The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 24, 1935, Page 9

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)

wy “y <” ‘Wednesday claimed the Great Nor- ~VAWATION CHANGE ~ 1S 9900000 CUT Distribution of Tax Monies Held Up by Court Action Begins Lee Nichols, state tax commissioner, thern Railway company had received “in effect, a $23,000,000 cut in its 1934 assessed valuation” as one result of the federal district court decision ‘Tuesday reducing the levy against the firm by 22 per cent. . Federal Judge Andrew Miller ruled - 22 per cent of the assessment was “illegal and void.” Hence, the total tax to be paid by the company drop- ped from $1,340,174.16 to $1,045,335.85, @ reduction of nearly $300,000. Nichols asserted the state board of equalization had given the railroad - “cut in assessment for 1934 of approx- (mately $8,000,000; now the federal court orders still further reductions of approximately $15,000,000 or a total of $23,000,000.” The company had already paid 60 per cent of its 1934 tax at the time of | Judge Miller’s order which directed the company to pay only an additional 18 per cent by Nov. 1., and perman- ently enjoined the state from collect- Ing the remainder. No interest or! penalty on 1934 taxes must be paid by! the company, the court ruled Meanwhile distribution of the mon- jes represented in the 18 per cent to 30 counties in the state, was be- gun. Counties and the amount each will; receive under the ruling arc: i Barnes .. $1,168.75, Pictured above are Russ and Dale, roller skaters extraordinary and ene of the star acts which will be presented here Thursday, Friday and Saturday in connection with the state corn show. Matinees are scheduled for Friday and Saturday afternoons. Russ, the masculine half cf the team, agrees to skate with anyone and give him a twirl similar to that shown above—if anyone wants to do it. LIESSMAN OUTLINES lat present is far below the limitations set in the treaty. Benson 7,993.18; Bottineau . 521.561 \ He was introduced by Dr. George Burke . 1.744.781 ‘M, Constans, program chairman and Cass 465.09; i | State Navy Day chairman. Guests of the club were H. O. Putnam, H. W. Lanterman, Mandan, and George M. NAVY'S INADEQUACY eat 31:78 Per Cent of Exports Carried! President George Dullam announc- an7 og | rf ed the annual 4-H club Achievement 327709, on Foreign Vessels, RO- pay banquet which will be held at "189.13! tarians Are Told Cavalier . Dickey Divide . Tidy 16:30 p. m., Oct. 29 at the World War Memorial building and Earl Hendricks McKenzie — PRT spoke on the Community Players Bourall . Seventy per cent of exports of the schedule of plays for the coming Pembi gi United States aro carried on ships of year, pointing out that the receipts Bless ‘foreign countries, Clarles Liessman, | Will be used to buy new stage equip- Data77is officer in the United States | ment for the city auditorium. 3,438.73 , told members of the local Ro- ; 7431.67) tazy club here Wednesday in pointing’ Dust Storm Control 4,768.11'Oul the inadequacy of the present! 4,828.65! American fleet. In 1910 the exports carried on for- | 00 Cz vessels reached a high point of; Washington, Oct. 24.—(4)—Erosion 2 91 por cent, went down to 58 per cent control, H. H. Bennett of the federal during the World War and then [erosion office seid Wednesday, con- climaed back to 70 p2r cant in 1935, | stitutes the start of an “agricultural Liecsman said. He stated that a fair |revolution” against dust storms west ratio would be about 50 per cent but /Of the Mississippi. thet was impossible with the Navy |. Back here after a tour of demonstra- and merchant marine in thelr pres- {tion projects, Bennett said “give us 2 e "9 he five-s (oan ys a ie Parser Be | western area will be stopped. with that of the present day. ‘He re- | The future of the erosion control fcounted his early experiences in ihe Rona het eee, spre Navy and talked on nautical practices | recs nea raed ‘a1 ee the jand’ experimental work done during | foi) Peoctdit ented ped Soeahe ones plates every morning. gives al ie RYN VOE tab NEV Se teres Eval part of it has been made avail- comfort and a tener it ak away.| Liessman said that the United Re Rie Try FASTEETH and enjoy better| States will not come up to the 5-5-3; The monastery of Debra-Damo, a false teeth security and comfort. Get) provisions of th2 parity treaty with|celebrated Ethiopian monastery, is lo- SETH at | pels VHP ERSE TS fh lace aDac ie jother foreign countries Until 1942 and jcated west of Acigrat. ot Renvilis . Richland Williams 28,160.72 New Powder Makes FALSE TEETH Stick Tight All Day Long’ Now you can wear false teeth more firmly ‘and more comfortably than ever. A new improved powder cail- ed FASTEETH sprinkled upon y F SATURDAY, NOV. 2 ANEW CHEVROLET The only complete low-priced car . WILL BE ON DISPLAY AT ate ALL CHEVROLET DEALER Has Been Given Start THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1935 : BISMARCK WEATHER BUREAU ACTIVITIES MAY BE EXPANDED Daily Plane Flights to Upper Air Next Possible Step, Roberts Declares Belief that Bismarck soon may be | added to the list of weather stations where an analysis of upper air con- ditions is made daily was expressed here Wednesday by O. W. Roberts, | head of the federal weather station. | The result, he said, will be more ac- | curate forecasting, not only for the benefit of air lines but for general purposes, Until recently, Roberts said, all fore- casting was done on a two-dimension basis. The length and breadth of air currents and conditions could be as- certained but there was no knowledge of their height above the earth. 25 Dally Trips Aloft Now, with airplanes making daily trips aloft at 25 stations in the United ‘States the bureau is accumulating data on air mass analysis and an entirely new nomenclature is coming into use in the weather bureau offices. Such things as “polar continental,” “polar Pacific” and “tropical gulf” fronts are discussed in much the same manner that fronts of battle were mentioned | during the World War. explains, is a mass of cold air moving down from northern and western Can- ada; a polar Pacific is one from the west coast, while a tropical gulf front is a mass of warm air moving up from the Gulf of Mexico. | By plotting the movements of cur- rents in the upper air and matching them against conditions observed on the ground, weather observers will be able to make more accurate fore- casts, Roberts said. Fliers Under Contract Upper air observations are made by airplanes to which are attached var- fous recording instruments. They rise to a height of 20,000 to 25,000 feet daily, he said, the work being done largely by fliers under contract to the government. At present the only upper air observ- ing station in North Dekota is at the airport in Fargo, but Roberts is con- fident development of the system will result in establishment of at least two more stations in North Dakota with the probability that one will be located here and another at Williston. HONOR STUDENTS AT ST, MARY'S LISTED Sixth Grade Has 12 Included and Leads Others in First Six-Week Period school had their names inscribed on the honor rolls for scholastic achieve- ment during the last six weeks, an- nouncement made at the school Thursday revealed. ‘The sixth grade, with 12 pupils list- ed, led all other grades. Following are the names of the honor students: Fourth grade: Adrian McDonald, Nadine Longbottom, Edna Rose, Alan Kast, Fern Logan, Angelica Roether, Robert Meaasen, Madelyn Helling, Margaret Halloran, Margaret Roherty, Richard Revell, Margaret Simmons. Fifth grade: Rey Deardorff, Dor- ethy Eisemann, Phyllis Fleck, Mary !}eaton, Virginia Lacey, Lorrene Litt, William Murphy, Eugene Masseth, Mary Valeda Rutten, Isabelle Snyder Bernard Slag, Herman Slag, Josephine Vellic, Virginia Walchare. ? Sixth grade: Betty Barticy, Jean Slag, Magdalen Schneider, Martha Ann Dunn, Margaret Webb, Teresa &t. George, Dolores Kast, Jack Wood- mark, Eleanor Ressler, Charlotte Knudson, Dolores Cavasino, Rose- mary Volk, Seventh grade: William Webb, Wil- A polar continental front, Roberts | Sixty students of St. Mary's grade | RAILWAYS SEEK 10 ABANDON TRACKAGE ICC Examiner to Preside at Wearing of Nun’s Garb In Schools Challenged from allowing the garb to be worn Supreme Court to Pass on Ques-|in the school. tion Evolving From Glad- G. Gerhardt, H. B. Condee, 1 Hol-| Hearings on G. N. and Mil- linger, Earl Neal and Beatrice Mc-' waukee Requests stone Action Kirdy, parents of children in the echool, and Grover C. Jopp, dissenting member of the school board, began the action. Named as defendants were Sisters Etheline Heid, Delourdes Magyar, Validia Kremer and Hecla Krauther- mer, together with Ray Gress and L. Two applications by railroads to abandon stretches of their lines in North Dakota are scheduled to be heard by T. F. Sullivan, Interstate Commerce Commission examiner, next week. Application of the Great Northern Railway company for to abandon a 3.55-mile stretch of its line from St. John to the Interna- tional boundary in Rolette county ts scheduled to be heard by Sullivan Oct. 28 at Devils Lake. For the first time in the history of North Dakota, the state supreme court next month will pass on the question of whether Catholic nuns may wear their religious habit while employed as teachers in a public school. The question reaches the state su- preme court on an appeal from the judgment of District Judge Harvey J. Miller of Stark county, who held the wearing of the garb in classes was not in violation of the constitution. Schilling 2 BY Toasted 1 CU surer, and John Zwick, clerk. The nuns were employed at the be- ginning of the school term this year, according to the complaint filed by J he Sel clerk of the supreme | Plaintiffs. At the same time, Sullivan will ‘The only tea that comes court, sai was the first time such hear a second application by the . ee had been submitted to the| Dozen Alaska Fishing | same cand eee ie aie to you ss fresia and ve justices. . s of its line iter- Five parents and a member of the Boats Missing in Gale national boundary in Pembina and Gladstone village school board in- fragrant as it left the situated the original action in Stark county against four nuns and mem- bers of the school board. They sought a restraining order enjoining the sisters from wearing the habit of the order of St. Benedict during school hours, and a similar order against the school board to prevent that body | Cavalier counties. The two hearings are scheduled to be conducted in the federal courtroom at Devils Lake. October 30, Sullivan will conduct a hearing on the application of the Chi- cago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pa- cific railroad to abandon a portion of its line, 7.49 miles between Brampton and Cogswell in Sargent county. The CORN SHOW SPECIALS ERE INNER Ketchikan, Alaska, Oct. 24—(?)— coast, were sought Thursday by coast guard and lighthouse service crews. Three boats were known to have foundered off Coronation Island with crews of two rescued and the fate of the third crew undetermined. TUBE For a limited time only at our regular low catalog prices, we will give an inner tube ABSOLUTELY FREE with each tire in the types listed below. Bear in mind our tire prices, quality for quality, are as low as you can get anywhere—and to offer, in addition —an irne> tube FREE, is some- . thing distinctly off the main track of usual values. The general trend of prices today is upward, and when you can get these low tire prices plus a FREE Inner Tube, you're getting something you’re not likely to find elsewhere in a three days’ hunt—if you find it at all. | ! bur Doll, Mary Halloran, Patricin Leahy, Jordis Godfrey, Irene Griffin, Betty Jane Baker, Alice May Leahy, Mary McGraw, Josephine Taix, Eileen Wallrich. Eighth grade: Harold Free, Amelia chneider, Katherine Ward, Madonna Clarey, Marjorie Elhi, Robert Garske, William Geiermann, Eugene Hend- rickson, Robert Personius, Robert Karasawiecz, Frederick Peterson. INSTALLS MENOKEN BOY SCOUT TROOP Netland Presides at Ceremon- ies; Judge A. G. Burr Is Principal Speaker An address by Judge A. G. Burt, supreme court jurist, and a charter precentation by Paul O. Netland Wednesday night featured the instal- lation of the newly organized Meno- ken Boy Scout troop sponsored by the Parents and Teachers association. Netland, Missouri Valley Area Boy Szout executive, acted as installing officer for the new troop, invested the new scouts and their leaders with their badges. Harold N. Bliss was commissioned as scoutmaster and Otto R. Ayers, Thomas M. Moffit and Carroll De Witt King were appointed to the troop committee for the coming year. The new Menoken troop is num- bered in the area council as unit No. 44, Charter members of the new Orson King, Russell J. Koch, Ray- mond Halvorson, Paul D. Holms, Paul 'T. Estell, Maurice E. Dance and James Garros, Bruce Herman of Bismarck troop the installation ceremonies. © ENDS ‘1,100 MILE RIDE Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 24.—()— {Orville Spooner rested at his father's home here Wednesday after complet- ing a 1,100-mile bicycle trip from his home at Pontiac, Mich, He made the trip in nine and a half days. A fine variety of ostrich ts com- mon in Ethiopia. troop are Gail Holmes, Jay Abelein, 1S had charge of the bugling during ANTI-FREEZE re Bring Winter Fronts ring DeLuxe Heavy &. y Leatherette, Sil- ver finish 85c¢ Bla Your Own Container lar and cellular two inches thick, Guaran: By “Geese deflectors. o6 nrovweue 39 PLATE BATTERIES For Cars or Homes. 10-foot Roll, }4-inch.

Other pages from this issue: