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The Bismarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) re ES are Published by The Bismarck Trib- ‘une Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mail matter. GEORGE D. MANN President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year. , per ye outside of Bismarck) Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . asevevevesescvees Bs Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three 2, mail outside of North Dakota, per year eoceee ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, year ...... Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter hercin are also reserved, Need Continued Effort Need for continued application by the government to the problem of the livestock raiser is indicated by! recent figures compiled by the Cen-)| tral Cooperation Association of South St. Paul, the largest body of its kind in the northwest. According to this authority, slaugh-| 00; realm of dreams to those of hard jcent ante taken out of the salaries of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1934 izes the need of this state for addi- | tional manufacturing enterprises. | Many of those who now oppose the Townley plan long have dreamed of | the day when our resources of me- | chanical power could be utilized in| woolen mills, flax mills and other en- terprises in order that our people! might have year-round employment. | The biggest handicap to popular) support of the Townley project is the history of the state-owned enter- prises we already have and a general feeling that Mr. Townley is not quite | sincere in his project. These are things which occur to; people when they descend from the! facts and they appear insurmountable. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors, They are published without -regatd to whether they agree or disagree |{ with The Tribune's policies. Payrollers and the Rolling Pin (Hettinger County Herald) Langer will lose by five per cent. Or perhaps it should be stated: Langer will lose because of, or through five per cent. Langer will lose his race for gov- ernor by considerably more than 5! Per cent of the votes in spite of the fact he now has the endorsement of the payrollers’ convention to be held at Valley City, March 6. Should combined Political stupidity and multiplicity of candidates make it possible for Lang- er to win endorsement as governor on the Republican ticket, he will still lose out in the general election by, through, or because of the five per the pie-counter brigade. ter of 6,000,000 pigs and 200,000 sows jast fall at the behest of the depart-j ment of agriculture resulted in a hog} population as of February 1 only three | per cent below the 10-year average.| This has played @ prominent part} in the recent advances of hog Prices | without question, but there is no fear | of a shortage of meat products and, on the contrary, unless further steps | are taken the livestock raiser prob-| ably will find himself in the same! situation as before, That there is no immediate cause | for alarm on the part of the con- sumer is proved by the figures of meat in storage. On Feb. 1 this year pork stocks were 26 per cent larger than a year ago and lard stocks were three times as heavy. At the same time, the cattle popu- lation of the county on Jan. 1 was Placed at 67,352,000 head, nearly three per cent larger than a year ago and about the same as the num- ber for the period from 1916 to 1923, when our export business still was| going strong. The number of dairy cattle also, increased three per cent, thereby ex- plaining, at least in part, the origin of one of the problems of the milk producer. This, too, is demanding attention at Washington, but what is to be done about it remains to be seen. Cattle men, like hog producers,! have found themselves engaged in an | endless chain of more and more pro- duction with the result that heavy slaughter of cattle during the last year has resulted in an 86 per cent increase in the amount of frozen and cured meat in stock as of Feb. 1. This also must be eaten before the indus- try gets on a normal basis and profits return to the range and feeding areas. From this survey, it will be seen that the government and the Jog and livestock producers still have a long way to go before reaching a situation where production will be profitable to the average man. There is, however, cause to believe | that the recent low prices of meat will eventually operate to the advan- tage of the livestock farmer. In a re- cent speech at Iowa State college, John W. Rath, chairman of the board of the Institute of American Meat Packers, announced that the American public has eaten more meat. in the last 13 months than in any ©orresponding period on record. This means that the housewives of the country, faced with the problem of providing their families with a satisfactory diet on limited funds, have turned more and more to meat as a daily article of food. In other words, the nation has become “meat- minded” and this tendency probably will operate to keep consumption at high levels even after the prices in- @rease, as we all hope they will do oon. Insurmountable Obstacles Many a North Dakotan will be sorry that his natural common sense and his knowledge of recent history will prevent him from supporting the | ways. |baby sent away monthly to Langer’s And we will grant that Mr. Langer has a more modern political machine than A. C. Townley ever had. The machine is on wheels, the rubber is new, the cylinders are well oiled and there is plenty of gas in the tank. There is a wheelhorse at the wheel of a state financed car on every road, @ payroller for every precinct, a beer inspector in every poolhall, a solicitor for subscriptions for the Langer Leader in every gathering. The great new capitol is like a giant ant hill, from which little ants in Pontiacs go forth in all directions, or like a bee hive from which workers fly forth to come back laden with 5-per cent poll- en. There seems to be too many ants for an ordinary anthill and too many bees for a hive, but there are no drones in the hive and real ants could learn about activity from some of the Pontiac driving political pismires. It is a great machine. It costs the state something to build it, but it functions politically, even if the ma- chine of state is sometimes idle while Parts are loaned to political machines in scattered areas. Tom Hagen, for instance, who gets $200 a month in salary from the state mill and eleva- tor, has time to cross the state to orate at Amidon before the precinct election, and other spare parts are sent forth into the highways and by- But the emery dust in the Langer Political machine is that 5 per cent. drag. Payrollers say they don't mind that 5 per cent so much, but what wife can see a new hat and a new shirt for the newspaper. The wife likes to think} of her husband as the provider for the | family instead, of the payroller pay- ing protection to the politician. It may be lawful to pay tribute to Lan- ger but the ladies do not like the idea. The little item of five per cent is a big item in the lives of little families. Great church organizations live on a lot lesser tithes. Taking $85,000 an- nually out of the hands of mothers and out of the mouths of their babies and out of the slim salaries of the; state workers will not make house- wives more loyal to Langer. The revolt against the 5 per cent drag will start in the kitchen. It will walk through the parlor and down the road to the neighbors. It will slip over the garden fence. Wives, sisters and their relatives will start a move- ment rolling which will gain momen- tum faster than a beer commissioner's PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. ‘ Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, |] self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink, No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. CORRECTIVE PROTECTIVE DIET FOR REDUCTION Obesity is not the only untoward effect of overeating. Many indivi- duals of mature age who overeat show premature degenerative changes along with increasing corpulence. Early hardening of the arteries, high blood pressure, insidious “rheuma- tism,” whatever that may be, diges- tive difficulties unknown in earlier life, headaches, sallow dry harsh skin, dull heavy eyes, growing disinclina- tion to make any brisk effort or take exercise. For such individuals the diet should be restricted as to food value or calo- ries, yet not in other respects, notably in vitamins, in mineral content and in items which serve as buffer against acidosis, The following regimen has been planned to meet these essentials and at the same time to reduce: Breakfast: Calories 1—Glass of orange juice or toma- to juice ... 2—Two eggs, c taste .. 3—Any fresh 4—Glass of milk For either No. 1 or No. 3, you may substitute a slice of bread or toast with butter, or a small roll or a shredded wheat bis- cuit without butter or milk. Lunch: 1—One-third head of lettuce .... Tablespoonful of oil dressing 2—Two fresh vegetables .... Small pat or ball of butter . 3—One pint of fresh milk, prefer- ably certified or plain raw, not pasteurized 4—Fresh fruit ... 2—One-third head of lettuce, or small helping raw cabbage or any other raw relish or salad vegetable Tablespoonful dressing 3—Two fresh vegetables . Small pat or ball of butter 4—A glass of Certified or plain raw milk 1 (You may substiute a glass of buttermilk and an extra Pat or ball of butter for the glass of fresh milk) 5—Fresh fruit (for instance, a large orange, banana, small bunch of grapes, large apple). 6—Cheese (None more healthful than cottage or “Dutch” cheese). 7—Handful of nuts Tea or coffee without cream or sugar may be taken in addition to the items named, but not as @ substitute for milk or fruit juice. The three meals as outlined yield approximately 2,000 calories. All the items are rich in vitamins, except olive oil and Jean meat. As outlined the regimen is a reduc- tion regimen for any adult of aver- age height and weight who is mode- rately active every day. It would be a maintenance diet for such an adult lying abed. Few persons can adhere strictly to sucha regimen many days at a time. But every day, for that matter every meal that does not depart far from the schedule may be counted good medicine for what ails you. Incidentally, old timers, it might help the work of retarding premature old age, if you should adopt one or two other suggestions you will find; in the little lesson on “Regeneration” given in the booklet “Regeneration Regimen,” Pontiac. Langer out of the governor's chair and on down the road from Capitol Hill. The Ladies don't like that 5 per cent extortion. take the change out of their hus- band’s pockets they prefer to do it themselves, HORIZONTAL 1 One of the greatest of American novelists. 12 Courtyard of a house. i3 Harem. 14Reign. 16 Enthusiasm 17'To furnish anew with men. 18 Genus of nudi branchiate gastropods. 39 Born, 20 For many years she has lived in ,. 21 Writing tool. 22 Not wide, 24 Form of “a.” 25 Electrified particle. 26 Part of the pronoun 35 Vermont (abbr.) 41 Sea skeleton. 45 Writing fluid. 46 Tidings.¢ proposals for the state-owned fac- tories made to the public works ad- ministration at Washington by A. C. Townley. Every North Dakota booster real- 47 Pertaining to a fugue. 48 Fairy. 49 Anger. 50 Rods. 51 Asylum. 52 She has a eye. 28 Petty naval officers. 31 Net. 32 Fleur-de-lis. 33 Sun god. 34 Neuter Answer to Previous Puzzle Modernistic Writer 9 Seventh note. 10 To press. 11 Demon. 12 She was born in —. 15 She studied medicine at University 17 Uncooked. 18 To bound. 20 Stinging ant 23 Gypsy 24 Three-toed sloths. 27 To recover. Or. Short sleep. 36 Possesses. 38 In reality. 40 Female sheep. -- 41 Selected, as an inferior product. 42 Type of molding. 43 File. 44 Morindin dye, 47 Dandy. 48 Right of precedence. 50 Afternoon. 51 Stop! modern —— — style. VERTICAL 1 Helmet-shaped Dart. 2Fruits of the strawberry type. 3 Japanese weight. 4 Toward. 5 Consumer. 6 Halt. 7 Ages. SGreek sibilant letter. Pete lol NT | fia L | To? | ~ Lt NS? LSS PURI | uaa BN SN wt eRe NN? Ich els SN | and a stamped envelope bearing your ad QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS I Waited 16 Years How long should one wait after having an appendicitis operation be- fore having a baby? (Mrs, E. B.) Answer—Ordinarily one should for- get that one has had such an opera- tion and carry on as usual. That is, unless some complication occurs, in which case the attending physician can best advise. Most patients do and should resume all their ordinary activities a month after such an ope- ration. More Height Where can the collodion be obtain- ed to use on the heels to add needed height? I saw your article about it but failed to cut it out... (Mrs. M. H) Answer—Collodion is liquid court. plaster—you paint it on and when it dries it leaves a film of protective transparent impervious materia]. It may be used to stick a felt pad on the heels, or to stick an artificial eyebrow or mustache on the face or to protect. @ cold sore or other minor abrasion. I do. not recall the article you say you saw. (Copyright, 1934, John F. Dille Co.) Carnera-Loughran Will Fight Tonight Miami, Fla, March 1.—(>)—Fair weather prevailing after a three day rain, the much delayed Carnera- Loughran world heavyweight title- bout will be offered up to the enter- tainment of a few thousand fight faithfuls Thursday night, despite two conflicting attractions—a flower show DISTRICT TITLISTS 16 Independent Basketball! Teams Win Their Way to Regional Competition (By The Associated Press) Twelve teams emerged as cham- pions Thursday night from as many district tournaments throughout the state to join four previously deter- mined titleholders and complete the field of 16 independent quints who will seek regional championships in eight tournaments this week-end. The regional engagements will de- termine the eight teams who will con- tend for the North Dakota independ- ent basketball league championship at a state tournament in Minot March 9 and 10. Bismarck Prowlers and Dunn Cen- ter will battle here for the cham- Pionship of the seventh region, North Dakota independent basketball league, Monday night, Friday as first announced. According to Neil O. Churchill, vice president of the state league, the date was changed to accommodate Dunn Center. One of their players, Ar- thur J. Olsen, coach at the Dunn) |Center high school, will be with his high school cagers in Beulah Friday and Saturday, where they are play- ing in a district tournament for con- |solidated schools. Other district champions and the jtentative pairings in regional events |follow: At Valley City: At Mayville: At Cando: Armour vs Lankin, Cando vs Kloten. At Maddock: Maddock vs Wood-) worth. At Anamoose: Balfour vs Minot, At Stanley: Lansford vs Stanley. At Hettinger: New Leipzig vs Reed- | be the manager. er, hich sets you back a dime \ i That movement will roll | If anyone is going to; by Allene Corliss COPYRIGHT BY ALLENS CORLISS + DISTRIBUTED BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. SYNOPSIS Stanley Paige, beautiful, young society girl, is left penniless when her lawyer speculates with her money and loses. Stanley, however, cares little for the money, feeling that she has everything in the love of fascinating Drew Armitage. But when Drew breaks their engage-' ment saying it would be impossible te marry on his income, she is heartbroken. Rather than accept aid from her wealthy friends, Stan- ley rents an inexpensive furnished room and disappears from her ex- elusive circle to try and make her own way. Her friends agree that a better way would have béen to| marry handsome Perry Deverest, but Stanley cannot forget Drew. Then, one day, she meets John | Harmon Northrup, struggling young author. A strong friendship | ensues and they become very nec- | essary to one another. John Har- mon is in love with Stanley but refrains from telling her because of Drew. As time passes, his kind- mess and consideration win Stan- ley’s affection and they are mar- tied. Thinking only of Stanley's happiness, John Harmon makes an agreement with her that, if the time should ever come when they cannot give each other the wonder- ful companionship and anderstand- ing they have now, they must end their relationship. After three| months ef married life, Stanley is serenely happy, but John Harmon has become so necessary to her that she realizes, in order to pre- serve their happiness, she must have other interests to keep her from getting restless while he is writing. She applies for work in a) bookshop. CHAPTER THIRTY An old man in a black skullcap aproached her, stared at her pene- tratingly from behind enormous horn-rimmed spectacles. He was little and wizened and his face had taken on the color of the yellowed pages of his books, but his eyes, like the words on their printed pages, were still remarkably clear and discerning. “I saw your card,” Stanley be- gan a bit uncertainly. “So?” the old man continued to stare at her. “I would like the place.” Stanley spoke abruptly, feeling that with this old person words were supere fluous. “Why?” His voice, like his stare, was even and penetrating. It seem- ed to brush aside trivialities, to get at the heart of things. “Because I like books, because I @ job, because I want to be- long somewhere, have some—voca- tion.” “You like books, but do you know about them?” “Not much, but I could learn, I think I could learn very easily if you would bother.” “Teaching people who wish to learn is never a bother; it is teaching fools that is a nuisance and a waste of time. The pay is small,” he added abruptly, “and my customers are few—and not interested in pretty girls,” he waited, watching her im- Pert would like the place,” Stanley gepeated, returning his gaze un- NAMED IN TOURNEY | Last Rites Held for Betty June Erstrom A large gathering of friends, in- cluding members of the Bismarck high school freshman class, attended funeral services for Miss Betty June Erstrom, daughter of Mrs. Elsie Er- Wahpeton vs. Straus Clothiers, Valley City. strom, 816 Avenue B, conducted Wed- nesday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the First Presbyterian church. Rev. F. E. Logee, pastor of the church, and Rev. G. A. Stewart, Mandan, officiated. i Pallbearers were Vernon Klawitter, Robert Morris and Albert Thysell of Bismarck and Ray and Hugh Simons and Lester Schoenert of Baldwin. The remains were taken to the family plot in Rose Hill cemetery in Ecklund township for burial. Out-of-town relatives who came for the funeral were an aunt of the decedsed, Mrs. T. J. Burbeck, Cathay, and an uncle, Edward Thompson, Rugby, and his son, Lyle Thompson. They left for their homes Thursday morning. New Manager Arrives For G. P. Restaurant Ernie Knudsen assumed manager- instead of | ship of the Grand Pacific hotel restau- rant here Thursday, replacing Andrew J. Bollin, manager at the Bismarck restaurant for three years, who is now in charge of the G. N. Eat Shop at Devils Lake. Knudsen came Wednesday from Minneapolis where he has been with a large catering establishment. He formerly was located in Chicago and has been associated with the restau- a business for several years, he sale |Schlitz Palm Garden To Open Friday Night A special entertainment will fea- ture the opening Friday of the Schlitz Palm Garden, on 3rd St. near Broad- way, in the place formerly occupied by the Casino. Arthur Bernstein will i Bernstein, Bismarck resident for the a job, she had John Harmon. She would be away from him all day, but she would come back to him at night. The closed door would no) longer shut her out, for she would not be there to be shut out; she would be on the other side of a door herself —the door of a dim and narrow bookshop. John Harmon quietly accepted Stanley’s announcement. She told him that night after they had had dinner on a shaky card table before the fire. It was characteristic of Stanley that she didn’t try to ex- plain and characteristic of John Harmon that he didn’t need an ex- planation. As a matter of fact, he was conscious of a rather startling feeling of relief. If John Harmon had seemed the same to Stanley in these weeks since their marriage, it was because he had compelled himself to seem the same; if he had rumpled his hair and laughed easily and spent long, hours behind a closed door, it had been because it was natural for John Harmon to rumple his hair and laugh easily with Stanley and shut himself away from her when He was now—not just for part of his and Stanley’s gether. It was less his craft and more his job—it must earn money and very agile. He wrote rapidly and easily and sent out an amazing number of stories to Maynard. Maynard read them and raised an eyebrow and fed them to his lever hungry magazines. They were good stuff, they would catch on, they were exceptionally clever—-not what he had thought the boy would do, of course, but then Maynard was always seeing things in people and then being disappointed: he he wanted most desperately to be/ those early stories young Northrup with her. He had compelled himself/had sent in there had been a touch to do just this for a long time nowjof genius, a rare quality of under- and a habit, when motivated by an|standing, an awareness of beauty impulse as strong as this one which |—in people, in nature, in the whole shielded Stanley from the full force of his love for her, was not easily put aside. In his marriage John Harmon had found no release from his self- imposed restraint, He felt very. humble about his happiness very responsible. There were times when he could have wept over sweetness of this thing that happened to him and other when he stood in shaking fear it. He gave Stanley just what thought she wanted from him—and kept his passion lashed to a mast. Had he loved her less, it would have been impossible. But because he loved her so much, so terribly much, he could shut himself up in aerict hey he could not write. jtanley, waiting impatiently in the room beyond, pe complicated fabric of life; but if i Ihad been there, it was But the stuff was clever and good m: % give bit at that novel, Mayna: look at it shape tor spring. pablication ters, discarding restless. |during ness, John Harmon sitting slumped|ceived while he over his typewriter, knew despair.|mont. He He had to write—and to write had to lose his own identity, to |come @ mere automaton, an ment of his inspiration; and now with Stanley so near, memories of her even i of more demanding, he any part of himself. conjure up any i longer could he He & i i pEeye bea ref He Fs E a ik i i i z i | i i i E i i Poor marks in school are often due to a child’s ph condition. No child can aay with a sluggish ean Sh ness actually dulls 1¢ senses; it will dull the brightest mind. Before you can blame the child—or his ‘teacher—you must be sure you are not sending a badly clogged child to school. Don’t wait for a badly coated tongue, head- aches, and poor appetite to tell you a. child’s bowels need help’ There's a way to insure their ity; see next column: When Children Get Bad Reports in School is is the secret of helping boys bey girls go through an entire school term without once slumping in their studies. Keep them free from bilious attacks, Not by purging them with cathartics of adult eal They’ i never need such things if you'll use this natural means of stimulating regular, thorough bowel action; every three or four days, let them havealittle California Syrup of Figs. The laxative action of the senna in this fruity syrup is enough. Get pure California Syrup of Figs. last 20 years, announces that a re: fined atmosphere will be maintained in the new establishment. Pleasure going people of Bismarck are invited te come and dance to peppy music at ted Schlitz Palm garden any evening, The new manager is an ex-service man, having served over seas with the first North Dakota 164th infantry. For a number of years he was in business here, and during the Jast four years he has been a traveling sales- man, Made $15,000 Deal To Buy ‘Influence’ ’ ‘Washington, March 1.—(?)—Harris M. Hanshue, president of Western Air Express, told senate air mail investi- gators Thursday Ernest W. Smoot, son Of the former Utah senator, had “sold” the company on the idea that Smoot could expedite a comptroller general's decision the company wanted. Government payments to the com- pany were being held up af the time, Pending the comptroller’s ision. Smoot was hired, and, after the de- cision was made, billed the company for $15,000 “for services rendered.” He has testified he was not paid the full amount. {Additional Society | Choirs Will Provide Free Sunday Musicale For the first free 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon musicale of the 1934 Lenten season, choirs of the city will sing nime sacred selections at the Bismarck city auditorium next Sunday after- noon. The program is one of the series being staged by the Association of Commerce musical activities commit- tee with the assistance of the Thurs- day Musical club. The committee for this concert includes Mrs. Opie 8. Rindahl, 704 Seventh St.; Mrs. John A. Larson, 210 Avenue A, west, and Mrs. Ira E. Herzberg. Selections included in the program ee See Our Window Display Tonight TITTLE BROS. Avoid Embarrassment of . FALSE TEETH Dropping or Slipping Don’t be embarrassed again by hav- ing your false teeth slip or drop when you eat, talk, laugh or sneeze. Just sprinkle ‘a little FASTEETH on your plates. This new, extremely fine powder gives a wonderful sense of comfort and security. No gummy, gooey taste or feeling. Get FAS- TEETH today at any drug store.— Advertisement. said. There will be no cover) ,and the grou! ing them are as | follows: “Far Away.” J. A. Parks—First | Evangelical male chorus; “The Awak- lening Chorus,” Homer — Salvation Army chorus; “I Do Not Ask.” Her man von Berge — German Baptist double quartet; “Still, Still With Thee,” Parks—First Baptist choir; “God Shall Wipe Away All Tears,” Roma-Reddick—Episcopal choir; “Go Down Moses,” Burleigh—Presby= terian male quartet; “Sanctus,” Guo- nod—Trinity Lutheran choir, and “The Hallelujah Chorus” from Handel's “Messiah”—combined choirs. Land Bank Pays Out Million Dollars Daily St. Paul, March 1.—()—Disbursing over one million dollars a day for each working day of February, the Federal Land Bank of St. Paul has closed loans of $22,315,550 to 9,888 farmers in North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Michigan during the month, General Agent J. P. Riordan of the farm credit administration, ane nounced Thursday. OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT of the SCHLITZ PALM GARDEN (formerly the Casino) On 3rd St. Near Broadway FRIDAY, MAR. 2 ‘ N Special entertain- ment starts 8 o'Clock All Draught Beer 10c No Cover Charge 1 Dancing Good Floor Come early! Good tim Assured - Minneapolis Journal Prints Dickens’ ‘Life of Our Lord’ Northwest’s Greatest Newspaper Scores Great Beat to Publish Precious Manuscript Rui in journalistic histor hn bw sured Oy the Minow onl; Journal in tells the Greatest, Story i ly & master artist could tell ‘The Journal for details cash casay competition to be fabhoss in connection with publication of this