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‘ers received more for these historic THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 13, 1932 Tribune i} NEWSPAPER Published by The Bismarck Tribune Comany, Bismarck, N. D. and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck as vecond 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) ........... see + 1.20) Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bismarck) eee 5.00 Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . 6.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year $1.00 Weekly by mail in state, three years . . 2.50 Weekly b; Dakota, per year .. +. 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per PERE, Binnie senso. oe Saeuies ses 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. ination in 1932, but the suddenness|/ and unexpectedness of the resigna- tion presents something of a mys- tery. It may be, of course, that the an- nouncement was sudden only to the general public; that the president may have known of Dawes’ inten- tions for a long time. However, the absence of any personal statement from the president regarding the case makes the whole business look queer. Dawes is one of the American del- egates to the arms parley &t Geneva and will take part in that meeting, {at least until the major controversies are settled. Then he will retire to private life. | Accepting the obvious fact that Dawes is sick of public life, it is only fair to ask what made him s0. The} obvious answer seems to be that he disagreed with Mr. Hoover on some important matters. The president has, during his present term, appar- ently been less content to leave many} important things to subordinates; than has been the case with his im- mediate predecessors. In that res- pect he is a good deal like Wilson, who also had his finger in every gov- ernment pie. Dawes, a vigorous man and a fight- er, may have tired of that situation. All rights of republication of all other magter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER, LEVINGS & BREWER (Incorporated) CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON A Thing of Today ‘| Reams of propaganda about the benefit to North Dakota agriculture of the cow, the sow and the hen, have led many of us to regard this develop- ment as a thing of the future. A visit to the Missouri Slope Poultry show, which opened Tuesday in the World ‘Wer Memorial building, furnishes ample proof that it is a thing of to- day, in so far as the poultry indus- ‘try is concerned. ‘ Here we see clear demonstration that poultry is with us to stay and that the quality as well as the quan- uty ig improving. From a by-product of the farm, designed to give the farm wife “pin money,” poultry has become a major product. Statistics of recent years indicate that poultry returns rival returns from the wheat crop in importance and value. In a way it is more important, for returns from poultry are available at practically all seasons of the year and the industrious hen has done much to keep farm folk comfortably cloth- ed and fed this year. Experts who have watched the de- velopment of the Missouri Slope show say the most important phase is the improvement in the average size and quality of birds displayed, and ‘nis,/ in turn, is a. reflechon of the increas- ing importance which poultry plays in the economic scheme. When farm flocks were a by-prod- uct they received by-product treat- ment. Now that they are a major concern they are receiving increasing attention and study. It seems safe to say that the average farmer has given more time in recent years to learning the best ways of raising poultry and of bringing it to market than he has given to the questicn of how to raise and market wheat. Exhibits offered at the show prove the assertions of local poultry en- thusiasts and producemen that the; industry is in good shape in this ter- ritory. All of the better farmers have kept their farm flocks and are striv- ing to increase the quality, both from the standpoint of egg and meat pro- duction. The general tendency has been toward a heavy type of general- purpose chicken which will provide ineome both from the sale of eggs and from the sale of the birds them- selves. rity A review of the recent turkey-mar- keting season shows that many farm- birds than they received from their grain crops. Compared to many other farm products, the price was rela- tively good and lower retail prices for manufactured goods increased the purchasing power of the turkey dol- lar. For many families, the market- ing of turkeys meant the difference between actual want and relative comfort. ‘The better farmers, we are told, are preserving their foundation stock and are making a real effort to breed bet- ter birds. They see that it costs just as much to raise a poor turkey or chicken as a good one. Agricultural historians tell us that the poultry and dairy industries al- ways have led the way up from agri- cultural depression. There ig no rea- son to believe the present circum- stance will prove an exception to the rule. But outside of its really significant phases, the poultry show is worth especially when he foun@ himself op- Posed to the president's ideas. The only thing for him to do under the circumstances was to quit. The lack of warmth in the white house ex- pression of regret lends weight to the supposition that “something hap- pened.” Editorial Comment Editoria!s 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 Role of the “Educational | Santa Claus” (The Spectrum, Student Publication, N. D. A. C.) The board of administration has succeeded remarkably well within the bre ! last few days in getting itself in the) New York, Jan. 13.—Paragraphs! headlines—satisfying that primitive|/suggested by notes on a desk spindle: | desire to get one’s name in print. Of all the Christmas cards received | The raising of the non-resident tui- tion fee may be a good publicity stunt, and a sop to the pressing demands of the taxpayer but it throws very|most amusing and original. little sand into the eyes of the stu-jtime it’s a collection of drinking dents, resident or non-resident, or to|Songs for the bootleg ear. those of the faculties at the institu-;they funny! For instance, tions of higher learning in the state. T “This state should be weary of|tor After 11 P. M. playing the educational Santa Claus for the young men and women of|and guest have been admonished by | other states,” said Chairman Nelson|house detectives to cease the nolse.’} Sauvain. Such a statement would/Some fun! Thanks, and when are) lead us to infer that the Christmas| You going to be doing your grand old| spirit prevails in North Dakota the) Stuff again around this town? { year around. After reading such a eee Statement we wondered if it ever oc-| | Must get over to see Jimmy Dunn / curred to the board that every organ-| While he’s in town. Just a lad getting | ization or institution has to assume|#long on Broadway before he went to the role of Santa Claus at some point|Hollywood. And look at him now! | in its career until it becomes mature|The ace newcomer on the Fox lot and; and established and is sufficient on-jone of their big bets for next year. to itself both financially and socially.|Now they toss teas for him at the ‘We feel that the educational insti-| Waldorf when he comes back for his tutions in this state are too young to! first New soba ene going west. become self-satisfied. At the present time their task is to present an at-| A lot of notes are here about Man- tractive enough program, both fi-|hattan’s writing people: Thyra Samp- nancially and curricularly, to attract| ter Winslow is going to write scenar- students from every state that our|!0s for Hollywood. Wonder if she | institutions may gain prestige and take along that amazingly placid} recognition in all parts of the uni-|“Peke” that she carries everywhere. | verse. When that is accomplished,|¢ven to parties and theater. . . Henrik{ and not until then, can we afford| Van Loon, who has been so intense on to raise our fees and set ourselyes|biography and history, is writing a on pedestals. play. .. . Some smart gent in Lon- Throwing sentimental feelings|40n has landed Alfonso, late king of aside, we feel quite sure that no state STICKERS | or university student today feels that a degree from their institution would be worth $1,200, the total cost of four years’ non-resident tuition. Certain- ly no student enrolled in the schools of education or of science or litera- ture can feel that way when a B. A. degree may be secured from such an institution as the University of Min- nesota for $120 of non-resident fees. As for the technical schools, an esti- mate made today showed a probable enrollment decrease of 25 per cent in the school of chemistry, one of the most adequately equipped and one of the stronger schools on this campus. According to statements made by the board, the state plans to educate its resident students with non-resi- dent fees. The theory is excellent, but school officials anticipate a de- crease of 90 per cent in the non- resident enrollment if this change goes into effect. We fail to see how ten per cent of the 1,116 non-resi- dent students will pay the education- al cost of some thousands of resident’ btudents. How any institution can hope to maintain an educational standard with a decreasing enrollment is ques- tionable. Good instructors will not be attracted to a non-progressive school and we shall hate to content ourselves with second-rate ones. In the midst of a business depres- sion seems a poor time to raise the tuition fees $277.50. Figures from the student employment bureau this fall showed that nearly 90 per cent of the students here were partially de- fraying their own expenses. It is a known fact that many of our stu- dents today are taxing their capa- cities to the utmost to stay in school until they can secure work. A bit of humor was cast into a strained situation teday when a Mon- tana student said, “Well, my father can buy two North Dakota farms for istration is attempting to give real estate dealers a hand, but we still fancy the role of the “educational Banta Claus.” PLEASANT SENTENCE Jacksonville, Fla. — Three youths picked up in this city for hitch- . They had six cents between Ordinarily hitch-hiking is frowned upon and punished with Jail sentence. Because of their age. however, Judge Anderson sentenced hear, will be called “Every Inch a King.” ... And Eddie Cantor, who has been writing little gag-books these several years, now collaborates with Georgia Jessel, with whom he has been teaming in vaudeville... . Tom Stix, of the Book League, goes on the air with literary chatter. . .. And Mike Gold, of The New Masses, stopped me on the street with a re- minder that he was doing a book on the life of John Reed... . Tom Da- vin, of all people, goes over to the Cosmopolitan magazine as one of the| # annually, Irene Franklin’s (the Jar-|new associates there. ... Just a few) | ins in pri life) are al the | weeks ago he was having a lot of fun taal Lhe eet bd a rhig| with @ super-scandal sheet, Broadway Brevities. .. . When I first met him, And are|Tom was steering Richard Hallibur- there's a ton and Peggy Joyce through the “4 'Telephe - | press colums. .. . And Harry Bur- Serna tore Meee thee a |tOE! who took Ray Long's job, was a song to be rendered “after the host Woman's page editor for NEA Service when first I heard of him. Here's a grin for you... . Just as an example in thrift, H. N. Swanson. of College Humor, used his old Christmas cards over again this year. . . . Charlie Driscoll, who although a hated rival—curse him—is an author- ity on pirates and brigands, returns to the air about the first of the year. ..- But no longer to tell pirate yarns, more’s the pity. . . Wonder if I should mention the inscription Kon- rad Bercovici wrote for me on his gift book. . “As one good bum to another.” .. . And thanks on the first of the year to Bernie Sobel for put- ting me, right out in print, in a book. ... My first appearance on the pages of a tome... . Do we ever outgrow liking to see our names in print? * * * ‘Wonder who that lad was who | Dates in history aren't the only kind that college boys forget. WORLD |Spain, for a personal story which, T|called on the phone the other after- noon, with the strangest request I ever have had. ... “My name is—,” he began, “And I come from Springfield, Ill. I read your stuff in the paper there, and here I am in New York broke. Can you loan me some money? I don't know a soul here. Yours is the only name I know in New York. I could use about $20.” And so could I, stranger! (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) Quotations | rs ———+ If people keep bowing their heads for Rockne at games, they will soon call him St. Knute.—Professor Husely Cason of Wisconsin U. ** * Few of us who use radio understand very much about it.—Prince George of England. mk * quickly announced that debts and re- parations should be canceled.—Pre- mier Laval of France. ee x If I'm dead—it’s lots of fun.—Jean- ette MacDonald, movie actress. ** ® In some countries people have too | C. G. Darwin, University of Edin- burgh. en # ‘Truth loses values if people do not understarid.—Kiu-0, Japanese priest. By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor, Journal of the American Med- ical Association Much attention has been given dur- ing the past two years to the so-call- ed Gerson and Hermannsdorfer diets ‘used in tuberculosis. oe raw meat lagen wees wc advised for this disease, but at present the evidence in favor of such a diet does not indicate is some evidence that a high pro! diet increases the coagulability of the blood.’ Hermannsdorfer was convinc- ed that a diet largely acid in charac: aa In the week ending Jan. 13 six ves- the of wounds. sels over "1600 tons, two under 1600 | ‘Pr, hastened, the Testing ve of gar tons, and two fishing vessels had been | ons0 Lake has the evidence sunk by submarines. In the samelror these diets in which salt is re- Fock, five French vessels and Wo stricted in cases of tuberculosis, He has also given special attention to the While submarines were taking this |other factors involved in diets for the tuberculous. He is inclined to believe that a high protein ration is of value. Apparently the fat in the body can be r held in reserve and drawn on at will. Several authorities have recommend- ed excess fats in the diets of the tu- berculous. It has not been established that the calcium in the blood in tuberculosis is lower than ordinarily; excess cal- cium in the food does not seem to aid the breatirteg of the tubercle. i | A graphologist says faults and vir- tues are betrayed by writing. Espe- cially * when read from the witness stand. ‘ fh IS id Neither has it been certainly dem- And now it’s divulged that Lithu-| onstrated that any large increase over the usual amount of vitamins is ad- visable, even for persons in good ELEVATOR M. sg Things have got so bad that the man on the street says stock market suckers are vnoe we @ rebait. = But it’s unlikely they'll swallow an: other hook without knowing there’s catch in it. **# # Colombia bull fight fans were dis- appointed in an American bull fight- er’s performance because the bull was lazy. Hereafter the American will realize that if the public must have bull, it must be interesting. - se * North Carolina is planning ® 10- year plan to draw business. After which it is safe to predict a new and fiercer wave of Carolina melodies. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) AGE DOESN'T STOP HIM London.—At an age when other men are too feeble to indulge in| nothing more than mild exercises, Sir Flinders Petrie, 78, has set off to Palestine again to search for hidden treasure, The great archaeologist has been excavating for 50 years and this time hopes to uncover valuable information on the old homes of the Shepherd Kings. FISHY, FISHY, IN A TUB Boston, Police staged a raid on the home of Constantin Rubynsk to search for liquor. On looking in a bathroom, they found a live pickerel specs We used to be faintly ashamed that we were not omniscient, but now ig- norance has become respectable —Dr. L d “GRAND” have lost their wealth and mennerian by A household is and Ceelly’ Postpo they have Cecily, ARRY NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIIL ARRY stopped the car, as she had hoped he’might, under thejlove charily and spasmodically— trees on the driveway and kissed her. “It’s true,” he said, then. “It is true, isn’t it, Cecily?” “Oh, it is!” she answered. “For both of us?” “But dear—of course for both of us.” “Wouldn’t it have been terrible,” he asked, “if I’d loved you, like this, or if you'd loved me and the other one hadn’t? It couldn't be Itved. What do people do? Cegily, have you ever loved any other man —like this?” “I have never loved any other man at all,” she said. “You've thought you were in love, though, haven't you?” She shook her head. “No, I never have. Not once nor a little, But you have, haven't you, Barry?” “I've had cases, crushes—that sort, But I've never asked any other girl to marry me, so they couldn't have amounted to: much— the crushes, J mean—could they?” “Perhaps not to you. But what about the girls?” “Nothing at all about the girls. It has been always all on my side. No other girl has ‘ever loved “me nor liked me—very much.” . Cecily, then, could take her choice of hypocritical humility, base per- so she thing when you don’t tell me truth.” “As you should,” he agreed. haven't told you anything KIND RA lens the around in the tub. Sergeant asked Rubynsk what he was doing with the fish. “Fattening it up for Friday,” Rubynsk replied. Wolsele; isn’t true, sweet, and I won't if I/ Well, never mind, I won't dramatize can help it. You must have known|/it. The house was on firé. The I was trying to be funny, if feebly,/upper hall was thick with smoke. about the shuddering ladies. Though|I was five years old...I ran to the most of them are unflinchingly in-|front stairs, and flantes were leap- different to me and my charms.” |ing up them. I couldn't get through “It wasn't that,” she said. the hall to the back stairway be- “It was?” he prompted. cause the smoke was too thick. My “Your saying that no girls had| picture of it now is exaggerated, of ever loved you or even liked you.” |course. But I think of flames shoot- eee iy ing out at mo from everywhere—at HE sianced at her, “I see,” ho Pateneeestiee ee a a ° 0 me. said. “Via Lutie, Mcpeaso ta’ ‘Through it all I heard clanging and I might have known—they're both |/ screams and shouts, as if the world Uppy. 1 can't see that it matters a were taking part in a final mon- hoot in hades whether girls hay trous quarrel. Five years old is loved me or not—the repeating of too young to be as frightened as I it sounds simpy and sickening, any-/"% in that hall, choking with how. “But you'll have to take my smoke that day. ‘word for it. I should know, Soe shouldn't I? Those girls loved thei rts Point Out Right Food ate seas the Disease that it has any special value. Rh and the along time to be persuaded that he ator operator in php la, and go to finally convinced him, and here they are shown York on a belated honeymoon to become Sir Reginald and Lady LOVE LEAVER | STRAHAN me afraid. death, “n°. no, darling. Nothing like id the fits were purely hysterical; I baven’t had one for 16 years. I'm not a freak. I don’t mean that I can’t stand an argument nor a dis- eussion nor that I have to have my own way about everythin; could tell me to go jump lake, if you felt like it, and didn’t scream it. Don’t ever scream at me, or call me names in a loud Yoice—will you?” do you define a quarrel, dear?” ugly words, Loud voices. Squawk- ing sareasms—” ——— Daily Health Service Correct Diet Is Vital Treating Tuberculosis Necessary to Combat health. If it can be shown that s de- finite lack of vitamins exists, that lack should be supplied. But only rarely in the American population does any adult seem to suffer from a real vitamin deficiency. The experi- ments with vitamin feeding may be carried out over long periods of time, since: it does not seem that harm can result from a relative excess of vitam- ins. ‘The two diets most talked about at the present time are the Gerson diet, Hermannsdorfer-Sauerbruch diet. These diets do not vary greatly one from the other. Both of them eliminate sodium chloride or common: salt, substituting a calcium-rich salt; both restrict meats greatly and water greatly; both are rich in fat and pro- tein but low in carbohydrates; both provide for giving much raw food with cod liver oil, phosphorus and calcium. xe In surveying all of the available evi- dence for these methods, Mayer con- cludes that some people react favor- ably to the withdrawal of table salt and that some improve on @ larger than normal vitamin intake, but that it is not safe as a routine proposit very dividual and Nass. AN TOBE ‘SIR REGIN. Associated Press Photo jeginald.” But his wit they salied from New © em Doran and Co. Suppose. I'm scared to , T'll never dare—” af cee % that. I’m not a freak- You in the “Barry! But—but exactly how “Noise. Recriminations. Hot, “But, Barry, your people couldn't T RAN into the bathroom—some selves a lot; they loved their van- ity;Ahey may, perhaps, have loved but they didn’t love me in the least. As I've told you, they didn’t even lke me.” Cecily said “Ob, but you couldn't know that, positively,” and quatled at his frown and added hastily, “could you?” “I read the other day,” he an- swered, “about a man who, when he came home and found his dinner ‘was not ready, held his wife's hands down on the hot cook-stove until she fainted. She'd have a reason- able right to decide, don’t you think so, when she gets out of the hos pital that the man didn’t love her and had never loved her nor liked her as a real friend?” “Barry!” “I'll tell you,” he said. “I'd thought that I wouldn't. It is un- necessary, in a way. But you'll re- gard it as a confession, won't you, Cecily, and not as a warning? Quarrels—do something to me that T can't endure. I can’t explain the sensation better than by saying they extinguish me, suffocate me, though that isn’t accurate, because T suffer all the time. Fact dear, a quarrel touches my mentality dan- “I'm sure that I know how it came about. Mother and dad quar- reled incessantly, frightfully during my childhood, and all the unpleas- fidy, or just plain dumbness, She|ent things thet happened to me ,found none of them to her pleasure, | happened in connection with these “Why—Barry!”|Quatrels. I grew-to hate them; to miserably and let it go at that, Berne of the loud Se , sha “Di words, Physically afraid. aot a tanned.’ “Borvy bat|They made 'me ashamed, too, I i é fishing and hunting the upper hall where dad kept|and flames again, and give me over thaps. {|to the Gevilt” : When 1 jut—but Barry,” Cecily q door—| ered, “St—it $s too terrible, It makes idea of water, I imagine, At any rate, it was at the side of the house where the fire had gained the least headway. Just as I got there @ fireman, with his face blackened from smoke, came through the win- dow. He let out a round oath and reached for me. That was the end of it—so far as I was concerned. He frightened me much more than the flames and the smoke, Like a good child, I had gone regularly to junday school. I thought the fire man was the devil, and that he'd come to catch me, I gaye up the ghost right then and there. Faint- ed, you know. “Strange but fires don’t bother me in the least, and never have since then, I'll run as fast as the rest of them after the fire engine, But to this day I have to stop de- lberately and rationalize the whole works before I can know. that it was not the quarrel before the fire that day that caused the flames to lick at me and the smoke to choke me and the devil himself to come and get me, “They brought me out of it all right that time, The next time the folks started a quarrel I ruined it by throwing something or other not unlike an epileptic ft. Scared the lives out of them. A couple of repetitions, and they sent me to grandma's to live for the winter. I recovered beautifully from the fits, But still I run for my closet and hide when I hear a quarrel, I don’t coddle myself and think it-s cute and original to be like that. I'm ashamed of it to the bone. But it’s true, A querre) takes something out of me that I don’t ever get back. Now, do you think that a person who liked me, and to whom.!’d ex- plained all this—much more in de- tall that I've explained it to you— would drag me through the smoke have been—like that? They were both university people, and your father was a member of Congress.” “He may have developed his voice there, It was suitable for nothing on earth but a shipwrecked satlor— that voice of dad’s. But they were good, worthy people—both of them, Overeducated a bit and—well, un- derbred, or they couldn’t have quar. Teled as they did. You see, they Never Mked each other at all, though for years were violently and vulgarly in love. Shall we talk about something else?” “In just a minute,” she said. “Barry—I'm still frightened, Im afraid you have made a mistake, T'm afraid that I’m a quarrelsome Derson. Only this morning I was quarreling with my little sister.” Ho laughed. “I can hear you chittering like a squirrel, Did you scream at her? Did you say one cruel, scorching thing to her. You id not, You couldn't. I'm sorry I told you. Please ‘forget it, dar- lng. And if, sometimes, I get unendurable, don’t say a word. Just smack me down. I don’t mind. being smacked. It ig only words that burn me up. You are always cool, Cecily. That is one of the things I love most about you, Your hands are cool to touch, and your voice fs soft and. cool, and your eyes are the color of cool rain clouds, and your - cheeks are pinky like sea shells, tnd juit them upeare ted aete uy and kist-shapea,” °° SOP8l Ceclly shivered, “Boo! my flesh is goosefiesh, and. m: teeth chatter, and my heart’s in Ee chest, and I'll die wun. » unheat hada ted, and une Ws “That's a swell way to recel my fairest flights of fancy, ant it? All right for you, Y'll think ‘em up ahead of time, after this, ° and revise them, and then if you still go ribald, I’ll—” He paused to search through his threats, (To Be Continued) juav-