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HOMESTEAD PROJECT; | Aim Is to Give Part-Time Work- ers Opportunity to Grow Their Own Food ‘Washington, March 32—(%)—Es- tablishment of a subsistence home- steads project. near Duluth, Minn., ne ment to repay their loans in monthly instalments. Would Give Board Control Over Money over the issuance of currency. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THURSDAY, MARCH 22, 1934 UMMA AVE | Penn Geert Yoeiearae Ruching ribbon bands on large sailors, originated by Patou, are Easter bonnet news. This one in natural ONE MAIL DELIVERY Service to Residential District Being Curtailed in Line With Order Only one delivery of mail a day is being made to residential districts in | Bismarck as @ result of the recent economy order of Postmaster General James Farley, Postmaster Walter Sather said Thursday. When the order first was issued a system whereby. only one delivery | would be made two days a week was instituted, but this proved unwork- able and further curtailment of serv- | iee_was necessary, Sather said. | During the four months the new system is expected to be in force here a saving of about $700 will be made Sather said. The reduced pro- gram began March 1. Thirty-four regular postal em- Ployes and three substitute workers at the local postoffice have been af- fected by the economy program.. The schedule practically eliminates the heed for substitute workers, Sather said. The tentative schedule now in op- eration calls for delivery of mail starting at 1:30 each afternoon, which means that deliveries will not be made at some homes until after 6 O'clock. The afternoon delivery was cnosen so Bismarck people would re- celve the same afternoon, mail com- ing in on the noon train. Mail de- liveries to business houses ‘have not been changed. Arrest Two Boys for Stealing 17 Purses Two boys were picked up by Chief of Police Chris Martineson Thursday, charged with stealing pocketbooks. According to Martineson, one-boy had taken 11 pocketbooks a year ago and had been released upon promise of| good behavior. He was picked up again after stealing five more. The; BEING MADE DAILY) °—= | Milk Producers Group ua | EASTER CUSTOMS In Florence, Italy, the Middle Ages, ge and colorful custom, preserved from ly commemorates the passing of Lent and serves as an augury for the coming year. As thousands of na- tives and visitors watch in breathless silence, four white oxen draw a towering, ornamented cart filled with explosives which at the proper moment are set off by a flaming metal dove. If the fireworks explode, great rejoicing follows, for this is believed to foretell an excellent harvest. NEXT: How Grecks roast the Easter lamb. entire crew of'12 men of the gi tanker La Girafe were killed Th day by a violent explosion and fi at the dock a the Port Jerome o refinery, To Sing Cantata at Palm Sunday Se The” sacred cantata,” hia Last Words of Christ,” by Dubois, will be sung by the ‘ Lutheran church choir at 8 0 Sunday evening to observe the ing of Holy Week. The tation of the oratorio this oratorio is sung at Trinity Lu-| theran church as Holy Week service. Mrs. C. A. Narum,| Bruce Wallace and I. A, Esko are loists. Piano accompaniments. will be} played by Mrs. Opie 8. Rindahl, The introduction to the oratorio is| the lamentation of Naomi arranged! as a soprano The first word! includes the scene in which he eruci- fiers realize their guilt. The second! is the benediction of the malefactor’ who repented, while the third is “Mother, Behold Thy Son.” At the! completion of the oratorio, the en-| tire choir will sing “Adoramus Te.” The public is invited to attend the service. Nye Proposes Tax to Hit War Profiteers Washington, March 22—(>)—As @ deterrent to war, an amendment to the tax bill has been proposed in the: senate to have income taxes boosted 100 per cent and virtually fo confis- cate incomes of over $10,000 a year while hostilities are on. It was offered by Senator ‘Nye (Rep., N. D.) who told reporters “if the government can send men to their death during time of war it is just and logical for it to confiscate wealth and every other thing thai goes into carrying on wi Opposes Control Plan below the average production of each dairy farmer during 1932 and 1933. A processing tax would be placed on Here’s Quick Relief other boy admitted stealing two.! OAV ORE ne They will be brought before the ju-| |venile court at an early date. Martineson said the police depart- straw with dyed border has ruching in the same two-tone effect. The cut gives a lovely example of the ‘The measure was amended on io- ‘Amgerie touches on the new dark dresses. Washington, March 22.—(#)—A na-}_ In return, farmers who sign con- jUonal conference of cooperative milk | tTacts with the government to reduce, producers gathered Thursday with a| Would receive benefit payments of 40 From Bad Coughs equal to 23.22 grains of pure gold. Chairman Md.) of the subcommittee said it of all currency, also would take over all gold bullion ‘and be empowered to deal in gold on the open market, Two Identified in. . Abduction of Bremer Justi nounced it had identified two men it said had taken part in the kidnaping of, Edward G, Bremer, of St. Paul. to as the Barker-Karpis gang who have operated ne throughout Bremer was kidnaped at St. Paul January 17 and released 22 days later after the payment of $200,000: ran- See the S. & L. com style show Friday ev. Bismarck g i h g af Zi il lt Tale of Jackknife New York, March 22—(#)—To the stark tale of abuses, graft and fraud which have fallen to the lot of helpless aged inmates of the Welfare Island city home, was added Thursday the story of elementary surgery under the age-palsied hands ofa former. cook on a sailing ship. The startling. story of his “doc- torin’”—with a drunkard for an assistant and a jack knife for an instrument—was told before a wity commissioner’s hearing by the sailor-doctor, Charles _John- son, 69-year-old © windjammer. cook. ‘His testimony was the conclud- ing phase of the inquiry before four days ago by commissioner of accounts Paul Blandshard into conditions of the Island home for the aged, from which Superinten-. Gesne Speaks on Trust ist Companies How trust companies operate and! types of trust companies formed the theme of a talk by A. R. Gesne, Min- neapolis, of the Northwestern Na- ‘tional Bank Underwriters association, at the World War Memorial building ‘Wednesday night, _ About: fifty people heard the lecture, ‘which was open to | public. At a breakfast banquet mney Make Tree | Sprayét With Rack and Pole Fy Fy He ze i He Ef es 4 5 u | af 3 S & 8 14 *3 i g | rp abase sire depo ree Ht 5G g8e a rie ja a Ships Passing ugh Gr Great Can: Ba, March 2 it traffic passing says a abe, Bis eee since Nay lg had a at fednes- bof five | Surgery Unfolded; :'To Horror-Striken Gotham Probers: dent Louis J. McNally is missing upon revelations that he banked $48,685.51 during his eight years in office. : Simpering and giggling, the old cook related that he treated a5 many as 33 “patients: &@ day with his jack knife for ulcerated legs and found himself hampered be- cause “Pete,” his predecessor and -assistant, drank the sterilizing al- cohol. For his work, he said, he was paid four ‘plugs of “chawin’ to- “bacco” cach week. -His “ulcer clinic” was an abandoned mor- gue. Johnson, giggling with enjoy-- ment at the attention he was re- ceiying, produced a Jack knife from his pocket. “This is her,” he said, holding it up, ‘special for the clinic.” ‘Resident. of Amidon Is Taken by. Death Amidon, N. D., March 22.—A. B. {Landquist, 51, proprietor of the I. G. A. store and one of the publishers of the Slope County Post here, died Monday morning. March 19, at the Dickinson hospital, where he had been taken one week before sufferi with peritonitis, following. a stoppay of the bowels. “An emergency opera- tion failed to stop’ the progress of the poison. Death-came at about 5 o'clock Monday -morning. The funeral will. be held Thursday, March 22, from the Price funeral parlors and interment will be made in Dickinson. Al Landquist, since the day he came to Amidon as the first clerk of court |’ of the newly created Slope-county in January, 1915, was-one of the moving spirits of the’ litte inland<community which serves as.the county seat. Dur- ing the 19 years he lived at Amidon there was never a community activ- ity to which he did not lend assist- Lance. Governor of Nevada Is Stricken by::Death i Carson City. ‘yev.. Nev. March. 22.—()— | 6 Death has ended the career of Gov. Frederick Bennett, Balzar, 54, who once proclaimed Nevada “the last free state in the union” because- of its lib- |! eralism. é . Governor Balzar, who signed acts legalizing gambling and the six-weeks divorce law, died at the. executive mansion here Weetetay- after @ long illness. ® THREE DIE IN: CRASH ee Peru; March 22.—(#)—Three ms were killed Thursday when a| ” Ben arerionn Airways plane crashed at the takeoff. Onboard the plane and injured in.the crash, was Manuel Trucco, Chilean Nisei to the United States..: WAKE UP YOUR LIVER: BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL And You'll Jump Out.of Bed ia the Morning Rarin’ to Go sn sesame a eel neal reac te ree Look Dario Coreen ee Relief Workers Go on . Strike at Williston Williston, N. D., March 22.—(?)—| Dissatisfied with the scale of 30 cents an hour offered by, the local relief) work administration, workers on vari. ous projects in Williston are on strike. They walked out Tuesday. Ralph Mattingly.,head of the un- employed council, declared the strike was -called because the 30 cents an| hour offered under the relief work program which succeeded the CWA program “is too low to support a de- cent standard of living.” The walkout affected a swimming pool project, the East Broadway grav- eling project and work on the mu- nicipal atrport. Officials. here planned to take up the matter with state relie® head- quarters at Bismarck. COLD AND CouGH Ted Rubr of si7 S, 7th Sioux Falls, S St., said: that settled in ny chest and bronchial tubes, I had a hacking cough and had difficulty in catching my breath.” The cold and cough lasted over a period of several weeks, Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery rid me miserable cold and cou Write Dr, Pierce's Clini ‘New size, tablets $0 cts, ree MOTICE .TO CREDITORS. ANT ATTER OF E. L. Carr, Deceased. Notice is hereby wi dersigned, Loren L. ax the inininteator of the estate of Everett L. Carr, also known as KL. Carr, late of Driscoll, In the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota, de- d, to the creditors of, and all having claims against, the f sald deceased, to exhibit he necessary. vouchers, n by the une months after the first pub- licatton of ‘tile notice, to said admin= trator. at-his residence in Draco to the Judge of the County Cou! sald Burleigh County, at his offi in. the Burleigh County, North Da. kota Court House in the’ City of Bis marck, in Burleigh County, North Dakota. y further notified that | , Judge of the Coun- ty Court within ‘and for the County of Burleigh, and State of North Da- has fixed the: 9th day of Octu- ‘A. D. 1934, at the hour of two cK in the afternoon of said day, . in sald County and State, as the time and place for hearing and ims against the estate ‘arr, also ‘arr, deceased, whic have been nd’ regularly pre sented ax fore provided. Dated Starch 45th, toren Te Carr, the estate of Everett. L. ‘arr, also known as E, 1. arr, deceased, Geo. M. Register, of ald Administrator, North Dakota publication ‘on the 22nd day . D. 1934. a fact 8. Rise, Deceanéd. Clare .R. Lund Ri mimi roshus, Dorth 0. Hay eh, Clartene Kvei Oreis. Kvarmme, Respondents, 6 The Bteee ot of North Dakota to thi jamed espo h of yo! ed and uired 0 County Court of the X in ital any you have, final accot ‘and petition or ati the ‘mi ene Mabel, in the mats of Min Let service be made of this ‘citation. as required by law. pret. this Soth day of March A. D. By the Court: (SEA! y LC. Davies, oe Judge of the County Court. Ang “I had a bad cold | size, tabs. or liquid, $1.35. “We De Our Part.” | 1E ESTATE | tt L. Carr, also known as | -as the admtnistrator ‘of |: ment would appreciate the coopera- tion of the public in informing them. of. beggars or loiterers who annoy peo- Ple in the residence districts. If they jcannot Get anyone at the police sta- tion, they should call the telephone office and ask the operator to display the call light and at the same time leave their telephone number with central. In that way the police can act promptly, able to pick up a number of undesir- able characters, i North Dakota’s he said, and may -be} McCall's Magasine, 1 Yn Pleterial Review, 1 Delinea: i chip on its collective shoulder. chip represents opposition to the ad- ministration’s new milk.control plan. | In an advance statement member: general policy of milk marketing! agreements, plan were expected later. under the agricultural adjustment Oldest Newspaper act, proposes curtailment of milk and) butterfat production by 15 per cent} ‘Fhe cents per 100 pounds of butter on the amount of their curtailment. Part of this would be paid after approval of ‘contracts and the balance after six of the conference opened fire on the, months. The cost of the program is esti- Attacks on the control mated at $165,000,000 with the pos: ‘bility that $300,000,000 will be expend- | The milk program, covering the last}ed if amendments pending in con. of the commodities named as eligible! gress are adopted. 12 DIE IN BLAST Rouen, France, March 22.— The Stops Hacking INSTANTLY Why hack, hack, hack yourself to pieces? One dose of Bronchuline Emulsion gives unmistakable relief— ‘eeaneno matter how your cough as hung on. Two doses may stop Half a bottle certainly ou can have your money | back. Service Drug Store and all | other good druggists guarantee it.— | Advertisement. The Bismarck Tribune Bismarck, North Dakota OFFERS CLUB Ne. 8-128 Review, 1 Yr. “ae » 2 Mother's Home Lice, axe Amerionn Poultry Prete Trive: 1 Year 97.00, You Save $1.00 All Five for $5.40 CLUB Ne. 8-128 Ye, 71 Xe. lomes & Gardens, 3 Country Heme, 1 Yr. marck Tribune,. 1 Year ine $8.85. 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