The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 4, 1929, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1929 ‘Farmers Will Trade Ideas at Economic Conference at Carson: OP MISSOURI TOBE | [ . ae] HELD BY SERVICE Conferences Scheduled at | dan, New England, Beach | and Dickinson Also | HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL IN PAST Committees Named to Ar for Discussion of 14 Dif- ferent Topics ge | | | agent, f the exter Dakota Agricul! This will be o meetings, the ot as follows counties in past two yea al meetin: territory, th mark the fir: ings have been he! souri river. The purpose of ference, Martell _DUTY ON FARM PRODUCE RAISED “TILER CENT BY TARIFF CHANGES ially, the report added, the ¢ had agreed to increases in rates on agri- roducts provided by the entailing an estimated in- *: 80-Page Decuinent So stitution of Dome: Foreign Values ences, this nf college, and adopt a progr: ment of agriculture Grant county. To expedite the ¢ of protection from 23, under sent law to 34 under the pro- jection of the plea or’ ti i a duty of nt on all vegetable oils, the tee majority said {t considered oil, constituting 47 per cent of imports under this heading, the most important and with 99 per cent xd of imported cocoanut oil coming in free from the Philippines, it had not been deemed advisable to “dis- ting free trade relations with ds.” An increased duty on ts and oils also was con- idered unw of an increased domestic be considered ment, becf caitl: sheep, poultry, crops, feed crops culture, home management, clot | and nutrition. | An organizat been named cor’ ing farthers and fi * eral chairman, J. W. McGinn ty Rock; Leipzig; ubstitution of dome jues in the co; y ll p the bill ve the com r the s that it ha The eliminstion six years, the report said, the ittee decided the increase of S$ a pound on raw wool by the house was inadvi: a and climinated. this provision. At the ¢ an increased duty on wool recommended. The mi important change in the nd | sugar schedules was asserted to be that reducing the rate on Cuban m the 2.40 cents per pound ‘oposed by the house to 2.20 “The rates on all items in hedule,” the report said, “have d careful consideration and the 3 made have been made with ts of the consumers, pro- mporters and manulacturers ; farm powe: 3 cash cro} Ned Bodic, J. Tibke, Elgin. This committec will mect on £ tember 19 at Carson to scle: of delegates for cach of ti ity committees and make th arrangements for the ference which is to follow. Rex Wil- lard, farm management demonstrator at the agricultural college, will mee! with this committee and will disc the type of subject ma‘ in mi | Water Stagnation Is in the economic conf ah | A A eae of this organ! 8 | Studied Near Minot the commodity commi FA a ND. Sept, 4—City en- Participation in t! work will not be limite: gates who are nam: rs are attempting to alleviate a ition of stagnation in the ex- ‘treme east portion of Minot caused by the unusually low level of the * Mouse river. The river is now lower an at any time since 1917, and the nel has not received the thor- |ough flushing it should have. Con- ditions were partly remedied when s of the Gam near the city were ed, permitting much of the of- ve water to flow off. t y | jo ' considered and a program of devel fen ment for the whole county will be: 7 adopted. County Seat FightIs = tarmor Slated at Fort Yates |= | Minot . Fort Yates, N. D., Sept. 4.— What Napoleon . romises to be one of the biggest | Oakes . Cloudy battles cver fought in Sioux’ Pembina % 40 1.00 Cloudy y will begin here Sept. 10 when | Portal . 61 35 0 Cloudy will be held on the re-;Sanish . OL 38 03 Clear of the county seat from Fort | Williston Heat La Pig to Selfridge. Judge J. M. Eng- | Yon ae #2 48 08 Rein (ole) MILLEO. lc. mtatives of the western . a. county will appear in be- WEATHER FORECASTS i] essed | For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen- Vie oe eee No- | erally fair tonight and Thursday. Not / tions their desire for the | Much change in temperature. | three Sioux county|, For North Dakota: Generally fair Harry Geffert, R. B.| tonight and Thursday. and J. R. Turner, are de- | Change fn temperature. ent . Means Ii. Drowies: Fork Yates and | GENERAL WEATHER, CONDITIONS Morrison, Mobridge, arc the A low pressure area is centered over attorneys, while the mOneDE MRGILOE oe sachs and firms of Jacoi precip’ occurred at most places and slacobeen 2nd Murray: from the upper Mississippi Valley to the eastern Rocky Mountain slope. Pair weather prevails over the East and over the far West. A oa pres- Not much Wyoming western North Dakota. North Dakota Corn an@ Wheat Region Summary For the week ending Sept. 3, 1929. The past week was warm and dry. weather was favorable for thresh- “the con- | 25,000,000 in revenue from | dule and raising the per-/| HOOOOH! 1-1 JUST CANT BRING MYSELF TO WATCH JUDGE FORMS CLUB | TO HELP PEOPLE 10 LIVE FOR 100 YEARS ‘insists That Average Life Span Can Be Stretched to the Century Mark | ice ‘LUNCHEON CLUB ORGANIZED Chief Essentials to Long Life Are Exercise, Sleep, Fresh Air and Good Food Cleveland, Sept. 4.—(NEA)—If you want to live to be a cent wouldn't mind joining a ne (club, Judge Henr rora, N. Y., has will interest Judge Neil. wanderer on the face of the at present engaged in travel organizing luncheon clubs of w centenarians, He insists that the average life span foo easily be extended to 100 rs | But he has no especial formula dietary or of any other nature. by which the job will be accomplished. The chief essentials to a long life, hi believes, are exercise, sleep, f: ; and wholesome food. Life Can Be Prolonged “Science is now restoring those cle- ments to use as new and vital assets ef long life, he says. “Science has al- ready proved that by eliminating poi- sons from living bodies life may be prolonged indefinitely. Modern biol- | ogists have found many life cells and tissues potentially immortal.” | He insists, however, that his lunch- 'eon club will not stress any dietary | fads or fancies. Their chief cmphasis | will be on moderation. “William Jennings Bryan and Cecii Rhodes, you know, killed themselves by overeating,” he remarks. | Judge Neil is 67, end has been de- | voting himself to the pursuit of a longer life for himself and others for nine years. | __“I used to be a judge in Cak Par! Tll., he says. “Finally I decided to quit ‘doing what I had done all my life. I had raised nine children. They were all married and I had a lot of grand- ‘children. I had been a regular business 'man, following a regular business | man's routine. I had always caten | abundantly. Then I got interested in efficient living.” So Judge Neil packed his bags and went exploring the earth. He read a ‘great deal about foods, and decided \that any man who didn’t change his diet in his 50s had no great chanc2 of reaching 60. The judge was then 58, and he wanted to reach 60 and pass it. So he made a change, and took to traveling about, talking with long-lived people and reading all he could find on the subject of longevity. In London he became the frequent ; guest of George Bernard Shaw, who drinks hot water with a little milx added for his stomach’s sqke. In Italy he met Mussolini and learned thai, while the dictator attends many state banquets, he never eats at any of them. Death Comes by Chance “The greatest apostles of biology maintain that all deaths are fortu- | itous,” he says. “They say that if we could live germ-free and poison-frec, and were immune from bodily as- saults in the form of accidents, the allotted span of man’s life could be advanced from three score and ten ‘o 100 years, or over. “One of the oldest known men, by the way, is an Indian, 120 years old. He was born the same year that win. coln came into the world. From baby- early age went on a dict of uncooked food. It is the so-called comforts and conveniences of civilization that have brought many of the ills which af- flict us.” What do you do when the message gocs around: “Volunteers forward?” Cadet: Step to one side to let the volunteers pass.—Buen Humor, Madrid. THING hood he lived outdoors, and at an) 5 BRUTAL KILLING MAY CURTAIL RIGHTS OF PRIVATE POLICEMEN Pennsylvania Coal and Iron Po- lice Charged With Beat- ing Miner to Death VICTIM FATHER OF FOUR Police of Industrial Concerns Were Given Rights of Peace Officers Pittsburgh, Pa., Sept. 4—(NEA)— policemen—guards employed by a private company—will go on trial at Pittsburgh in September for one of ‘the most bruta! murders in industrial history. Licuienant W. J. Lyster and Offi- cers Frank Slapika and H. P. Watts are the three men who must stand trial. Their victim, John Barcoski, farm- er-miner, father of four children, was brutally beaten and kicked to death by the police, who were employed at '! the time by the Pittsburgh Coal com- pany, near its Santiago mine, and the echo of the crime was heard through- out the state and even into the halls of the legislature, where a bill de- signed to correct coal and iron police evils was passed just a few months ago. Governor Promises Reform Governor John 8. Fisher was ap- pealed to and promised reforms in the system which gave the private guards of industrial concerns the same power that is granted recognized peace officers af the various munic- ipalities, Barcoski lived on a 120-acre farm near Santiago with his wife and four children, the oldest a boy about 16. He was a quiet, home-loving man who mined coal when the pit was operat- ing, and farmer in his spare hours. On Sunday, Feb. 10, he was visiting at the home of a neighbor when two coal and iron officers—Slapika and Watts—entered the house on the pretense of searching for liquor. An argument ensued and Barcoski was arrested. A short time later the beating commenced, and when Bar- coski was led into the barracks, he was confronted, the state will say, by Lieutenant Lyster, and there he was subjected to the unmerciful pummel- ing that caused his death a few hours later in a hospital. poker in the course of his attack upon Barcoski, beating the unfortunate miner, then barely until the poker bent. Then, after straight- ening the weapon, he is said to have jused it again on the prostrate form. # In the meantime one of the other lofficers is alleged to have jumped with both feet on the chest of Bar- coski, crushing his ribs and injuring ihim otherwise internally. The Pittsburgh Coal company effected a cash settlement with the widow of the slain man, awarding her approximately $12,000 for her husband's death. Parshall Man Returned On Desertion Charge Stanley, N. D., Sept. 4.—Phillip Ja- cobson, of Parshall, brought back here by Sheriff Square A. Warren to an- swer to a charge of deserting his jfamily, pleaded guilty before Judge john C. Lowe, Minot, and was sen- tenced to two years in the state pen- itentiary. The sentence was sus- pended, however, with the provision that Jacobson must contribute to the support of his family. The court ordered him to pay $25 per month for this purpose. . Having located Jacobson at Malta, Mont., Sheriff Warren made the trip of 650 miles there and back ° ley in 22 hours, including stops, brought the Parshall man here arraignment. «< A ‘THIS HAS HAPPENED MOLLY BURNHAM, charming playwright, has a stormy scene with BOB NEWTON and RED FLYNN. Bob has becn drinking, and insists that he wants his baby. Molly took the child when Bob's wife died, and now she lives in mortal terror lest he take her away. She has grown to love little RITA as though she were her own child, and her whole life revolves about the baby. After Molly gets rid of her quarrel- some callers, she writes a letter to her Three Pennsylvania coal and iron | ¢ old sweetheart, JACK WELLS, who is going to Italy. She humbly admits her love and longing, and says that she wishes they might go together. Molly writes until breakfast time, when Red Fiynn telephones to say it MRS. BULWER-EATON, a mid- dle-aged = mill sailed with Jack on the Leviathan. Then she de- B, stroys her letter. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY INING LENT ELEANOR EARLY RA, | lessons were sweet to the child, as her bedtime hour with Molly. Tormented by her ‘envious demons, Molly kept way when the two were together, sparing herself the agony of watch- ing them. She despised herself for her jeal- ousy, knowing it for a base and un- worthy emotion. She read, in a doc- tor’s book, that jealousy is a disease, It was unhealthy for a woman to concentrate her emotions so entirely upon a child. In vain Molly sought absorption, first in work, then in trivialities. But the fear of losing Rita filled her life to the exclusion of all things else. Like a great un- wholesome bogey, it stalked her day and night. Then came the afternoon when she went to the nursery, and found Bob there. Rita was in the park. Bob had come earlier than usual, and was Chapter XXXVI There were stories after that, about Jack and Mrs. Bulwer-Eaton. They said that in the Bulwer-Eaton man- sion there was a golden bathtub, with cupids painted on it. And they said that a French maid bathed the pom- — each morning in the gold ub. ‘There were rumors that the two were married, although no record could be found of a marriage license. It was whispered, also, that the old ‘woman had adopted Jack, and make him her sole heir. European correspondents met the Leviathan when she docked at Liver- Pool. Mrs. Bulwer-Eaton was accom- panicd by her personal maid, a secre- tary, and two stalwart guards. With plenty of team work, the quartet fended off reporters, and Mrs. Bul- wer-Eaton made a successful getaway. Jack was not with her, and there was a rumor that he had gone ashore disguised as a steward. ‘Still, the couple was news. Cam- cramen bribed the servants, and gained entrance to the various Bul- ‘wer-Eaton homes. They photographed the million-dollar bathtub. And the statues of Cupid and Psyche in the old lady's boudoir. Feature writers did articles on the mosaic floor in the ball room, com- Paring it to the art of Nero's banquet hall. ‘They described, in great detail, the rug woven in Tunis for Mrs. Bul- wer-Eaton, depicting the characters of a famous comic strip. They count- ed the cut crystal chandeliers, and the gold handles on the bureau drawers i | have love, Molly “I didn't ask you,” she remarked pointedly. “Well, I'm telling you then,” he pur- sued unruffled. “If the old dame doesn't take them for a few millions in libel suits, she’s a dumb jane. As for Wells—my gosh, they've taken him waiting for her. Molly stopped on the threshold. “Oh,” she said. “I didn’t know you “You've been avoiding me, Molly,” he accused. “No, I haven't. What makes you think so? I've been awfully busy, that’s all.” “Anything special?” he asked. Molly hesitated. “I have it in my mind,” she confessed. “to write a book. Something different. Quite unlike anything I’ve done before. I've been mulling it over for days.” “A romance, I suppose?” “A blighted romance,” she said. He looked up quickly. “Your own story?” he asked. But she shook her head, coloring so guiltily, he knew he had surmised cor rectly. se 8 ‘| who has everything in the world,” he remarked, “you're a singularly unhappy person, Molly. You're young and charming. You've friends, and might have lovers. You've hild to cherish. A beautiful home, and plenty of money, What more could a woman ask?” “You've changed,” he declared. “The old sparkle’s gone. You're not gay, the way: you used to be. You don’t laugh so much. And you've the sad- dest smile in the world, Molly.” “Well,” she said, “I’m not so young as T used tobe. And I don’t think I'm charming at all. I haven't any par- ticular friends—just Red. and you— and Mr. Durbin, maybe. And I haven't any lover at all. Of course I adore Rita. But, after all, she's not mine. As for my beautiful home— why, it’s nothing in the world but a rented flat! I don't own a stick of “For a » I : ‘Why “jon't yu get married?” he interrupted. “And who,” she asked, “wants to marry me?” It was a tactiess question, born of ® moment's bantering. As soon as the words were out of her mouth, | & Molly regretted them. Bob was standing now by Rita's crib, looking, not at Molly at all, but at the mad March hare. “I do,” he said, and raised his eyes wife, my dear. You are the sort of woman @ man dreams about when he | thinks of the woman whom he would Molly faced him angrily. “It's about time you observed,” she told him cuttingly, “that I'm not in- terested in Mra. Bulwer-Eaton and her boy friends, if any.” Red whistled. “But you don't really think—” he ies al f E i it ri | nt E 4 | Hl Hiss EF i 7 2 dd ; : | i fr Fie ft : Roteg é sie i F E i i iS it desire. For dream-girls are made your sweetness, and tipped with you know that, 2 i I “ i g i fF a i ii i & F z guard to kiss you, would have given you such a devastating thrill, you'd have thought it was love-for-life stuff. Now you know better than that. You tnd Fiygn ean both thei Jou can tee See hare! i Molly thrust him from her, and catching his coat lapels in both hands, held him. Searching his eyes with “Why not?” he Two Clothing Clubs © Formed Near Stanley (Tribune Special Service) Stanley, N. D., Sept. 4.—Two cloth: ing clubs for junior girls, one at Ross and another northwest of Stanley, « were organized last week. Rut! Oscar Roeder local leader of the Ross club, Offi- cers of the other club are Myrtle Kennedy, president; Marion Larson, jae and Esther Jellesed, local leader. Kansas Youth Claims He Was Robbed of Car Minnewaukan, N. D., Sept. 4 eeatigat ara Rollei are in- a st told by Clyde Fisher, 22-year-old Kansas youth, who claims he was drugged and robbed of the car in which he was riding. While he was heading for « Devils Lake, Fisher claims he was stopped by two men and, after tak- ing his money, forced him to drink & concoction which he says doped. Awakening hours later, he got a ride to Minnewaukan where he reported to officials. Reynolds Wheat Goes 65 Pounds to Bushel day said. He raised it on his farm three miles east of Reynolds in Amer- icus township. Girls Clothing Clubs Plan Year’s Program (Tribune lub, and Sept. 14 with the of Stanley. Laborer Drowns Near Harvey, NW. D.. Sept. 4.—Algot < drowned Malm, transient laborer, was in the Sheyenne river near here after gE i | Ra die Ha ail liste i & E i : i i i E Hi] #4 Hf i EekE : Ht : aa) 7 ers. “You mustn't talk to me like that.” &” Harvey in Sheyenne ~ > ¥ Y

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