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2 NEED FOR HOPPER WAR IS OUTLINED Groom Tells Grain D Pests Are Real Menace to Crops in State ers CONTRACT @ the py yak. EXPERTS PLAY IT Solution to Previous Contract Problem ' | | Today’s Contract Problem You cannot bid seven on this hand, in South position, but if West opens a small | | diamond against a no trump contract by South, seven can By WM. E. MCKENNEY { | (Secretary, American Bridge League) | | In the play of the hand, we often raged for seven hours Tuesday night. Machine guns rattled from the steps of the chamber of deputies. Mounted guards, with drawn sabres, slashed right and left. Guns and swords were Daladier’s answer to “an armed at- tempt against the safety of the state.” The magnificent Place De La Con- vorde, where once the guillotine stood, marked the worst of the rioting. Roy- alists led charge after charge, and stated at the end they would start all over again Wednesday. Police Lines Smashed ‘The hours between 7 p. m. and mid- mght saw the wildest disorder and Devils Lake, N. D., Feb. 7—(—| talk about giving the opponents an Legislation to provide federal funds! opportunity to make a mistake. Why to combat the grasshopper menace in shouldn't this hold true in the bidding bloodshed. At 7 o'clock the mob of many hundreds led by Royalists smashed police lines at the bridge Try it. | be made. North Dakota and the northwest {s/ also? needed to preserve this year’s crop, B.| E. Groom, representing the Produc- tion Credit Corporation of St. Paul, tuld over 300 delegates at Tuesday af- If your opponents arrive at a con- jtract that you think is bad, don't double unless you are definitely cer- jtain of setting them. ternoon’s session of North Dakota ; Your double may disclose just the state grain dealers convention here. information needed to make the con- J. L. Page, Grand Forks, district | tract. especially when your opponents | appraiser for the Home Owners Loan jarrive at a grand slam contract and Corporation, spoke on conservation, | you feel certain you have them beaten. urging a program of tree pianting on| It is unnecessary to double unless ‘every section of land in North Dakota. | you have the ace of trump, because He suggested a plan of planting 10|they are in a bad spot. The minute rods of trees through each section tojyou double, the declarer starts to catch drifting snow in winter. In-/ reason out how you could have doubl- stead of moisture running off into ed, and he usually can find the reason. ditches in the spring, the soil and sur- | rounding land would absorb the water, ceed to step out and make his contract, making it richer, he said. This plan | as did the declarer in today’s hand. would require only 40 acres to each | cection, increase production and qual- ity and provide wood for the farmer, he said. | Tuesday aight more than 500 dele- | gates were entertained at a fight card | and buffet lunch at the Elks’ club. Wednesday Hutzel Metzger, presi- dent of the St. Paul bank of coopera- tives, St. Paul, will talk, as will Robert M Black, tederal grain supervisor at Minneapolis and 8. W. Thompson, | president of the Missouri River Diver- | sion association. | P. F. Schuneman, Minneapolis, will sneak in the afternoon. while on) Thursday, Governor Langer will make | an address, after which officers will | be elected. o— I Weather Report FORECAST For Bismarck and vicinity: Partly eloudy tonight and Thursday; no de- cided cnange in Duplicate—None vul. Opening lead—@ 6 West North East Pass 19 Pass Pass ry Pass vy th Pass Pass Pass Pass Pass Double 7 4 5 6 Pass The bidding is very optimistic. South should have left the six no! With this information, he may pro-| | monds on a four-card suit is danger- ous. | Of course, East's double is bad. Why double when you know that the ‘opposition is in a bad spot? Give jthem a chance to make a mistake.| gays she has no dates, no men, | Now. after the double, it is not diffi-! and no distractions and doe | cult to make the contract. want anything but her work. West's opening lead is the six of | Rhee CONTINUED spades, which South wins with the, ace. He returns a small spade, which; is ruffed in dummy with the three of page Mobs Continue to Create Disorders In Paris Streets | diamonds. The monarchist newspaper Action | The ten of clubs is played next, East covers with the king, and South Francaise places the number of dead at 50. Some were shot, others were wins the trick with the ace. He then cut down by sabres and some were leads a small diamond which is won in dummy with the queen. Due to the fact that East doubled, & trampled as officers, firing from the shows out. hip, drove the mob, numbering thou- A small heart is won in dummy |sands, down the street. his ace, and cashes all the clubs, mak- Daladier Is Hooted ing his grand slam doubled. Men and women by the thousands, A Spartan code has been worked out for life in Hol wood by Joan Wheeler, promis- fny film actress above. She she declare: plays him for four trump, |So a small trump is returned from | dummy. East puts on the ten, South wins the trick with the king and West with the ace, and the seven of dia-| Rioting had spread Wednesday to | monds returned. East plays low and provincial cities. At Lille, Nantes and South wins the trick with the nine./Nancy, reports here said, police were Hicks up East's Jack of diamonds with | sailed to disperse mobs. temperature. r North Da-} cota: Partly cloudy tonight, and Thursday; / slightly warmer, east portion, Thursday. | For South Da- kota: Generally fair tonight and, Thursday; colder) «| extreme southeast | Portion tonight; | slightly warmer) CLOUDY Thursday. | For Montana: Generally fair east, unsettled west, probably rain or snow | northwest portion tonight and Thurs-/| oy; warmer north-central portion | For Minnesota: Generally fair to- | night and Thursday; colder in south! ‘and extreme east portions tonight. | GENERAL CONDITIONS ‘he high pressure area, with its accompanyin, tered over fanitoba and the Red River Valley (Winnipeg 30.58) while a “Low” has appeared over the north Pacific coast (Seattle 29.70). peratures are moderate in all other cold weather, is cen-| Court costs and interest. ay {sociation and the Florists’ Tele; h State Pay: son Bond Delivery aesoctatiod here. eas i iff | Speaking on advertising and sales Of Stark Ex-Sheriff erence on ane te se Payment of $866.91 on the bond of | Ohio, merchandising expert, former sheriff Frank X. Wanner of Praised the newspapers as an adver Stark county was made Tuesday by the tising medium and urged an increase state bonding department following a coming year. | les Huber of Dickinson damages for ' s See Little Hope of fired by the sheriff, it was announced by Pred Tunell, manager of the bond- Huber sued for $25,000 damages,. Ames, Ia., Feb. 7.—(@)—Dr. A. G. claiming he was injured when the | Black, chief of the farm administr short range in an effort to break up dress Tuesday only adjustment a brawl at a band. concert in Dick-| production “by farmers themselves” wriet court awarded Huber $750, plus since there is little immediate prospect \Of increased domestic consumption. of advertising appropriations for the district court verdict granting Char-} juries from a tear gas cartridge Bigger Pork Demand in_ fund. — sheriff fired a tear gas cartridge at ‘tion's corn-hog section, said in an ad- inson. The jury in Stark county dis- can improve corn and hog markets “The American people all through The bonding department aiso is | paying $573.52 on the bonds of Sheriff | the depression ate more pork and lard ee Krois had placed certain fees and . Krois of Sioux county, Tunell| than they consumed during the com- i naratively prosperous pre-depression,” trump bid in. To bid seven dia-| (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) /nooting Premier Daladier, choked the .PTOvised torches—were tossed inside. main streets of Lyons. There were |manifestations, too, in other cities, as veterans protested the dismissal by the premier of the Paris police pre- tect, Jean Chiappe. ‘There were numerous opinions as to the actual cause of the outbreaks here and in other cites. Some said “the rioters were furious at the gov- ernment over the Stavisky pawnshop scandal; others that the people were generally restive under financial and economic pressure. Royalists, al- ways hostile to the Republican regime, were active in the riotings. | Not since the bloody revolution of {1870 has Paris seen such disorders as head leading to the chamber of dep- uties, At 7:15 p. m. the macifine guns mounted on the chamber steps began spitting fire and lead. Behind those guns, in the chamber, the deputies were still in session. The fire from the machine guns whined over the heads of the mob. Many bullets flattened themselves harmlessly against the walls of the Hotel Crillon. One bullet killed a French maid. Another dropped a man dead. *s The mob moved forward, then back time after time, beating like waves avainst a breakwater. The sabres and bullets of police seemed only to add to its fury. Near midnight came the third and bloodiest of the encounters, Police, firing from the hip, drove the throng, men and women alike—many fright- Marriner 8. Eccles, shown here as he assumed his duties as spe- cial assistant to Treasury Sec- retary Henry Morgenthau in ‘Washington, is an Ogden, Utah, banker and industrialist. A Re- publican and liberal, Eccles suc- ceeds Earle Bailie, who resigned when Congress protested his re- tention in the treasury post. ened now, some hysterical—ecross the Place De La Concorde and up the Rue Poyale. Many fell, struck by bullets. Some were women. All were caught under the feet of their terror-stricken com- nanions. Find Refuge in Hotel Hundreds crushed against the barred door of the fashionable Hotel Crillon, pounded and pleaded for ad- mittance. Finally they were let in. In the richly-furnished salons they found refuge. Thousands of others were trapped in a crush of terrified humanity be- fore the Maceleine church. The ground floor of the ministry of marine on the Rue Royale side was wrecked. The great windows were smashed. Lighted rolls of paper—im- The ministry blazed half an hour. Smoke bellowing from the shattered windows, added to the terror of the night. The mob left untouched the Amer- ican embassy nearby. Several Amer- icans, including three officials of the embassy, were endangered by bullets. These included J. Theodore Marriner, Robert C. Pell and 8. Pinkney Tuck of the embassy force; and Mrs. Gustave Porges, Vida Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jaffe, Mrs. Jane Ladds and Mrs Bessie Burr, all of New York. Richard Massock, an Associated Press staff man, was slightly hurt in sections. Precipitation occurred in| | Black told an assembly here for farm Colorado and at scattered places in/Personal property tax collections on |and home week at Iowa State college. the northern border states; elsewhere | deposit in a bank which subsequently etree a poneraliy tate: anys jclosed. The sheriff contended that! ag 01 TO! Ty, “the bank had given depository bond! 28.49. Reduced to sea level, 30.36. | to the county to protect funds of the | county and that that protected funds vor Big RECIFITATION lors office, "he court held against | Total this month to date ...... | Krois, awarding a judgment against | Normal, this month to date ‘12/ him and the bonding department. | Total, January Ist to date 08 Normal, January ist to date 1 ee | Accumulated deficiency to date 33|Crabbe Appointed to | NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 Low State Highway Post | Minot, N. D., Feb. 7—P)—Sam F. 109 |Crabbe of Fargo Tuesday assumed a! {position in Minot as assistant civision | engineer of the state highway depart- | jment, in charge of relief work pro- | Pet. | jects in the Minot division. | ‘00 | A resident of Fargo for four decades, ‘00 | Widely known in the state and else- ‘00 , Where, Crabbe several years ago was 00 | consulting engineer and architect for ; -18| the state board of control, since re- | 00 | placed by the state board of adminis- Grand Forks. pcidy. . Jamestown, clear WEATHER IN THE NATION Devils Lake, N lear -6 16 > jtration. He prepared the plans and | Poses cits, Mans. cldy. 38 G4 09 supervised the work of constructing | Havre, Mont., clear.... 24 52 .00/the waterworks system in Minot. , &. D., clea.. . 00) m. Kamicons, = C-"cicai: $8 19 n9|Says Newspapers Get _ ansas City, Mo., clear 4 eq i Lander, Wyo, clear. 24 46 | Advertising Results Miles Clty. Mi S00 it 'y, Mont 00| Minneapolis, Feb. 7.—(P)—News- | “ae mn. 14 0 |papers are the best media for obtain- Modes. Minn, clear 20 90 |M quick results in sales promotion No. Platte, Neb. cletr.. 64 00|Work of the floral industry, florists _ Okla. City, 60 .00|from several northwest states were Pai per. ol 4 8 im told Dueedey at the annual meeting | , S. snow... 00 jo} e nesot > as- pid City, 8D, clear 22 60.00 Ee SEE Ae) Roseburg, Ore 48 66 00 Sas Se Louis, Mo., clea! 30 38 «6.00 Salt Lake City, U. 36 «62 suey uencer¢ # BISMARCK TRIBU tle, Wash., cldy.... 46 54 .01 Wyo., clear.. 22 58 .00} Sioux City, "4 ae Be g * Spokane, fash., cl eee 06. Swift Current, S. clear 20 30 00) The Pas, Man. ciear.. -14 |2 00} 0, 30 ‘co! N. 36 00) 58.00 6 00! Fascists in Austria Take Over New Town Vienna, Feb. 7.—() —Chancellor Englebert Dollfuss, with two provin- cfal capitals—Innsbruck and Linz— occupied by Fascist troops bearing drastic demands, departed for Buda- pest Wednesday to see Premier Julius Goemboes of Hungary. The chancellor left Vice Chancellor Emil Fey, a leader in the Fascist Heimwehr (home guard) in charge of Austria. Fey has been left in charge before ‘and once took drastic steps by issu- ing a decree in his own name creat- ing political concentration camps and authorizing the ieee tare of po- “It is stretching a point, to say the least, to expect them to develop a still stronger appetite for hog products in the near future.” INDICT SEVEN IN LYNCHING Hazard, Ky., Feb. 7.—(?)—An indict- ment charging seven men with par- ticipating in the lynching of Rex Scott on the night of January 24 was re- turned Wednesday by a special grand jury. Warrants for their arrest were immediately placed in the hands of the sheriff. | John Gilbert wants enough work to stay popular with the public. Most others want enough work to stay popular with the grocer. NOTICE Educational meeting of Unemployed Council TONIGHT at Court House gives quick Just as molasses on back your engine. It gets Make This Model at Home SMART TAILORED LINES FOR DAYTIME WEAR PATTERN 1767 by Ofnac hlams Tailored frocks are in the limelight for daytime wear. This is a stun- ning model to wear now under a coat, and later, without a coat it makes a smart street dress. Its chic lines give a slim figure—particularly the ver- tical lines of the bodice and skirt seaming, and the snappy pleats. Note, too, how the sleeves repeat the trig button trim. The soft, rolled collar which introduces contrast, is flattering to every woman, This frock would be effective in sheer woo} with bengaline or satin trim, or ft of a new heavy falling cfepe, or wool-like cotton. Pattern 1767 is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44. Size 16 takes 2% yards 54-inch foune Prscany igs 39-inch Cgc Ing. lustrat step-by-ste] instructions ineluded J to start more quickly. friction of stiff, heavy oil. iSO=VIS “D” . TOTAL...... lo W New Winter Grade Iso=Vis “D” frees engines = from costly winter drag, reduces gasoline cost. gaz back—the wrong grade of winter oil holds weather, clutches pistons and cylinder walls, makes starting harder, and uses up gasoline power. Get rid of winter drag —use new winter grades IsocVis “D” motor oils, 10-W and 20-W. They resist thick- ening and permit your engine to be cranked rapidly at low temperatures—lIet it turn over faster, allow it Because they end winter drag these new winter grades save you gasoline money. Your pistons use all their power in driving the wheels, not in overcoming the Change to this easy-starting, drag-free oil now—at four nearest Standard Station. PLUS FEDERAL TAX .... Wea the hand. He said it was hard to tell er starting, a cat's feet holds the cat thick and sticky in cold ooo e+ BOF oe TWO NEW WINTER GRADES 20 W ISO-VIS D Cn 7 Ani: — ade chic this .. PRICE OF MAGA- ZINE AND PATTERN . /| , fh re fy / 14 c Tribune Pattern “ West Inch Breet, New York City what struck him—possibl \ flying missle. Workers went to work quickly Wed- nesday to clear the streets. There was no mertial law and no state of siege, however. Most of the thousands of police had been with- drawn. The actual debate in the chamber deputies, in which the Daladier cobinet won three votes of confidence, faded into insignificance before the turbulent situation in the streets. North Dakota Shoe Retailers Honored Sioux City, Feb. 7—(#)—Members of the Northwestern Shoe Retailers association elected Roy Sorenson of St. Paul president to succeed Harold ‘W. Reid, Sioux City, at their closing business session of a three day con- vention here Tuesday. Vice presidents and directors were elected as follows: Ell L'Esperance, North Dakota: Grand Forks, vice president, and W. T. McHugh, Wahpeton, director. OMAHA MOURNS HITCHCOCK Omaha, Neb., Feb. 7—()—Omaha ‘Wednesday honored Gilbert M. Hitch- cock, former United States senator and Omaha publisher, in death as in life. Mr. Hitchcock died in Washing- ton Saturday. Funeral services were to be held Wednesday afternoon. | Utah Man Takes |ANNOUNCE LEADERS Treasury Post IN SCHOOL GLASSES High Averages Shown by Stu- dents on Honor Roll at Loéal High School Scholastic leaders in the four classes at the Bismarck high school ‘vere announced Wednesday as fol- lows: Seniors, Junior Birdzell, 96.75 per cent; Juniors, Mary Wahlman, 96; Sophomores, Chester Johnson, 95.6; Freshmen, Elizabeth Tolchinsky, 94.9. Other honor roll students for the first five months of the current school year were: Freshmen—Norman Solberg, Henri- Ode, Cayle Kelly, Dorothy Sigurdson, James Burckhart, Harriett Rosen, Helen Solberg, Viola Marvel, Schonert, mma Langer, Sarah Messenger, Hol- ‘ace Beall, Frances Frahm, Carl Kruger, Marian Bickel, Marie Coman, Alvin Ode, Victor Westbrook, Hedwig Husby and Doris Lampman. Juniors—Peggy Skeels, Mary Louise Nuessle, Eugene Fevold, Marian Ped- evson, Ruth Marion Lit- tle, Ruth Rand, Robert Watts, Lillian Hedstrom, Donna Jean Davis and Carl Gutache. Seniors—Florence Rupp, Ruth Sax- Logee, Philip Gorman, Roberts, Abl~ Marjorie Mitchell, Fanny dail Welliver, Dorothy Ode, Jane Smith, Bill Mote and Alice Austin. Land Bank Officers To Meet in Capital Fargo, N. D., Feb. 7.—(?)—Apprais- ers of the St. Paul Federal Land bank, who have been holding a two-day con- ference in the nature of school of in- struction in Pargo, completed their. sessions Tuesday night Roy G. Wilde, assistant chief ap- praiser, in charge of North Dakota appraisal work, Henry Olson, assistant reviewing appraiser, and J. FE. Chap- man, soil specialist, will leave Wed- nesday for Bismarck where @ second conference will be held Thursday and Friday. Also going to Bismarck will be H. R. Danielson, specialist in farm mai ment. Next week similar conferences will be held in Minot and Grand Forks. CUBAN STRIKE FAILS Havana, Feb. 7.—(?)—A huge bomb set off at dawn Wednesday damaged showrooms of the Cuban Electric company on Galiano street but was the sole disorder in connec- tion_with a called general strike which scarcely affected the capital. SHORTE COLD PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS ch NUN 000 0 0c 0 OOo O68 oo oo 6 ot oss 8 te toee Ooo oo 0 0 0 0 ow 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 oo 8 0 ow 0 oo os oo oe lling ; ree\ /Qnilla PROTECTS she FLAVOR. '* Pure Vanills. from HARMFUL LIGHT RAYS 4 No amount of bak- ing or freezing can rob a cake or any dessert of that deli- cate, exquisite flavor of Schilling Vanilla. That's because it weeeeeeeoe CC COCO CET ASO OT Eee Ever see a cat in MOLASSES 1 AN ENGINE WITH STICKY, COLD THICKENED’ OIL IN THE CRANKCASE BEHAVES IN JUST THE SAME WAY! MOLASSES ON A CAT'S FEET may be amusing, but not to the + eat. It slows him down. OW GETS MOLASSY TOO. ‘Thewrong winter oil gets thick and sticky in Sehmapepes clutches Your engine, clings to pistons and makes