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4 WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1928 JHE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE ACTS ATTACKED BY HANSBROUGH “Candidates Boosting Nominee na Farmer's Friend For- feit Support’ League, agricultural record in a radio speech broadeast by station WBBM. “I have been a Republican all my life,” declared Hansbrough, “and I] have a message to deliver to Repub- licans, It is this; Any candidate for congress or for any other office, or any individual who seeks to elevate Mr. Hoover to the presidency | on the ground that he is a friend of the farmer and can be relied upon j honestly to solve the farm problem, forfeits his right to farmer support. “Republican a ily are broadcasting their defense of Mr. Hoover's record toward American agriculture—and if any man ever needed such a defense it certainly is Mr. Hoover, who was brought from England, where he had made _his| gone into society. home for some 20 years, to hold down the prices of the essential products of the American farm. Attacks Borah, Hoover “Those two loyal party servants, Senator Borah and Senator Brook- hart, have been going about the country lauding Mr. Hoover, whom they say strove during the war and afterwards to hold up from decline the price of wheat and pork in this country. The plain record of Mr. Hoover’s words refutes this claim in his behalf. “The question of veracity is not raised between us and Mr. Hoover. We say he held farm prices down;] this Mr. Hoover admits and has re- peatedly admitted in official letters and statements. The question of truthfulness arises between Borah and Brookhart on the one hand and Mr. Hoover on the other. They say he held prices up. He admits he held them down. Let them fight it out, “During the war, so determined was Mr. Hoover to fix an unchange- able price for wheat below the open market price that he appealed to President Wilson asking authority to keep the price down. In his let- ter to the president he said, on July 11, 1917: “IT might point out to you that if any of you gentlemen (the Wilson cabinet)* or mysolf had the single buying agency with a four months supply of wheat behind us we could probably drop the price of wheat in this country to 75 cents a bushel.” | Act Alarmed Wilson “Tt was this act of Mr. Hoover that served to alarm the Wilson ad- ministration. So at once the presi- dent formed a strategy board of farm experts which recommended a basic minimum price of $2.20 a bushel. Mr, Hoover finally succeed- ed in making that price the fixed aximum, Emith has jovernor Alfred FE. announced a policy of fatm relief to} be determined by the farmers them- selves on election day. He has made the farm proklem the principal issue of the campaign. As president, he will not use the veto against them. | “Governor Smith has neve: given a promise he has not kept. This conforms to his record as legislator and executive. Parmers have every reason to draw encouragement and hope, from Governor Smith's posi-| tion.” Salvation Army. Is Stocking Up Foods . Vegetables and foods of all de- Scriptions are continuing to pile up in the storerooms of the local post of the Salvation Army in prepara- tion for the annual Harvest Festival, which will be staged here next Sat- urday, Sunday, and Monday. This statement was made today by Miss Clara J. Sletten, ensign, who is expecting the festival to be the biggest the Bismarck corps has ever sponsored. Plans to use a truck in solicitation of foodstuffs for the event have been abandoned because the organ- ization has been unable to find one to drive it. The small touring car is being used daily in the Bismarck district by the ensign. Final details for the program are being made today. The foodstuffs will be sold Monday night, the money received andthe vegetables left being used for winter relief work, par be Ee Garrison. Infant Dies in Bismarck Orval ©. Hayes, 1-month-vld son of Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes, Gar- vison, died after a few days’ illness of pneumonia, in a local hospital Yesterday mornin, . The body was shipped this morn- ing to Washburn, where funeral ar- | rangements~are tentatively pianned for Thursday afternoon. Burial will be made ‘at Washburn, a FRENCH SCORN BASEBALL Paris, Qet. 10.—()—There has been great éxcitement over the World’s series in this- country—not, The French newspapers have print- ed nary a line, not even a word. ight attacked Herbert Hoover's} Osage Society Is All Excited eee Woman of Rich Tribe Accuses Friend of Conspiracy to Rob Her of $1,200 Gem ; jeight story off construction here. |vietims.. Unofficially from 60 to 100, Arkansas City, Kas., Oct. 10.—The | noble red man has taken a leaf from # the book of the palefaces and has “att The women of the Osage tribe —richest organization of people on the face of the globe—do not wear the colored blankets of tradition, nor intone ancient tales of Great Chief Boiled-on-both-sides. They wear clothes that their pale face sisters might envy, and they play bridge and get into gossipy rows. Now the whole Osage country is excited by criminal charges against the pretty Mrs. Freddie Wheeler, white wife of the rich Morris Wheeler, Indian rancher. The chief complaining witness, Mrs. Edna Plomondon, is an Indian woman of striking beauty. Last July Mrs. Plomondon and two other Osage women—Mrs. J. E, O'Connor and Mrs. Edna Watts— Czechoslovakia, to jthe thoroughfare. Mrs, Edna Plomondon, an Osage Indian womait rag robbed of her diamond, and | Mr: Wheeler, Icft, whom she accuses conspiracy to take it. , tight. ..! Charleston, W. V ces +!—Donald Orrahood, school football play. with ‘staging it. ‘The two are now |*t4ay- belonging to Mrs. Plomondon. A few lays later Mrs. Plomondon charged Mr: Wheeler's brother, Johnnie Williams, with being the state. Colonel “I am not guil witness who beli A fair trial will prove r Meanwhile There is not a o in her heart. innocence,” he whole Osage | Police Magistrate es, Collects $170 Fines ceny. Bismarek is $170.10 richer through fines collected by Police Magistrate John M. Belk during September, ac- cording to the report of the i ful not to let this fact sway youi She was convicted of la: e hydrant. Minot Contractors Get $259,357 Jobs presented to the city commission. De ae im BEGieht Minot, Oct. 1¢ P)—All con- bates ites alge naan month, | tracts for the construction of a new | dozen ans ed charges of drunk- | junior high school building in Minot j oe enness, nine for disorderly conduct, ‘ded at roon today to local | ive for traffic violations, and thr The contracts totaled | were ordered out of town for v. grancy. BEAUTY IS Media, Pa., Oct. 1 of seven men and five women here. last year. A report made to the; was immune to pulchritude. Judge | Chancery Court indicates that for McDade charged in the case of Mr very two and one-half marriages Vivian McDowell Page, the Mobile of an Atlantic City page: The record shows a total of “Because God has endowed this gi 95 = marriage with beauty, be exceptionally care- | against 1,077 divor RcUPID | Ala. — Cupid VICTED Birmingham, licenses Ss Football Injury Fatal for Youth) Oct. 10.—() night in a hospital from a broken k suffered in a football game ‘ v free under bond of 00 apiece, 7 'O PERMIT went for a drive. On their way | awaiting a hearing next month, Mineola, “ Rey eter Hoe home a ie bandit reli eeien Willi ‘ 4 2 witnes 5 |The king ‘of the air is now entitled car. le chief article of value that | to an ai s. Wheeler tearfully Hive ile i York was taken was a $1,200 diamond ring | recites '¥'to drive an automdbile in New York Lindbergh took a road test for half an hour and after {passing paid one dollar for ‘a per- jmit. Near a fire hydrant. the ex i charged Mrs. Wheelor| con armtile aminer told him to stop quickly. bandit, and charged Mrs, Wheeler country is excited. jLindbergh did so, but made sure the lear was the required distance from | Her Color Went Black. She i Was Frightened To Death | Mrs. Waite, New Brighton, writes: PA j sledding i had | erhat deadly indigestion and gastritis, (rh itty tough sledding in Jefferson county | Crates constinnten made Mycol go black. I was frightened to death, | and I feel your laxative saved my life. ‘S| I take them every night now for Les nthe county, there was one di-| caution, and do not fear an attack of ; ia of] caatpationponaing any tore” issued) CARTERS LITTLE LIVER P ' AU) druggists—25c and 75c red pkgs, KILLS 100 MEN Eight Story Block Collapses, Burying Unknown Number in Debris Prague, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 10. —()—Only 20 bodies had been ex-! tricated up to noon today from the mass of soft cement twisted girders | {and broken masonry which resulted | jfrom the collapse yesterday of an ice building under | | Government officials were unable | |to-estimate the probable number of | it was be- lieved that the dead would total Exact figures will not be available until the mountain | {of debris has been cleared away and authorites said it would take at least a week to accomplish that task. Some of the four score workmen | jwho were caught in the disaster | jwere still alive this morning but ‘their appeals for help were growing | | fewer and weake- and it was feared | |that none of them could be saved. | One of the archites jthat the collapse was due to defec- ixing of cement, but the city | authorities attributed the disaster, ‘which is the worst in the history of | slipshod and poor quality of materials. The building was being erected on jone of the busiest streets of the city and many of the injured were pedes- itrians who were hit by fragments as |the shattered material poured into cts asserted | work Sutton high died ast 10.) — That famous flavor enjoy it now | You've heard of them—those beans baked in the old “bean hole” in the lumber camps of the Maine woods. Such flavor, such aroma as that outdoor method of baking gave to them! ... Fragrant forest air, sweet-smelling earthen oven, camp fire smoke. Unlike any other baked-bean flavor! And now you can enjoy it, wherever you live! For that wonderful “baked-in-the-ground” flavor is now reproduced in Bean Hole Beans! For dinner tonight have Bean Hole Beans, It will be a delightful change—and so easy for you! Sef of beans baked in the ground ollet | i | | | Philadelphia. this morning. ally code of gallantry. |Here are two men who figured prominently in the investigation of alleged wholesale liquor graft in Max “Boo-Boo” Hoff, | Sports promoter, and Louis Elfman, below, were said to have been | nesses before the grand ju Schlosser Funeral | Conducted in City The body of Mike Schlosser, Bis- jmarck youth who was killed in an | automobile accident Saturday night, was buried in St. Mary’s cemetery Father Joh Slag officiated at the funeral services which were held at ; 8 a.m. at St. Mary’s procathedral. Parents of deceased, Mr. and Mrs. Sebastian Schlosser, had charge of funeral arrangements. Kissing the hand has been form- incorporated in Jugoslavia’s local hospital. Hospital authorities had not determined at noon the ex- tent of his injuries. MECHANIC HURT IN FREAK CRASH William Melech, Bismarck, Suffers Undetermined In- juries, Is in Hospital that he may have been injure ternally, ~0@ut) Melech is married. He has been employed at the Corwin - Churchill garage for about two years, caused the death recently of Joseph Hack: William Melech, 24, 307 Front [nite in the kitchen of his home and as he fell his head struck the faw- They believe|cet, fracturing his skull. some of his ribs may be broken and | without regaining consicousness, He died HUBBY BAD LOSER hurling golf sticksor throwin= 56. He suffered a stroke|on the floor. Sh street, was injured, possibly serious- ly, shortly after 5 a. m. today when an automobile backed into him. crushing him against another ma- chine which he was repairing, ;_, Melech, a mechanic and gasoline | station attendant at the Corwin- Churchill Motor company, was re- pairing a self-starter on an auto-, |mobile in front of the garage at} ;Main avenue and Second street. Coming out from under the car, he was crushed against the machine by the automobile which backed to him. The driver of the backi automobile believed that the mas! chine was in low gear rather than! reverse when he released the clutch, i it is believed. Melech was rendered unconscious by the crash but regained conscious, ness before he was brought into a fl ——__—_— First Class Shoe Repairing Bismarck Shoe Hospital Henry Burman, Prop. Bismarck, N. D, PICTURE? Capital Funeral Phone—Day cr Night—22 Also Jos. W. Techumperlin fe City Auditorium - B A UNIVERSAL HEN you crack a particularly fine walnut and enjoy its rich meaty flavor, do you ever stop to think how flat and taste- Parlors oq It will thrill you with its ramance as it recks you 208 Mala Ave. i} with its humor, Licensed Embalmer News and Comedy less that same kernel would be without its sealed shell which protects against flavor evaporation . . . . Nature places in each bean of green coffee a certain amount of rich flavor which when developed by heat, she intends you to enjoy in your morning cup. But through. the inability of man to perfect a coffee roasting process to prevent the evaporation of a considerable part of this rich flavor, there has been left behind many hard, dry, flavorless cells, which con- tribute nothing to the goodness of a cup of coffee.... Nash’s Hermetic Toasting Process checks this evapo- ration, at the same time developing and enhancing true coffee flavor, resulting in a cup of coffee, with a new and unexpected taste delight. You will enjoy it as keenly year after year as the first time you try it. At your Grocer’s. “RMB i) il, até lO Reno, Nev., Oct. 10. \ “ot jthe reasons ‘given by ie Cee | KILLED BY FAUCET —_[ y¥;, McHose of Los A: les and New York for wishing a divorce is that Cleveland, O.—A water , faucet | Bee husband has been a bad loser, obtained «