The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 16, 1934, Page 2

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2 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1934 T | Telentlessly into the trees and and rocks of the mountainside. complete wreck. TO HELP HOG RAISERS Are Entitled to $5 Per Head on 75-Per-Cent of Past Pro- duction Record i All hog producers, regardless of | their past hog production, now are eligible for hog reduction payments! under a new ruling on the 1934-35 / reduction contract, it was announced by Dr. A. G. Black, chief of the corn-/ hog section of the Agricultural Ad-| justment administration. A previous ruling specified that if/ the 1932-33 hog litter average was less} than three, the contracting producer | Was not required to reduce hog pro- duction in 1934, and in any event was not eligible to receive any hog reduc- tion payments. Under the new ruling, all producers will be entitled to reduction payments of $5 per head on a number of hogs equal to 75 per cent of their past av- erage of market hog production, pro- vided their litter average and produc- tion of hogs for market is reduced not Jess than 25 per cent. In cases where the litter average is less than four, this means that the contracting pro- ducer will have to reduce by one lit- ter in order to comply with the con- tract, even though this will constitute more than a 25 per cent reduction from the litter average. anow| A Murray cilmbed out, wiped the blood off his face, and started mush- ing. It was evening. He came to a jhollow tree, and got inside for the night. He was an easterner, and he didn’t know whether building a fire would keep wild animals away or draw them to him. But it was bitter cold, so he built a fire. And all that night, as he stood shiv- ering in the hollow tree and holding his battered head, a bear circled round and round the tree. x eR STALKED BY HUGE BEAR Next morning Murray found a sign which said, “Sand Lake—Arlington BY WM. E. McKENNEY (Secretary, American Bridge League) We expect @ misplay to cost us one or two tricks, but in today’s hand the Play of just one wrong card—not the wrong suit, but just the wrong card of a suit—cost the declarer four wicks. After South had bid clubs and EXPERTS PLAY IT 2 Solution to Previous Contract Problem Today's Contract Problem North is declarer at six spades, doubled by West. It Jooks as though he must lose @ spade and a diamond. When West ts in the lead with the ace of diamonds, he fails to Play a spade. Can you make the ecatract? 14 miles.” He started walking. It was just getting dark that evening when he stumbled, ready to drop, into the little post of Arlington. A cowboy rode in not far behind him. The cowboy said he had seen the man’s tracks in the snow, and had followed him because—paralleling the man’s tfacks for miles were the tracks of a huge bear. That is only one of countless dozens of dramas of the airmail, dramas which have become fewer and fewer as aviation advanced and flying be- came safer. x e * VETERANS HEART-BROKEN Murray no longer carts the mail over the mountains, but he is still in the game. Today he is a Washington representative of United Airlines which now files that same transcon- tinental route. And it is men like Murray—the spades, I believe that North should! try for the no trump, instead of bid- | ding the diamonds. South had told) his partner that there was no real advantage in becoming the declarer at no trump. However, when this hand was play- ed, South became the declarer and West opened the seven of diamonds. The jack was played from dummy, and held the trick. Here is where the declarer made | his mistake—he led the jack of hearts; from dummy, while the proper play! from dummy would have been a small heart. If a small heart is played, the ten spot is finessed; West wins All the hearts and spades are good, the club Yinesse can be taken safely and six odd are made. However, when the jack of hearts was played, East covered with the }queen and South was forced to win with the ace. Now he either must jlead the heart suit right out, or go The change in ruling was made in|genuine, sincere, brave men of the consideration of an unexpected inter-]0ld days—who are heart-broken over est in the corn-hog program among|this staggering blow of cancellation small hog farmers. Many additional] Which America’s airlines have brought North Dakota farmers now will have|Upon themselves. an opportunity to share in the pro-| NEXT: The infant industry grows ceeds of the processing tax being col- lected on the slaughtering of all hogs for market regardless of by whom sold. The secretary of agriculture also has authorized a new regulation per- mitting producers to butcher hogs of their own raising and sell or ex- change up to 300 pounds of products from them in any one marketing year, without having to pay the processing tax, provided the amount of products sold or exchanged in that marketing year does not exceed 1,000 pounds. ‘When the volume of hog products so sold or exchanged exceeds 1,000 pounds, the producer loses his exemp- tion. Hog producers also are exempt from the tax on the slaughter of live hogs by or for the producer for consump- tion by his own family, employees or household. Several North Dakota counties be- gan activity on the corn-hog reduc- tion project the first week in Febru- ary and it is anticipated that by the end of the month nearly every county will have opened up the work. Com- pletion of the wheat allotment pro- gram will mark the beginning of the campaign in most counties. Snow in the northern half of the state is ex- pected to interfere somewhat with an early start there. As with wheat, the corn-hog reduction program is being conducted by the Agricultural College extension service. ONTINUE C from page ane- Aviation Pioneers Disturbed by Blow self. It laid out a transcontinental route from New York to San Fran- cisco, via Cleveland, Chicago, Omaha, Cheyenne, and Salt Lake. And over that route, by night and day, a little handful of men wrote dramatic history that has no equal in modern adventure annals. In those first years, beginning with | 1920, planes were poor and pilots were | inexperienced. Deaths by fire were frequent, until the cause was discov- ered and planes changed. Storms and mountains took their toll. But for every death, there were @ score of escapes where death was cheated by a hair's breadth. One blizzardy day in 1920, Pilot Jimmy Murray was trying to sneak his old DH over Laramie Ridge, 9000 feet high in Wyoming. It was snow- ing so hard he hardly could see his wing-tips. He as hunting for a pass. * ek * WRECKS ON MOUNTAIN | Suddenly he saw the tops of fir trees going by under his wings. He was flying up a pass, but he couldn't | get over. He couldn't turn back. He jammed the throttle wide open and hauled back on the stick, but the old DH wouldn't go up as fast as the mountain was going up. It had to happen. It did. Jimmy cut his switches, and the DH plowed WOW EATS ANY KIND OF FOOD, AND NO CONSTIPATION Mr. Durigan Finds Relief in Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Here is his enthusiastic letter: “Am 70 years of age, and f 40 of these years there % never was a week but what I had to take a pill or some kind of cathartic. “I took everything, but gained oeary, eel ene at 8 % nurse ina hos ital, brought me some Kelloge’s “At the end of the I had something tha‘ D’ Lucas Store Offers New Advertising Idea Something new in advertising is offered to readers of The Tribune in this issue by A. W. Lucas company, an old and honored Bismarck department @3 &AQ752 Duplicate—All vul. Opening lead—@ 7. West North Kast Pass 19 Pass Pass 2@ Pass Pass Pass Pass 16 store. The bid for business 1s simple|with the king and returns @ diamond. enough, since it merely calls attention| Declarer then can win with the ace to the fact that it offers nationally-|in dummy, and lead another heart, advertised goods, sold by, or under the|going up with the ace in his own now finessed the nine, with the trick with the West won with the nine, king and queen of diamonds, and the contract one trick. | South should not have played jack of hearts from dummy unless ‘he held the nine and ten in his own \hand. With this combination of cards, always lead the small card and finesse the ten spot. (Copyright, 1934, NEA Service, Inc.) direction of, experienced department | hand. heads, The advertisement, clearly, is a bid/ Think Halliday Man for confidence in the store because of 's the nature of the goods it sels and| Saw Falling Meteor the character of the individuals whom — the store hires to deal with the cus-| A spectacular meteoric display wit- tomer. nessed at Halliday Monday evening In some respects the advertisement /py A. L. Boelter, his son, and other is unique. But it nevertheless is good| persons was undoubtedly the same ob- advertising. The foundation of any|seryed-at Billings, Mont., 350 to 375 business is the satisfied customer. A/|miles away, in the opinion of O. W. combination of sound merchandise | Roberts, director of the United States and competent people seems well cal-| Weather Bureau at Bismarck. culated to produce it. Boelter and his.son were returning years; Alice Finnegan, 11 years; E. H.| westerly direction at @ terrific speed. Schlechter, 11 years; Elizabeth Foris-|The lights were at an altitude which ter, 15 years; Hannah Engeseth, 12|might easily be attained by an air- years; and others are examples of the|plane and were visible for about 25 policy of the A. W. Lucas company in|seconds, Boelter said. The meteoric its employment of sales people. lights appeared to me a few hundred jfeet apart and apparently were at the same altitude. They seemed to travel several miles before the view was ob- structed by buildings. The Halliday man’s curiosity was eee it Weather Report | ae ee re ia Por Bisuatee ana va es marck ani vicinity: settled tonight and ‘Saturday, much |in The Tribune reporting a brilliant colder EN meteor at Billings the same evening, PF ovah ee ei flashing from the northwest, explod- tonight and Gat-| 0S and disappearing neer. the south: ene jweestb ly, The phenomenon was visible for portion; much |about 45 seconds at Billings. The ex- Ea ee Plosion appeared to occur at a point on South above the Yellowstone river and the Generally fair, somewhat| 8st divided the fireball into two warmer west por- tion tonight; Sat- urday unsettle d, followed by cold- r. SOREN For Montana: Generally fair east, unsettled west ;portion tonight and Saturday; con- tinued mild temperature. For Minnesota: Cioudy, ible |followed by light snow in north por- tion tonight nad in north and ex- {treme east portions Saturday; colder Saturday afternoon and night. | GENERAL CONDITIONS |. The principal high pressure area \overlies the Great Lakes region (S. 8. Marie 30.50) while areas of low pres- sure are centered over Utah and over Alberta (Calgary 29.96). Tempera- Service such as rendered by Jessie/home about 9:30 o'clock and noticed | Harris, 14 years; Clara Rohrer, 12|two bright lights approaching from a/ Un- | roused Tuesday when he read a story | {bright specks of light. The time it jwas seen at Billings was not given. | Roberts bases his belief that the imeteor was the same on the identical |reports regarding two lights. It would be impossible, he said, to determine the distance which the meteor travel- Nanehete en or ier i; Crimson Departing if ‘| From Regular Plan | > | Cambridge, Mass.” Feb. 16.—(#) —Eddie Casey is going to rely en- tirely on outside aid in ‘Harvard's football team next sea- son, None of his three 1934 assis- tants is a Harvard man, some- thing of a departure in Crimson football tactics. Casey will have Adam Walsh, former Notre Dame player, as line coach; Myles Lane, who learned his football at Dart- mouth, as backfield coach, and ‘Wesley Fesler, former Ohio State star, as end coach. Their selec- tion was announced Thursday. 1 Attention—Masons and 0. 'E, S. members—Card party to- tnight at 8 o’clock at Masonic | Temple. jtures are low in the Great Lakes re- gion, but warm weather prevails from the Mississippi Valley Westward to Would you use the Pacific coast. The weather is unsettled west of the Rockies and in the Mississij Valley. Skies are mostly clear in the Plains States and along the eastern Rocky Mountain ae 4 ‘ismarck station barometer, jaeae Reduced to sea level, 30. \ PRECIPITATION |_ For Bismarck station: Total this month to date Normal, this month to date Total, January ist to date . Normal, January ist to date Accumulated deficiency to date NORTH DAKOTA POINTS , 1 Lo cube inches. 27. cube). Each is prepared to it is with coffee. There are ferent coffee. through a coffee specially Graal tae aa a. QuicKLy. In a percolat Jamestown, cldy. . 27 Valley City, cldy. THE NATION | BISMARCK, N. D., clear 25 Amarillo, Tex., clear. . Boise, Idaho, cldy. . algary, Alta, clear. 63 Bebet each method. SILERBSSESSS Et = BSGSVETHSTaCSISSESSSVSSLSSLSLSLSSLITLSSASQ. 38388888888 8888888858888333 SSRaoVSSVSRSKERSSSRRELS 5 Shee’ sugar to mix a cake? There are several types of sugar (granulated, powdered, serve a different purpose, So two vitally different methods of making it—percolator and drip. Each demands a dif- In a drip coffee maker, boiling water drips ONLY ONCE prepared to yield its flavor or, water passes many times through a coffee prepared to yield its favor sLowLy. The same coffee can be used for both methods, but like a “Jack-of-all-trades” it is “master of none”—neither drip nor percolator. In one or the other, little things happen. It’s a little weak, or a little strong, or a little cloudy, or it has a little less flavor. It’s these little things that make or mar good coffee. Be sure to use the correct coffee for Your grocer has two Schilling Coffees, identical in flavor, but each is specially prepared for its purpose—each one different in blend, roast and grind. Two CONTINUE Svem page one Old-Time Leaguers See Unfair Use of Huge ‘Slush’ Fund Payrollers Are Busy ‘Whereas sald forces representing anger have at their disposal a large group of men upon the public payroll who have been ordered to secure dele- gates friendly to the present adminis- tration at all costs, and ; “Whereas the administration of William Langer has ‘available cam: paign funds for the purpose of con- trolling the convention by whatever means they may see fit without re- gard for the will of the people. “Now, therefore, be it resolved that ‘we urge the voters of North Dakota to be on their guard in the various pre- cinct and county conventions to pro- tect themselves from dictation in the matter of the selection of delegates to the convention at Valley City, and that they make every effort to insure @ delegation which will truly repre- sent the will of the people, “However, realizing the unscrupul- ous methods and coercive means that may be employed by the Langer forces hi in their effort to control the Valley City convention, be it resolved that a convention be called at Jamestown, N. D., on March 8, at 10 o'clock a. m., for the purpose of safeguarding the selection of a ticket which shall truly represent the principles of honest and progressive state government. Be it further resolved that a county con- vention to be called in the county seat of each county in the state to convene on February 27 at two o'clock Pp. m., or as soon thereafter as possi- ble, for the purpose of selecting anti- Langer delegates to the Jamestown convention, each county to be en- titled to one delegate for each 750 votes or major fraction thereof cast for the league candidate for governor in the June, 1932, primary. “We urge that all progressive- minded citizens of North Dakota join in this movement to protect the state from the bureaucratic control which seems inevitable unless the above steps are taken. “Committee of One Hundred “By John L. Miklethun, President. “Sidney A. Papke, ~ Secretary. LANGER MEN ORGANIZE FOR BATTLE IN STARK Dickinson, N. D., Feb. 16.—(#)—The Langer faction of the Nonpartisan League organized their forces in Stark county Thursday for the “big push” which they hope will see them in con- trol of the state convention at Valley City, March 6. About 300 attended iner and chairman of the Stark county Farmer-Labor league, presid-| southeastern lines. ed. Other speakers were Judge W.R.| The eut in basic rates will subst!- Schnell of Dickinson and Attorney |tute for a ten per cent reduction from General P. O. Sathre. pay checks now in effect by the agree- The purpose of the preliminary meeting Thursday was to get Langer tives of the railroads a year ago. It support at the precinct meetings Sat- | will amount to a five per cent addition- urday when 48 delegates will be|@l cut, but it will, if finally put into named to the county convention at/effect, be. the first actual Dickinson Feb. 27. Stark county will|in the basic pay schedules of rail em- send three representatives to the|Ployes. state contention. The notice of the intended reduc- Judge Schell upheld the Langer/tion included a proposal for a con- regime, pointing out economies which | ference on the subject to be held in he said have been effected during aj Chicago March 1. critical period when the state was called upon to accomplish “a much greater amount of work on less money.” He urged unity within the party and more activity by young men who “will be the leaders of to- by executives of western, eastern and Farmers Urged to Aid Hopper Fight morrow.” Protection offered the people by the Langer moratorium, Attorney General Sathre stated, is destined in itself to make our governor one of the great- est figures in the all-time history of North Dakota, He said the radio speech of Senator Matthaei was a “vicious example of what we can expect in the forthcom- ing campaign.” “Let us fight back,” he said, “in an honest way.” Strange But True News Items of Day (By The Associated Press) pour i There he said his 100-pound wife, Mildred, slapped and hit him, pushed him against a telephone a’si threw him over the dining room table. “But,” he added, “I maintained my gentlemanly dignity.” Washington, Feb. 16. passage of a #2,000,000 Congrecaio Thousands appropriation for fighting grasshop- pers in northwestern and midwestern ment made betweén labor and execu- | farmi grasshi be spent almost entirely to poison bran mash and distribute it among farmers in infested areas for & concerted drive on the insects early in the summer. Dr. J. R. Parker of the bureau of entomology said individual farmers can help in the control effort by spring-plowing of all their acreage possible. He added that the migratory grass- hopper is now a dominant species throughout North Dakota, a levge part of South Dakota and across bea Montana to the rocky moun- have Ended| their Bowel Worries Can constipation safely be relieved? “Yes! say medical men. “Yest” say the many thousands who have followed their advice and know. or any of the habit-forming cathar- tics. But you can safely relieve this eee THE LIQUID TEST: First: select a properly nel laxative. Second: Eats For which the judge complimented him and then gave him a divorce. A TEST FOR REAL MEN De Pere, Wis. — G. A. Crabbe and Alphonse Van Sistine are hoping the weather will be mild next Monday night. Clad only in pajamas and fol- lowed by the American Legion band and firing squad, the pair will give I. A. Smite, commander of the local Legion post, a ride across the long Alloez memorial bridge in a wheelbarrow. ‘They wagered the Legion would obtain 100 new members in a re- cent drive and lost. The sub-zero temperature is not unusual here in February. Railroad Men Get Notice of Pay Cut |.. Chicago, Feb. 16.—()—Formal no- tice of a 15-per-cent reduction in basic find suited to your system. ‘Third: gradually reduce the dose until bowels are moving of their own accord. rte tpi al IS ee it works? e Ti i laxative brings Sapte os sees tet ing force. An ap) laxative (one which is most witely beet vei “ed and children) is Dr. Caldwell’s Pepsin. It is a doctor's ae iption, and fectly safe. Its laxative action based on senna, a natural laxative; the dose can be measured, and the the meetings in the afternoon and evening Adam A. Lefor, state bank e: rates of pay was served on all rail- road labor union executives Thursday action thus lated to’suit your individual If there are in your household, don’t give them any fad form of laxative, but use a health- ful, helpful preparation like Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Its very taste will tell you it is wholesome, and agreeable to the stomach. De- lightful taste, and delightful action; there is no discomfort at the time, = beets oo your for Dr. "s Syrup all read: to take. ee if A Frank Statement Concerning Dr. Caldwoll's Syrup Popeia ‘We believe the use of and tablets conteining di is rapic way le at the bowels with a li faxative. si And we know it is a safe it does not cause bowel strain or irritate the kidneys. The Bismarck Tribune North Dakota's Pathfinder ‘Woman's We Good Stories, 1 Yr. The Country Oldest Newspaper OFFERS To Its Readers > [CAM Sey Lovee © Bismarck, North Dakota ON LEADING MACAZINES CLUB Ne, 8-123 (Wely) 2 Ye, orld, 1 Ye. avr. 1 Year ek Tribune, Value $7.00. You Save $1.00 All Five for (ONE YEAR) And Your Choice of Any 3 of THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE i? i" i *NOTE—If you prefer (] Liberty, () True Stery, CO Beal Ametica, () Outdoor Life or () Redbook to American Magrsine—chock magusine desired. Owcnlation Blomarck, Neth Dakota. GENTLEMEN: Enclosed you will find §. Bargain Offer No. .. ‘ NAME senereresscvecccccccsccceceneseecescssesccasoeces Street or B. F. DW. ...cccccccscerevvvcsccccccccccscccbes’

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