The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 19, 1932, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1932 THE GUMPS— THE DOCTOR'S ORDERS WELL~ I'S PRETTY SERIOUS= (°) AND WHEN A MAN GETS YouR AGERE. HIS BONES BO NOY KNitr AS THEY WOULD THIRTY YEARS AGO=— ‘YOUR LEG IS BROKEN = I> THAT'S WHAT MAPPENES Yo BIMBO WHEN HE GOT KITTENISM AND MADE SHE BEY WITH. MILUE THAT IF SHE WOULO STAND ON A CHAIR - HOLDING PARTY IS CALLED OFF = Site WILL BE NO QUE TS AND MILLIE sige OF HER ? Mi e 2 WILL SHE BRING FLOWERS TO MIM WILL SHE COME AND SIT SY H BEDSIDE ANB READ TO HIM = AND HELP WHILE AWAY THE WEARY HOURS ? a. U.S. Pat. Off; Pet Nike Oncans Tae p A a feortH FROM SANTA FE, NEW MEXICO, THROUGH ALCALDE, MEXICAN VILLAGE, THROUGH RANCHES DE TAOS, WITH [1S MASSIVE ADOBE CHURCH, To TAOS £4 AND THE BIG / RK PUEBLOS. /¥ 4} TOLD HIM FROM NOW ON ['M COMBINING IS GETTING RESTLESS. HE MAKE THE INDIANS WANTS ME BACK, WICKER-FURNITURE - 2 N60. U.S. PAT. OFF..!, 1932 By NEA SEQVICS. INC. “Now, don’t get any of those lima beans up your nose. I can’t afford any doctors.” | vatuea at $426,230,960, led the nation. VW dropped more than 50 per cent from that of 1929, when the total value a was set at $942,834. WE'LL SHOW 'EM THAT “Other machinery, vehicles, and |parts” ranked first in value among BEATING THEIR TIME! GEE..ITLL BE SWELL I'D BE GLAD To TR YEAU..WE GOT DH \NILL ‘YOU TEACH MY OFFSPRING DOES! AND IN ORDER TO MAKE AGUSTA FORGET, HE BROUGHT HER WITH GLADYS ARE OUT XO GIVE HER ANY THING SHE WANTS || AND THIS 1S (T— ov CAN LEARN Dos To HAVE JUMBO 008 To Do Some HOW WOULD You LIke NO OTHER KIDS KNOW kee Tis UNDER | TRICKS , TOO... TRICKS KNOW A WHOLE Nice Tricks, pocRR HIM To KNOW How TO THIS,oR THEY'D ALL. our Hats J the state's exports during 1931, OUGHTA BE DUC BUNCH OF DIFFER- JONES? He's SmaRT | WALK ON HIS HIND Lees? GE BRINGIN’ THEI amounting to $174,066. The classifica- Sour aie A bbe ENT Dos AN" IT WWOULDNT LET'S TRY HIM ANYWAY... DOGS DocToR | tion for machinery used in last year’s AS SMART AS TAKE ANY TI T IT THINK HE'D SOON ») |compilation, and which is not strictly laa Me A Fe comparable with the current class- ALL FOR HIM To “ i ification, shows exports of machinery, KETCH ON... j State Ranked 48th Among 52) venicies and parts valued at $116031, day ‘itori: Exports of laundry machinery, shown Seaees and) werritories, | separately for the first time this year, Table Indicates jWere valued at $79,887. i | Other leading exports with com- eee |parative values for 1930, were: Non- Exports of merchandise from North | metallic minerals, $42,779 and $49,660; Dakota were valued at $452,903 dur-|edible animals and animal products, ing 1931 compared with $516,162 the s97,822 and $20,979; wood and paper, ® previous year, according to statistics | §21'316 and $27,548; vegetable food € made public by the department of| products and beverages, $17,741 and 8 commerce. | $106,008; and inedible vegetable prod- € North Dakota ranked 48th among| ucts. $8151 and $46,869, VY the 52 states and territories in as) Values of exports from neighboring £ value of exports, the table shows. states quring the last three years 4@ New York, whose exports were! follow: ~~"States =a 1931 1930 1929 t wisconsin -$38,414,880 $78,470,340 $124,977,467 {Indiana 30,604,428 55,628025 73,740,468 1 4 FR ww to wre uP to awe 17,413,69 28,738,731 401.376 Re a arinnescix 16,155,655 32,328,954 ilewar Poke Sues fH S109 TO GUASNS TOUEUERILL gs } } Kansas . 10,824,844 28,416,467 23,805,710 DEKaeeT On ENTERTAN AGUSTA, eS \ «Nebraska . 6,195,914 10,613,505 12,406,248 LANDING THE WHILE AFFEL » | ¢ South Dako! 4,797,339 6,467,417 7,095,247 ACCOUNT estas eal bead Montana 2,955,913 4,313,010 5,680,884 LD AVER'S ONLY PAPA, CHICK AND rT ww Q—? 3 ‘ Urges Deep Plowing ith inersace™* mie (9 he Though the grasshopper situation, for the state in 1932 will depend large- the state, the most damaging to crops are the two-striped, red-legged, clear- winged, and lesser migratory types. FULLER AYER, 2 7 mH, Le “ 6 To Kill Grasshoppers) ©f many species of grasshoppers in i MEANG CHICK 1S ANKIOU oe | ABouT IT, TOO HIM ON THIS TRIP Mis 1s A PoE, | NAMED HOMER | DITTY AND HOW OLD AVER DOESNT LOVE THAT Boy{ ‘THE COOKSTOVE KING, CAME. ly on the weather in the next few : 5 . weeks, farmers can do much at pres-| Hettinger’s Seed } ent to fight off the menace, accord- Loans Total $77,689 H ing to J. A. Munro, of the state agri-| ADVERTISING cultural college. Munro recommends the use of poi- son bran bait during the ‘hoppers’ growing season and deep plowing of ground followed by packing or har- rowing. Deep plowing, he says, bur- fes the eggs and prevents most of the hatched hoppers from getting to} the surface. Poison bran is not a menace to live- stock, the entomologist said, if ordi- nary precautions are observed. The bran should be scattered so that It falls in flakes rather than lumps. The hatching period usually begins the latter part of May and continues throughout June. The young ‘hoppers require five to six weeks to complete WAIT, wart ‘Have you had the new breakfast thrill? Have you sprung this de- lightful surprise on the family? Grape-Nuts Flakes —big, golden, crinkly flakes, rich ‘with that good Grape-Nuts flavor, and, likeGrape-Nuts, jammed with nourishment. Get Grape-Nuts Flakes at your grocer’s to-day! New England, N. D., April 19.—Het- tinger county farmers have received | $77,689.00 in federal feed and seed loans, County Agent Walter Sales said Monday. Sales said 364 loans already have been completed and it is expected that farmers in this county will re- ceive between $35,000 and $40,000 more in government loans, Paul Mann of the First National bank in Dickinson said loans in Stark county to date amount to $145,118.10, with the money already delivered to more than 400 of the 704 applicants for federal aid, Taxpayers in Grant Draw Rigid Platform Carson, N. D., April 19.—(?)—Grant county's taxpayer's association adopt- ed a platform at a meeting here for the approval and guidance of county Officials. Included were suggestions that no new debts be incurred during present conditions, that the budget system be applied to all county offices, that all purchases over $100 be let on bids, that all road work be let on contract, that no county property be let at pri- vate sale, that there be no emergency fund levied, and that each county of- ficial should assume his reduction of salary. OFFER FREE GARDENS New England, N. D., April 19—At a OX recent meeting of the board of coun- AWE FLYING ty commissioners of Hettinger county FIELO , OAX- it was voted poor people in the sev- TREAMING smu eral towns in the county be allowed to WHEN SOME- put in gardens on city lots owned by the county, free of cost. SHIPS TON OF BUTTER New England, N. D., April 19.—The first ton of creamery butter ever shipped out of New England is on the way to New York city. It was prepar- ed and sent by Albert Anderson, who came here from Erskine, Minn., to open a creamery last week. RABID DRY It is said that the gemsbok, a large South African antelope, never drinks water, the moisture which it requires being obtained from the succulent Plants on which it feeds. We Grape-Nuts BRAND-NEW form! eS | Stickler Solution | wm B@-—~ HoweyER— ELL, THIS MUST BE bay!’ ( Have HE VERY THING YOU WANT, Mapam A SLIGHT MISTAKE! AY LUCKY are! WHY, THATS NOTHING BUT @& COMMON BLACK TACK! I WANTED AN EGG BEATER THERE You (an was WING CLICKED, NES sweet i! OH, MY Mistake! ( THOUGHT 1 YOU SAID A YEGG BEATER! WASH TUBBS és fits’ ASH AND RIP HAVE BEEN WAITING HOURS, BUT THE SELE- STYLED “ASIATIC MONSTER” DOES NOT APPEAR, ‘THE CAFE 1S EMPTY, AND THE PROPRIETOR DOZES LAZILY BEHIND THE BAR. SOMETHING’S WRONG! \ WEESH YOU To TRY THEES SODA, GENTLEMAN, EET EES ON ZE HOUSE. ane its Tuat Sopa cer up, sport) o tei @errine woozy. |\_E WKS WE, BIN DOPED! "M SLEEPY, By CRANE : |

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