The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 24, 1933, Page 4

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! to kill the aged man. The blows were intended only to mage it easy to rob. This probably is true, but death rode that thudding railroad spike just the same. There is something sickening about 8! the whole business. Who' can look with equanimity upon such a train of events? Who can hear without a NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) + Published by The Bismarck Tribune , Bismarck, N. D., and en- tered at the postoffice at Bismarck second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher. FEN hanover tiensecr 8 Rates Payable in Ne aan, that he be hanged? One wonders Daily by carrier, per year........8730) about the background of this lad. year Un Bis- | | What advantages must have 4 denied him to bring him to this stage $00] at 20 tender an age? Why has life a 3 Oe Dakota ? resigned to death on the gallows? weeny by mail nak ae The answers to these questions eee ee on this case. They might show that Dakota, Per Year .....0000es000 this boy had accomplices in this crime Weekly by mail in Canada, per. lin the persons who denied to him the things which are the right of every Member of Audit Bureas of “ Circulation 4 The Associated Press is oxeli rely substantially as he failed toward it. to it}/us can escape as we review a case A Rival for Capone Al Capone is the most famous man ever sent to prison for evading his income tax but if the government is successful in convicting Charles E. Mitchell, New York banker, he will matter herein are also aes CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON have a rival. Birds of a Feather At first glance it would seem that] For if Capone was the king of a few nations are farther apart po-|Steat city’s underworld, Mitchell has litically than Nationalist Germany,| een and is # king in high financial/no relation to elimination of excre- rapidly heading toward restoration of|‘!rcles. As head of the National City’ ti the Hohenzollerns to power, and So-|5ank for many years, he controlled viet Russia, scorning the minutest|™more money than any other banker, Getails of what the old German re-|!" America, a nation of big bankers. gime stood for. Yet the two are birds of a feather when it comes to/man or any other. He is entitled to method, at least. & fair trial and to be presumed in- Recent dispatches from the Father-| 0cent until he is proved guilty. Jand have stressed a political group| But the crime which he committed, | t gone mad, almost as much so as did] !f the government's charges are true, the Russians when first they felt the]! Teal enough. It would mean that, reins of government in their hands|®S he drew from the people their sus- at Mi " tenance by financial manipulations, f; Neither brooks opposition of the|e refused to bear his share of the faintest sort. By governmental fiat,|@0Vernmental burden, even though enforced by the mailed fist, each has the protection of the government attempted to control almost the very}™ade his transactions possible. thoughts of its “citizens.” It is to be hoped that Mitchell will Esch has placed a tremendous] be dealt with as any other individual | t premium upon adherence to a po- charged with crime, with no more litical organization. In Russia it is/Consideration, and no less, than is membership in the Communist party’ given the ordinary man. If he is whereby a few million rule 160,000,000. | Silty the fact that he has been and| In Germany it is membership in the| 18 ® “Big Shot” should not save him| J “Brown Shirt” organization of Chan-| from paying the penalty. cellor Hitler with its attendant license ny AS agen to ignore the rights of everyone else.| Secretary Woodin, « composer of In Russia the ruling spirits are| note, probably found the “nut cracker above the law. Unfairness and down- | Suites” most consoling during the first Tight criminality are excused on the| few days of his term. grounds that the perpetrators are z actuated by a sense of political] Resources of Bank righteousness. This is no less true in Germany where Hitlerites have murdered, invaded private homes,! Resgurces.of the Bank of North Da- — neo a ipigacates kota total $23,751,055.23, a statement “i ripley pean Were political setie. [of the bank as of March 16 shows. dee pomucal activ-| Liabilities include $20,695,735.32 in ‘The result, of course, is to empha- Size the similarity in all dictatorships. 4 eee Incidentally it is an important bit of history which is being enacted in Germany just now. With the war reparations treaties out of the way, Germany seems to be emerging from the obscurity into which she was cast by the outcome of the World war. The average Teuton, mindful of past glories as compared with recent and present trials, looks hopefully forward to a change for the better under more flamboyant leadership than the country has enjoyed since the days of the Kaiser. As the Prussian diet opens a Ho- henzollern prince sits in the royal box and is cheered. One political leader bids for continued prominence by expressing the hope that the monarchy may yet be restored. The flag of the Republic is cast into the discard and the imperial banner takes its place. By its side floats the em- blem of a political party which, by an overwhelming plurality of prom- ises and a show of force, has taken Precedence over constitutional gov- ernment. In the president's palace sits old Paul von Hindenburg, by whose grace the Nazis came to power. One of the first acts of the new administration was to insult him, at least by infer- ce, in the declaration that it recog- nizes no other power than Hitler's. It 4s a human drama of the mouse thumbing its nose at the mountain which hore it. Have Fractured Neck ** % Possibly the victim of a fractured ‘These things are important to the! neck, Carl Ellingson, 55-year-old Self- ‘United States because of the possibil-| ridge man, was in a local hospital ittes for the future. Europe no longer | Friday receiving treatment for in- undivided profits, $124,000 reserve fund, and $475,000 due the Recon- |i struction Finance Corporation. $9,155,047.30 of the state treasurer's iund, $1,349,734.34 from state institu- tions; $1,066,076.56 from county treas- ury sinking funds, $4,674,122.44 from county treasury general funds; $131,- 491.70 from the city treasury general funds; $720,989.03 from township treasury general funds, and $1,162,- 907.21 from school treasury general funds. Private deposits include $2,- 284,974.19 individual deposits; $142,- 932.67 depository banks, and $6,549.88 cashier’s checks. Believe Bandit Gang St. Paul, March 24.—()—Police robbed the Farmers Terminal State Bank of Newport of $6,600 had been linked with gangs that staged two raids in Minneapolis. License plates on an automoible, found abandoned near Newport and thought to be the bandit car, were said by police to belong to a sedan stolen from L. J. Shields and recover- ed in December. The sedan was used in the $200,000 Minneapolis a year ago and was aban- doned in Como Park here after the robbery December 16 of the third Northwestern National Bank in Min- reapolis. At least $20,000 in cash was taken in the latter raid and three men Accident Victim May ‘This nation never desired to do so. But it had no desire that arrogance ‘and conceit should return to the sad- | be i l F i i agi al I re i ie : ; 1 ill $ 2 . 3 | oa ne i: if : iH TD 4 i fk H i ji ae HE i been | Ty's digestive much whether you worry about meet- ing the interest on the mortgage about the dire effects you will suffer digestion. gether for Deposits including public funds are, had better spend your dime for an- other package of your or a snifter of your favorite oil or whatever nostrum you depend COLLEGE WORKER DIES Fargo, N. D., March D. B. VC. Operating in St. Paul} 4™wer—1 repeat what 1 suggested Friday believed bandits who Thursday|Hunt Michigan Woods Four Favorites Win is able to hold Germany juries he suffered in an automobile | four bo, coal. accident near his home three days| Chisholm, Red Wing and Montevideo y iene first round games of Fearing that Ellingson’s neck might | Minnesota state fractured, doctors planned an/ball tournament at the Bigned letters pertaining self-addressed envelope is enclosed. im ink. No reply can be made to tions. Address Dr. William Brady, shudder the plea trom ® 11-year-old | sopGer IT AND IT WILL WORK BETTER little lesson in physiology: ‘The entire process of digestion, from the swallowing of food and drink to the expulsion of the residue from the intestine, is no more under control of conscious- ness or the will than is the beat- ing of your heart. No matter how often<t say this or in how many different words, the great majority of readers go right on complacently believing that one can boy. They might show that society/somehow “regulate” the bowels by has failed toward this lad quite as|taking medicine, funny food prepara- tions, or thought. Here is one who even condescends ‘That is a thought which none of +, show how illogical I am about it: — ait the process of elim: Ou - ination is not a conscious one; that it is not under control of the mind or the will. Yet you say that if we stop thinking about it and interfering tee it, elimination will regulate If it ts not under control of the mind how come it works so well L. M, uses a term I have never em- . The function of defection has ion. Merely thinking about this func- tion has no apparent effect upon it, one way or the other. A healthy per- son with a fair knowledge of anatomy It is not for us to pre-judge this|and physiology has normal digestion whether he puts his mind on the or never gives any stage of process it a thought. It is worry, anxiety, fear, not hinking, that retards or inhibits the process. Doesn't matter or’ “autointoxication” rom if your bowels are permitted to get all clog- ged up. Anger, hatred, jealousy, malevol- ence, all have a marked inhibiting ac: tion on the vigorous peristaltic or waves of contraction that pass along he intestine and propel the contents. These unpleasant emotions throw the brake on the normal processes of They stop secretion alto- a time, That is how a ittle flare-up of anger or jealousy just before dinner drives away ap- ion. Petite. The first step in overcoming the Put at $23,000,000|s ms deposits, $2,000,000 capital, $455,319.91 | roy favorite pills, mineral on. QUESTIONS Yes, We Have Ni ‘A little while For Engineer’s Body raid on the North American Bank in | exhaustic In Minnesota Tourney Minneapolis, March 24. favorites—Minneapolis 001 basket- & i health to personal treatment, will be answered queries not 5 5 Hi i i Ht 2 ae i: Bg uy E i i i z g E fig | (Copyright, 2 o to cancer }, John. i eg 2.585 Fee i i i is akae co Texas, Vermont and A bill providing for a convention died in the Georgia no action. eral printing ads banned by the prohibi- NTINUE from page one: Beer Vats Bubbling As Sale Date Nears Island, South Carolina, Tennessee, Delaware. . legislature. The other states as yet have taken | j, ‘Will Not An interpretation by Attorney Gen- Cummings few papers that hopped to ‘Thursday even before his ruling, tion laws. Meanwhile, the nation’s capital saw the possibility of catching step with states where beer will when 12:01 a. m. is ticked off on April 7. ‘The senate had been awaiting ac- thorough | tion of a bill passed by the house Thursday to permit sale of the 32 HORIZONTAL 1 What man has flown higher than any known bird? 7 Who attempted to kill Presi- dent Roose- velt? 13 Russian mountains. 14 Command. 16 Exclamation of sorrow. 17 Rubber wheel pad. 18 Injured by fire. 19 To gasp. 20 Rock de- clivity 22 Taro paste. 23 Twilled wool fabric, 24 Unbeliever. 27 Upper opening of the wind- pipe. 31 Young cows. 35 Pertaining to an area, 36 lous. 37 To partition. 39 Organs of @EERN Pt NT RS ‘a al tt t+ ICIAINAID speech. 41 Profits which lands yield. 43 Consumer, 47 To ventilate. 48The third power, 51 Epilepsy symptom. 52 Cougars. 54 Armadillo. 55 To envelop with paper. 56 Winged. 57 Departed. 58 Permanently attached. ss BE sf D be available 24.—()—Min- LAIN) RIL 19} FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1983 aE, i > 4 3 cf ft I i, RURAL CHURCH NOTICE 3 #2 H une sesegsens susueess ol peeeseebeeeesesbessssbisesescesseeses? BBRBEsest s titi ttitittit te titre t eee Trey BRSVRERSSRRLSSRRETKASSSSRw e Poy a race. Children’s and Young People’s serv- ice, 7:45 p. m. All welcome. 59 Accompanies. VERTICAL 1 Part of a scaffold. 2 Feeling melancholy, 3 Ace. 4 Horsefly. 5To steal. 6 Types of fruits. 7 Culmination. iT} 29 English coin, bell. 12 Star-shaped flowers. 4 15 To let fall. 21 Fortune. 23 Descendants, 25 Murders. 26 Great-grand- child. 28 Ingredient of varnish. 30X. 32 Haze. ie] 33 Native peach. 34 Cereal grass. 37 Females. = 38 Shoulder of a bastion. 39 Monsters. 40 Cubic meters, 42 Capital of Peru. 44 Certain, 45 Ages. 46 Knocks. 48 Bird prison, 49 On. 8 Work of skill. 50 Company. 9To yawn. 52 Chum. 10 Pertaining to 53Group of * wings. 11 Sounded as a matching dishes, Rail Dictatorship _ Declared Imminent 1932 TEMPERATURE AVERAGE WAS HIGH Data By Federal Weather Bu- Chicago Newspaper Says M I agements Ready to Accept Roosevelt Idea COMMITTEE APPOINTED Moisture Deficiency President Which Were ‘The average temperature in North ‘logist here, shows. The avérage was | imminent. Gegrees lower than the average for! The dictatorship possibility, the les § Leu Lansing, just tw pretty, is stadying for an career, but dreams of LL savored its sweetness even before she opened her eyes. She lay still, lips faintly smiling. She was re- ‘membering last night. Last night she went riding in ‘Ken Sargent’s green Cadillac, Noth- ing happened. Just a ride. A choco- late malt in a candy shop. They didn’t even talk very much. Just sat, side by side. Part of the time he slipped an arm sround her, drove 5 i f / i 5 — leaning over suddenly, kissed r. “Mind?” heasked, laughing softly. 7 not,” she had answered “Fifty cents. Throw your money away if you like. Only I’ve seen Se oy NOW. wo it isnt the money. It's the prines- |! bed, with ber eyes shut. ple. To think that, after all that's |, 2+ wae t Preece ro been done for you, you can throw | meeiies <c,* remy, Nien’ er us over for one smile from the first home didn't count, Lily Lou felt boy that asks you out!” Tite tew't the fret boy!” the thrill shoot through her again. “I don't care if he isn't. It’s the |-> - Did sirls always feel this way principle. To think thet after all| shout Kisses? Did May, and Bess, vate aid that betere, Oh, lot, Toe thonght of ber inter, nd ae lone! Tm going, Tal t* | Eat seenenentae eee See PF cig hoi it, helpless. Cate: De age ees llr ing her breath, she trailed back to|S8t_ UP, chasing dreams and at- tha. dialog see. ig a pe imond hadn’s moved. He s'in| She wanted lote of time to dress. mid sir, his ear cocked for what No use in looking any more like a would fellow. frump than you have to, Lily Lou came out, wearing her May and Raymond were just fin- best cont. May noticed the coat the |‘shing breakfast when she came first thing. Hor mouth tightened, the Kitchen, hatted, enated, heer “Lily Lou,” she said » “you a new handker- can’t keep Laura waiting for noth- eS lor who's only Q ” It was ‘again 06 3m agree istic of the Lansings that there was oe “You can’t! I forbid you. You're | | ' Neither May 3 Lou was] night?” Ken asked just before they Ketan 2a? So See MNS, bie of A i, pany “I pay board. You can’t tell me—”| “The early bird,” Raymond ob-| “Heavens no! I've got to prac- “Let her go, Maisie. Aw, don't|setved, pushing coffee cup aside,| tice! expect too much of the kid. Irene’s | ighting a cigarette. “Out to catch] “Practice some ‘vther time,” he the same way—” |@ worm?” teased. “I'll be around at eight. after all Bl Ayal pels ery ‘That will give you plenty of time. that’s been you, r'il—!} smiled, “I’m tired of running for it.”| S’long!” A horn honked outside. May, stacking dishes at the sink,| For an instant Lily Lou stared, Lily Lou stood irresolute. flashed a knowing look at the|her mouth open. She The front door squeaked on its Saw the eyes, | couldn't believe it. It was the first hinges. Old Mr. Kittridge, Ray-|the , lips... bur. | time anyone had ever dared to make mond’s father, pushed it open, cau-|2ithed with brushing, best blouse,| light of her music. Quick anger tiously. He stood in the front hall, neg gloves. .. took her. “Certainly not! My music putting his latch key back in his ot, come on Regmend.” che) seniee Stat givers!” she called af- a fe. se ee aD te | Ly Tow falhed her cxfeo and|. He treed on hs hes, came back head and mild blue eyes out |toast leisurely. Looked at herself | “Aw, Lily Lou. There’s 8 moon to- visible eyebrows or lashes. He had |®pprovingly in the little mirror) Might, and it's such marvelous 8 way of arriving at the wrong | over the mantel in the dining room, | meatier, And besides Fil be busy time, and this was one of them. no use in getting to work | myself, lots of nights. Come on, He beamed at the little Rinne Nee = Sane ie henett, come tonight. Bee sport Morte group et the other end of the hal. pple yl Lag eee Donaghy n om good looking young man always tried to save rather go dancing rs wating” suse [cet bo Me oo Oe tate. 8 onele Lou? Is eight too them, avey rth tentpusal nd | tok eat bead 0 Bate Somehow that just made Lily Low there's Lily Lou,' srose!” |could see her. Then she would pre-|™adder. “It isn’t where we go. He 8 playful at the |tend to be absorbed in her maga-| Ride—dance—what difference does _ tight-lipped Lou. | sine, or in looking out the window,| ‘thst make? It’s my music that She stood, “Tt doesn’t make the least bit of counts. I've got to study. It’s my May held her breath. difference where I sit,” her indif- Mig S Os, Ken_-den' you oot” Raymond permitted \himgelf | ferent back said. And she laughed| “Yes, I see,” he slowly. He faint guffaw. inside, because she knew that Ken |**¥ it, all too clearly, Her flam- “Don't let me keep you, Lily |was fidgeting, wishing he could get |i"¢, glamorous beauty. Her fierce Lou.” Mr, Kittridge was divesting | out and come and stand beside her, |*®™bition.... “You haven't time himself of his overcéat. “I'll just jand not quite daring to, because of | for me. eg hy cy He grinned, ‘chin with the folks. You run right | whet the other commuters would the cap he had been holding in ‘along, girlie.” ehiale, [his hand beck on his bead, turned ) “Try and keep her!” May cut in] Oh, the other commuters were} *W8Y- ~ . “The great Kentfield Sar-|thinking plenty. Lily Lou knew] Lily Lou gulped. ‘Third, is honoring us, .If s|that. She felt half embarrassed,| .G00d-bye!” she called after him accompanist can’t keep ber,| half proud, tingly all over when she | rightly.

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