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- @ropping UL. TRADE POLICY IS STUDIED BY N. D. Planning Board Probing Effects of Canadian Agreement on State Agriculture Analysis of the effect upon agricul- ture in North Dakota and the United Btates as a result of the Canadian- American trade agreement is being undertaken this week by the state planning board, J. P. Cain, Dickinson, chairman, said Thursday. 5 “We know from U, 8. figures that importations of certain agricultural commodities into North Dakota and the United States have increased sub- stantially since the 1936 agreement,” Chairman Cain asserted. “We also ‘know imports and exports of agricul- tural items, upon which duties were reduced by the agreement, almost bal- anced in 1938, whereas exports into ‘Canada led the preceding year.” Exports of non-agricultural pro- ducts in Canada led the United States imports from Canada during the last two years, whereas the situation was exactly reversed for all agricultural products, Cain said. He asserted grains, feeder cattle and potatoes comprise agricultural commodities which are most likely to have a direct bearing upon the North Dakota producer. An example of paradoxical situa- tions which frequently arise in North Dakota was the situation in 1935 when various agricultural interests here sought simultaneously; an increase in tariff on Canadian rye which was coming into the state in large volume, and, waiving entirely of existing duty on feed grains and hay, which were needed to supplement a short feed crop. Cain explained that advantages and disadvantages of the tariff structure as a whole and existing trade agree- ment in particular, will be carefully weighed in the current study. The American consumption of ba- manas exceeds 5,000,000,000 bananas daily. : ‘New Way to Hold Loose FALSE TEETH Firmly in Place! Do false teeth annoy and bother by ipping when you eat, talk or laugh? Just sprinkle a little FASTEETH on your plates. This new, tasteless alkaline powder hi eth firm and comfortable all day. 7m. my, gooey, pasty taste. Ma t pleasant. Get FASTEETH today at any good drug store. Accept no sub- etitute.—Advertisement. all the facts pee in and see CITY MILK SUPPLY CLEANER IN AUGUST Violations of .Butterfat and Bacteria Regulations Fewer, Inspector Reports Fewer violations of dairy regula- tions were cited during August than in July, Vincent Kavaney, city milk inspector, reported to the Bismarck city commissioners Monday. Fifty-eight violations were reported in August as compared to 252 cited in July, Kavaney reported. Most viola- tions were chalked up to insufficient butterfat content or excessive bacteria, counts, he said, Butterfat content of milk speci- mens analyzed during August ranged from 8.8 to 5.3 per cent, with bacteria counts varying from 2,000 to 10,400 per 1 c.c. while the butterfat content of raw milk ranged from 36 to 5.5 in| Per cent and the bacteria count from 9,000 to 180,000. Butterfat content of pasteurized cream varied from 30 per cent to 36 Better food protection brings bigger savings! See how food savings alone averaged $7.58 a month in official Proving Kitchens. ‘Westinghouse LARSEN’S “Home Appliance Shop” 304 Majin Phone 407 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1987 This is Sahib, who eats 12 pounds of raw beefsteak every day and appears in Captain Ro- man Proske’s featured tiger act with the Polack brothers Bis- marck-Mandan Indian Shrine cir- cus in the Memorial. building every night up to and Including next Tuesday. You might think this is a pose. Captain Proske knows it isn't. One of Sahib’s friends who ap- pears in the act nearly bit the captain to death in Los Angeles last winter. (Story on page 1) per cent, as compared to a range of from 32 per cent to 38 per cent for raw cream, while bacteria count of pasteurized cream was 4,000 to 25,000 in comparison to 10,000 to 160,000 for unpasteurized cream, Denhart Attorney Is Threatened by Letter Bowling Green, Ky., Sept. 23.—(#)}— Disclosure that an attorney for Brig. Gen. Henry H. Denhardt, victim of one of Kentucky’s most sensational siayings, had received three threat- ening letter heightened interest in the case Thursday. The disclosure came as this city pre- pared to pay final respects to a home town boy who became one of the Blue- | grass state’s outetanding political and military figures, only to die in a hail of bullets fired by the brothers of the woman the commonwealth alleged Denhardt slew. Rodes K. Myers of Bowling Green, who was with Denhardt when the [61-year-old “stormy. petrel” of Ken- tucky politics was shot down on the main street in Shelbyville Monday night, revealed he was warned in one note “not to come up.” He expressed belief the veiled threat 1eferred to the examining trial sched- uled Friday at Shelbyville for the brothers—Jack, Roy and E. 8. Garr— charged with murder. Pirate’s Arrest Stirs Diplomatic Uneasiness Bayonne, France, Sept. 23.—(#)— Major Julian Troncoso, identified as the scar-faced leader of a piratical band that tried to steal a Spanish government submarine, left Bayonne Thursday under heavy guard to face conspiracy charges in Brest. The arrest of Troncoso, one of Gen- eralissimo Francisco Franco's military governors, created a diplomatic un- easiness between Insurgent Spain and France. Yanks to Take Series Ticket Applications New York, Sept. 23.—(#)—Needing enly one victory—or one Detroit de- feat—to clinch the American League flag, the New York Yankees now are ready to accept applications for world series tickets. ‘The Yankees will sell reserved seats only in three-game strips for admis- sion to games one, two and six. The third, fourth and fifth contests will be played in the park of the Na- tional League winner. MR. MATTINGLY: “Upon my word, our whiskey's grand! T'm keen for bars that serve this brand!” MR. MOORE: “It's M & M—rich, smooth and mellow— And served at all good bars, old fellow!” step uP 10 Mattingly & Moore AT YOUR FAVORITE BAR OR TAVERN ... IT'S ALL WHISKEY! FRANKFORT BISTILLERIES, INCORPORATES, Loui LE 8 BAL ND PWA PROJECTS GIVE JOBS 10 200 | Will Be Employed on New Jobs at Dickinson, Ashley, Lis- bon, Jamestown North Dakota’s million-dollar Pub- jic Works Administration program will employ approximately 200 men for from three to eight months on four projects for which P.W.A, loans and grants have been approved, H. C. Knudsen, state director, said Thursday. Grants totaling $166,417 and loans amounting to $89,500 were made to Dickinson, Ashley, Lisbon and James- town, bringing the total estimated cost of the this year’s program to over $1,100,000, Knudsen stated. Employment for 40 men working in four five-hour shifts will be pro- vided at Dickinson where a grant allotment of $57,870 was made for paving and improving with a low-cost asphalt type pavement on 61 blocks of residential streets, Construction of a waterworks sys- tem including two wells; two pumps; two pump houses, one 50,000 gallon storage tank and a distribution sys- tem is planned at Ashley where & grant allotment of $35,730 was made for a project estimated to cost $79,- 400, Construction work is expected to employ 60 men for four months. A grant allotment of $49,000 and a loan of $60,000 has been made to Ransom county for the erection and equipment of a new court house at Lisbon. Approximately 40 men are expected to be employed for eight months in erecting the building of brick, tile and structural steel. Jamestown was allocated $23,727 in a grant and $29,000 loan for pav- ing and improving 36 blocks with low cost asphalt type pavement. About 60 men will be employed there for three months. Summer Leaves Its Temperature Behind Summer officially departed this clime at 6:13 a. m. today but left its temperatures as something to re- member it by. Autumn came into North Dakota on the back of damp looking clouds which failed to live up to their ap- pearance. The temperature ranged above 70. Six widely scattered points extend- ing from Beach to Fargo reported precipitation of less than .06 of an inch. There was a light shower in Bismarck at 8 a. m. which hardly settled the dust. The forecast is mostly cloudy and much cooler Thursday night with Friday fair and cooler. Hulterstrum Will Be at Game Protest Meeting Commissioner D. W. Hulterstrum of the state game and fish depart- ment left Thursday for Lisbon where he will meet with members of the Lis- bon Sportsmen's league who he said are “opposing the 1937 state game proclamation.” The commissioner said he hed re- ceived a few resolutions of sports- men’s clubs protesting opening the season on upland game birds in some localities but that he did not see how protests could “alter the proclamation this year.” FORMER KULM BOY DIES § Jamestown, N. D., Sept. 23.—Rev. J. W. Schindler of Linton will offictate at funeral services here Saturday afternoon for Nathan Otto, 8-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Felberg, before coming to Jamestown. ————— | Schoolgirl Stabs . | Self With Pencil gc. 2 eee Chicago, Sept. 23 —()— A sharply-pointed pencil pierced the heart of Marian Knippel, seven, when she stumbled and fell on the lawn at her home Wednes- day. She died a short time later ine hospital. Anxiety over her radio lessons —broadcast because infantile par- . alysis keeps the grammar schools closed—led indirectly to the freak accident. Marian was helping her mother when the broadcast was on Wed- nesday and when she tuned in it was over. said. “I'll go over, to Billy’s house (her cousin) and get his notes.” She sharpened her pencil, took @ pad of paper, skipped eagerly out of the house and across the lawn—and fell. Physicians said the pencil point stabbed the heart. 5,110 PRIZES WEEKLY it’s Easy! It’s Fun! Enter Today! Anybody can win! All you do is write 25 words on ‘“WHY I LIKE RCA VICTOR ELEC- TRIC TUNING!” There's a valuable prize waitin; for you! It’s easy to win—ani fun, too—in this $50,000 RCA Victor Electric Tuning Contest! So enter —and win one of the 5,110 ly prizes! RCA Victor is offering $10,000 in prizes week in order to e you familiar with its new- somany weekly prizes—with your part in the contest so amazingly simple—you have a wander chance to win! 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