The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 10, 1933, Page 7

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a ee 4 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1933 Persons receiving federal emergency | since this is prohibited but have re-| streams which are navigable where i ber, at 2 o'clock Saturday afternoon. relief are requird to labor on public| ceived their pay in relief orders for| there is no title or prescription to the Pallbearers will be chosen from Mrs. works. They also demand a uniform | necessities, which are issued in this|contrary. Both offices are of the Finley’s friends there. The body wil rate of pay per day and a specified} county by Mrs. F. E. Diehl and Miss| opinion that the land department has |be interred in the Gilby cemetery e e 9 e f r) number of consecutive hours if they|Mary Houser. Upon approval by the] title to such islands but the right has next to the grave of her husband. Rev. iet 1 n t Oo 18 $ .| are compelled to work out the relief, | state committe these orders have been| not been exercised because the Mis- | Mr. Sampson, pastor of the church, 5 according to Wallace. Paid for out of federal relief money] souri has changed its course so often will officiate. “We axe willing to work on public | *lotted to North Dakota, Kinzer said.| that an island may disappear or the Mr. and Mrs. McCurdy and their | projects for relief money if we can Is More Than Minimum river change its channel so as to make j children expect to leave for Gilby} 4 be shown that we are required to do| Kinzer pointed out that 40 cents|the island a part of the mainland. Friday. Roy Finley is expected from | Oy) si Claim Burleigh Only County in State Requiring Labor on Public Works Neecly men on the Burleigh county relief lists who have been employed recently on state and federal road projects were on strike again Thurs- day. The strikers object to being forced to work out their relief on public works projects, according to Henry Wallace, one of their leaders. ‘They contend that Burleigh county is the only one in the state where so under the regulations of the fed- eral government,” he said, “but we don’t want to have anything put over on us in this county.” Claim 300 On Strike i Wallace said 300 needy men are on Strike here. A conference between strike leaders and the state emergency relief com- mittee was to be held in the federal building Thursday afternoon, accord- ing to R. A. Kinzer, committee secre- tary. Men on the relief lists have been getting 40 cents an hour for their work on the roads, Kinzer said. and in this county have been restricted to a 24- hour week, or three days of eight hours each, They have been getting no cash, Keep Young with Your Children Bagging mother to remember. A happy home depends upon sR part ett dclie in eA annoy you—-do something about i today. Start taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s per hour is 10 cents per hour more than the minimum for common labor set by the government, which also has required that no man be employed more than 35 hours a week. The secretary said that the men must work in order to secure relief orders. He said he was not acquainted with the demands of the strikers since they had not conferred with the state committee or himself. Wallace said executives of the state! association of unemployed councils; and workers’ clubs, which organized here this week, have gone to Spirit- wood Lake, near Jamestown, to con- fe: with Governor Langer on the Problem. In this group are B. J. Drennan of Bismarck, Nels Prima of Williston, Stanley Frank of Dickin- son, William Meredith of Mandan and Charles Fodness of Grand Forks. ‘USE OF ISLANDS 1S CAUSE OF DISPUTE Flood Habits of Missouri River Give State’ Officials New Then the question of riparian rights enters into the picture. Residents of Emmons county are; quarreling over the use of an island east of Cannonball. The’ island is; over two miles long and _ contains nearly two sections of land. During high water there is a channel between the island and the mainland about 100 feet wide, but during low water it can be forded. Two farmers have been using the island as a pasture for their cattle for some time and one of them has recently built a cabin on it and claims squatters rights to half of it. Other farmers living near the island wanted to cut some driftwood that had lodged on the island but were or- dered off by the present occupants. They want to know who really has title to the island and the driftwood. Both the attorney general and the land commisstoner are of the opinion that the state has title to the land, if the land department wants to exercise its right. They do not believe the present occupants have any right to bar others from using the land, bit on account of the fact that the status of the island may be changed at any time by action of the river they are ve to take action to establish title. Cancer Fatal to Mrs. Emily Fin-! ley, Mother of Mrs. F.E. | M'Curdy | | Mrs. Emily Finley, resident of Gilby | for nearly half a century and mother of Mrs. F. E. McCurdy of Bismarck, died in @ local hospital at 8:10 o'clock Wednesday evening. { Death of the 74-year-old woman | was caused by cancer. She had been in the hospital here since June 12. | Mrs. Finley came here last April 15 to live with her son-in-law and} daughter at 415 Ninth St. after hav-! ing spent the winter at Lynden, Wash. Mrs. Finley, who was Miss Emily Bennett before her marriage, was born Jan. 7, 1859, at Kingston, Ont.,| Canada. She spent most of her girl- hood days at Orillia, Ont., and was/| liiteala to Robert Finley in June,} In the same year Mr. and Mrs. Fin- ley moved to North Dakota, settling at Ojata, near Grand Forks, where they lived for a couple of years. Later they moved to Kelso and then to Gil- by in 1889. Mrs. Finley had lived at Gilby since. Her husband died in February, 1932. Mrs. Finley leaves four sons, two daughters, one brother, William Ben- nett at Orillia, and several grandchil- Winnipeg to attend the rites also. Minnesota Increases | Pay of Road Workers} St. Paul, Aug. 10.—()—An increase of'10 cents an hour in the minimum wage scale to be paid labor on fed- eral aid highway construction in Minnesota was announced Thursday by N. W. Elsberg, state highway com- missioner, The new rates will be 55 cents per hour for unskilled labor and 65 cents per hour for skilled workers. The rates will govern contracts to be let with $10,000,000 of federal funds. Five dollars weekly will be deducted for board and lodging. Property of Former Mandan Man Burned Cass Lake, Minn., Aug. 10—(P)}— The main lodge and dining room at the Norway Pine Beach Hotel, east of Cass Lake, burned to the ground | early Wednesday. Guests in the hotel and cottages escaped without injuries. The fire is believed to have started in the power room. The resort is owned by M. P. Knoll, | formerly of Mandan, N. D. HyAPrY little girl, just bursting with pep, and she has never tasted a “tonic!” Every child’s stomach, liver, and bowels need stimulating at times, but give children something you know all about. Follow the advice of that famous family physician who gave the Syrup Pepsin. This gentle stimulant will soon right things! The bowels will move with better regularity and thoroughness. There won’t be so many sick spells or colds. You'll find it just as wonderful for adults, too, in larger spoonfuls! Get some Syrup Pepsin; protect your household from those bilious : in. Stimulate the Nav : Vamniane a Te wil steady Problem dren, Sons and daughters are Ernest | Rorld Syrup Pepsin. Stimulate the days, frequent headaches, and that land almost daily. The law gives the state title to all islands of land formed in the beds of THRIFTY CAR OWNERS WROTE this CODE tyté Tubes are Tires I can find. They must have: They must have: They must have: EXTRA SAFETY. The Thrifty Code for Tire Buyers I hereby promise to trade in my thin, worn, dangerous tires today and equip my car, before prices advance again, with the Safest and Most Dependable Every fiber in every High Stretch cord in every ply saturated and coated with pure liquid rubber, to sive me Extra Blowout Protection. . TwoExtraGum-Dipped Cord Plies Under theTread for Greater Strength and Blowout Protection. Scientifically designed non-skid tread to give me QUESTIONS, ANSWERS Answers to Queries of Associated Press Some interesting facts about the wheat allotment plan are contained in a series of questions and answers. Prepared by the Associated Press in collaboration with the federal farm administration. Here they are: Can a producer who signs an allot- Ment contract stop raising wheat? No; he must seed the acreage based on his average yield in recent years needed to produce his farm's allot- ac at would happen to a producer who signed and who, because of un- favorable weather, could not seed win- ter wheat? In some areas he could seed spring wheat. If he does not seed such acre- age as is necessary to produce his farm allotment in terms of average yield, he must return payments made to him. Must a producer withhold from sale @ part or all of his wheat crop until given permission to sell? No. If the producer's farm is mortgaged must the mortgagee sign the con- tract? Not unless he receives a part of the crop as payment on the mortgage. If a farm is sold, is the purchaser bound after a contract has been sign- ed? Yes, What is the farm allotment? That number of bushels of wheat upon which adjustment payments may be made to the producer, supple- menting what the producer obtains from it in the markets. It is intended Call Is Issued for by, of which Mrs. Finley was a mem-| $ Fin e RATE BOOST DENIED mission was informed Thursday. us, body's vital organs. Dr. Caldwell's this evening with Dr. Caldwell’s sluggish state of half-health that Serpe eive you that ext etreagth amd | Theroh ‘Pintey Aid Verion Finley,| ‘The iterate commerce commis- PCSAPtion of pure pepsin, active means the bowels need stimulating you need. Use of islands in tne Missouri river ON ALLOTMENT AN Luseland, Sask.; Roy Finley, Wihni-| sion has denied the carriers’ petition | SUnlaHO AHEE nase tie eyetenn eep this peers ie a 8 ome By actual record, 98 out of 100 women | is causing trouble in Emmons and peg, Man. Canada; Mrs. Howard | for increased rates on potatoes from! from tting sluggish . Thee eauae a of harsh catharties say, “‘It helps me.” Give it afairchanceto | other counties and the attorney gen- Long, Lakeview, Alaska; and Mrs.| North Dakota and denied a request | If tthe Aprteredoa't BREN i crue phaacen te El if help you too. Sold by all druggists. jeral and the state land commission- Se ae McCudy. for a general reduction in freight | 5 hand aeattcley: ot eset “tp fe 18 ‘all Ste ko fae cr are being asked to decide the ques- | Wheat Proposal Is Clarified By| Funeral services will be conducted| rates of basic commodities, asked by| 3 S¢ IDES OUNCE RILEY CHE See eee tion of ownership of some piece of from the Presbyterian church at Gil-| farm interests, the state railroad com- | 28, Well as other children do, begin ave it all any ore store; they ready in big bottles. to represent the farmer's share in the motor oil money can Seen Maxe the Thrifty Code—your Code. Raw consumption" O™" Mm! buy. You will also eee cae ALTYTE |! materials, commodities and wages are up—and [exch year? ment Be chanted es the best - price. pan Sular tubes |] going higher. When you know tire prices are Boing, | cnet aieae Ee eee weg peepee 1 WANT THE wadhally isseair, higher — it’s smart to Buy Now and Save. years except for correction of errors. yi FINEST MOTOR OIL ¢ manufactured __REMEMBER—Firestone Gum-Dipped Tires S . 1 CAN BUY hold all world records on road and track for Safety, Women’s Convention . , Speed, Mileage and Endu Jamestown, ND. aus, 1o—-| AND HERE’S WHAT esecled |] "POC as nee Mis. Winifred Knaut of Jamestown, YOU GET WITH against air president of the North Dakota Fed- Joss — the rubber valve stems is vulcanized into the tube. panna 158° Firestone itm SPARK PLUGS aul worn Spark lugs waste gas- oline and cause ower loss — Drive in today — we'll save you money and serve you better. THE NEW Firestone OLDFIELD TYPE Built to equal all first line standard brand tires in quality, construction and appearance, but lower in price — an- eration of Womens clubs, today issued a call for the annual state conven- tion to be held in Minot Oct. 4 to 6. Mrs. Grace Morrison Poole, presi- dent of the general federation, will speak the second day of the convén- tion. New officers will be elected. “HOW WOMEN EVERY PURCHASE AVAILABILITY You never have to switch brands on the road if you start with Standard. Stand- ard Motor Oils are sold by (ils. 3d LowPrices BUY YOUR MOTOR OIL AT STANDARD STATIONS At all Standard Stations you will find the best tone engi- other Firestone achievement in saving thousands ef Standard Sta- & peers he rederalon: sooner, for car ayoers, CAN WIN MEN tions and Dealers through- of manufacture out the Middle West. Be, ere AND MEN WIN UNIFORMITY SO=VIS “‘D”—The new motor oil that will not sludge under the hardest, ead gag ald hottest driving—top quality, low in carbon, unsurpassed in durability. Free Spark Plug Test he Favor of Other Men. You get the same high qual- SEP Aunty: Pe ty, Firestone thane from your liver into your bowels, your fecays in your bowels. This poisons sour whole body. Movements get hard and ity every time you buy at Standard. Standard Motor ‘our akin, pimples dull eines, Sek hee . dull eyes, h ; Firestone bad taste. "gas, dizziness, headaches Youd Oils never vary, no matter engineers have become an ugiy-looking, foul-smell- have devel: Bi denond cher Biersody sass | Where you buy them. oped in the : Zs ie f af Built wi uPperior tak 5 Me Firestone \ ‘ ae aia laxative ‘pilsr laiatlve candies oe RESPONSIBILITY isi : Brake Lin- ; TIRES jyas eee er ee 1 WANT THE MOST ing Factory i mH aN ey do Ie, for, ter only Don’t worry about substitu- ; a iew brake wil { ef Priced il end of your bowels and ECONOMICAL lining that is moisture- | Firestone os LOW as Special Brands & free flow of your bile ju tion or reclaimed oil. Buy at Standard instead. There GOOD OIL1 CAN FIND IWANTA HIGH: f—gives NAME and dedi mail Oraes atop this decay poison in your bowels. The r GRADE OILATA ‘une teet, thon. Free Satis WE oot oul wine week ae si wave You eer Raabe Toth ert Sie fen ee ateratae as SERVICE Gor IT 7 ; iNfstone'Somthing Suet ae Eonk fore 4 YOU WAN’ . Firestone Batteries saad gripe looten tooth at read ettant hak Atall Standard Stations and SW stanounp “Half-dead” for Es, Little Liver Pills be name | baisecinc tee and get what vou ask for. ©1933, C.M.Co, Dealers you get the prompt, i would trouble- Never Felt Better courteous attention of YES SIR.. Since She Lost 39 skilled Servismen. They OARS ' know what grade of oil you AT 20¢* Factories Pounds of Fat should use, check it for you — have EX- TRA Power dependabl mt ie ba long- er.Free Bat- tery Test. Sz. See Firestone Gum Tires made in the Firestone Factory iain a and Exhibition Building at “‘A Century of Progress’® Chicago. Copelin Motor Company Better GB Service Bismarck “Three months ago I started using Kruschen and weighed 201 lbs. To- day after starting my 4th jar I've lost 39 lbs. and am in perfect condi- tion—really I never felt so well.” Mrs. B. C. Terry, Tampa, Fla. Don't stay fat and unattractive— not when it’s so easy and safe to get tid of double chins, ugly hip-fat and unbecoming plumpness on upper arms—at the same time build up strength and increase vitality—feel younger and keep free from head- aches, indigestion, acidity, fatigue and shortness of breath. Just take a half teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts first thing every Morning in a glass of hot water. If not joyfully satisfied with results of one jar (lasts 4 weeks) money back from Finney'’s Drug Store, Cowan's Drug Store or any drug store the world_over. But make sure you get Kruschen—the SAFE way to reduce. —Advertisement. willingly, and don’t try to sell youmorethan youneed. LONGER CAR LIFE Because they get nothing but good oil and get a serv- ice check every time they drive into a Standard Sta- tion, Standard-Oiled cars last longer. STANOLIND—Why go to unknown oils when you can buy this dependable Standard product for only 15¢ a quart? POLARINE—The Middle West's most popular medium-priced motor oil. Now sells for the lowest price in its history, *& PER QUART PLUS TAX STANDARD OIL SERVICE ——w== ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES Copr. 1933, Standard Of Co,

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