The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 11, 1929, Page 4

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Have We a Ruling C A good many things connected with the Shearer hear- ing have given us an acute pain; but nothing is much | more painful than a little incident related by Rodncy Dutcher, well-known Washington correspondent. Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-) purcher tells how one of a large group of people who ck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | 14 not get in the crowded committee room to attend ree tras nail matier. president and Publisher | the hearings protested when a guard let two women in : ————— shead of a iong line that had been waiting for hours. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance nose women,” expla'=-d the guard, “are members of ly 4 oriige per year s ie 2¢ DL ALR. refore they have precedence.” mail, per year (in Bismal ea ly by mail, per year, | i Su ; w (in state, outside Bismarck) .. a rutin by mail, outside of North Dal | manifectation: [The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) of snobbery that go with such an institu- eekly by mail, in state, per year . eekly by mail, in state, three years for eekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation mer rbd Be Careful, Mexico! Mexico is taking up American football. President Portes Gil watches two teams at the University of Mexico in- ulge in a scrimmage, and expresses the hope that the ill owead throughout the country. Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use Tepublication of all news dispatches credited to tt or mot otherwise credited in t! newspaper and also the 4 news of spontancous origin published herein. All sights of repubiication of all other matter herein are) Vi el j wishing on his people. | Football is an excellent gam _Beeesee gam ons eer ee =. ; but did the Mexican Forcign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS president ever pause to concider wheter Mexico is reedy (Incorporated) to cope with such perplexing questions ag “over-em= Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. phasis," alumni proselyting activities, huge od shiek on lacs certs couting agreements, eligibility rules and all the rest? | Those are maiters that only an advanced and com plex too icugh to solve even then. Is the Mexican president ure he wants them to spread south of the Rio Grande? (Official, City, State and County Newspaper) tk Actually Stopping Oil Was to The Hoover adm its , oil consery sof the president of nterior depart: Pafleman Hills {: tions. This action is made possible by the fact that stjsovernment controls 40 per cent of the production of the | Editoria) Comment n of which is public domain. By | Field, the major po! intering into an agreqment with the other operators, Transoceani . ai retary Wilbur has been able to prociaim a complete ransoceanic Diagnosis ‘ (Des Moines Tribune-Capital) eee ee A medical specialist in Berlin, Germany, consulted a : nan field is the newest and largest discov- | curgical expert in Buenos Aires, Argentina, by television The Kettleman { in recent years, and Secretary Wilbur appraises the | &nd by radio telephone in the case of a Berlin patient. summation of the agreement and the subsequent clo: g of the district as the outstanding piece of conse! on in the country. What is moi ine conser tion policy out of the dormancy which succeeded its romulga‘ion some months azo and bolsters the wisdom the president's policy, which so far has been largely fined to paper. It shuts down two wells producing 90 barrcls cach a day and, in addition, approximately 000,000 cubic tect of gas daily. ‘The president's order imposing oil ervation was in nat~> of a double-barreled exccutive action, It nded t> stop wasteful production which was rampant A the industry, with prices at the well low, this also ending to wasteful consumption end unwise uses, and it at “scrupulous promot prospecting on public id. With a government nit as an inducement, such pectors would organize a company and draw in un- a investors, then fade away and leave the confiding rbock purchasers holding the bag. Of 34,000 permits is- before the president's withdrawal order, 56 came to riperss of leases, the others were allowed to lapse. —)3t was perhaps also from a consideration of the Fall- eny-Sinclair cases that the president was led to the He put an end to leasing of government oil is by his action, and it was leasing oil lands, it will be Heealled, that led to the Teapot Dome and Elk Hills’scan- fals. It was a reply to the old fiction of royalty lease <jekers that neighbor wells, privately owned, were likely of’ drain pools controlled by the government. The big PrOonsideration among the private oil operators was to get BY “ontrol of the supplics in the grow, and any argument 2 Accomplish that, however dev atisfied the cupidity asief the oil 7rabbe lon) Prior to the Hoover decree, there had been but two HE residential steps toward conservation, one by Roose- me it in 1907 and the other by Taft in 1909. It was the is appeal of the Taft action that opened the way for the » life ‘oheny and Sinclair leases and the big oil scandals which ~ ©UFSeked congress and national politics through the Cool- ss ine administration, which inherited the scandal from its ‘arding predecessor. @f -Meanwhile a federal and states petroleum conserva- @Udon commission is striving to work out the problem of d conservation. Mark L. Requa, its chairman, in a scent letter to The Tribune. put the situation thus: “Minerals are a problem unto themselves in that they se not renewable; once exhausted they are gone for- er. Petroleum is a problem unto itself in that it is the ‘Wily migratory mineral. Drilling by one landowner forces ‘stag ijoining owners to drill and we run into the whole 5, talrecious circle of excess production and the waste of pe- Tew, .: cetyjcleum reserves. aliy “There are two possible lines of procedure: We may go Ita as in the’past with low production efficiency and the $8 of millions of barrels of oil burned as fuel, in place * coal, with consequent loss of gasoline, Diesel oil and ; bricating oil, and rapidly increasing dependence upon treign scurces of supply; or we can work out and adopt es Program cf cooperation and conservation that ell coordinate the running of the drill with the require- 4 of the market, making possible the conservation ee il for cracking into gasoline and thus turn back to the oy industry the great volume of business that oil has : but which it should not supply because of its value for cracking into gasoline. year about 912,000,000 barrels of oil were run to .fineries with a gasoline recovery of 41.3 per cent. Some recovered well over 60 per cent. On a 60 per withdrawal act Wilbur, of the oduction in the Ket-| Monday papers are interesting if you care for mortal- ity statistics. 4 Is “Bathing suits half off" a threat or a promise? disease are studied for diagnosis, were transmitted by ra- dio to the Argentine expert. Then the Berlin specialist got connection with his Buenos Aires colleague by trans- oceanic r iiotelephone, and the consultation was com- pleted. Transmission of the picture and consultation by tele- phone, ending in agreement on the diagnosis, consumed twenty-seven minutes, less than half an hour. And that the worlld goes in these days, was that. It is of some mild interest, apart from the marvel of rapid communication, that Europe should now be com- ing to America, and to one of the young countries of South America. at that, for expert judgment in the med- ico-surgical ficid. The Buyer Is Acquitted (Duluth Herald) Jubilated not a little when a Pennsylvania federal ome months ago, cor-victed and fined 2 New York society man for buying liquor from a Philadelchia boot- legeer who shipped the Micit commodity to the New Yorker's home. | t re happy. and the Wets were not a little concerned. If the prohibition law wer2 to be extended to reach buyer's as well as sellers, it was more serious than they had thought it. But yesterday the United States circuit court of ap- | peal 0 which this case was appealed, handed down a decision that a buyer of liquor cannot be punished under the prohibition law even where transportation was in- valved. So the New York society man gocs frec, and the law goes back to what it was before—a law against selling and not a law against buying. No doubt a lew that classed buyers with sellers would be more vigorous, and possibly more effective. But it would not be so popular. There arc some who want the law against selling liquor maintained who would be quite worked up about it if the law were equally severe against buying Mquor. At the same time, it is posrib!e that if the prohibition law were amended so as to reach the buyers, who are obviously more numerous than the seliers, it might bring the whole prohibition issue earlier to a head ond hasten the reecncideration of the question which many are hop- ing for. Whither Goeth, Male? (Cleveland Plain Deeler) Not in some time has masculinity received a shock comparable to the one it is now forc2d to bear up under, namely, that the fashionable male attire for next sum- mer will resemble something of a crocs between that worn by a British foot soldier in Mandalay and the garb of a well-to-do Chinese mandaria. Featuring the new sartorial effect, it 1s said. will be panties, reaching only to a point six inches above the knee. Socks, garters, shoes, oxfords—all will be swept aside and the American male will seek to regain an Apol- lo-esque form by wearing dainty rolled socks and sandals and by going bare-legged. Shirts will be collarless, sleeveless and open at the front to display the manly chest and expose more territory to the sun's rays. It is a picture likely to send cold chills down the spines of bow-legged. muscle-bound and knock-kneed males and jone to bend the women double with mirth. There is no outward connection between the new style and the editor who has gone into the north woods wearing only a smile. It will be a wonder if the exponents of the newer idea succeed in getting mcre than a small proportion of the hardy men of this land to expose their log extremitics. Only the athletic type can hop to exhibit any manly beauty of figure or ruggedaess of form. In most cases it would mean a sad betrayal of broken-down physical prowess. Men, too, will hesitate to expose their lowermost limbs to the inclemencies of the weather. the ravares of insec‘s, prickly burs, greasy automobiles, sand traps, barbed wire fences and other impedimenta. A healthy drove of ambitious mosquitoes would be likely to send the most venturesome male forthwith for his winter “longies.” The Great Toothpick Rescue (Washington Star) Readiness of wit, quickness of thought, speed of in- vention in emergencies have saved many lives. People who think quickly in sudden crises can do much good for their fellow beings. Such a person is a cab driver in Brooklyn who was instrumental in saving th lives of at least thirty occupants of a flat building the other night. He was in a restaurant aeross the street, getting a late lunch, when he chanced to see smoke pouring from the apartment. He ran over and found the halls filled with fumes. Rushine hack to the restaurant, he grasped @ handful of toothpicks from a bowl and then, hastening bac’: to the burning apartment, he ran through the halls and started all the bells ringing, plugging them with the toothpicks so that they kept sounding the alarm. All of the occupants got out of the building in sa! quence of this incessant sound. Psychologists would perhaps be able to trace the reac- tion of this quick-thinkins cab driver cal of - i ; ds, around 275,000,000 bar-~'s could theoretically, have z conserved. In practice a large part of this saving, not all of it, is possible, for there are places and uses justify the burning of oil as fuel, for example for heating and for fuel where there ts no gor * coal inable at reasonable prices. California over 600,000,000 cubic feet of gas is daily ed to the air; in heat units this is equal to about tons of coal a day. What is true in California is je in varying degree in other oil producing states.” The Professors at Fault ean Max McConn of Lehigh University declares in the r North American Review that the American col- ge professor himself is largely to blame for the preval- Of students who --~* football games and fraternity above their studies in imnoztance. He Sepa" bebriyi : . overboard from ‘Circumstances, the student is hardly to be| of a | he concludes that his studies are unimportant. | lying of real ability ever found himself unable to | ‘ending soe rie 228 i S258 Es y this should be so, unless we are developing | based on birth and ancestry, with all the | bit hed to understand. AD. A. R. has no} dence in a hearing of that kind than a likely President Gil docsn't know just what he is | tion can cope with: indeed, they seem almost | Pictures of the patient's eyes, which in the case of his; SO an In this country everyone stands back for the pretty, sure-of-herself, and aggressive young woman of to- day. She can get away with evory- thing but murder, and she can often ect away with that. “Not so. however, in China,” said Alice Tisdale Hobart, who spent 15 years of ‘er life there, and knows the home life of the Chinese womenses well as that of the western women ‘acre who live in the foreign col- onies, “A woman is not important in China until she is old,’ she went on, “until she has given birth to sons and they in turn make her a grandmother, When che becomes the oldest woman {in one of these Chinese families*that may include a clan of 200 members iWon. one roof, she is powerful in- eed. “And the oldest wife is the one who manages all the other wives her husband later annex A young and beautiful one che can humiliate dominate until she makes life dif. cult indeed for her.” She recalled an old coolie of 60, who used to work for her husband. who always had to ask his mother before he dared go on any trip away from the city, or make any decision, however trifling. ee * YOUTH PROTESTS The younger Chinese woman, who mey have been educated in the west. resents this state of affairs, just che resents polygamy, and is register- ing a protest. But protesting in China, where customs have been crystallized for centuries, is considerably different than protesting against customs in this country. Mrs, Hobart has lived through stir- {ring times in China, and though she jregards her experiences there as priceless, she is glad to be bac': in her ; Pative country, surrounded by her lovely Chinese porcelains, her beauti- fully carved teakwood furniture, and the colorful embroideries she brought home. xk * ESCAPED MASSACRE She was living in the foreign colony in Nanking at the time of the uori jing and massacre there two yoars ago, when she, together with a few a CI ie fis | by a hairbreadth escape over the city walls into an American gun boat. Until they left the house, Americans lived from hour to hour by bargaining with the Chinese for their re and more money. irs could hear this bar- and expceted death at lives for mi women w tering belo tions. boy. when it jleaving all Thad w the mant ithe porll of his warfare was over, he found a return it to her. Returni \! \? | | | rbout most | nowadays, i | Why go to the zoo to see elephants ean hear them walking | around in the flat just above? hen you co-eds. old. The touching devo [tne servants at this time is one of Tt was real! sponsible for sav The American uite frequently hand-painted. x em any moment. * * * HERO! the most beautiful of her And gratitude by { book, “Pidgin Cargo,” to her house- 3 dedicating the ion her treas g to America, n the Far E: any city ti * ek ee girl * * n of her Chi- her latest boy who was re- For of life or 5 glad to leave anee of safety, res behind. But <his boy knew how hard she i ed on those j much she vali book. after finds herself marveling and full of admiration An automobile is the first thing | strikes you is a picture The Chicago judge who said that # man who would hide behind a wem- n’s skirts must be a worm was right 23 to dimensions any s A casual sirell across the street of- j ten results in a casualty. Quite a few students nowadays are quite good on figures, if you include (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) It is estimated that there are now about 3,500 persons in the United) States who are more than 100 years [OUR BOARDING HOUSE AA \ELL,GOOT BYE MR. HooP | AN’ DENKS FoR “TH” AUTOMOBILE ! ~~ NO MEDDER VitcH VAY TL Sf FLIP A NEECKEL, HEADS OR “TAILS, I voNT BE A LoseR wWitH Dis CAR $I VON tT FoR “Wo-BiTs BW A RAFFLES TickKET ~ (FIT A) RUNS GooT, Doers FIWE ~~ ~~ (F IT DONT, I TAKE IT APART FoR MY SUNK BUSINESS ! ~~ $0,’ SHOE FITS BOTH Feet, AWT cr? these The recollec- has recorded her 3, and how he rescucd script from the locters at fe, and, wh her t, Mrs. Ho- am YoU ARE A FoRTUNATE MAN! ue MY WORD a FoR 25% You REAP A HARVEST IN A WHIRLWIND § ~~ VERILY You ARE Tdricé ToucHeD BY | Off Agin, On Agin, Gone Agi orah!’ a ee 7% PLEASURE AND PAIN (By Alice Judson Peale) During all their waking hours chil- ren are learning. They are respond- ing to their environment and are be- ing modified by it. They tend also, in common with the rest of the an:- mal world, to remember and repeat those experiences which have proven pleasant and to forget and to avoid thore which have not. a The process cf bringing up your child is really just a matter of see- ing that he enjoys the right things and gets no opportunity to develop a aste for the wrong ones. People have always been aware of the fact that experiences associated with pain are not readily repeated, | for punishment, used ostensibly as a | deterrent, is an ancient institution. | But the precious urge to repeat pleas- ant experiences has only lately be- gun to be exploited by parents and teachers. Since only pleasant experiences tend to be retained it is well worth while for us to think out ways of making desirable responses as pleas- {ant as possible. We must learn to | kecp open always the path to pleas- ‘ure through constructive activity and { wholeseme social adeptation. In his free play we may rely upon ithe child to find constructive and happy activitics for himself provided we supply him the right environment. | But in matters of routine which lead | to iae formation of desirable social habits he needs help if he is to find picasure in good behavior. We need to imbue with the play spirit such tasks as hanging up his clothes end helping to set the table. We need to spread thickly the sweet of our approval when he hes done the right thing in spite cf a strony desire to do the contrary. We need to think in terms of rewards rather than in terms of punishments. HURRAY FOR CHINA! Peking.—Exceedingly fair are these Chinese. What goes for one goes for ancther. The Nanking government recently made women legally equal with men. And how they do it. The decree is so worded that one measure provides that divorced wives are liable to pay alimony under the same cir- ccupeanres ex-husbands are made to pay it. o-—o By Ahern QuiTe SO,MR. STEIN +! We WAND oF Luck, EGAD/ Sunday Breakfast: Coddled eggs, Melba toast, applesauce. Lunch: Combination salad of let- tuce, tomatoes, cucumbers and celery, glass of milk. Dinner: Roast pork, mashed tur- nips, spinach. Salad of head lettuce, jello or jell-well, no cream. Monday Breakfast: Oatmeal, cooked at least one hour, and served with butter or cream, but no sugar. Lunch: Cooked string beans, but- tered beets, raw celery. Dinner: Vegetable soup, salisbury steak, cooked celery, steamed carrots, McCoy salad, prune whip. ‘Tuesda: 'y Breakfast: Sliced pineapple and cottage cheese. Melba toast. Lunch: Glass of grapejuice. Dinner: Baked mutton, steamed carrots, cooked lettuce, stuffed cel- ery, stewed raisins, Wednesday Breakfast: French omelet, waffle (browned through) dish of berries (canned), Lunch: Potato soup, cooked beet tops, salad of cold cooked asparagus. Dinner: Roast beef, cooked string beans, baked eggplant, salad of mold- ed vegetables (celery, string beans and cucumbers) peach whip. Thursday Breakfast: Wholewheat mush with milk or cream. Baked apple. Lunch: Cooked lettuce, cooked carrots and peas, celery and nut salad. Dinner: Mushroom soup, broiled lamb chops, cooked okra, cauliflower salad, pear sauce. Friday Breakfast: Poached eggs on Melba toast, stewed figs. Lunch: Wholewheat bread and pea- nut butter sandwiches. Combination salad (lettuce. celery, cucumbers). Dinner: Jellied tomato consomme, *Baked sea bass, spinach, cooked cel- ery, salad of sliced tomatoes. No des- Saturday Breakfast: Toasted breakfast food, with milk or cream. Stewed prunes. Lunch: Oranges or apples as de- sired. Dinner: Vegetable soup, broiled steak with mushrooms, stewed toma- toes, salad of celery and ripe olives, Pineapple gelatin with cream. * After thoroughly washing and wiping fish, place in baking pan with small amount of water, and bake in modcrate oven. One pound or less re- and sauces, for you will get eravies all of the benefit of a good protein food without any of the harmful ef- fects produced by the addition of starch, or spicy seasoning. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Has Persistent Question: Mrs. K. L. writes: “I am interested in your answers to ques- tions. What would you advise fcr a cough of about fifteen years stand- ing? Worse in damp weather and in winter. Started with the grippe. Never leaves me entirely, but gets bet- ter at times. Is not any worse than it was ten years ago. Never have colds in my head, and rarely cough anything loose. Different doctors say it is bron- chial. Doesn't seem to break my health, but certainly is annoying.” Answer: Some people have a form- ation of excessive mucus which oc- curs only in one particular part. It is apparent that yours forms in the bronchial tubes and not on the other mucus membranes. Skin elimination jis not as good in the winter or in damp weather, so more elimination occurs through the mucus membranes. If you will increase skin elimination by frequent bathing and through tak- ing vigorous exercise, I'am sure you will no longer be troubled with the Persistent cough. Sunket Question: Mrs..K. G. S. asks: “Does Junket with a quart of milk (which makes a custard of a real thick con- sistency) make a good food used as a dessert.” Answer: Junket is a good food and makes a good protein to be used in Place of meat, fish or fowl. If used as @ dessert, only a very smali amount should be eaten. Dizzy When Hungry Question: Alice H. asks: “Why is it that when I am full and eat at in-, tervals I fecl fine and can work hard, but the minute I am the least bit hunery I have a dizzy feeling or light headedness?” Answer: The hunger you complain of is due to gastritis and over-acidity of your stomach. You should stop eating, and drink only water for a few quire from 15 to 20 minutes; from 3 to 4 pounds, 45 to 60 minutes. Add no fat nor other seasoning except but- ter when ready to serve. You will find this method of preparing fish superior to those methods calling for A Me BO Niue tatead euusJeuuuuw “NEW NETHERLANDS On Oct. 11, 1614, the states general of Holland named the country around Manhattan Island “New Netherlands” and granted a charter for its settle- ment to Amsterdam merchants. In the spring of 1614, the states general had passed a law conferring on those who should discover new lands the exclusive privilege of mak- ing four voyages thither before oth- He could have admission to the traf- ie. This ordinance excited considerable activity among adventurers. A num- ber of merchants of Amsterdam and Hoorn fitted out five ships, ‘This fleet immediately on an exploring expedition to the mouth of the Great River and the Manhat- tans, Long Island, Cape Cod and Delaware Bay and other points on the east coast of America. The united company by which the explorers were employed lost no time in obtaining the exclusive trade of the countries thus explored. They sent deputies to the Hague and laid before the states general a report of their discoveries and a tigurative map of the newly explored countries. A special grant in their favor was forthwith accorded, and } Settlement was established in the new country. | Our Yesterdays | oo i [ i i i : i ki i | | days, and the dizzy feeling and head- aches will disappear. If you will then adopt a sensible diet you will not have a return of your trouble. (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) George Holta, vice president; Agnes Parsons, treasurer; and Imogene Mc- Lean, secretary. Judge I. C. Davics has gonc to Far- go and Grand Forks on a business “The real estate seized upon the theater, and far too many are being built. They are drug speculator has on the _ market."—Otis (World's Work.) eee “There is more teaching in Anier- ica than ever before, and it is less good.”—H, L, Mencken. (American Mercury.) eek “I have seen more incompetent Parents than incompetent youngsters.” —Dr. B. Chere: psychiatrist. Lied Skinner. “The whole of America will have to be so marked that eventually even the amateur pilot can fly cross-country without the present danger of getting Jost.”—Willlam P, MacCracken, Jr. (World’s Work.) se *& “In practically every case of mal- adjustment which I have discovered among college students, I have come ultimately to the statement, ‘I didn't really want to come to college; I did it just to please my family.'"—Wil- Mam I. winapi (Atlantic Monthly.) ** “Human beings are not so differ- ent from mules: you have to learn to understand them, and then you us- ually find they will respond to con- siderate treatment."—Jackson E. Reynolds, Ban Foe menker . “If any preacher of any denomina- tion begins to preach anything seri- ously out of harmony with what is believed by his denomina- tion he is immediately called a her- fo aa Jesse F. Benton. (Plain Ap. pastemriing, pallk, the fluid is to 145 to 170 degrees Fahren- helt and then cooled 2

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