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The Assoctated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the ase | for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS durable, praiseworthy place when a September night | torics, office buildings and stores, and turn into towering TE OnARAT SALE OFFERINGS COOLCEL OCCT COERCL SEL SCEC EA LLPEPLLLL EPA PASLLVSSSLSSSLA Ss fot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the | brings a stea ownpour, The black streets glisten and local news of spontancous SEE EET Lak hareht are | rows of lights, changing from dingy aa See eee es | thoroughfares into enchanted avefues leading to all ‘ nd i i | sorts of improbabie surprises. The downtown buildings Foreign Representatives | bulk large and mysterious; they cease to be ordinary fac- ¢ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1929 ! i inuous neighboring hills, t : esos ‘ , 7 he Bismarck Tribune gulls corinen ¢ 3 te commonplace and unexciting, grow misiy and An Independent Newspaper mysterious, they rimmed an unknown country where Breaking in His_New Work Shoes THE STATE'S OLI~ST NEWSPAPER Jall the unknown trails met. A little z (Established 1873) | comes a primeval forest, its tree trunks gleaming in shiny Publ by the Bismarck Tribune Company, ness, it 5 canty underbrush drooping low in the wet Za WELL, ‘ if coe he D. and entered at the postoffice at Bisinarck | ome cank Eocene era of shiggish reptiles and 2 — Mare THEViL e e e @s second class mail matter. | frightful monsters were about to begin again. A reaped _ FEEL SETTER George D. Mann..............Presiden ne Ee | afield tak e look of lirhitless desolation: a tiny | — AFTER IVE. WORN Bismarck’s Busiest Sto Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ae Hi rhald an enchanted vale in whice THEM Awnie/ arck’s busie: re pay ad Rat ber year 7:20 | t the transformation is even more compicte. | Dail: ear, | Siand on the front poreh of a farmhouse, afier dark, iy tate. butside Bismarck) 5.00 | Guring « chill September rain, if you want to encounter A Datly by mali, outside of North “+ 600) tne familiar earth in a new pulse. ‘The steady patter of Small Items But Extremely Important ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year....... se 1.00) tae rain becomes a nge chorus—a requiem for the Weekly by mall, in state, three scars for. 250|cying life of autumn and a chant, from beyond the In Our Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, roo | brGer. of the indomitable life that will sueceed it. You <spldehe ot areeere “lean sce nothing but darkness and you can hear nothing Membr Audit Bureau of Circulation | but the rainfall, yet you know Uhai you are in the pres- 2 ' — tactodth u boell eettt And in the cit cll, a city actually becomes an en- | 8 f ee os | cliffs that unconquerable men have made their own. { ‘ormerly G. Logan Pay! 5 5 ’ r 1 i etCAGO NEW YORE BOSTON The homes, too, grow better for the rain, Their com- ' os monplace sameness falls away. They are not simply the ‘ (Official City, State and County Newspaper) d-brick boxes in which live the sadiy unattractive ‘ id Browns and Smiths and Robinsons; they are Man a Machine of Mystery of refuge from the surrounding darkness and cold, Professor ©. Judson Herrick of the Universliy of Chi- | s of light and warmth in a trackless universe that e ‘ cago believes that man is simply a machine that thinks. | jas rione too much of cither. | ‘oiletries After spending years in the study of neurology, Dr.| Look from an upstairs window over a rain-pelted city, be Herrick has concluded that all life—physical, mental and | jy the cool of a wind-whipped night. ‘The change fairly { spiritual—is simply a mechanical process. He has just | cries out to you. This is not your familiar town, with its | Palmolive Soap, 4 bars for ........00..... 25e ‘written a book setting forth his views, and in it he s ugliness and drudgery and monotony. It is mystic and Wy sre "ost aaa oh iets Riera Me ne en! haunted, the habitation of wanderers who have strayed All regular 50c Tooth Pastes ............. 38¢ 4 general and of the brain sin jus same | from light into darkness and are pluckily making the best @ sense that circulation of the blood is a function of the| of i, Its buildings, where the lamplight gleams from = by I AN (Ipana, Iodent, Pepsodent, Squibbs and heart, or breathing is a function of the lungs. A thought | windows, are the abiding places of miracles. Its strects, Pebeco included.) ' 48 a manufactured product as truly as a pair of shoes.” even the meanest, lead to unpredictable glory. x ! ‘The present age is distinguished from ail former ages) Look for these things, the next time a rain boxes you Adults’ Tooth Brushes ..........e0000..- 19e 2 } by @ number of things; but chiefly, it would seem, it 18) jn. you'll see them. if you look, You and your earth are | » y t set apart by the fact that never until now have men] nobler than you know. ; Johnson’s Baby Talcum ................. 19e NY Deen able to conceive of themselves as soulless bits of ma- Ties sll Bonnie Bee Narcisse Talcum ... icauwes 2Oe chinery. Ail’ to Rescue of Farmer Che visits to logging sore uel pw fact was discovered long ago by chorus 3 Probebly this is only natural. We ive sn an eva that] saving ue farmer ‘has Become a strikingly complex York Worlds ne tO the New |e alamonds out of hatter and cee |%| 14-Ounce Listerine .........ssseeseessee- 69e Moves by machinery. We are as far removed from the | activity at Washington “Instead of the usual stock of | men. Rubber GI ; 25 social and economic conditions ws eats ase as Weare) 5. addition to the oreinal taHn board creation with ey sete ond ciel cote 3 | (Copyright, 1920, NEA Service, Inc.) Ubber GlOVES, a PAIL .....ceeeeeeeeseees SOC from the buildlers of the pyramids. is not surprising iS “s : a is found the commissary shelves adorn i that some men should come to look upon human beings Pe UL DE OUGE Oly tam Sslten see ae recent | with fancy soap, face iotion, lip salve Palmolive Rose Taleum, HORN. ..cccasas. Be a : ‘ nee | ative groups, trying to lead the tillers out of the wilder- | and other cosmetics. The table in the ey g themselves as mere glorified bits of mechanism. | oss by some form of orderly marketing still waiting to! 4 ALLENE SUMNER, | ‘ining room was waited on by beau- Talks fo Princess Pat Face Powder, $1 box ........ 79 It is a mistake, however, to think that one solves ANY | 14 ¢ormutated, there is the tariff bill based on the aim of itustration of fit, Women, dressed in the latest lems adopting such a theory. Bie pie % Chicago gives us an illustration of | style. Fy . 49e Oia tie om verb contemplative man felt that he had | Pr0tecting home farm products from the competition of |the poorest sportsmanship in the | “At one camp the cook got us a Nujol, 9 ounce ........... eens 19e in ol y' sen tial a those produced outside of the country. world, it seems to me, in the case of | special lunch whose piece de resist- . Pp d 11 Ab: ‘be! t Ci tto: 39 an immortal soul, that he ee kin to the seem i spiris - Then there ts the project of banding the representa- | Caryl Frink MacArthur, divorced wife | ance was California head lettuce and +4 found ro sorben OUTON 2... eee ee eee DUC the universe itself, that he was superior to time and | tivo. of 31 £2 sti i of Ciarles G. MacArthur. successful | shrimp salad, with Thousand Island : sone change and death; and he knew, therefore, that he was a| ar Fs cocuaelinee ig las creeps pat nel | Beverisht husband of the famous oe, fobs So ret eee ~~ IDEAL Creams, both cleansing and vanishing, nian . “| Helen Hayes. orks, no ives being furni , the geil ina Pe ean cial aah [partment of Acticalture, When this group started two| Caryl divoreed MacArthur in 1928]eook sat with us and the conversa |“. Ned ecpeaticlaris a cee nero | regular 50c creams .............5.+000+ 39C gave him a sense of dignity, a » 4 | years ago to increase the research fund of the depart- | When he was poor and unknown. He | tion was confined to golf.” ether a child chose as ero ee) r . consciousness of nobility. ment, a noal of $10000,000 was cet. ‘To date about hatt | did not contest the suit and, because pies Lincoln or Napoleon is significant Glazo Liquid Nail Polish ........... -. 39 ‘Today he simply says, “I am a machine. I breathe in | o¢ thi h 2 A it was obvious to one who had lived GIVING IN TO LUXURY both as an indication of his state of 1 d eat certain meats and fruits and vegetables | 1 “US has been cbtained. This week, Col. J. C. Roop. ! with him that he was not earning| I suppose there are some who will |™mind and as @ point of departure in Face Powders, all regular 50c ones ....... 35¢ clear air and ¢: he . S aon) | the new director of the budget, was formally requested to | enough for alimony, she accepted $250 | say the women started all this weak- | 8 education. and undergo certain experiences, and out of them 1 ¢ of $5,000,000. settlement. entg of he-men when they left home} The growing child has always a Shaving Creams, all 50c creams .......... 39¢ create the finished products of thought and action.” | the elit fe e Florida fruit growers in So far, so good, for an ambitious | for equal rights. Rather, it seems to succession of ideals. First and 2st! * fairs A a a ‘Thus he has an entirely new slant on the universe and : wt “| Young woman. The only trquble was |me an indication of an ubiquitous | important to the very young child is (Including Squibbs, Listerine, Mennens) Se igee in-tt ya & an fruit fly pest.!that she was much too hasty. The | yielding to easier life and luxury all | the eal ot father “A tes owe % Sh Palmolive, Mulsified is ‘ a | That leaves the corn borer and th he Japanese beetle which | tery next year Charles MacArthur's | along the line. It is funny, anyway | such glamorous people as the police- | 4 am) ive si But--and this is what is worth noticing—the mystery | are making inroads in Pennsylvania remaining ills of | Play “Lulu Belle” brought him fame | you analyze it. For, no matter how | man, the fireman and the man who | ¥ Aesop Shyethen vada rahe Cocoanut remains as freat as before. | which the farmer still is to be relieved. Washington |“"4 money. Immediately, instead of | soft we may become indiviauauy, | Keeps the corner candy store tem- Oil and Conti Castile, each ... siseineee GOS Amachine? Very po:sibly. But what a marvelous one! | cspte will | 7 es oar o” | standing her financial mistake, | there is no one who does not enjoy | porarily embody for him what he | ¢ x i es tick ty lee Genc beta | possibly will in due time come around to extensive drives | hed into court to try to have | picturing the hardy, rough, unpleas- | himself would some day like to be. Pond’s Cleansing Tissue, 50c size ......... 39e ~ A machine that ca a moerasllisath dacs on these pests. \ th ¢ divorce decree set aside. She made / ant life of the tall timbers, if not for | But at no time is hero worship :. machine that can create beauty so compelling and haun| ing thet the beholder, involuntarily, is persuaded of his | own immortality; a machine that can be heroic, gan suffer hardships for a cause, can sacrifice itself for the fake of other machines—what kind of machine is this, anyway? 1 ‘The mechanistic explanation may be a very good one. | The facts of physiology may support Professor Herrick’s | theory right up to the hilt. But the mystery is still there, | &s tremendous as ever. No theory can dispel it. And you! may make of it what you please. Opportunity for New Farm Board | If there are to be any farm loans to tide over the sit- | uation created by the jammed condition of terminal cle- | vators in the lake markets, the time is here to make them. John Sherman once said of a critical money situation | that the way to resume specie payments was to resume. His cogent comment might be paraphrased to fit the | Present grain situation in the Northwest, especially in North Dakota—the way to make farm loans is to make them. If they are needed they should be made, con- | ditioned, of course, on the sufficiency of the grain col- lateral in storage. Today the senate agricultural committee is sitting as ® quiz to find out why North Dakota farmers are com- plaining that they cannot get such loans on the eve of pressing October obligations and whether such com- Plaints are justified. Through Senator Nye the com- | } plaint—sanctioned by the Farmers Union and signed by | ©. W. Fine, a North Dakota Farmers Union director, and 15 others—was put before the senate last Tuesday. The charge is that red tape at Washington is holding up the making of loans. It is easy to see the dilemma in which farmers of the states of North Dakota and Montana may find them- | gelves. With elevators in the terminal markets clogged by earlier shipments, especially from the Southwest with its earlier harvest—these being added to surplus stor- | ‘age from last year—the farmers of these two states are 4m a situation as though tied hand and foot. They are the victims of an emergency. { ‘Tife intermediate credit facilities were provided to keep farmers out of this predicament and the state farm grain storage acts enacted in the two states last winter were what was supposed to be a perfection of the credit sys- tem in the direction of a more orderly grain market. ing system. As the Farmers Union officials and Senator Nye represent the situation to be now, the farmers arc ‘estopped both from obtaining credit and from putting in- | to practice the orderly marketing plan by storage of their | grain crops on their farms. \ ‘What the senate quiz should do is to get to the meat, ‘of the matter at once and obtain action to tide the farm- is @ré over. A long-drawn-out investigation will increase | the wheat growers’ financial distress and will interfere ‘with the test of the new storage policy. If the Inter- mediate Credi Credit ccrporation can not efford relief, there | opportunity for the new Farm board to juctify its pee by finding 2 remedy for the emergency. The ‘was the outcome of efforts at farm relief and here ‘ecasion that provides conspicuous opportunity for the power to relieve the farmer. The Glamour of Rain 83 nobody, for some inscrutable reason, loves a fat ever speaks up to express a downright fond- grainy day. The April shower, to be sure, gets | mow and then; but the cold, drizzly rain of v be sitting on the top of |29 pretense about ove unede ta ss {She announced she didn’t want y be a considerable distance | 5.6. She merely wanted her | “rights,” meaning some of his money. | @: * * * i| WORSE THAN ALIMONY ° The courts refused to set aside her divorce decree. MacArthur remarried. | | The farmer should eventu the world, but eventually m around the corner. prove how nice one's Grafting changes the character of plants. that of man. It reveals | Then she sued for separate mainte- | A boom district has settled back to normal when every- | nance. This is still pending. The one buys his own lunehcon. current comment, “Isn't that just like ;® Woman?” makes me wrathy. Yet Popeater ee it is just, in that the whole problem | Some men are born leaders and others never can guess | of alimony leave womankind open to which way the crowd is going. criticism. Personally, I have never been able to see why an able bodied, self-supporting woman should take pete with. money from an ex-husband just for | | herself. If there are children, that is | A former treaaury another thing. But for an ex-wife to' new currency is enjoy a divorce until her ex-husband | people we know are gets the rewards for years of work | ture. and then come forward and try to) * * claim some of the money he made | earth, but there still seem fairly healthy, too. * * The Hawley-Smoot Few failures are so complete as that of a bald man with | a pug nose in his effort to be a sheik. Monday was wash day once. Now it is the day on| which we have the garage man put the auto back to- gether. | even less sporting than the usual ali- | newspaper | | Editorial Comment | ae eae Pe anise “SOFTIES!” | * Surely this is a devastating age! Re-| ‘We're making wet roa aim | me come from the far west that | ress, but there In its shaded yard with its Sunday morning gatherings | oven, Meena: ee eee alan of young and old from surrounding farm aad village the tall timber along the west coast yet.’ homes, the country church once was a staunch Ameri- nd meals were| A professor can institution. It has come upon m/e difficult days. | Shen men were then ty ‘The struggle for existence sometimes has gone one way | Chow: Recently Be mate; a round of mands can be made romantic reasons, then for contrast to | more active than in the years be- BARBS Maybe the meck will inherit the | selects Napoleon shows, thereby, that Dnieper gre ggg aac | chestnuts on the free list. too many old chestnuts in this coun- try for the foreign market to com- | Topeka has been investigating the after she had divorced him seems liquor-in-the-home situation after a columnist mony case. It will be interesting to | drinks in several houses. Maybe of- own life is, | tween 12 and 16. At this time an ideal seems actually to influence the child’s 7 Pet waneana and through it his con- | duct. ¢@ | His choice is in the first place an | indication of his values. The lad who are quite a ae him attainment and victory are 'Y \good regardless of the means em- | ployed. The lad whose hero is Lin- {coln is one who, you may be sure, rates moral and spiritual values high- er than material ones. If your child seems to be enamored of a worthy ideal, help him to culti- | vate it. Give him books in which he | may learn more about his hero. Put Otticiat says the! in his path every experience which Several | will enrich his knowledge of the man craving adven- | and his work. These things rn spr. |S @ very genuine influence in spir- * yal ane intellectual growth, * tariff bill places ‘There are wrote of having and sometimes the other. There have been mergers, as in | ize the busing vorid. The problem of the ccuntry church was discussed re- cently before the Institute of Public Affairs at the Uni- versity of Virginia by Dr. Warren H. Wilson of New! York. As superintendent of the Presbyterian church's | country life work, Dr. Wilson has been studying the sit- uation for 20 years. In his opinion, the decline of the country church 1s one result of persistent government dis- crimination against agricultural industry by the tariff and other mea: Manufacturing has been protected at the expense of farming until the farmer's sons and help- crs have moved to the city, he asserted. The exodus from the country, he said, is the direct result of forces which the government has fostered since the time of Henry Clay. The country church can not be expected to prosper if the countryside does not. Depression in the agricultural industry naturally has sociological consequences of a deeply disturbing sort, affecting adversely even religious institutions not thought to rest on material foundations. More About Split Hydrogen (Washington Star) Every time a scientific society gets together in annual convention something wonderful may be expected in the y of announcement and demonstration. For science Progressing in research and discovery at.a high pace in and it is a poor season when half a dozen or ing revelations are not made at these meet- ings. The latest sensation is reported from the meeting of the American Chemical society at Minneapolis. It is called the “gveatest scientific discovery of 1929,” being s split ~™ EGAD CLYDE -IM NOT. EZ AMEMPTING To SELL You THAT 5% EXCELLENT VEHICLE, BUT I THINK ‘T WoULD BE TO YouR ADVANTAGE “fo HAVE A CAR/ ~~ I'M SELLING 'T FoR A FRIEND ~~ HE'S ASKING A $100 ~ iF You're 1 TLL LET You WAVE tT For $40! ~ HM-m — THERE'S AN OPPORTUNMY For Nou “To GRASP { an announcement that Dr. K. F. Bohnhoeffer hydrogen gas into two parts. Hydrogen being @ suppos- edly indivisible clement, the conversion of it into a gas with a differen: effec: is rated as a revolutionary achieve- ment. Dr. Hugh 8. Taylor of Princeton, chairman of the session, says that it means that text books on physical chemistry sill have to be rewritten. The actual discovery consists, it seems, of version Vera hydrogen gas into a new form called para-hy ky possing it over charcoal chilled to the intense ecld_ of ‘Vqaia air. empneration of its difference of nature from the parent gas, if that may be so called, was effected by pumping it over a hot wire where it in- terfered with the flow of heat thrcugh the wire, this in- terference being indicated*by a spot of light cast upon the wall.. When the para-! in was then converted back into ordinary the hot , thus demon- differen’ the con- YEH ~ OPPORTUNITY KNOCKING IN ALL TH’ CYLIADERS /: | a 1 WALK “TO AM’ FROM. 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