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/ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1980 TOMORROW THE 13th IS THE LUCKY DAY | Some Woman Will be the Proud Owner of This Beautiful Hot- point Range A Big Time for Every- one at the Auditorium North Dakota GOVERNOR PUTS 0. K. ON DRIVE 10 STOP DAIRYING BY STATE: Says He Is in Sympathy With Lions Club Protest Against Sales by Commonwealth A study of the use of oleomargarine and other butter substitutes in state institutions is under way, with a view toward theiy elimination, Governor Shafer said today. Commenting on the action of the Bismarck Lions club protesting against the sale of dairy products by the state and use of butter substitutes in state institutions, Governor Shafer said his administration is in sympathy with this action He declared a study of the situa- tion had been undertaken some time ago in the hopes that substitutes could ‘be eliminated from use in state in- stitutions, without causing any deficit in the operation expenses. In the case of the state peniten- tiary, the governor said, use of butter substitutes has been found necessary to keep*within the budget allowed by the legislature. Should the legislature appropriate sufficient money to buy equipment to handle sufplus dairy | products, he believed the prison would not have to sell its surplus. This would also lead to an elimination of substitutes in feeding prisoners The local Lions club at their meet- { ing Monday moved to abolish com- petition of state institution dairies with legitimate dairymen. Protests were voiced against the system at the state prison where surplus milk and cream is sold, and oleomargarine pur- chased. MINNESOTA GIRL KILLED | Fergus Falls, Minn., Aug. 12.—(?)— | Margaret Field, 23 years old, daugh- ter of N. F. Field, attorney here, was | killed in an automobile accident ten | miles east of here Monday night. Her | - car ran too close to the edge of the/ road in meeting another car and | turned over. Her skull was fractured. | She was a graduate of Carleton college | and well known as a musician. | NO CARROLL INDICTMENT | New York, Aug. 12.—()—Earl Car- | roll and eight members of the cast of his ‘Vanities’ were freed today of charges of presenting an immoral per- formance when a grand jury refused to return an indictment against them. | She’s Getting Thinner Every Day Her Fat Is Melting . Fast Away | Here's the recipe that banishes fat and brings into blossom all the natu- ral attractiveness that every woman possesses. Every morning take one half tea- spoon of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water before breakfast. Cut out excessive eating—exercise regularly. Be sure and do this every morning for “It’s the little daily dose that takes off the fat.” Don't miss a morning. The Kruschen habit means that every particle of poisonous waste matter and harmful acids and gases are expelled from the system, At the same time the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels are toned up and the pure, fresh blood containing na- ture’s six life-giving salts is carried to every organ, gland, nerve and fibre of the body and this is followed by “that Kruschen feeling” of energetic health and activitiy that is reflected in bright eyes, clear skin, cheerful vi- vacity and charming figure. Get an 85c bottle of Kruschen Salts a% Finney’s Drug Store, Service Drug | Co., or any drug store (lasts 4 weeks) with the distinct under-tanding that you must be satisfied with results or @poney back. i One Montana we~~* lost 19 pounds of fat in 4 wer" iecls better than, he has for yc..---Acv. vi | It's @ beautiful world, as these pictures prove! And no corner of judge by these fairest flowers of Europe, shown here as they arrived in Havana, Cubi tional beauty pageant at Galveston, Tex. mania,” Mariane P. Mirica; “Miss France,” Madeline Mourgues, and “Miss Turkey,” Feriha Tevfik. “Miss Hungary,” Georgette Gero; “Miss Bucharest,” Li lianne M. Andreescu; and “Miss Russia,” Nadia de Kosarin. | YOUNG NEW ENGLAND MAN DIES IN MISHAP Louis Lancaster, War Veteran, Killed When Automobile Is Hit by Truck (Tribune Special Service’ New England, N. D., Aug. 12—The body of Louis Lancaster, 31, killed in an automobile accident near here last night, will be sent to his home at Rush Springs, Oklahoma, Thomas Gallup, commander of the local American Legion post, said today. Lancaster, a repairman fcr the Ordway and Halvorson hardware and machinery firm at Bucyrus, was on his way to New England with Christ Wolf, at whose farm he had been working. As they came over a hill they met a truck, driven by one of Wolf's 14 sons. The truck was on the wrong Above, left to right, are “Miss side of the road and Mr. Wolf swung his car to the left, the truck striking was riding. Lancaster‘ was: killed but Wolf was not seriously injured. Cards in his pocket identified Lan- caster as a mémber of the American Legion post at Rush Springs, Okla- ‘homa, and the American Legion there | Was notified. This morning word was received that Lancaster's mother, ‘Mrs. Carrie Lancaster, lives there, to- {gether with instructions to send the body to Oklahoma for burial. NEW SERVICE STATION McClusky, N. D., Aug. 12.—The White Eagle service station erected ere last spring was opened for the st_ time on Monday, with J. J. Froehlich in charge. It is the proper- ty of E. H. Brant, Harvey. INJURIES ARE FATAL New England, N. D., Aug. 12—(7)— Louis Lancaster, 31, of Wakita, Okla., employe of the International Har- Vester company with headquarters at Bucyrus, died from injuries sufferea when his car was struck by a truck south of here. Demands Education as Proper Test For Entrance Into Political Life University, Va., Aug. 12—()—Will Durant, New York author, told the Virginia institute of public affairs to- day there was no way out of the domination of political life in the United States by men of third-rate ability, except to make education a qualification for public office. In his address on “is democracy a failure?” Mr, Durant asserted the final “breakdown of democracy ap- Peared in the increasing insecurity of life in our cities, where political ma- chines were in league with the world of crime and in the inability of con- gress to face the complex economic Problems confronting it every day.” “I should like to see in all our great universities, schools of public admin- istration in which students would be Prepared as specifically and technical- ly for the tasks of government as they are now prepared for medicine, for engineering and law; and no one should be eligible to municipal office unless he had received such. training,” he said. | Besides higher educational train- ing, the speaker proposed a gradua- tion of public office, giving as an ex- [or of a first class city, should first be mayor of a second class city, and the mayor of a second class city, should first be a mayor of a third class city. Education, he said, was his sugges- tion for salvaging democracy. Under Compete in U.S. : the globe has a corner on pulchritude, to it on the side on which Lancaster | ; ample, the suggestion, that the may-{ ~ TOBANK RAID TALE Victims of Bandits Tell of Ad- venture; Golf Champs Are Luncheon Guests The Kiwanis club had as guests at today’s luncheon Paul Cook, men’s, and Nadine O'Leary, women’s golf champion of North Dakota. The two were introd@&ced and, in response to a plea that Cook tell how it was done, he drafted Alfred Zuger, one of the gallery in the deciding game, to tell the story. The talk of the day.was by Claude Turner, warden at the state prison. The chairman of the day, Charles Foster, led up to this feature by call- ing on Al Brink and J. P. Wagner to give their impressions of being held up by five bank bandits. This the two victims of the Dako- ta National robbery did in an enter- taining and interesting way. Warden Turner then was asked to tell what | happens to bank bandits when they are caught. In response, the warden | gave a review of the history of the state prison and of the equipment, | purposes and methods of administra- tion, as he did at last Wednesday's Rotary luncheon. Don Kenyon, of Syracuse, N. Y.,/ en route to the interna- | Was a guest of the club. Germany,” Carla Boehl; “Miss Ri Belo’ | Stork Beats Auto In Dickinson Race || — (Tribune Special Service New England, N. D., Aug. 12.—Mod- , ern automobiles may be speedy but) the old-fashioned stork beats them, once in a while. | James Fulton, proprietor of the gen- | eral store at Amidon, left his home| for Dickinson last night. He was ac- companied by his wife and they were in_a hurry. Arriving here, Fulton had trouble; with his car and immediateiy ar-, ranged with a friend to help him con- | tinue the journey. Instead, however, Mrs, Fulton was | rushed to the local hotel where the tr i became the parents of a baby | girl. Miss Mary Bowler, clerk at the! hotel, was the master of ceremonies | for the event since the local physician ‘was out of the city. | PRISONERS NOW GOLF Concord, N. H., Aug. 12.—(4:—Over | ;the wall is out, but in this case not’ \for the player. Inmates of the statc | | prison have taken to golf and the jail |yard’s a golf co\@se now. But with! jonly two clubs on hand they have broadcast an appeal for more. Oh, Boy! What Joy | LIFT CORNS, RIGHT OUT | The English Way Right from England comes the new, | better, joyful way to take out corns— | root\ and all. H baking. | his plan, he continued, every adult| allouses go also and you can rub, ; would vote, but no one could vote for | off that hard skin on heels and toes: an unqualified candidate; “democracy | with your hand—the magic treatment. | would be made fool proof.” | Ask Finney's’ Drug Store or any There is no way, short of dictator- | leading druggist for a package of | Ship, he said, to escape from the | Radox—put 2 tablespoonfuls in a gai- {clutch of the political machines, ex- | lon of hot water—do this for 3 or 4 First McClusky Wheat Is Grading as No. 2 McClusky, N. D., Aug. 12.—Fields of Marquis hard spring wheat in“dis- tricts south and southeast of Mc- Clusky are yielding from 8% to 10 bushels an acre. New wheat has been brought to lo- cal elevators during the week, one firm reporting a full carload up to Wednesday. Wheat marketed to date has all been No. 2 grade, on the aver- age 57 pounds to the bushel. No No. 1 has been received. The new Mar- quis has good color but kernels are shrunken. It is believed\that crop conditions, in so far as wheat is concerned, will be similar to those of last year, in that all wheat from south of town graded below No. 1, while virtually all of that from the territory north of town graded No. 1. The grain brought to McClusky elevators this week was threshed by both combines and threshers, hence the weight of the grain may be an ac- curate indication of the weights of the remainder to be threshed. Carl J. and Fred Wahl, Andrew Beck and John Semler were among the first to thresh wheat this year. There has been. some movement of last year's wheat surplus during the past two weeks. Several farmers who have been holding wheat have sold in order to get ready money for their Present harvest needs. Laws in eleven states prohibit mar- riage between Mongolians and white persons. Distributed by 2 GAMBLE-ROBINSON CO. Bismarck, North Dakota Back of the Bread =| Back of the Factory | Back of the WONDER LOAF and the PAN- DANDY BREAD is a plant equipped with every successfully demonstrated improvement for the production of the purest, most wholesome and best tasting bread possible to modern, sanitary Back of the WONDER and PAN-DANDY fac- tory stand years of successful, progressive experi- ence in baking with a reputation we are deter- “mined to maintain. Ask for these loaves by name and your dealer will see that you get them. cept education. The speaker opened his address by asserting that democracy has given | nights in succession—then lift out the | corns. «This joyful exhilarating foot bath neither government by the people, | is simply great—you'll enjoy every } nor government by the best, and that | minute of it and your burning, sore, the path of office lay now not in hon- | tired, aching feet. will feel better than est_service to the people, but in dis-| they have for years—ask for Radox | honest service to the machine. jand foot comfort will be yours.—Ady. Western Baking Company Don’t Forget FREE Donuts and Lemonade . and many other Prizes 4 4 4 4 € < 4 4 ¢ 4 » < é 4 < 4 < € < Bring Your Pencils Power & Light Co. [__ Burope’s Fairest to Competeinu.s. _||KIWANISLISTEN 2:30 - 7 and 9 p. m. Last Times Tonight Tuesday | CAPITOL THEATRE “The Party Girl” She's everybody's pal—a good- looking, fast-stepping, warm- hearted jazz baby with a ravish- ing smile, a Ziegfeld figure and @ million dollars worth of “It” ... She's the Party Girl and e's Hot Stuff! It’s a big night every night for her. Life for Sweetie is just one party after another—one visiting buyer after another—one drink, one story, one embrace after another ... and an endless succession of mornings after the nights before. . . . She knows more out-of-town buyers than most manufacturers. For mal de mer Seasickness has no terror for most people who travel with a bottle of our malted milk tablets. They satisfy hunger without overloading the stomach. Also try them for relief from fatigue, throat irritations and sleeplessness. A lunch that travels with you. At the best drugstores. HORLICK’S RACINE, WISCONSIN Richholt’s Cash and Carry [==] Grocery THE ORIGINAL CASH AND CARRY STORE Harvest Day Specials BREAD, 114 Ib. loaf ................10¢ SUGAR, Pure Cane, 10 lbs ..........59¢ BRICK CHEESE, per Ib. ............24e