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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1934 COMMITTEE PLANS | CAPITOL PROGRAM. Olson Appoints Three to Study Ways and Means of Staging Dedication A committee of three was appointed | Tuesday by Acting Gov. Ole H. Olson to determine ways and means of stag- ing a dedication ceremony of the new $2,000,000 statehouse. The committee consists of H. P. God- dard, representing the Bismarck As- sociation of Commerce; R. M. Rish- worth, representing the state board of administration and 8. A. Olness, state insurance commissioner, representing ; state officials. i Probable costs of the event, together | with methods of handling expected) crowds, and formation of the program will be investigated by the committee. Civic leaders of Bismarck have ask- | ed that the dedication program be’ made the high point of the annual; Bismarck Corn Show and Homecom- | ing Week celebration, in October. STORMISSUBSDING. _It’s World’s Biggest Eat OVER TEXAS AREA Freeport Residents Return to! Homes After Wild Night of Wind and Rain | Freeport. Tex. Aug. 28.—(P)—A) tropical gale which lashed this sec | tion of the Texas gulf coast for 24) hours with high winds and torrential rains abated Tuesday. No deaths were | Shortly after 8 a. m., (central stan- | dard time). the wind had fallen to about 40 miles an hour and the ba- Tometer was rising steadily. The! storm apparently headed inland. i The wind, which blew out of the; north Monday, shifted to the north-/| northeast and blew the water out, | keeping the tide to a minimum. | Two newspapermen made a hasty | survey by automobile Tuesday and the | only damage they found was one| small tree broken down. Warned by past storms, Freeport | %¢! citizens evacuated the town by spe-/ cial buses, and private cars. Not, more than 50 of the 3,500 population | remained here through the night, but ‘Tuesday others began to return. Expect 285 Students In Underwood School Underwood, N. D., Aug. 28.—One | hundred and twenty-five pupils will) er—30 Tons in One Bite | aio & ¢ One bite from this giant electric shovel and 30 tons of coal or dirt is guiped. It’s the largest piece of machinery of its kind in the world, in operation tn a strip coal mine at Middle Grove, Il. Weigh- ing 1500 tous, it moves under its own power on crawler trucks, one under each corner, which —~o iar. | Weather Report HY FORECASTS For Bismarck and vicinity: Gen-| erally fair tonight; Wednesday partly cloudy; warmer. For North Da- kota: Generally fair and warmer tonight; |Wednes- day partly cloudy, warmer east and central portions. For South Da- kota: Fair and warmer tonight; Wednesday gen- erally fair and wi Gun af mig ee 2 erally air east, unsettled WARMER west portion tonight and Wednesday; warmer extreme northeast tonight, cooler west and central portions Wed- lay. linnesota—Fair and not quite so cool Tuesday night; Wednesday gen- erally fair and warmer. GENERAL CONDITIONS A high pressure area overlies the! north-central states this morning (Moorhead 30.36) while a low pres- sure area is centered over the west- ern Rocky Mountain slope and the western Canadian Provinces (Edmon- ton 29.84). Temperatures have drop- ped from the Great Lakes region to; the Plains States but warmer weath- enroll in high school and 160 children | er prevails over the Far West. Min-; will report in the grades when the/Neapolis reports the lowest tempera- ; Modena, Utah, eldy {No. Platte, Neb., clei ; St. Louis, ay | Salt Lake oy cle S. 8. Marie, Mich., pel Seattle, Wash., cld, . Sheridan, Wyo., clear.. Sioux City, Ia., clear .. Swift Current, The Pas, Man. idy.. Toledo, Ohio, clear .... | Winnemucca, Nev., cldy Winnipeg, Mi clear... RSSAISSSSSSRSRLRa3 SRSSSSSLESSSALSIASTSSS SbS2eseRessessesee3sR3 New York . 82 «62 TRUCK DRIVERS TO POLLS TUESDAY 1,500 Employes Affected by Re- cent Strike to Pick Repre- | sentatives Minneapolis, Aug. 28.—(?)—Fifteen \hundred employes of 166 firms in- volved in the recently settled truck drivers’ strike, at a special election Tuesday chose their representatives Underwood public school opens Mon-! ture of record for August, 42 degrees.| for collective bargaining. day, Sept. 3, according to J. E. Dan- felson, superintendent. i ‘With a $100,000 school building and; seven school bus routes, the school at | Underwood is ranked among ial largest schools in McLean county. | Serving with Danielson, who comes | from Lake Park, Minn., will be the following faculty members: 8. 0O.! Hefty, Walcott, high school principal; | Agnes Siverson, Bismarck, English | and music; Alice Hansen, Minot, com- | TO! mercial subjects; Thomas Rindt,! Minot, seventh and eighth grades and | band; Ive Bevers, Douglas, fifth eal sixth grades; Fern Meitz, Van Hook, third and fourth grades, and Anna; Orluck, Benedict, first and second | grades. i Members of the board of education | at the present time are C. O. Thomp- | son, chairman; C. W. Gannon, clerk; | William Gogstetter, treasurer; Ed- | ward Radke, and P. J. Fuchs. | Du Schilling | B Hungarian Paprika B e Rich red. Delicate flavor. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed The eye is an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optom ‘rist Offices Opposit: the G. P. Hotel since 1914 533 Bismarck, Light precipitation has occurred in the Great Lakes region and over the) ,, results of the election, which it wat South, but elsewhere the weather is/ Predicted by Neil M. Cronin, generally fair. labor board chairman, would satisfy Bismarck station barometer, inch-/both sides, will not be known until es: 28.52, Reduced to sea level, 30.32.’ late Tuesday night or possibly Wed- Missouri river stage at 7 a. m.: -2.2' nesday when ballots will be counted. ft, 24-hour change, -0.2 ft. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck station: Total this month to dati Normal, this month to dat: tal, Jan. ist to date yeietepesy ree date . umulat . ccumul lefcy. to date close at 8 p. m. NORTH DAKOTA POINT: A good natured crowd of truck driv- High- Ree ers lined up when the polls opened. est est Pct.|It was evident the voting would be a BISMARCK, clear .... 69 43 00 slow Process as each voter had to be any pee oe . 00/ checked for his eligibility. ee cic 00; Watchers from both the general Devils ‘Lake, cie: ‘Drivers and Helpers Union, No. 574, Dickinson, clear ‘00; Which is seeking to represent the 00, Workers, and the employers looked 00, over the credentials. 00° The line continued to fill out as the -00' morning advanced but there were no reports of any disturbances. Aeronautical Exams Scheduled by Board Aeronautical inspectors will con- duct examinations at four cities in ee “| North Dakota late in September, the SOUTH DAKOTA Forts rae rullsced commission announced igh- Low. ..| Inspections will be held at Fargo, General Drivers and Helpers Union, | Local, No. 574. the organization which called the strike, is seeking the right 42; to represent the employers. Names 64lof other individuals, opposed to the union, also are on the ballot. Polls opened at 8 a. m. and will Drake, clear . inn Center, clear Grand Forks, clear Hankinson, clear Jamestown, clear Lisbon. clear . Max, clear . Minot, clear . Napoleon, clear Oakes, clear .. Parshall, clear Williston. clear Sanish, clear . Wishek, clear gesesseses | Huron, clear . 44 00, September 18; Bismarck, | 00; 19; Minot, September 21, and Devils Lake, September 22. MINNESOTA POINTS { The commission also renewed trans- High-Low- | port pilots’ licenses issued to Ernest est est Pct. | Mossman, Moorhead, Minn., and Carl Minneapolis, clear 66 42 00/F. Leuthi, St. Paul, Minn. Moorhead, clear 00 ar figh tows : In Texas Near End est est Pct. Amarillo, Tex., ptcldy.. 76 60 .34| Dallas, Tex. Aug. 28—()—The Boise, Idaho, cidy 92 00} once mighty power that James E. Fer- Bae pie any + Be 00! guson exercised in Texas politics for ¢ val nearly two decades appeared definite- ‘00/17 on the wane Monday. The latest blow to the former gov- j}ernor came in the Democratic run- off primary for the gubernatorial nomination with the victory of James V. Allred, 35-year-old attorney gen- eral, over Tom F. Hunter, who had the backing of Ferguson and his wife, Gov. Miriam (Ma) Ferguson. ptel Des Moines, Ia., clear .. 90 Dodge City, Kan,, clear 88 Edmonton, Alta. clear 88 Havre, Mont., clear ... 88 Helena, Mont., clear .. 88 Kamloops. B. C.. clear.. 90 Kansas City, Mo., clear 88 Lander, .. Clear ... 82 Medicine Hat, A., cldy 88 Miles City, Mont., clear 82 838383883: A Greater WORLD'S FAIR Go this Summer! are as tall as the men of medium height shown in the circle (CODE MERGERS INTO {0 GROUPS PLANNED Realignment For Efficiency to Reduce Number From 682 to 250 Washington, Aug. 28—(#)—NRA hailed its far-reaching realignment of codes Tuesday as an important step toward greater efficiency and econ- omy. It divided American industry into 22 classes, the initial move toward cutting down the number of codes from 682 to about 250 and grouping them in 10 grand divisions. Mergers are relied on to make the drastic re- duction in the number of codes. The 22 classifications in turn are based on four fundamental groups as follows: Producing ‘Industries—Food, tex- tiles, leather and fur, ferrous metals, non-ferrous metals, non-metallic pro- ducts, fuel, lumber and timber, chem- icals and paints and drugs, paper, rubber. Fabricating industries—Equipment, manufacturing, graphic arts, construc- tion. Service Industries—Public utilities, transportation, communications, fin- ance, amusements. Distributing trades—Professions and services, wholesale and retail codes. A special economic unit recommend- ed the plan, which resembles closely the census bureau grouping and the international classification. The contemplated code mergers, of- ficials said, “will take piace between units of almost identical economic interests whose separation at this time is based on arbitary and personal Let this agency plan all your insurance. No matter how large your building may be—even a small fire will cause damage both to the contents and to the structure, This agency represents the Hartford Fire Insurance company —an_ institution that has been serving countless property owners so faithfully since 1810. | MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Inaurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway Phone 577 Gonches galy. On. sale every week-end. Also low-cost All-Expense tours. See Your Northern Pacific Agent Cy FRAZIER’S EXPENSE | Gets Advancement | ACCOUNT REJECTED Williston Highway Employe, Discharged by Plomasen, Re- fused $4.91 Claim Payment of claims for gasoline and oil purchased for a state automobile by R. W. Frazier, ousted as highway division maintenance superintendent at Williston, Tuesday was ordered re- fused by T. G. Plomasen, state main- tenance engineer. Prazier was discharged by Plomasen shortly after the latter assumed of- fice two weeks-ago. Frasier, ordered to turn in his automobile, refused, and has retained possession of it since, according to Plomasen. The order Tuesday came after a claim for $4.91 for gasoline and oil had been received from an oil station operator at Max. T. C. Flaten has been appointed to take the place of Frazier and has taken over the office. wanitae tn the fous eeciee, Prous | ad The first draw game lasted four hours. Play will continue Tuesday until a Emmons Farmer Dies decision is reached in an even num-/|when the Of Lobar Pneumonia have suffered.one defest in the tourn-|singers became hoarse, ament at the hands of the other. Jacob Shaefer, 52, a ploneer farmer of Emmons county, died at 5 p. m., Monday at a local hospital from lobar Pneumonia. Funeral services will be held Thursday at Braddock with Rev. G. F. Dohn, pastor of the Lutheran church, officiating. Born March 16, 1882 in Russia, Mr. Shaefer received his common school education there before coming to America. On February 24, 1907 he was married to Miss Katharen Woll- hem at Linton, N. D. For many years he has been engaged in farming six miles northwest of Braddock. Besides his wife he leaves 10 child- ren and five brothers and sisters. One daughter, Mrs. Bertha Richardson, lives in Iowa. The other children make their home with their parents. They are Fred, Emily, Julia, Katharen, Martha, Edmund, Esther, Bernard and Maren, Checker Finalists in Deadlocked Session Jamestown, N. Y., Aug. 28,—(P)}— With both men waiting for the break that will make one of them. checker champion of the United States, Nath- aniel Rubin, of Detroit, and Edwin F. Hunt, of Nashville, Tenn., Tuesday resumed play in the national tourna- ment now being held here behind Closed doors. Rubin and Hunt, survivors of more than two-score experts who started in the tourney two weeks ago, went through a gruelling eight-hour session Monday with neither able to gain an DEER 18 MUSIC LOVER Estes Park, Colo.—A deer that ap- peared out of the darkness while a party of hikers were singing about Fresh World Economic View Given President Hyde Park, N. Y., Aug. 28—(?)— of world economic the campfire, showed himself to be|A fresh Telephone 981 economic situation, President = velt is showing no outward about world wide progress toward prosperity. North Dakota Boy Is Leviathan Stowaway New York, Aug. 28.—(#)—The Unit- ed States liner Leviathan arrived Mon- day from Cherbourg and Southamp- with seven stowaways aboard. were Americans and all said Feorgunisaton of al the agricullural & reorganization jural credit activities which have been un- der the supervision of the federal government. It represents a stage in the development of a sound, per- manent system of credit fitted to the needs of agriculture. ires At Bargain Prices We havea large stock of all standard makes of tires which have been removed from used cars. These tires carry the same warranty as if you purchased new tires. Universal Motor Company Is Scarcity the Road to Wealth? Sete : Prepared by the Bureau of Research and Education, Advertising Federation of America E are living in an age of confusion and contradiction. Traditional beliefs are being scrapped so fast it makes one dizzy. In the new intellectual junk heap we find many long-cherished ideas about eco- nomics, money, wealth, production, and business. Long accepted as un- paasiialte, sveieinental principles, these ideas have now been tossed lightly aside. No wonder that our thinking has become confused. We have seen peo- ple starving, apparently because there was too much food, and we have seen crops destroyed to make farmers richer.. We have seen industry prostrate, apparently because it had been too efficient, and we have seen manufacturers compelled to adopt wasteful methods so they could make more profit. We have seen international trade stagnate, apparently be- cause each nation tried to export more than ever, and we have seen gov- ernments struggle to reduce the buying power of their own currencies so their people could buy more. We are coming to believe that saving is sinful, that waste makes wealth, and that plenty brings poverty. ese times are perilous for the soul. Our like that of a man who has just been argued out of his religion. Shorn of his faith, he is ready to scoff at virtue and his thinking becomes jumbled and destructive. Our present bewilderment is threatening to make us a nation of economic atheists, unless the light of wisdom comes to save us from confusion. It is wholesome occasionally to shut our eyes to the immediate com- plications and get back to first principles. To begin with, there is one thing and only one which makes a people rich. That one thing is the production which comes from the country’s farms, mines, forests, and factories... These products are real wealth and the land and facilities used - in producing them are the real capital assets. Money itself is not true wealth; it is only invented to facilitate the distribution of goods. In this country, the total amount of money in cir- culation at any one time represents only a very small fraction of the new wealth which we produce in a year’s time. Only production can create real wealth and our permanent prosperity is limited strictly to the quantity which we produce. This is an uaiving truth to which we must anchor all theories on economics, business, LoRa, meale tadcanes aeimialion “hateakr, ® ie Lnpcanie men’ a temporary ion, # to increase wealth by promoting scarcity. : “Whatever we may do in the name of emergency, our ultimate objec- tive must always be a total balanced production and its equitable distribution. The link in the program which most needs attention now is distribution. Acy Rermnaneele solution will require that we strengthen the instruments of bution. The most useful and most efficient distribution force in existence is otes a healthy, normal process of distribu- tion by creating and increasing demand for the products of industry. It is the natural stimulant for the production of wealth. If we wish to pros- .per we must beware of the doctrine of scarcity and turn to the forces for distributing plenty. Advertising is the foe of scarcity. Copyright, 1934, Advertising Federation of America S@6@4y08 een wmemnn