Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
4 orating out” or what was known to refiners as the “skimming process.” It turned about 24 per cent of the crude oil into gasoline which was highly volatile and which really deserved the name, which designates it as a liquid which easily turns into gas or fumes: ~ The next step was development of the “cracking pro- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- _ marek, N. D,, and entered at the postoffice :t Bismarck | cos.” about which we have heard a great deal in recent George Dd. crrlaaes matter. «President and Publisher | Years. It recovered about 44 per cent of the oll as gaso- line. The product, however, was heavier and less vola- tile than the old-time substance. It is more greasy, and whereas the straight run gasoline could be used for cleaning clothes, that produced by cracking cannot. 00 No data are available regarding the quality of gaso- line produced by the hydrogenation process, but it pre- sumably will be satisfactory for motor fuel. There is still another method of obtaining gasoline which was, for a long time, partially ignored but, which is coming rapidly to the front as a source of high-grade gasoline for use in mixing with a lower-grade product. It is natural gasoline, which is recovered from the gas produced by both oil and gas wells. The effects af the hydrogenation process may be far] reaching’ but: the installation of plants to operate it on a large scale will necessarily be slow. This should give both the oil and automotive industries ample time in outside Bismarck) ....... outside of North Dakota weekly by mail in Canada. per year : "Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated ‘ ‘The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the’ use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the focal news of spontaneous origin published herein, All rights of republication of all other matter herein are = which to adjust themselves to the new situation, (Official City State.and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives When Big Shots Rule é SMALL, Teenie In the northern part of Ohio there is a very exclusive . Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. little village of some 270 inhabitants, nearly all of whom ~ CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON are miftionatres, This village, like all others, has its own government; but this village is unique in that all of. its elected offi-. cials are rich business men, The mayor, the councilmen and so on are, in their private lives, high-pressure execu-. tives accustomed to large affairs, enamored of efficiency and bred to the orderly conduct of things. As a result, one would expect this village to have a city hall fairly reeking with good government. However, a state examiner recently looked into af- fairs and reported sadly that such was not the case. He intimated that somehow these titans of the business world had found the task of running their own village An Old Friend Transferred ; News that C. B. Dickinson will be transferred from the superintendency of the Bismarck Indian school to the management of a similar institution at Pierre, S. D., came as a distinct surprise to his many friends in Bis- marck and throughout the Missouri Slope country. Although his residence in Bismarck totaled only nine years, Mr. Dickinson and the members of his family had become so much a part of the city that it is difficult to comprehend the fact that he soon will be leaving. Some men have given the impression, even on short acquaint- ance, that you have known them always, and Mr. Dick- @ bit too much for them. The council had not met as inson is a man of that type. etoam sbpased Gatun often as it should, the mayor had failed to sign docu- Today Is the of the country, stating their wrongs,|any new right in our favor. Your At the same time, it was not “4 @ e inments and a| ments he should have signed, certain needed ordinances Anniversary of were presented to the congressmen. jroyal authority over us and our con- of Mr. Dickinson's personality and attal had failed of passage through oversight and village funds |.<———___—. Also, a petition to the British king/nection with Great Britain we shall (fhe declaration of rights and griev- és); was ordered.'' That document that by the riddanceof the sys- tem of’laws and regulations of which the colonists complained, harmony would be restored. 1 with his record of successfully adminis- 4 ‘eon as iniportath post, would be overlooked when the | 58d been spent without proper authority. be . government Indian service needed a man’ for bigger There was nothing improper, of course; no graft, no . things. The best index of the success which Mr. Dick-| padded pay-rolls or anything of that kind. There was inson will have at Pierre is the success he has had here. | just-a bit of governmental slovenliness, that was all. The “Under his leadership the local Indian school has risen village fathers were dozing at their posts. from: a struggling institution of little importance and| ‘This is highly unimportant, of course, but it is rather’ ly no interest to the public, to a leading place in interesting, and if one tried hard enough one probably. THE FIRST CONGRESS ‘On Sept. 5, 1774, the first. Conti- nential Congress met in Carpenters’ Hall, Philadelphia. Fifty-five. delegates, representing all of the colonies but Georgia, at-| “We ask but for peace, liberty and tended the first assembly. They rep-| safety,” the petition declared. “We resented a population of 2,200,000. wish not a diminution of the Prerog- | 26, after a secret session of deavor to support.and maintain.” congress should be held within tained before that time. Resolutions from various sections! ative, nor do we solicit the grant of always carefully and zealously en- The delegates agreed that another month unless the redress of griev- ances which they desired was ob- The first Continental Congress adjourned Oct. 51 days. | Menus fi (Dr. McCoy’s menus suggested for the. week. beginning Sunday, Septem- \ ber. 7th.) Sunday ° Breakfast—Grapefruit juice upon arising. Stewed raisins. Poached egg. Melba toast. Lunch—Melon, all desired. Dinner—Roast chicken or veal, Melba toast dressing. Asparagus. Combination salad of pineapple -and shredded lettuce. Ice cream, Monday i git cheese. Baked apple. Lunch—Boiled potatoes with butter, string beans. Salad of lettuce. Dinner—Minced chicken or. veal eft from Sunday) in tgmato jelly. Baked stuffed squash, small carrots. Celery. Watermelon. ‘Tuesday Breakfast—Baked eggs. Genuine wholewheat bread, with butter. Stewed prunes. ¥ Lunch—Fresh fruit of only one kind, all desired. Dinher—Vegetable soup. Salad of sliced tomatoes. bury steak, cooked with beet tops, escalloped celery. Jell or Jell-well, with whipped cream, ‘Wednesday Breakfast— Melon, Waffles cooked) and broiled bacon. Lunch—*Creamed spinach, beets. Salad of chopped raw cabbage and Parsley. Dinner — Baked Belgian hare. As- p&ragus. Salad of head lettuce with peanut butter dressing. Date pie. ‘Thursday Breakfast—Orange juice upon aris- ing. Stewed or fresh figs. Coddled eggs, toasted Shredded Wheat biscuit. Lunch—Large glass of tomato juice. Dinner — Roast mutton, string beans, creamed cucumbers. Veget- able salad molded in gelatin consist- ing of chopped celery, cucumbers and ripe olives. Baked peaches. (well “the minds of Bismarck citizens. Among federal schools. could draw some sort of motal out of it. of its size it now ranks with the best in the countryand | Every so often someone advances the idea that our. it probably is the most famous of them all. ~ city, state and national governments would become, over=' |’ His conception of a school for Indian girls was one| Might, all that they ought to be if only their various which really would benefit the students and which would | Posts could be manned by real business men. The’ busi- make the most of the capabilities—artistic as wel) as.) ness man has a passion for efficiency afd accuracy. He economic and industrial—of each individual student. likes to see every subordinate do. a. full day’s work and "The result of this attitude has been the production of he likes to, see eyery dollar in-expenditures bring back @ - some of Bismarck’s Jeading girl singers and dancers, | dollar's warth of results. These wholly desirable things © girls whose performances here and elsewhere. have in-| @re not always'visible in governmental affairs; hence, it spired favorable comment, not only for themselves but is argued, the remedy is to fill the big jobs with business for the school and Mf. Dickinson. Mmen-and let them. hop fot. + It is true that he has been aided in this work by local) Perhaps it would: work beautifully; but there are valid citizens, particularly a group of women interested in| erounds for being skeptical. Executive talents that can making the most of the human material at the school, | be exercised adniffably in a private office tend to go but the fact that he was able to enlist an interest where | under a blight when they are transferred to a city hall little or none existed before is significant and character- | Or @ statehouse. The Ohio village mentioned above is a istic of the . His ‘work as.an educator has been | ase in point. — 4) Sie £ niainily coricetned with. the school for ‘Indian girls but | AS @-matter of fact—to leave thy diminutive village Ye has found time to impart something in the way of | out of it—the de: we observe in government are gen- broadening influences to Bismarck’s citizens as well. erally the defects that are dnherent in democracy itself. When the glee club of the local school attended the All along the jine, we. get just. the kind of government national convention of the federation of women’s clubs | We deserve. Giving the jobs to’ the big shots of the bus- at Denver early this summer, it created something of a | iness world will never help 80 long as we stick to our old sensation. Had it not been for Mr. Dickinson and those habit of sitting on the sidelines and letting governmental working with him, the trip could not have been made, or | Organizations run themselves. j if it had been made the results would not have been | - worthwhile. \ | Under the able leadership of Madame Hermann Schef- F fer, supported by Mr. Dickinson, the local school has be- wood by NEA SERVICE /nc; ER is BEGIN HERE TODAY . DAN. RORIMER, former New York newspaper writing scenari Pletures in H letter fro Zork, telling Bim to look eps girl nai ANNE WINTER, who from Tulsa, Okla, to from a sto! before comin; 6 wi oma the ey lowing mornin; ‘time she aa “Hollywood” and “Maiden in Distress” eyebrow fin- ishes are predicted as the coming rage. Doubtless they are another of the cosmetologist’s boons to women seek- ing to entrance the male. But girls who are more skill- ful with pots and.pans than with eyebrow pencils need not worry about the new competition. Somehow, an eyebrow just doesn’t qualify when it comes to making a man comfortable. | ' Editorial Comment | ‘Errand Boys’ (Williams County Farmers Press) In the opinion of James W. Gerard sixty-four people rule the nation. Mr. Gerard draws up a list of the men whom he considers the “ behind the throne.” The men recognized are all giants of the financial world. President Hoover nor none of the high officials of state are even mentioned as rulers. Mr. Gerard’s statement hes elicited no violent protest. A woman complains because none of her sex have been included but in the miain the statement has been cepted in silence. Arthur Brisbane makes the ironic in- quiry, why should these colossus of business venture into the political field when they can hire errand boys? The mirage of special zen is aware of must take on grim reality when the fi nancial hierarchy is called by name. ‘No one is so simple as to believe that a Rockefeller, Eugene Grace, Charles Schwab, Andrew Mellon, and the rest of the rulers do not exact their pound of flesh from 122 million people. come famous for the vocal artistry of its students. It ‘was she Who trained the glee club which was the hit of the women’s convention—and in her work she had Mr. Dickinson's whole-hearted support. \ Mrs. Alfred Zuger organized at the local school the Hs) first club of Indian girls to be associated with the na- : tional federation. This, too, brought recognition to Bis- marek as well as to the school. And in her work Mrs. : Zuger also had the able backing of the school superin- tendent. As superintendent of the school, Mr. Dickinson has done a thousand other things to give the students in his “charge a new conception of life. In many different ‘ways also he has demonstrated that he has been a force : for civic and cultural advancement in the city of Bis- marck. \. _ And withal he has made friends, warm friends who ‘will remember him when he transfers to his new field. * ‘The hand which Bismarck will extend to Mr. Dickin- * gon and his family as it says good-by will be the hand of true friendship based upon recognition of his char- acter and of his achievements while one of us. nde el No Gasoline Shortage 4 “Fears that there will be insufficient gasoline In the : not distant future to run America’s millions of motor NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VII NNE let his arm stay where it _ Wass appeared not to notice it, even, But a moment or two later, when Rorimer tried to draw her toward him, he encountered firm rusistance, and Anne said, “Hadn't we better start back? What time is itr” “Oh, I keep my promises; I'll -get you back by ten,” he-replied. “It’s no more than nine now.” “I didn’t see you look at your watch.” Dan brought up his wrist, squint- ed in the semi-darkness. “Well, then, 9:15,” he admitted, grinni “What's 15 minutes?” And he added, “On a night like this?” Anne Winter smiled at hith. “Ro- math Uncle Dan!” she jeered soft- “E hope you won't do that again,” Anne said. leaned back in the seat and be; and sang it through to the -end. to sing: And not once did Rorjmer turn his “Wh; i? Why reyes from the roadway ahead of Moing? chai Kani thém. He was thinking that he had What. do.I get?. What am 1} heard a voice like hers before, over { “cars seem groundless in view of recent developments | Schwab hired a propagandist to start a war. Grace made “Yeah? Forget that, young lady; giving? i ee Leer 4 paatrale “Wy et i ich make possible the distillation of gasoline from coal | # million and a half bonus by keeping down the wages of T’'m not your uncle.” Why do I want a thing I daren't moot { whl 2. x of 6 steel workers. Rockefeller, now @ pious philantrophist “You were a few minutes ago.” ~ hope for? ease and lowness that made you “tar, any kind of crude oil, shale oil or fuel oil. The new system, worked out by Dr. Bergius, a Ger- man scientist, proves that necessity is indeed the moth- er of,invention. Germany has no oil resources, So she “turned to coal as a source of oil and its by-products. *» ‘The process is known as hydrogenation and now it is ‘about to be installed in this country. Through coopera- tion between the German scientist and the research -de- partment of a great American oil company, the process ‘wes adapted to making gasoline from well oil. Recent tests show that 85 per cent gasoline was recovered from coal tar. The immediate value of the hydrogenation process ¢4s that it will recover more gasoline from a given quan- «tity of crude oil, than any other known—that is if it dives up to the claims made for it. : To North Dakota, of course, it has an added signifi- cance which may be of vast importance in the years to i come. Improved methods of obtaining by-products from } coal have the effect of increasing the value of our tre- mendous coal.deposits. They are acknowledged as the. state's principal source of mineral wealth ‘now. Some day their value may be materially enhanced. P Because America is dominant in the manufacture and use of automobiles, gasoline has played a more import- ant role in the drama of progress here than elsewhere on the globe. For that‘reason, more Work has been done here than in’ the development of gasoline- making processes. But we are not too proud to borrow #eaintained for it, Dr. Bergius can look forward to hand- Borer eh in thie. country, alien Wat the Present product is something of a misnomer. Gasoline.is the ‘appellation given the fluid when it was practically ® waste product and sold for less than kerosene because ‘the latter was in great demand for lighting purposes. ‘Whe-old-timé gasoline, according to the Independent Petroleum Association of America, was obtained by “evap- shut your eyes and imagine things, Only, Anne’s singing was not s0 i not so professional, It thought, striving for the ‘right ‘word, an utcaptured quality im it‘that left him a little shaken. At the end of her song he turned to look at her. She sat still be- |side him, her head back against the cushioned seat, eyes half-closed. “If 8] break,” he said to him- self, “‘ahe'll ‘go a long way.” Pro- vided, ofcourse, the camera and the mirerophone did not do strange things to her; that had been known to-hapben, ruin with the ruth- What can I hope for? I wish I knew. Plaintive . . . forlorn . . . th song of a lonely heart. And Anne's voice, low and sweet and tremu- lously exciting, carrying right into his blood... . “Why do I try to draw you near Ld who gives-away dimes, drove men “But I don’t feel so—so avuncu- lessness of a savage until lar now; or platonic, either, for that matter.” Anne dropped the subject; and Rorimer, feeling her impersonal dismissal of it, fell silent. He fered her a cigaret, and this time she took one, Leaning back in his seat, he re- garded her through half-closed eyes and wondered if she had ever given a man her love. Certainly, he + ‘thought, in admiring approval of her, there must have been many who had tried to win it. Perhaps there was a young man back in Tulsa;“and if theré was, Dan was thinking, he was plenty lucky. . He began presently to whistle softly, but thinking of something else, checked himself and urged: “Sing for mé, Anne.” “Sing for you?” repeated, re- garding him curiously. “Why?” “Because I like to hear you sing. + + . Sing that thing I was trying to whistle.” “*Why Was I Born? . . . But that’s so plaintive and so forlorn.” - “That's just the way I feel, some- how. Does the ocean at night affect » you that way?” It did, she agreed. “I feel a little homesick.” eee AN said he had been away from his family too long to know homesickness again, ee that he felt a longing, and a cu! us alone e pe ness that was hard to explain. He fe renee ietacant started the car, backed it onto the Bho began: road, and headed it up the grade, > and rolling back toward Hollywood,| “I'm a dreamer—aren't we all? with the ocean behind them, Anne! Just o dreamer—eren't we all?—" me: Why do I cry?—you never hear me T'm a podr foot, dut what can 7 dof : Why was I born to love your” ‘She wind rushed past them, whip- ping at his hair before it fied, carrying the last echoes of her song with it. Dan felt contentrhent—a contentment curiously mixed with the stirrings of voiceless longing and unrest. Why do I want the things 2 daren’t hope for? ‘That was the thing that life was lived for, he told himself—to wart the things one daren't hope for. aly, you did hops for them some- how, ‘no’ mat! -forfornly; even if they were way off somewhere be- yond the frozen stars, “Sing some more, Anne, Sing to me again.” * “Do you like to be sung to?” He said simply, staring straight ahead, “I love to hear you sing.” And Anne turned on bim a curl- ous smile st the strange emphas! g 4 z 5 i ‘HEY were on her street ‘now, amd-when he stopped the car in fypnt of her apartment he asked if he might pick her up again in the moreing and take her to the Grand United lot. “It’s no trouble, Anne, and you. can sleep longer if you don’t have to wait for a bus.” “All right, Dan; you're certainly kind. He “walked down the hallway with her, and when they stopped at her door he showed her the time. “See, Anne? Only four minutes of ten, Am I a man of my word or not?” “You're just marvelous,” she sald, laughing, and gave him her hand. And Dan suddenly drew her to’‘him and kissed ber. Just as suddenly he knew he had done the wrong thing, Anne was he would have felt bet- had shown her anger. But she was plainly hurt, end he te gE Hen ag Fargo Forum Herald—North Dakota’s two mightiest ex- its of constitutional rights. If they have not to Stor NEST LYNN sald contritely, “I’m sorry, Anne.” “I hope you won't do that again,” Anne said. The dark eyes wére level and calm enough, but bright spots flamed in her cheeks. Dan said again, “I'm Anne, I'll remember.” He added that he hoped he hadn't made her change her mind about riding with him in the morning. “You can at Jeast trust mein the day time,” he said with a lame lit- tle laugh. Anne's faint smile heartened him. “You said you'd remember,” she said, “and you’re @ man of your word. . . . Good night.” “Good night, Anne. You're & good sport.” és + « + A darned good gport, he thought, climbing into his car, “Why was I born? Why am 1 living?” He drove to Henry’s, and there he found Johnny Riddle, sitting alone over coffee and a sandwich. Johnny said, “Hello, stranger. Who was the lady I saw you with the other night? “That wasn’t no lady; that was my — Who was she, Dan? And what did you do with the ‘little O’Neil girl—little Mil- dred?” Dan sald, studying bis menu: “Mildred’s'a blond.” vi “Not.a real one; Milly bleached her hair because it photographs better.” r “Are there any real blonds?” Dan. asked, his eyes still on the card. “What a cynical young man you turned out to be! Why, of course! See the lady over there, for in- stance? Over, there to your left— in the corner. There's a blond— and how! ‘That's Sylvia Patter- son.” Dan swung around in his chair and stared brazenly. “So that’s Sylvia,” he said. “Is that hair real?” “Absolutely. Of course, she prob- ably sees to it that it doesn’t get rt any darker.” i “That man with her,” Dan said with sudden interest; “is that Garry Sloan?” “That's Garry.” cee ORIMER found occasion from time to time to look at Sloan. He was big and bronzed and power- ful looking, and he had a vast mop sorry, Breakfast—Wholewheat mush with cream (no sugar). Lunch—Melon, as much as desired. Dinner—Tomato bouillon. Baked white fish, carrots with parsley butter. Salad of whole tomatoes stuffed with chopped cabbage and parsley. »No Saturday Breakfast—Bowl of berries with cream (no sugar). a Lunch—String beans. Large com- bination salad of pineapple, pecan nut meats and shredded lettuce. Baked ground beets. Salad of sliced cucumbers. Melon. ‘Creamed Spinach: Wash about a half peck of fresh spinach under run- ning. water until all grit is removed. Cook without water (except that which clings to the leaves) for about 10 minutes, during which time pre- Pare @ sauce as follows: Blend with @ fork 1% tablespoonfuls of browned flour into 1 tablespoonful of butter, Place over a low flame and stir in 1% cupfuls of thin cream, either ffesh or evaporated. Cook to the desired consistency and add the chopped whites of 4 hard-boiled eggs. spinach into hot serving dish, cover with sauce, and press the egg yolks through a coarse sieve over top. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Lumbago and Constipation Question: Mrs. H. W. writes: “I am 60 years old, very stout and healthy looking, but am most miser- able. I have lumbago, constipation, and suffer from a very bitter taste in my mouth’ which rhakes me sick to a Please advise me what 0.” Answer: If you will send me gour name and address on a large, stamped envelope I will be glad to send you my, Cleansing Diet Course in pam- phiet form which is now avialable to | | @ny subscriber of this paper, Question: J. 8. asks: “What cause my knees to creak and grind as though the. kneecap were terribly dry? What treatment would you sug- |gest for this?” Answer: The cracking an@ grinding | |of the knees simply denote the lack ‘lof synovial fluid and this condition ||can usually be corrected through the use of the proper diet and eoerciey. Heart Trouble Question:. Mary J. writes: been in bed four months with heart ;{trouble. My meals seem to make so much gas, which increase the heart ‘jpalpitation. Does diet affect the || Reart2” Answer: The cause of most heart \ prorat, «ad || “Twenty Die in England's "Heat Wave.” It's one of those waves || Britannia does not rule. * e * If sports writers thought théy were | |clever in dubbing the baseball “pill,” let them exercise some'real ingenuity | in Bnding « nsouloker. tee the golf and (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service. £nc.) —____ North Dakota livestock breeders (vill consign sdme of their choicest stbck to the district livestock sale to be held in Valley City Sept. 15 and 16. of ;wiry yellow-brown hatr—hair, Dan thought, that suggested an in- tense vitality. Johnny Riddle was one of Holly- wood’s better gleaners of gossip. Paul Collier, when he had brought the two together, had informed Dan that “Hollywood hides no secrets from little Johnny.” Riddle was medium-sized and compact looking, and he had laughing gray eyes, and hair that kept falling down over his forehead into one eye. ‘When the waitress departed with Rorimer’s order Johnny Riddle leaned across the table to say that he had heard Sloan's wife was divorcing him. “Can't. say that I blame her,” Dan remarked, “if some of the tales about Sloan are true. What's he pis to do—marry Sylvia Patter- son?” Johnny Riddle si “Is Sloan in love with her? Dan asked. Riddle sa{d, “Sloan's in love with’ himself, and that’s why he expects every woman he meets to be crazy bout him, . . . But he’s one swell irector!” vee | “Is Sylvia crazy about him?” Dan nd Riddle said he didn't “Sylvia's a swell girl, an; but Sylvia is ambitious—and she can be diplomatic.” ~ (To Be Continued) of livestock because of the FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: FETT | Lal Dishonesty doesn’ there's too much is itiow, ye competiti Little evidence of forced marketing , PASGaoTR HNC RPERLBRY