The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1929, Page 4

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ee ee a ee eae I : ara THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 20 1929 The Bismarck Tribune | he followed them up the side of the ship. An Independent Newspaper | Meanwhile, C. A. Lupofd, another airplane passenger, | ‘THE STATE'S OLD“ST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | was being picked up by another ship where much thé; mined same scene was being enacted. | Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| Yes, the glorious traditions of the sta still live, even | marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | jn tunis modern day when survivors from ill-fated air fs second class mail matter. George D. Mann. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year............. Daily by mail, per year (ir Bismarck Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck)....... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota $7.20 7.20 | liners are rescued from the deep. Times are different. | but the ery for aid still finds willing and heroic rescuers | | ready to respond. | Even in this day of advanced progress and modern science we still have men who are real men! ALIBIS USE STRING BEANS IN SEASON Small green string beans and small yellow wax beans are wholesome non- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Drinking With Meals Question: H. B. writes: “I am diet addressed to him, care of The 4 Onz of the first things a good sportsman should learn hy vegetables to be used with following your menus in the paper ‘Weekly b: 1, in state, per year 1.09 | starchy veg and am somewhat puzzled about the wane by ail, ih atte, threes. years : 3.50 | s the preparation of an alibi. Grace. agility, endurance, | either protein or starchy meals. AS | use: of liquids, as you never mention Ea Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, _. | training. skill, are all very well in actual competition, the beans inside the pods become jany drink with meals.” 4 per year........ RY GT ors seeseseceeeeee 1.50] put at the conclusion of the contest they are useless, matured they develop a larger amount i Membcr Audit Bureau of Circulation whereas an alibi serves not only befere a match but of starch, and should be considered Dr. McCoy will gladly answer a Member of The Associated Press | alco during it and so long afterward as the maich is @ as starchy food. After the beans of || personal questions on health and The Associated Press is exclu: ly ei 's dispatches this newspaper and origin published her al! other matter he: for republication of all ne not otherwise cr: ed in local news of spontaneous rights of republication of also reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS topic of discussion. Alibis may be classified as animate the inanimate are capabie of al and bdivision nate. into s that are too high or too low, warped d the phenomena of nature such as heat or cold, breezes or absence of bree: ‘oo little rain and surfa: Inanimate alibis include such ob- | plight and haze, | beans or broatl beans. and contain little or no strings. them harder to digest. any variety become mature they may be shelled and served as are butter- In selecting string beans or snap beans, select those which are firm In cooking string beans, do not add any grease, such as pork, as this makes Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. . Answer: The only drink I advise with or near meals is pure water, and then only if you feel thirsty. Drink- ing with meals is to be condemned oa generally because of the tendency to Form G ea Pas ne Co. = | re instances in which inanimate alibis If you wish to raid Guanine aia. down food not properly masti- (4 Pi ag rigs Le Be q qi < ars 7 beans as a non-starchy vegetable, it | cated. : CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON s pik sans alien ad ae oat ah is well to open the pods and remove Multiple Sclerosis , any y mt will do, such as a the larger beans. In serving lima} Question: H. G.»F. asks: “What (Official City, State and County Newspaper) NEW ROCKFORD CUT-OFF LOOM North Dakota has an interest in t in line | ization of James J. Hi across Montana through the great wheat basin of that | or toe, toothache. eyestrair Z pain in the back, a weak anklo. resulting from the fact that “you must have eaten some- thing.” Mental alibis, such as the recei: f a cepressing tcie- principal part of the meal combined with non-starchy vegetables. String beans contain a larger relative amount of sulphur and chlor- ine than the other mineral elements. beans, or any of the seed beans in the green state, remember that they are starchy and should be used as the treatment do you advise for multiple sclerosis? What is the cause? Violet rays have brought back the feeling to patient's limbs and he has use of them, but a numbness comes over him at times. Answer: The fundamental cause of multiple sclerosis is the presence 7 t { Th n limi ntain large | of toxic mi state and through what probably w tame become | cram, are more difficult to arran=, entail expense, and aisioanits of potassium and sodium | resulting fori a faulty Gat Pacers growing city of Great Falls The j consequently are less frequent, but they cannot be! and are very alkaline in the system. | you write of will get quickest results interest this ject—aiready laid | ignored. In fact, with all the alibis available, little Here are a few recipes which you | by taking a fruit fast for a week or ‘ he Interstate for the re- | sy; 2 " rho t: te | | might find helpful: ten days followed by a well balanced a before the Interstate C 8 nal ympathy is due the sportsman who takes the field with- | New Potatoes and String Beans {dict. Treatment such as massage, a quired permission—is the prop out one. Should he fail to take the precaution upon the ‘Thoroughly wash new potatoes and | osteopathy, chiropractic, and electro- J % line will be an extens Fairv! | hance of winning, he should realize that he does so | cut them into cubes with the skin in- | therapy will be helpful in restoring e i Hi ranch and it proposed to build it tana, and, pos: at his own risk and has only hims@ to blame. With a reasonablé alibi in hand the best of spor cluded. Cook with fresh string beans. Serve with butter. Combination Salad the circulation to the affected parts. Cider Question: T. F. G. asks: “What that state. | may experience defeat. but he need never know Mix cooked string beans, shredded | is the best method of making cider? The project was shelv terness. He has the everlasting consolation that if things | lettuce, grated carrots and tomatoes. Should cider be kept in bottles or a war. It origin had not been what they were the result would not be Cottage cheese may be served on the | cask? the portion now under consideration, but also to build | the rest of the New Rockford, N. D.. cut-off to Lewis- | town; Montana, thence on to Great Palls and by a Sun | river pass of an casy grade through the Rockies to con- | nect up With the existing Great Northern main line Java, Montana. Though they both are Hill roads, the Northern Pacific | will oppose the Great Northern's plans The Northern | Pacific has ambitions in an identical portion of the Great | Northern territory to be entered by the proposed road. | ‘The N. P. has been developing the Redwater valley out of Glendive to Richey and it wants to preserve that area | for itself, Both roads also are considered to have de- signs on another extension in the territory in question, | fas the Great Northern has exhibited intentions to build | this Watford-Fairview-Richey-Hamblin extension on to @ordan, Montana. In this pelitics of railroad extension the Milwaukee what it is. GETTING OUTDOORS One of the most promising signs for a more healthy nation in the future is the great spread of the fad of spending more time outdoors. The automobile, of course, has done much along this line. Before motor cars began to jam the highways, millions of children in the cities failed to get the amount of real country fresh air and sunshine that they should have. Charitabie organizations arranged trips into the country for them just to get some fresh air But now with the ownership of autom distributed, the number of families who cannot get their children away for brief periods at least from the com-| paratively impure air of the cities has gre: decreased. More people are spending vacations at outdoor camps than ever before. Golf courses, swimming pools, tennis | | Women who take their citizenship | i seriously enough to give thoughtful | | answers, whether traditional answers to some of the orthodox ques- the naturalization test so put them, seem rather worth | while for the country. One of the surest signs of ‘awakening civic conscious: is the | very fact that she hesitates in these | changing times over questions phrased decacies ago. woman's PROUD OF HER environment.” for the right sort of birth generally denotes the right sort of environment, unless the child is stolen from his cradle in infancy or something like that. It would realiy have been much ' more heartening to our American idea if some coal heaver’s son had won this honor. * * * WHERE'LL MA GET IT? Here's China trying to solve this marriage, divorce and alimony busi- ness by the introduction of an “equal rights law” which would automati- cally make the one found guilty, the one divorced, rather than the one di- vorcing, pay alimony. That sounds very just on the sur- face, but China must be pretty smart if all its women have incomes per- still works for its board only and |with it. It's not a case of “birth or | Talks TWAh THEFT (By Alice Judson Peale) One fond mother, having discover- ed her five-year-old in the act of filching money from his grandmoth- er’s purse, laughed and declared that ;he was just-too cute for anything. ; Then she begged that he be allowed ito ksep the quarter he had been clev- jer enough to take, { Another mother whipped her four- | year-old for taking candy from her method makes easier for the child side. String Bean Salad y Use the fresh string beans if pos- sible, but if the canned ones are used, boil them for a few minutes and let cool before using. Place in a large salad bowl, using two forks to toss bout and thoroughly mix with the desired amount of chopped parsley and minced ripe olives. A little chop- ped celery may also be added, and if a dressing is desired, use a little olive oil. Serve on crisp lettuce leaves on | individual salad plates. Ee String Bean Soup ‘To two cups of soup stock add one quart of string beans and one cupful of scalded milk, four tablespoonfuls of dextrinized or browned flour, and @ small amount of butter. Cook the beans in the soup stock. Mix with the milk and dextrinized flour and | add the butter after the soup has been tablespoonful of butter and one- Answer: Cider is easily made in a pir home press which can be pur- chased in any large hardware store If the cider is and put into bottles. turns to vinegar. Wants to Gain } Question: Reader asks: “What exercises and diet can a girl 18 years old take to gain in weight and de- velopment? Height is five feet, three | inches, weight ninety-six pounds. The chest bones are also prominent, due to the beginning of spinal curvature. Also round shoulders.” Answer: It is not necessary for you to take any special diet except to follow the well menus which I give every week in this col- umn. Consult a physical culture ex- pert and have him give you special exercises to correct the spinal curva- Otherwise, it given by a physical culturist who is ett : Bue ¢ an 4 : “ ire. ture and round shoulders. I could ; ‘i : ne Milwaukee | courts ar lay are crovded. The army! Instead of being alarmed at the mitting them to pay alimony. We ‘bureau ‘drawer and t pet iw also is involved. Int friendly to the Milwaukee | courts and other playgrounds are Re ee ee er MGricitiencony th | Guan Hise yer wieeiieaaioran (Porn ete eta tn + Green Lima Beans give you special exercises for this pur- several years ago projected the North-South line from ; of “tin can” tourists is increasing from ye © | women, we should be delighted. our prattle about “modern women.” : s wanes ! Cook one pint of fresh lima beans | pose, but I believe it would be better Miles City, Montana, through Sheridan, Wyoming, to |“sun tan” fad has spread like wildfire o he c sneha The great bulk of our womanhoo:l These are extremes. Neither j until tender. After cooking add one | for you to have some private lessons y, | z connect with the Union Pacific at Rawlins, Wyoming. ‘The Milwaukee's financial embarrassment and stoppage of grading on the North-South road had the evident connection that both lines had back of them the same banking interests. The North-South has never been able to revive itself. Had it gone through, there is evidence that ultimately the road would have been hooked up with | an extension of the Milwaukee north into the Jordan} country. While the Milwaukee is helpless to aid its friends of the North-South to resume their plans, the | Hill lines, through the Great Northern, start a project | that must forever maneuver the Milwaukee out of the| Picture of tapping the Jordan country. Jordan is in a county without a railroad or a foot of telephone line. It, however, has amateur wireless serv- | fee. Agriculture in the form of seed production and sheep and wool has become very profitable in Garfield Northern Pacific. By the Great Northern going in almost all the trade might conceivably be diverted from the Milwaukee. Glendive, a Northern Pacific division terminal, also might be the gainer in the diversion of trade from Miles City. If the Great Northern succeeds, the second Hill line of that road will, in all likelihood, ultimately be built as the empire builder conceived the vision. That will mean railroad development in this state and in a section that must benefit largely from the projection of the New Rockford-Watford City cut-off into Montana. Both Montana and North Dakota will be gainers from the building of such a line. Just as the North Dakota towns and cities along the lines of the Northern Pacific and Great Northern have thrived most, so in all likelihood ‘would the towns on the route of the proposed extension hhave an accession of development if the line be con- structed. end children with their scanty summer clothing getting the greatest possible ben: out of those terious rays of the sun which. doctors say, mean so much | to their future health. | Nature provided a wonderful land for us to live but many of us have been too long in dic fact. in, covering that MOTOR CARS AND HEALTH | Did you ever think of the big part played by the, automobile in getting America’s urban population to! millions of people stifling heat and smoke- Fresh air specials loaded | filled air of our large cities. with poor children were run into the country districts. | But now nearly every family is able to get the pure air | Child Health Association who lauds * i hi ti Congress from 1853 to | Will be perfect, but simply to devise county. This business has Miles City for its shipping| Of the country at least once a week. The automobile | the flapper mother, declaring that the | BARBS | |e. Hod ieee eerie eae 1 5 one that will work.’—Henry L. point, where it is divided between the Milwaukee and takes them there. Look at the greatly increased number | babies of the original flapper who be- | ry | Don’t tell your child that you are| After studying law in Cincinnati, Mencken. (The American Mercury.) of golf courses, most of which are crowded. The same | applies to beaches, camps and other places where out- door sports are available. One of the gzeatest contributions of the motor car to; modern civilization probably will be improved health re- sulting from more fresh air per capita. An eight-letter word meaning an old form of hold-up, now being repopulariz: Galluses. Of all the serial stories still running. the hardest by | far to kecp track of is the changing Chinese political | situation. | All a bridegroom has to dig up in Germany to get married is sevent cents. All a would-be bride has to dig | up is a mark. Hl We should realize that woman has reached that state of being well-in- f when she really knows what | she is doing. We are rather proud of such wom- en as Miss Martha Jane Graber, 30, could no more pay hatch a kangaroo. * * * NOT SO FETTERED Speaking of China, it’s sort of a alimony than jolt to our complacent assumption | Serious consideration, but even in a} the difficult distinction between e and thine. The one creates a ing of irresponsibility, the other \a lasting, self-depreciation. Theft, even in a, three-year-old deserves of Lima, O., who will deny themselves : that occidental women are infinitely 12-year-old. it should not be treated citizenship rather than say they will More of an influence than oriental as @ high, irrevocable crime—a per- bear arms for their country. refuse to so affirm, there might be a simple little way of stopping war right there. ee * FLAPPER MAMA | While the flapper isn’t cussed and discussed as she once was, still she j for argument, consider the statement of Dr. S. J. Crumbine of the American gan causing such to-do ten years ago are the best babies ever raised. It is hardly just, though, to give all | the credit to the flapper mother. She | is merely lucky to live in an age} which is enriched with all that science | has found out to date. Perhaps she | be modern enough to use all that is handed her. Her mother didn't. TRUE TO FORM The selection of the son of an/ Episcopalian bishop as winner of the | recent Thomas A. Edison test to se- | lect the brightest boy in the United , States must be a bit of a stunner for | those who are fond of declaring that | even the gutter boy has the chance | nor environment has much to do| should be given a hand for daring to | w; to be president, and that neither birth | 5: ones to learn of the bitter letter Ma- If all women, and all men, would dame Sun Yat-sen, widow of the man | known as “father of the Chinese revo- lution,” wrote to his Nationalist party, accusing them of betraying her husband's cause. And we think of them as meek tiny- | footed ladies married unprotestingly to men chosen for them, utterly un- needs support occasionally. As grist | interested in their husband's jobs, | etc. The ladies are not the only ones who appear scantily clad. How about a bald-headed man in a rumble seat? oes A New Yerk woman says the modern girl is incapable of a blush. that out? oes One of the Chinese generals is named Cheu-Cheou. They must have hay fever over there in that country, too. ees A New York bank cierk 000 to play the stock market. Robbing Peter to pay Paul. |With present ideas in makeup pre-| | vailing, how did the writer ever find | business, while you do likewise. As- took| manent mark of bad character. Whenever a child takes what does not belong to him, he should be forced immediately to make resti- tution. This should be done in a perfectly matter of fact way without the fireworks of emotion. If, in order to make restitution it is necessary to take money from the child’s allowance or from his savings it should not be done so as {to leave him penniless or nearly so, ! shocked, grieved or humiliated by his jaction. Let him understand quite simply that to take what does not belong to you is nowhere permitted, and that such wrongdoing must be made good before the accounts can be squared. And then let him forget the whole sume that he is an honest - child; trust him quite as you would’ have {done in the past. Be sure, too, to jlook into the motives for his mis- deed and make such adjustments as {will remove temptations in the fu- ture. | The estimated population of China in 1923 was 330,000,000. | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | fourth of a cup of cream and two tablespoonfuls of chopped parsley. BENJAMIN HARRISON Today is the 96th anniversary of the birth of Benjamin Harrison, sol- dier, orator, lawyer, author and 23rd president of the United States. Harrison was born Aug. 20, 1833, at North Bend, O. His father, Scott Harrison, a son of President William Henry Harrison, represented Benjamin Harrison was admitted to the bar. He acquired @ reputation as a speaker in a political debate with Thomas A. Hendricks while a reporter for the supreme court of Indiana. As a soldier in the Federal army he was widely known for his bravery at Resaca, Ga., Kenesaw Mountain, and at Peachtree Creek. Harrison was nominated for presi- dent at the Republican convention in Chicago in 1888 and in the ensuing election won by 233 electoral votes to Grover Cleveland's 168. When nom- inated for a second term, Harrison was defeated by Cleveland. He was the principal representative of the United States at the Hague conference in 1899. He lectured for a time at Leland Stanford Junior Uni- versity in California and was the author of several articles and books, John | able to study out your particular needs. visit with relatives at St. John, Hal fax, Montreal and other points where she will spend two months, A. G. Gunderson of Jamestown has been appointed state land commis- UOTATIO “The problem before the humar. Trace is not to devise a peace plan that * ke “The strange thing of today with its unknown uses is the familiar things of tomorrow with myriad val- ues.”—Vilhjalmur Stefanssen. ene “This is the time for someone to ask how good this ‘second chance’ is. Personally, I think the odds are a hundred to one against bettering the first marriage.”—Evelyn Miller Pierce. (Plain Talk.) xe * “No man ever gets for very long more than he deserves without pay- ing for it something equally as valu- able as he gets.”—Bruce Barton. se k “I do not believe that the average doctor's fees are high. .. . The diffi- culty lies not in the doctor's charges, but in the high cost of medical acces- sories."—Herman N. Bundesen, M. D. Probably no one can look any hotter in July than! prac of the work-| (Forum.) ees * @ motorist manipulating a demountal - ings of the t. TIMES, NOT MEN, CHANGE Sa wes fe ie eee oe sig by thezpad He died. after @ brief illness in In-| “Color is merely that personal touch ‘Times may change, but the fine traditions of heroism ‘of the sea will remain. One finds the proof in the thrilling story of the rescue of three men and one woman from the wave-tossed Disarmament conferees sometimes remind us of the little girl learning to walk, in one of Thomas Hardy's novels, who was constantly confronted by “insuper- | able barriers a quarter of an inch high.” A “TfoMORROW, So HE FILL “TH” G4S TANK His “TRACTOR AN” PUT IT {~~ BREAK “TH” SAD NEWS “To YouR UNK “THAT WE'RE LEAVING FoR Home CAN fa) of FINISH OUT MY VACATION wWitH UNCLE WELL COME BACK F “THEN AN’ HELP You AUCTION OFF “TH” FARM , ~~ OR ELSE TURN {IT INTo A REST SANITARIUM ! dianapolis in 1901. NE SS |. Our Yesterdays t A FORTY YEARS AGO A complete copy of the constitution of North Dakota, as completed by the that catches the fancy of the crowd.” —Grantland Rice. (Collier’s.) CORRECTS SPEECH Radio, according to F. A. D. An- drea, president of Fada Radio, will within a decade correct the reputa- tion that the United States has of being the most careless nation in the but the other three were saved. constitutional convention, appears in| World with reference to speech. = ith hea Editorial Comment * BACK IN SERVICE! BEN! ~~ 2 ( axe I'M SO ALL IN today's Bismarck. ‘Tribune. ne es iy ie caaeaes GF Gasces, ue ~~ [Ve HAD ENOUGH oF *) ~~, BESIDES, Now I HAVE “To At n mecting” of the Rapuhiican| Slates ave bean ambers, of the i . 1 4 a of tl publican | States have been mem! \e b iH chief pilot of the plane, swam four miles through rough SUNNY, IF NOT SOUTH HAY FIELD GOLF, AN’ Tm His SOLE USE A DOUBLE club yesterday Gerald Pierce, L. V.| American Philosophical Soclety, old- } seas to the nearest steamship lane. 5 (Minneapolis Journal) BEING CHAMBERMAID HEIR , «1 AN To YAW N FoR Sanne a 4 le Poet Hig elected as|est learned society in America, iS ee ‘well a mere dot on the horizon, bobbing u The Sioux Falls, S. D., Argus-Leader received a news SOMEDAY i legat at Fargo. ‘ Caldwell was , P| release the other day from an organization with head- me! Vee ‘and down with the waves, when Allan Emerson, eagle- | quarters in Boston. It bore on its face this’ notation: ‘Walter H. Cabban arrived yester- es eyed second mate of the Canadian freighter Midland Special in South i sige geatulan to any oe oe, con Biase gles D., and will f King, chanced to sight him. Quickly, the ship put about | sortners {taccuth Dakota: f ‘week on business. and Caldwell was*hoisted aboard where he told of the 1, K. Hyman, formerly of this city, In the hub of culture, the Leader thinks, the other survivors still out in the water. mention of South Dakota joe eee Raia at ear: wee geo anne oe a Captain Roy Burke, master of the Midland King,|ing cotton fjelds, Negro mammies and palm trees.” 8 turned his vessel and raced for the scene. His power-| Such provinclals may also conceive.of North Carolina ies ful searchlights penetrated the darkness and revealed TWENTY-! YEARS AGO a sal trom’! her trip to Caro, Men Joslin, first Dr. Chamberlain has returned from waiting to Glendive where he was called by. the side and illness Strauss she could do ‘The Misses McCauley who have hhausted, too. been visiting at points on the Pa-' am Wilkinson, a man cific coast have returned and are the ona ext aay poaets 06 Meee wpelleee, when some| - M. W. Hutchinson, chief clerk of asked him to the land office, has returned from a arm, some of the ‘TEN YEARS AGO dropped relatives of Miss Nita Foster, Chicago, is here Little kept out? for a visit with her aunt, Mrs. T. J. = Out legiti. ‘Woodmansee. tossed him ce x4 5 't ae ‘ him to his Governor Lynn J, Frazier and Rev. arm was George Buzelle wit i i ; .] at Bismarck’s Labor When one stunt aviator f Eten another's way of ig off ee Mss, William Engle lets today toe a its merely 1 takerolty ‘ou rans

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