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cee cht 2 7,000 NON-FARMERS ARE SHIFTED TO WPA Only 23 Left on Burleigh Coun- ty Relief Rolls to Be Cer- tified by FERA + Publishes Chorales ? * ATTENDANCE RECORD | MADE BY 76 PUPILS St. Mary’s High School An- nounces List of Prompt Stu- dents for First Period THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1985 Wheat Adjustment Safequards Wheat Income HIGHLIGHTS OF WHEAT ADJUSTMENT HAITI STORM DEA TOLL REACHES 2 Floods Following Hurricane of Week Ago Leave Thousands Homeless, Hungry Is Not Evident Here E. M. Hendricks of Bismarck, dis- trict secretary of the ‘National Bituminous Coal commission, denied Monday that any attempts to stam- pede coal producers into not-accept- ing the code of the bituminous coal conservation act were being made in this district. 1 Adjusts Production to Demand 2 Increases Farm Purchasing Power 3 Provides Adequate Supplies 4 Encourages Sound Farm Practices Authorities of St. Mary's high school Saturday announced the names of 76 students who had been More than 7,000 non-farmers have been certified by the state FERA to the public works administration, E.| Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, Oct. 28.—(?) —At least 2,000 persons are dead or missing in a storm which ravaged the nae” A. Willson, state FERA administrator, ; announced Monday. In the western sections of the state comparatively few on relief rolls have been. certified to WPA because in- dividuals do not fall in the class of non-farmers, Willson said. In two counties, Cavalier and Traill, none has been certified because the counties have no local relief setup, ‘Willson said. The work of certifica- tion has been carried on by the social service division of FERA. The number does not include those being certified to rural resettlement administration, Willson explained. By counties, the certification varies from 29 to 677. One county—Moun- trail—has completed its certification with 132, while Burleigh county has only 23 left on direct relief rolls to be certified. The certification by counties shows: Adams 41 certified; Barnes 168, Ben- fon 271, Billings 14, Bottineau 191, Bowman 39, Burke 206, Burleigh 322, EDWIN LEMOHN A book of chorale arrangements for women’s voices has been pub- lished by Mr. Lemohn, Fargo, who is a brother of Miss Marie Lemohn, Tribune apartments, lo- cal piano instructor. * * * LEMOHN PUBLISHES BOOK OF CHORALES neither absent nor tardy during the first six weeks of the 1935-36 term. Included in the list were the fol- lowing: Gomer Anderson, Beverly Bauer, Delia Beylund, Florence Bobzien, Edwin Brendel, Paul Briski, Anthony and Stephen Brown, Howard Can- field, Marian Carufel, Roland Crane, Lucille Dalleir, Vera Dixon, John Doll, Amelia Eisele, Louise Elich, Magdalen Emineth, Alvina and Anna Fischer. Mary and Veronica Fritz, Joseph Geiger, Anne and Magdalen Golda- der, Margaret Gomulak, Mary Gray, Raymond Griffin, Joseph Gross, Rob- ert Gustafson, Edward Hayes, Marie Heltemaes. Kenneth Hessinger, Robert Howard, Boniface Jeppson, Thomas Johner, Grace Johnston, Bernard Jundt, Kathleen Kohler, Charles Kupitz, Leo Litt, Stella Lutgen, Helen Mc- Kinnon, Mina Manly, Helen and Rose Mildenberger, Lorraine Miners, Ann 5 Is Based onVoluntary Cooperation & U.S. CASH —— _# Includes Benefit Payments YZ WHEAT 193 (932 This chart shows how the Agricultural Adjustment Administration wheat program has safeguarded wheat farmers’ income. For 1932 when there was no program, cash income to farmers from wheat was $196,000,000. For 1934 higher prices and adjustment payments brought a cash income of $391,000,000. The wheat prograth seeks: (2) to produce wheat for available markets; (2) to increase farm pur- chasing power; (3) to produce adequate supplies at all times for domestic use; (4) to encourage sound farming through diversion of land to soil-improving and erosion-preventing crops; and (5) to make voluntary cooperation more profitable to farmers than non- cooperation. This is the third of a series of four illustrated explana- tions of the wheat adjustment program. The charts were prepared by the Agricultural Adjustment Administration and furnished to The Bismarck Tribune by T. W. Gildersleeve, extension editor of the North Dakota Agricultural college. southern peninsula of Haiti. Most of the casualties were caused by floods which followed the hurricane a week ago. Thousands were reported home- less and hungry. Populations of were valley villages believed to have been wiped out as rains sent the from their channels, det the frail, thatched huts of the natives. Information received here indicated the bodies of most of the missing were swept out to sea. Relief operations could not be in- stituted until the arrival of the Stand- ard fruit steamer Truxton, streams shore of the peninsula almost direct- ly across from Port-au-Prince, al- ready has yielded 96 bodies. Jeremie, on the north shore near the western tip of the peninsula, apparently was hardest hit. Cass 199, Dickey 164, Divide 163, Dunn Monaghan, Gail North, Robert Patz- Hi 106, Eddy iM Emmons 168, Foster man, Virginia Penders, Veronica igh Court to Hear 8, Golden Valley 22, Grand Forks 362, Price. Death Case Appeal Grant 87, Griggs 62, Hettinger 107, Kidder 102, LaMoure 117, Logan 94, (McHenry 153, McIntosh 135, McKenzie 55, McLean 184, Mercer 145, Morton 319, Mountrail 132, Nelson 59, Oliver 41, Pembina 128, Pierce 89, Ramsey 79, Ransom 147, Renville 62, Richland 120, Rolette 296, Sargent 126, Sheridan 54, Sioux 61, Slope 50, Stark 29, Steele 71, Stutsman 292, Towner 65, Walsh 35, ‘Ward 677, Wells 120, Williams 423. TEACHERS 10 HAVE 4 DEMONSTRATIONS Miss Peterson Will Conduct Meetings Through Burleigh County This Week ‘Teacher's demonstration meetings will be held in four rural Burleigh county schools this week, Miss Marie Huber, county superintendent, has announced. Sessions will be in charge of Miss with the regularly enrolled pupils. The afternoon will be devoted to open forum discussions in which the teach- ers will take part. Dates and schools at which the demonstration work will be given fol- low: Tuesday, Lyman school, No. 7, seven miles south of Wing, Edward Banttari, teacher. Wednesday, Boyd School, No. 1, one- half mile west and six miles south of Menoken, Catherine McLean, teacher. Thursday, Hay Creek School No. 1, three miles north and two miles east of Bismarck, Lois Walters, teacher. Friday, Ecklund school No. 6, two miles east and one mile south of Wil- ton, Cora DeVee Richards, teacher. Rural teachers have been instruct- ed to attend the demonstration meet- ing most convenient for them. Brother of Local Woman | Composer of Arrangements for Women’s Voices A collection of numbers he has written for the Oak Grove seminary chorus of Fargo for its annual con- cert program makes up a book of chorale arrangements for women’s voices published by Edwin Lemohn, Fargo, brother of Miss Marie Lemohn, Tribune apartments, local piano teacher. The book was published by Augs- burg House of Minneapolis. Mr. Lemohn is head of music at Oak Grove and has the rank of professor on the staff of the Concordia Conser- vatory of Music with which he has been affiliated for seven years as teacher of music and theory. Later Mr. Lemohn will publish & volume of original form of composi- tion for chorus, some of which he al- ready has used on concert programs. He also is working on music history and harmony textbooks. Mr, Lemohn has taken his singers on many tours within recent years, their North Dakota appearances in- cluding concerts at Fargo, Valley City Built on the Rock, Lideman; Christ the Lord Is Risen Again, Davidica; From Heaven Above, German; I Know a Way Beseiged and Throng- ing, Sandstrom; My God! How Won- derful Thou Art, Scottish Psalter; O Sacred Head, Now Wounded, Hassler; O What Precious Balm and Healing, Bourgeois; Praise to the Lord, the Almighty, German; The Morning Star, Nicolai; The Vision of Christ, F. Melis Christiansen; Through the Night of Doubt and Sorrow, German, and Wake, Awake, Nicolai. Mr. Lemohn is a native of Estelline, S. D., and had his training in music at the Chicago Music college, Mc- Phail School of Music, Minneapolis, and Augsburg college, Minneapolis. Relief Rolls Pared ella Steil, Taix, Eleanor Thompson, Lucille To- vaas, Margaret Turnbow, Agnes Volk, Marian Wagner, Catherine and Francis Weisgerber and Neola Winter. GANG GUNS BLAZE; 13,000 in September ls} _ Clarence and Dorothy Ressler, Theresa Revell, Edwin Robidou, Francis Rothschiller, Ardith Ruana, Pauline Schantz, Mildred Schlener, William Schmidt, Joseph Schneider. Anne Senger, Eunice Starkle, Lu- Vincent Steiner, James Eleanor Wallrich, TWO MEN WOUNDED New York Police Seek to Link Street Shooting With Schultz Extermination New York, Oct. 28.—(7)—Gang guns blazed again Monday, leaving two men seriously wounded in the doorway of ines apartment house at 320 West 84th street. Police started an investigation to ing the notorious Dutch Schultz, were exterminated. Monday's victims were Hugo Gar- aldo, alias Chiarello, 25, and Joseph Pegno, 24. Police said they were shot down about 6:30 a. m. *. Two men, who escaped, did the shooting, one of the wounded men told police. Geraldo received two bullets in his side and one in the face. Pegno got a bullet under his heart. Both men had minor police records. Robbers Break Wall To Raid Marion Bank North Dakota authorities Monday were searching for persons who bur- rowed through a brick wall into the vault of the Marion State bank and escaped with approximately $450. Active in the hunt for fingerprints Wild Geese Vainly Fight for Life on Niagara Falls’ Brink 5,000 Birds, Trapped in Haze, Slowly Being Carried to Wholesale Death Niagara Falls, N. Y., Oct. 283—(P)— A heavy haze in which wild geese will not rise threatened wholesale death for more than 5,000 of the birds Monday as they made slowly weaken- ing efforts in the brink of Horseshoe Falls to defy the swift moving cur- rent in which they took haven Sun- day en route from Canada to the south, The haze fell over the Niagara river and the cataract this morning, blotting out all view of the geese. Meanwhile Canadian and American authorities were seeking frantically for some method to scare the birds from their dangerous, annual stop. Rockets, searchlights and shotguns have been used already in an effort to frighten the birds, to no avail. A few of the geese were frightened away before the haze dropped over the water, but many were believed to be fast nearing death in a plunge over the big cataract. Some already have been seen plunging to their end in the roaring, swirling pools of angry foam at the bottom of the falls. The dead geese were allowed to float down river, to disappear forever in the destroying force of the whirl- pool rapids. Echoes of a $50,000 damage suit in Burleigh county district court grow- ing out of the death of railway sec- tion foremen in an automobile acci- dent, will be heard in the state su- preme court next month. Appealing from a $10,380.04 judg- ment returned by a jury in favor of Florence M. Hausken, widow of Hans Hausken who died following the ac- cident, L. R. Coman and the North- west, Construction company, both de- fendants, ask a new trial. Forty-seven specifications of error in rulings and in charges to the jury are cited by the defendants’ attorneys, Conmy and: Conmy of Fargo, in sup- port of the appeal for a new trial. Hausken, it was alleged in the court action, was struck by an automobile driven by Coman near Glen Ullin, Nov. 6, 1934. As a result of his juries, he died at Glendive Dec. 14, 1934, it was claimed. Teachers Attending the State Fur Co. Store Every Fur Coat Will Have.a Spe- cial Sale Price Tag on It State Fur coats are distinctively individual and can be depended upon to give excellent service. Made of fine pelts, perfectly match- ed, expertly tailored and finished. Convention of the Your Own Initials Twenty Styles to Olga Peterson of the Minot State/and Napoleon. They also have given|qetermine if th N. D. E. A, at Bismarck Will Be Welcome : Sache cee, Moring wile [concern Minnenpis,, (Cention ih us eats wa Visitors at the Carved in Ginasithins ‘ evo classroom work Ww: These numbers are included in his elnds 4 Peterson carrying on the instruction| recent publication: ee EA uN et Tt Beautiful Rosewood Webb Brothers Terms will gladly be arranged A deposit will hold for future delivery and other clues is the state bureau of criminal identification under the direction of Superintendent C. A. Miller who said efforts are being made to trace oxygen and gas tanks left behind by the thieves. Miller said the bank was entered Wednesday night or Thursday morn- ing and that entrance to the vault was gained by digging through a brick wall from a back room. KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS MEET Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 28.—(®)— District and state heads of the North Dakota Knights of Columbus lodge assembled in Grand Forks Monday to discuss participation in the Catholic action plan adopted by the state or- ganization in May. C. H. Mergens of ‘Bismarck, state deputy, presided. A free economy is the only one that hhas ever produced abundance. It is on the fruits of that abundance that we are living in these depression days. The New Deal is subsisting on the WELCOME HOME, OLD GRADS BISMARCK HIGH SCHOOL HOMECOMING BISMARCK vs. MINOT Getting Up Nights If you suffer from Getting Up Nights, Nervousness, Leg Pains, Swollen Joints, Dizziness, Headaches, Loss of Pep, Burn- ing, Smarting, Itching Acidity due to functional Kidney or Bladder troubles, try the Doctor's guaranteed prescription Cystex (Siss-tex). Must bring new vitality in 48 hours, and satisfy completely in 8 days or money back. Guaranteed Cystex costs only 3c a dose at druggists, Thirteen thousand persons went off North Dakota relief rolls in Septem- ber, and costs dropped more than $200,000, F. C. Hauser, FERA statis- tician, announces. The relief load in North Dakota as of Oct. 1, stood at 102,230, Hauser ex- plained, while Oct. 10, the total had dropped to 101,000. =| Total expenditures for September were $676,204. Of this amount $108,- 073 was from county and local funds. Nearly three-fourths of the amount spent in September was for relief in kind, a total of $336,278. Cash relief totaled $104,565. Grand Forks Potato Hearing Scheduled Wahington, Oct. 28—()}—Potato growers in Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin and Michigan will attend public hearings in seven cites Nov. 4 Prices will range from $69.50 to $325.00 State Fur Co. Manufacturing Furriers Across from G. P. Hotel Phone 496 Bismarck, N. D. BOAy BOOM Baden FOR SALE Hughes Field 2P. M., Saturday, Nov. 2 TEACHERS--- Red Poll Bull - Wachter Transfer Dealer | Fifth St.So. Phone 62 to 15, over proposed marketng agree- ments under the AAA. Hearings will be at Grand Forks, N. D., on Nov. 4; Rhinelander, Wis., Nov. 4; Stevens Point, Wis. Nov. 6; St. Paul, Nov. 6; Traverse City, Mich, Nov. 11; Grand Rapids, Mich., Nov. 13, and Pontiac, Mich. Nov. 15. ‘The agreements would enable con- Training for public service as a tional youth administration project was suggested to college authorities ance, Bonds, Ante and Loans Sales and Rentals, City and Farm Property Over Cowan's Drug Store Otemarsk, N. D. savings of the old order.—Ogden Mills. CONCRETE can make any repairs and patching. Once you do a job with concrete, PORTLAND, CEMENT ASSOCIATION (003 Boker Bidg., Minncepolis, Mins. ee to When in Bismarck for your annual convention, don’t forget to visit the Rendezvous offers the last word in dining elegance. We are prepared re for small groups as well as large. Fixtures and furnishings are tich in dignity. Food, service and prices are unsurpassed in the Capital City. A SMART FURNACE TENDER 20 Months Old Pomeereeresam farm pay better AT WORK! H.T.Beckert = ||" Posies . SHS 4 CRETE out : 11 miles west of Kildeer || Training for Public pe ona oar nce Service Suggested| out. Makesevery chore easier. Why Folks Buy — || Monday by & 4. willson, state youth | Whether it’s a well-curb or @ Bites Rian Je Reine suaeesion fo milk house tank, it’s done... ul i. if BEULAH Or it wil be loft to the discretion ot | You can forget it. the individual college heads, Willson | And, it makes life a lot more LIGNITE While prospective jobs to be pro-| worth living! Work is easier, vided ‘would sae 503, Puree rest comes sooner, the place v Lots of Heat ployment in the position is contained | J00ks better and ds better for pies ! —— sea lists oat in the program, Willson emphasized.| everyone in the family. ‘ Rt, Ut Gare amen | Tak ore tim eet shee RENDEZVOUS Could There Be s Better Reason Hey Or, andl ha concrete belongs on your farm : A Tal Wit Please You, ton. 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