The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 1, 1924, Page 2

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PAGE TWO THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PICTURES SENT | OVER ATLANTIC BY RADIO USE Remarkable Invention De- clared Practical to be in General Use PROCESS DESCRIBED New York, Dec, 1 rowded room at 66 Broad street, experts of the Radio Corporation of America Sunday gave u public demonstration of the art of receiving pictures across the A ntic ocean. It was almost uncanny to fountain pen pluck from the cord on # cylinder vo bigger baking powde an the featur mous faces lected in Marconi house, London. The new wonder days old. ‘The fi across the Atlantic by wireless was i f President Coolidge received It had been closely follow-} that of Secretary of State In a air 4 th was only a few picture to come ¢ Instrume | machine, sitting on Q larger than a tea table, seemed to good to be true. Tt} seemed unreal that from London, 4,000 miles away, were being sent the linaments of United States Am- bassador Kellogg, which form right under the eyes of of eager watchers The receiving ke a printing pr us a sewing machin Then the machine stopped while « word message interrupte f ture. A joke about pro- ssed from ne men the pictures being sent from Marconi house, London, followed by a question as to the re- tits in New York, brought the real- ation that the murvel was genuine, it brought to the intent group) watching the pen tracing the grow- ing vision of another, similar group in far off London observing the icture being sent. Other Photos Follow Methodically the jittle machine re- | volved and turned, the pen moved} from side to side up and down and in a brief quarter of an hour, an unmistakable likeness of Ambassa- dor Kellogg was apparent. Mean while, on a concealed cylinder, rays | of light had impressed another por trait on a sensitive photographic film, making two pictures received in one transmission In quick succession, there follow- ed portraits of Owen D. Young, Dawes commission expert; Dowager Queen Alexandra of England, the Prince of Wales and Prime Minister | Stanley Baldwin, as well as photo- graphs of the finish of a relay race, and the raising sunken steamer in the river Tees. General J. G. Harbord, president | of the Radio Corporation of Amer icu declared that under conditions a picture could be in six minutes instead of 20 or more When the first picture was sent be- iween experimental static within | the United States, three hours was | consumed in a to a score instrument as unromantic | spaper: | i { ingle transmission. Harbord Traces Possibilities Possibilities of the new invention were traced by General Harbord dur- ing the demonstration. He | “Checks and drafts may be sent | by wireless, Messages in code where typographical errors might be dan- gerous, may be transmitted in facsimile. Signutures and finger- can be compared instantan- | eously over widely separated dis- tances. Almost lost in the crowd of curi- ous observers were the modest men who had wrought the miracle. Th had to be sought out. Principa credit was given to Capt. Richard H. Ranger. a slight sandy man of 35 with spectacle: Ranger, ried, lives at* No, 212 Mont Clair avenue, New York, He was born at Indianapolis, studied electrical engineering at the Mas: chusetts Institute of Techno! served two with the corps in | | i} Captain Chief £ Iso the grea | the jthe damaging of D. M. { tomobile. haired | ‘i POPE PIUS XI SITS FOR BUST AND PORTRAIT | nil portrait mulptor, whe Mon wien His H » vatican, an; Mon Pius XT, killed with stone, as the saying goes, in a hall adjoining the once served as Swis gnor Savini, secret chambe | New intances and looking fairs. vag reproduced in the company tin all-Americ by which not rinted message complete that Mr who in this city Washburn Washburn was here company. Mrs, Stanley en spending left in the president Lignite Coal Comp official busin Washburn some time! veek. Mr of the ny and for the only pi success. e , they ex on sportation eret. business corresponden of aR | Melvin Bureh held an‘auction saie | at farm north of town Monday ind plans on moving to Wilton with his family within a short time, rictures, omatic uid | > for police is John Eckland and Led the capital | having rented his mov- . Ecklund rm to Bert Hed- | strom. Sopha Anstrom who has been il with pneumonia is re- Re some improved at this a se who Ss bandu Baldwin Headen writing. whieh Monday wa en on and bab: two weeks v Mrs. Elmer La ded toastmaster returned from a Mr. Stewart gave a! the capital city. Fighty-two men and! present at the banquet! Mrs. the first event of the kind| turned from B | marck where home of he Ashbridge and { Nugent has ust nite affair and short addre boys were which wa held in William Me a pleas ae ughte nily. has re- nt visit at Bis- a guest at the Mrs, Adrian ra ever i | ©. AL Hoigy . Burteh and F. E hits are spending the week in Washburn where they are acting as! jurymen. Of the three criminal cases! go 3 a few days visit to be tried st this term of court, one| of his son Dr. is that of Henry and George} ily. Kostenko w urged with mal- | with Quigley'’s au- | are forty civil cases] of parents of the stu- Mr. rons of the school visit-| nicel. returned to Far- the home ef are in e ons tion Anderson left recently Seattle, Washington where he spend the winter months with danghter Miss Emily Anderson, | % | and Mrs, V. W. Fiegel are now! conced in their new home! Wednesday in re-} the idence formerly occupied | invitation issued by} Superintendent Codding and famil become better acquaint-| Mr. Fiegel came here a cout time ago} teachers and the work-| from Columbus to a his new ul The past | bos n with the Wilton News. A marked improvement noticed in the News since Mr. Fiegel came here, Ss. M. for} will There his} on the docket. A number ents and p. ed at the s sponse to the of the sch week igervedidimsuenoutithe nation, Clifford Hanson and Franklund, well known people who live in the Painted Woods | triet were united in arriage Sun- y Hanson of Washburn, ‘The witnesses were Miss Winifred | ‘Ober, ang Otto Lechn Mr. Han-| son and bride will make their home fon a farm near Wilton. state and | | Harry Golding spent the week here on business. Harry was formerly connected with the local mine, but now has employment with the Secur- ity Investment Company of Minnea- polis and lives in Fargo. His wife sufferi with an attack ‘of ton- silitis and was unable to accompany Mr. Golding to Wilton. Miss Mabel | oung Wilton | Adam E, Otto of Minneapo- office inspector and J. H. 1 service examiner of St. returned to th spec- tive homes after spending eve! days in Wilton where they looked in- to the records, characters and quali- fications of the various candidates for the Wilton postoffice. There are Several applicants for the position among them being Sam Fairman who acted as substitute a few months ago. Major lis. post Weisz, Louis have fruit have Fellows I ahs. to by Three boxes of {sent to the Odd | Devils Lake by the Lodge of the Rebe was sent in respons which was sent out Lodge, been home at rie Queen The fruit a request the Grand ry delicious Thanksgiving nsisting of turkey, dressing, ed potatoes with gravy, eranber: salad, rolls, ice cream, cake and cof- fee served Monday evening at the Woodman Hall by the Sacred ciety. A nice sum wi he supper which wi eligious purposes, supper. mash- Among the business callers in{ town the past week were: B. W. Stevenson of Minneapolis who is connected with the Russell-Miller{ Compan ry Newton of the | rocery Co. and S. was returned | Missour ‘accio Dominioni, and Prof. Giovanni Palanti, {the B Ren Ww. uchiovement. Ranger acknowledged the assistance of Dc ald G. Ward, Aldred J, Koenig, Maclivain, and William Paley of his | research staff, Captain Ranger said | he had made h ti d had been consta’ the idea since that ti Sending Was Hampered The transmitting machine which! dispatched the pictures from London | yesterday were sent abroad a month ! ago, and installed at Marconi House, | London. Donald G. Ward, Captain Ranger's principal assistant, took it | abroad. Mr, Ward reported by ra diogram that 200 pictures had been filed with him for transmission. | During the sending of the first pic- ture the glass cylinder used the London end to filter light throuci | the film reproductions of the pic- trtes was broken. ‘inis hampered and impeded the sending. x for the present General Harbord said the Radiv corporation had no ‘facilities for and could not under- take transmission of pictures ‘by wireless within the United States. 10 BE eect New York, Dec, 1.—-Trans-atlantic transmission of photographs by dio is a reality. , Yortrnits of Presidént Coolidge, ; Premier Stanley Baldwin, the Prince of “Wales and Owen D. Young were among those dispatched by wireless ! fiom London’ fluring a test cdnduct- ed “by the Radio corporation of » America. Sail Jn its office here a jiggling 3 drew these pictures on an oscillating ~eeylinder, and 20 minutes after each original Kad been put on the air in y va- Mrs. Don QUICK TEST FOR DURABILITY OF TIRES DEVISED Photos frem Unde & test for the durcbility of awtomobile ti inside of four days prediction of their been devised by che U, S. Bureau of Standar's. in co-operation with | the rubber manufacturers. The test is made by running the tire | under standard conditions against the rim of the wheel provided with | bumps. It is believed that the purchaser of tires will -beneft by the terfere. unle! tests. Photo shows L. L. Childree, of tie rubber n, testing some tires in thig fashion. oliness, Pope Pius 3 ht are Prof. at for both painter. to spend the winter, nicely settled at Mineral Texas, and have beautiful voses blooming in the yard. states tame Mr, and Mrs. R. J Frank and Earl ors Monday . Elliott and sons, were Mandan visit- A number of the young people of this locality attended the dance at Braddock in the high school gymma- sium Friday evening and report fine time, children ‘of oo ile are chicken po: The nest the and Mrs. having a Helen Brownawell is staying at 0, R. Martini home in Braddock le the Saville children are sick © chicken pox. It reported that Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Esres, formerly of this lo- eality, but now living at Corvallis, Oregon, have a baby daughter named Edith Margaret. Misses Ada Saville, Helen Brown awell and Aavis Carlisle, who are attending high school in Braddock spent Thanksgiving holidays with the home folks. John Peterson's father was a Bis- marek visitor Monday returning home the next day. Val Benz of Moffit made a busi- ness trip through here the fore part of the week. Mrs. Olaf Feltheim, who has been in a hospital the past three weeks, George | the | real property of the judgment debtor }cenfirmed by the court and a sher where she underwent ya double oper- ation, returned to her home in Brad- dock Tuesday considerably improved. 0. B. Swanson and son, Ernest were helping W. H. Brownawell raise { Attorneys for a windmill the first of the week. DECISION REME COURT From Ward County Fannie Pace, Plaintiff and Respondent vs. rth Dakota Workmen's com- pensation Bureau, Defendant and Appellant SYLLABU 1. In an action against the Work- men's Compensation Bureau to r ccver on account of an injury, re- sulting in death, alleged to have been received by the decedent in the ccurse of his employment, the bur- Gen is on the claimant to-prove, by preponderance of evidence, that the injury re d in the course of the employment, and an award should not be made upon mere surmise or conjecture. 2. It is the intent of the Work- men’s Compensation Law that employee, injured in the cour: his employment, shall have relict in all cases where ‘he would nave had ht of action at common law, and, addition thereto, to extend his right to recover in other ci gardless of questions of negligence, negligence, or assump- A physical impact is not a ary prérequisite to an “ine iain the compensation act. ration of an of his em- ve mate or uns in death. Whether, under the 4th division of seetion 7660, ¢ entitled to a ne » ground of newly nee, rests largely sound | retion of the trial court ! elute court w it appears that cretion has been abused. i Notwithstanding the fact that isting disease or infirmity LITTLE JOE THE JUDGMENT OF 4 LEVEL HEAD SELDom FALLS FLAT, Dek., censecutive weeks, the prior to the date of sale, ther paper between the publication and the day of the sale Tull, ox sal8, is not decided, tion to vacate order confirming sale, made by Hon. Stutsman County by Johnson, dis Judicial Distri © predisposed the employee to plexy, his dependents may be en- j titled to compensation if the rup- ture of the blood vessel, with r sulting apoplexy, took place earlier vecause of the excessive artificial neat, under which the employee labored. Acceleration of a pre-exist- ing di to a fatal conclusion is m such circumstances, an injury within the compensation law | Certain findings of fact chal- lenged by appellant examined, and, for reasons stated in the opimon, beld to have substantial support in the evidence. Appeal from the District Court of Ward County, North Dakota, Hon. George H. Moellring, J. i Affirmed. Opinion of the Court “Philip Elliott and Scott Cameron, Lismarek, N. Dak., and. 0. B. Herig- tad, Minot, N. Dak., Attorneys for Appellant. At From Stutsman County 3. Winslow, i Plaintiff and Respondent | vs. Klundt, et al, Defendant and : Appellant SYLLABU! 1. Whe judgment roll, in an Coun wllowfield district i sit She is one of four won House Social of lor list IN COMMONS to n Wilki th in Common » MONDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1924 of the st we Pariiament. on ie in the new action to foreclose a mortgage on real property, is filed in the office the clerk of the district court, and judgment is docketed therein, the judgment becomes a lien on the i ir tnat county, or in any county where a transcript of the docket is fired, and sneh real property m sold under execution by the sheriff without a levy by filing a notice in i y of deeds. | Section 7547, C.L. 1 | filing of such a noti does not govern. 2. Obejetion to an execution nt to u judgment in a for ction, made on motion the sale had been reported to and eriff's certificate, comes too when the sole ground in non- nee with a statute, which requires the notige of sale to be pub- lished “once a week for at least thirty days prior to making such in this, that, altho the notice | pu times for five first publica- thirty of t te, sult was tion being more than published one issue of the weekly date of the last which such notice was not ed. it does but me in pub- If this be a noncompliance, | not render the sale void, : voidable. ther, in an action in where ‘all the issues may be investigated, a sale may, unde: circumstances, after confirma- jon, be set aside on the ground of irregularity in publishing the notice ged jing Justi dri Gray} Appeal from an order denying mo- ye Distr Opinion ffey, of the et Court. the Court J. Nuessle, J. being qualified, did not participate, Hon. Fred Jansonius of the Fourth itting in his stead. John A. Jorgenson, Jamestown, N, | Attorney for Appellants George | and Margaretha Klundt. Knauf & Knauf, Jamestown, N. Respondent. Two Arrested As Suspects in Jewel Theft N. D., Dee. 1.—Two men, giving their names as Ed. Thompson and George Stratton we arrested here Sunday morning charg- ed=with the robbery of a jewelry store at Fisher, Minnesota, Thursday night when nearly $1,000 worth. of jewelry was stolen. The jewelry was recovered Sunday afternoon, being found in a suit ease checked in the basement of a local rooming house under the name of Joe Williams. Thompson and Stratton were taken to Crookston last night by Sheriff Nelson and will be given a prelimin- ary hearing on the charge. TAKES OWN LIFE IN FARGO 1 Fargo, N. D., Dec. 1.—Lucas Sivert- ploye of 2 local jewelry store, committed suicide at his home here last night by shooting himself with a revolver. He was found by mem- bers of the family at 8:30 o'clock this morning when they attempted to awaken him. No motive was given for the ac! ept that he was fana- tically re! » and had been act- ing que several_months paral was vers y Suturday Affirmed. D., F 1 li. Grand Forks, The the © The utes pass from moni fore by Flectrie Cookery. Ia Better Cookery. Two today Lim there night. night at 8 p. ‘YOUTH SHOOTS rabbits Enderlin just across the Cass county line. Chester had borrowed one of the other ing into the b: not pital husbs TWO DRIVERS OF AUTOS HELD BEFORE JUSTICE’ . R. Atkinson Suffers ies When Cars Collide on Injur- Downtown Street he Pe: of drivers facing charges Ferguson, i s charged 5 n complaint passenger, Fourth of 2 eo when the att AUKEnSD! was severely ery w auton be: nobil for were Justice Bee: files ar » With aeciden was badly Atkinson w with de ny es Bi a x ca and re any Ed Allensworth, re r while Graves, in a complaint eer. ur lis uffered bri not was and cd was evening about R. Atkin- at the int Rosser nt happened. injured but hurt and amaged. cont and his es ed to examination wa inju farmer, to es determine to the rib: wa less driving It w is alle hich Men is intoxicated by ( filed before eged he was struck the oken Wednesdi SELF, DIFS Boy Looks Into Barrel Gun Is Discharged ly shot calibre rifle boy, ayes ny gun hess. resident ed es! 7 ia. a Dee. nd k with of about wa’ of Bisma Chester year old son of Mr. m Raffe Ruitte nd Mrs, Wile of Enderlin, led himself with a at iW th The boy lived ne bout 4 p,m. fo and 16, ur oth mi boys a hers between us hunting: north of a gun from nd was look- rel to see if it was knowing ed, entering the le! in the brain, but did ot it denta eye regai 1 discharg lodging 25 min- conscious- lly and n | Pioneer Colored. Resident Dies beth h Shann ck colored, 1381, non, since vay at the St. Alex terday ten Mr: Wilmington, to North Dakota on a s afternoon days Shannon orth Carolina, coming the first Capta ain built to Bismarck and ht years a well k past les thre to railroad w: or They're hunting for dinosaurs along the Chilean coa and William Trend, American sportsmen nd over Lake Esguel (seen hers) who illne: at of pneu- born in was eamboat be- being and was employed Mrs. i, John Shannon, p over ip (in inset), or whatever he may be, is reported Green. Her passed away pioneer, I forty Ith n= | Friday | 1 and icember 2 Triscuit Has Arrived Your grocer has it— the new Triscuit you have been waiting for. It is a real whole wheat cracker, not made of flour. It is the whole‘ wheat cooked in steam, shredded and baked. The crisp, flavory shreds of whole wheat encourage thorough chewing —and the more you chew it the better it tastes. Full of nutriment and easy to digest. Delicious with butter or soft cheese. Tastes better when toasted in the oven to restore its crispness. Triscuit JUSONAEREADASOCODIOORGAUSROORUSES 13: Made by THE SHREDDED WHEAT COMPANY Niagara Falls, N. Y. ‘SUAUETAFANOUEDESUNS SSERAUSGSODADLOLEUASEUSNLOCEGEOLESSEALONSLD>O3 SUOEUTAEHG CONSTIPATION OVERCOM The use of FOLE FABLETS will bring from constipation if taken promptly, They are purely vegetable and act on the liver. Mr. John D, McComb s Co. Home, Toledo, Ohi ave used ATHAR s in seve ot constipation to “which Tam subject and found them benefici: FOLEY ecge TIC) TABL to leave no uny ects. them, and two Ordeman na The o'cloe! granddaughters, Myrtle and Mrs, Alfred McClen- | funeral will take Tuesday mu s Pro-Cathedral Father Slag officiating. be in St. Mary’s cemeter: place at 8} ing at St. with = Re Burial will ‘oll SMART BLOUSE smart overblouse of fitted section A very > chine crepe onto an and held y au double “Ady. NOTICE ENVELOPE PURSE avelope purses have become many es » Do not experiment. To buy Beulah Coal is winter wis- dom. Wachter’ Transfer Cu. {Phones 62 and 63. huge | pockets that the and MOTHER: Fletcher’s Castoria is especially pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising there- from, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids thd assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. “fo avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Btthihis Absolutely Harmless -No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it. - State-Built House The Nerth Daketa Industrial Commiss sian offers fer public sale the residence property jocated at 206 W. Rosser Strect, being hot 3, Hiock 3. Riverview Addition to the City of Bismarck, North Dak., and known ad the “Graham state-built home project.’ A down peyment of at least $1,006.60 is required, the valance to be amortized over a maximum period of e years on a monthly payment basis including 6% interest. Bids i the purehase of this Oe will ‘be received until neon of next Tuesday, De- 2, 1924.. Address all communications and inquiries to John Gammons, Secretary _[Eosustrial Commission, Bismarck, N. Dz,

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