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ro v ~ RURAL GREDIT COST ATTACKED BY CAIN Independent Republican Candi- date for Governor Assails League Program Rugby, N. D., June 21.—(#)—Opera- tion of the rural credit department of the Bank of North Dakota is costing oe Cal Gelcrreine abenione! Jv. Cain, independent Republican candidate for governor, declared here Wednesday night at a political meet- Cain attacked both factions of the Nonpartisan League, and opposed any extension of the state industrial pro- gram. “The present annual cost to tax- Payers of maintaining the rural credit department of the bank is more than £2,280,000,” Cain asserted. “How is money obtained to cover the loss? The state board of equalization for the year 1933 levied a general state tax in the amount of $1,160,812. This tax is now in the process of collection. The approximate sum of $1,200,000 was transferred from the motor ve- hicle fund to the real estate bond in- terest fund, making a total of $2,360.- 812 per year. Stated another way, it ig, now the taxpayers $6,470 bart day—to operate that department.” Cain pledged that “if the Indepen- dent Republican candidates are elect- ed, there will be no extension of the state industries program, no new in- dustries will be created and no addi- tional tax burden for them will be created.” He attacked the platform of the “uitl-adminlstration League candidate = as “ambiguous, indefinite and uncer- in” “I recall during the last session of the legislature when the bill for man- ufecturing automobile license tags at the penitentiary was up for considera- tion, one senator, elected with League support, said, ‘I represent union la- bor. We are not asking for any fa- ors, but we demand an cqual right to livelihood. If we keep on with this program, the only way a laboring man can obtain employment is to commit a and get into the peniten- t iicaintiee Simms Swimmers ELLERY E. KELLEY Ellery E. Kelley, special life saving field representative of the American Red Cross, with headquarters at the midwestern branch office at St. Louis, Mo., will be in Bismarck June 29-30 to examine life guards at the muni- cipal swimming pool. The guards are required to pass tests and to renew their certificates annually. Kelley is & member of the Dolphins, national honorary swimming fraternity, to which he was elected at the Univer- sity of Iowa, and since 1929 has been Physical education instructor at the Hot Hot Springs, 8. D., high school. More Cattle Shipped From Burleigh County ‘The second five carloads of govern- Mment-purchased cattle were to be shipped out of Burleigh county Thurs- day and empties were billed to many points in order to keep the shipments up to the maximum allowed by the government. One car was shipped out of Bis- marck Thursday morning. Three cars had been loaded at Baldwin and one at Regan with plans calling for ship- ment Thursday afternoon. H. 0. Put- nam, county extension agent, plans to ship three cars out of Menoken and two out of Magnus Friday with a Possibility that three additional cars will be loaded at Moffit that day. HERE | AM... 616 DINNER PARTY ON HANI AND ANOTHER OF MY BAD HEADACHES. WHAT CAN 100 2 BVER TRY BAYER ASPIRIN ? TAKE 2 TABLETS AND YOUR HEADACHE WILL BE GONE INA JIFFY I Now comes amazingly quick reliet from headaches, rheumatism, neuri- tis, neuralgia . . . the fastest safe relie/, it is said, yet discovered. Those results are due to a scien- tific discovery by which a Bayer Aspirin Tablet begins to dissolve, or disintegrate, in the amazing space of two seconds after touching moisture. And hence to start “taking hold” of pain a few minutes after taking. The illustration of the tells the story. A Bayer Tal to disin' ite almost instantly you swallow it. And thus is ready to go to work almost instantly. ‘When you buy, tho: oe see that pede Genin R Aspirin. Bayer pein in’s quick Pellet always say “! ER Aspirin.” A Quicker Way To Ease Headaches A Discovery that’s Bringing Fast Relief to Millions 2 BEFORE THE DINNER. ‘THAT BAYER ASPIRIN You SUGGESTED 1S SIMPLY WONDERFUL!) MY HEADACHE WAS ENTIRELY GONE IN A FEW MINUTES— KNEW IT WOULD 68. \YER ASPIRIN WORKS SO Fast! WHY BAYER ASPIRIN WORKS SO FAST __ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1984 BYRNE EXPERIENGED IN BIG STATE POST Incumbent Has Held Job Since 1924; Two Rivals Seek- ing Nomination Editor's Note: This is one of a series of sketches of candidates in are nnn Priel ERC (By The Associated Press) Robert Byrne, incumbent, will have as opposition H. E. Timm, Wishek, In- dependent; and James Gronna, La- kota, pro-Langer Nonpartisan League Candidate for the Republican nomin- ation for secretary of state in the June 27 primary election. Byrne is an anti-Langer Leaguer. The Demo- cratic endorsee is Laura Wah! Pulsch- er, Fargo. Byrne was first appointed to the office by Governor Nestos to fill the unexpired term of Thomas Hall in November, 1924, and has been returned | to office in every subsequent election. | Born in Ingraham, Ill., Feb. 4, 1886, the son of William P. and Hannah R. Byrne, he was educated in the public schools of Illinois. In 1904, he engaged in teaching, continuing that work for four years in Dlinois and a fifth year in Mc- Kenzie county, North Dakota, where he filed on a homstead in 1908. He married Maude Rhodes of Har- risburg, Virginia, April 6, 1910, and for the next 10 years in farming at Arnegard. In 1916 he was elected & representative in the North Dakota legislature from Williams and Mc- Kensie counties. He was re-elected for @ second term and in 1920 went to the state senate. ‘He is a Methodist and a member of the A, 0. U. W. and B. P. O. E. lodges. kes has three children, Jean, Howard, and Lynn. Democrats Favor Woman A quiet, modest and unassuming woman of middle-age, Laura Wahl Pulscher of Fargo, Democratic can- didate for secretary of state, is a train- ed educator who found an outlet for her energies for several years in the work of a teachers college. She was critic and dean of girls in An official of the town of Wishek since 1912, Henry Elmer Timm is an a candidate for secretary of te. 4 Born in Iowa, in October, 1885, he ‘was educated in the public schools at. Ackley, Ia., graduating from high school in 1905. He attended Cornell keeper and followed farming until 1911, when he became assistant cash- fer of the Wishek bank. In 1919 he be- came cashier and the last 13 years has headed the institution. He is inter- ested in the Bankers Loan company of Wishek and conducts a real estate and insurance business in connection with the bank. He has been an official of Wishek since 1912, being treasurer of the town Government Awaiting Steel Industry Move Washington, June 21—()—It was ‘steel’s move Thuraday in the negotia- tions to avert a strike. Steel management has union labor's demands. The government awaited a denial or a counter-pro- “There is no reason why a satis- factory adjustment can’t be made,” Donald Richberg, NRA general coun- sel told newsmen. Secretary Perkins, President Roose- velt’s agent in dealings with both management and union labor, said, however, that so far there had been the Unions pemak® employers on) Region in Turkey Miss Perkins and her aides hope to work out a compromise satisfactory to both employers and the union from Proposals each has submitted. The Amalgamated Association of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers, the prin- cipal steel union affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, threat- ened to call a strike unless given “recognition” in collective bargaining. The union agreed, however, to post- pone the strike indefinitely if a three- man neutral board were appointed to act on its grievances and to super- vise elections to determine whether it should represent steel labor in deal- ing with management. Damaged by Quake Smyrna, Turkey, June 21.—(P)—' The region Afiunkarahissar in west- ern Anatolia was shaken Wednesday evening by a violent earthquake which lasted 20 seconds, followed by shocks which continued at intervals throughout the night. Damage was heavy and there were believed to have been many casualties, although the number could not be immediately determined. Many buildings were badly cracked. Hundreds of houses were reported wrecked by cloudbursts which fol- lowed the quake. human A A ARNO RRR wi Postoffice Sempel Is Braddock Acting Postmaster acting postmaster: Nt Braddock, Freda A. Sempel. Stand by the Congressman Whe Has Stood By You! J. H. SINCLAIR His promise for the future is based on performance in the past. 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