The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 29, 1931, Page 7

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vbhe alu whe, \ o hy abo AY 4 o> es - * ' os 6 yA ‘ wk > DENIES THATCHER WAS EMPLOYED BY US. FARM BOARD Alexander Legge Declares Statement Made by John Simpson Is Incorrect INFORMS FARMERS UNION Directors and Officers of Organ- ization Reelected at St. Paul Meeting St. Paul, Jan, 29.—(?)}—Charges by John Simpson, president of the Na- tional Farmers’ Union, that M. W. ‘Thatcher, general manager of the Farmers’ Union Terminal Association of St. Paul, was in the employ of the federal farm board, were denied by Alexander ' Legge, chairman of the federal farm board, in a telegram to the resolution committee of the asso- ciation convention here. “Statements to the effect that Mr. Huff (president of the Farmers’ Na- tional Grain Corporation) and Mr. ‘Thatcher are on the payroll of the farm board,” Mr. Legge telegraphed, “or with anybody connected with the farm board, are absolutely untrue and on @ par with a lot of other conversa- tion issued from the same source re- cently.” At the concluding meeting of the Lamm, Philip, 8. D., second and third, Narragansett young pen—Mrs. G. C. Tuttle and Betty, Crystal Bay, Minn., first; Obert Stadstad, Man- ville, second; H. Olin, Grand Forks, third. Narragansett old pen—Mrs. Geo! { Parr, Argyle, Minn. first, say pi a | Additional Society Wednesday Study Club To Hold Annual Party Members of the Wednesday Study club will entertain their husbands at the annual party to be held Satur- day evening in the Terrace Garden at the Patterson hotel. The affair, which will take the form of a bridge dinner and cards will be played at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Burt Fin- ‘ney, 220 Anderson St. Plans for the entertainment, which are in charge of a committee headed by Mrs. L. W. Larson, were revealed at a meeting of the club Wednesday at the Finney home. Other members of Mrs. Larson’s committee are Mrs. J. K. Blunt, Mrs. M. B, Gilman and Mrs. Kelly Simonson. For the program at the Wednesday session. Mrs. Blunt reviewed a pa- per on “The Chjnese Industrial Revo- lution” which she had given at a pre- vious meeting. Miss Marian Burke read a paper on “The Labor Move- ment in Nationalist China.” se * Play Cast Includes Eleven young people of the Firat Presbyterian church will take part in two plays to be presented Friday eve- ning, Jan. 30, in the church school rooms under the auspices of the Mel- stockholdets of the Farmes’ Union! at g o'clock and the public is invited ‘Terminal association, the directors and officers were re-elected. They are: D, L. O’Connor, New Rockford, to attend. berry and Marcia Bowman will take N. D., president; Walter Maddock,|tne parts of Mr. Box, a printer; Mr. Bismarck, N. D., and C. C. Talbott, Jamestown, N. D., vice presidents; Cox, a hatter, and Mrs. Bouncer, the landlady, respectively, in the one-act George C. Lambert, St. Paul, secre-|nlay, “Box and Cox” which is being tary-treasurer; Elling Knudson, Ed-|directed by Mrs. James H. Gentry. more, N. D., Ole Kittilson, Dunn Cen- Interest centers around Mrs. Boun- ter, N. D.; Oscar B. Hersford, Wolf | cer's efforts to keep apart Mr. Cox Point, Mont.; W. S. Handley, Stirum, N. D, and E. R. Kindler, Billings, Mont., directors. The directors are submitting a bal- Jot to the stockholders to increase the board of directors from nine to 15, and Mr. Box, to whom she has rented the same room, the one to use by day and the other by night. The may, written by J. M. Morton, is one of the most popular farces ever written. “The Neighbors” is a delightful and if authorized by the board, wfll|comedy. Relating the touching story increase the directorate to 15. ‘The telegram from Mr. Legge was made a part of a resolution. Other resolutions urged the con- the hands of “the neighbors” all the characters are particularly human. pothalians. The program will begin| even: of a friendless child who falls into The cast includes Isabelle Humphreys ___THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, JANUARY 29, 1981 husband, Lieutenant-Governor Jchn Carr, was complimented t+ an after- noon bridge party given Tuesday by Mrs, A, W. Stadler at her home, 305 West Broadway. ‘There were 12 guests. Mrs. M. Knoll and Mrs. Leo DeRochford were awarded honors in the afternoon’s games and Mrs, Carr was presented with a gift. Bouquets of rosebuds and appointments to form @ Valentine motif were used for the tables. Mrs, Knoll and Mrs. M. ©. Heinsohn were guests from Man- dan. * * “India” was the topic of a program of unusual interest given Tuesday evening for members of the Pro- gressive Mothers club. Roll call was answered by naming places of historic interest in India. Mrs. George Tekippe read a paper dealing with the lan- guage, customs of its people, and Mrs. Albin Hedstrom discussed the Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi, reviewing réasons for his influence over the In- dian people generally. * * * Miss Mabel Rue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, J. J. Rue, 711 Avenue A, is studying at Teacher's college, Colum- bia University, New York City, this year. She was recently awarded a fellowship by the Rockefeller Foun- dation and she also holds a scholar- ship at Teacher’s college. Miss Rue in June. “ee Guests for two tables of bridge were entertained Wednesday after- noon by Mrs. Gregory Dahlen at her home, 831 Fifth St. Mrs. Paul Wach- ter was awarded the score prize. At the close of play the hostess served a 11 of Drama Group) ®*, seek dinner. Pink carnations and» daffodils decorated the tables and the pink and yellow note was re- peated in the ae * * ‘Mrs. George Christo and Mrs. Pat Clooten entertained the members of the H. N. O. bridge club Wednesday ing. Cards were played at three tables with Mrs. Roy Joos, Dorothy Keller and Allayne Mellon holding Frederick Schrimpf, James Gold-j honors. Decorations in red, white and blue were used for the tables. * * * Kupitz. ak olis on Pleasure trip. eee tinuation of a building program of|as Mis’ Abel; Emma Trygg as Inez; | day. large country terminals like the new|Emma May Brittin as Grandma; 217,000-bushel plant at Williston, N. D., urged passage of a bill introduced by United States Senator Lynn J. Frazier of North Dakota to provide federal refinancing of farm indebted- ness at low interest rates; asked fed-|sema, eral farm board and farm organiza- tions to appropriate funds for a co- The Melpothalians are @ drama oup recently formed by young peo- operative marketing educational pro- fle oA the ee anaes gram, and praising the benefits of/ficers are: the farm marketing act, urging its|chairman; Helen Tuskind, secretary; retention by congress regardless of|and Thirza Gentry, librarian. * * * Political parties. Another resolution urged congress to pass the Capper-Burtness bill, sponsored by Congressman O. B. Burtness of North Dakota and Sen- ator Arthur Capper of Kansas to de- clare an embargo on importation of surplus farm. products, | grains and dairy products. CANDO BIRD MADE . GRAND CHAMPION OF TURKEY SHOW Owned by Mrs. Henry Botz; Missouri Woman Again Scores Heavily in Awards Grand Forks, N. D., Jan, 29.—()}— A bronze yearling tom owned by Mrs, Henry Botz, Cando, was named grand champion of the 1931 All- American turkey show here Wednes- day. ‘i The bird was said by the several judges to be the finest: bird ever ex- hibited at an All-American exhibit, Mrs. Gladys Honssinger, Lebanon, Mo., many times a winner at the All- American show held here, scored heavily in awards announced at the annual banguet. A bourbon red young tom exhibited by Mrs. Honssinger was named cham- pion young tom of this year’s show. ‘This is the fifth time the Missouri woman has won the event. Other awards follow: Champion four young toms—Mrs. Honssinger; champion for young hens, Mrs. Honssinger; young hen; white Holland, Willlam Mishelson, Montevideo, Minn.; best all-around display in master breeders competi- tion, Glen C. Beidelman, Kinsley, Kans., Ray Andrews, Petersburg, was second in the master breeders display and Alfred Malmberg, Crookston, Minn., third. Bronze young tom—O. B. Skon- WHEN A CHILD JS FEVERISH, CROSS, UPSET gas, sour pli ting, | fever ish- jes and Colic, ness, children, generally tc souring show food is in the little digestive tract. a i ait ik of Add % to the first bottle Older chil- mn latabl t- sie Series ei oat far ate Wario = Y.” Tt will be sent PREE. cS etal ats a a lalalical Mrs. John Carr, Jamestown, who is here to spend a few days with her ———————— Konjola Ends Long Illness Stomach and Bowel Ailments Of Five Years Standing Ban-| ished by New Medicine MRS. C. H. MOORE “I suffered for five years from in- digestion,” said Mrs. C. H. Moore, 1688 Burr street, Lincoln. “Gas formed after meals and I bloated and belched terribly. Cramping stomach pains were common. I had consti- pation and was always taking ca- thartics, I had no appetite and about five months ago I began to get nervous.” 4 “Konjola is the only medicine that helped me. I began to improve in health with the second bottle. I have now finished four bottles and my stomach misery has left me. I am no longer nervous nor constipated and I have an excellent appetite. I feel like a new person and I am glad to endorse Konjola.” Konjola is more than “just another medicine.” Of its 32 ingredients 22 are the juices of roots and herbs. They attack ailments at the source and remove the causes. ~ Kanjola is sold in Bismarck, N. Dak., at Hall's drug store, 122 Third St., and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire sec- tion.—Advertisement. —— Que id ten’to Lorne Fania dagsowe te eoloaiae. Shs cll oe how names and dates success in business, love or marriage. A real radio thrill, con- polds, ’s ailments.|- . take it r because it is WDAY and entire Columbia net- work at 8:15 p. th, OLD GOLD CIGARETTE RADIO PROGEKA Donald Keniston as Peter; Merrell Kitchen as Ezra; Mary Cave as Mis’! jotoa, Trot; Frances Heath as Mis’ Moran and Helen Tuskind as Mis’ Ellsworth. It is being coached by Mrs. C. D. Dur- Of- Emma Trygg,, program * * * Mrs. expects to get her master’s degree | 1 St. Mary’s Circle will sponsor the second of a series of public card par- ties Thursday evening at St. Mary's school auditorium, play to begin at 8:30 o’clock. The affair is being ar- ranged by a committee headed by Mrs. PF. H. Gelermann and Mrs. Max Herbert Thiele, Missouri Slope rep- resentative of the General Foods company, left Thursday for Minneap- combined business and Edward Sailer, Stanton, was a Bis- marck guest Wednesday and Thurs- Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Walpole, Qui- , Arig, were visitors in Bismarck ‘Wednesday while a route to Chicago. * * and her two small sons will leave Bis- marck Wednesday for Riverside, Calif.. where they plan to spend four or five months visiting with Mrs, McLeod's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E, 8. Thomas. al Snapdragons and freesia were used to form a spring color scheme of pink | and green for the tables at. the 1! o'clock luncheon given Wednesday by | Mrs. C. W. Schoregge at her home, 507 Sixth St. Covers were marked for 16 guests. Honors in the bridge game went to Mrs. R. 8. Towne and Mrs, J.C. Taylor. Mrs, Lillian Wiest, Hen- derson, Minn. 9 sister of Mrs. Schoregge, was a guest from out of town. x ok * In observance of the fifth birthday anniversary of her son Harold, Mrs. H. T. Perry entertained 10 children at a party at the Perry home, 116 Avenue B. The afternoon was spent with games and refreshments were served at tables decotated in Valen- tine favors. ek * A Valentine motif was used for the tables at the evening bridge party given Wednesday by Mrs. C, H, Mer- were guests for two tables and score prizes were awarded Mr. and Mrs. J. 'W. Guthrie and Charles Rue. * ok x Mrs. C. H. Cloid, 115 Avenue C, was hostess to the members of the Ace-Hi bridge club Wednesday evening at her (ome. Two tables were in play and How One Woman Lost 20 Lbs. of Fat Lost Her Double Chin Lost Her Prominent Hips Lost Her Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor Gained in Vivaclousness Gained a Shapely Figure cause! Take one half teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hat water before breaki‘ast every morn- ing—cut out pastry and fatty meats —go light on potutoes, butter, cream and sugar—in 3 weeks get on the fat have vanished. Notice also that yo: have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—your eyes sparkle with glorious health— you feel younger in body—keener in mind. KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS at Finney’s drug store or the even this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat—if you don't feel a superb improvement in health —so gloriously energetic—vigorously alive—your money gladly returned. Mrs, Mame Carey of Buffalo, N, ¥., writes—“Since I began taking Kru- schen Salts I have lost 20 pounds and Roy McLeod, 619 Avenue -C,/1 feel as if I had lost 50 pounds—I feel-so good and the best part of it ,| all 1s that I eat anything I like.”— Advertisement. gens, 226 West Rosser avenue. There) wy; If you're fat--first remove the | scales and note how many pounds of | Service drug store (lasts 4 weeks). If | nue A, returned Wednesday from | Jamestown, where they have been for the last two weeks on a combined business and pleasure trip. eek companied by lire, W. Nagel were accompa: y Mrs. W. , were * * visitors from Steele in the ony wee. |SWiftest, Easiest Way needy. To End Bilious Spell ‘When you neglect those first symp- toms of constipation—bed breath, eae Ear ering coated tongue, listlessness, the whole i $ Digerti al ee Ye Sacons a ion slows up. You + City-County Briefs | ietgcty, den, ilo ©] It’s easy to correct sluggish 1 A boy was born to Mr. and Mrs.|action! Take a candy Cascaret to- Raymond Hogue, Bismarck, at the |might. See how quickly—and pleas- St. Alexius hospital, Wednesday. antly—the bowels are activated. All the souring waste is gently propelled Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wright, He-|from the system. and com- bron, are the parents of a son born |plete bowel action is restored. ednesday at the Bismarck hospital. .Cascarets are made from pure cas- cara, @ substance which doctors agree A daughter was born at the Bis-|actually strengthens bowel muscles. marck hospital Wednesday to Mr.|All drug stores have Cascarets, 10c— and Mrs, Marquis McDowall, Carson. | Advertisement. F. O. Hellstrom, Bismarck attor- ney who has been critically ill in a local hospital during the Jast week, is {somewhat improved, relatives said Thursday noon. * oe OK Mrs. Peter V. Hermes, Glen Ullin, spent Wednesday in Bismatck visiting with friends, Pleveres \ NOW SHOWING | When Young Girls Are Grandmothers | In 1980. . . . What’s going to happen then? What's the world coming to? Find out in this brand new kind of talking picture fun? Two solid hours of laughing at the future! ‘With a 1930 epee comes to life “Just Imagine” with El! Brendel Maureen O’Sullivan John Garrick Marjorie White Frank Albertson Written and Directed by the men who made “Sunny Side Up” honors were held by Mrs. E. A. Kalser/ Felistrom Reported If R : . C. W. rson, Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Byrne, 500 Ave- j e hat Improved daughter, and Mrs. H. J. sched, ne up Mr. Hellstrom is suffering from @ ailment. go, a sister, arrived in Bismarck Wed- Don’t Let a Cold Even Get Started! You Poesy ei to, Piling every, rantneea, me son's ‘ol 8 an new-| should wri at once A ice, type treatment in tablet form, doubly|$$1-8 Main St. Adams, N.Y. for a fast and effective. Breaks up a cold! ‘re trial of his, wont! enna. ne Just put it om the rupture and the ef = pea weg eid it in| opening closes waturally so the need of a suppor 7 eventually done away with. Don't nex= remedies, Changes the system from|lect to send for the free trial of this an acid condition to alkaline condl-/1.2"/% curing supports alt your life, tion, in which cold and grippe germs|ir',0u “aont have to? Why run the y run the fo not thrive Stops headaches, t00/risk of gangrene and such dangers in quick time. Also the pains and/from n small and innocent little rup- aches of neuralgia and neuritis. Safe/ture. the kind that has thrown thou- for all—no effects on heart or|sands on the operating table? A host stomach. At the first sign of any|of men and women are daily running cold, headache or get Darol on|such risk just becouse thelr ruptures 0 not hu: revent them from get- i iregg Mn a All| ing around; Write at once for this bevsnaggrd Druggisis @Nd/ free trial, as it is certainly a wonder- er independent stotes sell)ful thing and has aided in healing eo on a guarantee of astisfaction pyle that were aa ue ae man’s oney back. Get a package today.|two fists. Try and write at once to ckeaeon and Robbins" ‘|W. 8, Rice, Inc, 881-8 Main St, Ad- Parent product—| ims, N. ¥--Advertisement. This Great Healing Oil Best . For Pimples and Skin Troubles Make up your mind today that you| The very first application will give rigs et give your skin @ real/ you relief and a few short treatments ‘You've probably been, like a lot of | Will thoroughly convince you that by other people, convinced that the only|sticking faithfully to it for @ short thing to use was an ointment or|while your skin troubles will be a salve (some of them are very @00d) | thing of the past. but in the big majority of cases these | ne 3 : sticky salves simply clog the pores| Remember that Moone’s Emerald and the condition primarily remafns|Oil is a clean, powerful, penetrating the same.| Antiseptic Oil that does not stain or Go to Service Drug Store or any/leave a greasy other good druggist today and get an|must give complete satisfaction or original bottle of Moone’s Emerald refunded — Oil—an 85 cent bottle lasts 2 weeks. it to Rupture, Recent, large or Small and You Are on the Road That Has Convinced Thousands, Sent Free to Prove This 1 woman i= Gum-Dipp Gum-Dipping is the Firestone trade name for that patented, basic process which makes Firestone Tires fundamentally differ- ent from all other tires, It is one of the reasons why Firestone, through many years, has easily been able to make good the statement: “Most miles per dollar.” It is not something done toatire after itis made. It is something very vital done before the tire is made. To grasp the full significance of Gum-Dipping, it is necessary to know something about how a tire is made and what goeson within a tire on the road. The body of the tire bears the principal strains in service. To it is attached the tread which provides traction and takes the wear of the road. The usual tire body is built up of layers or plies of cotton cords between which rubber has been forced. Rubber is incom- pressible. Hence the tire body practi- cally does not expand or contract to meet road shocks. It flexes—that is, it changes form. The strain of the flexing tends to pull the plies apart and also to pull the cords themselves apart. A tire flexes about seven hundred times ina mile—which gives some idea of the strains and the friction which a tire must endure. The great enemy to tire life is internal friction. Years ago the fabric was square-woven—and the If cotton rubs against cotton, the tire scon heats up and collapses. That is why the square- woven fabric tires were 80 short-lived. Then came the tires with parallel cords that could not saw each other. The best square-woven fabric tire would go scarcely four thousand miles. A poor cord tire will give at. least twice that mileage. Making the cords parallel was a great advance—but it was only part of the battle against It was realized that if the fibers of cotton in a cord could be insulated one from another, then a step-up in tire life could be had comparable to that made by shift- ing from equare-woven fabric to paral- lel cords. That is what all tire makers have been striving for. That is what Firestone hes achieved. _ Every cord used in Firestone Tires has been treated with a rubber solution which penettates every cord and coats every fiber; and thus not only the cords, but also the very fibers within thém are insulated. ‘Copmricht, 1951, The Pisesecne Tire & Radber Co Eight pounds of fine, pure rubber are, by the pat- ented Gum-Dipping process, inte- gratedinto every one hundred pounds of cotton cords, This means three extra pounds of pure rubber added to an average set of tires—and added where it means most to the strength and the life of the tire. This extra rubber all goes into the cords of the tire—where you never eee it. Why ddes Firestone put in this extra value? And what does it mean to you? It means just this. The performance— the extra value—has been shown for yearson theroadand in thelaboratory Ithaeheen proved that Gum-Dipping: increases the flexing life of a cotton cord by 58%. increases tire life by from 25 % to more than 40%, accord- ing to the severity of the service —the more severe the service, the __ higher the percentage. Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires are not just tires. They are thirty years of organized expesience. They are sold only through Firestone Service Dealers and Service Scores and only as Firestone Gum- Dipped Tires—bearing the Firestone name and bearing the Firestone emblem that appears on this page. Wherever you live city or country—a fresh and complete stock of Firestone products is near-by. Tea in vacuum just like your coffee It is just as necessary for tea as it is for coffee. It has been urged by a U.S, Government Tea Examiner, and Schil- ling has discovered how to do it. Every, tea importer and every Government Tea Examiner knows that the most delight- ful flavor of tea has always evaporated long before it could reach you in an ordinary tin or cardboard box. There was no way to prevent it, Then Schil- ling discovered how--discovered how to keep tea fresh in vacuum just like your coffee. It comes to you as fresh as it left the Oriental tea gardens, As fresh as the Government Tea Examiner said it would be. Lost flavors refound-- fragrant flavors you never before tasted in tea. resh | Schilling S

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