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i 4 : i . .THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESCAY, AUGUST 24, 1937 The Bismarck Tribune|MRS. STEINERT, 62, An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER DIES AT FARM HOME State, City and County Official Newspaper Published except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Company, march, ND, and entered at the posvotfic st Bismarck aa second class mall matter. Mrs. Stella 1. Mann President and Treasurer Homesteader Northeast of Wil- ton Is Victim of Lingering Ulness Mra. Gottlieb Steinert, 62, died early Tuesday morning at her farm home in Steiber township, victim of ® lingering illness. She was born in Russia, Aug. 6, 1875, and was married in that country Dec, 28, 1898. In 1900 Mrs. Steinert came to this country with her hus- band, homesteading 20 miles north- east of Wilton in 1904. Mrs. Steinert was a member of the Kenneth W. Simons Secretary and Editor Archie O. Johnson Vice Pres. and Gen'l. Manager Subscription Rates Payable in Advance German Baptist church near her home, where funeral services will be will be preceded by a home service at 1:30. Burial will be in the church Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press det oe Nidieee. Wels he Pi ti uel titled hi fe blica- . Steine: a de news dispatches credited to it ef aot otherwise credites in this (husband, four sisters and two ton of the newspaper and also the local news of sp: neous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. brothers in Russia and nine children. The children are John, of Regan; Gottlieb James, of Mandan, and Wil- lam, Reinhold, Emanuel, Theodoge, Edna, Dave and Edwin, all at home. Machines and Music—Discord on the Air The average radio listener, sitting sleepily before his loud- go age peetege speaker, is only barely conscious (if he notices it at all) of those 11 Injured in Rioting At Strike-Bound Plant oft-repeated words “We will now listen to a recording by elec- | District Judge FATHER TAKES CHILD Shell Lake, Wis.—A sreerpee reared New York— Saag ere et Judge William H. Hutchin- | States Senstor Copeland son of Wahpeton, former foe of President Roosevelt's New Deal state’s attorney of LaMoure or the pro-New Deal — county and past president of the North Dakota Bar asso- ciation, presides over ses- sions of court in the third judicial district. WOMAN IS KILLED courts before leaving on a trip trical transcription...” Every time those words come over the air, the listener is getting not only music by a phonograph but also, right along with it, he is getting a concrete example of technological un- employment. It is an example that means a living to musicians. Pittsburgh, Aug. 24.—(?)—Women and children joined their men folks on the picket lines at the strikebound Heppenstall steel company Tuesday as union leaders expressed ‘fear of a renewal of Monday's riots in which 11 were injured. The American Federation of Musicians considers the play-| William Hart, head of the steel workers committee local, organizing massed 700 pickets at the plant, as- serting he had received “a tip” that non-strikers would again rush the gates, padlocked by strikers. Approximately 50 pickets were on duty Monday as four carloads of non- strikers led by C. W. Heppenstall, Jr., company vice president, attempted to break the lines and open the gates. Five strikers, an equal number of non-strikers and a policeman at Lawrenceville where the plant is lo- cated, were battered in the hand-to- hand fighting with bricks, clubs, bot- tles and fists. Rindahl Is Named to. Head Luther Leagues Dickinson, N. D., Aug. 24.—(®)— Rev. Opie 8S. Rindahl, Bismarck, is new president of the Luther League and Choral union, being elected at oe sania! meeting of the Mandan ci . Other officers named were Rev. F. R. Lakenseard, Belfield, vice presi- dent; Miss Tillie Burke, Mandan, cor- responding secretary; Miss Oleda Thorason, Belfield, recording secre- tary; Harold Jesperson, Taylor, treas- uter, and Rev. E. H. Plamann, Dick- inson, Choral union director. Principal speakers at the sessions, attended by 140 delegates from 12 Missouri slope cities, were Rev. Henry Koch, Columbus, O., executive secre- tary of the: International Luther League of America, and’ Rev. Marcus & Lewis, Minot, president, North Da- kota League of Norwegian Lutheran churches. Nu2s.= NEWS Births Son, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Folkins, McKensie, 6:15 a. m. Tuesday, Bis- ing over the air of recordings so serious a threat to employment of its members that it has threatened a strike on Sept. 16 unless a working arrangement with broadcasting stations is concluded. It asks such control over the broadcasting of recordings as will make certain the employment of many more musicians than are now at work. The musicians’ union would allow no radio station to play records or electrical transcription unless that station was hiring a number of musicians satisfactory to the union. Union mem- bers would not be allowed to play for stations transmitting to other stations which do not hire enough musicians to satisfy the union. They could play for stations using recordings only if they were used under a set of stringent regulations laid down by the union. The AFM also insists on a number of stringent regulations enforced on recording companies, or it will not allow its members to make any recordings, This is a fair example of the jam into which technological progress is leading industry after industry, and an equally good example of how necessary it is that workable compromises be made in all such cases. For there is much justi¢e on both sides of this controversy. A musician who plays a piece sees it recorded. And then throughout the rest of his musical life he hears that same recording popping up and taking his place in spots where he vould otherwise have another job. You can’t hate the musi- tians for wanting some restrictions on a mechanical competitor vhich uses their own music to take away their jobs. —’- A small broadcasting station finds recordings generally as satisfactory as live musician: for much of its program, and much cheaper. Along comes the union and insists that it hire 10 sec- ond-rate musicians to sit.and twiddle their thumbs while the recording of a top-notch band is played on the air. You can’t hate the radio stations for wanting just as little of that as they have to take, either. Between these points of view a compromise must be worked out, and undoubtedly it will be. These conflicts between man and his machines are going to require the application of every marck hospital. to New York and London. OBSERVE HIGHWAY TRAFFIC St. Paul—Almost 600 signs marked Highway 160 as Minnesota's high department planned observation of traffic over the 155-mile stretch of the “laboratory” highway. IN CAR COLLISION Three Others Are Hurt as Tour- ist Car and Cattle Truck Crash Head-on Shakopee, Minn., Aug. 24.—()}—One woman was killed and three persons injured early Tuesday in a head-on collision between a tourist’s car and & cattle truck on the three-lane high- way No. 169, two miles north of here. Mrs. Floyd Nesbitt of Fairmont, Ill., died in St. Mary’s hospital at Minne- apolis from head injuries. Her husband was reported in “fair” condition. Albert Ellingsberg, 13, of Madelis, riding in the cattle truck, was recov- ering from less serious injuries. Two small children, two and four years old, a son and daughter of the Nesbitt’s were slightly bruised, and were being cared for at the hospital with their father. N. D. Auditors Open State Convention, Minot, N. D. Aug. 24—(P)—At noon Tuesday 19 delegates had regis- tered as the North Dakota County Auditors’ association opened its 33rd annual convention here, Appointment of committees was postponed until late Tuesday after- noon, F. E. Doherty, Fargo, president pro tem, called the meeting to order and City Manager J. W. Bliss of extended a welcome to the delegates election cam, MINNESOTA NOT ELIGIBLE leg islature to create a state housing au- thority in compliance with the fed- eral program came as U. 8. officials disclosed Minnesota is not yet eligible to participate. MABEL MAROH DIES cluded the disease which early Tuesday caused the death of little Mabel March was lymphatic leu- kemia or something closely akin tells A post mortem was plan- RATES EXTENDED ‘Oct, 31. ou behalf of Minot. it of interest, «A report received frqn Bismarck expressed doubt as Veen Go | T 25 | William Langer, sched spe day’ Reci hie ie afternoon program, would o 8 pe ‘ Eggplant Stuffed with Corn and Ham Fighting in Santander Is Practically at End Hendaye, Franco-Spanish Frontier, Aug. 24.—(#)—Cont five converging columns of insurgent corn, % cup minced ham, 1 table- spoon butter, salt, pepper.and paprika to taste. Cut eggplant in. half. Boil in salted water until tender. Then drain = Pove Gets — eer eeenns Your Personal Health | By William Brady, M. D. ir. jwer questions talaing to health but’ not ais on = npn pin ey ee. Ey er teak, «ed te a ciamncl, Mosting already on file. Recommendations of the educators will be forwarded to national NY. atte, ame e a ees Oo trom green . invisible, imperceptible to human sense. For, instance, plenty of sunlight ot TE Dakota budget for sid !and considerable of the heat of the sun will pass through ordinary window js students an-|giass, but the ultraviolet rays of sunlight are almost entirely screened out rye fashington headquarters by ordinary glass. Special may be used for windows which will permit me athe relies any a large part of the ultra rays, not all, of sunlight to pass 5 denis oto 1206 high school stu-' you want to get all of the ultraviolet the sunshine contains, you have to take The ‘direcer sean Ady it raw, that is, on naked skin with no screen or covering to filter out part ee @ school aid/ of the radiant energy. program Maadinreatiasseepeed The mid-day sunshine in mid-summer contains the largest proportion bE agaed rails girls and 1,500} to ultraviolet, ‘The sun in equatorial regions contains more than the sun in Bigher "learning. ‘This diviion of Boies Siete, Gremnine of elevated places con alg the program was exclusive of- youths It is this invisible, colorless e mergy out beyond the violet th: sasisted on, the NYA work program |attects the photographic plate or flim, bleuches or fades colored fabric, teat ot totaled 3,000 young / the skin exposed to sun, converts ergosterol in the human skin, in the anima! eople meen ages of 18 and 241 body, in plants, in foods and in diatoms in the sea into viosterol, otherwise Funds will be available in North Ultraviolet (from from sources) rays ( the sun or artificial ) hasten hatch- Dakota for NYA work, Byrne said but |ing of fish eggs and fly eggs, stimulate reproduction in tissue cells’ and fated. for the program as at yest | ent ae ‘okets’ purity’ water) favor the developer best ure water, favor because of the reduced federal budget. degree of immunity against respiratory infection. : oP as 5 In the cosmic sense it is far out beyond the violet where life begins. 11 Planes Poise for aia ascis ai ° QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ee . Kindly tell me what urta carrier is and what causes it. Oe ARS, Ae ASeter sls 1th be nip Anon ail Eleven planes were ready to partici- ves, » Bend three ry cent-stamped envelope and ask for monograph or advice on hives. Numer. pale ie itm ene omy |S os a Ot ings my Seas Please inform me of the name of the medicine sagen Mca NA lotayel extending allergy may take. (F. R. B.) you said persons with from Moscow, where three planes Answer—Calcium lactate, ten grains three times awaited a takeoff to follow the course & day after food for taken by vanished and | ccveral weeks. Pius s daily ration of vitamin D to promote Eevanetiny, 0, the conti- (Copyright, 1937, John F. Dille Co.) George Hubert Wilkins, noted Fi marathon sitdown strik chased especially for the cearet ny | Vee uise Finne baled he = for the Russian government, end nis| Pictured in Magazine | ited by s court decision against their party of four Monday flew about 750 — ues : W. T. ‘He reported finding no trans been accepting ies ing & demand fot 1 6 per ont wast Of the lost plane. Earlier reports|over the appearance of his daughter, ie ees Wilkins had flown across the pole|Mary Louise, in the weekly, | loves, to him by kindness, treated were discounted, te. bis tan wien te play Aaa LEAVES HOSPITAL the international Gist Boout encamp- | ,,14,°Ce, Of,them want to go home Ambrose, N. D. Aug. 24—Business|ment at Camp Andree, N. ¥., ana |‘ Vist his family? All right, he could manager of the Good Samaritan hos- |her photograph appeared the telephone? Estes would call his pital here three years, Harold Vite | are 6 ue cs te ae eos ‘Was the room too chilly? incre woule tens has to accept a similar Tle appearance didn't surprise her | Zive them mi heat. Also ate position with the Good Samaritan father, who says he predicted it be-|f nt. t> reed be Cea Peal se Cuambelsi B.D a fe esadeed Bi re oi Mout Rosliy ibe, Mckes tamed otf iaesied by sine Mary Louise is expected home Wed- 2 Rosing,| | Mi e 4 the electric lights, He told the switch- Ce ae calls for stribers. BUill the sindewnce ie ora f 5 jowners Donnybrook, WN. De aug. 24 Pu-| Employes Enter 135th |*** neral services will be held here Thurs- D: f S: NDON BANKER day for Myron P. Johnson, 6, early| Day of Sitdown Strike toate aie: SCI eevee day settler, who died at his home in — - Beckett, shies, ind te a aoe iH Ernest 5 a Lif last ounce of the common sense of all of us, unless we are to see| _ Dea ‘ troops Tuesday made it “apparent,”|and take out all insides. Chop this our own mechanical ingenuity turned from a blessing into a|m Tuesday, lose! hospital seid Gen. | Pranclaco| Franco, that| pulp and mix with corn, tomato aause, BY IDA RINER GLEASON Copyright, 1937, NEA Service, Inc. mater: earned Peniitcrterel virtually ended.” the soooped out Halves and dust top CAST oF CHARA seen it before. Then he shook his|She knows her way about and Grand Pacifie Hotel _| ‘The t , - KATHLEEN e =f blo ae atiwint Se" EA AE ast, 0 |oineadgaters grates inate Sank ep antera inh ontn| HSE RARTRIME onl vp [Rend br 1 aN al tal doit ye be toate Als 3 f McTavish. It’s because she’s hurt/ none o’ thim can outsmart her.’ The Man’s World Blouteu'stadiaon. Wied, Peat Bonn, | ment that the rate of his army’s ad-|until the crumbs are browned. ‘That's oh Tee he: ghayed ye passed her up for that| “She wears some pretty With the advent of hostesses on railroad trains comes also ‘Aine Kibler, Halidayy Ber. aed | provincial capital, Santander, “before| Chestnuts make another variation OME muicumesoeetces otter |or hates Gk ete na Mead coil as bleser 08 the prediction that the Pullman porter with his spotless jacket,| it's, ‘Netite Russell, Gympie, Wars: |"“Government Teports, admitted in| This is a el dene, Vegetables! ERG PSGOR BRACEY—Eare- |ye?” : better stones whin she throws th his toothy grin and his “Yassuh, boss” will soon be as extinct Julia Kringler and, fda, Leer, Car- | part the insurgent claims, any good American Lepscuemeegy see G4 “No: eae 1 fone showed hie fancy dress ball she's oe as the buggy whip. Los Angeles, Calif; Robert ™ Spence, ~ enYeuterdays Pat o.hanét= |nered me as soon as I got there,|the place wide , what with A romance of plat open, Don’t believe it. As long as traveling salesmen ride the) Berea, Allee Odeo ane ree oe ad learns that Kathice ma |and I couldn't break away with-/ electricians, and: decorators, and rails and as long as congenially loquacious gents still congre-| Vancouver, B.C Hing aeintyre, | L O b ss" semvthing abort this Seetee ee ee ee gate in the smoker, there always will be a Pullman porter lurk- Beddow, Pendleton, Gre cane ate ene unar ; r coasts) on ek T do, me boy,” Pat] sets out to do anything.” ing somewhere around. - ~ 2 JUICKLY completing the repair ee gravely, “But not} “Well, that’s okay by me.” Bob thin”? ; Troop 10 of th Scouts will hold 1S job, Pat put away his hammer Kathy’s kind now. She’d|shrugged. “After smashing up her - pene a c’ hag they ie Doge Beer ed ws fr meeting of the fal season, nat (nee ee eae and tacks and marched up to[niver run after no man.” picture, she'll not be apt to invite lus” as the roads advertise. But you coi slip a dollar | 7:30 p. m, Tuesday. mem! the sky. , « é job's room, young man doesn’ Bracey|me again. I certainly wouldn't go into one of their palms and get that upper 12 changed magically | *° Ue % attend. Alt is next to SIS SMD! fepeed the dove, tee. dpetbee ak | Sy el re fe, taut. Ue se aid. ‘Once ss plenty enagh : finger mysteriously into a lower seven. A Dr. Harry Fortin and Dr. Joel F: pater ts FEI MESIVIE| his lips and, coming in, closed the| afternoon.” Pat leaned forward. “Not if ye And when a bright-eyed young hostess pokes her head into| Sioned’ children at Catap Grassick| _ ness. ; dope carefully behind him. el nc AMd Zo, think that plased her| thought ye'd be doin’ Miss Kathy he berth “Th inutes to Buffal ir,” then | Sunday. One of its 26 Wayside hotel. s a now? It did not, She was likely|a favor now? I got a job helpin’ that will pie se ay rortee WN bas eh er phases. Zi Negelive word! Favish he suid” “7 Mé-| hopin! ye'd be aparin’ her some othe electrician so I can keep, an going ‘ar. ie pol sf on, -| mt 5 anslucent. yer le to "jeye on what’s goin’’on. And traits: 5 GEE OE ATT Gagan ae tiaiens || Aa Hemet resin, Bob looked surprised. “What's |steps to put that felle? where he|Bracey’s bound’ to see Miss of 404 Fifth St,, called out the Bis-| shaped part, [, 33 Social insogs up? The police on my trail or | belongs—where he can't be forcin’ |Kethy’s invited. It's to be an = marek fire department about 1p. m. 14Corbon tn fag 34 Witticism, Pat grinned, Not a-tall, a-tal,|" "tt cane "tance Tarawored tf oct pele The Duchess 1s goix - Good News ener: Epabions ime eee ain though before long maybe they| Bob burned. , indian, , ey slowly. “You know I believé|to wear her emerald. They say It’s hard to take much pleasure in a great deal of the news ——) 17 Appropriate- 38 Finale. 6ittisa—— of, *ce™ ae come after some ithers ase sn bie a oes belore, {fe big os 0 cae egg oa vor that comes out of Washington these days, but here's one item | ,,¥.%: , Gallagher, now. sneiting tal 19 Feather scart, 49 Either watt cat tena “You heard about what hap-| clapped eyes on him, but couldn't|head a think’ oF it” that ought to bring hearty cheers even in the hottest of hot! count, is wanted in Pondero county,| 20Second note. i ae 44 Form of “a”. pened then at the party?” | _|be sure. You know how you get) “Let her wear it for all me,” th Mont. for the same offense, accord-| 21 Sable. ‘SMember of an VERTICAL 4g Morindin dye. <Miss Kathy was, tillin’ me|that feeling about people some-| Bob replied. “I've got entirely too weather. . : ing to » telegram received by Sherift| 22To devour. as bese ot race. 1 Bishop's 47 Writing perce) about it,” was the/ times. Even the dog doéan’'t care/many things to do to take any The treasury department is rearranging its income tax| Freq Anstrom . Gallagher} 24Street. Bae ot ere eee dol “But|for him, He'd lke nothing better |more time out for her fool par- blanks'to make them a little simpler, and will begin distributing| will not be released by Burleigh] 25Companions. | Abt 2Unit. be serene i Seis than So, taka ieee 34 le, | 0e:* them 68-Jan, 2 so as to give the maximum amount of'time to| iar’ swore before hie lal) 27 Ritilion Ot Cov Ot eorow. 4 Perchsas say they don't” Bob him again at the party” pac acts VO, foe ota a 5 ere, , I, said. “Bui make them out before that awful March 15 deadline. The new — 20Northwest, 50Measure of — § Arm bone. frowned darkly and walked over} Pat nodded. “And it’s dogs|all the men what come to this 4 f, 2 Ai . 30.Nay. . area. -6 Born. . to his desk for a match. “That|know more than the folks around form’ is especially almed at making it simpler for “the little} ,,Definkely, through ith household! ° 31 Food | 51It gives a——— 8 You and me. 54Mine hut. slippery guy sure seemed to pull|thim. That feller is after some- Spd "atch “Out ter "Mis fellow,” but the treasury is hoping to simply even the returns | tist, was back in his psi at 210 Park container. light. 9 Tennis stroke. 55 Musical note. the wool over her eyes. She prob-|thing. Mark me word. And I'm| Kathy.” Si,” Tuesday, recovering from cuts| 35 Definite 57 Behold. 10 Slack, 56 ably didn’t tell you how he got| thinkin’ it’s something the Duch- eee for upper-bracket individuals and corporations. aud urbe rechived when's two-quart article, 58 Affray. 11 Its — is me in bad, did she?” ess has. That's why he made a/ DOB did not answer, so Pat took Paying the tax is always bad enough, but making out the|siass jar of corn-on-the-cob ex-| 37 Type measure.59 Lubricated. uneven. “No.” Eat was careful not to|play for Miss Kathy to draw ye|_D his departure hoping fervent- blank is almost as bad as the actual payment. Anything that ee face Sunday. Dr. Cole a aan waa | ecb related in detail just what yore te! bla gr Big ca ibe Healy aden meaning te can be done to make it any less painful will be a boon to millions Seg es L | had happened, with, “And eee = as and millionaires alike. Two-year-old Harry snieits ot a-| f | | | Me | | | Pe Mel 1 oe) I don't belles be's what he's pos-| A GLEAM showed in Bob's eves. (after the door closed, he would : marek, will resover from his fall from 2 ing a9 ns peat after |" “You think 90, Pat? I won-|have felt confident he had suc- , Living and Dyin Soe ee ee eee ee rr ; ) ing ey ; The infant son of Mr. and Mrs, W. | le Bi al | bunch. man assured him. “Miss Kathy’s| Duchess sent a warm glow over Within the past 35 years the general death rate in the Sie aah ain ave., taaly SEP eae ae ae Hurt to think ye can't see ber tor Bob. She must have said some- United States has declined s nalhe nti 10.9 Sepndewaiiey bared by the fall is now out of dan: Ai no usin to be trailin’ with |If"ye ‘could ‘And some ‘way to |e gouge notion, though ‘Bob |, §,| ser, doctors said Tuesday. Duchi thousand persons, according to s\ compiled by the he ain't thee and I's] cet, eae ay toa eth reemscr | suspected that Pat's commonplace Pap ne Nest service. “Blightly worse” was his phyal- me that's kind e” lookin’ out for|not so polite, ed ‘be dota’ Miss | mest’ heer Hee ad “eden hima The reduction in death rates, however, has come almost |cian's description, » , of the her, her bein’ the sweet little thing| Kathy faves, and it’s Patrick wately, Sc ogag sane for entirely for persons in early life. The decreases in diphtheria | Condition of 63-year-old James Whit- Set pwithout anybody to be/ that's tillin’ ye.” tz, all the time assuming a : : Bernadino, Calif. resident talkin’ her part now. “He surely im’t hankering for | studied indifference toward the and smallpox-are startling and reflect the courage and labor of | hurt in an automobile accident south “She spperently doesn't want/ any of the Duchess’ pictures,” Bob |dog, which only the terrier’s elo- white-robed laboratory workers and. physicians whose discov- cf Bt, Anthony last Wednesday. the rest of us to butt in,” an- sald Shoughttully. “at he 20 much woent tall a ot erleg réeulted in prestical life-saving. When » gust of wind caused his her sive me the Gla shoulder [key ive Bi = en <r wo peristent feeling hat he had sera ~ On the other hand, diseases of middle and old age are in-| biplane to ground loop at the Bis- No-knowing what that guy told/ she'd be so tickled. It's very evi: before—Bob stared out of the creasing, cancer almost doubled. Youth is spared | srck, Municipal alrport | Saturday, ber, ntter lett the party. T've/dent she hes plenty of cash.| window thoughtfully, . Sea eet hestrdoes middie aad old age. It is wel to delay be takeott for Seats. "One Charges apaindt me for” drags |eeeyee ae® what I's got hls) | Suddenly he matched his cap gt to a@ more lor . me eye on.” and, Schmatz at his heels, went ‘ he wing tip was the it Just any vr 4 Y t roedieal research has turned to a greater concentration in| ‘a7 vnisied on the runway as it Was cee 9 ai, Srinned. It won't do him | down the stairway two steps at title field. REO ae BPA : about to take off, PAT took out his pipe and looked |ither fellers figured they'd git|he had first seen Professor Bracey. Ae) at.it ap though be had fom bese put it . (Be Be Continued) « Ms ‘ \