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‘THE BISMAKCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCLUB. HK 5, 1YS1 I ANT SAMYIN' NOTHIN’, AM T ? IT AINT SAMIN' ENEN ONE WELL »4OU SAY SOMETHING! ~ I'D AS SOON HEAR AWHAT YOU THINK OF ME,45 To SEE WHAT YOu THINK OF ME, WHEN I ASK You To BO SOME LUTTLE THING, LiKE GETTING ME A GLASS OF TT LIVESTOCK EXHIBITS | AT WASHBURN SHOW | WERE OUTSTANDING |Winners of Various Contests | | Are Listed by Show Offi- cials Saturday Washburn, N. D., Oct. 5.—()—Win- ners of the various contests held in ‘connection with the McLean county annual livestock show were an- nounced at the close of the exposition | Saturday night. |. Livestock exhibits were, considered by officials as one of the most oui- standing in recent years. Winners of the contests, in the o1-/ fhannes, Underwood; Lawrence Hun-! harbor; Frank Snyder, Underwood. Showmanship contest (dairy class), Milton Sauer, Washburn; Paul Parks,; Washburn; Clarence Johnson, Un-' derwood;' Elmer Retser, Washburn;! Jerald Johannes, Underwood; Ken- neth Tweeten, Washburn; Otho Jo- stad, Underwood; Marvin Reiser,! Washburn. Pigs { Purebred Duroc Jersey sow pigs, | Milton Sauer, Washburn; Irving Dal- botten, Mercer. Purebred Duroc Jersey boar pigs,! Harland Josephson, Washburn; Irv-! ing Dalbotten, Mercer. Purebred Poland China sow pigs, Milton Sauer, Washburn; Ovett' Parks, Washburn (two); Lester Twee-| ten, Washburn; Ernest Tweeten,| Washburn; Paul Slagg, Washburn (two). Purebred Poland China boar pigs, Ovett Parks, Washburn (two); Ern-!' est Tweeten, Washburn; Lester Tweeten, Washburn, | Purebred Chester White sow pigs,| LeRoy Evans, Turtle Lake, first and | brothers. , tle Lake. Heifer 1 year, Washburn. Heifer 1 year, LeRoy Evans, Turtle Lake. - Lester Tweeten, brothers. , Junior and grand’ champion ‘bull, Lorentzen brothers. Senior champion cow, Lorentzen Junior and grand champion heifer, Lester Tweeten. Milking Shorthorn Bull 2 years old, Maynesd Slagg ‘Washburn. Bull 1 year old, LeRoy Evans, Tur- Bull 6 months old, O. M. Dalbotten, Mercer. Heifer 6 months old, Hunstad, Underwood. Senior champion bull, Maynard Slagg, Washburn. Junior and grand champion bull Lawrence Junior champion heifer, Lawrence Hunstad, Underwood. Duroc Jersey Hogs Heifer under 6 months, Lorentzen| O. M. Dalbotten, Mercer. ! eS Senior and grand champion sow.| WED AT CARRINGTON Ovett Parks, Carrington, N. D., Oct. 5.—Miss Junior champion sow, Milton Sauer,|Alma Geisler, living near Fessenden, ‘Washburn. and Halvor Larson, xy, were Chasele: Sheep married at Carrington. They will 1 pees a E. Fisher, Mer-/live near Chaseley. cer; in Schlichenmayer, Turtle; aes. A TMapCReN DE Lake. | MASONS ATTENTION mee ram, John Acetate ae meeting of Bismarck . 2 ige No.5 A. F. & A. M. will cobson Dengian” Torsten M. J8-| be held tonight at 7:30 o'clock. st dnanienee ey \ All members are requested t> McLEAN SHOW CLOSES ; be present. Waskburn, N. D., Oct. —(P)—Mc- Lean county's annual livestock show closed here Saturday night with an old-time dance after one of the most successful exhibitions in its history. Iver Acker, state tax commissioner, spoke. Meredile with Backache? Spring boar pig, first and secona,/ | der they placed, are: | 4-H CLUB CLASS Cattle | second. Purebred Chester White boar pigs, | Purebred beef shorthorn bull) LeRoy Evans, Turtle Lake, first and| Harland Josephson, Washburn; C. C.) Rickets, Douglas, third. | Yearling. sow, Irving Dalbotten,) jealves, George Anderson, Coleharbo-; | Vivian Snyder, Underwood. | Purebred beef shorthorn heifers, |Lester Tweeten, Washburn; LeRoy| | second. |Mercer, and Milton Sauer, Wash-| Grade Chester White sow pigs,| burn. | Rodney Slagg, Washburn, first and! Spring sow pig, Harland Joseph- second. |son, Washburn, first and third; Mil-! Wit! MOTHERS GET GRAY. |Evans, Turtle Lake. | | Purebred Aberdeen Angus heifers, | Harland Josephson, Washburn. i Purebred Holstein bull calf, Elmer Reiser, Washburn; Underwood. Purebred Holstein heifer, Clarence Johnson, Underwood; Gerald Jc- hannes, Underwood. Purebred Holstein cow, Sauer, Wishburn. Purebred milking shorthorn heifer,| Milton Sauer. | Purebred milking shorthorn cow,) Lawrence Hynstad, Underwood. | Baby beef (grades and purebreds),) Raymond Josephson, Washburn; Ross) Josephson, Washburn; Frank Snycer,| Underwood; Paul Slagg, Washburn. Grade Holstein heifers, Marvirl| Otho Johannes, Milton pt Aer 1081 BY Total Is $155,304.75 Less Than Amount Collected Same Period in 1930 North Dakota motorists paid $1,- 779,589 for motor vehicle reglstra- tions during the first nine. months of this year, according to the third quarterly report by the state motor vehicle registrar. The receipts of $1,779,587.80 are $155,304.75 less than the amount coi- lected for the corresponding nine months of 1930, when the total was $1,934,892.55. For the entire year of 1930, the total collections were $1,-| 958,662.05. Registration ‘ of passenger car‘ trucks and motorcycles for the nin» months were 11,002 less than for that period a year ago. On Sept. 30 of this year, the total registrations were 143,606 passenger cars; 27,195 trucks, and 223 motorcycles, while up to that date a year ago, the registrations were 153,638 passenger cars, 28,228 trucks, and 226 motorcycles. “MOTORISTS PAID $1,779,589 - FOR LICENSES UP TO SEPT. 30, loons, details the drama which enters the lives of two Navy fliers portrayed \by Holt and Graves. The two, fast \friends, become bitter enemies, indi-| = rectly because both love the same | woman—wife of the character played | by Graves. | “Most of the scenes were made at |the U. S. Naval Air Station at Lake- hurst, N. J., with the dirigible Los | Angeles playing an important part in them. Full cooperation of the Navy |department was accorded the Colum- ‘bia executives in filming the picture. PARAMOUNT THEATRE What do society girls do when their family fortunes suddenly vanish? In most instances, such bereft young ladies have been known to plunge right into the workaday world |and make commercial successes out of lives that once had been ordained {mainly for squanderoys activities. | “Secrets of a Secretary” has to do | with the activities of just such a gir! j7~Helen Blake—played by Claudette | Colbert at the Paramount Theatre to- | night. In this story. the heroine is even Receipts for the final quarter cf| more than ordinarily burdened. She 1930 totaled $23,769.50. Estimating | nas acquired a husband.who turns out collections the last quarter for this to be a worthless fortune-hunter who, year at around $15,000, the registrar | as soon as he sees their money going, said, the final collections for the pe-| goes himself, deserting the much-em- riod will be approximately $165,000) Jess than the collections for the en-| tire year of 1930. | Receipts and county shares for the| quarter ending Sept. 30, 1931 (the state highway share being practi- cally the same as for the county) | follow: i Couniy | County— Adams Receipts $987.5 Barnes 2,945.45 Benson 151.10 Billings 176.05 86.03) Bottineau 919.15 459.57 | Bowman 1,106.15, 553.08. Burke 987.00 _-493.50/ Burleigh 3,485.70 1,742.85 Cass ... 9,384.10 4,692.05! Cavalier .. 1,234.75, 617.37 Dickey . 1,374.60 687.30 Divide: . 655.50 327.75 Dunn 359.05, E Eddy . 716.60 Emmons 992.55 Foster ... 822.65 Golden Valley .. 506.55" Grand Forks 4,917.05 Grant .. 998.70 Griggs . 632.60 Hettinger 1,692.10 Kidder . LaMoure . Logan McHenry McIntosh McKenzie McLean . Mercer . Morton Mountrail Nelson . Oliver .. Pembina . Pierce Ramsey Ransom Renville Richland « Rolette Sargent Is Wiliams . 1,487.35 $74,214.90 $37,107.45 *"AT THE MOVIES *! . AT THE A a! a CAPITOL THEATRE H The United States Navy turned the Tesources of its air station at Lake-| nurst, N. J., over to the production | department of Columbia pictures for | the making of certain scenes of “Diri-| gible,” the air special which comes to the Capitol theater today. “Dirigible” is a Frank Capra pro-| duction, with Jack Holt and Ralph! Graves costarred and Fay Wray in the: feminine role. Hobart Bos- | } Roscue Kerns and Clarence | Muse are important members of the } be picture, ti i ure, filled with thrilling air scents enacted by the pick of the! Navy's flying aces, and with striking! maneuvers by the dirigible Les An. eles and her brood of blimps and bal bittered girl. But she gets employment as a so- cial secretary for a wealthy family with whom she had once been on a par socially. The father and mother of the family treat her with the re- spect that her earlier status in their stratum demanded. But their young daughter Sylvia is just a trifle snooty. When the British Lord who is com- ing to marry this young woman ar- 2|rives he falls in love with Claudette. Meanwhile Sylvia has been carrying on a dangerous affair with Claudette’s renegade husband. The situation is tense and the problems faced by the heroine are modern problems. She solves them in a modern way—and the picture is ended with a brilliant series of scenes in which acting and plot tension have 15 full sway. ICKS VapoRun BAKING / ‘ SAM E double ee PRICE Bee OUNCES FOR MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR COVERNMENT Reiser, Washburn. NOT MANY FATALITIES Grade Le nota heifer, Paul Parks, W: urn. | Mexico City, Oct, 5.—Accidents in| Grade red polled hélfer, Rennetl| civil aviation in Mexico last year were yeeten, Washburn. i few and far between. Only 14 persons} Showmanship contest (beef class),, were killed in air travel, and eight! Ross Josephson, Washburn; Ray-' were injured. Eight planes were to-|mond Josephson, Washburn; LeRoy| tally destroyed, nine were partly dam- Evans, Turtle Lake; Harland Joseph- aged, and four forced landings with-|son, Washburn; Lester Tweeten, out damage were recorded. | Washburn; George Anderson, Cole- OPEN CLASS | Hereford Cattle I" Bull 2 years old, junior and grand champion, J. B. Peterson, Mercer. Aberdeen Angus Junior and grand champion bull | W. J. Bickert, Washburn. - Junior and grand champion heifer, Harland Josephson, Washburn. Holstein | Two heifers owne dand bred by ex- hibitor, Milton, Sauer, Washburn. +Bull 1 year old, Otho Johannes, | Underwood. Bull under 6 months, Milton Sauer. | Bull 6 months old, Elmer Reiser. | Heifer 1 year old, Clarence John- \tle Lake, first and second. j ton Sauer, Washburn, second. | Litter of 4 pigs, Harland Joseph- son, Washburn. | Junior champion gilt, Harland Jo-' | Sephson. ! Junior and grand champion boar,'! Harland Josephson. | Senior and grand champion sow,) Irving Dalbotten, Mercer. Chester White i Spring boar pig, LeRoy Evans, Tur-| Spring sow pig, LeRoy Evans, first! and second. 1 Litter of 4 pigs, LeRoy Evans, Junior and grand champion boar and junior and grand champion sow, son, Underwood ;Elmer Reiser. LeRoy Evans. ' Junior and grand champion bull, Poland China Milton Sauer. Yearling boar, first; sow, Senior champion cow, Milton Sauer.| first; yearling sow, first; Ovett Paris, Junior and grand champion heifer.) Washburn. Clarence Johnson, Underwood. | Shorthorn Beef Bull less than 1 year, Lorentzen brothers, Washburn. Spring Bull less than 1 year, George An-| Washburn, derson, Coleharbor. Bull under 6 months, Jonas Thomp-' son, Underwood. Cow 2 years, Lorentzen brothers, |Ovett Parks. Spring boar pig, John Arngrimson | Washburn, first; Ovett Park, second and third. x sow pig, Milton Sauei, first; Ovett Parks, sec- jond and third. Litter of 4 pigs, Ovett Parks. | Senior and grand champion boar, | Ie be Warn of Disordered idney Function. A nagging backache, with bladder irritations and a tired, nervous, depressed feeling may warn of disordered kidney function. Thousands recom- mend Doan’s Pills in these con- ditions. Praised for more than 50 years by grateful users the country over. Sold by dealers All we ask to prove their superiority is that you use one sack. Satisfaction guar- anteed. 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. | You purchase shoes, fruit and candy. You call for cigarettes. I?s like this ¢ WHEN You . GO TO BUY A PAIR OF SHOES, you examine the leather, the way the shoes are made, their shape. You try them to see if they fit— if they satisfy you. Why not follow the same method in purchasing your ciga- rettes? You want cigarettes that are made from the very best to- bacco—mild, ripe, sweet. You want them made right. You want them free from harshness and bite and “pinches.” In other words, you want cigarettes that satisfy you. WHEN.YOU GO TO BUY FRUIT—oranges, grapefruit, apples— you want ripe fruit, fruit that has matured before being taken from the tree; fruit that has been handled right and packed right; fruit that’s the same throughout—not green on one side and ripe on the other, Why not apply the same test in purchasing your cigarettes? You want cigarettes made from tobaccos handled right by the farmer—ripened, sweetened in the sun and cured right. You want cigarettes that taste the same, day in and day out. You want them pleasing in taste—mild and satisfying. WHEN YOU BUY CANDY, you want to know, above all things, that it is pure. Is it real candy or are there a lot of other things mixed in with itP And you want it fresh. You want it freshly made and you want it so packed as to reach you just as it was when it was made. Why not apply the same test when you buy your cigarettes? You want a cigarette that’s pure; for @ 1933. Locaes & Mvass Tesacco Co, a purity counts in ciga- rettes just as it does in candy. Then again, you want a cigarette that’s just as fresh as when it was made. Now, if you apply to cigarettes all the tests that you apply in buying shoes and fruit and candy you. will purchase CHEs- TERFIELD like millions of other smokers. First, because tobacco men will tell you that in Turkey, Ken- tucky, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland, only the mildest, ripest tobacco is bought for CHESTERFIELD— tobacco cured by the sun’s pure rays, by the farmers’ slow-burn- ing ovens, and finally by great high-pressure steam drying ma- chines. In the tobacco regions where they grow tobacco and know tobacco, CHESTERFIELD is usually the leading seller, Second, because the carefully selected CHESTERFIELD tobacco leaves are blended and cross-blended. This exclusive CHESTER- FIELD blending method is not just mixing together different tobaccos—it is mixing them in such a way as to bring out tlie finer qualities of each. It’s like producing a mew and better type of tobacco—tobacco with greater mildness, more smoothness, much better taste. Third, because the cigarette paper is selected with the same care. CHESTERFIELD paper is the purest, the best that money can buy. Then the cigarettes are made and packed by machin- ery in clean, sanitary factories. And the moisture-proof, attrac- tive package—free from heavy inks or inky odor—comes to you just as if you passed the factory in the morning and tooz your CHESTERFIELDS from the machine. Good . . . they’ve got to be good. ——