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ee ‘Conversion’ State Schools Studied Fees a ELD Ee nts ceiao ONSEN TO various schools and institutional towns,” Larsen said, Creation of New Governing; Board, Fund Consolida- tion, Also Scanned North Dakota’s interim tax survey commission is . considering recom- mendations for “conversion” of three state schools, creation of a new gov- erning board for institutions of higher learning and consolidation of educa- tional appropriations, it was revealed Tuesday by Dr. Spencer Larsen, con- sultant of the commission, The proposals under study by the commission were announced by Larsen after a conference with Gov. Walter Welford and various educators of the state, who had been here attending the state convention of the North Da- ‘kota Education association. In addition, the commission also has under scrutiny recommendations look- ing toward elimination of duplication’ in the various higher learning insti- tutions, Larsen said. Eliminate Competition “The tax survey! commission’s tent- ative plan of reorganization for the institutions of ‘higher learning in- volves ® proposal to eliminate compe- tition for appropriations between the Find competition for enrollments is being tition for: appropriations and enroll- duplicates educational facilities and cation in needs.” vealed, “these institutions have been offerings by local demands. Such in- Out From Your Doctor if the “Pain” Remedy You Take Is Safe. Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations BEFORE you take any ieee tion you don’t know all about, for the relief of headaches; or the pains ef rheumatism, neuritis or: neuralgia, ask your doctor what he thinks about it— in comparison with Genuine Bayer Aspirin. We say this because, before the Sei of Bayer Aspirin, most a unite foes were ad- vised against by physicians as being bad for the stomach; or, often, for the heart. And the discovery of Bayer Aspirin largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of people who have taken Bayer Aspirin year in and ovt without ill effect, have proved that the medical findings about its safety were correct. Remember this: Genuine Bayer Aspirin is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered tor the relief of Beodnelte and a common pains ... and safe for the average person to take regularly. You can get real Bayer Aspirin at any. drug store — simply by never asking for it by the name “aspirin” alone, but always saying BAYER ASPIRIN when you buy. of Three “Likewise, a plan for elimination of considered,” he continued. “Compe- ments unnecessarily expands and obscures the financing ef higher edu- accordance with state In some instances, Larsen said the commission investigation had re- unduly influenced in their curricular fluence results in inequitable distribu- tion of tax benefits.” See Farm High Schools The commission also is investigat- ing “the feasibility of permitting some of the institutions to be converted in- to sectional agricultural high schools, to train for more abundant farm life. “An equitable distribution of tax benefits would seem to demand that @ greater proportion of the educa- tional. tax dollar be expended in training rural youth,” Larsen said. “Educators in North Dakota are faced with the challenge of finding a more effective way of combining cultural training with agricultural instruction if the state's resources are to be prop- erly developed.” tions Yet No Although not definite recommenda- tions have been made, the commis- sion has studied the plans at Botti- neau School of Forestry, and the Ellendale and Mayville state normal schools with this thought of conver- Oscar Chaput, principal wit- ness for the government in its trial of former Gov. William Lan- ger and three associates on charges of conspiring to obstruct the operation of an act of con- gress, is shown leaving the fed- eral courtroom in Bismarck at the completion of his testimony Chaput previously had pleaded guilty to the indictments, _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1985 [Prosecution Witness | FLJERS PRONOUNCE Mussolini’s Pet Has Pet, Too THEIR THIRD STRATO PLIGHT SUCCESSFUL Greatest Hazard Was Counter- acting Down Draft at Takeoff in Bowl (Copyright, 1935, by Associated Press) By CAPT. ORVIL A. ANDERSON Kimball, 8. D., Nov. 12.(#)—The third stratosphere balloon flight sponsored by the U. 8, army and the National Geographic society, as far as Capt, Albert W. Stevens and 1} were ablé to tell, was a success in! every way. We went up 173,000 feet and could have gone 5,000 feet higher in safety. We experienced no discomfort al-/ though temperatures outside were as low as 76 degrees below zero. Inside the gondola temperatures went no lower than 23 degrees above zero. From a study of maps we were con- vinced Sunday that satisfactory con- ditions prevailed after six weeks of waiting. We gave the order to start infating about 2 p. m. Monday. - Cuts 2 Hours Off Flight ‘We were not able to get off until about 7 a. m. cutting two, hours off our flight. This made it mandatory that we eliminate the intermediate stop at 53,000 feet, and that we go in- stead straight to the top, which we did. ‘We cleared -the rim of the bowl by about 50 feet. While her father molds the destiny of Italy, and her twa big brothers and brother-ine law risk death in their planes over Ethiopia, Anna Maria Mussolini {s apparently the picture of serenity he plays with the family pet in her Northern Italy home. She's It Duce’s youngest child. sion in mind, Largen said. “A careful study is being given to the governing mechanism of higher education,” Larsen explained. “The governing board is a tax expenditure control device. Through establish- ment of a thoroughly representative governing board, the commission is confident that unified and coordi-| QUINS WILL BE TOLD satisfactory to taxpayers, educators and students can be evolved . FROST BLAMED FOR to Act in Forthcoming Motion Picture Slices in Estimates of Potato wets! and Sorghum Production Outstanding “Be yourselves, ladies.” They won't be called upon to act. Washington, Nov. 12.—(?)—Early October frost is blamed Wy the agri- cultural department for sharp reduc- tions in harvest prospects for several late crops. A decrease of 12,190,000 bushels in potato production from the Oct. 1 es- timate, and a decline of 16,615,000 bushels in grain sorghum yields were outstanding forecasts in the Nov. 1 report issued Monday. Total potato production was esti- mated at 354,000,000 bushels, corh- pared to 385,421,000 bushels harvested last year and a five year 1928-32 erage of 363,367,000 bushels. The reduced estimate, already an- ticipated by the trade, has resulted in price increases during the past 30 days of from 50 to 100 ‘per cent for some varieties of potatoes. tract. differences in their temperaments. doctor who preserved their lives.” ical miracle of xeeping them alive. is entitled “The Country Doctor.” bushels under the Oct. 1 estimate. Officials said the indicated reduc- tion in potato yield would have no material effect on the compulsory po- TO ‘BE YOURSELVES’ nated system of higher education|Babies Won't Be Called Upon Hollywood, Nov. 12—(#)—The Di- onne quintuplets, signed this week for CROPS R their first feature-length motion pic- ture, will hear only one command from the director the day they start It will be the French equivalent of “The story is designed with two purposes,” said Darryl Zanuck, pro- duction chief at 20th Century-Fox studio, who placed them under con- “Naturally, the emphasis will be on the babies, the routing of their daily lives, the gradually-developing “But almost equally important, from the standpoint of plot will be the ef- fect of the children on the commun- ity where they were born, and on the Title-character of the picture is Dr. A. R..Dafoe, who performed the med- | Zanuck disclosed that inhabitants|Dates of the 1936 convention of North of Callander, Ontario, Canada, birth- place of the “quints,” probably will be “cast” for roles in the picture, which |set Jan. 14 and 15, Chief of Police Ed. About 50 feet over the rim, a stitt| down draft struck the balloon, making it necessary to discharge 750 pounds of ballast rapidly in order to avoid being thrown down against’ the cliff. This was the toughest spot on our flight. . After reaching an altitude of about 15,000, feet I slowed our rate of ascent so that Captain Stevens could ing our air purifier. hours after our takeoff. As this was the approximate height desired, I stopped the balloon and maintained that altitude for an hour and 40 min- utes, starting down at 12:30 p. m. I attempted to pick out stars in the heavens, but was unable to see any. The moon was not out yet. The sky was a dark blue, tinged with purple. ;him but to write the platform. Beneath us, nearly 14 miles away, the earth lost much of its detail and the horizon was an indistinct blur. The instruments were all working perfectly. The balloon functioned, vention than in the last one. A tabulation Tuesday disclosed than in 1932, chief losers in the new allocation votes, It will have 24 instead of 28. Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 12.—(4)—|tral western states four. . Dakota Sheriffs and Peace Officers sota, 24 to 22; North Dakota, 10 to association in Grand Forks have been South Dakota, 10 to 8. Hough announced Tuesday. Sheriff) Peter McArthur of Cass county is Tuskind of Fargo is secretary. {at high altitudes. DEMOCRATS MUFFLE ROOSEVELT'S FOES rig the instruments which trailed un: (North Dakota Party's Voice Is derneath the gondola ropes. After we had both returned to the gondola, Cut From 10 to 8 by twe eo the ports and started up Convention Edict again. All Instruments Working We then started what instruments! Washington, Nov. 12.—(?)—States were not already in operation, includ- | from which comes the loudest Demo- cratic clamor against President Roose- ‘We reached 73,000 feet four hours | velt’s New Deal policies will have less voice in the party’s 1936 national con- states will have fewer votes in 1936 Politicians generally believe Presi- dent Roosevelt's forces will control the convention, not only to renominate Georgia, home of New Deal critic Gov. Eugene Talmadge, is one of the Under a resolution adopted at the The states that lose include Minne- “| 1936 LAFAYETTE ‘595 Many engines now submitted to the U. S. Department of Commerce for president of the association, and C. A.iapproval are designed for operation AMERICAN BUSINESS BOOM 1S FORECAST British Expert Sees Pickup First in: Consumers. Good, He Tells Bankers New - Orleans, Nov. 12.—(#)—Major |i. L. B. Angas, British boom fore- caster, predicted Tuesday the coming of an. American ‘tidal wave of recov- ery and prosperity.” In a speech before the annual con- vention of the American Bankers as- sociation, Major Angas. declared: “Confidence already has returned to this country; fear has declined; mone- tary velocity will increase. The re- {sult will be an immediate boom—first, in consumer goods; second, in plant and machinery; third, in the housing industries. “America, in fact, has at last turned the corner, and even fears of elections and foreign wars are unlikely to check the tidal wave of recovery and pros- perity.” He asserted an abundant volume of money and credit exists for revival but that the fund is turning over only about 25 times a year. N. D. One of Six States division is to be the Lenmar of Not Giving Relief Aid “tne American rs mid. “The In Hopkins, which he gave to President Roosevelt, showed Tuesday that North Dakota was one of six states failing to contribute state funds for relief the five years ending June 30, 1935. The other five were Florida, gia, Nebraska and North and Carolina, The total from-the tributing states was set at 632,045,- 373, Minnesota supplied $4,276,762 and Montana $506,959. Ethel Schlasinger to Direct N. D. Writers Appointment of Ethel Schlasinger, Streeter, as state director of writers’ projects under the works progress ad- ministration for North Dakota has been announced by Henry 2. Alsberg. director of federal writers’ projects. Chief undertaking of the writers’ eff Be Sure to See—— ' “TONS OF 'MONEY” A Bismarck Community Players’ Presentation TONIGHT Admission: 48c, plus tax 8:30 City Avditeriam SALES OF LaFAYETTE CLIMB AS BUYERS COMPARE IT WITH OTHER 21, of 520 Main LOW-PRICED CAR tem lets buyers see with their own eyes that LaFayette is the ONLY car in the lowest- price field with all of the VITAL engineering features of the highest-priced cars! towns across America as X-Ray Sys- @ When you see the X-Ray Sys- tem in a Nash-LaFayette show- Lead and everything went on(jast convention, the old Leese ipenitameyio ts mah eieiiea tow Wetec ace schedule. rule giving each state two votes for . 4 >, 3 short weeks ago! oF) CERES each senator and member of the penhiniere enlace ei phinires onenieanier recap Sheriffs to Convene house, will again be in force in 1936. Som S lg Mela pisthies se a hares At Forks in J The solid south will lose 18 votes EVEN TWOOF THESE PILE-DRIVERS, oe ibe Bb) Leste Orks IN JANUAPLy j under the new allocation. The west from Chicago ’ backfield, would fill the priced cars...then you'll under- its price! The Nash Motors will lose 20; the east 12; andthe cen- front seat of any other low-priced car! stand why sales’ have doubled Company, ‘Kenosha, Wisconsin. end up f.0.b. foce ion, iw 6S C1. 7. TIME PAYMENT PLAN. Simple, conenient terms. Ne lower rates in 1936 Nash““400"$665and up, f.0. b. factory. 1936 Ambassadors in two series,$835and up, f.0.b. factory. "4s"! COPELIN MOTOR COMPANY Phone 318 Bayer Aspirin ive Dec. 1. do the damage to clothing. = ~ — : This asitly knows how to “GO PLACES” —and get things done! They have a rule for every Say’ of the month—this friendly fam- ily who get things done—who al- ’ ways have places te go and the time aud energy It takes. On the first and last of the month—and many times each day In between —they remember to : USE THE TELEPHONE — es control law which becomes effec- The invisible larvae of the clothes moth, and not the moths themselves, * {since faint on the western prairies, is CASTAWAYS RESCUE} =” Typhoon Brewing 1,200 Miles East of Rock Where 54 Are Marooned Manila, P. I., Nov. 12.—(#)—A far- away typhoon reared its head Tues- day as the U. S. Navy sent another destroyer to the rescue of 54 persons including five women passengers ma- rooned on a wave-lashed rock by the wrecking of the British freigher, Sil- verhazel, However, naval officers expected to \have the entire party rescued long before the typhoon, forming off the island of Yap 1,200 miles due east of the wreck, reached the Philippines. Government forecasters here said it would be two or three days before the tropical storm would strike the islands. The destroyer Blumer which left Manila at 2:10 p. m., with special life saving equipment, was due early Wed- nesday at the scene of the wreck, 350 miles f1 Manila by water at the southern tip of Luzon Island. It will join the destroyer Peary which attempted in vain all day Mon- day to reach the castaways in small boats. The Peary, arriving at the wreck scene early Tuesday, was in communi- \eation with those aboard the Silver- hazel who had scrambled to tempor- ary safety on rocks. It was not learn- jed here whether those on the rocks |ineluded the passengers, but an un- signed message received by Henderson said “so far all is well.” Parker Will Reduce Private Bison Herd| ~ y | Minot, N. D., Nov. 12.—()—Pound- ling of Buffalo hoofs, a sound long dropping into another diminuendo— for the sake of a duck’s quack. Sportsmen friends of Clarence H. Parker, owner of North Dakota’s last remaining private Buffalo herd, look- ed forward Tuesday to his invitation to @ “Buffalo shoot” to kill off about ‘half the shaggy beasts. The projected creation of the huge upper Souris area into marshlands tor a waterfowl habitat, taking in Army. Bomber Crash con: © 193), Lioaxtr a Mans Tosucco Co, | "Thay di ain theyre milder and taste better i ‘and Ive heard: