The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 14, 1933, Page 4

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4 _~ rE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, _TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1933 “i PERSONAL HEALTH SERVICE By William Brady, M. D. Signed letters pertaining to personal health and hygiene, not to disease diagnosis, or treatment, will be answered by Dr. Brady if a stamped, self-addressed envelope is enclosed. Letters should be brief and written in ink, No reply can be made to queries not conforming to instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ......97.20 Daily by mail per year (int Bis- Daily by meil per year (in state Daily by mail outaide of North Dak sevesess 6.00 it eed ‘Weekly by mail in state, per year 1.00 ‘Weekly by mail in state, three Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year ........00.0.. 1.50 Weekly by mail in Canada, per year ... 2.00 Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other tmatter herein are also reserved. Real Revolutionaries “‘The Engineering Foundation, in ‘New York, recently set out to dis- cover just how unemployment affects the morale and the ideals of men who are out of work. Tt learned, oddly enough, that engi- neers as a class are not filled with radical notions when they lose their jobs. They get resentful and dis- couraged, naturally—but they don’t swing off toward Communism or sim- ilar panaceas, as some jobless men do. Most of them are content to, have the old system continue. All they want is to get their jobs back. And all of this simply shows how little meaning that word “radical- ism” really has nowadays. Engineers are generally . ultra-conservative in. their political and economic beliefs. This survey has shown that they mostly stay that way even under the pressure of unemployment. And yet engineers as a class probably have done more to change our form of society, our scheme of government and our economic organization than any other class alive. To be sure, they have done it with- out in the least intending to. But they have done it, just the same, and they will continue to do so for a long time to come. The engineering which gave us railroads and steamboats made it possible for the United States to ex- pand over a continent without split- ting up into a group of independent nations. It was engineering that doomed Jefferson's dream of a land of small farmers .and small cities; enginecring that gave the south a cotton empire; engineering that de- veloped our big cities, exploited our: mines and gave us our factory civil- ization. It was the engineer, blithely think- ing of nothing on earth except the age-old problem of how to get the most work done with the least energy, who gave us mass production, auto- mobiles, electric power, modern com- munications and a network of good highways. And in giving us all of these things he set in motion forces which have changed our form of 80- ciety almost beyond comprehension and bid fair to make equal changes in the future. The engineer is not “radical,” it seems. Well, why should he be? He ignores politics, economics and sociol- ogy—and remakes all three of those perplexing sciences overnight. He may think he is the very essence of conservatism; and yet he sows the seeds of greater changes than all the long-haired theorizers that ever lived. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thou They are publi to whether they ag: di With The Tribune's policie The Ghost Walks (Williams County Farmers Press) The irrepressible A. C. Townley, founder of the Nonpartisan league, is back on his home range again. With CUT OUT THE HOME WORK In the grade schools of a certain city considerable petty thieving an- noyed teachers and parents. Shoes, sweaters, and the like vanished from lockers or desks. One indignant mother whose daughter reported the loss of her new gym shoes wrote to the papers about it and voiced a de- mand that the schools give more at- tention to instruction in morals. The lady probably believes in noble experi- ments. Another contributor to the symposium intimated that the teach- ers were to blame because they en- couraged carelessness or something. Finally a teacher jumped in and elu- cidated the problem.: It all goes back to the homework. Seems a lot of parents or good natured uncles and aunties can’t for- get their own childhood. They have & deplorable habit of helping Jonquil and Bartholomew with their home- work. In fact, well trained parents do practically all of it, and then Jonk and Bart proudly carry the finished Product to school and bask in the teacher's smiles and get fine marks and make the school proud of them. And all the time the teachers who are getting by with the homework racket know perfectly well that it is a system of adult education they are promoting. But it is the system on which the school is run and the board creature of patronage and instrument of graft, frowns on any disturbance of the cut and dried system, so that even if a teacher here and there were sick and tired of the silly business he or she is powerless to say or do anything about it. In such a politically well greased machine a mere teacher is in Ino position to start a one-man rebel- Hon. I should have nothing to say about the matter if the moral depravity due to homework were the only objection. Health is my province. I am not con- cerned about morals. For health’'s sake every sensible parent should put his foot down hard at the first irrup- tion of the evil, scotch it the very first time Jonquil or Bart drags home a load of lessons that should be done ‘at school. As an innocent bystander I have been observing this homework evil for years. I have found that the best grade schools and high schools have the least homework or none at all, while the poorest schools with the least competent teaching staff have the most homework. It is the poor alibi of broken down pedagogy. I have noticed, too, that im schools where homework is countenanced teachers or principal think nothing of wasting an hour of the schoolday fiddle-fad- dling. They evidently feel that the children’s time is not worth much, that is, the time in school. Haven't the children got a lot of time at home to make up for what the teacher or principal so prodigally squanders in school? 5 A business man or woman knows that it is unwise to carry business home. Why can’t the same common sense be applied to this homework racket? If the school day is not long enough for the requirements of in- struction, then lengthen the school day. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Strangers Need Doctors ‘We are newcomers here and while we have not required medical atten- tion so far, we wonder what we should | do if we did need a physician . . (Mrs. R. T. T.) Answer—The local County Medical society probably has an office or bureau for information for the pub- lic. Find it in the telephone direc- tory and ask the bureau for the names of reputable physicians or specialists. Use Your Elbow Please send me the proper method to clean the wax from the inner ear canal. (N. E. L.) Answer—Clean {t out once in 150 years and use only your elbow in the ear canal. It is dangerous to attempt to remove wax from the ear canal, un- til your physician has taught you how. Ordinary external washing is all that normal persons require. The Ills Called Rheumatism I understand you have a treatment for chronic disabling rheumatism. .. (A. E. F.) Answer—I haven't. Send a dime (not stamps) and a stamped envelope bearing your address, and ask for the booklet “The Ills Called Rheumatism.” It gives the best suggestions I can offer about treatment. (Copyright, 1933, John F. Dilie Co.) Former Penitentiary Inmate Is Sentenced Detroit Lakes, Minn. Nov. 14.—(®)— George Brown, 33, of Tipton, Mo., Monday pleaded guilty in district court to participating in the robbery of the Audubon, Minn., state bank June 13, 1932. He was sentenced to| 40 years in the state penitentiary at Stillwater by Judge Andrew Thomp- | son. | Brown, who was arrested Oct. 27 at | Madison, Wis., on a burglary charge and later turned over to authorities | here, was the second man to be sen- | tenced in connection with the rob- bery. Dale Carver was found guilty! @ year ago and sentenced to 40 years in state's prison. | The two were released from a North Dakota prison a week before the! Detroit ‘Lakes robbery, which netted | $900. Wells County Farmer Enters Chicago Show, Chicago, Nov. 14.—(/)—First entry | from North Dakota for the 1933 in- ternational grain and hay show, to be held at the Chicago stock yards December 2 to 9 in connection with | the international lwestock exposi-| tion, comes from Otto W. Klindworth, | of Wells county. He will exhibit du- | rum wheat, flax, oats, two-row-bar- | ley, and hard red spring wheat, grown | on his farm near Fessenden. In addition to the prize money of- fered by the exposition, Klindworth will compete for the special cash bonus awards to be paid to winners {from this state by the Greater North Dakota association, Fargo. Cuban Newspaperman Is Put Under Arrest Havana, Nov. 14.—(#)—Colonel Ful- eencio Batista, army chief of staff, ordered the arrest of Guillermo Mar- tinez Harquez, director of the news- paper Ahora, early Tuesday, appar- HOW MANY TIMES HAS ZEPPELIN VISITED THE HORIZONTAL 1,8 Lecturer on family rights. 13 Final aim. 14 Greck letter. 16 Rail (bird). 17 Mail. 18She is a trained —— by profession. 20 Prima donna. 22 Native metal. 23 German emperors, Answer to Pre A SM LFS IM Oil bbs him appear Senator Lynn J. Frazier and Governor William Langer on platforms from which Townley advo- cates his home industry plan for the state. Almost a legendary political figure, ‘Townley has been fed on reverses since he swished out of sight over the North Dakota horizon. But, despite his volatile ol! well business and 25 Knots in wool fibers. 26 Father. 7 To exist. You and me, 30 Spain (abbr. 31 Fish 32 Sound of disgust. 34 Lowest. 35 Carnivora. 42 Southeast. 43 Electrified particle. 45 Seems. Coal box. Auditory. 54 Shrub of acer family. 55 To wade through. | equally unfortunate ventures that discredited HE i iy E E i ad . i BF z A 56 To woo. 58 Insect’s egg. 59 To be ill. 60, 61 She leads the —— movement. 36 Nothing. 37 Night betore. 38 Transpose (abbr.). 40 Negative, 41 Second note. cu RED ITH. DIA | Author and Lecturer 2 vious Puzzle oh a3) —— Confer. ence in 1927, 18 North America. 19 Suffix forming nouns. 21 Arrests. 23 Rhinoceros. 24 Even today she from police interference, A Is] a LA (=) O iia ste © [STE TAME) 1 Light brown. Before. 9 'To decay. 42 Courtesy title, 44Un 46 Afternoon. 47 Skillet. 43 Narrative poem, 49 Singing voice, 50 Second note. Knife. 53 Mongret. roofs. 55 Evergreen 15 To inure. tree, 178he organized 57 And. first World 59 Preposition. 3 June flower 4 Channel. 5Dye. — 6 Toilet box. 7 Sailors. 9 Like, 10 To bow. 11 Wide smile. 12 Edges of ~ *|re-elected president of the ently in line with the government's policy of curbing what it considers false news. Marquez said he did not know why ho had been arrested unless it was because his paper published reports of unrest in the interior. Meanwhile, reports from .the in- terior continued to indicate scattered rebel bands were roaming the coun- turbing incident in the city over- night—a bomb explosion at the Atenas club, wounding an aged man passer- by. Will Bury Colored Man Here Wednesday Funeral services for William M. Goodman, Bismarck colored man who died in a local hospital Monday af- ternoon, will be conducted from Webb's Funeral Chapel at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The body will be buried in Fairview cemetery. Rev. Ellis L. Jackson, pastor of the First Baptist church, will officiate ‘at the rites. Goodman, who was 70 years old, left no known living relatives. He had been in the hospital since Nov. 9. He also was a patient at the hospital from Jan, 24 to Feb. 20 last winter. Dunn Center Pastor Named by Lutherans Mandan, N. D., Nov. 14.—()—Rev.| C. M. Fossmark of Dunn ae a was | fandah | circuit of the Lutheran church at a/ meeting of pastors here Monday. | Other officers named were Rev. O./ tryside but there was only one dis-| FINAL AGREEMENT | ON MAJOR POLICIES SENSED AT PARLEY Optimism Over Ultimate Russo- American Understanding . Reigns At Capital Washington, Nov. 14—(?)—Final agreement on major policies occupied the Roosevelt administration and Maxim Litvinoff Tuesday as the So- viet commissar rounded out a week's conversations seeking diplomatic ac- cord. Optimism over an ultimate Russo- American understanding continued undimmed by the prolongation of dis. cussions opened formally last Tues- day. But details of his talks at the state department and with President Roo- sevelt. still were obscured by rigid Secrecy despite the mutually shared belief that Friday at the latest would conclude negotiations. On that day the president leaves on a southern vacation. Tuesday Litvinoff and United States officials returned to the con- ference table after having spent Monday apart. Both sides devoted the day to the study and drafting necessary to the remaining conversa- tions. Litvinoff conferred quietly with associates at the home of Boris Skvirsky, chief of the Soviet infor- O. Andvik, Mandan, vice president, and C. G, Nelson, Sims, secretary- treasurer. Speakers were Rev. Opie S Rindahl, Bismarck; Rev. K. L.| Norlie, Flasher, and Rev. Andvik. |ington. mation bureau and his host in Wash- State department officials worked in their offices. Every day passing without any of- ficial announcement solidified the: belief in official circles that ques- jernor William Langer announced|the federal government standpoint be- | tions normally considered after recog. nition were receiving a big share of attention. They include’ trade rela- tions and other economic and po- litical matters such as the govern- ment’s attitudes on far eastern af- fairs and disarmament. CLAINS DIVERSION WOULD BE HELP 10 NAVIGATION PLANS Adver- tising Selling League Monday night,|J. N. Roherty, Highway En- discussed the benefits to American i trade which will come, he said with gineer, Discusses Project recognition by this country of the Soviet punilo, Before Kiwanis Senator Wheeler expressed opinion that the United States will recognize the Soviet and severely criticized the American government for shutting/ would be the door to Russia “because we did|posed Big Bend dit not like its government and morals” WHEELER SAYS ACTION WILL BENEFIT AMERICA Omaha, Nov. 14.—()—Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana, in an address before the Omaha British Will Build een agen said, has promised that the Missouri , 9,000-Ton Cruisers ‘atts river's channel will be made navigable London, Nov. 14—()—The British |*S far up as Omaha, This, admiralty Tuesday announced revi-| eves, will be impractical in part sion of its 1933 naval program to in-|Wnless the diversion project goes clude two new-type| 9,000-ton cruisers |through, because navigation will be with increased armaments and one/hampered by low water and flood cruiser of the 5,200,-ton arethusa | Waters. class. The diversion scheme, he said, Sir Bolton Meredith Eyres Monsell,|WOuld make this possible because it first lord of the admiralty, who made| Would control the flow of the river. the announcement in the house of Fort Peck Insufficient commons, said the decision was made} The Fort Peck, Mont. project will after reviewing the latest cruiser/nOt correct this evil because Fort programs of other countries, and|Peck will control only 30 per cent “following the most anxious consid. |/of the water which can be controlled eration and with much regret.” at hag Big Bend, near Garrison, he said. PARDON BOARD TO MEET The diversion project is a novel pro- | A meeting of the state pardon|Posal, Roherty said, because it has no} board will be held December 2, Gov-|enemies. It would be desirable from | Tuesday. The session is expected to/ Cause it would afford employment for | continue several days. @ great number of men immediately at many points. hy HAZEL LIVINGSTON COPYRIGHT BY KING FEATURES SYNDICATE, INC. “STOLEN LOVE” CHAPTER XLII Maisie went grumbling away. Not for worlds would she let Joan know she was worried . . . terribly wor- = . nee Surely siete: a ing wrong... cou! be that . ae and she didn’t drink. There was no stale smell of gin in the room... Maisie shuddered. She remembered that smell... Fanny . “I guet "ve had my share of trouble,” s! told the coffee pot, “Oh well... I only hope every- thin’s all right with Joan. I don’t Tike it...” “You'd better phone Fanny,” she said, still in the bi ue, scolding tone she to cover her emotion, “an’ tell her I overslen and you’re going to be good and late. Fanny’s never anywhere on time herself but T know how she is if. anybody else is late.” “Yes,” Joan said docilely. She looked more natural now that she was bathed and dressed for the day. And certainly she had not been crying. That was one good sign. Or Maisie thought it was until she re- membered that she had never cried in the old days, when she was eat- ing. her heart out for that scoundrel “You'd better call her now,” Mai- aie resem severely. “All right.” : But it was Curtis’s number she ealled when Maisie had gone bust- ling down the back stairs to com- lain about the can again, “The rent I pay for this place, an’ the service I get .. . worse n’ a tene- ment in Tar Flat. Let me catch that man an ’I’ll give him a piece of my mind that’ll—” jie’s voice rumbling down the stairs, and at the telephone, Joan's small and timid, like a child’s— “Curtis, this is Joan. I’m sorry if T distu you...I just remem- bered that it is the Cominghente dinner dance tonight. Could you tell them I’m ill, please, Curtis? . . - Oh no, no—please don’t ask me—I ings you think fea best you it is Yes, I'll manage, somehow.” So she had to go, because people ‘would’ think it queer if she didn’t, She'd have to go, and dance and smile, and laugh sod talk to Curtis, as if nothing happened . . . be- . because he hadn’t made mind. “Oh, make him decide soon... make him... make him...” It was her little prayer, that she repeated under her breath all the long day. “T can’t go—I can't—I But she knew she could. anything,” she tt with a strange, detached admiration of her own calm. “I even danced with Bill without «+. and if I can do that...1 cand anything.” And then he'd see her dancing, someone else’s arms about her. Someone holding her close, someone whispering to her, loving her per- haps . . . Good God—what if rt "t | Were the man... it might be Avie be someone he met every of his life ... someone who would take his hand and congratulate him, with his tongue in his cheek, “Lucky boy, Barstow!” Luck boy— getting the girl I love.... He'd nie his damp forehead ... that couldn’t go on. Impossible to go through life, wondering that way. Better never to see her again. Never to see her ... to let eee forever? Joan with the skin like velvet, the sweet red lips... Impos- sible to leave her... to give her up now ... with the wedding date set, nee plans all pineal Sir th “I’m going crazy!. Tazy e thought desperately. And when the gaiety was at its height, and the music was mounting to its height of abandon, when she was dancing, laughingly, with Bert ° 4 SY The orchestra was playing when the: gether, for the the last time... her to do it again... Ligh laughter, i Joan ig nals 4 "Curt the same motions... . One came in, Joan and Curtis to- last time, surely for . he wouldn’t expect “Hello, “Joan, the next dance with me!” The same People, the same part of her was “For heaven's sake, let us get out of here,” Curtis said. Eanninghaty he brought her her ce of here,” he said. ray to them, one part of her smiled, and answe one part was nor hearing, nor feeling ... de: “Curtis Js off his oats tonight,” sai ollie Davis looked and laughed. his regular face. what you saw is him myselee-* er ike that ve “No, that’s just Wecden Teil 1 He was never ai thing in, my life—just a fami “Look at him mooni carries that Lily Ma stuff too far. ‘She looks up by Gomer" ike tide—’ “Well, she does. Did tn mepe ooking the he kee ee i ‘is hasn't taken his eyes hen he too! hand to dance with her it at the iy me she laid of Astolat like some- the tide—” k her burned him coldly, like ice. He was repelled them, ate squab and little green peas ... and| off +. + not seeing, “No, he didn’t, I didn’t see him all,” Joan repeated only, bat ofil the itsttion he wouldn’ an he case alone, Mr. said it wasn’t necessary. He know why Curtis went, and I can’t rstand it. 4 he get on the train so 51 take that long miserable tri a few telegrams, cr even a te! convérsation would have done well?” a) “I don’t know, Mrs. Barstow.” “Nonsense—o! He wouldn’t have gone without some reason. You are sure you didn’t 1, Joan?” “Not that thers would be at there wou! any ex- cuse quarreling with Curtis, ‘There never was anyone get at ‘want to and attracted and torn a dozen ways at once. He saw her fae clear and clean and vii gut of her hair, Her dear, curl bar that glinted like a halo, a ite inal, Her pathetic childish lips, scarlet in the white of her face. Her deep | be Sig feet a tae Se lashes, just deeper than the himself since—since this ment. My dear, do you thi r—’ Joan just twisted her handker- chief in her hands, mtr “You see what I mean. If you can't get along, surel; ig better to admit it now. ‘Much ba hate to ee it broken off "4.0 i as Pan She stopped and sighed. able to have to break it still... it herself would be ay | saic in, telephoning to Joan it Sapets a the atop. pan Pag is Mrs. from Really, I som I one is fair, my dear? titled to some consideration, some confidence? What's that? ...1 can’t hear you ~» You heard at all? Well, do get in with me I'm Baker's in Seattle. I don’t know why he doesn’t write—” lect that Mr. called at their office. oat. at “For heavens sake, let us get out | work there was finished. He . aid where, Lyla Barstow set down her tea-| that occurred to Roherty then described the project, including the Gon or bie of the James and Sheyenne rivers, from where natural channels would take care of it. The replenished James river, he =a would supply much needed water Miser. now, and nd still... to have him to again... how heavenly that plent aid Harvey, Devils Lake, Valley City and would swell the Red River, into a we didn’t quarrel,” Joan “Well—” The next day she began all over reached a low point where they no longer are reliable. Weather bureau records show de creasing rainfall for the last 50 years, he said, bringing streams to such a low point that they.do not warrant the building of cities along them, Farm wells are drying up and efforts at diversified farming are hampered by the lack of moisture. The diversion project, he said, would jarstow. You haven't heard Sgt bea pmtogirnsed it ou are ee from ne. Do Fes ink n’t you ‘ink that as his mother I am en- haven't touch wiring when you do. Baker’s reported briefly and col- yw had not as yed SUCCUMBS MONDAY Peter Karpen, Resident Here 13 Years Mrs. Peter Karpen of 414 Avenue B, resident of Bismarck for the last 13 years, died about 10:10 o'clock Monday night. Death of the 54-year-old wom- an was caused by heart disease. Mr. and Mrs. Karpen, who were married here Oct. 8, 1910, had lived at Medina before moving to Bismarck in Mrs. Kazpen was horn April 12, 1879, at Ada, Minn., the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jacob Klett. Curtis had no intention Bateren As eats use he and it was - Liquid Laxatives | are Back in Favor = ‘The public is fast returning to the use of liquid laxatives. People have learned that the properly prepared liquid laxative will bring a perfect movement without any discomfort at the time, or after. The dose of a liquid laxative can be varied to suit the needs of the individual. The action can thus be lated. A child is easily given the right dose. And mild liquid laxatives do not irritate the kidneys. Doctors are generally 9; that senna is the best laxative for body. Senna is & natural a re. It does not drain the system like the cathartics that leave you so thirsty. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is a liquid laxative which relies on senna for its laxative action. It has the average person’s bowels as regular as. clockwork in a few weeks’ time. * You ee aoe get Dr. ieee epsin at any drugstore, reat for use. Member N. R i {4 LOCAL PERSONS SELECTED FOR JURY Residents’ Names Drawn by City Commission At Mon- day Night Session Fourteen Bismarck residents were drawn for jury service at the Decem- ber term of Burleigh county district court by the city commission at its regular weekly business meeting Mon- day evening. * They are C. E. Ligon, Prince Hotel; T. M. Casey, 518 Broadway avenue: Carl J. Reff, 615 Avenue F; Frank Clausen, 111 Thayer avenue; Walter W. Clark, 104 Thayer avenue west; Mrs. L, Van Hook, 523% Sixth 8t.; FP. H. Getermann, 512 Broadway avenue west; Gilbert Haugen, Masonic Tem- ple; William M. Zabel, 917 Fifth St.; N. I. Roop, 205 Second St.; Carl Nel- son, 922 Eighth St.; F. E. Erickson, 116 Broadway avenue; John R, Fleck, 712 Mandan St.; and John L. Peter- son, 515 Fifth St. William Weinstein appeared before the commissioners to tell them that he planned alterations in his beer parlor and amusement hall at Elev- enfh St. and Sweet avenue, asking their approval so that he can be cer- tain the alterations will conform with the beer ordinance. The board agreed to visit his establishment and advise Weinstein. . Lawrence, representing the fed Guaranty Holding company, appeared in regard to a request for abatement in taxes on two lots at the corner of Avenue E and Seventh St. The board - reserved its decision until the next meeting. At the request of Commissioner J. B. Smith, the board decided to secure about 250 feet of snow fence to pro- jtect the airport road from drifts at two points. Orben Sime Giving Concert Wednesday Orben Sime, who plays the there- min, described as “the mystery in- strument,” and more than 25 other musical instruments, will make his second appearance in Bismarck Wed- nesday evening at 8 o'clock at the Trinity Lutheran church. ‘The concert is under auspices of the church Luther League. It will be fol- lowed by a social hour and lunch, with Sime as guest of honor. The theremin recently was added to Sime’s collection of instruments which already included a “pitchfork cello” valued at over $1,000. The theremin is played by waving the hands before it, the right hand controlling the pitch or voice and the left hand the volume. Mr. Sime explains it as “harnessing the squeaks and howls that were heard in the early days of radio, and playing without touch, mellow, soul- stirring, colorful tones that seem to ‘come from nature itself.” A free will offering will be taken during the concert. State Gets $305,000 Gift from. Government North Dakota Tuesday was allotted | an, outright gift of $305,000 in federal money for relief purposes, according to an ited Press dispatch from ‘Washington. ‘This grant is from the fund which does not require that the state supply chree dollars for each one dollar of sederal money. Of this allotment, $180,000 already nas been receivéd by North Dakota, it, was announced at the office of the from Joan reg S sossion here Tuesday y Presided over by H. J. Muhlenbein, Fargo, state president, the group made preliminary plans to further broaden its in | can that way | great cook, will make him. happy? Wouldn't it| 20% 10 poor kid, she likes you!” (To Be Continued Tomorrow): ‘e made available to the state in the Rear future, ‘The money will be used in about 50, counties now getting federal relief und will be distributed through coun. ty committees in the usual manner, it ‘Was announced. Relief grants to seven states, totel~ ing $2,195,299, were approved Tues- the Associated Press dispatch ‘The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Strect, specializes in com- ties Poel poison ba map $4.00 tend: thelr friends. "Phone 783, REAL STEAM Supercurline, perman- ents, done with oil, $3.50 completer ts Sitaied 50c. mount Multiple in half usual time. We use Palmolive soap. Children’s’ lead 38e. Harri ‘8. Phone ,

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