The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 10, 1931, Page 6

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Co An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) i ermeremamatstt hes Eee Published by The Bismarck Tribune} Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as} es led to the practice being bgn- Second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year........$7.20/ application. Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck)............. 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ...... sdeccecesecccees + 6.00 The Bismarck Tribune ++ 720) the motorist desiring to protect there are also records of numer- ous thefts, robberies and even murders resulting from lifts given to strangers. One of the most | tragic murders in American inology was the outgrowth ride given two strangers. “Inability of the car owner to distinguish between the two class- ft a { ned in the eight states, namely, Connecticut, Delaware, Maine, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon and Wisconsin. It is only a question of time until the law will be universal in its | “Meantime, the safe thing for himself and family, is to ignore | all signals from strangers along | the highway.” i RIS | Weekly by mail in state, per yearsi.00/ Real Cause for Celebration | Weekly by mail in state, three years ....:.... ado d scieas ins Weekly by mail outside of Nort Dakota, per year ..... Weekly by mail in Canada, per year .. ‘ Mem> dit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press _ The Associated Press is exclusively 2.06 imposing looking structure and the! |taxpayers’ money has been well) [handled in its construction. An | | Citizens of Burleigh county have, . 2.50}every reason to be proud of. the fine | $ 150/22" courthouse which will be ope to} the public in a few weeks. It is an| spection of the building is convinc-| ing proof that the board of county | entitled to the use for republication of | commissioners ably, assisted by the! all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this news-| paper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. | economically. All rights of republication of all other| Ipublic to join in the ‘should mect with hearty | will be an ideal occasion to ins; ———| the bul matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON id County Monroe Doctrine Again In an address at Charlo July Fourth, William F. Cas F Under-Secretary of State, declared that the Monroe Doctrine is a: d a policy as it ever was, It has long been the cornerstone of our inte national policy and often chailen by Latin America. President Wilson! |” once said of the doctrine: 2 “The Monroe Doctrine was pro- claimed by the United St: nm her own authority. It alw been maintained and always will be main- tained upon her own responsibility.’ ‘That is a sound view of the polic, Jaid down during the administratio: of President Monroe. There can be little doubt but that adherence to the Monroe Doctrine aided the g ernments of Latin America to de and thrive. Irritation against doctrine has been present often, but much of it has been without good foundations. For the most part the Latin ernments are no longer our wards but our friends and the Mor trine has done much to to the question s0 often asked “Why not abandon thi aspect of the Mol invite the Latin gov wy us in @ general American doctrine? His reply is: “The answer seems to mi clear. This would consti treaty of alliance which c trary to our traditions and institutions. On the other ha if the Latin-American nations not themselves individually pro- claim similar doctrines it is be- cause they know they would act in accord with the spirit of the doctrine whether or not it had been proclaimed as a policy. “Not one of our friends in South America would be mor willing than we to see one of independent neighbors absorbed into the political system of a non- American nation. All these na- tions are instinctively as surely supporters of the policy of Amer- | tze jconti | autom: ica for Americans as we are. The fact that we happen prblicly to have declared the policy makes our interest no greater. The Monroe Doctrine confers no su- perior position on the United States. It was originally intend- ed to help; it accomplished its task; in the changed circum- stances of the twentieth century it offers no threat, but remains @S an assurance of our unswery- ing friendship toward our sis- ter nations of this Western Hemi- sphere.” Mobilizing ‘Hitch-Hikers’ ‘When the automobile was new and motorists few, it used to be courtesy of the road to give the weary pe- destrian a lift. Ease with which free transportation was secured in the Good old days through imposing ‘on| Public service. the generosity of the motorist de- veloped the “hiteh-Hikér”’ ‘who, in| some states, has become a pest and) ®@ menace to safe traveling. The American Automobile associa- tion is engaged in a drive against the) “hitch-hiker.” Eight states and the District of Columbia, have enacted Statutes forbidding the practice. Efforts of some “hitch-hikers” to form a national organization so: that the worthy and honest pedestrian in Need of free transportation might} enjoy the charity of the highway in|Market conditions he expected more |land sales this year than last. the form of a free ride now and then, has brought @ protest against such a Plan from automobile clubs. It is Proposed by those who would mobilize the “hitch-hikers” to furnish them with cards or some means of identi- fication sy that motorists so inclined the A. A. A. 1s timely and should iscourage motorists from aiding “hitch-hikers.” It is in part as fol- dows: | |States in the number of motor ve |nicles registered. |reGion, has but one motor jtion says is true, the n should thoro' ‘ner in which public busin other county officials, has spent the| money entrusted to it w and The invitation extended to the} lebration re records are m lict to the mod county bu and handsome miles went gaso tran: Pumping « rations Increase are 5,531,468 motor trucks inj} in the world; 29,033,137 cars and 341,027 busses. nee ranks second to the U is the most densely motor- m on the globe outside of) Haw dr Spitzbergen, an island truck. If half what W. J. C member of the board of adm: ly rel ducted. In the near future tion of commissions will not shift the! load from his shoulders nor afford} him an excuse or alibi for inefficient Editorial Comment Editortals, printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. ‘They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. The Alluring Land (Duluth Herald) An official of the federal land bank at’ St. Paul said’ last’ winter that there! was a definite trend back to farm-| ing and that in spite of unfavorable mote commissions are to he created, | but after all the people of the state will hold Gov. Shafer responsible for| |the acts of his subordinates. Crea-| A statement lately issued by Presi- dent Klawon of that bank indicates that the prediction was sound. He reports that twice as many farms were sold by the institution in May this year as in the same month in 1930, and that for the first five months of this year the gain is about 37 per cent over the same period last year. The states within the bank’s For Same Reason Include New York, July 10—Having wit- nessed at least a dozen of those gangster films, recently so popular, and having read any number of novels on the subject, I am now con- vinced that life has been giving the novelist, playwright and scenarist im- | possible competition. What Hollywood gangman, for in-) @tanee, would have dared to use a situation such as the St. Valentine's Day massacre in Chicago when gun- men dressed as ony and using a, police siren on the! al their machine-guns on a dozen rivals? | EDITOR'S NOTE—This is the second of a series of seven articles by Dr. Morris Fishbein on “Sum- mer Care of Health.” In the light of new data on proper’ diet, dress exercise during the hot months, this series should now prove particularly timely. BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Association In very hot weather with geste able humidity, the condition of heal Or take those scenes at gang bani depends on proper clothing, proper |tite, less desire for meat, and a greater rest and diet. Wet clothing is a good) conductor of heat. SKED FOR WAS, Aumie SiNGE! —= quets and funerals, where ate | money boys appear in evening clothes) and high hats, while carrying a couple! clothes are worn in hot weather, there/ insist that this is due to @ lower! lis danger of chilling. People who co thing and then sit around in damp sults find this out In hot weather, the air Hence, if damp | of handy gats— | Or take one of those incidents }the daily routine of New York. | ecent newspapers an: [Eoeneed that & lovely soni woman} which is inhaled is rarified by heat| weather. In hot weather much mols= Rad ieaped to her death from a win-|and contains less oxygen; therefore,| ture is lost from the skin, therefore, dow. jthere is a tendency to retention of|the material in the bowels tends to She had been a cigaret girl in one) carbon dioxide in the blood. Some|be exceedingly hard and concenw She! pcople insist that this 1s partly the| trated. In order to overcome the teh- was good looking, and gents who werejreason why they tire so easily in hot! dency to constipation in hot weather, traveling alone tried to slip her notes | weather. ‘with the large tips they gave her. At the time her mother was living jin a smaller city, out of town. One of the snappier night resorts. Daily Health Service Drink Lots of Water to Avoid Constipation in Hot Weather * * * é Extra Amount of Fresh Fruits an in Your Summer Diet 4 | than that of those’ living in the tem- perate zone. It is believed that it is related to the breathing rate. People ate also inclined to be more irritable in hot weather than in cold weather. In the tropics there is a condition called “tropical irritability,” which is supposed to be due to some change taking place in the nervous system in hot weather. However, these things have not been definitely estab< lished. It is quite possible that ir- ritability is due to the changed con ditions under which people live. In hot weather there is less appe- demand for spicy articles of food. Physicians who live in the tropics of the power of digestion sasoclated? with living in hot weather. How- ever, this is not nearly so important as the danger of censtipation in hot it is advisable to drink lots of water People who live in the tropics have/and also to take considerable quan= a pulse rate that is slightly higher’ tities of fresh fruits and vegetables, fof the most important items in this girl's life was the contact with her |mother, through letters. As is common in many of the late- | j, back to the Jamestown colony and 7. Deen spending his money here and) According to the The cigaret girl felt thi been suppressed for so long cannot!ing to ¢i [lost her only friend—save, possibly, xplain the round-the-world Her prize award| | tmmediately develop a genius for flight of Gatty and Post. éere-| TODAY IS THE- “The first stage is necessarily one} ‘The fellow who regards himself a «, of debate. The ‘didn't amount to a great deal,” she| he was “nice to her.” the young man wheel of his car,} He had mixed! solid, admirable traits) man of the world will probably feel inge of humility now that Gatty ‘Three id Post have done their little stunt... . slumped over—dead! she cops once too often! days later,"the cigaret girl lay in the New York morgue. leapec from a window. in the Russian character will pull the|a \nation through the present crisis. Natural love of law and order and) capacity for local self-government| One of the most ironic things about have been demonstrated every day the weather is our habit since the revolution. The country’s a heat spell a “wave.” most serious lack is money and ade-| quate transportation. what we can to help Russia in both.’ MISSION ENDS of calling “ t5 can mission to Rus- ent declaring that had accomplished it of about one} (\ ——<—<—<—< — — — — >) fre things beside beautiful leg prizes and | She aimed for dramatic ights. She had made money and One day, not long ago, she New York with her own critics laughed and days later she swal- her dressing room— fellow who rides the rods thinks he'll get better service if the + + * ost little tragedy of the city: C. C. grants the railroads higher Another little tragedy : 3 @ couple of yeai if; to do, and we are we tn 10 ae Now they're saying the round-the-| Democracies are world flight was successful because! , and we have seen Gatty stuck to his Post. in the progress of nust remember that a 1e| Embarrassing moments: ¥ ctive ‘effort has Glenn (the world is flat) Voliva try-|rye when turned into pork | ‘Then there's the plumber who con- 1: Sulted the heart specialist to get some we: uurable malady in the dope on repairing leaking valves. aut did act die GILBERT SWAN. NEA Service, Inc.) Feeding trials with hogs at the Hettinger substation r esulted in a met being Wilbur | return of 75 cents per bushel for the Horn Ma who Sraced Ser ' | |Matowakas and thus to the historic!/Leo and daughters Rose and Esther, Chief Powhatan. They could check /|visted in Hazelton Sunday afternoon. | Esther Schmidt of Hazelton, who lis staying at the Jake Schiermeister But this is another world and the home, visited at the Godfrey Greng predatory enemies ate now more home Sunday. 7 Social and economic. | She came to ed On Rito ton, N. J, and St. Catherine's con- | day, at she had) vent in particular. gave her a chance on the stage. She attended private schools and drama- tic schools. She started her stage career in Philadelphia. a director of stock companies in| Oklahoma and Washington. | Now there is a great legend about jthe stoic quality of the Indian—but Dorothy Deer-Horn grew up in a Henry Knittel was a business caller Prince-|at the Jake Schiermister home Mon= People’s Forum Editor's Note. Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of in- ferest, Letters dealing with con- troversial religious subjects, which attack individuals unfairly, or which offend good taste and fair play will be returned to the writers. All letters MUST be signed. If you wish to use a pseudonym, sign the pseudonym first and your own name beneath it. We will re- ect such requests. We reserve the right to delete such parts of letters as may be necessary to conform to this policy. ON THE USE OF HIGHWAYS Dickinson, N. D., July 2; 1931, | | Editor, The Tribune: An editorial appeared in the Min<« neapolis Journal of June 30th relating jto control of trucks on state high- oe << war. —Mabdl BEGIN HERE TODAY poker and fed into the shelter of; satisfied to play at business like; But although she tried ¢ mare a so many rich men’s sons. He) ately to bate Bim st = wanted to do something on his own) to succeed very w: | account. She liked him for it, the dining room where she made a brave show of a last minute con- sultation with the waitress. When Clive came in five minutes, later he found a composed and quiet trio before the fire. hands in pockets, lounged careless-| ly and at ease. Mrs. Cleespaugh was busy with her petit point.| Clive glanced keeuly at the young girl who sat half in shadow. When dinner Was announced, Van offered his arm ceremoniously to the old lady who approved of formality. Liane followed with Clive. She felt grateful to him for his mere Dresence.’ As if he sensed the strain she was under he exerted himself to be entertainiig. He asked Van & thousand questions about his ponies and the Burlingame team. Even Clive’s majestic mother found herself talked down for once {n her every word that he Van inquired with suavity, “You| fection of hi | Ramsay Mac- aren’t going to Paris this winter,’ It was a spell your children/ hem out and| w to drink.—Richard I love this place And I think I'm get ting old. The thought of traveling| @& am old woma=.” ete said majet- wears on me this year. Per! | shall be dull but I think f shall gtay/ Yaa.” here until Christmas at least. This) The game was ends good child,” she smiled et Lian: “bas done much to make life pleas | termizabie but now [im Rer mind wildiy for “I'm staying in New York fer 2. to bel@ Van Bere. ‘an informed them, | see im again—ever. hh A mects CLIVE CLEESPAUGH, a the great ¢lock, & “You k2ew my babdits, * ion and prohibl- rilology of crime— Liane bad tho tante who shares ho: her, His name ian ha thing more to ao with jim. without ex mont at czpinining, why. th or two,” Liane to stay with her in CHUCK DESMOND, de- porter whe comes to er By S. GYLDEN , thought the girl rebel, ously, must bh mysterious? There wi Gercurrent in everything he said. little pile Clive was She at once loved and hated it, It/ attending bis mother to the stair- Harju, Emil Lieuska, Venla, and Wayne Inget, Sulo, Sadie a Gylden and Edwin Ojson sday evening at Gust Eck-| i IANE sat, pale and smiling, 4 scarcely touching her food. She: glanced, now and again, at the dark man across the way, so handsom and sinister-looking in his poster black and white. Clive seemed as tonishingly young compared to Ro bard although there was probably not 10 years difference in their Gylden has left for Oriska, Hilma Olson returned home ‘knew? It was the lure of the snake her. She longed now, with a eud- for the humming bird, she reflected. | And wanted to laugh hysterically at why he blew, now hot, now cold, the idea, This man affected her} in her ‘irection. None of this strangely, made her use phrases) showed in ber composed manner and before the words formed in “Remind me to talk to you about) her mind the moment passed. A coal fell in the grate with a rattle len fierce eagerness, to ask bim to atay at the le Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kuisti- were , Sunday callers at John Waiste’s home. | Emil Lehto, Vieno and Arvo Koski, igrid and Olaf Wainlo and. Sadie es spent Sunday at Lake Isa- that belonged only in melodrama. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XIIL IANE looked up, then away. All ~ her ardent young soul was in the Aiken house,” she heard Mrs. Cleespaugh murmur to Robard as/ and Liane pretended to start at sound, This was the hour dreamed of when they should meet face to face. And yet she seemed |to be stricken dumb. What an idiot he must think her, standing there tongue-tied! She could hear Clive’s step in the hall. Against her will Liane’s eyes were drawn to Robard’s. “It seems we are not to have even a moment alone,” he said in The girl smiled faintly. “What does it matter? We have nothing to say to each other.” Suddenly she felt gauche and need she have said She always managed to blurt out the wrong thing, perhaps because she cared so much. She could not be natural with this man. Clive entered the room, seemingly unconscious of the atmosphere. After the briefest in- terval Van announced be must be off. He shook Liane’s hand for mally and withdrew. The girl was folding the card table when Clive returned. T'll attend to that, You look all “When do you leave for the east?” Van asked him presently. Clive flashed a quick, annoyed) glance at his mother who bridled, and answered for him. “Such nonsense I think it ts!” “Why can’t Clive potter around here? There's plenty) to do on the estate. But no, he must dash off to this tea planting place, or rubber, or whatever it may be. I should like to see him in Wall Street as his father was she finished witb’ majesty, “but he doesn’t see things Mr. and Mrs. Dave Josephson and son Clifford, Gust Eckholm, Adolph Johnson, Sulo and Severie Eckholm Spent Sunday at John Gylden’s. | Arne Antilla, Walter Ojanen, and Charlie Johnson were business call- jee John Gylden’s Wednesday eve- e Mr. and Mrs. Henry from the table. Clive ‘went to the radio in the corner.of the study and twirled the dials. A Faucous voice came through, His mother shuddered. “However can we talk with that hideous thing screeching at us?” Clive grinned at her. another station and a luscious tone came rippling into the q luzurious room. “Heavens, what stuff!” murmured. the fastidious Mrs. Cleespaugh, pausing in her monologue to lis- ten. The baritone wailed the tune, smacking his lips over the honeyed ‘words: “You don’t like me,” the man ac- velvet toned. away whenever I come near. Why? We were such friends last sum- she said briskly. Pihlaja, Henry 14 | foodstufts. Liane moved restlessly under his intent scrutiny. But we're that still, spent Sunday at Lake Isabell. baled egies suffered a severe jury foot and Armas Kangas ‘ained bruises when the war in SR tipped over y. accident occurred on highway No, 14 near the Finn hail, “I don’t know.” words were measured, quite—know.” “Why not?” fluttered Liane, ex- cited pleasurably at this bit of “You've done nothing— said nothing—” She could not go on. Her voice trembled and broke at memory of the disappointment she had sutf- fered when he had gone away with- out @ word or look, after the night he had left her on the steps, Instantly the man was at her “My sweet,” he Van Robard’s “It's Surabaya, to be exact, and is rubber,” Clive re turned affably to Robard. nored his mother’s protest. F “McAlister who was at school with me has a place there. s Britisher, you know. fellow, very enthusiastic, to try it, anyhow. Sounds interest “The moon is new, but love is old—lover come back to me.” Liane looked into the fire. Silly Foolish words they were, full of pathos—but there was some thing about them. It was a wail from the heart. “Shut that wretched machine Hampton By ELIZABETH KOPPY territory Wednesday. Ted Schnaible visit Roth home Wedn: tension in the Van nodded. “I hate finance,” Clive grumbled, helping himself to @ delicious looking souffle. “It this place weren't such @ dudé ranch in the middl might have some fun right here with the land. But mother wants it all park, like her English friends, She'd have fits if I tried alfalfa in one or two of her broad acres.” “Where you get this passion for the land I'm sure I don’t know,” said Mrs. Cleespaugh irritably. ited at the John evening. Koppy from Chicago, ‘Thursday. Miss must have some bridge.” Although Clive mad returned to her home side, all concern, Koppy is a registered nurse. Among those i cried in that deep, troubling voice. “My dear, I've made you ery. And that’s a thing I never meant to y,” Liane begged, de spairing. “Go away! Someone may id find me making @ fool of of suburbia 4 evenings. Never waits for them to volunteer.” cna ae a eae smiled wanly. ini he “Not a step,” said the man stub- wn him long—Van, ways wherein the Juggernauts will |) Perhaps be compelled to pay higher at | toll for use of highways if certain decisions are upheld. The public at first did not suppose *ttrucks and busses would hog the state highways but they now know they are appropriating them and en- iarging their business so that it has become a menace to ordinary auto | travel and endangering the lives of 2 ded of sick-| tourists. The use of these highways by com- PRY"! mercial trucks is throwing business jout of gear. For instance, a large | truck from Valley City, 250 miles east |of here, unloads fruit from cars on | track here and delivers around to sur- rounding towns. It uses the high- way, the city streets, and encroaches on local business and deprives the railway of @ lot of business. Bread trucks come from Mandan, 115 miles away, and deliver bread right in local territory, and the local baker uses trucks to grab the busi- ness of nearby towns, so with such competition bread has a high price to consumers. On markets of wheat at present, bakers should sell bread at 5c per loaf, if this cut-throat expensive truck delivery were curbed. is supposed to be an age of efficiency and papers are full of ad- vice to farmers to cut down cost of Production. Such advice should be given to distributors of bread and frult and other foods to cut out about 60 per cent of their distribut- ing expense, Dickinson has the Russell-Miller Milling Co. here, and turns out 800 barrels daily. Still merchants ship in bread from Minneapolis. The wheat is shipped to Minneapolis and the bread from the same shipped back, a travel of 1,300 miles; and then the bread costs 10c to 16¢ per loaf. The consumer pays the nonsensical transportation costs. ‘Trucks and busses stould be com- Pelled to create and maintain their own highways and terminals and de- Pots, and then no one would object to what they try to do. Trucks will help to concentrate business in large cities but are de- moralizing to small towns and at the same time the consumer pays twice a8 Much as he should for fruits and CONSUMER. — Traces of # forgotten snake religion evidently practiced by ancient in- habitants of the island of Crete in the Mediterranean sea and perhaps the beginning of the many myths of serpent wisdom, “snake mothers,” and pedis have been discovered in tions near ance! city of Knossos, ™ a eee FLAPPER FANNY Says: bornly, “until I've discovered what T've-done. Here—” He thrust a big, soft lien ‘handkerchief into ber trembling fingers, Hastily, frenziedly the girl wiped away the tell-tale tears. Scarcely had she repaired the casual rav- ages and powdered her pretty nose before Mrs, Cleespaugh’s majestic Clive shrugged his shoulders and skilfully changed the subject. But the little discussion bad shaken Liane out of ber own. depression. Sbe thought she understood why the young man wished to put eral oceans between himself and nonchalantly, fe've met once i : [ s EY ei Bt el ROME WAS NOT BUILT IN A DAY, Can you make » six-word sentence. wih tele wa de s § gg 4 f Hy al i i CGtickler olution on Back Page) {abe Keays" scat" by tie! contpany out ‘ 3

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