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THE BISMARUK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, AUGUST 30 1929 The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper : 3 THE STATE'S OLT'“ST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) i | former would be preferable, It is better to have grim! | happenings behind us than ahead of us. nd surely those condemned to die do not thus benefit. are given another holiday to live through, but it; is a cold mors What, indeed, could be more agon- than the lengthening of the period over which | rd to certain and shameful death? That ‘Reduced’ Feeling! HEALTH DIET ADVICE W Dr Me Frank ing Published by the Bismarck Tribune Compan: marck, N. D., and entercd at the postoffice at Bi: more ghastly than thus to live 43 ee Saal My 2 + as second class mail matter. » . George D. Mann eneral festivity and happin | Py tay TO HEALTH € DIET Wilt Be MEERED j (a SIR curious thing about the public, whether it is ENCLOSE _STANPEQ [S$EO FOR REPLY ~ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance inflamed or selfishly sentimental; often funny, | is Exe : > Daily by carricr per year.. Berry ea ber year Mtr - — 600 SAKE, y f Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for | stove and heat to almost boiling point, Dally by mail, per year, . TEW | be prod Ptey che the week beginning Sunday, Septem- | seasoning with a little salt. When (in state, outside Bismarct)...... | THE NEW SOUTH | R bir It, ready to serve, add a generous sprin- le of North Dakota In the words of an educator of the South “the South AND SMALLER EVERY DAY! Sunday genre rere tsel a w hat has been brought | z ssi Breakfast—Cantaloupe, all desired. Weekly by mail, in state, t yea ce at stry; : | pith : a potat Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, ievement above personality; a world 18-DAY_pieT ¢ tuce, cauliflower, ‘chicken, okra, stuf- |] set addressed to him, care of The Audit Bureau of € d to the use edited to it or ¢ and also the ein. All erein are for republication of all news not oth: it also reserved. metimes rather stupid and crucl as well. South were still to become ad- 2s the South, of all regioi adjusted to it. ast dispos who crea : than Isisure; a world that thinks | jons more often than it does of | | It is in the} ion to criticize the scien- ; | ‘iat No-— o 2-DAY ZEPPELINS! fed celery, ice cream. Monday Breakfast—French omelet, toast, stewed figs. Lunch—One kind of fresh fruit, all desired. Dinner—Roast beef, squash, com- bination salad of tomatoes, celery and cucumbers. Raspberry whip. Tuesday Melba Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. kling of chopped parsley and a tea- spoonful of whipped cream to each serving. Thin strips of Melba toast may be used if desired. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS rn Breakfast—Coddled eggs, toasted Reducing Arms ie it st point of cereal biscuits, stewed apples. Question: Mrs. H. H. writes: " ihichal Halheashi enice i groups work most amicably together to hold Lunch—Stewed corn, string, beans, | “Kindly tell me how to reduce the SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS ; Stee i celery. upper arms.” ince . oes i Dinner—Broiled mutton chops,} Answer: Any kind of arm exercises Forme ses rere | > South is preaching s sence of the in- spinach, salad of chopped cucumber | will reduce the fat on your arms. The CHICAGO si BOST ¢ of the machine, there is a t and watercress, pineapple sponge. best ones to take are those requiring (Official City, State and County % SACRIFICED—FOR WH: all of that is perf ventures is ever a t inded too often ‘ort and a long life are Go to a library some day Greeley Arctic expedition, sent into the nor U.S. army a matter of four dec; You will read there the simple, unvarni of a little group of soldiers, marooned on a devo! bound island, without food, without boa hope of escape. Week after weck they s' complaining, averting starvation by cating st {were dead. The . erippied and emaciated, were brought back to this cou “The men employed in and around the mines of the | 4 Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. ... received an average wage ; of $7.95 per day during the first quarter of 1929, While + the wage contract increased the earnings of the men, as " we desired it should, it has not resulted in increased pro- duction costs because of the co-operation and increased efficiency which have characterized the new relationship. “The effective working of the contract is further shown by the fact that the pit committees and mine superin- tendents are satisfactorily settling complaints. Only two + cases in 11 months have been appealed from the decisions | * of the pit committees and superintendents.” This is extremely gratifying news. It is becoming in- creasingly evident that a humanitarian policy is, after all, only good business. THE TOURIST GROWS CAREFUL It is a tradition—started by whom and when it is im- Ross Eakin of Glacier National Park, discussing forest fires in the national park, says that most fires now are started by natural causes, such as lightning. “Carelessness in handling campfires, smoldering cigars, E cigarets and matches at one time presented quite a problem,” he writes, “but in the last few years, thanks to enterprising Luft 9 d re the same prea out against ad- which is the last ‘ocuee another Jefferson, an- Zarshall, fadison or Calhoun. en of the South have been conspicuously perhaps the South of today finds no h men! sum on postage stamps? y to Covelop will power is to live near i brat whose parents won't give him what he man could be happy if he could overcome the n that his have designs on his purse. The less important the bill, the Editorial Comment sz of Germany. Thi a few months the air: n operation in the United State ail transporta- The more experimental flights before any of these big air- planes can be declared practicable, and the test will not be thorough unless made over the sea for long distances and in high winds. FARM CO-OPERATION (Washington Star) The era of co-operation has sct in for the farmer. Under the leadership of the government, the farmers are planning to pool their prociuce and to market it through co-operative effort on a tremendous scale. The latest developments are the announcements from New York of a gigantic co-operative organization to handle fruits and vegetables and from the federal farm board in Washington of plans for a co-operative selling agency for the wool growers of the country. Already, with the aid {and advice of the farm board, there is being created a rane grain corporation to help the farmers dispose jin or ly fashion of their wheat, corn and other grain crops. Not long ago came from New Orleans reports of @ project to organize a national chamber of agricultural co-operatives, with a membership of 2,000,000 farmers, It has been the contention of the Hoover administra- times the demand for their products. sate for their investments and their labor. It does not require great acumen to grasp the fact that if a tre- denly thrown into the market, prices of that commodity will be foreed down immediately. n Their trouble has | laid in getting prices for their products which compen- Nor does it Sequire h unsteckinged legs just na- turally wish she hadn’t when Myra’s ‘law got after her! * STOCKINGS COST! Here’s wagering that hundreds and thousands of fathers and moth- ers hope and pray that somebody makes the eritics of unclad limbs “pipe down.” For who knows better] than parents what it means to try) to keep a daughter or two or thre.| or them in silken hose? | You just can’t make a girl wear | jeotton: in fact, you can't buy ’em,| jand it’s no joke to find five of Dad's be poppa and momma won’t be a jlittle bit glad if Imogene doesn't! jhave to have her new pair of silk lunch, and makes the trip in about 10 minutes. Some of the games played by chil- | dren in rural parts of England are | 1000 years old. Talks TOA, 4, Parents be accomplished only by means of |the bribe of an ice cream cone. Moth- er, who loved the woods and fields, give him time to grow. During 1928, 420 merchant ships, with a total tonnage of 1,445,920, were jaunched in Great Britain and Ire- land. Sy MAY COME Home tT DISHES. “fo “THe ‘mendous amount of wheat or beef or tomatoes is sud- Z| 4 a NAO CLNDE, M'LAD, T AM IN A QUANDARY {~~ MRS. HOOPLE Now —AND "THE KITCHEN SINK HIDDEN FROM VIEW UNDER A MOUND OF SOILED DisHES ! WOULD WASH —THem, “URN “HE LAWN SPRINKLER on 4 || OUR BOARDING HOUSE . By Ahern | ANY HOUR BACKYARD, AND “THEM 2 ~~ AND “He MoRROW'S NIM AFRAID You MIGHT TURN AN’ ANKLE CARRYING ‘EM OUT! ~~. Now HERE'S A. BETTER PLAN IN “TRUE © Si nucee RuMl ALL Aiatt FAUCE: on TH? DISHES ~~~-THEN BAKE "EM DRY! yy: , ednesday Breakfast—Crisp waffle with maple syrup, 2 or 3 strips of well cooked bacon, stewed apricots. Lunch—Melon as desired. Dinner—Tomato jelly served in cubes, baked sea bass, cooked celery, Thursday Breakfast—Baked eggs, wholewheat drop biscuits, stewed prunes. Dinner—Salisbury steak, string beans, stuffed bect salad, carrot pud- ding. Friday . Breakfast—Baked stuffed apples. Lunch—Rice with peanut butter en casserole, shredded Icttuce, ripe olives. Dinner—Broiled halibut, baked egg- plant, combination salad of tomatoes, cucumber and parsley, Jello or Jell- well, no cream. Saturday Breakfast—Poached egg on toasted Shredded Whest Biscuit, stewed rai- sins. Lunch—Melon or grapes, sired. Dinner—Boiled fresh beef tongue, all de- mashing as much as desired of the cooked lettuce through the colander. If liquid does not equal three cupfuls, time this fall. Hon. William M. Springer, congress- man from Illinois, paid Bismarck a visit yesterday. Oliver Wendell Holmes spent his eightieth birthday quietly at Beverly farm, near Boston. : George Conkrite have trip through the northwest. '-FIVE YEARS AGO TWENTY: ‘W. O. Ward went to St. Paul today of his sliced tomatoes on lettuce, apple whip. ; a reasonable amount of muscular ten- sion and, at the same time, these ex- ercises should be used rapidly and with vigor. Probably the best plan ‘would be to purchase one of the “chest weight exercisers” which you can secure from any sporting goods store. This apparatus is attached to the wall and the exercises are talen by raising and lowering weights which are attached to handles by ropes run- nee 8 en ” vankiv aaa Lunch—Lettuce soup, salad of chop- | ning over pulleys. Doe a eee a oe ped raw cabbage, celery and tomatoes. Injury to Back ‘ Why doesn't a paternal government slip it over in the “Several Question: H. G. writes: years ago while cranking my car I had a sudden “crick” in the last joint of the back, which caused a miserable pain at the time and more or less ever since. It is in the back, extends down the front of the right leg and mainiy in the hip joint. Worse at night and early morning, but wears off dusing the day. Answer: You probably strained your back enough to cither displace one of the vertebrae or move the sacro-iliac out of position. As several years have elapsed since the injury, it will no doubt take a long time to bring about a cure. The best treat- ment is with osteopathy or chiro- ae a variety of moss, One $40 weckly wage going for the wom- mashed turnips, salad of cold cooked | practic, and the use of hot applica- : ae * Gee ae occasional ALLENE SUMNER. en folks’ silk hose. ie GROWTH string beans ‘and eclery, cup custerd. | tions to your back. Most practitioners . torms beat up' mi; ae ae an Avis Mehes dabcactn see Perhaps we should say “long live! (By Alice Judson Peale) Lettuce soup: Shred two medium | using manipulative thereapeutics have . that one or another of the party the nicht, but} 4 SOUTH ATLANTIC AIR SERVICE Piyra McHenry eppearcd in ber |the Myras!” For it’s a cinch that if| __ i 5 sized heads of lettuce and put into aj electrical appliances or therapeutic , that “we were too weak to bury his b il two days Rig gee zon of Tate before the city commis they stir up sufficient agitation the| | When first the children came to| jarge kettle over a low fire with three | lights which will produce better ef- ; The prospect now ir that the first Atlantic airplane |whieh would make any young damo-|=tockingless fad will row just be- | the country, they clung to the Horch ar four cups of water. Let simmer fects in the treatment of your Beck : came—when ail but seven of the party | service will be put on between Lisbon and Bi the | 1 so benighted as to appear in pub-| cause it’s Perea Dice eae Drier ay= |" ‘A walk, ee to the village, could Ehatrom cetan et dekarptirey ent bl peta peed gh tnintneatla drole use in your own home. Until such treatment is started, have some mem- ber of your family apply hot com- $ S any materi etter off for the kiana i - . a ‘hose every week! edd hot water. Next, add a table-] presses to your back once or twice etic” ce nasteGaaded to our comfort | Bee ne ee eee ordinal Dicer ene ie ara memunglad yO sid | was disappointed that her children | spoonful of chopped parsley and three | daily for ten or fifteen minutes with ee eee pune X art of Germany, with exeansions 15 eines S06? lies Wor AmAImEL Whe wide Ts. ia @ | should be so insensitive to the beauty | cups of whole milk. Return to the| several changes of hot towels. security or happines it, then, a total w al in Europe. La senger traffic in-| Tt begins to appear from the mum-| ARBS lot the county ana ao. alow’ touavall i Did the men who died in the f north die for | © ed 8 per cent, fre: . and baggage 6 blings and grumblings that the gir! ‘themselves of opportunities to roam : cent. Tt is now cperating almosi 100 air routes. The | without stockings is the new-fangled Orc eeplore, ALbarentlg they enraa a nothing? ievements of Pinedo, Ferrarin, Franco, and Costes in| -ubstitution for the old-fashioned bakin 3 A Me OO Of course not. They were followers of a prand old) fiying the Southern Atlantic indicated a design of France, | Stull J ‘ The newer of the endurance fads is {nothing for the whole deep green TA | cour nares : eo ee oa tablish: commercial gervices: with girl who rolled her socks and rouged | swing-sitting. Can’t some way be de-|countryside to which she had taken tradition, just as the too hopeful OFS TBS) sade | SUB BUG SS DRO: WO es bae ne CD ont i cheeks and caused the Myras| vised to make them swing for it?ithem for their summer holiday. . panich-American countries, but the Lufthansa planned | . . ing, y its folio men who, in the old phrase, “despised the | Spanien! n s, but the ansa planned | <ch pain and woe in a bygone day. ee Her Eh Pee hatecoensand world,” and welcomed a chance to ris! aya sue va sxarater are rotting: a its naa 2 eae oa! rales He jcomplained that there was ebine ca . : e mouth agains ie cigarette girl| vacation, but.sometimes harder to set-|to do. For a month they were bored | a tuscle with ma: oldest enemy, fe: ! parison v. liad tallied eee | y se | Gis writs bh had men of this type, and it has| _ In the spring of this year the Lufthansa intimated that |0" the billboards, the baby who tle up. land longed for the boardwalk of a| “We must meet new kinds of crime ‘ ia AERNG it would e: s ice to South America |W¢2"s @ suntan suit and shows his ‘i cohen vee! summer resort and a movie down the| with new kinds of laws."-—Governor FORT MIMS MASSACRE used them prodigaily. They have left before 1930. Alliances were made with the Iberia com- |Tibs quite unabashed, and the man|_ A British motorist skidded the other | stroet. Roosevelt of New York. One hundred and sixteen years ago ely ice floes, in burning dese of Spain and the Condor Syndiccte of Brazil. Taree | who has been heard to make home oo Ri Sao pmsane eral Then slowly their attitude} ie aig, of forecasting | 18%; 0m Aus. 30. 1813, more than 500 y have struggled and cyrsed and n-Romar planes with a flying radius of 4,000 | Drew. DA REOEE. & prob- changed. The advent of a foal on a “pasta abe forect men, women and children wers mas- = RGEC feet cas Rania tenn were mentioned as the machines that would be ably the American movie influence. neighboring farm delighted them.| nowadays is to announce a dream of | sacred by Indians at Fort Mims, a eee vith horiners vumpets, | uccd. It was said that there might be a competitor in the f : eels They went wading in the brook. | the future quickly enough so that | temporary stockade $5 miles north of pealss; they have gone out with banners and trumpets, | J 104i Dornier plane known as the DX. As the Lufthansa : n may be just as) | Some people are pessimistic over the | When mother went into the gar-| You will not receive @ catalogue of 't | Mobile, Ala. and they have gone out unsung and unnoticed; and | js a powerful monopoiy, it is more likely that the Dornier | Sood as mine; on the other hand, be a ais 7k sea nas ne all den to get the beans for dinner they in the next mail.”"—Roger W. -| The massacre was the first outbreak cometimes the stay-at-homes have profited by their sac-} giant will be absorbed. Now the announcement is made | mine is . Me sood a theirs, and mel cgay ante a toes ysl << at offered to help. They begged Willy | 6" esac “* iid Pree war im the ae: rifice and sometimes they have not. that the three Romar planes have been taken over, and |I arise in all my dignified majesty | On mists to let them drive the horses and) wry pive ever Fee persons sought refug z fi oy | that the German terminus of a South American service |to remark that the stockingless leg 3 were brimful of information on the give everybody who asks with the garrison at the fort, under But one thing we have always gained from them. They | win) po ‘Travemunde. is as chaste as the lily of the field. ganic itreatment for ringworm in horses| ‘Nustice, because often in this fash- |the command of Dixon Bailey. have proved, again and again, in peril and pain, that} In June Berlin reported that “the Romars will in-| To be sure, there are times when} eeepc ped moister art) mille favor in cows: ppc Se ere ee tone jalaneh eatier os peo rere eS 1 td at i her than the ape| augurate some time this summer a transatlantic service }a close survey of unstockinged legs id e ii * rving } . > 'y were surprised a pus Ne eee tee tent with coy | beqween Germany andiGouth america, making: Mops Bt | parading. up;aod dawn the. village ene we sad ss bik enough to,own.an|), Tey tonk lone walks into. toeaay * es perior force of Indians under the . and tiger; something that cannot be content with easy | ?© y 2 © SLOps | at De i up r RE | automobil ten meadows back in the hills and] « latent rs untold oe ‘tn | Lisbon, Medeira Islands and Cape Verde Islands.” Tests streets, makes one a bit old-fash- | *¥tomobile. beouehech 7 ¢ shini ‘All of us have latent powers ui half-breed Weathersford at noon Aus. % days and quiet nights, but that demands combat with | ofthe Romars have proved satisfactory. They have been |ioned and admit that, perhaps, x * * : Hide, Bs teat ie se ies the pret within ourselves if we will only wake | 30, Though they offered brave resist- 2 > the wild force of nature itself. | flown 2,500 miles in twenty-five hours, although the total | stockings are just as well, not A | cet ene eon eee pritioieed nae ae sag es had learned to| ‘e™ aD a Drecsseet. ance, virtually all of them were ae bi ‘And there is that to remember when you think of the| weight lifted was nineteen long tons. Watertight com-|any vast moral prop, but because tage ald Pee love ta culmley wa anes OA) ‘ce 5 The result of the massacre was that ‘ | partments should keep these flying boats afloat in any | they hel Ititude of | 9@¥S: Walk down any street and be- u ‘Dreary, second-rate lives are &| Alabama was almost abandoned by “lost Swiss flyers. igh die West Senieriainie Weniinn Tne greek was PS Apa tc ae @ multitude Ff! hold the use of rouge and lipstick if sacua aldase to be impatient when | More frequent cause of mental dis- | the whites. Terror and desires for re- —— i material a ¥ i on He ‘e are likely to be i disaster.”— FAIRNESS IS GOOD BUSINESS Darien ithe Seats cmintors cre carried lia Ha sabere geo eae Manders re 2 Any Fessnn fOr Such ay children do not at once respond| Gr'gdwerd Mapoer: i tettemees ne eee an ie ‘ sip Presta: : : row apo. [anointed with some liquid prep-| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) |to the opportunities we offer them.| e Ten legislature voted to Some little time ago the famous Rocky Mountain Fuel | ge Ines, where even high seas would probably not reach aratn We cuae: A ‘ ante Ad si We Soraet that *e musi give them|@ % <r" 1 Aa fpr enya ae, Ree the Company sought to insure industrial peace in its coal] yr is not extravagantly optimistic to believe that the |GUDUC*te OF &. jim> stockinged in time to become adjusted to a strange ur Yesterdays fight against the Creeks. General mines by introducing more liberal wage scales, working | problem of Atlantic services with such big scaboats is | {he eee Bee rh, fer) ote NDE Schnelder, a farmer| situation, to find themselves. and 3 | Andrew Jackson soon took the field, 4 & rules and methods of dealing with its employes. A recent | Near solution. The Dornier plane with its 12 motors and | everything in the world to imitate |i ing les south of 2 eves | slowly nee into the realization 0 5 4co and the Creek campaign lasted only . | capacity for half a hundred passengers or more , , imitate | in doing farming in an ultra-modern | new satisfactions. FORTY YEAR! seven months. report from the president of the concern indicates that | o¢ Promise. Enormous as it is in bulk, it leaves the water the exact hue of the unclad limb, it’s| manner. He has a plane, and every; When your child seems slow to Judge John E. Carland has re- © the effort has been highly successful. smoothly and quickly, although the weight lifted in a|hard to see how any sane persons morning flies 10 miles from where he|take advantage of some bright op-| tuned from Sioux Falls, where he has ACTRESS TAKES TO AIR ( ‘After citing increased sales tonnage and production | test on Lake Constance was thirty-six and a half long |C@" Object to whether the limb is/ lives to break up some new ground.| portunity, don’t be impatient and! completed arrangements for remov-| London.— Great Britain's most Beeie new resime, his.report says: tons. It developed a speed of 131 miles. There must be |OVered oF not, He flies back home every noon for| feel that you have failed. Wait and|ing to the South Dakota city some| beautiful screen actress, Miss Eve Grey, has taken up aviation to keep up with the trend of modern life. Miss Grey got her start on the legitimate stage, and her beauty and personality soon won her a screen job. She has been active in sports all her life and has taken up aviation as a branch of sports. HANDLESS FAMILY Rio de Janeiro.—Two generations 2% @ family living in Brazil have id duced members that have been us hands and feet in five cases. Three ants. TOUGH FOR HIM Beautiful Girl: No, Sam, I cannot s, | tion—and of tl a Ss ¢ . 7 d mn nee 20-00) Ke Si: Uae met carson, |G Ni ee eee aes Bur L HAVE SUCH PAINFUL Wa “OH MORAG » TMT oy yeittamaieaminageng rat e 8 3 farmer was marketing. Production on the farms of this HANGNAILS ! —« WouULD You by ALL Dejected Lover: No use; I'm & Happily, however, it begins to look as if the tourist is! country is not a problem. The farmers know how to —, . SL GAS STOVE OVEN Ail” eee, ews mending his ways. A bulletin from Superintendent J.| produce, and with diligence can do so, far excecding at ADVISE ME “TAKING ALL THE pert. FLAPPER, Fa \NIN SAYS: SUN WoULD GRY “Hem great acumen to understand that th> farmer, standing alone, is easily the victim of the buyer, who knows that the farmer must sell when his crops come in. The purpose of the efforts now being made by the government and the farmers themselves is to make it pocsible for the farmers to chtain more adequate prices for. agricultural products than they have ob- tained in the past. The farmers have suffered greatly dn comparison with the manufacturers and with labor when it comes to selling. They have to buy in a well- organized market. If the farmers now are to benefit by higher prices, come one must pay those prices. It remains to be seen whether the general consumer of foodstuffs is to pay this bill or whether the price in- ¢reases are to be squeezed out of the middleman, who is reputed to have grown fat at the expense of the farmer. There 1s no question that there has been a tremendous spread between the price paid the farmer for his prod- uce and the prige paid by the consumer for foodstuffs. But, whoever pays the price, it has been clear for a Icng time that the American farmer, generally speaking, has been entitled to a better deal. It has been ple: the farmer by the Republicans and the Democrats. f Republican administration has gone ahead with its plans | to give the farmer a change to obtain better prices for his ucts. Th? huge co-operatives already planned @ measure its answer to the demand for farm re- they worl: successfully, the farm problem, 50. ag the farmer 23 a class {5 ji <i the co-operation of park visitors, this cause has been If the American tourist has learned the great lesson | ebout taking care with fire hazards, the old tradition will - have to be revised. ng . 23 ; SENTIMENT _ Beciety has not outlawed generally the execution of these who offend her, but the public, in the United ‘Btates at least, will not tolerate hangings and elctro- ‘eutions on holidays or within the week of their occur- For example, governors scrupulously avoid fix- } execution dates that fall within Thanksgiving or pas week, mostly because of the public protest arouse. iMlustrate the frequent sentimen- ‘the illogic of that sentimentality? lef. ss: