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nee EERE THE BISMARCK TRIB WEDNESDAY, SEPYEMBER 20, 18S 4 5 : eet of public buildings we already (ee tarmer lobbyist, as his general coun” ‘ ON, ees area Tribune = Fae MEET: | The Approach of Autumn Seacegecemersctenaanscsen| se! sad was fecal £ Mies || THE STATES fork War Mem‘ ss NEWSPAPER end the city auditorium give Bis- P 7 Th N D | vee | GMstablizhed 1973) marck the best central gathering LEA aA SSSSS=5> <= > e New Vea ped pend who worte “LAN | |) SVsssieci st! gea—— LLL: = ea eg a 3 4 . e entire northwest, with the ex- Zz 2 , ~pe conservat ty, He was P| Senet cP neatge es |esption ot the Twin cies Te new PA, vt con we 2LLLE LLL” GO Washington _ || zx stent setts. ta fr a4 GEORGE D. MANN Sauiy at note Vat ie rl HITCH -HIKERS BLE, ee S_ key jobs here by Prof. Felix Frank- B President and Publisher yg oh et ARE GOING SOUTH LLP BLE ae wakes seeks to keep ne ¥ Wbecription “ates Payable in| 8" up-and-coming . ees j | History must continue to be a string Seer Pee ee Teme | state capitol building, of course, will| {2==— saa es, _{ Split Threatens in Department ot| neace, If he doesn't succeed, resig-| | History must condciue & 06 string Daily by carrier, per year $7.20| be the largest single structural con- = 3 Agriculture Over Profits Allowed on | rations will be likely. astrous trend until @ comprehensive 1 ,. seccee! Food . . . Charlie Curtis’ Gold Mine aan es in the modernized World 8tate, Daily by mail per year (in Bis- tribution to the development of any Sells Stock... Jops | CHARLIE CURTIS’ GOLD MINE ec im 5 Dally by mall outside ‘of Harti “| the achool board will make the most : By RODNEY DUTCHER Charlie Curtis became efter Ii Htee)|—H. G. 5 DAKOt® ......s000es0seeeeee++ 680] of this opportunity and seek a de- (Tribune Washington Correspondent) |88 vice presiden ‘The real dirt about the coal code wae state, per year $1.00) sign for the new building which is aa But it has sold more than $400,000 | js that the operators for once have - wenkly by mall to Sree. 4o|Not only beautiful in itself but in keeping with the other public build- 1.50 ings to which Bismarck citizens take Pride in calling the attention of Member of Audit Bureas ot mis of It is important, too, in view of the ee ee circumstances under which the build-|_ ; The Associated Press is exclusively pause eae or abe to ae tae entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to| that a dollar in value is received for it oF not an ka cariseel ewtiat every dollar spent. newspaper The cos necessarily sprain aes abled Per eau of minimum wegen and eter matter herein are also reserved. conditions prescribed by the govern- ment, but this fact should not open Bishop Magee’s Refusal the way for slip-shod building, the Refusal by Bishop J. Ralph Magee} waste of money or the cutting of of St. Paul to serve on the proposed| a “melon” such as some persons claim Minnesota Liquor Control Commis-/has not been unknown in the past. sion emphasizes anew the obligation Members of the board of education of the every-day citizen to interest| owe it to themselves as well as to the himself in the job of seeing that) public to get the most possible for liquor, once it is returned, is placed/every dollar and the careful way in under restraints which will keep it/ which they are approaching the prob- from becoming a stench in the nos-/lem indicates that they will do so. trils of right-thinking citizens. Some of them have been frank to Bishop Magee is the head of the/comment privately on the possibil- Methodist Episcopal church in this/ ities of graft in public building and area and, as such, speaks for a large|to express their determination to pre- body of conscientidus drys. He also} vent any development of this ancient is president of Hamline university| practice in connection with their {bie than oe sans nc and, from this vantage point, views| project. sin re ne i w'n| nate vt we oe nnel| PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE. |(*erecit"s cosiem, oe ecclesiastical educator. Whether or/port and cooperation of the public ever, to have the meat ground in your not one agrees with his views, as ex-| works administration. This federal By William Brady, M. D. Presence. Do not accept meat that pressed in a letter rejecting Governor| agency has suffered criticism as to a a Olson’s offer of the appointment,|its lack of speed rather than approve bop nent renee sis be anbourel tote any brated disease Rkas 00 the tide — Bernas Wilaeoene “id enclosed. Letters should be brief Washington, Sept. 20—There’s a is fetid ey ‘the Department of Ag- | {2 stock here in Washington. tad to come clean. riculture which developed sensa- ad tionally, ad CONFUSION OVER WAGES a FLAPPER E [ANNY-S, ‘AYS: Profits of the middieman, return to | Widespread misunderstanding eae i ‘the farmer and price to the consumer | ists as to the wage status of Lge represent the issue. - under the NRA codes or the PRA Assistant Secretary Rexford G.|vwho previously received more than Tugwell and Chief Counsel Jerome |the new minimum wages. The Presi- Frank of the Agricultural Adjustment | dent's Agreement promises that wages Administration head the group of lib- | shall not be reduced and that an erals which is primarily concerned | able adjustments” shall be made for with producer and and | those persons. hopes it can squeeze excess profits; Nearly every approved code bars from the “spread” of the distributors lower weekly compensation for shorter and financiers, | hours and most of them provide for ‘On the other side are Administrator | increases proportionate with the mini- George N. Peek, Co-Administrator| mum wage increase. Charles J. Brand and Dairy Section! A textile manufacturer came here Chief Clyde King of the AAA, who| from Northampton, Mass. to com- aren't 80 excited about those aims, (plain of labor troubles in his mills. | He said he was observing the code to FIGHT CENTERS ON MILK the letter. Milk is now the crux of the fight.| Inspection of his payroll revealed ‘The first group seeks a national mini-| that he had put his whole plant— mum price for dairy farmers and a| higher brackets and all — on $13 a maximum for consumers and subse- | week, the code minimum. quent concentration on the “spread.” Brand, who retains his post with | STEALING HIS STUFF i the National Fertilizer Association,; Dr. Fred C. Howe, energetic con- and Dr. King, who is charged with |sumer’s counsel for the AAA who Playing too closely with distributors, | keeps track of food and textile prices are special targets of the liberal| over the country, knows something! a about unfair competition. Peek, who failed to loom as large| Shortly before the World War he ‘\as Hugh Johnson of NRA when Sec- | was billed to speak at the New York | retary Wallace firmly seized the AAA|City Club on “What a City Might Girls who count are usually reins, tried to get Fred Lee, former | Be.” The German ambassador, Von| those who watch their figures. there is no discounting the fact that| projects which appeared to be un-|/ self-addressed envelope ism. (Copyright 1933, John F. Dille Co.) in the liquor problem is much to be/recently, Interior Secretary Ickes said strongly by the manner in which the| Clent Rome built her wonderful Scientist predicts man will be much tt will affect the thinking of many/ worthy. —_________-_-e desired. in part: { in j biahop’s statement came to The Trib.| 024s, drainage canals, and aque- |#TaP book is a testimonial from a] products—skim milk, buttermilk, | more intellectual in years to CHAPTER FORTY-TWO fine citizens whose continued interest | Commenting on the entire program | ‘This is emphasized all the more “Ever since the days when an- ducts, there ‘have been attempts | ‘tate dental society to the value of my ‘They had been waiting but a few|Patricie said dryly. “He simply/lunch, and if you'll” “Fle didn’t mean to be cruel,”|Patricia. “I’m just going to make | , a body's position on repeal of prohibi-| gressman tried to get as large an |‘lusively. Once in a while I go 4 tion and the legal sale of beer in| appropriation for his own district |*eainst a dentor who gabberflasts a North Dakota. as possible, without regard to | by agreeing that Here is what Bishop Magee told| Whether the buildings, harbors, or well for dentists if the business ful to Poca and cultivate ‘work. i craving to eat such raw vegetables as (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) une’s attention, it having been pres-| to use public works for newspaper column in promoting popu-| 8, It is fine to chew some wild | “4 no less foolish, no doubt. minutes in the small elegant hotel| didn’t think, He has made a real| “Lunch! Why, it’s two-thirty,” ented by the Rev. W. E. Vater, pastor juntie. Sn America a me lar conservation of the teeth. But} rice, whole wheat or other raw Those Ctaniea hae en salon when the elevator door open-| success in a thinking business, yet|she said, glancing at her diamond P of McCabe Methodist Episcopal} works system has often been | ‘hat wasgiven before I began agitating) grain when you crave something asiaaauiad become . ed and a woman, a little short, athe bas made a mess of his life by| wrist watch, “Oh, I'm sorry. 4 church, as the best evidence of that| Justly called ‘pork barrel’ sys- | the relin nt of the trademark} to chew. to revolutions, they'd little square, but softly rounded,|not thinking when thought was) “Yes, my Dadums: is very pe- ; i tem. By this system each con- | “Doctor” to ex-| 9. In young or old it is health- | revolt if they had to go back to dressed from head to foot in sand,| needed.” tient. I've been painting all morn- 4 bang Directly Mrs. Brownley’s softjing and forgot the time. I’m not hazel eyes lifted. “Do you—hate]much of a cook, but I make our me—Patricia?” breakfasts and lunches. We have stepped out. She came forward smiling. She shook hands with Jimmie; then turned in her sweet serene way to Patricia. “No, oddly I don’t. I rather like}only one real meal a day.” Governor Olson: Reveeary or desiable' Neo teas {to pugsiclans, ‘ut scdom corr find | "0, ‘Ordinary. weahink “I used to watch you always} ¥ou- i Bi foobticd a sttica th ldared “I have been an ardent dry | ator dared to object to the was. |@ dentist who will consent to be| surface of vegetables, fruits rushing about at Palm Beach. I} “I'm glad. I like you, too.” After] another time.” Her eyes fell on the from my earliest memories. teful items of his colleagues for |quoted as in accord with my view| eaten raw is sufficient. First don’t suppose you remember me.”| another silence she said: "May I)picture. “How splendid!” She “I have seen every scheme | fear of imperiling his own share |about brushing the teeth. I do not| soap and water, then rinse “I do very well,” said Patricia,|come and see you? I don’t know| moved toward it, and it developed that is now advocated. They | of the gravy. Research men say |olame them either, If I were a dentor “Yours is one of the last faces T have all failed more ingloriously that in the past a good half of {I'd be just as careful about letting the than prohibition ever did. I our public works appropriations Public think I had any “radical” ideas. anyone in Paris—You’re so sensi-|that she knew something of the ble—and I—” technique of painting. t “Of course.” Patricia gave her] “Yes, I studied once; but I had i address and phone number. “And|no talent,” she sighed. i travel much, and our so-called has been wasted in this way. A Kentucky dentist submits renee, and the contrast between his this non-intoxicating beer makes me It is up to the school board to/criticism of my little monograph on| hands or retain traces of battered face and yours sent me|now I must go. Come and see me They urged her to stay, and she see each week more drunks, a make sure that researchers of the|the care and preservation of the| sprays, away laughing.” whenever you like. and Mr, Braithwait talked pictures aha disgusting near drunks than future cannot honestly say that any teeth, which I am glad to arty — They sat down smilingly. But it Tl go too. rm Phone you to-/and the Louvre while Patricia pre- E | saw during the entire period of bs thes ek sea reader on request—inclose a stamped| © QUESTIONS AND ANS' was of Paris and not Palm Beach|™orrow, if J may.” Pared some sandwiches and coffee. 3 Prohibition. Seen ee ppropriation for the new|/envelope bearing your address and do Bonehead Draggist that they talked. ‘Yes. Do.” Anything to get out.| Mrs. Brownley had a cup of cof- “The men ae ote = school building was wasted. The/not Send @ clipping: I Peg nnayy ot They discussed the inevitable ee fee and was finally prevailed on to Facies bands — prob. | Past record of its members gives T agree heartily and in full PP penta med capsules of re supjects—clothes and the shops.| Patricia was not surprised when|have a sandwich. Patricia forced ote lem of control in their hands, as |¢Very assurance that the new high} With all its teachings. I have probed reap ya Mrs, Brownley said she hadn't|Jack failed to call her the follow-|herself to eat one because her far as 1 am concerned, until they |school will be well and honestly built. purseed auch a..course in. may .own poll prfomlorss cee — bought much. She wasn't really|ing morning. father was watching. She won- have shown the utter falsity of ——— fected to appendectomy, sad sum |¢rastic effect, He said one crazy about clothes, which was a] “Oh, I've treated him abomina-|dered why the woman had come. all their pious utterances about Mencia ris reaper Sra is the dose for reduced tron. good thing as her means were lim-| bly. I had no business to meet Jim-| Was she really so lonely? And how temperance by producing what is local attorney remarks that Gov- nities prege rp rgreres ae let) ited. Patricia admitted that she|mie after I'd promised Jack.” She| Could she visit today. ... But may- ; destined to be the most debauch- |ernor Langer’s position on the state ing a rion at gees ‘Answer—My advice is that you adored beautiful clothes; -butjcalled his hotel and was told he had|be she had to do something... . I ed age America ever knew. sales tax is like that of the defendant! Vegetables and tute woe, Law |18 grains of Teduced tron couldn't afford them, and didn’t{checked out. No, he hadn't left a|slways heard that rivals hated each aan tts looks like Poor Jin a paternity case: “The child isn’t| ries, etc., and now at mature age |meal, if you are going to pelea siege as sg anmpe tiy, [ag eric oeagce Pingt. It's odd, T don't hate her. portsmanship, but the people | ine put rl support it.” I am in better health ‘ever all. ‘That dove may be taken unconscious appraisal on Mrs.| Feeling sick beyond words, she|! admire her very much, and rather have peel to en fen jeer before. I use a dry Selceger ‘a, |capsules. It may do no good, Brownley’s very simple but very|went to her easel and began paint- like her too... a ieee re ae phere ice lai tumbler of water for mouth toilet, |My case it can do no harm, eloquent apparel. ing out the pretty girl she had| “What is the name of it?” asked t 4 Shel uiuin. five years they Editorial Comment Have used no dentifrice for years. Ground Beef The woman noted her glance and|started. She covered the canvas|Mrs. Brownley, her eyes on the eG pated an dees a en! If your Uttle monograph on the Is chopped or ground bee! smiled: “I don’t care for many|with burning blue across the top,| Picture. things, or elaborate clothes, but I drawing it down to meet a waste| “The Mirage,” said Patricia, on Editorials printed bel how the conservat of the teeth were in moral situation, then the much F ow. show. ton of yellow sand that stretched away| “And where is the mirage?” trend bj - * als to have misrepresented and maligned They ee pec ee lor coli Bary the hands of the millions of sick \ways manage one stun-| and would follow it - 5 ning outfit. It is stunning, dont/and away to infinity, “In the wi 's “2 ; by tep out of tts shame and ruin || °° witk'the"suntses gutdae'™* || ings taitnfuly, ours would be. Attorne you think? "|. Het father watched her in gur-lhow abe's toling to reach thet cert to more prohibition than we have happier, healthier people, and in- 'y She was eo charmingly frank,|prise. She was not studying land-|tus? As she sees it, that’s a shade ever had.” firmaries, clinics and health re- s almost childlike in her gentle|scape painting. Often she painted| tree.” rere sclieen Will. hone that rot reels see acti ) dwindle instead of being bs igo HORIZONTAL § — Answers to Previous Puzzle 26 Opposing : Yes, ‘nought Faticie, I can see. ee at esis ee, age ba tee eae ee pot amare “ lew -' a a 3 e p’ Pia reexpoese ot "the TOR Sebamed | ee Tecate anne abor| tneaane. 1Who isthe = AYSTETHTTINTGIPIOINL_ITISICIE] «counsel in the ... She fs charming .”: . and alllnever seen her attempt anything|shadow—a difference, as if wees age America ever knew” will prove leader, in statements opposing the In my humble opinion after famous + TAIVIUTATT IOI MMA IRI TTHIA Dayton, Tenn. women... . Not a common find in] of this sort, Rot so blazing over there.” to be incorrect. No one, ‘ncluding| proposed Orient immigration quota| thirty years experience and obeer- murder trial [DIATRINIE [DENMIEINIAICIE] cane of the these days of masculinely assured| She worked on and on, never| “Yes, that shadow is thrown by the vast body of those citizens who] act, warn against reopening the gates} vation as a practitioner of den- attorney in QO oi pictured man? women and hoyish girls... . speaking, laying in light and heat|® big shade tree just o now are supporting legal beer and|of America to Asiatic labor, and| istry, most human ills are due the pict iP] 28 Solitary, They chatted so pleasantly, so|and aridity with amazing skill, un.|Picture.” saat ontaide Yan 4 prohibition repeal, wants that. Doubt-| hereby reveal complete misunder-) ‘0 improper diet together with | {4 Blackbird. 29 Measure. inconsequentially, Warren alone|til the feeling of it began to grip| After lunch Mr. Braithwait went i tes ane re Nimasit Gaper sation of the modification pro- take fat Proper exercise, rest, fresh i. se aT Age. showed embarrassment.’ The color/him. And all at once he knew that|for a walk, saying he would leave | ! that he will prove to be a poor| Substitution of the Oriental quota! Here are some of the suggestions| (7 Pleces, out. 32 The pictured came and went, in his, fair face.|she was transferring, not imagina-|them to discuss the shops, tis prophet. Tt is not a thing to which| for exclusion will not reopen. the| tor the conservation of the teeth U8 Relating to man 1 one of them, shifted restlessly in hie cor-|Emotion so. tremmendcey (ete | Brot cteaee fortunate.” sighed Mrs, anyone can look forward with any| Golden Gate to a flood of cheap la-| 1. Have good dentist, and node, rTimtAmMATel@l [MG U.S. A's ner of the settee he and Patricia technique w ona heed Pacieys het, cve# on the canvas, bor from the Far East. It will ad-| visit him regularly for inspection | 20 Notion. m Ta unconscious. A thou-| _ Patricia was clearing the table. rest. mit 108 Chinese and 185 J nd AlvigielTMmNtuL Jal oat noted occupied, He grinned at the femi-|sand details were filled in where|When the hed fering , At the back of Bishop Mager's| year, none of whom will be laborers| 2. se that your mete has Hee en nee nine things about which they] yet not one object lived, details of] herself on the couch, “In erat one I ind, of is the thought that,|or immigrants liable to become pub-| fresh fruit and at least twas the 44 Toward. 2 Body of water, 34 Transparent talked. Grinned rather stupidly. |blown sand, tiny depressions andjam I fortunate?” saa ee mind, of course, ug! at one fresh most’ famous green mineral When they were discussing thejuprisings that made the “In hay A | following the anticipated failure of] He, Charkes., These are fractions of} vegetable, relish or greene, RAW ssPrepaiion — 3Faremall laces shown on spring frocks, helore and more barren and hope: |do. Tt maine SouthINE, you. can the prospective new dispensation, the om ovesy betore born. 5. ‘To sit down to his feet as if jerked I Painted ins a people will swing back to a new) would change’ nothing fundnmentall vir “en’iie “ally ration of ood 48'The pictured _again. Hight, and. anid quite violentiy:| single. tall cactus, Siteercd “ton [lonerey fearetole from under the espousal of prohibition and the whole in our immigration Policies. It would] mother, and @ weekly ration of Sen hashes. beat: anem. “Cm catching a train ten: black, a tiny impressionistic | cheeks. “I've fon rales, fora ee simply amend our manners. 6 Lukewarm. iy. Goodbye, girls, May! whether man |My hi 4 yhontr eager sate ciggay Two blunders caused’ the Japanese ot provide a ration of cod side of ——- 7 To invest. get back ere I sail, Tl let you) could ‘not tall. Yet the Sgure wes ith hie nares) teases yet lived | J 3 exclusion clause to be written into lige ghd at tae en against ~ know.” alive, deep in sand, toiling toward | didn’t know what else to waped Be that as it may, many will hope| the ‘A Wise] age et tan ote i ee capital? He didn't offer to shake hands.|the distant and wretched sactea |laft me Uvin fo. oan he i that mane, Mage and others like| written by the sarap _Siskomes ion tie ie 62 Fairy. ‘They saved ee pty] ‘i Nonder what for,” he thought, sent me oad cae anaes him definitely wash their y . eating of fresh Btage parts throug! out at once she stopped. Looked| made S1st oath. hands of the lquor tare, that they Setuencee’ If Japenese wore exclud-| vegetables ahd ruits is natural ‘ Soe, Thee. her eae st sacha it long tes thet ad dow ed forfour yearns SE ‘= will not deliberately hasten the day| grees, ‘That. was ot. as serious s| the’ Vecin, “uneteanne i tes CME sft vag reece | Well she td wan anes na tbs Poston nor the freee | ee eer now| mitied when ie took he latter aera) ‘eth clean. ‘ ing from them and pinned to the|tempt at her bantering smile,| “You could have | On the contrary, many who now: ted the ‘5 6. Until the baby has teeth to man— ruthlessly from/|“what do you think ef me ‘and gotten al ven se are supporting repeal only because of | “hallenge, abroga! Sentleman’s| chew with, see that he gets some the he The; ” ma mony, | agreement and enacted the exclusion m as he went out. They satilandscape painter? “Yes, I could have, but | probibtin's failure, will hope that| seretmeat and enacted the exclusion! Sind’ of tien fruit or vegetable stark naked, before each other. | “I thlak” you've, been wasting| ound to a businew of Lic oxeae they continue their efforts to-| retary of State Hughes President| Juice dally. rs, m & feeble | your time on the thing been salaried | Aang pons piaapaag Po Ad aod 1. Rvyry child or adult should effort, “What do you suppose was|deing. There's genius it thee Thousand ese ag cars forty A decade has not softened the hurt matter with him? Do you real-| The bell . Bhe it as easil; i could earn velopment and enforcement of ly think he had fo catch a train| Then went to theo ate nate yy in California or in New and had forgotten ik? Or was belicre saronely cmstane, ME. Brown-| 10Tk 2r Chicago, T couldn't have just bored by our talk of clothes?” wistful, appealing, stnod there, 7" | if the courts bea ty Simony oven i oNo,” said Patricia grimly.) “I didn't phone. I was in the|!’d have had to fen it to me, fitans to the Onlent will b <He'd got himself and us in anjnelghborhood and I took a chance) **ep following to get ig" SM How unsuccessful they were is a mat- tiede Wil he teeeyad teats ee embarrassing situation, and | helof your being in.” “He'd probably fare ter of pathetic record. They are now| Pacific will be strengthened. Wise couldn't stand the gaff. That's al.” | “Come tn,” Patricia invited, You of his own willmaiea? vt, t@ ; fern Saek ana all Jeaders on the coast in increasing Mrs. Brownley’s eyes fell before|“Dadums, this is Mrs, Brownley,| hat be was doing that was . over | numbers are understanding these the level gaze of the girl. There|She was at Palm Beach when we|_ “No. He didn't went” 2ae again. facta. was a moment of silence. Then Mrs.| were there, I called her The Lady|H® made it g want & divores, ’ Bi eeries te new ome they 2 susgested that they golin Sand. I ran into her the other| W004 support. me so Tones ta" need the best and most disinterested or a stroll. e evening in—Rue de \'Opere ted long guidance possible. Prohibition a not | ir sion expert say V's are return- ‘As they went out Patzicia wone|didn't speabie Pale Moore a hed ore a It 1 dia that, Holz repealed because the people| tits fal” suse think moe eer dered: What will we talk about? |spoke in Rue de VOpera,” sho) im; but as soon ag ne 2nd Street aye Teak dahauthery bh because of the| Would be {f more of them could te 7 wns what a beastiy sath toe eee ee, battle laugh fall be'd move agains” ‘ eae wi Gebauchery, moral and polltical,|Ttmed to the pockets of men's jimmie to do... . lez know the bad told her father Cuda have? yrax, Mune. He which have been caused by it. pee wuat is. . \ Cafe de Paris being at hand,| nothing, without guage, Many. such ites esis aatinnd? Saa- they went in, Tt was full of Ameri-|. “Americans always speak away|lielty, toe a 0 Tg cans. Tiey found a table by a wine|from home,” he smiled’ after ta5| Wanted aman jee Would dow in s far corner. But they had| greetings. “They live in the Minute to dodge ajqt®, eave aiey nothing to talk about. same apartment pos in New “Me mony,” “How could he-be so cruel?” said] York and never + but in the, But I was Mrs. Brownley after the waiter had| Boulevards cf Paris they are T met— brought their order. “And. yet,| friends.” — part of p vbee’s the kindest Lovet knew."! “Bit a Mrs, Brownley,” me,” a