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: Hi \ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1930 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER yEstablished 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 48 Second clas mail matter. George D. Mann . + President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail per year (in Bismarc! Daily by mail per year (in state, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year .. ‘Weekly by mail in state, three years . ‘Weekly by mail outside of North Dakot: Weekly by mail in Canada. per year . ! Member Audit Bureau of Circulation } Member of The Associated Press | The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use! for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein All rights of republication of all other matter hercin are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER é& LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON It Is Easy to Help In launching its “Open Your Heart” campaign with a view to aiding in making Christmas merry for those less ; fortunate than themselves, Bismarck’s American Legion post has begun a movement which deserves the support of every citizen. Most of us are prone to indifference to the ills of those with whom we do not come in contact. Our nat- ural selfishness makes us interested mainly in ourselves and those about us. We may read of thousands starv- ing in China, for example, and think nothing of it. It is one of the blessings of human nature that we can hear of tragedy without its having too great an effect on our own lives. Yet, there is always the danger of becoming too cal- loused, too blind to the trials and tribulations of those less fortunate than ourselves. There is hardly a man in Bismarck who, seeing a child with its toes exposed to the cold and snow, would not dig down into his pockets for a pair of shoes if he could spare the money. There is none who, seeing a little body shrunken and thin for lack of food, would not contribute toward the price of a meal. If we see these things ourselves the appeal is direct and the result is certain. The average Americar heart is big and generous. Our principal trouble is that we sometimes are too careless. 7 Announcing its movement, the American Legion said conditions in Burleigh county are the same this year as every other year. That is encouraging but it is no rea- son why those who can do so should not help in taking care of the poor who are “always with us.” : It is doubtful if the recipients of the Christmas cheer which the Legion will distribute will get quite as much benefit from it as those who do the giving. There is no feeling of selfish gratification which can quite compare with the satisfaction which everyone gets from knowing that he has contributed his share to a worthy enterprise. The beauty of the Legion's plan is that participation in it costs most of us exactly nothing. All of us have items which are no longer useful to us but which other persons need. A little time and thought in bringing these articles to light and turning them over to the Le- gion committee will yield real happiness to us and real happiness to those who, needing them, have little or nothing with which to purchase. Money also is needed and the response to the appeal for this useful commodity has been generous. It has proved that Bismark’s heart still is big and understand- ing. We are confident that the Legion’s movement will suc- ceed because it deserves to succeed and that Christmas joys will be the sweeter to most of us for having par- ticipated in it, , Blessings in Disguise It often happens that blessings are so well disguised we often have difficulty in recognizing theng, even after they have been with us for a considerable period. ‘Which is by way of introducing the fact that night clubs are on the wane in New York City and other met- ropolitan centers. It seems people now have more to think about than the expensive and not too refined en- tertainment of such centers. Few persons who have ever paid $1.75 for a bottle of ginger ale and a bowl of cracked ice will regret the pass- ing of this peculiarly American form of modified band- itry.: ‘Writing in a leading magazine, Percy Hammond as- terts that, in place of the night club, is coming “the po- lite and exclusive speakeasy where, in a secluded nook, the weary and heavy-laden may put off their burdens and rest for a time on the screened cushiong of quiet dissipation. In those niches there is none of the noise and fury of the cabarets.” : ‘Which merely indicates, of course, that our blessings seldom are unmixed. ‘To compare a night club with a speakeasy may be com- paring the horns of a dilemma but on both the score of morality and public decency it would seem that the speakeasy is much to be preferred. Practically the only difference between the night club ‘and the speakeasy is the noise of the former. Both, if reports of the sophisticate are to be trusted, serve the same kind of vile liquor at the same atrocious prices. The former, however, probably has a lure for the young and unsophisticated which the plain, quiet speakeasy Jacks. Youth likes life, light and laughter and no one would deny it those pleasures, In the night clubs these innocent enjoyments are tinseled almost beyond recog- nition by normal persons. In addition liquor is served and the aimosphere is conducive to free indulgence. If one must drink, despite the difficulty which the law throws around that accomplishment, he had better do it in an atmosphere where he can keep his mind on his Job. In these days of poisonous, bootleg concoctions it may mean the difference between death and a preserva- tion of life's vital spark in a rum-assailed carcass. It Should Be Better Reports by the federal public health service indicate that the number of cases of smallpox is increasing an- nually in the United States. With 45 states reporting, the number listed in 1927 was | 34,685. In 1928 it was 38,114 and in 1929 it was 41,458. Most outbreaks of the disease disclosed only the mild type and the total number of deaths attributed to small- pox in the three years was only 442, ‘This is far less than the number killed monthly by au- tomobiles and less than the. number claimed by many other diseases. If considered from that viewpoint we might be excused for patting ourselves on the back. The real point, however, is that no one should die of smallpox. In fact no one ever should have what once ‘was e dreaded malady which killed thousands. Vaccination and re-vaccination are sure pteventives of smallpox. They are a safe, sure and simple protection froma disease which, in its virulent form, has killed people by the thousands. Every death from smallpox 4s, in a way, a suicide. It may be a fatal tribute to lack science accomplishes. The effect, however, is ver’ definitely the same and the sexton’s job of tolling the church bell is made no easier. The record made by the United States in reducing the incidence of smallpox is a good one, when compared with that of less-enlightened nations, but it is not what it should be. In three years we have wasted 442 lives and, unless the immunity of our people is maintained it may, in the future, claim thousands more. a; | | | | Telephone Paradoxes The telephone has upset the calendar. . i Now, over a circuit 14,000 miles long, we may, speak on one day to a friend in Australia the next day; be- cause if it is night-time for us, it will be the following morning for him. Time in the United States and Aus- tralia differs by about 15 hours. ' This is but one of the many telephone paradoxes. It} has, so far as transmission of messages is concerned, - entirely eliminated both time and space. It has brought all the major countries of the world within speaking distance. It has conquered the obstacles of mountains, | oceans and desert that, not so many years ago, made it, a matter of months for the sending of a letter a ‘few; thousand miles. { Compared to the achievements of. the telephone, Alad-| din’s magic lamp was but a trivial parlor trick. Physical laws bow down before it. ! Curtailing Metal Production The principal copper producers of the nation are seek-| ing @ way out of their over-production problem. Plans} designed to curtail production and adjust supply to de- Anxious Moments! mand are being put into effect. | The metal situation, like that of oil, vitally affects} the public. An over-supply of copper, lead or zinc, in| the long run, benefits no one, and threatens the stabi | ity of a basic industry. Price levels which prevent the mines from earning a legitimate profit contribute greatly | to unemployment, declining wage scales and industria)! | stagnation. The mine operators, when they seek to cur-! tall useless production, are serving the public as well as, themselves. \ H Recently the price of copper took a slight —— turn, as compared with a steady decline during the past; few months. If curtailment of production permits the; mines to reestablish themselves on a sound economic] basis, labor, investors, state governments, and other in- dustries will reap great benefits. Railroad chiefs are beginning to urge the consolidation of all means of transportation under one management. ‘The list includes rail, air, motor and water transporta- tion. Might not that sort of organization be called an immersion? Editorial Comment Bditorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with Tho Trib- une’s policies. The End of the Trail (Minneapolis Tribune) Chief Simon Kahquados, said to be the last of the hereditary chiefs of the Wisconsin Potawatomis is dead. C. E. Broughton, Sheboygan editor, who visited him shortly before his death, found him suffering from lack of food and clothing, with no bed to sleep on at the age of 79. His aristocratic barbarian lineage, with which white civilization probably made its first contact in days of the first Virginia colony, more than 300 years ago, then availed him nothing. He was just an Indian, “old, no good,” at the end of the trail. He was frobably a pagan, perhaps shaman, adhering to the mystic medicine rites of his people, in times when illness beset him, or his — was stirred erg roa Sen ier of the mysteries of life as he-emcount met least of which were the vagaries of white ci easton, Yet he and his forefathers before him adhered quite faithfully te a simple law of justice. It included every principle of the Christian decalogue. One of these, “Thou shalt love they neighbor as thyself,” his great-grandfath- er, Onaningason, practically applied when he found the great French explorer, Robert LaSalle, wandering in the woods and saved him from starvation. Kahquados probably would have appreciated nourish- ing food, a warm overcoat and the warmth of a friendly fire in life, more than the ornate white monument a white civilization will erect over his grave to mark the final resting place of “the last of the Potawatomi chiefs.” Time is merciful. The tragedy of man’s inhumanity to man is soon forgotten. Future generations who pause to muse by the grave of Kahquados will envision a lordly red man, wearing a glorious war bonnet and a warm blanket, not an old, decrepit whimpering septuagenarian, hungry and pain-racked in the last scene of all. It is better so. The truthful story is too long to be told on a tombstone. It is not a pleasant story. Posterity will have sufficient evidence of our shortcomings in this day without the record of neglect of the aged and indigent Indian being written wherever he is found. Santa Claus (Washington Star) Santa Clauses—all shapes and sizes of Santa Clauses —are beginning to appear in the stores and to broad- cast over the radio. In a few days they will be decorat- ing the street corners. And the jovial, white-bearded good fairy is very much in the thoughts and dreams of the Nation's millions of children, trying so hard these last few weeks to meet the impossible requirement of - good” according to the arbitrary standard of goodness set up by their clders, which generally they | inci mustpaccept without understanding. ‘The return of the Christmas season raises certain ethi- cal questions over which there is endless debate. Should the Santa Claus myth be kept alive? Should parents and teachers create and abet superstitions in the minds of their children? 5 It is hard to conceive of any questions which lead into greater depths. We are plunged into the mystical chambers of the evolution of human concepts. A long, strange vista opens from the family fireside into the haunted depths of the mind of man. Nearly every Phase of philosophical and theological thought is in- volved before we approach the end of the road. Parents, it might be said. deliberately create something H in the minds of their children ‘which does not exist. They manufacture an incentive to good behavior which has no counterpart in the world of reality. In a few years, at the most, the falsehood will be found out. The child’s confidence will be shattered. There will be heartaches, and tears and the beginning of cynicism. | So fair, so good. But this line of reasoning takes as an assumption that the parents and teachers themselves do not believe in Santa Clays. It probably is an invalid as- sumption. The persons in any community who are hon- estly convinced of the non-existence of the kindly old gift-bearer could be counted on the fingers of one hand. Very rare is the actual child who ever has been disillu- sloned. Santa Claus merely changes his clothes, his name and his physical appearance at various stages in the in- tellectual growth of the individual. For Santa Claus is not an arbitrary fictional character, conceived in the mind of an individual, like Peter Rabbit or Little Bo-Peep or Simple Simon. He has the far different—and far more valid—status of a universal concept. He is a child-centered propection of a child's yearnings. The child mind reaches into the mystical infinite and concentrates upon a symbol—the symbol of a love and tenderness and ideal grandfather- hood which transcends any actual experience. So long as children are born children will yearn. Their emotions will overflow the little limits of the world they see and hear. And so long as children yearn those -yearnings will find a symbol upon which to concentrate. All that would result from a discontinuance of the Santa Claus myth would be the necessary creation of another symbol. Yearnings are drawn to a symbol as water is drawn to the sea. They cannot float forever, like tinted clouds, buffeted by the wild winds beyond the world’s end. The whole debate narrows down to the question of the acceptability of a specific symbol. Those who would de- Stroy a symbol because it 1s a symbol logically would de- stroy most of creation itself as we know it. What would be left of heaven and earth if we take out of them all the man-centered projections of man’s yearnings—all the Santa Clauses of adult life? ef information or to disbelief of the wonders which Santa Claus, in the final analysis, is part of the child’s | | | i jtHons done by this pest. The law is | @—— mn so strict that we cannot even steal , END OF SHERIDAN ithe beaver and get away with the | | AT THE MOVIES | |pelts. We are bee ST RTT RIT ETRE aS | ROAD WORKS NEA Completed McClusky, N. D., Dec. 10.—Com- ess of state highway No. 14 in ‘idan county will mark the com- Pletion of state road building in this county for several years. Approximately 12 miles of earth ling already has been done on state road No. 14, running north and bod in the county, through Den- off. | The county board recently author- ized the letting of a contract for 14 miles of earth grading on this route. The contract was let at Bismarck re~ cently. It is probable that the re- maining nine miles of the route, which must be graded will be let on contract next spring. Highway No. 7, running east and west through the county ,was. com- pleted more than two years ago, This road in Sheridan county is miles lo. 9, which cuts across the north- eastern corner of the county through Martin, is a little more than 11 miles long. Gravel was spread on all’ but three miles of this road this fall, ‘the work being stopped when snow pre- vented the contractor from winding up the job. When all of this road is }gtaveled, two state roads in Sheridan county will be completed, and work on the third will be well under way. The county !'oard contemplates very little county road work next summer. Townships that have saved money will have an opportunity to improve their roads next year with the county outfit, consisting of a caterpillar trac- tor and elevating grader. Such town- ships, however, have to pay all expenses, |" A recent contract awarded calls for 14 miles earth grading to begin at a point about four and one-half miles south of Denhoff and continue north for the distance specified. When this grading is completed there will re- main pate miles to be graded on the 35 route. fe ees | PEOPLE'S FORUM | Editor of The Tribune: Two years ago I wrote an article for the press in which I told of the damage being done by the beavers along our litle river, called the Little Beaver. I personally counted the beaver cuts from the Montana line to Mar- marth a distance of eight miles and found 793 beaver cuts, and it would have been an easy matter for me to have missed 100 trees cut down by the er, on re pipe Ge ane of the damage done by the beavér, but it is safe to estimate a loss of 1,000 trees as the beavers are re! So very fast. i,, 48 the law stands tofer we are en- tirely helpless against the depreda- not even allowed to | Protect our own property. It is heart- | |rending to see our trees cut down just |for the amusement of a family of | beavers who make no use of them and | most of the trees are lost forever: In | August and September the beavers cut down trees just for amusement; \in October and November to butl their caches or winter supply of food. Beavers do not occupy the same den |more than one year. With the com- ing of spring they start to travel and always upstream, The beavers that are with us this fall will in all prob- ability be up in Montana next year where the farmers are given a permit to catch them if they are destroying any timber. We propagate and feed the beaver, but Montana gets all of the profit. On my own farm, 20 fine trees have jbeen cut down and as many more scarred up by the te little beavers, |On my wife’s land a fine grove of ash trees has been almost totally wiped out just to appease the appetite of the highly protected beaver—170 ash trees and 20 cottonwood, all on one farm. My nearest neighbor has suf- fered a loss of 175 trees, and the next farmer estimates his loss at 200 trees, There is some talk of passing an emergency law by the legislature this winter to give relief to the farmers wooded streams, March being the month selected for the open sea- son. In March the ground will be | frozen four feet deep and the ice will be 26 inches deep or thick on the river, and in my opinion the beaver will be perfectly safe from the ordinary trapper. Of course a few will be caugnt but not enough to give the de- sired relief. As the law now stands it will allow a few expert trappers to make a lot of easy money. and a few of the very rich people of Chicago and New York to wear Beaver coats at our expe..ce, How terribly “dumb” a set 7f legis- lators must be to deliberately maxe a Jaw that would allow all of the timber destroyed along our creeks and rivers. I estimate my loss as follows: | 20 jcotton wood trees at $10 each, $200, and 170 ash trees at $1.00 each, $170, for a total of $370, and all the legisla~ tures in the U.S. can’t put the trees back for four times that amount of money and take anes a do it in. Marmarth, N. D. P. S—Since writing the above J article a game wardea made us a call and handed out the information that we have a legal right to shoot and kill all beaver found on our land cut- ting down trees and d>ing other dam- age but that we absolutely must not commercialize the hides. SNELLING HOSPITAL URGED Washington, Dec. 10.—(?)—Senator Shipstead, Minnestoa, introduced a bill providing for construction of an $800,000 convalescent hospital at Fort Snelling. Canada is the greatest producer of raw and waste asbestos and the United States the largest consumer. Ethiopia or Abyssinia is the only independent nation on the continent of Africa. * PARAMOUNT THEATRE | The collegiate Ford, vehicle of gaudy colors and flippant wisecracks | familiar to every campus, has found its way to the screen. | This symbol of undergraduate | glamour is seen in the Warner Bros. {and Vitaphone college production, | “Maybe It’s Love,” in which Joan Bennett and James Hall have the | leading romantic roles and which is coming to the Paramount theatre ‘Thursday and Friday. Joe E. Brown and Laura Lee in the comedy roles in this screen collegiate | romance, have the Ford for their own special use in the picture. | Equipped in the usual college man- ner, the “puddle-jumper” has special stop and go signals, several auto- matic horns and whistles, and a radio fully equipped with snappy loud speaker. Anders Randolf, Sumner Getchell, George Irving, and others are in the cast of “Maybe It's Love,” while the first “all-American” football team ever assembled plays football in the picture and enact roles under their real names. CAPITOL THEATRE Acclaimed as one of the most im- posing, dramatic and _ entertaining pictures ever produced by Pathe, “Her Man,” a colorful story of the Havana ungerworld, comes to the Capitol Theatre ‘tonight, for a. two. day’s run. Directed by Tay Garnett, “Her |Man” deals with the regeneration of ja girl from “the wrong side of the island” and in the course of this re- formation there is presented a series of episodes that are said to be the most thrilling that have been pic- tured since the sound era was inaug- |urated. Helen Twelvetrees plays Frankie and Ricardo Cortez essays the char- acter of Johnnie. The production serves to introduce to the motion picture public the stage star, Mar- jorie Rambeau. Phillips Holmes, whose performances in “Devil’s Holi- day” was hailed as one of the best of |the seasog, plays the roving sailor lad who rescues Frankie from degra- dation. The comedy is provided by James Gleason and. Harry Sweet. Others in an outstanding cast are Franklyn Pangborn, Mathew Betz, Thelma Todd, Mike Donlin, Stanley Fields, Blythe Daly, Ruth Hiatt, Vincent ;Barnett, Jerry Drew and Pai Har- mon, MOULE’S MOTHER ILL Frank Moule of Humphreys and Moule, printers, received word Mon- day afternoon that his mother is dan- Receualy ill_with pneumonia at her ome in Columbia, 8. D. Mr. Moule left immediately by automobile to go to his mother’s le. | Six Insane Convicts in Daring Break from Hospital | RERET TO YOUR HEALTH Dr auTHoR TREATING INFLUENZA If an influenza epidemic is in your neighborhood, you should avoid crowded meetings and stuffy rooms. You should also be careful not to tire yourself out by worry or overwork. Go out in the open for an hour every day. Begin to develop strength and soundness by exercising and yesterday's article, you will be better able to avoid an attack of influenza, but if you disregard such advice un- til you feel the first aay of the deaths from infinenza are di to neglect in the beginning. The first thing to do is to use enema of two quarts of warm water and thoroughly the bowels. Next, take a hot tub bath, lying in water as hot as can be borne, for about twenty minutes. The tempera- ture should be about from 104 degrees to 106 degrees F. After the bath, dry quickly and wrap yourself in some heavy woolen blankets, then lie down in bed and have somebody else place plenty of covers on top and a hot wa- ter bottle at your feet. You will need some assistance because you must not uncover yourself once you begin to sweat. The bedclothes should be well tucked around you so that no air will be drawn under the covers if you move about. Drink a glass of hot water every thirty minutes as long as you are awake. You will soon begin to sweat and will continue to do so until your fever has disappeared. If the head becomes congested apply a cold compress to the forehead. This sweating treatment should be continued for several hours, then the patient should take a tepid bath and return to bed between clean bed cloth- ing. If the fever continues, an occa- sional short cool shower may be used, followed by a brisk rub-down. Repeat this sweating treatment every day for the first two or three days. One enema should be used morning and evening, using a bed pan if necessary, as the patient should not be exposed too long to the cold afr. The patient should not be given food of any kind except water which may be flavored with lemon or orange juice. The patient should not under any circumstances attempt to go out, or return to work, until he has entirely recovered. Once your temperature ihas become normal and your appetite has returned you may start eating any kind of food in proper combina- tions. However, you very likely will not feel hungry for several days, and FRANIC, NECOY. ‘. MeALTI? OF “TRE FAST WY TO it is advisable to only use water and acid fruit jui period. . The theory that the body requires nourishing food during an acute at- lenty of during 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. tack of influenza is very wrong and has probably resulted in many deaths which could have been prevented by the methods I have just outlined. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Tuberculosis ul! Question: H. E. H. writes: “I have a brother who has been sick with tuberculosis for over a year. He has been in a sanitarium for six months and is no better. In fact, he is get- ting weaker. What would you sug- gest for him to do?” Answer: It would be unwise for me to attempt to advise you about your brother’s case as, of course, I cannot examine him or diagnose his case through the columns of this pa- Per. My theories about the treat- ment of tuberculosis are very differ- ent from those practiced in the aver- age sanitarium. For example, he has probably been kept in bed and stuffed on too much food. My plan would be for him to take light exercises, such as walking, and decrease the quan- tity of food, using only those foods of the finest quality, with no effort be- ing made to increase his weight. I have written a great deal on this sub- ject, and will be glad to send you any literature you wish if you will for- ward a large self-addressed stamped envelope. Vaccination Question: E. R. S. writes: “I know Several children who were vaccinated about a year ago. Their arms were not sore and appeared to be entirely well. The scar left an indention, as usual. Recently, the places have puffed up and formed hard, knotty Pones. The children also complain of their arms being sore. Please tell the public what causes this, and also the remedy.” Answer: The remedy for such a condition as you describe is for the children to be put on a fairly long fast of ten days or two weeks. This is the only method I know of for get- ting rid of such a deep-seated infec- tion. The experience of these chil- dren is very common, and comes from the infection from the streptococcus or staphylococcus bacteria, which are oe Present in the smallpox vac- cine. Today Is the | ‘Anniversary of FALL OF JERUSALEM On Dec. 10, 1917, the British, under Field Marshal Edmund Allenby, cap- tured Jerusalem from the Turks in what is called one of the masterpieces of military history. It marked the first time since the days of the cru- saders that Jerusalem was in the hands of Christian troops. Allenby had been sent from France, where he was doing valiant work against the Germans to take charge of the forces in Egypt and Palestine, He arrived there in the autumn and immediately prepared to take the ag- gressive. i By skillful preliminary maneuvers Allenby seized the port of Jaffa and so outwitted the Turks that they were unable even to block the narrow mountain passes. Despite a stout Turkish almost at the gates of Jerusalem, the objective was gained with the surrender of the city. For the success of this brief but brilliant campaign Allenby was pro- moted to field marshal and raised to the peerage. He also received a grant of 50,000 pounds. In 1919 he was ap- pointed British high commissioner in Egypt and held the post until 1925. * Ke he ‘The Interborough Rapid Transit System in New York anounced it car- ried 54,000,000 more passengers last year than the year before. What they might well call a crushing busi- ness, * * * A writer, just returned from Africa, says he prefers cannibals to the peo- ple he meets on Broadway. Apper- ently he has had a close escape from the scalpers on oe ent White Way. * Bill Roper, Princeton coach, says that football is 90 per cent fight. If wy weights Quotations ] “The river of knowledge is a wind- ing one.”—Sir James Jeans. * * * “It should be possible in our coun- try for everybody of sound character The Matteawan State Hospital for the Criminal Insane at Beacon, N. Y., scene of the daring delivery of six dan- gerous lunatics, is pictured above. ‘Below are four of the maniacal criminals, who escaped with the aid of a for- mer inmate and two others, and eluded state troopers and police on a wild dash into New York City. Left to right: Harry Gordon, known as the “Mad Butcher” ‘of Rochester; John Biggins, of Brooklyn, a robber; Joseph Kaylor, of New York, also a robber; and Anthony. A. Alloy, of Brooklyn, a pyromantac. The man hunt for the God. escaped madmen and their deliverers was extended throughout the cast. {7 Stickler Solution j had! ciation reveals. and industrious habits ‘to provide himself with adequate housing and preferably to buy his own home.”— President Hoover. * ek * “Every form of government is the consequence of social conditions, of economic needs, and of the intellec- tual life of a nation.”—Premier Mus- Solini of Italy. see “When @ woman has good looks she might aswell make themost of them.”" —Peggy Hopkins Joyce. x ek * “If the maintenance of prosperity becomes a governmental function and duty it will inevitably overshadow all others.”—James Truslow Adams, his- torian. * * * “The plain fact is that, to the young men who engage in it, war is rather pleasant than otherwise.”—} L, Mencken. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 11 2.1.59 Eilecrelee—S45.1 Meters p—ghow pera, guide pposram. yron J. Bens nett, conductor. 10:00—Opening grain markets; weathe er report. 10:10—Aunt Sammy: dally household chats. -Home-owned stores program, [—Arlington ee signals, ets, 0—Organ recital: Clara Morris. 00—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- une news and weather; lunch- . eon prograt 6—Old Masters ‘h 5—Grain market igh, low, and close; Bismarck Tribune news and weather; St. Paul livestock, 0—Musical matinee melodies. 5—Bismarck Tribune sports items, 0—Bismarck Tribune news. /0—Dinner hour organ recital: Clara Morris, 6:45—Newscastini 7:00—Sportsm« The cow that returns the largest income for the year also requires the largest expenditure for feed, a survey by an Oklahoma dairy asso-\ FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: A girl can appreciate a jewel even when her love is stone cold. *