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INCREASED TERMS FOR JUDGES 10 BE PUT BEFORE PEOPLE Senate Passes Referendums for Two Proposals Recom- mended by Governor BUSINESS IN SCHOOLS UP Bills Barring Merchandising Among Students Is Saved; Capitol Levy Stays Cut Proposals to submit two constitu- tional amendments to the voters of the state at the next general election were passed by the state senate Mon- day. One would increase the terms of district judges from four to six years and the other would increase the terms of supreme court judges from six to ten years. Recommenda- tion that the change be made was contained in the inaugural message of George F. Shafer. Companion bills provide for the at- tachment of motor vehicles to pay damages in accidents in which the motor cars may be involved and for the bonding of persons who are con- victed of reckless driving or of driv- ing a motor vehicle while intoxicated. The second bill would require per- sons so convicted to post with the | for registrar of motor vehicles a bond of $2,000 to insure compliance with the law and to protect persons or prop- erty which might be injured by them in accidents. In all the senate passed 11 bills and defeated three. : Some 62 bills remain for considera- tion, of which. almost 50 are in the hands of committees. Extended com- mittee sessions are expected to finish this phase of the work, however. Merchandising in Schools up The warmest argument of Monday's session came on a divided report by the education committee, which failed to agree on a bill to prohibit the sale of magazines and other articles through the public schools. A ma- jority of the committee favored de- feat of the bill but the committee minority favored it. Defending the bill, C. W. Fine, Ben- son county, said that the system is pernicious and that many firms and orgenizations are making merchan- dising agencies of the schools. He asserted that the plan is wrong in principle and that it results in taking the time of children and teachers which might better be devoted to scheol work. In one case which came to his knowledge, he said, the agent for one firm used the school children to spread political propaganda. Alfred Steele, Stutsman county. agreed that the system is bad, but contended that the job of stopping ‘the practice should be left to the lo- cal school boards. He said the legis- Idture should stop telling local politi- cal subdivisions what to do in petty affairs of their business. * Ole Ettestad, McHenry county, said he knew of a case where the children in a school had been organized into teams to sell magazines, some of which were full of political propa- ganda. He said it is just as important to kéep the schools from being com- mercialized as to keep religion out of the public school ‘curriculum. J. E. Eastgate, Grand Forks coun- ty, contendéd thatthe problem should be left to the local school boards and to the various educational associations to solve. Politics in Scheols Alleged Dell Patterson, Renville county, said the agents never bothered the HASN'T FELT $0. FINE IN YEARS “For four years I suffered all the tortures that stomach trouble can give a man. I spent hundreds of dollars trying to get well, but I was wasting my time until I took Sargon. T fell like going from house to house TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1929 school board but went directly to the teachers, applying some “high-pow- ered” salesmanship to get the teach- er to support their plan. Teachers often are young and inexperienced and are talked into agreeing to some- thing before they know it, he said. He recounted an instance in which, he said, a young girl teacher was in- sulted by an agent seeking to use the school to distribute his goods. .P. O. Sathre, Steele county, said the schools should be free of com- mercialism as well as sectarianism and political influences. In the city in which he is a school board mem- ber, he said, high school students were used to spread sup- Porting a certain presidential candi- date at the last election. The motion to kill the bill lost, 10 to 31, and its passage is expected. Fail to Increase Capitol Levy An effort to increase the rate at which the state will accumulate a capitol building fund failed when the senate rejected an amendment which would produce $100,000 a year instead of $50,000. As passed by the house the bill carried an annual levy of one-tenth of a mill for this purpose but the senate cut this in half. Lynn Sperry, Burleigh county, sought to have the one-tenth mill levy restored. ‘William Watt, Cass county, said the state now has $600,000 in a capitol building fund and this will draw $30,- 000 annually in interest. With the Proposed Jevy the fund will reach $1,000,000 in five years, he said. Watt explained that the budget board, DON’T STARVE TO END FAT Few succeed without harm. Try the embodied in Marmola scription People have used years—millions of boxes of them. The results are seen everywhere. Marmola contains a gland element which energy. fn food into fuel and formula appears in every Box also the ressons for results. Thus you will know how the occur WHA crsesiss supply Marmola at $1 t box. Go start it now. Take four ‘tablets ily until weight comes down to normal. Do this because of the new beauty and vin which Marmola has brought manv. foz.so long. 66 THE RISMARCK ‘TRIBUN tutional bu: 1 associations to build dormitories at state educational in- stitutions. Sathre ‘said he saw no danger in it and Ettestad said that the bill would be useless if the court found it un- constitutional, anyhow. Fine led the fight against the bill, contending that it was intended to Permit things to be rushed through and that it would have the effect of blocking any effort to refer the law to the people. The ~ institutional building bill was fought bitterly by some Nonpartisan league senators. The bill carried 29 to 19, but the emergency clause was lost for lack | of a two-thirds majority. A separate roll call on the emcr- gency clause found the vote un-| changed, despite Fowler's plea that | the bill was useless without the emer- | gency clause. The vote passing the bill then was reconsidered and the measure killed by its friends. Only one voice was raised in objec- tion to the bill requiring motorists | convicted of reckless driving or of driving while intoxicated to give a bond before they would be pernalttee Hi !when it recommended that provision be made for a new capitol did not contemplate building it in five or six years but felt the need for a larg- er building fund for use in case the | Brod ramshackle capitol is de- '@ $2,000 bond would.be hard to get and it is comparatively easy to obtain @ conviction on a charge of reckless driving. A man might be convicted of such a charge following an acci- dent, even though he actually had been driving with ordinary caution, he said. Frank Hyland, Ramsey county, told of a case in his county in which a reckless youth with a battered ma- chine caused three separate acci- dents in which an old man was in- jured for life, woman and two children sent to the hospital and one man killed. The argument that the people should be permitted to pass on pro- Posed constitutional changes caused the two bills to submit proposals to increase the length of judicial terms in office to pass without difficulty. Fine contended that the terms are BITTER MOUTH Dry, bad breath, lack of Ly Naeptlherrsnret disturbed, nervous, irritable—Heart affected, ole pressure—Pain, prickling, swe! ing in legs or ankles—Weakness, pain burn- ing in stomach, sour, belching, gas; sensation of fullness—Biliousness, headaches—Yellow skin, pale, dusky, blotches, pimples—Eyes yellow, lids heavy—Feet cold, chilly, sweats --Diarrhoea, constipation--Urine yellow, dark, scanty, increased—Catarrh any part of body with mucous, pus or other discharges—Are you suffering from any of the above? Don't ‘ou think it is serious? VERY SERIOUS? ‘isit our clinic before it is too late and you are lying helpless in bed, a chronic invalid, or taker to the hospital and operated on. You will need no operation if you see us, for we . can ‘peel CURE YOU witlout the KNIFE—We cure the above troubles and other ailments without If your disease is incurable we will frankly tel! more frequent intervals would give the people an opportunity to express their wishes. He failed to obtain support sufficient to kill the bills, al- though the vote on the bill applying to the terms of district judges showed only 25 ayes, the minimum number required for passag 4 Teams Survive in Minot Tourney stroyed. He said the legislative ready has lai one of the heav- jest building programs in the history of the state and that it could not do everything at once. Patterson said the matter had been thoroughly discussed by the appro- priation committee, whith was unanimous in reducing the levy be- cause of more pressing obligations. Kill Bill An apparently innocent bill to per- mit the supreme court to pass on the constitutionality of bills before they become effective experienced a strange career. It was passed but was recalled by its friends and killed because the emergency clause, which would make it effective at oncc, failed to carry, A. W. Fowler, Cass county, ex- plained that the aim of the bill was to permit the supreme court to pass on the constitutionality of the law Permitting the organization of in: Martin, Ryder and Anamoose were victoricus in the first round of play in the tenth district independent bas- ketball tournament under way today. Minot climinatcd Velva 39 to 20. Martin beat Sawyer 31 to 10, Ryder defeated Butte 37 to 21 and Anamoose eliminated Balfow operations. Tel. 332 ' 402 Main Ave. you Wednesday Specials 80. 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