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t RRR S 1939. \ “RERHSTS RECRSRBRSMES EYSs eR AeE Fen BAIS SORNee.. Beare er a i seeeve eR eae eaeene JOBAWATTSRETURN HERBERT HOOVER 3 { President-Elect Says He Will/ - Gonfer With Republican Leaders Soon 'U. 8. 8. Utah, Jan. 2—()—The lection of his Inet being the next) important task ahead of him. Herbert | Hoover immediately after his arrival in Washington next Sunday plans to begin a series of conferences with Re- Publican party leaders from prac- tically all sections of the country on! the makeup of his executive family. | ‘The president-elect indicated clear- ly today that he has not made up hs} mind on the cabinet appointments. | The first task he set for himsclf wes | his Latin-American good-will tour, and he feels it ts unnecessary to begin | the cabinet selection until he reaches | the capital | The primary purpose of Mr. Hoo- ver's visit to Washington is to confer with these leaders. While there he also will ask for a conference w President Coolidge to make a rej on his observations on the good tour. In addition he will fo:mulat> Precise program for his inau which he desires to b: any held in recent y The historical record of the gond- ‘will tour is now in the course of prep- aration by Ambassador F ie) Will file 1t with the state to be placed in the government's manent archi ords of the trip, includin aid voluminous data on y jects ‘about the diffe ci visited, which arc exp rainistratio; The Hoo’ upan the arrival in Wi disbaad gion. SPORTS SYMPOSIUM TOBE HELD TONIGHT Mesting Will Take Place at A. of C. Rooms on Games, Carnival and July 4th A city meeting of the entire sub- Jects of local sports will bo held at the Association of Commerce rooms this evening. Incidental to sports, the matter of a Fourth of July celebration will be brought up. /lso a proposal from a Minneapolis show spectacle compan: to put on a winter carnival here. representative of the company is her to present the company’’s proposal in detail. The meeting might also result in something on the subject of expand: ing the summer race mect into a fa: coming up for discussion. As far as sports, such as baseball and football are concerned, the mect- ing will consider raising a budget for these activities in general. The meeting will be open to all whc are interested in developing sports in Bismarck, and the other topics to be considered may interest others suf- ficlently to attend. The projectors ‘desire to get enthusiasm aroused and want lots of action. $1 AN HOUR FOR FARMWIFE Kendrick, Okla—(?)—A net profit of more than a dollar for every hour she devoted to caring for a flock of 400 laying hens was earned by Mrs. Maude Bailey, farmer's wife. .. TO PROMOTE AVIATION Pittsburgh.—(®)}—A holding cor- poration to promote aviation interests has been formed here with a num ber of the city’s leading industria business men and financial men as | its directors. d SUMMONS State of North Dakota, County of | Burleigh. np (istrict Court, Fourth Judicial + District. R. Baird, as Keceiver of Farmers | ants State Bank of Dris- | and Me hi ‘coll, North Wakota, Plaintiff, vs. Elick Larson, Defendant The State of North Dakota to the above tiamed Defendant: _You are hereby sum swer the Complaint in the above en- titled action, which wiil be filed in the office of the “lerk of the Dis- trict Court of the Fourth Judicial District, in and for the county of Burleigh and State of Morin Dakota, and to serve a vopy of your answer to the gaid Compiaint on the sub. suribers within thirty days after the wervice of this summons upon you, ex- clusive of the day of such service. and in case of yuur failure to appear or apes. Judgment will be Rie years ago. ‘Dated this 12th day vf October, | tainly are the first evidence of cre- 1928 ation in that valley, and possibly ZUGER & TILLOTSON, Attorneys for the Plaintiff. ence and Vest Office Address, ... Bismarck, North Dakota. 12/13-19-26; 16 DEMPTION Slate of North Dakots Burleigh, »s. ¢ uf county’ auditor, Bismarck. » County . Dak. “ToL. S. Hackney, St. Paul, Minne- sota Union Investment Co., St. ‘Minn. -You are hereby notified th of land hereinafter de: which was assessed in t taxation for the year 192 the 8th day of Deceinber, 1 ,. a provided by law. for the de- linquent ‘taxes of the year, and that the time for rédemption from said Bs ill expire ninety days from the of this notice. Section 9, Township 1 ofjacres 160. t'sold for, $60.54. it taxes paid by purchas- above amount to pay the costs is notice and in- of} { | oolidge to Leave in Good Condition BC's pi in 1923, present the ined offi “From his hould say | before him 30 life.” was condition I dent has ion given by a phy who has occasion for fre- quent cxaminations of the chief executive. “He is, if possible, in bet- ical shape than when he took et of Mr. Coolidge’s vig- dition is seen by his medical the fact that he is the tice the slightest altera- i state and im- tice helps to preserve what is nat- jurally a strong constitution, sound in ‘all functions, capable of with- | standing lengthy exertions, both phy- sical and mental. ' Mr. Coolidge is credited with |“knowing his body as well as his Politics.” He needs no doctor's warn- jing to become aware of some in- cipient indisposition and he further- nore falls in the category of the per- lfect patient in that he is able to facilitate the physician's task by revealing the likely cause of whatever | indisposition ails him. President Coolidge is intensely ware of the interdependence of full hysical and mental efficiency. | his brain should at times not func- tion with its customary lucidity, he is immediately led to seek the cause for this in some slight temporary phy- sical disturbance. On such occasio.s he turns to his doctor to set matters straight again. Mr. Coolidge, as a matter of fact, | requires very little medical attention. {He knows for himself what is good for him and needs little advice as to | diets or as to what other precautions he should take to preserve his natural robustness. His knowledge of his own body is such that he naturaliy knows what it needs in such matters as exercise and yest. 2 | stinctive If} he chief executive's position do not appear to have eal condition, one of his 4 phy ed office and at the right a ton. A‘ times. however, despite his in- tendency to watch his x. Cool is forced to the press of business 5 the White House, and which he will ne allow to ac- cumulate on his de: The ill ef- ve | fects of such occasions are generally offset by another characteristic of |the ¢chief executive's constitution, jnamely his power of rapid recovery |as soon as he is able to relax into |his normal life again. A typical example of this was | Provided during the last session of congress when the great number of important questions which arose be- fore that body called for intense ap- | plication on his part for months. Af- ter the session ended Mr. Coolidge appeared very tired ‘and his ex- hausted appearance caused much wonderment in Wisconsin whither he traveled immediately afterwards to spend his summer vacation on the Brule River. ts Hardly a fortnight had he spent at the summer White House before his condition was apparently normal again. At the end of a month he was able to spend a whole day on the river fishing and return home less fatigued than others accompanying him who were 20 years younger than he. Of chronic ailments Mr. Coolidge is said to have only one, and that is negligible. Every spring he suffers from rose fever, a variety of hay fever. He overcomes the tiresome ef- | fects of this affliction by choosing his summer residence in localities free from pollen or other causes of the ailment. On the whole, therefore, his doc- tors believe that Mr. Coolidge’s years in the White House have not proved harmful to his health. Gifted with @ strong constitution and perhaps warned by the fatal effects which neglect of their physique had on some of his predecessors, he has been wise enough to take good care of his health both for the sake of preserving it and to be able to fulfill with un- impaired capacity the duties of the presidency. Minneapolis Expedition Un- | earths Prehistoric Evi- | dence of Rites Minneapolis, Jan. 2.—(?)—Evidence | that pre-historic dwellers on the ! North American continent were the {first of mankind to cremate the dead > has been unearthed by an expedition |of the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. The evidence is based chiefly upon a crumbly material found in the sands | of the Mimbres valley in New Mexico, | thought to have been pulverized corn, i Which an analysis showed was bone j a he culture of the Mimbres valley believed to have flourished 2,000 ywhere. says Dr. Albert E. Jenks, der of the expedition. Dr. Jenks i believes Mimbres culture ceased to | about 500 or 700 A. D. Near Hurley, New Mexico, the rooms, or huts. over their heads. But in one was found a jar of an unrecognized ma- terial. “We tasted it,” said Dr. Jenks. “One {member of the party declared it was Laboratory tests revealed it to be bone ash, Another find deemed importent was @ copper bell, use of which previously had not been known. A bracelet of 13 shells was found on the arm of the Skeleton of a female. There were fire places and wall bases of adobe and stone. Some huts were constructed of wood. “The culture, according to anthrop- ologists, disal villages were destroyed. although how learned. Go far as is known the cul- ture never fook root elsewhere. GOVERNMENT GETS. |Searchers unearthed a village of 150 Some yielded sitting, 1 or full-length skeletons with bowls! ed when Mimbres ; vi they were destroyed has not been ‘Early Americans Are Believed First to Cremate Their Dead whether the land was known to be mineral land in 1903, when the matter was brought to his attention. When the question was before Fal) the government charged he gave it no opportunity to present testimony or to be heard in opposition to the 1 position taken by the company. ‘STATE CONTRACTORS TONEETIN JANUARY Fargo Builders Exchange Stag- ing Show in Conjunction i With Convention The Associated Contractors of | North Dakota will hold their second |annual convention! at Fargo Jan. 7 and 8. Invitations to the convention have | been sent to men in North and South Dakota and Minnesota who are in- { terested in the construction industry. Thre new directors of the organ- meeting. The Fargo builders exchange is stag- ing a builders’ show in connection with the meet at the Pence Automo- bile building. if Rate of fare and one-half railroad leading into Fargo, good for Jan. 3 to 9 coming and returning by Jan. 15. Present officers of the organization are: B. B. Meinecke, president, Fargo; W. T._ Borden, secretary, Grand Forks; John L. Larson, treasure, Bis- Fargo, R. 8. Pixley, Fargo, Carl Steen, Grand Forks, R. C. Spriggs, Grand Forks, A. V. DuVall, Jamestown, end Ed: Johnson, Devils Lake, all di- S. rectors. Afghan Rebels Ask for Peace Parleys at the Afghan said that all was ye ization will be elected and. legislative matters will be discussed at tne Fargo ; fare has been secured over all roads — or London, Jan. 2.—(#)—Latest advi bed recetved ition TO DATE IN REVIEW ; Relations, Laboratory Prog- i ress, Play Are Topics The Rotary luncheon took up a re- view of world affairs at’ the noon |chairman of the day, called on J. P. , Jackson. who spoke on “The World jin Commerce and Industry’; E. J. | Taylor, who discussed “Government |and International Relations”; Leon- {ard Larson, who review “The World |in the Laboratory”; and Dale Simon, who told of the status of play under jthe topic of “The World at Play.” ;. Three guests were noted at the luncheon, F. F. McGinnis, Bay City, Michigan, Roy Baird and William Fricke. Greetings were reported re- ceived from the Bismarck Lions and Kiwanis clubs; from the Rotary clubs of Mandan, Minot and Fargo; and from Phil Sheridan, district gover- nor. J. P. Jackson, in his review of the world in commerce and industry, told {of an important part played by Jim- my Yen, a Chinese Yale graduate, in starting education among the coolies employed in the labor camps of the World war front, as a result of which literacy was quite widely disseminated in China and must have an import- »|ant bearing on the future commer- cial relations from that vast country. E. J. Taylor discussed the big in- fluences that. the goodwill tours of Colonel Lindbergh and of President- Elect Hoover have had on America’s relations with Latin-America. Inter- national relations, he said, are su- stained by 90 governments among the nations of the earth. Laboratory Makes Progress Dr. Lorson said 1928 had not brought. forth any great outstanding discoveries, but it had developed oth- ers considerably. Considerable light had been obtained on the disease caused by wild rabbits and on malta fever. The year probably would show new progress gained in reducing death from tuberculosis, he said. These were 374 per 1000 in 1868; 327 in 1888; and in 1928 only 74, as a re- sult of the propaganda to prevent the disease. Progress has been made in dealing with hardening of the arteries and the anti-toxin campaign of the pub- lic health service promises to win out for the slogan, “No diphtheria in the United States in 1930,” he pre- dicted. Another evidence of progress he noted in the bottling of sunshine—in the form of uniting the violet rays and cod liver oil for the cure of cer- tain diseases. Little prograss been made in clearing the mysteries of cancer; some advance has been gained in the liver treatment of per- nicious anemia. From a laboratory viewpoint. he thought that the lignite briquetting opening up new fields in by-products. Billions Spent on Play Dale Simon drew most of his ma- terial from a book, in which the whole subject of sports was dealt with in a Special chapter. He read statictics showing that about $16,000,000,000 an- nually is spent in amusement and Sport, this including the money ex- pended on automobiles, chewing gum and telephones, for, he said. in some of the rural localities the telephone has become for the farmers’ wives an indoor sport. . In 1872, he said, sport did not have the hold it now ‘has. Play was frowned on even. He read from the discipline of a Methodist school, wherein studentst were forbidden tot Play at all. “Those who will play when young,” the order read, “will likewise play when they're old.” That, he said, was in the day when unremit- ttitntgt ttoil was considered the por- tion of all mankind. Last week’s Christmas talk was, due to a confusion of names, ascribed to another local minister. The speaker than was the Rev. Paul Wright, ot the Presbyterian church. THEY MUST BE WORRIED Fifteen members of the Georgia Tech football team this year will be lost by graduation to the 1929 team. SHE SUFFERED | 9 YEARS; THEN FOUND SARGON ‘ls Wonderful to Enjoy ; ‘Such Splendid Health After All Those Years of Suffer- ing,” Says Mrs. Rozel fering. condition when I began taking Sar- gon. I suffered both day and night from stomach disorders, indigestion and heartlirn. _1I frequently hac dizzy spells and attacks of headaches that almost drove me distracted. I became so weak that it was a great effort for me to do my housework. wonderful change in my condition. I now eat anything I want and never suffer from indigestion, dizzy spells and headaches. Sargon has strength- ened me wonderfully, That tired, weak feeling has left me and I fee! better and brighter than I have in years. My wonderful. Their se gentle. There is | OF YEAR BY ROTARY | Economic Side, International ‘luncheon. C. L. Young, who was experiment at Lehigh might result in | “I will always bless the day I began taking Sargon, for it has made me a well woman after five years of suf- “I was in a dreadfully rundown National Distribution Census Asked in 1930 Washington, Jan. 2.—(4)—Congresr was urged by the chamber of com- ‘merce of the United States to adopt legislation providing for a national census distribution in connection with the regular decennial census in 1930. A census bill with such a provision already had the approval of the house jand is now awaiting ction by the senate. In a letter to senate members, William Butterworth, president of the chamber of commerce said that such a census would be of value to every branch of industry and com- ; merce. TARIFF SCHEDULES ARE DISCUSSED BY NORTHWEST GROUP Agricultural Body, Formed a! the middle west other section hospital of the University of Iowa not | only permits its young patients to use ‘WEDNESDAY, JANUARY‘ 2, 1929 POPULAR IN MID-WEsT _—_! sling sho! Basketball plays to bigger crowds in! practice. than it does in any, of the country. i SAVING THE LOOT _—_ | She (sleepily): “s that you, Fido? UTOPIA FOR KIDS | Burglar (to his partuer): Lick ‘er Towa City, lowa.—(®)—A children’s hand, Bill.—Judge. ts but encourages target | class of United States mail. that self supporting. First During the period following colds, coughs, grippe, inflaenza or other prostrating illness, when your body is weakened, is the worthwhile time to prove the strength- restorative merit of SCOTT'S EMULSION OF PURE VITAMIN-RICH COD-LIVER OIL isp ene Ginsberg, Bronx, N.Y. It is the food-tonic with world-wide prestige, that *itiné cach day with a heavy strengthens and helps build up the weakened body and | Bowes mere cquaatiy coeped Le restore atom en of health. tag te run- faking yous pareitregadiee beens down with Grippe—buil on Scott’s ulsion! | CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Week Ago, Seeks Advan- tageous Protection St. Paul, Jan. 2—(AP)—Members jof the tariff committee of the North- west Agricultural foundation, or- ganized a week ago at Fargo, met this morning at the St. Paul Athletic club to make plans for the correlation of forces of the states of North and South Dakota, Montana and Minne- sota in working for tariff schedules advantageous to the farmer. Tariff hearings are to be held this month at Washington by the ways and means committee of the house and the foundation wishes to be in a position to present a united front in its effort to obtain adequate protec- tion for the products of the -four states, James S. Milloy of Fargo, sec- retary of the foundation, explained. Various plans for the organization 'of forces interested in tariff on agri- | cultural products were being dis- cussed and it was expected that a schedule of the rate to be asked for each product would be developed be- fore the meeting is adjourned. The session will last until late this eve- ning, Mr. Milloy predicted. | The members of the committee are: M. W. Thatcher, St. Paul, chairman; H. B. Test, Frederick, S. D.; I. D. O'Donnell, Billings, Mont.; H. N. | Owens and Franklin M. Crosby, Min- neapolis; Governor Walter Maddock, {of North Dakota; M. C. Bacheller, {Grand Forks, N. D.; Dr. John Lee} (Coulter, Fargo. president of the {Northwest Agricultural foundation, land Mr. Milloy. BEG PARDON ; Club Secretary: ‘I say, you know you simply mustn't drive from in {front of the box. You can drive from ‘as far behind it as you like, but you | mustn't drive from in front of it. | New Member: Drive, nothing! 'This is my fourth stroke —Dublin | Opinion. IDENTIFIED Master: Anna, your young man is waiting for you c: the corner of the road. | Maid: But how did you know that ‘he is my young man, sir? | Master: Becausce he is smoking |my cigars—Lustige Blactter, Berlin. % Western Lady Knew y the Way Every mother knows what it means} when her child begins to get under- weight, pale, listless, bilious, feverish | and fretful, with bad breath, coated tongue and no appetite. What every one of them doesn't know is that it’s dangerous to use harsh methods to start the little stomach and bowels. There's no use experimenting in such cases. Millions of mothers have proved the merit and reliability of pleasant-tasting. purely vegetable California Fig Syrup. It gently clears up the most stubborn cases of constie pation; stimulates the appetite; gives tone and strength to weak stomach and bowels so they continue to act normally, of their own accord; and makes pale, lifeless children, bright, vosy-cheekec’ and full of energy. A Nebraska mother, Mrs. Hazel E. Roberts, Congress Hotel, Omaha, says: Jack Rabbits Now 35c Each BRING OR SHIP DIRECT to EA NORTHERN HIDE & FUR CO. BOX 265 Sam Sloven, Prop. BISMARCK, N. D. NEXT TO ARMOUR'S CREAMERIES BROTHERS Announce The complete line of Trucks, Buses and Motor Coaches which Dodge Brothers have been manufacturing and eelling under the name of Graham .Brothers now take the name of their makers — Dodge Brothers. These Trucks, Buses and Motor Coaches have always been powered by Dodge Brothers engines. For years they have been built of Dodge Brothers parts in Dodge Brothers plants according to Dodge Brothers standards. These Trucks, Buses and Motor Coaches are sold, as they always have been sold, by Dodge Brothers Dealers everywhere. v - For Power, Speed, Safety, Economy, Fine Appearance and Dependability, Dodge : Brothers Trucks, Buses and Motor Coaches will continue to merit that high public re- gard which impels keen businessmen to purchase them at a rate of more than a ; “Four bottles of Sargon made a} thing “My little girl. constipation. pale and fretful; had no appetite and couldn't digest right. She was losing weight. Syrup as a child, so I gave it to her. It regulated her quick. She began eating heartily and digesting every- . Soon she was her robust, happy self again.” : Ask for California Fig Syrup by the full name s0 you'll get the genuine, en- aes by physicians for voer 50 years. —Adv DON’T STARVE _ TO END FAT rT Maylon, developed She became _bilious. had taken California Fig million dollars’ worth a week.