The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 18, 1930, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY: 18, 1980 tragic injustice; if all of us, from the California supreme court on down, are compelled to realize that this “well- anyhow-they-knew-something-about-it” reasoning is ut- ter nonsense—then, as a nation, we shall be much better off. We shall have purged ourselves of something that has been very bad for us. We shall have ended a dis- honest, wilfully blind mental attitude. : It seems our good luck, as well as Mooney's and Bill- ings, that McDonald has turned up. Bank Raid Suggests State Police Minnesota ‘has reacted to the Willmar bank hold-up, the most. brazen since the Youngers raided Northfield half a century ago to their sorrow, with a movement for 8 state constabulary. The idea is that if the state had a police force of mo- bile character such as Canada has in its Northwest Mounted, bandits would give “Minnesota a wide berth. For a mounted police force of that character would be able to cut off the flight of bahk robbers, in all likeli- hood. Anyhow, the Mounted Police of Canada have the reputation of always getting their man. Pennsylvania has a‘fine state constabulary. Except in the large cities one hears nothing of bank and pay roll hold-ups there any longer. Before the state police force was established, there were periodical pay roll hold-ups in the anthracite country. Some of these were accom- panied by murder. The state constabulary also seems to work well in New York state. In both commonwealths at the time of establishing the institution there was much protest, in the belief that the Police were designed mainly to fight the battle of big industries in their clashes with striking workers. Pre- viously Pennsylvania was cursed with vast strikes, as the railroad strike of 1877 and the Homestead steel strike of 1892. In those labor wars national guards were used. The establishment of the state police ended the use of Dr. McCoy's menus suggested’ for the week of Sunday, July 20th: Sunday Breakfast — Be ee ear oraks orange juice 30 minutes before = fast of poached egg on Melba toast; Lunch—Green peas in turnip cups; stuffed celery, ripe olives. Dinner—Baked chicken or Belgian hare, asparagus; salad of lettuce, to- matoes and cucumbers; apricot whip. Monday Breakfast—French omelet, whole- wheat muffins; stewed prunes. Lunch—Berries and cteam, no sugar. Dinner — Salisbury steak, baked Lape carrots and turnips; salad of fh led raw spinach; sliced pineap- le. celery. Dinner—Roast pork, string beans; salad of sliced cucumber with parsley; baked apple. ‘Wednesday ‘ Breakfast — Coddled eggs, Melba toast; stewed pears. Lunch—ice cream ‘(% pint portions) with @ fresh. fruit. Dinner—Baked seas bass, stuffed summer squash; salad of whole toma- toes on lettuce; no dessert. ‘CHICAGO Justice Can’t Afford This Big ‘If’ It looks as though the country were about prepared to unconvict Tom. Mooney and Warren K. Billings, who, whether guilty or not guilty, have for 14 years been pay-. ing the penalty of the Preparedness day bomb outrage | 11. guards in strikes and nobody now argues that phase in San Francisco in June, 1916, when nine persons were | oy the matter any longer. “It is feared that this old killed and 40 injured during a wartime parade. Pennsylvapia argument might be raised if Minnesota "The chief thing that, stands between the men and free- | went about éstablishing @ constabulary. In Pennsylvania dor is the testimony of John McDonald, star witness at! the march-of events has disposed of the fear. The old the trial, and that has become a mighty frail reason for | type of strikes has died out. Arbitration is more and the two remaining in prison, as McDonald, like most all| more taking the place of the old industrial warfare with Dinner—Broiled steak, artichokes; the other witnesses, had admitted that he, too, led against | tts violence against property and: life and itd bloodshed combination salad (recipe given July the defendants under the bidding of San Francisco polit] and death, | Today Is the | | BARBS i] Quotations 42); blneapple-almond cream (small ~ Thursday Breakfast—Baked peaches (or fresh if desired) with cream. Lunch — Buttered spinach, okra, head lettuce. ical and industrial interests and for pay from them, A coincidence of the proposal that Minnesota estab- ‘Anniversary of 2 Mooney and Billings would probably very generally be | lish a state police is the circumstance that at the moment . It may be out of Poo Md é “Where sex attraction is utterly and eee econ ee chit Byte ond regarded as martyrs were it not that they had been fight- | it was being broached’at a conference on governmental THACKERAY’S BIRTH bor of @ cou of funt who | definitely lacking in one partner to a| before breakfast of si of = t a récord all to pieces. union, no amount of pity, or reason, | broiled ham, toasted cereal biscuit; ing agitators in the cause of labor, and their violent meth-| relations at the University of Minnesota by Raymond On July 18, 1811, William Make- se 8 Gr City, ox WBA not, can oi | eppieeaiine, 5 3 ods of battling a rapacious industrial and utility ring that controlled: and corrupted the politics of Sar? Francisco also weighs against @ ready response to the case that has been made out in favor of their innocence. ‘The wartime prejudices which also undoubtedly aided in convicting them have died down. Not so entirely the prej- udices of the system of justice as it has been adminis- tered in San Francisco many years under the lash, one time, of a boss. like Abe Ruef and at another under the goad. of the grafting utility gang. ‘The California su- preme court, for instance, refused to free the two.men on the amazing assumption that, even if they are inno- cent, they know something about the explosion and, therefore, ought to be kept in prison. There is no evi- dence that indicates that they know anything about the Moley, of Columbia university, New York, the raid with | peace Thackeray, English novelist, tepulsion implicit in nature."—John| Lunch—Melon, or cherries, machine guns was being made on the‘ Willmar bank. | was born at Calcutta. Fgh eager roby by Fo ‘. ' as much as desived. as Moley said the United States in its failure to avail it-; After attending lower schools,/it, The téent—not the pitch. ees Dinner—Broiled filet of sole, baked self, of state police organizations has lagged behind al-| Thackeray entered Trinity College, 2* * “Tvs a conimon notion that God is| stuffed tomatoes; salad of vegetables most every other civilized country on the face of. the | Cambridge, in 1829, but left a year emeritus, like an elderly professor.| molded in gelatin (cucumbers, lettuce ry ie face of the | jater without taking a degree. An Ohio tourist lest a straw hat/Foiks admit He used to do at | Celery); no dessert. earth. Europe has them. They beget state-wide activity "Thackeray settled in. Paris about when it blew off and into a field|dean of the divinity school of the Saturday against crime, where, at present, there may be discon- | 1834 to study art seriously as he had | “here 4 cow wind peg Hay! Hay! | University of Chicago. «| Breakfast—Wholewheat-raisin muf- nected. efforts decentralized by professional jealousies of | shown talent as a caricaturist. His e se @ fins, peanut butter; stewed or fresh officials of the various counties and failing to produce co- | Peneil was at its best in fantastic] New York police have been in-) “Girls? Shucks! Ihave the high- operdtion, wotk as is found in the initial letters | structed to be more quiet in the per-|est admiration for girls generally, but} Lunch—Cantaloupe a la mode. pel fe of chapters as well as in drawings | formance of their duties. There aré | have never thought much about being] Dinner—Roast veal, spinach; avo- Meanwhile Minnesota has had 14 bank hold-ups so far| made for the amusement of child| times, no doubt, when people would in love, being busy with other things.” in 1980, . The losses have been above $100,000 and in two | friends, like to have 'thém keep absolutely/—Boy Scout Siple, companion of of the hold-ups bandits have been killed. ‘The state has a| _ In 1837, he went to London and be- | stil. ate spisrlaseenmingie highway. patrol which cannot ue bandits and the| came & regular magazine contributor, “ hr Digg td moe and the/ jjustrating many of his own stories. | Canada expects to collect $900,000,-/ “No one knows how far I have state crime prevention bureau is equally helpless after] Thackeray, who had inherited a| 000 ae Career, Arve gred ee genet gone.”—Albert Einstein. . the commission of the crime, as it’ was in advance, lo sum, lost most of it in Indian | mer. fone ludes * ke outrage, nor were they convicted on suich ® charge. The | tre oul to do | wks, in having x good time and| Febate on the empty bottles? “The United Btatés government 1s charge on which they were convicted, witnesses who | anything. would seem that Minnesota Would be tn~ | s/s newspapers. : ** * thé most inefficient big business or- polsteréd it up for pay they now say, was that they plant: | terested right now in putting an end to these raids by| He became editor of the Cornhill] Golf to Bobby Jones seems to be a| ganization in operation today.” — ed and exploded the bomb left in # suit case on a gireet piers heapeet edie 0e which, ‘it has-been pointed wareine in tye resigned this| matter of course. a ce ® \ t, | Out, is a guarantee of government to those entering into e years later. ** corner curb, The recanters now say they didn’t do that ing in “It is imposible for men to indulge] ish in drink without involving the whole its ci 6 ' ‘Thackeray made his reputation by| Generally speaking women are ‘That is a perfect sample of the way the whole country Me rs ‘ the “Snob Papers,” in’ 1848, now | pretty and they are pretty generally has reacted. It had been demonstrated, before McDon- community in the habit.”—Evangeline known as “The Book of Snobs.” ald’s reappearance, that the case against Moongy and - Billings had utterly collapsed; but we all said, in ttect— Editorial Comment “well, they're bad actors anyhow; why wot about: speaking. He died on: Dec. 24, 1863. (Copyright, 1990, NEA Service, Inc.) Sacal The Price of*Wheat and the Price of Because of this prejudiced attitude the California su- preme court was able to make its absurd remark—for- Bread getting, apparently, that Mooney and Billings weren't (Duluth Herald) ‘ ‘There is but one possible solace for the agricultural accused of having knowledge of the bembing, or of being | |... le agricul tress which cheap wi bad actors generally, but solely of having planted the | reiee which Beep tesad Aver ghesfestran Aerts bomb. sumer. ‘The federal farm board yesterday, for the second In the light of the legal principles on which our system t ye Y> e sec of justice 1s founded the excuse of the California su- | tne ‘ld the public that with wheat as cheap as it is, Bok ner menu). Gerdes in plain nip cup, topping with a lump of but- ter and a generous of preme court becomes # counter-outrage of the most rep-| If the farmer is to suffer from cheap wheat, it is a BEGIN HERE TODAY “You'll live there then when|¢6¥7OU foolish Ju : uu ; affal 5 rehensible character. It indicates a vicious spirit in the bia \Seemierso4 situation if baker is the one to sUDIT GRANT, benstitel you're married?” said it. ciate ie reg check, but it iaikias Sicentonae. from. cheap flour h results from cheap ote eee eee . Ce ans fe ‘alan, I love you, I] With her red-gold bair and bril- interpretation of the law—suggests the unfitness of the men who made it to defile the bench of any tribunal. ment with girl wheat, “Wheat,” sald Samucl R. McKelvie of the farm board, parenitren st lant face, she looked like some - the of Mooney and Bill- | «; “Why will you ask mé that?) ing it all the 3 eprite—rather a visitor to this Bias eoekln deehse to hae? . Been gee gerbe gr clergrersemieorsan pra tira ea ALAN STRONE: | «you're not going back on your| ~ With a wild effort she got up. earth than-e denizen of it. ings. ‘ year ago, there can be no conscientious objection ‘Sieyne returns, but Chummy ” Jud alsem. | “I hate ry that the | %, the theory that when it costs less to manufacture an to recognize ‘mean word?” Judy exelaimed jn you!” She cle ‘The next thing to do was to find With the finding of McDonald it would seem © | article it ought to sell for leas,” Tove with Judith, “No,” he said with @ miserable/ hands in a rage of hélpless fury.| work. Another artist she sat for ‘ime has come for California to deal with this case on| It is true that those who bake their own bread benefit loved laugh. : Til never, never speak to you|did not want a model of her type “You have asked hér to matry | asain!” for the momient, tried one or the basis of the frazzle of so-called testimony that is left. | from chéap wheat because their flour is correspondingly ale McDonald's word could convict the two when it | Cheap. . catuente you, I know. She told mé. Shé is| Steyne rose, too. He took her| two strangers, who were also not in 2 Srgrgee bir ropes ais when he says his | But if thése Who buy bread from the baker, which eres, aks that: Ccolutely wild with happiness.” |arm and dréw her into the gather-| immediate need of her services. S ‘was a lie, why can’ hes eetig nowadays means most peoplt, have had any gain from Sugitn, _menawrall “She is not in any hurry,” Steyne| ing darkness. would have to try her luck in ‘words then all were false and now they're true’ cheap wheat it has not been reported. pe perl Mg og said awkwardly. “She ie A “Judy,” he eaid, and now his|chorus again. That was when the - ‘The unfortunate feature of the recantation of course infatuation of on as we are for the presént. dmall “sum she had in ‘hand lies in the fact that McDonald admits that he lied in Kansas and the Farm Board rleh Sani wants to work.” ’ ‘was expended, or nearly s0. 1916, If he is a lar, as he says he was, may he not now (Minneapolis Tribune) “Then you are not marrying at Ready ‘ “Judy,| The idea of accepting Gideon's ‘be lying again? It seems that this would be the first test | Kansas, as represented by Senator Capper and Gov- ‘aha wetees once?” 3 ngry with me. I couldn't| offer never occurred to her. She to be given his recantation, If he can make it stick, if ernor Reed, is aking the farm board to go into the mar- “No. Clarissa says six months. "m going to do what you| disliked the man, and she consid- ket again and buy 100,000,000 more bushels of wheat. Y Her it thing, Don’t say. ered he had insulted her. She never it has the ring of truth at last, Mooney and Billings) Kansas, in other words, is asking the board to do CHAPTER XII hed Fp PR gs gelimors Wil fever ‘speak to me again. We/ wanted to see him again. Some should be set free, not held because,of prejudice against | precisely what it did last fall. yor was taken by surprise, and|1 always thought so.” t often, we can’t—I| thing would turn up, no doubt. labor agitators. The courts and a great commonwealth | If the experience of the last year means anything, it her eyes gave Alan a welcome joves you more than 5 it; -but just some-|"" jreanwhile, other difficulties pre- i can not afford such odium. Those whom Mooney and | Means that this particular form of farm relief is worth~ b ble ban an i sce phon Billings fought were at least equally as mean and abom- | ‘The. closed over hers, He explain: at }an’s insight. “She'd z gd Chummy always wanted Judy to inable and vicious. ‘The revelations of San Francisco| superfusus eheat off the marketer ns ee ee ‘P| fhe had Just walked acroms from the|wite than De Set a themetnd tla core [be with her and Steyne, graft and political corruption, the stealing of val ‘There is only -one trouble with the idea; that is that other side, having taken his car to| world,” she added, for your loyalty to Chummy. I'm| “Do come out for a walk with fea ¢ the ci the wheat must sometime come back on the market. & garage for some repairs. self willfully. Alan and me, Judy. Judy, you. franchises, the bribery and plundering of the city Py | "rat board ts now loaded up with: 60,000,000 bushels of “It's such @ lovely day,” he) “And there aren't any words to must dine with us tonight. Judy, utility gang politics have proved that. wheat, bought for the purpose of arresting the decline added. “Shall we take a little/tell how I love you, Judy,” don’t you like him? Has he of- In fact, those who cenvicted the two agitators seem to] in wheat prices. stroll?” said the young man in a bi “tn time.” fended-you in any way? You won't have repented their deed even earlier than this., Orig-| The purchases of the board not only failed to arrest “I want to sit down,” Judy frost yoice, * time,” said Judy, fighting ber} join us in anything!” inally the men were to be hanged, but this death penal-| the decline in wheat prices, but apparently they did pathetically, “I'm simply “And you love me—I know you boos a ee eae 4 ‘A couple of days after she had when it gets too hard, ob,|sented themselves. . g g more... They. tended to act as a weight and an obstruc- beat.” . [do,” he went on. ty was remitted to life imprisonment. Why? Did some- | tion preventing wheat prices from rising again. ‘They sat in silence'for quite five} “I don’t—I don't!” gbeut me. You only think you wag! in the park, Steyne eaped body's conscience rebel at hanging men whom it was| It is natural that a wheat buyer, on noting that the minutes, Judy spoke first. “Look at me, Judy, and tell me| me because you can’t have me. Alt “I saw you and Chummy‘at lunch | you den’t.” . Las dig Maine for a time.; His house had ba gi NY re me * a ged to look at Bim Every saan Be Loa owt: of her rather} neon damaged by a storm, and:be . “I want fo ask you come, | nei er body was quivering. | pitiful knowledge of life, to try to able.moment, the farm board would unload an avalanche ” had to see to the repairs. ‘The judge who presided at thelr conviction and who |ot wiveat on the market, with the result that prices would | Ml Girrisen utd ‘ou were’ a Fane between} patch up her own broken heart. |: a¢ was a respite, Judy felt. When wentencedthe men says he now is convinced that there| be broken all over again. The farm board’s wheat is bread’s, and frightfully busy. I|that she loved he came back, he would be taken was a miscarriage of justice against the two, Their |>Y no means the only fector in the wheat situation; with I'd known!” hi I'm not up with Chummy. Six months , but it does exert an influence, and that inf is ever since i jot @ fool. But - (Prosecutor 1s living in obscurity lke a vietim of retribu- Theailenaniy Meares ae vanee, TAD “I was there on business.” Judy's | theit meating. shall never, never forget.” Sigs to pre a regal Bt ros wig rtaken | voice did not encourage further die-| was now; and Ini the resume of the Mooney case printed in The Trib- the pan f att “But when they cussion of her owe. Dives. “Tike t0 live ‘on but « dteam. oviyad then. she” reproached her- une the other day, there was a picture which showed immediately beg Rave Dosa a {reat ys + uuMt| She trled not to Jeol, but self violently for being glad that Mooney and his wife on the roof of » building a mile “Clarissa enjoyed it, I think, Bhe| tego oni at hte ad wer Ma | Re ree gene SUET: oee Oe. ‘ayay a few minutes from the time of the homb explo- | result as soon’as the board’s 60,000,000 bushels were un- Won't let me take her about much. , ‘ x would te. aN if aise, Yok Mutbausld swore that ho hid scan Silings| ates. are wo a0 o new holding of 100800/00| [ sbéat tk Yoo ieee aapthere rig ice agg pectaeteor é new p ff eee tae paweet os tha comnts, Pie Mooney 06 to ia present holding of 60000000, the ssme|(@ with’ me. I've asked Dumont out | cue Sreeming down her S900 | th Aalsiest bettér|and faithfal, as had been proved, bushels ‘tal with him and then walk away. Chiefly on the! situation would repeat itself. heaps of times, and he always of his testimony, the two men were convicted! The present holding of 60,000,000 bushels is a Damo- some excuse.” clesign sword held over the wheat market. Were the “Why should you spend as asked. Volee was hoarser than iE ts later McDonald appeared in ‘Trenton and }000 bushels instead of 60,000,000, the | Hi money on us?” Judy had led. He had never seen Moonty and he said; he'would not have been able to roi FEe.. otliatee Yel BR rd . afl one i S 3 ! Be i iF A ge age it I # | inner. Judy would not go with She made as an excuse an ‘with Bastien Dumont, jhe had no such appointment, but iL EE Z e Strangely enough, she had never inquired before. © “I have rqoms in Gramercy Park. | say it.’ I..want you to ‘come’to seemthem |" “Pil when they're finished. I’m making | fércely. + two into @ big-etudio.” * . ‘ Ey et m3 : iF i chopped parsley. Serve hot, with « garnish of pimento across each cup. Vegetables prepared and served in small colorful portions have a distinct appeal to children, and mothers will find the extra effort required for such methods well worth while. The con- stant urging and forcing of children to “eat their VY oe eliminated gradually by a little in- genuity in the kitchen. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS * and Whisky estion—H. G. writes: “I am suf- Qu fering from advised that and have beer diabetes whisky will destroy the sugar. I have no faith in whisky but would like your ter.” opinion in the mat- Answer—I consider the whisky treatment for diabetes to be funda- in principle, al- unsound though it is used by a great many height of folly for any diabetic tc drug or remedy to promote all fruits contain sugar, but the dia- betic usually can convert this small amount of starch’ and sugar without = an Oo 30 203 20 2 DP. and mouth dinner ges 8 Sg goday—appearin the need of drugs or oe feet, Question—Reader asks: “Whit causes sweating of the feet at the least exertion, and dryness of the Pe aan after lunch and Answer—Excessive sweating of the feet may be caused from tight-fight- ing shoes or from not washing the feet often enough. Those who are toxic are liable to sweat excessively at times. The shoes should be frequently and permitted to thoroughly before being used dry out come from some inflammatory con- pee Present in your alimentary (Copyright, 1 of the mouth must 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Civilization Charged 2! With Making Pigs Pigs St. Paul, Minn, July 18.—(#)—The pig should worry if a neat civiliza- tion becomes self-conscious about p hias Groehthat iGwas civiliza- tion that made him piggish. tural research center at that the reason the hog “hogs” his food—five times as much i | : I 550 Kilocyek 1 Meters SATURDAY, JULY 19 jea—545. 00—SI gui 00 — Weather rep 7—Arlington 0—Grain mar! weather; Ii M. 12:20—Volce of the W! rain mar! markets. ort; grain markets time signals. ‘kets. ram: Clara Morry ‘ribuné new: lunches heat Pool. — kets: High, low, and clo: :18—Farm notes. :45—Bismarck Tribune new vs, weather, and St. Paul livestock. ‘m. and 6:30 :00—Musical ‘matinee. #30—Slesta hour: Good News radio i$00-Newscasati fo :55—Your Enelsh, 3204 tudio program, 201 usic, aA ] KGCU | TY | ame WOLTME CREAT “The Man That Knows” tomorrow ge this station at ily. Tune in hear this unusual person. Canadians plan to ship wheat by te Hudson Bay route, which was

Other pages from this issue: