The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 4, 1934, Page 7

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Time’ Looks at Senior Senator eo & ee ANALYZES * @ *e 8 IS CAREER Rates Him as an Individualist gaan alt : i 7 uP itl gReeeegH Begs» £ s g laws. In the Frasier wnor was recalled. defeated the late Senator Farrell Says Carryover Will More Than Take Care of Nation's Needs a itt E Ue § ti if is ny | i ! Ha Eg E j 3 5 [ i wBE @ i : | i Fe fF F s i i | i i i i ie Hdl i tit it & ERE i i a E E d (1931), Heonomy Act (1933), sales tax 1938). Peace. the forefront of any farm relief he last winter that iP fee reel SoBe 5 Surveyor Seeks Authorization For Three More Road Work 8 a 3 | | ie i ats hs ai i a8 i iy ERE. : x | rH E i ote ih | i ggF il Hi ? i E | ! i i e? i Hf a ili uf 1 ekg tr ai f 5 E i i & i g H at nT | | sf te i Lisle i g i a] hy i rake HE lie i He z Z | ; 229 FT| tn Ft ce THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, AUGUST 4, 1034_ Feebleness of President Paul von Hindenburg of Germany, who died ‘Thursday, was indicated by this picture (the most recent of him to reach this country) taken shortly before he was stricken, at his re- |’ ception of the king and queen of Siam, as he bade them farewell at his summer estate at Neudeck. The president, who was 86, appeared extremely weak and leaned heavily on his cane. Minresota National Guard troops are shown above in front of the striking truck drivers’ headquarters after they had raided the offices and arre sted several of the leaders on August 1. 20,000 Valuable Law Volumes Being Moved to New Supreme Court Chambers Twenty thousand volumes of law, many hoary with age, many rare first editions, moved Friday from the state historical building into North .Da- kota’s new $2,000,000 state capitol. The occasion of the move was shifting of the state supreme court into its new quarters—one of the last state departments to assume new quarters, Two floors will be occupied in the new building. Three floors of court- Toom, offices and book shelves were occupied in the old quarters, into hich the justices moved 10 years ago. Many volumes of iaw, valuable first tions, date back ¢o revolutionary ‘More than 158 years old. An volumes are also in- Canadian records of law and decisios. A code Napoleon, dating back to 1824, is one of the valuable collections, while other volumes are priceless in value. Early records of the supreme court, from the time it was established in territorial days, as a bench composed of federal district judges, are also in- cluded. Transcripts of cases heard before five such judges sitting en banc as & supreme bench are buried in the files, Records of J. H. Newton, clerk of the court, will be moved first. The moving is expected to take more than a week, No new furniture will be installed in the justices’ office, because of re- duced budgets. Empty Feed Trough, No 2 Et ai A gs g | ft i People’s Forum (Editor's Note)—The Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of inter- ing with contro- ve reli subjects, which attack individuals unfairly, oF ich offend good tast id fair will be returned to the writ- All letters MUST bi igned. & pseudony: donym first and your meath it. We will re- requests. We reserve the right such parts of letters as may be necessary to conform to this policy and to re- quire publication of a writers nal where justice and fair play make it advisable. PLEA FOR UNITED ACTION 2 Braddock, N. D., August 2, 1934. Editor, Tribune: Now that the Re- Publican state committee has met and pretended to name another candidate for governor it is time that the peo. Ple took stock of state affairs and call a state convention to nominate another state ticket for the Novem. ber election. I am not a party man but have supported the Nonpartisan League ever since it was first organ- ized, so I am a better Leaguer than Langer ever was and will not vote according to my dictionary, tha’ makes him a convict and according to, the state supreme court he is no long- er a citizen, therefore can no office or be @ candiate for any. Bul he can go throughout the state cam. Paigning for a state ticket but being a convict how can we support his ticket? It is said that a government is no better than the people who make it. How, then, can we support his ticket which would be the same thing as supporting Langer himself? We can name a new state ticket composed of the three Republican factions and of even the Democratic party if they care to join in with us and name a state ticket with Ole H. Olson as governor as he received a larger vote in the primary than any other of the four candidates for gov- ernor on the three tickets. That Proves his popularity with the people ef the state. I would also retain John Husby as he has never been able to show what he could do as commis. sioner of agriculture and he repre- sents, the Progressive Republicans; also Fay Harding as railroad commis- sioner because of his experience and his large vote. The remainder of the Be ER A 3 5 E rll a : ie Ee a E; i E i z i : i ge zits BEER PERE | iil EEF i j : i | | ay BEEE fi Game indeed, game of life end death and the weasel lost. There was his stiff, dead body on the snow, some- thing I had never seen before; but the rabbits had UNITED against their deadly enemy and this was the result, We can do the same if we will all get together and UNITE on one state ticket and completely forget that we are Republicans and Democrats. DAKOTAN, ANSWERS DAUNTLESS DUNN Dickinson, N. D. Aug. 2, 1934. Editor Tribune: ‘ Our friend from Killdeer in his enthusiasm to defend Dauntless Dunn is more to be admired for his loyalty than his failure to stay on the ground and stick to facts, for old timers in that county know that Dunn is no! particular oasis in this vast territory where the cycles of weather show a strong inclination to drouth, com.| mencing with their early farming with failures from 1911 to 1934, at least nine years wherein failures were extreme. Take 1931, and that was not 80 rosy, but a bad one, and 1933, where he says Western North Dakota had an average of five bushels of wheat, and if that is so, it must have been confined to a good yield at ten or better at Beach, for this writer knows that running from ‘ownship 143 on east side of Dunn clear through to 144-97 in Western Dunn and over in Billings, there was not enough wheat in that line of townships to feed a coffee mill, and it has repeated with| ;, @ 100 per cent failure this year. Our friend indicates the herds were multiplying so extensively that they had to be thinned out anyway, but just to make sure of keeping a lot of hay on hand they don’t think it worth while to harvest the wheat but cut it for hay, while from observations up| there the past week, one might as well run @ mower on the side walks of Dickinson as most of the country, and I know townships where one single load of prairie hay cannot be secured even with the use of a Bar. ber’s clippers. Green? Yes, Dauntless Dunn has that color, or did have it ago, as well as all drouth area, but it Growing fields, except the corn fields that are struggling along now, trying to survive until it rains. The wonderful hay crop in Daunt- less Dunn is just the Russian Thistle, for outside that a meager scant hay may be salvaged from wheat and oats fields that were too poor to use for anything else, but that will be small. Speaking of this native Russian Thistle Hay, a rancher south of here had an old corral and used to stick up his barb wire there, and had left 10 spools of barb wire near a stack of Thistles, and let his cattle in to eat. ‘They ate up the barb wire but never touched the thistles, the barb wire evi- dently having a more palatable qual- ity. Now Dauntless Dunn is one of our best Western Counties, but Dr. Mead is not making any careless statements when he says there are areas in this vast territory where it would be bet. ter for those having the poorer lands to hike elsewhere. But Dr. Mead should get this Kill- deer booster to help him colonize, for that boy can put it over. Dauntless Dunn, the Garden of Eden with mod- ern trimmings. SUBSCRIBER. BENEFIT FROM ADVERSITY Wilton, North Dakota August 2, 1934. Editor Tribune: I—“What’s going on over at the court house, another meeting of the unemployed?” Priend—“Yes, its great isn’t it when the unemployed can strike and make their demands.” I—“What's the trouble, some radi- cals stirring them up?” Friend—“Yes, there are some good men over there but there are others who wouldn't do a day's work no mat. ter what.” I—“Well, its too bad, we ought to have some new industry to put these people to work.” Friend—"“Well we could do some- thing if we had a c! So goes conversation in 1934. Wonder if a time of plenty does come before a lean time. And what Not now, for it comes ul : : &f Be Q i ay oak 1 ; i 3 ut 3 ERS 5 g 4 FH i 2E ak ¢ Ey a i z a8 bree f g ue He é ; 8s g FY F gs i } i gE il | *E en i I E i 5 g f i Fe f F : z i 5 & - i z E it re if z = 8 [ DR. 8S. K. CLAUNCH Dr. Stanford Claunch, food scientist, psychologi:t and health educator of San Francisco and New York, will give a series of five public lectures in the Silver Ball Room of the Patterson hotel Mon- day at 8:15 p. m. and. extending through Friday at the same hour each day. The lectures will cover the general topic of “scientific liv- ing.” Dr. Claunch has been in the edu- cational field more than 20 years, and has lectured in practically every English-speaking country. He will be assisted by Florence M. Holbrook. The lectures, sponsored by the Ameri- can Health Foundation, are free. printing press money. Industry must be controlled. Big machinery must not be allowed to run away with the people’s means of mak- ing a livelihood, causing excessive un- employment and a possibility of wrecking a nation through revolution. Have a law that a permit must be gotten from the County Commission. ers for every big machine that will turn men out of work, they to have the power to issue or withhold permit at their discretion. ‘We did get some rain this summer, must have been an average of two inches or more in June. And I be- leve we will yet get rain to save some of the corn. Sunday afternoon, after church, went to see the garden of a friend, a market garden on the river bottom. Wanted to see if it amounted to any- thing and if he had used irrigation this year. He said, “I have the best garden I ever had.” Has not used irrigation but has planted his rows farther apart, beets, carrots, etc. 42 inches apart. Onions were closer. Water melons, squash, tomatoes, etc. must have been 7 or 8 feet apart each way. He cultivates twice a week and there are no weeds; would have quite a lot even if it didn’t rain another drop. A man who can raise good vegetables on a year like this should be reckoned with our benefac- tors. Monuments in the public’ square to those who achieve would not be out of place. Why not an exchange of ideas. Here is one. Put up snow fences on a good spot of land for garden or potato patch and catch snow to furnish subsoil moisture. If we could send a representative to Mars, where astronomers believe there may be human beings and such @ shortage of water they must make use of the polar snows, we could get some ideas. This dry weather is going to do more for the state in the future than rain and crops. Maybe you think it odd to be writing this way when last spring I wrote, I believe we should Pray for rain. I still believe we should pray for rain or other things that we need, but I believe really the dry weather is bringing us for the fu- ture a larger answer to our prayers, for with dams built, moisture conser- vation, tree planting, methods we will finally get the rain- fall above average when land values will be twice what they ever were before and we shall have more of the good things of life and this western section shall blossom like the rose. A home, subsistence homesteads where needed, a garden for every one who has time to work one and a cow to milk,—progressive legislation and more of the spirit and embodiment of the golden rule will yet save us from Ted menace, And in a larger way, the progres. sive plans of men are also the plans of the Creator which shall go for- ward with the certainty of final vic. tory and an omnipotence like that world an for Pi that there shall be a re. our labors. Respectfully, HUGH REDINGTON. Youthful Nudists | “chet olf Tsk: | swanky Exmoor golf club in High- land park fought off the spread of nudism Friday. — Grand Forks, N, Members of the Rockefeller Director | Visits Health 0 Dr. John A. Ferrell, director of medical division of the Roc Foundation of New York City, Friday in Bismarck visiting the health department and conferri: with the director, Dr. Maysil M. WU: liams. Dr. Ferrell was en route t] Montana and the western Canediar) provinces. CITATION HEARING PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION. | STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Counts) of Pee be i IN COUNTY COURT, Before Hoa. I C. Davies, J In the Matt f the Estate of John C. Swett, Deceased. q Clinton’ C, Swett, FINAL WTING, Petitioner, vs. Minnie Mabel Bchmid, David W. Swett, and Elizabeth May Brad- ley, formerly Elizabeth May Swett, and all other persons in- terested in the estate of John C. Swett, deceased, Reg; sents THE STATE OF NORTH DAROTA THE ABOVE RESPONDENTS: | You and each one of you are hereby’ cited and required to a} before: the County Court of Burle! County, North Dakota, at the office of ¢1 County Judge of said County, at Burleigh County, North Dako’ House in the City of Bismarck, said County and State, on the 5th of September, A. D. 193¢ at the hour: of two o'clock in the afternoon of that day, to show cau any have, why the Final Report an@ counting, Petition for Distril executed by Clinton C. Swett, as the administrator of the estate of Johe C. Swett, deceased, file im eaid Court, praying that said Final Report and Accounting, Petition for Distri- bution be allowed, the administration of said estate may be brought te © close, the estate of said deceased re- ran na the poeigond said “4 trator, ff any, may the parties entitled thereto and that said edmainistrator be rom his trust as | or that such other or further orders may be aay meet in the prem- |} ises, should no! granted. The residence of said John 6. Gwett, deceased, the Gate Roe ontate. was, at the time o! erg Egy we leigh and State o: Let a of this citation as required by law, pe Dated this th day of August, & BD 1934, By the Courts (Seal) I. C. Davies, Judge of sald County Court. Geo. M. Register, Att'y., of said Administrator, Bismérck, N. Dak. 4 SEvowt AND ACCOUNTING, STATE , o 4 x0 REM DAKOTA, County 2 ik COUNTY, cote, Betore Nom. “In the Matter of the Estate of Elizabeth J. Swett, Deceased. Clinton C. Swett, Petitioner, vs. Minnie Mabel Schmid, David W. Swett, and Elizabeth May Brad ley, formerly Elisabeth May Swett, and all other persons it terested in the estate of Blii beth J. Swett, deceased, tl heirs of John C. Swett, dece spontente, THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA TO ff THE ABOVE RESPONDENTS: wat ane Cotorg of ‘you are hereby cited and require appear the Count; Court of Buriel stay County, Count: udge 0! OQ Burleigh County, North Dakota Court House in the City of Bi ‘ounty an September, A. D, 1934, at the hour of two o'clock im the afternoon of foes Oak Haan bart , why the Fin: tounting,” Petition. for. Distribul FINAL praying. that id Court sa! ou! a rt ant soccnerine brought to a cl deceased remaini ministrator, or that such be os further orders may made tne Sey" of Biemarck, is of Burleigh and State of Let service be made of this Heated wols ath + ~ 1934, swe (Seal) 1, C Davies, ) Judge of salé County Court, Geo, M. Baal, Sinairek, Re Deke . 8-4-11 s' STATE OF. NORTH DAKOTA, County fe Bure : es Disrhicr COURT, Sixth Judi. Pre, . Frieda Pischer, Piainti, ae etate of "North .bove Named

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