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song ar @ Ny Treat Your Credit As a Sacred Trust You make your own rating! Paying your monthly bills on If you are transferred or if temporarily away from home your record in our office is always available. SECOND CORN-HOG INSPECTION BEGINS County Committee Receives In- structions for Final Check- Up of Contracts on corn-hog con: Hy t'-Tesident embrsce the precepts of + ‘i i afl aE : : ding in appearance, is simple in operation, and infallible in its diag- nosis. When a motor car arrives for Through our affiliation with the Nat’l. Retail Credit Ass’n. your paying habits are made accessible to every credit granter in U.S. A. INUE D from page one Midwest Liberals Seek Support for Third Party Move Dekota will support him overwhelm- ingly. We have elected U. 8. Senator Gerald P, Nye and Lynn Frasier and we always vote for the most liberal Minnesota, Lt Gov.-elect Hjaimar Peterson (F.-L.): “It depends on what {the national edministration does in the next two years. Minnesota 1s in-| clined and headed for a third party. If the Washington administration doesn’t go far cnough, Minnesota de- finitely will go to a national third Even some of the main street- FOUR SHIPS READY TO HELP STRICKEN JAPANESE VESSEL Freighter Victoria Naru Pound- ed Into Unmanageable Condition by Gales New York, Dec. 10.—(#)—Four ships stood by Monday to aid the Japanese ifreighter Victoria Maru, which had aan aaanEaee | | eS Weather Report | Tw party. ets might fall in line.” 3 George way. Michigan would be for a th: party. The question there is: Wil! forthright liberal?” South Dakota: Gordon Stout, Ka doka, secretary the Farmers Un fon: “You couldn’t keep South Da. kota out. It would favor a third party; almost it is in demand. A third party couldn't be defeated inj that state if the movement got un- der way.” ‘Williams said liberals from Mon- tana at the conference informed him that state would be fallow ground and ripe for third party support. a Precision equipment has made {t an invaluable Dart of the service facilities of hun dreds of Ford dealers, FORECAST ee and vici For Bism: nity: Fair tonight ~~~ Tuesday; little change in temperature. MeZuc wi. 2 tre! t it. portion. me sou . onda: ‘an . Bey ra ‘Tuesday; slightly GENERAL CONDITIONS tne Sabsubiper Valley westward to the Pacific coast (Bolae 30.62) while & low pressure area is centered over the lower Great Laxes (To- ledo 29.94). Another “ has ap- : SRUSRERUEHe, Bi 4 y , ig. el ; i F EE} = or before the 10th or as agreed upon with our members determines your credit rating. Look for the insignia on your statements which appears in the upper and lower right hand corners of this ad. Our member- ship list has grown too large to publish. You know them also by their service. vice | ALENTED PLAYERS had Teached the ship. The Japanese vessel's captain and chief officer are dead, the third of- ficer was lost and seven se: “nen were injured. waves. Toast i reported » ‘The message from her wireless man, however, said: “I am alone but conditions not so dangerous.” From the staccato story told in her meager messages, sea-going men de- duced that the stricken freighter lost her rudder in the storm; was being directed by the movement of her TO GIVE ‘HOLIDAY’ Group Will Present Philip Barry Drama at 8:30 o'Clock Wednesday With one of the most competent staffs ever assembled for a Commun- ity Players’ production, “Holiday,” three-act drama by Philip Barry, will be presented at the Bismarck city auditorium Wednesday evening at 8:30 o'clock and promises to be one of the bright spots in the crowded pre- Christmas season. Not to be outshone by the dramatic cast directed by Miss Clarice Belk, William J. Smith’s technical staff has been working hard on the drawing - |room setting in the mansion of the wealthy Edward Seton for the first and third acts and an old playroom been/on the fifth floor of the same home, where the second act's happenings occur. The story concerns one of the. daughters of the solvent Seton fam- ily who has engaged herself to be married to an upstanding youth with no fiscal nor social background. The alliance is regarded dubiously but with dignity by the head of the house, a self-satisfied moneyed man living complacently for and with the Seton clan. The young hero, though ex- pert in finance, is of the belief that life is not 100 per cent bank note, and that there is important fun to be had in the pursuit, of other treasures. He .| Proposes to retire from business when he is young and to work when he is old. These radical impressions dis- turb both his betrothed and her par- ent and they set forth to rectify them. Priendly to his belief is his prospec- tive sister-in-law—and here we come upon one of the numerous solution's of the play’s success. For Wednesday's performance, there will be musical entertainment by & six-piece orchestra directed by Ralph Truman. It is announced that the curtain will rise promptly at 8:30 o'clock and that there will be no long ‘were | Waits between acts. é PEEEy i a Ey | i H i H HY i ; if E f tied K ti Hf Characters will be enacted by the ‘Misses Auverne Olson, Edith Guthrie, Alice Jensen and Dorothy Tiedman, Mrs. A. T. Peterson, Kenneth Law- ster, Emery T. Putnam, Herman Pet- ers, John Moses, Frederick Monley, Laurence V. Nelson and Emmet Mc- BURLEIGH PIONEER CLAIMED BY DEATH Henry Crawford Succumbs to Complication of Ailments; Funeral Wednesday -Henry Crawford, 86, pioneer farmer of Burleigh county, died at 2:40 a. m. Monday at a local hospital from com- Plications of old age. Coming to North Dakota from Canada in 1879, Mr. Crawford home- steaded @ claim south of Bismatck, where he lived for 22 years before to Bismarck. After retiring active farming he served for) rs as & janitor at the capi- "3 —— ©|Now You Can Wear Sundquist of St. Paul. He also leaves 10 grandchildren and seven great- grandchildren. All of the children fare expected to be here for the fu- neral, Funeral services have tentatively been set. for some time Wednesday. Interment will be made in the St. Mary's cemetery. YOUTH IS SUBJECT OF LION'S ADDRESS Rev. Roy Olson of St. Cloud In- tones Challenge to Older Generation A challenge to parents from “Youth lain of the St. Cloud reformatory a1 now a representative of the Minn last flve days. There is no indication that those expelled will be allowed to return. PRISON TAG PLANT SHOWS 1994 PROFIT Plant Manager Sees Further Gains in 1935; Would Build Up Surplus Belief that the state of North Da- kota will show a neat profit on the operation of its penitentiary plant for the manufacture of motor vehicle li- cense plates and road signs is ex- pressed by George L. Baska, plant manager, in a report on the first year's operations. . Last year, Baska said, 150,000 pairs of truck and auto license tags were made at the prison, along with 9,517 road signs and marke: ‘This was sota Parent-Teachers congress, atthe|done at a small profit after paying regular luncheon meeting of the local | off $6,700 which the $18,000 appropri- Lions club. ation for the installation of the plant Character building in the home'did not cover and indications are was stressed by Reverend Olson @5 that a considerable additional sum the solution to the problem of taking) will be available when the current: the great burden of responsibility!run of license tags is completed in, from the shoulders of the educators} March. This will be used as working upon whom now depends much of| capital for the purchase of warehouse the moral education. room and materials for f ture use, Likening youth's quest for a solu-| according to the tentative plan. tion to the “whys” and “wherefores” A change in the er of making of present conditions to that of ajthe royal blue and orange license bewildered spectator at A Century of|tags for 1935 was announced Progress exposition, the clergyman] Baska. This has to do with by the said that youth is looking to the| placing of holes and slots for attach- older generation for something con- ment of the tags to the car and is structive which will take the country| designed to make it easier for the out of the financial and industrial} motorist. depression. Reverend Olson was in- A recent survey showed that 34 troduced by William Payne, princi-| states now make license tags and ‘pal of the local high school, Musical entertainment was fur- nished by the Three Melodeers of Mandan, who played “Home, Home on the Range,” # college melody and “There's a Home in Wyoming.” Mem- of the trio are Tony Dchandt, Slow - Cleansing tooth pastes rob teeth William Christianson and John Kol-! of natural whiteness poeoff. Guests of the club were Frank Milhollan, Rev. Opie 8. Rindahl of Bismarck and Judge G. Grimson of Rugby. Herman Brocopp won the attendance prize. CONTINUED League Suggests Terrorism Probe To Pacify Serbs was convinced ‘that it the deporta- tions were continued it would pre- judice her case at Geneva. She has rerennble for King Alexander's mur- ‘Some 2,700 Hungarians have been forced to leave the country during the THOLATUM COMFORT Du MEN FALSE TEETH Without Embarrassment ti ugh or sneeze, without feeth dropping or site ETH holds them firmly comfortably. This , fine powder has no gummy, gooey, pasty ing. Makes breath pleas- @ Dull-white teeth are com- mon, Brilliant-white teeth are tially effective. ‘Why let a slow-cleansing tooth paste rob your teeth of their natural whiteness? Lab- oratory tests prove that Dr. West's new Double-Quick Tooth Paste cleans over twice as fast as some leading tooth pastes, nearly twice as fast as the av- erage. Yet it cannot scratch enamel. Try it—today! DR. R. S. ENGE Chiropractor Graduate Drugless Physician Lucas Block Bismarck, N. D. Best Christmas Gift Is a Good Credit Rating BISMARCK MANDAN CREDIT \Gurew® highway signs in prison plants and that two more have adopted plans for doing so. Last year 25 inmates of the prison were given employment in the tag ted veri ete dep ‘rtd number was luc ane operatin, - lod extended. oe In 1934 the state paid 8 cents per pair for tags but the price this year will be 9% cents because of the in- creased cost of materials, A survey showed that only Nebraska and South Dakota paid less for their tags fhan did North Dakota. | EEE UEPEEEEEEEREEEEE | City and County if Bernadine is the name which Mr. and Mrs. Ben Brocopp, 1001 Twelfth &t., have chosen for their infant daughter, born at 11 p. m. Sunday at the home of Mrs. T. B. Meinhover, 523 Seventh St. The baby weighed 5% pounds at birth. A_five-pound baby girl was born to Mr. and Mrs. George T. Dobson, 810 First St. 3:15 p. m. Saturday leinhover residence, 523 Fish have so keen a sense of hear- ing that they can hear sounds below those audible to the human ear, and a little higher than the highest notes of a violin. An ideal Xmas Gift—Foley’s “Way of Smiles.” A neat lit- tle book, leather cover. Only a limited number left to be closed out at below cost. Each 50 cents, postage paid. The a, Tribune, Bismarck, TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY SPECIALS —at— 208 Sixth Street Beef Stew ...... 5¢ Veal Stew ...... 5¢ Veal Sh. Roast. .10c Veal Sh. Steak. .10c Pork Chops ....14c Pork Leg ......14e Round Steak. .1242c Hamburger .... 7c GIVE US A TRIAL We're here to stay. Our prices will always be low. EDDIE KIST, Mgr. Oysters — Frozen Pike Link Sausage — Bologna Small ROASTING PIGS Specially Priced - GUSSNER’S PACKING CO. nd one daugh- Pd ae besides Soph aay youve ‘ever aed: Herbert of Mandan and Mrs. Oscar|ti Just Phone 1060 fe Newer and better than anything Get FASTEETH | at any good drug store.—Adver- | ent, | UNIVERSAL MOTOR COMPANY BeRBBESESENBRBEESbeeBeEBesesessaBssussesseeRsessss se SPLRSRBNVKSVSSSRSVLSSSRSSSeSSSSessesss: Soe Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc.