The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 11, 1931, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

The Bismarck Tribune|* te company in question. They; eport that among policyholders liv- An Independent Newspaper = | 7°77" ‘ ' THE STATE'S OLDEST ing west of the Rocky Mountains, th: death rate for the half-year was 6. flhegteteret |per cent lower than for the corre- eae ea 1619) sponding period of 1930. Among in-j Published by The Bismarck Tribune! sured Canadians, the improvement) Company, Bismarck, N. D., and en-|has been even greater, 8.2 per cent. tered at the postoffice at Bsmarck as’ But among the great bulk of the — OROROS tr Mate \insured wage earners, who live east] President and Publisher. jof the Rockies, the mortality rate hes} lincreased by 2.6 per cent, which more} Subscription Rates Payable in than counterbalanced the gains in Advance other sections. Daily by carrier, per year........87.20| cle “ney ae Sea San 10 A Lot of Taxes Daily by mail per year 7.201 agitators for “easy of raising outside Bismarck)... §.00|tax money may be brought up with’ Daily by mail outside ja short turn by data recently made a public by the Taxation Committee of ‘Weekly by mail in state, per yearsi.00| the American Automobile association, Weekly by mail in state, three {which makes the amazing assertion Years .....ss000005 secesesseess 2.50) that the average automobile owner Weekly by mail outside of North | nays 1283 per cent of the average Wao Per Tear Canada, ‘per | Value of his car in taxes, The com-| WOE hia; 2.09| mittee then goes on to prove its point Member of Audit Bureau of — | a5 follows: Circulation “The average motor vehicle on _ the street, according to com- Member of The Associated Press | prehensive’ charts developed by ‘The Associated Press is exclusively; our committee, has an averag? entitled to the use for republication of} value through life of 25.48 per all news dispatches credited to it or; cent of its purchase price. The not otherwise credited in this news-} purchase price of the average paper and also the local news of; vehicle in 1930 was $808. If ‘he spontaneous origin published herein. average value of vehicles through All rights of republication of allother| life is applied to this purchase HERE IN {aie end; the public would yawn at the// Daily Health Service mention of a clean up and comment, “Yeah . . . but they never set the! Suoar Necessary to Health But Should Be big shots! They never get the high- er-up!” Taken Sensibly left their augergrinte in the Conmisioners|| High Calorie Diet, Needed. b Office have by tig tically Laoag responsibility can not longer passed to a couple of other fellows. EDITOR'S NOTE—This is the * * tf aie tenth of a series of 26 timely Of course, few people expect a city cl Dr. Morris Fishbein of Manhattan's bulk to be lily white) S7cles by Ty. ion potion,” and without vice or swindle. yen Mage # But certain dance halls have be-| dealing with such much discussed come little more than brothels and| but little known subjects as cal- not particularly good brothels at| ories, vitamins, minerals, diges- that. And the vicious practices of) tion and berar a ked ht clubs have traj | * Hing per visitor. ‘The aa BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN popular game has been that of check- (Editor, Journal of the American raising, with a little attempted black- Medical Association) mail on the side, Knock-out drops} Sugars are, of course, the most con- are still used and failure to pay hold-|centrated carbohydrates. Sugar S up prices have been followed by beat-|the chief fuel food. It represen.s ings and robbery. \ about 19 per cent of the fuel that GILBERT SWAN. | €veryone uses. ae a ee tos tht, 1931, NEA Se! , Inc.) | Substances are n jous a Saath: “tis meal they tend to take away the ap- petite. Therefore, it ai Regge TO "g to eat candy or pastries iween DAY 1S “THEY | meats, whereas taken es a destert they have the particular value of making a meal seem especially satis- factory. It is reported that over a billion dollars was spent for candy in the United States in 1926. ‘The contrast in the Li ag nrg emphasized by the fact that the HENDERSON RESIGNS average consumption per person per On Aug. 11, 1917, Arthur Hender- st son, secreiary of the British Labor| car Was 11 pounds it 1026. Als party, resigned from the British war Undernourished Who Want to ut on Weight Rapidly organs for the handling of these sub- stances when these organs are not endowed by nature with the equip- jment to handle a one-sided diet. A high caloric diet is necessary particularly for those who want to gain weight rapidly, in people who are undernourished after chronic dis- ease, such as tuberculosis and ty- phoid. Such diets must provide meas ‘of moderate bulk, but of foods that are easily and readily digested, and which will cause very little gastric disturbance. A high caloric die} in these modern times means from 3,000 to 4,500 calories, because it is under- stood that a person requiring such a diet takes only moderate exercise. It must be remembered at the same time that calories are only one s- pect of the diet. The diet must in- clude a reasonable protein and fat content, as well as vitamins and min- eral salts. Therefore, fats and sugars must be depended on primarily for the increased carbohydrates. Foods providing these carbohydrates are vegetable soups, breakfast foods with @ high content of meal, cream soups and whipped cream dressings on rich matter herein are also reserved. price, it will readily be seen that the value of the average vehicle cabinet owing to the government's dissatisfaction with his support of the though a person may live on a diet|salads. Sometimes patients who largely of vegetables, there is nojhave been unable to eat more than Stockholm Socialist conference. combination of vegetables that will (Official City, State and County ‘on the street in 1930 was $205.88. Newspaper) “Now the tax levy on the aver- age vehicle in 1930 was $37.72. Foreign Representatives The vehicle has an average life SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS of seven years. On the basis of & BREWER { the tax rate for last year, the (Incorporated) | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON) e vehicle through its aver- fe of seven years will pay es in.the amount of $264.04, or 128.3 per cent of its average A Notable Passes | value, namely, $205.88. H Possibly no other North Dakotan| ‘That is quite a lot of taxes and! could have attracted the same in-|proves that pennies, collected often) terest by the simple act of dying as)cnough, do mount up. did Red Tomahawk, noted Sioux|— Brave who may be buried on the) sh as : nt |} state capitol grounds here. | Editorial Comment It may not be very inaccurrate to} Senne by einer. eallore || say that Red Tomahawk was the!| 7 Published without regard |} most notable member of his race in| Coe ee eet inunes polloles: | these United States, a territory which | 5 printed below show the tori his forefathers once owned outright. | Avoiding the Dole etous To an interesting history, mingled as it was with the Custer battle) through Sitting Bull's connection) with that famous frontier episode, Red Tomahawk added an appearance astonishly like the white man’s con- going to remain unchanged during} Silas M. Strawn, chairman of th Those of us who live in a territory] PA a ciate where Indians are not uncommon)thinks that the federation figures are| had visited Russia, just after the re- volution, on behalf of the British government, and found the then In the previous spring Henderson {7ish Saving Leer beled drates or sugars, and without throw- ing special burdens on the digestive 1,4. calories per day on account of lack of appetite can learn to take 3,200 to 4,000 by the encouragement that comes from well selected foods properly prepared. provisional government strongly in favor of an international and soc:=1-|high plane; that strives to see ques- ist conference at Stockholm. It was/tions as infinite wisdom, far above his conviction that it would be bet-jall transitory and personal interests, 7 7 ter that British representatives go to; would regard them.”—President A. cabarets, dimly-lit night clubs and|partments. Scores of them have rec-|the conference, rather than permit|Lawrence Lowell of Harvard. But what is more important is this —the question of ownership or man- agership cannot longer be lodged. The men who appeared before {Commissioner Mulrooney came as di- {rect representatives of some certain {resort, and so they must take the |Tesponsibility for anything that hap- pens in the future. Finding the “responsible” persons jafter a raid or a complaint has long been one of Manhattan’s most far- cical games. Police appearing at some low dive would arrest, perhaps, a couple of docrmen, a ticket taker and |@ few flunkies, As mere attaches of ;@ resort, there was no percentage in | pressing charges against them. | Well, who was the owner? . . . Why, it was a corporation! Made up of John Doe, Richard Roe and Sam Gazoo! . . upon year, things would go around in a merry circle and come to no good To the dwellers in cities where di- rect procedure is the custom, significance of this finger-printing In fact, there are millions of New Yorkers who read something about it in the papers and failed to realize that the police for the first time had an edge on the ari- ful-dodgers of the night—assuming, of course, that they care to do any- |thing about it. It was all very well for the com- missioner of police to address the hard-boiled night club gents in words that were harsh and biting. when he told them to line up and the approaching winter, all agencics| Promises of city reform, have found aljeaye a finger-print behind them; at have studied the problem are; most hopeful symptom in one inci-|that was something else again. agreed. The American Federation of|dent of the city's more recent vice- ception of what the “noble redman”|Labor estimates that 7,000,000 men inquiry ; should be. will be without work on January 1] This was the finger-printing of sev-| maestros of the night life who would 3 eral hundred owners, or direct rep-j just as soon not have their past rec- jords checked through finger-print de- act may be lost. | New York, Aug. 11—The more vi- cts of New York night life (Minneapolis Tribune) {finally have become subject to a dis- ‘That employment conditions are comforting check. Manhattanites, considers all things from a stand- point not only beyond the individuai| DO" ct re linporiant citenecnad ‘and local, but beyond the temporary {,i"* Of more Mnf " and evanescent; that looks upon so- ciety, upon life with its intricate duties and responsibilities, from a|°!4 blosrapher. ‘To begin with, there are many - And 80, year Chamber of Commerce, resentatives, of dance halls, shady know they are subject to the sam2|exaggerated, but said that a pre-) vagaries and idiosyncracies of natute| liminary survey of the epation) ins | .|dicates “an appreciable increase as men of other races. But the ef. | eeeacingment kar anied fete East has been trained to ex-| Couzens is hoping that a special ses- pect its Indians to be tall and lean,|sion of congress will he called early) with strong faces as orescribed in the|in October to consider unemployment | tales of Fenimore Cooper. relief, while Mr. Strawn hopes that| the federal government will stay out. El Bi oP seaein heed aerate Hoover's employment committee also perfection. Inches over six feet tall,| so. no decline in the number of the| he was a commanding figure in any! unemployed. | assembly and his physiognomy was| All agencies recognize the serious-/ | | | considered so like what an ideal In-| ess of the problem, but they cannot) ian’ 2 v1 agree on a definite program of relief. Gian’s ought to be that it was taken Ameen A Ooh Meaded by Presi= as a model for the thousands of state) dent Hoover and such business lead- highway markers which dot our state. ps as Mr. Strawn, which contends But Red Tomahawk had other at-|that unemployment relief is a local) ibute: ¢ pis! problem, they deplore what they refer pee cae Among his/f> as a “dole,” should the federal gov-| own people he was a famous orator! omment become a dominant factor in and many a ringing speech has he/rejieving the distress. On the other delivered to his fellow tribesmen on| side in the controversy are those wh| the banks of the Cannonball. think that since labor is a commod- eg ity whose market is not loc; 1, relief Soo a reid gate S| of widespread unemployment shoulc which he gave in the presence of any| not be left entirely to philanthropy large number of white men was that/and local divisions of governmen at a hearing two years ago before ajSuch men as Senator Couzens are senate investigating committee at oie leaders in this school of Fort Yates. He defended. in vigor-|""Rushing to the federal government ous terms the actions of the Indian) ¢o; aid in any kind of disaster is al- agent in dealing with the govern-| ways a simple solution of a situation ment’s red charges and told his/ calling for financial relief. Even the fellows they would do better to work| members of the 101 Ranch and Wild West show, who are stranded in mentee and smnpinin leas, Washington, appealed to the govern- The speech was not overpopular,|ment for financial aid. Calling on some of the Indians contending that|the federal government “to do some- Tomahawk could talk in that yein|thing” is popular politics and re- pos lieves the loeal agencies of respon- he was receiving a steady pen-| piity. It is not surprising, there- sion from the government. fore, to find business leadership At 82, Tomahawk could neither! strenuously opposed to a raid on the speak, read, nor write the English federal Soy to ember on 8 Bee gram of unemployment relief, the en ee faa on pee erga of which would be lost in doubt, Mr. ide 11) Strawn is quite right when he says, doing so on the infrequent occasions}«Uniess we do something at once when he was @ guest at Bismarck|there will be more kinds of legisla- hotels. His orthography was not|tion for dole than Germany and Sa England ever heard of.” President ee ae oe of the pale-| Hoover's position that the govern- ‘ace, however, for he called himself} ment should seek to coordinate the “Red Tommy Hawk” on such oc-|various local efforts at ‘relief rather casions. than to dominate the whole program ‘There are in the United States|Y unlimited grants of money is also @ sound view as far as it goes. some 48 governors of states, 96 sena-| tr our pusiness leadership intends tors and four hundred odd congress-!to keep the federal government out men but there was only one Redjof making large appropriations, and ‘Tomahawk and his death recalled to|if they are sincere in thelr efforts to nation actually do something to relleve the bed at large the picture of the) situation, they will have to present old frontier, with Indians on the war) the country with a program effective path and of Custer making his last enough to kill the growing sentiment stand on the Little Big Horn. that the federal government should ‘Yes, it may well be that Red Toma-|take a hand. It will not be enough to tell local communities—this is hawk, living in @ humble shack On| ou, problem, go ahead and solve the banks of a remote stream, was/it, Every large city in the country is the most famous North Dakotan—|issuing a “dole” in some form or ‘and in many ways the most interest-|other to its unemployed today, For ing. many years 80 per cent of this kind eo of relief has been carried on by cities and counties. Lower Death Rates in West | American business. leadership as- Substantial decreases in deaths|sumes the responsibility of a solution, from tuberculosis’ and diphtheria|When it tells the country that the federal government must stay out, have helped to improve the health | --cept insofar as it can make use of record of tle United States and Can-| public works as a means of relief, ada for the first six months of 1931 /An aroused American business, tired according to a leading life insurance|0f listening to doles of advice from stump orators, can do more to help company, and there 1s a fair chances. working out of this difficulty than that the record for the entire year/can a bloc of demagogues in congress. will better the remarkable health| But if they are going to do anything showing of 1930. Despite a some-|worth while they will have to face what unfavorable beginning, due to|the facts of unemployment as they are and shape a program that will be the influenza epidemic lest winter,| nore than @ condemnation of a dolc ‘the lowest death rate for the second) or politely referring the problem back quarter of any year was recorded this|to cities and counties that are already rear. This rate was 8.9 per thousand. doing all they can. r A, pilot balloon, released over the agate Sg cigalad bureau station at Fairbanks, 4s now only 1.7 per] alaska, was recently seen to move at a, speed of 547 miles an hour at '@ height of 14 miles. i 3 g RUA dogged by a restlessness which would not let her go. breakfast things she and Clive spoke of casual matters. Oh, mother, don’t look like that!|my—my father?” pered. ‘ALKING like an old woman, like someone who has been dealt a mortal blow, Cass rose. She went to the shabby, littered desk in the corner. MURIEL LADD, popa- ‘ASS tossed her head. “Luisa | After ho had gone she sat for a long time listless. The servants came and noiselessly set the place Her life ran on well oiled wheels, she reflected. There was nothing she needed to do. No one needed ner—except pos- sibly Van. Clive was utterly self- sufficient. He had his horses and dogs in the country. He had the| know where s! so far as I know, tried to find Bandits robbed several American Long island summer colony t Fr wealthy widow. Cass goes on tour in t Linne becomes Mrs. Cleespanzh social secretary, CLIVE CLEES: GH, the widow's only son, aske Lione to marry hi cannot inherit always been locked. she drew a roll of papers held together by a rubber band. “These,” she said, tapping the roll, “will explain, them to you in a minute.” sat down heavily. “First of all you must know this. You are not my child at all. You are my sister Luisa’s daugh- te 5. Liane accepts, agrecing the is to be a matter of form | her. When she died I mailed him tourists recently in China. That one drawer which Liane knew had/| the death notice. He sent lawyers seems to be going pretty far out of to seo us. He had heard there the way for that kind of experience. was a child but wasn’t sure. I ee * lied to the lawyers. I was afraid Henry Ford says money is merely a they might take you because you symbol. And have you ever noticed | were his own flesh and blood. how symbclic a garage mechanic's There was some clause in his will, repair bill can be? I believe, to the effect that if an sete heir should appear such a claim was to be thoroughly examined. 1 thing he always suspected there had been a child, but he couldn’t prove it. Tom Barrett and I had been married the year before. It was easy for me to pretend you were our daughter, Her voice softened. “And then I felt, too, that you truly be- longed to me. I cared for you from, babyhood. I loved you as my own. I was justified in keep- ing you, from that devil.” Liane’ She put her arm around the older woman. “Of course you were,” she soothed. “And when it was so hard, when we were s0 desper- ately poor you must often have repented your decision to keep a | 4 | i Even her mother no longer Cass was happy, in- playing better than she had ever played before. looked younger, less harried. “I must see her," s changeable, asks her to break und Liane refi the Cleespaughs and Tr wants to marry Cli make trouble for Liane. connives with a gang mailers but a friendly polices tenant, SHANE MecDERMID, Liane whispered, “She wasn’t— wasn’t married?” Cags’s laugh was short and bit- ‘Yes. she was married right enough, The license is here. I'll show it to you in a minute, The man broke her heart. when you were born. That's why I hate the whole clan,” she fin- ished bitterly. Still Liane did not understand. “What clan?” she asked. words at her. ” Liane decided. . ‘ASS was just getting up when Liane arrived. Tle little apart- looked comfortable shabby. The lovely green brocade couch Liane had given her was a curious anomaly in the small, Liane saw the familiar room with new eyes, eyes that had somehow grown critical. shrugging into her old red corduroy dressing “I hate to wear that lovely padded thing you gave me around Christmas Day and t part on a honeymoon in th News comes that Muriel newspaper reanrtes, untidy room. Robnrd is the man Liane two into misunder- the couple returi Cass entered, north. Clive d votes himself bus “The Robards, The girl winced as though some- one had stfuck her. cial duties. On a shopping trip encounters Robard. Robard persuades Lin to his apartment alos He begs her to go al “Van's father was Dirk Robard. So was yours.” Liane flung her hands to her This was unendurable. She sald abruptly, “It’s not tru: Amberton told me long ago.” She struggled to remember. “What's not true?” “Van is not Dirk Robard's son. Cass sat up straight. “Re- pented? Never! You were mine * and I meant to have you.” Liane laced her fin ly. ‘Clive knows this?” she asked. Cass nodded. “I told his mother shortly before you were married, hep hal ie OA CURIOUS WORLD carrying in the chipped tin tray with her breakfast. “Have a cup?” Liang drank some of the steam- ing coffee. She felt steadier. She seemed to know now what it was she wanted. She wanted to tell her mother all her troubles, “What's on your mind, baby?” watching the girl Liane home. They quarrel. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XL ‘OW that the bars were down, Liane rushed on, recklessly. “Van wants me to go away with him,” she declared. “You didn’t listen to him?” Clive clenched his hands. “I told him I wouldn't. don’t think me utterly bad. I’m Onty when he calls I feel I must go. It’s like a spell.” anger smote Clive. Desperately he sought the right move. “Promise me you'll not do anything without consulting me,” he urged. “As a friend, Nothing They sat for a few moments in silence. Then Cass broke out again, “You'll never go to Van Robard now?” “I don’t know. I don't know, My mind is dizzy from all this.” “Liane, you can’t. You wouldn't hurt Clive so. The scandal—” The girl moaned. “I hadn't thought of that.” “You must. Forget this man. berton’s words came back to her “He married Van’s mother That was three years after I was born.” Cass murmured, “I don’t be- Liane shut her eyes. Now for it. Now for the plunge. She said, “I’m going to leave Clive.” Cass set down hel great deliberation, “Why? You're ngt happy with him?” Liane put out her hand in an impulsive gesture, “It’s not that. Clive’s splendid.” before she flung the words at I love Van Robard. going away with him.” Cass swayed a little. Her face had gone dead white, thought she was going to faint. “Mother, what's the matter?” She was bending over the older woman, shaking her arm. left her and, flying into the tiny kitchen, brought back a glass of “It's true,” Liane persisted. “I don’t remember what Mrs. Amber- ton sald Van's real name was but She hesitatea| he was Dirk Robard’s adopted “It may be so,” Cass mused, ‘I was in Eng- women of his own world unde! stand him. You made the mistake of taking him seriously.” Cass added, “Tell me I did right to hold you for my own. Tell me you forgive—" She was on * her knees. “Mother, dearest!" It was Liane’s answer. Cass wiped her eyes presently. “Heavens, I must rush! They called rehearsal for this after- noon.”* ~ Together they straightened the place. Liane, a towel pinned over her dove colored frock, made the bed and wiped dishes. Constraint held them after their mutual burst of emotion. She promised. She thought him a thoroughbred that night when, at the dinner party, he moved, spoke, laughed as if nothing had half to herself. land in 1913, just before the war started. Mother was taking care of you then.” She whirled on Liane. “But it Old Mrs. Williams, a grande doesn’t alter the main facts of dame in black and silver, bent her head to them at parting. Be- hind her fan she whispered to Clive but quite audibly. a charming child. We are all de- lighted with her Liane flushed. What would all these people think if they knew? Sho felt ashamed. mind ran this thought constantly, “Ho sails on Tuesday. T'll_never see him again. igi Ici brother or step brother, he’s still forbidden to you. He's wicked— conscienceless.” Liane asked, “Why did you hat “Because Dirk wicked, cruel. He met Luisa in Baltimore where she was playing in stock. He was much older—15 He. persuaded her to have a secret marriage. They went somewhere on the eastern shore. Luisa didn’t tell us until) th: a few months before you were| was all Cass dared to ask on part- born, By that time he was tired| ing. of the arrangement. He was hav- ing an affair with some New Or-| dlim, distinguished figure. Some leans beauty and wanted Luisa| impulse, born of the old trouper vorce him. Poor child! She| habit, caused her to stop and buy. ‘was so young, so bewildered. She|a paper at the corner. ke a wrote me and told me about it. needle to a magnet her wero died | drawn to the headline, “Million- 10 days after you were born. The| aire Killed In Motor Accident.” or said she hed 20 will to ve. “And you never heard from sipped it and shook her “Take it away. Robard was Consclence-stricken at the ef- fect of her news Liane sat down Through her or 20 years, “I'm sorry,” she began con- “I didn’t know it would be such a shock to you. I—I had to tell someone.” The color was coming back into Cass’s pale checks, She shook her head :‘ke a swimmer freeing him- self from the bondage of the waves. In a dull voice she said, “There’s something you've got to} I should have told you Jong ago. God forgive me for a miserable coward.” ‘Her eyes, her tone, struck 'ter- ror into the heart of Monday found her desperate,' Liane Her lips twisted at the frony If only she had waited a She had believed this marriage would put a barrier between her and Van forever, She had hoped and prayed the spell was broken, It had not been. Surely this madness must be one of those deathless loves of which she had read. Browning and his Elizabeth had loved that way. Heloise and Abelard. Romeo and Idane walked up Broadway, & I brought her home. She lords as yeggs, gangsters h, Russian delegates to meet German x % * H hat i bth delegates there alone. “Principles of Christianity underlie Accordingly, on his return to Eng-|the science of economics.” —Dr. land, he promoted the participation|Richard Lynch, leader, New York of British Labor in the conference.| Unity Society. Two Labor parties endorsed his at- * %* # titude but the Sailors’ and Firemen’s| “The cocktail has transferred the Union refused to carry the delegates; | field of alcoholism from the old rav- and most other Labor parties in al-/ages of the demon rum in the lower lied counties did not follow his lead.|ranks of society to the disintegration When Lloyd George and his fellow|of the highcst intellectual and social ministers indicated publicly their ob-|classes.”—Professor Emile Sergent. jection to his policy, Henderson re- ; signed. “Except for those who are to be ee OR specialists, it is more important to ‘%|know about European civilization a Quotations || than to know about the solar system.” ¢|—The Archbishop of York. * * * “The wisdom we need is that which “gociety is all right for lazy people, than staying out most of the night; dancing.”—Billy Marsh, Jr., 11-year- [BARBS _| ——_————_s A dispatch the other day told of a farmer in Dakota who turned his turkeys loose on the grasshoppers and the hoppers ate the feathers off the turks. That makes Winsted, Conn., where the nine-legged calves come from, look sae cheap. % %. Liane whiss ; | -a man who speaks 17 languages a ars “ was married the other day to a wom- an who ae 12 languages. It's a retty safe bet that the 12 1 didn’t want us to let him #& vill he the better play. saieiaades was. He never, * * * G. B. Shaw regrets that he is 75 years old instead of 18 so that he could go to Russia and grow up with STICKLEBS eyes were brimming. rs nervous had dozens of affairs. The {Promise me you won’t do any- without telling me first,” the country. Most young men of 18, however, seem to be fonder of other | than growing up with a coun- Ty. ee *® It would be a fine thing for every- body if all the farmers could get their neighbors to cut down a little on production. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.), Runs for Congress Assoctated Press Photo Mrs, Henry Allen Cooper of Ra- cine, Wis., has announced her can- didacy for the unexpired term United Sti representative vacat- ed, by the death of her hussand lat March,

Other pages from this issue: