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pateeegesee EOL aeTey Pee ree eranted. "And it is further ordered by the | PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE MENTOR CRAIG RUBY’ OP ILLINOIS FEARS THE NORTH DAKOTA TEAM Nodaks Played Too Well Against Wesleyan; Wlini Has Strong Offense yorigee el gs 23 in the spotlight w one of the . cham = uship, the o>. sketball team took its 1 st drill rep: -ator int re gr wave from kota tonig. Coach Craig he was doubt is Chars Bec‘uing made it Big Ten made th t Dakoia t defeat mile trip Tue gi’ Illinois ¥ two yea Al Letich Lauded id tha. Al Leticl With ht four team sonsati ad Lombard 44 to) m haye shown unmis- it offensive | p h Dateta isual standard agai Loyola, No one ¢! dl inferior in| 1 Eberly Imp-oving zailly reunding into trim ad it is possible that he may | d part time tonight. Lewy Lee not made an app nd | Letich has had no wor condition. Wesleyan’s put Glenn J, delines K: abit is | Just when the fleet C d t was playing a beautiful guard. If he is in tremely provab’~ thet Letich will start hn ith Paul Doyd. If Letich uses} tactics he employ t Bloomington the nomads m: rs with a second outfit on the { Interest in North Dakota's western | invasion has been keen at every step. | | Three thousand s the game at Lo- yola, and a like number turned out at Bloomington. It is estimated thal 7.000 will seo tonight's gam? he This will be by the lar a vniversity cage team has ever ap-| peared before. BRIAND REJOICES OVER SETTLEMENT | Paris, Dec. 20. \—Foreign minis- | ter Briand, after receiving official messages announcing that Bolivia and | Paraguay had submitted their differ- | ences to the Pan-Americ: ence, in his capacity as president of the council of tie League of Natio sent this cable today to the two gov ernments: “The council an were beni toward venting a tion of the dispute and toward facili- tating peaceful settlement by any method can only rejoice at the halt- ing of the conflict between members | of the le2zue uniied by race and | common tra erous offer o tion has bee: “The co! that. the ¥ these two parties hi there will fol a settlement of which will reest: all whose hope ure which | rrriey Kon ORDER oF PEEREON Dis- do- In the 1» ates d In the rivt ¢ of the Unitea h Dakot eva J. North Da Marck, in the and State of District, respe on the 24th day o past she was duly under the acts 16 bankruptcy; t Li rendered all her property of property, and hax fully with ali the reyuirements of and of the orders of t! Tame ter iniueaptcy. WHEREFORE. she prays that s..e | may be decreed by the vourt to have a full discharge from all debts nrov- able against her estate under said bankrupt acts. except such debts as are excepted by law from such dis- charge. Dated this 9th day A.D. 1928. Count complied aid acts. court touch- of Novomber, Eva J, Barker, Bankrupt ee i Addl of notice, District of North | 6: “On thie Iith day of December, A. D | 1928, on reading the petition for dis- charge of the above-named Bankrupt * Onde ered by the court, that a hear- ing be had upon the same on the 11th of February, A. D. 1929, before seid court, at Fargo in said dis- let, at ten o'clock in the forenoon: Tinted A raid district, and that own creditors and other per- oe, in interest may appear at the said time and place and show cause, if any they have, why the prayer of the suid petitioner should not be at the referee shall send, by an known creditors, cop! petition and this orde: hem at their places of Honorable, Andrew of, the xaid Court, and ‘ar in said ‘ne th Tien ‘aay of December, ry, Clerk. Clerk. leue v |8a5 pocket and caused 2 1 Jet the mine roof to crash. \Has Fifth Successive Good! | tient hi | convince his ph Prince George today Follies Career Halted by Cupid so THREATENED : ‘WITH DEATH AS HE _ OPENS KIDNAP CASE | Letter Similar to Others Re- \ ceived by Principals in Chicago Tria! | Chicago, Dee. 20.—UP)—A | threatening death to Judge Robert E. | A Long Twosome i | | | letter } | Gentzel was received by the Judge | this morning shortly pefore he took | the bench to resume the tria. of three | defendants accused of the kidnapping | of 10-year-old Billy Ranieri The lette: written on brown paper with a blue nn was mailed at 2, o'clock this morning and was received by the judge in his chambers as he! prepared to open the morning session of court | | ‘The message was wled in af scarcely legible hand in an upper cor- | ner of the page of 5 | “You are too late, are dead. Now quit our | was unsigned but the authorit: {the writing was similar to th | threatening letters received by several others involved in the case. including the Ranieri family and .state wit-| nesses. The message was received as Mike! de Vitoswho the ‘oom under heavy nd. Prosecutors | wanted his testi-! e something happened to Waiting in the c guard to take t t a hearing before Judge te opposed the freeing | three suspects in the slaying cariict in the week of another witness by declaring that one of the defendauts | had remarked to a bailiff that de Vito would be the next to die. Jucige Gentzel continued the hear- ing until Saturday when the prosecu- | tion maintained that if the suspects | held for the killing of Ole Scully, an- other state witness, were freed, they | would immediately slay de Vito. The; suspects include a brother of one of! the defendants and Billy’s Godfather. | HOOVER WILL VISIT CUBA BEFORE MAR, 4 U. 8S. 5. Utah, Until a fe Watt, 21, glorifie Hi months ago, Marecine S_up- st Watt ern University senior from Wheel- ing, W. Va. The wedding hells will ring 2s soon as Ray has finished his schooling as a lawyer. * MINERS FOUND DEAD BEHIND DEBRIS WALL Six Victims of Kentucky Cave-| In-Explosion to Be Buried by Families en Route to Rio! Janeiro, Dec. 20. Ithough Her- | ars bert Hoover has decided that he will} Ky. Dee. 20. — | not visit Havana on the present good- one of the numerous | win trip, it was stated today that he nining villages in the coal fields of | would go to the Cuban capital before Kentucky was in deep mourning to-|his inauguration. He is also eal plans were being made for|¢ring a visit to Mex‘: City and Texas before March 4. nerals' of the victims of the) “rhe Utah was rolling along the er in the Diamond Mining com-| pa mine Tuesday night which! claimed the lives of six men. of the dead were married and} e funerals were planned to be jheld Friday or Saturday. Recovery of the bodies was not ac- complished until large groups of res- rs had virtually austed in the long and hazardous against a heavy bank of hich closed the only avenue to the six men following Drakesboro. I boro, 15 knots and is due to dock at Janeiro at 2 p. m., tomorrow. The Utah will sail on the last lap of the journey home at noon Sunday and the Hoover party will spend Christmas day aboard 4 President-elect and = Mrs, were enjoying their present relaxation | after the strenuous days they spent! in Buenos Aires, and Montevideo. During today the Utah will be jPicked up by two Brazilian cruisers, plosion. jth? Bahia and the Rio Grande do, s of mine experts that|Sue. These vessels will accompany the Hefetinsd men would be found! the battleship to the Brazilian capital dead were verified when the obstruc-|as an escort of honor. It will te the | tion finally was opened shortly before | first time that the ship carrying Mr. | midnight. |Hoover has had an escort of more Collapse of a cmell portion of the! than one warcraft mine roof about 7:30 o'cloc:: Tuesday night is thought to h ignited i i nig “On causell = nase area | U€Zal-Trained Mind Fit for Leadership, Steel Magnate Says! Ithaca, N. ¥.. Dec. 20.—P)—A belief | | tase the legal-trained mind is best| fitted for leadership has prompted Myron C. Taylor, chairman of the | finance committee of the United! | States Steel corporation, to give Cor- | nell university $1,500,000 for the erec- KING GEORGE GAINS STRENGTH SLOWLY law school. Mr. Taylor was graduated from the | law school in and is a member | 2 the university's board of trustees. Night's Resteas Cptim- ism Prevails London, Dec. 20.—(P)}—Th ward trend in King Gi tion Was continuing tod: dispatchers had a This morning's bulletin which again | freignt should have announced that his majesty had ajNeither would give in. The result Sood night's rest was the fifth succes-) was that two trains met head on. sive one in which a slight improve-| four trai x F rainmen were killed and 33} recorded. ‘This indication | cars smashed, y. if small, gain for the King s cheering news for the public ie in palace circles there was an air of greater optimism although it has beon repeatedly made clear that mxiety must continu: il the pa- gained sufficient strength to sicians that he is able | to carry through to recovery Ww up-| WRECK FOLLOWS ARGUMENT rge’s condi- Fe Warsaw, Dec. 20.—(7)—Two train| ispute as to which Mile. Cecile Cailans of Paris jilted a banker worth $10,000,000 and eloped with @ chauffeur. DON’T BE SICK! The inalienable _birth- right of nature is health. That same health comes from within your own body, not from without. Perhaps you have been ailing for a long tim _and have tried this and that with little or no re- sults. Stop that uncer- tainty and find the exact cause of your trouble be- fore you waste more time and money. PRINCE CELEBRATES 2STH BIRTHDAY QUIETLY S. S. Berengaria, Dec. 20.—(P)— celebrated the | anniversary of his birth, but in | cumstances under | n he was making the voyage to | father's bedside, the celebration | of a very quiet nature. The ship's | cooks prepared a birthday cake as a | ‘surprise gift to the prince. Apart from an early morning sprint | around the deck dressed in flannel trousers and a white sweater, the Prince spent most of the day quistly reading in the imperial suite. Twin City Council Elects Officers Twin City council, No. 7, made up of Bismarck and Mandan Masons, elected officers for the ensuing year. Wednesday evening, at the temple. The officers cre divided by alterna- tion between: the two cities. They are: L. K. Thompson, Bismarck, mas- ter; E. W. Miller, Mandan, deputy master; Gilbert Simingson, Bismarck. tncipal conductor; D. P. Dullam, , treasurer; Gilbert Haugen, k, secretary; F. W. McKen- dry, ge captain of the guard; R. G. Bismarck, conductor of council; ia ‘W. Mason, Mandan, stew- ard; F. E. Titus, sentinel, 5 the cause of all diseases. nm pass into the blood stream the: Here Is Your C1 by visiting the Clinic of Dr. T. careful examin: razilian consi today at better than! “ Rio! tion of a new building to house its! . | treasury. Norwegian writer, and his wife, are going to do just that. The pair are pictured here, with their sailboat, just before leaving the harbor of La Coruna, Galicia. SOLO FLIGHT MARK FOR WOMEN IS SET Viola Gentyr, 28, Remains in Air Little More Than 8 Hours Today Roosevelt Field, N. Y., Dec. 20.— (AP)—Miss Viola Gentyr, 28, came down out of the rain filled skies at ‘51 o'clock this afternoon after es- tablishing an endurance solo flight record for women of eight hours six minutes and 37 seconds. She made a perfect landing despite the heavy rain and showed no fatigue from her hours in the ai: Bundled in a vast amount of cloth- i tect her from a_ chilling Gentyr took off in an Gis cockpit biplane at 5:44:28 ock this morning in an attempt es establish an official women’s en- ance record. Her plane carried 100 gations of “one and she hoped to remain in he cir until 7 o'clock tonight. No endurance record for women is now recognized. rv, who was born in Gen- has 120 hours of flying time to her credit. She has worked as a waitress, cashier and stenog- rapher at various times to acquire i money for aviation instruction. The plane she used was loaned by iss Grace Lyon of Long Beach, N. Y., while field mechanics supervised preparations for her flight free of | | charge. Robbery Charge Faces Man Taken Off Train William Laird, 40, Dickinson, who | Nas taken from a train at Mandan |yesterday by Sheriff Henry Handt- mann, Morton county, at the request of Stark county officials, was returned | to Dickinson today. Laird is accused of robbing a tran- sient of $70 after he had taken the ‘man to a room and given him a doped drink. Two other men who were with Laird and the transient during the drinking are said to substantiate the charges. Ed Schatz, deputy sheriff of Stark | county, took Laird back to Dickinson. GIL BOAG HAS ‘PRESENT’ New York, Dec. 20.—(AP)—Gil li Boag, who is being sued for a divorce in Wisconsin by Gilda Gray of the | movies, has a shiner, a big black eye vhich hoe describes as a Christmas card from Gilda. He says two men |beat him up when he was leaving a ‘restaurant; insists they described the | beating as a Christmas present from Gilda. He likes the present so well he intends to go to Port Washington, Wis., and prove by income tax re- | turns that Gilda is a resident of New \ York and can’t sue in Wisconsin. T. M. MacLACHLAN, M. D. (Harvard) riginator of Alkaline Blood Treat- ment and Mucousless Diet System Your Body at One Time Did Function Normally and If Given the Chance Will Do So Again Health can only come through the circulation of pure blood in all the tissues, cells and gene of your body. Impure blood is the products of fermentation and acid poisons are absorbed from the stomach and intestines and poison the entire system. ance to Get Well M. MacLachlan who will make a ion of your blood and urine and determine the peas amount of acid in your system. He uses no X-ray nor .other dangerons nor disagreeable method of examination. Dr. Mac- lan does not send his patients to the hospital—he cures them. He does not ellere in Be eka ita obtained Healing by her ba marvelous. es HE NAS CURED HUND! 8, Lucas Bi — he eee without sureety. 's Modern System of Natural ‘k and ‘Alkaline *BI Treatment HE C. Sic NRT Rises HOHE eatin ntact cute GTR MELLON REPLIES 10 GARNER'S ATTACK ON TREASURY'S REPORT Says Texas Representative ‘Makes Statement With No Responsibility’ Washington, Dec. 20. — (‘P) — The charge made by Representative Gar- ner, Democrat, Texas, in the house, that Secretary Mellon had misrepre- sented the condition of the treasury to congress drew from the secretary a retort today that Garner had em- ployed “wrorg figures which do not fit the facts.” “The treasury makes a statement and has the responsibility for it,” Mr. Mellon said. “Mr. Garner makes a statement and has no responsibility.” Under-secretary Mills joined the discussion by declaring that there would be no deficit in government funds in 1929, “unless congress spends more money.” Garner in a general attack on Mel- lon and the treasury yesterday had declared the secretary had sent te congress conflicting estimates as te possible surpluses and deficits. Sec- retary Mellon said h: could not enter into a debate with Mr. Garner, but he observed that 2udget estimates submitted to congress were prepared by the budget bureau and not the Garner had charged also that the United States Steel corpor- ation ‘would receive — $65,000,000 through tax refunds agreed upon through settlements with the treas- ury, and Mellon reiterated his declar- ation that Garner's figures did not fit the facts in the tax refund cases. “As far as the treasury is con- cerned,” he said, “our figures are cor- ,|date of final repayment. rect and we wuven't made any mis- takes.” Son aaa ta Close’ Mellon said that tax refunds needed for each fiscal year were es- timated by the intcrnal revenue bu- reau and while they cculd not esti- mate exactly the amount that would be allowed by court decisions and agreements settling claims, that they were “remarkably close.” i Budget figures, Under-secretary Mills said, go to the director of the budget so early that it is impossible to estimate accurately the amount jneeded. The amount first asked for in the 1929 budget for tax refunds was approximately $131,000,000 and the treasury later estimated that an- other $20,000,000 would be needed. Last week ‘vhen the final deficiency estimate was submitted the amount was increased »y $55,000,000 to a total of $205,000,000 for the year. Mills ex- Plained that due to laws passed by ; congress last year interest on tax re- funds ran from ‘F- time the taxes were paid to within 30 days of the It was to avoid paying this interest any longer than necessary, he said, that the treasury asked for the $205,000,000. Thieves at Lawrence, Mass., car- tied away an iron safe containing only one postage stamp, overlooking @ smaller safe filled with money. ADVERTISEMENT Finds a Way to Stop Attacks of Fits Reports are received of an amazing treatment that epileptics state has proved successful in stopping their at- tacks. R. Lepso, Apt. 108, 895 Island Ave., Milwaukee, Wis., has been sup- plying sufferers with this treatment. 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