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‘ ' SATURDAY, JUNE 22 STERLING FARMERS WIN HOG VERDICT — OVER SWINE FIRM Company Must Pay $1400 With Interest, Burleigh Court Decides Payment of $1,400 and interest since November, 1928, must be made to 10 “hog-wild” Sterling farmers by the Central U.S. Swine company, with headquarters in Spokane, Wash. ‘This was decided in Burleigh coun- ty district court yesterday afternoon when the hog company allowed the verdict in the*damage suit brought against it by the farmers go in favor of the plaintiff by default, according to Judge Fred Jansonius. The suit was an outgrowth of a hog sales campaign conducted here last fall by the Washington company, which deals in purebred Chester White sows, The farmers agreed to purchase 40 sows, making down pay- ments of $35 on each animal. Off- spring of the sows were to be sold back to the company, sums coming from the sales to apply on the re-- maining $60 due on each animal. They made their down payments. Another representative of the company arrived a few days later with the hogs but refused to deliver them unless the farmers paid the remaining $60 on each animal. Farmers Have Animals The animals were attached the same day through a court order, the farmers taking possession of them. ‘The farmers, who were represented by F. E. McCurdy, Bismarck attorney, were Carey Johnson, E. A. Van Vleet, W. C. Hoeft, Knute Johnson, Ed Gib- son, L. M. Johnson, Paul Lang, George Harding, Ed Smith, and J. A. Nor- lin. They will keep the sows until payment is made by the company. “Accounting reports of Oscar Back- man, Wilton, special administrator of the Peter Larson estate in 1919, were proper and justified, a jury decided yesterday. Annette Erickson. sole beneficiary of the Larson will, claimed that Backman’s reports were not cor- rect. Backman had appealed to the district court from a county court decision. The jury deliberated but a few minutes on the case. ‘The case in which the Wing Mer- cantile company has brought suit against C. O. Kettleson was begun this morning. The mercantile com- pany. is claiming money from Kettle- son on a note alleged signed when Kettleson purchased a header from the company. Ten Jurors Drawn ‘Ten more special jurors were drawn this morning: Christ Schoon, Sterl- ing; E. E. See, Wing; Erick Slovarp, Brittin; Elmer Lundquist and Floyd Owens, Menoken; J. P. Patterson, Apple Creek; and Abe Tolchinsky, L. Carey, R. A. Ritterbrush, and E. Schee, ee nec Judge R. G. McFarlane ne morning will relieve Judge Jansonius here and preside over the remainder of the term. Judge Jan- sonius and se SS al stenographer, will go Monday, where Judge Jansgnius, will preside over several cases. Plans to make @ motion before | Judge McFarland to dismiss all grand jury indictments returned last fall against Eugene Merritt Walla were announced this morning by Charles L. Crum, defense attorney. Crum will argue that Walla was not givena speedy trial. Walla was indicted on charges of embezzlement, grand lar- ceny, and forgery. Judge McFarland quashed the embezzlement count against Walla during the special May term. ° —Slope Shorts | ——_—_—_—_—_— LINTON LIONS ACTIVE Linton, N. D., June 22.—Linton’s Lions club is busy putting the Se- man park swimming pool in shape for the Fourth of July. Members of the club are clearing brush away, trim- ming overhanging trees and renovat- ing bath houses. NONPARTISAN WOMEN PICNIC Turtle Lake, N. D., June 22.—Sen- T. ator Peck, F. A. Vogel and H. B. French were princ:pal speakers at the Nonpartisan Women’s county picnic held at Forland Grove Tuesday. More than 200 attended. GRAPPLING COP BUSY Garrison—Olaf Olson, Garrison's policeman, who wrestles when he isn't walking his beat, will wrestle Leonard Smith on a program to be staged in the near future. . SELLS COYOTE PUPS captured a litt coy: = oy ‘and sold them to people who plan on taming them. SEBALL FEATURES PICNIC Bhlelde Fort Yates and Shields baseball teams will clash at ihe Odd Fellows picnic here Sunday as the feature of the annual funfest. HOLD BEE DEMONSTRATION Garrison—J. A. Munro, professor at the state agricultural college, and A. L, Norling, McLean county agent, conducted a bee demonstration at the George W. Gregg farm here today. CHURCH cane: MEETING, ON low ical church congre- Lehr—Evange! ie PAINTS &T. CURTAINS Fort Vater ctgest ariunry wes util- ized in ‘the scenery work is. pronounced better than chat of professional wield- ers of the pallet and brush. | 1929 . The fastest passenger train Service between Chicago and the Pacific coast was inaugurated Sunday by the Northern Pacific, when the North Coast Limited, the road's premier transcontinental, started the 63-hour west- bound and 61 1-4 hour eastbound schedules, despite the handicap of the Montana washouts on the line. ‘This North Coast Limited Initiates Fastest Chicago-Coast Service difficulty was overcome by detouring the pacemaker of the new service. ‘Word here today was that the train arrived on time at Seattle at 10 a. m. Tuesday, making time of 51 hours and 45 minutes between St. Paul and the Puget sound metropolis. For operating reasons the train was started from St. Paul instead of Chicago, at 8:15 a. m., Sunday. At 6:15 a. m., Sunday, another North Coast Limited was started eastward from Seattle on the 61 1-4 hour J.| schedule, and the new transcontinental service was under way at both ends of the road. The second train from St. Paul westward was started at 9 p. m., Sunday, also on a 63-hour schedule. The eastbound trains travel 6 hours and 45 minutes faster on the transcontinental trip and 5 hours faster .d, Jamestown, | Westbound than under the old schedule. The North Coast Limited, which 29 years ago established limited train service in the Northwest, was the fi’ train to turn a wheel in shortening the time between the Pacific Coast and Chicago. Limited is an all-Pullman train. The picture shows a group on the observation platform lcaving for a scenic trip, and, above, an interior view ~ of the North Coast Limited's luxurious Stutsman county! tudwig Mitzel, village marshal, has|had to wear trousers and smoke a been ordered to arrest all speeders and “one-eye” cars. COLLIS RANCH DESTROYED Sentinel Butte—Forty head of reg -| istered Hereford bulls and 32 brood June 6 that practically wiped out the | Picturesque Collis ranch, one of the, beauty and historical spots of the Bad Lands country. : BRONCHO ‘BREAKS' BOY | Selfridge—The 14-year-old son of Charles Gayton is in the Fort Yates | hospital receiving treatment for a broken arm suffered in a tussle with | an unbroken broncho. LEGION DELEGATES NAMED La Moure—C. M. Isenberger, Rus- sell Diesem, delegates, and T. M. Johnson, alternate, will represent the Frank L. Townend posi of the Amer- ican Legion at the state convention in Minot. Wm. Huntington, Verona, has been elected vice commander of | the post. Unpaid Wages Create Statue of Farmhand West Union, Iowa. — ()— Wages which he failed to collect for years have provided funds for a life-size statue of J. H. Crawford, a lonely farm laborer, and hig dog, over Craw- ford’s grave in a hillside cemetery near the Volga river at Lima, Fayette county. While Crawford worked on the farm of Crit Harrison he refused, for an unknown reason, to accept his observation car. ‘Death’s Head’ Signs pipe to be recognized.” Mile, Sevastos comes from a well known French family. Her mother is Mme. Anthippe Couchod-Sevastas, edi- tor of the Revue de la Femme. Her stepfather, Dr. Paul Louis Couchod, as physician to Anatole France. She likes the United States. “Abroad,” she says, “only shop girls and working people have fun at a carnival. Here, everyone joins in and has a good time. It is better. I like it.” discarded by police. of trial the “death’s head” ‘The upkeep of London's schools last year cost $656,653,330. blocks. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The faster North Com, Discarded by Detroit some Detroit — () — Detroit's “de&th’s head” safety zone signs have been have been replaced by rectangular red neon signs, visible for ‘everellond health department, physicians, PRCARDR) |MABEL DESIRED TO BE NEXT BRDGE'S ECARD "BIG BOSS OF U.S. PROHIBITION AS SYMBOL OF UNION Dream of Years Nears Reality as Arlington Memerial Span Nears Completion Washington—@—A_ dream for years—the symbol of a united na- tion—is rapidly nearing completion in the nation’s capital. It is the Arlington memorial bridge across the Potomac river, ex- tending from a point opposite the Lincoln memorial on the Washington side to near the Lee mansion on the Virginia side. When completed it will be one of the most superb struc- tures of its kind in the world. The bridge will have nine arches with a draw in the center for the passage of vessels, It is of concrete with granite used for facing. Its length is 2,138 feet, with a roadway 60 feet wide, bordered on each side by sidewalks 15 feet wide. The architecture is simple and of perfect proportion. At both the Washington and Virginia ends, py- lons 40 feet high, surmounted by American eagles and adorned on the sides with sculpture and inscrip- tions, will be placed. The sculpture on the sides of the pylons represents the recognition of the common bonds and aspirations of the nation, and the final complete union, The figures on each end of the piers symbolize the harmonious union in the arts of peace—in inven- tions and accomplishments of art and science connected with the his- tory of this country. And the idea of union will be evident to all at a glance. It is across this dignified bridge that funeral processions will move to beautiful Arlington, the restin, place of soldiers of many wars. x boulevard extending from the north- west section of the city to Potomac park will provide the approach on the Washington side. Too Much Appetite Slew Ancient Owls Washington.—(4)—The wisdom of ancient giant owls did not extend to their appetites, according to Gerrit 8. Miller, jr., of the National museum, for they ate themselevs out of cxist- ence. Buried in floor materials of Haitian caves, bones of the birds are found together with remains of large and extinct rodents. It is believed that ithe owls, feeding too voraciously on \the animals, stopped their only food source. The giants were unable to subsist on small mice and other animals which came into their caves. Smaller owls, which can feed on the rodents, yare all that exist of the ancient fam- \ily. Babies of Toronto ,' Set Health Record uto, Ontario—()—Some of the moév $.rious of ordinary baby diseases exist in Toronto mostly as wax models. The models have been constructed for medical students to demonstrate types of baby diseases which cannot find in real life. “We cannot pick up enough diseases among Toronto babies to illustrate to our students what they will have {to treat when they get out into the Psychologists felt that, although | country,” says Dr. Alan Brown of the the ‘skull and_ cross-bones left aj Toronto general hospital. “It is safer. strong impression on the mind of | easier and cheaper to raise a baby in the motorist, the warning of safety | Toronto than in any other part of the was obscured. After several weeks | dominion.” signs| The baby health ts attributed to supervision exercised jointly by the and Toronto's women. A NEW KIND OF CAR THEN—A NEW KIND OF CAR NOW “" OC 1 oe 1994! + + the Chrysler is a new type of motor car, which holds entirely novel sensations for every motorist. + + The fact is, that Chrysler engineers have in this car employed the fundamentals of motor cer design in a manner fully as revolutionary as the application of the steam turbine to ocean-going ships. + + Your first ride in a Chrysler will compel a new conception of eutomobile transportation.” salary. After \Crawford’s death in|, Libbie 2 & 4 ti bd "RL te Hi pleteness with which fulGills these higher ex; ions that explains the ever-rising tide of Chrysler success. justifiably. In the five years of its CHRYS Phone 700 : Advertisement Seturday Evening Past 11, 1996 WHAT YOU EXPECT OF CHRYSLER The’ imposing succession of Chrysler meteoric rise, Chrysier has done more accompli 4 has led the public than any other force in the automobile instinctively to expect more of Chrysler world to revolutionize and modernize than of other cars—and it is the com- motor car That is the reason why the volume of ler sales has increased to such You expect of Chrysler a charming individuality in style, and et it. , Youepctindientmereaniing Wait Tein vat dots oa espett a more nrriout fs ag of oto. of apy St several hundred comfort, and you get i. You <ellars peice. pe any iy vist noe ef CUMYELER“75°—-$15350061795—Right Body Cheysl 4 ‘s 4 Seyles. CHRYSLER “65"—$1040 to $1145— influence over the entire i Six Body Seyles. AU pricse f. 0. b. factory. Choysler dealers extend convenient time payments. i. @ chaysLin MOTORS PeoDuct Corwin-Churchill Motors, lnc. Bismarck, No. Dak. Ory Friends Urged Appointment of ‘Little Miss Trouble’ to High Position WAS NOT SHRINKING VIOLET | Mrs. Willebrandt Held Higher Federal Post Than Any Other Woman of Time By RODNEY DUTCHER Washington, June 22.—(NEA)—Lit- tle Miss Trouble is going back into private life. She rose to a higher post in the fed- eral government than any other wom- an ever attained, did Mrs. Mabel ‘Walker Willebrandt, and for quite a while she has been recognized here as the “Dry Czarina.” But she is not going any higher and the next big boss of prohibition is going to be a| man. ‘When subordinate officials failed to co-operate with Mrs. Willebrandt, she used to grab an axc. But one simply can’t go after the president of the United States with an axe. And it was President Hoover who failed to fall in with the idea of Mrs. Willebrandt’s friends, especially the dry leaders, that she should be placed in charge of the entire pro- hibition show after all enforcement activities are put under the depart- ment of justice. Trouble Somewhere? Mr. Hoover has gone out of his way to assure the nation that Mrs. Wille- brandt wasn't giving up her job as assistant district attorney general un- der unpleasant circumstances, but there is no doubt anywhere that Mrs. Willebrandt would have been glad to have taken over the Hoover enforce- ment program. No one ever was heard to moan that Mabel was lacking in ambition. No one ever called her a shrinking violet. And few ever accused her of any feminine weaknesses, such as (hose of charity and sympathy, in her work. Mabel always was as hard-boiled as the best of them. There will be moans everywhere over Mrs. Willebrandt’s resignation, for she has many admirers. On the other hand, her zealousness probably has brought her more enemies than any other woman in the United States. Both her friends and ene- mies have been of the warmest kind. She Has Some Enemics Her enemies include many Repub- licans, but very few, if any, are drys. ‘There is a suspicion in Washington, of course, that some of them were pow- erful enough to dissuade the presi- dent from handsomely rewarding lit- campaign services of last year, though you can’t prove that by Mr. Hoover. early in the Harding administration and first came into the national lime- light in 1923 by her supreme court arguments on the Daugherty ruling barring liquor on steamships. After- ward she became one of the most ardent proponents of heavier pro- hibition law penalties. In 1924 she was found demanding Capital Funeral Parlors 208 Main Ave. Licensed Embalmer Phone—Day or Night—22 tle Miss Trouble for her enthusiastic | Mrs. Willebrandt was appointed | j o_o Mabel Walker Willebrandt . eee her friends and enemies always were of the warmest kind. that politics be taken out of prohi- bition enforcement, which sorely em- barrassed other Republicans who were denying that politics was in- volved at all. President Coolidge Displeased She charged a national scandal in Prohibition enforcement, pointing out 14 months, whereas, “in six months a fearless president would end this scandal.” Mr. Coolidge didn't like that. Little Miss Trouble was just spread- ing her wings when General Lincoln C. Andrews was made the prohibition “czar.” What a battle there was! Andrews had the quaint idea that her job was to present cases to the courts after his agents had obtained Picture up to that time. Mrs. Wille: brandt never had that idea at all, out to “get” Andrews, having failed to boss him. was & personal “wet.” Mrs. Willebrandt to Fore In time, of course, Andrews went new prohibition commissioner. Dr. Mrs. Willebrandt, was considerate of her ambitions. Mabel Loses Job ] that Coolidge had been in office for} the evidence—and to keep out of the | The dry organizations were behind her, because Andrews Doran, possibly observing that it was Andrews who had departed and not much more Doran took a lot of counsel from the able | lady. When she wanted raids, she |distributed in Ontario last year. | PAGE SEVEN got them. Doran rather faded inte the background as Mrs. Willebrandt rushed to the front. Teamwork between the two brought about a series of raids in New York just about the time Governor A! Smith was nominated for president by the Democrats. Mrs Willebrandt had been engaging at Kansas City in what is always the dirty work at any convention, work- ing to bar anti-Hoover delegates. She had been among the earliest Hoover supporters. Had to be “Called Off” Everyone remembers, of course, Mrs. ‘Willebrandt’s little private “holy war” against Al Smith last fall, which in- furiated the Democrats and seared a raft of Republicans. Candidate Hoo- ver was among those embarrassed, and presumably had something to do with calling Mabel off. Ever since her campaign speeches, naturally, Washington had been spec- ulating as to Mrs. Willebrandt’s re- ward, if any, with much argument as to whether Mr. Hoover could or couldn't afford to confer it, The drys were in no doubt. Their very highest leaders got together to urge Little Miss Trouble for a bigger | and better prohibition job. But Mr. | Hoover apparently heard none of this ; hullaballoo and now Mrs. Willebrandt is going into private practice on June 15, with the administration's very best wishes. Elaborate Equipment Provided for Airport Springfield, Mass., June 22—(®)— Every convenience for aviators, pas- sengers and field crew is planned for the new Agawam airport under con- struction near here. The administration building, abut- ting on the landing field, will contain waiting rooms, offices, control rooms, restaurant, baggage room and tele- graph equipment. The second floor will be given over to the owner and transportation companies, with five beclrooms for overnight guests. On the roof two-rooms will house radio and meteorological equipment. A glass observation tower will sur- mount the building alongside a pow- erful revolving beacon and _flood- lights for illuminating the field. Facilities for pilots will be provided in the basement. | The field is expected to be ready for |seneral use by September 1. | Lebanon President Is ‘The story went around that she was | Held to Single Term Beirut, Syria—#)—The term of the President of the Republic of Le- banon has been fixed at six years |and the incumbent will not be re- |eligible under a recent revision of Enforcement was officially placed in | the constitution. the hands of Dr. James M. Doran, the | The right to dissolve the legisla- .|ture, provided a majority of the council of ministers favors the meas- jure, was also added to the preroga- jtive of the President. More than 11,500,000 trees were | FOR location and a dandy ho Price $6,500.00. Terms. Jos. W. Tschumperlin Prop. SALE Six room semi-bungalow, all modern, practically new and in splendid condition. Built-in features. Fine me. Immediate possession. Investors Mortgage Security Co. Phone 138 Owners of the New All-American are calling it America’s finest medium-priced automobile Few, if any, cars in Oakland’s field have ever aroused such en- thusiasm among owners as the New All-American Six is causing. Come in and let us show you why its owners are so proud of their cars and so completely satisfied with the value which the New Oakland All-American represents. 5 1575, f.0. b. Pontiac, Prices. Pea oot si By mune mens senaedanememlaimiion "7-1. Sala Sage essay saan eg poe ne ce a em - STAIR MOTOR CO. Broadway at Sevesth peter heer ce. Goadrich—Rrennctorr @ Neus The New OAKLAND ALL-AMERICAN PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS ASSULIATE DEALERS Se ‘Tertle Lake—Otibert Bismarck, N. D, 3