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—————— ‘CERNAN PHYSICIAN WIL BE DEPORTED ‘Dr. Maximilifan R. Schneller Re- turns to Fargo Charged With Forging Permits Fargo, N. 16.+(#)—Dr. Maximillian former “German Red Cross physician, who has been in an out of the gtasp of the law since 1926, will be deported | to his native country. after hé hes answered the law's demands, accord- ing. to P. B. Garberg, federal district attorney. Dr. Schneller who was sentenced td D., July R. Federal Judge John B. Sanborn in 6t. Paul yesterday to answer charges of forging narcotic permits; he was paroled from the Minnesota prison on understanding that he would answer the narcoiic charge. by ‘department .f labor in 1928, and this order will be enforced after the legal "proceedings cgainst him. More Fake Lawn Seed Complaints Coming in From Mountrail Co. Stanley, N. D., July 16.—Complaint of misrepresentation in selling of an alleged grass seed that will grow with- “out moisture; even on dry bricks is heard from over Mountrail county. It “was sold here at $1 a pound. “. County Agent C. A. Fiske became §:suspicious when he heard so much yx Claimed for the seed, so he immedi- Yvately sent in a sample to the pure seed « laboratory for analysis. It was found consist of red top, meadow feseué nd perennial rye grass, a common ixture that can be bought for gboyt 20 cents per pound, nor would it pro- vide @ permanent lawn. sa ene Pet ‘Seek Secret of Old Race on Yukon River By OSCAR LEIDING (Associated Press Science Editor) Sars) oract 3 a7 8 anks of the historic Yukon, in the Uynorthermost reaches of Alaska, lies wsthe secret of a strange people, un- known to science, which may be un- Escovered this summer by Dr. Ales Hrd- ‘ licka, curator of anthropology of the National museum. |, Revealed by remains found in crude “boxes made of burned out logs, a form of burial wholly unknown in Alaska, there is no other knowledge on which to base an understanding of “the lost race.” The burials, first reported last year by a former missionary, were found from five to seven fect’ in a bank of the river. Their occurrence at such unusual depth, indicates, according to the an- thropologist, that Alaska once had a much warmer climate. In the pres- ent time, the earth “4s Detaustly frozen beneath the two and one-! foot mark. . Historic even before the days of the gold rush, the Yukon may have been the devious avenue traveled by an ancient Asiatic people into North America. A second object will be the exca- vation, as far as the river may per- mit, of the old site in the bank at Bonasila. Human remains, unlike those of the present Yukon Indian, have been found, accompanied gemifossilized bones of animals, a many of which no longer live in the region. Another object will be to explore briefly the sites of six or seven dead villages on the Shageluk slough. They were, according to early Russian ac- counts, of considerable importance. More than 2,000 miles of the journey will have to be made in small boats. Kentucky Boys Set Up Future Farmers Club Perryville, Ky., July 16.—()—Thir- ty-eight high school and eighth grade boys here have an organization known as the Future Farmers. ‘They have admitted their fathers and local business men as honorary members. Their purpose is to pro- mote scientific farm methods. Groups have been organized to study corn, tobacco, hogs, sheep, dairy cows and poultry. . Adult farmers are following their lead. Some have dipped sheep to kill parasites; many are culling poultry, pruning orchards and keeping farm records. Larger Race Cars May Create New Interest Washington, July 16.—()—The in- terest of American automobile many- facturers in motor racing is expected by the American Automobile associa- tion to be revived next year with the return to the track of cars with larg- er engines. The European precedent was fol- lowed when the 91% cubic inch piston displacement limitation was placed on American racing cars, several 34 i ‘ago. ‘ "Im Burope, where fuel, tax and other costs are high, the small en- gined car was a practical thing. The performances of the small-engined | Facer, however, did not parallel, those } of the average American road car the. American manufacturers be- ai South American Nations May Enter 1930 Gordon Bennett Balloon Race St. Louis, July 16.—(P)—Every South American country visited by Presidént-elect’ Hoover on his Latin- America good-will tour has been ex- tended a special invitation to chal- lenge the balloon supremacy of the United States in the James Gordon Bennett race to start this year from Bt. Louis. Two other international balloon races have started in St. Louis. This year’s event is scheduled for Octo- ber 1. The St. Louis air board already has sent 20 invitations, many to coun- tries that have not before been repre- sented in the aeronautical classic. has handle . A supply of 3,000,000 cubic feet poi gr aoe baad hours. ‘The 1929 race will start from an old Washington, July 16.—(#)—Stricter regulations for airplane pilots go in- u B ot baseball park on south Broadway, near Jefferson Barracks. It will ac- | commodate 200,000 persons. The race, in returning to St. Louis, comes back to the city where the first of these races in the United States was held. That was in 1907, and a German, Osker Eberslob, who flew to Asbury Park, N. J., won. At a race held here in 1910, A. R. Hawley, representing the United States, won. He landed in Canada, and with his aide, was lost in a forest seven days. When found they were nearly exhausted. Hawley set a rec- ord of 1,172 miles. Four national elimination contests have been held here. The third Bennett trophy will be put into competition this year. The two previous cups went to the United i Pilots Must Keep in Practice Under Newly Passed Federal Regulations to effect September 1, and after that| time on any class the privilege to fly date peony Ha on | es See, lp SERIO AUT they are to fly more than one type| There are three general classifica- of plane. tions of planes by weight under the Under the new. department of|new regulations. Those are planes of commerce regulations a pilot will be! less than 3,500 pounds gross weight, Beer te 0 kt Je Bie a0 or. sneee | ones of. frase, 2008 $0. 188. panne, of 12 classes of planes upon which/and planes of more than 7,000 he satisfactorily passes flying tests,| pounds. Each of these classifica- and the classes will be specified upon| tions is divided into types — planes his Moense card. Present holders of| with one engine and open cockpit; transport and limited commercial | more than one engine and open cock- pilots licenses will be required to take| pit; single motored cabin planes, and the tests when t'ey for semi-| multi-motored cabin planes. <i Tess nena el php rag rmmed ieee 08 | plants amphibians as as to flyer is qualified to handle the typ:/ If a pilot wishes to fly for hire a or class of plane he is flying and) plane for which he is not licensed. has kept in practice on it. he may apply to a department of ‘The rules provide that a pilot shall! commerce inspector and not carry passengers in @ class of | immediately Pane reich ot Bae eek flown EF sk cess to Che. aptiatgction two hours in the previous 90| spector. Sake Dare Wad. <9 Eees Ot sere ha Bae, the six months’ duration|they are not familiar pd ger gang gee gage om ghd Borage Monger of pisses for which ho. ts Usenesd.lof the glen, V’omen May Gain New | °™ *t Canterrs. j = ‘The commonwealth government has Privilege in France |; ciaca to estavtish tits institute im- f = mediately at Paris, July 16—(—Women of | $3,000,000 for ot ‘oral Belencek Thay of animal lif- Rete Seen tees © b Beanies ot sone 8 time DAP che ore 1011 and abd in Pega tong Ra A cates that the of tne ‘paicoal and ‘moral brash at | i. thé. kon 540) tah mete Aqgendi & Foot tan man, 'o Bar to His corded in any —— mentioned. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. contract, she passed the 1! Bismarck Embryo | | Gertrude Ederle | Swims Five Miles o—- ° Bismarck has an émbryo Gertrude Ederle. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland, 614 Avenue C. Bara accepted a “dare” flung at her last week-end that she couldn't swim across the Bismarck swimming pool 150 times. The pool is 40 yards wide from east to west. Not content with merely filling her mark and continued until she had gone across the pool 220 times or five miles. She now holds the long distance swimming record of the loca} pool. She swam the five miles in five hours, beginning at 2:15 p. m. and finishing at 7:15 p. m., according to Fred Land- ers, life guard. Newspaper Sponsors Air Tour of Georgia Atlanta—(?)—Sponsored by the Atlanta Constitution, a squadron of airplanes will take off from Candler field here this inonth for an “All Geor- gia Air Tour” to stimulate interest in aviation throug .out the state. More than 40 cities and towns have invited the squadron to halt for visits within their limits and Harry O. Mitchell, district manager of the United States department of com- merce, who is chairman of the ar- rangements committee, stated that none affording landing facilities would be skipped. At least 12 planes, ranging from two passenger biplanes to large cabin monoplanes with accommodations for eight passengers, will make the tour. ‘And an “on to Atlanta race.” with Candler field as the goal, will pre- cede the general tour. The Atlanta Constitution in 1910 sponsored the first all Georgia “mo- torcade” in the interest of good roads. Banana Boom Makes French Colony Hope Conakry, French Guinea.9(ej— ‘This French colony expects to pro- vide the mother country this year with half, and in two years, with the whole of its supply of bananas. This is made possible by the in- stallation of a modern cold storage plant and the introduction of special transportation methods. In 1920 the colony exported only WwW. E. 206 tons of bananas while in 1927 it produced 8.500 tons. In addition to supplying the needs of France plans are being made to invade the world markets in the near future. Attendance Rules upper classmen will be permit: ted to cut classes at their own discre: tion without penalty is to be tried at Carleton college next autumn. be ineligible to take final examina removed. Carleton is a co-educational in. stitute. Gatun Lake in the Panama Canal is the largest artificially-formed lake in the world. It has an area of 16¢ ‘square miles. She is Sara Cleveland, sree | Lifted at Carleton All restrictions, which at present require that juniors and seniors shall TUESDAY, JULY 16, 1929 UNION MEN TO ASK HOOVER'S SERVICE Intercede in Street Car Difficulty Orleans. that later in the day they would call with the president. Devils Lake Girl to Attend International Devils Lake high school, has “'ypewriter company to go as its gues! Her trip will include a briet stay at Niagara Falls. Forks last May. To win this cham quarter-hour. world’s school contest at national sweepstakes. {Scientist Goes High Colorado Sickness—which afflicts persons whi suddenly enter kins university. effect of altitude on the heart. it tions if their records show more than: a limited number of “cuts,” will be Watch T For Signs of Iliness Your tongue is nothing mere than the upper end of your stomach and intestines. It is the first thing your doctor looks at. It tells at a glance the condition of your diges- tive system — and en sicians sey that 90 per cent of all sicknesses start with stomach and bowel trouble. A white or yellow- ish coating on your tongue is a danger signal of those s- tive disorders. It you why the least ex- ertion tires you out; Look at your Why you have in TONGUE every morning! stomach, dizzy 8) And it’s a sign you need Tanlac. This old reliable medicine has hel; thousands who were ges cal wrecks. See how the first tle helps you. Tanlac contains no drugs; it is made of barks, herbs the bowels, gas, sour mineral and roots—nature’s own medicines for the sick. Get a bottle from pe druggist today. Your money k if it doesn’t help you. Tanlac 52 MILLION BOTTLES USED aa tall pains | 10 SETTLE STRIKE iacteeen Revives | President Will Be Requested to| C‘slahoma Ghost Town New Orleans, ‘La., July 16.—(®)—J. B. Lawson, representative of the street car men’s union, said here today that national union leagers would request President Hoover to intercede in the fifteen day street car-strike in New + Mr. Lawson said he had been in- formed over long distance telephone that William Green of the American Federation of Labor, W. D. Mahon, president of the: International Car- men’s Union and others had con- ferred today with the attorney gen- eral and the secretary of labor and at the white-house for @ conference Typewriting Contest Devils Lake, N. D., July 16.—Miss | reno; they Esther Feldman, freshman of the} ceneral state of his health. invitation from the Underwood r rtgage and which will be sold to the International Typewriting con- Approaches N a ge hereinafter described! to watinty the same are situated in - » mene of the one amor= tsa Toronto, Ont nex, soem; | ADPPoaches New Pealk| th teswiyalige ef taricepii| eh Balots ta tecrbea as a Miss Feldman won the school | commerce records covering 161 minor novice typewriting contest at Grand | vehicle makers in the United States ‘ Pionship Miss Feldmar averaged 63 | sutemebiles were produced during qive errorless words per minute for 4 | first four months this year then last. | és North Dakota was one of the first | tained the total production of this states to choose a Phe! cor for the | type of cer in 1929 will be erst the Inter- eri bfooage compared with 3,697,- In Test of Altitude | Minnesota’s ‘Lemon’ Springs. —(?)—Mountain high _altitudes—is being studied svientifically this sum- | Owes @ debt of gratitude to a squatter mer by Arthur Grollman, associate | Who 38 years ago forced the state to professor of physiology at Johns Hop-|take a “lemon” worth $40,000,000 or With Mrs. Grollman as his assist- ant he took quarters at the summit | acre tract in southern Minnesota which house on Pike's peak, bringing with | was a part of the federal govern- h him tanks of gases, masks and many | ment’s school land grant to the state. laboratory articles used in testing | Officials told the state that it would | k: WILL TEST QUACK GRASS PLAN | nounced generally as a bad deal for Stanley, July 16.—Several demon- | the state. Northfield Minnesota — (AP) — An educational experiment under which strations in quack grass eradication —REBERERIIIII IVER RE Over 31,000 Readers Are are to be put on by County Agent ©. A. Fiske using sodium chlorate. Just enough of this has been purchased this year to determine its effective- ness and the plan is to ship in quite & bit another year. Dates and places of démonstrations will be announced as provided b; we. Dated this Yorn aay of June, 1928. - s ZUGER & TILLOTSON, Attorneys for Mortgagee, Bismarck, 3 “north o’ 36,” the ghost town of Hardesty, first on the Oklahome pan- handle, is being reborn. A new railroad line hes brought a boom to spur Fardesty from its grave on the historic cow trail between Texas a1 Kansas. New stores, No. 1° of the NOTICE OF MORTGAGE FORE- CLOSURE SALE Default has been mad HOMEMAKERS’ PLAY AUG. 5 dred Stanley, N. D., July 16.—Achieve- (the sum of ment dey for Homemakers clubs has | ($100.40) Dr‘lars pi t remiums, and the will | 78/100 (g11276), Dollars paid as, taxes held on August 2 and 3. Achieve- | for the years 1923, 1924, 1925, 1936 and day promises to be the biggest | !9 of the year. Every Homemaker is expectéd to be present with the family and at least one guest. It is expected thét about 500 will attend. ind homes and “Vel. 1 Hardesty News have appeared near the old town’s site. The first Hardesty took its name 50 years ago from a pioneer Texas county ranchmen. til railroad tracks pointed south reverted to its native Anxiety Is Allayed Over King’s Health ° London, July 16.—(#)—Such anxiety as to the condition of King which remained after yesterday's en- couraging reports on the operation performed then was relieved with an additional favorable bulletin frém his physicians this morning. His Majesty's four doctors visited him in the forenoon today and found he had passed a restful night. They red were satisfied with the Now, ‘Therefore, Notice is Hereby Given,’ That that certain mort, 4 execuied and delivered by Ole and Oline 8: TB, t) his wife, mortgagor to the Fed Land Bank of Sait Paul. 1 body corporate, of the Cit St. Pau! County of Rameey, State o , Dated May 36, FIRST TOURIST CAMP 1 Washington, July 16.—(4)—The Lie Sour, a By 3h. 22, an 4 Trondhiem "Pyord, has -dacied | oreCateg" ARs ofthe petteas eateblish & tourist camp for motorists | in| such mortgage and. hereinafter on the main highway into Trondhjem, | described, x the front door e Steinkjer, a town at the head of | County of Burleigh, Gudrum Carlsen, trade commissionet | North Dakota, at the hour of 2 o'clock at Oslo, reports to the department of P.M. on the z9th day of July. 1929. coenmmpece. Tt will be the first in Nor- ) (pcntiety ‘he amount due upos gag way. mortgage on the day of sale, for said defaulted indebtedness. Said sale ie to.be made subject and inferior to the unpaid principal of the aforesaid mortgage to The Federal Land Bank of Saint Paul amounting to Forty-sit Hyndrea Nine and 55/100 Dollars (9999.55). eee OnE TALE FORE- t | Motor Car Production | tne caret ane iuiitions or thet cers ‘The premises described in if ry ra, ($48.75) due De-| lows: and the further sum Government Lot | Four red Ninety-five and Southwest Quarter of the Ni Dollars paid as taxes) west Quarter (SW UNW i) for the years 1925.| the West Half of the Sout! ter pat tees. oak is serebs Sour pathy ane the. we certain morteage t Wy Section Nine Mina aulivered by cect | SUerteE NA) os eee r to Re My uomargiog, moztsagor, to, The eee ty Nor ert eee ‘edorg) La , mber 3, a of On 727100 31 1 37, ‘Washington.— () — Department of show that 570,08 more If the same rate of increase is main- Thirty-eight (138) North Range Seventy-five (75) West, contains wa increase in the current motor trucks. ment thereof. There will be due on said mortgage .| at the date of sale for said defaulted installment. insurance and taxes the sum_of Twelve Hundred Twenty-six and 79/100 Dollars ($1226.79), together with statutory attorney's fees and To a ‘tiled production of a the Court House | cost of foreclosure as provided it door in ti city of Bismarck, County of .. Has Paid $20,000,000 | Surieigs: ‘soa stete or North Davotn, | *Batea this sth day of June, 1999, 1° tntae tot thd Om ei i <i ye fu THE Asie LAND BANK iy of ugust, 1929, to satisfy the 0 N’ - Virginia, Minn.—()— Minnesota | arsount due upon’ such tno OF SAINT forlgiges. gage on the day of sale, for said defaulted indebtedness. Said sale is to be made subjéct and inferior to the unpaid principal of the aforesaid mortgage to The Federal Land Bank of Saint to Thirteen Hundred Dollars, ($1316.08). mises described in such mo: da sae atteas be sold to satisfy Z2UGER & TILLOTSON, Attorneys for Mortga Bismarck, North Dako! (6/11-18-25 7/2 more. The squatter had settled on a 160- situated in, the Count: nd State of ‘North Da- Dr. R.S. Enge tak ear | nthe East Halt of the Southwest Chiropractor je East of the Southwes! ce tteledpenel edge stab tiadv pated uarter (E%SW%) and Lots | here, or nothing at all. It was de- Drugless Physician Lucas Block Bismarck, N. D. inree (2) and Four (4) of Sec- tion Thirty (30), Township, One Hundred Forty’ (140) North, Range Seventy-seven (77) West, containing ‘One Hundred Fifty- Then, in 1891, iron ore was dis- Visited Daily by “‘Salesmen”’ “Salesmen” START FROM THE TRIB- UNE OFFICE EVERY DAY. No doors are closed to these “Salesmen.” Wher- ever “They” go “They” are welcome. “They” sell bungalows, business bonds and bricks, typewriters, tables, trom- bones and tools; anything and every- thing salable! Hundreds of their em- ployers will tell you that “They” are real producers. And “They” work at a cost so low that anybody can employ them profitably for any selling job. “They” are the classified ads of The Bismarck Tribune. Phone 32: When you haye something to sell, buy or rent. The Bismarck Tribune Want Ad Dept.