The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 13, 1937, Page 4

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An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (stablished 1873) tate, City and County Official Newspaper Published dally except Sunday Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- march, ND. and entecta at the postotfice at Bumnarck es e0cood class ail Mrs. Stella 1. Mann President and Treasurer Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons ‘Vice Pres. and Gen’, Manager Secretary and Editor - Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press ‘The Associated tion o: 8 ali Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for republica- spatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this r and also the loca! news of spontaneous origin ee rose of republication of all other matter herein are @ Police vs. Strikers Fourteen men have died in the steel strikes still going for- ward, to the eternal disgrace of everyone concerned. The fact reflects no credit on the self-serving, power-seek- ing union leaders who have lent a peculiar twist to the modern industrial strife. It reflects none on the managers of the plants who, in many instances, have shown no more sense than the strikers and it certainly places no wreaths on the brows of police- men who have been mixed up in death-dealing affrays. The most impartial evidence presented at the recent senate committee hearing in Chicago were photographs taken during the riot which brought death to a number of persons. They showed policemen shooting citizens in the back and clubbing men who already were down. Not a pretty picture. As usually is the case, the riot death at Massillon, O., Sun- The Bismarck Tribune CASH VALUE POLICY FOR JOBS’ DIVISION Commission to Determine Worth of Wages Paid in Kind to North Dakota Workers North Dakota Workmen's Compen- sation bureau commissioners Tuesday adopted two rules on cash value of re- munerations and gratuities under which the unemployment compensa- tion division will operate, Alvin Pur- cell, state diréctor of the new pro- Gram, sald. Under the act it is provided that reasonable cash value'of remuneration payable in any medium other than cash, and the reasonable amount of gratuity will be estimated and deter- mined in accordance with rules pre- scribed by the bureau. The board ruled that if board, lodg- ing, or any other payment in kind, considered as payment for services performed by a worker, is in addition HOTEL REGISTRATIONS Grand Pa citic Hotel a Mr. and iio te Be = jeorge Martin, Butte, Mont.; G. C. Mesh , Halliday; Mr. and Mrs, M. Lemmon; Mr. and Mrs, F. . yn, Rugby; Irene Turner, jan Haven; Hulda Larson and Pauline lumhardt, Carson. Prince Hetel Mr. and Mrs. P. J, Flood, Brooklyn, David B, Salmon, Syracuse, N. ndrick H, Soule, Syracuse, N. 4 Mrs. Ed C. Teuscher, Web- Groves, Mo., Mr. and Mrs. C. N. rens and son, Petaluma, Calif. Daughter, Mrs. Everett Johnson, McKensie, 9:30 a. m. Monday, Bismarck hospital. Daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Brocopp, 2100 Main Ave., 12:25 p. m. Monday, Bismarck hospital. D. J. Carroll, leasing superintend- ent of the Standard Oil company of California now active in the Nesson Convicted of a statutory offense before Justice of the Peace Spencer Sell Monday, Goldie Baker and Al Reimer, both of Bismarck, were sen- nee wate mata ye to or in Weu of money wages, the commission shall determine or ap- prove the cash value of the payment in kind. The employer will use thése cash values in computing contribu- tions due under the act. The board also ruled that if gra- tulties constitute partial or entire pay- ment for service performed by a money wages, the commission shall determine or approve the cash value of the payment in kind. The employer will use these cash values in com- Leona contributions due under the act The board also ruled that if gratuities constitute partial or entire payment for service performed by a worker, the employer must include as wages the amount of gratuities or tips actually received by each worker or make a reasonable valuation of the ai day night is the subject of dispute. Each side blames the other and the only provable thing is that a man is dead. But one thing appears certain. That is the failure of either side to show much restraint and the apparent feeling on the part of the police that they were supposed to be “against” the strik- ers. Had their attitude been different it is probable that the peace would have been maintained. Bismarck also has been having a taste of the same medicine. But for the smile of fortune a local citizen might have been num- bered among the dead. Ours is only a little dispute involving a few men, but magnify it a thousand times and the possibilities for serious trouble become apparent. In this situation it is up to the Bismarck police department to remain calm and impartial. If it follows the policy outlined by Commissioner E. B. Klein it will do so. His assertion that it is the duty of the police to protect both strikers, owners and other workers in their respective rights is sound logic and good citizenship. If the police make it effective they, will do both themselves and the city a favor. But if they develop a case of “nerves” and become jittery, or feel that they are aligned on one side or the other, the result will be bad. They can learn what NOT to do from the cases at Chicago and Massilon. A cool head, a courageous heart—and a sense of humor— is better equipment for maintaining the peace in such situations than all the guns and tear gas in the world. Wage-Living Cost Curve During the last two years income of wage earners has risen much more rapidly than the cost of living. The result is a higher living standard for many families. The wolf is being kept far- ther away from the door than usual. But now, according to the statisticians, living costs are climbing faster than wages. The spread between income and necessary outgo is narrowing. Politicians as well as business- men should note that fact. The politicians should be interested because few issues are more potent than that of the cost of living. Businessmen should note it, because it indicates an ap- proaching stability. It is a sign that the curve is not always up- ward. Also, it is an indication that American industry is not | Poss passing on to the consumer the benefits of improved manufac- turing processes. It may not mean as much profit NOW but it does mean a sounder prosperity in the long run if prices are kept DOWN. They should remember that profiteering has made more radicals than all the Communist harangues in history. The average American wage earner is better off now than a year ago—18 per cent better according to the experts—but he hardly will be able to continue indefinitely saying with Dr. Coue “Every day in every way things are getting better and better.” The curve is flattening out and as it does so the individual sees less and less improvement in his position. Another factor also enters the situation. Most of the wage advances in the last year or two have applied to low-paid men. The man on the bottom has been moving up toward the middle bs faster than the man in the middle has been moving upward in his own classification. That fact is bound, in time, to have its own peculiar repercussions. Republicans, interested in a return to power, should watch the wage-living cost curve. For it is sad but true that an eco- nomic issue carries more appeal with the citizen than all the moral arguments politicians know. Asia’s Bad Boy It is just too bad about Japan. It seems that everywhere the Nipponese go someone picks on them and causes trouble. First it was China, then Russia—and now China again. During the World War Americans were familiar with a popular song wherein proud parents, watching troops go by, commented “They're all out of step but Jim.” Japan seems to occupy the same position today. It is not altogether an enviable situation because the fellow who always is looking for a fight usually gets one. And sometimes he gets more than he bargained for. attached to the employer's first con- tribution report for 1937 or the em- ployer’s first contribution report thereafter. Reporting of the exact amount of received by workers is to be made tl only with voluntary consent of the workers, 8 RUSSIAN ARNEN SPEED TOWARD U.S. Based on Present Flying, Soviet Aces Should Arrive Over States Wednesday Officers of nine North Dakota Pro- worker, is in addition to or in liew of |secretary PRINCIPAL AG IN SUIT GATHERING Stage All Set for Trial on Action to Recover Money on Bonzer Bond Hei S of fuel, : Officials of the National Aeronau- tical association estimated the earliest ible arrival time at 4a. m., Wed- Mrs. Katharine Harrington, Bismarck, Elected Senior Vice President It also is disconcerting because the peace-loving elements | Broughton. of the world can never be sure just how to deal with the sensi- tive children of the Rising Sun. Father Divine’s Olympic games at Kingston, N. Y., his way of being sure the flock was at least two jumps of A Philadelphian advised fencing for grace and » but that help @ congressman. mets pos Gis bev hee ie a eee A Hollywood model and a patent medicine millionaire Meares in car wey ot abe ono andectrapaaatiy - eee in Gradgicounty, Oklahoma, have Farmers copyrigh termelon, viig no regen allowed except oa the consumer's necktie. eg Tuesday he was = tioning by federal officers in connec- tion with the Mattson kidnap case a man named Harry Stevens. The sheriff said Stevens claimed to have taken the kidnaped child for s walk and never brought him back. He compares “perfectly” with the de- eerie as eee Risnape?, Langeliers « » TO 4H GLUB KIDS| 100 Members and Parents At- tend Picnic in Memorial Building Tuesday Members of the Bismarck Kiwanis club Tuesday noon were hosts to more than 100 members of Burleigh county 4-H clubs and their parents at an in- door picnic at the World War Me- morial building. A colored orchestra from the Good- man Wonder Show entertained with ClO STARTS FIGHT T0 GET CONTROL OF L$, LONGSHOREMEN Ryan, Bridges Issue Threats and Counter-Threats as Sparring Begins ——— New York, July 13—()—Threats of raids and counter raids in the na- tion’s union labor camps touched of fthe heralded “open war- fare” between John L. Lewis’ ClO and the American Federation of Labor for control of 40,000 members of the International Longshoremen’s association. ‘As a prelude to the struggle leaders on both sides held conferences behind locked doors. Principals gave every indication of fighting to the finish, with J P. Ryan, veteran L.L.A. president, de- claring: “we're not taking ultimatums from anybody.” 1s eae of Pacific coast longshoremen, the so-called “brains” of the 1934 West coast maritime strike. Bridges informed Ryan that the CIO was determined to invade the nation’s waterfronts and enroll both longshoremen and warehouse work- ers. He warned Ryan that unless he abandoned the American Federation of Labor, with which the ILA, has been affiliated for 25 years, the CIO would take Ryan's organization away from him. Ryan retorted: “Ym not interested in any state- ment that Australian Communist (Bridges) makes. To me he is like prickly heat.” Ryan also threatened “retaliations” in other CIO dominated fields if Bridges pushed his ultimatum to a showdown. In reply, Bridges announced the ‘CIO would charter pier and ware- house men on the East coast under separate charters and carry the fight directly into Ryan's own territory. FATALITIES FROM HEMORRHAGES UP) sce sr Alarming Increase Noted in Deaths From Brain Bleed- ing in North Dakota ‘An alarming increase in fatalities arising from cerebral hemorrhages comprises one of the beget Rage decade. From 320 deaths in North Dakota in 1926, a rapid upward trend is culminating in a peak of 475 aths in 1935. Released jointly by staffs oper- ‘Dakota | ating under Dr. M. M. Willaims, state health officer, and Mrs. W. O. Campbell of the state planning board, this study is the most exten- sive analysis of vital statistics ever conducted in the state. It reveals that cerebral hemorrhages in 1935 were exceeded only by heart disease and cancer as death causes. Fatalities in principal cities, by. City Nurses Visit 1,623 Families During Year City nurses visited 705 families in Bismarck for the first time during the fiscal year ending June 30, according to the annual report of City Nurse enent hundred t niy-elght saralles went were revisited, making a total of 1,623 Three handed thitt three confer. ye - ences were held with parents, 300 with physicians, and 357 with teachers. a ONLY 2 OR 3 GUARD SQUADS ARE NEEDED HOSPITAL MAN SAYS Additions to Medical Staff of State Asylum Are An- nounced by Owens Jamestown, N. D, July 13—@)—|0% Not more than two or three squads of National Guard troops will be used in connection with the fumigation of the in North Dakote state hospital, it was announced by Henry G. Owen, acting No, 1 red '1.26-26 | 1.12% -14% 5 No. a7 vhF ge Ha 8 4 2 4 ras a8 i g Bg jounced several medical staff at the stated that other ex- perienced physicians are being con- bring the personnel of the staff up to the number absolutely it the health of the 3 5 ie Ei gE Bs g | 1.52% -1.55% No.3 clans, Six graduates of the two-year medical course at the University of Baeg Dakota have been employed to marck; James Johnson, and Corley McFarland, James Helmsworth and Hubert Flannery of Jamestown. Dr. Pearl Mathaei, who has been at the institution for some time, has been named chief of the medical staff and assistant superintendent by the board of administration. TWO DIE OF HEAT &t. Paul, July 13—()—Two persons died from heat-connected causes in Minnesota during the last 24 hours, but temperatures were generally low- er than for the preceding period. SUPERSTITION M illiston ay ee ee Deaths from this source in Burleigh county, for the past decade, totaled as follows: 1926, 12; 1927, 15; 1928, 11; 1929, 7; 1930, 13; 1931, 18; 1932, 15; 1933, 11; 1934, 13; 1935, 18. HEARST MENTIONED BY SENATE PROBES - | Prominent Names Figure in Tax Dodging Inquiry; James Roosevelt Appears Washington, July 13—(%)—The names of William Randolph Hearst, publisher, Jacob Ruppert, New York brewer and baseball tbe tee Tuesday. ‘The names were mentioned by O. ; | John Rogge, securities commission counsel, borrowed by the treasury to aid in its investigation of methods by which wealthy persons have been able to reduce their income tax pay- ments. Before Rogge took the stand James Roosevelt, eldest son and secretary of President Roosevelt, made an un- heralded appearance before the com- mittee to deny that he had any inter- est in @ personal holding company in National School Gets N. D. Petrified Bench Nem avatar ( By Oren Arnold CAST OF CHARA\ CAROLEE ‘COLTE ter. pe aig ge iT COLTER, Y PAUL AND |& BLAKE, Stuart's sister. eee Yesterday: Colters learn that father and brother to worry about. They were waiting in the old car te leave, even now. She went over to them. CTERS BR, heroine, ” easterm Your Personal Health By William Ys M. D. . Brady wil: answer re iets es must be accompanied by @ stamped, osis, Write in Pe at ne Tribune. All que self-addressed envelope — ODD HOUSE DORMITORY mansions ‘huge bedrooms because land, building materia? AES cheap. pee ape another reason for the spatial manor house bedroom was the instinctive arte for a na breathe—they never opened the windows, for night air was n: . i ‘oom for each member of the family, ute il bet sree ten twelve feet. The rest of the space for clothes closet, drawers, & dressing larger than Pr bed ‘will be used bedroom will take half the space of the because show‘ ‘will be used. usu 5 only er baths a uy rooms have as much window space 5 lows a ae the Lagi Pig possible two Cree otbasyeen le Ais h roll-up wire screens for summer, unbleached m' en alr int tte betior ‘The unbleached muslin screen bleached muslin screen is the simplest iis room. Tt ts washable. Every sleeping room in yet exclude ey Coaghcleny admits plen! light to any windows equipped wit! vathi ould have one or more ih te oF cold weather shoul’ Ive “ideal sleeping atihosphere. Buch Fev recelig wren muslin: , windows open and the winter or summer gives all the advantages of a sleeping porch without the dis. sereens i i guttloulties involved in sleeping on an ordinary porch. about imaginary pness. nts have to be concerned only furnaces, water heaters or other ters for heat, not the bedrooms. OauOn sent He tedrooms are going to be equipped with beds. We do like a nice comty bed Jn act the Kind of Bt 62 ous has several eas about e man at s Tee OF ot Pee them criays he will tell you about them next time we get beds, not all of them crasy, and on. the subject. ‘Meanwhile, we'll be glad to receive your suggestions about beds or any other feature of Odd House. CURB STOCKS New York, July 18. urbs s_Ber: 4 Elec. Bond & Share 17%. Fisk Rubber 13%. CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Associated Press) Midwest Corp 10%. —_——_—— MINNEAPOLIS STOCK! os Minneapolis, July sretaticKe close: First Bank Stock 14. Northwest Banco 11%. INVESTMENT TRUSTS (By the Associated ). (Over the counter in New York) Hamilton Tr Sh 2.35, 2.59. Maryland Fund 9.57, 10.49. No. Am Tr 78, Ne Quart Inc Sh 18.04, 19.’ —_—__——_"—_ | Additional Markets | ———— CHICAGO CASH GRAIN . Chicago, Jul; (#)—Cash wheat ple grade red i 4 rd 1,26%-28; grade 1,06-: 3. No, 1 mixed Boe (ai pee Fae red garlicky 1.19%; No. ty te: No. 3 hard tough 1.24%4-25; No. 5 mixed tough 1.14-1.15; sample grade tough 1.05%. Corn, No. 2 mixed 1.25% -27; No, 1 yellow 1. No. 3 white 1.28%; sample grade 1.06, Oats No, 1 white 52; sample grade 43. No. ryé. Soy beans No. 1 yellow 1.46%. Barley feed 53-70 nom; malting 71- 90 nom, DULUTH CASH GRAIN Duluth, July 13—@)—Closing cash prices. Wheat: No.1 heavy dark . northern spring 1.57%-1.60%; No. 1 —____—_ dark northern, |152%-1.50%; No. 2 GOVERNMENT BONDS dark northern 1.50%-1.57%; No, 3,| New York, July 13.—(%)-—Govern- 3 No. | ment Bonds: 1 ‘northern hard winter| Treasury ¢'s 111.16, TESTIFY RITZ STARTED FIGHT Grand Forks, N. D., July 18—(?)— Testimony that William Rits startev the fight in a beer parlor here June 1, in which it is alleged he was kicked by Emil D. Gollnick and suffered in- juries from which he died later, was given in district court here Tuesday as Gollnick’s manslaughter trial con- Y | tinued. Alma Page testified Rits start- 5; | ed the fight and struck the first blow. Previously, she said, Mrs. William Rita had been drunk and abusive. ° SPORTSMEN to MEET JULY 25-26 Jamestown, N. D., July 13. i | Conventions of the North Dekota Life association and the North Da- ‘kote Isaac Walton league will be held in Jamestown and at Arrowwood lake July 25 and 26. ‘0. . dark Montana 1.54%-1.56%. Durum: No. 1 hard amber 1.30 No, 2, 1.28-1.30; No. 3, 1.24-1.27; No, 4, 1.20-1.24; No. 5, 1.14-1.20, No, 1 red durum 1.30-1.31. Mixed durum discounted 3-5c below hard ambers. Flax No. 1, (plus dock) 2.08%. aye No, 2, 88%-91%. Oats No. 3 white 43-46. Barley: Malting 55-85; feed barley 52-64. MINNEAPOLIS POTATOES Minneapolis, July 13.—(@—(U. 8. D. A.)—Potatoes: Supplies heavy, de- mand moderate; market slightly weaker. New stock, 1 9 California White Rose, US. No. 1 Hi combination grade $2; Kansas cob- blers, US. No. 1, 1% inch minimum 1.60-1.70; home grown, bushel basket, Early Ohios, $1.00. aril bel ae ea oe: nneapolis, Ju’ — (PI carload lots, per barrel in 98 er, 6.95-7. lower, 17.50-7.70, bran 27,50-38. Pure dlings 33.50-34.00, UNTAIN © Copyright 1937 NEA SERVICE 1 momentarily. The old man just|He realized their looked at her, chewing his goes fs 5 and saying no more. 10 o'clock, with yore horse,” said Silas, as he stepped on the starter of their old car and pulled away.|saw no What to do with Carolee, if any- thing, wasn't discussed by Es if qe788 5 3 Ber EsE piibest & e cliff top meanwhile. ‘All clear now,” Stua: gaily. “I'll go back from ag ta ‘A mass of loosened earth hepa aaetcdaiasd Dust Grea : Sure glad Ot one ial Hed men shouted Cote cae aeons The car hi lien mass e same, to smash itself against | who's an ee He jerked out rapidly at the clift cf a ee ae ET aa Qos pt oag oep org ey

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