The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 16, 1931, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. IONDAY, NOVEM BREAKS GAME LAWS -. EVENIP HE MISSES “Attorney General Says ‘Poor Shot’ Can Expect No Sym- pathy From Courts A poor shot, who hunts out of sea- son but returns empty-handed, can- not expect any sympathy from the courts. He is just as much a game violator as the perfect shot who bags them out of season, according to an opin- ion by Attorney General James Mor- Tis. C. Vernon Freeman, deputy game and fish commissioner, asked Morris to rule on this question: A defend- ant has been arrested and charged with hunting pheasants illegally, The evidence shows he was hunting afield with a gun and that he shot at a pheasant. He missed it. The statutes provide for a penalty for every bird “taken or killed” in violation of the game regulations. Morris pointed out that “hunting ’ pheasants out of season is clearly for- bidden by law. “It is also clear,” he said, “that the penalty provided in section 19 (chap- ter 148, laws of 1931), does not apply to hunting pheasants unless a per- son kills one or takes it. That does not mean, however, that there is no penalty provided for hunting pheas- ants out of season.” Section 59 of the chapter makes 1 a misdemeanor to violate any provi- sions of the game and fish act, and hunting pheasants, regardless of! whether any are taken or killed, is| illegal if done so out of season.” Morris ruled that while no specific penalty is provided in section 19, the general penalty under section 59 ap- ‘plies and “that one who hunts pheas- ants out of season, even though he 1s @ poor shot and does not get any birds, is liable for punishment as. provided in section 59.” The penalty is not less than $10 nor more than $100 and costs of prosecution or by imprisonment in the county jail for 10 to 30 days, or both, at the discre- tion of the court. State Drouth Chest Now Totals $150,000 Pledges and cash contributed to the Red Cross drought relief fund total approximately $150,000 Wesley Mc-j Dowell of Fargo, executive secretary of the state drought relief committee, said here Saturday. McDowell predicted the state would successfully meet its goal of $200,000 for drought relief, but said consider- able more intensive work on the part of local committees is necessary. He believed the campaign would be closed. on Thanksgiving day. Organization of relief committees has been completed in every county in the state, McDowell said. The last seven counties were organized by McDowell and Frank Bryant, secre- tary to Governor Shafer in a week's tour which ended Saturday. These counties are Logan, McIntosh, Em- mons, Slope, Bowman, Hettinger and Adams. McDowell and Bryant said they re- ceived enthusiastic response to ap- peals for funds and necessities for OUT OUR WAY By Williams GOOO NIGHT! ALLUS CORRECTIN’ ME IN FRONT TRwitliams Sito © 1931 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. |Halliday, Gladys Gale. Alfred Cross, | Pearl Varvelle and Lillian Harmer. PARAMOUNT THEATRE “Flying High,” screen version of the famous New York musical comedy hit, |which opens today at the Para- mount Theatre. Known as an “aerocopter,” it not only executes comical dideos on the ground of an aviation field, but actually soars high in the sky, car- rying the supposedly terrified Bert Lahr and the hysterical Charlotte Greenwood to riotous adventures among the clouds. laugh of their life when they see this novel air invention execute’ a series of amazing evolutions which in the eye and lamed a wing! Parent-Teachers to Make Toy Collection Grand Forks, N .D., Nov. 16.—()-- The North Dakota Parent-Teachers’, council will sponsor a state-wide cam-| paign for the collection of toys and other gifts to be presented to chil- Miss Johnstone said the purpose of the drive will be to assure every child Probebly the craziest sky vehicle | ever built makes its appearance in| Filmgores may be prepared for the manner of a bird which has lost one | dren of the drouth area at Christmas; time, M. Beatrice Johnstone, Grand, Forks, state president, has announced. | drought stricken farmers in north-|in the stricken region a Christmas {commission in freight rates on Red western North Dakota. Numerous|sift. School pupils of 40 counties will | donations of food, clothing and cash|be asked to contribute presents for | were made while workers were in| various communities. So far, McDowell said, Wells, La Moure and Barnes counties have! oversubscribed their quotas, while a) number of counties are approaching their quotas. Operetta Presented By Beach High School (Tribune Special Service) Beach, N. D., Nov. 16.—More than 40 members of the combined male and female glee clubs of Beach high school presented a two-act operetta, “Peggy and the Pirate,” here. In the cast were Ernest Helm, James Stone, Virginia Miller, Doro- thea “ Golliet, Harold Kannenberg, Helga Nellermoe, Dorothy Lovell, Reese Foster, Rex Miller, and Gordon Crosby. Members of the choruses were: Girls—Margaret Arnold, Laura Abel, Ruth Lovell, Garnet Hathaway, Noreene Johnston, Helen Robertson, Luella Sticka, Marjorie Zielsdorf, Mary Zeller, Katharine Moran, Ioune Nelson, Agnes Schauer, Myrtle Gol- den, Tio Hollstein, Lenora Nelson, and, Virginia Bishop; boys—Robert Carl- son, Howard Davis, Harold Feld- hhusen, Carl Fosjard, Stanley Kan- nenberg, Ray. Langberg, Russell Langberg, Frank Jones, Orville Moe, Lewis Odland, Glen Odman, Ernest Schmitt, and Albert Gilman. In the orchestra were Anne Houck, Oma- Mills, Genevieve Rocksvold, Thelma Dailey, Robert Russell, and Hilda Elidson. Between the acts, Mr. : Remiche Presented several piano accordion’ solos. The operetta. was directed by, Miss Wagenhals and Mrs. Evea Per- icle. June Mills was accompanist. ‘The operetta was featured by 18 musical numbers. . © peer ee ey | AT THE MOVIES ' a —————————— CAPITOL THEATRE the less fortunate children of north- western North Dakota. i County superintendents of schools{ will be the agencies for the drive, those in the 40 counties supervising the assembling of gifts and sending! them to superintendents in the drouth counties. These latter school heads will distribute them in their counties. The P. T. A. will conduct the drive and its county councils. Support of the state department of public in- struction has been pledged by Bertha R. Palmer, Bismarck, state superin- tendent; and of the North Dakota vik, Bismarck, state president. Northwest Grainmen Gathering in Fargo Fargo, N. D., Nov. 16.—()—With revision of by-laws as one of the most important items of » the an- nual meeting of the Northwest Grain setups came last night. It is believed leaders will attend. By-law revision becomes necessary through new affiliation of the North- west body with the Farmers’ National Grain corporation, also a farm board setup, which Sept. 1 became effective. The Farmers’ National handles fi- with the Northwest association in charge of getting the grain from the rural points. ‘Chicken Shack’ South Of Bismarck Is Raided Oounty and federal police officials Saturday night raided the “chicken | shack” on the Missouri River bottoms about four miles south of Bismarck. No arrests were made but three gallons of wine, a small quantity of through its nine district chairmen | Maine and other eastern states. | Education association by H. O. sax | ciation, one of the federal farm board ! between 50 and 100 grain organization | © nancing and marketing of grain un-j "| der the new farm board machinery, j Three nationally known beauties vie| alcohol, and two solt machines were ‘from throughout the county are ex- pected to attend the program. A play program in the World War Memorial building is on the afternoon A request for an injunction re- schedule. In the evening the club | Straining workers from completing @’ members will b2 guests at a dinner in two-mile stretch of earth grade road | the memorial building to be given by in Trygg township was denied by |the Bismarck Rotary club. e Judge Fred Jansonius in Burleigh! A Program to be staged by club lcounty district court Monday morn-| members is being planned. jing. \ | Plaintiffs in the action were Jacob} Niemi and Edward Lundquist, who |own and lease property adjacent to, {the road, work in which practically | has been completed. j The two farmers claimed that the original petitions asking for the road were insufficient and stated it will! cause them additional expense for the { erection of fences on their property| b@dering the road. | The road is along a section line be- tween the Niemi and Lundquist farms. Valley Potato Men | Asking Protection) Injunction Sought by Trygg Farmers Denied; To Carry On Minneapolis, Nov. 16.—(?)—A group :of potato shivpers from Moorhead, | Fargo, and other Red River valley| points met Monday with officials of the Soo Line, Northern Pacific and Great Northern railways to protest against advances ordered for Decem- ber 3 by the Interstate Commerce |* River potatoes to Chicago and the east. The proposed increases, it is esti- mated, would average more than 15 per cent as compared with present rates. The shippers stressed the Point that the higher rates would make it difficult if not impossible for Minnesota and North Dakota pota-r toes to compete in the consuming ” will keep the Chicago territory between Chicago and New Ox. He Inherited his father's York with potatoes from Michigan, », Including the ball club, which | ts estimated at several miilion dollars. . ‘Associated Presse Photo Louis Comisky, son of the tate Charles Comiskey, baseball’s “Old ‘Says Drought Area | | | Williston Attorney Praises Stick- to-Itiveness of North- west Residents Fargo, N. D., Nov. 16.—()—Out of the drought that has brought human suffering and misery to. the farmers) {of northwestern North Dakota has| j¢ome an epic of hope, ambition and | determination. | Victims of the fickleness of nature, jwhich has laid waste their fields through lack of moisture, the farm- jers refuse to be despondent. | W. B. Overson, Williston lawyer and former state senator, in a letter | to Wesley McDowell, Fargo, secretary lof the state drought relief commit- ‘tee, has summarized the first-hand | information which is his through ‘close contact with the stricken farm- ers. i “This section of the state is com- | paratively new,” Overson writes. |“Lots of the original homesteaders jare here yet. They are a brave lot. | They have met misfortunes and | dashed hopes before, and met them | standing up. They will do it again. | “I venture to predict that after this winter is over, this section of ithe country will be about the first {to recover from depression. Most of our people have their health; they jhave fair places to sleep, they have \friends, hope, ambition and stick-io- itiveness. They have had a pretty severe lesson, and are going to profit by it.” There 32 Years Overson, who has spent the last 32 years in Williston, said he has seen many crop failures, “but this is the only real one I ever saw.” “When a farmer has summer fal- lowed his land,” he writes, “and has it in excellent shape, as he believes, for raising a good crop; plants his seed, and good seed, early; when no crop appears, and he plants again, and sometimes yet once again, and sees Russian thistles only, with once in a while @ spear of grain that raises its head above the dwarfed thistles, with absolutely no chance of getting even a half bushel of grain to the acre; when the native grass is so short that it will not even make pasture, and the country all sum- mer looks and is as brown as it usu- ally is in October after the grass nas cured, one can realize that there sim- ply was no crop. “You cannot exaggerate as far as crop failure is concerned, with the exception of @ crop of Russian this- tles, which many, many farmers have mowed and raked up, thinking that these would be better for stock to feed on than a snow bank. When the cattle and sheep got sick from eating the stuff, and on inquiry it was learned that it was very laxa- tive, and dangerous to feed exclu- sively or even largely, then you can begin to realize what the farmers are up against. Are Not Downhearted “But are we downhearted? Mostly no. When you get the farmers out singly and have a heart-to-heart talk with them, ‘they are going to make it all right.’ It will be hard, but they have some milk cows and] Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound | Had fight with husband ‘Another quarrel! She should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com to ease those headaches — headaches that j _make hernetvous, irritable and grouchy. To Complete Program For Achievement Day Final plans for the annual Burleigh county 4-H club achievement day pro- ; gram here next Friday will be arrang-} ed this evening by Miss Esther Wat- son, McKenzie, president of the coun- ty association, and H.O. Putnam, county agricultural agent. More than 250 junior club members | | BAKING f / acting aire 25 | OUNCES FOR for pulchritudinous honors in RKO Radio Pictures’ sophisticated drama “Smart Woman” opening today at the Capitol Theatre. Mary Astor, who plays the leading feminine role, once won a beauty con- test in Chicago. It was this event that inspired her to try her fortunes on the stage and screen—a successful try as everyone knows. Miss Astor's beauty and excellent screen presence won for her the enviable title—“Or- chid of the Screen.” Noel Francis, who enacts the sir- enic role of the blonde gold-digger, also won a beauty contest in the South and was a featured beauty in Ziegfeld’s “Follies” for several sea- sons. Ruth Weston, who hails from New ‘York's social “400,” was known as the most beautiful debutante in Gotham at her coming out party. In “Smart Woman” she plays the part of modern maid who believes in taking bby force the man she wants. “Smart Woman” adapted from My- ton C. Fagan’s successful stage play, provides both a colorful background and lavish wardrobe for the three Deauties. Others in the cast inelude Robert Ames, Edward Everett Herton, John . ° confiscated, according to Fred Ans- | trom, Burleigh county deputy sheriff. | 25 Ben Horwitz, one of several persons in the establishment when the raid was made, claimed to be the proprie- ‘tor, the deputy eaid. State’s Attorney George S. Register said he would confer with Sheriff Jo- seph L. Kelley before issuing any war- Register and Kelley. TREASURE CRAFT New York.—The latest diving bell, invented by Emil Kulikk, of Brooklyn, is intended for use in sunken treasure hunt. The bell is equipped with oxy- gen tanks, interchangeable arms oper- ated from the inside to grasp any ob- ject in the water, and is fitted out in the manner of @ small submarine. It can descend to great depths. GETS BETTER A GACK FEELS FINE alter Musterole—safe “‘counter- imtitant”—is applied once an hour for 5 houre. Many feck better after first application. rants. The raid was instigated by! MILLIONS OF POUNDS USED BY OUR COVERNMENT | | i I's almost as“much fun i} Werld’s My i | 34 Champion | meas! Charges are less per mil | Riders ' INTERNATIONAL | You can talk three minu \ 6D BIKE | :30 a, m. and 7p, ' i | Y RACE | ise | MINNEAP fs AUDITORIUM | ask for anyone a GENERAL ADMISSION 50 Cen's Clip this Ad end bring te to the above hovel. be w | NORTHWESTERN BELL Novender 17-23 | | ; atit'e hearer to 25 Comte on Admission é town member of the party present when you talk to him by LONG DISTANCE Low as having that out iw COST — anD RAPID e tes during the day (between ' over a distance of 40 airline for 50 cents; + + » when you wailable at the telephone called. je as the distance increases. TELEPHONE COMPANY Nouteenee ane d BER 16, 1931_*- Farmers Will Be | First to Recover From Depression a few chickens; they may have to have help to buy feed, flour, vegeta- bles and clothing, but they are going j to get through all right.” Overson praised the Red Cross for {its work. In Williams county, out- 1 side of Williston, he said 850 fami- lies have been assisted. In one town- ship, all but three families asked for Red Cross aid. One former member of the legislature advised Overson that he probably would need Red Cross aid before the winter is over. Indications are, Overson said, that double the number of families now receiving aid in the county will need assistance, i “The people who are helping us,’ he said, “are responding nobly. The response that is being made to our needs strengthens our confidence and faith in humanity.. “Those fine people, who are aid- ing, even to the extent of a good deal of personal sacrifice can rest assured, that the cause is a worthy oné and that the recipients are truly thank- ful and appreciative.” CAUSE CHILDREN’S DEATHS Accidents, tuberculosis, heart dis- ease, pneumonia, diphtheria and ap- Pendictis are the six most important causes of death among children be- tween 5 and 19, according to a survey of the U. 8. Public Health Service. 92 OUT OF EVERY 100 druggists tell us Bromo Quinine is the best known remedy in the world for COLDS Use this safe and proven remedy LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE "Esk" C.D Lireven it's the @ TUNE IN—Enjey the Maytag Redio Hour over C. Coast to Cosst Blue Network—Every Monday, 9:00 P.M., E.T. 8.00 C.T.—7:00 M.T.— 6100 P.C.T. The New Maytag may be bought on terms . as low os tacky PER WEEK Beltield—McGarvey & Schneider Dickinson—Scheeler Maytag Co. Driscoll—Koehler’s Store Garrison—Philips Imp. Co. Moffit—H. D. Brownawell | Bismarck All-Stars ({cha‘vas esponsine for two touch, Trim Stanton Team ¢own:. Hedstrom and Adam Brown playec Sr raED. | well for the visitors while the Stan- Uncorking @ baffling passing com-/ton team played brilliantly in Spots tc bination, the Bismarck All Stars won| make several successive first downs from the Stanton Independents 35 abs to complete’ a number of long 0 in a recent engagement at the Stan-/ — ton gridiron. . Eddie Spriggs of the All Stars was the most consistant ground gainer on | Use the Want Ads Tired, Nervous and Depressed ? Health Suffers When Kidneys Do Not Act Right ED promptly a naggin itso bine binds ne Peete CH a ee nervous, depressed feeling. icy may ware sf cettail, disordered kidney oe bladder conditions. : Users Wied Peet rely on Doan’s Pills. The sale of millions of boxes annually attests to Doan’s popae larity. Your dealer has Doan’s, Doan’s Pills =. 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