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OUT OUR WAY, WHY MOTHERS” Road Building Bids To Be Opened Aug. 28 Bids for 84 miles of highway con- struction will be opened by the state highway commission Aug. 28. The work includes 10.350 miles gravel surfacing and 13.831 miles earth grading. Proposed gravel projects are: Grand Forks county—20.48 miles on ‘U. 8. route No. 2, Grand Forks west; completion date, November 1, 1931. Barnes—12.644 miles on U. 8. No. 10, east of Valley City; completion date, November 1, 1931. Rolette—14.406 miles on 8. R. No. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 24, 1981 ~___ By Wiliams J WOMEN RESPOND TO WELL IF YOu Could See THRL HIM) You'O SEE HAT ITS THE GAS BILL~ AND IF YOu WERE DRESSED PROPERIM AND THOSE MEN WERENT OoT THERE, HE WOULONT BE PuLtlLIuG OFF THAT UTTLE T"GRAY TRWiLLiame, 8.34 30, Rolla north; completion date, June 15, 1932. Walsh—9.926 miles on 8. R. 32, Edinburgh north and south; com- pletion date, November 1, 1931. Hettinger—12,926 miles on S. R. 21 and 22, New England west and north; completion date, June 15, 1932. Proposed grading projects: Hettinger county—5.946 miles on S. R. No. 8, north of Mott; completion date, July 1, 1932; structural work to be completed November 1, 1931. Cass—7.885 miles on U. 8. 10, west of Casselton, south of track; com- pletion date, July 15, 1932. GET FOUR NEW. TEACHERS ‘Wilton, N. D., Aug. 24.—Four new teachers are included in the Wilton school faculty for the coming year, which begins Sept. 8. Members of the faculty are Joseph Hanson, su- perintendent; Everett I. Sundquist, principal; Harold C, Redington, Wil- ton, eighth grade; Ida Herr, Mc- Clusky, seventh grade; Marie New- man, Wilton, sixth grade; Helen E. Herman, Underwood, fifth; Henrietta Theis, Fargo, fourth; Alice Arnold, Minot, third; Ruth Bergquist, Wash- burn, second; and Edith Fletcher, Fargo, first. Cats exist in most Japanese towns in a proportion of 80 to every 100 houses, with the result that rats are very scarce, f APPEALS FOR HELP Prepare to Collect and Make Over Clothing in Quarters -In Memorial Building Women of Bismarck and Burleigh county have given enthusiastic sup- Port to the appeal of charitable or- Ganizations for support in relief work during the winter months according to Mrs, F. L, Conklin, chairman of the Burleigh county chapter of the Red Cross. Preliminary arrangements for the work are well under way and quar- ters in the new World War Memorial building have been secured and will Ti ihe obit for relief work. e r Sewing Machine company has offered to provide as many sew- ing machines as will be needed and it is expected that quantities of clothing will be collected and made over in the new rooms. The committee personnel, as tem- Porarily set up, is as follows: Mrs, F. A. Lahr, general chairman; Mrs, M. HH. Atkinson, secretary; Sewing room commttee—Mrs. J. C. Oberg,, chair- man, Mrs. J. L. Kelley, Mrs. C. W. Schoregge, and Mrs. W. E. Perry; Office committee—Mrs. W. B. Pierce, Mrs. W. L. Diven, Mrs. O. 8. Rindahl, Mrs. B. C. Ward, Mrs. N. O, Churchill, Mrs. H. W. Rosenthal, and Mrs. Carl Hagbert; Publicity committee—Mrs. F. E. Shepard, Mrs. O. 8. Rindahl, and Mrs. W. B. Pierce; Meeting quarters committee—Mrs. F. A. Copelin. ARABS ON STRIKE Jerusalem, Aug. 24.—(?)—Protest- ing use of sealed armories in outly- ing Jewish villages, the entire Arab population of Palestine was on strike Monday and authorities feared dis- turbances, ° PARAMOUNT THEATRE contract, awarded for the success of her first moving picture characteriza- jtion in “City Streets,” Sylvia Sidney, the brunette stage star who has gone movie in a big way, received her sec- ond important screen assignment. With Phillips Holmes and Norman Foster, she joined the featured cast of “Confessions of a Co-Ed,” show at \the Paramount Theatre beginning to- day. A few seasons ago Miss Sidney was hailed as the most younger actress in Manhattan, but just as she was beginning to realize stage fame, iin the leading role of the Broadway production “Bad Girl,” Paramount signed her for her first movie part, with Gary Cooper in “City Streets.” ‘The long-term contract and her sec- ond movie role in “Confessions of a Co-Ed” followed. Her real stage talents were first recognized when she created a minor sensation in “Gods of the Lightning,” a daring, dramatic play, and follow- ed up this success with outstanding work in “Crime,” with Chester Mor- ris and Martin-Burton, and in “Many a Slip.” <iilaiiaa ail diced , AT THE MOVIES | ; *| Boles, Genevieve Tobin and Lois Wil- Following almost immediately on the signing of her new Paramount That is the absorbing theme of the picture “Seed,” filmed from Charles G. Norris’ great novel, with Joh: son in the leading roles, and now current at the Capitol Theatre. There have been many “triangle” pictures, but never one like this pro- ity, and the lifelike quality that dom- nates everything about it—story, Players, and direction. A screen play dealing seriously with domestic problems is always full of interest, if it is well done. And “Seed” is much better than “well done.” It is superlative—without doubt one of duced. And in its unfolding the challenge to women in love, which is its moti- vating theme, builds up to a great and totally unexpected climax. Genevieve Tobin gives a magnifi- cent portrayal of the boyhood sweet- eart ahi would-be writer. She appears irs after his marriage and stirs his “ambition which, ‘under her inspiration, flames into successful creative writing. Then there is the the author’s wife, the mother of his five children. Her performance is a classic of acting—unquestionably the greatest mother-portrayal ever seen duction. It is startling in its sincer-| the best talking pictures ever pro-! third member of this remarkable trio} of players—Lois Wilson, in the role of |‘ on the screen, and utterly natural. Dr. Clara B. Westphal FOOT SPECIALIST CHIROPODIST RICHMOND’s BOOTERY Phones—309-2825 Bismarck, N. D. “Confessions of a Co-Ed,” reputed to be the first authentic drama of present-day college life brought to the screen, is a highly dramatic story of undergraduate life. Its action, based upon the intimate diary of a co-ed, who, for obvious reasons, re- mains anonymous, centers around the brunette actress. It deals with the joys, ambitions, jealousies, rival- ‘Commission To Coal Shipment Rates A complaint has been filed by the jstate railroad commission by the! Northwestern Coal Dealers’ associa- ition, alleging that the present charges jon lignite coal car loads between \Points in North Dakota are unrea- isonable. The association contends ithat an allowance for weight of the vater in lignite is not made in ar- iriving at the weight on which freight ;charges are computed. A hearing will be conducted on the complaint at Bismarck at a date to ‘be set later by the commission. “It is a matter of common knowl- edge,” Ben Larkin, president of the commission, said, “that lignite coal Jas mined and loaded in the railroad freight cars is from 20 to 40 per cent water, some of which evaporates in {transit. Freight charges usually | A\ ries and love affairs of a group of glamorous undergraduates. A soror- ity initiation opens the story, and the changing sequences include intimate interior scenes in the sorority house, and colorful outdoor action at a fa- vorite mountain holiday. resort, CAPITOL THEATRE A challenge to women in 2 ON YOUR BIRTHDAY Takes Less To Kill— Flies, Mosquitoes, Roaches, ' Square with what you 4ear . .-? what you read . . » what you deheve OWADAYS you read and hear every kind of thing about cigarettes, But when you try to square some of it with your own common-sense and experience, a lot of it just doesn’t ‘square’?! ‘What smokers want to know about a cigarette is **How good is it?”’ ‘ And when it comes to that, cigarettes are just as good and just as pure as the materials from which they’ re made. In making Chesterfield, we use only riper, milder, sweeter-tasting tobaccos—the best that money can buy —and pure cigarette paper—the purest that can be made. Our chemists rigidly test for cleanliness and purity all materials used in the manufacture of Chesterfield. In our factories even the air is washed, and changed every 442 minutes. ; Everything that goes into Chesterfield is the best that money can buy or that science knows about. “Good... they’ve got to be good,” we say about CHESTERFIELD—and we mean it! And that’s _ something you can square with everything you’ve ever tead, or heard—or know—about this good cigarette! © 1931, Liccarr & Myers Tosacco Co, Cheapest Insect Spray You. Can Use Laboratory-Tested—Super-Strength FLY.TOX Bed Bugs, Ants. Moths, Fleas MOST POPULAR THROUGHOUT THE Send MOTHER Oscar H. Will & Co. Phone 784 319-3rd Street Surest, Quickest Death to WORLD = All we ask to prove their superiority is that you use one sack. Satisfaction guar- anteed. The Season’s Treat Is to get a glimpse of the exceptional values we're Showing In M. BORN & CO. Made to Measure Clothes $25 to $50 John Henlein Sure to be- THE BEST PICTURE OF 1931” Chained by con-, vention to, necessity”. slave. ‘yearning for lib-; erty,.;. seeking: solace; under-, OCCIDENT, LYON’S BEST, ~ OR CLIMAX . Every bushel of wheat used in milling these brands is washed and scoured in at least 20 gallons of pure water. Cost More - Worth It! RUSSELL -MILLER MILLING CO. Eyes Examined Glasses Prescribed- The eye is an organ you cant afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Offices the G. P. Opposite Hotel since 1914 Phone 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. Capital Funeral Parlors ‘ Jos. W. Tschumperlin Prop. : Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day or Night—23 HOTELRADISSON| | A Challenge To Women in Love 10th Big