The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1930, Page 2

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- ing to estimates. Petroleum products , State Mill and Elevat TOTAL FLOUR SALES. OF PLANT AT FORKS DOUBLING THIS YEAR Governor Hopeful Later Busi- ness of North Dakota Utility | May Show Improvement 58 CENTS LOSS TO BARREL Unsettled ‘Conditions in Buying Wheat Begin to Bring in- crease in Orders Losses of the state mill and eleva- tor for the first three months of 1930 total $46,963.53, according to a report to Governor George F. Shafer, ex- officio mill manager, by K. C. Nelson, auditor of the enterprise. In January the mill showed a profit of $4,847.98 but February produced a loss of $30,683.53 and March showed a loss of $21,127.53. During the period, however, 9 total of $61,366.44 was paid out in bond in- terest and depreciation, leaving $14,- 403.36 in the mill treasury which would not have been made had the mill not been in operation. Prospects that the report for April and ensuing months may show some improvement were advanced by the governor, who said a report shows that sales of state- milled flour in North Dakota, the most profitable business it does, are picking uv. For the period from January 1 to April 19, 45,356.61 barrels of flour were sold oy the mill in North Dakota as com- pared with 22,801.06 berrels for the same period & year ago. Unsettled conditions in the wheat market caused purchasers to buy on a hand -to-mouth basis during the late fall andwinter when sales usyally are heaviest, the governor said,:and the effect of this policy on the part of purchasers is becoming apparent \n increased sales now. During the first quarter of 1930, Nelson said, the mill has operated at one-third capacity, grinding 433,171 bushels of wheat into 97,165 barrels of flour. The loss per barrel is 48 cents but interest and depreciation charges total 79 cents per berrel, leaving an operating profit of 31 cent ‘a barrel to apply on the fixed Bore dowd ‘The production and profit and loss record of the mill for the first threc months of 1930, follows: or Bu. pote “atin Month ground made perbbl January . « 138,288 30,085} February 144,342 32,2828. March . « 150,541 33,028 Totals...... 433,171 97,165 “Le Dl ead. Hannaford Janning Dam for Recreation In Creek Near Town Hannaford, N. D., May 3.—(®)— Plans for the construction of a dam across a small creek near here will be considered by local residents at a con- ference, Monday night, with State Engineer R. E. Kennedy. eliminary studies: already have been made by Kennedy and he esti- mates that @ lake two miles long and & quarter of a mile wide can be pro- vided by constructing a dam at a cost of $4,000. The maximum depth would be nine feet at the dam. It would be suitable for use as a fish preserve and convocation will be pronounced |nort with the great. Sicilian by the Right Rev. Edward L. Buckey Rone-! ow , Tminus in eight and:one-half. hours, is THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, MAY 3, 180 NUMBER OF WOMEN JAILED INNEW YORK DOUBLES SINCE 1920 Majority Are New Offenders, While Men Are Repeaters; 1920 Turnover 250,000 | SIDEGLANCES - - - By George Clark | New York, May 3.—(NEA)—The crime capital of the world, despite Chicago's reputation, is right here in New York City. Richard C. Patter- son, commissioner of correction, has Gathered the data for an extensive departmental report, and one of his startling discoveries is that the 1029 turnover of prisoners totaled more than 250,000. “It is doubtful,” he declared, “if there is a prison system in the entire world with such a phenomenal turn- over. Certainly there is none in the United States. It means that every year we unlock the doors of our pris- ons to receive or release more people than there are in entire cities like Louisville, St. Paul or Toledo.” The commissioner said there is every indication that the figures for this year will be still greater, but de- clined to attempt to explain the in- crease. He pointed out, however, that the number of women criminals in municipal penal institutions has more than doubled in the last decade, and that the problem of the woman offender no longer could be regarded as of slight importance in relation to the broad, general problem of crime. More Women Arrested ‘On the surface,” Patterson said, “these figures would seem to indicate that the problem of the female of- fender is growing increasingly diffi- cult. Assuming that this is so, one becomes curious about what deep, underlying social forces may be ré- sins, Omer ““1 saw you, Bubblés; you had your foot on the scales.” — f Chain Broadcasts If Today’s Congress | New York, May 3.—()—Kentucky' sponsible for this situation. annual racing classic is to be de: SATURDAY ett is possible of course, that the ‘scribed for radio listeners again this senare comparative emancipation of woman, year. aatie her greater participation in political Arrangements were completed to-| hehe P and commercial affairs, and the ten- day by the National Broadcasting ‘aken up flexible provision 4nd | dency toward greater general free- debenti plan in ti FRIDAY SENATE Debated Parker supreme court nomination, company, and the Columbia Broad- iff bill, casting cotnpany as well as station WGN, , to present vocal stories of the annual Kentucky derby Saturday afternoon, May 17, The chain broadcasts will start at approx- imately 3:30 (E. 8. T.). In observance of National Music ‘Week, May § to 11, NBC will present compositions of American composers as features of 16 of its next week’s Programs. Included will be the Roxy Symphony concert, Sunday, May 11; the Walter Damrosch Symphony or- chestra, Saturday night, May 12, and the mid week hymn sing, Thureday evening, May 8 Seven programs on Sunday, May 11, will call attention to American musicians. ‘The second broadcast this month of an address by President Hoover will be made from Washington Mon- day NBC and CBS. It will be to the delegate; at the a eed Wi the aha sg ington PLANES LINK GENOA, PALERMO] hoiding that to make’ useful citizens bl a jofeotha pp sautto eg hi Genoa, \Italy.—(?)—'The Genos-| from this large group is one of the dent of the Red toni Rome = Naples - Palermo hydroplane| most helplass tasks ‘with which so- Payne, president e Cross, line, linking this Ligurian coast sea-| ciety is confronted. sea ter-| “It is a harsh remedy,” Patterson admitted,.“‘but it seems to be the only one unless new methods of handling the problem should be evelved which dom may. be playing their part in bringing about this situation. “While the number of women con- victed.stems to be increasing, regard- less of whether the number of: men decreases or increases, the amount of recidivism remains about the same between the two sexes.” In 1929, out of 16,890 men con- vigted, about 40 per cent were identi- tences, while of 2391 women convict: ed, 42% per cent were so identified. “Even the most optimistic,” he con- tinued, “can scarcely hope for any real dimunition of crime until some plan is evolved by which these chronic criminals can be taken off the market entirely and confined under proper cutodial care in suitable institutions, either for life or until such time as there is good reason to believe that they can again enter the social life of | the community and abide by its rules.” Harsh Remedy He particularly favors life confine- ment for criminal narcotic addicts, Interst mame held beatings on proposal to. cre jeral_ power com with Secretary Hyde on it Hosver asked con- ton. aay execu ine every week day,in both rections. The distance between SOVIETS TO MAKE -RUBBER Genoa and Rome is negotiated in fled as having served previous sen- | ¥°®) or Again Losing - $46,963 Short in Quarter. classes.” i Several prominent physicfans who fora on a. special come: mittee on drug addiction, to deter- mine how the dope habit could best be cured, have borne out Patterson's belief that all prison treatments are Generally ineffective. .. large number of addicts were confined and closely guarded in a special ward at Bellevue hospital. Of these, 83.3 per cent ad- mitted having criminal records. Urge Withdrawal Method After attempting all the better jknown methods of cure, the com: mittee specifically recommended a treatment which really is no tréate ment at all. Science calls it the “complete withdrawal method,” and addicts shudderingly refer. to it_as “cold turkey.” Prisoners’ who are physically unable to endure this sud- denly enforced abstinence are given drugs in progressively decreasing doses. But after all their experimentation, the experts found that in 80 to 90 per cent of their, patients, the desire }tyj for drugs sooner or later returned in full force. The report declared that ‘a withdrawal treatment by itself is only an administrative routine, to be carried out as often as @ prisoner re- ceives @ court sentence, and with no probability of bringing about lasting abstinence.” Commissioner Patterson thus has been led to recommend long-tune confinement for narcotic addicts, and alcoholics as wel ‘not in peniten- tiaries,” he said, “but in isolated in- stitutions designed for their treat- ment, and where smuggling would be practically impossible.” PRISON IS RUSHING TWINE PRODUCTION Total Output for April Was 800,000 Pounds; 6,000,000 Pourids Under Contract ‘Operation “of day and night shifts at the twine plant operated at the state prison here resulted in a record output of 800,000 pounds of finished product during April, according to a report to the state board of adminis- tration. Additional forces were added to the twine plant after the board of admin- | stroyed istration had entered into contracts calling for the delivery of approxi- mately 6,000,000 pounds of twine this ir. Of this amount, 4,000,000 pounds will be sold by the Farmers Union through its local units, 1,000,000 Pounds through the Farmers Grain Dealers association and _ 1,000,000 pounds will be reserved for sale to Persons who make application for it at the prison gates. Prisoners at the penitentiary are selected for work in the twine plant and get 25 cents a day for their labor, the money being credited to their in- dividual accounts. Forestry School Has Harlequins on Road Bottineau, N. D., May 3.—()— Harlequins of the state forestry school here are “on the road.” Two performances of their play “The Lucky Break” took well with lo- cal audiences and now they are billed for appearances in nearby towns. Last will upset all the experience of the past. But until that time comes, so- ciety should take the only means available of protecting itself, from narcotic addicts, undoubtedly the OUT OF FETROLEUM WASTE | four hours, three hours of flight and Washington.—(#)—Soviet. scientists have announced discovery of a new [On® Hour by automobile, process fer the synthetic ction, of rubber, employing leum resi- dues as raw material. An-experimental plant, js to be built soon near Moscow with &aquipment to Produce 15@ tons of rubber annually. May 1 to 7 is national egg week. aniead with the project itis expected pro, that citizens will be asked Hee both money and labor to make the dam a reality. A —____—_~"* | Farm Facts | » = a Good drainage, a thoroughly pared seedbed, six inches of good soil and the best seed obtainable the essentials for start a new lawn. A growth of five to six Inches should be allowed before the first mowing. A scratch mixture of equal parts of whole wheat and whole corn is a of agriculture says. “If you sell scrub cows to one neigh- Bean pat os front anetes neighbor, the dairy industry gains TRICT scrub HM. J nothing. But if you sell a to the butcher and repl with a good young cow, bred Hr i - i | ge i 3 : i FEGER, aR? Hh iy i of Ba] « i if Pa L t F i § comprised approximately 70 per cent ‘of the total value. ‘ TAKEN U rr one light e rk Drown mare. charges. C.%. Cunningham, 10 anites | x and 1 mile west of Mcie: . Dak. . Gay ~ State of North County af Bur- Bistrice Court, Fourth Judicial let of the City of Bismarck, ‘ota, a municipal corpors John J. Jackma! a You are hereby summoned to a ayer the complaint in this actlo which ig on file in the office of the clerk of said court, and to serve a copy of your answer upon the sub- scribers within fifteen days after the service of this summons upon yo' ‘ou exclusive of the day of servic in case of your failure to appear or answer, judgment will be taken against you by default for the relief demanded in t! complaint. a 3 at Bi tek, this 30th day of Apr! Na or Plaintiff. Attorney x First National Bank Bullding, Rismarck, North Dakota, of SUPERIOR 5/3-10 alone’can offer you. Quality, Fully Guaranteed exclusive improvements of imbrance upo roy’ scribed in the Complaint, nts. Dakgte to the carrying more air at a‘ i purpenea ie wl 10m ewer inthis action, “whic nthe attice of the Cle! District oun: ana te gets t youn 4a: 4 copy Oo! yu i pon the rubecrlbges Ne purigigh County. North Di shoe, withe , Non ote, withe Frtnitty dape sites the ante i tas ne chee you, , ‘of such service, " 4 t your falluse to appear: i 7 ish dew udgment wil be taken sesinst’ vou : . . lor @ relie! lemapded Petea ee Bian North feet al arc! Nort! a this 1th day of Apr J AaB, ane . M. st an GnokGe 8 REGISTER: Attorneys for Plaintiff; office and postoffice ad Gress, Webb Block,” it marck, North Dakota. To the abuve Defendants: "you will please take notice that the above entitled action relat to the following described real property uated in the County of Burleigh, in the State of North Dakota. namely: the northeast quarter of section ning (9) In township one hundred and thir- ty-eight (138) North, of Range Sev- enty-six (76) Wes cipal Meridian, in Burleigh County, North Dakota. That the purpose of this action is to determine adverse claims to said 1 property and to quiet title in sai Teal property in the plaintiff herein, and that no per- sonal claim is made against the de- fendants in said action, or against any of the defendgnts in id avtion. Dated this ith day of April, A. D. and GEO. M_ REGISTER be ee at ah js SS y10-9 7-26 Nine tact—the combin! features result in still_ani ance. i default , esength without rigidity or weight ‘4, Increased Flex Area Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc. Phene 700 Bismarck, N. Dak. Conclusive Evidence i++: thisyeross sectional diagram” clearly - illustrates 7 Points of Superiority which the | Air-Flight} Principle Tires! by Fisk ‘The De Luxe; Rugged, Fisk arid Premier, each « First ciple of tire. construction and ; representing utmost that your tire dollars can buy in ‘thelr four respective price fields.» Their larger air-chamber, constructed of Fisk’s paten' —their flexible side-walls of live rubber—their line tread, multiple cable bead and Tuesday night they played at Dun- seith and tonight will appear at Lan- da. Other engagements are for St. Johns next Tuesday night and Souris on Friday night. R14 ITY--- Fisk, embodying all of the the new Air-Flight Brn: the are—their carcass, and exclusive All-Cord GERMANY SUFFERS DEEP PESSIMISH OF REPARATIONS PALL Big Banker Analyzes Conditions and Finds Reich Essen- Tt was precisely during the unsettling Young plan negotiations at Paris and The Hague that the American stock market-frenzy was sucking the world’s motiey into Wall street and making it abnormally difficult to raise money for industry in Germany. ‘Yet a survey of the past year in its Political and economic aspects of Germany in the period.of transi- tion between the Dawes and Young Plans, in fighting. her way through a Severe crisis without any possibility of recourse to the capital market at home or. abroad. That is a.circum- market, and, above all, has set Ger: many with her intense demands far capital and credit free from the dan- gerous competition of the unnatur- ally high rates for money on the New York market.” An Even 200 Papers Published in State; ' Only Eight Dailies Fargo, N. D., May 3—(?}—Newspa- pers published in ‘North Dakota total 4 an even 200, to a survey by tially: Sound Berlin, May 3—(®)—That Ger- many’s chief jacob Goldschmidt, exeoutive director of the Darni- staedter and National bank, one of Berlin's chief private financial insti- Herr Goldschmidt wrote this in the annual report of the bank. He said that the burdens placed on the loser of the world war have -been so great that the nation is blindly staring at ‘a blank wall, overlooking the breeches that have already been made in that barrier to progress. “This depression of the spirit of @ great people is one of the most serious conséquénces of the critical worthy of attention than the ma- terial. changes which the yoer brought,” he says. and strength, and the creative and constructive impulses whieh are the expression of that stfength, are nullified by a spirit-of crippling pessimism and hopeless resigna- Young Pian Disappoints must not be de- repara' the Young plan, influenced as it. was by @ “tendency to lose sight of all for the economic reaction. Hit By Stock Market Debacle “In the life of individuals, and still many’s actual progress during 1929. thrilling. It develops THE NEW OAK stance which justifies. resolute sition to the atmosphere of: mistrust. today is a deep} «rhe technicat and administrative which obscures in the pop-| foundations of German’ production ular mind the great achlevements| are sound,” asserts the banker. “In over post < war obtacles is the diag-|tnis connection the nosis given by J balance is remarkable. Germany be- came in the course of the past year Se one areas Cooeiver, Aa the “The significance ment is the greater when it is borne year 1929, and is- perhaps more] relat ba set bra Mile after mile. ...Month after month... ALWAYS The New Oakland Eight is colorful, than any other automobile of its size and weight. It hes accelera- tion, speed and power thatfewcars with eight- cylinder automobiles. can match, regardless of price. Yet the very features which give @akland its superior performance also make it a remarkably reliable car. Its high power is applied to transmission and reor axle in such ‘move at an unusually low rate for according the publications department of the state agricultural college here. : Of the total number, 192 are week- ly newspapers and eight are dailies. Of the latter, two have both morning and evening editions. In addition, the survey disclosed 1¢ religious, educational and trade pub- lications of which seven are published at Fargo, three each at Valley City and Grand Forks and one each at Jamestown, Lisbon and Minot. ‘The survey places the circulation of the daily newspapers of the state at 76,193 and asserts that this figure rep- resents an increase of more than 20,- 000 in four years. Oppo- favorable trade of this achive- consisted jucts, which to compete spite of all adds, street “ne| > the|! Incorporations =| Dakota company. W. Loftus Implement jinot, and E. S. Offering Northwestern Public Service Company 6% Cumulative Preferred Shares Par Value $100.00 Per Share Invest your money in a fast-growing company operating in North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. This is the first opportunity afforded the general public in North Dakota to invest their funds in this splendid investment. This preferred stock may be secured from any. employee of the North Dakota Power & Light com- pany or by writing or calling at the local offices: Bismarck - Mandan.- Dickinson. Information regarding this investment will be gladly furnished upon request. Our allotment of this stock is limited. North Dakota Power & Light Company Bismarck, North Dakota DEPENDABLE : ro SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE any given road speed, its engine life is unusually long. The Oakland Eight embodies six- teen years’ engineering experience more power ~ And every car undergoes approxi- mately 25,000 separate inspections while being manufactured! That is why mile after mile, montn after month—Oakland performs with that unfailing. dependability which is, by far, the biggest factor 1025 zc. : LAND 2 for © sensl r PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS STAIR MOTOR COMPANY — ASSULIATE DEALERS Bismarek, N. D. Geodrich—B; 7 a ‘: Lake--Gilbert Bolten eer o Pearse ine Shep v y _-@ smogth, even flow thet strain on _in the coritinued enjoyment of an. i these parts is materially reduced, _. 2vtomobile. Ae ee And Because its reciprocating parts Price ag well a che list (0. By

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