The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 23, 1929, Page 6

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~RRGRTED AT LUNGH . (®}—This little Schleswig town was K crowded today with 2000 visitors who \ planned to follow the coffin of Prince to the Orient; Saw Japan and India Besides Some of the wonders of China were described to the Kiwanis luncheon, today, by Kenneth Crawford, who re- vently returned from a trip to the Orient on which he and a companion set out October 20 last from Seattle. In a previous talk to the Rotarians. Mr. Crawford told of what he had seen and experienced in India and he referred briefly to that portion of ais globe trotting today, China his chief topic. However, Japan claimed his atten- tion first, for he and his traveling mate arrived there while the corona- tion was in progress. He described the big assemblage of warships at Kobe and the rites at Kioto. An the ceremonies, he said, were marked by that almost sacred reverence for their emperor which the Japanese exhibit. Kenneth Crawford Tells of Trip making | Mobs Crowd Little German Village for . Prince Henry Rites Eckernfoerde, Germany, April 23.— Indian Operetta - Mon-Dah-Min Will ‘BILLICAN’ CANAN, FORMER POLITICAL | yc se, ee min,” will 3e g.ven at the Bismarck | auditorium by the girls’ glee club of 9 the Indian school Tuesday, April 30. Henry of Prussia to the grave at ; The story is a beautiful Indian nearby Hemmelmark tomorrow. Nu- | ——— legend telling the story cf corn, merous patriotic leagues and sporting | Was Prominent During Days of | valued food of the Indians, and the clubs throughout Germany sent s § ‘ various feasts observed during the deputations to render the last honors Nonpartisan Power in Bis- | growing period and at harvest. to their patron. = k and The operetta willbe in costume. Admiral Roeder and Rear Admiral mercx and rargo | and in addition to the songs will have Hansen will represent the German |many dances, and a number of spe- ‘navy and General Hasse, the Reich-| Fargo, N. Dak., April 23.—Wilfred | Clal features in which children from jsweer. Funeral orations will be! 4. Canan, 48 formerly a cartoonist | all grades of the Indian school will limited to one hour at the’ request jon The Fargo Courier News. in the | take part. ‘ of Princess Irene. | palmy days of the Nonpartisan league | The play will also be given in Far- when the League owned that paper, | 80. May 10. an’ in Casselton, May 11. ” died ~ QUESTION IS STUDIED scree # eesti") pra HON COPAY a wheel chair to get ,and was a conspicuous figure about | the streets of Fargo during the years of his residence here, 1917 to 1921, and in Bismarck during the sessions of the legislature during those years. He used a t'ny figure of a goat jin his early cartoons and in later | 23.—.P.—One | NaTs of his cartoon work. enlarged | cay eye upon the goat idea and finally evelved “the goat that cant be he slogans in Non- | Phase of Senator Vare Election Controversy Considered by Supreme Court Famous Indian Fighter, Well Known in Bismarck, to At- tend Park Program Major General Hugh L.. Scott, Princeton, N. J.. famous Indian fighter Washington, April | ph f the c versy 0 | phase o! ontroversy over the | r j election of William 8. Vare as senator | the term: They bow toward his palace whether | from Pennsylvania was before the su- | §°t.” 85 one o | partisan publications. in the frontier days in North Dakota they expect him to see their respect or not, because they must express their scared feeling toward him. * ‘The two Americans visited the Dia- preme court today in a case in which {the authority of the senate to arrest | Sheriff Thomas W. Cunningham of shite Minn, } 82d the northwest, will be the prin He worked Mr the Rorthem Pacific |<1Pal speaker. of the dedication pro- machine shops there for several years | &'@m during the coming summer of | Philadelphia for refusal to answer | before becoming crippled, and later ,°!d Fort Berthold, near Williston, as butsu Bhudda, a towering statue of | certain inquiries during the Reed in- the god. ‘Then they went to China and tried to reach the Great Wall, but got no further than Szu-Chow. Nevertheless, Mr. Crawford told the club about the wall. It took 3,000,- 000 laborers to build it, is 1200 miles long and every mile has eight to ten towers for defence. It was built to keep out the Tartars and Mongols. The worker loafing on the job was built into it as a penalty. When it was finished, its projector, Chin— whence “China"—put to death all the literati and historians and burned’ all the books he could lay hands on, that he might appeer as the first man in the world—“Chin, the Only First.” The travelers also visited Shanghai and Hong Kong and Mr. Crawford described their sights, but had no ad- ventures there to relate. From these ports they went to India, the show > Mace of the world. He described the »’ aj Mahal palace, 20 years in the % duilding, the Peacock room of the Delhi palace, from which the Persian (nvaders carried off the $3,000,000 peacock throne with its mass of gems, and it now is in Teheran. Otto Bowman presided at the lunch- Worth Lumry. Dr. F. R. Krause was chairman of the day’s program. ton in the absence of President | ‘est was madi ;to examine vestigation is questioned. | Cunningham refused to disclose the source of his income after he had | testified that he had contributed ; $50,000 to the Republican state com- {mittee in 1926, at the time he was | clerk of the quarter sessions court at a salary of $8,000 a year. geant-at-arms of the senate in com- pliance with a resolution adopted by that body, requiring his appearance before it. He insisted that if he was | wanted as a witness he should have | been subpoenaed and not arrested. | and challenged the power of the sen- ate to punish him on the charge of contempt. The federal district court at Phila- j delphia refused to release him on| habeas corpus proceedings. but the circuit court of appeals held that the} arrest was illegal. The senate appealed to the highest court and was represented by former Attorney General George W. Wicker- sham. He will contend that the sen- ate had power to make arrests to He was arrested by a deputy ser-| Miss Marie Daveau of Brainerd. | took a course in drawing. On leaving Fargo in 1921, Mr. Canan went to Minneapolis and es- tablished a mailing bureau. He left | Minneapolis for Los Angeles last year, lestablishing a mailing bureau in the California city. ‘ He was married three years ago to Philo Brockway. columnist on the Fargo Courier News when Canan was a cartoonist there, now of The Duluth News Tribune, is a relative by mar- riage. J, F, SCHWANTES, 74, DIES OF HEART SPELL Pioneer Northwest Resident Succumbs After Month's Ill- ness at Home Here bring persons before it. and will use the resolution under which ment that t ~'", Guests present were J. B. McCar- Hs @ -thy, of the 805 Tire shop; N. F. Sny- | ‘=P*. s_ der, former member of the legislature, ‘from Bottineau; Alfred Zuger. of Bis- “marck; L. F. Crawford, Bismarck, ind Harry S. Marsh, traveling freigh: ygent of the Northern Pacific, from ' famestown. .” Additional Society” > Mrs. Jansonius Speaks Jn ‘Vanishing Race’ at Monday Club Meetin - * > » » e & * A very comprehensive paper oc ‘The Vanishing Race” was g:vex =7 Mrs. Fred Jansonius at the meeung of the Monday club heid yestercar afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. G Worner. 5 Mrs. Jansonius’ paper dealt with the American Indians, and she pox:- +d out that time has proven the ¥is- dom of the suggestion offered a hun- ired. years ago by President Jefferson. ‘hat. “In truth the ultimate poi: co! ‘est and happiness for them ‘the In- finns) is to let their settlements anc / ‘urs meet and blend together. to inte:- nix and become one people. Incor- vorating themselves with us as citi- ‘ens of the United States is what the satural progress of things will bring m. It is better to promote than re- ‘ard it.” Mrs. Jansqniys gave reasons shy she Indian is fast disappearing. using statistics collected for the recent in- vestigation into Indian affairs by the senate, of which committee Benator Ugnin J. Frazier of North Dakota shatrman. ‘The need of more health education Among the tribes was especially stressed, as was the need for better | srease in tuberculosis and other com- municable diseases within the past; decade was shown. Malnutrition and the lack of proper to hold him under arrest for con- $20,000,000 Utility | Corporation Organized New Yak : Tarmgs ier cmstiuenc cmmgs- mes, ime % Wee Serves acct Pemgies ligt ant Sower corpera- Gens muppiy tesmwie ight anc power. ariel ad aaccral gas. anc water Ero War Service company. Ari-, Crosby Occupied | Election Contests; M.D. April 3 ——Hear- 10 of election comtests, in- | Divite county following | terun The firs, case taken up was that of | George P. Homnes agains: E. J.j Mclirath for the office of state's at-| torney. G FP. Hawixinson was chos- | |en 2s 2 teller for the pisintiffs and | Roy W. Frazer was chosen as teller iving quarters, and the appaliing in- Prt newspaper, and C. J. Clark versus C. ~ marek for the last 11 years. died at ~. H G. Schwantes, 417 P. Bishonnette for the office of coun- Is y commissioner. Irregularities and illegal eiection- | district court yesterday afternoon. J. P. Schwantes. 74. resident of Bis- 10 a.m today at the home of his son. First street. | Death was due to heart disease. He} had been ill about one month. Funeral services will be conducted at the Pirst Evangelical church at 2 p.m Thursday. Rev. Ira E. Herzberg. pastor, will officiate. Interment will} te made at Big Stone City. S. au ae who cannot be Saturday. according to present plans. Deceased hac a resident in| ‘a, North and was two years | the United States! cus family when he was two cid. The famiy settled in Wis- am, where deceased spent his boy- | date. Seed amd received his early educa- x After being married at Ripon. 's.. he resided for a few years at) He retired and moved to Bismarck to reside with his son il years ago, His wife died in 1914 Mr. Schwantes leaves two brothers, Schwantes, Ridgefield, Wash. are H. G., Bismarck; H. W., Minne- apojis; B W., Aberdeen, S. Dak.; H. C., Cleveland, O.; and R. W., Garden Grove, Calif. The two daughters are ., and ughi Calif. here ,ioday by Judge | o not other relatives will come for the funeral services is not definitely known. THREE CASES KEEP LOCAL JUDGE BUSY A trio of cases kept Judge Fred fansonius busy in Burleigh county mn the north-| attend are | George Germany May 7. | reservations. /Opponents Rely on | a state park. Major General Scott visited in Bis- marck last summer. Last night he told of the Indian fighting in the Bismarek area in a radio address de- livered at Washington, D. C. Dedicatory ceremonies are ‘to. be conducted under the auspices of the Williston Commercial club. One of tht features will be the placing’ of marker by the North Dakota Masonic grand lodge where first meetings w held by Fort Buford lodge. This now the Williston Masonic The last freight shipping done fi Bismarck to Fort Buford along tl old government trail was in tl spring of 1881. The preceding yer Sitting Bull had been chesed in Canada and held during the win' by the mounted police. The follow! year the Indianss were turned over the Seventh United States cavalry a! Fort Buford. sd wiied esaaseeea PT Mandan Auxiliary Rally to Be May 2 Thursday, May 2, has beert set for the third district American. Legion Auxiliary ¢illy at Mandan. ‘The rally. Previously planned for March 28, had to Postponed on account of bad Toads and floods. Mrs. Walter Tostevin will preside at the meeting in place of Mrs. Bertle Nelson. third district committee wom- The rally will include a morning. an afternoon and an evening session. with a banquet at the Lewis and Ciark hotel Tuesday evening as the big social event. Those planning to asked to advisc Mrs. Janda, who is in charge of Severa! changes have been made in ¢ program for the meeting, and these will be announced at a later Hoover’s Attitude To Defeat Measure “Neither this bill nor any single measure,” he declared, “ do all that. needs to be di en the economic SOUND, intelligent advice on child training. Practical and sensible. The sort of advice that parents everywhere can use and profit from. ; fing An oft-repeated tion coming to?” and books. __ : We believe the answer lies with the parents themselves—in conscientious application to the task of child training. And Olive Roberts Barton, successful both as mother and writer, contributes daily a valuable column on this all-important subject. uestion today.is “What is the younger genera- e hear it from pulpits, read’ it in magazines Read Olive Roberts Barton every day in The Bismarck Tribune - Send for a Trial Subscription — Here is an offer by which you can secure the World’s important events through The Tribune leased wires of the Associated Press, the daily market reports, and the following comics daily: The daily Gumps, Freckles and His Friends, Mom’n Pop. Salesman Sam, Boots and Her Buddies, Our Board- ing House and Out Our Way. In addition to these you get an 8-page comic section every Saturday of the Sunday Gumps, Harold Teen, Smithy, Win- nie Winkle, Moon Mullins, Little Orphan Annie, Kids, and Gasoline Alley. 6 . Fill out and mail the blank below enclosing the amount as listed for subscription you desire... - by carrier in Bismarck. Meee y (|) by carrier in Bismarck, 6 mos. . 3.60 1 year (in North Dakota) ... ..$5.00; 6 months, (in North Dakota)... 2.50; eering in Frazier township, and the| The judge issued a temporary in- Promiscuous use of absent voters bal- | junction against the construction of a lots are alleged in the complaints | State highway in Sheridan county are generally crowded beyond their | tijeq capaeity. so that the individual chiid | does not have sufficient light and air. The school dormitories are generally of the congregate type, so that those below par in health cannot be isolated from the others. Contagious diseases | under these conditions have almost | by the plaintiffs. 10-Day Air Tour in State Is Arranged Devils Lake, N. D., April 23.7) A North Dakota air tour, during which airports in Devils Lake, Wijlis- ton, Valley City and Jamestown will be dédicated, will start from Grand Forks on June 1 and continue 10 days, Yesterday by the Alsport, Gommirics x ly by Al Committee of Devils Lake Civic and Commerce Stops will be made in Fargo, Val- ley City, Jamestown, Mandan, Dick- inson, Devils Lake, Williston and James Barrett of | this city was named chairman general com- across property claimed by Richard Schumann to belong to him. Schu- mann asked for the injunction re- from continuing construction until title to the property could be decided satisfactorily. In another civil case, Judge Jan- sonius upheld a demurrer by the de- fendant in the F. F. Burehard vs. the State Bonding Fund case, in which the plaintiff was asking for $913.52 di . was em- by carrier in Bismarck, 3 mos. . 1.80 3 months (in, North.Dakota) ... 1.25; _ SUBSCRIPTION. 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