The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 21, 1930, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1930 The Bismarck Tribune + Am Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) by. the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- )., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck mai] matter. jeceesesecessoee President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Dally by mall pee year dn Biamark per year ( rel Daily by mail, per year (in state, outaide Bismarck) ... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota Fey ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ; Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or hot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All ts of republication of all other matter herein are reserved. 5S (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK Sticking Together ‘The goodwill tour from the Twin Cities in its essence was to North Dakota just what Colonel Lindbergh's flight to Paris was to the French people. It was an ex- pression of sentimental attachment that should be kept cordial at all times. . The Twin Cities are the hub of the Northwest. When they still were young Dakota territory was the hinter- land of which they were the gateway in the entering BOSTON , frontier. That relationship has never died out. St. Paul and Minneapolis (Minneapolis and St. Paul) remain the focal metropoli of this northern plains region. In finance, in trade, in cultural primacy, North Dakota still must acknowledge the hegemony of the Twin Cities in the Northwest. North Dakota is proud of their splendid development. They have the big banks, the outstanding wholesale houses, they still are the distributing gateway to this entire northern plains region. There is a mutual ad- vantage in keeping close contacts between the prairies that are the breadbasket, the reservoirs of livestock, the future of a vastly’expanded dairying industry and the organized commercial empire that is enthroned in the cities where the dreams of Jim Hill were born. The vi- sions of this builder included the Greater North Dakota which is in formation now and which this goodwill tour came to appraise. Boundary lines mean nothing between people who are homogeneous. One state may be branded “Minnesota,’ another “North Dakota,” or mayhap “South Dakota” and another “Montana.” They all are of one world of their own, and their interests are mutual. The Twin Cities are the commercial barometer of this great north- westerp,.empire. As Louis Silverstein said at Mandan: “Watch us, rely on us, invite our cooperation. We are with you. Your problems are outs. “Let us help you and you help ys. United we stand,.divided we fall. Let us go forward unfalteringly-in courage, in hope and in labor, arid the world is ours.” If there was any element of encouragement lacking in this it was more than made up in the address of Charles Collison on northwestern agriculture. Bismarck and Mandan surely will accept the message from this prophet from the upper Mississippi. Both Da- kota Twin Cities realize how they and their future are beund up with the prosperity of Minneapolis and St. Paul (St. Paul and Minneapolis) and are ready to hand out their cooperation on a silver platter. Also to place their hospitality at the disposal of such goodwill embassies as the tour just closed has been. It ‘was an interesting party that has just concluded its visit, @nd the Twin Cities of the Missouri and the Heart ap- Preciate that so many bankers, commercial house heads, managers of big newspapers and trade experts should have come here to learn firsthand just what steady but ‘undeviating progress is under way in this region. The latchstring always will be out to more of these goodwill tours. Inventorying the Period. ‘The present age is an age of skepticism. A glance at any modern magazine, a study of any reli- gious publication, a survey of the weekly output of ser- mons in any city, will convince you of that. The aver- ‘age writer or preacher seems to take it for granted that. unbelief is more firmly entrenched today than ever be- fore. The sképtic is having his heydey. But things move in cycles, and no great period of doubt for there have been others, in the history of the world has ever lasted for long. To discern an age of faith lying beyond the present age of skepticism may seem a job for a man with uncommonly good eyes; yet there are those who do discern it, and who are confident that its advent is not so very far off. ‘There is, for instance, Salvador de Madariaga, one of the most thoughtful, intelligent Europeans alive today. Writing for the New York Herald-Tribune, Senor de Madariaga expresses the belief that the western world is about to “rediscover God”—to emerge from its era of ‘weary disbelief into an era of faith and wonder, which are the hallmarks of all devotion. His reasons for advancing this proposition are inter- ‘esting. : A few decades ago science suddenly expanded the scope of ite operations. It upset many old beliefs, dug up many new facts and theories about the world, caused many men te lock doubtfully at dogmes that had gone unquestioned for centuri¢s and raised that peculiér, fascinating, terri- fying specter of a mechanical, soulless universe. ‘This, as much as anything, is back of modern skepti- cigm. But now, says Senor de Madariaga, science is tak- ing a new teck. It is beginning to realize that it has ago science believed that it would only be a matter of time before.gll.of the secrets of creation.were laid bare; now it is beginning to admit that there are many things that it will never know:. It ts, in fact, beginning to see that man’s finite capacity for understanding makes it inevitable that the greater part of -the universe. about him will always be a mystery to him. So, says this ‘writer: _ “Science is the theology of the westerner; the way, the ‘method,’ toward God. Sclenée leads to the conclusion the world—including matter—can only be explained 4 terms of intelligent energy. The time is therefore at Mapa when the westerner will see God with the only ‘eyes he possesses for spiritual realities—the eyes of the * || The world, in other words, is not the easily-understood some cock-sure investigators have thought. The and the physicist are daily proving that it is swith mystery and wonder. Is it not possible, then Probable—that we are on the verge of a great 8nd awakening, in which the old awe, the 7 old sense of being in the presence of unutterable mar- vels, will once again be a part of the dally life of every man? Nuisance Senators Squelched The senate foreign relations committee wisely in rejecting the demand moved by one of its mem- bers that Secretary Stimson be required to produce’ the confidential records connected with the London naval parity pact. It was largely a call for the nuisance effect which the demand might excite. i Foreign relations may at times require just this kind of secrecy and at other times may be a mattér of “open 6.00 | convenants openly arrived at” as the late President Wil- son phrased the idea. Here, however, was a pact in the background of which there are potentialities of interna- tional sensibility and irritation to be considered. The troublemakers in the United States senate have 00! nen squelched in committee and by all means they should not be permitted to annoy the relations of this country with Europe by any further agitation of deli- cate matters of diplomacy from the open floor of the upper chamber. The Upswing Is Near The monthly business bulletin issued by the Cleve- land Trust company is one of the most sober, analytical business and industrial charts now available; and the current issue brings the cheering prediction that the return of prosperity cannot be very far distant. Pointing out that production has declined more rapid- ly than consumption, so that shortages are in the mak- ing in many important lines, the bulletin says: “The combined forces of under-production and of abundant credit at low rates are operating to remedy conditions, and to bring about business recovery, as they always do in times like these. Ease of credit facilitates business recovery, and under-production compels it. We have both in combination, and confidence that they will be effective in the not distant future is fully justified. All the history of past periods of slow business indicates that the end of this one is approaching.” Personally Offensive : The difference between Hanford MacNider and Smith ‘Wildman Brookhart, two Iowans, was made plain in the U. S. senate Friday when consideration of MacNider’s nomination to be minister to Canada was up for confir- acted | Today Is the Anniversary of HW) BEARD’S BIRTH On June 21, 1850, Daniel C. Beard, mation. “He is personally offensive to me,” said the Iowa egotist. . That's it. MacNider ts offensive to one man who hap- pens to be a United States senator in spite of his short- comings. Senator Brookhart is personally offensive to millions of Americans, The odd thing about this situa- tion is that neither may suspect it. This is the time of year when the batk-seat driver calls your attention to that ingen‘ous, oddly-named Inn at the right. American artist, author, and natural: ist, and founder of the first Boy Scout Society in the United States, was born at Cincinnati, O. Following an academic education at Covington, Ky., and four years of art training in New York City, Beard for many years made illustrations for leading magazines and books. He was the originator and first instructor of the pioneer class in illustration and later served as teacher -of animal drawing at the Woman's School of Applied Design. Through his enthusiasm for out- door life Beard became interested in Laugh and Grow Fat, But Not Wise (Chicago News) Miss Mary Ferguson, supervisor of social service at Johns Hopkins hospital, writing in the current issue of the Family, has much’ to say of the therapeutic value of laughter. It has, she says, @ marked effect on the chem- istry of the body and on the mind, brings about much deeper breathing, exposes every cell to an increased amount of oxygen, promotes digestion and in many -ways leads to good health and mental well-being. bn But Miss Ferguson cites the opinion of William Mc- Dougall that to those who laugh life 4s “not. all: beer and skittles.” The things that cause laughter, says the fa- mous psychologist, would annoy us if we. did not laugh, and Dr. Cecil Reynolds traces the origin of laughter back to the sounds of wild beasts when they seize their prey. Laughter, according to M. Bergson, is a social gesture, a corrective to that rigidity of body, mind and character which hampers the elasticity of the spirit and discourages sociability. The philosopher who gathers a handful of laughter to taste, says M. Bergson, may find that the sub- stance is scanty and the aftertaste bitter. ‘This probably is the reason why philosophers do not laugh. They will not disturb the deep inner serenity of their lives by hideous cachinnation or parrot-like cack- lings. ‘ * ” Mr. Borah to the “Radicals. (Milwaukee Journal) Senator Borah in a radio speech tells the younger gen- eration to “dare to be radical.” And hare is Mr. Borah’s definition of a radical—“One who believes in the con- stitution of the United States and will not barter away his devotion: for party, for sake of so-called regularity and for the sake of being with the majority.” Sounds big. And one need have no quarrel with the definition. No- body knows what a radical is anyway, though we'll wager the younger generation comes nearer knowing than the man from Idaho. But the definition will do. The wonder comes in contemplating Mr. Borah’s saying it. Dare party regularity! And the man who gives this advice has for years played the game of being off the party reservation between elections and on it when the political drums were sounding. When votes are to be counted he is the most regular of the regulars. His daring comes only at times when daring does not count at the ballot box. Mr. Borah dares to be a Daniel when the lions are chained up. Japanese Puzzle in Hawaii. (Washington Star) Customs of ancient Japan clashing with those of modern America are perplexing the elder Japanese in Hawaii, who see their children growing up largely apart from traditional family influence. This is a subject which is receiving more and more discussion in Japanese civic, social and business organizations, and in the “vernacu- lar” Japanese press of Hawaii, ’ One Japanese editor frequently devotes leading edito- rials to comment on the problem of this “second genera- tion.” A particular instance of the perplexity is in the relationship between a young married couple and the elder “in-laws” with whom they live. In Japan youngsters are obedient and submissive to the father and mother or the father-in-law or mother-in-law, but in Hawaii the young folk, thinking and acting as Americans, wish to enjoy freedom of thought and action. One obvious result of the changing environment is the tendency of the young people to break away from the family home and set up homes of their own as soon Possible. And in recent years it is noticeable that the “first generation” immigrants are coming more and more to eccept Hewall as their permanent home and now wish their children to gain a foothold in island industry. .| founding the Scout society, he was the Boy Scout movement, and, after chosen as the national of the Boy Scouts of America. Beard also is credited with the dis- covery of a mountain, which has been named for him, adjoining Mount Mc- Kinley in Alaska. McKinley is the > Quotations WI “I once thought my art more im- Portant than love—now I'm not sure}summer job in a radiator factory, is repérted to be “eager to begin work.” In fact he’s all stearged ‘up over it. 2 that I was right."—Rosa Ponselle, opera singer. * “It is not because but because it draws to its heart all things that are gay and keen, that the life in its streets is exhilarating.” \—Agnes Repplier, essayist. “The best of selves when we are producing than when we are taking recreation.”—M. Andre Siegfried, French writer. * * * “It is easy to cry out against cen- sorship generally.”— Edward Weeks, writer. “Europeans are saying today that ‘Europe is being Americanized. are saying it with an air of fatalism jand distaste, expressing a sentiment ‘compounded of fear, curiosity, scorn and admiration.” — Nathaniel Peffer, ‘author. Allan Hoover, wi * ss Dwight Morrow, * the city is big, = * Bebe Daniels and “* * us are much more our- along nicely unless, Lyon's den. -* 10 days for steaing eee up matter.” se & “People need leisure and privacy, (Copyright, 1930, ig \ BARBS Glass of milk at the end of a day's campaigning. From contented Jer- sey cows, undoubtedly. stars, married recently, should get decides to rearrange things in the| ’ The Atlanta Negro who was given considered that the unkindest cut of all. x ek * “Space,” says Einstein, “| Looking spare does have that effect on gray The title has slipped from his grasp so many times, it would seem that Jack Sharkey can settle down to 4 to do anything really wrong.”—Fred-/|be a real heavy weig! highest mountain iri North emer} Arnold Kummer, author. these articles as part of which this column is offering ers of your newspapers. The following lists of arti now available for distribut! you are invited to send for more of these articles.. Send whole list if you like. Just today’s article and make mark at the side of each article desire and they will be sent to you return mail. Please enclose a self-addressed envelope, and also close a two-cent stamip for each article desired. This takes care of the post- age and helps to pay for the prepar- ation of the articles. il PE BS ag Fal 4 > ho has taken aj ----Asthma we read, sips a * Ben Lyon, movie of course, Daniels * iI cHow to Banish Epilepsy re sein Stomach and Intestinal as ++. .Strong Feet for Health Gallstones & ham probably Catarrh and Colds eating Auto-Intoxication for “parking Causes of Headache * insomnia or Sleeplessness. hi 3 Service, Inc.) BEGIN HERE TODAY NOW GO ON WITH THE sTORY CHAPTER XL ATALIE’S lips stiffly tramed ‘ the tneriianie question.’ “Do raged. sath & sneer: Suppose I may_expect you to try and bluff ft out.” " His laughing brown eyes were now like dark agate, glinting coldly at her. “ “I am not bluffing, Alan,” she said simply: “you will have to tell . me what you mean.” How to Deodorize Politics. (Minneapolis Journal) merely scratched the surface of knowledge. A generation:| “public ifications than we have had since. We had fewer scandals. bpeld counts for more in politics today than ever it did fore. ‘When reputable citizens, all of them, not only vote in primaries and regular elections, but make it a point to Know whom they are voting for; when reputable citizens take as much interest in the character of the public serv- vants they hire as in the character of the private em- ployes they hire, then there will be no need to change the name of politics to some less odoriferous term. Alan laughed, shortly, con- temptuously. “Going to see it through along that line, are you? Innocence accused. Very well, then, let's bring it out in the open and see what comes of it. I mean why did you change the name of tha stock in that letter?” Natalie stared at him uncom- prebendingly. Had he been even @ little less inflamed with anger, ‘he could have judged her sion with afough accuracy to know she was not simulating it. As it was, he thought she had made up her mind to carry her bluff to the end and he reacted by becoming more infuriated. “Why don’t you deny it?” he ‘ demarded fiercely, as her gaze re- mainea upon his face, unchang- ing, fascinated. Natalie merely shook her head. ou was begtoning to be afraid of im, “What kind of woman are you, anyway?” he raved. “Jealous! Jeaious! Jealous! Beastly jeal- ous. And you had to pick on a woman who bas never done you a | e Musbant © 1930 4Y NEA ‘SERVICE INC. eS stock for a good one in that letter, she was literally blinded with I've lost a small fortune.” A grim| pain. ‘| per. .|"“I ought to choke you, but I've bit of A @oman who is sick, the sole support of a kid whose er died to make the country safe for people like you—-so you can cheat and rob his widow.” ting that I His wild words beat on her ears/even if you ha Ike blows, and the hollow, bitter,| was damned clever, laugater that followed them was) that!” ike an echo of some faraway] It seemed now ti soucd, His denunciation numbed her with its shoqking violence. Could this be Alan torturing her so? She acarcely could think, Letter? Letter? Letter? Why was he talking about a letter? The word, tormenting her brain, escaped from her lips in a weak utterance, “That's right, Bernadin ’ Alan thrust at her. “Co: on, tell me, why did you do it?” He advanced toward her, his lips twisting in his passion of tem- Natalie shrank back from him, visibly frightened. “You deserve it,” he snarled. laugh burst from bi! wasn't so clev blindly. For she her. Neve that? Why, see a letter!” stuff,” he snarled tims for that is makes what you" got to save my hands for cleaner work. I've got to work, do you understand, and make up for your mischief.” His bloodshot eyes bored threat- eningly into her own feverish ones, but his halt-raised hands dropped to his sides. a letter that didn’t Look at your hands His voice wi ing. “They're lov burning eyes, seemed dead. “You haven't any defense, have you?” he taunted her. “Not s thing to say. Well, you're wise to ‘keep quiet. God, I couldn't stand to hear you deny it! I’ve had enough of your saintliness that covers the cheapest kind of soul. But if you ‘hink you've a chance to hide under silence, just listen. 1 know what you did, all right. “You came into my office when 1 was out and got hold of Mrs. Lamont's letter. It gave you your chance. You saw what you could do, but here’s where you made your big mistake. You thought you would cause her to lose a pretty penny, but you're wrong. It’s me you've damned near ruined.” H> swept bis arms in a circle indicate the room. “All this,” he| Bernadine Lamont ed savagely. “Backgro' a baby’s mouth? wouldn’t touch a wouldn’t erase the it because she got initials, did you? heard me mention have you?” panting. color under the words. She under: & false conclusio knew that—it was never hard for| me to make mon become of it? to steal from Bernadine. your" was creeping into the very core} She saw at once that her re- Natalie continued to stare|of ber neart. Knowing how hate-| mark was unfortunate, “That's strickenly at his ferociously con-|{ul was the thing Alan accused |just- it,” Alan declared. “That's torted mouth and reddened eyes.|her of, she was beginning to feel Her attitude drove him frantic, |that he could’ nev “Why don’t you say some-jher, to believe, fo thing?” he yelled at her, unmind-|that she would be ful of the inconsistency. was|s crime. showing. ful, bumbness partially left ber blood-|pbysical support. 5 Alan laughed at he raved on, “because | progress to. a c! dishty substituted a rotten know was it, forget- sense of honor 't? But the work she must speak, must stop him, even though she had to answer understood the nature of the charge he was bringing against “Don’t, don’t, don’t,” she cried imploringly. “Oh, Alan, you can't . believe that I would touch one of Ani your letters? Surely you can’t be- “Never mind the high-minded hideous. Look at you. White and gold and clean! You ought to be black, black, black! hell! Oh, no, you wouldn't touch your hands? Who'd ever think Natalie’s face, aside from her /they could turn themselves to tak- ing hread and ere out of a dine wrote and put in one that’s @ joke on the market, would you? You didn’t know that I'd fall for man that even you know by his He broke off, breathless Natalie's face was regaining its ("hi not clearly. Her mind jumped to had done this, she believed. How, she did not know—she would to|need time to think it out. But und! | She had ysed ber genius for evil what you call it. But to/to turn Alan into s blind fool, s my earnings. Ob, yes, I|mad, blind fool. He was Berna- could always make more—you|dine’s now, heart, mind and soul. Natalie told herself ‘this with But what’s| sickening despair. She saw that it saved: pre-|was useless to try to convince clous little. An. now, sow I’ve| him of ber innocence at the pres- &ct to make good what you triedjent time. Perhaps—when his Yoy|anger had abated—the thought know what that means, don’t/held little of hope. A cold chill|is, Ae Her soul. seemed dying within Still-she did ‘not speak, though|her, as though his words lay her head moved a little in a piti-|uo-n it with crushing weight. She sidewise motion and the/put out s hand and groped for sight had lett ner, that is dry lips. “It 'Good acting,” he applauded. “Too bad to waste it on me alone, But you always were good at everything. Everything, that is, but matrimony. You've made a fine mess of that!” Natalie reached her chair, and slipped limply into it. She did not see Alan go, but she heard him, dimly, as though the sound came from a world not her own, Darkness descended upon her, engulfed her. Her body drooped over the arm of the chair. She was very still. I'll grant you 10 Natalle that only partly ALAN went directly to Berna- dine’s house, She was at home. Dr. Wagnall bad positively for- bidden her to go to the club. She 1 didn’t even at her. “The| WS both relieved and alarmed to It only | 8° Alan. lone more| “You look like... well, never mind,” she greeted him. “I know. Like nobody's busi- ness,” Alan finished for her. “And this time. that’s not -just slang, Bernadine, Nobody’s busi- ness is just what I'll get if this keeps up; I can't stand it!” “Ne Bernadine said sooth- ingly, “I know you can’t. But don’t try to be funny, Alan. This has got into you too deep for that. But come and sit down and let ms make you comfortable.” She was, herself, barely able to but she made sake. She did not want him to guess that the Gnancial blow she had just suffered had cost her much in physical strength as well. “Have you any idea who did it?" Alan flung at her when she seated him in her living room. She looked at him with Oriental inserutability. “No,” she lied, you?” As black as bions, to you. Ingingly sneer- , aren’t they, no, you letter. You Dame Berna- a tip from a You haven't him by them, and smart of his food now. But guilt was affecting would affect her if she were ta see her son, Bobby, com- mitting some ugly act. She felt deeply sorry for him. “Well, I have,” he declared, lin sond heavily. “I know who Bernadine uttered s little cry. “Ob, Alan, are you sure?” she asked pleadingly. . “It was Natalie,” he answered, his voice as hard as steel. “Ob, no, there must be some mistake,” Bernadine cried. “Nata- le is too lovely. a woman to do snything like that, I know she mp. Bernadine had done it, what makes it eo unforgivable. If 1 hadn't always thought ber some- thiug to be worshiped, 1 could stand ft better. But I’m glad | found her out at last. She'll never fool me again.” Bernadine looked-at his bard, set face and trembled for Natalie, Alun moved, as though he were: abcut to rise. “Alan,” Bernadine cried fear- He did not/fully, “what are you going to do2t (To Be Costinued) er bave loved r one minute, guilty. of such \ her tottering £ tes? Esgnogs Question: K. G. writes: tell me what should be eggnogs for a balanced diet.” Answer: In the first place, the mixture of raw egg and milk is not a good combination, but if the mixture Spl bot se 287 10:25—Weather report. 10:30—Church services, First Presbyterian church. 12:00—Weather report. - MONDAY, JUNE 38 6:00-—-Dawn-revelile. 5—Early Risers club. i . 0—Farm reporter in Wasington. 7:45—Meditation period. hoppers’ Loge main? 0—Opening grain mar! 5 —Sunshine hour, : if ¢—Aunt Sammy. 7—Arlington time signals. Me-Grain mark. West Pool, : high; low and close, :18—Farm notes. :45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock :00—Good chi :30—Siesta hour: Good News radio azine. s—Newscasting. 10—Your English. eae fle Poxete Associ. ation ax tal :30—Studlo program. ‘ 45—Hon. F. B. Garberg, depositors’ ity fund bie repeal. er. aw ~4 a-

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