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buildi manifested in the break- of windows and sometimes in the collapse of walls. TOMORROW: Week-to-week wea- ther ‘and crop news. Farm Exchange List : , AUDITOR DESCRIBES BURLEIGH COUNTY'S Mines “J be tlaed two, tare, , of Emil Gus afzon, king f te Weather Charles Fitzhugh Talman of te US. Weather Bureow | OUT OUR WAY By Williams’ | We GODS, MA conw)\ POU GOT TO KmoA SUT. 1 OoNT Ste How UYORESELF IN TH’ HOSGES YOU CAN “TELL - PACE — BUT YORE SO WHETHER A Horse WELL. EDUCATED , IT TAKES “TAX LEVY FOR 1934) Total State and County Levy 14.82 Mills Compared to 13.63 a Year Ago The total state-and Burleigh coun- ty tax: levy for 1931 is 14.82 mills compared ‘to, 18:63 mills in 1930, it is announced. by A. C. Isaminger, county auditor. The .a: evaluation of the county, including the city of . Bis- marck, is $20,954,820 for 1931, com- pared to. $22,653,627 a year ago. The state and county levy is di- vided as follows General fund levy. 3.25 State bond interest and x sinking: Milling ‘bond payment fund . 19 ment fund: 2 Total state bond interest and sinking levy. Total state board levie: Legislative levies: at pi capitol building fund Total state rate of lev; County general County salary County road County bridge a | County interest and sink- ‘7 ing + County tuition Total county levy Total state and county levy f 14.82 The rate ‘of taxation for 1931 as compared to that for 1930 is listed by {" Isaminger for the various districts as follows: School Town- District ship 1 Bismarck Estherville Estherville Grass Lake Hazel Grove Wilson Steiber pcrhe ryge Painted Woods Ecklund Ghylin Schrunk Phoenix Florence Lake Thelma Glenview Glenview Christiania Lyman Richmond Clear Lake Arena Harriett Lien Riverview Burnt Creek Naughton Frances Rock Hill Wing 4 Village of Wing Hay Creek 2 Gibbs Menoken 11.04 1930 ftempo, it bares the souls of high 52.92 | school children as calmly as a dig 27.82 | secting surgeon at work’ and reveals 35.44) an awesome panorama of emotions 24.27 |—of human failings, romance, greed 18.63 |and budding idealism. 28.09 Ably Portrays Today’s Youth 26.82) Perhaps no picture of recent times 35.27} has utilized a modern social .prob- 32.63} lem as effectively and entertaingly 25.13 | as “Are These Our Childrep?”—nor 23.38 | does this reviewer consider that any 25.81] film made so far more ably catches 31.64| the spirit of restless youth. 24.19] The oad concerns. an intimate 31.80] group of high schoot children—a 29.10] cross section of any such Up, 27.02) anywhere—and focuses itself on 40.15|them individually and_ collectively 30.51]as they are related to their environ- 35.78| ment. A ‘boy, with all the benefits 30.15 | of aggood family background, flirts 27.33 | with®adventure, becomes involved in 38.00]a tragedy of circumstance and 31.20|emerges frdm that experience a . 34.75 | super-egotist who jibes at life, the 21.80} law and traditions until the end 29.09 | finds him contrite and meek—but 33.09 | only when it is too late. 28.73 st this” stern characteriza- 20.46 | tion Director Wesley Ruggles, whose 38.14 | original story this is, has inter- 48.16 | spersed other factors of youthful ex- 28.40 | perience. Good girls, bad girls, mere $2.72 | flappers and their male counterparts 36.83] weave in and out of the tensely 83,32 | dramatic situations. . 33.66 See a 3725 | ‘Three Mexicans Held 4¢ ios! In Bank Robbery Case 18.63. 19.06 25.41 Cromwell Lincoln Apple Creek Boyd- Logan Taft Missouri > Telfer anes x ong Lake Fort Rice Crofte Crofte Sibley Butte Wild Rose Wild Rose South Wilton Village of Regan 34. PES Vilegpiot Bowen teas eee 1 AT THE MOVIES ° PARAMOUNT THEATRE Marian Marsh, heralded as the most sensational screen discovery of the year, will be seen at the Paramount ‘Theatre tomorrow in her first starring vehicle, “Under Eighteen,” @ Warner Bros; feature production. The blonde, blue-eyed charmer, who, within the last few months has been: triumphant as leading lady to John Barrymore, Edward G. Robinson ‘and William Powell, was still in her seventeenth year, when she finished ther first-‘very own’ film aptly titled “Under Eighteen.” ' Miss Marsh, as the girl who by desperate means to raise herself into the world of the idle rich, gives performance of amazing clarity and tehderness. The play is an adapta- tion of the popular magazine story: “Poor Little Ritz Girl,” by Frank Da- | zeys | The star is supported by Warren ‘William—Broadway leading man who | is considered one of the most promis- \ ing recent recruits to the screen; by \ Regis Toomey of “The Finger Points,” fame. Fargo, N. D., Jan. 19.—(?)—Seeking, to trace disposition of the loot in the 29.79 Sabin Bank wobbery of Dec. 29, Moor- 33,15 head police Monday arrested three 5g | Mexicans and charged them with re- 32.52 ceiving $200 of the cash and $500 in 18,91 | Liberty bonds from one of the rob- 67 | bers. ren The men, George Rea, Joe Mar- 33.78 | tinez, and Joe Rueda, Moorhead, were 31.58 | 88d by officers to. have been fre- 33.58 | quenters of the residence where the 55.33 | Tobbers are claimed to have gathered 38.51 | the night following the holdup. @| The men are charged with burning ‘| five Liberty bonds worth $100 each and which they are alleged to have received from the robbers. One war- Tant charges receipt of stolen moaecy, and the other its destruction. A total, of $2,500 was taken in the robbery, for which four men are held in the Clay county jail. $510,000 in Bonds on Real Estate Retired State of North Dakota real estate bonds have been retired in the Amount of $510,000 in the last six months, -statistics compiled by tne state treasurer’s office for the de-| partment’s semi-annual report dis- close. Mrs. Berta E. Baker, state treas- urer, said total payments into the! sinking fund for the real estate bonds amounts to $3,479,651.06. After vay- ing the half million dollars, whicn became due in-the past six. months, | the fund will still have approximate- Jy $3,000,000. ‘ if This balance is sufficient to pay all real estate bonds which will fall due ie mere years to come, Mrs. Baker Bovine Tuberculosis : Reduced in Mountrail CAPITOL Marching stridently and hora to the dance of life, uncaring where its strains may lead them, 2. half dozen remarkable young act 5, and actors conspire to make a film of intense realism based on the rebellious conduct, of ‘modern youth.| three-tenths per cent in bovine is the much-discussed | tuberculosis since 1028 is the “Are These Our Children?” which ‘opened yesterday at the * Capitol Theatre, and firmly established it- self ‘as a momentous contribution to motion’ pictures. x Guaged to _a mounting dramatic Cost 85 Cents to Put Rheumatic Cripple Back to Work Again " ‘Now Joyously Happy ‘ett you get your money. < It works just as swiftly ‘nitis, Sciatica, Lumbago 1S GOING To JUMP ~ OVER A BUSH, OR MOU LONGER T" PUT YORESELF, In “TH HOSSES ‘PLACE THAN Tornado Most Violent of All Storms, its immediate vicinity. The whirl but Usually its Life and Scope are, not infrequently rises clear of the Go AROOND IT. B_CANT “Teri WHAT MENTAL LEVELS RwluaAMS (ITY DADS POSTPONE | VOTE ON AMENDMENT Will Give Citizens: Opportunity to Protest Move Against Double Parking Final action on the proposed amendment to the city parking ordi- nance which is designed to prohibit unnecessary double parking was de- ferred until next Monday evening by the city commissioners in their regu- lar weekly business meeting Monday evening. ‘The postponement was ordered in! order that citizens who may have’ ob- Jections to the proposed amendment} may.appear before the commission next week in formal protest, : | The’ amendment would prohibit {double parking except when regular {parking spaces at the places of des-; tination are occupied. Except where) the machine is double parked to en- able delivering or picking up of goods, the double parked car’ must not be left unattended, the amendment reads, ‘The amendment would permit double. of time and stipulates that the dou- ble parked machine must be riot more than 18 inches from the vehicle at its immediate right. . ‘The commissioners ordered Myron | H. Atkinson, city auditor, to renew, insurance on city properties and for ability for the new year. ‘The reports of the city weigher and the chief of police for December were approved. Auditor Atkinson informed the com- missioners that in the near future they must select 13 election inspectors for the March 15 presidential prefer: ence primary election. He said March’ 1 and 8 will be registration days. Cigarette Papers Must Bear Staimp Cigarette papers attached or given way with pufchases of tobacco, re- gardless of whether such papers are contained within the package, must, bear the state cigarette stamp, Attor- ney General James Morris ruled in an ion issued on inquiry from R.! C. Morton, chief inspector of the} state inspection department, The law provides, Morris said, for] @ one-half cent stamp on each pack- age, book or’ set containing not more} than 50 papers; one-cent stamp: for those containing more than 50 papers’ pers or major fraction over 50. “If the cigarette papers are con- tained within the package of tobacco, such a manner that the papers reached without breaking} the package,”, Morris’; , “the stamps may be age of tobacco.” Grand Forks Pastor Has His Eye Removed ( ee Forks, A Dp, aah. ba geons Monday remove¢ the ee eye of Rev. J. Harold Gamble, pastor of the First Bap- tist church, as a result of. injuries received while v. Gamble was chopping wood at the. Boy Scout winter cabin north of Grand Forks late Saturday. The eye was injured beyond re- covery, physicians said, when a stick of wood flew up and hit him. Rubbing Oil Best For Muscular Aches You Don't Catch Cold! parking for only a reasonable amount |" Veteran Teacher of Grant County Dies Miss Mina Aasved, about 70, for half a century a school teaeher in the two Dakotas, died at her home at Carson Tuesday following a brief ili- ness. : Asa girl Miss Aasved taught school im South Dakota, later being named’ county superintendent of schools at Webster. She came to Carson in 1910, home- steading near Carson. After teach- ing two terms in the rural schools Miss Aasved was named superinten- dent of Carson schools. When Morton county was divided: in 1916, Governor L, B. Hanna ap-. pointed her superintendent of Grant) county schools. Twice reelected, she served until 1922 when she was named Carson postmistress, a posi- tion she has held since. A brother at Webster, S. D., and three sisters are left. The longest stretch of railway in the world is from Riga to Vladivostok, which runs over 6,800 miles, AN OLD FRIEND IN A NEW BOX INDIGESTION Here's good news for your, stomach! A new, handy pocket size of Pape’s Diapepsin. Eat what you want, and all you want, without one pang of indigestion. Justicarry this hi stomach stimulant. Take two or three tablets after eating. Then enjoy serene digestion. Pape’s Diapepsin tablets are as pleasantly eaten as candy. No sour- no no distress two hours after no sensation but hunger for the next meal. Don’t diet; don’t deny yourself. Use Pape’s Diapepsin. . A Poor Roof Causes Fires When : you re-roof your house, Strictly Limited— Winds at 500 Miles an Hour The tornado is the most violent of all storms, bat ’compared: with most other, storms’ it is of brief duration and ¢overs a_ relatively small area. The entire life history of a tornado is usually limited to less than an hour, and the path of its destruction is ‘seldom more than a quarter of a mile wide. At any one place along the path the storm does | not last more than a minute or so. A tornado travels over the earth | at a speed of from 25 to 60 miles! an hour. -At the same time it spins on its axis, arid if is this rotary Movement that causes havoc. The Speed of rotation has never been Measured, but is ‘supposed, from the terrific feats of destruction ac- complished, to amount to 400 or 500 miles an hour in some cases. Like thunderstorms, tornadoes may occur in some part of the Uni- ted States in any month of the year. In winter and early spring they may be expected in the Gulf and South Atlantic states, but with the advance of the season, they o cur farther and farther northward. February and March are the months of greatest frequency in the East Gulf and South Atlantic States, June in the Mississippi Valley, and July and August in the Middle At- lantic and New England States The five states in which torna- does are most frequent are Ar sas, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas and souri, averaging from four to si a year. None are known to have occurred along the immediate coasts of the United States. In the last 25 years one has been reported in each of the Pacific and Plateau States; about 10 in each of the Rocky Mountain States and some- what more in the interior and the Atlantic States. The long dangling cloud always present in a true tornado— called a funnel, cloud, though it assumes a variety of shapes—forms high in the air and works its way downward. Wherever it touches the ground it gathers a cloud of dust and debris around its lower end. The clou marks the location of the atmos- pheric whirl or vortex, and destruc- tive effects are always limited to ! ground at places along the path, and when it does so it leaves objects un- derneath it unharmed, The vortex is_a region of much reduced atmospheric pressure, though, despite many statements to the contrary, it never approaches an actual vacuum. In an extreme case the pressure may be reduced as much as one-tenth of its normal value. The difference, however, between the pressure in the whirl’ and that of the air inside a sbuilding at the mo- ment the storm passes over it is suf- ficient to explain the so-called ex- Prepared by Agent Grand ‘Forks, N. Jan. 19.—(— Preparations for a farm exchange list are being made by William R. Page, county agent, who has mailed notices to 2,096 Grand Forks county farmers. The list is to be issued in the spring and will contain hundreds of items offered for sale or exchange by local farmers. A similar list prepared last year was an effective aid to farmers| in the disposal of surplus farm equip- ment, livestock and seed, Page said, and it is expected that large use wili be made of the list this year. plosive effect of the tornado on Use the Want Ads | Their Costs One of Family’s Biggest “Control-of- Actual Test of the Plan Is Offered By Bismarck Druggists on a Trial Guarantee, To most families this winter, the high costs of colds are an extra bur- den. Loss of time, health and money | are involved. To reduce ¢he drain of | this burdensome family “Colds-Tax” is the purpose of the Vick Plan for better “Control-of-Colds”—to lessen their number, severity and duration. Plan Follows New Discovery The Vick Plan is made possible with Vicks Nose & Throat Drops. Based | on a new idea for “preventing” colds, | this new Vick discovery is companion | to Vicks VapoRub,*the modern way of “treating” colds. Each aids and supplements the other for better “Con- | trol-of-Colds.” Here, briefly, is the Vick Plan: 1—Before a Cold Starts Watch yourself whenever. you have | been exposed to anything that you know is apt to give you a cold, such as— Contact with others having fresh colds —crowds, stuffy ill-ventilated rooms, public places—a night on a Pullman or a dusty automobile ride—| sudden changes in temperature—in-j| {haling smoke, dust, gases—excesses in living, such as over-eating, smoking or drinking, which reduce body resistance —after a hard day when you are over- tired. How to Reduce Colds and | Ping them before they get beyond the |Mose and throat—where most colds jcover with warm flannel. | (If there is @ cough, you will like the jcated with ingredients of Vicks Vapo- ‘hours as needed. This gives you full ‘risks of too much internal “dosing,” |which so often upsets digestion—es- This Winter Problems Met With Vick Colds” Plan ing on—use Vicks Nose Drops at once—just a few drops up each nostril. Repeat every hour or so if needed. This will prevent many colds by stop- start. 2—After a Cold Starts i t night, massage the throat and chest well with Vicks VapoRub (now available in white “stainless” form, if you, prefer). Spread on thick and | Leave the bed-clothing loose around the neck so! that the medicated -vapors arising can | be inhaled all night long. If the air-passages are badly clogged | with mucus, melt some VapoRub in a) bowl of hot water and inhale the steaming vapors for several minutes. new Vick Cough Drop—actually medi- Rub.) During ‘the day—any time, place—use Vicks Nose Drops every few any 24-hour treatment and without the pecially of children. Offered by Local Druggists Your druggist is offering Vicks Nose Drops and Vicks VapoRub on the fol- lowing trial guarantee: Use these preparations together as directed in the Vick Plan for better “Control-of- | Then—if you feel that stuffy, sneezy | irritation of the nasal passages, Na- |results, your money will ture’s usual signal that a cold is com- |—Advertisement. J Colds.” Unless you are delighted with be refunded. | CAPITO THEATRE TONIGHT Today’s Bewildered Boys and Girls — Crashing Through Life—Heedless of Right and Blind to Con- sequences, “ARE THESE _ OUR CHILDREN?” A thunderous document whipped like lightning across the screen by the in- spired playing of the great- est. young cast ever as- sembled! Coming - Coming “PLATINUM BLONDE” Seth Parker in WAY BACK HOME LEATHER Another fresh shipment of HARNESS LACE LEATHERS Order your it greatly re- duced prices. “Northern” Hide & Fur Co. 900 Front Avenue Box 265. Bismarck, N. D. OH, WHAT A GAL IS MARYI - ‘She's Gre of the genuine beauties thot even the camera cannot flatter. Sorrow ond professional bod luck follawed her for years. Now she's ebride...the studies clomorforher phane wrapper little tab.” Astor! We're glad you smoke end we're grateful for that you gave vs wittr, my play safe by sticking to LUCKIES” “1 can’t afford to take chances with my voice. So I play - safe by sticking to LUCKIES— throat. And I’m doubly grateful for your improved Cello- : opens so easily with that wh \ they’re always kind tomy ©