The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 25, 1932, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE __ MONDAY JANUARY 25, 1982 WORKMEN BUILD RETAINING WALL FOR HOOVER DAM ND. FEDERAL COURT F]|-MBRCERS PROPOSED | Jamestown, However, Objects | to Being Included With Fargo, As Bill Says Fargo, N. D., Jan. 25.—(AP)— Elimination ofstwo of the six divis- ions of the North Dakota Federal court district and consolidation of the counties comprising the so-called; central or Jamestown division with the southeastern or Fargo division and consolidation of counties in the; Devils Lake division with Grand Forks division is proposed in a bill! now before congre: The bill, drawn by J. A. Montgom- ery, Fargo, clerk of court, introduced by, congressman QO. B. Burtness, has | not been acted upon and is not being| pressed, Montgomer, id. Jamestown attorn do not favor | consolidation of che Jamestown and! Fargo divisions, The Stutsman} county bar association passed a reso- lution. opposing the bill last. week. Montgomery said if the Stutsman bar is opposed to the proposal he! does not plan to press it, but said the) measure would be.a_ benefit to Jamestown in that it would provide one good term of federal court a year | at Jamestown instead of having a term which probably only one or two jury cases are tried, as at present. The Stutsman county group op- posing becoming affiliated with the Fargo division stated if congress feels it is improper to call a jury term of court at Jamestown, James- town should be attached to the Bis- marck or southwestern division. This, says Montgombery, would be unwise because the southwestern division is the largest division in the state at present and had more work than any of the other districts. 5 ssociate t Press Fi Here workmen are shown constructing retaining walls that will give support to the new road to lead’ over the top of Hoover dam, the huge engineering project on the Colorado river near Las Vegas, Nev. Work on the job has continued despite labor troubles, with more than 125 workmen rebelling against wage T OAD, BROGELVES | * How to Provide Proper Food and Care at a Minimum Cost. ae os . BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON’ | Soap and water are {ust about the)Only Two Counties Show In- je first thing a mother worries| greatest gift God has bestowed on 4 - about in hard times is the health of|s, because a clean ody nor ouiy| crease Wn 9931: Over.-Ae: her children, Naturally enough her| makes for health but it has a direct sessments in 1929 ol first thought is about, proper food.| effect on happy, wholesome mind. 4 and she is right. Nourishing food 15) Children should bathe every day Sake Former N. D. Mining |necesary to tte and neatth, as wo|or ai least every other aay. Rosd-and bridge tend leviesaatal all know— things i aeranbe re ss f Operator Succumbs '?),¢ ne ne CLARE ne hing; Ms ee clean and with! (> North Dakota’s 53 counties were q as important. everything in order comes next.’ \tess in 1931 than im 1999, fi : — ; | This is easily proved by the fact! So I put soap and water first be-| e881 fate: tek, cotaMOee Northfield, Minn., Jan. (AP)/that many children with every ad-jcause everything starts from there, /£Ompiled from state tax commission, —H. A. Whittier, who died at Long} vantage for health are sickly |Discouragement and depression take | TeCoTds show. 5 Beach, Cal. long had been in the} Sometimes, of course, there is q/on less frightening visages when tae Sores ate eens ntracting a Coa siness in the] s i ani - 028,509.63, Ww contracting and coal business sound reason for the privileged ehtid|cleaniiness and neatness greets them. | nied SPCusi te ane ‘| Funds apportioned to the counticS from the motor vehicle license tax northwest. S being ill, but more frequently the! j He started his business career] trouble can be laid to the door of u-| The children should be taught their | and from the gasoline tax operated to reduce the county levies. here in 1884 with a stone quarry.| regular habits, too much or too rich|own responsibility in keeping them-| ite ee lat ed he e ieee in| food, lack of fresh air and sunshine,|selves clean. Their heads should be| railroad construction wor len /and even occasionally to dirt and|washed every week—they can do this he became interested in the lignite| improper sanitation, Another factor |too, as well as take thelr own baths, |, Dunn and Stutsman counties had coal industry in North Dakota. that is now known to be a straight)if they are over four years old. j nerenees ae coun eee With E. R. Crockett, Whittier de-/ lead to illness in children is menta!| Clean clothes and clean bedclothes, | bridge fund levy in Dunn county was veloped lignite mines near Columbus,| unhappiness. An unhappy child wisi|of course, are as necessary as clean | $28,502.36 in 1929 and $3178.48 in N. D., which eventually produced | rarely be physically perfect. bodies, And this brings us to fresh air i 1931. In Stutsman county: the “1929 150,000 tons annually. Whittier sold| “tt may be encouraging, then, for |at night | levy was $44,554.34, and the 1931 levy, his interests in 1925 to the Truax-|the worried mother to know that she| All childr i the choice facing Ell iter, a “dim This was the choice facing Ellen Rossiter,a“dime- ee : 3 iach és $51,000. easy ae sced on | 05 Teme mele a Sal cane sade eg at. Printer eh a-dance girl” in a Broadway dance hall. Ellen had . / A widow, one son and two daugh-| ily strong and well, even though the that compensation must be made at| 1980, there was apportioned to the|™ on i ters are left. table does not groan under a weight Napoleon Income for ("=e Tain ice” eee aah "gt | mare of the moter whet eenae never known luxuries and longed for them. Larry nen Harrowgate whom she loved treated her as a play-. Coarse muslin tacked over a frame | tax, and $635,000 from the gasoline Sane he open window lets in| tax. For the fiscal year, ending June ¢ Napoleon, N. D., Jan. 25.—()—In- come from cream production in this f AT THE MOVIES _i{trea breaks the current; or a{30, 1931, counties received .$725,436.07 ‘screen should be set up between bed | from the motor vehicle tax, ahd $645,- CAPITOL THEATRE territory during 1931 was $139,639.73 2s compared with $137,311.26 for 1930, */and window. 000 from the gasoline tax. Hollywood “extras” are blase par- an increase of $2,328.37 despite lower ticipants of big, showy and fashion- able “party” scenes, but old-fashioned barn dances are something else again. out for ver: young ba bitter nights, and watch | County— Babies cannot safely | Adams 1929 $20,166.38 1931 $16,868.58 mate, was never serious. Steven Barclay, rich and + 12,195.00 + 19,677.03 + 50,190.00 28,502.36 - 38,449.72 17,040.00 32,533.26 » 23,655.19 + 28,418.10 + 24,623.93 + 50,206.00 + 32,898.95 29,005.88 . 51,831.57 25,727.49 66,608.78 13,909.50 22,716.92 8,614.00 + 15,003.94 + 24,010.11 | The children should be warmly! The levies for the yarious counties ‘covered so they can sleep well. Watch | for 1929 and 1931 include: average prices, according to figures| ‘The biggest barn dance given in|Dreathe air of extremely low temper- | Billings obtained from cream checks cleared} Hollywood for years, with good edi-|#ture for any long period. Many ba- | Bowman through banks here. ble (not prop) food and excellent pay |Dies get Prcumonia because young | Burleigh . The increase was ascribed to two| for all “guests,” figured in “Way Back | mothers do not realize this. ;Dunn . factors, opening of the Napoleon|Home,” Seth Parker’s RKO-Radio aca Se ____ | Emmons last year and enlargement | Pictures’ starring vehicle now showing!, Sunshine is not only a medicine | G. Valley of Napoleon's trade territory. There | at the Capitol Theatre. ibut a food. It contains a vitamin that | Grant has m a steady increase the last! Seth, of radio fame, was official| We Often buy certain vegetables to get. | Hettinger four years, the figures show. host, but of course the real hospi-|When there is any sun shoo the chil- | Kidder a tality came from William A. Seiter,/(™eM out into it. See that they are; Logan ... TO DISCONTINUE AGENCY director. The scenes were made at|@!m and their feet dry when they} McHenry . An application of the Great North-|night, and 84 extra players, with | P/av {McIntosh ern railway for authority to discon-'Seth’s supporting cast of radio and| »w them how to breathe deeply. McKenzie tinue its regular agency at Lone Tree | screen celebrities, a rustic 5-piece or-|©ercise causes deep breathing—that McLean . and to substitute custodian service in- |chestra, a special male quartette and)!5 One reason it is so good for every Mercer stead has been granted by the state 'a feminine trio, participated. jone. But do not keep them trotting Morton railroad commission. Custodian serv-| Instead of lasting one night, as/Wntil they are exhausted. An ex- Oliver . ice will be maintained from Feb. 1,|barn dances usually do, the movie af-|hausted body is ready for disease. | Sherida 10,000.00 6,414.26 37,299.00 31,178.48 35,077.87 2,000.00 30,727.70 22,860.94 middle-aged, offered her every happiness money could buy. _ Ellen made her choice and her story, “The Dime-a- Dance Girl,” by Joan Clayton, tells what happened. It’s thrilling, unforgettable serial beginning Saturday, February 13 1932, to Aug. 1, 1932. Lone Tree is on |feir seen in the picture held forth for| Regular habits for meals and sleep Sioux . the Minot division of the railway 17.59 | two nights. “Guests” arrived on the |@re absolutely essential to the healthy Slope . 11,969.00 feallss Seeat of Minot, scene at 7 p.m., and the “party” broke (child. To bed on the dot (and that Stark | 24,000.00 up each night around 2 a. m., as any/€arly). then up in the morning on the | SppMORS Tea ape barn dance should, \dot. Meals on pane ae | PERMIT CUSTODIAN SERVICE y The scenes were filmed in special !_ Authority was granted the Great Before The Court sets, brimming with rustic atmosphere,| Hot food in cold weather is best for Northern railway by the North Da- at the RKO-Radio Pictures ranch |breakfast and lunch. Cooked cereal kota railroad commission to substitute & é near Encino, which is just over the; With whole milk, an egg or a piece custodian service for an agency at E 2 hills @ hoop an’ a hollar from Holly-}of bacon, toast, and if possible a lit- Silverleaf from Feb. 1, 1932 to July 20, wood: tle stewed fruit either dried or fresh 1932, Silverleaf is 21 miles east of “Guests” arrived in private automo-|makes the ideal breakfast before Forbes. ’ biles and big sight-seeing auto buses, ;School. | but not an automobile motor was al-| Certain foods now are very cheap. | lowed to disturb the melody of the|Our cheapest and most plebeian veg- frogs, tree-toads and crickets when |etables are the most nourishing. Milk actual filming began. So the extrasjis the best food of all, and that too had to make a second arrival, as it| is reduced in most places. were, inside the limits of the farm} Keep the children away from other itself, where they were transferred to sick or complaining children, And if wagons, buggies, “foot and hoss-jthey cough or sneeze themselves, be back.” jsure each has a handkerchief or bit Beside Seth and his five radio cele-|of clean cloth to hold over his face. brities who, like himself, make their} Let us try to keep the children as debut in pictures in “Way Back | well and happy as we can for they are Home,” such well-known movie play-/our men and women of the future and jets as Frank Albertson, Bette Davis, deserve everything we can do for _ Dorothy Peterson, Stanley Fields, Os- |them. car Apfel and Frankie Darro partici-| pei Dane, pated! in big rustic “whoopee. GRANT THREE CERTIFICATES PARAMOUNT THEATRE Three certificates have been grant- | Greta Garbo's characterization of ed by the state railroad commission Mata Hari, famous World War spy, t© applicants for permission to oper- is startling in life-like quality, accord- 2t¢ as special motor freight carriers. ing to George Davis, veteran Conti- The applicants are Ted M. Lee, Kin- nental player, who recalled the Java- ‘red; Albert Rockstad, Walcott; and Subscribe Now 4 YEAR (IN NORTH DAKOTA) ..... -$5.00; BY CARRIER IN BISMARCK . : é . $7.20 6 MONTHS (IN NORTH DAKOTA) .. 2.50; BY CARRIER IN BISMARCK, 6 MOS. . vee 3.60. Outward symptoms 3 MONTHS (IN NORTH DAKOTA) ........3...' 1.25; BY CARRIER IN BISMARCK, 3 MOS. ..........+ 1.80° mean infection within You can soothe the symptoms— and fool yourself, or you can elim-° inate the cold infection from within the system quickly, safely and the. syste gual, evely and SUBSCRIPTION BLANK There is no easier way—no such ’ pe aa The Bismarck Tribune, Bismarck, N. Dak. infection of colds, - Millions of people all over the civ- ag world can testify to the merit of— ated Press Photo “In _meods and emo- “‘Winale Ruth Judd, trial f6e her life in , charged with the if twowomen friends. .|before military court martial. nese dancer's performances in Paris. Davis, who plays a comedy role with | Miss Garbo and Ramon Novarro in; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer’s picturization' of the life and loves of the exotic siren, now at the Paramount Theatre, not only appeared on the same pro- grams with Mata Hari but also was acquainted with her personally before her espinogae activties brought La e later paid with her life for her ad- venturesome career. “It is amazing how much Miss Garbo looks like Hari,” Davis observed during the making of the dance cere- monial scenes. “The only physical difference I discover is that Miss Gar- bo is more lithesome. Hari, was in- clined to plumpness. There is the ‘same general cast to their expressions. however, and in the costumes Miss Garbo might easily have been able to taze Hari’s place on the stage with- out attracting any comment. { “The costume Miss Garbo wears in the dance scene is an exact duplicate of the one Hari always wore in her ‘Kali’ ritual. Even to the exact shace of color it is faithful in its copy. No {doubt all that has been said of Mata iHari ts true. But, I don’t think she was motivated by any great vicious- ness. She was more a creature of Using her sex and beauty as a aad that brought about her tragic end.” | "Cash in With a Tribune Want Ad Edgar H. Christianson, Horace. WISHEK ACTORS ORGANIZE Wishek, N. D., Jan. 25.—(P)—A group of Junior Playmakers was or- ganized here under the direction of Miss A, Pearson. Officers named are Doris Roehm, chairman; Lyle Rott, recorder; Robert Gillis, librarian; and | Miss Prestegard, custodian of funds. | COLDS UB Musterole well into your chest . and throat—almost instantly you feel easier, Repeat the Musterole-rub once an hour for five Boos what a glorious relief! | Those good old-fashioned cold reme- dies—oil of mustard, menthol, camphor —are mixed with other valuable ingredi- ents in Musterole to make it what doc- tors calla“*counter-irritant”’ because it gets action and is not just a salve. It penetrates and stimulates bt circulation and helps to draw out infec- tion and pain. Used by millions for 20 years. Recommended by many doctors and nurses, All dru; 5 To Mothers—Musterole is also made in: milder form ys babies ani small children. Ask for Chil- dren's Musterole. “LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE “Slenavunt | ©: 2 Lorwvees BALL CAB CO. 514 Main Biamarch DAY AND N ‘Time’ Calin’ Gi Cat IT SERVICE 7 Given—Just Ball Eves Examined ‘ Glasses Prescribed Tae eye ts an organ you can’t afford to neglect. Dr. H. J. Wagner Optometrist Oftines Opposite the O. P, Hotel since 14 Phone 533 Blamarck, N. Dak. Enclosed find .........:...for which send Tribune for .......... ...-mgnths to oer sesee PLEASE WRITE OR PRINT NAME PLAINLY -TO AVOID MISTAKES The Bismarck Tribune A Member Newspaper of the Associated Press : Ae NN A AN ER RRA er arcn nae

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