The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 22, 1923, Page 2

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a is mao i - mer home. i first-time during the ‘summer, M, C, + the park she will go to Great Falls PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE What the World Is Doi | CAS SEEN BY POPULAR cMECHANICS cMAGAZINE ‘ Racing Auto Takes Gas and Oil ‘‘On the Run” While racing along at a speed of nearly 50 miles an hour to break a record, an automobile recently was supplied with gas, oil, water, and relicf drivers without stopping the ear during ule run made in 50 hours 21 Although three stops were tires during this time, the engine was kept going without pause. All the other supplies were taken aboard, without stopping the machine, from another car which ran alongside during the period of delivery. see Radio Speeds Up Taking of Moving Pictures Radio carried orders of the movie di- rector to 5,000 members of the cast in a big scene in a western studio, re- y. Where, usually, the megaphone id to shout instructions, while camera men are turning the cranks, this director, standing at a point from which he had a clear view of all the actors, spoke his orders calmly into a sending instrument, which made it heard elear- ly all over the lot. ‘The directing, somewhat difficult, because of the num- ber of people employed, was simplified by use of radio, and the movie man pre- dicted that it will be repeated in other bigscencs. The same system was used ie increase the carrying power of broadcast messages and concerts at the feceiving end. Use of radio in this | MANDAN NEWS | NOW LOWER | MANDAN VALUE | State Board Makes a Decrease! on Residence Structures equalization, | | The state board of assessments on Man- dan real estate on the b: of the first report of the county officials yesterday lowered the valuation on residence structur after a correct- ed return higher than the first state board figure had been retuened. which raised of the original return | wuditor of Morton coun-| ty, the state board increased lots 100 | percent, business structures 20 per- cent and residence structures -120! percent. On the b s of the amend-} ed return the state board made noj| change on business structures or lots but decreased residences 10 per- | cent from the amount réported. | The board yesterday heard William | Faleoner, city assessor of Bismarck | complain that a 40 percent increas in residence structures in Bismarc t and ineqpitable. Final s not been taken. i ard now is engaged in equalizing personal property. G. A, Renden, head of the Mandan Electric company and one of the most progressive business men in the was elected member of the city Park | rd to fill the unexpired term of | iertrude Ritchey @ho resigned, at} their meeting Monday, bi Miss Cecile Porter and Mr. and! Mrs. Erwin Ricker who have been | visiting at Detroit Lake at the Wm.! Johnston cottage for the past two! weeks returned home the first of the week, Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Brady children returned Sunday from th Twin Cities and other points “in| Minnesota and Wisconsin, where they | spent the month with relatives. | and} Mr. and Mrs. James Scully of Plateau, Mont., are the parents of ‘a! baby girl born yesterday at the local hospital, Mrs. Scully was formerly Miss Mary Tobin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Tobin, * Miss Willifred Simson left last night for the Yellowstone National Park after spending the summer with her parents, After going through where she will teach in the Public Sehools during the ‘winter term. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. F. Ellis and son, Charles returned Monday from an extended tour among the lakes in Minnesota, afd Canada. Mr. and Mrs. John Bunting -re- turned yesterday from a vacation at Nevis, Minn., with Dr.-and Mrs, F. E, Bunting. The latter will return in the near future from their sum- _,. FORD CAR‘STOLEN, Marmarth, N. D., Aug. 22—For the Newstrom, manager of the Rochdale ‘cooperative Co.,. in a garage lai to, disc: had bi that burglars had en- ‘the Kelly Garage A iy d the next. morning. moeven Russe 1 Girls Stop When They Realize How They Look, Says Teacher press crudeness and vulgarity or| QUOTATIONS WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1928 — UP ABROAD quotations on this side of the Atlan- tic during the early dealings. Offer- ings increased andsan early advance was checked. Predicted frost for most parts of Canuda failed to be realized and fair and warmer weath- ‘ed from unchanged figures to 3.8 cents higher with Dec. $1.04 5-8 to $1.04 3-4 and May $1.10 1-8 to 1.10 1-4 were followed by a little further rise and then a decline to a trifle below yesterday's finish, case not only spared the director's| Equipping the Wheelbarrow | GIRLS STOP WHEN’ THEY voice, but it produced better results by inaking it possible for all the actors quickly to go through with the scene without frequent, stops, s}eoe Make Poison-Gas Test in Three Minutes Simple tests to find the degree of poi- soning from a gas known as carbon monoxide are now poskible with the in- vention of an instrument that shows how much a person has been affected within three minutes, where formerly it took from 24 to 48 hours before this could be accurately determined. ‘The apparatus may “be carried in the pocket and is expected to prove of particular value in mines, where this gas is a much-dreaded menace. Be- cause of the compactness of the new instrument and the fact that it can be applied to a patient by one who has had no special training, it will be of broad general it is predicted. Government ¢ ho tried it on a young girl, a at it is the quickest method known to detect the gas. soe Tenis Court in Squares to 4 Teach Accuracy Looking like a great checkerboard, except that each square has a number, a tennis court has been devised to teach accuracy. While an instructor calls out the numbers, the player is re- quired to place the ball in the required seetion. ‘The practice provides train- ing not only for the hands and feet, but so for the mind, because of the quic! ness with which the numbers are cal e, noted comedienne 1 that son, plastic surgeon the nose from Roman to Gr Fannie for the operation, shown with Shock Absorbers | The shocks suffered when pushinga | wheelbarrow oyer rough ind can be | largely eliminated by providing the wheel with shock absorbers made from buggy-spring leaves. The leaves used | for this pur- pose have eyes at the ends; each is cut toa length of about 8 in., and has three | orfourscrew- holes drilled | through it. | The eyes are reamed out 80 that they | will accommodate the axle of the wheel | nd allow it to turn easily, and the | springs are screwed to the underside of the wheelbarrow frame, the eyes being | turned down, Ga | Secure Latch for Paddocks | It is desirable to have the gates of | stables and paddocks provided with a | latch that cannot be opened by the | horses. A | good latch, | that is abso- lutely secure, and has been found to be very useful on the stallion paddock at the University of Illinois, is in the drawing. | | The gate is made | so that it touches the gatepost at the | bottom first, and the top must be | sprung in in order to hook the latch. | There is not a chance for the gate to | open when the latch is in position; the | harder the stallion rubs or pushes against the gate, the tighter the latch becomes. eee Beeswax makes a better lubricant for FANNIE BRICE WANTS NEW'NOSE_ | she wants to have her nose changed. f Chicago, went to Atlantic City tq change tailcenters than the usual white lead, oil, or grease. and wife Here he and nurses are preparing ° waters of the Gulf of Mexicos He black bass‘in almop: every detail, card, Orleans, caught the fish. FLOWING SLEEVES, The afternoon gown is at’ Present distinguished by the treatment of its are log and fipwing, at the wrist, some ers left to dri Eve- slash ate BOY, PAGE IZAAK WALTON! The gentleman in tho conter lived botore te demisé.in the salty d Gerstner (left) and Edward Mullen ‘(rig ir gowns are sleeve" an ot ig a Warsaw fish, nd resembles a Note his height 71-1'weight on the ‘both of New * SILHOvETTS *, For tailored suits and sports cos- 'tumes the silhouette for the coming’ season is to be as straight as it has ‘heen’in past seasons with the excep- tion of ‘their increased tendency to’ introduce. the cirtular flounce or the| ripple side. : aaens By NEA Service San Diego, Calif., Aug... 22.—The next time Mary*Ellen starts out for the country club dance, tell her how pretty she looks and that she’s going to be the most graceful dancer pn the floor. ont Kor a consciousness of one’s per- sonal appearance will do more than all else to clear up the jazz era of dancing, says Hulda Hanker of this city. It’s’ been 90 years since Hulda Hanker started telling young people the. why and wherefore of the hecl and toe, And in all those 30 years she’s never engountered a young per- son who insisted on going to ex- tremes in dancing, ¥ “The check to cheek and t'e cake- eater’s clutch couldn’t exist,” she says, “if young people realized how they look. “Years ugo I became convinced that so-called vulgarity in dancing didn’t arise frowm vulgarity at all. It merely comes from exuberance. | Young folks get tired of ‘doing the same old thing and want something different. Self Predominant “Then is the time to turn this ex- tra exuberance into thoughts of— self. Yes, I mean it. There is a consciousness of self which very one should have. to” try Selves can ex- |, they can express grace and beauty. “If a young girl in my classes shows a tendency to want to clutch her partner about the neck, I don't tell her outright that it is in bad | taste. Instead, I praise her clothes, | her hands, “her walk. If she nas danced particularly well at some other time, I recall it to her. Boys, Too “And I -have never known a girl, once she realized it was possible to express beauty in her dancing, who didn't want to express that beauty all the while. “It is the same with boys. Boys won't admit it, but tHey’re vainer than girls. Get a boy to thinking about his hair, his shoes, his finger nails. Praise him for his walk, aud- ibly admire the ‘way he carries hi shoulders, and he'll never fall ‘into | the slinking ways of the dante hall lizard. \ “There is hardly ‘any other ques- tion of behavior on the dance floor that will not resolve itself purely into a matter of taste. Give the youhg people judgment and a sense of personal pride and the jazz era will lose every one of its objection- able features.” UA HULDA HANKER ‘ WORLD'S ONLY GAMBLING SCHOOL je ie A German gambling casfno'has been opened at the summer place at Zopper and to secure managers and croupiers for the tables a school for gambling has been opened.) Here some of the pupils are being shown the ins and outs of six-handed baccarat. TTT LTT ‘SEASON TICKETS ~ FOR : Missouri Slope Fair Now on Sale'in Bismarck at the “ Association of Commerce TO MTT MMMM Business Directory WEBB BROTHERS Undertakers Embalmers Funeral Directors Licensed Embalmer in Charge DAY PHONE 246 NIGHT PHONES 246-887 < PERRY UNDERTAKING PARLORS Licensed Day Phone 100 Embalmer Paint and Varnish Products » Prevent Destruction. in Charge Night Phone 100 or 687 | Liverpool Quotations Influ- enge Chicago Market Chicago, Aug. 22—Higher quota- tions at Liverpool gave strength to} The Seyi (The Biemarck College) er is expected in the domestic wheat region. There was some scattered commission house buying on both sides of the market but trading was light. Operating * a switchboard ir a busy telephone exchange is so great a strain that few girls can stand it Opening prices which rang-|for as long as eight years. NATIONAL zeand The tuition charges. © upon graduation. | Roberts and Second Street North, Fargo, N. Dak, * ‘Consolidated, will hereafter be under the same management and students enrolling at one of these Colleges may change to the other without loss of time, change of text-books or additional Botb Colleges in session thruout the year. Enroll for our Summer Courses, and we will send you to a good business or banking position immediately For free catalog and particulars write—G. M. LANGUM, Pres., Bismarck, N. Dak, . The TRIBUNE - aes ‘The box with the handy .easy-opening ke 1 e Oliver Towne ALLO ) I approached ten people at random on the street the other day, and inquired if they had anything they wanted to buy or Sell. And they all did. Everybody has! ‘ ; i Pe -J ran ads in the want ad column of this paper and bought or sold everything from fishing tackle to ostrich feathers, , -’Phone me, and I'll wager I/can buy, sell or exchange whatever you-have in mind. _ Bismarck, North Dakota BK s% » | | ‘

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