The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1928, Page 7

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WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1928 Longworth Opens Congress GN, D. A. WILL STAGE CARSON SIRE CAMPAIGN Purebred Stock Sale Set for Grant County City Dec. 18 by Groom The second purebred sire sale to be held in the Bismarck - Mandan area under the auspices of the agri- cultural committee of the Greater North Dakota association will be held at Carson Tuesday, Dec. 18, ac- cording to an announcement sent out today by B. E. Groom, chairman of the committee. “This sale will be in cooperation with Theodore Martell, county ex- tension agent of Grant county, who will have charge of all 1 rangements for the sale. Mr. Mar- tell with a number of farmers from Grant county attended the sale at Mandan, Nov. 27, arranged for a sale in his Souae: Martin Apland, buyer for the as- iation, was then sent to Carson to assist in preliminary arrangements for the sale and get definite infor- mation on the stock wanted, which Mr. Groom says will be handled the same as other sales and include Holsteins, Guernseys, Angus, Here- fords, beef Shorthorns, and milking Shorthorns, A carload of 25 head will be selected for this sale. In selecting animals for this sale Mr. Apland says he will have five top notch Shorthorn yearlings, which he bought from W. M. Brown, Amenia. All of these are sired by Dreadnaught Tokay, premier sire of the Brown herd. CHICAGO GIRLS JOIN NOBILITY Adoption of English Marchion- ess Makes Them Heirs to Millions Chicago, Dec. 5.—(P)-—The door of English nobility has opened for two little Chicago girls, Marjorie and Isabelle Meuser, whose adoption Le the Marchioness Hutly of all, Peterborough, England, will make them heirs to an estate of several millions, Until yesterday Marjorie and Isa- belle, who ‘are eight and ten years old, led the lives of thousands of other Chicago girls—minus wealth and social position. Their father, Floyd C. Meuser, an. advertising salesman. had died in February. For 10 months they had lived with their stepmother, Mrs. Louise Meuser. Today they left for the glamour of English sociéty life because their great aunt, the marchioness, expressed a desire to adopt them. In her youth she had been a Chicagoan, Arthur Campbell, Jr., a son of the. marchioness. by..her. first.. came to Chicago to arrange adoption 5 Hibase h bate Judge Henry lorner signed the necessary papers eveind after the girls’ stepmother ad agreed to surrender them. The marchioness inherited a large estate from her second husband, James MacDonald of Cincinnati Her present husband, the marquis, is 81 years old and holds 11 other titles beside his marquisate. Accompanied by Mr. Campbell, whose father, an English barrister, was the marchioness’ first husband, the girls will go as wards of the Chicago court to Peterborough, there to be adopted by the marchioness, GANG KIDNAPS GAMBLER KING Louisville, Ky., Dec, 5—{AP)— Alvey, 60, widely wn race horse man and known as “king of Louisville gamblers” has been kid- naped, apparently by racketeers, who have issued a demand for $50,000 ransom, Alvey, last seen early Monday night, apparently was kidnaped from toi his home after his wife departed. When she returned shortly before midnight, Alvey was missing, but knowledge that he had been kid- naped did not reach here until yes- terday when Alvey’s captors tele- phoned Logan Swanner, an employe of Alvey, demanding that the latter cash Alvey’s check for $50,000, Detectives have been assigned to the case, although *irs, Alvey, fear- ing that the a, aoeeiers believed to have captured her husband, will harm him, expressed a desire to comply with their wishes. COULTER WILL TALK AT MEET Crookston, Minn., Dec, 5.—(AP)— Delran S088 1 counties Lseavenen ere today iscuss luction, marketing and “manufacturing of dairy products at the silver anniver- sary convention of the Red Valley D: 's association. ined by 12 men 6 youes age, cpened y 12:'men 0) its session this morning aia nae dreds of dairymen from all parts of River 8 Po! pied delegates for most of the morn- ing session, while problems con- fronting the dairy industry furnished the t for tied he ail" ‘hy “tice cl keeping ‘jazs music Speaker of the House Nicholas Longworth, of Cincinnati, is shown as he banged the gavel that opened the “lame duck” session of Congress, rtant measures, such as farm relief, Muscle Shoals, the Kellogg Treaty and others, were scheduled for disposition at the short s WORK ON TUT-ANKH- clacnenion. by. speak- poother Im- AMEN’S RELICS IN LUXOR SOON TO BE COMPLETED Mumny of Ancient King to Be Interred and Sealed Again in Tomb Luxor, Egypt, Dec. 5.—(AP)—The mummy of King Tut-ankh-amen, whose discovery in 8 forgotten tomb in the Valley ofthe Kings a few years ago greatly enriched the world’s knowledge of ancient Egypt, is to be interred again shortly after Christmas and his tomb sealed. Howard Carter, American Egypt- ologist, has returned to Egypt to se first aid to some of the an- rice he saved from King Tut- ankh-amen’s tomb and to complete the work which has taken him sev- eral years in the face of many dif- ficulties, The necessity for care in handling some of the antiquities is due to their great age and the haphazard way in which they have been stored of stone, marble or precious metals are in excellent condition but the wood and wickerwork furniture, after centuries in a dusty tomb, re- quires overhauling before it can be transported, Superstitious Egyptian women are . | taking great interest in the relics of the boy king who sailed along the Nile surrounded by beautiful women on moonlight nights some 32 cen- turies ago. The museum at Cairo, where the most precious and inter- esting exhibits are now stored, is crowded with native women who spend most of their time in the Tut- ankh-amen room. Carter’s work this autumn has none of the romantically exciting revelations which accompanied the first years of excavation. He is now finishing his laboratory work which will mark the end of one of the most important archeological discoveries ever made in Egypt. Carter will reconstruct several hundred ancient Egyptian game boards and elucidate the games themselves. These are different forms of primitive games of check- ers and chess. Now that the end of the work is approaching, the scientist can see more clearly what the value of the discovery of King Tut-ankh-amen's mb has been:to the world. Generally speaking, the excavation has only provided much material which better illustrates facts about the lives and customs of the ancient Egyptians that were already known. It is the historians who have profited most. Before the discovery they knew the dates of the dynasty and of the reigns of the separate members of the family. Their pple was that the total years of the various reigns greatly exceeded the. period which could be assigned to the whole dynasty. hen King ‘Tut-ankh- amen’s tomb was opened the answer was found in the fact that several members of the family often reigned simultaneously as co-regenta, Stanton Farmers Get Better Phone Service Farmers living near Stanton will ae better telephone service in the future. A case, filed with the railroad commission by subscribers of the Farmers Mutual Telephone company of Krem in an effort to obtain bet- ter service, has been dismissed be- cause the company is constructing another line to improve the service. The complainants averzed that there are.only three lines operated by the company and that more were needed to properly handle the busi- ness. After a consultation by rail- oad. commission, bers. with both the com to build line without action. work of building the line now is going, forward. e facilities ‘or all of the lines are located at Stanton, 4 2 tk ry, Philadelvhis, M Dec, 5.—(AP' mysterious oe of : rs tachment of Nati who left Jackson before he was taken and was said to be seriously wounded. The Mississippi guardsmen had departed from Jackson under sealed orders in command of Adjutant General J. M. Hairston and Gover- nor Bilbo had declined to say where he had ordered them. An automobile loaded with newspaper men went on their trail. Dunn who had been hid- ing in the hills escaped to a nearby. woods when the soldiers arrived but was followed up and taken after a fight. LAGUARDIA MODEST ‘DAPPER DANNY’ HOGAN IS DEAD Automobile Started Bomb Blast Fatal to St. Paul Un- derworld Leader St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 5.—()—The “smiling peacemaker” of the St. Paul underworld, the “Dapper Dan- ny” Hogan who said he didn’t have an enem ° in the world, lay last night and watched surgeons amputate his right leg, shattered by a bomb. And then he died. Earlier in the day Hogan, a res- taurant proprietor who long has been known a a mediator in gang disputes, stepped on the starter o! his automobile. A dynamite bomb had been placed under the floor board of the car, and the touch on the starter button exploded it. “I didn’t know I had an enemy in the world,” he said at the hospital. “I don’t know who did it, or mucl what happened. I touched the starter, and that’s “ull I remember.” fen was 48 years old and mar- ried. “Big Tim” gunmen were believed to have planted the dynamite in Hogan's car. Police think that New York gunmen were involved. De- scriptions of two men seen near the Hogan home early yesterday were in the hands of detectives, who also had fragments of the bomb as slen- der clues, PROBE REVEALS LIQUOR “TRUST” “|Score of Canadian Distillers, Brewers Indicted by Buffalo Grand Jury _ Washington, Dec. 5.—(#)—Follow- ing the indictment at Buffalo, N. Y., by a federal grand jury of more than @ score of Canadian distillers and brewers, the treasury department announced that investigations dis- closed that “powerful combinations” were engaged in the smuggling traffic. The investigation which resulted in the indictments in Buffalo were said to be likely to involve not only other Canadian distillers but em- Ployes of railway and telegraph companies and several banks, The foreign control division of the treasury department in a statement said that some Canadian liquor in- terests had aided and abetted in smuggling to the extent in some in- ,| stances of sending sales agents to the United States and in. others of furnishing false and misleading in- ‘What most people call indigestion is usually excess acid in the stomach. The food has soured. The instant remedy is an alkali which neutralizes acids, But don’t use ertide helps. Use what your doctor would advise. The best help is Phillips’ Milk of Magne: For the 50 years since its invention it has remained stan- dard with physicians. You will find nothing else so quick in its effect, 80 harmless, so efficient. One tasteless spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume in acid, The results are immediate, with no bad after-effects. Once you learn this fact, you will never deal with excess acid in the crude ways. Go learn—now—why this method is supreme. sure to get the genuine Phil- ii ilk of Magnesia prescribed of physicians for 50 years in correct- ing excess acids. 25c and 50c a bot- MCA of Magnesia” has been the ilk of Magnesia” has been ee Re; ti pee Mark ee The rles H, Philli emical Com- ny and its predecessor Charles H. Philips since 1875.—Adv. All the j of Christmas . all the Il of the thri New i Year in The Silver Anni versary BUICK Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. . Bismarck, North Dakota | form ven members of the eustoms border patrol at Detroit who were | arrested last weck on charges o! pass into the United States from Canada are said to have confessed arid to have given the inside details of the smugglers’ organization. NYE CRITICIZES FRENCH COURTS Calls Blackmer Extradition Re- fusal Lack of Friendliness, Consideration Washington, Dec. 6.—(AP)—The refusal of ‘he French courts to al- low the extradition sought by Amer- ica of Harry M. Blackmer in con- nection wit!. the inquiry into the government's leases of oil fields, drew sharp criticism from Senator Nye, Republican, of North Dakota, the chairman of the Senate Public Lands committee. “I don’t see how the American people,” he said, “can regard the action of France as friendly or con- siderate. The average American is ing to wonder how much it cost rt. Blackmer to win that action. The French courts have been consid- ering the Blackmer defense of poli- tical persecution whereas the Amer- ican public looks on the case aside from any political motive. I hope the time will never come when America will be coming to the de- fense of such scoundrels in the way France has come to the defense of Blackmer.” Washington officials seemed to regard the action of France as final in the case. HUBBY BREAKS ‘PROMISE’ Los Angeles, Dec. 5.—(2)—Mrs. Violet Merchant’s story is that she agreed to a divorce on condition that her husband remarry her when cer- tain property matters had been set- tled. He married another. Mrs. Merchant is’ suing for $50,000 for breach of promise. if |‘Gsed-Fellows’ Group | Asking for Names of | * Tl ‘good. -, Needy Families Here ‘beginning its cepting bribes to permit liquor to Jare: \are: Do you know any needy families | ®"4 in Bismarck ? This is a question asked today b: . whic! the “good-follows” committe has charge of presenting bi food, clothing, and other articles needy families in Bismarck. Names of be sent to Miss Mary Cashel, sec: needy families should tary of the B county chapter of the American h 5 Cross, before Monday, Dee, 10. lellows” committee is work today. Members E. A. Thorberg, H. G. Hanson, |. E. Bostrom, all of the Ki- wanis club, Miss Cashel, and a rep- | resentative of the Bismarck corps of yi | the Salvation Army. HERBERT AND HOOVER Taleaso, Ecuador, Dec. 5.—(P)— Twins here have been named Herbert and Hoover ts of 0! to Life carefully planned SK any of the boyswho've made good and they'll tell you it didn't just hap- heed by a lucky eak. Their suc- cess was the re- sult of careful planning. Hard work. Night school, perhaps. And above all, a! ways attending strictly to this important matter of health. “Thad notime for outdoor exer- cise,”’ is the story you'll hear. “I couldn't afford one of those gym- nasium courses. But I figured I could keep myself in good shape by takin, taken it ever since. And it's helped as much as anything to keep me fit and on the job every day."* There's no casier way to keep in first rate condition than by taking Nujol. Nujol is not a medicine. It's juse a pure, natural substance that helps your system to function as Nature jujol. I've meant it to under all conditions. Normally. Regu- larly. Easily, Ie not only ‘an excess yer oisons from forming (we all have them), but aids in their re- moval. Nujol can't possibly up- set or disagrec with you, because it contains abso- lutelyno medicine or drugs. It issim- ply a pure nataral substance. Per- fected by the Nujol Laborato- ties,26Broadway, New York. Start wb to- day. Give it a fair ery—for the next three months, anyway. By the end of that time—even before then per- haps—see if you don’t feel much more all ‘round fit. You can buy Nujol at all drugstores for a small sum. Worth trying, isn't it? Nujol is sold in sealed packages only. Stop and buy a bottle on your way home tonight. -——— MEN’S GIFT SHOP % SPARION EQUASONNE 4 wide range of models and prices A MUSICAL MARVEL and MAGNIFICENTLY new, is this revolutionary sade lotemions thing known before, that baffles description. It takes auditorium. Hear the Sparton BQ means, 1 oe by all gives a richness...a scp s Lemay fre agi sats ino the ten. or [ASONNE before you choose VERCOATS 0% Discount The mildest November in the history of the state finds us greatly overstocked with overcoats. Our Popular Prices together with this discount for stylish, quality merchandise make these values unbeatable. An Ideal Christmas Gitt KLEIN’S TOGGERY t from apy- Mansfactured by THE SPARKS-WITHINGTON CO.,(t1. 1900) JACKSON, MICH, U.S.A. QUANRUD, BRINK & RETBOLD WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS. SPARTON RADIO "The Pathfinder of the Aix” ~~ Ward’s The Practical Gitt Store for the Entire Hawthorne Flyer $33.45 Such a gift will make any Lys! or girl joyously happy. sporty looking bike, all shining nickel and bright enamel, Fully equipped—coaster brake, elec- tric light, package carrier, horn —nothing more to buy. Fa mous for its sturdy construc. tion, its smooth speed, its low en Other bikes, $9.49 to 6.65. Velocipedes $1.89 to $9.89 Santa knows that Ward’s have the finest velocipedes in the world! Strong enameled frames, heavy rubber tires, real leather seats, Ball-bearing through- out. Sturdily built for the roughest wear. You won't find them more reasonably priced anywhere. Convertible Baby Walker $2.69 To delight baby, Santa brings this pretty walker. Of ivory and plue enamel, with a musical tinkle bell. A walker, stroller, and coaster combined. When baby’s little feet get tired, mother can let down the floor and attach the handle. Rtrongly built, reasonably priced.

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