Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
BUROPEAN FEELING AGAINST U. §. LEFT IMPRESS ON TATLEY Bismarck Tourist Had to Meet Sneers at War Debt Policy; Saw Costly Socialism Europe in general does net like the United States these days, Henry Tatley says he discovered on_ his tour there during June and July, when he went baci t union of his semini Trondjhem The iness was the outstanding impression his trip gave him. Sentiments such as from newspaper and review articles recently by Dr. Eric P. Quain in a talk to the Rotary club—as the at- tack by the first alty, then Mr. in the British parliament, one of the slurs being that the U. S. constitution is merely a chip on the shoulders of America to provoke war with Eu- rope—find echo in what Mr. Tatley says he heard abroad One of the chief sneers to tourists are subjected—as wa Yatley—is based on re efforts to hold France, Engl and Italy to their bi of war debts owing to this country “What are you going to do with all this money?” says Mr. Tatley is the usual sneer. | “I asked in return,” says the Bis- marck man, “what money? I don’t notice that we are getting any. We have promises but little pross f getting anything after thrown off a third or more we spent on getting Europe out of the wa: Stir Up Neutral Countries The feeling against this country is fanned by org: d propaganda , that plays on envy, says Mr. Tatley.| Res nationals of the debtor nations are spreading their hymns | of hate in the newspapers of othe | countries, as the neutral countries | of Norway and Sweden. He met Swedes fed up on this misrepresen- | tation who knew no Letter than that | America was oppressing France and England, and he had meet some riendly questioning, as the ex- ample given. It was quite an eye- opener for these critics of the Amer- ican attitude to learn the rea! facts of the billions of lars advanced the Allies in the most critical pe riod of the war, says Mr. Tatley, in addition to the rifices in lives in the expeditionary force which saved the ultimate v rs from be- ing crushed. 2a Finds Drouth Abroad | Mr. Tatley found that this coun- try is not alo b. He f of Europe Since \ in June, water has been put on ra- tioning ‘at some places. The crops reflected the rain oversea possibly worse than herc One of the changes in his home country which struck Mr. Tatley a uneconomic was the trend toward pensions and doles and the multi- plication of officials to adminster this soeialistic policy. He terested in the condition of tea: as he was educated in a sem which would be tesmed a norma’ school here. Salari: been in- creased and retired teachers are on pensions equivalent to about two- thirds of their former stipend, he said. The resulting fiscal condition mixed up with the policy as to liquor, said Mr. Tatley. Liquor is! made to help raise the enormous! taxes required to kcep up the so-| cialistic economic p Normal | types of taxes all have been boosted. | There is, he said, a 35 per cent tax on automobiles. On every cafe and which per cent. It is a tax that confronts the tourist and native at every turn. And the policies of all the other | countries of Europe are very much the same, he found. That is why the ropaganda directed against the Inited States on the war debt is- sue has found such ready lodgment | in the minds of the unthinking peo- ple, he thinks. They feel as though what they are paying in excessive | taxes all is for the enrichment of | this country, though none of it is| coming over but all is used to pay the pensions, doles and bounties at home. Tourists Keep Europe Going flowing from this country, he says. the water transportrtion swarming up and down the Rhine in Germany. All bulky freight vas handled on strings of scows drawn by tugs. coal, iron and steel, building mi The Rhine he found was riprapped it all along its course. He said would be a good idea for the Missouri. Spring floods would not tom lands, as now. Channels would not shift. Tatley landed at Plymouth ing over and travel north England. H. home, 20 miles from Trondjhem, visited Bergen ind other lead ag cities of va He also | the into Germany to Berlin and and Mainz, ing land on his return trip ing the return boat at Am- jcommission for airport administr: {tion requires a diploma from an a jlimited commercial pilot's jand a knowledge of airport ratings. [Requirements for assistant director Lewis, opera singer. has filed suit against her husband, Michac! Fran: Requirements for superintendent Bohnen, asking separate maintenance jare two years of university train- Bohnen also is an opera singer. ing, four years as an executive, and ‘The singers, ofter termed the “idea! |three years connection with flying theatri THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY j RUSSIA AND BRIT ARE DEADLOCKED IN TRADE NEGOTIATION Soviet Ambassador Returns to Paris After Failure to Ar- rive at Agreement Moscow, August 1.—(AP)—Rus- si: and Great Britain have reached |@ deadiock in their London confer- ence for the resumption of trade and jcommercial relations and diplomatic services. Great Britain refused to cede to the Russian desire for mediate appointment ef ambas- sadors before controverted questions were taken up. Russ Ambassador Valerian | Dovgalevsky of Paris, who has con- iducted the negotiations for Russia with British Foreign Secretary Arthur Henderson, today returned jio his post in France, The nego- tiations began shortly after the Rus- sian ambassador arrived in London at the end of last week. High Standards Set For Airport Chiefs Los Angeles —(AP)— Standards credited university, four years’ ex- |perience as an executive, three of ; which must have been spent in con- tact with aeronautical industries, a nse are the same. industrie: Age lim EXAMS FACE TEACHERS Minot. N. D. Aug. 1.—Regular ex- are set at 21 and 55. ond grade elementary certificates will | | be held in the Minot high school as- sembly room Thursday and Friday mornings, August 8 and 9, A. M. Wall- er, county superintendent, has an- | nounced. You see him at s @ world series to be op: is there to start and he and Mrs. Walk: hes shown. coliariess anc and below you ngly as a royal banque: pple at a public schoo! function. FIRE DAMAGES FAIR BARN the North Dakota State fair grounds the local fire department before much Gamage had been done. WILLIAM G. NORTHUP DIES FLAPPER MOTHERS BRINGING UP = disease gaining a hold upon the Not Old Fashion Type of Moth- ch Scant Ciothes Healthy ‘The mother's freedom of dress, short scant underciothes and pen- ‘ for fresh air and sunshine is refiected in her care of her children. s generation ago.” Dr. Crum- ies Were virtually esses and kept in er, but She's Doing Swell Job Raising Kids FIGURES REFUTE CRITICS Today's Children Three Times Healthier Than Those of Generation Ago campaigns against dis- | s tuberculosis and diph- | the vast amount of health ib agencies throughout the na- By BERYL MILLER ton play important parts in making y called her a flapper, with her short i ‘on | SKirts, rouged lips and bobbed hair. hotel check there is a levy of ten They said she we and the Bronx, in | New York city, health campaigns have | saved the lives of 417,726 babies under S of age, statisticians estimate, | decreasing the mortality rate from | 1,000 in 1891 to 17.6 per 1,000 GROSS I AWARDED ~TOFLYING PIONEERS Smith and Richter Receive Med- al for Demonstration of Refueling in Air And now look what she’s doing— rearing the healthiest cr: since Cain and Able w | tiny toes in a sandpile just outside the Garden of Eden. In the ten years since those early days of the post-war period, when | moralists were everlastingly predicting @ gloomy future for the younger gen- eration, the flapper has grown into womanhood, married and had babies, | Just like others of her sex have been | doing for centuries. u Keep 4 | babies” healthier than _ Business in Europe during the | rearcd a gencration ago by the mod- visit of Mr. Tatley was good because | ern girl's caustic critics is revealed in| «s the tremendous tourist revenue} a study of mortality rates of millions | ) ys.|of babies throughout the nation by He was particularly impressed with | the American Child Health associa- tion, Have Survival Chance Babies born to these modern young women have three times the chance of survival as did youngsters born to the sterner mothers of a quarter cen- tury ago. In 1900 there were 19.8 deaths per 1,000 among children 1 to 4 years of age, while in 1925 the rate was only eat away hundreds of acres of bot-| 62 per 1,000. And 162.2 of every 1,000 babies under 1 year old died at the Lowell H. Smith of Santa Barbara, Calif, and Licut.| John P. Richter of V air corps cfficers, as establishing the practicability of re-| day to Capt. feat was performed in June, 1923, | when they retueled in the air for 3% hours and 15 minutes. you are sick inside you are sick Il over. When the stomach fails to igest its food, you are standing at the reshold of a series of ailments that may end in a complete Internal health means! out Pane Keep yon im and estive organs and vigor- Natural stimu- ks and herbs money Pleasut “fads,” but she is also spending it in| better care for her babies, in the/ opinion of Dr. 8. J. Crumbine. itive of the Child Health associ- contained in Tanlac, Tanlac is wonderful for indigestion ales, Rasen, eppetite, helps you dij Minneapolis, Aug. 1—4)—William G. Northup. president of the North Su Woolen Mills company, and chairman of the board of directors of {the Farmers and Mechanics Savings | bank of Minneapolis, died last night | at his home in Ferndaie, Lake Minnc- tonka. He was 78. New In interviews shortly after their marriage Miss Lewis stated that she 'r and Bohnen had agreed that their | Cr 5 careers should come first, and that aminations for teachers’ first and sec- | their marriage should not be allowed Grand Forks, N. D.. Aug. 1—! Fire of unknown origin caused slight | damage to the roof of a horse barn at | bere. The blaze was extinguished by | Professors to Test Boilers’ Efficiency Inspection of all stoker and boiler equipment in state institutions will be made for the state board of ad- ministration by two professors from the state university. Chairman J. E. Davis announecd today. The object ; Of the investigation is to determine the efficiency of the various power Plants owned by the state and ways in which they can be improved. The survey will begin at once. SOVIET REGIMENTS REVOLT NEAR IMAN, Russian Army Is So Disorgan- ized Leaders Are Afraid to Send Troops to Front London, Aug. 1—(—A dispatch to the daily mail from Chang Chun. | Manchuria, today said that two soviet regiments had revolted north of Viadivostou, near Iman, and seized an armored train, cutting the railroad. The correspondent cited the state- ment of two alleged red army desert- |; ers that the soviet army was some- | What disorganized and the govern- |‘ set by the Los Angeles civil service Ment therefore afraid to concentrate large numbers of troops without su- , . Pervision Career Comes First; Lewis Seeks Divorce Los Angeles, Aug. 1.—(7—Mary Courses in “boyology” will be conducted this summer by the Knights of Columbus at Cliff Haven, N. Y., and Jackson’s Point, Ontario. @ADIO TUBES | Anether Remarkable N Scout and r way automatic block signal FR. , and gain strength aad E is tHEty atte 3 i Phone 687 LINCOLN’S LOG CABIN, KENTUCKY In this crude log cabin in Hardin County, Ken- tucky, Abraham Lincoln was born on February 12, 1809. The structure itself is no longer there, but the spot where it stood is venerated by all Americans, W. E. PERRY and Arizena $ > am One way epecial chair car and coach excursions | August 15 to September 15, inclusive. Fred Harvey station dining rooms and lunch rooms will save you money. fast Santa Fe trains to choose from—The Missionary. the “Santa Fe all Quick, comfortable—free reclining chair cars— safeguards. Gonnel’, Pass. Agent ss i" eye Fe er 07 Metropolitan Lite Bidg. details p> Minneapolis, Minn. Phone: Geneva 9136 Biemarek, N. Dek. AUGUST 1, 1929 HARBIN POLICEMEN CUTTING RAILROAD S22: = stree | brutal’ | saulted arat: | ‘Shag’. Lates: Pane iP director eration: to interfere with thelr operatic WON. | qaqa ATTACK AMERICAN; Father Is Assautted Twice ty ¢¢ Officers When Me Goes to Rescue of Mis Sor York Stair were Dy Was ae For Bnergetx: Oni Rese * a? Saye }backes Rathenc eats gene Name) one seers 4% were married in b , ROORS sss" his retirement as premier last POINCARE UNDE! “The former premier left the ee ating room within @ half hour of his , entering it at 8 @. m. and shortly aft. PROSTATE erwards recovered consciousness. He WE said he felt no pain and his doctors said there was no fever and they sorted to Mave Rallied; — arfection of the prostrate gland. He Pyysicians Hopeful will be 69 years old August 29, pereaen | | Sunday Island, in the Pacific, is Raymond Poin- really the tallest mountain in the nt successfully today a | world. It rises 2,000 feet out of five ¢ eration for the treat- miles of water and is thus neariy LY affection, which | 30,000 feet from base to summit. were confident everything would go eeomer French Premier Is Re- | wel. j . 4 ‘The premier's operation was for an Vine taint and torment of flies end mosquitoes have no terrors forthe some with fragrant FLY-TOX ate rebessed in Gave t oe ss centiy the positive killing quali- te B FLS.TOR before it is solid % vou. mins 22 DeOME Pre wall OE Shae, apenas EE tee Te Be On, NOTICE TO VIOLATORS OF we) aaa TRAFFIC ORDINANCE f owners of cars which have been tagged for traffic violations or which are tagged in the future for traffic violations. fail to renort to police headquarters within 48 hours after being tagged, warrants for their arrest will be issued and fines imposed accordingly. BOARD OF CITY COMMISSIONERS. Ic is eclipsing its entire field .|. " ah’ Boince FRAME 7 MAIN BEARINGS B REAR AXLE BEARING “CLUTCH Ql The backbone of Dodge Six Nothing that yon hear or read dependability, ruggedness, about the new Dodge Six could strength and long life is a be more impressive than the structure of modern ‘mechani- facts and figures you will findin eal features that are bigger, a Table of Comparative Speci- stronger, more advanced and fications. For here is concrete more efficient than those found evidence that in real value the in other cars that are sold at new Dodge Brothers Six totally RODGE BROTHERS SIX M. B. GILMAN CO. TAN AER ee A TSAR CDSE EE