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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1933 SCORES OF WATER ENTHUSIASTS PASS TESTS LAST MONTH Five Instructors Last Week-End Took Examination As Swimming Examiners Scores of Bismarck swimmers pass- ed advancement tests in swimming and life-saving at the city swimming pool during July, according to A. C. Van Wyk, manager. Five Capital Citians last week-end passed an examiner’s test given by Robert Eaton, Red Cross representa- tive. This entitles the five to teach either Junor or senior life saving. Those who Passed the test included Van Wyk, who had taken it previously, and Mel- vin Munger, Harvey Erlenmayer, Betty Haagensen and Esther Olafson, who took it for the first time. Among those who passed advance- ment tests last month were: Test 1 John Carlson, Lyle Porter, Kenneth Hastings, Floyd Hastings, Bobby Wes- ner, Junior Gussner, Paul Porter, Glenn Coons, Arnold Hafstrand, Francis Rothschiller, Royce Le Grave, Edgar Schultz, Robert Penner, Erwin Cowley, Billy Aughnay, Gerald Bair, Gweneth Tester, Beverly Swett, Betty Louise Dick, Henrietta Ode, Louise Thysell, Dorothy Knecht, Grace Ol- manson, Agnes Holkup, Bertha Vogel, Dorothy Nelson, Evelyn Starner, Vir- ginia Wheeler, Pauline Werner. Karen Knecht, Jane Allen, Milon Hedahl, Arletta Joy Gorman, Esther Johnson, Leota Goodman, Rosemary Slorby, Mary Jane Nelson, Louise Sorsdahl, Marjorie Varney, Madonna Clarey, Doris Radspenner, Bertha Rennick, Lydia Rennick, Irene Stech- er, Rose Thomas, Margaret Gabel, Anna Gabel, Rosemary Bartley, Mrs. F. H. Tharotson, Mrs. L. F. Bechtold, Mrs. G. J. Worner, Eunice Venne, Jane Anne Skinner, Jane Edith Fraz- fer, Magdalen Doll, Connie Kiley. ‘Wilma Moos, Joyce Woodward, Hel- en Winkler, Helen Louise Scott, Cor- rinne Kiley, Rose Adele Wildfang, Celia Singer, Barbara Richter, Vir- The New Deal in Pictures—No. 6 Text by John M. Gleissner—Sketches by Don Lavin assist in provi Cole, Gayle Kelley, Louise Beall, Rob- ert Ackerman, Red Cross Swimmers’ awardad: Button TEST V Flossy Dohn, Laura Ellsworth, ginia Walcher, Helen Wald, Lois Hektner, Joyce Johnson, Elaine Cleve- land, Viola Lueck, Harriet Coker, Anne Catherine Singer, Eloyce Kosi- tzky, Helen Pederson, Viola Hellick- son, Laura Swindling, Dorothea Holm, Jean Johnson, Mina Mitchell, Ellen Klee, Jordice Godfrey, Phyllis Kraft, Jean Sloan, Lucille Kallis, Adeline ‘Wilson, Beverly Machov, Shirley Las- kin, John Carlson. Certicate Awarded. Test Ruth Mueller, Leroy Mitchell, Floyd Hastings, Donald Medder, Leslie Hoff- man, Althea La Grave, Rosemary Carufel, Beverly Jean McDonald, Irene White, Joan Rosenthal, Kath- erine Bartley, Rebecca Freitag, Mar- garet Olson, Mary O'Connor, Bar- bara Baker, Phyllis Collins, Gweneth Tester, Stella Lutgen, Dale Saxvik, Jack Pierce Jones, Marjorie Varney, Luella Holmes, Dorothy Knecht, Stella Lutgen, Jacqueline Parks, Frances Heath, Mrs. R. C. Harnish, Margaret Schlosser, Mrs. H. A. Brandes, Martin Hagen, Arthur Weisenberger, Francis Selby, Joseph Gagnon, Dale Kitts, Darrell Menefee, Glen Coons. David Haggerty, Gerald Kohler, George Weisenberger, Harvey Larson, Floyd Hornell, Arnold Fosteson, Rob- ert Penner, Donald Meeder, Walter Dohn, Luella Monroe, Lydia Rennick, Bertha Rennick, Agnes Holiey, Bertha Vogel, Evelyn Starner, Jimmy Konyne, Howard Smith, Ralph Wheeler, Royce La Grave, William Toliver, Billy Lund, Homer Corwin, Bert Corwin, Alice Brown, Alvina Nelson, Mrs, Priske, Marian Enright, Louise Thysell, Rob- ert Milum, Eugene Miller, Foster Han- sen, Frank Richard, Kenneth Hast- ings, Larry Webber, Dell Cram, Bill Carman, John Ritcher, George Bruck- er, Eugene Struwing, Matt Schmidt. Tony Brucker, Howard Wildfang, Adolph Kutchera, William Brooker, Junior Olson, Harold Schultz, Gerald Kohler, Robert Ball, Donald Flate- land, Harriet Wallace, Elizabeth Geiermann, Rita Rosenberg, Betty Baker, Jeanne Larson, Elaine Cleve- land, Viola Hellickson, Laura Swend- ling, Grace Neideffer, Jean Powers, Bill Geiermann, Shirley Laskin, Frank Richard, Kenneth Hastings, Dell Cram. Pia Cross beginner's button award- Test 111 Ruth McCurdy, Pearl Norum, Jack Lyngstad, Mary Brandes, Janet Sell, Jane Mundy, Walter Brophy, Elaine Hugelman, Florence Rosenbert, Betty Smith, Lydia Kallenberger, Char- lotte Sloven, Gertrude Gabel, Gene- vieve Sack, Melvin Ruder, Wilmer Martinson, Billy. Aughnay, George Morton, Donald Swenson, Ronald Wheeler, Leroy Mitchell, Charles Cook, Floyd Hastings, Norman Lar- son, Frederick Wesner, Charles Clark, Duke Smith, Leonard Beylund, Dale Saxvik, Walter Dohn, Lloyd Steen, Buddy Schneider, Dorothy Knecht, Mary Anne Mullaney, Louise Fisher, Frances Bernstein, Mary Katherine Riggs, Graydon Dahlen, Edward Wo- sepke, Jean Byers, Helen Johnson, Reo Carr, Mrs. H. A. Pike, Donald Schwebs, Blanche Robinson, Francis Selby. Evelyn Starner, Emma Jean LaRue, Howard Smith, David Haggerty, Her- bert Rosen, Bennie Tillotson, Russell Rohrer, Jack Davenport, Homer Cor- win, Bert Corwin, Marion Enright, Mrs, Priske, Rosemary Selvig, Charles Schafer, Jack McCarthy, Milum, Eunice Omdahi, Phyllis Yorks, John Kunkel, Jean Larson, Denis Hadricks, Howard Mohler, Charles Wachter, Louise Thysell, Bill Alice Helstein, Jack Mc- Gary, Adeline Ode. Certificate awarded. Test IV John Peterson, Jean Speaks, Lor- Taine Berg, Jean Baker, Robert Guss- ner, Robert Vogel, Arnold Anderson, Hathleen Kohler, Frances Kohler, Schmidt, John McDonald, (William McDonald, Jack Slattery, Zone McConkey, Vicki Cook, Margaret Forrester, Frances Kohler, Ira Ruch, Harriet McGraw, Joyce Pavlak, Anne Dolan, Anne Bergeson, Mary McGraw, Edgar Rose, Phyllis Fleck, Mim McNutt, Mrs. Harry J. Clark, Mary Logan, Dot Bering, Georgia Ma- son, Jeanette Mason, Chet Little, Wack Simonitsch, Charles Conner, Betty Simonitsch, Frances Bosch, Mary Kathryn Riggs, Robert Norma Peterson, Dede Barrett. Certificate awarded. TEST VI Lester Dohn and Woodrow Shep- rd. Certificate awarded. TEST Vil Lester Dohn. Certificate awarded. Junior Life Saving John Peterson, Jean Speaks, Lor- rain Berg, Jean Baker, Currie Con- rad, Robert Gussner, Rogert Vogel, Arnold Anderson, Leonard Kositzky, Kathleen Kohler, Eugene Schmidt, William McDonald, Jack McDonald, Anne Dolan, Louise Beall, Robert Ackerman, Ione McConkey, Vick Cook, Frances Kohler, Jack Slattery, Gayle Kelley, Dayton Shipley, Har- riet' McGraw, Constance Cole, Mil- dred Kensrud, Betty Simonitsch, George Brynjulson, Charles Conner: Junior ‘Red Cross Life Saving em- blem awarded. Senior Life Saving Harvey Erlenmeyer, Woodrow Shep- ard, Lester Dohn, Frances Slattery, Betty Haagenson, Neva Vetter. Senior Red Cross Life Saving em- blem awarded. Examiners’ Test A. C. Van Wyk, Harvey Erlenmeyer, Melvin Munger, Betty Haagensen, Es- ther Olafson. Red Cross awarded. examiners’ emblem Boy Scout Tests Bob Vogel Athletics, Swimming Bob Tavis .... Athletics, Swimming Richard Shafer . Athletics, Swimming Robert Ackerman .......secesesesees Swimming, Merit Badge Swimming, Merit Badge Buddy Beall ........ssssseseseserees Life Saving Merit Badge Swimming Merit Badge Leonard Kositzky Life Say Life Saving Merit Badge. Gayle Kelley Swimmers’ Merit Badge Phyllis Brainerd .... teeeeeeeeses Swimmers’ Merit Badge Gayle Kelley ............046 Life Saving Badge Sylvia Is Fearful Of Surgeon’s Knife New York, Aug. 2—(P}—The fear that a surgeon's knife may sever her from the films forever was voiced Wednesday by Sylvia Sidney as she explained why she left Hollywood in the middle of a picture. Hollywood for a throat ailment,” she said, speaking with difficulty. “If it doesn’t take I'll have to have another operation for the complete removal of a gland, which will leave a scar on the outside of my face. “If that happens it will be impos- sible for me to go on in pictures. And I can't go on with the picture I was making until I find out.” On Monday Miss Sidney boarded a Plane and left Hollywood, where she was making a picture with Maurice Chevalier. Paramount officials, de- claring her departure would cost them $100,000, have filed complaint with the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, Miss Sidney was in- formed on her arrival here last night. Minnesota Planning Large Road Program St. Paul, Aug. 2—(®)}—More than 1,200 miles of roadways will be im- Proved under Minnesota’s $10,600,000 federal aid highway program now awaiting formal approval from Wash- ington, State Highway Commissioner N. W. Elsberg announced Wednesday. ‘Bol The tentative program Elsberg an- nounced provides for 900 miles of bi- tuminous treatment at a cost of $2,- 736,000; 35 miles of concrete paving and incidental work, $1,075,000; 200 miles of grading, $2,470,000; construc- tion of 24 bridges, $1,154,000; removal of center plers from 13 underpasses, $148,000; seven grade separations, @choregge, Frank Vogel, Marcia Le- Roy, Mildred Kensrud, Constance $258,000; landscaping, $100,000; work in cities of the first class, $1,500,000. Half the sum appropriated wi be given to the states in amounts equal to one-third of the money appropriated by a state and its subdivisions for unemployment relief. become exhausted, "| Rye harvest Congress enacted the Wagner-Lewis bill providing for gifts ‘to the states of $500,000,000 from the federal treasury to iding direct relief to the unemployed. right on the basis of ie The remaining $1,200,000 is to be al- lotted later. Federal approval has been given the preliminary allocation of funds to federal aid roads, municipalities and & secondary roads and approval of the | Rp: more detailed program is awaited. Elsberg said the department is ready to call for bids just as soon as officials at Washington approve pro- | Se jects submitted. SS || Weather Report The FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly cloudy tonight; Thursday generally fair and slight warmer. couby For North Da- kota: Partly cloudy tonight; Thursday general- ly fair; slightly ‘Thursday. South Da- Generally fair tonight and except east, tonight; slightly warmer Thi A For Montana: Generally fair tonight and Thursday; warmer east portion Thursday. For Minnesota: Probably local showers tonight and aS ee t generally fair in extreme 3 little change in temperature, GENERAL CONDITIONS A high pressure area is centered over the northern Great Plains and cool weather prevails throughout the north-central ts. ‘empera- tures continue high over the East and South. Precipitation occurred at most places from the Great Lakes re- gion westward to the eastern Rocky Mountain slope. The weather is gen- erally fair over the Far West. North Dakota Corn and Wheat Re- gion Summary For the week ending Aug. 1, 1933. Continued unseasonably high tem- pemettee: with only widely scattered light showers greatly aggravated droughty conditions in all sections. The weather was favorable for har- vesting spring wheat, oats and barley. qmecioely, completed and threshing is well advan with generally light yields. Corn and flax leteriorat Tapidly from drought, and loppers seriously damaged corn Shere peety Saeires, a ranges are and shrinkage livestock has been reported. Missouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.8 ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.49. Reduced to sea level, 30.29. PRECIPITATION REPORT For Bismarck station: Total this month to date . Normal, this month to da Eatay eauaty Ist te oe lormal, January 1st date 11.28 Accumulated deficiency to date 3.62 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS High- 0.19 07 “I underwent one operation in | Ci » Cl Dickinson, cldy. Drake, cldy. .. Dunn ‘Center, cldy. Grand Forks, cldy. . Hankinson, cldy. James| »_ cldy, , cldy. Parshall, clc Pembina, cl Sanish, cldy. Williston, Wishek, cldy. Minneay » Tain Moorheed. fais OUT OF STATE POINTS Hi ise eae est est Amarillo, Tex. cldy. .. 92 68 ise, Idaho, peldy. 92 Calgary, Alta, cldy. .. Chicago, Ml, rain . Denver, Colo., clear \Des Moines, Ia., cldy. Dodge City, Kans,, cldy, Edmonton, Alta., clear. Havre, Mont., clear Helena, Mont., pcld; Kamloops, B. C. Kansas City, | Lander, Wyo., Medicine Hat, seeeszaeesss Belay. A, cl U. S. Funds to Feed Hungry The bill ended the practice of lending funds to the states, ‘and makes grants which need \ not be repaid. It created a Federal Relief ee, of which Harry Hopkins has been named head. temper in St. Louis Monday. The fine was ordered when Hilde- brand hurled the resin bag to the ground in disgust at being removed from the box after he had walked three men and allowed one hit in the wild seventh-inning eight-run rally that enabled the Browns to win 12 to 8 Smarting under that order, the young pitcher exchanged hot words with Johnson before Tuesday’s game in St. Louis and was ordered suspend- ed indefinitely. “I hope this fine will make him see he has to subordinate his feelings to the good of the team,” Johnson said. Hildebrand said he would present his case before General Manager Billy Evans here Thursday. ASK REDUCED RATES ON WHEAT SHIPMENT Free Transit Privileges De- manded For Cleaning, Mixing and Milling An action has been filed with the Board of Railroad Commissioners ask- ing for a reduction in intrastate freight rates of grain, grain products and seeds throughout the state. The complaint asks for single-line and joint-line rates without additional charge over the single-line basis for a joint line haul. It also requests rates for North Dakota as favorable as the interior scale applied to Min- nesota and for a free transit privilege (Copyright, 1933, NEA Service, Inc.) tr The remaining $280,000,000 wil be given to the states out- Broved need where state funds have ° WEXT: The Muscle Shoals Experiment. Miles City, Mont., cldy. Modena, Utah, peldy. ‘peld: urg, Ore., cl St. Louis, Mo., py, oe Salt Lake City, U,, Relay: 8. 8. Marie, M., cldy. h., cldy. Sheridan, Wyo., clear. pe City, + ar Winnemucca, N., cle: Winnipeg, Man., pel SSSSSSSSSSSRESSSRES SRRRAIPSSRRSSTASSSSS iy|Pitcher Hildebrand Suspended by Pilot Cleveland, Aug. 2—(/P)—Oral Hilde- brand, leading pitcher of the Cleve- land Indians, was under the ban of an indefinite suspension Wednesday and ordered by Manager Walter Johnson to pay a $100 fine for a display of on at least two stops. The action in effect asks that if a car of wheat is shipped from a point on the Great Northern line west of Grand Forks, it can be unloaded, cleaned and mixed at the state ele- vator for milling purposes and again loaded and shipped to other points in the state for milling and when un- loaded at any other -point no transit charge shall be made by the railroad companies for the two stops. The action is brought by the North Dakota Mill and Elevator association, North Dakota Terminal ; association, Farmers Grain Dealers - association, Greater Grand Forks Traffic associa- tion, Chamber of Commerce of Fargo, Interstate Seed and Grain company, 00| Magill & Co, and the Fargo Mill Company. At present a transit charge of one cent per hundred pounds is allowed the railroads for stopping grain at the state mill and a further charge of one and one-half cents per 100 pounds is allowed for milling in tran- sit privilege at any point between Grand Forks and the ultimate desti- nation in addition to the continuous mileage rates. The present charges were set by the Interstate Commerce commission in @ case decided in Geb- Tuary, 1928. a ae f Strange But True | News Items of Day | (By The Associated Press) | ‘THIRD GOVERNOR IN WEEK Oklahoma City, Aug. 2.—()—Okla- homa had its third gavernor in a week We ednesday. Rotund Paul Stewart, president pro tem of the state senate, ruled Wed- inesday while Lieut, Gov. Robert Burns was in Sherman, Texas, prot against the proposed construction of @ dam near the mouth of the Wash- ita River near Denison. Burns and his political foe, Gov. William H. Murray, who is in Wash- ington on the same flood control pro- ject, agree in their opposition to the Washita dam. FIRE CHIEF ON FIRE Mount Holly, N. J.—About the hottest fire John A. Throckmor- ton, chief of the local fire depart- ment, ever heard of was right in his own pocket. The chief, while watching a ball game, placed a lighted pipe in his coat pocket. So absorbed was he in the game that friends had to tell him he was on fire. PATIENT WIFE Chicago—Mrs. Mary V. Linton who alleged her husband Patrick had de- serted her 61 times, decided to give him another chance. She therefore asked dismissal of a Separate maintenance petition. © People’s Forum (Editor's Note)—The Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of inter- est. Letters dealing with contro- versial religious subjects, which attack individu unfairly, or which offend good taste and fair play will be returned to the wr! ers. All letters MUST be signed. If you wish to use a pseudonym, sign the pseudonym first and yo! own name beneath it. We will r spect such requests. We reser the right to delete such parts of letters as may be necessary to conform to this policy. GIFT BAG PLATFORM Garrison, North Dak. August 1, 1933. ‘The question arising in the minds of a lot of people over the state is: To whom will this paper, incubated by the Langer Administration and known as the Leader, belong? ‘Well that is very easy to answer. To whom should it belong? As far as I can discern it should and ought to belong to the principal one that made the League a success in the recent campaign, and that was none other than William Langer. It was common knowledge that the league had not and could not raise any campaign fund to speak of, so it became com- mon chatter at their convention that in order to beat the “Shafer Admin- istration” they would on account of their financial condition, be required to select some one able and ready to finance his own campaign. And who else than William Langer could do that at the time? He went into bat- tle, yes and fought their battles hard and>vell. And just because he select- ed ‘the “Gift-Bag” or Andy Gump platform and could not muster enough jobs to go the rounds; now they and others holler both long and loud and against the very man that brought to them what and all they asked at the time, to defeat the “Shafer Administration.” ° Now, hobo like, and after the wrinkles are out of their hungry pots because of a few feeds off the state, and after the smoke of the battle has me 2 Clear sky, these same favored job-hunters cry Wolf! No, this paper by right should not belong to the ex- ecutive committee, Erickson, Vogel nor Whatnot; but to William Langer alone it should belong and as recom- testing | pense for his labors in the defeat of the “Shafer Administration.” That was their wish and cry, and that was what he delivered to them. ‘This executive committee is install- ed for no other reason than to have @ check on the administration and is of no avail in any other particular. And because of success now they and others wish to grab-in on the find- ings and feebly ask, “Let me drive, Please.” No, to William Langer and to none other should credit go. He put in his time and money and ought to be recompensed in some way for his delivery to the “Bunch.” I am not supporting William Langer nor his system of collection, but I am staunch in my belief as to whom this piece of machinery ought, by right, belong. And owing to their wails during the convention at which time William Langer was nominated: Now to the victor belong the spoils and if Bill is not a Victor then show me up. J.B. SULLIVAN, Editor's Note: ‘This letter contains considerable misinformation but the Tribune Prints it in line with its policy, which is to give everyone oppor- tunity to express his views in this column. Southeastern Press Group Plans Meeting Casselton, N. D., Aug. 2—()—Edi- ‘tors of southeastern North Dakota— the sixth district of the State Press association—will meet Friday, Aug. 11 at Lisbon, it is announced by Dwight 'W. Porter, publisher of the Casselton Reporter and president of the district. The meeting was cheduled first for La Moure but was changed by district officers on request of W. EB, Jones of Libon, publisher of the Ransom County Gazette, who @ year ago in- vited the publishers to his city. Round-table discussions will occupy the meeting, scheduled to begin at 130 p. m. in the Lisbon National Guard armory, Comprising the sixth district arg Stutsman, Cass, LaMoure, Barnes, Ransom, Richland, Dickey and Sars geant counties, Sympathy for Farmer Declared Widespread , Regina, Canada, Aug. 2—()-It has become popular to sympathize with the desperate position of the farmer because his suffering has reacted upon other groups, Bernard 'W. Snow, Chicago, told delegates to the world’s grain conference in an address prepared for delivery Wednese day. Agriculture, he said, must receive § ~ higher reward for its service to hue manity, and. then pointed out thaé the world as a whole, suffers not from 8 food surplus but from immobility of supplies, “The difference between the past and the present is that in the ages gone,” he said, “mankind struggled with nature for a sufficiency of supply while today the outstanding world problem is man-created interference with distribution.” Snow, known as an internat authority on agricultural Lapin! said most of the attempts to competition in the grain trade had been applied to the processes of dise tribution with a growing tendency .. to deliberately block the channels international trade. GIVE YOUR STOMACH That “lump” you feel an hour or so after eating, is a symptom of slow stomach. This very common condition can be remedied. Instead of taking soda, or any- thing else you must take the rest of your life, try some diapepsin. Each tablet saves half an hour’s digestion time. If your stomach is one hour slow in emptying, just take two tablets of diapepsin and all that gas, sourness,’ and ‘distress after meals will be gone. One box of Pape’s Diapepsin will test your stomach and correct. your digestion time. Then eat anye thing you like, and it will digest like crackers and milk! Keep on with diapepsin a few days, until the stomach is doing its work with- out need of help. When it slows down, take diapepsin agains it’s good for the digestive system and can’t hurt you. Pape’s Diapepsin may end wall your “stomach trouble’. and is certainly worth trying? Chesterfields are as good 7 as Science and Money can make them Every pound of Domestic tobacco used in. Chesterfield cigarettes is aged for thirty months—214 years. Science knows there is no other way to make cigarette tobaccos mild and mellow. Every process used in the manufacture of Chesterfield cigarettes is modern, scientific and clean—visitors are always impressed with the cleanliness of the Chesterfield factories. Every ingredient, including the paper, is pure—nothing that you eat or drink is tested more carefully. And Chesterfields are made right; the right length, the right diameter, and filled right—a detail perhaps, but if a cigarette is “to satisfy” it must be made right. Everything about Chesterfield is as good as money can buy or Science knows about— you have our word for this. And Chesterfields are milder and taste better—this much you can prove for yourself. estertield - the eigarelle thal utpsr - Zhe cegarelle thal TASTES BETTER = Pe ee ae ee Pe ee, eee