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» omens THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JULY 18, 1929 INVESTIGATION OF INDIAN CONDITIONS . Senators Complete Survey of Reservations in Nebraska; Proceed to Dakotas Yankton, 8. D., July 13—(P}—In- Veatigation of the condition of the American Indian in South Dakota ‘Was begun today by United States Sen- ators Lynn J. Frazier of North Da- kota, Burton K. Whetler of Montana and W. H. McMaster of South Da- kota, members of a senate committee appointed to accomplish this work. ¢ the situs ey £ Winnebago if o! a at Winnebago, Nebr., Friday. The senators will spend until the middle of next week in this state Qnd will in the condition of affairs at the Greenwood, Pine Ridge and Rosebud reservations, Wasuren ane air La ety aa of ‘isconsin, wi the party earlier in the week, and Senator’ W. Pine of are expected to join the group later in the week. EDGE CONVINCED ON MIDDLE COUR SE IN REVISION OF TARIFF Canadian Protests Against the Schedules on Three Items Concern Administration Washington, July 13.—()—Indica- tions were multiplying today that ad- ministration forces in the senate would steer for a middle course in tariff revision, while interest con- tinued to grow in the numerous for- eign protests against various rate in- house. the sweeping revision of rates written into the house bill and the Republican Independents’ desire to confine up- to farm and related products while reducing present duties “est commodities, increased. Discussion of the foreign protests, meanwhile, brought out indications that the administration was a little more concerned over that from Can- ada, one of the United States’ largest customers, than over t‘10se from other Power Firm Accepts Gas Line Franchise Given by Dickinson of the building is being employed as [Bere comes Here Comes N Money—Moncy—MONEY! There's you've toured the bureau of engraving and printing in Washington. That's what the photographer was Coing when he took the above photos, the first ever to show the actual process of money-making as the government does it. This special occasion was the manufacture of the new small-size currency that will replace the kind you're carrying now. The new the present size, and tlt: a view of the examining division, Lower left is the stacking room, where the bills are ma is shown making money faster than F< DICKINSON GROWTH SHOWN BY BUILDING Construction of Many School Buildings, Business Houses and Homes Under Way (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. D., July 13.—Definite evidence that Dickinson is progress- ing steadily and increasing in size and commercial importance is revealed in a checkup of the large number of building projects planned, under way, or just completed. A number of pri- vate dwellings and business houses also have been remodeled in the last few weeks. 1 Construction of St. Patrick’s paro- | chial grade school is the largest single | building project under way at present. The fireproof structure will be com- pleted August 1. Construction is of brick and the building contains eight classrooms, living quarters for the sisters, a gymnasium and boiler rooms. A few floors remain to be more of it where every sheet of the uncut following persons: Lewis Kostelecky, two-story brick home on Marguerite boulevard; C. H. Nichols, five-room stucco cottage on Seventh avenue west; J. W. Burkhart, five-room frame bungalow with garage attached on First avenue east; Stanley Pribyl, five-room frame bungalow on Second avenue east; Mathias Baddinger, five- room frame bungalow next to the Pribyl home; Arthur Josephson, tem- Porary ane-story frame house on Tenth avenue west until seven-room two-story frame house can be com- pleted on same lot. Phil Boise moved into his new five- Toom frame bungalow on Seventh avenue west recently. Several other houses are contemplated. DETENTION HOSPITAL (Tribune Special Service) to erect a one-story detention build- ing to accommodate patients with contagious diseases who cannot be laid and sanders and painters are | provided for at St. Joseph's hospital adding the finishing touches to the! is befig considered by the Stark woodwork. ‘ Diedrich-Johnson Motor company | has begun construction of a one- story warehouse of brick and tile, 50x100 feet, on the vacant lot at the rear of their garage. The. building sets back 41 feet from the street | to permit construction of a two-story | Office at the front in the future. August 15 is the date set for its com- Pletion. Dickinson Iron & Metal company, of which George Massad is proprictor, has just completed 2 one-story fire- Proof brick and tile building with a full size concrete. basement to use &s a store warehouse for wool, hides, Pelts, furs, and other articles. The structure is 60x25 feet and faces on East Villard street, directly east of the present offices. i A two-story addition to the power plant of the Dickinson State School also was started this week. Dimensions are 26x34 feet and it is connected to the northeast part of the presen: power building. The building will be used as a storehouse. A corrugated steel warehouse and office building was completed for the Union Oil company the latter part of the week. The structure is 24x5) | feet, with a 10x24 space at the front converted into two offices. The rest @ storehouse for oil products. The county commissioners. There is great necd for some such place for these cases, city physicians Pointed out in urging the step to be taken. They cannot be kept in the hospital where they would expose other patients. be erected, according to the plan, at a location near the hospital and con- nected with it by a corridor. Pa- tients can be transferred and doctors and nurses can pass from one build- ing to the other without going out- side. By erecting it near the hospital, /Sewer, lights, heat and water could be obtained frora the latter building, saving the city hundreds of dollars annually through economy of opera- tion, it is claimed. The building, $750 and $1,000, remains the property of the county. Patients would pay for services just as they do at the hospital. MADE MANY BEAUTIES London.—(P)—A beauty surgeon patients is C. H. Willi. His patients have been society leaders, actresses, and professional business men and women. “Cosmetic surgery has reach- FORSTARK PROPOSED, which 1s estimated to cost between ; who has treated successfully 10,000! here than you ever saw at one time in your life, unless’ “Ic:.3 green” is three-quarters of an inch shorter than governmer’ factory is grinding out many millions of dollars’ worth. At the top is paper money is carefully inspected. ide into bales. A printing press at the lower right ‘ord and Rockefeller combined. COMBINE BULLETIN GIVES TEST RESULTS Costs of Operation Worked Out and State Is Issuing Book- ‘let on Machine That the man labor involved in harvesting with the combine is ap- proximately one-fourth the amount required in the binder-thresher meth: od, and that the combine owner vir- tually independent of transient labor for harvesting, are two contentions of Bulletin 225, “Combine in North Da- kota,” which is just off the press at | the North Dakota Agricultural college. The cost of direct combining, ex- clusive of depreciation, interest on the combine and overhead, averaged the bulletin. It was also found that the acreage harvested per season mi terially affects the total cost per acre, due to the varying depreciation and | interest charges. i It was also found that on the basis | of 600 acres, the total cost of harvest- | ing with a 16-foot combine averaged | $1.52 per acre when direct combined | and about $2 when the windrow pick- | up method was used. When harvest- A six-room one-story building will!ing and threshing this acreage with | three 8-foot binders and thresher, the | toal costs averaged $3.32 per acre and | $3.26 if only two 8-foot binders were used. On the basis of 500 acres the | total cost of direct combining with the 10-foot machine amounted to $1.54; per acre. 1 The results of a thorough investiga- tion and research on combine har- vesting, as made by the North Dakota Agricultural experiment station in | cooperation with the United States department of agriculture, is set forth in Bulletin 225, which is available for | the asking at the publications de- partment of the college. PRACTICAL JOKERS PLAY Madison, Wis.—(#)—After attend- ing a stag party Francis Dolan and Harry Fuller visited the home of a friend and played a practical joke on him by upsetting his furniture and placing a skunk’s carcass on_ the dining table. The friend, playing a return joke, had them arrested for ed such a pitch of perfection,” he says, “that almost miraculous results one-story structure has a frame front. @re deing erected for the can be achieved in the hands of ex- } Perienced specialists. | Worst South Ameri ican Quake Wipes Out City | burglary. They ar. sentenced to prison for three years, and were only freed by the intervention of former State Senator J. Henry Bennett. \CRICAGOAN IS FOUND BURNED IN FURNACE; SUICIDE SUSPECTED .)Wrists Are Bound With Wire and Body Wrapped in Burlap Soaked With Kerosene Chicago, July 13.—(@)—The body of Theodore Hammel, 50, was found last night in a furnace, burned beyond recognition. Police carly today were unable to determine whether it was murder or suicide. loosely together with telephone wire and his body wrapped in burlap, which had been soaked with kero- sene. Unburned and charred bits of the burlap were found in the ashes of the furnace. The body was found by Hammel’s niece, Miss Carmen Hammel, and a friend, James Cregg, who had been requested by Mrs. Hammel, the dead man’s wife, to look for him when he failed to return home last evening. He had gone in the morning to a vacant flat building he owned to do some work, and Mrs. Hammel, an ‘n- valid, feared he might have been overcome by the heat. Police learned Hammel recently had experienced financial difficulties and that the vacant building was mortgaged for $26,000. Cregg de- clared Hammel had once remarked: “That building will be the death of me. Sometimes I feel like dashing my brains out on the sewer pipes in the basement.” Police said they believed Hammel, crazed from worry, crawled into the furnace, after wrapping himself in the saturated burlap and binding his wrists, set himself afire. Cregg and Miss Hammel were re- leased after being questioned. Excepting New York, Illinois leads the states in paint and lacquer con- cerns. Illinois has 109; New York, 2. THEATRE Saturday Matinee Daily at 2:30 —_————— Every Saturday Continuous from 6:00 to 11:00 p. m. 93 cents per acre for the 16-foot and | a {$1.03 for the 10-foot, according to the | Fee rena Ja, Promos story of the combine as revealed by | | { wth MRAEY MASN JASON ROBARDS Fascinating Dialogue Beautiful Theme Song Complete Musical Score Marvelous Sound Effects MON. - TUES. - WED. GENTLEMEN OF THE PRESS With WALTER HUSTON YOU SEE AND HEAR the famous stage star talking throughout More startling than | Hammel’s wrists had been bound | Dickinson Library Proves Busy Place (Tribune Special Service) Dickinson, N. Dak., July 13—That the Dickinson public library is recog- nized as a valuable community in- stitution and is rated as one of the best in North Dakota is revealed in the annual report to the library board | made by Miss Gertrude Voldal, li- brarian. ‘The average per capita circulatiin 0. books was 7.2 volumes, which is pe cent higher than the standard set by the American Library association. the last year amounted to 32.434, or a 13 per cent increase over the yer~ previous. For each day the library was open the average circulation was 106 volumes. There were 671 new books added and 556 new borrowers registered dur- ing the year, bringing the ¢otal num- ber using the library to 3,172. Miss Lillian E. Cook, director of the state library commission, has written the local board congratulating them on the work done. She stated that no other library in the state has had so high a per capita circulation on so low a per cent book expenditure. The cost to circulate each books last year Bismarck Postoffice Vacancy Is Announced An open competitive examinatior for position of hed epreabdard pated the Bismarck postoffice has any nounced by the U. 8. Civil Service Commission through its local secre- tary, Miss Alice Sales. Applications must be in the hands of officials before Auz. 2 Full information may pe obtained from Miss Sales at the Bismarck federal building. Birds cannot see blue or violet, but. anything you have ever seen or heard. “Gentle- men of the Press,” a@ara- mount All- Talking Picture. The total circulation of books during | was 2.6 cents. they do see red and infra-red. 440 Hours (Over I8 Days) | Without a Single Stop Roosevelt 8 surpasses all known non-stop records both on the ground and in the air s s s Stock car, fully equipped. Gas, oil and water taken on fly. A. A. A. supervision N= PROOF—official proof—of the out- standing dependability of Marmon’s new low-priced straight-eight—the Roosevelt. By running continuously for 440 hours (over 18 days) on the Indianapolis Speedway this car has established a new world’s non- stop record which far overshadows any pre- vious accomplishment of gasoline-propelled vehicles, on the ground or in the air. Above—Re-fueling record-breaking i - : i Roosevelt on the fly from “mother” car. Right—Passing food to the men. Below—Re-fueling airplane from “mother” plane. (Run made under official obser. cation. Record subject to final confir= ) the bosevelf- MARMON-BUILT. THE WORLD'S FIRST STRAIGHT-EIGHT UNDER #1000 Sedan, $995, at factory. Group equipment extra. Distributors STEEN MARMON CO. 116 Second Street BISMARCK, N. DAK. Phone 1452 Fleck Motor Sales, Inc. Phone 55 Bismarck, No. Dak. BUICKS 1—1929 Buick, Series 121 1—1928-20 Buick 2 door Sedan | 1—1927-20 Buick 2 door Sedan 1—Master Six Buick, enclosed touring OTHER MAKES 1—1926 Willys-Knight Great Six 1—1926 Overland Six, 2 door 1—1926 Hupmobile, 4 door 1—1929. De Soto Sport Roadster 1—1926 Chevrolet Coach 1—1928 GMC 1-ton Truck and take advantage of the Special Prices on the above automobiles. Come early Fleck Motor Sales, Inc,