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_ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1931 a TELETYPE SERVICE 8 BEING OFFERED BY BEL COMPANY Electric Typewriters to Be Con- nected Through Separate Exchange and Telegraph company was organ-| ized to develop long-distance service | it became apparent that the tele- |phone wire system could be adapted |to provide circuits to concerns need- ling private wire facilities. | The first line furnished, connected {the New York and Boston offices of | S. M. Weld and company and was put lin service on December 9, 1887. As! \the long distance circuits were ex- | tended, the private wire service grew !rapidly among those having need for! | constant communications with distant! \branches or correspondence, such as| |banks, brokers and press associations. The scope of the service was widened | |when the teletypewriters began to be! 02 BOYS AND GIRLS; BORN IN BISMARCK DURING LAST MONTH 20 Born to Local Parents; 16} Persons, Nine Living Here, Die in Month | Oct. 22—Mr. and Mrs. George, Mandan, daughter. Oct. 24—Mr. and Mrs. Magnus O. Arman, Bismarck, son. Oct. 27—Mr. and Mrs. William To- man, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs. Clara H. Nelson, Bismarck, daughter. Oct, 30—Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Johnson, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Max Alfred Clausnitser, son; Mr. and Mrs. Romeo Albert Kramer, Bismarck, son. Oct. 31—Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barney Schacht, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs. Harry James Schrimpf, Ernest J. Deaths Oct. 2—Alice C. Howe, 49, Regan; | Atthe Moria: | 8 the Paramount ener. tomorrow his latest First National comedy, ° te ovies | | Local Boy Bakes Good.” CAPITOL THEATRE Twenty-five outstanding players, the largest number ever cast in a |story of this kind, appear in Radio “Too | Pictures’ domestic comedy, Many Cooks,” showing at the Capitol Theatre Wednesday and Thursday. ° Heading the list 1s Bert Wheeler, of vaudeville, Follies’ and Radio Pic- tures’ fame. Millions of fans have focal and heard him in such screen hits as “Cuckoos,” “Half Shot at Sun- |rise,” “Hook and Line and Sinker”! and “Cracked Nuts,” co-starring with Brown, who has indulged in ath- letic pictures of many sorts, includ- ing football, baseball and boxing, is a track man in “Local Boy Makes Good,” and wins laurels for his col- lege—and his lady—as a sprinter, putting the usual number of typical | Brown effects into his athletic ef- forts. “Local Boy Makes Good,” which is based on a play by J. C. and Elliott Nugent, was directed by Mervyn Le Roy. Among the supporting cast are ;Many favorites includitig Dorothy | Lee, Edward Woods, Ruth Hall, Wade used in 1915. Within the last five | Harold L. Hayes, six months, Price. A new communication service is be- ing made available by the Northwest- ern Bell Telephone company in co- operation with the American Tele- phone and Telegraph company and the other Associated Companies of the Bell System. This new service consists in the es- tablishment and operation of central switching exchanges for teletype- writer-machine which typewrite electrically over wires to a distant teletypewriter. Any subscriber to this Service can obtain connection with the teletypewriter of any other sub- Scriber to the service within the same city or in a distant city and this will permit the immediate transmission of letters, typewritten statements or other information between the two Subscribers. In. effect, the method used for interconnection of the in- struments is the same as that now employed in the telephone system. The present teletypewriter service of | the Bell System is furnished only in connection with private wires which are not connected to central switch- ing points. This private wire service, now widely used by firms for inter- office communication, will be contin- ued as heretofore. The new switching service through teletypewriter exchanges is now pos- sible because of developments in ap- paratus and operation. These permit intercommunication by teletypewriter on @ nation-wide basis, just as the development of telephone switch- boards made possible the interconnec- tion of telephone instruments. Has Marked Flexibility The new teletypewriter service will thus have the flexibility that charac- terizes the regular telephone service. \years, there has been a marked in-| ase in the number of industrial concerns using them and the variety | |of uses they have found for them. A:/ | the beginning of 1931 the Bell System | ;was furnishing 10,500 teletypewriter | machines utilizing 48% of its private! |line wire mileage in the service. | More than five hundred service or- |ders were received at telephone busi- |ness offices during the first half day |the new service was offered in all parts of the country. In addition,’ \hundreds of inquiries were received! |from financial, manufacturing and) industrial companies who wished to | know more about the new service. Nation-Wide in Scope | The new teletypwriter service will \be nation-wide in scope permitting any subscriber to send written mes- sages to any other subscriber when the need arises and at a cost based on ‘the time the circuits are used for the! | wire mileage involved. For local con-' |nections, the rate will be 20 cents for | each five minute period or fraction thereof. For toll connections, the| rate for five minute connection will depend upon the air line distance to; |the called city. To teletypewriter a) message over a distance of 50 miles will cost 60 cents for a five minute use of the circuit. For a distance of | 150 miles the rate would be 90 cents, | for 500 miles $1.60, for 1,000 miles; $2.60. A universal teletypewriter di-! rectory is already being compiled. This will contain the names of sub-| scribers arranged alphabetically un- der the cities in which their offices jare located. The directory will be; ikept up-td-date and during the first few months of operation at least, a ‘The establishment of switching offices D¢W edition will be issued each month. similar to the telephone exchanges ee re | enables subscribers to use the new! A railroad compahy in England| service to call and secure connections | runs what is called the “whitewash | just as they do for local or long dis- special.” The train carries no pas-| tance telephone conversations. While sengers, but it is equipped to note their teletypewriter lines are connect-| every jolt and bump on the track. ed they may send or receive typed’ As a bump is hit, a splash of white- Eighteen girls and 14 boys were born in Bismarck during October, ac- cording to vital statistics recorded in the office of Myron H. Atkinson, city auditor, cas Twenty of the children were born to Bismarck parents. Sixteen persons, nine of them Bis- marck residents, died during the same period. Births and deaths in Bismarck dur- | ing October follow: Births | Oct. 1—Mr. and Mrs. . Seppanson John Hagedus, Fargo, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Peter Koether, Bismarck, |; daughter. Oct, 2—Mr. and Mrs. Gotfred Gob- hart, Bismarck, son. ‘ Oct. 3—Mr. and Mrs. George Francis Lester, Fort Lincoln, daugh- ter; Mr. and Mrs. Gabreal A. Wright, Fort Lincoln, daughter. Oct. 4—Mr. and Mrs. Emil Phillip Bobb, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schock, Bismarck, daughter. | Oct. 5—Mr. and Mrs. Albert Larson, | Kintyre, son; Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy! Casey, Bismarck, son. j Oct. 10—Mr. and Mrs. James Pa-| trick McGarvey, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Emery Tounsend Put- | nam, Bismarck, son; Mr. and Mrs.) Paul C. Bennett, Dickinson, son. Oct. 13-—-Mr. and Mrs, Oscar Swan- berg, Mandan, daughter. Oct. 15—Mr. and Mrs. Hektner, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bernard Nelson, Bismarck, son, Oct. 16—Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Gott- Neb Meske, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. ond Mrs. Jacob Fehr, Hebron, daugh- r, Bolton, Bismarck, daughter. Oct. 19—Mr. and Mrs, Val Ryck- man, Pollock, 8. D., daughter. Oct. 2i—Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Henderson, Bismarck, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John G. Fleck, Timmer, son; Mr. and Mrs, Herman L. Kirk- Ralph wm.| Oct. 17—Mr. and Mrs. Jack Francis | Henry, Alex, Oct. 3—Caroline May Watson, four months, Bismarck; Anton Kutchera, 69, Bismarck; Conrad Olai Horn, 33, Bismarck. Oct. 4—Mrs. James Lahey, 55, Shields. Oct. 7—Herman B. Brocopp, 2, Bis- marck, Oct, 11—Raymond Paul Hamming, 14 days, Bismarck. Oct. 18—Ella Kimball Winchester, 74, Bismarck; John Kenneth Zook, 29, Garrison. Oct. 14—Carl Nelson, 58, Bismarck; Christ Satter, 77, Bismarck. Oct. 27—Franklin Pierce Goodrich, 14, McKenzie; Jacob Stolz, 19, Bald- in. wet, 29—Gordon Arthur Williams, 19, Baldwin. Oct. 31—Andrew Benedict Reif, 65, Bismarck. Wilton Miner to Be Buried Wednesday Puneral services for Fred Herman, 25-year-old Wilton miner who was killed when crushed bepween two mine cars Monday forenoon, will be conducted from the Presbyterian church at Wilton at 2 p. m. Wednes- day. = Rev. F. W. Christ, pastor of the church, will officiate and pallbearers will be selected from among his friends and fellow-workers at Wil-; Burial will be made in the Wilton metery. ne navies his mother, Mrs. Henry Herman, and four brothers, John, and William, all living at born in Russia. | Herman’s head was crushed and he \suffered other injuries when he was Wilton. He was \attempted to couple them. Scientists have estimated that the {coldest point in the world is a town in caught between two mine cars as he| messages as desired. Soon after the American Telephone wash {s dropped on the ground to {mark the spot for repair crews. ingburg, Mott, daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Em. Emmette daughter. ‘northwestern Siberia about 1400 miles Burth, from the North Pole. Bismarck, . FOR EVERY BUSINESS Valitvpaedione exchanges, now established by the Bell System, make it possible for any subscriber to this new service to typewrite by wire instantly to any other sub- scriber . . . across the city or across the continent. Teletypewriter Service--typing by wire--is now offered like telephone service. When you need it! For any number of minutes! To any city! As a subscriber to this service, your typist simply calls the desired teletypewriter by typing its number, ately makes the connection. and ‘‘central”” immedi- Thus you have two-way typewriter communication for any length of time. . . as short as five minutes, or as long as you may wish. Messages, inquiries, reporte--typed in your office--are instantly and accurately repro- duced on any other subscriber's teletype- writer, whether 300 feet or 3000 miles away. Identical typewritten copies, made by both sending and receiving machines, are available for permanent records. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION Teletypewriter Service provides two-way communications. Speed of connection is as fast as telephone service. A typewritten record, one or more copies, is produced simultaneously by both sending and receiving machines, Material transmitted may be recorded on forms if desired. Teletypewriters are like ordinary type- writers in appearance. Teletypewriters can be operated by any ane who can operate a typewriter. You can use Teletypewriter Service any time you need it. A most economical form of record com- munication, This new service differs from private line teletypewriter service in that any subscrib- er may ask for any other subscriber and be connected immediately. Its advantages are offered to every business, large or small. The cost is low. NORTHWESTERN BELL TELEPHONE CO. "-Porty-Fifth ANNUAL Robert Woolsey. | Boteler, Edward J. Nugent, William In the leading feminine part ts! p d John Harrington. Dorothy Lee, Le beauty, who/| bibles ceca laa also is as familiar to film fans as Wheeler and Woolsey, having formed| Dry Men Trying to the other angle to this comic triangle! “4 i barrie tal Stop Butte’s Liquor Sharon Lynn, winner of beauty; ured . Butte, Mont., Nov. 24.—()—Federal Ser cee ae ay ia in Fox films ary agents, whose superior declares for several, years, plays the role of |uthey just don't know what prohibi- Fee e Ee ame Cooler hendebes | tion means in Butte,” Monday began trouper. : | seizing bar fixtures lsd @ half hour s ° ‘ fter learning the United States su- Rosco Ates, “stuttering comedian, |* who scored a hit in “Cimarron,” plays|Preme court had approved such @ stammering, humorous part in the 1 Radio ie! of the Frank Craven | pechiuition wae q Btioe wie’ aaa stage play. the dry law was being flouted, tem- Robert = MeWade. Louie Heffner, porarily has placed 12 agents at Butte. character player of “Cimarron,” and |" after 18 recent raids 14 places were noted stage veteran, appears in the | abated by court order. ‘The agents picture. Also Florence Roberts with | have been instructed “to dry up the & background of firty years in the) city no matter how long it takes.” acting profession. Clifford Dempéey,| In addition to arresting bartenders, Catherine Clare Ward, Alfred James, they backed trucks to the doors of William Scott, Dorothea Wolbert, | the barrooms and carted away furni- Erville Alderson, George Chandler,| ture and fixtures, including pianos, Lewis Sargent, Barney Furey, Ethan | radios, tables, chairs, and a variety Allen, Tex Higginson, Robert Laffer-| of smaller equipment to be ware- ty and many others. | housed pending trial. PARAMOUNT THEATRE | Falls cause about three times as Joe E. Brown, one of the most pop-|many deaths among elderly persons ular comedians of the screen, comes jas automobile accidents. Former Legislator Is Dead at Colgate Colgate, N. D., Nov. 24.—(P)—Fu- neral services will be conducted here ‘Tuesday for 8. W. Johnson, 75, for- mer state legislator and, at the time of his death, commissioner of Steele county. JoAnson died Sunday at his farm home near here. Always interested in public affairs, Johnson held his first public office 4n 1882 in Illinois when he was named & highway commissioner. He was elected in 1918 and again in 1920 from the 16th district to the North Dakota legislature and at the time of his and that the Chichigalpa battle was | the opening gun in a general offen- sive on all fronts, Sandino having finished reorganization of his army for a fight to the finish. The spokesman further said San- dino’s followers are prepared to lay down their arms immediately if United States marine forces are with- drawn. | The U. 8S. Forest Service is em- Ploying airplanes to guard Michigan forests against danger of fire. Two planes now on duty guard the four national forests of the state. ; district. in Steele county. | death was commissioner of the fifth | Soitwon wee bora Dee, 11, 1885, in| Inexpensive Prescrip- Kendall county, Ill. Educated in the | Kendall county, Tl. Educated in the| tion Guaranteed to End Forest academy. Rheumatism In 1879 he was married to Margaret e Ann Wagner and became the father | qhousands Joyfully Astonished at of four children, Ruth, a teacher at i Madison, Wis., Theodore, farmer near Oe ee ee Colgate; Mrs. Sarah Holcomb of Pargo and Mrs. Ellen Arnold of Beach. Report Victory in Mexico City, Nov. 24.(4)—Sandin- ista insurgents, under General Pedro Salgada captured the important town of Chichigalpa, state of Chinandega, Nicaragua, Sunday, driving out gov- ernment to Dr. Jose Pedro Zepeda, General Bandino’s foreign representative. Zepeda said Sandino advised him that @ considerable store of arms and ammunition was taken in the fight. Casualties were not mentioned. ,, Dr. Zepeda said Sandino now con- trols eight of Nicaragua’s 14 states commanded by | American marine officers, according | ‘ Progressive pharmacists will tell | you that the popular big selling pre- ‘scription for rheumatism right now {is Allenru—for 85 cents you can get |a@ generous bottle from Hall's Drug | Store or any up-to-date druggist. Nicaraguan Revolt' You can get it with an absolute guarantee that if it doesn't stop the pain—the agony—and reduce the swelling in 48 hours—your money back. Uric Acid Poison Starts to Leave Body in 24 Hours Out of your joints and muscles go the uric acid deposits that catise all your suffering—it’s a safe, sensible, scientific formula—free from harm- ful or pain-deadening drugs. The same absolute guarantee holds good for sciatica, neuritis and lum- bago—quick, joyful relief—no more idle days—it removes the cause.—Ad- vertisement. STANDARD RED CROWN =—the better gasoline ep and itality 'S BALL World War Memorial Bldg. Dancing at 9:30 Now! _ ski-jumper is a glorious picture of vital energy. Mark the ease and grace of that poised figure. And know that every nerve, every muscle, is adjusted for that magnificent leap. Know, too, Crown—the that Standard Red better gasoline—is perfectly adjusted. It won’t fail —it can’t fail—to pep up your Crown gives engine, because it’s made to a formula that insures brilliant, sparkling performance NOW— —and always. Try Standard Red Crown today. See how eagerly your engine leaps into life. Feel that rhythmic throb of surging power. remember that Standard Red maximum perform. ance at a moderate price. It Burns Clean at Any Speed Sold where the Red Crown emblem is displayed. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) : Thanksgiving Nite Nov. 26, Tickets $1.00