The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 6, 1929, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1929 ‘The lowliest, most insignificant mort e a 7 : 3 lthat can be ? The Biswarck Tribune), ;: place; he has, perhaps, a bright smile that his Am independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) by the Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- | Published marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ag second class mai) matter. President and Publisher acquaintances have come to depend on, or he is an unobstructive, efficient workman, or he unconsciously convinces some stranger that the world is a decent place | by the brave fight he makes daily against unfriendly circumstances. You cannot take any mortal out of the world without leaving some sort of void. | The other thing—loneliness—is harder to combat. It, also, is a thing to which we all fall victim now and then. SAY, MISTER ~WE KNOW WHo You ARE! You AIT No REALLY SANTY CLAUS ~ You'RE ALVIN'S’ UNCLE DAKE é ‘WHAT! . IM WEARING A FALSE FACE 2 WELL L Like THAT! ~ Now Listen, IT WANT You KIDS “To SCRAM AN* HOaPLe! «~ You micHT Fook Little KIDS WHAT DONT KNOW MUCH. BUT HAVETA WEAR Quit Fottowine ME! A FALSE Subscription Kates Payable tn Advance ~~ ON DONT PoKE FUN AT Daily by cartier. per year .... eevee Datly by mail, per year «in Bismarck) .. | Unless we can tie our own lives up with somcone else's | we feel lost. Ss ee . Daily by mail. per year, (in state. outside Bismarck) oe dD. Daily by mail, outside of Nort: Dakota .. « 6.00 Weekly by mail, in state, per year 1.00 Weekly by mail. in state, three years for 2.30 Weekly by mail outs'* of North Dak per year .... i Member Audit Bare: Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entiticd to the use - for tepublication of all news dispatches credited to it or hot otherwise credited in this newspaper and visc the focal news of spontancous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter hereiz are also reserved. of Circulation Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS «Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Good Points About Congress At the risk of drawing a round of gutfaws, we wish to say a kind word for congress in which the state is rep- resented by Tom Hall, O. B. Burtness and J. H. Sinclair, | as it starts another session—one of vital interest to American business, world peace and incidentally the Hoover administration. Lately, much criticism has been directed at congress. | "There seems to be a tendency to blame it for everything from the stock market crash down the line. We are told that the nation’s legislative body often argues over un- important matters, that it is slow in providing needed | legislation, and that its members are constantly playing Politics. Congress undoubtedly deserves considerable criticism ‘True, it is unwieldly, inefficient and is-made up of men; who often try to further their own political interests-- which it might be said they have to do or they wouldn't stay there very long. eee But there are several good points concerning congress Under our system of government, it still stands as a Yet—that, too, is a thing we must overcome. We are condemned, by the mere fact that we are alive, to a |certain amount of loneliness. It is up to us to realize | the fact; to school ourselves in independence, and, at | the same time, to extend bits of ourselves to our fellows. so that they perhaps can escape from their own prisons | for a time. Despair comes to all of us, at times. All we can do; {is remember that others have moments in which they | feel the same way. Things are never quite as black as we believe, Danger of Stringhalt \ The business men of the United States stand to make mistakes in thgir dealings with two sections of Europe. Both would be willing, it seems, to tie up this country with business relations. One has been openly hostile | to the policies of this country, the other is sabre-mad !and a dictator is continually rattling that instrument | of war. ‘The business men of this country must not fetter or handicap the government in its relations with Italy and | Russia. Danger lurks from both. Neither countries are a good bet for America. The whole war-weary world listens with interest and | hope when President Hoover and Premicr MacDonald speak of their efforts to further the great cause of naval | disarmament. And then suddenly the harmony is broken by the voice of Mussolini, dictator of Italy. The Duce ; makes light of all this peace talk. He once more talks jof the strong nation that is ready for eventualities. | Mussolini seems to love to rattle the sabre. If balances of trade do not hobble this nation in its relations with Italy—which Mussolini conceivable would like to bring about—there may be no trouble. In that | event it would be unnecessary to take the dictator too | seriously. Possibly he has to make a gesture to please his followers, because Mussolini is too shrewd to take his country into another war, if he can help it. He knows Italy has neither the requisite food supplies gold, nor raw materials. Furthermore, he would be afraid to take Italy into war. He would be more frightened of his own people than of the enemy. Before he emerged as dictator, there was a strong liberal and a strong PINKY AN” ME WAS ToLD ABOUT You / FANN UVM == ni eau = ATM tee o~- AN’ BESIDES, SANTY CLAUS AIN BOWLEGGED! FEB. U. 8. PAT. OFF. FACE!~ HE uses His OWN FACE, ~~ NoT A FALSE FAcE LIKE Yours / ©1928, wr wea senvice. mc. SANTA CLAUS fu aw \F Y’SAY THAT AGAIN TLL SPANK TH’ PACKING OUT OF You! = —— TY line over a in Wall Street. was “fat.” - @| the Pullman smoking early in the {| morning while 12 are trying to shave. ** * BARBS eee At a@ recent livestock show in Kan- Some of the writers covering the sas City, ‘the Ideal “An Era of Chance,” says a ree Henry Ford has bought a western story describing activities | g0ld mine. says a newspaper dispatch. The word left out! That makes two he has now, includ- ing the one in Detroit. x * * Hog” was exhi-| stcck market recently seem to have bited. ‘The dispatch didn’t say where | secn things differently. |than-in- any other:state. The colored Some called | Some of those movies are “100 per cent ‘talkie* and not much else. * * The Tunneys have set sail for] home, it is reported. Mr. Tunney, | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc. ‘There are more negroes in Georgia; the animal was found, but it’s safe] it a debacte and others described it as | Population of that state, according to the last census, is 1,206,365. you know,-is the man who was sued. | the week beginnig Sunday, Decem- Sunday t: French ed figs. : Peanut butter soup, com- bination salad (beets, tomatoes and celery). Dinner: Baked chicken or rabbit, cooked lettuce, squash, salad of sliced tomatoes on lettuce, ice cream. Monday Breakfast: Cottage cheese, sliced pineapple. Lunch: Baking powder _ biscuits, string beans, salad of shredded let: tuce. Dinner: Broiled steak, baked pars- nips, spinach, McCoy salad, cup cus- tard. ‘Tuesday Breakfast: Eggs poached in milk, served on Melba toast, pear sauce. Lunch: Baked egg plant, seasoned with butter, salad of cold cooked as- paragus (canned). Dinne Roast mutton, baked minced beets, salad of tomatoes, cel- ery and lettuce, Jello or Jell-well. Wednesday Breakfast: Oatmeal with butter or cream (no sugar), Melba toast. Lunch: Cooked turnips, string beans, salad of chopped raw cabbage. Dinner: Vegetable soup, boiled fresh beef tongue, cooked celery, spinach, salad of sliced tomatoes, prune whip. Thursday Coddled eggs, retoasted Breakfast: Biscuit, stewed Shredded Wheat raisins. Lunch: Potato soup, cooked beets, raw celery. Dinner: “ast pork, steamed car- rots with peas, salad of raw spinach leaves, baked apple. Frida: y Breakfast: Retoasted breakfast food with milk or cream, stewed apri- cots, Lunch: Baked squash, cooked let- tuce, asparagus. Tomato bouillon, baked sea bass, cookcd spinach, egg plant, Dinner: omelet, Melba | Dr. McCoy's menus suggested an: | deme of tomatoes and cucumbers, no desrt. i . Dr. MeCoy will gladly anszc oe ae vee na addressed ca The Tribune. me Enclose a stam ectveloge ter ma addresseq Saterday Breakfast: Baked cggs, er Melba toast, stewed pruncs, au * : sweet potators string beans, lettuce. siete | Dinner: Vegetable soup, Salisbur ; Steak, cooked okra, combination grate the desired number of sweet po- tatoes. Add fresh cream, or canneci cream thinned with a little water, to bring potatoes to the . c tightly covered for about three min- utes, then remove cover and scrambic the potatoes like eggs until the de- sired amount of moisture is cooked away, the whole procedure requiriny, about five to ten minutes. The re- sult is a thick, creamy ure re- sembling a pudding. Serve with a generous amount of butter. little girl of 8 years? She has alw: worn low shoes, gone barefoot Answer: There are many different exercises which can be taken to hening the ich is equaliy important. I will be glad to send you some of these exercises if you will hei force seading your full name , (Butter en Vegetablcs) Question: G.H. writes: “fam on diet for constipation, and would + real guardian of the public interest, a forum where the to guess it was the man who sits in| @ readjustment. | socialist element in Italy, not to speak of a considcrable | —<—<$<£&@ — —____— H wheather butter should eww Ce se parent TEE 4 1 ’ ‘ , efforts of special interests to gain privileges at the ex- pense of the public are disclosed. ‘As you know, congress consisis of the senate and the house and the present difference between these bodies strikingly illustrates one of the best points concerning the value of congress. ‘The house works fast with an efficient party organ- ization absolutely controlling legislation, In recent years this has been true whether Republicans or Democrats are in power. Debate is limited, often to five-minute dis- cussions by members. Possibly, it is weil or nothing could be accomplished, but the house, far more than the senate, tives up to the idea of how th: ‘erage person thinks congress should operate. A house committee framed a tariff bill in short order and it was pushed through with only a few days’ debate fespite the fact that it was a measure that was considere-| oe of the two most important tasks of the special session. It then went to the senate and what happened? The senate recused to be hurried and drew criticism from many groups of business men. Debate there still is practically unlimited. The Republican senators split into various groups. But the net result of all this was that the country gradually began to find out what was in the tariff bill, who wanted the higher tariffs and how they campaigned for them. Thus followed the lebby investigation, including the discovg'y that Senator Bingham of Connecticut allowed ® representative of a Connecticut manufacturer's as- sociation to sit in on the framing of the bill as his sec- retary and the fact that Washington is crowded with lobbyists, seeking governmental favors for private inter- ests. Now, radical changes secm certain to be made in the tariff bill, but the important thing is that the spot- light of publicity has been turned on the mammoth Washington lobby. One lobbyist at the Geneva confer- ence, apparently financed by shipbuilders and seeking to Prevent agreements looking toward arms limitation, was denounced by President Hoover, but it was Senator Borah’s curiosity concerning a suit growing out of that affair that led to the presidential denunciation. eee The senate has the habit of turning the light on the efforts of many to gain special privilege and en fraud and corruption. It was a senate investigation that brought the sensational disclosures concerning govern- ment oil lands a few years ago. For many years, nearly all disclosures of this kind have come from congress. It is the tendency of all administra- tions,. regardless of party affiliation, to conduct much Public business in sccret. Obviously a certain amount secrecy is necessary. Conscientious exccutive offi- Often believe they can correct abuses more satis- by not making the facts public, and thus avert criticism of their conduct. American public has a habit of correcting gov- ernment is performing a service that makes for better government. Congress should carefully consider all mat- ters brought before it, and time ‘and again the value of its decidedly slow method of enacting legislation has been demonstrated. Despair ‘When 8 man sits down, pens a farewell letter and then himself to death, those last words he has written bound to be of more than ordinary interest. day a man drove his car up to the jail at , Mont., left a letter for the sheriff, returned . The sheriff found in the “And new of course you wonder why I do this so- 2 and crazy act. Well, I am not crazy, millions that are of no use to ny place, never accomplish any- chance at anything worth while, and sprinkling of communists and anarchists. By means of his Black Shirts he has dragooned all these people into silence. Their newspapers have been suppressed. Their voters have been driven away from the urns, But in their hearts tens of thousands of Italians hate Fascism and cling to their old beliefs. | Now to take Italy into war would mean calling up all the man power of the country. It would mean putting guns into the hands of Mussolini's enemies. There would be possibility of civil strife at home and of treachery on the battlefield. Mussolini will take no chances. He will keep the peace. A Real Loss to the Diplomatic Service Somehow, we regret to read the announcement that Dwight Morrow is to become a member of the senate. Not that he doesn’t deserve the honor. Far from that. But his services as ambassador to Mexico have been |'so outstanding that we would like to sec him stay in {the diplomatic service. Any man who can bring such jan improved relationship between two nations in the | comparatively short time Mr. Morrow has been in Mexi- co deserves the highest commendation. He was to Mex- ; ico what Herrick was to France, and America needs more of this type of ambassadors. Their influence helps bring about that better under- standing between peoples that makes it much morc dif- ficult for nations to go to war. Why Not Try? The great Christmas rush will soon be on. Only 15 shopping days left. How few of us ever stop to think what the Christmas season means to millions of people in this country—the Postal workers, the clerks and the delivery men. For them it is a season of hard work—fatiguing in the ex- treme. Many of them will work 18 hours a day. And all because so many of us put off buying and be making Christmas more of a seasgn of joy than Grudgery for millions of your neighbors, Why not try it? The new senator from Kansas asks Senator Caraway of Arkansas to speak so that he might understand him. Mr. Caraway replied that he didn't expect to live that long. This choice reply is just for gour own use, free. if you're ever in a similar situation. Priest and Scholar (Washington Star) The scientific world loses @ colorful figure through the death of the Rev. Francis A. Tondorf, director of the Ui TH } pe an8 Hi es 52 HEL i 7 a! si i | tis 8 Fite ; eset ef-paat ri (a reat geet nis fel HAE 5 i Ha i i & i 4 7 filet Hu i ‘1 gz? oP if 3 fH B508 g° f. Shepherd entered the dining room. She was dressed in a light summer silk ensemble, topped ith a modish little hat that made her But as the rest of the boarders Grifted into tho dining room, all of them showing the effect of the strain of the tragic night, his keen eyes told him that he was not alone in being a temporary pariah. Every band that accidentally touched an- other shrank from the contact. It was then that the full horror of the situation burst upon the boy. In spite of the fact that the mora- ing papers had played up the news that the police were hunting Emil Sevier, every boarder here—uniess, of course, the real murderer was among them—looked with sick sus Picion and horror upon every other boarder, eee DUNDEE made a sudden resolu- tion, He bad not missed the stricken look in Mrs. Rhodes’ eyes as she heard Daisy Shepherd's de 5 | cision to quit the house of horror. And it was vitally necessary to cer tain plans of his own that those jestioned last night by Lieutenant Strawn remain in this house, He rose to his feet, smiling his friend- 7, disarming smile: . 8 g- g ade Hi i i iH rH z Z 58 cee z ge. 5 $ § i i if dl gs. fF ie a e i? f i EE fla rH Ht toast, and whether is used or is all right to use but- , also on vegetables use salt on the ve not been . With Proper cook- ing very little salt is needed. I have @ special article on salad dressing for free distribution. FS i Bi tit rif ii | ie Ely i i H Fy | fy | é i i Ht ! i F i E ! | FE iE j dy sense enough to take it. difficulties, although a led to oF i nat fll i i Hue abe if rE ty Ee: l g oH HH : aH i fa f [ t a I i i it Fr g i E ‘| [ ij i § i Hi i & i Ee fi iow ; gee Y Be mek.

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