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| ‘Additional Markets | cto MINNEAPOLIS STOL Minneapolis, r First Bank Stock 14%. Northwest Banco 9%. CHICAGO STOCKS (By the Asxocinted Presa) Midwest 25 McGraw that speaks from the deep heart of one glorious woman to the secret hearts of all women, Katharine HEPBURN —in— “A Woman Rebels” Her greatest role si “Little Women” Opens tomorrow at the CAPITOL Capitol Last Times Today Startling! Sensational! RALPH BELLAMY. ; MARIAN MARSH > ISABEL JEWELL. —Added— Three Stooges Comedy Vitaphone Vaudeville ‘News Events” FRI, - SAT. - A woman loves with all her and pays with all her soul! S heart {/TUGWELL, POLICIES | WILL BE RETAINED, | SUCCESSOR AVERS Long Range Farm Tenancy | Program to Be Continued by : Agricultural Bureau Washington, Nov. 19.—(4%—Policies of Rexford G. Tugwell will go march- ing on, it was indicated Thursday, even though the handsome “brain truster” will not be here to admin- ister them. i | For instance, there is the farm ten- ancy program, which already has been | started by Tugwell and which ts bound; up with theories of “paternalistic” ‘ government so roundly denounced by anti-New Dealers. Dr. Will W. Alexander, Tugwell] as- tant slated to fill his chief's shoes] Resettlement administrator, has} | come out for a plan which is a vir- tual continuation of the Tugwell un- dertaking. Dr. Alexander, former Methodist minister who is down in the southern sharecropper belt looking over the sit- ‘ vation first hand, sald last night the program should be a long range one. in which farmers would be closely supervised as the governiyent helps ‘ them to rise from the statt* of farm tenants to land owners. Tugwell’s agency already has ac-; | quired 74,000 acres of farm land in ! southern states, with the idea of! permitting tenants to buy it, over a ‘long period and under close super- vision. Tugwell’s resignation as Resettle- | ment administrator and under-secre- | tary of agriculture was due at least} \ i | | { | | | in part, friends intimated, to the fact||_ that he was tired of being the target of anti-administration criticism, | Secretary Wallace, his immediate superior, paid him a handsome com- pliment last night, saying: “Men of | Tugwell’s courage and insight are rare. We shall all regret that he no longer is in government.” | Born in Missouri The successor to Rexford Guy Tug- well, Resettlement administrator, was) born on a farm three miles south of Morrisville, Mo., July 15, 1884, and a ; brother, John, still lives on the old homestead, The clergyman and social worker, a graduate in 1908 of the old Scar- | ritt-Morrisville college, has not been home since his mother died six years progress excitedly. “He had more humanity in him; {than any man I ever knew,” Joe Jones, retired rural mail carrier, said Thurs- CI “For more than 15 years, Mr. Alexe ander never missed a week writing to his mother, no matter where he was.! ''The letters didn’t stop coming until) j his mother died.” { (CONTINUED) from page one N. D. Enjoys Indian Summer as Cold Grips Eastern U. S. Washington in New. Hampshire to be- low freezing in southernmost Conncc- | ticut. River Freezes Over ‘The Saint John river froze for 20/ miles between Saint Anne and Grand | | Falls, the earliest freezing ever re- | corded there. | New York state was gripped by cold | tor the fourth straight day with tem-! peratures in most sections hovering between 10 and 18 degrees. In New | York city the mercury dropped to 18 ;Gegrees by midnight for the coldest | reading ever listed for the date, | Five fishermen whose battered tug sank in Lake Erie owed their lives to efforts of coast guardsmen. Two crippled ships, one damaged in collision and the other by heavy | seas, limped toward Atlantic ports. | The 125-foot freighter Bertie E. Tull | was damaged in a collision with the | tanker New York, and the Baltimore | | Mail liner City of Newport News had its rudder torn partly away by waves. SH GRAIN »—Cash wheat. so. 8 mixed 2-07; sample Brade 1716-18 M4: ; sample ed 65-80 timothy | clover sced 23,00-39.00 ew. LINDBERGH IN IRELAND | Dublin, Irish Free State, Nov. 19.— \(P)—Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, ar- rived by plane from England Thurs- day and left immediately for western veland, It was understood his flight |was in connection with projected ago but the town has followed his| ? THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1 War Is Not All for a Dictator Plans for death-dealing war machines to crush enemies do not occupy all the attention of a ropean dictator. For in- stance, Chancellor Kurt Schuschnigg, Austria's ‘strong man,” is shown above in a kindly mood with one of the 120 children he entertained in his Vienna home recently.’ Schuschnigg is fond of children and often has parties for groups of them from various parts of the nation | Weather Report | | R FORE, eplenntek and vicinity: Idy tonight, becoming colder Friday. Partly unsettled ‘orth Dakota: Partly cloudy tonight, becoming unsettled’ Friday; somewhat warmer southeast i treme west. te For South Ds becoming cloudy Fri perature tonight; ¢ For Montana night and 4 i tisina tem- der Friday, nerally fair to- except unsettled somewhat colder north-central, warmer ex- eme northwest portion tonight, Vor Minnesota: Partly cloudy’ to- night and Fri rising temperature in central and” south — portions Friday, except in ex- centered ves, Edmon- 9.64 inches while a high pres- a extends from the Pacific tes southwestward y, Bois tures droppe Gre Lakes region, middle y and at most places Mountain states, but s are higher from the Dakotas northwestward over the jan Provinces. Generally fair weather prevails in all sections. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.25. Reduced to 30.0) Missouri 24 hour over the temperature tt Sunrine, 7:53 a. m. Sunset, 5:04 p, m. PRECIPITATION For Bismarck Station: Total this month to date . Normal, this month to date . Total, January Ist to date . Normal, January 1st to date Accumulated deficiency to d: BISMARCK, clear’. Devils Lake, clear Williston, n Valley Cits WEATHER 27 CTHER POINTS Amarillo, Texas, clear Boise, Idaho, clear Calgary, Alta. eldy Chicago, Ill, clea Denver, Colo.. clear Towa, cl Dodge City, Kans, clear 2 Edmonton, Alta 3 Havre, Mont. ©! Helena, Mont Huron, 8. Da Kamloops, B. Kansas City, M Los Angeles, Cal., clear Miles City, Mont. clear 3 Qu'Appelle, Sas Rapld City, S. Spokane, Wash ‘aay el The sé¢cond highest peak in world is unnamed. Towering 28,250 feet in Tibet, it is designated on maps ‘North Atlantic air service. PARAMOUNT; TODAY - FRI. as “K2.” - SAT. - SUN. WORTH WAITING FOR... AT POPULAR PRICES! Greatest entertainment in screen history . -. three lavish hours of scenes and ity ~* cer? 300 girls! LUISE |. POWELL: Lov. *RAINER My Notice—Time of Shows and Prices —FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY— SHOWS DAILW AT 2:30 - 6:30 - 9:30 WORLD'S GREATEST SCREEN ENTERTAINMENT! The Same Show Thousands Paid $2.20 a Seat to See! ADMISSION—MATINEES 26c; ALL EVENING 4c CONTINUE from page one: Mandan Realtor Is ‘Sold’ on Missouri Bottoms Irrigation have it picked over and sell it for seed. Good native seed corn is scarce | and he expects it to bring a good price. How much, he will not guess, but he expects to be well satisfied. The potatoes are fine, good-look- ing tubers of two new varieties, the Chippewa and the Warba. The lat- ter matured well, but the.Chippewas were a little green when dug. But the price for potatoes, as everyone knows, 4s pretty good. And these would sell even if the market were worse than it is for they are prize | stock with hardly a runt in the lot. The muskmelons (cantaloupe to some folks) were irrigated from the beginning and grew like nobody's business. They were placed on the market as they got ripe and the cash return was “between $200 and $225.” The plot on which they were grown was slightly less than an acre. And here's the significant part of the whole business. The muskmelons almost paid for the cost of irrigating the entire 62 acres, Sylvester irri- gated a patch of squash and they did well but that isn’t considered in the 936 cash returns. family likes squash. Project Cost Him $300 The cost of the project, over and above what it would have been for |dry. land farming, Sylvester places at ($300 for the entire tract. This in- The Sylvester cludes the cost of leveling the land| and making the ditches, additioral labor and fuel cost. It also includes an amortization charge against the eight-inch pump used to draw water from the Heart river. A tractor fur- nished the power. The work was done by hired labor, |since Sylvester directs operation. of the farm himself. There was. no magic about it. The successful com- bination was one of land, water and climate. But it paid big dividends. The experiment was so successful that Sylvester is thinking about putting farm. And now for some observations which may help others who may ke tempted to “go thou and do likewis: Irrigation was begun by Sylvester jin 1934 at the urging of ‘on, Bob, | mow located in West Virginia. Bob sold his dad on the idea, laid out: the small way. It was successful. Didn't Irrigate in 1935 | Sylvester did not irrigate in 1935— | but he wishes he had. There was | plenty of rain early in the summer and when the rain stopped coming water on 209 acres of his 435-acre) levels and got the work started in a, about the Fourth of July Sylvester was always hopeful there would be more. There wasn't. Now Sylvester wishes he had started irrigation as soon as the dry season set in. He was deceived about the 1936 sea- son. Snow was heavy last winter and Sylvester, in common with others, | looked forward to a good season. In- | stead of starting his pump he kept hoping for rain. That is why the first cutting of alfalfa was light, why some of the potatoes didn’t ripen and why the corn didn’t produce more. Next year he is going to start early. | He isn’t going to trust Mother Nature. Early in the epring his pump will be chugging away putting the life-giving water on the soil so it will be in per- | fect condition for seed. | There's one thing about it. He's never scen too much rain in North Dakota, S. D. FAVORS DIVERSION Huron, 8S. D., Nov. 19.—(#)—The Greater South Dakota’ association Thursday recommended the associ- ation “endorse impounding and -di- verting of flood waters of the Mis- souri river to the James river valley ; oi South Dakota.” 1 * Aviators have found plant disease spores at altitudes of 18,000 feet. Dis- | eased plants can infect healthy crops | \ hundreds of miles away. Sails For England Helen Jacobs, International tennis star, is shown posed in the window of her stateroom aboard the liner Aquitania as she sailed from New York for England. (Associated Press Photo) GRC ONT HC TCL CETTE S Demonstrating To All America . * _ That Economy Begins At Home And At Commercial College To Entertain Pupils college is giving this year for Prenat and former students. Dancing to music of the Gullickson podiediag will start at 9 o'clock and continue until midnight. William G. Ellis, faculty sponsor for the party, especially invites all former students to attend. The student as- sisting committee is composed of Edgar Moos and the Misses Emma Gruger- beck and Viola Hess. ——_—_—_——— TO-NITE first showing “Among the Breakers’’ Community Players’ opening offering. City Auditorium Curtain 8:15 BALCONY 35c Main Floor &@c; Gallery 25 Warde fovember | HOME SALES aM tac p cute (au Priscillas, Lace Panels, Cottage Sets lin Wards Great November CURTAIN SALE! eh 131) ¢ PAIR Regular $1.39 Ward values sensational root roof that you'll save more at Wards November - Home Sales! These curtains are side—wide enough to criss-cross! 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