The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 19, 1930, Page 7

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1930 ns NOTE OF OPTIMISM Tells Kiwanians United States Business Is Headed Up- ward and Forward America and American business are going upward and forward as long as the individual American retains his business sense and his ability to face problems squarely and constructively, Scott Cameron, local attorney, told members of the Kiwanis club at their luncheon meeting Tuesday. -. Commenting on the business situa- | > tion, Cameron said the American pi lic has been swept by a wave of pessi- mism and has acquired the habit of putting unfavorable interpretations on things which it reads in the pub- lie prints. He denied that there is any more crime in America today than there @ used to be or that America is crime- ridden while Europe and Canada are free from it. The contrary appears to be so, he said, because of the superior reporting system devised by Amezican newspapers to supply their readers with current information. America’s | troubles with its crime problem, he! said, comes from “too much publicity | and not enough detailed attention.” Stressing that the point of view from which one sees a thing is im-| portant, Cameron said there is noth- | ing unusually wrong with either the people or the country. Al Capone and Bugs Moran, he said, are no} worse and cut no larger figures in the public mind than did the James brothers 50 years ago. | The economic situation, he said. is | not as bad as some people seem to think.’ Millions of people still have their jobs and retain their purchas- ing power and the recent census showed less unemployment now than | there was 10 years ago. Entertainers at the luncheon were Miss Marguerite Kennedy, who played two piano solos, and Mrs. Iver Acker, who sang two songs. ‘ Guests were Burnie Maurek, state game and fish commissioner; Charles Kimball, Fargo, John Kenyon of Syracuse, New York, and Kenneth W. Simons. % Rev. Father John A. H. Slag, rector of St. Mary procathedral and a mem- ber of the club, was present for the first time since his return from a trip | to Europe and Africa. Father Slag will address the club on the subject of North Africa within the next few weeks. an | FOUR DROWNED WHEN FERRY BOAT CAPSIZES Unequal Weight of Two Auto-; mobiles Carried Sinks Ves- sel in New Hampshire age | Westmoreland, N. H., Aug. 19.—P}— | Divers today were endeavoring to re- | cover the bodies of four persons, irowned in the sinking of an_ old at-bottomed cable ferry in the Con- | aecticut river near here last night. {| Ray Austin, 30, of East Putney, Vt., his wife, their baby daughter, and Wiliam Clark, a boarder at the Aus- tin home, were those drowned. They were trapped in one of two automo- * piles crossing from this town to East Putney when the ferry sank. The automobile was located at the bottom | of the river. An occupant of the second auto- mobile, a foot passenger, and the 75- year-old operator of the ferry, swam to safety. An uneven distribution of the weight of the two automobiles was believed to have caused the accident. Six prisoners trom the Westmore- land House of Correction responded to a request for divers. Fires Still Rage in Minnesota Woodlands St. Paul, Aug. 19.—()—Fire con- ditions were called the worst in eight years for this time of the season, by A. F. Oppel, deputy state forester, to- day, as approximately 1,200 men con- tinued to fight more than 100 blazes in nearly every section of northern Minnesota. The drought has resulted in an average of approximately 40 fires a day during August. Although many of the fires have been extinguished and the remainder are under control, there is danger of a widespread tim- ber blaze, Mr. Oppel said. Two of the largest of the fires a:e in Aitkin and St. Louis counties. Tne Aitkin county fire, located 12 mues northeast of Aitkin and 20 miies south of Hill City, has burned over 3,840 acres of secondary growth and peat The St. Louis county fire has burned over about 400 acres near ine new Duluth municipal airport, but 290 men fighting the blaze are succeeding in getting it under contro!. The 20 rangers, patrolincn and powermen and the 1,000 extra fire fighters employed are anxiously awaiting rain. North Dakota Girl Sentenced as ‘Red’ Rochester, N. ¥., Aug. 19.—(@)—A vigorous campaign to free two girl communists from a sentence of three months in the Monroe county peni- tentiary, on charges of desecrating the flag, was launched here today. Rochester communists are raising a Gefense fund and planning a mass s-ameeting Saturday. The girls, Ailene Holmes, 23, of New York, and Mabel Husa, 20, of Belden, N. D., began serving their sentence lay. They were arrested after How the Khyber Pass country on In- dia’s northwestern frontier has formed the “funnel” through which India’s invaders have poured for twenty-five centuries is graphically illustrated on the above map. At the left is a typical Pathan tribesman of the wild hill country which harbors the world’s most savage fighters, lit- tle changed by the centuries except that they now have guns instead of more primitive weapons. At the right is shown a camel train winding its way through Khyber Pass, the narrow defile that connects India with the rest of Asia. By MILTON BRONNER remote London, 19. — (F) — Historic Khyber Pass, that narrow defile through the Himalayan mountains through which invaders of India have marched with fire and sword tor 2,500 years, is again aflame with battle as British army airplanes drop bombs on the world’s oldest and most savage fighters and send them scurrying into the hills. For the Khyber ‘country—scene of Kipling’s “Kim” and the last British outpost on the Afghanistan border in northwestern India—is again in the world’s news. The wave of unrest that has swept India in the Gandhi revolt has extended to the fierce Pathan tribesmen in this remote mountain fastness who see in the situation a chance for loot and their natural de- sire to fight. The recent attacks of these wild and restive marauders on Peshawar, the British-controlled city that lies at the entrance to the pass, have centered attention on them again. They have been beaten off in fights into the out- skirts of the city and British airmen, pursuing them into the hills, have bombed their retreats. if A few miles beyond Peshawar the pass begins and then for nearly 30 Aug. ACCIDENT VICTIMS — ARE BROUGHT HERE Braddock Boy Injured in Fall] From Pony; Hazen Youth | Hurt in Car Accident Dale Lee,’ nine-year-old Braddock | boy, is in the Bismarck hospital with a broken arm. The tad was riding a Shetland pony when he was thrown from its back and his arm broken. Traugott Kruckenberger, 18-year- | old Hazen youth, also is a patient at the hospital and is suffering from a similar injury, said to have been re- ceived in an automobile accident near his home. ? Let Condemned Kill | o- -* London, Aug. 19.—()—George Ber- nard Shaw today characteristically went Dean Inge of St. Paul’s one bet- ter in endorsing the “Gloomy Dean's” be a good thing to permit condemned murderers to commit suicide. Their opportunities Irish writer and commentator de- clared, “Every condemned man”, said the dramatist without flicking an eye- jash, “should have a collection of and if he choose to use them”,—he left the sentence suggestively un- finished but went on: “I think a con- demned man should be told that on a certain day he would be hanged and if by that day he was not dead, hav- ing been provided with évery possible convenience for committing suicide, he would have to suffer execution.” Wisconsin Sharpshot Leading at Vandalia) Vandalia, O., Aug. 19.—()-Lead- | ers among the early finishers in the | North American clay target cham- pionships on 100 of the 200 targets today were: ° Men's: E.\D. Martin, | Columbus, Wis. 99; Gus Smith, Long Beach, Calif., 99. Women's: Mrs. W. P. Andrews, At- lanta, 95. povee Howard Kieffer, Orville, O., Sub Junior: Henry Rosenbrook, Jr., yesterd: they had refused the proffer of a flag for their camp near Van Etten, where one hundred children under The refusal was the cause of a dis- turbance and authorities were called to protect the girls from a mob of 2,000 persons who threatened to burn the camp. : Bert T. Baker of Ithdca, retained ternational Labor Defense as g g 8 girls have denied the offense. W. J. Brown, Nowata, Okla., pipe- 3 Ey! tiation. esrered 77-000 miles , years, walking 18 mile: week day during thet time. 4 Gardenville, Nev., 93 and Bud McKin- ley, Harrisburg, Ohio, 93. OE eee WE ARE CASH BUYERS of Sweet Clover, Red and Alsike Clover, Timothy, Alfalfa, Brome Grass, and-other field seeds. We buy carloads or less and furnish bags free for shipping. If you have seed to sell, write us, giving and amount, and also tell us if a carload could be accumulated in your community. We also clean, store, and make advances on seed, to growers who wish to hold for a later market, N. W. SEED GROWERS ASS'N. 206 Lith St. Ne., Fergo, N. Dak. —_— Fight Wild Tribes FURKES Khyber Pass, Battle Scene for Centuries, Again Flames as British TAN seee@e+ JENGHIZ KHAN, from Mongolia, A.0.1219-1227 beeeee TIMUR, f:0m Samarkand, A.D.1398. IFARM HOME NEAR Sunday Afternoon; Believed to Have Been Drunk Officials of the county sheriff's office today were seeking two men who are accused of having robbed the home of Henry Jesson, living south of Sterling. “ Deputy Sheriff R.°H. Crane said’ two men who broke into the Jesson home Sunday while the family was away evidently were intoxicated. They first took the screeng off the windows and then, instead of climb- STERLING ROBBED Marauders Enter Jesson Home) cation is received from the postal de-' heat! just ‘before midihight ariounced| the head, was found west of herq partment at Washi The judge would retain his offices in the old courthouse and the federal ar roms would be used for trials only. Even though no court term is in progress, Judge Jansonius said, hear- ings constantly are being held. The work is made difficult by the fact that noise ‘caused by the workmen on the new building makes it almost impossible to hear what witnesses are. saying, COSTE READY TO FLY Le Bourget, France, Aug. 19.—(P)— Dieudonne Coste, French aviation ace, in a flight over Le Bourget Field this | morning tested his plane's new wire- | ment weather reports are favorable. less equipment and said he was ready | CUnty’s grain field murder mystery to set out on his projected Atlantic |\today was apparently still as far from flight to New York at the first mo- | S0lution as when the body of a man, stabbed near the heart and*shot in the bodies were located on No. 1 slope. Other bodies had been found near the a ho Pit portal. Rescuers had penetrated quite a| Caldwell worked yesterday dissolved distance from where they were tem-| into “false leads” and the sheriff tos Porarily halted by Friday's fire. No attempts were mad dead men. Workers Clues upon which coroner Jameg day said no new evidence had been le to identify the! uncovered in: the attempt to identify said with cave-ins | the body, which had lain in the field blocking the stope, it might be several | {1e,n cr - days before the bodies could So eee ee brought out. Grain Field Murder Is Mystery in S. D.) Presho, 8. D., Aug. 19—()—Lyman | fall hats, also large show case, | way for about two months. FINAL CLOSING OUT SALR Friday and Saturday, Aug. 22nd and 23rd. on felt and velvet cabinet with a 4x6 foot mirror and one mirror. Sale to be held at the Master Cleaners & Dyers.{ MRS. A. S. NIELSEN | ‘Selves, Says Shaw |! ‘suggestion of yesterday that it might | for self - destruction ; Should, in tact, be facilitated, the | Poisons and chemicals put in his way | Is Heavily Fortified NEA-London Times, 1 " ) miles it leads its dusty, winding route |perts. A few profess to tend herds ame hoger title |through the overhanging hills to the ‘and harvest scanty crops. border of Afghanistan. Nothing in| ‘Their favorite method of warfare America resembles it, perhaps, except ‘js sniping from behind trees, and the the Grand Canyon of Colorado. British have lost numerous men as the result. It is related that once a British forts are strung along thc\ British officer, incensed at @ lone Pass and, except for a few turns where the view is obscured, gunners com- mand every foot of its length. If this were not so, no rich camel train traveling through the Khyber with silks and other valuable merchandise would be safe Even with these pre- cautions, occasional wayfarers are murdered with a well-aimed rifle shot from a sniper lurking among the rocks and trees. The tribesmen who live in this desolate country are the world’s ‘most blood-thirsty people and have been so for centuries. Time upon time they have been subdued by military force, They fight with a fanatical fury, by their Moslem the warrior who dies in battle is as- sured of a place in Allah’s paradise. Every Man Carries Gun Every man carries a gun with him constantly. Even in his native vil- lage, he does not venture into his courtyard without it. He is quick to fight either friend or foe and may spend hours on the sun-baked roof of his hut, awaiting his chance to get a pot shot at a neighbor. But no man ever shoots a woman, for the murder of a woman would be considered a dis- grace. : Caravans and travelers who pass through this country are never out after nightfall. At intervals along the route, spaced to a day’s camel march, there are caravanserai, or overnight fortresses. These are heavily guarded enclosures with thick, gud walls, in which both camels and travelers spend the night. The gates are always lock- ed at sundown. the tribesmen’s Paris. It abounds with all the vices and practically none of the virtues that can be found in the civilized world. Vice, crime and opium smoking are favorite diver- sions; murder and robbery are prac- tically taken fér granted. Live in Hill Country For most of their time, the tribes- men lead a roving life in the sun- baked hills, practicing professional brigandage, at which they are ex- Perhaps the one simple thing | you are not doing to guarantee Permanent health is having suffi- cient roughage in your food. Ab- sence of this roughage is the direct cause of constipation which results in so many other ills—headaches, listlessness, general depression, in- digestion and, sometimes, seriou: disease. A . Kellogg’s. ALL-BRAN is rough- age. It is positively guaranteed to relieve both temporary and recur- ring constipation or the purchase but never have they been conquered. | lef that | Peshawar, the nearest large ciiy, is} sniper who continued to pick ff his men with appalling regularity, <imally offered a huge reward of rupees to any native who would dispatch him. A slender, beardless youngster from the hills volunteered. In an hour he accomplished the job, shooting the {aged sniper through the head as he | crouched behind a tree. | “How did you find him so quickly?” |asked the British officer. | “Basy,” the young native replied. \“He was my father.” Is ‘Funnel’ to India | Afghanistan, with its wild uplands, |forms the buffer state between India and the rest of Asia. For centuries \it has been the funnel through which {India’s ravishers have poured down |through Khyber Pass, one of the old- est highways on earth. Through the Khyber, Darius the | Great sent his captain, Scylax, to the Indus 2,500 years ago and made an Indian satrapy out of his conquest in the north. In the year 326 B, C. came Alexander to pass through the Khyber, in the course of his conquest of the | world, Fifteen centuries later follow- ed Jenghiz Khan, whose Mongol \ hordes swept across central Asia in the |Middle Ages and reached but did not | pass the Indus. It remained for a sec- ond great Asiatic conqueror, Timur, {to penetrate to Delhi and pillage the jland nearly 200 years later. In the early 16th century, his descendant, Baber, who claimed kinship also with | Jenghiz Khan, invaded India via the jsame route and founded the great Mogul dynasty which nominally ruled until the advent-of the British. And so, this ancient highway of conquest is aflame again, just as it has been intermittently for 25 cen- turies. In the hills around the nar- tow defile which echoed to the clank lof the swords and spears of Alexan- der the Great 300 years before Christ, the recurrent drama of the long cen- turies is being reenacted. But this time the Khyber country echoes tq the whirr and roar of British bombing planes instead of to the tramp of Alexander's marching le- gions. A SIMPLE STEP TOWARDS HEALTH Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN is a Daily Essential and. Millions Know Its Effectiveness in “Relief of Constipation red, healthy color to the complexion. It helps prevent anemia. Be sure to include it in reducing diets. Many eat Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN with cream or milk added. It is a delicious addition to cereals, fruits and soups. In cooked foods, such as bran muffins, it is just as effec- tive in the relief of constipation. Recommended»by docto: Ask your grocer for Kellogg’s ALL- BRAN in the red-arid-green“pack- age. Served everywhere. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek, price will be refunded. Two table- ° spoons daily (in serious cases, with each meal) is the proper amount. Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN also helps you to health in other ways. It is rich in iron, practically all of which goes into the blood, bringing 9 ALL-BRAN “Improved in Texture and Taste” MALT SYRUP FIRST IN FLAVOR/ Distributed by Gamble-Robinson Co. Bismarck, N. Dak, =” ——_"__ / Jansonius. ing through the opening so made, broke the glass in a door and entered | Lake Out Ten Dead the house through it. The only thing taken, Cr: was a child's savings bank which con- tained $5. It later was found, un- opened, in an abandoned automobile at a nearby farm. Empty beer bottles also were found in the car and there were blood stains. Crane said he in- terpreted this as a sign that the men had cut themselves when they broke the glass in the Jesson doorway} The Jesson’s hired man, who re- turned home late’ Sunday night, said he saw two men run from the place. It was reported to the sheriff's Office today that two men had ap- peared at the place where the car was abandoned to claim it. Deputy sheriffs left to arrest the two men on the theory that they were responsible for the Jesson burglary. e said, bodies were found last Blakeburn mine, had been recovered. DICK’S 2 Stores to Serve You 710 Thayer Fruit Specials 25c Plums, fancy blue Diamonds, basket. 48c 4 basket crate .......$1.87 Jansonius Seeks Quieter Quarters Use of the federal court rooms in the postoffice building for the trial of district court cases pending the construction of the new courthouse is being sought by District Judge Fred Bananas, fancy _ ripe fruit, 3 lbs. Federal Judge Andrew Miller and Postmaster Oliver Lundquist have ap- proved of the idea, Judge Jansonius said today, but the change wMl not be made until approval of the appli- Cantaloupe, In Blakeburn Mine Blakeburn, B. C., Aug. 19.—(?)—Ten |. in the where 45 workers were entombed in an explosion last Wednesday. Three bodies previously | Rescue workers returning to the pit | ——S———— 308 13th St. “oo Gussner’s ‘tc Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday BREAD yates ete oC . _ HARVEST SPECIALS BEEF POT ROAST pe L74ke BEEF STEW oer me. 15¢ FRESH HAMBURGER 5”."""" 15¢ Faney. Ih 15¢ rem. ...... 234 Select Beef Pot Roast ‘™. 19¢ 10 23c rae PAE 1De MAEMO 19¢ SUGAR Cash and Carry, Fancy Fresh, Ib. Meat Dept., 10 ibs. Per 100 Pound Sack .... BANANAS fa att "hte ther ee 25 2h phe. Geo veces: kc 25c — Know whet you are taking to relieve that pain, cold, headache or sore throat. Aspirin should not only be effective, it must also be safe, Genvine Bayer Aspirin is reliable, always the same—brings prompt relief safefy—does not depress the heart. Do not take’ chances—get the genuine product identified by the name BAYER on the package and the word GENUINE printed in red. CULL, BAKKEN, BRADY and JANZ - Certified Public Accountants INCOME TAX SPECIALISTS Dah! Bldg. Bismarck Phone 359 i | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Job Printing Dept. PHONE 32 FOR SALE: \§ Modern Bungalow.” Terms | given. Peppers, large fancy, 2 lbs, Grapes, Thompson Seedless, 2 Ibs. ... 25c Puritan Malt, LG. A. Malt ...38¢ Mayonnaise Sandwich Spread, DOR JOR ore sc acess I Coffee ......35¢ Nash Coffee ..47¢ SLICED PEACHES, JAR Libby’s ..... PGi . 2OC Rings TALL SALMON Pik ony .33¢ Princess Patt Coffee 1". 50c value ............ Climax Brand, 98 Ib. bag, cash ... We Do Not Handle Inferior Brands. 48c | FLOUR Per eave ei. DO Bear CANTALOUPE Gusrenteca Phone 1060 1000 Island 19c Gussner’s Cash Dividends in December Jor all who make this sound heating investment now ‘We're asking you to use your foresight in the all-important matter of healthful heat for your home, and we're paying you—in cold cash— for doing it. To everyone who orders a genuine Estate Gas Heatrola between Aue gust 9th and August 30th, for installation this Fall, we are giving a Div- idend Certificate, redeemable December first in the value of $5.00 on your monthly Heatrola payment, or as a down-payment of $7.50 on any other merchandise which we handle. All you need do to earn this dividend is to sign your order before Au- gpst 30th and deposit two dollars. This we apply to the purchase price of your Gas Heatrola, and not another penny do you pay until your Heatrola is installed. Then the balance of the low down-pay- CAMPBELL’S SOUP, Tomato only . .8¢ np aaes $2.98 Finest of season 15 18 23 28 To comply with our merchants’ agreement, we close promptly Ate 44¢ Phone 1060 | If interested, call H. A. THOMPSON for the bereaved to Webb Bros. _ Funeral Directors ment is due, and easy monthly payments begin. F COURSE, you've seen the famous Gas Heatrola, liver 80 much warmth from so. that looks like a beautiful wal- little fuel. It is fume-tight, nut cabinet. And if you’ve odor-tight, absolutely safe. So visited a Gas Heatrola-heated cleanly in operation, and so Experience has , pear a mune pan Etre easy to keep clean. —— knowledge. ,.! my, warm genuine Estate s Wo know what to do through all the rooms. There Bay pave yr ery al s how to do it, and is no other gas heater like it. for the complete heating of ine to Dy doing a For it has the exclusive Inten- small homes or as an auxiliary Mea roed raed Be eal si-Fire Air Duct—the unique to the basement heating plant panearsler, Pocaed babies geod only from August 9th to August 30th. and invite us to call at your home. Montana- Dakota Power Co. BISMARCK, N. DAK. sys

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