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‘PAGE EIGHT THE BISMARCK TRIRUNE STATE 1S FACING BIG] GRAIN RATE JUMP IP NOT BLOCKED BY N. W. Freight Charges Here Would Be Increased $37.89 a ‘Car; N. D. Total $3,800,000 A rate schedule showing the amount ‘of increases involved for North Da- kota in the proposed grain freight re- visions was brought back from the Friday Fargo conference of commer- cial heads from the various cities and towns in the state by H. P. Goddard secretary of the Association of Com- merce. A tabulation made {or the state rail- road board shows a probable total in- crease of $3,800,000 in freight charges | for North Dakota on a wheat crop of the volume of that of 1928. 'The increase in Bismarck on ship- ments to Duluth or Minneapolis would | be $37.89 a carload. From Armourdale an increase of $101.04 a car is shown. ‘The increase at Nechc is $88.41 to Minneapolis. At Williston it would be $58.94 to Duluth and $46.31 to Min- neapolis. Dickinson would pay $37.89 more a car, same as Bismarck, on Du- luth shipments, and $29.47 more on a carlead to Minneapolis. 7 For Killdeer the ii ¢ is $) a carload; Pingrec, $42; Wilton, $: to Duluth and $21 to Minneapolis: from Mandan, $46 to Duluth and $37.89 to Minneapolis. A conference of repres ntatives of be held 0 over the ytation of their at- tate commerce situation for pr titude before the in commission at a he ton later in the month. BISMARCK AUTOISTS GET LIGHT WARNINGS 340 Drivers Ordered to Adjust Lamps During March; Mi- nor Infractions Many A warning to automobile drivers in Bismarck to make certain that their lights are proper was issued by Chris J. Martineson, chief of police, tod: after he had informed the city com- mission in his monthly report that 340 drivers were notified of having improper lights during April. Twenty-seven transient drivers here were stopped after driving through stop signs and making improper turns | at corners, the report indicates. Five of six bicycles stolen during the month, valued at $125, were re-/| covered, one by an owner and four by police. Two coats, valued at $270. one automobile valucd at $500, and a pocketbook containing $20 reported stolen were recovered by local offi- cials. , Twenty-one automobile accidents + were reported and investigated in the 30-day period. Doors of 22 business estabilshmen‘s were found open dur- ing night. Twenty-five arrests made by local police during April follow: drunk 5; disorderly conduct 6; speeding 2; driving auto while intoxicatel 3; and drunk and disorderly, driving with four in front seat of auto, vagrancy. assault and battery, obtaining money under false pretenses, failing to pay board bill, passing worthless checks, and breaking parole, 1 each. Dr. Bodenstab Back From Southern Trip Dr. W. H. Bodenstab, medical di rector of the Provident Life, re- turned Saturday from a 10 day trip to points in Louisiana and Mississippi. At Biloxi, Dr. Bodenstab attended the annual convention of the Medical Directors of American Life Insurance companies. At New Orleans he at- tended the congress of Southern Rail- way Surgeons. 400 Federals Repulse Attack of ‘Cristeros’ Mexico City. May 6.—()—Dis- patches to Excelsier today Guadalajara said that 1,200 “Cris- tero” insurgents led by Ramon Ar- naiz, Felipe Sanchez, and Julio San- doval had failed in a 17-hour attempt to recapture Colotlan, Jalisco, from a garrison of 400 federals. The federal commander. Major Pedro Rosales ‘was killed in the fray. Chinese Army Takes Over City from Japs Peking, May 6.—(4)—Telegrams to- day from Tsinan. Shantung. said that Nationalist government troops yester- day took over contro! of the Walled City from Japanese troops who had held it since February 5, 1928. This marked the first decisive step in com- plete Japanese military evacuation of Shantung which it was expected ‘would be concluded by May 27. 1930 Student Meeting To Be Held at Varsity Minot, N. D., May 6.—(4)—The 1930 g3 | Which will convene } ing in Washing- | from | | | which contr May 6 Dis- | is in the Princeton Theo- | | logic: 5 spread to the! y of the! 8. A. | impending g Presbyterian | May | Represented as having grown from | | pei onalities, the internal strife in | church's oldest and largest semi- ‘nary has extended to the institution's {two governing board: | While the contro {mitted to the general assembly im earch of settlement, some Presby an churchmen believe civil courts eventually will untangle it. | ‘The differei.ce between the board |of directors and the board of trus- | tees also has been explained as one {of doctrine and administration, with {a clash of authority in which the seminary's president figures. ‘Two years ago a committee neaded | {by Dr. William O. Thompson, Colum- | bus, Ohio, president emeritus of Ohio | State university, recommended reot ganization of the seminary gover (ment. This proposal has been ar- j ranged again for the presentation to the general assembly. I y will be sub- | Presbyterians to Air Discord | ; both of Philadelphia, and Dr. John | ‘TELEPHONE SERVICE ON TRAIN DEVELOPED | j | Two-Way Talk Between Moving Train and Stationary Point Is Success Toronto, May 6. —The feasibil- ity of two-way telephone conversation between a moving train and a sta- tionary point has been demonstrated on the Canadian National way. Service is to shortly for passengers on trains be- tween Chicago and Toronto. A two-hour conversation was main- tained between a train speeding {northward through Ontario at 40 miles an hour and the main otfices of the road at Toronto yesterday. The telegraph wires along the rail- ad right way are used by the |system which has been developed | under the direction of J. C. Burk- holder of the Bell Telephone lab- t k. N. J. arry the voice of the ilway car to the by which the impulses are insmitted to the receiving point. | The test was begun by W. D. Robb, Fier iouses are ee aserg assembly | vice president in charge of the Cana- will suggest sweeping changes in the | qig i il t direciurate, faculty and board of trus- sheratbesboetom ie eis oh . is classed as etian church, | 5 he scminary. . . . . . . be made availabie | Fol telephone service. He picked up an ordinary telephone instrument and asked the operator for Mr. Barber, jseneral manager of the Canadian National telegraphs. The connection was made promptly. The system is operative up to 150 miles and as long as the telegraph wires are not more than 200 feet from the track. Mr. Robb said a single wire would Je stretched through tun- nels and in other places where the telegraph wires are not available. Daniel Folger, Lakota Pioneer of 1882, Dead Devils Lake, N. D., May 6.—Daniel ger. 88, a resident of this state Judge Burke Off East To Washington for Law Institute Meet Chief Justice John Burke left this morning, for the east, to attend the meeting of the American Law Insti- tute at Washington, where it will hold sessions for three days. Judge Burke expects to make a ten-day stay east. He will be met at the Twin cities by Mrs. Burke and daughter Marion, who will accompany him on the trip. Tt is seven years since the judge has been back in the nation’s capital. He spent eight years there as treasurer sed United States under President mn. THINKS TOWN SINFUL Toms River, N. J., May 6. The lieves i since 1882, died at his home in La- kota Sunday. He settled uorthwest of Larimore, building the only house for ny miles within this district at that time. Later the town, Ni- agara was established three miles from his home. The town was named by settlers from Niagara, N. Y., of which he was one. Cs Vv. Ira E. Hicks, Baptist, be- town is defiled with sin. ! eons rate NORTH DAKOTA NOTES Cavalier — The annual Pembina county poultry show will be held here November 19 to 22. Belcourt — R. N. Widmeyer and Adner Widmeyer have established a muskrat farm near here. The farm includes a lake of 40 acres and sev- eral sloughs. | tees. Dr. J. Ross Stevenson, president of the seminary, classed as leader of the | moderate-conservative group. is pre- | sented as believing the seminary should be responsive to opinion of the | whole church. His opponents assert the seminary stands for an ultra- | conservative view. { Churchmen declare the dispute has had an “unwholesome effect on st dents,” and some claim attendance has decreased because of it. With Dr. Stevenson as “moderatc conservatives” are: Faculty member Dr. Charles Erdman; directors, Rob- ert E. Speer, New York, secreta' board of foreign missions; Dr. Lew S. Mudge and W. Beatty Jennings, | Finey. M. D., Baltimore. | “Ultra-conservatives” are: Faculty | members, Dr. J. Gresham Machen, Dr. Robert Dick Wison; directors, Dr. W. L. McEwan, Dr. Maitland NASH-FINCH CO. Bismarck, North Dakota Alexander, Dr. Clarence Macartney, all of Pittsburgh, and Dr. John B. Laird, Philadelphia. r Peacemaker Shot Dead for Efforts | | Chicago, May 6.—(7)}—Sam Galluc- ci, 33, acted as peacemaker in a quare | rel between four men last night and | | was killed for it. | Gallucci ordered the men from his store when they refused to quit fight- |ing. Nick Gallucci, 6, the slain man's \son, told police one of the men fired at Gallucci, killing him instantly. Bismarck Indian Girls | To Offer ‘Mondamin’ 'In Cass County Cities n the Bismarck Indian j give performances of musical spectacle, in | 5 county cities Friday and Satur- | it is anneunced today. | Friday the girls’ spectacle will be a feature at the annual May Festival at the North Dakota agricultural col- lege at Fargo. Saturday they will give the entertainment at Casselton as a feature of the annual Cass county play day. The appearance at Casselton was arranged by Miss Caroline Evingson, superintendent of Cass county schools. “Mondamin” is an American Indian operetta. + | \ Universal Air Lines’ Head, Seriously Sick Cleveland, O., May 6.—(?)—L. H. Piper, president of the Universal Air Lines system, was in a critical condi- tion here today from complications following an attack of influenza. Phy- sicians ve been administering oxy- gen for the last two days in an ef- fort to save his life. Mr. Piper, whose home is in Min- neapolis, was joined by his wife today after a tlight from California where she was advised of his illness. The attack came on after he had attend- last week, it was said. Elizabethton Mills Operate Under Guns Elizabethton, Tenn. May 6.—(Pi— With five companies of National Guardsmn on duty and machine guns mounted on roofs of buildings, the mechanical and chemical depart- ments of the American Bemberg and American Glanzstoff plants resumed operations today after a strike that began April 15. ed an aircraft exposition in Detroit | LUDENDORFF AIDE DEAD Auditor Shanghai, May 6—(P}—Colonel Max | Bauer, German military adviser to] the Chinese government and formes | right hand man of Erich Ludendortt | during the world war, died today of ERR pga smallpox. THE FAMOUS STAR HIMSELF aw at MIRTH MYSTERY THRILLS ENTERTAINMENT Same Price jor over 38 Years s we ° BAKING Ki POWDER Guaranteed Pure use less then of high priced brands MILLIONS of POUNDS USED BY THE GOVERNMENT Prices: au. JOHNS MEDICINE THE GREATEST BODY BUILDER Se ee DOING YOUR PART in the CLEAN-UP CAMPAIGN will reduce the FIRE HAZARD but you will still need FIRE INSURANCE . Let .. Le Barron Insure It M Blemorcs. ND ducted in America today. place that a man—or a woman—can do, proper tools. Also you will find here paints, varnishes, successful and tidy home-keeping. Wednesday, May 8th so ANS SEATS NOW ON SALE at Harris & Woodmansee's $2.50, $2.00, $1.50, $1.00 _ We think you'll agree that a hardware store is always an inter: esting store. The suggestion of constructive work is everywhere expressed. Every home has an ally in the hardware store, as con- Here you will find those things which make for the civic pride and bring it about—the implements of thrift and of pride. Every home-ovmer, for example, should have a fairly com- plete set of tools, for there are so many Fix-up jobs around the provided they have the quers, crack-fillers—a long list of the essentials of FRENCH & WELCH HARDWARE One Night Only ium ow were in perfect NEW YORK CAST Fre mai ome just as ship-shape, as tidy, and in just INTACT of pesfect repair. peace tana spirit of Ps Phone 17 The term “ship-shape’ ted generations and span condition of those oa old sailing vessels vas was spotless, spars glistened in the sun. From stem to stern these crafts condition. : . The First National Bank The Pioneer Bank Spin the busy hand around the dial! Thrift’s most remunerative play game. Does the house need repairing? Do you need new floors or woodwork? Do you need a new porch or garage, old or new screens for your windows? Very well, then, begin to “Play the Clean-up and Fix Up Game.” It’ ‘ than you might imagine and you always win in t! f Chie Paes is a profitable virtue. We can Belp selecting the materials for jobs which you can do yourself. Central Lumber Co. MONDAY, MAY 6, 1929 He expressed his view from the pul-!the stage with their arms about each pit in commenting on @ high school|other and later they actually kiss.” production of “Miss Cherry Blossom.” | School board officials said the play “In one scene,” said the clergyme:,|has been a favorite with schools and “50 American boys and girls come on! colleges for 25 years. Bismarck Auditorium One Night Only, Thursday, May 16th THE EVENT OF THE SEASON! LILLIAW ALBERTSON 3 THRILLING AbD ROMANTIC UrahEi... —TWO YEARS IN ZONDON AND NEW _ SIG. ROMBERG’S BEST MUSIC 2° scuras « “Bicgest Road Show in Years — Stewart's Symphony Orchestra Arriving 2 p. m. in their own special train, 7 cars. "Prices: $1.00, $1.50, $2.00, $2.50 and $3.00. Seats on Sale Tuesday at Harris & Woodmansee's. Mail Orders Now. Don't Get Left! . Cy and related to the spic rounded the Horn. Can- pa Fifty Years in Bismarck Bismarck, North Dakota end. You win because Civic Pride you by submitting estimates, making suggestions, BISMARCK, N. DAK. 601 Main Ave,