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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1929 The Bismarck AT TOUG Bee cate tas uae tess ne tai oe aad | OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | Bechet ai rtedt eir he Ht SAS Sd oe ner meet re rset eintementrnermerncsen ern An Independent Newspaper that there should be no agitation for wage increases THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER They int the employers to have every cooperation !n (Established 1873) ihe handling of their problems. _ Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis-| In fact, there was a general concurrence that there Marck, N. D.. and entered at the postoifice at Bismarck 445 no reason why business should not go on as usual as second class mail matter. George D. Mann ....... teeseses President and Publisne: And that construction work should be expanded in many directions. Baily ¢: ane ter ae Payable ip Advance There doesn't appear to be any reason left for pur-! and gel ger } chasing uneasiness that would depress business end in- SAV «DID You EVER GET A PANORAMA VIEW OF V'SELE 2 ae witd “TH” EASTERN AN’? WESTERN HEMISPHERES PRINTED ON GREAT GRIEF, SAKE ~ WHY DON'T Vou GO ow A DIET, OR “TAKE A CoUuRSE OF PHYSICAL EXERCISES “To REDUCE VWOUR WEIGHT AND REGAIN, YouR SHAPE 2 a \tW p——7 Daily by mail, per year ‘in Daily by mail. per year, the splendid prosperity that has prevailed. (in state outside Bismarck) .. looks as though the uneasiness will be allayed. Daily by mail. outside of North Dak ——— A World War Recoil ng of itself quite capable of recoilinc. | The World war proved that destiny is greater than’ nce. It showed that human ingenuity is eapatic | rasp of a resourceful people of foiling revenge Gefeat into bene: The new German example of the futility of too ve, too Shylockian. To heap coals of fire on the an enemy it is necessary to be kind to him. T! 9. in that mood when it came to dei with Germany. They wanted their p: wanted it m next to the hea nt of defeat it was it was assented cotted line by Germany per year ....... three years for of North Dako.a, Hate is at ember ot The Associated Press ely entitled tg the use es credited to it oF s newspaper and cisc the published herein. All her matter hereir are for so in ine! to on the! of cle 1. the instance of the extinetion of the German fiect h proper air- 22-hour 29% stance. n he Versailles treaty was drawn up. { the lish were determined that German naval power | should be crippled forever. In 1914 the great German! fleet was larger than any other on earth except Eng-| land's. It was strong enough to prove a genuine menace | and in the battle of Jutland it gave an impressive ac- | count of itself. | England did rot want to face that situation again. | So Germany was prevented from building any battle- | ship exceeding 10.000 tons in weight. The size of its’ cruisers: similarly restricted. Rigid limits were placed } on the caliber of the guns that these reduced warships / might mount. The thing leoked absolutely certain. The modern battleship mounts 14 or 16-inch guns and is around 30,000 tons in size. How could any battleship Germany might build hope to cope with such a vessel? It was the same in the cruiser division. The new cruisers being built by England and America are of © 10,000 tons and mount eight-inch guns. One of them, it | would be supposed, might be a match for the strongest | ©: battleship Germany could ever build. mail service if the 2 a better field than that of airpo: r Bismarck nh airport. First in the favor of the air transportation airport. Neither air transport companies can ith indifferent cities and towns. icago seems to be that it did not ww that aviation has made s inefficiently provided for the ng plant at Se: has turned out a fleet -motored 18-passenger transport ships designed line. But the to hazard scheduled operation of the small field. ns for a new hangar to house the ¢ n abandoned. Boeing and other air h terminals in Chicago have stopped all expan- Bu that the treaty makers could not gauge in advance. i The nex German battleship, which keeps strictly within | treaty lim: is a profound departure from all former hips have at the municipal field because of its present con- and because the city has failed to extend their beyond the next six years. the second instance in which a passenger line use of larger ships has refused to risk from Chicago's small municipal field. Offi- Universal Air Lines state that use of the motored 32-passenger Fokker ships, which they int transcont Ppossibie unless the Chicago Such evidences of stifled growth in aviation there have led aviation experts of national reputation to give warn- ing that Chicago's position as air transport center of the United States is in peril. They point out that Chi- cago's greatest promise lies in the direction of air trans- portat Port is al to its development. At present only 120 acres of the Chicago airport are developed. In the meentime the number of air lines has grown from three air lines to 13. The number of arrivals and cepartures has increased unttl it is greater than that of airport in the United States. Instead of one trip ‘, some lines are making three and four trips to the same point and return. When the field was first opened small single-engined planes flew the mail at a cruising speed of about 90 miles an hour. Today 135 miles an hour is a usual speed and the large multi- motored transports have been put into service. With vement the field has not increased its cials of & new four facilities. $3,500,000 for a Good Name “A good name is better than riches,” so the saying goes, 2nd C. S. Mott. multi-millionaire vice president of General Motors and chairman of the board of the Union Industrial bank of Flint, Mich., seems to have taken this to heart. At any rate, Mr. Mott has dug down into his pocket and withdrawn $3,500,000 cash with which to cover the emphasize that a modern municipal air- | ship, it nevertheless possesses armament that would saa abie it to stand up to any one of them in combat; and, in addition, it has greater speed than any other battle- ship afloat, so that it could get away safely if the odds were too great. It could simply pulverize any cruiser | in existence. And the new German cruisers are, likewise, a vast sur- prise. Limited to 6,000 tons in size, they are neverthe- ' less said to be capable of out-sailing and out-fighting any English or American cruiser of greater size. | Thus the Germans, although the treaty was expected | to limit them to a position of minor importance in naval | ‘circles, may yet, because of their inventive genius, regain | their old place as a premier naval power. i For all ordinary situations in life it is possible to, provide rules in advance. But no one can ever tell what developments human ingenuity is going to bring about. | The human brain can work miracles that rule-makers | | can never foresee. | | | Editorial] Comment | A Nomad of the North \ (Devils Lake Journal) ‘ | Carl Ben Eielson is thought lost in the Arctic. This | is a bit of irony that appears not to fit into the char- | acter of the daring North Dakota aviator, because the } Arctic has been home to him, so to speak, for many | years. |" ‘Those of us whose lives are commonplace more or less, hemmed in by a certain routine which deprives | of adventure aside from the dreaming thereof, may | ell wonder why Eieison or any other man chooses the | | wastes of the world in their zest for romance and ad-/ | venture. Why can they not remain in civilization with | | the rest of us and dangle with the bits of life which | perplex us and give us, once in a blue moon. a touch | ‘of romance? Why lose themselves in the dreadful lone- | liness of an Arctic night or in the fearful tanglewoods | of an African jungle? shortages of defaulting employes of his bank who gambled: It is an old, old story. It was old in the days of | i , | Abraham, and it was ancient, very ancient, when Alex- a sue sek ae And omnes ee soyalianh paige | ander the Great sighed because he had no more worlds is money—and he may not—but the fact remains that! to conquer. The same spirit which sent the first man the men and women who deposited their savings in his! from his rude native abode far into the wilderness or | bank are protected. | poeees or a far ame land wal aires je the a i Apparently, Mr. Mott figured that he was better able to the modern man. The spirit of adventure never dies. | A I it, or less— | Stand the loss than his depositors; apparently, he took | pgielecgeoarserg eae ee nae sel the four the broad view that he, as head of the institution te, walls of a factory or office building, or even with the | which they had entrusted their savings in good faith, | roof of a modern habitation. He wants to go places, and was obligated to protect them. Yet, it seems he was in! ing ae sed saa 38 not especially interested whethec | no wise legally responsible and could have resisted any The spirit of seme the spirit which sent Lindbergh lawsuit successfully. | across the treacherous wastes of the Atlantic on his | We need more men with this broader conception of| flight to Paris. It is the same spirit which sent the | { Surers of lumber products, cement and bricks, gencrat duty, more men who place a greater value on their reputations and their obligations to society than they place on their money. Now, Why Uneasiness? Henry Ford wants to announce a general wage increase soon. Henry is an idealist in some things but a very Practical industrialist in others. The wage increase is his answer to the fears of some people that the recent Stock speculation debacle means business depression, which, in fact, it need not mean. In afnouncing his decision to advance wages, Ford suggested that similar increases in other lines will go far in sustaining Ameri- can business by keeping the demand for many com- modities at a high level. idealism or from good hard sense is for everyone to guess for himself. Everybody will recognize that some idealism 's back of this move, at least, but it is undeniable that wage increases at this time of the year would tend to speed up business in spite of the depressing effect of the stock speculation that ended so disastrously for the foolish people who risked their savings in a game that they were not fitted to play. In fact, there should be no need of advancing wages old wage standards. It was only the little poker game in Wall Street that went wrong. That should not have ® panicky effect on business. Nevertheless, people have been hesitating to buy, back east. There has developed @n undercurrent.of pessimism. The proposal of Ford. ‘Sherefore, is reassuring. As soon as he puts it into effect it should have @ stimulating result. And if others will follow his lead, it will. ‘The whote ousiness situation is involved in the stabil- ity of employment. If that is maintained, the public will pee that the Wall Street disaster is not related to legiti- mate business. Confidence will return and business will proceed as normally. And stability of labor is to be maintained. Manuiac- _@ontractors, road builders and officials of building trade . agreed at the White house Friday to ma.n- the stability of wages and employment. labor organizations have been as nice about the ; Industrial bank of Flint, Mich., to offset mere speculative disaster. Industry and busi- | Private fortune $3,500,000 cash in order that ness are sound. Business ought to get along fine on the| ; Vikings to New England. and Columbus to San Salvador. : Cervantes laughed at it through Don Quixote, but the laugh did not kill the spirit in man. Man is still battling the windmills of adventure, hoping they might turn into dragons which he had never seen before. Eielson lost in the Arctic. Your great adventurer is | never lost. He is lost when he finds civilization: and | oftentimes he prefers death to failure and frozen wastes | to the mad race of men. i | Noblesse Oblige | | (Grand Forks Herald) | There is more good than evil in the world. People | | are expected to be decent in their behavior and honor- | | able in their dealings with each other, and usually they | | are. It is the fact that conduct of the opposite caarac- ter is the exception that makes it attract attention, and, | comment that the undesirable bulks too large in con- | versation, in the newspapers and in thought. Because jit does bulk so large, the trend of does not give a faithful picture of life. {,, zt is im to make note of all the ; that are done. and it is necessary jof the bed ones. Occasionally, ; formed an act so conspicuous in its | Mess that the rule is reversed and | that becomes noteworthy. Such |} Charles 8. Mott, chairman of the in i BEY ean fs providing out ag gE bank nor its depositors might suffer loss because efalcation of a group of employes. ‘The remarkable situation in t.12 oank, which has aE Gi sea EGAD, I Wourd BESPEAKS ; “id” FRONT AN” BACK OF LET MYSELF GET INTO SucH A CONDITiaN J we ~~ YOUR CORPULENCE BALED HAY APPEARANCE AND NEGLECT! —~)) NEVER © VYouR ~ IF NDOLENCE a HUMAN A KICK OUT OF FEELING VALUABLE SOME “TiME + f Dust StEeP iNT A POST OFFICE AN’ GET VEST, You'd BE A GLOBE fax You WANT “fo GET N'SELF WEIGHED FOR AIR 7 @ one will have to go hungry when we BARBS ° A message given to a soldier dur- ! nov ing the war was delivered 11 years when a chorus girl received some from the inventive genius of Germany was one thing) later. { messenger bo; | Probably cne of the regular! a “* {| Go nave one. ees come from the oyster. But and then the process is varied lob: ee * One of the Hollywood girls drives” We've been hearing all along that ' an automobile fitted up with a cock- , War has been outlawed and now we | tail bar. naval standards. A third the size of the ordinary battle- | learn from President Hoover that no} lucky enough to get hit. Several people have been Horses can be trained like sheep to follow a leader. If you doubt it, just go to any race track. * A crying baby saved the six people when a house in was burned. Father probabl: ened the ciher members of the fam- ily. (Copyright, 1929. NEA Service, Inc.) BISCUITS AND CRACKERS Those who have been following my health articles know that I usually recommend wholewheat flour rather than white, but there are two meth- “lods in which the white flour may {be used. The first is in the form of | thoroughly toasted or dextrinized | bread, and the second is in the form |of baking powder biscuits. The best method of making these baking pow- der biscuits is to combine the white {flour with eggs and milk with the addition of baking powder. The bis- cuits should be made very thin s0 that they can be thoroughly cooked. They should not be used in addition to other starches at the meal, but should be considered the principal starchy food and be properly com- bined with the non-starchy and salad vegetables. Either white or whole- wheat flour may be used in the prep- | aration of these biscuits. Properly prepared biscuits should be light, with a golden brown crust ‘of a fluffy composition and never soggy. In making them one should be accurate wich the measurements, | have an oven of correct temperature, | and avoid over-handling or kneading the biscuits. A good recipe is as follows: Two egg whites, two level teaspoon- fuls of baking powder or less, de- pending upon the type of baking powder used. (Follow the directions given on the.can.) Two cups of flour. a pinch of salt, and a half cupful of milk, Beat the egg whites until stift and fold in the flour with as little stirring as possible, adding the milk a little at a time along with the flour, which has been sifted with the baking powder and salt. The yolks should be beaten in the milk and not thrown away. Drop the batter in {small spoonfuls on an ungreased aluminum sheet and bake in a hot oven until brown. Most of the biscuits sold from the bread counters are made of yeast lrather than baking powder, and ree ‘semble bread rather than baking | powder biscuits, eee zAveng ©1929 by NEA THIS HAS HAPPESED BONNIE DUNDEE, “eat” detec- LIEUTENANT homicide fle te Ged her veturn tater. 1330 aeen jam dewe ley ae he went far his car | ahowt 12:18 to make a call. SOW GO ON WITH THE stort CHAPTER 1X ' 6eWES, t watched him until he disappeared.” Dr. Weeks an- swered. “As soon @s the car had backed out of the alley. the man straightened up, and ran faster than ever out of the alley tato Tenth street.” “In the direction the ca taken?” Strawn asked. | that car, turning briefly into the alley and flashing its headlights, | bad been @ pre-arranged signal— | 0. The opposite direction — | toward Maple avenue, the street | just north of Chestnut, sou know The car turned wmward Chestnut.” | “Could you distinguish the ma! of the car or its occupants?” “Nowneither. In fact. | paid 20 attention to the car. | was watch. ing the man. If I bad had my wits about me and had not been tn such & hurry to make my call—a pretty | sick patient, by the way—! suppose { should have challenged the man. or reported the matter to the police. Or if 1 bad known the man to bea former boarder, an evicted one, | should, of course. have notified Mrs. Rhodes of his strange behavior. { bave as high regard for Sirs. Rhodes—” “I'm sure you bave, doctor,” Strawn Interrupted. “And thank you very much. You've helped us & great deal. You'll be needed for the toquest. of course... . By the way. doctor, you say you at- tended Mrs. Hogarth occasionally during the last three or four years. | {2 your opinion, was she — well. mentally normal?” The doctor ecbuckled, then re membered be was in a room where qmurder bad been committed s very short time before. and looked em- barrassed. “One of the shrewdest women I've ever met. Lieutenant Strawn. And the most close mouthed. A quecr woman, but not & crazy woman. I'm sure of that, Lieutenant means. ° Wes the doctor Jeft the room. Strawn spoke briefly Car faway, the fingerprint expert, who Ing Service, Inc. PAHS ALP PEN TINA TBR top of it. f took her fingerprints first thing, and they match with on the keys, either.” When Carraway had left, Straw: | Joined Dundee behind the screen. | “Well, boy, I'm afraid this case { | going to be too simple for you | tastes,” the older detective com: | miserated, a gleam of triumphant mirth in bis eyes. Dundee grinned amiably, then remarked, very casually: “I won- der why it took Sevier—if it was Sevier the doctor saw—so long to run from bere to the station? He was still running when he caught jthe train, you know. How far is it from the Rhodes House to the Union Station?” Strawn scowled. “As a matter of fact, it's only about 10 blocks. But that doesn’t ve anything, Di jdee. Sevier must have known wi | Set om bis trail. because of the old }tady’s complaints against him. He | wouldn't board @ train with the Swag on bim. My idea is that be met 8 fence somewhere, who en- | dertooks to take care of the stuff jfor bim until the police were tired of watching him. or released bim on evidence. Either those found on the desk. No prints: Cora Barker, escorted by the patrolman, appeared in the doorway. Rhodes {s holding some reporters )at bay downstairs now.” eee T was more than 15 minutes be! ,, fore Lieutenant Strawn returned rfrom his session with the reporters. | “Well, that's that!” Strawn com- ented with satisfaction.’ “I gave ithe megspaper boys the low-down jo2 our suspicions of Sevier, but toid them to soft-pedal it; just to say that Sevier was wanted for questioning. They ate up the doc- tor’s story of the running man and the car, and are going to ask the driver of the car to come forward, Itke @ good citizen, and tell any- thing be knows. . . . Say, young feller, me lad, what are you grin- | ning about?” he broke of to de |mane half angrily. | “2 was just thinking,” Drndee | confessed. his eyes twinkling, “how jim my ignorance and inexperience I should bave gone about this case.” The careful wording did not de jcelve Strawn. He flushed, then shri ‘All right! Spill it? Ho would you have gone about this case?” “I'm afraid 1 should have made an awful lot of work for myself and the police department,” Dundee ad- insuffele: paraphernalia pre |that, or be bid it somewhere, and | mitted, ruefully. “1 should bav ry leaving. “Afraid this buacb of prints i've picked up won't help you mue! Strawn,” Carraway answered. “The murderer was 8 wise guy — used gloves, ors maid must have dusted ia here with an oiled rag some time Saturday, for the desk was clean even of the j thes barely bad time to make the jtraia be had advertised he was going to take No flies on Sevier,” be added admiringly. “As a matter 1s map going to have « Picture of that maa is mind. Guess I'd better @ begun op the supposition that any- one who lived ip this house, or who jhad ever lived in ft, or bad even jtakem @ meal in it, and bad heard of 8 miser with a hidden |boaré in her room. was a possible suspect, Greed, you know. is such vulversal passion. 1 belleve it ts {responsible for more crimes than {aay other motive, isn’t it?” “Well?” Strawn snorted. oF ete ‘one comes forward to identity him the man running down the j alley.” Dundee went on, with hi isarming smile. ‘But 1 can’t help remembering, lieutenant, that everyone in this house kuew Emi) Sevier bad been evicted Mrs. ;Hogarth’s complaints, that Sevier bad just been firgd and therefore ould be leaving ®wn to look else where for work, and that the police | would think of him first as the | murderer! “And I also can’t help remember. jing.” Dundee went on, with that ;Same quiet emphasis, “that every- one in this house knew that Mra. | Hogarth’s reinforced window screen would be installed Monday, making ccess to ber room from the porch |Impossible. Unless Cora Barker or someone else has been-keeping bim informed, Sevier could not , known that the screen was not jfeady in place, Mrs. Hogarth told ime she had given Dusty Rhodes the money to buy materials for it jnearly @ month ago. Also, I heard Mrs. Rhodes say, in the presence of all the boarders and ‘moalers, that all screens, including Mrs. Ho garth’s, would be installed Monday. They are the kind that pusb up and idown, like windows, I noticed the Grooves for them in my own win- | dow,” “Well?” Strawn parked, as Dun- dee paused, eee | HE young man shrugged slight- ly, “It just occurred to me that if the murderer was an inmate of the house, he—or she—would want ;t0 do bis little job of robbing and murdering before those screens were installed. All. the rooms |the front and the east side of this jfloor have windows opening direct ly upon the upstairs poreh. With ‘out screens on those windows, any | boarder on this floor could step out of a window, creep along the porch to Mrs. Hogarth’s window, enter |noiselessly, since the windows are |Jow, and steal up on the old lady jfrom bebind. “Once the screens w ever, the rais! it | Screens might bai tien, . . . By the way, I said ald the roomers on this floor, because those having rooms om the west side of the house, which bas Porch, could gain access to the root merely by walking across the ball, which is T-shaped, you know, with & window opening directly upon Porch. Naturally a roomer op third floor could bave the stairs to this ball, ste; the ball window sill, snes Cora Barker's room aise it an ideally constructed & robber's viewpoint Bring ie Barker, Payne to follow orders.” oe pare iss ae Barker, eo 7 man, appeared in the Pde Ba Through the screen Dundee could see her face, and he Almost betrayed his presence by “Ot course, 1 realize that things exclaiming im pity. old tady’s tngerprinte—escept the|get the papers to help ma Airs jlook vad for Sevier—provided ae und (To He Continued) | Biscuits should never | strawberry shortcake or wit) j fruit. Crackers may occas; | | ! Dr. McCoy will glad {| Personal questions on h: diet addressed to him, i] The Tribune. | Enclose a stamped a: | envelope for reply. i used as the starchy par instead of biscuits. Thi | when toasted so that the: oughly dry and of a gold: | Crackers may ve taken trips in place of bread. There are also a va: wheat crackers baked in a form. Some have the flaxseed, raisins, etc. latest to be developed wheat cracker to-which y etables have been added. good type of cracker to dren, as the vegetabies a: wholewheat biscuit are quite wholesome w open and retoasted und Because of these produc brittle, they may be softer ing hot water over them seasoning with butter. eaten with a spoon as a ver substitute for Melba t Cornmeal fiour ma: st Place the wheat flours in pr muffins, but the wheat cornmeal should not gether in the same reci; In preparing any of {Or crackers, remember starchy foods cond should be u--d ; such and not be combined wis). acig fruits. QUESTIONS AND ANSWEisS Controlling Height Question: J. J. Se please tell me whether it i to control the glands that a child may not a usual height? The gr: this child are tall and ¢ years is 58 inches tall, or fo above average.” Answer: I have found glands can be r the 10 year old j about 10 days. have a balancing ef: glandular functioning, and t to have a beneficial effect wu: creasing the growth of the chila is no growing rapidly enough and to retard the growth of the one clined to be too tall. Yellow Teeth Question: L. G. asks: “What whiten the teeth harmlessly? tried salt, roda, lemon juice toothpastes regularly, but s' teeth have a yellowish tinge. smoke. It may be that the ; Answer: Ask your dentist about this. your teeth are made yellow bacterial stain this can sur ¢ moved through some __preparatio which your dentist could suc: you to use, Rheumatism Question: G. H. asks: causes the whole body to ache? S: mornings it is painful to even 7 my arms up, but after I stir a: a-bit I seem to be all right. 1 the weather have anything to (io ¥ this condition?” Answer: You undoubted!s having the start of some rheumatism. You will 1 stiffness more in cold wet we but as you move about, or as comes out, you will feel bet have a series of articles on the and cure of rheumatism which I be glad to send to you if you \) write again, giving me your namc (Copyright, 1929, by The Ee. Syndicate, Inc.) 2 | Our Yesterdays | a ae; FORTY YEARS AGO W. I. Irwin, publisher of the L: wood Broadax, is @ business in the city, Governor Pierce, Governor 3 tendered a reception last even the Sheridan house. John Parker has been appoin: Gistrict attorney for Emmons cou! Hon. Gilbert A. Pierce was © by the senate to be the first U States senator from North Da’ -FIVE YEARS AGO _ Mrs. J. D. Wakeman and Mrs. J.D Taylor entertained a large. comp: of friends at a thimble party Wakeman Henry Holtan, Washburn, is = ing several days here on busin Mark Sullivan of the Bost ‘Transcript is one of the visitors 1 the city today. Mr. and Mrs 8 eee thipattended the Shrine reunio ——<— ——— | ‘LITTLE JOE | o ia eo LATE TO THINK LEARN, IF Yoo i. 12.0,4.6, ap cage COR AEE EINE SEATS GES Eo SON SSR ONE SE