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THE BEACH REVIEW
r
PATqMmRN
~Ou'll have no moment of dark
despair If an old friend comes In to
see you unexpectedly and you're
dressed in this nicely tailored house
frock ! For it's especially designed to
flatter larger figures, and fashioned
along lines as chic as a street or
sports frock. The sleeves, cut in one
with that pretty, d ouble-poLnted
yoke, have a little Inverted pleat to
make them Jaunty and oh ! so com-
fortable to work In! And the neat
panel at the front sweeps all the
way from hem to yoke to give you •
long, slim line. If you'd be practical
as well as attractive, choose a gaily
printed cotton fabric, gingham, per-
cale, lawn or seersucker, as they
launder so beautifully and wear so
well
Pattern 9226 may he ordered only
tn sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32. 34, 36, 88,
40, 42 and 44. Size 36 requires 3K
yards 36 Inch fabric.
Complete, diagrammed sew chart
included.
Send FIFTEEN CENTS In coins or
for pattern.
tlte STYLE
and SLOE of each pattern,
8end your order to Sewing Circle
Pattern Department, 232 West Eight.
• ~tb~lSt~ New York.
.... JL, J~ ,J Ji
AND GET YOUR FEE
"Doctor, [ want you to look after
my office, while I'm on my vacatlen."
"But I've Just graduated, doctor.
I've had no exPerience."
"That's sl! Hght, my boy. My prao
tlce is strictly fashionable. Tell the
men to play golf and shlp the lady
patients off to Europe."~Lorain
(Ohio) Journal
All Taksn Care Of
Mrs. Smlth--What rent do you
PaY?
Mrs. Jones---I don't pay It.
Mrs. Smith--What weald It be if
you ~d pay It?
Mrs. Jones--A miracle,
:M~ra Consid.ratlon
Diner--Say ! Of all the vile, nau-
seous messes ever set before a man
to eat~
WalterwSh! You seem to think
we're your wife.
WASHINGTON.~(NCPW)~"Put up your pen, Mr. Reporter, until Mr.
Shearer returns to the witness stand," Senator Nye thundered, stopping the
wild and stormy proceedings of the Senate Munitions investigation as William
13. Shearer charged toward Senator Bone. The Washington Senator had
branded Shearer as cowardly for trying to "hide behind the skirts" of William
Randolph Hearst whose writings he had plagiarized in likening the "traitor.
ism" of such internationalists as Mary E. Woolly, Newton D. Baker, Raymond
E. Fosdick, and others to Benedict Arnold's. This he did In a libelous pamph-
let, "The Cloak of Benedict Arnold," which was paid for by the "Big Three"
Shipbuilding Companies as part of a "fast aud vicious campaign" to bull(
up the Navy by spreading scares of war with England and Jal~n. As the
undercover agent of the "Big Three" and furnished with secret documents by
the Navy, Shearer, called by a Committee Investigator an "international
arsonist," broke up the 1927 Geneva Disarmamen~ Conference, and thus helped
precipitate a naval race. He points to the present swollen appropriations of
the Navy as the proof of his success!
From: National Council for ~reventlon ef War
Washington, D. C.
FARMERS DEffl ADJUSTED
Editor's Note: The last session of the North Dakota Leglslaturn
passed a bill providing for Debt Adjustment Committees. This is
Senate BIH 280.
g
Washington, D. C. -- Over 40,000
farms have been eared from foreclo-
sure and debts aggregating $200,000,-
000 have been adjusted as a result of
the work of voluntary farm debt ad-
Justment committees, largely during
the past year, according to an esti-
mate ~released today (March 20) by
the Farm Credit Administration based
on reports from state debt adjustment
committees.
Forty-four states are now partici-
pating in the voluntary program to ad-
Just farm debts to a basis on which
farmers can continue to farm and
meet their payments, and there are
2,714 county farm debt adjustment
committees with over 13,000 commit-
teemen. Appointed by the state gov-
ernors, it is the business of these com-
mittees to give accurate information
and counsel to creditors and debtors
In connection with cases of excessive
farm debts; and, If possible, to ar-
range adjustments or extensions satis-
factory to both parties to prevent
[Qreclosurea. In most states the coun-
ty organizations work under the di-
rection of the state committee.
According to the Farm Credit Ad.
ministration report, the debt adjust-
ment work, which began spontaneous-
ly in the middle and western states in
1933 is now effective in almost the
entire country. Recently the work
has been especially active in the
southern states and in this section, as
elsewhere, according to the report, it
Is responsible for a decided improve-
ment in the confidence and debt-pay-
ing morale of farmers.
A report from B. W. DeBord, state
supervisor of the /Jlinois Agricultural
Conciliatory Committee, shows that
from April 1, 1933 through March 1,
1935, some 3.540 cases involving $34,.
000,000 of farm debts in Illinois have
been settled satisfactorily.
According to Mr. DeBord a great
deal of farm financing after the War
was dons through the medium of
mortgage note brokers through split-
note mortgages and in these cues the
committees have adopted the proce-
dure of having all creditors meet with
the debtor in an )pen committee
meeting and have found It to be the
most~ effective means of making a set.
tiement.,m Those in charge o~ the
liquidation of institutions holding
farm debts have, in the majority of
cases, extended full co-operation.'" Mr.
DeBord writes, "and the results of
the work thus far have been to re-
lease a great amount of frozen credit
for circulation for the payment of
other debts."
The work of farm debt adjustment
in Indiana, begun more recently, has
resulted in settlement of 354 cases in-
volving an indebtedness of $2,684,679.
L. R. Breithaupt of the Agricultural
,~dvisory Committee in Oregon, where
tl~e farm debt adjustment movement
has established a record for reconcil-
ing conflicting debtor and creditor in-
terests, estimates that "more than
3,500 farms have been saved and a
:oral adjustment of $2,500,000 elf acted.
"There is still work to be done in Ore-
gon," Mr. Bretthaupt writes, "but the
number of cases needing adjustment
may be numbered by hundreds today
and not by thousands as in 1933."
In California, the work of the debt
adjustment committees made good
headway during the last half of 1934,
and the report from T. C. Tucker,
chairman of the California State Com-
mittee, shows that 401 cases were set-
tled to the end of the year.
Farm debt conciliation which be-
gan in most of the southern states
during the past summer has made re-
markable progress. While the state
reports are concerned primarily with
the exceptional cases, in most in-
stances the successful settlement of
the initial cases immediately helped
to create a better understanding of
debtor-creditor problems, and pointed
the way to additional voluntary settle-
meats, perhaps a larger number of
which are settled before they reach
the committee stage than afterwardS.~
In Arkansas the local county com-
mittees have successfully handled 872
cases and have 821 additional In the
process of settlement, according to
the state report. A total farm indebt-
edness of $1,605,043 was settled for
$1,053,722.
John W. Batsman, chairman of the
Louisiana State Farm Debt Concili-
ation Committee, reports the settle-
ment of 182 cases representing over
half a million dollars of indebtedness
in the six weeks ending Feb. 25, 1935.
During February Just passed the
farm debt adjustment committees in
Georgia made 75 adjustments involv-
ing an indebtedness of $452,453, Chas.
J. Haden, chairman of the state com-~
mittee reports.
In the period from Jnne 12, 1934,
the date of organization of the work
in North Carolina, through December
31, 1934, the state committee reports
the settling bY local com~aittees of
1,062 cases involving farm debts
amounting to $3,089,686. The average
reduction in the case of debts written
down was 23~ cents on the dollar.
A check-over of reports of some. of
the most active committees in the
South lists the following objectives
of farm debt adjustment work: to
serve as a source of information ~md
counsel to distressed debtors and for
or~ditors; to re-establish the confi-
dence of farmers and work out equit-
able agreements so that good farmers
can pay their debts and not relinquish
their farms and homes; to stop un-
necessary foreclosures; to assist
closed banks in affecting equitable
settlements of farmers' accounts in-
volved in the banks' affairs; to pro-
vide, in cases where a composition of
debts seems impossible, an extension
agreement which will, in a sense,
freeze the debts pending further set-
tlement, provide for the efficient oper-
i atlon of the farm, assure the debtor of
fair treatment and provide for a fair
distribution of available income to pay
creditors; to direct debtors and credi-
tors to the proper court facilities
where voluntai'y mediation fails; and
to co-operate with the committees in
the same or different states when.
questions involving absentee credito:'s
are involved.
1935 MAY SEE END OF THE CO-OPERATIVE
GRASSHOPPER MENACE BROTHERHOOD
Removal of the grasshopper menace
which "has been threatening North
Dakota crops for the past several
years is possible in 1935, state and
~ederal entomologists believe, provid-
ing as well organized and effective
poisoning campaigns are carried on by
countieB this year as in 1934.
A redudtion of about 40 per cent in
the infestation was secured in the
state last year, says F. D. Butcher,
entomologist of the Agricultural col-
lege extension service, but the infes-
tation, although not as severe, con-
tinues to be quite general.
Migration of grasshoppers from
Canada and other areas la~e in the
st;miner Just before egg laying time
resulted in a re-infestation in some
For if there were some way try
which some of us could get tree apart
from others, If there were some way
by which some of us could have heav-
en while others had hell, if there
were some way by which ~,art of the
world could escape some form of the
blight and peril and misery of disin-
herited labor, then would our world
indeed be lost and damned; but since
men have never been able to separ-
ate themselves from one another's
woes and wrongs, since history is fair-
ly strtcken with the lesson that we
can not escape brotherhood of some
kind, since the whole of life is teach-
ing usthat we are hourly choosing be-
tween brotherhood In suffering and
brotherhood in good, it remains for u~
to choose the brotherhood of a co-op-
sections after the local hoppers had erative'worid, with all its fruits there-
been pretty thoroughly exterminated, of--the fruits of !eve and liberty.-
CroPs, however, were saved by the George D. Herren from The Manitoba
lmisoning work. Co-operator.
,, r ~,
any of you tell me what an
is?" asked the teacher In the
JUNIOR COLUMN
~ Directed by Mrs. G. H. Edwards,
State Junior Leader,
NEWS FROM THE FRONT
Lesson Books Arrived.
"Living With Power and Machines,"
the base lesson texts for Juniors, by
Mrs. O. H. Olson are here. One hun-
dred of them came from the National
Junior Department office and before
evening of the first day they were all
gone and we still had some orders to
fill. Pending orders are on file and
more are coming in every day. More
books have been ordered.
The Washington Contest.
March 23, is the deadline for the
contestants in the Washington Trip
Contest. Dues and collections for one
Junior or another in the contest are
coming in every day. Have you sent
yours In for your favorite Junior--if
you haven't be sure to do so before
Saturday night.
Everyone concerned is getting ex-
cited about the contest now and we
here at the office are Just as excited
--one never knows who will win until
the last straw is drawn~that is the
way here. The places of the contes-
tants are bobbing back and forth like
a rubber ball. one day one contestant
is in the lead and the next day an.
other one pops up. It is an interest-
ing race and we will have to wait for
the outcome until Saturday, March 23.
Camp.
All of those Juniors who entered
the Washington Contest will be admit-
ted free to one session of our Junior
Encampment this summer providing
they have qualified for it. This
should be an incentive to work on the
Achievement Points as soon as your
Washington Contest is over so that
you will qualify for this prize in case
you have not already started doing so.
When you register you will have a
choice~ first and second--of which
session of camp you will attend.
Due to the tremendous interest In
~amp and the large number of Juniors
who will qualify we are holding three
weeks of~camp this summer. So that
means that we will have three differ-
ent groups of Juniors. They will all
be taught the same lessons and the
same schedule will be used.
Field Worker in Sister State.
Mary Jo Wailer, our state field
worker, is in Chippewa Falls, Wiscon-
sin, this week supervising a Leaders'
Training School there. Mrs. Ruth
Huntington, the Wisconsin State Lead-
er, was here in North Dakota looking
over our Junior Department for a
week. She said she learned so inuch
~about the work/and that she didn't
realize how big it really was before
this. Mrs. Edwards was asked to
come and conduct th~ school in Wis-
consin and help to get them off to a
good start. Due to the tremendous
heavy work at the office it was impos-
sible for her to leave so a few days
later a wire came from the Wisconsin
Junior Department imploring her to
send Mary Jo.
Lesson Books Go to County Leaderl.
The Junior lesson books were mailed
to the county leaders March 18. We
hope that they will see that all their
local leaders find out that the books
are here so they can get theirs or-
dered and start using them in their
classes.
Circulating Library.
Another book has been added to
our circulating library. It is "A Tale
'of Two Nations." You know we have
"Looking Backward" by Edward Bel-
lamy, and "Russia's New Primer" by
Iiin. These books may be taken out
to be read by simply sending fifteen
cents to Mrs. G. H. Edwards, James-
town, N. Dak., to cover cost of wrap-
ping and mailing. They may be kept
for three weeks. You can get other
books from the circulating library at
the Livestock Commission. South St.
Paul, Minn., by writing IO Chas. D.
Egley.
COMMON SENSE
(By Charles T. Johnstone)
~'hat gaineth a man if the barrel
of flour he needs, sells for twelve dol-
lars and he has only 30 cents to his
name.
And is looking for a job and can't
lad one.
The people of this country right
now, today, are facing a situation that
calls for common sense.
Let's forget about ps)chology and
economics and readjustment and all
the other much-talked of thiv, gs. And use common sense,
In every city, town and hamlet in
the land people are telling each other
what the country needs.
But you know and I Pnow that what
the people of the United States need
most of all just now is common sense.
If you are a shoemaker, and the fur-
niture worker, the weaver, the hatter,
the machinist, the miner~
And the producer of a hundred oth-
er commodities you buy during flue
year, stop buylng~the shoes you make,
And by so doing throw you out of
WOYk,
HOW are you going to get the mol~ey
to buy the things they produce?
You've got to help consume what
the other fellow produces and he must
help to consume what you prodace.
Win~er.
"'This Clock we won runs flne--fl
an hour in ~4ve minut~J"
DROPS TIPS ON
GIRLS OF GLOBE
American ~ Frank in
His Findings.
GERTRUD~' BAILEY. in the New Ye~k
World-Telesrara.
"German girls are the most beauti-
fuL Japanese girls are silly, Chinese
girls look pretty at a distance, but
not close up: English women are dis-
tinctly athletic. Frenct~ women still
use too much perfume, and the seams
In their hose are seldom straight.
Russian women are intriguing with-
out looking nice. I can be sure trial
the American girl has bad a bath."
Thus genial Ernest Gann. whose
alertness to feminine modes and
manners got him a Job as director of
movie tests for two~ companies,
summed up his Impressions of wom-
en of different countries.
Flip epithets about women every-
where tripped off the tongue of this
twenty.four.year-old man of the world
who might hays been on his way to
George Pierce Baker's dramatic class
If be had not explained that he went
through that years ago. "Why, at
fourteen I had already produced a
movie---Just a one-reeler, 'Sweet Six.
teen'--but I thought it was great art
and the country called It e riot," he
said.
What this happy-go-lucky blond
youth learned about women in one
trip around the world points to the
average American girl as the "best
groomed, but too concerned about
getting thin" (he married an Amer-
ican girl whom "he is trying to fat-
ten up").
His great disappointment, after
spending $362 (part of which he bor-
rowed) and eleven months on freight-
ers, motor cycles, and on foot, was
that be didn't even get a peek at a
harem. "All I could tell about Moor-
ish women was that they were fat
and dumpy," he said.
°'European men were always ask-
ing me to get them a date with an
American girl. After all, It ts no
novelty to the American man to be
told to go to h~I. but European men
don't know what to make of her Im-
pudence and frankness.
"French 'chic' I found applied to
international women, and not to the
average French woman, who wears
enough white make-up and bright
lipstick to make one sick," he com.
merited.
"English women do not wear any
make-up and look frightful, but Ger.
man women can wear no make-up
and look beautiful.
"I saw almost as many peroxide
blonds in Madrid as In Hollywood,
and in East Africa a tattooed girl of
the 'Berber' tr~e had her snapshot
with the Foreign Legion posted
alongside photograhps of Garbo
Dietrich and Robert Montgomery.
• 'You can't compare the peasants
of Italy and Spain with American
women any more than you could
a Chinese coolie. Those who can
afford to fix themselves up are very
charming."
Belgian women he described as
"tremendous.'.'
"My ambition? To be chief o~
police in Bagdad. Aside from that
I would like to produce movie shorts
with a plot and an O'Henry twist
on the end, finish the book I am
writing and illustrating about s taxi
driver, and to make a movie of a
Jungle tribe in Ceylon, if I can ever
find one," he said.
Week's Supply of Postum Free
Read the offer mad~ by the Posture
Company in another part of this pa-
per. They will send a full week's sup-
ply of health giving Posture free to
anyone who writes for lt.~Adv.
Town Run by Women
O~k Park, Ga., cla!ms thedistinc-
tion of being tbe only town in the
United States run entirely by wom-
en. A complete petticoat ticket was
elected without opposition at the re-
cent municipal election. The women
named s ticket because the men
officeholders had not done the things
women t'hought necessary.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the orig-
inal little liver pills put up 60 years ago.
They regulate liver and bowel~.--Adv.
Made 'Era Woozy
He--Did the candidate electrify his
audience?
She---No; he only gassed lt.--An
swers Magazine.
or perfect
BAKIN
RESULT
BIG CAN
UsedTractors, Plows
CtENnN lle0~ AMoeumu
N. P. Ave. - Fm N. DJ.~
And That, Gladly
The only thing some people will
share with you is trouble.
GET THIS!
4S BUSHELS
or 8¢rTZR
WHEAT
FOR $1.25
Fixture-out for yourself how much
more profit you can make on wheat
just by dust-treating seed with Ne~
Improoed CERESAN (ethyl mercury
phosphate).
For $1.25 you call treat enough
seed for 40 acres at the average U. S.
rate of seeding. Teats on dean seed
show that Nero Improved CERESAN
increases yields an average of 1.13
bushels an acre; more, if seed is
smutty. That means over 45 busheI~
more wheat from 40 acrrs~for
only $1.25!
New Improoed CERESAN ~ive~
better stands, controls s "tmking smut,
brings bigger, better yields. Easy to
apply; one pound treats 32 bushels
of seed. One lb., 75c; 5 Ibs., $3.00,
.Whettt Pamphle~
No. 81 free Ask
dealer or write to
[] the Bayer-Seme~a~
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~ [] mington, Velaware~
WNU--Y 13--35
,, !
Suffered
From Teller
on Hands
Re//eved by Cetlcera
~I guffered for two or three years
with tatter on my hands. If I did
any work they would bleed and be-
come irritated, and I could not bear
to put them in water. They wer~
dirty-looking all the time.
"I tried different remedle~, but
they failed, so I sent for a free
sample of Cutieura Soap and Oint-
ment. I purchased more and after
using one cake of Cutlcura Soap
and one box of Cutieura Ointment
my hands were entirely relieved."
(Signed) Miss Mary Pratt, R. 3,
,New Market, Tenn.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c and 50e.
Talcum 25c. Sold everywhere. One
sample each free. Address: "CutS-
curs Laboratorl'es, I)ept R, Maiden,
blass."~Adv,
WITH
NASH'S TOASTED
" COFFEE
ll~~~l Nuh', Toasted Coffee helps me,
~~':':~:" - = and it help* m~ husband m ~
THE NEW DAY
SEED DEALER
in your eommunity has dependgl~ £eld
seed at favorable prlees and varieties
most suitable for your district.
NEW DAY SEEDS, INC.
Fargo . • . Norfla Dakota
I/ , I II
Write for Prices
Earl Stra~
.y Seed Com--SUdan--Can~ -- l!
M~et:Sw~tCl?ve~. ~Ptwin~P~trF and II
can nave a complete garden. 14-- ~c packete, [I
,.
oscar N. JooJ~g co.~ Fmp, it n. lJ
" -- I "]1 [W]I' ]]" ' ]Jl" ]
~ rr~£