The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 29, 1932, Page 3

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HEALTHY CHILDREN ° How to Provide Proper Food and Care at a Minimum Cost; By SISTER MARY In order for children to grow with- of their tissues the minimum amount of food that must be supplied. Food has been divided into five groups, each group essential to the welfare and health of children. Milk comes Pare gece cenit to drink and use in cooki In the second bread, cereals, rice, macaroni, spa- ghetti, noodles and the like; one or more of these foods to be used at every meal with whole grain breads and cereals predominating. Group three takes care of the vege- tables and fruit and recommends gen- erous helpings of two or three vege: tables including lettuce, spltint, eab: cab- carrots and other leafy vege- tables, Tomatoes are classed with fruit and fresh or canned may be used in place of oranges. Some other fruit such as bananas or apples should also be provided. eee Eggs, meat, fish, cheese, dried beans, |. peas and lentils make up the fourth) Broup. At-least one food from this group should be chosen daily with preferably an egg at least three or four times during the week and meat never more‘thari once a day.” The fats come in group five with some cream, butter, oleomargarine, nut butter, bacon, suet or other fat and a little cod liver oil daily sug- gested.’ On such a diet a child can grow and portect his health. From these groups it is compara- tively easy to plan luncheon menus. Such vegetables as potatoes, carrots, cabbage, onions and spinach can be cooked in many ways that are appe- tizing and nourishing. Yellow turnips and dried peas and beans add variety. Cabbage, carrots and onions are all | good served raw and can be used alone or in combinations. Red cabbage has valuable on account of its crisp téxt- ‘ure. Day-old bread is better for children than fresh bread and costs less. Stale breed, combined with dried fruit and vege: table: and one taw vegetable, some fruit other than that used for break- In the. accompanying luncheon menu a well-balanced diet is pro- vided, og AT THE MOVIES ——— CAPITOL THEATRE One of the strangest “locations” ever used for a talking picture is seen in “The Cuban Love Song,” Lawrence Tibbett’s latest starring vehicle, which will open tonight at the Capitol theatre. ‘The famous Scott ranch in Santa) Monica Canyon, California, was transformed into a tropic locale for the picturesque fiesta scene of the production. ‘Transplanted palms, mango trees, carloads of imported, tropical fruits and a polyglot crowd of Spanish, Mexican, Chinese and Cuban “extras” contributed to make E BY] 4 i 3 F 1 Ried ts te toey ot who realizes that i" HH 3 e : eerEg Hea EEL, z E 8 i Fee gyttlt ze Ha a S35 3 created by an actor of reat, sensi- tiveness, youthful appeal and dra- matic ability. Well, the actor who fulfills these requirements is Phillips Holmes, whose moving emotional per- formance in “An American won him the assignment. Ernst Lubitsch — a tender, Lubitsch utterly different from the aa witty Lubitsch of the Chevalier comedies—directed “The Man Til .” And he had the privilege of including in his cast Lionel Barry- more, winner of the 1931 Acting Award. Nancy Carroll also plays in “The Man I Killed,” directed by Lubitsch in a performance that will surprise her friends, for it’s different from anything she's ever done. The Paramount Theatre has an- nounced “The Man I Killed” for an early showing. Use the Want Ads | flat _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1982 ‘shown Potato in Throat Is Fatal to Child|*"s Enderlin, N. D., “D, Jan. 90—-A|? plece of raw potato lodged in his lung Proved fatal to Kenneth, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Walter Kastner |. nesday when it became lodged throat. Parents of the child attempt- ed to rush him tg a Minneapolis spe- Bene nie. ania child died near eee inc parents, one_ sister, Heth, five, van @ brother William, nine/ The child was born at Milnor, iN. D., April 26, 1930. , Mrs. Ruby Forman, Burial will be in thé For- man cemetery. Valley City Boy Is Drowned in Sheyenne Valley City, N.D, D., Jan. 29.—(?)— After an all-night search by a posse of 50 men, the body of six-year-old Carl Fagerson was recovered from the Sheyenne river here Friday morning. Carl had fallen into the river at a point where it is kept open by hot water flowing from the power house. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Fager- son, missed him Thursday when he failed to return from Laeieionh and the hunt was immediately started. ee Wing ! € By LILLIAN MUELLER Mrs. Ben McCloskey and daughter Margaret and Bernice Glanville were Sunday afternoon visitors at the Axel Soder home. The Robinson basketball team was defeated by the Wing basketball team land Carl Anfinson of Mylo as state here peek The ie! ls Oe Dra ae oy 6 to vf Kidder 1 Pioneer Dies es Lege sninest gM ce doseph Renauld number in at hie hoa ned m Hea: ISEASE tion. Owen Solberg of Agate was ‘selected to represent the county at the state league convention. John Clark of Thorne was elected alternate. Affiliation of the Progres- _ sive Republican party with the Non- Partisan League was-favored,. While no formal action was taken, several members expressed approval of the four-cent gasoline tax. , he doe Hy on her daughter Ferne’s Son {home near Steele Thursday, # victim of heart disease. He ead his widow, four daughters and three sons. His children are ‘Mrs, Roy Colton and Mrs. Alden Nel- son, Driscoll; Mrs. Russell Lawrence, ; Miss Lucille Truax, Steele; J. Walter ‘rust, St. Paul; Willard R. Truax, Steele; and Lester B. Truax, Driscoll. He also leaves 10 grandchil- | dren. ‘Mrs. James Olson and Mrs. H. Glan- ville entertained a group of friends ‘at the latter's home Sunday evening. G. A. Hubbell and George Anderson ‘motored to Sterling Saturday. Rev. John Fisher of Tuttle was @ Guest ‘at the John Mueller turday. L. Davis and daughter anaes with Mrs. John L, Vincent, Ralph Ja- nd Clara, Lillian, Martha and visited at the R. J. home Sunday. and Mrs, Henry Roth of Tuttle several days at the Bill Roth Mrs, Jacob Banttari visited with ‘Mrs. Henry Josephson Friday. Rent the Spare Room Thru The Tribune Want Ads i Yankton, 8. D., Jan. 29.—(P)—A delegation of Farmers’ Union mem- bers from South Dakota left Thursday for Washington to join other union members in a move upon the capitol to urge congress to speed legislation Pertaining to farm relief. Delegations are expected to go from 20 states. nly ; | Puneral services will be held at the Steele Methodist chursh at 2:30 p. m. Sunday, Rev. Herbert Brown officiat- ing. Interment will be in the Steele i! i Ly ro ri if Rolette Ni onpartisans Organize for Battle Rolette, N. D., Jan. 29.—(7)—The Rolette county Nonpartisan roy at its convention here Thursday, en-; dorsed James McManus of St. ‘ons | B LARATIVE Good selection of wool and silk dresses reduced: to $6.75, $9.95, $19.75. Hats, $1.00. All Costume Jewelry half price.— ROSE SHOP, | Baking Tests will prove tt BEST... more iron than the white variety and its color often appeals to children. Vegetable chowders and cream soups offer the maximum amount of food value for the money haar * * stile agonal igen in at esinala fruit or raw vegetable every day. When a soft food or a liquid such as a cream soup forms the main lunch- eon dish the raw food is particularly School Heads Will Plan Tournament Bottineau, N. D., Jan. 20.—(?)— Superintendents or principals of schools in Bottineau county eligible to membership in the Consolidated High an exotic atmosphere for an episode in which Tibbett sings a Cuban song and Lupe Velez dances a rumba to| the accompaniment of the noted Palau Brothers’ Cuban orchestra, imported from Havana. The fiesta was attended by nearly @ thousand people and was an exact replica of such an affair in Cuba. Great stone barbecue ovens were erected and whole pigs roasted. Piled high on tables were tropical fruits, tortillas and other Latin delicacies. Much of the dramatic. action takes place in this locale which also serves, as the setting for a comic interlude in which Ernest Torrence and Jimmy Durante are pelted with cocoanuts by an irate monkey. The picture tells a vivid story of a marine stationed in Cuba and his ro- POWDER School league of North Dakota will gather here Feb. 1 to plan for the Consolidated League county tourna- ment. The board of control of the Con- Solidated league has adopted the county unit as a plan for elimination in basketball tournaments this sea- fon, taking the place of the former sub-tournament. Schools expected to be represented at the meeting called by Miss Wanda Svingen are Landa, Kramer, Antler, Newburg, Blaine, Russell, Maxbass, Lansford, Brander, Overly, Willow City, Gardena, Mount Rose, Souris, ‘Westhope and Omemee. Falkirk Station to Be Kept in Service An application of the Soo Line for authority to discontinue its agency at Falkirk, and to substitute custodian service instead, has been denied by the state railroad commission on the ground that the business handled by the railroad at the station justifies maintenance of an agency. a record indicates nents the peopl Falkirk supported the Soo Protest against Lrg service, custodian service is permitted certain conditions, we cannot, that it is equal to agency service. would-not be so considered in a post season, Earnings Tisiog of Ke oo. Zine 63 mallee ae of TROUBLED ALL LIFE WITH CONSTIPATION But Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Brought Real Relief Sic ame | © epee are tion: Mul te exereae the 2 dirt and FLOAT every particle away. MORI “F Feeine; Vitamin tg ely tone the New Oxydol is great for dishes too—and kind suas : TWN ri un plies iron for the blood. to hands and delicate fabrics. Ask your grocer sath Sbulk? jn Aus Baa is wach today for the Semign, Sad hea, todetoegeia LESS WORK per ies peg eye package. Procter & Gamble ¢ scars ig pre atara a THE WORLD'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER tg al Srngr-se SiN semi, ape |) gor? od Harris & W: stipstion. “If ‘you ‘have intestinal p re GBBT os : , ‘oodmansee 4 front j mance with a little peanut vender, played by Miss Velez. Karen Morley plays an American girl who com- Plicates the romance, and the strong, cast also includes Louise Fazenda, Hale Hamilton, Mathilda Comont and Phillip Cooper. The production was directed by W. 8S. Van Dyke, who “Never! produced “Trader Horn,” the. Twain Shall Meet” and “Guilty Hands.” Tibbett sings a number of inter- esting songs, including “From the Halls of Montezuma’—official song of-the United States Marine “Tramps at Sea” and “The Cuban Love Song.” “The Man I Killed” The hero of “The Man I Killed” is @ man who has to. live. And it is this man’s human need for love and hap- Piness that starts the staggering sit- uations of “The Man I Killed,” Para- mount's significant, unusual new pic- ture from the play by Edmund Ros- 6AM fpousete eens teaversett cr ace = cumecerey Ne DOUBLE TESTED DOUBLE ACTION E PRICE FOR OVER 40 Y EARS 25 ounces for 25¢ COPYRIGHT 1931 BY JAQUES HPO.CO. MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR GOVERNMENT a women spread the good and no wonder, for its whiter clothes—faster Livelier, richer suds—5e% unin of them? Enthusiastic women are praising this new soap discovery and the richer extra suds it makes— word 50% more suds mean less work. Sunday Tribune, gives you a whole Sunday’s reading material—at no extra cost. A wealth of absorbing, special articles on subjects from all over the world; gripping stories of science, dis- covery, invention, romance and mystery, of foreign lands and peoples—beautifully iltus- trated with many actual photographs, and printed in colors. The Graphic Weekly— full newspaper size — added free to the ew larged Chicago Sunday Tribune—makes this the greatest newspaper value on carth. Don’t miss this week’s issue, No Extra Cuaree! eo. Order now from your local newsdealer named below... oe Chicago

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