The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 14, 1931, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14, 1981 U8. PRICES ABOVE FOREIGN QUOTATIONS No European Country Has Found Situation Practicable for Similar Practice HAVE SURPLUS TROUBLES Six Conferences Have Been Held on Continent; Take Up Tariff Questions By FREDERIC C. HAS Washington, D. C., Jan. 14— Western farmers have not been dis- tressed by low wheat prices nor con- gress perplexed with relief plans be- cause of a purely American overpro- duction of the great grain staple. Other surplus-wheat-producing coun- tries have been embarrassed by too large supplies with a consequent dif- ficulty in finding foreign outlets. The situation in Europe, especially in southeastern Europe, has been so acute that a series of conferences have been held on ways and means of handling the surplus. What has been accomplished along this line go far has been characterized as the first move in the general spirit of the scheme for a United States of Europe which has been so enthusiastically fathered by M. Aristide Briand, for- mer premier of France. In the United States, the Federal Farm board was created as an emer- gency measure for aiding in the situ- ation. Because in some respects the American wheat situation is more self contained, direct financial sup- Port could be given the price of wheat. Through the expenditure of many millions of dollars effective support has been given and the American wheat price has been kept above world levels. Has Not Been Practical It has not been practicable for any wheat-surplus country of Europe to do this. No such country now has the fi- nancial resources to enable it to sup- port its wheat market on the same scale as that adopted in this country by the Federal Farm board. Moreover, on this side of the water there is a geographical isolation, except for Canada. In Europe excess supplies of wheat merely have to move across | a land border to be in another coun- try rather than undergo a long ocean haul. Such being the case, cooperation in governing the disposal of supplies | to the best advantage of all has come! to be regarded as imperative. While | so far the diplomats of Europe have | not succeeded in adopting the idea of | a@ United States of Europe in the} handling of diplomatic questions and questions regarding armaments, na-} tional defense, and the like, it is thought probable that economic pres- sure may force the adoption of such a plan for the better direction of | economic crises. i Six conferences have been held in southeastern Europe since last July when the 1930 wheat crop began to/ be harvested. The participating n: tions—all surplus producing—are | Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Rumania, and Jugoslavia. | Plan Is Recommended In general, the scheme undertaken is to have each nation set up an e: port control body which can definit ly regulate the movement of wh shipments across boundaries. Beyond | these bodies, there is designed an in- | ternational control representing all | of the involved nations. This will be composed of representatives of the | Several countries and will have au- t the situation in the all. Thus, if Hun- gary has a greater wheat surplus than Poland, export movements cal- culated to relieve the greatest con- gestion will be directed by the inter- national control, distributing the excess wheat and maintaining a fair economic level for all. It is believed that the international control might go even further. For example, it might be utilized in pre- vailing upon farmers of these coun- j tries to curtail acreage as the Federal i Farm oard has attempted to do in this country. Also, it is expected an attempt will be made to induce other European nations which aze more highly organized industrially to min- imize their agricultural activities, particularly as to grain, so that they will develop a larger consumptive de- mand calling for imports from the surplus-producing nations, Bettes progress has been made in connection with this economic effort than with any of the diplomatic ar- rangements. It is recognizeu that full success cannot well attend the | Scheme without ultimate cooperation | of the nations of western Europe. Inasmuch as an excellent start has been made among these Balkan na- tions, usually characterized by dif- ficulties most trying to resolve, it is hoped that such an extension of the plan may be effected. The six conferences which have been held so far did not have any plenary. powers, The plans for na- tional and international wheat con- trol boards so far have taken the form only of recommendations, The STICKERS IN s¥Nnors movies, love with Pearl lows, x who joins forces with him, Menace. employs as a spy, oF i stows away on the Zeppelin, and by dressing in a rajah’s outfit. 1 in a plane only to find that COULD not possibly conceive that Homer T. Dare would 3, Jack Stone, an airmail pilot, who made good in the Dare.’ Her father, disapproves of the fuateh, and sends Pearl around the world in a Zeppelin nd, after many adventures, mects Bert Hill Toscthcr they make plans to rescue Pearl, but each time are defeated by an unkn They suspect that it may be Richards, Pearl's chaperon, . ‘They meet Bert ean bank there—only to find that the bank is owned by Pearl's father, and that his agent is ready to detain Pearl. The three escape ey are being pursued and shot at, » Jack fol- . another pilot jown enemy, the Silent earl’s father capes with Pearl at Hong Kong Hill at an Ameri- Thornton, whom cable instructions to his secret Hongkong agent to send a gunman into the air to shoot his daughter down— no matter how invincibly determined he was to put an un- breakable wedge between Pearl and myself. That is what we were up against apparently! A thousand feet above our Dornier-Wahl flying boat was that mysterious, murderous flyer in.an old German army Fokker bomber. an alr rifle, lary, Bylo) but strik- ing us slightly on the third attempt! We were unarmed except for the revolver I had wrenched from the rajah in his stateroom on the Queen of the Skies. I was still dressed in the rajah’s robes and turban—by which mas- querade I had achieved a getaway from the ‘round the world air- cruiser, where I had stowed away successfuly in order to bring about this very coup, with the aid and eee of my flying pal, Bert By this time, no doubt, the fact that I had stowed away and fet away with my sweetheart probably was known on bpard, if the rajah had broken from the closet where T had locked him. The news would be broadcast far and wide. Steam- ers, as well as land stations, would ese it up. They would be on the lookout. Eventually we would be sighted. The wireless and the radio would buzz some more. All of which would go to prove that there is no longer a hiding place in the sky for a pair of fugitive elopers can parental wrath and retribu- on. Our sole chance was to escape from the now raining gunfire of the flying killer and to get some ac- commodating steamship commander to marry us before the wireless could interfere. It had to be an American vessel. I set out to find one not equipped with wireless, “Out of His Way, Jack, You've Got ‘Im!” 1 gave the Dornier-Wabl all the rope it could take, and it fairly jumped when I opened the controls as far as they ,would go. Not a false note in the exultant roar of those rhythmic motors. They grew red hot. They steamed! From the exhaust poured a steady volley of flame. “Gee!” chuckled Bert Hill, his eyes following the needles on the board; “200 miles an hour and hard- ly any vibration!” “Where's the now?” i ert squinted in all directions. A curious, quizzical, half-admiring gleam crossed his features. “Damn if the nasty little wasp isn’t trailing right along! He must have a triple ir of hidden wings! He's 500 feet low and that gun of his !s popping like a gat.” T had taken altitude. flying menace He had shot at us three times with ate ‘ve @ mind to drop on him,” I said, peevishly. “Let nim get in closer. I'd like to see his face. We might have to remember it.” “Tf I get near enough to see his face, we'll never need to see it again,” I said, significantly, as shots in quick succession struck danger- ously close to our perpellers. “For, whatever the reason he’s got to get us, this is war! Since I don't seem to be able to dodge him, I have only one alternative. We have a girl on board, and not only a girl, but my girl!” I climbed and climbed. The little wasp clung like a leech. I couldn't shake him unless I could wear him out at long distance. We were al- most 20,000 feet above the sea. There wasn’t a cloud in our range. I couldn't stand this sort of nui- sance any longer. It was too peril- ous. “I'm going to loop!” I velled to Pearl, who nad sensed that some- thing was going wrong. I intrigued the wasp to within 500 feet. Then I looped and flew upside down. For a few seconds he was puz- zled. I had seemingly vanished, though I was directly under him and mounting. He leaned far out over the cowl- ing and I got a square look. He was a big, burly Mongolian. 1 could not see his face. It was gog- gled and it was also masked. I had taken him off guard and it was my trick now! With the rajah’s revolver 1 let him have it, while Bert held the sticks, cmptying every chamber in rapid fire. ‘The third and fourth shots be- gan to tell. One bullet bored into his shooting arm. I saw the arm Jerk. I could almost hear him cursing as he juggled his sticks. The fiith shot clipped so close to his goggles that. involuntarily, he shrank and simultaneously froze! “He's frozen!” howled Bert. “Out, of his way, Jack, out of his way. You've got ‘im!” a Time had passed. Distance had been covered. “How about that food locker back there?” asked plain-spoken Bert. Pearl laughed, and I said: “Feed eres bh ~ “I guess we're al ungry,” 8! Pearl, having pried into the locker and discovered that it was crammed tiny bit of Ee abag ed cloud?” with a variety of grub. “We'll not Bert nodded. “Watch it starve for a long time to come, no and spread. It will become as bla:< Harp 3 ha Cy hap; tee a as pitch after awhile.” she hauled out sandwiches and « Cae 4 i thermos-heated drinks. i Cauca ‘Typhoon!’ 8 0 8! Ship Afire! Bert was reaching for his share when he quickly withdrew his hand in and clapped it against the wireless- telephone receiver on his ear. Queen of the Skies asked who was “SO S!” he exclaimed, “Ship on the air. afire!, Gives location... latitude “Shall I tell them?” asked Bert. .. . longitude. watch the chart, “It’s Charley Downs.” jack, . . 8. no—schooner ... A reckless oe of a ph care m, r judgment. “ Mary Marble. . . Gloucester, Mass. {U's Jack Stone in the Yellow Gul i, Captain's wife and child on and’ that ‘all's well aboard. He'll board . . . mutiny feared .. . 328 Zerit and harness his ” mallee Gop saath ‘And so our Dornier-W - + +. Calls for imme boat was named. Tne Yellow Gull! Bert repeated word for word. hear him chuckle about. We all grew grave. “You can “S OS!" he exclaimed. “Ship atire!” ‘io _ Ustened in again, repeat- iy g, aloud: * aisitintrcca’ | implores weemtl woree see what we can do to cee t implores asnoly help save the ship or the people on sald Bert. “For that matter, Meee nee, agen of ine Skies a what can the Queen of the Skies dc e except stand by and see the sight?” SOS of the Mary Marble ... . it’s asking for the "Jchooner's exact This was a puzzlem We had de- location. toured from our main object on a He spun around in amazement. flying errand of mercy without paus- “By golly, Jack! The Zeppelin is ing to consider what use we could be. going to try to ald that burning “Just so that typhoon don’t hit Schooner!” us,” was all I said. Then we fell “So are we!” I shot bi “We silent until Bert, with a dramatic can't be far away, either: noe rine I studied the chart and our log, “There she is!” altered the course and ‘plowed at _ “And there's the fire-doomed top speed in the given direction. ger ae oe ilies If the clear weather held at any garkencd area, we saw b dull, red moment we should sight the blaze. ciow. . It was still miles oft’ and Long since we had left all shipping from ‘our location resembled behind us, The whole panorama weird, remote, lonesome looking bon- was illimitable sea and boundless fire amid barrenness and desolation sky, with cloud specks forming, in a twilight hour. melting and reappearing, only to. f scanned the ocean anxiously. vanish and again reapptar. Not a vessel, as yet, had responded Bert fastencd his eyes forebodingly to the Mary Marble’s § O S! e on one of those specks, “Ever sce pieces free Sita ely Fong Neng Rt pee a ie aero which it recorded, and sharp, static _ “What's an ox-eye?” Peat! click on each stroke of lightning broke in. vividly zigzagging and_ streakiny Bert pointed. “There's one.” through the ebony ceiling. We ha Pearl used her glasses. “That no means of ascertaining whether This was something to think. orm was that our direct! the Queen of the Skies had heeded our warning or not. steering straight into i Jack,” admoni Bert ly. “oant you see I'm taking aitt- wled. “I’m going to fly lamned typhoon.” “There will be no schooner Mary Marble when we get there,” said rt, in hollow tones. “If we re “We'll get there!” There's 2 Woman In the Wav I should have named the Yellow Gull after some dreadnought or ad- miral. -It took hours, but it con- quered those battling elements. The only thing of consequence that haj ned to us while riding out the ‘ion-indi~ cator on the instrument board went .” Bert repaired it after an- other hour or two. And then we lost priceless time in relocating the spot where we had seen the fated schooner, Again Bert’s sense of prophecy was correct. 7 The Mary Marble had gone to Davy Jones’ locker! We circled and circled over a stretch of weary miles and retraced the path of the typhoon, flying as jJow as twenty-five fect from the mountainous waves. Our quest, apparently, was to no purpose. Yet we burned flares and sent off rockets and burned our plane-lights brilliantly, We were no longer looking for the schooner. 3 Our search was for survivors, “If this confounded wireless would only come back to life!” Bert, Gah, ee the apparatus teverishly. “We might pick up something worth while!” At that moment Pearl screamed tai and grew marble white. “I saw @ woman's tace. It flashed past. A young woman deep in the pocket of @ huge rolling wave. Please, Jack, go back!” 1 threw the controls too forcibly. Bert shouted: “I've broken igehoesd Prey = again! ‘The Queen e is—' The sentence was never finished! grumbled Be: ve touch the Yel- low Gull wees flying leap and nosed straight down! Too late I righted my error! We had“plunged! Inte a seeth- ing trough we dove! a “Now you've gone and broken my wireless contact againi” raged Bert at the moment the sea engulfed and flooded us and I banked. “What do you think the Yellow Gull is? A submarine?” The sudden suspension of power against the pitiless rush of the and pull her over. To our infinite relief, she righted. heavy tide shook every fibre and rattled every bolt and nut in the Yellow Gull. Would we spill? Had the propellers warped or snapped? We were strangling and wallowing in tubs of brine which washed in. get The Yellow Gull was pitching and listing at forty degrees to her star- board side. We gathered sufficient presence of mind to pile our com- bined weight on the opposite side “Would you believe it? She’s not ee to sink!” Bert cried almost ayly. . Ball ship!” Y shouted. all O K, Pearl?” “All wet, you mean!” She was all to the good. Bs cabin leaks?” 0. We fell to bailing. £ ‘We had, in our self-concern, fore gotten our mission. Our predica- ment had for the time being erased all thought of the Queen of the - Skies from our minds. When, out of the sea, near at hand, a pitiable arose, we were startled half out of our wits. “Help! Help!” Pearl recovered first. “It's the wife of the captain of the Mary Marble!” she screamed. Our lights had been extinguished, but we had flashes. and the flares were water-proof. We carried lines and life-buoys. pe ier of the Skies Us!” In a moment or two the 5 around the Yellow Gull was bathed. in the eerle light of torches and the greenish-steel glow of the flares. “Are you strength nearly e: in easy . tied to a line. She caught it. “Hold!” And I dtew her in, cut her loose and lifted her through the cabin door. Pearl took her in her arms. She seemed half-demented and was whimpering like a child. Bert and I turned aside. “Let them alone,” I said, huskily. “I reckon she's the sole survivor,” mumbled Bert. We were ail a little seasick and bound to grow worse. Our food was spoiled. Our drinking water had . Spilled. Our wireless was be- bh repair until we dried out. Dry out? Already we were chilling to the bone and again the sky was over- cast. That damnable fog which haunts the China Sea an eons down in freakish torment was roll- ing toward us. As it clesed in thickly we heard an old familiar, drumlike tum... tum ...tum...tum... tum... me Queen of the Skies,” roared We sent up rocket after rocket until our supply was exhausted. ‘The drumming died out in the dis- nee. : “Damn if she hasn't missed us!” groaned Bert. Don’t fail to read the next in- stallment of this scrial—a st: 01 of romance and adventure in the air—“On Cupid’s Wings.” veral nations immediately cerned and other nations are free to accept or reject the plan or to modi- fy it. Tariff Aspects of Situation The Danube Basin is one of the greatest wheat-producing areas the world and has been’ since the days of Roman occupation. It has been only since the war that overproduc- tion has been serious. This has been very large crops raised by the United States and Canada. The North American wheat has flowed into such consuming countries as France, Italy, and Germany, competing with the Danube wheat. The world supply ready market in neighboring coun- tries. The conferences have gone so far as to take up tariff questions in con- nection with the proposed national controls. Obviously, an international body, seeking to move surpluses of wheat about like pieces on a chess board could not function freely if every boundary. A plan has been discussed for the establishment of a customs union which, for the pur- nation treaty provisions. Baltics in Picture The Baltic nations brought into the picture in connec- situation. A trading of tariff pref- erences was discussed but so far the Baltic states have viewed such con- cession with something considerably short of enthusiasm. Since the World war, corn has been added to the grain staples of some of these countries and this com- modity is receiving attention too. Czechoslovakia enters the equation here as this succession state is the chief European nation to take up corn culture. Nor have rye antl bar- ley been left out. While wheat isthe most important grain, the proposed control bodies would function in con- nection with all cereals, grain dealers as well as the consum- of this economic United States of Europe presumably would perma- nently limit the foreign market for North American wheat. FOLEX-GRAM for those fortunates who take geri- uine Foley’s Honey and Tar Com- pound. Dependable. - Quickly stops persistent wearing coughs. Coats the throat with a healing demulcent. Clears the air passages of bothersome phlegm. Exactly suits Elderly Per- sons, Mildly laxatiye.. Ask for genuine Foley's, Family: Size. A real thrift ‘Sold ‘everywhere—Ady. lamond-crusted car of Amer- The hood and windshield Tt is the costliest car eve made more apparent because of SS Morante Defeat K. of C. Quint, 5 . a has been augmented, backing up the | Danube tonnage which used to find a} basketball squads won two out of con- | @ jnson team 19-9 in an uninteresting | victory in its first lengue start against tion with the tariff aspects of the | contest. These cevelopments have a direct W interest for American farmers and | Sch ing public. Successful development |- No more troublesome night coughs | being. sedative without opiates. '}¥ Additional Sports e- Tappen Fives Win | 2 Out of 3 Games, i and High School Wal- lops Robinson Tappen, N. D., Jan. 14—Tappen’s three games played there over the | week-end. i Tappel “Hornets” _ defeated | Jamestown's K of C’s cagers 18-37 Monday night. The game was featured by long-|the greatest quints ever turned out range shooting and a clever passing attack. The Tappen high school basketeers tariff . barriers were erected, across | were defeated 16-14 the same eve- ning by the St. John academy team of Jamestown in what was the hard- | , est game the high school here has had | ed they were able to make only one Poses of this problem, would break | so far this season. The St. John’s | tield goal, that in the second half, down tariff walls, even doing away, | crew dropped in the winning basket, in expedient cases, with most favored | with but 15 seconds of the game left to be played. In a game Friday night the Tappen hhgve been | high school quint defeated the Rob- The summaries: ‘Tappen Hornets (18)- ee 1 Schultz, ¢ see. e Donough, eight, ©. Billington, Ottinger, & Spinanski, & ool eee °. 1 1 0 1 FT FP 1 o 3 1 1 6 Totals. a 1 Peterson, Demaroy, & al voces & Totals... St. John’s (16)— Pinn, f Plann 7H Sy |Bellxtun, Bashinsky, leosee \ ‘Totals: T PF 0 (ae) ecuenenS aleoanu 1 00 rt 0) 0 tsp Oat 4 oo 6 MS yea 0) ao pie tee OO Saaeee | D0) go $5 MBs ‘St. John’s Quint in its initial conference game of the season at Si. Olaf Tuesday night, the St. John’s University team of College- ville Wednesday night meets Augs- burg college’s quint in Minneapolis. Heralded by its followers as one of at St. John’s, Coach Joe Benda’s squad was overwhelmed by a 47 to 8 'score at St. Olaf, and Wednesday | night it will come.up against a team | With just as good an offense. The Johnnies were so closely guard- ; while Gilbertson, Hildebrand and Ja- jcobson, forwards and center, respec- |tively of the Northfield team, caged |17 field goals between them. Macalester college scored a 35 to 24 Hamline and served notice it would be hard quint to beat in future games. It was the second tilt of the year for the Mackmen. ‘Three more conference games are to be played during the week-end. |Friday night St. Olaf and Gustavus | Adolphus will meet at Nortifield. Hamline plays its first game at home Saturday night against St. Thomas, and Augsburg and Macales- |ter meet in a game that undoubtedly ‘will eliminate one from first place. | St. Thomas lost to De Paul univer- sity at Chicago, Tuesday, and will {clash with Loyola university Wednes- day night. Corbett Fights Walker to Draw Los Angeles, Jan. 14.—()—Paulie Walker, New York welterweight, and Young Corbett, Fresno, Cal., fought to a draw in 10 fast rounds here Tuesday night. Corbett , who was a slight favorite, barely was able to pull himself up to even terms with a furious finish. | Bowman Beats Rhame | In Double Cage Tilt | Bowman, N. D.. Jan. 14~—Bowman , defeated the Rhame cagers in @ | double-header here Monday night. , . The Bowman first string quint de- feated Rhame’s first team 16-6 in a close guarding classic. In the preliminary contest the Had Been Heralded as One of Hy | a good passing attack and an effec- | contract with the Pirates for the 1931 tive defense. The summary of the game: | Season. | Humiliated 47.8 3:32"; : ' T Governor Flays By St. Olaf Crew #86 esscc: 3 + 3) College Sports [Oklahoma Executive Criticizes Greatest Collegeville Teams 1 | ‘Over-Emphasis’ in Address in Recent Years Smee to Legislature St. Paul, Jan. 14—()—Stopped cold WINS Oklahoma City, Jan. 14.—()—Col- Devils Lake, N. D., Jan. 14—()—| lege sports received a vigorous blow Devils Lake high school scored its|'Tuesday from Governor William H. eighth consecutive victory by troun-| Murray, in his first message to the cing Cando high here 30 to 11. i , Oklahoma legislature. | “The most deplorable thing of all our educational errors is the placing WANER SIGNS CONTRACT Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 14—()—Lloyd | as the shibboleth and slogan of insti- Waner, centerfielder of the Pitts-| tutions, the subject of ‘ball playing’ burgh baseball club, has signed aj and other sports,” the governor, “Al- falfa Bill” asserted. “It is but giv- ing reward and applause for physical strength.” ‘The chief executive said he favored paying for sports to a limited extent in the schools, “but when it comes to a university paying an aggregate sum of $52,000 for instructors in sports alone, not counting the other expenses incidental and the expense of players, it is entirely too much.” The governor criticized ‘“overem- phasis” on college sports in his cam= paign and advocated a general cur- tailment in state school budgets to have professors teach eight hours a day “same as the plumber and car- penter.” HOCKEY GAME POSTPONED Minneapolis, Jan. 14.—(4)—Ordered home by Athletic Director Fritz Cris- ler, the University of Minnesota hockey team was back at school Wednesday instead of being in Mad- ison, Wis., to play off the postponed i Bowmsn second team wailloped the Rhame second sauad 35-7 | Each of the Bowman teams showed Wire Stoop ENoveH oF HIS GROWLING AND SNAPPING ~— 50 HERE GOES YouR CHECKER , GAME IN ONE BIG SWEEPING MOVE, AS MY PLAY Paw and [ Wis ! SS x BETWEEN You “Wo .PARLOR BEARS: | OUR’ BOARDING HOUS By Ahern European Wheat Farmers Hurt More Than Americans by Prices FARM BOARD KEEPS 2 ame of its series with the Badgers. The Gopher sextet will play Wiscon- sin on a later trip this season, Oris- ler said. ASSOCIATION VOTES TO ACCEPT MAJORS DRAFT PROPOSITION Kansas City and Louisville Op- pose Plan; Minneapolis Did Not Ballot Chicago, Jan. 14—(#)—The Ameri- can Association, one of the big three leagues in class AA baseball, Wed- nesday advised Commissioner Kene- saw M. Landis that it had finally and officially accepted the major league draft proposal without reservations. The acceptance enables all Ameri- can Association clubs to resume bus-, iness relations with the major leagues immediately. Thoms Jefferson Hickey, president of the circuit, said the clubs voted five to two for acceptance. St. Paul, Milwaukee, Toledo, Columbus and In- dianapolis voted for the proposal, . Kansas City and Louisville cast neg- ative votes while Minneapolis, origin- ally aligned with the forces opposed to the draft, did not vote. The vote, the second on the ques- tion, was made by mail. On’Dec. 21, the American Associa- tion voted five to three to accept the Graft proposal but just as President Hickey had notified Commissioner Landis of the acceptance, George Muehlebach, president of the Kansas City club, protested the vote was il- legally taken. President Hickey then took another poll, the result of which was announced Wednesday. The Pacific Coast league, which with the American Association and the International league, compose the “big three” of minor league base- ball, recently voted to accept the draft proposal with reservations un- satisfactory to the majors. The In- ternational league is expected to vote on the matter within ‘a week or two, Civil Service Jobs Open to Applicants Alice Sales, secretary of the United States Civil Service Board of Exam- iners at the post office here has an- nounced that a ‘number of federal jobs are open and will be awarded on the basis of competitive examination. The Civil Service Commission offers the following opportunities for gov- ernment employment: associate medi- cal officer (female), $3,200 a year, U. S. Public Health Service, Washing- ton, D. C.; senior medical technician (roentgenology), $2,000 a year, for duty in the Veterans’ hospital, Tuske-" gee, Okla, (colored eligibles are de- sired for this vacancy); girl’s adviser, senior high school, $2,600 a year, In~ dian Service; girl’s adviser, reserva tion and junior high school, $2,000 a year, Indian service; matron senior high school, $1,500, matron junior high school and reservation, $1,200 and assistant matron $1,080 @ year, Indian service. Full information may be obtained from Miss Sales at the post office building. GRANT MAN APPOINTED P. P. Schlosser, Grant county, has been appointed secretary of the sen- ate committees on Banks and Bank- ing, Cities and Municipal corpora- tions, Corporations other than mu- nicipal, and counties. A contract has just been signed for the construction of a bridge across the Zambezi river, in the Nyasaland Protectorate. It will be one of the longest in the world, total strength piae completion being about 11,650 ee ARE A it ENDS DIGESTIVE ILLS QUICK AND ~» GAINS 5 POUNDS Food does not nourish when it is not roperl siete. That's wh: Wino sulfer irom gas on stomach ¢ aa bowels, belching, nausea, headaches, i to indigestion, nd tl lves nleraee it, weak, with little energy and vitality. All this is quickly ch: when i start using the simple ¢ wn as Pape’s Diapepsin. When people experience for themsetves the amazing results of using these testy little tablets, they invariably fe compelled bY i others, Mr, Wm. R. Ficklin, 3036 West Pico ee Los Angeles, Calif., says: “I suffered for over two with tag all te fine to get ath 6 time ae tr Areata, y en I learned about Diapepsin and onit. ithe a wol pea hele t me. I eat pastries now without bad after-effects, How they used to make me suflert “Friends that I have told about Diapepsin have been helped in the sam Thi a wat aye fained 4 pounds since matting ig to try it bel raburng wate Pipes Dieppe ae W. Va., for a : D \ PAPE'S 7 DIAPEpPS|I iQuicl er Stmvned Paling WOMac Ne te | } 4] ae ie » 7? + t 7 ia '» ¢ vee

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