The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 29, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 29, 198f --~. — The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 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........87.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- +3 Daily by mail outside Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year$1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three YOATS ...seceecseescsvesesceess 2:50) Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .........+-+- 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . 2.00 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 & BREWER incorporated) | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Caring for Unemployed President Hoover is confronted by serious problem in the care of un- employed during the coming winter. Naturally he turns to a solution of this situation by an appeal to the generosity of the public rather than) resorting to a special session and leg- islation smacking of the dole. If a special session is to be called and appropriations made to set up) in every state a federal bureau for the relief of the needy and unem- ployed, there must be a material in- crease in taxation. Many congress- men urge relief through the appro- priation of state and federal money. ‘They are in error. President Hoover's advisers, how- ever, properly insist that the situ- ation can be taken care of by setting up voluntary community agencies financed by popular subscriptions re- lleving the states and the nation of accepting that most dangerous species, of legislation, a federal dole. For the most part unemployment is a local problem and one which the various states should solve. Rich commonwealths have no defense in seeking doles from the federal treas- ury to care for a situation within their control. Pesident Hoover is right in resisting federal action and placing! the burden upon the various states and communities where it rightfully belongs. There has been too much} rushing to Washington for relief on! every pretext and it would be better to return to some of the Jeffersonian principles among which are: “I believe that the States can best govern our home concerns. “To the State Governments are reserved all legislation and ad- ministration which concern their citizens only.” Senator Reed of Pennsylvania was right when, as a citizen of that state, he resented Governor Pinchot's de- mand upon President Hoover for a special session of congress. The Fed- eral Treasury now faces a deficit and, fresh raids upon it by the various states would only complicate matters more, Generally speaking, it is cheaper for taxpayers to raise money at home and administer it for the relief of the needy. Using charitable organiza- tions now effective in practically every community of this land would be more economical than setting up an elaborate federal machine to dispense ® dole. President Hoover's plan is not as politically appealing as the one advocated by Congressmen who) see in the dole a weapon to build up Political prestige and capitalize for their benefit a most distressful situ- ation. President Hoover, in his plan to apply every remedy before resorting to the dole, is most commendable and should meet the support of every pa- triotic citizen. Every community in this nation will have to give of its plenty to aid those who, through no fault of their own, find themselves in an un- fortunate plight. North Dakota has its Red Cross and other agencies of relief. These will be tied up into a great national chain under the lead- ership of men picked from all walks of life and all political parties to ar g if gs HL i s jof helium, representing 450 hours of| jhard to recoup from them. |a8 cabbages, although that would be make production of helium in Can: ada much more difficult and expen- sive than in this country. In Texas, where the government helium plants are located, the gas contains about one per cent of helium, 15,000 cubic feet being obtained from 250,000 feet of natural gas. After the helium is extracted the natural gas 1s {returned to the mains and serves as/ fuel, The process used is that of! liquefaction, similar to that used to obtain oxygen from the atmosphere, and the cost is about two and four- tenths cents per cubic foot. On this basis the Akron, with ca- pacity for 6,500,000 feet in its huge bag, will contain about $156,000 worth | work for the Texas factory. The speed with which the product) may be turned out, however, may be} gauged from the fact that we had on| the docks, ready for shipment to Europe, 147,000,000 cubic feet of the) non-inflammable gas when the; world war ended. State Loses An Expert | North Dakota's educational insti-j tutions suffer a loss in the resigna- tion of Rex E. Willard, nationally known agricultural economist. He! has labored in the state since 1908 and is specially trained to cope with the economic problems of this state. Not so long ago the state felt an- other loss in the call of Dr. Coulter] to Washington. These retirements from the technical staff of the state. may be inevitable, still it is extremely There is lively bidding among the educational institutions of the na- tion for such experts. It is not al- ways @ cash consideration that sways the educator. Sometimes the field is broader and the work more congenial, but too often it is a matter of salary. Some states, young and without Great wealth and population, cannot meet the competition of older com-/ monwealths with unlimited funds. North Dakota, in common with many other states, suffers under such @ handicap because her educational facilities are spread over so much territory. There is a duplication of effort and plants which hardly makes for economy. Surveys have been! made suggesting the elimination of duplication and waste in the expen- diture of the educational dollar in North Dakota, but politics and local considerations always win. It is a hard situation to correct. The trend in North Dakota's system of higher education has been to decentralize not centralize effort. Such losses as that of Willard and Coulter are the inevitable results. Editorial Comment |! Editorials 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. Shotgun Gardens (New York World-Telegram) Married men employed by Henry Ford must in the future have veg- etable gardens or they will lose their jobs. If they do not have yards the company will provide garden plots. If the men do not know how to raise vegetables they will be taught by Specialists. Whether or not the men want to, have vegetable gardens does not seem to have entered at all into Mr. Ford’s calculations. Contact with the soil doubtless will be good for the men who toil in Mr. Ford’s mass production plants. Mak- ing things grow might fill a void in their lives, particularly if Mr. Ford will permit them to grow roses as well counter to his utilitarian ideas. The Sage of Dearborn frequently has expressed his ideas about the Production of food. It is shamefully wasteful in his opinion, because the farmer need spend only a part of his time in tending his fields. Mr. Ford has suggested that the farmers would be better occupied if they used their spare time in making bolts and nuts and other mechanical Parts for manufacturers. But what, we wonder, will become of those who grow food if Mr. Ford's ideas take root as did his high-wage, short-week theories? And how will those who have grown, processed and purveyed foods be able to buy Mr. Ford's automobiles? And what of the division of labor? The Wisconsin farmer can make ex- cellent cheese but would have trouble building an auto, just as Mr. Ford’s mechanic-gardener might have dif- ficulty in becoming a cheesemaker. ‘The man who grows wheat has’ neither coal nor iron nor other ma- terials to use in constructing an auto, but he can raise grain for bread to much better advantage than the fac- tory worker. Shouldn’t we continue to trade bread and cheez: for auto- mobiles? Our civilization is organized on the theory that trade flourishes and both profit when the shoemaker sticks to his last and the farmer to the plough. > | BARBS | -—_——— ‘The government is organizing un- employment relief. Well, something’ had to be done now that Al Capone might not run his free soup kitchens’ ARR RAT AR A See 0 PGE HT PR HD LIKE To LET Go, BuT—! Sa APPROVE NAVY BILL On Aug. 29, 1917, the Navy depart- ment’s estimate of $350,000,000 for’ German submarine sank the Belgian ‘man | proved by President Wilson. Under the specding-up plan each destroyer half the time it took before the war.,0°d in § ; That is, it will take from 10 to 12824 return 029 miles. | The months to build a destroyer instead of | 00K him 10 hours 38 minutes. | from 18 to 23 mon 5 han ee aed As this bill was being approved, a} Only the female firefly carries the |new destroyers to combat the Ger- was ap- submarine warfare M be produced in about Norway. On this date also Captan Giulio/ Italian Aviation Corps established a new world’s rec- i flight from Turin to Naples ee eanteneiebe ‘The flight| fisherman. And he said something Laurence of the “Cail light.” f ship “Kongsli” off the coast of New York, Aug. 29.—On the very eve of my vacation, all the contem- Plated joys of @ fishing trip into Can- ada have been shattered. I have just learned, to my endless humiliation, that I am a “bourgeoise fisherman.” I'm quite sure that isn’t flattering. It came about accidentally while I was admiring some excellently re- Produced flies in a current issue of the magazine’ “Fortune.” I stumbled over this paragraph: “Canada—In slightly de luxe edi-. tion, the bourgeoise is be found in eastern Canada and Nova Scotia where he fishes streams too easy for his more puritanical brothers.” Of course I would have picked out Nova Scotia! And see what that makes mef I might as well bend a pin, dig up an| angleworm, cut off a willow branch, jand join the bare-legged kids down, by the old mill. To think that I once fished the “Hell Roarin’ ” in Yellowstone, and the Gardner and the Bechler, and the rapids of the Feather River in Cali- fornia, and the historic Gold Lake belt in the Sierras! That's what you get by coming to New York! You get “citified,” soft and almost sissy! They told me it would happen to me. And here it is. I'm a “bourgeoise” fisherman—or I’m. likely to be any day now. What will I tell the old folks back in the he-man west? How can I face my friends? eee T can say, of course, that I meant. well. But now that I come to think of it, I didn’t receive much encouragement from those I consulted. I wrote a note to Ben Deacon, of the Canadian National Railroads, who doesn’t pretend to be any kind of a jabout the Laurentians or Laurentides: \Park. At his recommendation, I went \to call on his New York assistant, George Lash, and he got out a vast number of maps. I like looking at, this winter. ee * Otto Von Porat went back and won the heavyweight championship of Scandinavia. When he was here it seemed he couldn't go back much further. + * From the way those women led the men in that cross-country With all those explorers going to the north pole, one of these days the H w8 &s ze Eskimos will of BEGIN HERE TODAY NORMA KENT, pretty 20-year- old secretary in a meets MARK TRAV. they rescue a from the young Inwyer, ‘arrell marry him and Nor- Thi of the story is Marl- boro, middle-western metropolis. Norma takes ahabby ay he has made ‘Norma’ to make a date bi shin invitations, he ‘telephones ATALIE PRICE, popular debu- tante, and goes with her to a gay party concluding with a round of the night clubs. ‘The following evening Norma arrives home and finds Chris ab- sent. A note e: gone to ™. hookkeeper office, who been seriously burned. hoy comes to claim the stray pup- Py tnd dakes him home, “BESS |AWTHORNE, the custodian’s daughter, asks Norma if she re- ceived an important telephone call that afternoon. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER VIL ESSIE'S eyes widened. voice showed surprise. ‘“V she went on, “I gave the man your telephone number at the office. I supposed of course lie'd call you! He said—” “Who did? Who was it?” “I don’t know.” Bessie shook her head. “He didn’t give any name, I—I didn’t think to ask, It was about 2 o'clock the phone rang and I was in the kitchen. It rang three times before I got there and then a man asked for you. I told him you were at the office, He seemed awfully anxious to talk to you so I said I could give him the number down there. As soon as I told him what it was he hung up. Don’t it seem funny he, didn’t try to call you? Maybe he did and you didn’t get the message.” “That was about 2 o'clock?” Nor- ma asked. The other girl nodded. “Oh, yes,” Norma said casually. “I did get that message only I'd forgotten about it.” She started up the stairs. “Well, good night, Bessie. I suppose you'll be glad to have your mother back?” “Yes'm. Good night, Miss Kent.” Bessie looked disappointed not to learn what the important telephone call had been about but there was no way for her to prolong the con- versation, Norma was already half way up the flight. Bessie re- turned to the rear apartment. Norms continued her climb to the third floor. She was by no means as unconcerned as her voice had indicated. As a matter of fact both cheeks were burning. The color was becoming and her eyes were bright. So that was how Mark Travers had learned where to find her. eee HE awoke to a morning of streaming golden sunlight and a certainty that something exciting was about to happen. As usual she wore the gray suit but she put on her prettiest blouse, She spent all of five minutes coax- ing the taffy-colored waves into their most Ing outline. And] there was certainly an added dash, a debonaire tilt to the little black hat when, 30 minutes after arising, Norma was on her way to the car The girl felt herself swept into a tempestuous embrace. It seemed a long time before she was able to pull herself away. She was so sure something de- lightful would happen that day— and yet nothing did. At 10:30 when there was a lull in the morn- ing rush of duties she put a calk through to the Hart Advertising Agency and talked to Chris, She learned that Junior Baker was still a very sick child. His mother was with him. Chris had arranged to have a nurse care for the boy while his condition was so serious, An- other 24 hours, the doctor sald, would decide the battle between life and death. The telephone on Norma's desk did not ring again until late after- noon. With quickly beating heart the girl took down the receiver. It was only Chris again saying she planned to spend the night at Min- nie Baker's, ‘Tien for a succession of days the girls saw little of each other. Chris stopped in.at the apartment, filled a traveling bag and virtually moved to Minnie’s drab quarters where the wornout mother was only too glad to shift her burdens to stronger shoulders. After two evenings spent in the apartment Norma found herself lonely. Bob Farrell called and sho agreed to g> with him to see the new Marion Davies movie. They had dinner together before the pic- ture at their favorite eating place. Norma wondered if Bob were work- ing too hard. He seemed tired, seldom looked at her directly but shrugged carelessly when she asked if anything were wrong. ; He telephoned again the next evening. Norma had been home trom the office less than. half an hour when the call came. Bob an- nounced that he had the use of a friend's car for the evening. Would she care to go for a drive?” “I'd love to! e told him. “Good, Then I'll be around about 8:30," eee Tr was not quite that late when she came down the stairs in answer to his ring. Norma was enveloped in a woolly tan polo coat, a brown beret pulled snugly over her head. The beret could not hide the gleaming gold of her hair, exposed in soft waves that framed her face. She wore brown pumps and, beneath the polo coat, a brown frock, Admiration shone in Bob Far- rell'’s eyes. All he said was, “Good thing you put on that coat. It’s going to be cool driving.” They went outside and Bob helped her into the car. It was a shining, newly painted coupe of inexpensive make, Not this year's model. The now paint was evi- dently a rejuvenation measure, “Where would you like to go?” Farrell asked. “Anywhere. It doesn’t matter.” “Like to drive through Wash- ington park and take @ run out on Crystal Creek highway?” “That would be grand.” “Then we'll do it.” Neither cared to talk while they were on the city streets. Other vehicles, traffic regulations took Farrell's attention, Norma ‘was content to lean back in her seat, letting the cool, crisp night breeze whip color into her cheeks. It was mid-September. The first frost was still several weeks away but there was the unmistakable scent of fall in the air. Norma loved it. The breeze hinted of fallen leaves and bonfires, All this was in her mind vague- ly when she realized they had AM res the park. Dancing rows of lights stretched ahead and twinkled at them from behind shrubbery and rolling hillocks as though a gigantic jewel case had been overturned on the black vel- vet of the-night. “It beautiful!” the girl sighed, “Oh, Bob, isn’t it beautiful?’ ‘Farrell, less emotional, “Yep. Always liked this park.”. * ee U Merl girl put a hand on his arm. “Drive around to that circle above the pavilion, won’t you?” agreed. | crossroads LAURA LOU BROOKMAN Daily Health Service Milk Rich in Vitamins Whole Grain Is Eno the Body Than Hi EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the twenty-fifth of a series of 36 timely articles by Dr. Morris Fish- bein on “Food Truths and Fol- Iles,” dealing with such much dis- cussed but little known subjects as calories, vit minerals, and balanced diet. - + *# # By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Medical Associa tion. Vitamin B is found in many suB-| stances. Ordinary meats are poor in vitamin B, while heart, liver and kidney contain it in somewhat larger is ‘found in milk, eggs and whole ceteals.The average sized hen’s egg is equivalent in vitamin B to about one- sixth of @ quart of cow's milk. In other words, the amount of vita- min B in a quart of milk is about the same as could be found in six or tinal seven eggs. Human milk is perhaps ® little richer than cow's milk. The whole grains of cereals are fairly rich’ in vitamin B, but most of the vitamin is found in the germ. as Bet! hly Milled ter. Generally for Products include enough vitamins sources than cereals so that hé need not be concerned about this from the vitamin point of view. When the diet becomes greatly restricted, he may hhave to give it careful consideration. Sherman feels that the intake of sary is often advantageous. @ues therefore that the use of whole gtain in preference to highly milled products should be encouraged, except in cases in which there is reason to fear that the roughage of whole grains will unduly irritate the intes- tract. Beans, péas and fats in general provide fairly good amounts of vitamin B. Potato has it. Oranges and lemons, grapefruit juice and fresh Prune juice have about as much vita- :min B as milk. maps when I'm not going anywhere. But when I actually threaten to start, they befuddle mé. Lash had a swell idea that had to do with meeting a Guide somewhere, packing a lot of phe ooea and going by canoe for 8. qi Tt being the fifth day of the great! heat wave, I went dizgily out into the street—still uncertain—when I met Harry Keller, who is connected with William Morris’ “show boat” cruises of the Belganiand. “Why don’t you ride up to Halifax with me next trip?” he most hos- pitably inquired. “Fishing—say all you've got to do is get off the boat and go in any direction and the trout send out a reception committee. Nova Scotia is the fisherman's para- dise.” So I called up Lash. He said he had never fished in Nova Scotia—and small wonder! He probably has a fisherman's reputation to maintain. But he would give me some letéers to fellows who knew all about the streams, That, my friends, is the sad story of how I became a “bourgeoise” fish- erman. And now that I am, I can't say that I give a continental hang— so long as I catch some fish. Considering how simple the mag- azine writer said it was, I almost fear Author of “MAD MARRIAGE” she urged. “I want. to see how the city looks with all the lights on.” . Bob nodded. The circle to which Norma referred was a show spot of Marlboro, providing a sweeping view of the entire busi- ness district and beyond that sec- tion of the metropolis known as East Marlboro, Bob brought the coupe up the winding hill, maneu- eltered position and cut off the moto: “There you are, & wi toward the city below. “There's your fairyland.” “That's exactly what it looks like! Us dozen or more cars parked in the circle to enjoy this view. Tonight there was only the borrowed coupe. Norma turned from the scene below’ them to meet the eyes of the boy at her side. She knew what was to happen a full instant before it did yet seemed helpless to prevent it. The girl felt her- self, swept into a tempestuous em- brace, felt Farrell's kisses on her lips and cheek, It seemed a long, long time before she was able to pull herself away. job!” she cried indignantly. b, how could you—" “Don’t say it!” he interrupted shortly, “Don’t even try to tell me how big a fool I’ve been! I know it'as well as you do. Bet- ter!” He was, fumbling with the mechanism to start the car. In another moment the coupe had backed and turned and they were driving away swiftly. Through the park the coupe flashed and out on the open road. i Farrell's eyes were on the pave- ment ahead. He seemed not to realize the gitl was beside him. In the shimmering light of a lamppost Norma caught . 8 swift glimpse of a face that was to start. Suppose I don’t catch any fish? Then what? “ah, well,” my friends will say with, a sigh, “he’s become a New Yorker.” (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) BIG FIRM ON ROCKS Boston, Aug. 29.~()—An inyolun- in federal court Saturday against Houghton and Dutton Company, one of Boston’s largest and oldest depart- ment stores. The petition was filed by three New York creditors. Weather Report t =) TEMPERATURE Highest yesterday Lowest last night .. PRECIPITATION Amt. 24 hrs, ending 7 a, m. Total this month to date Normal, this month to dat ‘ota: 1 to date . Normal, Jan, 1 to date . Accumulated deficiency since an. a GENERAL REPORT N. D. Statlons— BISMARCK, clay. Amenia, clear | Beach, clear . Bottineau, cle: Carrington, -cl | Crosby, clear Devils ‘Lake, | Dickinson, Ellendale, clay, Fessenden, pel ai Grand Forks, n, cl tary petition in bankruptcy was filed | Se! —o FE RARE PMN AIG Atthe Movies | o CAPITOL THEATRE Some of the most interesting in- terior scenes in “Arizona,” the latest Columbia release featuring Laura La Plante, John Wayne and June Clyde are those taken inside one of the most historic landmarks in California. The interiors of the residence of Colonel Bonham, in the firm version of the famous Augustus Thomas play, were shot in the old Cahuenga Chapel near Hollywood. It was here that the Indians used to come to worship in the days of the padres in 1847, and where the Mexi- can General Pico, surrendered to General Freemont in 1847. It, of course, is a typical example ture and adds considersble artistic ture and adds considerabel artistic value to the picture itself. As one notes the heavy adobe con- struction of the interiors of the old chapel, the eye passes to the back- ground where, through large windows Opening upon a beautiful patio, the lure of the desert waste with lone lilac mountains iooming in the dis- tance becomes apparent. Altogether the scene is charming to the extreme and it is in this his- toric adobe that many of the biggest scenes were taken, “Arizona,” with Laura La Plante, John Wayne, For- rest Stanley, June Clyde and Nena Quartaro can be seen at the Capitol Theatre on Monday. It is an adap- tation of Augustus Thomas’ celebrat- Priva Play, directed by George B. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Ernst Lubitsch, conceded by many to be the foremost director of motion pitcures, and the maker of two out- Standing successes, “The Love Pa- rade” and “Monte Carlo,” has turned out another fast-paced, bouyant en- tertainment, '“The~ Smiling Lieuten- ant,” starring the inimitable French- man, Maurice Chevalier. “The Smiling Lieutenant” is a typi- cal Lubitsch production. Its humor is sly, sophisticated and, at times, boisterously robust. From the story of ® gay and carefree military officer who loves one girl and is forced to marry another, a princess of royal blood, he has fashioned a romantic comedy of indescribable charm which critics and audiences throughout the country have labeled his most enter- taining picture since the advent of talking pictures. “The Smiling Lieutenant” will be |shown at the Paramount Theatre be- 1 ginning Monday. ‘|Bismarck Nine Will Face Washburn Club Members of the Bismarck Elks baseball team will travel to Washburn Sunday for a baseball game against the team in the McLean county city. Lefty Klein will pitch for Bismarck, with Wally Engelhardt catching, ‘The game is scheduled for 3 p. m. FLAPPER, FANNY Says: ou "4 $ 6 Des Moines, fa., 6 Dodge City, Kai 83 0 Edmanton, ‘Alte. 50 200 Havre, Mont, cleal 80 46:00 Helena, Mont., 80 52.00 Huron, 8. D., cl 72 60.00 Kansas City, M 80 62 ‘00 Miles City, Mon\ 76 48 00 No. Platte, Neb., 18 44 ‘00 clear 3 40 200 12 48 00 80 63:00 62 62-00 84 58:00 80 58. .00 16 38 = .00 76 52:00 86 54:00 we 3 40 18 WEATHER FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen ally fair tonight and Sunday; some- what warmer pandas. For North Dakota: Generally fair tonight and Sunday; somewhat warm- or Bunday and éxtre northwest ortion tonight. P For fouth Dakota: Fair tonight and Sunday; somewhat watmer Sunday and extreme west portion tonight, For Montana: Generally fair tonight and Sundey; warmer east and south portions tonight and east portion ju fair tonight t tonight in htly warmer rally tros' Sunday afternoon. Weather, outlook for the week be» sinning Mo nday, Aug. 31: For the upper Mississi| Missouri Valleys and central Great first of rebk, pi some showers by mid ing temperature ppl and lower Many a fine exterior has little bee neath the surface. STICKLEBS day; mostly near or somewhat normal thereafter. @ ‘THER CONDITIONS A Miow pressure area is. centered over the upper Great Lakes fegicn and light precipitation ocurred from the Red va alley eastward to On- tario, Generally fair weather pre- ions 4 to an nter= morn. ~ g ~ | A ” f 4 { q A y a fee a esd

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