The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 26, 1935, Page 3

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PARI-MARKET ROAD |Co-op Dairymen Want U.S. PROGRAM EXPANDED/ To Keep Hands Off Business ‘Another 500 Million May Be Al- lotted by President for Rural Highways ‘Washington, July 26—(4)—Word of @ vast works-relief program “to get the farmers out of the mud” from , Maine to California came Friday. to original advocates of the plan in con- gress. A farm-to-market road building project, far exceeding the approxi- mately $100,000,000 heretofore desig- nated for back roads, was understood to be in the making under the direc- tion of Lawrence Westbrook, assist- ant to Works Progress Administrator Harry L. Hopkins. Another $500,000,000 might be al- lotted for the road improvements, it was said, although the limit would not be set until a survey disclosed the ex- tent of. possible and practical road work. State works progress administrators ave been notified to co-relate their tural roads projects immediately. Each state is to pick the roads to be im- proved; then the list is to be consid- ered in cooperation with the bureau of public roads. Kerosene Electrolux Is Handled by Gilman Announcement that the M. B. Gil- man Company of Bismarck has been named distributor in the Bismarck district for the Electrolux kerosene re- frigerator was made Friday by Mr. Gilman. ~ “The new air-cooled Electrolux, the Servel kerosene refrigerator,” Gilman said, “makes modern refrigeration available for farm homes, suburban homes and summer homes.” _The kerosene-fueled refrigerator was designed to fill a need where nat- ural gas is not available, Gilman said, in explaining that his refrigerator is the same as the Electrolux which util- izes natural gas except that kerosene instead of natural gas is used as the fuel. One filling of the new Electro- lux’s big kerosene tank provides ample supply for a week or 10 days, the dis- tributor said. The electrolux is air- cooled and uses no water. “Nine years ago, two young techni- cal students in Sweden set themselves to develop a refrigerating unit that would operate without machinery or moving parts of any kind,” Gilman said. “Utilizing a few well-known principles.of nature, they created a successful unit that was hailed quickly as a triumph. By applying heat to circulate the refrigerant, they pro- duced a constant degree of cold with- out using a single mechanical part. The unit was silent in operation. It operated continuously, as long as heat was applied. Their unit was the first Electrolux.” The new Electrolux kerosene re- frigerator has a wide variety of sizes and styles. Collect $866,694,982 In Processing Taxes Washington, July 26—()—The AAA announced Friday that the gov- ernment has collected a grand total of $866,694,982 in processing taxes and related taxes from May, 1933, through May 31, 1935, The report showed collections di- vided as follows: Wheat, $234,019,- 062; cotton $236,624,912; paper and jute $12,310,764; tobacco $48,469,115; field corn $10,860,650; hogs $254,315.- 586; sugar $61,500,501; peanuts $3.- 367,490; rice $17,719; cotton ginning Jax $947,212; tobacco producers sales tax $3,229,243, and unclassified $1,- 032,523, A summary of processing taxes collected by states and commodities included: North Dakota, wheat $1,- 638,986; cotton $68,582; tobacco $2,- 524; field corn $1,040; hogs $171,1i2; Paper $7,346; sugar $3,646.- _————_————— Bismarck Marble, Terrazzo and Tile Works Steps, Bathrooms, Fireplaces, Etc. L. Braida 108 Main Ave. Bismarck, N.D. Concrete Building Tile Drier and Warmer—The Ideal Building Material ’ See us for estimates BISMARCK BRICK AND TILE COMPANY Wm. Noggle, Sup’t. Phone 228 Walsh Construction Co. House Moving, Raising and Ce- ment Werk. No Job Too Large— No Job Too Small. All Work Guaranteed. J. V. WALSH General Con tractor Bismarck Phone 834-W It may be the last time— ACT NOW! Buy 2 Tires instead of 1—for the Nat’l. Adv. List of One 1st Line Tire and 1 Tube. You get 2 famous Roadgripper Tires and 2 Roadgripper Tubes. All 4 for $9.00, 30x3%4— 4.75-19, $11.30. Gamble Stores, With Life Insurance you spend less now than you make, so that you can spend more later than you earn. Dallas Kast, Dist. Agent Phone 877 Bismarck, N. D. Minnesota Groups Prosper Without Helping Hand; Olson Bids Time In the heart of third party land, Frazier Hunt finds that men’s views diverge over the efficacy of the New Deal. This is the fifth of 12 vital articles in which Hunt, on a rambling trans- continental tour, impartially re- ports popular sentiment as he finds it at the present time, with the 1936 elections looming large on the political horizon. By FRAZIER HUNT (Copyright, 1935, NEA Service, Inc.) Governor Floyd Olson of Minnesota is @ radical and proud of it. “The trouble is we've got too many reformers and not enough real radi- cals,” he said to me in his office in the capitol in St. Paul. Then he added: against Roosevelt is that he ener- vates all middle-lefters. He's just sufficiently radical so that we can’t make a real enemy out of him.” Olson is big and blustering and somewhat of a swashbuckler, but he’s likable and knows his stuff. In 1936 he will run for the senate on the Farmer-Labor ticket—and will probably be elected. He's al- ready a master at irony and ridicule, and when this big Swede from Min- nesota turns loose on the elder statesmen in Washington, there will be something new for the gossips of the capital to shake their heads over. Olson unquestionably likes the idea of a strong radical national third party, but I have a feeling that, along with the LaFollettes and some of the Dakota boys, he doesn’t quite feel the urge to make the big sacri- fice himself. eee The Low-down A man I met in the reception hall outside the governor’s office tipped me off to what looks like the low- down here in this seething north- west. “It doesn’t ‘look as if the third party people can center on one per- sonality,” he told me. . “There are so many strong and picturesque char- acters, each his own brand of ax to grind, that it will be almost impossible for them really to join together their fortunes. The colored doorman at the Nicollet hotel confirmed in rather less elab- orate terms this general conclusion. “I'm for Olson, but I'm for Roosevelt, too,” he told me. “My folks is all for him. He'll carry the Twin Cities like them other people was nailed down.” eee Successful Co-operation But driving out from Minneapolis to Farmington to visit the new $350,- 000 co-op creamery plant, I got the other side of the picture from con- servative, hard-headed W. 8. Moscrip —who incidentally is president of the Twin-City Milk Producers asso- ciation, which is one of the most successful cooperative organizations in the United States. “If the government will simply withdraw and let business alone we'll have the biggest boom in his- tory,” he said with some vehemency. “Our banks are full of money eager to be safely invested. But there is no confidence. Everyone is afraid of what the government may do... . Our people need new supplies of everything that’s made. For four or five years we've all been coasting along. Why, our farmers alone need to spend from five to ten billions to put their farms and buildings in shape. Man alive! Once we get going we could consume all that our factories working three shifts could turn out for the next five years. But right now, with the government in- terfering, men with money and the tools are afraid to move. “Roosevelt said at the start that he'd acknowledge the failure of any of his pet schemes if they didn’t pan out. Let him do it now—and let us get back to work and have real boom days.” A Lesson Learned The vast Land O’ Lakes Cream- eries, last year did a total busi- ness of $32,500,000 and in the fantas- tic year of 1928 reached a grand total of almost $50,000,000. It Spreads over parts of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska and South Da- kota, and is now going into Illinois. It is owned outright by 485 indepen- dent co-op creameries and 124 cheese factories. The true secret of its phenomenal success lies in its expert and almost inspired management, and in the fact that it has developed a national trade mark that ranks with another great co-operative- owned trade-mark—Sunkist. Here in the northwest men do not entirely leave either to Fate or Chance or Roosevelt their destiny. They are learning slowly how to work and live together. Only a small per cent of their many co-operative adventures have succeeded, but out of their experiences they have glean- ed the lesson that co-op enterprises must have the same type of high class management that private busi- ness has, Through years of trial they have learned that they must pay competitive wages to the men run- ning their affairs. Here on these dairy farms in the northwest one sees independent, able, hard-working men and women who have found through bitter experience that in both business and govern- ment they must work together in or- der to get what they want. They have learned to look after them- selves. They look for neither gifts nor miracles from Washington. Saturday: What think the peo- ple in the pivotal states of Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Okla- homa. NRA Chief Resigning To Return to N.Y. Bank Washington, July 26.—(?)—James L. O'Neill, acting chairman of NRA, Friday said he had asked the presi- dent to name his successor so he may return to his place with the Guar- anty Trust company of New York City Aug. 1. Officials at the same time reported NRA’s staff had been reduced to 3,- 235 from a peak of 5,500 workers, and is to be trimmed to 1,500 by Oct. 1. “My biggest complaint | ning. tn tema bs senna {Rough Going But | He Gets Birdi le | + Orange, Conn.—Lou Sperandeo drove off the tee of the tenth hole, Race Brook country club. He hooked into the rough. His second stroke was a slice and he was still in the rough. The third shot was better, but it didn’t get his ball onto the fair- way. The fourth lifted the ball out of the rough, onto the green, into hy cup, for a birdie on a par-5 le. | Sterling By MES. GEO. LEE The N. P. Ladies’ Club held a ice cream social at the H. B. Moffitt farm north of Sterling Saturday eve- Mr. and Mrs. Theron Ellison of Los Angeles Calif., are visiting friends and relatives here. They intend to stay about six weeks. Mrs, Chas. Gaskill who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. P. M. Gos- ney of LeBannon, Ore., returned to her home here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ryan will leave for Graceful, Minn., Sunday, where they will visit Mrs. Ryan’s parents and get their two small’ daughters, Kathern and Dorothy, who have been visiting there for several wecks. A kitchen shower was held for Mrs. Victor Mercer at the church Wednes- day afternoon. She was presented with many beautiful and useful gifts, among which the community ladie: Presented her with a set of beautiful china. Mrs. Mercer just returned to her home here a few weeks ago from Los Angeles. Miss Lucille Elness, who has been employed in Bismarck for some time, is visiting at her home here. Dorothy Lee, visited at the Elmer Koon home in Driscoll from Monday until Tuesday. _ Homer Envick of Marion, N. D., was a Sterling business caller Tues- day. John Lee and two sons Richard and‘ Robert were visiting with friends and relatives in Sterling Sunday. MICHIGAN TO ADVERTISE Lansing, Mich—The state of Mich- igan will spend $75,000 for newspaper and other advertising in an effort to collect $250,000,500 in delinquent state and local taxes, SIX ESCAPE JAIL Cadiz, O.—Two escaped convicts led four other prisoners in a break from the Harrison county jail Friday. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1935 congratulate him on that he prob- ably has looked up my records, Yes, I was very interested in that there “sales tax law” and did not mind paying for the ad. It would take too much space to convince Mr. Corbin why he should not pay a “sales tax” but if Mr. Corbin wants jto debate on the “sales tax” and he can find a public place to do so in Bismarck I will be only. too glad to meet him in Bismarck and defend my side of it. People’s Forum ubsects of inte ing with contro. subjects, which individuals unfairly, | or which offend good taste and fair play will be returned to the writ- ers. All letters MUST be signed. If 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 policy and to re- quire publication of a writers hame where justice and fair play make {t advisable. All letters must be limited to not more than 00 words. Yours truly, JULIUS MEYER. FOOD POISONS 100 Northport, N. Y., July 26.— (®) — Made ill apparently by tainted food, about 100 World War veterans were believed to be recovering Friday at AN OFFER TO DEBATE Baldwin, N. D.|the United States veterans facility July 23, 1935. here, with one death recorded. Editor, Tribune: It certainly interested me when I came home from the cornfield and picked up the yesterday’s issue and read the letter in the “Forum” writ- ten by Burl W. Corbin of Livona, N. D., on July 16, 1935. I am very sorry to ‘say that Mr. Corbin does not admit that God has restored our beloved N. D. to pros- perity and that he expects God to put it in the granaries. I am glad to hear of Mr. Corbin that he is as well off as I am, and Approximately $13,000,000,000 _ {s| spent annually in the United States in taking care of criminals. | ALREADY eerving more than half a million city homes and apartments, | Electrolux now comes to the country—operating on kero- sene. It gives you all the famous Electrolux advan- tages—including perfect re- frigeration, plenty of fee ceubes—at low cost! i Coste Little To Run! | Owners report their Kerosene | Electrolux running for as j little as 314¢ a day. Five | gallons of kerosene runs this modern refrigerator a week or more. No daily attention , fs required. Simpler... More EMctent! That's because Electrolux | operates more simply than | any other refrigerator. Like | ail Electrolux, it has no mov- ing parts! The heat from a wickless glow-type burner M. B. GILMAN CO. Second and Broadway Bismarck, N. D. cireulates the refrigerant which ordinary afr cools. Electrolux uses no water! No Moving Ports To Wear! ‘Thanks to {ts freedom from moving parts, Electrolux saves on repairs and is perma- nently silent, too! For parts that do not move cannot wear—cannot cause noise! Besides providing modern city refrigeration for only a few pennies a day, Electrolux will add beauty to your home! FREE > Phone 808 Riverside Users Always Stick to Riversides! Let me sell you a new tire today Sir «e.and you Thanks No! WARDS AUGUST FURNITURE SALE Save Over 10% On This 7-Pc. Living Room Set : ‘ One of the greatest values we’ve ever offered. 2 Piece Friezette living room suite, lamps, chairs, tables, all grouped at one low sale price! | Gaarcaihie tare Now’s the time to refurnish your i] home—you can well afford to when you get a remarkable value like this! AUGUST SALE SPECIAL Reg. $29.95 Durastan Rug Augus~ “-te Price $26.88 9x12 Size not included abeve price Now You Save‘’15! 3 Pe. Butt Walnut Suite! proof drawers, octagon shaped bevelled plate-glass mirror, Im sticking to Wards Riverside Tires! "Il say the same thing once you have used America’s best first quality tire! ery Wards First Quality RIVERSIDE TIRES! You get up to 28% more mileage! Guaranteed against everything! Yet priced to save you money! © Actual tests show that Riversides give up to 28% more mileage than other first-quality tires! That means you get up to one free mile in every five you drive! That means even greater savings when you consider that Wards regular prices on Riversides are as low as any first quality tires and consider- ably LOWER than most! And remember too that the same extra quality that gives you Riversides’ greater mileage and savings gives you greater safety too! No safer first quality tire made! WRITTEN GUARANTEE AGAINST EVERYTHING... @ Bruises @Cuts © Collision @ Wheels Out of Alignment EVERYTHING that can happen to a tire in service WITHOUT LIMIT as to num- ber of months or miles. The strongest written guarantee ever offered! kes. @ Under inflation Wards Convenient Payments May Be Arranged MONTGOMERY WARD 800 Fourth St. Phone 475 Bismarck, N. D. rubbed lacquer finish. Choice of vanity or dresser. Bench $4.94. It’s Easy to Buy on Wards Budget Plan! This is an extremely well built suite—our Supreme qual- ; 9 5 ity! 5-Ply butt walnut veneer fronts, walnut veneer tops and ends—special features include hidden casters, dust- $7 Down, $7 Monthly, Small Carrying Charge AUGUST Sale Special It’s Easy to Buy on Wards Budget Plan! Save in the “August Sale Oo” Sensational SaleValue You Usually See These Mattresses at 30% More! We've sold thousands upon thousands of these mat- © The Best Mattress That ir price—now, at this reduces price You Can Buy Any il pemey ae paee 182 Premier wire coil springs : Within Dollars of This Remarkable Low Price! with protective sisal pads top and bottom. Thick layers ld Feites cotton on top Sag ante eovering of sell icking' © MONTGOMERY WARD 300 Fourth Street Phone 475 BISMARCK, N. DAK.

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