The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 30, 1937, Page 5

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)

> Bismarck ‘T+ VISITORS INVITED 10 |Ancients Old Fogies? INSPECT NEW HOWE,| © Only in School Books By LYDIA GRAY SHAW (AP Feature Service Writer) New York, Nov. 30.—The Roman CARS THIS WEEK-END 5 phalanxes Harry G. Orr Associated With N.|pettie tines. plo, strongman of T. Livdahl andC.A.Cranna |qiere arcit any oa pana, at heres @ marker. The € in Motor Business In his excitement Scipio throws off his steel helmet and embraces his teammate, us, NEW EQUIPMENT INSTALLED ro Seanirns ae ee Eas ae read it in Plymouth, De Soto, Packard, | 7... ut Bot the Way Dn Cities Service Oils and Wil- [8 Jot more fun out of the di fun the Greeks and lard Batteries Handled So why not let the pu private life of the ancien’ fred J, Funk, who's been digging w startling facts like these for his recent ‘book, “So You Think It’s New.” Friday, Saturday and Sunday of this week have been selected for the Bank of Nc Dakota. £0 ancient after you found that apart- ered arsed Reon federal|tent houses, shorthand systems and tice, which had used the main |even elevators date way back. foor of the building as temporary “Educators are teaching their stu- quarters during enlargement of the|dents about cold statues in museums, federal building, the garage has un-|eapostulated Mr. Funk. “All they dergone a thorough redecoration and kuow is that Plato has a marble beard rite of antenotune bes been ine Snipinte? He was human, Had hopes has been in-| “ 5 a ea eho ee Bismarck Motors, Inc., will have on | high schools ant leges, , like display the 1938 models of Plymouth, |modern Dr. Townsend, he tried to De Soto and Packard automobiles, for put his Utopian ideas to work at the which it is dealer in Bismarck. ‘This {court of the King of Syracuse in firm grows from the former firm of Sicily; how they utterly failed; how Livdahl-Cranna-: Motors, Inc., which |the philosopher escaped with his life ‘was organized in 1932 by N. T. Livdahl |by the tail of his tunic, went home and C. A. Cranns, to handle Plymouth | disillusioned and rewrote his classic and De Soto. Livdahl and Cranna |‘Republic.’ continue as executives of the new or- with cabinet work by Ludvig Peter- son. Modernistic colors make this one Recently Harry became | of the most attractive show rooms in identified with the organisation asthe state. The latest type mercury general manager, its capital increased |pulb lighting fixtures give daylight and the large two-story building and |color effects at night. gas-oll station were leased with! Cities Service products are featured options for 10 years, Orr has had 13/py the oil and gas station in connec- years of automobile sales experience, | tion, This has been newly aecorated largely in Milwaukee and Minnespolls,|and equipped, with latest type auto- as well as two years with an automo-/matic calculating gasoline pumps. An bile finance corporation. additional pump for servicing large The two floors of the new building | trucks at the curb is being installed. have storage capacity for 160 auto-| Twenty-four hour service is being mobiles. It is steam-heated and fire-|maintained by the new garage and proof. A call-for-and-deliver service | oil station. is offered to storage patrons. The new concern also maintains a The show room and offices have |modern used car lot at the intersec: been newly decorated by George Aide, |tion of Sixth St. and Broadway Ave- Manager G. Orr We Furnished The Paint for the New Home of BISMARCK MOTORS, Inc. LUMINAL for the Walls and Ceil- Paint tor the Showroom. Floors JEWEL. nn iS Mowroom Bismarck Paint & Glass Co. ings of the Showroom JEWEL Lo-Lustre for the Wood- 401 Fourth St. HL E. Spohn. Mgr. Congratulations to BISMARCK MOTORS, Inc. Quanrud, Brink & Reibold, Ine. Wholesale Automobile Supplies and Equipment 206 Fourth St. Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 765 Counters Offices Backgrounds Special Rooms and All Other Carpenter Work at the New Home of BISMARCK MOTORS, Ine. Was Done by Ludwig Peterson Carpenter 726 21st Street Bismarck, N. D. When you visit Bismarck Motors, inspect this work. When you need a good carpenter, phone 1945. Ne eee eee ——eee THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1937 “Nero? We all know that he fiddied while Rome burned. Wake up the young scholars by telling them that he wére @ monocle to the games, had en elevator 120 feet high, and owned ® self-playing organ that ‘went by compressed air. That's news. Even Cafeterias “Pericles? Picture him as a worried tuler, going up to the Parthenon, the National Bank of Athens, to Wares @ loan for his much-criticized Million-. Dollar Building Program which was designated to give work to the un- employed.” Even modern football isn’t really modern, Mr. Funk has found. Teil the schoolboys that the Roman armies always took their football teams with them when they went out te fight, ne says. He's found that the Romans, relaxing between battles, played with | an inflated pigskin ball behind the lines, and their football rules, sim- ilar to ours, are described by the earl- fest dictionary maker, Julius Pollux. ‘a: the beginning of the Christian era “Make ancient Rome live,” Mr. Funk urges teachers. “Describe the partment houses, 12 stories high, the teoth-powder, tooth-krushes and ra- zors used, the hot and cold water, plumbing and central heating in théir houses; their busy department stores, fire-engines, shorthand systems and other modern conveniences. “I promise you this. The boys and girls will be sitting on the edges of tneir chairs after a lecture like this. T've seen them.” |nue under the supervision of Pat | Gable. New Equipment Considerable New service equipment includes a Lincoln streamliner high pressure lub- ricating system and Glove hydraulic boist featuring Cities Service and Quaker State oils and greases e clusively; the only permanent instal- lation of a Cities Service power prover in the state; a body repair and paint shop complete with ai jammers for straightening fenders and bodies; Duco air pressure paint equipment in an enclosed and ventilated paint room under charge of Oscar Nybakken; a repair shop department on the second | floor equipped with modern tools for servicing of automobiles under super- vision of Oscar H. Nustad, veteran service manager; washing and clean- ing department equipped with a mod- ern high-pressure washer, vacuum cleaner and other equipment for clean- ing and polishing automobiles. A complete stock of Acme tires and tubes, backed by the Cities Service Oi) company 12-month guarantee, and ‘Willard batteries in all sizes are car- tied. A battery charging department is fully equipped. WAR SPURS JAPAN'S INTEREST IN FLYING: Government Drafting Plan to Train 5,000 Civilian Avia- tors, Spend $70,000,000 Tokyo, Nov. 30.-*(Correspondence of the Associated Press)-—The war in China has given Japan a spectacular by-product of conquest, a tremendous surge of public interest in flying. The most backward among the world powers in the field of civil avi- ation until six months ago, Japan is bidding now for its place in the sun. The government is drafting a plan to train 5,000 civilian aviators and to scatter fifty fields over Japan proper for their use. The December diet session is expected to appropriate $70,000,000 for the work. This has been stimulated by the striking success of Japanese fighting planes in China. Before the conflict, the Japanese public largely was apathetic toward flying. Out of an empire population of nearly 100,000,000 there are only 752 persons holding private licenses, The Imperial Aviation asssociation set the figure of those actively engaged: in aviation at around 300. There are only 15 public flying fields in all Japan. One reason for all this was the lack of official interest in the civilian flyer, The government's lone lift came in the form of a small subsidy through which men of recognized | ability were given what amounted to/ scholarships in one of the three avi- ation schools. It was 1,000 yen—$295. The plans that prvide for training 5,000 pilots are expected to be com- plete within three to five years, These | men unquestionably will be on call for military service. They will give Japan a grand aerial war-strength approaching 10,000 pilots, navigators and mechanics. Says He Tried to Stop Death Plunge Los Angeles, Nov. 30.—)—Stanley Brooks’ own story dominated his de- fense Tuesday against murder charge in the death plunge of Ethel JOstiing, 25, of Dent, Mich, He testified Miss Ostling, threw herself from a fifth floor hotel window Sept. 16, although he tried to stop her. “I dived after her and almost went out of the window myself” said the 26-year-old mechanic, adding she was “quite intoxicated and began to brood over some fellow she referred to as “Lynn.” Explaining bloodstains on a shirt re- Suicide Investigated | Pelly, Sask. Nov. 30.—(Canadian PNEUMONLA REMEDY Extract of Warm Ox Blood Ef- fective: in Many Ca: Southern Doctor Reports Dy New Orleans, La., Nov. 30.—(7)—A new and successful chemical treat- ‘ment for pneumonia with an extract of warm ox blood gathered from slaughter houses was announced Tues- day at the opening of the Southern Medical association's annual meeting. Dr. Clyde Brooks of the Louisiana State University medical school re- ported the treatment had brought about @ large decrease in the death rate in a series of 800 pneumonia patients. The new chemical is called “deutero- proteose” and is made from fibrin, a white protein obtained from the blood of freshly-killed oxen. A small jamount injected into the blood stream of @ pneumonia patient in the early stages of the disease causes a quick decline of fever and repeated injec- tions over a period of several days have produced quick and complete re- coveries, Dr. Brooks declared. During the early days of the World bot-dog stands, the cafeterias, the |War, sea lions were trained to track |night. Some of the crowd were f submarines, Friday, Saturday, - Sunday Dec. 3-4-5 Telephone 314 FREE AT ALL TIMES We have the only per- manent installation of a CITIES SERVICE POWER PROVER MO- TOR ANALYZER in the State of North Dakota and will give you AB- SOLUTELY FREE a complete analysis of your motor’s operating condition — avail your- self of this FREE SERV- |. ICE to obtain a more efficient and economical operating automobile. located varied expert emploring only, x] Used Car Dept. Modern Used Car Lot Street and offering at all times & Used Cars in all pop- | ular makes and prices. SALES REPRESENTATIVES: ED. C. ODERMANN Our Permanent Guarantee: Satisfactory, Courteous Service at Fair Prices Your Patronage is Respectfully Solicited and Will be Sincerely Appreciated New York, Nov. 30.—A cross- fire psychological. and sociolog- ieal research raked the “normal American male” Monday and found him—physically speaking— “By no means flattering to Ameri- can vanity.” The verbal X-ray exposure came from Dr. John Dollard, professor of the Yale University institute of human relations, who pictured the average male as a sort of jig- saw personality distinguishable if not altogether distinguished by 21 traits. Here are spme of them: He's no Adonis. He is “flat of chest, round of shoulder, and pro- tuberant of paunch.” CLAIMS SUCCESSFUL [New Typical Male Is Paunchy, Ambitious He's easily aroused to warlike behavior and persuaded that his enemy is a demon, He expects to rise in the social scale, He's individualistic. He's fairly clean. He expects to act in accotdance to his sex role “and this usually involves the idea of marriage and children, with ‘possible some out- side sex experience before mar- riage and after.” A He peers nee religion fer not urt anybody, especial his children, Towards his children, he shows @ mixture of low esteem, love and Physical severity. He has faith in democracy. Minnesota Town Hall Burns; 400 Escape Clinton, Minn., Nov. 30.—(?)—Ap- proximately 400 persons escaped seri- cus injury when fire starting in the motion picture projection booth de- stroyed the community hall Monday ty leap from second story windows Flames, believed to have started whet film caught fire, Quinley, of Randall, projectionist. PUBLISHER DIES Duluth, Nov. 30.—(#)—Death Tues- day had ended the 46-year career of; Colonel William F. Henry, general, manager of the Duluth Herald an News-Tribune, civic leader and well known among circus and theater folk. burned William : 5 Motors, Inc., Plans Grand Opening in Its Remodeled Structure cture Zeeland Man to Get Accounts of Dead S. D. Cashier Short $12,000) U.S. Flight Training — Washington, Nov. 30—()—Three Watertown, 8. D., Nov. 30.—(P)}— ae niente men and one North Dae Shortages of nearly $12,000 were re-/Kotan are among 75 aviation cadets vealed by L. T. Morris, president of | *Ppolnted to flight training at Pensa the First Citizens National bank here Gn ail ine Seas a Monday, in the accounts of Edward Kranz, assistant cashier, who took his own life, There is @ range of seven and one- third octaves in the 88 notes of the full-compass keyboard of a piano. Painting and Decorating at the New Home of Bismarck Motors, Inc. Done by GEORGE AIDE 1025 Seventh St. Bismarck, N. Dak. Phone 2392-J for Expert Decorating Work a0 di In Our New Home Plymouth - DeSoto - Packard SALES and SERVICE Sixth Broadway at line of fine Bismarck Motors, Inc. SUCCESSORS TO LIVDAHL-CRANNA MOTORS, INC. 618 - 620 - 622 Main Ave. HARRY G. ORR General Manager Sec’y.-Treas. With every ten gallons of gaso- line or every complete crank case oil change you purchase during our THREE FORMAL OPEN- ING DAYS. we will give you AB- SOLUTELY FREE ONE COM- PLETE .CHASSIS .LUBRICA- TION FOR YOUR AUTOMO- BILE. Credit coupons will be is- sued at the time you purchase the Ine or oil change en- titling you to the chassis lubrica- tion then or at a later date more convenient to you, (limited, of course, to one chassis lubrication to each customer). 8. E. NORLIN ' Saturday, Sunday Dec. 3-4-5 Telephone 314 ouR SPECIALIZED LUBRICATING DEPARTMENT is _ equipped with @ NER LING Ons Hig! Pressute Lubricating System featuring for the different parts of your automobile ex- actly by STORAGE Open 24 hours a day to handle all types of stor- age in our modern, fire- proof, steam-heated gar- MAKE age — YOUR RESERVATION NOW as recommended its manufacturer. Vice President Also operating line Service St grades of C! Company's g modern gaxc- featuring all ‘ON Body and Paint Dept. A body repair and paint shop second to none in the Northwest em- Ploying only latest type equipment — we specialize in repair- ing wrecked and guarantee com- plete satisfaction. General Office fair and efficient man- ner at all A. M. WINFREE

Other pages from this issue: