The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 12, 1937, Page 8

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8 ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 12,1937 ~ POWER MAY CONTROL ANOTHER BOOM, DEPRESSION Wallace Visualizes New Func-| tions of Federal Government in Economic Regulation Washington, May 12—(#)—The federal government, Secretary Wal-| lace says, must use its taxing power) in the next few years in an effort to/ control another boom and depression. | “A new science of government is in| the making,” he declared, “the broad outlines of which are just appearing.”| J. Gorman, president of the United The farm spokesman in President | Textile Workers, ioe a house ance velt'’ ‘declared the gov-| Subcommittee Tuesday the textile in- Roosevelt's cabinet teclare 2a | cia tree HRRinig TECH ME lee comnriate ernment’s place in the future be “partly a policeman, partly a co- ordinator, partly a clearing house and partly a stimulator.” “There seems to be a tendency for a | boom and crash to come about once! every 10 years,” Wallace said. “If 1919) produced 1921 and 1929 produced a} 1932, we cannot help from looking to the possibilities of a 1939 producing a 1942 .... “There are indications that orga- | FOR RENT Apartment Boutrous Apartments | 504 Third St. Phone 2250 | create a “little NRA” for the industry, nized business, labor and agriculture, left to themselves, may produce a sit- uation some time during the next 10 years which might bring about some time in the 1940s a repetition of that which we experienced in 1921 and the early 1930s.” The secretary said many economists believed the national income would climb to “at least 80 million dollars” by 1940, unless a catastrophic war in- terrupted. National income last year was about 60 billions, compared with a depression low of about 45 billions and the 1929 peak of about 79 billions. The secretary said that many cor- porations and private individuals would make large profits and have large savings in the next few years. Collapse of Textile Industry Predicted Washington, May 12.—(/)—Francis collapse” within three months “un- less congress acts to regulate it.” Testifying on the Ellenbogen bill to Gorman said economists and other “competent authoritjes” had pre- dicted the collapse. Canadian Is Held for Remark About Killing Minneapolis, May 12.—()—Police held a 35-year-old Canadian for im- migration authorities Wednesday aft- er he allegedly told a woman friend that several years ago, following an argument with another man, he backed thesautomobile into the man, killing him, The man held James B. Wilde, also known as Stokes, said he made the remark jokingly to the woman's brother. We Deliver All Phones 34 GROCERY SPECIALS May 12th to [FREE 30.000 AND 15,000 PAIRS SILK STOCKINGS 9100 SILVERWARE with Crisco Minneopa Kidney Moxa 25C wo. DLC Mother’s Oats, quick or (with dinner plate free) sota. Dr. Meyerding, secretary of in the long ago. away along in June, 1931, land, May 18th Libby’s Grapefruit, Leartidis Fancy Red imon, ‘ eo tall... 20C CAKE KNIFEH25; Libby’s Vienna Sausage, ate ‘tbe tis 32c 3 Ne 1 tall tn. LOC nara oe Beet, No-1 tn. 19C Just an Old Fashioned Girl The glacier had long gone the way and grand old Agassiz had dwindled to dots in a parched and drouth-stricken Lived On Giacier’s Edge But since that June day, six years ago, Dr. A. E. Jenks, chairman of the department of anthropology of the University of Minnesota, has been very busy filling up all the little scientific chinks in a theory he held from the Dr. Harold 8, Diehl, dean of medical sciences at the University of Minnesota, is shown at the left of the picture. He is pointing out to Dr. E. A. Meyerding of St. Paul the anatomical peculiarities which led to final determination of the real age of the 200-centuries-old Miss Minne- the Minnesota Medical association is holding the rest of the head bones of the Gopher Girl. ‘The insert, lower left, shows a scientific artist's conception of the young lady as she looked Pre-Historic Maid Wore Clam Shells St. Paul, Minn., May 12—Just a snub-nosed Minnesota subdeb of 16 or 80, and she wore a clam shell around her forehead. At her waist she wore a conch shell pendant from the Gulf of Mexico. And a dagger made of elk | large antler swung by a leash from her girdle. : Nobody will ever know what disaster overtook this first Gopher Girl on a dim and shadowy day 20,000 years ago. She disappeared, Probably she was drowned in a pre-historic glacial lake. No one ever made a note of having seen the Gopher Girl until a Minne- sota road crew uncovered a glittering fragment of her clam shell ornament, of glaciers. The lakes Prairie, Pelican start—that here near Lake Pelican, was the first real evidence ever found that man lived in the Sgterlor of America in the day of the glaciers and that the skeleton unearthed ‘from glacial drift by the road crew was, in fact, a fragment of the remains of a proto-Eskimo, pre-Indian, Mongoloid maiden— a girl who lived within walking distance of the retreating glacier on the edge of a lake that now exists only in books. Dr. Jenks has just made public fully, documented findings in his book, “Pleistocene Man in Minnesota,” published by the University of Minnesota 3 ‘ That is how it happens the of Minnesota had a chance to study with scientific sidelights the skull of the first Miss Minnesota at close range at their meeting in St. Paul, May 3. Compared ‘With Others ‘They compared Miss Minnesota with a representative of an even earlier race of men, one of the first of the famous Mechtas who lived in North Africa some 10,000 years before the Gopher Girl. This North African man, the doctors explain, also is definitely a “homo sapiens,” A man, not an ape. He had many so-called civilized accomplishments to his credit. Dr. Jenks explains that Miss Minnesote’s people camp to Minnesota across @ land bridge that ‘once connected America and Asia.’ The girl is called “an early type of evolving Mongoloid, already prophetically suggesting the American aborigine, especially the Eskimo.” The Gopher Girl’s people were great travellers as the conch shell pendant proves. The conch came from the Gulf Coast and indicates that scattered populations did an interstate commerce business from the head of navigation at St. Paul to New Orleans, Dentists were especially interested in Miss Minnesota’s most noticeable feature—her teeth. They are large and strong and all present except one which fell out and was lost when the road crew removed the lady's bones from the glacial lake deposits near Pelican Rapids. SURVEYING HIGHWAY Washington, May 12—(P)—A sur- vey of the nation’s 3,000,000. miles of highways is under way, Secretary Wallace said Tuesday, with a view of planning large governmental proj- ects “when the next depression comes.” fi & MAKE T A SWEET BEER Have you DRINK Budweiser For Five DAYS. ON THE SIXTH DAY TRY TO DRINK Budweiser’s FLAVOR THEREAFTER. a Budweiser AMERICA'S SOCIAL COMPANION ANHEUSER-BUSCH ) again. If jback HIS TEST! **YOU WILL WANT a: Bismarc Order a carton for your home NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED k Grocery Co. Budweiser Distributor made this test ? Start pouring from your bottle of BUDWEISER slowly. “Then lift the bottle higher and let the beer flow freely into the glass. That will release BUDWEISER’S natural carbona- tion and bring up its rich, creamy foam. Now hold the glass to the light. Note BUDWEISER’S clarity, brilliance. See its soaring bubbles! As you lift it to your lips, enjoy the delightful hops bouquet that hovers over the foam. Then taste...and taste you drink beer regularly, do this for five days—and just try togo toa less distinguished brew. $T LOUIS, $275,850 for Indian Schools of N. D. Asked Washington, May 12—(4)—The in- terlor department appropriations bill reported Tuesday carried $275,850 for buildings, repairs, and maintenance of North Dakota Indian institutions. The items included: school, $110,250; Wahpeton school heating system improvements, $10,- 000; Fort Totten preventorium, 000; Fort ‘Totten hospital, $23,000; Fort Totten water system improve- Wahpetor |. OLD MAN RIVER Is HARD NUT TO CRACK AVERS KANSAS MAN Tricky Character of Stream Forces Revision of Plans to Promote Irrigation ‘Belief that the state water con- servation board had best confine frri- gation activities along the Missouri river to experimental projects andj the those involving comparatively large acreages was expressed here Wednes- day by George 8S. Knapp, Kansas state engineer, here for a six-month period as technical. adviser to the board. Knapp said the Missouri river is North Dakota’s biggest. unused re- source and offers tremendous pos- sibilities but that it will be difficult | to obtain the best results on small projects at reasonable cost. Stream Is Tticky ‘The reason, he said, is the shift- ing character of the stream. The current may be on one side of the water course today and on the other side tomorrow. Thus, the only way to insure a water supply, he sald, is to go out into the middle and in- stall a permanent intake, as Bis- marck has done for its municipal water supply. This, he pointed out, costs more money than can logic- ally be assessed against a small ir- rigation project but would not be too large for a project involving sev- eral thousand acres. As a result of Knapp’s report, members of the commission indi- cated, the activities of the state board will be directed toward interesting the Bureau of Reclamation in estab- lishing large irrigation: projects on the Missouri river bottoms, since acreages coyld bear the cost of permanent intakes. \. Will Promote Experiments At the same time it will conduct experiments here and there in the Missouri valley to ascertain if some other solution for the water-intake problem may not be found. One suggestion which may be tried is the construction of small barges upon which pumps will be installed. The fear, however, is that a change in the current would leave both barge and pump high and dry and the farmer without water. Pumping, Knapp said, is the only method which can logically be con- sidered for irrigation in this part of the Missouri valley. The stream falls only 9 inches to the mile, he said, and the construction of diversion works and ditches would be too costly rivets are used to complete exhaustion and never reach the Mis- sour river at all, he said, the streams have a drop of five to seven feet per mile whereas the irrigation ditches have a drop of only two feet-per mile. Because of this fact a diversion Knapp said, because it presents & difficult technical problem. it been easy it probably would have been done long ago,” he explained. “The fact that it is difficult is what has delayed consideration of its. use until necessity has driven the state to_it.” Emphasizing the relative import- ance of the Missouri, Knapp pointed out that it annually carries 21,000,- 000 acre feet of water past the bridge at Bismarck. This is more water than is carried by any other stream in western America with the excep- tion of the Columbia and nearly twice as much as is carried by the Colorado river on which Boulder dam was built. Early packs of playing were full length, one way cards. {They were in use more 400 years be- fore an unknown genifis invented the double-headed card now in use. ment, $15,000; Fort Berthold hospi! Secretary Ickes May Get $2,500 for Auto Factory Girls Fight In Northern Ireland Belfast, Northern Ireland, May 12— (®)—Workers and police clashed Wednesday in a bitter fight preci- pases by . republican demonstra- mostly factory girls, soon made peace. aw WICHITA CHRYSLER'S EASY “Tue BEAUTY OF the new Chrysler Royal attracted us at once. Since we have owned it, we have been completely charmed. I haveneverownedacar which handled so nimbly and parked so easily. The safety- steel body is astonishingly quiet. The riding quali ties ate superior to any car I have ever ridden in.”” MRS. STANLEY SPURRIER, Wichita, Ken. Bobby Jones Adds | To Links’ Feats lones, former king Atlanta, May 12.—(?)—Bobby Je king of all the golf- ers, had to his credit Wednesday & double eagle, a links: accom- Plishment far rarer than a hole- in-one. Jones holed a number 3 wood shot for a deuce on the 565- yard fifth hole at east lake in a friendly match Tuesday. : CROWLEY WARNS BANKERS Nashville, Tenn., May 12.—(#)—Leo T. Crowley, chariman of the Federal Deposit Insurance corporation, sounds ed a general note of warning Tuesday that bankers must be ready “when Due to the pull of the moon on our bodies, we:weigh less when the moon is overhead: Senate Approval of Court Bill Doubtful hington, May 12.—(?)—Opppo- ones of the Roosevelt court bill de- clared Wednesday that administra- tion leaders had advised the presi- dent senate approval of the measure was extremely doubtful. Senate supporters of the bill, how- ever, contended they had enough votes to pass it, although some said there would be only a vote or two to spare. Opponents claimed 52 votes—or three more than a senate majority— The Blue Blazer Lounge is serving a Plate Luncheon every day Electric cooking equipment is de- signed for every home and homemaker regardless of age or experience. Consider this mod- em cooking process for your home. Be modemly thrifty with MONARCH. 1 WCLEVELAND, OWNER GETS 20% MILES PER GALLON “In THOUSANDS OF miles of business driving, I am convinced that my Chrysler Royal tops them all in power, comfort and low cost of operation. The new Gold Seal engine is truly remarkable - . it spins this big, roomy car along over all sorts of roads at. 2034 miles per gallon.’’ F. P. SCHREINER, Cleveland, Ohio HANDLING! | AND PL || 208 Main Ave. inst the measure. The declaration agains t the bill Tuesday by Senator Shipstead (FL-Minn.) made 38 pub- licly committed in opposition. ————_ AAA CHIEFS MEET Chicago, May 12.—()—Representa- tives of the Agricultural Adjustment administration study and section from 30 states met for # closed conference on discussion project plans for the coming year. ——_— “Busy” beavers have to keep busy If not kept short by gnawing, the teeth would grow so long that the animals ‘could not close their mouths. J. W. CALNAN Funeral Home Phone 22 Bismarck, N. D. “Mother and Grandma called today to see J my new MONARCH Electric. T think they were’ a little envious, although they have- each kept house with a MONARCH in their kitchen for years, Of course, cooking elec: ) trically is more convenient and dependable | . broad cocking top @ “I use my CAR in business and it gets hard driving, mostly in thick traffic. In spite of that, my Chrysler Royal gives 18 miles per gallon and better, day in and day out. Three othér big factors stand out... the roominess, the safety-steel body...and those wonderful hydraulic brakes.’’ HARRY £. MILES New York City * MONARCH - Mode equipped with 16” enamel oven, well insulat- ed and automatically controlled. The smooth, is equipped with four MONARCH “Hi-Efficiency” Units. Handy Elec offers a word to the wives, and says that these New -Modern Electric Ranges are very easy to buy and easy to pay for. A small down payment will place one in your home, and the con- venient monthly installments are made to fit even the most limited budget. Call at our office today for more information on these clean, fast, economical electric ranges. NORTH DAKOTA POWER & LIGHT COMPANY ght CHRYSLER INVADES THE LOW-PRICED FELD! ALL over AmzRica, thousands of Chrysler Royal owners are telling their friends about the amazing superiorities of ler’s newest masterpiece. See and drive a new Chrysler Royal for yourself YMOUTH ON . . «see what a lot of beauty, power and comfort it off price very little above the lowest priced cars. Time eitiicihe ie fit your purse on the official Commercial Credit Company plan. , CORWIN-CHURCHILL MOTORS, Inc. 122 Main Ave. ‘ Bismarck, N. D. Phone 700

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