Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MORE MOTOR CARS IEE: ~ LICENSED IN ND. Increase of 3,400 Over 1934 Is Shown In State Regis- trar’s Report At the mid-year mark, 1935 motor Tegistrations stood at 146,057 $a North Dakota compared with 143,- ~. $42 on July 1 8 year ago, an increase . (of more than 3,400, L. H. McCoy, state le announced the department for total $1,181,466, or $40,326 for the first six months of fn the first five months of the year figures for identical months last receipts last month being $203,- compared with $187,549.80 a Bane ago, and registrations totaling }707 against 25,531 for June, 1934. After di ent administration way commission fund and $1,- $100,000, diverted from roads funds under @ law passed by the 1933 leg- fslature, was paid to the real estate bond payment fund. Diversion of the funds will be dis- jure and the old system of using 50 Ber cent of the money for the state commission aid 50 per cent to the counties will become effective, McCoy explained. Commenting on the receipts and registrations for the first half of 1935, McCoy said passenger registrations increased 2,023 and truck registra- tions increased 1,221 over the same Period in 1934 while rec showed & corresponding improvement of $17,- 444 for passenger cars and $9,182 for trucks. Receipts for new titles issued in the six months period jumped from 99,- S82 tm 1934 to $13,462 this year. Three New Firms Are Given State Papers Articles of incorporation have been filed by three North Dakota con- cerns this month, Secretary of State James D. Gronna said Thursday. The Ashley Implement company was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $25,000 with R. G. Mensing, Paul J. Wishek, and 0. F. Hinz, all of Ashley, as directors. Also incorporated at $25,000 capital stock was the Western Auto Supply company of Minot. Incorporators are J. M. Zugulin, M, G. Zuzulin and P. ‘M. Sandquist, all of Minot. Doing business as a credit and col- lection agency, the Capital Service bureau of Bismarck filed ‘articles list- ing capital stock at $1,500 and W. C. Rowerdink and P. E. Rowerdink, both of Bismarck, and A. K. Krueger of Minot, directors. 24 DIE IN QUAKE Tokyo, July 11—(4)—Twenty-four persons weré killed and 58 injured Thursday by sevére earthquake in the rich Shizuoka district of Japan from which America annually buys millions of dollars worth of tea and oranges. Nye Asserts ’ Party ‘Inopportune’ Washington, July 11—(%)}—A third party’ movement aimed at the 1936 °. campaign, was viewed Thursday as} - “entirély inopportune” by one of the. senate’s chief liberals, Senator Nye, of North Dakota. He spoke particularly of the new party plan aired in Chicago last week and started on its career as the American. Commonwealth Political Federation. Nye, a ‘progressive, believes ‘both old parties are fundamentally too conservative and that a liberal party. some day will be necessary. He said, however, he could not see the “faint- est hope” of success for a third party while President Roosevelt remained the titular head of the Democratic party. Nye said he saw no hope for “pro- gressivism” in the Republican party and predicted that when the Demo- cratic leadership no longer ‘is held by Roosevelt the party will “revert to its fundamental conservatism.” That will be the time for a third party, he said. Frazier Forecasts Sales Tax Victory Washington, July 11.—(#)—Senator Frazier, North Dakota. Republican, expressed the opinion Wednesday that Nerth Dakota voters probably would approve of that state's sales tax in the special election Nonday. He said he saw a swing of public sentiment in its favor. Frazier re- turned: ‘yesterday after funeral :er- vices several days ago for Mrs. Prasier at Hoople, N. D. (MNOT ILL. THE HEAT AND STEAM FROM BOILING CLOTHES EXHAUSTED ME HOW FOOLISH TO SLAVE ON THIS SCORCHING DAY RINSO IS A LIFESAVER! AWAD THE EASIEST \WASHDAY OF MY LIFE TODAY— YET MY WASH 1S WHITER THAN EVER LUXURY USE RINSO. IT SOAKS CLOTHES WHITER THAN THEY CAN BE SCRUBBED OR BOILED THAT'S MARVELOUS! HLL TRY AT GEE, MOM, YOU'RE THROUGH EARLY—AND THATS BECAUSE | DIDN'T SCRUB OR BOIL THE CLOTHES — THANKS TO J Think of it:.. this SAFE soap soaks clothes whiter and brighter TT RINSO!—in washing machine or tub. See how it soaks out dirt — gets clothes whiter without scrubbing or boiling. (Even stubborn’ cuffs and edges come clean with ~& little gentle rubbing berween-the fingers.)-See how Rinso whips at once into creamy, lasting suds— even in hardest water. See how bright and fresh colors come! Clothes last longer washed this gentle way. ‘Use Rinso,"’ say washer experts. The makers of 34 famous washers recommend Rinso. Mar- velous for dishes and all cleaning. Grease goes in a dishes and glassware shine. So easy - jiffy, on hands. Tested and approved by Good Housekeeping Institute. Get the BIG household: package. A PRODUCT OF LEVER BROTHERS €O. Because no place could be foun to life imprisonment for kidnaping LIFE SENTENCES SET ASIDE id to. Incarcerate two boys sentenced Sheriff Ed Li Ind. they were re-sentencéd. Bascum Ray, RUSE ik a Jr. (center), 14, was given @ suspended sentence and Maurice Sheridan (left), 17, Ww: to one to ten years on a charge of auto banditry. (ashclstid Brome pete People’s Forum (Editor’s Note)—The Tribune wel- comes letters on subjects. of inter- est. Letters dealing with contro- versial religious subjects, which attack Individuals unfairly, or which offend good taste and fair play will be returned to the writ- All letters MUST be signed. {f you wish to use @ pseudonym, sign the pseudonym first and your own name bdéneath it. We eyes 8 may be ne conform to this poltey a quire publication of a w riter’s name where justice and fair play make it advisable. All letters must be limited to not more than 00 werds. ing escapes the sales tax in France. Even the cabbages which the peas- ant carts to market are subject to the two per cent turnover levy—first, when the peasant sells them; a sec- ond time when the wholesaler passes them to the retailer; a third time when the ultimate consumer puts them in her market basket. Nor can jone rise far above cabbages, caps and wooden shoes without colliding with the 12 per cent luxury tax. It falls on every-day footwear, on street clothes, walking sticks, upholstered perambulators, just as it does on caviar, champagne and ermine capes. Railroad tickets pay 32 per cent of their face value, theater tickets— FAVORS SALES TAX Underwood, N. Dak. July 8, 1935 Editor, the Tribune: May I be permitted to write a few paragraphs in favor the sales tax to be voted on July 15th. My neighbor at Baldwin, N. D., makes a grim face at having to pay @-one-cent sales tax on a 15 cent -|lunch. I venture that he can count on the fingers of one hand the number of times he eats a 15-cent lunch in a month. Too many dissatisfied citizens are making a mountain out of a mole hill on this question. When it is considered that approximately 51 per cent of the taxes of the state remain unpaid to date with most likely a larger amount in the offing in spite of the fine crop outlook, we are con- fronted with the most urgent need of financing our state in order to re- main solvent. What is a two-cent sales tax to anyone who has the wel- fare of the state at heart? Here is @ fact which must not be overlooked: every one in the state who makes purchases helps on a two per cent basis to keep our state doing busi- ness, and when it is considered that any purchase up to 64 cents costs only one cent, it appears cheap poli- ties to raise a roar over the matter. Let's give the sales tax a fair chance, and then, if we do not like it, let us change, but not before we all may take a breath. May I add for com- parison’s sake a paragraph from an article in the July Reader's Digest. “From bassinet to the coffin, noth- even movies—28 per cent. “One is taxed for paying rent, or, ifa landlord, for receiving it. On reai estate sales there is a heavy trans- fer tax. There's a tax when paying any bill, in restaurant, department store or office. To vote, and usually to get a job, a Frenchman must have lan identity card. That is taxed. When he is born, his birth must be registered, for which there is a fee. When he dies, a fee must be paid on @ permit for a funeral procession to use the streets after which his estate is whittled by sharp déath duties.” I would be the last citizen to object |if there was strenuous objection made to any such sales tax being put on U. 8. citizens, but when an honest- to-goodness effort is made to meet absolutely necessary financial needs of our state, in my candid judgment it is in very bad taste for any one to raise one hundred and one objections, lmany of which never would bear a fair examination. Let’s give the sales tax a worth-while chance to prove its merits and demerits, and then look at the results without pre- judice. Most respectfully, F. W. Gi jServe as associate consultant to the Labor convention here Wednesday night. It was the first and last meeting of @ convention that was slated to run five days, but it broke up in a tumult as Norman Baker, unsuccessful Farmer-Labor candidate for governor of Iowa in 1932, bolted the meeting and denounced its program as one of Promoting laziness and crime among the unemployed. Leslie Erickson of Minneapolis, Minn., was named the vice presiden- tial candidate. Rumblings that Sen- ator Huey P. Long of Louisiana would be the presidéntial candidate proved groundless. Gatiney, 8. O., July 11—(%)—-Eari Suttles, aged 15, hes @ whole week & sit and ponder on how hard papa’: going to spank. For taking part in a greenhouse tobbery, the judge sentenced Earl to serve 30 days in jail. He suspended all but a week of the sentence when the boy's father promised to weltom< him back home with @ rod, Lake at Spiritwood! For more than two weeks, repre- Sentatives of the state game and fish department have been seining carp from Spiritwood lake in Stutsman county to put the lake in favorable condition for stocking with game fish. Carp, which feed on other fish, had become so plentiful that they had almost denuded the lake of. game fish, officials of the department said. Five men have been busy since the last week in June seining the carp and report “fair hauls.” There has been a “good market for the catch,” Officials stated. Irrigation long continued has § tendency to cause soil to become alkali even though the water applied does not contain alkali in excess, Bie aes Sommerville Named To Plan Board Post! Douglas Sommerville, graduate of the state agricultural college at Fargo who has been doing special research there, has been assigned to! state planning board. Appointed by the national resources board, clearing house for all projects in the various states, Sommerville will serve as “consultant proper” dur- ing Dr. Irvine Lavine’s period of of- fice with the works progress admin- istration, M. O. Ryan, secretary of the state planning board, said. Coxey Is Nominated By Third Party Men Omaha, Neb., July 11—(?)—“Gen- eral” Jacob S. Coxey of Massillon, O., Thursday started his second campaign for president on a Farmer-Labor party platform of “Share -the- Wealth,” inflation and technocracy. The 81-year-old veteran of political wars tl started with his famous “Coxey’s Army” which marched on ‘Washington in 1894 was nominated by acclamation by the handful of dele- gates attending the national Farmer- | —for longer, Safer tire-mileage 4 } Ss andard-Serviced Cars last longer Standard Oil is able to give you more for your mone and With Each New G & § Tire This is the first time in our history that we've been able to offera FREE INNER TUBE with our fine quality, low- priced G&S Tire. It has all you could ask for in a modern. and a brand new inner tube is FREE! Made by an Old Reliable Company that has had many years’ experience producing only the finest quality tires. New Design — This fine G&S Tire has been designed to withstand the torture of today’s hard driving. embodies all features necessary for safety and endurance. Guaranteed against most everything that could happea to a tire. That’s mighty broad, you'll agree. Flying fish do not fly; they do not flap their “wings,” but merely glide through the air. After getting up speed in the water, the fish takes to the air, and wind currents and momentum do the rest. Considerable . {Speed is attained and a distance of 500 feet is often covered by these fish. ALL DURING = : : CHE VR ‘e) LET ae Your Chevrolet dealer cordi- ally invites you to drive the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet without any obligation! He wants you to learn all about this car ; ; ; how much more smoothly it rideé ss ; how much more ‘perfectly it combines power with economy, CHEVROLET MOTOR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN Compare Chevrolet's low delivered prices and easy G.M.A.C. terms. A General Motors Value TEST (TS POWER AND ECONOMY, SPEED AND SAFETY, KNEE-ACTION COMFORT AND STABILITY. LEARN THAT BALANCED MOTORING IS BETTER MOTORING and safety of its speed with safety, gliding comfort with road stability ; ; . and how much more finely balanced it is in all ways! Heé also wants you to consider the greater beauty tolid steel Tyrrée-Top Body by Fisher! See him and drive the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet—today! otitis Master De Luce BEAUTY Capital Chevrolet Co. 101 Broadway Avenue Bismarck, N. D. KNEE-ACTION COMFORT Telephone 432 DEALER ADVERTISEMENT TUBE FREE | TUBE FREE *5 TRUCK TIRE TUBE FREE 142% You don’t have to pay high prices for first line first quality tires. You'll see below SAVINGS that are absolute convineing roof of the fact that Gamble Stores can save you DO. S on finest quality Crest tires. Crest Tires are first line by every standard of measurement; they’re modern inside and out, having full center traction; deep, toughened rubber tread; 4 and 6 full plies from bead to bead—plus breakers. They are mod- ern to meet the demands of today’s high speed, modern cars. @ The specially toughened rubber and full tread depth give maximum wear. The flexible pliant sidewall construction gives easy riding comfort and long life to the sidewall. The lubricated cords and great tensile strength of the cords in the carcass give the maximum protection against blowouts. : @ GUARANTEED on a service basis, 2% months—6 ply; 18 months—4 ply. @ Compare the prices below and satisfy yourself of the savings by buying Crest. By hg First Line Crest ist Line Tire and Tube " List Price © WITH YOUR Size Tire & Tul _ OLD TIRE 4.40-21.$10.30 $ 6.95 Tire & Tube 4.50-20. 10.35 7.25 Tire & Tube 4.60-21. 10.80 7.65 Tire & Tube 4.76-19. 11.30 7.95 Tire & Tube 4.75-20. 11.45 8.10 Tire & Tube 5.00-19. 12.20 8.55 Tire & Tube 5.00-20. 12.65 8.90 Tire & Tube § 5.00-21. 12.80 9.29 Tire & Tube 5.26-17. 12.90 9.15 Tire & Tube 5.26-18. 13.30 9.45 Tire & Tube 5.25-20. 14.05 9.80 Tire & Tube 6.25-21. 14.70 10.35 Tire & Tube 5.50-17. 14.80 10.10 Tire & Tube 6.00-16. 16.16 11.40 Tire & Tube Clift Palmer, Mgr. | Agency stores at Wilton, Washburn, Garrison, Turtle Leke, Tuttle, Driscdll, Nepeleom, -- Re srag 508 Broadway » Linton and Steele.