The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 15, 1937, Page 4

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HERoe ses — ron OO ye OO ed smarck Tribune An Independent Newspaper By William Brady, M. D. i THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER gma rr (Established 1873) : BS U a | ri! ae ¢ Jw Wa Btate, City and County Official Newspaper ome ie \ f | / W/. Ad 5 ie cauaDts Brady, will anny tae tte gene 2 a: | First VFW Card Party Thies ineezachetar tee: Will Be Wednesday is Mrs, Stella I. Mann — j le it President and Treasurer ‘The first of a series of card parties, | Kenneth W. Simons sponsored } Secretary and Editor Post No. Ie Veterans of Foreign ~y Wars of the United States, will be IZ i held Wednesday, Nov. 17, in & Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ne regents LA ie din Dally by carrier, per year ...... seesoeee eect) Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail per year (in state outst Daily by mail outside of North Dakota . Weekly by mail in state, per year ...... Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year. ‘Weekly by mail in Canada, per year . Published daily except Sunday by The Blamarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. Archie O, Johnson Vico Pres. and Gen’l. Manager i a 3 ag Ee #z | i i E 7 e &. Ez i : Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republica- tion of the news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper gnd also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. E Hh They Did Better Bismarck citizens, watching the annual Armistice Day parade, showed much more respect for the Flag this year than bn most similar occasions in the past. The reason may have been the instructions on proper re- pect for the National Emblem, issued Wednesday by the Amer- fcan Legion Auxiliary and published in The Tribune. For it does seem as though ignorance of what to do and of the significance of the Flag are more to blame than intentional lack of respect. Also there is the factor of mass psychology. *, . ie {Unless the people generally do it some persons feel they are Bowling Registration making themselves conspicuous by giving the flag the honor Will Be Held Monday which tradition and sound patriotism assert that it deserves. A registration meeting for all The rules for honoring the Flag are so simple that they |en wishing to take bow thay be divided into only two parts, A Persons in uniform or with uniform accouterments, such fenced Worse erage fis uniform caps, salute the Flag. If they are standing when | World War Memorial building. She flag passes by they come to salute when the flag is 10 paces | women’s bow: Bis- Bway, hold the salute until the flag is 10 paces past. marck. he time ice) the) sport will Men not in uniform stand at attention, remove their hats | way suimic hin sane higher living standards and a more Bee ieeeteiion ot a eee ey Officers Training Ty Project. §nd hold them over their hearts. If removal of the hat would}. see E waste and to give the nation its|the corporate form for the purpose of gndanger health, civilians may and should salute. Friends Compliment co . po D Rest ai eee eae ee fe rh eng ad Women not in uniform show their respect by standing at} Miss Pauline Mauser _ “What these four subjects promise | indivi . don and placing their right hands over their hearts. ‘That —— But Congress Is [prcontnued and snereewed: mura CONTINUEDH all there is to it, And no show need be made of it. Sopetteveydrrepitliees Aen c, Warned Against greater efficiency in the use of gov- 4 £0, ME: Foss wuney.| Moral Ini ‘geod eae The REASONS for respecting the flag are too numerous to|or her friends gathered at her home Unequal Burdens |{re tenner, ance tee ake ort ixth AE; af 20 6:'m. Monsey, (6 | Moral Instruction be mentioned here. Every drop of blood that has been shed in|‘ ® farewell party, Miss Mauser — other plans for the encouragement of Deaths fis defense, every tear that has been shed in sorrow as the result [her beatin,” ™ "O™ F] and small, and leaders of agriculture industrial expansion with government Eugene Bumann, ereeatt on of sacrifices made for it is a reason why Americans should| The guests spent the evening in- y “Te ‘a ( Salem, at 12:20 p. m. Sunday ine lo- pepe form, egrang ihe hoe at th Ni Sages gated apres tax ur [@H epi 7 ‘ 4 FF guest would soon be able to/ only to check the present recession | slack.” HOTEL REGISTRATIONS It is the sign of our national unity, the emblem under which | veturn to Bismarck with her health re- work for per-| The president declared that “the “M. Van''Dee Velde and family, Al- ull of us stand and because of which we turn a united front to-|#*ined._ A book of verse was presented é ultimate answer to the conditions of |the enterprise of the small business| bests; Anna D. Smith, Sanger; ‘wile to her from the group. today” was “a cordial and confideat|men,” he said: Nam ares Nome; D. D. bg lS ward the rest of the world, ee * oosoperntaon mot balp betmoen gorery (cm or even those ot | uensler: MP and Mrs._0. J. Tho! One of the reasons for current laxity—and it is no worse in}Mrs, Opie S. Rindahl mnged recession, |ment and every kind of citizen—but Blerre, 8. Bismarck than elsewhere—is the decline of patriotism. This} ‘To Lutheran Meeting Bie oeerrore eters end of Dikieen a Frank, Galinghe! has gone backward almost in exact ratio with the advance of gine Mentions Railroads dau Mote eee cynicism. It no longer is “smart” to be patriotic. The modern| Mrs. Ople 8. Rindahl, second vice .,, As never before in history,” he said, d intelligentia is too blase to esteem the virtues of self-sacrifice, a of private capital to Souk cen es soy geribaglesderld , errr eh Pog . “a and devotion which have made the flag a great tradi- Of the Norwegian Lutheran Ratrehrig ara eo ariente ees poaat ee, ot Mis Marie Eve Empter ang George \ tacnooe “I will address you further in regard|the solid foundgtion that all ha But the people as a whole are not and, when the matter is to pie shorten Lie) enough.” eee es called to their attention, they respond. The best evidence is the| Deday See eo lhlie hake Meroe seaariaat improved conduct, with respect to this matter, evidenced by the On the four points of his immediate | included among other matters “recelv- oe which lined the streets of Bismarck during Thursday's plans and bade cietyiadrdecsls if atone vind oer Bo e ul wi » he “| use of onal di out waste” and backed by new taxes| thoroughly unsound f: extend- cost poser hes regular ee, over aon a years eolutons will Hope They Find It 3X, Mpefore dispatching his massage his R ( : which he leted late Sunde’ Such things as the spudding in of a wildcat well near Ray| lege. watt ine Genres Heer ears a and announcement of production records at the oil wells near| ,, Mt. T. G. Plomasen is president of @ conference with Vice President Marmarth every #0 often titillate the interest of North Dakota, ne Garner, Speaker Bankhead and Sena- folk in the production of black gold. poe Perey ane Representative ar to 3 ; machinery provide} burn, senate and house democratic People generally are skeptical, as well they may be. Few Weather Report senaere ceeanyall sdevoueal Gea one gan see far enough into the future to know whether the dreams paragra| gntertained by some will ever come true. WEATHER FORE iaapaitiea coe aakguate to encour- SYEViA SUTTON, off heiress. Others draw upon their ignorance to comment that it|ciudy tonignt: Tuesday generally gee DEORuCHve eitereeus, epee reece bask ac hiarivta ane: would make little difference to North Dakota if oil were found| *i,"Ntii'steZitin paxote: wosty | Regional planning boards to “avold| “must not extend to the point of using) Sem “4utge Nees: Ang Par Sea fhere in quantity. In that they are mistaken as a paragraph | (20°71 3etd oienaty — Seneratty | breach between Jack and . i git pra ts i. se in the Texas magazine easily proves: mow tpnlenty uenday partly douays x : ei “What the oil industry contributes to Texas’ economic sneha cee Sate Maron | English P ugilist prelfare today can be realized when it is said that at the close|‘!ued cola. : ‘THER CONDITIONS GORIZONTAL Answer te Previous Pussie = 14 Finish. pf 1937 it will have distributed during the\year for cost of waa’ drilling producing wells approximately $80,000,000. Its dry|the Grest Lakes tosion, soucnsen| tS Prise — (ETOOIDITALETIETAICINIE TRIS] 15 Old French Hil holes will have cost 000,000. as Bhd over the pera Pacific! fighter pice Fr inNiUIRIEMMHIOILIOMMAIRII IA] co”. No, she we. 185,000,000. Tt Tie sa page poe te pias High greaiureeren ovriee ie cap, | tured ere, Ce eat sion OD roueae act woud ‘and 2 Alen’ hed fentals, and bonuses $60,000,000. It will have paid royalty | ited 17ah Settee ees ne] (Harem. EMM UDMMALRD | oo him ead teen pwners $45,000,000. It will have spent for equipment and sup-|mostiy snow: hes aitutres fears tack: Rau i pat IN cies , is wean ‘ead, Thay plies $150,000,000. It will have paid for contract drilling and|twin"sachic cout” fomeatuees| | !3Feels tous CRM MRD | ,. allowance oa ee ee oe team work approximately $70,000,000. It will have paid freight | seueTarnst Wmer over tue north ep TET 3210 socerve. vet therm And then every fon the weather map this Ail i 4 f FIAITIEMETII pharges in the total sum of $24,000,000. It will have paid state |" SUIAISISMMSITEISTTIATS) 24 Pound. and county taxes in the aggregate sum of more than $42,000,-| ss% An Therefore: RET ATT] 25 Encountered. Piece fad tian ra : - PIAINIE| P|O materialize, oe and it will have paid federal taxes in the sum of $25,000,- 2 Hes seg) Peete Met a fo en Ry had he Nee cae ae .' 2 29 Challenges. pier and right i would be if 3 : 30 . uccessful ‘0 7 A Granting that Texas is the largest oil-producing state in PRECIPITATION 23 Genus of elms an tor the woman's tntaltce, she ‘a that the union and that North Dakota could not reasonably hope to| _%or Bismarck, station: Dae atrnidieds! was the way her young knight, bven approach its development, the figures are convincing. _| Norms, thie month to ds | woReckoned = 48 Prinncont ee a who was wielding his brush with If it would result in only 10 per cent of such figures, oil| Norma Jenuary ist tog ik ae, giant. t Peak ot old hea, word, discovery in this state would alone solve almost all of our| “UUs *xoere to date... 54] 5:80 is the —— 49 Having flavor 2 Kimono sash. ela vent furrent problems. NORTH DAKOTA POINTS British 51 Portion of While Jill Lo fighter. medicine. time, Alen. a 5 BISMA! ms 32 Tennis fence. 52 Poison. warm ‘battle. Jill, Oil and Diplomacy Hinata $6] 38Aljorneys, 54 Wrath, you|§o. Alan For the past 10 years, or thereabouts, the United States ; meal. 56 He ts —— is the |TOUDE has enjoyed unusually friendly relations with Mexico. Unfortu- me, | sree Ee was'the 10Without nately, one of those clouds-no-larger-than-a-man‘s-hand is ap- Aberdeen, 8. Di cid; 32.66 # | pearing on the horizon, and it takes the old, familiar shape of a|Csisers; Aire.” splotch of oil. | Ber - President Lazaro Cardenas of. Mexico is going ahead with | Doage city, Kans, his long-talked-of program for the nationalization of ofl lands. | Surane waite As a decisive step in that program, he has decreed the nation- | Hive, Ment; alization of 850,000 acres of oil lands under lease to the Standard | #2°°".,5, 5, Oil Co. of California. Kansar City, Mo, Most of the serious difficulties between the United States | ter, angelse, ce and Mexico during this generation have had oil at their base. | ¥>' :Bome of them have led the countries close to war. It is to be| ™ hoped that wise statesmanship will find a way of settling this new misunderstanding before it creates a discord that will shatter the present harmony. fy gk He z E 3 z E 3 + Hi §, | i i j gq Z ir 8 & a f 5 f < fF ; 3 F l i i E ; E i te : | Winter romances reversal in the ‘form fe (NE danpedgeeend ele : usual of courtship. | 5, An exploring party back from the jungles brings table which ‘tas the leading cooks pusied. ‘They don’ know what to make of ft.” FF : E é E i i PF 8 : BEE i I i ee ii

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