The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 12, 1936, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1986 ROOSEVELT 10 SET $13,000,000 ASIDE FOR GROP LOANING President Says It Is Not Prac- ticable to Make Entire Sum Available Washington, March 12.—(?)—Presi- Gent Roosevelt assured the senate agricultural committee Thursday he would make $13,000,000 of emergency funds available for crop production Joans effective March 20 and more money up to $30,000,000 as needed. In a letter sent the committee and Tead to its members by Chairman Smith (Dem., 8S. C.), the presiden: said it was “not practicable” to make the entire $30,000,000 immediately available. ‘The assurance from the president appeared to make more unlikely than ever any action by the committee to- ward recommending over-riding of the president's veto of the $50,000,000 seed or feed loan bill. At the time of his veto, Mr. Roose- velt promised to set aside $30,000,000 of relief funds for 1936 loans. He al- ready has made $7,000,000 available. Farmers may borrow up to $200 for seed and feed. The government takes @ first lien on the crop as security. People’s Forum oe Note)—The Tribune wel- ers bjects of inter- ing with contro- baabeoe he which unfairly, or wnich offend good taste ane fair pluy will be returned to the writ- ers. All letters MUST be signed. If you wish to use a udonym, sign the Dseudonym first and your own @ beneath it. We reserve the right to delete such parts of letters as may be necessary to conform to this, Lalas ie sage to re- quire eae ° rite and ymake it must be limited to not more than 600 words. ‘SHE'S ‘AGIN ’EM’ Bismarck, N. D., 3 March 12, 1936. Editor, Tribune: Why spoil the coming Territorial Days Celebration with whiskers? Of course, some of the men in those “good old days” did wear whiskers, although few of them did so from choice and still less by choice of their wives or sweethearts. Rather it was because razors and shaving equip- ment were cumbersome to lug around and not very satisfactory when used. ‘There are plenty of other ways in which our men folks may try to im- itate the old timers, particuarly in clothes, worn just for the few days of the celebration without imposing up- on the whole town for months the aight of walrus moustaches, billy goat chins and general hairy dog faces, both unsightly and unsanitary. ‘The idea is already old, worn and proven unsatisfactory in other places, adding little reality to the appearance of genuiness and much to be gro- tesque. We should not try to make folks believe our good old pioneers were a The wife whom a New York cil court over his fortune. Contest Will of Il]-Fated Oil Man millionaire divorced in Reno last June, and the girl he married three hours afterward, will fight in Mrs. Marion Alexander Hart, left above, first wife and mother of the three children of Frank C. Hart, be- low, contests the quarter share he willed to Mrs, Muriel Constance Woodworth Hart, above right, Hart’s second wife. with 16 others in an Arkansas airliner of the first Mrs, Hart, who alleges the divorce obtained by Hart was invalid, also received a quarter share of the oil man’s estate. Hart was killed rash in January. Children jeffective had doubled. RECIPROCAL TRADE POLICIES ATTACKED Dairy Farmers Told They Have Already Suffered Losses Due Treaty Minneapolis, March 12.—()—Re- ciprocal trade policies of the Roose- velt administration, Charles W. Hol- man, secretary of the National Milk Producers federation, asserted Thurs- day, already have caused heavy losses to American dairy farmers. “Imports of Canadian dairy pro- ducts,” Holman said, “are crowding in and even before the treaties became In January. after the treaty with Canada had gone into effect, cheese imports to- taled 740,000 pounds against 150,000 pounds for the same month in 1935.” Branding slashing of tariffs an “‘un- bunch of rag-a-muffins, but. were |, Brandin folly,” Holman said “prices we should endeavor to picture them at their best and the average whiskers of dairy products and incomes of dairymen have been opened needlessly our men would grow in a few short |to attack.” weeks would be a very poor imitation Holman was principal speaker at Nazi Comes Off | Third in Duels Ae tertiles Budapest, March 12. — (2) — Andras Mecser, the leader of the Hungarian Nazi movement and known as “Hitler’s personal rep- resentative in Budapest,” finished @ poor second in successive duels with two journalists in the offi- cers’ casino Thursday. The first journalist slashed Mecser’s eyebrow with a sabre, the second sliced his ear. Mecser had challenged them after he caused the ejection of newspapermen from a cia he was addressing. Anamoose Captures Independent B Title Anamoose, N. D., March 12.—()— Anamoose won the district Class B in- dependent league basketball champ- ionship here Wednesday night by de- feating Goodrich 42 to 20. The con- solation title went to Velva which beat Balfour 42 to 29. In the semi-finals Velva lost to Goodrich 41 to 33 and Anamoose defeated Balfour 54 to 29. of those few really well cared for|the annual meeting of the Land O’!% (and yet unsightly) beards of our pioneers. And to look into the future and see the be-whiskered faces of our men is to receive one of those irre- futable impressions which requires more than a philospher to explain. T am sure most of the wives and mothers will agree with me when I say “Don't try to grow ’em.” WIFE AND MOTHER. ‘Number of mental patients requir- ‘ing institutional care is increasing at ee ae one annually: inthe prov ince of Ontario, Can. | Lakes Creameries, a cooperative asso- I ciation operating in the northwest. $30,000 Is Voted for Expenditures’ Probe Washington, March 12.—(@)—The senate Thursday voted $30,000 for an investigation of senatorial and presi- dential campaign expenditures. Re- quest for the fund was in a resolution by Senator Robinson (Dem., Ark.) the majority leader, who first had asked $100,000 for the committeer Just Received A carload of the new 1936 air-cooled ELECTROLUX Gas Refrigerators All models now on Siaplay at our Bismarck store, ‘Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. Bismarck - Mandan - Hebron - Dickinson Today’s Recipe Creamed Ham Creamed ham is as good on hot waffles as it is on toast. Or it can be served as pop-overs. ‘Two cups finely chopped cold cooked. ham, % cup minced celery, 2 table- spoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 |cups milk, 6 slices bread. Melt butter in sauce pan and stir in flour. When bubbling slowly add milk, stirring constantly. Add ham and celery and let cook until thick and smooth, stirring to prevent stick- ing. Season with pepper but no salt. Toast bread to a golden brown on both sides and arrange on a hot plat- ter. Pour over the creamed ham, gar- nish each piece with a sprig of par- sley and serve. If you are using ham croquettes to accompany a company luncheon, serve with froezn horseradish cream which is nothing more nor less than two tablespoons prepared horseradish and one tablespoon prepared mustard folded into one cup whipped cream and the mixture frozen in the freez- ing unit of your automatic refrig- erator or packed in six parts ice to one part salt and allowed to stand for three or four hours, A whale weighing 12,000 pounds once floated into the harbor of Cux- haven, Germany, and tied up ship traffic until it was removed. ee SHERIFF'S SALE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, COUN- TY OF BURLEIGH. IN DISTRICT COURT FOURTH JU- DICIAL DISTRICT. First National Bank of Bismarck, a corporation of Bismarck, North Dakota, Plaintiff, vs. May Hall and Isham Hall, wife and husband, Defendants. Notice is hereby given that by Vite tue of a special execution to me di- rected and delivered and now in my hands, issued out of the Clerk's office of the Fourth Judicial District Court in and for the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, upon a judgment rendered in said Court in favor of the said plaintiff and against the sald defendants, T have levied upon the following described real property, lying and situate in Burleigh County, North Dakota, and described as foliows, to- uth Half (8%) of the North- Quarter (NE%) of Section (19), Township Hundred ‘Thirly Bight.” (138). Range Seventy-nine (79) West of the Fifth Principal Meridian, and I shall on the 25th day of March, 1936, at the hour of two o'clock in the afternoon of said day at the front door of the Courthouse in the City of Bismarck, Burleigh County, North Dakota, proceed to sell all the right, title and interest of the above named defendants, May Hall and Isham wife and husband, in and to the abo’ described real property to satisfy t said judgment and costs amounting to $762.72, with interest thereon the legal rate from_and after the 3rd day of February, 1936, together with accrued costs atid accrul this execution and pul auction to the highest b bidder fo cash, Dated at Bismarck, North Dak this 26th ts Fe! Fr Sheri: Burielgh County, ota. a Carl R.- Kositzky, uty aoe O'HARE, cone Bismarck, North Sekkote, eal wad for Plaintift. BRITAIN VULNERABLE Jamestown College Speech Winners TO AIR RAIDS, AVERS SECRETARY OF WAR Duff Cooper Says Nation Faces Risk of Being Embroiled in War London, March 12.—()—Alfred Duff Cooper, secretary of war, bluntly warn- ed-the house of commons Thursday that Great Britain was more vulner- able than ever from an attack from the air and faced the risk of becom- ing embroiled in a European war. Duff Cooper moved the adoption of a budget for military appropriations and declared: “We should never proceed under the assumption that in no future con- flict on the continent could we be called upon by the government of the day to send, at a very short notice, a well-equipped force to take part in modern warfare against the best- equipped forces of the world.” “The invention of flying, far from rendering us more immune, has rob- bed us of a great part of our immun- ity. “More than ever are we part of the continent of Europe, less than ever can we realize upon any special ad- vantage from our insular position.” CHAILLAUX WARNS OF ‘RED’ MENACE Legion Leaders Declare There Are 28 Communist Dis- tricts in U. S. Grand Forks, N. D., March 12.—(>) —Communistic organization in the United States is being financed and accomplished through 600 affiliated and harmlessly-named organizations, Homer L. Chaillaux, national Amer- icanization commissioner of the American Legion, charged here at a joint meeting of the service clubs. Declaring there were 28 Commun- ist districts in the United States with paid organizers, drawing part of their money from Russia, and raising funds through “such rackets as the ‘free Tom Mooney’ movement and Scotts- boro defense,” Chaillaux said radi- cals were hoping to enter the church and colleges through these affiliated organizations. Chaillaux, explaining the legion program for youth, mentioned spon- sorship of boy and girl scout troops, legislative work to prevent curtail- ment of educational appropriations, the safety program and the junior baseball movement. He said these were but a few of the legion’s 28 ob- jectives for the benefit of youth. He charged that Soviet Russia was endeavoring to destroy in the young people of America their belief in God, and destroy in their minds “the American code of ethics.” Frank Rockwell Gets S. D. Forester’s Post Huron, 8. D., March 12.—(?)—Frank I, Rockwell, Valley City, N. D., active in forestry and agricultural enter- prises, both public and private, for 30 years, has been named extension for- ester for South Dakota, a newly cre- ated position in the state extension service. He will have headquarters at Brookings and will help promote tree and forestry projects of all kinds in the state. Graduating in 1906 from the Uni- yersity of Minnesota where he ma- jored in forestry and agriculture, Rockwell was in the U. 8. forest serv-. ice for nine years. He has worked on forestry and agricultural projects in Idaho, Oregon, Minnesota and North Dakota. From 1929 to 1935 he man- aged farms for land companies in North Dakota,’ Welford’s Williams Supporters to Meet Williston, N. D., March 12.—(?)— A Williams county convention of North Dakota Nonpartisan League Welford supporters has been called for Williston March 31 by R. J. Siver- son of Wheelock, Siverson, former vice chairman of the Williams League executive com- mittee, said the precinct meetings will be held March 17 at the same time as township meetings. Asking that all anti-league leaguers turn out for the meeting, Siverson said a new executive committee would be selected and a legislative slate would be picked. i R. C. FORSYTHE “The One-Trip Plumber” Plumbing - Heating - Gas-Fitting Estimates furnished—All work guaranteed—Done by Licensed and Qualified Plumbers. 719 Fifth St. Phone 1887 at the Hotel Patterson French Doughnuts and Coffee in the Main Dining Room, Silver Grill and Coffee Shop. Coffee—Piping Hot and al- ways the same at any hour of the day or night. BENNIE. STRANONESS Glen Odman, Beach, and Bennie Gen ODMAN Strandness, Larimore, fare prize wine ning orators and room-mates at Jamestown College where both are mem- bers of the Junior class, Strandness recently won the Old Line Oratorical contest and Odman was winner in the college Peace contest. These young men will represent their college in the state contest to be held on thi Jamestown College campus March 13th. Fargo Baptist Pastor Flays ‘Pagan Parents’ Minneapolis, March 12—(?)—Rev. Vance Webster of the Baptist church of Fargo, N. D., said “pagan parents” are the greatest hindrance in reaching the youth of the community in an ad- dress before a conference of Baptist ministers in Minneapolis Thursday. “The importance of reaching the pa- rents must not be forgotten if the children are to be brought the Christ- jan message,” Rev. Webster said. “Pastors must endeavor to build up their church by building up their Sun- day schools. To do this, they must go out and bring in the neglected youth of the community and estab- lish relations with heads of families in their work.” OBJECTIONS WITHDRAWN St. Paul, March 12—(?)—An order Louis R. Probst Will Address Legionnaires Louis R. Probst of Laramie, Wyo., national vice commander, is sched- uled as principal speaker at the sev- enth district American Legion meet- ing in Mandan March 25. Other speakers include Spencer Boise of Bis- marck, state commander; Roy Dow, Mandan, state vice commander, and Jack Williams of Fargo, state adjut- ant. Mandan ‘Crimeless’ For Second Month For the second consecutive month (Mandan police have failed to make ‘an arrest. There were no crimes com- mitted during January and February, according to Chief, of Police J. P. of the state railroad and warehouse\Buckley who reported 10 years had commission allowing additional stor- age time at terminal markets for grain shipments without charge ‘Thursday stood unchallenged follow- ing withdrawal of objections to the order by a group of commission firms and shippers. elapsed since a similar record had ‘been hung up. It has been estimated that there are now approximately 3500 vaudeville performers in theaters throughout the United States, Four Seed Meetings Planned in Burleigh Four more seed meetings are being] * held throughout Burleigh county in the next five days and others will be planned as rapidly as county roads are opened up to permit attendance of the farmers, County Agent H. O. Putnam said Thursday. Putnam went to Menoken Thursday afternoon for the first of the new series of meetings. A second is sched- uled to be held in conjunction with the Farmers’ Union meeting at Regan Friday; a third is set for the World ‘War Memorial building here Satur- day and the fourth will be held Mon- day at Baldwin. Putnam said that there would be no meeting of the county agricultural Planning committee here Saturday because of the bad condition of the roads, At all of the meetings Putnam is pointing out the necessity of making germination tests of all seed before Planting. In over 100 tests made in Bismarck the seed grain showed from 60 to 99 per cent germination, he stated, with durum wheat and bair- ley running lower than other grains. Father of Local Man Dies in Indianapolis Jean G. Hunt, 515 Thirteenth St., received word here Wednesday of the; death of his father, Blain A. Hunt, 74, which occurred at his home at Indianapolis, Ind., Tuesday. Funeral services were to be held at Ruthville, Ind., Thursday and burial was to be made in the family plot of the Ruth- ville cemetery. Besides his son here, Mr. Hunt leaves several other sons and daughters. His wife died several years ago. Jean Hunt was unable to attend the services because of the illness of his wife. LANGDON NATIVE DIES Portland, Ore., March 12.—(?)—Fu- neral services were held Thursday for Ernst Hebert, 29, native of Langdon, N. D., who died of pneumonia Tues- day. Hebert, a plumber, had lived here six years. His widow and four children survive. j Here’s a Bit of Whisker History Was Bismarck a whiskery town in the old days or was it not? This was one of the incidental arguments which raged on the general question of hirsute adorn- ment in Bismarck Thursday and The Tribune appealed to W. B. (Billy) Falconer, here since 1874, for information. “When they were building the railroad in here everyone wore whiskers,” recAlled the sage. “Men didn’t have the time or the equipment to shave. But after the work was done most of them shaved off their beards, though nearly everyone wore a mustache. Bismarck had two barbers in those days and they were kept busy trimming or chopping off beards. After the railroad got here only the eccentric people let their hair grow long. “A lot of the leading citizens wore full beards. John P, Dunn, the first druggist and an early- day mayor; Henry Suttle, who ran the woodyard, and Walter A. Burleigh, the territorial delegate, all had thém. “Charles McLean, George P. Flannery, Dr. Porter and a lot of others wore sideburns, “It might be all right for the younger people, but I'm not very keen about it.” AYR WINS TITLE Hillsboro, N. D. March 12—(P)— Ayr won the district three champion- ship of the Independent Basketball League of North Dakota last nigh:,. defeating Grandin 47 to 28 in the final. Stop Getting Up Nights MAKE THIS 25c TEST Use juniper oil, buchu leaves, etc., to flush out excess acids and waste matter, Get rid of bladder irrita- tion that causes waking up, frequent desire, scanty flow, burning and backache. Get juniper oll, buchu leaves, etc, in little green’ tablets called’ Bukets, the bladder laxative. In four days if not pleased go back and get your 25c, Get your regular sleep and feel “full of pep.” by Finney's Drug Store and Hall's Drug Store,—Advertisement, STATE FARM MUTUAL AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE CO. LEGAL RESERVE COMPANY RATED A-PLUS We can save you money. Call us for RATES. More cars insured with us than any company in the United States. Hundreds of custom- ers in Bismarck and Mandan. Let us figure with you and save you money. | Gerald Craig — 207 Bdwy. Phone 820 — H. C. Hanson . -».in the only car in the lower price range with the FAMOUS KNEE-ACTION RIDE" (Double-Acting, Self-Articulating) © crown of beouly, « fortress of safety -IN-HEAD ENGINE comfortable it is on any road and at any speed. VALVE-In ‘The same ride will also prqve that Chevrolet Giving even better ‘even less gos and oil ‘ end low monthly poyments. New Money-Saving G.M.A.C. TIME 0 PAYMENT PLAN Compore Chevrolet's tow delivered prices It is important to go places com- es, fortably, just as it is important to Teamworancs go swiftly, safely and economically. And Chevrolet for 1936 maintains its title of the only complete low-priced car by being the enly car in ite price range with the famous Knee-Action venience. Just so you'll Gli Ride*—the most bie kno’ Your Chevrolet dealer believes that “one ride is worth a thousand words.” He invites you to ride in the new Chevrolet at your earliest con- comfortal wn, know how much more for 1936 is safer, more spirited and more thrilling to drive than any other thrifty car. Because Chevrolet is the only car in its price range with New Perfected Hydraulic Brakes, Solid Steel gereees Turret Tops oar sion Valve-in-He: ine, and man; im- mgine, ry portant features. S¢e and ride in this car—today! 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