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a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE STATE'S OLDEST. NEWSPAPER ITATE'S OLDEST N: ios (Established 1873) [cian heen eT EEE Bi Tribune Company, Bis- maven Des tae shtered ai the postoffice at Bismarck George D. Man crn President and Publisher Subeeription Rates Payable in Advance 3 Dy carrier Der YOAr .......-.-svoseesemensmersnscesseesseee Bally by ber per year (in Bismarck) wooee 120 ily by mail per big mp tate, outside Bismarck) ......... wsseernscerrnssenome 5, Daily'by mail outside of North Dakota ....-------- 6.00 oe ee Week: mail in state per year .......... ve Weekly y mail in state, three years for Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, IT ceceeosnnsseencsenereneesconsenenreoenennnt Weekly by mail in Canada per year .... oe Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ber of The Associated Press The Assoctated Press is cal) entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to a bs not otherwise credited in this newspaper and vom Fad local news of spontaneous origin published here! se en rights of republication of all other matter herein also reserve (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Co, G. Logan Payne omcagon Fork BOSTON NEW Strong in Defeat ‘When Bismarck went down to defeat on the gridiron at Fargo as the sun sank Friday afternoon, it marked the close of an athletic epoch at Bismarck high school. Tt marked the capital city’s first defeat on the gridiron in three years and it practically put this year’s club out of the running for the state high school championship. To followers of the local team the defeat will be a bitter blow, because all of us would have liked to see the capital city’s record kept clear in this great sport just as we like to see Bismarck and Burleigh county triumph in other contests. But it also is to be remembered that in every contest where there is a winner there must also be a loser. Enthusiastic as any one may be about football as a game for boys to play or as @ spectacle for grown-ups to watch, we should not forget that it has more important aspects than these. To a large extent, these athletic contests are the proving ground of young America. The battles on the gridiron are comparable, in the lives of those who participate, to the battles of the business, commercial, social] and political world which are to come in later life. And in the game which we know as life, it is important that our boys learn how to take defeat like real men. ‘We are certain that our boys gave their best at Fargo and that, even though they lost, we have just as much cause to be proud of them as if they had returned home crowned with victory. ‘They lost like the fine, clean lads we know them to be. If the story were otherwise, the chief lesson of this greatest of high school and college sports would have been missed completely. All of us love a winner, but the people of Bismarck are just as enthusiastic about its young athletes follow- ing this first defeat in three years as they ever were after a victory. It will be something of a test for Bismarck fans, too, to taste the ashes of defeat in their mouths. We have known yictory for so long that we have come to accept it pretty much as a commonplace. The hard-lost battle at Dargo recalls to us that for every game won there must be careful and adequate preparation and that these games on the gridiron really are struggles in which the valiant youths of both the losing and win- ning teams give full measure of their strength and heart and courage. ‘We would have liked to see Bismarck’s banner tower- ing high above all others in the state but, since it did not, we can take the consolation which always remains to a good loser. And, in the long run, to meet defeat now may be a better experience for the boys who play on the local team than an uninterrupted succession of victories. Tt is easy to be strong in victory. It is a test of man- hood to be strong in defeat. Too Many Laws Anvestigation by experts has not been necessary to Prove to everybody that laws and more laws do not check crime or lawlessness that is not exactly criminal in intent ahd purpose, but that is due, in a very large measure, to the multiplicity of laws. Many people violate laws they do not know exist. ~ (Others violate laws of which they know full well, but which they do not respect and, therefore, feel they are justified in violating. Whatever the conditions under which laws are broken every day and night, more and more laws are being enacted and scarcely any repealed. Law violations of every character are more numerous now than in any time in the past. The increase in population has not been as rapid as the increase in crime. _ Laws at the rate of 1,500 a year are being enacted. And lawiecsness steadily keeps pace with the lawmakers. Tt 4s estimated that since the adoption of the consti- tution of the United Siates the laws passed in this country have exceeded in number the total of all laws eagcied for the government of mankind from the time vf Adam to the inauguration of George Washington. ‘Whether the calculator believed he was stating a fact or merely resorted to hyperbole, the comparison admirably describes what seems to be a mania among legislators. If laws had the power they are supposed to have, with the very great number on the statute books there ought to be scarcely any crime in the United States. The fact ig, however, this country hes the unenviable reputation of being the most lawless nation in the civilited world. Power of Custom Imagine, if you can, men addicted to skirts and tadies to trousers, and imagine this state of affairs to have existed for a thousand years. It would today be accepted as the only right and proper state of sffairs, Daring ladies who elected to wear skirts tnd daring men who adopted trousers would be frowned ui i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1980 , “cleverness” 80 largely consists of simple truth-telling speaks ill of civilized man’s freedom from custom and public opinion, Frock Coats in Texas Although we live in a time of chance and turmoil, all is not yet lost. The old ways are vanishing fast, but here and there a community stands out like a rock for its traditional virtues. Texas, to be brief, is proving @ Gibraltar. The other day Gene Howe, the Amarillo editor, invited Mary Garden, the grand opera star, to a tea. He also invited some 40 leading Amarillo citizens to the tea, and stipulated that they must wear frock coats so that the occasion might be just what a widely traveled grand opera star could expect. But—frock coats in Texas? The 40 guests searched their wardrobes, No frock coats, They sped downtown to the clothing stores. Not a frock coat was to be had. The Panhandle has never found much use for them, and the clothiers simply hadn't stocked them. So, in the end, the 40 Texans had to wire to effete Chicago and have their frock coats sent down special delivery. All of this, very likely, is relatively unimportant in a day of great issues and knotty problems. But there is something extremely encouraging about it, just the same. The frock coat, a minor matter at best, is a symbol— and so is the fact that the Texas Panhandle turned out to be a frock coat-less area. For the frock coat—what is it, anyway? A useless and not particularly attractive item of wearing apparel, used only on occasions where one must put on the dog. No man dons one, ever, unless he has become citified and fashion-conscious, It is out of place in the great open spaces. Romance is not in it. The arrival of the frock coat on any seene means that frontier days are gone forever, and that the memory of them has grown dim. The hardy pioneers, who seldom shaved and dressed—if the old song is to be believed—in leather breeches, would very likely have shot any man who put on a frock coat in their presence. And Texas is not just one of the 48 states in the Ameri- can union. It is—well, it is Texas, a state set apart, @ state with a great tradition. Texas is not supposed to be citified. A Texan, whether he likes it or not, is sup- posed to be a brawny, two-fisted, energetic man who can gallop from Fort Worth to the Rio Grande before breakfast, shooting half a dozen Mexicans en route and combining in his person the best features of Tom Mix, Douglas Fairbanks and Sam Houston. Putting him in a frock coat is like putting New York’s Jimmy Walker in chaps and @ sombrero, It goes against nature. So, we repeat, it is comforting to find that Amarillo can put on frock coats for a tea party only by virtue of special delivery service from Chicago. To be sure, after Mr. Howe's party the Panhandle will be harboring at least 40 frock coats, but the Panhandle is large, they will not go far, and they will seldom be worn, Texas is still Texas, Let us be thankful, Lots of us are looking for the path of least per- sistence. Some boys are small for their age and so are some men, He who keeps too many irons in the fire gets burned, Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published withs gut regerd. to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribute’s policies. ne | A Good Suggestion (Williams County Farmers Press) William G. McAdoo, one-time potent political figure during the presidency of Woodrow Wilson, makes a per- tinent suggestion in dealing with the unemployment situation and the market price of wheat. McAdoo sug- gests that the surplus wheat be used to feed the unem- Ployed rather than the cattle and hogs. The government stabilizing corporation purchased mil- lions of bushels of wheat at the fixed price to stabilize the market. The purchase was made with the taxpayers’ money. The taxpayer must foot the unemployment bill. Why not take the wheat that he federal farm board holds to feed the unemployed and at the same time remove that much more wheat from the market, which would be a great aid to the farmer? People who live in rural districts and who have never lived in cities during times of stress, can hardly conceive the situation that is brought about where thousands of people who depend on their livelihood from wages earned from day to day, are thrown out of work. Perhaps too few North Dakotans are aware of their enviable posi- tion in living in a poor man’s state—so-called because there are no men of great wealth, and because there is little wealth comparatively, this state does not know what an unemployment problem means. Henry Ford, General Motors and other huge manufacturers or con- cerns could overnight throw half the numerical popula- tion of North Dakota out of work in some of the cities where factories are located. In New York city a committee of private citizens are seeking to raise $150,000 per week for the employment of 10,000 people. That sum, however, is pitifully in- adequate. In Cincinnati the. city advertised for 3,000 People to do work—12,000 applied. In Detroit the police and firemen are setting aside a percentage of their wages to aid the destitute. But such measures, com- mendable as they are, are but makeshift at best. ‘The government has avowed its purpose of aiding agri- culture, It must take care of its unemployed in some fashion or other. To take the 60,000,000 bushels that the federal farm board has in store and feed the un-. employed would be the means of killing two birds with one stone. The surplus would be alleviated, the un- employed would be taken care of for the winter and the natural swing of the pendulum would bring ebout a resume of manufacturing and employment. Mental Depressions (New Leipzig Sentinel) A year ago we were in the closing phases of the greatest bull market America had ever seen. It seemed that there would be no end to the steady upward march of prosperity. There were many so enthusiastic as to claim that the old economic laws had been repealed, that America was too big for them and that there would never be depression again. We know now that such predictions were foolish, but what we do not seem to realize is that the atmosphere Of depression and: pessimism which has enveloped the country during the past few weeks is equally foolish. Now there are prophets of disaster who tell us that we have passed the meridian of progress for all time to come, and that we will never be prosperous again. Just what has happened to bring about this change of sentiment? Undoubtedly the cause is the economic depression and the slowing down of business which it has brought with it. But it is to be remembered that we have the same country, the same resources, the same energetic intelligent people, the same potentiai buying power that we had a year ago when it seemed that we could never be stopped. What, then, is to prevent our once more marching on the road to prosperity as we were marching before? ‘The truth is that we are overly pessimistic now just as we were overly optimistic a year ago. Then the optimists ‘would pay no attention to the sane minds who cautioned them against over-expansion. Now they will pay no at- tention to sane and conservative minds who tell them that one of the principal things retarding our recovery is @ pessimism as unreasoning as was the optimism of & year ago. We like to picture the Frenchman and the Italian as the most volatile persons on earth. But our rebound from the heights of optimism to the depths of despair without any change in that government and its resources, would indicate that there may be some weight to the charge of certain Europeans that the most volatile people are not to be found in Europe after all but in America. Isn't it about time we stop theorizing and get down to brass tacks? Things aren't as bad as most of us think they are. Business will get better if we all work together to help improve it. America is still the great country. that it always has been. Nothing has changed perma- nently. A part of the disease is undoubtedly mental. ‘That is the part which we can correct immediately. . SYNOPSIS: Denny Dorn, Greenwich ‘His lower lip had fallen and saliva murdered in hls home daring's party. He was xunning down the corner of his ren portiere rope which Jit Palmer, coming from his apartment. All the ‘The nurse wiped it away.*Dr. Carpenter is found in the suffering Gfay took me to the far corner of his power of speech before he can . | the room. jetective Mi has A small plece of cloth which he found “Do you wish to see me?” he in Denny's This will tity the murderer, xt disappears. a be guecte sre in a state of hysteria as Murphy tells they must | I felt foolish, I had simply en- until the murder has been solved. By E. V. BURKHOLDER (Copyright, 1980, by New York Evening GRAPHIC) Bee had hardly finished telling us about the quarrel between Courtney and Jane Marsh when they entered the room. Courtney looked nervous and frightened. | “Has hi Jane Marsh was still cold and haughty, a demeanor that in had marked her every movement that night. Their arrival in the studio produced a strained feeling. ee No one said anything, and as soon as I could gracefully do so, I got up and left the room. . 7 I went down to the on the: second floor. Marino and = ays were sitting on a couch-like “What's new?” Marino asked. “Not Seon. When is Murphy H n't. know, anything about oe, La sere ago, Hi eal up here a ead “T think I'll go down and see him. ‘The old man won't live mych longer.” THE POISONED NEEDLE! ‘When are they going to take Dorn’s body out of here?” Marino asked. “It’s getting on my nerves.” “They'll take it away in a little while,” I answered, “Hope 80,” Marino groaned. “This is terible"leaving his body here like this.” “They'll take it away. They'll Ue Gain of ewes et to kill him.” about the Polson betore the? kept fore us here,” Etartso said with some vert ti heat, “They don’t know yet whether Der committed suicide or was mur- “rt ink they know that” 1 re- plied. “I think he was murdered, the basement. I know it came from neat eight —you heard tt" Marino pped at her. “No use to|that cellar. I ‘mtelivense’ with, moran was yet.” “Not dear, but soon,” Marino inugned. zy you hear this noise, “A few minutes Tt was just & little while after TB the andi “T'm going down in that cellar be- fore the it’s over,” I said. “I'll See if there’ one down there.” “You're. welcome to ” ., “But don’t ask me with} “If ‘go “Me either,” Marino put in. Mona looked at him with’ sar- “I thought you said there wasn’t an: down there,” abide ™ it are you afraid “Not for several days. but he may die over’ He may that” e i E Z E i 5 Be ig i ; need pete ate “TE 2) oe “And Tbe deat as & door nail,” Met Ska» x magnod, “tm gxtng | soc down to tet Then Tn visit the cue ei up and the footste col ep ide words Then made me | ni @ few we feel a little. walk door. followed jof eyes. She looked Ii a scared | had seen the Ieek ont Be ry Oarpens |i’ His woot cg of the be ‘little chicken. I felt sorry for her.' ter’s face and I was sure that It was a tough break for a kid like ah her ta be thrown into such a sordid affair. “It'll all be over before long, |- Mona,” I said, mind off of it, Why ne Cree sleep?” A HAUNTED HOUSE? Mona shuddered and then started al one of her lis. “I'm scared,” she wi Set want He looked scared and white. “You can go when Murphy comes been Marino sald “ft simply t done. . “It si . That's all there is to tr" Dev & “I’m scared,” Mona shuddered. “I want to get out of this dump” .” I said, hoping to cheer her. ; was something or some one down | w! >*ST nape se.” ave an “It terrible | there, ¢ had no idea who It could be -( be 7 unted.” how treunted’» ‘asked. “You're not |ed ‘with tse see! boing already. Foul be cutting paper dolls before |down in that Oe pienes over ee bearing and seeing, now.” “Mona claims she heard a groan and some one wriking around down in cellar,” Marino explained. “We walked down to the first floor. pe We didn't like the idea of staying here while Denny was lying in there. “Trying to kid me?” he snapped stiff and cold.” it. “No, I'm not kidding pen 4 be right,” I sald.| I stared at her as if she were an | right now,” I said. “I want tq know “something in ‘nat cellar scared | apparit! if you heard any noises coming \ i old Henry Carpenter into a stroke.” wish to see Doctor Gray?” | from the cellar.” “I know I was right.” Mona wailed. |she asked. “Go on back upstairs,” he “I know I heard some one walking Ja “You're getting a Uttle down there. It didn’t sound human. ” | HEREZATO YOU HEALH Large, stamped, PROTECT THE TEETH WITH DIET By Dr ANK NCCOY- ‘auTHOR FES IEE 4 Al quatiens soguriing Hoctth and Det wl bo aniwored:' sell addremed envelope aunt \ rte en ano cide of paper only. Lotions anst sot exned “90 words, Addrem Ds, Feank McCoy, ave of Wis paper. After you have corrected your diet! ‘The art and science of dentistry has | you should call up a competent cen- an enormous stride within the|tist and make an appointment ag Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. ass, been ing the value of interesting been performed in mouth. In the examination of sev- earlier in recogniz- | soon as possible to that he can treat & protective dist than | your mouth. Between the treatments of other schools. Some | at his office he will probably tell you experiments have |of some preparation he wants you to to find out j use to keep the gums free from bacy \ the cause of pyorrhea and trench j teria until he can build up the natu ral resistance. I am sure that your eral hundred patients it was found | dentist will be able to give you many that all of the patients suffering from | helpful ideas about diet. Of ccurce, + pyorrhea, had been living on a diet |he is chiefly concerned in teaching which was deficient in vitamin C, and | you how to grow and preserve good it was also found’ that this trouble | teeth, but at the same time this pur- was much easier to correct when the | pose is being accomplished, you will a also find that your general health is M. 'T. Hanke, of the University | improving. of people hea, inflamma- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Chiropractic Treatments “I would track of a/like to know your opinion of chiro- group of 100 patients he found that | practic treatments. I am no chiro- 15 of them did not adopt his diet and | practor or follower of any one health in these gum condition worse, but every used the correct diet, for the better, and in many cases|every state in - | regulating the practice of chiroprac-~* their pyorrhea and gum grew | method; I merely ask for your un-, one of the 85 who | biased opinion.” ‘ showed a gain! Answer: ~The fact that practically the union has a law inflamma. tion were entirely cured within 60 tic is assurance that there is a great days, dental treatments also being|deal of used in addition to the diet. Gums j method of treatment. which had been bleeding easily ceased bleeding, spongy gums became firmer, and tooth decay was stopped. This diet of Dr. Hanke was not un- usual or freakish and yet it overcame lettuce and and had fewer colds than ever before. ° If you are suffering from any gum » you should see that your food contains plenty of vitamins, Here is a list of some of the foods which are rich in vitamin C. Oranges, lemons, grapefruit, tomatoes, sprout- ing grains or legumes, green leaves, celery, lettuce, spinach, cabbage, etc. Such foods when combined with the proper dental regimen not only aid in curing modern gum troubles but also in preventing their development. Fortunately, foods containing vitamin C are almost all alkaline- forming and also have a tendency to overcome systemic acidosis so that the seliva which bathes the teeth can become more alkaline. . value in this Chiropractic is defined as the science of adjusting the spinal vertebrae with the hands by means of a specific thrust. There is much d‘fference of opinion about whether or not the spinal vertebrae actually get out of position, but there is no question but what the stimula- tion given to the spinal nerves through chiropractic treatment is helpful in bringing about increased tone to those parts of the body which receive the added stimulation. C Question: Mrs. O. J. writes: “I wish to know if the genuine whole- wheat bread is fattening. Also, rye* bread.” Answer: Any bread may be con- sidered “fattening.” Pneumonia Question: Mrs. R.D. asks: “What are the symptoms, cause and effect of pneumonia? Does it leave the health permanently wrecked? Can a Person have pneumonia more than once?” Answer: A complete answer to your question would be too long to print in this column. Upon receijit of your name and address I would be very glad to send you a special} article I have prepared on this subs ject. In partially answering your question I would say that pneumonia is a very serious disorder. It often permanently injures the lungs, and can occur several times. _. Today Is the li ‘Anniversary of LISBON’S EARTHQUAKE On Nov. 1, 1755, Lisbon, capital of Portugal, was destroyed by an earth- SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3 550 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters 10:25—Weather report. 10:30—Church services: First Presby- terlan church. 4 12:00—Weather report. ‘ quake which is said to have been felt from Scotland to Asia Minor. Be- tween 30,000 and 40,000 persons were killed and property damaged to the value of $100,000,000. Though the city had for many cen- turies suffered from earthquakes, the Tagus river. to the disaster. The district sur- rounding an old Moorish castle in the center of the city was the only part not destroyed. ; The rapid recovery of the city was 19th century the French invasion, the loss of Brasil and dynastic troubles nutty.’ julted in its decadence, from which A tread her| “Perhaps I have plenty of rea- [T° 4 there was s'aroan aad & cry, movements and voice that were no- | son. Got any objections if I wander it did not recover until after 1850. silence that followed was more ter- down ent?” ribl 5 is hi is| “I'd like to see how Henry Car-| “All right, but don’t try to skip.” haunted aff ever et ote ot se | penter is ed along,” I never pa ‘worry. I'm not to if B. AARBS » m3 “There change. fap . home—a hall at six 8 week. “I don't think it advisable to disturb ‘Suddenly the sound of a der | @————————————. ‘but it’s home.” him.” closing somewhere in the ent At least, there's one thing that Chi- “That noise could have come from | Doctor Gray came to the door and|caused us both to Jump a little. . eee pa ween ord nai Th ge pags Dr. There ‘was, . peas inhuman for —life pastel pdr probably Gray is there with ter 0 nurse 3 leone oa think fe tins a nure helping i. Gray put is fineer to his ls to|groan—and then e piercing cry. |never pester them, na is just nervous.” . indicate silenc bead zee “You weren't there when I beard| The room was dimly lighted, but What further ers are wait- that noise.” Mona cried. “You were |in the shadows 1 could] tng behind those closed doors? |, A Fannivivanis, house painter had up here. I heard it and it came |see the face ot Henry Carpen-| Read the next install- tings accepted for an from the cellar. The ay to the | ter op His were wide} ment of this detective international art exhibit. Proving cellar is righf under the st fay (o'open and staring af the céiling.' mystery in tomor-ow’s paper. house painters can also streaks. . Wagner and dauughters Gredche and|Berg and Rudolph Berg, all * * Wilson Caroline, and Misses Sarah and Ber-|Sunday evening at the A. E. Nelson] The linotyper who set it “Bernard °. ¢ | tha Berg. home. Shaw to Bardcast” had his ‘ Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Wagner, Mr.| Mr. and Mrs. Christ Wolf and fam- |own ideas of a good pun. By MRS. JOHN A. BERG and Mrs. Wm. Wagner and daughter | ily visitéd at the Sam Berg home Sat- see contre Awitten | Hilda motored to Bismarck Friday. | urday evening. This is the age when it behooves Miss Herda Berg was a \Wilten | eoisnuel Hinsz and Herald Hinsz| Mr. and Mrs. John Berg spent Sun-|many a stockbroker to consult the pence. Wedneeday. « called at the Fred Lange home Fri-|day at the John Kurly home. broker. Mr. and Mrs. Gust Neimiller re- | gay, Sam. Berg attended the * turned ‘o their home Monday after} Sam Berg and son Willie called at | meeting at the F. G. Redington home| A Pittsburgh man, shot in error by a few days visiting with relatives at!the Hryckow home on business mat-| Tuesday e & policeman, complimented him on Goodrich and Hurdsfleld, N. D. ters Friday evening. Logan Emery called at the A. E.|his alertness. And there is little doubt Miss Freda Stroble spent Satur-} Mr. and Mrs. Sam Berg and fam- | Nelson home Monday mi: that the tactiful cop replied: “I aim day and Sunday with her Aunt Betty. /ily were Wilton callers Thursday] Emanuel Hinsz was an overnight|to please.” Mr. and Mrs. Christ Wolf and fam- | evening. guest at the Carl Berg home near Re-| (Copyright, 1930, NEA Servite, Inc.) ily visited at the Wm. Bauer home| Sam Berg and son Willie called at | gan Friday. Sunday. the Fred Lange home Friday eve-| Lewis Wagner and sons Paul and ~ Mr. and Mrs. John Schlofman | ning. Ernest and Gedion Ketterling are Quotations t spent Tuesday at the Christ Wolf| Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wagner had | helping Mr. Wolf with building an ad- 4 ome. Miss Bremer of Bismarck as their | dition to his barn this week. Mrs. Katie Seible visited with her | guest Wednesday. Mr. and Rays aad Ne and] “No one would invite either war or parents ‘Tuesday. She was en route| Jake Liefe of Wilton was deliver- | family spent at Wing at the|business depression, but from them to Montana where she will spend a|ing gas around this community | Christ Berg home. may come some new inspirations.”— few days visiting. ‘Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Neimiller Sr. vis- | president Hoover. Mr.-and Mrs. Adolph Wagner spent | Miss Herda and Bill ‘Berg were |ited at the Carl Gesele see Sunday at the Edward Berg home. | Wilton shoppers Saturday. afternoon. “Too many authors seem to be in- Mrs. John Berg helped Mrs. Wolf with butchering Tuesday. Mrs. John A. Berg received the sad news Sunday morning of the death of her uncle, John Hirsh at Anamoose, N. D. The revival meetings at the Evan- gelist Zion church was started Mon- day and will be continued for two weeks or more, ‘Tom Wall is employed at the John Berg home. Emanuel Hinsz is helping Gust jing friends. Neimiller with rye sowing this week. | The Wolf young folks, Herbert and Visitors at the Wm. Wagner Led bapa ‘Wagner, Helen and Teddy Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Christ/Gesele, Misses Sarah and Bertha LESPEDEZA AS FERTILIZER vout Ci Raleigh, N. C., Nov. 1—()—J. T. [Ld father of Mussolini was a black- smith by trade and strongly anti-re- ligious and revolutionary in his opin- ions, His mother was a school teach- er and, unlike the father, was a de- atholic, dulging in s free-for-all race for big- and better immorality.”"—G. K. xe * “God must find the United States @ rather difficult country to please.” — Lord Melchett. s y Eg = “Try singing to speak well.”—Alwyn Bach, winner of the 1930 diction medal awarded the American Academy of Arts and Letters. se * “I suppose the dogmas of the church were slogans.”—Dean Inge, show lucky! pare MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3 q 0—Farm flashes. , 0—Weather report. -—Farm reporter in Washington. 0—Spectal bulletins: U. S. depart-, ment of agriculture, Meditation period. 0—Shoppers’ guide program. 0—Sunshine hour. 0—Opening grain markets; weath- :10—Aunt Sammy, 5—Address: Ethel H. Cooley. '—Arlington time signals. 0—Grain markets. ; S—Organ program: Clara Morris, 0—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- une news and weather; lunch- eon program, 5——Voice of the Wheat Pool 0—Music. 0—Musical matinee melodies. 1:45—Grain markets: high, low ané close; Bismarck ‘Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Siesta jhour: Good News radio fon. Thomas Hall. Gov. George F. Shafer, P. W. Lanie 0 ress: Hon. Thomas Hall. PROFITS IN DAIRY FEEDING East Lansing, Mich., Nov. 1—(P)— Records of 1,430 herds in Michigan show that farmers who fed homé- corn, 90 cents for oats, $1.25 for bar- ley and $1.25 for wheat. WILD GOURD FOUND’