The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 16, 1934, Page 8

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Pha cA NORA ASAE SSR AE OT SEES — THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 16, 1934 the treasury it is newly- fs Maxi- secretary Of tne tresa.ne an ounce.” é ary mined, he can ge! mum an Gre “Too much trouble,” replied Fess. Total Allot- Wheat Total Allot- Wheat | TO ORGANIZE FOR GREATER BUYING POWER ee ‘ i ore- Sec- Acres tin Acre. ‘ ° EGR oAFEtm Bushels ‘Age | Name of Anplicant ist on Farm Bushels “age Missouri Valley Bill mn on Farm Ld bel, "2 1 320 rr) ’ uw 8 6191s Is Offered in House i ai 105 1 i ‘Washington, Jan. 16.—(P)—The old 100 a 23 37 Norris bilt for flood control and pow- tao a ie 3 er development in the any river 160 7 28 valley was introduced house 320 41 36 76 by Rep! tative Rankin 180 25 10 zs ‘Monday by resent q ’ aiilaaad re " 3 Fi bray Hanna bill calls for @ survey : 6 6 % 38 by the bureau of reclamation of the Z mh AND an | ton 85 entire Missour! river basin, for dams AAN 480 72 | MARY 5 ‘aud other flood control projects, ir- f L. CHENOWETH 160 7s | CLARE a rigation, navigation, improvement, s BIER TCLARK . rc ih longas 7 hydro-electric power development x 6 zs [JAC ay ike. y A were cohiieiania) to | Whtr: a ee oH Peck, Mont, dam, would F BELE (Christiania) 150 a lees te 3 be incorporated in the program upon } US ELNESS (Tati): 320 191 Deh at its. completion. j W. HALL .. 320 44 ae 3 ' ; W. HALL (Taft) . ae at 20 10 s % : 43 iz |JOHN MATH sii 28 11 ‘i N WILL ‘ i ; a0 HH PAUL fe), T (Burnt Creek) .. 5 137 ALL-BRA 4 480 142 PAUL. ‘T (Burnt Creek & ‘s 160 42 Rive %12 780 93 160 10 | KITTIE B. Hay ¢ 7,19 437 99 480 139 J. CALLA lorence Lake) 4,35, 640 151 235, 57 k RD TZER (Glenview) 1,2 cord 1i7 ” 160 82 = a a fig i OF MY DIET AES : = = + |BlueEa ‘ome — AUL LANG & THELMA . ee an it u (4 @ Cc m Delicious Cereal Corrected F 0, 21 400 79 ‘ e e : 32 320 ae e | His Constipation \ erty HH S te el B 44 It V | Ss 1 to r 9 ROUGH their county corn-hog | law with the responsibility of direct- | is entitled to vote in its affairs. [Al 32 69 a1 control associations, American | ing the corn-hog reduction program, | The Board of Directors of the | If you suffer from constipation, RTIN H. NELSO: ae as tH e farmers can follow the pathway to | the actual sign-up of contracts and | County Corn-Hog Control Associa, | sead this fine letter: oe RICE + 2 209 40 M ills esume or. Increased purchasing power for corn | the local administration will be in | tion will be composed of representa “T have been troubled for years OY P. SCHLABACH 24 154 110 and hogs. Under the corn-hog reduc- | the hands of the corn-hog control | tives from the various communities with constipation. During this ee Bameihcr oti a 160 & tion plan, they can organize to con- | associations which will be organized | within the county, elected by con | time, I have tried almost every Y Oy P. SC HH ¢ uy Ay eA March crisis, and most of these have trol production and they will receive | in major corn-producing counties by | tracting producers, themselves. In | known remedy. Then some one } * ¥ H 5. i ge FY Sight of Inactive Plants Has paid trom 60 to 70 per cent, In the the full benefits for their efforts, | contract signers. Each farmer who | each community ® permanent com- recommended eating Kelloge’s Aue 3 28 157 36 i western part of the state 23 banks re- Although the Agricultural Adjust- | signs a reduction contract becomes | mittee of three to five members also Bran, and the proper resi ah ant 140 Changed; Smoke Again | opened jst before the) Hae ba ment Administration is charged by | ® member of the association and | will be elected by farmers. I reper iy. 8 48 ‘ at is one reason wi “ anh in Kelloge’s Ati- 3 Tho nt Darkens Skies making progress, ae rived at via leelee.| BRAN each morning, there has been o 2h 180 2 It’s Sound Money Town Commerce. elsewhere, is the restaurant business. perity can be arrived at via legisla-| eral improvement in my j ae Tio 3 Pittsburgh is essentially, you see by} “There have been altogether some ‘There are supposed to be 6,000 res- | tion.” health without the ill effects that ‘ a ° 33 240 136 1415,000 MEN ARE AT WORK ‘tis, a “sound money” town. And here|1,400 complaints under the blanket | taurants in Allegheny county, far too ° | formerly experienced taking 9 480 15 4 [gain you hear business men crying |code,” Harper says. “Many of these/many, and there is no doubt that | , : | laxatives. Hereafter, Kellogg’s és. i 3 ———_— jfor some kind of stabilization of|were merely trivial or obviously due |many a them continue to ehisel,| | Here and Therein || Aui-Baan wil always be a part rot ‘ 6 320 136 money. to misunderstanding. jespecial ie small ones. | | | my diet.”—Mr. E, G. ‘ 02 i, -Skill- iine put it this way: “There usi-/ was the shabby appearance of | Western Pennsylvania Restaurant as-| = ‘arch shows : (areKenvie) 1 160 it Shortage of Highly-Skill ness to be had, but much of it is| many small employers who obvi- |sociation, insists that “anyone can Bh recap drt al iar 7HS| BRAN provides “bulk” to exercise HENR: (McKenzie) ae ah ed Workmen holding back because the government| ously wanted to comply, but who |make money under NRA wages if he yh bed aay’ Wy day, ae Hety the intestines, and vitamin B to aid HENRY ZURAFF (Sibley Butte) oe won't say what it is going to do. looked as though they themselves | will raise his prices enough to cover | *nscr! lay by day, elimination, ALi-Bran also sup- 4 a bit of light reading to a constituent 3 is “I believe there is an enormous) ought to be on the breadline. Yet creased costs. Many small restaur-|O) gooator Harrison of ‘Mississippi. plies iron for the y ILARENCE W. ANDERSON . a0: ‘This ts the 10th of 11 articles |@mount of business waiting for the) only about 100 asked for relief or |ant proprietors did not realize they |" mennon nannen Goened tnig! The “bulk” in ALL-BRan fs much J eS ER CE ANDERSON 34 “America Under the Blue | Stee? light if the government will tell) special dispensations under the |would have to do this, or could not setter: like that in leafy vegetables. Isn't He, HARLES ANDERSON 4 | ee where it is going, especially on the| blanket code. ido it.” “If Pat has not exhausted his sup-| this “cereal way” safer than risk- aed ES ANDERSOD iB Eagle. nia money question.” “We have not yet found a single ‘The “show me” attitude is best re-| ply of Congressional Records, please| ing patent medicines? : HAUVIN DELILE (Logan): 3 BY WILLIS THORNTON eet even in conservative Pittsburgh,| case that we believed justified re- |riected by E. T. Weir, president of |put me on the mailing list, I do| Two tablespoonfuls daily are NZ 28 | (NEA Service Staff Correspondent) | Where the Mellon tradition sets the) moval of the Blue Eagle.” National Steel, who in his annual re-|enjoy funny stories occasionally.” | usually sufficient to relieve ordi- ed 6.—Many times, ' banking tone, I was able to find one} ‘The cleaning and dyeing industry, st of Ohio} nary constipation. With each 2 42 Pittsburgh, Jan. 16. iy , " tort to stockholders, points out that} Jinglig a coin, Seator Fess 7 29 |during the last four depression years, | iresident of a highly successful bank |which was in danger of falling into|“nrecedent has disappeared almost|wanted-to know whether » dollar) in. serious eases. If not 33 |Z have made the trip through the Who said this: “The flow of capital|ihe hands of racketeers here, is re- | entirely from present-day calculations. | would be worth 50 cents or two dol-| this way, see your doctor. £8 | steel district which swings along the | ‘nto new investments is very slug-|rorted by Harper as much improved. | Change is in the air, lars with ‘the gold content reduced Be sure to ask for Kellogg’s ‘ 15 |Ohio valley from here in an arc to-[8ish, and it is because bankers are|The labor board. which did not begin| ““tndustry definitely and voluntar- | half. | Aut-Bran. It contains much more 42 | ward Lake Erie. scared. | They claim they are scared to function until late last year, help-|nty has assumed new responsibilities.| “If the senator has gold coin or| needed “bulk” than part-bran j 64 | And the sight of the silent, steel |about sound money, but what is sounded avert a dozen strikes, A new plane of industrial relations {s | bullion,” Senator Conally of Texas ex-| Products. In the red-and-green 244 | mills, gaunt and stark and cold, gave |money? di Trouble in Restaurants more than a reasonable expectancy. | plained, “and can slip out behind the paereae. by Kellogg in Bat- 12 |me the shivers. ° Opera eed One of the sorest spots here, as| . . It is yet to be proved that pros-|house and melt it, persuading the aus ‘They do not look so today. The old| “Your wife may have thought she fe Fr pall of smoke hangs over the river|J0oked very grand 10 years ago in a oy 34 | valley, and the glow of coke ovens|-lew outfit of clothes, But you wouldn't a , ight sky. More than|like it if she wore them today. What 3s Likaen: fob aoe sgt Weel in|Was sound money yesterday is not « America today. necessarily sound money today, or to- 40 ‘That is within a few-odd thousands | Morrow. 4 {1 lof the 1929 total, when production| | “Bankers are narrow. | They e e , 8% |was nearly 70 per cent of capacity, Move in a narrow circle, 2 AT ainst today’s 38 per cent. not have contacts with the mass bey Sere ee on ics fhie chivas Of the people. I am still perfectly g fo ‘anson, Chairman; Pederson, Nels Dronen. é willing to leave the money matter North Dakota’s Oldest Newspaper Bismarck, North Dakota I You can’t take away from the NRA to the president, who hears all that the shortening of hours and sim- « ible| sides He is in » better position ilar provisions have made it poss than the average banker to know i to employ almost as many men as what is sound money today.” worked at the trade in 1929, even! wssany industries are ‘up in the air’ 4 . though production is far lower. about the effects of codes,” said 4 In fact, steel authorities here re-|(soorge T, Ladd, president of the port an actual shortage of certain! tnited Engineering and Foundry Co., types of highly skilled labor. q ep cinilil ‘hin through the but they are willing to try anyt Td Nobody who pushed the Goontown|that Promises to lead us out of the fy crowds that thronged the down’ dire condition of the last-three years. 3) canyons of this city could doubt that “Iron and steel, coal and oil, have he fi Pittsburgh has benefited by the NRA|in 4 measure secured stabilization of ‘ and the recovery progam nas sales |2Tices and aid in elimination of un- i Not only were Christmas sales | air competition and chiseling.” } above last year’s, but tal fi The easing up of a very heavy re- wy Ge RRELE sity of Pittsburgh's careful figures yer burden tells the same story of ; WIN KOTERBA show « gain of 7 per cent over : WIN KOTERBA ber, before progress in this area. On May 15 , KOTERBA (Driscoll) 1839, _evem im. November, last, there were 74,244 Allegheny coun- His UREDAL Christmas buying began. = | _|ty families on the relief rolls, On La} Pittsburgh, another open SHOP! Noy, 15, just before the CWA work stronghold, has yielded to labor or- 1B No, $-122 CLUB Ne, 8-123 went into effect, there were 63,045. much more gracefully od Seat: RUSSIRALReaanannssaasa: egmsts’ eotongtgim so stg 22 Driscoll Fewnship ‘You read much of coal strikes, and disputes at the Weirton steel works, but the fact remains that the sweep- ing victories of the United Mine Workers in the coal field elections match the wide-spread progress of May Complete Tower Deinestor, 1 Yr" |'Thege Club Otters are not | frac story eens, Us, the American Federation of ‘The Tower of Learning of the Uni- Better Homes & Gardens, 1) 500d in Good Stories, 1 Ye. Amalgamated Union in the steel in-| versity of Pittsburgh, which has stood, es, Coes cae Laaniey Mame, s Tn Both these organizations have reached peaks never before attained in this area. In sede, yee hen ling up of ormat ae Tenn ‘Even the state of Pennsylvania employes are organizing @ union at Harrisburg. The Amalgamated Association of work in western Pennsylvania seal- ing up the mouths of abandoned imines, which should improve the wa- ter for drinking, washing and fishing over a large part of the state. uncompleted, a gaunt steel skeleton, for many months, may be finished partly, using materials already on the ground, and CWA labor. NRA compliance, generally speak- ing, has been good, according to Frank Harper, secretary of the Chamber of ‘i ganization One of the out-|n2smuch as 7,300 have been given ora ve. Household: Megane ar ve. : standing results of NRA in the Pits: [CWA Work in the Plrtsburgh district, country Home, 1 xe, | Wether Mater Life, 1 vr. i burgh rea is the wide-spread pro- ee ae net byes Talla De rok, Tribune,” 1 Year| American Poultry Journal, 5 gress 5 silence, on ee i, {CWA work here is of a more protit~ Tre Country Home, 2 Xr, 2 merly . able character than in some cities, 7 mid Labor Makes Gains For instance, 1,200 men are to go to Value $7.50, You save $2.00 CLUB Ne, 8-128 Home, 1 Y: Bismarck Tribune, Value $8.85. ¥. MeCall’s Magazine, 1 Yr. wave All Seven for $5.50 Cay Farmer, ot| Bismarck ‘Tribune, All Six for $6.00 3 years Value $10.00. You save $4.00 d Tin Workers, headed hy io Hid st ayes Mike Tighe, works a 180 229 42 |on contracts which have sliding scales i Aon 38 14 | varying according to production, and : 4 | varying ib Fit 7 many plants have welcomed it as an | 180 124 3 alternative to allowing radicals to get ' 0 6 1 % ie HEB | ene lon Recorion 126 105 40 But many steel leaders have faced 460 243 45 | the union problem in this way: They ie 45 A will not recognize the union as such. THE BISM RCK TRIBUNE A ler as te. = "g2,-~=Ss« 4 under NRA, the industrialists will deal $ 00 (ONE = ena to at at | "But they deal with bin only as — Fai Choice of Any 4 ut 160 at 3° | the chosen representative of their own ese Famous BIVaF pa Serre en Sonne : Mark an “X” before the 3 magasines you desire, Fill out oo 8 | ee ee 5 the head of an rea we-| Whether you have a piano coupon below, | All subscriptions are for ene year din 1288 284 | fuse to recognize as such. or a radio (or both) it H20-6:0-) ns otherrine Rioen. 640 = 1363 252 And the other side of it is put by t lent f 160 275 51 a prominent business executive in represents Pl e y ° Bee ee 34 | these words: “Various Communistic| money. Is it fully in- *NOTE—If you prefer Q Liberty, ]) True Story 160 257 48 jor Socialistic labor organizations are} sured together with all or @ Redbook to American Magasine— ay Hy 72 | springing up, the necessity for which th th ticles 160 92 17 |i lacking, and which very definitely le many other ai 240 11 38 have stamped on such moves the ap-| which make your home? aso a DORRDOR DED Tee Are you sure you have iso 21s 4)._—'| “atany employes misunderstand the| adequate insurance? ES ESE |caleie barging section of mma and that = elas Gh | creased deliberately by the untruthful a us to ayo your 4206135, [and unwarranted statements of Isbor) household goods and per- GENTLEMEN: Enclosed you will tind $,....... for which plonee send me your Re |e #0 {clean house and do away wit sonal belongings in the Offer No. : we if # Ie d Hartford. Bargain dooccsssooeesoiens 320 13 14 | Mellons heartily and freely, but there 480° 101-19 |g" one thing sbout them that isn't MI JIRPHY 160 41 8 jcriticized. Their banks stayed open. 1600114 21 knocking at the i i yt 8 = “The Man Who Knows Insurance” Bismarck 218 Broadway Phone 577

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