The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 13, 1932, Page 8

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Te INT Quick. rage HERE HE COMES 3o Mu LSepiiiie DAY, IN = ONT KV CRAs NO YOuR MR GUMP = MIS. WAY = FAULT OF HE OLD MAN OF SMUN. HIM AS YOU. MARS, DE STROSS- Juer Viter! ; WOULD POISON = INLUE'S MOTHER: : soon 9 cee HAS, FORBIDDEN HER DAUGHTER WHILE BIM HAS BEEN PACING THE DECK To GET EVEN A GLIMPSE OF SHE BEAUTIFUL @GIRL=- LET'S SIT ON f MANBE I'M GEE, . f OLS. KING OF UNCLE a on eee HUNGRY WALT. I'M MYSELF. STARVED. “I haven't told her anything. 1 couldn't quit work, anyway. And, besides, the doctor might be wrong.” “a SP king <f-+fe © & Charles Fitzhugh Talman of tp US. Weather Burbau | | ' | _No Matter Where You Go, You'll maintained in the Arctic regions for Find a Weather Station Somewhere the “International Polar Year” of Near—Several Located in Arctic 1931-32. Circle. Not only is the world now dotted over with weather stations, but the One of the remarkable products of observations made at the more im- modern civilization is the vast net- + work of stations for observing and i ; recording the world’s weather. It is EACH OF THE KIDS PalD WITH TH’ DOODLE AN’ Ma estimated that there are now in op-| . " . eration more than 35,000 of these i) bei Deane. CHIPIN’ IN TH’ BALANCE ELL stations as fixed locations on land,!portant of these have broadened in and several thousand ships conduct scope in recent years. Thus there Bnaaliyge- inch regular weather observations during has been a general increase in the CENTS... Boy! THATS their voyages. Several hundred ships, number of observations made each A LOT OF NONEY, Teport their observations regularly by day, and hundreds of stations meas- IF Y'ASK MEL! radio for immediate use on land in ure conditions in the upper air with f connection with forecasting. |the aid of balloons, kites or air- Of the land stations, some are large ' planes. » observatories fully equipped with | elaborate instruments making very; TOMORROW: What is a cloud- % detailed records. At the opposite ex- | burst? treme, there are thousands of sta- — ——_——_ MAI SICK | The condition among cows known as “salt sick” has been found, ac- jcording to the American Dairy Sci- |ence association, to be caused by a tions where the observers devote only; deficiency of copper and iron in the @ few minutes each day to recording | ‘et. one or 8 few Feeceate oe weather. | Rice ee The only area where no permanent stations now exist is! Buy or Sell Through Antarctica, where, however, stations) The Tribune Want Ads have been maintained for consider- able periods by exploring expeditions, é CMe ae and where some permanent stations U will undoubtedly be established in MOM’N POP Chick Gets a Laugh! the future. One of the favorite proj- "3 - a ects of the late Admiral Peary was LOOK WHAT I JUST BOUGHT K NOU ACTUALLY } us, 11'S LouELY MATE the establishment of a weather ob-! Sem) FROM A LAMP SHLESMAN AND ; PAID THREE servatory at the South Pole. At pres-; WAIT TILL 3 TELL YOu WHAT 1 ent the southernmost weather station i A PAID FOR IT... YOuLL ROAR! in the world is one maintained by the} must be driven out Argentine government at Laurie f h = Island in the South Orkneys, about ithi Tatitude 61 degrees south. | tom within ‘Thus there is no station within the i re ‘Antarctic Circle, but there are several ares a cot sn ontigary within the Arctic Circle, the most dence knows that it te-ainen northerly one, and the most north-/| i ir erly permanent inhabited spot on the globe, being that maintained by the Russians in Franz Josef land. There ‘are half a dozen stations in Green-| 3 stroyed and expelled from within. land, and there are others in Spitz-| § Bromo Quinine tablets have won ee ee. unted Stains bas 8 ilized world as the safe and proved station at Pont Barrow, Alaska. remedy for colds. the stations mentioned report the | i sults of their observations by radio. LAXATIVE Several other weather stations will be’ B ri) Says Lack of Iodine Qu i Nl INE Injurious to Stock “foustunt @- Ot Lrwre- Livestock in certain sections of SALESMAN SAM : That’s About It! Burleigh county are suffering from g way ~ ae ct pedine content. in rations, MOTORISTS ATTENTION! ae ee etic Go ae pA olf poner Berge sce ae eats ac oor pee PUNCHES 1 Work EO. a inty af % “4 --- COMIN’ agent, who advocates feeding of po-|| cinied be tie Min atreee eeree To STEP RIGHT IN AN’ GET ) DOGGONE LUCKY WA. KIN EAT WER LUNCHES NUTHIN’ GOIN’ In, BUT t Was always e nA Pe ta tassium or sodium iodide as a rem- Station, Corner Seventh and Main, \ “ER OLD SoB BACK — RIGHT HERE IN TH! STORE / OUT, HUH? WELL ° . pposite jank of North Dakota, , The states in the northwest have|] Smeit'e Preaictn, ,asakeresias |] | Scent an’ CoLeuet Gate Lat Dae the greatest iodine deficiency in the|] Auto accessories. nna oe SALARY United States, he said, and unless ©. H, Erickson, Prop. q et ‘proper precautions are taken, live- stock may suffer. A number of Burleigh county farmers reported litters of hairless igs in 1931, a condition which may be, directly ‘attributed to lack of Eves Examined \miss (TS ine in feed and water, Putnam i believes. Glasses Prescribed The United States Department of ‘Agriculture makes the following The eye is an organ you can’t statement. relative to hairless pigs: afford to neglect. “Condition in which pigs are born swith little or no hair is usually as- Dr. H. J. Wagner sociated with goiter in sows and Optometrist seems to.be due to lack of iodine in ratio This condition may be Offices Opposite the G. P. avoided by feeding the pregnant sow Hotel since 1914 two grains of potassium or sodium Phono 533 Bismarck, N. Dak. ” godide each day.” Ldck of iodine in fodder also causes goiter, and “big neck” among ~ shéep and woolless lambs are usually ~~ the result of a_lack of the mineral. One-half potassium é of ge daily with » half ounce HOTEL RADISSON and dissolved in water 7100 ewes with enough Minnespolis

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