The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, August 20, 1928, Page 3

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6 MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 1928 “BUTLER SCORNS HOOVER'S VIEW ON PROHIBITION Calls Nominee’s Navy Idea as Timeworn and Wholly False’ New York, Aug. 20.—(?)—Herbert Hoover’s views on prohibition and a naval program as set forth in his speech of accepta ce are rejected by Nicholas Murray Butler, president of Columbia university and a life- long Republican. In a letter printed by the New York Times today’Mr. Butler breaks silence on politics that he has main- tained since the Kansas City conven- tion. He expresses confidence that millions of earnest Republicans are in agreement with him, Referring to prohibition the letter Bays: “What I wish to make entirely plain is that no candidate of my party for president can commit me or countless others like me to such doctrines or any such policies.’ In this connection Dr. Butler quotes Patrick Henry: “If this be treason make the most of it.” In regard to Mr. Hoover's “accept- ance of the ‘imeworn but wholly false argument that what he de- ™ scribes as ‘adequate preparation for defense’ is a factor in cooperation in the maintenance of peace,” Dr. But- ler writes: “The contrary is now the well demonstrated fact Dr. Butler describes the 18th amendment as “an alien and unnat- uralized invader of the constitution,” saying it must be deported if the constitution is to be preserved. “Anyone who is opposed to that process of statutory obsolescence that is now called nullification,” Dr. Butler adds, “must then be in favor of their only alternative, which is the continuance of the present reign of lawlessness, debauchery and gov- arnment-made crime.” Dr. Butler describes Mr. Hoover ‘accepting the formula of that paid band of agitators, lobbyists and persecutors which ci Is itself the Anti-Saloon League” when “he speaks of nullification as if that were an unheard of and horrid . ching’ Political Exile Nears for Huerta as Mexico Friends Plan Return Los Angeles, Aug. 20—H)— Adolfo de la Huerta, former provi- sional president of Mexico, declared today that his return to Mexicd, end- ing his political exile, depended up- on the tone of a message which he awaits frora friends in Mexico City. “But as for being offered the provisional presidency, I have no thought of such a turn of events at this timy id De la Huerta in an- swering published reports that this might be the case. intil I receive the message from Mexico City I can say no more about the matter. He said negotiations for his return to Mexico were being made a group of his friends and friends of President Calles, who “feel that it would be of some assistance in Bre venting further chaos and politi ical upheaval in Mexi Washburn Civil War Vet, Pioneer Dies Red Wing, Minn., Aug. 20.—(7)— Funeral services were held here to- day for Henry Burgdorf, 85-year- ald Civil war veteran and former resident of Washburn, N. D., who died at the St. Paul soldiers’ home Sabawiag. Mr. Burgdorf who came from Germany, lived here before the war in which he served with the first Minnesota regiment and was wound-, _ td at Gettysburg. After being* mustered out of the army he took up his residence at Feggus Falls and later moved to hburn, where he lived until mov- ae St. Paul 18 pre = * jurviving is a son, August, living in Canada. Mercury Lowest for Month in City Today Mercury dropped to a new low level for 7 a. m. this month in Bis- marck .today. The thermometer Tegistered 54 degrees. A cool week-end followed two weeks of scorching weather, and ‘warmer weather is predicted for to- ht according to this morning rep Rain fell in it scattered North Dakota points in the last 24-hour period, according to a report from the local weather bureau: tinger, with .38 inches, led the list. Other rainfall lor the state 3 Ellendale Mostly fair weather tonight and Tuesday. is predicted for the state. tonight but Ms will be warmer tomorrow, according to the report. “St. Thomas. Grad -\ Goes to St. Paul St. Paul, Kee, mt immie icCarter will graduate sional baseball when he dibloma from St. Thomas lune, io Compare 50 Years of Transportation Fifty years Mrs. James D. Wakeman first saw Bismarck from & creeping Missouri river packet. Today she again saw Bis from an ai “cree! the clouds at 100 miles per hour. It was her first ride in a ’plane. “Do I have to get out?” Mrs. Wakeman asked Cecil Schupe, pilot of the monoplane of the Inter- national Airlines, after they had at the Fo‘ Lincoln airport. “You know I didn’t think that I could get Jim to go with me,” said Mrs. Wakeman to friends who gath- ered about'the ship to congratulate Bismarck 1 ; board. ” and the| ment here. the craft “I pone dios doesn’t get held at Mi ideas,” said the spry old the state. ail i i ih i aiye ce -_ wait right here un- | Columbus it, takes me up again.” FLIES AREN'T ‘SARE IN CITY til 4 Het-| out. A meefin; and Ree appli nounced todav by the. state railruad Under the new rate consum- r 100 cubic marc! ” through| ers will pay 15 cents Shae feet for gas consumé cubic feet instead of 20 cents per 100 as at present. 4 5 BRSB2333 RP We OLD SRLES Were “ALL WET” Uncle Jim and Aunt Jo Take First Plane Hop Pioneer Bismarck Residents| Bismarck Gas Rates Lowered by Company! Approval of a new gas rate sche’ | ule proposed by the Montana-Dako- {ta Power compan: Federal Farm Loan Bank Directors to Hold N. D. Meetings Directors of the Federal Farm in Bank at St. Paul will conduct series of meetings in North Dako- this weck, beginning today at Dickinson, according to information let Mrs.| received at the state banking depart- will be held here to- other meetings will be held at Minot, Valley, City, Devils Lake and one or two other points in se ee tbe eeutiens are ine pees ideas after' held, it was said here to enable. the, ” 50 directors of the institution to confer ‘of September 6._ It will be preceded had | with officials of local banks which are subsi one | federal institutior AMERICAN Anepet Indianapolis .... polis see idiacice of the not and neighboring Results Sunday lis 5: qodiananolis 2. 5 | sascecas 7 —_WOwDnT dave ication in was an- loan by an automobile tour through Mi- rl MRS, PRESSLER DEFENDS TITLE RRRERERET THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE ~ JGHORGE HARVEY - (DBAD AT HOME Former Ambassador to Great Britain Was Called Presi- dent-Maker Dublin, N. H., Aug. 20.—(AP)— Colonel George D. vey, former bassador to “Great Britain, died suddenly at his home here this after- noon of a heart attack. He had been in ill health for some time. George Harvey, one of the fore- most publicists of his time and am- bassador to the court of St. James in the turbulent post-war days, at- tained the singular distinction of having had a large share in the mak- of two successive presidents, one i a Democrat and the other a Repub- lican. The editor and publisher was gen- erally credited with having laur.ched Woodrow Wilson upon the political seas when Wilson was head of Princeton university. He later be- came one of Wilson’s bitterest foes. Hoe had a part in the selection of Warren G. Harding as the compro- mised Republican presidential _nom- inee at Chicago in 1920; aided Hard- ing materially in his campaign, and was reputed to have formulated the issues of anti-Wilsonism and oppo- sition to the League of Nations that dominated the Harding-Cox contest for the presidency. His reward was appointment to the highest diplo- matic post within the gift of the new ipcteag that of ambassador to mndon. Born during the Civil war, Febru- ary 16, 1864, at Peacham, in rock- ‘ibbed Republican Vermont, Harve: inally was a Republican. After attending Peachai demy, Vermont and Nevada universities, and Middle- ton and Erskine colleges, he turned to newspaper work, and changed his political faith whi Oo engaged. ~n SORN WBE NINERS Harvey started his career as pub- GOTTEN Bure Uicist on the Springfield Republican. Gone? 4 Later he was on the staff of the Chi. cago Daily News when Melville E. T. Stone, one of the founders of the As- sociated Press, was editor. Then he turned to the strongly Democratic New York World, of which he be- came managing editor. Leaving the World in 1893 to be- come president of several electric railways which he built, Harvey found the lure of the publishing world irresistible, and six years later he bought the North American Re- view, which he edited almost con- tinuously until he sold it in Octobe: 1926, when he retired from active work, Besides the North American DAWES SOUGHT BY BAR GROUP and editor of 20.—()— An -anazine he urpew's. Weekly, the i Minot, N. 1 Aug. effort to bring Vice Dawes to Minot Sertember 6 and 6° to address the annual Rpnlere of augnor sot the state bar ee is hence which borame the direct cause of the made by the erties in 3 Bis. | cstrengement between the fiery ed- of arrangements, R. E. Wenzel, r und the presidential candidate. Soe ee eM ABCK 10) BUSY FOR ACE that the vice president will be able ie ‘attend the. sessions has been re- ceived, Wenzel said. it is believed that the vice president may find time to attend sessions for a part of day. o"Two speakers of national promi- nence will address the convention, he said. They are Gurney E. Newlin, . Los Angeles, recently elected pres-| Martin Jensen, famous Dole trans- ident of the American Bar oe pe Pacific Ueto pn Baty agi lle of the Iowa| was so en! ‘ie about flying an tion, and Judge Favil the two new air passenger transpor- tation companies that its citizens had not time to go up in the Aloha. even though that monoplane had crossed the Pacific ocean, and he left yesterday for Fillendale. Jensen broke off a planned three- day engagement here to continue his trip eastward. He arrived here supreme court. in his all-steel monoplane Saturday. topic on which Judge Faville ‘pence to talk is Law Reform, a subject upon which he is regarded s_an authority. ** tho talk here will be the first of- ficial address of President Newlin since elected as head of the ia: tion. The annual banquet, held each i the con-| spending most of the afternoon re- year on the closing day of th Leesa eye Mrs. Jensen liked the west so well she purchased a 2,000-acre ranch near Glendive, Mont.. the day hefore the counle arrived in Bismarck. “It'll be the first home we’ve ever had.” Mrs, Jensen said. “We've heen fiving all the time. and when T say ‘flying,’ I mean ‘flying’.” is scheduled for the evening VETERAN REGINS AGAIN Sag Harhor, N. Y.. Aus. (AP)—HUavine lost a beautiful crop of 60-year-old whiskers through a misunderstanding, Fdward Mulford Dering, who is in his 82nd year, is growing another. On a hot day he fell asleep in a barber's chair. He wanted a trim, but the barber main-. tains he was given no_ direction. Dering found that old friends could| sections. A golf tournament for members of the ‘association has been arranged and |the playoff for the association cham- jPionship is planned for Thursday yafternoon. Aug. 20.—(7)—The same not recognize him after his first clean shave since he became a man. Too Late to Uiassiry Los Angeles, ruled over western women golfers again seaey, Her driver and-never failing irons quelled the annual uprising of 160 would-be champions at the Indian k and the NOTICE THE PILMOOR SIGN CO. are ex- ign painters only, making signs of every descrip- ti and giving the best servi possible, making it impossible for! us to do any house decorating or any other business. But we can recommend Mr. A. Arntron who has had 40 years experience in house decorating and painting of every description. Our phone 899 will locate him. H. H. Pilmoor. FOR RENT—Two furnished apart- ments, Call at 1014 Broadway or phone 129-W. FOR SALE—Dining and: bed room furniture and miscellaneous _ar- rn Call at 300 Av-. B or phone 80 holes of golf, under a relent- © large and at ADVERTISEMENT One Thin Woman Gained 15 Pounds in Five Weeks FOR RE: lodern seven Yoom house by September first, hot wa- ter ba suitable for rooming house. Must be seen to be ap- preciated. Phone 1419-W or call at 206 West Thayer. MINETTE BEAUTY SCHOOL. rite for inf ti yi E | 3 : ptee open 1-2 Broadway, Fargo, No Dak. FOR SALE OR TRADE—S2-58 Case ete awe Sate A Harry Robb, Garden City, 8. Dak. : GARAGE FOR RENT. Thayer etvet, Call WANTED TO RENT 15 a small modern FOR RENT. f partment with i li Lf i Sept. 1 oF 4 if three room kitchenette. : : CURTIS DENIES OFPOSING HERB Says His Proposal for Joint Congressional Committee Speeds Legislation Chicago, Aug. 20.—(#)—Senator Curtis, Republican vice presidential nominee, said here today in a talk with newspaper men that in his pro- posal for appointment of a joint congressiont! committc> to consider the agricultural problem, he had in mind only the legislative sidc of the situation. “I think it would be better,” he said, “that a joint congressional committee be appointed to consider whatever recommendations are made to congress by the president or any- one else than to go ahead with two large committees, one in the senate and one in the house. Considering the problem separately. I mérely suggested this plan as an easier one in legislative action.” The question was brought up when cne of the r2porters suggested that the vice presidential nominee and Herbert Hoover, Republican stand- ard bearer, were at cross purposes. “Not at all,” Curtis declared em- phatically, “I want congress to be ready to take up whatever Mr. Hoov- er_works out.” North Dakota Wheat Protein Content Big Fargo, N. D., Aug. 20.—()—Pro- tein in North Dakota hard spring wheat crop this year will average from two tenths to three tenths per cent above last year’s figure, accord- Y | ing to C. E. Mangels, cereal chemist at the North Dakota agricultural college, who bases his estimate on tests of 137 samples from 29 coun- ties of the tate which give an aver- age of 12.03 per cent. Wheat in the southeastern part of the state in Czss, Richland, Ransom, and Dickey counties is considerably above the general level; these coun- ties averaging from 12.5 to 14.7 per cent for the samples submitted. From Golden Valley county in the extreme western part of the state 15 samples have been submitted by County Agent J. C. Russell and the average for them is 12.8 per cent considerably higher than that for protein considerably higher than that for surrounding Missouri slope counties the tests show. Review, Harvey also was president * joking, ‘When it comes to my smoking— For I know that Tom 20.— CHICK EVANS IS Bob O’Link Club, Chicago, Aug. 20.—(#)—Chic!. Evans, of Chicago, eight times western champion, made a good initial bid today for another title by scoring 71 to take the lead in ihe st qualification round of the event. His artner, Major C. O. Hezlet, of Great Britain, was six strokes ee T CONDUCTOR A 2 new orchest’ ‘ j ican Symphonic Ensen | i] \ b from the personal. ity of a condu r to the music, |} TRUCKS For ') Hauling Wheat One Ford Truck equipped with f Cab and Warford Transmission. M. C. i equipped $450 Trucks These trucks are in good condi- tion RED TRAIL OIL COMPANY Mandan, N. D. et Southwest LEADING FIELD FOR SALE WEEKLY NEWSPAPER N. D. COUNTY SEAT CITY R FURTHER INFORMATION WRITE sit Uic wraveling Chicken Parlor near the Fair Grounds. C. W. BEAL OPENING EVENINGS As a. &peciaf.. eay to. farmers and hang Og Our store will be open’ even- ings until after harvest. = ~ Your local Agent or Office, ol ecco ak 8o., Minneapolis, Minn. H. M. Tai,’ MF AW Gencral Agent ‘Cana- Expense dian Pacific Tout Canadian GRAND FORKS, N. D. Mandan, N. D. <7F 4 No more awkward driving positions! No more straining for pedals! No more need of cushions for feminine drivers! Buick has ended all that— ended it with a new comfort feature as unique and individual as the dashing beauty of Buick’s new Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher—a comfort ;' feature obtainable only in the Silver Anniver- sary Buick! ‘The front seats of all Buick closed models are adjustable! A turn of the seat-regulator causes the entire seat to move forward or back at the will of the driver, thus assuring a natural, com- fortable position for any mam or woman who takes the wheel! The new seat is easily adjustable even ‘when fully eceupied! A child cam operate it! It is simple— positive in action—and together with THE SILVER ANNIVERSARY nee “BUICK WITH MASTERPIECE BODIES BY FISHER - Fleck Motor Sales, Bismarck, N. D. New adjustable front seats - in all Buick closed models providing unrivalled comfort and driving ease for women. and men alike Buick’s adjustable steering wheel provides, fer the first time in motor ear histery, ¢ made-te- measure driving position! This same fine convenience — this same mateh- less comfort and luxury—are apparent im every phase of Buick design and operation—in the deep soft upholstery—in full width rear sents providing plenty of reom for three adult pas= sengers—in velvety clutch action—in finger-tip steering ease—and above all in the unrivaled smoothness with which the Silver Anniversary Buick rides even the roughest reeds. See this epic car! Drive it! Test the mew and exclusive adjustable seat! Prove te yeusesif that, here, indeed, is the finest moter ear and the greatest value America has ever predmesd3

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