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ft The Utmost in Lignite Quality! eee 9 10 BISMARCK TRIBUNE MONDAY, NOVEM NOVEMBER 4, 1985 VELVA-BURLEIGH-KINCAI “THE 3 CHAMPION LIGNITES - SOLD ONLY BY DEPENDABLE COAL DEALERS KENTUCKY QUARRELS WORRY DEMOCRATS ON EVE OF ELECTION Contests in New York, Virginia, New Jersey and Missis- sippi Watched Washington, Nov. 4.—(?)—With na- tional Democratic leaders showing concern over the intra-party quarrel- ing that marks the Kentucky guber- natorial race, voters in six states will make their choices Tuesday in elec- tions that will receive the closest scrutiny for possible 1936 indicators. Two congressional contests in New York City also will be watched with interest, as will the intense scrap for the Philadelphia mayoralty and the strugge over control of the assembly of President Roosevelt's home state of New York. No matter who wins the governor- ship fight in Kentucky between Lieut. Gov. A. B. Chandler, Democrat, and Judge King Swope, Republican, Demo- cratic leaders fear party wounds will result that may prove difficult to heal by the time that border state casts is presidential vote next November. Democratic Governor Laffoon is supporting Swope, contending Chand-, Jer “betrayed” the Laffoon adminis- tration. Democrats expect to ‘win the two contests to fill vacancies in the New ‘York congressional delegation, but students of politics will watch to see how the tally of votes compares with previous democratic pluralities in the two districts. Close to 5,000,000 persons are regis- tered for the Empire state elections. Bc be Jersey, Virginia and Mississipp! will choose new legislatures and the; latter also will select a governor and| Btate ve LINCOLN HAS CAR IN MEDIUM-PRIGE FIELD Zephyr, With V-12 Motor, Is First Auto Without Orth- odox Chassis Having made its debut in the New ‘York Automobile Show Saturday, the Lincoln-Zephyr, newest entry in the medium-price field, is expected to be on display in Bismarck in the near future, according to John R. Fleck of Universal Motor Co., dealer here. The car, powered with a newly-de- veloped 110 horsepower V-12 engine, is the prodt:t of the combined re- sources of the Ford Motor company and the Lincoln Motor company. Its conception, both as to exterior apy ie and engineering design, is decidedly advanced, principles being utilized which have never before been put into actual motor car production. In appearance, the Lincoln-Zephyr is said to be the most completely stream-lined motor car ever built in production volume. Fundamentally, its lines and to some extent its mod- ern interior treatment were suggested by the “Motor Car of the Future,” in- spected by hundreds of thousands of visitors to the Ford exposition at the Chicago World fair last year. It is the first car produced on the American continent to have no ortho- dox chassis or chassis frame. The car comprises an all-steel “bridge truss” body of extraordinary strength, in which the engine is mounted and to which the running gear is attached. The new car is light in weight in’ proportion to its power. As a result, its road performance and hill-climb- ing ability is surprising. Its center of gravity is unusually low. The floor is only 12 inches from the road, low-: est of any American car. Despite) this, normal road clearance has been maintained. Low center of gravity in combina- tion with the center-poise spring sus- pension system, gives remarkable hal-' can cut housework and barnwork in half! PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION | ‘They Will Perform Here in 1 | | RUTH RAY Among the artists to be presented in the 1935-36 Artist Series spon- sored by the Thursday Musical club in cooperation with the Ameri- can Artists association will be Rudolph Reuter, pianist, assisted by Esther Goodwin, contralto, on Nov. 21; Reinhold Schmidt, bass-bari- tone, on Jan. 15; and Ruth Ray, Robert Long, tenor, May 6. The violinist, who will be assisted by remaining program in the series of four will be by Grace and Kurt Graff, dance team, scheduled for March 24. Ticket sales for the series now are in progress and have met with such success that free performances by the artists for the pupils of Bismarck high school practically are assured. ance and riding qualities and freedom from side sway, especially when cor- nering. Saftey glass is used in wind- shield and all doors and windows, an important safety feature. In addi- tion, due to the c&r’s unique construc- tion, the ratio of steel-to-glass is un- usually high, without sacrifice of vis- ibility. Convention Speaker Talks in 7 Languages|~ When Asgier Asgierson, Icelandic premier of education comes to Bis- marck late this week to speak to the North Dakota Education Association convention he will be accompanied by Judge G. Grimson of Rugby, who met Asgierson in Iceland in 1930 and de- scribes him as a “comparatively young man of great mental attainments.” Asgierson, as president of the Ice- landic Althing, welcomed the dele- gates to Iceland’s millenial celebra- tion in 1930, Judge Grimson said, and ‘on some occasions was forced to speak in as many as seven different lan- guages. Judge Grimson was the of- ficial delegate from North Dakota and came to know Asgierson very well. Among the national delegates, he re- calls, were Senator Peter Norbeck, 2 B, Burtness, then a congressman, ani Sveinbjorn Johnson. After leaving Bismarck, Asgierson and Grimson will visit those sections of North Dakota which were settled by people from Iceland, being sched- uled to,speak at Upham on Nov. 8 and at Mountain on Nov. 9. Fargo Business Man, Charles Stone, Dies Fargo, N. D., Nov. 4—(?)—Charles R. Stone, 70, founder of the Stone Piano company of Fargo and Minne- apolis, died at his home here at 4 p. m. Sunday, folowing a long illness. An Indianan by. birth, he attended the Boston Conservatory of Music, lo- cating at Anoka, Minn., after gradu- ation. There he organized piano and violin classes, also bought a sizeable tract of lake property near Anoka, op- erating a summer resort. In 1884 he went to St. Paul, where he started a music class, later becoming connected with Dyer Brothers Piano company as a,salesman in charge of the Dakotas, with Fargo headquarters. He founded the Stone Piano com- pany here in 1894, of late years man- aged by C. R. Stone, Jr., and A. J.) From 1919 to 1925 he also; Daveau. operated a music store in Minneapolis. For many years Mr. Stone. belonged to the Minneapolis Athletic club. He was @ 33rd degree Mason. Nurse Examiners to Hold Quiz 1 This Week! The state board of | of nurse examiners Mandan Taking Final Action on Bond Issue ‘The Mandan city board of review| met Monday to take first ac- tion on @ proposed $13,000 bond issue for funds to complete the new Me- morial building. pote ab $50,000 has been spent on the structure #0 far, with only the lower floor completed and used at present. The bonds would raise funds to augment about $5.000 in cash on hand in the city treasury, and $13,500 PWA grant , Welford, Berry Will See Turkey Day Tilt Aberdeen, S. D., , Nov. 4.—(?)—Mem- bers of the Sombrero Day committee were pleased Monday by the agree- ment of governors from both North and South Dakota to participate in ceremonies at the Inter-State high school football game here November Acceptance by Acting Governor Welford of North Dakota followed by several days that of Governor Tom Berry of South Dakota. They are the key men in the ceremony awarding the challenge trophy, a ten-gallon sombrero on which the names and scores of competing teams will be written. Ticket sales reached the 1,000 mark, assuring expenses for the event. the committee said. The Minot Magicians.under the guidance of Chief Magician “Red” 935-36 Artist Series REINHOLD SCHMIDT Jarrett, North Dakota’s logical representative. In South Dakota three teams, Rapid City, Wessington Springs and Brook- ings remained to fight it out for honors, with two or them almost cer- tain to remain urldefeated when the Official bid is soma ph alread North Da Dakota Po Poll Ballots Are Mailed) Whether or not North Dakota ap- proves or disapproves of the New Deal to date will be indicated soon by a Literary Digest straw vote which asks those chosen to ballot whether they now approve the acts and policies of , the Roosevelt New Deal to date and) for whom they voted in 1932, Altogether 10,000,000 ballots will be} mailed out, and these now are being placed in the mail at the rate of 500, 000 a day. : tionate share mailed from New York last Thursday and Friday. stood practically alone as} DISPEL ‘SEX BOGIES? IN OWA ‘V? COURSE Class in ‘Modern Marriage,’ With 130 Enrolled, Wins Wide Approval Towa City, Iowa, Nov. 4.—(P)—An experiment in teaching students the “facts of life” in marriage, tried out last year by the University of Iowa under the course title, “Religion and Social Problems,” this year is an ac- cepted course termed “modern mar- riage.” Last year 40 students enrolled in the experiment. This year 130 are taking the course. University officials admit they were apprehensive when Prof. Moses Jung brought his idea for “dispelling sex bogies” to them. They expressed fear that a frank discussion of the sexual relationship in marriage might be “too delicate a subject for a co-educational institution in a conservative state.” “But,” Professor Jung declared, Monday, “students have found noth-/| jing embarrassing or objectionable in discussions designed to show them the way to happiness and successful marriage. I have received letters from parents, ministers and educators throughout the state approving this !attempt to clear away misleading mys- | tertes.” 13 CREAM STATIONS | CLOSED BY STATE: Marks Beginning of Rigid Drive to Enforce Grading Law Program Thirteen cream stations at various \for violation of state dairy depart- ment regulations, Theodore Martell, state commissioner of agriculture and jlabor, declared Saturday. | Martell said cream stations had jbeen closed at Fredonia, Temvik, Mc- iClusky, Strasburg, Linton, Fillmore, Coleharbor, Kratschbacly township, Benson Corner, Verona, Makoti, Rey- inolds and Zap. \ “Closing of these stations, some of | 'which have been ordered shut tem- porarily and others for an indefinite | period, is but the beginning of a drive ‘now gaining momentum, to rigidly jenforce rules and regulations of the {cream grading program,” Martell) | said. “Since estabiishment of the pro- jgram May 1,” Martell said, “thirty |per cent of the No. 2 cream generally ;marketed has been eliminated, at an; farmers in income.” FIRE GUTS CHURCH Marquette. Mich. Nov. 4—(#)—St. ever's Catholic cathedral was a g|charred and smoke-blackened ruin Monday. and the loss was estimated at $350,000. points in the state have been closed , approximate saving of $40,000 to the; Chinese Government Nationalizing Silver Shanghai, Nov. 4.—(4)—The Chi- nese government began to gather in hoarded silver Monday under the |terms of a new financial decree na- |tionalizing the white metal. The order also provides for restriction of bank note issues, stabilization of the ;Chinese dollar and legalization of | legal tender to ler to replace ailye silver coin. WATER MAJOR ITEM IN STATE PLANNING National Resource Committee Comments on Work Being Done in N. D. ‘Washington, Nov. 4—()—A federal |report Monday characterized North Dakota as “thoroughly interested” in state planning, with water conserva- tion a major item. The national resources committee, commented on efforts of planning! boards of the North and South Da- kota to make “great changes in the lives and livelihood of farmers and city dwellers alike.” The report pointed out North Da- jkota now is engaged in studies of jwater conservation, mineral resources, Nand classification, transportation, stream pollution, sewage disposal, spopulation densities and trends, pov jerty, unemployment and relief, bank- ing, taxation and development of a {10-year public works program. North Dakota’s board, the report said, found the artesian water head jfor 18 years, It said both North and |South Dakota have undertaken defi- nite policies to correct flood and sew- age conditions of the Red river. Rural school affairs ix: both states, the report said, were complicated by abandonment of submarginal jand @ tendency of “misguided farm- over lands. + The committee mentioned electrification in Minnesota as a par- jticular project by that state's board, which recommended publicly-owned power plants. \Lions at Richardton Richardton, N. D, D., Nov. 4.—Spon- sored by the local Lions club, the first of a series of Bargain Days was held here recently. A scrip money auction | sale, a free movie and a dance were |Principal entertainment features. The Bargain Days will continue once each month for several months to come. The Lions club also sponsored a Hal- loween dance, which was well attend- ed. Funds are being used to lay a new hard cement floor and add a the meetings. The Richardton club | Was represented at the Mott sub-dis- trict meeting. to be decreasing about a foot a year; land} ers” to settle on unproductive, ha rural Sponsor Bargain Day! kitchen to the city hall for use during | WILLIAM MALONEY, Pioneer Wheelock Wheelock Attorney and Publisher Dies in Hospi- tal Sunday Fargo, N. D., Nov. 4—(#)—William Maloney, 65, Fargo attorney for the last 14 years, died in a local hospital Sunday. Surviving are his widow, three sons, Ansel of Montevideo, Minn.; Clifford and William, and two daughters, Viv- ian and Marian, all at home, two brothers, Charles H. Maloney of Wheelock, N. D., and A. E. Maloney, Minneapolis, and a sister, Mrs. O. Alexon, Wheelock. Funeral services will be in Fargo Tuesday. Born in Warren, Wis., Maloney came to North Dakota with his parents who homesteaded near Arvilla in Grand Forks county. He was graduated from the law school of the University of North Dakota in 1906. When in his early 20s, Maloney in- vented the double disk drill. In 1908 at Graceville, Minn. Ma- loney married Anna Moran. Previous- ly Maloney practiced law at Wheelock where he and his brothers mapped out the townsite of Wheelock. A member of the Maloney family is the present postmistress there. Maloney for a time also was editor and part owner of the Wheelock Trib- une. The family moved to Fargo in 1921. A charter member of the Knights |of Columbus at Minot, Maloney also | was secretary of the Inventors Associ- jation of Fargo. INDIANS WILL GET ADDITIONAL LANDS Crowded Condition on Turtle Mountain Reservation to Be Alleviated Additional lands for Indians hud- dled together on the Turtle Mountain reservation will be bought from an allocation of $280,218, it was an- |nounced Monday by the Resettlement administration. Nearly 590 Indian families are crowded onto an area just about large enough to support 133 families, the administration claimed. Two Rolette county townships make up the reservation. Lands bought in these and four and a half adjoining ‘Help Kidneys, | P. functioning @ Balier foake you suter £1 oon Cetin | But e ie pirat itenet = ‘upor mosey Cystex back. Only 1of ot drogpista. FARGO, SUCCUMBS == townships will relieve the condition and extend the Indian domain to the er border. 43,800 acres result of allotments to individual In- dians rather than to the Chippewa tribe. More than a third of the tracts still owned by Indians are so split among heirs that economic use is “dif- ficult or impossible,” it was claimed. “The level of living is unbelievably low,” said A, W. Simington, who spent @ quarter century in the Indian serv- ice and is now employed by the Re- settlement administration to handle its Indian projects in this region. “Two or three families often live in one house with insufficient food and no sanitation.” POLICEMAN YOUNGER Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 4—(?)—The av- E.jerage Atlanta policeman is three years younger, four pounds lighter, has 1% inches less girth and % inch more chest expansion than he did June 1. Systematic gymnasium work and retirement of veterans were given as the reasons, A total of 6,750,620,000 letters, par- cels, telegrams, and wireless licenses was handled by the British postoffice in 1931. i request: ) age me with Schilling Poultry Seasoning H J.S. FEVOLD |] Investment, Real Estate, Insur- Truck ance, Bonds, Auto Loans Sales and Rentals, City and Farm Property Over Cowan’s Drug Store Bismarck, N. D. and FOR SALE TURKEY Barrel Packs We will sell you Barrel Packs at lowest prices and we will pay you highest cash market prices for your tur- keys. “Northern” Hide & Fur Company Brick Bldg., Cor. 9th & Front Bismarck, N. Dak. WHAT THE MILDNESS OF CAMELS mon Trophy, says: “I’ve his plane. Camels never meat of the last one!” ia 2 recent interview. “Camels re- fresh me so when I’m fatigued,” he continues, “and they are sp mild that I can smoke any number with- out throwing my nerves off key.” famous holder of 214 speed records and the Har- years and smoking Camels almost as long. Making speed records tests the pilot as well as bother my physical ‘condition’ in any way. As the athletes say, Camels are so mild they don’t get the wind. And I’ve found they never upset my nerves. Camel must use choicer tobaccos.” “Speaking of cigarettes, I make it. rule to smoke Camels,” says Mrs. T.W.Kenyon, sportswoman pilot. “They are the mildest cigarette Iknow. Morning, noon, and night, Ican smoke Camels steadily. They mever upset my nerves. And each Camel renews the zest and enj Reynolds Tob.Co, MEANS TO FAMOUS AVIATORS ‘ Lieutenant Commander Frank Hawks, U.S.N.R., been flying for 19 make me jumpy or joy YOULL FIND THAT CAMELS ARE MILO, TOO~BETTER | FOR STEADY SMOKING "3 TUNE INI 2 ORCHESTRA © Tuesday: mover WABC: CAMEL CARAVAN with WAL- ‘TBR O'KEEFE © DEANE JANIS TED HUSING ¢ GLEN GRAY and the CASA LOMA and Thursday—9p.m.B.S.T.. @p.m.C.S.T.,9:30p.m. M.8.T., and 8:30p.m.P.$.T. Columbia Network. “I smoke Camels all I want,” ssys Col Roscoe Turner( below),’crosse continent speed ace. “Because of their mildness, Camels never tire my taste. A speed flyer uses up energy just as his motor uses ‘gas.” After smoking a Camel, I get a ‘refill’ in energy.” Cah