The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 19, 1930, Page 6

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an TOOFFER _1V. A. CONVENTION OLD MILL PROPOSAL ‘Wants Plank in Platform for Commission to Operate It; Also Oleo and Gas Tax THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1930 Bertha Palmer, state superintendent | 0f public instruction. Announcement was made here recently that she will opposed in the convention by Mrs. Eliza Boylan of Killdeer, a former superintendent of schools in Dunn county. Candidates for this office run on the no-party ballot but Miss Palmer received the Independent ment two years ago and will be candidate again this year. She new {ts serving her second term. |Forcibly Feed Jailed |Woman Refusing Food! Paris, Mar. 19. aA nineteen-day | jailed woman financier, ended against | here Monday. GOVERNMENT SURVEY, T00} | Wiil Propose Fiscal Survey of; Village, Township and County Units At least fqur planks will be offered to the I. V. A. convention at Grand Forks with the backing of the Shafer administration, according to infor- tation current in political circles here. They are, in order, a sales tax on oleomargarine, as asked by the state's dairy industry; approval of the four- cent gasoline tax to replace the three-cent tax now effective; proposal for a governmental survey commis- sion to investigate the workings of all units of government, from township to state; and a commission to operate the state mill and elevator. Of the four suggested planks all but the gasoline tax proposal were defeat- ed at the 1929 legislative session. At that time, however, the sales tax on oleomargarine did not have the par- tisan support of any political faction. ‘The mill commission and governmen- tal survey commission measures were beaten in the senate, controlled by the Nonpartisans. Expects Endorsement Regarding tax on butter substitutes and the gasoline tax, the governor al- ready has taken a strong stand and it is no secret that he expects the Inde- pendent convention to endorse them in its platform. The other two ideas \hunger strike by Marthe Hanau, her will today when officials at the | Cochin hospital carried cut a forcible feeding operation. Despite her weakness, Madame Hanau objecter strenuously and it jrequired eight attendants to place a jtube in her throat. Her lawyer said they had not been advised of the decision of the officials to resort to forcible feeding and reg- istered an immediate protest with the legal authorities. Bank of Robbinsdale Is Newcomer in Chain Minneapolis, Mar. 19.—)—Another | ° bank was added to the First Bank Stock corporation's membership to- day with announcement by P. J. Lee- man, vice president and general man- ager, that the Security State Bank of Robbinsdale had affiliated with the| company. The Security is the 98th) unit in the membership. Capt. W. H.! Fawcett, vice president of the Secur-| ity, will retire and J. W. Roche. cash- jer, becomes vice president and cashier. Blonde Gunwoman Is Recalled to Testify *’ ‘New Castle, Pa. 1 Mar. 19—(?)—| Irene Schroeder, 21 year old former | Wheeling, W. Va., waitress, who took : up crime for a livelihood, today was recalled to the witness stand for further state cross-examination re- were endorsed in his message to the legislature in 1929 and the governor has not seen any reason to change his mind since that time, according] Her fight against being sent to the! ffenry Lc to the best available information. The job of the governmental survey | Strength from her statement that she) , commission, as outlined by the gov- ernor early last year, would be to in- vestigate the workings of various units of government, particularly as regards their finances. Only by first getting all of the available facts can any comprehensive program of tax reduction be outlined, the governor aid at that time. The survey would include township, county, village, city, school and drainage district and county organizations as well as the state situation, the governor said at that time, since it is in the local tax- ‘ing districts that most of the public money is spent. After a competent commission has investigated current practices and the law governing them, the governor is known to believe, it would be in better position to advise the legislature as to possible ways of cutting taxes. Reduction of property taxes is known to be one of the prin- cipal aims of the executive. He has made no secret that he is in favor of other taxes, such as that on gasoline, garding the slaying last Dec. 27 of a state highway patrolman near New Castle, | electric chair drew its greatest did not know if the bullet she fired had hit Corporal Brady Paul. Al- ready she had admitted from the stand that she participated in the holdup of a Butler, Pa.. chain store, that December day. ted. too, she fired at Paul when he: and two men from the scene of the holdup. She has admit-, ‘ halted the automobile bearing her t SYKESTON FARMER ALFALFA CHAMPION Sei {John Litke Wins First Place in; Event During Wells County Alfalfa Day (Tribune Special Service) | Fessenden, N. D., Mar. 19.—John Litke, Sykeston, won first place in the alfalfa exhibits at the third annual Wells county Alfalfa Day condifcted Forty-seven farmers exhibited in the alfalfa event. Almost 200 entered | specimens in the various grain and | seed contests, according to Edward W. Vancura, county agriculural agent who was in general charge of the af- fair. The event was sored by the Fessenden Lions c! More than 000 visitors were here for the pro- ‘am. A list of prize winners follows: Alfaita 1, John Litke, Anderson ‘ “ttce| Whents Albert Meyer, lindworth, Fes- uster, Bremen; 3, hdum senden; Ch Tk Meriain thay Marqu’ senden: njulson, Bowdon. Ibert Meyer, 1, 1, Herbert +. CG. Selbold, 1 tw. w Ca , Bremen, | six thousand young cherry trees! have been sent to the Australian na- tional botanic gardens as a gift by Prince Takamatsu of Japan. Introduction of The New Konjola Medicine Hailed 1 Many People Call at the Hall Drug Store Before Scheduled Date: Konjola Man Arrives Tomorrow Immediately following yesterday's announcement that the new, advanc- ed medicine, Konjola, was to be in- troduced in Bismarck many local peo- ple were eagerly seeking this medi- cine and telling of reports about it, THE KONJOLA MAN n: 2,| which they had received from rela- tives and friends at Chicago and Philadelphia and other large cities. Many who called at the Hall Drug Store, Third and Broadway, this city »,| Stated they already knew about this Price Aug. Eatren Faecrasn dium-late —~ Sy Keston W senden; 3, Albert | Meyer, man, Harvey; Fessenden. Weigelt, Fessenden; ' i Mehihouse, essend senden; August lindworth, Fes- enden c Lit ykeston; 3, medicine and some had secured it through acquaintances in other cities. The extentto which this Konjol has arouscs {interest proves very cli ly that health troubles, due to dis- ordered liver, stomach, kidneys and bowels are so common that thousands are suffering daily. The forms of misery described by a great many sufferers interviewed yesterday, were as follows: STOMACH: Indigestion, gas and ‘| bloating, feeling like a rock in the ‘| stomach, which in reality is a mass to reduce the impost on property. It is this idea which is expected to be Presented to the I. V. A. convention. Commission Previously Beaten Rumor current in capitol circles is that the governor will recommend en- dorsement of a commission to operate the mill and elevator over the opposi- tion of some of his close advisers. ‘These are known to feel that a record was made by the mill in 1929 under Shafer's management and that this is a political asset which should not be weakened by any suggestion that sit be turned over to a commission. The governor is reported to have answered this argument with the \.same ones presented to the legislature ‘in 1929. These were that the man- } agement of a mill, located more than 200 miles from the state capital, | should be no part of a governor's du- ties and that a commission would in- {sure a more stable policy of manage- ment than could be expected if the job of mill manager continues to rest _ Many people, two hours after eat- ing, suffer indigestion as they call it. It is usually excess acid. Correct it with an alkali. The best way, the quick, harmless and efficient way, is | Phillips’ Milk of Magnesia. It has remained for 50 years the standard with physicians. One spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in stomach acids, and at once. ' The symptoms disappear in five min- utes, ‘You will never use crude methods And you will never suffer from ex- cess acid when you prove out this easy relief. Please do that—for your own sake—now. Be sure to get the genuine Phillips’ ‘with the governor, who must run for election every two years. The plan} Proposed at the last session was to’ ‘create a commission of three persons. Whatever talking is done for the ) Shafer administration at the conven- ,tion will be done by the governor ‘himself. He will have no Spokesman {but will himself be present as will range of the other Independents hold- jdng state offices. Other Candidacies All of the latter are candidates for {the convention endorsement and, so far as is known here, there will be little opposition. It is expected in {Some circles that the name of John | Husby, former dairy commissioner, ‘will be offered as an opponent for J. A. Kitchen for the endorsement as commissioner of agticulture and la- Husby formerly worked under ‘Kitchen, but resigned after a dis- agreement in 1928. He has been ac- tive in the movement to organize all cooperative creameries through- jout the state and now operates a of undigested food, dyspepsia, intense pains in stomach and chest, wild heart palpitation, feeling like fire from the throat to the pit of the sto- mach, awful headaches, loss of weight, tissue and strength, sour | stomach, cramps, spitting up of bits 1% half-digested food and a hot, sour liquid. LIVER: Attacks of biliousness, sick | headaches that may last for days, constipation, dizzy spells, yellowish complexion. KIDNEYS: Sharp pains over kid- neys, a dull, achy feeling across the ; Phillips since 1875, when you know this better method. ' | back, stiffness in the back and lower | limbs, especially in mornings just aft- \er arising, frequent getting up through the night, dizziness, spots before the i | Milk of Magnesia prescribed by physi- | cians for 50 years in correcting excess | acids. 25c and 50c a bottle—any drugstore. ilk of Magnesia” has been the U. S. Registered Trade Mark of The Charles H. Phillips Chemical Com- | pany and its predecessors Charles H. OO eee ! CREAMY WHITE TEETH | | and a Sweet Breath ' wv —————_- 2 Try Phillips’ Dental Magnesia Toothpaste just once and see for yourself how white your teeth become. Write for a free 10-day tube. Ad- dress The Phillips Co., 117 Hudson St. , New York, N. Y.—Adv. i 8, swelling of ankles, feet and low- er limbs, puffs or dark circles beneath | the eyes, lack of vitality. BOWELS; ; Painful, heavy bloated feeling in the lower stomach, head- | aches, worn-out feeling, sleeplessness. | Many other forms of suffering re- | quently arise from the weakened con- dition of the system that results from | Sluggish, disordered stomach, _ liver, | kidneys and bowels. For instance, | there may be rheumatic or neuritis | trouble, with its agonizing aches and Pains over the body. The above forms of suffering yield readily to the work of Konjola, and this medical preparation has so com- pletely ended the health troubles of so many thousands, wherever intro- duced, that it is declared to be what countless sufferers in this section have always needed. The Konjola Man, direct from un- usual successes in the great cities of America will be at the Hall Drug Store, Third and Broadway, Bismarck, at 9 o'clock tomorrow (Thursday) morning. He will personally meet the public and explain this edicine as well as pass out literature ind free samples.—Adv. ‘ Cook by Wire The Modern Maid Automatic Electric Let us tell you how Practical Electric Cookery really is, especially with our low cooking. rate. North Dakota Power & Light Co. CONSTIPATION RELIEVED ‘This Posely Vegetable Pill will move the bowels ities aay Tan eae fects. Sick Headiches fadigest Biliousness jexion siekiy seieven ed Chiticencnt ae agar costed pile. They ate fi sugar coat a calomel and poi: nous d Laxative BROMO. QUININE Tablets ponies Since 1889 tne 's No. 7 at $7.00—offering the famous range of seven readily identified Pal tee one re ecieotidcally adapted to basic handwriting characteri Ninety-seven per cent of all pen users will find among them the one point exactly suited to their hands. Try them all and find your: ‘Waterman's Ne. 5 at $5.00— Five points for choice—tauging from One to stab. An unusually good pen for a moderate price—built to meet ene standard of fine craftsmanship. Certainly today . . it's Waterman’s Patrician that has the ‘call Can you imagine a tray of exquisitely modelled pens set before you choose from? Each seemingly love- lier and more colorful than the next: Emerald, deep Turquoise, Jet, varie- © gated Nacre or Onyx. Then, to pick up one and see how perfectly it balances in your hand—how easily it pushes across the page—how smooth- ly the ink flows, And then to realize that this beautiful new Patrician is, after all, a Waterman’s—handcrafted with all that meticulous care that goes into the making of a fine watch. A pen that onlyyears and years ofexperience could possibly have achieved... and one that, will last you for years and years. Boxed at $10.00. Mechanical pencil to match, $5.00. Good dealers everywhere carry wide stocks of Waterman's famous fountain pens, mechanical pencils, and Waterman's inks which make exy fountain pen write better. 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Streitmatter, Gleu- en

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