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2 CAVALIER MAN TO SUCCEED DYNES IN FARM WORK POST By WM. E. MCKENNEY (Secretary American Bridge League) In our past articles we have de- seribed the two-club forcing bid and the one-club forcing bid. The writer —A Series Explaining the Contract Bridge System— THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 1981 49 CANNED FOODS RECOMMENDED FOR VITAMIN CONTENT suit than diamonds or one no trump, and if diamonds or clubs ore his strong suit, he must bid two. While the advocates of this system will bid one club first or second hand E. G. Parizek, Native of Lidger- wood, to Be Assistant Coun- ty Agent Leader Fargo, N. D., April 2—(4)—Ap- pointment of County Agent E. G. Parizek, Cavalier, N. D., as assistant state county agent leader with head- quarters at the North. Dakota Agri- cultural college was announced thé extension division at the college. Mr. Parizek takes over the duties of Roy C. Dynes, who died Feb. 10, with M. D. Gorman, county agent leader, he will have supervision of the 38 county and home demonstration agents in the state. One of the veteran county agents 4n the state, Mr. Parizek entered ag- ricultural extension division work as a county agent in McIntosh county in 1917, when the war emergency result- ed in a number of similar appoint- ments throughout the agricultural areas of the United States. He has been engaged in county agent work continuously since that time. being transferred to Kidder county in 1919 and to his present post in Pembina inty in 1921. roted in an area heavily in with the perennial sow thistle, one 0 Mr. Parisek's major projects in Pem- bina county has been the introduc- tion of sheep and other livestock with the attendant increase in feed crop acreages as @ means of profitably combating the inroads of this weed. He has been particularly active also in developing boys’ and girls’ 4-H club work, and has turned out several te championship teams. pees on 9 farm near Lidgerwood Richland county, Mr. Parizek has spent his entire life in North Dakota. He attended the North Dakota Agri- cultural college, where he was promi- nent in athletics, a first string man in football and also baseball. He is married and has a son and & daughter. The transfer will be ef- fected as soon as Mr. Parizek can ar- range to move to Fargo, probably about May 1. No announcement has been made regarding the successor to his post in Pembina county. Fargo Man Is Given 2nd Chance to Sue St. Paul, April 2—(#)—E. T. Alford, Fargo, N. D., dairy farm operator, was granted a new trial Thursday by the Minnesota supreme court of his action for $2,099 damages against Simon Kruse, operator of the Radis- son farm, 12 miles north of Minnea- Polis. Alford brought suit claiming Kruse sold him three registered Guernsey cows having Bang’s disease. The Hennepin county district court directed a verdict in favor of Kruse and denied Alford’s motion for a new trial. The high court's action re-) verses this and remands the case back to district court for trial. , Vein of Radium in Canada ‘Promising’ Montreal, April 2—(7)—The Ga- zette Thursday published the follow- ing from its Ottawa correspondent: Canada shortly may produce radi- um in commercial quantities. Sam- ples from a Pitchblende discovery at Echo Bay, Great Bear Lake, North- west Territories, have been analyzed by the department of mines, and the uranium-radium content in these samples is promising. Dickinson Girl Is Named as Debater Margaret Anderson, Dickinson, and Mercedes Pitzer, Grand Forks, are the members of a University of North Dakota debating team which will meet teams representing Jartestown college and Moorhead state teachers college April 7 and 8. The question debated will be: “Re- solved that the nations of the world should adopi a policy of free trade.” TO HAVE NURSE Selfridge, N. D., April 2.—Sioux county will have a Red Cross nurse for three months this year, accord- ing to E. Helen Iorns, superintendent of schools here. The nurse is spon- sored by the Sioux county chapter of the American Red Cross. ‘Auto Runs 59 Miles On Gallon of Gas Automobile engineers who worked for years in‘an effort to reduce gaso- line consumption have found the so- lution in a marvelous invention that fits all cars. An actual test made by will devote the next few articles to describing bilt club system, which variation was compiled by Mr. V. F. Bolatid and John H. Law, both of Cleveland, O. The system is generaly called the Bo-| land system. system, all bids of one excepting one club show a minimum hand. As a matter of fact, under this system, the ‘ursday by C. F. Monroe, director of | advocates of it will make a one bid in an iS contract with as minimum a holding as they would a one bid in auction. In other words, they do not demand two and one-half tricks first or sec- ond hand for an opening bid, but would shade the requirements to two tricks. They also employ all suit bids of two as demand bids showing a very powerful hand—that the original two bidder feels he can go game with lit-,!more quick tricks. tle or no assistance from partner. | This system was devised to show the intermediate hands—that is the hold- ings that are better than minimum but not strong enough to open with @ two forcing bid. as much as one trick more than would be required to open the bid- ding, but not enough high card tricks to bid two, you bid on? club. This club bid is made without regard to the club suit holding—the hand may or may not contain a club strength—but it does tell partner that the hand contains from three to three and one-half high card tricks | partner gave a positive response. If partner responds with ore dia-| (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) mond, he denies holding two quick} tricks. If the partner holds two or} more quick tricks, he must make #|Responses by Partner to the Boland Positive response of one in some other jClab Bid. GANDHI PRESCRIBES Clean Heart, Clear Conscience, hatma Gandhi Thursday gave his recipe for the prodigious health and energy which mark his life, even at well past 60 years of age: @ cool head, regular communion with God, abstention from carnal food and pleasure, no alcohol, smoking or con- diments, a strict vegetable diet, and love for my fellow-man.” and put to bed Wednesday, Gandhi's capacity to work without seeming ill effects has been a source of constant wonder to Europeans who have with one trick stronger than a mini- mum, it does not necessarily mean that they will open the bidding with three bare aces, as two bare aces are not enough for a minimum opening of one. Therefore the club bid must be strengthened by favorable distri- bution or scattered honor strength. Third and fourth hands require an additional trick. Naturally the first questiov that arises in the minds of those inter- ested in studying this system is what do you do when you hold a minimum bid and your best suit is clubs? These hands must be bid as one club. The partner will assume that ‘t is the forcing bid and will respond with a diamond if holding less then two tricks, or will give one of the positive responses if his hand contains two or @ variation of the Vander- Under the Boland club convention The opening bidder will then re- bid his club suit to show that his original bid was simply a mirimum club bid. Of course, if the cpening bidder's original club bid had the re- quired strength to make a forcing club bid and at the same time his strong suit was clubs, he would then jump his partner's diamond; e. g., one club from South, North responds witn one diamond, South if he held a mimimum club bid would bid two clubs, while if he held the required strength and his real suit was also clubs, he would jump to three clubs This same procedure would be true if ‘When you have a hand containing TOMORROW'S ARTICLE--Proper watched the progress of the all-India national congress here. In the course of each day Gandhi receives in the neighborhood of 500 visitors, participates in endless coun- cils, attends to voluminous cor- respondence, directs policy and actions of the Nationalist organization, edits “Young India,” translates Christian scriptural writings into Hindustani, RECIPE FOR HEALTH and Cool Head Are First | makes speeches, gives interviews, and yet finds time to pray, spin, fast and meditate, and he even has invented a new type of spinning wheel. He says he expects to live to be 100 years old. Three Requirements Karachi, India, April 2—(4)—Ma- “A clean heart, a clear conscience, Now—You can buy red friction surface rubber belt- ing at Gamble Stores. Cut any length. 2 inch 3 ply— lle per ft. Full line of automobile and farm tools. Although temporarily indisposed F course, the beet in the picture is slightly exaggerated, but it’s not an exaggeration when we say you can grow bigger beets than you ever saw before—and tomatoes and beans and peas—by feeding your garden with Loma. For Loma is the scientific plant food that makes everything grow bigger, better and faster. Use it regularly on your lawn and flowers and vegetables, the results will amaze you. Loma is clean, odorless, easy to apply. Get it from any dealer in lawn, garden and florists’ supplies—who has it in 100-pound sacks down to 1-pound cartons; also Loma spreader for larger areas. Tennessee Corpo tation, 61 Broadway, New York, N. Y. Loma Apply it now ~for a beautiful lawn and garden We offer our modern home suitable for large or small fu- nerals at no additional cost. % W. E. PERRY Funeral Director Phone 687 Bismarck, N. D. Menu of Canned Foods and Sunlight Is Described at Chemists’ Meeting Indianapolis, April 2.—()—Forty- nine different canned foOds ‘were re- ported to the American Chemical so- clety Thursday as supplying scientif- ically adequate amounts of vitamins A. B,C and G. If this year’s June brides will see that the new head of the house gets out in the sunshine, they may safely feed him from cans so far as vitamins are concerned. Sunshine gives vita- min D (on cloudy days feed cod liver oil for D). The other vitamins, says the report, are in the 49 cans “in adequate amounts.” The report is made by Prof. W. H. Eddy of Teachers college of Columbia university, E. F. Koh- man of the National Canners asso- ciation and Celia Fall Gurin. The canned menu might get. by a honeymoon esthetically too. Here it is. Canned milk (every day). Choice of nine meats; roast beef, corned ‘beef, tongue, potted meat, chicken, lamb stew, corned beef hash, sausage and veal loaf. Choice of 16 vegetables: Spinach, peas, beans, tomatoes, tomato juice, wax beans, bake beans, beets, corn, Lima beans, sweet potatoes, hominy, car- rots, okra, turnip greens, and Brussels sprouts, Fruits: Prunes, peaches, apricots, berries, pineapple, and apple sauce. Desert; Canned plum-pudding. Also, canned brown bread, spha- getti, chicken-a-la-king and mixed vegetables. State Educators Open Conference Grand Forks, N. D., April 2—(>)— Educators of the state opened the an- nual North Dakota high school con- ference here Thursday. John W. Cooper, federal education commissioner, will speak Thursday night, after a day devoted to discus- sions and addresses. The conference ends Friday. The wireless telegraph station in Mexico’ City has been equipped to communicate with all the countries of the world. YOUR GARDEN=NEEDS PROPER WATERING TO HAVE STURDY, DEEP-ROOTED PLANTS This is the tenth of a séries of articles on home gardening, writ- ten especially for NEA Service and The Bismarck Tribune. By WILLIAM R. BEATTIE (Bureau of Plant Industry, U. S. De- partment of Agriculture) Water for your garden is just as important as good soil and seeds. There may be too much water in some cases, and too much water. te usually more of @ handicap than too little water. For best results we should have just the right amount of water in our garden soil. It is easy to carry a few pails of water from the. spring or the well for the purpose of “watering in” a row of cabbage or tomato plants, but when it comes to supplying tons and tons of water to quench the thirst of a patch of sweet corn or cabbage, Farrows are satisfactory for level ground. at one end of the tiles, ususily the string |Tows of plants; and the underground -|Little furrows are opened alongside| Just one thing; excess acid. The that's another problem. Many Ways to Get Water In the east there are three impor- tant system of distributing water to] Rules for watering garden erops the crops. These are the overhead/are rather simple. However, there sprinkler system employing lines ofjare a few points that must be ob- pipe mounted on posts and having | served. Frequent light sprinkling of the numerous small nozzles the full length of the pipes to distribute the water; the furrow or flooding system | Excess Acid Sickens —Get Rid of It} upper end, and escapes through the Joints into the soil. How to Water Plants by which the water is allowed to run in small furrors or trenches along the or sub-irrigatioh system. When the land is comparatively level or only slightly sloping, the fur - row method is the rows of plants with the corner of | Stomach nerves have been over-stim- a hoe or with a little hand garden| Ulated. Too much acid ts plow and an) walter is simply allowed | food sdur in the stomach and intes- to flow in these furrows until . the plants have had a good dcink. The way to correct excess acid is After the water has settled away | With an alkali, The best form of al- the soil is returned toythe furrows | kall and cultivated. ” of U: System Subirrigation, or underground ir- tigation, is adapted for use only where the subsoil is of such nature eartburn, head- that the water will not readily waste has through it. The usual method is to lay lines of open-joint tiles a little below the depth of plowing, the lines being spaced four to eight feet apart. The tiles are laid practically level or they may be given a fall of about four inches in 100 feet qnd used as drains during wet weather. In that case the lower ends of the tiles open into a citch and are plugged when the tiles are used for irrigation! In operation the water is admitted Know Phillips Milk of Magnesia and you're through with crude-meth- ods forever. It is the pleasant way— the efficient way to alkalinize the system; to relieve the effects of over- acidity. Phillips Milk of Magnesia has been standard with doctors for over 50 years, 25¢ and 50c bottles at all drug stores. Be sure you get the genuine. —Advertisement. Consider These Five { Important Advantages: ~ 1, From the time the chick is hatched until it is four to six weeks eld, Mash is a lete and perf lanced (No other feed is necessary éedun papel, aca - —_ 2. Sterling Starter Mash contains h cod li i to permit the raising of chicks i. if esivebie. screens 3. Sterling Starter Mash is of sufficient bulk and proper texture so it does not it is easily digested, 4. Sterling Starter Mash is excellent battery feed for Sterling Starter hatcheries. §. Sterling Starter Mash is economical. ‘than six cents to feed a chick for five weeks. 6. Sterling Starter Mash is Guaranteed to Satisfy. Made By Northrup, King & Co., Feeds and Seeds Minneapolis, Minn, Distributors--- Russell Miller Milling Co. and All Occident Elevators Sold by Northrup.King & C issner é¢ Rueter, Mott, N. Dak. Yates & Son, Mott, N, Dak. pack in the crop and |—costing less These Dependable Dealers : S eb Sterling Starter Mash With Id Jried Butcc nih mad Cod Liver Oil of the soil in dry weather juse the roots of the plants to near the surface. This re- rhe Ss shallow-rooted plants that | Garden. the juent eprink- —— Paterson) on Ninety-five patches were required gaé i Craftsmen in ky here ready and able to meet requirements metal repairs. No motorist need drive a car in which the body or fenders have been damaged BUULE on the resale of ray acel corrosion. work of this kind, you will save money by letting us serve you. DINGLE TOP & BODY WORKS RUSSELL-MILLER Le ee MILLING CO. Phene 290 When You Buy a Tractor or Other Farm repair service is all that they could ask and that our prices are fair to all. service if you are planning to buy new implements this year. | Pine enough for any mansion, economical enough for the most Dear Bir: Kis 1981 BISMARCK PAINT & GLASS CO. 401 Fourth St. Blemarck, N.Dak. H.E,SPOHN, Mgr. Phone 399 weather and don’t water heavily whel rain is threatening. NEXT: Getting Most Out of » © to repair damage inflicted to wings of an airplane caught in a hailstorm in South Dakota. r method is to give the watering once every in dry weather, the z e y! patent flours OCCIDENT, . LYON’S BEST, OR CLIMAX “Our Money Back” guaran- tee is an insurance policy with every sack. Sheet Metal— accident or made un- ‘Whenevet you require 606 Main Ave. Consider the Dealer from Whom the Purchase Is Made and His Ability to Furnish You with REPAIR SERVICE ‘When you order genuine John Deere Repairs from us, you get repaira that are.exact duplicates of the original parts that go into all John Deere Implements. ‘Users of John Deere farm-machinery say that our It will be to your advantage to consider this We Assure You Good Im: Service When You BUY Our Im; ‘ments and When You USE T. Bismarck Implement Co. 201 Main Bismarck, N. D. Phone 6 Send for the New 1931 Catalogue. It’s Free Fill in and mail the coupon below 1d. _b; it 41 with end by re eee, maa s input obligation to me the NEW Write Plainly to Avold Mistakes, tm Paints, Varnishes, Brushes, Ete. %