The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 20, 1929, Page 6

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> pere Ee i f ' i | | 4 F| é PRESIDENT HOOVER REQUESTED TOHAVE HYDE EXPLAIN PLAN Federal Warehouse Act Change and Canned Farm Prod- ucts Standards Talked | | 20.—()—Presi- | dent Hoover was requested today by Representative Dickinson, Republi- can, Iowa, to have Secretary Hyde ar pear before the house agricultur: committee and explain the president's | views on farm relief. i Representatives Mapes and Ketch-| am, both Michigan i | Washington. M: Republicans, | called upon the president to urge that | changes in the federal warehouse act and the establishment of a minimum standard for canned farm products; be included in a general farm aid| program. Measures to accomplish | these changes were passed by the! house at the last session, but failed of passage in the senate. | The warehouse proposal would re- | Move federal storage establishments from state interference. They pointed | out that in some states it was pos- sible to remove products from the warehouses after they once had be lodged there, thus weakening the loan | y values all along the line. Under the present regulations ap- plied to canned products, they said there was no minimum standard and that overripe vegetables or those of secondary character command the same price as those of best quality. Mr. Dickinson said that in view of the fact that the chief executive's ideas would not reach congress nor- mally until his message is read at the outset of the special session, it would te extremely helpful if the commit- tee in its deliberations before that time could have some specific knowl- edge of Mr. Hoover's views. The president, while not intending to dictate the terms of the farm re- lief measure to be considered at the ccming session, is ready at any time to discuss the agricultural situation with interested. members of the sen- ate and house, but he has indicated that there will be no public explana- tion of his views until his message to congress is read. School Has Opened in Gibbs Township After being in vacation during the winter months, the consolidated school in Gibbs township is again in session, according to an announce- ment made at the office of the coun- ty superintendent of schools. School work is dispensed with dur- | ing the winter because of the poor condition of the roads. The term ex- tends from spring to fall rather than from fall to spring. Teachers of the school are Mrs. Es- ther Sehmitz and Mrs. Ruth Burbage. They were visitors in Bismarck yes- Schools Have Week’s Vacation for Easter More than “2,000 pupils in Bis- march’s schools will have a week's Easter vacation beginning next Mon- day, according to announcements recently. All city schools, including Richholt, Roosevelt, Wachter, Will, William Moore, and the high school, will be in vacation from Friday un- °1, by H. O. Saxvik, super- of city schools. Mandan C. of C. Heads Reelected; Tax Laws of State Held Drawbacks The Mandan Chamber of Commerce has reelected L, F. Lyman as presi- dent and A. W. Furness as secretary. Dr. G. H. Spielman and E. E. Salzman were clected first and second vice presidents. The matter of amending the tax laws so as to induce capital to invest in industrial enterprises in the state was brought up and urged by John F. Sullivan. He instanced the Fair- mount creamery and sugar refineries as locating on the edge of the state but refusing to come in with their payrolls, because of the income tax, | the compensation and other forms of levies on capital. He called atten- tion to the advantages to the farmer in creating markets at home for his produce. Good roads and expansion of Man- dan’s park system were other topics | considered at the meeting. BATHING SUIT PARTY FIGURES IN DIVORCE Chicago, March 20.—(.?)}—Whether a bathing suit party in an apart- ment should be classified as disor- conduct or merely a capricious Sarah W. Brown Deynzer, 64, against her young husband, Jack Deynzer, 34. The woman, whose fortune is said to be near $3,000,000, filed suit against Deynzer, he said, because he ridiculed her plans to purchase a custom built $11,000 limousine to be painted a “Persian pink and have gold door knobs.” Among other things, Mrs. Deynzer accused her young mate of having disorderly parties in their apartment, among them being the bathing suit affair. Edwin Platt, friend of Deyn- zer’: ho attended the party in ques- tion, said it was no such thing as dis- orderly. While he admitted the young women might have gambled a bit, it amounted to nothing more than a display of their frivolous nature which he said all girls have nothing else but. Platt said the party merely dropped in on their way to a beach and re- turned later for some sandwiches. The suit is still on trial. Phyllis Haver to Quit Cinema for Marriage Hollywood, Calif., March 20.—(#)— ; Phyllis Haver, actress, has announced that her last motion picture will be completed in April, after which she jill marry William Seaman, New York business man, and retire to pri- vate life. Miss Haver began her sereen career as a bathing beauty. Mississippi Valley Flood Fears Abate Memphis, Tenn., March 20—(7)— Reports of falling stages and clear weather along upper tributaries and careful watching of the levee system by government engineers today brought added strength to the belief of the lower Mississippi valley that present high water will not consti- tute a flood of serious proportions. Ee _ = No More Gas in Stomach and Bowels If you wish to be permanently re- lieved of gas in stomach and bowels, take Baalmann's Gas Tablets, which and |#re prepared especially for stomach gas and all the bad effects resulting from gas pressure. ‘That empty, gnawing feeling at the pit of the stomach will dissppear; ---BUROPE’S ABLEST GENERAL SINCE NAPOLEON |WHITE MIGHT SEEK AUTO RECORD AGAIN Philadelphia, March 20.—(?)—J. M. White, owner of the Triplex in which Lee Bible was killed while attempt- ing to regain the world’s automobile | peed record at Daytona Beach last | week, said today that he might try again to recover the honor for the United States. “I may wait a year to see if some- jone else will try it.” he said, “and | then if nobody has built a car to go after the record, I may.” White said he was of the opinion that the accident was due to the | wheels of the car giving way under | the terrific speed. He said he wi told that an expert eye witness the car quiver and slow up 250 yards from the finish of the measured mile which was covered at the rate of 202 | miles an hour. | White had only words of praise for | Bible's ability as a driver. “I wish | o say.” he declared, “that Bible was jot a last resort as a driver, but was | i i ' ! rls has become‘ a chosen driver, capable and fear- | jinvolved ‘n the divorce suit of Mrs. | less.” Charles Traub, cameraman, also was killed when the car crashed. Col. Stimson Arrives To Succeed Kellogg 1—A recent photo of Marshal Foch. taken at an important military ! conference; 2—Foch as a schoolboy of 12 in Southern France; 3—Foch and Genera! Pershing on former's visit to New York; 4—Foch, Pershing and Howard W. Savage (center), American Legion commander, in Legion parade in Paris; 5—Foch and Pershing when latter visited his chateau in Brittany, Pershing holding Foch’s little granddaughter; 6—Mayor Hylan greeting Foch on latter's triumphal visit to New York; 7—Foch (speaking) at memorial services for American dead at Suresnes cemetery, near Paris; 8—Foch at an Allied conference in 1921. at quarantine by a large delegation | pointments to the cadet corps officers including prominent federal, state|staff at the University of North Da- and municipal officials as well as higit |, "i y Prof. Earle H. Prall, head of the mu-/is soothed; relief is just a matter of | army and navy officers. kota were completed today with an i Hoover Press Talk Broadcast Planned New York, March 21.—(?)—The Na- | lieutenant cadet colonels chosen, andjday morning that Mrs. Prail was in|Ccrueler pangs of colic, or constipa- tional Broadcasting company and the | will have charge of the first and sec-,a serious condition, and left immedi-| tion, or diarrhea; effective, too, for Columbia Broadcasting system an-/|ond battalions. ‘ately but she died before he reached| Older children. Twenty-five million nounced today that their nation-wide networks would broadcast the ad-|ling, Jamestown, and Frank Novotny, dress of President Hoover at the an- | Lidgerwood. luncheon of the i Press here April 22. More than 100jin the unit are: stations will be in the hookups. The|Bismarck; John K. Walsh, Makott; |leaves two children, Jeanne and Gor- broadcasting is expected to start at |John Stewart, Grand Forks; Webster|don Grant, born to her by a prior 1 p.m., eastern standard time. ESDAY, MARCH 20, 1929 |Crippled Children’s | Meet Picks Toronto, Minneapolis, March 20.—(#)—The | eighth annual of the Inter- national Society for Crippled Chil- dren, which opened in the Curtis ho- tel, here, Monday, ended today, f lowing short reports from 29 state s0- cieties. Next year’s convention will be held in Toronto, Canada. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _=see all the:work if saves you/ ° Whe Oh, how white? me Harvey; Willis Shepard, Bismarck; and Fred Lukins, Williston. Their n Your Children Cry ing the staff personnel arc 14 first for It {eutenants and 32 second I:cutenants. ‘Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But | Mrs. Gladys P. rall, you can be prepared. Then you can Grand Forks, N. D, March 20—Ap-/ Mandan Woman, Dead |2° whet sny experienced nurse wouls siangh a you to do—give a few drops of plain Mrs. Gladys Prall, aged 39, wife Of | Castoria. No sooner done than Baby announcement naming two lieutenant |sic department of the Mandan public; moments. Yet you have eased your | ‘And baby’s things. cadet colonels; two majors; six CaP-| schools, died at noon Monday at Min. [child without use of a single doubt- aby coast tains; 14 first lieutenants; and 32) lis followi several: montis ful drug; Castoria is vegetable. So second lieutenants. Se ee ee it’s safe to use as often as an infant Gordon Carpenter, Grand Forks, | illness. has any little pain you cannot pat and Ehrling Fugelso, Minot, were the! Mr. Prall was advised by wire Mon-| away. And it’s always ready for the bottles were bought last year—Adv. FEM AAL. CASTORIA Majors named were Richard Nicr- Minneapolis. Deceased was taken ill three |months ago. She had gone to Min- Having charge of the six companies | neapolis for treatment. William Hillman,| Besides her husband, Mrs. Prall Associated Pullen, Donnybrook; Aloys Wartner, | marriage. San Francisco, March 20.—(#)— Colonel Henry L. Stimson, who re- turned as governor general of the! Philippines to become secretary of state in President Hoover's cabinet, arrived here today aboard the Dollar liner President Pierce. He was met Western Child Amazes Mother Constipation is one of the worst health-ruiners for children. Waste matter held too long in their little stomachs and bowels, forms poisons which pollute their blood, cause head- aches, bad breath, coated tongue, in- digestion; make them bilious, weak, sallow, fretful and underweight. At the first sign of constipation, give your child a little California Fig Syrup. Children love its rich, fruity flavor. It’s purely vegetable, a gentle but certain laxatiye, and it gives tone and strength to the stomach and bowels so they continue tq act nor- wally, of their own accord. 74 just take the wheel + + then you'll know why Buick is winning more than twice as many buyers as any other car priced above $1200! Get behind the wheel an et the facts! Just drive Sweetens and disinfects ~ Stains and: Odors vanish : Hi Is there a meticulous woman anywhere who'd want to be With more than 100,000 enthusiastic owners al- ready driving this latest Buick—with new thousands getting behind the wheel, getting the facts and enter- gineerin; r ran, from the bril- Fog their orders day aftee dayvit couse be plain to lisnt Buick Valverio-Head engine, ging from the without it? every prospective motor car ick ‘pro- automobile engine of its size in the world, to the What Is IT? vides something heretofore unknown to motor car famous Buick ses ich all vital parts Tomorrow’s paper tells the manufacture! 2 fully protected by dirt-proof, dust-proof, ight on complete story , ’ Aad that “something” is not only s i bosange g Watch For It. new measure of style, beauty, luxury and comfort but a new sta of motoring—an entirely new order of ce—with 3 thrill vastly Stikerion ned psp gs“ cars! Su; ie , superior flexibility, superior hill- Se IR Seae ad pomes, selon, emcee Come, dgive a Buick! Learn the whole wonderful story of its new order of performance. Then you'll keaow why Buick is winning morethantwiceas many buyers as any other. automobile priced above $1200! Buick Motor Company, Flint,‘ Michigan Disistes of Mater Corporation SERIES 116 SERIES 121 We es 129 " Sedans .- - -$1220t0 $1320 Sedans - - -$1450t0 $1520 Sedans - + -$1875 to $2145 ’ Coupes -.- -$1195 to $1250 Coupes - - - $1395 to $1450 2-9 © $1865 to $1875 Sport Car - - $1225 Sport Car - - $1325 ae Cats +.» $1525 to $1550 ’ ‘These prices £. 0. b. Buick Factory, special equipment extre. Convenient terms can be arranged o@ ©

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