The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 15, 1929, Page 4

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4 he Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck second class mail matter. ge D. Mann Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ily by carrier, per year .- ‘int ss ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck) ly by mail, per year. (in state, outside Bismarck) ...... ly by mail, outside of North Dakota . .President and Publisher . $7.20 7.20 | 1.00 | 2.50 | by mail, in state, per year ..- by mail, in state, three years for kly by mail, outside of Nortn Di per year .. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press | s ted Press is exclusively entitled to the use| Tepublication of all nows dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the news of spontaneous origin published herein. All| thts of republication of all other matter herein are | 9 reserved. i Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & L! NGS Incorporated) G. Logan Payne Co NEW YORK BOSTON | ; | se for Action | t one of those oppor- a public prosecutor to y of csome enforcement of the time ne matter and hew may. t At the proper Statc | ips fall where ennelly could proceed with his then the state's attorney is p ore court, the facts are in ha’ orton county prosecutor natu He will want to take those ty. He will vant to take th he public protection from simil fe and limb from reckless or intoxicated car drivers. ared to bring the case | 1 for such steps as the | ly will want to take. | teps because it will be his e steps because he owes subjection to peril of A grave responsibility rests on the two als in this tragic abuse of the rights of the most traveled highwe They fat to get action in hesitates to do hi dn’t a traffic patrol be put on free from drunken and reckless drivers? A cor hquest and vercict would be just the means to lei p this, And can’t some way be found to ligit the bridge? sworn di The Mackmen Win \ "Phere is joy in Manayunk and Fishtown, Bustleton boils | in happy cbuilition, a chorus of riotous celebration | enzs from Moyamensine, Passyunk and Kingsessiny res, Byberry cuts capricornean cape: i ring, Darby brings out olmesburg to League Island and from Delan 9 Cobb's C-2ck all Phiiadelphia is on t Falley of dry bones hi i jracle of Cornelius McCillicuddy. | Who said Philadelphia was 4 ) For a short time the city of Penn on the Delaware 1 Fhe most, talked-of city in the country. Connie Mack | das taken another world’s pennant after a long wait. Be | nas his fourth. Other sencschals of baseball have taken ce. but the wizened wizard sprung from the soil of ine has confounded them all. He has added another hapter to baschall lore and for years to come the sport- d fans of balidem will b: king about the mighty feats of the last ik, of Mack, of Foxx, of Ehmke, oi mons, of Dyiics, of Cochri of the near shut-out y a has-been, of the coming from behind for ten runs tn inning and winning a game as good as lost, of the inth-inning victory which capped the series with the imal victory for possession of the piece of bunting which ecomes a gonfalon of conquerors almost unmatched in Yhe glory of the ball and the bat. ‘The Athletics arc a mighty baseball team, and they on the flag nobly. At that, the Cubs are noi to be sed. They showed up poweriul at times, but Connie k surely put the jinx on them. His skill in confound- ng the great batting aggregation of Chicago's “murder- ¥ row” by unexpected shifts in alignment amounted to) itive genius. ‘The country must admit, cven the losers and their fol- ng, that the world scries of 1929 was a campaign of i markable stratoeg} id that those who paid their dol- 4 i 's worth of entertainment. Censorship Proves Inconsistent | The chief trcuble with censorship is that it so often | ba-kwards. | Foz some reason it seems impossible to enforce a cen- | ip without doing things that are just naturally diculous. Some months ago the papers were full of the case of a | York grandmother who was convicted in {federal | of sending obscene literature through the mails. | had written a sex education pamphlet and had it to various people. One of these people ap- himself a censor and had her arrested. Her ap: from her jail sentence is now pending. * ‘More recently the play “Strange Interlude” came to A number of Bostonians felt that the play was improper to be allowed on the boards of any theater. man felt so deeply about it that he got a copy of the and went through it looting for passages that were strong for the public morals. ‘Having found a number of passages that seemed to him ‘be off-color, he copied them .and mailed these copics @ all the clerzymen in the city, asking them to read n and denour:cc the play. ) Now here is the funny thing about these two cases. | "he New York woman mailed out literature that she believed to be p-rfcctly proper and decen:. Some easily- recipient of her wares had her arrested and the ruled that she must go to jail—despite the fact ehe did what she had done in the belief that the terial was cmincntly moral and wholesome. [32 Boston man mailed out literature that he believed indecont. Indeed, he was so sure that it was in- should be allowed to be presented. Yet, thus far, e bas taken any action against him. ease, in other words, a woman was arrested for ‘matter that she believed to be entirely innocent. ‘other case @ man mailed matter that he believed 8 two cases don't jibe. somehow. ‘only made more pr-zzling by the fact that each ‘was working in the interests of good mor- ‘bad any improper motive. Yet it would did, | hed been known in edvance that no private corporations | [and s | P. A. Lee, have becn members of the committee of six- | yars to sit by the side and watch the games got their | cS that he felt that no play which contained such | *2¢ observer that if the woman violated | p15 jan certainly pod Mike that, Therd isn’t much rhyme or It Doesn’t Look Right France, with one war still unpaid, is spending millions in preparation for the eventuality of another. Which is very much like saying that the United Statcs is footing the bill. For as long as France does not pay the war debts ov 7 this country, that country can go on | spending money for forts and submarines and warships It can bumper and hobble the steps of other nations in efforts to bring the world to an effective peace basis. The Tribune carried the news Monday that the fortifi- cetion policy of France was directed on the fromtier to- ward Italy. Peace and pence pledges have convinced France that along the Rhine there be no further fear But France still is in such a state of nerves from the World war that specters of fresh wars continue to haunt the land of Napoleon. Now these are seen from | the side of her old ally in the World war. | Of course, France's preparations will look so menacing | that Italy must be expected to proceed to the execution of a similar pol Other portions of Europe are learning how to get along with each other, if not in immedliate smoothness, with steps calculated to realize that condi- tion ultimately. France is so tilled with the hobgoblin of war menaces thet it is possible the representatives from Paris will turn out to be puillbects in the naval disarmament confercnc: | to open at Londsn January 20. Tt is not very pleasant for Americans to realize that the | reason the billions lent to France in the World war have remained unpaid is because France continues to be mili- laristic and goes on spending her money in war prepara- Uons—in a sense, is making the United States foot ex- penditure from whieh this country is turning at home. Trance t ned the secret of getting along with an old enemy which had many reasons to be permanently bitter toward the iand whose vast armies time and again in three centuries ravaged it. Why not try the same process with old friends it now feels it cannot trust? It dorsn't look right to go ahead as the news from Paris says France is. The world ts not headed that di- just now, but in the direction of enthroning Why not try that cut a bit at least? econ peace Doing More Than His Job pens that a newspaper man’s best work is that is not done directly in the line of his ordinary ¢ is, for instance, Edward Price Bell, London cor- dent for tiie Chicego Daily News. | y Dutcher reveals that it was Mr. Bell who orig- d the visit to America of the British prime It was he who first grew alarmed at the in- ingly strained relations between America and Eng- land, and it was he who instituted the negotiations that led to Ramsay MacDonald's visit. bit of work was not, strictly speaking, in the line eular duty, If he had not done ii he would not ave been scamping his job. But, being an and conscientious man, he s2w a chances to do some- ng for his coun —and he did it, even though there was no oblication resting upon him. | inaliy « minister. Let the Government Do It Dutcher reports that one of the chicf results | naval investigation is a greatly increased | nent in congress for having the government build | all of its warships in its own navy yards, To many the idea may sound attractive. As long as we } have huge corporations which stand to make enormous profits out of preparations for war, we are bound to have propaganda episodes similar to the Siearer affair— episodes that can be extremely costly to the nation. Putting all naval construction work in the hands of the navy yards would go far to end that evil. The ship- builders would never have vent Shearer to Geneva if it | Rodney ef the critin would build any more of Uncle Sam's war vesscis, A refermer is a man who things every acquittal a mis- lage ef justice, It takes a lot of hard practice to give some girls that charming naturalness. The swell-head germ is nobody's fool. He always man- ages to pick out an empty one. Editoria} Comment | Fargo Has Grain Aspirations (Fargo Forum) North Dakota has a keen interest in the formation of | the Farmers National Grain corporation, the gigantic co- ! ve which is to engage in orderly grain marketing abilization operations, if these become necessary. | Two citizens of the state, Mr. George E. Duis and Mr. ice hich promulgated the plans, and, as such members. among the incorporating directors. Later there 1 be an election of directorate, and this state will have | is representatives on the board. But this is net the chief interest. The Farmers Na- nal Grain corporation will handle millions of bushels of it each year. The various cooperatives and pools hich belong to it will carry their grain up to it, after | i it will be hendled in such a way as to keep the | stable, That means additional terminal facili- tics in the great shipping centers. It means storage fa- } cilities in the important secondary points, with these places become, in a large measure, potcnt markets. | Putting a Little Snap Into the Act! | yA , AN'S DAY... Mrs. Sarah Millin, the novelist, who has been living in South Africa for a umber of years, recently arrived in New York, and the first thing she wanted to see was the “new woman you hear so much about. I'm glad T did not have the job of showing her around, and producing a new woman for her. It would be like the old days when out-of-towners came to New York and demanded im- mediately to be taken to Greenwich Village dens—and the best you could co was a tame sort of a tea room, lighted with candles instead of elec- l tricity and waited upon by girls in smocks rather than boys in white jackets. You are never quile able to pro- duce these innovations that are so glibly written about. A definite thing like the Woolworth building or Grant's tomb is different. You can lead a sightseer up to that and it is up to her whether she likes it or not | —there it is. * * FIND THE NEW WOMAN But to be asked to produce a new woman—what an order. Whom would you produce, and what would there be to indicate that she was any dif- ferent from her mother or her grand- mother? And suppose you introduce her to a woman judge or senator, the wom- an of imporiance is sure to say some- thing like this—“You know, in spite of my position, I am just an old-fash- ioned woman who believes that the woman who serves her country best is the good mother,” ete. Personally, I don't know whether Mrs. Millin has a great revelation or a flop in store for her. But if she finds anyene who anzwers to her ideal ical “new woman,” I she would name her. It woul interesting to know how and what her reaction is. * * * HER LUXURIES T can't prcduce the new woman, off hand. but I cen produce some of the juxuries provided for her, that indi- ‘ate that she loves luxury and con- venience. One of the most fascinating of the tiny shops on expensive Park Avenue is a little bath shop in which every There is no reason, for instance, why Fargo should not kecome an important center of the wheat marketing | world. It is the logical place for holding back North | Dakota and Montana wheat, the point of storage, in- spection, cleaning, preparation of by-products, ete., and there is no deubt that it eventually will figure thusly in the Farmers National Grain corporation's marketing | Program. Does the Farmer Benefit? (Valley City Times-Record) _ While we have been hearing very much of the benc- fits to be derived from governmental agencies by the farmers when the thing has been siited down it looks a the average citizen as if the farmer was getting it in he neck. From most angles you get dn this attempt to help the farmer the more convinced you are that the farmer gets stung—and gets stung right. Let's take the Intermedi- ate Credit Bank of St. Paul, which is a government in- stitution, and let's see how much help he gets when he goes after it. We will say that the farmer has 1,000 bushels of wheat worth approximately $1,200, and he wants to borrow some money on that wheat. What does he get when he gets through with all the red tape and all the expense? He gets a lemon. The bank will only loan $200 maximum value for loan purposes no matter what the price of wheat is on the market. Then when all the various expenses are taken out for hauling charges, 70 per cent is the limit of the loan for which a note is given, expense or redeposit, interest in edvance taken out at seven and three-quarters per cent, abstract charges various other charges never before thought of. when the farmer gets through with that on that $1,200 worth of grain is $487.50, whica is little help. He gets practically 48 cents per bushel grain and pays approximately 9 Let us take & look at the er has 1,000 bushels of flax worth $3,100. gets approximately a loan of $906.15 when he gets through with all the red tape and the [OUR BOARDING HOUS ,1 WANT You “fo GET ALLTHIS, IN ONE LUMPS we w-THE WHOLE SUM LEFT THE MATOR, ‘ar NOW TAKE, BY HIS UNCLE, WAS DOLLARS # ~~ WHOEVER “TOLD You tr WAS A HALF MILLION SHOULDA WEAR A SoFT HAT WOODPECKERS !ue-THE MAJOR SPENT MOST OF “HE MONEY FoR WIS TRIP/ we WHAT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1929 | possibte luxury for the bath room is represented—all the most amazing | Soaps, bath sal-s, bath mats, cry and jade boxes, and colored bot i that are a joy | is considered here. Another shop that fas | @ pillow shop, that handles nothing but piilows, in every shape, size, color and of any material from chiffon to fur. es me is * ee STYLES IN BOXING Another specializes entirely in box: es, from the smallest of boxes }: large enough to hold stamps, to cre: tonne hat boxes and boxes as big a trunks, and nothing to put in them But nothing scems more of a ges- ture to the modern feminine than these closet shops. that make the clos- et an ensemble of beauty rather than a chamber of horrors—one that you can't shut the door on fast enough. In them you wiil find transparent covers for your frock: hats, shoes, and gloves, ers for your shelves, and hat holders that are modeis of fantasy. They will er in chintz or art paper, according to your desires, Porfecting the clothes | closet as they have today means that | | the last frontier in comfortable living | has been crossed. The new woman, whoever she is, | knows how to live. | —_————_—_____—_—_-==—@ | BARBS | ° > A 10-year-old Minnesota boy learned to play the violin while prac- ,ticing secretly on a remote farm. | There ought to be some reward for ; this boy's consideration. | * * ® | ‘The Soviet government has abol- jished Bunday. That ought to be an |economy on automobile fenders, any- | way. * * * New York is to have an 80-story ‘building. You can find more stories {in Wall Street, however. | * Om | Prohibition inspectors have been , crdered to be dignified when search- ing for liquor. But can you shoot a Person in a dignified way? * ok Chemistry now has divided an atom | into two parts. Probabiy the result |of research with drug store sand- wiches. * * A dancing master says many mod- ern danccrs are too heavy on their feet. And not only theirs, either, (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) A FEW HUNDRED mr “To ENCOURAGE Hd" there. No other room | outfit your closet in satin or taffeta, | NEWS, I BOUGHT A CIGAR AN’ BLew SMOKE IN TW’ FOREMAN'S Face ~ wee THEN I WENT I THE PERFECTIONIST (By Alice Judson Peale) A man who as a camp director has worked and played with boys for many years says that above all the hings from which he would try to voiect his own child is the baleful nfluence of excessively high stand- ards. Children, he feels, are hurt more of- ten by high ideals than by the lack of them. The child who ts a_ perfectionist finds life unnecessarily hard. Nearly always he falls short in his own eyes. Seldom does he know the glow of elf satisfaction and success. He becomes discouraged. and fre- | quent discouragement is not good for growth, With it often go irritability and a carrying over of the hypercrit- ical attitude towards others—a state of mind not calculated to make for happy social relations. One such young idealist covered his eeling of self depreciation with a Waggering exterior that won for him the reputation of being a conceited | bully. | The hypercritical attitude not only i makes difficult the child's social rela- { tionships. but it stands in the way of accomplishment. He starts to make something, but as it nears completion he sees how fer it falls short of the perfect thing he had in mind when he began. Without finishing it he throws it asic and restlessly looks for some othcy occupation from which, in all probability, he will reap no greater success. His standards serve only to give him poor habits of work and a fense of imminent failure in whatever he undertakes. Give your child ideals that he can live with, standards or achievement which, with good effort and inten- tion, he may attain. GIRL SLAYS MOTHER Paris,—Because she wanted to ob- tain possession of a farm, worth only a few francs, Augustine Agogue murdered her aged mother. The mother was found hanging in a build- ing near Guilly, with a note reading: “Accuse nobody. I am taking my own life.” A neighbor remembered that the mother could not write, and Augustine was arrested. She. finally confessed. HECK fe THEN We AIT WEALTHY 2... WELL, IF THAT'S “TH? CASE, I Quir MY JOB “Too QUICK fue WHEN I HEARD “TH” sé SUPERINTENDENT'S CHOP SUEY The term “chop suey” comes from the Enelish word “chop” plus the Chi- word “sui” meaning “bits.” It refore ineans chopped into bits, ich is good to remember in prepar- chop suey, as the meats and vege- tables used should all be cut to about the same size. Chinese food is chopped before be- ing served so that it can be handled nh chop sticks. Somebody has said | chop suey is Chinese for “clean jup the kitchen,” since it is really a Chinese form of hash and may con- sist of chicken, fish, mushrooms, bamboo shoots, bean sprouts, or al- most anything handy. Although chop suey is closely asso- ciated in our minds with the Chinese, as a maiter of fact, it is not supposed to have had its beginning in China, but to have first seen the light of day in San Francisco. Gossip has it that some clever Chinese there made a fortune by serving this dish, which is so easiiy digested and relished by al- most everyone. The Chinese cook uses no milk, cheese nor butter. The frying is done in peanut or olive oil. One of the fundamental rules of Chinese cookery which dates back from 3,000 B. C. is that meat dishes should contain about one-third as much meat as vegetables. This is a very good rule to follow, as it makes a well balanced meal. Chop suey usually contains onions, but this is not necessary, as the other ingredients are quite appetizing and more wholesome if the onions are omitted. Chop suey is usually fried. This method cannot really be con- sidered wholesome, but the frying of the non-starchy vegetables and meat cannot be considered as harmful as when starchy foods are fried. Chop suey, while not particularly healthtul, can be used occasionally for the sake of variety by those who are in good health. Meat chop sueys are prepared with a soup stock which is made from equal parts of chicken and pork cooked slowly for about two hours and strained. Here is a recipe for chicken chop suey: 3 pounds of chicken 3 stalks of celery 1 dozen white mushrooms I dozen water chestnuts, 1 pound of bean sprouts 4 tablespoonfuls of suey sauce 1, cup of soup stock. Chop the raw chicken meat into small pieces and fry in a hot greased skillet, using olive oil. After the chicken begins to brown, add the | chopped celery and water chestnuts, } after which tfie. stock may be added. | Then add the Chinese sauce, bean sprouts and mushrooms. After sim- mering for a few minutes this dish is veady to serve. le OO CZAR BANS ALCOHOL On Oct. 15, 1914, the Czar of Russia prohibited forever the sale of spiritu- ous liquors—chicfly vodka. Three months before, all wine, beer and vodka shop; had been closed as a temporary measure, in view of the order for mobilization of land and sea forces of the empire. But the people made use of the oc- casion, and demanded the prohibi- tion of the sale of alcohol for the whole duration of the war, and if possibie, forever. Earig in September of 1914, the council of ministers announced that his imperial majesty had decided to prohibit the sale of spirits and vodka until the end of the war. The czar announced on Oct. 15 that he had decided to prohibit forever the sale of spirituous liquors. These orders, however, did not apply to malt liquor and wines. Local governing bodies were al- lowed to petition for a complete pro- hibition of the sale of all alcoholic beverages within the limits of their Jurisdiction. Petrograd restricted the sale of wine to 49 first-class hotels and restaur- ents and only permitted liquor to be sold with meals, The city of Moscow adopted complete prohibition of all intoxicants. > FORTY YEARS AGO Thomas Richards, R. R. Marsh, and numerous other Burleigh county farmers are di the feasibility of establishing a farmers’ mill and elevator in Bismarck. Joseph Dietrich has returned from Chicago where he sold @ carload of fine beef cattle. G, L. Burdie, one of the old-timers Our Yesterdays 1 Most of the chop sucy recipes arc made in similar manner except othe: meats may be used in place of the rsonal let addressed to him, care of The Enclose envelope for reply. chicken, for instance, lean beef or pork. In Chinese recipes, suey sauce takes the place of salt. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Twitching in Legs Question:. G. H. K. writes: “I am 73 years old, and am bothered with a twitching or jerking in my legs when retiring, sometimes keeping me awake |for an hour or more. Will you please | let me know the cause, also if there is a remedy?” Answer: The jerking in your legs is doubtless caused by a poor circula- tion of blood. I would advise you to take some exercises about an hour before retiring. After the exercises, sit in a tub of warm water, immersing the legs in the water for about two or three minutes. This will help the circulation and should prevent the jerking. Clabbered Milk Question: F. D. asks: “Is clabbered whole milk healthful and nutritious for an elderly person who dearly loves it? Would a person who craves it be likely to be benefited by going on a diet of this kind?” Answer: Clabbered whole milk is a very good food, and one could live on this diet for many years without needing any other food. If green veg- etables are taken with the clabbcr (about three quarts used per day) it makes a very well balanced diet but so simple that most people would not be willing to live on this diet exclus- ively for any length of time. Losing Mental Control Question: G. S. writes: “I have lost confidence in myself and others— also have lost control of my will- power which causes me to have a nervous fear almost constantly. Will you tell me what causes this, and how to cure myself?” Answer: You should seek the ad- vice of a good psychologist or psycho- analyst. You can receive much help by reading good books on the subject of mind-power and mental control, but the personal advice and encour- agement of a mental practitioner are often necessary to help you in ef- fecting a complete cure, after you are | conscious of having lost your mental | control. | «Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Syndi- “cate, Inc.) Homecoming festivities in Bismarck today. Judge A. A. Bruce, former justice of the North Dakota supreme court, was the chief speaker at the ceremonies held at the Northern Pa- cific park. | { |. “There is a tendency to be rather broadminded about other people's se- curity.”—Artistide Briand. . * * * “Beauty is the flower of abundant health."—Maria Jeritza. skh “Bobs are not going out of fashion. | Far from it. Older women and younz business women find them too con- venient.”—Ruth Francis, beautician. a& & “The present scandal of our sham- ateur athletics is due to venal pro- moters and a laissez faire association which is more concerned with ex- pansion than the spirit of the sport.” —John R. Tunis. (Outlook and Inde- Pendent.) ee * “Prohibition is all that prevents New York from being one of the most law-abiding communities in the coun- try."—Grover C. Whalen, New York Police commissioner. ere “Prohibition is the most powerful friend that the liquor traffic has ever had. Prohibition is the most resource- ful enemy that the temperance move- ment has ever had to face."—Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, PLENTY OF BROTH London.—When the gypsies have a party they have plenty to eat—esps- cially soup. At the recent gypsy party at Baildon, Yorkshire, soup was dis- Pensed from a giant cauldron which Contained two and a half tons of the quid, ts were a quarter of @ ton of meat, 900 pounds of green vegetables, 600 pounds of peas, 300 Pounds of potatoes, and 56 pounds of ~ a ; Ls ~ «ps i i t « . d Tae aves LittLe HE GAVE mE, L SPENT ON THE HOUSE ~ BUT THERE WASN'T ENOUGH “To INCLUDE PADDING We WALLS! — OFFICE AN’ SAID“ HIM, “WELL SIMON LEGREE, You OL” GIN-PACKER, I quer Jaw of the Missouri slope, now making his| As early as 1899 the tions home in lghingil is in | forbade the use of ceca for 2 interests and visiting frends, x John A. Rea returned today from @ brief business trip to , TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Miss Lulu Satterlund arrived in Bis- marck today after a several months’ stay on her claim near Underwood. B. H. Bronson returned last night aun oe ae ae ae “4 weather bureau. pe Ed Hughes has returned from Fargo where he attended the wedding of his William Hughes, to Miss Mar- guerite Haggart. C. L. Merrick arrived yesterday from Napoleon, returning today with Mrs, Merrick, who has been visiting here for several days. TEN YEARS AGO with the Bismarck a Motor posi R. R. Morford has returned to Bis- woe after two years’ service in nce, A parade led by D. C. McLean, in which the Fiks band, ‘blue Jackets, A fellow often needs help when the American Legion, nurses . be teen iris took part, preceded ‘the | bow "esriné © four-in-hand. Yeah, :

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