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rar ae a) ? 4 % v > 4 ae & * \ a THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 10, 1931 U.S. 18 BUILDING {Mencken Has Hope American Literary |AGRUMENTS IN LAND SHIP LARGER THAN | Prodigy May Spring Up in Nea Futur BANK BATTLE HEARD GERMAN ZEPPELIN Bismarck Window Display II- lustrates Immensity of U. S. * &, Akron and Dock ‘Thousands of persons, more than 60,900 on Sundays, each week are in- Specting the progress of construction of the U. 8. 8. Akron, which the Goodyear-Zeppelin corporation is building for the U, S. Navy, acording to E. M. Duerre, local Goodyear dealer. The U. S. 8. Akron, the world’s largest airship, now has nearly half its fabric outer cover in place, and seven of its eight 560-horsepower en- gines have been installed in motor rooms in the hull. Doping also is in Progress, and the nose of the ship hhas been covered with the aluminum dope which give lighter-than-air ships their silvery appearance as they glide through the sky. Provisions for visitors have been made, and one end of the dock and a portion of the west side of the structure have been made available for persons wishing to in- spect the ship. With its length of 785 feet, the U. 8S. S. Akron will be but nine feet longer than the famous Graf Zeppe- lin, but its greater diameter gives it a lifting gas capacity of nearly twice the German ship. The Akron will have @ capacity of 6,500,000 cubic feet of helium, America’s non-inflam- mable, non-explosive gas, as com- pared with 3,700,000 for the Graf, and 2,400,000 for the U. 8S. S. Los Angeles, present Navy dirigible. Use of helium eliminates fire and explosion hazard, and allows instal- Jation of the motors inside the hull itself, instead of in separate gondolas as has been the practice in previous ships. A specially designed outrigger with a rigid drive shaft will deliver power to the propellers outside the hull. One of the most interesting fea- tures of the ship will be its airplane compartment. This compartment will house five pursuit planes, which may be released and picked up in mid-air, and which will be used for scouting, or for offense and defense of the mother ship. While visitors are interested in the airship, the mammoth dock is in it- self a major attraction. A semi- paraboloid in shape, the dock is 1,175 feet long, 325 feet wide and 211 feet high, the largest structure in the world without interior supports. The floor area of 364,000 square feet is unobstructed by pillars or posts. More than 7,200 tons of steel were used in the building and its doors, and be- cause of this immense amount of metal it was necessary to place the girders on rollers in order that the structure might expand and contract with changes in temperature. It has been estimated that 10 foot- bell games could be played simul- taneously under the roof of the dock, that six miles of standard railroad track could be laid on the floor area, and that the great Woolworth build- ing could be laid inside and the Washington monument thrown in for good measure. Mr. Duerre has installed an attrac- tive window display showing the air- ship dock and a Zeppelin of the U. S. S. Akron type, giving a visual impression of the immensity of both. Statistics Show Government Costs Rising in State (Continued from page one) 1928 to 1929. The per capita property and special taxes were $6.34 in 1929, $6.70 in 1928, and $2.54 in 1918. “Earnings of general departments, or compensation for services rendered by state officials, represented 8.6 per cent of the total revenue for 1929, 9.7 per cent for 1928, and 23.4 per cent | for 1918. “Business and non-business licenses constituted 19.4 per cent of the total revenue for 1929, 17.9 per cent for 1928, and 12.5 per cent for 1918. “Receipts from business licenses consist chiefly of taxes exacted from insurance and other incorporated companies, and cigarette tax, and of sales tax on gasoline, while those from non-business licenses comprise chiefly taxes on motor vehicles and amounts paid fcr hunting and fishing privi- lJeges. The sales tax on gasoline amounted to $1,490,000 in 1929 and $1,387,696 in 1928, an increase of 7.4 per cent. Indebtedness “The total funded or fixed debt outstanding June 30, 1929 was $34,- 607, 200. The net indebtedness (funded or fixed debt less sinking fund assets) was 1,295,926, or $1.92 per capita. In 1928 the per capita net \debt was $6.87, and in 1918, $0.69. “The entire amount of the out- standing funded debt in 1929 was for the Grand Forks Mill and Elevator association, real estate loans, and the Bank of North Dakota. “The assessed valuation of property in North Dakota subject to ad valorem taxation was $991,576,496; the amount of state taxes levied was $3,430,855; and the per capital levy, $5.07. In 1928 the per capita levy was $5.84, and in, 1918, $2.18. Pneumonia Takes Sheridan Farmer McClusky, N. D., June 10.—Rein- homesteaded in hold Uhlich, who Rosenfield township nearly 28 years ago, died in McClusky last y morning. Uhlich hospital Friday suffering from pneu- monis, which caused his death a few hours later. He was 45 years old. A crowd at 400 persons attended ‘funeral services for Uhlich, held at the Lutheran church in Ros- ¥. Lehner, of Denhoff. Interment was made in the ceme- tery there. He leaves his widow and seven children, a brother, Adam, also of ‘eld, atives, district at 1:45 o'clock Wed- | of the The chances of an American literary prodigy appearing tomor- Tow are much better than they were last year, in the opinion of ‘HH. L. Mencken, editor and critic, who welieves that the depression has made it harder for the begin- ner to market his wares, thus discouraging half-baked work and encouraging young writers to learn their business. Mencken's article is one of a series on “What's Going on in the World Today.” peared in the United States but I know plenty of youngsters of large promise, and next month or next year one of them may turn out to be a new Dreiser. My suspicion is that the chances of such a prodigy ap- pearing tomorrow will be much better than they were last year. That is because we have just passed out of an era of wild over- production in the publishing bus- iness, As a result, it was fatally easy for newcomers to get into print, and many of them did so By H. L, MENCKEN before they were ripe. Perhaps Copyright, 1931, Associ- | 80me potentially good ones were ‘ "xisa bre ; thus ruined. Today .it is very | much harder for a beginner to Baltimore, June 10.—(?)—At | market his wares. I like to be- the moment there is a sort of Hi- lieve (or, at all events, to hope) atus in American letters. A great | that the fact will discourage half- deal of workmanlike and inter- baked work, and encourage many esting stuff is being written, but youngsters to really learn their there is a dearth of new and ar- business, Hergesheimer wrote resting authors. _Certainly no end rewrote for seven years be- careful critic would allege that fore he published his first book. any of the novices of the last few If it had been snapped up by a years is as important as Dreiser publisher in its first form there and Norris were in 1900, or Miss would have been no Hergesheimer. Cather and Lindsay in 1913, or The multiplicity of magazines, Frost and Hergesheimer in 1914, and especially of bad ones, has or Masters and Cabell in 1915, or worked against good ork. The Sandburg in 1915, or Sherwood wood-pulp fiction magazines need Anderson in 1916. | so much copy that they snap up Today we have only a general almost anything and in conse- competence. quence they encourage shabby Why there should be such rises writing. Similarly, the cheap and falls in literary productivity magazines of huge circulation in- I don't know, and neither docs cite all the young authors to anyone else. There are, of course, write what is safe and lovely— plenty of theories. One is to the a trashy. The market for effect that the best writing is al- really sericus stuff is curiously ways done during times of peace limited. Save from the so-called and plenty; another is that it is quality magazines, of which there done when blood is on the moon. are only fouz, and one or two of All that can be said with any the more ambitious women's surety is that progress in lett: magazines, there is no demand like any other kind of evolut:on, for it. If a new Henry James ap- tends to go in waves. For 10 peared suddenly tomorrow he years past no literary debutante would have trouble placing his of any real importance has ap- manuscripis. all day Monday, funeral services being TORNEY GENER Al, conducted in the auditorium at 1 p. J |m. with the Rev, H. J. Gernhardt, pastor of the Warren E. Simpson | Methodist church, officiating. He j | leaves his wife and three children. BY SEN AT Survey Chief Will a | Work from Dickinson | Dickinson, June 10.—Dickinson will be a pivotal point for the state in- | dustrial survey commission, ercated | by the last legislature to study North | Dakota industries. J. B. Cooley, Minot, reoenty ap-/ Wiese inted by Gov. George F. Shafer as Washington, June _10.—(?)—Asser- boars “Ot the commission, will be tion that Attorney General Mitchell! 9+ pickinson this week to begin his Would not discuss the dropping of survey. Mr. Cooley is of the opinion the estate tax case against the estate| pickinson will serve as 2 pivotal point of the late Mary T. Hill, widow of | for the survey, inasmuch as the Le-| James J. Hill, until confronted by 8 high Briquetting company plant, the| senatorial investigation, was made! prick yards and lignite coal mines Wednesday by Senator Schall of| are located in the surrounding terri- Minnesota. | tory. Taking the side of Senator Cou-| Cooley, former managing editor of zens of Michigan, who recently said|the Grand Forks Herald, is owner of the attorney general had not an-| radio station KPLM at Minot. | swered questions as to why the case) was not .appealed to the supreme| HOSPITALS BAR DAISIES court, the Minnesota Republican) Ney, York, June 10.—()—Daisles Says Investigation Is Only Thing Which Will Make Cab- inet Member Talk said: “No one who knows Attorney Gen- eral Mitchell is at all surprised at his refusal to answer the pertinent and proper questions propounded to him by Senator Couzens.” “Senator Couzens,” Schall said, “and every other senator will find, as I have that Mr. Mitchell will never voluntarily tell the whole truth about his part in the Hill case. The only way to get that is through a sena- torial investigation. Once Mr. Mitchell is put on the stand in his own de- fense and under the gun of contempt proceedings for failure to answer he will talk about the Hill case and not before and he may then, too, have the opportunity to tell the exact amount which the Hill estate is fur. nishing to finance the senatorial con. test against me.” | ‘The Schall statement followed the | announcement Tuesday of Attorne! General Mitchell that Senator Cou-/ zens would be welcome io any infor- | mation available at the justice de- partment relating to the Hill case. At the same time, the justice de-/ | won't tell, but something is the mat- |ter with them this year and an ex- pert says it’s plant lice. The flowers | have been barred from hospitals be-| cause they have so many black bugs | which doctors believe may be germ carriers. | INDIANS ARE BOY SCOUTS | | Asheville, N. C., June 10.—(P)—In- | {dian boys are learning forest lore, ‘from a paleface. A Boy Scout troop; {has been chartered on the Cherokee | Indian reservation and a white scout-; |master is teaching the members on! [ee in the Grea, Smoky mountains. | |To Complete School Census Work in July BY SUPREME COURT Refund of Stock Money Follow- ing Foreclosure on Loan Is Basis of Action An array of distinguished counsel Presented arguments before the North Dakota supreme court Wednes- day in a case affecting loans on the 12 federal land banks in the United States. x Judge Fred Jansonius, Bismarck, in a decision given in Stutsman county district court, held that on foreclos- ure of a mortgage and the bidding in of the land by the federal land bank for the amount due as a full payment of the loan, the borrower is entitled to a refund of the amount subscribed by him for the stock. The action was brought by Ed Byrne of LaMoure county against the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul and the Nortonville National Farm Loan association of Nortonville, N. D.. the verdict was in Byrne's favor and an appeal was taken by the Land Bank and the Farm Loan association. Because the action is in the nature of a test case which will affect thou-; sands of loans foreclosed by land banks operating under the federal farm loan act, representatives of the cther land banks in the country have interested themselves in the action as friends of the court. Peyton R. Evans of Washington, Irving P. Whitehead of Baltimore, John Thorpeof the St.Paul Land Bank, Alfred Zuger, Bismarck attorney, and John Knauf, Jamestown attorney, came before the supreme court in be- half of the land bank's case, while Martin P. Freerks of Jamestown is representing Mr. Byrne. The action involves but $6500, the amount subscribed by him for stock in obtaining a loan from the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul through the Nortonville National Farm Loan asso- ciation. EXPLAIN WORK OF | DAIRY EXPERIMENT Superintendent of Federal Sta- tion Near Mandan Tells of Government Aims How the federal dairy experiment| station south of Mandan is attempt- ing to help dairy farmers in the Great Plains area was described by Superntendent A. L. Watt in an ad- dress to the Bismarck Rotary club Wednesday noon. Watt said the station was organ- ized with three major purposes in mind. They were to maintain and build up a herd of Holstein cattle from which pure-bred bulls could be distributed to increase the productiv- ity of herds in this district; to test and determine the best methods of feeding and kinds of feed and to; demonstrate dairying methods in the field. A large number of bulls have been; loaned on the cooperative plan and the scheme is doing its bit to in- crease the average yield of milk per cow, Watt said. Tests made to date show that al- falfa hay is the best annual average ration but that, since alfalfa is not available in all districts, the best bet of the average farmer is corn silage. Oat hay and Sudan-grass hay also) have shown good returns, he said. | Crops on the station are rotated, Watt said, with a view to maintaining soil fertility and all sorts of rations and methods of feeding are tried in Richard Penwarden, clerk of the|order that accurate data may be ob- ity school board, expects to complete | tained as to the worth of various sys- the Bismarck school census by the| tems. middle of July. Penwarden is in| A new milking machine has been charge of the school census work | installed, he said, which relieves the \here. cows of their milk without touching Penwarden believes that he will|them by hand and which is the last partment in a statement said, Mrs. have completed canvassing the resi- Mabel Walker Willebrandt, then as-|dences here by July 1. Work in com- sistant attorney general, had recom-| piling the data will occupy his atien- mended to Attorney General Sargent | tion for about two weeks after that that no appeal be taken in the case. | time Penwarden believes. Mitchell, it said, then was solicitor} Richard Schmidt ts assisting Pen- general, and having drawn up the They trust deeds for Mrs. Hill's estate, had disqualified himself because of the previous connection. Sheep-Killing Dogs Hunted in Dickinson Dickinson, June 10.—A band of Dickinson dogs, turned killers by the taste of blood, is dealing death and destruction to sheep owned by farm- ers in the vicinity of this city. °7ith- in the last 10 days 11 sheep have fallen victims to the band. Last week the midnight marauders descended upon a flock of sheep at the F. W. Braun farm, near the Stark county fairgrounds, killed two ewes and attempted to cut another down. Within the last fortnight Mike Gress, who farms nearby, has lost nine lambs as a result of onslaughts of the killers, Dickinson dog owners have been asked to inspect their canines closely for traces. of blood and wool and if any are found to dispose of the dog in| order that sheep raisers may be >ro- tected from further loss, Teacher’s Body Is Sent to Iowa Home Dickinson, June 10.—The body of W. J. Freed, 41, left Dickinson Tues- day for Webb, Ia., there to be buried in the family lot. Freed who died here Saturday after a two-weeks’ ill- ness with heart disease, was a mem- ber of the Dickinson State Teachers’ college faculty, having been in charge commerce department at the school. He came here two years ago from the University of Washington, where ! he received his Sachelor of Arts and Master of Arts degrees in commerce and administration. The state college remained closed | warden in taking the census. | have been at work for a week. Evangelical Leader Moves to Bismarck Rev. A. W. Heidinger, formerly of; Alice, N. D., has arrived in Bismarck to take up his duties as presiding lelder of the Bismarck district of the | Evangelical church and has settled with his family in the home provided for the district leader ct 1002 Avenue \C. He was accompanied to Bismarck by his wife and two daughters and has teken up the work of the church {in this area, which comprises the | western half of the state. Rev. Heidinger attended North Central college at Naperville, Ill, and {completed his scholastic work at the | University of North Dakota. Fargo Resident for 21 Years Succumbs Fargo, N. D., June 10.—(4)—John 8. Johnson, 53, died in his home Wed- | nesday from cancer. Mr. Johnson had been a resitient of | Fargo 21 years, coming here from Grand Forks where he established a home after crossing from Sweden 46 years ago. He long had been an auto mechanic and was vice president of the Jiffy Lubricator company of Fargo. Left are his widow and son, Ted, at home. There are four brothers, Carl in Oregon, Gus in Grand Forks, Au- gust in Fargo, and Alfred of Minne- apolis. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday. Rev. R. V. Conard. Con- gregational pastor, will officiate. More than $10,000,000 worth of livestock was hendled through the stockyards at Montgomery, Ala., dur- word in sanitation. The milk taken from each cow is weighed automa- tically, he said. Watt described the ice well which was installed on the farm and said use of these contrivances will help} many farmers increase their incomes since the difference between sweet and sour cream often is five cents a; Pound. An ice well will keep cream sweet for two weeks, he said. Guests at the luncheon were M. C. Freerks, Jamestown; Judge White- head, Baltimore, Md.; Peyton Evans, Washington, D. C.; John Thorpe, St. Paul; John Knauf, Jamestown; Judge | M. J. Englert, Valley City; L. R. Baird, Dickinson, and J. E. Davis, Bismarck. Sheridan County Farmer Succumbs Denhoff, N. D., June 10.—William Tagatz, who farmed near Denhoff for 10 years, died at his home Saturday morning at 2 o'clock. He had been in ill health for the last two years, | following a paralytic stroke in 1929. At the time of his death Mrs. Tagatz was nursing him. She retired | at 12:30 a. m. and awoke at 2:30 to} find that her husband had quietly passed away. : i Crystal Lake, Marquette county, | Wis, was William Tagatz’ former home. He was born there in 1861 and was married to Bertha Wah! at Neils- ville, Wis., Feb. 23, 1902. Mr. and Mrs. Tagatz moved to Sheridan county in the fall of 1921, the farm north of Den- sold their personal prop- moved to Montana in 1929 fall. | Mr. Tagatz left four children. They are: Mrs. Wm. Alms, Denhoff; Mrs. Julius Glaser, Tuttle; and Russell and Louise, both living at home. His mother lives at Berlin, Wis., and he also leaves four brothers, two sisters and grandchildren. Funeral services were held at Den- hoff conducted by the Rev. E. E. Eidb of Bowdon and Rev. H. A. Lintz of Denhoff. Inter- ment was made in the Denhoff cem- ing 1930. Can Strawberries Now 7 — for | Man Sentenced Cruelty to Animals Wahpton, N. D., June 10.—(7)— Because he laced wire through the fatty part of his cows’ necks, Joseph Sisorski is going to spend the next 15 days in the county Jail here. Arraigned before Wahpeton'’s ‘overall justice, Ed Fisher, he Pleaded guilty to a charge of cruelty to domestic animals and in addition to the 15-day term was fined $50. The charge against him was lodged by Arnold C. Forbes, Richland county state's attorney, who visited his farm near Fair- mount. After threading a wire through the throat fat of the animals, Sisorski fastened a large tin can on their shoulders, maintaining this kept them from going through fences. “Everybody does it in Canada,” was his defense, Mrs. R. L. Anderson Returns from France Mrs. R. L. Anderson, Bismarck, re- turned Monday from a trip to France. where she visited the grave of her Step-son, Captain O. L. Anderson, who is buried in the cemetery at Soissons, about 68 miles from Paris. Mrs. Anderson made the trip in the! company of about 125 Gold Star Mothers, who were guests of the U. S.; government. Besides the visits to the cemeteries, the tour arranged for the party included a trip of avout 0 miles to some of the battle fields.| Among those visited were Relleau' Woods, Chateau Thierry and Rheims, | Mrs. Anderson said. FOREST FIRES FEARED Washington, June 10.—()—Lack of rainfall in the far west was said Wed- nesday by the forest service to have created a dangerous forest fire situ- ation. Several large fires have been reported in the Pacific northwest, California, Colorado and Montana. This is the season in which usually the greatest losses from fire occur. ‘NOW | EAT WHAT | LIKE,” POPULAR WOMAN DECLARES ping, stunting and dead stick landing | also were on the program. The flier's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Matheny, who reside here, were present at the celebration. | National Guardsmen gave a mili- | tary touch to the celebration as they took charge of policing the airport during the ceremonies. Last week, an inspector from the Department of Commerce, made a AIRPORT DEDICATED AS MATHENY FIELD ‘Home Town Flier,’ in Whose! , director in the recent Omaha. Neb. ji air races, is general manager of th Honor the Field:ts Named, sky show and has spent two weeks , Unable to Attend here making preliminary arrange- ments. Several thousand automoniles from Carrington, N. D., June 10.—(P)}— Moin ae While airplanes soared overhead, eee Neate ita als Carrington's new municipal airport | 2". points in the state were parked r | i was dedicated Wednesday as “Math- | in the space provided at the field. eny Field” in honor of a native son. | " ‘TERANS he Wl eoME| ee William Matheny, an officer in the; washington, June 10—(?)—More United States air corps, whose name | than 850 disabled World war veterans the air field now bears. He nad were invited guests Wednesday at the planned to come here for the cele-| white house garden party given an- bration from Marsh Field, Calif. |;uany in their honor. Following where he is stationed, but serious ill-! their usual custom, President and ness of his wife prevented him from: ) yrs Hoover will extend personal being present. greetings to each former man of Lieutenant Governor John Carr! sims Cabinet members and their gave the dedicatory speech and be-/ wives will assist in the reception, stowed the name on the field. Sen- ator Gerald P. Nye and Ole Elelson, Hatton, father of the late Car! Be?) | qu Efelson, also addressed the thousands | CARRINGTON'S NEW CAPITOL THEATRE Last Times Tonight 2:30-7-9 | 35c until 8 o’Clock fiction's strangest character—in the most thrilling and who came to the celebration. | Wool Bags and sensational. pic- Lieutenant Matheny won the Che-; ‘ ture of the year! ney medal in 1929 for performing the Twine bravest act accredited Fears Lead in the United States army air corps dur- ing that year. He displayed unusual For Sale heroism when his plane burst into Phone 406 flames and crashed in the jungle of Nicaragua. Although slightly injured | in the crash, he was seriously burned | in an effort to rescue his two com- panions. About 40 airplanes came here to participate in a huge airshow. Several air races were carried out, bomb drop- Northern Hide & Fur Co. 900 Front Ave. Bismarck, | | ile balloon busting, i] Furnace Cleaning We will vacuum clean your furnace with a Sturtevant Vacuum Cleaner, paint the castings, inspect the grates and smoke pipes, all for $3. All Repairs at Reasonable Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye ts an organ you can't afford to neglect. Prices Dr. H. J. Wagner net Phone 141 Offices Opposit G. P. eetpotel since 1914 French & Welch Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. Hdwe. Co. Nhe city will be host to the | KNIGHTS A Thrill and Laughter Riot! One after another, men and women all over the South and West are coming right out in public to tell others about this simple method to end indigestion and the gas, bloating, heartburn, headaches, etc., it causes. Just the other day, Mrs. Jewell Bainbridge, panier owner of the Browning Hotel, Oklahoma City, Okla., enthusiastically declared: “At last I have found real relief for indi- estion. 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