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PAGE St; son, Ars, Nets Alm, Attred ana ‘henry | —— r : — ‘ HOOVER ie StL CRE Tae ee | Reversed Verdict of Chief Justice! y | froigerson B20 LON, ALUCLE YOLLLON, | meee! Mr. and Mrs, August wundberg and son Leonard, John and Wiliam Drawver and Walter and Israci Keaior. Mr. and Mis. D. E. Spangberg and Barney Fisher and i. ther were iv- ‘Becretaries of Community Washington, March 28. (AB) = clal callers and dinner guests at the President Hoover and his new seas Bodies to Meet Here Albin Spangberg home in Trygg thelr. tise ' ril 4 and 5 township Sunday. ary. St state. Wall, eve ik on April 4 an Mrs. Sigmund Rup attended Pente- meeting tomorrow with the arrival ef Hi costal church in Regan Sunday night. Henry L, Stimson after his long trip |. ‘The outlook is for a full attendance Agnes Seliy.n was a Regan caller from Manila by way of San Pranicsco bf the secretaries of commercial or- me | Seay Sat muday: a and New York. Mr. Stimson had ganisations throughout the state, ac- fhineay ‘ene, en Peet Calle: been invited to the white house today, uP president of their Mr, and Mrs. W. C. Noon of Wilton Spent the week-end with the parents of Mrs. Noon, who was formerly Miss Martha Alm. Marvin Rupp was a dinner guest of Reubin Krause Sunday. August and Axel Lundberg called at the E. J, Engbretson home Sunday. Miss Mary Doyle spent Tuesday at the A. J. Krause home while election was held in the schoolhouse. Mrs. Nels Alm and Marion called at Ghylin school No. 2 Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Willis Gill and Ellis Gill were brief callers at the A. J. Kraust home Tuesday. M. E. Alm ettended the dance and Party at the Martin Nelson home Sat- urday evening. Election was held in school No. 2 esday. Andrew Anderson of Bismarck is spending a few days with his sons south of Regan. He will return to | Bismarck after election. Jennings Kettleson and Ernie Gor- don attended the birthday party at Martin Nelson’s Saturday night. Nels Alm, Andrew Anderson, Alfred Anderson and Marien Alm attended the Twin City Tractor show in Wil- ton Monday. ©. W. Backman motored to Wilton Monday to attend the tractor show. Barney and Steve Fisher attended the dance at Martin Nelson’s Satur- day ‘night. l, but after his arrival in New York he found that he would be unable to come to the capitol until tomorrow afternoon. The chief executive and Mr. Stim- son have a host of subjects to discuss and, in order that they may facilitate the work ahead, the new official will be a white house guest’ for the te- mainder of the week. The Root formula for American ad- herence to the world court, the Mex- ican situation, and European repara- tions are some of the questions f Mr. Stimson, but perhaps the fore- most is the reorganization of the diplomatic corps and the selection of ae Officials of the state depart- ment. “ Frank B. Kellogg, who has re= mained in his post at the urgent re- quest of President Hoover, will be of- ficially relieved of duty when Mr. Stimson takes the oath of office, but he will remain here until Friday on which date he sails for Europe where he will spend several weeks on @ vaca tion tour. Almont Is Planning Organization Rally (Special to The Tribune) Almont, N. Dak. March 25.—Dr, Frank R. Weber, national community state body. Miss Hazel A. Hanson, of ‘Wahpeton, is secretary. ‘The cities which will be represented y ae Ue Grand Forks, Bismarck, clubs functioning as commercial bodies in the smaller cities also may attend, as they are eligible, but us- ually they do not show up. The sessions of the organization Will be held here April 4-5. Com- mercial, legislative and municipal topics will be discussed. Return of Man Held In Montana Is Asked By Governor Shafer Papers asking the governor of Mon- tana to return Tom Wear, alias Tom Long, alias Blackie Wear, to Foster county to answer a charge of enter- ing a bank with intent to rob were issued by Governor George F. Shafer this morning. ‘* ~ Wear is charged with being one of the group which robbed the First State Bank of Glenfield of $800 in a holdup on October 9, 1928. He was identified as one of the holdup men from a photograph which was brought to the attention of the iS Little Helen Terwilliger was right, and Chief Justice Taft of the Uni- ted States Supreme Court was wrong —and just let him try to get out of it now. When he administered the oath of office to President Hoover, Helen, pictured above, was listening in from her home in Walden, N. Y. Helen is only 13, but she has studied her civics in school and knows that ‘Preserve, protect and defend” is the phrase used in the Constitution. After hearing him si preserve, maintain and defend,” she wrote him a letter Justice Taft admitted a misquotation, but denied that he had made it just that way. But the Fox Movietone film, right, record- ing the sound and sight of the inauguration ceremony, reverses the decision made by the foremost jurist. Secretary of the Treasury Andrew Mellon . .. the head of one of Amer- ica’s greatest fortunes which traces back to a two-room leg cabin on the outskirts of Pittsburgh. Woman Collapses as! Horas cualiapses as ROBBERS ARE ROUTED lia A wore MANAGES MP ° | BANICNG BUSINESS WITH | Yank’s cashier. EMINENT ABILITY*HE WROTE. a Ske kan R [F ‘ound Under Ground| BY PREPARED VICTIM foe Almont bugines ie at 8pm e e es e e e e e e ° e . e e e RT MATa isecrteeens,_ urday on “ ie ‘uture Mrs.Frank Wagendorf| “ ° ° PRICES DROP AFTE Springtield, Ti, March 25—ap._| : Small Town.” ° Ms Eighteen f tbe b , Bde 7A i bas ers and business men together Of Near Mott Dies of’ ANDREW MELLON IS SON OF PIONEER STORM OF SELLING| scr oor sti dt: | atte "Snet iss op treet ome Samay wee 1s ind yesterday after S_prescription laboratories on | y, h = ae ee wee AND HAD A LOG CABIN BACKGROUND = Ger tin pt | ‘ae ent aah ig Si = ey Mrs. Knox, who dropped the ring Saturday while washing her hair, Collapsed when it was found. PENNSYLVANIA RAIL PRESIDENT IS DEAD Philadelphia, March 25. —(P)— Samuel Rea, who rose from chairman in a Pennsylvania railroad engineer corps to the presidency of the great railway system, is dead. With his wife and daughter at his found Harry Hibbe, Proprietor, wait- ing for them with a pistol. He killed one, ‘and drove the others off after a sun fight. A woman noticed three men loitering near the drug store and warned Hibbe, who notified Police and obtained his pistol. Before offi- cers arrived the shooting occurred. Primo de Rivera Is Planning to Retire Madrid, March 25.—(@—Primo de Rivera, chief of the Spanish director- ate, feels that he is no longer young enough to remain at the head of the Present regime. The dictator has is- sued a semi-official note foretelling Frank Wagendorf, a leading farmer of the Mott community, died here at 11:20 Sunday forenoon. Funeral ar- rangements have not yet been made, @s word from a daughter at Seattle ‘ $8 awaited before setting the time. ‘The services and interment will be at Mott. Mrs. Wagendorf was a sufferer from diabetes and had been more or less ill for seven years. She and her husband were natives of the Banat, @ portion of Hungary which was tak- en over by Rumania as a result of the peace treaties after the World war. She was born December 16, 1662. Her father was Jacob Streng. In the town of Lugos they were married in 1886. In 1893 the family came to America Officers of the Almont Commercial club will have charge of the rally: E. W. Hyde, president; N. E. Beckland, vice president; and G. H. Anderson, secretary-treasurer. ry New York, March 25.—()—A storm Gh li | ‘of selling orders poured into the New yin York Stock Exchange today, washing away millions of dollars in quoted wea he values and sending nearly two score igo aE oe By E. R. KRAUSE railroad and industrial shares to new “Andrew manages my b: busi-} Farl Davis visited his wife and|!0W levels for the year. Declines in ness with eminent ability and suc- | child at the L. W. Davis home Tues- | the active issues ranged from $2 to cess. Dick is equally a model with | day. $10 a share. The selling movement his brothers in the management of Hugo Sundquist was a Wilton |eceived its stimulus from an advance business affairs.” caller Monday. in the call money rate from 9 to 12 The Mellons of today are known| Marion Alm is spending the week | Per cent which followed the heavy a8 conservatives—the ultra-conserva- | with A. B. Fisher in Bismarck. withdrawal of funds from New York A. J. Krause was a caller at Ghylin | bY out of town banks and corpora- co: FWA sats igen nig " i eral reserve board warning against abies we A) tg adi tt) the excessive use of credit for specu- and I feared lest the confinement and | close attention to the banking busi- | ness at so carly an age might be in- > Jurious to Andrew's health.” Father’s Almost-Forgotten Auto- biography Reveals Secre- tary of Treasury CROSSED ALLEGHENIES 1818 Two Older Brothers of One of America’s Richest Men Became Blacksmiths begin : ‘emergency o tives, indeed, of the conservative Republican party. This, at least, they did not inherit from their father. The old judge was a liberal Republican, and although he detested politics he and to North Dakota to homestead. The Wagendorf family consisted of Pittsburgh, March 25.—(NEA)— took an active part in the campaign of 1872 and helped in the unsuccess- E. J. Engelbretson was a business; ation on Feb. 7 by marking up the caller in Regan Wednesday. general average of prices to new high bedside, he died yesterday at his home in Ardmore, a suburb, of heart disease. &® change in government and stating that he was not young enough to con- He was 73 years old and tinue for another five years at the parents and three children and| Andrew W. Mellon, the thin-faced|ful effort to elect Horace Greeley} Miss Mary Doyle was a caller at| records, and boosting the brokers- had been ill several weeks, Funeral | post. years at his they reached the Mott community | patrician of the American banking | president over U. 8. Grant. the A. J. Krause home Friday. loan total to the highest level in his- | services will be held tomorrow at 4 with their final $5. As the result of | world, now serving as secretary of the their industry, frugality and good management in the 36 years they have been in the state, the Wagen- dort farm now contains 1,000 acres. * It is 25 miles west of Mott. ‘The three children, now grown, are Mrs. Katie Reilley, Medora; Mrs. Mary Ross, Seattle; and Frank, Jr., eSiitbtaltiis aglacteay : atone a et BES ont ar ak ea SS Es sere an (See omer id een | Cote Hunts From [irc fat n'e 2 eet | Muscular Pains Make || 7, MY? 6 5 . ° : s it has come to light again, to give} On the last pages of the autobio-|Ryberg home Thursday evening. Plane Make Money |bure. Four years later he entered This 30-Minute Test Sluggish Kidneys. Shafer Concentrates some new facts about the ‘and eraphy are these ada: fe a A Taree aie card seaty ced pu bel netiers ot the Pennsylvania rail- AME? Stiff? Achy? Every iy * career ' a mai ‘s Oscar nderho! Marc! Toad as a 5 On State Mill Work of one of America’s richest a millionaire sane ettiane Gaui: 50. Latin last Baring evening. They | Minot, h | 25.— UP) — Hunting His advancement nee caren hee ippereee ies vagaries bring nagging backache, dull head- men. grec sae A ' pring oie ri Coyotes from an airplane has been a 1912 he f 'y, and in| Rheumatic Pains, Sciatica, Lumbago, aches and dizziness? Kidney excretions Governor George F. Shafer will ons teem apace al ber Gounty |not ‘increase “proportionately” with | Seiden hen they purchased. Prowiable business in North Dakota.| coe/am° WAS clected president of the wibnitaanicrinaen manta test ot | | ®°. frequent, scanty or ia concentrate on his job as manager of | Tyrone, Trelatd. The family Salgeanea weelth. It is more difficult to keep| Alfred Anderson, Marvin Alm and est ed ged ee pat ite 8c nie pate Bint your =::azcst drug nT Y» Pile. "Chay i pate saitl on clerneers teil nes to America in 1818, landing a; Balti- eat ey you have it than to ec-| Randa Kettleson called at the Oscar | W&8ed Fischer, farmers living near BOUNCING TUMBLERS store and ask for a package of PAXO ce Dow's Pills, pradipner le said today that x cum : to Grand Forks next Monday and ‘will spend several days looking over the enterprise of which he is the ex- officio head. ; Because of the press of work inci- dent to the legislative session the governor has had little time to give to his job as manager of the mill. ‘With the press of work over, how- ever, he expects to keep a close eye A cutter, but it will admit ultra-violet | fund the full purchase price of 50] | nroved with, pai ti for- i i Z . and Mrs, L. J. King, Miss | cently from Regina, Saskatchewan. It oi kidneys acted y< on the enterprise from this time from Lit. wlle the horses rested at the noes hanog Sean eee jeoual os SoS use, Marvin and Mar- | Consisted of 195 cats of wheat, and |74¥5 Of sunlight. cents if you are not satisfied—Adv. || bothered me a lot, treasury under his third president, stands revealed as the son of a Pioneer and a man with a log cabin background—whether he looks it or not. In 1885 the secretary's father, Judge Thomas Mellon, looked back over his 73 years of life and wrote an auto- More and piling its worldly goods into a creaking Conestoga wagon there to cross the Alleghenies. Near Pittsburgh they settled in a two-raom log cabin. There Thomas Mellon, at the age-of 12, began his career in the typical €& “In 1872 I took an active part in the Greeley campaign,” he wrote, “because the duplicity practiced on President Johnson by Grant while secretary of war, and the corrupt cabinet he gathered about him when Grant became president himself, and his remarkable capacity for accepting presents from office seekers, had dis- —_——— VAN HORN APPOINTED Arthur Van Horn, Bismarck archi- tect, today was reappointed as a es a of the state board of archi- The formation of a syndicate of German manufacturers of steel cast- ings, numbering some 90 stecl foun- ca Ernie Gordon called at Alm home Thursday. Marvin Alm and Randa attended the Legion dance Thursday evening. Miss Julia Shemski and Alm visited with Mrs. Oscar Lander- holm Thursday afternoon. Ernie Gordon, Mrs. Car! Magnuson home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Krause and chil- dren, Ella, Reubin, Helda, Esther and and Barney Fisher and brother attended church in Regan Every Sunday eve- ning at 8 o'clock and beginning the 26th of March there will be revival August, Sunday night.. meetings in the Pentecostal Among those who were Regan call- ers Saturday, from this tory, was faced today with an acute coe situation, call money with tleson | Which the bulk of stock trading is ay Baa financed, renewed at 9 per cent, ad- vanced to 10 and thence to 12, dupli- Mrs. Nels | cating the high rate of the year, on a withdrawal of only between $15,000,- 000 and $20,000,000 in loans. the Nels ‘l_Lander- Roseglen, southwest of here, who stalked their prey by plane. They faye collected nearly $1,000 in boun- ies. Albrecht pilots the plane and Fischey handles the shotgun, STAFF O° LIFE Winnipeg, March 25.—The longest grain train on record arrived here re- church township, P. m., at the Bryan Mawr Presby- terian church. Mr. Rea retired from the presi- @ency of the Pennsylvania in 1925, after 54 years of almost continuous service and nine days after he had celebrated his 70th birthday, A son of a colonial Pennsylvania family, he started work in 1867 when London, March 25.—Professor E, c. Baly of Liverpool university has per- fected a new process for the manu- facture of nonbreakable glass. It is called plass. The professor says that it was first invented by Dr. Pollock of Austria and that he has improved it to @ point where it can now be moulded into shape. Plass will not break and cannot be cut with ® glass eS A sel booth in a confection- ery at Watertown, Mass., posts this sign: “Be Reasonable—Be Brief.” If Suffering from Rheumatic or BALM. Use it according to direc- tions and note the quick relief it gives. Muscular pain is often caused by congestion (lack of blood flow). Paxo Balm, a powerful stimulant, penetrates the muscular _ tissues, soothes the irritated nerves and brings a quick rush of blood to the painful area. AH responsible drug- gists are authorized to promptly re- Tired Achy? mended by thousends in these condi- tions, Doan's, a stimulant diuretic, increase the activity of the kidneys and thus aid them in carrying of waste impurities, Are used and recommended the world over, Ask your neighbor! 50,000 Users Endorse Doan’s: says ings, was recently completed. j|ion Alm, Alfred and Henry Magnu- | Was more than a mile in length. | “FASHIONS tw ?PRONES I had seen Doan’s Pills advertised and bought a box and it wasn’t after them before I felt very much better.” DOAN'S "i$ 75 ASTIMULANT DIURETIC si& KIDNEYS Focter-Milburn Co. Mig.Chem. Buffale. MY. Hearing on Prisoner |, Benjamin Escape Case Delayed | ticsrapny, | Grand Forks, N. D., March 25.—(#) \--Hearing of Larry O'Connor, charged with permitting a, prisoner to escape from his custody was continued today ‘until Friday while authorities contin- ued their search for the prisoner, Rube Lukkason. dignified and luxurious than farming. moselt ee thrift and , Who justry, an frugality had. become | le HAVE CAANOLD— / —~ AND SO HAVE THE GIRLS Lukkason, under six months sen- tence for violating liquor laws, had though reports parkiatan, thet to tad t s n soen here during the past week. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY |,,,°° ae | oun. to get ai from the ft and at- ble Used Cars tended what is now the tralvseniy if ‘AS NEW as conscientious recondi- Pittsburgh, where he studied law. In tioning can make them. Mechani- | 1839 he hung tp Lis shingle in Pitis- cally right, priced right. Transpor- | burgh as.an , and made the tation you will be proud of. beginning of the great business house leat Ghrisler 60 Coupe, “Anarew Mallon, sccording to. the 1927 ;> 1928 52 Coach. biography, was born in 1855. This, 1927 Buick 4 pass, Coupe. incidentally, may settle the much- *T dovent A 1928 Erskine Sedan like new. The 100) eben OE hls exact age, ing toDPo~ # Ioat Onevrolet Truck (grain box). | ia birth yearns ener oe, ate ty There's An 1924 International 2 ton truck. © | ton made it 1854, and tho last edi. Good * tion made it 1865. If the father's | at The book is accepted, the last date is cor- fe rect, and the secretary is 16, town / There is in the autoblography a Good deal of interesting comment fea juage NOME eons of 4 i The two elder brothers, Thomas and James, it appears, at’ one time Aenterm Somes Wanted to become blacksmiths; and grown-up’s. It’s the father, instead of ordering them growth end iden ‘und “devore, thenueine a Se ae Ne Oe business he had founded, encouraged them and even: equipped a - small blacksmith shop for them. A little Judge remarks that “I soon discov-