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FOR N. D, TEACHERS THROUGHOUT STATE «, Serles of Conferences Will Open at Dickinson Friday, It Is Announced Administration of federal relief for teachers will be discussed at a district 2 conference of county superintendents ; of schools at Dickinson Friday, the first of seven conferences to be held over the state. R. B. Murphy, deputy, who will ac. company State Superintendent of Pub. Ue Instruction Arthur E. Thompson to , the conferences, estimated that relief funds in North Dakota for education Provided by federal aid will reach ap. Proximately $150,000 a month. The total estimated funds that should come into North Dakota for the balance of the school year will probably be half @ million dollars, he said. Superintendent Thompson, as chief state school officer, will be the admin. } istrator of the funds, all of the ap. Provals coming through his office. Dickinson, March 9.—Stark, Golden Valley, Bowman, Hettinger, Dunn, Adams, Billings, and Slope counties. Bismarck, March Morton, Emmons, McLean, Kidder, Logan, McIntosh, Mercer, Oliver, Grant, Sioux and Williston, March 12, 7:30 p. m.—Wwil- hams and McKenzie counties. Devils Lake, March 14—Ramsey, Rolette, Benson, Eddy, Nelson, Town. er, Cavalier counties. Valley City, March 16.—Barnes, : > Dickey, Ransom, Sargent, Cass, Rich. land and Wells counties. Mayville, March 17.—Traill, Grand Forks, Steele, Walsh and Pembina counties, POULTRY RATES REDUCED ‘Through informal negotiations with the North Dakota railroads, the traf- fic department of the state railroad commission has obtained reduced minimum weights on live poultry, carload of 14,000 pounds, intra-state, which will result in a substantial re- duction in live poultry rates, it was ‘The relief is on the basis of con-! announced Thursday, LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘ A Love So Powerful; So Elemental—Comes “Once to Every Woman” Fay Wray — Walter Connolly TOMORROW and SATURDAY Different! - « . from any air picture you’ve ever seen The story behind the airmail postage stamp told for the first time in a smashing human drama that will make your pulses pound! “Neither Snow Nor Rain Nor Heat Nor Gloom of Night Stay These Couriers from the Swift Completion of Their Appointed Rounds” ‘Airmail’ with Ralph Bellamy, Gloria Stuart, Pat O’Brien, Slim Summerville, Lilian Bond, Russell Hopton These Attractions 25¢ to 7:30 CAPITOL | —se THEATRE =ee— Matinee Daily 2:30 -9P.M. ‘ A Free Service to the Public WHEN YOU WANT THE CORRECT TIME JUST ; PHONE 52 ANY TIME LL me Service MILDNER CONCERT NEXT MONDAY WILL CONCLUDE SERIE Girl Pianist Who Has Startled _Europe and New York Will Play at City Auditorium Poldj Mildner, the Viennese pianist who swept her audience to its feet on several occasions when she made her American debut in New York's Town hall, will play at Bismarck city auditorium Monday evening, conclud- ing the 1934 Singers’ Guild Artist Se- ties sponsored by Miss Maude A. Tol- lefsen. During the five years preceding her American debut, which was classed as “the most startling event of the musical autumn,” Miss Mild- ner toured Europe, giving concerts in Germany, Holland, Italy, Roumania, France, Switzerland and some of the Balkans, winning more fame and more praise wherever she played. She took New York by storm. “Perhaps this is the first woman Pianist in the experience of the writ- er who possesses, and at the age of 17, the complete technical equipment, |” the immense strength and the range of sonorities, from very soft to very loud and grand,” wrote Olin Downes of the New York Times. Pitts Sanborn, another leading New York critic, was equally eloquent, in praising Miss Mildner. He comment- ed, “A slight young girl, said to be only 17, revealed a technique for the like of which one would have to look to a Hofmann or a Lhevinne, and a strength that Carnera might envy if the keyboard were his medium. | “She commanded 2 really heroic tone, a tone which in these days of pianistic miniature is rarely even at- tempted, and which set some of us wondering whether Rubinstein and Liszt hadn't played like that. More- over, her tone was beautiful through- out extraordinary gradations, from the softest planissimo to a crashing fortissimo. “This young girl is a pianist in the Great tradition and the grand style. Bhe has the big line, the irresistible sweep, the fiery impetus, the pris- matic color that one finds only in executants cast in the heroic mould.” Success in New York was no sur- prise to Poldi Mildner. Triumph at 17 she explained in one bewildered sentence. “In all my life I have never thought about anything but music,” she said with utmost simplicity an hour after she had held a critical metropolitan gathering enthralled with the dy- namic energy and sweeping brilliance of her technique at the piano. The concert to be given here next Monday by Miss Mildner is attract- ing, attention from music lovers in nearby cities. Miss Patricia Bren- nan, piano instructor at Dickinson Teachers college, will bring a group of 10 or 12 pupils who have been studying the program in advance. A Steinway concert grand piano is being shipped here from Sioux Falls. | &. D., for the concert by order of the Steinway sompany of New York, . Strike Votes Loom Both East and West (By the Associated Press) Voting on proposed strikes in San Francisco and Cleveland was the high. light Thursday in widespread labor unrest. Despite government intervention, of- ficials of a union representing 4,500 workers in the Fisher Body company’s How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat Lost. Her Prominent Hips, Double Chin, Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor—- A Shapely Figure cause. Take one-half teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot water every morning—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many Pounds of fat have vanished. | Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer—you feel younger in body—KRUSCHEN will give any fat person a joyous sur- Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS from Finney’s Drug Store, Cowan’s Drug Store or any leading It you're fat—first remove the| Plant at Cleveland decided to pro- ceed with a strike vote. Proposed be effective March 23. The association has between 12,000 and 15,000 mem. Labor disputes also flared at other Points in Ohio, in Pennsylvania and igri ati and textile districts of COUNTY BOARD IS WORRIED OVER LAW Act Passed by 1933 Legislative Session May Affect Regis- tering of Warrants Burleigh county's board of commis- sioners wants to know whether Chap- ter 267 of the Session Laws of _1933 means what it says when it states that “no indebtedness be in- ditures authorized in excess of unen- cumbered uncollected taxes which have been levied during the current ar. The board has asked State’s Attor- ney George 8. Register for an. opin- ion regarding the law to be furnish- | ed at its April meeting. Register told the board Thursday morning that he believed the law pro- hibited the issuance of registered warrants in excess of uncollected taxes for the year 1933. The law provides that certificates of indebted- | ness can be issued against uncollect- | ed taxes for the current year, plus uncollected taxes remaining upon the tax lists of four preceding years. The act provides that any officer of @ political subdivision executing any warrant in violation of the law shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and is personally liable for the amount of the warrant. Under the law in effect before July 1, 1933, registered warrants could be work late Thursday afternoon or Fri- day morning, 13,829 BANKS INSURED Washington, March 8.—(?)—The De- posit Insurance corporation said ‘Thursday that 54,662,082 accounts in! 13,529 banks are guaranteed by thi temporary insurance fund. Leo T. Crowley, corporation chairman, said 5,229 are national banks, 909 state banks, belonging to the federal reserve system, and 7,391 non-member state banks. Insured deposits aggregate $15,482.981,016 of a total deposit lia. bility in the insured institutions of $37,923,828,503. BARNINGS OF FIRM Railroad Commission Takes) Step in Montana Dakota Power Co. Case An order requiring the Montans- Dakota Power Co. to set aside 25 per cent of its earnings from the electric service in 14 northwestern North Da- hea by the state railroad commis- ion, The order affects company earn- ie Juve electric service Spine, see of Tioga, Spring Brook, 5 Gregor, Hanks, Grenora, Wild Rose, Corinth, Zahl, Appam, Temple, Ala- mo, Ray and Watford City. A similar order affecting the towns of Portal, Flaxton, Bowbells, Stanley and Pow- ers Lake was issued Nov. 1, 1933. Electric consumers in the 14 towns filed petitions with the commission for revaluation of the property of the company to determine rates to be charged for the electric service. the power company which would bring about a reduction of 15 per cent or more in the rates, the com- mission, acting under a law passed by the 1933 legislature, ordered a 25 per cent reduction, provided, how- ever, the company may charge the full present rate !f it keeps 25 per cent of the collections impounded pending final determination of the rates, The commission had started an ap- praisal of the company’s property on its own motion last summer, but be- fore the work was completed, regular complaints were received from Grahd Forks and Minot. As a result the work was laid aside until the Grand Forks and Minot cases were completed, after which work will be resumed on the Mon- tana-Dakota Power company prop- erty. For correct time call 52. 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