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i a H \ | The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER stablished 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........ $7.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- marck) Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck. . 5.00 Daily by mail outside o! rth Dakota ... see 6,00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years . wee 2.50 Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .:.... . 150 Weekly by mail in Canad: rT WERE dN ecw. ssi 500 + 2.06) Member of 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 news- paper and also the local news of! spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON) The Silver Lining blackest and the outlook stormiest, it | seems impossible that there could be| a silver lining, and yet it almost al-| ways is there. As an example we might cite the| | 4 {0 Sometimes, when the clouds soa thrift policy full of holes. The fed-| eral Children’s Bureau is secking “to) correct” and prevent the “child miser.” Little brother or sister who puts all her pennies in the bank is no longer a shining example or head- jed for a hall of fame. Here's the {mew decalogue } 1. Give the child a regular fixed allowance; teach him not to beg and tease for additional money. 2, Let him learn by experience that denial must follow extravagance. { 3, Teach the child not to expect |pay for duties he ought to perform. Encourage him to earn extra money by giving him a real job, pref- lerably one which had real commer- cial value. Pay him no more and no Jess than it is worth. 5. Be sure ‘any work he does out- side the home is not physically harm- ful and does not expose him to wrong influences. 6. Don’t “tip” the child for render- ing small services to his elders or for being “good” or polite. 7. Teach the child the value of saving for a definite purpose instead of for the “mere sake of saving.” Let him learn the folly of spending all his money at once and of going into debt to buy something he wants. 8. Teach him that saving things that cost money is as important as ving money. 9, Help the child to realize the im- portance of giving as well as of spending and saving, 19. Remember that the example of financial responsibility parents set will influence the child's attitude. Worth Observing When the New Salem Dairy Circuit ‘ed its twenty-first birthday an- ry recently, Superintendent H.! | viled 22 points of interest | about the organization and set them forth in a little booklet outlining the; achievments of the organization, experiences, past, present and to come, | of the people in the drouth-stricken sections of Arkansas. A year ago, it will be remembered, the outlook there was as black as it possibly could be. The corn, cotton | and tobacco crops had shriveled up under the blazing sun. A country| which usually is blessed with plenty | of rainfall had received no rain. ‘The | condition was that which comes to | mombers every district which finds itself sim-| ilarly situated and with which we are | not wholly unfamiliar in this section. And yet, benefits came from that) condition which will be felt in Ar-| kansas for many generations. The} beneficial effects of that situation| may create stronger and sturdier bodies for the generations to come; more active minds and new ambition. | How? We quote from the Red Cross Courier, magazine of the na-} tion’s great eleemosynary organiza- tion: “Were an absent native of these agricultural sections to return home for the first time since the drought, he would be amazed the new aspect of the familiar fields and river bottoms, In ad of cottcn growing up to the very doorstep of the shacks that house the share-croppers, and the corn and alfalfa crowding close into the dooryards of the tenant-farm- ers, innumerable stockades of bleached oak palings would rivet his attention. These are strewn by the thousands throughout the countryside. Every such row of stakes indicates a vegetable gar- den. Squares and triangles and zigzag rows of carrots, beans, { lettuce, tomatoes—a profusion of vegetables, the very names of which were heretofore alien to many of those who are now rais- ing them, vary the unbroken lines | of corn and the waving sea of cotton plants. “With something of the eager- ness of children exploring Christ- mas stockings, these farmer folk are awaiting the revelations that the harvest will bring. “What does a carrot taste like?” was a question frequently asked of Red Cross nutritionists who all through the period of drought relief in- culcated the principles of bal- anced food selection to those the Red Cross was feeding. “Often a whole family may be | seen eagerly inspecting the first squashes to be raised in their community, or cautiously tasting the first ripe tomato they have ever set their teeth into. Food habits are being revolutionized by the Red Cross gardens with a speed made possible in no other manner, for the rural dweller is not easily won over to new diets or even novel ways of preparing familiar rations.” The seeds for the gardens were furnished by the Red Cross, but think of the lasting benefits. Children who kasw only hog and hominy now are becoming familiar with tomatoes and succulent greens. They are learning what carrots taste like. And most important, they are getting, for the first time, the foods children should Shades of Benjamin Franklin Some psychologists in an educa- “Subjective spank- ing,” was mentioned and other kinds of corporal punishment were touched upon. They left the problem un- as usual, but there seemed to be @ concensus of opinion that no the tender age of four be spanked at all and i jmore th dairying will grow. On the theory that the proof of! the pudding is in the eating, these| records are of more than passing in. tere They show what actually has | been done by North Dakota farmers, | » wo! ig under a e North Dakota Leisure, like property, has its pit- falls—Ray Lyman Wilbur. Quotations We are trying in the age of the! against electric light to teach national eco-| Henderson, British foreign secretary. nomic progress with a candle—Nich- lolas Murray Butler. * * * * Oe OK Infancy {s a period of beatitude, | | Lowell, * * * | each in its proper time—A. Lawrence|troduce a personal note—a note which, in the case of some tenants, one could do very nicely without.— Tariff walls are the worst sinners} Elsie McCormick. economic _welfare—Arthur * * * ** * Any place where a man has done good piece of work is a good place.— Prohibition is like a divorce case—| Oskar Strauss, |both sides are right—Mabel Walker | Willebrandt. * * * *k * This has been called an age of en- Perhaps it might better be In an apartment house elevator the| called an age of firemen and stokers. and so are childhood and youth; but | removal of a mans’ hat seems to lS Bernard Iddings Bell, gineers. condition, not what might be done or what it would be possible to do if con- ditions were just a little different. Here are the facts for 1930 as d by Mr, Puss, In 1930 the 15 of the circuit produced 1,448,558.7 pounds of milk containing 56,149.4 pounds of butterfat which sold for $18,188.49. The average value of butterfat per member wa: $1,212,571 the highest $1,687.91 and the lowest $820.86, The total profi above cost of feed was $11,845.71 and| the average profit per member was! $789.71. The average cow gave 8,779.1 pounds of milk which contained 340.4 pounds of butterfat. It required] $38.44 to feed this cow and she re- turned a profit of $71.79. In addition, the total receipts for surplus stock Sold from the circuit were $2,030.50, making the total receipts for the cir-/ cuit $20,218.99 and the average total return per member to $1,347.93. An analysis of the production on the circuit, as shown by the record: discloses that five cows produced n 500 pounds of butterfat each; 11 produced more than 450; 21 more than 400 and 28 more than 350; 50 more than 300. There are 15 herds in the circuit and each of them aver- aged more than 300 pounds of butter- fat per cow, while six herds averaged more than 350 pounds of butterfat per cow. This is a record which sj itself. As it becomes better known and the results are made manifest by the improved situation of the farmer members of the circuit, interest in 2 for Ni ing succeeds like success and nothing is more quickly imitated. Editorial Commen to whether they e with The Tribune's pol The Reaper’s Centenary (New York Times) It would be idle to contend that the invention of the reaper by Cyrus H. McCormick, just a century ago, was! alone responsible for the new agri- cuitural order. Yet to him belongs the credit of having wrought a mir-| 2 acle comparable with that which fol- lowed the application of the steam| engine in industry. Before he made | his dramatic demonstration in the} Valley of Virginia in July, 1831, farm- | ing was the occupation of four out of | five Americans, Today less than 25 Per cent of our population is so en- gaged. In the last decade 3,500,000 have drifted to the cities. And still oe grow more wheat than we can sell. To hail McCormick as the pioneer of reaper inventors is to belie the an- nals of invention. A hundred me- chanics had preceded him. But it remained for him brilliantly to or- ganize in a machine elements sep- arately invented but never before ef- fectively combined, The story of the reaper is therefore the story of the steam engine, the telegraph, the air- Plane—of an evolution. There is a time for the birth of an invention as there is for the birth of a great lead- er. McCormick appeared on the scene just when the rich soil west of the Alleghanies was ready for the plow. Had he never been born the reaper would inevitably have been created. What singled McCormick out from the impractical dreaming class to which we owe our technical advances was business genius. He ranks with Vanderbilt, Hill, Carnegie and Ford. In 15 years he made himself a mil- Honaire, even after his patent had ex- Pired. Yet he was more than a mere money-maker. He saw himself an in- strumentality of Providence, charged with the duty of changing the whole character of agriculture and with it) : the living habits and economie status ine to be feared in the Occident, AMIN Ga AT | Thearts BEGIN HERE TODAY LIANE BARRETT, 18 and beau- tiful, lives In 2 cramped New York apartment with her mother, CASS BARRETT, o rather faded net On a hot ner with MO! nd a at nerives and persundes SHANE Me- DERMID, the you iceman in ren han apenks her name. Willow Stream, has an engagement in'a small ry works In the hox offlee, duties with MURIEL LAD ® Murfel’s mother have nothing more to do witl him. Mrs, Cleespaugh asks C1 fe Liane atay with the winter. Muriel goes dancing one night with CHUCK DESMOND, debonal Van lieving they have eloped, He takes Linne with hi tells her packs to retar end of the season and NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XI He room was long and low-ceil- inged and it seemed to Liane to be packed with ugly, comfortable mahogany furniture of the Victo- rian age. Mrs. Cleesbaugh’s big old house proved to be a curious dwell- ing. “Mother’s dining room is pure Borgia,” Clive told her that first day, with affectionate amusement in his voice. Liane had had to agree. The great, black, worm eaten oak table with its huge poly- chromed candlesticks and the dark, réd velvet curtains looped back from the windows, seemed out of place so near to the hall with its Chinese lacquers and gold tea box paper on the walls. Strange, strange house! Yet Liane rather liked it. It was ugly and rich and comforta- ble. Her own room pleased her. The great bed had a priceless lace coverlet over rose satin, There was a puffy rose-colored down comforter. Not at all the sort of thing the young girl would have chosen but luxurious in a heavy sort of way. “I’m dreaming,” she said, sitting up and blinking as she regarded the breakfast tray which Nora, one of the deft, well-trained maids, had set down on the inlaid table. Mrs. Cleespaugh had five maids, all Irish girls. The breakfast tray was very mod- ern, set with thin, sprigged china dishes-in pink and white. The cov- ered dish held golden toast. The fat little pink jar had honey in it. The tall, crystal glass was filled with orange juice. The bulbous pot poured out a thin, amber stream’of inviting coffee. “Luxury!” sighed the young girl, throwing her cheap challis dressing gown over her shoulders and slip- ping her narrow feet into wel worn brocaded mules. She dashed to the bathroom where she splashed and showered, returning quickly to that alluring morning repast. Nora ‘had drawn the shades, shutting out the insistent September sun. Liane thought with a pang, “How Mother would have loved this!” The, “Liane ‘Tooked up thought made the delicious food almost bitter for an instant. see Y lpr being young, she forgot that guilty feeling and pro- ceeded to enjoy herself wholly. Mrs. Cleespaugh had said autocrat- ically, “I never come down to break- fast. Never appear before eleven in fact. Perhaps you'd like to have a tray in your room?” Liane had agreed that that would be delightful. Demure she had been. Quiet and tractable as be- came the young companion of an aristocratic old lady. “I'm going to be happy here,” Liane decided suddenly with one of those rare flashes of prescience which come occasionally to all of us. Why she believed that she couldn’t have said. Nevertheless she did. She got into her old, crisp white linen presently. Her dark hair was damp from the shower. It curled and shaped itself delightfully un- der her skilful fingers. “Poor girls are the ones who should be born with @ natural wave,” Liane re- flected, thankful this was so in her case. “It's only the rich ones who can afford a hairdresser once a week.” She went down into the study where she began her morning task of straightening out the accounts, sorting mail, slitting the envelopes which she knew contained bills. Her convent training stood her in good stead. She had been taught to be neat, methodical, orderly. She was clever at figures and she wrote a clear, feminine script. “Honestly there isn’t enough to keep anyone really busy,” the girl thought as her slim fingers worked busily, surely, among the papers on the old walnut desk. She was puz- sled at Mrs, Cleespaugh’s desire to have her there, “It’s probably more aerate the aerial stuntster. of adventures, stantly in tions. the little town of Johnston, N. home town papers.” life of New York for many a year. near-by subway entrance, {is being said about them. CELLIOTT 1931 by NEAY, ERVICE INT «<by\MABEL Not exciting probably but good, de- pendable. She hoped, quite grave- ly, that Elsie hadn't trifled with his young affections. Elsie had a way of doing such things, Mrs, Cleespaugh rustled in on the stroke of 11, Her white hair was piled high. She was majestic in Ulac-colored swiss, her lorgnette dangling from a thin platinum chain. “Good child, to get through all that stack,” she approved, flicking the pile of checks and sitting dewn to sign them. “I thought we'd drive to Easthampton for luncheon, It’s sticky, isn’t it? Has my son Dut in an appearance yet?” Liane told her Clive had gone up to change. “Ah, then perhaps he'll join us,” said the old lady in a tone of quiet as Cle, dripping in his tennis flannels, stepped through the French window that gave on the ag terrace. because she’s lonely than for any other reason,” she decided. Their afternoons were given over mostly to driving. If her employer was very tired Liane read to her in the late afternoon. If there were visi- tors Liane poured tea. Sometimes jhe worked in the rose garden, snipping leaves, spraying the bush- es with a villainous mixture. In the morning, too, she was expected to replace the blooms in the draw- ing room and study with fresh ones, This was a joy, not work, really. Yes, was happy here, ee AD yet there was a restlessness under Liane’s quiet content- ment. She had the feeling she was waiting, watching for something to happen. “Hello,” said a quiet voice. She looked up. Clive, the son of the: house, dripping in his tennis flan- nels, stepped through the French window that gave on the terrace, “Hot!” he said sighing and wip- ing his forehead. “Heard from Elsie?” he wanted to know. ees Liane frowned. “I had a letter— let's see?—on Monday, from Bos ton,” she said. “From Mother. She sald Elsie threatened to write me soon. They've been gone just a week,” she reminded him. “Yes, I know.” His tone sounded careless, but as he went on, with a smile and nod for her, she couldn’t help wondering. How deep had bis flirtation with Blsie gone? The actress was besutiful in a lush, ripe way. “She's the sort,” Liane thought artlessly, “that men must go simply mad about.” This par- ticular young man seemed so shy, so reticent, one couldn’t guess how’ seriously bis feelings were in- volved. “He's nice,” she decided. Yes, that was exactly the word for Clive. . satisfaction. “By the way, my dear, I haven’t given you your salary check yet. I think it would be bet- ter, perhaps, if I arranged to make that a weekly matter.” “Salary?” Liane stammered. “But I thought—Mother understood my living was enough.” “Nonsense!” said Mrs. Clees- paugh disdainfully. “You're being @ most efficient secretary. Certain- ly you're to have a salary. How does $30 a week seem to you?” “It seems magnificent!” faltered the young girl, almost overcome. Why with that she could do magic things! She could save, put by a nest egg for her mother. She could buy herself new gloves. And her shoes were shabby. Perhaps—she flushed painfully at the thought— perhaps Mrs. Cleespaugh had no- ticed that fact. E old lady was observing her shrewdly. “You're earning it, my dear, I assure you,” she with satisfaction, “No qualms are necessary.” Mrs, Cleespaugh touched a bell rope. When the fresh-faced Irish girl in her apple green uniform and crisp, ruffily apron appeared, the ‘woman said, “Tell Mr. Clive I wish to see him when he is ready.” “He's out by the stables, Ma’am,” the rosy girl reported in a few mo- ments. “Wan of the mares has a distemper, and Mr. Clive says don’t know will he be able to come for a bit, he’s that busy.” Mrs. Cleespaugh rapped her eye glasses sharply on the gleaming desk, “Tell him I said to come at once. It's frightfully important.” Liane was disturbed. She had never seen the old lady in this mood. Perhaps this manner of his mother’s explained the young man’s sudden shynesses, his hesitations and withdrawals, Liane sat quiet, hardly daring to lift her eyes. “Want to see me, Mother?” The girl looked up to see Clive, atill in his damp and crumpled tennis things, standing in the doorway. “I certainly did. I want you to dress and lunch with us. We haven't a minute to spare. Leave the animal to Kelly and hurry.” The old lady’s voice was impera- tive, Clive said, unperturbed, “So that was it! Sorry, I am not lunching with you today.” turned on his heel. His jaw had taken on a hard Une, His voice crackled. “Clive, did you hear me?” He wheeled\and now Liane saw from behind her veiled lashes that: bis blue eyes were blazing. “I heard and I'm going,” he rapped out. “No scenes, please. I’m a bit weary of them,” He was gone, “Bravo!” Liane applauded him in her heart. Yet she felt sorry for the old woman, who sat, staring at New Yor , July 8—This is the open season for the transatlantic flyer and And when you read of a couple of gents who reached Paris, Berlin, Russia or Turkestan, give some credit to a certain Dr. Kimball, who rarely appears in accounts of the exploits. ‘Dr. Kimball is the gent who shoots the starter’s gun. He's the chap who informs them if and when they can best take off. Among the old-timers Kimball known as “the patron saint of flyers.” He is the fellow who studies the storm zones and the winds and the weather in general and, bat) eng offices, keeps the anxious flyers con- touch with flying condi- Last winter @ testimonial banquet was held for him in a, New York hotel and everyone from Lindy to Cham- berlin to Bernt Balchen turned out with proper remarks i appreciation. * * ‘The small town aspects of New York often have been made the sub. jects of columns. But only the other day did I learn that one of the big city’s best known bits of local color had been introduced by a lad from Y¥. ‘This is the newspaper stand at ‘Times Square where you “gc: your ‘This spot has been associated with the drama and Tales have been told of plain cloth- es policemen who slouched against a waiting patiently for a runaway girl, a small town embezzler, an errant wife or husband, a check forger or a missing lad. The theory has been that most folk who have disappeared for one reason or another, try to get copies of their home town paper t> see what At any rate, this famous stand at the “crossroads of the world” is the {Property of one Archie Hotaling, now j@ man well into his fifties, who got the bright idea many a year ago. He had gone out to the St. Louis Exposition and, noting the number of persons from all sections of the na- ii AE AT g is Women Suffer From * BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American ” Medical Association coming sicians could be practitioners with the equipment @ handbag. which they must be prepared. pared the rates for disease among men and women as determined by the examination of 12,618 people. The women included workers of all types, housewives, clerks in stores and those serving in the various pro- fessions. Many of the conditions from which the women suffer are ‘connected with childbirth. The rates are higher among women than among men for functional murmurs of the heart, neuritis, nervousness and ab- normal reflexes. Women have varl- cose veins more frequently than do men and also valvular lesions of the heart and enlargement of the heart. On the other hand, the only con-/ ditions in which there is a definite excess. in the rate for men are de- flected septums in the nose, thick- jening or hardening of the: arteries, defective hearing, frequent colds and pyorrhea. Just why men should have nose and throat troubles so: Daily Health Service Than Men x eK Many Conditions Connected With Childbirth Some years ago the Commission on Medical Education, after studying the cases in the practice of numerous general practitioners, came to the conclusion that 90 per cent of diseases to the attention of phy- handled by general amount of that could be carried in Statistical studies of dis- eases are important because they show physicians the kind of work for One organization which makes examinations of men and women at periodic intervals has recently com. More Serious Diseases ch more than women is of great interes + but the reason is not clear. When the figures for housewives were studied in relation to all of the women, it is found that they suffer more frequently from some conditions than do women in general. Since housewives are married to a far greater extent than are other women workers, the explanation lies in hed fact that the conditions concern are definitely associated with child- birth. Women have far more disturbances of the thyroid than do men. They complain much more of tenderness in the region of the gall bladder and Appendix. ‘So far as the age at which disease occurs is concerned, the ages in both groups seem to be the same. Sex differences in the occurrence of va- rious diseases are factors which in- terest physicians greatly, particularly in the matter of making a diagnosis, There was a time when certain dis- eases were limited almost exclusively to men, even those that did not affect tissues or organs peculiarly masculine, Since women have come to @ large extent out of the home and into in- dustry and into similar politically active positions, they begin to show disturbances which were formerly limited almost wholly to men. In the past the life expectancy of ‘women was in general greater than that of man at any given age, and among people living to 100 years of age there would usually be more women than men. Equality of effort and associated therewith equality of exposure makes it likely that in the future this distinction will not main- tain. tion, had started an out-of-town newspaper service. It worked so well that he decided later to try it out on the big town which gets hundreds of thousands of visitors from all parts of the nation. Something like a half a million @ year. brings a very neat income. * * * And speaking of the out-of-town- ers who set the pace for Manhattan, I am reminded that most of the so- called “actors’ boarding houses” in the west-of-Broadway section provide a camping ground for the thousands who come and go in search of the elusive engagement. A recent survey of one spot in the neighborhood of 48th street revealed that seven young hoofers, all dream- ing of billing at the Palace some fine day, represented, variously, Holyoke, Mass., Ashtabula, O., Terre Haute and Goshen, Ind., Danville, l., and Altoona, Pa. This is an extremely representative list—half a dozen ambitious young- sters, steering by the Broadway stars! They share each other's clean collars and suits, when they happen| to fit; even taking a fancy pair of shoes from a pal when starting out to look for a job) When one gets work, there's little something for the others until they can catch on. So it goes in the precarious show world. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service Inc.) GERMAN CRISIS On July 8, 1917, German political unrest due to popular dissatisfaction with the conduct of the war, had reached a crisis. Fremdenblatt on that day said: of the war. tem. In referring to Mathias Erzherger, nities and who criticized the German submarine policy and the blundering diplomacy which brought America into the war, the Fremdenblatt said: “Continuation of the submarine does not come into the question, not} + even so far as Erzberger is concerned. The question is of revising the war} aim formula somewhat on the lines demanded by our Social Democrats.” BARBS of bustling aviation activity. * * * “shut-down.” * * %, should keep it to himself. ** * The only difference between a golf- er and the new balloon ball is that STICKERS it is the former who goes up in thé alr. * * * After the war debt situation 1s mulled over statesmen, we suppose, will be holding their post-mora- toriums. * * papers are sold during the course of The papers of nearly 500 cities are handled. All of which The Hamburger “We are now living through the greatest crisis in our political life which has arisen since the outbreak This crisis centers around the fundamental questions of war and peace as well as the reorgan-| ization of our internal political sys-| Andy Mellon's job in France, as far as the debt proposal is concerned, is to show that 50,000,000 Frenchmen can sometimes be wrong. ** * Checkers gives way to bridge in popularity among Cleveland firemen, a news item says. Well, hosemen should be rather proficient at rubber games. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) News of Interest in N. D. Towns (By The Associated Press) Stanley—About seven hundred per- sons attended a taxpayers and coun- ty commissioners joint meeting here. ‘Taxpayers drew up a resolution ask- ing the commissioners to stop road building operations for the remainder of the year and to place such road funds as possible in the county poor fund to be used for immediate relief of poor families or other emergen- cies. Hazelton—E, A. Anderson, Linton, was reelected and Commissioner George Shepherd was elected to the board of directors of the Emmons County. Breeders association here. The annual Breeders’ picnic will be held July 12, it was announced. Fessenden—Four carloads of wool, about 120,000 pounds, were shipped last week from points in Wells coun. ty by the county Wool Growers’ asso- ciation. Two cars were loaded here, and one each at Harvey and Hurds- field. Nearly 200 wool growers were represented by the shipment. Kintyre—About 100 Legion and auxiliary members attended a picnic of the Tri-County Council, of Em- mons, Logan, and McIntosh coun- ties, Delegations from Hazelton, Lin- ton, Kintyre, Dawson and Steele at- member of Paliament, who created a | tended. profound sensation by declaring for Peace without annexations or indem-| _ McClusky—At a reorganization meeting of the McClusky Golf club @ number Of improvements and changes in the course were planned. George Thom Jr., meeting. Gladstone—At an presided at the organization meeting of the Farmers Union Eleva- tor company here, John Sabo was o oH “All God's Chillun Got Wings,” takes on something more than a Spiritual significance in these days The nations news these days seems to vacillate from “anntdeeae to It's safe to entrust ‘a secret to a Scotchman; it’s instinctive that he named president; P. O. Dahil president, and C. V. me ae tary-treasurer. Operations of the new company are expect August 1. pected to begin Linton—Casper Burgad was president of the Linton Fenes Go renee Elevator company at a eeting here. About 85 were in attendance. rae ee ‘The average amount of pasture farm in North Dakota wa 136 acres in 1930, compared to 118 acres and 129 in 1920, mee FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS: Rago yw a eS |