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Should Boil Food F LITTLE HELP CAN BE GIVEN PERSON AFTER POISONING SHOWS UP Anti-Toxin Discovered Should Be Administered Soon After Food Is Eaten SPORES ARE WIDESPREAD] i Information on Poison Can Be Obtained From Agricul- | tural Department Death of 12 persons from botulism at Grafton caused Dr. A. A. Whitte- more, director of the state health de- | partment, to issue a warning against | the improper preparation of canned | foods. | Dr. Whittemore reiterated the warn- | ing given last June when four mem- | bers of the Math Zimmer family at} Sentinel Butte died from food poi-j soning. An anti-toxin has been discovered | for the disease, he said, but its use is hardly practicable as it must be} administered shorthy after the food is eaten. It is not generally effective after the symptoms of botulism have j become evident, he stated. “Botulism is indirectly caused by| the bacillus botulinus, a form of life which grows in the absence of air,” Dr. Whittemore said. “A fungus or spore is produced, which detaches itself and grows elsewhere. This spore when eaten produces a toxin or poi- sonous substance which causes the disease. “The bacillus botulinus has its nat- ural habitat in the soil, and its spores are widespread throughout the world, being more frequently found in virgin and pasture soils than in rich soil or manure from animals. The spores are found in string bean pods, moldy hay, ensilage, decayed vegetation, canned vegetables, such as spinach, string beans, peas, corn and beets, and also in canned or potted meats. It also is found in sausage, poorly preserved! meats, and even fish. 26 Outbreaks Reported “There have, however, been no cases traced to commercially canned food since February, 1922, yet during the period from February, 1922, to Novem-| ber, 1924, there were 26 outbreaks of | the disease attributed to home-canned foods. “It takes about five hours of con- stant boiling at canning time to kill) the spore and prevent it from devel-j oping while contained in air-tight | cans. Canned food suspected of being dangerous can be made safe for con- sumption by boiling it for 10 minutes before it is prepared for table use. Foods preserved in at least a six per cent salt solution or a 55 per cent! solution of sugar are considered safe} and are unlikely to foster botulism.” Dr. Whittemore called attention to number of pamphlets and bulletins; giving information on the proper method of home canning. The April bulletin from the United States department of agriculture on “Food Poisoning and the Laws” and Dr. Stanley's bulletin on the “Canning of Vegetables” from the bureau of home economics fully cover this sub-; ject, Dr. Whittemore said, and can be obtained by addressing the depart- ment and bureau at Washington, D. C. Prepares 3 Resume -! ‘Miss Mildred Tackaberry, extension food specialist of the North Dakota Agricultural college at Fargo, has pre- pared a “resume” of methods to be followed in the home canning of vege- tables. Miss Tackaberty stressed the follow- ing points in the canning of meats and vegetables: i 1. Be sure to follow directions for canning issued by some reliable authority. Remember that scalding water is not boiling water. 2. Can non-acid vegetables and meats under pressure. Pressure cookers are reasonably priced and secured. 3. Do not pack vegetables too tight- ly. A loose pack and more water added will increase the chances of food keeping. 4. The addition of one or two table- spoonfuls of lemon juice or vinegar per pint to non-acid vegetables will help to preserve them. ze 5. Discard all spoiled food. Spoilage is often indicated by leaky jars, bulg- ing, unusual odors and taste. 6. Boil all vegetables and meats for at least 10 minutes after opening the can and before testing them. This practice helps to destroy any poisons which may be present. Two Wing Men Are _ Sentenced to Jail Two residents of Wing were fined $50 and sentenced to 30 days in jail, each, Saturday afternoon in police court, when they pleaded guilty to a charge of being intoxicated in a public place. A charge of first-degree burglary which had originally been placed against them was withdrawn on a motion of the state's attorney when | the evidence tended to show that; there was no.intent of burglary. ‘The pair had-broken into a rural} school in the Wing district recently. | The complaining witness was the| school teacher who had been asleep | im her quarters in the building when | the men forced their way in. She escaped to the home of a neighboring farmer. \ YOO ATT MES tobe. college LYNCH LAW LYNCHES LAW with the nine of trumps, he boldly and two sons, one, George J., Breck- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1981 - - = — _ ne Ive riours anning Iime to rreven Botulism | weet att te golden N OPTIMISM ine sree A cout the golden, Key the skipper Nad forved from me. “ary the safe!” suggested ‘Thorn- NY . at Rey fitted snugly into iN RI the eel cy ue Naty wall safe. ” Tn another minute T was ransacks dng: drawers arnt becihg, tarocgt odds: nds af extd-loo r6 a wr 4 : code. “ease ot ants T sulted in my Some Encouraging Factors Are “ . A of which wei . Or es neck BSS te cane ven Ue $8000 Seen in Review of January , 7, id the Skip Lov C 25,000 Miles Svough Clouttla erent pong This Tappro- by Dun and Company petated, ne we & it ton, Who grinne MOR me . bolted aperture. Drawing the bolts, I took his flash and motioned him aneepishty, fot pitt yc dete ola lee a = T swung the thing open. to preced SU, no! fof import appea ness forecast of R. G. Dun and com- SYNOPSIS: Jack Stone, an*airmail pilot, who made good in the eee Ren to be he skipper's effects, ‘ movies, % in love with Pearl Dare. Her father disapprovcs of the There stood Thornton, blinking As I did so, the vessel gave a fear- and I bags 3 xg to give up in dis- pany and its review of conditions match, and sends Pearl around the world in a Zeppelin. Jack follows, in, the light of a flash. a. lurch and throw, us flat. Appatntinent when T observed a hid- during the week and month just and after many adventures meet anothe: }. who joins le y 5 - y He i 4 ’ forees with “him.” Torether the, ‘make man plans. to resque Peart | shaven. and was badly frightened Leb rita titan Gretel ba Ss opens = ended. ey! ut eac! ime they are feat iy an unknown enemy, ie Silent a cor . moment \- 3 . 2 ‘ Mensce. ‘They. suspect that this may be Thornton, whom Pectl’s | ly . ‘ enn etna aitine ace ae ree re amar day } father wants her to marry. or Mrs. Richards, Pearl's chaperon. Homer | about's fair play. You're ors ‘of NM sce Sx2 ag j Dare joins the Zeppelin in Japan, and the ergise continues toward | free,” I said. Then I smiled: “As ran Tuapibeta were of one ity has featured the wholesale mar- \ Alaska. Jack and Bert have managed to plzce Thornton on a whaler. | free as I am. ‘woman, from in- kets this week. While buying has the Anthy Gorton, and Mrs. Richards on » coast guard cutter, the Sen- Fancy to tse present time. been slow it is now making better eca. Jack, while on board the Zeppelin, discovers a carrier pigeon with Ta utter tion, Thornton ogress, and in some instances or- a message, for Homer Dare asking 10 00 oF threatening to, ee the ‘aa ih . vad depos} fanattig sae a ar je identity of ie Silent Menace. jack ant or following e pigcon, arc led to the Anthy Gorton. Jack boards the whaler and ts attacked The photographs were of Mrs. ago. Price reductions in wholesale by a half-man, hali-beast called the Walrus! “Great. Heavens, Thornton, {s markets are growing less frequent, “Mrs. Richards the skipper's daugh- ‘and continued marking down of mer= si (Copyright, 1929, by New York Graphic.! ter?" I cried when I could find my chandise by retailers helps to attract OWN into the hold of the whaler I was drawn by those voice. : a abe @ better response to their offerings. alon-like hands of the hid ure called The ‘Not when you've got the goods Support of a more hopeful attitude talon-like hands of the hideous creature calle e red-handed. Mrs. Richards didn’t for an early revival of industrial out- Walrus. ‘ BS ae bak Ge ane meobatly put lies in the continued gain in steel, Alongside the whaler was Bert Hill in our airpiane, Geceet ee Ge Os tee Mees been the ratio of operation now being bobbing on the waves. Rrening. 8 scrapbook of his Ase ery wes im nie sa 1 7 5 Yales Selaate ne wo ward littl daughter, I'm. coi “Prices are firmer al expec! Around a point, still some miles distant, was the gov get to the bottom of this whole Rich- to be aivanch in AOPAe sities, VRERS ernment cutter Seneca. On it was Mrs. Richards! ards business, Thornton, no mat- house business has broadened in the Where the Queen of the Skies was at this moment I rome tte in dtiortton, Middle West and moré evidences are 4 did not know. Had it. succeeded in repairing its gas-ccll sharply, and before I was quite reported of business being placed on struts? At Nome the airship tit der Patoka was waiting, seg apa ay cede structural steel es Lak nares with its mooring mast and its refucling tanks. It would ing down the barrel of his gun. Her ene ta ter eausentipad pe wat take some days to refuel the Zeppelin. Meanwhile, what Sol ER eg back where cutput. Seasonal gains pds reported would happen to Pearl? What would her father do when er cia ts ot ewe in the call for heavy chemical prod- he learned that I had escaped? completely that I yielded, mechan- ucts’ of a basic Socaeial reflecting To the whalez, the Anthy Gor-€——————_—_—_—- ally. : a freer movement consuming ton, I had pursued the cartier ceeded in peering through. At first meee, crenySuee “1ebicrs = +5 channels. pigeon for the sole purpose of dis- petted ; i oe “The distribution of chemicals for covering a real clue to the Silent 1 saw nothing except a blur and a “What— a rites trade Ban been teaeed Menace. Was the Walrus the Silent faint ray of moving light. ¢ everything back!’ the fertilizer tra Menace? ‘The light came from an electric I knew Thornton for a cool one by conditions, prevailing in centers of And how about the Yankee skip- torch. amd a good shot. drought and in quarters where costs ¥ per? Was his vessel, the Anthy | yelled, beat my head against I complied, “ have been discouragingly to vigorous Gorton, a whaler? Was -he or was the Wall and kicked on the floor. ‘Now, lock the safe and toss me planting investments. “Dyestuffs have ’ the Walrus the blackmailer who hed The flash swept toward me and, in the golden key. , been in slightly better demand, re- threatened to expose the identity of astonishment. I recognized “Frank ah eB eg og flecting the increased interest in tex- the Silent Menace to Pearl and my- Thornton. Thornton,” 7 burst out in a fury 1 bibdate ets onal & self unless those $10,000 were forth- “This way. Thornton!” I cried. could not check. “You think you're tile channels. Of the movem ey coming from Homer Dare? “Who are you?” he demanded, . rotecting Richards, don't you? building, a larger proportion of busi- By this time my message. purport- suspiciously. Z ‘ _ ell, you're not! Or. maybe you ness is coming from new public works: ing to come from Dare. under the “Jack Stone!” I took his flash and motioned him to precede me think you're being loyal to Homer and utilities, and the ratio of private leg-band of the carrier pigeon. had 1 could see him squirm at the A WE eS enterprises is distinctly less than it been read. I had written: “Will see mention of my name. were in the midst of a breath- the stoke hole of the Anthy Gor- have got me, right this minute. Go yas last yeat. (At the wane Gin you personally. Meet the Queen of “I'm bound hand and foot. Give taking blow which had ridden down ton? ahead! What's your next - was last year. pro- the Skies and identifv yourself with me a knife. Put it in my tecth,” I ss ae ‘They had not yet discovered ws ye om, © Ste nearer, his eves duction of many building materials the sign of the golden key.” said, as he came close. cautiously, from the north with typical sud- 9 3 boring into mine with all the ma- has increased substantially from the The Yankee skipper had the and’ focused his flashlight on the denness. The old ship creaked and but now. as we edged i the — Bciousness of his nature. low levels of last fall. Seva seveed before the Waleas bad CS uttered harsh sound, “Re F shivered, pitched and rolled. spasm Toring glances sot Our, wat. FOF agile movement. he brought the batt “Deliveries of rubber are becoming 21 a by * ee \ after spasm vibrating through her a few seconds they did not Stir. of his revelver down on my temple larger, but supplies of crude make it t a a ee Fe ee eae timbers, etiee An instant later they were on our gad I saw all the stars in the difficult to count “upon sustained : sti I caught a glimpse of his face. It «yes» uddenly we sensed from a new s, bellowing Milky Was. strength in prices. ide an mini while T pawea the ai and was distorted with hate. “Yes,” he answered, sullenly. vibration thatthe engines had bees We feathed the open. ‘The sty “AST sacred, he caught my body, eather ninthete “Hae ietatveee-ves Tried te extricate iniselt’ foom ‘the Twas.at his mercy and he knewit, “What kind of a ship is this? started. : was black. The storm had not dragged me to the door and thrust sporided: tov Aity {a0 HEETGRESREF ORE Paces ea tess Retcr Atlee eM OTIGMIAyTyOUCe a cra ee en ane Oe REO tom peat huge, mountainous sea was TUBnINE Tt was blowing off and changing to |still backward. Notwithstanding un- he had'been named. “What's vour proposition?” tackle on board. It’s the devil’s own ~The next moment, without any and the racket in the air was inde- sleet and snow. I felt myself siid- satisfactory industrial conditions, “You want to net off this hell- Ship, if you ask me. It has been previous inkling of our immediate scribable. Bert Hill and the sea- ing along the deck. I remember evidence of an improvement has ap- ‘Thornton Proves shipnpot rout” trailing in the lane of the Queen Whereabouts, we pitched down a plane were nowhere in sight Neither that I dashed against the rail. A peared “in odrtain capesiNe\iriae Unexpected Aid! “Yes Gamn you!” of the Skics ever since we left Tokio, S80Tt flight of stairs and tumbled Was the Seneca. All view of land mammoth wave sweeping in from “With few exceptions, inventories * What sort of ship ot horrors “All right. Cut me loose and Ill ”.. ey ' into the boiler room. had been blotted out. age, Phe Sea caught and sent me swirl biotmel . had I boarded? see that you are sot free.” ‘Who is the Walrus? In the harsh, reddish flare of the The deck wasin confusion, a litter img like a human cork. I backed are subnormal, and the potential de- “ As I fought for release the Wal- “Can I trust you?” $ Thornton shivered. “That fiend! open fire -boxes were two stokers. of broken masts and spars, much of back against the rail. clutching out mand for spring requirements should rus, hissing and snarling like an “TI give you my. word.” He just came on board. He’s as One was the Walrus! The other, a its middle being half submerged by wildly. body-bruised aa ae result in a gradual upswing to busi- animal, jabbed me in the jaw with | “I don't have a knife,’ He fumbled much a mystery as thé skipper and Monstrous. gorilla of @ man, was the enormous breakers | sweeping head ached excrudatingly. Another ness. While it is difficult to general- one of his vile flapper-like fists, in his clothes and produced.a file , ; equally joathsome and brutish. They over the rail. There as a wave, larger and more treacherous jze on possible development from knocking me senseless. which he jabbed through the hole. the crew. They're all devils, I tell fairly reveled in the gritty and list to starboard. Officers andcrew than any of the others, engulfed me. h ried f ti { ‘When I regained my wits 1 was I-caught it in my teeth and sawed ©You. and will go to any limit. Good iy heat, Never. had I'seen such were working like demons and the _ The next thing I knew Was thet such @ varied array of conditions as lying prone. tied to a ring in an the thongs from my wrists Lord! You certainly pulled a a’ rd a play of gigantic muscles as theirs skipper was bawling orders which I had plunged info the icy depths have ruled during the opening month q iron floor. I had been di 1d to ankles. : one ene you dumped me on as they faecri ran (EBs no one heard. of the sea! of the year, the removai of some of j some secret cranny of the ship be- | Then 1 filed through the trap- oat. ee) “Good | God!” sai lornton; In the excitement and chaos, we the obstacles which have hampered a tween the hold and the boiler room door hinges, knocked the lid off and , “That remains to be scen!” I shot aghast. gn tS Hom-Faced Harry!” were not observed. In fact, incom- | In the ICY grip of the SEA! free and natural development is very bulkhead. I suffered intensely. My climbed out of the sweltering dun- Bs ‘Who?” I echoed. mon With the others. we were fight- Jack's quest ‘of the SILENT hopeful.” body seemed to be parboiled. My geon. I told him the other news. “The = «Don’t you remember him? He ing for our lives. MENACE has led him to nothing : breath came and went in scorching — I was still somewhere far under government cutter Seneca is stand- was one ‘of the members of the reach the cabin and obtain life belts. | but DANGER. Can he be Sea eer cere gasps. deck and in pitch dark. I couldn't ing by. Zeppelin’s landing crew at Cal- Seized with a sudden inspiration, Lakota Alderman Is Overhead was a heavily hinged hear a sound. Thornton had van- | And I sneered: “Your very dear cutta!” we fought our way into the skip- Don't fil to read TOMOR- s 8 < trapdoor, through which I had been ished. I calied his name several friend, Mrs. Richards, is on her. We stared at each other blankly. per’s private quarters. S$ installment of this Dead in California thrust. ‘It was reached by fron times. He did not reply. You see, Thornton, you two are Was he the Silent Menace? Was " There I began a frantic search air serial, “On Cupid’s 4 rungs in the wall. I stumbled around like a blind doomed to work together. 1 don't he behind the scheme to blackmail among his private papers while = —— } On a level with my eyes was a rat man until. by sheer accident my szem to be able to separate you per- Homer Dare? Or, wes it only a Thornton mounted guard at the Lakota, N. D., Feb. 3—(?)—Mathew hole. By twisting my neck, I suc- groping hands touched a thickly manently.” coincidence that he was here door ,after we had armed ourselves. Holicky, 74, alderman here for many : ° seer icien Friday at the home of his ; as the consciousless brute who mur- | ene pad sere taser Eye, unless his trump finesse won, Declar- Mr. Hiolleky came to the United Ww. | ders a whole family of helpless chil- | €r could not make game. States from Bohemia and to Lakota s aren, | “After North won the third trick | in 1888. He leaves three daughters PY | CHARLES BANNON LYNCHING | (Duluth Herald) Schafer Affair Is Called Out- rage Against Law and Fair < Name of State Few North Dakota happenings have activated a more spontaneous out: burst of editorial condemnation than the lynching at Schafer of Charles Bannon, confessed slayer of the A. E. Haven family, a survey by The Trib- une shows. Some editors use the case as an argument for the restoration of capi- tal punishment in North Dakota and ! | Governor Shafer of North Dakota ils fury that it is to be deplored the | has begun an investigation of yester- jmost. The mob's offense was not day's outrage at Schafer, in that alone against the murderer whose | state, where a mob took a confessed |expiation at their hands was really| murdered from the jail where he | 4s merciful as that which society | awaited trial and hanged him from a | Would have inflicted upon him legal-/ bridge. He should investigate, and iy. The crime of the lynchers is as if it is possible those guilty of this | Well against the dignity and majesty | crime against law, order and justice ,of the law, the constitution of their} should be properly punished. country and their state and the peo-/ The crime, a wholesale murder of |ple of North Dakota, whcse good a family of six, was heinous; but imame they have associated with a' there is no crime so heinous as that ; Vicious outrage. | of the mob which takes the law into | It is in the nature of things that | its hands and constitutes itself judge, justice sometimes is frustrated. But | jury and executioner. A mob is not infrequent miscarriages of this kind | fit. for any of. those responsibilities, Minnesota. Others are content with |are much to be preferfed to thé in- condemning it as an outrage against | evitable injustices that. must arise law, order and the fair name of North | shen passions and. prejudices of ' or for any other. Murder’ is bad, but lynching ts | worse—worse than any crime for Dakota. | mobs, whose highest level is that of 'vhich the sentence of Judge Lynch Representative editorials bearing on the subject are reprinted below for the information of The Tribune's readers. ANOTHER LYNCHING (Grand Forks Herald) Another has just been added to the small.list of North Dakota lynchings. The young man Bannon, who had confessed to the butchery of a whole family in McKenzie county, was tak- en from the jail where he was held and hanged. The wholesale murder was a shocking thing, but it cast no) stigma on the community. The lynch- ing blots the reputation of the state. The fact that a man was lynched in North Dakota will confer on the state a reputation for lawlessness which, in fact, the state does not deserve. Those who committed this act have broken one of the state’ and injured its reputation in a manner from which it cannot recover until time has blotted out the memory of this fresh crime. CAPITAL PUNISHMENT (Devils Lake Journal) Probably. after all. capital punish- ment should be stored in North Dako- ta. The Bannon lynching indicates that something: should be done not only to prevent such occurences in the future, but also to stem more or less the tendency to murder.’ When a man confesses to murder, or when conviction for the crime fol. lows a fair trial, life imprisonment, it appears, is not punishment suffi. cient. Moreover, without capital pun. ishment there is always the chance of the prisoner escaping full punishment , provided by law. The chances of es- cape, pardon or parole are always present. MOB VIOLENCE IN NORTH DA- KOTA , their lowest member, seize the powe x 'cver is imposed and executed. So- of courts and usurp the place of laws. ciety is organized on a basis of law | Where mobs rule, lives of innocent | and order, and anybody who over- men and women are in danger and throws that structure, whatever the jeonstitutional securities are gone. provocation, is a public enemy who {Crimes cannat be . cured. ,by. . more , should be recognized and punished as jerime. The mob murder at Schafer | such, is to be deplored and regretted, not | ,only for the act in itself, but because | ¢———- it reflects upon the law-abiding citi- | | Radio Bridge zens o fa great state where public! ¢ ‘opinion is not in sympathy with such | * ar i em violence. The following bridge hands were ser be | played in a game broadcast by KFYR THE! LYNCHING AT SCHAFER | at 4:30 p. m. Tuesday as one of a (Minneapolis Journal) series sponsored by Milton C. Work, Horrible as was the crime which, bridge expert. Charles Bannon had confessed, the North—Spades, J. 92 lynching at Schafer, North Dakota, Hearts, K1096 ;cannot be condoned.‘ For having Diamonds. A J10 murdered a family of six, including | Clubs, 765 \four helpless children, Bannon un-| West— East— \doubtedly merited death. Because . Spades, 43 Spades, K 8 ; North Dakota, like Minnesota, fool- | Hearts, 3 Hearts, QJ 82 ishly spares the lives of even the most ; Diamonds,87654 Diamonds. KQ9 fiendish of murderers, the death pen- , Clubs, AKJ102 Clubs, 9983 alty could not be inflicted. except. by}. .South-Spades, AQ 10765 ‘lynching. Hence enraged citizens | Hearts, A754 Diamonds, 32 lynched ae a | But their act cannot be excused, Clubs, 4 however great the provocation inher- j THE BIDDING South. one spade; West, two of ent in the law’s futility. Mob yiolence | Clubs; North, two of Spades; East, |is cowardly. Mob violence is, murder, ‘even when the victim is himself the | three of Clubs; South, three of Spades. worst of murderers. Vengeance is the THE PLAY |law’s, not the mob’s, even wheif the; Trick one—West opened the play ‘aw’s limit of vengeance is palpably |wtin the King of Clubs; Dummy | played the five of Spades; Bast inadequate. So Governor Shafer acts with com- pieven the three and Declarer played the four. mendable energy when he promptly orders a thorough going investigation) Trick two—West led her singleton Heart; Declarer played the King of of the hanging of Bannon, to the end | ‘that the mob’s members, and espe- | Hearts from ‘the Dummy; East played \elally the leaders, be identified and | the deuce and Declarer the four. punished. Trick three—Dummy lead the nine But is there not a strong argument, | of Spades; East followed with the this eight; Declarer played the seven and ‘West the trey. ‘ f Trick four—Dummy led the deuce with |.of Spades; East drops the King; De- ag played the ‘Ace and West. the four. © . Trick five—Declarer led the deuce of Diamonds: i House Bills Introduced H. B, 140—State affairs committee: | | Requires all persons, co-partnersnips, jassociations or corporations licensed | {as an investment company or dealer |to forward to the state securites com- | |mission all documents necessary for | issuing a lien certificate. ss | H.B. 141—State affairs committe: ‘Makes minor changes in present la | governing sale of securities. i Bills Passed By House | H. B. 26—Appropriations commit- tee: Appropriates $70,000 for bovine tuberculosis indemnity fund. | H. B. 25—Appropriations commit- : Appropriates $70,000 for state | ‘National Guard, ‘ |.:H. B. 92—Flannigan: of ‘Stutsman, | Wr request: Makes . attorney's len jautomatic upon any judgment decid- d in court or in cases where money} lor property settlement effected out of | |court after commencement of action. | H. B. 38—Appropriations commit- tee: Appropriates $12,340 for state |board of administration. _ H. B. 47—Halcrow of Pembir:a and Twichell of Cass Amends law to | permit use of alcohol ‘by hospitals, laboratories, clinics and for manufac- turing and industrial purposes. | Bills Killed By Hcuse Commitees | H. B, 85—Anti-vivissetion measure. | | H. B, 89—Would have eliminated! deficiency judgment in mortgage \foreclosure actions, | H. B. 90—Prohibited chattel mort-/ |gage on crops prior to threshing. H Bills Introduced in Senate S, B. 120—Sathre of Barnes, Cain ‘of Stark, Matthaei of Wells and Fo ler of Cass: Provides for suj jof administrgtion of trust ‘district court, and for ado} rules of procedure in such actions. | 8. B. 121—Putnam of Foster-Eddy: | ; Prohibits school districts from levying tax for school building fund if there| jis outstanding indebtedness. pital for insane from $900 to $1,500 2 year. S. B. 123—Banks and banking com- mittee: Requires depositories of p lic founds in state to pay subs‘a: ly same rate of interest as such banks recommended by banking code commission. S. B. 124—Crocker of Ransom: Ap- propriates $100 yearly to each count: for paying expenses of persons act-| ing as demonstration teachers in schools and lecturers at teachers’ and superintendents’ meetings. - the play developed easily, Declarer the deuce to the next trick, hop- and expecting that the King uld drop and that his Jack of Spades would be an entry. It turned. out that way (East’s eight had not been a false card), and the rest of being able to exhaust East’s Dia- monds and Clubs so as to force him to lead a Heart at trick 12.” Predicts Good Year For Automobile Men If avtomobile sales maintain the Pace they are setting at the Chicago Naticnal Automobile Show, held last 8. B. 125—Crocker of Ransom: Pro- vides for security for funds loaned or week in the Coliseum, 1931 will be advanced by public agencies for p: an excellent motor car selling year, | Year. ‘and other non-school activities, {That taxes on all farm lands in state chase of seeds. S. B. 126—Renauld of Role Property of Indians who are wards of federal government exempt from tax- ation. from leased buildings used for resi- dential purposes between November 15 and March 15. 8. B, 128—Renauld of Rolette: Ap-) propriates $15,000 for paying deficit/ in general maintenance fund of) North Dakota state tuberculosis san-| atorium at San Haven. 8. B. 129—Burkhart of Ward: Re-| a quires school census to be taken each odd-numbered year, instead of each S. B. 130—Hoople of Walsh: Sets school day at not less than five and one-half hours, exclusive of recess Concurrent Resolution Resolution F— Martin of Morton: be reduced 50 per cent from tax levy of 1930, and that all appropriations depending on funds from direct tax- ation to reduced accordingly. clubs; Declarer ruffed with the 10 of | Spades; West played the deuce and! | Dummy the six. | ‘Trick seven—Declarer led the trey | of Diamonds; West played the five; | Dummy the Ace and East the nine. | ‘Trick “eight—Declarer continued | Diamonds with the Dummy's Jack; | East played the Queen; Declarer | Tuffed with the Queen of Spades and | West played the six of Diamonds. | Trick nine—Declarer led the five | of Spades; West discarded the seven lof Diamonds; Dummy played the | Jack of Spades; East discarded the nine of Clubs. Trick 10—Dummy played the seven of Clubs; East played the Queen; De- clarer trumped with the six of Spades and West played the 10 of Clubs. . Trick 11—Declarer led the five of Hearts; West discarded the eight of ; Scoring 36 points, game, with 40 hon- In either event the Declarer would take the remaining two tricks with his Ace or the Dummy’s 10, Declarer therefore won four-odd, ors. In his analysis of the play, Mr. Work said: “It is rarely that we sec @ hand developed as brilliantly as the one just played. Wien West led @ Heart to trick two, South could mark that lead as a singleton and place East's Hearts. He had lost one Club trick and knew he must lose one Diamond. Therefore to make game his Spade finesse must succeed . and have the Queen-8-2 over North’s King-10-6. To win this | Eczema*can withstand. according to the Automotive Daily News, a trade paper called to the at- tention of The Tribune by 8S. W. Corwin, A number of dealers, exhibiting their cars at the show, have reported that sales for the first half of the show closely approximated the total for the entire week last year and in a number of instances reported sales exceeding that total, Based on the response of the buy- ing public to the new cars on display, several manufacturers have ordered, P-up in production in February and a further increase in March, INTRODUCES WHITE TUXEDO Palm Beach, Feb. 3.—(/?)—Snow white linen tuxedos are the thing for men at night social functions. How- ard Major of New York set the style. Everything is like the tuxedo en- semble except in color and material and Jack of a waist-coat. Instead. there is a wide silk belt. Asks: What Is ACNE? Yes! That's the simple answer, but Acne is more than tue a big ofall) better to call it a big stubborn pimple. ‘That's why you must fight this ob- stinate skin disease with something Powerful enough to kill it and swift- Jy get the unsightly thing off the skin. So we advise’ all who are so unfor- tunate as to have Acne to get rid of il at once and for all by using Emer- ald Oil, a powerful, healing, antiseptic oil that. no case of Acne, Pimples or * And those itchy toes that get. raw and sore—the germs that cause it are killed by’Emer@ld Oil, Don't waste time with weak washes—Emerald Oi} 4s guaranteed by the Service drug store and druggists everywhere to rid you,of stubborn unsightly skin trou- trick in‘tl.> North hand was essential finesse‘ the trumps: bles or money: hack— tle lasts 2 weeks—-hdvertisement. enridge. Funeral services will be held Thurs- day at the Catholic church. The body will arrive from California ‘Wednesday. i PIMPLES,