The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 12, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 1981 Clearing Up FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: hy Latest reports from Washington indicate that the case| He Who Laughs Last—! ' se an \ na PricrE cious seoariskh involving taxes on the estate of the late James J. Hill s ‘ ‘ fain S885 is about to be given to the public without the beating of , » h Established drums which usually attends a senatorial investigation, Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-| The matter popped into the public eye when Senator | ghee f eRe Saree the postoffice at Bismarck | Couzens of Michigan accused Attorney General William ond class mail . D. Mitchell of suppressing the facts and of failing to| * Geese D. Mann ...,.......:... President and Publisher) 44) the matter. after the estate had beaten the gov- News of Interest ‘ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ernment in its effort to collect inheritance taxes, i Daily by carrier, per year ......e.0+ Mr, Mitchell's answer was @ statement outlining the ° N D T wns Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) various happenings of the case from the time he, as a In e e 0 : Daily a por lest year ey private attrney, drew the trust document which caused : ’ . bri Bismar bribe all the rumpus, to the present, when Mr. Couzens is (By The Associated Press) Daily by mail ou Sooo! clamoring for action. New England—A delegation the ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year It is not altogether certain, on the basis of present a ining et Tee iy oon ‘pnd A aad Ae al cuiaa or Nee spas information, that Mr. Couzens is picking on the right asked that a community building be Teer sua a oye a % man when he accuses Mr. Mitchell—even if there really constructed. Members of the dele- q ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . is something wrong. This, of course, remains to be} gation that, if necersaty, & Member of Audit Bureaa of Circulation proved. Even if he does hold political office, the con- had ee ee stitution forbids finding a man guilty without trial or} no action. : i} Member of The Associated Press a hearing and Mr. Mitchell can be sure of a square deal i cilities i ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use| before the bar of public opinion, | P | lew Salem—Old timers of Mor- t ‘4 one "Slherviae ‘erodited Hd agin "alsd els Based on his own statement, Mr. Mitchell pursued the | ton and Grant counties attended 4 i 4 local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All) Only course open to an ethical member of the bar. He | the Old Settlers’ day cblebration Jowea_GLAbyS PARKER + i] rights of republication of all other matter herein are} had drawn the instrument under fire and hence; as! here. , - i ig! pul ots It’s no wonder that air-minded iH also reserved. Solicitor general in the office of John Garibaldi Sargent, nit bit 1 i ea people usually have a breezy manner. i then attorney general, he could not well take part in the leer — Diving, log rolling, tub} ' etna Lilt ctl ced Mandan case. It was up to Mr. Sargent to decide if an appeal esting, Eesketall ‘and otter contests \ will feature the third annual water |Sayg Control Must Foreign Representatives should be taken, as Mr. Couzens claims there should have carnival here on Sunday. The carni- ‘ SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS been. At this distance Mr. Mitchell cannot be blamed val is sponsored by the Town riers!) Come from Industry { (Incorporated) for whatever happened, regardless of whether the course club. Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. taken adequately protected the interests of the govern- —_ Washington, June 12.—(#)—Secre- CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON 1 of ¢ | tary Lamont told a group of lumber- _ Manning — School officers of | en ‘Thursday that “any control of ——— : Senator Schall of Minnesota has leaped into the fray Dunn county attended a mecting | inGustrital conditions must come from. The Welcoming Hand here Thursday. Superintendent ” with a statement excoriating Mr. Mitchell and demand- within industry itself.’ ' tends a welcoming hand to the Cos- a | H. O. Pippin, Stark county, con- | Wigan wna one thins Bismarck today ex! Mie ee ness and pro. | 28 his political blood. This adds interest to the matter | ducted a round table. Be even “DoE Caneel a i: ‘ mopolitan Club, a new ie acim wich Se sonny poe but only from the standpoint of making it a political) —a. President Hoover to study conditions , by We ; fessional men organized for the purposes o: ting the in./cicus attraction. ‘The enmity between Schall and Napoleon—Napoleon and Braddock |in the lumber industry and related f fulness and good will and to assist in promoting the M-/vetonen is one of the most famous in current politics Sent aes as Joint hostesses to the |industries, Secretary Lamont said H terests of this community. |and the onlookers may thrill to see the blind senator NVORMAE'S POGeCEG Chae er rae ane | mnere was no easy solution for present } The record which this club will make as the years roll attempt to hang the hide of his enemy on the fence. ota. Mrs. D. W. Crabtree, Rlienéne, |e ik tote ‘and is distinctly within the keeping | . W. » Ellen ‘The government can do little more i on remains beac nip. That the lo-| Th&t Mr. Mitchell seems disposed to deal with the President, presided. than collect and make available cur- | eciteesiy cuiitisand ta ig Assi ai a ta aditions|cA8® fTankly and without equivocation is a relief to! Wiis aie Seiad Tent thformation,” he continued, = ' ei most of us. Had he maintained silence or attempted to 3 count! tem was th " cessal of this thriving young int hea = ad Renae evade the issue we should have had the sorry spectacle Daily Health Service of fesget te by w. = hasan The fey be asrenicuch alas based upon the quality of local citizens who Jof a leading public official refusing or afraid to tell Passing ‘of Old Dobbin Bri Decli : state deputy superintendent of | that the better off everybody will be.” admitted to membership. decade, the service |th® ttuth to the electorate whose interests he 1s pre- \ Ings Decline in ee Instruction at the annual | | ‘The secretary Seal the opinion ost of the past decade, the service ler county a ie iumber lustry would at 4 peas ber sider t cereal ae sumed to serve. Glanders Disease school officers here, least have the “cold comfort” of life of every up-and-coming American city. There are Valley Fores and Now abiaAkn-cAcrerainiita: tv bes ronda ae other industries were in towns in North Dakota today where the only real expres-| p wsent stoover> analesies between Valley Forge| rai2Y DR MORRIS FISHBEIN | abscesoes are located. | Sometimes a | mado for a three-day boys’ and giris'| Athy sion of popular will on many subjects of interest i al and present economic conditions are being challenged by; aa Medical Association and breaks down, discharging a pro- | orton a ee dite is pee Plan F: 7 community, other than those given at bested a al-|Students of history. They claim that the president missed) |New York, June 12—For the last| , Most farmers think of glanders as/ fuse, sticky substance. If the disease |ciub members and boys between the|* ert ori LOUFS \ tained through clubs of this character. They stand 2" |the greatest comparison between those times and these.| time I have ‘ried to be a good Samar-|® disease affecting horses and mules, | attacks the lungs, it gives symptoms | ages of 12 and 20 years, accorolng ce In McLean County 44.%. ways ready and willing to give of their time, energy and : itan to some of the younger folk ob-| but occasionally it attacks human | like those of pneumonia, R. C. Newcomer, Morton money to boost for their home cities and for the state} It is pointed out with considerable logic that the| served roaming the streets. beings. It has been reported also in| Nowadays a diagnosis of glanders| agent, “ areal eraateieatae Reeth Dake hole, serene in the knowledge of accomplishment | evolutionists suffered at Valley Forge because of gov-| And I have found that trying to cats, rabbits, sheep, mice and various | is hardly likely to be made, unless the ‘ase ania -tn doreaae cation With tae nnd as we ee by the hope that the work done unselfishly) €rmental inefficiency. There were plenty of supplies| sive something away is one of the| Wild animals of the cat tribe, any icone Boss happens to occur! watford City—The third an- | west North Dakota Development as and uh pe javailable. Slow moving congress, states reluctant to| Most difficult and distressing adven- | OP affects | axcmneone who is constantly working} nus! Homemakers’ Achievement | sociation, has arranged for a series of eay atta eke Hine PORE. meet their quotas, profiteering, graft and dishonesty, hires one can undertake tn New work. aren tes preguastay ny shoot is i aera Pete teed bare Day was held here with a speak- | farm tours in McLean county June z . ‘ ‘| So gun-shy have the timid nati rs very serious in uman In welcoming the Cosmopolitanites to the ranks of Bis). -coraing to the author Rupert Hughes, were present in) of this metropolitan jungle -hecwes | animal, tt is now rarely seen in large | and most of the patients dle. ing ‘and entertainment program 18, 19 and 20. Local arrangements ‘The Tribune is mindful of the high pO) jungle -become featuring. Committees from 10 | were worked out by Count Agent A. marck service ae a pain Sarina oiehs | colonial He that they take flight, like frightened ee ote br horses have prac- ra the geet a rere Uke! clubs in the county were in |L. Norling. J. J. Schmid of Wilton + ee = ; | So 1931 finds @ surplus of food on every hand but no) Sazelles, at the mention of “some- | NiCHIy RASADpeatel. t- Come oe ee cs eeencs 08 | charge of the arrangements. is county chairman for the Greater already established here. Never has @ worthy project thing-for-nothing.” So often have in the years e past | stamping out the source of the in North a has a cold shoulder been | Way to make it available for the unemployed and hungry.| they heard tales of “sucker” rackets | Century, there were seven cases of| fection in the animal which trans- Dakota association while Cliff sought their wind se bier ie areni oer has any of| The crisis is really a problem of plenty. Government/ and “gyp” games, they cannot believe | S!anders in the wards of the Bellevue | mits it. Hence, it is recommended County Named After a alos ete seeped taroed beta me bakes ‘a united front for the best | Seems powerless to effect any solution and probably never! that a gift, proffered by a stranger, bons ase Rion a be rnaded siesta — hesarey by ee Alexander McKenzie] wit which is financed by ihermaee eh us can. People have come to believe that governments can| 28S No ties to it. They immediately é : cy . z - pail association. interests of Bismarck and its people. ae | begin to ask “What's the matter with | mers, a single case has not been seen.} stroyed and the stables thoroughly who scoff at the service | legislate prosperity, but in this crisis they are realizing] ito» oy they conclude, without ques-|. Glanders is caused by a germ | disinfected, includ! ‘all bh and Editor’s Note: The { ita ‘The tours are planned for the pur- renee ee aan anes “Babbits” and ascerting| ‘At certain inexorable laws control against the opera-| tion, that “there must be some catch | Known as the bacillus of glan-|watering buckets. All animals that| one of a series of articles dealing Protits trem fivestack “produsticn, clubs, dubbing their members “Babbits” and asrang tion of which congress and other governmental agencies| OF it wouldn't be free.” Gers, From three to five days after | have been exposed should be exam-j with the history of Nortt Dakota | Piovic.. We tmanviete livestock. spe that they “walk with their heads among the stars and) are impotent. Too often have gifts been caught | the germ gets into the body, the | ined for the infection and kept under} counties. faltat, anit os ie chia ni their hands condemned to money grabbing.” Some of| ° < wearing disguises, symptoms first appear. There are | observation until well past the time PROWESS ci ” in charge and will con- 4 ¥ folks make their livings by writing nasty things ——————— Not long ago, just to attract’ at- | the usual symptoms of infection, such | when there is any Mkelihood that the (By The Associated Press) gee ee ee eer 2 caniehe Early Prominence tention at the opening of a new film | 88 nausea, headache, vomiting, chills | infection may develop in them. McKenzie county—The county was| ‘he various farms. ; about these organizations. = nope fi utter! theater, a shrewd press agent proffer- | @nd some fever. A doctor who takes charge of such|named in honor of Alexander Mc-|,,18¢ schedule for the tour follows: ‘The fact that the service clubs of America can stand|, GOV: Roosevelt's presidential candidacy may suffer) oi fict Cass $5 gold pleces for $2.50| Quite soon, however, nodules ap-| cases treats them usually by the sur-|Kenzle, prominently identified with} T#w%sday, June 18—Max 10 a. m. at } Ted for ridicule and abuse and still grow and ‘Tom what some political experts call “early prominence.”| ang found no takers. Nor could he | Pear on the skin associated with in- | gical method of opening the abscesses |the development of the state, partic.|_¥- 7- Solberg farm, one-half mile such uncalled for miitely that they are based on a sound| 1 such contests it is not always the early bird that getsrgive $1 bilis away for 50 centde/ He | flammation of the lymphatic ducts|and draining away the infectious | ularly the Missourl Slope aud’ westera ela ne ohgerecy Coomera ped prosper proves definitely that they enacts, stale jthe worm. The “sooner” is usually regarded as a po-|did manage to draw a large crowd | and glands near the places where the | material. counties. The county is well watered Giftey roan aie zal! “its principle. All of those organized in Bismarck, j MB titical stalking horse. and two police came over to investi- by the Missouri river. Lignite coal is| hatnc. 4pm. at W. O. Hultbes the Cosmopolitan, are of the selective membership type. de . {gate what sort of swindle was going] paring to swing a fist and gave me TODAY 1S THE-/ found in abundance and timber is farm, saat nll gel ge ad i ‘The representation from any industry, business or pro-| Mr. Roosevelt's friends may be sincere in launching) on, a blunt “How do you get that way? G plentiful along the rivers and creeks. Priday, aie ib Uinaacereonst or-| his boom so early and again his foes may be killing him eke What do you think I am—a sucker?” The county seat is at Schafer, the gio i fession is limited and the result is to bring into one i ‘ br m,, at John Johnson farm, two and | off by the “early prominence” route. Others have been] My own adventure went like this:} I thought he was, but didn’t say so. name being selected as a tribute to & hy v4 anization men with varying experiences, training ant legs each the father of one-half .miles northwest; Falkirk 8 a | disposed of in that manner and it is a trick of the prac- About a week ago, hurrying toa thea-| It was now too late to do anything ie Gov. George F. Shafer. 1:30 p. m. at Ole Holtan’s farm, one | outlook. They see a given proposition from many an tical solttiet ter, I found that I had an extra pair | about it. We were passing a hotel. I ad ianeshaat snlienaicatioaal: Wyaitic often from conflicting viewpoints and hence are enabled | tical politician. : of tickets in my pocket. It was but | figured the doorman saw lots of peo- Railroad Groups to burn-Wilton at W. J. Sickert form: 10 to determine its strength and weakness. As the New York Times has aptly put it: “the for-/@ few minutes before curtain time, | ple coming and going and could “set miles southeast of Washburn and ‘The spirit of comradeship and good will engendered by] tunate are those who like Bryan or Harding, come sud-| quite, too pedo cal up a friend, So aor uae, eon bopeeers RUSSIA'S ASSEMBLY Hear Senator Nye| fortnwest of Wilton. these clubs is important in the development of sound bus-) denly to the nomination.” | “The first pair of youngsters we|clothes and top-hat came out. ‘The On June 12, 1917, a council of 61 Montevideo, Minn, panpeiee F, Serday, pig reeled Lake a ness ethics and pleasant commercial relationships. No| The recent governor's conference at French Lick started pass who look as though they would | doorman handed him the tickets. The | members under the presidency of | ,eoulendee, Minn. June 12—(P)— pe prising Vlg geal ory one, least of all the members of these clubs, will contend! political speculation. Pinchot, Ritehie and Roosevelt| Abpreclate tickets to a good show will jman tipped his top hat and thanked | Kokashkine, a member of the Dum, | Nortn patota, will apeak at the Mom | Grace tase tee wiles ae, ( that membership works @ metamorphosis in any member.! occupied prominent places in the prospective presidential sir goog acroutis anagus seg es ine tet mananes ba OY peli “|tevideo Community picnic sponsored : | 6 ‘There is no hard and fast mold for the good service elu®/ timber row. The political correspondents lined them uD| girl friend went by. ‘They were plain-| “You know, of course, that this is| _ This assembly met not only to dratt |PY the Associated pidge resin opr pred etherd | member and a man who 1s mean, petty and vain need/and there was the usual ballyhooing and snapping of{ly dressed and seemed to be looking | theatrical hotel and I'get passes to Russia's permanent constitution, but | H0ot Flag Day tribute will be paid by| per cent this year. ee not expect to become a paragon of personal and civic! cameras for of such stuff is the American political game./St the passing crowds with hungry | dozens of shows, but I did want to | slso to solve certain immediate prob-| _ A Tine Dey tribute will be pe Past fs virtue the minute he is admitted to membership. | eyes, There was every reason to be- | catch this one.” lems, the chief of which were the national chaplain of the pee hay rf) a . mente 4 help in imeroving lieve they would appreciate a couple| So I have given up—dozens of peo- | questions of nationalities and the Legion. The Zurah Temple band and CALL FOR BIDS But he does have a right to expect help pt General Douglas MacArthur convinced the president| of good $3 theater tickets. ple who seldom go to shows had turn- | Conditions of the transfer of the lands | (ihO%, | Me er eaatis. will’ te himself. In these clubs he comes into contact with lead-!i15¢ the mec! uni aed ‘a sy | My wife and I stopped them, and|ed me down and when, I finally gave | of the nobles to the peasantry. enol take! Notice is hereby given: That sealed echanizes y should retain a few horses e part in the program. Special trains in the various fields of endeavor in his city. If he is fi after a brief explanation I said, “And | the tickets away, it had to be a fellow| In the preparatory council sat a 4 bids will be received at the office of ers and mules for special purposes. The careless second oe rh ” of tional are to be run from Minneapolis and|C. L. Young, secretary of the Board inclined to be pompous, someone is pretty sure to stick a since I cannot use them, you're wel- | already on the “deadhead” lists. group constitu specialists, | i erdeen, ot Directors of the Bismarck Public Tf he is inclined to be proud, hi fitsde| Seen’ muey, lave @ichanneior-two:ot being steP>) comms to hon GILBERT SWAN. _| also deputies from the army and from . Library, at his office in the Birat Nac pin into him. If he is inclined to be proud, he soon eS] ped on in action. The youth looked at the girl. ‘The| (Copyright, 1931, NEA. Service, Inc.) | all the political parties, representa- Fane onal peek Bale ne An eee eltycoe occasion to ask himself what it is of which he is proud. girl giggled. The youth edged away, tives of Jews, Ukrainians, Foles and} Three Nicaraguan than ten‘o'clock a. m..on June 11th, It he is petty he cannot help but grow when he comes N} rye poston Herald descries “Jn epidemic of State| Nd with a sort of challenge, demand- | CONVINCES ROBBER OF FOLLY | other races and also a representative Guards A: $114.4 | 1931, such bids to be for the paint- tact with broad-gauge men. b i ed: “What's the idea?” I tried to} New Toronto, Ont., June 12—(@)—|of the women, the famous feminist, uards Are. Killed) ins ‘ofthe chitaren's room and ‘hall i . ool for|S0n8s:” Where are the Minnesota State songs of yester-| say that there was no “big idea”... .|A man approached 8. F. Chamberlain, ! Mme. Shishkin Yavein. — Sabie Tie ih ec And so the service club becomes @ training sc year? but they were gone, and I was at- {manager of a branch of the Bank of| An important reform proclaimedon| Managua, Nicaragua, June 12—(#) | seeiicat era en Tne Se Tee wee hi lose (P) its members as well es an organization where cl tracting attention. Montreal, threatened to shoot to kill] this day was the introduction of the /—Three men of the Nicaraguan na-|the librarian in the Bismarck Public friendships ere formed and where benefits to the com- “Til try again,” I, sald to my wife |if there were outeries, and demanded] small unit of local self-government, tional guard were killed, another was| brary, building. || Ste munity are contrived. Many a member of Bismarck’s Piatt as we turned a corner. all the cash. Chamberlain suggested | in which all classes piste ging’ fatally wounded and a fourth less|is hereby reserved. service organizations has found in himself capabilities of Editorial Comment 5 oe He ey ee ee oe ee tater ail mamiere of te | one ee mnne nebdas 0.8 ro] © Dated shies, 10F5, das of Tune, 1821, before his enti into one of A large and awkward-looking young | money was being obtained. He point- | f r emperor and of the | with insurgents six trom Ji » L YOUNG, Secretary, which he never dreamed before his entrance into one ea cree | man was standing on a corner staring |ed out what had befallen recent bank! imperial family the privilege of vot-|it was disclosed 4 Bismarck Public Library. these clubs. by other editors, They are publighed wi hont eeery || at the bright lghts. A girl clung|robbers and urged the visitor to ask; ing Lieutenant Everett Ross, in com- 6/10-11-12 i On the basis of worth to the individual, then, as well|| to whether they agree or disag ye with The Trib- wy to hus arm. They looked like BB fens for ep an his trouble. pong the detachment, also was Norrow a \ orth ity, th ‘lubs hi oved une's polici visitors. The visitor accept a 10-dollar bill q lout wounded. The insurgents’ eA am nee) Sovsne. ooepsn el. ese ce Daye. Be So I tried again. The big fellow|and left. Search for him then was Quotation: casualties were not known. themselves valuable. The welcome and gbod wishes to backed away as though he was pre- | futile. o Btate of: North Dakota, County of = . NEE 1 tak; the Cosmopolitan Club, extended by Bismarck residents, cone Cures pin gape a Burlelgh-—In District Court, Fourth hich lubs , ie Manufacturer) ‘When people Ben C. Larkin, Fay Harding and C. are ee ee mae upon which the c! | As President Hoover recently pointed out, tax reduc talk .—Clarence Darrow. BARBS ea MoDonnell, as, the Board of airesay me {tion must bea vial element in any program for maces) TALIS CURIOUS WORLD [ss , Bealeoss 5 Gammceioners., ofthe and economic stabilization. Either we have got to prevent trusts! A Hollywood actress has insured| v8: Wheat Growers’’ Warehou Wages and Standard of Living This is not to say that high taxes alone were re- Ee ee ‘3 and monopolies or regulate them.—| her fingers for $100,000. Which is Combany, @ Corporation, Respond- In these days when business is faced with the grim | sponsible z tat, oe liggase many, divergent, : U. 8. Senator a a aia rather a high price for a couple of| The Board of Railroad Commiasion- } ame. ut it is almost axiomatic that ers of the State of North Dakota hav- necessity of reducing overhead costs to combat depleted employment and business cannot return to normal if they I. would steal before I would starve. Pope raoe x kk [ine by order of the District Court Fevenues, some federal officials and so-called national) are burdened with a staggering and constantly growing —Daniel Willard. A maturing Chicago boy doesn't] North’ Dakaie: withiqe am fet obs economists are making the adjustment doubly hard by| weight of taxation. > we & complain so much about growing|County of Burleigh, dated May 2nd, agitating higher wages and shorter hours “to increase) It is unfortunate that in times of stress, many foolish, The growing congestion of the! pains as he does Winer een gabpointed as ttustes of ahs although well-meant, panaceas are offered and some- cities prevents constantly new prob- ee a CorppretiD, ant’ ealtout Bake 4 n of ank of the University of Wiscon-| times are tried. All of them, in one way or another, cost Jems of physical and mental train- a staggers a victim] Warchouseman’ doing business at President Glenn Fr: of the University o! the people money, and sometimes, for a single experi- ing of children on one hand, and the} with a bullet, that is also ‘and Adrian, Alfred, Baldwin, Beulah, Bur- sin, Secretary of Labor Doak, Raskob, Ford and others) ment, the cost goes into hundreds of millions, ‘The in- growing lelsure by shortened hours! reel sport. Springs, Dawson, Dickey, Bung Gea equally as prominent are advocates of this theory. How! evitable result is higher taxes. , Thus the ostensible cure of labor presents increasing problems eee ter, Eckelson, ' Bdgel Eldridge, A \ business is going to induce prosperity by this sort of|for depression becomes » barrier in the path of pros in provisions of opportunity for the} Dorothy thinks that an architect | =J#sher, Forman, Fort Clark, Gackle, bl a | perity. ’ Proper use of increasing leisure for| should be a much traveled man be- | p22"@ Rapids, Hazen, Hazelton, H i magic they do not explain clearly. How the average bus-/ % ! bron, Killdeer, Linton, Marion, Mé fe, er Sen pocket the| . When government goes in for artificial and expensive ‘adults.—President Hoover. cause he takes in all the sites. dina, South Heart, Spiritwood, ‘Stal iness man can hoist himself by his own eer, economic respirators #t almost always does far more harm * * & ee * ton, ‘Steele, Streeter, Tappen, Win distinguished Frank and the other adherents of this) than good, Being a king, I have discovered, is) In trying times there is no class mont Boies SG Bioford, Berge theory fail to state. They announce empirically—raise on not the fun it once was—Richard ; there are the idle poor|more, Flora, Hannaford, Hensel, Hes- ‘wages, shorter hours, lower ees and os pou ben Cancelling. Alife Deris as well as the ee Mohail Nilge, Perk fiver Me ee omic process will be mor: ess, er profits an mi lette, Souris, St. Joe, lum, = economic pri more bt igger pr Again to ae CN Re eek “y comes out all|halla, and Westhope’ North walote: ee ies man who is struggling to keep a few laps/ Hon of the war debts which various European countries bg sdicameaaas Biotic abe by, given to the own owe the United States. 5 ers and-holders of grain. st 5 spent of his payroll or the sheriff reads May Laat with Rilgie Bay, bea ale excuse Read fue sanceration at M : (Copsright, 1991, NEA Mervice, Inc.) pelts and cash sllpy ar cnacke given @ well-grounded cynicism and arrives at the general con- Ime because ot financial condition the var- Dak ri “ clusion that these distinguished educators and economists | !0uS debtor nations, with the possible. exception of| ©'?"ermesenmceme | FRE TZE Ur SENTENCED TO CASS JAIL | pany ‘ana/ot be wetd eee Com are talking through their hats. If the businessman is|**@Nce. England and other countries have funded their w. ee ie ete secie)—BeaDey waretouseman for fF On Sccount of debts promising to pay them in @ period of years, and . 5 polis, was sen- | S7ain vig: unpaid or un- Wise, he hastens to set his industrial house in order, cuts! they probably have arranged their budgets with this in the | 2nced to six months in the Coss) ot Railroad ‘Commissioners “oF are salaries and overhead to meet present conditions. view. France has been the chief exponent of debt can- Seay ia by Federal Judge Andrew ‘ It is not a pleasant job to cut and slash salaries, but cues, yet France is ina aoe pone than all the ‘Miller for using the mails to defraud, J : ‘ to pay her war ob! 5 2 Gespite President ‘Hoover's admonitions to keep them up,| ther nations f < HURT IN ACCIDENT insolvent for or at there is hardly an industry that has not done some wage abe conditian ot SER karate ree Ppa: Forks, N. D., June 12.—()—| 8° stored with it, within ‘ninety Sd eutting—and more is in the offing. Present time is such as to eliminate any chance of can- celling what the other nations owe us. It is evident that Living costs have gone down. Wage cuts to meet these| the Treasury deficit will amount to over a billion doilars reductions will not lower the standard of living. There! this year, and it seems rather unfair to ask the American ‘will be less installment buying and everyone will get back on @ sounder basis. That adjustment has got to come before the upward trend will start. New York is ‘people to make further sacrifices for a war which ended eleven years ago. . The nations of Europe which owe us money appear not to be economizing in armaments and in the erection Of fortifications. If they wanted to do a good turn for another commonwealth that is thinking|® nation which helped them they could economize on Grand Hywell C. Rowland, head of the music department at the University of North Dakota, and three others from the school escaped with minor bruises when their) car overturned near Huron, 8. D. ——_—____ STUTSMAN HOMEMAKERS MEET Jt ) N, D., June 12—(7)— About 200 members of the Stutsman the last publication of this n tice is further siven that un! such grain storage rei " slips and-checks are so. surrendered to said Board of Ratlroad ‘Commi: sioners within said time, th and holders thereof will ry, eg id Board of Rail (Gommissioners as trustee of said ine solve: ‘k, North Dakota, 1931, Dated at Bismai , their military and naval expenditures. It might be this 27th : of adopting s state bird. So far the swallow hasn't, been | {Rei milter ees let 9 county Homemakers club met in the Board. of: Halon Garngiestoners, i consideration. noe; ie Bin 7 given any military purposes it did before the World war. thelr annual achievement day.) |. ey} 5/29; 6/513 Secretary

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