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| Bui Buildings ATTENDANCE AT SCHOOL MAKES BIG INCREASE Enrollment Increases from 400/ in 1919 to Nearly 1,300 Is ASKED State Board of Administration Approves New Budget Pressed by the tremendous growth of college students in attendance, .which has more than tripled since the last appropriation was made for a building at the North Dakota Ag- ricultural college in 1919, and by the further fact that its greatly needed building fund of two years ago was vetoed, the institution will ask for a 000 worth of buildings 's biennial budget. The state board of administration has authorized this budget, R. B. hy, chairman, saying that the buildings are needed greatly. ss If some way can be found to fin- ish the boys’ dormitory by borrow- ing money, which would be repaid by receipts from the use of this the fund would be re- 75,000. This building was begun and the basement built fol- lowing passage of a bill by the 1927 legislature which authorized such action, but provisions of the bill were found to be unconstitutional, and the project had to be abandoned after the basement was constructed. With the $175,000 for this build- ing eliminated and considering that the buildings, which members of the legislature found were necessary the last session and appropriated $170,000, should not be as part of this biennium’s Duilding program, a total of $353,000 ir. John Lee Coul- is pointed out by president he proposed progr Addition to science hall $86,000. Addition to agricultural building, 000. 5,000. Boys’ dormitory, $175,000. 4 ical education building, Livestock pavillion, $85,000. ‘The additions to Science hall and cultural building were in appropriations of the lature in 1927 but were vetoed. Need Is Critical “There is critical need for every building asked for,” said Dr. Coul- ter. “Bince 1919, when the last appro- priation which we received was » our enrollment of college stu- the passin; has increased from 400 is Snatladsef ie jents . close to 1,300. Last enrollment of students in erably ae Ne ney ore tion deteriorates physically when hit students bring the total enrollment by ‘additions to sciene hall and the agricultural building to provide room for more labo. ‘already monstrated to the ks, thrown together during the emerg- ency of the war for student train- It is a fire-trap and not in|schoo! Asked * “We have 200 freshmen boys each |éducation under such circumstances. and all institutions feel t! hav ood dormitories on|for lack of a proper audito! boys coming | seat 1, their first year could| feel Protection of dormitory other institutions have such = hope thee oes serious mistake to plan for present can. be worked out whereby this|needs only. can be financed by a loan|tain to gfow and ly contemplated. We have had tenta- gymnasi: 160 feet and a T shaped wing 160 feet, for small athletic showers, offices and seniors. ee Physical Work as mo.ars sompalied te Totaling $738 Agricu olleg SIDE GLANCES ---- By George Clark ©1000, Oy nea SEAViEE, tins 08. w 6. PAT, OFF, Cambridge, Mass, Oct. 2 (AP) —A new kind of history of the American southwest, one taken from study of human bones covering 1,000 years time, is being written at Har- vard by Dr. Ernest A. Hooton. He is associate professor of an- thropology and curator of somatol- » Pathologists and archeolo- ist 4 All the bones are from the Indian village of Pecos, New Mexico, which existed from about 800 A. D. to 1838, They represent about one-third/of the populations which lived there. At its prosperity peak, Dr. Hooton says, the village probably had 4,000 habitants, but numbered 17 persons when it abandoned in 1838. The skeletal records were buried in eight distinct layers, whose time periods | at identified by archeological | ‘inds. People Diseased Those of the bottom era showed a fairly healthy rous people. With of time they became , and their teeth were not so good. Dr. Hooton says there is definite evidence of how popula- bad economic conditions, such as poor or insufficient food. I marks on bones showed progressive advance of certai ases. Cancer and tuberculosis were two of thet A third malady has been detec and submitted to pathologists for de- cision to its character. It ap- pears in @ period atedating the com- ing of the white man to America two rooms in the barracks for the 1,000 boys already registered at “It is impossible to give the stu- dents the proper physical care and “We are alao greatly handicapped im, to students now enrolled. We it provision should be made for the auditorium needs for several rs to come, when we build this ilding, and that it would be a The institution is cer- the needs increase ‘with the years, and that fact should be given full consideration. Need Livestock Pavilion “No livstock pavilion has ever been provided at the college. Since 1919 we have been pang a large room in the north end of the bar- racks, formerly used as kitchen and dining room during the war, as a livestock pavilion. “Now we have three times as many students taking agriculture and three times as many animals in the different flocks and herds for study purposes. The students tak- ing livestock courses must have some place to study and these pres- it quarters are entirely ii tock pavilion is in ff 43,000,000 Voters Will Go to Polls November 6 (Continued from in 1924. “Cut out that infernal racket; is that any way to act on the Sabbath?” HARVARD PROFESSOR IS TRACING AMERICAN HISTORY FROM BONES 8 with Columbus. When Pecos was founded, Dr. Hooton says, its in habitants included several fairly dis- tinct types of Indians. There fol- lows every’ evidence that it became & prehistoric melting pot. At the be- ginning the skull types included groups which resembled negroids, Australian bushmen, Europeans and Mongoloids. One skull group was wholly Egyptian in form. Mon- goloid strain in time dominated all others. Of Mixed Blood One of the results of the Pecos melting pot, Dr. Hooton says, is a pure “Buffalo Nickel” Indian t Another is the well known “Ameri can Basket Maker Indian” head. Hooton has been able to identify among present day Indians all the Pecos aborigines except those which | }; look like Egy s and negroids. Of these two he sa: “I do not think that a thousand | ic years ago real Egyptians were living inn Pecos; nor that negroes ever re- sided there. The logical deduction is that at the remote period when America was peopled by an Asiatic race that seems to have arrived via the region of Bering Strait, these newcomers carried minor strains of almost every type of blood in the world. It would be natural to find . | occasional individuals showing seg- regations of these latent ancestral strains which would make oe is Pecos Egypt- semble non-Indian races. think accounts for the ians and the negroids.’ 1928 election, talk confidently for public consumption of the benefits which will come to their candidate. But there is no doubt that privates there has been a big question mari hovering over the h voters lists for the rianagers of both parties. Reasons For Rush Various schools of thought give various explanations for the sudden] of the rush to the registration counters, One element says it’s prohibition. Another says it is the religious is- sue. Another says it’s prosperity. Still others maintain it is farm re- lief; water power; tariff, and a doz- en other subjects which might af- fect various localities. And there j are those who may contend that none of these are the issues—that the 4 fight is“one of personalities between Hoover and Smith. ,_ All in all, if this great outpour- ing of voters goes to the polls and termination of the winner may be delayed long enough to keep many on the anxious bench, even if the 15 er cent which a rule refrains rom voting rem: home. CRAFT HEADS FOR GERMANY EARLY TODAY (Continued from page one) Friedrichshafen on Oct. 11, for the United States, great care was taken to make sure that no stowaways were aboard, Because of the size of the ship and the attendant confusion upon departure an opportunity for stow- was offered. A development, unusual in Ameri- against politics, is the it increase in the. the Democratic th H a i | : Fa ie E Esk THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _ MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1928 000 A pelin, greatest ship that ever rode o—_»_______, | F bade farewell to the United | for 14 days has been headed its the breaking dawn and toward its istant hangar at Friedrichshafen, Germany, at 6:05 o’clock this morn- First Lady of edy trip up the coast the dirigible left land | Nantucket sound. After having hugged the coastline since it quit the air station, tl lin struck boldly out to theast. A group hunters, who glimpsed the big estimated it was makin; miles an hour and that at an altitude of about 1,600 feet. | PASSES OVER STEAMER New York, Oct. 29.— The dio Marine corporation was informed the steamer Laconia that the if Zeppelin passed over at 10:15 . eastern standard time, about 8 southwest of Cape Sable, Oct. 29.— (AP)— pared to 658 a year ago. Minnea) olis cash wheat and ran VARY RAPIDLY} STOCK MARKET SALES LOWER Marking Up Call Money Rate Hinders Resumption of Upward Price Moves Wheat receipts losing quotations today follow: closing 4 Market Values Average Lower as Liverpool Ignores Satur- Chicago, Oct. 29.—(7)—Word of rains in Argentina did much today to dispel apprehension of crop dai age ni that country. Largely result, wheat values fluctuating rapidly at times, aver- irk, Oct. 29.—()—Marki: up of the call money rate from 7% to 8 per cent slowed up the resump- tion of the upward in today’s stock market. Flurries of Pied Soe ae ings were ab- sorbed. Pools again played a prom- inent part. in the day’s operations, more than a score issues to high levels on gains running ‘igh as 10 poini With the market 1 dark northern. 2 dark northern. 1 dark northern. ments from Australia and slowness of export demand for North Ameri- can wheat, as well. as 3,471,000 bush- els increase of the U: total, tended also to t. Wheat closed unsettled, %c to 1%c | 1. ecember 1.17% to 1.17%, March 1.21% to 1.21%, May 1.24% to 1.21%). Corn closed unchanged (December 81% to to 84%, May 86%). Oats closed unchanged to %c off (December 43%, March 44%, 45) id provisions varying from 12c decline to a rise of 5c, In addition to comparative weal ness of the Liverpool wheat market, muck talk was current here today that sales of wheat on rallies would be wiser ee buying after 7c drought reports from Argenina counted also in favor of the selling side of the market. On the con- trary. Buenos Aires cables said to construe, not to make law, is, of|there had been good rains in South ry statement. The|Argentina since yesterday. trouble with it is that we all know that courts do legislate. ‘ALL'S WELL’ REPORTED Portland, Me., Oct, 29.—()—The Graf Zeppelin was in communication by ratio with a Massachusetts com- mercial station during the forenoon: Private messages were being trans- mitted between 9 “All's well” was reported. VARYING WEATHER OFFERED BY OCEATI Hambu.g, Germany, Oct. 29. (AP)—Varying weather condi over the Atlantic face the air liner Zeppelin on her homeward to Friedrichshafen. % more southern course than the normal great circle route would carry the ship into more fay- orable areas, the northern route has the advantage of a strong tail wind which would enable the Graf Zeppe- and 10 o'clock. | 1DHW or 1HW. tl porary, ope! had tae difficulty in attracting an . Large commission houses report that specula terest in the market continues at high pitch throughout the country, with customers’ rooms crowded and accounts generally . lent character of the major- ity of earnings reports now bei published, coupled with reports o! marked improvement in the oil and ion in the steel industry, to maintain bullish enthusi- asm. Short selling of late has been rather sporadic in character, due to the relatively small floating supply Motor Products, which was weak Saturday, rallied 12% points. R. H. Macy ran up 9% points to a new peak at 171%, and Radi =e ea 6 points to a new top 1DHW or 1HW. To arri 1DHW or 1HW. Grade of— 1DHW or 1HW.... Miss Leonor Llorente, a society se- norita of Mexico City, ma; the bride of President Calles before he leaves office, according to rumor. The announcement of her ment has not been made officii 1DHW or 1HW.... The marine weather station on the basis of extensive reports, expressed the opinicn that the Graf encounter wind clouds and intermittent rain soon after leaving the eastern coast of the United States unless it steers south o the 43rd degree of latitude. A course south of the 43rd degree would carry the Graf Zeppelin con- siderably south of the great circle course on a line with Cape Finistere in Northwestern Spain. Even if the shi north of the 43: reports indicate that it will sdon rade 1DHW or 1HW.... arri largement of the amount of wheat on ocean passage tate a fact is|tended also today to handicap buy- it necessarily any attack or criti-jers of wheat. The aggregate of ‘wheat afloat was ported gree, however with a recent| 43,040,000 bushels, against 41,416,- Prof Fowler}000 bushels a week . Law School,jother hand, the Unit partment of Iture estimated bers thereof should have intelligence | that it is possible 6 per cent of the enough to recognize the fact, and|total crop of wheat of the Canadian candor enough to admit it. tion you that the a expresses |feed, 15 id cent No. e thoug! ut not the language— Harper uses English while T ‘use| Corn prices held within nartow mber for sale on the bulges to 82c and over, whereas there was rather persistent buying not discuss the merits of the cases|0f May for pit traders and commis- referred to, but will show by other| Sion houses. Prices for corn future deliveries averaged somewhat higher despite a decline of 2c to 4c in the Grade of 1 amber... Grade of 2 amber... Grade of 1 durum... Grade of 2 durum... Union, Industrial article, I believe fining, Montgome shi ain| Harper, of the N. degree weather | that when courts legislate, the mem-. Commercial Solvents, yers all sold 4 to 6 poi th grade rails took a more prom: — part in Melle ware ludson, ur * ihe bi to T peat higher ing int r. St. Louis Southwestern attained a new peak price for the year. SOUTH ST. PAUL LIVESTOCK St. Paul, Oct. 29.—(AP-U.S.D.A.) Cattle: 13,500, Slaughter steers and atockers and feeders. tending lower. Practically nothing done-early. Fat cord stock stea ts ir grade One Few loads grass steers "hi ‘ew is TB, 10.80 down, Bulk 7.00@8.25; seating ran, Beyond the 50th degree of longitude, or about one-fourth across the Atlantic, there may again be bad weather if the ship keeps to the northern course while the weather | will be good around the Azores, STOWAWAY THOUGHT CADDY Rye, N. Y., Oct. 29.—(AP)—Ofti- lieved today that the youthful si away aboard the Graf Ze) Clarence Terhune, 19-year-o! it North Dakotese. In order not to violate Ju Birdzell’s sense of pi cases that the North Dakota Su- preme Court does legislate. a In the recent case of Baird vs.|cash corn trading basis. Fischer, 220 N. W. 892, Court inserted the following clause: “except such ‘right, title, interest, claim, lien, or encumbrance,” in sec- tion 2196. The effect, as stated by the court, was to make the statute express “an entirely different idea.” Ch. 183, 8. L. 1921, vid “When at the close of the any party to the action moves the court to direct a verdict in his favor, ard the adverse party objects the: to, such motion shall be denied, and the court shall submit to the jury such issue or issues, within the pleadings, on which any evidence has been taken, as either or any party to the action shall In September, 1927, the Bar As- sociation of North Dakota adopted @ report recommending the repeal of this law but the Supreme Court beat them to it, and in Rattie vs. Soo, 55 N. D. 686, practically re- pealed the law by holding that fail- ure to comply with the statute, if |error, was error without prejudice. A good illustration of the extent, to which courts will go is State vs. Mosport » BN. af ey holding that, as lc repeal of chapter Laws of 1890, did not mean what it Provisions were fir die mamma te WHEAT LOSES STEAM TODAY Minneapolis, Minn., eat lost its steam te ied: | buying failing to follow the fast a y| vance of Saturday and prices react- ed under profit taking and increased s at “St. Louis” because he came from the Missouri city. “T'll be going away any day now,” the caddy was telling his friends mysteriously last week, according to Pau! Belluscio, one of the club’s pro- fers. They thought he meant Cal Hbenia until they heard ihe Fae, Freee Is weak, largely was quiet on the advance and gen- es Fy, indifferent trade in eral news was bearish or lacking in bull punch. On a dip of 1/8-8 at 1 1-2 cent surport improved, Oats were quiet and steady to firm. Kye started firm and turned draggy with wheat. ‘Barley futures were slow and easy. poe were quiet and irregular. Calves, 2,000; lights 11.80; few choice 217,000, Steady to 15¢ high it week's close. To} re a for desirable with about $50 that rom caddying here The youth was described as blond, fain pomiblasioned, and slight of BISMARCK MAN SUCCUMBS’ TO SHOTGUN FIRE (Continued trom page one) Sunday afternoon and was arraigned charge before Justi committed to the B: $25, Asked if he would be able to fur- nish bonds for his release, dicated that he expect would furnish bail money. Potter sa: calm and emotionless while the murder charge was read by McCurdy, Burleigh county ey, has plete and thorough investigation of all circumstances surrounding the if the contest 's at all close, the de-| lives, and friendship of Potter and McCurdy stated toda: could ascribe no logis the shooting but said that further examination of witnesses and a of the circumstances would probably bring a solution to Oliver Ramstad Webb was born in Bismarck, Nov. 4, 1900. He attended rat eight grades in school in completion of the eighth he entered high'school at St. lege, Collegveille, Minn. A completing his high school course at the Minnesota school, he returned to Bismarck where he was employed as a clerk in the Webb Brothers lerton, Calle, where returned to spend Bismarck early in June, bevo: re tative of the company, @ chain CRICAGO GRAIN TABLE High Low Clove 117% 118% 1.16% 1.17% 1.28% 121% 1.21% 126% 124% 1.20% 8.50; packing sows ter.” Tndicetions arou and demand avera; good. miums were steady to one cent bet-| Wh Low and frosted springs| Dec, tter demand from eleva-| March nae Sond sound mally in was in and the basis was firm to stronger.| nec, Winter wheat was in light supply| March May . iterings of maling quality were, small set Sale ir Was '. "Com offerings were large ‘and de- mand was, quiet to fair. Oats were in quiet to and basis was stead; Sheep: 31,000. Largest run of sea- ; about, steady Doneption. Increased run on ewes get- ie good action from breeders kill eins pomereae ewes 6. try Praiiicg owes 00; breeding Durum was steady. Of: ‘arleigh Count; ball 4 The syllabus reads “The broad 1; jangu: repealing act which went into effect with the, Revised Codes must be so limited by the ob- vious purpose of the new revenue law as to leave unaf- fe 1132 of the pty late to the office of district as- sessors in unorganized town- BISMARCK GRAIN (Furnished by Rupsel-Miller Co.) northern ....:...8 90 fair demand ne ie 1.04% 1.01% 1, 7 1.04 iting | ay, 100 ‘was moderate and gies ‘were stead) nee was good. Flax seed was in ho arc! demand and May In other words, whether or not a law is open to construction, and if, so the proper construction, is often a matter of opinion; and the political, social, CHICAGO LIVESTOCK » Oct, 29—(AP-U.S.D.A.) 000, Mostly 10¢ to 1! the meaning of the law. ERRApOLis RANGE pol . 29.—(P)— Open -High Low Close 112% 1.13% 111% 1.12% 1.19% 1.20% 1.11% 1.18% Cooperstown, N. D. GANGSTER SHOT DEAD IN SALOON? Pople ey ig i lower, 4 by choles 1900-1600 Ibs. 18.78 3 1100-1800 Ibe. 13.50@)17.50; 00 Ibs. 18.50@17.75; common medium 860 Ibs. up 8.2! eaics, 3,000. Choice fed steers and yearl! 2c hi . 40 40 89% «89% Policeman’s Bullets Leave Chi- 42% 42% AIK 41% cago Beer Gang Without ‘Torture Man’ 82% 61% 61% organisation, 66% 65% 66 lat returnit Me time of hi without Gaaal 8 2 J Ey 3 ae ii Low Close 1.01% 1.01% 1.01 03 ; u Tt ell? t a Ht é i z 3 F 29 100- 98% 1.08% 1.04% 102% Pr ir f i i f i 1 g 5 E lz Hy, i 4 i i E F i re a i 5 i é i F : i ip i ait e§ 3 i i ees F i m tf i Fj EE Es | é set i ot cig foto tw Ob Nov Oats—No. ite 45 $ ite 0 to a to 46%; No, Rye—No, . Barley—51 to 72, ge Hs iF 3 s o in ki | RFE: 3 5 < ca j fl i