The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 13, 1933, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

, : . ~_ STAT STUNG jars GAOT QUAY FOR csc RON TUN FDS Re : PUBLIC WORK HELP win Anderson Py disciplinary Quarterly Checks Sent to Coun- —_—_—. ben ee ee ee ties By State Treasurer 0 Alfred Dale. Anderson, 30, was under arrest ‘Assistant Attorney General eee eee wie inhuman " Shaft Cites. Restricti ~~ Prank - Gessner, - | Checks totaling $213,487.08 have : ala cer, acting on hoa aa been sent to North Dakota counties in Opinion Plaints, found the boy Monday | by State ‘Treasures Alfred 8. Dale as SS sobbing in pain on top of the /their quarterly share in the appor- 3 Anderson. " tionment of the state tuition fund. _ Nqne of North Dakota's state insti- Gessner tutions can qualify for aid in con- wo clamp-type |The money is distributed on a basis pins had been attached to jof the enumeration of school chil- struction of buildings under the pub-| the child's tongue which was pull- | dren. lle-works act, Assistant Attorney Gen-| ed from his mouth; ‘The Officer ‘The distribution, for the quarter ‘eral Harold D. ‘Shaft holds in an ending Aug., 1933, follows: opinion given the state board of ad- Adams .. ministration. . . * bruised. Barnes . Asked for a ruling on whether the} | Mrs. Anderson, Benson . various state institutions under con-| told him the Billings . trol of the board of administration] “disciplinary measure” she had {Bottineau can participate in the benefits of the} taken to break him of babyhodd federal public works program, Shaft| habits. The officer said she said it held that under the present| told him she believed “shaming” state of North Dakota law, neither] the child before his playmates the board or any of the institutions! would correct the habits. under its control may procure erec- Mrs. May Wortz of the state APES Regan THE BISMA. and Scott Cameron, Bismarck, counsel for Gammons, will be based on allega- tions to the jury and in admitting evidence, and on the contention there was insufficient evidence to convict, People’s Forum (Editor's Note). Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects of inter- sest. Letters dealing with contro- fal religious Ce re) which ack individuals — ui rly, oF which offend good tasi id ft play will be returned writ- ers. All letters MUST be signed. If you h to use a pseudonym, judonym first and your eneath it, We will re- spect guch requests, We reserve the right to delete such parts of |, letters as may be necessary to conform to this policy. ee) IN HONEST DISAGREEMENT Sheldon, N. D., Sept. 5, 1933. Editor, Tribune: A recent editorial in the “Bismarck Tribune” under the caption “Beer and Motor Accidents” is of special interest at this time. In @ single year, 32,000 people of the United States were killed and 1,- tion of any building project on any] Welfare department ordered the plan which ihvolves an obligation for} boy and his six-year-old brother; future repayment by either the state) who were: adopted conditionally or the institution. ' by ane last pos Proposals made by the various in- fornia idren’s stitutions involve either a pledge of] Home Society of Oakland, taken the general credit of the state, aj ‘rom the couple's custody. ledge of income from the ete institu- pl Jand grant to the particular tion, & pledge of a part of the future income of the institution from regis- tration fees, or a combination of two Lal or more of these methods. Shaft said the board of adminis- tration cannot borrow on the general . rin of the state unless authorized is Thiele We hone ne ack erect |Have Record of Not Losing buildings, either by the expenditure 5 of cash, or the pledge of future in| ame For Six Weeks; Many come, as the legislature has given no Will Return Next Year beers steady tied on the contrary as expressly den such expen- TTS aa ditures by the board.? = eee Members of Bismarck’s baseball Pi Institutional income from registra-|team left for their homes Wednesday tion, incidental, tuition or other fees| With @ record of not having lost a cannot be pledged, Shaft said, as all/8ame in the last six weeks. Several such fees and other institutional col- ae have i peretd SeaPanant i lecti Atute tl Bismarck next SLE OD Ot ae naa that Lie TRI oe ae will return. incy Troupe, catcher, goes to CARD OF THANKS ‘We wish to thank ou many friends! for their xindness and sympathy ex- tended to us in our bereavement upon the death of our mother, Mrs. Andrew Johnson. We will always remerhber your kindness to mother, during her illness, and the many expressions of , sympathy and help given during the time of her death and on the day of the funeral. We appreciate the bea’ tiful floral offerings and wish to es- Qui Jefferson City, Mo., where he will at- tend college. Red Haley will spend the winter in Missouri and Arkansas. Ringhofer, firse-baseman, and Mass- mann, second-baseman, will go to their homes in Chicago. Oberholzer, third baseman, will re- turn to Minneapolis, where he will attend the University of Minnesota. Schaefer, pitcher and outfielder, and Moore, infielder and outfielder, will spend the winter at their homes in Pecially thank all who the | Minneapolis. pine dbp ersineng TSO RAE en |) Sill “Raoetan) -ooétiaadse winiesena Her sons: Andrew, Charles, Fred,|the winter at his home in Jefferson, . Abe! Emil lermai Ta., Roosevelt Davis already has left iia a = for his home in Philadelphia and CHURCHILL OVATION —_———— I Satchel Paige will spend the winter Only $10 for 3 Days bags eed He Lari es . lembers eam, the commit-| praise Manager of Bismarck s.,| tee the team for the = At the World’s Fair padre rice bet boys and age) Baseball Club For Quality the fans were given a steak dinner ‘i of Sport This Season Here's the ideal and economical|at the Grand Pacific hotel Wednes- t ‘way to see Chicago's great Exposi-|day evening. Talks were made by | ton: Join.a North Coast Limited-|members of the team, all of whom “Blackhawk Tour, with everything planned in advance and escorts on hand to serve you while in Chicago. $10 covers accommodations at Sher-| They autographed a number of man Hotel (reserved in advance),! baseballs which will be preserved as sight-seeing tours, transfers, 3 ad-! souvenirs of the season. D, E. Ship: niissions to the Fair, 3 breakfasts—|ley, who has umpired most of the |Tecord in providing the city with the in ‘fact, nearly every necessary ex-| games during the season, presided. best brand of baseball in years, ‘pense for 3 wonderful days in Chi- In reply Churchill said it was a cago, except lunches and dinners, SEMINGSON ON COMMITTEE | Pleasure to manage a baseball team Special ‘Tours every Friday and| Chicago, Sept. 13.—()—The Na-|of the caliber of the Bismarck club. Saturday, except Sept. 29 and 30.) tional Association of Supervisors of| The first part of the season was rath- And the Northern Pacific daily ex-| State Banks Wednesday appointed a|ér dismal, he asserted, but the team gursion rate to Chicago from North | committee of 13 members to confer|WAs gradually built up to the point Dakota is only one cent a mile, good | with federal authorities and cooper-| Where it was compelled to go outside in coaches and Tourist sleepers, with ate in putting into effect the federal|the state for competition. 25-day return limit. .. guaranty on bank deposits. The men| ©. B. Cornell, regional director of Of course you're going to Chicago.| named to the committee, all of them|the Boy Scouts gave an interesting Go on the North Coast Limited. Ask | state bank supervisors and represent-| talk on the activities of the scout ZEsaien, Northern Pacific agent at|ing the nation’s 13 federal reserve [aplasgeait onary es ces gronee an » today. for etails.— | distric mingson, . ‘Advertisement, ee cal al aaa "| the international jamboree of the Boy rr ANNOUNCEMENT THE CAPITAL BARBER SHOP 507 Broadway 4 . will open for business we THURSDAY, SEPT. 14 B C. G. Martin and C. P. Schiff, Proprietors, formerly em- ployed at Murphy’s Barber Shop, extend an invitation to all old customers as well as new ones to call on them in their new place of business. Union Shop and Will Comply With NRA “Prompt and Efficient Service” an instance where 59 pupils were be- ing taught in one room by one teacher at present. “As long as we are paying for the $3,300,000 government appro- priation we might as wéll get some ’ E PA ERNS benefit out of it,” He said. - Guests of the club included L, B. a Cornell, Minneapolis; Bruce Wallace, Make This Model at Home | Bhy sent’ nrecutive of the Missour ATTRACTIVE FOR HOME WEAR : PATTERN 2579 paleo. Shakira Waid. eogient eis meet at the ery at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening. Will Hear Gammons’ -Plea for New Trial ‘A motion for a new trial for John Gammons, convicted of i _ NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION PARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, oy 8. LAND OFFICE at Bismarck, ott, 3. is here! thony reyes |, 1 kota, who, on ad, Entry. inténtion to make Final ear Proof, to estab] to the land above desc Register, U. S$, Land Oftice, at Bix- marck, N, Dal, on the 26th day of September, 19: Claimant names as witnesses: Sohn Kneeland, Mason Lawson, Lee Carlson, Calvin Stout, all of Bismarck, Pattern Department, 243 eee. ee ecili Ith Biéeet, New York City. ‘Aug: 16-25-30 Bept. 6-18, . eetetet 230,000 injured by automobile acc’ dents. Every fifteen minutes through- cut that year a man, woman, or child was killed, and twice every minute some one was injured in an automo- ble accident. This exceeds the rate that Amerioan soldiers were killed and injured during our participation inj the World war. If it can be shown that the legali- zation of beer and the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment will increase the number of persons killed or injur- ed, then every good citizen should vate “No” on these propositions. We believe every one must feel as the edi- torial tersely puts it that “No satis- faction of appetite is worth the life f any man.” The editorial opens with the state- ment, “A clinical experiment is in order to determine the effect of the current 3.2 per cent beer upon the consciousness of automobile drivers.” Clinical experiments have already been conducted and scientific mea- surements have made it clear that even two to four hours after taking as much alcohol as is contained in two ‘ounces of whisky, or one pint of beer, the mental processes necessary to carry a danger signal to the eyes and respond in movement of hand or foot, takes two or three times as long as the normal. This mental process in @ normal man in normal condition takes about one-fifth of a second. ' A car going thirty-five miles an hour, which is slow driving these days, will travel ten feet in one-fifth of a sec- ond. The driver who normally can stop his car in ten feet goes twenty to thir- ty feet after he has had a drink or two. .His life and the lives of others are at stake. The really drunken driver does not get far before he falls asleep or runs amuck, and is not as great a menace on the road as the moderate drinker. A little alcohol makes the moderate drinker speed up his driving and take chances, and lessens his control. A fair test would be a comparison of the automobile death rate in coun- tries where the sale of liquor is legal- ized with prohibition United States. Prohibition United States has the RCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1988 _——————————_—_SE DISTRIBUTE $213 487 by John F. Sullivan, Mandan, | largest number of automobiles and the cring nicély in @ Bismarck hospital. t) ‘Mr. fewest automobile deaths in propor- tion to the number of cars and trucks. Australia, with the least liquor regu: lation, has the largest number of au- tomobile deaths. Based on the automobile death rate in England with legalized liquor, our automobiles with legal beer and the Eighteenth Amendment repealed ‘would kill 72,607 people every year. If our rate was the same as beer drink- ing Germany, we would have 182,000 automobile deaths a year. Canada’s automobile death rate is two and one- half times higher than ours. Those who contend that legalizing beer, so that it may be obtained: at every filling station, will help in the drive to lessen autoniobile accidents ie kindergarten minds or ir reasoning have been slowed up to the nth degree. The editorial states that tests sub- ject to laboratory analysis showed that, {he normal man can not get drunk on r. Beer is drunk for the effect of the alcohol it contains. Alcohol is the same whether found in wine, beer, whiskey or brandy. The difference is that one must drink more beer to get {the same effect. 2,600 CONSUMERS Committee Canvassing City Re- port Only 37 Persons Re- fusing to Sign Over 2,609 consumers in Bismarck have signed NRA pledges, according to the report of the.consumers can- vass, committee headed by Misses Mary Huber and Henricka Beach. The report, which was filed with Secretary H. P. Goddard of the As- sociation of Commerce, shows that only 37 people refused to sign the Pledges in Bismarck. Consumers signing the pledges agree to patronize only business institutions displaying the Blue Eagle NRA pla- cards in their windows and places of business. The canvass committee included members of the Business and Profes- A pint of beer contains the same amount of alcohol as two ounces of whiskey. Dr. Harvey Wiley testified before the New Jersey legislature re- garding 2.75 per cent beer, “Beer of this strength may not produce appar- ent drunkenness in every drinker, but. it does produce intoxication in every Person.” Intoxication is the first stage in drunkenness and motor vehicle commissions generally have decided that many a driver is not drunk, but teu intoxicated to be allowed to drive. Lord D'Abernon, chairman British board of control, made the follow- ing statement: “In London, at var- fous periods in 1916, 903 cases of drunkenness were analyzed. It was found that 40 per cent of the men had become drunk on beer or stout.” Professor Emil Krapelin, noted scientist of Germany says: “In the production of alcoholism in Germany, beer undoubtedly plays the chief ro! It must be conceded that beer is ca! able of producing typical delirium tremens.” . Every voter, before he casts his bal- lot September 22, should consider that. legalized beer means more beer; more beer means more intoxicated drivers; more intoxicated drivers means more men, women, and children killed by automobile accidents. Is satisfaction of appetite or gain- ing of revenue worth the life of any man, woman, or child, especially if it Should be one of your own family? Elizabeth Preston Anderson. Propose Judge Miller As Kenyon Successor Fargo, N. D., Sept. 13.—(4#)—Friends of Judge Andrew Miller of North Da- kota federal district court, are pre- senting his name to President Roose- Velt a8 a successor to the late Judge Kenyon as one of the judges of the circuit court of appeals for this judi- cial district, it is announced by H. H. Perry, Democratic national commit- teeman for North Rakota. The silence in parts of the Rocky Mountains is so great that the fla) ping of partridge wings can be heard for several miles, experts when they buy. That's Many women know little about Furs. They need the advice of your NEW FUR COAT PURCHASE HERE. We are EXPERT FURRIERS and are here every day in the year to give you satis- faction and service. Every garment we sell is absolutely guaranteed. A liberal allowance will be made for your old Fur Coat. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL LOW RATE ON Repairing — Remodeling — Relining and Cleaning STATE FUR COMPANY 202 Fourth St. Bismarck, SEAveceecceusuannceceeceaocenegercvaveseeceeuoeensaeeecensuasngcecconeneeeceeaeavenecnedfnceeoneeea essen Dependable Furs Wy Nowata wy ¢ Decided Saving & \Sueone, why it's a good policy to make ae Often we have 7 &é ui f ry i ; i to prove Peele came £6:9e-alter. tele Gas heated home to i “ i f : af u i i é i sf i 3 HE eFgSe3 nie cit it stil bt MONTANA- DAKOTA POWER CO. Natural Gas 18 a rropuct oF NonTH DAKOTA ee t sional Woman's club, assisted by mem- bers of Floyd Spetz post of the Amer- ican Legion and did a thorough Job of covering the city, according to! Secretary Goddard. HOME OF WIDOW IS DESTROYED BY FIRE Residence of Mrs. Ethel Kens- tud, West of Underpass on Highway No. 10, Burns Ethel Kensrud on Memorial highway west of the underpass Tuesday after- noon. Hunters! Duck season opens Oct. 1st. Prepare now—Save at Gamble’s prices. S&G 12 Ga., 72c box, case lots. Hunting Coats, $2.59. GOOD RADIO SERVICE costs so little more than guesswork. Phone 909 and Tony’s Radio Shop will give you REAL Service 207 13th St. Bismarck, N. D. A Chicken Dinner and supper will be served by the ladies of St. Anthony’s Church at St. Anthony on SUNDAY, SEPT, 17TH at the School Auditorium. A big time is planned. Everybody is- cordially in- ' vited. THE COMMITTEE SIGN NRA PLEDGE! =: Wilton Man Injured - In Mine Accident Joe Vincéht, 54-year-old Wilton man, suffered a broken right leg and an injury to his neck Tuesday when he was caught in a cave-in at a new mine being opened near Wilton. He was brought to a local hospital and his condition is reported as sate isfactory by attending physicians, Coast Woman Hurt in i f ; Wreck Near McKenzie ie definitely good for your ear. It Mrs, J. M. Hill of the west coast who suffered @ badly lacerated leg in an automobile accident near McKen- zie several days ago is reported recov- against freezing, jin the cooling-system by 75% to 95%. ‘Everes by Pully guar- |New York, N. Y.—Advertisement. Ageais . She x Triumphs in Drama ‘that Touches - the, sacs ‘Heart, of the World! K AT HEPBURN | | i | Fire destroyed the home of Mrs.| June Kensrud, 16-year-old daugh- | ter of Mrs. Kensrud, was baking in| the kitchen when she discovered the | ‘GLORY A small town'girl coughtin x Broadway's drift— TONIGHT AND THURS. Daily 2:30-7-9 Until 7:30—25¢ After 7:30—35¢ Matinee—25c CAPITOL me THEATRE see— A R\ 1 UN JE Buick makes a 35.7 1933 SEVEN MONTHS gain in the total business of its field Latest available, . 1. ead be 1. MODERN STYLE— with bodies by Fisher blending bermoniously inte the windstream lines of radiator, hood aod fenders. 1s by Polk's National New Car Service s why! 2. MODERN PERFORMANCE—for which Buick's famous Valve-in-Head Sersight Eight engine is largély responsible. 3. MODERN COMFORT—obtained by the use of such notable features as inertis- 4. UNEQUALLED DEPENDABILITY. in service bring sileat, but convincing proof. BUICK «. x « 100 West Bdwy. tT TOMOS controlled hydraulic shock absorbers aod the Fisher Ventilation System. ‘to which more than 1,250,000 Buicks now ‘bon Co., Inc.,

Other pages from this issue: