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> WNUTT SPEAKS AT KIWANIS MEETING Agricultural Agent For Soo Line Describes Federal Ex- in Development Nonpartisans Fly To Meeting Here Minot, N. D., March 2—()— Neither wind, snow, rain, or night prevents ardent Nonpartisan Leaguers from attending their party's convention, slated to open at Bismarck Wednesday after- noon. Four delegates to the conven- tion, A. J. Gronna and P. J. Drick- ae i a R. R. Smith of ttineau and S\ Federal participation in agricul-|| Foumenn and State Senator Nels tural extension projects was veal Minot Tuesday night and planned cussed by H. A. McNutt, Soo Line// to continue to the capital city tural agent in an address be-|| Wednesday morning. But with || Righway No. 83 blocked by snow- fore the Kiwanis club at a luncheon || arts ‘and no tale pet livin meeting Tuesday noon. ‘ which would get the quartet to The’ first step by the U. 8. govern- || Bismarck in time for the opening ment in aiding agricultural projects | of the convention, the delegates was made when the Morrell Act was|| Secured the services of Pilot Cecil passed shortly after the Civil war, Shupe of the Northwest Airways in the speaker said. At that time a/| Minot and flew to Bismarck. They food shortage seemed imminent and |] left Minot about 11 a. m. agricultural college land grants were made in an effort to increase acre-/ 4, = ° S. i} * Sy wen 1869 a bill was passed to create | ' AT THE MOVIES experimental stations and was the | ¢——HW——— second important sten in the develop- { ment of federal extension agencles.| Quite as timely as a news-reel, and Eighteen years ago the county|@ thousand times more thrilling, agent program was established. The |‘“Shanghai Express,” the new Para- growth cf the movement has been | mount picture starring Marlene Die- growing steadily until today there are |trich, opens on Thursday at the hundreds of county agents in agricul- | Paramount Theatre. tural states. In North Dakota,! Among the daring passengers who fundamentally an agricultural state, |start from Pelping with Miss Dietrich there are 32 of them, McNutt point-!are Clive Brook, Anna May Wong, ed out. ‘Warner Oland, Eugene — Pallettz, C. B. Olson was welcomed as a new |Louise Closser Hale, and Miss Hale’s briefly outlining some of the high |that one exception meets another At the start you will be kept busy, March 2.-|British Army doctor, as played by ination for U.S, senator against Sen. (Genuine than his diamonds? Is the| have the full’ support of Governor |UBiform? Who is the mysterious Mr. cihendinent. jhair? On the other hand, is the member of Kiwanis by Judge A. G.|Pet Pekinese. All save one arrive = of his recent trip to Washing- jfate. Suffice it to say that for every- ;48 are the passengers themselves, in {Clive Brook, is unquestionably what ater Jaiies J. Davis. jGerman invalid hiding behind his Gifford Pinchot. Senator Davis re- |Chang (Warner Oland)? And is even frail and beautiful “Shanghai Lily” Two Bismarck Men PARAMOUNT THEATRE Newtown Square, Pa., (®)—Major General Smedley D. But- ler Wednesday announced that he is a candidate for the Republican nom- Governor George Shafer spoke |trip, and this is no place to tell how |the picture full of thrills. For U. S. Senator jcolored assembly can be trusted. The American (Eugene Pallette) no more on a bone dry platform and would colonel really entitled to wear his fication of the federal prohibition | (Louise Closser Hale) as false as her ‘turess as she is supposed to be? THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY MARCH 2, 1932 OUT OUR WAY HIM INTO THEM HOLD UP TH SHAFTS SO t Could: BACH WHAT ARE OU HITTING HIM FOR ? By Williams | You~- OW! YOU BACKED HIM ONTO MY FOOT! “|men to talk of violence and women Man Terrifies Many By Slashing Throat St. Paul, March 2.—(#)—Slashing his throat in a moment of insanity, Arthur Ristuben, 33 years old, of Mayville, N. D., Wednesday terrified hundreds of persons as he ran more than three blocks on Wabasha street in the downtown district. He died a short time later. Women screamed and some fainted as the dying man slashed his redden- ed knife at pedestrians and dodged automobiles driven in efforts to in- tercept him. Shouts of the more than 200 per- sons racing along the sidewalks at- Burr. jsafely in Shanghai after the exciting jone the journey proves eventful, and| Butler Candidate deciding just who among this vari- he claims to be. But is the traveling! iieveeal Butler said he ‘would run ;Smoked glasses? Is the French army cently announced he favors modi- ithe respectable Shanghai landlady (Miss Dietrich) as wicked an adven- Sentenced to Jail! CAPITOL THEATRE |. Hurtling into cinema prominence Two Bismarck men were given jail with a pace as fast as modern life.| sentences after pleading guilty before RxOQ-Radio Pictures’ “Men of | Judge Fred Jansonius in district court Chance” comes to the Capitol The- | here Wednesday, no wag atte tonight with Mary Astas andj They were C. W. Bunker. who WaS Ricardo Cortez, cast in two of the! given 30 days in the county jail for most dynamic screen roles in years. & statutory offense, and Joseph Mar-| There are no muted horns blowing quis, who was given 30 days and fin- 4. «ifen of Chance.” The film is & {derson, foreman of a street cleaning tracted the attention of H. M. Hen- gang. As Ristuben staggered by, his pace slowed by loss of blood, Henderson snatched a shovel and struck the man on the head. Ristuben fell and the ambulance which had been called, caught up. Ristuben died almost as soon as he was carried into the emergency room | ed $200 and costs for engaging in the | compelled blast of strong emotions! liquor traffic. % i . and stong men and women built up to Both were committed to jail after ja strong dramatic climax. | sentence. Geared to the fast tempo of Paris of a hospital. Rates on Beet Pulp \Fyazier’s Bill Would _ Restore Indian Land: Washington, March 2—(P)—A sen- | ate bill introduced Tuesday by Fra- zier (R., N. D.), would resiore to tri- |held out little hope for the recovery bal status vacant lands of Sioux In- dians of the Standing Rock reserva- tion thrown open to homestead entry jin 1908 and 1913. One by Schall (R., Minn.) would | authorize distribution of the princi- Pal and interest of the permanent funds of the Chippewa Indians in {Minnesota on a per capita basis to Persons who are lineal issue, without regard to place of birth, residence, cr tribal affiliation. Esa scientists attribute the decay of te soil deficient in mineral ‘salts. |Hold Little Hope For Man’s Recovery Linton, N. D., Mar. 2—(#)—Em- mons county authorities Wednesday | jof George C. Corbin, who was found unconscious about two weeks ago in! the basement of his home at Livona| [vith an injury to the head. His con-! dition has grown worse steadily, Sheriff E. M. Klein said. | Indications are that Corbin was struck over the head. He has not re- | gained consciousness since he suffer-| ed the injury, and officials who con- ducted an investigation into the case are withholding any action pending | the outcome of Corbin’s injuries. A! jtheory has been advanced that he might have fallen down the basement stairs and injured himself accident-| ally. to a diet of food raised on “Acid mouth” is found less prev- alent among persons of excitable na- tures than among those of calm per- sonalities. After Eye Operation ‘and other pleasure capitals, it reflects | itricked by his enemies through the Cut by I. C. C. Order Information that reduced freight rates on beet pulp have been granted by the Interstate Commerce Commis- agency of the woman he marries. sion on shipments from Iowa to The film is hailed as a notable/northwestern drouth areas was re- achievement in motion picture pro-|ceived here Wednesday from Con- duction by virtue of its intense ac-|gressman O. B. Burtness at Wash- tion and adherence to the accepted |ingtcn. The new rates will be effec- principle that a motion picture is| tive on the Northern Pacific, Soo Line essentially a dramatic vehicle of and Great Northern railroads. movement and story. | Application for the reduction, made It is a story of men and chance |by the railroads on February 17 was and thoroughbred women, shifting | first denied but the case later was the’ exhilarating peace of modern times in a story filled with the hates| and the loves of a dominant man} |from the picturesque capitals of Eu-|Te-opened and a new order entered. rope and back again to America .in! @ never ceasing display of pictur-! esque locales and elaborate settings. Directed by George Archainbaud with a supporting cast composed of John Halliday, Kitty Kelly, Ralph Ince and George Davis, the film reaches a high mark in its deline-! ation of life as it is lived in the} PLAN PREPARATORY SERVICES Special services preparatory to the communion next Sunday will be held at 7:30 o'clock tonight at the First Presbyterian church. Rev. F. E. Lo- gee, the pastor, will deliver a sermon on “Keeping the Radiance of Reli- gion.” Schilling Good spices are so important <3 ae MOUS = alike. Not by any means! Schilling’s is rich in aromatic oils and has more flavor. Some are merely stinging dust. MAN PAYS PENALTY FOR HAWAII ATTACK Portuguese to Serve Life Term For Committing Crime Against Jap Mother Honolulu, March 2.—(P)—Quick re- tribution followed the latest and boldest of the assaults upon women of Oahu island which have brought to live {n fear. Nine hours after he assaulted the Japanese mother of four children, | John Fernandez, 21-year-old Portu- guese, was taken late Tuesday to Oahu prison to serve a life sentence. | Hope that death would be the penalty was expressed by the victim, | Mrs, Miwa Watanabe, stocky 35- year-old woman who came to court carrying her four-month-old babe. Circuit Judge Albert M. Cristy ex- plained he int ee law oe life imprisonment the maxi- iaue, that the death penalty had not been asked, and that such speedy punishment should be deterrent to that type of of crime. ‘The attack was the second in four days. Police described it as the boldest of the series which began with the assault upon the wife of Lieut. Thomas H. Massie, U. 8. N., last September. Clarence Darrow, noted Chicago) lawyer, and Dudley Field Malone, New York international lawyer, an- nounced Tuesday they would come to Honolulu to defend Lieut. Massie, his mother-in-law, Mrs. Granville For- tescue and two naval men accused of FOR THE HIDDEN ROOMS IN EVERY BASEMENT: - - Go over your home and find that room you never use. Of course you have one. All that is required is the investment of a few dollars in inexpensive partitions and effi- cient heat. Now what would you do with that room if you could find it? A den? A sewing room, a work room? A gymnasium, a play room? There are a hundred worthwhile things to do with it. There is only one logical and ideal way to make it livable and pleasant. Build it around a Radiantfire! Whether it is a work shop or a sewing room the wel- come warmth of a Radiantfire reproducing the magic rays that make the sun: so health- ful will make it one popular rooms in of the most the house. Don’t move to a bigger home. Add a room with a Radiantfire. slaying Josefh Kahahawal, one of five ten suspected of that, assault, —_— mall blimps at Akron, O., were foma ‘298,000 miles and carried 32,000 passengers in 1931 without an acci- dent. & Had Melancholy Blues Wanted to die... Jip felt so blue 1! Don’t let _crai and alee oD ts Ae Vegetable Compound gives you re pleasure centers of the world. Sunshine Plentiful During Last Month Bismarck had more than its ordi-| nary share of sunshine during Febru- ary, according to records kept at the federal weather bureau here, the ‘amount recorded being 69 per cent of the total possible or 11 per cent above normal. There were 10 clear days, 13 partly | jcloudy and six cloudy. Dense fog was recorded for one day. The tempera- ture ranged from 18 below zero on} the third to 65 above on the 27th with} |the greatest daily range 37 degrees on |the 17th and the least seven degrees on the 29th. The average tempera- |ture was 16 degrees as compared with jan all-time minimum of four below | during February, 1875 and an all-| |time maximum of 30 degrees in 1930. | \'Temperature during the month was, '5.4 degrees above normal. | Precipitation totaled 20 of an inch of rainfall as compared with a nor- mal of .46, a deficiency of .26. Thej javerage wind velocity was 9.5 miles an | hour with the highest wind 31 miles ; an hour from the northwest on Feb- ruary 11. The prevailing wind direc- | tion was from the northwest. ture’s “Yes, Suh! Here’s Na You want to know’ What leaf we grow : To make those OLD GOLDS you ‘ are smokin’? Well, that’s a sheaf Of OLD GOLD leaf Smooth, ripe and sweet—that you throat- ease!” delicate eye operation. 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