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THURSDAY, MARCH 21, 1929 NEW MANDAN DEPOT TO-BE COLONIAL IN 1+. TTS ARCHITECTURE Bids Soon to Be Asked So as to Start Operations on It Early in Season The proposed new $130,000 station at Mandan is to be a building of co- lonial design, Col. T. F. Lowry, gen- tral superintendent from Livingston, announced at. Mandan, Wednesday. He also announced that the proposed construction will consist of three buildings, the depot proper, a lunch room to the west and a yard office to the cast. Bids will be asked shortly and other preliminaries will be taken (By The Associated ress) President Hocver: “It was my privilege to gain perhaps a special in- sight not only into his ability but also his fine human qualities of: straight forwardness, kindness and modesty.” Charles G. Dawes: “One of the Great figures of history has passed away.” General John J. Pershing: “As my friend and comrade his death brings to me a profound sense of per- sonal loss.” Raymond Poincare, French Pre- mier: “A great soldier and a great Frenchman is gone.” Ambassador Myron T. Herrick: “The human side of the man was, I think, after all his greatest side.” Sir William G. Tyrrell. British Ambassador, Paris: “In my country he will be honored as a national hero.” Paul Painleve, French Minister of War: “He will go down in history to rank with Caesar, Alexander and Na- care cf at once, so that operations may be begun at an early day. The new depot is to be erected north of and parallel to the present pioneer structure. That will be al- lowed to stand, unless it intexferes with operations, until the new build- ing is ready for use, then is to be razed, if not removed earlier. The station will be 136 feet in length, 34 feet in width and will have north and south porticos as well as platforms on each end of the station. The portico ‘plan allows shelter for passengers entering or leaving the station from the north or south main entrances. A general waiting room, 32 by 41 feet in size, a smoking room, wom- en's room, toilets, ticket office, bag- gage and express room, baggage and express checking counters and minor facilities will be provided. The men’s emoking room, 10 by 16 feet in size, women’s room, 12 by 22 feet, and the lavatories will be located on the west side of the general wait- ing room. The ticket office, 10 by 12 feet, baggage and express counters and a hallway, leading from the waiting room to the baggage and express room, will open on the east side of the general waiting room. Ample storage space will be provid- ed by a baggage and express room, 22 by 28 fcet in dimensions. The one story structure will have @ group of columns on the north and south side to support the two por- ticos. A tower of simple though ap- propriate design is also to enhance the beauty of the new station. A structure 48 by 30 feet in di- mensions will house the yard offices. Six offices, halls, washrooms and oth- er accommodations will be provided for in this. The main yard office will be 17 by 20 feet in size. The yard master’s of- fice, 914 by 13 feet, and the tele- graph ofice of similar dimensions will be in the north section of the build- ing and with the main yard office will take up the west half of the building. The assistant superintendent's and roadmaster’s offices will be 20 by 13 feet in size and will be located in the southeast corner. The conductors’ end engineers’ rooms, each 912 by 13 feet in size will take up the remain- der of the building. With entrances on the east and south sides, the new lunch room will be 31 by 74 feet in size. Accommoda- tions for 92 people at one time w! be provided. A lunch room and a dining room are planned in the new structure. The dining room with 16 tables, seating 39 people. will be situ- ated in the west end of the junch- room. Rites for Math Braun Are Held at Wahpeton ‘Wahpeton, N. D., March 21.—(?)— The Rev. J. A. Thiel conducted funer- al services today at St. John’s church for Math Braun, 72, who died Mon- day. Mr. Braun was president of Math Braun and Company, owners of the first flour mill to be built in this sec- tion, and established by Math Braun in 1887. Besides his widow. the fol- lowing children survive: Mrs. Waldo Green, Minneapolis; Mrs. Anthony Miksche, Breckenridge; the Rev. Father Mark Braun, Collegeville, Minn.; Mrs. Carl Stovik, Curley, Wash.; Mrs. H. T. McCray, Chi- cago; a sister, Mary Mark Braun, Bismarck; and Carl and Anthony Braun, Wahpeton. - New Wahpeton School Plans Are Approved Wahpeton, N. D., March 21—(?)— The local school board has «pproved preliminary plans of Jacobson & Ja- cobson, Minneapolis architects, for a $150,000 grade and junior school building, and a special election has been called for April 9 at which the voters will be asked to authorize a bond issue to provide funds for the construction. , The new structure ts to be erected on the site of the present grade build- ing, which is overcrowded. It is planned to have it completed by next September. A feature of its construc- tion will be a combinatior auditorium gymnasium s0 arranged that the gymnasium may be shut off so as to ‘form a stage for the auditorium. The new building will relieve congestion at the present high school building. —_—_—_——_. Citation Hearing Petition to set apart absolutely $1500.90 in cash to the surviving wife. sat North Dakota, County of Eounty. Court, Before Hon. I. C. us e. In rhe Satter et ibe Faraee of Valen- tine Benz, Dece! a. Wile liam C. iY Bens, ie O1 our Joan z, and Frank Bens, and all other persons i t of Val rm akota to the bove Respondent: You and tach of you are hereby cited and required to appear before Count: ourt of the County of aid State, at the office idge of said Bur. leigh county, at the Burleigh North: Dakota Court House city of Bismarck, in Burleigh qounty, North Dakota.on the 10th day 0! ‘April A. D. 1929, at the hour of 10 o'clock in tl forenoon of that day, to show cause, if any you have, why the petition of Katharina Beng, file in said court, to set apart bs0- jutely Fifteen Hundred cash to said Katharina Bena, Viving wife of said Valentine Benz, deceased, should not be allowed and jate residence, of Valentine 4 |, the ownel Bene, doceatne vilinge of Moffit, in Barle North Count Dakota, ‘service be made of this clta- Let yd by law, Be ReTASHE MGIC 48s ot March, Lt: : DAVIES, the County Court. ee eee poleon.” Stanley Baldwin, British Prime Minister: “In him there has passed away one of the great soldiers of all times.” Earl Beatty, Admiral of the British Fleet: “He was the greatest man in the greatest war the world has ever known.” Georges Clemenceau, French War Time Premier: “The man who just died is entitled to the profoundest re- spect of the entire world.” MILLIONS AT STAKE ON COURT DECISION Judged Called Upon to Decide if Profit on Sale of Municipal Bonds Is Taxable St. Paul, Minn, March 21—(@)— Millions of dollars already collected by the government were at stake as the united circuit court of appeals was called on today to decide whether profits made in the sale of municipal bonds are subject to federal income taxation. The appeal we: filed by the St. Paul bureau of internal revenue from a decision in a test suit in federal dis- trict court last November in which the federal levy on municipal bond profits was ruled invalid by Judge W. A. Cant. If the district court is upheld the government will be compelled to re- turn millions of dollars in taxes col- lected in similar cases. The test suit was brought by Charles W. Bunn, St. Paul, who sued for the return of $99.51 he paid in income taxes on profits made on the sale of municipal bonds. Judge Cart in his decision ruled that “the federal government shall not exercise the power of taxation in such manner as in any substantial degree to interfere with the state in any of its governmental functions.” He held that a federal ircome tax on municipal bonds or the income there- of made them less desirable for in- vestment end interfered with de- mand for them. */RICH MAN MURDERED IN SMALL ARGUMENT Chicago, March 21.—(4)—John MacKenzie, a real estate operator, confessed today, police said, that he killed a man last October after years of wrangling over a “spite wall.” When MacKenzie was arrested po- lice found his tattered telescope bulg- ing with bonds and mortgages worth $450,000. He said he was planning to depart today for Canada and thense to Europe had he not been arrested. MacKenzie in his three-page con- fession:said’ he was “provoked” to the int of shooting Arthur Glanke after long years of squabbling over the “spite wall” between their properties. Glanke was slain after MacKenzie had made a final appeal to him to remove the wall. The two had brawled frequently on the streets, police re- called. Wife of Three Months Dies on Eve of Birth Anniversary at Hazen Mrs. Arthur Adolph, 24, died at 5 o'clock Wednesday morning at Hazen. She was a wife of three months, hav- ing been married to Mr. Adolph in December last. Funeral services are to be held Sunday at the Hazen Lutheran church, with the Rev. Christian Deger officiating. Mrs. Adolph was born in Parkston, 8. D., as Susan Hildebrand, March 21, 1904, thus dying on the eve of her twenty-fourth birthday. Shop Employe Boost Gets Consideration St. Paul, March 21—(4)—Negotia- tions were in progress today toward increases for 10,000 craft, employes of the Great Ni ahd Soo Line railways, following higher wages granted 5,500 Northern: Pacific men x ‘The S00 Line conference in {to be held shortly’ thereaster. ntine Benz, de-|- Great Northern has 7.500 employes and the Soo Line 2,500. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY County, in the] looking | ment, is having with the 4-H boys PROPOSAL IS READY lowa Senator Expects Hoover to Give It Consideration De- spite Lack of Support Washington, March 21.—(?)—The $1,250.000,000 farm relief program of Senator Brookhart, Republican, Iowa, is going to be one of the many pro- posals put before the senate agricul- ture committee when it starts work on a 1929 agricultural relicf measure next week. Brookhart failed to get any support on his proposal of the last session. He is not assured of any now, but he was one of President Hoover's _hearticst campaigners and he is confident the new chief executive will give his plan favorable consideration, at least. The Iowan, in his elaborate proposi- tion aims to guarantee to the farmer a return of five per cent on his cap- ital investment. He would set up a farmers’ nation- al export cooperative, financed by the government, with power to buy and withhold surplus crops from the mer- ket. If any losses were sustained in this operation, and he doesn't believe there would be heavy ones, he would have the United States treasury meet these up to $600,000.000. Under his plan, the department of agriculture would be called upon to ascertain the average cost of produc- tion to farmers of each agricultural commodity having an exportable sur- plus and also the financials invest- ment of the farmers, for use by the farmers’ cooperative in determining its prices. BEALS CHICKERIES TO LOCATE BRANCH Hatchery of Fargo Chick Deal- ers to Be in Armour Cream- ery; Opens March 29 Beal's State Chickeries will open a branch here about March 29, in the Armour creamery building, part of which has been leased to house the new business. Clarence Njaa will be manager of the plant and L. E. Berger assistant manager. The Beal Chickeric: headquarters are in Fargo, with branches at Valley City, Jamestown, Bowden and Kin- dred, N. D., and at Battle Lake, Minn. The branch here will be devoted to, hatching and selling chicks. Poultry feeds and supplies also will be handled. The managers of the new enter- prise had dificulty in finding quar- ters here. Eventually it is contem- plated to build a hatchery here. FOUR MEETINGS SET FOR FARMERS UNION Announcement of four meetings to be attended by agents of the Farm- ers Union throughout the state was made here today by Walter Maddock, ee president of the state organiza- tion. The meetings will be held at James- town April 1; Devils Lake, April 2; Bismarck, April 3 and Williston from April 4 to 7, inclusive. The Williston meeting will be gen- eral in its nature and agents from northwestern North Dakota and east- ern Montana will attend. One of the principal items of business to be tak- en up is the manner in which to make effective the law providing for the storage of grain on farms as passed by the Montana legislature. Those phases of the Farmers Union business relating to life and fire in- surance also will be discussed. Truck and Ford Car Collide at Seventh And B Intersection A new Ford car and a dyeing and cleaning delivery truck contested for right of way at the corner of Seventh street and Avenue B about 1:30 this afternoon. The truck, driven by Ford Ticrney, was half way across the street, going west, according to report made at the police station, when the Ford car, driven by John A. Roth, 905 Main street, and truck collided. The truck was overturned, two wheels were torn from the Ford, which was hurled around into the corner post, from which the street sign was torn. Neither driver was much hurt. Head of 4-H Juveniles. Visiting Clubs Today A. R. Miesen, county agent, went to Moffit today to attend juvenile club meetings Miss Edna Summerfeld, ex- tension service head of that depart- and girls. Miss Summerfeld organized cloth- Refvem, Manager of Penney Store, Arrives B. O. Retvem, manager of the new J. C. Penney store, has arrived in Bis- . He formerly managed romney 6 oars Bt Meadiave, Wie. ait : iF g & a tl el BE ft : : u § teh : i E Fl ake z g g i i ; } i a nae ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE [Fook ‘ributes — {iBROOKHART'S FARM |"rene"so Seve Lite Of Milwaukee Woman Milwaukee, Wis., March 21.—(?)— Mrs. Ruth Van Doehren, 17, was} clinging tenaciously to life today as) members of a fire department rescue squad continued their fight against pneumonia with an inhalator. For 87 hours the firemen. working in relays, have pumped 1,350 cubic feet of oxy- gen into the young woman in an ef- {fort to save her life. Today physicians jsaid she had a chance to recover. 300 TEACHERS ARE. ATTENDING SESSION Southeastern North Dakota Ed-| ucation Association Mem- bers Meet at Wahpeton \ Wahpeton, N. D., March 21.—()— More than 300 teachers and school executives gathered here today when | the annual convention of the south- eastern division of the North Dakota Education association got under way with Superintendent E. C. Ingvalson, Ellendale. president, presiding. The delegates were welcomed to the city of Wahpeton by R. M. Merchant and a response to the welcome was made by Dr. C. L. Kjerstad, Valley City. Changes which have occurred in school legislation were cited by John A. Page, state high school in- spector. The morning session was brought | to a close by Dr. Julius Boraas, pro- fessor of education, St. Olaf college, Northfield, Minn. This afternoon the teachers en- gaged in group sessions. Specific divisions of the association which were in mecting were: Parent Teach- er associations; superintendents and principals; English and foreign lan- guage; home economics, and the elementary section. Miss Georgina Leommen of the Moorhead State Teachers college will address a general assembly of attend- ants tonight on “teaching methods are changing, why?” The convention, which closes Fri- day, will draw more than 400 teachers and executives, President Ingvalson said today. FARM RELIEF PLAN PRESENTED HOOVER: Tariff Readjustment, Storage Loans, Farm Board, Other Features in Measure Washington, March 21.—()—Rep- resentative Clarke, Republican, New York, submitted to President Hoover today a plan for farm relief which} would call for tariff readjustment, the creation of a farm board, exten- sion of the federal warehouse policy to provide loans upon stored farm | products, and enlargement of the re- search work of the department of ag- riculture. * In addition Giarke proposed a sur- vey of geographic areas with the commodities produced within them to |determine whether cooperatives should be formed, and the creation of | a clearing house for the dissemination of information gained from world wide marketing and farm surveys. | WASHBURN YOUTH IS NEW NODAK DEBATER Grand Forks, N. D.. March 21—A debate this evening will conclude the second annual forensic day program at the University of North Dakota, announces William Schrier, coach. A clash between the university freshman team and Mayville State Teachers’ college opened the day's events at convocation hour this morning. The North Dakota team, made up of Milton Cohen, New York | southeast of Bismarck, has returned | been completed. Nodak Rifle Team Clarence Burgess, Devils Lake: Hugh ign |Baird, East Grand Forks; Fred Goes to Winnipeg b Grand Forks, N. D., March 21.—Six marksmen representing the University of GLAD 10 GET BACK FROM IOWA TO ND.) ,cusares.s.tsrcst W. F. Cameron Has Learned |they will fire a shoulder-to-shoulder How to Prosper in Farming match with the University of Mani- toba rifle team. in His Adopted State Men making the trip are Gordon eset Grand Forks, captal n Shafer Today Holds shtradition Hearing — Hearing will be held this : by Governor George F. Shafer on extradition of Earl Schwarts to Hen | nepin county, Minnesota,'on a charg of abandonment. Schwartz, who now is a resident 6 Jamestown, will be represented at th: hearing by Attorney Russell D: Jamestown. kota team will be honor guests at the Canadian’s annual military ball. Several banquets and other entertain- ment features have been arranged for them also, according to word received here. Oranges were first grown in Cali- fornia in 1873. J W. F. Cameron, who farms and raises hogs on a large scale 15 miles from a winter s:ay in Iowa. his old home. He visited his daughter and kin in the Hawkeye state during his j absence from his farm. Mr. Cameron says 7owa had more winter than North Dakota, in snow and rough weather. He was very glad to get back here, the 12 years that he has been a resident of North Da- kota having thoroughly sold him on the future of shis adopted home. He is farming three quarter sections and will add another by lease this spring. This new soil and he will break it for flax. So successful has Mr. Cameron been as a result of raising hogs that he has made money every year since he drove in from Towa in an old farm wagon in 1917, while other farmers, depending on wheat, barely got by some years. Lucas’ Lunch Room Given More Space Renovation of the basement of the A. W. Lucas company to make more room for the store's lunch room has The lunch room is owned and op- erated by the A. W. Lucas company and managed by Mrs. O. Lundquist. The shoe department has been moved from the south half to the north half of the basement. With the exception of crockery display shelves along the walls, the entire souta half of the basement is now devoted to the lunch room, and table capacity has been increased. A Furniture Fashion Service When You Shop Here T is such a satisfaction to find just the right type ~ and style of furniture for your home! And it is so necessary, too, to work out the proper color scheme for draperies and other decorative accessories. Our Berkey & Gay STYLE BOOK gives just the suggestions you are looking for. And in it too, you will find more than a hundred new styles to select from—just like a visit to the Berkey @ Gay Exhibi- tion Building. When you shop here, you will receive a Furniture Fashion Service. \ for Women They Fit! wat Aze Comfortable! re. And Stylish! Kennelly Furniture Co.. PHONE 138 MANDAN, NO. DAK. City, and Lloyd Williams, Washburn, upheld the affirmative of the question, resolved, “That Too Many People Are Attending College.” This evening Lloyd Blume, Billings, Mont.; and -Ben Johnson, Osna- brock, composing the varsity team, will clash with.St. Thomas college on the question: Resolved, That a Sub- stitute for the Jury System Should Be Adopted. North Dakota will de- fend the negative in this debate. TWO BIVERS LINKED Buenos Aires, March 21.—(?)—The greatest river system in the world ex- ists in South America. Returning Ger- $5 and $6 the price brings a smile to your purse! What More Can You Ask? 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