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PAGEEIGHT COLLEGE YOUTH! CAUSES RAID ON ALY. NIGHT CLUB : Texas Guinan, Widely Known Night Club Host Spends Night in Jail (P)-~A wei a grudge New York, Fel college youth w New York's ¢ a prohibition three Hundred Clu West pate known nigh t for the wee small hours. This college youth, federal agents furious at having been fleeced 7,000 in one of the night clubs went to Washington, obtained siti ss a prohibition agent has been spending his own mon getting evidence against high class night club fhe agents refu ed to reveal his agents, had been gue: night clubs. The part have been in the Three Hundred Club at the time for the raid and to have tipped off the raiding } y Eighteen agents, including the four women, descended on the club short- ly after 2 o'clock threw the room full of fashionably attired guests into consternation, seized a small quanti- ty of alleged liquor and carted Texas and four male assistants to the » precinct police station in a patrol. “Bill is Refused Bail was refused when Captain John W. Inglesby, of the prohibition forces, explained to the police mag- istrate that in addition to being charged with illegal sale and posses- sion of liquor iss Guinan was charged with violation of a personal injunction which he asserted car ried a jail sentence upon conviction. Bail, he said, only could be taken by the federal judge who had signed the original injunction. “How sweet,” said Texas, when | she learned she would have to spend | the night in the po station. “What a thrill! Texas Guinan go- ing to jai | Miss Guinan, who gave her age to! the desk sergeant as 36, took her arrest in good humor and entertained | the hundred or more persons who | followed her to jail with impromptu | selections from popular songs. BILLS KILLED RETURN UNDER | CHANGED NAME Several Measures Already De-| feated Reappear in House in Different Form ne y last} proposed leg’ In many ¢ killed in some for! in the session but th advocates in- | troduced them again in the hope of | receiving more favorable considera- tion than was experienced on the first attempt. That procedure has proved success- ful once already this session, a billl relating to the publication of insur-! ance notices having been killed failure to receive the two-thirds vote necessary to amend an initiated mea- sure. Proponents of the idea found, how- ever, that they could attain their end by amending another section of the law which a majority could change and did so. ital Punishment Up Again The capital punishment bill, already beaten in the senate, appeared in the house sponsored by C. F. Streich, Bot tineau count uy L, county, and Carl Johnson, county. It is one of the shortest introduced at this session, providing very person convicted ot the first degree shall suf- fer death or be imprisoned fn the penitentiary for life.” | ‘An echo of #1 unsuccessful attempt to induce the state to repair the Hillsboro armory is the bill provid- ing for deed of the building to the, “ of Hillsboro. L corollary of the bill to legalize| the sale of snuff is the measure in- troduced by Streich and L. L. Twichell, Cass county, prohibiting the giving away of snuff for advertising Purposes or its sale to the young.| The act carefully excludes “ordinary plu longcut or fine-cut chewing to- been| earlier en, pp. Twichell has introduced a bill providing for submission to a vote of | the people of a proposal to permit| the state board of equalization to| assess the value of electric power dis- | tributing lines throughout the state. | It already assesses the property ot | similar public service corporations | doing business in more than one tax- ing district. A bill intended to grant the board! of equalization such power was de- feated after the attorney general had, ees that it would be unconstitution- | Aftermath of Dog Tax | An aftermath of the bill by E. E.; Veitch, Grand Forks county, provid- ing for a tax on dogs, the money; taised thereby to be used in paying ae How Children Quickly | Gain Robust Health the growth of teeth an mes, cod liver oil is the one medi- nothing helps like it. repulsive and app: have grown strong Adams county, specifying t of dogs liable ior the done by their canines, The bill was defeuted in the hous hot argument, The Brown vides that owners of such do; lly run in packs, may be sued da joint verdict and judg t them a session before it finally was killed. It first was sent to the agricditure nittee which voted against it but made Veiteh had it re-referred to the com- tock where he hoped the report could be mittee on hiv it would receive —bett disappointed treatment. » but done to death on the when the i A bill by T. EB. ty, requires. th school tuit ents live Sleight, McHenry county to pay n for children whose par- county poor farms, A previous bill had sought to make tne! they had been tuition for children whose on any land owned by thc but it defeated county pay nts liv STATE AID FUND PROBE DROPPED BY COMMITTEE Ployhar Presents Attorney General’s Ruling and Fig- ures to Support Charge A concurrent resolution providing | for an investigation of “an uncovered | deficit” in the state aid fund of the} department of public instruction amounting to $226,000, as reported} on floor of the senate by Senator Frank E, Ployhar, Barnes county, was killed by the committee on and| means late Wednesday. | Ployhur appeared before the com- mittee with an oninion from Attorney General George Shafer to support his statements. “Ever since 1917 the ap-| propriations r state aid to! rural graded and consolidated schools | have been one year behind, In 1923 |the same condition occurred in the| aid for high schools, and this prac- tice has put the state aid for high| schools one year behind,” Shafer's, opinion read. Senator John V. Benson, Rolette; county, a member of the committee, | said he believed that the department not behind in its state aid fund! propriations, despite the attorney neral’s opinion. Ployhar also submitted an itemized account of the expenditures of John E. Bjorlie, Bismarck, then state high school inspector, in’ traveling about the state during the months of June, July, part of August and October, 1926, in referring to his previous statements that about $5,000 of the department's funds had been spent for “political purposes.” Bjorlie penses for the period totaled $468. Bjorlie was candidate for state su- perintendent of public instruction at the last election. | Ployhar pointed out that the; schools were closed during June, July and August. Senator J. F. Fleckten, Ward coun- 'y, who introduced the measure, and| who is also a member of the ways and | means committee, explained that he had done so merely in order to obtain figures on Ployhar's statements, con- tending that Ployhar had not xiven| any previous explanations. No minority report will be made! when the committee reports to the, senate, College Student Fears Reprimand and Takes Poison Feb, 17,. ()—An- added today to the students who have : their own hands. F victim is ar-old Elmira college n Tuxedo died within an hour. Betty Wales Chiffon Hose! at $1.75, and the service! weight at $1.95.—Bismarck | Cloak Shop: | ORNS Ends pain atonce No waiting—one minute after you apply Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads the pain is gone. After the corm is healed it never comes back. If new shoes irri- tate the spot again, a Zino-pad fizes it overnight. Old methods of paring corns, or using caustic acids, are dangerous. Dr, Scholl's Zino-pads are safe, antisep- tic, protective, healing. They stop the — rubbing and pressing of a % h At all di ist’s and shoe dealer’ shoes. At all dr Gost but e trifle. “a Dt Scholl: Zino- dl Put one onthe’ pain is gone! In What Month Is Your Birthday? On Hoskins-Meyer Home of K-F-Y-B bill had one the} split on the measure and floor majority report was accept- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ‘Burleigh County Bar Associa- tion Has Special Session in His Honor In pioneer a week a memory of Geo. W. Newton,| marck attorney who died/ o, members of the Burleigh ar association held special os the court room Monday fternoot District Judge Fred Jan- sonius was on the bench during the | meeting, and S. L, Nuchols, president of the bar tion, presided. After th solutions committee had presented a set of resolutions and doptell by the associa- tion, busin ‘tners and associates eulogized Mr. Newton, telling of his dilig 1s an attorney, his integrity and his high standing the com- muni! Brief addresses were given by G. F. Dullam and C. L. Young, partners of Mr. Newton in the law firm of Newton, Dullam and Young; Alfred Zuger, F McCurdy, H. F. O'Hare and W. L. Smith. Judge Jan- \sonius also spoke briefly, and ad- journed court for the balance of the day, out of respect to the departed| barrister. The Resolutions The resolutions, drawn committee composed of George M. Register, F. E. McCurdy and J. A. Hyland, were as follows: “Whereas, Almighty God in His! | infinite wisdom has reoently removed | from our midst our esteemed friend and fellow lawyer, Honorable Geo.) W. Newton, of Bismarck, North Dako- | ta, and “Whereas, he was the oldest mem- ber of the Burleigh County, North Dakota, bar and perhaps of the whole bar of the State of North Dakota, being about ninety years of age at the time of his death, and ereas, he was a most kindly man of wide human sympathy and understanding as was evidenced par- ticularly in his demeanor toward and is helpfulness to young lawyers in first cases in court, and “Whereas, during the many years he made his home among us he lived a most exemplary life, and his repu- tation for integrity and ability was up by (a bereavement, that t rded upon the records of this court, and tnat a copy thereof be pub- lished in the papers of Bismarck, and copy of this testimonial be sent to euch one of the sons and brothers of said decease Death Separate 84-year-old Couple, Former Mandanite =a ews cagers having a poor eye when comes to locating the clusive hoop. Linton has won practically Reported Dying in veloped a reputation for r nh all games in its territory and has de- 1 speed. | ¥ city, Were separated by only for five days. Hehm died Friday. erday. da placed flowe Mr. and Mrs. same age. sume month, 84 years ago, children survive, Buck Olson Wins 2 Out of 3 Falls last Friday. Crookston, Minn., Buck Olson Jack last night. minutes. ‘Lifer’ Ends His Hunger Strike and But Only For 5 Days| Chippewa Falls, Wis. Feb, 17.—W) -Married more than 60 years, part- ners since they were children togeth- er in Germany, Mr. and Mrs. William Behm, for 35 years residents of this death—but| ated Press dispatches from the lowa| His widow died She will be buried Fri- beside the new grave where she Bohm were of the} jj They were born in the Three From Jack Sampson Feb. 17.—)— of Crookston defeated Sampson, Chicago, two out of three falls in u wresting mateh here Sampson took the first fall in 13 minutes but Olson came back to win the second fall in 23 minutes, and the third fall in six Decides to Appeal * Des Moines, Iowa Little hope was held today for the recovery of Charles Miller, a former railroad man of Mandan, who re- ceived wounds when he is alleged to have robbed a cafe at Des Moines, Towa, Tuesday, according to Associ- city. | In a gun fight with E. C. Brad- shaw, cafe manager, Miller was shot after he took $17.40 from a cash reg-| ister, according to Des Moines po- ice, Miller came into the cafe, chatted a while and then handed his gun to thoritices. When Bradshaw returned the gun Miller ordered him to “sit tight” while he rifled the cash reg- ister. Bradshaw declared he opened fire on Miller and férced him to flee. Miller drove off in an automobile and shortly thereafter was found by police lying in a street with bullet wounds in his back and foot. Heavy Workout Is Held For Cagers Back to heavy work-outs in prep- aration for the Mandan-Linten game Friday night and the Mandon-James- mage practice involving the entire Brave squad was:held last night. The period of rest given the men has restored them to their former sneed and fight and both games eral Bradshaw, the cafe manager told wu. | tot be made until Ross Hartwich, E. The “B" squad will make tl the Emmons county town. with sev- t first string men also tively slated to accompany them. |Dr. Coe Funeral Will Be Held Next Monday or Tuesday Funeral, services for Dr. Waldo the While Dr. Co Services for G. A. acti of ball, who died yesterdey at will’ be held tomorrow at 1 p. m. at Christ Episcopal church. Rev. F. H. Davenport will officiate town game Saturday night, a scrim-|and interment wil cemetery, Pallbearers will probably be a bronze statue is home, be in the local be Jack Oberg, . A. Horrobin, Ver- non Peters, Roy Kennelly and “A. L. Marviek, trip to tenta- Ce ho died T aye ae Loe, who died Tuesda: Glendale, Calif., will Ye held at Portland, Ore., Monday or Tuesday. Definite arrangements will arrival at Coe Friday. h body is en route to his home city one of his finest gifts to Portland, of George Washington, is on the way from Philadelphia where it was ex- hibited at the sesquicentennial expo- sition prior to erection in Portland. Services Tomorrow For Cannon Ball Man Portland, Maine, Feb, 27.—U#). cup of warm milk simultaneously end. ed the five-day hunger strike of Ben- his irresolution about an from the life sentence imposed on last Frtday for the slaying of James D. Hallen. Turner drank the milk last night and decided to appeal. Later he took some broth and an orange. unquestioned, and “Whereas, he was possessed of great pride in his profession of the law, and was very diligent in his la- bors as a lawyer and officer of this court, and as such his conduct was at all times honorable, courteous and just, and : “Whereas, such was his pride in his profession and such was his be- lief that every man needing same was entitled to the services of a lawyer, that no matter how poor a prospective client, if his cause was meritorious, the active sympathy and legal help of Mr. Newton was assured, nd “Whereas, he lived in himself his | ideal that a lawyer should be a per-| son of the highest integrity and learning, and | “Whereas, his greatest monument was his life, “Nov therefore, be it resolved, that we, the members of the Burleigh County, North Dakota, Bar associa-| tion, express our heartfelt sympathy to the relatives of Mr. Newton for DIAMONDS te $25, $60, $75, $100, and up Cash or terms Mail orders filled JAMES W. MAREK . So. of Prince Hotel ‘ N. Dak. H. B. LOVE D.C. PH. C. Doctor of Chiropractic. EXAMINATION FREE. Fitinge Bldg. * Phone 176 Magnificent Canadian Pacific tase and Cabin‘ Class From Montreal and Quebec the beautiful St. Lawrence— only 4 days open sea. Secure 1927 summersailinglist at once. Always carry Canadian Pacific. Express Companys Travellers’ Cheques, negotiableeverywhere. Full inform: ete dates and vations from local steamship agente oF 3 H. M. TAIT 611 2nd Avenue South Minneapolis, Minn. The MoR Beaut in Cheorolet Hiftory! Come in and see these strikingly beautiful models CHEVROLET COMPANY A CHEVROLET A DAY Shop Service That Satisfies CAPITAL Broadway at Second St. BISMARCK, NORTH DAKOTA Chevrolet TheCosch . $595 The Coupe + 9625 The Sedan + 9695 The Landaa. $745 Dykes, $525 Ti teor A $715 Ton Truck » $495 ‘Guess One) cy ‘on oo * 98 Belloon standard ‘on all moasls- ‘ait peices f.0-b, Flint, Miah Phone 432 QUALITYMATSLOW Cost Should be hard-fought showings are any. indication. Jamestown has a team which: is jamin H. Turner, of Mystic, Iowa, and | strong een basket shooting, the majority of the jim if present oa 18 IMPROVING E. G. Collis, who recent}; went an operation at a Bi hospital, is now greatly improved, on defense but weak on Yt i \ ne under- ismarck ‘THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1927 | Personal ‘and | ||| Social News of | | Mandan Vicinity | it] RETURNS FROM MINNESOTA Jack Bierling has returned from Litchfield, Minn., where he has been visiting relatives for several weeks. During his absence he underwent an operation for appendictis and later contracted scarlet fever and rheuma- tism. Although he is now much im- proved he will be unable to return to his position with the Mandan Cream- ery company for several days. ENTERTAIN FOR MRS, KELSCH Mrs. C. F. Kelsch was honor guest Tuesday evening at a 6 o'clock din- ner given by Mrs. Oscar Morck and Mrs. F. G, Tharp at the Morek home. Four tables of bridge were in play, Mrs, J. A. Kasper and Mrs. A. R. Weinhandi winning honors. ‘The honor guest was presented with a basket of preserves. Valentine dee- orations were used HOMEMAKERS CLUB TO MEET The Mandan Homemakers’ club will meet Saturday ‘afternoon in the Chamber of Commerce rooms with Mrs. John son and Mrs. Gus Macklem in charge of the meeting. Mrs. Williams Borden will give a fon on “Standard Breeds of Poul- ry.” ' SURPRISE PARTY Misses Betty and Eva Boehm were honor guests at a surorise party given Tuesday evening by a number of friends. iss Betty Boehm left Wednesday for Glendive where she will spend the remainder of the win- ter. NIGHT HAWKS TO DANCE The Night Hawks club will enter- tain Friday evening at the Knights of Pythias hall with a dancing party. BIRTHDAY PARTY The tenth birthday party of Miss Muriel Brazda was celebrated Tues- day afternoon at her home when 14 S. Brazda, mother of Miss Brazda, six o'clock supper was served. B. P, W. CLUB SPONSORS DANCE The Business snd Professional Women's elab of Mandan will spon- dance to be given Friday eve- ning at the Elks hall. The North Dakota Commodore orchestra will furnish music for the dancing. INJURED IN FALL Mrs. C. A, Hasicias is a patient at a Bismarck hosptial suffering with a fractured shoulder received several days ago in a fall, Mrs. Haskins is in charge of the Bismarck Delicates- sen, girl friends word ‘entertained by Mrs. A PARENTS OF SON. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Ehlis, resid- ing northwest of the city, are the parents of a son born Wednesday. MARRIAGE LICENSE ISSUED A marriage license has been issued to. Christ Metzger, Jr, and Miss Helen Miller, both of Hebron. ENTERS HOSPITAL is Miss Minnie Kreter of Mandan is receiving treatment at the Mandan Deaconess hospital. IF TOO FAT DO THIS NOW Try the method which combats the cause—the modern, scientific method, No abnormal exercise or dict is re- wired. Try Marmola ription ‘ablets. They have been used for 19 years. You see the sesults in slender figures wherever you look today. So many have proved them that the de- mand has grown to very large propor- tions. Watch the fat disappear, watch your vigor increase. You will be de- gt . 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