The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 24, 1929, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1929 Coolidge owed much of his popular strength to the wise reise of t!> veto power. Tn his first skirmish with congress the president had | public opinion on his side, not so much because the people understand the issues as because they did not be- Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | lieve that Mr. Hoover would, for petty reasons, lose an marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | oy to demonsirate his leadership at a time The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ortunit Daily by carrier, per year .......--- Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year. tin eats, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail, outside of North Dak Railroads Prove Prosperity x of prosperity that is partic y nd earning. This has been go! on through 1,00 | 1928 and +o far in 1929. The first proof at the beginning increase in the earnings x their income for 1927. ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years for .. ‘Weekly by mail, outs!4> of North Dakota, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use to feel the effects for republication of all news dispatches credited to it Or! mont, this newspaper and also the i i feral exe of apectatous ign published herein. All| Raiiroad prosperity means steady empleyment at good rights of republication of all other matter hercir are) wo-~ rel hundred thousand men and women also reserved. } out the 48 states. Moreover, it means ther theusands who have invested their s that the nation’s life blood may flow hcalthfully hrough these vital arteries of the country. lays for the roads continue, one sees when records are studied. They show the v ssed in business and transportation. | Recently the Railway Age published a detailed story Jof what is being donc, and pointed out some of the rds. Freight is being moved more upecdily, longer trains are used, heavier loads are the Nel rule, better operation is shown by the increased mileage Me | of cars and trains, Shippers are served with a certainty of delivery they never enjoyed in the past. These were “7 the outstanding results shown in the story the meter of busin and As long as they are busy the na- 2, for the carriers are the fir of business depression or retrenc! The reilroads are Amerie’: b omic conditions | tion is producin Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTO! (Official City, Tackling Isolation in Slope Corner ‘The sections of southwestern North Dakota h Milwaukee railroad arc in the state georra politically, but in the community and comme they lack the bonds which should unite them solld with the entire Slope country, of which they are an is lated part. | Railway Age published, In a way, they say, they are linked with South Da-| Benind these results is a story far more interesting. kota, in another they are of Montana and in the sense | yt 4; one of finer managerial wiedom. Tracks have been of paying taxes, sending representatives to the assembly | nut in first-class condition and properly maintained, and obeying the laws of the state they are a part of ater motive power has been provided, and the actual North Dakota. The voluntary rc ips of a large | operation of trains has been vastly improved. All these area in the southwest are largeiy coverned by the pres-!po to the preparation for finer service; operating sk! ence of the Milwaukee railroad. It creates interests for | and cemius ¢ been developed to new heights, there is State and County Newspaper) ent in this country is the record of railroad | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | (Tun AHem~ HERE,MY DEAR P) \MPOVERISHED BROTHER wo ~»Nou) CARELESSLY HID THIS ROLL OF MONEY UNDER MY PILLOW LAST NIGHT! wHM-A- AND You GAVE US ALL “TO UNDERSTAND “THAT You WERE BROKE AND OUT OF A DOB, EH 2 wu VERILY, MY BROTHER “You ARE quite | DROLL fue EGAD, You | HAVE. A QUAINT MANNER OF og, 5 ene! fi \ GOSH, THANKS ™ EITHER You've “URNED HONEST, oR Nou AIN“T FULLY AWAKE MET hae wWArT TLL OT COUNT (tT BEFORE You TAKE YoUR SHOWER ~~ ~~ A FIFTY COULD HIDE NERY SNUGLY IN A CREASE OF ONE OF YouR CHINS | we —HERE WAS $150. ww “HAT A LESSON ON CHOPS (Continued) During the summertime many peo- ple find it convenient to use chops on picnics, since they may be quickly cooked over a small fire, and do not take up much room in packing. Trave elers touring the country in their cars may stop in town and buy chops, which they can pack on a piece of ice and carry right along with them until the urge to stop and eat comes on, when they can build a camp fire and broil their chops, cooked out of doors and served with a lerge fresh salad. The chop meal will be found to be appetizing, inexpensive, pleasing to the appetite, and still without provid- ing such a heavy meal that stuffiness will result throughout the afternoon. Different kinds of chops are often desirable through the summer months, since they cook quickly and the house- wife does not need to heat up the | kitchen as much as is necessary when roasts are cooked. Many people like pork chops who do |not care for other kinds of meat, and | it is no doubt true that pork chops do have a certain agreeable flavor which has coaxed many would-be vegetari- ans away from their well-laid prin- | ciples of not eating flesh foods. It is |much better, however, to use only a | limited amount of any kind of pork | food. | meat. especially with those who have |digestive disturbances. The protein | particles of the pork seem to be so linterwoven with the fat that those | with faulty digestions find difficulty in digesting the fat and protein to- gether. One of the best ways to {em in South Dakota and in Montana through the fact | Yhat it is their means of transportation in and out, and | y are led by the incrila of taat cir | In part this comr~~-ial and communal isolation from j other Slope parts not on the Milwaukee in the case of | this Milwaukee area ts in part due also to the |: of good roads to reach these othcr portions. Hettinger, Reeder, Scranton and Bowman for instance. | It is possible that the termination of this isolation of | the towns along or close to the Milwaukee line may be | broker in the near “-'--- through the campaign ted by the Bismarck Lions club. this week, in establishing | clubs of that organization in Hettinger and Bowman. ‘The Lions have set out to lint: up the section; repre- sented by these towns with the resi of the state, while | at the same time setting in notion forces for the expan- | gion and improvemen: of ‘*-~ communities themselves. To bring Hettinger, New Engiand, Scranton, Reeder, Bowman and other tov-ns in the Milwaukee territory into that desirable closer touch with the communities to the north and west and with Bismarck, good roads are es- sential. Morton county Lions assisted in putting over a $200,000 bond issuc in their home county for the im- | provement of the county's roads. What next becomes Receszry is to obtain improved roads beycnd Morton county westward and southward. These must provide ® thunk route through Grant, Hettinger and Adams eounties at least. A graded and partly graveled road leads from Hettinger to Bowrs-n. In time the highway to Mott will be a fairly improved rcuic. The object then is to get a link south from Mott to Hichway No. 12 into Hettinger. There is considerable sentiment in the coun- try affected in favor of the Sakakawea route being linked into the state road system and graded and fraveled. ‘The whole plan of ro-d improvement to put these out- f-touch sections on the map in fellowship with Bis- | marek and the territory lying between here and there is, however, something for the communities affected to work out for themselves. The new Lions clubs just instituted fare expected to take up this and other problems that af- fect their interests and develop them. The whole network of Lions clubs then can j-"> hands with them in seeking to put over the projects “-emed essential to the wel- fare of communities but out of their municipal bounds, such as ® trunk rout highway from Bismarck to the @utermost. community of the southwestern corner would be. For the Lions clubs are being put in these towns for their upbuilding and for the betterment of the en- tire territory that embraces them. These are the two fields of Lion activity and they blend in one. ‘The trend of the times is toward the fading away of the small town—the mere hamlet. But county scat towns can survive and they can be built up. To progress, however, it has become necessary in this period to have the leavening energies of service clubs, whether of the community type so named or of the luncheon service or- ganizations passing under the names of Rotary, Kiwanis or Lions. So fer the Lions have been able to organize the smaller towns with more facility, as the other clubs ‘are handicapped by the maximum of charter members have. The Lions having a smaller maximum able to enter where the others could not. So set such organization on the basis of active of home and area improvement. ‘Thus @ much-needed public undertaking is got under If it succeeds in bringing the Slope territory along Of its isolation from its neighbors to and establishing the social and commercial tics in keeping with existing political unity, it will accom- plish a highly creditable purpose and something tend- fing to the general welfare of the southern section of . Heckling Hoover in the Senate Lagisiation in congress is not shaping itself in accord recommendations of President his protests.. Take the acticn into the tariff bill the debenture it to remove from the farm relict the president had proclaimed ten devastating Also consider the repeal of the written into the bill by the a finer ¢ nization of forces from the lowest to the highest in railroading. It makes for large opcrations and provides an organization, strong and competent, to | meei special demands, things in perfecting their many organizations, then bringing all into complete coordination for teamwork. A Fallacious Theory In their anxiety for permanent peace the world over ‘ome of the more ardent pacifists have gone to the ex- treme of openiy inviting the halting of those lines of seience and invention which serve tie ends of war. For these reasons there is opposition to the development of aircraft and even chemical research, Thus would some deny humanity the necessary im- plements of peace for fear that humanity might some- | time use them for war, They would obstruct progress to stop war, apparently not realizing that there were wars before there was powder and cannon, They may be prompted by 2 dread that further development of air- craft and chemical rescarch may make the wars in the future more terrible than those in the past. ‘This debate has a parallel in the history of the educa- tion of the masses and of free speech and free thought. For many centuries church and state bridled the minds and tongues of the multitudes on the pretense that too much knowledge was a dangerous thing. The common people were not told and were too igncrant to see for themselves that the danger in knowledge was to the ruling classes for whom universal education meant loss of power. Because some may misuse their education, are others to be denied its blessing? Because the airship may some day be a powerful instrument of warfare, should the world be deprived of its transportation ad- vantages in peace time? The sdvantage of a good vocabulary is that you can Giscard the big word and select a simile you can spell. People who find it difficult to live within thelr in- comes would find it even more difficult to live without heir incomes, | Editorial Comment Gratitude (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) Two striking instances of gratitude, neither of which should go unnoticed, were recorded in the news columns on the same day. In one case, the will of Jacob Son- nen disclosed that he had left half of his fortune, $19,000, to August A. Busch, who had employed him for 40 years. In the other, Louis Bamberger, wealthy merchant of Newark, N. J., decided to retire and sold his prosperous department store, presenting checks totaling $1,000,000 té 236 employes who had served him for more than 15 years Thus, two men, one an-employer, the other an employe, showed their gratitude to those who helped make their Prosperity possible. Things Not Cheap in Europe (Forbes Magazine) Americans visiting Europe expecting to find everything very cheap have been disappointed this year. European prices are almost on a parity with American—and cer- tainly, if allowance be made for duty, few bargains are readily available. The currency has been stabilized in the leading countries, wages have greatly advanced since the war, business has to pay very burdensome taxes, and substantial profits, therefore, have to be obtained. The rates charged by the best hotels are as high as in this country. Indeed, in London I was charged more for rooms—they were very delightful—than would be charged by any first-class hotel in New York. The tipping evil is as annoying as ever, except that in numbers of hotels, in lieu of tips, 10 per cent is added to your bill for “serv- ice,” a system which some Americans prefer, some rail against. Altogether, you can get as much for your money at, home as you can get in Europe. Europe has, of course, things to offer which our own young country hasn't But a word should be added for our own little-advertised | seonery as compared with Europe's much-lauded scenic grandeur. Fear and Flying (Nation's Business) Talking with a man whose business brings, him into constant contact with aviation, a friend said::° :~ “I guppose in your journeys about the country you have a chance to do a good deal of travel by al “I do have a good deal of opportunity to fly,’ house does not LE E > answer, “but T have never ridden in an airp!s “Why?’ “Well, as I figure it there are three reasons: “First, my parents are afraid. “Second, my wife ts afraid. /"—and his manner grew more impressive—“I'n Hy E| Hts EERte The railroads have done preat | | ____ BARBS o | A News Jersey woman murdered her husband after living with him 49 years, The height of restraint. * Britain proposes to bar the men- tally unfit from marriage. That ought to work out pretty well if the | mentally unfit can be barred from jthe committees that will pass upon who is or isn't mentally fit. x * * Chicago is lagging in the war for health, according to a Chicago news- paper's headline. Why try to be healthy in that town, anyway? * * Oe ‘The Department of Agriculture has | g me: HAS HAPPESED PAGE feelin mapetessiz her guardian, LEON- child of @ miltionaire, CYRIL K. CUNNINGHAM, Wrent takes ber actiog as sympathiser and appeat- joyalty, Brent secures Helen's promise to marry him. chance meeting between 4 Dob revenia their love h other, but she tells ia promised tu another. Helen wore to ask Brent to relense her CARMEL SEGRO ta bie | Carmel throws ber i | AOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXIL FLELEN stared at Brent like @ helpless creature caught in a net. Her face drained white while he held ber gaze with bis own, seeming to force bis will upon her. Then something very strange happened to her. A warm flood Durely mental but with actual Dhysical sensation, rushed to ner heart, and filled it with courage. She thought of Bob — of bis kisses—of the blissful joy of tying in bis arms. of the divinely happy knowledge that she belonged there that be would shelter her, love her. protect ber always. Brent's face became satanic. Helen shuddered with a slight tremor, Had she ever really thought bim attractivet Suddenly she bated bim. What had he done? He had tet a young wet cellars dry. ow could you! * * * Wait! The football season hasn't ended, and there's still a chance for one of the experts to forecast a game correctly. sx 8 A new ambulance makes 70 miles an hour. That should pick up a little business on the way to and from jobs. One of the clowns of the fish circus is the puff or porcupine fish, a harm- less-looking species. When cornered by its enemies this peculiar fish swells up like a toy balloon and the air which it draws into its body in great gasps acts like a life-preserver ssued a bulletin on how to make | and forces the fish up to the surface. ¢ Innocent Chea ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. Why, Department, | © ee Our Yesterdays ° FORTY YEARS AGO division of the Northern Pacific, busincss at the state capitol. George Elder started for Tacom: cating in the western city. that too—and waited. They came!! say 1 will not marry you.” sooner than he expected. He had Mighted one of his fat Turkish cigarets. From behind the smoke screen be manufactured with it be surveyed the girl seated across the table from him with the coldly cal- culating eyes of a fox. .She leaned over and opened her denunciation rather softly. “1 hate you,” she said tensely. “You're like @ poison vine that bas fastened it- self upon a young tree and is grad- ually strangling it. You thought you could do that with me, Rob me of my life—train me to grow up stunted and dwarfed.” “You're wrong.” Brent broke. in sharply. “1. wanted you to be a real girl—not an empty-headed flapper.” “You wanted me to be a char acterless rag.” Helen retorted. “One who would overlook your Weaknesses and come to heel at. your whistle, Can't you see what you say when you tell me that you sacrificed yourself for me? Was ft fair? Did 1 have anything to say about it? Did | promise you a reward? You bave no right to do anything for which you mean to make someone else. pay 8 price un- fess ‘you make your bargain first. fveryone bas a right to grow up free—and not be saddled with « debt they've had no voice in ac quiring.” eee syou were quite willing to have 5 me love you,” Brent reminded er, 2 “But you knew | was just « kid,” have ted me on as you did. Ob, 1 Helen protested. “You. shouldn't koow you weren't always kind to Me, but you fascinated me, and it wasn't it wasn't cricket. You must have realized that some day 1 would meet the right man-that 1 couldn't stay tn tove with you. It would bave been so much better if you'd lived your life for your- self.” “Well.” Brent agreed @ obit laconically, “1 didn't, and that's that, What are you going to do about it? Bea quitter just because you thin’s you care for # young up start? A bum too, Why, you poor foolish girl, Won't. you know that any man ia Enpis’ position who irl remain madly infatuated with him when with s word he could wanted to tive bis tite for bert She could not beiieve it, - A smile of disillusion caught at her lps and contorted their tovely » Maes {nto an unfamiliar shape. tt worried Brent strife. ile bad sees that expression on other feminine nave ended it. Why? Because he | bel lips, And always it bed presaged aspires to marry a girl as wealthy 48 you are is open to the charge of 8 fortune hunter?” » “No matter what you-say, 1 love him.” Helen declared, “How can you think of marrying me when 1 tell you chat? “That's just sgother one of those things you. wouldn’t understand,” was Brent's unsatistactory answer. Brent contented himself with raising an eyebrow, knowing that she would go on, “I was wrong to think of It after 1 knew that 1 loved Bob,” she said hurriedly; “but I did believe I owed you something. All that is changed now. You will be able to console yourself readily enough. And if 1 had not seen what 1 did and vou had told me you meant to make me pay your price for the care you've given me I should feel just as 1 do now about marrying you. You've cured me of believing in sacrifices, If 1 sacrificed my- self and ‘Bob now 1 couldn't make you happy—it would be a useless gesture.” Brent smiled inwardly. “Let me be the judge of that,”. he con- tributed, Helen shook her head. “No,” she said firmly.‘ “I'm going to make my own decisions —and stick to them.” “Are you?” Brent drawled, be ginning to be amused. After all, he thought, she might be more in- teresting as an unwilling bride, It would be a diversion to spend a little time in conquering her. And it sulted bis mood, which had lost all gravity—in the certainty that he held the whip band over her— to let her bave the reins and pull and char p at the bit. eee (HERE was always bis ace card to be played. She had nothing in her hand to play against it. He was absolutely safe—as safe as Such @ game as his could be, he amended. Damn it, why hadn't he been able to discover the owner of that second locket? As bis mind swept back over the night he bad picked it up in the ball at Bramb! be remem- bered that it had ap peared to And he it, Ever tentative questions put to Hel elicited no knowl edge of the locket, or of any loss among her guests. Brent had found himself up against @ blank wall in regard to he should probably always baye to keep her. at a distance with the payment of a reasonable amount of blackmail, but she did not greatly trouble him, Eva he dismissed with s sbrog. i Helen..was gathering her about her neck preparatory to fog the table. Brent saw that she meant end their Ex-Senator Spencer, now a resi- dent of Alabama, stopped here yes- terday for a visit with his friend Alexander McKenzie on his way west. John Wallace has gone west to ac- cept a position with the Yellowstone Wash., today with the intention of lo- {pork meat is in the form of pork 4 | chops with at least part of the fat re- | moved before cooking. They should ° then be broiled under a broiler and | cooked thoroughly. Many cooks make {the mistake of not cooking pork well | TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Prof. E. E. Ladd, Fargo, state pure , food commissioner, stopped in Bis- | marck on his way west to investigate j food conditions, Mrs. H. 8. Oliver of Lisbon was elected president of the North Da- N. L. Shattuck, Fargo, is here on! kota Federation of Women’s clubs at ithe closing session of their conven- tion here yesterday. A dinner party was given last night at the home of Governor and a, Ruth Dewey HOR OF AUT * RICH GIRL- POOR GIRL", ETC, told her that @upeffor persons did not follow impulses—though he fol- lowed many of them himself. But Helen did not know it, Remembering what he had said she decided to be more worldly. “Very well,” she said quietly. The drive to the station would give her an opportunity to impress upon him fully and finally that she serlous, she reflected. And she wanted to leave him with no doubt in his mind that everything was at an end between them. Presently they were making @ tortuous way through a traffic jam. ! Helen seized the moment to turn | to Brent and tell him that, as they could not avoid seeing each other on matters connected with the Cunningham estate, he must un- derstand that she was going to marry Bob Ennis, Hees missed the underlying threat in his words. “Nothing you could say could do that,” she rejoined coldly. “No? It pleased Brent to play with ber. “Do you belleve that enough to give me your promise not to marry anyone else without first hearing what I ha with the fullest assurance that the course of true love was now to run smoothly for her. “I shall consider that a sacred promise,” Brent told her, Helen 4 minutes they were at the station. “Vl be up to see you soon,” Brent said in parting, “and please try to keep that kid Eva away. 1 want to have s long talk with enough. This is especially true when the broiler is used, as the fire is often too hot and burns the outside of the meat before it is completely cooked on the inside. Broiling is really a modern version of the old-time “spit” on which the meat is revolved before the fire. In ¥ order to cook the meat thoroughly in this way, one variety of the old-time spit was connected with some sort of * music box that played a certain num- ber of tunes, enabling the cook to tell when the meat was done. Perhaps the modern housewife might be able to time her cooking by running so many records on the phonograph. But, bet- ter yet, I would advise her to buy a modern stove with one of the timing devices which can be set to turn off the fire and ring @ clock exactly to the minute. With a little practice cooking differ- ent kinds of meat, the housewife can soon learn the exact time required for cooking each kind of meat or other Articles on similar subjects which » I have prepared for distribution. Please sent 2-cent stamp for each ar- ticle you desire. This is to partially pay for postage and preparation: Use More Rabbit Meat ——; Lam and Mutton ——; Value of Meat ——; Meat May Be Food or Poison ——; Health From Meat ——; Does Meat Cause High Blood Pressure? Meat and Protein Substitutes ——; A Lesson on Beef ——; Inexpensive Beef ——; Salisbury Diet ——-; Pork Meat Not Injurious —. Mrs. Frank White for the ladies from - Valley City who are here for the state federated clubs meeting. W. F. Ralteman, Jamestown, is here for a few days’ visit with friends, TEN YEARS AGO Attorney Alfred Zuger has gone to Mott on business for the Great Northern railroad. P. Ochner and daughter, Miss Lydia Ochner, have returned to‘their home at Arena after a visit at the home of Rev. and Mrs. William Suckow. Mrs. J. J. Clarke was honored at 8 party last evening given by Mrs. E. H. Light. Mrs. Clarke leaves soon to make her home in California. Sam H. Clarke and a party of friends returned yesterday from a trip of inspection to their gold mine in Montana. Qe | AT THE MOVIES | ° o THE PARAMOUNT THEATRE ‘Walter Huston, the star of the le- gitimate stage who made his debut on the audible screen in “Gentlemen of the Press,” and Claudette Colbert, also well known to New York theatrc- goers, are featured in Paramount's all-talking comedy-drama, “The Lady Lies,” coming Friday to the Para- mount theatre. And in “The Lady Lies” both these » Popular players are cast in roles worthy of their talents. For this latest Paramount presentation is' gay, sc- phisticated, and in many ways differ- \ E : | i a H | , | f rauietyt tip ah

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