The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 3, 1926, Page 8

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PAGE EIGHT OCTOBER WAS NORMAL MONTH AS TO WEATHER Mean Tempcrature Was With. in .1 of a Degree of Nor- mal—Not Much Snow While the weather at times AN October unseasonable and dis- “At the Bismarck — agecable whole it compared | Public Library quite fave y with past Octobers, uccording to O. W. Roberts in charge | of the weather bureau here. 1 The m temperature month was i of the normal. ature recorded w 10th while the lowest temperature) [ was 13 on the 30th. There were 1 tures degre grentest ‘daily tween the day) was degrees on the least was seven degrees on the 4th. The total precipitation for the; month mae inch or 0.80 below the} normal, jount of pre-| cipitation recorded in any s being 0,09 inch on the nd. There were} Hughes Electric Company to Buy New Salem Plant The Hugh lectric filed its application to purchase the New Salem Electric Light and Power company has The s morning. «|The New Salem company will be | {lined up with the high voltage line of the Hughes Electric company, pro- viding the the approval of the railway commission. applic no was on th Books of adult ction AiG belly | for dist on for the tion at the Public Library What Books Can Do For discussion of books — witl lists representing \ icf fields of human knowledge, The author stars a few books in each ass for the reader who wants a in sel ys with temper: Mth; the national h Capper ,| The chan mic he Agricultural Bloc conditions of the last fifteen led the farmers to feel “eke agricultural interests were not adequately represented in the gov- ernment. The present book describes the causes, methods, and results of the agricultural bloc and its present program. pi Only a trace of snow! occurred was none on the ground at the close of the month. Partly cloudy the mi jority, there being 18 of them, wh there were eight cloudy days and fii clear days. A The prevailing wind was from the |‘) “Urvey OF t and the total movement | (pie. j.° 8 or an average hourly Lelabet Mh of 10.5 miles., The maximum | locity was at the rate of 39 hour from the northwest on} agedy of Waste.” + factors in make for w ain that the time near when make prov jhe 25th. J oem The avera: hine was 48 pi cent below the normal. Aurori Mth, solar halos on} Oth, and lunar halo on} t occurred on the Mth! t con the Bth. on for the preservation of be urces and to nic inef y and distribution. “The Price of Freedom views the Presi the fundamental problems confront- jing this nation here revealed. |The speeches an F ing the volu {te present Coolidge rr the 18th and the 18th. SI and. dense 5 ane ET) | Sidelights on | Hall-Mills Trial o- a) Somerville, Tho courthouse is at the town, and the room in wh will be held : It has a seating capacity, including §%,, gallerics, of 270 and about one-half of the length of the room is required for} the judges’ be and other court- room furniture and for the seats for reporte ney in the Sunday Cope is re enized as pness und use: y School. stions discussed in these ¢ deal’ with ‘cracial matters. pert ents of the Sunday a) center of h the trial this book, the nut and intelligenc voter, and the ne j cal par Dor: sibili Two hundred and fifty newspaper d of him in politi: neluding Mary Rob-| Billy Sunday und! are expected to re- port the trials. There are seats for ninety reporters in the courtroom The basement of the courthouse wi be crowded with special wires to newspapers while other floors be utilized to their full capacit id Th ciated Pr ed in a opening the courtroom proper, from which jit will be possible to fol: Jow all the proc h? we Behave Like Hu- man "Being Dr. Dorsey believes that human beings are the most im portant things in the world and that. it is their chief problem to get along with themselves and with one another. On the problems of love, » thought zation, Pri a, hered book Your Washington Your Washington and Mine pictures the romance of the city and ‘the famous personages’ who have liv- ed there, deseri' he great ngs, and gi survey of the complicated relations of the United States and the District “ Columb! # governments. “Choosing a Career. part: ailing, tions as to pe The first part discus: which make for leadershi ese the chances for succes: Sleeping accommodations wer month before the Glale York newspapers rented houses which they are operating a: clubs for the accommodation of their men, A number of others engaged , suites of three and four rooms in pri- vate homes. Both hotels are oversold, and the same is true of a new rooming house opened recently. Rent has been paid for five or six weesk on some of the rooms in order to hold them for ae the trial season, This teers Two possible candidates for gover- ant the’ nor will se ausese, each other at the| “ sMyoy trials. are state senators and |p itepature. one was mite governor for a Alexander Simpson, special prosecu- tor, is frequently mentioned as the next Democratic candidate. He is a resident of Hudson county, the strong- hold of Jersey democracy. larenec E. Chase, of counsel for the defense was acting governor for reek in 1920. He withdrew from ¢ contest fur the Republican nom- ination for governor in 1925, with the announcement that he was not able to finance a campaign himseli, and would not place himself under obliga- tion by accepting large contributions from others, ‘urious profession “The Story of tl A book of Ten Investigators Have Passed Beyond Death has removed ten person: in earlier investigations of the Hall- Mills killings. In addition to the prosccuto both Middlesex and Essex counties, + the tisk ‘of those. who have died in- Spare State, Trooper, John Mannion, 10 was dismissed from the force in 1923 for assaulting an officer, and » year later was shot to death while ‘attempting a mail holdup in East Orange. Azuriah M. Beekman, former Som- erset county prosecutor, died from grepleny in Mareh, 192 je hed harge of the investigation in the county in which the bodies. were found but was superseded by a special gan ® month after the slay- aoe h_L. Striker, former prosecu- tor ros Middlesex county in which most of the principals in the mystery lived, died on October 2, 1926. He had undergone an operation but friends insisted that worry over the Feopened investigation had hastened his dest Fitzpatrick, Middlesex ‘county detective who conducted par of the first tomobife wa, was killed in his automobile was struck by an express train at W: State Trooper ‘Daniel ped who in 1922 was stationed at Franklin not far from the scene of the . dropped dead in Jersey City mber, 1928. | if 1 Regan, captain of Engine ie. ath New Brunswick, to eged. Willie Stevens ie a statements on the were found, rs Ago. ares per reporters who ‘on the ee years ago ant Hutches, is les Sw The tonic and laxative effect of Laxative BROMO ae Se Tablets will for- tifythe ny with the state railroad com- | filed | {)) Thomas in the social and econo-) a is | will be forced to! and] ity and the tions containing & resume’t bt important hooks and writers whole world of literature, beginning to the close of the nin White Heart of | Misjave An ncebunt. ofa vacation | off the beaten track. Two Eastern women motor trom Los An | the he they turn the Valley les into he Mojave Desert, where | scinated that they following year to Death | | . Rittenhouse -"The Little Book of. ' Modern British Ver The period that Miss Rittenhouse covers in this j anthology includes the second half | of the last century 1g24.. Two hundred poms, from the works of exactly 100 po beginning with Henly, are in- cluded. “The First World Flight.” Lowell Thomas, writer, lecturer, lorer and war correspondent, lected by the War Department to be the medium through which the six \world flyers would tell their stories, th them, flown with n down from the -cire The ng experienc: scientist In part ces for th foreign showings Mrs. V. J. Laltose, accompanied by rs. Ed Hughes, sang two solos. G. A. Rawlings read a short 2 om“ What Rotary’ Is Not” and Ward told of visits with the clubs of Milwaukee and Dr. Brandes told a Rotary meeting in George Will told of plans for the state corn show to be held in the auditorium November 10, 11, 12 and Be jordon D. Brown, “Ro B Fuller of Fargo, Mrs. Vv. Jd. "laRoses and Mrs. Hughes. Maxine Light Dies ; at Detroit, Mich. Maxine Light, 13-year-old daughter of ne and Mrs. E. H. Light, died m., Wednesday, at Lani cording to word received here by Mr. and Mrs. R. Weide of the MeKenzie hotel, ‘pa nts of Mrs. Light. Mr. and Mrs, Light and their chil- dren left Bismarck about a month ago for Detroit, Mich., to make their No details were contained in ssuge received by Mr. and Mrs. ey juded Foot Specialist DR. CLARA B. WESTPHAL (Chiropodist) Richmond's Bootery Used Auto Parts of all makes and models— Call, Phone or Write Bismarck Auto Parts Phone 154 513 Bdwy. BISMARCK, N. D. and goes down to twenty-nine , ex: | of eight states in yesterdny’s election was | inv lips | Some instances their people ignored ‘of; the questions. the authentic narrat ive of | peal of the state prohibition yee La i his book into three the reader who in outline of the John Doe finds theory of evo- mains the varying jews of evolution. arner—"G: and Couples.” Sketches of family life drawn from the first year of marriage, The titles include Supervised Suicide, Family Laws and By-Laws, Do Not Open Before Christmas, and The Fable of jthe Lost Paper. Gordon D. Brown, School Head, Tellg Rotarians of Trip Gordon D. Brown, of the Bismarck high school fuculty, told the Bis- marck Rotary Club, at its luncheon this noon, of his trip east last sum- ular emphasis on the Sesquicentennial at Philadelphia, He told of various interesting exhibits, ioning the Pennsylvania state ig as the most complete of the and pointing out the stood a for repeal and 24,164) @———. ainst. at hoirh rig league had called qhe Illinois and epnsin referen- dums meaningless and had conceded | their barron hese they had fought repeal of dry I eg ation in Missouri, as had Senator James Reed, who, though a wet, recarded the proposi- ~ ISSUE UP IN’ 8 ELECTIONS! tore hind | Watson, Robinson, Votes on Prohibition - Ques-; Are Expected to Be’ tion in Commonwealths Show | Visitors in Indiana ihe bien Hl Opinion Nov. 3—)—Return ‘ i} to the United’ States senate of both James E. Watson and Arthur R. Rob- inson, Republican incumbents, seem- d assured today as the tabulation of votes cast at yesterday’s election neared completion. eT ough their majorities went up and down with each succeeding compilation, the trend 3 definitely in their favor. Returns from 2,434 out of 8,545 pre- cincts gave Watson a majority of 16,084 over Albert Stump, -Demo- cratic candidate. The figures were: : Watson, 362,870; Stump, 346,786. Robinson ‘in 2,404 precincts had 358,661 to 336,606 nn Democrat, thus givi can a majority of 22, S. W. Brookhart’s Majority Is Still ous forms and the results were equally variegated. How much ‘the results may be regarded as reflecting nopular sentiment vis not witaout dispute, for the drys declare that.in California's question was on thé re. est returns today showed ¢ in precincts of the 8,512 in eh , 104,525 votes were cast to re- pe! the law and 65,746 against it Missouri's referendum was on the, repeal of the state enforcement law. Such returns as were available! today showed a mojority of 100,000 against the proposal. Winois presented a question almost identicyl with that in New York. It wes a proposal to petition cot for modification of the Volstend Act to permit states to make their own definitions of what constitutes an intoxicating beverage. In Illinois in 8,570 precincts out of 6,068, the vote. was 525,983 for the proposal to ‘268, 490 against it. Modification Favored In New York, with some districts unacc6unted for, but with the state generally represented, the vote wa: 1,620,919 in favor of modification an 3,961 against it. ‘olorado’s proposal wa: for law which does not conflict with the fed- eral law and repeal of the stace law as at present. A little less than half of the state reported 64,401, against repealing the present law and 03,642 in favor df it. Nevada’s proposal was on denounc- ing the national prohibition law as a failure and calling a convention to submit amendment to the 18tlr aniend- ment. The results were about 3 to 1 against the prohibition law. Such re- turns as had been reported from Wis-| consin showed a vote of 214,557, in favor of 2.75 per cent beer with 27,- 862 against In some of the cities the ratio ran as high as 5 to 1 for e proposal. Des Moin Nev. jov. Smith W. Brookhart’s majo: y over ‘Claude R. Porter in the Iowa torial contest continued to creep u; ward today with returns coming in lowly from rural precincts. At mid- day the Brookhart majority was 47,- 898. with 1,714 precincts out of the 2,447 heard from. The vote stood, Brookhart (R), 231,270; Porter (D), ao 372; Biekelberg (Com. Land), Manning Retains Dunn 1 County Seat Mandan, Nov. FL —Manning Te- tains the Ce id seat in Dunn county by a mally of 400, unofficial re- turns from the complete list of pre- cincts showed today and Dunn Cen- terites, who waged a hot battle, con- ceded defeat. CITY TO BUILD RIVER Ottawa, ing built a bridge t a cost of $126,000, Ottawa now aa poses to put a river under it. The steel and concrete structure over the) Marais des Cygnes was recently com-| pleted. Now a move hus been start-! ed to make over the river in keeping: with the bridge. Mont 's Vote | In Montana on a straight out pro- posal to repeal the state bone dry law, only 672 Sree to the state’s 1,481 had reported but they Closes Saturday, Nov. 13th . Big Reductions on all Fur Coats Hudson Seal, Marten cuffs and collar (Dyed Skunk). A regular $295 seller, $234.50 at this sale for ..........-..+.+0- Hudson Seal, self trimmed, a $260 coat, marked for I ae coctecicisesnsness: EO for .. Raccoon, genuine Raccoon. A -wonder- ful bargain. . $298.75 for only. ... Marked at ........ Muskrat, with Beaver collar, marked to, oat fo $275. Can be purchased at this sa for . . $2 1 9.50 Another Sealine Coat, $96.50 a $189.50 value, for... ‘ / collar, this coat for ... for this sale ... of Indies’ and misses’ Dresses. Valued up to $ 1 6. 45 $87.50, at ......- trimmed, Wool Jersey Dresses in many Pag $9.45 Going Uy Up in Iowa q $.—UP)—Colone! | Sealine, $160 buy, Northern Seal, 9236 Sport and Dress Coats, fur ——-—_——_@ * Aime Mct McPherson H : | Must Stand Trial o—_— Los Angeles, Calif, Nov. 3— (AP)—Aimee Semple McPherson! was bound over'to the superior court by Municipal Judge Samuel R. Blake here today for trial on charges of criminal conspiracy. Mrs. Minnie Kennedy, mother of the evangelist, and Mrs. Lor- thine Wisemancdlclatf, her chief accuser, charged jointly with McPherson, also were held trial in the higher courts. Man Arrested For Attempted Sui Fargo, N. tempted to kill himself with a rifle! in a local store October 6, was ar-| rested last night by Fargo police on a Heed arrant. He is charged with cheats to end his own’ eee, 5 The Election is over and the Corn Show is on at Richholt’s. 8 experts ever | made for mej {1 all it my Wave and it _keey if as you wish it. Ii you | wish fluffy hair like mine, just comb it backward and stay. Tf you wish waves or curls, usc combs or and the curl ay. If you have a Marcel wave. | iy Wave and Sheen will keep it. Or it keeps hair sleek and smooth for those who — it, without stickiness or grease. It will Selight you. whatever your idea on hair Tt gives a luster, | enhances the color. It keeps the hair | in any style you tike. Al fet counters now supply Edna Wallace Hopper’s Wave and” Sheen | under tee. “The price is 75c. You will never go without it w sec what it means to your hair. $98.50 Fiteh trimmed cuffs and. $162.50 ara ‘ Northern Seal, Squirrel. cuffe lar, priced. to seii for $219 and _g| marked $164 $16.45 Others at i! busy. in Higher Court | ace ea | | with oil of m | ‘ide maine Nov. Jov, 8—#)—Lawrence a ata 3 O’Brien, 40, of Vergas, Minn., who at- {Cit may | i a Rew-type hair dress. | | and blistered. ‘WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1926 PPP canines 2a the athena te in Vinton. He was toting two heavy Je—Unele Jame-| suitcases in which he carries his Kennedy, 81, veteran of the Civil store of “corn medicine.” War, twice wounded in action, is still Kennedy -was in Cedar Rapids recently on his way from his home OOOO SS | Grandmother Knew thing so good for conges- ton ‘and colds ed mustard. But the ‘old-fashioned mustard plaster burned He Who Is Selling nile may other kind of lig- y see Tee Lon ai Ss ieee Does He Know? Our customers in Bis- marck that IN- DIAN HEAD is che dry- est, hottest, longest- burning lignite on he market. They Ought to Know. Sold Exelusively By ST. HILAIRE LUMBER COMPANY Phone 17 Muste: that the pla: ter It is a cle lief and hel Leted gives the, the rel po Sage ‘ nhoat without, She blister. white ointment, made ard. Gently ru rub it in. See how uickly the pain disappears. ‘Try Musterole for sore throat, bron- chitis, tonsillitis, croup, stiff neck, eed neuralg’ err conges- pleuris; ism, lumbago, and aches of the back or joints, sore muscles, bruises, chil- rosted feet, colds of the chest prevent pneumonia), —adv. dere & Tubes The gift that carries the true sentiment of Christ- mas—your portrait. Make an appointment to. day and avoid the holi- day rush, Money can’t buy a gift mother would appreciate more than your photo- ~ graph. . We make a special offer on Christmas orders up to Noy. 20th. You will find it worth It’s not too early to think of sitting for your Christmas por- traits. Make the ap- pointment today. while. Slorby Studio. BISMARCK, N. D. The Butler Studio Webb Block SPECIAL This Week Only ‘ 30x31, Clin. .......$ 7.75 30x32 Cord ...... 8.10 29x4.40 Balloon... 14.25 “Quality Merchandise at - Mail Ordér House Prices” Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. Buick Automodiles—K. elly Tires THANKSGIVING TURKEYS WARNING! =" Every year the farmers of the northwest lose thousands of dollars by selling their im- mature turkeys on the Thanksgiving mar- ket. Don’t make this mistake this year! Turkeys will grow more repidly during the next few weeks. Smiling | You Wilf Make Money Dressirz Only Your Oid Fat Birds . Young hen turx weighing. tbe, and over, Young tom turx weighing 12 lbs. and over Market Them from Nov. 1 to 12 Get Our Prices Before You Sell ‘ z ' Remember 1 Fay

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