Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Tt is not humane. jIt is downright brutality. If it is any hunters, and too many of them’ utterly inexperienced in the field. {These constitute a menace to life and |vake @ position with the D the government, and not a mob, had |This ts not sport. i |. Agriculture. She took a civil serv. the upper hand. ‘The most deplorable phase of the - TREASURY LEADERS People’s Forum Famous Riverman Gets Recognition ; | . ice examination for a stenogrephic |] (eattor’s Notey—The Tri 1. California situation, it seems to mi Property. They shoot at any and asa. RT B eee ict tat ** 4% e 4% || coines, tatters o8 atitdacterot inter: || I know very well that every moving thing. ‘They shoot in |Pocition with the government ove bed MARSH 5 BIOGR APHY PRINTED est, Letters dealing with contro. || James Rolph, Jr. Having already-dis- | this statement will be given the horse jthe direction of farm buildings and | Wo years ago and heard nothing trom con. versial religious subjects, which || tinguished himself in the field of{laigh by coarse, unfeclin ‘stock. The ake i | it until she received the order to re- * attack individ unfairly, or i 5 iS people. If; s' 4 ey never take into account | ae eee +e & eae * * # |] which offend good taste and fair ||Penology by his failure to take action ‘these same people had to run through |the carrying power of heavy rifles and, 2°Tt in Washington Dec. 1. The: po-| the ry rt Te e play will be returned to the writ-|/in the Billings-Mooney “American /the woods and over hill and prairie{high velocity shells. ‘Safety first” | ition pays $1,620 per annum. ctionary sts Him Among Greats de Prat Aas) M oe aiceee. | Dreyfuss case,” Governor Rolph has/|for four days we would hear some should be the slogan of the hunter Was aes the pasiachgn: fish’ ane ane Ee Ces stg eae “d a ae ene el A well as the ee see | ‘ « beneath it, We will re- ||defiance at gangland by refusing ey have not wind enough to blow| v, ahey. ae Wilt Continue on Present Pro- Exploits of a Bismarck man who|the service of transporting supplies spect, ech requests, we Torerve aid the San Jose sheriff in his vailant jout A candle, yet riding in automo- asia caer eee : Help Kidneys te helped make history in the west are| for er Bully's army, operating || iene as meg ‘be mocessary’ te |/cttorts to withstand a bloodthirsty jbiles as they hunt, they never think) ORDERED TO WASHINGTON ie d to + gram of Gold Buying and {given national prominence in the lat-|Sesitist the Sioux. He became a mas- eG AL Seedy mob, A magnificent gesture, wasn’t lof the poor deer. Hive, Rb, Noe Sean) ee Fepaaper Bing : ter ‘in 1866, taking his vessel, the it? |-1 do not know who advired o Dn Bee ce tees) etnaad) Up Cash Borrowing eat edition of the Dictionary of Amer-| Luella, to Fort Benton, the head of “a Does it not give us pause to won-' governor that the deer werd plenti, (Esher Hanson, assistant cashier of tnt oan Blography, recently off the press,|navigation on the Missouri. He soon CLOSE To ANARCHY {der, when such things can occur, if|fu and that a four-day open Seewen|the First National bank here will! 8 The man is Grant Prince March,/®auired an exceptional knowledge Bismarck, N. D. (our vaunted democracy may not be jw, X for Washi 0c, ia Washington, Nov. 20—()—‘Treasury| ploneer steamboat captain’ and aide the upper waters and his skill es November 27, 1933, | Petllously close to anarchy? ero ealribies ate tar Treat heteg wee] come cee my chieftains viewed the administration 0 the leading generals of the Indian| Plot calised him to be employed £€- lst Tribune: Laurence V. Nelson curate. Just because a few deer are ate money program through the perspee-|stissuri river runs when he brought|Marsh always piloted his own vessels.| , Sunday night's lynching episode at FRIEND OF THE DEER _{[¢2" Dunched together near good feed- live of government financing needs|the ‘rar West back (o Bismarck after| Early in 1873 he gave names to|SAN Jose, California, is worthy of| Wilton, ND, tak parece he Tatdral abetter- ans Wean: ‘and th s serious thought on the part of all Yaa’ ane jbelt, is no proof that they are plenti- . esday ¢ immediate out. many of the physical features of the Nov. 22, 1933. fut.” ‘That br fd vn look was ® continuation of gold American citizens who, on superficial] aitor, Tribune: IE AI cea eh ~) ud tell 0 a gold buy- considerations only, would laud such| ‘The four-day open season on ant- |Drise the entire deer population of | ing and routine cash borrowings. “elemental justice.” |lered deer has just closed. It is the| Wide territory. i No difficulty was foreseen by act- In the sum-|, There is no doubt, of course, that | consensus of opinion that the season|, During the hunting season some ing Secretary Morgenthau and his mer of that year he cooperated with |the flagrant law violations of gang-|was much too long. Real sportsmen |U"SPortsmenlike practices prevail. | . Mike aides in refunding December 15 ma- | notabl of this Bismarck resi-|the Stanley-Custer expedition along|Sters and allied criminal elements,|were not in favor of so long a sea. |50™e hunters seem to think that buy- | ae Caine the ee naa ete, 8 20tt: | dent's life is interwoven with the his-|the Yellowstone, and two years later together with apparent futility of | son, as It is only two years ago since |‘ © Ucense, to hunt entitles them | carried General J. W. Forsyth’s ex-|the courts in feeble attempts to curb / we had open season. Taking this into | “oil ae bad newest R. F. 0. at ae wun eatery x wanwah pedition nearly 50 miles ee ‘Pou. | their qcutrages a sal Aca consideration and remembering that | ‘hey of ete ona Oy Tee oe | The wonder of from discouraged, ’s Pillar, spread contem; for law. laving | many deer are being ilegally slaught- | ~ ‘ ie cchange subscriptions ct $600 000.0 | SULy. Gan ronyth, SW Ferrite | in 1676, in the historic Far West, (Witnessed such farcical situations as|ered annually, we cannot help being |9f thelr Party to shoot one for them, CELLOPHANE is 5 ~ in fourth Liberty Bonds for which 10-12 year treasury bonds are being offered. The treasury called $1,875,- 000,000 of the fourth Liberty series and Morgenthau set midnight Satur- day for closing subscriptions. ‘The present level of exchange sub- | Praise. scriptions, however, left approximate- ly $1,000,000,000 of the called bonds still outstanding. New exchange ts- sues are being planned prior to the Liberty maturity dates next spring, for otherwise they must be met in cash. 4 FINANCIAL ADVISERS TALK WITH PRESIDENT Warm Springs, Ga., Nov. 29.—(P}— President Roosevelt was joined Wed- nesday by two leading financial ad- visers of the administration, Eugene Black, governor of the federal reserve Sherman, Sheridan, Custer, Miles and|Marsh cooperated with the Custer- Stanley. He was # life-long friend of | Terry expedition, forcing his boat up Mark Twain, the noted writer. the tortuous channel of the Bighorn General G. A. Forsyth called Marsh|to the mouth of the Little Bighorn. “the ideal man of his profession” and|From there he brought down the other military heroes added their| Wounded from the Custer battlefield, 5 and starting from Fort Pease, in the Knew River’s Romance afternoon of July 3, took his vessel There was a romance about the old} to Fort Abraham Lincoln, a distance river steamboat captains and their/of 710 miles, in the unparalleled boats, which are now dismembered|time of 54 hours. hulks if any vestiges of them remain. Went Back to Mississippi All that romance lives again in an ac-| The close of the Sioux wars and count of the life of Marsh. the advent of railroads to the Upper Grant Prince Marsh was born in|Missouri had by 1882 paralyzed the Chautauqua County, N. ¥., the son of |Steamboat industry. Marsh went back John and Lydia (Dyer) Marsh, A few|to the Mississippi and remained in years later the family moved to Ro-|Service on its waters for 21 years. chester, Pa., on the Ohio river. A revival of steamboating on the ‘The river ‘early cast its spell: over | Upper Missouri brought him again to the boy. At the age of 12 young|the region in 1903, at first in the em- Marsh's schooling came to an end|Ploy of General W. D. Washburn and and he became cabin boy on a local/later of the Benton Packet company. that of Al Capone, arch racketeer, who had finally to be tried and con-/| victed on a charge ‘of income tax | evasion—having read, daily for yea of gang killings, conducted in day-| light on crowded city streets without fear of legal retribution—and having had to pay taxes for the support of corrupt public officials strongly sus- pected of being in league with the underworld, red-blooded American citizens can hardly be blamed for the desire to cut through the tangle of | red tape in which the wheels of jus- tice seém hopelessly to be enmeshed, to “take the law into their own hands” dealing with offenders according to the ancient Hebraic code—“an eye for an eye.” Putting such a desire into action, jowever, is another matter. It is seriously to be questioned if violence can successfully be combatted by surprised why our governor and his advisors deemed it advisable to de- clare a four day open season. There is no danger whatever of the deer Population increasing very rapidly. And now after four day’s slaughter of bucks the chances of increase are rather slim. Anyone with common sense can readily see that. Many hunters expressed the opinion that one or two days open season would have been sufficient. In fact many were in favor of a one-day sea- son in which to take deer of both sexes. While many do not favor the killing of female deer at any time, both sexes much more humane than a four-day slaughter of male deer which tends to depopulate the spe- of hunters. they consider one-day open season on ; cies and results in the females being |be thinned out so rapidly. Open sea- chased back and forth between bands | ged wi In this way many deer are killed which would otherwise escape. The man who does the killing and the man who does the paying, in such cases are not sportsmen. They are: game hogs. This should be made illegal. The offender should pay; such a penalty that he would think twice before repeating the offence. ‘When a hunter buys a license he only buys the privilege to hunt—not a guarantee that he will get a deer, and certainly not the right to hire a man to shoot one for him. If such a law was passed and rigidly enforced many | ® poor shot would never take the field. And since he could not hire anyone to shoot a deer for him there ‘would be more sport for real sports- men. The deer population would not son could come more frequently, even though of shorter duration, ! that it costs so little and protects so com- pletely a thing so delicate as the flavor of fine tea, . ead Hunters testified | eorainator’ for a tresh review (steamboat plying from Pittsburgh, |He made his home in Bismarck, where|m™ore violence. Aside from any con | with thelr tongues henging “in| intro ee ry aevisable too, in the bi Pg ee fation.|. For more than 60 years thereafter,|his life and exploits have become siderations of justice or of disregard | itteriy exhausted, fleeing from one i hod Property, to of the credit and) monetary station. |wcarsh "was connected “with river] legendary, and retired about 1910. iis |for constituted authority, it is doubt. | peg Ge Mimtare ee rs yer SiON anaT Cue eee su SS 18 : tion. In 1852, as a deck-| Wife died in 1906. Four children were | {ul if such bestial mob action as that | nother band and chased back again. | hunting field. Th 1 bd lo- two men who have a Sted nipped wy and, he reached St. Louls, which for | left. : at San Jose will have the effect of .hunting field. There are always too Ds pried oi Se ie piri white ‘a long period was his home. Marsh was a man somewhat above | Welling further offenses of the kind — oo House” that no change in policy: on| AS a watchman on the A. B, Cham- medium helght, of sinewy body and Beers har inseam een eo isons Orange Pekoe (Bisck) louse’ C fe |great strength. He was keen-sig! Japan (Green) : the commodity dollar was in prospect. |bers, he narrowly escaped with his life | great of this kind may rather create in a - |in the great disaster of Feb. 27, 1856, and quick of movement, and ir i” splcion that Roosevelt. was exiending|when the breaking of an ice jam {deliberate in speech, Lo eters ser hk aren THE PATTERSON HOTEL a Wis vacation to some more of his hard |wrecked or sank some SO vessels on, “Hs skill as allot and were sec. [some ventures in citizenship of their NOWoat your GROCERS . i. front. | ot ig working aides. x the 8t. — Te ciniaait ognized by all,” the biographer con-|elders that a generation of Boy Scout, The Patt Hotel's f; ksgi Governee “Bistk is urvdeestood not) Be wing yest he Hecaine s | cides, public school and religious training The Patterson Hotel’s famous Thanksgiv- SO crn SEiEedaraantiontalhw mon, te follow ‘inter of 1688-69| ‘The Dictionary of American Bio- (has tried nobly to prevent? ing Dinner in main dining 50 Levees ne time, in complete |served with Mark Twain, with whom graphy credits the material used to| As to the merits of the particular room reduced to .... a Cc i petiiaoal with’ the administration |he formed s lifelong friendship. In|J. M. Hanson's “The: Conquest of the eee the eulpetia were guilty, litle a. 's : rried Kath-|Missouri: Being the Story of the i i ns since the decision has been made. bel Soar” he mai lLife and Exploits of Captain Grant|One could wish, however, that their TURKEY DINNER in Coffee Shop a * ‘In March, 1862, Marsh’s experience |Marsh” published in 1909; the Bis-|fate had overtaken such hardened/9 ery. aa in. Fargo Firms Given | with to be climaxed in 1876, be-|marck Daily Tribune of Jan. 4, 1916,|criminals as “Machine Gun” Kelly Bak saiaterSioreculopeionnyelorevers wieiaiere an Di 1J b aan, ‘As euste ‘of the John J. Roe, hejand to Marsh's sister, Mrs. Lydia/end his cohorts, rather than these | ed Sewage Disposal Jo! Seiisted in carrying Grant's army | Gordon, Rochester, Pa, luckless first offenders. | Come to the Patterson and start your Thanksgiving son to Pittsburgh| The recent volume and its 11 pre-| I would rather see the President of | - 5 be Fargo, N. D., Nov. 29.—(P)—Atter |from Sagecgren bloody Sunday of |decessors, published by Charles|the United States declare martial law Dinner with blue points on half shell direct from is voting to reject all bids on the Pargo Aoniie be Mided in placing Buell’s|Scribner's Sons, New York, are pre-|and put the united forces of the U.|| Baltimore. sewage disposal plant, the clty com-|2P. 0” sn lett bank of the river. |pared as an authentitive source of in-|S. Army and Marine Corps at work rrssion Tuesday moved to reconsider |“ETY fr experience with the Indian|formation on the lives of America'sjon @ thorough “delousing eampelgn” Music by Bud and GI A that action, killed the proposal to re: | country came in 1864 when he was in| great, aR LG eee usic by Bud an len Dancing « made a ———_—————#| Oct. 23—Andrew Wicklander, 55,|and shot rather than that such out- Seeune firms: wich had | ‘ickland 55, han the h ioint proposal as the “lowest and-best”’ Mid. The five firms are the T. F. Powers Construction company, Haggart Con- struction company, 8. Birch and Sons, J. A. Shaw Construction company and Meinecke and Johnson. ‘The bid accepted calls for a plant costing $609,855. It would have Dorr type equipment, fixed nozzle sprays and two of the 12 sludge beds would be glass covered. In addition to the $600,855, there will be engineering costs of $17,500 and the site cost of $7,000, making a total cost of $634,- 355.45. The other bidders were J. L. Mc-/ Cormick of Fargo and C. F. Lytle, Stoux City, Towa. INDIAN DRINKS ACID ' Fort Yates, N. D., Nov. 29.—Thomas Black Tomahawk, Indian, is in a Bis- marck hospital in a serious condition ‘28 @ result of drinking a strong caus- \ie solution handed him by a friend. || October Births | i! And Deaths Here | | ———_—____--—__ | | Washburn. Oct. 24--J. J. Leif, 48, Wilton. Oct. 25-—-Sherbiah F. Lambert, 44, ;301 Fourth; Dan W. Register, six months, 508 Second. ~ Oct, 26--Mrs. Jeannette Ostrander, 69, 519 Fifth; Herman: Trepto, 62, Beulah. Oct. 28—-Peter Baker, 63; 515 Ninth. Oct. 30—Anna Clark Lee Barf-| jknecht, 75, 617 Sixth. 1 |Fluke Goal Brings | Defeat to Senators; Oct. 7—Mr. and Mrs. George Har-{ j y New York, Nov. 29.—(?)—After win- vey Bartlett, 419 Avenue B,'a daugh- | ning their first two games of the Na- | ter; Mr. and Mrs. Sale Seer oi rigger tional Hockey League season, the Ot, | tawa Senators appear to haye col Oct, 8—Mr. and Mrs, John ‘Allen lapsed into the state that was pre-. Coulson, 222 Third St., a daughter. Oct, 9—Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ray- dicted for them befote the campaign | opened. It took a fluke goal for the mond Conley, Menoken, a son. Boston Bruins to beat them Tuesday BIRTHS Oct. 1—Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lee Meek, Bismarck, @ daughter. Oct. 2—Mr. ami Mrs. Herbert Edgar Fricke, Baldwin, a daughter; Mr. and Mrs, Trygve Salveson, 1100 Broadway, @ daughter. Oct, 3—Mr. and Mrs. Peter James Oct. 10—Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ed- mund Englebrecht, Golden Valley, breaks as that of Sunday in Califor- nia be repeated. The executions could at least be conducted in an orderly | manner and with the assurance that | Pains and Dizziness Disappeared After She Began Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ‘The acid burned the esophagus, leav- |". 11 age, and Mrs. Sanford Col- | night. | ~an estimate of the number listening on 2 coast-to-coast network “hating off the passage of food tothe inishardtan, a son-| tally with ose then fou malnutes left \ stomach. Physicians are attempting s| Starting on scfive-man “power” play, | ¢o open and heal the stricture but if jEddie grabbed the puck behind the | uot successful will have to operate on Igenator net and poked it out. The.| ee ° ° ile comach Sie truckGoule ‘Bll Bovrige The great thing Radio 1 skate and glanched into the cage. “My grandmother and my mother at The Toronto Maple Leafs swamped! both used the Vegetable Compound e . e Ps is OTIOR: 10 CRBDITORS the New York Americans 7 to 3. | and they on it. I can doa | can do is to bri Ins ired ia. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE The Canadiens took a 4-1 shellack-| man’s work now. I am not dizzy ng pi x | Be Noeie Aten i cee the un ine: pabdccstcheoataoy M e ° he ho 9 <4 Notice ven bythe une “sie zZ me ates PE ee ae wale inie the Same en Noveh Dakoin, deceasta, to the credi- Jerominous Vian Capper, talking, viciirs star, Ja ec: | Da aot endurs apethc. daz wiih “Ie is not necessary to know about music— os sang ei dactanea to exmiot thon drew. @. Dronen, Driscoll, a son. [known in.the films as Sandra Shaw.| Sold by all druggists one can simply feel it, and love it. pe nix months after the fifst publication | Oct, 20—Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stad- “Listening to a cathedral organ or to 68 of this notice, to said Administratris ler, Ruso, Bie a nr oie stata ss wher Shy ae Shetek ty'aaid Burial |g Oy BM any greet enchants —— shan af ae hak. met zi Court of Burleigh County, ne hin of felt uplifted and refreshed, as by the cool a iismarcks Burleigh County, North clean air of the mountains? “4 ssc en nectiy Suanse pedicel tat “Sb-mny athe, tie great shing restio cxm on Court ‘within and for the County of e do is to bring Inspired Music into the home. [ne has fied the seth day of dune A. De ; } My comrades of the Philadelphia Orchestra 1984, at the hour of 10 o'clock tn the ris mas ar § ry ‘ pra aie a. Freee tn ThetCuure House in ths CY and I welcome this wonderful opportunity. om of Bismarck in said County and State, sit the time and place for hearing and : ies or the sald SF Lambert, De: as ; . fr ceased, which have ‘been duly and Perhaps you haven’t even thought iy regularly sented as hereinbefore , . C a "Dated November 24th A. D. 2233, of Christmas cards yet, but you are Leopold Stokowski ly ‘As Administratrix of the Ba- ee Conductor Philadelphia ed iaietof BF. Lambert, De- going to erder some between now Symphony Orchestra es + o m November ADuigi OY and Christmas, so why not have it Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co., the people a z Attorneys for Admintstratrix . DEATHS ; Hi = who make Chesterfield, want to hea: The cigarette that's i Bismarck, N.'D. Ot MNES amend, a. te over with? Our stock is all clean the Phi i phe _-. MILDER Oct. 2—Karl:Rennich, Sr:, 57, Mer- j sas < 3 5 ee a and fresh, beautiful new designs. many people, the greatest musical organi- S \ The cigarette that : coll Now is the time to get this much of sation om the Amparigns continent. TASTES BETTER i your Christmas shopping out of the We know you will like . way before the holiday rush. this music, and although not oO : s; in the same way we hope THE BISMARCK’ TRIBUNE you will enjoy Chesterfield— : JOB PRINTING DEPARTMEN . Ps COLUMBIA COAST-TO-COAST;: NETWORK PHONE 32 Quality Pristers Since 1873 Fourth and Thayer Bismarck, North Daketa Every night in the week