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4! i) { ve WOMAN DISCUSSES ‘LOCAL ORGANIZATION FOR RELIEF OF POOR Mrs. Alice B. Bailey, Mandan, Is Speaker At Devils Lake Convention Devils Lake, N. D., Oct. 13—(P)— Community organization should serve as the keynote in city planning for poor relief, Mrs. Alice B. Bailey, Mandan, juvenile commissioner for the sixth judicial district, told the annual meeting of the North Dakota League of Municipalities here Tues- day. Fred W. Sheffield, Fargo, and F. G. Kneeland, Jamestown, also spoke on Tuesday's program which brings to an end the two-day session. Coordination of effort with its sub- sequent avoidance of duplication, Mrs. Bailey said, simplifies and places on a business basis the intercity problems of the municipality. “The basic requirement for social ‘work supported by the public through taxes is the highest possible effi- ciency,” she said. ‘ “Administration of public welfare has about reached disaster propor- tions in many localities. The strug- gle seems to be reduced to the sim- ple elements of food and shelter for the unemployed and their depend- ents. The heaviest weight falls on the cities. Added to their own load we have the steady migration from smaller towns and communities. To stem this tide taxes the wisdom and strategy of. relief agencies. ‘Wide Planning Needed “Wide range planning therefore takes the center of the picture and it is to community organization that we look for the actuality that brings results. If the nation itself recog- nizes the need for national organiza- tion, how much more so is this true of the small locality.” Mrs. Bailey suggested that city) planning for poor relief include the; organization of a citizens’ committee or social’ service exchange, or coun- cil of social agencies, to be composed! John Wanam: A warrant for the arrest of John Wanamaker, Jr. (left), son of the late Rodman Wanamaker, has been issued at Norristown, Pa., on charges of desertion and non-support filed Le his wife (right), the former Pauline Disston, South Africa, will be in operation. | This is possibly the longest air line! in the world, and enlists the service | of 14 airports along its route. Eleven radio stations will work in conjunc- tion with planes, keeping them on the correct route and dispatching/ messages to them. | Old Times Recalled | On 65th Anniversary, Chicago, Oct, 13—(7)—Folks who talk hard times should be ashamed of themselves, in the opinion of Rosell M. Clark and his wife, Alzina, who; have been married for 65 years. Reminiscing as they prepared to) celebrate their wedding anniversary | aker, Jr., Accused by Wife | of representatives of the various|/next Thursday, the- couple recalled | community groups. these facts: ‘The organization, she added, should center in a central or executive com- mittee, with a city-county tie-up. Recommendations made by Mrs. Bailey included: Survey of the unemployed, using the machinery of the local election boards; establishment of a bureau for registration of unemployed, and in conjunction having firms list possible needs; formulation of plans to pass work around by rotating jobs; stimu- lation of club women’s campaign to give day work to women whose fami- lies are dependent; creation of a clothing center; formation of a bu- reau or committee to secure stand- ard prices for food supplies; forma- tion of a plan whereby local bakers could be interested in distributing un- sold bread to needy families. Jobs Can Be ‘Made’ She suggested further that work bb “made.” such as road work, re- pairing city streets, sewer repair, garbage hauling. cleaning up dump Jots, snow shoveling, fall plowing of garden space for use next spring by dependent families, cutting down hills, filling up sunken areas, and ar- ranging to have dependent families secure winter supply of coal at near- by mines. Sheffield discussed requisites laying out an airport. “A good field,” he said, “is an ad- vertisement for any city and the slightest improvement on the field) seems to be known in aviation circles) for miles.” | Airports, he said, have been found to be as much an asset as a park system, drawing numerous visitors on Sundays. Qualifications for airports should include, he added, the location of a site near the city; a site free from obstacles; and level ground. IT’s A LONG TRIP London.—By the first of next year it is expected that through air serv- in When they were married, after, Clark was mustered out of the Union army in the Civil War and followed the old Santa Fe trail to McPherson, Kan., they didn’t find any kitchenette apartment awaiting them. | While not engaged in fighting In-, dians they built a house out of dirt, | supported by three branches. The grain they planted was blown away by a Kansas gale. ‘When a crop was ready for harvest grasshoppers or prairie fires destroyed it. You can't talk hard times to the Clarks. They won't listen. Bad Stomach Cause of Bad Skin You can't expect to have a good, clear, fresh-looking complexion if your stomach is weak and disordered. Undigested food sends poisons through your whole body, pimples ap-/ pear in your face, skin grows salléw and muddy and loses its color. Your tongue becomes coated, breath most| unpleasant. But these troubles will | end quickly and skin clear up if you will start today taking that simple! herbal compound known to druggists as Tanlac. i ‘Tanlac contains nothing but herbs, ' barks and roots which have a cleans- ing, healing effect on a poor upset! stomach. Just a tablespoonful before each meal stimulates the digestion naturally so that you can eat what you want without fear of distress. And when your stomach is in good shape again see how much keener your appetite is—watch how quickly skin begins to grow free of disfigur- ing eruptions. The cost of Tanlac is Jess than 2c a dose. Get a bottle from your druggist today. Money back if| ice between London and Cape Town, it doesn’t help you.—Advertisement. ° ———$_______4 | Man Shoots Self ° Chicago, Oct. 13—(#)—For five years Leo J. Lynch, 27, was a Steady suitor of Miss Caroline Spolinger, 24, Last summer, how- ever, his fancy changed and he began keeping company with Miss Katherine Curran, 25. Yesterday Miss Spolinger de- manded a show-down and last evening Lynch arranged for the girls to meet in his apartment. After they arrived Miss Spo- linger asked Lynch. ‘Do you love me, or do you love Katherine?” He considered. Then “I'm sor- ry, but I love Katherine.” Then Miss Spolinger turned to Katherine and said, “Now I know you're engaged to another boy. Are you going to leave him for Leo?” “No,” answered Katherine, “I don’t love Leo enough.” Leo settled the problem by drawing @ revolver and shooting himself in the abdomen. He may recover, physicians said. — No. 854 *8 REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF The Moffit State Bank at Moffit, in (GARRISON MAN DIES: IN LOCAL HOSPITAL John K. Zook, 29 Years Old, Is Victim of Uremia on Wed- ding Anniversary John Kenneth Zook, 29 years old, Garrison, ‘died in a local hospital’ about 5:30 a. m. Tuesday, the fourth | anniversary of his wedding. | Death was caused by kidney trouble which developed into uremia. He had been ill since last April and had been in the hospital for the last six days. Zook was born at Coleharbor Jan. 26, 1902, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Zook, and spent :aost of his life in the vicinity of Coleharbor and Garrison. He was employed as a farm hand before il last April. He was married to Helen Hummel of Washburn Oct. 13, 1927. 1 services will be conducted from the Lutheran church at Garri- son at 2 p.m. Thursday, with Rev. Henry Holzhausen officiating. Bur- ial will be made in Emanuel ceme- tery, Garrison. Zook leaves his widow and children, Donald John and Lloyd , living on a farm six miles east of Garrison. He also leaves his father, residing at Coleharbor, and three sisters and six brothers. Broth- ers and sisters are William, Frank, and Arthur, Coleharbor; Alfred, El- mer, and Harry Zook, Garrison; Mrs. May Cooley, Minneapolis; Mrs. John Mardy, living near Red Cliff, Alberta, Canada; and Mrs. Frank Krause, Coleharbor. Trunk Is Returned After Many Years Leghorn, Italy, Oct. 13.—()—Pietro Mascagni has just had returned to him here a trunk which he left as se- curity for a board bill 49 years ago. The noted composer, then a poor student, was ejected from a students’ boat house in Milan and his trunk held for the rent. Recently the heirs of the boarding house keeper returned it to him. The trunk contained his diploma from the first music school he attend- ed, his first medal from the academy ; ilies had carried on warfare at their Tennessee mountain homes for years. \ two Preparations have been made for heavily guarding the Brownstown, Ind., courthouse, where the Spurlock brothers, Pleas, left, and John, face trial on charges of slaying Patton Gibson, 70-year-old patriarch of the Gibson clan, in a family feud. Last December the Gibsons attacked the jail, but; were beaten off before they could reach the Spurlock brothers. The two fam- big job ahead of him. He had to Pickle two whales, each 45 feet long and weighing 22 tons. He has just| finished them for the British Mu- | Boston Society Girl to Wed seum of Natural History. Each whale was packed with 30 tons of salt and into each were injected 65 gallons of formalin preserving fluid. They are to be kept for two years of examina- tion and for the purpose of having @ plaster cast made of one of them. SAFER THAN A SAFE Knoxville, Tenn.—If robbers had} broken into the home of Sam Let- | singer and had opened one of the | drawers of Mrs. Letsinger to get her money, they would have been as hor- |Tified as she was. She pulled the | drawer partly open and then decided |to put on her hat first before get- , ting her pocketbook. Her husband happened to glance into the drawer and shouted. A snake was coiled around the pocketbook. He man- aged to get the reptile out of the drawer and killed it. r NO FARM PROBLEM Agree on Plan to Withhold Cotton New Orleans, La., Oct. 13—(P)—A conditional accord on a plan to keep approximately seven billion bales of cotton off the market for at least a year has been reached by the farm board, the American Cotton Cooper- ative association and southern bank- ing interests. v ‘The program, based on granting of new credits and extension of old obligations, was announced Monday night by representatives of the va- rious agencies involved after an aill- day exeoutive session. It was agreed by the farm board that so long as extensions are grant- ed the cotton cooperative, the Cotton igi Corporation will main- tain its present holdings of aj - mately 1,300,000 bales. aia Use the Want Ads When You | CAN'T QUIT Fatigue is the signal to rest. 0) it if you can. When you can’t, stl cool and carry-on in comfort. , Bayer Aspirin was meant for just such times, for/it insures your comfort. Freedom from those pains that nag at nerves and wear you down. One tablet will block that threatening headache while it is still just a threat. Take two or three tablets when you've caught a wile and that’s usually the end of it. Carry Bayer Aspirin when you travel. Have some at home and keep some at the office. Like an efficient secretary, it will often “save the day” and spare you many uncomfortable, unproductive hours. ty harmless, so keep it handy, keep it in mind, and use it. No man of affairs can afford to ignore the score and more of uses explained in the proven directions. From a grumbling tooth to those rheumatic pains which seem almost to bend the bones, Bayer Aspirin is ready with its quick relief—and always works. Neuralgia. Neuritis. Any nagging, needless pain. .Get the genuine tablets, stamped with the Bayer cross. They are of perfect purity, absolute uniformity, and have the same action every periment with imitations Hatfield, Pa.—If farming ever gets, and the original score of his first so unprofitable that J. Lyndale Hile- It will be a wedding of high social importance in two cities when Miss ex; costing a few cents less? The sa is too little. There is too much a! stake. But there is economy in the opera “Infiland PICKLED WHALES London.—Percy Stammwitz had a the State of North Dakota, at the close of business September 29th, 1931. Jenources Loans and discounts ...... $ 52,332.82 Overdrafts, secured and wi Be eee 16.38 ‘arrants, stocks, tificates, claims, ete. 4,646.54 Banking ‘house, "furniture and fixtures .... 3,800.00 Other real estate .. 2,870.21 Curreat expenses, paid, over undivided fe profits .........s sees 441,07 Checks and other ‘ eash items .... Cash and due from other banks .... Total .... $ 71,003.: Capital stock paid in $10,000.00 Surpins ned 2,500.00 Individual deposits Hs subject to check $14,984.47 Time certificate: an Sy ae 40,384.22 Cashier's checks erie outstanding .... 14.60 55,382.29 Bills payable «+++ 3, Total ...sseseeeeeseees+$ 11,008. State of North Dakota, County of Bur- it leigh. —ss. 1 F. H. Pillsbury, Cashier of the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true, to - “Give me Lucky Strike Every Time”. “My throat is all impor- tant to me. No truly. Give me Lucky Strike every time. y knowledge and beitef. te oe Oty et PILLSBURY, (Corporate Seal) Cashier, Subscribed and sworn, to before me ay of Oct. 1931. this 8th day of oe HLDEs 1 Notary Pub (Sead gurteigh County, N. D. My commission expires Jan, 4th, 1932. Correct. Attest: — JASON HOOVER, (A, ANDERSON, FRI > An Open Letter To Bismarck and Mandan Physicians Gentlemen: October 13, 1931. To you, more than to most of us, it is given to probe the ex- tremes in the turn to you. of human emotion. In birth as in death, in sorrow— bitterest and the sweetest of life's polly dd BS women Yet by the ethics of your profession you are constrained to keep silence regarding your own part in the struggle. les are won in secret. if Your greatest victor- For this reason it must be a satisfaction to find, in the theatre's reproduction of the great human drama, one true picture of pulsing 2 revealing picture is “BAD GIRL,” the screen version of Vina Delmar’s novel coming and SATURDAY. at 12:15, to the PARAMOUNT THEATRE THURSDAY, FRIDAY Also A GALA MIDNIGHT SHOW WEDNESDAY That rigid code of ethics which forbids you to advertise will also forbid you to recommend this picture publicly, but if I were a phy- sictan I should want all my patients to see “BAD GIRL.” Every woman will understand and ” the poor frightened little “BAD GIRL” who must go down shadowy valley where the integrity of her physician is her only hope. Every Doctor i man help. For gs sympathize will feel for Eddie Collins when he comes to beg the Eddie typifies all harassed humanity—rich and patient or “charity case,” alike helpless salvation not to medical science alone, but to the hu- doctor. and woman will id desperate ap! Faithfully yours, Bob Nippert Burgeor—ably poviraved vy Claude Kint-—tesponde jurgess—ably p: a - pathetically to Eddie's peal. is with Dorothy im time of trial in—the way EEE And pat yourself on the back for your new CeHophane wrapper with that tab which makes the package so easy to open.” Dorothy Mackall Dorothy Mackalil is the same fascinating, rollicking personality in real life as the parts she plays. Watch for Dorothy in her next First National Picture, ‘Safe In Hell.” There is never a dull moment in any of First National's pictures starring that Mackaill girl, * That LUCKY tab! Cellophane. Sealed tight—Ever right. The Unique age. Zip—And it’s open! See the new notched tab on the age. Hold down one half with your "C4 thumb. Tear off the other half. Simple. Quick. Zip! That’s all. Unique! Wrapped in dust-proof, moisture-proof, germ-proof Cellophane. Clean, protected, neat, FRESH! —what could be more modern than LUCKIES’ improved Humidor package—so easy to open! Ladies—the LUCKY TAB is—your finger nail protection. “It’s toasted” Your Throat Protection = against Irritation = against cough And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps that “Toasted” Flavor Ever Fresh TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance Orchestra, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B.C. networks, Se |man can’t make a living at it, he'll |turn baker. He recently won several | prizes at the Montgomery County Rose Saltonstall Movius of Boston marries Potter Palmer 3rd of Chi- cago, soon. This is a recent posed Portrait of the bride-to-be. 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