Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
va THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1931 COMMISSION MIGHT , ALLOW GROCERY IN ‘BAST PART OF CITY Amendment to Business Zoning Ordinance Proposed by Commissioner An amendment to Bismarck’s busi- ness zoning ordinance which would -change a block. in the eastern part of the city from the B residential dis- .trict to the C commercial district was proposed to the city commission Mon- ‘day evening by Commissioner Paul Wachter. Such an amendment, if passed, -would permit the establishment of a grocery store in that block as a con- venience to residents in that section of the city. The block in question is bordered : by Avenues C and D and Twentieth and Twenty-first Sts. R. A. Russell, 700 Twenty-first St., who desires to open a store in the block, presented a petition to pi commission. Arguing in favor of a store before the commission Monday night, A. B. Carley explained that residents of the section are virtually isolated from the’ rest of the city and are one mile from the nearest store and much farther from the business district, He said that from 280 to 285 persons occupy 49 houses east of Nineteenth St. and north of Rosser avenue which would patronize the proposed store. Kling Favors Plan J. Henry Kling, manager of the Bismarck -Mandan Credit Bureau, and Mrs. D. T. Owens, a resident of the district in question, spoke in fa- vor of the proposal and several other supporters attended the Monday night meeting. The commission probably will vote on the proposed amendment next Monday evening. Wachter explained that the Russell request is different from that of C. R. Kositzky, whith the commission refused a short time ago. in that Russell would establish a. store far from the business section in an isolated region while Kositzky sought to establish one nearer the C commercial district. The commission deferred action of a request by E. B. Klein that his per- sonal property assessment for 1929- 1930 be lowered until the situation is examined more closely by J. A. Gra- ham, assessor. Consider Subscription Plan A. Arntson, representative of the Crowell Publishing company, submit- ted an unemployment relief proposal before the commissioners. Under the plan, the Crowell company would stage a subscription campaign in the city until Dec. 1 for many publica- ions. A percentage of the subscrip- tion money would be turned over to the city commission, which would use the money to employ men at any work in-the city it found desirable. Arntson stipulated that the money could not be used for charity, how- ever. ‘The commission decided to-suggest- that Arntson endeavor to interest rome private organization, rather than the city commission, “in the pro- a veThe commission also decided to or- der Joe Salomon to move a news stand he had constructed @n the side- walk near the Nicola building at the| Intersection of Broadway avenue and Fifth St. , A large stack of bills was approved sy the commission. ; At the Movies _~ or CAPITOL THEATRE £ ‘Whether you are.a footbal fan or not, you will get @ real thrill from seeing “The Spirit of Notre Dame,” the Universal picture which opened an engagement of two days at the Capitol theatre yesterday. Devotees of the gridiron sport will undoubtedly: be filled with the wildeyed enthusia- sm that comes from @ hard-fought game, for this picture is real foot- ball with real football players. The picture stars Lew Ayres, as a country boy just entering Notre Dame university, and later, in his junior year, becoming the ball-carry- ing. hero of the team, definitely headed for All-American selection in the following season. But there arises a situation which interferes) with these plans, and eventually brings the young football star to a point where he forgets the spirit point where he forgets the spirit animating the team, and becomes an outcast in the eyes of his fellow get ahead so fast? | | You've seen men like “Mac.” Always stepping to bigger jobs. { With the energy and good health | to realize his ambitions. ' So often a promising career is handicapped by constipation. This ailment frequently brings headaches, loss of appetite and energy. Ambition is dulled. { Avoid constipation. Just eat two tablespoonfuls daily of Kellogg’s Att-Bran. This de- licious cereal supplies “bulk,” Vitamin B and iron. “Bulk” gently cleanses the in- sete, Agee B tones ee ‘up. promote regularity. How much better than pills and rugs, Enjoy Kellogg’s Ati-Bran as a cereal. Have your wife use it in cooking. Appe- tizing recipes on the red-and-green package. At all grocers. Made by Kellogg in Battle Creek. WELPS KEEP YOU FIT This Associated Press telephoto shows Pres fer, Josee, on the rear steps of the White Hou t and Mrs, Hoovs fter the 5} with ior Pi Left to right: Mrs, Hoover, President Hoover, Laval, and Josee, HOOVERS PLAY HOST TO LAVAL AND DAUGHTER Laval of Fr: kesmen for the two nations had finished their conferences. Assoviated Press Photo and his daugh- ABSENCES IN HIGH SCHOOL DIMINISH Cuts For First Period This Year Only 54 Per Cent of Total Last Year | Absences recorded in Bismarck high school for the first six weeks of this year were only 54 per cent of the total recorded during the same period last year, according to W. H. Payne, principal. | Absences in the four classes dur-/} ing the period this year totaled only 186 1-2 days compared with 325 1-2 days for the first six weeks in 1930-) 1931. Unexcused tardinesses, however, totaled 113 this year compared to 109 last year, due to increased tardi- ness in the sophomore class this year. A new cut system has been in vogue in the high school this year, the essential points of which follows: a student is alowed two cuts a { Semester without loss of credit; a cut} may be excused in case the absence is | due to sickness of such a serious na- | ture that a doctor is called, provid- | ing a doctor's certificate is presented when the student returns to school; when a student is absent from a class more than two times without being excused, the student will be given zero for each recitation missed after the two cuts; students wishing to leave school during a session must present a written request from a par- ent or guardian; students tardy to any class or assembly will be sent to the detention room; students are ex- pected to make up all work missed, whether excused or not. Attendance figures for the first six players. This portion of the pitture is frought with drama, and the b97- ish Lew makes the most of every scene. The entire production is filled with the spirit of football, and the spot manship that builds championship teams, and the cast comprises some of the greatest players in the history developed by the late Coach Knute Rockne at Notre Dame. These in- clude Frank Carideo, twice All- American quarterback, “The Four Horsemen,” Moon Mullins, John Law, | Adam Walsh, Al Howard, Bucky O'Connor, Art McMamon many other noted players. And these boys reveel themselves as capable actors, as well as football players of the first degree. When the team finds itsef in the midst of its final game of the season, with Army, the interest has reached a pitch of high- est excitement. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Vivid and striking, matching thrills in an English castle with thrills on an Arizona cattle ranch, Cecil B. De- Mille’s “The Squaw Man,” which opens Wednesday night at the Para- mount. Theatre for two days, is “swell” entertainment. The writers, Lucien Hubbard, Le- nore J. Coffee and Elsie Janis, have jdone @ fine job with the highly suc- cessful Edwin Milton Royle play. They have xept intact both the thrills and pathos of the Englishman, exiled for a theft he didn’t commit. who marries the Indian girl who saved his life, only to have his sweet- heart from Great Britain come back into his sphere of things seven years later, when he is the father of a half- Indian boy. ‘The piece abounds in extraordinary camera shots, well-done with some sort of a trick crane, by Hal Rosseon. | The scenic investiture, shot in the) wilds of Arizona, is breath-taking in its beauty. The Presbyterian Ladies Aid will hold a rummage sale, Thursday and Friday, October 29 and 30. «« Personality »» 5 and) (33 ATTEND CLOTHES | jLeaders of Burleigh Homemak- | ers Meet With Agricultural College Expert | eine Thirty-three Burleigh county wom- ; jen, leaders of Homemakers clubs, at- tended a three-day clothes remodel- ing school over the week-end con- ducted by Miss Julla E. Brekke, of Ae North Dakota agrigultural col- lege. Sessions were held in Bismarck Fri- a and Saturday and in Wing Mon- lay. | The sessions were another lesson in ,the series on the project of clothing |color and design chosen by the coun- ty Homemakers clubs for this season, Those attending the meetings are as follows: At Bismarck Friday—Mrs. W. L. Watson and Mrs. E. Conley, McKen- zie club; Mrs. Herb Fricke and Mrs. | Falkenstein, Crofte Star; Mrs. R. M. Ludemann and Mrs. A. C. Dance, Me- noken; Mrs. J. Kurby, Bismarck Hay Creek; Mrs. Earl Snyder and Mrs. Ralph Ishmeal, Boyd Cross Country; | Wild Rose; Mrs. F. 8. Owen and Mrs. W. A. Dietzman, Three Leaf Clover. |_ At Bismarck Saturday—Mrs. H. L. Belk and Mrs. C. W. Beyer, Sterling; | Mrs, R. J. Buchanan and Mrs, Wil- liam McMurrich, Riverview; Mrs.} Charles McGoon, Bi&marck Hay) Creek; Mrs. R. Day and Mrs. M. Rob- | inson, Brittin; Mrs. E, Enockson and} Mrs. T. E. Watkins, Rainbow. At Wing Monday—Mrs. Fred Jor- dan and Mrs. C. Swanson, Driscoll; Mrs. 8. L. Jordahl, Canfield; Mrs. E. |A. Kopplin and Mrs. B. Knowles, Wing; Mrs. O. J. Olson and Mrs. W. |Ollenburger, Macumber; Mrs. C. E. Cunningham and Mrs. H. Taylor, Trygg Cedar Hill; and Mrs. Arthur Strand and Mrs. Carlson, Estherville. Your mother traveling alone. An inanimate thing, a line of steel units—a pant- ing locomotive, a chain railroad station, about away from home and lif Bustle and hurrying tion. But a Northern fusion with hospitality. A friendly welcome of pullmens—pausing at the to speed off into distance, etime friends. persons at the railroad sta- Pacific ticket displaces con- and a homelike spirit are found on Northern Pacific passenger cars. Train employes, members of the Northern Pacific family, have been trained through 50 years of exacting serv- ice to the traveling public. Days and nights of pleas- urable riding through scenic areas. There comes a new appreciation of the friendliness which underlies the thing called a passenger train. Personality is a part of Northern Pacific passenger train service. NORTHERN PACIFIC \Mrs. A. Fetterly and Mrs. E, Saville, | St. James, Minn., Oct. 27—(#)—The third death resulting from an auto- !mobile-train crash at St. James Sun- \day occurred Tuesday. The driver of ‘the car, Robert Clark, 40, died with-i {Out regaining consciousness. Robert | Number days absence 1930-1931 .. Engh was killed outright and Eugene; Number days absence 1931-1932 Clark died Monday. . | Aboard a. battleship only one man| 4s allowed to whistle. He is the boat-| \swain, who signals the crew with his “pipe.” THIRD VICTIM DIES FON is: Kidney Function Promptly. A nagging backache, with bladder irritations; burning; scanty and too frequent pas- sage and getting up at night, may warn of disordered kidney function. Thousands recom- mend Doan’s Pills in these con- ditions. Praised for 50 years by grateful users the country over. . i 8 00 py ; 17 V old by dealers everywhere. 1) OT ! H pfs Uy, i} The New North Coast Limited RAILWAY First of the Northern Uranscontinentals weeks of this year and last year fol- low: Number in class 1930-1931 .. Number in class 1931-1932 .. | Unexcused tardiness 1930-1931 . Unexcused tardiness 1931-1932 . Number having perfect attendance 1930-1931 130 Number having perfect attendance 1931-1932 156 Opera Singer Weds Assuciated Press Photo -Eleanor Painter, prima donna of the Philadelphia and San Francisco opera companies, was married in New York City to Charles Henry Strong, Cleveland business man. LINTON HARDWARE MOVES Linton, N. D., Oct. 27.—Stock of the Jarrell Hardware company, whicl moved here from Bismarck, will be moved to Jamestown, its owners have announced. Man Is Bound Over On Statutory Count Hugh L. Erwin, Bismarck, was in the Burleigh county jail Tuesday awaiting the next term of district court, when he will face a statutory charge. He was bound over to district court Monday afternoon following a hear- ing before Police Magistrate Edward 8. Allen. He was placed in jail when he was unable to furnish $1,000 in bonds. | STOMACH ILLS h| Eat, drink and be merry! You will not suffer, if you're prepared. Two or three tablets of Pape’s Diapepsin will give that “weak stomach” a new lease on life! Eat them like candy, take a swallow of water, and get up Fresh. a hg Bi es 3 hearty Bisa fit for work or 2 play. No gas can form, no pains wil 19 181 120 v1| Done—ner distress two hours later. 16 68 ua Get the handy pocket size of this 113 84 710) positive panacea for sour stomach, 121% 6343, «= 81s 58! nausea, soreness, or other symptoms 1'a 4° 42 25| of gastric disorder. Pape’s Diapepsin 46 15 2 24| always works! 36 37 16 ry What is your garage worth? Your garage surely needs insuring as well as your house. Adequate protec- tion for all your property is absolutely essential it you plan to make a per- manent investment in establishing your home and its surroundings. Talk with us and get the benefit of our experience, Our advice has saved many a property-owner from loss. Why not let us help you, too? MURPHY “The Man Who Knews Insurance” 218 Broadway Phone 517 Use the Want Ads =the better gasoline Standard Red Crown Balanced for All Conditions IHE golfer about to drive is perfectly co-ordinated. His limbs, his nerves, his whole being —mind and muscle—are in complete balance for that long shot. Standard Red Crown, the better gasoline, also is per- feetly balanced. It is made, not found—made to meet every changing phase of travel, weather and season, with perfect poise. It is balanced for smooth, easy starting, quick, eager pick-up, sustained power and speed. It gives all these because it is made to an exact formula. Standard Red Crown is priced to meet current eco- nomic conditions. It gives maximum performance at a moderate cost. Fill up today with Standard Red Crown —the better gasoline. You will be astonished and delighted at the performance you get from your engine. It Burns Clean at Any Speed Sold where the Red Crown Emblem is displayed STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Indians)