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. Coral Shows Ocean MONDAY, APRIL 29, 1929 PHEASANT PROGRAM FOR STATE PUSHED Bismarck Izaak Walton League Recommends Spending of $25,000 in Purchases A petition requesting that $25,000 | be spent. this year in purchasing pheasants and releasing them in va fous points in North Dakota will presented to the state game and fish commission in the near future by the Bismarck chapter of the Izaak Wal- ton League. This was decided at a mecting of 20 members of the organization at the Grand Pacific hotel at 2:30 p. m. yes- terday. ‘The $25,000 purchase money would be taken from the treasury of the state game and fish commission, which is estimated to total approxi- mately $60,000. Members of the local Sportsmen's organization believe that the money could be spent in no bet- ter way than restocking the state with the game birds. Birds would be purchased from pheasant farms throughout the coun- try and released in this state to en- joy the closed season which is in ef- fect now. In a short time North Da- kota would be a “pheasant hunters’ paradise” if the plan is accepted, members of the local club believe. Philip J. Meyer was elected presi- dent of the Bismarck club for the coming year at yesterday’s meeting. John Hoffman was named vice presi- dent and Carl Kositzky and M. O. Steen were reelected treasurer and Secretary respectively. Orris W. Roberts and John Peter- son are the retiring president and vice president. Local Man Gives Sum For Research Work With Deaf and Dumb Dr. L. A. Schipfer, a Bismarck resi- dent. appears on the list of contribu- tors to the American Otological So- ciety’s research fund made ublic in New York city recently. A fund of $2,500,000 is being sought to finance a plan of research, world- wide in scope, into the causes and means of preventing deafness. The Plan embraces research in leading universities and hospitals both here and abroad and is under the direc- tion of the American Otological So- ciety, the foremost group of ear spe- cialists in the country and the oldest specialized medical society in the world. Results of the research will affect ten million people in the United States who suffer from afflictions of the hearing apparatus, a number large enough to entirely repopulate New York and Chicago as “Cities of Silence.” Swanson President Of Farmers Union Local at Driscoll C. A. Swanson was elected presi- dent of the Driscoll local organization of-the Farmers union at a meeting last week. Other officers named follow: Vice president, Olaf Quale, and secretary- treasurer, Mrs. Alden Nelson. Delegates to the state convention named are C. A. Swanson, Albert Quale and A. H. Meland. Alternates are Alden Nelson, L. B. Olson and Edward Madson. Local unions in all townships of Burleigh county are now organized. A county organization will be ar- ranged in the near future, according to officials. Gannett Acquires 17th Newspaper for Chain Rochester, N. Y., April 28—()—An- nouncement was made here today of the acquisition of the seventeenth newspaper in the Gannett group of which Frank E. Gannett of this city is head. The newspaper is the Malone, Y., Telegram, founded in 1905 by Charles M. Redfield, who has been its publisher since its founding. Douglas N. Callander and Leon L, Turner will continue to hold an in- terest under the Gannett manag ment, The Gannett group includes daily newspapers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. a Washed New Mexico Fort Worth, Texas, April 29.—(7)— A barrier reef of the sea, that now stands in New Mexico nearly 1,000 miles from the ocean, is described for the American Association of Petrol- eum Geologists by E. Russell Lloyd, geologist of Midland, Texas. Much of the reef ee a buried. Its exposed portion, Lloyd says, about 70 miles long and more than 2,000 feet high—gray, massive and very porous. It lies between Carls- bad and Guadalupe point. Mr. Lloyd holds that the substance posing the limestone prove that Robert La Follette Sucher, Jr., idea that inherited evils are to hit the first born hardest. among previous studies by medical men have indicated that the first- born is a sort of inheritance goat. Members of the La Follette family here are shown at the ceremony of unveiling a statue of the latg Senator Robert La Follette, of Wisconsin, in Statuary Hall, Washington. The statue is the work of Jo Davidson, famed American sculptor, and shows the statesman in a pose characteristic of him in the senate. Left to right are Miss Fola La Follete, a daughter; little Marion Wheeler, daughter of Senator Burton K. Wheeler of Montana; grandson of Senator La Foliette; Mrs. Robert La Follette Sucher, a daughter, and two sons, Philip La Follette and Senator Robert La Follette, Jr. Woman Denies Predilection of First Born to Bad Heritages London, Ont., April 29.—()—That the firstborn child is not subject to more inheritable diseases than the subsequent children, was found in a survey by Madge Thurlow Macklin, of the University of Western Ontar- io. Her figures are at variance with the likely Some Miss Macklin’s report is made for the American Eugenics society and her analysis is based on hundreds of observations. Previous interpretations firstborn hazard as the highest is due to the probability that these con- clusions were based on an undue pro- portion of families that births after the first one. She suggests that rating the restricted “In families in which restriction has Weber ‘to Conduct Rally at Fryburg}| (Special to The Tribune) Fryburg, N. D., April 29.—Dr. Frank R. Weber, national community service expert, will give two lectures during special community development rally program here May 4. H. R. Talkington, representing the business men who are sponsoring Dr. ‘Weber's appearance, is in charge of general arrangements. The community service lecturer spoke before the Fryberg Parent- Teacher association on the “Economic Value of an Education” a short time ago. T. G. Eklund, president of the or- ganization, presided at the meeting. Other officers are: Esther Johnson, secretary; Mr. Boicourt, vice presi- dent; and F. B. McCullough, head of the entertainment committee. The program was completed with N.1 an informal dance and luncheon. Long-haired Poles View First Movies Warsaw. — (7) — Members of the Khassyds of Poland have seen their first movie, and liked it. Bearded men with long curls, worn according to their ‘religious beliefs, howled with delight, shouted advice and warnings to the actors, and otherwise carried on as children seeing their first film. The occasion was the presentation of a film history of a famous Polish Jew patriot, Berew Joselewitz, who perished during the Kosciuszxo in- surgent movement. The Khassyds’ re- ligious leaders decided to allow tne men of the sect to view the film at a special performance, but no Woucu were permitted to attend. HAY PRICES HIGH Reno, Nev., April 29.—(4)—Rela- tively high prices for good Nevada hay are expected to continue until the new crop While prices for the 1929 crop are ex- pected to average below those of available. 1928, they may be above those of 1927 if yields and quality are aver- aged and if production by tributed in the areas. PAXO will relieve - that pain Muscular pain is often Sentinel Butte to Hear Dr. F. R. Weber ’ GIRL AUCTION ‘Wis,—Bi-weekly parties ‘were auctioned before ‘Waukesh -nd Milwaukeo , the irritated nerves, Paxo is well dis- caused by congestion — lack of blood flow. Paxo Balm penetrates the mus- cular tissues—it soothes .Balm causes a quick rush of blood to the painful oe Get Paxo Balm your druggist’s—apply pet fis to directions. Thirty minutes will bring relief. If not. satisfied, the ea ze of Me will” ‘land. Reed has applied his experi- chief hey-producing || CONDEMNED WOMAN “es ESCAPES SCAFFOLD IWinois -Frees Mrs. Cassler, Stating Man's Murder Avenged by Death Mexican Officer d Herbert Chicago, April 29.—(—Once con- demned to death and sentenced to be hanged for murder, Mrs. Catherine Cassler, a middle-aged mother, was freed today after a three-year fight goad carried on from her prison cel The woman screamed and collapsed before the judge’s bench when in- formed that the state had agreed to nolle prosse her case which was brought before’ the court today on:a motion for a new trial. The state, said the murder of Wil- liam Lindstrom, for which Mrs. Cas- sler, Mrs. Lillian Fraser and Loren Patlink were icted, had been! Sergeant Don E. Person, 20, of the avenged by the death of Mrs. Fraser|U. S. army medical detachment at who died last month while serving a| William Beaumont Hospital, Paso, life term in the state prison. Patrick | Tex., is the American hero of the also is serving a life term, but Mrs.} Mexican revolution. Sergeant Person Cassler had been sentenced to death | has just received a letter from Presi- Married son “Jesse Yount, thorn. Gives Blood for ot Aaeitie of Herbert Hoover Came New York, April 29.—(P)—President, scendant of an American colonial ‘| who migrated from Germany in 1740, the American Heraldry society in New York has discovered. The lineage of the cessor is clearly defined from date on, genealogists have declared and the family tree is announced as fe ‘Andrew Hoover Germany) settled in Maryland 1740, “John Hoover went to North Car- olina and thence to Ohio and mar- ried Sarah Burket. Branch, Iowa, and married Rebecca Their son “Eli Hoover (1820-1892) first Mary Davis. “Son of Jesse Clark Hoover (1840- 1880) married Hulda Randall Min- ‘Their Hoover, born at West Branch, Iowa, August 10, 1874.” The original spelling of the name To North America in Year of 1740 was “Huber,” according to Harry M. Hoover, author of the “Huber-Hoo- ver Family History.” The name is derived from German word “hube,” Meaning the possessor of a tract of land. Other variations are Huver, Hover, Hoober. The crest of the family consists of @ ducal coronet out of which spring two buffalo horns. The horns are = of that early America | Hoover is the lineal de- Coolidge suc- that (born Baden,|to which Andrew Hoover came. In the language of heraldry, the horns signify honor and distinction. The arms show in first and fourth quarters a male sheep springing over three hills and, in other quarters, rose in full bloom with four leaves. Margeret Fountz. Their Their son Hoover settled at West TALE OF Tayatea ine JUDGE'S tive virtues of pure pine tar. London.—There's a wee await- ! clear honey. and other valuable ing the next person who approaches | and tissue -healing ingredients. the magistrates at Wymouth with alfor it. Sold everywhere.—Adv. sob story. A tramp is responsible for | a turn to more severity and less kind- ; KFY! ness in the court. tires ¥ th A 7 The vagrant was haled before the | MOrn ing or the A. We. bench of justice after being found|Co. day’s special. married, son, Herbert Clark as the alleged plotter of Lindsttom’s; dent Portes Gil thanking him for death to collect his insurance. giving his blood in a_ transfusion Patrick, it was charged at the trial. | operation in a vain effort to save the was hired by the two women to beat! life of Lieut. Maximino Ruiz, Mexi- Lindstrom to death. He turned state’s| can federal officer wounded in the evidence and testified against Mrs.!recent battle of Juarez. Sergeant Cassler. She was one of the few| Person's home is in Port Arthur, Tex. women ever given the death sentence in Cook county. RENE FONCK’S PLANE WILL FLY 0 CHILE Roosevelt Field, N. Y., April 29.— The Sikorsky plane in which Rene Fonck, France's ace of aces, once hoped to span the Atlantic, left to- day for Washington preparatory to a nonstop flight to Santiago, Chile, the plane was piloted by Harold Mc- Mahon, and as one of its passengers carried John K. Montgomery, presi- dent of the American International Airways, which recently purchased the plane as flagship of a fleet to operate passenger mail and freight service to South America. It is planned to start the nonstop flight from Washington or from some point in Florida within the next 10 days. After reaching Santiago the plane will make a goodwill flight, stopping at every country in South America. The 18-passenger plane will be christened “the Southern Star” at Washington today before South American diplomats. Downtown Play Area Developed by Women Cambridge, Mass.—()— Converting unused back yards in the business dis- trict into playgrounds for children is @ project successfully carried out by “| the Cambridge League of Women Voters. Realizing that municipal play- grounds are often in distant places where children must get into heavy traffic in order to reach them, the league launched its plan for back yard Playgrounds. Prizes were offered in a city-wide contest. Exhibits of back yard play- grounds were held in all parts of the city. Soon boys and girls were more absorbed in making models of play- grounds than in playing in real ones. Magnificent Diamond Reaps $400 Per Carat Kimberley, Cape of Good Hope, April 29—(7)—A magnificent dia- mond weighing 33 1-4 carats, found at Barkly West brought £2,660 today, or £80 (approximately $400) per ‘carat. ‘This was believed to consti- tute a record price reckoned per carat. St. Louis Is Providing Home for Dairy Show 8t. Louis—(?)}—Three exhibition buildings, costing $3,000,000, to house the national dairy show and the na- tional poultry show which will be held here in October, rapidly are nearing not been practised,” she says, “or has not been successful, there fre- quently occur other children with malformations. “How unjust to parents who have already had the misfortune of bring- ing into the world one defective child, to raise their hopes by false prom- ises. How tragic for them when our promises fail to materialize and a second malformed baby comes into the world. “Although it would be gratifying to be able to assure them that their later offspring will be normal, can we conscientiousiy do so, when we realize that out of every 16 families in which congenital defects that are not obviously inherited occur, there will be at least one family, perhaps more, in which there will be more than one defective child? Is it not better to be accurate than to be too hopeful, with disastrous results?” completion. The project embraces 70 acres of ground and when completed 150,000 feet of floor space under patent glass- and-steel roofing will be available for * Tazz Played Very Poorly in Europe | = > New York, April 29.—(?)—Jazz c the only American music known in Europe, and even that is played very badly, said Sandor Harmati, director of the Omaha Symphony orchestra, who returned with his wife today on the liner Laconia. For six weeks he was guest conductor of the Berlin Philharmonic and the Paris Sym- phony orchestras. The work of American se! posers is entirely unknown in Europe, he said. British Trade Board Says Nation on Mend London.—()—Sir Philip Cunliffe- Lister, president of the board of trade, told an audience at Newport, Wales, that England was definitely on the road to economic recovery. He said that 500,000 more persons had employment today than in 1924. “We have made steady progress since 1926,” he declared. “Output has in- creased and our trade balance has in- creased by $725,000,000. In the mining industry contracts are being made on a scale that we should have thought impossible a year ago.” Terracing Poor Farm Is One Banker’s Hobby | Gorman, Tex.—(#)—Ben F. Reed is one bank president who doesn’t play golf for recreation. He oper- ates a terracing machine as a hobby. Reed became an advocate of ter- racing farm land when he bought a gully washed, worn out section of land, By terracing he transformed it into a productive farm. Farmers following the banker's plan also have increased the value of their Distributed by Nash-Finch Co. Bismarck, 1. 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You mei pan weed no operation if ia see us, for we | oi ey, CURE YOU witkout the om KNIFI We are the above tres bles and other ailments without operations. .If your disease is incurable we will frankly tel! you By our Alkaline Blood Treatments and Mucousless Diet System we quickly remove the poisons from your blood stream and CURE you to stay CURED We remove ike CAUSE of the fen. If we take your case reatment we will GUARAN- TEE A CURE OR REFUND ‘EVERY ag hla YOU HAVE PAID US—Can anything be more fair than that CLINIC OF DR. T. M. angel Rooms 6-8, Lucas Block, Bismarck, No. Dak. By our Bloodless Surgical Methods we tively guarantee a cure "of goiter, gall bi: rr trouble, coma pide appendicitis T. M. Mactachian (tarvare) Dad ment successfully on several farms since his first attempt. WILLISTON MAN KILLED © Williston, N. D., he fell under a tractor on the farm of Sam Herob, west of here. 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