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MONDAY, JULY 11, 1997 FOUR ENTERED IN BIG CONTEST Three Bismarck Girls, One From Mandan,Take Part in ‘Best, Girl’ Competition Three Bismarck girls and one from Mandan are all excited these days. They are, entered in the Mary Pick. ford “Best Gir!” contest sponsored by | the Minneapolis Tribune, and the | prize is a trip to Hollywood to visit the famous actress, | Is entered are Hildor Simonson, iploye of the state highway de- wartment; Eileen Doerner, an em- \-oye of the motor vehicle depart ment; Marjorie Smith, of the Parisian Beauty Shoppe, and Alfreda Guesner, employe of the First National Bank of Mandan. Two other girls from - North Dakota are entered in the con- j They are Génevieve Helen hard of Grand Forks, and Rae 3 pod of Fargo. Ww from the Northwest are osen' to make the trip. One| will be from Minneapolis and the! ther from outside of the Mill City. entering must be working girls.) of the Tribune contains a/ wd for so many votes, and/ proponents of the’ different didates are keeping hawk-like eyes! out for any copies with bailots in them, SAPIRO READY TO DROP SUIT | AGAINST FORD Says Retraction Has Fulfilled: Purpcse—May End Liti- gation Today oe: July11.-(P)—Aaron Sa- t an accident of destiny i the vindication of the Jewish people, he described himself—is complete- ied with Henry Ford’s pub- hed apology for what Ford’s Dear- * Independent has =e ubout the Sideshow on the Atlantic City Boardwalk stacle not every visitor to At on the beardwalk. Three persons flames’ toll. BYRD RESTED AFTER SLEEP Real Night’s Rest Clears! Away Effect of Too En- thusiastic Hospitality Rouen, France, July 11. mander ' Richard E. Byrd was. it usual cheerful self this morning. A al night's rest at the quiet. vil- of his Annapolis classmate, B. B. rd, at the exclusive scaside} ort of Cobourg, did much to ¢ io satisfied is he, in fact, that he id returning home from st night that he believed his million dollar libel suit against “Mr. Ford and the Dearborn Independ- ent would be settled out of court— possibly. today, | “The retraction, apology, and re-| cantation have fulfilled the purposes gf the suit, so far as the matn Inten- tion is concerned,” he said. ve no desire to cause embarrassment, what- soever, and I mean that to apply from all standpoints.” Mr. iro, a activity in agricultural econ- manana cooperatives drew the edi- torial fires which kindled the libel suit, said that negotiations for an out-of-coyrt settlement have been conducted “over the heads.” of Mr. conducted “over the heads” of Mr. Ford’s counsel. MAN ARRESTED IN NEW YORK’S MURDER PROBE! (Continued from page one) Fingers Found in Sewer Further search in the cellar fail- ed to reveal missing portions of the two bodies. gBut detectives, using picks and shovels. excavated part of the sewer and in a pipe near a manhole 60 feet from the house found four left hand_ fingers ‘and a woman’s right hand. In a trap a few feet away they discovered pieces of flesh and bone. Kept under constant grilling, Lee told of how Miss Brownell proposed marriage to him. The proposal occurred May 16, Lee told detec- tives. “You don’t mean that you pro- posed to her,” they asked. “No,” replied. | “I mean that she proposed to me.” “What did you “ay” “T said, ‘Yes, I'll marry you,’” Lee said he told the aged spinster. Gave Him. Money Lee said that several months ago Miss Brownell eave $800 with which he started a cree in Brooklyn. This Cater proved a failure, he said. The last time she gave him money, he said, was on July 4, when she handed him $15. That Was about 9 o'clock in the evening, he said, and he never saw her after that. He told of know- ing her for four years. Detectives said that when it came to details of why he did not marry Chicago lawyer \, Miss Brownell after her alleged proposal became vague, saying that things “just drifted along.” Marie Kryl Will - Not Mary Count Chicago, July 11.—44)}-—Marie Kyr!, who has only to remain single until she is 30’ ykars old to ‘win $100,000 from her father, Bohumir-Kyrl, ‘the master, has ended a romance, says the Herald and Eaxminer, that th¥eatened to forfeit the promised fortune. Miss Kyrl, herself a pianist of dis- tiaction, ‘announced several months zo that she planned to be married 0 Count Spiro Hadji-Kyriacos, a “Greek scholar. But dispatches front Lexington, Ky. where'l her father is conducting, indleated Miss Kyri had changed het “I won't a u about whether I'll marty aN ene next five years,” she We wai ine. “hut it won't be tl n-I marry will be an America: The count is now on his way to this country from Europe. Miss Kyrl’s shen, Josehpirie, had| bY the same kind of no-marriage-until- agreement with her father. She ¥ released from her promi in |, however; to be married to Paul @ composer, y the effects of too enthus Krench prov! hospitaiity day night, at Le Touquet, w less for Byrd, from ptomaine po: ing. His three comp . Bort George Noville and Bernt Balchen, spared the ordeal of speechmaking which fell to Commander Byrd as! sleep- fering! leader of the expedition, showed no; ill effects from the long series of banquet: Byrd was received by the Prince of Wales yesterday and they had a friendly chat, The pri interested in the projected ai pedition to the south pole and asked a number of questions. After a farewell visit today to Ver- Sur-Mer, where the monoplane Amer- ica fell into the sea on flight] from New York, the aviators will go} to Cherbourg, where they will em- bark on the Leviathan tomorrow. | EXTRADITION OF HAVELOCK IS DELAYED (Continued from page one) nor Sorlie set forth that, Havelock pleaded gulity to embezzlment $2,500 from — the company of Minot, N. D., while act- ing as a collector, was sentenced to serve four years in the penitentiary on May 8, 1924, and the sentence suspended. On June 15, 1927, the board of pardons revoked the’ sus- pended sentence on complaint that had been violated. Affi- ned’ by D. E. Mair and L. J. Palda, Jr., are cited as claiming t the violation of parole in that prom- |. ises to repay the money have not been fulfilled. Havelock, according to friends and his attorney, has been making regular reports and has ful- filled provisions of the parole and suspended sentence, MINISTER IS SHOT DOWN BY 3 ASSAILANTS (Continued from page one) O’Higgins, who was a nephew of Governor ‘Healy, was 31 ycars of age. He had a clearly. defined an- tagonism toward the Republicans since the Free State was organized and his political speeches were sharp denunciations of the Valera party. Consequently he had made enemies and for this reason was peovined with police protecticn. Body Lies in State The body of O'Higgins lay in state today in the mansion house. De After a mass in St. Andrews church |’ Wednesday, there will be a public funeral. Burial will take place in Glasnevin cemetery, where many leading figures in Irish history are buried. Several arrests were reported to have been made today growing out of the assassination, but no indica- tion has been made that the actual persons implicated in the crime have been found. An official account of Mr. O’Hig- gins’ assassination. says that five men were engaged in it, two of whom acted as scouts. All are be- lieved to have been between the ages‘ of 20 and 35. The account says that one of the men signalled to the others when he saw Mr. O’Higgins ap- proaching and that thereupon the men opened fire. Descriptions of -|the men have been obtained. The official account further states that a stolen automobile. which is supposed to have been used the assassins, was found aban- doned at Milltown. The Byrd flight turned out to be news after all—a transatlantic flight that ended as a Channel swim. “yur crate Here y Acosta, | lantic Ci injared, you ees Was the recent fire y made homeless and ee firemen in action at the NEXT CONGRESS MUST ACT, SAYS | L. J. DICKINSO (Continued from page one) aged and protected to the discri ination of our farmers. Pa | without any real effort to perform is unpardonable. No political can endure with such a record. “Forty million ‘watching the result of this confer fence. The drift of the politic: ‘alignment here will be heralded ithe political drift of the time !What will farmers of this conference e M Pe ieee Declaring the farmers’ hope in the future is to maintain economic j equality through legislation, Mr.| Dickinson said the purpose of pro- posed ‘farm relief measures is not} {to-fix prices, but to stabilize them’ on a higher ‘le py year is essential to farm prosper- »” he continued. “A producers’ pr ive during the selling season and} a speculative price after ducer has’ parted with his modity only emphasizes the n com-!| ce kind.” A federal farm board must be in- jcluded in any satisfactory farm aid; legislation, he said, but instead of specifying commodities to come un-| der the bill, the board should be given “the opportunity to put it in operation on any food commodity that came within the scope of its; provisions.” Equalization Fee Necessary “An equalization fee will be ne essary unless the public treasury to absorb the loss,” he said. say there will be no loss is wrong.) The producers of the commodity! are willing to absorb the loss if iven a stabilized price. “The equalization fee is a neces-, sary cog in this machinery to make the law effective; and cannot be supplanted by loans on casy terms lor cooperative propaganda.” |, Relief cannot be achieved by a jbalanced production pr. by diver- {s fication, said Mr. Dickinson. “The ; weather conditions and the human element, not the number of acres, determine the amount of the crop. “The remedy of diversification simply shifts the burden from one commodity to another. When the wheat farmer of the northwest diversified, the wheat situation was helped, but when he planted e¢orn, | he immediately added to the prob- \lems of the corn farmers of Towa and Illinois.” Congressman Haugeh said the purpose of the McNary-Haugen bill “was merely to make the tariff effective” to the farmers, to en- |force to agriculture the principle of protection and restricted immi-! gration already established, applied to products of general in- dustry.” a aa = | NEWS BRIEFS | —_—_ Internal revenue; bureau: announces income tax collections 'of §2,219,931,- 014 for past fiscal year, representing inerease of $245,726,873 over. preced- ing twelve months; collections from all sources total $2,865,695,509, an in- crease of $29,695,617. Paul—Postponement of proe St. Paul-Seattle-Tokyo flight, scheduled for September 1, until announcea vy Le W. airman of board of directors of Great Northern failroad, who was revealed as one of chief backers of flight. Twenty-five persons. arrested iy Leningrad in connection with re- ported discovery of large spying or- ganization, alleged to be dirogted by British’ secret service agent.“ Senator Peul Dupuy, one of’ fore- most. politicans and journalists of} France, dies in Paris ater short ill- ness. Woman at Florence, Alk., reveal she was flogged by eight men in Ku Klux Kian regalia because she would not disclose taken on le near Bessemet, whip: with lash by five hood re masked men. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE genial thistle, Bobby, he warmed up and the two were soon chatting away like veteran campaigners its Sn i | “Armour has powerfully strong jarms and wrists despite the handi- |eap of shrapnel wounds,” the two jagreed. “He has that original grip iwhich combines to put an ungodly j effe tive ‘snap’ in his shots. j “And on the putting green, up Bobby, “his methods a jand his touch excellent, when he is ; anywhere near his-form. He stands jwith his heels no more than four or ifive inches apart and putts with the ball about midway between his two feet. He bends well over at the |waist but there is no drooping, or nly bending of the knee such the putting postures of spoke sound Cooper's Stylo | Hagen quoted Cooper as‘ an ‘ex- jample to bring out the differences jin type. “Harry, now, is a real |free-swinger. On ‘a full shot he slings the club back to where the! hend is hardly more than a foot) from the ground at times. As is the case with Perteoly. all who wield such full wallop, he gets distance in plenty but when his timing is even the least bit off the beat he is like- ly to be visiting the rough and other fair This ought to spike a few dis- gruntled mutterings about Armour and his getting a lucky break at Oakmount. Many claimed the best entrants had “gone sour” at the op- portune time ‘tor Armour to plug through. are two veterans introducing dence that the Armour game as sound as Man o° War and that ylist_ of the first rank” is a bou- quet for nobody's garbage can either, which laid waste a bleck bordering} » a heavy monetary loss were the » height of the blaze. x eet d { Pennant Progress - MERICAN | ‘sac TATION pledges without performance and! ‘Score 9 to 7 “An even price throughout the} the pro-; sity for legislative control of some | To Ir ————$——@ | Ad Additional $ Sports Sports | GLEN ULLING BEATS LOCALS Win in Last Yin- nings, After Score Is Knot- ted at All five be the answer of the} cal nine | the wallops | 4 time when they meant runs. | The lodge team started scoring in Vee first, after’ Elness singled, stole and came home on; Glen Thin gathered ¢ runs at their ting two walks }the fourth, the locals gathered four »| hits for three runs and again scored jin the fifth to tie the score at five tall. In the sixth, Glen Ullin score {two more runs by getting two hits’ error, In the eighth and ninth » the’ lodge tw had two men on bases and a hit meant’ two j rans, but it always resulted in a popped fly. t Sund meet Moffit jof the A. 0. UL A. uthit Glen Ulin, at fon a | innin, t Fort Lincoln as part W- picnic. oO. UL W. s ABR 5 H PO 1 1 ‘aie ss | Kelley, «| 3, Bb. driekson, . Hummel, If i a Seceseremne Totals .... 2 *Went in for Hansen in fifth. | xBatted for A. Hummel in ninth. Glen Ullin AB RH POA i ! Tae | Ployhart, J. Geek, 3b Ruete: * Armstrong, Wallery, 2b Isack, Ib. Pp Verduin, rf. Totals 2 WELL KN KNOWN PROS ANALYZE Hagen and Cruickshank Term New Open Champion Styl- ist of First Rank (BY JIMMY .PQWERS) New York, July 11—(NEA)—Tom Armour, the gent who will peram: bulate around the country this com- ie I year ‘wearing the title of the nited § is a stylist of the first rank. He is a notable exponent. of wh' is known as the hip shift as coné trasted with a more rounded Hier: As a long iron player he h superior. He bas an original ‘crip, ja’ style of ‘grasping’ the ‘club arith ‘both hands well on top of the shaft jfor bis iron shots. This enables him to put g sharp snap or punch in [the stroke Melding great distance ‘1 the shot without th rificing anything in the way of di- {Teenae due to exaggerated body’ effo Hagen Says So. - Where do T get that aut? From none other than Waker Hagen, the old maestro of the mashie, arid wee: Bobbie Cruickshank, the’ canny Scot diagnosing a man’s game than ¢ next one. Hagen and Cryickshank were bes ing to this writer én route to #) eastern open. A great opportu: thought we, to ee the ele plot ae new. champion, aig” ot, been eae he his f weactat to the press ‘since he hoo! up at so many centimes'a word bat under the kindly influence of the “9 -onpes + ene Toledo Milwaukee . Kansas City Minneapolis St. Paul... Indinnoplis St. Louis 6, ee Brooklyn Philadelphi Chicago 1; Brook! New York 5, 3; Chicago at (Bapton. St. Loui: St. Louis ... New York |. Sherdel and 0 Barnes and Taylor, Second Game R St. Louis . New York McGraw and Clarkson and ‘Faylor. Chicago Brooklyn .. Rush and Hu artnet; and Hargreaves Others not scheduled, AMERICAN oie St. Louis . Philadelphia Walber; ngard a Washington Cleveland (Tin Lisenbee, Burke, ton and Burger, Smith, Grant and L New York Detroit Pennoc er Grabowski; win as Cincinnati al Results Sunday St Louis 0, 7. Others not ‘scheduled, Games Te Teday Philadelphia. Others not ‘icheduled. —_— | Yesterday’s Games | NATIQNAL LEAGUE ret Game Schulte; Tage; Levsen, Shute, | a a ere een ene EE EE ees Work & 5.1. yn 0. H 1 5 9 0 rell, Schulte; Devormer. 0 E Z 2 Grimes, } 1 Lif + 3 Plite, Erhardt Grove,| ne; ‘Crowder, | id O'Neil. Marberry, Brax-| Sewell. R H ee nae C) 6 9 0 Thomas and and Woodall, lin the first Tincu; berry, and M Mullen; D Peal, Shealy and WESTERN LEAGUS Wichita 4-6; Oklahoma City 1-1. Omaha 6-1; Linco!n 6-1, (called 8th catch train). Des. Moines 1-2; Denver 4-8. Tulsa 6; Amarillo 4. STARS DEFEAT | TURTLE LAKE; SCORE, 11 T0 ) Spring ‘Big Seine of Sea- son—Kelly, Bready, Snyder Star Betaers TONY IS VE RSATILE; FITS ANYWHERE His! Ambition Is. to Play Every Pesition om Diamond in Same Game LLY EVANS) july 11.—The most ver- player in the major leagues. : That is a new honor’ to which I nominate Tony- Lazzeri of the New York Americans. Within one week I have seen Laz- zeri shift from second to third, then short, and play all three positions with remarkable brilliancy, te Tony, by the way, has one ambi- tion, which I am inclined to think Manager Miller Huggins of the Yan- |kees will gratify betore the close of he season—he wants to pla: position on the diamond in the game. Maybe Can't Cateh Lazzeri has his doubts as to one position only and it isn’t that of | pitcher, as, many probakly have al- ready surmised. It ix the other end of the battery, the catcher. Not since his kid days has Tony donned # mask but he feels capable |of turning the trick, since an inning will suffice. In recent years he has j | Played ever position in the infield aS ee also taken a whirl ot the out- ield. (BY New York, satile ball \AN Stars sprung “the of the season Sunday afternoon when they hammered their way to an 11 to 2 victory over the fast Turtle Lake team on the home diamond. With the All Stars living up te F name, three of the players we ne. F, Bready, | prison shortstop, arte io chances after misjudging a highfly and redeemed | himself for h y in the first. Kelly The sixth all when he performed a i Kelly | on . tim, i had the fia tite When Lazzeri came to the Yankees it was us a shortstop, At the same two fouls. The miraculous feat was |T0kie for the same position in -the mpleted when Kelly slipped the | Person of Mark Koenig. He had re- next one by, making it a total of 11 pitched balls and three strikeouts. In turn at bat. the Stars almost batted around. McCrill clouted a home run with one on the path, but the Lakers retired the side without ported the previous fall and thus. had a month's start on Lazzeri as a bix leaguer and the job of ghartstop. In spring training Manager Hug- gins decided that shortstop was the only place in the infield for which . the lodge team witt| ( ‘ARMOUR’S GAME “and | tates open golf champion, danger of sac- |} —two wise noodles better capable of Cojumbus Loinsy ile Boston Chicago sre heeane, 1 Lundgren, Russell, Sommers and Hoftmun; Hartley; ‘Phomas and Me- | Curdy. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION First Game Columbus 1 Results Minneapolis 8, 23 (second game seven tnflugey-6:u‘elock law) St. Toledo oe Milwaukee Maun and Urban, O'Neil; and McMenemy. Paul 10, 9; Louisville », Milwaukee 18, 4; Toledo 1, 3 4 Jonnard Games Today napolis at Minneapolis. tisville at St. Paul, ‘Toledo at Milwaukee. Columbus at Kansas AMERICAN ee a In Second ha Toledo .... Milwaukee Wisner and ( Menemy. 4 Pet, 00 8 5 ew York shingto: Indianapolis Minneapolis Koupal. Sp Burwell and cavder; Moon, Hubbell, Malone and Kenna. iC 1 r 1 cy) Second Game R Indianapolis 5 Minneapolis 3 (7 innings. 6 o'clock closing law.) Boone and Snyder; Benton, Wil- son and Krueger. lay. Detroit 7, 14. Ww shington 6, 3; Cleveland 5, game 13 innings). ston 2, 0; Chicago 1, Loujs 7; Philadelphia Results Sunday Detroit 6; New York 3. { Washington 10; Cleveland 9; 5 innings, rain). , “hicago 4; Boston 1) Philadelphia 14; St. Louis 11. St —_—— First Game R uM E 0; Columbue .. Kansas City Harris and and Shin- | ault, Games Today New York at Detroit. Philadelphia at” St. Louis. Washington at Cleveland. Boston at Chicago. NATIONAL LEAGUE Ww. L. | Chicago Columbus . Kansas Ci Morris and Ferrell; Peters. Pet. 632 625 Firet Game R Tonisville 2 566) St Paul .. 525 Holley and 474] and Siemer. A13 eres. MeSiulien; Second Gare “ Louisville . St. Paul . (7 innings, Results Saturday Pittsburgh 4; Chicago 0. pictcelag nae = Summer Hygiene A While Wearing - Filmy, Thin Frocks By ELLEN J. BUCKLAND Registered Nurse Obtain Kétex! “For * peace-of- mind's sake, accept no other, See that box marke - “K tex. it isn’ not eens Kotex: “as ISMARCK DENTAL CLINIC DENTAL COMPANY Painless Dentistry — NSTEAD of risking old-time : “sanitary pads,” 8 in 10 better- class women employ a NEW way called “Kotex.” Filled with Cellu- cotton wadding, the world’s super- absorbent, it is 5 times more absorbent. Kotex also deodorizes. It dis- cards easily as tissue—no laundry. | « Thus, in three important ways, it solves a serious summer problem * for women. More than a mere sanitary pad, Kotex offers safe and certain scien- tific protection. We save you 50% on all Genial work Work done by the most ‘akilled operators We wish’ All our ol patients’ te come in’ and tet 'us see that cur work is satisfactory “In thid location for-19° ‘years Rooms 5-7, Lucas Blk, Phone 281 2ew s/o meee repay: 2 | Johnson, as 2 alt 3 Td Huddleston, 1b he believed Koenig ‘was adapted, while Lazzeri gave promise of being able to make himself over into a sec- ond sacker, another position Roe on the Yankee infield, ‘The auties ot the new job were all foreign to Tony and he didn’t look s0 good for a time but went about his work with a grim determination thut made Manager Huggins feel positive he would make good. He Made Good Within two months after the open- ing of the 1926 campaign Lazzeri had | made good beyond a doubt. As each 1 | Week passed his. play improved and @ {8 other person in the New York g|lineup, not excepting Babe Kuth or Herb Pennock, did more to help the Yanks win th American League pen- nant than Lazzeri. “Push-'Em-Up Tony” is the college yell at the Yankee stadium with Lazzeri up. It is the call of fan- dom for Tony to hit one high, far. and handsome. He vies with Ruth ana favorite in New York. ELKS BAND NOTICE _. Rehearsal tonight 8:30 m.. Be there on time. Cliquot club will be served at intervals. letting in any more runs. _MeCrill concocted a deceptive play in the next inning when he caught a high fly in the outfield after chasing it ‘behind one of the buildings with three runners eling the path to- ward home, t ing the third owt, The box se ‘ore: e RH POA E oes 2 0 Kusler, 3b-p 0 axwell, cf Olson, 2b Boehm, rf ..... J), Maxwell, © KR 0 0 0 1 1 | eeoxeeeuce weag MeCrill, Bready, ss Snyder, J.C. Kelly, p Poole, 3b sneascese> w! oocucHoHe esonoscunm ale Totals = DR. R, 8S. ENGE Chiropracter Free Examination Lucas Bik. Bismarck, N. D. Capitol Theatre Tonight Monday and "Tuesday IN WRONG JAIL Los Angeles. Preusser was given 50 days in jail and he served it. But when the time came for re- lease it was discovered that he had jserved his time in the county jail instead of city jail to which he fad been sentenced, so the judge decreed that he had to serve it all over again. in’ aan, RA leas With, Sally. Phipps,:Johuny Harron, J. Farrell MacDonald Florence Gilbert A comedy: ‘drama of life, love and laughter—and the story of a worm who, turned A tornado of fun and a tornado of thrills Comedy—“A Dog’s Pal,” with Terry the Giant