland, who has been delving into the matter for many years. Reading’ a paper before the American Philosophical _ - wise to use denatured flour from] nosis of your case to determine what 4 gociety at Philadelphia, Dr. Crile declared that man |‘! Preparing to aid the American Legion to obtain an ; | . | | which all of the bran and roughage | is causing the muscles to jerk, Ir the =” y afar "a appropriate memorial to its war services. In many of . RHEL ; has been removed. You can buy|side now being affected is on the seems to be fundamentally a sort of glorified battety. As long as the battery remains charged, the machinery can function, and the individual can carry on his daily work, whether the job be writing poetry or playing profes- sional baseball. When the battery runs down, how- ever, the daily work has to be given up; the man dies. Apparently the old expression, “the vital spark,” is a good one. If our clever scientists are going to keep on demonstrating that we are kin to the crackling of an electrical generator, rather than to the stars and the wind as we used to think, we would do well to keep that expression in regular use. these activities it has been the leadership of Dr. Strauss. a j Racal ag teat ctor) < a eae une as thie ‘arm and leg: whiott that has made the members so willing to do their bit in i a2 - . ; be used for Artiste te finely ground or huis tour are onion the cause the den has espoused. They have confidence - . = wholewhgat flour made into muffins. Frog Legs in him and they recognize his potent energy and in- . 7 > The unbolted and not over-processed | Question: J. H. W. writes: “I re- spirational example. These are qualities that are needed : : coe to ae beg rt oil | renee ta ree edhe dinainecceaslabke i ence to the denatured This | trouble that was cured by eating frog t PI y. . — makes an excellent mush, and may | meat. I would like to have your views Bismarc’: Lions stand high in the development of the bs ; also be used for making muffins. jon this subject of feeding stomach organization. At present the local den ts third in pro- . 5 ‘ eid ele o feist cA A with frog meat.” habia Be ush., There are many nswer: Frog legs ai k= ; a ; n34 bpherrsrr of A ian but it may be able to excellent brands of rolled or crushed | ably good form of peo pit eastly Wie ge ¢ top before the district convention is held. everything from dry cereals to the} have been originated by Alexander} oats on the market, and it has not | gested and nourishing, but I do not Formation of the club at Steele last week will, at least, motion pictures, the Great, who ordered his men to| been the custom to refine this grain. | believe they are of any special bene- - nar..v7 the gap between it and Minot and Columbus, se * amputate their beards so the enemy | Rolled oats are made from steamed | fit in overcomii Dr. Crile’s researches are extremely interesting, ana Ohio, the only dens which have a record of greater ae OTHER CONCERNS could not seize them as handles and/| whole grain afterwards crushed be-| trouble. ‘ dibasic there is no doubt that they add immensely to the store | hor of clubs established, “This is all very well, but most of cae Se peeing: nat custom bah Brea vb mets de pete Cataract f hi knowledge. Yet it would be a mistake to sup: ¥ us are too busy earning a living for ce nm finding great mascu- imming up these point we Question: Mrs. W. writes: “I of ER ee Seti spline cite iia ave In every way, therefore, Bismarck Lions are justified in our children, or making a home for | line favor, even with bachelors. say that the best starchy foods to} would like to know if there is any Lea ey y Pp idam\ ¥& | asking the district for the honor of the presidency of the them, to go about chasing these * Ok % use are potatoes, Hubbard squash,| treatment that will restore cataract tery. Life may be a matter of electricity, as Dr. Crile sug- gests; but what scientist will arise now to tell us what electricity is? We have only exchanged one mystery for another. During the last century mankind has found out a great d2al about itself and about the world it inhabits. It has area, And the city in general could not ALLENE SUMNER, | shadows, labeling and pigeon-holing| Harry A. Bryant, owner of the farm | ™ush made from wholewheat or rolled | eyes.” ical eas apts ae calsarkiet Sayers Sari of them, writing books about them, and|that the Parsons, Kan., chamber of | °@ts, or muffins from wholewheat or| Answer: It is sometimes possible t & terri- “I didn’t ask to be born!” is the | dispelling them. We are too con-, commerce offered to Marion Talley, cornmeal, stewed corn, or corn on the |to stop the formation of cataracts ory throughout the Slope for carrying on the propa-| glib answer on the lips of youth | cerned with the problems of roof and! probably has given up waiting for | Cb in season. through adopting hygienic ways of ganda of service organization and it would be an inspir- whenever It ts confronted with cer~ | bread, certitied milk and education, congress to act. Benth ay are you to add these ENED senha this is usually not advis- stin to orgnnies theme commmratilties 1 in responsibilities to parents which | shoes once a month, clothes all year | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Ing.) acted: le cataract has really aang aly if it could be done under eval eee eee | Pound and “tite insurance. He: as fae ytecctn too |. It is generally better to et b Sects |" «t want to live my own life!” isthe} “And when we say this, the great Your egg, toast and stewed fruit |the growth continue until it reaches ict chief. average off: ’s war cry as it walks | cry is heard, ‘Remember the Rights + breakfast may be changed slightly,|a size where it can all be removed dispeliec the old fables by which primitive men sought » substituting wholewheat muffins f out from situations which its mothers | of the Children! Ing wholew: mi Ss for | by a skillful surgeon. There is a fair to interpret the puzzles of existence, and has substituted A PROBLEM IN ETHICS and fathers could no more have} “Therefore in a great voice I cry the toast, or using only one egg and | percentage of good results from these for them a series of far less interesting formulas and thought of avoiding in their own re-j back, ‘Remember the Rights of the 4 & small amount of wholewheat mush. | operations. It is often n to equations. But it is really no nearer the root of the mat- City officials of Gallup, N. M., resigned in a body the lationships with their own parents, | Parents!’ For the noon meal, if you have not | remove the entire lens of the eye, but other day, according to the United Press, because the dis- | than cutting off a sire’s arm or leg. | “Grant, for the sake of indisput- used any starchy food at breakfast,| wearing glasses with heavy lenses a=) ai segleraercacaba trict court learned they had been accepting protection | And just because parents are so| Able argument, that children do not you could try using baked potato or | will substitute for the one removed ‘The ancient Aztecs believed that the creator of the ask to be born. They do not. But : baked Hubbard squash along with the | so that often a patient cai money from tor: am! hal constituted that they almost invar- . in see just | —_sworld made a set of clay figures, blew life into them ey from operators of gambling halls. ty & I having been born, they have received non-starchy vegetables, about as well as before the cataract ; with his nostrils, and sent them forth to inhabit the| That sounds like an ordinary story of graft. But eee the fight ‘den, tia) tine: eile ered Shape eid week ks a igh sul ae bal ie evesiig eeaate Sie shoulda <GCopyrigh or r029, 3 more to . i It good’ Alice Judson Peale! meal, wi B ¥ world—which, by the way, he had trampled into shape it. part, only turned the other cheek, , Zt,'s @ gift. (By a ) ie ‘oul ht, 1929, by The Bell Syndi. Fs ‘i ways be kept as a “protein” meal cate, Inc.) It develops that the protection money had been used} and grimly endured all the wrongs | .., ue au Lica whispers at it} Until they were 10 and 12 respecy » Inc. to improve the city’s street and lighting system. It had | imposed upon them while their chil- | htw Fee it threatened ales, (tively, Phoebe and Jane were dressed months of work, left yesterday for a with his feet. T've modern scientist believes that man is a very com- 4 he would fight if threatened with its - dren insist on “living their own liv: exactly alike. That made such a pret plicated sort of storage battery, moving about on a speck | Pee? most carefully accounted for; no city official had | because they “didn't ask to be born.” | 5S. ty picture as they walked down the UO | Al ION visit with relatives at New Lisbon, + ¢ cosmic dust as k his charge of electricity 1 profited a penny at any stage of the game. Spier ‘This brings us to the rights of| street together. They could hear Wis, t <p ang tay eo apie edlages And that raises a nice question in:ethics. Are these} °‘**~ Cont . Parents. It is impossible for the | gentle ladies murmur as they passed: ma Buth conceptions are interesting: Neither one clears THE OTHER VIEW average adult to be wholly content| “sisters! How sweet!” And how Commissioner of Hail Insurance 8. officials to be condemned for taking protection money} “3: 4, rer, with the society and conversation of A. Olsness has reshing, therefore, to find those sisters both hated it! named C. M. Holbert from the gamblers, or are they to be praised for finding paieat who AG reiapha slipped @ small, growing or adolescent child! Jane, being the elder, felt that it of La Moure county deputy hail in- a new source of city revenue which would ease the tax- | over on her” quite so casily; who gets | {°F 24 hours a day. The mature mind | was not quite fair for her to be kept | “No one has yet fathomed man's| SPector for the southeastern section of 4 up and dusts her feathers, and speaks | CT@ves stronger and more congenial in “baby clothes” just because she had | Potentialities for good. Behind our | the state. payers’ burden? Figure it out and see what you think ut iniaestiog jana ‘nas pees food.” a younger sister. She thought there |chaos, our riot and our crime lies the . 8b . the rights and wrongs of the case were. parental, and, especially, maternal,| ‘Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | ought to be some distinction in her | fundamental kindliness of the human| |W. C. McFadden, Fargo, secretary up the ancient mystery. We tear down the old curtains of ignorance only to find an endless vista of new ones. And if this leaves room for doubt and disquiet, it also leaves room for faith and boundless hope. The technicians may have reduced you ° conviction that it is only meet and clothing to mark her seniority. soul.”—Dr. Will Durant, (Forum.) of the North Dakota Bankers asso- toan pois equation, but what of that? You are still STAY-AT-HOMES, AFTER ALL just that their own lives should be |. — | _ Phoebe, on the other hand, felt -* * ceten, was here yesterday fora con- unexplainable. 2 bleak and lonely and bereft, but that BARBS {! grieved because it seemed to her that | “Every idea is an incitement, it| ference with J. R. Walters of the ae ae aa oe pected ee eee since the offspring ‘must have "complete |© | her mother always chose colors and offers itzelt for bellef, and tf believed, Bank of North Dakota, movies, from. responsibil rare anbenn ; ‘upon, 4 be pene men away from home, the average male | ents. ity to Par Chicago man who awoke in ‘They looked charming paeeer tied lief outweighs it or moan) fallure of spends just about as much time around his own fireside| It is Faith Baldwin, author of “Alt: taxicab to find an alligator as acom-| bine eyed sister, but on herself, she [energy stifles the movement at its A SINGER TURNS FARMER Mis; Marion Talley, who was blessed by nature with eZ LAA lady from Kansas City has a great deal of discernment. People who “dedicate their lives to art,” as the saying has it, do not do it primarily for the sake of the money | Editorial Comment | they will get, or for fame and adulation. Those things count, of course; but no one worth his salt ever fol- THE YIELD OF THE ESTATE TAX lowed one of the fine arts for any other primary reason (New York World) = : closing windows, getting in and out of |is than mere gunpowder in a naval taxicabs, waving one’s hand to|engagement. From the point of view OUR BOARDING HOUSE ‘By Ahern _||etewt jrvir taza; ~|oMecitnscemoumnane ser * : * * slightly injured. * “I'd rather get a single that wins voice of marvelous beauty, seems also to have been mony,” and other pop x | Panion has explained everything. He] feit, they Possessed all the graceful |birth.” — Justice Oliver Wendell Lalor toad gifted with a good deal of discernment. as he ever did. takes her pen in hand to say, “I Have | Old the reporters he had been to &| outiines of a potato bag. Holmes, U. 8. Supreme Court. A few years ago Miss Talley, coming out of Kansas}, This deduction is drawn from a curlous source— |My Rights, Too. I Believe Mother's | lodge meeting. But the thing which irritated them a * ® , figures on home accidents compiled by the Travelers| Should Lt Well as Children.” gees both the most was the fact that their | “Political progress results from the City to fame and riches as a star of the Metropolitan | | ance com She writes in part— The man of the future will have | own tastes never were consulted. They |Clash of conflicting opinions. The Opera company, was listed among that band of ardent | ‘uuu serie poset accidentally hurt,| _,"20 the last decade we have heard | fewer teeth, says Dr. Ales Hirdlicka. | loathed the feeling of belng a kind of |public assertion of an erroneous doc- young men and women who have “dedicated their lives ees oe Reyes is Yor the | Stout the rights of children from all nae aed walk the floor so | show-piece. trine is perhaps the surest way to dis- A NOTABLE SEA BATTLE GURY Me hegest a teilliant enseer; and. we: lesser |72 "7%? home. erage sides. Even the children have ex- ? The comnmon practice of dressing |Close the error snd make it evident : past ten years is only 24. Now, obviously, in order to | pressed themselves all over the place. +* * children alike, unless it coincides with |to the electorate.”—Former Governor] On April 29, 1814, the Peacock, one ; | mortals, who have a sneaking feeling that following the t hurt in ® home accident, a man must be at home.| The age-old cry ‘I didn't ask to be| No one in New York has claimed as| their own preference, is a trespass on | Alfred E. Smith of New York. of the three frigates which congress ‘ff | fine arts must bring more satisfaction than any other | © 4 born!” has been hurled, like a battle- | Yet to be the slayer of gambler Arnold | their individuality; and it is only nat- pegged expected to have ready for the be- | ~ ind of life, envied her great Apparently we're more @ race of stay-at-homes than We| cry, into the shrinking cars of al- | Rothstein. There are so many other] ural that they should resent it, “Apparently the men who are do- £ le, en greatly. f getti b ginning of the War of 1812, but which Sere nearer ibe. ia retiri had supposed. legedly old-fashioned parents. ways now of getting publicity. We should forego the satisfaction of jing things these days — organizing j low, however, retiring—retiring when, by all Pee eare aire SeNN ty “Tt has been set forth that it is not ek having two little daughters, charm-|new companies, bufiding new fac-| Were delayed in building, engaged ; _ the laws of probability, her career could be continued! 4 new york preacher wants the nation to return to the | @8Y to be a child, hampered and| The day is coming when automo- | ingly and identically dressed. and al-|torles, establishing new precedents|the British brig, Epervier, off the | for years and years. She will sing no more, she says, 5 ines bet- | Bindered on every hand by parental biles will be built to do more than 100] low each one to choose her own|in all lines of endeavor, including| southeast coast of Florida. citer an. grand opera or on. thé. concert stage, Inetead| enn of he Puritan fathers. The wi had bet-| notions of behavior. From loud talk | miles an hour, predicts H. O. D. Se-| clothing within the wide margin of |commercial aviation—are those below! Both vessels were of the 18-gun i} é is of complexes and inhibitions we have | grave. Maybe that’s what some of | appropriateness and good taste. the age of 45.”—John G. Lonsdale, | type and nominally oaual in stechgin + she will travel through the middle west, buy a farm worried through to wrong condition- ; the real estate developers mean when} All of us like to express our own in- | President of the National Bank of|After only 45 minutes of spirited | and settle down to the pursuit of agriculture. ing and behavior patterns. We are xed nayertee poop proper min- uaa and there is no reason|Commerce of St. Louis. (Forbes/ fighting, however, the British ship Did ever oung artist do anything ested to spend most of our time | U! from the heart of ity.” why children, because they happen Magazine.) surrendered. A comparison of the E mechatly tt; sod, wo taper’ i proven tas the young |MPHT © ‘ime comotete the mediation tn & bengal anxiously studying the peychologically ee be sisters, should be denied this priv. ** casualties on bottr aides indicates | Puig . import reactions of our children to} The custom of shaving is said to! ilege. “Walking, pushing open doors and|how much more important stra‘ 4 than the belief that he could make his life more satis- z, AA ; 7 bY the ball game than’ get three home A lew: You will ~MR. ATTORNEY /~ LET ME ASK You A QUESTION,—-Z runs in a gams we lose."—Babe Ruth. sain, spo Pa, more entt-expeeatre, im thes way than in p tet HAT BA AS-A ease. ener igupresule = Z siecibndiaeibehen aa dest iniinsiia : Miss Talley, who had several years’ experience q @ maps MY REPORT To You, THA C) re ‘eves me ec a se a AMAZON REGION, I SAW CLIFF LIZARDS “THAT I Our Yesterdays ] ISED A PARACHUTE IN. DESCENDING THAT I = Wane Fill. ae pe ACROSS A TURTLE “Hay HAD A “wipe? 4 The egy somone of juan “i 2 17S SHELL, THAT I DISCOVERED A TREE county have offered a WW FULL Possession | GpesleD AS AN UMBRELLA DURING A RAIN 76 , the ernon destroying ‘the largest OF YOUR FACULTIES | poorer ITS DELICATE BARK aw WOULD You season. FOR SIGHT AND DOUBT ME 2 > Then WHY Nov. REASON “THAT Luke G. Byrne, Columbus, Ohio, if of stone, by painting pictures; and Y 9 oem arrived yesterday to look after his in- 1 also can be done in much homeller , SOUND, —~ THAT ¢ I CERTAINLY CoULD OBSERVE ' a * Rereipeph strand a You ACTUALLY SAW, $ A ComMMoN AcciDENt, EGA! F sigaeiae! farm neat 18 | one THE AcciDE —- Se : ‘ poe Wit A eae .(§=5 ee trom her easjern trip, hasreturned h HEAD ? | John White of this city ts 95 years whole community has had of age today—the oldest man in town—and phi Neat br ghet A spring morn- THE FATHER OF THE MOTOR CAR country filling (Kansas Star) ever rites ness pig ars pete ied In 1886, when a few ‘Ameticen mechanics were tinker- YY pee lade vier Y Ses ' == ie ,

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