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5 a 8. P. in f. 10 r. ~PLANS FOR ANNUAL CONCLAVE, FEB. 5-7 Problems Confronting Farmers’ ‘ Elevators to Get Atten- tion of Group Grand Forks, N. D., Jan. 209.—(P)— Special problems confronting farm- elevators of the state will be given first consideration at the an- nual convention of the North Dakota ‘These matters, the seed problem for 1935, distribution of feed, operations of the code affecting country ele- vators, threat of increased railroad rates and many other legislative and economic problems, promise to make the meeting one of the most import- ant in the history of the organiza- tion, Lee declared. Membership of the association in- cludes local independent elevators but farmers cooperative elevator com- Panies in all sections of the state are * the dominant group, Lee explained. ‘With favorable weather, he said, he expected large attendance of repre- sentatives from central and west- ern North Dakota. Mayor J. A. Patterson will wel- come the elevator men with a re- sponse and the president’s message by C. H. Conaway of Starkweather. In the afternoon, J. H. Evans, dep- uty minister of agriculture of Man- itoba, will review “basic progress in agriculture. American railroads will be discussed by Carl R. Gray, vice Officer of the federal seed stocks committee scheduled to speak. Fol- lowing discussion, there will be a talk by B. E. Groom of the Greater North Dakota @ssociation. Round table discussions will continue that night. Business sessions close the conven- tion. Speakers will be Frank 8. Bets of the “Farmers Elevator Guide,” Chicago, Governor Thomas H. Moodie and U. 8. Senator Gerald P. Nye. CANNED FOODS TESTED Washington.—(?)—Women who be- tests on all green peas sold in their their work to other canned YOU'RE HAPPY WHEN YOU'RE Station-To-Statie: " GRAIN DEALERS SRT [Meat Prices to Rise While Fruits, THE Vegetables Stay at Present Level Washington, Jan. 20.—(%)—For the near future, and possibly for the entire year, housewives can expect a rise in meat prices, the consumers’ guide says. The guide is a publication issued by the consumers’ counsel of AAA. Meat prices, in their rise, will be doing an “about face.” Be- tween September and December drouth damage would be severe. ‘Those high levels could not be maintained. The drop was hastened by the fact that farmers were forced to send their steers, hogs and lambs to market sooner due to low sup- Plies of feed. As a result meat bed been abundant on the mar- ets. Dairy Products Up Too But the situation will not last, the guide says. Livestock econ- omists foresee materially lower supplies for early February. High- er prices are expected as @ result. Dairy products and eggs also are expected to reflect the high Price of feed. ‘“ Recent trends in the wholesale butter market have been upward. This indicates consumers’ prices may rise further. How- ever, the guide expects to see but- ter imported from New Zealand if the price at New York goes any r. Egg prices usually drop at this time of the egg prices will drop some from now until spring, hen can be expected to rise. prices are expected to remain comparatively level, even in the classifications where the Present price is a low one. Fruit and vegetable prices are lower this year than last. Reasonable prices in certain food crops are due to the large supplies on hand. The potato crop is 5.4 per cent above the five year average from 1927 to 1933; sweet potatoes, 8 per cent up; pears, 5.1 per cent up; oranges, 25.7 per cent up; grapefruit, 35.2 per cent up. SHELTERBELT PLAN DISCUSSED BY COBB Predicts Idea, If Carried Out for Decade, Will Continue indefinitely A prediction that the proposed fed- Fy gE a Ht g tr gs Zz é ? ier aye § ree ie a ak i B ? gH é i ; : fi ait A ge ze a By H i £ i be prev: which either Being away from loved ones at home isn't so bad when you can talk with them any time by LONG DISTANCE os Are 40 Per Cent Lower After 8:30 P. M. For Most Dista: ; Bailey, president of the club, had turned the meeting over to the en- tertainment committee. G. A. Dahlen, also of the committee, introduced Mrs. Dahlen, who sang the “Blue Danube Waltz” and A. P. Simon, who sang “I Will Take You Back, Kath- keen.” ‘They were accompanied by the Misses Vivian Coghlan and Phyllis Wolverton, respectively. Guests included Edward Boelter of Bismarck and Chicago and Martin P. Olson of Driscoll. Claude Martin was introduced as a new member of the luncheon organization. Dr. A. M. Fisher and F. G. Orr, of the club's health committee, an- nou! they had made to- ward having the penitentiary’s sewer main with the city’s sys- tem, At present, they said, it ap- pears likely that the federal govern- ment will bear half of the expense in the proposed $20,000 project. =|PLANNING BOARD 10 HOLD SESSION HERE Representatives of Nation Re- sources Group Will Be Principal Speakers Representatives of the national resources board will be principal speakers at the North Dakota State Planning conference to open here on ‘Thursday. Marshall N. Dana, district chair- Helena, Mont., consultant to the Montana State Planning board, will represent the national resources board of the PWA at the gathering. Methods employed in the Pacific Coast states, in which county and district planning boards have been id, -{ set up, will be described by them. Robert Byrne, chairman of the state planning board, and M. O. Ryan of Fargo, a member of the work | state board, are in charge of the con- ference arrangements. “This conference has been called,” Byrne said, “to acquaint delegates from all parts of North Dakota with the planning program up to date, and to pave the way for formation of county and district planning boards. All of these latter will be drawn from volunteer sources, with laymen and subdivision officials working side by side. We believe that this field of planning is broad enough to interest Political, tax, civic, community and development organizations.” Others who have been invited to Baker, all of “It is the hope of the board mem- bers that every section of North Da- ‘kota may be represented at this ‘ forthcoming state conference,” Byrne * declared. BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 29, 1935 MUSICAL HISTORY WRITTEN HERE BY BCHANIZ CONCERT Ovation Given Cuban Pianist at Program Opening 1935 Artist Series A large and appreciative audience assembled at the Bismarck city audi- torlum Monday evening to hear the inspiring concert by Jose Echaniz, Cuban planist, and applauded until there were many aching arms. It was the opening of the 1935 Singers Guild Artist Series, managed by Miss Maude A. Tollefsen, and was an auspicious ing. Echaniz opened his program, which was happy in all its selections, with the exacting “Toccata in E-Minor” of Bach and a Beethoven sonata, the Op. 31, No, 2 in D-Minor. He fol- lowed this with four Chopin compo- sitions to close the first group. In the second grouping, the Debussy “Reflets dans l'eau” and “Golliwog's Cake Walk” were bracketed with “Fete Dieu @ Seville” and “Triana” by Albeniz and Liszt's “Concert Etude in F-Minor” and “La Campanella.” Mastery of Technic No difficulties of technic seem to exist for Echaniz. His playing is fleet and clean but what is most re- markable is the extraordinary qual- ity of the tones he draws from the piano, The instrument becomes in his hands not a tool made of wood and strings but a mirror for the moods of the immortals. His touch is incredibly resilient, his musicianship astonishing and his beauty of tone compelling. There was never a strident or a harsh note. An artist of more than generous accomplishment, Echaniz does not storm with virtousity but plays with competence bespeaking his techincal mastery and poise, interpretive vision and sensitiveness to the spirit of his music, The Bach Toccata became in his hands @ thing liquid and flowing with beauty of sentence and phrase, not merely an orderly succession of notes. Equality in the play of counterpoint as between the hands marked the rendition. The technical mastery and interpretive intelligence which Echa- niz reflected brought out the fine in- ner voices of the Beethoven. The audience warmed to the inimit- ably beautiful Chopin numbers and the brilliant reading. In the group were a ballade, walte, etude and Polonaise, Echaniz giving them polish and drawing out the full grace of line and beauty of tone. The artist's fing- ers at times became a blur on the keyboard, then brought forth the most delicate staccato passages. Goes Modern Program Heard oftener than the Bach, Beethoven and Chopin, the Debussy, Albeniz and Lisst numbers offered @ | basis on which to compare the play- |ing of Echaniz with others. The “La Campanella,” which frequently ap- Pears on programs, was given an amazing rendition, its brilliant chro- matics calling forth a masterful tech- nical display. He played the French master’s works with charm and his interpretation of Albeniz justifies his Position as the particular master in the performance of the works of the modern Spanish composers. “Fete Dieu & Seville” is the music of the Corpus Christi feast and “Triana” is gypsy music. A notable highlight in the modern group was the effective use which Echaniz makes of the pedal. The ovation at the close of the con- cert, which had run well into an hour and a half, was deserved. Echaniz took bow after bow and played a ; Gluck Gavotte, arranged for the piano {by Brahms, in which there were tones sounding as if they were soft plucking on a harp, and the fiery “Turkish March” of Beethoven, arranged for the piano by Rubinstein. Those who were disappointed that a Brahms number was not included on the for- mal program were delighted with the “Intermezzo in C-Major,” the encore at the close of the first group. Echaniz, a well-known figure on the concert stages of Europe and Amer- tal City music-lovers an evening which long will be remembered. Selection of his program to open the Artist Series, which also is to bring Mme. Eide Norena, Mme. Olga d’Allaz and the Chicago Symphonic «String quartet, presages that this year's con- certs again are to be a conversational topic for days after their perform- ance. Twenty Grand May Be Kept Out of Handicap Los Angeles, Jan. 20—()}—Twenty Grand, one of the turf’s greatest champions, will never run another Trace if the recommendation of his trainer, William Brennan, is adopted by Mrs. Payne Whitney, owner of the seven-year-old big money winner. Watching the stout -hearted thoroughbred closely since he finished third to High Glee and Mate in a race here last week, Brennan has con- cluded Twenty Grand is unsound. He said he had written to Major Louis A. Beard, manager of the Whit- ica's largest cities, brought to Capi-j ney breeding and racing interests, advising that the 1931 Kentucky derby winner he withdrawn from the $100,000 Santa Anita handicap, February 23, and retired, SENATE 10 VOTE ON WORLD COURT ISSUE Close Vote Indicated With Both Sides Claiming Strength for Victory Washington, Jan. (®) —Amid controversy fanned to white heat by debate in congress and before huge radio audiences, the proposal to put the United States into the “World Court reached the end of a 12-year trail Tuesday with the senate pre- arth to make its decision before night. A rather close vote—perhaps a hairline one—was indicated in state- ments from both sides. Senator Rob- inson of Arkansas, leader of Roose- velt administration forces which have | thrown all the strength they could muster into the battle for the court, expressed confidence the resolution would be adopted, though perhaps with few votes to spare over the two- thirds required. Though only a few days ago the opposition had conceded their out- look was dark, Tuesday they were claiming a chance. From Senator Borah (R-Idaho), who has battled down the years alongside Senator Johnson (R-Cal.) to defeat the pro- posal, there came the prediction that the resolution might lose by two or three votes. Father Charles E. Coughlin, whose denunciation of the Court has brought a@ flood of telegrams to congress, went on the air with another attack Monday night while several other speakers, including other clergymen, | rallied to defend the court against the ~ Detroit priest's onslaught. Invoking “the name of the god of | peace and justice” in a plea to his listeners to wire their senators, Father Coughlin said the court would legalize the “‘pilfering” of $12,000,000,- | 000 in war debts from the American people. As if in reply to Father Coughlin’s statements, Monsignor Joseph A. Ryan, president of Catholic Univer-/ sity at Washington, said: “I believe in the World Court and my reason for taking this opportunity | to speak is also to let the people of | the United States know that all the; Catholics of the country are not op-| posed fo our entrance into the mae The North. Dakota house of representatives Monday “mourn- ed” the first “death in the lower assembly, 7 Representative R. R. Scholl electrified the house as the ses- sion opened Monday, with the claim that an “American hair- less dog” sent him from Florida by his daughter, had met death through lessness: Postmaster be brought to the floor of the house, as he leveled his charges. The dog, he claimed, had died of .neglect, and he mourned it deeply. Ben Gilbertson rose to mourn with him. He declared the de- mise “touches me deeply” and called on his fellow members to mourn with him and to appro- Priate a sum to provide milk for future pets delivered to house members. L. L. Twichell refused to vote on the motion unless he “knew whether the dog was a Demo- crat or a Nonpartisan.” J. M. Thompson countered with the claim he “knew it was a Democrat because if it was a Nonpartisan he would have howled himself to death.” Majority ‘oor leader W. J. Gedwin met this with the coun- ter claim that “it must have been a Democrat because a little sub- zero weather and no clothes could never kill a Nonpartisan.” The denouement came when Thomas Burke, Burleigh county Democrat, demanded to see the corpse. A page held it on high—a three-inch “hot dog” nestling in a nest of excelsior in a small pine Overtaxed by ing,sing- 8] ing, smoking “Her Husband’s Wife” 3-act farce will be presented by the COMMUNITY PLAYERS it the cITY AUDITORIUM Friday Eve., Feb. 1, 8:30 e'Cleck Wilson is said to have given the name Leviathan to the great German liner, Vaterland, which the United States seized during the World war. wife of President Woodrow The DOWN GOES THE PRICE OF SHAVING COMFORT NOW! PROBAK JUNIOR 4 blades for 1 0 Pa 10 for 25 25 for 59¢ A ‘HAVING comfort bit an all- time low in price with the announcement ofProbak Junior —the remarkable new double- edge razor blade. Think of it! 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