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| i : q The Bi marck Tribune degepandret I! ‘ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER q (Batablished 1873) ‘@tate, City and County Official Newspaper Published exeept Sunday Bismarck [ribune Company, Bis- Ipssdl Wr Duna eovered ac Ci Goctoliice ot Bismarcs 0s movnd clam mad | Archie O. Johnson Kenneth Subseription Rates Payable in Advance Casrter. per year ,. Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the credited to (t or not otherwise credited in this al news of sportaneous origin published herein. hte of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. ' What We Need One of the dreams which Bismarck boosters have had for years is that of a packing plant in Bismarck. Efforts to induce packers to locate here have been made in the past but all of them have failed. With this in mind it is interesting to note that the Cudahy Packing company recently has installed the world’s most mod- ern small packing plant at Albany, Ga. It is built of glass blocks, is air-conditioned and is the last word in sanitation and equipment. Of major interest to Bismarck, however, is the fact that ‘it will employ 400 persons and will offer a nearby market for the product of many farms in that region. THE SIGNIFICANT THING IS THAT, WHILE BIS- MARCK CONTINUES TO DREAM OF SUCH AN INDUSTRY, OTHER CITIES ARE GETTING THEM. This fact is not a slur upon those who have tried and failed, BUT IT DOES INDICATE THE NECESSITY OF DEVELOP- ING THIS REGION IN SUCH A WAY THAT IT CAN SUP- PORT A PACKING PLANT IF BOTH OUR FARMERS AND OUR BUSINESSMEN ARE TO PROSPER. There is such a thing as enlightened selfishness and it should be applied now in our efforts to develop western North Dakota so that the ultimate result will be good for both agricul- ture and business. We may as well recognize the fact that we have no packing plant in Bismarck because packers feel we could not muster enough meat animals of the proper kind to justify them in building one. THEY WILL GO WHEREVER THEY SEE A GOOD OPPORTUNITY TO MAKE A PROFIT. It is apparent, then, that if we are to have packing plants and other agricultural industries, we must improve the produc- tivity of this region. IF A PACKING FIRM ESTABLISHES ITSELF HERE IT WILL BE BECAUSE IT WANTS TO COME, NOT BECAUSE WE WANT IT TO COME. That is the reasoning behind The Tribune’s campaign in recent months to stimulate interest in irrigation in the Missouri river valley. It has been based on the belief that we can pro- duce as much high-quality meat, milk and other farm products as any other spot on the globe. Irrigation offers a back-log, not only for our upland agri- culture, but for packing plants, creameries, milk condenseries, vegetable canning factories and all of the other enterprises which link the farm to industry and make both enterprises profitable. It will mean a different type of farming but the experience of the last few years has shown that WE NEED A DIFFERENT TYPE OF FARMING. We need all-the-year-’round occupation for both our farm- ers and our city population. We need greater production to earn more money. The place to start is-with agriculture, our basic industry. AND THE WAY TO START IS BY PUTTING WATER ON OUR RICH RIVER-BOTTOM LAND. for republica- How Business Feels Whether demagogues and agitators admit it or not, what the business community thinks is highly important to the con- dition of our national economic pulse. With this in mind it is interesting to note the observations made by W. F. Bloor, chief statistician of the Goodyear Rubber company, at a meeting of the superintendents of that firm’s 18 manufacturing plants. Bloor presented the following picture of present conditions: Cash farm income 27 per cent below the former peak; retail prices 19 per cent below and retail volume 27 per cent below; freight car loadings 32 per cent below and the construction industry slightly more than 50 per cent below the Jevels of 1929. His prediction for 1987 follows: Fifty per cent increase in the building industry; substan- tial increases in the volume of transportation, real estate values, farm income, stock values, wages, corporation earnings and retail business. Accompanying these, he said, will be boosts in prices, rents and taxes but there will be no increase in the returns from bonds. Incidentally, he offered some interesting data on how in- creased manufacturing efficiency improves the lot of all the people. In 1915 the average automobile used an average of eight tires a year. With introduction of the cord tire this was reduced to two a year and the average now is one and a half tires a year—and the new tires, though much larger than the old ones, cost only half as much and give many times more mileage. This might be tough on the tire industry if it were not for the widely increased ownership of automobiles. This year 52,000,000 tires will be made as compared with a high of 70,00,- 000 in 1928 and a recent low of 39,000,000 in 1932. The pros- pect for 1937 is an increase of 12 per cent in tires for original eduipment and a lift of two per cent in renewal tires. It is obvious that the rubber manufacturers expect the automobile factories to keep busy. The final sentence of Bloor’s report is unexplained. It Zeads: “Taxes, which absorbed 10 per cent of the national in- | @omme at the end of the World war, now absorb 15 per cent.” __ That figure doesn’t jibe with those given out by politicians, who put tax costs much higher. It would be interesting to know ‘which is correct. | but fair, and in the second contingency Your Personal Health - By William Brady, M, D. Ith but not dis- Dr, Brady will answer questions pert tag Se eee rates De ters gase, of disenotls ae rigune, “All queries must be accompanied by © stamped, self-addressed envelope. = Looking at the- Campaign “David Lawrence Behind Scenes The Campaign Peace Supreme Court Once More Edging |!mpression that greets the visitor chinery, panels settee nee at the t Inte Campaign Picture; Minimum northern Ohio is that have taken Binge ‘Toledo r 6 , Wage Issue Is Bobbing Up Again. . PERENNIAL “HAY FEVER’ peace plan o sperenten aye senitio “Call it Cri” (No. 6 in Little Lessons in the Ways of By RODNEY DUTCHER (Tribune Washington Correspondent) Washington, Oct. 12—The United States supreme court has been rather effectively kept out of the election campaign and if it finds itself now involved it has only itself to blame. ‘The justices aren't passing on any , more New Deal legislation before Fen pee neers eh 4 i out election day. But their answer to Hy ies sa e ot petitions for a rehearing on the New ite part or ‘about igige York state minimum wage law wWill/give Mr. Landon a riatority. generally be taken as approximately; One might say, why not a equaling in importance the 5 to 4/from Mr. Hoover's vote of 1932, decision against the law which the/that 40,000 who voted Republican last court handed down early in the sum-| time would vote now for the New Deal id of 5 plan is the invention of Edward | Health series) I say: cri is put to bed immedi- should see that the child developing pul P. McGrady, assistant secretary of alsin oa and cae there until the trouble subsides or ® Pl takes charge erican cities, Tt) of the case. principle into effect universally, substitut- Ame forms a constant panel from which ingame 3f we could Pur, tine Glink for the child, the nation’s’ doctor bill 3 i it Fag Pik BE ; 8 tl BE E i i i I name machinery Sie Ag, Grin heequent interference with working capacity that counts in these mor- feet ag an aed ageeich hid statistics, You must include in the bill the sinus troubles, middle ear 2 is s community charged infections, many cases of appendicitis, pleurisy, empyema and arthritis with the responsibility of finding out| ynich are common complications or sequels of the cri. What do I mean, who 4s right and who is wrong in | the cri? How can you tell you have it? i i g § A g 5 mer, Party? The answer is that the vari-| tagonisms in-j labor dispute, and there are vehicles, means of the dozen common respiratory infections ‘The original decision had a pro-jous polls being taken show a shift | dustrial distur! y for letting the people of the city, the tects ne anon when one feels more or less chilliness, general nounced influence on the two po-|the other way. Nearly every poll of: ‘Toledo, curiously enough, had| neighbors, know about it. No strong-| ma.aise, headache, misery and, of course, doesn’t know as yet whether ae ete and litical conventions and probably on the campaign as well. Popular reac- tion was such as to bolster somewhat ‘when, er spirit of compulsion ts neccasary in | 1s coming down with the simple coryss, flu, diphtheria, meningitis, infan the Meira? ages where public] paralysis, scarlet fever—it may be any C(ommon) Respiratory) I(nfection) the administration as against the sentiment-can be mobilized with any/ ana let iM = ‘oad fore the onl; court and to cause Governor Landon obligations to the social welfare of| interest. ( he publ ? § to suggest a possible constitutional/Republicans = who -voted for Mr.) the city, < Toledo, be it noted; has driven poli- | Uanecessary surgical work and most of the doctor's visits, although I amendment—the inevitable effect be- | Hoover in 1932 now going over to Mr. I believe Toledo ts entitled to be/ tics from its city hall and installed not hesitate ional ing to blur what many politicians had) Roosevelt. Thus, the Literary Digest | cated “the city of cooperation,” for] a city manager plan. It has brought | However, 1 te ase figured would be a clean-cut issue. reveals two persons going to introduced an industrial peace coperative spirit that from 5 to 10 per cent ines fa Entiat anpeadd ous te beles vasa lie sousatomeanen te hee iene ere not infectious nor even serious, though in all conscience annoying Looms Again as Issue one person shifting from Republican ¢¢ being used on # national scale, but| life. ‘This takes somebody's time and|¢20ugh to the victiins. This estimate I candidly consider too low. Indeed Lately the politicians have again|in 1932 to Roosevelt in 1936, - | with local application in every in- energy. But the business men of To-| We ate just beginning to recognize how frequently conditions purporting to been figuring. New Dealers decided that if the court should grant the re- . Mr. Seer, ations, =” ‘eaeral control of| ledo have come to realize that every- | irestations of a peculiar individual sensitivity or idosynerasy which phy- hearing asked by New York, Ilinpis, 3 z body's business has too long been n0- | sictans call The plan was described in » recent | body's business and that, if they want and other states which have -|that might otherwise have in Many mum wage laws, they would be able |large part to Mr. Roosevelt. Dublic address by , Grove Pattersot,/to cure the conditions that lead t0| out of the hy fever season, are really allergic senalivily f8 to cry out that even the supreme court} Take the poll being conducted in oo of the “Toledo Blade,’ as fol-| communism, they must take s hand) Sitstance or emanation to which the victims happen to Iteelf had recognized that it wasn't|Luces county by the Toledo Bisde.|!0We: sa poara, | oud sive of thelr time and thelr en-|a5 horse feathers—I mean horse dander or goose feathers or infallible, A mailed ballot is being sent to every oo aercanized, always toads for | cies 23 consultation with represent- | ar to ® specific food substance such as chocolate, egg white, gelatin, radish, On the other hand, if the petition | registered voter in the county, which | Slvays Organised, always ready tor | atives of other groups in establishing | mustard. Out of season of perennial “hay fever” should always arouse were denied, they would again be! means every kind of voter irrespective | #ction, always to lend ® quick | the square deal in their ity. suspicion, 3 able to picture the five conservative |of class. The polling of a total regis- | Hand to the settlement of thuse labor ‘There is a new Toledo in the mak- eae Justices as hard-jawed, biased reac-| tration vote eliminates the question of | Controversies which are inevitable in| ing. It’s a city that will bear watch- QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS tionaries, whether the ballots reach everybody. | #ny industrial community. ing in the next decade as it recon- : Cod Liver Oil Republicans, in the first instance,|' Now, Lucas county went Demo-| “The board is made up of five men structs its municipal affairs and| 1 am 95 years old. I am taking about 16 ounces of cod liver oll felt they could make a point of saying/cratic in 1932, with Mr. Roosevelt| {rom the ranks of organized labor, | builds anew on the foundations of lo-| cight days. it that too much? My druggist tells me all kinds of cod liver the court had proved itself flexible | getting 58.5 per cent of the total vote.| five from the ranks of employers, | cal self-government, which is the root oil are the same in effect, though some are very expensive. I get 16 This year, the Toledo Blade poll| eight citizens at large. The citizens|of American democracy. For Toledo| ounces for 49 cents... . (H. K. L.) a cculd point to Landon’s suggesting @/shows Mr. Roosevelt getting 52 per| ®t large include @ priest, a rabbi, a/has discovered the evils of its own Answer—It is all right if you take it readily. ee Possible amendment. cent, Mr. Landon 37 per cent and Mr.| merchant, two lawyers, two judges. | negligence and is catching the spirit | it costs you a cent for every 600 units of vitamin D. Two drops of conDol New York and 11 other states have|Lemke about 11 per cent. If this} Employed on full time is @ highly| of a recovered economic situation. In|‘de!ivers 600 units of vitamin D, and conDol costs about $1.25 for the ounce undertaken to continue enforcement | percentage is applied to the cities of | qualified executive manager and sec-| the language of the day, Toledo is| vial, or approximately one-half cent for every 600 units of vitamin D. of their minimum wage laws for wom- | the state, where generally Mr. Roose- | retary. : “going places.” ; (Copyright, 1936, John F. Dille Co.) en and children since the decision.|velt’s vote is strong, it would show encase They have taken the position, out-|that Mr, Lemke is taking away - e lined in the petition for rehearing,|enough votes so that the rural dis- that the court didn’t really pass on/tricts and towns, which seem this the validity of the New York law, but|year Repupblican a bit more heavily had erroneously assumed that New|than usual in Ohio, would be able to York wasn’t asking it to reconsider|counterbalance all of the Roosevelt principles asserted in the Adkins deci- | strength and have a little to spare. sion in 1923, In other words, the Roosevelt vote New York, Illinois, and other states/must be much stronger than it is in came back with coe Man peed request | the cities in order to make up for for such reconsideration, claiming |Lemke-Coughlin defections and also : : that the reasoning in the Adkins case |for the large number of Republicans © 1936, NEA Service, Ino. had been offset by subsequent court |who voted for Mr. Roosevelt in 1932 . decisions. and are now going to return to their The petition tended to put Justice | own party in 1936. Owen J. Roberts in a hole. Although] Lucas county includes such a large he was one ip sand with—and make | population of pro-Roosevelt labor ele- —the majority last summer against | ments as to present a fair cross-sec- the law, he declared in the Nebbia| tise’ ot noctners Obie looked up again his eyes were twink- case that “so far as the requirement| Toledo, it should not be forgotten,| Ung. “I think you ought to get mar- of due process is concerned ... ®|has had more than its share of strikes| ‘ed, Ted,” he said, “and give Dickie state is free to adopt whatever eco-|and disturbances ‘and had plenty of| ® eal home. Then he wouldn't be homic policy may reasonably be|banking troubles before 1938. Today,| °, lonely. : deemed to promote public welfare and ‘Not on your life! That kid's all to enforce that policy by legislation right. He's as hard as nails, like adapted to its purpose.” me. Doesn't need the feminine in- * * * Eg Bs seist Bg ‘ONTINUE « Hughes Balks Cameramen C from page one- D NEA and other photographers’ went | Sails Clipper Ship out after the justices for individual Ri 1 Romance} died more than 15 years before. Ted ight to worshiped the memory of that wife. pictures just before the court went into session again, with varying re- sults, “Oh, yes, You've already filled out =z Chief Justice Hughes refused to) the card.” He picked up three cards come out of his house = Jong ir and glanced hurriedly over the arian CHAPTER Il cameramen stayed on the front walk |lsted. “Age 22, Born, Joplin, Mo. OTH mi e and they were told to go away. He|High school. Graduate nurse—” B Bt ane UD Sree didn't travel the short distance to| He glanced up again at Kay. “What second girl was admitted. his automobile until his secretary and| makes you think you'd like to be a Doris Lee came in swinging her two colored servants had made a re- | stewardess? arms at her sides. Her face was connaissance up and down the street.| Kay said promptly, “There are flushed and the secreta Next day photographers rushed up| plenty of girls who will be glad to soe se as he was leaving. “No pictures!”|take my place at the hospital. But Peared behind her, protesting. exclaimed Hughes. “What, no pic-|for me—I want to see far-off places, “It was my turn and I’m here!” tures?” echoed the boys. “No pic-|something adventurous. Every time Doris Lee said. “Now you run tures!” repeated Hughes firmly. I look up and see a plane in the sir ong and shuffl Justice VanDevanter posed oblig-|I want to be on board. To me, flying| 2/0ne ee oe eee ingly and Justice cae aoe no | spells adventure!” young man.” complaint about a surpi ot. “Have you ever flown?” The determin ‘wom: Justice Roberts was out of town,| “No, But in my dreams—” She sat down in pageant: ae but the doorman at his home was| stopped short. “I had a brother, an : z found to be wearing a big Landon | aviator, who was killed in the war. I ‘feted her. “That secretary of euntlower: Mts. Justice eee. ae {was only a rata then but I re- yours didn’t want to let me in,” very nice and was sure a photo could | member seeing up there in the announ: “ be arranged later. Justice Suther- | air—” . bed The is Pa pt deckone 4 land sent out word that he was ill.| Charles Benton picked up a rubber 2: leat le said I was Justice Brandeis was non-co-opera-| stamp and brought it down on Kay excess baggage! So I said to Hye: Se anne refused. ie Dunn's card. “You're hired!” he ‘him—” justice Butler became enraged said—‘“that is, if the doctor lets you en attempt to snap him in his auto- | by. Report to the doctor's office, and! yer", iQoked, at her and laughed. mobile. He poked his cane under the |if he says you're seaworth wrath and indignation. She photographer's nose and cried, “You| Ted Graham's eyes twinkled, “Bea- ‘ae pe and get out of Beas a worthy! Of course she’s seaworthy. Miss Dunn will in Court May Stay Intact day.” pee ee Ee One table says the oldest of the! Charles coughed discreetly again, justices has a life expectancy of more | and pressed a small white button. than four years and so it might be! “On this line,” he said to Kay, “Name?” Geduced that Roosevelt would have no|“you go in training for three weeks— “Doris Lee.” 5 fluence.” Benton did not laugh. He knew that Ted Graham had never thought of marrying again, since his wife had z E g 3 ga Bi z H i E i 34 : 8 ey z H ‘ 4 te ai z i g Hy Eze sf | Fi F i chance to fill a court vacancy if re-|% sort of probation . Courtesy elected. ; and tact in dealing with people are| — gevmresene cucy OF the personnel _On the other hand, since 1789 no|among the most important features . —— . five years have ever passed without|of the job. I'll see you again after Kay Dunn (Poe by Mildred Shelley the occurrence of a vacancy. The last|we have the report from the doctor. one was in 1932, when Justice Oliver * * Wendell Holmes resigned and was succeeded by Cardozo, (Copyright, 1936, NEA Service, Inc.) of United Airlines.) lege t who make| brown eyes carried a mute ap- ry 2 a 5 she could 5 g 3 BIT OF HUMOR {| "wnat abo cuir 4 eagerly. A On Buu. Bi ae he asked. Thine they'll oe Seb RELI “One of them might—the THE BEST OF MEN i ins : office ay She—Will you act like a gentleman if I} Ted Graham juickly. . , “bi i \ ES & H Bi h Certaily. I won't even try to hold your iS on th ai hand. Ale ailb yer . advent And se. She—I mean, will you pay for the “end wold : pte kings Jook ida af ho ed encour lie! Souse — Woe ish me! When I'm “They cow the hall, ae Bleed A ae Ee EE e H drunk I shee pink elephants. Pal — Then why don’t you stay sober? Bouse — ‘Cause, then I shee my mother-in-law. | i g ti ie Zz AF A : pills ce g i i Es ig zs ze g ail Pug—Did that bee fighter of yours : i < atl wa