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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 Bismarce @ Second class mail matter. Mann .. President and Publishe: i Subscription Rates Payable in Advance his, by carrier. per year... A [| Daily by mail, per year cin Bismarck) Fyraty by mail, per | f=, in state. outside Bismarck) + Dally by mail, outside of North De rs tor +250 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The sted Press is to the use tgor republication of all ne ed to tt or Pot otherwise credited in this nev Iso the deal news of spontancous origin pi All s of republication of ail other mi reserved. SMALLS. SPE Incorporated) : Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. | CHICAGO NEW YORK ost’ t€ (Official City, State and County Newspaper) _ ee ‘ i | ‘The Buffalo Bill of the Sea @ The Business and Professional Women’s club Hause for feoling that it pr e tyr the 2 snee that sat in the auditorium last night find heard Count Felix von Ly is yarn of the Weadler’s roving wa South seas. aplis story is a thrillin greatest story that the World Tt had the m 4 je narrator of pir | Macific would have | KAventurous fiction to match his Troas | tauckner cruise does n: n to be a part | Vorid war at all, for t ye no modern batt BE it after the ble is passed, no pol F agtmored tanks, no pile artillery, mo t adit inferno of we t marked the di | Seer and herror on the wesier 10 «starving populat © illages. Not even a man ont ‘agfe. All are punctillious!; , comic opera with a Spa: s the sou s foptip ts wrecked, is U dupona ,vaving palms, core. lowers, @kents, just as though on location for a Poly t conflict. there are the alt Under all this fi ive velvet, howe’ ‘4 r-present pe! lockzde there was Sef chance collision with disaster. £9 the story runs Blither tense with grimacss cr meli <h adventure ‘kin to burlesque. D¢ Count von Luckner came to America a rune’ boy 30a his teens to scek out Buffalo Bill, the hero of the Ned Suntline tales he had read in Germany. Colonel Cody Mad become his idol, his ideal cf -made aan,“a pionecr of the glamorous tond the buffalo and adventure. Wonder whether it ever Ywecurrs to him that he himself has become a fizure just ds glamorous as Buffalo Bill was to him? He has 0° yore need he seek the buffalo slayer. In the mirror ye can behold a greater } His story worth the te eenture for his cour nsash expressed in actual deeds, not in the fiction of Yvestern novel writers who created their heroes out of Nfure melodrama. The strivings of Felix von Luckner | become a self-made man and his resourcefulness inj emergencies of a fighting man’s life form a whole-) awme thriller for the young and an entertaining tal? FOr the mature. So the Business and Professional Women's club made _{ creditable selection in bringing him here to entertain hh¢ismarck in general and the Indian school and the Lions q 2 taal in special cppearances. ist SES Sea ae te What a Goaded Man Said Menator Walsh, of Montana, in le: tig The senators at whom the fling was directed did not op to argue the matter with Grundy. They kept on jsaign funds, for the probe has been turned into a Rike Reed and Bingham. Perhaps they took the wise course. It may be that ae does not deserve to be criticized too sharply for gibe at the less developed states of the west, for he said what other critics have been thinking with splenetic temper and even sometimes saying with : and loudly, instead of concealing it and operating ‘ false pretenses. And utter frankness, in Wash- is not too common a virtue. American theory; the theory that nothing jolt automobile region. Now, if this theory be correct, Grundy’s view about our c d states” is correct also, In that case a Penn- their long record bf brutality and repression, is 9 in our crown, and a peaceful Dakota farming com- is a villainous disgrace. It might be, however, that Grundy is mistaken. #. Perhaps there are in this world things that are tant than dividends. Perhaps Grundy and re not the immeasurable superiors of Borah and after all, bolls down to this: the have a right to fix the laws to suit them- nothing like hone: ment to el county or a state. of safety property A serics of accidents due to recklessness in auto driv- ng by a double tragedy, had led to some doubt as to what. stand Morton county would take toward the suppression of th safety. The dec: leral w ing made en; are | proseeu on the m paved highwey bu cond ope: Kind of sh in Am $76,000,000 “Def ene. are invariably les ow ccor rather for a son-! the In running the British | se on the spot. in the Pacific. | that the cow uurceful of the red man | Ho essayed a brave ad-| zy and he played it with an amazing | ®8 With a wallop that apparently was intended to hold, uring some sharp | tauestioning in the lobby probe, Joseph R. Grundy, the | ark Hanna of Pennsylvania, Republican and national | | ,stotective politics, launched the comment that the} Yestern and southwestern sections of the country were | »_mposed of states that do not deserve equal senatorial | 1 apresentation with the more populous and more develop- | igi states of the union, They were, he said, “backward” o oring into his activities as a tariff lobbyist at Wash- Sngton and into his fat frying of manufacturers for cam- | Optive to discredit the present tariff revision, particularly ; | alae upward revision introduced by the eastern senators P pedal vocality. Grundy trumpeted his theory pub- Nevertheless, this proposition of Grundy’s deserves we discussion. It represents the culmination of a except industry, that all values can be measured terms of a manufacturer's ledgers, that the supreme of human endeavor is represented in such a as the Pittsburgh steel district or the De- yat mining town, with its unpainted hovels that ) for homes, its dreary streets and its company police, in other words, we do not live for our in- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY tives in Washington. We owe Grundy a debt, in a way. that it is there. Taking the Right Course Serving of warrants preparatory to prosecution of | reckless or drunken Morton county motorists is a move | whieh the law officers there and the county will find a wholesome factor in creating faith in their official | conduct. It also will restore the county's good repute. There is . intelligent and fair law enforce- | ate the standing end character of a city, a t means proper liberty, a cf life and limb and implies protection of jeopardy State's Attorney Connolly has takea a cour merits approval. All good citizens will acclaim his ef-) forts to restore proper treffie conditions net only on the{ it on all roads and then to keep these ve without relaxing a bit in their en- bune thinks he has started out to do a good job. May he succeed. When Cheapness Is Expensive Careless and cheap construction is a pretty costly ; ‘ticie in the current h an enormous yearly fire loss. ction is the most expensive kind. you are buying or building a home, you'll find that real my will consist in demanding, and paying for, Cheap cons kind of construction work. Not So Many, After All printed in America than ever before. had fallen to 10,345. as much as we have sup d. The palmy days are the ones when the pcop!: around | you have tncir palins out. Hoover's Postoffice ‘Reform’ (Baltimore Eun) President Hoover's proposal to put the postal service on a “business basis” is subject to somewhat conflicting | | interpretations. Some view it primarily as a plan to inaugurate a postal accounting systen’ that will show clearly what services are provided at a profit or loss, and | why. Others see it as a design to convert the postal serv- | ice into a “go-getting” business organization, opcrated on the profit-making principle. If accounting reform is the main feature of the plan. it is a good one. When the postoffice department ad- ministers subsidies to the merchant marine, commercial aviation and certain types of publications there is no justification for tossing them losely into a postal deficit which obscures the truc nature of the transactions, They should be clearly labeled, no matter how much the sub- sidy recipients resent it. If, however, the president has in mind for the post- | office to adopt the cardinal principle of business—make | a profit or don’t produce—he is moving on to extremely | doubtful ground. He is proposing a revolutionary change | in government which would shift its major objective | from service to money making—a change which, logically i extended, would require the state department or the | Navy to show a profit or close up shop, In view of his necessary familiarity with traditional policy of operating the postoffice for public service and} not profit, it seems altogether unlikely that President | Hoover entertains the idea, attributed to him by some, | of trying to convert the postal service into a money-mak- | ing institution. And it is even more unlikely that he could succeed even if he harbored such a notion. In dealing with a postal deficit of $135,000,000 the major | consideration is not its size but what the public is getting | for its money. At present that is not clear because of | loose methods of presenting federal accounts. When | the accounts are ironed out, ail subsidies labeled and the | operating efficiency of the postoffice clearly pictured. | it will be time to decide on postal rate changes. it may be good public policy to ignore what is conven- Lawyers Blamed for Jury Evil (Chattanooga Times) With every convention of lawyers and from almost every bench in the country the public is treated to a the things thet afflict society, the abuse of the system is the direct result of a lack of united and of official and lay leaders arity ission, then the } states do not deserve to have senators and representa: | ~ i OUR BOARDING HOUSE ALTH “DIET ADVI CE Dr Frank McCoy __, Ihe Sast blay. to Maal om SOE on ANE OF THD PER, THE ROMANCE OF WHEAT The hard wheat flours are prin-| wheat flour. Many people ask for the cipally used in bread-making, except | white flour because they associate the the durums, which are used in the | whiteness with purity and cleanliness. manufacturing of semolina flour,|The millers have encouraged this be- which goes into macaroni, spaghetti, noodles and shells, etc. It is estimated that we use nearly twenty million bushels of this flour a year in the macaroni production. The Kubanka or durum wheet was brought to this country by Mark Carlton, working for the department of agriculture, in an effort to find a wheat which would withstand thé rust, Carlton's solitary | lief, as the removal of the bran and exploration into the wind-swept, | heart from the wheat helps in stor- lonely regions of Russia is a romance | #8@ because it prevents the invasion in itself which is very well related in | bY wo! remarkable book entitled Hunger Fighters,” by De Kriuf. In 1926 the Canadian crop was over | dirty has taught the population that 405,938,000 bushels. The United States | it was a good idea to buy flour that is crop for the same period was 669,365,- 000 bushels. At the present time it is | Whether it is clean or not. Within the said that wheat furnishes us with one- | last few years this belief has changed, third of cur total food, but our per|however, and it is estimated that apita consumption is lightly de-|most bakers manufacture an equal He has brought; this attitude out into the open. It is an attitude that 1s | pretty well represented at the capital just now, and} it exercises a lot of power. Grundy has helped us to see Ved, I SEE, we Tavis” To | FIGURE SOME WAY SO THAT TLL BE TA” BRAWN OF “HIS JoB AS? You'LL BE TH” BRAIN f ee we GRAB TH? TRUNK BY ITS POTTOM.CORNERS AN’ LIFT IT HiGH ENOUGH SO (TLL CLEAR YouR BAY WINDOW ~~ Comin’ IN) FROM “TH” ScREEN PaRCH Nou HAD HALE oF YouR EQUATOR OK, “TOP OF TH’ we Now WAIT A MINUTE we GETING “THiS TRUNK UP INTO THE ATTIC REQUIRES MORE THAN PHYSICAL EFFORT! aw AS A SCIENTIFIC ENGINZER oF Note, L Witt FiguURE A WAN fo DETERMINE “He CEMTER OF GRAVITY AND “THEREBY DISTRIBUTE THE “TRUNKS WEIGHT, So THAT THE RATIO OF LIFTING LEVERAGE WILL NoT UNDULY “TAK i aoecY WO On $s criminal di: n, as attested in the servic nts on intoxicated drivers who c: crashes in spite of two Hyves lost in a prior wreck, he offenders. The practice of running amuck ! orial highway is no longer to be overlooked. ; Violators of the publi¢ safety must pay the penalty, especially when they do damage and place lives in} rms, “The| The fact that for thousands of yea: ts out that fire losses due to that vican buildings run around | clive chimneys and flues, stoves, furnaces, boil- | — d pipes cause about 10 per cont of the total yearly | agazine. “Carelessness in handling da loss of about 3 per cent of the total. due to improper wiring and over-load- to take his planned trip to the Pa- .————— | Our Yesterdays le Peet ute Ore ad NTY-FIVE YEARS AGO ies L and M of the Twenty- | Behold that which I have seen: it antry arrived last night) js good and comely for one to eat and from the Presidio at San Francisco. | FORTY YEARS AGO | Invitations have been issued for the rtilder is @ nuisance in more ways than | annual birthday rece) e-sores, and | William Thompson, | brate his seventy: to drink, and to enj his labour that he taketh under the ‘sun all the days of his life—Ecclest- the good of all he puts up are usually ey omfortable and snug than the home- Ss a right to expect.. Now comes this evidence | John Hanson wh type of constructor is directly responsible for; northern part of Burleigh county. re- {ports seeing a large black buffal | bull about five miles north of Eis- ;marck yesterday. Lottie Carlson of Parkers 0 venth birthday. who has been visiting Pleasure has its time; so too has wisdom. Make love in thy youth, and vey of Menoken is in the i in old age attend to thy salvation — y and Menoken, R. P. Allison of Steele is passing ja few days in Bismarci. decreasing in London, s, such as rooks and J.C. Staley and daughter Kather- | formerly nested in f Garrison were in the city yes-| ja, en route to St. Louis to at-|the heart of Kensington, now finding it impossible to obtain food there. ! has been seriously | ‘ill, but is improving, and will be able ‘y magazine and every newspaper column | 2 'y criticism and gossip remzrks quite frequently | is fairly being deluged with a flood cf new books. One gathers that more books are being tend the World's Fai Som EM ATA e jnnocent ©1929 BY NEA SERVICE INC. Chea ! temper completely. “Don't you know | Helen was his. He could take | that you've simply broken Eva's |her when he silled, She was utter-) ics, however, prove the contrary to be true. ago as 1910 there were 13,470 different books pub- | lished in this country. In 1928, when we were supposed | to have many more authors and publishing houses, the | Furthermore, fiction itself shows a falling off. back in 1901 there were 2,234 different novels published in America. Last year there were only 1.809. Apparently we're not being flooded with literature S$ WAS HAPPENED sclf in his satisfaction. ELEN glanced at her wrist- watch, “I am takiug Miss Mor. ris to the station in a few minutes,” she told him. “Please say what you have to say as quickly cs possible.” “I'd advise you to make other arrangements there,” Brent remarked. not take me seriously, 1 see, but you will shortly, and 1 predict that you will not be in a mood to drive out when this interview ts over.” Helen ref. sed to be frightened. “Very well.” Brent began as she stood waiting. His practice of po- liteness compelled him to rise and stand also. “You may as well have it straight from the shoulder. Here it is: You will never marry Ennis!” Helen smiled disdainfully. “You won't bave the nerve to tell him that you're a criminal,” Brent went on; “and if you marry him without telling him I'll expose heart?” she cricd. “Some day ['m certain she will think so too,” Helen agreed; “but for the present she imagines her- self in love with you. She wants to That is why 1 bave sent meeting a dying At 18, he presen Finally he glanced at a small clock on his desk, arose, stretched himself agreeably and went to! change his dressing gown for his “She isn’t here?” ever: jwatehink | With a touch of consternation. came in to help him, Brent told him) to telephone for his car. The garage was just around the lcorner, a convenience for which | futile it would be to make an ap- | Peal to you for any kind o« decent | treatment—but 1 know, and { wish to spare her further disillusion. 66,70, she isn’t,” Helen relleved him, “She doesn’t know how those who hired espace tn it were required to pay heavily. was brought to the coor of Brent's | ment.” apartment house within 10 minutes and he went down to take the wheel, thoroughly convinced that the ulti- mate success of bis scheming was the servants Gna the old lend in bed. Then be wine Promise to marry bin. Later, che and Bob realise they love each other, but she telis aim he to engaged. the tries to Brent to celense ber, but be ce- (uses and makes dire threats U ohe dares to marry Bob. “Yes?” Bfent smiled over her ‘opinion of him, thinking of what \she was yet to learn, “How do you propose to do that?” “I want your promise never to ;see her again. No fate could be | Worse for ber than to go on with Helen's eyes were wide with mixed emotions, chiefly astonisb- ment and disbelief, but there was fear Jurking in them as well. Fear that Brent was evil enough to have found some way to wreck ber bap Diness, however innocent of any wrong she herself might be. She made as wordless sound of protest and shrank back from his closer, threatening approach. “What have you to say to that?” he demanded, Helen rallied her courage. “Only that you are a contemptil ard,” she cried, “and utterly in Fears he had entertained former. ly that Helen would refuse the new role be would offer her bi No one could be s$ mad, he he answered dryly. “I'm willing to make that promise. The kid's a damned nulsance, tut don’t think you're dictating to me, my dear. | simply find it convenient to comply with your wishes in the Give up millions? Face poverty— a girl who bad been carefully pro tected all her life? but the publicity? Could she stand up to all that ex: posure would mean to her? He Ureat to Helen, and wi talking am argent call comes trom “But should you change yoit mind,” Helen began warningly, “let me tell you that her brother will thrash you within an inch of your \ife—and maybe he won't stop tm time to prevent Eve from tng polsoe tm a Gt of by: OT caring for slow driving, he made good time to Yonkers. Helen was watching for him. She ran to open the door herself, having lost much of ber self control while waiting for him in nervous anaiety. He attempted to take het hand for a kiss in greeting but she drew it angrily away from him and turned to lead the way to the living elem tries te Brent ts, bat ebe insists that she must cece him. Helen decides to “Ap inch to live,” 1 and phones fur bi “Am 1?” Brent mocked her. “Pos sibly, but not too insane to bave put you in tbe Nellin girl’s place— to have won an immense fortune for you—and to have you just where questionnaire.” ‘What would you do if you had but an Inch to live?” “Jest, if you tike,” Helen told “but you can’t go forever trampling on other people without some day being trampled on in” AOW GO UN WITH THE sTORY CHAPTER XLIL gpeent dressed leisurely and lingered over his breaktast, taking a third cup of the crystal- clear coffee bis man bad prepared for him——adding @ tiny pinch of salt ip place of sugar or cream. its Steaming fragrance, mingled witb the smoke from bis Turkisb cigar @t, tiled bim with @ sense of well being that’ brought the look of a lately fed ‘ungie beast into bis eyes. His satanic sm ‘ps now and theu as certain pleas ing thoughts came to bim. Helen must be stewing over bis The more upset she was the better for him, Carmel bad promised to be good, being clever enough to know the Umit of all things, Eva was @ mouse. No trouble Brent followed without @ word. She must be the first to speak—it suited his purpose to have it so. Ip the privacy of the vast room she whirled upon him and her words came fike the lash “I've heard about you and Eva, Brent smiled broadly. dear little lecturer you are,” he sald enthusiastically. ‘y in a temper, Helen. where to begin to ask the questions that were seething in ber mind aad ber story from the Helen’ fistened helplessly. so appalling, so the dead parents, revealed as crooks, “1 mean what J say,” Helen cau- Brent stiffened slightly, the only | Honed him. outward sign that she bad disturbed his poise, One eyebrow went up quiringly, but be remained silent. “Well, what do you mean to do about it?” Helen pursued. “Do?” Brent repeated blankly. “Are you thinking of marrying her?” Helen asked tensely, “My dear girl!” Brent was amused. “1 see,” Helen said Icily. “1 glad to know that you have no such | CO”! impossible intention.” she went on, | *"E ber eyes fairly burning with scorn “You need not have worrted,” Brent said hastily. “1 shall marry Bo one but you, Helen,’ ‘ Ean For s moment Helen wag too turious to speak. Then: “You are mistaken,” she said, using all her will to say it calmly, to marry me.” “Where to. | 70U2s Ennis come int” he shot at her suddenly. Helen's head reared haughtily. “1 am going to marry him,” played over bis conceived the idea of imposing her Helen answered rather quietly,|upon the aged man as bie grand sidering bow his words Gred ber | daughter—and what it meant to a ete tonal! eet ss made a r) tl ¢ said. ° ua attitui you choose,| Helen's lips opened stifly—her but 1 am going to marry Robert/ words came with great difficulty, ta. - » you are the crim ie ried hoarsely. te ald and seated bimacit|tigertstinens left’ Bion, and be be came on the instant his old suave, he/| unperturbed self. He had been disdained to com- | ferocious in his attack, brutal, de lighting in it. But be knew that “There really {an't anything|bis moves must now be cautious, “And now you know why you jo taking 8 | ended. That gir! Shaliimar—well, it she hadn't tanded Bob Konis it didn’t matter. She'd soon be sent packing —he'd see to that. Not have ber banging around to give Ennis en excuse to call, The young puppy might bave the nerve even with the door closed im bis face at Helen's drders. . They had been standing. Brent ites inal,” gow waved toward a chair. me Ell “It you expect | o, “Because of Eva?” Brent taunted “My word, you are jealous, a to take time,” cS F i c “This is go! werned, as Helen ply. i “L thought you at least too tn- telligent hd toot at a time | ore to be said,” she hinted. Uke this,” Helen promptly returned, “Why at r time-like juired blandly. more carefully planned. “Unfortunately, for you,” he said be differed, “it | qietly, “you cannot prove your ia- won't be pleasant elther—for you. | Hocence.” * jolen came close to losing her | You'd better eit down, my dca But what did it matter? What id anything matter? Brent drank deep trom the cup, drew in s long | | breath of smoke and steeped bim peng “There is a great deal, and it will cf a88 this?” be|take some tims," (To Be Continued) MEM OF TAS PAPER food store and ask for the entire jthe flour which was sifted looke white so that one can tell at a glance amount of whole-wheat bread or per- Europe uses: more wheat than|haps more loaves than made from America per person, and it has been | White flour. estimated that one-half of the aver- - rent | age European meals come from wheat. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | The reason for the per capita decline Childhood Visions in the consumption of wheat is prob-] Question—Mrs. R. Y. writes: “1 ‘ably because our work has changed|have a little nephew about 3 years from the hard, strenuous physical|!ld, and in the daytime he seems to labor, calling for a large amount of | see visions, and laughs and acts like fuel foods, to the white-collar jobs in | he is asleep. At night he is disturbed— which overeating of the highly starchy |Can’t sleep like children should. I foods is apt to lead to digestive dis-/Would appreciate your opinion on !turbances. The public has also been | this.” educated to use more freely of the} Answer.—Of course it would be im- fruits and vegetables, and because of | Possible for me to determine whether better clothing and better houses the | Or not your little nephew is normal iving foods are not as neces-} Mentally without having the oppor- 5 y once were. The increased | tunity to examine him. However, there earning capacity has also given people | are many children who are quite nor- a chance to buy higher-priced food,| mal, apparently, and have visions or resulting in a decrease per person in | fancies during the day in which they the wheat consumption as high as 20] appear to see visions or play with j per cent in 20 years. In analyzing the flours it is found j rect he should be able to sleep well at that the amount of mineral matter | Night. Digestive disturbances are the and protein is somewhat higher in| Principal cause of troubled sleep. If the whole-wheat flour than in white] these dreams or hallucinations con- flour. There are some people, how- | tinue it would be well for you to con- ever, who find that whole-wheat flour | sult a psychoandlyst or psychologist is more difficult to digest. What is|when your neph@w is about two or commonly sold in many stores as vhole-wheat flour is not really whole- wheat, but a mixture of 60 to 40 of the dark and white flours. Whenever white flour is used it should be in ad- ion to non-starchy vegetables, as/ imaginary friends. If the dict is cor- and obstruction of the veins and ar- teries to the limbs. This disease is very difficult to cure, but some bene- fit may be derived from following my diet course, which would help to reduce the inflammation of : |the arteries. It would probably be , | necessary to repeat the fast about once a month for a while until there is an improvement. It would also be a good plan to use baths, massage and exercises outlined in the article on Raynaud's disease, which will be sent upon request. (Copyright, 1929, by the Bell Syndi- cate, Inc.) UOTATIO “Capitalism is a relic of barbarism we haven't the courage to abolish.” —C. J. Miller Kenyon. se & “Many a young man who talked bass to his father talks tenor to his wife.” —Eddie Cantor. ne % “There seems to be no time at all over here (America) for self-culture. You do not seem to realize at all the value of your imaginations or your senses or what it means to be alive. —John aaa ee wea author. “Lawyers, you-know, are Oi supposed to spend all their time settling the troubles of other people. I spend most of my.time trying to settle with my la # —John D. Rockefeller, Jr. xe * “No boy ever became a leader with- out making himself a nuisance to some one—at some time.” —Henry Ford. ses “Not the game itself, but the fact that it reaches and teaches the sport- ing of the American people, matter in what land he lives, even to the seventh generation.” — Benito Mussolini. Fifty miles of wire are used in the burglar alarm system of a store in London.