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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, AUGUST 6, 1932 = it SUPPRESSION LAW | WAR!OUMSIN DISPUTE OVER CHACO [WRAY DpANIICT ON [ists Eat! Mit seme] new a tt ts nets © © °| May Play Golf Free | savtrctttia tn rresime ( ae a ise tate kbs. Gee in time to reach the markets on the| Of Charge Sunday | Hlein said. AG | \ han ducks, geese and hen turkeys; Day| best days. Bismarck mashie-swingers may| _ODD MARINE a ee ee BOLIVIANS of Atonement, Oct. 10, best market play nine or 18 holes of golf free St. Kilda, one of days Sept. 27-29, fancy fat fowls! When having dry cleaning,| of charge at the Pleasant Valley golf| rides, has no postoffice, so stamps ancy fat fowls; Feast of Tabernacles, club here Sunday, according to Adam | cannot be purchased there. ters pressing, repairing, also new tailored clothes and payments on account, ask for Popularity Votes. Klein—Tailor and days Oct. 5-7, chickens, roosters and 11-13, fancy fat fowls, ducks ana geese; Feast of Laws, Oct. 22, best market days Oct. 19-20, birds of prime quality of all kinds. Klein, manager. Klein offers the use of his course free of charge to give Capital City golfers an opportunity to become ac- quainted with the layout. TTOKILL NEWSPAPER Refuses Order Restraining Au- | FOR SLOPE COUNTIES Yield of 20 Bushels Per Acre at thorities From Confiscat- ing Publication Minneapolis, Aug. 6—(#)—The Min- nesota newspaper suppression law was relay again Saturday by District ludge Paul W. Guilford in denying Arthur Kasherman an order restrain- ing Minneapolis authorities from con- fiscating his newspaper, The Public Press, or interfering with its sale. The law has been held unconstitu- tional by the supreme court of the United States in a case involving The Saturday Press, a weekly publication, Since discontinued. ‘The state su- Preme court of Minnesota previously had ruled the statute valid. Kasherman cited the United States Supreme court's decision in arguing his case at a hearing last week after copies of his publication had been confiscated by police. That issue con- tained an article discussing a case Passed on by. a district court judge. Judge Guilford, in a memorandum made part of his order, said the ma- jority opinion by Justice Hughes and the dissenting opinion by Justice Butler “seem to agree that the clause in‘the Minnesota statutes dealing with obscene, lewd, and lascivious newspapers is not inclyded in the ju- dicial condemnations directed against © BOLIVIAN FORToR POST 8 PA /AYAN nee FORT on Y Bouivian \\ OCCUPATION Fe) PARAGUAYAN EA OCCUPATION The tong controversy between Paraguay and Bolivia over the bit- terly disputed Gran Chaco territory approached a climax as the two countries prepared for war although giving thei: tlonal moves for a peaceful cettiement. This map shows the territory Involved and distribution of the two countries’ outposts. Experiment Farm Is Held Criterion Mandan, N. D., Aug. 6—(#)—The average wheat yleld of Morton, Sioux, Oliver and Grant counties will run in excess of 20 bushels to the acre, it was reported Saturday by Superin- tendent J. M. Stephens of the U. 8. bkuaka Great Plains Field Station e. For more than a dozen years the result of threshing at the experiment station has been the criterion on which the yield of grain in Morton county can be judged, Stephens said, and by the same token the yield for Oliver, Sioux, Grant and to some ex- tent Hettinger and Mercer counties can be judged, these closely follow- ing the Morton county yield and the average at the experiment station. Threshing of grain on the 312 one- tenth acre plats of land has been completed. at the station with the lowest yield of wheat 11 bushels to the acre and the highest 36 bushels. The average on the station plats is 23 3-10 bushels per acre. Conditions of the plats at the sta- tion correspond with every condition in this territory, including planting time and method of planting, Ste- approval to interna. the other section of the law dealing with scandalous and defamatory newspapers.” “The remedy by injunction under the statues as to obscene and lewd publications is therefore apparently still valid and effective,” the court said in its memorandum. In any event, the court said, the section of the Minnesota law dealing with scandalous and defamatory news- papers was the only part of the law construed by the supreme court and declared to be unconstitutional. Referring specifically to the Kash- erman petition, the court held the threat of arrest is not a ground for a temporary injunction. The court also held the issues of Kasherman’s paper which were confiscated were not the property of the plaintiff but belonged to persons to whom he had sold them as news agents and they were not parties in the injunction suit. Editor's Note: This is the 11th of 20 daily articles explaining the new federal taxes. (Copyright, 1932, NEA Service, Inc.) You can join a lodge or a college fraternity without paying Uncle Sam @ tax on your dues or initiation fees, but if you are initiated into “a social, athletic, or sporting club” you prob- ably will have to pay Uncle Sam for the privilege of riding the goat—or whatever it is that they do to you SS bee they initiate you. @ present revenue law continues ! At the Movies d @ section of the Revenue Act of 1928 CAPITOL THEATRE which puts a 10 per cent government Many of the most remarkable feats/ tax on all dues and membership fees of photography ever recorded on a}in “social, athletic or sporting organi- screen are promised in “The Doomed zations” where such costs (in the case Battalion,” which is coming to the of an active resident annual member) Capitol Theatre on Monday. It is a/@re more than $25 a year. « story of battles above the clouds,) Likewise, the law taxes initiation many of them at night and in the | fees charged by such organization at smoke of gun powder and bursting|/10 per cent, if such fees amount to AY explosives, and of a heroic company | More than $10. H which was undermined and their em-| Specifically exempted by the law t battled fortress blown to kingdom| are fraternal societies, orders or asso- UNCLE SAMS NEW TAXES WHERE THEY HIT YOU—AND HOW! phens said. “Some of the plats were seeded on last year’s stubble, some on stubble that has been cropped with wheat continuously for 10 years, some on corn land, some on potato land, some where barley or oats previously: had + |been planted, some on deep and some on shallow plowing, and so forth. None of the plats were irrigated or received any more moisture or at- tention than did the rest of the ter- ritory.” The high yield of 36 bushels to the acre was obtained on plats which had been in summer fallow last year, Stephens reported. “The dozens of different methods and kinds of planting,” said Stephens, “give us a close check on all man- ner of farming in the district. For the last 14 years this 10-acre plat hhas been the average of Morton coun- ty wheat yield as well as closely that of counties in the territory.” Jewish Holidays Give Poultry Sales Boost Poultry raisers generally can antici- pate a better demand for birds at central markets such as Chicago and New York during the Hebrew holi- days, according to O. M. Fulkr, agri- cultural college farm economist. With increased demand, prices tend to strengthen about the time holidays occur, he says. The Hebrew holidays for the re- mainder of this year, together with ciations operating under the lodge system, and local fraternal organiza- tions among college students. A Chamber of Commerce is exempt- ed as a business organization. The Y. M. C. A. and the Y. M. H. A. are exempted as organizations whose pre- dominant purposes are religion and social service. Also, dues and fees Paid to a “local” of a labor union are exempt. The law applies to country clubs, golf clubs, tennis clubs, boxing clubs, boating clubs, canoe clubs, hunting and fishing clubs and “any organiza- tion for the practice or promotion of athletics or sports.” Under the law, any organization of @ status that is doubtful or disputed is automatically classed as coming within the meaning of the act until it succeeds in proving its exemption. The local tax collector's decision may be appealed to Washington. Holders of life memberships must Pay an annual.tax equal to that of current members and at the same time. fi walker on Mar eae BRITISH TO ANSWER DOMINION DEMANDS the place where the Italians and the Austrians fought each other to a Mother Country to Make Deci- sion on Proposals For { standstill for two years, every effort Trade Agreements ‘ was made by the photographers to record conditions as they really ex- isted in war time. “The Doomed Battalion” was an or- ganization of picked mountain men, climbers, sportsmen, guides, who not only could scale the icy precipices of the mountains of this Italian No- Man’s Land, but could drop from its ji heights to the valleys below with in- credible speed on skiis. It takes remarkable skill to photo- graph, with the reflection of snow, the rarified atmosphere and unusual con- 4 ditions of cold, anyway, but the scenes of this “Doomed Battalion,” sweeping at seventy miles an hour down the mountain-side were actually photo- graphed by a member of that troupe who himself was on skiis. Luis Trenker, the leader of this remark- able organization, personally trained this cameraman for over a year be- fore this, one of the most unusual { scenes ever shown in pictures, could ; be shot. PARAMOUNT THEATRE Not a horse in “Horse Feathers,” but Marx brothers are happy. When the movie moguls in Holly- wood got together to select a title for the four Marx brothers’ latest Para- mount picture they were in some- what of a quandary but they were straightened out in Ottawa, Ont., Aug. 6—(?)—The Plans of the dominions for trade agreements with Great Britain were all in the hands of the British dele- Gates Saturday. The British were expected to begin making their de- cisions next week. The two exceptions were the Irish Free State and India, whose delegates indicated they did not come to the conference to treat with Great Brit- ain. In each of the other instances, the dominions asked the mother country for a protected British mar- ket for their products, chiefly agri- cultural. There was a tacit promise that the British answers would be transmit- ted, beginning Monday, but there was no indication that these would be mate public. eh it was made plain t! to grant sane see ty, their requests Great Britain would “we'll, 4 ve forsake e-honored mes Ps Lev Pictur... prod Policy of free trade in bread and im’t a horse in the’ picture. It'll be |Meat and that her decision would be a horse on you.” ij based 2 Wi deal the inducements i 3 were 51 nt. For that matter there wasn’t an anifmal or a cracker in “Animal ‘Those close to the British said the * ? delegation undoubtedly would seek Crackers” and there wasn’t so much|/iaterial compromises. As it stands, as a pecan nut in “The Cocoanuts.” | trey are Pereira break virtual : So the four Marxmaniacs started to opolice te Dennaek ahd an atta work on their picture happy in the| on bacon and Aree thought that once again they had on bacon chilled beef, practically a title for their picture that- would |‘, ©xelude Russian lumber and to be in keeping with their crazy antics on the screed. foreign countries, ns “na Omer A glance at the cast of characters fi 356 sec Ee NO will give @ vague idea of the plot of/ speaKING OF HOARDING Gold hoardings in India are such the picture. Said caret Soeloeen: Prof. Wagstaff, pre: nt lux- | that no one can acct ley College ........+ Groucho Marx! the ‘amount. ‘The pierced we eg sets it at more than $5,000,- Harpo, the boy who is working his way through college as & dog catcher ........++.++++ Harpo Marx Chico, football star and speakeasy proprietor .........++.+ Chico Marx Zeppo, star either on the gridiron or in @ parked automobile....... tte eteseeseeeeseeecens . Zeppo Marx lege widow.. Sree Thelma, Todd wid Landau, Flor- STILL SELLING SLAVES “Horse Feathers." They are all swell comedians and well able to protect| specializes comb! themselves in the clinches, even if spiral with Sragsbe een ay Marxian Queensberry rules were plete, $3.75 and $5.00. 102 3rd St. eo oe there's Boge Bismarck, N. Dak. , ture and @ story by Ruby, OR RENT—E eee Pe ied and 8. J, the best market days at central mar- \ ‘Expressive’ Legs Until 7:30 Our sone 25C After 7:30, 35¢ Matinee Daily 2.30 - 25¢ TONIGHT TWO BIG FEATURES Laurel - Hardy America’s Greatest Comedians IN A FOUR-REEL SPECIAL “Ghost Valley” Von Tilden in ovine wor ther chance. Inv tre || | “Valley Smash” movies when a Hollywood studio selected her from many applicants as the possessor of the “most ex- pressive” legs. (Associated Press Photo) Performances Daily at 2:30 - 7 and 9:00 p. m. We sell . The Thrifty Anti-Knock Gasoline New Purol-Pep Try A Tankful of this new Gyro-Processed gasoline, test it for anti-knock, pick-up, speed, power. Then check your mileage. Compare its all ‘round performance with other gasolines. : You'll find New Purol-Pep gives you what you're looking for these days—most value for your money. You'll like our friendly service, too. SIOUX OIL CO. Corwin-Churchill Motors, Inc, Copelin Motor Co. Riverside Service Station Mons and Mollys Bismarck Auto Parts We also sll TIOLENE = she 100% Motor Oil — in sealed bottles for your protection, Tw Purl: Yue Thrifty Anni-Knock Gasoune PREMIUM QUALITY AT REGULAR pPRice @ North Dakota shippers should note Cleaner. The Pleasant Valley course is She Spent 10 Hours In Hell! The “All Quiet” of 1932 REFRESHINGLY DIFFERENT! Never beforehave you seen a picture like this! SEE men killing each other while Na- ture kills them. . . an army on skiis dash at a mile a minute pace through a hail of fire - - .a whole mountain blown up! Daily Performances at 2:30 - 7 and 9 o’Clock 5C 2:30 | 35¢ Until 7:30 Bewildered Women-- There are so many ways to turn— and so many confusing questions— when you're looking for a place to live! Not every vacancy listed in The Bismarck Tribune Rental Ads is go- ing to be what you want. But Tribune Rental Ads do THIS:-They reduce tiresome “looking around” to the minimum, and provide the quickest - and easiest house-hunting service it is possible to devise! Only Four Miles Away on That Moun- tain Top Was the Man She Loved... Trapped with his battalion ... While the enemy led by the man who loved her mined underneath them . . . planting tons of dynamite. . . that would blow them to perdition. Monday and Tuesday --- August 8-9 After 7:30