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OORIVHOG SII-IP TOTALS 100000 Farm Administration Estimate Benefit Payments to Reach _ $15,000,000 Washington, April 4—()—Farm Administration officials estimated ‘Thursday the 1935 corn-hog sign-up ‘at more than 1,000,000 farmers and the prospective benefit payments at 150,000,000. More than three-fourths of the farmers who signed applications for 1935 contracts live in the 10 corn- belt states, Iowa topping the lot with 152,000 signers, said Claude R. Wick- ard, chief of the corn-hog section. Local Surgeon Finds He Should Have Specialized in Ants, Gnats, Dermatology Editor's Note: This is another While the number of signers may| ty ‘be slightly less than last year, Wick- ard said the change would not ma- terlally affect the aggregate corn acreage covered. Cooperating fasm- ers, he said, apparently planned to withhold from production between 20 ‘and 25 per cent of their base acreages, {ng to J. E. Danielson, superint a North Dakota Indians received 97,- 200 pounds of canned goat meat from the FERA. Gall Stone Colic Avoid operations, if possible. ‘Treat the cause in a sensible, painless, in expensive way at home. Write Home Drug Co. 18-B No, Fourth St., Min- neapolis,” Minn. for a recognized racticing specialist's prescription on iver and gall bladder trouble. Get Jiterature on treatment which has heen giving gratifying results for 30 years. Sold under money back guar- &ntee. Clip this out now.—Ady. NEVER BEFORE SUCH A SMOOTH SHAVING BLADE NOW! PROBAK JUNIOR 4 blades “Gueertenen: “Daring the past few years I've been driven because of necessity into yeas = 8 zag H & ask 33 22228 Era $24zs s 3 [ i i a “F ig d gay i: ALE: 2 5 g SUMMONS STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- TY OF BUR! IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT. Mose Jouharian, Plaintiff, vs. A. L, Pritchard, Albert L. Prit- rd, J. Frailey Smith, Harriet L. Smith, Anni . Smith, J: ‘queline H. Smith, Jaqueline Ha: rison Smith, Hinckle Smith, Bertha KE. Smith and 11 Smith, minor he! Smith, decease ind Hin Smith, their Guardian, Charles F. Hinckle, Joseph = Fri mit! Zimmerm Compan: Anna W. Zimmerman, & minor, A. A. Laveur, Vice President, Anna W. Zimmerman, William H. Smith, Bertha E. Walker, Joseph F, Smith, M. Ww. Zimme: Anna M. Zimm in, Samuel J. Walker, L. ‘alker, William Hinckle Smith, May Calloway Smith, Samuel Calloway Smith, Joseph Frailey Smith, Jr. F. M. Kinter, T Mart B. Koon, jarbed higian, Garabed igian, and all other persona unknown, and all the heirs and devisees of any de: defen: ant or other deceased person uw! claiming any estate or interest In or lien or encum- brance upon the property de: eribed tn the complaint in thi action, Defendants. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA bg ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- You and each .of you are hereby summoned to answer the complaint in the above entitled actie: of which is hereto attached with served upon you, and to serve @ copy of your er to th Reese upon known, url kota, within thirty days after service of this summons upon yo! eof the day of such servi ur failure to appear igment will b fault for tl ded in the complaint. Dated at Bismarck, North Dakota, this 15th day of March, 1935. O'Hare, Cox '& Cox, Attorneys for the Plaintitt Office and Post Office Address: Little Building, Bismarck, North Dakota. exclus! NOTICE TO THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- ANTS: west section line, ft. south to the place of beginning, being a tract 780 tt. by 1319 ft: in ‘SW% Section 3, T ip 138, Range $0, West of incipal tdi 23.62 ac Dakota, on or day of March, 1935, 1 claim : made by st you. ‘Dated at Bismarck, ‘North ‘Dakota, this 15th day of March, 1935. O'Hare, Cox & Cox, Attorneys for the Piaintif?, Bismarck, North Dakota. 3/21-28 4/4-11-18-25. ; ene THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, ‘THU Dr. Quain in War Own, Fighting Off Insects of His eke out a living somehow in spite of | the ridiculous pittance they receive | for their wares. ‘The heart bleeds for these poor People, the Guarani Indians, Once they were a powerful nation, intel- ques i i st op Bie a8 ‘ s g i > BEE z March 14th (Thursday): ‘This part of the world is noted for its display of butterflies. In no other place are they found in so many varieties, sizes, and brilliant colors. In the Amazona they furnish a real metamorphosis, live as full-fledged butterflies for only a. day. A new generation begins on this day and when this generation in turn matures,’ it will be exactly like the forebears it has never seen. It will Perform its duty toward another gen- eration—and tue, cycle goes on and on, Mysterious Nature! ‘We are on the way down the river toward Corrientes. This is the rough- est part of the river travel, Whirl- pools, eddies, whorls and swirls, and “what have you,” disturb the surface of the water. The trip up this sec- tion was slow and, in part, bumpy. Going down 1s much easier, but the helmsman has a constant tussle with his wheel in forcing the prow of the boat to disregard the whirls and swirls through which it rushes. 19,766 Farmers Sign Corn-Hog Contracts Fargo, N. D., April 4—(#)—Corn ‘and hog production adjustment con- tracts for 1935 have been signed by 19,766 North Dakota the North Dakota agricultural extension service reported to the corn-hog sec- tion of the AAA, Wednesday. With a few added contracts expected from several counties which have not yet totals, the number of farmers partici- pating in the 1935 program will be approximately the same as in 1934, the extension service stated. ‘The total number of contracts sign- ed in 1934 was 19,912. Teduction larg- An average ler than the 10 per cent required by the contracts is planned, information tion for counties is 22.5 per cent. Roosevelt Penmanship Award Winners Listed oy iH i“ sf if a ees ie H A i [ j E E i i Z : Fl 4 i i [ tof | | RSDAY, APRIL 4, 1935 People’s Forum 's Note)=-The Tribune wel- letters on subjects of inter- Letters dealing with contro- versial religious subjects, which attack Individuals unfairly, | or which offend good taste and fair play will be returned to the writ- ers. All letters MUST be signed. t€ you wish to use a pseudonym, sign the pseudonym first and your own name beneath it. We reserve the right to delete such parts of letters as may be necessary to conform to this peu’, and to re- quire publication of a writer's name where justice and fair play make it advisable. jetters must be limited to not more than 600 words. TAKES OPPOSITE VIEW Editor, Tribune: Your editorial of March 21 “We Need Farm Exports,” presents an er- Toneous conclusion from the fact that government figures show 18 per cent of the average farm income is de- rived from sales abroad whereas the figure for American industry is only I am enclosing a draft of a plan for establishing a domestic market for . |through no fault of ‘The Townsend {It 1s @ continuation, modification and enlargement of the present allotment. plan. Yours very truly, + Geo. M. Willis. Editor's Note: The Tribune is glad to have discussion of this subject, so im- Portant to us all. WE CATCH A TARTAR Editor, Tribune: Your editorial, “Townsend and) Technocracy,” in the March 18 issue of The Tribune is, in my opinion, one of the most narrow-minded crit- icisms I have ever read. You did not attack the plan particularly, but; when anyone states that most of the 5.|People sign the petitions, not because ithe plan is feasible or that they have jany hope of it being enacted into jlaw but merely in the hope that it might help, as we need @ pension of jsome sort, I call such a statement a slap at the intelligence of the mil- lions who are backing the Town- send plan. In your editorial, you stated that one member in good said jhe wouldn't know how to spend $200 |® month. Now that man may be a | member, in that he paid 12 cents to, |become @ club member, but he cer- | tainly is not in good standing. ‘You have criticized the movement repeatedly but I have yet to see a member of your press present at a Townsend club meeting for first- hand information. Were they present when that grand old man, Dr. March 16?° Don't you think he de- served honorable mention? cover prize fights, ball games, dances, out of the people. Why not back something of benefit to every man, woman and child in this great United States? Our white-hajred men and women are entitled to this consideration. Most of them have lost all they had, their own. Weekly, the official paper of the Townsend movement, has increased its circulation so rapidly that all critics should sit up and take notice that it isn’t all in the heads of the people who are 60 years old and McDonald, spoke on You in fact anything that takes money wheat Independent of foreign prices.|over but is being backed by young limiting the and old, 100 per cent. ‘ The following quotation from the Townsend Weekly of March 25 should put everyone wise to a lot of facts concerning the Townsend Plan: “When some one stops buying someone stops selling; when someone stops selling someone stops making; when someone stops making someone stops work- ing; when someone stops working someone stops earning; when someone stops earning someone stops buying. “Just change the word ‘stops’ to ‘starts’ and the whole cycle is reversed and prosperity re- turns. It cannot return until money returns to circulation and millions of idle people return to work.” Our congressmen and legislators know who put them to work. They dare not laugh at the millions of signatures on those petitions that are Placed on their desks daily nor at the thousands of letters and tele. grams that are literally swamping) them, from their constituents who placed them in office to do the will of the people. ‘The Townsend plan is the will of the majortiy of voters in the city of Bismarck and the whole United States. A boost for this plan means a boost for yourself—more buying power. Yours for the Townsend plan, 38 million strong. MRS. J. H. SLEIGHT, Sec'y Club No. 2, Editor's Note: Parts of Mrs. Sleight’s letter were deleted to make it comply with the rules o length and subject matter, tenor is un- changed. The editorial complained of @oubted that the Townsend plan would be enacted into law but would have # beneficial effect in that it would center attention up- on the question of security and comfort for the aged. MORE QUESTIONS ANSWERED Bismarck, N. D. April 3, 1935. Editor, Tribune: ‘Will you please answer these ques- tions through The Tribune? 1, Does the fact that the govern- ment has removed all restrictions six people in this new Ford V-8 Fordor—and you're neither overcrowded nor overloaded! This is a big car—with pleaty of leg and elbow room ia both front and back seats. Your bags fit easily in 2 com- behind the Ask your Ford dealer to let you take a trial tide. You will notice rear seat. one thing first. In the new Ford V-8, beck seat passengers ride with “front seat comfort’! This is made possible development— If you are driving, you'll notice this car is easier to handle. Brakes operate with a light touch—and shifting, Stessing is better. Little on the clutch is needed when the new Ford V-8 is a longer car, it retains the parking ease of the 112-inch wheelbase. For 31 years it has been Ford policy give you the utmost for your automobile dollar. Without sacrificing either low first cost of economy, Ford has built this 1935 V-8 to satisfy every motoring need. AUTHORIZED FORD DEALERS amount of { mean that been lifted as to {amount to be sown, 2. Local farmers wheat, for much ernment prices, wheat, a 10 per cent reduction leaves me 68 acres to seed to wheat. Now in your paper you say we can seed 75 per cent more than this, which is 45 25/100. Add 68 acres to jthis and you get 108 25/100 acres on my 80 acres of land. Yours truly, Stanley Dalby. Answer: Mr. Dalby attaches to his letter a paragraph from a recent news story bearing on the allotment contract which said: “Thus a farmer with 500 acres, who would have reduced production to 450 acres, may increase his plantings by 75 per cent of 450 acres for @ total of The Burleigh county agent answers his query as follows: “Quite naturally, because the man has only 80 acres of land, 70 acres of which were used as the average in figuring the contract, he cannot in- crease his acreage the full 75 per cent allowed by the government in remov- ing the restrictions. “While this may handicap him this year, it will not if figured on the two- year basis. Acreages which are in- creased this year must be reduced in 1936. Full details of how much the reduction will be next year have not been received at the county agent's Office but it is expected that the re- duction will be in direct proportion to the number of acres increased this year. “Mr. Dalby evidently has made a mistake in figuring what additional acres he will be allowed to plant. In- Schilling Poultry ; Seasoning . ¢ A delicious seasoning fer) soups. stews, all mest and ‘More Niles per Gellon' LONGER Oil LIFE ASK YOUR DEALER Quanrud, Brink and Reibold, Inc. Bismarck Distributors of K-W Graphite — Yae-hag ansaecd ake and sat ofl eens: oe new luggage Sedans. The back cushion in both Forder and Tader ward permitting easy access. Another pulls well for. extra Ford value. THE NEW FORD V8 49 tive extra, Credit Co., AND UP, F. 0. B. DETROIT —Stendard ON THE AIR—FORD SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA, SUNDAY BVENINGS—FRED WARING, THURSDAY. EVENINGS—COLUMBIA NBTWwORK UNIVERSAL MOTOR COMPANY Only Authorised Ford Dealer in Bismarck