The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1929, Page 4

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Ra Re ee RR A tee BMVAsismwowres za UAHO>M>AHr>HAy samen an THE STATE'S ULDEST NEWSPaPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck class mail matter. D. Mann ................President and Publisner Subscription Rates Payable in Advance by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) ..... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail, in state, per year .... Weekly by mail, in state. three years t ‘Weekly by mail, outside of North per year . ‘ Mem! if ay Audi Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein ere also reserved. pecnetichentth Foreign Representative. SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) SAVE THE TRAINING CAMP ‘The service clubs of the city have joined with the As- sociation of Commerce to assure Fort Lincoln a respect- able-sized citizens military training camp, this summer. Letters are now going out to every Lion, Kiwanis and Rotary club in the state, calling attention to the near- ness of the camp—August 1 to 31—and to the fact that but 92 applications have been filed so far for participa- tion in the month’s course of training and instruction. ‘The camp wants 400 students. The Association of Commerce is sending out similar letters to the commercial clubs and to the chambers and associations of commerce in North Dakota, urging that the camp be given publicity of a character to inspire the young men of the various communities of the state to ap- ply for enrollment in the courses. South Dakota has more than 300 applicants for free military training, but many of these are applying for entry to tome of the other camps. The brunt of supply- ing the students, therefore, falls on North Dakota. And if the two states fail to fill the camp, it is taken for granted that the war department will discontinuc it. This is too good an opportunity to be lightly ignored by the young men eligible to take advantage of the gov- ernment’s generosity. Every community in the state should be interested in preserving the camp to North Da- kota. Especially should the city of Bismarck and the Slope country give a hand to helping put the camp over again, so that it may be retained for future years. It still is a new institution and its benefits are not so well comprehended as they will be when—and if—several years have passed and the nature of the training given Permeates the consciousness of the communities of North Dakota. bi The camp is not really thoroughly military. It has been put largely on a civil training basis and civil sponsors arc supposed to organize it this year. It is for that reason that the camp has fallen down this summer. The civil authorities to whom was entrusted the task of booming the institution this year have neglected the duty dis- charged last year by army recruiting officers, and have allowed the camp to drag thus far. To save it, the As- sociation of Commerce has leaped into the breach and is seeking to stir the enthusiasm of the youth of the state to take it up and make application for entry. This is something for college boys back for their vaca- tion to consider, if they have no jobs for the summer to occupy them. Participation in the camp is absolutely free. The government refunds railroad or other trans- portation to the boys at five cents a mile. They get drill exercise, enjoyable recreation and are provided food and shelter. In addition, there will be three prizes of $75 appropriated by the three Bismarck servicc clubs as prizes to be competed for. Blanks for applications can be had at the Association of Commerce. Save the camp by making use of it. LABOR A common picture today is that of labor as the world’s only producer, supporting the world’s quota of toil, care and responsibility and denied participation in the world of pleasure. And invariably from this picture are ex- cluded all employers, all professional and office workers, in fact all occupations foreign to the actual tilling of the soil, mining of the natural resources of the earth and manufacturing from raw materials. Such a picture is obviously untruthful and unfair. Just as it takes all sorts of people & world, the world can not get along without all sorts of work and workers to perform that work. There must be capitalists to fi- nance labor, there must be clerks to keep labor and the fruits of labor in order, there must be professional men to administer to the needs of labor and there must be businessmen and salesmen to distribute the fruits of la- bor. So it is found that there are useful occupations other than farming, mining and working in the factory. As concerns that part of the picture representing labor stoop-shouldered under the whole burden of toil the pub- lie is coming to the opinion that fundamental forms of labor may not be the most pleasant means of giving serv- ioe and earning a livelihood, but are far from being the hardest manifestations of labor. Labor serves its eight hours, receives its wage and need give its work no further thought until the next day. How different is ‘the lot of the boss. Upon him rests the responsibility of providing work for labor, of obtaining that daily wage for labor, of marketing the products of labor and of su- perintending labor and when he works eighteen hours in ® day, as he often does, he can not go home confident of receiving his wage at the end of the week. ‘Man is ambitious and most men are inclined to a love of leisure, but myriads of laborers have been disillusioned when they worked themselves out of the ranks of labor in the hope of shifting from their shoulders the weight of toil and responsibility. COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT ‘There are two kinds of builders—those who build with beth eyes on personal profit and those who build with one eye on personal profit and the other on community Modern cities are a collection of subdivisions, each de- by a different promoter who is in the business to . Until he has divided it into lots and sold the land belongs to the developer and, within cer- tein limits, is under his absolute control. mercial and residential divisions, and use foresight in laying out their strects. ‘That the public is more exacting and critical in this inatter ts indicative of its higher cultural standard and deeper appreciation of architectural beauty and commun- ity planning A WARNING FROM MR. LASKY Jesse Lasky, one of the leaders of the Hollywood mov- ing picture world, repeats once more the word of warn- ing that Hollywood executives have sounded so often lately—that the most foolish thing a girl can do is drop her job and head for Hallywood on the chance of “break- ing into the movies.” Hollywood is fairly swamped with would-be actresses Mr. Lasky says, and the movie industry can’t begin to take care of then. tion picture success,” he warns. “Very, very’few of the girls who arrive in Hollywood have either. No girl should ‘go to Hollywood unless she has a round-trip ticket and | enough money to support herself for at least six months.” | There will be some, of course, who will ignore this j Warning, just as similar warnings have been ignored in ithe past. But any parents who have a movie-struck daughter—or son—would do well to clip it out and tack | it upon the wall. The movement of Russian troops over the Chinese kor- der may turn out to be just one morc incident in the long chain of disorder which besets the Celestial republic—or, conceivably, it can be the starting point for more trouble | than you would care to think about. Probably it will be the former. The world powers, uy- doubtedly, will use every effort to localize the rumpus, But it could very easily mean a large sized war. Sup- se, for instance, that the Japanese felt that this Rus- sian invasion were menacing their interests, and should send their own army up to meet it? And suppose that | this should create a’situation in which some such power as England should feel called on to take a hand? And with all this going on, it is quite easy to sce how the | United States could get involved, what with our “open door policy” and our interests in China and Orient gen- erally. | Probably it won't happen that way—but it's worth watching. A whole lot of trouble could very easily begin | in just that way. A FIELD FOR-THE BAKER The commercial bakery now bakes most of the bread eaten in the United States; in the majority of homes the housewife does not bake a loaf of bread from one year's end to another. But cake-baking is still the housewife's job, according to a survey made by the department of agriculture, which announces that the vast majority of the cakes the coun- try eats are baked in the home. This, the department suggests, opens a huge field to the commercial cake baker; but it warns that the bakery must be able to convince the housewife that his cake is as good as the ones she herself bakes. This was relative- ly easy to do in the case of bread, but with cake it may well be a different story. Every housewife takes pride in her cake, the baking of which is a much less arduous task than the baking of bread. Apparently the baking of cake will remain a housc- hold institution for some time yet—which, perhaps, is as it should be. Here is one field where it is hard to find a “just as good” substitue for the home-made article. There wasn’t any patriotism until mankind split into two tribes that envied one another. | Editorial Comment FLOWING WITH MILK (Atlanta Journal) Each person in the United States. if we strike an aver- age, now consumes annually thirteen gallons more of milk than in the year 1919, three pounds more of butter, one more of cineese, two more of condensed and cvapor- ated milk and half a gallon more of ice cream. Of all evidences of American prosperity this, it scems to us, is among the surest and happiest. A land flowing with milk. The increase in demand for dairy products during the decade is ascribed mainly to a growing appreciation of their food value and to improvement in their quality. Anyone who is informed knows that plenty of good milk is as essential to the body-building of a child as it is to the life of a baby, and that without it no dict, for young or for old, can be well balanced. Its nutriment is such, indeed, that of most foods it is relatively the cheapest. The conditions under which milk is produced and mar- keted, for the larger cities at least, is much more sani- “It requires unusual ability or unusual talent for mo- | A asenee | | @ANT we Do SomEnHING avouT A CHANCE FOR TROUBLE i Wi THIS BIRD WHO RUNS HIS RADIO FULL BLAST INTO THE WEE HOURS OF THE AM? Qesrouer OF OUR PARKS AND rq THE CURB AND WONKS THE ANNOUNCEMENT QF HIS PRESENCE! ~\S ANOTHER OF OUR GREAT BIG PET PEEVES! A Few Crimes We Hope Hoover’s Commission Wi Acard / a : at é SZ aon THs ts. 3K AN \a WAG eg 2 er 7 a AL Cy THE CUNNING UL CREATURE! \DS\DES~ Wit MAKES THE WILD FLOWERS WILD!--SROCT HIM AT SUNRISE! Qo somemi auic! THE COMPOSERS OF SOME OF THE THEME SONGS’ WEVE BEEN HEARING LATELY: THANKS! ILL | ah Br curustoas! ekg , er 4: a /'TS i Qoweminc eEALuy OUGHTA BE Done! ABOUT THE NEIGHBOR WHO BORROWS (OUR NEWLY-SHARPENED LAWN MOWER! CAGARET SHOULD BE SUBPOENAED ‘OR SOMETHING, TOO! 4 AWFUL OUGHT TO HAPPEN Ais / ALLENE SUMNER, A World war veteran of British Columbia, unable to get work, was helping with the family washing. His tie caught in the wringer and he was strangled to death. Not only does it seem ironic that @ man could escape unscathed frem @ war and then die in this way, but some figures from various insurance companies to the effect that many more fatalities occur from just such unexpected little things about the house than in any so-called place of “hazardous cmpioyment” seem ironic, ecially in light of the fact very few housewives carry or are credited as doing very impor- tant or “hazardous” work, * * BEAUTY OF UNIVERSE It will be interesting to see what of Austria, recently selected as The Most Beautiful Girl in the Universe. (One wonders how they found about the girls of Mars, but let that pass.) We have a theory that if a girl hi yet a roll call of selected beauties of recent years proves, too, that beauty still brings troubles as it did to Heltn and Cleo of old. Still, most of us weuld chance cn the troubles in such a cause! se * MALE COOK BOOK It took a man to get up a cook be of all the things that can be cot without pots and pans. The book called “Jack Knife Cookery” by James Wilder. He tells how to make cran- all sorts of stews to be cooked in leaves or cocoanut shells. The auth- or’s life as a wanderer and explorer tary than in years gone, and more convenient. “Families of all classes,” says the federal bureau of ag- ricultural economics {n a recent report, “now have their milk and cream delivered regularly at their doors each morning, a distribution plan which undoubtedly has in- creased consumption.” From the same authority we learn that a commission of German officials, after making a study of economic conditions in the United States, resolved that “much of the health and wealth of this country could be traced to temperance in eating and to wholesome food; with the result that Germany today is conducting a nation-wide educational campaign to encourage larger consumption of dairy products.” CHANGING TRAVEL METHODS (Minneapolis Journal) Announcement of a fifty million dollar motorbus merger calls attention again, and strikingly, to the sudden Growth of this branch of the transportation industry. In @ single decade it has become a giant, carrying seven mil- lion passengers a day in 86,000 motor vehicles. Today there are thirteen thousand more miles of bus line oper- ated in the country than there are miles of railroad. It is conceded that the drop in passenger revenue of the railroads since 1920 is due far more to motor bus com- Petition than to the increased travel in private motor cars. Most railroads were a bit slow to grasp the full import of this development. They are working to adjust them- selves to it now, in various ways. One method is to ac- quire control of the bus lines, as in Minnesota, where the Great Northern through a subsidiary owns the largest group under state regulation. Over the country as a whole, railroads now control 1,046 motor coaches oper- ating over 10,519 miles, according to a survey by William James Cunningham of Harvard. His study is incorpor- ated in a report by the committee on recent economic changes of the president's unemployment conference. This committee finds that railroads have been gain- unprofitable trains only throws more business to the Railroads have used other measures. They have in- creased the comforts of day coach travel. They liave re- placed local trains with smaller and more cheaply oper- ated units. They have put on non-stop trains for well short runs, beating the time of the buses. This is an intensely interesting age of transportation means of travel, and no human prescience can tell will be the relative status. of air, rail and highway in another ten or twenty years. While this the public is better and better served. an interest of one kind, however, that | weler wants to go quickly, cheaply but above all he wants a dependable carrier must furnish continuous, year- If motor buses cause elimination of lor instance, and then in winter storms to keep the service going, where is the notes that much of the motor trans- passenger and freight. is without state or fed- regulation, and therefore cannot be held responsible continuous service. Minnesota has full state contro! borders. So have some other states. But traffic is under no regulation. of interstate traffic on the highways well as by rail, must come. things. Now he tells the world. After all, we are learning more and more that the realm of cooking is not @ woman's province solely, and that most of the real “finds” in this realm have been by men. * * * MONEYED TRAGEDY Most of our love tragedies center about the faet that cither the boy or girl is pcor and of humble parentage, HIS GUEST EVERY becomes of Miss Louise Goidarbeiter | beauty she needs nothing else, and: take al @ berry or apple pie without pan, and: made him find out how to do these; DURING THE VOYAGE! we LIKEWISE, INFORM MONSIEUR VILLAR, THAT I WILL FIND TIME 0 ACTAS MASTER OF CEREMONIES FoR HE SHIPS Festivities, | and the other a favored member of society. But the love tragedy of Miss Ruth Wilson and her fiance, Horace Roberts, Jr., of Moorestown, N. J., centers about two young people to the manor born. The murder-suicide theory to explain the two young peo- ple found dying in the girl's home was changed to a double murder theory, and one broken engagement after another secms to have preceded the tragedy. Sometimes life remains at too smooth a level and more _ trouble comes than when it has its high and low spots. * OK JUST LET 'EM DARE! Speaking of cooking, have you heard of the famous French club of gourmets, called the Club'des Cents? Each member has to prove that he fore he can join the fampus old club. |The club gives occasional dinners at !a restaurant which it deems worthy patronage. It be an ob- e little place made famous over- night by the tribute paid it by the gourmancs. Imagine any American body of men daring form such an association! American husbands, willy-nilly, are |forced by Amcrican wives into the i great national game of dicting. They {may laud the vitamin, but never the ‘trussed and ruffled fowl. We apolo- it. | i¢———__—_______» 1] BARBS | & A New York pastor says the middl class is not drinking. Maybe th why they manage to keep to the mid- idle of the road. * * * A town in Kansas recently cele- brated “Tonsil Day. pose the residents felt their necks? s* * Among the newer fashions for men are red. shoes. Probably this is meant to match the vogue in noses, s* * Flies, army worms and straw {worms aren't the only pesis working jon the wheat crop. There ar ‘ couple of others working on the prices, * * * Why can’t men wear a couple of straps over their shoulders all sum- mer like the girls? * * * A new law in Texas provides that three days’ notice must be given in applying for a marriage license. And really knows good food and drink be- ! gize for food in this land, never laud : Do you sup-| just a whole lot of things can hap- pen in three days. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) { THE FAMILY PICNIC (By Alice Judson Peale) | ‘The old-fashioned family picnic ts an institution which requires not only prayers for good weather but also a half day's labor in the kitchen, It’s beginning, its climax and its ending. is in the magnificent spread beng emerges from the heavy bas- ket. Mother spent hours preparing those Scores of sandwiches with deviled egg and wWhat-not filling. The baking of taat thickly-frosted cake and all those cookies made the kitchen hot all one summer morning. There are Pickles and jellics, knives and forks, and spoons and napkins, After the feast there is peace. The rest of the day is mostly given over to mild worries about the ants and the little green caterpillars and to the passive BERRIES ARE GOOD TONICS Strawberries contain a larger amount of iron, sodium and silicon than any other fruits or berries. One | pleasures of gustatory content. The family picnic would be no less splendid and much more amusing if jMmother did not do all the work and | if there were sports other than eat- ing. ; If the children are old, enough, {start out, not with an automobile {| | ! but with a vigorous walk, to the pic- nic spot. Let everybody carry his j Proper share of the necessary impedi- menta. See that everybody has his , bathing suit, for at every picnic there should be somewhere to bathe. Let the children help build the camp fire. Each must bake his own Potato and cook his own meat. They scon will find out that nothing in the | World ever tasted as good as steak or | bacon speared and roasted on sharp- ened green sticks in the open fire, And for the period after eating see to it that you have brought along a iball or two, a camera, some nature guide books and a box in which to ! i¢ home such trophies as the coun- ! tryside will yield. “Part-time” clergymen, who would ‘be ordained and serve under license {without payment while carrying on jtheir ordinary work, is one sugges- jtion for meeting the shortage of clergy in England. EVENING AT DINNER tH AWAY AS Soonl AS jh OUR BOARDING HOUSE ; By Ahern | , — ~I SAY MLAD,~ AS SOON AS You DIRECT ME MY STATEROOM, CONVEY MY RESPECTS fo CAPTAIN BLANCART AND CHIEF PURSER VILLAR ¢ — TELL “HE CAPTAIN, I CAN BE HUNDRED MORE © WAITING “To joy AND "RE AFRAI WitH Jour R BIG INFLUENCE, YoU MIGHT HAVE. E SHIP PuLE should make use of this valuable berry while it is still plentiful. The strawberry flavor appeals to everyone, and it is better for one to use the fresh fruit rather than artificial flav- oring in preparing foods. Strawberries, though an acid fruit, do not cause acidosis. In fact, they are so alkaline forming as to be a valuable remedy. While strawberries are wholesome, it must be remembered that they are an acid fruit and should never be used with starchy foods, but should be eaten along with milk, non-starchy vegetables or proteins. They should never be used as strawberry short- cake. Wrongly combining strawber- ries with starches is largely respon- sible for their bad reputation of being poisonous to some people. ‘Those individuals who break out af- ter eating strawberries suffer from a toxic condition, and it seems that the strawberries actually speed up the elimination through the skin to such an extent as to cause itching or even inflammation. Care should also be used in not us- ing the other berries with starches. All of the berry pies and berry short- cakes, while exceedingly palatable, are unwholesome for this reason. Among the wholesome berries we find barberries, blackberries, blue- berries, cranberries, loganberries, mul- berries, raspberries, roebuck berries, service berries, strawberries and whortleberries. Blackberries contain more mag- nesium than the others; cranberries | foods. more calcium and sulphur; huckle- berries lead in potassium and phos- phorus; and raspberries in chlorine. It is better to obtain the fully ripened berries so that no sugar is needed to make them palatable. The berries which do need the addition of sugar, such as cranberries, are not quite as valuable from a dietetic standpoint. Here are two wholesome ways of preparing berries, but remember that no cake, bread nor potatoes should be used at the same meal with any of these preparations. Berry Ice Cream Measure into a dish half the con- tents of an envelope of unflavored gelatin and add to it enough cold water to soften. Crush the desired amount of any kind of berries and mix thoroughly with a half pint of cream. Into another bowl put a pint of whole milk into which has been thoroughly mixed about half a cupful of honey and add to the berries. Next, add the gelatin which has been dis- solved over hot water. Stir all to- gether and pour into freezer and freeze until of the desired consist- ency. The amount makes about a quart, depending upon the quantity of berries used. The amount of honey WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26, 19 will vary, according to the kind of berries used. Add crushed berries to the stiffly beaten whites of eggs. Do not stir, Dr. MeCoy will giedly answer ‘ions but fold the berries in lightly, and do not add sugar. Place in moderate oven until lightly browned on top. Do not leave in the oven too long or the whip will fall. This whip may also be eaten uncooked. Berries and cream form a whole- some combination; also, the berries may be crushed and added to gelatin. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Pellagra Question—J. T. B. writes: “For two years I have had pellagra and am dn a rundown condition. My heart seems to at times run away. I am five feet tall, twenty-three years of age, and weigh 106 pounds. Am I un- derweight? I would also like to know what would be a good diet?” Answer—First, take a fruit fast for @ few days, and then live on a well balanced diet such as I give each week in this column. These menus will be sufficient to correct your trouble after you have taken the fruit fast. Stop using cornmeal from which all of the good has been extracted. Pellagra is caused in much the same manner as all the deficiency diseases —from the use of too many devitalized Eggs in Kidney Trouble Question—Mrs. G. H. asks: “Are eggs harmful for a person suffering with diseased or weak kidneys?” Answer—Anyone suffering from kidney trouble of any kind should be able to handle a limited number of eggs, about one a day, properly pre- pared by coddling or poaching. Wants Stronger Voice Question—M. J. H. writes: “I am writing to you for advice on how to strengthen a weak voice. My voice is very weak at times, and at other ZZ ZLA ASS U. S. TROOPS IN FRANCE On June 26, 1917, the first contin- gents of American troops landed in France in the World war. Within four weeks after the presi- dent's order, transports had departed from the Atlantic seaports of the United States. Never before had a military expedition of such size been assembled, transported and landed without mishap, in so short a time. Although the first contingents reached their destination in safety, they were twice attacked by Ger- man submarines, which were beaten off each time. The arrival in France of the first troops, which were under the com- mand of Maj.-Gen. William L, Sibert, was the ‘occasion of a magnificent welcome by the French people. The transports, whose arrival had not been previously announced, steamed into the seaport (the name of which was withheld by censors) at an one of den ial spread rapidly News az.d by the time the troop ships drew along the quays where the men were to debark, thousands were on hand to greet them. Whistles of craft in the harbor shrieked a wild welcome and cries of “Vive la France!” and “Vivent les Etats Unis!” seemed to come from every throat in the crowd. —————— f Our Yesterdays ee ] FORTY YEARS AGO Mrs. Belk and young son arrived from Sioux City the first of the week to join her husband, Captain John Belk, - Henry Van Houten was seriously in- jured last night when he was thrown from his bicycle while riding down Miss Mabel Hunt, Miss Gertie Grif- fin, and Charles A. heat Hig Meth- ; ia visiting for a Mrs. G. L. Gilman of Plymouth, Wis., is here for a visit with her son, M. B. Gilman. ington, D. C., to take a position in the income tax department. “There never was @ first class ex ecutive for whom inaction was not a burden. He cannot talk about being tired with business cares because he has the habit of enjoying his work and regards the daily routine as an interesting affair.”—Charles J. Finger. (American Mercury.) es * * “There is no foundation for the theory that, if'a man can write good English, his domestic affairs must, therefore, be of importance to the public.”"—Lord Hewart. es * * “Wherever you find a wealthy min- ister or teacher, you know it is either itus of the Yale Divinity school. © * * * “I love the clinging vine type of women; I very much dislike the type of women who put on the gloves with me, and hit me where they please, but insist that I be a gentleman and not hit back.”—Ed Howe. -* & “Church members want to be bam- boozled, and the pulpiteer who con- the best anesthetic and does the in the most painless, businesslike is the fellow who gets the soft with the salary running well into five figures."—Rev. W. Nevin Elliott. (Plain Talk.) s* * “Women in society—much more than man—is parsed and analyzed and criticized, so that wherever she goes or whatever she does, her ears burn.”—Mrs. Jerome Napoleon Bona- parte. (Collier's.) i g Hi z %

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