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6 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, , FEBRUARY 19, 1931 AMUSEMENT TAXING BILLS DELAYED BY SENATE COMMITTEE Syrup and Tobacco Also Are Postponed Four measures providing for sales and amusement taxes were indefi- nitely postponed by the senate com- mittee on state affairs Thursday. On the amusement tax bill, pro- viding for a tax on admission to shows, exhibitions, cabarets and dances, a majority of the committee | voted to indefinitely postpone the measure, while a minority planned to bring a report to the floor of the | senate to recommend the proposal | Bills Providing Tax on Malt/ager at Devils Lake. |Depositors in Leeds | Bank to Get Dividend Bringing the total dividends paid to the depositors of the closed Farmers and Merchants bank of Leeds to 25 |per cent, L. R. Baird, receiver, has announced the payment of a five per cent dividend. Payment is being made through the joffice of C. W. Conroy, district man- BUTLER PLANS 70 | Major General Says He Will Forsake Military Career to Be Speaker Buffalo, N. ¥., Feb. 19.—(?)—Major General Smedley Butler plans to re- | QUIT MARINE POST; | that every dairyman in Mandan have | Two Fergus Falls Stores Are Burned | MANDAN NEWS | | Are PASS MANDAN MILK izes to RULING WEDNESDAY jfrom their homes in a fire here Tues- day night. The loss, it is estimated, Makes Violators of City Ordi- nance Subject to $100 Fine |may reach $150,000, The -Golden Rule Ready-to-Wear or 90-Day Sentence store owned by Miss Monica Conroy and the Golden Rule Dry Goods store jowned by P. J. McGoldrick were de- jstroyed. The loss to the stocks, it is (estimated, probably will total $100,000 | while loss to the building was esti- | mated at $50,000, The Mandan city commission bess besser Passed a milk ordinance | ¢~—————_________i¢g incorporating 28 different provisions | iti Ay | at the*meeting Wednesday night, ac- ||_ Additional Society | cording to W. H. Seitz, Mandan city | ms auditor. A delegation of seven Man- | |dan dairymen attended the meeting \K. C. Initiation to | eee alee Close With Banquet | The Mandan ordinance requires | a year’s permit for selling and dis- tributing milk. The permits are ob: A class of 25 candidates will be initiated by the Bismarck council, for passage. a i ‘The proposal. was sponsored by | tire from the marine corps next Sep: Senators J. H. Burkhart, Ward; ©. N. | ember to become a lecturer. re Brunsdale, Grand Forks: C. W. Fine, He announced his intention Benson, and William Watt, Cass. Two other bills sponsored by this group also were indefinitely post- Poned. These bills, S. B. 203, and S. B. 233, provided for a sales tax on malt syrup and for licensing dealers, and for a sales tax on cigars, che- Toots, or tobacco used for smoking or chewing, except cigarettes or snuff which are already taxed. Senator Fine’s bill, to tax chewing gum, cosmetics, face powders, patent medicines, shaving soaps, creams, hair tonics and other articles, was the fourth bill ordered indefinitely post- poned by the committee. A sub-committee was appointed to; consider 2 proposal sponsored by Senators Watt, Fine, Brunsdale, and Burkhart, to increase the present cigarette tax from three to four cents @ package. FARMERS WILL CET SEED, FEED LOANS Loans to Drought and Hail Sufferers Are for Crop Pro- duction Only Loans to farmers for seed, feed for ‘workstock, and fuel and oil for trac- tors used in crop production, will be confined to farmers who suffered se- tious crop loss in 1930, is the gist of a report received from Walter E. Eliff, in charge of the Farmers’ Seed Loan office at Grand Forks, The most serious drought losses, he ays, were in the northwestern coun- ties, especially Mountrail, but extend- ing over into all or parts of several other counties. Another area rather seriously affected in 1930 extended from Barnes and Stutsman counties northwest in the general direction of Minot. In_ some counties, such as Pembina, Walsh and Towner, hail damage was serious. Counties seri- ously affected by drought and hail have been included in the territory in which seed loans are being made. Elsewhere in the state, crop con- ditions were fairly satisfactory in 1930, except possibly for locai areas where drought or hail damage oc- curred. The principal difficulty for their 1931 crop production in such sections is due to low prices at which grain crops have been sold, rather than to unsatisfactory yields. Such farmers are not entitled to aid under the seed loan act. Consideration is still being given to! Tequests of additional counties for granting of seed and feed loans, fav- orable decision necessarily being based | on showing of serious reduction in crop yields in 1930. North Dakota suffered much less seriously from} drought in 1930 than many other states, crop yields for the entire state| being estimated at practically 90% of the average yields for the previ- ous ten years, as compared with a correspondeng figure of 62.8% for Arkansas, 60.5% for Kentuckq, 66.8% for Missouri, and 71.2% for Oklahoma. Death Claims Mother Of Seven Wednesday; Mrs. Gottlob Mueller, 37, a resident | of Ashley for the last 18 years, died ; farmers at this time in financing} forsake his military career Wednes- jday night when he arrived here to | deliver an address, explaining ce had j Signed a contract to deliver a series of lectures beginning next October. He said the recent. Mussolini inci- dent which resulted in an apology to the Italian premier by the state de- | partment and a reprimana for 2utler {from the navy department bad noth- ling to do with his proposed retire- ment. His retirement, he said, was contin- gent upon the consent of the pr dent, adding some Washington o! cials were aware of his plans and that he expected no opposition. Approves Highway Appropriation Bill ‘The house committee on appropri- ations Thursday recommended an {appropriation of $358,600 for the state {highway department, a reduction of $13,000 in the amount provided for in the original measure which carried the recommendation of the state budget board. Four $10,000 appropriations for in- stitutions at Fargo were approved by the committee. The senate previous- ly acted favorably on the bills, which provide for appropriations for the North Dakbta House of Mercy, St. John’s orphanage, North Dakota Children’s Home Society, and the Florence Crittenton home. Williston Girl Is Killed in Accident Williston, N. D., Feb. 19.—(?)—Alma Evenson, 17, is killed early Thurs- day as a car driven by Berger Ross- land upset eight miles south of Alamo. Rossland said the girl, daughter of iMrs, Anna Evenson, Williston, clutched his arm as the car struck a depression. He lost control and the car turned over, crushing her. He freed the girl by using a jack to raise the car. Believing she had fainted, he waiked three miles for help. A coroner’s jury was to consider the |case Thursday. Will Hold Baptist Before the adjournment of the Bap- |tist Ministers’ institute, which has | been held in Bismarck the last four jdays, it was decided that because of the unqualified success of the confer- ence, that a similar institute should be} held in 1932. | Rey. F. E. Stockton, Fargo: Rev.! F. Klein, Washburn; Rev. Charles Knapp, Wishek; Rey. E. Monnes, Mi- not; and Rey. E. L. Jackson, Bis- marck, were named to make arrange- ments for the next year’s meeting. | The institute went on record as} “disapproving of public promiscuous , dancing in schools and other public! buildings owned by the taxpayers who may be divided in their opinion as to the propriety of dancing.” | Resolutions thanking the guest speakers and the various organiza-! work of the institute as well as to th people of Bismarck were passed. | APPROVE INDIAN SCHOOL Washington, Feb. 19. P\—The | Institute in 1932 tions who had contributed aid in the | 5; here Wednesday after an illness of! house accepted an amendment offer-| 8 days’ duration. jed by Representative Leavitt, Repub- Mrs. Mueller was born in Eureka,|lican, Montana, to the second defi- S. D., March 19, 1894, the daughter /ciency bill to provide $25,000 for the of Mr. and Mrs. Gottlieb Reich. She|Indian school at Frazier, Mont. came to North Dakota a few years later with her parents and was edu-/ cated in the public schools of the Rosenthal district. On March 13, 1913, she married Gottlob Mueller, Ashley. She leaves her husband, father, a! brother, five sisters and seven chil- Gren. | The children are Eleanor, Hilda, Esther, Lydia, Benjamin, Harvey and Elmer, all of whom live at Ashley. Her sisters are Mrs. Jake Entzminger, Kulm; Mrs. Andres Eirpele, Lehr; ‘Mrs, John Wolf, Long Lake, 8. D.; ‘Mrs. Dave Botheive, Danzig, and Mrs. John Britchau, Napoleon. Her broth- He Reich, lives at Hillwig, N. GINGER CASES INCREASE Los Angeles, Feb. 19.—(?)—City health officers have reported two new cases of paralysis attributed to the drinking of Jamaica Ginger extract bringing the official total of suffer- ers here the last three months to 74, DESCRIBE PERFECT MAN | New York, Feb, 19.—(?)—Here's| the perfect man: Height 5 feet, 8/ inches; weight, 140 pounds; waist, 30| ches; hips, 37 inches. Such are the | specifications for a model wanted for | the styie show of the clothing de- signers executives’ association. \ New Yi Pennsylvania and Mli- nois contribute 34.28 per cent of all| goods manufactured in the United} States, according to the Business Re- search and Survey, New York. Avoid Half-Cured Colds! | Half-cured colds are a source of | Many a case of Flu .. Puneral services will be held at Ashley in the Baptist church at 3:30 ‘Thursday afternoon, Rev. Grumbine sof Fredonia officiating. Burial will be made at the Berlin cemetery at Ashley. Former Students to Gather at Banquet! i Forty. former students of the North Dakota State college will gather at a! banquet to be held-at the Terrace! tainable through filing an aplication with the commission. A fee of $2 is} charged for the application. | The ordinance also requires that a bona fide tester determine the grades of milk, the bacteria count, the san- itation of the buildings and herds, proper pasturization and that all cattle in the herd have a tuberculin test. A provision in the ordinance de- mands that all delivery wagons have | top to protect the milk from the jSun’s rays. Milk also must be de- livered 36 hours after milking. No fee will be charged dairymen in town for the inspection although dairymen outside the city limits must pay expenses. ‘The ordinance expressly demands the name of the distributor be placed on the milk bottle cap before dis- tribution. A fine not exceeding $100 or im- prisonment in the city jail not to exceed 90 days will be imposed on anyone violating the ordinance, Mr. | Seitz declared. 8. P. Ravnos, supervisor of Man- dan waterworks, was named to head the milk testing laboratory. Ravnos, with the consent of the commissioner | Knights of Columbus, at a special rvice to be conducted on Sunday, Feb. 22, at St. Mary's school auditor- ium. As a preliminary to the cere- mony, a high mass will be celebrated at 8 a, m. at St. Mary's Pro-cathedral. The concluding feature will be a banquet at 6 o'clock Sunday evening in the Patterson hotel Terrace Gar- den, to which wives or guests of mem- bers have been bidden. Initiation services for the first de- gree will be held at 10 a. m., with the second degree. given at 11:15 a. m. and the third degree at 1:30 p. m. Officers of the local council, as- sisted by E. H. Donovan, Langdon, state deputy, and H. H. Hurning, dis- pc deputy, will conduct the initia- tion, RAISES PORK THRIFTILY Cavalier, N. D., Feb. 19.—Wheat, barley and oats supplemented with. a concentrate and alfalfa pasture produced pork for Eric Peterson, Backoo, for less than 5 cents per pound last year, according to E. G. It required 189 days to finish 61 hogs which averaged 204 pounds at South St. Paul when marketed. —_— MAN’S BODY FOUND Rice Lake, Wis. Feb. 19—(?)—A two-day search was ended when the body of August Hier, 70, was found in a barn on his farm home The coroner decided he shot himself with a rifle found nearby, and said an in- jquest was unnecessary. Training School Five Defeats Flasher, 16-9; The Training school basketball team defeated the Flasher hign school cagers 16-9 Wednesday night in the Training school gymnasium. The Training school quint allowed the Flasher team only one field goa! {during the entire game althougn Flasher obtained seven points via the free throw line. A total of 11 per- ‘sonal and two technical fouls were called on the Training school crew jWhile the Flasher quint committed only five personal fouls. | ‘The Training school squad obtained @ 2-1 lead at the end of the firs: quarter. They gained seven more points to hold an 8-2 advantage at halftime. In the second half the! | Training school quint totaled eight | more points while their opponents were only able to garner seven. | Coates and Brastad starred for the | Training school five. Hutchins, cen- ter, led the Flasher attack. Court Calendar to | Be Ready Friday The calendar of the mid-winter | term of Morton county district court will be ready Friday according to: John Handtmann, Sr., Morton county clerk of court, The mid-winter term is scheduled to start Feb. 24, Mr. Handtmann said. Judge H, L. Berry, Mandan, will pre- side. The majority of the cases before this court term are civil, Mr. Handt- | mann added. NO MORE RHEUMATISM “For over a year I felt the awful agony of rheumatism in my ‘legs and arms”, writes. Mr. Phillip Green- baum, 132 Lincoln, street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa, “Within seven weeks after I began taking Konjola, I was a different man. ‘The frightful misery of rheumatism had been entirely banished. I gained) eight pounds in weight”. Konjola Buy It At Any Good Drug Store. We stop buying old tires February 28th. Take ad- vantage of this unusual of- fer. New tires as low as 30c per thousand miles. |) GAMBLE STORES Swiftest, Easiest Way To End Bilious Spell When you neglect those first symp- toms of constipation—bad breath, Parizek, Pembina county a-Jent. i of public health, may revoke any li- fication | HIGHWAY PAVING Engineers, County Representa- tives Hold Wednesday Morn- ing Discussion Fargo, N. D., Feb. 19—()—After a. morning of discussion during which several spirited talks and arguments were heard for and against the pro- posed paving of highway No. 10 from Fargo west, members of the state highway department, Cass county commissioners and residents of towns slong the route are no nearer solu- tion of the problem. Among those present were H. C.! Frahm, chief highway engineer; A. 1tenance engineer, STILL UNSOLVED: “= ber of the state highway commission; H, C. Hollopeter, state highway main- tatives: Maple- Strenuous protests against the pro- posal to pave was voiced by represent- atives of the three towns who main- tain paving would practically “kill” their towns. Moe explained that Cass county and the state perhaps never again will have an opportunity \to get a permanent road at such a little ex- pense as now through using part. of the $1,290,000 allotted North Dakota for highway purposes in the federal emergency measure. Night Session Is in Prospect for House The first night meeting of the present legislative session is expected to be held by the North Dakota hous? , and from Casselton, Buffalo and D. McKinnon, Bismarck, project Thursday night. Forks, announced that because of a heavy calendar of business, the house probably will go into night session. Whether the evening meeting will be held depends on the progress made with the calendar Thursday after- noon. The house has before it 21 bills on the calendar and 21 in general or- ders. Molitor Is Champion Flockmaster for ’30 P. B. Molitor’s accomplishment of Producing an average of 156.35 pounds of lamb per ewe has resulted in the Brinsmade man being crowned North Dakota’s champion flockmas- ter for 1930. The record was made in connection with the 1930 lamb production contest of the Agricultur- al college extension service conduct- ed by Geo. J. Baker, livestock special- ist, The award was based on the average weight of lamb per ewe 135 days after lambing. Mr. Molitor’s flock was composéd of 51 Shrop- shire-Oxford ewes and the total number of lambs raised was 82. | : SMILES AT U. S. LAWS Philadelphia, Feb. 19—(?)—Euro- Ppeans, it seems, smile at American indignation over child marriages in the Orient. Setting this forth at a meeting here, Dame Rachael Crow- jley, British sociologist, proceeded: “We know that seven states in your country permit marriages of girls at the age of 12 and one state at the age of 10.” engineer; I. J. Moe, Valley City, mem-; Speaker Cc. V.. Freeman, Grand Nicola Grocery 1 SEE YOU HAVE A NEW WASHER. IT’S LIKE MINE, ISN'T IT? | YES, BUT 1 CAN'T GET MY CLOTHES AS WHITE AS YOU DO. I DON'T KNOW WHY IT MUST BE THE SOAP. CHANGE TO RINSO AND SEE THE DIFFERENCE! THE MAKERS OF OUR WASHING MACHINES RECOMMEND IT we 5 - Phone 231 We Deliver Specials for Friday and Saturday Butter, Eggs, per Ib: . 27ic per dozen Sugar, Salmon, tall cans, Wife s.:... 9EO |S Papa, ons DEC Monaco Coffee pans C | Toilet Soap, Leila as 29 Cate tor i Oe alee |e Puritan Malt, per can ... .49¢ Tomatoes, No. 2 cans, 1 box Macaroni free, 2 for. BREAD, 3 loaves for Catsup, 14 oz. bottle for .. 21c 22c Karo Syrup 2 1-2 Ib, can for Cup e oO est water softeners needed. ib vi Great for t! : saves scrubbing. the BIG package- for dishes too as lightweight vues soaps © washing, #00- at savé Rinso’s Tl You'll like coated tongue, listlessness, the whole vstem soon suffers. Appetite lags. Digestion slows up. You become headachy, dizzy. bilious. It's easy to correct sluggish bowel action! Take a candy Cascaret to- night. See how quickly—and pleas- antly—the bowels are activated. Al:| the souring waste is gently propelled from the system. Regular and com- plete bowel action is restored. 4 Cascarets are made from pure cas- cara, a substance which doctors agree actually strengthens bowel | muscles. All drug stores have Cas- carets. 10c.—Advertisement. It costs only a few cents more to get the best in flours. We guarantee that you will make better baked foods with OCCIDENT, LYON’S BEST, OR CLIMAX than from any other flour. j | 3 k A | Try a sack! If you are not satisfied, your grocer will refund your money without argument. Our money back guarantee is an insurance policy with every sack. Bismarck Cloak Shop For Friday and Saturday 100 DRESSES in the “Of course, it’s Schilling’s” Do you believe standard? double About 975 A special purchase of Quality Dresses consisting of silk crepes and prints of many popular styles, patterns and new Spring shades, for young and matronly, sizes 14 to 50, half sizes 1414 to 2414, These dresses are valued from $14.50 to $19.50. Get.your selection early! Sehilling Schilling Coffee is for those who will not tolerate “cheapness” in their own homes--and who appreciate the same standard in those who make their coffee. The Schilling roasting room is the only place in America where cheap coffees are not made side by side with good coffee. There is no Schilling double] | Coffee | standard--no_ confu- sion of quality—for « Schilling Schilling believes that cheapness is contagious. There are several good coffees-- but where is the finest apt to come from? coffee Wings of the Morning \KING POWDER » TEA « SPICES » EXTRACTS