The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 22, 1929, Page 7

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)

“TUESDAY, JANUARY 22,1929 _ + $50,000 WAS SPENT: | ~ FOR KDDER ROADS —$$$<$<— 200,000 Spent Last Year for Roads in Next County, } $551,371.33, the cash balance being $118,471.35 Dec. 31. )real estate taxes, hail insurance, auto ilicense fund, teachers’ insurance fund, State tuitions, interest and principal and proceeds from the delin- quent tax sale. ‘New England Criers '. Spending Freely for City’s Improvements ANNUAL A. C. MEETING 10 BE OPEN AFFAIR Others Than Members Will Be Welcome to Sit in at Din- ner and Talks : The annual dinner and meeting of ‘Affinity Earle’ Sued _| ‘he Asecistion of Commerce ele: for $180,000 Damage in the Gi by ‘Inveigled’ Woman F-HPRLECE it F i Only Two Lives Lost in Minneapolis Fire drillers of North rf Ta ay 10 ‘ite Drillers Convene Devils Lake, Jan. 22—(AP)—Well Dakota started $19 Bro enouch 10 LOSE A BeT~ —~PBiT WORSE 10 LOSE A Surgeons to Attempt to Give Footless Girl Means to Walk, Play ervleg into substitutes for f series of low the operations for the purpose of enabling the child to walk normal- ‘The girl's name was withheld. =|500 GIGOLOS FLOCK TO WINTER RIVIERA Professional Dancing Partners of Old Women and Flappers Open ‘Their’ Season § 5 i i 8 : i e beg Hg E i z 5 f 4 gE z se ag s i E Hi ! 5 i 8 g ef Ht ikl iii i i I bi 3 guu Fall Soe in ! i i i i Fi ys i E E i gkghe é Fiat Fae BE “BARGAIN Bi < Ive Career > GONE? Oh,(e/ Oh, gf ~ Clow Why Didnt Lo 1 6d Ory THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE F G flow Why a « éte- + ¢ 250 COUNTY DADS IN ANNUAL CONVENTION Valley City Host to 22d State Meeting of Commission- ers; Shafer Speaks — dresses by High’ Commissioner I. ley Ol E. O. Hathaway, of public roads, 8t. Dies of Appendicitis ‘New England, N, Dak, Jan, 22— services were conducted at * Stotgzel farm home near here GIVEN GOOD AIRING Fowler and Hamilton Explain Bill and Answer Ques- tions Arising A_complete airing of the Hamil- ton-Fowler bill which would provide for construction of dormitories at state educational institutions by holding associations was given at a meeting of the senate judiciary com- mittee today. committee re- cessed until Wednesday without tak- ing action on the measure. ill was recommended to the senate by the committee last week for but upon coming before the house the measure was referred again to the committee. Senators Hamilton and Fowler as authors of the bill explained its pur- Senator Fow- poses and provisions. ler cited estimated costs and income to point out that a dormitory erected at a cost of $165,000 would pay for itself in 25 years. The estimated in- come, he said, would not only pay running expenses, installments on the principal and interest payments but would also create an annual re- serve fund of $3,800. Senators Olson of Barnes and Forbes of Richland raised the ques- tion of obligation on the part of the state provided a dormitory did not pay for itself, and Senator Ettestad, McHenry county, declared that the state would have a moral obligation to assume the resulting indebtedness in case of a dormitory not paying its way. Charges of profit on the part of holding associations or others con- cerned which had been presented Senator Fowler, he maintained were impossible because of provisions in the bill itself to prevent any profit being gained. No approach toward approval or amendment of the bill was made and discussion will be continued Wednes- day. Amendment of the measure seems probable. Be eee if Additional Sports | AL VAN RYAN AND SULLIVAN CLASH St. Paul, Jan. 22—(?)—The ques- tion of welterweight superiority be- tween My Sullivan and Al Van Ryan will be settled here tonight when the boys exchange punches for ten rounds or any essential portion thereof. There is plenty of difference cf opinion as to the outcome of the fight which has stirred. local in- terest to a high pitch, and wager- ing on the result is at even |money. Van Ryan holds an_ unof- ficial verdict over Sullivan, having cuffed his way to a newspapermcn’s decision in ten rounds a year ago, Sullivan, a sharpshooter with a lethal punch in either hand, has promised to reverse the verdict to- night and.if he doés he will have'th2 backing of the state boxing commis- sion in his claim to superiority, for the commission, deviating from its usual practice, has ordered an offi- cial decision of two judges and tne referee. The judges will be Billy B. Hoke, 1. | state referee, and Phil Bronson, for- mer sports writer and at present radio announcer. The referee will be {chosen by the fighters, and is ex- pected to be George Barton, sports * }editor of the Minneapolis Tribune. -|Saints Star Puck Team Pushes Kaws St. Paul, Jan. 22—(AP)—St, Paul's Hockey club whittled Kansas City’s lead in the American Association race to five points. by trimming the | be Duluth Hornets 2 to 1 last night while the Pra-Mors were idle. The Saints by their victory also pon ge ge with the Minneapolis Mill- ers defeated St. Louis 5 to 0. League Legislators’ Caucus Is Fruitless Alt sh Non} league legis- wa nama Ne much talk about standing on mission ss suggested. by Governor a | New England M | Is Nearly Scalped | When Horses Jump j Rina rastonehctrdnae echoes @ New England, N. D., Jan. 22—No, dear easterners, there are no Indians in this particular section of North Dakota—and it is a good many years since they have been on the warpath. But—Carl Pederson, who lives near Rainy Butte, was nearly scalped a short time ago. Rev. John Warmanen, Hettinger, who conducted services in the Rainy Butte community, remained . over night in the Pederson home, The next morning it was cold and there was difficulty in getting the minis- ter’s automobile started. Mr. Peder- son hitched a team to the machine to pull it in an effort to start the motor. At the first explosion of the en- ine the team became frightened and yan to run. Mr. Pederson, holding the reins, was pulled beneath the wheels of the car which passed over his right arm and cut his head. doctor who was called to attend him’ said that it took several stitches to tie the scalp back in place. BISMARCK GUESTS ENOY SCOUT FEAST Hazelton Father and Sons Serve Real Chicken Din- ner Monday Evening The Hazelton Boy Scouts had a real fathers and sons banquet Mon- day evening, according to the Rev. Paul Wright, W. G. Fulton and W. E. Perry, who were guests and speake-s at the dinner. The affair was held in a hall over one of the stores. The chief dish was stewed chicken with gravy and mashed potatoes, with plenty of side dishes. Pastor Wright, as an author- ity on chicken, says no presbytery @/| that he ever attended sat down to anything as toothsome as that served at Hazelton—not even a general as- sembly. Mr. Perry was impressed by the feast also. He said they served delicious cream. It didn’t require a label on the pitcher to tell what it was. Fulton said he enjoyed the hot biscuits better than any he ever ate. All got a lot of enjoyment out of the spread, The chief speakers were the Bis- marck minister and the scout leader. Some of the townsfolk and the Boy Scouts also spoke. The talks by the boys were quite impressive. They had the real scout ring to their senti- ments, the Bismarck guests at the dinner said. Fight Over Will Sent Back to Lower Court Reversing the Pembina county dis- trict court the supreme court has ordered a new trial in the case of Mary Black, Jane Ball and Mary Jane Cunningham vs. Vera Helen Smith and Jay Brand, appealed by the latter. The case involved the validity of the will of William Cain, who died with considerable property which was bequeathed to the plaintiffs in the action now before the court. The Pembina county court held the will invalid but the district court held it to be a legal instrument. Those at- tacking the will contended that Cain was in such physical and mental con- dition as to lack testamentary capac- ity. The supreme court upheld this contention. Union Oil Company to Open Bismarck Office A branch of the Union Oil com- pany, dealing in Hy-purity oils, will established in Bismarck in the near future, according to officials of the company, who headquarter in Dickinson. Other branches will be established at New England, Amidon, and Bowman. The territory of the new company ex- tends from Bismarck and Mobridge, 8. Dak., west to Miles City, Mont. Incorporation papers were filed sath the secretary of state here last week. Officers of the organization are: Henry Holm, formerly of New Eng: land, president; A. J. Lawson, Dick- inson, vice president; and John P. Grady, formerly of Amidon, secretary and treasurer. A bronze statue, “Lady With a Dove,” at Kinston, N. C., has been brightened by a house painter’s art. The lady now has auburn hair, a blue gown, and a more life-like com- | plexion. In 1927 London consumed coal: at the rate of 50,000 tons a day; the total for the year was almost 1,000,- 000 tons more than in 1926. OVER BAD HIGHWAYS Only Four Miles of Federal Road in 2,000-Mile Area Causes Action Demands Killdeer, N. Dak., Jan. 22—Four miles of federal road in a county made up of more than 2,000 square miles! That is what Dunn county, the sec- ond largest county in North Dakota, laments. Dunn county citizens are urging the county commissioners to take advant- age of the plan whereby roads may be built in a county with the federal and state governments bearing three- fourths of the expenses. “Dunn county needs a good road from éast to west across the county,” say. “It needs two good The county is 42 miles- wide. Under this plan no resident of the county would be more than seven miles from & federal highway leading directly to market. “Our automobile license and gas tax money is going into the state treasury in a steady stream. The counties that have the most state and federal highways get most of that money. Our money goes into their roads; our money pays for the main- tenance of their roads.” Dunn county’s four-mile stretch of federal road is between Killdeer and Manning. Appeal on Tax Bill Referred to County The appeal of Mrs. Jacob Roth- schiller from a tax bill of $8.06 was before the city commission as the sole item of business outside of ap- proving claims, Monday evening. An accompanying affidavit showed the payment of $5.36 tax in Fargo on the same personal property after moving there from here. ‘The commission referred the mat- ter to the board of county commis- sioners for adjustment. $50,000 Wolf Bounty Appropriation Seen A wolf bounty appropriation of $50,000 for the next biennium will be passed by the state legislature if recommendations of the senate ap- Propriations committee made at a meeting last night are adopted. The committee will recommend the pass- age of a bill to that effect at today’s session of the senate. Five other appropriation bills will be recommended for passage today by the committee following last night’s meeting. They include $32,000 for the livestock sanitary board, $6,000 for the glanders and dourine indemnity fund, $6,000 for miscellaneous re- funds, $5,090 for the minimum wage department and $567 for the veter- inary medical examiners. A subcommittee was named to draft a bill setting the state veterin- arian’s salary at $3,600 per year. Bridge Party Held In Spite of Cold! Don’t despair some day your social calendar is full, and you wake with a miserable cold. Be rid of it by noon! You can if you know the secret: a simple compound that soon settles any cold, yes, even one that has reached deep in the throat or lungs. . ‘The smallest druggist has this won- derful tablet. Pape’s Cold Compound is what they call it. Harmless, but it drives away colds quicker than all the dosing with drugs that make the head ting. Don’t go to a party red-nosed and with watery eyes; get this quick relief for 35c at any drugstore —Adv. SSE EE PAPE’S COLD COMPOUND Od ad First Ziegfeld picked her “Follies.” Next, she was “Rio Rita” and now Warner Br will present her in the movie ty Agnes Franey is climbin by clever dancing and seldon ed_ beauty. Miss Franey says: “I lieve in overlooking an; helps add to your ai ti am most particular about my and so many friends compli Bs on its softness and lustre sure my method of carin r right. Nearly all the gir! q here in New York are using it; ; It is so easy. All we do is little Danderine on our brush time we dress our hair. It. my hair easy to dress and in place wonderfully, It has) rid of a Sea aoa hair and scalp so cot a I don’t shampoo half as often: djd before. And best of all, it) my hair a softer, more si lustrous appearance T’ve ever found.” ¢ Danderine quickly removes oily film from your hair; b . its natural color, makes it #4 sparkle! Dandruff usually pears when you use D Waves, “set” with it, stay in low It’s delicately fragranced; isn't. doesn’t show. It’s economical. 7 35c bottles will last several wa All drug stores recommend and’ antee it.—Adv. “A In What Month Is Your Birthday? | Hoskins-Meyer Home o? KPIE Plambing 4 FRED J. DICKS Frost 1305 Street

Other pages from this issue: