The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 10, 1928, Page 9

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ft ih. eee MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1928 CAL PROPOSES SUMMER HOUSE FOR PRESIDENT Says Health of President and| ore His Wife Should Be Safe- guarded Washington,. Dec. 10.—(AP)—To flerbert Hoover and other presidents to come may go the benefit of President Coolidge’s suggestion that the chief executive be provided with a country White House. Only a few months before his re- tirement from office, the president has declared that the health not only of the president but of the mistress o* the White House could be bene- fited if there were such a home pro- vided. Writing for t..: fiftieth anniver- sary of the St. Louis Post Dispatch, President Coolidge said: “As a fierce about to retire, I feel at iberty to write of certain phases of that office which one who was en- tering upon its; duties might feel some hesitation in discussing.” Pleads For Successor He declared that he referred to the health and pbysical condition of the president, adding, “not so much for my own sake as for my succes- Bor.” “I have often remarked that at least I had one distinction,” he con- tinued. “I have been the healthiest petal that the country has ever jad.” President Coolidge said that he had accomplished this by systematic exercise and regular habits and then after talking of the arduous duties cf a president and the necessity for conserving his strength, he made his proposal for a country White House. “Washington is practically at sea level,” he said. “Its climate is an exceedingly good all the year around climate, but at times the humidity is high and unrelieved. It becomes monotonous. The only avenue of escape for the president is the naval boat Mayflower.” Has Little Freedom President Coolidge explained the chief executive had little freedom of movement and he asserted that the only place he could enter without considerable preliminary disturbance is the White House. “For these reasons,” he said, “it seem to me that some place should be provided in the hills within easy striking distance of Washington where the president might go for two or three days at a time when he was so disposed, with conven- iences for entertaining members of ,the government ‘and other guests, where he could have that freedom of action which he has only at the ‘White House, and where he could get ‘a complete change of atmosphere. “While I have made no mention of the mistress of the White House, she \is of course to be considered. The public little understands the very ex- acting duties that she must perform and the restrictive life that she must. Jead. Fully as much as the presi- dent, she needs the opportunity for a change and some place where she can have the seclusion of the White ‘House without a constant reminder of its obligations.” CHILE HONORS HOOVER GROUP President-Elect Lands and Leaves for Valparaiso at 8 A. M. Today Santiago, Chile; Dee. 10.—(AP)— President-elect Hoover arrived here at 11:50 this morning. . President Ibanez and his cabinet greeted ‘him warmly at the station. The presi- dent escorted the visitor in gove; ment carriages to the United Stal embassy. Colorful military escorts] ed by preceded and followed the carriages. The ¢ity was brilliantly decorated. Valparaiso, Chile, Dec. 10.—(?)— ‘Welcomed by a 21-gun salute, Her- bert Hoover landed at Valparaiso about eight o’clock this morning. He left shortly afterwards on a special train for Santiago. Mager. Toutes Hosas ot Ga paraiso and a large ty of loc: officials welcomed the president- elect, A group of American resi- dents him as he passed through double lines of soldiers and sailors standing at attention to a special train. sented Mrs. Hoo- Mayor Rosas re! ver with) two Qeautiful pieces of the old colonial silver. The mayor accompanied Hoover train to Santiago where President Ibanez and his cabinet were to greet Mr. Hoover. British Royal Family Have Varying Tastes Windsor, England, Dec. 10.—(P)— Every member of the British royal family has a different taste in lit- erature, says the Windsor Castle li- brarian. There are scores of- books in the castle library dealing with naval his- tory and strategy. These belong to the King. Queen Mary Jeans toward Dickens, Tennyson and Scott. Kipling is the favorite author of the Prince of Wal than thrillers. His favorite character is Sherlock Holi On the other ‘hand the Duchess of York prefers princess ‘Mary still has great ess Mary a number of volumes of French litera- rom cas rary since marriage to Viscount Lascelles. HELP FOR WEAK KIDNEYS tions es. The Duke of York reads little else | Thai Rabbi Makler Comes to Serve Bismarck Rabbi J. Makler has come to Bis- marck from Grand Forks to conduct services for the Jewish community here and to assume charge of thi Hebrew school. Both of these tivi i . le- ry Friday nights Raphi ry. y night. Makler served a 5; in Du- luth seven years. He also has been a student of the State University at Grand Forks. INDIAN SCHOOL CHILDREN KEPT WELL IS CLATI Commissioner Burke Denies Statement That Children * Are Being Underfed Washington, Dec. 10.—(?)—A charge that during the recent ci paign, “no less a gentleman th: candidate for the presidency,” joined propagandists on the Indian ques- tion, was made by Commissioner Charles M. Burke of the Indian bu- reau before the house interior de- Jets appropriations sub commit- ee. The commissioner did not name his candidate in his testimony, made felts today, but said the nominee ad written a letter and circulated it throughout Indian country to the effect that if elected he would main- tain schools for Indian children up to the standard of such a school in New York state, where the cost per child was $600 a year. Previously, Burke had submitted a table to the sub committee showing the average cost per pupil in Indian schools, figured on a 270 day school year, was a little more than $66 or 24.7 cents a day. He branded as untrue and mis- leading a statement he said had been widely published and accepted by the institute for government research that Indian children were being fed we the government at 11 cents a day. he average for food alone, he said, was 20.4 cents a pupil. LEAGUE GROUP MEET HOLDING YANK INTEREST United States’ Right to Veto World Court Cases to Be Considered (By the Associated Press) Lugano, where the council of the League of Nations opens its fifty- third session today will be the cen- ter of interest this week for Eu- rope’s international politicians. The open program involves questions i which the United States has a tinct interest, notably the discussion of the rules for the court of inter- national justice, a subject which arose through this country’s reserva- tion that it must have the right of vetoing submission to the court of any subject in which there was di- rect American consideration. Debate Arms Agreements The council is to debate arms and armament in connection with the re last week of a special com- mission at Geneva to frame a ten- tative convention for control of the manufacture of weapons and muni- tions. That conference agreed to disagree, splitting over the old sub- ject of publicity on the products of government arsenals. Germany seemingly has lost her contention that the experts who are to investigate ible revision of the Dawes plan, should be appoint- yy the respective governments, Premier Poincare of France talked in Paris with S. Parker Gilbert, agent general of reparations, and the announced result of that conver- sation significantly described the committee of experts as “the creation of the reparations commission.” It also brought out that the experts’ findings would be only advisory in nature, and not binding upon the| Sofi reparations powers. Domestic Affairs Foremost Europeans generally follow inter- national fencing of .this nature closely, but in several countries do- mestic affairs have been foremost in the public mind. The British have been watching anxiously the illness | iste og King George and the French have had their attention distracted by the dissipation of an “invest- ment” bubble which has reduced French savings by. $10,000,000, , In Jugo-Slavia the Croat separat- ist movement ran into firmer re- sistance by the Serbian elements when the Belgrade cabinet appointed an army colonel as prefect.at Zag- ia pos Srsten leaders denonnead is as imposing upon Croats a tyranny that not even the Austrian-Hungarian empire had sared equal in its days of pre-war might. London Suicide Bridge Gets Bright New Paint Lond Dec. 10-—(F)—Author- ities ace bs to dissuade woul be suicides from jum} into the mes from Blac! psychology. of ee a the Apcreasing homer ‘sons taking ves pe a Rodd former som lack bridge a “happy” combination Bridge by| sim, LE PASS = ARIZONA IT.OF TH COMMINGNTAL DWIDE- PERCHED ON mals LOFTY ve ie SCANS YHE JORIZON WITH THE SWEEP. OF AN OBSERVATORY LENSE-| MOUNYAY a PIERCII e@ HE SLIGHTEST SPECK THE BISMARCK DARLING ~- HE'S NEVER SEEN CHRISTMAS YET- ONLY 14 DAYS To BDO YOUR 1)" SHOPPING GouATH ti tli, POOR LITTLE DIMPLED TRIBUNE SNOW Wit THOSE AND! THAT AND f liters LD SANTA CLAUS WILL SOON “BE COMING “THROUGM THE ? c IN HIS SLED — WHITE WHISKERS LITTLE RED COAT = THOSE TINY REINDEER Wie LYTYLE SILVER BELLS ‘ SOME NG RATTLE OF JHERE— SINGING CHAMPIONS ‘OF ALL SECTIONS READY FOR NATIONAL FINALS IN $17,500 RADIO AUDITION LQ BESS \ u Graoys MORRISON BALL? *, Aansas onRIsoN BALI, Amateur Boy and Girl Sin: “Parrick Hen wi "Galveston, Jex. Cy ED A ATWAWER KENT “ANNA M.CHat 8 Fayetteville, THREAT TO BALKAN PEACE IS SEEN IN ANCIENT MACEDONIAN PROBLEM Old Issue of Independence Causes Pots of War to Sim- mer Hotter Washington, Dec. 10.— (>) —The Balkan pot is simmering again with the old: issue of “Macedonian. inde-. 5 ligerent faction of the Macedonian Tevolutionary party, has reopened violently the question that has stirred the Balkans fot years with his tirades against certain members of the Bulgarian. government at ia, the. country’s capital, and threatens to march on the city. lacedonia, which never has ex- isted as an organic state, has been an irritant in the cross-fire of vexa- tious questions that have embroiled the Balkans since 1893 when the revolutionary party came into ex- nce, The territory historically known as Macedonia today- consists of the southern tip of Jugo-Slavia, a part of pee Sarees Greece and a. smal slice off Bulgaria, Michailoff, at the town of Pet- titch, is in Bulgarian territory. « Macedonian revolutionary party has been known as a virtual overnment within a government. its announced purpose is and has been to create an independent Mace- donian state, When this happens, say the party members, it will make possible the creation of an effective Balkan con- federation, which admittedly. would result in more family peace in the Balkans. The federation is con- ceived as consisting of the states of independent Macedonia, Jugo-Slavia, Greece, Bulgaria, is of Balkan pos- ty deny that .. They assert the group seeks to deliver Macedonia. to Bulgaria. J Slavia has protested to Bul- again to put. dows | ; of light green, trimmed with bright | 2s the yellow. JAMESTOWN POSTMASTER . NOMINATED and bladder] — Ws helped me so_ wonderfully, I iloved me of ty ils, and lfted the mo clouds from “y life.” Satisfaction out it ‘3° army under treaty regulations con- ee tha ones wae ae many - soldiers rinetioary tatls cna cacti ct Sofia has ‘ been Bae mere the renewed activity i = fist reaty a country, extending into Jugo- H Serbia and the | the % are Macedonians. dead been dissension in the Slavia. It was a Turkish princi- pality. There were other shuntings back and forth between then and 1908, but at that time, Bulgaria threw off ‘| the Turkish yoke. In 1912, Serbia, Bulgaria and Greece defeated Turkey and what was left of. that country’s posses- sions in the embroiled area—Mace- donia, Thrace and Eastern Thrace— were ceded to the three allies. The second Balkan war, a_ year later,; found Greece and Serbia aligned against Bulgaria, and the treaty of Bucharest gave to the vic- torious first two countries most of that territory which had been known as Macedonia. Now, Bulgaria has only a small part of Macedonia. If Macedonia were to become an na yy INO! Ark rs from Every Part of United States, Eligi ~ for Atwater Kent Foundation Cash Awards and Scholarships. 7 _ Cane ROSELL, DONALD opueanse se easastine Pe. ‘a m J ie * atl Ri ai WILFRED ENGELMAN, | \ Deir, Sich. seal to Compete in New York / dress on “Educational Problems of the Present Day” at the convocation exercises this morning at the May- ville normal school. Mr. Kitchen will be an honor guest at a banquet this evening given by Women’s Club of the North Dakota Agricultural college at Far- HERMIT LEAVES Atlantic City Veteran Found Dead in Dingy Flat; Had Many Bonds independent state, something that few can conceive, it would mean tak- ing a good portion of territory away from Fico Slavia and from Greece. The inflammable effects of the con- troversy on Balkan peace are admit- tedly great. i BEN MORRIS ON TRIALINFARGO Faces Charge of Robbing Grand Recreation Parlors Sept. 24 ; Fargo, N._D., Dec, 10.—(AP)— Ben Morris, Fargo, went on trial in Cass county district court today on & charge of relay acs ee oral legree for alle; Pi jicipation 11 Grand Recreation Parlor rob- here Sept. 24. tles Anderson, patrolman, who shot and seriously wounded Morris ‘after the latter had been found near ‘the scene of the robbery and failed to halt .at the officers. command, peared as witness. against. Mor- Dickinson, N. D.,, Dec, 10.—(AP) —Peter Kreiter, 55, farmer, dropped from heart, failure dedication services ial sel of St. Pius rch south of Dickinson. Kreiter, who was born in Russia, leaves a widow and several children. Kitchen Speaks at while attending of a new Cat Atlantic City, N. J., Dec. 10.—(#) Surrotnded by wealth the body of James T. Cowden, 78, a hermit and a pioneer resident of this resort, has been found in his dingy top floor quarters in a rooming house. Seven worn and musty wallets, bulging with silver and gold coins, were hidden in the room. Packets of stocks, bonds and mortgages had been stuffed into old shoes. Under the shabby carpet were bank books, one of which showed a $37,000 bal- ance, Gold pieces: blackened with age and valuable papers which crumbled as police opened them for examina- tion had beeh tucked away in hiding places and left long undisturbed. Patrick Paunon, proprietor of the rooming house, discovered the body when is searched for his lodger whom he had not seen for several days. He called the police. An ambulance surgeon said death had resulted from natural causes: Cowden owned much real estate. | ins Some estimates were that he was worth $1,000,000. For 20 years he had been a recluse. Mayville Normal Kitchen, commissioner of sgricabare sa labor, neve. #8 ai GREAT WEALTH : TROOPS HELP IN COLOMBIA FRUIT STRIKE Rebellious Elements Scat- tered; Nine Battalions in Action Bogota, Colombia, Dec. 10—(P)— Telegrams from the Magdalena re- gion, where fruit-workers are on strike, state that government troops have dispersed the rebellious ele ments. Nine battalions of soldiers were operating in the region. Government forces surprised a large body of strikers burning and pillaging near Sevilla and repulsed them. The strikers fled and left be- Hind a number-of dead and wounded. There were unconfirmed reports that Raul Machecha, a Socialist and lead- er of the strikers, was killed in the combat. Later a large body of reinforce- ments armed with revolvers and machetes, came to the aid of the strikers and the troops were re- ier to have killed 15 in another attle. A telegram from Santa Marta said that the rebellious elements were fleeing before the government troops, and pillaging and plunder- ing as they went. Twelve strikers were reported to have been killed in one combat. The soldiers captured 400 pounds of dynamite, fuses and a great quantity of arms. Railroad service to Rio Frio has been re-established and telegraph service to Ciunega reopened. The Socialist directorate in Bo- gota offered the ministry of industry to send two delegates to their re- gion to try to effect a solution of the difficulty. It was thought un- likely, however, that the offer would be accepted. THINK HE'LL BRING YOU'LL KNOW HIM - WON'T SURE — YOu Witt = THE GUMPS— THERE’S ONE BORN EVERY MINUTE AND WHEN WE COMES DOWN, THAT CHIMNEY AND FINDS YOUR STOCKING HANGING WHAT DO YOU ? You ?, BY GOLLY = YINAT LITTLE DICKENS} KNOW 8: ~ HE BELIVES IN SANTA CLAUS stock show and sale which will again be a big feature of the institute. At a conference of members of the agricultural committee of the Fargo Chamber of Commerce today, committees were named to solicit the husiness houses of Fargo for the purpose of urging a large repre- sentation of business men to attend the annual sale of livestock. The sale will be held Thursday, at 9 a.m., with 58 animals, the pick from the flocks and herds of the junior boys and girls livestock clubs of the state to be offered for sale, H. L. Finke, Minot, and Frank Hy- land, Devils Lake, livestock auction- eers, will donate their services at this sale, and C. F, Monroe, director of the extension division of the col- lege will act as clerk. LIONS PREPARE FOR CHRISTMAS Members Informed at Lunch- eon of Role Club Will Play in Bismarck Celebration Lions were made acquainted with what is expected of them Christmas, at the weekly luncheon of the club today. Dr. D. C. Dursema explained the city’s holiday plans to the lunch- ers and the part the club members are to have in the big community celebration. The Lions are to see that the community tree is received and set up and decorated, he an- nounced. In addition, 30 members are to serve as ushers at the Auditorium | Christmas celebration and to assist | in the distribution of candy there. he speaker of the day was Jason | E, Wait, who took as his topic that | of jewels and gems, He went back | into ancient lore to cite the use of | prectous stones in the various civ- | izations of antiquity and brought | his subject down to the present day, | NEW DIRECTOR FOR CORN SHOW Frank Hyland, Devils Lake, Is Elected to Fill Vacancy Left by J. S. Kirk The yearly reorganization of the North Dakota State Cotn show wa: held at the Association of Cor merce rooms tl wit change in directors. J. S. Kirk, Devils Lake, retired from the board and Frank Hyland, of the same town, was elected in his place. The old officers were then ‘hey are George F. Will, president; D. C. Crimmi ton, vice president; and P. J. My. treasurer. H. P. Goddard, in hi capacity as secretary of the Associa- tion of Commerce, serves as secre- fn of the show organization. ‘he board of the show consists of pects F. Will, J. P. Jackson, A. L. Conklin, Obert A. Olson, J. A. Graham and J. L. Bell, Bismarck; Otto Mund, Delamere J. G. Hi Grand Forks; F. H. Hyland, Devils Lake; John Frey, Turtle Lal . C. Crimmins, Hazelton; Herman Leutz, Taylor C. A. Stenehjem, Arne; with the governor and commissioner of agriculture, ex-officio members. JUNIOR FARMER GROUP GATHERS State Boys and Girls Meet in Fargo; Conduct Livestock Sale Thursday Fargo, N. D., Dec. 10.—P)— North Dakota 4-H club boys and girls were gathered in Fargo to- annual achievement when gems serve both for beauty | and utility. He referred to some of | the historical jewels associated with | Syaaaties and the tragedies of em- pire. President Strauss reported that! Cold Won’t Bother Him This Winter! Some men throw-off a cold within a few hours of contracting it. An; one can do it with the aid of a si pe compound which comes in tablet orm, and is no trouble to take or to always have about one. Don’t “dope” xouraelt when you catch cold; use ape’s Cold Compound. Men and women everywhere rely on this in- nocent but amazingly efficient little tablet. You'll find it in any drugstore you visit, and for only 350 a package. Sore throat, or a stuffed-up head, even grippy colds won’t worry you, ones, you experience this quick re- PAPE’S COLD COMPOUND the charter night planned for the ine stitution of the Dickinson Lions club, tomorrow night, had been in- definitely postponed on account of illness in the Stark county seat. Visitors present at the luncheon included Frank P. Byrne, Minneapo- lis, and Brune Just, Judson. State Will Auction Seized Game Guns M. A. Kinzer, state game warden, announces that a sale of confiscated hunting and gunning property will be held at the Gladstone, Jamestown, at 2:30 Wednesday afternoon, The effects to be sold include 85 guns, some traps and minor accessories. WANTED DRESSED TURKEYS Bring your dressed turkeys, any quantity, to Gussner’s, For those people who en- joy a fine, full wheaten flavor in baked foods use

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