The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 5, 1929, Page 8

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AL RECEIPTS OF ! /SHOW GAIN OVER 1928 1 Hlincriaes Attributed to Constant | k _ Growth of Bismarck, re Official Said th oe nil’ Receipts of $20,958.59 for Aucust E gyfand @ gain in receipts of $10.64 for th the first cight months che bit over Pe the corresponding period in 1928 e by, fevenled in a statement given rai to- ce day at the United States postoffies here. aa Increase in receipts the cight- a month period. Postoffice officia' “ said, was due to the constant increa. ‘9 in Bismarck's population. At the pre: if ent rate, total receipts for the vear will be approximately $225,000, as; de compared with $205,397.64 received th last year, and $197,015 in 19: Returns for each quarter show an increase over similar ‘at # Year ago, except in th ter. During the first q . $39.371.55. Pd these two montis last yea Heaviest business at the postoffice. . officials stated, is handled during the spring months, while a siack ts not during July. August and Septemb , Annual receipts the offices ha’ shown an increase over tho p cc ing year for a long period of years * Boy Still Unconscious FA 108 Hours After Crash " Ashland, Wis. Sep’ ®& aid Mcintyre. 6. Rare * ceived a fractured « a Bi ieg when struck b: M Gaturday still was un after 108 hours. Ver: 20, Superior. « crowded another where the child wa held by police here on a driving charac ‘Immediate Building of # Montana Line Planned to build a Jordan. 2 by Bismarck Test Point & For Oil-Surface Road n © made byt ‘the state } ment on U. S | face road four miles ® ‘state penitentiary. Becau increased cost of the compared with tar four miles of the new ) be constructed on es ct | », Six Men Tried Before £ Sheen on Two Counts, F @ «Six defendants charged with I < fault and assault and battery went | 1 on trial before Justic Charles M. | | Sheen in Mandan yesterday Hl } They are Mike, Tim and Nick | Berger, Joe Eckroth. John Doll, and | Marcus Matz, They are alleged to| = have stoned the home of Martin} Morrel near Si. Anthony and to have | © committed assault nnd battery on E i. Morrel, a brother of Martin. Two witnesses called yesterday, F. + R. Morrel an‘ John Scheff. testified ' that Morrel cufieved a beating at the Lp of the Berser brothers and | The cas> vill be concluded | ios, tis 5 Last Rites Heldfor | North Dakota Pioneer: & Ceoperstown. ‘N. D. Sep: Fu | | netal eervices for Mrs. Olin> Westley. | 92. North Dakota pioncer wao died ‘Wednesday from a stroke of apoplexy. Were conducted from the Zion Luth- can church. south of Cooperstown. ‘Born in Stavanger. Norway, in P 1837, Mrs. Westley lived in her native | country until 1881. Coming to North | Dakota in 1882 and homesteaded in ‘ Ari county. Mr. Westley died in| ‘One dauehter, Anna, and five sons. Hans, M.D. O. C., 0. B., and O. M., Westley survive. < EIGHT - MONTH PERIOD. jon a charge of drunkenness, with Ve ed a 73 j five = Jacobson mode the charge THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1929 Four Cents Remain In Pocket of Man After Paying Fine | Pie N. D., Sept. J. G babi | of Philadelphia, a transient laborer, landed in the Minot city 9 | i * CHILDREN OF WISHEK ALL VACCINATED FOR DIPHTHERIA, REPORT Signs Indicate Extensive Prev- alence of Disease Over State, Doctor Says ‘cents in his pockets. When he got out, cents left | Police Magistrate Carl N. Cox as- ent: fine against Lan- | with the alternative of serving | days in jail. Landis preferred | the fine he had ia dis to pay « HYDE STARTS PROBE INTO GRAIN GRADING: Federal Rules Taking | Immense Amounts of *oney Out of Farmers’ Pockets ‘been inoculated and Dr. C. C. Camp-} bell, health officer in that towi | ating rural school children with in anti-toxin in an effort to stop any spread of diphtheria there, Dr. J. D. Jungman, director of the bureau o. miley diseases of the state department, said today. telsgram from Dr. Jungman ord- : ing all children inoculated was ited and spread over the county notify parents of conditions. peaking of diphtheria in the state, “doctor said: The diphtheria outlook for North Dakota during the coming autumn and carly winter months is anything but encouraging. All signs point to- ward an extensive prevalence. ly all the probable cases might be prevented but that it is a matter {which must be decided by parents. “The prevalence of the discase has hs considerably higher than for the | sponding period in any recent | year. In all past c June and July prevalence has been a fairly good index as to what might be expected during October, November and December. Almost invariably the for October, November re at least twice those y. June and July and not in- tly the incidence for the last Paul. Sept. 5.—.P—Investiga- es that federal grain- dards have worked to t> of wheat growers in the est has been started by Arthu: M. Hyde, secretary of agriculture E. C. Parker, Washington burr of the department of agriculture. and | Prof. G. R. Hyslop. Oregon College of ¢, arrived in St. Paul yes- © study effects of grat: and to confer with O. P. bson, chairman of th> Minnesota ¢ and warehouse commis grading ading system. he detriment of American thermore, the November pre- ce almost always ranges from two to four times that of July. where vigorous throughout this | The 10th is the last day of discount on Gas bills. rar — t oF NEW YORK, and Saturday “% Last Two Days of Great Fur Sale Come... See Our Grand Display of Fur Coats --- Showing Next Season’s Styles The Original models and samples of a large New York manufacturer are on sale now at greatly reduced prices OUR SUPER SPECIALS Fur Coats « *175§° Speak fer Themselves ! !! EVERY COAT GUARANTEED Fer Style, Furs and Tailoring BISMARCK CLOAK SHOP LIBERAL ALLOWANCE GIVEN HURRY! Only a Few Days Left af She Sorenination. Cala iv th ae rh anti-toxin against any autumn exposure. months are required, he said, | toxin anti-toxin to create full im- | ty. It begins to act at onee after the injection, ho the degree of protection with the passing of cach day after | this preparation is given to suscep- is | Prac- | muni} tible vals, Rh Michi As it fell, drenching woods dried by under control except in one isolate:! spot. Gl TYPHOON FATALITIES Manila, Sept. 5.—(4—Reports from Bulacan and Laguna provinces today | increased to 61 the number of known direct and indirect, result- ,ing from the typhoon which | | Luzon island carly this week. fatalities. below those for the corresponding { period in 1928.” say ee pointed out aa iin is | to children. School children in Wishek all have , ‘Pelting Rain Douses Flame-Swept Woods inelander, igan Wis., pelting rain sounded the requiem to- day for two score forest fires in Wis-| north of Regent and Loren, seven consin and the upper peninsula of i miles west of Regent. immunize children | From three to six | ver, so that increases | fois of the law yesterday at Mandan. He explained |the Hettinger county Jail. escape was discovered Sunday committed last June. ; Plea of guil tence of one year in jail. Leslie was captured nine Upon Sept. 5—)— |. To forestall of their terms. ‘MOTT JAIL BREAKERS |NABBED NEAR REGENT | After three days of freedom, Leslie {and Loren Wilson were again in the his time 1 Using chisels fashioned from gas that | r! toxin anti-toxin is given hypodermi- | Pipe. the pair dug their way out of cally in three doses at weekly inter- | and Mott officers expressed the belt |the digging operations had been c | ried on for several weeks. They were {serving a term for highway robbery, each received a sen- any further break, Mott officers transferred the pair to three weeks of hot weather. wardens the Morton county jail at Mandan in charge of fire-fighting operations , Where they will serve the remainder declared that the situation was w Their night their Dr. Geo. F. ae Gaveunecnnvncangn fence the May, = ‘ ANNOUNCEMENT MISS MARIE LEMOHN Minneapolis pianist and teacher, will be associated with the Belle Mehus Piano Studio 18 - 20 Eltinge Building For terms and appointments, telephone Miss Mehus. czy ¢ CREREUEXESEEEEEEREREELELELELEXLESEXKELELELEXELELELEXELESIXIE PeEEeEY) [X¥XExx) SNAPPY CO-EDS! CAMPUS DAYS! THRILLS! HEAR All Talking Comedy Sie Thursday - Friday Saturday THEATRE 2:30 - 7:15 -9 p.m. [XE EEXXESEAELERELERELEEEELEEERERERE! There’s More in every bottle of ‘e PALE DRY _ —= ey eaed me ae YOUR STORE — Laurel and Hardy in “Berth Marks” = 2 PEYEUEUELELELELELELELEUELELEEELELELELIE] we are engaged just yet. I never would find a fool to marry me.—Der Lustige Sachse, Leipzig. Skating, Monday, Wednesday, Fri- Admission 10c; Skates 25¢ WANTS TO SHOW HER He: Darling, don’t tell anybody She: Only Lily. She always said Roller Skatin Grand Opening atthe - DOME Friday Evening, Sept. 6 8p.m. DOBBS HATS The magic lantern and the lecture hall have given place to the talking movies ‘and the Moving Picture Palace. The art of hat manufacture has progressed as far andas notably. Dobbs Hats,ascompared with the crude produétions of past gen- erations, are the evidence. The styles for Fall are ready. 5. E. Bergeson & Son On Broadway Opposite Postoffice 2:30 to 5:00 and 200 to 10:30 day Evenings and Every Afternoon Shellie Charles, Mgr. “If this paint does not wear as long and look as well as the highest-priced paint made, we will furnish new paint FREE and pay for putting it on.” MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. As Advertised in THE SATURDAY EVENING POST August 31, 1929 Master Painter HOUSE PAINT The purest lead-zine- and-oil paint that can be made. Covers 360 sq. ft. per gal. (2 coats). Choice of 12 gallon with 2 coats. colors. Choice of 12 colors. $3.22 MONTGOMERYWARD&CO. $2.73 PER GALLON 300 Fourth Street Phone 476 Bismarck, No. Dak. PER GALLON Zine-Ite HOUSE PAINT Zinc-Oxide base, ex- ceptionally sunproof. Covers 400 sq. ft. per WE HAVE A FULL LINE OF HOUSEHOLD PAINTS. ENAMELS, ua" VABNISHES, BRUSHES, “I Just Heard Dad Say to Mother That We Are Going To Buy Our Own HOME!” - A little bungalow ; a cozy place in the city; a quiet home; any one of these locations may be found at attractive prices and on easy payment terms. among the many splendid offers in the “Houses for Sale” columns of The Bismarck Tribune Want Ads. The Bismarck Tribune offers a splendid listing of homes that are put forth as the local real estate dealers’ Best Buys. You owe it to yourself and family to be a home owner—your children need a yard of their own to play in. HOUSES FOR SALE The Bismarck Tribune Want Ads BISMARCK’S REAL ESTATE MARKET PLACE paeanenpess Pigs es aie =

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