The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1932, Page 2

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE TUESDAY, JULY 5, 1932 pee Ly Weathcr Report i | ° r VIEW PLAN 10 HEAT FORECASTS —- m} For kota: perature. WITH NATURAL GAS) Proposal Made to State Board| by Montana-Dakota Pow- er Company Wednesd ay; § cept showers night little change temperature. kota: Wednesday; State institutions in western Nortn Dakota would be heated with natural gas under a proposal submitted to the state board of administration by the/ tion tonight. B Montana-Dakota Power company.|_, For Minnesota: Fair in southwest, showers in east and north tonight; The company believes North Dakota!Wednesday generally fair would realize a substantial saving | Showers in northeast; cooler Wednes- though the use of the gas. day in extreme south. Nelson Sauvain, chairman of the| GENERAL CONDITIONS board, said Saturday that the pro-| A well developed low pressure arca A ; iy |18 centered over North Dakota and Ree een > nearing Possibly | eclpitation’ tell at tioet places dont next week when power company of-/Oxlahoma and Missouri northwest- ficials will be allowed to submit com- | ee to lato ail la ; v i. | Heavy precipitation occurred in parts Parisons with coal bids. of North Dakota and Missouri. ‘The The proposal deals with the state | pressure is high over.the north Pa- capitol building at Bismarck, the/Cific coast and the weather is gen- i te _lerally fair from the western state penitentiary at Bismarck, the/ Mountain slope westward to the Pa state training school at Mandan, ard|cific coast. Cool weather prevails in the state teachers college at Dickin-|all sections. Son |_ Missouri River stage, 7 a. m. 7.5 ft. “Seve ion dollars have been|24 hour change, 0.2 ft spent Mr recent soatg in driliing oper. |, Bismarck station barometer, inches, ations for the development of oil and|279!. Reduced to sea level, 29.66. natural gas and the building of pipe | TEMP! ATURE lines in the state of North Dakota.| a, 7 4. m, He MPERATURE and at the present time,” power com- pighest y night central and east. Fair slightly warmer west por- terda Pany officials said, “several gas wells | Lowest night 53 are located within the state. pone “Recent action on the part of the, PRECIPITATION federal government again has opened | Amt. 48 hrs. ending 7 a. m. acreage in North Dakota for drilli:g|Total this month to date 1.23 purposes and numerous developments | Normal, this month to date 32 are now contemplated. The creation) Sort, san. (eon of additional markets for natural gas, | = : such as the use for heating state in- | ACcumulated excess since Jan. stitutions,” they said, “would mater-j jally increase the development of the; oil and gas industry in North Da-j| NORTH DAKOTA POINTS Temprs. Pre. Ins. °o ] | STATE INSTITUTIONS \.zs.nsxtetstete rue OF LIGNITE INS. D. North Da- Generally | ‘ fair_tonight and/Say Residents Must Be Taught ex- to- northeast; ; in} For South Da-| Generally | Plans for a fair tonight and/¢ducation campaign in South Dakota slightly cooler to-|South Dakota's coal mine tonight andj except | Rocky | 1.63 | kota.” North Dakota towns are receiving! Amenia, cldy. . gas from the field located at the in-| Beach, rain tersection of the states of North an.i/ South Dakota and Montana, accord- | ing to James Trimble, Bismarck, dis- | trict manager of the power company. who said the producing area in th} state will be enlarged as rapidly as} the development of markets requires. {Devils Lake, cldy. { High Low 77 53 BISMARCK, peldy. 1.23 Bottineau, cldy. . Carrington, cldy. .. Crosby, cidy. Dickinson, clear . Drake, cldy. ....... Dunn Center, cid: Ellendale, clear . “The Montana-Dakota Power com-| Fessenden, cldy. 53.92 pany during the last three years has|Grand Forks, cldy.. 52.64 built approximately 300 miles of nat-|*Hankinson, clear 5 ural gas pipe line in North Dakota, | Jamestown, cldy. 50 62 serving such towns as Bismarck, |Larimore, cldy. 51 9 Mandan, Williston, Dickinson, Bow- creat 31 8 man and others,” Trimble said. ieee st 181 IsI ‘i j Napoleon, cidy 49° 87 Oakes, clay. 4467 Murray Is Issue in | Qakes, clay. ne Oklahoma Election |rembina, cidy. ee fear ear ee . ual 54 1.40 Oklahoma City, July 5.—(#)—Gov- ston, rain . 6 mL ernor William H. (Alfalfa Bill) Mur- (AR yee eee ni 58 ray, the state's fiery Democratic} spo, the last 24 hours, } chief executive, was an issue Tuesday in Oklahoma's first primary election. qo The governor has announced the |other stations— Temprs. Pre. legislative candidates he wishes elect- High Low Ins. ed and as a result bitter campaigns | Boise, Idaho, clear .... 74 00 have resulted in many counties. Calgary, Alta., cldy. 64 22 Twenty-five Democrats and six Re- | Chicago, Ill. cldy. 66 ‘0 publicans want the new office of con- | Denver, Colo. clear . 90 00 Claude Weaver, | Des Moines, Ia, cldy.... 74 04 gressman at large. e until recently Governor Murray's se- cretary, has his former chief's support for the Democratic nomination, while | Mrs. Mabel Bassett, state commission- er of charties and one of Weaver's opponents, is a pronounced foe of the governor. Nearly 9,000 candidates sought of- fices ranging from United States sen- ator to township constable. YOUR TEETH Their Relation to Your | General Health By the Educational Committee of the American Dental Association | A LESSON FROM FOLKLORE From the world’s folklore the en- lightened modern world may learn a lesson in dental hygiene, according to Dr. Alfred Walker, chairman of the educational committee of the Amer-j ican Dental association. i Despite the great strides taken for- ward by modern scientific research | Dr. Walker says, thousands of per-| sons believe today that you can cure) @ toothache by running three times around a church without thinking of a fox. | That is just one of hundreds of| strange cures recommended by folk- | lore. If it doesn’t work, you can try what Dr. Walker considers the prize of them all, which specifies that you fill your mouth with water and sit on a stove until the water boils. This is guaranteed to eliminate toothache entirely. Carolina Negroes believe in teach- ing tooth charms to the young. They put a dog’s tooth in a bag and tie the bag around a baby’s neck. This is supposed to save the child trouble while teething and assures healthy teeth when the child grows up. German peasants, who recommend the walk around the church as a solution of your teeth troubles, also think that you can cure a toothache by kissing a donkey. Some Bavarians believe that camphor wrapped in cotton and placed in the ear will cure bad teeth, while others offer this prescription: Open a hen’s egg, remove the white cuticle surrounding the yolk, wrap it around the little finger of each hand, and leave it there until it dries. Pain will dis-; appear promptly. Commenting on the folklore find- ings, Dr. Walker says that moderns, with the tools of science at their command, may take a lesson from the humble folk who devised the strange formulas. “The German peasants who use the fox ‘cure’ at least indicate that they 24 hour: PROHIBITION PARTY MAY SUPPORT BORAH Convention Gathers in Indiana- polis and Condemns Both Old Groups The above record for Indianapolis, July 5.—()—Its hopes centered on a move to unite the great of Senator Borah for the presidency, the prohibtiion party gathered for its quadrennial national convention Tuesday. D. Lugh Colvin, national chairman of the party, has engaged in confer- enecs with representatives of the tem- Perance groups designed to gain ad- vance pledges of support to the Idaho senator if he will accept the party's nomination. Borah, who has refused to suppor: the Republican presidential ticket be- cause of the platform's declaration on prohibition, conferred with Colvin in Washington Sunday, but neither has revealed what, if anything, was de- cided. Those familiar with the sen- ator'’s views believe he will decline the nomination. Colvin said he believes Senator Borah would poll 10,000.000 votes as @ candidate for president on the pro- hibition ticket. The movement to draft Borah drew some opposition from persons, de- scribed as a minority of the prohibi- tion group, who feel the candidate are giving some thought to their den- tal health,” Dr. Walker says, “and that is more than you can say for most of us modern Americans. “We can well take a page from the folklore of simple people the world over and learn that we should place pea eeprciance oe condition of our as they ai our general health.” ‘Think of your teeth when they do and they will not ache and think of them. newspaper will be glad to questions from readers it teeth, mouth hygiene or dental health. The questions will be answered authoritatively but by outstanding should come from within the party ranks, ag is customary. Committees to draft a platform and attend to other convention business were formed at state caucuses preced- ing the opening session. The keynote address was entrusted to Clinton Howard of Rochester. N. Y., widely known temperance lecturer. The major parties were scored at a mass meeting Monday night for their prohibition stands. JUST BOOKKEEPING Boston—A report came to police headquarters that a woman was found dead slumped. under the steering wheel of an auto. Patrolman William Twomey was sent to investigate. He found the woman to be very. much live. Here's his report: “She was up her accounts and hed her head down close to the wheel where, the ledger was resting.” jChatterton appears as the wealth- 3 | oily married until she discovers her | Manager of Gamble Edmonton, Alta., cldy... 66 00; Havre, Mont., peldy + 62 00 Helena, Mont., clear ... 64 00 Huron, S. D., clear .. 68 08 Kansas City, Mo., rain. . 92 2.14 Miles City, Mont., clear 68 02 No. Platte, Neb., clear.. 86 00 Oklahoma Cit: 92 00} Pierre, S. D. 7B 40 Rapid City, +e 4 01 St. Louis, Mo., peldy.... 86 20 St. Paul, Minn., cldy. .. 70 00 Salt Lake City, U., clear 76 00 | Seattle, Wash., cldy. 62 .00 Sheridan, Wyo., cle: » 70 00 Sioux City. Ta., cldy -% 00 Spokane, Wash.. clea 7 01 Swift Current, S., cid: 8 2.26 The Pas, Man., clear . 4 Toledo, Ohio, peldy. 70 00 Winnipeg, Man., cldy... 74 54 02 temperance organizations in support! ! WOULD BOOST USE That N. D. Coal is of Superior Quality | lignite _coal-burning were discussed here Monday when commis- jSloners conferred with North Dakota lignite mine operators. The South Dakotans were J. W. |Parmley, Ipswich, who also is presi- |dent of the Canada-to-Panama Canal | highway association, and George H. Puder, Timber Lake. The state of South Dakota has ;Operated a lignite mine near Haynes jfor the last 10 years, | Lignite “got off to a bad start” in ;South Dakota, the visitors said, be- {cause many new mines were being jopened and a poor quality coal from near the surface was shipped into that {state. They said South Dakotans {must be educated to the fact that a jmuch superior lignite is being mined now from the deeper mines. | South Dakota saves from one- fourth to one-third on its coal bill pdeese it uses North Dakota lignite in preference to eastern hard coals, the commissioners told the local oper- ators. Speaking of the Canada-to-Canal highway, Parmley said North Dakota's section is one of the best on the entire jcontinental system. The road runs} ;from Swan River, Manitoba, Canada, to Monterey, Mexico. State road No. (3 in North Dakota is part of this high- lway. A contract for construction of ;the connecting link between Dunseith |and the Canadian border already has! ‘been let. He pointed out that all but |12 miles of the road has been finished in South Dakota. highway association is cooperating in staging the dedicatory picnic at the International Peace Garden, half in North Dakota and half in Canada in the Turtle Mountains, July 14. o——— $9 | Atthe Movies | Parmley said the Canada-to-Canal | |’ nue Pictured above Garner to Roosevelt the scene that was enacted on and thereby insured the latter's nomination. nia delegation, who made the announcement concerning that stat the center (notebook in hand) is Robert Scott, secretary of the When California and Democra shown with their Doctor, 92, Regrets Day He Originated Electric Chair ssi isioma es c PARAMOUNT THEATRE | The Paramount Theatre will show| Ruth Chatterton’s newest star-! ring vehicle, “The Rich Are Alway: With Us,” a First National picture starting Wednesday. | Manager Nippert advises that in | “The Rich Are Always With Us,” Miss; t member of the wealthy set, hap- husband “cheating” with a heartless debutante, whom he marries after the jdivorce which sets them both free. In spite of her love for Julian Tierney, ja successful author, portrayed by |George Brent, Miss Chatterton fears ; to marry again, because of her previous {painful experience. She has, more- jover, a motherly interest in her for- ‘mer husband which time and again jnearly disrupts her love for the au-{ jthor. A surprise climax gives the [story an added fillip, all the more in- |teresting because of its novelty and | surprise. Store Here Promoted Fred J. Sorkness, manager of the ; Gamble Store in Bismarck, will leave for Appleton, Wis., Wednesday, hav- ing been promoted to a supervisor's | position by the company. | Sorkness has been in Bismarck for the last three and one-half years. | He will be at Appleton temporarily, | pending arrangement of affairs in his new position. ; He will be succeeded as manager of the Bismarck store by Clifford Palm- ser, who has been at Grand Forks for the last four months. Palmer wasi ,at Williston for two years before mov- |ing to Grand Forks. The new man- | ager, his wife and two children ar- ‘rived here Monday evening. Directors of Gamble-Skogma, Inc., joperators of Gamble Stores, last| {month declared a dividend of 50 cents per share on common stock and the regular quarterly dividend of $1.75 | per share on the seven per cent pre- | ferred stock, Sorkness said. Gamble officials report earnings for the first five months of 1932 in excess of the same period in 1931. They also report a sales increase of 21.45 per cent in 1932 over the same period. The increase in sales is partially due to the addition of new lines of merchandise. | There are 184 Gamble stores ; Operating in Minnesota, North and South Dakota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Towa, Illinois, Kansas, Nebraska, Mis- souri and Indiana, Praises Roosevelt | Washington, July 5.—()—The poli- | tically-minded were seeking an answer Tuesday to the highly-speculative question aroused by Hiram Johnson’s Praise of Governor Roosevelt's con- duct in accepting the Democratic nomination. Will the California senator, a se- vere critic of the Hoover administra- tion, join Senator Norris of Nebraska in bolting the Republican party to support the New York chief execu- tive? Johnson has been outspoken in criticism of Hoover's debt moratorium and his handling of the relief situa- tion. | SNAKE LAND Los Angeles—Mrs. Walter Jacoby can sure make salad to suit a snake's taste. She placed a bowl of macaroni salad in a window to cool off. A huge rattlesnake saw it, devoured it all and attempted to escape. It was too slow under the heavy load of food and was an easy victim of a club. Get Back Vitality | With New Tonic! Starved blood saps vitality, Most peo- ple who tire easily need richer blood. Ordinary iron tonics are hard to absorb. Science has learned that copper added to fron increases tonic effect tremen- dously. CO-RON, new copper and iron ‘tonic, has produced remarkable results in run-down blood condittor Builds r ten days’ treatment, your money back. For sale by: . | HALL'S DRUG STORE ' Johnson Statement | | Originator of the electric chair, Dr. A. D. Rockwell, took his 92nd birthday anniversary as an occasion to condemn capital punishment. New York state's oldest physician, he is shown above with his grand- daughter. Mrs. Jean Reymond, and his great-granddaughter, Suzanne Reymond, at his home in Flushing, Long Island. By NEA Service ' New York, July 5—Dr. A. D. Rockwell, back in 1888, designed the first electric chair. ‘Today, at 92, the} oldest physician and criminologist in | New York, he wishes he hadn't done| it. For many hundreds of men have been executed according to the meth-/ od he ‘evolved, and Dr. Rockwell is bitterly opposed to capital punish- ment. . It was not by choice that he em- ployed his talents for the destruc- tion of criminal life. He was called to the service of a reform-swept state! which had voted to electrocute its! murderers and then discovered it had no reasonably humane method. Dr. Rockwell was the ranking American authority on electro-therapeutics, so, he was commissioned to produce an electric chair. He did so with the advice of Thomas Edison. He recalls today the almost world- wide cry of protest that followed the first electrocution at Auburn prison | in 1890. Dr. Rockwell had not at-{ ‘THE “old maestro” and all thelads have prepared a radio am for you this eventide, under ‘spon- sorship of the alma malta—good, old Blue Ribbon Malt. With par- donable pride and a bit of a gusto Pprofundo, the maestro men- tion that Blue Ribbon Malt is Amer- ica’s Biggest Seller. Millions say it’s the very best and take it from me America knows its malt. Hear BEN BERNIE WCCO - WNAX TONIGHT at 7 Cential Standard Time Wherever you go, you find Biue RIBBON Mat AS SETLER BIGGEST |» FINNEY'S DRUG 67 | : SERVICE DRUG 8TO! tended. His instructions regarding the placing of the electrodes had been ignored by confused officials, and the job was barbarously bungled. ‘Thereafter he was present at exe- cutions to see that his method was |properly employed, and death invari- jably resulted from the first shock. “It’s the principle of capital pun- ishment that I oppose,” declared the aged physician, who is active and in good health. “It is only a measure of vengeance, and admission of the law's futility. “It is the fault of society if it Fes & ry . 74 Too “Worn-Out” to go Another date broken . . . Couldn't stay on her feet a minute longer! Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound always relieves cramps. Try it next mont Texas Turned the Tide the platform at the Demo cratic convention when California and Texas switched their votes from At the ex treme right, hand upraised, is William G. McAdoo, chairman of the Califor- te. At the left, gavel in hand, is Senator Walsh, the convention chairman, while in Cheering leaders of the Texas delegation are tic national committee. state's standard. | ““}{ waits until a man has gone complete-| ly bad before it takes a hand in affairs. Criminals should be put work for the good of the state, an should be used as subjects for study! by criminologists.” Radio Chains Slash | Staffs and Salaries | | New York, April 5.—()—Both Na- tional radio stations have reduced Staffs and salaries. The National Broadcasting com- pany on July first placed in effect a ‘general 10 per cent salary reduction. Several months ago the staff was cut down in an effort to make the pay cut unnecessary. * At present 1,246 names appear on the N. B. C. payroll. The Columbia Broadcasting system recently reduced salaries 15 per cent, after dropping about 75 employes from a personnel of 600. } } FIRST IN 40 YEARS Merced, Calif—For the first time | in 40 years, James W. Smalling, 75, is free to cast his first vote. He was convicted of a self-defense killing in 1891 and served 17 years before he was paroled -here. He was recentiy pardoned by Gov. Rolph and an- nounced his intentions to vote in the presidential election this year. Rescue Four Persons From Manitoba Lake The Pas, Man., July 5.—(®)—Four Persons have been rescued after be- ing marooned on ‘an island in Clear Lake for seven days, information re- ceived here Tuesday said. The four, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Bayne, of Ralls Island, and Henry Reider and William Grund, left here June 9 by canoe for Island Lake, scene of new gold discoveries. On June 13 their canoes, propelled by outboard motors, were swamped in Cedar Lake and they spent eight hours in the wa- ter clinging to one of the overturned canoes before they reached the island. A report to Royal Canadian Mount ed police here said they were in “fai condition. PEPPY PEPPER Brockton, Mass.—Local police feel rather embarrassed, letting a prison- er twice slip through their grasp in one afternoon. Immediately after ar- | resting a man named Alexander Pep- Per on a public morals charge, he jumped through a closed, screened window 20 feet to the sidewalk be- low. Recaptured, he was being tak- en to the station house when he again broke away, making good his escape through the crowd. apanese There is a flower, grown in Japan, which insects cannot tolerate. Mod- ern research has discovered that its extract kills them at a touch. This is the basis of Fly Tox. FLY-TO Fly-Tox is economical, for a little goes far. Its strength is guaran- teed, for every lot is tested in our laboratory, on live insects, It is Kill Quickly all Flies and Mosquitoes by a Perfumed Mist Based on Flowers We have spent ten years and over $100,000 to perfect it. It kills at once every fly or mosqujto that it touches. Yet its perfumed mist is harmless to people. ONLY the latest, and best that science has produced. Don’t trust your home protection to ways less effi- cient, Fly-Tox is sold everywhere. We need a man for our sales force a salary and commt ax our sales representative... ‘The right man will be «! he can make good money w oll direct to users by an e1 others are doing it iy + O11 fx wold in with each loc in required. oil, 2361 Hampden Ave; THIS COUNTY IS OPEN! ion position open for the man He must be honest, xtand well in his ality, be willing to work hard and must own a car. WE SET YOU UP IN BUSINESS! exclusive territory and be shown how T present conditions xelling lubricating WILLHELM LUBRICATION CO. in this county right now.. There's who can quality new and different xystem. Many well-established com- mpte stock of mot against merc! buy—they’re all St. Paul, Minn, “What Shall I - Do With These?” Housekeeping time always finds a few odds and ends “left over.” What Shall You Do With Them? .. . Sell Them, Of Course. Sell them for ready cash instead of lugging them back up to the attic. An inexpensive Want-Ad will turn the trick. Just Phone Miss Adtaker ~ At Phone 32 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘The church of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople arid St. Mark’s in Venice are judged the greatest ex- amples of Byzantine architecture, —__—_—— NOTICE HAIRDRESSERS rxamimations in both branches of beauty culture will be held in Bi marck, July 11 and 12 in the Patter- sor Hotel and in boy on July 14 and 15 in the Minette Beauty School. Clara Russell Alexand State Board of Hairdres and Cosmetologists, KILL Teacher (pointing out the moral against steal- ing): “If I put my hand in some one’s pocket and take out the money, what would I be?” Tommy: “You'd be his wife.” This is an old joke, but just the same you don’t want any one “to go through” your home. The Burglary Insurance policy sold by this agency will make good any such loss. MURPHY “The Man Who Knows Insurance” 218 Broadway BISMARCK ‘The honor of serv- « ing you at a time when expert and efficient service is so badly need- ed obligates us to do everything as nearly Perfect as possible, You can rely upon us, WEBB BROS. Funeral Directors Phone 50 Night Phone 50 or 887 wt -+

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