The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 28, 1925, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

) PAGE EIGHT ;INOREASE I ' MOTOR TAX I ~ STATE OPPOSED Niiseiways Committee of Leg- Ai - islature Rejects Road As- sociation Program | ‘BACK TO COUNTIES) NG , Little Would be Left For Ex-! Me: clusive State Highway Fund, Under Plan , i The proposal of the North Dakota} «Good Roads Association, Highway | ‘Commission and other agencies fay-| oring the creation of a State High-| way Fund for building of roads un- der joint federal and state aid suf-| fered a setback in the North Da jkota legislature when the highw: Ticommittee of the house voted to re tiport in a new motor vehicle license eec,bill leaving fees substantially as] 'TOl-they are now and sending 75 Osi of the money back to count! he * stead of 50 percent under the pres- tG ent law. oan Chairman Fred Eckert of the high- f 4 ways committee, stating the report 2674 was unanimous, declared sentiment { Af,of the committee was against cre he Vation of a large state highway fund | wand in favor of sending as much| ita® > money to counties as possible for n @ building of roads under local author- # RG ities. Ten, It had been proposed by the High- h@ way Commission and the good roads 7OUSbody that motor vehicle license fees aifybe materially inereased, a one-cent (gas tax added and the proceeds 08M placed in a state highway fund. After OFM) 1926 the state of North Dakota, if it h@ obtains federal aid, must have an ex- ugg clusive state highway fund, accord- in ing to Highway Commission officials. « i House bill , the motor vehicle M' ticense bill, as reported in by the ve®e highways committee, provides a basic ia motor vehicle registration fee the kd same as at present, but would in- crease fees on trucks, commercial trucks and commercial — passenger vehicles probably 200 percent, Chair- The basic motor vehicle license or @ fee is five mills per dollar of sell- “1 ing price, 20 cents per hundred ‘tion thereof of 10 cents per y thpounds or major fr: net weight of vehic © 8 horsepower, except electrics, which hase shall be charged $2 in lieu of the 10n@ horsepower fee. After the first yea f the fee is decreased 10 percent, he } after the second year 25 percent and ‘© di after the third year 40 percent, ex- Pe cept that the license fee shall never 28 be less than $ nin The license fees proposed for phy other vehicles follow: motor trucks, * not used for commercial freighting, ectir in addition to foregoing factors, fee nenty nent shall be based on its road capacity vile at rate of $5 per ton for one-ton M4 truck; $7.50 for one and one-nalf ton vhich truck; $20 for three-ton truck; $30 and for 3% ton truck; $40 for 4-ton ectiO: truck; $60 for 5-ton truck. fa. For trucks used for commercial rhe freighting an additional fee as fol- hes lOWS: lone ton truck, $10; 1% ton e ® truck, $15; 2 ton truck, $20; 2% ton AFOVIE truck 3h ton truck $: 0; 4-ton truck $70; 3 over 5 tons $350.00. In addition $10 per passenger based on carrying capacity. fayms rhe Amendment provides $150,000 iy Shall be taken from the motor ve- hicle fund for the administration of ~) the Highway Commission and Motor vorr Vehicle Reglstration department, f $130,000 to meet state aid for brid- t Bes, and the balance shall be divided, Reghe 7 percent to counties, prorated as that received from counties, and 25 per- hake cent to state highway fund. - a5. jrovij 27t0” truck $13 inpai Ar TO PROTECT U. S. VESSEL Washington, Jan. 28—American vessels in Shanghai waters have been jordered to escort British or Ameri- can merchant ships which desired to leave Shanghai at night, even in the face of guns of the Woospng fort, ; commanded by General Warig. FORMER DAKOTAN PROMOTED Mott, N. D., Jan. 28.—W. H. John- son, former register of deeds of Het- tinger county, and for a time an as- J sistant in the farm’loan department of the Bank of North Dakota, has been promoted in connection with his work in the loan and investment de- partment of the American Bankers Insurance company of Chicago, He has been made assistant secretary to aut the president in charge of the in- vestment| and loa department. (By Courtesy of and Ooppyright 1925 By Radio Digest Publishing Ce.) (SEE INSTRUCTIONS FOR USE BELOW) OSA I aaa AA eA LA SERRATE ES = 9: sefeeracceztees | Sng s 2 3 oz; art 8 8 =F BS e833 3 s3es2z 2 33 3 8838hs28s 3 Sekeiseses s3233 338 she Siete Bazexcneezezze: Tit 232389; eee 53.8. E sasssseesszin 3 sesseseiz ¥ 2 teesse of st ee ¢ iS Se Setesze2i: errs jokate naa! 83 8 3 2 43333 82 = 2 3 83s Be8u8 23 a 23-30 tir if $ 0183s eMetiiittitts i or) 335133. 3558. 33: asi 20: EEeCEERE CEES: $3: 505228..5 $$ S23 2 23 2. Se Instructions for Use—All the houre abace are grsen in Central Standerd Time. ume, edd one howr to each ofthe periods sated: 1f your cy uses Mountain, Time, eity waee Pacific Time, eubtract two hours. This table includes only the erening Radiocasts, Swnday. thetate afternoon program. Christians sent Chri actuated by unchristian ss °° Our mi Asks Churches To Make Most Of Opportunity Washington, Jan. 28,—Christian chuches, and governments were de- clared by President Coolidge tod to have “no greater responsibility than to make sure that the best and not the worst” of which Christian society is capable, should be given to the other people.” | This, with other views on the for- eign missionary question, were pre- sented by the president in an address to the meeting here of the foreign missions conference of North Amer- ica, an inter-denominational gather- ing of the foreign mission interests} months. of the Protestant churches of the]. United States and Canada. “Not everything that thee men of Christian countries have carried to the other peoples of the world have been good and helpful to those who received them,” the President said. “We know that the missionary movements have repeatedly been hampered and at times frustrated because some calling. themselves ATTENTION Automobile Dealers! missions.” WIFE TO JAIL WEEKLY ent sentence: and costs. OPHYL AGTIC fi Siteras Gime While in Bismarck attending the Q. B. & R. convention, don’t miss call- ing at our garage to see the 1925 Chevrolets, Maxwells, and Chryslers. You will be particularly interested in the torn down Chevrolet chassis, showing all the new parts, and the new four door Maxwell Sedan listing at $1095 (unloaded yesterday.) CORWIN MOTOR CO. 23 es 382 us 83 7 Utmost Preteati AN EVENING AT HOME WITH THE LISTENER IN 1 sce Eastern direc one hoor and assuming to repre- civilization have been motives. on efforts wi be more effective, just in proportion as we shall render them in the same spirit of brotherhood and charity which marked the earliest Christian New Rockford, N. D., Jan. 28— Peter Hartman and wife, convicted in district court here of violatirg prohibition laws, were given differ- Hartman was given six months in jail and was fined $200 Mrs. Hartman was sen- tenced to be confined in the county jail for one day each week for six THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE JUDGE BURKE IN ADDRESS Tells Engineers of Experience In U. S. Treasury Drawing upon his experience as war time Treasurer ‘of the United States, Judge John Burke of the State Supreme Court addressed the Engineers Club last night at a din- ner in the Grand Pacific Hotel, and gave a graphic and intimate account of the operation of the United States Treasury both in peace and war. The Treasurer of the United States, Judge Burke pointed out, has no part in shaping the financial pol- icy of the country, but is rather the holder of Uncle Sam's pocket book and the custodian of his wealth. Pay- ment for the enormous expenditures of the world war, and for the present ordinary expenses of the government, running into the billions, is made en- tirely by check drawn against the Treasurer. An interestingfpoint brought out Q the address was that practically none of the billions of dollars loan- @ , eeses sets 2 ed to the Allies during the . world war ever left the United States. Money loaned was immediately de- posited by England, France, and oth- er European nations in New York banks, and paid out for the purchase in this country of supplies and muni- tions, Judge Burke closed his address with a plea for a world organization, whether World Court, League of Na- tions, or an association under some other name, to make future wars im- possible, and for a return to the unity of purpose which marked the war period, both in National, State thd civil life. . RACE DOGS TO . SAVE PEOPLE FROM DISEASE Anchorage, Alaska, Jan. 28.—Mov- ing on a 400-mile snowscovered. path, the fastest and most faithful dog teams in this district were on the FOR STIFF JOINTS Pharmacists, say that other socalled remedies fail Ease will succeed. It’s for joint ailments only—that is why you are ‘advised to use it for sord, painful, tinflamed, rheumati€ joint Joint-Ease limbers up the joints— is clean and penetrating. and quick results are assured—Sixty cents a tube at any drugstore and drug, everywhere. E Always remémber, when Joint-Ease gets in joint agony gets out—quick. —Adv. aes e when all Joint- This Is tate of 4,000,000 a will provide more Streets. Such an Road That Gets the . Traffic ‘No mattet how many roads there are leading in or out of your town, the ones best paved get the traffic. This is especially true if these roads + are of Concrete. For every motorist ap- preciates the many advantages of driving over its true, rigid, unyielding surlace. No wonder Concrete Highways are crowded for mile after mile. 16,000,000 motor vehicles are using them today. And new cars are being produced at the Here is a situation of vital concern to you: Everywhere weneed moreor wider Concrete Roads, or both, to take care of the ever-increasing traffic. And now is ? the time to plan for their construction. Your highway officials want to be of , the greatest possible service to you. Get behind them with «-ays and means that you big dividends year after. year. PORTLAND CEMENT. ASSOCIATION — sane Be 4 National Organization to Improve and Extend the Uses of Concrete ‘ OFTLCES IN 29 CITISS road to Nenana, Alaska, today in a race against the advnces of an epi- demic of djphtheria, raging at Nome. The teams eprried 300 units of anti- toxin to be,,used in fighting the epidemic. Four deaths have been reported there since the outbreak yesterday. / The seruny which left here for Nenana, north of Anchorage, was supplied, by Dr. J. B. Beeson, who made a \600-mile race against death in 1920 with dog teams which car- ried diphtheria antitoxin to Iatarod. NOTICE OF SALE Notice Is Hereby Given, That by virtue of a judgment and decree in foreclosure, rendered and given by the District Court of the Fourth Ju- dicial District, in and for the Coun- ty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, and entered and docketed in the office of’ the Clerk of said Court in and for said County, on the 27th day cf January, 1925, in an action wherein ‘The Sterling National Farm Loan Association, a corporation, Plaintiff, and Bert G. Lewis and Ella Maude Lewis and the Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul, St. Paul, Minn., a corporation and’ all other parties interested in the premises, Defendants, for the sum of Five Hundred ,Seventy-eight Dollars and Seventy-eight cents, which judgment and decree among other things, di- rected the sale by me, of the real estate hereinafter described, to sat- isfy the amount of said .judgment, with interest thereon, and the costs and expenses of such sale, or 80 much thereof as the proceeds of such {sale applicable thereto will satisfy. And by virtue of a writ to me issued out of the office of the Clerk of said Court, directing me to sell said real estate pursuant to said judg- ment and decree, I, Albin Hedstrom, Sheriff of said County, and person A Vegetable Relief} For Constipation ; Nature’s Remedy (8 Tab- lets) a vegetable laxative with a pleasant, near-to- nature action. Relieves and prevents biliousness, constipation and sick Cress ane ind res aaltcmeaaise Wild yj Fics, >... EB ie y ips Old Block WR JUNIORS==Little NRe ‘The came NR — in one-third. doses, candy-coated. For children ane antes roads area good investment . .—not an.expense the year. Concrete Roads and investment will pay appointed ‘by said ‘Court to make said sale, will sell the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder, for cash, at public auction, at the front door of the Court House in the City of Bismarck in the Coun- ty of Burleigh and State of North Dakota, on the 2nd day of March, A. D. 1925, at 2:00 P. M., of that day, to satisfy said judgment with interest and costs thereon, and the costs and expenses of such sale, or so much thereof as the proceeds of such sale applicable thereto will satisfy. The premises to be sold as aforesaid pursuant to said judgment and de- cree, and to said writ, and to this notice, are described in said judg- ment and decree and writ, as fol- lows, to-wit: sed ‘ The Southwest Quarter (SW% ) of Section Thirty-two (32) in Township Onej Hundred Forty (140) North, df Range Seventy- six (76), West of the 5th P. M. ALBIN HEDSTROM, Sheriff of Burleigh County, North Dakota. F. E. MeCURDY, ‘Attorney for the Plaintiff, Bismarck, North Dakota. -4-11-18-25 The public is cordially in- vited to attend the midwinter recital of pupils from Mrs. Scheffer’s class on Friday, Jan. 30th at 8:15 at the Rialto. : $15,000 Electrical Home, finish- ed from top to bottom, built on her! own lot in Portland, Oregon, will, be the prize that Julia S. Groo will receive for her essay as first prize in the International Home Lighting Contest just con- cluded, Miss Groo, a winsome maid of eighteen, was adjudged winner from among two million school children in the United States and Canada who entered the contest, of which a million submitted essays for the prizes. Local contests were held in 4,784 communities and the 46,000 win- ners of these contests had their ubmitted to the Interna tional Judges for the prices, of which the ho: first. The other prizes were ten scholarships of $300 to $1,200 and 1,000 distinguished essay medals and were awarded to children scat- tered over a wide ares. Besides the essay, the contest ants were obliged to make lighting investigations. and. thoroughly study the pubject-of Home Light- ing. Theiressays were supposed to tell how they would light their own home, giving the specifications of wattage for each room. c a international judges of the Lighting Contest were Wil- iiarccanare , superintendent of : achodls, ‘Chigago, Mlinois; Mrs. William Brown Meloney, editor, , the Delineator; ‘B.C. Forbeg, editor Forbes Magazine; Sarab L. Bhod principal, P. 8.'No. 28, N. Y.; George, D. Shepardson, pro- fessor of electtical engineering, University of \Minnesota; George R. Anderson, professor of: illumi- nating engines: «Toronto, and M. @. Aylesworth, ex- ecutive manager of the National Electric Light Association, repre- senting Franklin T. Griffith, prest- dent of that assoriation, who was unable to be present. Miss Groo's esgay that, won the prize follows: © * | “A Well Lighted. Home” “We do not keep. horse and bug- sy simply ‘decause, our father had » University of WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1925 Castoria is a pleasant, harm- less Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops’ and Soothing Syrups, espe- Proven directions on each package. ace ; : E : Julla 8. Groo of Portland, Oregon, the winner of the Home Lighting Conteest in which 2,000,000 children took part and the $15,000 home that will be bulit for her in Portland. one. Instead, we use the new and more serviceable means of travel. The man in the office, the factory manager, the contractor, all con- tinually strive to find labor saving devices. They do away with anti- quated apparatus and replace it with machines for increasing out- put. Greater production by the individual is a demand of the times. “¥et when these same men reach their homes the thoughts of ad- vanced methods and convenience seem left behind. They retain lighting equipment which was prob-/ ably considered the best when it was installed, but which is now ob- solete because of the developments in the industry and the knowledge of proper lighting learned from ex- perience and investigation. “Careful thought was given to the lighting of our house and has resulted, I believe, in our having a well lighted home. It is well light- ed since each fixture was selected to provide sufficient light where it might be needed. A center light. gives general illumination, whil Dortable lamps placed by easy chairs for reading or sewing bring the light directly where desired. A shade in harmony with the fix- ture and the room covers each bulb, but all are dense enough to. prevent glare or e; are glass, some are silk and some are parchment, each being adapted to ils surroundings. The. basement shades are metal. “Small bulbs are used in decora- tive ‘lamps to prevent annoying bright spots; frosted bulbs, where there ts a possibility of their be- ing seen with discomfort. Porta- ble lamps are placed on each side of the mirror on the dressing ta- bles and brackets on each side of the bathroom mirror yo tiluminate the ‘features on both: sides, thus avoiding shadows. The shades pre- MOTHER:- Fletcher’s cially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Bsfhiln Physicians everywhere recommend it. TRIBUNE WANT ADS BRING RESULTS vent @ bright light from being re flected into the eyes. “Each room has bulbs in exces! of one watt per square foot, and since the walls are light, very lit tle light is absorbed by them, thus avoiding the necessity of large) bulbs, “The center fixture in the living room has two 150 watt bulbs There are two floor lamps and onq table lamp, each containing twe 40 watt bulbs. The brackets over the mantel and two small decora tive lamps each have a 15 watt bulb, Four single convenience out: lets permit rearranging the furni- ture, “A fixture with four 40 watt bulbs hangs 26, inches above the dining room table, while 15 watt candles are at each side of the buffet. A double convenience out let is under the table and another by the buffet, “Qur kitchen {8 lighted py 4 150 watt coiling fixture with a 40: watt laxip over the sink. Appliandes nay be attached to a double con ve ce outlet. Sy. “Each of the two bedrooms has &@ 40 watt lamp at the head of the ‘bed. The. three double conven: fenc@ outlets make rearrangement of the furniture easy. ~ wou two 40 watt brackets by r irrer furnish suff, creat ted the 40 watt center fixture fs unnecessary because of the smallness of the room. :The double convenience outlet is for appliances. “The basement has 40 watt lamps in the trunk room, in front of the furnace and.at the coal pile. & 100 watt lamp {s over the laundry tubs. A double convenience outlet ig available for appliances. 40 watt lamps should be placed over the work bench to preven{ shadows on the work. [Our long hall has. 40 watt cell fixture and a 40 watt bracket.” We will be pleased to assist you in planning the lighting of your home. Our experience is at your service. B. K’s. ELECTRIC SHOP 408 Broadway Two | a | | “ i Us ie - 4 : ] t ee ! =

Other pages from this issue: