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4 4 te «<¢ THE BISMARCY TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 27, 1982 at (DRESSES Women’s CO ATS uisser (HATS S OL D! EVERY GARMENT GOES AT TREMENDOUS REDUCTIONS SEE OUR WINDOWS For a Quick S A L E ORDERED All CONTROL TO HINGE ON APPROPRIATION Engineer Points Out That Funds For Purpose Will Be Gone Next June Public water supplies, sewage dis- eral sanitation will be under no con- trol after June 30, 1933, unless the coming legislature appropriates suffi- cient funds to carry on the work of the bureau of sanitary engineering, according to the biennial report of Dr.) A. A. Whittemore, head of the state department of health. ing the biennium will show that a sanitary engineering bureau is indis- pensable to any health department,” Whittemore’s report said. “The phases of the work attempted are numerous and varied. In assuring safe water supplies, more adequate sewage dis- Posal facilities, cleaner communities, safe milk supplies, sanitary swimming pools and tourist camps, the bureau is rendering a great service to the citi- zens of North Dakota. “The organization of the bureau was made possible through the financial | assistance of the international health board, which provided sufficient funds | to form a working nucleus. This sub- | sidy will be discontinued June 30, 1933, and unless the coming legislature will appropriate sufficient funds to carry on the work, the bureau of sanitary! engineering will have to be discon- tinued. This will mean that public water supplies, sewage disposal sys- tems, milk supplies and general san- itation will be under no control. Has Made Rapid Strides During the biennial period just passed, North Dakota has made rapid strides in its milk sanitation program, the report showed. Valley City adopt- ed the U. 8. public health service stan- dard ordinance and nine cities adopt- ed other milk ordinances. Milk sur- veys of several cities considering en- actment of the standard ordinance were conducted at Grand Forks, Far- “SELL OUT” PUBLIC SANITATION [Lindbergh Kidnaping Biggest 1932 Story Depression, Protest Elections, Marches to Washington, Collapse of Kreuger and Insull By WILLIS ‘The year 1932 to some is the Year It was his year. It was he who Republicanism to mildly progressive | seven million votes, It was he who swung the American Legion from anti- | bonus to pro-bonus, the American Federation of Labor from passive to ag- | gressive. It was he who marched on Washington for the bonus, he who ran} It was he, and nearly 12,000,000 of him who were unem-| ployed, who set the country to pondering and planning for the future. P Without prepedent was the overturn by which, casting well over 22 mil- ‘A summary of the work done dur-! tion Democratic votes, the Forgotten Man climbed into the political drivers’ seat. The election of Franklin D. Roosevelt and an overwhelmingly Demo- cratic house and senate was the common man’s effort to cope with condi-| the farm strike. tions he had never seen before. Scarcely had the new year gotten well under way when the nation was stunned by the most spectacular crime in its history, the thing that couldn’t happen. On the misty, driz- aly night of March 1, kidnapers slunk to the hill on lonely Sourland Moun- tain in rural New Jersey where had built their home. Placing a lad- der against the house, stealthy hands! |removed baby Charles from his crib and vanished. A frantic manhunt developed no real clew. The nation was brought to the humiliation of dealing with the underworld in a vain effort to protect its own. False clews, costly hoaxes (one cost Lindbergh $50,000 in bills tossed melodramati- cally over a wall into a cemetery), cruelly false hopes, and dime novel episodes followed one another. Then on May 12 the buried remains of the child's body were found near the home. The year closed without the guilty being discovered. In August, Lindberghs. MURDER IN HAWAII Echoes still sound through Hawaii in demands for reform of the terri- torial government as the result of a murder. Joe Kahahawai, half-breed, go, Jamestown, Valley City, Bismarck, and Minot. Recommendations contained in the report include one asking for adequate appropriation for equipment and ex- penses for the purpose of carrying on duties now imposed by law, particular- ly with regard to supervision of water supply and sewage disposal plant con- struction, maintenance, and opera- tion. If funds are not appropriated, the work of this bureau must be dis- continued, it was reported. Other recommendations ‘ec Legal and financial provisions the study of streams in North Dakota with a view of determining the amount and extent of pollution; leg- islation regulating the use of streams for purposes of sewage disposal, per- mitting cities to finance sewage dis- Posal projects by charging sewer rentals, giving the health department: authority to supervise the design, con- struction and operation of swimming pools, and placing the supervision of water supplies, sewage and refuse dis- Posal systems at state institutions un- der the supervision of the state health | jong. department. The report showed that a total of $430,000 was spent for water works improvements in the state during the biennium. Forks Spent $225,000 The city of Grand Forks completed @ water works improvement program involving an expenditure of $225,000, Fargo spent $70,000 and Williston $67,- 000, A. L. Bavone, state sanitary en- gineer, reported. Other cities spend- ing money to improve the water works included Harvey, Valley City, Park River, Mandan, Washburn, Wahpeton, and Westhope. Cities which had to increase their water sup- ply to avert a shortage due to drought conditions were Towner, Mohall, Fair- mount, Langdon, Lakota, Rugby, Bowbells, and Walhalla. Bavone said that one reason why many North Dakota cities now are having considerable trouble with sew- age disposal is that North Dakota statutes have placed no restrictions upon the use of streams for sewage disposal. More regulation of the use of rivers is needed, he said. Pollution Is Menace “Closely aliied with the problem of sewage is the problem of stream pollution,” the report said. “In the past there has been little atten- tion paid to this problem but with continued drought the problem of stream pollution has become an im- portant one. There are no statutes in the state regulating the use of streams and for that reason many municipali- ties have been lax in providing ade- quate treatment of their wastes be- fore discharging into the streams. There are 68 towns and cities in North Dakota that have sewerage sys- tems, the report showed. Of this number 33 discharge sewage into streams or coulees without treatment and 35 others have treatment plants. It is significant, the report declared, that only two m state have complete ment plants. They are Jamestown and Minot. _ Tribune Want Ads Bring Results had been acquitted of a charge of raping Mrs. Thalia Massie, wife of a U, 8. naval officer. He was then ab- ducted and shot to death by Massie, Mrs. Granville Fortesque, husband and mother of the injured girl, and two U. 8. sailors. All were convicted of manslaughter, sentenced to prison, served one hour, when sentence was commuted. Sensational was the suicide of Smith Reynolds, playboy son of to- bacco millions, and the absolution of Libby Holman, Broadway blues singer ‘for| and his wife, of any connection with his death when charges against her ‘Were dropped. When iron gates clanged behind Al} Roscoe federal’ penton federal pel tiary on May 4, many saw the beginning of society's victory over the racket, already ‘as hard hit by the depression as legitimate busi- ness. lion and ® half piled up for fiscal 1932-33. YEAR OF PROTEST Throughout the world it was a year of turmoil, of stress and strain which broke through the surface in- termittently. The United States tions before. In January Father Cox began by leading 10,000 men from Pittsburgh past the capitol. The great “outpouring of New York's thirsty was led in a “Beer Parade” by Mayor Jimmy Walker in May. By early June the bonus.army was on its way to Washington, stopping trains, bumming rides and food. By the time the proposal for pre-payment of the bonus came up in congress, 20,000, mostly ex-service men, i Other Big News Breaks the Year of the Shanghai-Manchuria Adventure. To some it was just ee Third Year of the Great Depression. But in the United States, at least, it Posal systems, milk supplies, and gen-; might well be named the Year of the Forgotten Man. : Charles Lindbergh and Ann Morrow’ @ second son, Jon, was-born to the; | Industrial Structures THORNTON of the Lindbergh kidnaping. To some, swung the country from contervative Democracy by a plurality of nearly initial MORE MARCHES As congress convened again in De- ember, 3000 communist-led marchers converged on Washington to demand) relief, Police permitted one parade,| sent them home. Delegations of) farmers again besought aid of con- ; Bress, and another bonus march, com- ;munist-led this time, demanded the/ bonus. Most of these demonstrations were surprisingly bloodless, greatest toll: being at Dearborn, Michigan, when four rioters were killed, 50 in- Jured in a clash with police near the Ford plant. Most impressive and most fruitful ' of all these protests was the success- ful hunger strike of the Mahatma Mohandas K. Gandhi. In six days of fasting, this little wizened saint broke the resistance of the whole British Empire, and forced conces- sions on representation at the polls by the “untouchables” and their en- trance into sacred temples. The guns of rising imperialist Ja- pan ushered in the year, shattering Shanghai and blasting a way into Manchuria. The remainder of the year was spent by Japan in materi- ally aiding, forcefully defending, and morally justifying before the world the “puppet state” it set up there un- der the name of Manchoukuo, Russia celebrated the 15th, Italy the 10th anniversaries of Commu- nism and Fascism, respectively, both with evidence of satisfaction in their success, THE WORLD PROGRESSES Man's mastery over earth, land and sea increased. Higher than living man had ever ascended into the Stratosphere rose Prof. Auguste Pic- card's balloon, more than ,10.4 miles above the earth. Deeper into the sea in a bathysphere, nearly a half mile (2200 feet) sank William Beebe, nat- uralist. Atlantic and Pacific oceans were brought closer together as Capt. Turner set an east-west mark of 12 hours, 22 minutes. Capt. James Mollison soloed west across the At- lantic in a tiny ship, and Amy John- son, his wife, beat his record from London to Capetown in four days, seven hours. She also set a new rec- ord of seven days, seven hours for the return trip, and 9 new round trip record. The most feted air achieve- 14 hours, 56 minutes, fastest transatlantic hop, first solo by a woman. Millions Americans, treated to| rare supply power for 16,000,000 people over @ 170,000-mile area. Scarcely second was the British dam on the Indus, the Lloyd Barrage, greatest ir- rigation project of our times, which will weer 6,000,000 acres around Sind, Indi In a stupendous operation, Holland completely cut off the Zuider Zee from the North Sea by dikes, adding seven per cent to the area of the country by wrestling land from the sea. America’s great Hoover dam made notable progress, and New York contributed virtual completion of Rockefeller Center, $250,000,000 office building and theater project. Despite the fact that half the world’s ships France uted two great new liners, and U. 8. yards the Manhattan, largest Amer- iean-built ship. The day dawned for there. When the house passed, but the senate rejected their demand, refused to leave. ‘Hot August the order to evict the the steel-fabricated house, air-condi- HONEY is working, When the Toosens cough up nasty mucus, the Tarts hel See name FOLEY on the package: Contetae 15 vroven ingredients, compout Bat, ‘Does, not. upsct’ stomachs 100,000. bottles used. 30c, 60c. Sold” everywhere, STARTS ruins. Two financial dukedoms crashed in Ivar Kreuger blew out his brains when the sands slipped away on which he had reared an interna- tional industrial structure of match- es. Samuel Insull, titanic juggler of American utility stocks and com- panies, fled to Greece when his paper house of securities collapsed. Insull and his brother are under indictment. Thousands of investors count their Insull losses, Death took heavy toll. The political scene lost John Rich- ard Voorhis, 102; Aristide Briand, 70; Jules Jusserand, 77; John Sharp Wil- ams, 78. Literature and art lost Frederick O'Brien, 62; Lytton Strachey, 51; Ga- maliel Bradford, 68; Charles Fort, 57; John Bach McMaster, 79; Kenneth Grahame, 72; John Macy, 55; Eu- gene Brieux, 74; Donald Freeman, 29; Clinton Scollard, 59; Charles Living- son Bull, 57; Edmund Vance Cook, 66. Death began to catch up with men’ ‘imate on the all-time minimum flow who pioneered in the 30-year-old auto industry: Hugh Chalmers, 59; Alex- ander Winton, 72; Leo Melanowski, 2" hour and 15 minutes to supply i 16; F. 8. Duesenberg, 55. Stage, screen and concert hall never again will see Tyrone Power,!and a half years the Bismarck plant 62; Minnie Maddern Fiske, 66; Jo-|has pumped 2,314,000,000 gallons, or 10 hanna Gadski, 59; John Philip Sousa,|hours and 42 minutes of the river's 71; Chauncey Olcott, 71; Billy Min- sky, 41; Florenz Ziegfeld, 63; Wilton Lackaye, 69, or Rin Tin Tin, 14. Brookings, 82. The millions of Rob- ert Dollar, 88 Thomas Bata, 56; Paul Warburg, 63, and Edith Rockefeller McCormick, King Gillette, 77, passed to other hands. Rudyard Kipling celebrated his 66th birthday, John D. Rockefeller his 93rd, Paul von Hindenburg was 85, and venerable Oliver Wendell Holmes, whose life with that of his father practically span the life of the republic, was 91. The world was a year older. Missouri Could Supply New York With Water Trouble encountered by Wahpeton, N. D., and Breckenridge, Minn., in ob- taining an adequate water supply set William Yegen, engineer at the city waterworks plant, to thinking how fortunate Bismarck and other Mis- sour river cities are, He took a pencil and, basing his es- Of 216,000,000 gallons per hour, record- ed in 1931, figured that it would take Bismarck and Mandan’s annual needs, even at this reduced figure. In eight flow at the minimum. New York City consumes a billion gallons of water a day in summer. At Carried on after their deaths are the philanthroples of Julius Rosen-| wald, 69; George Eastman, 77; Ellen | Browning Scripps, 95, and me this rate the Missouri could supply the needs of the metropolis in five hours sexed Missouri Slope Champion Shown above are Viola Schnell and her calf which won champion- ship honors at the Junior Livestock Show, held recently in Dickinson. Miss Schnell is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Schnell of near Dickinson. Mr. Schnell is widely known as a Shorthorn breeder. The mother of the champion calf was sired by “King of the Fairies,” owned by the prince of Wales and grand champion at the Interna- tional Livestock Exposition in Chicago in 1925. A sister to the sire of the calf was grand champion female at the same show in 1931. WEDNESDAY! Sug. Co. tioning, the commercially usable pho- toelectric cell, INSULL AND KREUGER 316 MAIN AVE, Poss CAPITOL —=>= THEATRE =—. MRS. T. R. 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