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FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1928 MANGANESE IS MADE PURE BY RADIO FURNACE Announcement Made of Me- chanical Servant in Pitts- burgh Today Pittsgurgh, Pa., Oct. 19.— (4) — Another mechanical servant for im- ‘proving building materials, a radio furnace that produces pure manga- nese in commercial quantities for the first time, was announced here ee ists in all steel langanese exists in all steels, with properties of toughening and cutility, and importance in making pure alloys. The discovery was an- nounced by the bureau of metal research at the Carnegie Institute of Technology at an Gad meeting held jointly witht the United States bureau of mines. Those perform- ing the maganese distillation were Dr. F. M. Walters Jr., director, and V. N. Krivolok and J. B. Friauf. The radio furnace is a super vacuum-tube. Crude metallic man- ganese is placed in a crucible made of pure magnesia and covered by another crucible, placed upside down to collect the distilled metal. These crucibles are placed inside a fused quartz tube, four inches in diameter and two feet long, closed at both ‘ends, The air is pumped out of the quartz tube, until there is less than one twenty-thousandth of it left. Around the quartz tube is a water cooled copper coil. Through this coil is passed an alternating cur- rent of about two amperes at 7700 pals The Sean from ae nat frequency current passes throug! the quartz tube, the vacuum and the crucible walls, and sets up eddy cur- rents, by induction, which heat the manganese to its melting point. On the outside of the quartz the copper coil is almost cold, but inside, only two inches away, the manganese is 80 hot it hurts the eyes to look at it. The pure manganese has a silver lustre, and is hard enough to scratch lass. The form in which the public nows manganese best is in the clouds of reddish smoke from steel \ymills. The substance is lost by combining with air during steel making. z ‘Additional Market | ee) y um steers 9.00 @ 10.00; 8.00@9.00; plain steers 7.00@9.00; feed heifers es tees) medium eifers 7.50@8.00; fair heifers 7.00 @7.50; plain heifers 6.00@7.00; co cows 7.75@8.25; medium cows .00@7.50; fair cows jae FH Lon cows 5.95@6.00; cutters 5.00@ 350; good bulls 7.00@7.50; medium bulls 6.50@7.00; common bulls 6.00 Calves, top veal 18.60@14.50; cull veal Ce are light heavy calves (%11.00@12.00; heavy calves 7.00@ 9.00; canner calves 5.00@7.00. Shap, top lambs 11.25@12.25; heavy lam! ibs 110 pounds up 9.00: 10.00; cull lambs Br00@10.60; test S008 ewes 130 pounds down 5.00 heavy ewes 150 pounds up 4.00; cull ewes 1.00@3.00; bucks 2,00@3.00. Hogs, 150-180 pounds 8.50@9.00; 180-200 pounds 8.75@9.10; 225 pounds 8.75@9.10; '-250 pounds 8.75@9.10; 250-300 pounds 8.75@ 9.00; 300-350 pounds 8.25@8.75; packers 7.75@8.25; stags 7.75@8.25. 4 BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Russell-Miller Co.) Bismarck, Oct."19 §No, 1 dark northern .........$ .88 No, 1 northern .... 87 No. 1 amber durum No. 1 mixed durum Dark hard winter wh CARLOT SALES Minneapolis, Oct. 19.—(4)—Range of carlot grain sales: Wheat—No. 1 dark northern 1.12 to 1.29% ; No, 2 dark northern, 1.11% to 1.34; sample grade dark north- ern 1.06; No. 2 hard spring 1.25% to 1.35; No. 1 hard winter, 1.12; No, 2 mixed durum 86%; No, 1 mixed wheat 1.21. Barley—No. 2 56.. Corn—None. Oats—No. 3 white 9315 to 98%. Rye—No. 2 93% to 98%, —No, 1 2.23 to 2.35%, CHICAGO CASH GRAIN Chicago, Oct. 19.— (>) — Wheat: No, 2 hard 1.15 to 1.17! No. 2 north- Flying in an NEA Service ait came up from below, W. B. Spi ae ringfield, NEA Service cameraman, that time the great airship was nearin, lane view shows the lower end of most of the great skyscrapers of New York. Observe the ships in the East river in the foreground. Their lanhattan Island, with Battery Park at the lower left . lane alongside the huge Graf Zeppelin it soared over New York’s towering skyscrapers while the cheers of millions Sp snapped this photograph—one of the greatest newspictures ever made. the end of its 5,000-mile voyage through the skies from Germany to Lakehurst, N. J. This remarkable arid the Woolworth Tower at the right of the ship mighty Wayfarer of the Skics. Upper Manhattan is shrouded in the haze, HARRIS NAMED DETROIT BOSS Detroit, Oct. 19.—()—Appoint- ment of Stanley (Bucky) Harris as manager of the Detroit American League baseball team was an- nounced today by Frank J. Navin, president of the local club. Harris who led the Washington American League team to two pennants and a| world’s ree endages title, succeeds George Moriarty, whose resignation ‘was announced this weel The length of the Harris contract and its financial terms were with- held. Texas Farmer to Join Farm Managers Group Fargo, N. D., Oct. 19.—()—The fame of the Northwest Farm Man- ager’s' Association is spreading. Cap. E. Miller, secretary of the or- ganization, recently has received numerous queries regarding the as- sociation and its work, One came from the manager of a 20,000-acre farm in Texas who is thinking of joining the organization, and others have come from farm magazines and trade journals in various parts of the country. French Acquire Habit of Travel by Airplane Le Bourget.. air were popu! e's prin- cipal airport this summer. ‘ari- sians departing for their holidays succumbed to the “air habit” more than ever before. Airplane services from Le Bour- t were doubled and tripled at rush |e just. like ordinary railway trains. London had the heaviest traffic, but the new Paris-Biarritz line did very well. Even aside from holidays, the number of air travel- ers is steadily increasing at Le Bourget. ° Bemidji Bomber Goes to Prison for Crime cations by John W. Wilcox, 48-year-old forest products dealer convicted and sen- tenced a week for bombing the apartment of Miss Myrtle Hallo- well, 28-year-old muni ‘pal clerk, was taken to Stillwater this morn- ing to start serving his 5 to 10-year undetermined sentence. Wilcox, hashes 8: mite and oe ily, was charg mabing Miss. Bauoeette apartment the night of August 20 followi: Miss Hallowell. 6 the stand that Wilcox “became angry” wi she told him their friendship must cease. ern spring 1.17%; No. 2 mixed 1084. : - 4, Corn—No. 2 mixed 99; No. 2 yel- low 1.06 to 1.07; No. 4 white 1.02; sample grade 76 to 95. Oate—No. 2 white 44% to 45. Rye—No. 2 1.08%; No, 3 1.03, Barley—58 to 68. Timothy seed—5.30 to 5.90. Clover cere. Lard 11.40, ribs 14.00, bellies 14.00. CHICAGO POULTRY hicago, Oct, 19,— () —Poultry, 3 receipts 3 cars, Fowis 22, sprit » roosters 20, turkeys "4 Pe 30, ducks 17 to e / alive, sf 25, geese 20 100 LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR RENT—Two comfortable fur- ieee eae te to| Not satisfied with teking JUDGE GETS JAWING New York—The ladies don't worry Magistrate Weil of the West Side Court. Even a tongue-lashing Bemidji, Minn., Oct. 19.—(AP)— | Alt by a defendant accused of refusing to pay a taxi bill failed to ruffle his disposition. “Is there any justice in this countzy for women?” she demanded to know and added, “I was born under the British flag.” Hizzoner came back with “Why don’t you go back to England?” To which she answered, “I haven’t any rubbers and might get my feet wet.” But the magistrate had the last word, “Pay your bill.’ Hoover-Curtis Office Is Opened in Bismarck Hoover-Curtis headquarters have been established in Bismarck, fics re located at 418 Main avenue, ording to H. F. O’Hare, Burleigh cdunty Republican state committeeman who is in charge of the local offices. Alfred Dale is vice chairman of the local offices. Mrs. H. F. Keller and Mrs. Ruth McCoy are aiding in the business of the local headquarters, distributing literature, buttons, and other Re- publican campaign symbols to vis- itors who visit the offices. A Hoover-Curtis banner has been hung across the street. The offices are being operated as a joint Independent and Nonpartisan institution. Minneapolis Building to Get Aerial Beacon Washington, Oct. 19. — (>) — One of the tallest buildings in the north- west, a 32 story structure at Minne- apolis occupied by the W. C. Foshay company, will be equipped January 1 with one of the newest type gov- ernment beacons to guide night fly- ing aviators, Captain F. C. Hingsburg, of the commerce department airway branch, announced today that a 2,000,000 candlepower beacon had been authorized which would give an elevation of 450 feet for the operation of a flashing beacon. Massachusetts Bull Wins Ayrshire Award Memphis, Tenn., Oct. 19.— () The id championship in the Ayrshire bull class was awarded at the national dairy show satay to ita Crest’ Ringleader, owned by the Alta Crest farm of Spencer, Mass. This animal also was ad- judged senior champion. Bay State Perseus, owned by the Masachu- setts Agricultural college, was se- lected as the junior champion bull in the Ayrshire division, FIVE SUFFOCATE Chicago, Oct. 19.—(#)—Mrs. Beu- lah Fisher, 32, and her four children were found dead when a gasfire burned up the oxygen in their tightly closed home here. EYES ON RENO? Husband: Whatever became of the silk underwear and .nightgowns I Cr you for your birthday? ‘ife: Oh, I put them in my hope chest.—Life. The Acrobatic Automobile a fii ., recent! sts satoonchile. its Yet none ‘of passenger of the bus, 0. p by itself on a highway outside Colum- caused another to take a similar turn, the three occu; ints of the first, nor the second was injured. : South China Promises to Protect Foreigner Canton, Oct. 19.—(P)—The pro- vincial bureau of education has of- ficially notified all foreign mission schgols in Kwangtung province that the government is taking special measures to guarantee protection for the lives and property of all for- cigners, This is a welcome assurance to American and British missionaries, especially those stationed in county districts far from possible assist- ance by foreign warships. These missionaries have been almost as busy packing and unpacking trunks as gaining converts during the last three years, Old Chinese Customs Good Enough in China Canton—(AP)—A campaign to cure the southern Chinese of their | sensé of. inferiority foreign- ; ers has been unde: en by the na- tionalist authorities, The slogan “Down with foreign culture!” has always been popular in China until Russia and Russian communism came to dominate the nationalist movement. Thé present reaction against communism has made the Chinese once more unre- ceptive to foreign ideas. Chief French Airport Receives a New Name! | Le Bourget, Oct. 19.—(P)—Le Bourget is no longer Le Bourget. The great French airport which wel- comed Lindbergh and has seen so | many other world famous flights is to municipally and postally | known as “Bourget-Dugny.” Free Scotland Is Aim | of Highland Patriots London—(AP)=-The _ reconstruc: | tion of Scottish nationality apart | from England and the establish. | ment of a parliament for Scotland was demanded by leaders of the Scottish autonomy movement at Robroyston recently, _THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE At whistles blare a nojsy welcome to Some U. S. Travelers Are Not Millionaires Paris—(AP)—Americans are los- ing their reputations as millionaires. The old fiction persists, but a small campaign of education is un- der way. For one thing there are fairly reliable statistics to show that only one in fifty of American visitors are in the seven figure class. Even the statisticians couldn't shake off caeaiys 4 the old idea of streets paved with gold dollars and the fiftieth tourist is listed as a “multimillionaire.” Soviet Will Give More Farm Lands to Jews Moscow—(AP)—The Soviet gov- ernment has approved the granting of an additional 200,000 acres in Crimea to Jews seeking agricultural home sites. jsInstructions were sent to the Crimean government to investigate and report on the amount of land available for Jewish colonization. It is the purpose of the central ex- ecutive committee to find land in sued against 34 divorce cases filed. \This for a population of 100,000. STATE BARBERS TO MEET HERE: Annual Convention Is Planned at Board of Directors Meeting The North Dakota State Barbers | association will hold their annual convention at Bismarck November | 12 and 13, it was decided at a meet- ing of directors of the association here last night. | A committee of four was appoint- | ed to make arrangements for the | meeting, and a second committee | was appointed to act on legislative measures. The arrangement committee is E. G. Erbe, A. R. Brujell, Bug Nott, and L, E. Resko, Mandan. The legislative committee is F. Ode, chairman, P. G. Harrington, and A. H. Pearson. Officers of the association are George Jahnke, Bismarck, president; L. E. Reko, vice president; and C. W. Peterson, Bismarck, secretary. Local barber shops will continue to close at 6:30 p. m., it was decided | at the meeting. With the opening of a new local | barber shop the question arose as to whether or not the shops would maintain the present closing hours. After a discussion in which all the local barbers took part it was de-| cided the present hours should not changed. At the close of the meeting the barbers signed a resolution “extend ing the cooperation and good will of the association to the operators of the new shop.” HOOVER EVADES, DANIELS AVERS |»: Birmingham, Ala., Oct. 19.—(AP) —Herbert Hoover was charged with evading issues in his campaign for president and failing to “ring true” on the prohibition issue, last night by Josephus Daniels, former secre- tary of the navy, who spoke at the Municipal auditorium in support of the Democratic National ticket. The speaker charged, in addition, that Hoover 1.ad “induced President Wilson to fix a price for the 1919 wheat crop at a figure that denied the wheat growers 000,000 which the National Agricultural ‘committee officially said they were entitled to receive, in view of the in- crease of all other commodities.” Mr. Daniels was en route to Nash- Mil today where he is to speak to- night. A CLOSE RACE St. Clairsville, O.—Cupid and the | divorce court ran a close race in Belmont county recently. In one month 38 marriage licenses were is- GOOD IDEA “How is it Bill has two caddies and you none?” “One’s mine —he keeps ‘rack of Bill’s score for me.”—Life. NOTICE. Custer Encampment No. 16 will have regular meeting Oct. 19, All members requested to other regions if conditions in Crimea are not suitable. be present. J. H. OLSEN, C. P. New Legion Chief Didn’t Get to France 1 4 | Colonel Paul V. McNutt and Mrs. tt, whom he met while training camp in 1918. Bloomington, In Oct. 19.—The new national commander of the American Legion is one of those un- happy Americans whose services during the World War were highly essent but not at all spectacular or exciting. Colonel Paul V. McNutt, the 37- yea chieltain of the soldiers’ organization, knew too much about field artillery for his own good. Because of his knowledge the army authorities kept him at San Antonio, Tex., where he just won election to the Legion’s highest office, train‘ng artillery units. He was considered one of the foremost theoretical field artillery instructors in the country —and that was just his hard luck. Colonel McNutt is youthful to be} a national commander; but then, he | has traveled far for his years in} other ways, too. He is dean of the! Indiana University School of Law, kdl seers ete follow thorougts All four Bismarck druggists, | 220 miles an hour over the moun- and has been granted a year's lea of absence from that post to eany on the duties of his new Legion fice. He won the appointment thre: years ago, having the distinetios of being the youngest man eve made a dean at I Born in Martinsville, Ind., iy 1891, McNutt studied at | Indians University, graduati in 1918, ant went to Harvard to study law. Hi finished his law course in 1926, re turned to Indiana to become an as ar ae of law, and on the outbreak of the war joined thr army, receiving his training an¢ commission as artillery cuptain ai* Fort ‘in Harrison. He was assigned to San Antonio and spent the remainder Of the wat there, having won premotisn to s j lieutenant colonelcy. He is now colonel in the reserves and command: | er of the 326th field artillery. |, It was in San Antonio that Colonc! | McNutt met his wife, ther Miss Kathleen Timolat. They were imar- vied there in 1918, and their recent trip to the Legion conveation at San Antonio was a tenth anniversary of their honeymoon, The fastest known bird is the spine-tailed swift, which achieves of Asia. SS Never an Iron on My Hair Wherever my theatrical engage- ments happen to take me I could have a marcel, but I never do. I pre- fer my own method—waving my hair with my Wave and Sheen. * I always keep my hair clean by shampooing once a _week. I apply Wave and Sheen with a comb. You can use a brush, or just your hands, *} I dampen the , | hair with it—in- | sert combs in the ee \ — direction I wish Edna Wallace Hopper, the essbolocisteday forget it for about an hour. Some types of hair require more time, some less. The result is a soft, lovely, undu- lating wave. Most people in my audiences think I have it marceled. Many ask whether it is a natural wave. It is not. You can have this same sheen no matter what method you use to wave your hair. Get a bottle at any toilet counter for 75 cents. One trial will convince vou as it has thousands of others.—Adv. waves and ICKETS CAN BE PREVENTED GIVE Scott's Emulsion THE FAVORIT Cod-liver Oil Tonic The orld Over It is announced that the autono- mists will contest every constituen- ; cy in the next general election and | that 18 candidates have already! been found. | SHE'LL BE THE PIPER t sia Sin beast about your girl pinching a- le.’ ' “You've got it wrong Ben, she’s gone off with a first violin.” assing Show. D.B.C. GIRLS WITH ws grt ag Rng ah open: ir » they followed ihe pl ii of 90% of the local firms—engaged 2 steno- ayy npr ‘argo. e ” Another D.B.C. git Laura went to theirSt, Paul branch. Lillian Halverson, recently em- ployed by Kelly Springfield Tire their 7th ‘‘Dakoten’’, Co,, is ul” Get else- “Follow the copy! cart aa Be rite F, L. Watkins, i=} SucceBBf ACTUAL BUSINESS 'Pres., Front &¢., F » Sarge. R IN LUMBER Co. Saveur Printers Binders Experience counts in every vocation, this is especially true with reference to printing. Each profession and each line of merchandising should have its literature turned out by an expert, and such printing should reflect credit upon the individual or institution in whose interest the work is done. No matter -what the purpose or the occasion experience has taught us how to produce any appropriate form of print- ing correctly in every respect— BISMARCK TRIBUNE COMPANY JOB PRINTING DEPARTMENT Legal Blanks Stationers Experience Counts by selecting the most appropriate stock— by determining the most appropriate size and shape— by selecting the most appropriate type faces— by determining the proper margins for the type form— ‘by selecting the most appropriate colors of ink—and by paying close attention to each and every detail. We take an intelligent interest in any problem you may care to present with reference to the art of printing. —_—s ee More than 50 men and women are employed by us who take personal interest in your printing orders. ’ We'll Do the Just Call 32 Rest