The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 5, 1933, Page 2

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~ RORSALE OF BEER 2 FEDERAL PERMITS ARE PUT AT 4,899 $37,980 Paid to Government by Brew Dispensers, Official Figures Show Fargo, N. D., Oct. 5.—(4)—Federal Permits issued in North Dakota for the sale of beer number 1,899, with $37,080 paid the federal government for the privilege, according to records in the office of H. H. Perry, collector of internal revenue. Fargo, with 130 federal licenses al- Teady on record, is leading all other cities in the state in the number of beer vendors or prospective deale:s. The next highest city in the state in the number of federal permits is|' Minot with 71. The records in Perry's office show that dealers or prospective dealers in almost every city and village in the | state have applied to Uncle Sam for & permit to sell beer and have paid the necessary tax. Towns of less than 100 population are on the records, in Many instances two and three permits having been taken out. The number of federal permits is- sued in 16 leading cities of the state follows: Fargo, 130; Casselton, 10; Bismarck, 39; Devils Lake 42, Dickin- son, 24; Grand Forks, 69; Hankinson, | 12; Edgeley, 10; Hillsboro, 11; James- town, 44; Minot, 71; New Rockford, 16; Valley City, 29; Mandan, 26; Wahpeton, 20; and Williston, 23. The federal tax for retailers is $20 per year. ? $189,900 For State With state tax of $100 for the first year for all beer dealers, provided for in the law passed at the Sept. 22 elec- tion, the state will collect $189,900 if all of the persons who have taken out federal licenses decided to continue selling after the state tax becomes ef- fective. It is anticipated, however, that many of the small concerns which are handling beer throughout the state at present will quit selling when they are coimpelled to pay the $100 annual state tax. Cass county is leading all other counties in the state in the number of federal permits taken out with 207 compared with 116 in Grand Forks county and 99 in Ward county. in the number of federal licenses taken out in the state by counties: Adams 12; McLean 37; Barnes 73; Mercer 19; Benson 38; Morton 57; Billings 5; Montrail 32; Bottineau 41; Nelson 40; Bowman 12; Oliver 4; Burke 23; Pembina 38; Burleigh 54; Cass 207; Cavalier 35; Dickey 29; Divide 13; Dunn 14; Eddy 27; Em- mons 21; Foster 22; Golden Valley 17; Grand Forks 116; Grant 13; Griges 24; Hettinger 21; Kidder 17; La Moure 39; Logan 13; McHenry 33; McIntosls 24; McKenzie 22; Pierce 19; Ramsey 69; Ransom 20; Renville 18; Richland 76; Rolette 23; Sargent 33; Sheridan 12; Sioux 1; Slope 1; Stark 47; Steele 18; Stutsman 79; Towner 23; Traill 37; Walsh 56; Ward 99; Wells 36; Williams 52. CONTINUE \érom page ene- Argue on Demurrer In J. P. Walsh Case ing liquor to an Indian pleaded not guilty. é A demurrer to the indictment charg- ing George Miller with selling liquor to an Indian was overruled and the case was deferred until Thursday afternoon. Miller has pleaded not Rinne guilty. The case of Leo Spears, facing a aimilar charge, also was deferred un- til Thursday afternoon. Sentencing of Frank Schweitzer, ‘who pleaded guilty to selling liquor to an Indian, and Ray Morell, who pleaded guilty to possession of liquor, ‘was deferred until the next term. Judge Miller instructed Harry Lash- kowitz, assistant district attorney, to investigate the non-appearance of Mrs. Henry Schultz of Solen, charged with selling liquor to an Indian, Eight defendants on liquor charges ‘Wednesday afternoon were fined or need. as of the cases had been carried evious terms. ees defendants entered not guilty pleas while disposition of six cases was deferred to ‘Torey Seven other actions were continue term. ny was served on two other Se fendants to make appearance mA court while in # third case the bon of @ defendant was ordered forfeit- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1988 = federal food and drug law. Thomas Short, Jr. sale of liquor to Indian. of liquor to Indian. 8. M. Kotchman of Medora, using mails to defraud. Others Bondsmen warned that appearance is necessary of Mrs. George J. Sharff of Wishek, charged with sending obscene literature through the mails. Rolla Dewey of Mandan, conspiracy to violate liquor laws, bond ordered forfeited and bench warrant for his arrest issued. Frank Hurick of Dickinson, Mquor charge, notified to make appearance. Aah es de For Bismarck and vicinity: mer= ally fair tonight and Friday; cooler) tonight. For North Da- kota: Generally fair tonight and Friday; cooler to- night and east portion Friday. For South Da-/; kota: Generally| fair tonight and! Ed. Bollinger of St. Anthony, sale — | eather Report || —— | Brown, film extras held on robbery] and opened fire and that | charges. Detective Lieutenants 8. 8. Stone, Earl Kynctte and W. M. Robinson | said Block end Brown signed a state- , ment asserting Bartlett told them he | wished to have Warburton’s, face dis- figured because the English actor had slapped Miss White and purportedly | made uncomplimentary remarks about her. “It’s a lot of rot,” said Bartlett. “It's absurd and ridiculous,” said | Miss White. |New Catholic Bishop Installed at Helena Helena, Mont., Oct. 5.—()}—Roman Catholic bishops of nine western states, dignitaries of the church from Pittsburgh, St. Paul and other points and delegations from every parish in Montana came here for the installa- tion Thursday of the most Rey. Ralph L. Hayes as the fourth bishop of Hel- ena. The installation ceremonies took Place in the cathedral of St. Helena following the processional march in which the new biship and the accom- Panying prelates entered the edifice Friday; cooler Fri- day and west por- tion tonight. ' For Montana: Fair tonight and| COOLER Friday; cooler tonight. For Minnesota: Generally fair to- | night and Friday except possibly | showers along Lake Superior; not 80} cool in extreme east tonight; cooler Friday except in extreme southeast. GENERAL CONDITIONS A low pressure area is centered over Manitoba and eastern North Dakota this morning (Winnipeg 29.76) and a, “High” has appeared over the Far Northwest (Kamloops 30.26). The| weather is somewhat unsettled in’ North Dakota and eastern Montana, ; but elsewhere from the Great Lakes Tegion westward and southwestward to the Pacific coast the weather is generally fair. Temperatures are above the seasonal normal in the northern Great Plains and in the northern Rocky Mountain states, but | cooler weather prevails over the west- ern Canadian Provinces, issouri river stage at 7 a. m. 0.1 ft. 24 hour change, 0.0 ft. Bismarck station barometer, inches: 28.11. Reduced to sea level, 29.87. PRECIPITATION REPORT | For Bismarck station: Total this month to date ...... 00; Normal, this month to date 15! Total, January 1st to date 9.25 | Normal, January 1st to date 14.41 Accumulated deficiency to 5.16 NORTH DAKOTA POINTS 7 es é a.m. est Pet. BISMARCK, pceldy. 41 44 (00 Devils Lake, cldy....2 48 48 00! Fargo-Moorhead, cle: 46 46 = 00; Jamestown, clear 43°41 «(00 Williston, cldy. . - 54 50 00 OUT OF STATE POIN Low- High- : est” Pet Amarillo, Tex., cldy. ... 01 Boise, Idaho, clear . Calgary, Alta., clear Chicago, Ill., peldy. Denver, Colo., clear . Des Moines, Ia. clear.. 38 Dodge City, Kans., clear 48 Edmonton, Alta., clear. 34 Havre, Mont., clear .... 46 Helena, Mont., clear. Huron, 8. D., clear. - 46 68 Kamloops, B. C., clear.. 44 74 Kansas City, Mo. clear 52 80 | Lander, Wyo., 4 | Medicine Hat, 80 H Miles City, Moi 86 Minneapolis, Minn., clear 40 56 Modena, Utah, clear 42° 78 No. Platte, Neb. clear.. 50 76 Okla. City, O., clear..:: 52 76 Pr. Albert, Sask., clear 40 70 Qu’ arene S., clear.... 42 76 apid City, 8. D., clear 52 80 Roseburg, Ore., clear.... 48 80 St. Louis, Mo., clear. 52 Salt Lake City, U., 8. 8. Marie, M. Seattle, Wash., cla; Sheridan, Wyo., cld Sioux City, Ta. clears, 44 «66 Spokane, Wash. clear.. 44 80 Swift Current, 8. clear 40 80 The Pas, Man. clear... 40 68 Toledo, Ohio, clear . 72 86 innemucca, Nev., cl peg, Man., eld: _833388888888888833388333333888338888 40 Probe Alleged Plot To Disfigure Actor Los Angeles, Oct. 5—(P)—A Teport- d plot to disfigure John Warburton #ilm actor, so he could not longer ap- Dear in motion pictures, was to be! considered by the Los Angeles grand | jury Thursday. Witnesses subpoenaed _ included | Alice White, featured film actress; Sidney Bartiett, her flance; Dave Mil- ler, former Chicago boxing referee; with a guard of honor formed of fourth degree Knights of Columbus. Visiting bishops included the most Rev. James O'Reilly of Fargo, N. D.; Most Rev. Vincent Wehrle of Bis- marck, N. D.; Most Rev. Edwin V. O’- Hara of Great Falls. > + ——o | Aviator Says Roofs Are Flying Hazard Los Angeles, Oct. (?) — Roofs were a flying hazard to E. L, Remlin, airplane pilot. sons had been wounded, Two steel workers were slashed by pickets as they attempted to enter the Clairton, Pa, plant of the Car- negie Steel company. It was the sec- F ond outburst in 18 hours among steel strikers, one man having been shot and others clubbed at Ambridge, Pa., Wednesday. At Scranton, Pa., the ninth dyna- miting in an anthracite strike dam- aged the home of @ miner, while workers’ automobiles were stoned by Pickets at Dickson -City, Pa. Ford Motor company strikers of three ana 50), Chester, Pa., and Edgewater, N. J.,|\ Attorney General. t - cs plans tors “march iy | CHAR A. vent fomether with the costs of qhis fore automobile on the Ford plant at De- troit, WILL IMPROVE RIO GRANDE Washington, Oct. 5.—()—Secretary Hull Thursday made known plans have been completed for beginning flood control work on the lower Rio|, Grande river under a program which contemplates employment of 750 to 1,000 men on the Ameri side and expenditure of $1,500,000. from public works funds, NOTICE OF REAL EF! TATE MORT- | GAGE FORBKC URE SALE Notice 1s hereb¥ given that that |® certain mortgage, executed and de- livered by Jos. J. Maddock,’an_un- married man, mortgagor, to The State of North Dakota, mortgagee, dated the 29th day of Abril, 1927, and filed tor record in the office of the Regis- ter of Deeds of the County of Bur- leigh and State of North Dakota on the 27th day of May, 1927, and record- ed in Book 29 of Mortgages at page 404, will be foreclosed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and here- Inafter described at the front door of the court house in the City of Bis- marck, in the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota at the hour of two o'clock P. M., on the 30th day of October, 1933, to satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such mortgage and which will be sold to He reports swirling desert wind un- roofed several buildings on a farm north of San Fernando Wednesday, carried them high in the air and forced him to alter his course to avoid @ collision. C ONTINUE D from page oni>’ Day and Night of Terror Are Ended By State Troopers dered out four more militia compa- nies, bringing the total to six and the number of men in the field to 350. TRI-STATE AREA AGAIN SERIOUSLY DISTURBED Violence broke out anew Thursday jin the tri-state industrial area near ; Pittsburgh as strikes spread and mine pickets tightened their lines, grimly determined to strangle production. Two men were clubbed by pickets outside the Spang-Chalfant tube plant in Ambridge. Several hundred pickets prevented 600 men from going to work at the Latrobe steel mill in Latrobe. In Greensburg two men and two women were arrested for creating a disturbance at the gates of the Wal- worth company’s plant. State troop- ers, armed with riot sticks and tear gas guns, opened a lane through 1,000 pickets and about 150 of the company’s normal ‘force of 1,100 en- tered, Union Chiefs Hopeful The United Mine Workers of America reiterated its prediction that more and more of its men will filter into the mines. There was no widespread back-to- the-mines movement Thursday, how- ever. . State police were sprinkled through the western Pennsylvania trouble zone. Roving bands of pickets trav- eled from mine to mine, Two terrific bomb explosions cli- maxed a night of terror in the south- ern Illinois coal fields and at Pea- body Mine ‘No. 43 officials reported Pickets had surrounded the workings oS Special Value Ladies’ First Quality RAYON HOSE, 35 c PRE ocoinss.ss 3 pairs $1.00 Extra Fine Gauge New Fall Shades are year’ round and Martin Block and Russell B ed and @ bench warrant issued for his fat was done Wednesday after- noon: Fined and Sentenced Martin Vrzal, three liquor counts, fined $3. ‘Chester Ashley of Marion, sale and of yee, fined $10. possession of liquor, “gehafer and Joe Suki of ‘count, fined $10 each. ‘Tony Zarr, selling liquor to Indian, 60 days and $100 ee asa Emanuel Wetzste! 200 fine. : | may i ; i (OE Oe a va the reason why are ABSOLUTE Why has BUSINESS turned to Natural Gas? than ever before. Efficiency standards which ‘were formerly considered high would today spell failure in business. The result has been an astonishing increase in efficiency .. . extrava- gances have been eliminated . . . operating 100%, efficiency will de, And there briefly, is Gas heating. Where efficiency énd economy - will find Natural’ Gas, MONTANA- DAKOTA POWER CO. Natural Gas 1s a propucr of NoRTH DAK Business competition today is perhaps keener reduced ... nothing less than business has chosen Netural ESSENTIALS . : . there you fatisty the same are described as fol- lows: ‘ The South Half (8%) of Section Twenty-two (22) in Township One Hundred Forty (140) North, of Range Seventy-seven (77) West of the Fifth Principal Meridian, Burleigh County, North Dakota. There will be due on such mort- age at the date of sale the sum of hree Thousand Three Hundred Thirty and 70-100 Dollars, ($3,330.70), together with the costs of this fore- closure. Dated September 18th, 1933. THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Mortgagee. A. J. GRONNA, Attorney General. CHAS. A. VERRET, Assistant Attorney General and At- torney for the Board of Univer- ay, and Bchool Larfds. ttorneys for Mortgagee, Bismarck, North Dakota. (9-21-28 10-5-12-19-26) —__—. NOTICE OF REAL ESTATE MORT- GAGE FORECLOSURE SALE Notice {s hereby given that that certain mortgage, executed and de- livered by Samuel O. LeBarron and Luella J. LeBarron, his wife, mort- gagors, to The State of se Dakota, mortgagee, dated the 19 day of March, 1927, and filed for record in the office of the Register of Deeds of the County of Burleigh and State of North Dakota on the 6th day. of April, 1927, and recorded in Book 29 of Mortgages at page 394, will be fore- closed by a sale of the premises in such mortgage and hereinafter des- eribed at the front door of the court house in the City of Bismarck, in the county of Burleigh and Dakota at the hour of two o'clock P. M., on the 30th day of October, 1933, to’ satisfy the amount due upon such mortgage on the day of sale. The premises described in such A. J, GRONNA, baba) OF REAL ESTATE MORT- tain mortga, by Samuel many per-| mortgage and which will be sold to | cit: q His hired hand prodded it with & patinfy the same are.described au fol: | Bucieigh and Wiate ot Horie ekots Strange But True pitchfork while standing on the run= eThe Northwest Quarter (NW) and| the roti dey oF GTN eka Fone ning board of the family car. the Went Half of the Northeast Quar-|ty the amount due uyon such mort-|/ News Items of Day {/ the bull went in the wrong direc- ter (W: of Se on the day of sale. ‘The Associated Press) tion, with the bull fighters in hot pur- eight (28) in h mises described in such (@y eeamactichiesla | ‘suit. They finally won, but the bull a ae which will be sold to tore down a few fence posts, in de- Prinetpal Be indices Mbespaaddire octets MIX MUSIC, RELIGION clining to use a gate. pe aie such ‘mort | quarter (HUNEH) oF Reston Ties | Mt Vernon, Til—Féx hunters in x the aum of | four (StS i oat tS eG Tin Forty-three (143) North, of Range Principal Meridian, Burleigh County, Pi jan, ri y, re. cy ako Dated September 18th, 1998. < ‘The i THE STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, |at the dts ve tote ns Mortgages. Thousand Three Hundred ‘Bij 50-100 Dollars ($1,3! Assistant Attorney. Genera and At- orney for 1 Bs sity and School Lands. | ¥*r Attorneys for Mor Bismarck, North (9-21-28 10-6-18-1 Dated September 18th, 1933. THB STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA, Mort A. J. GRONNA, fone Attorney General. RRET, Assistant Attorney General and At- torney for the Board of Univer- my) ‘and School Lands. ttorneys for Mortgage: Bismarck, North Dak (9-21-28 10-543; RIGHT AT HOME ‘Wis.—Marvin Thors- GE FORECLOSURE SALE Notice ts hereby. iven that that cer- executed and di Th cred LeBarron his wife, mo: BISMARCK TRIBUNE PATTERNS Make This Model at Home THE NEW MODE SHOWS - CONTRAST PATTERN 1620 No Headache Now in Five Minutes “( THE BIG TAX CASE IS UP AND IVE GOT A SPLITTING HEADACHE, (CANT EVEN TRY TO THINK ! GRAND, HEADACHES COMPLETELY GONE = THANKS TO YOU AND YOUR LESSON, nothing is smarter than the combina- WHY DONT YOU TAKE tion-in one dress of two fabrics, or TWO BAYER ASPIRIN pal ended ‘This frock Let hcd Cond TABLETS, THEY'LL KNOCK Satin, or pte mere talk oul Pattern 1620 is available in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 3% yards 39-inch Tunrated. step-by-step. sewing In step ° structions included with pattern. 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