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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1929 e Bismarck ‘Tribune An Jutependent Newspeprr j TES OLS ST NE Es tebluit Bit ; pe | September Mourn! THE HEALTH VALUE OF DRIEDient foods are Gehydrated that it is ‘VEGETABLES impossible to serve a complete dinner The Americen Indian wes quite fa-]of these foods. For example, onc milier with the methods of sun-dry- ling fruits, vegetables, amd meats to 1 Crease weed Press Next of celery. lettuce anc which had been soaked vegetables, one could 3 5 or crackers could be composed largely of i Nour. Macaroni or dried could be used. If one desired a one could use the dehydrated 8. apples, peaches, bananas. wherries or even an ice cream je from powdered milk. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | Question: Anxious asks: Is there |tities of a quickly prepared vegetable anything that can be given a man |soup mixture. During the Pranco-| secretly that will cure him of the | @rink habit? I wish I could find something that would make him Greadfully sick if he touched liquor.” Answer: There is nothing I know of which will cure the drink habit un- ly in Germany, and it is)less the drinker is really willing to t the large quantities of be cured. It is then very simple. A x | g it gp ub! it (Offivied City, Nieves and County Veweperer ae { Hh ( 4 quir 5 3 3 ‘SE; AL SEITE ET ' nipulate pi Gils because the came to the « found to be began in pecd! ptluects a Their place in modern so- | no better than the old ones they secure. Therefore women earlier pugnacious | time is ripe now for ment. 1 as the moment of coopera- anda spirit of couldn't be any worse. + * & Some men find obscurity naturally and a tan abendon the | femin. The # higher develop- sports 1929. NEA Service, Inc.) can stand to see Ot It took @ spectac pave gir Gerby to cryste. Exposition of justries purpose siness an HOMECOMING (By Alice Judson Peale) The children are returning home irom the seaside and the mountains. They are brown and sound and strong. They have lived all summer in the possible clothes. in the freest of environment. They are used large space—to room in which to and shout ‘The first days at home in the polite surroundings of rugs and curtains and 2 | proper dinner table etiquette will be hard on these healthy young barbar- jans. founded ot anufacturers, | 1 jture spent much time and cried vegetables and potatoes in Ger- jmany explains why she was able to hold out so long in the struggle without obtaining supplies from other countries. With the en- try of the United States into the others become the husbands ef | World war, numerous plants were established; and the United States Department of Agricul- effort in experiments to perfect the scientific dehydration. As a result of many ex- periments it was found that where the fruit or vegetables were exposed to excessive heat the vitamins were {destroyed and the salts oxidized. The | foods were discolored and robbed of their finest flavors. It was found that vitamin C is destroyed by sun- drying at a moderate temperature Providing the dehydrated food is quickly sealed and kept in a cool storage place. Some foods such as spinach can be reduced in weight on a ratio of 16 to 1. One ton of apricots, if canned, would weigh about 3,500 pounds, while one ton dehydrated and packed will weigh abou: 350 pounds. This is indication of the great saving in stor- age and transportation by the dehy- crating method of preserving food. ‘When properly performed, dehy: dration is simply the removal of wa: fast on acid fruits will in a day or two destroy all eraving for liquor. The jeure is then complete if the drinkr- jreally desires a cure. : HM. asks: “Does sugar combine well with starchy foods?” Answer: Starchy foods should be used only with the cooked and raw non-starchy vegetables. Sugar shou! {not be used at the same meal with starchy foods. Exercises fer Back Question: W. G. asks: “What ex- jercise will help a girl of fift to |straighten her back. There is a slight hump neer the shoulders in the back jdue to bending over, reading. Answer: All exercises which tense |the muscles of the upper back will jhelp you to straighten up and de- velop normally-shaped shoulders. 233 : z E : fie ini 3 g i E ii $83 et i ter and does not impair the food nesses and other fem- value of the foods. So many differ: The city air is enervating. The ses respond. Thi | pavement, the roar of traffic, the un- to get an Zz our of | Quiet streets at night are exhausting help lesser lights to y which have become accus- n lines climb @ bit’ tomed to pure air, to green meadows ¢ heights they have/ and to hearing at night only the/ . | voices of crickets or the wash of the of sportsmanship | surf feminism has ar-/ The routine of the city day neces- yi 8 ay is Waid te ba Editorial Comment eR SARY HARLEM On Sept. 16, 1776, the Battle of Har- Jem Heights, in which the Americans repulsed the British Ages of Lift (Nex York Herald ve in congress, t fylvania, Georges Whar of the upper ch tr efpoused the live mon peopie, possibly, his eaure by “pl on Pe H and cooperation in niber nved, y nulliner f n tamed when man real d t ved | r proof than the sue the 200-ton station of the lyn bridge terminal th ithout the crowds of + tne operation s of ancient engineering exemp! onehenge or the pyramids, and marvel~ ter accomplishme: 4 the country. Meals. bed time, ° Ume, must be ordered to suit the BARBS [needs of the more complicated city o @ household. Fi | No wonder the children find it hard A Belgian woman told police th? | to accept the change. No iXher Gay she had been married 50 ithey rebel with irritability and fa- times and engaged to 652 men, and | tigue against @ life so much less free none of the jilted 602 seems to have | and joyous than that of their sum- sued her for eee . promise. | mer holiday. Consider how much even you and I feel the imprisoning The United State idea of rep- | ermosphere of city life and think how erations seems to be quite a healthy | much more acute must be the reac- is | Young plan, Be tion of a child whose life so much more than ours depends for its satis- ‘Two bandits scolded a Kansas City | factions upon physical }Maz who happened to have only 59| Keeping these things in mind its cents when they robbed him. That haps will help us to make the should be @ lesson to him. | @ays at home easier for the women leaders were primarily egoist ** | We will permit them to get | fighting for personal places ina man- A small town 4s one where one of | the new life. We will be less made world. They found little time the leading citizens deplores circus | as to manners and apparance. for constructive cooperation ¢ they take away 20 much| We will not be too critical . like aviation, feminism has voices or peevish dispositions. | crossed into the higher stag see to it that they get plent: tical give and take. Won and relaxation. We will give | airplanes are no longer on t time to rediscover the com: sive. They have “arrived, of being home again. Juggaze of © With that 11 ng possum nd for the | on the proh $ = = earnestness t Vare won the nom Wilson, the Per eommissioner of Ja because he was Yepresented the ; venians, ‘The 1 titled to be repr Tn Per the chagrined toes ate that fiery Jim Reed, of pet up a hue and ery again | penditures in behalf ot Vare losing opponents also had sper ease fauce for the gouse not at all. ‘The contest to bar Vare deny those’ who elected bin the right to be represe as they feel on political problems, tu " thon-wide war on the vice of m | made the goat of the reform | Veniently for the purposes of | bhim—rather his cause—at the Thus, in one aspect former Senator Jim —Wighly moral revolt tics, ai all times an evil in popu the rest of his pre “They were having 4 hard tme w overload. I had to ha’ last. I thoug! t their luggage There is sen passing of aviat: fAoneer “lone eagle” a a stage of cooperation. ously, it seems to me. | Pasting into that same » x * ® GIVE AND TAKE Feminism, lke aviation, | “lone eagle” individualistic sity. British battleships had opened fire on the Americans the or in Wilson but in nents of ids think ted hy in lifting of weights was perhaps the first engineer- vily of mankind. ‘The easiest of weight bfters. neologists believe, be- ame edingly however | tore mn erful Ft ll civilized at a of exerting fol wetted wooden and bursts the strongest stones, seer W used by the ancients for lifting pur- did use it instead of an explo- Uselr stone quarries, ‘The mystery often pian engineers moved the of the py ss really no myster 4 be but b doubt that the suffi A inclined ramp of earth, afterw: Of real lifting machines, the firs litue appreciated ich Mourished at Alex had he mrinous primary ¢ i ey E : a ol i In for the ga Hen Se puun i iT i i ge a z es sive In workin} which in effect je about b i i é § -—* & The new golf balls are appearing | on several courses, The consensus of jonas seems to be that if they are ————we asatnnene@errcovas i il ow into ay g Vare wits | ~ up thus been con those who could not bea! | of eng anid One of tin position of | tame the contest wi “The little fact that women are half the human race means that, produced to justify any sweeping gen- made about ‘the sex.’"— Mary Agnes Hamilton. pasts, that typified by the « dot M nst Lhe cuse, is credited with a m: ssels entirely gut of the ha 5@ great 4 feat in tho: today, hut still we 10 of moi ui ld “$m another aspect it strove to turn a ‘Anto # half victory by chicane nly sham, hypocrisy and dishonest: polis Meenwhile Peunsylyvs #entation at « time when legislation of Lhe most v Ment to its interests is pending wi the tant! veyisie All of which does not prove that the Vare ext holy one, but nevertir signi defeat by ballots | doub and, # such, signified | besa p= texterennd enon 4 continues Lo be without repre gone cary ‘There can be one at the Alexandriay {or perhaps hi Invented two lifting machin crew jack still used in lifting a pump which is the germ of the Crediting an assist to Blaise ancrisn colleague (a:T HAVE RETURNED sin, FEELING THAT You Dante ) HE MATTER WITH YouR eS CONSCIENCE ON A DIVISION *) PEWEEN RELATIVES, oF WN THE FORTUNE LEFT You BY YouR UNcLE ! ao 1 THINK, BY “THIS Time, UM-M ~ No DOUBT IT IS A CUSTOM WITH -THe HooPLEes ON YouR SIDE, REMOVE A HAT ONLY FoR THE PURPOSE OF PASSING IT, EH? ~Hm-m- vr EGAD, | DONT BELIEVE You HAVE HAD “HE HoNoR OF MEETING MY WIFE we se & “We are faced with difficulties in “If men were as much men as liz- sards they'd be worth look- ing at."—D. H Lawrence. ‘The “carrion. plant,” an English jungie growth, has a strong smell of the element of righteou:nes: a the senator-elect. | z i F ~~NO ~~UM-m- DUST STEP Ws HE PARLOR AND I wilt CALL HER‘ mI BID You | Hat YoU SEE (1 AS taigtes meat, which attracts . files A MORAL OBLIGATION, AS WELL AS ONE oF daNor AND SUSTiCE! Old Age Pensions (Brooklyn Standard-Union) Old age pensions were opposed by William D. Bosler New York in an address the other night to the Amer- an Federation of Industrial Women on the ground “giving @ man a certain amount every month will is es i 5 The Mob and the Radicals ‘The kidnaping of the textile strike leaders in North | tp, Carolina makes dismal reading Hot enly destroy his reliance and independence but kill It isn't pleasant to think of that scene by the dark pad gl idtaetted gd to vite Mi own bts ater : fi pat old see. pensions would put a premium on the de- ‘inaien Bipen and bound, flogged with sick | ysnaent elaes, paupcrize it and destroy its independence end straps by his angry captors, his two companions A nelf relian ‘Watching, the three menaced with hanging when they} ‘These are statements which do not in any way touch ‘Were sufficiently beaten, the merits of the case for old age pensions. Giving a | "The question of the textile strike it | man 4 certain amount every month instead of shutting * felf does not enter | him up in tdlencss in an elmshouse is @ means of main- into this episode. ‘The kidnaping and flogging are things ‘Phat can arouse only the disgust of decent people, taining his self-reliance and independence; in most cases Ing wilh easce of pull dependence in old ager _ Yet it will not do to dismiss the affair as the work of | We have made gicat, progress. in’ recent generations and back-alley toughs, ‘There were such | in dealing with pauperism. To keep the old folks in the ple in the mob, of course; there are in all mobs, The discouraging thing is the thing that is discouraging ‘every outbreak of mob viglence--the fact that it homes of relatives after they are unable because of age to earn enough to support themselves completely is de- ip the main, the work of men who are ordinarily ing and kind-hearted; men who are, in other erable, and 1s cheaper than feeding, clothing them and Average citizens, housing them entirely at public expense, Mr, Bosler talks as if any octogenarian could go ou: and get & good job if he only wanted to, that pauper- mob is nothing but # collection of such temporarily, under the lash of fear or deep up all contro} of thelr passions and stopped powers. | Fj (ot i | é i é Hi fi i a i a3 | | ze itt ig i it is I q If : id jum could be abolished by just issuing notice that ft has no right to exist, It uzed to be suid that society does not owe any man 4 living. But our governments all now recognize that they owe it to theiselves not to let the aged and infirm without treatment. As it is, tate provides free medical service for anyone who have not the money to pay for it himself, It bears the whole cost of the living of the aged who have nohody else to support them. The propaial to perform this duty, when practicable, by means of an old age pension has much to commend it, and cannot be dismissed by merely caying that the destiiutes t to be peuperised, if wba i rt : i thet makes an affair of this kind so disheart- ue display of and senseless rage--hut the 9 ‘Me 60 clove to the Hy : :