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Nee ANE ASI ‘William Langer, chairman of the In , Btate School of Scleitoe, Wah- Piullam Langer, chairman of the In. | Riley, State, School of Ware Erazier and Townley General P. ©. Sathre voted for him,|D.; ‘Roberts, Pierre, and Fret} To Talk Here Tonight while oa. voted against the ap- Helena. i — ALL RUSSIA HAPPY AT CULMINATION OF LITVINOF® EFFORTS Comment, However, Is Lacking As Newspapers Hurry to Print Dispatches pointment ING APPOINTS ABRIL COMMITTEE Central Section Is Aim Of Groups it and Publisher 8 Rates in jubscription Payable Daily by carrier, per year ......87.20 Daily by mail per year (in Bis- Glendive. . Governor CONTINUE Dietits phers . J. e arrange- of standing commit- In Bitter Contest| ments commit teres for 1933 of the north central sec- of the National Association of a, 00s ‘ santa emanate armen na R. J, Twlling Buys, by Pay ing, | run: smeared repeat- regional vice president and chairman | eqiy cc gett Minnesota for- r also is pres!-| wards. It was Michigan’s ball on its) R. J. Twilling, Bismarck resident for .” commissi has purchased Zerr's . @01 Tenth St. and will Ea eae Moscow, Nov, 18.—(#)—All Soviet Russia, from a chubby, red-cheeked three girl tending a tram-car switch in one} seseees 28010 Moscow's downtown squares, to mail outside of North high government officials, hailed sesccscseccese 150|news of American recognition Sat- per urday in a burst of popular enthusi- .00 | asm. Morning newspapers gave the most, Prominent display to texts of the ex-) —__________________ | changes between President Roosevelt Member of The Associated Press and Foreign Commissar Maxim Lit-| The Associated Press is exclusively|vinoff at Washington. And there entitled to the use for republication | were large pictures of both the presi-{ of all news dispatches credited to it/dent and Litvinoff. | by or not otherwise credited in this} Comment, however, was lacking, as ere while Mrs, Twilling has newspaper and also the local news ofthe newspapers had only time to ‘empl by We = spontaneous origin published testi hurry the big news into Lea ial . : 8. loyed Harris-Woodman 4 All rights of republication of all er |it was received from the United) 4 matter herein are also reserved. States late Friday night. | RS E, M. Canfield, Williston, N. D. a an 2 ore,” the But if there was a dearth of im-| poe thee Jucitites Oakes! L a sour Bork wt rods ” mediate comment from newspaper) ; in, state aeronautical com- fe best * We're Gelng Pisces quarters, it was made up for in the Free Regardless of whether one likes OF | street, missioner, St. Paul, chairman; John on all orders of $1.25 | A. Heder, commerce counsel, North dislikes the Roosevelt administra-| There an attitude of general satis-| = se Dakota railroad’ commission and as- tion, there can be no denying the/faction was manifest on all sides and sistant attorney general, Bismarck; E. fact that it has given the American|the opinion prevailed that Litvinoff | B. Winter, Miles City, Mont.; H. M. had achieved the outstanding triumph | MacPherson, Green Bay, Wis., and/their Lect lhe eat of his diplomatic career. | John W. Mille, Rapid City, 8. D. It has stepped in decisively where} “American recognition,” said a So-| ‘Aviation encouragement—Dawes E. politicians formerly feared to tread} viet lawyer, “will greatly enhance our) Brisbine, chairman, South Dakota and has changed both the details and | Prestige in world politics.” | railroad commission, Pierre, chair- Helena, Mont., chairman; Arthur M. Sampson, aeronautical instructor, the spirit of the current situation. | stamping her fest’ te worm them, Foremost, of course, is the hand-/a sunny-dispositioned girl at a tram-| ling of the domestic farm and indus-|car switch, observed in answer to a| trial problem. The illness was se- vere and the remedies are drastic. ‘We are having pretty fair proof right along that the NRA and the AAA are doing at least some of the things they were intended to do. Latest evidence of an adventurous turn of mind is the recognition of Rus- sia, The political Bourbons of this country long looked upon the Soviet government as if it were afflicted with the plague. They would not even talk with it about the items which stood between them and normal re- lations, A self-respecting American diplomat wouldn't have been caught talking to s representative of Mos- cow. But Litvinoff has come to the White House and made a deal. The two nations will exchange ambassa- dors. Diplomatically they are aware of each other and this condition may quickly be followed by an expansion of trade and commerce. Add to these the economy measures of the administration, the drive for repeal and a host of minor items and it is easy to see that we have been proceeding along a new path at unprecedented speed these last few months. To date there hasn't been a great deal of criticism. It may be that the stand-pat element hasn't caught up enough yet to know what really is going on. The Steel Men Like It Not the least significant of current news items is the declaration of the steel industry that it is pleased with the operation of its code, wants to give it a further trial. To appreciate the full significance of this fact one has to understand the background of the steel business. One of the most important fields of industry, it has been very closely organized and not always on a basis which has due regard for the public welfare. Because large investments are nec- essary, only very wealthy individuals or big corporations could engage in it, These men have always had an understanding as to prices, anti- trust laws or no, as witness the standard bids for steel rails recently offered to—and rejected by—the gov- ernment. ‘Their practices with regard to la- ‘bor have been pretty much the same. Few steel plants are unionized and some of the bitterest of our recent Jabor troubles have hinged round this fact. ‘Until relatively few years ago, steel magnates contended that they had correspondent’s question, “Vso budit horosho,” meaning, “All will be well now...” The workman on a subway now under construction commented, “America is a great country and I hope this will mean we will be able to buy more and better clothes.” Most prominently mentioned un- officially in connection with the ap- pointment of the first Soviet ambas- sador to Washington was Valerian Ivanovitch Mezhlauk, first vice chair- man of the state plannning commis- sariat of foreign affairs. At the foreign office, Saturday was the usual “free day” and no official there would comment. Although Moscow still is laboring under a most severe housing short- age, Ambassador William C. Bullitt will have no difficulty in locating appropriate quarters here in which to house the embassy and the con- ‘sulate. It was understood the Soviet gov- ernment already had taken measures to provide the necessary office and living space for the staff of American representatives and Bullitt will be given his choice of at least two sub- stantial buildings, both of which be- longed to pre-revolutionary million-| aires. CVIL WORKS JOBS. IN CITY DISCUSSED Formal Consideration Held Up Pending Receipt of Instructions Projects which could be undertaken | in Bismarck under the new civil works. Program have been under informal discussion for several days by members, of the city commission, park board and association of commerce, accord- ing to A. P. Lenhart, commission pres- | ident. No formal meeting to list such proj- ects, however, will be held until de-| finite instructions on how to proceed | are received from Washington or the state emergency relief committee, | Lenhart said. Among projects mentioned are river revetment, levelling of city park prop- erty near the vehicular bridge over the Missouri, improvement of the city athletic field and baseball park, with Possible construction of a new grand stand and bleachers, widening of Main Avenue, and several others. An $84,000 program of park apd Playground improvement under the reemployment program will be sub- mitted to federal authorities by mem- bers of the Mandan city park board. Labor will constitute the major por- tion of the expense, according to the park board's preliminary estimate which listed $66,000 for labor and $18,- 000 for material and equipment costs. ‘The program prepared by the park to work their men 12 hours a day, that the eight or even the 10-hour| major proposal. The pool would befworm lives in the intestine of man; day was something for dreamers to talk about. It was President Harding who, by negotiation, induced them to change this view, even though unwillingly. Now the NRA requires them to make further concessions to human- tty. The significant and surprising thing is that they like it. og oe eee, citizen Thursday in the death of came to North Dakote in its infancy and which helped to develop the state into a progressive common- wealth. Y In the years since he left office in a citizen who at best he had to its board Thursday night includes 11 Projects with a swimming pool as the 150 feet long and 120 feet wide and is estimated to cost $45,000, two- thirds of this for labor. . Other projects in the program in- clude a new scenic road through the park property; a cleanup project; a riprapping job to protect the banks of the Heart river; dike the west bank of the Heart river; two additional tennis courts; a new horseshoe court; Tecondition the municipal golf course and completion of the Boy Scout /from headquarters cabin. If the project meets with federal ap- Proval at least 100 unemployed will be temporarily drafted into the civilian North Dakota Legion Beats South Dakota Minot, N. D., No. 18. — (?)— The North Dakota American a by Williams after extending an invi- tation Saturday at Indianapolis and receiving’ the commander's accept- jin the beef heart, diaphragm and jaw self-addressed envelope is enclosed. TAENIA SAGINATA DOESN'T LIVE UP TO ITS NAME The common tapeworm in this country is the beef tapeworm. Taenia saginata. This name means band or tape that fattens—presumably at the host's expense. Evidently the popu- lar mythical notion that a tapeworm consumes a lot of nourishment and that any one who eats a great deal therefore probably supports such a parasite, was conceived by the an- cients. But there is no truth in it. In the first place, the individual who has a tapeworm usually has no symp- toms, no disturbance of: health, or if there is any disturbance produced by the unbidden guest it is seldom ser- fous. In the next place, we actually find that most persons who harbor tapeworm are very well nourished, in fact overnourished, and they have no more appetite for or capacity for food than have persons who are not hosts of tapeworms. So be sensible and look the tape- worm situation straight in the eye and don’t take the quack doctor hokum too seriously. The beef tapeworm occurs only in cattle and man; the adult worm in the intestine of man; the larva em- bedded in beef and called Cysticercus —the beef carcass so infested is called “measly.” Man becomes infested by eating raw or underdone beef. The Cysticerci or measles are most frequently found muscles, but occur in all the muscles. Cattle become infested by the eggs of the tapeworm, passed in! human feces, which contaminate the feed or water of cattle. ‘This parasite reaches a length of 20 to 30 feet, and consists of long chains of flat broad segments re- sembling pumpkin seeds, The head) is the smallest segiment, hard to dis-| tinguish_ except under glass. The segments gradually in- crease in size toward the tail end un- til they become as large as ‘the last joint of a finger. Another tapeworm, less common but more likely to disturb the health of the host, is the pork tapeworm, Tae- nia solium,-which means the solitary tapeworm, tho sometimes more than one is present. It grows to from six to twelve feet in length. The head, smaller than the head of » pin, has jhooks with which it clings to the mucous membrane, so that it is hard to dislodge this parasite. The seg- beef tapeworm. The adult tape- the larva in the flesh of the hog, the measies in the pork being called “bladderworms” of Cysticercus cel- lulosae. A third kind of tapeworm the fish tapeworm. Dibothriocephalus latus, the largest of all human tapeworms was formerly almost unknown in this with increasing frequency in recent fondness for certain raw fish. in the waters of Wisconsin and Min- 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, in ink. No reply can be made to queries not conforming ‘o instructions. Address Dr. William Brady, in care of this newspaper. ments are smaller than those of the, country, but has been encountered) Letters shouid be brief and written tapeworm and infect man. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Another Old Fossil Betrays His Incompetence tor in this city uses the diathermy method of removing tonsils, I asked our family doctor for the informa- tion ase eet ones the idea and Answer—Any physician whe pooh- Poohs the use of electro-surgery mere- ly betrays his ignorance and incompe- | tence. Hard on the Bugs From considerable experience we have found that cakes of naphthalene dissolved in the kerosene or gasoline used against bedbugs “will be more effective than the kerosene or gaso- line alone. The naphthalene lingers after the solvent has all evaporated, and the odor is not unpleasant. Answer—Thank you. Naphthalene is commonly used against moths—the familiar mothballs. Sodium Salicylate Is there any harm in taking a five grain tablet of sodium salicylate for headache? (C. E.) Answer—Not if it 1s only an occa- sional remedy. Nor is the organic salicylic compound—acetyl-salicylic acid ester, more familiar to the laity under the name of “aspirin,” harmful in similar dose for occasional emer- gency use. But any such coaltar derivative used as a pain-killer, a anxiety or other disturbed feelings, 4s injurious if frequently resorted to. It is a vicious practice using such dope to relieve the sense of fa- I have tried to find out what doc- | |BELL NOT BLAMED IN LICENSE FIGHT Industrial Commission Secre- tary Says Spencer Was Man Really ‘On the Pan’ A letter in the files of the state in- |dustrial commission from the federal ;department of agriculture indicates the federal grain department has re- fused reinstatement of the state mill elevator license because it objects to management of both the mill and ele- vator by the same head. This was the interpretation put on the contents of the letter at a meet- ing of the industrial commission at which Ludvig Pederson was appointed to succeed O. L. Spencer, present man- ager of the state mill and elevator. It was reported previously that the federal department had refused to re- imstate the license as long as C. A. Bell, present elevator manager, re- mains on the job, but James Milloy, secretary of the Industrial Commis- sion, said Saturday the letter from the federal department could be inter- preted to refer to Spencer. John Husby, Commissioner of Agri- culture and Labor, said he specifically objected to naming Pederson head of the mill and elevator because of the objections raised by the federal gov- ernment and that as a result a motion was adopted by the commission auth- trizing Pederson to name an eleva! manager if necessary. The federal grain department de- mands, in its letter to the commission, that the elevator department be dis- associated entirely from the mill de- partment. There was no reference in- dicating federal officials object to Bell’s management of the elevator. Pederson takes over the duties of mill and elevator manager Monday, tigue of “shoppers’ nerves.” HORIZONTAL, 1 Who was the famous poet ‘in the picture? 18 Audibly. re 14 Sixteenth of & T°) pound. 16 Year (abbr.). 18 Crescent- shaped figure, 20 Behold. |} au rater. NIEIONMNO! | | 28 Discordant [a sound. 24 Goddess of peace. 26 Foreheads. 28 Waxy sub- stance, 29 Aphid. 30Ratite bird. 44To trim. 45 Thing. “] 47 Falsehood. 48 Nor! 49 Woven string. 50 Person opposed, 52 Preposition. 53 He called him: 37 Genus of frogs. —s. 36 Ho rote SOM 55 Glossy paints. nesota and Michigan and other nor- thern states or provinces have been found infested. Dogs or cats that feed on the fish may harbor the fish 56 White ant. perms sheet VERTICAL 2 Each (abbr.). with authority given him to employ and discharge any employes. Governor | 19th Century Poet 17 Uncommon. 20He studied —— (pl). 22 He was born and educated in —. 23 He wrote for a daily —. seBaney. test. OAD WAI 33 Narrow way. - 35 Melody. 36A contempo- rary writer and couny- man. 38 Prickly pair. 39 Uncloses, 40 Characteris- tie. 41 Therefore. 44 Limping. 3 Bad. 4 Objects of intuition. 5To hasten. 6 Fish. 7 Mortar tray. 8 Color. 9To dignity. 10 Frozen water. self the last Of 1) New England. 46 Bustle. 49 Male cat. 51 Distinctive theory. 53'Sun god. 54 Seventh note, 12 He rates as one of the Breatest of 15 Mare. 4 man; Ralph Cram, Davenport, Iowa; O. W. Roberts, Bismarck; G. M. Rob- erts, Pierre, and Herbert F. Swett, Steele, N. D. and airmen—J. L. Taylor, Mont., chairman; E. Aircraft Glendive, CHAPTER XLVII Renner went to the 80 yard line on a faked pass. On the next play Wistert fumbled and Minnesota recovered. Lund punted to Michigat’s 10-yard line as the game ended, Minnesota 0, of Munich, é A dogs’ “university” has been found- F.| Michigan 0. And then, when Joan had almost | twenty. decided that Curtis loathed the very pile of wedding invitations, waiting a vee snug, rich envelopes to be | th iressed, when was sure he had lost all interest in her, so ab- sorbed was he in his own a then as if suddenly conscious of her he would seize her suddenly and passionately in his arms. Cover her face with burning, almost brutal kisses, until she would him fearfully, hating herself for her fears. . . . “It is because I do not love him... . Oh, Curtis! Cur- tis! Have I still cheated you?” So she submitted to his caresses, endured violin brooding silences, hi reas! bursts of anger, his sharp, harsh words. ‘T have made him sulfer enough boat «.. I’ve done everything wrong... rything . . spoilo my own life ++ snow th spoil his—” _ And there came over her the longing to see the hills again, the green and gold hills of Marin, with | 4 1c madrones with their tai 1. ing bark, and the ever re anand the spicy smells. To k to the old see oe see tl eae and the roi .-. Aunt Evvie, too . eee The little Italian who sold flow- tercupe to sell a rusty tin pail of . ups to sell, a rusty them on the lowest shelf of the them home, to bury her face in their freshness, and smell the green, springy smell. her eyes were misty when A i 5 [ . H E te tf Ha eet ith f F “ ei Te Fit i Tt] 13 fe Ei | if Het tt : i i El af | * PIRERE Ele tees | ay i i shrink from |and the te the hi over it lately. lowers hi spider had climbed She holding her aching side. She ‘could on now. why did I come?’ E igh mpi the hill she eat dorm in the grass to remember . .. Joan, do you remem- ber?” SE 58 rat a io bis iy ie : i 5 i 8 r+ FF Ls et “Bait for Sale!” sign, that he had painted e least I can do is not mastic? down. as Here was the trail, the short-cut road. No one had ad sprung up there. A made a web. f: i on in Lausanne, France, to train dogs HAZEL“ LIVINGSTON Curtis’ plans were almost ready. His mind was made up. Sleepless days of indecision... go on that way. Eve: t the weds di the first engagement to be broken at the last moment, She'd get over | e tsi her to enough to have him to in. He might even take jurope for a few months, she had always wanted that. +; Wh in,” His himeelf, he dead Horner kept his old. ence e1 le een| tie—to think of whi Some small pink] been! served as meal lossy, ment committee all on, her life Ruth Gilles; in| “2 friend.” OF h, why did I come, 7 rest. But she about Joan? thought mis- ing a fool of myself over hey, A lot she has worried about my happiness! She can take care of herself—she’s had ri ++-Oh, Johnnie, John- at might have eee The weeliny Dutchman who had ticket and entertain- winter had gone East in the spring, and for once in jie was without course, there ad Ho Spe omar Tee, Bee with letters, and s! le chocolates from the South—but he was too far away to count. She was on her way home, feel- ing “low in her mind” in spite of the new black satin outfit that had sharply. “Great She wheeled Scott — Will'um— where did you “herd: you “You sure don’t look it. Dear old London, or little old N’ York’s more ies it. Stand ha and let oe lon at you. good just to at. Say, if you aren’t the Dace thi doing the disap, pearing act that way, thot me crying m; eyes out, thinking you didn't love more!” me any She looked into his eyes, and 1 her Felis essen, ea hit near her mouth quivered, her round brown | eves danced with merriment, for me—or Joan—” she A ig could have bit i £ F Ho i 4 = He ile ES HH B ug “She's a Van Fleet,” he said, ab- sent “Ahe io you know all about - “I know all about her people,” he are old