The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 6, 1933, Page 4

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Bismarek Tribune n ‘copeer™ knowledge of a plane's action under extremely adverse conditions has been gained that could not be gained just Gopher Poison Mix Available This Week as well elsewhere. Yet there is something about this flight that-appeals to one’s imagina- Perhaps it is the simple fact that it is so useless—and so perilous. Will be available this week-end, it Was announced Thursday by H. O. ,| Putnam, county agricultural agent. Ei always command our respect, even a ee ae one though they sometimes make us feel ‘The remainder that they are acting foolishly, en Sane na ‘The human animal, when you stop ships pay for the anal to think about it, is a queer and un-| while the county supplies explainable creature. Fix him up in| @nd other ingredients, the cost comfort and safety as thoroughly as Wariaed With, the cals Ash arsenic, you can, he is more likely than not to| saccharine, baking soda, gloss starch, wriggle out of it and try to break his/| glycerin and corn syrup. neck against some ice-bound, gale- idhunear vite ie spread about fields swept crag on the other side of the wb nnana globe. Let him know that on an in- ry accessible point of the map there is a Injured Local Youth sea that has never been sailed, or a| Continues to Improve mountain that has never been " climbed, or a danger that has never| AS Clark Hough of O'Neill, Neb., been faced successfully, and he will| *Walted a hearing on charges of reck- not rest until he has tackled it, | Je88 driving, Leo Haigh, Bismarck Why should this be? Heaven knows.| Youth who was injured in an automo- There is something in man that makes Leredhdtiettet dled bat iach net it impossible for him to take a dare. ae improvement at a local hos- This causes a good many unnecessary Haigh suffered fractures of the skull deaths, from year to year, and leads/@nd three vertebra when the car in us stay-at-homes to wag our beards| Which he was riding collided with one fet if E in state, sececccesecccecscsccess SHO mail outside of North ii Bi %: & [ & 2 i ! driven by Hough. pronoun. 16 Ossjfied. 17To complain. 18 Eucharist wine vessel, 19 Kind. 20 Tribe of Israel. . 21To coagulate. 22 Negative. 23 Glossy silks. 24 Fuel bed. 25 Grammatical case, 26The human body. 27 Toward. 29 Withered. 30 Black haw 81 You. 33 Saline ALR. ISIPIALT ITE re Nal 2 aS CORIE!S) LASSIE |S! wa. DE AIL (SI Euaut solution. 35 Horses’ home. 36 Occurrence. 37 Breathes loud- ly in sleep, , 38 Second note. 39 To fail to hit. 40 Looks joyous. 41 The heart. 42 Flying mammal 43 Ran away 44To engage in. 45 Preposition. 46Glass marbles. 47 The ankle. 48 Made yellow. 49 Destiny. PIR Lic . AL IAM ICR 28To make Decor! 1 What are the 32 Highest mou» heads of the tain -in the executive de- world, partments of 34 To sleep. the U. 8. gov. 35 Shot at ernment called? 2 Rounded molding. 3 Cistern, 4To attempt. 5 Bone. 6 Plunder. 7 Redacts. 8 Prong. 9To regret. Dye. 10 Standard type 47 Seventh 36To shut Man With the Hoe A Bismarck garden enthusiast drew comment about the earliness of the season recently by announcing that his peonies were growing splendidly. This being the case, he felt called upon to confess that they weren't above the ground yet, but that he had ascertained their condition by digging down a little with his hands Just to satisfy his curiosity. The incident illustrates a tendency which all of us have at this season. We examine the trees to see how the buds are swelling, we watch for the first pussy willows and we look for- ward to the time when lush Nature again will prove her fulness. The neighbor whom you see walking about his yard probably is planning his changes for the coming year, for a true enthusiast never gets done with his planting. This shrub comes out here and a new one takes its place. That change is to be made there. @ravely; but it also gives a glimpse, Hough pleaded not guilty to the every so often, of sheer magnificence. | reckless driving count and will have ———_———EE & hearing before Edward 8. Allen, The Reason Why Police magistrate, at 10 a. m. Friday. Overwhelming action by the people} BEACH PLANS COMMENCEMENT of Michigan and Wisconsin in voting] Beach, N. D., April 6—At a meeting | Prohibition repeal bodes ill for the ty be traaed SSTalcaae high ate school for graduation were an- caw velit it. en nounced. Commencement will be held ve known it. May 30 this year, and, contrary to A score of 100 to one in Michigan | custom, there will be no outside speak- and 15 to nothing in Wisconsin, to/er for the occasion. Instead, what 1s be officially recorded at constitutional |"nOWN as a “Vitalized” graduation N.-| Bl id Pritt And wouldn't this look better? So it goes. The seed catalogue becomes a piece of standard literature, New selections of flowers and garden seed are made. Hope springs triumphantly to the fore, spurred on by the splendid illus- trations. All of us hope to grow something, some day, which will be ‘as good as the pictures prove they can be. The man with the hoe, which Means the average citizen these days, stands just around the corner ready to spring into action. The fervor of late April and early May may wilt under the heat of June and July, but that is beside the point. Spring and home gardening are as much an emo- tional experience as anything else. In this connection an expert offers ® suggestion for preventing this year the infestation of Bismarck elm trees with the aphis or plant lice which affected them last summer. It is to spray at once with a strong lime sul- Phur solution, before the leaves give the mites protection. They are killed by poisons coming in contact with their soft bodies, a different treat- ment than that given chewing in- sects. For the owners of elm trees such action would give that “I wish I could Bet out into the garden” urge a worth- while outlet. Legalizing Betting A somewhat saner attitude toward “blue laws” is beginning to become apparent in various parts of the coun- try. The state of Ohio, for example, has conventions, means something. An insight into the reasons why ts given by returns from a questionnaire on beer recently sent out to women by a national publishing concern, The questions asked were: 1, Would you object to beer advertising in newspapers and magazines? 2. Will you serve beer in your home? 3. Would you buy bottled beer in a drug store? 4. Would you buy it in a gro- cery store? 5. Would you approve of women drinking beer in restaurants, out- door gards, hoters, etc.? 6. Do you think repeal of pro- hibition will improve social con- ditions? Eliminating the Ifs, Buts and other qualifications, the answers were rec- orded as follows: 83 per cent in fa- vor of beer advertising; 76 per cent for serving it in their homes, many with the qualification that they would not drink it themselves but would have it for their husband and his friends; 61 per cent favored buying it in drug stores, 70 in grocery stores. Seventy-two per cent found nothing wrong with women drinking beer in restaurants and other public places, but the qualifications were many. Seventy per cent believed legal sale of beer would improve social condi- tions, the reason most frequently given being that it would eliminate speak- easies, the bootlegger and hypocrisy. Women have long been the back- bone of the prohibition movement. If these answers represent their views. the overwhelming votes cast against Prohibition in Wisconsin and Michi- gan need cause no surprise, Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without regard to whether they ag: or disagree with The Tribu: policies, ~ Investigating Morgan (New York World-Telegram) The authority of the senate inves- tigating committee to inquire into its investment business is questioned by Just passed legislation legalizing horse racing and horse race betting; and before you start deploring such a step, consides the situation that ex- isted in Ohio in years past. Ohio had horse racing—lots and lots of it, year in and year out. These races, obviously, were conducted to the tune of a vast amount of betting, all perfectly open and without con- cealment. Yet the betting was en- tirely illegal. The result was that Ohio had all sian Watt ut J. P. Morgan & Co., according to Counsel Pecora’s report. A grave mistake on the part of the Morgan firm. Nothing could be more likely to inspire public distrust than an attempt to evade a legitimate of- ficial inquiry. Perhaps the firm's lawyers have found a technical legal basis for re- People of the United States will not feel that the government has inves- tigated American banking if the ex- amination does not include the Pooh- Bah of all the banks, J. P. Morgan ae.° ie by: 5 i geil ery Program will be given, wherein seven or eight members of the seniér class will give brief talks. Class honors also were announced, with Glen Odman being selected as class valedictorian and James McGee as salutatorian. Honorable mention was gifen Violet ‘Severson, Helga Nellermoe, and Anne Houck, SYNOPSIS Thinking Lily Low Lansing, pretty, young|™May’s hurt surprise, and mother|conducted telephone operator, lives with her married sister in moderate stances. She is torn between for an operatic career and love party at Ken's home, Lily izes they are unsuited decides to give him up. rules her objections and his proposal of marriage. Next they go to Woodlake, Lily Loa’ home town, for their license. CHAPTER FIFTEEN It was Monday—“Blue Monday, May called it. Back in We would be “wash-day,” flapping on clotheslines, |; with clothes-pins in her the copper boiler steami of the stove.... And it was her weddi the day she was going to Ken... Lily Lou, wide awake ina turned over and buried her the pillow. She could hear and Raymond moving around, ting ready for work. They mustn't BE af Seer HET i L a & Tee rie i i HE i ; L Pr F ebEe ii i él fEe8 i i £ a git a R Lg in TH &. and dad not understanding wh; vay if E el zEP il z ef i i : 88 E i i F i E : } i i E F z i k GIF Hey Eripee i i ee i 8 43 i Hi i E FE it fai [if i t i & § ei Ad ; Hi itl ire ul 2 i f k | § i i , | ge 5 Fi R i F Tt : B i aR. ia 3 i z te iy i i é : 2 Hi ! tle ett mn 3 i al £ z Hl F i j i i Ef i f i ‘ 2 ql iat bell : e Eg i 3 if F Eye2 de tached men of the enemy. note. i iF a Has i i E j yr 4 f Faffed nile Ee agtert HE Eycie alt GE i &g i PERSONAL HEALTH SERVI By William Brady, M. D. Gigned letters pertaining to personal health and not to disease or treatment, will be answered by Dr. a eelf: envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and in mk. No can be made to not conforming to instruc- tions, Dr. William in care of this newspaper. There is reason to believe that the fect of tobacco smoke is OO Physicians Puzzled By Case of Broker PERE i a é | HH Adventists to Meet would they have not decided about a divorce. Learn the Secret Here Over Week-End oh beets a ld aa RE. Tales Dies in West Pasadena, Calif, April 6.—(®)—Earl : moe Of Chasiic Curtain,” “Seven ‘Keys to Baldpate,” “The Black Camel,” and numerous nov- els, was stricken a week ago and died ‘ Need New Tires? THe SHOF MAR] You can NOW afford the World's Standard of Quality F YOU need new tires, and you Varese Goodyears lately, you are in for a surprise. LOOK at these extraordinary PRICES +4021 $8,685 4.50-21 * 478-19 $.00-19 528-18 6.00-20 6.50.19 6.20

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