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\ e “ ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE PAGE THREE: RR a a ee ee WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1929 _ {+0000 MEN NEEDED| Victim, Wusbondand Suspect WEDEPLYERSTAKE | E;Pitesto Hout TO CANVASS COUNTRY in Coast Murder Mystery TEST FLIGHT BEFORE. For Des Moines Staff The state staff of agents of the | Des Moines Life and Annuity com- | pany will be gathered here June 19 , and 20 by C. E. Pickles, state man- 2 =A amemmeinntinn Dmeera satel ween AP | ON REGULAR CENSUS! Population Statistics Will be| Published as Soon as They Are Gathered Washington, June 12.—()—Popula- tion statistics of the 1930 decennial census will be announced publicly in each of 500 districts immediately aft- er they are gathered, instead of being vabulated first in Washington. William M. Steuart, director of the census, explains this procedure would be followed for the first time with the forthcoming census, in order that in- accuracies may be detected before the figures are tabulated for the perma- nent record. At least 100,000 enumerators will be needed to canvass the nation’s homes for the census, he says, and between 6,000 and 8,000 more will be employed here later. Women Enumerators Favored Selection of women for the jobs of enumerators is favored by the direc- tors because they usually have a plentiful endowment of tact and are faithful in attending to details. JUMP T0 GREENLAN Unaffected by Setbacks Suf- fered, Pilots Apparently Are Merry, Optimistic Reykjavik, Iceland, June 12.—(.)— Captain Albin Ahrenberg, Swedish flyer who is on a transatlantic trip: from Stockholm to New York, made a trial flight this morning testing re- | Pairs made after his arrival here from @ forced landing at Skaptaros latc Sunday. When the Swedish airmen took off, it was first thought they were headed for Greenland on the third lap of their flight, but the flyers soon came back. The flight was made in order to test repairs made on the plane's cooling apparatus. Captain Ahrenberg was watching weather conditions closely and !f the weather outlook continued good in Greenland planned to start for Ivg- tut some time during the day. He will carry enough fuel for eighteen hours’ although the hop to Greenland should | take only between nine and ten hours. The aviators were up at six o'clock this morning and began their study og with offices in the Cowan build- ing. The meeting will be of an educa- tional character in insurance and will deal with insurance salesmanship problems. It will open at 9:30 June 19. In addition to the agents, J. J. Shambaugh, president of the com- pany, will be here and accompanying him will be Actuary Shinnick and Barncy Person, lecturer. STRIKERS CONTROL MEXICO UNIVERSITY Rebellious Students Demand Dropping of Monthly Term Exams, Rector’s Ousting Mexico City, June 12.—(%)—Strikers of the Mexican National university were in complete control today of the (main building of the university, with the determination, they said, of re- maining there until their demands Though applications for positions of weather re $ were met. Police did not molest x ports from Greenland as enumerators will he filed with the which have been arriving every hour. |*9¢". census bureau here, supervisors in the After breakfast they boarded their A red flag hoisted by the strikers 500 districts into which the country seaplane Sverige and made the trial {floated over the building while an- will be Citta uk ar ae ak trip. " pother was draped from a second story organization of e staff. e plan Al ys | balcony over the main entrance. A ry is to employ one enumerator for each frit meh winch Wave yoarked he hundred students maintained a con- | 2,000 estimated population. on ; flight thus far, the airmen were /Stant guard at entrances, refusing to eo “Publication of the figures in the| Mysteriously missing is handsome Bill Tallman, radio operator, pictured | ory and optimistic of success. They yone except strikers enter. ‘| stricts,” Director Steuart cxpects, above at the right, who is-sought by Los Angeles police in connection with were extremely reticent howeves. ! Soveral university officials seized ¢ “will also enable me to carry out the | the “clothes closet” murder of pretty Mrs. Frank Paty, left. Mrs. Patty's concerning their plans, having’ pri- {when the building was captured yes- pansensncassasnnsesas: “j provision of the law of a penalty on body, bundled and dangling from a hook, was found in a Los Angcles apart- | vate writin ‘GanRENEEE x S PMs leorday, and held as hostages, later ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT. ‘1 deliberate inaccuracy. The super-| ment. Tallman was located on a ship, but disappeared when the boat eet were released. ANesetable PreparationforAs- visor will not be paid for the work in| touched San Francisco harbor. The victim's husband, a Portland, Ore., * ‘The students demand the resigna- similatingthe Food by Regula: : his district until after results of his financier, is pictured at the right, below. United States Court tion of Rector Antonio Castro Leal, ting the Stomachs and Bowels of staff have been published and opened — i j one of the firmest in opposing their ara DREN | il fect lecotidhicyn iach Jamestown Teacher Claims Justice Dead |i%,3° Stains the imovation of _INFANTS “CHILDREN Acontented baby. Older children healthy and ' Estimate 123,000,000 | Heart Attack Victim| Weston, dune 12—cr—sudze|eral weeks ago Thereby Promotingbidestion] happy. ‘That's a mother's reward for seeing that } On the basis of estimates of | the ear ACK VICUIM | xrcicenize Moss of the United States| Much of the disgruntlement of the CheerfulnessandRestContais | nothing prevents sound sleep; that no fretful or ‘| pine i onincretenr pede ht tnt « BAM rere ‘ court of claims, whose home was|students, it was understood. arose neither Opium, Morphinenr) = feverish spells interrupt play; or interfere with | y, it ds | Jamestown. N. D., June 12.—UP— | Bowling Green, Kentucky, died sud-|from the fact there was not instan- Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC ‘ d digesti The knowi hi about 123,000,000 individuals must be | Miss Bessie Adams, high school - Jen appetite and digestion. ie Knowing mother | | igh school teach- |denly early today of heart trouble. | taneous promulgation by the president oe i | listed for the new census. | er here for the past 10 years, died to- i Ho al 7 Becpeo? Old Dt SAMUELPTMER averts all those littl ts with good old Fletch- q jer P years Judge Moss, who was born in|conferring autonomy on the univer- ie erts all those little upsets with good o ete ‘ The first volume published, record- ‘i | day at a local hospital of heart trou-|Christian county, Kentucky, in 1868, ° — er’s Castoria. The doctor approves this pure ing each individual separately and|/Corn Belt Committee Sees) ble. she had been ill since April. | ca st so : Sec! : PP pu ‘ | PI served as assistant sccretary of the; ——___— Rochelle Salts vegetabl duct. Onl: di hould i carrying correlated figures on occu-) Equalization Fee Principle | qAunera! services will be held here |treasury from March, 1923, until his} More than 4,006498.000 cigarets aatve sted SM RGHTGRIG ee m1 pation and other items, will | appear P Thursday and the body sent to Peli-|appointment to the bench by former| were produced during the fiscal year Bate Sede your baby anything stronger. i rein ett Naat tat ead As Only Farm Hope can Rapids, Minn. fer burial. She | president Coolidge in June, 1926. | ending March 31, 1928, in Canada, poses | Fletcher's Castoria i i n ded | Sonshine: shown uy te coer hs | leaves a brother, W. H. Adams of | ion etcher s flere is soothing to infants; it is bd Increase in average length of life, for Bottineau, and three sisters, Mabel E. = — — pl ere a sweetening influence w i ii at instance; and the increases in mar-| Des Moines, Ia., June 12.—()—The | Pelican Rapids; Hulda R., Duluth, AnhelpfulRemedy for - _ . ee m nen Baby’s stomach = | riages and divorces,—will be tabulated | amended house farm relief bill “docs | Minn.; and Ethel M. of Tacoma, Constipation and Di Sour; a gentle persuader when any youngsters } and published later. It took 11 vol-|not manifest the slightest cffort to| Was! et Feverishness and bowels are irregular. There is almost daily use } so + | umes of 1,000 pages each 'to contain the results of the last national census. Out of a literal barrage of requests that various kinds of information be obtained only one new item has been selected thus far. Census workers will inquire for the first time whether each person enumerated is a veteran of any war, and of what war and which encounters. BiG BALLOON STUNT CARNIVAL FEATURE Provincial Exhibition to Put On Latest Aircraft Feats and Finales The latest attraction at the Provin- make the tariff effective in behalf of our surplus farm commodities,” in the | opinion of the corn belt committee. Opposition both to that measure and the house tariff revision bill, termed “the most indefensible meas- ure of the kind ever offcred in the history of congress,” was expressed by the committee in ‘a resolution adopted yesterday. The committee, representing 36 farm organizations, called the equal- that will assure genuine cquality to agriculture, make the tariff effective and place the loss on the various farm surpluses where it belongs.” Although jt opposed the house farm bill, the committee said it had “no desire to in any wise interfere with | passage or operation” of the measure. William Hirth of Columbia, Mo., w reelected president and A. W. Ricker of St. Paul, secretary. cial exhibition will be a balloon act. This wonderful act will, without a doubt, be the greatest attraction ever brought to a western Canada exhi- bition. The big balloon will make from 100 to 200 trips a day on passenger-carry- ing excursions, besides featuring para- chute drops, single and double, and some days will have as many as 20 parachutes in the air at one time, ranging from small to three men, making doubles. ‘The doubles are made in the follow- ing manner, using the very latest air- craft equipment: A parachute is cut away in the regulation manner and the jumper rides it down several hun- dred feet, working on a trapeze bar, then falls off and drops several hun- dred feet and opens another para- chute. ‘There also is a rope slide o1 several hundred feet from the balloon when the man apparently falls from the end of his rope for a few hundred feet, and then opens his k and floats down from an alltit of 1,500 feet. Besides these lormances, there are cable slides and dummy drops going on all day. As a grand finale to each day’s performance the balloon will hover in front of the grandstand and release a shower of fireworks. E. J. Walters of Manchester, Mary- land, the organizer of this spectacular act, has ten daring acrobats who take their lives in their hands a hundred times a day, jumping, twisting and falling, with nothing but a little bit of silk to save them. L 13 FRENCH SOLDIERS ~ KILLED IN MOROCCO Rabat, Morocco, June 12—(?)—/ Thirteen French soldiers were killcd | and 10 wounded, including two offi- cers, in anambush of French native troops by dissident tribesmen at the | foot of the Atlas mountains. The | fate of 15 Frenchmen and 65 native | auxiliaries who were caught in the! ambush and unable to fall back with | the rest of the French force to the base at Ait Yakoub was unknown. = | CHICAGO COPS RAID DOG RACING RACKET’ Chicago, June 12.—()—Three raids | which the state's attorney's office de- | scribed as “a smashing blow at the dog racing racket,” were executed| simultaneously last night at tracks! reputedly operated by the Al Capone, | George (Bugs) Moran and Chicago; Heights “syndicates.” More than 100 persons were arrest-| ed, and among articles confiscated were three machine guns. All those arrested were employes or track of- ficials. The places raided were the Haw- thorne Kennel club, the Fairview (closed today that he had prepared a RHINELANDER HOPES TO DIVORCE NEGRESS: Disinherited Son of Socially ization fee principle “the only one) Prominent Family Lived Under { Assumed Name Las Vegas, Nev., June 12—(7)—Har- ley Harmon, attorney for Leonard Kip Rhinelander, disinherited son of a well known New York family, dis- divorce complaint which young Rhinelander plans to) file against Alice Jones Rhinelander, daughter of a New Rochelle, N. Y., negro, within the next two weeks. Harmon, district attorncy here, said Rhinelander had lived in Las Vegas and at a nearby mountain resort since January 1 under an assumed name. He had successfully hidden his identity by a moustache and a gain of 21 pounds in weight since coming to Nevada. Under the name of Lou Russell, Harmon admitted, his client had r sided at the Nevada hotel and in a cabin ‘at the Charleston mountain re- sort, 25 miles north of Las Vegas. He also had operated in real estate, through which the attorney and oth- ers who knew Rbinelander as Russell, said the young man had made a con- siderable income. Cruelty, based upon the “humilla- tion my wife has caused me by her Cc Apo! Tonight - - Only THEATRE the great North, half a dozen persons find themselves. Such is the theme of this drama of Arctic snows and sizzling passions of human beings marooned on the Alas- kan wastes. There have been other films of the far North, but this is cne with a totally fresh idea, superb- ly acted by a fine cast. Also The Famous “Our Gang” in an all talkie comedy Thursday, Wm. Boyd talks in “THE LEATHERNECK” actions,” Harmon stated, would be the basis of the divorce complaint, which will be filed in the Las Vogas district court. The disclosure of Rhinelander’s marriage several years ago to the daughter of the New Rochelle hack drive#was followed by their enforced separation by his socially prominent family. A subsequent suit for the annulment of the marriage was de- nied, and the young couple perma- nently separated. North Dakotans Test Play-Writing Ability Grand Forks, N. D., June 12.—North Dakota people believing themselves possessed of play-writing ability will Thursday, June 20th BISMARCK FacSimile Signature of f THE CENTAUR CO. NEWYOR) Atomonths old ee 5 Dosrs 4001 ™ Se SLEEP eet for it in any home until the children are all grown. —_ And in the dead of night when colic or diarrhea makes a sudden attack it is indispensable. Get the genuine, with Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. Children Cry for LAAs. PERFORMER! The motoring world has already endorsed the Marquette as “a great performer!" And no wonder—1o to 60 miles See —_— club, and the Illinois Kennel club. _| be given an opportunity to compete in ‘i i Pat Roche, chief investigator for! . % ivanemeogey ri Bailey Expects Less | a.rtt, etttncy Gwanson, said the! b, Tuten. wide contest, announces, E Twogens fades an hour in 31 seconds—over the top of alongn.6% grade ‘ Trouble After July Ljraids had “stopped the racket for| tics department at the University of 975 t | h tarti t t the b —<all i good.” Se ee eae cial i ; at 25 miles an hour, starting at § at the bottom —aill in i Pierre, June 12—(>)—Most of the |, “Well raid ihem every night if we the contest. : Meruuoinn Hotel zor~ high gear! (The average road grade is 7%). 68 or 70 i troubles incurred by the North Da- |have to,” he said. “and since we are) Under a plan sponsored by the Spec honest miles in comfort! There isn't a phi f perform: ie ee yet” 4 RING WILD ANIMAL cn | epee rp sat iye will soon be starved out of existence. | trants can write either a full-length Marquette Mode! 35— ance whe can't show a clean pair of wheels to every ‘ We've cut off an income of $4,500,000 play, a one-act Christmas play, or a Five-possenger car in its price class. : ®@ year—and they can’t stand it.” arliaions play. Aware | wil one, A Pheeton d b h issioners & professional production bhp One word can say most about the Marquette—it's Fargo Woman Named {iit fivie tor their authors, Sehon- Pa “VALUE.” The Marquette with the latest Bodies by Fishe rp Hy President of P.T. A. pits h Marquette Model 96S ‘ .” The Marquette with the jodies by Fisher Dabo law, he sald has been the Be fase amma Je a Danae of Special Coupe is America's most complete moderate:priced car. sale of Jamestown, June 12.-(P)—The | the. AE SR sate. CORN. OF Throughout this great new six—in se camo, ee lon ihe | February 1, 1930, with the exception $995 gn 9 every feature, from ——— HIS ONLY CHANCE Blink: You'é never do in the Iictes; stutter. eeank. B-but they c-could tst-take mum-m-me in él-slow m-motion— Judge. £ >) ‘ 21,151 members and 463 chapters in the state, J. G. Moore, Fargo, treas- urer, told the. association's conven- of the religious dramas. The latter should be sent directly to Chicago, declared. may further informat: be Vics from the drematics. deparement ; | at the university, gineering. council engineers are enter! ~ increasing numbers. It says engineers in public. life include the president, secretaries of commerce and interior, five governors, five senators and 21 |’ League of Nations to Convene in September . Fleck Motor Sales, WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT... BUICK WILE =e bumper to bumper, from top to tread — there is more quelity than seems possible to put into a car at the price. But it is there, because Buick knows how to build an extra margin of out-and-out goodness into all its products. Drive the Marquette and you're bound to say, with all the others, “A great performert” BUICK MOTOR COMPANY, FLINT, MICHIGAN Canadian Fecteries | _—Divislonof Generel Metors Bullders of McLeughlin-Bvick, Oshewe, Ont, Buick and Marquette Meter Cann Bismarck, No. Dak. .