The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1929, Page 4

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S884 B2OG48 2885 AkREezssssasse ZeanTeS2 | he co tie wi x: cle of va co th ra th ar be - pa m™ = ‘The Bismarck » Daily by cavticr Tribune), An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER stablished 1873) Published by the B marck, N. D., and er 88 second class mail George D. Mann peretien | Rates Pays able in Advance arck Tribune Company. B t the postoffic Bis- and Pu President Daily by mail. p Daily by mail, p (in sta Daily by mail, Tights of repu' also reserved BOSTON tinued stabilit since the days of 1870 who were con and worthy of being noted. Bi: on the high tide of favor ‘was the other commandi revealed soricti @ dominant id figure, had to wor store what his illustrious predecessor had created out materials waiting shaped and ready at hand. In depres- sion and in storm Stresemann also wrought well as Bismarck, but he wrought tortuously out of prostration and with infinite p: ided it out of the | dark days into the ligh s dance such as his | still is needed by the German republic, so his death is a stroke of evil fate to his country and a gap in the operation of Europe's statesmanship that was brii | ness that war-smitten continent to a sense of its interdepend- | ship; ence and to some basis of stabilized r send It was the province of Bismarck to fe into power ann, who tihelmstrasse and t made Bismarck h chao see to re- of that naisa Th barg Islar o- sreat role in| cr has been practically the Minot Associa- ota Develop- Harvester company Shipping by River Again with a revival of the use of inland waterways middie west, as exemplificd by the growth in pop- of the Micsicsippi barge lines and the pending extension of service to the Missouri river, comes word eastern rivers, too, are to have their part in the ren- ance, he Connecticut river once had many steamboats and | es, Which carried passengers and freight from Long | nd sovnd far up into Massachusetts. For years the | sed. Now, however, busi- | is picking up. Oil companies are discovering that | ping by water is economical, and are preparing to | by river. | River terminals are beiny expanded at Hartford, and their freight as fer as Springfield, Mass., the period and evenis that led up to the Franco- Prussian | preparations are being made for extensive use of the ‘war and to hold that role through that bricf conflic through and following the unification of Germany 1 o| It the reich under the grandfather and father of Kais ser | Tac Wilheim. Bismarck had a monopoly upon German statesmanship | con in all the events of the creation of the German empire | and its transmission to the wrecking crew which suceced- ed his administraticn in Wilhelmstrasse in later yo; His role was essentially that of creator and preserver, M if he now 22d then indulged in weighty cultural S| wire these were the clashes of a politician and they never took | the form of a peril to the federation of the German | ,. states. le Thus Bismarck became a towering figure in European pate statesmanship and its international politics, a man al-| ways consulted in the councils of the powers. In this realm he played the game of German unity just as he did | in the domestic politics of the reich. The history of Germany after the Iron C! dropped became the vainglory of the res scion of the old Wilhelm whose empire Bismarck had | ave consolidated. Wilhelm the Second, from that time on j ‘aid. until his flight into Holland with the collapse of the | German cause in the World war, filled the spotlight of German existence. He chose chancellors who for the most part were. amiable old second-raters, colorless “uncles” and “papas” not calculated to cast their shadow | cons | river's facil | Industrialicts, said Mr. economy cften lies in spending money freely, while the | | worst | policy. | “We must lift up an entire industry toward a highe: a preat deal of moi is courageous and creative spendini | motorcar in every walk of life. is interesting to note this revival in river traffic. 5 were for 2 time our chief arteries of commerce. n they fell into almost complete disuse. Now they are < back. Modern industrialism demands that every | form of cheap transportation be used to the utmost. Wasteful Economy edern indu: has no greater foe than the executive | has short-sighted ideas about economy. | is is the conciusion reachcd by Charies F. Abbott, | ive director of the American Institute of Stcel Con- | ction, in a speech before the National Industrial Ad- association at Cincinnati. Abbott, must realize that true waste is that caused by a tight-fisted and penurious | zge in tools “We are w ethods and business principles,” he ling to spend money to accomplish it— | Y, individually and collectively. That the statesmanship of ‘umption, and genuine progr A medical writer refers to the increasing use of the | This, according to the across that of the All-Highest. Count von Buclow came; % nearest to the stature of an international statesman, but | paar 7™ #$ What Js spoiling every one of his walls. — Wilhelm promptly dispensed with this ambitious and clever fellow and so, eventually, Germany came to the! The Youth's Companion has been sold out of Boston chancellorship of that rather inconsequential junier, Dr. von Bethmann-Hollweg. The history of these figurehead chanccllors, of von Caprivi and Hohenlohe and their kind, might be con- signed to the ash can without derogation to the political prestige of the German empire in the old days of Europe's balance of power. Only what Bismarck accomplished by his iron fist and what Stresemann vaged by hard- headed sagacity counts in the record of modern Ger- many’s political achievements. These men were empire builders. | | Bun Al } cess Monuments to the statecraft of this greatest post-war | statesman of Germany are to be found in the general pol- icy of reconciliation with the reich’s enemies, which he 89 successfully established that it brought about the Lo- arno security pact to disabuse the suspicions of France! Qu and made Germany a member of the League of Nations, | Jus Ee also inspired confidence in France by the renun- ciation of Alsace and Lo: ne, helped in the adoption of | the Dawes plan and was the neediul hand to guide the | situation creaicd by Young plan, displacing the Dawes scheme as an adjustment of the German repar- ; ations. Strecemann wes a man of vision, a sort of German. t Briand, and had he lived he mus: have contributed mas- | teriully to the molding of the new Europe w reams | £0 near to unity that it sometimes t there can be | ectaki:shcd a United Staves of its own. Dr St mann Iosmed as one of of a Evropo li cut cf the despair cf wi to esvablish the Europe of Jasting peace. Pc 3 he has lef: that aspiration as a hevitage which his try and his internaticnal asso- eiztss ef the other powers of Europ? may fra:p and cone vert into a tengible droem, aaotncr posthumous monu- ment to his place in t. an. Alfalfs Seed as Income Crop Growing of alfzifa for cced is a branch for agriculiure Which E. J. Hatlerud, county egen: at Minot, thinks | S04 Might prove a profiiabie industry for North Dalcta in the northwestern corner end soil that seciion ts c21 “ered better als d to alfalfa culture than most other ‘parts of the state. Already the farme:s there are fairly deep in alielfa growing for hay. Sinc2 1927, wien there Was an acreaze of 9,000 in several of the northwestern ‘Counties, the ccreaze has grown to 19,000. “Alfalfa eced growing will succeed in some localities and ff in others. There is a technique about raising it that to be understood. Attention clso hes to be paid to character of the soll and the climate. Where there is of moisture alfalfa will run to p!enty of hay, but ruts the Mowers end prevent 2 se2d crop. the alfalfa is more likeiy to run to that the btostoms heve a better The seed also will be tion | Am Mrs, be th rent age: In nell euch lived. sold By has no juctentiy recorted. it, they do so in the con wise], years ago, the Red Cross was asked to help. ative: China made it whoily impracticable to employ Red Cross ne war-torn the Gravest deubt was expressed as to whether a single ‘sa famine relief. int éuris relief measures that were allowed to brea down because of sheer neglect. clusion thet American Red Cross money sent into China teaey weuld be money thrown away, Pledged to the na- whieh it | to Detroit, but no bids have yet been received for the ker Hill monument cr Faneuil Hall.—Arkansas Ga- | zette. 1 that is needed to make this naval limitation a suc- is to put the pare in parity, People who think too much of themselves do not think enough, | Editoria) Comment The Red Cross and China (Washington Star) uite aptly the New York Times describes the report issued by the American Red Cross about fariine con- | ditions in China as “one of the most depressing docu- ; ments that has ever been issued by this organization, which has done so much to alleviate human suffering.” The report emanates from the three special commis- stoners sent to China earlier in the year at the instiga- of President Hoover. They were headed by Col. | Ernest P. Bicknell, the seasoned Red Cross executive in | charge of foreign activities. Conscientious inquiry into amine conditions led him and his associates to join in an t of mal-administration, of callous carclessness, of crass ndifference, and of conduct generally that depicts if, to an appalling degree, as the architect of eries, or at least as the victim of some of elt-soeking, so-called leaders. It is a pitiable narra- It must have grieved the Red Cross to fcel com- 'd to sponsox it, for the inclinations, as well as the raditions of that world almoner all run in the direction ef succor, aimost under any circumstances. Bu the American Red Cross is the trustee of the rican people in the realm of relief. When Mr. and Average Man intrust their annual subscriptions to iousness that every doilar will aries weighed before it is spent, end, if spent, spent At the outbreak of the Chinese famine some two Its repre- n the ground, experienced in relief work in ‘ar Hast, reported that while distress was unquestion- widespread, the prevalence of civil wer throughout cies, 1) rival war lords scrambling for power and pelf inces, end devastating as they fought, of American bounty would ever reach a proper nation. The Red Cross determined to keep hands off order to checx up on its own information the Bick- mission was dicpat as one of the first acts insti- zation. The president's he bas seen so much of the world’s suffer- the pact fift ion years, is easily touched by calamity as eppresses China, w! he himself once . The mission went, it saw, it has voted in the nega- Tt learned of food ‘supplies allowed to rot cr turned to the military hordes; of Chinese bonds that were and the proczeds filehed by the war lords; of famine end Iarge, the Bickncll mission e2me to the con- as it Jagd to husbend zealcusly the great funds with 43 periodically endowed, the Red Cross plainly recourse than the one to which it has re- Amsrican sympathy with the Chinese people's troubles remains keen and s' It is reascuring to Inarn from Gross report that nature is ebout to atford a *| country jit Cy can? DAY a Beauty contests are at least as old 2s the Trojan war and probably older than that, but because of the way they have thrived in this country the | past ten years, and the number of eauties who have contested for Miss |; America honors, we are apt to con- sider them our own pet institution. However, Miss Turkey, chosen the beauty queen of her coun- try in a competition that was spon- sored by the leading newspaper of the and which had 50 judges chosen from the arts, theater, the medical profession and the municipal- ity. ” And her reply when asked what she | expected to do about her laurels was: “I'd like to get in to the movies. I'd rather have a carcer than get mar- vied.” And how many years is it now ince Turkish women discarded their veils? France has recently been holding contests, but not the regular stereo- typed sort. It seems to be custom- ary in the smart cafes and hotels to have the guests vote for the most dis- tinguished looking woman in the room. When the votes are collected, the lady who has won the honor is ap- ; Proached to know if she minds being declared the most distinguished lady in the room. Just what would happen if she re> fused is not known, for so far no woman has objected. x * BUSY WOMEN The first school of its kind in this country has just been established by Dr. Mabel 8. Douglass, dean of the New Jersey College for Women—a | school of politics for women. whereas preparation for motherhood psychology, cooking and the ability to read and write, that she needs a sound training in civil government. She claims that housework has been time than ever before. women do with the time they used to have that they had to have to do all the actual work they did? Having otherwise | |Feriha Tevfik Hanoum, was recently It is Dean Douglass’ contention that | | should include hygiene, dict, child; so simplified that women have more | Which causes me to ask: What do) just visited in a home with all the Modern conveniences, with a maid and a laundress thrown in. I must | say I never had less time, nor did I ever see a busier woman than my hostess. But I am perfectly sure if gnyone suggested to her that she Ought to study politics she would go in for that too. She is seriously en- gaged in doing what the community {expects and apparently it expects |quite a large order from her. If she | stopped to think about it, I'm not sure she would not be glad to go back to the old ways, and let all the time savers go. She might come out ahead in the long run. | BARBS ! ° A great many women are taking up the law. says a bulletin from an east- ern college. And probably an even greater number are laying it down. zee A woman's magazine says that au- |tumn fashions will be full of eccen- ricities. That's not a very tactful | thing to say. *** * | There are 369 generals and 5646 pri- vates in the Mexican army. So far the 369 are holding out valiantly against promotion. zee There were 58 slight earthquakes | during one day recently in Hawaii. No wonder those Hula maidens can dance. x“ * k The name of a new book is “The Runaway Sardine.” flateweller who fled sereaming to the wilds, esr ® Edison keeps on going around and around in his search for a new sourc for rubber. Did he ever try the steaks | on a restaurant menu? (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc. A DOC’S LIFE ; _ London, Oct, 4.—Leaving the bed- side of his dying mee: to answer an urgent sick call, Dr. J. R. Caidwell |found that the man who appealed fer aid over the telephone was raving madman and had attacked cwn wife with a sled; hammer, alleged the maniac attacked him with a razor. the case, the doctor returned home cnly to find his wife dead. Concrete was first used for pave- Bellefontaine, O., in 1884. Probably some } While the doctor attended her, it is After taking care of ment in Inverness, Scotland, in 1865. The first in America was laid in worpDs (By Alice Judson Peale) Never have people thought so much about their children, never, surely, have they talked so much about them. Intelligent mothers with restless zeal read books and take courses to help them in the arduous task of Parenthood. They learn about “the child.” They develop a vocabulary full of such words as “inferiority,” “inhibition” and “mother complex.” They acquire a multitude of labels, but not always do they glean from their studies that precious insight which makes knowledge something more than a matter of vocabulary. There is, I fear, among us modern parents a tendency to substitute words for insight, talking Yor doing. Words are so easy to acquire. In- sight and the power to act upon it de- mand discipline not of our children, but of ourselves. To call your child’s shyness an “in- feriority complex” is one thing, to love |and understand him so well that you |are able to build up his self confi- {dence and draw him into happy ac- tivity is quite another. To recog- nize that your child is an “introvert” ‘is not in itself helpful. To feel and | meet his need for active pursuits and childish companionship is much more to the point. Too often one sees parents whose ; use of the vocabulary of child psy- chology is but the charting of the | confusion and inadequacy which ex- ts within themselves. It serves as a salve for the conscience while they turn their backs upon difficulties {which would require but real good will and common sense for their so- lution. Words are tools of knowledge, and while the bringing up of children can be heiped and illumined by them, the understanding they imply must pass through the heart of one who is hon- est and mature before it can become effective. ‘The Merscy Tunnel, the cerethony of “holing through” which took place recently, will be tne largest sub- aqueous tunnel in the world. Four lines of traffic will run through the tunnel, and the distance of three miles from the street level at Liverpool to normal conditions in eight minutes, Saw. CHANCE on THE astac EGAD CINDE M'LAD. + You'Re THE ONLY ONE wWetHe HoUSE WHo HAS BOUGHT A I AM RAFFLING oFF! ~~ COME, COME, i MY WORD, AA AUTO VALUED AT $100. AND You MAY WIAs (Tf FoR Witd A QUARTER £ Ji we NY OF-TH’ DEAL BAD LUCK To io AUTO Susr HANICE oF A Guy I Wl CASES tT'D JUST BE MY Wil THAT OL’ CHURN # ~~ Tit BUY A CHANCE, ‘BUT You PUT rv ih TH’ NAME Peas cot eve 755 i AN MAKE: Monley! | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern . 2 Hing, Fourth street Jat “HATS TH’ STING \) NUMBER 13 WELL “HAT Gives ME EASE OF - MIND ——~Now ie I CAN FIND SOMEONE MORE AFRAID OF WIIG TH’ CAR THAN I AM, TLL SELL His PRIZE Ticket Birkenhead will be negotiated under | Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for the week beginning Sunday, Oct. 6th: | Sunday Breakfast: Poached egg in milk on Melba toast, stewed apricots. Lunch: Baked squash, celery and ripe olives. Dinner: | Melba toast dressing, baked eggplant, | cooked celery, salad of tomato, raw spinach and asparagus (canned), ice cream, spinach, Monday Breakfast: Baked egg, genuine wholewheat bread and butter, stewed prunes. Lunch: Stewed corn, cooked string beans,.shredded lettuce. Dinner: Vegetable soup, salisbury steak, cooked small carrots. Salad of raw celery and cold cooked string beans, baked apple. Tuesday Breakfast: Cottage cheese, Mclba toast, applesauct. Lunch: *Baked potato, cooked cu- cumbers, endive salad. Dinner: Baked mutton, cooked let- tuce, cooked turnips, salad of grated Taw beets on lettuce, stewed figs. ednesda: we y Breakfast: Coddled egg, broiled ham, Melba toast, stewed raisins. Lunch: Macaroni (wholewheat Product) seasoned with butter, oyster Plant, raw celery. Dinner: Baked Belgian hare, cooked beet tops, squash, salad of shredded raw cabbage and parsley, apple whip. Thursda: iy Breakfast: Wholewheat muffins and peanut butter, stewed pears. Lunch: Carrot loaf, cooked spin- ach, cooked celery. Dinner: Vegetable soup (with cream in place of meat base). Roast pork, cooked string beans, combina- tion salad of tomatoes, celery and parsley, stewed apricots. Friday French omelet, Melba toast, stewed prunes. Lunch: Cooked okra, cooked small parsnips, lettuce. Dinner: Baked white fish, baked ege plant, beet tops, salad of sliced tomatoes, pincapple gelatin (no cream), Saturday Ground wholewheat mush and milk (no sugar). } Lunch: carrots and peas, stuffed celery. Dinner: Veal loaf, cooked beets, asparagus, McCoy salad, dish of cooked berries. "Baked potatoes: Select and thoroughly scrub the desired number of potatoes. Bake in a slow oven un- til thoroughly done, or about one hour. Cut the potatoes in halves lengthwise while hot, scoop out cen- thule ataal BATTLE OF GERMANTOWN Today is the 152nd anniversary of the famous Battle of Germantown which took place October 4, 1777, be- tween the Americans under Washing- ton and the British and Hessians un- der Howe. Washington opened the engagement early in the morning of the 4th and at first his army forced back the British and victory seemed almost cer- tain. But the Americans became con- fused in the fog and opened fire on each other, while a body of English, who had taken refuge in a large stone house, in the rear, detained a part of the American forces. ‘The accident, coupled with the con- tinual firing in the rear, threw the American troops into confusion, but Washington succeeded in restoring order and led them from the field. The British lost 575 men and the Americans 673. Germantown, ® former suburb of Philadelphia, since 1854 has been in- cluded within the municipal limits Bnd now S0kens Ae AA OES Ae city. [Our Yesterdays | FORTY YEARS AGO ‘The first Chinese vote ever cast in Bismarck, and in all probability the first in North Dakota, was given pod Roast chicken or veal with | ters, season with cream and beat until light and fluffy. If desired, chopped Parsley, spinach or other green vege- |] Dr. McCoy will gladly answer i] Personal questions on health and t sd — to him, care of The | “ioc @ stamped addressed envelope for reply. table may be added. Heap the mashed Potatoes into shells, sprinkle with Meiba toast crumbs, and return to oven until browned. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Non-Catarrh-producing Foods Question: = Mrs. J. H. writes: “Please name the foods that are non- , catarrh-producing. I have 2 cold in the head all winter. I may have chronic catarrh. If so, can diet cure this trouble?” Answer: You can use all of the non-starchy vegetables and fruits without producing any excessive ca- tarrhal mucus. All of the foods high in calory value, as the starches, su- gars and proteins may be said to b* catarrh-producing if used in largo quantities. The hydrocarbons, that is, the fats and oils, also contribute | their share in adding to the toxins which irritate the mucous membranes nd produce catarrh. The best dict for you to take is one free from starches, sugars and fats, but with a small amount of portein and plenty of non-starchy vegetables. Sulphur and Molasses Question: A.D. asks: “Is the old- feshioned remedy composed of stl. phur and molasses good for the bloos' If so, how often and how much shoule be taken?” Answer: The sulphur and mola:se: treatment is no doubt effective in re- moving some intestinal toxemias, but a fruit fast is far superior for ac- complishing this effect. Baby Has Rash Question: Mother writes: “For th2 last four or five weeks my baby, five months old, has been breaking out in arash. It seems ta come on during the night. The doctor does not seem to know what it is. His diet is one pint of water each day, with a little sugar in it.” Answer: I don't blame your baby for having a rash if you dilute his milk so much and put sugar into ii also. Give him four ounces of pure Holstein cow's milk every four hours, and do not dilute the milk or put anything in it. Just before each feeding give him a teaspoonful or two of pure orange juice. (Copyright, 1929, by the Bell Syndi- cate, ) “The only evidence of perpetual mo- tion that I have ever observed is the continued activity of those in of- ficial places to increase their own sal- aries."—Senator Borah. ses @ “Any leading team that survives this (football) season, with one of the harder schedules to face, will be some- thing of a wonder.”—Grantiand Rice. Collier's.) se * “A man may look down and like it. A woman never looks anywhere but up."—Allison ies oan Set.) “The record “ot today is the com- mercial speed of tomorrow.”—Sir Alar Cobham. *e 2 ‘People nowadays are out of breath physically, mentally, and spiritually. «+. True life is not made up of things but qualities of mind and heart.”— “Happiness is the emotional tone accompanying the self-realization of a sine ver ig Pitkin. “Women 40 and 50 years of age are obviously embarrassed at betraying their interest in such a ‘stagey’ ac- complishment, but they are determ- ined to learn clogging and after one ‘@'|lesson you can't stop them.”—James R. Whitton, ae ie clog master. ment I am seldom tem! to in- dulge”—John Cousens, of Tufts University. FORGETTING GoD Johnstown, Pa. 4.—Present day Christians ‘iving God thet their second best, is the opi James Emblen of the Svangelical church. "Christian he says, “have been giv’ ving the laferier and second best to as did the priests in the days of Malachi, Sod hes | been 4a testimony py the world oa, ie see know God ae who are or ne am Pe ccestatien” hae ai) i GaN, a & * 6 es ty bogs a le al | ‘ i ‘ s tM re] >

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