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AGE FOUR" The Bismarck Tribune Ap independent Newsprper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- tmarek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @s second class mai) matter. George D. _ —-=c2 | ee ha ‘ e ‘ 1: Weekly ‘Weekly : § ‘Weekly ia , Member Audit Bureav of Circulation i Member of The Associated Prese ‘ The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use i for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also j T the local news of spontaneous origin publ'shec herein. an All rights of republication of all other matter herein ag Forcign Representatives a om DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. Phelan eS m (Official City, State and Coun’y Newspaper) ca he THE TWIN-CITY-INDUSTRIAL PLAN ‘wl The ideas of cooperation between Bismarck and Man- m dan which John F. Sullivan proposed at last week's ie Kiwanis luncheon here may germinate if allowed to lie a dormant, but why put off for tomorrow what can be done to today? th Almost any day situations may arise concerning the “4 interests of the two cities wherein the existence of a N bicity committee to adjust them in conformity with he mutual and individual interests of the two communities bel would be highly desirable, A committee-not only. to * Md disentangle conflicting interests, but a committee that ‘4 a from time to time might discover occasions fur initiating a th joint activities toward some desirable objective promising = 6% betterments for’ both cities. js a Such a committee could put into action at once some iq pr of the cooperative ideas expressed by Mr. Sullivan. It 4 ce could lay the groundwork of others. By drawing the : if commercial forces of the two cities together in under- ai standing and imbuing them with common ideals for the : Ne business and industrial future of the twin communities, ' Se a great stride forward to meet and grasp the opportuni- e ties in time to come to North Dakota, when industry will pr knock at its doors, will have been gained. The time is here to consider that future now. i As Mr. Sullivan pointed out, the location of the two cities is strategic for utilizing both rail and water trans- bu portation. They have the advantage of two railroad sys- os tems. The direction of shipments, in the nature of the a markets, would be southward, and, if made by the river, £ ror the load would move with the current, a saving of me- 5 an chanical energy. This possibility involves no great § on stretch of the imagination. Already moves are under way tic . in congress to re-establish this water transportation pa once s0 thriving in the old days as to promise a me- as tropolis here. Senator Lynn J. Frazier has introduced ee @ bill for linkinng up the Mississippi and Missouri rivers, po leaving the problem of channels and other improvements by which navigability might require to a board of 12 engi- tad neers, red It was a striking idea which Mr. Sullivan put forth for pu inducing industry to locate in North Dakota. Basing his co proposal on what North Dakota has to offer for manu- “a facturing, he suggested that mdustries be encouraged to come in which would process and fabricate the raw ma- di. terials that the state can furnish for manufacturing pur- ou poses—such as its lignite and its incomparable eweet 4 corn, It was such manufacturing investments that he 4 ad suggested the state might well spare from income taxa- as tion in order to persuade them to locate in North Dakota. ‘Those industries which would have to bring in the : products of other states might be left to pay taxation as de at present imposed. ne While that was something that necessarily would have a8 to wait for the convening of another legislature, it is an to idea worth considering now. The proposed joint com- ab mittee representing the commercial organizations might even take it up and undertake to sell it to the other com- si munities of the state, so that, two years henee, intelligent en ~~ action could be got under way on it by the. state law- baal makers. North Dakcta has cll to gain and nothing to = lose, at least, from getting under way this much of a - no program for developing industry along with the splendid ae policy of encouraging diversified farming which various ne organizations are backing and the state encouraging. - 4 _FOR THIS MUCH, THANKS Te In England the popular sport still seems to be diag- Ht nosing American prosperity and industrial progress, It ca is the chief theme of British editorializing. Hi, Once in a while an Englishman has s word of praise for the American order of things. For instance, there was the prominent member of parliament who announced that he liked Hollywood films and none other, even though the American motion picture industry was keep- . ing the British industry on the verge of bankruptcy. And then there was the London writer on trade and engineering who had this to say lately about the secret of American getting-along: “The evidence seems to indicate that the American ‘workman works harder, though for a shorter time, than his British confrere. He has the advantage of far more machinery and the output per man is greater than here, but the chief difference in the conditions is that there is no-limit to hours that may be worked in time of stress; there is no limit to the money that a man may earn, and there are very few restrictions on what a man may do.” Apparently American jibes at the “tired business man” go unnoticed abroad. For the British writer observes that the average American executive works harder than ee RSSPYPEEEEV EEE ORNL E ONDE a ON A NEW TRACK ‘The old-time farmer who planted his corn in the “new of the moon” and his potatoes when Luna was in hiding: who depended upon the zodiac signs for guidance in cut- ting weeds and weaning pigs, scoffed at the idea of con- sulting “city fellers” concerning planting, harvesting or marketing his crops. How different from his predecessor is the modern farmer! He sends his sons to sgricultural schools and nei T i is customary in his land and devotes a great deal more sigl time out of office hours to obtaining business knowledge. | go —$——— TE, an A 9 RN seem that government bureaus and agents could give him valuable advice. Perhaps:one of the reasons industry has Progressed’and prospered’ more than agriculture is that it was not above learning all it could from the “country fellow.” THE ROMANCE OF DANGER Due to some queer quirk in human nature, it is hard for us to consider any trade or calling interesting unless it has a fair element of danger in it. Disaster and sudden death are great stimulants to the imagination. A good half of the average man’s interest in the sea, for instance, is undoubtedly due to the fact that ships occasionally leave port and are seen no more. Take away all trace of danger from any trade and you make of it something prosaic. ‘There was 2 striking example of this just the other day, when a destructive gale ravaged shipping on the great lakes. A passenger steamer, disabled by a cracked steam pres- sure chest, drifted for two days close to a lee shore, with 135 pedple aboard. A 500-foot steel freight steamer, loaded deep with iron | ore from the Lake Superior mines, went ashore in Lake Erie and was hammered by the waves for days before her | crew could be rescued. | In Lake Huron a smaller steamer, coming down from | Georgian bay with pulpwood, was strained by the storm | so that her seams opened. She foundered a short time | after the coast guard, by heroic exertions, had managed | to take off her officers and men. | ‘This sort of thing, for some reason. puts a tinge of | romance into the ordinarily unexciting of great lakes shipping. The men who are engaged in workmen, following an ordin: ie. and become men whom it is possible to invest the aura of daring and | adventure. i All of us like to read abo: old days of Mississippi | river steamers. The old-time packet boats are the color- | ful furniture of a bygone day. Any novel whose action | is laid in that scene is sure of an audience. | This is partly due to the natural tendency to roman- | ticize anything that is of the past. But a good deal of it. | certainly, must be due to the fact that the old river boats } were rather risky affairs. Their boilers had a tendency | to blow up; and the picturesque men and women who | traveled on them could never be quite certain that they | were not going to be blown sk; the middle of the night. It is ths same way with ever, attractive unless it gives a man at of losing his life. This makes one look to the future with melancholy. Every day things are being made safer and safer. aviation, some day, will be safe and sane. The sea is getting safer yearly. The risks of railroading are di- minishing rapidly. What will our grandchildren do for thrills? Editorial Comment | PATRIOTISM AND PLUNDER (St. Paul Daily News) Of course the Mexican revolution was a protest against tyranny, a move to free downtrodden people and all that, but the boys appear to have gathered up quite a bit of loot as they went along, and not only the boys in charge but some of those who stayed so far behind that they never came within speaking distance of the rear guard. It is not surprising, therefore, to discover two of the gang trying to make Europe via New York with three- quarters of a million in a little black bag, or to learn that one of them held a gambling concession under a great patriot leader, while the other was content to act as his secretary. It can hardly be denied that there are hearts in Mexico, as well as some other places, which bleed with uplift and reform, but somehow the blood seems to flow much freer when plunder is in sight. Fa THE CATTLE COUNTRY <8t. Paul Dispatch) Fifty head of fancy Hereford yearlings from Glen Ullin, North Dakota, opened the cattle market at South St. Paul on Monday with the record price of $14.50 a hundredweight. Swift Brothers, the North Dakota pro- ducers, received approximately $5,500 for the lot. Glen Ullin is in the heart of the range where the cow- boys reigned for many years. It is not far from where the late Theodore Roosevelt “rode herd” on cattle and on cattle rustlers when he was deputy sheriff. In his di Morton county, for judicial purposes, ran from the Mi! souri river to the Montana line. So great was the faith in the area as a profitable cow country that the Marquis de Mores, who came to Dakota in 1883, built a packing ‘plant to convert the longhorns into meat. The tall smokestack and some of the buildings are still to be seen from trains passing through Medora. The Marquis had visions but he was a half century ahead of his time. The old longhorn even when fat with the best buffalo grass was a tough customer. It needed corn or grain as a finish. That is what has happened to the old cow country. Herefords and other purebred an- imals have replaced the racing roaming tough steer. The new breed is carefully conditioned on grain raised on the range, with the result: that when the old cow country enters the market its products take the top price. Roose- velt and de Mores were right. It is the cow country for the right kind of cows. HOOVER AND THE SENATE (New York Times) In the final vote in the senate on the debenture amendment to the farm relief bill, 47 to 44, there was to override cease to be ordinary i could not the bill, denat: debentured, without stuitifying himself. His plain-: letter to Senator McNary was as definite a commitment to a veto as if he had gone before a notary and made oath that he would not sign the bill. The senate knew this perfectly well. Yet, by @n alliance between short- | LETTE Even | * and Rosie's father, William Stanley, got $2,700 for Rosie as a bride. Not a as she was, her father would have had to be content with a smaller sale delphia John tribe of gypsies paid THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | Pinning a New Tail on the Doiikey! | SOME PINEAPPLE RECIPES The pineapple is a multiple fruit, as all of the little sections are really fruits growing out of a central core. When the pineapple is small, it is covered with many purplish-blue flowers, one in each eye, As it ma- tures, the flowers drop off, and the closely packed individual berries be- come consolidated into one juicy solid fruit. It is difficult to obtain good fresh pineapple in this country because it must be picked green for shipment. The best fruit reaches us in canned form, as it may be allowed to com- pletely ripen and develop its full flavoring upon the plant before being canned. If you use the fresh fruit, select on that has yellow around the little circles. If you cannot get the Pineapple fully ripe, you should set it aside for a few days to allow it to become mellow. The pineapple prepared without sugar makes a very good fruit to use. while fasting, and may be used as a change from the orange to other fruits. Unsweetened pineapple juice can be obtained in most stores and some. of the better class restaurants serve this in the same manner as orange juice before breakfast. The pineapple is especially suitable Bake in ate oven for forty-five m! until well browned. Pineapple, Water-Crese anf’ C Cheese Salad QUESTIONS AND ANS' Wounded With Shrapnel Question: Mrs. J. K. writes: ing the war my hi removed. He is e to violent heddaches which ¢ believe due ¢o faulty diet. d think it advisable for @s a dessert with a protein meal, as its combination of fruit acids and other elements stimulates the gastric juices and makes the pineapple really a medicinal fruit especially for dyspe, tics. It also combines well with the nonstarchy vegetables, but not well with the starches, Ripe pineapple contains about 85 Per cent water, one-half of 1 per cent protein, 13 per cent sugar and some mineral matter, in which potassium, calcium and magnesium are most abundant, Here are a few pineapple recipes: Pineapple Cream Gelatin Soak two tablespoonfuls of gelatin in a small amount of water. Add one- Answer: I bell would be for your husband an X-ray so that the of the shrapnel can be is rare that’ a foreign body ever works int d area, as the tendency is for work toward the skin or become inf bedded in fibrous tissues. It woul be necessary for him to have a c ful examination to determine cause of the headache. Too Muscular? Question: Miss H. ‘a question is: How may I flesh solid without day when, believing himself auto- matically divorced, because his wife refused to come with him from Eu- rope to this country, he married somebody else. He just can't under- stand why he's a bigamist. he fe) sDAY.... Rosie Stanley was 16 and a gypsy, half. cup of strained hot pineapple juice. As this mixture becomes: cool, but not yet solid, fold in a half cup of whipped cream, “I have found that the greatest pleasure in the business game is to help others make money.——John J. Raskob. a half cup of crushed pineapple, and a half cup of cleaned raisins. Place in molds and allow to harden on ice. Frozen x * * “No better way will ever be found to glorify beauty than the stage.”— Florenz Ziegfeld. 5 ee * “I have found men more generous than women. They are willing to allow their wives to have their lodge nights, and stay home and help with the children.”—Mrs. B. W. Miller, erred ‘Women's Benefit Associa- ion. fortune, but high as brides go, and if Rosie had not been quite so comely Do not sittin nirtecnrd ‘ open le can of pinea| le, but remove the label, placing tient tire can in a bucket and entirely sui round it with a mixture of chopped ice and ice cream salt. This will freeze in about a half hour, after which the can may be opened, the frozen pineapple sliced and served; or, if you have one of the new elec- trical refrigerators, you can place the can of pineapple in the compartment for about a half to three-quarters of an hour. Crushed Pineay Dessert Plain crushed pineapple served in individual cups makes a splendid des- sert for a protein meal. If desired, the pineapple may be garnished with whipped cream and water-cress or mint leaves. A NEW COMPLAINT (By Alice Judson Peale) It used to be the fashion to com- Plain that children had too much of a will of their own; that they were headstrong in their impulses and shockingly persistent in getting what they wanted. i Now we have a new complaint. The modern nursery school teacher, who sees many children each year, asserts that she finds them entirely too plas- tic, too easily persuaded, too readily diverted from their genuine interests. She feels it to be one of her chief duties to protect the young child's embryonic personality from the en- croachments af dominating grownups and older children. A parent, an older playmate, may readily play a devastating part in the life of a small child. Adult approval Price. Chief Gregory John of the Phila- the $2700 for his 17-year-old son, Frank John, who wanted Rosie for his bride. It was a great wedding down on the banks of the Obio river in Louisville, Ky., the other day. There was a sim- ple, colorless legal ceremony to satisfy the laws of the state. Then the real ceremony began with all the gorgeous pageantry of gypsy custom, with sing- ing and music and ropes of wild flow- rs, RELUCTANT BRIDE ‘The traditional reluctance of the bride to be won and the aggressive ness of the groom was symbolized by the bride tarrying in her tent until “reluctantly” dragged forth by the groom and his parents to his own to be deformed by muscular ment. Take Helen Wills for i Normal Blood Pressure * * * “This generation is obsessed with sex and dizzy with freedom.”—Rev. Minot Simons. (Outlook.) xe * “Tammany is actuated by Demo- ocratic principles and it is character- istic of. Democrats after a fight to shake hands and forget it."—John F. Curry, Tammany’s new leader. s* * “There is nothing surer than that we humans are destined to be dis- day to join Mr. McAneney. They Me ae ee § tent. ‘and disapproval place values gn types | !plined, whether or not we approve —- Traditions are powerful things.| of response which are not oerat of it beforehand, at the time or af- eG: Higgins, Baldwin In a social age with more females|to the child’s own development. terwards.”—A. G. Keller, professor of business caller here today, i social science, Yale University. (Out- look.) than men, with marriage no longer @s essential to either set as it once was; but with it perhaps more of an asset to women today than men, we continue to carry out the old idea that the maiden is wooed reluctantly, and gypsy Rosies aren't the only ones who must be dragged, even if only in pretense, * in trying to please his superiors he lows paths which are not the ones real growth for him. Especially Mrs. L. 8. Craswell and have returned to the city after a with relatives at Carrington. Edwin James Taylor, Jr. ceived ames, Tavior, 3r- fas that he has passed the ams to Annapolis, ee * “Young and good-looking women know what gallantry means and are alittle afraid of it, but old and dis- agreeable women demand it as a right.” — Ed Howe, Atchison, Kas., writer and editor. ses & “This type of craft (seaplanes) will doubtless graduate into giant flying boats that may carry as many as 400 or 500 passengers. When this day arrives the plane may compete on better than even terms with great ocean - liners.”—Senator Robinson, ‘kansas. Phage ie Gnd iar eeh isl remark- le exploration erican history began at St. Louis 125 years ago to- day, when Lewis and Clark started the assent of the Missouri river to ex- Plore-the vast northwest wilderness o acquired by the United States in the Louisiana Purchase. - The two explorers were close .per- sonal friends and their exploits to- gether have made them the Damon attack on his immediate physical en- vironment and make him play upon the theme of sociability and personal response. * x The child needs a background of se- LONG MAY THEY REIGN curity in his parents’ love-and inter- More power to the color of gypsy | est, but he needs to be free, to weave weddings. Here's hoping that our| lils patterns of self initiated activities, Great national passion for standard-| and to register his own individual ization won't cause authorities to| responses. stop being content with their legal ceremony, and insist that that be the only one. Somebody or other has/| at home will find great difficulty in tried outlawing European gypsies, forcing them to wear shoes, live in, houses, stop roaming, and do even as all the rest of us. - x ke i “COMPANIONATE DIVORCE” George Zido of St. Clairsville, O., Probably knows little or no! The nursery school is able to achieve with relative ease what z| Ari doing. We can, however,.resolve to let our youngster find things from in- “The expansion of American in French North Africa and in tralia, for example, have been viewed with no*little concern by French and British merchants who have long re- garded those territories as their rightful and special preserves.”—-Dr. Julius Klein, director of the bureau foreign and domestic commerce, De- partment of Commerce. sales Aus- truding our personalities, our stand- ards, when he is engrossed in his own pursuits. A good share of his day we can leave him alone with plenty of good play materials. We-can protect him about modern pleas for “companion-| from the presence of overwhelming ate divorce.” But even if he didn’t | older children while we seek for him know the label, he tried it the other | companions of his own age. l & Ly i Fey gaa i E A i i 1 Dol" BEA cHUMP fur, MACK 1S ONLY KippING You Int STARTING A COMPANY To FIND -LoST DOGS fu. WHY, HE'S. . WoRN “TH” ELBows oUT oF HIS ~ SHIRT, LAUGHING UP His SLEEVE ABOUT Sou Su IMAGINE * You , A GREAT; SciENTIST,* LECTURER, © ex-coNSUL Ais WHATNOT,~ GON” @AROUND IN AI PLUG-HAT, # AN” - WHISTLING ,FoR LosTa Does Ff. J we MASOR HOOPLE, PROMINENT, _ MAN _ABouT.TOWN ,* ww BY Jove, BUSTER, — You'RE RIGHT fur Yes, MINE IS THE | RESPONSIBILITY OF CARRYING: THe NoBLe BANNER OF HooPLE, HIGH AND PRouD J. we Now, — MY: BROTHER SAKE CoULD WELL* DO! THe BUSINESS oF FIlDING LoST, PETS, w—~ BUT, As) You ‘Poin TED our.§ Iv IsiANoT, IN KEEPING: WITH | i ‘ rf i AGO have they and family i 8. T. Sperry to Helena, Mont., where to locate. Henry Blume of WY &DIGNiFIED o* POSITION fle NUNN RT S< SRD