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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1929 s ‘The Bismarck Tribune Jot the $ are outdone by sober fact. We have | caught up with our melodrama, An Independent Newspaper Listen again to some of the details of this outfit which ‘THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER the federal men finally managed to smash into (Established 1873) 2 of warehouses running all the OUR BOARDING HOU: way from aw AN’ SO Y'SEE, MY ole fleet of ships, many of them heavily ned; a board of directors whose espionage system kept Subscription Rates Payable in Advance H y Member of The Associated Press ated Press is exclusively entitled to the use cr How many other similar organizations there may be | for conjecture. Probably there are quite a | | |few. We have a long coastline, and the liquor-smuggling | c | ‘The As for republication of all news dispatc ted to it or Mot otherwise credited in this newspaper and «Iso the local news of spontancous origin published herein. All Tights of republication of all other ma hercir are ‘also reserved. Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS | Incorporated? Formerly G an Payne Co CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | is a matt business a enormous protits. Ivs highly interesting—but it isn't, really, anything to at smugeling outfit was | laugis an empire Within our em- ap of men who lived by their own laws and | le cnly to themselves, | is extremely serious. The existence of | ngs us a lot closer to xctual chaos and | wn than it is comfortable to think about. | s we can tind seme way to smash such outfits | ‘ke the law supreme we are going to run into a] y strophe. We have traveled a whole lot | the road that leads to it than we imagine. | re; a gr (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Bingham’s Blunder and Perfidy Of all the follies of the tarift that of f* Senator Bingham, of Connecticut, was the most humil- 2 iating, because the ill effect of ints misconduct comes | > from a regular Republican and Fr supposedly a friend of | 5 ! : In fact, he has done | Editorial Comment | more to ciscredit the rewriting of the Hawley-Smoot bill | i ©, the president, not an insurgent 4 by the senate than any of the opponents of Hoover have Wecctinci ERD : done. He has made the subject of the present tariff Teachers pall 53 Situation vevision ridiculous by his pretense of needing expert as- (Vall Ma Saree aie saree sistance in formulating schedules in which Conne ‘ut | . | no: ate teachers college, has been wrought | is interested; und, by secretiy hiring the assistant of the | up over the reports that have been rife to the effect doervaiahy enate mak 4 ecticut. Manufacturers association | that the stats board of administration contemplated | ie Connecticut 3 rarily, as- | Cutting the colleges down to a two year school and| ae i i, 10 take the place of his own secretary temporarily, as- | He eng Pa Sy 3 sured the manufacturers’ the role of a spy | . Valley City “went up in the air” over such , BARI subcommittee hearings. To the country the impres-/| a proposition and rightfully, too. We did not want, nor | BS | Ft sion given is one of perfidy. It pairs off with the Shear- | Rice An ragser ea hagas for that sort of thing if it were | @ ° ee ve evils of under-cover lobbying. | Miss Palmer, who is given the blame for starting this ees cueaRevid lev wbara candveHt a % It must be remembered that even fellow-senators not} line of change in the schools, assured the commniites | To, ave bees queens ue Pues ‘on the subcommiitce were not admitted to the meetings} that she hed no intention of curtailing the activities of sters. If that woman doesn't watch cs ? dchirere (aalaty tae | ihe colleges, but to the contrary was trying to put them | out she's never going to get a hus-|° this sub-body held. The manufacturers asking tariff! on a better footing. Her great concern, as well as the oh y, favors thus had an unfair advantage over the men who| conc of the other board members, was to do somc- 4 ese k This is the time of year when many a college football coach discov- ers that what he thought was a set- up is really an upset. s* € Umpire at an Ohio baseball game killed a fan who had been criticizing his decisions, and 5000 newspaper paragraphers instantly sat down and tried to think up some new way of thing for the rural school teacher, 58 per cent of whom Were teaching in the one-room rural schools of the state. Under the present system, she contended that these teachers only received 12 weeks’ instruction or prepara- tion, which is not enough. Under the plan she contem- —or rather the board contemplates—a two-year course is to be provided at the colleges for the training of r school teachers, and this is where the biggest Part of the readjustment of courses at the college will come in : We think that this is perfectly proper. The farmers | Must pass on the bill after it is framed. It resulted in| y) 8N individual without official status interfering with the | © legislative processes in behalf of interests desiring to} use the government for their own selfish advanta qt) smacks of exploiting the Republican party with callous | indifference to what damag> may be done the organiza- tion in the minds of the trusting followers of its prin- ciples. It raises the suspicion of the basest betrayal. = {| The revision of the tariff asked and recommended by | of-tive tate gay ahi pex cane oetthe tates aor ere the president was revision that would benefit the farmer. | entitied to have their rural teachers fitted out at the | It meant that congress could discharge the task by ad- | colleges by the state to teach these rural schools, There | justing the agricultural schedules along the lines advised | ¢2n be no pee phere i vile change, and that prac- | by such expert economists as North Dakota's John Lee | oot, ieaohers calieees: ing in this talk of change in | Coulter. Instead, the senate has gone ahead blundering- | ne question of degrees was a subject for much debate | ly to raise the industrial schedules in the face of protests | and brought out the fact that it had been reported to the i based on just such suspicions as are confirmed in the | board that after 1931 the North Ceniral Association of | Binzvam-Eyanson revelation. Colleges will no longer have a separate list of accredited | cpueiopaieaian 3 teacher training institutions. The board's contention is | The fact that Eyanson signed the pay roll, so that | tat our normal schools and junior colleges will be linked | the salary of the regular secretary might be drawn, and | up with the American Association of Teachers Colleges | then turned the salary over to that temporarily retired | 8Md will give us a better standing. Under this arrange- | functionary, rather increases the turpituce of the Con- | | 4 ent we will continue to give out bachelor of arts edu- cation degrees. uecticut senator's conduct. Having a paid agent of the We wiil continue with the four-year course as now, ex- | & manufacturers sit sccretly in the deliberations behind | cepiing that the first two years will be revamped to | closed doors, without the knowledge of the very legis- | Sive the rural school teacher a longer and better train- } Tators who in large part are accustomed to accept com- | {Re for teaching the rural schools, absolutely proper, and | i Eee sais ihe other two years will be used for putting through the | mittee tariff ratin:; representing honest economic | course for working for this B. A. degree. | needs, was a deception Senator Bingham cannot explain| This seems to be the real aim and purpose of the away by the sophistry of pleading personal ignorance of Thence AUN meceenoaerg er Signaler E what the exact degree of tariff protection for his state’s | cistinctly to understand that there is no intention to | © | industries should be. | The eventual effect of the Bingham blunder might not | cripple cr curtail our institution or any of the state] # teacher colleges of the state, but rather a desire to make | 2 7 i, | them better and more efficient along lines of readjusted | pe be as bad as Senator Walsh would make it appear, but it | courses of study that will primarily benefit the rural Pe jis bad enough in shaking public confidence in the sc- | school teacher. There can be no valid objection to that. i = tious business of legislating for the national welfare. Wall Street’s Turn (St. Paul Dispatch) nother increase of 88 million dollars in brokers’ loans | jorted Thursday indicates that Federal Reserve credit | ces are <till finding their way into the financing market speculation. When the Federal Reserve ‘em, the American-made central bank plan, was first , projected there was considerable fear in both banking circles that any such scheme of super- 1 by a semi-governmenial agency wauid subject the banking system to political influences. Recent events prove that this fear was enti y justified. The deflation of 1920-21 caused a great outcry in the | liural sections. The Federal Rescrve board was ac- cused of deliberately and arbitrarily bringing it about by means of its high rediscount rate and its policy of con- traction, But the fat was in the fire before the west Woke up. The political pressure was ex post facto, Per: sistent increase of currency and credit and the contin. ued export of gold had brought things to such a pas: that the country had almost no spare gold left. Infla- tion had to be checked. although the methods were harsh and disastrous to agriculture. et st SOUS POReeRh sees aasee Hoodiums Making History | One hundred years from now historians will be cager- |, ay digging back into the past, trying to find out just | 1 what sort of civilization existed in the United States in ithe year 1929. | When they do, it is to be hoped that there will be | newspapers of 1929 preserved for their inspection. , _FAn ordinary front page can sometimes tell more about | state of society than a whole volume of careful |i sociological treatises. Take, for instance, the story concerning one of Chi- o's recent murders. ‘Two youtig street corner loafers got two girls—soda | ntain clerks, they happened to be—and went out for joy-ride. They stopped at the girls’ apartment and nk considerable gin; then they sallied forth. Another automobile happened to pass them—an ordi- ¥, peaceful citizen driving home from work. This! _ Today the shoe is on the other foot. Now it is Wall fee cut in a little too close ahead of the joy-riders, | Bice! that has turned infla.tonist and eee hd the young toughies got sore. They trailed the other | cloar now as it was nine years ago. But it is clear i. Finally, when it stopped, they stopped too: and one | i In bees xoae hin sa bi essing need far redis- ve ve tic 2 world’ sl k ! ee Pe OT othe ote ae eee aatiee ade tae nee ee hd coolly shot the offending driver to death. some of America’s best customers. ‘The board set an ab- Then the joy-riders went on with their spree quite as | normally low rediscount rate in August, 1927, to enable nothing had happened. They went to a friend’s apart- | certain countrics to retake what they needed from the pment, had a chicken dinner and indulged in more drink- | United States surplus. ing, gay and unworried. At last it grow late. Tne girls Fwent home, and the two young men went back to the , to commit a few robberies. } The police got the story from one of the girls. She a it, the newspapers said, “between giggles.” She | happened, incidentally, to be the mother of three chil- 5 Where her husband was, and why, was not stated. » "There you have the story. Historians of the future can ‘make of it what they please. Be assured that it will speak volumes to them. It il give them a very-clear and graphic picture of certain s of our city life in the year of prosperity and ; 1029. And that picture will not be a flattering one. " We ore fond of saying that our up-to-the-minute s0- tisiy is going somewhere very fast. Undoubtedly it is. Mut & Story like this one out of Chicago makes one stop ‘and wonder if the ultimate destination is going to be as jieatilic and lovely as we like to think. : Melodrama Outdone he story of the “liquor empire” uncovered in the east pal prohibition agents reads like the scenario for tic movie. several years the novelist and the movie makers | | i i 1 out of the way je the sick room shout- that Helen bne heen a eympathiser nad appent- her toyalty, Brent secures solves om more drantle methods NOW GO ON WITH THE stony CHAPTER XXXII SRALLINAR MORRIS bad come to visit Helen. Without a word of warning and with ber luggase well packed with @ kitling ward robe. “But {£ you don't want me, old cauliflower, I'll dasb along on my way to Canada. Would stop a mo ment with you, bowever, should you urge me.” She was laughing, and different Mer laughter was touder, but it tinkled mustcaily. Helen puzzled over the change in her. She seemed restlese, stirred, wobappy. There was palo io her eyes, Her dark beauty was somebow more brilliant yet somehow clouded. “To marriage.” was the cryptic toast she offered. when refresh ments were brought. Helen's silence repeated the word with vomistakable inquiry. “This is his wedding day. Shallimar went ber glass, “Let's go up to my room and you can tell me about it.” Helen said. sensing @ confidence. To listen to another's story might make her own seem @ little fess important, she thought. For it had appeared to her that nothing fn the wortd mattered but her love for Bob Ennis Shallimar motioned to the tray. “Have it sent up, too,” she re quested and Helen nodded tp assent, A minute or two later they had made of Wall Sirect upset the apple cart. They took advantage of this cheap money to ensi- neer another boom in the stocis market, 2 boom which has been booming beyond the dreams of avarice ever since. In the ensuing twelve months the banks of the couniry had to increase their borrowings from the Fed- eral Reserve bants two and a half times over to mect the ¢cmand. Money poured into Wall Street from every j direction. 1 * To curb the sudden rapid expansion the board found it | necessary within six months to restore the former re- , discount rate, and in the following five months made two H further raises. At the end of the first year the outflow oi gold had been entirely stopped and it bogan to flow | back until half the good work had been undone. Todey the rate of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York is higher than it has been since the early part of 1921. But so far that has only interfered with business and has not curbed speculation. For what does a few per, interest mean in comparison with euch inordinate ; brofits as we nave seen? It no more dampens the ardor Of the sucesssful spsculator than does the income tax. Meanwhile the balked on, and drained Time was that the farmer was the principal debtor | class and represented the inflationist . Now stock market speculator, in end out of Wi more to banks than all others together. heccill cial hoghoeaptied lass and it is his i E i i F i i i i i i z fe i i i : lsh e. Bisn DEAR , BUT ed by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | s, N. J., to Atlantle City; a fortified arsenal earex, N. D. and entered at the postoifice at Bismarck could restst attacks by its enemies; a DUMB BROTHER, STILL WATER Be pecond class mail matter. ation; branch offices in England and RUNS STEER AS “TH” BOOTLEGGER George D. Mann ................ President and Publisher SAYS |! ~~ WHEN You THouGdT I WAS BROKE AN’ OUT OF A SOB, GATE With THAT MONEY LEFT You make government whiskey. most of us are concerned, what of it? SE JANGING ON -TH’ BY UNCLE RUFUS! stating the old proverb about the turning of the worm. xe ® Whoops! $50,000 of the navy's funds missing and the navy’s at sea, Anybody with a good voice has a hance to be a radio announcer. Oth- ers can sing or speak over the air, * * U. S. has named three firms to As far as -—* ® The New York market truckmen’s rike is over. Finc! Any market rike is just a lot of rot. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) The Chinese wall is 1250 miles long. e jnnocent Chea THIS HAN. HAPPENED | “1 fell in love,” she confessed, “with an engaged man. He wouldn't break it off, and today he's saying ‘1 will’ to a tot of nonsense he prob ably isn't even listening to. Not that it makes any difference—1 mean about his being married now but I can't forgive him for not refusing to give it up. He sald if 1 was any kind of Diana { could set my man M@gainst any odds, We quarreled about it—and, here 1 am!” “And here you'll stay,” Helen told her abruptly. Then, her voice softening with a note of sympathy: “I'm glad yu came, Shallie, darling, I've been awfully lonesome for some of the girls.” “But you never invited me,” Shallimar complaired. “My grandfather explained, “and . . .' “Never mind.” Shallimar broke ‘Are there any men about?” “I'm afraid you won't stay,’ Helen taughed. 5 “At least until morning,” Shall!- mar promised. eee B T by morning she had decided |" to postpone her stay indefinitely | Any man was game for her now She was going to be reckless. ruth less and revengeful whe of the species was concerned. And she had met Bob Ennis. Helen had telephoned Eva and invited her to dinner to meet Shalli. mar, knowing that her guest would prefer company and a later hour for intimate talk. They'd had an interesting 45 minutes at table—Shallimar simply ; Wouldn't remain there any longer —With the restless guest feeding her “ostess tidbits of gossip about school friends in returo for @ delicious dinner. Eva was fascinated with her, a fascination tn which Shallimar took keen delight. She caw that her scornful remarks anent men were received by the younger girl with Breat respect. “Some fella bas tried 8 masculine trick two on her and she's snowed rr.” Shallimar decided the while she smiled and curled her fine red lips contemptu- ously. Helen felt impelled to remark that she didn’t belleve Shallimar was so bitter as sounded. “My dear, 1 love men.” Shallimar answered with flippant ease; “but 1 think they ought to suffer for the Good of their souls.” “Oh,” Eva ald softly, and envied Shallimar tess Her hate seemed 80 of the surface. And in her own heart Eva felt that hate should be respected & cardinal emotion. It was not a thing to be taken lightly. As the evening wore on she grew exceedingly pensive and wheo Helen asked her to p) for them—she had ill,” Helen charming voice--and Shallimar insisted upon Jazz, she refused, rather impatient- ly, Shalimar’ thought, = “1 will not be made to cry, Shallimar objected when Helen urged Eva to choose her selections to please herself. “If! heard one Rote that sounded as if it belonged in oe March I'd howl like calf ‘Or bellow like @ wolf, § sup Dose,” Helen teased. HME THINK LT wilt FAWN OVER You AND MAKE ORIENTAL SALAAMS, JUST BECAUSE You MADE A | “TRIFLING SUM OF MONEY Zt he male | By Ahern me by eee iicasir sia i ot the government's movements; a pr atk Yee ene ie oe ae ae rts ene - ‘ ns ee ee Nh Dakols sos teeta; ab ebFae, 6 OMMDIAY bal OF FFE RUNES) MONEY ON “TH MARKET I'M A Bia LIke A WeatHer vanes} [7 sii Weekly by mail, in state, per year 00) sad cunning who directed cperations from a distant SLAP ON “TH? BACK Now # ue HA-A- aww WHAT You NEED Breakfast: Coddled eggs, waffle Dinner: Tomato consomme, baked chicken or rabbit, parsnips, combina- tion salad of cold cooked string beans, cucumbers and lettuce, peach whip. Nou AROUND pineapple, ig aay. rice, cooked string ans, faw celery. Dinner: Broiled spinach, toast, stewed figs. Lunch: ‘Vegetables with whole- wheat noodles. Dinner: Roast pork, cooked tur- nips, okra. Salad of raw spinach leaves, baked apple. ‘Wednesday Breakfast: Wholewheat muffins with peanut butter, pear sauce. Lunch: Baked squash, cooked let- tuce, cucumbers. Dinner: Mushroom soup, broiled lamb chops, steamed carrots, McCoy salad, apricot whip. ‘Thursday Breakfast: Baked eggs, Melba toast, stewed raisins. deans, salad of tomatoes, spinach and asparagus, sponge. Breakfast: Coddled eggs, broiled ham, waffle, applesauce. Lunch: Sandwiches of real whole- wheat bread and peanut butter. shredded lettuce. Dinner: Baked halibut, stewed to- matoes, spinach, McCoy salad, no dessert. Saturday Breakfast: Cottage cheese, stewed Lunch: Carrot Cheol cooked let- tuce and parsley, celery. Dinner: Vegetable soup. Salis- bury steak, buttered vegetables con- sisting of carrots, turnips and bects |. cooked separately and diced together when tender, head lettuce with olive oil, ice cream. “Vegetables with wholewheat noo- dies: Cook together for about twe ty minutes in a heavy, tightly cov- ered pan (without water) the desired amounts of fresh spinach, chopped cucumbers and celery. Cover the bot- tom of a baking dish with cooked wholewheat noodles, add a layer of the vegetables, including half of a small can of bean sprouts. Continue until the dish is filled, covering all with the noodles. Each layer may be seasoned with a little salt if de- | sired. Bake until slightly browned Lunch: Buttered noodles, cooked turnips, celery. iar o ‘@| Dinner: Roast , cooked string | Our Yesterdays | _ * TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO FORTY YEARS AGO Mr. and Mrs. George 8. Roberts and Miss Anna Matlock, of Dawson, visited friends here today. Mrs. M. A. Johnson left for St. Paul yesterday to visit her daugh- ter, Mrs. William Pye, Jr. Attorney E. J. Steele of Mandan, ; who has been @ Missouri slope resi- dent since 1883, has returned to his | former home in Wisconsin. | Dr. B. W. Ruth of Hartford, Conn., is here on business with George H. Fairchild, Bismarck agent of the Travelers Insurance company. | To indicate their good will for President Theodore Roosevelt In- dians at the Standing Rock agency today sent John Grass, chief justice buffalo robe which will be forwarded to the president. Mrs. F. A. Callahan and daugh- ter Hattie, Wilton, friends in the city, L. C. Pettibone, Dawson, is a busi- ness visitor in Bismarck today. H. T. Pease and Sam Rhoads have arrived from Washington, D. C., to “Just the same...” Shallimar said, and seated herself at th piano, leaving her sentence unfin- ished. A ripple of the keys—Eva caught by her technique, on the verge of being intrigued, when Helen whis- Dered in her eai eee SOYV7HERE is 30b?” she asked swiftly. “1 wish | knew,” Eva ered. “He's been like a crazy man today, ; Helen. Whatever did you do to him last night?” “Is be miserable?” Helen pressed with a touch of exultation that pro voked Eva a bit—until she saw that it was followed by tender concern and was in no way Inspired by dis- regard of her brother's feelings. “Thoroughly,” she replied. “He ought to be,” Helen amazed her by saying. “He called me a rotter, Eva. Think of it!” eyes opened wide, but smile reassured her. “You don't seem to mind very much,” she remarked, “1 don't,” Helen admitted. “1 think there's just enough of the cave man In Bob to make bim rough | ized with the woman he loves when he thinks she's making & fool of her- self, And what a fool 1 was!” “Tell me about it.” Eva pleaded. “Not now.” Helen demurred, noting that Shallimar was looking at them in a curious way. “1 want you to do something for me,” she went on hurriedly. “Call up your house and if Bob is there ask bim to come r” “He won't, if yo. quarreled.” “Tell bim 1 need him. Tell bi wait jute—tell him to come and take you bome. But you must cet him inside when he gets here.” “All right,” Eva agreed. Helen got up and went over to stand beside the piano and bum with Shallimar’s music. al the latter asked, with drove her car up to the curb and the brake pedal for a smooth stop. As Bob's figure loomed up in the moonlight she felt a wild desire to 1 love you! 1 love you!” “Hello,” she said, so quietly she was amazed at herself. “Ab, @ man, a tall man, and young, { vow,” Shallimar said. Helen caught the words but they beld no sinister significance for her at the time. She did not know how deep lay the hurt in Shallimar’s heart as well as in her eyes and that she was, for the present, viclously serious in spite of her mocking words and carefree man- ner. ih, Bob!” Eva called and he wa’ compelled to stop, although be bad already hurriedly turned away to enter the house, hoping to escape unobserved and seek bis room be fore the girls got in. bis voice was raspy and the words jerked out discordantly. A little later, a she saw that be and clumberous ‘iree—was Ges. ‘8 reaction to it was the nor Kaew Her When tists "7% || mal ope af the average tate Or E F : “Let them. | shall ite all to my wedding. when I've i i i iF i fe i i l il | ee sg bg Ee F 4 Helen was instantly she consoled herself with thought that she would surely bim om the morrow. i & ? Hi if and, rather hoped Shallimar cline, invited her to go Should an opportunity pine she much preferred = SB F He o st i t 2 ‘i Shalimar would, intentionally, or otherwise, interfere, Helen to interfere inteationally. Bob was just arriving tome when Helen scorned are visiting| showing the underground wi on top and serve with butter. — take up their duties with the U. 5. tion survey. TEN YEARS AGO Mrs. C. L. Merrick, formerly of this of the Sioux Indian tribe at Standing | city, but now a resident of Minne- ; Rock, to Bismarck with an immense| apolis, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Dobler. ‘The Publicity Film company is pre- Paring to take 1,500 more fect of film ings Of the lignite mine at Wilton. Irving Small yesterday sold $2,100 worth of Grim alfalfa seed raised on his farm south of Bismarck. Mrs. B. N. Dunn and children have arrived from . Minn., to join Mr. Dunn who is with a telephonc company here. e¢— eo AT THE MOVIES | e CAPITOL THEATRE ‘The Capitol theatre announces that Ir ne i gE grr